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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-02-14 - Orange Coast PilotTOMORROW: NEWPORT BEACH .. South Coast· gets fitness center 50 million athletic training academy will be located inf oothills near Laguna_ research headquaners for coaches ancj athletes similar to athletic academics commonly found in Europe, actordin_a to Bill Harris, bead of the non-profit foundation's site selection and construction commit-tee. seven considered 1n Oranae County and throughout the nation. Harris said foundation trustees hope to have the fitness academy completed within four yean to honor a promise made to President Ronald Reagan. Construction is expected to beain within a year. Spons, is the honorary ctwrman of the NationaH=itncss Foundation. At the Wednesday afternoon news conference announcing the site selec- tion, Allen said Aliso Viejo was chosen for its year-round comfortable climate and its proximity to water and a large city. Coto de Caza in Trabuco Canyon. Four of the ti&bt tru teeS, iocludiiia Allen, met tb1 w«k to viSit the Alisa VitJO Sites aptn, Harris said. Tbe trustees made the decislon dunna a conference call with other trusteel Wednesday morning. By ROBERT HYNDMAN aad USA MAHONEY Of ... D9111 ........... A 175-acre sue in the coastal foothills east of Laguna Beach has been selected for a S50 million Laura'aday Toda7 la Laura Ann Brad .. bary llleeln& Children Awareneu Day. eo deelC- nated by the <>ranee County Board of Supervleor• Wedneeday. The 3 -year-old daaihter of lllke and Patty BraClbary of Bunt1n1ton Beach bu been mlMing al.nee October. when ehe ~ appeared dartn& a family oa~ at Joehaa Tree Na- donaf Monument. Anyone with information about Laura la uked to contact the San Bernardino County Sheriff'• Station. (619) 386-3781. Coast 1 Coast residents are otter- ing love for sale, and It comes gtft wrapped./ A3 Callfomla Six workers at the San Onofre Nuclear Generat- ing Station are exposed to radiation./ AS Nation Attorneys for CBS want the CIA to release study on Vietnam enemy flg- ures./ A4 World Manila hotel blaze con- tinues to burn; police now say the fire was work of arsonists./ AS Boating More than 1,000 boat crews start comp~tlng In the Midwinter regatta Saturday./81 Sports Laguna Beach High basketball coach Craig Falconer reslgns./C1 Entertainment Forewarned Is forearmed -"Hollywood Wives" Is trash without redeeming class./83 Bualneu Contlnental Airlines wlll Inaugurate nonstop ser- vice from Houston to John Wayne Airport on Aprll 1./84 INDEX Boating 81-2 Erma 8ombeck 82 Bridge 86 Bulletin Board A3 Buliness S.-5 Cluaifled C4'· 7 Comlcl_ 86 Croaword C7 Death Notices C3 Horo1Cope C8 Ann Landers 82 Oplnl0n A8 Paparazzi 81 Poflce log A3 Publtc Notlcet C3-4' Sporte C1-3 Televt1lon 82 Theatera 82-3 W•ther A2 athletic training academy, U'le Na- tional Fitness Foundation an- nounced Wednesday. The academy, which would be built and supported by private funds. is envisioned as a national training and Moses denies asking fotsex LOS ANGELES (AP)-Two-time Olympic gold medalist Edwin Moses, disputing police testimony, ~ve a different version today of the circum- stances-that led to his arrest on a charge-of.solicitation ot-~4ion. Moses, testifying in bis own de- fense at his trial on the misdemeanor charge, told a Municipal Court jury that undercover police officer Susan Gonzales spoke to him first while his car was at the comer of Sunset Boulevard and Genesee A venue in Hollywood on Jan. 13. He said it was Gonzales who mentioned two sex acts; she testified earlier he brought them up. "She walked toward me, looked at me and smiled and said something," Moses said under questioning from defense attorney Edward Medvene. ·:1 couldn't hear it; my window was rolled up. I rolled at down halfway. she said 'Pull over so we can talk.' I pulled over." "She came in front of my car. glanced at my li cense plate; at that time I figured she knew whQ 1 was," said Moses, whose license plate reads 'OLYMPYN."' "I rolled down the window, she said, 'Ai, how are you?"' Moses said. "I said fine, how arc you?" Moses said Gonzales said then asked him what he had been doin& and he said he had been to a couple of discos. "She said, 'Do you want 10 have some fun?'" Moses testified. "I said, 'What kind of fun?' She mentioned the two acts of sex and asked how much money I had. I said SI 00. I was surprised; I had no intention ofdoang it. .. "Did you have any intention to pay Officer Gonzales for sex?" Med vene asked. "Absolutely not," Moses said. "I lef\ the scene immediately. I had no intention of stopping." "Practically every other country does have it. It's something very important," Harris said. The site was selected from amona ---- Former pro football coach Gcorae Allen, chamnan of the Presidenf s Council on Physical Fitness and ' . - "\___. --~~~-..:lllL.-~~~~~__. High school drug buata Irvine police Sit. Leo Jonee dleplaye blotter acid tabe and blndlee of cocalne that were eelzed darinC eweep of three hJCh echoole. Thirteen teen-aaen were arreeted. See atory PageA4. Neighbors fear jailed resident may be released By STEVE MARBLE OflMD9111"9tlWI A group of Costa Mesa residents. fearful that a jailed neighbor they describe as a bully will go free, has asked a Municipal Court judge to deny Warren Ahhoffs request for bail reduction. Althoff. 69. was arrested on susp1- c1on of attempted murder Nov. 29 following a five-hour standoff wtth Costa Mesa pohce that ended an a shootout. He is being held on S I 00.000 baa I at Orange County Jail. But Althoff has asked Harbor Municipal Coun Judge Selim Frank- hn to release him on bis own recognizance or to set a "reasonable" bail. Franklin. who met last week with Ahhoffs wife and neighbors. said he could make has decision late today. Althoff. descnbed by some res1- denls as a "neighborhood bully .. with a reputation for sudden, violent (Pleue eee RESIDENTS/ A2) Oh-so-carefully ar~anged protest lacks spontaneity They munched on cam>t sticks, nibbled on cheese and sipped wine while listenina 10 the Jesuit priest whose anti-war struples ha4 landed him in a federal penitentiary. Father Daniel Btnipn. 64, spoke of his sister-in-law,. who is jCrvtn1 th~ years in federal prison for brukina into a military base about a ycarqoandauackinaa 8-Sl bomber with a hammer. She and other protesters had flrst drawn some of their blood and ~ured it over the p&ane at Gnffi Air Foru lae in New York. They wttt hopins to 1nfttet enouah damatc 10 keep the mahtary 11rcraft from ever unl01d1na •ts deadly ur.,. TONY SAAVEDRA -- P 11111 L 111.H111I ~ was also later convicted of damll'nt m1h11ry property 1n ~nnsylvanaa. For Iler ftlentlne Two other local sites considered were a second Aliso Viejo location and one in the pnvatc community of Locations in Mah bu. Houston and Dallas were also 1n the running for the project. But Allen. a former coach of (Plee.M eee FITWW/ A.2) Heightsl<:tnd use pl~n -p·ut _on hold again S i d 1 -Airport Land Use Commiss1on to u perv so rs e a y consider a nt>wly propoted z.onina . i g ti l' -plan for the pa~toral neighborhoods ZOn n aC On ! Of beneath John Wayne Airpon•s prio-r:,, .--+h h i cipaJ flight path. w l. ... er ear ngs The Planning CommlS.sion ;, tcn- tUivel> sCbciJul to recoos t c land use plan at its Feb. 19 meeting. By JEFF ADLER Of ... 0.-, ....... What was supposed to be the climactic hearing on a land-use plan for Santa Ana Heights came and went quietly Wednetday. When it was over residents found themselves an .J_ familiar position -awaaung the outcome of yet more hearings on the future of their community. The Orange County Board of Supervisors voted 3-0 to continue the matter until Feb. 26 to allow timt> for both the Planning Comm ission and By the time supervisors voted on the postponement, followina close to two hours of testimony from neigh- borhood res1dents, both Supervisors Bruce Nestande and Harriett Wieder had left the heanng to attend other mecungs. For years. supervisors and county officials ha ve been trying to grapple wub lbe anomaly of Santa Ana Heights, a rural enclave surrounded by encroaching urban1z.at1on and (Pleue eee HEIGHTS/ A2) ·More noise tests slated •f airport By JEFF ADLER Of ... 0.-, ....... For the' second tame 10 as man> -weeks, \be wes ovci the Oranac Coast will play host to what many ex.pcct will be welcome relief from the ear-splitting roar of commerctal Jet- liners taking off from John Wavne Airport. . The Orange Counl\ Board of Supervisors agr~d WCdncsday 10 allow Pacific Southwest AJ,rlincs to test its Bri11sh Aerospace BAe-1 46...a 100-passenger alrcraft billed as a new generation "quiet JCI." Beginnan~ at 10 a.m. toda}. the airline and tts new Jet were to begin nv1ng the fi rst in a scnes of SC\ en 01ghts intended to demonstrate the aircraft can not only meet John Wa}ne .\arpon's m1mmum noise &UJdcltne$. but also more tnoacnt guidelines that would allow the airline lO g3JO add1t1onal nights beginning .\pnl I Just last \,l,eclend . .\arC al demon- strated llS ne-"c'>t aaraaft. the-B«ang 737-300. a 140.pas'loenger aircraft that a1rpon officials behe' e was quiet ent>ugh to quahf)' for addauonal "tradeout" naght'i 1n .\pnl .\1rport Manager Mu!T! Cable: said the AirCal 731. '00 probably can take off bent>ath the M9,5-dccabel ~altng and quahf\ for addll1onal nights as (Pleue .ee NOISE/ A2) Bcmpn himselh~nt two years jn pnsonafterhcandh1sbrother. Philip, wett convicted in 1968 of dcstro~ana draft records 1n Maryland. Bcnipn nd he was arrntcd wt January alona witl\ 25 other protC$tCT'S wbo thrtw vials of their bfood at the front door oft New York rnt1n:h l•bOf'I· tory. "Pnsons att &landmark for u an very o~utt or hoptlc tunes." Mid (...._ ... PSAC&/A.2) Sb-,_..:ow aKiille Neff. a kla4_,ar. tew' atllartM:nlclaool la Jlfewport ._c,. ,. .. tM n ............. Oil..., ft.lndlle palatine. The artwork may be a bit•-••. kt t.lle Mntiment le certala to ~ 101Deone•• beart. • • f • .. E1i ~ ~ fin do ~- pr( caa ca u str DI C..()' fi -F F R ") ... I b c c liltlGBTS PUT·ON BOLD AGAIN ••• .,_Al subject to thr nr.Wutnna roar ot commettiat Jttlanen takina Off from nearby John ~ayne Airport. Adoption of a land-uee plan, an imponant component of the braider airpon ellpan11on olan aJracty aJ>- proved by the board, i• an ancmpt b)' ClOUnty ofticla11 not ooly to ICl.uare the area with 11.ate noise reaulataons but alto addreu ever-inaeuina market Pf'HIUret on the area. juJl aouth of ceemina BriAol Sueet. to become more commercial In nature. The postponement wa1 ao~t to allow the .,._nnina and Airport Land Use commissions time to con1ickr a newly proposed "composite" plan for the communjtY. developed at the behest of 8oatd Chairman Thomas Riley, who represents unin· COf])Of'lted Santa Ana Hei&hts. Riley's plan calls for the conven1on of 172 homes in the most noise· aensltive area of Eut Santa Ane Hei&hts. alona Acacia and North Biren streets. to more noise-com- patible office and bu1ine11 park Ylet whale allowina milled reudential aad omce or bu&ineu park &aaes alooa adjacent West Cypress and Soulia Birch 1treet1. . ... The spot or milled-use zonina feeture of the plan would aJlow retidenu to tell their property for commercial development or remain in their homes to e"'oy the equestrian lifestyle that first attracted \hem to the area. Two other plans, one advanced by county planners and uother de- veloped by community rea.identt and recommended by the County Plan- nina Commission, propose different uses and boundaries in areas propoeed ror convenion. As they have at oountleu meetinas in the past, Santa Ana Heiabts residents marched to the microphone to support one plan or 1N1other or beseech superviaon to make a de- cision that finally would aettle the issue. Addra1jna the plan outtintd by ~th.~11M~·~;t;;,~e "~~~ stabbed in the beck by my own J&apervilOf • ., Several other speakers t1id the Riley's plan with O• milled-use zon· ina provisions would tum 1eetion1 of Santa Ana Hei&hts into a slum, with homes situated next-door to office buildinas. Consultant Douala• Wood, who helped deviee the plin recommended by the Plannina Commission, told supervisors Riley's propo$1l was .. analaaous to Solomon cunin• the beby in half and givina both sides nothina." On the other hand, members of the ABCOM community group res~ed to sellina their Santa Ana He1&bu homes, told board memben they opposed the Plannina Commission's recommendation, prefcrrina either Riley's plan or the staff proposal. -T oom .emce walten orl&Ddo Ramires f-Dd hanclaco Pranco paah cart wttla coff~ PEACE PROTEST ST AGED •.• Jl'rom A l Bcmpn, speaking without a miCTo- phone to a smaJI group of peace activists during a pre-protest rCCCJ>- tion Tuesday at the Westin South Coast Plaza hotel. Goina to jail fora cause is a "public gift to a polluted time." he said. With th~ words. the activists from the Orange County Alliance for Sl,\r'V1val and other groups were fortified for what lay ahead: four days of polite protests. some couneous arrests and tons of media attention for their ac tions against a convention of m ilitary officials and defense contractors headquartered this week at the hotel Known as "Wincon '85," the Winter Conventio n on Aerospace and Electronic System s began Wednesday and runs through Fnday. Almost down to the last "ngh1-0n," the protest against the three-day conference has bttn scripted by the alliance. with advance copies going to Costa Mesa police officials and. of course. the media. There would be no surpnscs, almost no spontant'ity, and li ttle of the same rislc-takmg that had made Bemgan a hero am ong peace protesters. Things seemed amiss when alliance leaders held a reception inside the very same hotel that protesters en- couraged peo ple to boycott 1f Jt continued to host rcpresenta11 vcs attending the military defense con- vention. More activists arrested By TONY SAAVEDRA °' ... .,..,,......., Nineteen more peace activists were arrested in Costa Mesa this morning dunng the second attempt in as many days to block buses carrying delegates to a convention of m ilitary officials and weapons manufacturers. This morning's arrests brings to 44 the number of protesters detained in the past two days a fter blocking a driveway at the Westm Sou1h Coast Plaza hotel, where roughly half of the 300 delegates to the "Wincon ·85" confercnc~ arc staying. While many oft he representatives are carpooling to the classified sessions at the Manne Corps Air Stauon. El Toro. about 60 have bttn taking chartered buses 10 the three-day conference. which bqan Wednesday. Police offic1alssa1d the protest this morning was "extremely smooth." The buses were stalled for about 25 minutes, but were on the road by 7:30 a m .• abou1 an ho ur before the conference was to stan . Fourteen o f those arrested this morning were cited and released on their own recognizance. Five chose to remain in Oran~ County Jail ·until they appear in coun. within the next three days. police said. The civil disobedience action this mo rning was to be conducted by a coaht1on of Orange County peace groups. . Twenty-two of the 25 protesters a rrested Wednesday remained in the county Jail. after decltmng to be released. workers to pla n for a morning protest -'tt>day and an atte mpt by protesters on Friday to try and convert delegates inside 1hc hotel. Protest groups had also met with cuy pohce officials as well as con- ference and ho tel sccunty. Although smcerc. this outcry for peace was indeed sla$ed. onl y by a few minutes. by delaying a bus? Bcm~n bristled Tuesday when asked 1f modem-day protests had become sanitized by the scheduling. scnpttng and stag.1ng -lht' d1s- cuss1ons wtth police. making sure that the roles were played with no surpris- es. ---~-~--..- Winter h ea t w a ve cont inuing 8outhtfn C ... fornlan1 OWi t~l mCW9 of UM mld--wtnttr IUINMr thlt puttied the m«cury Into tht rtoord book•. metclng . loe ~ one of the hott•t placea In the nellon the put few daye. The National WMthtr a.vtot •V-Friday wlft N c6tat ~a Htt .. C006tt,_ but not nwcn. The wtndt.,.~ to die down• • hlah preuure tyttm '1Vtf Idaho and northtfn Utah weakene, thtf.IWSMld. A high tempereturt nMr le w .. for.c .. t tor tMtropolltan lot Angeltit Frldty, with 1emperatur• peetclng In the low 80t tfofla the cout •tt.,. IOW9 trom •S to eo. AtonolheOr~Cout, 11 wtll beclurFrtdll)'. Local north to northnlt wind• 15 to 25 mph cMOreaelng tonight. High• Frtdll)' eo to 85. ~Owt tonight 45 to 55. Tempe ~City u 11 l.aV9QoN 10 44 unte lllocti .. 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Newport 0.1 poo ~ 3~ 11 811.0Ule 17 21 ~Clly ,, 45 a.-oawedga 0.1 -~-23 It S1 Pel•T~ 67 3t Sect-.o II 42 &...-8Mcll 0 pOo M 22 Sall Ltke ci:r ,.. 2t ....... 73 61 ..,.~ 1·2 ... a....terld 21 ,. 8M.Nan,P 87 .. ..,. Oieoo 12 M w_...,.,7 ~.()ti 27 It StSteMatle 17 04 a.n , , 9llGleOO 12 13 8Wll dll'ecllon toul!Nell C-d)IH 44 27 e..uie .. :M hn!41ew-a 11 45 ~WO'UI ~ 37 ""~ 13 42 StodltOft 17 ,. 25 17 SCIQll-,, 26 Ceylon o.n-4\, 26 8vr-•i 27 High. tow, Pfeclplt•llon '°' ,, l>Olirt Tldea Dee~ 2t o• Topel!& 39 17 anoino •• & o "' Oelroll 30 20 T-78 47 eienop 70 2t Dulutll ,. ot Tull& 63 30 9iylhe IO .. TOOAY EIPMO .. 31 WMlllnglon 41 24 Catallne n 62 8econd lllgll 1:np.111. u F81rbat*t 0 16 ·27 Wichita ... 27 Long 8Mcill IS .. 5-ICllOw 11·S7p"'-u ,.,00 17 -OS Wllll-e .. ,. SS 22 Monrovle .. 41 '""""' ., 3-4 Monterey . 71 45 ,...., o.-ano~ 25 18 Ml Wllaon .. 41 ~lllgh 113 &_lft 5 7 Gt-.,_ 35 24 Ezten ded ~._,, 13 47 FlrMtow 1'4p.m 01 Hwllord 31 2t o.t1ano " llO 8-ld lllOll •otpm ,. ....... " 14 ''*"'°'inO& .. 4t HonoMi to .. L-ooatal CIOud• at ftlgll1 and P1Mde1141 .. 47 "'" .... l.Oeley .. 6 3t p.m.. ..... *'*°" . , " tnornlnO S.!Utday CIMtinO fkincllty ANoeralcle 13 .. Frld1ty ti 8 3t e m end Mle ~ 91 1:37 ..,., llt)Olll 25 "' llnd lalf Mond%. Muell eOOler d41Y9 SenknwdlnO 12 .. ptn -**eon.Me. 5t 31 Hir:, 1110'11\o l1f IM •~bOut ,.,,,,_ 70 41 M00<1 Mte lodey al 12°45 a.m., rllel ,,.._..... "' 30 5 -_, IOc:&4ly Wlnd'f It)' SMtaMe ea " Frld.9yat4·00e.m and .... ~M 1:14 ....., 17 17 IOw9 moatly :It IO 41 l enta C.W 71J 41 pm RESIDENTS FEAR NEIGHBOR •.• homA l outbursts, was sen ously in1ured 1n the shootout with police by a shotgun blast to the stomach. The police officer said he returned fire after Althoff fired a shotgun at him. The officer, who has never been identified, was struck in the hand by shotgun pellets. Althoff is recovenng from his wound. Paul Buscaino. on~ of Althoff s Orange Avenue neighbors, said he and others want the man kept behind bars. "The guy's always running around with guns. threatenin~ his neigh- bors." Buscamo said. ·He's out of control." Deputy Distnct Attorney Devallis Rutledge said neighbors told him they arc afraid of ATthofT.. , The Nov. 29 incident rcponedly was touched off by an argument betwttn Althoff and neighbor 8111 Gricew1ch. Pohce sa10 AlthoJT smashed out a windowofGricewich's camper and later threatened him with a gun. Gncewich and his wife w,ere among tbe neighbors who met with Judge Franklin. "There 1s concern in 1hc entire n~ghborhood that he not be per· mitted to come back," Gricewich said. "We very worried for our safety." Althofl's wife Clara indicated to Franklin that she would care fo r her husband and monitor his conduc according 10 court officers. Mrs. Althoff could not be reachcc for comment. Althofl's wife was inside the famil home during the Nov. 29 standol with police. Althoff' permitted hi wife to leave the house just minute before shooting broke out. She wa not harmed and police said sh1 apparently was not held apinst he will. At the time of his arrest. AJthof was described by police as a man witl a dcc~de-long history of violence an' public intoxication. Police sai< Althoff' previously had been arrestee in Costa Mesa for assaulting a poliet officer. NOISE TESTS SET AT AIRPORT ••• From Al . long as the plane is flying w1 1h fewer than 100 passengers to such desti- natio ns as San Francisco Cable said he doubted whether A1rCal would be able to meet the stncter guidelines on lonier 01ghts to Ponland or Seattle, which require additional amounts of fuel and in- crease the aircraft 's takeoff weight Results of the AirCal test still have no l been completed, the airport's chief noise aba!~IJlcnt officer. Bill Manin. said latdWcdncsdav. Test flij)tts of the BAe-1 46, which will continue through Feb. 21 , will mirror those flown by the 737-300. The plane must complete seven takeoffs fro m the airpon, two at gross mu1mum weight. and meet noise m1n1mums to qualify for flight oper· aNms at the airport. Under an expansio~ plan adopted by supervisors Jan. 30, the number of daily flights available to commercial atrlines will increase from 41 10 SS flights each day beginning April I. The plan also calls forairhncs usin1 the newer-$t'neration aircraft to be given add1t1onal incentive flights fo1 aircraft flyi ng below the 89.5-<iecibe noise ceiling. If all the flights available fo1 tradcout were used by the airlines, l t of the 55 available flights each da) would be flown by the new aircraft while 39 flights would be reserved foa airlines using older equipment, such as the McDonnell-DouaJas MD-SC now used by most airlines operatina out of John Wayne Airport. FITNESS ACADEMY SET ON COAST ••. F rom Al , Mo reover. it seemed rather odd to be ~nacking 1ns1de a hotel one minute, and protesting outside 11 the next. ~1·11 see you at the protC1t," said one fellow, waving to a fncnd at the buffet table, who was perhaps trying to decide between the olives o r the cherry tomatoes. That became painfully evident when 25 protesters tried to block buses leaving the hotel Wednesday morning for the classified conference sessions at the Manne Corps Air Station. El Toro. 'Tm not wnting the sen pt here, I'm just a guest. But we don't do that back home (in New York)," said Berripn, addin~ "You can't JUSt send people into difficult situations without plan-the Los Angeles Rams. Washington specifically 1oward training O lympic society's current manta for physical nina." Red skins, Chicago Bhtz and Anzona contenders. Harris said. Its aim will fitness, it's like bnnging motherhood Most of the ~ople arrested Wranglers football teams. said be "to help get youth and just about and apple pie to Ora nae County." "Don't go near the Coors. we're boycotting the Coors," instructed alhance co-director Tim Carpenter, pointing to the ice-filled tubs of beer brought ou 1 by hotel workers unaware of tne group's distaste for the brewery's labor practices. Putting down 1he1r cocktail plates and wine glasses. protesters ~n arabbed their candles. walked past the piano bar 10 the tune of "Night and Day" and thro udl the lobby and out onto the streets. W ithin an hour their numbers would swell to a crowd of 1,400 candle-holding acti v1sts. calling for an end to the arms race The sea ofnames was JOined by tf)e floodli&hts of television cameras. and the flashes from newspaper photogra- phen. Reponers were also there on time . ., they wo uld be for a 7 a.m. protest the next morning. The handy-dand y press ad v1sones by the alliance al90 allowed· media Just Call 642-6086 o=' le O...enflMd ~"°"T II ""' <» ""' -'f(All ,,..,., ~ s lO "Ill c.111 belO'f , 0 .., MO 'fO" 0"'1¥ -0-~...i There was no tense confrontation between peace advocates and the armed, stern-looking POlice officers. T here were no reaf expectations among 1hc pro testers that they would actually stop any buses. I n'itead. there was only a word game, w11h officers o rdering protes1crs to m ove or be arrested; protesters choosing 1he latter; and police taking them by the arm and politely escorting them into custody. Three of those arrested were re- leased on their own recognizance. while 22 others opted to remain m1a1I until their coun appearance on charge'i of blocking a public thoroughfare It wa<; a pesky reci tal that proved to be a mosqu110-hke nuisance for the ~overnment, m1htary and defense industry representatives who waited 20 minu1es for police to clear the path. Wednelday were bnefed on booking trustees felt favorably toward a everybody 1n the United States in-The academy is to include a procedures and jailhouse survival by Southern California location. volvcd in fitness." research wing and a leadership in- thc Los Anaeles Catholic Worke r. a A pote nt ial site in Indianapolis had Orange County Supervisor Bruce stitutc for training physical education charity aroup that also spe'Cializes in already been ruled out because of its Nestande Wednesday said he wcl-instructors. said Allen, who hu been civil disobedience. size. Harris said . The academ y re-comes 1he establishment of a fitness working on the project for the past Catherine Morris. co-leader of the quires at least I 00 acres to accommo-center at Aliso Viejo. five years. group. said the domesticated protests date 11s buildings. tracks. tennis The country will focus on O range Preliminary sketches are reported· allow peace act1v1sts to be peacefully couns, soccer fields and bicycle trails. County as the nation's phy11cal ly scheduled to be unveiled April 15 at act!ve. he said. fitness center. he said. "How can you a banquet honoring first lady Nancy "We don't believe in secret stuff. The academy will not be geared be against somethin& like this? With Rcaaan in New York .. It's not a sanitization, it's a ... a .....-------------------------------------------publicit1z.ation," Morris said. In any case. would the new "domestic" protests be as effective as the upnsi ngs and risks that unmasked an unholy war during the 1960s and early '70s'> Were the people arrested Wednes-- da,Y m o rning accomplishing any- tb1na? "I don't know, I don't know." uid Diane Posson, 50. of Long Beach, flanked by hefty Costa Mesa police- men on each side. Had the acti' 1su succeeded in their plan 10 "delay the arms race." even if "I JUSt had to do this fo r m y children and my grandchildren." Wlaat do yoa llke abotl& tile Daily Piiot'? Wu& •o•'& yoa Ukt!? Call lite namber at left and you meHa1e will be recordcod, &ra•acrikd Hd delivered to Ute appropriate editor. ne aame U·laoer auwerte1 Mnlce may be •Id a. record letter• lo lite editor oa aay loptc. CoetrtlHIS.rt a. o•r Lener• col•m• mnt l11elade tlaelr name aa4 telepltoH Hmber for vtrUlcaUoa. No elrcelaUoe cal11, please. Tell •• wllat'• OD yHr mlM. ORAN()E COAST lllily Piii H.L. act.wartz HI Publisher • Clfcutetloft 71•1M2-4333 Clwtfled ~ 71•1M2·1f71 All otlter d ............. M2~1 MAIN Of''tCI llO Wlltlt e.., II eo.t• ,..... CA "441• .aot-ftl),, 1* COtle ..._ CA t~f;ot • ~..,,I IMJ Of•"Ot c-t ~ ~ "'° -tlOt ... MttilftO"!I l'dllllt..i -l• OI .O..I• ... ..rdltr etld ""*' II .,.., di> ""' ,._ .,... CC"'9' .,. ., • Oft Cot' O!Nf• •O • 111 _.., ffllll CGllJ' -.. ......,.., Frenk Zlnl Managing EdltOf K•en WlttrMr Advettltlng Director -· -1911y .,. ~ .. !ht~" -' '* ~al CC!Oy<lfii'fl - Clr0t.11i.._ T1l1ph•n• ,..,,.. c;....v~ ··-...... I L.egwlll 119"' --- AOMfMr1 CtMWctwnan Controller RolMrt L. Cantretl Production Manager .. Donald L. WHll•m• Clrculallon Manager VOL. 71, NO.'MI ,-' -------\.-- I ' r r • Irvine aenlors set for Valentine f ete . A ~1al-cntenainment niaht will be held for Irvine -MA&Or c hzent F~y cvcn1n1 at the lrvane senior Ct'nter, 3 Sandbura W~y. 1n cclebra11on of Valentine's Day. ~c~vent lll(heduled from 7 to IOp.m.a11costof$4 and will include senior citizen performers and poets. Red and white dress Li recommended and fun her information is available 11 660-3889. ' Dane~ troupe aadJtlonlJJ6 Audnlons for the Danse Arts Theater' a annual sprina perf~nnan~. will be held Friday and Saturday at the Ml~11~n V1e10 School o( Dance, 23728 Via Fabricaote Butldin. 0 . ' ~n1or Division Ballet (aaes 13 and over) tryout• will be fnda~ fro~~:¥> to 8:30 p.m. and Saturday from 2 to 3 p.m. Senior D1v1s1on Jazz (also 13 and over) arc Saturday from 3 to 4 p.m .. while Junior Division Ballet (8 to 12) arc ~turday. from 4 to S p.m. C'all 768-9683 for additional 1nforma11on. ,.reach Helety meet. Friday The Allian~ FrancaJSC of Orange County will present M. Georges Joum, official dcleg.atc of the Paris branch. Fnday at ~ p.m. m the Bridge Hall of the Laguna Beach Con1ft13t1onal Church. 340 St. Ann's Drive, Laauna Beach. Joum, a journalist and amateur astronomer will speak on "Space, Science and P~try." The cost is SJ for guests and SI for st udents under 2 S. hyclJoloD lecture at coJJe1e . M~n·s Lives, Men's Souls" is the topic of a lecture and d1scuss1on-to be presented Friday by Dr. Pan C'oukoulis and Roacr Neyman al Chapman College in Oranae. The proaram .. sponsored by the C.G. Jung Club of Oranac County. 1s ~hcdulcd for 7:30 p.m. in the psycholotty building of the college. Further information may be obtained by calling the club at 979-6234. They're selling packages of1Qv:e By JOYCE SCllEUll·BODLOVJCH • .,...,.,u:eu 3 •1 1 Louise ptcked up a &m&IJ bc»I, wrapped 1n pink4nd· aftd IW1Cld ~bout ... Ed Lo . red hearted Valentine paper. On a rosy l*Chment card So fat me uio Ml Md a ~ine 9l)CMI -ii w • J\I u11e dtd the 1mposs1ble-she PICkaaed love. thll accompanya each box, a note explains the sift '• profhab6e .:_ ume with IMif lov~ pfl It• ~unds absurd. ~ut ahe did. meanana. .. Onrda '' De9wrouaid ... ldattMfiael.ry..._, Ek ch1~11ns an an upstairs bedroom in her Huntmaton "/ ~t you ~bmk 1h11 "°" ,, rmpty ... 11'1 full of Love. n:d sksrt 1~ lhots aftd catried 1 rillll..t ..... bo • ocdme.~uhrrou~dcd by~undredsof~ahllywrapped It 11 • very 11FWJ boJC bea111e IN~ i1n '1 OM W.,e ovctf\ow1n1 with tM BO.a of Love iaM> a ...wll,1 "~ t1 Wlt vaneaated nbbons, Louise and her I~ tnoulh 10 bold 11/ the Love I have to IJYt ... " 1t0tt. , • a *>C1ate1., LaDo!ln• DeBarros and Art Aanqan, dis-Tbe empty box with the 1e1ttimental vc:nt has bun ""Thttt I was surrounded by l'UladiM ml' lillftl culled ~ear creation that 1ells for S2. known to mol ten more than on eye • try1na to intttttt the aalcsmu in our ida. He -..,..._ ·~1111.~n empty boduU oflove,'' Lo~ise. S7, N!d ~th • ''A (riet'd or mine in Idaho iuaaesUld the idea," 'if you can tcU that to my boll., ¥OU ca11 .a~·"' 1 smile. When they a1k u~ at the JI~ •h<?ps 1f 1t .. 1s Lou1secxpl11n~. "then LaDonnaruommended~1ell it Bo~es ofLovueem io Melve m.iud 1 nu •• empty ... we say no. be<.lause It as overllow1ng w1t_h love. around Valcnllne's Day. So ... ft stopped everythinae11e, "Art triedtointetfttaMlellld1.ill aaiftl_lw)p," ..... 11 d, chuctlina at the mem~. • he kept ~ M:r around \k store aayina 'you1J love i .yCMt"I AoW ii.' Finally the anno~cd lady turned 10 huu Md Mid.. •J ._., want any love ... r don't feel lake love tod9y!'" They bave tried to tel lbe bous lk>dked ill Ille holpital pft tbopt~ *1e, UVC beiee 9MK'C mW Undawnled, ver, die ~ oJC ·de aroup fed ti~ bu pal lnOl"lfe bOoller '-... h mM IO have a Box o( Love llituna at bnack. .. After au, .. DtBlnoudded witb. pi&, ....... ia. hcllinl medicine." " emember when An wu llYina to leU to111e aldlc boxes at a boutique," Louitc Myt u the recollectioe ..... peels o(laupter from both women. "°TbcR wu a • ;.·,· a New Yotter 11andana c1otc by Ii~ to An"•...._ Finally,...._ she turned to him and mes.•;. New \'en. you know, we ttt tometbina lo our bmetr .. AlthouJh the idea does bavca cenain oddicy ._.it. the people involved are noc wild~ eccmtnct; ID ~ contrary, they are saccnsful pro(tWoe•le. "I hlveamastct'a in peycholQIY ud I am ac.-'rhn counsdor~l&lwnain bi<J.fecdbeck." LoWaellid. l lllo have an .. ,napiratioOaJ pmt.ina card~ ta.a ._ mushroomed in the lut year. My lolo it "Mad eo Hold,' and I write the poetry •Iona witb ~Mack. I •Do-i Md An." - DeBarros is an accomplished comm'10ily pMybouee performer. Aanapn. a retiTcd emt.lmer, st dleir &op , salesman and motivator for the businca. ' The Box of Love bas brouaht to much joy to lbe trio. they plan to market the aiftt throuabout the )at. "Afttr aJI," Louise sa.id with her utual merrimad.. .. love doesn't spoil,orao out o(stylie, and. .• you can~ 11ve it away tf you don't ltke it." Opera LN1De recraltlng _____ -_A'""''rccruitmcnt TUncncon-for the Opera League. Opera ac1 1c s volunteer acrn, wlll be held Fnday at the El Niaucl Country Club in Laguna Niguel. League members raise funds to support the opera. Art Ptan-.an. Edna LoalH and LaDonna DeBarroe and their bose. of 1~. ~ Boxes of Love can be purchued •I H lltllilftpoe ~h's Turtl~ J}ov~ Store •od lMi/m ~ OI rmy ~ ooCJl}ir throu,b Elina Louise, l 97'S CoUr1Ux Lane, Huntilllfon &ach. 92648. Membership information and luncheon reservations arc available through Mavis Orton. 496-2940. Supervisors seek reaction LBSchoolofJ\tt to proposed sffioking law !!2.'!:nollegeofart lbttloaal llv1ag •or.t•IJop .et Staying sane whale the rest of the world goes crazy is the topic of an all-day workshop Friday in 1he Atlantis Lounge of the Campus Village Community Center at UC' Irvine. By JEFF ADLER .. Ottlle ..... "9tltlll voted apinst the action. explaining she believed a lcsHtringcnt, itafT- rccommendcd draft of the ordinance should be circulated. She said super- visors still would be empowered 10 toughen 1he measure dunna the May pubhc hearing. r . .............. . hospnals or other health care mstatu-New atudente looking for 11'9 ~ -. Dr. Albert Ellis will present the workshop on rational living from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Th~ fee is $55, and additional information is available a1 856-~4 l 4. The Orange County Board of Supervisors voted 4-1 Wednesday to solicit public comment on a tough, new smoking ordinance that would regulate smoking in all public bu1ld- 1ngs. pnvate workplaces and res- taurants an unincorporated Orange County. t1ons. School of Ar1 wHI find n.-no more. In a letter to board members No, the 23-yw-oed pall 111:1awldll~ ICIM!nt seeking suppon for the proposed h • of ... ...a. ordinanc~. Ncstande said studies Mn t gone out uv.n111. lt'1ce.19d .. ,__ l"lltle. party .et In Irvine A 'lostalgia party featunng dress and music of the 1950s will be held Fndar, at the pansh hall ofS1. Elizabeth Ann Seton Church, 9 H1llg.atc in Irvine. Admission as $4 and those under 12 will be admitted free~ The hall is located at the comer of Campus and Turtle Rock Drives. and more information as available from Mura Lepera at SS I~ 178 or Susan Sulla van at. 786-5620. The proposed ordinance. authored by Supervisor Bruce Nestandc, would require pubhc officials, employers and restaurant owners to provide no- smokm& areas for workers or patrons have determined that employees who TM echoot'I boerd of •ectota,....... Mu flC ~~~~:m~0:atn:m~l~y;r~Y~~~ ~~~~ ~~~~~U.C=~ =::, duct1v1ty as lost an the "lightma-up truat ... niual," a~n1eesim rates arc 33-4S The new Mme Md .._ .. not .. .,. el percent higher for smokers. and tome frtvotow wtWft. ._. Ma .. Tums, Cl DRiii health care cosu arc higher. edrntnietrattve 1nl11mJt. ~ .. MWll tD "Based on th~ studies. 1f one--bobemore.,.,...,,....ctt 1n-----founh of the county's 10.705 full-_,... 491.--·--fut\ri. time employees smoke. the cost to Come September, the 8rt ci:il119 wa Clllllr a and would arant non-smoking cm-Cllarf ty froap plan• dbuJer ployces the nght to maintam a The annual board recognition dinner for members of smoke-free work envaronmenl. Supervisor Ralph Clark in support- ing the action noted that fully 72 percent ·or I 0,000 of his constituents surveyed indicated support for tougher smokfog rcgulattons. "The public mood today fa vors strenathcn- in& the ordinance." said Clark. "Supervisor Ncstandc's proposal is a starting point." Bw Clark said he would hkc to find out during the neltl several months whether' it is economically feasible 10 require smaJI businesses or em- ployers to comply with the measure. taxpayers of permitting smoking on progrwn for atudenta ....... to..n a bldl *• the 1ob could be as b1ah as $12.3 ofllwm1adlllr-.TUIW,~~==~==: milhon each year," he said. "Millions certtftclltll of Olfllflll ait'.ii .. --= -··~ ~~~:2-ycr dollars arc going up in pttntmektng. phologrllPflY, lltl ... Mtdtii Md tf'9 Last wcek, 1hec1tyoflaguna Beach fine wta. · the Board of Help for Brain Injured Children wall be held Board members. w11h. the excep- Friday evenin& an the dining room of the Brea Cultural t1on ot Superv1so~ Hamett Wieder. Ce nter. / voted to seek public comment on the Dinner will be served at 7:30 p.m. following a 6:30 proposal a~d scheduled a May 2 1 social hour. w11h a program featuring author Jeff Len burg publ~c heanng on the ordman.~c. to be presented af\crward. Tickets arc S 15. Wieder. saying she was a .stron_g advocate of non-smokers' nghts," And Supervisor Roger Stanton suS&ested that the ordinance might be pnoriuzcd to include early com- pliance in certain'workplaces. such as tentatively approved a similar smok-The oerttflca• CllP tfWw ,_w of lllUdy. A ma ordinance designed ro ~ulate bllChek>r'a degrw ~ blr. c1garcllc. cigar and pipe smoking m ~-~ ednllnl11 llr»• ti Ill... ., that Clty. fine llrta ~ • .... .,. mar. ' Penonalltle. to be •tudled atudenta. Tums._... . - About 350 atuder* .nand ct11111 w:ft quarter, 8M Nkt. Once tM..,.. prOlfMt 11 In ptece, "we feel we'll be Abee to,.._ .... to IOO ... Author and psychologist Dr. David Kcirsey wall speak on "Understanding Your Personality Type" Saturday at a Women's Opportunities Center workshop at UC Irvine. OC to hire Irvine tax case counsel By JEFF ADLER OfllleO.-, .......... assessor together with County Coun- sel Adnan Ku yper report pnor to June I. I 985. "10 what significance the private counsel . has been employed." r developer owns. The parcels were reassessed when 1he firm was sold 10 current Irvine Co Chairman Donald Bren. CMnging the moniker from .. .,....., to ··oo1ege·· may mao end conMlon on .. pert of protpeettve ltudentl wtM) '°""""''-......... tor a private high achool, Turner Mid. •"'The rww ,..,. The program will be held from 9 a.m. to I p.m. in Room 220 of UCJ's Social Science Tower. with personality testing available at 8:30. The fee is S20 and registration information 1s available ar 856-7 I 31 . The Orange Co unty Board of Supervisors agreed Wednesday that S2SO.OOO worth of pre vention 1s far preferable to a $32 m1ll1on cure. Con1end1ng tha11hc sale of1hc firm con)tatuted a change m ownership of 1hc properties. tht' co unt) reassessed the property to rcnect current market value. lmmedlatety ldentlftee us • 1 pa.t ncond• t IChool.'' Thunday,Feb.14 Supervisors authorized County Assessor Brad Jacobs to hare a pnvate law firm to represent the county against the lrvint' Co.'schallengc to a property Lax reassessment completed when the firm was sold m 1983. The lrv1n(CO .. the.' county's largest landowner and taxpayer. has ap-pealed a propert) 1ax reassessment that saw the firm's property taxes climb from Sl 7.8 malhon an 1983·84 to more than $51 m1ll1on this year. Close to S32 milli on an disputed taxes 1s being questioned Under Propos111on 13, a property's assessed value is hm11ed 10 a mu1- mum 2 percent increase each year Property can onl) be rcasses~d tom full market valut' ~hen 11 1s so ld or rransferred Truatlil beg.in a five-~ fund.nlliln9 "'1Dit dut1ng the 1~ IChoot,.. to,...."'°'~ n11ded to expend the~. ~hope to purcNM et>out en ecre of ~ ..,.... .. to the c<*ge at 2222 ~ ~ Aoed Md conetruct four mote ttudlo9. Turner lllld. In October 198<*, trul1MI hired Pllbkl68 CaktWeet u dtrector to c.ry out .,_. rww. wnbftk>u• goaa.. • 7 p.m .. ft~ .. Coasolldated Water Dl1trkt board, 1965 Placentia Ave .. Costa Mesa. But supervisors. an agreeing 10 hire outside counsel to prepare and pres- ent tht' county's case, directed 1hat the The challenge cen ters on more than 2.018 ind1 v1dual pro~rty parcels the Four shOp workers hurt in waterbed factory blast A Santa Ana waterbcd factory has been ordered to halt operations (ollowina a mad-af\cmoon explosion Wednesday that criucalJy inJured four woodshop workers. The explosion at Pac1fk Trend Co .• off Warner A venue near Harbor Boulevard, was blamed on sawdust that ijnitcd, said Santa Ana Deputy Chief Bill Reedy. The source of ianltfon i1 not known. Reedy said the waterbed company would have to clean up ill plant before the fire dcptrtment lifts the order that halted work. "Just from what I saw it's obvious there's sawdust that has to be cleaned up." said Reedy. "There may be other v1olat1ons. too. but we won·t know for sure until we conduct an mspccuon today.'' Reedy confirmed that the firm wa~ recently cited with a "notice of hazards" but he did not know wh y the company was cited or whether it had complied with the notice. He said work places normally arc Jiven 14 days to COrTCCt a hazard. Reedy said he didn't know if the "arace period" had expired. The injured workers, with bums covcrin& 40 to 80 percent of their bodies. were 1dent1fied as Alfonso Martinez. 20: Tony Martinez. JO: Flav10 Alvare~. 27. and Abel Aranda. 2S. Alvarc1 and Aranda were 1n fair condition today at UCI Medical Center Burn Ward while the other two men's cond1t1ons remained cntt- cal. A fifth worker was treated and released from the county medical center. Damaac to Pacific Trend was held to only $2.000. Reedy said. 380SL. parked at the Hunt1ng0ton Beach Inn. 2111 2 Pacific C oas1 H1fhway. The damagt' was e'lt1 mal<'d at 1.000 • • • Somt'onc pnC'd open the ~unroof 10 buralamc a ara) 1981 D:mun JIU parkt'd Wednesday on thC' 7700 bloclr. of Whatt"watcr. The lo~\ included model airplane parts ~orth S l SOO Coeta Ille.a Tools worth $224 Y.C~ reported stolen from an unlocked pragC' m tht' SOO block of Bernard ireet wmctamr hetwcen Jan. I and Feb I • • • k1 equipment worth SSSO wu reponed stolen from 1hc ~ck of a pickup truck parked in an aJ)3rtmcnt complex at 126 E. 18th t ~mctlmt' bet-wttn 7 pm. Fnday 3nd 8 30 a.m. Saturday. The cqu1pmcn1 had been lctl m the truck by mistake. • • • Spoked hubcaps valued at $232 were stolen from the dn ver' ~ sadt' of a car parked at 3333 Hyland Ave w mct1mc between 7 ~O a m and I I 50 a m WcJnesda) • • • Health foods and shampoo ' .. lut'd al $800. were reported stokn trom lht' Count!) lorc, 177 5 Nt'wport Blvd somet1mt' bet~~n 8 pm Tut'~&) and 8· 30 pm. WC'dnesda~ En1n ~as apparent!~ madt' b~ P""'" the loc k bar on 1he rear door Newport Beach A color tclcv1s1on set and aboul Sl.SOO v.onh of 1e~cll"} v.crC' st olen from a rcliadenct on the 400 bhx k of Seaward Pohct said thr bur"a" ~ Lapnalleacb was stolen from a South Coast Hiahway bu1ldina. the vicum told police Wednetday momina. rrcovered. howt"vcr. when police arttsted a male JUVt'nalc in conncc: tion with the buralary Officers rr- lcucd the youth to his parents Bandits bumbled first tr}'? PoUce responded to repons of a man with a fla1hlifht knockinaon the door of a Bluebtrd Can~on home ednctday niatu. Officers re· spondJna to the call, however. de· wmlncd thll the au PtCted prowler wras actually a man deli verina pizza. • • • Complaints of a prowler brouaht ~lice out to a Catalina trttt home ~cdnt1day n11hl. but the man who was reportedly look1n1 into the home lhrouah a window wa not found. • • • A man left an OCcan Avenue store Wed.nesct.y evenina with out PIYlfll for a pair of IOCU and boott toSClher ~ SSO, police said • • • A wa1hin1 machine valued 11t S 00 • • • People shootina fittwork1 Wednc • dJly njl)'\t at C-raccnt Bay l>olnt we~ told by police officers to stop. They comphed. • • • Police were unable to locate the whereabouts o( an Aster U-ett prowler who residents said wa in the nciaJtborhood tarty Wednesday momina. Hud..-.a.c• Enteri"I throut)I 1 be(k door, a buralar stolt a SI SO ponable lkf'CO wtanttday from. home on the 6.-oo block of Sundance The tcrtO *U • • • A woman reponed Wedncsda> cven1n1 that he saw four tttn ... at boys break a window rat Clea Elementary hool,.6311 brchwood Onvc. The damqc·wa e t1maltd at S80. • • • A man wa anntcd Thufiday on su p1c1onof hoph1l1rl1.1ttheSav-On Oruas store.. 7S42 l:du11t'r A"c. Rtc0"crtd .-crt co mctici and v1t· amins -..onh s~. • • • woman rcponcd Wcdnctday that tomcc>ne dented the roof al)d hood of her blue 1914 McfU'dc1 Two maucd men who stoic as much H SI million m aems from a Mt 1 n V1e,o J~ler latt last wn-k may be the ~me duo wbo bumbled a robber) ti')' at a Ncwpon C't'nt« Jewelry 'tore C'hnstma Evt, New- pon Beach pohC'C said Pol~ \aid the method o( optt1t1on and the de nptton of tht' robbers matcha T-.o men wcanna dark mnks and alovn O\iCTPQWCrtd the owncn of f pck Jewelry Inc 1n Ma "on VieJO before busln ttou"' la t Fnday · momina.. accord&r\I \O Ora Coun· ty hcnrr deP\ntn lvin 1pek aald tbe robbtn fon.~ him lo open the to"·' ~and then bound and pged him and hi\ "'lft' lpek said one of1he mt'n al.a h11 ham on tht" head wuh tht hun of 4 handaun Lt Dick 0 1\0n uad the tuct loc; 1n the robhn) \1111 ha.c; not bcocn calcu· lated e"'pon polt<"t' 1d tht' cnmt as s1m11at to an abonC'd robbl'f) t'arl}' Clm lmH hut Moboco. I cwport Center ,teY>ck" Acrord1n1 to rtpon the robbef) wa foiled "hen a pohce officer amvcd 1f\er tht crooks tnpped a 1ltnt alarm The bandit e pcJ tmp1y-handC'd and potitt frttd an tmplo)tt who had been bolfnd and b" lhc 1ntt"\ldcn gaant'd <"ntf) by 01clung a lock ' . . Three pottC'd Cypress trees worth SbOO ~ere stolen from an apartment front porch on tht' 700 block of .\lderwood • • • \lcarh S8.000 wonh ofjt'wclry was s1okn frnm an apartment on the 700 · block of South &~front Pohcc said 1htapanmen1 had ~n let\ unlocked. ••• \IC'rt'O uni t\ wt"rt' stolen from a 11184 fo> ota ( t"ha and a 1983 To,ota upra parked at 4500 \.1aL.\nhur 81\d Tht' total lo wu put al S 7CX) T hree mote ls h it in two days \ lonr aunman who held up a Newport Bea h motel Wcdnoday night may be the $Ame bandit who bat two ( O$tl Mna motels the nipt • brforc. Pohcr rcnorted today. . The 1'\)hbrr walked into the Chan- nel Inn. bOJO West Coast Hiabway, at about II 4S pm and Lnqu1rcd atio-at a room. cwpon Bea h police Mid. Wh1k the ntaht manaatt wu prep.,-. 1n& PIE)('t"t.'Ork. the blnd1t pWaed a '"" Pohec wd the man t'tCaPed 1a a dark '-Chl(k ..-1tb about SlOO iii Qlh, The 1unman •-a dcscnbed u ._, .. and 1n h1 late 2 ._ man match1n1 that ~ held up the koedwa)' 'ID'!L_ 16'0 upcnor .. "e and the Don \IWU- Motcl 2100 Newpon 9h4 .. T~ C'lcn1n acconhnt to COl&I Mm pohec. 1t1n18'r11) '*Ith 1670. :-J • , .. -~-- ' - M••0r-. Coelt DAILY PILOT/Thurtdey, February 14, 1N5 Irvinescho01drug raidnets1~teens Ami -aeebbud ethtke llJ LllA llAllONEY Bowmin said. One other man wu dNp. Sil-Loo Jones 1&Jd. She also Pohc:e u1d the: most recent 09<r-Y 6 ' l l1 °'............. already in custody 00 a parole alletedly bo\llht soo doses of LSD al Ilion Wll in rcsponte to _ptrenta.1 lor a ne~ SID........ m .. e Irvine police Wcdnctday swept 16 violation and another is still beina SS apiece from the Hwitinaton Beach concerns followin1 the Chemical I. 1 .,,,. a.& 11-a.Ueecd dnaa dealers out of the city's aouabt this momin" \ mae, be said. People drua awareness Pf'OIJ'lms lUali ICboofi f0Uowi04 a four.month All are suspected of felony dt\11 At a pl'e$$ conference Wednetda)', aired in 1984. The reterve officer, BJ Ge At..ella.4 Pnt1 undetc:over in~tiphon. sales. police officials di1played the LSD. who wu not identified, i1 the first to Police ofticers went knock.in& on Those arrested allqedly told oo-called Green Acom, aod IOS bindles come alona who could pass fora biab W ASHINOTON -The Anny wantlto double its raearch ~Ill on 1 doors in 1everal Irvine neigh· cainc, marijuana. amphetamines, of cocaine seized f'rom a Santa Ana school student, police uid. new conventional missile system which if developed, could work uenectJvel) borhoodl before classes started and LSD to studenu from Irvine, home Jan. 31. About one-quaner Police concluded that campus drua qain11 enemy tank columns or troops u a 1mall nuclear bomb. Aod accordin, Wednaday momina, arrcstlna 13 University and Woodbri~ hiah aram apiece; the bind.In. which sell problemsarc not as severe as parenls to testimony last week before tbe House Armed Services Committee, the Ann) tee1H1Crs. The~ left the tecn.qers' schools, police said. for S2S each are a recent pacbajna may think. Only five of 38 drua buys now thinks it miaht be able to beain buildina such a ••aman" miuile •Ytten' pateD\I a letter from the police chief The alleaed drua dealen were technique to make oocaine more took place on campus. Lt. Al Muir within the next four or five yean. The weapons development prosram, knowl and directions to J.uvenile Hall, Sat. routed by a ZI ·year-old reserve officer affordable, Jones said. · said. as the Joint Tactical Missile Sy1tem, has been under way for several yean. But Diet Bowman aaid, masqucradin1au h~ school junior. Other druas purchased by the "No one is hawkina druas in the the Arm)'. planato accelerate research by increa1ina the pr<>1Rm'1 budeet ftorr A 20-year-old junior colleae stur The female officer infiltrated drua undercover officer include 130 ad-quad area " he said. $76.4 million this year to SI S4.8 million in 1986.The key t~ ,the new ayscem dent was &nested at bis home in networks at two of the schools and ditional doses of LSD, SO But although school officials are would be a missile that could~ dozens ofamall submuruuon1 -or mini· Huntinaton Beach on Tuesday night, purchase<J smaU amounts of various amphetamine tablets •. ~me cocaine kccpi~a drug abuse under control on bombs -each equipped with its own miniature auidance and tarsetina and two ounces of muu~. he said. campus, illegal drugs -includin1 the system. The undercover opentton was popular 1960s hallucinogen LSD -co~ductcd.withtbecoo~rat~onofthe are Radily.available to those who al~ .. #lllft&-.1.m bJ nnnol• Irvine Unifitd School Oistnct. f want them. be aaid. asi ,,,,. ... ._~ Crazing the Dody, accenting the curves ... Nipon Coature interprets spring's newest body-conscious silhouette in a most appealing way. The slim black skirt., the fitted white jacket rushed with black lightning. In cotton pique for sizes 4 to 14; '410: In Designer Suit Collections. Your feet need a doctor of their own! Phone for import.an~ information and an ethical referral. Podiatric physicians and " I. Running 2. Diabetes 3. Athlete's f()()( 4.Bunions surgeons-podiatrists-/ have taped unportant / me~ for you ,,, Phone and ~ 5. Corns/calluses 6. Health and aging 7. Ingrown toenails r:t.11~ 8. Moleil 9. Plantar wart the tape by numbet 10. Children's feet 11. Hammertoes 12. 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Or you celebrate thts week\ spe· provide you with the same level c1al event or occasion Meet of seryKe our attractively attired chauf· Go ahead Steal some style feurs EnJOY our tastefully today There's no reason to wait appointed limousines. com· for frtday or Saturday After plete with fully stocked wet all. a celebration can happen bars And experience the any day of the week For impeccable ~rv1Ce you·~ A, reservations or information. naturally expect from ex.:~ call (714) 5581411 O<'~ ELMWOOD PARK, 111. -Authorities arc tryina to determine lf tht slaying of a reputed mobster outside a restaurant is part of a mob. war that mA) also have claimed two other lives. Charles "Chuckie" En&lish. 70, onct believed the boss of the gambling,j ukebox and 0th.er ra~ket.s on Chicqo•1 West Side, was shot once between the eyes and several limes an the body Wednctda) in this western Cttlcaao suburb, said Capt. Frank Braun of the Cook Coullt) sheriffs police. The shooting was the third p~nd .. tyle slar.ina i~ th( C hicago area in the past two months and the second in a week. Polioc llld th( other two men k:llled recently were active in gambling rackets. Death mine •tlll burning PRICE, Utah -It will take months to reach 27 mincn killed and entombed by a fire Dec. 19, officials said after special teams re-ent~red the ltill· burning Wilberg mine and beg.an a two-mile Journey to the bodies. Wearln1 oxygen tanks, the teams made "very encouraging" progress Wednesday in exploring the first 500 feet of the mine, said Bob Henrie, spokesman for the Emery Mining Corp. Shooting •pree clalm• loar COLBY, Kan. -Three young men and a woman apparently held up a roadside restaurant. shot the manager to death and killed two boatqcs "exccution.-style" in a crime S{>rCC that coded wbe.a one of the suspecu died in a shootout wt th police, a shenff said today. An undenberiff, a grain elevato1 operator and two of the suspects also were wounded in the ~unt) rampage in rural northwest Kansas on Wednesday, said Thomas Count) Sheriff Tom Jones. Actiea la.e. blgjary award -~;;----- BOSTON -A lawyer for Vanessa Rcd&ravc says it's likely the actreas will appeal a judge's decision to throwout theSJOO,OOOjuryaward she won inuuit against the Boston Symphony Orchestra after it canceled her pcrformanct in a 1982 concert series. U.S. District Coun Judge Robert Keeton also upheld on Wednesday the jury's finding that Miss Redgrave's civil rights had not been violated when she was fired, and said the orchestra bad not canceled her appearance because of her strong support of the Palestine Liberation Organization. Instead, K.ccton said that the orchestra must pay Miss Rec:tarave only $27,500 for breach of contract. Another 'rock hoa.e' rocked LOS ANGELES -Police used their new armored car bancrina ram for a second time to smash throuab the waJI of an alleged "rock house" where they seized several grams of cocaine and anested three tecn..qers. Special WeaPons and Tactics team members surrounded abc stucco house on the city'1 aouth side at about 6:30 p.m. Wednesday. After using a bullhorn to demand entry, police used the battering ram mounted on the armored car to bash a bole through the rear wall of the building. Sgt. David Gunning said. Watte Tower accord near LOS ANGELES -An aareement may be near to form a non-profit corporation to preserve the landmark Watts Towers, but the City Council apparently will have a hard time accepting the settlement. Carlyle Hall, an attorney with the Center for Law in the Public Interest, said the Clty, the ttate and a citizens committcc,.jlre near agreement on terms to create a non-profit corporation to raise enough cash to maintain the towers and improve the surrounding area. Bela•ld death •a•pect pleat& bJnoceat LOS ANGELES-Canadian roclc singer Cathy Evelyn Smith has pleaded innocent to murder and dru& charges in the death of comedian John ltelu1bi and was ordered back to court next month for a preliminary hcarlq. In entering the plea Wednesday, Smith reneged on an involuntary manslaujht.er pica bargain she had agreed to last month before her extradition from Canada. Smith's attorney, Howard Weitzman, said he would ask the court to delay the scheduled March 12 preliminary hearing because he was havina trouble serving subpoenas on unidentified ocws reportcn to testify. Cooper jury •tUl deUberadZJ6 South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bristol Street Costa Mesa SAN DIEGO -A third day of jury deliberations was completed io the Kevin Cooper murder trial without a verdict in the case, which involves a 1983 •11 ..... •J.of.o .. , ., "·d' • .., '" ~· .cid, quadruple homicide in Chino Hills. During Wectnesdat s deliberations, ...... , ..... •r: • 1, •• , ... 1 •• ·•' ~ ,, defenseauomcysandprosecutorsmetincloscdsessionfor l h bountodiscuu 1164 E Fruit, Santa Ana. CA (714) 558 1411 --------------------------1..!~=======================:=!.J a question from jurors. Prosecutor John Kochis and defense attorney O.vid Negus were called to the courthouse in the afternoon and Jiven a two-pqe letter from the jury. ,. Right now you pay less for our co rdless. AT&T is taking 15o/o off one of our best cordless phones- Nomad " 4000. It's got all the features you're looking for: a 1000-1500 foot range~ a security system, im- proved sound quality. 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Mtee6onVJeto 24000 Alicia Parkway SP 34 .... ---- I • Prof uamlna EJn•tebJ braln BERKELEY -An anatomy professor who spent the last six months cutting up I nd studying Albert Emstein's brain says the experience was "overwhclminJ." "There I was, lookina at the brain that came up with the theory of relauvity;• uid Marian Diamond of the Univenity of California. Diamond thinks she knows why Einstein was so smart, but she's not sure. He had 7 3 percent more support cells than the averaae person. Support cells aupply nourishment and do the more routine chores of running a brain. The neurons in the brain do the thinking. · W OR LD Vlei. overma rebel ba.e K.HAO SARAPEE. Thai.land -Vietnamese troops, in their fiercqt offensive this year, toppled one major Communist Khmer Rouse bue and seized part of another today in the hms of western Cambodi~Jhai milliary officers said. Under a heavy umbrella of artillery tire, 13 uuu Vietnamne troops pushed from the aouth and cast in a three-proOaed attack that tent hundreds of Khmer Rouse aucrrillas retreatina to Thailand, the ofticen Mid. Solidarity memben detabJed WARSA w, Poland -Polish authorities u.id today aeven P")ml~nt Solidaritr activists were detained in a police raid for .. participatlf\I in an ilJcpl meeti°'' but one official said be believed they would not be fonnally anwt.ed. Solidarity leader Lech Wale~ who wa1 act ftee immediately after police fbfwd their way Into a mectina in Gdansk on Wednesday, was attemptina to pie the activists release and was unavailable for comment. his wife, O.nuta, taJd. Iraq deid• b.JttfJJ6 JJOe plaa.t BAOHDAD, IRAQ -lraq denied today that ill fitbk'r planet "8d rocketed an Iranian nudearPQ.werplant undercon1tNCtion in the PmianOWf port of Bu1hehr. An unidentifkd (f1Qi miliitry spokesman wu qUOfed by tbe state newi qcncy .. aayina the cba,.e amounted to "mere alletatioM" by iu enemy, Iran. There wu no daoter of nuclear e~plolion. said a apotamu for the atomic eneflY qeoq-. Shea pule. Bllopal ft#ddul8 BHOPAL, India -Mo~ than S0,000 midefttt a.round the Ullion Carbide plant 111 Bhopal fled tbdr bomCI ln pu1c, milta.kina a railway._• a wamina of anothtt Polton .. leek. police Mid today. The feai..uicteG people ran out into the 1trect1 Wednelday nisht and thron,ed pol_i~c.don• and the railway ...non for lhrher. The llftft wu bJown bymtway aauritiel to alert their ... ,,. to IO to a nearby town wheTe a train wa1 held up beca-of cr\tin' troubie. police aid. • • } , SAN DIEOO(AP)-EJevenjurors who YOud IO c:oaVla Mayw Rota Hedlecock of coospiracy and perjury aaid \bey wen ftulU'ated and anttted by the panel's tone holdout, wbOte 1tubbomnet1 fon:ed a mistrial. .. I .. ve up three month• of my Ii~" •id JUIOf' Susan Lancaster, a ICbOOI teacher. "I Id\ my kids with 1 aubttitutc teaeber Ill that time, and my own children were in day care. Yeti it't very fnatlntina. •• She wu one of the ~ority who said the evidence apinst the 38-year- old mayor was overwhelmina. "He wu paihy u lin," Lancaster said after San Di~ County Superior Court Judie William Todd declared the mmrial taie Wednttday. Hedtecoclc was chltled wiu OM count Of consptraq an4 12 counts of perjury for aJkledJy tehemin• with political *ken to funnel dlcpl contributions into his l 983 campeisn for office. A conviction on any of the counts would have brouaht H~k's 1uioma1k ouater as ceremonial head of the nation's eiahth-~t city. The focus of thcjuro11 frustration was Leon Crowder, a 37-year-old sanitation supervisor, and the only city employee on the si.x·man, six· woman jury. He voted for acquittal on each of 17 ballots taken by the jury durina 21 hours of deljbcrauons over Manlla hotel Bre work of arsonists .. four days. ·•He refuted to look a1 .aox evi<knce. He ate OfU1tJ ud Uept. l.ancatttt said. Severa.I o\het Jut0t1 said Crowder dozed durina deBKn- tions. an ICC'Uution he denied. "They (other jurors) Just wanted lO 10 throuah the prosecutor•1 evidenct without e\)en ditcuaina the <kfmae evidence," Crowdtt aaid ... I tboapt that was wrona. They were like sbatb that had Wled blood after they went throu.fb the prosecutor's evidence," Crowder said. ''There wa1 too much inconsistent testimony. Most of the witnesses were not the type tha1 were crcd.ible enouah to convince me l\e was guilty," be said. Hedgecock said be felt vindicated by the hunajury. "I was hopina for a more con- clusi\IC outcome on this. but it is a victoty," Hed&ecock said ... The dis- trict attorney has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars trymg to fiod something wrong with my campaieo. bur he couldn't. No cnminal con- MANILA. Philippines(AP)-The military today blamed arsonists for a fire that killed at least 24 people in' one of Manila·s largest luxury hotels and was still bumins nearly two days aft.er it broke out, the official Philippine News A&ency reported. spiracy existed, and no pel')ury was uons into his 1983 campaiaq for committed... mayor, a.nd then lied about the money Among the identified dead were Prosecutors aUctie Hedgecock on financial disclosure Corms. five Americans, three Britons, a schemed with political backers.. in-Assistant District At&omey Jticb. Canadian and an Australian. Funeral eluding jailed financier J. David ard Huffman said he will ao forward Lacllle LeYln ahowa photo of bearded huaband. home operators said several of the Dom1nelli, to funnel ii J contribu-Wllb another trial. \midentified bodies were those of ,...;;;...~__..;..~~..;.=~.;....;.;.;""'"""~=;..;..;;;..;"-------------- Beirut newsman escapes captors Bureau chief shows up at Syrian military base; Islamic roup claiming they freed him BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)-Jeremy Levin faileQ to report for work last Lcvin._jJle Beirut bureau chief JoJ-M~rdt Land wa.j assumed ~'' C.~ews ""'N"etwor~"Who dlsap-colleagues in Beirut to have bcco peared last March 7. escaped from his kidnapped. In a typewritten note .delivered to two news qcncies, a previously unheard of group, The Angels, claimed responsibihty for the fire as a · protest of U.S. and·Japanese support for President Ferdinand E. Marcos. Firefighters battled flames, .heavy smoke and intense heat to try to recover more bodies from the hotel. .. foreigners. "All indications arc that it was the job of arsonists," the agency quoted Brig. Gen. Victor Natividad as say- ing. Natividad said his investigatots were taking statements from wit- nesses who said the fire began simultaneously on the second and ninth floors of the I I-story Rqent of Manila. Th1s bauble hitda ltJmlllar ring tolt cal?tors early today, according to a He was last seen by has wife in their Beirut radio report and a Syrian apahment in mostly Moslem west source in the eastern Lebanese city of Beirut. SANTA IM'Wta ,.,P) _ .... .&..A Hoapltal Corpsman Wayne Ba.albek. An anonymous t~ephone caller to "VVI" V" " • "'W "He escaped. He as with us," said a Western news"-agency in Beirut gtYefl • a V~I tttne•a 0., pt-. Sdlutt wk> WM rOMning Walkld lt\c Syrian source, who spoke to The today. claiming to represent the ent In 1131 W b-* on with an UIMl9lwatw metal._. Associated Press on condition he not shadowy lslamac Holy War extremist El'neettne O•tc..'e flr'9I' ~ tor. be identified. group, said Levin had not escaped, after being loet In b IUrf off "I found H about a foot and a The Christian Voice of Lebanon but had been released. W9iklkl beldl for~ ye99. half down In the eand.'' Schutt. -......_ 0 s:adi.P station said Levin. 51. had The caller said. "The truth of the '11 ~·t b1lllwe It," Mrs. 21, _.,.._ Wedneeday. "H escaped, and that he had appeared at matter is that we released ... Levin O'Kane aatd WednH-. "It wa .a blMk." Syrian military headquarters in after many approaches by some IOOkl juet Ilk• tt dkt the~ I lost "I could make out the Baalbek at about 2 a.m. It gave no brotherly and effective sides for It." -~ .. &amond:J": .. _...,,., t"'---.., further details. which we have all respect and .., ...,,...., 'OVWV'' The office of the French news appreciation." He said, "After in-Mrs. O'Kane, thewrtfeofretlred ~~··'· ~ -.i.a..", wa an 9Cllderny agency Agence France Presse in vestigations. we had established that admiral and Congr ... lonal nv ~ Beirut said an AFP correspondent in the American correspondent was not Medal of Honor holder Richsd ft• 80lft9 8Cl'Ubbing, Schutt Baalbck had seen Levin, and that he involved in any espionage or O'Kane, wa given the rtna. a madeouttlteln9Crlptlon:"E.D.G. appeared to be in good health, but was subversion against Islamic forces." mlnlatur. of her ~·a clMe from R.H.OK." tired. AFP said it had pictures of The news agency released the ring from the U.S. N~val Schutt ~nd the academy'a Levin. an formation on the basis that at not be Acedemy. on V9'a1ttne•a Day In 1934 )Wtook ln U.. nawl A Pict_ureeds ~~. byBe~FP toh Thde adenti~ed. ti 1931. lbrary 81 '-'Harbor and ldent· SSOClat .-.~s an arut s owe Levin IS among ave Amencans Four tha .. and lfted o·~ the only ce- Lcvin loolung extremely tired, with who have disappeared or been kid-O'Kane = "'8n'': In June of member wttb.:.. lnltlala. his hair in disarray. AFP said the napped in the Moslem sector of photographs were taken between I 0 Bea rut since Feb. 6. 1984. when Oruse 1937 the rtno lllpped off her Schutt ~ the rtng - a.m. and 11 a.m. today in ' Syrian and Shute Moslem m1ht1as drove the finger nw U. Outrtgdlr Club In .. ttenlng lllce new -and a intelligence office in Baalbek. Lebanese army out in the latest round Honolulu. peraonel .._,tine to Mrs. Be ?111 Vak.tilte/ l!tJW "'"'~ BJ In one plloto, Levin was silting an Lebanon's long CIVIi war. The rtnQ WM found by Navy O"Kw by ....... nwM. with his eyes half-closed in a room ....----,----------rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iT---~----"-----------~.---~::----~~-:-s~ with a photo of Syrian President CHINA HOME-ST A YS Hafn AsSJd on a door behind him. · RUf f ELL'S He was wearing a full moustache and NOW ALLOWED about an inch and a half of beard. A ,_. •my llC Newt '• c:-.a-. .__ ~ u nJ.. second photo showed him drinking ,. • ..,... ' • .duc.Fanh.fWilnc,wloanfundl...Man,. tea, sitting next to a be~ fw Tiii ant Of Y• Uft lttq..n-IAw rat.. T ........... Ille. Levin was wearing pajamas. with l!Z2 HMIOll aWD .. COSTA 1DA -~-115' (714) ttS-"'4 or (213JSIS-MS5 what appeared to be a zippered !-----------........ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ pullovCT on top. One photograph showed a hand- written note with "Jeremy Levin" written on the top. but no date. The shaky handwriting read: "Hello my dearat wife. I am okay. God willing, l will bewith you soon. Give my love to our family.' A representative of AFP handed a copy of one of the photos to Levin's wife, Lucille, and her daughter, Clare Moss. in Washington today. Mn. Levin said the photograph indicated her husband is .. alive and wen.·· "He looks beautiful," she said, althoudl "a little bewildered." 60nofre workers exposed SAN ONOFRE (AP) -Six worker5 at the San Onofre nuclear power plant were exposed to small amounts of radiation as a result of a freak accident near the Unit 3 reactor, utility officials have confirmed. The accident occurred late last week when the core of a highly radioactive X-ray machine being uled to examine welds at the plant wuexposed for 36 hours.. said Harold 8. Ray, a vice president of Southern California Edison Co., the princi~l owner and operator of the seaside plant. Ray said Wednesday that the workers were exposed to tiny amounts of radiation when they put the core beck into its container. The tube was retracted at 2 p.m. last Saturday. rn the process. the six workc11 were exposed to radiation ~naina from 20 mi Iii rems to I 00 mUTI~m1. Nuclear Rqulatory Com- mlNion standards allow for safe upoturc of up to 3,000 millirems e8Ch three months. Editon tookesma,n Dive Barron aid the accldent, in which the bared element emitted potentially fatal level• of radiation thouahout the 36 boun, was non-nuclear and could have happened at any industrial site. Edi10n owns 80 percent of the station and San Oicao Oa & Etectric Co. owns 20 perccn t. The X·ra)' machine h.ld been set up to iA1pea welds Ln a. valve in a bulldint next to Unit l . Ray said. Th.c mectline works by cxtendJnt a radi-ation IOUftt in a tubt towtrd 1 phcMosraphic plate on the 011\tt side of the wcJd beina inspected, Ray said. Presenti : Champagne v'Zmine Dinner for 1Wo · Just $19.95 including your choice of shrimp, chicken or steak, champagne and dessert Costa Mesa (714) 241-8938 Westminster (714) 891 -4522 Make YQY! plans to come to Bennigan's for Valentine's Dayl - r:;;:i L:::J· 1- Sunflo'.Ner n I M~ j Soutto Co.st ~. l\Ao(~J -I ~--- -,oJ,,...v - i - The hardest part is making the choice. Family Fare with a Special ~lair. You want it, we have it at Mesa Verde Center. Alexander's Bar & Grill 1 "The be,1 in C.Jlif orn1a cw,ine .. 241-01 23 Fuddruckers "S('rvin~ world f.JmOU\ hdmburger' in a c awal at mo\phere" 751-1518 Hamburger Hamlet "Featuring unique h.Jmburgcr\ with 4 N<" .... York tylE' bar" 546 -7392 Mione's Family dmms tNturmg thti lmest tn soup , ul.Jds, P" ta~ and pizzas .... 979-6735 Mesa Verde Center 2701 Harbor Bl\ld. (Harbor & Adams) Costa M~. California ---.... _ --- Or.nge Coaet DAILY PILOTIT'hUttday, February 1•. 1985 \ . What'smlsslng? Warmoth knows Cltents call psychic a trouble-shooter or owser ... and they call him often- 87 ROBERT HYNDMAN ............ .. If it's lost, 1f tt's hidden. Ron Warmoth will find it. The Los Angeles.-based psychk has tbfltd a career out of locatina 'whatever items are missina from people's Uves -missing clues for politt detectives. hidden mineraJ deposits for mining companies. hazy futures for business. owners. un- foreseen risks for investors or a missinacbHd for distraught parents. Warmoth's been called a clairvoyant. a dowser. a "human Geiser coun&cr," a "businessman's psychic" or a troubleshooter. While they call him by various names, they also call him often. Warmoth 's work with oil and mineral companies has taken him all over the world while police agencies and businesses ca ll on him for his proven telepathic skills. He also· publishes a monthly newsJetter which 'discusses business predi~tien1. Warmoth was recently called on by a local group for a far different search. Oarinette9·114 by Realistic Save•ao 15995.ii Reg. 239.95 One deck for recordlp&ay and one for playback. Make cq>iee at penJOnal t.pel, record off radio, ·~. ()( "ltve" with op-tional n>ikes. 17" -high IP88kerl.#1~1217 He i bcina asked 10 help attract su,porters for the newly formed Buddy Roaers chapter for the City of Hope. Warmoth will speak to the local aroup at 8 ~.m. Fnday at the Balboa Bay Club in Newport Beach. 'Proceeds will benefit the City of Hope. Required reservations can be made by calling Vi Sorensen al 552-6582 or Barbara Handel at 556-1 770. The 4l-year-old psychic will dis- cuss business and real estate prcdic- uons for 1985 as well as his work with mining cornpanics and police. Warmoth also will demonstrate his telepathic abilities, including what he calls "remote viewing" where he offers a detailed description ofa place or the surroundings taken from an individual's background. "It's hke a videotape playing an my head." he said in ao interview. Warmoth says he 1s unclear where has clairvoyant ski lls originate, but is con\'._inced individuals arc born with them -or without them. "I have no great reasons wh y 1t Save'160 ~ • ~ i o o o C o c c o t ·c r r (s) • 19995 • .,,. .. °',_ --""·-,,.. ..... Mi. wmt IO MCIM TIWI t.~ 'Om Reg. 359.95 Stereo Expander creates an inoredlbfy realistic sound most comparably priced receivers can't match. #31-2097 By Realistic .. = '60 Off 13995 Reg. 199.95 Hi-power, LED display, mem- ory tuning, Auto-Search. Fits most dashes.#12-1908 Video Enhancer By Archer41 Save '10 8995 Reg. 99.95 Improves video clarity, elimi- nates "roll and jitter" from prerecorded tapes. # 1 s-1210 HJgh-Performance CB TAC-413 by Realistic ' ·~:-·_ -----. -to • • '40 Off 591s::~ For fun and safety in town or on the road. With lock-plug mike. #21-1507 10-Number Trim-Fone"' By Radio Shack Save '30 L=3995 Whtt• or Brown PulM. #43-520/521 . Reg. 69.95. Sale 39.95 Tone. #43-5221523. Reg. 79.95. Sale 49.95 51/•" Computt!! II Diskettes Cut 3391. . Certified 40 Track, Unformatted Type Qty Ca1 Ho Reg .. 1 2$-305 3 49 Ui Unbeatable value! Prints over 200 letter.perfect words per minute. A best buyl ~1257 = = Ooullll l 2$-406 10 26-0 3 26-411 10 2&-412 8 99 ••• 27 96 "·· 9 96 ••• 2996 11.• LCD Digital Clock B Micfonta (-----.-- work~ or why 1t doesn't," he says. "l realiie I am fallble, however, and many limes U"f.C (clients) to act a 5CCOnd opinion. ' Unlike some in the fields or ESP. tclcpath,Y and clairvoyance. Warm. 01h maintain~ a prorcs ional. busi- nesslike approach to his work . "I'm not rral my tical, I don't believe I have any type of contact with the dead or that sort of thing," he S4ys. 'Warmo1h believes 1n a ··collecuvc consciousness" that he taps into to pick up his cXlra-sensory perceptions. Such contact with that "collecJivc consciousness" 1s simply contacting your innermost though ts, he said. usin& common sense and avoiding d1stract1Qns and personal biases. Warmoth 1ypically declines 10 work with 1nd1v1duals on their per- sonal and marital problems. He prefers instead to apply his skills in the business world. Much of his noton e1y has been earned from his dowsing ~kills. Warmoth works w11h mining and·otl companies and is ·able to tell them where to dig on their land. and ho .... deep. Not only does Warmoth choose the precise locations. he can do i1 from miles away. b) looking only at a 3-Way Spea Optimuse-400 by A Save•ao 119!! Reg. 199.95 Leaf tweeter. 12" woofer, 5" midrange. Wal- nut veneer. 'lfJJ/•" -high. #40-2048 Save1 •ao Receives 20, VHF frequenci talsl ~112 Batter, tor IMITIOfY Reg. 34.95 Battery bacl<Up operates clock and alarm during power fail- ures. #12·1~1 Reg. 39.9 For super-a with Color #26-3012 map of the area. While such claims m1aht well be met b) kept1c1sm. several publ i· cations across the coun1ry. includ1na "Newsweek," have quoted oil and ' mining officials vouching for Warm· oth's 11bill11cs. Business leaders also seek him out for advice on investments, acquisi- tion~. mergers and so fonh. urprisingJ y, Warmoth maintains that it is no1 e sential for him to be well-educated in business to provide advice. In fact. he believes that the less you sometimes know, the better. While he 1s familiar with the land where mining is beina done, and what might be found beneath the surface, Warllloth said he hasn't a clue just how he "knows" whert to dig for ore. or oil, or silver or aold. Warmoth simply prefers to follow with methods 1ha1 work. without gcttingcaugh1 up in the mechanics, he says. He has learned how he can best prepare himself to detect perceptions without questioning why he 1s able to. Ron Warmoth "It's like a radio. Thtt radio waves arc in th e air, but you won't be aware of them until you tum on the radio," Warmoth says ... I just have to believe that there is a cause and effect to this that I'm able to tap into." UCI gets laser study grant A S 1.5 m1lhon continua1ion grant has been awarded to the Laser Microbeam Pr6gram. LAMP. at UC Irvine. tech nologies. It also encourages col- laboration with scientists fl'om other instituiions and trains scientists in the design , operation and application of laser microbeam irradiation. The National Institutes ofliealth grant will suppon on-going basic research concerning laser technology and clinical applications. The fund s will also go toward training courses and workshops for researchers. Directing LAMP IS Michael w. Berns. professor of ce ll biology and surgery. Berns also is director the Beckman Laser Institute and Medical Clinic. a $5 milli on faci lity dedicated to research and clinical use of lasers for ca ncer. eye disorders. gastrointestinal problems and other ailments. LAMP was established in 1980 through joint sponsorship of the National Institutes of Health and th e Uni versity of California. Its goals arc to study and develop new laser LGA Open To The Public STORE HOURS: Monday through Friday 10:30 am · 6:00 pm Saturday 10:00 am-4:00 pm VIM' Alb4trtaon'a We go out of our w1y lor you 751--4270 Alexender'• Bar & Grill ·rn. OHi tn C•hfOtn•I cu1111ne 2•1·0123 Biibo Bagglna 545 1718 Bank of Amerlc. 75!>-4476 Dolphin Hair Wt/come I 111 us add to your n11rur111 b11111Jty 54().060() Edwards Cinema 9794141 Fuddruckera ·serving world t1m011J n11mour911rs in 1 cHual atmospfl•t• 751 :l'!J18 Hamburger Hamlet fHlurmg tJniqua n1mt>urg"1 w11n • Ntw Yor-5ryia blf 5'&-7392 tee Capadet Chalet 1179-8880 MemMfle le11Uty lupply 'Complete line (>fell mlflOf brend O.tvty 1>rtxJutt1 (()( ,.,,, """ Mid 1•111 cart M2 2f7S COSTA MESA 743 BAKER STREET One Block West of 8flstol (T14) 957-1214 Mesa Verde Travel We Jf)flCl/l/ltfJ In CfUIHS 556-6311 Mione'• "fllm/ly ~ IHrUl'lflg me 1,,...1 111 ~ "'"'°' pnfn lll'ld paLllS ' 91M136 Mra. Fleldt' CooklH Openiog Soon Mualc Merttet SA&-0038 Photography by Jeffrey Ou1/1ty S•rvoc11 D11,,.nd1t'4/ify for over /SyHtl 5'1>1796 Plectmakera 'Hind qwlrtd quoits 1111d •" dtco,.rino 1111m1 '""' make 1 flo11H 1,.1comt 1nom• &41 3112 Swenaen'1 Swens9n s 11111 m11kH ice cre1m in tfle 11011 "'' old f11Jll1on w11y 556 6937 Upper Cutt "~Mid,,~""'" llK~t CUit Pro,.__ 1'111~0.,Uutflt 850 tUll WhMt Land Hlptllf 10 Hn• yQ41 w1lfl •It YOl" 0<1t1no nH<11 ll)fletl/1/l(llJ rf1 t•P«I •• ,., ' • ., ... c. 7S1 418' ·, Mesa Verde Center 2701 HarbOr Blvd (HarbOr & Adams) Costa Mes.a. CA ~~~----.;... ________________ ..... .;....-....-.. __ . ----_ .. ........ _ ..... -. ... Schlafly at talk in Irvine Ph,Ylhs Schlatly, nationally known ~lit1cal 1cu v1st and leader of the 'Stop ERA" movement. will be a principal speaker durina the Ea"e Forum of California's first leadership confe rence, which is scheduled frt· day and Saturday. Schlafly is the founder of the Eagle Forum, a aroup of about S.QOO members that promotes conservative political and economic aoals. The conference opens Friday at the Regimy Hotel in Irvine with a noon luncheon featurina an address by Schlafly. who is expected to discuss domestic violence and pornoaraphy. A dinner Friday cvcnina will include a speech by Clarence Pendleton. chairman of the lJnited States Commission on Civil Right$. 0 1hcr conference speakers and seminar leaders will include U.S. Rep. Wilham Dannemeyer. R-Full- crton; California Assemblywoman Doris All~n. R-Cypress; Randall Presley, chairman of the Committee for Monetary Reform; and Thomas Burton, a San Jose attorney special- izing in "pro-family" lit1pt1on. An anti-abortion fi lm entitled "The Silent Scream" also will be screened. The two-day fee for attending all conference acti vi ties isSSO. Tickets to attend only the luncheon featuring Schlafly arc S 15 each. The charge for attending onl y the Fnday night dinner is $25. Payment will be accepted at the door. but organizers ask that reser- vations be placed by calling Karen Sewell at 597-5565. , .............. ,. \ •. ,,/' \ / ......... ....__. ·----/ - Composer Roemheld dies in HB 1 film composer Heinz Eric ·Roemheld, who wrote the hit aona "Ruby" and won an Otcar for scorin1 "Yankee Doodle Dandy," died of complicataons from pneumonia at Humana Hospital Huntlnaton Beach, a •P,Okesman wd. He wu 83. be retired an 1964, publicist Gene Shefrin said. "Suawberry Blonde." .. The Milwaukee-born Roembeld wbo died Monday, broke into the movie bu1ineta a1 pan of a team of com~ aftd arr:anaers-for the 1930 "AU Quiet on the Western Front" and , went on to compose, arranae or conduct for more than 400 films until Roemhcld won the Academy Award with Ray Heindorf in 1942 for James Cqney's "Yankee Doodle Dandy" and wrote "Ruby," the bit theme sona from "Ruby Gentry," which starred Jennifer Jones and Charlton Heston, in I 9S2. Other Ct'edita included the films "The Desert Sona," "Knute Rockne: All American," "Gentleman Jim," "Valentino,""The Moonlighter" and Roembcld ditd Monday momina of complicatfon1 cauJCd by pncu· mon11 folJowina a Iona illnn.. Shcfrin uid. He had livtd in the Huntinaton Beach Convalescent Home for the past five yean. Survivors include two' dauahten, Ann Cullen, wife of teleVition pme show host Bill Cullen. and Mary Lou Dawson: four 111ndchildrtn; three &reat·arandchildren; and •sister. Private services are planned. Laguna festival this weekend Sinaer and illusionist Jim Bailey will headline the Laauna Beach Winter Festival this weekend. Art isans, poets and dancers will also be on hand for the 22nd annual Chamber of Commerce fundraiscr which runs Friday through Monday on the Festival of Ans arounds. 650 _Laauna Canyon Road. Illusionist Bailey will aive-two performances, a characterization of Barbra Streisand on Saturday and one of Judy Garland on Sunday. Both start at 7 p.'ll. in the Irvine Bowl. Tickets are available throu&h Ticket Master Centen, the Chamber of Commerce, the Sound Spcctn.m and Ron's in La1una restaurant. An anisan's fair fcaturina.. more than 120 artists and craf\spco(>lC who will sell and demonstrate their work will be held from I 0 a.m. to S p.m. all four days on the festival grounds. Ceramics.Jewelry, metal sculpture. stainea glass, custom desiant<t and hand-sewn items, acrylics. blown glass. leather work, photograph¥ and oil and watercolor pai ntings wall be on sale. The Laguna Folltdancers will per- form Friday, Saturday and Sunday at 1 p.m. on the festival green. The Jack Rather Band, country western pcrfo~n, will be on the green at I p.m. turday and Sunda).'. The Women's aucus for An wall present Eleanor Antin as Eleanor Antinova in "Recollecuons of My Life w11h D1aghiley," at 8 p.m. Fnday in the Forum. Tickets are available at Laguna Beach School of Art, the Laguna Beach Museum of An and at the door. OUR ONCE A YEAR SALE • • --!S-now n .. pr.ogre~-·-.. _ 50% OFF . On Selected Meri's & Women's European Sportswear, S~oes & .A~cessories 13 Faelalo• lela•d (AcroH from Roblnaona) •~ BY ARLA" FLAUM Enjoy a unique dining and shopping experience m a carefree European style atmosphere. SPECIAL TY STORES A SWNI ~ CIJll<ft A ft«:lbnill.ty Amber o.le'•'Foorworlf• Dene» CMllr• ETC.~ Fr«ICfl Marlf•t GrHI l#glnnlflgl • Hiland'• Tobacco Loci!., La TO(tUQa Natllr'Nlly ,..,,.,.ao.Roun<J Sr ,.,,.. Sr tw.Anou SI ,.,,.. Pap« Gard«! &MMen'• S<»~n Import• Soc/th eo.11 Olea Erv•vtto S,,.to9 T e11or1nQ v_. P.I C«lt•=----- WOOI I W.!P Faonc. SERVICES A. I. A. Oranoe County Anthony's She» Rep.tr Clirfton HaK lnt.,...fbnllt &~ Tr•vtll Fish/on lnslllUI• F1t1'1 Repri.v. I F11m«J tr AAYN'f TrMl'IOute Nail Boutique Or. O.(llel W.mtt -Optom.lrlst Unlrtld Altllt ThH Ir• Hour GaflQ IWIOflMI RESTAURANTS Antoneitlo ,...cnnt• ~Waflltlnn Hofrk•w• fWtacJtllfll Hr1 !Wlacnnt Gendnl ~· TN Good EMtfl UpetMf Crow & ~ Ver~'t Muan Rw11HXa111 644-65•• lou1eo 11 SunTto•et a , Sii 11 s.1111 AN CA l104 ·17141141 1700 Act111011t 10 Soul!\ Ce>11st Pl&/41 I "' ,a..;. __________ _..;. __________________ ~--~I ... ............... __ .• '\i:J Otange CoMc DAILY PILOT~.~ M, ,._ A7 ' • starts Friday at 9:30 a.m. • many limited quantities • not all sizes may be availabfe in each gro~ping • colors and styles limited to stock on hand, so shop earty for ·best selectiqn! .. in our Huntington Beach store women's sportswear NOW -134 JUNIOI SHIRTS •.•. ~--. • . . . . . . 1 .. 111 ACTIVE COOROINAT£S ............. UI 13 LARGE SIZE ll.OUIES .............. 3 .. 123 MISSEi' PANT TOPS ............... 111 151 JUNIOR POL YEST£A BLOUSES . . . . . . . UI 277 WARMUP JACKETS ......... .' ...... UI M MISSES' PULLOVER SWEAT£RS ....... ... 72 MISSES' COOROINA T£S .............. .. 13 JUNIOR PANTS .................... ... 53 LARGE SIZE PANTS ................ ... 51 JUNIOR PANT TOPS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . t• 11 JUNIOR JEANS .................... t• 54 LARGE llZE ACTIVE SEPARATES ....... .. 17 JUMPSUITS ................... , .. 11 .. 71 MISSES' PETITE SEPARATES ......... 11.• dressei and coats NOW 30 JUNIOR JUMPSUITS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... IO MISSES' 0-.ESSES ................. 15.• 20 JUNIOA JACKETS .................. 20.• 35 ALL·WEATHEA COATS .............. 31 .. maternity wear NOW 112 PANTS ......................... l.M 75 TOPS ......•.................... I.II 35 0RESSES ......................... .. llngerle, loungewear NOW 48 BIKINIS ........................... lie 1058AAS .......................... 1 .. 27 TEDDIES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.M 31 CAMISOLES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.M 33 NIGHT SHIRTS ..........•...•• \ • . 2.18 738RAS ........................... 3 •• 51 SLIPPERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.• 93BRAS ........................... 5.11 29 BABYDOLLS, TEDDIES .... '. . . . . . . . . . 5 •• 43 CAMISOLES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 .. 50 SHORT GOWNS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.11 • women's accessories NOW 119 PANTSOX ........................ 11c 247 SPORT SOCKS .................... 2k IS HAIR ACCESSORIES ................. 4lc It SCARVES ......................... 4lc 13 CHRtSTMAS DECOAA TIONS ........... 4lc 77 HANDIAGS ....................... lie 175 EARMUFFS ....................... lie 73 PURSEKtTI ........... : ............ lie 13 SHOES ........................... lie 55 t£GWARMEAS ..................... lie 215 FASHION PANTYHOSE .............. lie 135 TIGHTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... lie 71 LEOTARDS ....................... 1 .• ltBELT8 .......................... 1 .• 13tTRAVELBAQS ................... 1.M 203 HAMDIAGS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.• 33 PHOTO ALBUMS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.M 147 CLUTCH HAND9AGS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 .. 51 LEA THEA HANDBAGS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.M 43 CLUTCHES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . UI Infants and toddlers NOW 47 TODDLER BOYS' TOPS . . . . . . . • .. . . . . 1 .. 33 •ANTI' IOXED GIFT SETS ......... 111 25 •ANT GIRLS' OVEAAUS ........... UI 43 •ANT IOYS' DIAPER SETS ......... 3 •• 21 TOOOLER IOYI' OVERALLS . . . . . . . . . . UI S1 TOOOLERS' OIHKO .... TEES . . . . . . . . l.• 25 GATHIRED LEG DISPOIAaE DIAPERS . UI 43 NEW10M ACRYLIC KNITWEAR ....... UI 21 •ANT GIM.S' PANT SETS ........... 5 .. 35 TOOOLEA GR.I' PANT SETS ......... S• buys for glrla NOW 47 O.P.• TEES, 7·14 ....•............... tic 711LOUIEI, 7·14 ..................•. 1 .. 75 ILOUIEI , 4-U . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.• S1 NeQHTQOWNI .......•............ 1 .. n MIMAL HAN<iERI •................ 1• llJIUllC IOXEI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1• -.aa,7.14 ...................... ... 55 P~AllAI ........................ l.11 II UCRllD ....................... 4.11 a•ANS, 7·14 ...................... W - buys for boys . NOW 2t HATS .............. -....... -..• -lie • 47 CAPS ....................... ~-;; 1·~-4...-· 25 ACRYLIC VEITI, 4-7 .•.............. 1• 31 COTTOM~...,. ............. 1• 17 0, .• VEITI, 1·11 ...•.............. 1• 47 L llV. IHmll, 1·11 ................ i.- 21 L ll V. SHlfTI, 4-7 ................. Ml 21 N>IA PMfT ..-Tl, 1· 11 ......•..... UI 31 O.P. THERMAL TOPl,1-11 ............ UI 21 COT /POl Y VELOUR TOPS .......•.... UI 13 LEVI'S• PANTS, I· 11 ....... -........ UI buys for men NOW 13 PAINT T£E8 ................ -..... lie 71 TIES ... : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1• 115 YOUNG MEN'S FAIHtON PANTS ...... 1 .. 223 L SLY. PlAJD IHlfTS .. , ........... UI 40 COT/POlY. FLEECE IHMTI ..... -.... 3.11 to S. SLY. COTl POlY. KWf IMt'TS ...... 3.11 40 L ll V. RUGaY 1t91TI ... -.......... 3.11 10 S. SLY. COT/POLY.~ ..-Tl ...... UI 35 YOUNG MEWi Pett-PANTS ... -...... UI 100 CHEETAHS" ACTM IHlfTI ......... 4.11 100 CHEET AHi" ACTIVE PANTS ......... UI 100 L llV. YOUNG ...... DMll SHlnS .. UI -CM&t AM9"' con• ..-t 11911'& .... UI 110 YOUNG MEN'I , .... 'ANTI ...... S.. so LEvr s• ACTIVE IHlfTI ............. 7 .. SO LEVI'S• ACTIVE PANTS .............. 7 .. 30 YOUNG MEN'S FASHION JACKETS ...... .. shoes for the famlly NOW t3 PLUSH ANIMAL 8UPPOS ............ 1.11 17 BOYi' CAMOUFLAGE JOGGERS ....... 3 .. 71 WOMEN'S HOelE• T£ ... SHOES ..... UI 41 WOMEN'S MUSHROOMS• ............ S.. a TRAomoNAL SLJIP£RI ............. 5 .. 55 BOYS' HIGH SIERRA'" CASUALS ....... SM 13 WOMEN'S DRESS HEELS ............ 7 .. at MEN'S NUNN MJ .... DRESS SHOES ... 12.18 31 MEN'S DEXT£"9 CASUALS . . . . . . . . . . 12.18 75 WOMEN'S FASHION BOOTS ......... 12.11 for your home NOW 33 BA TH TOWELS . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . tic 27 HAND TOWELS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . tic •WASH TOWELS . . . . . . .... -...... lie 11 BA TH ACCESSORIES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . lie 21 HAMPER BAGS . . . . . ............ 1.• 45 ACET A T£/NYlON SATIN SHEETS ...... 4 •• 23 SHAMS . . . ............... · · · · · 4.11 22 COMFORTERS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1t.• housewares NOW 273 DISHES . . . . . . . . . ......... 21c·tlc 47 IT£MWARE SETS, 4-PC.. . . . . . .. 2-9 11 HUMICANE I.AMPS . . ........... UI 73 IA.LAD IOWlS . . . • ............. Lii •WOKS ........................ I.II • ICE IUCKETS . . . . • . . . . . -....... &.• •TAllECLOTHS ............. 1.•-11• 27 Dt1H SETS, 20-PC. .. - -.. .. . .. 11• Jewelry buys NOW· 150 TWIST ·O·BEAOI ... - . • . . ......... lie -EARNNGI . . . . . . ........ lie 100•ADI....... . . . . . .......... i.. 15 CRYSTAL Ol YWIC FIGURINES ....... UI toys, toys, toys MOW 27 aDt-CARO G.-1 ................ .. 25 ..,... Pl.A y ·00tf9 ant ............ 1• 13 IODY IOQQl I · QAIEI ............. UI 4 HOT WHHl• llTI .. , ............. 7• HUntingto11 Beach • 9811 Adam s Ave. at Brookhurst St. -.. . ... •'Members of the middle class ... ought to keep Jn mind that the dollars · theygetfrom Washlngtonaredollars Wash Jngtongetsfrom them." . Time· for board to bite the bullet on Heights ,plan Moving as carefully as nudists in a cactus patch, the county supervisors Wednesday once again -delayed the ultimate decision on a land-use plan for Santa Ana Heights. Caution certainly is in order. Whatever path the supervisors choose to bring the httle enclaye at the end of the John Wayne Airport runway into compliance With state noise standards, they will disrupt the Ii ves of many people. But the supervisors must realize that, despite their best efforts to the contrary, they are about to make some folks unhappy. By pro longing the agony, they only make everyone uilhappy. It has become clear as this issue inches with excruciating slowness toward a resolution: Both sides are anxious for it to end. -.. Supervisor Thomas Riley may have had the impossible in mind last week when he offered an eleventh hour compromise plan for the Heigh ts that, in effect, attempted to satisfy everyone. Even if it were successful in that, it would be an ultimate failure because it would set a precedent for spot zoning in unincorporated Orange County. According to Riley's compromise, it is conceivable that office buildings and single-family homes could exist side by side, perhap~in ~tµily. io_Sru:llil Ana Heights. That flies in the face of the principles of good planning and sliould be avoided. If spot zoning is approved, even with a wink and a nod, the supervisors should not express astonishment the next time they are asked to OK similar digressions from policy. . Reagan ~udget tears into· mtddte class extravagance In the meantime, the Riley compromise will be studied by the county Planning Commission - a group of professionals who have already given the problem more attention than Michael Jackson gets in People ma?Zine -and the ,Airport Land Use Commission, which is likewise familiar wfth the intricacies of the problem. This process will delay the ultimate decision by several weeks, despite the fa ct that the most objective, non-political alternatives alreaqy were on the table. Riley's motives should not be questioned. He has shown himself to operate with the best interests of bis constituents at heart. But, as a military man who has known the responsibilities of comma nd, the retired general might do well to recall one of the tools of his former trade and bite the bullet. l Drastic measures re{}uired to reduce overblown budget The fa vorite criticism of President Reagan's budgets during his first term -aside from the deficits, that is - was that they took away from the poor while sparing the affiuent. The cri tics should have been careful what they wished for. The latest pres1dent1al budget gives it to them. This spending bluepnnt is a frontal assault on welfare for the middle class. It cuts an impostng array of programs whose. objective 1s to protect the strong. reflecting a consis- tent application of the belief that 1U'e . • d i · •t . ..people who can pay their own wa y .l9~ w J.mnnun J.DJJ 1Deans oughtt<?dOS?· . r-That 1sa pnnc1pleon which liberals Shelter needs public's aid and con~rvatives should agree. Lib-erals think the government has a humanitarian duty to help those who can·t heJp themselves, with the cost borne by those better off But every dollar Washington spends putting affluent kids throuBJl college or subsidizing small business is a dollar that can't be spent on food stamps or public housing. To the &h tor: On Jan. I, the newly-mandated 45- day impound limit for all animals housed at the Irvine Animal Care Center went into effect, so that by Feb. 15. some nitty gritty decisions regarding euthanasia will have to be made by our city's shelter staff. , this program, but continue to ma1n- ta10 the Special Animal Exhibi t Area, provide funding for spaying and llt'utering each animal placed into one of our sponsored runs and provide the animal with medical care and supplemental foods if needed. Supporters, through our organm1- tion. are currently sponsonng four dog runs and one cat run. Through the generosity of new members and contribotors. we will be able to continue this program and enlarge it. Conservatives, by contrast. want to limit the size of the federal iovern- ment. minimizing its responsibilities and maximizing individual self-re- liance. But Washington's power can't be restrained 1f its duties include everything from financing ex pons to underwriting extravagant mass tran- si t systems. Members of the middle class STEPHEN CHAPMAN understandably will resist. But they ought to keep in mind that the dollars they get from Washington are dollars Washington gets from them. For the most pan, the middle class is taking money out of one pocket and putting it 10 another. If it loses money not paid out in subs1d1es. it will gain in money not taken.in taxes -and in a healthier. more aynam1c economy. Budget director David Stockman sees clearly the dnving force behind the expansion of federal spending - the eagerness of Congress to coun Mr. and Mrs. Average American with pr~ms designed just for them. Poht1cians have learned well the crucial lesson taught by Social Secur- ity~ If you want a program to prosper, spread its benefits as widely as possible. From the electoral point of vie~. the best group to help is the middle class. because that's where the votes are. Reagan's domestic bud&et is thus historic -not for the dollar amount of the cuts. though it isn't trivial, but for the central theme. His plan should dispel the myth that federal spending can be brought under control simply by cutting out programs aimed at the poor (which account fo r less lhan a tenth of the budget). The only flaw is the adminis- tratioil's exclusion of Social Security from fisca l austerity, even though it 1s the largc;sLSingle domestic pro~m and the mosl imponant to the middle class. As the new economic report of the president points oui the elderly are typically as welt.off financially as younger Amencans. Between 1950 and 1983, the average monthly Social Security benefit rose twice as fast as wages and salaries and nearly three times as fast as the consumer price index. Retirement benefits plainly can be frozen without inflicting any measurable hardship. Dderse spending· also deserves more scrutiny than it has gotten from the administration. No doubt Con- gress can find ways to save a few billion here. as it has in previous. Reagan budgets. But no large reduc- tions can be achieved without a re- examination of Amenca's global commitments-a step congressional Democrats. for all their brave talk, have persistently declined to take. If the design of Reagan's budget i!1 pathbrcaking, its fate will be cquall)' momentous. for ~ood or ill. r f Congress isn't willing to tackll" middle<lass entitlements, there can be no realistic hope of substantiall•,, reducing the role of the federal government any time in the foresee·· able future. Republicans who balk at these cut •1 will no longer be able to claim :;1 devotion to limited government . Democrats who resist cannot claim to be defenders of the weak. In the coming budget battle, the question 11 whether either party has the nerve t<> act on its own rhetoric. Steplleo Cllllpmu 11 • 1yodk•~ll cel•mi11t. STEPHEN CJIAPllAN' eohua.olat CoMMFNTARV We can dam up Water Wars By SUNNE WRIGHT MCPEAK Coftlft c .... c......, 144 ...... Isn't it time to settle the Water Wars and get on with.the business of Californta"rlsn 't there a more rational approach to managing our water resources -an approach that is environmentally safe and economi- cally sound -than has been evident In previous, failed proposals'? Both the Brown and Dcukmejian administrations made the same mi~ take: They failed to understand that there must be a whole new approach - a New Water Ethic -that embraces the long-term need to sustain this vital resource for gener· ations to come instead of serving the short-term interests of today . Further, there must be a dramatic departure from "politics as usual'' in three key ways: (1) adopt protections for Northern CaJifornia before in- creasing expom out of the San Francisco -Bay-Delta estuarine sys- tem (policy before plumbing); (2) pursue an aggressive conservation program coupled to appropriate new construction prejeE-ts{wit~a focus on water banking); and (3) initiate a public-private pannership to achieve a statewide consensus ($Cl water policy out ofbackroom politics). First of all, we must recognize that the era of massive water projects and huge water pricce subsidies is over. No longer will the electorate accept the mentality of "we'll build now and answer questions later," as previous administrations said in originally promoting construction of the State Water Project. Both the Brown and Dcukmejian adm inistrations have focused on plumbing. There has been no solid commitment to enacting adequate and enforceable protections for Northern California and for the Delta and San Francisco Bay that must precede any increases m the amount of water exported south if there is to be true statewide agree- ment. This is what is meant by the plea for '"policy before plumbing. .. Is it too much to ask that the needs of the Delta and Bay be met before export levels are increased? This is co nsistent with past promises to protect our region. Secondly, we must get beyond the debate over conservation versus new construction as if it were an either/or option. We need both. Department of Water Resources and SWRCB reports indicate that 2.5 million acre feet of water can be provided each year from conserva- tion and wastewater reclamation projects by the year 2000. Such measures would produce water in amounts exceeding the projected yields of either the Peripheral Canal or the Dcukmejian. plan and at a cheaper cost. Additio nal quantities of water could be generated from water Therefore, we urge all citizens who have suppon.ed Irvine's fine animal services program in the past to continue to do so by panic1pating in our kennel sponsorship program at the care center on Sand Canyon Road 1n Irvine, so that adoptable dogs and cats may be kept ahve until suitable homes are found. This might also be a very good ume for readers who have been cons1denng the adoption of a new pet to do so. BUT, WE DO NEED YOUR HELP! And, because we feel a responsibility to those who entrust us with their money. and because we know that many people are unaware that some chantable organizations claim tax-deductible status whether they fla ve it or not. we want to assure those who support us that all con- tnbutions to A Committee of Friends of the !ACC. Inc. are tax deductible. Information about our federal ideQti- ficat1on number will be given up0n request. Please call 854-9649, 552-7044; or write to us at P.O. Box 4774. Irvine. CA 927,16-4774 regard- 10g donations and general infor- mation. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-• markettrans~rsand~ricing~~L Eventually there will be additional A Committee of Fnends of the Irvine Animal Care Center. Inc., originated the kennel sponsorship program. formed at the encourage- ment of the city staff for the sole purpose of 1m plemc.-n t1ng this pro- gram, and has been approved to do so by the Irvine C11y Coun cil. We are still offering sponsorships at SI 0 per week. Anyone donating a year's amount of S520 will ha ve a plaque imprinted with their name mounted on their Sponsored dog or cat run. Membcr<;h1ps m o ur or- ganization are also available. Dues and contnbut1ono; not onl~ ~uppon LOIS ANNE WELSH. President A Committee of Friends of the IACC. Inc. Irvine JW A: More 'buslness as usual' To the Editor It's "business as usual" at the Orange County supervisors mecttng. They have JUSt approved another in cremental increase m an ongotng expansion of John Wayne A1rpon. The number of passengers they can cram through their new terminal will be the only real hm1 t1ng factor. Supervisor Riley calls this a great compromise. It is reall y JUSt a pause in the march for more and more flights. When Ralph Clock. president of the Industrial League of Orange County. supports the proposal. you know something must be wrong. Finall_y the board authonzes the sohcrtanon of bids for a financ131 feasibili ty study on t.he expansion project. One would think that with all the studying that has been going on that the supervisors would already know how the bjll was gotng to be paid. This 1s JUSt another uample of .. bu,incss as usual" the government way. DONALD W PROUL Newport Beach Pilot welco1Des co1Dineats The OaJly Pilot welcomes your comments on luoes of lnterett to our,..dera. .,. Lett•s 8nd longer anlcles of commentary mus~~~· They ~ be typed Of CIUrly written and ~ to: ...... fDfTOR, Dtllr Not. llo• 1580, Coate..._ ..._ PteaM lndude your addr ... end tetephone number. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat t,c; r '"'",...''"lJ0\1¥ 1Ba,•1 .__ "Oil'-w·~• I08o• ·~ c ~ .......... c.11 ~,,.~ H. l . Schwartz HI t'i;t>'~ Frenk ZJnl l.11~,g [Oto. Tom Tift C' ly ( d>l ()r No cover-up here, but IRS bl ushlng over 'disclosure' Surpr!sebfrthday strip-tease sets agency squirming WASHI NGTON -The federal gov~rn~ent. which has regulations forbidding JUSt about anything. a~ pears to have been caught with its "can·ts" down in a touchy area of employee decorum. The question. stripped to 1t$ bare essentials. 1s: Should government workers be per- mitted to have stri~teascrs entertain at the office? The answer seems to be: Nobody knows. At least no one has been able to dii up a rcgulatton that might cover the s1tua1ion. The most fascinating feature of this tit11lating tempest is the teapot where ii originated: the grim, ant1scpt1 c regional headquarters of the Internal Revenue Service iol1owntown Wash- ington. D.C.. known to local tax- payers as Dracula's Castle. Behind its clinical. glass--and-concrcte facade lurks a spirit ofmeniment that belies. the reven ue acenu· grim image. On Aug. 30, 1984, at 3 p.m .. a woman demurely clad in an evening gown and carrying a violin cue showed up uoannounccd in the office cK a supervisor on his birthday. The young woman first sang a con· gratulatory message and played a tune on her fiddle. Then. in the course of a h ttlc dance number, the youoa woman tripped down to a rcvealina S'4'jm uil The whole btnbday sur- pnsc luted no more than ven O( eight minules. The rcpt't'CUSSIOOS lasted • lot lo nacr. An IRS spokesman described thr birthday boy as a marned man and a '"shy kind o( auy whom you can make tum red preuy easily." Sutt JACK AIDEISOI . enough. the supervisor was so dis- comfited he reported the "Stri~A­ Gram" to his boss. a branch chief. who reported the incident to the d1stnct dtrector. The I RS. perhaps wary of 1he Supreme Coun's ruling that sleeping in the park opposite the White House constitutes free expression protected by the First Amendment. has declin- ed to ban strippina outright. Pressed for comment. an IRS spokesman told my rcponer Scott Barrett only that "we don't sa nction" such forms of free speech on government premises. A second incident occurred in almost equall y au,ust quaners last Dec. 19 at 1he Smithsonian lnstitu· lion's environmental research center in Rockvlllc. Md. A wo man em- pl oyee who had, until then, been making no arcat fus over her birth- day. was visited by a young man dressed in a San~ Oaus outfit. With appropnieJOlhty. St. Nick peeled off everythina. Wilham KJem, director of the rc~rch center. ~id he had been '"t~tally unaware" that the birthday· •ult surpnsc had been ptanntd ... If I had known. I would havel10pped i&." he s111d. "I totally disappro~ of il ·· When a ktd for enhJhtennvn1 on the kaahty of striP1>1na in s<>vem- ment bu1ldtnp. the om~ of Person- nel Man•ment responded in efTcct 1ha1 &he~ 1 no off'tcial polky. An official did cite a passage in the Cocle of Federal Regulations, titled "Gen- eral Conduct Prejudicial to the Gov- ernment," which reads: "An en·1- ployec shall not engage in crimina I. infamous, dishonest, immoral .:1r notoriously disgraceful conduct C•r other conduct prejudicial to the government." But of course it wasn't an employc e who did the stripping. Is it prcjudiciE1I to watch? The OPM official pa~1:t the buck to the! General Services Administration, which is directi1y responsible for government build- ings. ··we're not arbitrators," said a GSA spokesman, doing a little sid<:-- step and tossinf responsibility den I y over the footlif11S. ·•1 doubt there's a policy on this. He did say that GSA, like ar1 >' landlord, doesn't encourage in·hou·Je paniesk and expressed the feeling th.Ett such arrain should be "in good taste.•• ~ EYE ON THE ECONOMY: A n internal government analysis pr•:· diets rou&h weather ahead for the airline industry as it tries to adjust a o deregulation. Continued ··dislocation and rt:· oraanllAtton" an: JO the fotCCUL alona with still more mersers. The end result could be just four maj11r airlin~ with a slew of small con 1- muter and spcciahzcd caniers. The big lines wtll move oul of the sho1 t· haul field entirely, 1he report pmjict s. and the acljustmcnt procm, whic h his already been 1om1 on for t••O chaotk years, could take another fh e to amvc at 1 "reasonably stable industry structure.•• Meanwhile.. air travelers will be nd1n1 hiJh -ind tht'aply. J•dl ....,._ & • •,wker• fl en.*' water needs that require new develo~ ment construction. Some of the new watci development can take place in Southern California. The state could encourage such construction by providing energy to these new {>r<>- Jects at the same cost for which Jt is supplied to the State Water Project, thereby making the economics more competitive. If conservation, more efficient use of the existing supply, and local water projects in Southern California can- not fully meet the future water needs and if there is a demand for increased exports from Northern California, then the solution must involve water banking in storage south of the Delta. Water banking involves building surface and underground facilities south of the Delta to store water during periods of hi$h rainfall and hug~ runoffs wheh it ts truly surplus to the needs of the "Sin Franci5co Bay- Dclta estuari ne ~ystem. Today there is not the capability of "banking" or capturing these surplus waters at peak ru noff periods because adequate storage facilities simply do not exist. A third key way in which '"politics as usual" must change is to realiu that the Water Wars cannot be settled !n the typi~I fashion <?f bills beina introduced in the Leg1sla1ure with various interest groups scrambling 10 prevail and checkmating each olher through regional activism and pani· san politics. lnstc.ad1 there must be a broad· based, blpartisan. statewide con· sensus-buildina process to reach greement on policy and plumbina. Further, the Governor and the ~ lature should a1.ree not to proceed on any bills until such a statewide consensus process has been com- pleted. MectiDJ our future wa~r ' needs in ~n environmentally safe and economically sound manner can bt accomphshed by tbt public and pnvate sectors workina totctber in 1 new pertnenhip dahcated to 1 New Water Ethic. Contra CQftt SuperviJor Sun11e Wn,JJt McPtak served .u chair- wom.tn of the stAtewide campeifn 10 tkw1 the Pmp1een1 c.,,., and cutTtntly btMIJ the San Frandtc0 Bly/Dcli.buN Commi11~ for W11er PollC)' Conxn.sus. - ·- 19 clubs.ho.sting idwinters races By ALMON LOCK.ABEY .,.., ........... .,.., Six Orange County yacht clubs are amonf the 19 Southern California Yachtina A'ssociation affiliates host· ing classes in the Midwinter Regatta Saturday, Sunday and Monday. The "Midwinters" as the regatta is known to Southern California sailing addicts, iii reputed to be the largest midwinter sailing regatta in the world, attracting as many as 1,000 boats in more than I 00 classes. 4 Inaugurated in 1929 as a regatta confined to Los Angeles Harbor on the weekend nearest Oeor'e Wash- ington's binhday, the Midwinters has grown to the point that it is conducted by clubs from San Dieao to Ventura County . SCY A governs Southern California yachting activity and includes more than 75 yacht and sailing clubs, including several in Nevada and Arizona. In addition to take-home trophies, 25 perpetual trophies will be up for grabs. Most of the activity will wind up Sunday except at the Los AnJCles Yacht O ub where large lnternauonal Ofljhore Rule yachts will vie through Monday. Orange County clubs and the classes they will run are: Balboa-Bahia Corinthian Yacht Paul Norina accepta trophy from-SCY A Staff Commodore Don Brown and Dave Dorran• of Alamltoe Bay Yacht Club. Double Manning wins for N oring When 16-year-old Paul Nonng of Huntington Harbour won the 1985 E.E. Manning Trophy for undccked dinghy sailors earlier this month he joined a select few who have won tho coveted trophy. one of the oldest in Southern California, twice. He also won it an 1982, placed fourth in 1983 and third in 1984. Noring, a Servite High School junior, does most of his sailing in Naples . Sabots, but also has been winning or scoring high in Lasers and Laser lls. . He sails under the burgee of Huntington Harbour Yacht Cl ub where his victories include Naples Sabot champion, 1981 -83-84; Laser champion. 1982-84; Staff Com- modore's Challenge Trophy, 1982; Junior ChaOcnge Trophf, 1981 , and the Chris Raab Perpetua for outside· the-harbor competition in 1982-84. Noring. who is a member of the varsity water 1>910 and swim teams for Servile, honed his sail racing skill s by attending the Dave Perry Ad· vanced Racing Clinic four yea rs. The Manning Trophy 1s awarded to the winner in the class with the largest number of entries. Both of Noring's wins came in the Naples Sabot Class. one of the most competitive among young sailors in Southern California. Clubs: Etchells-22. Holder-20. Shields. Soling, Santana-20. Newpon Harbor-Lido Isle Yacht clubs: Lehman-12, laser A-8, Sail- boards. Sabot A-B-Cl-C2, Senior and Over 40, Holder-9. Dana Point-Ca pistrano Bay Yacht Clubs: . PHRF A·B-C-D, MORC, Catalina-27. Other clubs and fhe classes they will handle: Alamitos Bay Yacht Club: J-24, Flying Dutchman, 4 70, lnter- national-14, Finn, Lido-14 A·B-C, Snipe A·B. Phoenix-12, Cor- onado-1 5, Laser II. Anacapa Yacht Club: PHRF A·B- C·D, PHRF Non Spinnaker, MORC. Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club: Martin 242. J-22, Tornado, C'al-20 A·B, NACRA 5.2, Mercury, International Contender. California Yacht Club: Hobie-33, Olson-30,C'a pri-30, Express-27. Santa Cruz-27, Merit-25, St.ar. Del Rey Yacht Club: Sidney Sabot Jr-Sr., Westward Sabot Jr.-Sr. King Harbor Yacht Club: PHRF A· 8-C-D, Capri-25. Columbia Challenger. Moore-24. Little Ships Fleet Long Beach: PHRF A-B·C'·D_. PHRF Non Spin· naker, Ericson 35-2. Long Beach Yacht Club: Cal-25. Cal-29, Santana 30-30, Santana-35, New York-36 , Catahna-38. Los Angeles Yacht Club: IOR A·B- C-D. C'al-40. M1ss1on Bay Yacht Club: Wylie Wabbit, Geary· 18. Lightning, This- tle, Laser. Sailboards. San Diego Yacht Club: PHRF A·B- C-D. San Fernando Valley Yacht Club: P-Cat, Small Boat Arbitrary. Day Sailer. Rhodes-19, 5-0-5. Fireball, Dart, Hobie 14-1 Q. Seal Beach Yac ht Club: C'atali na -30. Catalina-27 , C'atahna-25. Catalina-22. Santana 525. Ventura-25. MacGregor-25. Coronado-25. Perpetual trophies at stake: Seo R. Meyer Trophy. IOR·A. Christian Brothers Trophy, IOR-B; Don Lee Trophy. IOR-C'; Max Miller Troph>. IOR·D. Kenneth E. Street Memorial Troph). PH RF-A sa1lmgout of Little Ships Fleet; Frank Dair Trophy. PHRF-B sa1hng out of LSF; Harold Adams Trophy. PHRF sailing out of LSF: PCT Perpetual Trophy, PHRF· D King Harbor YC'; Harry John March Trophy. PHRF·A. KHYC; Charles Brown Trophy, PHRF-B. KHYC': Harry Wills Trophy. PHRF-C'. KHYC': Commodore Jam Foyer Trophy, PH RF-A out of Dana Point YC; Axel Carlsson, PHRF·B, DPYC: Dana Point Yach t Club Trophy. PHRF·C'. Midwinter Snipe Class Trophy; Jim Tyler Memorial. Lido-14 Class A: Kite Trophy. lnternational-14; Fran Bonage Trophy. Star; World (Pleue eee REGATTA/82) The home of the Loe An&ela Yacht Clab at Ft.h Harbor wu built 1n the 19309 and DlllJ ........ ., .... ........, hardly ~mblet the more faalaloaable qaartera of other Barbor Area yaelat c:laba. LAYC: Short on plush but 1-ong on pr:estlge The t e rm s --------------.-------..,.----.... .... "posh'' or "plush" hardly apply to tlie Los Angeles Yacht Club located on Ter· minal Island (San Pedro) in a nckety old building in Fish At.101 loCUIEY Harbor. • ...................... .. Nevertheless, LA YC' has the distinction of being the second oldest in Southern California. and probably the most distinguished -depending on to whom you are talking. LA YC' observed its 84th Opening Day last Saturday to the skirting of bagpipes, martial airs by a talented youth steel band and formal flag-raising inspired by a Coast Guard color guard. · When you are talking about the "oldest," one has to consider mergers of clubs around the tum of the century. San Diego Yacht Club traces its lineage i·nto the 1800s when 1t was known by another narne. LA YC claims a 1901 inaugural. emerging from what was once known as the South Coast Yacht Oub. In later years. before building the present clubhouse at Fish Harbor. 11 shared quarters with California Yacht Club. now located in ··~lush'" quaners at Marina del Rey. The LA YC' clubhouse-one large room, an office and surrounding utility buildings -was built in the early 1930s and boasts of a membership. past and pi"cscot of some of the most disunguished yachtsmen and women on the West Coast. some of whom hold memberships in other clubs -including Newport Harbor, Balboa and Voyagers yacht clubs. As cannon fire heralded the anauguraJ of the 1985 slate of officers. Leon Cooper was installed as commodore; Elliott {Joe) Cu tting. vice commodore; James H. Brenner. rear commodore, and Christopher M. Moore, fleet captain. In addition to visiting commodores and other guests, Cooper introduced a long list of early day members. including Ed Rapley, "No. I," and his brother Fritz who claims No. 4 membership. Don Ayres of Newpon Beach was introduced as another "oldtimer" and Peggy Slater. the most distinguished yachtswoman on the West Coast. LA YC was once the principal club hosting the Leon Cooper Ed Ripley Southern Cahforn1a Yachting ASSOCtation M1dwmter Rcpt ta when that event was limi\ed \0 the coofines of Los .\ngeles Harbor It now has grown to embrace 19 clubs from San Diego to Ventura Count}. LA ye also hosts the oldest offshore racme scnes. ':he Whllne). Lillie Whitney and Los Angeles Tames senes which draws entnes from San Diego to San Francisco for races around the Channel Islands. Despite llS locat1on, LA YC members are proud of their Fish Harbor home. even wtiile talking for years about a new cl ubhouse in the immediate vicinity. If members and guests expected to hear of imminent plans for a new clubhouse. they were disappointed by Commodore Cooper who said. "We arc still in the planning sta~e. but 1t 1s not likely we will occupy a new clubhouse this year or ne~t.'" Harding Regatta detailed Dana Pomt 't acht Club wall kick ofT its I Q85 racing season March 3 with the 13th annual Henf) Harding Regatta Harding was the DPYC' com· modorem 1966-67. Performance Handicap Racing Fleet ratings or yacht club affiliation arc not required. Ratings v.ill be assigned b) the race committee for those"' 11hou1. There will be fi ve classes. PHRF A· B-l. non-spinnaker and non-spin- naker \1ngle-handcd .\ sk1pJ)('rs· m~tmg at Q· J 5 a.m. "'111 pn·<"edt' thc v. arnang signal forthe race at 11 10 a m Trophies will be presented at DP't C after the race. At Mayor'• Ball: Dora and Charlie RoclrltUea, llounlr and Irene Marcllnl, Jady Scott, Frank Na Tarro with Margie and Frank Hopkin•. Entf"\ form'I can be obtained by .. calling DPYC. .i96-:!QOO. or Btll Pollock. Q70-64::!7 Mayor's Ball honors Valley leaders Some 140 attended the Mayor's BaJJ hosted by the Fountain Valley Chamber of Commerce to honor Mayor Bea Nlelsea and City Council members Geor1e Scott, Fred VM1, Barbara Brown and Jim Neal. Fullenon CollCfC'sJazzComboNo. I "Connec- tion ''began the music duri n~ the social hour. play.ed durina the New York steak dinner and continued for dancing. Irene Mardlal, attendina with husband Mff&ir Manllal, was chairman of the annual event held in the MilcSQuarc Golf Coursemtaurant. Members of the Chamber's Women's Division, headed by BetteS..le(thercwith husbandJ.a}, added a festive touch to the party with theirbelloon and floral decorations done in Fountain Valley's colors-silver and blue. Pacific Mutual, represented at the ball by the W1rm1Qarband Fountain Valley Estates(with Dr. and Mrs. BobOluderinanendancc}weresPonsorsof t~e U9l'------ JHyKel1ey, Fountain Vallcycitymartaacr, was thercalona with Marste and Chamber President Fruk H...-(hcprescntwaplaquc to Nielscn1ttcndin1 witl\ wi fe UHi), J.aOrr, rcpn:scntina Rep. Nolan Frinelle. and wife UMa Orr,Sae4yand Dea M•rt• (he'sa hambcr vice president whopve ~ invoca· tion), Joel Vttt(lead1n1 the fla salute). Ma""9 Deatso1,exe<:utivcdirectorofthcchamber; Fruit Navarro, immediate past president, and Dora and Honorary Oire<:tort'brUe Rodrtpez. . . . \ Jane D'AddJo ofHuntinaton Beach has been singled out byChaner IOOasits Woman of the Year for her accomplishments in business. Atadinnerheldat The Hobbit in Orange it was pointed out that she is the soteownerofSecurity ManufacturinaCorp., the world's largest.mail box manufac1urinacompanyforprivatcmailandbusincss service industry. · She is also the chairperson of the board and SO percent owner of Mail Boxes. Etc. USA, a I ~store nationwide franchise and the only national franchise dealinacxclusivclvwith the private mail indu.suy. O'Addio wrotc0 Evcry Woman Can''. asutep-by· step auide for worMawb uld like to own tbdr own bu sines and make money cf9ina it and authored "Monica's HAnn'nhh Houte." Ina lS..mmutcfUmshown laSt)'earat tbeNational lnittativcsConfettnC'cs for Women ButinnsOwn- entup,1>' Addio 1ppea~ wnh Pm!dctlt RCIPD • discuss1eahowwomcn. withthchclpofthe mall BusincssAdmini1trationc:anst1n tbeirown~ul firms. he has appeared on 38 talk showslhdafterone o (Pleue ... lllATGa/al) .. ............................ P-tala VILIJe7 11aJW 8eD Nleleea. ceam, llMta hM v-. mayor pro.._ ud CltJ eo-cu.aa Oeor .. lcott. ' . OPYC also announcro the dates for its 13th annual Dana Point Yacht ClubSenesof'l(-.en ra~ throughout the ~ason The." first ra~ is scheduled March 23. Based on the number of entnes, classn will be desu~natcd as PHRF • S.C' and C'atahna-17. Each entrant must bea member of a recognized Ll n1ted States Yacht Rae· mg Union vacht d ub and must have a· vahd PHRF raung ~naficatc on race date Entrv fee Wlll be S2S per boat if received before March 23 and $30 thereafter. k1ppcn en pay SS to compete in indl\ 1dual races Trophic will~ awarded for each nee. ba~ on the num~r of st.artcn. One trophy wtll ~ awarded for fin tartcrs.. two for sill to seven, three for e11ht to 11 . four for 12 to 16 and 6ve for I 7 or mo~. Ptrpctu&l and take-home troptuei will be av.'lrded LO the O\'erafl RnCS Mnnc:r and the winner of each class. nd and thud place scnn take-- home tropt11csalso will~ awarded "' c. h eta Race dates for the entift tenet~ March 23. May '· tlurd and fourtb f"&CC ,Junc29. u 10, pt 15and Oct. ll The club "-'Ill be QP(n after each nl~ to"' 1t1n s 11)C)Crs&nd sun I 1 ! t - • Orange Coat OAU.Y PILOT/TI\urld•Y, ir.bruwy 1•, 1885 Roaxornot, the message is watch children OEAR ANN LANDERS: You · recently ran a letter from ·•West Coast Wamina" about a woman who wat shoppina with her small day&hter. The woman lost slaht of the llf l and called 1eeunty. They locked the 11ore · and after a search located the ,Jrl in : the men re1tro0m with a man who : had sedated her and cut off her hair so :. be could di11ulae her looks and carry ~ ber out unnoticed. :.. Ann, that old yarn has been around ~ for years. The Chicaao version dQC• : not Involve a man, but JYJ>llH. l • heard it happened nnt in North· : brook. then· Oak Park. and recently • Arlinaton Hcjpts, • The newest tca.re story 11 about a • I •• LM1us youn.1 mauon who went to her car and found an old woman in the back 11eat. The old woman claimed to be sick and asked to be driven to a hospital. The youna matron aarccd. but said she needed to ao baclt into Marshall Field's to pick up somc- thina. She aot a security auard from the atore to retum to ~c car.with her. The auard ditcovered that the old woman In the car waa a man dresaed 11 a woman. He had an ax . Thcte incident• never happen to the person tclllna the ttory -it's always a friend or an aunt'.s ncitt-door nei&hbor. I'm surpriled you printed "West Coa11" without checkina It. Many people swear by what you Write and will rc~at that story until It takes on an air of truth. Remandina people to watch their kidJ is one thins. Scarin1 the pants off them is another. -BS DETECTOR IN' CHlCAOO DEAR BS: I bl&. So wllact U wa1 u lloDetS mt1ca1st. ne f0Uowla1 leSStr • tM umt ·---------------------------------------------------' iHappytrails, Valentine • I : Valentine's Day seems as aood a time 11 any to lltllc about that boit of . chocolates mott of you will be • rccel vlna today. E111 IOllECI ..:. Chocolate Is an aphrodisiac, one of· : the love foods that supposedly has the : special power to stimulate you se~ual· : ly. ~phrodisiacs were never anythina • 1 planned my meals around. you -understand. but l fiaurcd it' was wonh : knowina about in the event I was in about chocolate until a few years aao. · Walareen's eatina at the counter Scientist1 did some studies and found ·: someday and Redford sat down next out it contained phenylethylaminc. :· to me. I d know what to sugest. This is a chemical that 11 released by :: I never put a whole lot of stock an the brain when people fall an love. the myth until one day J was doin& a (for ycirs I've been blamina my cook.ina seament with Julia Child for morhcr.) · "Good Mornina America" when she-Accordina to the studies. this , · passed me a plate offlamina bananas. would u plain why. when~ romance : As I stuffed halfof the banana an to aocs on the rocks. lovers will 10 on a . my mouth she observed, "It's an chocolate binac which is the body's • ·.aphrodisiac, you know." When I aot way ofreplacinaphenylethylaminc. . to thinking about the number of My mother didn't raise a fool. I . gonHas anCI monkeys and baboons knew that love foods would never be out thert who looked louay, but anythinachcap ... likehamh-09'und ·: multiplied their brains 01,11. I became beans or macaroni and cheese. No. : a believer. 1-•1 we're loolcin& at artichokes pomc· ;: · All my life I heard whispered aranates. aspara1us, ~uahrooms. :: rum ors about the powers of oysters caviar. nuts. truffles. fo ac aras and ~ and strawberries. but I never knew npc apricots. -: Other scientists dlsqrcc. They say h lsn•t what you cat that arouses people seitually. but where you cat. A posh restaurant with dim liahts a"d soft musk with food served elcpntly - on tarae plates and sprinkled With a life-stud_pepper mUI will do as much as seven courses of fip. Jn preparation for Valentine's Day. I approached my husband a few days aao and said ... Dad you know that chocolate is an aphrodisiac?" .. Wht"rc did you hear that?" he asked. "And that th e Mexican Emperor Montezuma drank SO cupt of choc- olate before entering his harcmr' "After what Montezuma did fat me an Mautlan a few )'.Cars aao. I wouldn't believe him 1f he told me oranges &rcw on trees." ''I'd hate to think wh•t would happen if someone aa ve me a lbree- pound box of, chocolate creams." There's no need to labor what I got fo r Valentine's Day. but I wonder how far Montezuma could have aoncn with a baa of Trail Miit. ............................................................................ -- :MAYOR ••• · rromBl received more than 30,000 leuen from listeners. Charter I 00 headed by President TIMlma Mill.er (Ambrosia owner) also honored Janay KrD1er of la Jolla as Woman of the Year for contributions to Charter I 00. She co-. founded the chapter with Gloria Zigncr and served as president from 1978 until 1984. Attorney Mary Carrtn,aon and Pat Powell, mamaae and family counselor, co-chaired the social event fo r the networkina invitational aroup composed of professional women. Paparazzi isedited by Daily Pilot Style Editor Vida Dean. JACK Lfl'll'IOrt ~ML Somewhere betwet'n laughler and tear\, they found soml'thing 10 Oefll'V(' 1n A UN IV ER SAL RELEASE ,.. __,,,, .. ._ - NOW PLAYING llNIN£ LAHAIAA COITAMUA EdWards South Coas1 P1w ~2711 EdWards WoodbfldOe Cinema AMC FulllOll SQuare OAAN0£ . OMNOE CinedOme Pacific· s Orange 634-2553 Onve In &91·0633 HutnlNOTON IEACH ~1-~' MIWONVIUO 634·9361 Edwards HunllnQlon Cinemi 848·0388 Edwards Mission Vieto Mall ~95·6220 I HO ....... ACCPflD '°" '" .. INOAOIM&Nl I LUXU.V THfATHS flnt T~ Mltl11M ........ * ONLY 12.71 Ullltte ..... , wrneassc•J IHOWS AT 12·10 J iOO I 10 7 20 6 t •lO llAM Al"PSAL JNJ AT 12:10 2 110 :10 1 :10 1 :10 .. 10:10 .,.._...'1A#TA81AM) 12140 J :OO 1:20 1 :~0 10·00. ltlown In 4•Tr1ok Matn•tle Sound tULl..J ... ,,,......,. , .. , ll'IOWI 81 1 141 4 :la 1 :30 .. 10:10 lllC llU 6 llAUDS .V&lll..Y MIL.LS .,.._11) IHOWI AT COft CfRl SHOWS AT ltOO :aiio 1 140 1: I )121 l 1JI a iOI. 10120 7110 .. 10:01 DRIVE-I NS m~ !:Mu:.M't!!ltl llltcHtU flt) s ""' Co•H t v nfaltllfllll)' YOIUl(JIQ) ••~nu Plu1 Co·,N\vre Thief of Heart• '"' CITYN&AT .. ) ""'' CO·Hft Heavenly aodl .. (Ill) STAIUIMfO'O) ""' Co ·Hlt oune <'0·1 JI PttOTOCOt. .. ) ,1u1 Co·ft•ature Mlokl & M•ud• 1'0·1 JJ REGATTA ••• From Bl Hobie Class Assoc1at1on Trophy. Hobie-33: Capri -JO Trophy; Junior Naples Sabot A Trophy; ~nior Naples Sabot Trophy: Lido lsle Yacht Club Trophy, Senior Sabot over 40; Gcary-18 SC'YA Trophy, Midwinter Olympic Classes Trophy, Olympic class with larae1t averap: number of entries. 7 ~MY N¥400 NOMNAAONS em llJT DmC10I rnND .off llJT ACTOI SA'.1 WAJERSTON lfST~ACTOI 00 KA.ING s. NGO'? lllT ICIUHP\AY laMd on MaMrtClt from Nw:lfMJ Medk#n BRUCE~ tHE KILLING EIELDS 9CA MA* &MA msm COITA.:JA EOWAMlS TOWN ClNlla IS I t 114 n JOIO (()WAAO$~(~ 5'1 seoo LAllMU .. ,ASHIOlf SQIM (113Jltl·OW -ClllJ)(JM( ll4-ZSU IUWID COWAllDS CKMA MST ttl·atl~ Oq.:untu· your: coupon suvings with thl'. Supt.•rmarkt.•t Shopper. each Wednescla,\· und ~unda~· in the ..., .... 111bjecs may ai.rt a ft't mUU• peopa. to SM w1en of ltnlal dMtlr dltl4lr• wu4tr .n wklle tM)' IN .,.,, ........... n11 letter •• for ,. ... DEAR ANN LANDERS: Lall w~kend while shopplna in a larae store I saw a S-year-old In tears unable to find her pare. nts. This child was more than willlna to 10 with me when l told her I'd help her find her mother. Lucky for her I took her ,to the cu1tomer service counter and not out the door. What la the natter with parents these days? Don't they know there is an incredible numberof1lcko1on the loose and we arc 1ufJ'crin1 'from a national epidemic of child abduc· tlon1. rapes and murders? Parent• mutt take the responsl· biHty for protectln1 their children apin1t the crailes. Herc are some practical auuenions: I . Keep your <:llild .neitt to you ~t a~I times while shopp1n1. even 1f 1t means usina a hamcss. 2:Nevcr leave a child in a locked or parked car. A tot can easily be tricked into uolocklna the door. 3. Tell your child if you become separated to ao directly to the check-out counter and say to the clerk, "lam lost." 4. Adults please do not ianore the pliaht of a lost child no matter how busy you are. Take the younjster to a aale1J)Crwn. You would want your child or arandchild to be helped in that manner. Do as much for some- one else. -A. V. IN VA. D&All VA.: l1ceU.s ~vice. Oar clal.,,... are lrreptaceeble truHnt. Let's tr•t tMm lbt ••1· Ann Landers' new booklet, "Soi •nd the T~nll."r. " expWn• every 11p«t ofaexuafbohavior-wboro to draw the lino. how to .ay no, the v•rlou1 met.hod1 of contr1ceptlon, the d1111crs of VD. the symptom• •nd whore to ,et help. For a copy, .end $2 •nd ' Ion~ tef f-addrcU«I, 1iamD«1 envelope 37 cents po1 ~ to Ann L.tndcrs. . 0 . Box I 19':f Chicqo. Ill. 6()611. I LATINICIHT AMINCA 7000lUI -n:«>-CClMOVll . tt • .. Tilt Clltngellng" (1t7t) George c Scott, TIWI Ven '*"'· -11:80- (B)MOYll • •·~ "Tilt 8uddY Syawn" (1M41 Alcitllrd Ottyfutt, Slltlll SltendOn. -1MO-l:'~vwooo P. ~ Gulde F« The Mlnled Men" ( 1967) Wiit• Matthau. Aober1 Motlt . (1)-......,--rrNIWt OOWU'INm.t -1lll0- ~ flltffwmt DAYIO t.=tlTCHOOQ( • YNll:/t DlfJJUUGlft 'ft~ Of Plltftct" (1952) lob ~.Jene Rutttll. ... ~··"Vivi ....... (1Mt) Ptt• Ulll· nO¥. Jonlttlln Wlnttrt. I LOYI. .--.CAN Im.I JACICll IWION -1tAO- .(l)MCMI In a beut·to-beart talk, Cllff (BUI Coeby) often ad'f'loe to bl8 da•ter van .... (Tempent llleclMe) In an epl8ode of .. Tbe Coeby 81aow" tontiJat at 8 on Channel 4. t t •..t "The Omega Men" (1171) Ctlattten Httton. Anthony Zerbe. -1:00- .MOVll * *'1' "The Shtpfttrd Of The Hiiia'' I 194l~-= =. lelty Field. l~ Moonllah1 II(' (1161) \, ** "Tht Min Wflo Lowd WOl'llll'I" ~'= Alynolde. Me Andrlwt. * "Two Of A Kind" (1N3) JOfln Tr1- Y01t1. ON\111 Newton.John, (J)MO'tW • t '..t "Tiit Bliek 8t11Uon Rtturna" '(1N3) Kelly Reno. Ttrt Gltr. -ta0-1 1~:""~ LOYllOAT IWTUALI -t.00- 1 L = lllON • ..v ..... F-=-THIATM • • • "Clfmtn" (1913) Antonio Oldta. Laura def Sol. -t.i0-1 r COUM **~ "f he St. Vallnttnn-OerM• Here" (1997) J11on Robarda. i!rWm * * • "Y1nll" ( 19831 81rbr1 StrelNn<I, Mandy P1tlnkln. -10:00-==uu ''=' MAN,'°°" MAN: IOOK I I ,AWLlY TOWIM MtGUNI WNtTUNG MOVll ** "PUfple H111" (1982) Ptter Nei-eon. Chuck Mcautny (J)MOTHIM -10:a0- 1=-~ • • • "A Fwtwlll To Arma" 11957) Rodi tWOeon. Jennlf• Jonel, (l)llZAMIQ -11:00- DAJJ. ()) 0 a HIWI JOl<IJft Wl.D &ILIONI "°"""'COURT MONTY mHON'I n. YING e llMIANT llUCO (J)MOYll . t * t "Yentl" ( 1983) 811br1 Strtlalnd, Mindy Pallnkln CZ)MO.V9 ~ t "Tiit World II Full Of M1trltd Men" (1980) Tony Franclou. CarTOll Biii«. IDot~~~e>N.a HOTllAT MOYll "Private TMClltr" (No Otte) (J)MOYll u • "Bad Boyl" ( 1M2) hill Ptnn. Atnl 8anlonl. -1:20- Cl)MOYll * * '1' "Olmltn: OIMtl II" ( 1971) Wll-lllm Holden, L .. Ofant. -1:ao-I ~MCON>ALUI .LCMIONGI !) ~ T'HUAIM.Y **~"Molt«" (1N0) ROW1 F«· '*·Robin-,..,, -1:AI-®MOYIE U "&Wnt h On Rio" (19") Ml· et\111 Ctlnt. JOM9fl Bologna. -fD0-1 i~NIWl~ATCH -taO-i :f ONl Nlwt H "CNnlt Chin: The Trip" (1947) Sidney TOier. Menlan Mottllnd. (1J)MCMI t "Hot °*"'t" ( 1N31 Anna Ventu-ra. Jlmlt Olllll. l lt111il11d11~\ h· 1il1ifl l1r1ttl ACADEMY AWARD NOWHE BEST ORIGINAL ICR&NPLAY 1 11 1 11 1f 1 '! , • I, t I I • ! 11, • '' •' , I • ' I ' ~-. Heauen help us ~~ 131:\llEl~~f I-Ill.I-'~ rH I II J(f A 10 A'> I < I lJ II I\ I N Tl H TA I N I t J(, I JI I< II V I MJIJ 'I llH H H. • 11• • •' "' 11 ft111 ........ THEY ONLY MIT ONCE, IUT rr CHANGED TH!IR LMS FOMVa. T • .. . .. -; . . .. 'HollywoOd • Wives' es By FRED ROTHENBERG .,., ........... ," .. Jtx:kcy1na and P.h1losophi11na. The Buddy Hudw n (Andtew te vens). and Neiman-Mucus) to the best And what will audience. learn alway done by the ment symm. and "Final Reunion · script w14s written an ex-11aolo. 15 also des~rate for a eatries to the best beds -1n that about Hollxwood livet? NothallJ o( nobod)'eVorhaauytroublefindiqa . NEW Y< >RK -Do lunlh l)o hy Montana Gray (Stefanie Powers) pan in "Final 8.euoton.' but wiH he Mder. • imPort. except tbal cut1na 11n't perluna 1pace on Rodeo Onve. ' d1nne~ l~anyth1njcl~ Hut don't who~ hus~nd, Nril (Anthony s~p~~xualh~1nk~)CO~~~inar~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i w~ te .!•mt watching "Holl)'woo<l Hopkins). 1s a reformed alcohohc his mamaae. to att h11 b11 carttr Wives. AR(\ plast1r m1n1knes that who will be dm:ctina the film . break? Steven ·only asset here 1s his nuds a lot more than a tummy tuck SexPQt Ginn Germaine (Suzanne upper torso, which he manaacs to and a facehO Someri.) 1s ready for a career chanae reveal in half a dozen scenes. T~is lethargic. video version ol and the part of the innocent young Other characters include the for. Jackie Co!lins' best-seller will he thing 1n "Final Reunion," We learn &cttable Angie Dickinson as super broadcast 1n three two-hour install· abou1 her new acting direction in a aaent adie LaSalle, Rod tciaer in a ~enb Sunday, Monday and Tucsda)' breathles interview with Mary Hart solidly offbeat performance a1 the ntdlb. of "Entertainment Ton11ht' who unscrupulous producer of ••final ~r~ucer Aaro~.~pelhng (" Dynas-plays herself quite believably. Reunion ... and Roddy McDowall as a ty, Love Boat, "Finder of Lo~t In the one 1n1ent1onally funny hne Beverl)' Hills pimp. Loves") has turned(. ollins' fet ching-1n "Hollywood Wives." Gina says her The performances are uneven. ly satirical novel into his <1tandard latest film has her playing "an Bergen d~sn't bnna cnou~ i:est to series glop: humorless, meaningless archcolog1s1 who gets captured by a Elaine. But Forrest is just right as the pap that take~ refuge in ght1 y ros-bnnd of pygmies" but she's had vain, immature actor who has his tu mes, lavish ~t'i and ~leek cars -all enough of those scxploi1ation parts. !n1tials on his pajamas. reads Variety to the crescendo of sa ppy \ 1ohns Gina ends up seducing Nell for a 1n bed and has been pampered and The shaml.' of 11 1s that th1~ crass ~reen test, blackmailing him with protected all his adult life. trash could ha'c been da~s) trash tapes of their affair and causing him Af\er six houl'1 of "Hollywood accord ing to th1!> column1s1'o; w1 f~ to have a heart attack 1n the sack. Wives" tedium. an eaaer public will wbo read th e book. wtth the front "Apparently, he's been under a lot of know ttus much about the women cover torn off so nobody would know. 'itress lately," the doctor who can't behind the movie kings: they spend and thought it was a gas. frequentl y <;ave him tells h1'i wife and ex-wife their days hopping from the best laugh111g aloud at Coll111s' devcr (Joanna Cassidy). shops (some filming is done in Gucci writing. ,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~___. Quaht> a'>1dl.'. <ipell1ng l'i a pro\ en ratings winner, and ABC'" npcc11ng a blockbuster performance from "Holl) wood Wi ves." Of course. 11 has the prerequ1S1tc murders. scduct10n'i, betrayals and blackmallings. "Holl ywood W1vec;" ("Hollywood Whines" fits belier) 1s about the women ~hind the powerful men 1n the movie capital. their quest for vicarious fame and fonunc, and their lunches. facial~ and affairs. or as ABC's gushing pubhctty material says. "the pnvatc ltves of th e world's most public people." All these public: people and plot lines intersect at the third night's big bash. which Elaine ConlJ (Candice Bergen) throws 1n the hopes of resurrecting her husband's fading film career. Elaine believes that 1f Ro!>s' star c:an me again through a plum role in \he movie "Final Reunion." he'll be more macho in bed and 'ihe'll be restored to her rightful place at Hollr.~oocrs chi c SPQl'i. Meanwhile. Ross (Steve Forrc'ir). a former matinee idol relegated to low. budget, spaehett1WeMerns.1s having a torrid dalltance w11h Elaine·~ friend, Karen (Mary Crosby). . "Final Reunion" is the focal point for much of the story'o; st·heming. NBC wins by turning off minds NEW YORK(AP)-NBCwon the week and confounded the ~xperts w11h successful movies about a wacky summer campand a perilous wartime mission tltat beat ABC's sens1t1ve filmsabout suicide and homosexuah· t)'. N BC s effecti ve counter-program- ming thwarred ABC's-recenT ratmgs comeback and illustrated the popu- larity and rcs1hcncy of made-for-TV movies. which one Madison A venue execu11ve credited with returning some disenchanted viewers to network telev1s1on . ALL SEATS s2.00 Sche~~~ 201 0 CBll ·HEAVEN HELP US ' 1A1 he~ 2010 8 I~ '~ 1 f 11' THE TERMINATOR [ffi TU ff TUlf 111 HI \I.I U\ \l \..,lttc I H\ 'JG 10 10 61~ t01~ edwards MESA CINEMA edwards WESTBROOK Ntwro •1 IUUl l'AIO 646 5025 Wf\h •IOO fU 530 4401 &l ot.,.\lllfl . &f U OOIHU9\f • CO\l&Mf\A 0:.&10 ... GIO•I SURTS FRl>AYI MWl'll 639 8110 ST AlllUM Ofl IN llA mu 111.M s 1 AOiuM 1U.1U , ... m 499l UA MOVllS 8 IN II( Miil ,,,,., llAl.I IUfT9"l()fj ll(ACH 8-48 0388 lDWAROSHUNllHGION 81-cH Al lllMI a 11 llS A ll he needed was a lucky bieak. T hen one day ~moved in . R -····-·--.... ~ ... ,~ ~ llVK 8S4 8811 £0WAROS UHIVlRSHY CMll'llS Oii ACMSS f llOlt ut1 LA HAMA 1213) 691-0633 Mil, r ASHION SQUAR£ llWIO & 1111'{11111l lA~S13 1611 SRO CAICWAY S H fW'I Al VAUO 'l'lW LACIN KACH 497 1111 COWARDS SO COAST LAGUNA 10 C04S I t4W'I A 1 llOHIWA Y l.ACIN ... .LS 7686611 l AGUNA HlllS MAI. l IN IMf llAll NOi 10 $(AR$ ORMlil m zm SYUFl CITY WfTER jtol •l~1M SNfU ANA ~7CU UlWAROS Bl!ISTOl llMSIOl 41 ~TllJI wnr-sm s91 3693 HIWAY 39 Of! ~ 110CH 11. vo so 01 G G rwr W11h the 30-week pnme-ttme season now exactly two-thirds over. last week may have assu(ed NBC of 1ts only second-place finish in a decade. And it may be remembered as the week when "Poison Ivy" outperformed "Surv1v1ng·· and "The Diny Dozen: The Next M1ss1on" had t-~;;;;~fi~~~~mffi~~~:ii~fi~=;iiiriii~:-1 ~13~fr· raungs than "Consenting I *PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES* ....... Wll:l.. ·Tm sure AB upected more from BARGAIN MATINEES I FIRST 2 '9rformanct1 Mon•y * those IWO movies," said Bob lg1el. Thru S.tur*v (Except Holi•ys a s,.c. Ent1ttmtnts) senior vice presi dent of the NW Ayer 10211lll!MM01~1T101c!"t1'" s..1-lf+'1if@•I•]•l 4) advcrtisingngency. "It didn't happen. 11 .. .. .. -••11~~.r ... • • • _ .11 They were blunted." r --111-,M-CA*-,---. 11111 Ul· ... (fK•lly'Ar C....41oweo4T The major matchups occurred on .. ., om <N U> 111.,_,,, l(M)(llnAl!AM>!Oilllll Monday and Sunday. two of the 110 JO'>. H~ 10 ioos ii JO t~ HO rn 1oso ~J.~M:0111 heaviest v1cw1ng nrrc1s. On Monday, I 00) I~~ JO 100 IOlll M COllOll ai. r11 1 oo • oo 11 oo , .,, ... _AW•-.. 1 1» -·~ ......... Feb. 4, 11 wa A C's ··cnnsentina --· -....... c .,, _ -..... , """. nl IMJI (N.IJ} l JO U O -TOIS Adult ," about a familY. deahng with its son's homosexuality, vs. "The Dirty Dozen: The Next Mission," a macho World War II yarn. vs. CBS' rcaular female-appeal series. includ· mg "Kate & Allie" and "Cagney & Lacey." "The 0111) t>o1en" ranked finh. ··c on..cnt1ng Adult" wa~ s11tth. while none of CBS' competing !tencs cracked the Top JO. "The two movies did very well. They split the audience between male and female. and we were caught 1n the middle." said Mike Eisenberg. CB · director of audience measurement. • Sunday. the competition stacked up this way: ABC's heavily promoted movie about teen-age su1c1~c. "Surv1vina " and CBS' controve rsial "Atlanta Child Murders," aaalnst NBCs unsuna tec:n.aac film about : u!!lT'h:' ~~fn~in~~·i;;ro•~:J~~:: : ranked 12th. "Poison Ivy:• I 71h. and "Surviving,'' 23rd. Last week. A BC had only one Knc1 1n the Top 20 -''Dynasty, .. which · ABC broadcast instead of immedi· ately carr)'l na the Democratic rcspon~ 10 Pre idcnt Rcapn's tate of the Union mcsuae The Demo- . crats were on CBS and NB but dcla)~ until Thursday nif!lt nn ABC. "Dynasty" wuthc week , No. l ahow. but n actually had a lo~r t1un1 than a week •fo· Last month, ABC scored '" only two WttkJy victories this season with the uper Bowl and the "American Music Award :· but the netv.ork'a momentum w '1oftd 1111 wuk by weak series and lowrr·than-e'pe ttd movie raunas. LoMIRAOA (.j lllCMlf (II 11JO no oo •10 110 10 JO -• lc•tt• Oo ~ 0.-. llMSS (I} 100 1n HO I I) IO IO -· t .. •tt• 0-.... °""' llt flt.COii & , .. .,...,., 12 lO ) 10 S ~ I ~ 11 00 ,.,, ... , lc:•'1• flt, s... Otolf llU 1"4 240tll• Ml<•ilt ~ le Ml••ilt At llowc11•1 w lil(lllllolllJllS • 'ASMS It ._ !PCI 100 HO. t JO I WO f MIU COP (I) Ill OOllV SIOlO 11 JO 100 \ lO 100 10 JO •• \• •, •' \ ' I ' Mil _ ....... I "'~-. -.ul. Ill I ACMl(lll" AWMD IQM\IOG 111 au• mos 111 IN OOllY 511 l!lO I 00 100 100 1000 •nz• 15••» (): sn em llll(U (II 17•0 100 ~10 10 .. ~ ,., ..... ldtll °"Wt Dolt TOKKen Ill 1/ l<l 110 t IO 6JO I JO IOJO ~ ....... ,, •• 11 °"Wt °"" ...-.1111 l\US fWOat •• tNl loHABRA .......... it! iill 11. I I • 4'0 ...... ..., -TatS•tll 1\111 --Ill ~ -8 UI " -~U! COSTA lllSA 631 3SOI EDWARDS HARllOll TWIN ~k~Al lAD AMDI 879~ PAClft AHAHCIM Oii ff fW! " A 1 lllOI -· 990-4021 UA MOVICS 4 lftM HWY Al OING f'ltT 11.0A PMI ¥.12 4993 lJA MOYES 8 .. 11( Ill*,..,, l!Wl •1 '4M L IHA1..• OOLbV SlfHfl AMAOEUS" ("GI 7 oo. 10.00 1 A A M' A'./YAA t4fJt~ • '<A\..• ~di' '>'f"(-1 oNlu' OoS"'f, s fAHTASIA (GI '--..,_~~-~~-™-UAS---7-1.s._~-JO~~___./ dWINI lOWll CfllTfll ~ .. . . . . . ... ~ . ' •.• ' • lb' 4 ,84 ·,.-11 .AC: ... 0 £''" A\l\IAAO N<'1MS ..._.,) "f< I 8£ ~I P (. 'u"E A "AUAGI TO INDIA ' ("GI ~ I • ----MISCHllf (I I ( MON ·THURS -I • 30 • JO 10 30 ./ f ~.~~f·,---. THI GODS MUST II UAZT' C'O> ·-------..... t•.• .,..~ ~ ••• '• H£5f c. •'• THI KILLING fllLOS Il l M~ ·THURS 7 15 10 10 IBJf ( £00•£ "'uRP•n HVlllT HlllS CO"' (I I •.• 'le ~· f ~f t•AHP '!J(J,_,. r '"[., WITHUS (I I +Al ,. 1 fMV ''' MAU A"f'IAL 1"01 ",,, MICKI 6 MAUOI (,.G.13} ... (~ -STAI MAN' l"Gl \_ THI C~T;O~ C~UI 1•1 • OUNOlOH MASlll l'O· Ill , ·\ MO~ fHURS 1130 I IS 1000 ·----.yfHOING AHOll' (I ) . ' TOICHllGHT (I I ' ,. H•INI HUIOll TWlll A••• '• ' ,,. .... - '... • 1111601 llC' DO f< r •Or "' APH• llVlll T HlllS CO" (I I MOH THURS 7.00 9 16 1fw1N1 fl IORO fl . .. . • 611 8ft00 • • ' ) \ nrmo ~1~ tDWAllDS SAOOUBACI( lt IOllO Ill A 1 llJD.l"ll.ll COST I llllJA s-40 OS94 UA SOUTll COAST l"I W W"\OlllU ._ 551-06SS EDWARDS W0008Rm ~l"lllfl'C OI CIUU --VU) 4¥.1-6220 EDWAllDS alS.SOI VlJO MAH S 0 IWY 10 c;.,. ftifl ftlft HWINI CllfMJ CflTB ""'' u '' + • A 4 AV •• ,, • 118 .. 141 JHAT S DAl\ICING •O MOH· THURS e 30 10 16 '--~------... • ._,, fl'$. .r.• MIS. SO"ll l"G· ll • G t lO A so1.0111·sn ""'"'o""•.,..,,......,..,,,.:--::0,.-1- MOH I:/ 00. 2 00, 4 00 1100 I 10 !O 1! TUES. THUAS e '6 a •5 3 ACAOEMY AWAAO NOMIHATl()f(S MWINI fOUITlll VlWY • • I• ol. • 0.., I • _ ... " · Ul· 1100 ED Ul'IS Al l SlA S 12 00 ( I All I 0 0 £ 'I' J"P~ • SEATS II lllll T HILLS CO"' t•> S:l 00 M~THUAS 1 16 11 15 '--A~L--TH,...,A'""T-::S-::D""A'"'N""'C=1NG 1G1 SUTS 1:100 MICICl 6 MAUOf C'G·ll> It MWINIWEITUm I\• .... •1 '. • .. • '~~· ..... ,, •• -~ •. "· .. . 610-4401 THI OUNOIOH MASTll" ("G-131 ..,...,. ~ l01D l'GI .._ HIAVIH HIL,. us_...,..,11,.,...1--.. , TUff TUU (I I ~ • tO •u MWINI HUllTllGIOI '" A • I • A VA t, \ I ....... · ........ 841-0JU • ,, r-..v ~ MASS """"l (f'O) Ml S. SO"ll «"G-1 l ) . ( •••INI CINEMA WEIT ... I V t-,. • A , I .... l't. ! '-' .,. .. .. . •1 naa /·-- • •AALtC 00~1!· S'fAf f :') ( ,. •r-.,. HVlllT HILLS CO,. (I ) I IS I IS 10 IS •• M • THI fAlCOH Al\IO IHI SNOWMAN' (I I "' '•' ~ a ~., ~·( ~ r' r--nr ~---'-H-IK-ll_ll_H_G_'_"_l_o_s~11_._ ·A'11f.. "•' s::t wmou c1 1 .... •Ari 1•w1N1 VlfJO IWll ~ I I A •0 A .. aa1110 IMOJ'tt V 0 THI fALCOH AHO THI SHOWMAN Ill 1'00 • >O OIMli( 637 ~3'0 NI( OtlAHCl MALL so Of llCllJI OUMil 6J.UHI UACtTY COOU • 111 on """"' CHltJ llUtWBlD 891 3693 tNtY 39 Oii ... 11J01 • ~ so °' 1a ,..., ElWISTD m.ml UA WlSn.sTU TWlf QUI .. *" Oii [ ... , THAT\ OAHCINGt (G J 7i""--, .. •I ~I,,"' :l"l ~-~ llVfllT HlllSCO' C•I MIClll & MAUDf t'G ll ... , ... MASS A"l'lAl 'G IHI HAMINOO KID tl'G-lll MO"' I 00 J 00 HIO, ' 00 11 00 10 O~ • J(S THURS • 00 1100 10 4S WllHlU Ill THI COlTOH CLUI (I ) A SOlOlll S STC'H lf'O> ' 4 4 tV A~;,,f• ~1 ~~ lfwwfa SIDIUllCI I 4 I> A P ~ •I J . . uuaa & • U A..\ AP " ""' Hf .._ "' W ) AMAOlUS t"Ol I f ' lOI CH llGHt • AVlHGINO ANGfl • "li41DUNGI Ol\IUSTfl l'G IJ ) M(\'1 '"~AS ''k!Qlf IHI lllHll\IG llllDS • HVUlT HllLS CO,. (I ) , •• '\lei 800. ,. 1010 'fMI ULCOH ANO o< I!• \ TMI SHOWMAN" (I ) ''Ar ) '""''"''ON~<"' WITNIH" (I I I I. MAIT OtuO~ --) ''THI fLAMIHOO IUD" ("0. lil Cl< •• --....,.-• ...,..,....Al.>t...,..,..,-:-.. .,.,":".":'a:-::-"M! T"!":,,, ':'T"',.( -• ~t« r i ' I ( f df A "AUAOl TO IHOIA l'G> M~ IH°'' II •S I .0 ;---; 0 :: ..... ,o .. -100 .)00 ~00 00 100 • MA S; ~"~~~~"irio1 \ .... ·-~ --.~ . .,~, ... ~.,. lJHH MILLS llll lH 111 t ·. ... ·. ' ... ' -• • l If' 1 ..... , SOUTit COlll l.ACUll ( • ,..IS(Hllf :•1 I I \-----11:-.~\:-:,-::ri;::-::r:-::o:-----.... \ ,-_ •41111•\0N ,o'lr1 tl ••• ,. • 1i f"MAT \ OAN(IHG IOI 2 II IOI IOOO . ... ' ... . .. . 417 1111 ,. SOLOtH s non (f'O) I I 0 'WlfNI U ' (I ) ( 61IO I ;'(I 1010 • , ..... D •• \HRr u • f ( "'""''"'' \ llVULY MILLS CM Cl ) _""""!m._ .... ,·, ttUM , '° • .. 10,. tfWll'fl lllU IMI flC17' r ''"' conoH cLu• <•1 .. '\ ----...,.,.,.~-:7':r.-:-----" ,. ----"'"''"' KlA! .. - 141WU"lll llDO • "°"" ~l M ~•A"fl tuf'T( ~ •• , ... C•I r '' • • 111UU Mii 1151" .. MH tOfnL" (PO.I)) 7 00 • 15 ... ftl CPlf 1!11 . . '' . Mt J 101 • I i ., .. fALC°" A ... fMI JNOWMAH tt l ,, T . . . . . .. " ... .. . . ·~ SmltlJ acqulrlag Megadlamond Smith International Inc. chairman and chief executive officer. Je:r'( W. Neely, Mid Tuetday that tbe Newport Beacb·blsed flrm is acquJri!'I · Mepcliamond lnduJtriet. a Provo, Utah based company that is a leader ln synthetic diamond tecbnolOI)'. Tbe purchase will be completed on Feb. 13, Terms were not dilclosed. ~ Soe.tina a Smith conference for secrities analysts from around the country, Neety alid. "Mepdiamond's polycmtalline diamond tecbnoloCY should ' ~ble us to develop Jonae~·lived, h1Jher speed tools, better cuttina stnac:uara. improved rates of penetrauon and reduced cost ~r toot in a number of ways. .. And wie are noqust dealina wit.W potential,' Nec!J emphasized ... Smith products bued on th11 tecbnoloay. such as our new Dyna-Drill hiah speed positive displlcement mud motor. are already in the field today." Smith's president. Fred J. Barnes. reported an overall improvement fn Smith's 198• operatina results. includina I seven percent increuc in Smith's operatina ~aratn befo~ unusual charses. He attnbuted the improvement \0 the compa,oy•s consolidation and cost red,uctio!' t>~ms. as well as to turnarounds in tbe Smith Eneray Services and Drilco d1v111ons. Commentjna on the current oil pricina climate, Smith executives reiterated that dc:dinin1 oil pnces would lead to reduced U.S. oil and ps drillina in 1985. . Smith expects active drillina riJS in the U.S .. as measured by SmithStats, • to decline to 2280 in l 985, down l 3 percent from the l 984 level. : At the mcctinf, Smith also reported that 1·984 revenues totaled $747 : milUon -$50 milhon. or 7 percent, higher than l 983. HFAO()lJA RTfR\ OHIC I COMMF.RCLOANK BlJ flOIN<i 1201 l.>moc c..~· Newport 8':1H!h <>2060 17141 8"-QQ()(J Ml '4111 M I UH \Ol 'T H COA.\ I Kl OIONAL OFFICl- J2111 Purk Center Onw tOff Antoft ~I.• Co,IJ M~. CA Q26~ 171417~ t\882 I \t 11 IH llft,llllft l"'C..C Ml 0 111\tOOOOO Cf?iitlnental will begin flights ~~J:ohn ~Way~eAirportApril 1 Twice dai y nonstop Houston flights mar successfu end to 1 7-year ef ort Continental AirtinC1 Wednesday announced that it will inauauratc twice daily nonstos> service from Hous~on to Oranac County Aenl 1. mark1na the suectssful compleuon of a l 7-year cfTon to provide low-fare service to Oranat County. Contin.ental will operate quiet. fuel-efficient M~80 aircraft between Houston's Intercontinental Airport and John Wayne International Afr· pon. l; far~s of $95 off-peak S 11 S peak and first clus for S29S. Other airlines charge $341 for an unrestricted. one- way coach ticket and $443 for first class. Bc:ainning Aptil I Continental will depart Houston for Ora nae County at 10:4S a.m. afld 7:SS p.m. each day. Return trips arc scheduled to leave Oranae County for Houston at 7:45 a.m. and I 2:4S p.m. "The end result of Continental's Business Properties Brokerage Company is proud to announce its successful negotiation of a $4-4-Mllllon, 10-Year Lease , for a 106,000-sq. ·ft .. build-to-suit Corporate Headquarters. and Warehouse Facility for Apace Movll')g and Storage Company of Irvine. The lessor is Santa Fe Land Improvement Co. . of Los Angeles. The new facility will be on a 5-acre site on Blueridge Avenue in the City of Orange . lob Grtfllth Md Al8n P91carclk of Bualneae Propertlee represented both parties in the transaction. ... ........... , ............... c.,....., Orqe County omc.. 4590 MacMhur Blvd , S.. 100 2'00 E. t<Mella Ave.. Sti: 100 Nawport a.oh. CA 92660 Anaheim, CA 9289!5 (71•} 752-«>11 (714) 385-1801 ., 17-year cfTon will prove beneficial to the residents of both Houston and OranJe County.'' said Bob Salter. Cont1nental's vice president of sales. "The low fares and quality service Continental will offer to the travehna public in each reaion will create gttater travel opportunities for the business and discretionary passcn- 1er." On the international front. Con- tinental plans to inauaurate emera· ency interim scrvict to Albena. Canada. on March I with a nlaht f roJTI Houston to Oallts-Fon Wonh that continues to Calpry. On April I . Continental will extend that route to Edmonton and add a second fliJlht that will provide nonstop service between Houston and Calpry. Also. elintinental is waiting for approval lrom the U.S. Department of Transportation to inauaurate nonstop scrvict between Houston and London on April I. The .airline has a DC-10 aircraft prepared to service the route at-soon as the government awards the routeto a U.S. Oa~ carrier. Con11ncntal currently serves 44 domestic and 25 international dest1· nations with I 08 airtraf\ through its hubs in Houston and Denver. averag- ma 474 daily departures systemwide. The airline has approximately I 0,000 employees . • , .. ~·· Wr1 ~ NYSE D ! ti -14' ~ WHAT AM£x Orn AM£X LEADER S - NASDAQ S UMMAR~ GoLo Quons Mrrnts Quou s . That's an apt description of both business and business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of where companies are goin~ and which people are helping them get there.just watch Credit btne' -every day In the Business section of your new ., Pillt 1 .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thu~1y. February 14, 1985 by Tom Batluk DOOlUSBURY by Garr)' Trudeau HI, ~.HilJ. ~V: MlliD IF I OOll • ~ /JO/II MTH '1fXJr • J N(Jf JtT' • Al.~ r • ~1SFAT. l" 5PEECl-I 1 - THE FAMILY CIRCUS BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) by Jeff MacNatty by BU Keane ~ Q:)4E we A~W S~1M£$,'4C*~ IN ™E SHED OVT fW:K1 PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz --~~~~~~--. ~~~~~~~---,--~~~~~~"":'!~ .Dear Swee thea rt , Happy Valent ine's Do you _still i Good . Day. love me ? I f . i j "Oh no~ He brought flbwers 'stead of candy!" ah~ays 'lnl'W this-Was a-CfiV9;·0unnat•1 DRABBLE ddlculous!" by Kevin Fagan MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE II \ ----f 214 ( ·~· ~"""'"'''"'" s., ' •. "Thanks just the same, but I don't want your rubber ducky." GORDO . GARFIELD PIP YOU KNOW THER£ AR£ THN:f KtNP5 OF CAT HAIR? THERE'S 'fH( COMMON, EASY TO Clf"AN KIND._ JUDGE PARK.ER SAM ()AIVER WHERE ARE TOOK THEM OUT THE BOYS, M ISS TO MY HOM E , SPENCER ? THEY W ERE EXHAUSTED ' .. THERE 'S 1'H£ KIN'7 THAT P15APPEAR e> INTO THE CARPET, NE.VER TO 0E 5EEN AC1AtN. AND THEN THERf.'5 MY FAVORITE ... by Hank Ketcham ~ ! ) J oil by Gus Arriola TME.ftf.'.S TME Ktf(P TI4AT HANG-5 IN THE AU\ FOR~\1£R by ~erd & Tom Johnson by Harold Le Doux YOU 00N'1 OESERVE TMAT ~lNO OF LOYALTY' '(X) ~~VE l~E l)JC.K RIJ, MR. DRA60l£ ! FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston DONT WIGGLE.1He. CUirER. We. ~NI THE. Et>G6S NICE ANO &\PRP~ !HERE.! Nc>W, we. CPN PUllHE~~ON f\ND ~THEM INTO 11'£ O'Jf:N ~ lHESE ONES tiA'JE. COOLED f\ UTT\.E srr,- ~. C.f\N I HAVE PRDD'y'1' ... ~y~~~? n WARM ncrr.1 . ROSE IS ROSE - Both vulnerable. South deals. NORTH • A104 <:>AK4 0 Q73 •Q876 WEST EAST +KJ52 +98 <:>78 <:>Jl05Z O J 5 0 Kl0962 •AJ5'S •t2 SOUTH + Q76S <::' Q98S 0 A8' • K 10 The bidding: 8.-di WHt Nert.la Eaat l NT Put S NT Pue P ... Put Open.Ing lead: Four of +. The name end play i4 termin· ologkaJly inexact. While the maJorl· t7 of cuea do occur late In the play, you might be "end played" at trick one. It happened quite early In thla band from a European tournament.. North·South were UJlnf a mloi-oo trump openinc bid ot 10-12 point.I. North had full .. Jue lor hie ralae to same, and West attacked with the rourth·be1& of hla longe1t and 1tron,.at ault. O NE.NoW'! /\ ~ by Tom K. Ryan by Pat Brady TUCKED IN THE THE LEAD Declarer won the opening lead lo hand with the ten and could count seven top tricks. The obvioua place to look for the two he was 1bjtiwa1 in spades, so at trick two he led a spade to the ten, with great 1uccea1. Next came a club to the king, and We1t ducked. Declarer continued 01u SHU I FF with a spade and. when Weat and dummy both plated low. Eut found, to hit IW'prile, that be had woo a trick with the nine. Howtver, he alao found that he wu end played at trick lourl · Ht did th• beat ht could by exltinc with the t.n of betrt.a. Dummy'a klns won and th• ace wa1 caahed. When dtclartr now led a low heart, ht waa rueonab'1 1un that Eut held th• jack. But u wu dead aure that th• flMeM wu not n.ce.,.ry. Ht won the quMD of M&rta ucl, wh n W Ht did DOt follow, ii.. ~w Eut back oa a.&d wtU. 1 Milt. Eut's forced diamond return was run to the queen and that became the fulfilling trick. CHARLES Go1E• Fw h'1 ,.,,.. .... Cllarlee a..· ...... ., ....... ...... ~ ...... a.... ..... w.., I• C'z k111 A ... , Ck1 ti .... N.J • .en . ) . } ~-~---.... ~ ...... -~ Orw"9 CoMt OAILV PILOTIThurad•y. ~ 14, 1985 by Tom Batluk DOOIU8BURT. by CMrry Trudeau 5PEECH 1 - ~I& C00~5€ 15 OFF£~EC> FOR n()S€ STtlOE.Nl!> WNO PL.AN Pfl!OFE~ION5 ltEQOl"INC:. GOOD COMNlt.NCA1bN sic:1LJ..b !>OCH A!> RADIO , 1l!.L.Ev1~100_, ~1t.l& , ~o · ut>RICI~ ltf A FA!>1' FOOO ORtVE -lHfqj WINDOW . .......... . . ·~ BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll ~artch (VIP) ....., ----- "Oh no! ~e brought flowers 'stead of candy!" "I always knew this was a dive, but that's rldlculous ! " llARllADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham ~ "Thanks just the same. but I don't want your rubber ducky." • Ho."( NlJ..Y ~ I'LL #Grl!fl< UNOE~ 'OJ IF l LIVE TO & Tl(,Ei.H3.' • GORDO ~GARFIELD Pie;> YOO KNOW THERE ARE TMREf KINPS OF CAT MAtR? THERE'S THE COMMON, £A5Y TO ClfAN KINP._ T~ERE'5 TH£ KIN'7 THAI Ple>APPEARe> INTO THE CARPET, NE.VER. 10 eE 5EEN A<fAIN. ANO THEN THER.E '5 MY FAVOAITE ... llOOl'f llULLll'fS MIST~fN IE>ENTITXC IN A -rAtcs ® MINUTE, OUT TH' MAMI~ ! l t..er HER f<NOW WHo WAS Boss IMS D,AY ~WAS WEI>. 6,ARB,AGS, Wll .. t:YAM · TME.ftE'.S TME K'"'7 TMAT MAN&.S IN THE AIR F"<>R£VER by Gus Arriola by Ferd & Tom Johnson PEAl'fUTS by Jeff ~ecNalty ~Ca.£-~ 5Ttlf!li lJE Sta SHOQ.. Wm£ 94£1' OUT EMCK1 . by Charles M. Schulz -------..,. Dear Sweetheart, Happy Valentine's Do you still love me ? Good. Vay. ·FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston OONT WIGGLE.1He. CUTre:R. We.~ THE EOOeS N\C!E. ANO St-\ffip 1 !HERE.~ ~.we. Cf\'J PlTflHe.~ON f\ND Ge:ITHEM IKTb ltAE~ENt lHESE ONES HA'Je.. c.a::>l.eo R ume srr, ~. eAN \ HA'IE PR DOY? ... ~yo.JUKE.. f\WffiM~? Both vulnerable. South deals. NORTH . + AI04 <:'AK4 o QTI •Q8U WEST EAST +KJ52 +t8 <:::1 76 <:'JI052 0 J5 o KI0982 •AJ541 •tt SOUTH • Q781 <:'Q98S 0 A84 • 1.10 The blddi.nr: &.-. Weet N..U Eut INT P .. INT P ... , ....... Openin1 J .. d: Four of •. \ The name end play i1 t.ermin- oloJically Inexact. WbUe the major!• t7 of e&HI do occur late In tM pla7, 1ou ml1ht be "end pla7ecl" at triek one. It happened quit• tarJ7 la tlda hand from a European tounameat. North-South ".,. uetar a lllhd·no tnnap opHlnr bld of 10.12 ~. North had full Y&lut for hi• ralH to pme, and Wttt attaekecl wlU1 tll1• fourth ·bt•t of hl1 Jo1p1t ai4 ,.,.....t1uJt. ONE.NOW'! ~ by Pat Brady TUCKED IN THE TBE LEAD Declarer won the opening lead in hi nd with the t.en and could count aeven top tricka. The obvlou1 place to look for the t"o be 1'U •'-1 wu in apadea, ao at triek two be led a 1pade to the i.n, with peat 1ueee11. Next came a dub to the kinr. and W eat ducked. Dec:larer cont.lnued 0111 S1111FF with a •l*I• and, when Wnt and dumm7 both pla7ed low, tut found, to h1I aurprlM, tbat IM laad • won a trick wltlrthe Diet. Howner, be alao found tbat ht wu end pla7ecl at trick four! Ht did tlM Nit he eou&d b7 edtlDr •lib t• tea of Mlrt.I. Dumm7'1 ktq wea ud tile aee wu lllMcl. 1'MI dtcJaHr a0w led I • --~ ..... ,.. ... :-t ... oat lut MW .._ Jiik. a.t WM ct.id ... \'8t t• tiiiie ... - IUHllf'1. , He.,..IM~ef...,.._. ............................ .... ............... ....... Eut'1 forced diamond return waa run to the queen and that bteame the fulfillinr trick. CHARLES G11E1 . I 0 Coetalleu JllCb'• Karl Kimme (50) battlea Dean SoreDMD of Jlfewport Barbor for a Newport topples Mustangs to gain at least a tie By CHRIS MONAHAN ........ c.. 0 .. 0 Newport Harbor Hi&h guard Joey James• 2S-foot shot al the buzzer Wednesday ni&ht was the perfect ending to a near-perfect oifht and a. near-perfea year for the Saalon. The shot made James the 10th Sailor to score and put the final touch on an 81-66 victory over vi siting Costa Mesa. assists. Fraser finsbed wi1ll 19 paiml The win assures the Sailors ( J 2-J., and l 2 rebounds, while ...._ ..sded · 2 l-3) of at least a ~bampionship in 5 poinu and s boards. _ - the Sea View Leaiue. as well as ''Fraser, Ma1e and ~ f:nteeing the top spot from the showed what they have lo-.,., .. mid tFe· tirstand bodmefcothunCJadF4vaAn~ ~r DcBusk. "They should bed 11191 I roun o e v-YO•i.S and .... _ h ··--' .... ~ .. Feb. 22. UKY s o~ uwl. "Our team depth came through "We got down ~y and CCMlldll"t --agajn IhaU..becn... our stteAl1h-all eci-out from behind." said COll8 year," said Newport Harbor Coach Mesa Coach Tim Panel .. We fc:MlllM Jerry DcBusk.. "I wanted everyone to back hard and tbe kids played• lllftl Ft~ piece of it (the title) and share in.. as they could. That's alf y0u cm Mk." at. I m ~Uy glad Joey hit that shot. It .. MCGavran is the key,.. aid show~ the good team play that we Pane. l. "He sets &hem up by J'..C'D": have. . • . . . etraungand ffieii diilllnaOft:"YouJUlt It was the Sailors tomd shootmg m have to hope he bas a t.d nishL .. the first quancr (12 of 16 from the . field) that catapulted them to a 26-13 TJlis pme was a . tremeDdous lead. At one point Newport Harbor SWttch from the fim 1lJDe tbe two led 22-7, thanks to a 1 S-2 scoring teams played Jan. 23 at a.a Mesa. spree over a three-minute span. In that pm~ ~ Musi•ap bad two Senior point Juard Chuck chancest~Wln1othcfinalllseconds McGavran, who t all scorers with before losma S9-S8. 2 1, was four offivcfrom the floor and "This was a different kind of pme scored nine points in tbe quancr. -we got a lead. Last time it was nip. ..., .......... -'-.... rebound Weclneeday ntcJat dartq 8&llon' 81-68 .tctory. In addition to the outside shooting and-tuck the whole way:• said De- of McGavran (10 of 16). the Sailors Busk. "In that pme Costa Mesa shot got numerous baskets in the k.q-from 6S percent (as ~mpared to 4S pcn:ent Alan Fraser and Rob Masc both on Wednesday nipt). This time we shot rebounds and the sbary passing of well (36 of S9, 61 percent) and uleCS McGavran. who also dished out 13 our upcourt press well." ·Flat Barons nip flattened Edison, 48-46 ovWin~: There's not much to get excited about Tho~s free throws to f!lakc it 47-46. SUftMt L-.ue nc& 1bow,~hcy keep ""!Cb~edsing.h" scram b1 -:-;;---.-----:--:-::------_,;::~,,..,,...-----..,,.----'-The Chargers worked 1t for one shot LeetiM o-1111 . re ert. owcvcr, ep1ti m12 t . c . thanks to the news of Chargers' forfeits but Mike M~onnell's attempt .from OcMn view ': \ • l ~~~~.~~t~:fr~~ .. t ~:an~ ln Sun sot · :~~~:a;,1.: ~~:!~cc~ =~~ ~ ~ ~ 1~ in addition t~ bis players. be may '-' :By ROGER CARLSON Edison, stunned with the recent throw with two seconds left. w.1m1mtw • s 1 u have~ binuelf, too. Of .. o.lr,...... ruling that it had to forfeit all five of .. 1 don't k'bow why we were = : : l~ ~ Despite the . Rat perfo~an~. It was quite possibly the least its league victories because of an Lifeless," admiued Edison Coach Jon w , •Y'• sar. Bro~~ ~pcoally pl~~ Wlth ~is .artistic and on the surface one of the ineligible player, fell to 0-9. Borchert. "·It wasn't what.I expected." ~;:~.i:; ~~= ~ '° ~~ s ~bthty to stay in It despite 'most unemotional games ever played The crowd was down and lifeless, His team had been slapped in its wn1m1Mtw s5. Merffta c hitnn1 Just 17 of 56 from the field between Sunset LeaJue rivals fouo-the shooting_ for both teams was cc by the Sunset I..eque rulin&. eoisen :~~--<J-.a> <~·~"d'.dnt.~. la th n .• .d tain Valley and Edison Wednesday mediocre, at best, ana even an which came despite the fact officials Westml11$ltr at 0cun View B c .. 1 n P. Y 31 we • 531 night. emotional call from Edison Activities not only knew of problems, but Fountain Valley al Hunlln9ton Beecn ~own, but Edison kept a control On · 0.... Vllllf· ....... una1&llft : l3u1 when it was over the victory Director Bruce Belcher late in the insisted the sta~us quo conti~ue for th~~~e were J. ust totally fl 1 t .._ , .,.. Cll:a "'°"•· ~ • was as sweet as any for the visiting pmcfaited to pull the Chargers out of five games (Edison was 4-1 10 that tr . . . a a ...,.. "'* ••*II ._. fft oon- Barons. And for Edison, few have it. stretch) without the kn~wlcdge of the difficult to get up for the game hal ime and 1 said, Hey. you guys ~ llylil Wedrtn*r nlghl - ever been harder to swatrow. Flattened by the rulinJ which coach thal anything was wrong. because of Edison's plight, and the have . got ... to generate some and w......... Hlgft"e 1Jone. f ountain Valley. on the ~y to the knocks Edison out of the CIF play-But for 16 and 17-year-olds, the Barons showed it. too. enth~5185!"· . . pilfftp9d up wfttl two fQrtltt vec.. C(F Big Five Divasion playoffs as the offs, the Chargers couldn't get off the slap was more like a knockout punch. Borchert predicted bis team would ~son s only cntb~sias~ for tfle tOftel. eurged 6"lo the CF Illa FM league's No. 2 representative. pulled floor as the Barons got the lead with Fountain Valley Coach Dave make a big effort, saying, "If they feed eftnre fim hatfcamc. WT~h Slx seconds DMl6on ~ pk:Ue wfth a out a 48-46 victory. 40 seconds left on a Nair of Simon Brown said his team was finding it off me they certainly will. But you le as Doug Kal~na s six-footer gave ~ ~~-_. the Chargers their first lead (22-21 ). In -=.:.:-• .. _.. .. trww In • ,,..CCM._.,lla~d111o ..... poeltk)n for the IPC)t Pirates ~awaken, !74-52 Laguna 's Falconer calls it quits Meanwhile, his Artists topple Trojans; Estancia, Corona del Mar pick up wins junior varstty.have combined for two vic1ories in thrte. years . Eagles had to hold off a late Warrior surge before taking the lead for good with 2: 16 left as Scon Oements. who topped all scorers with a career high 31 points, hit a jumper. WIC l11d by Edllon followtl1G the ~ bec81• of .. lneiglbee ~·inat~ llhoukl unbeat91 ac.t'I View detMt w ........ Friday n6gtrt. coupled"wfth • FOUfta tlln v~ *'°'Y °"'Hue••• ...... and • Manna*'°'" --Edllon, tt woukt leew ... ttw. .- 4..e records Md IC)lta wMi one •dw. • j • By ROGER CARLSON : Orange Coast College moved into l sole possession of fourth place in the • South Coast Conference basketball : race Wednesday night, but the Pirates : had to overcome a sluggish first half j against winless Golden-West. °' .. ..., ......... Craig Falconer•s last pme as coach of Laguna Beach High's Artists is Friday night -· the 37-year-old former Costa Mesa Hi&h, Orange Coast College and San Diego State star has resigned his walk-on po~ "falconer, who .enten Friday's game wi1h a 3 l-40carcer record, cited se-.ral roadblock situations at LaJ.una Beach. but in essence it all boiled down to total apathy. ition. ! Meanwhile. Saddleback got back : ~nth~ winninl track with a convinc- ! ing victory at L)'press. "They don't want to do what is necessary here, .. says Falconer. whose Here'' what took place: four-year record at Laguna Beach bas Oraqe Coa1t 74, Gol4n West H : been an up-and-down venture from The Rustlen entered the pme with the start. . . an 0-1 I record and were missing Marc "Tbere'SJUS~ too !!1uch a~thy here Longan, the conference's top scorer. •. for me to conunu~. ,he c~nunued. YerGoldcn West led 21-10 with 5:52 A,n example of1.t came 10 W~nes­ remaining in the first half and still days ~9~ ~I Sea y1cw. League victory maintained a 25-15 advantaae with over vas1t1ng U~1versaty. . remaining before intermission. "We had a 11.rl from Uni do the But Oranae Coast, which shot lust stats (scorekecplDI) and we ttAd to 30 percent from the floor in the first have a freshman ba~et~ll player 20 minutes, came out blazin& in the ~cep !~e clock, which 1s totally second half allepl. The Pirates used a 14-2 ss:turt to .. h's a shame because there's five take the lead for ao<>d behind the hot really fine P1ayer;t ~h~·n ~ btlck and shootina of sophomore pard Mark whocver~esth1SJOb1sgo1ngtohave Oouc!Je. Qoudee wu 9 of 9 from the a team with five ~~rters. back.. But floor in the second half and finished after . next y~r, at s 1oan1 to be with 20 points. unbehevablc. , "Ifs not just basketball,'' he con- tinued. "Our swim ming coach puts in unbelievable hours morning and night and has good kids, but no swimming pool. .• ''My assistants couldn't even get a key to lhe gym and the basketball or football coach couldn'1 get a key for the weight room. "The whole thing has to change. There's never a student at a game and there's simply no camaradaric. They realty treat walk-on coaches like low- ~lass citizens. instead of helping them." Falconer, a Lake Forest resident. led La1una Beach to a 17-7 record and a CIF playoff berth in 1981. The next season he was was 0-2 ~fore resi1n- ing abruptly, then returned in l 983 and had a 6-17 record. The current team is 8-14 overall, S-8 in Sea View Leque play. Falconer says the decision was Crate Faleoner made and the resignation given to Roben Hushes, the school's princi- pal. during tbc fint week of lea&ue play. Meanwhile in Sea View Leque play Wednesday night: Eatuda M , W11•rNp H : In a pmc won at t~ free throw line, the ShaughnRyanadded 14pointsand The frethmcn, sophomores and .even rebounds While Patrick Drake --------------------------------------came off the bcnd910equal bi11ea10n hilltwitb t3. "Bill Bruce led Golden West witb 16 ~nts while J.T. Dcbbs and Nathan Morgan dellvers fa, VCl, 4~1 Jeflm acored I 0 apiece. ·······~ ... cnr-... Tlw Gauchos snapped. three-tame= strelk 11 Aleunder Hamilton ~ 17 DOinll in the win at Cypma. The o.uc.o., S-7 in sec play, allo IOt 12 points ftom Dan Mulder and 11 ftonl Eric Comly. Hamilton waa 5of7 ft-om the floor nd 7 b 7 fto'Olft the he throw line. He • led lbc Oaucbos in rebounds ..-13. h .._ tht tecOnil &Ms in a row for ~ ~ ftll to s-6 an ~n· ferenee. CARSON -Steve Morpn·s t.~loa~ sir\ale In the eiahth innina_ tcOled what turned out to be the winnisw run as UC Irvine scored a 4-l non· confercMe bueball victory over Cal State Doml· ~Hilla here Wednnday. Tbe Anteaten. 4-1 ·1, smpped 1 1-1 tic in the ciahth by lolldisw 'the bua with n<>M out before M'°Otpn delivered an RBI ti..ac. Bob Ptny's ..mnc. fty ICOnd aliOthcf rwn, and Mike Suaar's MHCOrisw Ii• complnlld d9e ICOriftl. UC1 llftior lobby Job_,.. was touched for 1 run in •--•-"IM&rllt.y OoftttftlWI Hills (1-S) when.=~ cnw 1 wilk. mowd to second on .... IO tlaifd on• fiekter'scboi« and then 9COf"cd on Fred Hanker's ~t. UCI evened tk tc0re ia lhe sixth innint ~ Adam Gi!'f sinakd. stotc tcCOWI ancl IC'Ored oa Morpn•shal MOf'llD was 2 for4wtth two RBI, Gi• wul (Of •and ICOred two run Mike Supr was) for '4 with an RBI. JohnJOn woc1tcd a.ht inni• and ltnd out four While walk.Int te.... IO Kent toot OYet lft the Dintla ud PicMd •P lk •ve. UCI rec.1m1 to IC1ioa Friday -.wbtft the . '"'~ tn\"'tl tO 56 DieiD ~ ...... ?:')() coeteSt. Oo S.turday. thcy1l be at UCLA b a noon doublelieedrr. Adam Lockwood. who made .I I of his I 2 free throw attempts and scored 17 points. netted a pair to i~ Estancia's win wi1h 1:10 left, making it 60-57. Woodbridge had taken the lead with 2:25 left at 51-56. Corou del Mar 13, Saddleback SS: The Sea Kings. playoff bound al I (}s3. used Jeff Fryer's 21 pom1s and Steve Morris' 18 points and nine rebounds 10 eliminate the Roadrunners from \he CIF playoff p1c1urc. A big founh quaner was what CdM needed and got as 11 outscored the Roadrunners. 18-11 . to win com- fortably. Sean Turner had seven rebounds and four assists. and Fryer sank 10of21 fieldgoalcfforts(mostly from the outside) to spark the offepse. Lacua Buclil It, UaJvenJty 71: The Anists used a big 1h1rd quarter. outscoring the T roJans 22-4. behind· Coby Niess· 21 points and I 5 rebound$ and Mark McGrath's IS points. BnMI Arnold led all !COrcn with 2J points for University. Air Force signs Tars· Kitchens · tntne,m. ...... -iw...iml\il-... ,.. tor tM 11tti lttWght time In Soutti C09lt l.MOI• play M Mlellan Vtefo wraipped up the South Cwt LMQUe champk>nship. 0 AUCKLAND, New Zealand-Brian m Theriot, t~ product of Newpon Harbor Hiab aad UCLA who just milled in an at1eft1Pttoqaalityfora benhon t~ United Statet Olympic team in the I .SOO meters last summer. continues has quest· tor world class distinctio n in the event after postina a l :S8.2 mile Wednesday in Wanaanu~ New Zealand ovef I .,..SS track. Theriot finished fifth in tM race won by New 7.calaDd·-Jobn Walker in .3:S4.9, tht same clockina u Ireland's Ray Aynn. W alk.c.r...ltioinf;for his I OOth sub-rour minute male on Sunday in Auckland and T heriot, who is stJlyina with WaJker in New Zealand. will also be racing. For Theriot it was his third sub-four minute mile in five attempts. .. I'm 27 and John is 32 so that means I have to run about 20 sub- four minute miles a year to catch T1Mrtot him." Theriot said in jest. Sunday's raoc will be run on Walker's home track at Mount Smart and the field could figures to have the same top finishers at Wanganui. including Australia's Pat. Scannell (3:SS.2). New 1.ealand's Tony Rogers (3:57. 7) and Kevin R~rs (l.59.2). ~oftlaeday a.. ••D ...... wtnner ot tn. Charlotte (N.C.) M9rlldlon ..... l*ng told that ..... of awrong un, he..., ottw tront-runnera mey have~ 300-8 ... tfwtthefullchtMCe: •• ,~ .... Ike f ran W enough." Gianta hire GWC auistant ()olden West College assistant • baseball coach Doug Mansolino bas been hired by the San Frani:isco Giants as a third Dase coac'h for the club's triple A affiliate in Phoenix. Mansolino. who has spent the last four years as nsrstant to Coach Fred Hoover at Golden West. was origjnally scheduled to spend one week in Arizona as a defensive specialist for the Milwaukee Brewers. He'll now report to Phoenix Giants Manager Jim Lcfevbre. the fonner Dodger, on March 6. "It's a great opportunity," says Mansolino. "I've never heard of anyone going from a community college to triple A in one jump. You usually have to pay some dues. .. My main goal has always been to make it to the big leques. I regret leaving the Golden West program and Fred Hoover," Mansolino added. Spartane•HpputUCSB Senior guard Mlke DiDll sank two free m throws with 19 seconds to play to secure San Jose State's S7-54 Pacific Coast Athletic Association basketball victory over UC Santa Barbara Wednesday ni&hL The Spartans are now 7-7 wbile the Gauchos fell to 7-6 in PCAA play ... Elsewh~ in college basketball. All-America Ket~ Ltt score<J.18 points to lead No. 5 Memphis State to a 68-55 victory over Cincinnati in a Metro Conference game. Memphis State, 18-2, raised its ·conference- leading record to 8-1 . Cincinnati. 13-1 O. sank to 6-4 in conference play ... Reserve freshman forward Kevin Striclddd scored 19 points, including 13 in the second half, as No. 1 Duke slammed Stetson. 94-51 ... Roluclo Lamb and Mike Scklqel combined for 48 points and Virginia Commonwealth grabbed a share of the Sun Belt Conference lead with a 6 7-53 victory over 19th- ranked Alabama Birmingham . aoo1r1e 1111.rkl., UN 7flen Rookie C'Mlltl laft:l9J tcOred flw m atraipt points in the ftnal 41 aeconds to live Philadelphia a 131-129 victory Wednelday nap& over the New York KAicU, puttina tht 76en in a fint p&ac:e tie with Botton atop the Atlantic Division of the National Basketball Alloc:iauon. ,.._.. Maa..t scored 37 poinu and arabbed nine rebounds forthc.7~n ... Ebewhertln the NBA, hnJ TJ• ICOred 25 po1nb ud ..... ft••• added 23 points and titd a Detroit reeord with 25 utitts u the Pistons beat Dallas 124-119 ... Ode...._. ICOred I Oofbis 31 pojntt in the fourth quaner aad llllb O....._. hit five free throws in t1'e clolina moments to lift New Jertey lo a 112· I 05 victory over Cleveland .. .Atlanta's Jevla WUU1 scored 11 of his 2J po'"'' in the rourth quarter to r1lly the Hawks to a ~88 victory over the Utah Jazz. Sanches. Anael• -.ree on pact Refiever Luis Sanchez. who· ad filed Ill for salary arbitr1tion last month. has apced to a one-year contract with the . Angels. Sanchez, who had a 9-7 record with 11 saves and a 3.33 earned run averase in 49 relier appearances last year. had asked for $42S,OOO for the upcomioa season. The Angels' offer was $280.000. Althouah no financial terins of the contract were announced. Sanchez ~portedly wi ll earn about $320.000. Bobby Ria• la at lt .. aln. DELRAY BEACH. Fla. -Vitas m Gerulaitiund Bobby Ri~ on Wednesday challenged the worlds top women's doubles team -Martina Navratilova and Pam Shriver -to a banle-of-the'Sexes tennis match. It was learned the four have signed a contract and the match will be played in either Atlantic City, N.J., or in Las Vegas, Nev. The 66-year-old Riggs. who in 1939 won Wimbledon and Lhe U.S. championships and was runner-up in the French championships, returned lo the tennis spotlight in I 97J when he challen&ed and defeated Margaret Smtth Court on MOlh.cr's Day. He lost to Billie Jean King on Sept. 20, I 973, in the Houston Astrodome before-the-largest crowd ever to attend a tennis match. 30.472. Boston fires Cheevers LOS ANGELES· -G~rry Cheevers (ii wai removed -as coach of the slumping-' Boston Bruins of the National Hockey l..ngue Wednesday and was replaced by General Manager Harry Sinden for the rcmafoder of the current season. "It appeared to us that something of a stapation had set in around the Bruins and Gerry and I agreed last night," Sinden told a news conference. "l asked him to step down." Jeta take over aecond place WINNIPEG. Manitoba -Doug (ii Smail'ssccondgoa. I ofthegameearlyin the ' third period snapped a 2-2 tie Wednesday night and sparked the Winnipeg Jets to a 5-3 come-from-behind National Hockey league victory over the Washington Capitals. 1'B.l¥lllON Ho~• leheduled. llADIO 6:30 p.m. _, COLLI• UlkllWAU.: Cet Stat• Fu~on at Ut.ti State. KEZY (1190). 7:30 p.m. -PRO HOCKFI: Boeton It Klnge, KWV&FM ( 108). 7:30p.m. -coa•·•~:T..- EJ PMO It 8.n Dleao Stateu~J.l.~~· a _,.m. -COLU• · Arizona State at·USC, KNX (1070). Four Sunset t@ams still aliV-e Ocea n-View nips Oilers; Barons tie; Edison still in running for playoffs Fountain Valley High had to settle for a 3-3 tie with Edison ·in the tigh t Sunset League soccer race Wednes- day while Ocean View managed to nip Huntington Beach. That means all four teams are still ahve in their bid for a CIF playoff spot. Fountain Valley's Barons hold a one point fead on second place Ocean View, while Huntington Beach and Edison remain 1n the running for a playoff spot. Here's what took place: Fouolaln Valley 3, Edison 3: The Chargers let a 2-0 lead get away from them and then rallied from a 3-2 deficit to tie It with less than five minutes to go in a game at Edison. Edison opened the soring in the first half on a goal by Mark Campbell. Campbell then put Edison up 2-0 early in the second half before the Barons came back with three straight. Tony Coles scored 15 minutes into the second half and Steve Mullen scored two goals within a four-minute span. Keith Winakur got the tying goal for Edison off a free kick in the closing minutes. The tie leaves Fountain Valley with a 6-1-2 record. good for 14 points. Eda son has I 0 pot nts. The Chargers are 3-2-4. Ocean View%, Hantlniton Beacb I: Andy Austw1ck headed in the win- ning goal three minutes into the second half to gave the Scahawks the win. Ocean View now has 13 points while Huntington Beach has 11 points. Huntington Beach got on the board first with a goal by Robert Howerton in the 18th minute of the first half Meech Tahsequah evened· things up 33 minutes anto the game with a shot from 20 yards out. Austwick then deli vered the game winner early in the second half. The league finale has Ocean View facing WestmansteT at ~:30 Friday night at Huntinaton Beach High. At ·5:30. Huntington Beach will take on Fountain Valley at the same site. In Sea View League action: Corona del Mar I Sa44leback t : The third place Sea Kinp nipped the second place Roadrunners at CdM as Pat Merrell scored midway throu&h the first hair for the only goal of tfte game. atM goalkeepers Matt Dalton and Steve Muzzy combined for five saves to share the shutout. The victory leaves the Road- runners with a 9-3-1 record for 19 points. while the Sea Kings are 7-4-2, good for 16 points. Newport Harbor %, Cot&a Mesa 0: Dale Cross and Jim Talamo scored goals for ~e Sailors in a pme at Costa Mesa. Jason Nettleman and Jeff Klein had an easy time in 'the nets for the Sailors. combining for just three saves. Newport Harbor is now 6-4-3 in leaaue. E1&uda 3, WMC1brld1e t : The EaaJcs clinched the league cham- pionship as Jorge Cruz scored two and Erin Wriaht added another. Estancia, I 0-1-2 in le.ague and 14-2-4 overall. outshot the Warriors 26-1 . In girls action: • Coroaa ckl Mar Z, 8a4dlebeck 1: Kari Sondra and Libby Wertin tallied for the Sea JC.jogs in a Sea View pme at Saddleback. Freshman aoalie Cammy Chabre. makin& her varsity debut. recorded 1even saves to pin the shutout. Stel)hanie Noonan assisted on each or the Sea Kinas· aoals. The victory improved CdM's leque record to 7·3-1. Clippers n@thappy after win LOS ANOELES CAP) -The Los Antcles Oippers. their confidence beaten down durina nine IOMet in their previous 10 pmn, took little solic~ in victory. The Oippers had to work hard to act pest. the Oolden State W1nion 108-105 Wednesday niabt at the Si>c>ns Arena. Tbe Warriors have the worst record in tile National Basketball Associa- tion. The loss to the Clippers ~s their fifth in a row and llsL lo tbcli last 22 pm es. The Oippers weren't panina them· selves on the back after the victory. "lt'sjusta win. but it was noth.ina to write home about," said Lot Anseles ~ntcr James Donaldson. "We•ve been playing poorly for the last three weeks. and our only two wins are · •'8inst two teams whose combined wins arc just sJiahtly more than ours." The Clippers only other victory in their last 11 pmes came aaaanst Indiana, which has the second-worst record in the lcaaue. Indiana has won just 16 games this season. the War- riors only 11. Los Angeles Coach Jim Lynam said bis team had to disrqard the oppo- nent. and start putting some victories t<>sether. "We needed a win," he said. "At this stage, we couldn't be choosy about how we got it. Our confidence waJ shaken and we need a couple of W's. We didn't play free and easy, we were tentative and we passed the bJlll poorly. Donaf<Json said the tean-l''WiinT pressing, however, in the face of its recent slump. ''I don't think we're playing tight;• DonaJdson said. "We're just not playing well, and I don't know the cause of it. Our confidence is kjnd of shot, -ana that causes a lot or frustrations." Norm Nixon. who led the Clippers with. 32 points and I 0 assists an 46 minutes, said the victory wasn't from any improved play on the Clippers part. .. We didn't play that great." he said. "We were not that sharp and we were not playing with confidence. "If we're going to tum it around, we•u have to be more agressive." Bucwonien topGWC Orange Coast College survivtd a scare from arch-rival Golden West in South Coast" Conference women's basketball action Wednesday night, while Saddleback managed to knock off Cypress. The victories kept both teams within strikina distance of first place Fullerton in the conference race. Herc's what happened: Ora.n1e Coast 7t, Golden We-at H : The Pirates won their 10th game against two conference defeats, but they liacl-rlicirhands full with tlle·11,m- Rustlers. The teams were even at 25 with 4:35 remaining in the first half, but the Pirates used an 8-2 spurt to take a 33-27 edge at halftime. Jn the second half. OCC main- tained a 55-47 lead with 8: 17 left. but another 8-2 run put the Bucs on top 63-49. Amy Hathcock led OCC with 21 points while Mary ,Beth Thobe had 17 and Ayumi Kobayashi added 11 . For Golden West. 2-11. 10-16 overall, Julie Amon and Jennifer Johnson had 14 points apiece while Debbie Eastin added I 0. S.ddleback 84, Cypreti $7: The Gauchos overcame a 31-point per- fonnance by the Chargers' Cheryl Hoffman to record the victory at home. Heather Estey, despite being double-teamed. scored 16 points. But that also meant teammate Lisa Jones was left open and she responded with a team-high 18 for the Gauchos. Coreen Cumin adderd 17 points and pulled Clown I 3 rebounds. Estey added eight assists. Saddle back. I 0-3 in conference and 20-5 overall. shot 55 percent rrom the floor. Buss denies TV report l NGLEWOOD (AP)-Jerry Buss, owner of the Los Anaeles Lakers and Los Angeles Kinas. denied a report Wednesday that his sports empire was threatened by financial prob- lems. ,,,......=-~~~~~~~-- Buss, interviewed by KCB~TV in response to a report by that station that a bank was considerina fore- closinJ on loans ror which the lakers and Kinas were plcdacd as collateral, said it was not true. He said, "I am solvent, I am not In default on anythina." Busa said he had met with the Laken earlier in the day to offer them his assurances after he learned that the ptQIJ'*m was aoi n1 to be aired. KCBS reported that Buss was asked by Stturity Pacific National Bank to ~ the Nat' onal Besketball A ... · IOCiation l.aken 1nd the National Hockey l.eque Kinas as collateral, and that the benk wa41 In .. crucial nttotiations to uve" his spons empire from fOttdosum. The television station reported that, while the bank would not publicly tttpond to an 1nqu1ry abour the money o-ed by Bu11, a source 111d the bank was not 1n1ious to take ovu lhe spons tams and _.., anemptina 10 11vc tkm frOm fore.. closure. .... WHTU• c:oeef'O•MCa .............. W L "" .. LA~ M 16 M2 ~· u J6 .... It~ ...,JlllllCI n 21 .451 tll.4t n ,. AU •• S.ttle LA~ ti JI ... 15 ·.2l6 ,...,, ~s•••• 11 .0 MNwett~ ~..., ,, 20 .•11 ~IOll 2' ,~ •• 2 0.lleJ . ,. . ... • Sen Anloolo H u .510 5Yt Utell ,, 21 .~ I Kanuacllv ,. ,. .no 15 •AIU•N CCHff'H•NCa Alllllk. OMllla loaton •I 10 ... Phlleclelohfe ,, 10 .ICM Wettllnfton ,. 25 .SJI •• 25 Ml 1'\lt ....... v l'ffwYOril 11 11. ,. .Mt 1l\'J c:.Mrll DMI"" Mllweull.M 35 17 ,673 Detroll 31 20 ·'°' J\'J Clllceeo 25 25 .500 ' Atlentt 22 lO .•n 13 CltvtlellCI " 35 .JI• 11\'J lndl•,,. 16 35 .31• 11\lt • .... Y'•kerft LA C...... IOI. Golden $tele 105 O.lroll 12•. Della• 119 • New Jer"v 112, CleVelend 105 Plllledllohle IJI, N-York 12' Atlante '4, Ut•ll • TMIM'a GetMt Mllwe11kM I I lndlene Hollalon •I New YOl"k '"'-nix 11 Sen Antonio Denver 11 K1nM1 Cllv Botton 11 Sffllle Clippers Hit, Werrten 105 GOLDIN STAT• (Its) -Short 10-25 l ·I 2', Ml. Johnson s-i. 3·• 1•. Wllllehffd 7-12 2·2 16, Conn« 5-13 1-2 11, FIOvd 1·20 2·3 19, Bretz l·l 1·2 3, AlektlnH •·7 0-0 I, ' Plummer 0· I 0-0 0, TlllbMUlC 0-0 0-4 0, 1"'11 >·S 0-0 6. To1ets 43·100 17·21 !OS. LA CLWPIU U•> -Cetcf\lnes 2·3 0-11 •• Ma JOM\Oll 3·11 6-7 12, Doneldton ... 6 l ·f 16. Nl•on 13·19 6-I 32, Smllll 1·16 2·6 11, C9" •·6 1-2 9, lridlilfnen 6-1• I· I u. w.i!Ofl 1•2 2-1 ~-Werrielt ...++o o, Whit• 0·1 0·2 0, ~don H H O.Totelt •1·71 26·37 IOI. ker9 w OMtW'I GOiden Stile II 21 30 2'-lOS LA C"""'s 2' 19 2S JS-IOI Tllr ... POfnl ooelt-MI. Jot!Mon, FloVd. Ftllltd O\lt-Smltll. ReOO\lnds-GOlden Sl•t• S. (Mf. JollnJon 121, Loi Anoetea. 55 (Donaldson 10). AHlsts-<;olden SI••• 22 ($Mrl6), LM Aneelel. 20 t!'llxon 10). Tol•I fOYls-Golden St11e 211 Los Anetitt ?2. Tecllnlcatt-Golden Slllt llltoel defense. Attetldanc:.· 7,'30. C ..... ICerel WIST Sen Jose St. S1. UC Sent• &artier• S. •ecllenot 6S, W111l1ter SI Clllremonl·Mlldd •. C.ltecti 61 "-·Pitier n . Occldenlel 53 lltOCtUIS Coloredo .... Nt«lrHU 61 Boise SI. '3, USIU ., ldallO 71, E. WHlllnelon 7S •AST lucknell 15, Rider 72 Oertmoutll '7, Vermont 62 Delewere SS. Lel\'911 S2 Lefevtlle S7, Towton S!, 56 P11110ur911 11, Connecllc11t 71 Rooert Morris 9•. WHM' 76 SOUTH Clemson IO, Welle Forest 6S Ouk• 9•. Stetson SI Norttt Cero!IN 60, Marvtenc:t S. Noftll Cerollne SI. '°· Md.·E. Shor• SI ICentlldty SI, A..O.me • F~da $1 ••• JacktonY ... 72 MIHIHk>ol 56. Ftorlde ~ MIHIHIPOI St. 12, A11bUrn 6S Venderbllt 69, Geor11l1 '8 Ve. Commonwe11111 '7, Ale.·Blrm· lnoll•m S3 Mlddlt Tenn. 70, Tennn ... SI. 6S SE Loul•l•n• 76, Nk:ll<>h SI. 70 EHi CeroOne 7•. Wlfltllroci 6' MIOWHT ~ St. 61, ClnclMetl SS Notre Oeme 7', New°'*!!'~ M!Metofe n , MiCNtM SI." a-.1et1oma 1CM, towe SI. 76 OlllellOme $1. I I, KenMS St. n Metcauetl• 71, x .... ..,. Ohio S3 Ohio u. 71. E. Mlcll!Nn • 1 &aft SI. 12. H. lllnol1 ... 8owllne GrMn n. Cenl. MldllMn 70 Bredlev 71, Orette SS Ctev•lld SI. 71, Wis. ·GrMf\ In 61 O.lrolt 61, DeV1on-'7 ICenl SI. 14, W. MlclllMn 69 IOUTHWHT SMU "· Texas A&M ,, TCU II, levlor 7t TexH Teel\ "· Rice '° COMMUNfTY COLLEGE Oruee c .. st 74, ~ Wtst 52 ('"91 Ceelt C.•: -GOLD•N WHT U1) -Jeffefs 10. DMOt 10, Mann 6, Re.smusMft 2, Brvc. t•. Smith I. Tote t1: 21 10-1• S2. ottANO• COAST 174) -GoudM 20, Jollntlon 6, Ferrner 6, Mortoo 11, ltven 1•. TOOIMV 2, Mullet '· Orel!• 13. Tote1': 31 11·1' 7 .. H1tftlrne: GOiden West, 2.S·22. Totel touts; GOIOen Wesl I•. Orenee Coe11 1t. S1d lllll1dl 60, ·C.,...... SO 1'"91 c.st CwAc ellCC) SAOOL•IACK (61) -HemlUoo 17, Dew son 6, SUlllYan •. M.4A6tK 12, Tllotlma• t , CMCllV 11, Cart I. Jotelt: ti 11>-25 60 CY,.ISS (St) -laU.... S, MartlnM11 6, Umant •· Horn I, Merlltlctl 6, Swenner 6, hr'W1dl IS. Tolelt: 21 1·1' 50. HeHtlme: ~•beck, 25-22. Totel foult. s.ddll11l.ck 17, CYJ>rfts 23. COMMUNfTY COLLEGE s.uttt c:..st c...... we Cw:l11 Met ow.r .. WL WL Cwr11os 11 1 20 • Mt. S~n Antonio 10 2 73 3 Flllltrloo I 3 13 10 OranM Coell 6 6 IS 11 Cvorn1 S 6 11 10 Comotoo s 6 10 11 s.ddletleck s 7 Is 11 Sente Ane 2 t t IS Golden West 0 12 7 II w .......... seer.. Orenee Coesl 7•. Go1dell Wesl St Sadcl1ebedl 60, Cvwes1 SO Cerrltot •. Sant• Ane n Compton 56, Mt. s.n Anlonlo U S.tvnl9Y'•--CYPl'nt •• GOiden Wesl Oranee Coesl et S.nte Ane Fllllcrton el ~ C«rlt0t •• CC>INtlon ....... ...,. • ., ....... Mttl " COSTA :l'uW..!!Jcno•t11• 11. J'* ~2. Kimme 111 6, Strokll ~ CerlMll I, Hartlton O, MclWO¥ 0. Tatelt D •n~ •....-T MM8Gll t11) -MCOevren 21, flraw It. Me .. 11 • ...,. 11, "~ t. Sor-S. M. 1.M 2. ~. Lee 21 Tttt .. 0, UMMv 2. Trlllll't t . Totelt J6 f-lf II "*9.W..,... Cotll Meta 1J 11 15 ~ ........,,~ .. ti It ...... Ttlal loUlt' CCMle ~ IS, NtWwt Ha1t1or 17 'ou!td out! Stroldl (CM), leedl INHl. T~ UildMV (NH). ........ w11au11., , .. --uetilll) .. TANCIA CM) -Lockwooel 17, Vt/I Doren 2, ~ 1. C:lcment• 31, It'"'" t, Cowv O. Totell: ti IA·lt 60. WOODMW (ff) -IWll"9V 1', trv• t, Lvon 10, TOWMeftd IO, lul!'flll 12, Crvet 2. •~ 21 fllll"'" t, Yn o. I( .... 0. TOlalt: J7 5 • ., Sf. ..,.."...,.... E1tencle 1• i> 16 1-60 WoodbrldM 1t " 11 , ... ,, Totet toutr: I!~ is. woo:a ..... n. FOUied ovt. Cryer (W). c .... ,_. Mar~ IU•1Udl JI , ... "" uetilll) SADO&.•UCIC (II) -"°'* 6, I . wettoo n. Petetto11 $, M. Welto:\ 11, Oeel e, lu11tt 2, Cooll 0. Toi ... : 2• 7· 10 SJ. COAC*A DIL MMl (~) -,.rv., ti, Morrl1 11, ZlmrMr '· TUI'• O. streuta t, Smlrl 15, GrMn 1. Tolala: '' 11-15 63. sar. w QuarWt S.ddltOeck ., ., 1• 1 l-55 C«-dtl Mar · t4 I• 17 I......, Totet f0\111: s.ddleOec:k 12, Cqf'one dtl Mar 10. L.MUlle ...0 tt, UNwnltY 71 <•V...~) UNIVUSITY (11) -Peutton 12, Wer· ren 2, lrellon I, Arnold D, S1011off lO, Gleu.n 9. Totel1: 2' 13•16 71. LAGUNA l•ACH (If) -Neftt ti, Jorden I, Mc-Grell\ IS, Herdmen 1), W•I· ford It, Elhten lO, .O.Wlll 2. FOtluM L Tollllt: 35 19·25 If. sc:-w~ UnlYeraltv 2'2 1f • 2.-11 L99111\t lffcll 22 II 22 27-tt Tolet fOUl1: Unlversllv 20, Leoune lffcll 23. Fouled oul: Jorden (LI ). Mlrtw Ott '"' ....... Amet .. ( ....... u..M) lfSHOI' AMAT<•> -P-•· W._., II. SOIMll 7, VetleMt'I •· l«k •. Ounllltn 4. Toi.it; 17 6· 16 40. MATma Dll 11t1) -lt.,,,..,I 4, MNrleet •, Jcwce o • .PellOft 2. IWo4Jla t . Dwv.r •. ICiiy •, PMllodY 2, Jl\Otl'IM 12, Mll<NI 27, Lewis 40. Tole~:., 1)-16 101. SC... ., o.rtwa llSllOP Amat 12 • 11 tr • Meter Del 20 2t u t1-101 Tole! fouls: BlshoP Amel 12, Me• Del 1•. Tectmlclll: ltemtlerl (MDI. Mlsllen V1et9 12. lrYIM St ( ... C:. ......... ) llYIN• (ff) -P•IClllll 17, Temur11 •• Hwrlnt 7. Mocw1-t;-lteve 0, Sdlufr 1, Snoeldv 12, IC. Tetnut• 6, laldwl11 1, Kre\Mr t . Tote1': 25 f-15 ff. MISUON V..-'O 112> -Ont.no 13, Minier 12, Knowtel .tll, '"9derwn •. Motlen S, HIW l. lrtceto •. Htrdmen 15, SllentOft 2. He~too 2, Yencev 2. Tolell: 3" 1•·11 tt. sar.w °'*"" lrYlne 11 17 IS 1.....-sf Mlu lon Vi.IO • 11 26 16 n-t2 Tolel I~ lrvlne 15, Mlulon vi.io 17; Tecllnlcal: Min ion Vlelo l>OOIC • HIGH SCHOOL ST ANDtNGS S.. View LHtue ....... !# L NeWPOl'I Herbor 12 1 E 1l•ncle 11 , Corone dtl Mar 10 3 s..ddteOeck 7 • L~ 8ffdl S I Cost• Mesa 4 9 Woodbridge 2 11 UnlYerslty I 12 Owral WL 21 3 n , II 6 ,. 10 I 1• ' I• . " ' .. TJCc••-Y'• sc-COl'ON Oil Mltr 63, SaddllMck SS NewPOf"t Hal't»r 11, Cot le """-U Eslencla 60, WoodbtldM 5t Laoune lffcll If, UnlYef'tllY 71 ,,... .... ~ 17:31) Cosle Mesa et Eslencl• Laoune lkecll et Corona dtl Mar Woodtlfldee •• N--· Herbor UnlYertllv et SeOdlebeck SUnMt~ ~ WL °""" WL C>eMn View F011ntetn Velltv HIH111neloo Bffcll Weslmlnster Marine Edlton • • 7 2 • 5 • s 3 ' 0 9 w.-...V'sSC.... Founl1ln VelltV •. Edi.on .. • a 15 1 9 11 1 13 11 IJ I 1• Ocean Ylew 11, -Hllfttlneloll 9"Cft 60 Westminster SS. Marina •2 ''*V'• 0-17:31) Edison et Marine Westmln11er el Oc:een View Founle ln Vittev 11 Hvntlnetoo lffcll Seuttt c .. at LMilUe LMIW OWr .. WL WL Mission Vlelo Dene Hlth CNlalr-VdeY Et Toro 10 I 21 • 9 3 17 s 7 • If 6 6 s 11 12 Laoune HlllS 4 7 12 12 Seft Clement• 3 I 7 I• Ir YIM 0 11 6 17 W ..... Y'ISecrws Mlulon Vlelo 12, trYlne ff El Toro n. S.n Ciem.n11 '5 Dene Hiiia 67, Latun• Hiils 56 ''*Y'• a.MM 17~) lrYIM el L99Ulle Hiiis Mluton Vlelo et Sen Ctem.nl• El Toro VJ. CePltlreno Va lltv et S.Odlt· Deck Colloe ...... u..w LMIW WL Owrel • WL Mlle!' Del 9 0 Plux X 1 2 S«Vlll 5 • SI. Pell! • S llSllOO Amal 1 I lltllOO MonlllOl'llerY 1 I W ..... Y'alarw Meler Del 101. I JtllOO Amel _, S«Yltt 61, aJshoP MollttotMtv 67 Plus X 70, St. Pclll 51 ''*V'• 0-(709) lltllop Amal el St. Peul Pl11t X el IJ~ Mollt~y .......... ..,,. (7~) ,. 0 16 9 ' 12 I 12 ' " • II Maler Del"'· Senlllt •• CvlH'n1 Collete COtMWNfTY COLL•O• WOMllN <>r..... C.1t 1', ...._ Weat 61 ls.ti c.ee.t C1 fl .,., GaAMG• COAST CJt> -Hattlcock 21, Perker 12. let""'1 5 KoMVMN 11, C11rl11ma11 •, Thotle 17. fotlfS: U 20-27 Jt. eoLDtl• W81T (61) -Amon 1', lellemy 6, AWY .. 6, JofWltOn 1.-, loltoll 9, EH llll 10, G111'1tle 4. Storer 2. TolM: n IS-20 '1. Helt11me: Or11n99 Coasl, J3·i7. Totel foult: Ora,,._ COHI 17, G01dln Wesl 20. Foulld out: .... mv IGWI. Se••ahdl M, Cwreu S7 (._. C.lt Ct fl ..... , CYN .. I CO) -~MOM It, Hoff· men JI, lYnM 2, JoMlln 4, WNllllt ._ To1e1s• n 13-16 fl. IADO\.••Aetc , .. , _ Contrer•~ILEllV 16, Jol1" 11, L"'*"°" 11, CIMYWn 17, Tevtw 10, HlnM 4. TotCll; '° .. 7 k Htlftlme: h dlll8'&Cll d-2t. Total foutl: CY9t&M 17, II ••1Mc• 19. •"'J * i . - . • • I I uo u: 2.40 3.40 6.20 '°""'" •Act. One milt Hee. FllnYOUOfftbO (Maltf') 21.20 UO UO Main ltlllWltf CDovaM1) YO 2t0 Ceoteln Cenoll (P9feelne> 2 60 Tim.: l:os ,, s. . fll"H llACI. One milt lleell. Miies L.Ov (Panter) UO S 10 UO Flatneeretl (\lellencll119hem) 1110 S 60 Ktemeltl KW\ert tC>etotntfl 2 .cl T lrne· 2'02, U l>CACTA IN ) Hid l300.60. SIXTH •Acl. One mile trot Saisv Ster C'"'8nol UO uo uo Slll'IOOI CWllll•l 3'UO lOAO Hobie lt ... n (FIKO) l.10 Time: 2:03 11 S. U IXACTA (S•fl Hid U'7.60. SIVINTH •ACI. One m!M NCI. Arm9dlll0 IDnomtr) 23.IO 12.10 UO Hurtc.ne S.nclf• (Longo) uo • . .i LA Ml1lres1 CPttersen> 2.40 Time: 2:04 215. U IXACTA (4•6) H id $74960. llOMTH •ACI. One mllt HQe. Caltfornla at.1ter (Rini UO UO Jlm1 ,,._ CTremblevl UO 119 Erllt (LKll"evl Time: 1:59 3/ S. U IXACTA (2-7) Hid ~IO. MMTH •ACI. One mMe trot. Jeuv /iNth (0. AC:Vrnnl 1.10 uo OH·Clnalc CMI (It. A<:krmn) l.00 OH·PrOOl'lecY N ( .. vttM) l.00 Time: 2:01 2/S. U IXACTA (l-61 Hid M0.20. uo 4.40 uo U P'tCK SOC (3-7-S+2·ll Pllld S2,142.40 with five wlnnl119 lldlet1 (five Ilona). Cerrvo¥81' OOOI Sll,712.5'. TINTH •ACI. One mile Nee. It~ Mu tMerdam> 4.00 i.o. ~ Creckld Ice lAUOln) UO UO MelltM Hunter (lake<) 6.40 • Time: 1:" )IS. U IXACTA C 1·21 Pllld MUO. ILIYINTH ltACI. One mlle pece Maret\ Stir (AuC>ln) UO 4.40 4.20 Country Comfort CPerlltf'l UO 4.00 Fire And Rain (Sherren> S.40 Time: 210S. IJ IXACTA (7· I) H id SS7 00. Atttndence: 3,303. Santa Anita . WIDNISOAY'I •ISULTS ( .......... ., .. ..,.,.. .. ,,....., fl•IT •ACI. 6\.'J fur!On91. ' Nol A Strew COllvern> 13.60 5.10 4,40 MIM!'vt (Domln$Uet) 4.40 )JO Nordic L'edv (Hewlevl S.AO Time: 1·11 2/S. SICONO •ACI. 6'1t lurtonei. ... lrOUl'ldl~ (Lmcn) L40 S.op 4.00 Marf/6/t Jo (Ollveretl 10.20 7.00 Sllverrar1nceu CNICHerguel 7.20 Time: 1-17 2/S. U DAil Y OOUIL.8 (l-S) paid SSUO. TH•D •ACI. 6 furlontn SNrp Control CSlnentl lUO S 10 4..00 Glowlne CMcCMronl 3AO UO Amtieuaw Of Wer (NICHereuel 3AO Time: I: 11 11 S. ~TM •ACI. One mlle. Polly La Femme (Trol 24 00 10.20 4A IM Ev• Crvln COltluv•l 6.AO UO Ir.ad Str• (Ha•leYI )..cl T 1me: 1:ll 11 S. II •XACTA I M I Mid i2U.50. fllf'TH •Ac•. I mites on hKf. Fellll (Lo1ov•) UO 7.60 UO Peleltlollo (Oelahounv•) lSAO IS • .c> lo1lo CHewlevl 3..0 Time: l :" 4/S, SIXTH •ACI. •v. lurlon91. ~teltrnefl'• ... (TOf'o) 9.40 S.40 3.40 Prlnceu Lark (L.OIOVll 12.IO 7.20 SwMt DH DH (Steiner) 3.60 Tlmr. 1:17 3/S. SIVIMTH •Ac•. 61h furloflt!•· Dullv Ollle (Steven11 l.IO UO UO ltlll'• Ooldmlne CUllNml 24.60 100 Sanl• ltOM Prince (Lamance> S.00 Tim.: 1.17 3/S. u IXACTA J11·9) H id use.so. 1....-TH .. ACI. 1 1116 ITllleL S.v-.f\ OMcw (SboeJ 4.40 2.60 2.20 PIM Saclfllr• CMcCarron> 2.40 2.20 l!d't lold ~ COllveretl l.00 Time: li" 1/S. u IXACTA (S·)) Nla n>.oo. U .-.CK SIX 110-1-2·3·11-SI N ICI 1127,711,.cl •lltl -wlnnlnt lldltl (MX llOtlft). U Pick Six consolation Mid 11,ICM.IO wlll'I 106 wlnfllno llclleh (five horlft). NeNTH •ACI. I 1116 milts. Aclrlanut (McCarron) 7.10 4..10 JM Sir Alchlmlll (Lamance) 17M 'AO Tvllkal Pro (LOIOVll uo Tlmr. hM 11 S. U IXACTA (3-4) otkl l.llt.~. Altendellce: 21,JN. o.... ........ OAYIY'I LOCICI• (NIW_.,, leedll -" ano11n. 152 rodl cod, 1 C.fko Illas. 1 Mnd Nff, I K~, )4 madlerll. ..... C.,_..LL COllPD•llC• ................. W LT .. WU ... 6 • -.. " 2J 6 .. '" Ill • 21 1 ., ft6 211 '' n 10 • 210 m M » I 40 , .. '" ...,....,.... St. Lout• 25 If 10 60 2111 201 Cllk.eto 25 ti J S) 211 2lS MIMHo•• 16 tt 10 a 111 m Detroit 1' JI ' '1 20J 2N Toronto IJ JS 1 n "1 n> 'WALIS COMPl•INCI ~ ....... Welhll\tttn 34 IS I 7& 240 161 PhlladtllMllll 31 " 1 ., n1 110 NY 1~$ JO 22 J 6' 2SJ '1J MY It~' 17 29 f 4) 191 227 Plttl.Durtll II 2t S 41 116 n1 New Jeney 17 2' 7 41 \G 211 luff •lo Mon tr ff I ~ ao.1on Hartford MIMI OfWlllilll 77 IS-It '6 202 112 27 " 10 .. 214 117 un 1 .. n> "' 2$ 24 7 S1 -"' 17. 6 ..... 241 Wit 1•1'1 SC.. Wlnnlfllt S, Wetlllneton 3 T ........ 1._ &o.1on el K._ Hertfotd It IMw .JefMV ~ el fl'NieCMICI~ MIMelol• 11 Detroit Plttibur9h el Clllea9o ,J;Monfo 11 St. L4Mil1 w11111no1on '' c....,., lenMCC« lttOH SCHOOL ,...._.v....,,,,._, Founleln \llllleY KOl'lno: Colet 1, Mullen 2. Edison .corlno: CatnPtltll 2. VVlnelcur 1. 0CW V... 1, HUIAOQlllla; ~ 1 OCean View te.orlne: TIMaqueh I, Austwlck I. Huntlnoton IMdl KOt"lno: ~ICM\. .......,, ...,.,, i. ca.. MllM • NewPOrt HartlOr ICOl'lne: Crots I, Talamo 1. • c;.,.. -MM I, t11•111c:t1 I Corona Oii Mar ICOl'lno: Mf/JffflA 1. l..._..J.We1•,.._1 ~.M*~~ui-2. Wtletll L Olm MCcer "'°" SCMOCX. c;.,.. ... MM 2. .. Jllll ell t Corone Oii Mar .corlno; londr• Wlf'tln 1. ~ • • . . .., .. c.-... UC 1rW1e 4, CS ~1 .... 1 UC Irvine 000 001 ~ 9 0 CS Dom Hitll 100 000 Ol»-1 I 2 JoMson. Kent Ct) end Moroen; salarer, Slr0t19 Ill, Connelly (9) encl Moreno. W-JoMson. 1·0 L~S1rono, 0-1 S.-l(anl , ..... Moreno IOHI. w ..... .,.. trw.dlenl •ASaaAll Al-.lcMLw IOSTON ltED SOX-$1ened Jim ltlet, °""'91der, end lotl Stanley, DltcNr, to tono·l•m conlrac1 ••1-lont, end Wede looo1, third NMmen. CLEVELAND INOIANS-Sl1n1 Mike Jeff<:oa1 encl Jow ltom.n, Dllehar1, to one·VHr contracts. TEXAS RANGEltS-PurcllHtd Greo H•rtb,-Dltc:i-, ftOm 1111 $an Dleoo Pedr•. TORONTO SLUE JA YS-Sl1MO Gtoroe 8111, outfletoer. Jimmy Kev, Piicher, Ind Frid McGrlff, fir'1 !>Heman, to one-v••r conlrecls. .......... ......,. SAN DIEGO PAQREs-tteecl'led en eorMl'nlftl wllll AfldY He••lns, Pilel'IW, Oii 1 twc>-v"r conlracf. MONTltEAL EXPOs-Sloned Jot Hnlc.elh and Dlcll GreDtnthln, D1tc;/1eo, IO -·"9r' conlrKfi. NMMd Ron P)cf'I tic.kt! "'" promotion manaoer. NEW ·YC>fll( METS.-Nem.o l uu Ceor• Pilellino coach of '"' cklll'• Llllle F.-efflltate In Ille New Yorll·Penn Laaoue. Named SOii Siket 111l5t1nt trelner and Leland lladtfltld, JOM Flou· "°'· CerlOs T•DI• and Sal Meroe9'!0M .COUIL PlTTSIUltGH PIRATES-Sloned Marvtll wvnne encl Joe 0twia11., out· fltldW1, and Bob Walle, olldler, to one· YMr COtttrac11. , '°°'9All ....... , ..... l ...... .. EW ENGL.AND PATRI · OTs-Hemld Ln Sl.U.11 Ind HarOld JKltson, aulslenf coaches . ....... see.. ....... LMIUt ARIZONA OVTLAWS-Trldld Terry heson, Nnetlaektf'. 10 Ille Jack sonvllle luh In lllChanle tor undlKIOMd d!'elt Olcll• • .JACKSONVILLE IULLS-Welved Tttrv L.Count, wide rtcalvef. OAKLAND IN\IADl!ltS-W1lved Mllctlll Montoomerv. tloht Ind. Slontd e>o.io Co11n, llOl\I eno. HOa<aY ........ Heclfev......,. I OSTON lltUINS-Announceo Ille re1'9nallon of Gerrv Cllteven, llHcl coach, ano Gerv Doak, .. .i11an1 coach. Named Harrv Sinden Interim hied cotd\. .. • • • ' ' • P1Crmoue ., ..... umn,n " The~ penone.,. dolna~-IEsT WQTEAH • EL TOAO IHH, 23702 ~11.ed Blvd., El Toro, Cellfotnle 92t30 Ho-Tlmee Inc., • CallforNa ~· 23702 Aodt· M, El Toro, Cei-1om. 92a0 TIQ bu...._ 11 c:on- duc:1ed by: • c:otpOfatlon YI Ho Wong, Prweldet1t Thia ..... , .. ,, ... tlled with the~ a.ti of Or-= County on Jenu.ry 25, rll7l8 Publl9hed Orange eo.t Daily Piiot ~ 31. F.o-ruary 7, 14, 21, 1915 TIHS79 P1t8JC NOTICE ACTTTIOUe llU ... U N~ITATDmNT The lollowlng pertOn9 .,. doing buelneee -ROBERSON & AS- SOCIATES. «25 JembofM Btvd., Suite 125, Newport Beecti, CelHornla 92MO David L. Aob•r•on Flneneiel and lneurence Ser- vices. Incorporated, Call- fomla Corpopretlon Thia buelne" 11 con- ducted by • eorporeOon Davtd L. Robefton. Prael- dent Thie ltalement WM ftlec:I with the Coun1y Clerk of Or- ange County on January 17, 1985 , ...... Publllhec:I Orange eo..t O&lly Piiiot January 31. Feb- ruary 7, 14, 21. 1985 Th-eecl P'tllJC NOTIC£ 'ICTITIOUI llU-U NAlltlTATlmNT The 104!owlng pereon1 are <IOlng butlneM •: NEWPORT IMPORTS LIMO SERVICES, INC., 3100 W81t Pldftc Co.at Hlghwey. Newport 8-ctl, ~nia 92663 L .. Waet Enterpmea, Inc. • Callfomla Corporation. 3100 Welt P9dflc eo.t Hlghwey, ~ &Mctl. Celflornla 92113 Thlt l>WIMM 11 con· ducted by: • COfpof'eUCln Leland H. W•. ftfeeldent Tills ltetament .... flled with the County a.ti of Or- ange County on JetMtty 25, 1985 l'lln17 Pubffltled Orenge Coell Dally Piiot J~ 31, FeC>o ruary 7, 14, 21, 1N8 T'M11 .. Telephone Service: Monday.f riday 8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M. Busi:neu Counter: Monday.f riday 8:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M. , . OEADLl~E Pl'Hl.IC \TIO' l>EADLI~•: Monday Tuesda y Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday Fri. Mon. Tues. Wed. Thurs. Fri. Fri. 4:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 3:00 p.m. 3:00 p.rp. <;AN~ELLATION & CORR ECTIONS: unm PUii U'fPIMf Spectaru)ar bayfront dplx. 2 Br, 2 Ba. up, 2 Br, 2 Ba down. & _ ,,.t spaces. $1,2~000. . Pl•llU ........ Exciting Ocean &·Jetty view, 4 Br, 3 Ba. .3700 IQ. ft. ca.r parking. Now $1 ,1~.ooo BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR ( l ~ ., I I ' •• µ , • I f If - Classy Autos Advertised . In the ..., ... -, -#. -'. ---~--•• --~ You.,. IN !owe of ""I.... CHNSTOPHEA, Our tint God .... You Iott\. YMr' toaether hM beef'! With Love, CHUCKO-the blltf NANCY Hefb .ner 25 YMfl, Joen. DIRTY IRU8H Ind SIL· Meurice, Ahond• l Allen VER FOX. I !owe you. I Wiii Lcwe You FOffWllf Belle 8'9r NBS, TESS PLEASE IE MY VALENTINE. LEROY DAVID la mt f9YOl1te ,,_. eon -mt Low • Ind mt Beat Friend • 8yM9 You .,. .. I .,,., went or•-------- need. I Lcwe You. JML Jeen, Thl9 will be/la OUt Aid\, You tM me 80 ~·Your loYer & tnend. much, but ,.,.. lrnpof1-, _______ _ ant YOA.11 L.AMll Oertene To Mom l Oed, We'll k>Ye you._ Ct81g, Curt l Kn.ti To • Wondartul Hutbllnd, Ded l Deddy-. To-S.- WE LOYE YOU uaa, si.v.n. & ? LeAnne. After 20 yrs you .,. 1t111 ""' o + o tor Jaw Het•'• 10 E + E. Lcwe Chuctl here'a 10 you. Tlmel c:Mnge. eo .. I, 80 you, but the one I !owe .... be you, ... l f ~ ' ST!YEN, I hope you 1M 1Mt FERRAN! I LO¥t 'fou aw.tte. Mnt l.Mar• To the GAINNI GIGGLE Deen The ONE. Falreat ol the flllr, lwl! you you •• ""I v.ry k>Ye. heertll J our SAHOIWt HEM OA AWAY. IN MY HIAf'T YOU WILL ALWAYS STAY. LOYl. IMH J«ry, You're the Beat llrthdey ,..,_,. Evetl I Low You Honey, Bran T!Nn', "'• 8-ltlfUI ltn't I SCOTT, I LOVE YOU, HI And 80 .,. youl I loYe Mor9 and Mor9 --«My. youl Scott The belt la )191 to oome. -------- LOY! ALWAYS, WINDY HAPPY VALENTINES DAY to: Julle, Mlchalla, CyntHe. Jentry, G...,, 89dty, UncM. Debby l ........... The moet ........ UAU.AA08 In ll:Il'I'""~ tf'9 wortdl LM you .. ..,... Mnt lue • Mom THE YUK l----1------ WIHI, You .,. mt Va'9ntlne every Dayl LcweALLEN FRANt< My Lo¥e. On Our 8pedll o.y, Love Now a fonMrtSYL .. ~ ... ' WE LOVE YOU CLAUDIA! Kevin, SNnnon. Mn & Molle / JOANN, 'l'hanka tor belngv "MY VALENTINE" tw9n- ty·llX tlmeatt lut, c:en I MYe ""' Diner'• Cer? bad! nowt I Low You.· _s_oe _______ j MICHAEL: Yov're my ~ In ..... arftlCW, rrty dreMt oome tNa. I LOVE YOU YEfrf MUCH .OOOOl.18 JULIE. You'I Nw9yt be MINE! Happy Vatantlne'a Olly. N4 rif; LOVE Now l F~ Lo¥e, STEVEN LON. The Ap9d'9,.... be """' Hilppy v ........ Olly. L.ow. you. Ne NCH, FAICIHATIOH TUAHID TO LOYE.PATSY MOM&DAD You're the Beat Pwenta ewrt I LOVE YOU, LAUre PAUL. I'm talir'9 the woftd you ere wonderlUI. I loYe you.~ 808.~1••••..._ &' MRllU.;,_ .... _, n.ver for,.t "WHO towe, .... LOYD YOU IAIYI" 1--------~ y-.. ,.~. L.oveJeMIW ., ................. 1 ................ Lowe, ec.- The HEAD POT .. our v• •----=-------"- ..... Your kno.n ~ MtREN IT'S OURS, VEAi THEKEllY'I Pl'9doua NATHAN, le mt l--:::1111111.::----::::;:11;::--- Valentlnel Orandma loYea you v.ry mudll Lovia, NONI .. CATHY, 8., Wttt1 .. of me, I lo.-al · of you ...... I LOVE YOU VERY MUCH, Ya6anttne'a la juet one «My FRED C tor llttla ~·a ~ way! Tho, In tNe Senlot'a I , You'w 8eef\ My Low F°' 43 Yra. H~ 1 v.i.nt1nes Day, St.,, hewt ""' dear, It ...... on throughout Md'I ~ To mt wife EVEl YN, Lo¥e Travta WN, you're IPeclail to me. I'm thanlltul .. met. I lo.-youJ Peul EARL & PEGGY (Mom l DEANNA l MELISSA. You Ded). I hope you ,__ a ... the Ugl'lt of OA.11 ~ haSIPY •••di• «My. I w. L0\119 you more love you _,., muc:tl, Dey! MOM l DAD Lan (TOOC81a Mil , TIGER: Roaea ... red. VI-) otata ••blue. T-. la no one tor me but YOU. YOU, YOU. 8ouncar --------Bob, Ao.-.. Aad, V\cMata ............ LOVE TO PHYL FROM CIHOYl JAQ< L.MCAMOU •• You .. ow~• ...... W. ioweyou. "°"'a b9d .. ~ .,.._ trult? Ale --------...., 10Uf'I too? Low, .. TO GEORGE. My s-t- heart on Ma IMO ''50'' 0.... You Ale The .... Ya6anftne IW1hdev. Wfttl Ded In The Wcwtcl. W. io... W*"'Y Pooh! Gema Low You C & J 9 '&w. ""' a.au, '%;.-.,. ##~lllC,..- ~tJW. . ~~ I ~ llYlllUI llTT• ... u, .. 1425,000 .0ne of. hand- ful of hofMe, acroae from beectl on ~· Dr. Some ~ ~om ll'tlng room but poeltblllty of 1eo• ~ " 2nd ltOfY added. A cftarmlng ,..._ denc». 8ewerly Morphy . ....... ----w.. COLDW<?U BAN~eR O --- 2 Bedroom. den, formal dining room, breakfast room. 4 year new borne on quiet cul-de-sac. Custom builders own home, cen\ral air. Plush and lush. Only $199,900, 10% interest, 2~ down. $1400 per mo. Call us to inspect. HOROSCOPE SYDNEY 0MARR -------~. -. . . W! '· u ,l :1 r f1l r1C '•• 'i't I I I. H• f,! .. ............... 754 eq. ft. view IUlt• Newlpaper SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS KIDS-EARN GREAT TRPS AND PRIZES! ACE 11-14 EARN ~ TO $75.00 PU WEEK . , W. llOW haft IS CIPtfll"IS" I« ~ ,.r bentn to MCult rudtn lof lhe Or11111 Cont °"'? Not. o.r crews slMt al 3 30 p.m alld 1wotk unbl I.JO p.m. wtlldays Otl Sltutday, we !won I few lllOfl hottrs You ... elln llllllJ trips , Ind ptlZts, llofll with tafllll. JOlll OWll lllOMy 1 thett IS llO dth_,NIC Of (olltcbOfl lllwol\led • • H you are 111lefnted. please c.a Mr Earl. (714) 548-7058 . ~· TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE AC..-011 I 1n1trumen1t 6 Apl)ef'dl tO E•hlbllton 14 As u1ua1ty IS Feline t6 W11ter1a 11 OrOll ~•on ti Contrition !O Cottecuon 21 llem 23 Stoned 24 Happy loo" 25 Shlppea 26 Old11h 30 Parches 34 lrrnate 3S Swill riv@• 37 Malri• 38 Appear 39 e.1en11ve • t lf\fatuauon 42 Coot cucumber 43 Htram 1 realm 44 Overchar~ 46 Shell 48 NHL 1eam 50 Oancef'li1t11> 52 To INltfe• 53 Engravf' 56 Ver1tv 57 Barrier 60 Plastic 62 01eores1n 84 S1m1an1 65 Numerical sull1• 8~ Art ahow 87 Cautious 88 Afl99' 61) High e<11f1ce DOWN I S Amar1ca" rodent 2 'loll clut> 3 Big cal 4 High priest s Made N ia 6 Mouniamoui 7 Daily fare a waar ll Woodcoci. '~.,. 10 Urbane t t lnt1m111 t 2 <>ver 11.gn ti~ 13 Use a flOf Ill Drawn 22 Pteasanu~ 2• w .. gn1 uni• 25 Groom s ~·l''. }6 Of no-.Ps 71 Pull'r -·-.... ·----.. --- 28 Trampl• 21) NOSlrtlS 31 Saw 32 St Lawrelle• o• MIS SOY rt l3 Plants gr.I'< 36 Ent.,111"' 40 Dr~ • 1 O•ull •J lie• •5 Ha,,lflont ~ • v 1>un1> salm<.o11 .. int. .... .., ..... t-11 A; ............. .,lhd . c-.. .... (Oft .... p., ...... o.. .... Cell (11•) '3f~ tor mor. info EOE ~ . .,., .... , • I ,, BUENA PARK GARDEN GROVE HUNTINGTON BEACH I -~. 0 ... tn ii: co EDINGER Q WARNER 8 CHICK IVERSON Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi "' L O.est hJ., • .,.,. hao• 111.- Hlghest Quality Sales & Service ~ co \ 9 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A. 's # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales, Servrce, Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Depts. Competitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals 2111 ...... lh• ........ ... 142-0010 " 140-1211 0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS INC. •LONG THM LIASIS 91 FWY. d 2FRWY . LAGUNA HILLS 0 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2121 ..,.., lh•., lest• .... . Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sales • Service • Leasing 54&-12H S,.W Plrts U.. 546-MM MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM WE'llE ·~ WE'ii IUUM 0 NABERS .CADILLAC @ 2llO 111111 ILYI., OISTI IEIA (114) 148-1100 (211) 111-1211 • Best Prices • Convenient Location • HUGE INVENTORY ~ • COMl'ETITIV! r\JRCHASI PRICES 0 dial MERCEDES 213/714 837-2333 • Great Location • Super Service • Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People Next to Santa Ana FwY (5) on Manchester /Beach Blvd. AcroM "°"' ... ,.. -~ ......... of 11 (Onnge) '"" MISSION VIEJO f) LAKEU SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO .· 0 BAUER MOTORS BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU • Complete Automottv. Need• SALES • SERVICE • LEASING Ane Setectlon of au.llty UMd VehJdel # 1 BUICK DEALER IN ORANGE COUNTY 2125 HAf'BOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 179-2IOO 0 BILL YATES YIUIWllll • PBS. • PlllUT S~LES •LEASING• PARTS• SERVICE 12112 , ...................... . 81-4111 111 .... ~ 0 CREVIER BMW "' ~ SALES • SERVICE • LEASING ""' • "Where Professional A ttltude Prevails " lpecWldng In Europeen Delhery. Exe.lent a...etlon of New end carefu1tJ ptepered UMd 8MW'1 always in stock. G ORANGE COAST JEEP/RENAULT & . TERLING lft e UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE . # 1 II Th W11t Flf · SAUS -SlmcE -lWllC -PUTS 835-3171 20I W. 1at St., S•nt• An• Corner of Broadway & 111 St. Cloaed Sundays JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS 1301 Quall St. -IHw C•r LOC11tlon 1001 Quall St. -R ... ,. Dlrl•lon 0 World's Largest Selection of IT\ Mercedes Benz \C;J 833-9300 SM · l.mill · P.ts · Strtke • Wy Site, • '\ lllW JH, Slllfl Fii I y,... Overseas Delivery Specialists ,ARTI ~,AJn'MeNT OPeN O~n~e. SALES IATUN>AY MONllMGI Oa t • SERVICE BMW -ROLLS ROYCE • LEASING . 1540 Jamboree Ad. ili• . ACCESSORIES DEPT Newport Beach 840-8444 COMMONWEALTH 8 VOLKSWAGEN &l1.'FAMILY STORE SINCE '93' -~Sales • Service -Leuing., - BRmTOL AT EDINGER Me-0110 IN SANTA AllA 888DOVE'ST NEWPORT BE.ACH 714 833-1300 ·HONDA ~ 2880 Harbor Blvd. Costa M••• 540-0713 3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy. SUWICl ... , ... 2345 I. CUii Ill SAITA AllA 542-8811 ) IJ LISA MARONEY °' .............. Irvine police Wednetday swept 16 alle,ecl drutdealen out oftbe city's hiah tchoofs foUowiftt a four-month undercover investiptaon. Police officen went knockina on doon in several Irvine neiah- borhoods before claslcs started Wednesday mom.in&. armtina l 3 teen:qe1s. They left lhe teen..qen' Laara'•day Today la Laara ADD a,acl- bary lll••l•I Cbllclren Awarama-Da7-, eo· de911- nated by tbe <>rue• CoaafJ Board of 8aper•l•or• Weclneeday. Tbe S-yeu-old daaa)lter of lllke and Patty Braibary of Bantiqton ae.eb bu been mhidDI mace October, w1um 8be .._ . . appeuecl d~ a family oatlnal at Joahaa Tree Na-tlonaf llonmaent. Anyone wltb Information aboat Laara la ••keel to ooatact tlae San Bernardino Coaiaty 9herlff9• Station, (8UJ) 886-3791. Cout Coast resident• are otter- ing love for ..... and It comes~lft wrapped./ A3 C.llforilla Six workers at the San Onofre NUCiear Generat- ing Statloh are expoaed to radiation./ Al Na don Attorneys for CBS want the CIA to release study on Vietnam enemy fig- urea./ M World Manila hotel blaze con- tinues to burn; police now say the fire was work of arsonists./ Al Boatln& Morethan 1.000 boat crews start competing In · the Mtdwtnter regatta Saturday./11 Sporta lagUJ18 Beach High . basketball coach Cratg Falconer reslgna./C1 Entertainment · Forewarned ta forearmed -.. "Hollywood Wlvee0 11 trash without redeeming clau./D Baelnw Conttnental Alrllnee wtlt tnauaurate non8top Mr- vtce from HOUiton to John Wayne Airport on Aprll 1./84 ll'O>BX puentl a letter from the police cb_ief .sales: and c1Nctioa1 to Juvenile Hall, s,t. Thole arrested alleaed!sold co-Dick Bowman laicl. caine, marijuana, am ~ A 2().year~ junior col'* stu-aDd LSD to students om lrviPll, dent ~ at bis home in Univenity and Woodbridtc hilb HuntinstoD a.ch OD Tuesday niabt. ICbooll, police said. Bowman laid. One other man was The ille8ed dru1 dealers were already in c:uatody on a parole routedbya11-year-oldmerveofficer violauon and another i1 still beina masquendinaasa~1ebooljunior. sou&ht this momina. The female officer mftltrated dl'UI All are SUtpeC1ed of felony dru1 networb at two of the schools and Fitness · school ' . set for , s~coast National training center·w1ll carry a $50 million tab BJ llOBDT-BYNDMAN ud LISA MARONEY °' ............... A 17S-acre site in the coastal foothills east of Lquna Beach bas been selected for a SSO million athletic trainina academy, the Na- tional Fitness Foundation an- nounced Wednesday . The academy, which would be built and supported by private funds, is envisioned as a national training and research headquarten for coach~s and athletes similar to athletic academies commonl).' found in Europe, accordinJ to Bdl Harris, head of the non-profit foundation's site selection and construction commit- tee. "Practically every other country does have it. It's somethina very important," Harris said. · The site waS selected from among seven considered in Oranae County and throuabout the nation. Harris uid foundation trustees hope to have the fitaesa academy completed within four yeaft to honor .a promise made to President Ronald Ralllft. Comtructioa ii expec:&ed to beain within a year. J:ormer pro football coach Oeo~ Allen, chatrman of the Presidents Council on Physical Fitness and Sports, is the honorary chairman of the National Fitness Foundation. purchued small amouau of' various druas. Sit. Leo Jones said. Sbe allO &IJeledly bouaht SOO doles of LSD at SS apiece &om the Huntinston 8eac;b man,be~d. . At a preu oon~nce Wedneld~, police nfficials displayed t11e L5 . called GReR Acom, and I 05 biadles of' cocaine seized from a Su1a Ana home Jan. 31. About -..auaner pm 8'iece. tbe bindlel,-~ ldl --- ....... ,.......,"-...... At the Wednesday afternoon news confe~nce announcina the site selec- tion, ·Allen said Aliso Viejo was chosen for its year-round comfonable climate and ats pro:itimity to water (Pleue ... PIT!m88/A2) Sit· Leo Jon• cllaplaym blotter acid tabe. CAK"Alne blacll•. Police now link Huntington knife murder to drugs · The sla~ofa HJ1ntinaton Beach man, sta to death durina a residential robbery mt week, appears to be linked to the 4ru1 world, police now acknowledec. Three auspectj in the slayina of Wilfaam F. O'Gorman.. 30, will be arraiped Friday in· West Oranae Muncipal Court in Weatfbinster on murder and robbery cbaracs. A tcheduled bearina· Wednesday wu postponed 10 that attorneys could be a~ to represent Clement E. 22; ~sa P. Mondragon, 21: and Tutulla F. Tuvalu, 22. The three, arrested Fri- day, a~ bej ng held without bail. Q'Gom\an was Slabbed in the chest and head after two men and a woman bUnt into a Holland Drive apiTtment in Huntington Beach he· wa~ vistina on t~ night of Feb. 6. Police said the trio brandis Cd .- sawed-off shotgun and ordered five people in the apartment to lie on the lloor. One of the intruders pulled out (Pl ....... llUIU>ft/A2) BJ PlllL SNEIDDMAN °' ............. Some Irvine residents, unhappy with Tuelday's City Council decision to belp plan thRe new freeways, may lrY to put a controversial element of die freeway propoul in the bands of local voters. The proposed initiative drfve would seek to require the council to get voter approval before cbargina new fees to finance the b.isbways. which would run throuab or Deal' Irvine. At issue is a county-backed plan to levy fees on new developments to help pay for the ~ San Joeqwn Hills, Foothill and Eu1em Ocean View pla·ns . to lay off teachers B' ROBERT BAUER °' ............ For the first time in history, Ocean View School District officials plan to mail notices to teacben tdlin& them they may not be rehired a 1he ,.,.-.aooa~-..orlbriak­ iaa enrollmeot. Tbe reduction in fOroe nolicel are to be leftt to 42 fu.D-tiJM leldaers prior to Marcb IS, Superintealent Date COopn ditclosed tQday. .. For the first time, we have an over-supply of teachers." he said. But Coopn said that only about IS teachers ultimately may be laid qtr. Sixteen teachers, be said, are on leave of absence and may oot mum to the classrom and about •• 10 or l 2" others should be expected to leave the HuntingtOn Beach district through normal attrition. The district bas about 425 full-time teachen. Became of the declini .. numbers of children. four demea&ary tdlooll will be clOled this June and dwee odier ICboolt will be tbeir ~ -.... ~ ..... lclliet 1•1•21n ia *' dimricl that ~ tibs m tlle city's aortheros, racbed its peat in 1974 with ... ~ ....... ol 14,000. Earonmena tm slid to abMn 9,000 &lid is not expecled to stabilize uadl it sin.ks IO 8,000 . District officials voled lut May to clott Glea View. P'r , at View, I.art View and ~ View IChooll. Seventh and ei,bth p-.dc daues will be shut down at Westmont, Circle View and Villllte View 1ebools. Officials say t.bey11 save about SI million a year with the cutbacks. 91MIPT8A.l•D ................. A 6'-~-old woman Uyi111 to lwt I ftre for a family barbecue ....... leCODCI· IDd ~ bw'lll ow:r 50 paceat of her body wbee a 2.plloie lllOliDI c;aD IX• p&oded ill bier baDda. JMice Mary l.aaeler Wiii tepQNd in critical condition today in tbe bum unit at UCI Medkal Center followina akin paft IW'll'Y· 7·"-WM ttyinc to re·1phe an .. __,...;. fire in the blc~ of her =:'9000 block of Leilani Drive ~ a ''Oaabt.ck.. took place, 1().-cordina to Huntinaton Bach Flre Department spokeswoman Birsit Davia. Flames jumped &om the t.rbecue c:oala to tbe ~ cu aDd ft• ~ IPibina tueJ on ber body ucl •nina her oa fire. wife's ._. IDd wu srafted from bet blck. O.vi1 tald that people on ·Ire sbould "stop. 4rop and roll" on tbe around to snuff out flames. ''And they should never, never Ide PIOliDe IO awt I bubecue ftre," lbe • llicl. Mn. ZaQller ran IDd craw&ed into a..,. where abe ud ._, neiabbon ultimately beat out dlle lamet With a blanliiel A daulbter, ¥iliUa &om Sliiennan OaA Md tried to put out tlile Runes witb a towel Davis Mid a limilarly cauted Mn. :za,,.,.·, blllbud, Jim, IUd bert>ecue fire broU out leu than an today, "Usually I take care ofblrbe-bour later not tar away in Founwn cuina and I would bave lut ~t tf I Valley. came bome (from work) 15 nunu&el A resident in the 10000 block of earlier. "We were out o( lialner fluid Perearine Citde identifted u Ray Del and lbe didn't ID to the store to buy V edihio used pa on a barbecue he any. My da\.llbtet warned her not to was~ Thepacanbadabolein do it but she wanted to pve it o.ne IMt it and didn t explode. Davit said. wbifhnd the whole can exploded.• ,. Del Vecbhio threw the can away z.u..r uid all the damqed *ill from him and a tarp cypma tree bad to be teraped from the &oat of bit ca\llbt flte. lbe said. Tempe :t..:" ............. a.a . .. 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IOClllf • 12:41 a.m., ..... hnlaAnl M 41 Ftidlly1C4:00Lm.lllCl ........ lt 1:14 llnlaCrvz 71 47 P·"'· Room Ml'rice waltne Orl•Ddo ltaaalres and Francl9co l"raDoo pub cart wt th coffee • ..., .... ,....._,, ........... and orance jlalce to tile police command poet at the Soath Cout P1aaa Hotel. FREEWAY FEE CURBS SOUGHT ••• From Al the three freeways. services in Irvine. PEACE PROTEST STAGED ••• City officials pointed out, however, that the memoranda of under- standing approved by the council are not lqally bindina and do not cominit the city to the developer fee plan. Panicipation in a freeway fee plan will require a future vote by the council. But other councilmembcrs, reject-ina Aaran's call for a ballot measure, argued that a lenathy council hearina and variqus ·meetings with home- owner and business groups bad provide<l sufficient opportunity to bear from the public on the proposed fees.. Speros, representing the Committee of Seven Thousand (COST), named for the approximate number of sipa- tures needed to force special election. · FromAl Berrigan. spcak:ina without a micro- phone to a small group of peace activists during a pre-protest recep- tion Tuesday at the Westin South Coast Plaza hotel. Going to jail for a cause is a "public gift to a polluted time," he said. With those words, the activists from the Orange County Alliance for Survival and other groups were fortified for what lay ahead: four days of polite protests, some courteous arrests and tons of media attention for their actions against a convention of military officials and defense contractors headquartered this week at the hotel. Known as "Wincon '85," the Winter Convention· on Aerospace and Electronic Systems began Wednesday and runs through Friday. Almost down to the last "riaht-on," the protest against the three-day conference bas been scripted by the alliance. with advance co~ies going to Costa Mesa police officials and, of course, the media. There would be no surprises, aJmost no spontaneity, and little of the same risk-talc:ing that had made Berrigan a hero among peace protesters. Things seemed amiss when alliance leaden held a reception inside the very same hotel that protesters en- couraged people to boycon if it continued to host representatives attending the military defense con- vention. Moreover, it seemed rather odd to be snacking inside a hotel one minute, and P.rotcsting outside it the next "111 sec you at the protest," said one fellow, waving to a friend at tbe buffet table, who was perhaps trying to decide between the oli ves or the cherry tomatoes. "Don't go near the COors, we're boycott in• the Coors," instructed alliance co-director Tim Carpenter, pointing to the ice-filled tubs of beer brouaht out by hotel workers unaware of the group's distaste for the brewery's labor practices. · Puttmg down their cocktail plates and wine .sJasses, protesters soon grabbed their candles, walked pa.st the piano bar to the tune of "Night and Day" and through the lobby and out onto the streets. Within an hour their numbers woulct-swell to a crowd of l ,400candJe-holding activists, calling for an end to the arms race. The sea offlam.s was joined by the floodlights of television cameras, and the nashes from newspaper photogra- phers. Reponers were iilso there oa time. as they would be for a 7 a.m. protest the next morning. The handy~ndy press advisories by the alliance also allowed med~ Just Call .,, 642:..6086 D~ .. ;;;;'9ct MotlcJotrFhdey It ~ GO not '-¥t 'PM ~ "" 6 3001'1(;8j!Oetot•1 plfl -Voll COjl'f ""' .,. Ot11¥1rtd More activists arrested By TO.NY SAAVEDRA °' .. .., ........ Nineteen more peace activists wecc arrested in Costa Mesa.this mornina during the second attempt in as many days to block busn carryina deleptes to a convention of military officials and weapons manufacturers. This morning's arrests brings to 44 the number of protesters de~ined in the past two days after blockina a driveway at the Westin South Coast Plaza hotel, where roughly half of the 300 deleptes to the "Wincon '85" conference arc st;aying. ·· 1- While many of the representatives arc carpooling to the classified teSSions at the Marine Corps Air Station, El Toro, about 60 have been taking chartered buses to the three-day conference, which began Wednesday. Police officials said the protest this morning wu "extremely smooth." The buses were stalled for about 25 minutes, but ~ on the road by 7:30 Lm., about an hour before the conference wu to start. Fourteen of those arrested this morning were cited and released on their own recognizance. Five chose to remain in Oran~ County Jail until they appear in c-0urt, within the next three days, polic.e $8Jd. The civil disobedience action this morning was to be conducted by a coali~on of Orange County peace groups. Twenty-two of the 25 protesters arrested Wednesday remained in th' county jail, after declining to be released. workers to plan for a "10ming protest today and an attempt by protesters on Friday to try and convert delegates inside the hotel. Protest groups had also met with city police officials as weU as con- ference and hotel security. only by a few minutes, by delaying a bus? I Berri~n bristled Tuesday , when asked 1f modem-day protests bad becomesanitizedbytheschedulin& scripting and stagu\g -the dis- cuss.ions with police, making sure that the roles were played with no surpris- Councilman Larry Agran, who cast the opposing vote on the highway ~asked that any new freeway fees an Irvine be approved by local voters. He bas claimed the fees will result in hilh onces for homes, goodJ and Aaran said today he will lend support and lepl expertise to a group p'4nning to pJher enough signatures to force the council to place the freeway fee proposal on the ballot. The drive is beina led by William SCHOOL DRUG RAID ••• From Al - Irvine City Clerk Nancy Lacey said organizers would need sipatures from 10 peroont of the city's rqis- tered voters to require the council to approve the initdtivc, Clll a s-pecial . election or P.ut the measure on the• next council -election ballot June 1986. If the group obtains-sianatures from l S percent, the council would be required to approve the measure or can a special election at an early dale. MURDER ••• homAl aired in 1984. The reserve officer, wbo was not identified, is the first to come alona who could pus for a biah school student., police said. arc readily available to those who a knife when a fight broke out., police want them, he said. reported. Police concluded that campus drua problems are not as severe as parents 'may think. Only five of 38 drua buys took place on campus. Lt. Al Muir said. "No one is hawkina drugs in the quad area," be said. But, although school officials arc keeping drua abuse unaer control on campus, illeaal druu-includin& the popular 1960. balfucinogen LSD - Students wanting to make a buy simply arnnae an off-campus rendezvous with their supplier, Muir said. Adults arrested in the sweep in- clude Paul E. Hobart, 18, and David P. Wilkirson, 18. both of Irvine; and Larry D. Tucker. 20, of Huntington Beach. -· The names of the juveniles were not released because of their ages. The six boys and six girls were between l S and 17 years old, police said. . . Steven A. Fritchel, who lives in the apartment. was stabbed in the um and required hospital care. Three others in the apartment were unin- jured. d Capt. Don Jenkins said the inci- ent has drug overtones. He would not elaborate. The three robbers reportedly took cash and other valuables from the apartment., a~cording to police. FITNESS ACADEMY SET ON COAST ••• From Al AJthough sincere, this outcry for peace was indeed Sta$ed. es. and a large city. Southern California location. The country wifl focus on Oranae "I'm not writing the script here I'm Two other local sites considered A potential site in Indianapolis had County as the nation's physical That became patnfully evident ·when 25 protesters tried to block buses leavma the hotel Wednesday morning for the classified conference sessions at the Marine Corps Air Station, El Toro. There was no tense confrontation between peace advocates and the anned, stem-lookini police officers. Thete were no real expectations among the protesters that they would actually stop any buses. Instead. there was only a word game, with officers orderina protesters to move or be arrested; protesters choosing the latter; and police taking them by the arm and politely escorting them into custody. Three of those arrested were re- leased on their own recognizance while 22 others opted to remain injad until their court appearance on charges of blocking a public thoroughfare. It was a pesky recital that proved to be a mosquito-like nuisance for the $Overnment. military and drienae Uldustry representatives who ~ted 20 minutes for police to cJear the path. Had the activists succeeded in tbeir plan to "delay the arms race, .. even if just a guest. But we don't do that back were a second Aliso Viejo location already been ruled out because of its fitness center, he said. ••How can you home (in New York)/' said Bempn, and one in the private community of size, Harris said. The academy re-be against something like this? With addi~ "You can't JUSt send people Coto de Caza in Trabuco Canyon. quires at least 100 acres to accommcr. society's current mania for physical into difficult situations without plan-Four of the eiaht trustees. includina date its buildings, track~ t~nnis fi~ess. it's l.ike brinsina motherhood nioa." Allen, met this week to visit the Aliso courts, soccer fields and bicycle trails, ao'd apple pie to Oranee County." .Most of the ~pie arrcsted Viejo sites apin, Harris said. The be said. Wednesday were briefed on bookina trustees made the decision durin& a The academy will not be geared The academy is to include a Procecturea andjailbouse survival by conference call with other UUJtees pccifically toward training Olympic research wing and a leadenbip in- lbe to..-An&etes Catholic-Worker, a Wednesday morninJ. contenders, Harris said. Its aim will ftiturefortrainiql)Hysicileducation"' charity poup that also specializes in .Locations in Malibu, Houston and be "to help act youth and just about instructors, said Allen, who has-been civil disobedience. · Dallas were also in the runninaforthe everybody in the United States in-workina on the project for the put Catherine Morris, co-leader of the project. But Allen, a former coach of volved in fitness." five years. .,oup, said the domesticated protests the Los Anaeles Rams, Washington Oranae County Supervisor Bruce Preliminary sketches are reported· allow peace activists to be peacefully Redskins, Chicqo Blitz and Arizona Nestande Wednesday said. he wel-ly scheduled to be unveiled April IS at active. Wranglers football teams, said comes the establishment of a fitness a banquet honorina fint lady Nancy .. We don't believe in secret stuff. trustees felt favorably toward a _center at Aliso Viejo. Reqan in New York. It's not a sanitization, it's a ... -a~===---------~------=---=------------------.................. -----publicitization," Morris said. In any case, would the new "domestic" protests be as effective as the uprisinas and risks that unmasked an unholy war during' the I 96<K and early '70s? Were the people arrested Wednes- day morning accomplishina any· th1D&? "[don't know. I don't know," said Diue Posson.!. SO, of Long Beach, Oanlced by heny Costa Mesa police- men on each side. "I just had to do this for my children and my arandchildren." Wll.at do yot1 like ..._. IM Daily Piiot? Wllat •oa'.~ like? Call tile aamber at left a.H '"'......,. wlO k ~. tru~ UM1 ..Unr .. to ~e appropriate Hiter. TH same t4·"9r wwer ... Mt'vtee may IM81d te ~ leUen .. lM editor • aay topk. ~ .. "' Letten c. .... ..i l8clMe dtelr ume ... telep~o•e •••er fer .. nHcatJ•. No clrnladtill aU.. 'leaH. Tell n wllat's • ,.., .... ORANGE COAST lllJPllll H.L lctlwertz Ill PubHther . S.Nrde1 Ind ~ " )'Oii 00 "°' -~ C"'1'/ .,., f • "' Cfll '*°'• 10 • Ill. 9'ld """' CCIP1 ""' ........ FrMk Ztnl Managing Editor K ... wuw.r Advertlting Director Clre .. a.._ T1l1phon• RotemerJ C.....,._ Con troffer Robert L. C•ntrell Production Man•ger Donlld L. WIHleme Cfrcutatlon Manmger . , ' .. I f Laara '• day Today la Laara ADD Brad- bary lll••la• Cblldrea Awarea .. Day, ao deett- nated bJ the <>ranee Comity Board of 8aper•l•or• Wedaeeday. Tbe 3-year-old daaalater of lllke aDd Patty Braibary of Baatmatoa Beaeb fau beeD ..... ... mace OCtober, w11ea .... di• appeared d~ a family oattaa at Joebaa Tree Jlfa- tloaaf lloaament. ADyone wltb laformatto11 aboat · Laara la uked to co.-tact tbe Baa Beraardlao Coaaty 8berlfra Station, (8UJ) 388-3781. , Coast residents are offer- ing love for ule, and It comes gift wrapped.JM Calllo~ Six work era at the San Onofre Nuclear Generat- ing Station are exposed to radiation./ AS Nation Attorneys for CBS want the CIA to release study on Vietnam enemy fJg- ur~./ A4 World Manna hotel blaze con-.;:,, tlnuea to bum; pollce now say the fire was work of araonlats./ AS BoatlJll More than 1,000 boat crews start competing In the Midwinter regatta Saturday./81 Sporta t..guna Beach High basketball coach Craig Falconer reaigna./C1 · Entertainment Forewarned!• forearmed -.. Hollywood Wtvee" 18- traah without redeeming ct-./U Baal.De... Contlr*1tal Alrllnee wtll Inaugurate nonetop eer- Ylce from Houston to · John Wayne Airport on April 1./14 u Fitness Schoool ~ set.for · S.COast National training center will carry a $35 million tab BJ ROBERT HYNDMAN ... LISA MARONEY °' .............. A l 7S-acre site in the coastal foothills cut of Lacuna Beach bas been selected for a S3S million athletic training academy, the Na- tional FitneH Foundation an- nounced Wednesday. • -; The academy, which would be built and supported by private fupds, is en'visioned u a national trainina and research hea:dqoanen for-coaches and athletes similar to athletic academies commonlx found m Europe, accordina to 8111 Harris, head of the non-profit foundation's site selection and oonst.ruction commit- tee. - "Practically every other couqtry does have iL It's something very important." Harris said. . The site was selected from among seven considered in Oranae County and throuahout the nation. Harris uid· foµndation trustees hope IO have the fltnell academy OOIDpieted .mbin four yean to honor a promile made to Praidalt Ronald Reapri. Construction is expected to bclin within a year. · Former ~ro footbeJJ ooacb George Allen, chairman of the President's Council on Pbysic::al Fitness and Sports, is the honorary cb4irman of the National Fitness foundation. ~-.. . .. -At the Wectnesday afternoon news conference announcing the site selec- tion, Allen said AJiso Viejo was chosen for its year-round ~omfortablc climate and 1u proximity to water (Pl_.. eee FITJllB88/A2) .......... -Lee .... stt. Leo Jonee dlspla19 blotter add tabe, c:oatae blndl•. Police now link Huntington knife murde~ tQ drugs · The slaying ofa Huntington Beach man, stabbed to death during a residential robbery last week, appean to be linked to the drua world, police now ac:tnowlccls. Three suspects in the slayina of William F. O'Gorman, 30, will be arraipcd Friday in West Oranae Muncipal Coun in Westminster on murder and robbery cbaf'ICS. A scheduled bearinJ Wednesday was postpe>ned so tb,tt attorneys could be appointed to rc~nt Clement E. Brown, 22; Lisa P. Mondragon, 2 1: and TutulJa F. Tuvalu, 22. The three, arrested Fri- day, arc being held without bail. CYOorman was stabbed in the chest and bead after two men and a woman burst into a Holland Drive apartment in HuntinJtOn Beach he was vistins on the night of Feb. 6. J>,o.licc said the trio brandished a sa~-off shotgun and ordered five people in the apartment to lie on the floor. One of the intruder'$ pulled out (Pleue eee 11111U>&R/A2) 011-so-c-aref ully Cl:ITanged pi:otest lacks spontaJ!leity Heights _land Use plan put · ·~a hold again Supervisors delay zoning action .for further hearings BJ 1EFP ADLER ............. What was supposed to be the clirMctic hearina on a land-use plan for Sant.a Ana Heights came and went quietly Wednesday. When it was over residents found themselves in a familiar position -awaitjng the outcome of yet more hearin~ on the future of their community. The Orange County Board of Supervisors voted 3-0 to continue the matter until Feb. 26 to allow time for both the P1anning Commission and Airport Land Use Commission to consider a newly proposed zoning plan for the pastoral neighborhoods beneath John Wayne Airport's prin- cipal fli&ht path. .., The Planning Commission is ten- tatively scheduled to reconsider the land use plan at its Feb. •l 9 mectina. 8)' the ume supcrvison voud on the postponement. followina dote to two hours of testimony from neiah- botbood midcnts. both Supew•i9on Bruce Ncstandc aod Harriett Wieder had left the hearing to attend other meetin~. For ~. supervisors and county officiaJs have ~n trying to gra]>Ple with the anomaly of Sant.a Ana Heights. a rural enclave surrounded by encroaching urbaniz.ation an(! subjttt to the car~shattcrina roar of commemal 1cthncrs taking off from nearby John Wayne Airport. Adopuon of a land-use plan. an imponant component of the broader airport c"tpans1on plan already ap- (Pleue eee HEIGHTS/ A2) I I l =1 I I I f i I I I I ~ I 'J I I I I 1 prowd =._board. ia an auemP' by county · not oely to= the .,. .ttlh nate ncMIC resW& but allO Ndrela ever-~ market Pl'ftlUret oo lbe area. jmt 10ulh of leanias MS10I Screet, to become mote cc Tlfieial ift wwe. The potq)Onement wu IOuPt to allow the Plannina and Airport L&Dd Vee commillions time to conaider a newly propc>eed "composite" plao for tbe community developed •• the bebelt of Board Chairman Thomas Riley. who represents unin- corpora&ed Santa Ana HeiahtL k.iley'a plan calls for the con version ol l 72 bomes in the most noise- llllliuve area of East Santa Ana Heiahts, Ilona Acacia and North Bircli streets, to more noite-()()m- petib&e office and business park uses while aUowine mixed residential and office or buunesa park uses alona ll(ljacent West Cypress and South llin:h llreett. lbe spot or mi1ted-ute zoni• hture of the plan would allow raideatt lO Mll their prapll1) for coaunemal development or Nllllbl in theit homes to eruoy the equestrian lifetcyle tblt flrst attracted them to the .... Two other plans. OM advaDCled by county planoen and . another de- velQped by community residents and ~mme.nded by the Count~ Plan- DiQI Commillion, ~ different Ulll and bouncSarin in areu ptopc)led for convenion. As Ibey have at countleta meetinp In the past. Santa Ana Heipu "**nts marched to the microobOne to suppon one plan or anot&er or beseech supervison to make a de- cision that finally would settle the issue. Addressina the plan outlined by Riley, resident Mary Anne Toweney said that she felt u if she had "been stabbed in the baclt by my owu supervisor." .. Thi•••• an unplan. E~y CID do ~Ml they want. Supervitor ~ It sympathetic with the (onuae .Un 10 tky can become 1n11ant ntiUionairet. •1 she added. Several other speakers said the kiley'a plan with its mi1ted-u.e zoo. ina provision• would tum sections of Santa Ana Heiahts into 1 slum. with homes situated next-door to office bujldiQll. Consultant DouaJas Wood, who belped devise the plan recommended by the Plannina Commiasion, told supervil011 Riley's proposal w11 .. 1naJaeou1 to Solomon cuttina tbe blby in half and givina both sjdes notbina." On the other hand, members of the ABCOM community group~ to sellina their Santa Ana H ts homes, told board members oppoeed the Plannjna Commission's recommendation, prefenina either, ·Riley's plan or the staff proposal. Tempe ... low tor 24 "°"'9 .... at • '""' IOClt!Y .. Le ~ 4S ao 16 " 11 JO :. ...... 1t 01 Mii* 41 ti A--~ at .. AllllWI .. 47 .....,_.. 41 28 ... ,,.._, 47 21 ......... l 4 t7 ..... 3t 25 lolton .. ao ........ at ti 0...., lit IT ~SC. 51 aa a.1u1a~W.V 26 22 ===N.C. .. 21 ., ,. g ... : .. b ,. 28 u ClliMIM lt ,. ~°"· 27 ti ~.H. 44 27 ~Worlll ... IT o.rton 21 17 o.n-41 21 O..Mo11'91 2t ot OllroM ao 20 °'*"" 18 ot ., .. _ .. SI ,...,.,.. ·111 ·17 '"'90 17 -06 ~"9pldt 47 a.. 26 11 OtMI,. H 24 Her1totd • lt ....... aa , .. 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'fldlrllt4;00&.111.Md .. lgllln1t 1!14 Sent1CM n 4T p.~ Room Mnlce w&iten Orlando Jlamlrea and J'ranct.co Franco pull cart ~th coffee t PEACE PROTEST STAGED ••• From A l By JEFF ADLER Of .. .., ......... and qualify for additional flights as long as the plane is fl ying with fewer than I 00 passengers to su~h desti- nations as San Francisco. Martin, said late Wegne.sday. Test niJhts of the BAe-146, which will conbnue throu&h Feb. 21 , will mirror those flown by the 737-300. The J>lanc must complete seven takeoffs from the airport. two at aross maximum weight, and meet" noise minimums to qualify for flight oper- ations at the airport. · Berrigan, speaking without a micro- phone to a small group of peace activists during a pre-protest recep- tion Tuesday at the Westin South . Coast Plaza hotel. Goins to jail for a cause is a "public gift to a polluted time." he saXl. With those words, the activists from the Orange County Alliance for Survival and other groups were fonified for what lay ahead: four days of polite protests, some councous arrests and tons of media attention for their actions against a convention of military officials and defense contractors headquartered this week at the hotel. . Known as "Wincon '85." the Winter Convention on Aerospace and Electronic Systems began Wednesday and runs through Friday. Almost Ciown to the.last "riJ}lt-on." the protest against the three-day confqence has been scripted by the aJliance. with advance co~ics going to Costa Mesa poficc officials and. of course, the media. There would be no surpnscs, almost no spontaneity, and little of the same risk-taking that had made Berrigan a hero among peace protesters. Things seemed amiss when alliance leaders held a reception inside the very same hotel that protesters en- couraged people to boycott if it continued to host representatives attending the military defense con- vention. Moreover, it seemed rather odd to be snacking inside a hotel one minute, and P,rotesting outside it the next. "I ll sec you at the protest," said pne fellow, waving to a friend at the buffet table, who was perhaps trying to dedde between the olives or the cherry tomatoes. "Don't go near the Coors, we're boycotting the Coon." instructed alliance co-director Tim Carpenter, pointing to the ice-filled tubs of beer brought out by hotel workers unaware of the group's disWte for the brewery's labor practices. Putting down thcir'cocktail plates and wine Jlasses, protesters soon grabbed their candles, walked past the piano bar to the tune of "Night and Day" and throu&h the lobby and out onto the streets. Within an hour their numbers would swelJ to a crowd of I, 400 candle-holding activists. calling for an end to the arms race. The sea offlamcs was joined by the floodli&hts of television cameras, and the Oasnes from newspaper photogra- phers. Reponcrs were also there on time. as they would be for a 7 a.m. protest the next morning. The handy-dandy press advisories by the alliance al1&-allowed media Just Call 642-6086. More activists arrested By TONY SAAVEDRA Of .. .., ....... • Nineteen more peace activists were arrested in Costa Mesa tJiis morning during the second attempt in as many days to block buses carrying delegates to a convention of military officials and weapons manufacturers. This morning's arrests brings to 44 the number of protesters detained in the past two days after blocking a driveway at the Westin South Coast.Plaza hotel. where roughly half of the 300 delegates to the "Wincon '85" conference arc staying. While many of the representatives arc carpooling to the classified sessions at the Marine Corps Air Station, El Toro, about 60 have been taking chartered buses to the three-day conference, which began Wednesday. · Police officials said the protest this morning was "extremely smooth." The buses' were stalled for about 25 minutes, but were on the road by 7:30 a.m., about an hour before the conference was to start. Founecn of those arrested this morning were cited and released on their own recognizance. FiV'c chose to remain in Oran$C County Jail until they appear in court, within the next three days, police said. The civil disobedience action this morning was to be conducted by a coalition of Orange County peace groups. Twenty-two of the 25 protesters arrested Wednesday remained in the county jail, after declining to be released. workers to plan for a morning protest today and an attempt by protesters on Friday to try and convert delegates inside the hotel. Protest groups had also met with city police officials as well as con- ference and hotel security. only by a few minutes. by delaying a bus? Berri~n bristled Tuesday when asked 1f modem-day protests had become sanitized by the sCheduling. scripting and staging -the dis- cussions with police, making sure that the roles were played with no surpris- for the second time in as many weeks. the skies over the Orange Coast will play host to what many expect will be welcome relief from the car-splitting roar of commercial jet- liners taking off from John Wayne Airpon. . The Orange County Board of Supervisors auecd Wednesday to allow Pacific Southwest Airlines to test its British Aerospace BAc-146. a 100.passcnf.cr aircraft billed as a new genera lion •quiet jct" Beginnin' at 10 a.m. today. the ai rline and its new jet were to begin flying the first in a series of seven fl1ahts . intended to demonstrate the aircraft can not only meet' John Wayne Airport's minimum noise guidelines, but also more stringent guidelines that would allow the airline to gain additional nights bcainning Apri&f1 . Just last weekend. AirCal demon- strated its newest aircraft. the Boeing 737-300, a 140-passeoger aircraft that airpon officials believe was quiet enough to qualify for additional "tradeout" nights in April. Ai~rt Manager Murry Cable said the A1rCal 737-300 probably can take off beneath the 89.5-decibel ceiling Cable said he doubted whether AirCaJ would be able to meet the strictcr"guidelincs on longer flights to Portland or Seattle, which require additional amounts of fuel and in- crease the aircraft's takcoff weighL Results of the A.jrCal test still have not been completed, the airport's chief noise abatement officer. Bill DRUGS ••• From Al Under an expansion plan adopted by supervisors Jan. 30, the number of daily nights available to commercial airlin~s will increase from 41 to .55 flighU each day beginning April I . ·MURDER ••• From Al the first time an officer has been planted in Irvine schools since Oper· ation Irving 10 years ago. a knife when a fight broke out, police Operation frving, netted 100-reported. suspected drug dealers and users in Steven A. Fritchel, who lives in the the schools and throughout the COQl-apartment, was stabbed in the arm fhuni~y. . and rC9uircd hospital care. Three Pohce said. the mos~ recent under-~thers in the apanment were unin- cover operation was m response to Jured. parental concerns following the Capt. Don Jenkins said the inci- Chemical People drug awareness dent has drug overtones. He would programs aired in 1984. The reserve not elaborate. officer, who was not identified, is the The three robbers reportedly took firs.t to come along who co~ld ~ss for cash and other "val\Jablcs from the a h1g.b school student. pohcc said. apanment. accordina to police. FITNESS ACADEMY SET ON COAST ••• From Al . Although sincere, this outcry for peace was i odecd Sta$ed. es. and a large city. Southcm California location. The country will focus on Oranae 'Tm not writing the script here, I'm Two other local sites considered A potential site in lndianapolis had County as the nation's physical That became painfully evident when 25 protesters tried to block buses leavmg the hotel Wednesday morning for the classified conference sessions at the Marine Corps Air Station. El Toro. There was no tense confrontation between peace advocates and the armed. stem-looking police officers. There were no real expectations among the protesters that they would actually stop any buses. Instead, there was only a word game. with officers ordering protesters to move or be arrested: protesters choosing the latter; and police taking them by the arm and politely csconing them into custody. Three of those arrested were re· leased on their own recognizance, while 22 others opted to remain in jail until their coun appearance on charges of blocking a public thorough fare. It was a pesky recital that prQved to be a mosquito-like nuisance for the ~ovemment, military and defense industry representatives who waited 20 minutes for police to clear the path. Had the activists succeeded in their plan to .. delay the arms race." even if just a guest. But we don't do that back were a second Aliso Viejo location already been ruled out because of its fitness center. he said. "How can you home (in New York)," said Berripn, and one in the private community of size, Aarrls said. The academy re-be against somcthina like this? With addin&? "You can't just send people Coto de Caza ~Trabuco Canyon. quiresatleast IOOacrcsto accommo-society's current mania for physical into difficult situations without plan-Four of the eight trustees, including date its buildings, tracks, tennis fitness, it's like bringina motherhood ning... Allen. met this week to visit the Aliso courts, soccer fields and bicycle trails, and apple pie to Ora nae County." ' Most of the f>C9Ple arrested Viejo sites again, Harris said. The he said. 1 Wednesday were bnefCd on bookina trustees made the decision durina a The academy will not be aearcd The academy is to nclude a procedures and jailhouse survival by conference call with other trustees specifically toward training Olympic research win.a and a lcadcnhlp in- the Los Angeles Catholic Worker. a Wednesday morning. contenders. Harris said. Its aim will stitute fortraining physical education c~tY. grouP. that also specializes in Locations in Malibu, Houston and be "to help get youth and just about instructors, said Allen, who has been CIVIi disobedience. Dallas were also in the running forthe everybody in 1he ·United States in-working on the project for the Pt1t Catherine Morris. co-leader of the project. But Allen, a former coach of volved in fitness." fiye years. group, said the domesticated protests the Los Angeles Rams. Washington Orange County Supervisor Bruce Preliminary sketches arc reponed- aJlow peace activists to be peacefully Redskins, Chicago Bli tz and Arizona Ncstandc Wednesday said he wcl-ly scheduted to be unveiled April 1.5 at active. Wranglers football teams, said comes the establishment of a fitness a banquet honoring fi.nflady Nancy "We don't believe in secret stuff. tru1tees felt favorably toward a center at Aliso Viejo, Reqan in Ntw York. ~ ; It's not a ~nitization, h~ a ... a ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ publicitization," Morris said. In any case, would the new "domestic" protests be as effective as the uprisings and risks that unmasked an unholy war during the 1960s and early '70s? Were the people arrested Wednes- day morning accomplishing any- thing? "I don't know. I don't know," said Diane Posson.t 50, of Long Beach, flanked by hcny Costa Mesa police- men on each side. . "I jutt had to do this for my children and my grandt'hildren." Wlaat do yoe like abMt lite Dally Pilot? Wlaat dH't yoe like? Call CM Hmber at left Hd yHr ma..,e wiU be recer4e4, traatcrtbe4 ... deUvere4 lo &lie appropriate e4lt«. TH same U ·ltoer uswertaa 1enlce may be 1H4 &o rt.cenl let&en &o tlM cclllor ott aay &oplc. C•rriMl#I a. nr Letten c.l1m1 mnt btc:IHe tMtr name H d telepfteae nmkt fir verlflcatloa. No clrc1latloa ealls, please. Tell 11 wut't 01 yOlr m .... °::,"'°'. ORANGE COAST Clrcul9tton 7141142~ Cl111.,... ....._... 714/IG·1171 Al ..., ... , ........... ..., 9'J . ............ ...,. f l'IOt'f " '°" do llOI N..e '°"' '*" llY IJllPfll Clllll9b't t pltl Ind 'f(/1111 "°"' .. De ...... a..vro.y lltlll tunoey II yc111 00 t1Q1 ra"MW .ffNI ~ Dy 1 "" c.1111 belOrt 10 • "' "'° rOI"' Oll(1y ... ........ ~ Clralllltllft Tela"ho"• M!* 0r.,..c:-io, "'- .. lllllJ Piii H.l. lcltwartz Ill Pubflther frank Zlnl Managing Editor Keten Wittmer Advertising Dfrector .......,Churcttm• Controfler Robert L. Cantreft Production 'Man•r Donald L. 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