HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-02-18 - Orange Coast PilotNEWPORT BEACH
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Lung Cancer high for .OC women
UC Irvine research attributes increase
to more women s~oking than in past
By PHll. SNEIDERMAN °' ... ....,,.......,
The percentage of Oranae County
women who develop luna cancer
compared to men is 11 percent higher
than the national averaac, a UC
Orange
'crush'
liJlrvine
A truck driver was inj ured this
morniq when his traC1or-trailer b.ar-
reled o'ff a bridge on the Santa Ana
Freeway aod landed on an underpass
in Irvine, spilling its cargo of Hi-C
oranae drink.
Rescue workers rushed the uniden-
tified driver to Western Medical
Center in Santa Ana after the 9:30 i.m. accident on the southbound
Santa Ana Freeway and Myford
Road. No more information was
available on the driver.
' Oranae County fire dispatchers
said the truck was traveling south on
the freeway when it "swerved to
avoid something" and rammed
through the concrete railing on the
bridge. No one else was injured In the
aceident.
Irvine cancer monitoring program
concluded.
A report by the UCI Cancer
Surveillance Program of Oranae
County indiGates women account for
42 percent of the county's luna cancer
cases. compared to 31 percent tor the
nation. as estimated by the American
Cancer Society.
The local report was issued shortly
after the American C.ancer Society
announced that lung cancer has
surpassed breast cancer as a leadins
cause of death among women.
Researchers attributed the change
to an focrcase in cigarette smoking
among women.
"The proportion of lung cancer isabia,hernumberofwomensmokas
between males and females in Orange or more males who have stopped
Couoty is quite different from what smoking or a combination of both,"
we see in national averaJCS," said Dr. she said.
Hoda Anton-Guirgis, director of the The report did not address whether
surveillance program and a professor ·Orange Countr. residents are more
of community and environmental likely or less hkely. to dev~lop tuna
medicine at the UCI Colleae of cancer th.an people elsewhere. Instead
Medtcine. 1t focused on the breakdown of cues
"The Ora nae County data could be by sex, occupation and ethic croup.
explained by the possibility that there By occupation, the study found a
...,,... ..... .., ..... c...
Dbwned·
plane
misses
homes
Aircraft clipped
power pple during
roadway landing
A private plane nirted with disaster
Sunday night when it crash-landed in
~ Beach. narrowtr missina a large
retirement community.
Fire dispatchers said half the truck
was on Myford Road and the other
half was still on the freeway when
rescue workers arrived. WrecU,e of twln-e~e Beechcraft 1U11f Air alta on Seal Beach Boaleftrd followtnc Sanday DICbt crula landlaf.
The twin-enaine Bcecbcraft Kmg
Air tipped a power line, then ripped a
wing and enajne off when it bit a
power pole during the emersency
landing on Seal Beach Boulevard.
ftttfiahten said.
(Pleue .ee PLAJlfS/ A2)
California Highway Patrol officials
issued a three-hour signal alert while
hi.aJ:-way workers mopped up the
sticky fruit drink from the south-
bound lane$ of the freeway and the
roadway below.
Callfomla
PresJdent Reagan says
the on derricks he can see
from his Santa Barbara
ranch don't bother him In
the least./ M
Nation
The world's third artlflclal
heart patient Is In stable
condition after success-
ful surgery on Sunday, his
doctor says./ AS
The famtly that trains
together .:. goea In cyctea
before a triathlon./ A7
The Unlden Invitational at
Mela Verde Country
Club I• on IChedute.1•1
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149wait
in line
fortcy-
at4jobs
Newport Beach h.frtn
new flrefl hters after
recent retirements
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of .. .,.., .........
Some of the 149 applicants for four
firefi&}lters' jobs at the Newport
Beach Fire Department showed up
Friday ni&ht and camped on the steps
of City Hall until Sunday to ensure
aeuina an application.
The department intended to hand
out no more than I SO a~tions
ahd wound up distribulln& all but
one.
The j9bs pay an entry-level salary
of SI, 904 a month, said Battalion
Chief Scott Allan. ~ ... LDl&/A2)
llJlljtloa IJA)Jt
mate. ceatl •t·
NB Jl!"talllim
IJ TONY S.U VEDl\A .... ..., ........
So you fOf'IOt to mail '"'-' letter before Sunday, whtft fim a.. poeW-
ratcs jumped two cents.
Well. there's still time to •\te thoec
two penn_ics, in fact you can C'fcn maU
lhl• note &o Uncle Bill or tut car
p1yment and tilt have four cent left
over.
That's because Charhc LitMrnns
is stllina a limited number ot 22-ttnt
post. sumps f~ I 8 ce1'I at I ~bel(lly simmklt for his cwl)Of't
• ( ........ P09Tf.L/A2)
..., .............. ._
Atit&D lllQf'atla ~Mt at 8 a.m. roll call la Necp1rL
LB's.Free Clinic:
Hippies replaced
by 'workingpoor'
When the Laguna Beach Free
Oinic first opened in October 1970:
the Love Generation's flower chil-
dren beat a path to its door.
It was the heyday of the drug
culture. a volunteer doctor ~
members. And transient hippies
filled Laguna· s streets. slttpina on t~
beach and in caves in the hills.
They came to the frtt chnic
needing routine mechcal care. tests for
pregnancy and venereal disease an~
counseling on the concerns of their
generauon -drugs and the draft.
The street people wtth httle money
were welcomed by t~ cl1nte's
philosophy of supplying f~ medical
care to.all who asked.
In those years. the frtt chn1c hved
the same hand-to-mouth existence as
its clients. One da)' in Auaust 197 1 t~
door of the chmc on Glenneytt Street
bore the following message: .. You got
us the rent. Thank You. Now we nttd
$77.43 by Wednesda~ to keep our
phone and $66.89 by Friday to pay
taxes (of all tbinp).''
A glass jar •t in the clinic waitiQI
room ready to receive whatna"-
donauon tb09C passina throup could
afford.
Now 14ycarsokt. tbeicen....-that
1s t~ frtt clinic is past the shaky·
I~ days of its inlane')'. Al~
neither flush nor financially 11a1re,
the operation does st.aod on its own
feet.
l....__n&&/AS)
Supervisor opposes
lowering Sewage
treating standards
By USA MAHONEY seeking to reduce tratmcnt bt de-°' .. ...,,..... n1td .
The letter C1\CS ronccm fof pubeic Thoma Riley. chairman of 'he health and ma1ntain1n1 the intcp'ity Oranac County Board of upcrv1son. So h c has joined tho9e opposin& a was•e of the ut oast u a pnme
water treatmtnt tattK')''s proposal to rttttation area.
loYl'tt standard . for sc~ 1t dis. It also IUllClll thet ~ uat-
cl'laran off Aliso Beach 1n ult\ mcnt 11 countct to coun3 ~ns for
U.una. tht area and a v1°'8t.on t public
· fn a Feb. 4 letter to •~ \ate trust. ·
Rca1onal Wucr Quaht¥ Control "Tht cha"l!t ... win be dttrimtniat
BOird. R1tqr. ""bote d1 tn•t cn<»m· ina numbtrof-a .. R.tkywro4c. tw
p1 mot.t of tht area tcl"\.cd by the uf'ICd the quahty control boetd \0
"1iso Water Ma~mcnl • . .. 1.n it 1utb0rit aftd marida" to
u~ that a ~1\.rr the (Phan -a&T Id)
,
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A .omaa deimiat to bi CC>C119W
O/ ik lm cmftOOD ...., hll
NllMMI ~ SlO •iltiola ....-wa
•inaa tht anitt, Tom Wilton, 60lll Oraner County and refiled the doc-. mea1a m Cleveland.
Mary A&-. lames. •0, refiled i•
Cleveland blcau.e~ound a lawys there MM> would id onl if thf
won the caee, uid rae 17.nnea.
the Newpon Beah attorney who
handaed the cue in Oranae County.
Hannen'• flrm docs not take cases
undn aucb reslriction1, but he will
continue '° rcptttent Bemtt 1n a
.,...Uty suit ... inst Wilson.
llmn. a former co-worker with
Willoe 11 American Oroetinp. is ...tdna compcnutory and punitive
~plus half the profltt frOm the
fotlom charactet'a canoont and prod~t line.
The move 10 Ohio, where Wi110n Is
a resident, also avoidt a fiaht over
courtjuritdiction in tht tuit,tiannen
taid.
UC REGENTS BOLD FEES •••
PnmiAl
Money collected frOftl student feet
is used to pay for items such u
counselina, Audent health and
financial aid. .
The incrcue it cauted by Inflation,
said Sullivan.
Nationally, California university
tuition for non-residents it l 2 pen:ent
above the avtflle, but resident feet a.re 20 percent below lht avef'llC,
Sullivan taid.
Despite the resents' vote, the
question of fees depends on the ~slaturc'1 approval of the stat~
buapt, she added.
In his proposed budact pacX..,
Gov. Georae Deukmejian let uade
S 12 million for special projecu nor-
mally funded by student fees, makina
it possible to keep tuition and fees
1tcady for California ~•idents.
Sullivan said she was uncertain
what would happen if the Lqitlaturc
(ails to approve the S 12 million
aUotrnent proposed by DeukmcHan.
But the rcaen11 can withdraw rrom
their vote at any time.
"It would not necessarily mean that f~ would ao up," she taid.
OMEN HIGH IN LUNG CANCER ••• _.._Al
t
that on averqc these wort.en
oke more than other 1>_11ional
oups.
' The UCI program also determined
that cancer of the female reproductive
orpns made' up 14 percent of the
county's cancer cues, with Hispanic
women found to have 41 percent of
the cases.
Researchers attributed the high
rate to the large number of cervical
:.cancer cases found amonJ Hispanics.
'Cervical cancer accounted for 71
'percent of the tt'Pfoductive organ
·tanccr cases among Hispanic women
• ;and 37 percent among other ethnic
..groups. -
Antoa.Quirais said. Cancer Society and the National
The Cancer Survcillanelc Proaram__ Cancer Institute..-.·
was ntablished as a central registry The local cancer rqistry was in·
for every cancer case in the county, itially funded by the university. but it
with information collected from local recently received a $368,000 A\\'.ard
hospitals. The program Is a joint from the state Department of Health
etron of UC Irvine and the Health Services. The grant was given to help
Care A&ency of Ora nae County. the prO&r'lm continue tracking cancer
by occupation. geoaraphy and etftnic
origins. The registry has collected infor-
mation on 4,823 cases, included
2,813 women and 2,0 I 0 men, all
diqnosed in 1982. This represents
more than 1S percent of all Orange
County cancer cases rcponed in that
year, the first period analyzed in the
continuing program .
Information gathered through thC"
program will be available to state and
local officials, hospitals and phys-
icians for use in cancer diagnosis,
treatment and prevention.
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T'**Y et I 13 Lift. Ind .... llflll! .. 5; ... p.m.
, "My speculation is that Hispanic
women actually have a hiaher dcaree
of risk factors associated with cancer
of the cervix, or we're not getting
Information is collected and stored
on computers, using the Cansur/Net
program developed by the California
Tumor Registry of the state Ocpan-
ment of Health Services. Develop-
ment of the computer programming
was subsidized by the American
"The importance of having access
to this son of informat ion in the
county is that people concerned with
heaJth care can stan planning
strateJies for prevention," said Or. B.
Dwi3ht Culver. co-director of the
cancer surveillance program and a
clinical professor of community and
environmental medicine.
Saddle back teachers accept lucrative pq.ct
,them to go to clinics for routine PAP
smears and educational proarams, ..
I '
?POST AL 'DEAL' IN NEWPORT •••
·'From Al
Beach postal business.
By Tuesday evening, Lisherness
plans to unload roughly 2S,000 new
postage stamps at four cents less than
,the U.S. rates. Customers will be
•limited to a maximum of SO stamps
. apiece.
promotic;m for his five-year-old busi-
ness, which offers post office boxes
and shippin& services.
a.m . he was still waitin1 for the "mad
rush" that he had expected.
But Lisherness remajncd hoocful
that he would be able to sell his
staml)S. losc his money and pjn some
potential customers for his other
services .
Concluding two years of some·
times heated negotiations. rcprescn-
tativesofthe Saddleback Community
College District and its teachers have
reached a tentative agreement on a
new contract.
District spokesman William
Schreiber said the proposed pact
would make Saddleback teachers the
highest-paid faculty amona Cali·
fornia's 70 community college dis-
tricts. ,
"That's not said gru<igjnJly," he
said. "We pay the best and get the
best."
The three-year agreement calls for
teachers to receive an 8.5 percent pay
raise, retroactive to July l , 1984. With
the increase, the averqe full-time
Saddlet.ck teacher would cam
S38,000 to S40,000 annually.
Schreiber said.
The pro~ pact is still subject to
approval bY district teachers. That
vote is txpccted to be held later 1his
month. The contract would affect
about 23S full-time and 470 f>"n-ume
instructors at Saddleback s Irvine
and Mission Viejo campuses.
The teachers previous contract
expired in June 1983. but barplJllnJ
had continued.Jor two years without
success until ille tentative pact was
reached last week. The agreement
provides no retroactive par increase
to cover the 1983-84 schoo year.
Schreiber said the proposed in·
crease would cost the district about
SI. IS million from its current budget.
.. There's only so much money that
,you can be willing to lose," said
Lisherness. the 62-year-old owner of
Post Box Rentals. 38S7 Birch St.
Lisherness said his business has
been runnini along smoothly, but he
decided to aive stamp buyers a few
c:cnts for their attention as a way of
"keeping things rollini."
He said, even though Post Offices
were closed today for the holiday,
nobody was exactly breaking down
the doors this morning to get at the
bargain-priced stamps. and at 9:30
While Lisherness is helping some
people avoid the increase in fint class
rates, postal scrvic:c usen will have to
fend for themselves with the new
rates for overniaht express mail,
SI0.75; and for special delivery,
S2.9S.
RILEY RAPS TREATMENT REDUCTION •.•
Lisherness figures that he will drop
about S 1.200 during the two-day
From A l
protect the quality of coastal waters
by denying this waiver."
The federal Clean Water Act of
1972 required wute water treatment
level. Such tertiary 1reated water is
sold by some of its districts for
waterina parkland and golf courses.
LINE FORMS FOR FIREMAN JOBS ••• districts to uppade f1teilities JO
provide what is called eecondlry
treatment. Such advanced treatment
removes about 75 percent of
But j" Sukenik. Aliso manager, says th 1tcncy wants to reduc:c
trcatme t to save money. Eneray
cost1111ociated with secondary treat-
ment could be cut by about S200 000
a year if the waiver were allow~. he
Sltd.
J'romAl
.. It's pretty typical of firefighter
recruiting to sec so many applicants,"
Allan said.
Applicants traveled from through-
out Southern and Central California
to vie fortbe positions, which opened
up following retirements in the paJt
car, he •id. Many of the candidates
arc currently working with other fire
depanmtnt.s and are seeking a job
hange.
To find the cream of the crop. the
ewport Beach Fire Department will
rccn the applications to ensure that
the basic requirements are met. All
applicants must already be state-
c:cnified trained firefighters with at
least 240 hours of classroom instruc-
tion and trainin" Allan said.
The next step is the skills testing in
which the applicants perform the
' physical agility tasks -taking vital
signs. cltmb1ng ladders, dragging fire
hoses. etc.
From there. the applicants are
interviewed by three fire captains. An
interview with a fire department
psychologist follows to see if the
applicant would be compatible with
other firemen in the department.
The finalists arc 1hcn interviewed
by the Fire Chief himself, Jim Recd.
Ed Engler, the second man in line
after he arrived at noon Friday. said
the large turnout wasn't surprising.
The 2S-ycar-old El Toro resident is
accustomed to the long waits for a fire
department job. Last weekend. he
saw more than 200 hopefuls stand in
line at both the Upland and Ontario
fire department headquarters.
In the past 21h years, EnaJcr bas
applied for about a dozen fire depart-
ment jobs throughout Southern Cali·
fom1a. Currently, he works for a small
fire agency at the Los Alamitos
Armed Forces Reserve Center and is
on-call with the Orange County Fire
Depanment.
While Engler amved too late to
apply for the Upland and Ontario suspended solids -the 1ewqe -
jobs, he wasn't about to make the from waste water.
same mistake in Newport Beach. Under Aliso's plan, the waters off
"I came out on Thursday. just to Aliso Beach would rcctive.doublc the
take a look," he sajd. . amount of suspended sohds as they
When he returned on Friday, do now. B~oe Post.humus,~ control
Engler armed himself with a beach board assopate enamcer, said.
chair. cot. 1lceping ba~ sofl drinks The Al~~ Water Manaaement
and mapzines. Agency, a JOtnt ~~e~ ~acncy made
"Newport is a good place to work. up of seven muna~1paht1es and water
naturally. so that's one big reason why d1stncts. can provide secondary treat-
so ma11y turned o ut. But it would ment, in fact most of its plants can
have been even biager if it· was process sewage at an even higher
However. Riley airces with resi-
dents and concerned civic orpniz.a-
tlons -and three Aliso memben -
from Emerald Bay to South Laauna.
They contend reduced treatment
poses pOtential health risks, would
sully Aliao'scrystalclcar water and be
a slap in the face to residents of South Laaun~ .who backed off their original
oppo11t1on to the construction of the
publicized more. Also. Newport's ---------------------------requirements were a bit higher than
others."
Engler said he and other hopefuls
passed the time by chatting, reading
and makin& food and beveraac raids
at the nearby Crab Cooker restaurant
and Malarkey's Irish Pub.
The four finalists will join a
depanment of about 120 employees
and can cam after 31h yean about
$2,300 a month.
PLANE CRASH •••
Prom Al
PEALE PREACHES IN COUNTY •••
From Al
devote more time to his publication.
Guideposts, which he founded 40
years a~uideposts has 4.S million
subscri . enabling him to reach a
larger audience than wouJd have been
: possible had he stayed with the
church. Peale said.
His book, "The Power of Positive
Thinking." has been translated into
40 lanJUages and was on the best·
seller hst for about six years. Crystal
Cathedral pastor Robert Schuller
said.
' It was inspired when Peale. as a
young man, discovered a way to
overcome his feclinp of mfenonty
·and shyness.
'1
..
Just Call
642-6086
"I was what they used to call
bashful. That's a good word because it
means bash. I thought I was a worm."
Peale said.
"I went around telhng everybody
that I would never amount 10 any-
thin&, and then I discovered 1hat they
were all agreeing with me."
When a professor of Peale's at Ohio
Western Uni versity exhorted his
student to cast off the self-doubt that
suppressed him, Peale said he
mounted the school steps and spoke
aloud.
"Look. Lord. you are able to cha nae
a drunk into a sober person and a thief
into an honest person. Why can't you
Wbat do you lib abo•t die Dally Ptlot? Wut ,..., YM Hile? Call ....
namber at left ud your messa1e •111 M reeo,..., truaeribff U4 ..... .,.
to dte appr.,rlale edl&or. ne ume U ·llMMlr u1wer .. 1 HrYtee me1 M ...... ~ letten a. dae
edl&or oa HY topic. C..tribtltort a."' Letten celama •••t ••• tMtr name ud ttlepllone namber fOf vertf~t .... N• etre9iaa._ e•ll•, pleaH.
Tell•• wlaat't oe )'Mr mlM .
ORANGE COAST
llilyl'llt
Clrlula ..... 7WM1-4111 Cl11 11ed edwertllll·7~ Al ..... , ................ ,
MMIOPl'a
Designed,
Finished
Installed
sewage pipeline in 1976 af\er Aliso
officials promised high treatment
standards.
Riley's letter notes that state and
county health officals arc rec-
ommending more monitoring than
the waiver itself requires. Pointina
out that. under the current level of
treatment and monitoring, Aliso
Beach was closed four times in 1983,
the letter states "it seems to be a very
unwise course of action to decide on a
level of treatment in which the level
ofvirus(forcxample)would be would
be 200 times greater than at the
present level."
T rash pickup
correction t old
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H.L. acttweru HI
Publlaher
Frenk Zlnl
Managing Editor
Keren Wittmer
Adl/9ftlttng DlrectOf
R-.mery Churchman
Controtler
Robert L. Cantrel
PrOductlon
Maneoer
DonaldL ........
Wiii 111¥ I! C:0..1 ,..... CA ..... .._. loll IMO Gotta ...... CA ~ 31 Yeara Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters
FINEST QUALITY SHU I I ERS AVAILABLE
ON THI MARKET TiODAY ••.• AT l'ACTORY
DIRllCT PlllCUI c.11<TM>14M141 or 541-1111
Clrculatlon
Mana~ VOL 71,NO ...
..
l
.~
Lt. Gov. llceuthy
to leCttare at UCI
~t Oov. Leo McCarthy will dllCUll current 6-~ Callfomia 11 UC Irvine Wednudly morainaaaa ·~ -.1ure in Room 220 orucra Sodl1 Sdeece Tows
f ~cCartU by will talk about lbe environment, dae tu.W. o t.~ nivenhy of CaJi(omia and the ICODOlftie
development of U.. ttate at the 1 l:4S Lna. lecture. Tbt
Jl'Olralft It •eonaored by the Onduate Sctaoo1 o1 MPuaablDa.i~M nt. Studtnt·Faculty ~ and 1be OSM ac a-.ement Student•~ .
For more information on the lieu1enant 90vernof1
appearance, call the UCJ omce o( Arte and Lecturet UCI It 856-6379.
Back Hmmar •tat J"JICA
A.a..:~ ... new tettlon of .. y., Way to a Heeltby Beck." ~ .... -for people who 1ufrer beck diacomfi will "-1n
:ruttday at the South Cout YMCA, 2778 l·B°Ci Pu ROid an Laauna Nisuel.
The •ix-week ooune will be offered Tundays and J'h~r'ldaya fr:om S:30 to 6:30 p.m. Call the Y at 49,-04Sl 1or 1nform1t1on . .
Barope trip plaaaed at OCC
.Oranae Coaat Collep's summer fleld st~y ex-cu~aon, entitled "European Adventure •• will be the ~ub.Jectofaaeneral information meetiqTUeadayat 7 p.m.
1n Room 108 ofOCCs Administration BuUdina.
The 30-day trip, which runt from June 13 throuah
July 14, is destaned to provide fint-hand obterv1ion of
Western Europe's m~or artistic achievements. The coat i1 S3,27S and information i1 available at 432-S880 . ...
Caacer copbJ6 coll.l'M •lated
A free course for cancer patients and their families on
copin1 with the diaea.se will bqin Tuesday at ·Goldenwnt
Home Health Care. 19671 Beach Blvd., Suite 300,
Huntinaton Beach.
The ei&ht-week courte is tauaht by a team of
physicians, nurses, dieticians, physical therapists., social
workers and otber J>fOfcuionaJ1 in the field. Call Tina
Marie Amante at 969-1383 for more information.
Sell-•teem •ork•IJop at OCC
A three-hour workshop on perception, feelinp,
icceptance, aelf·imaae, self-esteem and aelf-confidence
will be conducted Wednesday evenin1 in the faculty
House ofOranae Coast Colleae in Cotta Mesa.
Jacqueline de River-Daniel will lead the proaram,
scheduled from 7 to I 0 p.m. Admi11ion i1 SIS, and further
information i1 avaJlabfe at 432-'880.
Jlueam toar .et In lrriae
The Irvine Community Services Department will
conduct a day-Iona tour of the newly reopened Museum of
Science and lnduatry Saturday. The deadline for
rq.i1tration i1 Wednesday.
The tour, planned especially for children 7 to 13 yean
old, will depen from Deerfield Community Park at 10
1.m, and will return at 4 p.m. The coat Is S6, and further
information may be obtajned by callina the put.. at
SSl-8638.
Monday, Feb. 18
No meeti•t• 1d1ed1Jed
Victim '8 quic·
netsFVhold
A store clerk'• quick thinkina i1
beinacredited in the capture of a maa
who alletedly robbed him.
The unnamed clerk. wbo workl 1t
P.J.'1Uquor, 17431 Brook.bumSt.in
fountain VaUey, wa ablt to ,et Cbe
make and Ucenae of the car driven by
a mu who alleeedly held blm up,
po!cf My. Tbt suapect, William R. Jacbon, 24. of Oardtn Orove, Wll picked up
by ooUce In that city bued on thl cftrk'• infonnation, 1 Fou..Wn Val·
le)' police •Poketman llid.
Newport ••ola
Two youne men, detcribed u punk
rockers. 1ianed a ftaht Sunday eve·
nine with other cutomen of the Oranll Julh11 m&1urant on the lll1K>e Penimula and wound up
brtlkine 1 windowi.,!~ mtaurant
m-.rtold_~llce. 1 ne di~ ns
placed. It IJOO. The IUtDedl. .. icribed u 2,.ycar-old wblte main,
n.d the rtt11urant followi~ lhc
lnddinL The manaeer told pohce thl
windoW nt broken by th~ I held
or• f\tt. • • • A video caeette recorder vatutd It
S 1,200 wat ttoltn from • Harbor ltlud Drive home Thundly, the
I \llctim told polk:t Sunday. • • • About$)()() tn ctlh Wit taken from
a walltt In an Evtnln• ('an on •Oad
lnlDe
A ~anda1 cut a hole
-... Rabbit'• convtm
tmPt"41 the conttntl o
inauithcr Inside undly. ••• Somtone broke into
I ..__ ..
, .
teer hM Clinic worker Kathleen
ollecu a patient'• blood preeeare.
thinkiQg
suspect
police say.
ht Jackaon didn't eet far. The
clerk ran to the store window in time
to 1ee the eietaway car, a white Ford
Maverick. and it1 licenae number.
In .... than an hour, J1ebon wu
lloPPed on Oilben Street by a Garden
Orove police otftcer.
After qlllltionina by Fountain
VllllJ ootice. be WM booked at °"Ill County Jiii pendina • chute of .,..... robbery, • police 1pota. .........
learpew SIMt t1eelifte'tennJ1 rackets andadftphoftie. ••• 8'a!'lllrl netted a Yideo caeectte recorder.~-... boolc from a Rlppll.ftl Stram bOIM. • • • A C1m tamon Ent ....... l"t'-
FREE CLINIC SURVIVES IN LAGUKA •••
Proa Al i
While part1Y supported by the
Un.iced Wa~. Executive Director Bea
Hetrick estimates the will apply for
more than 20 11'1Dtl to keep the
clinic's expended services aoin1 this
year.
The 19lS bud&ct: ~17 000. Oper-
1tin1 costs in l 911 : $9,000.
'Despite burseonin1 costa and in-
creased 1ervioes -clients can now
see a dentist, a lawyer.. a mental health counselor or call the rape crisis
hotline -the clinic i1 still free. And it
still depends on the jar in the waitin1
room to make ends meet.
federal cutbacks cost the clinic,
now in two Ocean A venue buildinp,
thousands of dollars in revenue
sharina funds last year. Cau>orations
and foundations are also 1Mn1 less. . Hetrick said.
"Circumstances make it very hard
to keep the door open," 1he said.
There are still phone bills to pay and
ones for rent. electricity, pharma-
ceuticals and dozens more.
South Oranae County's only free
clinic attracted about 12,000 clients
last year. About an cq1&1l number
received information and oounselin1
by telephone. Hetrick 11id.
Drua abuse no lonaer looms tarae
amona clients. The nower children
have aone to be reptaced by the workina poor.Today's client is "vast-
ly different" from those in the 1970s,
Hetrick said. They are older than the
under 25-year-<>lds who came. to the
clinic then. Many are strugHn1 sinaJe parents. Entire fam ilies use the clinic
because their insurance doesn't
stre1ch. she sajd.
"The majority are at or below the poveny level. We call many of our
clients the workina poor because.
althouah they arc workina. they can't
afford much more than food or rent."
Hetrick said. John Mullen, a Westminster phys..
ician, remembers the clinic's early
days. A 13-ycar volunteer, Mullen
says there was "not a lot of facade to
it, but it WIS &ood medicine."
"There was just one doctor in those
days. It was just me and I'd run
between two rooms."
There were fewer professional vol-
unteers then. Many came without
medical backatouod but with plenty
of aood intentions, he said. Now
volunteers 10 throuJh a trainina
proaram and profess1on1ls abound.
There are doctors, dentists, nurses.
mental health counselors, laboratory
technicians and pharmacists to
provide medical care.
Some local coll~es also use the
cJinic II a trainin1 around for inteml
in their medical and psychokJly
i>rotrams.
Third-year mellicaJ students at UC
Irvine. for ex.ample. run the Monday
Prenatal Well Baby Oinic under the
supervision of faculty phys1d an1 and
help. with a Tuetday prevention
proaram for stnior citizens.
Donna Raffeny. clerkship coordi-nator for the medical tehool s depan-
ment offamily medicine. says the
clinic is a valuable hands-on resource
for them. "Our.1tudent1 &Jean a vast
amount of knowled,e from beina
there." she 11id.
Besides daytime counsclina. family
plannma. prenatal and preventativ~
care, there are still the evenin1 clinics
that characterized the free clinic in
the bqinnina.
Four-year volunteer Bob Williams
mans the desk Monday n\&hts when
··we set all the weekend problems."
Dctcribini a typical cvenina.
clienture sianed in by 6 p.m., he said.
They receive a shon orientation
lecture from the niaht manqer in-
cludjna a request for donations then
fill out a complaint form, Wilhams
says. A ~ner det.crmines the
nature of their problem aM e>ri-
oridza die calel. •
Claildrw ........... ·9111 · ..
taken care of qllittiy lft -.... 11111 aaid. Otben mey wait ..at t,.... •
later to .. tk doctor. w·ws a •;d
U..-.r rapinlaory ilA 1111 I SI tM
moatcommon '1' a• • lllil
lime of year, he C: l1e112• lot
binh conUOI and p; I CJ • .. nereal dJICMC 1etts are ..a 'fa hie.
The pn>Mem1 or )'OUdlM clliila
tear at Williams.
"It's almott ~Wllea you tee tbele ll, 14 mid as., .. Ml come in and tbey doa"t now.._.,
~ prt1 come in **l m.,·n:
art.id of their pareeu." • • Notpoor, the¥ are .. k>lt I&:*" IO
Willlam1. '11u1i1one place tbaa Ibey
can come,·· he aaid..
The flft clinJc is a pl9Ce b'
everyone who needs, but c:aa't piY
for. aood medical or Plycbolop:al
care.
"I think everyone has a riPt to
9B!llid health ~." Hetrick laid. ireec.u. they can't afford it, doesn't
mean they ahoukln't tie abk to ba~ IL ..
A od IO the Pili\. in ecboel, survives.
1~. clentlat Randall ... treata Trtcta OwCUottl. 17 • .,
llleelon Viejo at i.a,.aa a.cb P'ree CUaJc. -
Two men ~re amsted for alleacd-door panels had been kicked in. the ~n I 8·year:-okl woman ~ ber
ly stealii'll tiret from Jim Oick F'ord windshield was shattered. a side purse snatched Sunday evenu .. Dtar
on AUlo Center Orivt. Olvld L. wtwdow wu broken and some keys the lnttnection or Alabmnl -.d
Vinson. 22. and Michael K. Myers. were stolen. The victims. 24 and 2S .\dams. The f"o!l"lt cooiained •boat
19. were taken Into custody Saturday. yean 014. apparent I) were picked up SI 00. The thief wa delc:ribed 11 1
at a tavern b) the lWO attackers. who · Hispanic man in hit latt 20a. -.rlftl '-•-.. • 81aoll 1nv11ed them to a pnvate pan), pohce a blue JICket.
---d . • •• Police aui11ed a motorist Saturday sai · • • • A custbdian-at ~ Sdlaol.
afternoon on· South Cout Hi&hway Jeweln and other small items. 19692 Luinston reported Smlclly
who had locked hit keys in t\is car worth SS IS we~ rtponed stolen that somco~ had ND lb 1 di a wiftdoW
with the enaJM Nnnlftl. · form the Ha,.Ptnny Inn, 2.277 Harbor to buritanze 11tvaal .-.s et 9e
Police omcer: vfe-!ed 1 bllral&ry in Blvd.. some11me between 6 p.m. 1ehool. The lost i..... M •·
prORrH& at a South Coest Hiah*IY Fnday and I a.m Saturday. Entry de1nm1ncd amount ol 'Cllllll lad
bulinm early Sunda~. The male was ,ross1bly made Wlth a .key or by ste~ cqu1pme~t ~ SJ.000.
adult suspect, reponedly dretaed 1n pickina a lock. • • A buralar apperendy tried Widaout
jeans and a Levra Jectet. fted on foot ~ stcf't'O v.onh S 1.200 wa1 reponed 1uoce11 to pry open a,... 4locM' • Ck
a Iona the beach. The buralary loss was stolen from a car perked at 277' Mesa Pim Hut. 19071 ._.t•1 IL Tle
estimated at SlO. Verde wt around 6 a.m. Wednr-s· thief did, however, tablJJOJa .. t
A auett left 1 5o:ih Coast H.iahwa y day. The pautnat! side window to from an ounide ftttter. ~otel, s--~y momina without pay-the car had ~'l "!'~open. Someone en.;~ ·a ....... -..
1n1 hat bill, the ~told pohce. An S800 ste~ wu reponed ttolen 1900 block ofDtlaWJre and..-••
AwalletwithS70caah waareponcd from a car in a movie theater perlcina of aolf cll'bl worth $600, 1 Nllihat
stolen Friday evcnlna from a Oaviota lot at I SOO Adami Blvd. aomet!me reported Sunday.
Drive home. £a. rUer the same day. 1 betwttn 7: IS p.m. and 9;4S p.m ·-----------purte with contents valued at s l.OS9 Sunday. The car door lock bad bttn
:;:r'ed atoten ft-om the same ~on~.open.apperently wathatcTew· Bandit ~iS •
• • • •
An unknown vandal poured su .. r Hanti.alto• a.ell $2. QQQ ·aul. into the ... tank or a Mynk treet .. l"Cladent of the 16700 block of •
mtdent'a car, the victim told pohce Edle.attt rtported eatty lOday that r '
Fndty afternoon, someone bu.raJ.anzed b11 red I 913 H untinaton le.Kb police an look· oon.d a child cryiq .,.. I a.m.
hDdly. but upoo llvelt .. II. Doi~ 11y It •u ju1t .. &MOIWI C11•..._ , .. ,nn... · 'TWO Ntwpon lteeh men -.en
Milda llX 7. Perked on ~ ttrtel A 1 na for a man -ho robbed Otndile
SSO pww contain1M SIO wa taken. Fedenl. 71 46 £.dinetf Ave., ofS2.000
• •' tWday aftcraooti .
T.o---.a. ~ a·rrcsted on Hefti· 1t'9C'W euty S.&urdly m • 1«1'8ded, ..-.-gftlit .. ofW• l ltl\ SUM W-. ~ Avce..e for alletedly ttyi~ to they hlll ..._ ..... by rwo ... *Y 11111 1 _.. (tom an automobile. hed ~ M 1 ._, blr TM ~
0.... All.-1:.t Md Np'6 Van Dana bot*' "°"'°""• ,.. ·to.a . ., 900 WlnlooUd at Oranae County Jail b&ot'ofW leda!lrMIAlroeeor ..... ,...,,,....•ed. their MW eoe.ifttaftftt 1'ecl•
T ~• rf.i. wm :Ctd ~ hostilt around J:U a.m. Thi viaima
" abendoncd thl BMW thtj hed drimt "°"" tomu • • iftd Stttci me. to IM He Whtn tlMy ~•urned. thie
Pr)'inaopenarear1WtndowtC>tnlef, Tk JU~ claciitied .. 1 thia.
IOIMOM buralanttd • hOmt •ndly ........... man .~. • )• -=-on the 16tocr block of Manton Tbt -· -~ --• lotl included ttem> CQUlpment wonh rtllow .Wn and ta 1'0111 s.
S 140 an4 a ieteva i°" wt -onb S100. into \be vitlll a.id._. allele HM& • • • t2:4S pm PGt•• a lllft at a dltk ~=:~a::..;=r,:.: wn:~~~~~ holMOft IM'l9l00 of tlwtftd 2.000.
Tllelolt.ntal'Ntedll\ • inchlded ·He Ml liiM .teen tllalk II.Ill lllA·
t-o htftdaunt ~ ,.,aa likt. ..
', I
1\
~ nae acco ends 4~-month trial;
rtWo sides agree to end case' sans rancor
NEW voak (AP)-ReiiNd Oen. William C. WtllmOftland bu aben·
doAed bit S 120 million libel suit
'111inat CBS over a documentary thll
accueed the V~tnam commander of
1upprnaina inform11ion on enemy
troop strenath. abonina a 4'/i·month·
old trial, a CBS lawyer 11id today.
. Westmoreland ll'ftd "to dismiss
the ease without cott to either party,"
CBS attorney David Boies told Aa-
sociatcd Pteu Radio. ·
"Each of the individual defendao&s
was involved. yesterdax. whc!n this
(aarccmcnt) happened, • Boies 11id
today. "I think it's fair to say they're
all very iMeased."
The decision came j ust days before
the conclusion of testimony.
Asked if the network hu been
vindicated. Boies repli(d: "Oh ccr:
&ainly, oh certainly."
• Hdwtvcr, he ~fused to say the
i41tiaion to drop the suit was a victory
UbrCBS.
• .. , don't want to try to characterize
" one Wll)' or the other. I think 1he
4Vnl speak1 for it1elf." Boies 11id. "I
think -.,erhaps General West·
morelanCl't coun1el wants to charac·
terize it, but I think. aiven the fact that
Telephone call• to Dan M. Burt,
Wettmorrland's chief attorney, were
no11n1wtred. CBS spQkeswoman Iris
Raylctbcra 11id the network would
mate no comment before a news
conference later today.
Wtttmoreland's case was badly
bittered durinJ the past two weeks
when two of his former top aides in
Vietnam testifled in favor of CBS.
Retired Maj. Gen. Joteph A.
McCbri1dan, who had been Wnt·
moreland'• chjef intelliaenet officer
from 196$ to mid· 1967. said Wett· moretan~ stopped him from .endinJ
an unfavonble enemy st~nath nta·
mate to Washinaton on arouodt that
tht fiaures would have been a .. politi-
cal bombshell."
Then retired Col. Gains Hawkins.;
who had been chitf of Wnt·
moreland's order of battle Mair in
Saiaon. testified that Westmoreland
t1tabli1hed a "command poaition ...
not to exceed 300.000 total, bottom·
line . enemy strenathZ.:,' despite
evidence to the contrary. 1 he order of
battle is the military'• official estl·
mall 'ol enemy ltttqth.
11w WUhlnaton Pott, quouna
unidintified sourcn. reported today
that ·•somt of Westmoreland·s
r~ atlOmeyl and financtal
becken SU19C1ted that he drop the
c11e" after Hawk.Ins' ftnt day of
antimony.
Burt had railCd Sl.! million fOr the
case but ha• so far 1pent more than $3
million. accordina to tome reporta.
Hawkins h8d been expeined to complete his antimony Tuetday
when the trill woutd have mumed
after a five-di~ holiday break. His
lettimony in the ca1e, beina laeard in
U.S. District Coun, was IO have been
followed by CBS correspondent Mike
Wallace. t&e documentary's narrator
and a co-defcn.dant in the 1ull
Reached at home Sunday niaht.
Wallace would not comment on the
development. sayina. ··1 believe there
is to be a news co"ference ... I think it
would be a aood idea to wait for that"
The other co-defendants-Georac
Crile. a CBS producer, and Sam
Adams, an ex-CIA analyst who
became a CBS consultant for the
prOlflm -have already testified.
CBS lawyers had planned to call only
two more witnesses after Wallace and
to rest their case Friday.
'
Much of the C9 cenaemt on a
dtti11on in 1967 IO 11op inctUclina
communist ".elt4fen•" forties in
the onkr of beHlt. Westmoreland
i nsittcd that the ded1ion Wit becaute
thote forces consisted of women, old
men and children who poled no military threat. Adams and numer·
ous other defense witnesses in1i11ed
that the self-defense forces. operatiftl
in South Vie1nam'1 hamleu and
villaacs. caused thou11nds of Amfri.
can casualties.
At a public fiaul'f 1eekina to win a
libel verdict. Wettrnol'fland hid to
prove nor only that the story w• f'llM
but also that the network brOldcast
the falsehood knowinaJy or reckJele..
ly.
CBS never conceded any factual
errors in its story. The case thus
became a question of which witnesses
to believe -the 16. mostly middle-
rankina military and CIA officials.
presented br. CBS. or the 18. mostly
hi&her·rank na military and civilian
officers called by Wes1moreland.
Amona the 18 were former Defense
Secretary Robcn S. McNamara. mak-
ina his first public comments on the
war in 16 years, and Walt Ros1ow,
who was President Lyndon B. John-
son's natlonaJ security adviser during
the conflict.
•the ca1e has been djsmissed. it's really
.,. not up to (RC to try to characterize that
as a victory."
"CBS has been saying from the ~· bqinina that this was a controversy
Shiite Moslems celebrate
that reaJly didn't belona in a court,
I that really ought to be in a debate
t. 1mona historians and ... journalists
k and Is not somethinf that could really
Israeli troop withdrawal
be susceptible as being resolved by a SIDON, Lebanon (AP) -Armed
judicial case," he added. Shiite Moslem militants roamed
• Earlier. a source close to the streets of Sidon today. tcarina down network, speaking on condition be Lebanese Oap anJS.,ponraits of Prcsi-
not be identified, had said the one-dent Amin G~a;el a day after
pa,...,-aph agreement sianed Sunday Gemayel helped celebrate the Israeli
evenma stipulated that the case army withdrew from the southern
would be irrevocably dismissed and port city.
-: that CBS would make no apoloay or Mili tants from Hczbollah. or Party
, payment to , Westmoreland. The of God. waved AK-47 assault rifles
, network agreed not to try to force him and rocket-propelled grenade
to pay its court costsand legal fees, the launchers. but no shootina was re-
., source said. ported. They chanted "Allah Akbar"
,, Westmoreland, 70. filed his libel -God is great -and "Sidon is s suit tn 1982 after CBS broadcast a Moslem! It cannot be ruled by a
,, documentary that ac.cused him of Maronitc!"
L suppressing information which This was a reference to the faith of
tJ would have warned U.S. leaders in Christian President Gcmayel, who
arch Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
· At a rally in Sidon's Star Square.
Shiites who arrived with the parade
from Beirut demanded that a Kho-
meini-style Islamic republic be set up
in Lebanon.
A pa11ing Lebanese army ).eep was
stopped by Hczbollah militiamen
who tore off its Lebanese f1aa and
then let the soldiers proceed. Mili-
tiamen were seen smashing a liquor
store and an amusement center.
The ci1y's Moslem and Christian
leaders iu~cd a Joint statement last
we~k that barred armed militiamen
from appearina on the streets after the
Israelis withdrew and called for
cooperation with the Lebanese army
to take control of Sidon.
About 25 miles south of Sidon, an
Israeli foot patrol today fired in the air
and into the walls of buildinas in a
Lebanese villa.ae where one Israeli
soldier was killed and three were
wounded Sunday, U.N. sources re-
poncd.
Reagan supports
offshore derrlCks
,
aten ta predict coanlct'l
'Pl SBURGH -Political scientists who are using a computer to Jam
how to rcdict wars say theH' theory that conflicts occur between di111tltfied
yet Ca iar nations can serve as a "smoke alarm" to head off future strife.
"Ccrta y. wt'malcc no claim our theory will prevent war. We can only ~~t
them a hope the diplomats can fiaurc out a way to stop the problem, laid
Paul erson of Camejie-Mellon Uni.versity .. For the past 11 months,
Ander and Tim McKeown have been programmina a computer with
histori data on every country for each year since 1816 -one year after the
Battle Waterloo ended the Napoleonic wars.
1967 thallhe Vietnamese communist .received a hero's welcome from
'' force was much larger than had been Sidon's predominantly Sunni
, reponed. Moslem population when he visited
1 The documentary. "The Un-the city on Sunday to celcbratt ,, counted Enemy: A Vietnam Dcccp-Saturday's withdrawaJ by the rsraclis.
r tion." said Westmoreland insisted The second phase of Israel's three-SANT A BARBARA (AP)-Pres1-mothballs. Why don't we bring down mlaa• Ja.l .. d can b• tlJODMDO
' that intelhgcncc reports showed no pan pullout from so uthern Lebanon dent Ronald Reapn, sayina he some and anchor the-m between the ..._ "
more than 300,000 communist reponedly will bqjn in three weeks. doesn't mind the offshore oil derricks shore and the oil derricks and the ANGELES-The multibillion-dollar auto theft industry is thrivlna
troops despite 1ndicat1ons the Government troops. who moved he can sec from his ranch, has offered people could see a ship and they ia. where an averaac of 2.986 vehicles are stolen daily. ~lite 11y.
• number was in excess of S00.000. into Sidon right after the Israelis a modest proposal for those who do wouldn't find anythin& wrona with Los An.eles County has lost its distinction as the nations car theft
1 Westmoreland feared that higher withdrew, made no move to stop the -block them from view with old war that at all." c.apital Boston. It remains in the top 20 with 85.819 vehicles reported stolen
figures would undermine poJiticaJ Hczbollah demonstraL1on. The dem-fm&htcrs. ReaJln made his commeDlS in an Jast y n an averaac day 235 cars are stolen in the County and 133 in
suppon for the war. the broadcast_ onstrators amved from Beirut in a The president was asked where he interview with the Santa Barbara-metro · n Los Anscles.
said. convoy of about 100 c.ars. buses and stood in the continuina debate in Ncws--Press while aboard Air Force e-acaat·-~ '-m a..Otel , Westmoreland maintained that no militia Jeeps. Santa Barbara between people who One last week. ..,., cu .i.a v M
' information was suppressed and that A poster denounetna Gemayel as think the platforms arc ugly and those .. They don't mind seeina piers that
1 CBS distorted an honest disa11tt· 'the shah of Lebanon" was atop the who don't find them unattractive. go out into the ocean. I don't find
ment among intclli&cnce ana1-¥1ts to lead car. Gcmayel's portraits were "I once said to some people that them (offensive).'' said the pretident,
make it appear he had deliberately tom down from walls and replaced by were complainina that we ve aot a lot who has a ranch in the Santa 8atbara
misled his superiors. pictures of Iran's revolutionary patn-of (World War II) freighters up in area.
,.•lli•~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiWi~iiiii~iiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil "I know one lovely old lady who
automatically complaine<t in the day·
time because she could see this
derrick when they were drillina. And when they evidently didn't find oil
and they left, then she said, •f miss the
Wedding Plana ... but don't know where to turn? Look for
the Daily Pilot•• Special Wedding Section o~ Thuraday.
February 28th. You'll learn all you need to know about
alJ manner of wedding finery, protocol, pomp and ceremony
. and a whole lot more to make your wedding day
a speciaJ memory. Make note not to miss this
exciting issue on Thureday, February 28th!!
li&hts at niaht. "'
Reapn, who said he can 1ee the oil
platfonns from his ranch, Mid the
federal aovemment current!>.: bas
about 16 platforms off the Cahfomia
coast and is &ettina attention and
abuse because of that.
"But there arc several hundred
wells that arc (on) state leases that
have been there for quite some time.
And when we sent the Cl~ bl -
and they weren't buddictOf'oun-to study this whole area and problem,
they came back with OPe unanimous
recommendation:· Drill, aet the oil
out!" Reapn said.
The experts told the aovernment that the channel's bottom is badly
fractured with 16 pennancnt oil slicks
that have been there for hundreds of
years, he said.
''They said the safest thin& you can
do is to act that oil pumped out of
there because there could be a natural
di11ster -and I'm sure they were
speakina of an eanhquake -that
would create a diwmer of such
dimensions," he said.
.
SA A MON IC A -An anonymous caller th~atened to blow up a hotel
minute fter two small fires were discovered in the nine-story build in~ and a
shon ti latertwops bombs were hurled at a nearby police officer but did no1
exiMode thoritics said. lnvestiptors today had yet to make any arrests in the
inciden which began shortly before 4 a.m. Sunda( when the flames were
spotted d more than 400 auests safely fled the hote . police and fire officials
said.
r check• '• •••te'
SA DIEGO -American Customs aacnts seekina information In the
abducti of a drug enforcement officer are wastina their time by con=lna
intense tpections at border S1'tions, a Mexican official says. The ste up
inspect! s have been in effect since Friday alona the 1,700.mile eidan
border m the southern San Diqo community of San Ysidro eut to
Browns le, Texas. The border searches, which at times created hu~ tratrlc
jams d na the holiday weekend, arc· pan of the investiption into the
kidnap a of U.S. Drua Enforcement Aacnt Enrique Camarena Salazar, who
was last n Feb. 7 in Guadalajara. Mexico.
tee ead1n1 run
LO ANGELES-Jeff Keith, a childhood amputee who left Boston nine
months o to run across the United States on an anjficial lea, has covered an
avcrafC 6 miles a day to arrive in Los Anaeles. Keith, 22. today w11 to
compte1 'he last stretch of the run that bepn June 4, uid Hu&h Curran, a
mem Keith 's cros~uotry supE'?n crew. The last four miles were to end.
with a brat ion. at Marina def Rey 1 Burton Cha1e Park. Keith bu run about
3.300 m alona a route that took him throuah Washin,aton D.C.:.i PittlbUf'lh;
Cincin i ; Kansas City; Amarillo. Tcxu; and Phocn1l, Ariz. 1 he disiance
from n to Los Angeles by car is about 3,082 miles.
en' can .et a!Jre
A. BARBARA -A weekend anon fire outside the hotel houalna
• staff and reporten sperked Clplosions that destroyed two
vchicl ntfd by reporters covcrina President Reapn's visit to his ranch. No
injuries rt'l'Cponed in the blaze outside the Santa Barbara Sheraton 30 miles
cast of ncho del Cicio. The president was not endanaered. '
..
..
Wor:ld' s-3rd artificial heart ·
patient stable af~er surg~ty
LOUISVILLE. Ky. (AP) -Mur-
ray P. Haydon's vital sians remained
stable today af\cr he became the
world•s third permanent artificial
hean recipient, and one of his doctors
said tjaydon has less to )¥Orry about
than the averasc open-hleart surscry
peticrtt.
The SS-year-old former auto-
worker was lilled in critical but stable
condition it Humana Hospital
Audubon, where suracons imfilanted
the mechanical heart in a 3 Vi-hour
operation Sunday.
llFFELL'S
••111a1,•. , ...... ,_Lit
'ltn -aa. CGITA llJA -•UM
---·--
i'f7 P Pro( S:nrP 1951
Call 142-H71.
ht• rewwordt
to work '°' rou.
"I'm very pleased to tell you that
Mr. Haydon ... had a very unevud'ul
nipt," said Dr. Allan M. Lansina.
chairman of Humana Hean lns,itute
International.
In a· briefina at 7:30 a,m. today,
Lansina said doctors hoped to stan
feedina Haydon intravenously later
today. He also •id Haydon was
breathina on his own about half the
time and probably would be breath-
ina without usistance by the end of
the day.
·1 can't think of anythint riaht now
that I would be tremendously worried
about." Lansioa had said Sunday.
Haydon "has the USLl.ll problems of
any open-hean patient, minus the
chance that he miaht develop some-
thing wrona with fiis heart," such as
IJceued
B•1en • Wllolelalen •
Dellpen • Appnilen
an irreplar thythm, said Lansina.
who alto i1 medical director of the
Humana inttltute.
Sunday na,ht. Haydon wu "awake
and aware and able to move all his
limbs and extremities.., said Geor,e
Atkins, a Humana spokesman.
Juanita Haydon visited her hu5-
band Sunday while he WU still under
anesthesia. and thouah he did not
open his eyes or speak, he was able to
squeeze her hand, said Roben Irvine,
a Humana spokesrn.n.
She kept repeatina, .. Murray, I love
you,.. accordina to Humana pho-
tOlflpher William Strode, who was in
the room.
Levin, wife heading holile
lansina observed the operatibn
durina which Dr. William C. De Vries
1COOped out the weak and deteriorat-
inJ ventricles of Haydon's heart and
stJtched the Jarvik-7 mechanical
• heart into place.
The operation was cxpecled to last
4'h hours - a record pace in itself -
but took an hour le11, thanks in part to
an absence of scar tissue.
The first such implant, on Barney
Clark in l 98~ took 7111 hours. The
second, on William J. Schroeder in
Nov. 2S. took 61/i houn.
"Gonna start chataioa for this
procedure. we're scttina so aood at
1t," DcVries quipped to other mem-
bers of the aul')ical team. which
finished the operation before 11 :30
a.m.
"It went perfect. cou&dri't hfve
aone better ... said De Vries. the only
man authorized by the federaJ aov-
emment to perform the implants.
FRANKFURT. West Germany
(AP} -American newsman Jeremy
Levin, abducted by terrorists nearly a
year •ao in war-tom Beirut. said
today he felt "just fanwtic" after five
days of freedom and flew toward
bome~board a White Home jeL
Levin. with one arm . around h11
wiftr Lucille, waved to repon.ers at
Rhein-Main air bate in Fran~rt.
Boating accidents _
may claim 12 lives
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A
nurse strollina alona a beach found a
man believed to be a survivor of one
of a strina of boatina accidents that
may have taken u many u a dozen
lives on the fint day of the salmon
season.
The U.S. Coast Guard reported
eiaht dead. four inissina and sax hurt
followina boatina and swimmina
accidents from Monterey to San
Francisco in rouah and fogy seas
Levallysa.id an intensive care nune
from the hospital was Wilkin& alona
Ocean Beach on Saturday when she
noticed a dazed man on the sand.
Then she spotted a wrecked 2~foot
boat a few hundred yards away and
called an ambulance.. he said.
..He's aoin& to be all ript. .. Levally
said of Stookey. He sald Stookey
djdn't want to discuss the 1nc1dent
that inJured him. killed one man and
let\ another missina.
West German~, hebe the CMlfk
boerdecl the Air Force C·Jl5 k a
flicbt to Andftwl Air Fora .._
outside Wubifttloa.
He wet kidnapped Mardi 7, .......
nl.:nl .Ut be dacribed • 11 ...... ohOliwy confulemeot in a W'fl'll
where be llyt four Ameriram no
are=illi from Beinatwl betiewd kid miaht also bave been IMld
captive.
Levin, S2, who had an ualilallpc
beard and was weanna .,.. .... w11ca
he first came to freedom, had allavcn
off the beard but sponed a llRll&Kbe
when he left tbe airport. He wor"C a
ITIY suit and brown overcoe1 aad wu
hatlcts in the wbf'reezina but sunny
weather.
"Hi. you 1uys. ~he shouted 10 about
a dozen reponen and pbotopaphcn
., the tarmac. Asked how he felt.
Levtn aid, .. Just fantastic. .. He did
not 11ve a formal statement.
Bcf'ore boerdiQI. ~in wl hit wife
shoot bands wtth U.S. Consul Wil-
lwn Bodde and each buged Bodde's
hLS wife. JftlOd.
He followed as Haydon was wheel-
ed on a bed to the hospital's intensive-
care unit. checked the maze of tubes
and wires in the h1&h-tech cubicle.
and patted his patient gently on the
chest.
Saturday.
Miles Stookey. 31. was listed in (iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil-llliiiiiiim.-liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii stable condition Sunday at San Fran-
cisco General Hospital with numer-
ous cuts and bruises and possible
fractured ribs, said nurse Scott Leval-
ly.
·-
8EMINNa
FOR DIVORCED
AND SEPARATED
PERSONS OF ALL
ACES
E•rly lllrd Dlititer
Specl•I• '6.9S
Prime Rib or Fresh Fish
C~tt DlnMr with Cho/a of
soup or ulMI and Ms.rt
Six Thursday heninp
Feb. 21-Much 28
7:30-9:30 p.m.
l 4' to 6 PM
~wu'ltniJ 1 ..,. I W ... I ST. ~N•aEW8 PaBS•YrBal~N C•tJac•
Newport Beach -St. Andrews at I Sth St.
ao1 ~ BMJOA 673-n26
Right now you pay less for our cordless. 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. And like all our products from
,phones to answering systems, it's built with AT&T
dependability. So build your AT&T
total home system with the
Nomad-4000 now and save 15o/o
==~I ~·-·it L .. Tllld ... IE I • IAT
Acrota from Newport Hatbof Hllh. 520 ...,_,Mion
For more lnformatioft. call 631-2885 M Mon-Frt.
~
\II "T•f ,......,_ ... ,. ti C trwl•l•tt f "" .. II 1tt'9<>•• ............. •llh 1••11 :n,,.. ""'"""••ft .,.,'" ,.....1. ..,., d•>4•"' wnkn •'!) •d •Pril• tl"C•tt..;.., Tr.._n. ,.f AT•T
lllllA AT•T•'-"'"'-' el ••~v. •1t...,.,ut11• ,_... .. ,.,_,.. ... .,,...,-~••I "·""•'""'' 09lf .............................. ....
AMhlllll
~ .....
500 N. Eud6d It Sull *
0..-.... 30335.~St._A
.
.... Anlllella
, 22.31 E. Lincdn IW.
IMne
1480& Jelr~y AoecS Sufte F
... Mlnlan~
2.-ooo Alicia P1111<way SP 3'
°' ... Town&~y ms. MMl St. Suite,,
·~
~. J
' ..
. u11 you ·rego1111to bedoltWanyelectrtc.i work. break three JJlljt bull».
three nuorNCent tubes, lilll a Vlrfl.n receptacle, and make pro~r
mumbojumbo."
Fitness will join
famous· mouse .
as OC attr&Ction
Orange County.
Kno~ across ~e. coun\ry as the home of Disneyland,
cooservattves, sunshine, sandy beaches and, at one time, oranaes.
· Now Orange County stands a good chance of becoming the
physical fitness capital of the nation.
That news came late last week when the National Fitness
Foundation announced it has selected a chunk of pristine real
estate in Aliso Viejo fo~ the.U.S. Physical Fitness Academy.
After a year of tounng s1tes throughout the country, trustees ·
for the non-profit foundation selected Aliso Viejo over five other
locations.
Why Orange County?
...
qeorge Allen, former coa~h of the Los Angele? Rams and
Washington Redskins, and chamnan of the foundation, said the
bottom line was accessibility, climate, proximity to water and a
major metropolis, privacy and the potential for expansion.
The 175-acre parcel is located in Aliso Creek, part of the
3,250-acre 'Laguna Greenbelt. The site is rich in heavy
vegetation, wildlife and barely a hint of civilization.
"W' • 1 II 1r1 t1 41 t•I• ..,. 1lt11''
lt was set aside several years ago t;Jy the county as part of a
deal with developers of Aliso Viejo, a huge housing development
planned for south Orange County. The county has a 15-year
option to take title to the land.
Preliminary plans call for county supervisors to lease the
land to the foundation at no charge.
. The funding scheme is still uncertain, but no public money
ts expected to be used. Instead, corporate and private funds wiU
be sought to build and maintain the academy.
Electricity's ju~t a theory
whose gods can't be trusted
Herc's what the foundation has in mind for the $50 million
health habitat: ·
The academy will boast tennis courts, soccer fields bike
trails, and a medical and research center. It will also be OPen to
the pu~lic for tours, its trustees promise.
It 1s to become a mecca for coaches and teachers in the
United States to train other instructors in physical fitness
progra~s. The.bottom l~ne, according to Bill Harris, head of the
foundations site selcct1on and construction committee is to
"help get youth and just about everybody in the United States
involved m fitness."
A noble cause, to be sure.
~~ct on your tennies and sweats, Orange County. We're in
the big time.
Blanket a heavy load
for a sleeper to bear
Say the blanket weighs five pounds.
Breathing normally as you sleep
under 1t, you lift it 16 times a minute.
That's 80 pounds a minute, two tons
an hour. 16 tons over an eiiJlt-hour
stretch. No wonder you're still tired
when you wake up in the momina.
let's write a song about a five-pound
blanket. "You lift 16 tons and what do
you get? Another day older and
deeper in debt." You like the lyrics?
When others see you yawn. they
tend to do hkeWlse. You ve noticed
that. But have you ever noticed how
their eyes seem to sparkle riiht after
they yawn?
Language scholars say the Japanese
generally find 11 more difficult to
learn Englfsh than the Chinese do.
Q. Are all lobsters red?
A. No. sir. only cooked lobsters.
The uncooked are variations of blue.
white and brown.
When the English describe some-
body as "cuckoo." they mean crafty.
not crazy. The cuckoo. the y know, 1s
an exceedingly crafty bird.
Q. Quick. what's the only food known that provide) \:alorics but no
nutrition?
A. Sugar.
Figure the ball speed of a good
golfer's drive at 170 mph: At least,
some have been so timed.
"When caribou walk. they make a
clicking noise." So I reported. Why 1s
no longer a mystery. A client writes:
''All cloven hoofed animals do that.
The hoof spreads when weight is put
~~ it. then clicks back toaether when
1t s raised. In the cold dry air of the
north. you can hear it better. that's all.
One expert on Africa's bi1 pme
insists lions eat more food killed by
hr.enas than the food eaten by hyenas
killed by lions.
L.M. Boyd 11 • 1yedlc•ted col om el It.
Sacrifice to gods
before beginning
any major projects
The other day I was talking to a
friend . and the subject of electnc11y
came up. Now. I don•t know about
B1LL
Hum
you. but I've had some pretty radical · d k. · l experiences wi th electricity. I had a you re un crta ing a part1cu arly big JOb. try a few 4-foot or even 6-foot few things to say on the subject. fluorescent tubes. For a major under-
! had some things 10 say about tak ing, it's necessary to go to your
plugs. and how to keep them plugged hardware store and buy a virgin
in. and how they have a will and a re«ptacle. Make absolutely sure it
mi nd of their own. and how they has never been plugged in. and take it
delight in making life as awkward and home. After calling upon the gods to
difficult as possible. bless your project. smash that recep-
1 also made men ti on oft he fact that tacle with a very large hammer. This
threatening to pull the main circuit may seem. at first alance. to be a
breaker has worked for me in the past. terrible waste. but you'll be alad at a
All that you have to do is address the later time that you made this sacri-
nearest electrical receptacle an a loud fice.
and firm voi ce. and make mention of Although this sacrifice is made in
the fact that unless things straiahten the names of all four gods. it's out to y~ur satisfaction (with regard primarily aimed at Gotcha. The
to electrical outlets). yo u're going to others. as previously mentioned. are
pull the main breaker. the ones in charge of making thin•s
This all has to do with the use of work. They're the ones who see to 1t
electricity. God forbid th~t you that the httle electricity critten do s~o.uld have to do any actuaJ electncal what's required of them.
wmng. For example. if you tum on a liaht.
The actual fa ct is that electncity is Volts. Watts and Amps see to it that
only a theory. and is not to be trusted the electricity critters go to the bulb
under any circumstances. and immediately turn on their
If you·r~ going to do any wiring.. flashlights. shining them on the inside
several things must be attended to of the bulb. thus making liaht so you
first. -can read.
~t least four days before under-If you turn on a drill, say, Volt.s,
taking an y electncal wiring job. Wattsand Amps see to it thatall of the
proper sacnfic~s. must be made to the critters line up on the treadmill and
Gods of Electnctty. start the drill tumina. If it's an electric
Thrre are. as you ma y already heater you want to run, these three see
know. fou r gods of electricity. They to it that the critters all line up on the
are Volts. Watts. Amps and Gotcha. wires inside the heater (the heatin1
Volts. Watts and Amps are fairly element) and light a match. Voita!
benevolent gods and are also the most Warmth. visibl~. Th~y·re in charge of mak ing Now. on the surface ofit. these may
electrical 1h1~gs work. Gotcha, on the seem like-fairly simple tasks, but it's
other h~nd. ·~ ~ very vindictive god, really not as simple as it sounds. For but you re not hkely to encounter him example, what irthe critten went to a
(her?) unless y~u·r:e foo!h.ardy enough liaht bulb and staned on a treadmill? t~ start mess1n with wiring and stuff N"ot only would you not have liiJlt,
hke that. but lour liaht bulb would unscrew
As to the proper sacrifice. usually itsel . breakin1 a few light bulbs in the I've personally seen a case where
names of the four gods will suffice. If the critters went to my drill and lit
matches instead of aoina on the
treadmill I had to buy a new drill and
~ my aara1t smelled like burnt plastic
forweeka.
It's usually cases of misdirected
critters where you'll 'encouf\ter the
worst of the bunch Gotcha.
Gotcha is there for one ~son and
one l'eason only. He's out to hurt you.
He's got lots of ways to do that. too.
He's the one who loors an ex-
tension cord where you'I be most
likely to trip over it. He's the one who
will sec to it that molten plastic or
solder will drip on your most vulner-
able parts. if you happen to be holdina
that drill when the critters liaht
matches instead of trcadmillina. H"e's
also the one who reduces your manly,
hairy body (Or. womanly, curved
body) to a mass of quivering jelly by
~ooting massive amounts of elec-
Wicity throuah it. usually with very
little provocation.
Hes not above waitina 'til you're
hanaina by three fingernails and two
toes. perched over your Christmis
tree on a rickety ladder, to let you
know that strina of li&hts clenched
between your teeth is pluged in after
all. •
Nope. If you're aoina to bettoing
any electrical work, break thr1t li&ht
bulbs. three fluorescent tubd, kiO a
virJ.in receptacle, and make proper
mumbo jumbo.
Then. ao tum off the ~in circuit
breaker. After that, takt a hiah-
powered rifle with a telesctpic siaht to
the end of your street and>shoot down
the power lines. You might shoot out
a few transformers for tbod measure.
Next. send a very ir1te letter to the
electric power people. demandina
that they shut down all power in the
state while you're doina your elec-
trical worlc.
Put on a pair of rubber socks, some
rubber shoes and a ptlr of rubber
boots. A ptir of heavy rubber aJoves
will complete your ensemble.
Now. ~u·re ready! ~
Pitch 1n!
If you've done all of the above
-thin11. there may be as much as a
SO..SO ChaflClC that Ootcha won't
lftChl, I
Col•IUl1t BIU H•rve1 u~., ii
Ha"-1* "-'i· .
Booming economy falls the handicapped
U.S. has plenty of money for missiles,
but none for paraplegic writing device
Dear Edward Ro~rts: The other
night I heard you interviewed on
NationaJ Public Radio's "All Thinas
Considered" or\ the subject oftechno-
lo1Jcal brcakthrouiJls for the hat1di·
capP.Cd. It tu rned out that you have
been paralyzed from the neck down
since you sat polio at the 'IC of 14 and
now yo u want a ck vicc that would let
you write with the aid of a compuier.
It costs Sl0.000.
Whit was amazing to me. Robens.
is that you mentioned this device
almost In pa11in1 -it .and
mechanized wheelchairs and that son
of th lna. The pr<>sram was not about
the lack or monty for these devices.
but just about thedevictt themselves
'OAANOE COAST ..., ..
•
and how important they are to the
handicapped. The writing device
could enrich your life. Too bad you
don't ha ve the money for it.
I listened. Roberu, and I aot mad.
Not at you. mind you, but at us. l
could not believe you were so mild-
mannered. l would have been anary. J
would have wondered about a nation
that could spend S4 billion for MX
mi11iles. $6.2 billion for 81 bombers
and $4. 7 billion for Trident sub-
marines and missiles and could not.
under any prOlflm. come up Wlth
$20.000 to enrich a sinate life. Theft's
somcthlna wrona here, Roberti.
somethina awfully wrona.
Of course. you're not afoM. Therc·s
no money for a lot of wonhwhllc
H. L. lottwerta Ml
Pybl"'*
,,.,. %.Int
~~g!<1110t
TomT8ff
Ctty £0<1or
c, ... .....,
Soo<t• (dllef
things. There's less money for food
stamps and welfare and colleae aid
and even drug and alcohol rehabili-
tation centers. There's no money to
save some poor farmer's farm and
nothing to train unemployed steel
workers and not a cent for Lcpl
Services. mass--transit subsidies and
the Job Corps. It ·seems that the
w~_lth oft ht country is aoina 1nto the
military and the debt payment. Since
1982. the administration has spent ·
over$ I trillion ~o,r the Pe!'taaon.
Oh. Roberts. It s momina apin in ~merica. Don't you know it~Can you
hf\ your head to see the sun? On tbe
proaram. you mentioned what •
diffCTCnce the mechanized whttl·
chair had made to you: "All of a
sudden. I could tum and see who had
come in the door." Until that mo-
. ment. I could not imaa>nc such
disab1hty and how somethina as
Sttm1n1ly prosaic as a mcchanited
wheelchair could ma.kc such a d1f·
ference. )urn around Robcns and s.ce the sun.
You know Roberts that 1f you talk
t tl\ls wa y people will think You'ro
some t0n of bl«dine hean. Com-
ptuion tt out -like callina WOINft
Ms. 11·1 as if compession wn 1~
or 10me1h1na and now thf nation
(knock on wood) has found itself and
rctumcd to old. basic valuca. Den-
ma rk would a.i~t )'OU your wnt1n1
R1e1111 c ...
Ja ....
KALai~· ..
tragedy/'.
&P.R.
victory
..
Shootinggave U.S.··
propaganda win
against the Soviets
..
COAST
Triathletes.' .fun: Swim, cycle, run
By JOYCB SCHERER·BODLOVICH
OtilrlllletCen11;11•11
Yes it's true: Some people are ~ctu~Uy C}'IZed enou&h to participate in tnathlons.
Triathlons arc non-stop sequences involvi~ a -2 4-mile ocean swim a
l 12-mi14 bike\ ride and a 26.2-m'ile run. 1 Or ... if that sounds a tad rough ...
then how about a shon-course
triathlon: I-mile swim, 2S-milc bike
ride and a 6.2-m\le run.
Yes it's true: Some people do
compete' ... and tbinlc it's arcat fun.
Fun? ' I Geol'1' and 8'rt>ara Wright arc
triathloners and ... they get a natural
"high" in pushing their bodies to the
maximum.
"The 'flee itself more exciting,"
explained spunky rbara, a physical
education professo at Orange Coast
Collcae. "When yo finish the swtm,
you t~ink wow, I de it out of the
water before the ot er competiton.
Then when you finis the.cycling, it's
great to think you m c it without a
flattireorcrashing... that's another
hiah. And when you ·sh the run, it
is such a sense of a mplishment,
you feel fit and excited '
Georae, who teach computer
courses at a Long Beac high school
and triathlon at Coastli , explained
ttie . event is actually ier on the
body than a straight ma hon.
"You '11C different muscles for each
event Runnina i1 very strenuous and
your body takes a beatina. When
you're cyclina. you are not poundina
the around, and swimmina relaxes
the muscles,'' he said.
Georae knows first hand the stresa
the body takes .. Last October be
participated in Hawaii's prestiaious
Ironman Triathlon where 8.tQClO run· ners applied for entry, l,JUU were
accepted, l ,030 participated.
Geo~ trained for a year for the
exhaust1n1 event. A1Mhhe discipline
paid off: He finished 87th overall witb-
a time of 11 hours 3 minutes.
Was his body wrecked after the
gruelina event?
"I felt areat, With the exception of a
few sore toes," he iaid.
So ... where was Barbara durina the
race?
"I didn't participate in the Iron-•
man, but I was there," she said. "I
attended a trainina camp while in
Hawaii and fortunately attended
lectures and met the different
coaches. And on nwc day, I was on the
pier for the start. In fact, I was able to
ride in a van on the closed course and
video tape the entire race. frrelltywas
exciting!"
George explained that he really
appreciated Barbara's encourage..
ment and organizational help:
"There arc so many things to think
about. The check-in procedure takes
..., .... ,.... ................
~r1e and Barbara Wrt,iat train for nut trlatblon title.
two days. Theft's pre-nee.......;....,
lectwa and equipment orpaizatioa.
Makina Jure the bikini .-. lboel.
helmets., a&oves, two tell of dodlial
and a swimsuit are in their ript
olaces is critical. It would be easy to f oraet somethina,." .
And did all that excitement tpUr
Barbul:s competitive nature to per-
ticipete next year?
''I was very excited watchina
Qeorae; it WU SO amazina that be WU
doina this. I thoqbt I woukt be really
motivated to compete next year ...
but, I'm not sure, because I know be
put four to six boun a day into
preperina," she said.
"That was all be did all summer ...
train. I don't know if I can be that
. dedicated."
Yet, for Barbara athletic discipline
has always been the norm. ·
"Competitive swimmina and div-
ing were mr. main sporu arowina up/'
she said, 'and livinJ on the East Coast.~J became an avid skier. I bepll
runnina seven yean aao: I usually nm
six days a week. lf I am aoina to enter
a triathlon, I bc&in swimmina. bik.ina
and running. l(I am JOinl to run a
marathon, l concentrate on just
running -about 50 miles a week."
It would seem that all this
"togcthemcs$" trainina would cer-
tainly account for . the toqevity of
their 19'-ycar mafria&e.
"You should have been in the car
.~ ......
oa the way ov• Mn ~·
8atbara laulbed, ~·orpl Geors who ... alto lndeed. ............ ..... COllsiderina the becliC ..,. 11111
Wriahu maintaia. • AJ\crfiniei~••a._won.;..'$ ::oo1~c:: 't7 their' clMldma
Michael, 7, and Xdly, 9, bop illlo die
car and drive beck to OCC to 1aCh
ni&ht claues. And, ac:cordial to . ......., they
really don't spend that mucJi time
trainina toeetber· ··we 'do ocx.aiOnaUy " the llid..
"on aeor.·· slower c1ayi. ud wbea r
am iryina to pulb mjldf we milbt
run or bike....-. It IUket JDe &I
really pat bec:l• I can keep up wida
him, but rally be is Pftl at •Y .. -pecc.
With all the hard nice lftl*aliom:
the Wnpts do have fun days. ·
··we ID to the oool ICJlether as a
family, And white the kids~ playi11.
~and I swim laps.
Fun?
Howev'er, tbe Wripta ~ J~
bec:lute they have tbcir own in-bOu.
cbeerleadcrS.--"Wbco we run in the same l"l('IC. ..
Barbara joked, "Gecqe is ~
recuperated and standiniat the furilla
line, holdina a .... of water for me ... cbcerina me on... .
(Pl•'• ... eof!P'L&/M)
Lealle Borchard, Saaan Brown, Rob Mlater, Lynne Valentine, Marlon Balfacre, boet Bob Lints, Gl8ela Jenkin•-• T_ lflel ....
' !
£ltl9""ade excites Harbour as much as parade
Olympic champ' s talent
aids Torch Lighter's ball
'
Ward, Jou Molola (she's collectin'
prizes), Jue Dod (up for crowns with
husband By as HH Philharmonic can-
didates), Toaia Marralle, Paala Mar-
ralle, Doris WllU1 and Ou McCalla. • • • April 21 will find the Torch Lighten at
the Newport Marriott for a benefit ball
with Raf er JolauoD as honorary chair-
man. (The group was responsible for
getting him at the Fashion Island
Christmas tree to again show offhls
lightingcxpc:nise.)
Torch Lighters Pr;sidcnt Gisela
Jellkla1 welcomed· the group to the social
and introduced Tom Sallivu and his
brother Mike who presented a media
show on Special Olympics held in
Berkeley. After the show brought tears to
cyesofany, Jenkins said, "The show only
reaffirms what a privilege it is to be able
to do something for these athletes."
Special Olympics is totally operated by
private fundmgand TrMi ftUUpt was
assisting underwriten with pledges and
niemberships{active $25, honorary $50
and patron S l 00). Torch Liahten' objec-
tive 1s to provide a year-round program
of sports training and competition for the
mentally handicapped throughout Cali·
fornia.
Others there were Fru Spears, exec
director, and Jue West, director of
development froniSanta Monica; Te4
Slmpkea1 (provided the.wine), Juet and
Dea Corbla, Martlya and Tom NlelHll,
Rolt Mister, Jim Vlllen (will emcee April
event)LyueVaJeatbte,MarluRalf·
acre, Cody Smit•, Gt.rla R.IWJN,
Mary LM Deluey, Laan Utde,atrley J.-.a.., Mary Kay Hewie, CMy lml8',
MUJ J.Usoa,Sally i......t.GerJ a...e,aanua,.,...._..._ • ..._
Sau Lawrnee Bnwa,IAlllea.eMN
and Betty BeWea. (Jenkins, 970-2274,
has more informatioo of the Ap:il fund·
raiser.)
Jou Land. center. premdeat of La Tramta 011114. dlael wltll ~
BJtopoDloe and Joelle lllller aboat Apdl 20 candftl pl••
11arJ L09 DelaaeJ. Lava Uttle, 8lalrlq Joltnetoe ... _, _,
Bowie atte•ded Tmcla Lla1aten' Mdal aad ftla fl'Hl•ta .... .
i •
DEAR READEkS; 11te Aan Laftd.. crs st.x aurvey is over. 8'a1 not rally.
At thasmornent. well over 1~000
postcards and leiaen have been
rcccived and tbty .. l&il&~in
Now lam hearina&om diem.-. ·
Most of them are &uN d9eirwiv•are
am on, the 72 ~t who would just as soon foratt about the act.
A husband from Covina, Calif.,
wrote, "Mywifeisacoldtomato.She
oevcr cartd foraex . lfyoumcther
mother you'd undentand. She is
straia,ht out ofa mid-Victorian
novel"
A man from Cleveland wrote.
··Most women aetjuat about as much
out ofit as they put into it. Jn didn't
hear my wife breathe, I'd think she
was dead."
The aspect of the survey that I
found mosuurprisi na wast.be vc-
hemence with whkb many women
described thcirlackoffulfillment. I
asked only fort )'CSOra no-and
"are you over 40 ycan of aac or
under?" Y ct thousands offemales felt
compelled to cxprtSS anacr, disap-
pointment and a tense ofhopeless-
nessabout asituation theyfeltcould
not be cbanaed.
The columns and editorials
spar~ed by the poll have been
hilarious, ridiculous, stupid, destruc-
tive and supportive. I have been
vilified, crucified, &lorified and
canonized.
I knew when I asked my readers to
panicipate in the poll that they would
respond in larac numbers, but I did
not expect HX>1000women to come
forward. nor dad I expect to attract the
attenuori orPeople, Time and Net'S'-
wcek magazines.
I ha ve declined all invitations to
discuss the poll after appearing on the
"Today" show. It wasespeciaJly
difficult to say no to my longtime paJ
Phil Donahue. but I felt enough had
been said and written on the subject
and I had no interest in setting myself
up as a sex expert. ·
For that matter, lam not an expert
on any subject. I write a column that
deals with human problems. The
validity of my work is based on access
to a stellar array of consultants in
every conceivable field,
l am a sounding-board. an escape
valve,ashouldertocryon, a human
wailin' wall, and accordina to Dr. Rohen Ebert. former dean of
Harvard Medical School. I run the
laraest and most cfTecti ve social
service referral aaency in the world.
Anditis free.
How do I feel about all this? Just
fine, thank you. I believe (have raised
thcconsc1ousncssofboth men and
women on a vital subject. There is
evidence that the survey has sparked
some meaninaful conversatioM In
bedrooms, boardrooms. barrooms
and classrooms. This is aood. For too
Iona there bas been a conspiracy of
a.ilcnce.
My thanks to alJ who panicipeted
in the survey. T'*1her we have
performed a utefUI service. It i1
apparent that millions of intimate
relationships leave much to be de-
sired. Women must tell their men
what they want -and men need to
listen and do t bei r best to deli vcr.
Wear~ng h"lmet
smart tliing to do
As the driver of a motor-
cycle or a motorized bicycle (mo-TRAFFIC QUIZ ~d), do I have to provide a
helmet for my passenger?
A) Yes.
B)No.
Answer: Both A and B. The
answer to the question is that it
depends.
Reqllired: California vehicle
code section 27803 (new in 1985)
mandates that any passcn1er on
a motorcycle or a mo-pcd under the qc of I S'h years of aae wear a
helmet. Both the driver and the bareheaded pa55enger would be in
violation of an infraction. The helmet must fit properly and must be
approved by the CHP.
~ot ~ed: Drivers and passengers over the age of 15111 are not
required to wear helmets: howevtr, common sense and the desire fo r
survival should prompt anyone riding a motorcycle or mo-ped to wear
an approved helmet:
An estimated half of all motorcycle fatalities could have been
avoided with the use of helmets.
QHatlon ud auwer Hpplled lly die Newport Bead! P•Uee
Departmen&.
TV L1s11N11 \
---
13 ALL STM CAST ... UCAL.9'CI
•CC1' -
COUPLE TRAINS FOR TRIATHLON .1e
FromA7
And George says it was her in-.. With both of us in the sport, 1t come to tJe Natio11al Cham-
fluence that sparked his running makes all the difference .. GeolJC pionship."
career: "f went to all of Bab's races said. "It would be very difficult if the George w<11 his age division the last
and decided I'd rather be a panici-other spouse wasn't involved. A lot of two years ia the event at Bass Lake
pant than a spectator." t.riathlctcs' marriages have fallen outside Y mite.
George. a subdued introspective apan because the people who get "Watchi all those top runners
man. showed his appreciation for his totally involved are 1.oonc all the time. compete t year really motivated
wife's suppon in the fam ily!s Jt~ like bavina uotber job." me to act volved in the race," she
Christmas newsletter. Nodding in .orccmcnt Barbara said enlh iastically. "So 1 decided to .... ·J. run in t Long Beach TriatbJon. I "I wanted to publicly thank my said they both are looking rorward to finished ird and wu invited to run
fam ily for all the suppon they gave the Nationat Championship intheN onaJs inSeptember ... Iwas
me this last year in preparing for the Triathlon series which the Wrishts really e ted when f won in my age
lronman. They were coperative and won la.st year. divisio
allowed me the freedom to achieve "There are IO races held throuah-May the next pl will be Barbara
my goal," he said. out the UnitedSta\es," sheexp&ained. standa at the finish line with a cold
Copious training for triathlons "The committee invites the top five &Jass o tCT. cbcerina Oeorte over
could ta.kc its toll on a marriage. in every aae aroup in each race to ·the fin line.
~~~~~~~~~~~-;-~~~~~~~~~------------~~---~~~---..-----, -=~~~~!I! -~-------#--~~~~----------
~MY ''THI 1UUJNO PllLOI" (II
AWARD 1· 15, 4; 15, 7, 15, 10: 15
HOMS. '2.50 II 3:IO
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EXCLUSM ENGAGEMENT "THI 0001 MUST II Q AZY'' (N)
1:30, 3:46, f!OO •• 15, 10:30
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1UB1A PAM 1148 0388
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COITA WIA EOwMOS EdWatds Uni¥en<1y
lltl$IOI ~ 7.W. 854 • 11
COITA •IA Eowam Cinema C«lltr 979-4141
1MIUllA llUI
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LaQUN Hills M.-768-6611
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-IJlv makes her own choices now
I I
LIYUllm•nn
IJ IOR 'l'llOMAI IOmcdailll abe Would daoOw -
A I ,,.._... S:TVwt.-..:
LOS ANOELES -'"Cboicel .. it .,. ckliped IO be anenain-
tbe title: ofUv Ullmann'• new book. •"It die aunca are moetly IC10rl ud it is a subject tbe Kimi Uowl rio ceu ;ota or lies about tbtrn-weD. She's been mU1111 choica all •Ives." abe said ... Everytbi, it I: !:r. ~= always leCOrdial to :::'m:=f.v:v'!:'v=:.n~~
••1 waw bfouPt up to believe that to Ill your=-tc1'0SI. ••
older E-=ople were always riabt/' she SIM hu the circuit before. L~Y~&llb.:'~~~ =r ~k ':f re'tctfv:bl~
two chain: one is littenant to their nilcence, ''Chanaina." It was im-
clden; 1hc other is questk>nifta their pretlive both re>r the quality of
advice .. I'm not sure they arc any writina. and the frankness of its
better c>fl'than I wu." revelation.
In "Choices'' (Knopf. S 14. 9S), the "Some _people critici,zed my treat·
Norwe;iian actress wntes: "Even 111 ment of Berpnan -How could r
aurviv<>r 1 didn•t have the co~ to . touch such• letend?' As a matter of make choices. I had 1 life with fact.~ wan~ more of himself in the
optiom1, but frequently I lived u book. lhc.aid. tbouab I bad none. Tbe sad mull of "I was concerned about how he
rr'Y not bavina exerciled my choices would react ~. the scene w~ I
11 that my memory of mytelfis not of locked myRlf1n tho~throom dunng
the woman I believe I am." an arpment and he kicked do~ tbe
It is ts surprisina confetlion from ~r. He only ~o~ why I didn't
one who bu always teemed to be auch u~h~ bow has thpPCr flew off when
a f11ee spirit: She left her psychiatrist he kic~ a bole 1n tbe door. He
husband to live with her film mentor. thoucJst 1t !"ouk! add to the comedy of
lnpnar· Bersman. who was 20 yean tbe.:ene. older, nnd subsequently ~ his In ••Choi~•• she. wri~ of another
child. tover, a wnter she 1dentafies only as
She later paned with Ber&man "Abel.u S~echoletoend the affair: "I
when tlbeir relationship appeared to learn the iron rule: Leave first. or else
be·mut1Jally destructive die oflove for one who.cannot love."
Ullm 11nf) was ~ ·on a book She docsn.'t have to worry about
promotion tour, which is not exactly Abel's reaction to the book -··1
inla'Viewed h.im. So he knew ~t I
WU IOlftl to write about." one of the 1Uf1Wite;1 in "Choica" ii
UUmau'a adMmioG 1ha1 Kli ....
loQeef' thriU. twr. In a.n interview* remarked: ··1 have kno-n nocbint buc
IC'tina since I wu 17. In a tentt, I am
mourn1na anotbtr love I have loet. My romance with 'tM theaact doesn't exist an~ ...
Much of the book details a new and
abidillf interest, 11 ambellldor o(
aoodwall for UNICEF.
Uv Ullmann was born 4S yan llO
in Tokyo. where her father worted as
an aircraft cnpneer. With his natave
Norway overrun by the Nu.is, he
moved tbc family to Canada and
terved in the displaced Norwepan air
force. He was killed waJkjftl into a
propeller. Ullmann wu slx when lhe
first aaw her parents' homeland.
Her succete in t.be Oslo theater
brouaht her to Berpnan'1 auention,
and she appeand in such clusics as
"Persona," "Hour of the Wolf,"
"Shame" and ''Cries and Whispers."
Hollywood ventures such u "Lost
Honzon" and "40 C&rats" were less
successful. ~L ~ Ullmann keeps an apuunent in
New York where bcr dauahter, Linn,
goes to school. Her UNICEF travels
take her all over the world, but home
rcmajns her place in Stommen,
Norway -this, despite her country's
ambivalent feclinp about her.
'Careless ·Whisper~ tops singles chart
By ""41 A1Mdale4 Prn1
The followinaare BiUboard's hot n:cord
hitt as they appear in the next issue of
Billboard mapzine. Copyri&ht l 98S,
Billboard Publications, Inc. Reprinted
with pmnission.
BOl'SINGU:S
!."Careless Whisper.. Wham (Col-umbia)
2."Lover Boy .. Billy Ocean (Jive-Arista)
3."E&sy Lover" Philip Bailey (Col-
umbia)
4."Can't Fi~ This Feelina" REO Spcedwqon ( · )
S."I Want • know what Love Is" Foreipr (Atlantic)
·· · 6."Neutron Danc.e" The Pointer Sisten
(Planet)
7."The Heat Is On" Glenn Frey (MCA)
8. "California Girls" David I.« Roth
(Warner Bros.)
TOPLP1
I ."Lik1: A Virsjn" Madonna (Sin:)
2.6'MAl<e It Bia" Wham (Columibe)
3."Born In Tbe U.S.A." Bruce Sprina-
steen (Columbia) ·
4."Cen a.:rfield" John Foaeny (Warner
Bros.)
S."Aaent Provocateur" Foreiper (At-
lantic) . 6."N~1 Edition" New Edition (MCA)
7."Purple Rain" Prince It The Revol-
ution (Wru-ner Bros.)
9."Metbod Of Modem Love" Daryl
-Hall It John Oates ~CA)
10."Supr Walls Sheena Easton (EMJ-
America)
8."Red;less" BryanAdams (AltM)
9."17" Chjcqo (Full Moon-Warner Bros.) ,.,. _____ ...iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllllliiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiii
10."Pri vate Dancer" Tina Turner
11. .. ~ Old Man Down The Road"
John fotelJY (Warner Bros)
(Capitol)
I I ."81a, 18am Boom" Daryl Hall & John
Oates (RCA) 12."Mr. Telephone Man' New Edition
(MCA) 12.-eeverly Hills Cop· Soundtrack" (MCA) 13. "Misled" Kool It The Gana (De·
Liie) 13."Soddenly.. Billy Ocean (Jive-
Arista) 14."Solid" Ashford &. Simpson
(Capitol) 14."Buildina The Perfect Beast" Don
IS. "The Boys Of Summer" Don Henley
(Oeffen)
He~ (Geffen)
IS. Wheels Arc Tumin&" REO Speed-
"'Witness' Is erotic In the purest sense. A thriller ...
· And a pleasure for us an:"
•• -Gene Shali\, TODAY StiOW
-MIMhPllD
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tkllrothmd
Slhlt 111511'5 School
preached apJnst vice,
lust and dlsre5pect.
I But that
never 9IOpped
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true-t·o-IH• comedyr'
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Read all todays news ever.ydaJI
-(I) ". --
. in·thc
••• ...... --
mlllY IEU 11111111 ,.
TIE FllClll &
TIE
DAILY DlllER SPECIALS
Mondly (Served 3 to 1J p.m.) •
Golden brown cfiicken~~~~?;;;:::=::~~
Moist and tender Served with
homemade soup, crisp green
salad, choice of potato. fresh
buttermilk biscuit . honey and
butter ... and dessert!
--
Tenoer ntli" of .beef. aellcatety
mannated. and served on a 9clMf
with oneon and QMf\ ~ Com-
plete WIUl homemade soup. cnsp
graen salad ~ ra l)iaf. ror
end butter lnCS desslft'
•
\ t
THE
PAlllLY
CIRCUS
"Which one comes sooner -'later' or
'afterwhile?' "
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
0 0 r'-f~· \ "'\ ,)'
2-~ -
"He has a jot> puppy-sm ingl"
GORDO
GARFIELD
MOON MULLINS
JUDGE PARKER
WI-EN "IOU SAW MY DAO
t..AST NIGHT. DtO l-4e SAY
lF HE GOT 14. .J0e ?
'
•
-
by Tom Batluk
BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
2. I\
"Hurry! They're 1tartlng to melt."
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham
'AAi YOU SORE IM 6ETTING ALL l'HE
CANO'( MY eoov NEEt>S ~.
' tl
11 1!
by Gus Arriola
by Jim Davis
by Harold Le Ooux
SHOE
l~'(~VE. iDaENJ M'< ~nrze AP~~ ..
PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz
IF YOU DON1T MELP ME
WITM MY HOMEWORK,
l'M 60IN6 TO SUE YOU
YOUR ATTORNEV WILL
NE\lf R UNDERSTAND
THIS CASE ...
I TMAT WONT BOTHER
HIM A BIT !
DRABBLE
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
TUMBLEWEEDS
YES··· tr Wf\S A··· 1-\ai···
WEU., rr Wf\S A
tuRKEV. 26 LBS.
~
by Kevin Fagan
by Lynn Johnston
FOt1:Ge.T rf?! WE'RE
STiLL EAliNG ITH
BRIDG[ ANSWE RS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ
Q,J -As South, vulnerable. you
hold:
• 7 ~ J852 O AQ9 • AJ752
The bidding has proceeded:
Soath Welt North EHt
J • Pa11 1 • p ...
?
What do you bid now?
A.-We are going to break a car-
dinal rule. We do not like rebidding
one no trump when we have a
singleton in partner's suit, but all
other, options are even le11 atLrac·
tlve. We reject two clubs because of
the poor quality of the suit, and two
hearts would be a reverse. showing
a far stronger hand.
Q.2-Both vulnerable, u South you
hold:
+QJM C7 KJ1072 •.ucta
The bidding hat proceeded:
SowtJa Wt1t Nert• EAtt
1 ~ 2 O Obie P ...
?
What action do you t.ake?
A. -Another difficult hand. We
abhor p111lng partner'• low·ltvel
double when we do not have a card
In the enemy 1ult to lead throush
declarer. but what lre our chole.a?
Partner ahould be ahort In heart.I,
and we do not have the atrcnfth to
reverie or to commit the hand to
tht th.rtt·ltvtl. Our fatt d.ftntlYt
trkka and over•ll "'*'"nrtll 'thould
be enouch to enaure th• 4!0ntrac:t'a
defeat. Pu1.
Q.1-Nelttt.r vulnerable. u South
you bold:
•AIUON 1:::>1'5 0 '71 •CM61
Th• blddlDJ hu proee.ded:
S.-. WM& Nwdi £ut
l • PMI I NT PUI
t
What act10n do you take? ,
A.-One of t he reaaona f·or opening
thla hand is because it is a two-
auiter. There la no rea son. then,
why you should not treat it as such.
Bid two clubs.
Q.4-Aa South, vulner11ble, 7ou
hold:
OMAR
S1111FF
+Kiow ~AQI 0 18 •At71
T he biddlnr haa proceeded:
Sntla Weit Ntrdl Eea&
1 • .P... 1 1:::> PUI
?
What do you bid now?
A.-You have a minimum openlDJ
bid and, thertfon. you ah ould plan
to t.akt no mon than on' ndcllc.loaal
bid unleu partner fore9• !I ou. If 1ou
re bid one 1padt and par·tner tND
t.a.k" a prefmtne. to elu 1>1 or bWt
no tnuap. 7CM1 wW 1 .. 1 p Uty about
havln1 1uppHIHd 7our lfia• lMan
aupport. You can avoid t.hat prob-
lem by ral1ln1 to two heartt now.
Q.6-Aa South, vulaer ab'•, you
hold:
•• OAKN oa1:1 •NI
The bfddln1 bu proeeedudi
Nwdi Eu& .... Wtiit · .. ..... ·~ ... I ~ PMil ?
Wlaac. ac&'°8 do JOU take't'
,
A. -Since partner haa abown a
minimum opening, the moet you can
hope for la a combined count of 25
HCP. You have a nat hand, and that
warrants a I-point deduction.
Because of these negative factors.
it'a doubtful that you can make a
game, ao don't endanger your par-
tial by getting too high. Paaa.
• CHARLES
Go1E1
Q.e-Ntiihtr vulnerable, as Soulh
you hold:
•Ma 1:::>1 OIU7ed •AQ'7
Tbt blddlns ha• proceeded:
Ntrdl Eut 8Mdt WM& · ..
1 1:::> Put I 0 P ...
I I::> r.. ?
What ace.ion do you Lake?
A.-Thil hand 1pell1 trouble. Slnee
partner eould do no more than reb&d
two t..ana, It looka aa 11 thtre mJ1ht
be a mJant. Praatns on eould 1tt
1ou lnLo deep troublt. Pue.
,_ ............. a.... ............................. ,.., ............... .......
•• "z ' 11 A.-.., fbsna..: ......... -.n.
-,
I . .
Mater Del Htp '•unbeaten Monarcha, led by Mike llltcbell
(left) and Tom Lewie. await rrtday'• flnt roand of the CD'
............... ..,,LM...,_
5-A buketbell p~ff• u tbe No. 1 Med. The two form a blC reuon for an 5 three-year record for the llon:archa.
Road to final
won't be easy
for area teams
CIF bas ketball
pairings: No
fi rst rollrid_p_a-t s_l_e _s
By ROGER CAR~N
OlllleO.., .... ...,,
The roa~ to the Lona Beach Arena
began Su¥.ay wnh revelation of the
first round of CIF basketball and
there was a familiar pattern to
comments from coaches -they'd
Just as soon play someone else.
Sunset League runner-up Fount.am
Valley won the coin flip and 1s in a
rematch with a Compton team which
fell to the Barons an non-lca.aue play.
36-36.
•Estancia. the Sea View Lcaauc
runller-up. lost Lhe coin flip and will
be at .. The Coun" on the Santa Ana
High campus.
•Mater Dc1. the No. I seed in the S-
A. drew at-la!JC toughie V erbum Dea,
a team which had the MonaKhsaoina
for a while an the Tournament of
Champions before fallinJ. 73-56.
•Sea View League kingpin Ncw-
pon Harbor 'ot t~ biggest break -
with a date w11h the wild card winner
ofa Wednesday duel between Hemet
and San Gorgonio, affording Coach
Jerry De Busk the opponunity to take
a look for himself at Fnday's opposi-
tion.
•Corona dd Mar's Sea Kinas drew
South Coast Leasuc champion
Mission VieJO and will play in die
same 1ym where the Oiablos shocked
hiahty-reprded Ocean View in 1M season-oomer.
•Ocean View, althouab in a very
StrOftl bottom half of the S-A bracket.
dttw a St. Francis quinwt which bas
little in the way of playoff experience.
•Newport Christian's Co~::;on
find themselves at Bel Air in
Small Schools action.
•And WcstminS1tt, the eventual
beneficiary of Edison's forfeit IOPeS
in Sunset Leaaue play. ttsts CJF
waters for the fint ttme in I 5 years
with a pmc at Serra. the Camino Real
Lca&ue champion.
Mater Ori is the top seed in the S-A, ..
foUowed by Ocean View. Lona Beach
Poly and Serra. ·
Glendale's unbeaten [)ynamiten
(Pleue ... AllltA TSAM8/BS)
Zangger findingtwo -hatS hard to keep on
Mesa Verde Country Club's Shootout
for LPGA's Uniden Invitationa l ready
With advent of spring weather, one
begins to look to the outdoors for
recreational activity.
A quick check of the calendar
shows that the second Unadcn LPGA
Invitational golftoumamef\J is rapid-
ly approaching and the stars of the
circuit will be at Mesa Verde Country
ClubinCosta Mesa March 4-1 0.
One man who is well aware of the
situation is Paul Zangger who is
wearing two caps this year. In
addition to beinagcneral chairman of
the event, he is alS<> serving as
tournament manaJcrand has become
even more deeply in volved in the
event than in previous years.
Zangger. a bundle of energy when it
Midwinter
Regatta:
895 vie
•Complete results. B2.
A combination of midsummer and
midwinter weather greeted the 895
sailors who competed Saturday and
Sunday in the S6th annual Southern
California Yachting Association
Midwinter Regatta.
Warm sunshine and 11,ht breezes
had crews stripped down to the bare
essentials on Saturday. but overcast
skies and chill winds called for foul
weather gear on most of the courses
between San Diego and Ventura
County.
Dense fog had boats groping
around the courses in San Diego and
Mission Bay for the first part of the
race on Sunday. but the soup cleared
in midaflcmoon and provided a brisk
breeze.
Seventeen of the panicipating
yacht clubs completed the action on
Sunday but the Midwinters con-
tinued today at San Dicao Yacht Club
and Los Anaeles Yacht Club where
the lal'JC ~an racing boats arc
compct1n~ for three days.
comes to staging a golf tournament
the magnitude of the Un1dcn Invita-
tional. admits he didn't realize just
how much of a job he was getting into
when he took over as manager this
year in addifion to his other
responsibilities.
"I enjoy 11 but there 1s a lot more to
my duties this year." he says. "For
instance. we've adopted a couple of
new concepts in regards to the
marshalls and scoreboard operators
on the course. But those arc only
small thinss that have helped to open
my eyes a little fartherthan an o ther
years."
Zangger is happy with the way
thingsarcprogressingand is anxious
for the event to gtt here.
The tournmamcnt will officially
get started on Friday. MaKh I when a
qualifying event will take place.
"Riaht now we havecomm1tt-
ments from 91 of the top 130cxcmpt
players in the LPGA." he says "I
behcvc there arc 160 players who arc
exempt and when one in the top I 30
doesn'tcommit. we take the next one
in line to fill the field.
"In addition. we have 12 Japanese
LPGA players who will becominJ
here which leaves only two spots 1n
the 144 player field for the qualifiers.
It looks like we will have around 40
players trying tOjiCt orte of those two
positions 1nclud1ng fi ve amateurs.
We invited five amateurs to play 1n
the qualifying tournament.
"When we started this qualifying
round. we thought we would have a
low number of players. In the first
a ....
. H111Y
.~G"~ "'I• ·. ..... .·..., I~ 0' .i. . . .. ·-·
I • \. " ·~. r . . " ..... '-· . . . ..
event an Aonda this )'ear the) had
only eight and an the second tour-
namcntthcy had 11 trying to qual-
ify:·
The field 1ncludesall tho~ on the
e'cmpt list not an the field who wa nt
to come here plus club pros who
belong to the LPG .\ and the five
amate urs. The event gets under wa y
at 7 a.m. and the field will be complete
that night.
··t think we could staa,c the tour-
nament ncx t week." Zangger says.
.. Weare read} and the course is in
great shape. lfth1s weather holds up
for another week. it will really make
an improvement in the looks of the
courst'. Bermuda grass 1s dormant
dunl!Sthewinterbut warm weather
brings 1t to hfe. The ,recns arc an
cx.cellel\J condition.
"We still have some openings for
the Pro-.\m. Right now the field 1s
about 75 percent fi lled as far as the
amateurs arc concerned. We will
draw the amateur teams on Sunday
along with starting times and then
have a cocktail part)' and dmncr Monda~ night to dra"" the pros for
each team.
"Wednesda) night afterthe tour-
nament we'll ha"c a cocktail party
w1 th hors d'ocu vres for the awards
(Pleue eee U!OD£1'/B3)
Top IO
Oranie County
hlgtimchool
bUketbell
10 years of frustration ends
Dally PUot eelecdoaa
( .... )
1. Meter Del (25-0)
Bl ackburn fina lly
findshls nic h e
in Sa n Diego w in
LA JO LLA (AP) -By most
accounts. Woody Blackburn's lack-
luster PGA career should have been
over years ago.
A consistently mediocre pro-
fessional who earned S 1.837 an 1979
and later missed the cut 20times 1n 21
golf tournaments. Blackbum . 33. hn
bottom last year, losing his PGA card
and being forced to requahfy with the
rookies in order to play on the tour.
His playoff victory 1n Sunday's San
Diego Open. then. hardly could have
been more gratifyi ng. Blackbum
turned back Ron Streck on the fo unh
extra hole. won a solo tournament for
the first time in his 10-season career
and pocketed $72.000 -1\carly half
as much as the SI S 1.297 he earned on
the tour from 1976 to 1984.
.. I had putted sowcll.11 seemed. the
who le tournament until the 18th
green," said Blackburn. who ad-
mitted feeling nervous down the
stretch ... But Ron had been playing so
well that I didn't than k I could la&
down there and three-putt for a 5."
He went for the cup on his fi rst tap.
but rolled it about 5 feet pa~t. Has
pressure-packed II) for par. which
would have scaled the champ1onsh1p.
slid off to the right.
Blackburn and Streck then engaged
1n a miserable playofT. with both
players spraying their tee shots wildl)
and massing putts that could ha' e
decided the tournament cham-
pionship.
It was an 1ronicall) poor con-
clusion to a tournament an which
Blackbum and Streck tied the W1l-
hams record for 72-holc totals. the ir
269s. 19 under par. matching Tom
Watson ·s performance here 1n I 977
Blackburn also set a 54-hole total w11h
an 18-under 198. and the 36-hole cut.
5-under-par I J9. was a record
Blackbum and Streck went par.
boge). par on the first three holes of
the playoff. but on the founh -lhe
501-~ard. par 5 18th ~ trcck
~lapped his sc:cond shot into tht' water
hazard an front oft he green. Ht' tooli. a
pcnalt) stroke. chipped to about .:!5
feet and m1<1'1Cd a putt for par
Thal Id\ 1t 10 Blackburn. "'ho had
reached the green an 1"'0 Hl' lagged
up from .:! feet to \I. llhin I• feet of
the-cup. then. '1s1bl~ nen OU\. lipped
out h1\ short h1 rd1r attl'mpt
.\fter a gesture of hclplessneu.
Blackburn putter in h1\ leti hand.
tapped 1n the ~inner
"It t('el~ so good to tinall~ do what
~ou're l'apabk of doing " he said.
Elliott runs away from field ··sausfying," he said. "A lot of
people look at the last four or fi ve
years of my carc(r and say. 'Why do D.\YTON BEACH (-\P) -Bill Elliott wasn't the field and began waging a sumng duel 1n thcu Ford
you stall play?' I joined the Tour con' meed he was the big game bean& hunted 1n the Thunderturds ~
because I thought I was good enough oa.,,tona 500. ..If ll had come down to a last-lap shootout. I don't
to wi n. I till do." · But his domination unday an the 17th rcnc\\111 of the Ii.no" 1f I could have beaten him." Elliott said of
On Sunday. Blackburn was read) S 1.2 m illion Grand National stock car e\<cnt came as no Yarborough
and willing. but not immediately surpnsc to those who '-"t'TC trying to "narc him But the howdown ended v.hen YarboroU&)\. low on
able. model of consistency from '"We went bear hunting with a BB gun," said Tim g.1S. burned a pJston on the 63rd of 200 laps. From then,
The Midwinters is the laraest Thursday's first hole until the 17th of Brewer. team manaaer for Neal Bonnett. one of onl~ two the rout was on.
competitive sallinaevcnt in the world rcgulntion on Sunday. he could have drivers who scriQusly challcnacd Elhott o n thl' high banks Onl~ a ~ries of late cauuon tlags. tcduci"I Elliott's
and, in Southern California. marks ~ppcd up the tourna ment on the of the 2.S-malc Daytona lntemauonal pccdwa) •'crag~" speed to 172.265 mph. and t~ craf\1neu of
the bcainninaof a new season of yacht a. •4 • • 18th areen. but th rec-putted from 15 The othCT was t1110-t1me defend1n1 champion Cale Bonne''· bncO~ made 1t nice .
.racina after the fall and winter Woody Blackbana capn.r.d feet to bo&ey and allow Streck into a Yarborouah. Hcand Elho u. tht' t'lttO fastest qualifiers 10 the Bonnett. 9'ho ak>na with second-place finisher Lake
doldrums. the San Dl .. o Opell -clay. playoff. history of st()(k car rkmg. 1mmeduuel~ brokt away from Pt"Cd wett the only other dnvcrs on tht lead lap. went In
•------------------------------------------------•-----------front with tiaht laps remaining. He pulled up behind Elliott after ttnnic Pond blew an cnaine on lap 192. faked
M i Bi d Sh It' d ff b t L k • 1d1,ean1o thcp11s1nd ta)cdonthttra ktotake lhelttd ag c-r ow: sastan 0 ' u a ersw1n whil~.i:~0~:dtt~.r~~~~~~1nddradcdtost1y out
there." Bonnett said. "I flcu~ maybe I could hold him
I NO LEWOOD (AP) -Earvin "Maaic" Johnson and
Larry Bird. arauably the two finest all-around players 1n
the National Basketball Assoc1at1on. had thar en11ncs
nannina al top efficienc:y in the latest confrontation of tl\e
Boston Ccltiet and Lot Anacles taken.
8otb were exccptlonar, but somcone·had to win and
someone had to lose 1n unday's nationally tcle~iscd pme
11 the Forum bttwttn la t year's NBA Champeon hip
Series combatants. . .
Thanks mainly to Johnson and de pttc the bnlhance
of Bird. it wu the liken who came out on top. 11 7-1 11 to
c&m I pht of the two rqul&MC&!On pm between the
two team& • "Mc and Larry do a lot for our team • but 1t 1 not a ~f10f'al beulc." Johnson 111d after tc:0nn1a1Ctton·h1ah
)7 point 13 of thtm In the founh ctuancr, and
accumulatin1 a aame-h1ah ll aut tJ. "A lot of pcopk say I
ttn't doth• or I can't do that,buttoday lju t v.-tnt ouund
lhowcd •hit I can do and had fu"."
Johnson..;.., ttfcrrina to what ha been said about his The wan was the se .. enth 1n a row for the Llkers and off or he would act held up or somcthma."
ability to scons and has accuracy from out idt. but 3 7 their 1 l th tnumph 1n 14 _.mes 1ntt the) dropped • Thl'N' laps later, ho'Wt' .. tr, 8onn(t1'sCbcvrok:t Monte
poantupcaks for 1t~lfand man)' ofh1s 10fteld1oals(1n 16 104-102 dttJ11on 10 the tluc at Bo ton la~t month Carlo v.ent the ""'Y of forma Daytona SOO wrnntn attcm~lS) were from Iona nnae. LosAntta' 38-16record 1.S the th1rd~t 1n the 8<\ \ arborough. Richard ~tty, Bobb) noon and a kw of
Bird. who finished with 33 point' and a gam~haah I 5 while Boston's 43-11 mark as the finest 1n the lcaaue othen. He blew his enarne 1n hot pursuit of Ell eot-. took a
rebound was a aracious loser. • TM W.cn IC'Ottd nine truaht points tanan\~~h a ~ 1ld hde throuah the infield and had to seule for 10th
"We ~la)cd a art•t ba kctball team out thtrc today," la}up by M~hetl C00c>tt Yatilh :?.12 rcm31nu\1 to k a pla<'t
ht said. ··Thty played btttcr than us. I hope .,.e set the 103-103 ttt and chnch the v~tof). thrtt-po1nt pla) b)' ··s111 Flltott rould beat me an ay, sol had noth1f\I to
opponun1t)' to play lhcm •'"·" , James Wonhy, .,hohed 24 points, With I :30lO10 p,.c Los Ix 1fr1td of," 8onnct1'atd .. mtthlf\I in tbcrt111t,.ecamt
81rdwHtt-ftrrin1toth1,,pnn1'sN8AChamp1on$h1p Anaelcs a fivc·Pof•u ~ad and John~ made •~o fret loo . It dumped $\ufT onto my 11ra and wbica that
Strit , the only place the teams could meet an the playoffs thro"' with·~ tcronds ~ft and anothCT peer tOur nd' happc1'cd. l did the be t I could do 10 hold o.\ ...
s1nct ihe Celtics arc'" the Ea tcm onfcrtncc and the latertomakt.n t12·10 . Elhott.v.hoquah~forthepokat20S lt4 Mpf\and
La ken arc an the Wntem \onftrcnct. The Cctttn ~ Martina C"tntcr Robm Pan h fi r the led I 1 of the 2 11 hid onl to outnan Spttd'i Poat
The clticsbcatthcl.akm+31nlast pnna'sbt t-of· day.,nhS lttonchrt1M1n1!'1btf0ft'halfl1mc•bcnthc 7· Q randPn tocoUttt I the · tJMlyOft'tn tock
K vcn C"hampeonship Serie footer suffcia tpninfd ttn. an~k. Plnth had onl thrtt c-u h1,tory Whtn th<' 1f.ttn came out wi~, 0.,. lap
•·Thtt 1 1 n(Yit year." Johnson said. "We havh t hanct potntund J OM rdM>und in h1i 11 minutes oh 11on rcm11n1"' lhott ran WI) from peed to ~in bytt..,cn car
to btat the champt. Thal'• ~ha• 1t'11ll 1bout. Th11 pme "I'll bt ayafter1,.h1k.'' id Panlh ... ,.m n t ob lt"nath .
wta 1mpon1n1 for our confidrnt"t 1~ it Yf111 do u aood now. rn ma at OM pme C • •Mt Utah 1onda) lhou iJ ~ ' r hn•Latcd 1n ma~ana the P't throu~out thr """of.the~ n:· nia,htl I don't kno" "t aftt'r that tot),
•
4 real mlleetone
for dolui. Walker:
lOOth aub-4:00
,.,..AP. llJJ 0
....
AUC~LANO, New Zeeland -New m Z..luder Joha Walker became the first
aahlele in hi.eory to nan I 00 sub-four
minute mi&et. when he was limed in 3:54.57 seconds
Sunday niaht. acbievina his much·souaht after mile·
stone an front of an enthusiastic, rain-soaked home crowd.
The 33*yearn0kl former world mile record holder. t~ fi"1 rnan to break the 3:SO barrier for the distance.
trouble.
and the 1976 Olympic 1,500-
meter champion, was tm{>rcssive
in 111Cin1 to the coveted victory.
Australian Pat Scammell fin,
ashed JCCond, and was followed
by New Zealand's Tony Roaers
and Ireland's Ray Flynn in the
historic event at Mount Sman
Stadium.
After running a 57.5 first-
quarter and a I :59 half-mile.
Walker moved into the lead after
the bell lap and never was in
The triumphant race signalled the end of Walker's
long prasram aearc!d to head ofT American miler Steve
Scott in the quest for 100 sub-four minute miles. Scott's.
total is 96.
Since Dec. IS, 1984. Walker has run 12 sub-four
minute miles in New Zealand and the United States 10
reach roo -a chase he began with a 3:58.8 clocking at
Victoria, British Columbia July 7. 1973.
"Eat your heart out Steve Scott.'' Walker said on
television after the race.
Although the once-magical four-minute barrier.
fint broken by England's Roger Barfn1s1er in 1954 now
is the standard for any respectabte miler, no runners
other than Walker and Scott have even begun to
approach the 100 mark. Bannister finished his career
with only two sub-four minute rrillcs.
"If someone had told Bannister about this as he
staggered across the line -that someone would break
four minutes 100 times -I think he would have been
very dismayed," said Walker.
"I feel elated," Walker said after the race:
"I wanted to win here because this is my home
track."
The world's most durable miler, Walker gave no
hint of retirement after 12 years of being among the
world's elite runners.
He said he would aim at running the 5,000 meters
in the 1986 Commonwealth Games at Edinburgh.
Scotland -a distance in which he was a finahst at the
1984 Los Angeles Olympics.
Walker became the first to run the mile under 3:50
when he was clocked in 3:49.4 on Aug. 12, 1975 at
Gotcborg. Sweden. On July 31 , 1976. he won the gold
medal in the 1.500 at the Montreal Olympics.
After running his first sub-four minute mile as a 22-
ycar-old more than 11 years a10. Walker ran another 6 I
sub-fours in the next 61/1 years. before he turned JO.But
remarkably his last 38 sub-four min ute miles have been
run af\er that age.
Parvie doeen 't come up Short
Parvis Slaort scored 46 points. 1nclud-m
mg eight in ovenime, for Golden State and
the Warriors broke a six-game National
Basketball Association losing streak with a
125-121 doublen0venimc victory over the Washington
Bullets Sunday ... Elsewhere on the NBA circuit. Alvan
Adams poured m 23 points, pacing six of has teammates
in double figures. as the Phoeni x Suns used a second-
quaner spun en route to a 115-97 victory over the
Indiana Pacers ... Sluey Moecrief scored 21 points to
lead six Mil~auk.ee players in double figures as the
Bucks crushed the Chicago Bulls. 125-105 .. Portland
rookie Sam Bowle scored 21 points and hauled in nine
rebounds as the Trail Blazers won their fifth straight
game. this one. 115-96 over the Kansas City Kinll.5.
lla)'Otte wlm Ml ($111,IOO)
DELRAY BEACH, Aa. -John m
Md!nrot and Jimmy Concaors didn't 1how
up, and lhe 01htt bia namn who did were
not around for the men's final~ of the Sl.8 ~
million Upton International Players Championships. So, it was left to Tim Ml)Otte and Scott Davis to play
ror the title, and tbc result was exciting enough to
impress the most jaded tennis fan.
The two former Stanford University teammates.
uaranteed 1ht ba t peydays of their careers win or
lose. arappled for fi ve sets before
Mayotte foraeda 4--6, 4-6, 6-3, 6-2,
6-4 victory. Mayotte collected S 112.500. Davis half that.
"I was nervous in the first~
and into the second set." Mayotte
said. "I wasn't nervous when I
walked onto the court, Then it
dawned on me what I wu doina
-playina in a match like this -
and I fot nervoos. " twas just one of those days,
lla7otte I guess -scary really -that the
first win comes in such a big tournament.'' Mayotte
said. "The comeback. 100. makes it fun.
"The only other time I came back from 0-2 in sets
was Wimbledon in 1982 against Sandy Mayer. J tried to
do the same thing I did then. loosen up and 10 for my
s~ots." . · Davis said fatigue caused him 10 lose the cnsp
passing shots he displayed in the first two' sets.
"h was a combination of fatigue land loss of
concentration." Davis said. "My adrenaline carried me
earl y. Every time J gota break point-the!" were manx
of them -he served well . He was clutch tn that way.
Lord at War •peed• to win
ARCADIA _ Lord at War was E
running fast on his own early, .and when
jockey Bill Shoemaker asked ham to pull ·
away late m the race. the horse still had -
plenty lefl.
"f wasn't even askin~ him, and he ran :45 3-5 the
first half." Shoemaker said Sunday after piloting Lord
at War 'to 21/1-lcngth victory in the $215,200 San
Antonio Handicap at Santa Anita. _
"Then when he saw horses coming to him, be took
ofTwhen I asked him." said Shoemaker, wbo loged bis
9 I 7th Ii fet a me stakes victory and 206th triumph in a
race wonh SI 00.000 or more.
Shoemaker said Lord at War's victory raises a
q uestion for him.
"This horse is better than people give him credit
for.'' Shoemaker remarked. "He ran a real big race
today. I guess I have a choice to make now for the Bia
'Cap (~500.000 Santa Anita Handicap) between this
horse and Grc1nton . But there's two weeks until the
race."
Trainer Charlie Whittingham said Shoemaker can
ha'e his pick. commenting.. "l do plan to run both Lord
at War and Gremton in the Big 'Cap. Shoe can ride
whichever one he waots."
Argentine-bred Lord at War led from the stan
Sunday, with I 5-1 shot Al Mamoon finishinj second
and Hail Bold King another length back in third.
Time for the 11/a miles was I :48 1-5.
Brawl man Rangers' victory
Rookies George MePbee and Grant ~
wdyard scored goals 39 seconds apan to '
spark a fi ve-goal second period outburst
that lifted the New York Rangers to a 9-3
rout of the New York Islanders Sunday night in a
National Hockey Leasue game marred by a full-scale
brawl ... In other NHL action. Denis Savard'• second
goal of the game early in the final period lifted the
Chicago Black Hawks into a 4-4 tie with the Detroit Red
Wings ... Dan DaoHt convened his own rebound at
I :30 of ovenime to give the Toronto Maple Leafs a 5-4
victory over the Hartford Whalers ... Winnipeg's Brian
Mallen scored the tying goal early in the third period,
but New Jersey goahe Haua Kamppari withstood a late
barrage with some acrobatic saves and the Jets and
Devils battled to a 2-2 tic ... Quebec scored at least one
goal an each pcnod and used two first-penod goals to
down the Minnesota Nonh Stars, 4-3.
Walton on Injured Hat again Qaote of tbe day
,_,., ~......_.an U1Jstant coecb Wltb tbe Clippers' center Bill Walton, sidelined . . . LOS ANGELES -Los Angeles m
H°'*;OD Oilen. on hit, many M<?Vet in 10 yean of most of the last seven games with an ankle coecbina: .. rvc sot. tf?e kind_offum1ture ~t, when you~ an jury. was pl aced or) the inj ured list
soap your 6.n, ttJumps tnto the crate. Sunday. the National Basketball Association team
announced.
St. John'• rallies paat DePaul
Orlt Mallin scored 24 of his season-m ~
high 31 points in the second half as top-
ranked St. John's overcame a fou r-poi nt
halftime deficit and pulled away to a 93-80
victory over OcPaul ~unday that extended the
Redmcn·, winning s~;eak to 17 games. The Rcdmen.
who improved their record to 22-1 . trailed 38-34 at
halftime as 7-foot BUI Weulogton was hampered by
three early fouls and Mullin made only two of I 0 shots
1n the first half. But they outscored the Blue Demons
22-5 during one stre tch 1n the second half. runnin~ off
10 straight points during the spurt. Elsewhere. Vtaceat
Hamll&oe scored 20 points to lead Clemson to a 71-64
victory over 20th-ranked Maryland in an Atlantic
Coast Conference game. The Tigers h11 eight free
throws in as many tries in the last 63 seconds to secure
the win. The loss denied Terp Coach Lefty Drtesell his
500th coachina vi ctory for the third straight game. He
gets his next opportunity Tuesday night against
Georgia Tech 1n Atlanta. Clemson rose to I 5-8.overall
and 5-6 in the conference. while Maryland fell to 19·9
overall and 5-5 in the conference.
Walton. 32. suffered the inJury to has nght ankle on
Jan. 29 at Cleveland. Prior 10 that. he had played in a
career-high 40 consecutive contests.
The 6-11 veteran, plagued through his career by
inJury. must miss a minimum offi ve pmcsand will not
be eligible 10 come ofT th e list until Feb. 27 against
Houston.
Walton sat out five games. then played bnefly last
Wednesday. but soreness 1n the ankle sidelined him
again.
Televlalon, radio
ftUVlllC)N I
8 p.m. -cou.a• llAIKITBAU: UCLA It
Stanford, Channe4 6.
MDtO
7:30 p.m. -COUIQI aAlkl TaALL: ,._.
Vada-Lu Vega at Cal 8191• Fullerton, KEZY
(1190).
7:30 p.m. -PRO M lklTaAU.: San Antonio
1t Cllpper1, KHJ (930).
8 p.m. -COLLI• aAlk&TaAU.: UCLA at
Stanford. KMPC (710).
-_ ..
1118 daqhter •Y• lt beat
8W Blllott wu ab'-wlaner at the Daytona
500 9aadaJ and _fie celebrates with hU
I
t •
Midwinter aegatta results
l MkfWMNr .......
SOUTHERN CAUfJO.NtA YACKTIMG AUN.
SEAL 8EACH YC
C~IMeta,SdlUft)
""TALINA·)O (12) -l C.lllslo, Helllma11-
8efton-Kobv, LSF, 2. 0 "-ssloll, alM APP\, VYC,
l . M¥1Wrlne. Devt Dwoskl11, CIYC. c. Neull
IAdV, ~rv &. Dw1vne Lulld. La YC.
CATALINA·?? (IJJ -1. Super Cll, Hortr
l(ortr, SI IYC, , oi.11. Ron .. '""' Rt<lmen, SI a ve. J. C.DOll', Jim a. S111o a1~. LAYC; 4.
Winos. 8oO &. C1m Phlftie>t, SI 8YC
COROHAOO-?S 141 -s.tldltr. Ron ()gilC)v, Aa YC
CAT ALINA·2S (6) -I. Fio.llno lllll'Ht, Sob
R1ldtr, SI 8 YC, 1 Limev, Enoll"1-Greoorv,
SFVYC
CAT ALINA·?2 Cfl -I LO~t II , Jeck
Arml11Hd. Frt1no YC; 2 Wind-. Elcloll
Gerrt1. Frnno YC, 3 JUI! INaUM, Ross H~ldll, Sl8YC
LrTTLE SHPS "LEaT en ........ 6 din"> PHRF·A 1111 -l. Hot Fta1n, Dell ClePP,
A8YC; 2. Timber WOif. Larrv Allll111, SI 8YC; 3
Mire", J()flll Sltl, LBYC; 4. Clamballt, J. Weir, LAYC~ S.Tlme eand11. &rloo\-Snvoar. SI e ve
PHRF·8 (IS) -lncOQllllO, Oouo and Tom
Jor9tf!Wft. LA YC, 2. Eloht 81N. M. 81Kct1,
C8YC; 3 Vroom, Mlrly Grttfl. SI 8 YC, c ChlVlh, C>Kar Krl11,lly, SI e ve. S.MI Slrtss,
Ptltr G1n11. AaYC. ~~ PHRF-C (16) -I ~lhtrn Comforl. T.
Newton Jr . ABYC, '1 l.o5 P1vo,, Phll LUPlon.
HHYC. 3. Wildeal, Lalli SPulld, C8YC; 4
Mlllrtu . D. Wllkl111. L8YC. s El Tlon II, Ktll
GrH11. C8YC
PHRF·D 161 -1 True Grll. 1111 T111ntr,
LSF, 2-Prolo EO Feo. L8YC.
PHRF Noll Sl>lnnaktr (5) -1. Too Mudl,
Johll Drllktl. LSF, ?. Tht Gtl1w1v, Merk Ttrml.on. LSF
ERICSON 3S-2 (Sl -I Nuole Too. Jim ..
Kert11 Nuoe111, eve. 1 Andoml, Don Zinn,
c ave.
LONG HACH YC
(2' ...... 4 de•-> CAL ·2S IS) -I. Lloo, 8oO Kln tlnt, LBYC, ?.
Fr-I II, Al C.r1Y11, LI YC SANTANA JO-JO
(C) -l Ful IAM, SMOdeft-Coleml11, L8YC.
NEW YOAK·3' (I) -l. No name, ,...,
H1mbf'ld1·He1tlltf McD1111et•. La YC, Slam,
Slt vt °''°"• LBYC. CATALINA-JI cm -1. Cobr1, 8 111 Huw,
Sllc>ftllM YC; Enl0\lrl9t, Ntt WillOll. LI YC, 3.
Oii Sllcll, Grlffl11·Hertwtll, L8YC; 4. JI C1tlw ,
Jtff etanron, S8 YRC
DANA~ YC·CA~ IAY YC
(SS IMeta, S di•->
PHRF·A (9) -l. Chrl110Ptltf lllOOlll, 8r1K1
HenMM'I, VYC; 2 Wl11t1. Carl IA.,, VYC, 3.
Mlscnltf. ceroivn Nt11011, ecvc.
PHRF-1 111) -I. Plum Cr1rv. loO Mcl11·
tvrt. DPYC; 2. MucllO Gldto, Jot" Mclfalft,
DWYC, 1 Hloh Sff"Uf19, 900 sw.,., DPYC; 4
RlmN9t, L.nu McCIOt, 09YC; S. Trts
Gotoo, Prict -Ht'ibKll Pured, ICYC.
PHRF·C (9) -l Vuloer 8oltman, Dk.k
AmlOWI', DPYC, '1 Ecatacv, Al JolllllOll,
DPYC, 3. Cllilltse Flrtclflll, Cnrl1 81Klon, C100
I YC.
CAT ALINA·27 110) -l. Rff99Ctv Ann II.
Joa.pf\ Hl'illll, OYC, '1. 'DaYbfMll, loO G•lt1,
Caoo I YC, 3. Strtna, JoM wtlllt. DPYC.
MORC (10)·-1.lnlllllCt, 01vt c-. GNo
IYC, 2 Wrtckteu, A.G l(adlflt, ~ aYC, ).
l ullet. Dick Brown, 8CYC.
ALAMITOS IAY YC (14l11Mta. I dalMI)
LI00-1'A (21) -l. Clllrlft Cumrnlno•. A8YC; 2. BIN Oentllrt, Encino YC; 3. Merk
Gau01o. ecvc, 4. P1u4 &tank, eve. s. G1rv
Ttlornt, ICYC.
LI00-148 (11) -l 8ry111 Peuon, MIYC, 2
Dall Vordell,8YC; 3. llloew Palltoon, M8YC.
$HIPE A (J7) -I. Mlcftetl S111"11toom,
AIYC; 2. Fo11tme11•JoM\Ofl, KHYC; :a. Chrl1
lllHll, HHYC; 4 .• Ktlltl Oodton, AIYC; S. Jack
Franco, IYC.
SNIPE I (4) -l. SltYt Mc.Jontt. CIYC.
CottOHA00-15 (2') -1.Sdl...--Jtwell,
AIYC; 2. BOii Allderrton, A8YC; 3. Tad Stoller,
Al YC; ._ Jim Ho6der, WL YC, S. Ltsllt Gt-.
AIYC
Sllllivan A ward
ready to uµveil
Parry O'Brien
recfllls good times
after 25 years --
INDIANAPOLIS (A P) -Parry
O'Brien's Sulli van Award trophy.
now 25-ycars-old. sits proudly in his
Los Angeles home -thanks to some
repair work by a friend of the family.
The two-Olympic champion in the
shot put. being honored at this year's
Sullivan banquet in recognition of the
sil ver annivti\ary of his selection as
the nation's top amateur athlete, had
his trophy shattered during a visit to a
television show'1 sct. I ,
. He told the story Sunday at a
reception b)' the Amateur Athletic
Union, which will be Jiving the award
for the 5Sth time tonight.
The winner will be one of 10
Olympic &old medalists - only the
second time in history all the finalists
can claim the distinction.
"I went to the set of Bonanza to
pose for some pictures with Lome
Oretn (the show's star)." said
O'Brien. "Hedropped it on a concrete
floor and it broke in about nine paf1J,
the marble split, the cast iron split."
The family friend. a retired welder,
put it together "with a little soldering
and he buffed down all the marks.
You'd never know this thinf was
drowed. He did it for free,' said
O'Bnen. who has the trophy of a
m1ntcl in his home. ~
O'Brien. now senior vice president
for a bank. returned to competition
last year for the first time since 1966
1t the Masten level.
At 53. he S1ill weighs the same 250
pounds he ~arried while winning
Olympic aold in 1952 and '56.
"It has become a lot more •if,?ifi-
cant," he .said of the award. 'The
reason I felt so fonunate in winning it
was that it covCT'Cd all amateur
spons.''
The list of contcnden this time
includes La1un1 Hills' Ore&
Loupnis. the winner of ft'Ore na-
tional divina championships than
anyone in the nation's history. He's
m~kin1 his sixth consecutive bid for
the Sullivan.
Hurdler Edwin Moses won the
award last year and is expected 10
present this year's award.
Smith wins in 55 minute•
I.A QUINTA -. tan Smith
brce1ed pa§t Sob Lu11 6-3, 6-0
unday 1n a match (hat lOOk just S5
minutes to win the S40,000 Hayes
Classic tennis tournament for players 3' years old and up.
Smith. 38. overpowered his Iona·
time doubles panncr with his 1tron1
service, logins eiahl ~ dur1na the
Ont-sided match at the LA Quinta
Hotel Tenni C1ub.
Lull. 37. foll behind J.I J'" 1he
optnanuct and never really threaten·
ed Smith aAcrward.
The victory in the event. one of 11
1cops on the Gr11nd Champion\ tour
th11 >CU , v.-11 worth SS.000 10 m11h,
Wlth lut7 collcctina S'4.000.
"He rc:lut n1 1ervc1 well,'' 11id
mith, former Wimbledon and U.S. ~ sinafet champion. "The best
way to comblt that is to terVC
cfTttt1vcly. I tcrVcd into the comcn
and I milled it up with different spins
and d1fTcttnt1ot1cementt •• , I served
utremcly we(l."
Lut1 remarkcd, "It wasoneoftb0te
day . EvCT)'th1n1 seemed to bt &Ol"I
his way and I didn'l tet any bre9kt at
all. I can't Lh1nk of too many thinp he
did wrona." r
Smtih and lutt wm oae of the
bcttrr mcn'1 doublet ieamt in tennis
earttn" 1n their catftt'I. winnina fout
U. . Open doUbtn titlri and reKhtnt
.: •• doubln final at Wimbkdon thrft
11mc:s.
INTElllNATIONAL-14 (24) -I. Eric Artnt.
Dlalllo YC; 2. Jim Melonev, ltldmond YC; 3.
Jedi Wlla, AIYC; 4. Tom Edwards, Callfornle
SIJll!lll Cklt> 1 Ken ClauMn, lllldw'nonO YC.
FINN (14) -l. lllld\ard 8yron, ~·
SliN11t Ann.; 2. Louie Nady, SI. FYC; l. RCIOen Odar, AIVC; 4. Rick Prince, MIYC; 5. JoM
H1rre>1>, SOYC.
LASER II CS) -I. U ttle·LlPPlalt WL YC; 2.
MorHn LtrlOll, Sanla Crut YC.
J-2• 121) -I. Ala11 Smith, AIYC; 2. CharlU
O'Lnrv. SDYC; 3-Dave Cnapln, AIYC, 4
KotlerMofftt, AaYC; 1 Jim Cl\allman, A8YC
MtSMON IAY YC (1tit.......,1m.->
SAILBOARD OPEN Cl.ASS (1•) -1. Jtff
Jontl, 8SSA; 2. Rldt Cook, lay SllorH SA; 3.
Ttrrv Frlllk, 8SSA; 4.JoM Dufour; 8SSA.
WAYLElll Ill -l. Eric l(rftl\, MIYC; 2.
lllllldV Gallmal\, M8YC; 1 Jim Klf1I, AIYC. wtNDSOlt~l!lll Ill -l. IMUrldo To.c.no, CCYC, 2 Ttiornu Gocldlrd, SCRA; 3. Jofln
T orttOllt, 1111ttlac:llect
GEARY-II 113) -l. JOfl11 Sctlitlltr, CIYC, ?.
Au1tln '"9oo!H, CI YC; 3. Bud EV91'tll, MaYC;
4. Chrl1 Knudton, SIYC.
LIGHTNING (I) -l. SCOll FlllkOoMr,
MSYC, ?. Kirk Jollntoll, MIYC; l. Mlkt
ar-1', MIYC.
THISTLE If ) -I. 8ruce Grafft, M8YC; 2.
Mark Thol'nPton. e ve, J. Wll Cumtrllnln.
MIYC, c DIYIO Kl't11, Frtano YC.
VICTORY Ill -l. Tom Leonerd , Frtano YC;
2. Clluok PhllliP\, FYC; 3. Tom AndtrlOll, FVC.
LASER 13'1 -l . 0ouo Keller, SClllA; Ktllll
Laby, Vt11 YC; 3. Ger Wrlont. SClllA; •. P1lrlck
Al\dl'HIOll, SI. FYC; S. Jl(n Oti., A8YC.
ANACA~A YC
(:1411eeft,)dH-)
PHlllF·A Ct) -1 SllYMll, R°'9rf. Grarlt,
SBYC; 2 Pvll\l90f'H, R. WW-, ~ YC; l.
D1ncl119 8e1r II. G. ~. Ana YC. PHRF•I (I) -1. Grttn Flalf\, 8. McKtnna,
Ch1n11et Ir.land• YC; 2. Wtr Palllt, L. Tl\omtltOl't,
AM YC; l. Sell Sc>rltt , R. Hoclot, Ana YC.
~c Ill -l. Poltev. KlallH.arson. ven
YC, 2. Rotan, K. COMtlY, SBYC; 3. ltufflan,
Stnlor-Tavtor, Rov .. Hew ZMland YIChl SQdtl
CAMILLO eaACH YC
(4lllMta.4 daUft)
TORNADO Ill -1, Rll11t>ow1 Elld, 8uuard
TtvlO<, Rlcnmolld YC; 2. No name, llM Ptum-
mtr, CIYC. 3. PumPkln Ealt', 8ruc:e HtrvtY,
CIYC.
MERCURY 115) -I Per 8radlty, St. FYC,
2. Oouo l1lrd, FYC, l Dick Clark ,Mollterev
Pel\lnwtl YC, 4. P111to11 D1vl,,St. FYC.
CAL 20A (14) -l. Tubbv TOllY, Gerv Jotltlton, CIYC; 2 ClltfOllH, Teo
Rtbmln, C8YC; l. Pllllburv'• 8'$1,
SltYt 8ulltf, LSF; .. Rlmbullctlolls v. Chuck
Mlnt1l110, CIYC.
CAL 209 161 -1. Cllrln y, Cerolt Cook,
C8YC, 2. ChaPltr Two, Larry Rottman, CIVC
K9"G HMlac>a YC (Jtlleeta, )dHMI)
PHlllF·A (14) -1. GllOsl lkn1W1, Her-
r\Clltft·Sltvtll\Otl-Slllbts, CYC-S8VltC; 2.
Wlncff11l, LH Ntwfltld, CYC; 3. W1rll\o9, Ulrry
&. Linde, Strew, WYC; 4. lttclllnt, Anotl-
McGulMu KHYC.
PHRF·S 0 4) -1. z..,, ltlctl llndl, CIYC,
1 lttcf Aler1, Ourden-Tllomas, WYC-C'VC; l
Siii SMk•. Peter St-erl, KHVC; .. H~ On, Snooov, Rem AnotC, KHYC.
PHlllF·C Ill) -1. Destination Unknown, Ty
HolleMOn, WYC; 2. 5moil•L J. Gro41maf!, eve. 3.
Sllnoer, L. SQl"Vroutn, ••YC.
IALIOA YC•IAHtA COIHNTHIAN YC , ....... ,di .... )
ETCHELLS-ft In) -l Don.._, NHYC,
1. Jim l ucklfllfltm, NHYC, l. GntOfl Of'tll,
e ve ... PllM lllllf'nMI', NHYC; 8'ad ~ 900
wi.ler, I YC.
SOLING (I) -l. ~rt ISMCI, CYC; 2. Gilbert
Smith, $anf1 Crua YC; l . SI...,. k.k, IYC.
SHll!LDS (6) -1. Brien Hench, UCISA; Gr" F .. IOfl, Claremont,
HOt.Dl!R-20 (t) -I. Sttw Ill°"• IYC; 2 .
Dtvld wtlteloctl, VYC; l. Hel GlldttUMYe, FYC.
SANTANA-20 (16) -1. Harr; ~ 900
P1ttlton, NHYC; 2 Jent Sdlodl, NHY;lJ.Scotl
Hartis, Cor YC; 4. KtllY lllOMtt, 11rf"C; S
Clllrlll How.,d, WYC. C~ "9ndlcff ,, .. ,011 KtllY Rotitrl.
OPYCJ. ClfllV St, Ameftf, ICC:YC, Clertl Owrttl, SCCY1;;.
NeWfl'OltT MMIOll YC-UOO 11U1 YC ott..-..12 ...... ,
IAIOT •A (J3) -l, f9ul Not1ftt HHYC1 2.
lllllld't L.ellt.1. SOYC; ), Scott Llnll'Y, K>YC; 4.
Erlo ~oue. •YC; s. Alta cemtt. SOYC.
SAIOT a (14) -1. kefl t:r SOYCJ 2.
Slnefl Mln!Oft, KYC; J CNk enrt, l.A'rC1 ._ !rlkt Norine, HHYC,
IAIOT C (t ) -1,..., Dal 1•11111er, L.AYC;
2. 1.Aur911 Uk, ICYC1 J ~ Cetftl,
NHYC.
IAIOT C·2 (61 -I Dell Oonelr~. llYC1 t Oeoff Oettlloft, NHVC.
SAIOT C•) <6) -1. Cetflel'IM 1,,..,, HHYC1
2. Cllrlt..,._ Quinn. e1vc. S8Na SAIOT(4) -1. NIU SCMoone, IVC:.
SAIOT 40 "'-Cit ) -I. JMt KtMY, sovca. o..r,. V1Mtr..or1. uvc: , o. ..
Till9llf, LI~ 4 DtrotlYY WN111r, SOYC.
HOt.Oltt:f ") -l, WM Cwmldltel, IVC:1 2, OW...._. K_.., IYC:, > ~
,...,,_,. IYC. •
OJ,tHOl•·t2 Cf> -I. Otvkl Sn1110::1 2. ~ Alt11--, C... IYC:1 <J. Jollll , NHVC
I.AMR A <'I -1 Keltrl LU9toft, HHYC; t. -"'*"· HHYC LAM• I C6) -I Mike r.-. ICYC.. t. Oltllly Ollln, LIYC.
C:YCLOM 16) -1 Tim Gr...,, SI IVC, ' ic..-lucUI, UCllA. _.,TC ._,
M*llV (71-1. Jellft ~ wvc, r o.... ..._.,,eve:. ...,.." iMOf ta Cl) -I ........ WY~ t. 0... _.,....,,_, OtlYC. •
W HT WA•O IMOT M llJ -, ..... ~. KHYCJ I Kurt ._,.., IUn'C
I
Stln.set
fue~gue
tracK ....
Thur•, Fa ti -CotOlle .. ,,,,., Tllun ,., • -11 LI Mllllu111 ' "
Set., Mwc:ll t -lrvlM tnvtt11101111 1• a.rn )
Thun .. Mwct 14 -., LI Wlltofl; S.t .. Mtfch
1' -'81clt Clllet lnvlt11ion,1 Ill NewPOft
H41111of, • un >1 Tllun,. MMdl 21 -11 w .. tmlm19'•; Tllun., Merdl n -°'"" v1tw• 1 Set .• f!Mfctt JO -Minion Vltlo .... .,. ti
Lin.). '
Thun.. Aorll ll -Huntlnttoll a..c11• · S.t
A#ll 13 -Arc.die lrwll1tloftll (TIA); Thur&.' Aor• 11 -11 FOUfltalfl V11tv•; Set., ._,M 10 _:
T111Mll ltlllvt (I Im.), Thur1., Al>'~ H -
MMlna•; Frl·Sll., Aorll 2 .. 27 -Ml. SAC
.... .,. It a.m. on Set >1 Tun., Aprlt )0 -Sulllll
L8"U1 ,Pftllmt 11 Hunllneton Bffch.
Fri,, Mav 3 -11111111 LQOut Flllllt at Hunttneton kadl.
MerlM
Fri., Ftb. 22 -at trvltle; Thurs., Ftb 2' -Gahr 111 .. 11a11onal (TIA)
Tllut\., Mlfcll 7 -~ Hilt, Thura., Mtreh 14 -Vallncla; Sit., Maldl 16 -kac11
Cltll\ 1nv11111ont1 la t NewPOn Hwbfr, I a.rn ),
T11ur1., Mardi 21 -H1111trneton 1ttcti• 1 Sit ,
• ~di 23 -lfallol> Amel ltelllvi (TIA); Tllul'a .•
MMCll 2' -at "ount1ln V1t11v•.
Thur•., Aorll 1l -II Ocean View•; Thur• .•
APl'll II -w .. tmlnater•, Sit., Aorll 20 -Tualln
.... YI (TIA); Wed .. Aorll 24 -It Edfaon•;
Frl.-S.t .. Aorll 2 ... 27 -Ml. SAC RNYS 11 a.m.);
Tuea., Aorll lO -Sunalt LHi>UI Prtllrns •• Huntlnoton lffdl.
Fri.. Mav ) -Sun111 L"oue Flnab at Huntlneton lffdl.
HIMflsllHn ... ch
Tllura., Ftb. 11 -HewPOft HarbOr; ThUl't ..
Fib. ,. -., LI Quinta.
Sii., March 16 -IMcll Cltl11 1n .. 11a t1onat lat
IMwPOrt Herpor, I 1.m.); Thun., Match 21 -at
Marina-. T~a., March 2t -W11tmtns1er•.
Thurs., Aorll 11 -I I Edison•; TIIUl'I .• AorH
11 -~ View•, Wed.. Allf'U 24 -F°""taln
V..._.,.; TUI\., Aorll JO -Sunwt LMllUI
Prlllmt.
Fri .. Ml't ) -Sutt111 LAaoue Finals.
Ocean View
Thurs., Fib 21 -11 E1tancl1; Tllun .. Fet>.
2t -Tullln.
Fri .. March I -Senta Ana Retav• (TIA);
Thurs .. March 7 -at S.vanna; Set .. March 16
-IMcll Clllet 1n .. 11a11ona1 (at Newiiort Hlfl)or, I a.m.); Thur1., Merell 21 -Fountain va11ttv•;
Tllur1:..-MarCll 2t -at Edison•; Sit .. March lO
-Orange COUlltv 1n .. 1111ion.i (al Minion Vlelo,
tam >.
Thurs .. Aorll 11 -Martna•; s.1 .. Aorll 13 -Arcadia tnvllatlonal ITIA), T11ur1., Aorll 11-at
Hunllnoton a..cn-. s.1.. APf'P 20 -Tuatlfl
RNYS (TIA), Thut'I., APrll n -•• Wnl·
minster•; Frl.-Sat .. Aprll 2'·27 -N\J. SAC
ltetan 11 e.rn.); Tun .. APf'll lO -SunMt l11oue Prtllms at HuntlnOton leach.
Fri.. Mav 3 -Sunwt LllOut Flnalt at
Huntlnoton l1tc11
Wntmlnster
Thurs .. Marcll 21 -Ecslson•. Thurs .. Merell 21 -at HunttnotOft kacn•
Thuri.. Aprll 11 -Fountain Vat1ev•. Thurs.,
Aorll 11 -at Marina•. T11Ur1 . AorH 25 -OcMn
view•; Tue• .. APf'll lO -Sutt11t LAaout Prallms
a t Hunllnoton INell.
Fri.. Mlv ) -Sunatl L•l1>UI Flnal• at
Hunllneton BHch.
l'euntaln v ....
Thun •• Fttl. ,. -., El Toro.
Fri . March I -S.nta Ana RNYI ITllAI.
Thur1.. Merell 1 t... LI Mllllltan; Thur~ .. Merell u -Marer Del. Set • Mardi 16 -luCll Cities 1n .. 11atlonal (at,.. __ , Harbor,• a..m.), Thuo ,
Merell 21 -at ocean v1-·. Thurs., Marc11 :it
-Marina•.
Thur• .. Aorll 11 -at wn1mtn11«•; Thurs ..
APl'll 11 -Edison•. Sat., APl'll 20 -T11111n
Retavs ITIA); W9d .. Aprll ,. -at Hunllnoton
leach•; Frl.·Sal., APl'll 26·27 -Ml. SAC Relays
II a.m.>; TUii.. APl'll :lO -Sun11t LllllUt Prtllms at HunllnotOft IMCh.
Fri.. Mav J -Sunwt LMllUt Flnat1 at
HuntlnOton kadl
• OtnOlll SunMI Laaout me.t. All me.ts allel
ll!vllatlonals bt9lfl at 3 o.m units• o!MnwlM
noted.
UNIDEN •••
From Bl
ceremony. Most of the players want
to get to bed early the night before a
tournamentand that is the reason for
moving the dinner to Monday night."
Forthose interested in playing. the
fee isS I ,()()()with the money going to
the two charity recipients-Make A
Wish and Share Ourselves. both of
Orange County. lfinterested in
playing. phone the &ournamcnt office
at 432-J 775.
Larry IJarashi. the tournament
direCtor.1s takinaa lower profile this
year in staging the event. He is very
much in evidence but is leaving the
details to Zangger and his committee
this time around and feels he has the
tournament in competent hands.
From all appearances. the.event 1s
read y to go nght now with more than
two weeks still to ao before the pros
tee off for the first round on Thurs-
day March 7.
If the weather holds like it has been
this past week. bigger crowds than last
year would be almost a certainty.
Yes. spring is here and itsgolfttme
along the Orange Coast.
World record
to East German
SENFTENBERG. East Germany
(AP) -Marita Koch of East Ger-
many and shot putter Ulf Tim-
mermann set world indoor bests in
the National Indoor Track and Field
Championships Saturday. the official
-news ucncy AON reponed.
Koch. 28. bettered her world in-
door best in the women's 60-metcr
dash. with a time of 7.04 seconds.
four-hundredthi of a second faster
than the clocking of 7.08 she set Jan.
29. 1983. ~
MD 's Lewis rua
Wltb area scorta'g
Mater Ori Haah·sTom Ltw1s. wtth .,... T•" Gres Gooriaan·a matt of 2.'°6 •
I witt·to-WU'f OVttWbelmina ftW'lln • lllJ .,. lie Ctttctnl.I \1al.ley, ond~ftdd.1.aheOran.,eCouum1'1 :, ~:: 0:. Mar ~ : ft~ : Mark Wulfeincycr of TJOJ WMI
top tcOri".'$ machine in ~P buUt-> ""'°'°· unlvw.itY n '" 11.> • the aU·time mark of 2.609 O¥a" • _.
ball, finiabant lhe ~ular seuon with t =· ~ e.::.. B ~ ~ : of four ytan.
a ~~~~American. u .... ,. --~:~ '-~-. ~ n * 1u » Thtrc att cwo juniors ia •Or9llil "~ xv~'""'"' 1 Oarlwlh, •~ v w 11.1 •1 Coast Ara·s Top 10 - C .... M
by the Monarchs u a shootinJ paard : ~ ~. 1,U,9;.'1~11~ : ffl ::.! : Mars Jdf'Fryer 11 No. :2 ... a -befo~ beina put back in his familiar 1t. Mc:G•~...,. Het-.r n • U.2 21 of 23.4. and Wlleboet .._,.
rok at the low post, scored 30 points Bryant WahorusatchcNo.llliMWitllt
or.more 16 times with a hiah of 40 No. 2 spot before he's tbf'OUlh. And. a t6.9a"eraet·
tw1«. he's No. 4' on the all-time rcbound.ina The mOll sipificant dlaftll is dw
He just recently ~1,1rpasscd Wayne list for CIF Southern Section players. emerteoce of &1.1ncia•a Scoa O.
Carlander to become No. 4 on the all-100, with 1.133. mentl. who moved ildO ak No. 7 alcll
time list of CIF Southern Section Lewis is 139 points behind Leon with a 17.3 averaeie.
career )(orer' with 2,321 in three Wood's mark of 2.460 whit~ at St. Ckments scored 72 pOi8u ill Iii
yearsandappearstohavca shotat the Monica High and 192 points .shv of last two Sea View LQaw _...
*** 0 *** ••• Final area regular Season scoring.
c.lr.,.. c1e1 IMt C1t·6> ,..,..... VII/Wt (1'-7) Mllf1M (11-14) •
Frvt1r
Morris
Zlmmtt
Gr-
Smlr1
Lemmon
harbower
Chrltllanwn
Stavner
John1ton
Slreun
Turner ,,...,,....
P91ichowtkl
Judel
l(lmmt
Loudtn
Stroldl
Carlson
Shuctl Car,_
Ha rrison
ltodr19Utl
Mcllrov
••1¥9.llte ••1¥9.119 ••we.• u 516 n.• J7 Mar11t1 n m 1u ,. Gulld 22 2AI 11.2 tt
2S JM IU 2t Ir"-13 332 IU 27 l(llUfl 2S 211 1.7 23
25 2'° U " Thomas 12 11• U i1 Oeoronon 2• 10f 1.7 22
9 '3 7.0 IS L Zeno 21 125 U 1' Pl 24 124 S.I 1'
2• 1• ' 1 IS Hotner n m ss 11 ~lhtim • ,. •.1 12 3 IS S,) I Emtf'IOtl n f'1 • I 13 Quinn 2• '2 ) I 12
I) :M 2.6 ii GamDffl ) t ) O • Craft 1S It U 14
1) lO 2.3 6 E Zeno U AO U 13 Crw. 19 SA U 10
2 • 2.0 2 Gordon 16 •S U 7 Medina 11 '7 2.7 t
6 11 1.t • 3 NHlt 2 I 4S 2.1 ' Havlletta 7 11 2.S 7 23 AO I 7 6 H!ulla 2 • 2 0 2 Neumann 1' 39 U 1
22 J7 1.6 7 KotlKll 12 19 1 S 7 Clmmarr\Jltl S 2 O.A 2
• 6 1.S • Scort 10 • 0.A 2
•• a,,.. ... n :w1 10 21 2• )Sl IV 27
24 2SA 10.S 17 n 1• u ll n m u 12
11 ... 4.1 10
13 3' 2.7 7
" 2t 2.S 6
• " 2.0 10
11 " I • • II f 07 2
""""'_..' heO Ct-IJ>
Hower Cl
Hane .. ..,
Snow
Parl111u
Schull
Kao 11111
. ., ...,... ...
22 291 I )S '11 n be 1o.a n
22 23' 10.7 19
I I '° •
19 us 7.1 "
1 • •.O • . 22 66 J.O 9
10 25 2 s ' " " ,. . 11 ., 2.3 t
IMtw Del C25·t) . . . ~ ..
2S 1G J2..1 • 1S l• 10 'l1 n • u 14
,, "' u 11 2• n u 1 u n u 12
" • 2.1 ' 2• ., If s
IS 2' 1.1 7 12 17 I.• •
I 10 12 •
11 l2 1.1 •
II f0.12 Edhen (f· 14)
Miit•
Harr'9an
Cl\lmo!Oft MoOtrtv ee1 ... 1ro1
2 ) IS J
• 2 0 s 2
LAwl$
MllcNI
ThomM l(tlv
Owvtr ~
Remotf't
Pffboelv
PallOll Stricklin
SOtnc:.lf'
Medrital
JOotce
O'C-lltdoulv 1) ' 0.7 )
Ammann
COIMtl
McCoMtll
Katona
Whtelwrlvht
Coll
DulloM Prince
Smjlh
Meroulln
$ancbltdl
Som•11 O.rn
•• a"9. ... n 291 1u 24
19 196 10.3 25
23 170 7.A 2•
23 I» 6.7 IS II 102 U IS
22 112 s.o " 20 ... .., u n n >.1 10 21 ., 2.) 1
12 26 2. I 6
12 IS 1.2 7
• 2 o.s 2 s 0 0.0 0
E ltanele ( 24· 3> ............ 27 .. 7 17.3 Al
27 343 12.7 23
2' l06 11.7 2•
'l7 11• 10.1 21 27 1)1 U I)
1) 26 2.0 10
6 I) 2.1 •
1mn. c1-m
Htf'rlno
Patcntll
Trout
S. Tamura
RIVI
Moceri
SnodclV
Sc:llulll
MurPllV
I( Tamura
Baldwin
l(rnhtf
2: ~ ~ ': 2• 311 12.9 22
IS IAO 93 1'
23 113 7 9 20
72 Ill U 17
2• 13' u " 19 103 S.• 13 nnui.
17 Al 2. ll
7 17 2 4 '
' 11 1' ' • 3 0.7 2
La9UM hedt Cl· 15)
N ... ~, Jorela
... ,,.. ...
22 Al l IU .2' 23 217 •• 22
11 f0.72
.... ...,, ~ (22·J)
McGavran
Mew
FraM" S«~
leecfl
M. LM
A. LM
LlndAv
Truone
J-
Ha'l'du TortM
..........
25 .OS IU 77
2S l6l 14.S 2•
2S lOS 12.2 2S
,. 110 4.S 12
1S 110 u 16
23 1Sl.7 12
2• " u • 14 AO 2.1 7
205.22.61
25 47 1.1 6
17 l2 1.1 •
11 23 11 '
S.dll1t11dl ( lS· \0) ..........
25 «23 IU 77
2S 412 IU 2'I
24 1'2 10.f 1S
2S 25' 10 2 22
OCllM VIN Cll·J) ........
D M 11.t it
at 2" lU • M M lU 22
2• ,,. ... " D lit U 1'
11 -u 15
" 7' l.7 " 21 .. ).2 I
" '1 u • ... I.I ' lO I0.14
U..•• (4·1t)
AIMlld
ll'IKAIOn ~
SltQofl
~
Werren
C>rltlrwlc
GrettOfl
Mesll
Meflrtent Ferr ..
SaMo
PltCIMSI
......... 2l ,., 17.1 •
• 171 l..S 15
2214' '-511
2'l •• s.s " 21 • 4.1 lJ •• u 12 n ,. i.1 1
lS M U I
12 10 u •
10 " u • IS • 13 e
• ' 11 2 • I u ,
W•1'rl 1t1 C•M)
5cl\urtN11
0.-
0.Vla Herr ta
l.cwt J Smllll
~ COOMr
ll Smllll
llall s .. Cllllod9
"~"" Pw'I•
Hurd
.........
22 -'IU J) 10 2U IU 21
22 m 10.1 n
21 fS u " 21 IS U ll
21 " 37 " 1) l6 2.7 12
61S2.S6
17 l6 2.1 s
to 10 2.0 ' 7 12 1.7 4
1'1217•
5 ' 1.2 • • ' OJ •
w ....... (4-17> ..........
ti 9S '" 11 21 IC 6.1 IS
21 IJf u ..
20 -f.A 22 20 Ill u 12 ....,,... ...... ., ....... ~
Mater Det•a Tom Lewis hu been head and •hoalden abo•e
the competition on ht• way to a .cortnc a•eraae of 32.1.
Clements
Lodl""OOCI MooMv
Sttml>'
Van Doren .....
Must•t•
co ... v
FUl'ln
Panarl\1
Ericson
~r•
2• so 2 0 • 2S '2 1.6 10
9121.)•
7 • 0.6 2
6 ) o.s 2
Ettst
Watford H«omen
McGralll
0....111
Fonunt
Lewttr
22 I .. u 2•
22 155 70 1' n ,., •• 25
23 146 u 10
%160267
20 )7 ••• 6 • 06 •
I WeflOll
M. WallOft
PetenOll
OHi
.I-.
lkltllf'
GOIOen
Cooti
Sar>ta Cruz
Cole
22 ICJ U 1'
14 .. l • f
14 ,, 2 1 10
22 J7 u 6
If " 1.0 ' 10 ' 0.9 )
MurPllv
LYOll T~
~
I( ....
llfv•n Yon
Crvt1r
Plltllol
R.ounatllll
21 1a u 11
21 S3 2S ' 1'50 27 6
10 17 1.7 s
12 7 O.i ,
JIM HARRIS
Ocean View
DAVE BROWN
Fountain Valley
AREA TEAMS FACE TOUGH ROAD ..•
From Bl
arc the top seed tn the 4-A. followed
by Santa Monica. Dominguez and
Lynwood.
Mater Oei·s Gary McKn ight was
outspoken about his team's ass1gn-
men1 with Verbum Dci. a very strong
at-large quintet.
"I think we drew the toughest team
possible." said McKnight. "I think
they·rc better then most of the second
place teams, at least as equal.
.. They split with St. Bernard's and
we're going to have 10 play a whale of
a game."
"Serra gets Westminster and Ocean
View gets St. Francis. But. sooner or
later you ha11e to beat them to get
there. " said McKnight.
Ocean View Coach Jim Harris
c11ed the fact his team is lumped in the
same bracket with Long Beach Poly.
St. Anthony. Pius X and St. Bernard.
"That's five of the top eight in one
bracket," says Harris.
"St. Francis goes 6-7, 6-4. 6-1. 6-1.
6--0 and although ifs onl y a .500 club.
two of their best missed nine games GARY McKlQGHT
with injuries. Mater Del
"The bracket reminds me of the
San Dimas Tournament when we Mar High Coach Jack Emon·s
were in the toughest bracket... response to a match up at Mission
Fountain Valley got past Co mpton Viejo. "They've got four guys at 6-4
in December wnh guard Simon and a center (Tim Knowles) at 6·6.
Thomas sidelined wit_h an injury. ~ut "And they·vc really staned 10 score
the Tarbabes have a history of pla ying a tot of points lately. Their me
much better in Febru•ry than Decem· presents a problem and they must
ber. . 1 have some shooters. Ocean View is
.Among the :rarbabes ar~ 6-5 senior obviously a very good team and 11
Vincent Da vis. 6-7 Jarvis He Ilaire shows what they can do down there."
and 6-2 guard Barry tfcads. Mission Viejo dealt Ocean Vie" a
De~~sk has the unique advantage 49-48 defeat in the season opener.
of wa1ung 10 see who he plays with Emon·s not thrilled about the
Wednesday's 4-A wild card game at * * *
matchup. but on the other hand.
neither 1s M1s$10n VicJo·s Bob Min i-
er.
"I think wc could have gollcn a
better draw." said Minier. "You
know when you go against an Emon
team ifs going to be a wcll<oached
situation.
"We'll defin11cl y tr) to run. but if s
hard to dictate the tempo to Emon. I
swear he wouldn't carc 1f the score
was 4-2.
"We JUSt have to remember not to
get impatient and do something
stupid.··
Estanr 1a's Joe Reid. in hts first
appearance in the CIF pla)ofTs as a
head coach. 1s wa ry of Santa 4'na·s
height. sa)ing "They go 6-6. 6-5 and
6-2. and the 6-2 1s Jeff Stewan. who
can reall) leap.
"I felt fo r a wh ile maybe we'd get to
play outside of the count}. but I guns
that's the trend."
The Eagles played one of their best
halves of the )Car against Costa Mesa
last Fnday and Reid says he's hopeful
it'll carry over.
This is Estancia 's eight h straight
trip to th e ('IF pla)offs and 1n 1hat
span the) '"e won their opener e'er)'
tt me. Santa .\na Coach Grt"g Coombs
says he v.atched Estancia 1n tts I 0-0
vs. I 0-0 shootou t Wlth Mater De1 at
the Orange tn v1tauonal 1n December.
"They were prett) dang 1m-
press1 ve." sa~s Coombs "The) ·re
ver) win-oriented and "'c·re going to
be in tough. Weha,etosta~ tncontrol
so their press docsn·1 hurt us and stop
an~ 6-8 paint runs··
* * * San Gorgonio. where the Spanans arc
coached by former Westminster H 1gh
Coach Doug Stockham.
"All we know is we get 10 scout
Wcdnesdav night." said De Busk.
First round CIF pairings
"I don't understand the rationale
that we arc able to play a wild rard
team." added DeBusk. alluding 10
Mater De1's ma1chup w11h an at-large
team in 5-A as the No. I seed.
"In our situation I knew 11 was
1l01na 10 be tou~h." was Corona del
CtP S·A ,.ST llOUM> ,,,_., 1 .. 1
V.,..,. Del (12-11) n. MIW Dtl US·t l 11
Cf\epmen COlltM
ComPlon ll•·tl at .,......,_ Vtlltn t 1'-7)
Joreltn 111-12) a t ComotOft ll•·fl
We...,.ttr 11-14) at Serra (lf·SI w .. 111 (10-1)) 11 Lone leach Poh• (17 11
St AntllOnv 117·5) al Altmany I 11·71 sr aamaro 116-7) 11 Plus x I i.-tl
St F rancis 111-12) at Ocileft View 111·JI
Cffl 4·A
lAI L.I M••eel• ( 1 11 •• Monrow .. ( 12 ,,
IBI p_.., Vt<Ot 11) 61 at Vuce oa 10-111
IC> Soutll H• ' I ll·t> 11 Arrovo 111· 141
P:llUT ltOU .. O tf<ridly, 1:JO)
Cf\em,,,.Ot 1t ·ll t 11 Se<lt1 Cle•• 122·31
El,lnore 11••71 at North,.•ew 110 In
San Olmu l U t) 11 O...r lt 11•·11
W110 Caro A 11 Santa Mar .. 1 lt·Sl
Bell·Jatt 110·31 a t h~ C1tv 116·9>
.\OOle v .... ,. 1 U·I> at lncllO 1 l4·t l
Avoura C II 111 11 Gl9nn It· 10)
RiO"tttl CU f > et Ca!lf'tllo 1'·41
Wilkins was the third choice ~D CMD •AMS CWeMla .. y, 7:J0l .....,., 1 i.-•> at Seti Gor90fllo m -n
ll.ST ..OU.O (...,._.,, 7!31)
"-tllOrfle ll•tfl I G-... lfl·O>
Senta ..,._,a (IS.-1 ) et CerNrllo llf -51
CNO v ...... f2t-S) at lttdlencb t 17-71
1.-.cll CM·J> at Sen!• AA1 (17-1) c• n, .. , ., M1u1on lllttlll tn·•>
Wild Cerd II •• San lt,.narc""o 11l·3>
Wtlel C"o C et Cl\eri.r O.' I 11-0
St JOMOfl ( 12· 101 •t Norelllott I l•·t '
S# Lu11 ()o.fOO ( ll·11 11 IWXOll!ttt lt ·•I
ca1 .. 1co I 1'·2) ., lletwlt"t 120->1
Arlft,. 111 Ill et E• Monlt 11 .. 71
But he ets wtnntn
shot as Atlanta
topples Clippers
LO ANGELES (Ar) -Domi-
nique Wilkins wanted the ball, want-
ed to take the last shot.
In the play the Atlanta Hawk'
picked, however, Wilkins was the
third choice to act the ball.
Fortunately for the Hawks and
unfonunately for the Lo Anact
Clippers, he ncvenhele s wound up
with the ball. sank a twistina thrtt·
footer with thrtt seconds rtmain1na
and Atlanta came up with a 91 -90
National .Ba ketball Auociatton v1~
1ory Sunday niaht.
0 Mya s1stantscall~ the last play:·
tatd Hawks Coach Mike Fra1ello.
"Oom1n1quc was our third option.
He wa to t a tcrttn then move 10
the hoop and he did 1u~t th1t."
After the Hawks inbounded the ball
at midcoun with some siit seconds
remainina. Wilkins floated into the
middle, and, in l'leavy traffic. lofttd
the baJI up and in.
In the last shot oh~hat wasa frantic
lint h. Norm Nixon missed a 20.
footer that would have won ll for the
Clippers at the buucr.
Wilkin ' aamc·Wlllnina basket
1411e hinl 36 point on the evening.
and he id afterward. "When the
pmc sot li&hl. they were ao•na lo me
and I made the ~hots. Down the
strctt'h. I w1n1rd the ball."
He Wiid or ht, final hot. "I had I
nice hnlc arc on 11 and 11 ju t 711
throuah."
The lead changro hand live times
in the final m1n u1c of the contest at
the Lo Anaclc' pons Arcna. .
-\ner the ( hpptrs 'Corrd nine
consccuuvc po1 n1 lo lead 84-78 wuh
3:47 lcn . Cliff u"1n1s1on' thrtt-
po1nt pla} II"' 4\tlanta an 87· 6 advanta~~ The ( hppcr • Jame'
Donaldson. who scored 20 or his ~4
points in the fint half, scored on a
dunk with 42 seconds left.
Wilkins came back with an 8-footcr
with 25 seconds remaining to restore
Atlanta's one-point lead.
Aflera LosAnaclcs11mcout.Jun1or
Bridacman sank an t S.foo1cr with s1~
seconds remain1n1 to make it 9().89
for Los Anacles. Then Afl1n1.1 Sol the
ball 10 Wilkin• and he stuck ii 1n the
basket.
Fratello found lots to hke an the
second half after an openin.a two
quancrs ~ht h w lhc the cold·
shoouna Ha•ks fall behind S0-40 by
J1n1crmi ion.
"We wcrt in a comatose state 1n the
first haJf," Fratcllo Qtd. "But Domt·
n1quc wu m11n1ficcnl otlcn 1"el).
and Trtt (ftoffin } pla)~ a artat
ond half dcfcnJJ\ICI). shut down
Uamnl Donekhon prtuv 1tood ••
N1Aon had 16 points for the
Clippers. 1o1rh1k-Bridlrman and Mar-
qun Johnson Lalh1 14 each.
Et Modene (15'-I) 11 Nor111, IUv. 120·l l
Well T~ (17·71 at C\ll'tW Cltv I 1'·•1
OWl\MI UN) 11 LY'ltWOOCI (2:M)
.... I IS·tl at ~· ( tt-•> 0-Htea (11·5) II Ol'tllet (lt-11
#1.W 11H ) 11 W..tltllt 114·10) w~ C¥d wlnfttr ................. tn -»
Simi Valltv 0 •-1) It ivena (21•21 c~. v .... 111•71 at "•""'*' m· 101 Norco l..,_1> et f tMMCI-111·1)
G111r c ••· • 11 at Senta Mollfc.a 119·•>
CIP l·A
~CMD~ (W1e1 ••,Nil It....,_ 112-121 et V8llflc.ie Cl•·tl
NIT~(,,....,, 7i.Jll
L9'11._. ca-t) M """'*" 121•31 .. o.r... Clt .. I IA lduT 0141 HW't (,..1) 11 .......,.._ (!f•6)
1111-.. ant ....., ........ Ill••)
__... 1 ... 1 M Trw 1\0-lll
,_._... Ctl-'11 .. e<_..., Cit-SI
Moftl<'tM ( '6 .. ) el ~ AletftllM ( ,, t i
WNttlw (M ... l M .,_,OINll m ·•I ~.Cc< "'"" et Mir•*••* 1.._.,I LI ~lftla 11•H> et S...... 11'-71
CWtelr•rl tlMlt It 0...... ClJ ti
F"""'IOll llt-tl .. S1 OtrMt 121 I A~·V .... IH•tll a•....,._ llt•4)
t<altllla <"·41 al ._. '9r1' (14·1) 0""'911 111 I > ti tlrM OM >
Gardin Grove ll>•lOI .. HH WlltOll t•4>
CIP t•A '
wt&..D CAAO eAMIS fW I P y, 1.a)
lllclor llalleY 11•·11 11 Ed9tWOOCI I"·•> &aldwon Park c 12·tl at So Pa\eeltna 1n -21
C., 1·A
~D CAltO GAMSS CW.._.y, 7:JO)
(Al l uc-ltv 117•5) at Pl~t llS·tl
ti ) Pe~ ....... lt·lll at ~t ll••SI
ICI L,t. Lulfttor8" I l•·tl at Crouroectt I IS fl
1COI Fillmore It IAI at l ret"'wn 11)· IOl
EI 4Gu•net ( 1•·11 11 Fl'""'°" Preo ( 17· 101 ,.ST "OUMO, P:,,.y, 7~1
w :io Cll'CI A ., CNHl'#ldl cn -11
Moor'Mf' 11)·'1 at l A .. Pllll I 17 S>
'9 "-'" llS·SI at Fa•lll .. IMl~t 111·'1 Wild Card I et WMtler C..m1te11 I 1'·'1
OnterlO '"''"Ian lll-101 11 s.t'ttn0 m·ll Wld Cer• C at S.nte Yntl (ll·t l
Wiid Cer4 0 at I \l'IOe Ill-t i
~C.d Eat Mon~" Pfto U I II cw Snlll Sc:Mlel
Ntt lltOUMO t"*•• 1.al Cea• (l4·Sl a1 T~ CW Vt"lurl 111•21
H1tY MtrlVf'\ II II at WlllfWttd llS·•I
Cll LV!Nfl!I 11H l 11 GHenwtat CIW 117 01 Y_,.,a ( 1'•l l al TtfMlltlOll 116-J)
St ~-11 Wooocrttt Crwl"*' IU·S> I.•,..,_ 11 TrtM t 'lt-•I
LWlftllll C11n1t 11 .. SI ar ._., (t II
GO ~ (t 10) t l Htr ... lll·'l ,_.... ti• SI at ~ Vfllllrt 1'>·7)
....., l»·tl et '"' ----<lt<-•1 _...,,.... OWlf Cl 11 ~'-115•61
Awtitll CI•• 1' ti '4 VlftC'911h Clt-tl
o.a .... fl""I al ~~ '"''" I IS.JI ...._a.... tl•'U •t ... Air ,.,... t l•·6l
.. ~ (\) 61 •' $flN ~ Ill (\3•71
ltOWNINS 112'1 II al ...._ .. CIT Ill 71
\
llU •ni=.. e::•NCI
WL. ,ct,el
le 1' ,7M 11 17 .IOI 11 u •. 471 ll't'l = nn .•1• 21 » ... 17 , .. 11 41 .n6 u"' ,...... Dewll6lll ,. 20 ,6)0
>l II .JH 2
• u ·"' ..... 17 " .tot 6'1l ti 21 .A72 Ill) KIMM Cttv 11 M ,)21 1•11)
8AIT90 COlt'8lllNCI AIMllc DMWelll ~ II .. 11
" 21 " f7 11 ,. c:...... OM.-MitW MM 27 17 Oetrel1 , 1 22 c..... ts 27
Allelltl 23 JI c~ 11,. .._.,.. 17 '7
......... IClf'ft Lel!ln 117, 1oe1on Ill Alllftl1 fl,~ 90
'91Mftl• 119, lndleM 97 ~M 12S, C:lllCeto 105
·"' .m .tot 500 w
~ 1sr...
" 75
SVt ll 14
If\,)
20
eetdift Statt ltS, W91lll11tl0f\ 171 11 oil ~llellcl 111, k1nM1 Cllv ,. T ......... acaemtt 1111 Antonio 11 ~ ~le II Cltvllll\4 ""°'"4• 11 Oltrolt
.... II Ullfl
Tll9NllY'• Ckl'MI LMwt 11 Clltc.to
Mllw_,kM 11 Nft Vll'lo.
0.-, Stele 11 Atllnte o.tll• I I Houston
'°'111nel 11 l<l l'IMI Cllv
Lalltn '17, Cettk• 111
IOITON C111J -llrd 1'·n •·S '3,
Ml•well 4·9 4-4 17, '"'"' 1·3 1·1 l , Al"ff .. 110-010, D.JoMton 1•10 •·• 10, McHelt
... )·• 15. Clerk M O·O 2. Wtc1m1n M 0-0 lo, C.rr 2·S O·O 6. Kii• O·O O·O o. Total• ..... ,..,, 111.
LAIClal 1117) -ltlmt>la 2·S O·O '· WOtll'lv 1·11 1·10 24, At>Ou1·J100.r H •
.. 10 20, l .JOf\11.on 10· 16 17· It l7, Scoll I· 12
0-0 16, COOPlt >·7 0-.0 6. MCAdOO 4·1 2·2 10, Mco.t 0-2 0-0 0. To1111: 42-12 >>·•I 117
lcerl w °"'"'" lotton 2' l3 20 29-111
L.111.91'1 l4 2S 27 J 1-111
ThrM·oolnt toelt-Cerr 2, l lro Fou1tc1
out-McHele. lttOounctt-loaton 4 lllro
IS>. L.ot At\Oelet ., lltamt>I• 121. Aa·
al1t1-lo11on Jl (Alntt, D.JOlln~n 10), Loe
An .... • 21 (E.Jolln.on Ill Tot11
toult-lo1ton 31, Lot Alltllt• '° TtcMI· Cl~lon. lllttll dtfel'IM.
AttMdlnu -17,50S
HIWlll 91, CJlllPtf'I fO
ATLANTA (fl) -LAvlne1ton 6·1J 1·1
1J, Wllklnt IS·ll S·S 34, ltotUna 1·3 •·• •· E JOMton 7· U 2·2 1', Wlt1men 3·7 0· 1 ••
WIRl1 H 0-0 2, Glenn 4·7 0·0 I. Cerr 2·7
0-0 4, l rown O·O O·O 0, To1111: 3t·l7 12· ll "· L.A CL.ll'l'IRS tfO) -C1tclll1191 1·2 0-0
2. M.JOllnaon 7-14 0-0 14, DoneldlOll 10· IJ
•·• 24, Nixon 7·20 2·2 16, Smltll J· 10 1-2 7,
Catt 1·> 0-0 2, l rloe.men 7·1• 0·0 U,
Werrlck 2·l O·O 4, Whit• l·4 I· I 7 To1111
41·t3 I· II 90.
kWI llY Oultterl
At11nt1 21 19 2t 23-tl en-• 2' 2• 11 73-tO TllrH·POlnt to11t-Wll1tln1 Fouled out-
None. 1taoounc,.-At11nt1 4' IL.tvlnoaton
17), Lo• Anoelel 4 IDon1ld1on 12). At·
tl1h-All1 n11 20 IE Jol'lnaon 10), LOI An· .... , n (Nixon II) Totll f0Ult-At11nt1 II.
Lot Al!Mltt 1 S T ec11nlc1lt-Sm1tn
A1ttn<11nc1 -I.Sn
C ..... ICOtli
St J011n'1 '3, 0.Plul IO
Clemson 71, M1rv11nc1 '4
Hwllotl ... Il le• fl
Hn A'1 tep 20 fared llSt weell
No. I, St. Jolln'a (72·1> t>H I Cotumt>lt
...... OHi Pllt1ouro11 M·'3. 1>111 D1P1ul n-eo
No 2. G.oroetown (23·2) OHi Vllleno111
S7·50, 11111 Provloenc• 17·73
No. l, Mlelll91n 120-3) l>HI Iowa 5'·52,
1>111 Mlnnttote 6:'·64. • No •, OllllllOl'n• 121·4) 11111 lowe Stitt
104· 76. l>Ht Mluourl It-IA No S. MamOfllt Stitt (19·21 1>111 Clncln·
natl ... 55, l>HI FlorlO• Stet• 70· ..
No. 6, Georola TKll I 11·S> 1011 10
Vlrolnla 62·SS.
No 7. Dukl 111·4) o .. t Stttaon ••·SI
111•1 Notre Dame 11·6'
No I, Svraeu11 (It·•> 1>111 Provloence
12·7', OHi Stton HeM ... .,, °''' LSU
76·6'.
No. '· SMU 120·S) Iot t to lavlor ••·90,
l>l•I Tl llH AAM 11 ·79. °''' Loulavlll• ,, ...
No 10, K1n111 110-6) Iott to Mlu ourl
'2·SS, Iot t to IOWI Stitt 72·70
No. 11, IOWI (1'·6) IOtl to Mlclll91n
5'·52, 1011 to Mlcl'llH n Stat• S7·S5.
No 12. LOUl1l1ne Ttcll 1n ·7) O .. t SW
L.oul1l1na 13·7•. OT, 1>111 McN"" St 5'·st No 13, NortPI C1rolln1 ( lt ·6) 1>111
M1rv11nd to· S4, 1011 to NortPI Cerolln• S1111
15-76
No 14, N1v1dt·L11 Vt011 ( 19·3) l>lat
UC Irvine tt·tt
No IS. T ulH I 19·4> 1>111 Crelonton 7NJ.
No. "· Vlllanov• ( IS·I ) IOI! 10
G.ort1town 57·SO, 1011 to 801ton Cot'-9•
•2·'1
No 17 INlnol1 110·11 1>111 Nortl'lwnt1r11
6'•42. 1>111 Wl1con11n 61·'9
No. II, Oregon Stefl (ll ·S> o .. t Wull·
lntton Stitt 69·'9, IOI! 10 w11111n11ton 60·'5
No It, Al1oem1·8lrm1no111m (21·6) 101t
to lllrglnle Comm011wt1illl 67·SJ
No 20. Mtrv eno I 19·9) IOI! to Nortl'I
Ctrollne 60·S4. >ott 10 Cltmton 71·64
'1CAA
canter-• WL
NIYIOl·Lll lftllH 12 1 Fr1tno s1111 12 2
Cal Stitt F ut11r1on 9 S
UC S.ntt l!ltrt>ara 7 1
Utell Stitt 7 7
Sen Jolt Stl!e 1 7
UC Irvine • I
Pacific 4 11
New M .. tco State 4 10
L.OrlO IHCPI $t1t1 1 1J
Ovtr•• WL
19 )
17 ' I) 10
11 12
14 9
12 11 II U . " 1 IS
] 10
Tlftltllt't Geme
Nev1d1·L.H V1911 a t Cal State
... 101'1
Full
WMMMIY'I Oeme
Lono IMCl'I Slllt 11 UC Irvine
Tll11f'MIY'• Glfl'llt
Ulll'I Sttra at Fr11r10 Stele
New Ml 1lco Slate al Nevldl·LH lft011
Sin JOM State 11 Pedflc
SllM•Y't CMlftl'I Cal Stefl Fullerton II Frnno Stele
Long IHCl'I s111t et New Mexico Stitt
Utall Stilt •I Sen Jolt Stitt
UC Senti aero.re" N9"IOl·Lll Veg11
COMMUNITY COLLIOI mt WM'I ldllllUle
TONtOHT
...,..,.,,~
~ Wiit at lll'ul*ton
Comtton et Dr11191 Coeat
lenll Alll et C vorn1
Ml Sa" Antonio 11 C¥r1101
WIDffllOAY
..... C.lf C.WlllCI
hddl1 .. ctc t i OolOtft W111 OrlMt eo.tt 11 Ml kn Antonio
'ulltrlon et lent• Ane Cy""'"' 11 c.,.,,_1on Nlltr ........ C.WIMI ~ II le/Ill Monlcl
L.ot .,,..... CC et LA l'leru
LA Het1IOr et L.Oflt lffCll
I I Ct m"'° 11 1.-1t1fltld -........ v.., C:.•11111C1
LA loulllwttl 11 Wiit L.Ot A"91tft
L.A V•llrl •t , ..... of Ille CtnVOM Anl~ Vetiey ., L.A Trtell Ttcl'I
P"ldk C.lf c.• MClf
OrOMf'IOl!f 11 1111 Ditto M4lll
1'1..,,_. 11 ltMtrlll VI~
1111 Ditto Cltv II toulflwttltrll .... v-.c..• ...
C ..... Of Ille o...t el~
IHI Lit A,..... •' .. ~ .... c ....... ,, "" Jtc""9 Cl!Na 11 llllO HIMO
left 1er.-d1nt .. C.r• c... ..... .,
Melia-• Cl r1 ... ~lllel'tteMMc.I
llCM\'llM I I LA HerW .... ,...,Cll If L.tnt IMCll
,_. fr • If LAI ,.,_... CC
..... v111wc11t•M
C..... of 1111 (en~ 11 Wit! L.-01 A"r.:\,_. TICll et LA 111111\wttt M-.. v.-v .. I.A Mll6IOft ...... v....c .....
0....... I I 1111 terw• *'*'Ide •t c ....... ,,. Dettrl 1111 JICllllO II IHI L. .. Al'ltMt . 11111 ....,. 11 Clleffev
Cwro COM ., ''""' IATWDAY .._c.etcC••"'• ............ llnll Anl II lllNlelliCk
Ctrrlllt II Drll'ltl CMtl
COfMIOll 11 ,wllftlfl Ml. ltfl Allltfllo 11 ,.,.,_, ,_..C....C•••-Mlre Cotltl 11 Ot'OMl'nOnl
S.11 OlttO Mitt 11 '"'"'''' Velilv 50\ltllWlllll'n I I jll11omef Wtetlnl ..... c .... , ....
A 11 Hlncock II Tift
O•nard II Vtnllil'I
Sent• lert>efl Cllv 11 MoorHrk
COMMUNITY COLLIOI
~ CMat C•lfel•Kt c...... OWtll
WL WL
(tl'rlfOI 12 1 21 4
Mt, Sen Antonio 10 2 23 3
l'llllerton t ) 1S 10
Drenee COii! 7 • 1' II
Cvor111 • 6 12 10 Com111on s 1 11 1)
SlddilOICll 5 I 1S 12
Slnte Ant 2 10 t 16
Oot0t11 Wiii 0 I) 7 It
Tlllltllt't cttmll 17i>0) Goi.i Wnt 11 lll'ultlfton
Com111on 11 Dr•lltt C:oett
Mt. S.11 Antonio 11 C1rrlto1
Santi Ane 11 Cvt1r111 w.....-v-.o-
SlddloMCll ., OolOtn Well
Drentt Coe11 11 Mt. Sen Antonio
Fulltrton 11 Sent• An•
Cvoren et Compton
Sin O'"' Ol*t 2't
1WoodY l lCllOl'n, 172,000
lion Streck. MJ,100
270
Loren 1too.r11, 117,200 m
D•" Pol'll,117 ,600
ltu Caldwell. '17.600
27>
Frao Cou!Wt1, 11),900
Merk Pfeil, 113,900
274
1111 Gl11ton.111.200
vane• Ht1fnar Sll,100
Don Poolt'f, l1 I 200
Eo Flori, kl 11,200 vs Crtlll Sledllr. 17,371
lot>t>v Cl1m1>1t1, S7 J7 1
Tim Norr la, S7 ,371
MIC O'Greov. S7 37 I
T.C Cl'len, 11,)71
l ot> Lonr. 17.371
Gerv H1Ht>ar11. 17 ,J71
27'
Pllll l lackmer, u .su
Al G1l1>1roar. 14,S14
JOMny Mllllr. $4,Sl4
Peter Oo11ernul1, U ,S 14
Keflh Fer11u1, 14,S 14
Scott Simpson, 14.S u
Pet McGow•"· 14.514 VT
Pavnt Stewert, 13,0IO
Mike Hull>lrt' 13,0IO
9111 Ao11er1. Sl,otO
VI
Tom Purt11r.12,43S Gerv Kocl'I, 12.'3S
D A Wllorlng, S2 .•JS
Gene S1u1ra, S2,•3S
Oevlo Tl'lore, U .43S
JOM Cook. 12,0S
JIY HIH.11 OS
Tim Slmo1on. 12.•3S ,,,
Willie Wood, I 1.110
Bruct L.lt t1k1, l1 ,110
Jc Sneeo. 11.aao
2IO How1ro Twl!fv 11,600
O•n Htlldoraon. 1.1600
Aot>err Wrenn. 11.600
01vlo Oorln, 11.600
211
Curr l'lrurn. S l, 1S6
Ltnntt C11men11. SI, I S6 Mlkt Mal111<1, S 1, 1 S6
P1u1A1ln11er,11, IS6
Steven Llabltr, S1, 1S6
Pl\11Hencoci..,11. IS6
lreo F1oe1. S1, IS6
8r10 FUOl'I. S1,IS6
212 Lerrv MIH , 1933
Tom Kiit, 1933
W1vna Greov. 1933
Tommy V111nt1t11 1'3)
Jack Atnfllf 1933
21J
Miki Smltl'I, 11'6
Mlcl'IH I 9arn1>1111, "" Joolt Muoo. 119'
KtnGrH n, 1176
Jtff Colton, 1176
285
Ernie Gon11111, stS6
8UC!dv Geron1r. stS6
&en Crtnanew, stS6
Steven Jon11, 1132
Andv Nortl'I, Sll2
CPlrla Perrv, 1832
Steve P111 SI 12
Jtff Sluman I& 12
,..
187
,..
Devlo L.unoatrom. 1797
CtH r S1nudo. '797 DOllll Ttwttl. 179?
Fri nk Conner. 1n6
JtJ
Gtnt Llttler, 1761
x ·denotH olavoff winner
U ·U ·'6·71
•7·'6·'6·70
6S· .. ·6'·61
67. 65-70·"
71·'6·6'·65
67·6'·65-72
.. ·6'·•7·6'
...... .,.71
65-10-6'·73
... ,f-70·71
...... 70.70
•7·65·70·7] • 7 ....... 74
67·6'·69·7l
71 ....... "
.. ·67-70·70
66·70· .. ·71
64·67-69·75
•7· .. ·67·7•
71·'4·67-7•
6M6· .. ·7S
67·6'·70·75
70· .. ·70· ..
67-71· .. ·70 .... 7·6'-72
69· 70·6'·6'
70·67·6'·72
6'·69·67·73
70·•7·67·7• 71-65-70-72
"8·6'·6'·11
67·70·69·72 ......... ,,
.. ·70·70·70 ...... 71.73
6'·67·69·7l
69·6'·70·72
6S·7l·n·71
.. ·70·7o-71
6'·71-71-74
6t·67·71·7• ......... ,.
72·66·71-11
12·66·7l·70
66·72·7•·69
71·67·7•·69
"8·69·70·7• ...... 70.75
66·7)· .. ·7•
70·69·69· 73 70·69-65·77
70·69·73·70
7J·6S·69·7S
.. ·70·70·7•
.. ·72·7J·7• '6·70·~-11
70·69·71·73 ... 71-71-73
71·6'·72·71
69·70·11·72
6t·7Hl-74
6'·72·73·7•
... 71-71-7s
66· 70· 73· 7'
73•66·72·7S
61·71·73·7•
69·70·72·7S
6S·74·72·76
7•·65·72-76
69·69·7•·76
69·70·73·76 67-70·72·79
72·66·73·7'
65·72·70·16
NA teur KMdule
Feo 21·24-Doral·E11ttrn Ootn, Ml1rnl
Ftt>. 2t·Mercll >-Hond• Tourn1men1 Mere!\ 7·10-lav Hiii Tournament
Mercl'I 1'· 11-USF&.G Tournament
Merell 20-2~11 v"" 1nv11111ot111 Merell 2t·l 1-TPC 11 Ponte Vidra, Fie
Aorll 4·7-GrH llf' GrMntooro OOln
APrll 11· 14-Tl'la Mlattra. Auou111. Ge
Aorll 11·21-S•• Pinet ~erltagt Tour·
l'l1m1nt
Aorll 2S·2t-Houaton OOln
Mlv 2·1--MONV T of C et LAC0111
Mlv t· 12-·lvron Ntt.on Tourn1 man1
Mav 16· 19-ColOnlel N1tlon11 Tour·
n1mant
Mlv 23·2 ..... MltnOl'll t Tourn1m1nt
Mlv :>O·Juna t-Kemoer Ootn
Junt 6·t-Wntcl'lltter Tournam111t
June 13·16-u.S Ooln, llrmlnenam.
Mlcll
June 20·23-At11n11 OOln June 27-~mPllll OOln
Julv •· 7-Canldllfl OOln Jut-I 11·14-Anflt\IMf'·l utcl'I Tour·
nemant
Julv 11·21-0U•d Cltllt Ooan
•July 11·21-l rlll•ll Ooln, Slndwlcll
Enote"<!
July JS·21-Grt1tlf' Hlrtford Ootn
Auo l·-Wtallf'tl °"'1
Auo I · I l~A ChemplonllllP, Danvtr
Auo. IS· lt-lulck °"11
Auo 11·21'-Wll'ld ..,, .. ol Goll
AUO 2'·$1pt 1-I ( Ootll
Sfft S·l-1111• al lotton Tour111m1111
51111 12· 1S--OrHl91' MllweullM °"'1
StPt If· n-t.IJtt ToUl'nament
StDI. 16·2t-TUH Oolfl
OCt l·6-~tlltrn Oot11
OCI 10-1r-w111 DltMV WorlO °""
OCI 17·70-ftlf!Mcoll Ootll
OCI 24·27-Tu<ton Meldl Plev "'-"'" OIOl\11'1111
Dte S•l-J.C PtllMV TOllf'llll"Nnt
Dtc l2•lt-<11rvw Teem TOUf'Nf'Nlll
•-Not • PGA tour tvenl
Ll'OA Tew ldlldUle
'•b 21-14-TU<aon °"'1. F10. ,._Merell rS.mer1t111 Turouo111
CllUIC ., Pnolfll•
Merell 7·1~nldlll L~A lftYllt liOMI at MIMI lltl'Cll CC
MttCll 14•17-w-·1 t("""' °"" et Mewl
Mltell 71 •2.....c;NA C:i.utc •I Oltlldl,.
AttM •·7-olNll ~ II lllancllO
""''"' All'• II l~I Cl.tHIC 11 h t1
OllH
Attn 11·11-J'I kotcll jllro•Affl t i LH .......
Allf• t•·,._MH OOlf C:llnlc 11 St
l'llttM\lf 1 MIY t-,_TIA
Mtv 10-1t-u"' to "'11 ,,,, a11111 Clln •c
., ,Oflll'llOUfll .....
Mn t7·1~!1Mltv (llHI< II (1'1.1111•"'·
N J
.-·
Prep basketball log
llA VllW LIAeUI
CO.ONA DIL MH NIWl'OllT MHI04ll
(It ... IM) en.a. 1S·ll
67 lt'°*l4owt1 42 " HM Wiiton 41 60 Tu1t1n ., N LI Hlflrl to
•1 L.llVlll ltltll H •t CIM Valley II
57 I tll!ICll •• II Ir vino " n I I Toro to IO I I '•""'"° .. •2 L1eun1 H 4t S7 l"ewlY 71 J1 '°'1111M to 71 Sil' O!otulto .. .. Mofl llO llllllV .0 61 TltrtV ,!Mt '4
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l'llt1t>vr1111 S, MlnNHI• 4
11111mor1 I , 0 11111 4
It. Loula ), ClllClllO I
Tlftlltlt't Olmot
No t• met ICllOCNltcl T_.Y'•O-
K1n111 City I I Cotmo•
Mlnn11ot1 11 l1111more
T1com1 " WICllll•
...,.. tewMmtftt
let L.e °"""') , ..........
Sten Smltn (U.S.) -· I® LUii (U,S.), •·3. •·O. ISmllh Wini 11,000; Lull win•
14,000) L._. teurwneM
t•• °""L.f.1·' "8,)
""""'' tMI Tim Mtvottt tu , .I dtf. kott 01v11
(U.S.), 4·6, •·•· •·>, •-i ..... tMlvotto win•
1112,500, Devit wlllt tN,2.tOJ.
WelMfl't D.-.. f'tMI
Oltf ,.,nonc111 tl'uerlo ltlCO)·Mtrtlno
N1vretllov1 (U.S,) dtf, l<lttlY JOf'iflft
(U,S.)•Hllll fMNl!lllOYI 'f11CllotitV9klll,
7-6 ... I.
a
Placay
reaebes
plateau
ARCADIA (AP) - h w11
·milestone for Jockey Laffit Plncay Ji
but It also was a time ohadneu. "All the way down the atretch,
kept seelna Linda's f'ICt In n
thou1h11."11ld Plncay. whocollecte
his 6.0001h career ridlna vlcto1
Sunday at Santa Anita. "I staned '
cry a little knowina how much th would have meant to her."
Plnc1y was refertina to hit laie wl
Linda. who shot henelf fatall y la
month. The 38·year-old jockey had 111
earlier he would dedicate the mil•
stone victory to her.
"I'm aJad It wu an easy win," tal
Pincay. who became Ql'.'!Y the thlr jockey ever to reach 6.000 wins 11 t
scored aboard Oorta•s Deli&ht in t~ sixth race. ··1 had time to pt ucited 1
we Tot clote to the wire.
" w11 very emotional when " passed the wire and I'm very happ that it happened."
Pincay. 38. alto rode winners in th
fifth. seventh and ninth racet to ru his career total to 6,002 and join Bi
Shoemaker. who has 1,440 victoriet and John Lonaden, who rode 6,03
befott he retired .
The 53-year-old Shoemaker, wh rode Lord at War to victory h
Sunday's featured $215.200 San An tonio Handicap at Santa Anita, wa
amon1 the f'int to conaratui.te Pin
ca~ when he hit 6,000.
Bom in Panama City. Pincay rodl
his fint winner thett on May 19
196<4. He won 446 races in Panam1
and Venezuela before comina to th•
United States.
He has won four Eclipse Awards a
this nation's best jockey and last ~ea
won the Kentucky Derby and Bel
mon t Stakes aboard Swale.
"I thous.ht today would be th•
da y." Pincay said. "I had several aooc mounts. I knew it was aoina t<
happen. The question was whcn.l'I
probably ride three mott yean and i
I'm close to 7.000. I'll 10 for it."
Coast faces
tough slate
this week
Oranae Coast Colleae f1ce1 ha bigest week of South Coast Con-
ference basketball play beainnlna
toniaht when the Pir1tn host Com-pton at 7:30.
The 7-6 Pirates. currently in founh
place In t~ South Coe11 Confernce. also must face second·place Mt. San
Antonio in Walnut Wedntlday ind conferenc:e-leadln1 Cerritot Saturday
In their leaaue finale.
The Pirates are blttlina for 11pot ID
the SCC Shauahnnsy Playotfl whim beain1 Saturday March l.
Meanwhile. ~olden Wnt trin '°
enap ltt J ~me wlnletl streak at Fultenon \on1pt.
Saddleblck, 5·1 In conference. hll
1 bye toni&ht before retumlna 10 ection Wednnday at Golden Wat.
T..aot'10....
Compton at"Ora~ Coett
Golden Wttt at Fullttton
Mt. SAC 11 Cerritos
Santa Ana II Cyprat ....... , •• Oalltl
Saddleblck at OOldtn Wnt
Oranet Coat at Mt. SAC Cypma at C~n
Fullenon at Slnta Ana .. ....no ....
Santa Aftl at llddlebKk
Cemtos at Ora• Cout Mt. ~C tt C_ypnu
Compton 11 FuUenon
•
•
,y
d
"I
0
11
d
~·
d •
d
e
I\
I
~
)
'
I
: .
RobettPlaorD talea place
on •peeeh, hearln& centerboard
or I~~ ~Mr~ vice prnident or corporate telation1 for the PIMr C.,. ne. .... ~n e-ted to the bolrd of dim:ton orPrMt••c• .,._. w ~b C.W, followina in \M (~ ofhi1 father, the late J. a.rt,,_, ~t_ oaorary member or the Providence boerd. The Ne_wpon BClch mideni
-ISV9I on tbe bolrds ol lbe ..._lrial LMne ef orup O..tJ the =::,o;•~" c:-1.,..,...._ .,Amerta, ........ ou ... o .. &nd the . ·-·-·~ ._ . ..,... ....... . . . : ,,,.,...,~ .. •--~du .. hu been named Top Satapenon o( the Month at
-w 'nH•Ual .... &aaate s.n~· Costa Mesa oftjce.
TIMBR001' MENDELSON
Aodenc?n, who has been with Coldwell for two years, is a relocation specialist
and rec1p1ent of the 1984 Silver Circle award. She specializes in the Cotta
Mesa/Newport Beach area, and bu held her reaJ estate license for nine years. .
• • • • • .Lquna N1auel resident .l•lle TlmlilrM has been promoted to vice
pra1deot and real estate controller at Bendf llW.t S.vtap' edministrative
offices in ~uion YieJo. Tim~ has been with the 11vi1J111S10Ciation since
1 ~1 ~~vma previously terved with &he accountina firm of Peat, Marwin,
MllCMU 6 Co. and in the private reaJ estate sector for five ycan. •••• . Jerry.L ....... .._has a11nounocd t~ formati<?n of a TIM New JLM Co. in
Irvine, which he terves as presadent and chief executave officer. The new I rvinc
firm specializes in p~nnina and enaineeri°' business mectinas and
conventions, corporate travel and sales incentive propams. Mendelson
formerly headed 'he JLM Ce., another incentiv,: firm . He has been pursuina
other business marketina interests for the past ft've years. • • • BeUy Hyde, owner and president of Irvine's leUy Hyde, be., Ultl
Detlpt, has been accepted to profeuional membenhip status in the Amertc
Society of b&erter Detlpen from a former status as associate with the arou .
She has also been accepted as a professional member of the lateraatl J
SoelttJ of ID&ertor Det ........ • • • Jo .... It. William• has been appointed nonh ccnlral manaicr of Cl
Sy1tem1,ho. of Irvine. He will be based at the company's rqional sales offi
in Chicaao. and help di~ the sales efforts of the CIE family of busincs
microcomputers. CIE is a subsidiary o(C. ltoll Eleetr0aic1 of Los Anaelcs an C. I ... ...t Co., L&4., of TMJ•, Japu. • • • J .. <.'llvft, president of Jau di•rdl Pan.en -Mane~
O~ Detlp, i.. of Newport Beach, bas been selected as one of six JU
for tbe upcomina lre1•ea1t O..Apen A11odadel Auul Det1p Com,etl
BYDB CHURCH BROCK.MAN
U.. The Newport Beach resident's firm specializes in the creation of
''corporate identities." · • • • I Nleltelal P. lrockmu has been named vice president and manaaer of the
Huntintton Harbor office of Oru,. City Bult. The Huntinaton Bcacb
resident was most recently usociated with Pacific Re1ncy Im in El Tord.
where he terved as vice president and manaacr. • • • &rte O ....... oflrvine bu been promoted to assistant vice president of
Pint Ml.._. TIU. ._.w.. Ce. of Santa Ana. He wiJI work at the corporate
level in the national subdivi1ion development department. Shield has been
with the company srncew 1979, beainnina as district manaicr for the Irvine
area. Mott recently! he wu manaaer of subdivision sales for the firm ·s Oranic
County division. He is a director and membership chairman of 1hc Oranic
County chapter o( the 8111Ntq IM•stl')' AIHCJaUoll and vice president and
director of the Hemt lllliltn Ceud1 of the BIA, Southern California. He also
serves u vice president and director of the HBCs Youth Housina Opportunity J>roaram. • • • WWJam C. Demmla, tenior vice president and cashier of Flr1t Americu
8aU lrTnttCo. of Laauna Beach, has been promoted to chieffinancial officer.
Nancy A. Cumminp takes over as vice president/cashier. Demmin, a Costa
Mesa resident, and Cumminp, who lives in Lquna Hills. have been with Fint
American since 1983. I
N:.W ;r,rK (~ -. T' ~~ I:' !,'\ Ii .. 0 ' • P··· ~~~ ... • l'lt:;f ~· Oft +11~ 0 • ~ MC4W r '12 ~ 1000 rm 2 11-p
'J!.,I ""W~'~ 0 ~~ , • 0 I.(, p
~y. J~ II! •
I l: n p
0 J;un • ~I ·n I It ·~ ..... • DOWNI
j oc~ UIS _'l i'ft! 2 \.Al ·~ xr. ,
U.S. auto .in~ustrybackon ~
now· What aboutimport llml
IJ JORN C1.1NNIPP ,,, ................
NEW YORK -Tile U.S. auto-
mobile industry has a clauy look
111in afkr 1em111 more than JO
million' can and camina about SlO
billion 1 on Illes of more than S 150
billion in 19"4.
That latter ftaure is so bia that it can
be related only 10 nations ~ther than
ind111tries. It is. for example., similar
in liH io the emire output or Poland,
Mexico or Australia. It is nearly
double that ofSoulh Africa.
But It is bigcr also in a more
mcaninaful way -biaser, that is,
than sales of just two or three years
earlier. when the industry was deep in
the red and fears existed about the
continued existence of Chrysler.
h was b9ck then that Japencse
carmakers, under pressure from the United Statct and the Japanese
aovemment, urced to limit sbip-
menll into the 0.S. market. It was an
action that mal)y analysts say allowed
the domestic industry to repin
Slrenath. .
And that produces questions that
Solomon couldn't answer.
Should the restraint.a be allowed to
run out as scheduled March 31 ?
Should the United States request that
they be extended? Should the
Japanese volunteer to extend them?
The questions arc loaded. Try to
answer any and you act involved in
issues such as free trade access to
Japanese markets, the U.S. trade
deficit, the value of the dollar, the
value of the yen, the riahts of
consumers.. profits.
Profits are bound to be con-
troversial, since evidence exists that
they come at the expense of the
consumer. Since mid-1981, says the
U.S. International Trade Com-
mission, quotas have cost American
carbuycrs SIS. 7 billion.
This results, it explained, from the
reduction of competition that allow-
ed U.S. makers to raise their prices.
Moreover, the limited supply and bia
demand for Japanese can led to
increases in that pan of the market as
well.
Tbi1 has infuriated some con-turnen who have eeen Oeneral
Moton 1984 profit rite to $4.52
billion from S3.l7 billion in 1913 •
ford profit j~mp to Sl. 71 billion
from S 1.297 billion, and Chrysler IO
Sl.38 billion from S700 million.
The consumer. aays Consumen
For World Trade, a W1shin11on-
b11cd aroup, bu been payina "an
unleaiJlaled. unju11iraable t.u to aive
Detroit breathina space to ~m pelf in
the world warket."
Not everyone in the industry is
apinst lowerina the quotas. The
Japanese lhcmselvct arc believed
anxious to retain at least a modicum of guotas IS a aoodwill ,esturc.
But speak of lowcrina quotas and
the issue of the U.S. trade deficit rises.
With Japan alone the U.S. deficit last
year was $33.9 billion. Without
quow, the trade commission said, it would have been $4 billion hiaher.
That iuue in tum brinp up the
matter of access to Japancse markets,
and U.S. manufacturers and their
representatives in Washinaton ha-ve
Iona accused the Japanese of rcstric-
tin' their panicupation in that coun-
try s economy.
There is the matter of the dollar to
be considered.
The U.S. dollar isan expens1 vc one,
valued hi&her than an y other curren-
cy in the world. There arc aood
aspects to that. but not in rcprd to
automobiles and other U.S. exports.
It prices them hiah. And it prices
imponslow.
The net effect is to a,ivc the
Japanese a tremendous advantaae in
the U.S. market, an advantage that
some American carmakers say they
would be free to exploit 1f the
voluntary restraints did oot remain in place.
When you consider the issue you
must also think of American jobs.
Every imported car can be seen as
so many U.S.jobs lost. There are now
about 730,000 workers in the U.S.
auto industry. 200,000 lo~ than in
1979. Without quotas, the trade
commission said. the latter figure
would be 244,000.
Telefile announces sale
of co111puters to airlines
Tclefile Computer Products Inc. has announced the sale 10 American
Airlines of thret Telefile TIS com-
puter systems consistina of one sinaJc
processor and two dual processor
systems alona with Telefile's
proprietary TCP-V software operat-
ing system, installation, trainina and
spare pans.
A m~or portion of the order. which represents approxim tely 20 percent of
Irvine firm's reported gross revenues
for fiscal 1984, has already been
delivered. Thcse computers will be
used to drive commercial aircraft
fliaht simulator systems.
Tetefite Computer Products manu-
factures and markets a wide ranac of
32-bit c-0mputer systems that arc
known throuahout the industry for
their ability to be networked and
distributed, exceptional dcarec of
fawt tolerance and fast real time
response.
The computer systems att aencr-
all y used in such applications as
1§ i 1:
21-r: ::s-~ =I~
= l·~ -~ = =:
\'t
=1~ = ~
weapons and fliaht simulators and
time sharinJ for academic ins1itu·
tions. scienufic laboratories and ser-
vice bureaus. ~
Pad.fie llataal, Newpwt B1a1'11, NC1•df flll l I•
$2,000 --... _ID PM'e IDp wll.e-e· .. 11 411J'bai 18M ...... ..,...., rtjdd. ., • ., Liii
~eDCJIDPortluMl.Ore.,noelftil ... elleek .... ..
l>Oerr, left, ..... ftce~··•-t. Cko9p llST .. .
Kuueoe wrote ... *819,000 llli -....... preJDlw wttla Pll 4..._ 1984 • .._ reoel•eil ..
cbeck 4ut.nc ceremoalee ~-. 1"
Biflyz quarterly report
shows increase in profit
Biflyx has rcl)OC'led oct income of
$21 .000 for lbc second fiscal quarter
ended Dec. ) l compared with net
income of $7,000 for the th~
months ended Dec. 31. 1983.
F;or the six months ended Dec. 31,
Btflyx had a net loss of $24,000
compared to net income of S 12,000
for the first haJf of fiscaJ 1984. The lrvinc-bascd company has
adopted a plan 10 dispose of its fuel
distribution b'{Siness and ~venues
from the remaining portion of th.al
busincssare included in income(lou)
from the discontinued fuel distribu-
tion business.
Revenues from the sale of1ts video
printer syacm are apecied duri:na
the CWTent fitcal yew.Jay~
BiOyx prnident_ said. 1'be Ilk of
S00,000 Elcctro-Spon common
shares f'or s 100,000 cmll dwiila \he
second quan.tr WM the primary reason for a profitable qUl11Cr ...
In 1983; Binyx n:cicivcd I million
shares or EJecuo.Spon common stock in exchaqr for tbe exclusive
markctina riahts for its 3-0 video
imaaina process u applied to an:ac:k
pm es. '
The 500.oQ shares were sold to a
aroup <>f priyate invnion enablina
Electro-Sport to proceed with its own
public off'crina_.
I
'
..
------
That· s an apt desci1ptton of both business and ·
business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of
where companies are gotn~ and which people are helping
them get there.just watch Credit Line' -everyday tn ttle
Business section of your new
.....
NihW,_
UJ1m':11~ wmt
WA. UI W flOUO Hll DUTM -~ . ..
Oii llmaTAftO.: ~LICILL.8t lr-Wtet
C~anc· .. ll•tiora MHd C'Ortt"C'tio1t• ••'
ht' m~ut .. on am.-~•dliah .. abo\~.
Pl ... M' a ll for a rant·c•Hation
nu111b.-r "hrn ranc-rllin(l ,·our ad.
ERRORSz '
Chee-II your ad dail~ aad rt"p4!rt --------1 erron imlMdiateh. TM D \IL\'
PlaJC llmCl PILOT aa1u1nes liabtlih (or thf' fina .:=:'., inrorrera iaterlion only.
IWUOIM.IGP CLASSIFIED 642-5678 ... ~ ........ .....
BILL GRUNDY . Rf~I TOR
DIMES
A-
LINE
WANT ADS
s.. )QK ,,.,.,., ~ l50 "' .... h our~ OMIB-A~ ,_.. ,,.,_, Melt <urtMy In ,,.. Diiiy
Piiot.
DIMES-A-LINE M19 mwt be
~ 90 '""""' bmo.,..., ""° the Daly Piiot ollol. I.le ..,. 10
~ )QK phone nwnNr,,, ..
dt-. In .row ed, ,...,. • ,,,a on Melt,,.,,,• no~ =· ~~-=-::..:. --~
DEADLINE:
•
--~ -. -
coLDweu
BAN~C!RO
---
PAR• IHWPOR T
A'&IHMEM T~
•
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
I
-
. . ..
' .--· ,
CHICll
~N
f'OltSCH£
AUDI CH!V1tOLET
Hllllft4Q..,.ffty
'". S."'k• CHICK
IVEIMON
Jdfrt oond • ...,,...
,,...,....~
$2000. 080 M6-1172
5 P"' &p. dlltwer ~
'74 Vega. NN ... tooka •• e T,_. Am, ...,_,,
emogged. 11400. oC>o
w~. 494-45411 ........... ............ ·-....... .....
cond, lo ml, IC>eded,
below blill 1*.5"48-7171 f!'k»=OIT ~Q""· AC,b ....... ~ln&
out ~ .-t tlOO '~ ••• 080&4-11Nlt76-2213 WWW Gt I .-. XU ·n lrou9t1am . 01"• ..,... CU--. io.ctect UIOO FM, AC, 13eK ml. ....... 090 5't-o. ...i 11eoo ss1~2m '71o.ct.~~ '77 C... I IPO. ernlfm dlll, gd :::.~ Mii
C8M, felCbedl, Qd cond ·-t 1t50 71CM341 lv meg _........, __ obo ___ 22_1_1_
'71 Celca QT La 5 ..,CS •.. llTUll-.
ale. 1'9Cl, mint Dn cote t111 Oowt\ CI ec...
t421S (711 ·WSQ) merclal IHH All· '27•tot4 SAvtM 71'14.U·ttn
~--., '13 "'6.68",4dr,tlet ....... •
--'· .,..,. ~ bll. ,._,.. t "9 00WN .... tM00 152""°61 Ooeed Ind~ OAC
IU.40 I Lllll I0011»GM -71'1.qa.. ,. 1
I §
..
BUENA
PARK
GARD~~ GROVE
HUNTINGTON
BEACH
...J ID
-' . i Cl)
EDINGER
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0 CHICK IVERSON
Chevrolet ~.ch• • Audi
UI I ...... hJ., h.,.rt leMll
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Highest Quality Sales & Service
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0 THEODORE ROBINS
FORD
U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer
Modern Sales, Service, Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Oepts.
C-Ompetitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals
2llO • .., ............ ....
142-0010" M0-1211
0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS INC.
• LONG THM LEASES
91 FWY.
-2 FRWY
LAGUNA
HILLS ..
0 CONNELL CHEVROLET
2121 ...., ....... Oestl ....
Over 23 Years Serving Orange County
Sales • Service • Leasing
541-1200 Special Parts Ult 541-1400
MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM
SA TU ROA Y 8:30 AM -8:00 PM
SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM
WE'RE
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dial MERCEDES
213/714 137-2333 • Best Prices • Convenient Location
• Great Location • Super Service
• Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People
Next to Santa Ana Fw\j (5) on
Manchester/Beach Blvd. AcfMe frOfft .. 'A' ... ~ ........... S7 (°'-..)'NJ
MISSION
VIEJO f)
v.Kt(}
SAN
JUAN
CAPISTRANO
8 BAUER MOTORS
SAW SEIVICE
LWllG IOIY SIOP
2345 II. GRAID AVE. SOTA All
542-8811
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YILllWlllll • .... E • PlllllT
SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE
11111 , .... 1114, ..... _ ....... .
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"' SALES • SERVICE • LEASING ~
• ORANGE COAST JEEP/RENAULT ~ TERLING IR • UNIVERSITY OLD8MOllLE
#I ,. TH ,,,,, For w. SAUS -S(IYIC( -ws•c -PUTS .
"Where Profeulonal Attitude Prevslls"
lp1c ... 11fte In a.,,.... D•::f· hcelent lelectton of
.... Md~ ll'•ll•ed We always In ltock.
. 835-3171
20I W. 1at St., S•nt•Ana
Comer of Broectway & lit at. Cloted Sundeya
llfl i,,, $a#s Flf I y1., Overseas Deflvery Speclallsts
,ARTI .,_,~NT ONN 0[fln2e • SALES IATURDAY MON•tGI Lo&St • sERv1ce BMW -ROLLS ROYCE
m •HAll-•LVD • LEASING 1540 Jamboree Rd. s4i.i023 • ACCESSORIES DEPT Newport Beach 840-8444
GJIM SLEMONS IMPORTS 0 COMMONWEALTH •
VOLKSWAGEN
World's Largest Stllectlon of cs ® A Mere«Jn s.nz ~ 'FAMILY STORE SINCE '53' ~
133-9300 Sal .. • S.rvice • Le~ing' -
1301 Qull •t. -tNw CM Location
1001 QIMll •t. -,,...,. DWlelon
888 DOVE ST NEWPOKT BEACH
HONDA .
2880 Harbor Blvd •
Coat• M-540-0713
3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy.
•
114 833-1300 S.S · l.mc · Pa11 • S... · W, S111, BRIS'roL AT !DING!R Ml· 0110 lN SANTA ANA 1--~----;__------~~--..._ __________ ...;;.;;;~------..._~,----------ii.......------.._---------------------
~ t. · .
I
t
l
'
Peace talk•
Retired Oen. WWlam C.
Weatmorelaad Ila•
greed to dl•mlM Illa
8120 million libel ae-
doa aaatnet C88. Con·
dldou of tbe aarprlae
amaoa.acemat laelade
atlpaladon tlaat neltber
aide may Mek c1amaa•
or attorney'• feee u a
reealt of tbe 4 "4a-moatll
trial. See atory Pace
A4.
TOMORROW:
FORECASTS ON A2
MONDAY FEBRUARY 18. 1985
' (Pleul ... UC llSG&m/A.21 ..
Dr.Peale
appeals
to&,000
a, econ rrooouo ........ c. 0 2 9 •
An overflow pthuina or about ~1000peoolc11w author/minillef Or.
Nonnan Vincent Peale speak on the
power of positive thinkina Sunday 11
Garden Grove's Crystal Cathedral beaan ill 30th annivenary year.
Another 1,000 watched Pl:ale on
cloled<ircuit television nearby in the
church's arboretum.
Peale. a retired 1enior pastor of tbe
Marble Col~tc Church in New
York Citv. said he left the church to
(Pleue~P&AL&/A2) Dr. Jlforaaa Vlmn•t .....
HUNTINGTON BEACH
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
Lung cancer high for OC women;,
UC Irvine research a ttributes increase
to more women smoking tha n in pa st
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of tM DllJ Not .....
The percentage of Orange County
women who develop lung cancer
compared to men is 11 percent higher
than the national average, a UC
California
President Reagan says
the oil derricks he can see
from his Santa Barbara
ranch don't bother him In
the least.I A4
Nation
The world's third artificial
heart patient is In stable
condition after success-
ful surgery on Sunday, his
doctor says./ AS
About 600 former
Marines reunite on 40th
anniversary of lwo Jlma
lnvaslond A5
World
Irvine cancer monitoring program
concluded.
A report by the UCI Cancer
Surveillance Program of Orange
County indicates women account for
42 percent of the county's lung cancer
cases. compared to 31 percent tor the
nation. as estimated by the American
Cancer Society.
The local report was issued shortly
after the American Cancer Society
announced that lung cancer has
surpassed breast cancer as a leading
cause of death among women.
Researchers attributed the change
to an increase in cigarette smoking
among women. 1
"The proportion of lung cancer
between males and females in Orange
County is quite different from what
we see in national avera$es." said Dr.
Hoda Anton-Guirgis. director of the
sur'1eillance program and a professor
of community and environmental
medicine at the UCI College of
Medicine.
"The Orange County data could be
explained by the pos5ibility that there
isa higher number of women smokers
or more males who have stop ped
smoking or a combination of both,"
she said.
The report did not address whether
Orange Count)'. residents arc more
likely or less hkely to develop luna
cancer than people elsewhere. Instead
it focused on the breakdown of cases
by sex. occupation and ethic group.
Bv occupation. the study found a
biJher percentage ofluna cancer cues
in blue collar workers. Amons all
cancer cases reported for Orante
County's blue collar worken. hma
cancer was the diqnosis in 27
perccnL Amon1 other worken, tuna
cancer accounted for IS pen:enL
"The data we have show blue collar
workers have a higher ~ of lunt
cancer,·· Anton..Quirsis said. ··sut we
(Pleue w WOllSlll/A2)
Downed
plane
misses
homes
Aircraft clipped
power pole durtng
roadway landing
A private plane fljrted with disaster
Sunday night when it crash-landed in
~J Beach. narrowly missini a large
retirement community.
Armed Shiite Moslems
celebrate upon departure
of Israelis./ A4
Dllr .................. c.s.-
Wreckage of twtn-encine Beechcraft KlnC Air eita on Seal Beach Boule•ard followtnc Sanday DICbt cruh landlnC.
The twin-cngjne Qeechcraft King
Air tipped a power line. then ripped a
wing and engjne off when it hit a
power pole during the emergency
landing on ScaJ Beach Boule vard.
firefighters said.
(Pleue Me PLAJU/A2)
Vietnamese, Thal
soldiers In fierce battle on
border./A4
Features
The family that trains
together ... goes In cycles
before a triathlon./ A7
Sports
CIF basketball playoffs
begin on Friday and area
teams know who they' II
play -except for New-
port Harbor .Hlgh./81
The Unlden Invitational at
Mesa Verde Country
Club Is on schedule./81
Entertainment
Actress Liv Ullmann talks
about her personal and
professional choices./ A9
Bu•lneu
The U.S. auto Industry Is
back on top after setting
more than 10 mllllon cars
In 1984./95 b
INDEX
Bridge A10
BulletlD Board A3
Bual nest 85-6
Classlfled 87-9
Comics A10
Crou word 89
Death Notices 87
Features A 7-8
Horoacope 88
Ann Landers A8
Opinion A6
Paparazzi A7
Polle• Log A3
Publlo Notices 87
Sport• 81_.
T elevltlon A8
Theeter• A9
w eather A2
149wait :
in line
for try
at4jobs
Newport Beach hiring
new firefigh ters after
recent r trements
By ROBERT YNDMAN
Of ... Del7 Not .....
Some of the 149 applicants for four
firefighters' jobs at the Newport
Beach Fire Department showed up
Frid~y night and camped on the steps
of City Kall until Sunday to ensure
getting an application.
The department intended to hand
out no more than I SO applications
and wound up distribuung all but
one.
The jobs pay an entry-level salary
of S 1.904 a month, said Battalion
Chief Scott Allan.
(Pleue eee LIJU/A2)
Inflation flght
makes cents at
NB postal nrm
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of .... Dllr Not ...
So you forgot to mail that letter
before Sunday, when first class post.al
ratcSJ umpcd two cents.
Well. thert'~ still time to save thole
1wo pennies. in fact you can even mail
that note to Uncle Bill or that car
payment and still have four ccnt1 lcf\
over.
That's because Charlie Lishemas
is scllina a limited number of 22-ccnt
pcma&t \tamps for 18 ttnts IS a
publicity g1mm1ck for his Newpon
(Pleue tee P08TAL/A2) ~· '
..., ......... .,_.. ......
A~llcOratla eacked oat at 8 a .m. roll call la 1'ewport. -~
t ·-)
LB'sFreeClinic:
Hippies replaced
by 'working poor'
When the Laguna Beach Frtt
Chnic first opened 10 October 1970.
the Love Generation's flower chil-
-dren beat a path to its door.
It was the heyday of the drug
culture. a volunteer doctor re-
members. And transient h1pp1es
filled Laguna's streets. sleeping on the
beach and 1n cavec; in the hills.
~hey came to the free chn1c
needing rouune medical care. tests for
pregnanq and venereal disease and
counseling on the concerns of their
generauon -drugs and the draft.
The street people with little mone)
were welcomed b' the clinic's
philosophy of supplying free medical
care to all who asked.
In those year!i. the free clinic lived
the same hand-to-JT1outh existence as
itsclitnts. OnC' da} in August 1971 the
door of the clinic on Glenneyre Street
bore the following message· "You got
us 1he rent. Thank You. Now we need
$77,43 b} Wednesday to keep our
LISA
MAHONEY
News F OLLOWUP
phone and $66.89 by Friday to pay
tax~ (of all things).'.
A glass Jar sat in the clinic waitina
room ready to receive whatever
·1donation those passina throu&h could
~afford.
' No"' 14 years old. the tccn..qcr that
ts the fret' clinic is past the shaky-
leggcd days of its infancy. Altho uah
neither flush nor fi nancially secure,
the operation does stand on iu own
feet.
(Pleue-PUS/A.3)
Teachers accept
a lucrative new
Saddleback pact
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
CM ... 0.-. ........
C'onclud1n1 two years of some·
times heated ncaot1at1ons. rcp~n
tati \'cs ofthc Saddlcback Community
ollqc Distnct and 11 tcach~rs have
reached a ten1at1ve aarttment on a
new contract
D"tnct spoku man Wilham
hrt1btr said the propo1ed PIC1
would male ddkblck tca~hm the h1~t-pa1d faculty amon1 Cah·
fonua's 70 rommuntl)' coll~ d1s-
1nctc;
. ' .:..
"That's not said P"Ud1in1ly... he
f.a1d. "We pay the best and ael the
best.·•
The thrtt-year agreement calls for
ttachcn to rttt1ve an 8.S percent pa)'
raise, retroactive to July l . 19'4. With
the 1ncru1e. the averqe (ull·tt~
~lebeck teacher would earn
$31.000 to $40.000 annually.
Schtttbcr said.
The propoa pact is suU subject to
approval by d1Stnc1 ttachcn. That
vote 11 Clptt'ttd to be hdd later thtt ll'leue ... aADDL&aAC&/ d )
1te ot.·ziggy'
attoon lawsuit
hlft ed to Ohio
a,.._ AM• • .., .,....
A woman claimina to be co-creator
of the Zia&Y cartoon character has
removt'd ~ SlO million lawsuit
aaainst the artist, Tom Wilson. from
Onnac Count y and refiled the docu-
ments in Cleveland.
Mary Alict Sames. 45, refiled in
Cleveland because she found a lawyer
there who would be paid only if she
won the case. said George Hannen,
lhc Newpon Bcah attorney who
bandied the case in Orange County.
Hannen's firm does not take caset
under 1uch restrictions, but he will
continue to represent Barnes in a
J>9tcmity suit apinst Wilson.
Sames, a former co-worker with
Wilson at American Greetings, is
seekina compensatory and punitJve
damases plus ~alf the profits from the
forlorn character's cartoons and
product line.
The move to Ohio. where Wil50n is
a resident, also avoids a fight over
counjurisdiclion in the suit. Hannen
said.
UC REGENTS HOLD FEES •.•
From Al
Money collected from student fees
1s used to pay for items such as
counseling1• student health and
financial aio.
The increase is caused by inflation.
said stllivan.
Nat)onally, California university
tuition for non-residents is I 2 percent
above the average. but resident fees
arc 20 percent below the average.
Sullivan 5aid.
Despite the regents' vote, the
question of fees depends o n the
Legislature's approval of the state
budget, she added.
In his proposed budget package.
Gov. George Deukmej1an set aside
S I 2 million for special projects nor-
mally funded by student fees, making
it possible to keep tuition and fee1
steady for California residents.
Sullivan said she was uncertatn
what would happen if the Leaislature
fails to approve the $12 million
allotment proposed by Deukmcjian.
But the regents can withdraw from
their vote at any time.
"It would not necessarily mean that
fees would go up, .. she said.
OMEN HIGH IN LUNG CANCER •••
mAl
now that on average these workers
moke more than other occupational
groups."
The UCI program also determined
that cancer of the female reproducu ve
organs made up 14 percent of the
county's cancer cases, with Hispanic
women found to have 41 percent of
the cases.
Researchers attributed the high
rate to the large number of cervical
cancer cases found among Hispanics.
Cervical cancer accounted for 71
percent of the reproductive organ
cancer cases among Hispanic women
and 37 percent among other ethnic
groups.
"My speculation is that Hispanic
women actually have a higher degree
of nsk factors associated with cancer
of the cervix. or we're not getting
them to go to clinics for routine PAP
smears and educational programs ...
Anton-Ou1rais ~id.
The Cancer Surveillance Program
was established as a ceJltral registry
for every cancer case in the county,
with informatioh collected [!om local
hospitals. The program IS a joint
effon of UC Irvine and the Health
Care Agency of Orange County.
The registry· has collected infor-
mation on 4.823 cases. included
2,813 women and 2.010 men, all
diagnosed in I 982. This represents
more than 75 percent of all Orange
County cancer cases reponed in that
year. the first period analyzed in the
continuing program.
Information is collected and stored
on c:pmputcrs. usloflf't:he Cansut/Nef
program ~e velopcd by the California
Tumor Registry• of the state Depart-
ment of Health Services. Develop-
ment of the computer programming
was subsidized by the American
Cancer Society and the NaJional
Caricer Institute.
The local cancer re$JSlty was in-
itially funded by the university. but it
recently received a $368.000 award
from the state Depanment of HcaJth
Services. The grant was given to help
the program continue tracking cancer
by occupation. geography and ethnic
origins.
Information gathered through the
program will be available to state and
local officials. hospitals and phys-
icians for use in cancer diagnosis.
treatment and prevention.
"The importance of ha ving access
10 this sort of information in the
county is that people concerned with
health care can start planning
strategics for prevention." said Dr. B.
Dwight Culver. co-director of the
cancer surveillance program and a
clinical professor of community and
e nvironmental medicine.
·POSTAL 'DEAL' IN NEWPORT •..
From Al
Beach postal business.
By Tuesday evening. Lisherness
plans to unload roughly 25.000 new
postage stamps at four cents le.ss than
the U.S. rates. Customers will be
limited to a maximum of 50 stamps
apiece.
"There's only so much money that
you can be wilting to lose," said
Lisherness. the 62-year-old owner of
Post Box Rentals. 3857 Barch St.
Lisherness figures that he will drop
about S 1.200 dunng the two-day
promotion for his five-year-old busi-
ness. which offers post office boxes
and shipping services.
Lisherness said his business has
been running along smoothly, but he
decided to give stamp buyers a few
cents for their attention as a way of
"keeping things rolling."
He said, even though Post Offices
were closed today for the holiday.
nobody was exactly breaking down
the doors this morning to get at the
bargain-priced stamps, and at 9:30
a.m. he was still waiting for the .. mad
rush" that he had expected.
But Lisherness remained hopeful
that he would be able to sett his
stamps. lose his money and gain some
potential customers for his other
services.
While Lisherness 1s helping some
people avoid the increase in first class
rates. postal service users will have to
fend for themselves with the new
rates for overnight express mail.
SI 0.75; and for special delivery.
$2.95.
·LINE FORMS FOR FIREMAN JOBS •••
From Al
"It's pretty lypical of firefighter
• recrui1ing 10 see so many applicants.''
Allan said.
Applican1s traveled from through-
out Southern and Central California
to vie for lhe pos1uons. which opened
up following retirements in the past
year. he said. Many of the candidates '~rt currently work.ang with other fire
=Jp_epartments and are seeking a job
' hange.
· To find the cream of the crop. the
:Newport Beach Fire Department wilt
$Creen the applications to ensure that
the basic requirements are met. All
:applicants must already be state-~certified trained firefighters with at
·teast 240 hours of classroom instruc-
• t1on and training. Allan said.
The next step is the skills testing in
~h1ch the applicants perform the
physical ag1ht)' tasks -taking vital
sign'i. climbing ladders. dragging fire
hoses. etc.
From there the applicants arc
interviewed by three fire captains. An
interview with a fire department
psychologist follows to sec if the
applicant would be compatible with
other firemen in the department.
The finalists are then inter.viewed
by the Fire Chief himself, Jim Reed.
Ed Engler. the second man in line
after he amved at noon Friday. said
the large turnout wasn't surprising.
The 25-year-old El Toro resident 1s
accustomed to the tong wait]. for a fire
department job. La~kend. he
saw more than 200 hopefuls stand in
hne at both the Upland and Ontano
fire depanment headquarters.
In the past 2'h years. Engler has
apphed for about a dozen fire depart-
ment JObs throughout Southern Cali-
fornia. Currently. he works for a small
tire agency at the Los Alamitos
Armed Forces Reserve Center and is
on-call with the O ra nge County Fire
Department.
White Engler arnved too late to
apply' for the Upland and Ontario
JObs. he wa5n't about to make the
same mistake 1n Newport Beach.
"I came out on Thursday. just to
take a look, .. he said.
When he returned on Friday,
Engler armed himself with a beach
chair, cot. sleeping bag, soft drinks
and magazines.
"Newpon is a good place to work,
naturally. so that's one big reason why
so mauy turned out. But 11 would
have been even bigger if it was
publicized more. Also. Newpon's
requirements were a bit higher than
others."
Engler said he and other hopefuls
passed the time by chatting, reading
and making food and beverage raids
at the nearby Crab Cooker restaurant
and Malarkey's Irish Pub.
The four finalists wilt join a
depanmenJ of about I 20 employees
and can earn after 3111 years about
$2.300 a month.
PEALE PREACHES IN COUNTY ..•
From Al
devote more time to his pubhcat1on,
Guideposts. which he founded 40
~cars ago. Guideposts has 4.5 m1lhon
subscribers. enabling him to reach a
larger audience than would have been
pos~1ble had he stayed with the
c.>tiurch. Peale ~aid.
• His hook. ··The Power of Positi ve
thLnk1ng. ·· has been translated into
40 lan~uages and was on the best-
'lcllcr list for about six years. Crystal
Cathedral pastor Robert Schuller
\aid
It was inspired when Peale, as a
>oung man. discovered a way to
overcome his feelings of inferionty
and shyness.
Just Call
642-6086
o:r.:;:
la QuerentMd
MOnQer 11.oa, 11 ,,.,.. on
not """' ~ 1•V<I' 11\' ~ )() o,. Ul'I O*IOI• T P"'
..,,,, fOJ' (OC)y " I I» ,..._..,
"I was what they used to call
bashful. That's a good word because 11
means bash. I thought I was a worm,··
Peale said.
"I went around telhng everybody
that I would never amount to any-
thing. and then I discovered that they
were all agreeing with me."
When a professor of Peale's at Ohio
Western University exhorted his
student to cast ofT the self-doubt that
suppressed him. Peale said he
mounted the school steps and spoke
aloud.
"Look. Lord. you are able to change
a drunk into a sober person and a thief
into an honest person. Whv can't you
What do you like about tll1e Dally Piiot? Wbt don't yoa lib? C.JI t111e
number at left and your me11a1e wlll be recorded. traascrlbed and delivered
to Ute appropriate editor.
ne same U -atoer aaswerl•& service may be H eel to record letters to~
editor oo aay topic. Contributors to oar Letters colama mast lach1de tllelr
name and ltlt pltoat number for nrlflratloa. No elrc•latloa calla, pltaH.
Tell as wlta t'1 oa yoar mind.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H.L. Schw•rtz HI
Publisher
Clrculatlon 714/142-4113
Ca..lfted edftftlelnt 714/142-M11
AH other depertmentt 142""'321
MAIN OflFICE
llO Wt'\I ftaf ,, Cot!• ~ CA
~ ... aodo ... &• ·~ Cotll .._ CA -~:>e
~••111ilotv 1111,1 Sv,,Ol y ii
,o,.,, °" no' •K.,..,. yoti.11 "°' I>• 7 • "' call 11910r•
•I) • "' 11"'1 '°'" Q'C)\I ... ,..,_"°
Frenk Zlnl
Managing Editor
Karen Wittmer
Advertising Director
Copf'oQl't' •M 1 0r'""9' C-.1 "'-'9 eo.-ny Ho ,_ "°',.. Mlf•I~ eO>for,.; ,...""' or ..,.,..,_
,,..,,1' ............ , De teptoeluel«I •llhoul -•I 1J9t
.._,"'~""'-
Ctrcutetton r ... ~
'
AoH mery Churchmen
Controller I
Robert l. C•ntrell
Production
Manager
Oon•ld L. WIUl•m•
Circulation
Manager VOl. 71, NO. CM1
(
Heavy fog keeping things cool
Denae marln• log rolled Into the uat«n Plf't of the Lot
Ange .. 1 basin early today as South«n Callfotnll ~ down
from laat week'• unseasonably high temP«atur•.
The log wae ao dense In aom• areas, euch .. In Riverside
where vltlbllity waa let• than a 1ht1.-nth of a mh at 5 a.m .. that
the National Weathef Service lhued a apeclal tra.......,.1 ICMeory
recommending •xtra caution. Little chang41 waa forecaal fOf Tuelday except for earlier
clearlng. lorecattera uld
Along the Orange Cout, ther• will b4I night and mOfnlng low
cloud• with only partial cle•rtng near th• cout tonight and
mostly sunny Tuesday attetnoon. Coo* wtth hight TUMday In
the &Os. LOwt tonight motllY 45 to 55. _
From Point Conception to th• ~exlcen Bord« -Inner
watera: Light var1able winds night and mornfno hours t>.aomlng
aouthwesl to west 8 to 15 knot• with 1 to 2·foot Wind wavet In the
afternoon Tuesday.
Temps I ""'-40 32
K.,,...Clty 42 32 Laa Veg.e .. 41
S4 ••~~'--": "'tit' 'Will' w....-coeo.,.
HIOfl. '°"' for 24 nou< o ending II $ Lillie Aoclll
Im IOOay M«nc>f\11
HI Lo Ml1ml 8-IC!h
6e
70
.,
43
67
.,._.,, ~ """".,.._ Ocoliidecl....,.StafionltyA.p
....., ...., ~HOM. ua o.t .,, o.-.c.
Albany 43 26 MlllNllUit .. 31 26
Albuque<QUI .. 36 Mpls-SI PllUI 39 24
Amltlllo $1 33 ~ 52 32
~ ... 14 ·03 New 0r1Nn•. 71 S4
Allanla 60 3e New YOtli 44 34
OlllaMm• City 67 43
Calif. Tempe Surf report
A llMIUc City 43 31
AuetJn .. 63
Baltimore 48 33
llirmlnohlm 61 40 ...,...,ell 2• 11
lolM 31 21
loeton .. 30
llulf.io 32 22
Ceeper 22 09 Char•ton.S C 12 40
cnan.con.w v .. 20
CNr1otte.N C SS 211
~ 41 10
CNcl!gO 31 20
Clnclnnell 42 19
~ 37 18
COlumtiue.°'1 39 t4
Conco<"O.H H 4S n
o.itu-Ft Worlh 83 S4 Oeyton 37 20 o.n-45 25 0.Moin.. 44 33
OeltOll 29 1S
Oukllh 27 10
El PlllO 77 44
fllltbanli• 14 -le
fwgo 33 11
"-''-" $t 28 Orenc:t Aaplo1 31 20
HlfllOtd 48 25
Helena 37 17
Honolulu 13 72
Houelon 15 51
ltlclllll•Pollt H 20
JllCl<1on.M1 .. 45
Jedi_,.... 70 35
OINl\I •• 30
()f1endo 70 47
~· 37 24
Phoerll• Ill 57
Pitt~ 37 11
POt11 .M9.. 43 24
PonlMd,Or 63 30
Pt~ 41 25
Rale19h 53 27
'*'° S4 21
Rtenmond 49 27
St LOUii 47 31 St Pflte-T1mp1 73 48
San LAii• City JS 17 San Antonio ee S4
San Jvao PA 84 72 SI SleMane 18 10
S..1111 47 33
Shraveporl 67 40
Spo1<-36 13 Syr-38 27
TQPella 41 36 ,_ ., 48 ,..,.. 66 42
WM111n9lon 47 3t
WlcHta 45 32
w1111•-8alrt 40 :le
Extended
0.Craulng nlghl -motl'lng low cloud• wt1h motlly 11unn1 Wld .,..,,.,...
daye ":?.:'"' 1111 mid --70. -lows In I 40e lo mid 609
76 42 ea 22
74 29
81 46
58 53 57 47
70 52 83 63
71 45
93 48
69 47
73 45
72 50
70 47
r.3 30 es :M
Ida~
1-2 '""' 1-2 POOt
1·2 poor
1·2 POOt
0 POOt 0-1 POOt
1·2 POOt
TOOAY 3otpm
9)()pm
10
42
It
1 0 o.a 4 3
&In Miii today 11 4 48 p.m • tlMa
T.-day at 6 34 • m Wld Mlll 11419#\ •I
S40pm
Moon Nit tOOay •I 4·4e p.m . rlMe
T\ieedey •t 8 63 • m and Mb 9lfl 91
S .. pm
Cops can 't fin·d BigBird
that's wanderingin Irvine
., UM MAHOtmY • from .,.._ to ttme, Mid no. no oett1cMI were °' ...... ,...., mllllna. ttw.ecyou
A motorllt c9hd Irvine poHce Sunday to NPOtt ••.Q the oetrtch. ..,. aQCOUnted for llt Uon
that Big Bird ~ on the loole, but Plllr<*I., Country Saf8r1," Norden Mid. ·w. didn't ...
reepondlng coutdn t ftnd eo much u •....,_of the anything, 80 .. didn't do anytNng," he lekt.
6-foot gray and Whit• 1U1P9C1. But the hapl111 tr...., may not have bMl1
Lt. Gene Norden laid a motorilt apprOMHng 1m1ig1ntng ~ btrde or pink etephanta, an animal
the connuence of the Santa Ana end San Deego contl'ot epok..,_, aald.
freeways waa reeponatble for the curaou. "°'9 on He could have ...,. a hewtc, Eugene Hann.
Sunday'a police blotter: '' Alllst IWltmat control with lllld. Aid ..al hewt<a, tt Nern•, gather In the .,..
a gray & whlte ftv.foot btrd wtth orange beak. Not w.y ~ about thta time u farmwortl .. 8t.r1
an off en..·· ct.ring fllldl for n.w crope.
An ottrlch hu run amok ak>ng the freeway, The c:leertng dtsturt>a ~ rabbft• and other
said the motorttt. , mnlm8ll that are :... In hewk a..,. -rM taety
But poUc• COUid ftnd no trace of the over9tzed rnonee.. '
bird once they arrMd and Uon Country Sefllrl. The hawks, whlle not 5-feet tllll; are ''mtghty
which uMd to mlsotace -..1c bird• and Mlmala latge bWd•." Hanna Uid.
SADDLEBACK TEACHERS ACCEPT PACT •••
From Al
month. The contract would afTect
about 235 full-time and 470 part-time
instructors at Saddleback's lrvme
and Mission Viejo cam puses.
The teachers previous contract
expired in June I 983. but bargaining
had continued for two years without
success unlit the tentative pact was
reached last week. The agreement
provides no retroactive pay increase
to cover the 1983-84 school year.
Schreiber said the proposed in-
crease would cost the district about
$1 . I 5 million from its current budget.
The current fringe benefit~ package
would remain unchanged through
Dec. 31 . 1985.
Under the agreement. the two sides
could reopen negotiations for pay and
fnnge benefits after Jan. I. 1986.
PLANE CRASH •.•
From Al
Designed,
Finished
Installed
One new provision of the proposed
contract is scnionty status for some
pan-time instructors, givin$ them
preference when certain teachmgJObs
become available. Schreiber said.
Trash pickup
correction told
31 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters
FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE
ON THE MARKET TODAY ••• AT FACTORY
DIRmCTPRICDI C.11(714)548-6841 or548-1717
HBI-MAIUF ACTlllY 19n Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa, CA 'llffl1
) • • I
I
I . I
•.. .,. •...
....... Geil.;~ • •...•. , ........ . ..... .. ,, leit .... •l•·•UM• ...... . ........... cm.c.-...... ., ... ...... ............... =:'-"·· tllat. Jl•Mt ..,. ......... ..... ~ .• ,.. ..
..-It of die •Y.·aoatla trial .... ..., ..,.
M .
e 1r
California
President Reagan says
the oU derricks he can see
from his Santa Barbara
ranch don't bother h7m I the least./ M
Na don
The world' a third artlficlal
heart patient 11 In stable
condition after au~
fulsurgeryon Sunday, his
..• . doctor says.I A5
About 800 former
• Martne1 reunite on 40th
.,..nlveraary of lwo Jim a
Invasion./ Al
World
Armed Shiite MOiiema
celebrate upon departure
of lsraells./ M
Vietnamese, Thal
soldlera In fierce battle on·
border./M
Featuree
The famlly that trains
together ... goes In cycles
before a triathlon./ A7
Sporu
CIF basketball playoffs
~In on Friday and area
teams know who they'll
play-except for New-
port Harbor Hlgh./B't
The Unlden Invitational at
Mesa Verde Country
Club la on echedule./81
Entertainment
Actr ... Liv Ullmann talks
about her personal and
profet1lonal choices./ Al
Bulneea
The U.S. auto Industry Is
b.ck on top after Mlllng
more than 10 mllllon cars
ln1984./M
nmsx
A10
A3
BM
87-9
A10
89
87
A7-8 aa
A8
Al A7
A3
87
81 ...
AS
A9
A2
FIRSTEDmON
ORANG£'COUHTY. . ~ _ CALJFOM~I A _ · · r • -
anecras ...
reet
Aircraft ell pped
-·power pole near
Leisure World .
A private plane ftir1ed with din tt'er
Sunday nisbt. narrowly mi... a laJ'IC miranent conunuaity whe9 it
crash landed in Seal ae.ch.
Tbe twi~ftline Beecbcraft K.i111
Air tipped a power line, then riPDCd a
wins and maine off when ii bit a
power pole duJina the ctnef'FDC'Y
landina on Seat Beach Boulevard.
firefiahten said.
An unidentified female ~
i fl the plane was ta.ken to Los
Alamitos General HOll)ital for nat-
ment of a minor' shoulder injury, but
nobody else wa's bun. Oranee County
fue dispatcher Kathy Kelly said.
The plane. _,doted by Ooualas
Alcarrunz. 27. bad taken off &om
Torrance Munjcipal Airport and WU
rq>e>nedlv bound for Oranee Cou.nty
but developed mechanical problems
over Sul Beach. J(elly said. It landed
on Seal Beach BouJevanf between
Golden Rain Road and SL Andrews Drive. The plane narrowly mined the
globe at the entrance to the densely . ....,,...,....._,.,....c.-populated Leisure World community
WrecU,e of twlD-enibae Beecbcn.ft Km, Air lllta on Seal Beach Boale~ard followine Sanday ntcht cruh la.n41DC. (Pleue ... CILUll/ A2)
149wait
in line
for try
at4jobs
•
Newport Beach hirtn
new flrefi hter~ arier
recent retirements
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of ... Dllr ........
Some of the 149 applicants fo r four
fi rcfi&hters' jobs at the Newpon
Beach Fire Dcpanment showed up
Friday niaht and camped on the steps
of City Hall until Monday to ensure
acu ina an application.
The depenment intended to hand
out no more than I SO applications
and wound up distributina all but
one.
Tbe Jobs pay an entry-level salary
of S 1.904 a month, said Batta Hon
Chief Scott Allan. (.S.. Me LOR/ A2)
bdlatloa fllJJt·
mates~atsat
NB postal~
l1~Y SAAVEDRA °' .. ._ .......
So you forac>t to mail that letter
before Sul\day, when fint clan po&tal
rates j umped two ocnls.
Well, there's still time to save thote
two pcnnic • 1n fact you can e"en mail
that note to Undt lhH or tlllt car
peyment and 1tm hlYe four centt left
over. That's because Cl\artie U~
1s tclli na a limittd number or 22-ant
pos1qC stamps for 11 eents • 1
publicity aimmick for hi• New,on
(Pl ... Me POaTAJ-JAI)
._ ................. ~
Adltllia llDOfttla eacked oat at 8 a.m. roll aall la Newport.
LB' s Free Cllnic:
Hippies replaced
by 'workingpoor'
WhC"n the Laguna Beach Frtt
Chnac first opened 1n October 1970.
the Love Generation's flower chil-
dren beat a path to HS door.
It "'as the he)da~ of the' drug
culture. a volunteer doctor re-
members. And transient h1pp1es
fi lled Laguna ·s streets. sleeping on the
beach and 1n ca\Cs in the hills.
The\ came to the' frtt ch n1c
needing routine medical care. tests for
pregnancy and ,·enercal disease and
counseling on the C'oncems of their
generation -drugs and the drat\.
The strttt people "'1th httlc money
were welcomed b' the clinic's
philosophy of supplying free medical
care to all who asked.
In those )Cars. the free d 1n1c hvcd
the same hand-to-mouth existence as
1tschents. One da)' 1n August 197 1 the
door ofthC' chnt<' on Glenneyrc trttt
bore the following message: "You got
us the rent Thank You. Now we need
S77.43 b~ Wedncsda\ to keep our
NEws FoLLOWUP
phone and S66.89 by Friday to pay
taxes (of all thinp). ••
A &lass Jat sat in the clinic waiti ..
room ready to receive whatever
donation tbotc passirw thl"O\llh could
afford.
Now 14yearsold, thetetn..,..ertbat
1s the ~ clinic is put the sbaky-
lqacd days of its infancy. Altboulb
neither flush nor financially ICCUle.
the operation does stand on its own
feet.
(Pl•••-na&/A3)
County's wqmen
with lung cancer
top U.S. average
By PKIL EJDEAMAN
Ot .. 0-.......... JI The percentage ot'Oranae County
women who develop tuna cancer
compal't'd to men IS 11 percent hllhcr
than ~ national avcraac. a C
Irvin canttr monuonng prosram
concludfd. rcpon b} the UCI Canttr
u~e1lt.ntt Prosram of OranJC
oucu and.c.a&cs men l«'OUnt for
42 pcrttnt of the count}· tuna nttr
taSC'\, compared to l 1 percent for the
nation. a umatcd bv t~ mtncan
Can~ Society.
The local rcpon was 1..-.d sbonly
after the American CaMer Society
announced that tuna cancer hae
urputed braSl c:ucer u a '-din&
cauxofdath amoaa womt1\.
• Rctearehcn attnbuud the cbanet
to an increate 1n cipret1C 1Molt1qa
amona ~.
"The ~ton of •11111 cancer
bttwen malri and feiM!ta '" OrHet Count)' i q-.ite diffcmn t'Olft wM\
we ttt 1n nalionel av:g;.• Di. flll ... .. ,., )
• • l
., J,'
l > •
.
i .
,
J
AL' IN KBWPORT •••
..,..._.,only so rn~h moaey that °" can be willina 10 tole." IAid · *'*-. the 62·yur-old owner of
-Pola Boa llentala. l8S7 8ircb St. LitMrneta ,... that be will drop
about s1 .200 d ·na lbe t~y
prolftOlion for bis ftve.year.:oad buU.
ne11,, wbicb often pc»& of'fkit bOaes
and lhippi111 lefYicel.
Liahemna aaid his buainm bH
been Nnftina aloft& amoothlyt but he
decided 10 IJYe &\atnp buyen I few
oent1 for their auention 11 a way of
·•1teel>in11hinp rollina. ''
He said, even thouah Post Offion
were closed today for the holiday,
nobody wu eoctly breakina down
the doors this morning to act at the
berpin-priced stamps, and at 9:30
a.m. he wu &till wai1h11 for the .. mad
rush" that he had Hpectefi.
But Lilhemeu remained hopeful
that he wo_.ld be 9ble to •tr his
stampa, loee tUt money and pin some
Potential cu1tomen for his otbcr
acrvictt.
While Ushernen is helpina some
peos>'e avoid the incre11e in first class
rates. postal ltt\'ice u1e11 wiU have to
fend for themwlvq with the new
rain. for ovemiaht csapreu 11'til, SI 0. 7S: and for special deliv,,-y, $2.95.
LINE FORMS FOR FIREMAN ~OBS .•• Pi'omA l
.. It's pretty typiQI of firefi.aJ'lter
recruilina to toe JO many applicants.''
Allan said.
Applicants traveled from throuah-
out SOutbem and Central California
to vie for the positions, which opened
up followina retirements in the past
year, he said. Many oflhe candidates•
are currently working with other fire
depanrpents and are seeking a job
cha •.
To find the cream of the crop, the
Newport Beach Fire Department wjll
ICteen the applications to ensure that
the buic requirement~ are met. ALI
pplicants must already be state-
'fied &rained firefiahters with at
2.0 houn of olassroom instruc-~ and trainin .. Allan said.
The r)CJll step 1s the skills testing in
which the applicants perform the
physical aaility task& -taking vital
signs. climbing ladders. drasging fire
hoses.etc.
From there, the applicants are
interviewed by three fire captains. An
interview wit.b a fire depanment
psycholQSist follows to see if the
applicant would be compatible with
other firemen in the department.
The finalists are then interviewed
by the Fire Chief himself, Jim Reed.
Ed Engler. the second man in line
after he arrived at noon Friday, said
the large turnout wasn't surprising.
The 25-year-old El Toro resident is
accustomed to the long waits for a fire
department job. Last weekend, he
saw more than 200 hopefuls stand in
line at both the UphJnd and Ontario
fire department hea~uarters.
In the past 21/J years. Engler has
applied for about a dozen fire depart-
ment jobs throughout Southern Cali-
fornia. Currently. he works for a small
fire agency at the Los Alamitos
Armed Forces Reserve Center and is
on-call with the Oranae County Fire
Department.
While Engler arrived too late to
apply for the Upland and Ontario
jobs. he wasn't about to make the
same mistake in Newport Beach.
"I came out on Thursday, just to
take a look," he said.
When he returned on Friday,
Enaler armed himself with a beach
chair. cot. slccpina baa. soft drinks
and mapzines.
··Newpon is a good place to work,
naturally. so that's one biareaaon why
so many turned out. But it would
have been even bisger if it was
publicized more. Also, Newp()rt's
requirements were a bit hiaher than .
others."
Engler said he and other hopefuls
paucd the time by chattina. readina
and making food and beverqc raid&
a1 the nearby Crab Cooker restaurant
and Malarkey's Irish Pub.
The four finalists will JOtn a
department of about 120 employees
and can cam after 31/z years about
$2,300 a month.
RILEY RAPS TREATMENT REDUCTION •••
From Al
It also susgests that lessened treat-board associate engineer, said.
, ment is counter to count( plans for The Aliso Water Management
the area and a violation o the public Agency. a joint powers agency made
trust. up of seven munici~Jities and water
"The change ... will be detrimental· 01siricts, can provide' secondary treat-
in a number of ways," Riley wrote. He ment, in fact most of its plants can
urged the quality control board to process sewage at an even higher
"assert its authority and mandate to level. Such tertiary treated water is
, protect the quality of coastal waters sold by some of its distric~ for
by dcnyina this waiver." watering parkland and golf courses.
The federal Clean Water Act of But Bill Sukcnik, Aliso manager,
1972 required waste water treatment says the agency wants to reduce
districts to upgrade facilities to treatment to save money. Energy
provide what is called secondary costs associated with secondary treat-
treatment. Such advanced treatment ment could be cut by about $200,000
removes about 75 percent of a year if the waiver were allowed, he
· suspended solids -the sewage -said.
from waste water. However, Riley agrees with resi-
Under Aliso's plan, the waters off dents and co.ncerned civic organiza-
Aliso Beach would receive double the tions -and three Aliso members -
amount of suspended solids as they from Emerald Bay to South Laguna.
do now, Bruce Posthumus. a control They contend reduced treatment
poses potential health risks, would
sully Aliso 's crystal clear water and be
a slap in the face to residents of South
Laguna who backed off their original
opposition to the construction of the
sewa,Je pipeline in 1976 after Aliso
officials promised high treatment
standards.
Riley's letter notes that state and
county health officals are rec-
ommending more monitoring than
the waiver itself requires. Pointin&
out that, under the current level of
treatment and monitoring, Aliso
Beach was closed four times in 1983,
the letter states "it seems to be a very
unwise course of actio:o decide on a
level of treatment in hich the level
of virus(forexample) ul<i be would
be 200 times greater than at the
present level."
WOMEN HIGH IN LUNG CANCER •••
From Al
Hoda Anton-Guirgis. director of the
surveillance program and a professor
of community and environmental
.. medicine at the UCI College of
~Medicine.
: "The Orange County Data could be
; explained by the possibility that there
.) is a higher number of women smokers
j or more males who have stopped ~ smoking or a combination of both."
' she said. ,.
The repon did not address whether
• Orange Countr. residents are more
likely or less likely to develop lung
cancer than people elsewhere. Instead
• it focused on the breakdown of cases
by sex, occupation and ethic group.
By occupation, the study found a
, higher percentage oflung cancer cases
• in blue collar workers. Among all
• cancer cases reported for Orange
County's blue collar workers, lung
'1 cancer was the diagnosis in 27
percent. Among other workers, lung
·. cancer accounted for 15 percent.
"The data we have show blue collar
workers have a higher share of lung
cancer," Anton-Guirgis said. "But we
know that on average these workers
smoke more than other occupational
groups."
The Uri program also determined
that cancer of the female reproductive
organs made up 14 percent of the
county's cancer cases, with Hispanic
women found to have 41 percent of
the cases.
Researchers attributed the high
rate to the large number of cervical
cancer cases found among Hispanics .
Cervical cancer accounted for 71
percent of the reproductive organ
cancercascsamong Hispanic women
and 37 percent among other ethnic
groups. ../
"My speculation is that ijispanic
· women actually have a higher degree
of risk factors associated with cancer
of the cervix, or we're not getting
them to go to clinics for routine PAP
smears and educational programs,"
Anton-Guirgis said.
The Cancer Surveillance Program
was established as a central registry
for every cancer case in the county,
with information collected from local
hospitals. The program is a joint
effon of UC Irvine and the Health
Care Agency of Orange County.
The registry has collected infor-
mation on 4.823 cases, included
2,813 women and 2,0 10 men, all
diagnosed in 1982. This represents.
more than 75 percent of all Orange
County cancer cases reponed 1n that
year. the first period analyzed in the
continuing pravam.
Information 1s collected and stored
on computers, using the Cansur/Net
program developed by the California
Tumor Reaistry of the state Dcpan-
ment of Health Services. Develop-
ment of the computer prosramming
was subsidized by the American
Cancer Society and the National
Cancel' Institute.
The local cancer fe$istry was in-
itially funded by the university, but it
recently received a $368,000 award
from the state Department of Health
Services. The grant was given to help
the program continue tracking cancer
by occupation. geography and ethnic
origins.
Information gathered through the
program will be available to state and
local officials. hospitals and phys-
icians for use in cancer diaanosis,
treatment and prevention.
"The imponance of having access
to this sort of information in the
county is that people concerned with
hc~lth cart can start planning
strategies for prevention," said Dr. B.
Dwight Culver. c<Hiircctor of the
cancer surveillance program and a
clinical professor of community and
environmental medicine.
PEALE PREACHES IN COUNTY •••
From Al
devote more time to his publication.
Guideposts. which he founded 40
years aJO. Guideposts has 4.5 million
subscribers. enabling him to reach a
larger audience than would have been
possible had he stayed with the
church. Peale said.
His book. "Ttie Power of Positive
• Thinking.·· has been translated into
40 lanJua.ges and was ol) the best-
seller list for about si'I years, Crystal
Cathedral pastor Robert Schuller
, said.
It was inspired when Peale. as a
young man. discovered a way to
' overcome his feelings of inferiority
and shyness.
t.
Just Call
642-6086
"I was what they used to call
bashful. That's a good word because it
means bash. I thought I was a worm."
Peale said.
··1 went around telling everybody
that I would never amount to any-
thing. and then I discovered that they
were all agreeing with me."
When a professor of Peale's at Ohio
Western University exhoned his
student to cast off the seff adoubt that
suppressed him. Peale said he
mounted the school steps and spoke
aloud.
"'Look. Lord. you are able to chan_ge
a drunk into a sober person and a thief
into an honest p(rson. Why can't you
Wllat do yoa like abnt l111e Dally Piiot? Wlaat 4oa't )'H like? C.IJ tllle
Hmber at left and you me1111e will be reeorft4, traucrlW aM 4ell•trH
to ~ appropriate edUor.
ne same %4-llloar aatwtrt•11enlc, may be •H4 to reconl letten .. CM
edJtor on 11y topic. Coatrlbators to nr•U teert ceJama mnt llllCIMt *'eir
ume and teltplloH Hmbtr for verlfleatloe. No elrnJaU.. calls, ,ae.1e.
TtU H wlllat'• ot1 ynr lllla4.
".---------------------------------------------------------------------------------..
MOllOIY rfdty " you 00 llOI Mw >'°"' pep« by
I! 5 30 p '" cal llelot• 1 p "' ,, _., 'f04ll cooy .. .,.
1 dllllwMd > ~ ~ Sundlly "
""' 4111 .... ·-"°"" CX1f1'f Oy , • "' .. Delo<• 10 .-tfl tnCI rGI" CQPY .... .,........,..,
Clr1Ml9 .....
Tsl1pft9Rll
ORANGE COAST
DlilyPillt
H.L. Schwartz Ill
Publisher
Frenk Zlnl
Managing Edi,or .
Katen wtttmer
Advertising Director
Rnemary Churchman
Controller
Robert L. Centrefl
Production
Manager
Doneld L. Wlfllam•
Clrculatlon
Manager
Clrc ......... 1141142...al
Cl1111fted ......... tt 1141142•""
Al ....... d., ........ ~
MMNCWPIC~
330 W"4 9rr 51 eo.ta Meta CA Mt<l ICl<lr ... 9o• IMO Oolll• .._ CA t26='t
Oopytogllt •NJ Ortn11t eo.1 ~ ~ Ho ,_ t10t.. ...,,,,'°"' eclolor,.. ~• or ....,,_
~ .... ..,,.,.,.,~~ ........
_... ol C.GP)'!IQIW .....
VOL71..NO ...
o.n .. l'Ntlnt r0g rolled Into the eeetefft part of the Loe
Angetee bMln Mtly lodey .. Southern ~ cooled down
from ... , ..... unMMOn•biY hlrgtl ~.
The fog WU ao '*'" In tome .,..., &IClft .. In ~
--. vtllblttty wu '"8 then • "•tMnttl of• mll at 5 e.m .. that the Natlonel WMthef s.vtoe INueda ~ .,..., •• ad'lftOfy
~••tr• caution. Llttle change waa fOteC:Mt for Tueaday eaoept for ..,,..,
a..t1n9, forecaat•• Mid.
Along the Orange Cout, there wtll be night 9nd mot'nlog low
doud9 ~h ontv partial ctearlng netr the oout tonight and
eunny Tueaday aft•noon. Cooler wtttl hight Tueeday In • Low IONQht moetly 45 Jo 55.
om Point C~lon to the Mexlcen 9ordw -lnntr --.: UOM vartable wtncta night 9nd morrq houri becomtno
IOUlhweet to weet I to 15 knot• wtttl 1 to 2-foot '*td wavee In the
....,noon Tueaday.
Tempe 40 12 42 32 .. ... 54 •t 61 4S
70 17 31 25
---c-.. .....,. ... ,...,,.... .... OooUled.., l!e41ofWy .....
.....,.. ......, ..,_. NOo\4, "I OllM d Co!Mwu .. Le
43 " ee SI 39 24 -------------------St 33
14 ~
IO H ., 3t
&I 53 41 33 11 40
24 18
31 21
.. 30
32 22 U OI 12 40
.. 20 55 28 41 10 » ao 42 •• 37 11 31 14
45 22 83 54
37 20
•5 25
.. 33
2t 15 27 to 17 ..
·14 ·II
52 32 7t 54
•4 34
57 43 .. 30 10 47
37 24
II 57 S1 18
43 24
53 30 ... 25
" 27 54 21
41 27
47 38
73 41 35 t7 .. 54
14 72
111 10
47 33
17 40
35 13
SI 27
41 31 II 41
55 42 47 31 45 a2
40 21
Calif. Tempe Surf report
Hlgtl, low lllf 24 110u<1 erldlng·el 6
• I'll today
8•1letllleld ... 11 Ellfeltl 54 M ,,_ .. 63
unca.1er -11 4t Loe Angtla ii 51
Ollllland lie 41
Peeo AOlllM 71 45
A.a Blulf 73 so AedWOCIO Clly 17 «
Sec:remento .. 43
Selnat It ..
Sen OleOO IO II Seti Ftenc:*o 17 41
Senta lletberl 65 " ----------
Stodnon 87 <II Tld H'Oh, IOw, prectpllellon 10< 24 llO\rfl e• «ldlng II 5 p.m
latelow 75 42 TODAY 819..., 12 22 ~ICM 3:0lpm
...,. 74 2t 8econd Noh 9:30 p.111. ~ •1 45
Long 9Mcfl 51 83 TUHOAY MOl'IMtey 57 4 7 '1111 1ow 2-.31 a.m
Mt. Wiiton 70 52 "''' Noll 1:41 Lm
10
42
33 lt
54 21
31 20 .. 28
37 17 13 72
IS 51 3t 20 .. 45
70 ..
Newpot1 8Meh 83 S3 ~lbw U4 pm
----------OntWlo 71 45 8ecof1C1 N1f1 •M p.m Pllln lp'lngl 13 4t
u 1.0 ... 43
Edlnn worker ln•pecta
CRASH •••
From Al
and came to a rest near the golf course
at ab9•t 6: I 5.
"h fln into a power line and power
pole. It didn't catch anything on fire.
It lost its right engine and wing,"
Kell)! &aid.
She said federal invcstiptors were
trying to determine what caused the
problem which forced the landing.
Another fire ,spokeswoman in-
dicated it miaht have been a fuel leak.
Designed,
Finished
Installed
P8Mdene M 47
Sen e.-dlno 73 45
Sen1t Ane 72 50
Sen11 Cfuz 70 •7 Tahoe VfllWt 53 30
YOMmlle Vly IS 84
9un ... loNy " 4'.Af p '" ' ,.. T~ ll1 1'34 e.m end Mii llfllllll 11 &·40p.m. Moon Mii lodly II 4: ... p,m., tlMe
Tl*dey e1 I 83 I m. end Mii lgaln II
8.41p.m.
hllr ..... ,......,...._ • ....,
pole after Beechcraft entlne •lammed acaln•t It.
Site of 'Ziggy' lawsuit shifted