HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-02-25 - Orange Coast PilotNe·wport ponders no-puffing I
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of ... ..., ........
A. proposed Newpon Beach cit~
orchnance would separate smokers
from non-smoker~ where they work
where they dine and in other public
places.
The reiulations. fashioned after the
Callfomla
Two of West Hollywood's
new council members are
tQklng a look at tou9~
rent control laws./ t'4
PoUce officer kills a
charging ram who butted
a woman to death last
week./M
Nation
Subway gunman
Bernhard Goetz goes to
bat for man accused In a
subway stabbing death.
IM
U.S. offlclals are blaming
Mexican police for allow-
ing a drug suspect to
escape./87
•orld
An obviously ailing
Konstantin Chernenko
shows up on Soviet tele-
vlslon./ A5
A foreign rnlnlster from
Norway Is accused of
aelllng NATO aecreta to
the Russians./ AA
Feature -
The last word In fashion at
the Gentlemen's
Haberdashery Extrava-
ganza was a quip from
Paul Salata./ A7
The Fanchonettes,
famous chorus llne
dancers of the 1930s,
now get their kicks from
memories./ A7
Sporta
A half century ago a
Newport Be•ch man In-
troduced football to
Japan./11
Orange Coast's alumni
and the current baseball
team battlestoa 14-14
tle./11
Robbie Miiier of Voy-
agers' Christian la CIF'a
leading scorer and re-
bounder ./83
Entertainment
Gloria Steinem's life u a
Playboy Club bunny la
chronicled In a TV movie
tonight./ Al
Baalneu
Chue Manhattan's non-
bank bank to open In
Newport Beach by mld-
March./M
ll'fDEX
A10
A3
85
17-0
A10
Bl
87
A74 ..
Al
A8
A7
A3
17
81 ....
Al Al
A2
recently approved Laauna Beach
1mokint ordinance, 11 bcina
proposed by Newpon Beach attorney
Michael Christianson. It will be
considered by the City Council at its
March 11 mectin1.
Christianson, a non-smoker who
sometimes suffers from asthma and
GettlDI oriented
emphysema, said he studied severaJ
1mok1n1 ordinances approved t~rouahout the 1tate before writina
hit own proposal.
.. The difference with this one is that
it strikes a very fine balance amona
smokers and non-smokers, em-
ployers and em~yees and so fonh, ••
Christianaon said thi1 momins.
"The 1tated purpose is not 1pecifi-
cally to protect the non-smoker, but
to provide a areater awareness of the
need to have areas where smokina is
Jenay llaDCela, left, 8; llilko l'akawa, 8, aad 11araaret
llcCoralck, 9, all of Olrl Scoat Troop 554 from Coarrecee
Scbool ln Poantaln Vallq, Mmple a fralt cap at tbe ecoata•
Sbcseized\
in Mesa
coke raids
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of ... ..., .........
·Two Costa Mesa police officers hit
\he jackpot early Sunday momina
while on routine patrol throuah
vanous niaht club parkina lots.
Officers Paul Banram and Joe
Williams made six dru1·related ar·
rests while walkina and drivina
throuah the parkina rots at the Pierce
St. Annex, the Newpon Station and
the Deja Vu niaht clubs.
(Pl ....... PAalUNO/ A2)
·pea soup
to return
on Coast
A thick blanket of foa slowed
commuter traffic and opcr·
ations at John Wayne Airpon
this mornina but did not trigger
the strint of accidents that often
10 hand in hand with the soupy
conditions.
"Traffic is very slow -too
slow for accidents, I auess. ..
California Highway Patrolman
Rick Stevens sugcsted toda_y.
The f<>J. which burned off by
midday, 1s anticipated to return
(Pl ....... FOGGY I A2)
Butcher or hero?
Artukovic raises
diverse emotions
Shouttn matches
erupttn outside his
dCjiOrtatton heartn
81 UNbA DltJTICH
•111 11 .........
It has bttn 36 years since AndriJI
Anukovic entered the United Stata
with a faltc Pll pon, but time hat not
cooled the cmotfo•• that nare each
time the eovemment tnn to cv~ the
man charted with war cnmet in h11
native Yueoslavia. Dtftounc.ed b)' Pf'OICCUtOf'I U the
"Butcher of the Balkans" and "the
H1mmlet ol Y...,.aav11," Anukovic
alto it ........ a hero b)' neruly loyal
Croatian-AIMricant who defend hlm
M a ftwdom f\Ptcr who reaatled the commun ... Ind Wll UN~ IC•
CUlld of llrvdtia.
He IMIM'C1aft1Uy ~· de9ona-tiOll lw 3J ,_,.. ht now ... lllt Ill
or 15. n....._. b)'. many 1n•11•,
Andrija An.iliovic (am b11 IMC .. c1
10\rlheli banlt 1n ftdtral coutt
In extradition kanna U1lder M y 1n
Lot A•la. •he U.S. eo•emmcnt IS
presentina evidence to 1uppon
Anukov1c'1 retum to YU&Ollavia to
face trial for mu murder.
The Yuptavian ,ovcmmcnt has
renewed an e1urad1tton request, and
the U.S. aovcmmcnt 11y1 it lhould be
honored. U.S. marshlb arrated the
invalid on Nov. t• at his home 1n
urfside Colony. a pnvate communi·
ty near Hunt1naton Harbc>ur.
Act1v1st1 on bolb aides -
Anukov1c's roetaan tupPOIWf1 and
Jewish turv1vort of Nm ptl'IU'Ution
-have 1ammed the counroom of
U .. M.ltf'lte Volftel' lrowa for the
«trachuon hcarina. n.e two aides
have aometnnet CftPl'd in lboutint
m11ehct out ide the coUnboute while
Artukovic's ti~ tilnled in coun
to prevent the hcanne ft'om IO'nt
f'of'Ward.
''They've wrnttd an Old man no '°""' ... '° .... -...... bthalf.'' h11 1ttor1tey, Oar
Flciaclunu, •'Jued a10M '°'"'·"In
my Ol"nto.. th1 i not lM _, d\i•
(Pinn ... AllTVKOtL/M)
and is not permitted.
"h't aood for both the smokeuad
the non-smoker ...
The ~posed ordinance, filed Fri·
day wtth the Newport Beach City
Oerk'1 office. requires emp&oym to
provide a smoke-free workplace for
employees who request one. If no
suitable smoke·f'ret area c.n be
found. the employer wouJd have the
ri&ht 10 dec1arc the entire workplace
ofr-hmits to smokers, Christianson
said.
The Pf'OOOlaJ would ,_uite rn-
taurantl that scat MOft tMn ~
people lO provide .moki ... Md "°"" mok•na aras.
.. Not onJy does that meke the non-
1moker mOR comfortable, but the
1rnokc'r u well ... Chrittinloa Mid.
"Smoken will be mOft comfonable
eatina in a clearty marted tmOkjnt
area because thcr. will never rilk
otrendina anyone. •
The proposed recru•~= limit 1mokifta 1n public bu~ and
..., ......... .., .......
•btb annaal "Randa Acroee tbe 8ea IDternatloaal Paire"
o•er the weellead. ror more detati. on tbe plctareeqae e,eat. Me Paee AS.
Lagu!la
seeking
hit-run
driver
Police claim they're
getting close tn fatal
crash invest atlon
By STEVE MAULE °' .. ..., ......
Laauna Beach police aid today
they arc closer to lamina the identity
of a motonst whose while com:s
car d an injured man Laaun~~yon Roed for ncarty I
feet early Saturday.
Harry Stone. 32. of Garden Gro~e
apparently was crawlina from the wreck.alt of his BMW, which WU
1nvo!ved 1n an earticr accident tbat
claimed two hves, when be was struck
by a hit-and-run dnver.
The hit-and-run driver rcponedly
stopped his car, walked over to the
1nJurcd man and Wlthout say1na
anytbina 10 other accident w1tnestcs,
droveofT.
Police said the dnvcr aJmost hit
another person while speedfo1 from
the accrdont scene.
Wttnesscs have been abk to
provide poltce with a partial hcense
plate number of the hit-and-run car.
Pohce have >el to release the partial
number.
tone 1s bc1n1 treated at M1u1on
Community HospttaJ in M1ss1on
V1eJO, His cond1t1on was upt;radcd
today from cnucal to senous.
The hit-and-run episode provided
a morbid aftermath 10 the earlier
(Pleue eee IDT·Rl11t/A2)
Teachers to vote on pact
but unrest will continue
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of ................
Saddleback Colleae teachers were
to vote today at the Irvine and
Mission Viejo campuses on a ten-
tative contract that would Jive them
an 8.S percent salary 1ncreue, retro-
active 10 July 1. 1984.
But faculty leaders say tbat rqard~
less of the outcome of today's vote,
unhappy teachers will picket toniaht
pnor to a Saddleback District Board
of Trustees mccuna to express then
con11nuing displeasure over colleat
operation~.
The seven-member board m~lS at
7:30 p.m. 1n Room -I OS tn the library
at the Mission VieJO campus.
"I am thorouJhly convinced the
problems as voiced by the facuJty
won't go away with the r1tificauon of
this coo tract." taid Ed Romeo. a
Cahfom11 Teachers Assoclauon rep-
resentative work1na with the Saddle ..
beck College Faculty Auocaa1ion.
··The d1savccments are much more
deeply seated than the simple matter
o( a settlement of salary and fringe
benefits."
Last Wttk. Robcn Kopfstein. a
Saddleback rcadina teacher who ts
·pan of the faculty barpinina team,
obscrv~. "The bi' wuc has not been
the bucks. The pnncipal iuuc 1s the
runnina of the collCJt -or 1n tb11
case the ·m11runnin1 of the collqc."
hen Wilham Schreiber, the chief
d1stnct pok.csman. said, "It would be
naive for any of us to th1nk that
\t'ttlement of the contract alone
v.ould cause an chm1nauon of the
t<"ns1ons and concerns. ..
But Schmbcr said he hoped ap-
proval of the contract wouJd "allow
(Pl .... eee T&ACllSR8/ A2)
ll•ldnl a bk 9p,la•b
.... ., .. 40I r··••cdft ~ .,... fer • .._. 2 we•er ,_. fl llf
18to tlMi .,_. elf B•tl .. I a •
-.t .. b, ......... .
•
.> •
*<>t•• C... DAILY ptLOT~. f*'-Y 25, 1NS
NEWPORT EYES NG-SMOKE LAW •••
He wilt be Md.ina the tuJ)POrt of
Newpon Hartlor Ami Cham_, Commerw dais~ and hoptt to
. 111 bis iiroooeal w1th N~ . CoUaciJ membm. ~ t._.u BeaCh City Cou~l
LL 'r om Durham iiid the drg
u were not pan OI a specifiC
rackdown. ··we know wbaa places have a -...-... ·m. to when they (the ofticm)
ave time. they just swina by there
nd check ahinp out, .. Durham said.
The fina amsts came around 12:4'0 .m. whiJe Bartram and Williams on a foot pt1trol at the ~ L
nnu bar. 330 E. 17th St.
T1mo1hy James Jones, 24. and
mel Anthony Novak. 36. both of
osta Mesa, wtrc arTCS1ed and book-
aP(>rOved tht counafs firs• smotina
onlin&m-e eartiC'r that month.
It• reaulations. which cake ,..
Man:h 21,. were ~ by C:ou• atman Ned Fit.Jpatrid who said be
ed for invn1ip1ion of ~i~n ~r cocaint. The men were teen 111t1• an
• parted car al)eaedly inttttins the
dB!nram and Williams then took a
stroll around 2:30 a.m. tbrouJb the
Newport Station partdna lot, 1945
P1accntia Ave.. where they con·
fronted three men sittin1 in the front
seat of a Cadillac El Dorado.
Two of the men. Kevin Ray
Cramer. 20. of Palm Sprinas. and
Kenneth Raymond mhh. 2S. ofNcw
Mexico, were booked for possession
ofrOMi"" """aid John Arcoli. 44. of
waited two~ before IUllH*I a
eiaz ofttinucr. we·~ taUlht i1'1 au ri&h• to UMuJa ~)' with smoke, but ii'• im·
DOliw to complain about it,"
tiU'pltrid .wt. .
Lquna N11ucl was liken inao
aa1tody on au•picion ofbeina ~n•
while a controlled tubatantt wu
bcina used.
About 90 minutes later. the two
ofTl(ers drove through the parkinJ lot
at the Deja Vu nightclub. 2285
Newport Blvd .• and spotted a man
sittina in a car and puttina something
to has nose.
The su1pcct. David Alan Ouu.s. 28.
of Westminster. was questioned and arrested on suspicion of possession of
coca int.
EACHERS VOTING ON PACT TODAY •••
~s some breathing space in which 10
~ discuss our dj(fercnces 1n a reason-
' able manner.•· ~ About 240 full-time and 470 part-
' ume ins1ructors arc eligible to vote ~oday on the tentative aareement ~each~ earlier this month. Voting
~ I take place by secret ballot at
dlebaclc's Irvine and Mission
ejo campuses. 1 The pact's rc1roactive pay nise
~ould run through Dec. 31, 1985. The
rinse benefit pack.age would remain
,J.lnchangcd through that <bte. Under
(-the proposed pact, the two sides could ~reopen negotiations on salary and
~
fnn~ benefits 1n January 1986.
Distnct offic1als say the proposed
raise would ma~e Saddlebaclc
teachtti the highe1t paid among
CaJifornia's 70 community collqc
district1. While uncertain whether
they rank first, Saddleback teachen
admit their salaries arc among-1he
highest in the state's community
colleges.
The tentative accord alto provides
a limit on .. overload" classes an
instructor can teach. It ,;ves ad-
ditional JOb security to some pan.
time instructon.
' The teachers union rpinina
team has made no~mmen<btion
on how instructon should vote on the
contrac1.
Faculty leaders say some instn»
ton want the contract issue behind
them so they can focus on a campaip
to recall Saddleback trustees William
Watts, Robert Price and Robert
Moore.
The faculty association h11
proceseed the policies of Sadd~k
Chasallor Larry Stevens and uted ~ dec1ed tnaltees to remove him.
The naU was launched after tn.ttiea
raftinned their Support for Steveu.
00 EXPECTED TO RETURN •••
romAl ", ~,uesday. Afternoons should be warm
~.1-nd clear with highs along the Coast
•.<fCaching 70 degrees, according to the •~'National Weather Service.
•. Operations at John Wayne Airport ~l
•
were not halted because of the fog but
scvc.:ral commercial carriers opted to
delay takeoffs or landinp, said a tower spokesman.
At its worst. visibility was reported
anywhere from 50 feet to 50 ya rds.
said Lt. Dick Olson, a spokesman for
the Oran~ County Sheriffs Harbor
Patrol.
~;:Artukovic declared incompetent
'• ~ LOS ANGELES (AP) -A U.S. ~ !"agistrate ruled AndriJ~ Anultovic
:·· ancompctcnt to proceed in an extra-~dition hearing today. while his at-
~· tomey moved that the alleged Nazi if. war criminal be freed because the
statute of limitations in has native
• Yugoslavia expi red in 1967.
: Attorney Michael D'Aqumo said
•! he had discovered during the week-
:.. end. with the help of the 85-year-old
.Anukov1c'sson Rad. that Yugoslavia : fftas a 25-year limit on prosecutions
~ for murder. -."f. The United States has no limit on ·~·such prosecutions. and the defense
.~had not thought to check until the
"
Y"Ung Artukovic recalled hearing
at.o ut such a provision in Yugosla-
vian law.
Magistrate Volney Brown, ob-
viously taken aback by the develo~
menl. promi5Cd a decision on the
matter. sayina .. , am not going to
leave J matter unadjudicated in a life·
and-death issue ...
He ordered lawyers to file briefs
Tuesday and said he would issue a
ruling Wednesday morning.
0 1f there is a 25-year statute of
limitation. the latest year that a
murder could be charged would be
1967." Brown said.
He notedlbat under the indictment
of Artukovic, the most recent murder
charaed was in 1942.
Brown specifically noted that the
govetnment's papers indicate
Yuaoslavia wants Anukovic extra-
dited for specific murders. not for the
more ~neTal charges of war crimes or
genocide which are also alleged in the
documents.
Assistant U.S. Attorney David
Nimmer left the courtroom before he
could be questioned about the allep-
tions. and his office later said he was
in conference and unavailable for
comment.
ARTUKOVIC CASE RAISES EMOTIONS ...
From Al
should be done in this country ...
But Rabbi Marvin Hier of 1he
Simon Wiescntha' Center. named for
the famed Nazi bunter, says
Artukovic should be extradited now
"for the purpose of history.
"I've used up all my_ compassion
and empathy for the 750,000 v1ct1ms
of Artukovic. and I have none left for
him," said Hier.
The elderly Artukovic's m<»t ar·
dent supporter is his son, Rad, a
stockbroker. who attends every court
hearing and says his father 1s an
innocent man.,
"This is a hoax being perpetrated in
. this country," he said." ... I think this
. 1s a kind of Nazi hysteria. Every-
: body's on a Nazi witch hunt."
·•• However, 1n a book by a former
: Jusucc Department Nazi hunter.
Artukov1c was panly blamed for the
wartime slaughter of some 7SO,OOO
Jews. Serbs. Orthodo~ Christians and gypsies in the Nazi puppet state of
Croatia where he served as a cabinet
official from 1941 to 194 5.
His cabinet posts coinCldcd with
the reien of 1crror of the notorious
Ustash1 secret police. and it is in
connection with their act1v1t1es that
Artukov1c 1s charged.
"It's a mauer of record that the
atroc111es which took place were
unspeakable." said Neal Sher. d1rec·
1orofthe Justice Department's Office
of Special lnvest1ptions. "Some
have said they were many limes
worse than the atroci ties comm1ued
, by the SS (Nazi secret police). And
Artukovic clearl y was in the main-
~tream .
"Since our office was created,
Anukovic has been our No. I
r' priority," Sher said after the okt man
• was arrested.
r. The OSI, formed to \Ike lqal
•I action •inst Nazis livinp 1n the United States, grew out o a 1978
chan1t in U.S. immigration laws that
. said members of Nazi aovemments
: could not fight deponation on
· · arounds that they would be per-
' secuted if they returned to their
native lands. ,z. Al1ukovic had 1uccessfully used
• that a1pmcnt lo tbe I 9S0s to win a
court rulina aaain11 bis deponation.
His attomcyt have arsued that
Anukovic is bcina hekt 10 double
jeopl.rdy with the reopeninLof a cue
r doled some 25 yean •· Tbe)' alto C •Y he i1 mentally and physically
incompetent to auist in has own
defense.
AJsiJtant U.S. Attorney David
Nimmer says new evidence apinst
Artukovic belies the doublejeoperdy
t. 'allqation. As for competence. Nim·
'• mer has araued h ts not an i ue 1 n
extradition catc1.
Nevertheles., Brown allowed a
competency harint 1nd determined
Anukov1c wu .. more of\en compeoo
ten t than not" and sufficiently lucid
to.,,.,, his attorMys.
Sketch of ADdrtJa Amakonc at Mportatloa bearta,.
However. the mqjstrate has aJso
made the unprecedented order that
doctors evaluate Anukovic's com-
pctcTice on a daily basis and repon to
him on whether he it able to
penicipate 1n the day's eiuradition
procccdinp. If Attukovte ii found
1ncooipetenl on a ~ven day, Brown
said he would postpone I.be heann1
until the foll0W1nt day.
Artukovic is beina held withbut
beil at Lona Beach Naval Ho,pnaJ.
Nimmer said extradition wa1 •
relatively simple pr~un: 1nd the
hc-trinft should move swiftly.
He isled four pointt tM !!',Vern·
ment must prove: ArtukovM: t ident,;
tty, which hat been conceded; thal I
treaty Wltl\ Yuplavia it in full force
and effect. that the offense ctta,.ed 11
covered an the treaty. and that there ii
probable cause to hnk lbe fua.it1vc to
the cnmc.
A9 in other cxtrad111on ate1. the
aovcrnmcnt 11 not try1n1 to pro~c
Artukov1c's au1h but merely chat he
should be deported, with any crimi.
nal trial lo be held in Yugoslavia. The
defense may present testjmony to
eJtplain Anukovic's actions in rqard
to the alleptions against him. but
may not contradict them.
The aovemment'a case ha1 been
pruented, but Fleischman.
Anukovk'1 lawyer. plans to call u~ to
1 O wit news he dncribct u oohticaJ
scientists Ind n~s an Cro.lian
aft'afrt.. He prediets I hearint Of
several daya.
The ultimate decation by Brown is
noc apPeala_. but can be cbal~
throutb other' lcpJ methods. Nam-~ Mid.
Asked 'Whelber Anukovtt'• •and
ramn1 health miaht uJ11mately pre-
vent hi• retum 10 YueosJavia. Nim·
mtt Mid. .. The secretary of Slate i1
chl,,ed with determination of the
final d«a ion Whltever human-
uanan or othcrconcun1 rhrft an:Clln
be liken 10 him."
••
• .
Mild weath~r due when fog lifts
T~pe ._City M IO
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Countian given ~us pended
sentence, fine in bribe case
By Tk .UMdated Pre11
WASHINGTON -Two men.
includina one from Oranac County.
accused of being the middlemen in
bribinaan EnCf'JY Depanment lawyer
received three-year suspended
sentences and were fined S 10.000
Friday.
Andrew P. Gazzara. 41 . of Laauna
Ni1uel. and Myron H. Maxwell, 58. of
Astor, Aa .• also were sentenced by
U.S. Distri~ Judge Thomas Penfield
Jackson to 100 hours of community
service. to be completed during the
first year of their three-year proba·
ti on.
Gazzara and Maxwell had pleaded
guilty to conspincy to COIVlh
bribery for a wealthy Oklah6ma
oilman. a crime that carries a maxi-
mum penalty of fi ve years in prison
and a SI0.000 fine.
Laguna council
schedules
special sessions
The Laguna Beach City Council
has scheduled a series of special
meetings bcginnina at 5:30 p.m.
Tuesday.
The workinas of the city's Com·
munity Development Depanment
will be the main subject of the special
session, City Manaacr Ken Frank
said.
Later, council members will meet
with the Ans Commission about 7: IS
p.m. to discuss an Ans in Public
Places program and current com-
minion projects.
Members of the Board of Adjust·L
ment are scheduled to di scuss the
downtown emergency ordinance
with the council about 8:30 p.m ..
Frank said.
The council meets in its chambers
at Ci ty Hall. 505 Forest Ave.
OC fire captain
h eld on warra nt
A man identified as an Oranae
County fire captain ~Jls arrested by
Newport Beach police late Thursday
on a drunken driving warrant, ac-
cording to records. John Patrick McNcilly. 38, of
Corona del Mar was arrested at the
cit y police station near Newport
Center and held on S2,SOO bail.
The warrant was mucd out of
Harbor Municipal Cqurt in Newport
Beach.
Just Call
642-6086
Jackson said he was suspending th e Sutton was found gu!hy by a U.S.
three:year sentence because of the D1stnc1 Court Jury ofb~bing Mark A.
defendants' coopcT'ltion with the Sucher. an auorney in the Eneray
govemment in its case apinst Tulsa Department's Economic Regulatory
oilman Robert 8. Sutton. who was Adm inistration between April 1980
conviC1ed of bribery last week. ·and June 1981. He is scheduled to be
The aovernment had charged in its sentenced Tuesday.
indictment that Max well and Sucher. convicted of taking a bribe,
Gazzara were the conduits for hand-is scheduled to be sentenced April 10.
ling the mon~ to bribe Energy Sutton alread y 1s serving a three-
Depanment officials to obtain con· ~ear prison term for obstructing
fidential aacncy documents dealing invesugauons by the Energy and
with an investiption of Sutton's 011· Jusuce departments into his oil
pricing practices. reselling ac11 v111es in 1he late 1970s.
McBandit left holding M cNuggets
By U.. AINetllted Pre11
Sheila Friend's dog won't get her
bq of leftover Chicken McNuggets.
because a bandit took 1hem at
gunpoint and made a clean getaway.
Fullerton police said.
The bandit thought he had a baa
containing McDonald·s restaurant
cash receipts. pol ice Lt. Ronald
Kazzor explained.
HIT-RUN DRIVER •..
From Al
accident Saturday that resulted in the
death of Joanne Covey, 22. of Laguna
Niguel and her passenger Mark
Corsetti. 26. of South Laguna.
Police said Covey and Stone were
traveling in opposite lanes when their
cars collided in a section of the
canyon road known as Big Bend.
.:>1v11c was crawling toward the side
of the road when he was hit and then
draped by the while compact car.
Police said the majority of Stone's
inj unes were caused by the hit-and-
run incident.
The accident forced 1he closurt of Laguna Canyon Road for nearly nine
hours. starting at 2:45 p.m.
Services held for Mesa's
Lillian Tay1or La Perle
Funeral services were held Tuesday
for Lillian Taylor La Perle of Costa
Mesa. a resident of the Harbor Arca
since 1925. who died Feb. 16 in Santa
Ana. She was 87.
Mrs. La Perle. a real estate broker.
had been a member of the Newpon
Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of Re·
ahon since 1944. She was born in Los
Angeles.
She Is survived by a son, George R.
La Perle. of Bakersfield and a daugh·
ter. Marie J. Hams. of Costa Mesa.
Also survivina arc 10 arandchildrco.
Services were conduC1ed at St.
Joechim's Catholic Church with in-
terment followina in Calvary Cem-
etery. Los Anacle1.
JfadeJbJe JfclCel...ie
Private funera l services have been
held for Madeline L McKel vie of
Costa Mesa. who dicd Feb. 19at Hoa1
Memorial Hospital. She was 75.
Mrs. McKelvie. who was born in
Compton. had lived in Costa Mesa
since 1960.
She is survived by her stepson.
David R. Stretz. ofTwin Peaks, Calif.
llUdred Sclunlu
Service have been conducted for
Mildred L. Schm itz of Costa Mesa.
who died Feb. 17 at Hoaa Memorial
Hospital in Newport Beach. She was 87.
Mrs. Schmitl is survived by a
brother. Cecil Hilts of Kansas and a
nephew . Robert N. HackerofCanop
Park. She also leaves a clote friend Susan Stein of Ora nae. •
Interment was held at City View
Cemetery in Salem . Ott.
Wllat .. J" like abHt lite Dally Pilot? Wut doa't '" Ukt? CaU tM ••miler at left_. , .. r metHtt wlll lie recor4ed, truecrtbed llM1 4tllveM .. die .,,,..,,.. ....... ,. .
T'lM .. ..,. U ·llowr uswert.1 servltt may be 1Hd te rffer4 letten .. die
edl&or " u~ a.,te. c .. art1M11en to •r I.eaten ttl•m• m111 leclMe lltllr
ume aM ••1'11•• u mber fer vertfkat .... No ctrcwlat ... callt, ,a. ...
Tel' n wu1•1" JMr llllM.
OAANOE COAST Clrot.1111Dn 7WMI..._
Cl1111fted ..._.,...., 114/IOoeln
MOftc»t r • .., • ,o.. oo "'°' ...... "°"' .... .,. UOj)t11 Ullo.Ion!' p~ .,... fWI COOY ... oe ..........
Vlltaf ano ...,.,.v If 10¥ 00 Ml ,...,.. yOl'I eo,y Dy 1 • m , CAlt lll'lw• 10 • ,,. at\O VOi# COP!' ..
IMdllwr.o c.,... .....
T1l1JMI• ...... 0r...,e-..., ..,_ ....
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11111 Pllill
H.L lcllw.,.a M
Publlth«
,, .. Zlnl
Managing Edttor
Rall 1rt L Cantrel
Produc1ton
M8n8Q9r
K8reftWlttmer
Advertlllng Director
Don.ed L ... ma
arcutatk>n
M1nager
Al .... ••11•rtmenla.......,
MAIN Of'Ptel
llO WWI ti, It Cot11 ..... CA ..... _,. • •W> C..11 "'-CA .,. ...
' " ..
Nicaragua lecture
slated at UC lrvtne Fountain Valley's Girl Scout110l 1 chance IO
tee how lM other half or the world lives over lbe
weekend.
d' "Nicaraaua: Can We Prevent an Invasion·• wiU be
.:ussed by Dr. Blase Bonpanc, director of the Ofl"tee of
t.., Americas, at noon Wednttday in the University
Unter Herh.aae Room of UC Irvine.
The UCf alumnus will offer an alternative per·
•J>«tlve on the current political and historic.al situation in
Central America. Kis talk is free and open to the public
More than SOO 1COU&1 from 37.f"ountain Valley troo~. 11 well 11 two troopl f'rom Garden Grove, panacipated in the sixth annual "Handt Acrosa the
Sea International Faire" at Lot Amip Hlah
School; honorina Girl Scouts throupout the world.
Each troop ch<>te a different country to study
the dress, customs and ethnic foods of its adopted
land. The scouts 1t1ffed colorful booths to sect their
country's foods and handmade cratU. Bonpane 'YIS a Catholk priest for over 10 yean who
left t~ church 1n 1968 to pursue bis commitment to Latin ~men~n advocacY,. Funher information on hia talk may
U'l!;8 obtained by calling the UCT Cross.Cultural Center at S6-721S.
Talk Ht o.a tfra6•, yoatlJ
Throuahout the day, the scouts entertained
family and friends with sonp and special dances
ranging from the Brazilian rbumba to our own break
dancing.
Money raised from the International Faire
supports the Girl Scout Wider Oooortunities, a
proa.ram that gives Fountain Valley scouts the
chance to travel to other parts of the country to share
Mike Dean,.subs~ance abuse proeram coordinator of the Young Amenca Lifestyle Center in San Clemente, will
be the auest speaker at a discussion mtttina of Parents
Who Clre T.uesdaY, at Sa.n Clemente Hi&h School. experiences with other scouts. .
Dean will be discussing druJ and alcohol abuse in the a~olesccnt atthe 7:30 p.m. meeting in the school, 700 Ave.
Pico. San Clemente. The meeting 1s open tp the public.
In the photo at ri&ht. M~n Morton o( the
Gisler School troop sells Canadian blueberry
muffins. Below, waning to ao on stage, are the
Scottish dancers from Troop 11 73 of Fountain
Valley elementary school. · Toa•tml•treue. to COIJVeJJe
Th~ Las Olas chapter of the International Toastm1st~sses Club .will hold its next meetina Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Grinder Restaurant, at Westminster
A venue and Golden West Street, Westminster. Toa~tmi.stresscs is a club devoted to improving
commumc.at1on, and guests arc ,tMlcome. Contact
Darlene Chadick at 842-9569 or Velma Bolin at 536-2939
for funher information.
Below. little Michael Ha~ove, 2, finds there
arc too many girls aroupd for him, and takes refuge
behind his mother. And below ripn, Troop 446 of
Northcutt School performs a New Zealand Moari
dance.
Local writer plan• NB talk
Huntinjton Beach writer Nina Vida will speak at
Tuesday afternoon's meeting of the Newport Beach
Friends of the Library in the fireside Room of tM
Lutheran Church of the Master, 2900 Pacific View Drive, Corona del Mar.
Vida, author of the 1984 novel "Scam," will speak-at
2 p.m. and will have books available for sale. Call
644-4579 or 644-2124 for reservations.
Retlred teaclJen unit lorm1JJ6
A new unit of the California Retired Teachers
Association is being formed to accommodate retired
teachers in Costa Mesa, Newpon Beac~.. Huntington
.Beach, Irvine, Fountain Valley and Seal Beach.
An organizational meeting will be held Tuesday at
l : I 5 p.m. at Columbia Savinp and Loan, at Harbor
Boulevard and Wilson Street in Costa Mesa. All retired
teachers are invited to attend. Call Jane Anthony at
546-7848 for more information.
Ha.pltal often CPR clau
San Clemente General Hosptial will offer a
cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) class Wednesday
evening in the hospital classroom.
The life-saving course will be conducted from 6 to 10
p.m. and the public is invited. The fee is SS and
reservations may be obtained by calling the hospital at
496-1122.
School plan• readl.ag propam
A program entitled "Reading ;s Fun" will be
presented Wednesday morning in the library of El Morro
Elementary School, 8681 S. Coast Highway, Laauna
Beach.
Parents, teachers and students have created life-size
Disney figures to help illustrate the gheme, and teachen
will be dressed in Disney costumes. The program is
scMduled from 9 a.m. 10 2 p.m. and additional
information may be obtained by calling librarian Sherry
Sutton-Brown at 497-7780 or Susan Hamil of the school
PTA at 494-1076.
Monday, Feb. 26
• S: I 5 p.m. H•Ua1&oa Bea~ City Coudl, Room
8-8 at Civic Center, 2000 Mains.,
• 6:30 p.m., Cotta Mesa P1Uata1 Comml11&oa City
Council Chambers, 77 Fair Drive.
• 7:30 p.m., Newport Beaell City Couell City
Council Chambers, 3300 Newport Blvd.
• 7: 30 p.m., lrvbae TrusportaUH Comm11.-. City
Council Chambers, I 7200 Jamboree Blvd.
Tuesday Feb. 26
• 6:30 p.m., lrvbae City Coadl, City Council
Chambers. I 7200 Jamboree Bl vd.
• 7:30 p.m .. Newport-Mesa U•lflecl SdlMI Dt1trtet
Selilool Board. Harper Community Center, 42S E. 18th St..
Costa Mesa.
• 7 p.m., Hutllltto• Bea~ U•loa HJp Selilool Beartl
of Et11e.atlH, 102SI Yorktown Ave.
Armed bandits get $500
in Costa Mesa motel heist
Police are still lookina for the two
robbers wbo CIClped with 1$00
S.turday niaht from the la Quinta
Motor In.n, l SIS South Cout Drive,
in Cotta Meta.
Butiqtoa Beacb
Thieves smashed a window of a
blue Mercedes Benz automobile in
the parkina lot orthe Rutty Scupper
mtaurant at 7887 Center Drive and
stole a Sl.000 radio. • • • BuraJars smashed a llidina al•• window and stole SI, 900 in cash and a
yelJow,aold and diamond rina valued
at1'00.
• • • Two bicycles -a Sl7S Couaar
racer and a St6S Murray cndttt -were stolen in the parkint lot at K·
Mart at Manaolia Strttt and Oarlickl
Avenue. ••• Someone broke into a car in a dirt
partina lot in the I SOOO block of
Huntlnaton Villaae and •tole a S400
stereo and Sl2 in clothes. • • •
Thieves broke the has.Pt on kX'b 1t
1..,...doorin t.hc8000blockofVan
N• and ltole two fith•na poles and n.o fithina boan. ••• lu .... n enwred 1n unloc:kff teer
Cloor in the 5000 block of Harrold and
U. Tom Durham said the men first
asked about rentint a room before
displayina a revolver with a two-inch
barrel and forcina the motel clerk to
lie on the noor.
~ stole $300 1n cash and one tape
meuurc. • • •
Tim were slashed on a black 1984
Ford Ranaer In the 8000 block of
Warner Avenue. • • •
A blnery charier and tools we~
taken from a locked aaraac in tht
7000 block of SvcamOIJ. ....
A rear teat valued at S 175 was
stokn from a I 96S Jeep in the 6000
block of Melbourne. • • • Thieves entered a home in the ~
block of Venturi throu&h an unlocked
rear window and stole a new tele-
vision tel and video ca tcttc recordtt
.... je\fttry. • • • IOfneOnf entered a home 1n the
5000 block of Hanold throuah I locked rw etidina pJu door and
11ole a S3'° camm.
• • •• Someone Ylld a pry tool to open I
l«ked teer bedroom windoW in thie
I 6000 block of Hollr-ood and t10lt a
stereo, video Cltttlte recordtr and
jcwtefy.
The bandits then f'lbbed the
money from the cub reamer and fled
arouJWI 10 p.m. The suspects were
detcribed as black males, S foot 8
inches taU, and weitbina I SO pounds.
Foaataba Valley
An Irvine resident reported Satur-
day that someone smashed a window
to buraJ1rire hissllver 1984 Meroedes
Benz while it was parked in Fountain
Valley ll Racquetball World, 101I5
T1lbert Ave. The loss included stereo
equipment worth $700. • • •
Someone stole a b&a(k. l 983 Ford
Thunderbird ftom the 16200block of
Livlnptone Sllftt. the owner re-
ported Saturday. • • •
A clerk at the ?·Eleven &toftat 9527
Oarflekl Avenue tt'pOl1ecl Friday
nlaht that tevml people tnteftd the
ttore and at.Ole blr 12-.pecks of oors
beer from the ~'°' •bile w dtrk wM d11lniC'teCf. _The lou was
estimated at $21.16, •• • • • Whtie the residt:nt .. away on
vacatton, totMOnc rtHIO\'ed 1 bath-'°°"' wiqidow teren • ...., the -indow ind ranasacted a holfte on
the l 7'°° block of F1•t0ait. Potict
wcn told Friday.~ PIOPftty loll
was not immediately cktennifted. • • •
Someone used a chunk of concrc1e
10 shatter a glass door in the burglary
earl} Frida y of the.Radio Shack store
al 16157 Harbor Blvd. The loss
included audio and video equipment
wo rth al least S2.500.
Newport Beach
A bm:fcase and a wallet conuun1ng
about S400 in c-ash was stolen from a
vehicle parked at Promonlor) Point.' • • • A burglar entered a hou~ on
Mariners Drive through a kttchen
window and stole a fox coat. so me
Jewelry. a telev1s1on and a video
cassci te recorder. • • • Someone stole a ~ack BMW from
n Qarking place on Birch Street. • • • A ~tereo unit wonh SSOO was stolen
from a car parked on .J:?nd tl\'et. The
car wa~ unlocked.
lnine
A onc--c}cd chap with a Down·
Under accent reported!) drove a\t+'ly
with a S3,000 motorcycle a re 1dcnt
had put up fot sale. Police say the
man. described as a Caucastan 1n his
:?Os with an eye patch and an
usiralian accent, wa'I allo~cd to test
dnve a motorcycle offcrt'd for sale by
a Teachers Avenue rt'l1dent. But the
man apparently ltlccd the vehicle so
well he never rtturncd ..-1th tt • • • An bcto trcct re 1dcnt rcponed
the thcf\ of a tool chcit and po~r
tools val~ It S.l.600. • • • A suit and car stc~ we~ taken
from a vehicle parked onf Von
Karman ~enue The items wtre
valued at about S 1.500 • • • TVto nnp wonh SS70 were re--
ported t<>kn from a lockbo~ 1n a
Otamantc ttt"et home.
• • • A stereo and camera valued at
about Sl.100 "'ere removed from a
To)'Qla Tercel parked on Mam Strttt
Fncfay night.
Coetaltlea
A stereo wonh S200 was rcponed
stolen from a car parked tn an
apartment complex at 2412 Harbor
Blvd. sometime between 3 p.m
Saturday and 7 o.m. Sunda)'
• • • I
A tckphone answering machine
and a television set were rcpone-d
stolen from the March of Dimes
office at Rea ( ·ommuntt) Center. 661
·Hamiliton St . somc11mc bctwC'cn ~
p.m. Friday and 8 a.m. Saturda)
Entry apparently was made by throw-
l"J a Potted plant throulf\ the
Wlndow. • • • Guns. 1ewclry and stereo equip-
ment were rcponed stolen from a
home '" the 400 hl oc'k of East 16th
tree\ sometime hctwttn 7 p.m.
Sat~rday ind I a.m. unday. The
front door had been pned open. • • Hubaps. worth Sl61. wen re-
ported stolen from a car parked 1n an
apart~nt complex at 550 Paulanno
Ave. sometime betv.ttn 6 pm. Satur-
day and 9:30 p.m unda)
L;acau 8eaela
POl1"t Ml)Ondcd to ~ns of a eoa'ble drownina ~1cum at Plmic
8eacll Sunday afternoon. But tile
otf'teer at t-tc'tnt> detmnrned tM
drirWatftl WU btl"I t.C.aaed by I IC'Uba
ell ~ic1111 rncun. • • • bU,....r Vlbbcd lboul $I,()()() ID
m15etllaneous ucms from a Louise
lttel ho~ H•r\11)' ~ ~cnina. 1hc
v1cttm told pohce.
. .
• • • Poltce an't'Sted Robcn Charles
Ka1 tschuk. 50. on suspicion of 4fiv-
1ng under the influence of alcohol.
Ka1tschuk was stopped Sunday after-
noon on U.guna Canyon Road. • • • Also amsted on suspicion of
drunken driving was Karl Nels
Swanson. 18. Swanson was stopped Fri~y ni&ht.along the 1100 block of Gav1ola Drive. Swanson was also
cited for alleged possession of Jen
than an ounce of mariJuana. • • • Agate Street residents arrived
home Saturday even mg in time-to 1«
a burglary suspect k av1ng from the
front door of their home. No loss wni.
reported. The susl)CCt was dcS<'nbcd
as a male white adull in his 2 . wnh
shon brown hair and wcanna a blue
plaid 1ackc-t and 1eans. ' .. Two \tdeo machines valued at
S 1.500 w('~ reported stokn f'tom an
.\lta Laguna Bou.kvard home earty
turda) • • • .\n .\gatC' \rttt resident Fnday
reponed the then of a teddy bear
valued at SSO.
Gunman r obs
liquor store
A m.n c•r .. ~ Jhoc .. 1un under l\is fled .,.lh about
$I 00 af\e• ~ .... &IP a dCr\ It •
Huntin1to_n lcKh tiQuOr ' MMe
honl} before midftiiht sm..y.
Tht :u pcct. who hid din...., IM
mu ta he and WOR .,.... 11'•1•1.
took the mol\C from the hMd ol i
ckrk at H1Utop LtqMOI', IU ...
datnapoh 't .• pol~ .W
I
t· ,. ,. , .. •
$24amonth
for
amont111
~-UJ .. ...,....11)
Tighter thighs. Yumcr
abs. No matter what pan of
your body you<I Like to Un·
prove, it's easier at Holiday
!)pa. Especially now, while
you can join for • whole )at,
and pay ~y $24 a month.
Wc'U hcfo you do it
with all the ktcll
equipment. Even
C H E R
swimming~ jogging at most
club Ana when you need to
wind down, try a whirlpooL
sauna or steam room .
We'U show Y°':1 how to
get a whole new body with·
out spending an ann and a
tcg. Come to a panicipating
Holiday Spa l lcalth Club for
a free guest tour today.
~ Holiday Spa Health Club for Men and women
ANAHl!IM •.. (714)~2,..3101. Wt">t1 M.i,1i:nol1J I hlock5'11111.incoln
Cf.RRITOS/LAKewooo ... ( 213) 924-1514. I IH1'11 Del Amo Ul\-d Al P1ont"'ff,
' blocks E~m of (,(I') Fn..'eWay
MISSION VIP.JO ... (714) 770-0822., 21'\lil Ahw Pkwy .• 11 ~.in D1('K" h (-t-w .. y
WESTM I NSTF.R ... ( 714) 894-~W. f11'i7 Wt"llm1n\ter Ave: . .11 Golden Wco<SI
COSfA MF. A .•. (714) 549-3368, .nw 11.trhor Rlvd. (B<:·hmd Thrifty l.>ru)()
ORANGE ... (714) 6¥)-2441, fill. f-J,, K,11dl.i Avt· .. W{~I uf Tu'llln Aw:.
Our M l\\IOfl V lt:)O C.luli "• mh If. min ult'' Imm ~.in Ck'fTwntt'
S24 down paymenr and 12 monthly paymc1m o4 S21\. AnnuaJ Percentage Ra~ of 16AO%.
C.i~t--',.,,.,~ ,, ,~Af---~..1.
~MERVY.N1;
~__,
We've added $250,000
worth of diamond• to our
regular atock end put
thi• aelectlon on aalel
Save on dazzling df•mond jewelry In
our Fine Jewelry Department. plus
a special, one-day.only colfeetlon.
h You'll save on pendantt, bracelets, Ours earring•. cocktail rlng1, bridal Mtl
" -~ men'1 rlng1. Chooae aolltelrea,
diamond ctu1ter1 or diamond• with
only!
diamond
sale
other precious 1ton ... All are In
14kt. gold 1ettlng1. Our Diamond
Countelor wlll be In our Fine
Jewelry Oep•rtment to help you.
Reg. 115.00 to 8000.00.
aale II .• to 31•.H
Mervyn'• Diamond Certlflca~ t1 lt1ued
with each purc:haM. At any tlme. the
amount of the e«ttfled ..Ulng price (or the
101a1 1mount of peym.ntl m.O. on the
price) may be 1ppf.19d towatd tM pvrc:h ...
of • more expentlve diamond, prov1<11no
the return Is m~ Wtth the Diamond
Certtfleat• and the diamond 11 In the orl·
glnal mOt.1ntJno. not merred or dameged
All returned dfamond1 are 1ublect to
....,lfiel11on by °"' ,._..er
Some 111u11r1uon1 may be enlarged 10
~how detall. Slyi.t may vary by 1tore.
Tueaday only
Febru•ry 28
Huntington Be•ch
at ore
12 noon to 8 p.m.
· ..
Tuead•y, Februery 21
Huntington Beach. 9811 Adami Ave. at Brookhurat St.
Subway
gunman
<fefends
auspect
NEW YORK <-'Pl -cw York
( 11) 1\ .. sick from one end 10 another"
and rc<11dc·n1~ .,hould ~ armed.
subway gunman Btmhard Goct:r .aid
afttr he aucnded the arr11anmen1 or a
man charged w11h 1he fataJ stabbtnaor
a man au1horit1es 58Y tried 10 steal
candy frum a subway vendor.
Goelz said he showed up Sunday at
lhe arra1111mcnt or Andrew Frederick
because M bcl ievtd Fre~rick IC'led
en self defense after he was anacked
with a bottle.
.. , told him the people were on hit
tick ... evcryth1n1'1 ao1n1 to be all
ri&ht." G0C12 said lacer 1n a television
1nterv1ew.
Frederick. 24. of New York City. it
charscd with. sccond-dearcc murder.
He was released ~unda)' on h1' own
rttoan1zance
Frederick 1n1cr~cncd Thur~ay
when two men tried 10 \teal candy
from a subway new\sland. police
s.aid. He reportedly cold the men 10
quit s1calina. JO I 1n10 a dispute and
stabbed Felix Mc< ord. 28. after
McCord "truck him w11h a bo11k.
policr 'ia1d.
a, lk AIMdllff Pra•
·h man of 1he na1c Appropria. WASHIN01 ON -The R~pubhcan' air a that &he Penta~n mull bt
1ion1 Commiurc told lhl' na1ion s aovf'S:~ ~'~ o Hai field of Qttson said
included In any budJcl frec1e propoJA : 01 dcai with 1he probkm. ··"We
the budttt offered by Pre•1den1 Rca,an does; ahc military from this kind or
have 10 look 11 •hat happens if. we eic:;;~omc clOit" to the 11v1nas that art
frte1c .. wud H11ficld ..... v.e aren t saina deficits Hatfield had a laracly
nttded 10 subtta,nllall> reduce record ~u~~:ucc or the N111onal Oovcmorl 1ympa1h~tlc aud ience. Thl' e1ccu~!\C ma bud11,.1 frcc:le chat would include Anoc1a11on voted unda) 1c1 cn..,or'>(' ...-
mihllt") pend1na..
Actor Scoarby de•d at 71
. b ll IOr who recorded works ol ROSTON -Ale"andcr ( Scour > an 11 n o ra'1 "Live from
litcracurc for the blind and wa') hoc;i for ihi: "1ea,ropo 1 11 Hfwa~ 11 Scourby
1hc Mel" broadram on public telc\-l\toS die~ ~~~r~~Y I 936 as Claudiu! 1~
of Newtown. Conn .. made h1\ Broa wa ) c al()n~ he wos host for the
Sh"kc pc~rt"<10"Ha'!"1.~1L ... f·fr 1~~ pMs~/~~:>:deas•~~n public 1dev11ion. He
Mctropohu1n pcra s 1~e "!m r 1 p hi . ~adio pruduct1on of Handel'\ wa~ 1n ~ton as host fo r a Na11ona u "
opera. "Scnwlc "
Heroln JMlnklller blll pu•bed
w .\SH'I N(, TON_ T""o l'Ongrc\\mcn are gc111n1 rca.d) 10 rC1 nl!~~cc ~
bill whose ra1lure 10 pan la\I \ear lhl'\ lOn\1der to be a tcxl ~k ii W p C~
pohl1<'al (car. The C'ompas~1onutt· Pain Rc:lit.'I Act wou 8 :'ontr~lcd
1crminally ill cancer pa11en1~ lo u~· heroin under 11~1.1>' od d b c1rcumst1ancc~ when ocher pa1nk1 lll:r~ do no1 work II 141 t0
0 _(. 'f 1 w~~~ ah~ Rep. Wilham Hushes. O.N J and Rep llcnl) Wuman. 8 1 · W w
mca ure came to a ~otr la\I Scp1. Ill 11 lo\I b) a vole of 3SS-H. h11 H
un usual. says Hughes. were commenl\ hi: recr1H:d after the \O~ fro'r tom~
lawmakers who had opposed 1he bill "I had peopll' come u~ ~n 1 ~~OIJ~· Hughet §aid last week. "Thry'd sa ). 'You v.ere ngh1. I d1dn I •tt ~a ~I
lhl\."'
Artificial heart palr lmprove
LOUrSVILLE. K . -Wilham \chroedrr \pent hour') at a party over the
weekend while his fefiow an1fiual hean rcc1p1rn1 Murra) Haydon had a
quieter celtbra1ion when he sat up a in t hair for the first lime. Haydon
completed his first week W>lh the an1fic1al hean Sunda y. and doc1ors reported
1hcrc wert no major medical or mechanical com phcat10M. Schroeder shared
tM weekend wnh hlS fam ily and aucnded an informal pany for h11 son. Terry.
1n the d0C1ors' lounge w11h hosp11al worker\
K,,.uly call• for black revolt
( HICAGO-Opprc'51on of lJ ~ black\ lea \('\ them with no choice but
to form an army 1odt'SlrO)' 1he countl) and nt'atc an 1ndcpcndcn1 \tatc. Libyan
leader Moammar Khadafy 1old a Na11on of Islam con,en11on. "This <:ounll)
must be dcstroxcd." Khadafy said Sunda)' in a speech broadcast h~c via
sa1elli1e from Libya to the Na11on of l\lam\ I 9t(S ln1erna11onal Sa vior ' 0a)
Convcntion."Thcy (white\) refuse 10 accept )Ou a\ American c1111cns. 1:h"
means )'OU arc obliged 10 crea1t' a §Cparatc and independent n a1c The whucs
force you to do lhH. by refusing you 1n political and social li fe .. "We .arc rtadJ
to ,11ve you anns bccau~ )'Our cau'it 1'> a JU\I cau'>C." Khadafy said 1n ~he 40·
minute speech to 1hc en1hus1as1ic. ovc:rwhl'lm1ngl)' bla(k audience ""mated
by a Na11on of l\lam <1pokesman a1 12 ()()(J Goc11. who De< 22 \hot four black
youths 1n a 'lubwa ~ said to an
1n1crv1cw5unday nigh t w11h WNEW-
TV 1ha1 he wcnl up IO Frederick after .J•Ylf9 condition 'falr' 1hc heannaand told him 1ha1 "I knew
whaa he wa\ aoing 1hrou1h." NEW YORK -Former ~n Jae.ob K Ja\11 \ "'ho
.. , 1h1nk 1hc pu hlic thoukl rcla1~ 10 hat an 1ncurabk nerve d1sca-.c. wa\ 1n lair cond1111)n
1hti man .. Goc11 \aid "I think 1herc .. 1oda) with a possible lun1_1nfe<11on after being ru\hed 10
'ihould be more of th.,," a hO\pltal rollow1ng difTicuh1e\ breathing. a ho\pttal
The C on&re,11 or Racial E.quah1y sp<>kc,man said. Jav11s was rnkcn b) ambulance from h1i.
retained attorneys for Frederick. Manhauan apanmcn1 Sunda> 10 Ne"' York Ho~p1t.al 1----------------. v.hcre he wasadm11tcd to the 1nll'ns1vc care unit. h04ip11<1I
."'ELL'S u><>kcsman Jed Golden said. The 80-)car-old hlxral
Republican who repre~ntcd Ne"" York 1n the l 'I.
Senate for 24 )Car\ wa' trca1ed w11h in1ravenou\ IPlll.ITllY, ... an11b1ot1n 10 impro\C hie; breathing.. (1olden \aid.
'• "11 .... Of•• Lie Doc1ors de1crmured I hat Ja\111 had a pcw~1bk lun J1
1tZZ ,_a• .. C.TA lllA -Ml-UM 1nfoct1on. Golden \aid. Siner leav1na publi c officc in J4 V t-:==:::::;;::::;=========11 1981 . Jav1ts ha) cruudcd rclen1lcssly for the d1~blcd. He ha~ \31d chat mtdl~a I
,\~~ IUM~GI SALi
POOD&GAMll
IAPfLll .
Soturdoy Mor. 2, 8-2 • J'-..
Tewlnkte lche .. /~;:
322,. CofiforNo ':I.~
(at Gitler) CM. ''
---
The Pros Smee 195 l
expenses from h111nfirm1tyco11 him abou1 SSO.OOO a year and 1ha111 takes hur
up to thrtt hours da1I~ to dresc; lxcausc of his dt..ca\C.'.
C r~t IF ORNIA
Rent control eyed for W. Hollywood
WEST HOLLYWOOD -Two ( 11) C ounc1I me mber\ who have been
hold1n1 hearinp on rent control in 1h1s newly 1ncorpora1cd c11y-.ay 1hcy intend
to propost a law a11 1ough ar. c;anta Monica'\. John Heilman and Helen Alben
said unda)' they expcc1 10 propose chat rent hike\ be 11ed 10 the ( onsumcr
Price Index. M,, Albtn said lhe maximum nsc allowed probably would bt 70
10 75 pc:rccnl or the 1ndu. While tht counc1lwc>man \Uppon .. a re nt rollback 10
Jan. I. 1984. Heilman WH uncc:rta1n abou1 suppon1ng1ha1 The propoul also
may require approval o( up to 7S pcrcenl of 1enanl'I before a la ndlord converts
apanmcnls 10 ccmd ominiums. a'I well 8\ prov1!>1ons for pa)mtnt of mov1n1
expenses and fir\I chanC'e a1 purcha'IC. among other\ ~;'\uam•._
.~~~bf
:i;, 111-7740 G•.allae price. edge upward
.,., ON Nsapwt 9IN. LOS ANGELES -Pump pncc\ for a.aj()finc edged up 1n the Int two LS~iii~Ns;;•;""'~";;•;';';';"";C..;;;;~~1 weeks for the fi "I 11me \tncc October fueled by n\ing wholcsak cost•. I according to oi l tndu'lll) analy\t nan Lundbe ra. The change. which was .. Good service. expected. marked the end ofa prn:c war 1ha1 aave mowmt\ 1tw lowcsl price\ ~ \Ince 1980. 1he puhli,her of t~e Lundbcra u ucr said Sunday The avcrajc ~ covet'Jllle. mail price na11onw1de for all grade' of ga~hnc rose a hal(<ent per gallon 10
11uuu price-JU"I under SI 14 dun n1 the pasa two \\-ee ks. Lundbcra \a1d. Thats State Farm insurance ...
ll CMTU tlllUICl ICllCY, •. ... ,. .....
A
~-9222
2tOO lristd St .. A·101
Colt• Mn• -· , _., ... ,,..~,, r;r., , .... ~ ,,..,.
Quadruplet. m•ke la•t.nt family
I OS \NGELES-.\'Ct of quadruplets-two boyund cv.o girls-were
born 10 a Van Nuys couple 111 Northndge Hospital Medical Cen1er. •1 vin1 tht
parents an in11an1 ram1Jy. The quadi born 'iunday were 1he fir~ children for
William and 8ridar1 Lach. who have been married ror sliah1ly n'\ore than two
years. "WcfOt 11 all oul or1he way aionc ume." said the 16-yea r-old fa1hcr "la'\
pretly cxcil 1na."
~~~~~~~~Killer ram •l•in by police
Emphasis On
Quality
Al <.I.Uk Kenned) fk>rl."'
1111r Ue'llKflc:r\ f 11cw1 r JO detail,
A II c: n I k>n HI ('Olor,
1t••111rt form :md ullht y
m;1kc t".Kh Oor;,il ~
:. f)al'l<>n~J m.-.. 'l4.lrc1
~daJLdnl In <.orponu· fled~
Jtll '\ ~M ~'\'fM "'"' A lllff ,, .... Mr."l!il
f<Mlt """"' """"' ~,,. """"""" kk:phOf~( 1 tt<•U .... .,
~LT "DENA -.\ram chat butted 1 woman to death was \hot and killed
when 1t characd ~cr1ffs 1nvest1p1on who were iummontd to 1hc tccne.
depu11ci wiid. ~puty S.lvadore MunoL. 31 . killed the ram when it anacktd
him dur1n1 an inVC\llJlltion or1hc dca1h of H·ycar-old Nancy Bond. who Wit
auackcd by lht ram fHt unday. Set. Stcvt' Fln~y said. "Bond was walk ln1 nnr her home when &he JO<* lamb buncd her." said Finley. ··She tried 10 trt
up and 11 continued.·· M died Friday n1ah1 a1 1. Luke H0tp1tal 1n Pasadcn1. Finley said.
arom7ko~laltaJ7
ROME -Sovitt r orc1an M1n1 ter ndrei Orom)'ko today 1oolt hit
campa1&n 1p1n11 NATO's nucl~u m1udcs and tht Rt111n adm1ni11n111on'1
.. tar Wan pllns to Italy. wMrc he may mttt with Pope JOhn Paul 11. ltaJtan
fort1an M1n1ster G iuho Andrcom arcc1ed Oromyko at Leonardo da Vinci
11rpon upon hit am val from M~ow Oromylco wts driven from thf aup0r1
to the Soviet f.mblHy and did no1 makt 1n~ pvbhc ttatcment. Oromylto wet
m1k1n1 h11 fim onic1al \ 1 1t to Wtsttrn Europe -apen from aucndln1
1ntcrna11onal conftrcncn -~Ince lht \tan (>( 1nstallaHOn 1n late 198) o( U. ,.
built mmtltt 1n Italy. We,t Germany and Rri111n to counter Soviet rockn11n lutern Europe.
NA TO..,,..,. llOld to 8oflm1
r'
A weak Konstant in Chernenko
MOS OW
(Al'J -Prrii· dent Kon,tan·
t ' i n U .
Chernenko has
appured 1n
public a fter
bt1n1 out of
slpt for two
months. but his
f1l1trif\I man·
ntrancf the way
Sovitt aele·
vi1k>n manaacd
hi• appnrance did littte to di1pcl doubQ 1bout his he1hh.
Carefully cdncd television rootaae
let• than two minutes in lensth was
1Jred Sundly on Soviet telev11ion. It
showed Chernenko. 73. 1ittins. •land·
Int and murmurinaa few wordsa1 he
voted in 1n election ror the Parlia-ment of the Ruu11n Republic.
Western d1plom1ts said they
doutMtd Chernenko voted at a rcaular
polhna place.
In contrast. M1kh11I S. Gorbachev.
Slid tobt the sccood·lcadina fiaure in
the ruhna Politburo. appeared sm1I·
inaand confident H he and h11 famil y
voted at a pollina place crowded with Wtsttm reporters.
-E•rly lllrd Dinner
Specl•I• '6.91
Prime Rib or Fresh Fish
CompWt~ DlnMr With cholc~ of
JOUp or JMMJ Mtd t*UMt
~ .C to 6 PM
,,..""~,,_n,,.a .... ~.. 7 ..,. I W ... I
M L90A . 901 E. BA1.10A ~73-n26
A
SAVE 40°/o-60°/o A
Includes • 2 SCripe of Bacon • 2 fresh Eggs
Hash Browns • Homemade Honey Bran Muffin
fn!th Orange Juice •Coffee
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' •
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5aw 60% a"d mort on " (O/orful ~ltwon of flat or
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of ""' bt11-11llmR m11lttN. &ry cart rottonlpo/yt1t1r
fNrc11/t. Quttn. Orig. SJ/.SJJ. 111.99.
Kmg. On1. SJ9·S40. 11/.'19. Alw aw1/i1blt.
111nd1ml c~ fM'" On1. 118.JU). SJl.'19. King '""'•
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Rol,,,uon 'i.JNJ lmttU, JO, 111/ llOP't• ~utpt
P11/m ~Jl"'nis. Sorry, no m•1I or phont orrltn.
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180-THll£AD PER Alt: HEETS
S..w 4096·60% and mnrf on .1•1 t'\rllmR u-l«tton of
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fi tttd. 1ill1n. OrtB· SH SIH lull OrtJ<. 116 S/9.
QuttP1. O"R· l10·S16. Km,_ Orig. Sn SJ / SI.ff J"Y
lllt A/10 11w1/.iblt \tt111ti.ml <.i~ I"'"
Or1i. SJ j S/8. 11.9'. Km,. <J~•. p.w Ona 116 S10
II. 9' 'Wltcllon iwnn '1y Jt11rr Rn/.mum 's &d I mtm,
JO. 11/I 110,..., tvq>t fJ/m \pmtKl ~,.,.,,. nn
ttw1/ Qr pll()tJt mt/rn
SHOP MONDAY-FlllDAY 10-9.
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$29. 99 A~Y c;rzE
WAM UTTA COMFO RT f R
~Ht 60'\ .u 1d mnrr' ( h1H1, /,,,,,, oi c \Cil1'11l, :..1r1t'f)
fJj prmu .md /.n:oriu , ,,/,,, • n/\ .1 /< • 11/ ~huh .irr
Jhm.ln ~"-Y>/r pob,~,rn 11• •1 ,,, tn _11h piton
polynter fi~rfill Tt. "' (Jr1R S ": SI JO I ull qwm
OnR SIOO SIJO l\mx On>:, SI 1: Si l~ S19 99 an)
•ltr ~lcnum t JT/t'f /71 •fol"[ R111 11•nn 's ( ot11forun, S 4,
.ill ~torn nupt f>.1/111 \rr111,t. \mry. ,,,, •11.id
()'f r'"'''' 11r le r.
Council shouldn't
open itself up to
'Conflict' cll'.arges
The debate over conflicts of interests -real and pcrcei ved
-will resume tonight in Huntington Beach when the City
Council awards the reconstruction contract for the two-story
building at the end of the pier. ,
One of the two appa~nt low bidders on the job is C ity
.r. Planning Commissioner Frank Mirjahangir. An unsuccessful
ca ndidate for the City Council last year. Mirja~angir's
construction company is one of two that submitted identical
$355.000 bids.
Despite a ruling by the city attorney that Mirjahangir may
legally bid on the project, several members of council have
worried publicly th~t Mirjahangir. by virtue of his public
position, may have compromised the competitive bidding
process.
"He's so intimately involved in the working of government
that it gives the appearance that be may have had an inside
track," said Councilman Peter Green.
So far, discussions of the conflict hav~ centered on
Mirjahangir, but tonight, the ~pie who appointed him to a
position of trust and responsibility in city government have the
opportunity to award him a job from which he stands to reap a
profit. It appears that council, too, finds itself the subject of a
perceived conflict-at least.
These situations arc difficu,lt for everyone involved.
Certainly, no one has suggest~d that Frank Mirjahangir or any
member of. the council has done anything improper as the
bidding process unfolded. But precautions against conflicts of
interest serve two functions. First, they protect the public from
cheats who would use their offices to enrich themselves and their
friends. That seem s not to be the case here. Second. they preserve
the public confidence in government -a confidence that has
been disastrously shaken by people who made conflict of interest
laws necessary.
To preserve public confidence in government is to preserve-
• ~overnment itself, for a government that sacrifices the support of
"its constituency is bound to fail. Sometimes concerns about that
confidence dictate that public officials adhere to loftier
standards than they might m their private dealings. Sometimes
public offi cials have to make sacrifices they hadn't barga ined for
m order to maintain an unrcproachable image.
This looks like one of those times.
Advocates TV censorship
to revive nation's morals
To the Editor:
What chance do children have
today to grow into adu lt citizens with
good morals. good educations and
respect fo r God and country?
• From recent studies. we find work·
I. Lal·k of parental guidance and
control while growing into puben)
\Ca~
f:~ 1ng mothers with children under 18
ha ve increased froM 40 to 60 percent
1 n the last I 0 years.
· ~ The almo~t total lack of
censorship of tek' 1s1on sho"' s. X-
rated movies. and late n1ghl cable TV
shows.
3. The read) avn1 labtlit ) of
narcotics to students.
Children in third lo seventh grades
who have tried mari1ua na or other
narcotics have increased from 11 to .< 36 percent in I 0 years.
The nu mber of movies and TV
shows showing couples half in the
nude 1n bed and making love have
increased 80 percent in the last I 0
years.
The present head of the FCC'
should hang his head tn shame when
he rl·ali1es what has been done 10 the
morals of our children!
Recenlly police rounded up drug
pushers in schools and the number
the~ arrcsled would surprise anyone.
The trouble 1s they will be given a slap
on the wrist and released to sell more
drugs lo more students. Mosl newsstands carry legalited
pornography today.
A Phil Donahue show on daytime
TV featured salesmen from the
frOJan Rubber C'o. advocating sales
of their contraceptive!> to high school
'>tudents lo prevent pregnancy. This
overemphasis on sex and drug.scan be
traced to the following reasons:
The puhlic must get involved and
demand harsh punish ment for any-
one dealing in. or possessing, illegal
drugs! Also. n:vivl' l'l'nsorsh1p for
public 'ihow1ng of movies and telc-
' ISIOn.
FRED H. PFEIFFER
Newpon Beach
Pilot welcoDJes comments
The Dally Piiot welcomes your comments on Issues of Interest to
our readers.
Letters and longer artlcles of commentary mutt be atgned. They
should be typed or clearly written and sent to: LITTERS to the
EDfTOA, Delly Piiot, Box 15'0, Coeta ...... '2121. Please Include
your address and tetephone number.
If you prefer, you may call your comment In to our spec,.I We 're
Ll•tenlng tefephOne number: ea ..... Please do not call In tong
letters or artlctes.
Flattery's good policy
The best work of the Arabian poet
Nabega Zrar was a two-ltncr in honor
of King Noman Ben Mondar ofH1ra .
It read: "You arc the ~un. and all the
m1r:-il It c, Rickover: "A ~h1td 1s
being prupcrlyrducatcd o nl ) when he
1~ karn1 ng to become independl.'nt of
hi' pan·nts."
,. other kings arc star'i. When the sun
appears on the honLon. the stars
pale:· So pleased was the king w1th
this httle puffp!cce. he gave the poet a
caravan of 100 camels plus dri ver"
plus tentt plus grub. the whole
<J \\l yourChief Prognoc;11t·ator 1f
brl':l~ Jancin& will still be tn voaue 20
\e:-ir\ fro m now'?
\ I le expects it 10 shuttle in and
ou 1 mur h in the manner of tap
tl.1011ng.
1 <iehmecr.
•I
Take a wide-awake rabbit. lnJeU 11
wi th some blood just taken from a
sleep1na rabbit. The wide-awake rab-
bit 1mmcd1ately falls asleep E~pla1n
th:it.
nother pronouncement hy ·\d·
ORANGE COAST
llilJPilll
\11 when dO you brush your leClh?
h"1 hdore breakfast s '3td to be the
t1ml' of day when that chore doc' )'OU
1hr ll·a<;t IOQd.
l .. M. B•1' 11 • •Y•tllc•l~tl
rol11mnl11.
H. L lcttw...n Ml
~
,,.. ZJnf
--M\~£010< , .... , ...
C.it (0.10r , • .... ,... 1 .no w..i "•· ,
(;(itlt M!!H A4"'fM ~'"""' 4 Ill • • ' r.0 Cotll ...._ (;A t?f>, f> Cr ... lheff
potl• f O•hx
--
R odanlooksonlyat · 1{The deficit) Is out of control preasely beHcause ~~·to that result Js, the big picture -at the result he wants ... ow youe
as they used to say, not his department.
,;__:..._ ______ ~--~~~----.:_--~--.:_----------~-----------;RJCRAJlDCOllSN
' co1'111111t.t
1 CANlDf TELL A: I.IE .....
1T WAS FUN! ...
Competition, not murder,
is key to game of Assassin
Those who oppose
it evidently don't
recall childhood -
I've been reading lately about a
game. It's been around for a while.
and 11 was 'Usually pla)ed 1n colleges.
There was even a movie aboul it
sometime back. I don 't recall the
name of the mo' ie. but the game's
called -\ssasstn.
There arc two leaders. called 1t·
ma'>lrrs. "'ho pass out tasks to the
players. The task is always the same.
rrack a specific victim down. (named
b) the master) and kill that person by
sl10011ng him or her with a plastic dan
pistol.
There arc only two rules. The
'ihooting mu"lt be done m front of no
more than one witness. and when
your shooung ts accomplished. you
pick up the victim's assignment. You
then track down your vic tim's victim
and shoot him.
The last person standing wms.
Sounds hke greal fun to me.
Apparently, not everyone agrees
with me. There seem to be some knce-
jerk cause espousers who feel that this
pas11me is harmful to our oh-so-
dehcatc yo uth. So much so. that when
the game surfaced at Palo Alto High
School. the principal banned it. Thts
acllon resulted. with total predic-
tab1ltty of course. in the game going
underground.
A teacher was quoted as saying,
"We're very worried about the blur-
ring of fantasy and reahty. It is
possible that some kids arc unable to
BILL
lfuVEY
distinguish their\ 1olcnt acts. I mean.
it's incredibly violent." Another said
"to play at murder turns the stomach
of those who arc aware of its
detrimental effect and blunts the
scnsibihtr, of those who find such play
amusing.' And }Ct another "Is our
society so tecnnoloeically cold. so
boring. so unchallenging that wc must
deaden our conscience for a chea p
thrill?" This last. by the way. was an
English teacher.
I think that these guys arc all wet.
The) 've apparent I) never heard of
"cops and robbers" or "cowbo)'S and
Indians ... These two staples of child-
hood play accounted for many h'Ours
of my young life. I distinctly re-
member hiding in gullies and behind
bushes waiting for my intended
victim to appear, and jumping out of
my place of concealment to shout
"S.ang! Bang! You're dead!" I also
remember times when my victim
outsmaned me. and I was the one
who was "dead."
There were numerous arguments
between cops and robbers. regarding
the severity of the wound inflicted.
"You only grazed me! I'm hardly
even hun!" "No way! I shot you right
in the gizzard! You're one dead
robber!"
In all of the games that I played. I
don't ever remember confu sing reah-
ty with the fantasy of the games.
Fantasy was the exercise of 1magina·
tion involved 1n the game. Reality
was when )Our mother told you 11 was
bedtime.
I 1hmk the major bone of conten·
tion is more a case of S<.'mantics than
anything else. The buzz words are
assassin and kill and executton.
Suppose that instead ofbe1ngcalled
-an assassin and using toy pistols. the
players were called firemen and were
required 10 douse their victims w11h a
balloon full of water? We could even
call the game "False Alarm" because
the firemen would be 1rying to put out
rton-cxistent fires. The masters
would. of course, be fire chiefs.
Woukl the game be soc1all) accep-
table then?
One of the major things that our
children need to acquire as they grow
is a sense of self esteem. They must
learn what thq arc good at. and what
their weak nesses are. Sports con-
tribute 10 this feeling of self esteem on
a physical level. If you're aood at a
panicular activity. vou feel good
about }Ourse lf. On a 'mental level, if
you're good at math. or any 01her
subJect. you feel good about yourself.
These th ings are all nothing more
th an competitions wit h your peers.
The game of Assassin is nothing
more. nor less. than that.
The goa l of this game is not the
killing of your vic tim . Wh at 1t 1s.1s the
planning of inge nious ruses to outwit
yo ur victi m, Whtie trying desperately
to ou tth1nk the pc~on who's after
you.
Exact I) the same as what goes on in
th e world ofbusmess.
Col11mol1t Biii Hirvey /Ive• Jn
Huntla1ton Beacb.
~tWM~---------------
F~I attempts to hide lack
of zeal in Donovan case
Freedom of Inf ormatton Act disclosure
deletes part of incriminating teletype
WASHINGTON - The FBI has
hidden behind technicaht1es tn the
Freedom of Informati on Act to
protect itself from di sclosina infor-
mation that m1aht suggest the G-men
were less than agaress1vc tn their
pursuit of alle13tions against Labor
St-crctary Raymond Donovan.
The information dele ted by the FBI
from its FOIA disclosure later ee-
came pan of the basis for Donovan's
md1ctment for grand larceny and
filina fal se stalemenh.
How do I know what the FBI
deleted from the document that f
obtained under the 1nforma11on act?
My associate Tony Capaccio got an
unadulterated mp) of the docum ent
from another wurce
The blacked-out mforma11on con·
-11tutcd \t'ven hnes of an FBI teletype
dated Jan. IO. I 9K I. The teletype was
from the FBI'!> New York office.
which had been au1&ned IQ work on
the backaround chttk of S«retuy-de 1gnatc Oonov an.
The heart of the ~natc Labor
c. omm1 11e c·.. concern over
Donovan's appointment wa the
•u~p1c1on that Donovan's Schtavont
ons1ruc11on orp. had cmbarraH·
in,ly close lies to a subcontractor.
Jopcl C'on1rac11na and Truck1na.
'l"h1ch was altcacdly mobster<on·
trolled.
The poruon of the 1cle1ype that
were not deleted by the rel arc
cmbarrl''ltnl rnouJh to the bureau.
Thcv 'how that the hnks bct~ccn
. ·-
Donovan's company and the alleged-
ly mob-dominated li rm were a lot
tighter than the Senate committee
had been led to believe by the FBI.
The links surfaced dunna 1.500 hours
of secretly taped convers:itions of
Jopel officials in 1979 dunna an
undercover operation known as
TUMCOM.
The New York FBI office's review
of Jopcrs principal owner, Wilham P.
Massclli. "revealed that (he) main-
tained a very dose relationship with
the Schiavone Construction Corp.
and 1Ls management officials.'' New
York wired Washinaton. ··This rela-
ti onship included social enpacmcnts
and frequent business contacts." th e
teletype added.
Yc1 17 days later. 1c 11fyina before
the ~1uue commiltee, the Wash1na-
ton FBI official in charac of the
Donovan backsround invest1pt1on
'i:.11d there had been "some contact"
bc1~ccn ' hiavone and Jo,P.".I ex·
ccut1ve,, "but nothint I would con·
sider 10 be ~11nificant. '
The comm111cc a a whole was
never ~hown the 1ncnm1n.ttnl tele-
type The dele1td portion of the
tcletypt detailed more evidence from
the TUMC'OM t1pcs of the closcnes
of the h1avonC>-Jopel connection. II
'81d:
"8ui1nc llfCCmenu included
prefcft'nllal &rtatmc"nt on sub4.:on·
tractina prOJtttJ..: fiMn IOI of cqu1p-
mcn1 for Ma sclti to la~ bKk (to)
h1:t\Onc and numerou,, poss1ttl)
. JACI
· AIH1so1
ft11udulcnt schemes to raise federally
requi red minority par11c1pation
levels on urban mass-transit pro-
jects."
II was thelC allcptions. based on
the tapes. that led to Do!lovan's and
Ma sclti's indk tmcnt by a New York
state arand jury last October.
The FBll in 111 frttdom-of-infor-
mation re ease. 1lso deleted the
teletype's statement that "1evcral
recorded convcrsa11ons indicate that
Jopel was never a bonded construc-
tion company, but utilitcd
Sch111vone·s bondlna to cover this
(federal) rtqu1rcment."
De pile its possession ofth i poten-
tially incrimlnat lnJcvldcncc, the FBI
apparently never fi>llowcd up on it -
and didn't tell the nate Labor
omm intt about 11.
The arand JU'Y charaed that
Donova'1. Maascllt and c1Jht other
company officials con~ptrcd 10 pass
olT Jopel as a lqttimaic m1norit)·
owned comp&ny 10 fulfill federal
cquat-opponunity rcquircmen11 for a
S 186 million subway construction
contract. The indictment cha~s that
Joecl •a only_ a pepcr "front •
footDOtc: The FBI just1(ied lhe
delittton of the .ncn ttletype lina °"
the ba 1s that the 1nformat1on in·
volvtd 1 current cue.
Jd ~,,.. .. I •TNlullH t.111.,.,,,_ ,
Nation:
can't ;
live on
dreams
Presid-ent has
concern self with
the 'big pictur e'
WASH INGTON -Trumpet fan·
fare. please. On Nov. 27th. the
Treasury Department announced a .1ax·s~mplifica1 ion plan of the type
President Reagan has Iona -wanted.
The plan made pagt one J*. alJ the
newspapers. The news~~.,..nes put
it on their covers. Telcv1s1<>$0vcred
it even thouah it was dull filaiaqd the
president announced In hlt'5$ite ~f
the Union speech that he wastll for 1L
Ta-Oa.
Bul for what? It turns out, u The
Wall Stree t Journal put f.it..; the
president was "unaware" Jn.al the
Trea.sul) plan would raise corporate
taxes about 3 7 percent. When that
paper asked him ID an interview what
he th oughl about that, the president
flinched: What rise? What corporate
taxes? Delicately. I imagine, the
Journal told him what was ia the
Treasur)' plan. The president said he
was not pleased.
Throughout America. corporate
execu1ivcs and coupon-clip~ al ike
presumabl y Jumped for joy1...h•aed
their secrelarics and called \f1e club,
sayi ng they were comif\I oi tartr. Charis Walker. one otwa neion s
top business lobbyists. said presi-
dent's remark s "made m y~·• Herc they all had naively tho tj that
corporate taxes might increa ..... that
the president knew what con-
tained in the proposal he pro-
nounced "the finest" an vpwcd
would become law. Silly, plc.
0( course. 11's well kn t the
president is not a detail ma the
Treasury package was no 'idea
ofafinaldrafi.butakindo( I bill
instead. Sull. we arc not tal mere
details here. but the sort tif-brold
policy decisions that mo~ ·even
Ralph Nadertosinjariasof~ for
the proposal. The increase id cOn>or·
ate taxes was a baste part of the
package. Without it, the Treasury
could not claim that individual tax
rates could be lowered and the
package still remain, in the current
Jargon. "revenue neutral." Af\cr alt,
the money has 10 come from 10me-
where.
Even after more than four years of
Ronald Reagan this is a remarkable
episode. With tax simplification, we
arc not talking about $0me minor bill,
but a major. even epic, piece of
legislation. You would think that the
president would be familiar with its
major provisions. especialJy since
one of them -an inctease in
corporate taxes -amoun&s to a
reversal in policy. Aner all. under
Reagan America n corporations have
been taxed ltghtly. many of them not
at all.
Docs any of this matter? Not realty,
comes oock the reply from lots of
They point out that Rcapn is
a hing success as president and it
matters that he concentrates
only on the big picture. leavina the
deijltls to others. Look at the econ-
omy. they say. Look at the inflation
rate. 1hey say. Look at the deficit
.... No! No! Don't look at that But the
deficit is. exactly where lhey should
look. 11 ts out of control precisely
because Reagan looks only 11 the bia
picture -at the result he wants. How
yo u get to that result is, as 1hcy used to
say. not his department.
Th~ trouble is that wantinJ some-
th1na is not the same as knowina how
to get it. The SCH"allcd details are
more than that. They arc buildlna
blocks. The reason there's 1 deficit 11
that 1be Reapn economic proaram
never added up. No amount of
w1shina co,uld chanac the math: Cut taxos and increase defense spendina
and ,you're aoina 10 ac1 red ink.
It s. the same with Stu Wan.
Want1na to do away with nuclear
weapons 11 not a technoto1kal brak·
throu1h: lf1 a wish. And no amount
of wishina chanacs the awful l~c of
deterrence. The same it true of ta.\
reform. Lowerina the tu rate (Of
Individuals is not ponible if t orpot•
1te ta"e• are not r11i1Cd to takt up the
alack.
Someday all these chickens att
&0in1 to come home to rooat. A
federal budtcl that's S200 billion in
the hole Is tryina to tell ya... tome-
thina. A nuclHr ~ftnse btled on 1
dream amounts to riothina more than
money tatted down a wilhlna well
And a lll plan that dccrtatts every.
one'• ta.ltt and still takes In tbt 11m1
1mount of money cannot n 11t in
reality. like • t:.ianced ~t. SW
Wars end the cntwhile Calli~ donal-
non or lhc Middle Ea11 (lf,.1 ~
&bclc O LelMw ... .). i1 no.ta abOw
,..,,,, like • ballooft O¥tr ·~· ton. It toars for only OM f'CllDll, Tltc
facts hlwt bttn thrown o"tfttoanl. ltkM"' cw. ,, • .,. ......
(' ........ .
..
~UJ' -fan•: Jadle aad Carmello llanto, Judi• KatbJ Bobbe. Rita Blncb; lacky wtnnen Renee Lewla, 8udJ .. 11•1tn1: i..t1l m.D a..11 ... aad wlfit
Blessed are sartorially savvy men .
~ 8edlenlek, wbo coordinated tbe •bow,
molt. down nm way wttb Illa 1'J.fe Katby.
. . . for they'll mercifully escape
barbs of emcee Paul Salata
BJ ROBERT HYNDMAN °' ..............
An uneven blend oflaughter and applause greeted
the bishop as the spotliahts chased hissbadows and sclf-
consciousness aside. Although he was swinging a golf
cluband·wearinaa cardipn sweater and cap, it was his
pants that drew the crowd's attention.
The M"t Rev.JolmT.Stelaboek, Bishop of the
Diocese of Orange, swapped his Roman collar for the
type of sartorial splendor reserved for the fairways and
putting greens.of the world-plaid pants with a
_resplendent riot ofcolors best seen through squinted
eyes.
Taped Gregorian chants sent the bishop parading
down the fashion show runway as the master of
ceremonies cracked: "Now those are slacks that even
God can see!"
Irreverent perhaps. but the Gentlemen's
~berdashery Fashion Extravaganza at the Newport
Beach Marriott Hotel was all in fun, with proceeds
benefitinga worthy charity-the children's programs
run by the Sisters of the Society Devoted to the Sacred
Heart.
Organized by Orange County Supervisor Tom
Riley and his wife Emma Jue, the men's luncheon
fashion show celebrated its fifth anniversary Thursday
with SO men volunteering to don the latest styles and hit
the runway to the applause of more than 300 guests who
donated$ IOOeach for the event.
Professional models these men were not.
Although several displayed the requisite poise and
swagger to make it. the SO amateur models have made
names for themselves in far different fields.
They included Bishop Steinbock: county super-
visors Brace NestaMe, Ralpll Clark and Roeer Stuton;
Irvine Co. President T•m Niel1ea; Municipal Court
Jlld1e Calvin Scllmldt; restaurateurs Jim Dale, BIU
Hamilton and Aa&oalo Capolo and several develop-
ment company executives.
None was immune from the spotlights or the good-
natured witofPaalSalata, the emcee.
Salata is the man to blame for the annual Irrelevant
Week's rowdy events honoring-among other
Model Jim OUleran tb•nlra da8'bter Oeorat
Gllleran-WllMn for aupportiYe applaa8e.
irrelevant targets-the last man picked in each year's
college football draft.
Salata was up to the task Thursday. poking fun at
one model after another.
As Supervisor Nestande walked the runway dressed
in Hawaiian shirt and straw hat. Salata snapped.·· And
you're 20 percent of our county government dressed like
that? Art you serious?"'
And when the Irvine Co. 's Tom Nlel1ea strolled out
in a wetl-coord1natedjacket and sweater outfit. Salata
pointed out that .. this 1s the first dectnt outfit he's worn
since he became president."
The models displayed sportswear. business suits.
tuxedos and leisure wear provided by merchants at
Fashion Island.
.\panel of women Judges awarded six prizes
following the fashion show:
•The JrvineCo:s MlkeMaaab.D -.. Most likely to
serve his wife breakfast in bed."
•Miclnael Watkla1, president of Professional Sports
Planners Inc .. -"Most likel y togivehis wife an
(Pleue eee WlJU'fltRS/ AS)
M.arUea Wayne and Bob Waller talse tmll
modelinC for Gentlemen'• Baberclullery.
Now their kicks come from memories Time
tinges
metal,
views
Famed Fanchonette
dancers from 1930s
reunite In Newport
By JOYCE SCHERER·BODLOVICH
.... NMCwc I i1 I
"The Most Perfectly Trained Bcvx
of' Beautiful Dancers in America.·
read the marquee at the ParaO"lount
Theatre in Los Anaeles in 1935.
They were the Fanchonettcs.
And they met recently at the
Newport Beach home of Adalyn
Harwick for a SOth year reunion.
"We were the Los AnJeles venion
of the Rockettes." Slid Harwick.
dcteribing the precision steps of the
24 dancers in the line as 20 of the
women, now 6S to 7S in aac. eagerly
shared Fanchonette memorabilia.
In a 1936 photo the beauteous and lona·l~ed Harwick. provoc,atively
draped in a small satin. sheet. was
shun• atop a larae wooden ball used
in their dance routine.
The Jroup's harmony and piety is
still evident today.
"Make us look aood.'' one
Fanchonette cheerfully warned. "this
could be our last press notice until our
obiluary." The comment brouaht pies of
la'*'ttr. Vera Rutlcd&c of Balboa Island was
a FanchoMlle for about four years.
"The Fanchonettcs were named
afttr the show's ownen and
producers. brother and sister Franc ho
and Marto.'' she said. "The idea
orilinated with an earlier roadshow
calfcd the unkist Beauties. I toured
the United tatcs with the show."
The larat Paramount Theatre.
loctted at 6th and &roadway. housed
a bewment for dancen' dressina
rooms. the m1in floor for ~r
formances and an upper level utcd for
tht francho and Marco business
otlka. Thf Fanchoneues were Plkf a hefty
I>' 1 wttk. top PIY _in thOte days
wtten t1ckct1 cost 30 ~ts for a
matinee or " cents for evtn1np.
Ailftn "Soy" Funk of Lot Anatles
11ld. "We had to work hlrd for tha: ~.Every dly we had to be on the
•• dmatd for rehearsal at 9 1.m. Theft we would ptnonn bctWttn
thfft to nvc numbcn 1 day and dtd
not ~ave the thtateruntll I I :30 p.m."
Fancbonettee from tbe Paramoant Theatre, aboft. recreate cborm line In Newport Beach 50 Jean later.
Harwick explained that Funk aot
her nickname "Sexy" because she was
"little. blondc ... and built.··
Patty Hackett. the lead dancer of
the Fanchonettet. hurried over to
recall a comical moment when the
danetn were performina with a circus
ICt.
"We were aoina to do our ·~alk the
ball' routine," she explained. "for
about seven minutes ft would dance
and walk with the bia wooden bells.
Well ... our act folk>..-cd the bl& cats ...
and fthen the cats 1cn the state. they
kft ·someth1n1' baidn Pl• marks.
We aot on the bells and tried to
maMuvcr around the ·somethina' ..
11 tumed out to be rather hysttrkal."
Blll-walk1n1 was JU t one of' many
fnt the danetn had to DCrl'«t The
pt. 17. 1936 i ue of hoW.top. an
tnttna1nment map.11ne. dctcriltcd a
FanchoMUc thusly:
··s~ mu., •ri~ t•rly •nd '° ro rM
Francho •nd M•rro Studio for hours of mrcns1"t tt~•rul in IM MM"SI
diner rourinn. SM-midi 1Jffftt1
herself in cvtry nt'w ftt'pftrltott•n
innovarron ... IHrn to ride a unlC)'<'k.
10 CX«Ult' ·~ful l)'l'llJOllS upon IM
kc. ro mastn ''"'°'' •ny lrnd 01 rh;rhm1C' srunr t\iff prnrn~ on 1ny
sra,r."
The rem1niscine rontinued ...
"Whlit was tMt ma.urant whett
we used to ttt a dtliciout 9'ak and
•lad for onl)' $0 cmts?" Ha,..1ck
asked. mcone mponded. "the
Downtowner:·
P1duna up 1 photo of the 2•
Fanchoneuts urround1ne ltll ··~
janaJn" Robin n in rthnrsal.
U\'ellc Howard of Ocft~ re·
called. "We were ~ttbrattns h1
I
b1nhda'. ht' was such a good danctr ...
such 3 n1l'C man "
The p1llurt. hov.e' er. SC't'med to
sttr a sadnc in Hov.ard as she
pc>mled 10 a prttl) m1hng blonde.
·· he v.a~ m' friend b3 k then:· she
said. ·· he v.a ~1lkd 1n an auto
1«1dtn1 not Iona after th:H photo was
taken.··
Howard mo'ed her fin er to a few
other )'Oona fact 1n the picture and
said. "She'' aone no~ and M> 1
she"
. uch mu"nas "''re interrupted as
Harwick nl~ her t the phone to
"saj hi to [1htl)n."
Ethet n Edv.1uds .. 100 111 to attend
the rcun• n. •as b(•nt artttl'd via
Iona d1 tantt all her fcllo"'
Fanche>Mu . • fltr the call. 1ht "'omen·, chatter
re\umed with mention of 81n
Crosb)o. Donald O'Connor. fde,a r
Bttlcn and Jack Benn\
"t.'e pttformed wuh all tho~ 'tal"
·~ evtn tM k1nn) ~1d. fBnk 1n-
atra." Hanwack JOked.
Dotothy. S.mmel'\' rema~ that .. I
saw ROMld lle.pn and h1 airlfncnd
Jane W)Wla t.ck taac af\cr OM
petfonnn W' brou&ht C'\: hors of "I reme•'* ... , .. and "That .. as ~t berc. Ill nd JIM v.~re ma med.· ~ •MOiin floated throuah the
air •.• .,_ occuional htlp1ns to l"C('llt
an evtae Of Mme arown dim 1ntt FanchOMttt bey-di)
But ~lyce lf)an did remcmher the aa,t timuhtdan«d Y.llh thcaroup-
"at the POMOW Fair in 1939 to thf b'i
band taunch of Gkn M1l~r ...
ThC Fa~ttc' d1\bendtd 1n
1941. Toda). tht Paramount Thea.re
1 • larac P1rit1nt lot
Here's yourchance·
to look ata rainbow
tn black and white-
By SUSAN MONAHAN
......... Cece $ •1 I
Ncwpon Harbor Art Museum
members crow~ the pllcnes dur-
in& thc recent prtvicw ~ption for ··100V1c~Alon11hc Road" and
·· 1x in Bronze" "1hteh art on cxbi-
b1t1on thfOUlh Apnl l4. Alfred l..esht.
whoCTcated"V~s" also attended
the prencw,attractinaalmo us much attention as his landscapes.
.. Landscape" may not be th~ost
IC'Curate term bccau!IC these Wlltt·
l'Olorsare intended to explore the
rc la11onsh1p betwc-cn blac1c and _.hi~
ratherthancapturc 1 speafk tctae.
I ,qh1 rnd. Leslicstnppeddtt111a
111 lolor people 1nddctalla.
·1f,ou want to 1mp1n dw~
nt llght. too many dctails~""
o phun<.'d Lcshc durinaan '*' """'-· T hl' m m pan son to black and wt.ite
pholl'traph 1 1nev1t1blc. alUM>ulh
I l·\l1C \ll\Sthe 1m1lantyv."1 un-
planned
.\nd ~h1k pa1n11n l"("~c•l m0tt
nuan\.crnfh&hund ladow than 1
photOiJ1lph. thcre 1 no attempt to
l'C(T('ate the m1nut1ae of the scene.
T~ .. \' icv. "stancd w11h draw·
"' man) of them 1nsp.ttd b)' visua
Leshc1hmJ*(iwh1&cndl~1n1car. .. ~n~r1 made 1>ttifw:dn•1np. I
mad watmolon.but~ didn't
W<W\," he rttallfd ... As 'I d1maftlled
dct.111 the pfC\utts bttime MON
truthful,"
Th1\ l«m It) 11not manifdiMW.
ob\lou om• ion Billboerdlillll
(Ph111 ... •011• ..
...
,.: . '
•I
•I
: ....
..
'•
---· --~ a --,
Mother-to-be· thinks pelvic erams excessive
DEAR ANN
LAN DERS: I'm writ·
1n11bouttcxual
abuse b) phrsidan"'
I ('On suited an aUOtM)' and was told that 1 f I sued. my
lttal ftts \\'Ou Id beenormoUJ.111umina I could find a
doctor who wou ld tes11 f) apinac a col~ue.
I consulted a numbttofpsychaatristsand was
informed that this abuse could be damaaina. c pectally
durina preanoncy.
Now I'm tum1ng1orou. Please print my lcttereo lean
send a copy to mvdoctor s offitc for him and the nurses to
Stt.-STOP E)(UALABUSEOFP TIENTSNOWI N
DOWNSTATE ILLI NO IS.
On my first
prenatal care visit I
rece1 ved a thorouah
exam. On my second
visit anothercom-
pltteeum was con·
ducied bec:a&* .. IONOM loll \ht tttOrds." On my thud DE.AA DOWNIT ATE: 5'1 ,.Ivie t11•611a.._. .....
visita ~lviceHm WIU~Ulred IO .. ltt ifl WIS dila&ed."' ....... S".., .... HcetllVe, ...-..u, ........... .
On the founh visitanocherpslvicHam was rcquirtd when ............ Mica.r ef a ''po11lM9 ..... le•."
linformedmyd«torofaJM)llibieproblcm.Onthtfifth Alluft&IJJM•re'*rth...,,......._l lM
visit I wuinformt'd that tbedoctOrwants to set me more ,eiy1te1Mw .... 11ta1llt1JolUttw11Jlet::::t'•I onen.On my sixth V1Sit I told him I wasfinundanothcr llMNJMIMllllll&~Jullkety ..... IA•• pelvic ex.am wun'1 necnsary. but he insisted. . · ,...,.,.., ... ,.1ellproce6treuveryay _,..., .. ,
WINNERS •••
homA7
unlimited aift crniticate to Fashion Island."
•Jim Dale of the Villa Nova -
"Most likely to wear a perfectly four-
an-hand tied and dimpled necktie."
•Job Creu -"Most likely to
forget which black-tie affair he is
attendin1."
•Joel Sl1t11ly -"Most likely to
discuss busi ness while runnina a
IOK."
The man "most likely to adopt the
latest in new wave fashions" was an
easy choice for the judges.
Bishop Steinbock won hands
down.
Alfred Leslie'• black and wblte watercolor, .. Horlson at Santa Barbara, 1977-81."
bRONZES •••
tr'omA7
movie screens remain. for example.
but they are depicted as rectangles of
ll&ht. The effect is of an uncluttered.
'1"most primeval landscape.
; Man y··views"areofthesamcs1te 4t different times. Far from being
Qepctitious. the ebb and now of
:.1um ination makes each scene
wnique. "It's as if they were stills from
~movie ... sai d Leslie ... You sec the
Sime scene with light changing over
(be horizon."
Regardless of how pcrmanen tor
fpparently banal the landscape ob-iects are. they illustrate t~at.nothing 1s
bnmutablc. The mountain 1n ~Homon at Santa Barbara. Cali-
fornia 1977-81 " and th telephone
poles and wires in "Ap oaching the
Grand Canyo n 1977-81 ·are equally
(tspons1vc to the shifting · t.
Leslie pointed out that w11h
I
color. there is less dist raction. This
austerity also lends a new focus to
SVhat might otherwise be a chchc.
Certa1nl> this is true of the landscape.
'subJeCt that representauonal ant!.IS
fJla y ha ve exhausted. And this trea1-
fncn1 is especiall y provocati ve in
t Rainbow Near Hadley. Massachu-
Nancy Ora••' 77·lncb bron&e, .. F•J111D-Re," 1982.
scns 1983.··
sually. th e fascination ofa '3in·
&ow 1s 1n the pla> of color. but Leslie's
Wi1crprctauon enables us to watch the play ofhght. "If you were w~tchinga
c.ainbow.11 chan~es-goes into
dark ncsc; ... he said.
, Sure enough. these pictures allow
tt\ 10 sec the demise.. ofa rainbow. asa
fu11) wh1teglow'1veswaytoa
&harper beam which is finall )' re-
placed b) a sltvcrof 1llumina11on.
• I fl e!.lie show!> us unexpected
ilcmcnts 10 fam1l1ar scenes. the
1c-ulptor~ who created "Six tn
Bronte" dt.>monstratc the' l'N1t1ht\
pf an ancient medium. Bro nte I!> •
9urablc and powerful. and thc!>C
f1ual111es are emphasized 1n 1.omc
works. But bronze also ca n be pla) ful.
Subtle and colorful
andro ('hia·s "D1onys1u<," and ~Figure With Tear and Arro~ .. Jn.·
9mallcr than hfr·\IZed. but give \uch
'n 1mprcs\1o n of concentrated power
~
l .
that they seem to fi ll the room. And
the bronze emphasizes the ti me·
lessness of these subjects: they could
be god-hke men or very human gods.
The figures in George Scgal's
.. Rush Hour" are also archetypal. but
in a disturbingly contemporary sense.
These commuters could have stepped
out of"The Wasteland" ora subwa)'.
The dusty patina smudaes their
features. but theirexprcss1onsarc
ckarly tense. even grim. They hurry
to unwa nted destinations ordesti-
nic,. apparently oblivious to one
another.
In co ntrast. Nancy Gra vcs' crea-
11ons are lacy bursts of color. The
pol)chrome patina 1mpansa surpris-
ing lightness to the sculptures
alt hough few matcnalsarc less
ephemeral than bronze. Even the
ou1s11cd ·· Fayum-Re" seems as
fragile and elusive as a snowflake.
Li ke Gravcs. l~ac W1tkin is im-
aginati ve 1n his use oft he patina.
Bride• and Groo••
yoa can ''WIN''
Sc ulptures such as "Crazy Horse"
and ··Tempest.'' which arc so lively
they seem ready to m.ove. arc cooled
with a green or blue tinae.
Bryan Hunt'sjcwel-rtkc sc ulptures
co mbine a rough facade with a Ouid
form. This is an especially effective
1uxtaposition in "Serpentine" where
11 suggests exaacratcd scales and an
al most s1 nister grace.
Anthony Caro's work is a reminder
that bronze 1s utilitarian as well as
ornamental.His structures are not. in
fact. functional. but "Lattice" and
··water Street Straddle" nag at the
1magina11on. The}' look likt' futuristic
artifacts with a definite. if d1fficult-to-
detennine purpose.
The scopcofth iscxhibition in·
dicates that the pliability and di-
ver1ifieation possible with lighter
matenels 1s also possible with bronze.
lfe, 1dencc 1s needed. these sculptu res
prove that this metal is neither
intractable nor obsolete.
FREE LIMOUSINE SERVICE
FOR YOlJR WEDDING DAY
MJR Limou s ine S e r v ice
"Maki.nl your Weddln1Da1 a 8,.c-JaJ M•mory,.
~ ~
l 1', ,,
FIND OlJT HOW
Yo• C.• WI•·
l•Tlle
THUaDAY,
FEB•UAllY ....
IWTHE
DAILY PILOT
...
.................. ,,. ................ tlMy ·-lluear.
!. •• DEAR ANN LANOE1tS:Thi11smyfirst lcttcrto you.
bu t the 1ripc from "Mary0 who complained about names reall)' aot to me. She was i.aJKet b«lusc some people gi vc
theirrhildrcn nameslikeChtryland Dawn. Would she be
happy if everyone was called "JKk'' or"Jill"?
M> name is unusual. h'u family name and I like it. I
am Std and tired of OCGO&e •rinl. "Your name 11 awfull y
hard to pronounce. Do~ n11nl ifl caH you Sue?" I tell
the rudt bozos. "Yn. I DOmind. lfl mean so liule to you
that youartn't willjnaeolUbaReffort 10 re member my
name. wt hive no frinlhbip."
Am I unreaeonablt. a OM woman said recently when
she wanted to call~ by my inilials? I leave it to you. -
MEXICO.MO.
OEAft MEX.: Stace )'Oii did Dot &ell me y•r ume I
cu taly Hrmlee au tit I• dlffleoll to remt81Mr. nl1 l110
escan. IMwever. If 1111 imponaat .. , .. IUI Y" 1M = :U"' llV• ..... ud )'M r~ ... I IC,)'Mt ,,....
••• • • • DEAR NN LANDERS: Our 24·y~ar-old son
returned fro m India. fasdnated by th~ Hindus hcsawthcre
wolk1ngon hotcoels. Hewant5 to ti')' It. (My husblnd and
t arc afraid he will burn himself.) PlcaJt t~IJ us what you
know about this practice. "Johnny" says 1t'uanat reh11ouscx~ricncc. -LA JOLLA PARENTS DEAR LA JOILA: WID ,...,., ,.Jdll18'eal
cudlUoai•I people na walh• .. , cieal• AM Mt M
IMlraed. n11 feat,ltewevtr. ,....,... ......... e..-. ..... ,._ aM eom,&ew faltll. If a,.,...,, Mt,,.,.,., _
la11r•cltd ucl psyelle4., II• cMld be.,.._., be,...,,.
..c recommelMI It
A ceatented .J~ rfted•an (Armaacl A8Mntel ....,_a .-let
moment wttla Illa Wife AaDa (Leeley Aan Warren) (n .. &••P-· ..
tlae ala-boar mtatMde. buecl on Bein Plain'• beet._ller. Tlae
eecoad part aln at 9 ·tolf!Cbt on Claanael 4.
-1:30-
;
TIC TAC DOUGH LOYEBOAT
l ~·(l)aJQIHEWS
UM Nil) Au.SI
AFffA80N8 fllEOPLFS COURT
BACK Of THE BOOK
JIM C()()f)EA'S ORANGE
COUNTY
BEHAVIOR
'$JMOVIE * * JOySllCkS 119831 Joe Don
Bakltf
-12:40-IJ (I) MCMILLAN & WIFE
'CJMOVIE
• • Slayground I 19841 Peter Coy·
ole Mel Sm1lll AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE
CHAIUS CHAMPUH OH THE FUllCENE ~ SERGEANT BltJ<O
RICK ANO 808 REPOAT
MOVIE -1:00-8 MOVIE • * Britannia Ho~1al ( 19821 • • • • , Doctor In Tile Haute
119551 Olrk Bogarde. Kay l(endllf -t.G0-Leonard Rossi1er Graham Ctowden
11 F ··A Bunnys Tale \Premtetel Kwstte
-11:30-
(1) SIMON a SIMON a BEST Of CARSON
OOOCOUPLE
MOVIE * • Wyoming Outlaw 11939) John
Wayne Ray Hunon e MOVIE ~·~ L ABC NEWS NIOHTUNE * • * Don I Bother To Knoell
119521 Marilyn Monroe Richard WKI·
mark VfGA$
AOQ(f()AD FILES
LA T!HIGHT AMEll:A
7'0CUJ8
MOW
e MOVIE • • • Sic/en Houts" (1963) &lsan
Har-ard MICllael Craig • • • · Merry Chnlllmas Mr Law·
rence 119831 DavKI Bowie Tom
Conti
!IJMOYI * •' 1 ··Erendira I 19831 treoe Pa.
pas Claudia Otlana
* • ' , Brady s Escape (19S. t Jenn
Savage. Kelly Reno
FRANKEN ANO DAVIS AT S OCKTONSTATE
0 ENTEATANBT TONIGHT I:) GOMEJI PYlE
0 MOVI£ ** , Tile HU119flr'"' ( 1983) Cathe·
rine Deneuve David Bowle
-1:30-
1~ • • * lmttahon OI Lile I 19591
Lana TUtner. Sandra Dee e DMAM Of 8UCCUS
-12.'00-
l ~~YWOOO
ll'088lk.E DMAM INDEPENDENT NEWS
CHARLIE'S ANGELS
Z)MOVIE
t • • A Boy And Hts Dog" (1975)
Don Jollnson Susanne Benton
-1:10-
'Ji ,MOVIE
-10:00-
lir~~~· -12:30-
~ HIGHT WfTH DAVID
• • Doctor Oetroo · ( 1983) Dan Ay·
kroyd Donna Dtxon
-t:30-
l ~OIEUP MONEYTAU<I
GAU.AOHER: THE MAOOE8Tl
-10!t0-
• ALFRED HfTCHCOOI<
"8EHT'S
l ~COLUMBO
AU IN THE FAMILY
u;)Tl1ATGIAL
-2:00-l:~T~ FROM THE SOUTH , 80UAl All* OF M.OREH:
* * Oil" ( 19781 Stuatl WM man
T=all I flEAl. ~TE 8EMINAll
,
~NEWS NIOHlWATCH
FATHEJI KNOWS IDT
)MOW . IEYOND THE 8ECMT
-11:00-
UM. AMENCAN STYLE
UtC>EASTANDIN8 HUMAN * • DC Cal> I 19831 Mr T. AOem
Bak1¥11n
eed assistance?
Use your radio
When is a driver allowed to ~~fc~io system (PA) from his TRAFFIC QllZ
A) Never.
8) To request assistance or =iii;;i;i;ii warn of a hazardous situation. ti
C')An~imc. iiiii~.,...q
Whal is the maximum al·
lowablc temple: width of eye
glasses while dnvina?
M 11' inch.
8 ) Under I inch.
(')Under 'h Inch.
D) No lim it.
Answer to frist question: B -To request assistance or warn of a
hazardous situ11ion . ·
Accordin1 to California Vehicle Code 27007. nodrivcrofa vehicle
shall use (or permit the use oO any radio system intended to make
sound audible outlick tht vehicle. unless the system is bcin• used to
request 11sist1n~ or warn ofl hazardous situation. This sttt1on docs
not apPI)' to 1uthori1td emcttency vehicles or vehicles used by public
utihucs companies.
Answer to tttond quntion: C -Under 1h inch.
California Vehicle Code Section 23 120 SllleS that no pcreon shall
dnve a motor vehicle while warinaJ1111e1 havina a temple width of '11
inch or more.
New. Eye alasses with 1 temple width of 1h irKh or more ore
common amona skim. While th~y are eold over the counter. they ore
1llepl to wear while drivina. This includes usint the leather or
neoprene side pittn that are attached to otherwise lawful al• sc:s.
ENGAGEMENT S
v AN de KAMP-o·conoa
Ted and Pat Van de Kamp of La
Jolla ha vt: announced the engaae-
mcnr-of their daughter. Jody. of
Ncwpon Beach to Chns O'Connor of
Corona dcl Mar.
T he bride-elect is a graduate of
Corona del Mar High School and Cal
State San Diego. Her future bride-
groom 1s the son of Pat O'Connor of
Flonda and 11. a graduate of Bishop ~utfy School and Niapra University
in Lewiston, N.Y. A June 8 wcddin1
IS planned an Mary Star or the Sea
Catholic Church in La Jolla.
EGAM-DA Vl8
Dr. and Mrs. John Robcn Epn or'
Ncwpon Beach have announced the
engagement of their dauahter. Karen
Patricia Eaan. to Blake Jame Davis.
son o(Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Jackson
Da' 1s of San Clemente .
Tht' bride-to-be graduated from
Newpon Harbor Hiah School and
lJC' Berkeley. where she affiliated
wit h Pi Beta Phi. She was a National
harity Leaaue debutante in 1978.
Her flance. a third &eneradon Californian. 1s a araduate of San
Clemente Hiah S'chool and UC
Berkeley. where he affiliated with
Reta Theta P1 . He nowancnds MIT in
C'ambridac. Man.
Qenta... aM ..... .,. ........ 1111)' .. N..,.. 9-cll p~
l>e,ertmMM. Here's how to submit
i-:;:=.-;~-================:::::::;:-i your wedding news
To help >ou submit the reQuittd
wcddina and en111tment infor.
mation. forms arc 1v11lablc at the
Daily Pilot offitt. 330 W. Bly St ..
Costa Meta.
Laurie J. Private Coll.Ction
Unlque Elt•te &"Antique Jewelry
Contempar•r7llec•• In
Ivory, l•pl• JiHle
Now on Diaplay at:
Charlie's
123 Fa1hlon lalanCI M0-5721
Forweddinp. quahty photos of the
br1dal couple or bride only arc
ac:repta blc
En .. acment information 1t to be
ubm1ucd at least R\'tft wctks before
the ~rdd1na.
Forms and Dhotos can bed~
ofT at the omtt Of malled to the
Wcdd1na Dcpenmen1. 0.1ly P11oc. p
0 . Bo' I S60. Cotta MeM. (ahf 111t.1ti
St i eDi 'stale
ofBunnydom on
TV flick tonight
By.JERRY BUCK ,,,...... ...
LOS ANOELES Ftmioast Oloria Steinem aives the Playboy
Bunny's tail a tweak in an ABC movie
,bout her u"dcrcovcr 11si1nmcnt for
1 mapzint story.
The llOry o(how Steinem became a
Pl1yboy Bunny for
Show ma~zine 22
vears 110 as told in ''A Bunny's Talc ..
toniaht. Kirstie
Alley stars as
Steinem.
tcincm's bunny
cirttr in 1963 was
1 short one. but at
produced a piece
uplorina the seductiv~ fanwy of the newl).'. opened
New York Playboy Club. The ex-
perience also fiJurcd •an Steinem's emersrn~ as 1 forceful advocate (or
contemporary causes.
.. Gloria'schanltd a lotsincc then.''
said Alley. "When she was a youna
journalist, as most women at the
time. she thouaht she would work for
a while, then act married and just
continue her wrltina as a hobby. The
bunny incident was not a major
tumina point in her life. but it was a
catal yst that made her Stt the need for
it.
"Bcina a bunny -and this ts the
way she dHcribcd it and the way I
dtscribe It -was shockina. I had ~vtr be-en ~ut in a position before to be so humiliated. On our Playboy
Club set we had about I SO men
txtras. and evcrythina Gloria dc-
tcribcd went on thert. The men
P.inchcd my bunny tail, thcycalkd mci
beby. • And this was 111 before the
cameras were evt'n turned on.··
Alley added. "Yo11 wonder what
aives these men that riatu. Then you
walk by a mirror and see yourself in
this costume and you realize you'rt
contributin& to it. Gloria knew this.
and she'd look around and sec these other women.
"She knew she was doing it for the
story. but she wondered why the
others were doina it. She talked to the
otht'r bunnies and th.cir reasons -to
mttt famous pcop(e. to become a
movie star or bt'cause the pay was
hlaher than for an ordinary waitress
-became pan of her story."
Karen . Anhur directed Deena
Goldstont's scr~nplay for Stan
Maraulies Productions. Mar,ulies was the producer of ··Roots' and
.. The Thom Birds." .. A Bunny's
Tale" also stars Cottt'r Smith. De-
borah Van Valkenberg. Joanna
Kerns. Lisa Pelikan. Ma ry Woronov.
Delta Burke and Diana Scarwid.
'Decade' Oscars proposed
HOLLYWOOD -Public rcla-
tions 1Fnt Milton Kahn has revealed
he is developing a series of television
or cable specials tentatively titled
··Award of the Decade.'' which will
pit the Academy Award winners from
the 1970s. 1960s. 19S0s. 1940s and
1930s against t'ach other for a primary
award.
Kahn said he plans to develop the
"'Award of the Decade'· into a series
of specials and serve as consuhan t on
the projt'Ct.
The concept of the show will be to
select film cratics from key cities
throughout tht' United States to serve
as voters. with screenings to be
amn4ed so that the votCTS can
appraise the performances of the
former Academy Award winners.
Kahn plans to basically limit the
cateaories to best actor. be$l actress.
best supporting actor. best supponing
actress. best director. best picture.
best screenplay and beit song.
production companies regarding his
.. Award oftht' Dec~de" specials.
Kahn. who is P.resident of Los
Anftlt's based-Mahon Kahn As-
sociates Inc .. has headed his own firm
si.acc 1958. during which time he has
represented a variety of Academy
Award-winning clients including
Gregory Peck. Joan Crawford. Edith
Head and Ingmar Bergman's film
"Cries and Whispers."
Klntie Alley
Steinem was reluctant to sell .a.be
film rights to her story. She felt her
early carter had been harmed because some people pcrceivt'd her not as a
serious journalist but as a bunn}.
..She wanted to forget that she had
evt'r been a bunny," said Alley. ··But
when she learned that she would have
some control. that it wouldn't be done
exploitativcly. she agreed. Sht' went
to a lot of trouble to speak to me at
great lcn1th and help me with my
research for the role.
"After I got the pan I flew to New
York aod spent four days with her. I
was awarl'ofwhat sht' had done in the
past IS years. but I didn"t know what
she was like. She told me 1t is not the
aoal of women lO be a man. Ofcourse.
but I was complimented 1f somebod}
said. ·voudidasgood asa man.' After
I finished this picture I realized what
sht' mt"ant."
COllll HAMI (PC)
PROTOCOL a .uaa•o
SAf/Sllt 12 •S. '•O. I 4S -•ldi• ......
(N-l~J
MOIUlll 6 lS 10 IS
SAT/Slit 2 40. 6'0. 10 40
Lauper, Turner, Prine
favorites for Grammyi
8J RICH.ilD DE A TU:V .................
LO ANGELES -Cyndi Lauper.
the oranat·ha1~ pnnttM of pop.
Tina Turner. soy and triumphant 1•
asmashinacareer ttvl~at. MC) Priace.
1ndrQ1Ynou1 and Cftlllftatic. are up
for the music wor1d•1 top honon at
Tutsday's 27th annual Grammy Awards.
John'Ocnver will bt the hott oflhe
thrtt-hour show from the Shnne
Auditorium (CBS. 8 p.m.~which will feature _performancn Turner. Prince. Chaka Khan. Han Williama
Jr.. Lauper and others. Cekbrity
presenters incll!M Neil Dtamond,
Diana Ross and Placido Dominao. l.aupcr had a rare swttp 1n last
month'sGrammy nominations. scor·
ing in thc "811 Four" catcaoriC1 of
best album. rccord and son1 of the
year and best new artist. The laJt
· anist to be nominated for lilt fbur
prizes and win was Christopher Cross
an 1980.
t.auper's album. "She's So Un-
usual.·· has sold four million copies
and generated fivt' hll sio&Jcs. inclu4·
ing ··Girls Just Want to Have Fun." It
has been nominated for best female
pop vocal and rt'cord of the year.
Laupcr won two trophies last
month at the American Music
A wards. where she perf ormcd on a
stage se t she designed. At tht' Gram-
my show. she will sing "Time After
Time."
Lauper's first si ngle. "Girls Just
Want to Have Fun," had the tone and
dt'livery of a novelty song. But such
songs as "Money ChanJCS Every-
thing" and "Time Afier Time" t'Stab-
lished her as a serious an1st. despite
her skin waving, sct-trashin& antks.
Prince. the 26-ycar-old superstar
from M innt'apolis whose sweaty con-
cen hysterics contrast with a fervent
offstage pnvacy. ttas fodr nomi-
nations with his group. the Revol-
ution. including album of the year for
"Purple Rain." The soundtrack from
that hit movie has sold nine million
La•per
copics.
"Purple Rain" also was nominalCd
for best rock aroup performance. best
film score rccordma ind producer of
the year.
Prince also has a best rhythym and
blues sona nomination for writin1 the
'Chaka Khan hit. ~1 Fed for Y<>U."
His pro\CIC. Sheila E.. is nominated
for best new artist.
Prince and the Revolution are
scheduled to perform "Baby I'm a
Star" op the awards show. At the
American Music Awards last month.
Prince won three trophies and elec-
trified the audience with 1 per·
formancc of~Purplt' Rain."
The diminutive rocker also raised
eyebrows by bringin' p:rpntuan
bodyguard "Big Chick• Hunubtrry
onstaac. in addition. his ~nta
tivcs told people sjnin& near the artist
and his band not to touch or acknowledge them .. in any way ...
Turner. 43. wanted to KC what she
Although no network of cable deal
has yet been set. Kahn said he is I ~~~~~~~;;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;;;;~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;~~ currently in discussion With several r lUJllu.Y '"' ..
IS DEFINITELY THE BEST
IN ITS CLASS."
-Joel Slegill, ABC-TV.
GOOD MOANING AMEAICA
THE
BREAKFAST
CLUB
~ ,_;.· ®
-UA--NOW PLAYING ----==-=~'-:::.'::.. .... --, __ -G6J161 -· ... II 1111-
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'"""' MtA•••ll ClU9" (It)
' 3 s 1 •
TIMOTHY HUTTON .,... "r<N-ta>
1 .. uo .••. , .. 94$
1f11111rf1 sow H r.o•s 1 , l(;1t1u I
ill ' ' 1
.-,--.....
I
\'
by Tom aattuk DOON'UllUltT by Gary Trudeau
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
"I wish I was a latchkey kid!"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
.-----------
"Well. good morning to you . too'"
GORDO
···A~AN
ADOPT'l!O
60~ _ _1.)NC, IrrEL A FIL IAL ourv r9 WAR)J VOc.J
TJ.IAT···
GARFIELD
BIG GSORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
----1 l.___/~ ~-----
"I hit• Monday1."
DE1'Pfl8 THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham
'hvs FaKS ~ BE AWFOLLY ft>OR 1J£Y ~ A BIQ
R6S ~E/ii HIS lW'I' SISTER ~O A PENNY. •
by Gus Arriola
by Jim Davis
MEY. GARf=IELV, WM.AT SAY WE HAVE POTATOE~ fOR PINNER? G£.E, IT'5 MEN A LONG TIME
5fNCf 1 FIXEP POTATOE.S
MOON MULLINS
. ,.
JUDGE PARKER
Gorr,A RUSI-I, TEDDY··
TH~ PRoGP.AM ONLY
L,ASTS ,A H,ALF·HOIJR.
1 H r SA•o H --;;;;.m!o "'1
MELLO, OAN'_f COVPL~ Of-HOURL OH
WMl!IN! ·s r ANO l.. FT ""8()Vr .AN ~ lf'X.JR CHVCK~ ./ ~.MISS SPe',.~E..,.,
·~---'"'27-:J'°
by Harotd Le Doux
8BOB by Jeff MacNalty
~ NJO GIZJ)Mft(. ..
PEAIWT8 by Charles M. Schulz
--~~~~~~----\
YOU ~NOW, BUILDING A
ROCK WALL LIKE THIS
IS 6000 THERAPY ...
EVEN IF IT'S A lJSELESS
WALL, IT MaPs JUST TO
8E DOIN6 SOMETMIM6
I ~AVE A FEELIN6 THAT
~KIN6 ON TMIS ROCK
WALL MAV EVEN HELP ME
TO GIVE VP MY BLANKET ..
i'M 61.AD TO MEAR VOU
SAY TMAT 6ECAUSE I
CEMENTED VOU({ 6(.AMKET
INTO TME WALL !
DRABBLE
tWONOE~ "°"->
1'0 l..OC.X w11"
~ f.~2~1N(,1
l U
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
TUMBLEWEEDS
BR IDG[
UH, I CAN~Flt4D IT.
~rr! G6f rr! suT 'ffi~E:S ~ Fl\.M !
~ ..
by Lynn Johnston
lt\~V'RE.
13Ac.K ~
NO~MAL.
by Tom K. Ryan
ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ
Q.l -Aa South, vulnerable. you
hold:
• 74 ~ AQMZ 0 93 +Q10t5
The biddinr hu proceeded:
N ... tla Eaat s .. tla W Ht
l + Pua 1 c;:;? 2 0
Z c;:;? Pua ?
What action do you take'/
A. -fn term• of hlJh cardt, you do
not have much more than a
mlnimunL However . your double flt
sivea your hand great trlck·taklng
po11ibilltle1. You do not have
enough lo bid game on your own,
but you should certainly 111ue an in
vltaUon by raltln1 to three heart.a.
Q.2-Neither vulnerable, aa South
you hold:
•A71 "AQJlot OAJ5 +84
T he blddln1 haa proc .. ded :
8 .. t.11 WHt N..U £ut
1 c;:;? P... I+ Put
?
Whal do you bid now?
A. -Thlt It,.. one of thOH hand1
where you almply have no rood
rebid. A Jump to thrtt apade with
only t hreeurd 1upport la too aa
Jrtlllvt, and a jump to thrH btarta
on a tlve-urd eult could reault In
)'O\lr ltltlnf to pme In lht wron1
major tult. In~ a chan,. ot 1ult by
opener could 1u11 .. t extra valu.t,
we would opt for h~o dlamonda.
P&Ptner'a ntat bid ahould leave you
uc.Utntly pla~d to plot tht reel ot
LIM auction.
Q..t-Both vuln rati ... u South 1ou
hold:
•97N <::'.41& OQ7• +II
Tflt blddln1 hi• proceeded:
WMt N..U r..t ._..
l • OW. r.. I• , .... I+ r.. 1
Wh&L action do 1ou Lab?
A. -By firat doubling and then rat.·
Ing your ault, partner ia 1howlng a
hand worth 16-18 polnta in support
of spades. Were ft not for the fact
that your kins of club• la under the
openln1 bidder, your hand would
warnnt goin1 to same. lt 1tlll
merlu one effort, and the logical bid
ia two no trump.
0111
SHUIFF
QA-At South, vulnerable, you
hold:
<:>QJ• O .4U +AIQJ871
The bfddtn1 hu prOCMded:
ffdt Wnt N_.. Etet
I+ p.,. I• P ...
3 • P.. INT P ...
7
Whal atUon do you tab?
A.-We would DOt fault you If you
chOH to bW nve elubt -thoM
honora are not to N antered at and
you ahould be a favorite tor 11
tricka. However, at n6 trump you
will be dellv1rin1 to partner tlJht
aure trtdla and he eurely un make
one trkll befort th• enem1 colltd.a
five. We ..... w ,....
Q.1 -Ae Soutll, vulMf'ab'-, you
hold:
•117111 <::'Qll OKQlen
TIM R*WU.1 Ml pr1M1ded:
................ Ku& ,_ ...... , ..
'
What do you bid now?
A.-Even thoush you are a puaed
hand and partner hu opened In
third seat, your hand olftta alam
poulbilltlu. To convey that
meauge, make a jump shift. of three
diamonda -by a paued hand a
jump 1hllt la a one·round force. A
Jump to four tpadea It woefull1 In·
adequate.
CHAI LES
Go1t1
Q.t -Eut·W11t vulnerable, 11
South you hold:
•WI OIU 0 '1"7W +t
The blddlftl h11 proeeedtd:
WMt N~ r... S..Ui
t • OW. P.. I O
2. ow. ,.. '
A.-Flret, )'OU mutt ,. ..... that.
tine• 70\I have alnady taken a bid,
partner'• double of two dubt la I«
penalUt1. Then 1ou mu• ... that
your haDcl la &oe.aat, uuula.d to
dtftne• no r1t1t.Ur wltat tit•
vulnerabUlty -7ou do IOl have th.
veat11• of a dlfeutn trick. INd two
dlamondt.
Coast,· v>
a lumni
in tie
Throu&h Make Mayne's nebt
seatons as head coec:b at <>ranee
Coast Collqe, never before bas theR
been an alumna pme -unul
unday •
nd the &roup of former 0taftlt -
Coast products squandtred a JO-run
lead ap1nst the current OCC club
befoR both teams battled to a 14-14
tac an front of a la rat crowd Ii Oruee
(oat.
The alumni, up 14-4 after 41h
1nn1nas. faded after jumpins out to
several early leads.. "
Dave Rolland. OCC"s ccntmaeldet
and one of four hi tuna •tan for the
Pirates. laced a two-out sinde i1"o ~
lefl-ccnttr field pp to tie tr.e pnw i•
the bottom of the ninth ad tend the
dream-team alumni squad (which
featured the Oakland A's' Donnie
Hill) home kicking themselves after
blow1n1 a b11 lcad.
MOit of the alumni's oJfcnsive
damatt was done in the fourth and
fifth 1nn1nas when they ICOf'Cd a
dozen tames. seven of which came 1n
the founh. ,But Ora~ Coest re-
bounded n1cel v from its early deficit.
A p1tchana duel 1t wasn't.. and only
Jack Reinholu for the alumni and
bro!her Enc Remholu (or the Pirates
werr sharp on the mound.
~ ............ .., .............
Jeff Ga rdner la caatbt by Cout'• Darrin Game r. Gary Bra u, (upper left) Damon Berryh ill (left), Rick Doetal (u pper rl.Cbt) and Donnie Hm look on.
Enc Reinholtz tosted the final foar
mn1ng,s for the Pira~ yieldJnl no
runs and only three bits. Jack Re-
mhollL. meanwhile, who pitched for
Mayne's 1981 and '82 South Coast
Conferrncc championship teams,
faced Just sax hmersdurina his perfect
two-1nnm1 stint.
And that was about it for pitchina.
Kareem
bails out
Lakers
Jabbar scores
39 points as LA
turns ack Knicks
NEW YORK (AP) -Little hat
changed for Kareem Abdul-Jab-
b• In hit 18 yn11 In the National
Buketball Aleoclatk>n. WheMYer
hll teem need• bUketa, they go
lntide to the bkl guy.
The 7-2 Lot Ange1ee center took
onty NWf1 lhota In the nr1t h•lf
8und9Y • the Laker1, unf amlllar
wtth New Yot1c'1 pr...ure defenM,
trlded beeket1 with the Knlck1.
AIMM-Jebber, who turM 38 on
Aprl 11. then ecored 29 of hi• 39
Pointe In tht MOOnd hatf, and white
Mew VoR k-s>t the game cioM
thenkt to the effort• of Bernard
King end OerNff WMker, the
Laker• held on for a 119-11'4
vtctoty. KJno, the NIA '1 acorlng feeder,
rnatcMd Abdul-Jabbar wtth 39 POtnt•. Wf'6ll w•er hed 2• pofntl, nine rMoundl and etght ........ .. ,.._ sw-~ u1 troubte
untJI we llowed It down and went to
~." llk.,. Coech Pat RIMfy
lltd. "That WM the turnfng potnt.
He beoemt more animated wherl we ..,. penetrating the pr .... It w• a,... m•athOn, but we putt.d
" out." ''New York came •t U9 wtth tMlr
dt ... IM end pt~ • gr•t game,
but we were abte to match the6r
effort," Mid Abduf . .J•bbar, who hft
11ofhll22 n.ed-goal attempt• and .aeo had 10 Nbaundt. ''When they
lllrted to pt .. , we weren't abt. to fll lnllde. Then, we adtulted and 1
9'trftVlhOt." ·~ ha¥9 the belt 4rmp In tht --~tt'1thtmatn pert of
... '.dl .. t•.'' ~ llid. "We
itOn't ~to ... I prw like thle too
Oftlrl --·-.. only feet tht ICllldeltwtol.''
On two OGCIMIOt• In the MCOnd
Ml, ~ comptetety
doMlnltecl tM .....
"" Ullltrl ~·· by only two _... Wiii l'rt "*""-left In tM
............ of .... netlOnlllV .....
,..... """' bUt ~
111Ndilof •L01= poenta === .... ,=r..,.u: ........................
..... ~ ...... "' .......... with ......... pertDd.
,. -·· telPOfdld """ • ., ............ 101~1 ... wettt
.. #.tlt.tlll•lnttw..,...A~ ii•• ........ Oft .. ,...,.. foi' .. 01 .. N1W Vortl ,,.,, ttllft
111.-ti of .. unrt' iele IO
.... , ............. two fr• ... .... ""Lee ........ ...,'° .. .-. .... a:Oltogo.
'!"'9 llnlDtlebp ........ ua."'
.. lllmtdMl-HfllY," Abdut--
1 ... Mid.
•
Football in Japan 50years&go
Maloney's dream
to intreduce sport
became a reality
ByCURT SEEDEN
Of the o.-y ..........
When Al Malone) wa\ a 26-)car-
old lifeguard. he <ic:nl off a lc11cr 10
Ad olf H11lcr and he received a
personal note 1n return.
That was a heller rcsponcoe than
Benito Mussolini''· The Italian die·
tator go1 a similar note earlier and
turned 11 over 10 the Italian Counsel
in Los Angeles.
Why on earth wa., a Lon~ Beach
lifeguard sending off co mun1ques to
two leaders who would eventually
change the cour'I<' of h1S1ory'!
It 's quite simple Maloney wanted
10 bnng two football teams to Italy
and later Germany 10 introduce the
two countne'I to the 'lpon The rea~n
Malone) wanted lo do that was
equall> simple' --good will
Nov. a 77-)ear-old busane'>sman
and pan-11me in ventor who resides 1n
the Baa Canyon area of Newpon
Beach. Malo ney looks back on those
da)', in the mad 1930s and wonders
what 11"
"When I fir'it \tarted th 1co thin~ I
wrote 10 Mussolini in 1934," explain'>
Maloney. "I had read that Mussolini
had enJoyed watching Notre Dame
and use playing football on the
Movietone Newsreels. That "-1mc
night I had a dream that I was goin~ to
introduce football into a fore1f.n
country. Which one I didn't know. ·
Doth Italy and Germany turned
down Maloney for different reawns
-the Italian' because of more
important political matters at the
time. and the (1ermans because the
11mina ~.a" on 1 he Olympics were
JUSI IWO )'Car'i oil
But Malone~ realt1t'd his dream
anvwev. c
UCI, Gauchos
meet tonight
lJ( Irvine'!> Antcatt.'r'I seek to
return 10 the .500 plateau ton11ht D'I
they entcrt:un lJ( . anu Barbara 1n
rawford Hall on the ~hool rnmpus
with 11pafl'schcdul«J for 7:30.
'rhc same can be uid for the
Gaucho<J of Santa Bubara as each
enters with a 7-8 conference record.
ihe AntcatcN arc led by Johnny
Rotel'J. Tod Murphy and Troy
Carmon, a tno which hu con "tcntly
been an double fiaurc'
R0tcr 1s the team·, lcad1n1 scorer
with a 21 9 averagr while MUf'l)hy (IS 6)andC'armon(JJ 4)ha\'chell)C(t
provide tome bnaJ\1 'pot 1n what ha1 othcr-.1~ b(en a "cry up.and-down
)c:ar.
Am na the lJ( \R cont1natnt art four. car letterman Michael Manin
(6.1) lftd thrtt·)car k'ttcrmcn Stott
F11htt (~ 7) and ( onncr Henry (6-7).
Ito on lM lJ{ 8 r ter" 6:.1 auard
Chrt lll<'klon, a frc,hman out of
Mater°''· Th11 11 lJ( 1·, Onal 19 5 home
appuraft<'f. The An1cuc:n cloee out
the rqular l(Hon ~nh 'llmft 11
Ncvada·l a\ Vqa' and Cal State
Fullenon.
Jn 1935 tbla wu tbe Ont football team Introduced to an Eutern Heml•phere when Al Maloney took them to Japan.
Fifi> )'ear'i ago. he organized two
team" using pla yers from west coa<it
unl\ers111cs and made a 30-day boat
1np 10 Japan
1 he ann1 vcr\3ry of the first day of
that trap came last week.
Onamally. the Japanese govern·
ment turned down Maloney but
eventually reconsidered.
"I go11he hunch together-35 guyco
-and wr left Wilmington on the
19th of February." Malone)' recalls.
Among the players were USC's Bnck
Bn&ht. Ed Brown and Cal Clemmon'>.
Wa'ih1ngton'41 Chuck Mucha. Oregon
Stall''s Red Franklin and Stanford'\
Jack Drown
II took the team 15 days bv ship 10
reach Japan Once the> amvcd. they
played I 0 football <games 1 n a span of
30 day'l 1n front of the runou~
Japanc~ "fon'l "
"We allral'tcd so murh a1ten11on
there that the public1t)' wai. tremen-
dous. We received phone calls asking
us to play in Shanghai. Manila and
Hong Kong," Maloney recalls. "We
were really wined and dined."
Nowadayco, U.~. college fcx11ball in
Japan 1~ an annual event. For the past
10 ycarco. two ll'llms have been
l hc>0..cn 10 play in Ja1X1n at thl· C'nd of
the ..cason Ne,1 }Car. t '\< and
Oregon ~Lale arl· S<.·heduled 10 v1co11
Ja~n.
Malum·' \a\\ Jaoane"4.' 01Tic1al'
ga'e him a <,amura1 <,v.ord 1n fl'tum
for introducing the \pon 111 that
COUnll)
"It 's the h1ghl''I honor \OU lan get
1here other 1h.rn a g1h from th<:
emperor.'' he da1mi. "It v.as ap-
praised for SI 0.000 whl.'.n I came back
through cu'>tom'> ..
Of course. Maloney didn't do all of
this Just togc1 an t"l(pcn\lve \word He
believes coun1nc' l'an Ix· harmon1ou'
w11h the help ol athkt1n anti \Jl('nli·
call y football
"I feel the Oh mp1t < 1amc\ put 10 ..
much emphJ'" nn "inning," he \J\'
"IJUSt want fll.'c1pk to meet and h<i 'l'
fun." ~1alonr' "''' hl' l\n't throu1h 'l'I
Wh1 lt' he rt'fu~ to go into dt'ta1l ht'
doc' \3~ ht' ha!> .mother tnp scht'd·
uled v.11h v..orld harmony a'> 11\ t'nd
fC'IUh.
\ backup quan.erhacl for the I~ 30
t ')( football team. Maloney~>!> h1
ncv. t'ndea "or v.ill "involve go,em·
men ts ... and "'>urround football ..
In the mcant1mt'. he plans to get
togt•thcr with ~me of thC' football
pl.a'c"' who made 1hat htstonc tnp to
laran 50 'ear'i aito
I '>l'l' '>Om<.• of 1he gu) s now and
tht'n and the) !><l> aside from 1he1r
mJrri.1grs and ha" mg lh1ldren 1h1!1 ""a" th<' Jrcatcst thing that e'er
happt·ned to them ... adds Malone)
Estancia-Capo: replay of ' 84 s emis?
Newport Harbor faces rugged Muir;
Estancia's game at Mission Viejo High
By ROOER CARLSON
OflM~ .........
A yc:ir aao the)' met in the Cl F 3-A
semifinals 1n Lo\ Anaicle$. this 11me
11' the 1«ond round of tht ~A
basketball eliminations for ~a Vi ew
Ltafue power stancia and
C'1p1str1no Valley·s perennial!)
tou&h South Coast Ltaaue con·
lenders.
L~t1nc1a Coach J~ Reid U)I 1t
~on'1 be: a matter of uptrtor1tr.
rathtr 1mpty a mautr of -ho'
hottcfit.
0 h'1 JUJt a mauer or Yrho per-
form ." .. )I "'(' tint~taf UtanCll
co.ch. "If lh<')''\.'e tot five and wc'"e
tot four. wt'll ha\.'C ptobacm1. We can
Pttl• cfl'CC11\'tl)'. but '° can they.
W ht'n I look at Ca Po I 1et ourwt ~ " Ne~ppn ti arbor. meanwh1tc. aAktt
1t 23·1 rttord 10 Pltedtna H•ah Tuetda)' netht for a 4-A oft' with
Muir. white Mattr Ori (26.()) and
Octan VMJW (ll-l). the No. I and 2 ~ 1n Uw S. d1~1s.on. take 1
bttather bdOtt l"t'tum1ns io 1«0ftd
round 1tt1on f ndav. ~
llerc"1 a look at T uc'ida> n11ht''i 4~
\pmt~
E1taDcl1 I U·S > VI. Captstr ...
V1lley (U -t> at Ml11loa VleJ• Hip:
On11n11ly set for ddlcbeck Collcac.
1hepmewumoved to Ma ion V1eJO
thl'i morn1na "I 1houa,ht v.c were our
ov.n worst enemies when v.e me1
f \tanl 11 last )car." 1}' apo oo h
Mark tt\Orn1on. "but Ei.anc1a' pre
d1<l hun us and we till haven't
forao11cn that half-coun hot b) ott
Clement,."
C opo operate' v.o1th 6-<> auarJs
a1han Call and •rcu BuJnOHk)' .
tt-l forv.11rd hawn Mttd anJ Tom
Menk) and 6-4 Reid Luk , 1hhou&h
11 hccr height 1 nttdN 11\t Coupn
can 10 to~ Villa Park 1ran ftr fohn
Wa1kte or 1>·6 JaM>n Tri .
( apo' auatd -8uJno" y and ( •11 -ltad the { ouaan 1n1 •1th
14 9 and I t.7 JXl•nt a a-me. rt Pt'(•
tl\.'el) •
.. 1 hcoM thinJ ~~ n't want ICHc."(
from f.\11nt1a 1 the four-comcn "
\a ' Thornton of unc af the l •
bt& wtapons wtth a kad tn th
half.
CHAMPK>NSHtP PlAYOffS 1115
While 11nc1a fin"h<'tl the rqula1
\(l'<>ft at the o 4 ~lot 1n 1hc Tla1I
P1lof Oranae Count) Top 10. Capo
Valle) JU t did ud \" l'\ack into the
T01> I 1th Bharc of o 10 v.11h at
20-6 marl. et th t point
"I hale to u 1t u an cuui.c," )
Thornton, .. bttau eH'r)onc act' It
'°°nc' ot later. hut y, haJ nu
pnlbttm dunna lea uc.
"W<'"i>nlt Mt \!On \'1c10(6 I ·~)
lMn ff )C)it thO!c IV.O cl~ 0
(nRC'·~•nt klto lo una If 111 and
I Toro) ind 1t rcall t k tht' wind
out of out .Mll v.e·rc bid; no • end
C\.Cf)bnd) fir.,. ."'
.. Mal'k-1" lM lt)' on 1hc hOlrd ••
\8 \ R'cid. "Ht'• httn an 1n1m1I
1n"c.k .\nd. v.(' haH to con1rol <all
on tht· ouh1dt' We onl) 101 etJhl
tioard) apmst n~ "n:i m the fi"1
hJlf f .?~ o'crall 1 and ~t c1n'1 do th;:it
:lllJln\I ( 3[ll.l ••
l \lannu ,., on the ro~d and thr
pme "v.ht•rc ( apo ha played all ol
1h lc.1JUl' pme\ and a non-lequc
game v.11h l-dl\on "WC''ve played
M">mc pretty aood game\ on the r< d "
..n s Retd
I\ '1r10"' o"c.'r < apo Valk 'A OU Id
mo'\t M .. t'I) send thr l aglc\ agatn'lt
II.Jo I ~C"dcd and unhcaten < 1l<'ndalc
11 .1 \Ill' nt':ir t \tanna -\uch u
ld"on I ounta1n Valle\ or Hunt·
1na1nn Rt.a( h
t'-.porl Ha"-IU·l) •• M1lr
tH-tl at Pa.._ a-... Mui r's
Mu\langs 'o (>.j, 6-6. 6-3, 6-3. 6-1 an
•ht"ir \t1n1nl lineup and the fi"'t
w~mult oO the bench " ti-.
k\Ord1 to Harbor C01Ch JerT)
Dt-8u .
"Thtfrc e\trcm t qu ~. an up-
trmpo ttam that Pft'Un and run\,"
'8)\ ( Bu
•· 1 h<' hid u1tc • ftdd day Friday
n1Jht (npf'ln& da 76-S9). the
m '™ ha" "'Oftd 20 poun on I dunk\··
T <W\\ \tk1n M1tir'1 premter
" (Jlleiue .. PLATC:WN/MI
'
,
' Pandemonium .
wins LA YC race
By ALMON LOCKABEY .. ,... ...........
Pandemonium. a n.cw 66-foot
( ultra-liaht diaplacemcnt yacht co-
owntd and skippered by Bill Packer
and Peter Wil10n, Newport Harbor
Yacht Club, led the way for three
other ULOB1 comprisina IOR CIHI A in Los Anaeles Yacht Cl ub's 61-
mile Around Catalina Island Race
/ Saturday.
The race 1taned at noon and
Pandemonium finished at 10 p.m.
with the other ULDBs finishing
within five minutes. The othen were
Blondie, a Santa Cruz-70 skippered
by Bill Lee, Santa Cruz YC; sap, a
Nelson-Marck-68 co-skippered by
Doua Baker and Oeorae Writer. Lona
Beach YC, and Drumbeat, a new
NM-68 skippered by Don Ayres Jr.,
NHYC.
The Catalina race is the first of six
races for the IOR ratinp in LA YC's
Whitney Series: the LA Times series
for PHRF yachts; the Little Whit~ey
Series for the M1dae1 Ocean Racina
Class (MORC). and the Todd Pacific
Series for yachts ratina PHRF-D.
IOR overall ~hnney Senes' -I.
Pandemonium, P1cker·Wtl1on,
NHYC; 2. Blondie, Bill I.«, ~nta
Cruz YC; ). Sa&a. Baktr·Wnter.
CLASS A -I. "Pandemonium; 2,
Blondie: 3. Sap. CLASS 8 -I. Victory, Robert
Butkus, Cabrillo Beach YC; 2. ht OK.
Lewis Beery, Balboa YC; .3. Love
Machine, Hubi Krms, Win~anuncn
CLASS C - 1. lncotntto, Doua
and Tom Joraenaen. LA YC; 2. R~
Shin Anne Kah&e, LA YC; 3. Tn.x,
Dam'p Syndicate, CBYC.
PHRF OVERALL (Times Series)
- 1. Breakaway1 Seve Stein~r.
LBYC: 2. Clambaace, James Wear,
LA YC: 3. SBOC II , Bruce Wallen-
tein. LBYC. CLASS A -I. Breakaway:
2.SBOC II: 3. Red Hot. Mike
Campbell. LBYC.
CLASS B -I. Clambake; 2.
Nutmea. Everet Cominp, CBYC: 3.
My Sweet Lord. Gene Carapetyan,
Arizona YC.
CLASS C -I. Torch. Al Gcarin'-
CBYC-2. Windhovcr, Hoskcn Synd1·
cate LA YC: 3. La Diana, B & F
Huffman. Blue Water Cruisina Club.
MORC (Little Whitney) -I.
Heber Creeper. CYC Syndicatei 2.
Bad News, Stan Sorenson, Alamitos
Bay YC: 3. Cowboy.Larry Harvey,
CBYC. PHRF-D (Todd Pacific) -I.
Omllr"9t ,......., ..... ~
Yacbta compedn& In the 81-mtle Around Catalina bland race, •et underway. It wu part of the Whitney Sertee.
Pandemonium was also the overall
IOR fleet winner. PHRF fleet winner
in the Times series was Breakaway. a
Hobie-33 skippered by Steve Steiner.
Lona Beach YC. The MORC winner
was Heber Creeper. sailed by a
California Yacht Club syndicate, and
the Todd Pacific winner was
Sunshine. sailed by Dennis
Humphrey. Cabrillo Beach YC.
Sunshine. Dennis Humphrey,
CBYC: 2. Island Melody, Brian
Asher. CBYC: 3. Grasshopper,
Marrin-Hunter. Kina Harbor YC.
Sportswriter says
he should not
have been arrested
From AP 4l1pate•n ~ ARCADIA -Af\cr being arrested
along with his dau&hter for investigation of
bookmaking. Gordon Jones, a Los Angeles
Herald Examiner sportswriter, was angry that the
situation wasn't handJed differently.
Jones was conducting a seminar on handicapping
the horse races, which he has done for the past six years.
when the arrest took place.
"Instead of coming up to me and saying. 'Hey,
you're doing this wrong.' they sta$e an arrest instead,"
said the sportswriter in an interview published by his
newspaper.
''Apparently, the technical violation is that I
collected the money outside the fence of the race track.
If I had done the same thing inside the track. 11 would
have been all n&ht."
Jones, 49. and Joanne Jones. 20. bailed out of the
Arcadia jail Saturday afternoon by posting S2.500 bond
each, said S&t. Richard Sandona. Arraignment was set
for March 12 in Santa Anita Municipal Court in nearby
Monrovia.
Bookmaking. a misdemeanor. involves illegally
receiving bets for horse races. said Adams. Under state
law, a misdemeanor is punishable by a maximum sax
months in jail and SSOO fin e.
Los Angeles County shenffs vice officers and
Arcadia police arrested the two at 11 :45 a.m. at the
Santa Anita Inn, a 110-room hotel and restaurant
across the street from the Santa Anita Race1rack. which
Jones covered as a sportswriter for the Herald.
Deputy Bob Stoneman said that when arrested.
Jones had$ 1.503 "ma bunch of different envelopes." in
his hands.
·•we believe it w s from his students. that he was
going to place the bets for them," Stoneman ~id,
adding the arrests culminated a month-long investiga-
tion involving an undercover officer posing as one of
Jones' students.
Although Ms. Jones also was arrested. sheriffs
Deputy Lynda Edmonds said. "The information we
received doesn't say what part sht played."
g.ote of the day
...... (Deo) ..... a guard for the Atlanta
H-*t, on a dunk o-..r Moeee Malone of ~ "I'm from Chicago. I'm not 1eared of anything .••
Dr. J'• 31leada76era
JallH Ervl••sco red 31 points. includ-
ing a go-ahead field $Oal with 56 seconds
left, as the Philadelphia 76crs beat the Utah
Jazz 11 7-108 for their third straight
National Basketball Association victory Sunday ... In
other action, Larry Bird scored a game-high 45 points
and Robert Parltll scored nine key points in the second
quarter as the Boston Celtics defeated the Indiana
Pacers, 11 3-100 ... Alu E nglish scored 14 of his 32
points in .1he fourth quarter as the Den ver Nuggets
rallied from 19 points behind early an the second half to
hand Phoenix a 117-107 defeat ... Clyde Drexler scored
a carcer·hi&h 37 points and Jim Paxsoa added 35 a\ the
Portland frail Blaars raced past the San Antonio
Spurs. 137-121.
Sonic• topple Clippers
SEATTLE -With time. Seattle m
SuperSonic point auard Gerald Henderson
appears to be more and more worthy of the
1986 first-round pick the team paid 10 pry
him away from the Boston Celtics.
"Henderson made some good decisions in running
the offense," Son.ic Coach Lenny Wilkens said after the
former Celtic scored 18 points and packed up I I assists as Seattle held off the Los An~elcs Clippers, I 08-102. in
National Basketball Association action Sunday. .
Henderson scored sax points in the final four
minutes to help Seattle pull away and spoil a solid Los
Angeles comeback. The Clippers. down by 19 points
midway in the second quarter. managed a 93-91 lead on
Michael Cage's rebound bucket before Henderson and
Co. regained control.
"Our defense go1 better" in the final minutes,
Henderson said. ··w e started picking up a little higher
on the fl oor.
"Our big guys banged away and kepi going until we
got the rebounds."
Wilkens said forwards Dann} Vranes· and Tim
McCormick's offensive rebounds and "quick baskets
were really good. and then Gerald got a real good shot.··
Henderson and $Uard Al Wood each scored 18
points. center Jack S1kma and reserve forward Tom
Chambers 17 each and McCormick and Vranes 15 each
in one of Seattle's better balanced efforts this season.
Sikma also grabbed 17 rebounds.
Mccumber, Alcott win In golf
Mark McCumber outlasted challenge~ l!I
from Jack Nicklaus, Tom Kite and a palm
tree Sunday and. with a hard-wo n 71.
scored a one-strike, victory in the Doral-
Eastern Open golf 1ournamen1. Mccumber. a stocky
little man who has played infrequently since last
!>um mer. was one of seven men who led or shared the
lead over the wind-blown final 18 holes. He faced
possibly his biggest challenge from a palm tree on the
18th fairway. He had a two-shot lead when he ca me to
the 18th, but hit his shot to the right, which most of the
gallery thought had landed in a palm tree. But
Mccumber would ha ve none of 11. saxing "the ball was
never near the tree. It's 40 yards right. ·He was right. He
then laid up short in two, played to the green in th~
and two-putted fo r a bogey-five. Kite parred the 18th.
finishing a stroke behincf McCumber ... In the LPGA-
T ucson Open, Amy Alcott sank a 12-foot eagle putt on
the 18th hole for a o ne-shot win over Betty Klng. Alcott
ued the tourney record with a fi ve-under 6 7 and a nine-
under par 279. King, the tournament's 54-hole leader,
Just missed an eagle putt herself on the final hole and
settled for a 69 and a 280 for the fou r-day tourney.
Hollis SUiey and Pat Bradley tied for third. fo ur ~hots
E arnhar dt wins NASCAR race
RICHMOND. Va. -"That's j ust II
racing," Dale Earnhardt said of the two
bumps he gave Tim Richmond in assum-
ing the lead for good in the Miller High Life
400 NASC AR Grand National stock car race.
"I had to make something happen because he
wasn't going to let me by," said Earnhardt. who
averaged 67.945 mph in Sunday's race. "He (Rich-
mond) would ha ve done the ~me thing 1fhc was in my
pos111on."
Earnhardt. who collected $33.625 for the win over
the Richmond Fairgrounds .542-mile oval, broke past
Richmond on a re-start after a caution on lap 380 of the
400-lap event and outran GeolT Bodine and Darrell
Waltrip for the victory.
German hlghj1i1mpe 7-10
COLOGNE. WestGermany-Olym-m pie champion Dietmar MogenburaofWest
Germany set the world indoor best in the
men's high jump, clearing 7-10 Sunday
during an international track and field meet.
Mogenburg, 23, bettered the mark of 1-9'1~ set by
Sweden's Patrik Sjoberg Friday at West Berlin.
Mogenburg's Jump also equalled the world
outdoor record set by China's Zhu Jianhua last June I 0
at Eberstadt. West Germany.
The West German set the mark on his third
attempt.
Montreal wine In overtime
second goal of the game. converting a pass ,
Left wing Bob Gainey scored his ri.11
by G•y Carbonneau at 44 seconds of
overtime to provide the Montreal Can-
adicns with a 4-3 National Hockey League triumph
over the New York Islanders on Sunday night ...
Elsewhere 1n the NHL Sunday, Brian Propp and Ron
Sutter each scored a goal and an assist as the
Philadelphia Fl yers defeated the Calgary Flames-4-1 for
their seventh straight victory ... Left wing Curt Fraser
scored his 22nd goal of the season at 13: 52 of the final
period to give the Chicago Black Hawks a 3-2 victory
over the Detroit Red Wings ... Third-period goals by
Joe Mullen and Gree P11lawslll enabled the St. Louis
Blues to overtake the Hartford Whalers. 3-2.
Flutie off to horrible •tart
In opening day action of the United s
States Football League's third season, e t
heralded rookie quarterback Doug Flutie II
got off to a horrible start and his late ·
recovery wasn't enough as the Birmingham Stallions
beat the New Jersey Generals 38-28 before 34.785.
Flutie, fresh from Boston College, where he set NCAA
passing marks, looked anything but ready for the pro
ranks as he misfired on his first nine passes. with two
being intercepted. It wasn't until late in the third
quarter that the $7 million QB collected his first
completion. a 6-yard pass to Clarence Collini. By then.
Birmingham had built a 31-1 lead behind quarterback
ClJff StotMlt, who finished hitting 21-for-33 for 220
yards and three scores. Flu tie was 12 for 27 for 189 yards
and three interceptions. He did hurl a pair of fourth-
quarter touchdown passes. .
Cardinal• pick Maxvill GM
ST. LOUIS -TheSt. Lou1s Cardinals iii
today named former Cardinals shortstop
and coach Dal Max vill as the National
League club's general manager.
At a news conference, August A. Busch Jr ..
chairman of the board and president of the team said
Maxvill will take over the job vacated by Joe
McDonald. who resigned in January.
Televtalon, radio
TILIVlllON
No events ICheduled.
RAIMO
7:30 p.m. -COLLI QI aAIKIT8AU: UC
Santa Barbara at UC Irvine, KWVE·F~~08).
7:30 p. . COLLIQa IAIK AU.: Cet -
State Fulle Pacific, KEZY ( 1190).
Prep baseball .
set this week I
Prep baseball for Orange Coast area athletes beains
Tuesday -with University High's Trojans, under new
coach Eddie Allen. opening with visitina San Clemente at
3 o'clock in a non-league contest.
Also in action Tuesday ~ WestminstC'r hosts Bolsa
Grande in a doubleheader at Mile Square Park in Fountain
Valley at 4.
Wednesday's play warms up considerably -with
Fountain Valley. Ocean View. Edison and Newport
Harbor in fim-round acuon in the Loara Invitational.
followed by more first-round action Thursday involving
Huntington Beach and Irvine.
Anaheim is at Fountain Valley. Ocean View is at El
Toro. Newpon Harbor 1s at Dana Hills and Scrvitc is at
Edison in the first round Wednesday, while Thursday's
first round Loara play includes Huntington Beach vs.
Katella at Boysen Park in Fullerton and Irvine apinst
Sonora at Brookhurst Park in Anaheim.
Also in non-league action on Wednesday: Corona del
Mar v1s11s Mission Viejo and Marina and Cerritos collide
at Long Beach's Blair Field 1n a 1 p.m. game.
....,
Teumemenn
TUSTIN P'lnt ltlllfld (T.,.....v, J p.m.)
8.il Geroens el Tinlin
Woodl>rtdlle •I CePIW•no Vel·
Renelle> A1emlto1 el Foo1n111
Los Amloos II El W.00.na
LOA.AA ,.,.., ._... ........ J p.m.)
Ctnvon at 8r••·OOlld1
Anal\tfm 11 P'aumHI Valev
Oownev •I Los Alemllos San Clemtnlt et El Dorado
Sunny Htlll el LI Qulnte
St Peul •I Uleuna Hiiis
Senta An• Valltv •t Esoerenie
OcMft View a1 El Toro v.-. Park et North
Cv11<es1 el Trov
I.a Hebf"a al lotre
Hew"'1 Hattlef et 01na Hllll Pac:HIQ n Wesletn el
8rookllur'1 Park
Sentltt 111 •• ._ •t L• Pelme
Park, 7 o.m.
, .... , ...... TIMfnday, J IMT\.)
Mlvnolle vs. KtMeelv 11 Lt
P•lma Park
Hlllltlll .... 9"dl n . Keltlla al
l o-Park
lrvh1t vs So11ore 11
8rooklhursr Per-
HOH·l•AGUa
T""49v, l:U
Sen Ciern.flle II Unlveollv
8olu Gr•nde vs. Wes!Mlntter
(doul>le·Mlder el Mlle SQuere Perk,
4 1 om I WMMtdey,J:U
Coron• del Mir et MIHlon Vlelo
CerrllCK vs Marine (a l Stair
Flelcl, 1 pm.I ,,...,, l !Mno
Laouna HIMs 11 Unlvenllv Mtrll\8 vs Lakewood (ltalr
F lelcl, OOUble· hNclef" at •. 1 P.11'1.I sa_...,
Or11199 al Cotla Mtu
(doul>fenetder • t 11) Es11ncl1 et El Toro
(~ttlll
L•vuna lffch at Trov
( doul>lef\Hder el 10)
Sunnv Hiiis al s.ddlltMtck
(doubleneader t i 101
Founteln Valev n . Lono
8uc11 Jordan (dOuOiafleadef al 'talr
Flt\cl, •I
sec opens playoffs
vs. Fresno Pacific
SOuthern Cal Collqe's basketball team will open
NAIA District Ill playoff competition Thursday night,
hosting Fresno Pacific at 7:30.
The Vanguards, winners of the District Ill Southern
Division. arc second-seeded in the tourney behind Biola.
SCC brings a 24-4 record into the game while Fresno
Pacific is 8-20.
The District Ill tourney 1s an eight-team affair with
the four seeded teams ~ttina home aames. Semifinals will
be played Saturday night at Occidental Colleac with the
finals also set for Oxy on Wednesday, March 6.
The Vanguards of coach Bill Reynolds will meet the
winner of Thursday's Westmont-Azusa-Pacific game in
the semifinals Saturday.
Thursday's first round painnp;
Cal Lutheran (8·24) at Biola (26-3).
Fresno Pa~ific (8-20) at Southern Cal Colleae (24-4).
Azusa-Pacific (8-26) at Westmont (22-S)
Cal Baptist (16-1 4)at Pt. Loma (2J.7), ·
. .
4•·
• Sipe's grid
career over? Kings in unfamiliar spot OV, Sea Kll]IS ·
h ome ln soccel'
JACKSONVtllE, Fla. (AP) -
Jaclceonvtae &uela quart«back
Brian Sipe. ~ IUffered ... com-
plM• lhoulder ...,.,atlon" tn Sun-
dmy't opening Unfted Staiet Foot·
bill lMgl• ... egalnet .....
mote, ... to be namtned by
doc1ora ..._ todey to dectde " he
... need IUtll'Y·
Or. PU SNney, Butta t.-n ,.,,.,._s= the Injury tottte SS-
~--• COUid be ••• .,..,_
etldlnglnturY."
''"'' • delt 11P9r8tlon, fNl9"8 ourn '**•'' ~ Miid. ''A mldd ... ot·t"t·toacf ••tlmate
WOUid -14 ...... out of.,...,,,. "*"r .. OOll,.,rlng todlly ... ....,. .... In oetws-taof ...
~to-ftow~t.. ..................... Mid'*""
·---... -........... epotc....,. ,... .,.. mer. "*• • ., ......,....., on 81pe't It Hll•tt
.. lafAI• I MW1 confW-'*"9 lllld ,_.by UIFL Commt1llo.w
H9rJj UIMf'.
Win over Sabres moves them
Into 2nd ln SmytheDlviston
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)-The Los Angele! Kings are
1n a position now that is unfamiliar to them at this staae of
1 National Hockey Lca'ue season.
Following Sunda_y s urpritin_a 4-2 victory over the
Buffalu Sabres. the K.ang moved into a three-wny tic for
second place 1n the mythe d1v1s1on w11h Calgary and
Winna pea.
All three teams hove 67 points. 26 behind leader
Edmonton. but of the thrtt club\, l.os Angele, has the
fewc t losses -23.
Consider1n1 that the Kinas have failed to make the
playoffs the latt twosta10n .a hard thing to do in the NHL.
their current rise in the Jtandin 1 surpn ma.
"We haven't been t<>actherthe pa.st few week,," center
Bcmae Nicholls said. "Thi week is a aood turnina point.
Toniaht we had the lead and we didn't blow it like in
Quebec."
The KinP-COmplclcd • four-pme road trip 1n Bufl'alo.
Thtj lost the fint .-mt to Quebec. 7·6. la t week as lhey
blew a ~I first ~nod lead. ~1ncc then. they have beaten
New Jcney. Hanford and now Buffalo.
"Out of lhe four-pmc trap. I thouaht we plGyed the
bcSt team tonaaht (Buffalo).'' c~ch P11 Quann uad "I
thouaht we pla)cd very well. fhc team wa up for the pmc
and we were sound naht off the bit.''
· "I thought we played very discielined hocker, and we
have been for the past two week a." QUinn said.· (Goalie)
Bob Janecyk has bttn sound and that 1ype of goaftendina
has helped us move into second place.'
"We're tied for second place and we've worked real
hard to act there." Janccyk aaid. "We've aot 11 aamcs
apin t our own division in March and hopefully what
we're doina now will carry over."
The Kina dominated Buffalo from 1tart to finish.
They created aood storina chances and ~re solid in ftont
of the net. •
"The team has been unbelievable," Janccyk 11id. "I
\top the fint ihot and they (the defcotcman) clear the puck
away. nd on ofTen'C, we've been settina aood 1COrin1
opponunities."
"In the third pcnod, we aot some fairly aood 11ves."
said Quinn. "The last three pmn. ~·ve 1hown 1aan1 of
playing well defensively."
tcve hutt scottd the only to11I of the first period
when he bltttd in the rtbound ofa Doua Smith thot.
In the middle ~nod, Jim foll~ on a power play
lo cnake u 2·0.
Brian Enablom shd a .,... Kroll the llot when Slbm defcn~m•n Jim Schocnfead ~U dc>Wn. fOl had an optn
shot from IS fm out and bat Buffalo phe Tom Bemteo
to the thon side.
Tht tl<tn WH th .. ,;"I ror l.()9 Anacin in Duf1ilo Mnct
()c('. IS. 1981.
B''" I' ... B l, I I I . ., ! I '
AMel .......... tlo~•tll
Ta.ta for the AfttCIS cxh1b111on aamct at
A!'tcl S\ldium in Palm Sprinas arc onulc at all
Tttketl'Oft OUtkta. It marks the lint t1me the
An-.ls have uwd an ou11idc ticke11na 1erv1ct' to tell tickctt for t~ aamcs.
The Palm Sprin15 cxhib111on tehedulc con·
1la11 of IJ p mn . pla_yed daily from Saturday,
March 23 throu&h Thurlday, April 4, Anacl
opponcnts lnclu<fe Stattlc. Oakland. Clevrland.
San Francisco. Chicaao Cubs. Milwaukee and San Diqo.
Tickctt for lht' Palm Sprinp aames will not be
sold ~t Anahrim Stadium. as they have been in previous years.
The box office at Ansel Stadium in Palm S~nas (capteity nearly s.0001 will not open
unttl March 8, by which time 11 is 1nt1cipa1ect that the maJority ofrescrved scats will have been sold by T1cketron.
For more Information. phone (2 1))6SS-S960.
rl•IJ.lnt and bo.t •llo ...
Two dates have bttn scheduled for 1he 1985 Western F1shina Tackle &t Fishina Boat Shows
1he first will be March 6-10 at San Dieao's Dci
Mar Fairarounds and the second March 2()..24 a1 the Lona Beach Convention Center.
Both events arc the sole fishina shows in
Southern California devoted to 1port1fish1ng.
whether 11 be lake and river or deep sea fishing. Tht' shows will have uhibits devoted 10 lht'
I.a test in rods. reels. lures. lines. tackle boxt'S and
other acar. Also on display will be tht' latest in
fish1na craft. cltttronic fishina scar and mannc hardware.
For more information. phone (213) 877-7072.
GAMBLERS
OUTLAST
EXPRESS
LOS ANGELES CAP) 'T" Jim
Kelly's passing was mediocre thro ugh
the middle portion of the game. but it
was brilliant al the start and -most
importantly-at the finish in leading
Houston past the LA Express. 34-33
at the Cohscum Stsnday in th<' USFL
open<'r.
-·The Houston quanerback staked
the Gamblers to a 13-0 lead with
touchdown passes the first two times
the) had the ball. Then. after he'd
been shut out in the second and third
quaners and his club had fallen
behind 33-13. Kelly connected for
three touchdowns in the final 10
minutes.
His fifth and final scoring throw. a
39-yarder for Ricky Sanders' third
touchdown reception of the day.
came with just I :58 remaining.
Toni Fritsch. who'd had a PAT
kick blocked <'arher. then nailed th<'
conversion 10 gi ve the Gamblers the
victory. ~
When 1t was over. Kelly had
thrown for more yards than any pro
quarterback ever in a game played on
·U.S. soil. completing 35 of 54 for 5 74
yards a nd the five touchdowns.
"I've been in some comebacks
before. but never anything like that.''
said Kelly. the former University of
Miami standout who was the USFL's
most valuable player as a rookie 1n
1984. "Pulling out that win was the
best feeling I ever had in my life.
Hone•llo•
A huntt'f•J umperhorwshow.,111 behddat the
Hununaton Brach Equestrian Center Saturday
ThHtntrr 11 locatcd on 11381 ~.n1 St.
'" H11n11na1on Beach and 1tw rvent "tthcduled to bcJin ii 8 a.m. In case ofrain. the thow would
be rescheduled for March 9. Thetc will be frtc virwina to the ~bite and ribbons will be presented throu&h e1pth place
and trophi« to firs! place in cacfi data.
For more 1nforma11on. phone 96().3S61 or
963-0187.
Off-RNd Gr&JJ Pd.
Tickets for 1hc March 16 race of the Off-Road
Championship Oran Prix series art OR' sale at T1cketron and Ttlc1ron outle\s. or Southern
Cahforn1a Super hops. Th<" c' cnl will be held at 7 p.m. al the Los
'\ngclcs County F11rarounds 1n Pomona . and will feature tht' v.ortd's best ofT-roMI competitors
and 1hcircxo11c radnJ machinetcompe11na on a
'pcc1all)'-des1ancd off-road count. ~mon1 1hc drivers compe\1ftl will be 1984
dcfcndin1 class champions Ivan SleWan. Cilenn Hams. Pancho Weaver and Jimmie White.
along with Indy SOO and ofT•road veteran Roaer Mean. JctT Huber. John Baker. Jim Fishback
and Jerry tansbury amona others. "total of 17 md1v1dual races will make up lhc
evening's program which laJts apProxjmatt'I)'
)"1 hours. Ad uh prices art SIS for box scau and
SI 3 for reserved 1r1ndstand seatina witch children unde r 12 half price in both areas.
For more 1nform1 1ton. phone 82J-J39S.
Orano-eo.tDAILVPILOT/~,F~'6. tm •
rwl,,..,.,
Lake IM1111ndalt wdl host tts arand ~= IU~1W1th tJw dly h1Pft&httd b)i a fiJh with pnzn ranaina u9 to S)()()
A a'" t ftsh1na Pf'OIBm -.u also btaan toOft
and lhe laU •tll be planted •ilh Chan MT C"atfitit
ISwtll,
Consu·uctton on lhe lake &c1lniet 1• neatly
comptctc and the boetJ art now aval&abic fot
ttnt1na. Boacs art equipped with eltttnc ll'Olhnt mo1on and art rt11tci6 on a tint-comt. ftrM-
served betel at SIS for four hours and S2 S for e1ah1 hours. ~or more 1nforma11on. phone (811) JJJ..J.420.
Women '•~ toarnq
Top pla)crs such 11 Martina Navra111o"a and Hana Mandhkova will be on hand for the
• Women'1 Team Tenn1sChamp1onshipa1 tht' La Costa Hotel and Spa. Thursday throu&h Sunday.
~ Pro-Am round-robin tournament. palrins each of the tournament's. 16 women wtth a
celebrity man. will takt'-place at 7 p.m ..
Thursday. OfYk1al tournament play stans Fnday with two matches each 11 11 a.m. and l
p.m.
Semifinal round matches will be held Satur-
da) stanina at noon and tht' tournament concludes Sunday with the consolation cham-
p1onsh1p a1 noon and the tournament cham-
p1onship a1 1:30.
Sin&le-day tkkeu ransc from S6 to SSO wuh
!K"ason 11cke1uv11lablc. staruna a1 $30.
For 1d<hl1onal tkkct informatton phone La
Costa at (619) 438-7416.
o..r-,,...u..a.,..
Tiie ~1~m (ahfofft• ~ ot·
llftlOhOft 11 Kttp!lfll tnlM S the fOunJa "'"'*"' 1. Palnck •Dey OTL TourMllWnt'" co w~Match 9 flw-~ will k IWkl 11 M1k $aUatt PW\ tn
fMSIWll Valley • Cftl~ fet It UI per ICMft,
l\ll lftllll ar. ..,.,.nlftd four pmn.
ThefT arc !Mft0S and women'• d1visaon1 lllid
the tournament .-111 s&ar1 at 9 a.m.
for rnC>rt' 1nJonnatlon. pbolw (213) 6)0.2291.
l/Vhallledoll ·-· The alumni auoc1111ons of UC Santa 8a.W.. UC Santa C'ru1 and UC" San Otqo att
sponao<1n& a PICU&c' featunna 1 Wttk's cvnua 1n London. 1ncludina ~n.-ed 11ckcts for
opcnma da) l'cstt"111~ and thr~ more days ol
tennis at Wimbledon
The pillekait also includes hotel. some malt.
!heater and a Thum4:'s cn11se. Thr wttk will be from Junt' 1.l-Junc 30 and 1hc cos1 1s Sl.619
1ncludin111rfarr for further 1nforma11on an'd a frtt brochure.
phont" tnstdt Europe at (21l>473-S6 I
Gnu1d PrU of Lof16 Beec.11
Ticktts arc on sale 11 tht' Grand Pm oJ LoQa Beach bo>. offict' for ~pnl 12-14 t\cnL
Indy cars will rac.'f>ln lht' 1.6 7-mak evcn1 that
winds throu&h th<" H)att Rcgtl\C') Hotcl's p,... •
around the Conven11on Ct'ntt'r-Spocu A~na
complex and throu&h 1he horelint Viti.t area.
For ticket informa1ion. phone (2 13) 43~99S3.
--
., .......
Dad's advice
helps Miller
spark UCLA
Sophomore gets 27
as Bruins roll past
Louisvill e, 75-65
From AP di1patc be1
LOS A.NGELES-A little parental
advice was all UCLA sophomore
Reggie Miller needed 10 find his old
shoo11ng touch.
.. ~' father 1old me. "hen I was
shooting. I ~as Jerking m~ hand
back." said Miller who kepi his hand
under con1rol long enough to pour 1n
l7 po1ntsSunda~ and lead UCL.\ toa
one-sided 75-65 non-<:onference \IC·
t or~ over the U nl\ers11~ of
LOUIS\ Ilk.
M 1ller's long-range m1 ss1ks were
JUSt what UCLA needed
"He's gei11ns hke Jamaal ~ 1lkcs
u~d 10 be.'' said l '( LA Coach Walt
Hauard. "Stroke~ of death. Evel)
time he make~ onl· 1t~ hke a stab 1n the
heart."
Miller's shoo11ng kd an impress" c
show1 n$ h~ the Bruins. which Haz·
1ard said could help l 'C L.\'s po<it·
season asp1rat1ons
ea ri v in the S('('Ond half and were nol
senousl} challenged the rest of the
W3\
In 01her acuon unday:
Georpa 71. Kn t8diy 77: Horace
McMillan lipped in a massed fr~
throw w11h 18 scronds to play as No.
18 Georgia. winnin& in Lexington for
1 he ti rst 11 me since 1913. beat Kcn-
t uck' to hold onto a share of the
· u\heas1ern Conference lead.
Georgia. ""h1ch boosted its record
10 IQ." o' era II and 11-5 in the SEC
t"-ice 1ra11ed b} 11 points in the
~:cond halfofthe nattonall) televised
rnn1cst and tra1h ng 63-53 when
Kcn1uck ~ 's Kenny Walker hn a one-
handed shot from 1ns1de the lane with
9 15 to pla).
OCCawaits
playoff game
'My offensi ve linemen save me
protection that was unbehevable,"
added Kelly. who lhr<'w two inter-
ceptions and was sacked twice. "Our
receivers did a hcckuvajob: they held
onto the ball well and ran some great
patterns."
ltzpreu quarterback Steve Youn& l• caqht
behind the line of acrlmmage by Houaton
Oamblen linebacker Mike Hawkin• durln&
Ont half action Sunday at the Coll.eum.
"Tht!> ~as a \Cr\ big ~1n for us
since 11 was on nat1o'nal Tv:· Hazzard
said. "It ~asa grrat learn win. rm not
looking past an) of our games into 1hc
post season, but I don'11hink bea11ng
Lou1sv1lle on telev1s1on hun our
chances ...
Orangr ( oast Collegr's basketball
1cam. which has already comple1cd
11s regular 'iCason schedule. must wa11
until Wedn<'sda} n1gh1 before the
Pirates know who thctr Saturda)
opponent ""'II be in the first round of
the Shaughness:r pht)offs.
OCC. "-h1ch finished at 9-7 1n thl'
South Coast Conference ( 18-1 2 o' rr·
all ). pla}s the loser of Wedn<'°Sda) ·s
Mt. San .\n1on10-Fullcrton pmc
(both teams are 11· 1 I
Voyagers' Miller tops CIF in scoring
6-4Junior averages 32.2
for HB christlan s chool
Robbie Miller of Voyagers Christian 1n
Huntinaton Beach and Cherie Nelson of
Marshall fundamental (Pasadena) complete<!
the 1984-SS reaular basketball season as the
leadina boys' and airls' scorers at CIF Southern
Section schools.
Miller ended the year as the boys' lop
rebounder as well, while Natasha Parks of Regina
Caeli (Compton) was the top rebounder among
ai rls players. . Miller. a 6~. I 9S-pound junior center.
averqed 32.2 points and 17.1 rebounds in 16
pmcs to lead Voyqers Christian to a 9-7 record
and founh-placc finish in the Express Lcaaue.
Voyaaers Christian has an enrollment of JUSI 19
students. nine of whom are boys.
Mater Oci's Tom uwis, who led the CIF's
No. I-ranked SA Division team to a 25-0 record
and third·ttraiaht Anaelus Lcaauc title. was
tteond with a 3 1.8 points per pmc avcra1c_:
Lewis ls currently fifth on the all·timc CIF-SS
scorina list with a total o'2.2'7 points. Arroyo's
Phillip Sanc:hn (31.3). Schurr'• Kevin Kun
(28.8) and Ventura Temple Christian's JelT
8ochm (26.6) round out the boys's top five
scorers.
•
Yr. W T'fl A¥9.
Jr. I• ilS U2 " ts ,,, Jll Sr. I• 111 )IJ
Sr. n .,, •• Sr. 1e •1' tu Sf. 11 .. ,..
$(. 21 * 10 Jr. tt ... ,.,
Sr. n tta H.S x, 11 m tu
Sf. ,. * JU Sr. n w to
Sr lf•,u k US4't0
St 17 •II tO Sr n 111 ,., Sr. ,. .,. , ••
Sr. ,, .,. , .. k 11 ., ,,.
Sr '° .,. »• $r. M ... JU
21 Fe«• Gonzele,, 8100ml11111on n. Joe Koellen, Puaoen. POiy
23 ArtdV Ollvarti, w11111i.r U. 80ll Scl\affer. Perri' Tem919 Cl'lr
?6 Oan Swanner. w111111er Cl'lri,llan
?7 l fllv Harwooo, Trona ?t Erli.. ll09er1, Temple Cll\I
29 J.+I Loo1oon. San11 Vnei
JO Joe Tllerina . Coachella va•iev JI 0 11n Joaauln, l100mln11ton Cl'lrl1ll1n
3? Jeff F rver, COf'on• cset Mar
lJ Garv WHI, Monlclalr
34 Pal SM•. Mlr11e11t
JS Ktnnv llOOtf\. Par1moun1 :& 5'ltlclon 8 0f''°11, llowllno
ll llk"9rCI Antff, Plu1 X
3t Mall Honllltl. S."•ltt
JI lreo Arnolct, Un1¥tf'lllv
411 11~111 WIUlaml, Vllll llOVI Pttt>
40 Tim Pnrm1n S1111nn1
40 Mlkt Pelrkk, Moorpark '3 Brian McSwMnt\I, 01n1 Hlll1 43 TOGO hw.ar. Montclelr Prep
43 Tom Dulle, Oo1 P\ltt>+o' 4' KtYln Wallltt. 9rta-C>unoa 41 Mlc""4 JOMMll'I. S.ldwln Park
41 lton OrPtt Pomot111
" Grte Trvv11ao. 8onlla
RtMllFMlftt ,..., l'Mw. SdlMI
t Ro"°"' Mllltf', vovaeer1 Cl'lr 2 Gtnt fi'tf'rls. l lOOIT\lnOlon Cllfl1ll1n
3 l oo Scl'lalfw. Perri' TtrnOlt Cl'lr
4 Ce"v Cra•IOf'di...Ltullf'IOtf'
S Cl'lef .. s Pi.rC4, ... "
6 Erle hueft, /lo.Q\llllH
1 ltk llerd "'""'· NOfOflOff I MIC""4 --·-.Win ,.., ..
9 T004 lowMr, Montclllr 10 Oa1moM SCi.nteua, Molltdelr
11 Or" Tr\1911.0, IOl\lll
11 -~ F Ider. OallWOOCI 13 Wllllf Jowon. LVllWOOCI I• Ario AtmMltn, HOIY Marlv"
1i VICIOf' WNflOll. •tc11t11Ch
16 Colln MOI\, II Mocltll• 17 J.+f "'"'1'· Moorotrt. 18 It~ Alltel,~)( " "°" Of..., • ...,_. Gfrttk ....
Sr • Sr
Sr
Sr
St
Sr
Sr
Sr
Jr
Jr
Jr
Sr
St
St
St
Sr
St
Sr
Sr Sr
Sr Sr
Jr.
Sr
Jr
Sr
St
Sr
n s11 233
11 4 S 23 I
11 .... 2l I
11 l90 n' n soo n 1
It OI 226 n ••s n s
21 ... nJ
20 •2• n 1 II 39' n I
2S SSO n 0 ,, ..0 119
23 SOI 21 1
24 Sit 11 6 n '71 21S lO S42 , .. n ..cJ 2n
n "'' 213 IS 314 209 ,. Soll 10.9 n o• 109 n m 201
21 435 207 n •s.s 20, 23 .,. 20.
21 431 lOS n u 1 101 n ..o 100
Yr. P n. AVW.
Jr 16 2n 111 Sr 11 tn 1u
Sr 17 2t2 IU
Sr U lU HO
St 2l ~7 14 7
So n m 1u
St 22 JIS IU
$.r 71 "7 lU
,, 2l 211 I>•
Sr 21 m IU
St 2l 301 ll 1
Jr 14 •• 1)0
$t ,. * th Sr II tU IU
" 20 t• 11 4 Sr 2) ,., 122
St 11 ,,. 12'
St t1 U7 117
St tt "' 11 •
fltM. .... W . ~ Yr. Gft TP .....
1 '"" .. '"'""· Merw• ,,.U11C1emt111e1 Sr 1' '11 » 1 2. Ml(l\tll Ci r•, MMl\Olle Jr 21 610 >It l ..,. Mlition, Le lt«fa St H 1IO ll 1
• Fre11Cl1 ,.•""*•• Caloll Sr t4 6tS "0 ' J.,_.. AMtt'Mltl, Arrowhffd Clvi•lt•n k 1J U2 ,. I 6 Ot11e Clllld\, Wftl•n (flrllt~ St 11 UI tt t
J, ~ NIV.,,0 '' N\e!ltlle\ Sr ?0 jM H 2 • Jell ...,..,,, Me'lfW " l• .. , ts' t Corlllt s.Mtrv • ...,_ ~..,...... St 24 MJ t>t
It "'-" W'rlflt Ctr ... fll ,,,,_ Sf 2t t6f ll 1 11 lllf'll ,..,,~. lertll Sr. 17 )t4 JU
12 l9111t1 Ai..IMlftl, ....... Sr ll 411 n I 13 Jtl MelY\ICN II ~ ; It •11 TJI
14 Nalatnt '""'· • .,._ CNll Sr n Sit Tl 4 I~ Mi<,,...,_...,., .. , w.N tlwitli.tl $r. tt 4l4 21 t
____ ...._ ____________________ ~--~--............ --..._ ..... ______ -" __ ~--..-.---~---
16 Sltonanle L1m1r lncllO
17 Mon•u l urk• Hart
II MonlCI Tour11llle St P1u4
II Sancl't C~r, Arll1111ron
lO Moltv Wamottr Crt1elftl1 Vallev
21 Catny Nawvlnt, El Oor.oo n Kecia Porter J W ~11'1
1l Carol Newman CSOlt
,.. L\111111• DI Loacl'I, L• Sl4trr1 ACl<llm\I
25 Clll'lv Colli• 81H·Jtff
2'. Call'lv We tlar . San Gabriel
11 Call'ltrlM Erll~ro Mire C~t•
2t Ju<l\I MOlllV LI P\Jlnft
2' Julll Gehr G•llr
1' o.m.1rit T..-rv Pomona
2' Janet • elon L A Lullleren
Glm Reoeundlne
~ 23 SOI 217
St 16 144 21S
Sr ?I ... ?1 4
St n •n n • So ,. }40 '11 l
Jr 21 "3 21 I
Jr 2• 504 210
Jr i. ™ 20t
51 10 20I 10 .
Sr 24 •9' 20 1
Sr 2• '9l 20 S
Sr If lU 203
Jr 11 0 3 20 I
St 2• .. , 200
51 20 * 200 St ,. 360 20 0
Weat All-Stan win
RIC'HFl LO. h10 ( P> -n Otcio\
tt\c Zun1ul.1hc lcad1n1 ~ran Ma.Jor Indoor
Socttt Lraaut hi tOI')'. booted In thrtt aoal\
1ndud1n1 t"'o in the final four minute tOll\t' the
Wnt an 11 -7 vu.:tory O\er t~ [ast 1n 1hc lea&ut'·,
1\lllh annual .\II· tar pmt unda)'.
The v1cl0f"\' lhc fifth 1n the 1\ 11mc' for
tht Wn&. -.tut"h $U 1\cO thrtt itl"Ond·halt coal\
b)l leh1m0f'C· tan t.amcnkov c:
TM Wt\t fOl t.-o pl c h from Er1l
Ratmu n ,,f W1ch1ta. Tatu of Dall.as and Juhc
Vtte of b\ \'~\
'
Louis' ilk Coach Denn' Crum s.a1d
l '\L.\ looked much 1mpro,ed O\.er
their pla) in previous na11onal tele-
' 1S1on appcar:inces this season." h1ch
included lopsided losses to DePaul
and t. John"''
"I saw l 'CLA earlier this \ear and the~ were real d1sonen1ed Now 1hc}
are doing the thing' the\ ha' e to do to
wtn." Crum 531d
"Ob\IOU\I~ \\C didn't pla~ \Cr.
""ell toda~ Thr' ll'C L.\) passed 1hl'
ball better. dnhhlcd II better. \ho1
better and rebounded better."
After an l'\ l'n fil"it SI:\ minutl''
Miller led a 15-0 Bruin run 1n a 3 N
sp:sn to put l '( L .\ ahead 13-tt. J
commanding ix1s1t1on wh ich thn
neq~r rchnqu1.,hed Dunna the spun
M 1ller srored fiH point!> "-llh guard
Montcl Hatl'hl'r lOntnbut1ng "'' Ill
lead llCL'\.
'\It hough Lou1.,, 1lle dosed the gap
to nine po1nl'> at halftime. the Bru1"'
au1ckl\ re-l·s1ahll\hed com mand
Regardless. the ga mr "111 be played
al a neutral site -11 Ml SA(' wins
~cdnesda)'. CXT ""'II pla) Fullenon
at Mt SAC If Mt. AC wins, the
game will be at Fullerton.
The second and final round of the
lihaughness)' playofT'I arc Tuesda)'.
March S. Conf<'rcnC'C champion Cer-
ritos pla)s the Mt .\C·N.tllcnon
winner on Saturda\ ~C'dne<ida\ • .. sOuth ( oast Con-
lercnll' <,ehed.ule matchl'\ up this WB)'.
( \prl''' ts at ( emto . Fu llerton
traH'i' to Mt SAC IOC'C\ real
ronn·rn I and Comp1on ho''" Saddlt'-
ba L.
If, nu" IU\t a ~a111n11 g:imc lor 1hc
Pirate.,
Orange.-( oas1 th1<; \4.',l\C'tn hJ'i
r \ptrienccd m \hare of up" and
do" n~ Jnd pc-rhaps 11 mo't plca!>3nl 'urpn~· has rnmc from Shaughn
R~Bn -()('( '\ leading S<'orcr and
rdX>undcr
Su~set coaches pick
Seahawks' Butler MVP
Ocean View H11h's Ricky Butler. a
6-6 50phom°" and '"'°""car ~tanc
for tM aha,.,k wb nimcd Most
V1haabk Pta)tt 1n the unset Lcaaue
by the ltque'5 coac~
8utlc.r I«! tM ahawk to a 10..Q
'"-ttP 1hrouah lcaaue and 1ntu Fn·
day's Sttond round of the t I~ S-A
pla offs.
Builera\C1111tCd I ~ O point a aame
and dont1nakd in Mk dcfcn 1vel).
The ha•b• bllantt 1s '"•<km
w11h two othcf) (IMa1ne DcBrouwer •
and M'tt t) arn1na fint t~m
hono in 1ddmon to tttond tc.am
lau~I' to °''·c traapt and Ton}
P1nT1c1
Other r.,... team ttlttbon ~'t1't
Edi n· Kn-mmann arid West·
min ter'\ Enc hu""8A, .\mmann
l\.-Crlacd 1) 0 potfttl I p~ in
lcad1n.1t td1son to 1 M mord on the
flo<.>r f 1\C forfcu loUC1. however.
L.n,ll. ~l'd Ed1wn out of the pla~ofT:
~ hurman ~''red at an I 2 chp I\
~ e'tm1n\tcr\ l'Cntnil fi•urt tn the
I ion•," fir-t appt'aranct in the IF
11la\ofh 1n I~ \Car'
MMtV.._ .... .,., P"le-. \CllMI Ml Yr. A .... •o<•• ... , ... Oct1ll ..,_ .... $0 120 IS.Int,...,..
...... 41-'l!I, 14Woft •·1 k . 1).
..111~.~Vlft H II, llt
Mlllt Laoet, OtWll v..-... ~ Sr, II 2
.....,, Ml'""· F-9arn v.a.v •·7 5t It e
Inc k~ wn~ 6•• Sf ltt S.C.....T.._ c., ... l<«"O. ,_ .. "' v-. •·l Sr. ,,. s-G.illl, Maflllt ... s fir, tJ I "'"'"*'" HoWWe "'" IM<tl S· 11 St W 4 Ttflv -•l'lto<.a OcMll V-t •J "· 0 Da.,. Sir ... ~ VllW .... tr u ....... _
r"" o.v1, '""'ff'l!IMJW1 ,...,.... o... tlt._"'~t ~ O.•• I ..... JtiM "*119"1111 (~Ille-'-cfll. ,_.. ~ Cli I, Oar,. .._ C~
$1~ TMme1 CF~art1 V....,I
#
..
,
~
WHTlllHI coetll'H811CS ~---LA LA1Mn :f h ~ ..
""°'"'" r1 JI ~ ,. ,.,.,.._, H 31 ... 14\lt IMtfle IS n '°' lSYJ
LA CllllNrl n as .. ""' OoldMlll .. " .. . m t7YJ -....DMei.
0-Ylt ,. 11 "" Houttoll J) J) ... IYJ
0.1 J2 H .Ml • Sen Antonio 1t ,, Ml • Ulen f1 • A14 ' Klft6hCllV II • Jtl 171.'J
•ASTl'ltN COM•H•NC• ·~ DMlllll aotlon .. n .m
"""I di. "I• d " "' \I)
WMllfneloll >O 21 J17 " Ntwwwv 1t 2t .491 171')
NtwVork 1' ,. 333 lt\I)
c....,~
MllwlUkN lt II .....
o.tf'Olt J2 2S .5'1 1
Cllkffo 2' 2t •n It
Ati.nl1 2• l1 '19 , .. ...,
Cltwllnd 20 37 .lSI " llld!IM II 3' J1' 21 ~Y'•k-
LMtn lit, New Vork 11•
S..lllt IOI, ~ 102
Ptll~ 117. Ullll '°' Porlllnd 137, San Antonio 171
OenYW 117, "-'111 107
Boston 11 J, lndllne 100
T ..... IGM'lft
Ho Hmtl ldlldultd
T""*Y'• 0.. HOUiton 11 Lalltn a..n •• Portllnd Sin Antonio et N-Vork
Denver 11 Atllnt1
Cltv ... nd 11 Clllceeo
Pflllede!Plll• .. Mltw•"" ..
Ute" et D11t11 '"'-11111 et Ken111 City
S..lllt 11 GOiden Slll1
Lallen llt, llC.ftkk1 114
LAK•H (ltf) -ltll'lll* 4-6 2·3 10, Wortt'ty 1·11 M 17, Aaiclul-JMMr 1 .. Z2
7-10 lt, JOl\Moft .. 12 7·" "· Sc:ott .. ", •• IS, C-0-1 H 1, s.1eea H M •.
McAdoo >-• 4•4 10, ~ l·S 2-2 4. Totals
ti-IS 2'*40 11'.
N•W YOllK (114) -Cumrnlftft H 1-2 9,
Kint 16·2' 7·7 lt, atftnltltl' S-11 , ... 14,
T ~er 1-6 o-o 2. w•er 11-22 2·4 24, l•Mev M 2·2 4, SHrr-)·10 4·4 10, Orr
2·S 2-2 6, Grunfeld 2·S 0-0 4, WllllM H 0-0
2.Tollll 4'-" 22·27 114. see...,---..
L.lkM• 33 2t ,, 21-llt
Ntw York 2t 32 23 3°"-114
Fouled ou..-..-. lllOoulldt-'-• An· oetet 5' lllem0t1, Worllw m. Ntw Vork 50
(Welker t ). A11lst~OI Mleiet l4 (JOfln· ton 15), Ntw 'Vorll 21 (WllllM t). Tot1t
toutt-Loa Anoeltl 22. New Von 21. Tldlnlcal.-N-Vork COICll lr-n, LOI
AnoMll 1""'4 deMnM. Allendenc»-16,217.
lelllc$ ,., °"'""" 1t2
LA C~•RI (11'1) -c ... H 0-0 2.
Joflnton 4-IS H 14, Donlldlon 7-11 0-0 14,
Nhcon 10-22 •·S 24, Smith 14-20 7-7 JS, c.1c:11m M 3·3 s. BrlOIMmln 2-6 o-o 4, Gordon 0·2 0-0 0, Warrick 0-1 0-0 0,
Ml.Kflfty 2·6 0-1 4, Wl'tlte 0-0 0-0 O. Totlfa: ... ., ,,..,. 102.
18ATTL• O•> -McCormlek 7-1 1-1 '5, Vntllft 7 .. M IS, SMlme 7-15 M 17,
H9ndlraon ,._ 11 0-0 II, WOOcl 6'-1' 6-1 11,
8rlckowull 1-1 0-0 2, C111tn1:1er1 1-15 l · 5 17.
Sotlef-1 3· 11 0-0 6. Totll•: 47·'3 14· 11 lOI.
lcllr'I ... o.wtlr'I
CllclHra 2' :U 20 21-1112
s..1111 36 2' 1t 2.-1oe ThrM·PC>lnt tolll-Jollftlon. Foull<I
out-None lt~oa Aneelft 5'
(Smith t ), S..ttte '9 ISlkme 17). As·
lllh--i..oa Nlellft 20 IJoMton 61, s..1111
J4 (Hendef"aon 11). Tote l foult~OI A~
If, Sllltte 22. Tedlnlc.ell-LOs Af1911n
..... ~. C.ICt\NI. All~ -7"74
c-... IC«9I
WHT
UCLA 7S, L.outavllle 6S
IOUTNWHT
Al« 71. Ark-• '9 MIDWHT
Wlsconaln 65, Mtnnnot• 61 SOUTH Georol1 1t, Kentucky n
North Ceroone St. S7, Virginie SS
•AIT
Ion• "· SI. Ptler'• '° ~Int 73, Co1Ht1 5'
~rvt1nd '9. W1k1 For11t U
Ow'tlt c ..... "· ~acHk awtsftlft 14 (Wllflnl OWl•tlell Aw.tk A•Mddlftl
CHltlST COLL•G• •VtN• (M ) -8111 1', SerrlOoe 20, H1rtm1n 12, Kitto 2,
EldlllDtl'ter 16. Hotmea 21, Lofink 2,
l r1n6on 2. Totlll 44 .. 14 94.
,.ACl,IC CHttlSTIAN (14) -Slllw S,
K11tner 13, OtPr-19, Polltlll 17,
'"''"'-"ton 16, ~ton 2 0 1ni.taon 10. Tot1t1 32 16·21 14.
H1lf11mt· CCI, 4""41
To11t loult CCI 21. Peclfk CIW'l1U1n 26.
Foui.d out Poitllk (PC) TIChnklt: Hll'll'Mll (CCI)
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Seutlt CM st C..• tM.e c..-...c. Owrll
WL WL
Cerritos ll 2 n s Mt S.n Antonio 11 J 2S 4
Fu!i.rton 11 J ti 10
Or11191 Coeat 9 7 ti 12
SldOllOICk 7 I t 1 12
Cvpreu 7 I IJ 12
Compton 6 ' ll IS S.nt1 Ane 2 13 9 19
GOiden Wiii 0 1S 1 11
w.....-Y'aG-(7:JO)
GOldlfl Wiii 11 S.nt1 An• s.ddleOlctt 11 Compton
Fulltl'ton •I Mt. Sin Ant0<1lo Cvor111 11 Cerritos •n11 ......... S..1111
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS
S.Cend round Dlavtff sites
Cl, S·A l'rWly, 7:)0 p.m.)
Ml• 0.. 12'·01 vs Compton I 1S·91 •t
Comoton Cotteoe s.rre 120·Sl VI CrtSPI (16-7) II Et
Ci mino Cotlloe Lone 8ffch P04y ( 11·7) vs St AnthOtlv
111·71 11 Cit St•lt 0oml"9Ull Hiiis
~ Vll'W cn ->1 "' St Bernero 117·71
•' Blal!Oo Montoomerv
Ct, 4·A T'"*"• 7:JO p.m.) C1merllto 119-51 "' Gteno.te 7•·01 11
Hoover
•AMdl ClS·J) vs C1PO Vettev 121 61 et
Mlulon Vfeio
Norttl, RlvertlOt (21·)) "' Min ion Vlelo (23·•1 et Et Toro
Cu!Ver City (20-61 vs LvnwOOd <?•-II 11
Gehr
Doml"9Ull (20·4) vs 01n1 Hiiis Ill-SI
•t Sin Cltmtnte
......,, He,,_ ltJ.)) vs Muir 120-6)
1t P1Mden.t
~· (22·2) •• Creacent1 Vellev Clf-11 .. GlendeM
EIMMOwer 119·71 v1 S.nl1 Monlel
(20-41 et S.nt1 Monk a Colleol
Ctl' >·A
IT""419y, 7:31 """'' Pomon1 <22·)) V\. Sch;..rr ( 19·•> •' Moftteo.tto
loflltt ('1·4) •t IUf'rOW111 117 ... l et
Trone
K-*'V (20-SI VI Notate\ 111·6) et
•owllftd lfM~ <n ·4) v\ Montclltr (17·1>
et Onlerlo Mornmldl ( lf-4) YI LI Qull'lll ( 11-111
11 Lot AmllOI
Et Dof.00 <n·J> ., Cellftlll 110·.i 11
Oerev ~ (lf-4) YS ICattKI (?0-4) t i
(....,....
HH Wl!Mn 121·•1 v\ Dimitri <lt·I> et
Ollftdor•
cw ...........
CT...-.,1:ae..-.> Wllldwn C\t·4l ti T.,,_ C"'l•llM Vent\ltl ( 1,.21
T.,,.._ton (17•)) ti GO'lfen w .. 1 Cllfla·
tten (lt·O>
T,_ (11-J) •t Woodc:rtll Chrlltlln
116·S>
Hertt1oe C 1,._SI et Llnfltld Ctwltllt11 (11-S}
NMdlet (IS-SI 11 ltlleflm O>-f l
WllltlltV ( 16•6) II ~yl40n (IJ-7)
... •Alt Prto I 1 .. 6) 11 Gree. Ctwlalllll
(1 .. JI
HHNrlt Ctvfati.n I 11-J ) 11 9'I '1111
(14·•>
HtGH SCHOOL .. U
C8' MCeM ,....., '"" °' •·A (W1•11*'' NI..,,._) POITIOlle 11 Comololl ,......_ V*" 11 Wt1tltkt
L ynwOOd a Monllnnldl
Cul\'ef' CllV •I Doi Put01o1 Cllettev 1t Mull
--.,. ., Oc.-View Ntwl:IUN Pll'k et Lono hlcfl Polv
8'*11 11 Mire Co\I•
CIP J·A
8r11•c:>llnd. 11 Onnot
Hort,,, ltlvlf'ilcle II Loere
Sin Gebl'i.I et AntttoM v111ev
ltlver.ide Polv 1t W11nYt
FootNH .. El Toro Sctlurr 11 Wu•,,.
LOUl\vltle 11 E._-1n11
Pelmdlte 11 Ncwco
CIP 2·A
G1n11hl et Le Quln11
LI Mlr.O. 11 Lomt»OC
Temllle City ti lndto
L• H1Dr1 II Celon
Chlnol et Gerdlll Grove
St. ~rv'• 11 MonteMl!o
LI Slerre It LI ll'Vellll
Sin Lula Otll1410 et MOfirovl1
NHL
C~l•LLCONP•ltSNCI SmY1M~ w L T "-...
1·Eomon1on 43 12 1 fl 311 C1io.rv lO 2S 7 67 -Winnipeg >O 26 7 '1 * K11191 21 23 11 '1 275
GA
212
2•7
276 2SS Follow the leader
Vencouvtf' 11 JS I
Mimi DMuen
SI. Louil 2t 21 10
C11faoo 21 lO 4
.. 211 .. 230
'° m
ll1
21t
231
Clnclnnad Reda man,er Pete Roee llmben up with
the 8qaad durm, the nt day of eprtng traln lnC ln
Tam,_, Fla.
Ott roll 11 l3 11 47 m 211
Mlnnt\011 17 33 11 45 * , ..
Toronto IS J9 7 37 1'1 267
WALH CON,•••NCI
~ OMtlell W1V>lnoton 36 16 ' Ptlf i.oetPllll :u " 7
NY lti.ndera ,, 2S 4
NY A1noer1 20 30· 9
Pltt~DUl'Oll 20 33 s
N•w JerWY II 33 I
Amms DMMen
Montrnt 31 21 10
Butf•IO 2t 19 12
Quebec lO 2• I
Bo\10<1 1' 26 I Hertforo 20 l3 7
·-~re'*' playoff SPOI
,_..,., kwft
l(Jll9s 4. 8 ufl1to 2
SI. Louis 3, H•rtford 2
Clllcaoo l. Detroit 1 Ptllfl<lllOllll 4, Celolrv 1
11 2SS 111
19 254 111 .. * 240
49 21t , ..
4S 205 771 .. 200 , ..
n 231 20t
.. 2" In
61 2SS 226 '° 111 214 47 20S 260
Montr .. t 4, Hew Vork llll ndlrl J (OI)
TlllllM'10-
Wlnnloee et N-York A1noers
MIMHOll et Plttabvroh
ClllC.90 I I Toronto
TwMIY'10-PtllteMJPlll1 11 Hertford
Buffeto et Hew JerMv
V1ncouver et W1atllngton
Kines 4, S.bret 2
Seer• llv It'"'* Lol Anoeles 1 2 1-4
l uff110 11 0 2-2
""'""" 1. Lo1 Allfffll, Sllutt 16 (Smith, H1klMtonl, 61... Peneltll1-Andrevct1u11,
Buf (llOldl119), 3:24; G1llev, LA (roUOhl"91.
16:3S.
•tGHTH ••c•. 1 111 mites. Lovtler Linda (McC1rr0<1) 2UO i.«> uo
Mltter1no (DellllOut,.v•l S.00 s,_ao
Pef'CIPlenl (HlwllV) 10.00
At'° re~: ClHr A• Cry1t11. Clolclll,
OontllOP Thernv1lc, Adored, E •lreNdl.
Time: 1: ..
S2 ~ SIX 12·2·S·•-4·6l PllO
S12,'20 40 with 21 winning tlckltl (Six
llOrMI) S2 PICK SIX. COMOllllon M IO
S2S1-80 wflll 1,06t wlnnlr19 tidllll (five
llOrMI).
NtNTH •ACI. 1 1/l6 mlln . Mino.to (V11tnrue4ll 17.20 7.00 4..20
Alollt On ltld (ONl\ou\SIY•l 2..10 2.40
Record C1tdl IH1wllvl 1 60
Also read: Just Arrived, ~rt< In Tiit
Slty, N"°ll1t1, Emoorot1111Unlver~
Time: 1 :Al 11 S.
'5 IXACTA (S-2) PllO 11"00
Atleno.tlcl: 50,406.
USl'L
WHT••N COllfl'•9'•NC• W L T ~ P,
Arlzone 1 O O 1.000 9
Houston 1 o O 1.000 34
0.kllnd 1 0 0 1.000 JI Sen Antonio 0 0 0 .000 0
Denver 0 1 0 .000 10
•• ..,... 0 1 0 .000 33
P0tlllnd 0 1 0 .000 7
,..
7
l3
10
0
31
34
9
llcelld Mt1M •AIT••N COllfl'•••NC• 2. LOI Anoelll, Fox 26 <Enoblom, Blrmlno"-m 1 O O 1.000 31 21
14
7
0
NldlOlts). 7'14 (Pl!). l. L01 AllOllll, Smith 11 Jmaonvlle 1 0 0 1.000 22
tH1k1nuon), 10:31 P-flllt-RUlk-•kl, Tempe Bly 1 0 0 I 000 JS
LA Onterfer111ee), 1:1', Vlrl•, luf CllOOk-Memtll\11 0 0 0 .000 0
Ing), 2.37, Dlonnl, LA lti.lhl"91. 3:21, S.ltlmore 0 1 0 .000 I• n
JI
JS
Houllty, Buf (llOolllnol. 4:l7; ltl mMV, Buf N-JlrMV 0 1 0 .000 21
(inrerferencel. 6:•7. Orllnoo o 1 o .000 7
T1*W ll9f'lld S4Mdi•'• ~ 4 Butf•IO, Andl'IVCflult. 27 (Tueker. Houston ).4, ••w..• 33
McKIMI), l:S7 S LOI Anoelll, Nlcholta 3', Jeckaonvllll 22, B•ttlmore 14
7:A1 6 Buff1to, Ptierton 11 (Andrevcllukl, Blr'!)ln9fllm 31, New Jersev 1'
19:11. Penet11et-+i1kenuon, LA (llOolllnol. ~one t. Portllno 7
t-.32, Redmond. LA (hOOlllng), 16:49 0.11.teno 31, o.m.er 10
SllOll on OOll-LOI Anoltel .. l.·6--26 TlllllM't Gam.
Butf•to 12· 7· lo--2' MemPlll• 11 Sen Antonio Go.lllt-Loa Allllliei. J1n«vk (2'·27) ,,,_.,., ~
8utf110, B1rreuo (26·n >. New Jersev •t Ortendo
Allencs.nce -1•.'13 Al1erH -AO<I S.twdaY'• Geme
Wlcf<s LA •11w..1 11 Porti.n0
S.nta Anttl
SUNDAY'S ltUULTS (411ft ...... y ......... ,,__,
FlltST ltAC•. 1 1116 mites
Amnotllrbfther (LlYI) 2S 20 10 40 6.60
LvnnwoutO (V1len1Ulll) llM 7.-0
Jlmt>o's Ace 1Domi"9Ul11 SIO
Al'° recld: Crv1t11 Siar. DlkM, C1J>1tlno, Trfftto, Poll« Pursuit, Hecknrt,
AtteoeO Power. Provo Areo11n, Ju11 WMI
l ime 1 44 llS.
SECOND •AC•. 6 lurtorlOs
Hnolmt PcklOI (Frnll01l 1 00 l IO J 20
Lucltv BudOv (L-ncel l.40 UO
Northwest EmPlfor I Stevena I J 60
At'° recld V1lllrt1, Too Poll, Nordic
S.its. Sun•lline Sweo. LUCllV .Jolln D. Luci
On Lui<e Time 110
S2 OAl1. Y DOUIL• ( 11-10) OllO 19410. n COftSOLATIOM 000.L• (11-9) oelcl
124 '°
TH•O 9'AC•. 1 lit mlltl.
Soruce H1rt>or IH1wtev) I 00 4.20 J 40
Lion Of Ttll Ottert (V11tn1ue4I) 00 4.00
Blltom (LolOYI ) UO "'''° recect: ltftlf'YI, MMM, com-m1ndlf''• SOlll, l lMlltln, Nldlolel, KIM Kulltf.
Time: l:Sl. '°""'" RACI. On. milt. Mimi Biker (Mc.GUf'n) $.20 UO tM
OH-CIVMSl'le'•ALaov ( Vlntull) J 20 JM
DH ·Promlalnt Clr't (M<'Carronl 340 UO
Alto rlC*ll GOldenllv, 1e1e1 IUl!efltl,
Perldltl
TllftO' 1_,. JIS
U IXAC'T /!. 11·>> oekl W.JO. .. IJtAC'TA 12·6) Nkl uuo.
ta ,. ,-.,,,. RAC•. I I It mllft Oii lllff, E..,,,,,_ M'Lord IVlnrw!ll 600 UI
No HYSI IMeul S •
TUii.i Ftver <Toro> •• ......... AIM rec.ct• He., Otactelm, s.v. ... , Ciouvwno. Allowtflcll
Tim. '" llS as UACTA ($•11 oekt "2.00
lt.nH RAC•. 7 lurtonel •eooner (Plftcev> s.• ue 1•
Mtto $tlltfV Yo.,, (LOIOYI) 1A 3• Oo Swlfftv (Vllln1U111) UI
Atto rec.eel Sl!Yer Hero •• ...,... Oft
My Onw, Miii¥ '"•· TllftO' I '2J J 11
, KV .. fTN •ACa. 6 112 """'* 111 l"'1
Trur.t Matt ll'lllc:.evl 17 M IM OI
WIM S~1t..,. (~¥9) e • U1
AmtrlC.ln L .. lon U.~I 2A
AltO fl<*I' G• Atwt, ,,_., ~ Klvvt, leneeo. 1!1~ .,.._, ~ .--.
Time U• as IUCTA IN ) Hlf 1111 a
14111dey'1 Gemet
Arl1on1 et S.n Anronlo
Denver et Blrmlnghlm
Houston et T1mP• Bev
B1ttlmor1 ti 01kland
Gembters J4, Expns1 33
~ bv Ou•rtwl
Houllon 13 o o 71-34
LOI Anoell• 0 6 17 ll>-ll
""' Ou1r19r Hou-Sino.rs 1 PHS ffom Ketlv (Frltse11
kick), •: lS
Hou-Senders 1 01u from Kellv lklcil
felled), 10-23
S.Cerld ~,.,.,.
LA-FG Zfftdllt• 26. 10-10
LA-F G Zll'ldllta .... 1J:'5
T1*W Qvll19t
LA-FG Zfftdllta 17, S S7
L.A-Townllll .. PH\ trom Youno IZ~s klcll.I. 9:33
LA-Nelton 2 run (Ztndelu t<lcltJ, IU3
, eurttl Ou•r'llr
LA-FG lll'ldeMla 4'. 2.31
LA-Wet! 42 PISS lnte<e«>tfon rttUf'n (lfftdl111 !tick), S 11
Hou-It .Jollftaon S? PIH lrom Klllv (Frlltcll f<ICltl. 6;06
Hov-COUf'vllte 40 NU ll'om K .. V (Frltacll kick), l?:O:J
Hou-Senders )9 PIH ll'om KlllY
(Frltac11 klcltl. IJ:42.
Atttndlnc• -1e,m
T_,. Stathtk1
Hw LA
Flrtl 00Wn\ 26 12
•u•hl1-varos t•U 20-4'
lttulno v•rOs S60 21t lteturn yeroa 14 11
P11M1 lS-54·2 1J~27·1
Sedll Bv 4•>7 2· 14
Pullh >·>2u2QSl'nd-l1
Fvmoll\-toat S•) 2•0 ,._1t1t1·vero1 s-ao , ...
Time Of Poa1111lon 2U9 ».21 .......... ~
•USHIH0-+4ou••on. M1rrlll 4·16, l(olfy
.... LOI Anottea. Youne s-21. NelWn .....
OtlV 6-4. looole H·ll
,.AUING-t'iou.ton1 l( .. y JS-.... 2·17•
Los Al'IMltl, Yount 11·17+7${.
HCflVING-+tovtton, ll. JoMton
11-174, Slndlra f.lOI, Herrel .. 105, C.~ 3-76, ~ )·U. Vwdlll 2•C2, McHel 1•16 LOI A.,..., 0\#WI 4-tl, TtwMll 2· t04. HUdlofl M•. ~ M,, CwnPIMI 1·4', N111aon 1-7, ....._ M
MtSHD Flll..D COAL~
Al· .. ,. •• ,..,.,
A Ill II Ille lil·t!Me Hu.n ._....I tllltll Mint Ill Pto JootMI lllltotv, wllll
-· '-"· 1119ue. ,.,. _, .,.., ~
1 $11'11 lldltvtrry, MolltrMI, C....... ,...._. Leeew, S06 nro., 1tW
t Jlll'l K_,, .__!«I~. UMeC1
S11• ,...._. LIHUI, {7•, "'5
S. Norm VIII lftellllft. l..Ot ~
•WM. Nttloftll "OOIW L.aetut. $W, lfSI • Vlllc4 ,.,,...,,.,, Lot .,..... ,..,,.,
N,L, M , ltl7
S Y .A Tlttte, .... Yen. Glefttt, N,L, ... ""
~,
I
Dorel Open
l•t Mllmll
214 Merk McCumlHlr sn ,ooo
JtS Tom Kite l'3 200
217
J•cll N1c1tt1u\, 113.200
Rooet Mlllblt , Sl3.S60 ,..
Andv B11n, I ll ,560
L0ttn AOl)lrh, I 13.560
Merk Ptelt, I 13.5'0
C1vin PHii, I ll,560
Biil Kr111er1, s 13,560
2lt
Frtd COUP1e1. $8,S7l Anov MIOH. ll,S7,
G-oe ArcMr. ll,S7 I Morrl' H111t1tw, U ,571
Sc Oii Hoch, II, S11
LH Trevino. ll,S7 1
Peter Oosltrhul•. Sl,S71
290 Miki Brion•. 15,000
D1vlo Lul\Clstrom, SS,000
G•n• S1uer1, '5,000
Denis W1t'°n. U ,000
2t1 t<eltn Ferou1, S4,4to
Jim Colt>ort. S4,4to Gerv H11tblf'o, S4.4IO
2t2 Hubert Gr1111, 53, IU
Jefl sium.n, 53, 16'
800 EHtwooo. 53. IU
Wevne LIVI, 53, lU
Bob Lew, 53, lU
Mlkt McCullouoll, 53, 16'
F renk Conner, 53, 16' m
Curll\ StrenQI, 12,.,S
Cllrls Perrv, U,•2S Bruu Lletrlte, l1,•2S
L1rrv Alnlter. U,42S
Jt4 Georoe Burnt , I l ,~7
Mike Hiii, 11.147
A1v Flovo, tl,.,.,
Biii Gl1non, 11.147
SlnOV LYll, 11 .... 7
Jollnnv Miiier, 11.~7
Jo11n 01For11t, 11,147
Wooov Bllc1t1>urn, ll.147
2'S D1vl0 Froll, 11,400
Nlcit Price, 11,400 Bill Rooera, 11,.00 ,..
Fun v lo.lier, I 1.070
Jett Hert, s 1,070
Mike Nlco1t111, s 1,070
Cla rence Aose, 11,070
01nnl1Trlxllf'.11,070
Bred F1bll, Sl,070
01v10ThOre,11,010 • 297
l•1n Srnltll, S90S
BobOv W1dkln1, s90S
Tom Jenklna. 190S
Steve Pell, 1905
90b Twev, S90S
P11Llnosev.190s ~flt Lye, l toS
Merit CllCl•ICCllll, 1905
Jim 0tn1. ltOS
2tt
Tim Norrla, 5t40 Chi c111Ao0rloue1.1140
Kfft GrMll, "40
Ernie Gon111t1, ll40
Jo. lnm1n, lt40
"' Lerrv Niison, 59 11
Tom L111m1n, 5912
Mike Donlkl, 5912
Lenrile C11rntn". 59 12
JOO Merli. HtYI\, sn•
AOl>ert Wrenn. 1776
Au C1tdWll4, S776
Hel S\.llton, 1176
Gllltly Gllbeft, S776 .,
Stuert Smith, S740
Greo TwfOQa, S740 .,
BIH Beroln, 1»6 -Tom WOOO.rCI, 1724
Gerv PIMt, 1724 .. 8Jlt Sender. t71J
70·71-12·11
71 70·11-73
76·61-69· 7• 11 -1•-n -10
10-14-n -n 1s-69-12-n 7•·13·69-n 13·11-70·1'
10-13·69-76
69· 76·7•· 70 11-13-12-n
7S-70·71-1l
73-69-n -74
7HH0-1l
'9-75-71-14
70·71·71-76
71-11·73·73
73·7•·70-73 71-74·71 ·74
73·73·'9·7S
7HS·7S·70 1s-71-1J·n
71 ·70·74-76
71·7~73·73 1s-11-n-13 1.-n-n·n 71-76·71-74 n ·n -n-15 n-1•·7o-16 74·71-67·IO
7S-n ·1l·73
74-n -73·7• n-n-n-1s
7S·73·70·7S
7S·72·76·71
73-76·7•·71 13·15·1•·12
15·7•·72·73 74·73·72-7S 14·73-n·1S n-1J·n -11
73·73·74·74
74·72-71·71
73-72·72-71
75·73·69-71
74·73·77-72
72·1S·76·13
76-73·7•·73
1l·75·74·74
71-7•·75·76 74-7S·71-76
73·70-76·77
76·71·77·71
75· 7•·75·73 12-n -15-73
73·75-7H4
76·71-16,74
1l·74·7S·7S
73·74·7S·7S
7S·73·73·76 1s-n -n -n
11·12·17·12
74·74·17·73
76·72·76·74
76·1l·7S·7• 73·7S·14·76
1•·14·1t·12 16·n·n·14 74• 7S·7'·n
7'·n ·74-7t
71·17·11·74
70·71·76·76 11-1s-11-n n-n·n·n 70-72·7 .... 12
74•7t•7t·7•
'°·U•to-7t
76•1t-1t·75
74·74·11·to
15· 74· 76•11
7S•74•71•t1
7MNN•
7H•·7NI n10-n -n n 11-n-n IMO·n ·n
71•7>-,..11 1t·n-n-11
-P9Mv Put1, U~1 ,.., •• JI ...
~ l unt.o'#llly, SJ,>M n -76·11·.,
ltOO!n WlllOll, '2,>66 74•1't-71-..
''"' ltluo, u.-76·7)-tl·71
AMt-INl'il ..... 12.-1't-79-7s-n
1"1ttv "-Y"• t2.)U 74·1't-11-7• ..
J-Geddls s1,m 7N>11-J'I
J-Loe11, sl.m 71.7 ....... 76 ,,.
7 .. ,..,, ... J1111 Crtlttr. SI ... 1 1'1
7>·74·7•·1'1 oo.nle Wood, S1A24
Cllldv Mlellev. al ,'24 74-7S· 71-71
Di.nne Delley, l1-'2J n -,..n-11
Anw lhnr, 11,62J n·n·'9·n
10M1e ~"°'· 11,•n 71-74·7•·71
Stlt4ltv Memlln, tim 7M3•7'•1J
lt2
17-73·71·11 .. Vlf'lv l(flU, Sl,)1'
Shlf'ff T vrw. s I ,J 1 s 76-74·71-71
81111 Solomon, 11.3 IS 71·73-70-72
Krll Monldllln, 11,315 1s-n-n-n
Allee •1trmen, 11{31S 72·73·75·72
AIWllO Hlk ... , S .)15 73·76·70-'7> m ~rY Dol..one. Sl,071 1s-n·7'·1• Clftdv Hiii, t 1,010 11-n·n ·n
Sltotlanle Ferwlo, al.mo n-11-1 .. n LIAM C11aeoev, 11,010 75-71·73·7• ~ MetMY, 11,070 10-n-11-n ,,..
LIUf'I Pll.,tOn, .... 7S·73·7S•71
lal'blfl Mo•nt1• ..... 1H•-11·n DffdML..,._,..,. n -n-16-n
J9S Vicki Alv_,..1, t720 16-1'1·15-12 s.nc1r1 P11m«, sno 7•·72·7'·73
Juov e 1111, 1120 n-n·7'·n
H11thtl' or-. 1710 76·73-71·74
Bec•y PMrt0n, sno 75-71•74·74 ~rttie N1U11, S120 74·71-1S·74
Lvnn AO.mt. 1720 1s-n-11-n
IM J11nnett1 KOhlhlll, l4lt 11-n -1•-n Denise Strebl9, 54" 76·73·7S-71 Lvnn Ptrker, Mii 74-74•75-73
Mrv 8th Zmmrmn, MM 75-7S·72·74 CarOllno Gowen. Mii 74·74·74-74
Jen Stll>lllnson, MM 7'·74·11-75
Roal• J01111, s.e 7)·7 .... 71·76
Berblre Penoeroat, MM 76-71·72·71 2t7
Atllaon Flnnev, S321 ,. . .,. ... .,
Susie Bernlr19, 5329 11·71·74·73 K1thY Po1ttew11t, 5321 75-72·74·76
Pel Meyera, S32t 1s-n-n-n Jo Ann Prentice, '321 1•·73·n·n "' Mine Ao0rto1·Hrdn, S774 76·73·77·72 "' Clllrto111 Mntomry. 1261 , .... ,..72.77
CllhV ~nJ, S260 7'·'9·7S-7t -'"''' Jonn'°"• Wl 76'-74·7'·72
NorHn Fri.I, 1230 1s-n-n -n
earw1 Mlzr•hle, sno 74-1'J·77·7'
C1thorlne Penton, s?:JO 1s-n-1•-11
Lvnn Stronev. S1:JO 73·73·75-7'
•1 ~rlolle FlovO, S197 74·7•·76-75 ~ M1111ertln, s 197 7S-71·7't-7S
llrb Tlloml1, I lff 7S·72·14·IO .. S.reh LtV-, 118' n-n-1t-11
HtGH SCHOOL
CIF MC9ft4 r-.M "9ltl
C1' 4·A
ITUftdlv, J !MT\.)
Oxnero 11 Ulll•nd
l'MMtatn v.,,,,., 11 Pelot v~ Foothltl et Torrence
01mlen et Sin Goroonlo
Aoltl"9 HIN• VI. 0c-Vlow .. Munt·
lnoton 8eec11, 6 P.m
C1nyon 11 _,... o.4
Simi V1ltev et s.n11 Berblre
Culver Cltv et ltldWlnoa
CIP l ·A
<W.-...y, J -.m.I
EU)lf'1n11 et HH WllM>n
Lono e..Cfl Wltaon et kn G1t>rl.i
St JONI Bosco ., G1n11111
Mlr111111 •' 8eM Gardens 01n1 Hlill 11 A-lend
L•k-OOCI 11 CVP<lll
CrllPI et Hervero
Burblnlt 11 Ol1mono Ber
Cll' l ·A
(Tlltldly, 3 p.m.)
LI S.Ue 11 Le C1n101 C11tJ1lco et B1klwln Park
I(~ II L• Quinta
BrN ·Otlnd• 11 Trov
Monrovt1 11 Glenn ••talldl 11 A111C110 A11mltos Et Monie et An1t1elm
APPie V1lllV et C-... MM
GlltLS OUA•T••l'INALS CIF 4·A
(Wtdnoto.v. 3 p.m.)
Torr•nc• 11 Min ion Vlelo
Unl'ffnltv •t Et Toro
L.eoun• Hiiia 11 ••-Claremont 11 INlhOO Montoomerv
Mlft's teurMment
(It LI OW.) ...............
Lerrv Stl11nkt (U S.) def Devi P111
(U.S ), 6· 1, 6·•. J -6, 6.J (Slefonlll wins SSl,000)
Mlft'1 Nvmemeftt
CetT.,.....l ............ Kevin Curren (South Afrlcl) def Ano.rt
Jarrvo (Sweden), 7·6, 6-3
Wtmen'1 '9umement
(It Oeldlftf) ................ H1n1 ~notlkOVI (Crecho1lov1kl1) def.
Cllrla Everl·Llovd (U.S.), 6'-2, 6·4,
~ . . .,, .
Cemmunttv c ........... °"""' C•st t4, AMN11 14 sew • .,.,...
Alumnl 020 750 000-14 IS 4
Or1not CO.\I 040 042 lW-14 1' 4 1re111, J A tlnftoltr <>I. Oullll (5),
Kltlooo C6), Netaon (I), Oaltl'odl (9) Md
Helton, BerrVhl• (4), Puallerlatl (7) and
Pef'rv (t), Brennen, Cflllv IS>, Brk*ltv IS>, E. ltelMOlll (6) Ind Elllaon, Frven (1). 21-Gtlc1'i (A), NllM>n (A), ltouml,,..r
COCCI 2. Tulllt tOCC), weooor (0C()
31-Gerner IOCCI. Hlt-lorl"Vllll (A),
Doatll (A)
sea View
League
track
,.,.. ... Mar
Thur1 .. ~-. 21 -11 Minion Vitia. Set Merell 2 -°'"* ...... (TIA), TN.in" Mlrdl 7 -~ a..ct1• • Tllura .. ,,_,ct,' 1• -11 w~iooe·; 111 .. Merci\ 16 -leectl Cltltt tn111f1tlollll (II NewPOl'l Hlrbo(, I
111\.l; TMt., Mardi 21 -Coste MIN'; TllUr-1 •
Mardi • -UnfVfl'lllY'i . $11.. Maret\ lO -()f.,.. COUftlY C~"'M (It MlttlOll Vlelo.
TIAI.
TllUr-1., _..,II 11 -et E1tenc1t•, $11., ADfll 1J
-llNl'lllll t11111!1tlonll CTIAI: Sit., April lJ-
ArClldla ltWlflllonel (TIA); ThV'L, Aetll II -et
Seddlllllde'; $11., _..,II 20 -Tutlln It·~·
ITIAI; Tl\urt., A#ll 15 -11 ......,,. HWW • Frl.·Sal., APl'll M-27 -Mt. SAC lnvll111t1111
CTIAI; Tun., Mrll 30 -S.. View L-.ue ~ Prelll'M •• NewllOrl ...,...,
Fri,. MIY 3 -Sell View LNOW "'"-" I I
NlwPOrl HlftlOt.
wu•rwtt
Fri , MtrC'h I -Trt•rneot wl"' ~"V Hlb,
Siii CllMOntO, Thun .. ~rdl 7 -~ ... .,..., Thur'I .. Mtrctt 1• -cor-del ,,., ••
TllYrL, Merell 21 -,, E•l•ncll'; TllUn •• MMCll
21 -L-.une 911ct1•.
Tlluo., Aprff 11 -11 S~~k"; Triut• ..
Aorll 1• -.. (Olll Mell'; 1'h4Jts., AMR 25 -
Unlver1llv'; Tun.. APflt lO -s.e View LMIUI P1'111m.. 11 N _ _., Herllor.
Fri .. ~y J -s.. View LNOUI Fin .....
NowPOrt Herl!Or.
•stM<lt
Thurs .. FIC>. 2t -11 Dene Hilla
Thllr1.. ~rel't 7 -Uruver•ltY". TllW• • ~"'' 14 -et New_., Harllor'; Sit .. Merell "
-'"ell Cltl11 1nvlf1tlontl (et NewPOrt H1roor.
• 1.m.l; Thura.. ~reft 21 -WoooC>rlOoe';
Thur• .. Mlrch 2' -Sldcllebeetl •. Thura .. Aorll 11 -Corone cllf Mir'; Sit.,
APfll 13· -Or•not County Ch1mPlon•hlP• (II
Mltalon Vle!O, 9:30 1.m.); Tllun .. i'&N'll 11 -at
Leeune IMcll': Sat .. APf'll 20 -TU$11n Invite·
tlonal (t 1.m .l; Tllvn.. Aprll 25 -et Costa
Mell'; TUii .. Atlfll lO -S.. View L.llO~
Prlllm• 11 HewPOrt H1rtlor. Fri., ~y ) -S.. View LllOUI F lnell et
NowPOI' I Hll'llor.
........... l'Mr
Thun .. ~rel'! 7 -11 Woodl>rldtl'; Ttwn .
MMC'h 14 -lhlenclt'; Sat., MMdl " -Bllch
Cllltt lnvll1tlonll (It NIWPorl Hlfl>Or •• I Jl'I ) •
Tlluta., MMCll 21 -et s.ddllOlck", Tlluta ,
MMCll 21 -It Coll• Mete'.
TllurL, Atlf 11 11 -L19un1 lffdl'. Tllura .• ~II 11 -•• Ulll¥rlltV"; Tllun.. AtlrM 2S -Corone dll M«'; TUii., APf'N JO -Sii Vltw
LM1U1 Prlllm1 et NIWPOl'1 Hwtlor. Fri., ~¥ 3 -Sii View L119U1 Flnlt1 II
NIW-1 H1rtl0r. •
S1dll1t11dl •
Fri .. Fet>. 21 -11 lrvlne.
Fri .. Merell 1 -Slnl• Ane ..... y, (TBA),
Thur•., MMCll 7 -et Cotti Mell"; TllUra ,
Mardi 14 -UnlWt'lltv"; Sit .. March " -
t<1tllla lnvftellonll (TIA); Thur• .. March 21 -
NIWoorJ Harw•; Thura., Mardi 71 -11
E1tencf'1•; Sit .. Merell 30 -C>fanoe Countv Cllemc>lonllllPS (It MIHlon Vi.lo, t:lO 1.m.).
Thura., APfll 11 -Woodl>rlOoe'; Set., APrll 1)
-Arcadll lnvll1tlonll (TIA); Thur• .. Aprll 11
-Cor-dll MM'; Set., APtll 10 -Tuatln
1nvlt1tlonel ITIAI; Tlluts .. APfll 2S -et L•oun1 8elch'; TUii .. Aprff 30 -Sii View L119ut
Pretlms 11 Newoott Hlftlor.
Fri .. Mey 3 -... View L'-oue Finell .,
N•w_.t Herllor.
c .... -..
Tun., Feb. 26 .L LIOUNI HINI.
Tfl\lra.. Merell 1 -Saddilblck •; Tllur1.,
~rcll 14 -11 ~ Bllcll'; Tllura .• ~rc11
21 -et Corone dOI Mir'; niur, .. Merell 21 -
NIWoort Herbor' .
Thura.. "-"" 11 -•• UnlVef'tltv.. Thurs •
Aprll II -w~iooe·. Thuta.. Aorll 2S -
E1t1nci.•; TUii .. Aswll lO -s.e View LllOUI Prltlmt II Hlw_.I Hert>or
Fri .. ~y 3 -SM VI-L••oue Flnlf\ .,
N-POrl Hert>or.
La9UM ... di
Trtun , Fet> 21 -II Sin (llmlnte.
Thuri. ~rc11 7 -11 Corone cllf ""-r'.
Thurs.. ~rcll 14 -Co1t1 Mell". Thurs ,
~re" 21 -11 Unlver\llY'; Thun,., ~rdl 21 -
11 WOOODrktoe'.
Thura., Aprll 11 -11 NewPOrt Herl>Or".
Thurs . Aprlt 11 -E1t1ncl1'; Thurs .. APrll 25 -
S.OOleC>lck', T1111., Aorll lO-Sii View LllOIA
Pretlm• et N1woort H1rllor.
Fri., Mey 3 -S.1 Vl•w LHOUI Ftn1ti at
Newoort Herllor.
""'""'9V
Thura .. ~refl 7 -et Ell1nel1'; Thurs , ~rdl 14 -11 Slddtoback •; Thurs.. M1re11 21
-Leovne 8eecll0; Tllura .. March 21 -et
Cor-cllf MM•.
Thun .. AprU 11 -Cotll Mell'; Thur• .. April 11 -NtWPOl'l Herllor'; Thura,. Aprll 2S -et
Woodbrfdtl•; Tuea,. ASN'll lO -Sii View L--.U. Prlllmt It NIWPCWI Harllor.
Fri .. Mlv 3 -Ill vi.w LlffUI Fln1ts et
Newoort Herllor.
' dlflotll S.. View Lll9UI meet. AN rMtts.
vnlll• othorwlse lndlcltld, bloln 11 J P.m
PLAYOFFS ...
Prom Bl
player. At 6-S he gives away little tn
terms of physical prowess.
''Ther, Uke to lob the ball to him for
a dunk, ' says DeBusk. "In fact, they
like to lob the ball to everybody for a
dunk."
Althouah Muir has lost six times,
the record is dcceivi na inasmuch as
the Mustangs lost twice to unbeaten
Glendale in league play, in addition to
non-lcaaue setbacks to Crenshaw and
Lynwood.
"What we're aoing to have to do is
show our discipline and intelligence,"
says DeBusk. "Hopefully we can
combat their really good physical
talent. Sometimes they have a tend-
ency to break down in discipline
within their offense and defense and
10 free lance.
"They make mistakes, but they
rttover very quickJy. We're not used ~o secina tha.t type of ability here and 1n the ~a View Leaaue.
Amona Muir's 20 victories was a
75-71 decision over a visitina Foun· tain Valley quintet.
Muir Is an imposina opponent but
DeBuslt feds his team has seen the
best in • 1011 to San Dieao power
Poway and the elpericne»should pay
off.
"Knowina whu I know now I'd like !!' play Poway apin,'~· 11 s De8u1k. They aot us pretty early and
then we cut the pp. c'd pgy it a li~de difTettntly, and we'll to 11 Muir with that in mutd.
••t know Muir can do a lot ofthinp
but we've been in the hunt with eom~
touth oeoole. We Jutt hive to take care or the bell incl noc become our own wont enm.y ...
Phyaally the S.ilors are in IOOd
el\apt whb the return o( 6-7 Mike Beech (tonsililit).
Pasadcnl H iP School . loCa
292S Ealt Siena Madie -=~ ~
tiont: Proceed "°"" °" .. . Freeway ( 405) to f ""9y 60S. Nonh
on 60S IO fftn'ly 210 tD 0..nt
Procerd West on 210 toolrard
Puldena '° Siem Madft •~d turnoff. North °" IWm Mletlt Be~d.
to echool.
/.
.•
,·i.
. ' • '::H
tllll
. ,
f\11'1
;I
Non-ban~·openings stir
interest and criticism.
Chase Manhattan's of flee tn NB
set to open its doors by mid-March
By JOY DEE ANTHONY
A "non-bank bank" IS comma to
Newpon Beach in mid-March. In lhe
meanrime. members of Congress
have warned that they will pass
legislation to close any such bank
opened afier July I. 1983.
AJso known as ··1tmlted service"
banks. in5titutions like t~e one 1n
Newport to be opened by Chase
Manhattan next month otfer ei ther
chedcing accounts or loans but not
both. By limiting its services. ChflK
can straddle state lines wilhout viol-
ating any of the restrictions on
interstate banking.
Using ils existing facilities at 2
Civic Plaza. Chase will offer money
market accounts. certificates of de-
posit, and commercial loans. in
addition to its current loan acti vities.
Rich Ladd. vice president in charge of
Chase Manhattan operations for
California. sa~s he expects high
demand for the ne_w products. A·b11
consumer response could necessitate
an expansion of the present buildin&
or a new one 1n 1he future. he added.
Though the Comptroller of the
Currency. C Todd Conover. clearly
favors the new type of bank. Ladd
says. it's hard to tell which way
Congress is leaning o n the issue. He
and others 1n the banking world
expected tha1 the matter would be
clarified long before this. he added.
It's a legal gray area right now. one
which the banking community would
hke to see resolved soon.
Meanwhile. 215 applications fo r
the banks have been preliminarily
approved. Ladd says around 28 of
these are repr~nted by Chase.
The new non-bank will be com-
pletely independent of its parent
company. in accordance with a Fed-
eral Reserve ban on sharing of
administrative services. Ladd said.
The limited service institution
approvals look hke "a decen t step can't otlcr. It SttUlS to me thett's
towards derqul1tion of interstate room for both kinds of scrv1cCj in a
bankina." says Sheldon Richman. lot of areas of the country. I don't
director of publications for the Wash -think n automatie1lly means 1hat
ington. D.C'.~bued. 40.000 member · Chase , Manhattan is goina 10 be
·:Citizens for a Souod Economy." ev~rybody's bank. 1( t~ey allo,w thi~.
Richman said special interest On the other hand. tfthcre 11 shift
groups are tryina ao prevent that step. towards larger banks that open up a
The Independent Bankers Assoc1a-lo~ of branches. th.at only men~s o~
uon of America has ~nc to court on lhinJ: that they re pcrformma a
the issoc in Jacksonville. Fla. "It's an service that consumers ":'ant. Who
association of rpainly rural banks." arc the small banks or who 1sany~y
Richman said. ''They're worried that to say that consumers shouldn t be
there's aoina to be intensified com-allowed to ta~e advanta~ of those
petition in their areas." services? Th~t s really ~hat 11 comes down to." Richman said. Th~ at~cmpt to stop co".'petit1on in "I hope the federal JOvernment
?ankmg is stan.dard practice in many isn'1 going to put blocks in the way:·
tndustnes. Richman points ou1. he added. House Ban lung Committee
Som.cone finds a way to provide a new Chairman Fcrnand St. Germain. 0.
service and someoneelscg~ts upset as R.l.. has introduced a bill that would
customers ao over to the ri \al. prevent the continued existence of a
Some fear that one day only large non-bank bank. ·It does this by
banks will exist. "But there's alway~ defining a bank as any institution that
that son of perception when )Ou talk-takes de.J?Osits or makes loans. not
about free. competition." 1 Richman necessarily both. If the Germain bill
said. "People think that the gian1s will passes. any of the limited service
come in ind swoop down and take banks already approved would be
over cverythina. That's no1 1rue. considered to have violated interstate
Smaller local ban~s have features 1hat banking laws. The issue 1s still
larger banks com1n1 from out of state pending an a federal distnct coury.
Boone's watching, mi-nd the Ps & Qs
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP....._.AM!rtt
NEW YORK -T. Boone Pickens
Jr.. obviously had decided in advance
to ignore the subtle introductory rites
ofspccchmaking. and so he ga ve it to
them straight:
"Shareholders arc the entire reason
for our companies' ex istence." he told
an audience made of corporate estab-
lishment members -executives who
sometimes tend to view activist
shareholders as nuisances.
"More often than not they (share-
holders) are the forgotten people an
corporate <\me nca:· he said ... ~nd I
think it's great that the} arc standina
up for their nght'i."
Pickens. chairman of Mesa Pe1-
roleum Co .. is known among more
1radit1onal executives as a corpora1c
raider. a rustler of sharehol ders. a
1roubkmaker who challenacs man-
agement to make better u~ of 11s
assets.
Some of them think so lowly ofh1m
1ha1 they brand him a shakedown
NEW V~K (AP) -Tlie lollowl"9 list I j~ Richton 2~ ... UP 111 q lnfOICh 2•-, -,..
T snows 1 Over • tne • Count., I ~unll1e 4 • "I UP MultnA r -l
stoeks •nd w•rr•nts th•I have ~ up IJ ~Syn 7 I 8: 1p iTIO wl • -S·16
I l lne most •net down th~ most based on Ntwk , .. , ~.
!1:1111
rSgn • l;.
percent of chan~ :Pr rldav. 1 lj erdix 3~• ., UP sh r 1 .1.. ~ Ii· No wcurlllts re no below s2 or 1000 AdNMR ' ,,, UP 1-tstn F "' snares are Included. CmpSt un •i .• 2 UP NovoCP 1 ~
Net and percenl•~ ch•n~s •rr, the j I An8ikor ll UP ll"! r~, .. lo,
difference betw"n he rrevioul c oslno 11 a" 119~ 4'• . ., UP arton ~ 11
bid P'lct "'" F•l .. Y'• "' bid " ct ~ 1um ~··· '. Up 1 14 omd1a1 )\ 11 1
Dl•olnc . ., ~, UP 1 . IS Ulml 4 .,, Ill u~s 1 wstsBc 4~ S· ~1 UP l: I vmos r -S·16
N•m• Lu i c~ Pel. I ~ewmCm J11! UP wensn .,. -'• 1 Rady un 6 I• UP 60.0 ntBar s '• UP NlnwdP J~ -7-16
! I R•dYM 4~> ~ Up «.O 4 NevNBc 4l'e .,., UP I .4 Mill I •• -" l rr.o" '1·16 t .. u. ~! ' Tll wt .. ~ . , Up 1.4 Mull~h ). -S-16 4 r Inf 1 1 + t3· 16 Up . OOWHS \-t'f'dC ... '• s rtslk 71, I ,.,., UP •.O N•me Lalt c~ Pct. r· ~ 1 . t An·rtf 3 S·16 ~ UP .3 i RA~ -I ~ 14.1 ~rel ·~ ~
Docl r. ~ Up r I 3 7-~ ::''lt 14:1 ~ lhL ', ~ 9,7
AN un 1 3 Up • tTmA9i uf un I • ~ 9.4 a ComP I ~ + ~ UP .a 4 wens un ~ -~ 1U 6 enal 3~ ~ 9•
an1~t. a lellow who spots an op-
ponun1ty to grab off corporate assets
b) convincing shareholders to dump
their company's management in
Iii\ or of his.
\\ hatevcr he is. he and others hke
him -such as Carl Icahn. Irwin
Jacobs. Wil ha m Farle>. Victor
Posner. David Murdock. Asher
Edt'lman and Ivan Boesky -have
brought tension 10 executive suites
and d ubs where lmle existed before.
Their mission. often heavil y laden
"1th self-interest. 1s to stir up oncc-
~ilent shareholders b) reminding
them that the> are the owners and
that their managers are doin1 a poor
JOb of utilizing corporatc assets.
To demonstrate the conviction
that they can do better. 1he> olTer 10
bu ) shares rn targt>ted compan1e!I al
bener-than-market prices. hopin~ to
un~at management and obtain h(1.
1er returns or.usscts. even 1fthc) have
to sell them.
"'.\mcrica's executives aren'1 look-
ing al takeovers as a means of
enhancing shareholder 'alue.'' he
said. "They onl ) look at takco\C~rs as
a threat 10 thrir salaries and their
perks."'
Wh >. he conunuc.-d. the} general!)
own very little stock m the companies
they manage. and he suggested there-
fore that they ~ought their personal
benefits b} taking big salaries rather
than enhancing shareholder 'alue.
He denounced management efTons
10 protect themsel ves b) restructur-
ing the i;tock to make it ntremel)'
ex pens1' c for a man:sgement
challenge to be made
II used on a large scale, he said of
stock restructuring. "it could place
con1rol of corporate America in 1he
hands of a few people interested onl}
in l ccp1ng their JObs ...
Such "entrenchment" de' ices. 1n-
clud1ng efforts to legislate the ac-
tivities of raiders. he said. "'are
disastrous for shareholders ...
r,~. r
,f.: 1 · "" -~-31·: J~ ., ..
1 ... 1 ~
11'-~ • 12. l Js.a. ' t ·l61 l1 n••
f
... I JI~
1 '• I .....
!. ~ ul~ .. fl ... '• ~~ ll .; ~~ '; \e ••
.... I • • • .. '• ~~ii'·~ ... ' . ... . . .. ,. i ~l!~ ·~ I ... . • .. • .. .. .
! ~.: l • .. ... t .. • • . .... ..... ,, . ,, ~ · "'' ...
Howard GllJ>hi elected to
~·on archltecta in•tltate .
ON Mesa resa<knt a.w8H au,m. director or dcs•an for .IA; .... C-~, has bC'Cn elected lO ICf'\'C b I director for \ht ()rm.Iii c;_.ty
ch1pter o( the A .. rk'm ._..... el Ardda.ta. The post calls b Oi_.. .. ID
di rect all activitin for the cbapccr•s AIA des11n awal'ds ... nlaibitt
commitJtts. l J.A. kWart. Gilpin coord1natCj projccu and ects 11 tiaiton
between architectural and mainttnna firms and his own firm. • • • Man. L. Gar*a of Huntinston Beach bas bttn promoted to nationil •In
manascr for CIE SyltlnlS, a.e., located 1n Irvine:. Gard(a hu been wtdt CIE
S)stcms since January 19'4. scrvina as southwt'i.l rc:gional saJes rNnttrr· C"IE
as a subsidiary ofC. llell &lec&Naln a.. of Lo~ ngcln and c .1.-•Ca.. LM.
of Tokyo. Japan. h supplies office au1omoat1on and coms-~N'elatcd
products. • • • James £. Marn has Joined Huuasioa Savlap u4 IAM .U11 et••• of
Hunt1n1ton Beach as president and chief e\Ct'utave officer. He comn IO tM
Oran1e Coas~company from a"post a'i pn-s1dent and chief uecutivt oftkier of
GILPIN GARDEA MARU CHUllCH
b&eru&MulS.TI8o._. m San l>tqo. bnfllJna 18 }eanofcxpencncelO the
JOb . .\ certified pub1ic accountant, Marks 1s past president and past national
director ofFluadal Exentlve lattltate . • • • Jau Qarcl, president of Jau Chrdl Partaen -Marke ... _.
GraP'le Detlp lac. ofNewport Beach. has been selected as one ofsiJt jucfan in
the Seattle Design cl Advertisin1 Awards Show sla ted for February. The
cont4est honors excellence in commercial design work in the Seattle •~·
Church's firm spcciaJizcs in crcatJna and strcn1thening corporate identi1in. • • • Jnepll Deeara. has bC'Cn appointed national instructor for Costa Mcsa-
bascd lastitate of Real E•ta&e Maaa1emea1, an educational affiliate of the
·Natloul AsseclaU. ef ReaHers. l..ocall}. DcCarlo tt-aches property
management at Coastline and Santa Ana collrges and 1s a managing panncr of
J .D. Property Maaa1ana1 C.. m Costa Me~. as well as a partner with CPMA.
Auoclatn, a Tustin firm that manun medical and offi~ btuld1ngs. ~ ..
David M. Ro11 has been appoi nted "1« president of planninJ and
co mmunication for Upland-based Footltill A1soclate1, Ille. Ross 1s former
research director the the Oraqe C...&y Regialtr and di~tor of corporate
planning and communications for Bauerfleld f:49itin c.r,. of Snata Ana
Ross is a member of the board ofdirtttors of the Girl ScMtC...al el Oraqe
COtUlty and scn·es -0n the research advisor) com mmtt for the UC Irvine
Orange County .\nnual Survey Proaram. ••• Corona del Mar chiropractors ~evin F. Priestley and J ... Koaillp ha ve return~ from a post-graduate seminar 1n Las Vegas. where Newport "Beach's
Mark Huaoa spoke about success and moll\ auon. \1ore than 3.500 doctors of
ch1ropr1c11c. assistant and spouses from around the world attcnd!tc' the four-
da } c' cnt. • • • Robert Goet1cb has tx-en appo1n1ed a' ice prc<>1den1 for Ltt SammJs Co. ot
In inc.\\ 11h repons1b1lil} for new business uppponun1t1es. and Jerry Pelliu"
has been named '1t·e pre'i1dent and controlkr (1oetsch former!) scrv~ as
de' elopmcnt anal~sl for MelropollUcaa Stnacturts of Ch1CafO. Pell1zzon. a
fou nding member of the Lake Forest Toastmas1er'1 Cl•b. prev1ousl~ served a)
'KC pres1dcn1 of Daile Tlm~rC.astrwetioa Co. Lee mm1s is a pn\ a tel~ held
rt•al l''lla tc deHlopment and investmcn1 organirat1on • • • Buker Abercrombie HLU has Juincd Nena !Hvelopmeat C.rp.'1
Ncwpon Beach-based central d' 1'11on as project enaineer 1n charge: ot
organizi ng and supen 1sing construction crcl4 s and maintaining quaht~
control of tenant improvements. A grad uate of Newport Harber Rip ScMot.
Hiii also attHdff Oraaae Coast College an Costa Mesa. He now lives 1n
Fountain Valk). • • • Geoffrey Stack, president of Ne"' pon Beach-based Reel• Hemes Cerp ..
has bee n elected sccrctarv of the board of directors of the Natieeal M•lti
H .. 11a1Coud l and James StCH1t ,cha1rman of the J.D. Stot1t C.. of Irvine will
sen e as a d1rcc1or. NM HC' 1s a national non-profit trade assoc1at1on that
represents builders. developers. owner<>, m:sna,ger . s~ nd1ca1ors and financial
1nst1tut1ons involved in mu lt1fam 1ly housing.
ICOT income up
IC"OT Corp . Mountain V1c\\, ha'>
reported for the second quarter ot
fi'K'al 1985 an unaudited net income
of S 188.000. or 2 <'Cnt per share.
compared with an unaudited net loss
ofS850.000. or I 0 cents p(r shan-. for
the same p(nod of 1he pnor ~car
1(-1' I 77
l( .. yJll 11 ·16 1l1' 1(....,5 A 34 1 l6 1(-~, •• ~
"'..,_ J.t'•U ltl,..11'11 • • ' • 11.leo!G )) .. ))'•
lt#WMV Jt • 41
Kr\llf ' 14 ' U • Kulclot 2' • H > Lanct_ )4 • l• ~. '-~"ft '• I • L~O •t •SO 1
A t_:• •'• ;11 911 ljt,.l I I•
"ft. D" ~r: ,... .. ll :
• ii-.
the nlt't·ting ol
t\\.'O o.nting
mm<ls
ARMAND
HAMMER
r\ \t111mJ.ning C\"Cnt )llJU
\m11't "·ant to mi .
~urKI.&\ I.an h ·~-ll :l !l n
• t
f
~ ' 1
\
~ '
J
t • • I On t
I
l the
i -
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fi1iii
wt II
NYSE LEADER S
NEW V041t~AP)t-S.lftt • p,m! "'t let • end net ino• of it'lt M"••n most KlfYt Yortl StOCk I!~ luues. Ira no natloetllv ~:nttian Jl. 3, 7 • • 'Al t ~ ~}tifsPtt 11• I • V. Net.II , ' + " ~mer~t~ I; ; ~ ~~:tw,t~.k : : lh t 1 (; ~~~u~G1u 1, • n _ ~
Phlll I -~ Son~ oro l i H1I urtn ~ILvn • _i
Motorolu ~. :1 1
UP s ~No DowN s
NEW YORK (AP) -Tt'lt followlnt'lr•t shOws lhl . New York Stoett E•Clflefttl
stOCks 1nd warrants lhel hev• :; "" ,,,. IT\0$1 rnd down lhe most be ~ percent o c .. h '"" reoercness of umt for Mond1v. No H(Urlti.s trading below 12 ere I~
-. N11 nd .,.,c:enteoe ch• are dY~enc1 1 ~'w"r. rn: prevrc:s' cloi
price and Mondav b~.m. orlce.
Name LH C:l Pct. i Or1f!o l ~P f~ 5t1, I I S 'h 3 P 1. vl~hrl o pf j~ !-\ p , 4 R Ind "' ~ P •
'
M M+UA wt ~ UP N H Coro p • Gtn Growth 6Jii RP
I lnteoRsc ~ tlo . FamOlrSI s Jle Jii1 BP · I MnolA ,, ~ p . 1 L1uc1~1. 2pf 37'h '1~ UP .
1 Starrett' ~1h a UP · 1 Wiiims I 3~ Up .
U ~IUCl~I s }ti/• UP IS uqLt 2.70of 1h Ya U0o 16 ortrGo l\ o 17 SJu1~Buln 9 •t.e Uo II Nulrl n ·~ ,.., UP ~ P. erm 1n 914 111 Up 0 vlS.l1ntCo '~ Yt Op UnllOrlll 4~ Ye Up MtmR~v 14 1h Up Ph 4.1Sc>f 1.4 8P uno Ve ~ o ~emed Ve :\ii o DOWNS N1me 1 Benouel B 2 Ne<co n
3 ~sh~ng i ra'~tXIS M1ntvF HomHIJkl I Bleck Deck HIZ.t~abs 1 mR k g I hill l ~IF:nA":lz ~exu Inst t• TowleMfg of
IS C1nlrnOtt1 16 Gtn Retrec 17 ASA ~1' ~c.~~·"':~ ICN Pharm SlaCnlLld TetecomCp
W111n ~ii Ptlelos od C1moe>b sc g
Last Chg •1f• -11'2 1m-1 Yt -~
Vi -~
fl
41/li = '.
'h -I~ Yt -1~ ~ -J't 'h -,.,... ,r~ _}~ 9v. -lh 9 -~ lOJ.li -~ ~=i~ I -'(!
3 -2~ -'I• -~ II -IYI •\.la -v.
NEW YORK !AP) Feb. 2S ,
Tod~ Advenced O~lned ¥~,~=· Ntwll19hs New lows 4
GoLo Quon s
... 'IOM ,.., -.................. ,... ...... ......._ • 4UO .._ .-patld, NV 0...-..., "', ·•~10-. ........ 0 ......... .. ·M40_,..,_,....,NVC.-..... "' U..·••••-•POIN. -...................... . ftt .................... . ........ ...,..,,.......,,...,.., -·•••a..,..,--.ltt'o....,.. ... ~ . ., ... ~ ..... ,..-.... .-. ~. tl1UNl1100 ._...""""""'..., --.NY
~------------------
, •
i,
That's an aptdescrtptton of both business and
business people aJong the Orange Coast. Tc keep track of
where companies are gotn~ anti which people are helping
them get there .just watch Credit Line· -ev:ery day tn tile
Business section of your new
,,
t .. • '
I
Flood humor
Cbrt8 Panbaello man .. e'e a amlle and a little Jaamor
ID front of bJa home 6a BowmanaTIJle, NY, wbere mel~ now bu caued many area cneb to
o....Oow.
Mexico police
aided escape
of drug chief?
WASH~~GTON (AP)-~exi~an police aided the escape of an
alleged marijuana grower believed to have bee·n involved in the
kidnapping of a U.S. drug agent, the head of the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration charges.
-bEA Administrator Francis M. Mullen Jr. said Sunday that
Rafael Caro-Quintero, "one of those whom we suspect. one of those
traffickers involved in the kidnapping." boarded a plane in
Guadalajara late Saturday despite attempts by Mexican judicial
police to detain him with a warrant.
"We have now learned he had as protection memben ~f the
(Mexican) Department of Federal Security," Mullen said, referring
to the Mex ican equivalent of the FBI. "We have an ... element of the
police lettina this individual go ......
Mullen. appearing on ABC-TV's "This Week With David
Brinkley." said Caro-Quintero. who was believed to have left
Mexico. was "responsible for the plantation where 3.500 tons of
marijuana were located in Mexico. This concerns us. and we wonder
why he was allowed to leave."
Caro-Quintero was wanted for questioning regar(iing Enrique
Camarena Salazar. a DEA agent abducted al gunpoint Feb. 7 in
GuadaJajara. The lack of arrests in the case has cau$Cd friction
betwttn U.S. and Mexican officials.
In a case similar to Caro-Quintero. DEA agents lost track of
allcaed cocaine kingpin Juan Matta Ballesteros this month in
Mexico City when a Mexican police official delayed his arrest.
Newsweek reported Sunday.
The DEA notified Mexican officials of the whereabouts of
Ballesteros on Feb. 14. but two days later. Manuel Ibarra Herrera.
head of the Mexican Federal Judicial Police. personally delayed the
raid for nearly a day. the magazine said.
Sy the time the police arrived. Matta had vanished. Newsweek
sa id.
A DEA spokesman. Robert Feldkamp. could not be reached
immediately for comment on the Newsweek report. Telephone calls
to Feldkamp's home went unanswered Sunday evening.
Mullen cotitinued his criticism of Mexican law enforcement
officials for their response to the kidnapping of Camarena.-..ihosc
fate remains unknown.
Egypt asks U.S.
to host Mideast
peace conf ere nee
NEW YORK (AP) -Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has
asked the Reagan administration to act as host in di~t peace talks
between Israel and rnembcn of a Jordanian-Palestinian deleaation,
The New York Times reported today.
Mubarak said Eaypt would also be willing to act as host for such
a meetina o f the two sides. or would be willing 10 attend one
"anywhere" that is agreeable to all concerned.
"Why not?" he said. "We arc ready to help."
He announced in Cairo today that he was sending his lop
politicaJ aide Osama el-Baz to Israel later in the day for talks with
Prime Minister Shimon Pcm on ways to promote Middle East
peacccfforts and improve bilateral ties.
El-Baz. dj~tor of the Political Affairs Office. would be the
El)'ptian president's second emissary to talk to Peres in less than a
week. Mubarak told the Times that he sent an envoy to sec Ptres
durina the Israeli leader's visit last week to Romania. He did not
name the emissary.
Asked what would be discuSJed by El-Baz. Mubarak said. ··we
are speak int about the recent events in the Middle East. the future or
relations and what we should do to ~sh the peace procns ...
In Jerusalem. an llf'Kh off1C.al said today that Ptrn was
s1udyin1 the text of the interview. but there would be no immediate
comment on Mubarak's proposal for dirtC't peace talks.
The mce1in1 la1t week bctwun Peres and the Efyptian envoy
took pfacc in Bucharest where Petta was on a state v1s1t .
Of.°\; ~J NI i; I f
I
HC911C ... DAW.NM Ouctl ,.~
a..t•C.au 111111,
MOO "'--V11W Oriwe th • Dtl ....
~
.. -'7 •M
An10H
Oil AM&TMM • ••1 . ...
c
.... Dll:\t:
fri.
Mon.
Tua.
Wed.
Thurs ..
fri. ·
Fri.
4:30 , ....
4:30p.m.
4:30 , •.
4:30 p.m.
4!30 p.m.
3:00 , ...
3;()() , ....
Sel v-,,., •• ,t
11'e Dair Nit tffen ,_Ii& t11d ....
• • "P'ktw1 'ace" ...... • • SZS per '-r. • 2 111'1 t. S4S.
......... wt1pheterr .. it '" ,. ,. It I ...... ct.11 .. ...,.
DIMES
-A-
LINE
WANT ADS
.. ORTANT NOTICE TO
PRfV A Tl PAllTWI
a...-.n.a Cg
C1111tlllili9IA I
J
• 'ITllTlllP'
Warm, cozy flrtt ti~ ~· home In lr"<llMI Northwood. Woodal•
view, c0mm pool, tennlt,
8P•. Only S91.000
U,_,l()Uf 11 ,._I'S
RMltcn, 87&-tOOO
THE REAL
ESTATERS
COY S KT
11 r 1 1 1
H 1 T s 0 I
..__.__.__!' l.__I..___. t
1--.,.,L--..O_N-.-K _Lr--11 ~.: 1· I I I . lsn 1 It Tri. T rutn 09patlmen1
Just -you ... tn to -~• ,,,.
.--------. mott of ti ~ of -•• --
G L A w E G I ~,-1 -,.-, -,,-0 ........................ OYO'.d
• -• -• • , • ' .. _, ......... ,.._."""G #'Cl'fd1 ......_......_.....___.___._,___, ft'fv ,. ... too ' ~ "" ,... 3 ~
•• ,,. """"et•ID 1fllft•
'"ISl YXIAlfS
.. '
HOROSCOPE
TuHday, Febr11ary 26
SYDNEY
0MARR
AR IES !March 21-A pril IY) •\\<Old unncces~ry nsks where
finances arc concerned. C ~clc n:ma1n<; high . but clement of deccp11on doe~ enter rclat1un'ih1p < ·anrt'r Ca pm.om person\ figure an unusual
see nano.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Ta~k will be completed. you'll rccel\ c
plaudits from Pl'Crs. Aura of glamour n l ts. sccrc1 1rH:c11ng could I:)( on
agenda and 1t relate'> 10 romance You'll rcceivc t0mphmcnts. you'll
know that you are "aluablc.
CANCER (June.! I-July 2.2 ): Get rrady for n~w \tart. act to hean ot
matters. realm~ lhol r mo11onal involvement .... i11 ultimately pro'c
btnefic1al. Imprint )Our own ~tyle. know tha1 w1\h will~ fulfilled I rn
na11ve pla)'I d )nam1l ro le
LEO (Jul) 2 ~-Aug. 22). Your ab1li1y in anal~11ng l'harac1er comt'\
into pos111vc pla y You'll know what to do. }ou·11 d1~crn motl\t'\
~nsc of direction will ~ rcitor~d. Be ready for un usual inv1ta1111n
which will include a jourmet dinner.
VJROO (Aua. 23-Scpl. 22): Key 11 to da vcr)af) without Kallenng
yo ur cfTon,. Focus on education. commun1cat1on. disscm1ntt11on "'
information. You'll b«ome morcawarcofbod y 1maac. populant) will
increase, long-distance call will elevate spin ta.
LIBRA (Sept. 2 3-0ct. 22): Check ta x records, be p<l\111' 1·
concerning payments and collections. Be aware of line print. fo< u<. 11n
thorough approach. A Scorpio indi\fidual could help you to "\Cl. 1hr
hght." Be ready for rcvl!1ons.
SELL/"'1111
rOuplf!• 13~ W 81lbo1,
1275,000 840-1295
YllW ., .....
UH,• •wrry1 And you will own 1 4
Bdrm 3 bl wlf1mlly rm,
lrg 60 • 1SO' IOI. Thlt le
lee. not leeM lend, with a
beau11tu1 hllfbot vi.w
OIRT a. lllllm II
H1·1HI
SCORPlO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): ommunica11on received con1 t·111-
1n1 lcpl documents. Oivc (ull rt1n to mtellCC'tual cuno'lit > -ml·lln\
ask Questions, find out where you 1u1nd. Cla'lh ot idea' prm c\
stunulatmJ. could involve oppcnite sc11:. ~~~liii!i!....,~...Oi.iiiiii
SAOmAJUUI (Nov. 22-Dtt. 20: Modera1c pace bnna., dr\lrC'd
mutts. Means 00n·1 tt~pt to steamroller -family mem ber '4-tll
cooperate 1f you·rc d1plomaoc. Kttp rc5<>lut10M c:oncem1ng d <>mt'\ltl
adjus1mtnt. d1e1 and •nnivcnary. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)· You could gain access tu 1n\ldc
information:· Focu on cmuivuy. d1scoH'ry, relations w11 h duldrrn ~~=f;i~=:n"i:
and pos11bleJOt.tmey. Answtturc found by rtad1ni. checlu ns unu,u. I
50Urat. IOOklnj bdtind ICtnft.
~ "1111fu ''' l~·alf\
AQUAJUUI (Jan. »Fd>. 18): Rece nt 1nqu1nes bring dc~1rrd
rnponsn. Orwn ••• Ruhn. you'll have more rcspon\lb1l1t )
prn1urc and an lddidonaJ ckadhne. Rclat1onsh1p inttn 1fic\ c:an Ile .,:::==
roo.1t<krtd vny ··wnous... r:!:~~l!IP:!~Jll!! otr.• hall 131.f"o PllCD (Feb. •~Mt«" '20) You'll \UCetcd on "third tf) • ( ~clc • • • .... ""Y fw llO CANYON llT I :
htah. poliuoe ti rea.atv~y 1uo111 and ou'll aa1n cfTect1ve all1c\ You cond eo.t• MW.,__ w11c-. 29,_ tlM .., • ~· IOOO l/f, .....,._
now arc~ or.uiku11 ch<>rd of un1~·e1'11ll appeal l ovc ·~~nor r1n1 • uo. uooo. .., 2 ""°"'' no ,... *"'*'· _,..,_,_., lttftlfio wftidt 1n volvn nn. Libra ptne)n . 141-2062/'42.HOO... eat ' .., .... 7ta 1 ,,, ....... ,.
~, ....... _ _......._ _____ ; __ ...
N••• , .. rb ...... , .. ,.,,
"Al llEWPOR T
l"ATllUTS
•
t
'1.'l ~ T Cllf I Bl DC.
.._H I/IP' 1J1 1 HI A4 tt
.-. . . ~
754 aq. It view suite
C0<ner offlcn w/bllcony
FWdecoratlon allowance
141-1101
Fotll ADS
ARE FREE
Caf: lllllllPll/TYPllT
142-Hll PIT, exp. bkpr w/fld typing
Miiis. 25 Hr wt!. Non-
smkr. AeaHne •l ref. to ________ , Gtrta Club of Ulguna,
1470 Temple Terr. Dr.
Found: Dog. Approx 30 Laguna Bet\, Ca. 92851
lbs, tong hair. Nr P9P•--------
boy1, CM 979-3741 ... -1&111 W
--------LOii' Blk Fem Chow.Chow Book PHI• up, per-. manent, PMt·llme P<*-CdM Exec. Office Sult" nr Np1 Blvd/Fair Or. Ilion. Monday 2:30PM 10 A/C, perking, from $700 Chlldt pet. REWARD approic. IS:30PM. Tu.day
Ce.N 873-4120 850-4-4 14/831-1917 1 OA M to approx.
Coeta MMe. 2500 '" of. Lott Silky. ""' 12 lb. 5:30PM. No •XS*· nee. flee epece avlllable In male. Slvr gray.'Fergua' Apply Pennayuv.r, 1880
nlee complex. NB lie/ID. VIC: Bluffs Placentia Ave, Coa1a
RIGHT REAL TY 758-8&4 1 REWARD! 844-54 15 M ...
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
-
~
Kl>S-EARN GREAT m»S Afl> PRIZESI
MD 11-14
U.•tom.•PBllll ........ ,, ..... ..,= ... .................... c.... ..., ,. Ow C"9t ....... )JI ._ ...
--····~OllSllllMt.• ...................... .., . ................. C:'.., . ............ ......
.,.. ............ a1a1..t --
CHICM
IVEa.ON
POllSCHE
AUDI
(HEVROLET
H..-..11o-t11y
....... ~ .... 10
CHJCM
IVEaMJN
.....
•70 cam. rune,r l200 Firm. ..... ,
IO Cutlut LS 4 or vt
Loeded l4000 PV1 pty
Cell "'4-0 7 , 1
'llllTUll..a 1 199 down CE Com-
merc:tel teeH ALL
SAVERS 714/432·1t n
..
t,
' {
BUENA
PARK
GARDEN GROVE
...J 0 I-
HUNTINGTON EDINGER
....-......ii.~ BEACH
...J m
0 WARNER
<
0 CHICK IVERSON
Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi
441 E. 0.llf hJ., 1..,.rt hHll
17MllO
Highest Quality Sales & Service
0 NABERS .CADILLAC ~
2100 Ollll ILVI., CISTI IESI
(114) 140-1100 (213) 111-1211
• Best Prices • Convenient Location
• Great Location • Super Service
• Courteous & Kno'f'ledgeable Sales People
UJ m
~ 0 CREVIER BMW "'1 V! SALES • SERVICE • LEASl~G '1J1
"Where Professions/ Attitude Prevails"
Spec:i.tlzlnt In Europeen o.ttverr. Exceflent a.t.cllon of
New end c:eretully prepered UMd BMW"• always 1n stock
835-3171
208 W. 1•t St., Santa Ana
Corne< of Broadway & 111 St. Closed Sundays
0 THEODORE ROBINS
FORD
U.S.A.'s #1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer
Modern Sales, Service, Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Oepts.
Compet1llve Rates On L~ase & Dally Rentals
20IO l1rhr lh•., Oetta ltu
142-0010 tr 140-1211
0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS INC.
• LONG TERM LEASES
• COMPETITIVE PURCHASE PRICES
• HUGE INVENTORY
dial MERCEDES
213/714 837-2333
Next to Santa Ana Fwy (5) on
Manchester/Beach Blvd.
G ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT
# 1 In T•1 Wist For
,,,. }Hp Sills ,,, 8 Y11rs
O~n~e • SALES
i-•SERVICE oa t • LEASING m::;.~~e::.:_Lvo • ACCESSORIES DEPT . 549-8023
CI> JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS 0 . COMMONWEAL TH
1301 Ou•// St. -INw CM Lout/on
1001 Quall St. -R...,. Dl~l•lon
World's Largest Selection of fT\
Mercedes Benz \C;J
833-9300
Wes · Ltasill · P.U · Stmct · lt4J s-,
•
. -..
J
VOLKSWAGEN
&)).'FAMILY STORE SINCE '53' -W Sales· Service -Leasing~
BRlB'roL Kl !DINO!R Ml·0110 IN SANTA ANA
. . .
91 Y.
LAGUNA
HILLS
0 CONNELL CHEVROLET
2121 larMr lh•., Oetta ....
Over 23 Years Serving Orange County
Sales • Service • Leasing
546-1200 S,.cial Pllts Ult 54&·94H
MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM
SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM
SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM
WE'RE 0 WE'RE
IULlll IEW
s•s
Ltalilc
I mats
Acroee ffom .. "A' on Ke..._, Juel-• of S7 (~..,..) '""
0 $All$. ~.!~R!!~GPUTS IR
Overseas Delivery Specialists
PARTS DIPAfn'MINT OfltEN
SATURDAY M09'NINGI
BMW -ROLLS ROYCE
1540 Jamboree Ad.
Newport Beach 840-8444
/II I • • A II
888 OOVE ST NE'NPORT BEACH
714 833-1300
MISSION
Vl:~il
MISSION
VIEJO
SAN
JUAN
CAPISTRANO
0 BILL YATES
YILllW&lll • PH ... • PE•IT
SALES• LEASING• PARTS• SERVICE
12112 , .................. .,, .... _
,
411-4111 117-4111
UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE
HONDA
2880 Harbor Blvd.
Coate Me•• 540-0713
3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy.
T6e Be•t C•r Bav•
la Or•••• Coaatv ., .. ,
T6e De•l•r• Ll•tetl
Oa Tiii• P•••
official denies pier conflict
lanntng commissioner says nothing
hady about bidding for pier structure
had no prior information. work in 120 days. The teCOnd is from of bcina Wf'08I or i9pope1, ,OU deaioftl Md it a ..,... ~ dlr
"The City Council can do what the Kopni Construction Co. of Loa& should not do. Thi1definiwtymthat employee in tbc buildi I 4"'11• fit ..
they wantaboutthe bid:· Beach. Kopfli submitted a bid ol appearance:• the city plaa~as.r• Ml
The council is slated this evenina to S33S,843 for a 180-daE · Bailey alao uid that ofticM have Mi~r ~It, .. .._. DO
award a contract to build a restaurant Mayor Rulh Bailey 'd today that received no written oplftioa from doubt that theft wat 90 c:mlid ._
By ROBERT BARKER
Ol .. O.., ........
Huntington Beach Planniq Com-
missioner Frank Mirjahanair de-
clared today that he's acted leplly
and ethically in atlef!IJ>lina to win a
bid fro111 fellow. city omcials to build a
California
Two of West Hollywood's
new council members are
taking a look at tough
rent control laws./~
Police officer kllls a
charglng ram who butted
a woman to death last
week./M
Nation
Subway gunman
Bernhard Goetz goes to
bat for man accused In a
subway stabbing death.
/A4
U.S. offlclals are blaming
Mexican police for allow-
ing a drug suspect to
escape./87
World
An obviously ailing
Konstantin Chernenko
shows up on Soviet tele-
vision./ AS
A foreign minister from
Norway Is accused of
selling NA TO secrets to
the Russians./ M
Feature
The last word In fashion at
the Gentlemen's
Haberdashery Extrava-
ganza was a quip from
Paul Salata./ A7
The Fanchonettes,
famous chorus Un•
dancers of the 1930s,
now get their kicks from
memories./ A7
Sporta
A half century ago a
Newport Beach man In-
troduced football to
Japan./81
Orange Coast's alumni
and the current baseball
team battles to a 14-14
tle./81
Robbie Miller of Voy-
agers' Christian Is Cl F's
leading scorer and re-
bounder ./83
Entertainment
Gloria Steinem's llfe as a
Playboy Club bunny Is
chronicled In a TV movie
tonight./ Al
Bulneu
Chase Manhattan's non-
bank bank to open In
Newport Beach by mld-
March./81
IKDEX
Bridge A.10
Bulletin Board A.3
Buttneaa 85
Claetfled 87 ·8
Cornlea A.10
Croeaword B9
Death Notlcea 87
F .. tur• A.7~
Horoecope 88
Ann Landerl Al
Oplnton A8
Plparazzl A 7
Polee Log A3
Pubic Notlcel 87. ~ 81-i
T ...... on Al ~ Al w..... A2
two-story building at the end of the
citl pier.
'I ve done nothina shady." the
owner of the Amiran Construction
Co. uid. "The bids were scaled and I
pic~ed them up at the same time as
the othen (bidders.) I read about the
contract in the McGraw-Hill tepon. I
and mcetina cenlef building on the she opposes~ntiq th nlraC:t to City Attorney Gail Huaoa. ubdHuttoaforaaopinioaj11111olle
end of the l)ter. The building would Mirjahanair. But Hutton relayed lier opinion to salt. Sbe pve Ihm u _.. ~
replace the End of the Pier Cafe, "I penonally feel it's a conflict of City Administrator C'butn Tllornp-answr that it was OK. Mirjr' I'
which as destroyed by huge wavet in a interett." shuaid. "He (Mirjahan,jr) son that there's no coaftict bet.al* uid.
March 1983 storm. is on a city commission and he hu Mirjahanair hu had aothins to do He uid he's~ a p'1 !:J
Thecity'spublicworksdepanment worked in the city's planning depen-with the pier work in bis role on tbe commiuionerua · lelVice 1 is recommend Ina two bids 10 of-ment. He knows how it (government) Plann~nJ Com million. that it would be up to the City COU8Cil
ficials: One is from Mirjahangir. who operatet. Mirjahanair wu u UIUCCUlfial to decide whedler be lllould ...
submitted a S3SS.000 bid to do the ''Anything that has the appearance candidate in lu1 fall's City Council ("'-9-o.ncu.L/AS)·
Suspect
moved
for own
safety
Westminster man to
testify against father
In HB murdertrtal
By STEVE MA•aut °' .............
A .Westmin11er man who bis
qreed to testify U. a fint...,_
mwder trial · bis father and" tbe
wife of the :"U: victim has been
· moved out of Omit County Jail b
his own proleetion. ,
The life of Adam Edward Ramirez. "
21. could be in jeopardy becaute of1ais
expected testimony in the trial, aid
the man's court-appointed attorney
l.any Bruce.
The trial opens today in Superior
Coun in Westminsler.
Jeannete Hushes. 30. and Adam S.
Ramirez. 43, are ctwsed ID the Jan.
1 o. 1984 slayina of James D. Huahes
of Huntinaton 8cach. The 3l-year-
old computer CQ&ineer was shot ID the
head as be slept in tbe master
bedroom of his home. I
The slayina a1lcled y was com-
mitted as pan ofa Pk>t to cash in on a
SS00,000 life insurance policy. ac-
cordinc to investiptors.
GettlDI oriented
Jemay 11an1e1a. left, 8 ; llllko hklawa. 8, aad llarlaret
lloCormlek, 9 , all of Girl Scoat Troop 554 from Coarrea•
8cbool ID Poantaln Valley, MJDple a fralt cap at tbe 8C:Oam'
abtb amu1al .. Banda Acr09e tlae Sea laterDatlODal P'alre"
o•er tlae weekend. P'or more cletalla on die plctueeqae
e•ent, aee Paee AS.
The ~naer Ramirez also is
char.,:d in the slayina but is expected
to be shown favorable treatment for
his testimony. He also will be ajven
credit for the year he al ready has spent
behlDd ban.
Deputy District Anomey Rick
~-80ff/A2)
Chase
suspect
captured
The normally quiet nei&hborhoods
of Nonhwood and Dccmeld turned
into a racetrack of sorts during the
wee hours Sunday morning as Irvine
police officers put the pedal to the
metal to capture a suspected burglar
and car thief. ·
Sgt. Dick Bowman said a squad car
and a brand new Nissan. the latter
reponed stolen from a Placentia
woman. were sliahtly damaaed as the
(Pl ..... CQU/A2)
Pea soup
to return
on Coast
A thick blanket offog slowed
commuter traffic and oper-
ations at John Wayne Airpon
this morning but did not trigger
the strin' of accidents that often
go hand an hand wi th the soupy
conditi ons.
"Traffic is very slow -too
slow for accidents. I guess,"
California Highway Patrolman
Rick Stevens suggested today.
The fog. expected to bum off
by midday. 1s anticipated to
(Pleue Me POOGY I A2)
~~~~~~~~
Butcher or herd?
Artukovic raises
diverse emotions
Shouttn matches 1
erupttn outside his
deportation heartn
IJ UNDA DEUTSCH
Al I 'E9 ,,._..._
It has been 36 yean since Andrija
Anukovic entered the United Stain
with a fal1e penpon.bu.a time has not
cooled the emotioet that flare each
ti me the aovemment tries to evict the
1 man chaqed with war crimes in his
naaive YuPJavia.
Denounced by pro1«uton 11 the
"Buicher or \he Balkans" and "the
Himmler of YUIOllavia." Anukovic
alt0 is hailed• ahm> by f1Ctetly lof&l
Croe&ian·Amcricans who defend him
as a hedom ftlhter who milled \he communi• and was ur\jultly ac-
cwed ol atrocities;
He bas ~Uy fou&ht deoorta·
lion for 33 ye9n. 8Ut now. 1t the Ille
of 15. en~ by many illnesa.
Andrije Artullovic feces h11 last and
touehat t.ttJt in ftderal roun
In extrldition hearina under way an
Los ARJCln. the U.S. government is
pretent1n1 evidence to suppon
Artukovic's mum to Yuaoelavia to
face trial for mass murder.
Tl\e Yuplavian JOVemment has
rencwid an exw.diuon requat_ and
the U.S. govmuiaent 11ys it should be
honored. U.S. ~Is anaied the
invalid..Qn Nov. t4 at his M>tM in
SurfsidC"'t:'olony, a private communi-
ty near Huntinaton HaltM>ur.
Activists on botJI sides
Anukovic's Croetian tupPOrten and
Jewish sur\livon of N111 penecution
-have Jammed the cwnroom of U.S. Maptrate Volney Brown tbrthe
extradiuon he.an"" The two Mdes
have IOfnetimn enaze din *>utina
matchn outside the c:ounhouat wtule
Anukovic's law-yen beuled 1n c:oun
to prennt the hannt f'lom eoi"I fbrwatd.
"'They've annecd an old man no toneer able to spn.k on his own
behalf," his attorney, Oary Fleildtman. uaued at one poeM. "In
my opinion. thfs"is not the way tlunp
(Pina•,-AllTVKOYIC/AI)
Teachers to vote on pact
•'
but unrest will continue
BJ PHIL SNEJDERMAN
Of .. Dlllr ........
Saddleback Collqe teachers were
to vote today at the Irvine and
Mi ssion Viejo campusn on a ten-
tative contract that would give them
an 8.5 percent salary increase. retro-
active to July I, 1984.
But faculty leaden say that ~
less of the outcome of today's vote.
unhappy teachers will picket tonisht
prior to a Saddleback District Board
of Trustees meeting 10 express their
continuing displeasure over colleae
operations.
The seven-member board ma.ts at
7:30 p.m. in Room IOS in the library
at the Mission Viejo campus.
"I am thorouJhly convinced the
probkms as voiced by the faculty
won't go away with the ratification of
this contrllct,.. said Ed Romeo, a
California Teachers Association rep-
resentative workina with the Saddle-
t:.ck Collete Faculty ASIOciation.
"~ disqrcements are much more
deeply seated than the simple matter
of a settlement of salary and fringe
koefits.''
Last week. Roben Kopfstein. «
Saddleback reading teacher who 1s
·pan of the faculty bargaining team,
observed. "The b1' 1ss~ has not been
the bucks. The pnncipal is.sue 1s the
runn1Dg of the colkf,e -or an this ~the 'misrunmng of the college."
Even Wilham Schreiber, the chief
district spokesman. said. "It would be
naive for any of us to think that
settlement of the contract alone
would cause an ehmination of the
tensions and concerns."
But Schreiber said he hoped ap-
proval of the contract would "allow
(Pleue Me TBACllBRS/ A2)
ll•lrt .. a bl.ti •plao
.... el a. tol'd'oepecdft ur.ezz • .,...,_~ ----J9M•• • .._ tM -· off a.ad ••• a rill ._..ta;s a ..... , •
0
CHASE NRTSBURGL~YSUSPECT ••• ..._A l ~ .. ,...
I
thief' tried'° elude pohce 1a a
chaie.
Wtuel 37, of Gardea Glow Wll tree\Cd (or D'llDOT iqjYna
a Tuatin Community Hotpital lftct-
wild ':30a.m. chase. He was then
boObd at Oranae County Jail, police
Pelc. oftlcm belan lookina for ... , lifter a Meckknbura Street
• t tepOrted hearina a no11e in
lier _,.. and teeina a man walk
away froln \be rni•nce and act ~n a car.
Ofrltm. who were watchina the
MiPbort.ood after recei~i a ruh of repoftt there, . to •lOP =rror questionina. but roered
oft', DOlice Mid.
Wenzel allttedfy led oflkert on a
chaae throuah the darkened rni<kn-
tial stmts at speeds tomttime1
el&Cftdina I 00 mikt an bour1 Bowman said. Once Wenzel brakeo
sharply eausin& the &cad squad ear to
rear end the Nissan 300ZX he was
drivina. The can. collided a second
time when Wenzel turned sharply
near lrvtM C:ent.er Drive and Yale
Strttt. The N111anjwnoedacurbaod
rocked to a stop as the l(tuad car
alammed into Its door panel. police
Mid.
. Televisions. video casJette rc-
corden and tool boxes later reported stolen by Nonhwood re51denll were
found 1n the vehicle, which is rqis·
tered to an Jff'ljdentified Placentia
woman. policn.id. Police suspec1 Wenzel of commit·
tin& other weekend buraJaries in the
Northwood area.
SON MOVED FROM JAIL .•.
l'l'OlllA l
'Toohey said the you~r Ram1rc2
was moved from county Jail. where he was beina held in protective custody.
to an undisclosed city jail for his
.. wcll-beina."
Bruce had earlier expressed COD· eem that his client's lifc·could be in
jfOpardy lfhe remained in the county
J&il, where the elder Ramirez also is a policeman on routine patrol stop-
beina held. ped the elder Ramirez just minutes
Huahes and the elder Ramire? after the shootina was reported. allc&~dly plotted the murder and H~ghes was arrested the followi na
intended to ~ss it off as the work ofa day when she rcponedly confessed
buralar. Pohee 51id Huahes initially the plot to police. The .. confession,"
told them an intruder burst into the however. was declared inadmissible
home and shot her husblnd. during a preliminary hearina last
The plot backfired. ho~ever. whe'l • '5Pring.
OFFICIAL DENIES CONFLICT ON BID ... '. Jf'rom Al .
I
! down if it belitves ifs a conflic1 for
I' him to bid for city jobs.
• Mirjahlnair's construction com-
pany has been in business for three
yea rs and is worlong on a government
project building at the Los Alamitos
Armed Forces Reserve Center, he
said.
His company has expencnce with
waterfront construction but hasn't
done building projects on a pier, he
said.
:_TEACHERS VOTING ON PACT TODAY •••
FTom Al
us some breathina space in which to
discuss our cliffercnces in a reason-
able manner."
~ About 240 full-time and 470 part· ~ time instructors arc eliaible to vote
today on the tentative qrument
reached earlier .this month. Votin& ~ will take place" by secret ballot at ~ Saddleback's Jrvtne and Mission
Viejo campuses.
• The pact's retroactive pay raise
, would run throuah Dec. 31, l 985. The
• f rinae benefit packaae would remain
• unchanged through that date. Under
the proposed pact. the two sides could
· reopen negotiations on saJary and
fringe benefits in January 1986.
District officials say the proposed
raise would make 5'ddleback
teachers the hiahest paad amona
California's 70 community colleac
districts. While uncertain whether
they rank first. Saddlebeck teachers
admit their salaries are amona the
hi&hcst in the state's community
colleges.
The tentative accord also provides
a limit on "overload" classes an
instructor can teach. It gives ad-
ditional job security to some pan-
timc instructors.
The teachers union barpinina
team has made no recommendation
on how instructors should vote on the
contract.
Faculty leaders say some instruc..
tors want the contract issue behind
them so they can focus on a campaian
to recall Saddleback trustees William
Watts, Roben Price and Robert
Moore.
The faculty association has
protested the policies of Saddleblck
Chancellor Larry Stevens and uked
the elected trustees to remove him.
The recall was launched after trustees
reaffirmed their support for Stevens.
FOG EXPECTED TO RETURN ••.
~P'romAl
return Tuesday. Afternoons should
be warm and clear with highs along
~• the Coast reaching 70dcgrccs. accord-
ing to the National Weather Bureau.
Operations at John Wa yne Airpon .
were not halted because of the fog but
several commercial carriers opted to
delay takeoffs or landings, said a
rower spokesman.
At its worst. visibility was reported
anywhere from 50 feet to 50 yards.
said Lt. Dick Olson. a spokesman for
the Orange County Sheriffs Harbor
Patrol.
~ ......................................................................... .
i Artukovic ruled incompetent
LOS ANGELES -Accused Nazi
.war criminal Andrija Artukovic was
ruled incompetent Monday to
proceed with his extradition hearina
after he told a magistrate be did not
understand what the hearing was all
about.
U.S. Magistrate Volney Brown
personally took over questioning of
the 85-year-old ArtuJcovic. who pros·
ecutors last week likened to Adolf
Hitler. after a defense psychiatrist
reported he had questioned the
defendant and fou nd him incompe-tent.
ARTUKOVIC CASE RAISES EMOTIONS •.•
From Al
should be done in this country."
But Rabbi Marvin Hier of the
Simon Wiescnthal C.:nter. named for
the famed Nazi hunter. says
Artukovic should be extradited now
"for the purpose of history.
"I've used up all my compassion
and empathy for the 750.000 victims
of Artukovic, and I have none left for
him," said Hier.
· \ The elderly Artukovic's most ar-
dent supporter is his son, Rad. a
stockbroker. who attends every court
hearing and says his father is an
innocent man.
"This is a hoax being perpetrated in
this country," he said. " ... I think this
is a kind of Nazi hysteria. Every-:~ body's on a Nazi witch hunt:•
:•.. However, in a book by a former
:*• Justice Dcpanmcnt Nazi hunter. Artukovic was partly blamed for the
wartime slaughter of some 750.000
Jews. Serbs, Orthodox Christians and
gypsies in the Nazi puppet state of
Croatia where he served as a cabinet
official from 1941 to 1945.
His cabinet posts coincided with
the reiin of terror of the notorious
Ustash1 secret police. and it 1s in
connection with their activ1t1es that
Artukov1c 1s charged.
"It's a mailer of record that the
atroc1t1es which took place were
. unspeakable,'' said Neal Sher. d1rec-
, tor of the Justice Depanment's Office
of Special In vestigations. "Some
have said they were many times
worse than the atrocities com mitted
b} the SS (Nazi secret pohce). And
Artukov1c clearly was 1n the main-
itream.
"Since our office was created.
Artukov1c has been our No. I
priority," Sher said after 1hc old man
wu arrested.
The OSI. formed to take lq1I
let.ion apinst Nam living in the
United States. arew out of a 1978
chanac in U.S. 1mm1gra11on laws that
said members of Nazi governments
could not fi&ht deportation on
, arounds that they would be per-
secuted 1f they returned to their
native lands.
Artukovic hid succcssf ully uted
, that arsument in the 1950s to win a
coun rulins apinst bis deponation.
His anomeya have ~ued that
Artukovic Is beina held in double ~rdy with the reopening oft case
,,... c:loled some 25 years aao. They also
,-MY he is mentaJJy and physically
incompetent to auist in his own
ddentc. •
Atlitc.nt U.S. Attorney David
Nimmer says new evidence apanst
Ill Artukovic behet the double jeooerdy
aUqatJon. Al for compewo(:e. Nim·
mer has arsued it is not a_n issue in
einradition catn.
1, Nevenhcle~ Brown allowed a
competency hcarina and determined
Artukovic was .. mote often compe·
tent than not" and sutracitntly IUCld
to assist hjs auorney
Sketch of Anclrtja Artakmc at deportation beartJaC.
However. the m111strate has also
made the unprecedented order that
doctors evaluate Artukovic's com·
pctencc on a daily basis and rcwrt to
him on whether he is able to
pan1cipate 1n the day's ~tradition
proceed1n15. If Artulcovic is found
incompetent on a aiven day. Brown
said he would postpone the heari•
until the followina day.
Anukovic is beina held without
bail at Lona Beach Nava_! Hospital.
Nimmer said extradition ••• a
relatively simple procedutt and the
hcarina shou_ld move swiftly.
He Hsled four points the aovcm-
ment must provr. Artulcovic'1 idau.
ity, which tw been conceded: that a
treaty with Yupllv1a is in full forte
and effect: that the offense charaed is
covered in lhc trcatr. and that there Is
probable cause to hnk the fuaitive to
the C'l"ime.
A1 in other extradauon caa. the
aovemment 1' not U')'iftl to pro~
rtukov1c'r. 1u11t but merely that he
• (
~--·
shouJd be deported. with any crimi·
na_l trial to be held in Yuao1lavia. The
defttlse may present testimony to
explain Artukovic's actions in reprd
to the alJqations apinst him, but
may not contradict them.
The aovemment'1 cate has been
presented, but Fleiachm1n. ~ukovic's lawyeT, plans IO call u~ to
JO witnntn he dncribel .. DObUcal
lrientitts and experts in Croetian
1«ain. He predfcis 1 hearina of
tcveral da)'S.
ne utt.imatc decitiOn by Brown is
Ml...,... but cu be cbal~ dlraillllt. Olher 11111 memocs., Nim·
-ilid;
Allrild wtwthef AnukoVJC'I. Ind
f'aiHna , health miaht ultimately .sn·
vent hit tttum to Yuplavi1, Nim-
mer Mid. "The sectttary of State i1
daa.,ed with deiamanauon of' the
ftMI clttilion. Whatever human·
iuirian or Other conttmS thctt 1n can
be taken to him."
t
Mild Weather due when fog lifts
7
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,.
Pcinel still favors Quail Hill
as site for new civic center
But advisory committee has a second choice
shou ld location be unacceptable to residents
ejlltes from the Woodbndge and
Culverdale communities. Four such
meetings were held in recent weeks.
The ad visory committee's new
report, made public today. states that
Quail Hill remains the first choice of
five of the nine committee members. By PffiL SNEIDERMAN
CM•Dllr .... IWI
An advisory committee. reaffirm-
ing an earlier recommendation. said
Quail Hill is the best site for an Irvine
Civic Center.
But the committee. acknowledging
that Quail Hill may not be acceP.table
to nearby residents. also identified a
"next-preferred site" in the proposed
Village 14. borderin& the Irvine
Business Complex.
The Ci ty Council is expcted to
make a decision Tuesday niaht on
where to build the long.awaited Civic
Center. The complex, with an esti·
mated price taJ of $30 million,
tentatively will include a city hall.
It's lights out
as car strikes
CdM signal pole
Before coming to mt.on iis side on
a Corona del Mar sidewalk Saturday,
a wayward car struck a bus stop post,
wiped out a traffic si&nal control box
and destroyed a traffic signal pole,
according to police.
The damage knocked out traffic
siJDals at 1he intersection of
Maraucrite Avenue and Pacific Coast
Hiahway from shon ly before 7 a.m.
until about noon.
The dri ver. 24-year-old Marian
Young of Laauna Beach, was treated
at Hoag Hospital for head and facial
injuries. She was arrested on suspi-
cion of driving while under the
inflence of alcohol, police said.
OC fire captain
held on warrant
A man identified as an Orange
County fire captain was arrested by
Newport Beach police late Thursday
on a drunken driving warrant, ac-
cording to records.
John Patrick McNeilly, 38. of
Corona del Mar was arrested at the
city police station near Newport
Center and held on $2,500 bail.
The warrant was iJS ued out of
Harbor Municipal Court in Newpon
Beach.
Just Call
642-8088 D= tt Guetenteed
MOl\Ofy-,1ioty " ~ 00 "°' ~ .. "°"' ~ Or • 30 p "' , .. belolt 7 p Ill
anCI YOU! copy Wiii bt --ti!
lll'Glf ttl(I lunoti " ~dOl'IOl r_,_
coo, OJ 1 • "' i.iore
10 • "' ...., '°"' CICOI' ..
bt .,.....,"°
police facilit)', public auditorium and
branch library.
At least 12 possible locations have
~n reviewed over the past eight
years.
The proposed Civic Center would
take the place of the interim offices
and police faci li ties the ci ty now owns
and leases at Jamboree Boulevard
and McGaw A venue.
Last May. the council approved a
2.>acrc site at Alton Parkway and
Culver Drive in the undeveloped
Village 14. also known as Wcstpark.
But in November, an advisory com-
mittee announced it favo red a site in
the scenic. rolling agricultural area
called Quail Hill. south of the San
Diego Freeway and cast of University
Drive.
In January. numerous residents
from the nearby University Park
community voiced objections to the
Quail Hill plan, charging that the
proposed Civic Center would spoil
the natural terrain and create traffic
problems in their neighborhoods.
The council directed its advisory
committee to meet with representa-
ti ves from five Uni versity Park
homeowner associations and del-
The repon SB)S that 1f 1he council
finds Quatl Hill unacceptable. the
next choice should be within a 60-acre
parcel 1n Village 14 -but not the
same ViUAie.14 site approved last
year b) the council.
The new Village 14 site would be
bounded b) Barranca Road, Harvard
A venue. Alton A venue and Peters
Canyon Wash.
Assistant Cit) Manager Paul Brady
Jr .. chairman of the advisory commit·
tee. said supponers of 1his site have
pointed out that ii is near a business
area and would not intrude on
res1dent1al neighborhoods. He said
the Civic Center could be built here in
conjunction with a large community
park alread earmarked for this area.
He said the new Village 14 site is in
the Irvine Act1v1ty Corridor, a section
already designated for commercial
development.
At Tuesday's meeting, the council
is expected to select a Civic Center
location and to a~provc a method of
financing the project. Irvine officials
believe the Civic Center will take
about three years to design and
construct.
Services held for Mesa 's
Lillian Taylor La Perle
Funeral services were held Tuesday
for Lillian Taylor la Perle of Costa
Mesa. a resident of the Harbor Arca
since 1925. who died Feb. 16 in Santa
Ana. She was 87.
Mrs. La Perle, a real estate broker.
had been a member of the Newpon
Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of Re-
altors sincr 1944. She was born in Los
AnJelcs.
Costa Mesa. who died Feb. 19 at Hoa&
Memorial Hospital. She was 75.
Mrs. McKclvic. who was born in
Compton. had hved in Costa Mesa
since 1960.
She is survived by her stepson.
David R. Stretz. of Twin Peaks, Calif.
MUdred Scbmlu
She is survived by a son, Georae R.
La Perle. of Bakersfield and a daugh-
ter. Marie J. Harris. of Costa Mesa.
Also survivina arc I 0 arandchildren.
Scrvic.cs were conducted at St.
Service have been conducted for
Mildred L. Schmitz of Costa Mesa
who died Feb. I 7 at Hoag Memoriai
Hospital in Newpon Bc1ch. She was
87. Joachim's Catholic Church with in-
terment following in Calvary Cem-
etery, Los Anaeles.
Mrs. Schmitz is survived by a
brother. Cecil Hilts of Kansa~ and a nephew. Robert N. Hacker Of \,.anop
Park. She also leaves a close friend
Susan Stein of Orange. ' Jf.adellae JldC•lrie
Private funeral services have been
held for Madeline L. McKelvit of
Interment was held at City View
Cemetery in Salem. Ore.
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