HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-02-28 - Orange Coast PilotTOllOMOW:
NEWPORT IEACH
~
Tempers, rubberburningi~CdM
Spyglass Hi ls residents fear children -
may get hurt as result of errant drivers
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of ... ...,,... ....
No one has cau&ht them in the act,
bqt they've left their marks on the
wide roadways that wander through
the exclusive Spyglass Hill neigh-
borhood of Corona dcl Mar.
Planning a wedding?
Check out today's special
Promises to Keep suppl-
ment.
Nation
Pan Am strike leaves
39,000 stranded passen-
gers with only 14 of 400
daJlyfllghts leaving U.S.
runways./ A5
Diplomat-statesman
Henry Cabot Lodge Is
dead at the age of 82./ A4
World
Three Chinese enter-
teiners are convicted of
spying for Taiwan./ A4
Boating
Forty-five yachts will start
the Newport-to-Cabo
San Lucas race March 9.
That's a lot more than the
seven boats In the In-
augural race In 1971./81
Boating columnist Almon
Lockabey writes about
the Importance of having
a lookout ./81
Sports
The Orange Coast Col-
lege women · s basketball
team falls to Compton,
81-7 4, In Shaughnessy
playoff actlon./C3
Entertainment
NBC's peacock Is flutter-
ing toward Its first finish
out of the Nielsen cellar In
1 O years./83
Gen. Douglas MacArthur.
the•' American Caesar.''
will be examined In a TV
documentary two nights
next week./84
Bualneu
Companies such as MCI
and Sprint are hoping the
gradual switch to "equal
acceas" to the long-dis-
tance circuits will bring
them some of the $11.27
billion In Interstate tele-
phone calls that AT&T
handled last year ./81
INDEX
Boating B 1-2
Bridge 85
Bulletln Board A3
lullnett 86-7
Claaltn.d CS-7
Comlct 86
Croeeword C7
Deeth Notlcel ea
Hor09CC>pe C6
Ann Lander• 82
Optnk>n A6-7
PIP8'uzl 81
Police Log A3
PubHo Notices CS SJ>ot1• C1·4
Televtlk>n 82 .,....,. ~
W......, A2
Parallel streaks of burnt rubber arc
the footprints of what Spyglass resi-
dents say has become a dangerous
problem -reckless drivers.
Leo Hanna. who lives in the
neighborhood. says dozens of skid
marks can be seen at the bottoms of
Still no
si'n~f m1ss1ng
flier .:
Offshore airplane
crash a puzzlement:"
3rd search fruitless
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .... 0.-, .... ...,.
A third underwater search off the
coast of Newport Beach Wednesday
failed to unravel a growing mystery
that has surfaced in the wake of an
airplane crash this week that killed
two people and left a third unac-
counted for.
lnvesti~tors said they have no
proof a third person was nding in the
two-"Seat. single-engi ne plane but
admit there is ample suspicion.
The bodies of Richard Michael
Brownell, 27. and Sa ndra L. O'Grady,
25. were discovered in the wreckage
of the Cessna I 52 just hours after the
pre-dawn crash Tuesday.
Both were still strapped to their
seats in the airplane. located in about
48 feet of water near 1hc Newport
Pitt. According to officials, neither
.. .,.. • licensed pilot.
Brownell and O'Grady, described
as close friends. left a Westminster
nightclub late Monday with a third
(Pleue 11ee PLAKE/ A2)
Mental
hospital
rejected
for Deluca
By STEVE MARBLE OftlMOllllyNotl._,.
Accused killer Gabriel Deluca will
no1 be moved to ::i state mental
hospital while awaiting a second
murder tnal. Orange County u-
pcnor Court Judge Luis Cardenas
ruled this week.
Lawyers representing the Hunt-
ington Beach man asked that the 19-
year-old Deluca be transferred from
Oran'c County Jail to Patton State
Hospital because he 1s mentally ill.
Cardenas said there was not
enough evidence that Deluca 1 in
need of"special" attention. The Judge
also denied a request that a pri vate
psychiatrist be appointed to treat
Deluca at the county jail.
Deluca allegedly has tncd 10 com-
mit suicide three times since his arrest
for allegedly killing Huntington
Beach mail camer Ida Jean Haxton
He is being held 1n protective custody
at the county j:.ul.
Judith Sanders. one of Dcluca's
court-appoi nted attorneys. said her
client is seen only once or twice a
month by a psychologist for li ve to
30-minutc sessions.
··He's just acning crazier." Sanders
said. "Now he has scratches on one
side of his face so he' apparently hurt
himself aaain ...
(Pleue eee DELUCA/ A2)
Under
theB:
Bucks
for kids
When )Outh arouPI need to ra1
money, they u1ually_ sell cand bar~.
waih tan or rame off somcthi na I 1ke a
donated pc>ruhk' t(ltvmon K't. But
steep hills, around bends in the road,
even be ide a s1an ~plcadina for
motorists to dnvc carefully.
"We're afraid someone eventually
is aoing to act hurt," he says. "There
are children in our neighborhood and
you can't always be ccnain when a
child might be 1n the street."
Hanna doesn't know who the
cul prits are. but he has heard them at
night, screeching their tfres. In some
cases. Hanna says he has seen traces
Comtnaatyou
of oil on the road, which appertntly
aids the reckless driven in.their wild-
spinning manuevera.
Hanna has photoaraphed the skid
marks at several focation1 in the
nciahborhood and has alerted New-
port Beach police to the problem.
But Sgt, Ch\M:k Olmstead. the
dcpanmcnt's supcrvisoT of traffic
enforcement, says apprehendina
reckless drivers in local neigh-
borhoods is difficult.
Rob Balala of lllMloa Viejo aet. airborne OD b1a poto 8tlck
wlalle hlaall B'.h•lll of L&Cuna Hllla wanna •P la tlae
bac~d u tlae memben of the Jetatar Poto 9ttek
DemOD8tratloD T--abow their atuff at UC Intne. 8aaU
once pocoed 19 boan and 125, 102 jumpm to earn a place la
tbe Oalnn .. Book al World Record•.
.. They have focused on a problem
that exists in one mall area,"
Olms~ad says ... Bu t, unfortunately,
this is not a unique problem to
Spyglass Hill. We hear repons of
people burning rubber in several
areas."
Because of the specific requests
from Spyalus Hill, however.
Olmstead has asked tbc helicopter
and patrol officers to keep an eye out
1n that n~i~borhood for the rcckle s
dnvcrs.
"I've also a kcd the people then! to
call us as quicldy as posJible when
they see or hear them:· Olm1ttad
said. "for us to, is.sue an infraction,
the violation hu to be committed in
our presence."
Olmstead said ifpohcc hrirrepons
of a pamcular car or dover continu-
a II) dnv1na recklessly. officen can
often deter the dnver witb a *lmina
(Ple&M ... RltC&LS89/ A2)
Chemical junk
of two decades
perils sea life
Pollution affects
\
homeowners along
with fish and birds
By tlte Associated Press
LOS ANGELES (AP)-Chemical
wastes such as DDT, PCB and
cyanide were dumped in the ocean off
Southern California for two decades
beg.inning in 1947 and remain a threat
to marine life and coast.al residents. a
television station reported.
The chemicals nave poisoned fish ,
killed birds and pose a conunuina
health hazard for bcachfront home-
owners. KCBS-TV reported Wcdncsr
day evening. attnbuung iu infor-
mation to government documents
and manne biologists.
Earlier Wednesday, a UnJVCTStty of
Southern California research team
released a study showing that hiah
levels of polychlorinatcd biphenyl
(PCB) and DOT were found in the
tissues of such fish as the Pacific
bonito. quecnfish and the Pacific
mackerel, as well as in seals and
dolphins that feed on them.
KCBS quoted one biologist as
saying the dump site 20 miles nonb of
(Pleue eee OC&AN/A2)
Parking structure
runs over budget
By LISA MAHONEY
Of .. .,., .......
la&una Bcach"s new parking ~truc
turc will take longer and cost more
than expected. the city's munin pal
services director says.
Rain and rock are the culpnts
behind a 25-daycxtension the Cit) ha!t
granted Hamilton Contractors to
complete the project. Tcrry Brand t
says. And those same elements prom-
ise to result ma bigger bill for the 1"0-
story garage under co~stru<:tion on
Glenneyrc Street, he said.
Construction emplo)ecs lost about
a month's wonh of \\Ork da} s to rain )
weather causing dela}s in la)ing 1he
slab for the SI 28 mil hon garagl'
Brandt said
ubsurface water and rock. which
proved harder than expected. also
meant a subcontractor had to s~nd
1np1-the ume anticipaled dnvmi
p1IM to suppon the building. he said.
Brandl \a}'S Hamllton Contractors
plans to su bmit a bill fo r the c~tra
work. and although he docs not ye1
~no~ th e ::1moun1. am extra cost will
e'CC<'d cont1ngenc1es 00 lhe proJCCl.
The lll\ ~111 ha'e to dig up the
funds \Oml·~ here or ··cut back on
'°me1hing · hl' ~td
tinder the l'\lt'n'i1on, ~ork on the
garagl' "h1ch llc.•gan in September is
no" schedulrd IO end June 17.
The garal_?c "hllh 1s eApccted 10
add I :!5 nn~ parL.ing spaces down-
111~ n. " ksc, 1han 20 percent com·
pk1e
Second suspect in NB
hit-run crash arrested
By STEVE MARBLE
Ollfleo.llyl'tlellt.ff
A Costa Mesa man "ho alkgcdh
tned 10 CO\Cr up the 1dent1t} lll .10
acc used hu-and-run dn' er ~ho
struck and cnucall~ injured I"<'
bicyclists last November. ~as ar-
rested at hts rts1dcnce earl~ toda'
Hassan Asshar. J2. wa charged
with bcin8an accc\SOI) to 1hc "'n' 11
h11-and-run .in:tdent on Dover Dnve
in Newpon Beach. \atd traffic m-
' e\ltgator Rick Bradlc).
\1arganto .\cc' C!i. 19. and
')ah ad or D1a1 18. were b 1C}Ch ng
home from their ~ttchen JObs at the
Rud>c n E L<'c Re taurant "hen the\
"ere htt from behind b} a woman
dn' 1ng a stht'r Da1 .. un 280Z.
(Pleue eee NEWPORT/ A2)
Toppled pole stalls traffic
Traffic w• t>ac:Ked up along a..cn 8each Boulevard Wedn 11 day
WMf't the top of a power pote was toppled after a tl'Uett atruok a
1Upport wtre to the pote, otflclala tald.
The aoctdent, at the tntereectlon of BMch BouleYW'd Md
tMdlaon Street In Midway City, kn<><*ed out eewtaf traffic••
Ind 8'owed trafftc notth of the 405 Freeway.
Most of the power, wttlch wu dlanlpted In the 4:20 p.m. 11eddent. w ,....ored by 5 p.m .• eccordtng to 8fft Compton, aru ~
for Che Southern Calltornla Edl90f'I Co.
The truck drtwr was making a turn when he hit the support wer..
Compton said.
----------------------------------------,.
S1mam
F 0 CIJ \ 11 ~ I ... N t .,. s
tho~ a~ us~lly once+yar proJCCl
that raise hmncd amouaH of money.
In Irvine, pertnll intmt on hclp1na hl.lh 1Cbool a1hktic teuM and mu 1c
aroups have tumcd ift~ad tO a
popular pashmc that hes helped
churthn ind other non-~fit aroups
balancc &heir book. -binao.
"We feel it will r1111t more mone),"
\!ltd Fred Gahm. a ~u·cha11n1 man·
a1cr whote son Ocoff ii 1 drum mlJ()r
1n the Irvine Htah 5".hool bind and a
clannet pla)cr in the orcMltra. •• nd
1t atl nd of tht ll:idl he"'"I to tell
candy and th•~ to tt.. tame flmtl
memben and f~ .. , ....... 81RQO/AaJ
Laguna school workers,
district call for mediator
By U SA MAHONEY
Of .. 0.-, ........
mcd111or will tra\CI to Luuna
Beach March 16 to try to btta\; an
1mpusc declared in contl'Kt talks
bet-.c-cn 1he hoot distnct> and its
eta 1ticd employee
Linda Bunon, president of the
d1 tnct ch~ter of tht C'alifomta
hoot Em O)"ttS SS0(1at1on. •>
the bone o tontcnt1on betwttn lM
as\OC1atton ind the cbstnct 11 job
unty.
Mort than 60 houn of talks over
nine month could not rnolve the i ue. he 11KS. so last Wttk offk11J
for both sicks 'lned Pll'ftl ~ t· •na a rMdiator. DI\ id Han. a ~ffttliat ~ from •
pn:v1ou con1ral i \tall~ ha\ ~-en
asstgncd b) 1hc Put">hc [mJ'lln)n'
Rclallon Board to tf) to caSt labor
and management 1n10 acrnrd ~uf'Cr·
1ntcndcn1 81ll1c Ra m"' '-'Hf
A 1at1on and d1\tr111 neJO·
tiaton ha\e prttt) much .1e""-·t1 1t1 aartt on the amount ot :a l'"._.,,_
It\ •na 1 nttca fi r eta "tied "11t!..l'"·
Bunon 1o11d Alth up dt\tm t 111·
rteiaJ hiH• d«ltn('d to dl\4. U\\ lhl'
M90tia1ion Burton d1sdo-.c<l lhat
the d111nct hi' oncr~-d a ' ricrn.•1n 'llal')'~ _inC"Ta :ind an oddt1 mnal
524,000 hike 10 he dt~anbuttJ amona
1heemplo 1 brin1thc1tpo 1110M
cloltr to the ov r«Ct\ C'J t'I\
.. orken • do 1m1 r JOb\ in other
dt\trK1"
Thl• ol1cr " I pcru~nt ~h' ol thc 6
p..·ru·nt rn'lt-ol-li v1f\g 1ncrra~ the
0\~11111on v.;inl\ but Burton \a)~
!ht' <1moun1 " clo~ tno h for a
l't1mrwm1"''
The '11d." 1 \ue that neither 1de
ha .. ix-en a hie to v• P'\'it ti. v. hethcr JOb
'(" unt' \hould ht-a nc: ot1able 11em.
Burton Yid
(l.1\ 1fil'\.I ranh -<'mplo C't1 who
arc nt"tthcr tc he~ nor ldm1ni\-trato~ -h&\C ~n d«1mat~ tn
ret"C'nt )Cl!'\ b c t·SI\ 1na action
adm1n1\1r tot\ \.8) arc n r} to
rn~ v.11h nn in \late tunJ1na thlt ao
hand in h nd v.:1th d«hnina fnrol·
lmcn1
'lchoo1 bu \ no lo~r roll rrom •
(Pl ....... M&DIATOa/ A.2)
rathe r IDlames sibling
., ... ~tff Praa
Two brothers who all~edly un· penonatcd lawyers and bHked U(l·
kao~na clients out of more thin
SIOO,OOOpltaded inn~nt tocharacs
OI C)Olltlpiracy to practice law wit bout
a lkentt, fraud and 192 counts of
theft.
However. Frank Vesttra. 34.
claimed in a statement in coun
Wednesday that he believed bis
brother, John V~ra. 28 bllldamftl
bis taw dtal'M from the iJnivenicy or
Southern California and that Jobn V~ra made the bulk of tbt pej(s
coun appearancet.
The Vesccras, both convicted bur·
&Ian, are accused of openina a botus faw office in Santa Ana last April and
takina in mo tly poor clients, many of
them suspected ille.111 aliens and
entcrinaauilty picas for relatively low
fees.
Howtvcr. b«aute the V~ras
never took a case to triaJ, many of thc
clionll are strvina terms tn jail,
Dtrty District Attorney Jan Nolan ui , and they are entJtled to new
trials.
.. TheY, wreaked havoc on 11\e ltt.tJ
S)'1tem. ' Nolan said.
Superior Court Judae Richard
Lucsebrink stt thc brothers' blil at
S l S0.000 each .
MEDIA TOR DUE IN SCHOOL TALKS •..
From A l
district prqe. Pincttte Transpor-
tation is under contract to provide
students with a ride to school. More
than half the custodial positions in
the district arc held by employees of a
building maintenance firm. and
Irvine Industrial Maintenance Co.
workers perform the jobs that four
district-hired maantenan~ workers
used to perform.
Contracting for help 1s cheaper
because the district no longer has to
pay insurance and other benefits to
those employees. It can also make
some money by selling uneeded buses
and equipment, Clyde Lovelady,
business manaaer says.
Burton, who represents the 48
clerical, cafeteria and custodial em-
ployees who remain. says the associa-
tion understands .. declining enrol-
lment and thina.s like that." But the
CSEA should have some say in
district plans affectina its members.
she said.
The association wants contract
language that would force the djstrict
to discuss future contractina plans
wi th negotiators. Right now. admin-
istl'lltnr<i 'imply have to notify the
assoc1at1on IO days before it intends
to contract for services.
Lovelady declined to discuss the
district's hesitance to change contract
language. He maintains that the
district has cut as deeply into the
classified reserve as it can to still
operate effectively.
That may be so. Burto n says, bul
makina further cuts a matter of
negotiation would case employees'
fears that temporary secretaries and!
food service company may soon bC
taking their place.
OCEAN WATERS ENDANGERED .•.
From Al
Santa Catalina Island and 11 miles
west of the Palos Verdes Peninsula
could be the worst ocean pollution
disaster of its type in world history.
"The site's been marked on the
navigational chans for years as a
dump," said Rimmon Fay, a marine
biologist who owns the Pacific Bio-
Marine research firm near Marina del
Rcr,.
· This is the first I've heard of it."
said David Cohen, an EPA spokes~
man contacted late Wednesday in
Washington. D.C. '"It's an ex-
traordinary case. I'm certain that
there are no ocean dump sites
currently on our superfund list ...
Fay said his studies have shown the
deadly effects of chcmicaJs on marine
life for years in Southern California
coastal waters. Fish populataons have
been decimated and remaining speci-
es show hiah concentrations of toxic
chemicals, he said.
Another biologist. Robert Riscn-
brough of the University of Cali-
fornia at Santa Cruz. told KCBS:
"This was the worst case of coastal
pollution that we know of .... Based
upon all the information that we have
111s stall a hotspot of contamination in
the eJobal perspective."
Rasebrough said two species of
birds disappeared from the area
because of DDT contamination.
The Un1 vcrs1ty of Southern Cali-
fornia study showed high levels of
PCBs. which are suspected of causing
cancer. and DDT. the now-banned
pest1c1de. in tissue of fish that were
caught between Santa Monica and
Long Beach.
Last December, a report issued by
the Southern California Coastal
Water Research Project found ex-
tremely high levels of PCB and DDT
in mammals such as seals and
dolphins.
'"Mammals were feeding on fish
that were also heavily contaminated
with PCBs and DDT," said Richard
Gossett. a SCCWRP marine re-
ascarcher.
USC pathology professor Harold
W. Puffer said all of the contaminated
fish are frequently caught and eaten
by local sport fishermen.
Puffer's research team interviewed
1.059 anglers. finding that half fished
at least once a week. that 82 percent
regularly ate white croaker, 17 per-
cent ate Pacific bonito and that the
white croaker was caught about one-
third "of the time.
"There have been animal studjes
that clearly indicate that PCB cqn-
tamination has caused reproductive
and hean abnormalities and even
chromosomal changes," Puffer said.
.. But there have been no human
studies."
According to KCBS, almost 2
million pllons of sludae containina
traces of DDT were dumped at the
ocean site in 1957 and 1958. Acids,
napalm and such chemicals 11
berylium and formaldehyde also were
dumped at the site, KCBS said.
It was estimated that the offshore
area of Southern California was
contaminated by as much as 1.9
million kilograms of commercial
DDT between 1950-1972.
The Montrose Chemical Co. of
Torrance, which was identified jn the
broadcast as a source of DDT-tainted
sludge. formerly operated a plant on
Normandie Boulevard that manufac-
tured DDT.
NEWPORT HIT-RUN ARREST •••
From Al ·
The two Costa Mesa residents were
left sprawled unconscious in a bike
lane on the shoulder of the roa,d. Diaz
sustained a broken neck and Aceves
suffered head injuries.
Officer Bradley said pohcc found
the sports car abandoned at the
condominimum complex in Costa
Mesa where Asshar lives. Hairs from
both victims were fou nd embedded
in the car's windshield and sun roof.
said Bradley.
Police identified the driver of the
car as Rhonda Joan Buo nato. 24. of El
Toro but did not arrest her until the
following month when pohce fo und a
witness. Bradley said.
Buonato. free on her own re-
cognizance. is awaiting trial for felony
hit-and-run driving.
Asshar. reponedly drivi ng in front
ofBuonato at the timc oft he accident.
later drove the woman home after
permitting her to leave the damaged
sports car near his re~idence. Bradley
claimed.
He said Asshar also returned to the
scene of the accident but did not
render first aid to the injured men.
'"Despite all the ads and the news
articles. he never came forward," said
Bradley. "And when we confronted
him. he denied being involved."
A warrant for Asshar's arrest was
signed Wednesday by Municipal
Court Judge Selim Franklin after a
witness reportedly identified the man
as an accomplice.
Asshan is being held in lieu of of
$2,500 bail at the Newport City Jail.
DELUCA STAYS IN COUNTY JAIL ••• From Al
Haxton. a 37-year-old U.S. Post
Service employee and mother of two.
was attacked and killed Jan. 3, 1984 as
she delivered mail in Dcluca's upper-
class neighborhood an Huntington
Beach.
Her battered body was fo und the
same day in the trunk of her mail car.
which had been abandoned at a
church parking lot an Costa Mesa.
John Dolan, Deluca's other at-
torney. acknowledged during the trial
that Deluca killed Haxton. but said
has chent should be found not guilt)
because he was '"unconscious·· at the
time of the attack.
Dolan claimed Deluca had smoked
manJuana and gulped tequila and
does not recall killing Haxton.
Deluca, a former student at Edison
High School an Huntington Beach.
was convicted June 13 of first-degree
murder.
But Superior Coun Judge Leonard
McBnde overturned the conv1ct1on
.
and ordered a new trial after defense
attorneys successfully argued they
had not seen a piece of evidence
important to their case.
Since then, McBride disqualified
himself from the case.
Deputy District Attorney Bryan
Brown appealed McBride's ruling but
a decision o n whether to uphold the
conviction has not been reached.
A new tnal date will be set July 12 if
the appeal is reJected.
PLANE CRASH STILL A MYSTERY ...
From Al
86clel wll be fair In 8ou1hem c-..omie ttwougt\ Frtd•y ••otPt for ., ... Of petchy Mtly mornlno doucl• Ol'I the ooat end too In the vallyl. the Netlonel w .. thlt s.vtoe .-..
High preeeure ~Into ..,Id• and U.an kept tow ck>ud•
and fog '"trlet.ct to the cont Mrty tOCS.y •her 1 WMk or dMI>
lntruelon by• MnM marine 11yer. By Friday, howtYer, the high
~· will weaken .. a trOUQh of low preuure mow. IOU1f\ from the north«n Roctclilt Ind tMcoatt .. fog and 10w ~ wN1
begin to lnc:r .. M .
Along the Orange Cout It wlll ~ fair through Friday ••ceot
ar111 or l•t• night and Mrly motnlng low cl<>Ydt ,,.., the cOltt
and p1tchy ..,1y morning fog In the velleyt. Lowe 38 to <45 In the
vllt9yt Ind 47 to 53 near the cout. Hlgh1 In the 801 near the cout and 70. lnl1nd,
Temp• 1(-Clty 41 2t ••<3'* 'MHTI· LaVtOM .. .... W•m-co-.~ Liiiia Aodl " 30
Hl9fl, 1vow IC)f 2 .. llOut9 ~ 91 I Loutevtlf 60 ... 0ceweo._ Si."°'*Y _.. •I
am ~ 56 31 Sflow9r• "-'""'"' Snow "'Le Miami INCl'I n .. ...... .... ~NOM.UI Dll>40I~ All>My 49 12 Mll'#eulll• :M 2•
~.,. 1.2 44 Mpll41Ptt.11 37 30
H 37 H ...... 51 2t
Mcllcw ... 39 H NewOtllena 12 54
Allen!• eo II NewYOfll 115 24 Calif. Temp• lliellop N a1
Allllntlc Olly 59 2t Ok~Olty 52 37 tllyllle II ...
Auatln 6t ... Omaha •• 33 C.tlllna •1 " lklllimofe 67 2t Orlando ... IO H~. IO'l\'fe>t 24 l\outl endlOQ•l 5a.m l.Ofll hecll 83 52
lir"*IOfllll 65 33 ~· M 22 Monr-" ..
llllnwell 47 31 ""-'Ill u IO W...iillel 7t 4t M0t1larey eo ..,
loM 40 ff Pi11t~ 40 17 I!~• 10 .. , Mt Wll9on ., 43
llollOtl 63 •• Porll . Me 51 14 ,,_ 76 •• Oflt.,IO 75 42
llllflllo 3t 10 P0tll.,,d. 0.. ti 35 LMCUlar 72 :M P...otna 71 ....
Caepar 311 21 Provldlnc9 53 19 Lo.Aft(lllM 71 52 ~ n " ClwlMlon.S C 77 M =lty 16 32 Olilltnd 89 ... San ..,,,.,dine> 7t .,
CNtltllOtl w v •• " IO 22 P-Aooiee 70 37 l1111G1bfte1 75 ..
ClleftoUe.N C at ,. Aeno 511 23 A.a lllul! 71 49 Sar1JoM 71 43
CNyeM4I .. 2 27 Alcllmond .. 30 AeClwood City 75 41 8-nla Alli . ., ,,
~. 33 22 St LOUii 31 27 Sect-to 71 .. , ,.,, .. Cr\12 • u ... 20 SI P-.. T 11t!1P1 12 62 ~ ... 42 TW-Vf/ley 12 32 Seti Dil90 82 5' QlwMncl 33 ,, San IAlll Cll)' 31 II Sen Franc:llCo M 60 YOMmlll V°'t • 13
~bua.Oll 42 24 Sen An10tllo u 60
Concord,HH 52 13 Sa11 Jua11.P A 19 72 la11ta Batbllf• 5t 45
Del!N-FI W0ttn $8 ... S1811Mllfll 16 04 Stodl111t1 76 ... Tlde1 Otyton '4 22 s..tua 53 3t Hlgll. 10W IOI' 24 llOuft anding 11 5 O m
0..-43 M $9°'1-.. , 29 ~ 72 at
o..~ 44 32 SY'-40 , .. !Ilg a-M II TOOAY
Oelfoh 38 21 T~• ... 2t Seool>d nigh IMo.m u
Oululll 21 27 ,_ 76 51 Secondlow &·Up.m 21
llPaeo ., 51 Tui,t 62 32 Surf report '•oo .. 5 ,, Waahlft9ton 57 2tl ,,.,,y ,......,. M m WICMa so 30 Fnt lllgll 4•12&.m. ....
Clflnd Rapid• 31 18 w11t ... a.rra ... 11 LOCATION ll:Zll ....... Fkll IOw 12.17p.m u
GfMlfalll 4& ,. HUntl(IOton ~ 1-3 ,.., Second fllol> 7:Mp.m u
Hartford 5t 15 "'-.iltty. IMWpOn I poor 8-tdlOw 1:05 o.'" u
Helene 42 34 Extended 40lllS~.~ ' poor
~ 12 72 22nd SllMI. Newpott I poor Sun Ntl 1~ at 5·4t om . ,,...
Houtilon M 52 8llOOa Wedgot ' poor Fndey at t 22 a_m lflCI Mii ~ 111' ..
lnClllNpolle 35 22 Flllr 111oeot OIW11y Cloudy 8lld bt.ay LllQl.tllllMoll I poor p,m.
JICl!aon.MI " 35 It tlfMe Saturday 111t:;rc Mond:t SenQwnenll I poor Moon lllal IOdltY •• 11:17 ._"'"· ..
~ II M HlgN Ill 1111 to. Ind lowar OI LOW Wat• *"9 N F~ It I 22 Im Ind r1MI ..-i II
""'-41 M ttw -Ind lowar so. a... dlrectlorl· ....,.._. 12:0 Pl'll.
Dellr ......... ., ...._,~......,
Wamlnll •tan apparently tanored by reckleee drt•ere on Carmel Bay ln 8Pflll ... Rill.
RECKLESS DRIVERS IN CDM •••
From Al '
a nd a stem lecture.
If caught. violators can be cited for
exhibition of speed and, possibly, a
misdemeanor offense punishable by a
fine of up to about S 100. O lmstead
Restaurant
cash register
tappedinHB
said.
Contrary to what some residents
believe, the rubber-bumin' drivers
arc not always the stereotypical teen-
agers trying out the new engine
Huntington Beach police are
searching for someone who stole S400
to $500 from a restaurant cash
register when the cashier left it
unattended.
Police said the theft occurred
Wednesday evening at the Skinny
Haven Restaurant, 7702 Edtnger
Ave.
The cashier told police a man was
they've rebuilt in the garage.
.. He could be a 35-year-old in bi5
new Porsche." Olmstead said. '"They
just get foot happy."
loitcnng at the front of the restaurant
shortly before the then.
She told police she stepped away
from the register brieOy. When she
returned she saw the drawer open, the
money Jone and the man walking
briskly from the business.
The suspected thief was described
as a white man. age 19-21. about 6 feet
tall. man. according to w11nesses at the
nightclub.
The man's car later was found at
John Wayne Airport parked where
the Cessna normally was tied down,
sa id Orange County ShcnfT Lt. Dack
Olwn.
pany spokeswoman said.
The airplane, owned by a Seal
Beach resident. 1<; used by a Oyingclub
that includes a large number of
McDonnell Douglas workers.
authorities said.
person 1n the cockpit would create '"precarious" fl yi ng conditions. rr-=======================;;;;;;;;;;;.,. _____________ _
'"But anything's possible," added
Olson. "If you can fit 20 people in a
phone booth I suppose nothing's
im possible."
'"But we're not \ll y1ng he was
aboard that plane.·· <oa1d Olson. '"We
don't know that."
The man. 1den11fied as Kevan Lee
E1sem1nger. has not been seen since
the early-morning plane crash.
Eascm1ngcr as employed as a precision
inspector at McDonnell Douglas
Corp. in Huntington Beach, a com-
Just Call
642-6086
Monday Ftoa.ty " ,..,.. Ori
nol IWY9 yOU! pa,,._ D~
&Jl>Olfl ulo.fqe 1pm
tM 1°"' COO'f '*. Cle ..-.a
Olson said anvest1jators onganally
discounted thc possibahty of a third
person being aboard the airplane
simply because oft he small sizc of the
plane scockp11
A spokesman for Mart an A v1a11on
at John Wayne Airport said the
Cessna 152 has two scats and as
designed to carry no more than two
people He o;a1d the presence ofa third
The f usclage of the sangle-en,ine
airplane as scheduled to be raised
from the ocean Friday by a private
salvage company. Olso n said a
sheriffs scuba team has inspected the
sunken c raft three times since the
crash.
A coronor'sdeputy said 1fthere was
a third person aboard the plane. 11 is
hkely the body was thrown or washed
clear of the wreckage.
What do you llke 1bout tbt Dally Pilot? Wlaat doa't you like? Call tile
Hmber at left aad JMr me1111e will be recordt4, Crauc:rtbecl aad dellverri
to Ult appropriate e41tor.
The same U -laotlr u1werla1 service may be 1aed to rffOrd ltlttrs to tile
editor oa any toptc. CMlrlbutors to oar Letter• c.l•m• mHI l1ch1de tlaelr
aame and telepltooe 11mber for verification. NiP clrC11l1tlotl callJ, pltaH.
Tell us wb1111 M YMr mlll4.
ORANGE COAST
DlilyPilal
H.L. Schwartz Ill
Publisher
Clrculatlon 11•1ea.-an
Cla .. "led edvwtlelftl 714/M2....,..
AH other..........,. .. IU-G21
MAIN °''ICI
110 Wftt S.y St C0t1a ~ CA
M.-t <l<l<"'' II• • tsec> ec.te ..._ CA 9JtU
0-turOly 111\d S-y II I'°" dO not •K-yOU!
copy 0y 7 a m c.• oet0te 10 a m *'Cl .,_ c.oc>y
frank Zlnl
Managing Editor
K•r•n Wittmer
Advertlling Director
Coc>r<9'' •!lal Ot111'9tC:-~~....,
-llOtoft -"•10"4 tclo1orllll Nn" Or aow<t.w
,,_.. ,,....., .... , tit ·~OOUC*I '"''"°"' ~· ... "-of COP¥r•9f1t -
-~
Ctroutatlon
T1l1pt.oMe
MOtl o.,,. C-1)' ....-~
"'"" -
Ro1emary Churchm•n
Controller
Robert L. Cantrell
Production
Manager
Donald L WIUlam1
Clreulatlon
Manager VOL 71.NO.Oll
'46 Fashion lsl~nd
Newport Beach, CA 92660
71'4-6'40-8310
1
Summer
Silka
Featherweight sport
coats of 100°/o raw silk,
blended silk, wool ,
linen or linen Dacron.
Offered in a variety of
textures, shades and
patterns. Prese nted in
fresh yet classically In-
fluenced styles. Per-
fect for all of your
leisure needs.
C ntlemen's Clothln9
Inspired by Tradition
, Stale Allemblyman Oil .Ferauson. R·Nf!'p0r1 Btach,
wall hos& an o~n ho~ae at hts new diltricl omces Frid&y.
Tht rettpt1on w!ll be held f'rom 4:30 to 7 p.m. a& 4667
MacArthur .Blyd. 1u1te 305. The otfice it k>caled in the
Binther BulldinJ nt~r Ca~pu1 Drive tn Newpon Beach. Ft,.~n. h11 wire Anita and memben or hi1 &mlly and 1taff' wall be on hand to meet tho public.
Women'• ma•lc poap meet.
Siam• Al~a Iota. the international music fratemity
for women, wall celebrate its annual Delta Province Day
Saturday at the Recital Hall of the new music complex at Cal State Lona Beach.
All colleac and alumnae chapters of Southern
California will meet at 8:30 a.m. to register for the day's
acth:itics, which include a luncheon, workshops and
music performance by memben. Call Marie EnaJish at 6 75-211 S for further information.
Tr1vlal Punult tourney •lated
A Triv!al Punu!t tournament will be held Saturday at
7:30 p.m. in 1he Jewish Community Center of South
Oranae County. 298 Broadway, Lquna Beach.
Prizes will be awarded and refreshments will be
served. The tournament as limited to players 21 and older.
and the donation is SI for members and $2 for non-
members.
Reservations arc required and should be phoned to ¢enter coordinator Sherry Hochman at 497-2070.
tlau 61Jltar clau planned
Young JUitarists will be offered a workshop in jazz
guitar techniques Saturday mor:ninaat the Yamaha Music
Education Center, on Jeffrey Road at Irvine Center Drive
In Irvine.
Studio musici an Georae Gilliam will cover scales and
chords and modes for improvisation. Participation is
limited to 20 players and the fee is S 1 S. Call SS9-S440 to
reserve a place.
Tera• grad• to celebrate
Graduates of the Univenity of Teus will celebrate
Texas Independence Day in Irvine Saturday1joinina more
lhan a quarter of a million other Texu Exes 1n recoanizina
lhe state holiday.
' The dinner and celebration will be held at 6 p.m. at the
County Line Restaurant, 4615 Barranca Parkway. The ~ost is S 15 for members and S 17 for non-members. Call
fhairman Glynda Lowther at 759-8661 for additional
information.
La1m bo•len plan tourney I The Santa Ana Lawn Bowlin& Oub will host a charity
koumament Saturday morning to benefit the March of
Dimes.
The event will bqjn at I 0 a.m. at the Santa Ana club.
a61 SN. Valencia. Bowlers should brinaa picnic lunch and
the host dkub will provide coffee. tea and cake. Call Ina
ackson at 8S0.072S.
WC .eek• alumn1 lor game
Golden West College alumni arc bcin& sou&ht for a
r:ir of softball games on March 8 at the colleac.
Golden West alumni will play Orange Coast Collea,e
S p.m. and Golden West at 1 p.m. Practice will be held
3 p.m. Sunday, March 3. for information. contact the
i:oach, Jan Dunlap, at 895-8260.
·-
Fred OaJun calla oat tlae namben.
Thunclay, Feb. 28 Chlld care ald bUl offered • 9 a.m. Oru1e CH •ty Fair Boanl Memorial
Gardens building at tnecounty fairgrounds, s8 Fair Drive,
Costa Me11. State Sen. Marian Bergeson, R-Newpon ~ch. has
introduced a bill which would help finance child care
centers. · • 7 p.m. Meta CoelOIWated Water District beanl,
1965 Placentia Ave., Costa Mesa.
• 7:30 p.m., Lapu Bean BMJ'd of Ech1catloa, SSO
Rlumont St.. Laguna Beach.
SB-566 would amend the state Dcvelofment Financ-
in1 Act to permit the issuance of industria development
bonds to finance child care centers. The lower financing
rates associated witb these bonds would facilitate the
construction of new care centers by private operators.
Bergeson said.
Friday, March 1
• 7 ~:·· Badaatn Be9d City (elemntary) ScHol D11trtct nl er Edwcatlell. schoor district headquarters,
A recent child care study in Orange Cou~ty
determined that the county needs about 6SO more child
care centers to meet the local demand. '204 17 Craimcr Lane.
Bur
bac
larysuspectcoJDes
for keys, arrested
A 1uspec1ed buraJar WM nabbed by
Costa Mesa police Tuesday after he
allqcdly dropped hi1 car key1 in an
1partment bedroom and went beck to
look for them.
Marcial Vuquez, 29, o!Suua Ana
contacted the apartment midlnt and
said a child bed tb.ron bit bys over
I wooden Ince and iJllO tbe lplrt•
ment'a enctoeed pedo.
Vuqua mat.cbed lbe dlecrlptioo
eo.ta--Two suspected Cir thieves were
armt.ed late Wednetdly niltn after
tbty were pulled over for a clefectivc
tail li1tn. Phillip Vincent Maninn,
11, and a 17-year-old boy, both ft'om
Sanaa Ana were ddlined after oolice
ditc0vmd tht car they were ridtna an
had been rcponed stolen I 0 dlya
earlier. Otftcer Joe William• 9*t
stopped the car on NcwPort
louftvard near 17th Stttet 1nd ran a
ticentr c:Mck. Martina was ~
into Costa Mt11 city j11l. where he
remained thia momina in lieu o(
S2S,000 bail. '.The miftOf' wu taken to Oranee County Juvenile Han. • • • A 14 karat aold necklatt, wonh
UOO, wu reponed atoltn tom an
gtenmtat It 1'SS MN V"* Eett. nert wat DO aipl of f'oreed entry.
Tht neddece wu removed from the
'°'oh"'°'*'· • • • . '
of' a bwslar tbe mident bad chued
ou& of tbe apenment minutet earlier.
The culprit wa eeen runnina 10 a car
puked iD tbe Newport VilJlel com-
pln, 635 W. Baker St., about noon.
While Vaquez looked for bit keys,
tbe raident called poUce. The auspect wu fDuDd in tbe pukiftl lot, wllUe the
keys were laser located in the
bedroom.
A penonal check for SllS was
reponed stolen from an 1panmn1 at
6:JS laker SL eometime between 8
a.m. and 7 p.m. Tuetday. Entry
a..,.mttly waa meek by mnoviaa a tcreen to a bedroom window. The
Check wel \lktD ftom I drtaer. • • • Oolf dubl and other sportina •i~t, wor1b S 1,0'°· ~re re-poltid illOlen fh>lll I ..... lft the ~ complex at ISi 2 ht &.1 ~~_bttwten 6:30 1.m. and ~
p.m.sna.y.
lnlM
Two car OWDtft were relievtd of
their , ...... """' by I thief' wlao btob 1 Window on~ vehicle toeet I""*· A .-.o ... IQU8lim val\lld •Sl,000..,.._ . ._~,.~
DlrUd .. IM Oill1ne Avenue .... A
J6001WtO_. llkea tom a carat 20
EMCunvt Part. • • •
I
V11qua was at.ill in custody this
momlna 1t Costa Mesa city jail in lieu
of SlS,000 bail for suspicion of
buf'llary.
Police said the victim Md been in
another room, when he heard aomc-
OM enter thl'OQlh an unlocked
bedroom window. He c:ollhllted the
bu,.._, who fled beck out the
window.
Someone took a S 1.100 steam
cleaner from an Oval Ro.cl aanac
between Sunday and Tuctday, police
said. • • • A mobile ho~ Min IOI at 37
Travel Land Way reponcd tbc theft of
a $600 video ca-• recorder from
OM or its recNllioM1 V9Wc:ta. The
thief 1pperentl)' tried uMUCCC11fulJ)'
to break into two ochen. police said.
~··•ila SomeonebroUinto111~on the
16900 block ot Ai8on0f "· a rnKtmt repontd latt W .... y. TM loel
iwluded tam 1.nd rimt wonb SlOO.
A raident ol d.: HOO block of
Vicbburt reDOnld Wldlinday tlalt
"" lilht bllle l t77 Dltln' '*'• ... MOllft from I Md>oRMll ·ea.ta
plant lot. 'The l• Wll niimileill at
13.500. • • • SomtOM Mole an ortnet m_oc,ect
............ --
BINGO GAMES AID IRVINE SCHOOLS •••
J'romAl --..
Still, Gahm said: '~se(tina up a
weekly binao ~me wasn't u simple
as it sounds. 'None of us had ever
done this before, .. he said ofbis fellow
parent orpnrun.
The blnao .. mes were seen as a way
to help music aroupa and athletic
1cams at Irvine and University hip
schools. (Woodbridae Hi&h has opted
for other fund-ra.itina tactics this
year, Gahm said.) Binao revenue will
be used to buy uniforms and equip-
ment for school musicians and ath·
letes -supplies that cannot be
purchased with school district funds.
Gahm said bint<> orpniurs had
plenty ortime to mean:h the project
while awa.ltina approval last summer
by the Irvi ne Unified School District
Board or Education and the Cit)'
Council. A~ovals were obtained. but the city hmited the orpnizcn to
maximum prizes of $200 per pme.
(State law permits prizes up to S2SO.)
Ironically, the best location for
holdina binao pmes wasn't at either
hi&h lchool. Instead, orpnizers
selected llancho San Joaquin Middle
School becaute it'a a ~n&ral location
with the room (or 200 binto players,
adequate oukina and the necesaary
staae and kitcbeli facilities.
There was an one-time investment
o( s2,ooo for a flashboard and a
machine to mix the numbers. Other
binao supplies have run about S400 to
SSOO per month. ReuntJy, the or-
pnizcra spent Sl.SOO for 10 36-inch--
Wide tables for biftfO players. ~ tables can be used by the school at
other times.)
The aroup launched Ill Saturday
ni&ht 6inao aames last fall, with modest turnouts at firsl Attendance
has been risina steadily to an ave,.,
of about 90 players per niaht.
Organizers recently launched a
second ni&ht of binao on Thursdays.
Thepmes run from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.
both njaf\t1.
Eventually. the parents hope to
have all Saturday proceeds JO to
Irvine Hiah prOlf'lmS, with Thurs-
day's revenues aoina to University
Hi&h.
fhe hi&h school boosters an ofTer-
ina Irvine's only reaular biqo pmes.,
accordina to Gahm. The nearest biab
school binJO competitors, he said, arc
Mater Dea in Santa Ana and Dana
Hills m Dana Point
Gahm estimates that half of
Irvine's binJO plar.en come from
within the city. while the remainder
come trom ne1pbonn1 com-
munities, incJudiQJ MltliOD Viejo-,
Oranec and Anaheim.
&ch Irvine biaeo niah• reqwm
eaaht to 10 pamn vOhlnteen. (~_law.
no one under II ca wOtt at 1 bitllO
same or Dlay iL) OlltiD •id he bu a
pool o( lboUt I 00 ..,..t5 wiftiat to
help. Paftal vol~lllist witb &he
same, rdabmcm Illa, cleanup Mid
other cborH.
Bob Mcfnters has been the repa1ar
biqo caller. Linda Vulpmore hu
been 1etVin1 as business mana,er.
About four pareou. inducUnc Gahm.
alternate as floor manaieen. Prize inoney varies accorcUna to
tbc t'9rnouL Altbouah Irvine winners
have occa1ionally won the maJ.imum
S200, the' usual pe)'OUt per pme is
S7' to Sl25. The lrvim biflO
propam calh for tbc poup to pey OU1
70 per~nt of what it takes in.
Gahm said the fuod-raitial projeca
is cleari na about S 1,000 a lftOlltb. But
he said the .,.a ti for the bi119D Diabts
to raise S'4,000 annually for eacfi of
the-two hiah 1Choot1.
··1t's not unrcuonable, really,"
Gahm insisted ... Other people arc
doin& it. If we can tet the crowds up. we ca.n do iL ••
...,,... ................
lrft.ne puenta •tadJ thelr carda ln btnco aame at Rancho San Joeqal.D School.
Brower joining Pilot
as growth columnist
Martin A. Brower. retired public
relations chief of the Irvine Co., has
joined the Daily Pilot as a columnist.
He will write on local arowth iuues.
Brower, S6. Ii ves in Corona del Mar
and currently publishes "Martin
Brower's Ora nae County Repon." a :.c::ma-monthly ncw51etter that will
provide what he calls "an insider's
analysis of the mcanin' behind the
news and 1he implications for the
coun ty's fu1ure."
In his column, "In Perspecuvc:·
Brower will deal with issues ammg in
aove rnment. politics and business
that was locked to a dnvcway post on
the 17800 block of Bell Circle, police
were told Wednesday. The loss was
esti mated at $350. • • • A resident of the 19600 btock of
Seaw1nd reported Wednesday that
someone broke into his white 1978
Da1sun SI 0. The loss included stereo
equi pment worth SI ,SOO and 15
cassettes worth S 120. • • • Entrnna throu&h a locked rear
hdmg &lai.s door. someone bur-
glanzed a home Wednesday on lhe
19200 block of Newhaven. The lou
incl uded a stereo rad io worth $900. a
tape deck \\Orth $400 and a video
recorder wonh S8SO. • • • Someone entered th rou&h an un-
locked window to buralanzc a home
on the 8400 block of Warner venue.
a rcsiden1 reported Wednesday. The
lo s included two speakm worth S 100 and fou r video pmcs worth
$88. • • • Brcak1na a kitchen window to
enter. someone buf'l)ani.cd a home
on the 4400 block of Sta Harbour, the
rctidcnt reported Wednesday. The
los included 1 video rt"COrd~r worth $900. jewelry worth $600 and SI 00 1n
re h.
P'oeatata van.,
Thicvn 1ppiarendy stoic four 2·
moftlh-otd pH bull dot P\I~ va&Ued at S200 from 1 beck yant 10 tht
10000 bloc of Cinco de MaYo. • • • Buralan tmashed a window of a
1911 Audi 11 the Mary K.a) parkjaa
lot al I 0700 SptnceT and 1tok a
Bllu1Nnkt radio val~ at S500. • • • nreman tokt Police thlt tome-one Mlt a MO .,.._, f'rofta Ilia oi.t U4)
and analyze 1hem 1n the context of
Orange Count} ·s one great issue -arowth.
Throu~out his career. Browrr
communicated on a daily basis with
people at the hi&hest levels of county
industry and aovemment. Has per-
spective. msi'1't and antelhaencc
qualify ham uniquel y for his new role
an commentary.
The Daily Pilot is pleased 10
present Marti n Brower's column. "In
Perspective." every Friday bcainning
tomorrow on 1he Opinion paae.
truck in the I 7000 block of Locust. • • • A locked S 175 Huffy bicycle was
stolen at Fountain Valley Hi&h
School. • • • Would-be burglars who removed a
window at Star Micronics, 1072S Ellis
Ave .. apprc ntly fled without takina
af\er acu vaung an audibk buralar
alann.
Newport Beach
Four hubcaps won h $200 wett
stolen from a 1976 Me rcedes Benz
parked on the 200 block of Diamond
on Balboa Island • • • ax tire and \\heels werr taken
from a heav' equipment trailer
parked at the 1nten«t1on of Eastluff
Drive and Jambortt Rood • • • A video camera wonh S 1.-00 was
reponed ma sma from the Video
upmcntt. 2087 n Joaquin Halls
Road. • • • 4 diamond nna v.onh s 1.000 was
rtponed mi ina from its m una 5pot
an a drcutr in a iu1dence on the 1200
block of Blue Gum • • • Buralars broke into a house on the
1 SOO block of Dorothy and pncd
open a safe. ta kin& silver service and a
collecuon of salver dames and quu-
tcrs in mint condition. The lo s was
estimated at $6.SOO.
LapnaBeada
Reports of three 1ntoiucated JU"ttn·
tics hanaina around an a trtt brouabt
pohcc out to Asicr Suttt and Non.b
Coast H11hway late Tunday niaht.
But officers were unable to locate the
taps)' treed tno. • • • A ,,.oman rcponed the theft of her
punt and 1u contents f'rom her
u.nloe:ked car parked Wcdnetday
mornin1 on Cal hope :i Uttt and South
Coast H'fhwa . The loss was ctU· mated at I 35. ••• lo a separate 1nc1dcnt. a car parked
Tuaday n1fht on Laauna Canyon
Roed wa hit by a thief who toolc a
S 100 bncfraK. S 2 sun&Ltnn and S 120 1n m1sceUancou items., tht
v1 tim told pohtt.
Woman robbed , raped
in carport near home
F®ntain ValJe) de\«11\es art
1n\estiaat1na the rapco and robbet)' of
a 27·)~1r~ld vooman who •• as-
Mulltd in a carpon near her ron-
domfftlum.
TM -om1n w.'I rrmo''"' peck-~ from btr car tNn~ late 'Tunda)'
niaht when she -. s 1111bbcJ and .........
.\Ott rap1n1 the ... oman. the
u pc'('\ tole her pune ..-h1ch, •1th 111
content was valued at about S6S
bcfort fltta"I the tc'CM Of lM Mud
at a condom1nnam deve~ aar
Heal A' cnlK" altd Hart.or .. n.
The sutp«t i1 bthcved to be ta hit
mid to lite·
Po1tee •id• .... " .........
._ .... ___ ....._... .
•VE.Ill Y, Maas. (AP) -Henry c.bot Lodlt, WbOle half-century in = lift lnchaded xrvic:e as am· .~ to South Vietnam. a Cold War poet at the United Nations and Ihm terms in the U.S. Sena\e, died after a left&thy illness. He was 82. Udee. a Republican vice presic:kn-• tial candida\e in 1960, died "very
' pmcefulty .. while asltep at hil bome oa Wednetday after sufferina from
• con1t1tive hean failure, said bis son,
~·s role in South Vietnam
stntched from 1963, when be became
1 ambassador just before the over-
• throw of the Diem rqime, to 1969,
· when he represented the United
States at the Paris peace talks. In the United Nations. he was known for bis
biting responses to Soviet charaes. He
also was presidental envoy to the
Vatican under Richard Nbae.
In Wllbintton, tbe Whitt Home
reJeated a statemeot calliaj LOdll .. •
very distinp.ilhed Americila."
"The cr:,::r.ts laia loll and exeendl is 1ym~tlly IO hia
tamily," the statement uid.
''Henry Cabot Lodme wu one ol&be
pa\elt statesmen ffom one ol tbe
peatest politkal families in the
history of the commonweallh. •• u.icl
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, 0-~ whose late brother, John, twice Lods at the polls.
"Ae is also remembered by all of us
in the Kennedy family tor the warmch
and friendship that endured despite
our political nvalry," Kennedy uicl.
Nixon, who chose Lodee u bi1
runnina mate in the 1960 race ipinat
John Kennedy, called him "a
diplomat-1tatesman of the ftnt
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rank.••
.. All iDdkatioa of bis oumarid~
abilitia '' mat bodt Demomdc R•blian ~ti called llpoD hi~ for top d1Dlotnatic Ulipments. .. Naon uid tllroup a .pokelman,
John Tay&or ... , would rate hiuervice
al lbe United Nations &om 19Sl to
196011 one of the moat outttandlna diDlomatic ecbievements of \he poll·
Wodd War 11 era." Lodee chanpt the imaee of his
cetetrited fanuly from ilOlationist to
iAtcrnatiooalilt, and was Rllnied u
1 model Eastern liberal 'Republican.
Loclee wu bol1l July '· 1902. i1 Nahant, to a family with twe> of
Bolton society•s most famous names
-Cabot and Lodle -and a history
of JM1blic aervk:e that included six
U.S. aenaton. a tecretary of state. a
aecret.ary of the Navy and a aovernor.
for dinner and a showl
Mesa Verde enter. For Dinner. for Theatres.
For Skating. FO
NeHndtt'• ler a Oftt
TM 0.11 m CeMornie
CIMllN
24t·0123
111to•9"'"• 5"4$-t1tl
ldW•dl Clneme
97t-4"' ,....,,..,.
.S-lllf!Q world femou1 •
llembcH(l«I in • c•~uel
"'""""'"-'• 75t·2Sll
.....,,..," ....... FH fllflfl(l llfllque
flambtK'(19fl '"'". Nff Yort&y1-f*
5*-73112
1cec..-c,.....
171-lllO
Mesa Verde Center
2701 Harbor Bfvd. (Harbor & A.dims) CCKta Mesa, ullfomla
...
Congress
OKs farm
credit
But White House sees
a Reagan veto If bill
stays In present form
WASHINGTON (A P)-Conarest
has moved to eJltend aedit to
SU'Ulllina farmen Just in time for
IPrina plantina, but the White House uys \he oroooul is too upenlive and
will tikef y ht vetoed.
Boch the Houte and Senate on
Wednnday puled separate Jeais-
lation o&rina various forms of credit
relief' to farmers baViftl_ trouble
· ~ operatina money this 1prina.
mclude interest rate subsidies n paarantees and advances -
alJ oppoled by President Reapn ai
unnecaury.
Beclten of the credit-aid moves,
mostly Democrats and farm-state
Republicans1 hailed the moves u a
way to keep rarmen cauaht in a credit
pinch alive for at least another year.
But Senate Majority Leader Robert
Dole, R-Kan., saad the action sipaled
a breakdown in budaet discipline early in a year when Conpas is
pupi~ ~r ways to reduce the
federal budFt deficit.
"We haven't demonstrated we're
willina to face up to the deficit." Dole
told 1en1tors. ..We're adding a
billion-plus (dollars) to our prob-
lem."
Dole vowed that the credit lcgi~
lation is "neveraoina to become law,••
and that was becked up_ by a threat
from deputy White House press
secretary Marlin Fitzwater, who said:
"In all likelihood, we'll veto" if the
measure reaches Reapn in its present
form.
~ --....... ' .
87 "9 AIMdaW Pntl
WASHINGTON -The Uni\ed Statet tuft'end a SI0.3 bUUon trade
cleflcit in January, 28 perceat hllher than the December ftauft, u 1 ftood o!1
imports swamped a reeotd ahorile for U.S. upona. =emment re~I
today. The Commerce De~t said tM Jan"81')' wu fu abow the S8 billion deficit recorded 1n [)e()ember althoup the Uai"'1 Stalel ex~ 11
record St9.• biUlon in aood• durina the mon\b, The coantry'1 poor tr1cUna
performance hu been &lamed primarily on tbe remark"* atreftllh of thi
dollar, which has been headed u~ard since the end of 1980. After poati
al moat daily records durina mos< offebruary. however, the dollar bas retrel
in the la1t two days.
A6at OruJ6e IMF Plan rmnlled
NEW YORK -A new coun plan to distribute the SI 80 million ~nt Oruee ae&tlernent to Vietnam veterans or their survivors would make direc1
c:asb ~ti IO only 10.000 of the 200,000 claimanu estimated to be elisible.1
The rat o( die money would be 1plit between an endowment for children
auftieriq from binb deffects and another for a social service prosram for Ateftt OranlC victims and their families. The plan recommended maximum
payments ofSlS,000 to "the most qualified claimants. If all 200.000 eliaiblel
claimants were paid directly, they would aet only S6'° apiece. -.. . Goets oot one m•a nrJce
NEW YORK-Bernhard Goetz. the man who shot four teen-qers when
they asked him for money on a subway train. shot at one of the youths a secondl1
time after sayina. "You seem to be all riaht. here•s another.' aocordlna to•.
police repon. Goeu "thouaht it was funny" that the youths "thouaht the1 had'
him trapped. when in fact they were trapped," Concord, N.H., police omcen
said in repons released Wednesday after a stale Supreme Coun hearina. The1
youth who was shot at twice was sprawled on a scat when Goeu checked his
condition and shot qain, the report said. ·
Netnbox.wm• IJero UtJe
DETROIT -A teen-qe newsboy, credited with foiling the attempted
rape of an 11-lear-old g.irl and decorated by ~lice for bravery, insisu he's
nobody specia . "Anybody couJd have done it.' said Collin Boatriaht, t •.after a~t1n1 the Micbipn Association of Police "badae of courqe""Wedrtnday for has action. Today he was to accept the keys to the city from Mayor Coleman
A. Youns. Police wd the Detroit News earner was delivcrina the Sunday paper{ when be saw a 6-foot-2 man force a youna sirl into a vacant house. He ran to a
neiahbor to summon help when he heard the ~rt scream, then went into the
house and held the man at bay with a stick unul police came. I
I
WASHINGTON -The Navy is plannina layoffs at its ciabt government-
ownecbbipyards. includina one in Lons Beach, under 1 new policy that will put'
mortttress on the use of private yard& for ship overhauls and maintenance,!
officials say. The decision disclosed Wednesday by sources cl0te to Navy
Secretary John f . Lehman 1 r., will mean layoffs of rouP.ly S, I 00 workers at the
ei&ht yards between now and Dec. 31 . The layoffs will be accompanied by a
crackdown on overtime work at the yards announced last Friday.
I
Acld 6frl anJf~el7 to /lee ~am I
SAN BERNARDINO -Cheryl Beu, a I ~year-old who was kidnapped
and horribly burned when her abductor ~ured a caustic chemical over berl
head, has only a '"Iona shot" chance of repanina her siaht. hersuraeon said. Tbe1 teen-qerwuon her way to classes at San Bernardino Hiah School last October
when she was abducted, taken to a remote desert area and doused with add.
Crao.toa l•~ oat IJl• record
LOS ANGELES -Alan Cranston. intent on remindina California voters1
about his record in preparation for his 1986 re-election campaian, has listed his
'° major accomplishments as a U.S. senator. Cranston prepared the U1tl
recently after an aide told him that even some of his supporters don't know alt
of his accomplishments since he was first elected to the Senate in 1968. The U11
included "liftin& the t.nner of civil riahts," making sure Vietnam veieran1 act
better counselina and reducing the capital pins tax rate from '°percent to 20
percent.
.lie.Donald'• m•u•cre dram• on TV
SAN DIEGO -A four-hour television '10yie is planned on the S.nl
Ysidro-McDonald's massacre, and the HoU)'v.t>od producer mak.ina the ftlml
bas hired the widow of aunman James Oliver Hubeny aa a consultant for thel
picture. Producer Larry Spivey was in the San ~area Wednesday to meetj with Etna Hubeny. Accordina to a repon in todays editions of the San oteao
Union, Mrs. Hubeny is to receive $100,000 for her role as consultant. The
newspaper uid Mrs. Hubeny has apeed to donate proceeds from the sale of1
film riahts to The Crime Victims fund, and that an unspecified amount wouJd
10 to two youna victims of the massacre whom she did not name.
Dedmejlan bacb _.t belt l••
SACRAMENTO-Gov. Georae Deuk:mejian is bac:kina mandatory seat
belt use, which could help the auto industry overturn 1 federal order for air blp
or automatic seat belts in new cars. A spokesman for the Republican governor,
Kevin Brett, said Wednesday that Deukmejian eow .. supports the concept of
mandatory seat belts." At two news conferences earlier this year, Deukmejian
refused to take a position. 1
Blood recJpJent. monltored tor AIDS
SAN FRANCISCO -In the wake of nine deaths from AIOS.taint.ed
transfua.ions-includina 1 pandmother and 1 nun -blood bank official• uy
they are monit':s"e:J 80 people who received blood from donon who eve11&ully
developed the ly disease. Dr. Herbert A. Perkins, Irwin Memorial Blood
Bank's scientific director, told a news conference Wednesday that the80people
beina tracked are ainona 162 who were exposed to 38 donors later found-to
have acquired immune deficiency syndn>me. The donors pve-blood
sometime 1ince 1979.
CIJemeiUo uo1n1 bJ p.lloto
MOSCOW -Soviet President Konstantin Chernenko today was shown
in a Taa Dhotopaph receivina credentj1l1as1 deputy in the Parliament of the
Rusaian f:edentioft, t.be country'• la.raest republic. Chernenko wu pic:tW'Cd
holding fut to a chair with bis left band while he shook bands with Comm unlit
~ny ofraciall with bil rilht hand. The Soviet leader, rumored to be seriously
all, had been out of \he pu6lic eye for two months before appearina in televiaion
foot.qe Sunday cutins bis ballot.
CIWJeM •• OOD'f'lcted I
PEKJNO -Tbrel entertainers. includifta an actor in a military troupe,
have been oonviculd on c:~ of epy!oa for the Nationalist Chlnne
aovcmmcnt on Taiwan, recn11tin1 aauoCammunitt IFftts and lnclti
defections, the IOVenunent announced today. It was one of the .,.._.
espionate c:ate1 reported by Pekina in the 36-yar-old poJilic:al dilpute between
the Communist mainlancl ind capitaUlt Wand. Theie '4t no immediate
comment from Taiwanae authorities.
.J•,.a'• rll••b •all,.. ~e
TOKYO-Fonner Prime Minitt£r Kakuci Tanaka. reprded u JAP.P••
most pcnwerful pe>tidcal ftaure desphe a 1913 convicdoa for ~Ina britlet,
has IU«ered a Mild tUOU and it boepitalbed, docton Mid. The doc1ofl, ID a
televised news conllrenoe &om Tol(yo's Teithin Hospital, said Taub, 66,
co=ined of dllll ~" and numbncll in hia rilbt tide at hit bome W aftmloon, Tbey uid k WU taken by ambulance to the boepitaJ.
If"' Z.1•'8nd .... OODtfllaed •JIPOl't
WIUJNOTON. NeW lalMd -Ntw lMlaad will aot 8'0p 111 ddewln ...... ac110IMU ......... ia .... of1l1.S.dec:ilioa10 ta
iateD ... ~ whll Ntw Z-land, Deputy Prime Mi .. Palmer tlid today. New Znkis,.. llli• mblitw, David U..,. .,.. 1
10P SC. Depm-.-a oftldal ~ ~ OI T8lidly, and lli&t ...... Ill W ._. laN IM UlllllCI wOuld ICM c1otrD ita ~ lild
d1I I ~wtthNtWl-'and.
ao ..... .,.,.,....._
ST. PIERI!, St. ""'' Mf .. tloa -,._., Woftift .-11H111 M
doekworbn011 daJ:.:l..,... lirrhory mlftW me..._., """w ....
to the nterft'ont. lri• lall 1 bolt ad ""' Mm oil ia "rule" to ~ Newfoundlind.
J
MANAOUA1 Nicanaua (AP) -Prtsident 0.niel Ortea •Y' hia
'-ftit!.,11>vernment ii willina ao aeDd 100 \,.Ubea military advitcn bome .... ::-: ---... ...,,.,.. .,. to ...... Pnlident ...
.... to ..... talb ud ckop .. aupn for Nicarquan rebels.
Or1ep outlined to reponen
Weddndey eeven Pllll ol prGpOl91a
be said oouJd help penu.6e tbe llelean admini11r1tion to diacon-
tinue ''the h<>1tile policy lpintt
Nicatlpa, in violation o(alae priaic-
pln and norms or lnt«national ~tion."
The first SO Cu-military a·~
covld leave in May, Ortep ..w. N~ allo wu Willina to impoee an "ip(lefinite montorium" on ac-
qulrina new weapoM 1y1tem1, in-
cludinr .. interception aircraft," he
•id.
Ortcp did not say What he meant by "int~tion aircraft." Nical"llUI
maintains It has the riabt to acquire
Mom's mad
over son's
short shear
·11FFELL'S
iP1ii.mlY, ill. , ...... ,.lit
.1m -•• .. CGlll ma -•u•
HANSEN'S
NATURAL SODA
12 pk. 12 oz. cane
'4"
The ..... price ...... In toder ..
....... lnMrt .. Incorrect ... ...... , 1noon ............
...., ..... NUMd,....
A~CYmtyou
won't want eo mill
· Sunday March 3-U:l~ a.m.
Ill the
CRYSTAL CATHEDRAL
in Ganim 0... CA
on~Jwe.mslhe
JuilCtiori d the Slrila Ana.
0.dcft Goe md
Or-'FP
' ---=-=. .... •. 1'ilw y .... I.ii Al!ililllil ... ... Ala llll!lllY ,_., ..... ,...,.
&MU.$;
Tms•a uar~ W ~=t:.,.~ .....
~--.. :-:.~· ..... tr.:\ .. '° .IAbtlie .. ... . llOnil ... D.C.~~Nle, a
1top0ver ia Miami ':Tiiey llill-....,
far &be illcovenince ......... ·-strilrc.-
~They just stranded • ill OltudC>
(Fla.), .. taid Roee Si--. "'° Md been OD ............. Mew Y• •
Miami. ..Wt .,C -• I 1133 i totether ud bind I c:er to ..... to
M'wni. And they tent my.,...._ &o
Tampt." \
Forty nilbt shift won.a • .. picket lineut Pm Am ticket ca UR
and •• ~ localiom .. HoMWll
lntematioul Air'pon.. Mid Kea
0Wo. vice clWr1uJl fA TWU'I
Hawaii unit.
'1"he picket lines arc ~ript now. we don't bow if ~
be honored," OIMO aid. I ..
bigest question riPt now."
A Honolulu-to-Saa frucitco
niJht took off on ~ '' m1nu1a before them~ lllilDe deadline. but only twO ll lillll
anendanu ~on bmnl
Pan Am ha beell coatac'tilll ill
competiton to ICck availllll9 ~
for any of its 39,000 daily J;'. 1 %:; arounded by a canceled · t.
said.
ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE RATE
FINANCING
•
There's no question
about it. The 1985
Mercury Topaz with its
sharp aerodynamic flair
definitely has its looks
going for it. But now, with 8.8% annual percentage rate financing.
the sleek Mercury Topaz looks more interesting than ever before.
Right now. the 8.8% annual percentage rate financing is available on
any new Topaz delivered by April 22, 1985. Participating dealers can
arrange it for qualified buyers through Ford Credit with a
limit of one unit per customer. Dealer contributions
may affect customer savings.
Mercury Topaz. • FROM
Shaped to get your attention. Now it has
your interest.
LINCOLN-MERCURY-
NOW THROUGH
APRIL 22, 1985.
•
••
Traffic problems
lie in residents'
reluctance to pay
The transportation funding crisis in the state hit home this
month when Caltrans recommended that three major Orange
County highway projects be delayed. Skyrocketing maintenance
costs and static gasoline tax revenues were offered as the reasons
for the shortage of money.
One of the projects that now looks unlikely for this year is
the widening of Laguna Canyon Road -a deadly stretch of
twisting, rolling pavement upon which more than two dozen
people have died in automobile crashes since I 975. The road
claimed its latest victims last weekend; two people died and
another was seriously injured in a two-car collision.
The suggested deletion of this project from the 1985 State
Transportation Improvement Program -along with delays in
the planned widening of the Ortega Highway and the completion
of the Costa Mesa Freeway -dismayed state Sen. Marian
Bergeson.
"Oranee County has struggled to come of age in
·transportation funding matters," she wrote to Heinz Heckeroth,
Caltrans local district director ... Hi~way 55's completion has
been contemplated for years; the widening of Laguna Canyon
Road is desperately needed from a safety perspective and has
been discussed for years; improvements to the Ortega Highway
are sorely needed and would save many lives. These projects
have finally been recommended for funding in a timely manner
after many years oflobbyi ng by Orange County transportation
planners and elected officials. I am distressed to learn that they
do not appear to be priorities on the Caltrans agenda."
Sen. Bergeson is not alone in her distress. The delay of these
projects is a major setback for transportation in this county. And
transportation is one of the major issues with which we grapple
as we attempt to accommodate the inevitable growth, especially
in the county's southern sector.
But the senator skirts a sensitive point when she notes, quite
accurately, that "Orange County has struggled to come of age in
transportation funding matters."
Struggled, yes, but not succeeded.
The overwhelming defeat last year of Proposition A (the 1
percent sales tax earmarked for highways), indicates that the real
opposition to a progressive transportation plan resides within.
Orange County needs more highway improvement projects than
the state can fund and the people of Orange County are unwilling
to pay for those projects themselves.
The resulting frustration among those charged with solving
public problems has led to suggestions like the one As-
semblyman Nolan Frizzelle advanced this week. Frizzelle thinks
we ought to consider building toll roads in Orange County, so we
can literally pay as we go.
To those who found the very idea of Proposition A to be
anathema, FrizzeUe's idea may sound like a threat. But it may be
only a reflection of a realistic trend in government. Increasingly.
the federal government is proposing user fees. The San Joaquin
Hills transportation corrider will be funded. in part, by
developer fees -which will, of course, be passed along to those
who become homeowners in the new developments served by
the highway. And toll roads in Orange County?
It may be an idea whose time is coming.
Two faces of Mon a L isa
reveal mystery of smil e
Ne\t lime ~ou sec a print of
Leonardo's Mona Lisa. cover one
side oft he lad} 's face w11h :your hand.
then the other. You'll note the sides
don't match. On one. she's cheerful.
On the other. she's sad. This dif-
ference 1s said to be one of the secrets
of her much-d iscussed smile.
E'er} graduate of tht• Japanese
Na' al .\cademy from 1931 until Dec.
7. 1941. was required to answer this
q uesti on on the academ) ·s final
e"am "How would yo u carry out an
attack on Pearl Harbor'!"
You·,,. 'teen the fashion designer's
g1mm1c:k~ list of''The Ten Best Dress
Women.. Just such a published
roster "as "here J. Edgar Hoover 1n
I 950 got the notion of putting out the
FBl's "Ten Most Wanted Cnm1-
nal s."
Q Na me the actor moo;t often
nominated for .\cadem) .\wardo;
A 5pcnccr Trac:y W1th eight.
Caterpillars cat onl y at night.
Q. What propon ion of the Ameri-
can people are overweight?
A. Can onl) tell you 6 7 percent
think the)' are.
Dingoes don't bark.
Q. What golfer chalked up the
sreatest number of consecutive tour-
nament wins on the professional,
circuit?
A. Byron Nelson with I I. Summer
of 1945.
Compare toda) ·.-. tclc\.1~1on with
that of yc'iterycar: Jack Paar walked
ORANGE COAST
DailJlilat
off The Tonight Show because NBC
censored his use oft he initials "W.C. ..
-meaning "water closet." Sponsors
complained mightily over a scene
wherein Petula Clark put her white
hand on Harry Belafonte's black arm.
And the Smother1 Brothers lost their
show after guest performer David
Steinberg did a comic bit containing
an allusion to the Almighty.
Is there a town around your place
"1th about 80.000 people in 11~ If one
comes to mind. you can compare it to
ancient Kn ossos on the Mediter-
ranean island of Crete. That was the
largest city on earth until the time of Christ. .
\1ozzarella cheese used to be made
onl" fro m buffalo milk.
.\II Kerr) blue terriers arc born
hlack.
Q. Do kangaroos live in trees?
<\. Some do. Their first step out
sometimes 1s a 50-foot drop.
Q. We're born with 300 bones. But
as grownups. I read, we only have 206
bones. What happened to those
m 1ssing 94 bones?
A. each fu sed with another to make
one bone.
In southern .\frica is a tribe of
Kalahari bushmen whose bodies
show several definite Mongolian
charaetensucs. but nobody knows tbe
why of that. These Kala.ban and the
Australian aboriaines are said to be
the two mo.st primitive pcopl« on
earth
L.M. Boyd /1 • 1yadlc•ted rol•mo/11.
. -·
H.L ..........
PuOlilnet
,, ... zant
1Jenl0'fl9 [O<tOI
TOM T ...
City £0ttOI
.-
--.. ----
--· ---
•
''Promoting sound sleep at the Kremlln •houldn •t be agoa/ of U.S.
policy. but1t'snotalwayslnourlnteresttoprovokeanxlety." ,
--.,.;::--
aTSPHSJll CllAPllAlf colamnt.t
:~r=--~_._;....;..-~ Pup 'Y
flt· far
~LOR aKlng
Canine owner gets
~riday night calls
concerning her dog
By JOY DEE ANTHONY
The phone rings at 9 p.m. one
Friday night. A deeply masculine
voice says hello.
"Is this the Anthony residence?" he
asks. ''Yes. it is," I say. wondering if
he has a secret, romantic pretext for
the call.
Geneva talks are doomed
ifU.S. insists on Star Wars
"This is Dr. X of the X Animal
Hospital. How's King?"
King is our 5-month-old monster
puppy. part golden retriever, part
labrador retriever.
''Fine." I say. "How arc you?" Now
I've thrown out the romance possi-
bility and am wondering if someone
calline about puppies on a Friday
night 1s feelin1t OK. Our newest a r ms
make Soviets fear
we'll strike first
The coming negotiations at Gen-
eva between the U nitcd States and the
Soviet Union, scheduled to bcain
March 12, may represent the last
serious chance for arms control.
Given the temper of the Reagan
administration. that may mean no
chance.
Cntics of arms control will say
good riddance: Give up the delusion
of bargaining with tyrants and get on
with "rearming" America -and
with erecting strategic defenses that
will defuse the threat of mass an-
n1h1lation.
The key evidence offered for Presi-
dent Reagan's "Star Wars" proposal
is the Soviets' fear of it. Only the
prospect of Amencan missile de-
fenses pulled them back to the
bargaining table. the argument goes.
And the fact that it scares them argues
against giving it up.
But there arc other reasons for the
Soviets' return. One is that the
Reagan administration finally agreed
to include space weapons in the talks.
Another is that their I 3-month walk-
out, aimed at dividing NA TO. served
to unite the allies. ~
The Soviets do fear a U.S. defense
against missiles. This is not because
thei r weapons will be made, in
Reagan's words, "impotent and ob-
solete." Their scientists know as well
as ours that cities can't be protected
from nuclear attack.
STEPHEN
CHAPMAN
. will be encourqed to beat us to the
punch. Thus the nuclear balance is
destabilized. Thus military programs
aimed at streqthenina our security
will harm it.
Why not~ lo a first strike, the
Soviets would launch at least 3})00
warheads. If a dozen of them -1our-
tcnths of I percent of the total -
landed on U.S. cities, they would
produce unimaginable destructron.
(Gen. Daniel 0 . Graham. a leading
advocate of strategic defense, says he
would consider It successful ifit could
stop 30 percent of incoming war-
heads.)
But wha t about a second strike?
Suppose the Soviets were merely
retaliating against a U.S. attack? Then
a missile defense makes more sense.
If most Soviet intercontinental
ballistic missiles (ICBMs) were de-
stroyed on the ground, a defense
would work much better.
Americans may regard a U.S. fint
strike as absurd. But in recent yean,
the U.S. has deployed or developed
several weapons (the Pershing II, the
Trident II , the MX) that arc desillled
to destroy "hardened" Soviet taracts,
like missile silos. There is no point in
destroyin& silos unless the missiles
are in them -that is. unless the U.S.
hits first. So the Soviets have cause for
worry.
Promoting sound sleep at lhe
Kremlin shouldn't be a goal of U.S.
policy, but it's not always in our
interest to provoke anxiety. If the
Soviets anticipate a first strike. they
The point overlooked by the ad·
ministration is this: We want the
Soviets to fear what will happen if
they attack us-not what will happen
if they fail to attack us.
Proponents of strateaic defense say
that even if it can't protect cities. a
ballistic missile defense could protect
our land-based missiles. True. But the
chances of a Soviet attack on our
ICBMs are miniscule. since it would
invite retaliation by the three-quar-
ters of our warheads that arc on
submarines or bombers.
There arc cheaper. better ways to
discourage a Soviet first strike. The
obviousoneisarmscontrol-say. by
nCJOtiating a reduction in land-based
missiles on both sides and a shift to
single-warhead missiles. That would
render a preemptive strike imposs-
ibleeven in theory, making both sides
more secure.
But no offensive reduction is
possible as Iona as Reqan clings to
stratqic defense. Tbe Soviets know
that cuttina their offensive forces
would only simplify our defensive
task - and weaken their deterrent.
Thus. the choice: defensivesystems
combined with an offensive arms
race, which would be expensive and
destabilizing, or nej'?tiated limits on
offensive arms, which would remove
the only plausible argument for
defenses. If the Reapn adminis-
tration insists on pursuma Star Wars,
the Geneva talks will fail, and
American security will suffer.
St~plteo CUpmu 11 • 1yodlc•tetl
COl1111Jal1I.
'I callbe put in prison for what I say,
But so what?' said one plane passenger
WASHINGTON -Twice in re-
cent months I've tried to get into
Poland. but the country's communist
military dictatorship wouldn't grant
me a visa .
The Polish authorities clearly
didn't want me to meet Lech Walesa.
the dynamic leader of the outlawed
Solidarity union.
The Polish government pan1ally
relented. however, and let my as-
sociate Lucette Laanado travel ftcely
through the country recently. Herc is
what she found:
•Even before arrival in Poland. a
visitor is surprised to hear ouupoken
criticism of the communist regime
from Poles flying home from abroad.
These were Polish citiiens who were
amona the most privilqed and
pre umably trusted by the regime,
havin& been allowed to ltavc the
country -and they made their
remarks wilhln earshot of other
passenaers who must have iocludcd
secret police. Ont man, who told of
involvement in tht print1n1of1llcaal
newspapers, was a factory manqer.
The rttuman• Pole$ larced that
Solidarity 11 •••II alive and ~u.
thouah forced unditrlround by the
authorities. The murder of the Rev.
Jcrzy Popieluuko by polict qents
inv11orated the 11tepl movement,
they Aid. The penen,cn dcttounttd
the economic system and urJCd
v1~itors to see proof of its failure 1n
hops that have httle to o"tr. •The volunttcrcd compla1n1 con-
tinued whenever Poles heard my
associate s~akina English. A young
father told oflow waacs and generally
difficult economic conditions. A poet
bemoaned official censorship. Even
employees of Inter-press. the liaison
'office between visitinJ journalists
and aovemment officials. com·
plained of difficulties with the Polish
bu rca ucracy.
•President Reagan is apparently as
popular amona Po&e1 as he is amona
Americans. Several Poles said they
had prayed for his re-election, and
even while complainina about their
economic hardships, they eitprHsed
hope that Rcapn would keep up the
emba~ocs that add to their misery. A
surprising number of Poles still spoke
of Yalta 111f1t had occurred yesterday
instead of 40 years qo; they view 1t
bitterly as the root ofall their postwar
troubles, a scUout of the Poles by their
Western allies.
•Confirmina the scarcity of con-
S\lmcr aoods was no problem. The
only well"itocked stores arc the Pcvu
outlets that ICCtpt onlr, hard curren-
cy. They offer btauuful lllecpek.in
roatt. choice liquon and French
Pttf\lmc. The ttoret that KCe1K
Polish c:u~ blw linle to •II bUt
shoddy aoodl. llln m."ket trlCh•
for Ammcan dollr'I it ublqu1tCMat.
Meat is ratto.ed and buy1na i•
ttqvirn 11andi!11 in line for houn:
Yet in the tourist lp•h. fine Ntl fl
meat are on the ....... al<>!W W."9
such luiturics as butlff. -..S oranee JU'«.
•lntclllacnce
The doctor.is a bit taken aback at
the unexpected interruption in his
spiel. "Oh, a bit tired," he says. "Did
King like his new dog food?"
Apparently, this was just a hospit-
able animal expert competing for our
pet's business in a booming Orange
County market. When you pay $69
fo r puppy shots, Science Diet dog
food. and scientific nea powder. you
get complimentary phone calls.
I only wish my own doctor would
call and ask 1f I liked my new diet. I'd
be happy if he even recommended a
new breakfast cereal. My doctor
wouldn't notice if I switched from
frosty Oakes to 100 percent bran.
The friendly vet recommended a
dog obedience school when I asked
about enc. I soon found out that we're
not talkina just de-barker and de-
digcr dcprogrammina; we're talking
behavioral therapists. positive feed-
back. and neptive reinforcement.
I'm goina to insist that our dog
doesn't need assertiveness training.
For a mere $450, the dog trainer
says she will come to our home for an
eight-week. two-hour-per-session,
fun-filled program. Our 12-ycar-old
golden retriever/collie will cost an
additional $1 25.
To be fair to the women. she'd be
willing to do it for free-if we opened
our home to all proarammilblc dogs
during the eight weeks. I can just
imagine what visitors would say, not
to mention the nei&hbors.
Her brochure tefls the prospective
owner what to look for in an
obedience school. Visit a session. she
suggests. Dogs should not be jerl{ed
around on their collars. A trainer who
makes yo ur untrained doa sit. play
dead. or roll over is a cruel show-off.
Owners at obedience school should
be jolly. Despite ~he 1>0ssibility of
doafllhts. disobedience, and over-
curious neighborina dop, ownen
should seem quiescent. amwcd, and
cheerful.
I sugest you chuckle when your
puppy bites your heel off at the
command "Heel!'' even if your
neighbor's dog docs a perfect exccu·
tion of it.
lfDr. X of the X Animel Hospital
calls again. I'll bring Kina to the
phone and let him report. I'm not
going to hold his paw any lon,cr if I
can get a paid professional to do \t for
free.
If his animal trainer beains to call
too. I'm going to make my puppy JCt
an answerina service. There s nothina
worse than getting fewer Friday niaht
calls thin your doe docs, unless it
would be answcrif\I the phone for
your aoldfish.
Fortunately, Goldy died whc•
overfed him over 20 years aao.
--' •
WINCON protest •torles
offend OC peace actlrist \
,,,. Bard qantloa• l or CJJ.UU.n•
To tht Eduor.
Some Christians v.iould like to ao
alona wi1h the v.orld. and Just leccpt
what the ""oi1d aavcs 1hem. and thtnk
posilive. ~ c.-act'fPI Tlw heOry
o( Evolution. and somehow, they
weavt Ood into n. To them. tcit~ 1s
the truth. and they artn't too IUtt
about the Bible
cht'm1Ctts'!
Some of thnr Christia•• ret1und ~of a tolditr who was in tht Kore&ft
War. His unit •as ntxt to a Marine
oudit. He didn't llke tht Marinn ~uSt' tht) mac:W the warlO ~for
him. The sotd1crJ v.outd J&&St ~
~nltd down in a p~ a"'9 ~
C'Onafonablc. and the MariQCI ~kl
111n ... at&ICL :iTbr first di~ )OU-
kniw. dw)' .would aft ha~ 1o ftlf't. If
those Marines wouldJuSt l.akt 1t euy.
and not sur up the enemy. lbc)' cou~,_
JUS\ sit ou1 the war end put in lhrir
time
To the Editor:
AS a peace activist, I was deeply
offended by Tony avedra·s cov-
eraae of the antt-Wincon demon-
strations which he referred to as "four
days of polite pro1csts. some
courteous 1"'"1t. and tons or media attention."
... and talk1na '°an advcnary on his or
her own arou"'9.
As rot Mr. Saavcdra's per~ption
that tholt panicipatina in the modem ~domesticated" dvtl d1tobcdirn~
take no risk. it is apparent that he has
never blocked traffic with his body.
been put in handcuffs and hauled
away to spend three days in the
county jail.
Saavedra criticized the Alliance for
Survival for holdina a reception for
Father Daniel lkn'iaan inside the
same hotel that was later surrounded
by 1.400 candle-bearina activists.
He was further irritated that the
alliance alerted the police as to its
plans and even held meetinJS with the
conference and hotel stcunty. And as
for the blocking or delegate buses. he
was disappointed that "there was no
tense confrontation betw«n peace
advocates and the armed. stem·
looking police officers.''
Saavedra concludes by aslcina
"Would the new 'domestic' protests
be as effective as the uprisings and
risks that unmasked an unhol+ war
during the 1960s and early '70s. •
Mr. Saavedra should first of all
realize that the peace movement of
the '80s is not an attempt to recapture
the '60s. That anti-war movement
came out of the universiti~s; the
current movement comes out of
churches. the business community.
organizations involving physicians
and scientists. women's groups. and
the li ving rooms of the middle class.
If the police are not hostile it is
because this generation of activists
realizes that it is not the police who
arc the adversary. And there is
nothinj incongruent about holdi.ng a
cocktail reception for a peace act1v1st
inside the very hotel being picketed if
one realizes the necessity of meeting
I took pan in a well-planned civil
disobedience where the police were
informed ahead of time. I slood in the
middle of the street outside a military
defense plant and blocked employee
vehicles from cntcrint a driveway.
Beside me an irate and 1ttminaly
out-of-control driver rammed his car
into a banner held by my friends.
draaaing one of them spread-eagled
across the hood for about SO yards.
The driver stopped only wben the
activist blocked his view by sp)cadin&
the banner over the windshield.
I spent three days in the Sybil
Brand Institute for Women in Los
Angeles where I saw prisoners humili-
ated and. in one case. beaten. I spent
hours locked in freezing cold and
overcrowded cells. choking on
cigarette smoke. I was chained to
other women and transponed back
and forth to the courthouse and stnp-
searched each time. And I didn't
know until my hearing if my sentence
would be "time served" or six months
in jail.
I thank Mr. Saavedra for the
"media attention," but before he
covers the next "domesticated dem-
onstration." I hope he gets his head
out of the '60s and docs some research
on the peace movement of the '80s.
ROSE HAMILTON-GOTTLIEB
Fullenon
I have some hard questions for
them. If nature created the earth. and
man. without knowledae. what 1
God the Sod of'? 0.d naturt abocreatt
Ood? If so. who do we pra) to. and
why? If Ood is a ettat1on of nature.
then He 1s JUSt as much a "1ct1m of
circumstances as we arc. If nature 1
an accident. whycan'1 scienu&ts. wnh
all of their education. create 1 Ver)·
small worm. or but-using nothing but
Either God 1 th<' Crea1or. or He ts
not at all. He 1s a b11 God. or lie it no
God.
JIM BOLDING'
Cost.a Mesa
Wave goodbye to NeWport Not all teachers earn $70,000
To the Editor: menuoned that manasement tot an
8.S pcrccn1 r.usc several days earlier
as announced m the tchool peper,
The Lariat. Arc you aware of the '
management raise? Your paper hU 1
also questioned the high salaries of
facuh). Did )OU ask how many •
faculty make S70.000 per year'! Did
you find out why . and 1s it deserved?
These questions don't seem to tct
answered in the press. I guess I don't
understand wh> the facuhy has to
look bad. I cenamlv don't want to be a •
police offi cer. but ·isn't it mtercst1ns
that ~e·re willing to pa) the police
more than we a~ our tc.achers. I've
been here fi"e )'cars and remember
rm making S25.000 a }ear. And I'm
not the onl) one!
To the Echtor:
I think it's only appropriate to
follow-up my recent letter to the
editor about the on--.oing traged) of
John Wayne (fo111vc me Duke!)
Airpon. Since that time. lots of1hings
ha ve happened. to wit:
I) The pre-orchestrated super-
visors' meeting and public hearing
took place and the script was followed
to the letter. The supervisors could
even have used dummies (no pun
intended) so the)' wouldn't have had
to waste their tame listening to those
poor souls who trooped up there to
voice their concerns. •
That wasn't a public heanng-but
rather a play. weJlrrehcarsed. wi1h
choreography by the pro-develop-
ment interests. words b) the elected
officials and produced (and how!) by
1he aviation industry.
We've never met but I would like to in a bigger mess. hade oflhat once-invite you to visit my office. Of
beautiful town called Playa Del Rey course. I hope you don't mind spiders
1hat now lies in dust and decay! and ants. They number perhaps 100
The sad fact. folks. is that there isn't to 1 _ IOO of them to one of me. M>
ano1hcr site -not in our lifetime. or office measures 6 x 12 feet so it may be
rather the lifetime of ourc1ty. A.t least tight. For two of the 4 1,1 )ears that I've
not without some monumental move had an office. I've shared a space. Last
being made by our supervisors. The year at this time. you would ha'e had
point of my last letter was apparently to be seated in the haJI.
lost on a few folks and ccnainl) one The lighting is a problem but I bnng
supervisor. I don't want Newpon to. my own lamps. You sec. r have no
in fact. be condemned. but that the windows and no overhead light
cost of the de-facto wipeout of the fi'<tures. Light does come from lix-
hcart of our city be imposed on the tu res in the hallwa). but then half of
rest of the county to see if the)' really those arc out to save clcctnc1ty.
"ant to pa} for what they are ~akmg. Pri vacy 1s a problem since the walls
Because the condemnation is are •ti inch plywood and an: 5 feet high
already at hand. Two houses of well-_no doors. We won't have to worry
known Dover Shores folks finall ) about the 1elephone nnging because I
sold for 50 percent of their recent don't have one.
value. and it's just beginning. Of course. we will be in1erruptcd by
Protest stories garner praise
2) When our erstwhile but naive
mayor reponed that Newpon Beach
had been "shafted." it was the
understatement of the decade. I stood
in unbelieving shock as people in
Newport Beach hailed this great
"victory." Let's see -a minimum
increase in flights of 30 percent with
no lid. an increase in terminal size of
1.000 percent to supposedly handle
onl) twice the existing traffic. and an
incentive plan that has already ap-
parently blown the limit off every-
thing -now that reall ) sounds like a
VICTORY. Why. one well-known
supervisor. whose acting at the hea~
ing destrved an Oscar. crowed to his
aides: "Newport Beach got zero -
nothing." He was wrong. The mayor
was right -we got 1he shaft.
The number of foreclosures and the recepuonist )Clling down the hall
takeo' ers b)' banks and savings and to announce m)' calls. You sec. there
roa ns in this area is kept a big secret. are three phones for 15 or more
but just ask any realtor who knows. people to use. If you call me. r11 have
The\ can and are conning you all the} to put a finger in my car in order 10
wani about sound curves. decibels. hear since the phones sit by the front
etc .. but as an ex-Mesa Dri ve veteran. door in the reception area. which 1s
I described my om~ to )'OU
because clerks and S«retanes have
better working conditions than I do.
The secretancs in our bu1Jding have
closed door offi~s with windows,
lights. phones. and one or more
assistants to help them with their
work. The) arc bard workers and we
could not get along without them -
but so am I!
To the Editor:
First. coneratulations on having in
your organization the real talent
needed in deciphering urgings such as
these.
Second congratulations on Tony
Saavedra's Feb. 14 anicle headlined
"Oh so carefull) arranged protest
lacks spon1aneity."
His sophisticated observation that
"almost down to the last 'right on' the
protest against the three-day aero-
space and electronic systems con-
ference has been scnpted. with ad-
vance copy to police and of course.
the media ... Also "it seemed rather
odd to be snacking inside a hotel one
minute and protesting outside it 1hc
next."
~II too often these days such
observant. enlightened reporting is
reserved for the Wall Street Journal.
Third. 1hc same Feb. 14 issue had
another thought-provoking article
headlined "Holdout angers
Hedgecock jurors."
Eleven jurors voted 17 times for
conviction of the San Diego mayor
for conspiracy and.perjury. The l~ne
holdout was a san1tat1on supervisor
employed by the city.
I wonder if the judge and pros-
ecuting attorney should not be in-
vestigated for ha ving perrnitted a city
supervisor} employee to sit on the
jury? How likely was he to vote
against a high-level politician. in this
case his boss?
Also of possible significance ...
doesn't this case illustrate again the
lack of wisdom in insisting that all 12
jurors agree?
Economic. racial or other ties too
often impede proper operation of the
couns.
J.R. BLAKEMORE
Corona del Mar
3) And now enter our AirCal
friends wnh their noise tests. Of
coursc. theycan't run them in 1he rain
because they're no151er then and we
all know W.ey ne ver ny commercially
in the rain. There were loud hails of
delight wnh the results. even a pan}
to celebrate. But wait a minute! Down
in the fine print. it appears that they
onl) pass (ma) be) with 40 empty
scats. Now }OU know. and I know.
1ha1 ..\irCal management would never
sell tickets for those em ply seats! But
what 1f they dad? Arc you aware that
our airpon has violated the law every
\car save one with respect to noise'' ~II that happens is that the) ha\I: a
hearing and a bunch of gu)s get up
with chans and spout off about
SNEL's, CNEL'sand all that stuff and
they get another variance to operate
outside the law.
What are laws for'! What do )OU
think is going to happen when all
these planes pass the tem 1;1~der
controlled. picture-perfect cond1uons
and then the real world begins? I'll tell
you what. my friends: they're going t!l
violate the law and yet more vari-
ances will begranted and "'e·11 be back
I can 1ell you that 100 nights a da} always busy and noisy.
over your house of the ~UICtc.st jet on Before I tell rou who I am. 1'd like
the drawing board will dnve you to tell you who 'm not. Last week. the
crazy. Tames ran an article 10 View about a
Your nowtrs wouldn't even grow young policewoman -late 20s. a
because oflack of sun -believe me! bachelor's degree and a couple years
I am not an acti"ist. but now I am
an&I)' I'm urcd of hearing of salancs
far higher than mine in areas that
don't require as much education as l
have. of working in demeanins work-
ing cond1t1ons. and then ha ving the
media make me look Fecdy and
wo~ to the public. I m a good
teacher -ask my students! I work
hard and make decisions based on
what 1s best for them. Most teachers
at m ) school do.
Well. I've said my piece. 1 would
very much hke to hear from )OU. and
would be very willing to set up an
appointment. Thank )OU for hstcn-
ing.
JO .\NN M. CRI T
Professor
ddleback College
Their course of action now is to get experience: Her salary -$38.000 per
us inch by inch. flight by night. and year. I ha ve a masttr's degree. In fact ,
lower propeny val ues year by year I have SO units past a master's. Last
until. when it's lime f~r ~hem to take year. 1 made S25,000. Who am I? I'm
your home to make It into !l ware-a full-time faculty member at SaddJe-
house. the mark.ct value will be a~ back College in Mission Viejo.
fraction of what It was befor~. we all I am writing to you because of the
donated our propeny for the . pubhc aniclcs you have published rqarding
good:· And you folks on L~do ~nd the faculry-managcmcnt situation at
Cor?na . del Mar who . don t . thi.nk this college. Your articles do not fairl) ~ou re involved are j ust kidding represent the facult) side. Another ~oursehes. Ask t.he folk~ around Los paper overthe weekend announced a
Angeles lntcrant1onal A1rporL facult) raise of 8.5 percent but never
The problem. of course. from a ..--_:_------------------------
~ SU. ..
TllB GDTLE
count~ wide standpoint. 1s a real one.
The a1rpon is a mess. a mob scene.
and a potential disaster with mo.re
demand being fueled b) more air-
lines. with more flights to more c111es.
lfwc had an alternate site right now it
would be 15 years before the first fli~ht would take ofT with the in-
evttable permit process. lawsuits.
GJAftS
OFTDSIAA.
O]Or. ..
co .. oltAJIT CltOISSS
u4 -~~n El R's. funding. etc .. etc.
So folks. wave goodby to good old
Newport -rm sure we'll all have
fond memories of one of the greatest
of places to hve. raise kids and 1he
glor} of beauty ... unless som.e
super" isor has the strength to call It
like 1t reall) as and call for the
condemnation of what is already
condemned and let the government.
the airlines and the Orange Count)
taxpa)er know what the true cost of
progress is.
RICH.\RD S. STEVENS
ewpon Beach
ADBLARY'S ar•VAUS m•m --. -:.:,~ ... ~ -' -WHALE
WATCllDIG
llUllCJDS . ·~ ~-
0
• DIPMTm L1JC> ftJ..AGl
~MACH
'Quietjets' called misnomer
SAT. A SUN. 10 am to 1.pm
FURUMY I llvu llARCtt S1 ~ 1MI CGllH a rwrr
CML FOlt AQERVAnDNS
1714) •TS-1481
To the Editor: .,. "°"" ~
THE FARM IE..T Reference is madl' to the front ~gc
an1cle in the Dall> Pilot cntatled
"Quiet Jets pose quandl) ovc-r fligh1
limits" b> Robert Hyndman and JefT
Adler. Please be advised that at the
moment we do not have an)' quiet
jets.
Thomas Riley as to dcstro~ing the
confidence in the board's word: I
remember d1s11nctl) not too long ago
that Su pen 1sor Rile~ stated on
se\ era I occasions that he was going 10
hold the line On 41 nights: nO\\ he IS
going to hold the hne on SS flights.
What confidence should we ha'c and
how much more could 11 bedestro~cd
1ftherc C\ er was an~?
Airport solution commended
" To the Editor: J
Now that the dust has settled. we
hope the citizens of Orange County
will reflect on the reall y good news fo r
air transportation that has occurred
recently. The Board of Supervisors
has allowed additional flights and
three new carriers at the airpon and
authorized a new terminal wi th
adequate parking. There may be new
competition on some routes. result-
ing in lower air fares.
The people of Santa Ana Heights
have been given options that should
please the majonty in the noise·
impacted area. Noise tests of AirCal's
8737·300 and PSA's BA-146 have
been very tavorable and the a1rpon.
now meeting state noise standards.
will become an even better ne1,hbor
through additional noise reductions.
The Board of Supervisors is to be
We do ha'e no1S)' JCts and less
nOIS) Jets. We lost the only quiet jets
when Golden State gave up the ghost.
Also the "concern" attributed to
.\LAN BLL1M
Balboa Island
commended for its thoughtful con-~.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.. -.--=.-.-=-=.-.~*-:*:-*7"'::*~*~*:-::*~*:-:*.:-*r:;*;;:*~*:::*;:-::;:*::;*;:--:*:;::::;*::-:*~*:-:*~*:-:;*~ sideration of all interests and its • •
aarccment to look for an alternate site • J •
for future arowth. We are hopeful • llftla ..., •
those not 100 percent satisfied will ! r . Oft fht : stand aside and let an ail]>On be ...-it
developed that will be a credit to the • B ,J •
county. This is indeed the course that : llaWl90ft !
is in the public interest. • ::
Joseph E. Irvine • ..,..
Executive Director it :
Community Airpon Council : W a Ve the :
Meese probe a costly scandal ! flag for your :
: . prod uct or :
To the Editor:
It 1s becoming common knowlcdae
that the rit1zcns of this country arc
beina ripped off by greedy suppliers.
grctd)' attorneys and <tdY elected
officials.
The latest scandal is the over·
charaes for defense attorney ftts in
Los Anaeles County courts. These
overcharaes could not have occurrtd
without the collusion of judacs and
county officials.
Also we now come to the lcpl bill
for Edwin Meese: $700.000 based on
$2SU per hour. fh1s bill as now
common knowledge and the govern·
mcnt is slated to pa)' the bill unless the
public files a class action suit DJninSt
all those involved. If Meese 1s not
guilty. why did 1t cost so much to
defend him? An investipt1on of the
characs .,.inst him could have been
made for SlS.000 or less. in public
life. It sctms whenever the govern-
ment 1s involved the lqal fees
sk)'rockct.
FRED H. PFEIFFER
Ncwpon Beach
Child abuse hardly a 'leaon'
To the Editor.
On Feb. 18. I 98S. you printed a
shon anick entitled "le son B«om-
es Otsastcr •• The ankle then de-
$Crtbed one of the most blatant cases
of chtld abuse I have ever heard of Semna your child's teat on firt 11
not the way to teach him no1 to play
with malChtL Th11 rauonak has been u~ b)' •butt~~ pe~ts for )ft" '"
an attempt to JU 1lfy their cruel
auach on their children.
For someone. especially 1 news--
paper. e~cn to SUllfSl that th11 was a
"leuon." ~s a ttt•t d1sSt"rv1cc to
children and perpttuatcs the myth
that kidurc mere propcrt) to be used
or d9'poltd o( 11 lft 1bus1~e parent
KCS fit.
DON HOW LL
Hun11-.aon kach
P ftmtaP' I Wt1t'f 11Alt for tht
antde would hhe bttn "Child busc
'' ull a Felony "
•· • .. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • :Hurry
:Deadline
service in:
Get Physical,:
a fitness:
s u pplement :
to the:
Daily Pilot. :
See "Get:
Phyaical" on :
Friday,:
March 15.:
• Reserve your :
1pace today! :
Call : .. :March 8th 642-4321 •
: Est. 250:
~ .................................... .
'
.STEAL ·
SOME
STYLE
THIS WEEK
•• •,
• . •
• A
The making of a legend
In the late 1920's this cove became the desert hideway of the rich
·and famous. Greta Garbo, Erro l Flynn, Clark Gable and many
others were drawn by the intoxicating beauty of the place and the
old world charms of the La Quinta Hotel. Now considered one of
the world's truly great hotels, it remains the choice of the
cognoscenti, who prefer its quiet elegance and priceless setting
to all other desert reso rts.
Recently
the finest golf
and tennis clubs
in the desert were built
on this sheltered land, creating
the La Quinta Hotel G o lf and Tennis
Resort. Now the extraordina rily st.ylish homes of Santa Rosa Cove
h ave been added, completing what many are calling the desert's
finest resort.
The homes of Santa Rosa Cove are situated in a private gate ..
guarded enclave, adj acent to the hotel and within walking distance
of the golf and tennis clubs. Many of the new homes are on the fair ..
ways of the La Quinta Hotel Golf C lub, rated recently among the
desert, but among the finest in the world. Membership in the Club
-one of the few in the world to have grass, clay and hard courts-
is included in the purchase of every Santa Rosa Cove home.
Santa Rosa Cove
was designed
by world renowned
architect Barry
Berkus for those who
desire the very finest in a desert residence. The
homes are distinguished by exqui.site architecture and appointments
that include separate guest quarters, dual master .. bedroom
suites, and private gated patios.
A Wind Sheltered Setting
There are thousands of
acres now being developed in
the desert, with much of the development
occurring in the desert's "wind tunnel"-those flat
stretches of sand between Highway 111 and Freeway 10.
When the wind blows here , tennis and golf are
impossible and even being outdoors can be very
unpleasant. Recently as sand storms raged in the
desert with gusts up to 50 miles per hour, there
was barely a flutter at Santa Rosa Cove.
Golf, tennis and a ll the restorative joys of
this pristine cove continued without
interruption. Is it any wonder the
, rich and famous have made
1 this cove their hideaway sinte
the 1920's?
. An Outstanding Success
Santa Rosa Cove has been extraordinarily
successful in its sales program, selling ove~ 200 homes,
but development h as progressed so judicially that today
the essential character of the cove remains unchanged-
secluded, unhurried, uncompromisingly stylish, with the finest
amenities of any resort in the desert.
There are ove r 100 developments in the desert-there is only
one Santa Rosa Cove-so sheltered, so secluded, so beautiful.
For every life well lived there must be proper compensation.
If not now, when? 10 950.t 120.l (619) 564 .. 1525-Sales O(fice • /0 /0
........... 1\-tc--rt. top 10 courses in California by
Golf Digest. Others are adjacent
to the La Quinta Hotel Tennis
C lu b, rated by Tennis Magazine
as not o nly the fine st in the
Seeing Santa Rosa Cove Means
Never Having To Say You're Sorry.
30 year financing with
10.95% fixed for 3 years·
$150,000 to $331,000
.IJ ltaftcho
,/.. Mk-
MAP NOT m <;(.AL(
f>lllM lftd10n ~ J Do.en W.llt /J ,.,
10 minutes from Palm Desert i.. Qui .. ,.
m
Santa Rosa Cove ,
Fine Homes at La Quinta Hotel Golf and Tennis Resort
·'-""6t1 ...... ,,. .. ,11l'IO.C<X>. "-.....-. U l OOOll<l'I 1...---ttll.(IQ.l• IO ~"'Cll'""""'"',_.,....,._, .. ......,.,..,._.s1,ll4 14(1'M. ......... ....._, i.o.....-. ,_#l1wfilt•''·'·---m.1e01 ..... s100 FIH.l'•""'""' ...... ,..,. .................. ,_ .. .,,...,,1111~.-.... 1-.-ir.~•W.tJff1oftW-·-W.t1I .... ~-Not~,...., ~-""''•""-•"''°"_" ........ ,_, ........ lflll'-.•llK•
.. T
Clubs'
regatta
leading
March
March will come in like a lion ufar
as yachting activity in Orange County
is concerned with four clubs conduct-
ing competitive events.
Newport Harbor and Balboa yacht
clubs will team up for a one-design
regatta with Balboa conducting races
over inside-the-bay courses Saturday
and. NHYC shepherding laracr one-
des1gn boats over ocean courses
Saturday and Sunday.
Balboa Yacht Club also will con-
duct a regatta for Metcalf dinghy
sailors competing for the Saint Cicero
Trophy on Saturday.
One of the most interesting events
on the yachting calendar for many
years is Voyaaers Yacht Club's Seam-
anship Race in which competitors arc
required 10 perform all manner of
feats of seamanship (whether necess-
ary or not). This year's contest -for
the Guy Snyder Trophy -will be
sailed Saturday and Sunday.
Dana Point Yacht Club will con-
duct its annual Henry Harding Mem-
orial Re'8tta for Performance Handi-
cap Racing Fleet yachts on Sunday.
Los Angeles Yacht Club will send
rugged International Offshore Ruic
yachtsmen off Friday on the 151-milc
Tri-Island race. circumnavigating
Santa Barbara. Catalina and San
Clemente islands. Crews start Friday
at 4:30 p.m. and arc not expected to
finish before Sunday. The race is the
second of the current Whitney Series.
Sailors in the Los Angeles Times
Series for PHRF yachts. the Little
Whitney for Midget Ocean Racing
Class (MORC). and the Todd Pacific
Series for PHRF-D will sail a shorter
course. from Los Angeles Harbor to
Catalina's Ship Rock and back Satur-
day.
Also on tap are Seal Beach Yacht
Club's Saturday Sailors race for one-
dcsign and PH RF yachts on Saturday
and the first race of Cabrillo Beach
Yacht Club's Spring One-design
Series on Sunday.
In other Southern California
Yachting Association areas:
S..ta M•c.a Ila)'
Kina Harbor Yacht Club -Spnna
Rcptta (one-design) Saturday.
South Coast Corinthian Yacht Club -Les Storrs Series No. 4. Saturday.
~I Rey Yacht Club -Sunday Skip-
pers race (Tannenbcrg Series). Sunda)'.
Su rneao
Coronado Cays Yacht Club -Club
Classic Winter Series. Saturday.
Santa Clara Racing Association -
Winter Series No. 3. Saturday.
Sil ver Gate Yacht Club-Jack and Jill
race. Saturday.
Conu Racing Association -Winter
Rcptta. Sunday.
Coronado Yacht C'lub -Yearly Series (PHRF). Sunday.
Mission Bay Yach1 Club -Winter
Series (bay classes). Sunday.
Southwestern Yacht Club -WYRA Mixer. Sunday
.,.., .............. ~
Drumbeat, owned by Don Ayre. Jr .• l• a Cabo San Lucas race fa•orlte.
CABO COUNTDOWN
Nine yachtsexpected
to be prt mary factors
in line honors race
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Oeltfl'll9t ...... rttet
When the 45 yachts in this year's
Newport-to-Caho San Lucas race hit
the starting line at I p.m. Saturday.
March 9. it will be a far cry from the
1971 inaugural race when only seven
yachts could be mustered for the 790-
mile challenge.
The biennial race has grown in
popularity because it 1sone of1he few
Mexico races which provide good
winds for the entire distance.
In October 1971. the ent f) list was
light: the event was scheduled vir-
tually on top of Lon$ Beach Yacht
Club's La Pal 1 race in November.
Since then LBYC has abandoned the
La Paz race and substituted 11s own
Cabo race.
This year's race for hne honors
(tint to fini sh) promises to be
exceptionall ycompetitive w11h nine
yachts rating 70 or over under the
International Offshore Rule of handi-
capping-seven of them of the uhra-
hght displacement (ULDB) rnn-
figurauon.
Competing for hne honors for the
sponsoring Newport Harbor Yacht
Club will be Don Ayres Jr. in ht'i new
Nelson-Marek-68 Drumbeat. and
Bill Packer and Pete Wilson co-
sk1ppering their new 66-foot ULDB
Pandemonium.
They will be challcned by such
veteran offshore winners as Nick
Frazee. San Dieso Yacht Oub. 1n his
NM-68. Swiftsure Ill: Doug Baker
and George Writer. Loni Beach YC
in their NM-68 Saga. and Don
Campion. Santa Cruz YC in the
veteran line honors campaigner.
Merlin. the 67-footer from the design
board of Bill Ltt.
And Lee will have two of his new
Santa Cruz-70s making their long
distance debut. They are Blondie.
skippered by Pat Moniz. Santa Cruz
Yl. and Kathmandu under the
(Plea.e .ee COlmTDOWJf / A2)
..., ...
No 1a0koiibl1
Your li~bl11ty_ • • 1ust went up
You arc on your way to Catalina.
steering by auto pilot while you and
crew are below havin& lunch. There's
no lookout on the bow or in the
cockpit
Or. )'ou're sa1hng sin&k-handed in
a long ocean race (trans-Atlantic.
trans-Pacific. or even to Mexico. and
go below to take a short nap.
In either case. you could be run
down ~Y a freighter. tanker or
passenger hner.
And rqardless of your "right of
way." you could be liable for damages
-or worse yet. not be able to collect
damages to your own vessel -if you
survive.
The obligation of all sluppers to
maintain a constant lookout hn been
substanttally bolstered by a U.S.
District Court ruling that a boat
under sail doe1 not have absolute
right of way.
Any boater who fails to maintatn a
lookout could be liable for damages in
the event of a collision. based on a
lawsuit that followed a colhs1on in the
North Atlantic in July 1981. between
a freighter and a yacht on a qualifying
sail for the OST AR.
In Granholm vs. The Tfl Express.
a federal Judge ruled that the yacht
Ensenada
beckoning
the faithful
The word ts out.
Yes. there will be a Newport-to-
Enscnada yacht race -for the J8th
consecutive year.
The official stan. as announced by
the sponsoring Newport Ocean Sail-
ing Association. is Apnl 27 at high
noon ofT the Newpon Harbor jetty.
That's when the waters off New-
pon and as far cast as Dana Point will
resemble Dunk.irk under sail. If the
entries arc running true LO form. there
will be more than 600 boats. CTOwd~
with sboutinf. costumed crews.. all
intent on arriving at the Baja Cali-
fornia rnort. 125 miles away. in time
to imbibe a few margaritas before
starting the long uphill journey home.
NOSA officials warn that all entnes
must have a valid ratinaccrtificate-
(eithcr IOR Mark Ill or Performance
Handicap Racing Acct (PHRF)-1n
effect March 31. Only entries re-
ceived by 4:30 p.m. March 31 will be
accepted. according to NOSA presi-
dent Bob Wheeler. Bob Bordwell is
general race chairman.
The Ensenada race. (known
facetiously as the "Enchilada Derby.··
"the race to Hussong's" etc.) 1s
proclaimed to be the world's largest
international ~ acht race b} sheer
numbers
was 50 percent at fault for not
maintainin1 a pro~r lookout. even
though it had thcnght of way.
The 36-foot yacht was four days out
of Newport. R.I. when the sk1pf)Cr.
Kai Granholm checked his hlhts.
scann~ the honzon and went below
for a JO-minute nap. The night was
said to have bttn clear, but u
Granholm slept his yacht was over-
taken and run over by the freighter.
Granholm said that prior to the
collision his tri-colored lantern was lit
atop the mast. but ship's offittrs
testifi~ they never saw it.
After being hit. the yacht owner
broadcast a "mayday .. (distress sig-
nal) and turned on all available liJJ!ts.
The freighter crew saw the hahts
astern. changed course and stopped to
assist.
The yacht later sank and Granholm
sued for S 155.000 damaacs. .
But the judge ru~ that Granholm
cho~ voluntarily to enpee in a
dangerous spon which did not excuse
him from the obligation to keep a
proper lookout under Rule 5 of the
International Rules of the Road (the
Coast G uard's COLREGS. Collision
Regulations).
The freighter also was found to be
50 percent at fault as evidence
1 nd1catcd the sh1p was proceed inc on
autopilot: the seaman actina as look-
out went below to make tea while the
officer 1n charge of the watch may
have been studying charts at the time
of the collision.
Thr decision 1s significant 1n that
the judge focused entirely on each
"esstl'slookout practices rather than
rules of ri&ht of way. Normally. an
overtakina vessel must yield the right
of way to any vessrl. sad or power.
under Ruic I J(a).
My longtime fncnd, Moulton H.
Farnum. former editor of Boating
Magazine and presently National
Advisory Council Chairman for
Boat-U.S. 1s a tran~Atlanuc sinJlc-
handed record holder. He stated in a
Boat-U .S. bulletin that a collision
wnh a commercial vessel is "the
biggest single hazard for sin&le-
handers. Eve!) minute you are offlhe
deck you are in peril."
Farnham said recreational boaters
must understand that a ship traveling
at a fast spctd can take fi ve to I 0 miles
to stop. e"en 1n attempting to avoid a
colhs1on.
The dec1s1on in this cast 1s unlikcl}
10 be appealed. said Boat-l '. .. Slncc
Granholm did recover $77.000 But
(Pleue eee LOOKOUT /82)
Preview orients patrons to antique treasures
........ ,.......,'-,.,_
llartlaa O ....... m and Pat Atha welcome Once Boyd, rtcbt, to •bOw prniew
By BETTY PORTER
Oelfr "'94 C.n 191 I ... I
Car doors slammed constantly
and young valets ran in circles.
looking for parking SPOts along
Ocean Ori ve for the 2 70 guests
arriv1ngsimultancousl> a1 the
Laguna Beach Museum of Art.
The Affiliates. the museum's
oldest support group. was hosting a
gala previewofits 13th annual
antique show featuring 3::! dealers
from Oregon. Washington and Cali-
fornia.
The) called Thursda~ night's
party"An Evening in China." But
surely no place in the Orient (or
anywhere else) could compare with
the ~pot where the museum stands.
high on a h ill. overlook inf the ocean
and the Just-comma-on night hghts
of Laguna Beach -the Ri' 1era of
Southern California.
But the Chinese New Year was
just beainninaso a "China" theme
was entirely appropriate forthe
part)' staaed in the museum· tent~
pa110 .
Buffet foods(byTi' 011 Terrace
caterer ) were Cantonese as was the
dtt<>r of ilk umbrellas. ChinCS(
porcelains and floral arranacmcnts,,
1 nduchna )"CUowchrysanthemums
and plants prov1dtd by S..U
S.n~ttand Bordicn Nuncl).
OrtttinatutSts were e<><ha1r-
mcn ht A ... and 1'MI St11".,,
and honorary chairman.,....
Gre1M•(W1th hutbend Dtdl)who
-ore all ttd, the CtuMte color
dcno11n1 h•PPtnnt.
Bcina hostm 1u natu111I for
G~ham •ho said w has wel-
comed 20.000.aunts (moat I) char.
•t> aroups) to Fornatt Mansion. a
home sM purttwcd aftd rntOttd in San Juan Capistrano.
T~~~hupind-
(Pl1H1-AJI /al)
,. .
_.._
9.'AL "M19 •••••'9C>RT MWTI COUMI cm-.
NIC NIWI MOT llAT HOTUNf fllCMI
••• "A FWl'llly . Upside Oovrf\
tt7') Helen HI)•. fred Astwt MOYW **'' The TrOUCll With Gll'IS I 1"91 Elvil ,rtllty Mwtyn Muon -9:30-T!IENJAMIH
MAaEl J lfHA(A
IMMKETINO NEWS
MANEY MIU.EA
~OFFOATUNE
MOVIE
• • 'MetalstOfm The Destruction
Of Jated·Syn I 19831 Jellrey Byron
T 11n Thomefson
-7:00-
CISNEWS
l to0,000 NAME THAT TUNE
8080M IUOOIES
AIC NEWSQ
NEWS nw.FS COMPANY
WHEEl. OF FORTUNE
3-2·1 CONTACT(R)Q
P.M. MAGAZIHE ltl ENTERTAIHMEHT TONIGHT !~APl)Y .
* * • Scarlet Street I 1945) Ed·
ward G Robinson. Joan Bennett
-7:30-
12 ON THE TOWN
CAAXf CAAUTA
COLI.EGE BASKETBALL
IEYEONLA WKRP IN CINCINNA Tl
.B:IPAIOY
PAORLES OF NATURE
SNEAK PREVIEWS
i SAN DIEGO AT LAAGE
PEOPLE'S COURT
FAMILYFEUO m RACING FROM SANTA AHIT A
-l1l0-l i~~ OMOVIE * • •., · Netoht>ors I 19811 Jonn Be·
11=·--llrY * COfJllon"' '"9bn To Edln'I
I AfTUAN TO EDIN
NATURE OFTlMI Ym9M
MOVIE
t t T1111 Night With Yo.J 11t4SI
Fr#IChOt Tone SUllMI Foater
MOYIE
t t t t The BIO Clllll ( 1983) Kt\lln
Klint, Gi.nn Close
(H)MOYll
t t "C H.0 M.P S j 19791 Wetley
EUtt. Vllltttt Ber11nt111
E.Yll: ONE 9IOHT WITH YOU
THE HASTY HEART
-l:30-
l QI FMILY TD TICT~DOUOH LOVEllOAT
AfTVALS
-t.o0-
1 F WOH
MERV GAIFf1H MYSTERY!
MASTEAPIECE THEATRE
MOYIE * * "Blame II On Rio '198~) Mt·
chael Caine Joseph Bologna
(Z;MOVIE
t t • ' 48 HRS f 19831 Ntek Nolte
Eddie Murphy
-t:30-R a NtGKT COURT ~=HTZOHE
* * High VelOClty 11977) Ben Gaz·
zara. Britt Ekland m NIGHT GALLERY
(8) HBO COMING AITRACTIONS
-10:00-
1 KNOTS LAHOING
~TREET BLUES
201200
RICH MAN, POOR MAN BOOK fl FAWLTY TOWERS
FIRINGLIHE
WREST UNG
MOVIE
• • • Dracula I 19791 Franll Lan-oeaa Laurence Olivier
!li;MOVIE
• • • 'Betrayal (19831 Ben Kings·
ley, Jeremy Irons
-10:»-
• TO THI 1iWD IOM -·--r lrZNNQ
-11:00-
1 &· 08NIWS
~WILD ..,.,.,.,..
PDLl't ()()UIWT
fllOWT'Y mHON'8 Fl Y1NO
CIQJS l:=r'"-.KO
'Lets Tl!ll S.1 (No Dattl (J)MOYIE
• • '1 Cu10 11983) Dee WalflOt,
Dan=euro
Ht A Special Day·· (1977) So-
phia Loren Mlfcello M1Jtr01111111
-11:30-NIGHTHEAT
TOHIOHT
ODOCOUPL.E ~NEWS HIGHTUNE
VEGAS
ROCKFORD Fil.ES
LATBIGHT AMERICA
· 700CUJI
-11:40-
'H)MOVIE
• • • Yentl ( 19831 Barbra
Strt1sand Mandy Pa11nk1n
-12:00-
1 TWILIGHT ZONE
EYE ON HOU YWOOO
MOVIE
• • • 1 Babe I 19751 Susan Clark
Alex Karras
(!) INOEJl£HOENT NEWS 0 CHARLIE'S ANGE1.S
(C)MOVIE
• • Lone Wolf McOuade I 19831 Chui:~ Norris. Oav1d Carradine
-12:30-
D a LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
L.ETTEAMAH 8 ALFRED HITCHCOCK
PAESENTS • ElLERY QUEEN
(!)MOVIE
• • •, Panic tn The City · t 19681
Howard o..11 Linda Cristal
e MOVIE
• • Only !be Valiant (19511 Gre-
i y Peck &arbara Payton
IHOEPENOEHT NEWS
JACKIE GLEASON
'O)MOVIE
• Heaven s Touch (19811 l<elly Ni·
chots. Joanna Storm
-12:11-
MOY!(
tt'r ClMll Of Tiit T1t1n1 {1111J
HerryHamlln. ~~
-12:40-
• MOYIE •• I. "Cry Raptt' ( 19731 Ptt« Col•
field, Andree MltCOYICC1,
-t:OO-.M0\111 * • • The Wolf Mill ' Clludt Rans Lon Cllanty Jr .MOVIE
• • ,,...,. Slllds ( 19551
Mttlt• Men= l ~r ro.n
tt "DC C1b ( 1983) Mt. T. Adam
Bald-.-tn
-1:30-
1 AECOADOUU
LOYESONQ8 "
All IN THE FAMILY
-1:55-
MOVIE
• • "Tile Sensuous Nurse" ( 1979)
Ursula Andress. OultlO Del Prete
(RJ Will.IE NELSON'S TEXAS PARTY
-2:00-
1 i ~NEWS NIGHTWATOH
HOT SEAT ~BOXING
-2:30-
8 MOVIE
• • • The Ugly Amertean f 1963)
Marton Brando E111 Olada CD MOVIETONE NEWS
e MOVIE • * t B•rdman 01 Alcatraz ( 19621
Burt Lancaster Karl Malden
-2:40-
SlMOVIE * •' 1 "Circle Of Power (1980)
Yvette M1m1eu~
-2:55-
H MOVIE
• • • South Pac1lie ( 19581 Milli
GayflO< Rossano Br&ZZI
-3:00-
(f) ABBOTT ANO COSTELLO
eMOVIE * * Jtie Star Packer' ( 19341 Jonn
Wayne Verna H1Uie m COMIN' ALIVE
l JMOVIE
• t 1 Erendira ( 1983) Irene Pa·
pas Claudia Chana
-3:20-
( Ci EROS AMERICA
Ava Gardner, •bown with Mrlee •tar J>oaC'laa Sheehan, la
the neweet addition to the cut of .. Knota Lanclln •• " alrln&
tontabt at 9 on CBS. Channel 2 .
New Dillon on screen
in 'Heaven Help Us'
LOS .\NGELES t -\P) -Another
Dillon has appeared on the movie
scene. Kevin Dillon. younger brother
of th e teen idol Matt. makes his film
debut in .. Heaven Help Us."
He plays the hea vy in a Catholic
boys' school -.. somewhat of a punk.
a wise gu' more than a bully ...
At 19. Ke" in has decided acting "is
definite!\. what I want to do" despite
the rigors. "The surpns1ng thing was how ex hausting film work 1s," he
remarked ... I've done manual labor.
hauhng shrubs at a nursery. but I was
never so worn out as I was after a day
on a movie set."
More Dillonscomingalong?Could
be. Besides Matt. 2 I. the Dillon
family includes. Paul. 22. an anist
and model. Kate. 17, Timothy. 15.
and Brian. 13.
BBC back
In saddle
on 'Dallas'
LONDON ( P) -The Bricish
Broadca 11na Corp .. lamentina the
lo ~of the merican television tencs
"D. Ila "to riv111 i:names Television.
says it will restore the popular show
because of s1rong protests by viewers.
"We were taken aback by the
strength of viewer reaction in toking
off .. Dallas.' We underestimated pub-
lic feelings about delaying the trans~
mission ofth1s merican series." said
8111 C ouon. managing director of
BBC TV. On Feb. 6. the BBC stopped
~creenina the remaining 13 episodes of the popular series. saying the show
would re ume in September because
of seasonal viewing factors.
But Cotton said Monday ni'ht t~e
BBC will now resume screenmg 11s
remaining episodes on March 27.
"It became clear that they (the
viewers) strongly objected to having
to wait until the autumn for the series
to return. so we decided to gi ve them
what they wanted." he said.
The BBC denied its cha nge of hean
had anyth ing to do wi th an an-
nouncement by an organization
called Guild Home Video that it had
acquired the video rights of the 13
episodes that the BBC still has to
screen in a deal with che U.S.
producers of the show.
Guild Home Video. which is
British-based and Swedish-0wned,
said 1t plans co issue the video version
of the 13 episodes in monthly batches
of three for sale or rent staning Feb.
27.
The "Dallas" shows deal with with
a family of Texas oil millionaires
headed by the ruthless. scheming
businessman J.R. Ewing. played by
Larry Hagman.
The BBC began screening "Dallas"
in 1978 and the series has gained a
BBC audience of around 14 million in
this country of 56 million.
ANTIQUE SHOW PREVIEW ORIENTS GUESTS ...
From Bl
laughter when Gresham spotted her
longtime friends Joan Hanson and
Grace Bradley Boyd, who wore an
elaborate antique gold coin neck-
lace given to her by her late
husband. actor William "Hopalong
Ca11idy'' Boyd and matching ear-
-rings "made from Hoppy'scufT
l inks."
"Martha Gresham designed m y
home.'' said Boyd ... It's furnished in
mostly traditional, in lavenders, sea
green and hlac:·
Just inside the tent were Dorothy
Berry(in Fitch fur)andGeorge
C1umin1ham (who for 16 years has
portrayed one of the disciples in
"The Last Supper" at the Pageant of
the Ma sters). Pa t Buford and
Beverly T•ttle.
Among those wandering among
the first two floors of d ispla y booths
were past trustees president Marla
Bird, treasurer Pattie Tunnel (in an
oriental gown). Voll and Lew Wllit·
aey (president.juniorcouncil) and
advisory board members Donna
and David Kelly.
Lawrence C. Dougberty demon-
strated his antique clocks to Abby
Meueaett, president. Orange
County ASID. while JoaJatir
compared some Ban Chiang art
(l.000to4.000 B.C)with 12 pieces
he has on loan for exhibit at the
Bowers Museum.
lnspecting1ewelf). thousand
flower porcelain and coromandel
screens were Hilary Imes, Dr. Peier
Volosbln (wlth wife Louise, program
chairman and vice president Af·
filiates) and Dr. William Farrington
(with wife Trudy, former president).
Affili ate board member and mu-
se um enthusiast Bernice McGrath
introduced trustee Janet
Cartwr ight (who wore a jade green
brocade suit and admitted to being
.. big on Oriental antiques"). vice
president and membersh1p cha1r·
man SH le Elseabart (in a black
ruffled antique blouse and a cameo
pin her mother gave her) and
1 nterior designer Dorothy Randall
(who wore an elaborate ivory nec k-
lace) .
.\n1st Joyce Donna watted wuh
Pat Gulick (Three Arch Bay) in a
buffet line-asdid David Gregory,
Kenny Rogers ("I don't sing and I
don't know Dolly Parton")Robln
Green and Rich,ard Mau In (who
.have owned Pyne Castle. a Laguna
-aeach landmark mansion for 14
years).
;Donna and David Kelly admlrejewelry. Ma.rla Bird. Co-chair Tom Stanabary chat.
On h1s wa> toseeexhibits
downstairs. Museum DirectorBlU
Otton (with wife Diana) predicted
"the show will make $25.000at
least.·· Trustees president Ted
WINTER SALE SPECIAL
····"•' Manie T '' C.111les
Your choice while
they last
only
'449"
Features :
Mahogany wood
with Inlay banding,
··. brass decorations
and accents with
beveled marble
top. Just a couple
of the many direct
Import• featured
during our winter
sale.
-van.Jffemer~ .!lnteriaa
eos:J.A 111~.u
1!S9!J n-,,-1 01,,1. • 64 f·20JO a,.... 0.5,1() m.... ,1.,.., s.1.
------
.t.Agutl.A Ot:.Ae.JI
14-' n. c .. ., .JJ.., • "'•¥6J$1
Or .. 9.s,JO t17"". 11-_<:.1.
... J 12·5 .s. ..
.I .
COUNTDOWN .•.
Fr om Bl
helmsman~h1p of John Landon. San
Diego YC
Others e:>.pccted to stan:
Arriba l(hoatr-48). Dick Ettinger.
NHYC . Its OK (41 -foot sloop). Lewis
8et"I). Balboa Y(: Stnder (NM-5). David
P1cke11-John C1ladstonc. Bear Lake YC
Gard<'n C II) lltah: Lone Star (NM-SS)
Burton BenJam1n. ·SOY\ ( ursor
(W\hc-38 I <itt'\C Farwell. NHY(. Ms Blu
(S ... ·an-S I). Ham Thomason. BYC Prl'dac1ou~ (Balt1c:.i21. Arnt<' Nelson. Del
Rt·~ YC . .\lcta (46-foot sloopl Warren
Hancol'k NHY<.
llpbca1 ({\( -50). Gnf -'\mies. NHYC:
Victor~ !Du801\·43). Robcn Butkus.
C abnllo Beach YC . Magic Touch (S{ -40). w a, nr < olahan. Santa Barbara YC.
Pakl-ld.1a(Stt',tns-47). R Ste,cnsG1lll').
St Frnnm '< T1mbcrwolf (Farr-38).
Lan·, .\tktn\. '>c.'al Beach Y(. Troubador
(S ... an-461 Jame\ D1cpcnbrck. C onnth1an
YC'. M1~\ Magic !SC -SOI. Dick and Kirk
£111011 . NHYC: Wh1stlew 1ng
(Pctcrson·Sl). Neil Mc( onaghy. Tacoma.
Wash. YC.
"
<\manic ({ hoair-481. Mel Rtl hie).
BYC. Toboggan (S ... an-42). Ron Kunt1.
Oceanside YC Notorious !Olson-40).
Scott Pinc. ~ania Cruz YC. Passion 2 (4().
foot cust om). J1m Warmmgton. NHYC:
Arvo Ins (BaJa-47). Bill Stevens. La Pal
YC . "Jalu (S\loan-441. Petl'r C1rant. NHYC
Emil) Car (5C -50). Lani 5pund. (abnllo
Beach YC. Black Swan (Sv.an-4-4). Hugh
Beall). t Francis YC: Splendid Isle
(Swan-57). Charles Lactr.. Dana Point
YC: Appanuon ISC-40). 8111 Allen. Pacific
Manners YC; Wh1tc L1ghtn1ng ( Frcl'$·)8).
Dennis Pennell. SOY('
Jun1r (S .... an-44 ). Anhur Sil ve rstein.
BYC: Pri me Time (Olson-401. Robcn
Lund. Encinal ' ( . Bencd1k11c (Golden
wa,c-48). Ok Johannsen. California YC:
Gate (rasher <C&C -41 l Roger Shurtz. Island YC: Questar (Swan-44). Ken Ou.
SDYC: maug (J-351. Roark Ludwig.
SOYC Ecl1p'lC (N M-43). Wilham Ban-
nasch. SDYC : Wild Women (Mull-45).
Garry Gcbhardt·Walt Stf)ckcr, St. FYC:
Allure I C'·50). Charles Jacobsen.
Montcrc)' Peninsula YC.
Dlllf .... ,..... ~ &M,.,..
Nineteen-month-old Erin Frick. wltb BeYerly Raddach,
left. and Joyce Frick •tarta ~ppreclatln& antique. early.
Paulson (with wife Suzanne) said the
museum re modeling and land-
scaping designs ha ve been approved
b) the City Council.
Suzanne Paulson was enthusiastic
about a new Collectors' Council the
museum has formed to educate
people on collecttng contem porary
an -"We 11.0 on field trips. view
LOOKOUT •..
F~omBl
1he decision ma)' no"' be ctted by
adm1rah) attorneys arguing sim ilar
case!..
"It'~ a harsh decision. but one
people should be aware of." said one
ad miral!> laW}cr who did not wish to
be 1dcnt died. .
Smee the Judge ruled that
Granholm's decision to take a 30-
minutc nap was "negligent.'' the case
also may make insurance for single-
handed voyages impossible or ex-
cremely ex pensive to obtain.
priva te collections and visit an1sts'
st udios."
Shopping for Ralph Lauren's new
Polo store (to open soon at South
Coast Pla1a) were Todd Morrow and
Alan KaappofThe Lin en Store.
Items they fou nd included a huge
hand hewn wooden bowl. a blan ket
rail and a Saratoga trunk.
Amons the last to lea ve the pan y
was Affiliate president Kay
Courtney who commented. "I'll be
back here tomorrow and the next
day. 'An Evening in China' was j ust
the beginningofa three-day show-
the last museiim event before the
planned remodeling.''
Among others attending were
Sylvia Bishop (wife of co median
Joey). Laura Blaisdell (who worked
for Dary l Zanuck for 20 years).
Ileane DooUa, Catherine Kiester,
Gloria Grant, Barbara DlamOIMl,
Arnita Albright and Lauri
Pell11ero.
Paparazzi is edited by Daily Pilot
StylL' Editor Vida Dean.
April shows due
Duncan Mctntolh, produCer of the Newport In-The Water bollt8
lhowt et Udo MMna Vllllge llnd Yechttng Center. ha lnnOUnOlid •• for .... .,.,. ......
The UMd boet lhow Aprtl 11· 14' _. be follow9d by lie 1111b 0111
lhow, AprN 17·Z-1, Ind the power bo.1 lhow, April 24-21.
Houri for Iii of thelhowt wtll be 11 a .m. to eunMt welk~Md
10 a.m. to..,... SeturdlYI Md lundeya. AdmilliOn • be 11 loi' ldutt•, 12 ror chlldreft t-12. ChNdNn under e ......
Sea Explorers bid
IOr new members
a Explorers of Dana Point will
st:in 1hcir biannual membership
dnvc at 7 p.m. Wednesday. March 6
in Room 306 at Mission Viejo High
hool. Sea Explorers offer a challena1na
and exc1tina~roaram wh ile tudima ltfc·lona ski . Adm1ni tratlon is by
the Nau11ca Hcritaac Museum of
Dana Po1nc under auspice of the Boy
OU\$ Of mCrtCI.
All 1cc1v1&1cs ona1natt It the Youth Dock~ 1n Dana Harbor. Mttt1np arc
held on Wt'dncsday e\ien1naa. Ac·
t1vittt arc ~htdukd for wttkends
and holiday\.
Minimum aac 11 '"and the fee of
S39 indudel rca11tra11on ID both blsic
and 1n1ermC"d111c 11ihnt clatsct.
•· ot 100 many ynrs qo in tht
wuntl'\ a 'oun man in hi tttn ,
drawn by the 1n111aue ot tall ships.
could ian on as cabin boy and
experience hfc from the decks of a
merchantman bound for u ouc
place ... !iaid ki~r Jim Wchan.
"Today the simpltcity of this
byaonc age is past. Yet the Sea
Explortrs still ofTt"r youna rmn end
women some of thnc same e:11-
pericnct' .
.. a faplortrs 1n Dana Po1n1 now
numbrr more 1h1n 10() youths and
a<tults uStnJ 40 vHSds.. A ~ l'KIUit
m1y find h1mselrlC'lm1na to tail in an S~foot Sabot. rac1n1 on board 1 )(). foot ocean f'Kcr. or Pfft'htd on 1he
yardarm 90 fttt above tht dttk Of tile
145-fuot C'ah(omaan or tht 150-foot ~t larim w11b1n 1 ftw Wttk after 111n11t1 on ... r or more dcta11,, c."all ,.9 -39.52.
~
BJ AOIERT MACY
'Ill I 1 ,,,_...,
LAS VEGAS-The tourist in the
Ian busiMSs suit squeezed pest a
camera c1tw in the lavish Ccasars Pala~ suite to act a better look at the
strikina blonde in the plush fur coat. ··oh man. T've been 1n love with her since I was 16." said the fan now
edaina past his mid-40s. •
(l's an cmo1ion Kim Novak evokes
whtrever she .aocs -hotel elevators.
restaurants. cny Strceu or on a movie
location at Ceasars Palace. where she
was shooting "The M•n From the South.'•
Now SI . and with more 1han 20
films to her credit. she is still best
re!flembercd by the postwar acner·
atron as tht sultry. sny, sulkina
blonde of Joshua lopn's hit movie
"Picnic" in I 9S6.
Todqy, with a face and figure many
younger women mi.&ht covet. she still
elicits fond memones from men who
adored her three decades ago.
"You'd be surprised how many
men come up to her. in elevators or
on the street. and sa) 'I've been in
love wrth yo u since I was a teen-
ager."' said agent Sue Cameron.
"She's very nattered: she loves it."
Rock star
to bare all
NE W YORK (AP)-Disco
diva Grace Jones. who just
finished shootinJ the latest
James Bond movie with Roger
Moore. "A View to Kill." says
she will appear in the bufT in
the July issue of Playboy.
Helmut Newton is sched-
uled to photograph the exotic
Jones. who posed nude four
yea rs ago for Italian Playboy
and Stern. the German maga-
zine.
Thoush Novak enJoys &he adull·
&ion &odly. IM 1bhottd ii JO ytars •to
durina htr "'Pknic" yean.
·•My ctl'ftf came so fu1 and bard.
ILwudifrteuh btcautt I felt pushed: I wa1 wortina all the ume and I just
wanttd to~· away." she said of the 1950s and 60s when she wat oiw of
the industry's lcadina sex symbols.
She Starrtd in a dozen films in htt
fil'1t eiaht ynrs in moviet includinA
"The Man With the Golden Arm.
"Picnic," "Pal Jocf and the Alfred
Hitchcock thriller. 'Vcrtiao."
In 1962. she bouaht a ranch in
Carmel. Calif .. to hcf p her comblt 1
srowina case of Hollywood bumout.
and she began cuttina back on htr
movie work.
"I was SO' insecure then: I just didn't ha ve any control over my life." w
recalled in an interview. rntina
between takes in her hotel suite as the
camera crew shufficd around the
hallway outside. "The studio told me
how to wear my hair and makeup.
what clothes to wear. even who I
should date to act the most publicity.
I constantly resented being made
over. Today the industry is so much
freer."
The Chicago native was a 20-year-
old an student and a travclina Miss
Deepfrceze model for a refriacrator
ad campaian when she was di~
covered in Los Angrlcs.
'The role I portrayed in 'Picnic'
was very much the real me. I was
frightened and frustrated," she said.
"All of a sudden there I was a
superstar and I hadn't lived up to it
yet. The ima~ was there, yet I was
still a little grrl from Chicago. Herc
were all these great pros exchanging
stories (Logan. William Holden,
Rosalind Russell). and I really felt out
of it. But now I feel like I finall y have
my own identity."
Novak shifted from talk of the
insecure "Picnic" years to plans for
an upcoming ski trip with husband
Rohen Malloy at their Orcaon ranch.
They met when Malloy; a veterin-
arian. came to the Novak ranch to
XlmKo•ak
treat one of the ranch's animals -
llamas. horses. dop. a donkey and a
goat.
They were married in 1976 under
an oak tree on the ranch. and Novak
said the union has changed her life.
"I think working in films today is
much different. much more fun than
it was when I was youngrr." she said.
"Possibly a lot of that is my attitude.
I've got a aood home life. a caring
husband and now I can do film work
for the fun of h. the enjoyment. It
seefJ\S much more relaxed. more
open." ·
Life rn Carmel includes ra1s1ng
llamas for sale. helping Malloy in his practi~ and teaching exercise classes at a Boy Scout hall three days a week.
"The older I fCt the more I like 10 share my life,' she said. ··Maybe
that's because I was a very private
person when I was young ...
The Hollywood lifestyle has a
certain glamor and appeal that was
lackins two decades ago. Novak said.
because it was thrust on her then.
"The work appeals to me now
because l feel I have so much more to
offer as a person."
And she hu never qu11 looking at
scripts. though she admits it's hard to
find somcthintt she really wants to do.
ALL TOLL FREE
·8S~·44SS
7 da~e a WHk9 8 AM to 8 PM
11 the perfect way to pre1ent
your product or ••rvlce to the active
Orange Coa1t realdent. Appearing Frld•y, M•rch 15th.
I ltla Anniverury Sale ' Celetlation 11 0.,. . n.n., ,., J1 • w., Mir. 21111
II' ....... ~. 11 .... , ... ,
....... -. ... o1 ............ -tMer ....... for ........
11 ........... ....
( ... 11 ta&ll of 19 ..... ) to the Wnllf• of OW •awina:
tit 111111 • t41l 8eM N11rt
PIRllllll wlll ti ii••••• <12SO value)
ti cmm _., •n •1 1 ,, _.,. .... ,. nsn-am
•• u•,. ---,. • .. mn1111t .
..._ ................. ---····-· •-....: ! ........ -···-··· ........ .. --------·· ...... ~-·
lyPREDROTRENBEllG .,, ....... ....,
NEW YORK -ABC and NBC ended the week In a dead heat ind
CBS was a hair bthind. the clotttt the
three networks have bttft 1n prime
tr me since July._l976.
ABC and NBC each had an averqe
ratina of 17.0. jult bcatina season
leader CBS' 16.8. accordina lo A.C.
Nielsen Co. ratinas released Tuesday
for the week of Feb. 18-24.
CBS' ''Dallas" was the No. I
proaram. but ABC and NBC each
placed a miniseries episode in the top
I 0. Pans 2 and 3 of ABC's "Holly·
wood Wive$" were 13th and second. respectively. and NBC's initial in-
stallment of"Evcrgrccn" was ninth.
NBC. the No. 2 network. is prac-
tacally assured ofits first second-place
finish for a February sweeps since
I 97S. With the sweeps almost com-
plete. CBS leads with a 17.S rating to
NBC's 16.9 and ABC's 16.4.
The major sweeps months of
February. Ma y and Novembtr arc
when ratings for local stations arc
calculated and used to determine
future advertisina rates.
"NBC will probably come in sec-
ond in the sweeps by better than half a
ratrnas point." sard Marvin Mord,
J\BC's vice president for marketing
and research. ·
NBC is all but mathematically
certain of finishin& second for the
season for the first time in a decade.
Wit h eiJht weeks left in the ~week
primc-trmc campaign. CBS holds a
commanding lead with a 17.2 rating.
but NBC has a virtual insurmoun-
table lead for second pla~ -16.4 to
ABC's I S.7.
One ratings point equals I percent
of the nation's 84.9 million TV
homes.
But on Madison Avenue. where ad
agencies buy specific programs for
their clients and not overall network
ratrnJtS. NBC's rcsuraencc is even
4 TRACK 00l.8Y ST!.REO
HARAISOH l'OAD ''WITNIH" (I )
7'15, ... s
KURT EU
'"TMI MIAH llASON'' (I)
moiri lipi(k.aat ---0( the kinch of PfOPll. ·11w Mtwor'k is ractuns (dena.,a,lun). rather than how
many people tratinp) arc btina
readied.
"'Tht 1&c>ry " NBC"s (ommandina lead With adults 18-49: il'salmost like
Secmanat. .. John Sisk, senior vice
president and director of Mtwortc
nqotiatina at the J. Walter Thomp-
50n ad 11tnc_y. said. rcferrins to the
1973 Triple Crown winner.
For adults 18 .... 9. which is the key
aroup for advertisers. the ratinp for
all pnmc-time Protrams thrs sat0n
breaks down this way: NBC-11.2:
ABC-10.2. and CBS-10.1. For reaular
series. the ratinp. arc: NBC-11.4:
ABC-10.}. and CBS-10.2.
"Cons1cknna that people claim
victory when the~ is a I 0th of a point
difference. those arc bia swi nas rn
favor of NBC.'' said Srsk.
NBC was able to keep pace last
week with its regular senes.. Pan I of
"Evergreen" and some suett$sful
cou nter-programming aprnst ~Hol· lywood Wi ves."
''NBC certainly bailed themselves
out with counter-proarammina." said
Bob lgicl. senior vice president at the
NW Aycradvcnisin1aaency.
Against "Hollywood Wives;· NBC
scored with a stron1 male-appeal
show. the two-hour repeat of .. Thc A·
Team." which finished 12th. and "Disneyland's 30th Anniversary ..
special. which ranked 18th.
NBC"s Thursda¥ ni&ht comedies
placed three shows in &be top I 0: .. The
Cosb) Show" was third. "family
Ties.'' fifth . and "Cheers." tied for
ninth.
"Hollywood Wives." which began
wath lower-than-expected ratinas. fin -
ished stron&Jy last Tuesday night.
almost rcadung the 40 share (per-
centage of sets in use) forecast by
some advcnising agrncics. ABC had
two regular senes in the top I 0:
founh-ra tcd ··Dynasty." and No. 7
MON-T~I00 ... 15, 101S
• (I)
l'.36, ... ''fAlf foeWAW' (fie)
. .,. .... Dt cuw·on
filiOTHV Huff&
DOUIY "TMI PAI.CON ANO
STEAfO 1'MI SNOWMAN" (II
4S
7 ACAOElifY AWAlllO NOt.tS
IN<A. MST ..:T\IM '"TMI ·~,_.. .. (I)
MON ·THUM 1'CIO t 30
.. Wllo., &ht loel?" (Jll••di~~ ~ Wivts" llM T~ .
.... ·•Ddla," QI ..... No. 6
"60 Miautn" 1ftd No: 1 .. s. ... a
Simo11"' ill dw lOP I 0.
tWrt art the 10p 20 raled ~
vi5a0ftt Pf'Cll'U:'I for dw week GrM. 1a..u. u~· include the ._.,
rankaq. With teMOn"~ .. e 1n pem11bnn. rati'! .at N
and IOW bomts. An X"' iA •
etet dcnotet onc·tun.e-only ,._.
talion.
I. (2) "Dalla1." CBS. lS.I. 21.9
million homes. -
2. (X) ··Hollywood We~·· Pltl 3.
ABC. 25.2. 21 .4 million holnta. 3. (l) -The COiby Show ... NIC.
2S.I. 21.3 mtlhon hom~
4. (I) "Dynasty," ABC. 24.6, 21,0
millron homes.
S. (7) "family Tics.'' NBC. 24.3.
20.6 million homn.
6. (4) ··60 Minutc1." CBS. 2.J.I .
20.2 million homes.
7. (40) ··who's the Boss?", Al£.
23.0. 19.5 millron homn.
8. (6)"Simon & imon." CBS. 22.•.
19.0 million homes.
9. (IS) "Chetrs," NBC. 22.3. 11 9
million homes. 9. (32) "Evcrgrttn." Pait I -
"NBC Sunda) N1aht Movie," 22.l .
18.9 million homes.
11. ( 13) ··Murder. She Wrote,"
CBS. 21 . 7. 18.4 m1lhon homes.
12. (S) "The A-Team." NBC. 21.S.
18.l minion homes.
13. (31 ) "Hollywood Wives," Part
2 -''ABC Monday Niaht Movac."
21.1. 18.0 mrllton homes.
14. (X ) ">Bob Hope Lampoons
TV." NBC. 20.3. 17.2 million homes.
IS. (8) "Fakon Crnt." CBS. 20.2.
17.1 million homes.
16. (35) "Trapper John, M.o .• -
:CBS. 20.1. 17.I million homn.
17. (9) "Crazy like A Fo-x." C.,
19.4, 16.S milhon homn..
"18. (11 ) "Hotel." ABC. 19.3. 16;4
million homes.
18. (X) "Di~lancfs lOtb A.-
niversary Special,' NBC. 19.l. 16.4
million homes.
20 ( 12) "Mqnum. P.l. ",CBS. 11.9.
16.0 million homC'S.
HAMllOH FOl'IO ''WITNIH" (II)
~ _1_1_s_•u~~~~--.
( TIMOTHY HUTTOH .. ,.., .. 1 ., .. (N-11)
• oo. t«I 10-<IO
MOH. THUM I 4S t 00
... ,.. (Jl9). (5 ACAD HOMS I
I IO
"STAaMAN" (H)
100 10 15
7 ACAOCMY AWAN> NOM$
UOCl IE.ST l'ICT\IM
''THI .IU. ......... (It.)
7 1S, IOOS
TIMOTHY ltUTTOH "TUH 112" (No 1 a)
d o f MacArthur unfold ·
urc." said Maclear an a telephone
interview from his office In Toronto.
Canada. "He was certainly America's
greatest general and one of the most
romantic fiaures of this century. He
and Winston Churchill were dastant
cousins and very much alike. They
both had a mystical sense of destiny
that they were born to do wbat they
had to do."
The series. usina rare newsreel
footage from this country as well as
Australia and Japan. traces
MacAnhur's career through three
major wars and his sojourn as a field
marshal in the Philippine Army. lt'sa
fascinating look at this controversial
and enigmatic figure, and it examines
him through his words and those of
THE HEAT IS ONI
Bl:\IEl~~f
1-lllJ-'~
edwa rds LIDO CI NEMA
~t ••~ ,':::~~.'••IC 613 8350
-t .,.p._ I' I I• .-..
'"Witness' is erotic In the purest sense. A thriller ...
And a pleasure for us all:'
! -Gene Shalit. TODAY SHOW
A PARAMOUNT PICTURE ..... ~ • MCMUIXXVll'tPw-~Copor-:~ jWJ NOW PLAYDIG Al,.........., . -..:. . ...
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M ISSIO N ..... : r · .. •, 1.-, 1 -:
his 1uP.P911en and critics. It milht eecm odd that 1 Canadian comp1ny prodUC'ed the 1erin, but
Maclear points out be also dad the 2~
pan "Vietnam: The 10,000.0.y
War."
Maclear. a foreian correspondent
for the Canadian Mtworkl for lS
years. said he leans toward news.
based productions.
Maclcar said he had no trouble
ttttina MacAr1hur•s old cohorts to talk. ''lt was iflhey'd 111 been waidna
for someone to caJI. Moat of them ate
in their lltt" 7~. but with vivid
memories and strona emotions about
MacArthur.''
The foot soldiers called him
"Duaout Doua." implyina that he
stayed safely away from danaer. But
his associates. backed by the film
foot.aae. point out that MacArthur
frequently citposcd himself recklessly
MON-FRI. 6:35, 10:30
SAT/~ 2:35. 6:35. 10:30
Mlcli¥ff~
SAT
to enemy ft~. M9cAnhur felt thll It
Wll his dettin)' that he woutd not die
ia mule. Al su~mc aJlied commander ill
the PKilk, MacAnhur chafed under
lhc 1u.naioa PRtident f ranklia
Rooaevih 11ve to the war in E\&tOPt.
ind he worbd miahtily to keep fro.,_ / beina ouunaneuvcred by the Navy
aad the Marine Corps. He helped
thape the ftaaure of Japan after &.he war. and when the North Koreans invaded South Kcme in I 9SO he took
10 die field apin.
But he clashed with Prnldent
TNmln over conduct of the war and was relieved of his command. He
retured to a hero'• welcome and
defended his policies in his famous
"old soldiers never die, they j ust fade
away" speech to a Joint session of
Conaress before setthna in New Yort
City.
Sidney Poitier dlrecta Don Frank1ln ln b.19 new ma.le,
.. ,. .. t Yonrard."
Poitier satisfied
behind camera
By BOB THOMAS
A I II Hf"-.,._
LOS ANGELES -Seven years
a&o. Academy Award-winnin' actor
Sidney Poitier starred in and d1reclcd "A Piece of the Action." He hasn't
bctn in a movie since.
Poitier, a thoughtful man who is
not given to snap answers, has sevtraJ
reasons for his film hiatus.
"I had been actina for JS years and
had done a variety of roles,·· he said in
an interview. "I had been more
fortunate than most actors in the opportunities that bad bctn available
to me. I had been as careful as possible
in the kind of films I chose, striving
for ones that would be •useful'
socially.
they have served me well.
"That is not 10 say that I haven't
done things that I later regretted.
There arc two in particular that I wish
I hadn't done." It would have been
fascinating to learn what they were,
but with a flash of the famous Poitier smile, he declined to name them.
On the day of a recent luncheon
interview, the actor-director-
producer was plannina to meet with a
New York-based writer about a script
that would return him to the scittn.
Meanwhile he was calling attention to
his latest film as a director, "fast
Forward."
Though it is the story of youna
dancers, Poitier sajd it was not a
musical.
"How could I direct a musical? I
am tone deaf and have two left feet,''
he said.
"Most of the films I made had a
touch more to them than just enter-
tainment. I got to the ~nt where it
tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiii was more and more difficult-to find new material for me as an actor. I
cUdn't want to fall prey to workina in
lisscr material that would not be
In his Academy. Award-winnina
"lilies of the Field," Poitier aana
gospel sonp to the missionary nun1.
But it was not his voice, He lip-
synchcd to the voice of Jester Hair-
ston, a noted gospel sinaer.
FRI 6:00
8:15, 10:30
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1 100 6 10100
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SAT/SUN 1:30
3:45, 6:00
8:15, 10:30
STADIUm a
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THa M llAKl'AST CUle Pt) Ce·Htt The Wild Ufe (9')
MISCHl ... (11) Co•Hlt The ~11mlnto Kid 1'0·1 J)
STA-"'9 .. ) "u• Co·tilt Dune (~·12)
w1nmmn11 ,.. ... Co·~ .. ture Thl9f of HNrll ( .. )
I
..
complementary to past values. The
alternative was to develop other skills
as a filmmaker."
Thouah he would ha ve made more
money as an actor than as a director.
he did not allow money to guide bis
anistic decisions.
"I was so dumb in my early days
that I held onto my values and
starved because of them." said
Poitier. "But I stayed with them. and
..
IS DEFINITELY THE BEST
IN ITS CLASS."
-Joel Siegel. Aec. TV,
0000 MOANING AMERICA
THE
BR E AKFAS T
C L UB
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MAJOR STUDIO
SNEAK PREVIEW
TOMORROW NIGHT
AT 8:00 P.M.
... INTO THE NIGHtr IS
•IElllTal ...
A •AllCLIN9 THllWR.
At the center are twO of the
movlet' molt engaging
young acton,
Jeff Qokiblum and
Machelle Pfefffer."
-lllctlotoCorlll. fMI ~
'"fast Forward' is the story of
youna people and their ur&e. desire
and need to leave their mark on
time," the dir~tor continued. "They
don't think in artistic terms beyond
the feeling that 'I want to be some·
body.' That's a universal feelina in a
world where anonymity is tanta-
mount to failure. They want witness
to their existence on this planet."
Poitier bas learned of these youth-
ful yearnings throuah his periodk
visits to hi&h schools in less advan-
taged areas. He talks about "self-
moti vation and the relationship be·
tween success. and di~i(>line," then
answers questions. A v111t to an cast
Los Anacles hiah school prompted
him to launch a film "about youna
Americans who are not into drup.
swearing. crime and the over·
whelming pursuit of pleasure."
He condoctcd auditions in New
York, Chicago and Los Angeles to
choose eight young performers, black
and white. who could act as well u
dance. That's another Poitier
mission: helping youna talent find •
place in the sun.
Sidney Poitier did it the hard way.
carvin& a career when black actors
were relegated to the back of the show
business bus. After films of racial
tensions such as "No Way Out" and
"Blackboard JunaJe," he established
himself as a moncr,makina star in
"To Sir With Love,' "Guess Who'•
Coming to Dinner" and "In the Heat
of the Night."
He directed himself i.n "A Wann
December." "Uptown Saturday
Night'' and "Let's Do It Again." Then
he directed only with "Stir Crazy"
(Gene Wilder. Richard Pryor) and
"Hanky Panky" (Witder and Gilda
Radner).
At 61 , Poitier remains in his prime.
He touches no alcohol, pve up
smokina 25 years aao. elC1'ci1t1 rqularly and eat• a special diet. Hl•
breakfast that day consisted of beet
areens. liver and the juice of beeu,
carrots and celery.
While workina in "The Lost Man,"
Poitier met his future wife, actretl
Joanna Shinkus. They now have two
children.
Hughes had
director's
talent too
LOS ANOELES (AP) -Howard
Hu&hes as movie dntttor1That's1
liUIC·known aspect of the late lY· coon '1 varied career.
He dlrtetcd ponions o( hl1 ny1111
epic "Heirs Anacls." a well 11 tbi
tctten tests.
Former actress Marp.rct Y ouftl
Townatnd recently donated to ahi
American Film Institute a teti abe
made with HuabH in the 19lOI. In
ecuptin& the ain, Pfftttv11ionl11 uwrence F. Karr commetned that
=Im Intl havt disappearid. He
··11 tht cue of this• the added
d&alinctioa is that the Int WM direct~ by Howard Huaha. •t.o.
voice " heard from behind tlll
camen aivint direct tons. Al 6ir a wt
know. this 11 the onl)' Hrv~vi•
tcma test that HUaha wt• n•vOMid with."
J
11JRKIWIJQmmAJ1
(If.)~
TD
PAlllLY
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane
"I bet Larry Bird's mother let HIM
dribble in the house!"
• ~~' ' t ·2S
·GORDO
OAllFIELD
by Brad Anderson
"I know! I know!"
CLEAN Y<>UR
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in a small slam wta.n he learned h11
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wuted no time in tlliaklac about
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bring home his slam.
CllULES
Go1E1
..
•
Arthur Danletlan receive•·
Penonal Achievement Award
Arcbftt(1 ..,.... c. OUMUa, ~icknt or DuMUu .UNdatn of
Newpon Beach. 1s one of 10 indlvidwak nacionwiM chotcn by Profett .... I B•lW.r Mqe•tee for it1 Profmional Achievemen11 Awards for 1984. The
lrvioe resident was the only architect amona those honored b~ the buldin1
track publications. HewaschOMn in thecatetoryof desian versaulity. hono~d
for 14 residential housi~ projects com~ncina construction in one yea r and
specifically "for leadenhap and pef()Cption in adaptina creative and efficient
designs to a wide ranae of tiousiQJ products in a variety of climates and rcaions
... . "Currently director of the Orinae County chapter of the Bllll4.laC ..,..,ry
Assoclatloe of SMdlen Callf•nla. Oenielfan is pest chairman of the Natloul
CommJnee of~ Nalioul bittJ&•&e ef Arcltltee11,past chairman of the AJA ·s
Orange County chapter and pasc chairman of the affordable housing task force
of the Oranae County chapter of the BIA. • • • Robert N. Qenell b1 beea elec&ff die "e board of directors of lrvt ..
based Aaaek, be., a producer of computer araphics equipment. Qurnell is
pr~ident and chairman ofQeaeU £8Serpri1e1, l.c., a manufacturer of lead
DANIELIAN QUE NELL POE CARROLL
powder and other lead products. He is founder and past p~csident of.Quemetco,
r.c. and a former director of St. Joe Mlaeral1 Corp. He 1s also a director and
past president of the W...W Bulaet1 Coucll.
Jeanette Poe has ~n promoted ~a~agerofacq!-us1.t1ons und~rw~ting for
ne Koll Co. of Newport Beach, with respons.1b1llly for d1rcct1~g the
coordination of information on potential prope.mcs, proJeCt a~alys1s .• anl!
packa.ging of investment agreements. She bnngs sax. years of expenence in the
real estate investment field and investment markeung.to her new post.
• • • Lorea K. Carroll has joined Sall~ hlerutioaal, loc. ofNcwpon Beach as
vice president and chief financial officer. He comes to Smith from a post as
managing partner of A.rtku AMerNll 6 Co.'1 Tucson. Ariz .. office. He is past
president of the Na&loul .UMdatlea of Accouwta, 1s a past director of the
Costa Mesa Cbmber of Cemmerce, and has served as chairman of the finance
co mmittee of 1he Girl Sceea C.Ucll of Oruce Couaty.
• • • ne Commlltff fer Lu41cape Arcltltecture Studeat Scltolaraltlp Fud
(Cla11 Fud) raised a better-than-anticipated $75.000 in 1984. ··we expected
to reach our S 100.000 goal in 1985, but more toward the end of the year," said
Gree Applepte, president. The goal of the group 1s to establish a pef1>Ctual
scholarship fund, but in~era~tion an~ fcllows~ip amona industry professionals
is also pan of the organization. For 1nformat1on. call Applepte at 559-1000.
• • • Michael L. Pulley has been named proJeCt manager for Main Street Center
in Jivine and several other projects under construction by Nexus Corp.'1
NrwP<>n Beach-based central division. Pulley managers new construction and
supervises construction crews at the Main Street Center. a S 15 milli on offi ce
development. • • • Karol and Vasaatlll Hed1e. owners of Bad1emu'1 Recopltioo Expre~1
franchise an lrvane, have received the 1984 Eagles Club Award for exccl!encc an
thrdevrlopment of corporate rccognit~on proarams. 'fhe San Jaun Cap11trano-
bascd firm is the world's largest supplier of personalized name badges. It. a.lso
offers plaques and awards. office s1gnage, desk plates and other rccogn1t1on
products. • • • Coo.le Sc .. roller, a real estate professional wath Coldwell Banbr
Retldeallal Real Estate Services, hs been named top salcsper~n oft he month
at the firm 's West Huntington Beach office. The award 1s based on a
co mbinauon of top sales and unusually outstanding service to clients during
the month. • • • Stephanie Wilkins has been hired as instructor, national education for CIE
Sy1tems, 1Dc. of Irvine. a subsidiary ofC. ltob Elec~roalct, be. ~fLos A!l~e~es
and C. Ito .. of Japan. She will be responsible for national edu~t1.onal acu vaues
of CIE's REGULUS operations system and advanced crainang of a wold
processin& software pro~m for muhi-u~r business computer syste~s.
Wilkins had been systems man.,er and assistant department manager wuh
Electreod, loc. of Fullerton. . . . . . The Lee Sammis Co. has announced plans to de velop I 0 acres in Irvine an
partnership with Bullers Life Co. The project will be known as Corporate
Poi nte and will be located within the master-plan ned C<?rporate Park. Plans
call for 16 7.000 square feet in five. two-story structures, wath space expected to
be available by late summer or early fall . • • • Perry N. Tlenoar has been named vice presiden t and managingJ1rcctor of
the Irvine-based Marine Natloul Buk'1 internatio nal banking group.
Ritenour brings 11 years of corporate and international banking experience to
his new post: He has wri~ten article~ for the Oraa1e Coant>: Bal1laea.1 Journal.
Marine National Bank as the firsl independent community bank an Oranie
County with a formalized international banking department headquartered in
the county.
NEW YORK CAP> -Tile folloV(Jno llJI j 'l'IOws the Over -lht -counter \locks end warrants lhel 11ave gone uP 11'\e moJt end dowl\ the mosl beMd on 4 oercent of 'henge for We<IMsCS.y. S No secur tin lredlng !Mlow s2 or 1000 \heres ere ncluded. Net end ~centege '"-"99' are !h• dlfftrence !Mlw"n lhe prevlovJ clo• ng bid Price end Wed~•,t9•v's IH I bid price.
l AC~fn':j• L•~r, Cnf. ut'?,.~ 1 ~v: ~nn 1 •1. 5il! 8: I • ~ ' 11tlrdfnd •1. 'h UP l 2 S A 0~ un 11'1 ~ Up 6 6 Ooct 'h ~ UP 6 1 7 Colu t n ~ ¥1 UP I 4 j t ~'r ~ s-~ 8: jt.A ,
10 Enroro i4 'h UP ~.4 S
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:' Up h v. Uo h •1. UP .I t: :: UP 1U UP ~ UP DO NS "tf ~ Pel ~ = 1 .. I ff j 'IA -~ .J 14 -'i'J
.... ...
Race for long-distance
custo1ners is aliDOst here
WASHINGTON (AP1 -Millions
of Americans soon wi I be spared
dialina 12 or more extra numbers to
use one of American Telephone &
Telcaraph Co. 's competitors for lona-
distancc telephone calls .
Companies such as MCI, Sprint
and hundreds of ocher competitors
are hoping that the gradual switch to
"equal a~eH" to .the long-distance
circuits will brinf them some of the S 11.27 billion in interstate telephone
calls that AT&T handled last year.
MCJ's Don Campbell calls it "the
greatest single op~rtunity MCI has ever been faced wath.''
Charleston. W. Va .• was the first
city in the nation 10 implement equal
access. Under the system, begun in
July 1984. Iona-distance telephone
calls arc automatically switched to
the company chosen by the con-
'sumer.
Gone arc the days of dialing a
dozen numbers to connect to an
AT le T competitor. Now, all ic takes is
dialing the area code, the number and
rn4Ybe a " I."
Sophisticated new switching de-
vices give all long-distance com-
panies the same direct quality con-
nections that AT&T has bad.
So far. about 5 percent of the more
than 60 million connections to equal
access have been made, and stanina
ina few weeks. millions of Americans
a month will be asked to choose a
Iona-distance company.
8 y Sept. I, 1986. two-thirds of each
telephone company's lines must be
convened.
However. equal access ma y never
come to areas served by smaller
telepftone offices that arc too small to
convert economically. As Charleston prepared to make
the switch, the alternative long-
distance companies swooped down
on the city, launchina intensive
marketing campaigns in an anempt
to draw consumers away from
AT&T.
Since then. the companies have
toned down their saJes effort. MCI.
for example. docs a mailina a month
durina the three-month pre-subscrip-
tion period.
There arc an estimated 400 com-
panies ofTerina long-distance service
an the United States. About a de>7en
join each battle ..
For example. in Bethesda, Md .•
where ei&ht exchanacs will conven
next Sunday. 11 companies offered to
serve area homes. four sent literature
to households and one, AT le T. called
consumers solicitinJ business.
The others were hsted on the local
Irvine firins f o~m
fund for financing
early-stage firms
Enterprises Partners of Irvine an-
nounced Wednesday the formation
ofits new ve nture capital pannership.
whkh plans to invest $2(}.25 million
over the next five years.
The fund was organized by Charles
D. Manin of Corporate Development
Associates in collaboration with
Hambrecht le Quist and the Mayfield
Fund. two of the leading venture
capital orpnizations in the nation.
The fund plans to finance perhaps
25-30 carly-stace companies.
Enterpnses Pannen will have a
strong reaional focus on Southern
California. Martin plans to develop a
balanced portfolio consisti ng of hagh
technology companies in the elec-
tronics. computer and communica-
tions industries as well as a significant
position an mcdkal tcchnoloay and
healthcare companies.
The medical sector of the fund's
ponfolio is expected to benefit from
the emergence of this region as the
"Silicon Valley" of medical tech-
nology and healthcare.
Jnvestors in EnterpriKs Partners
include top tier institutions such as
Horslcy-Ke<>&h Associates, Harvard
University. G.T. Capital. Rho Man-
age ment and the World Bank, plus
more than 20 individuals of high
stature and accomplishment in the
Southern California business com-
munity.
Manin said. "Typicall).' these indi-
vidual 1nveston have built successful
companies an this region. The
network they form as partners will
constitute a valuable resource to help
the next Jeneration of entrepreneurial
companies."
As the general partner. Martin has
' ~~~~mP 29-16 _,_u ~~ 3'12 -I ~~~ S7-~\., -2_1-H ,.,. -
1n -.. I -1
= 5 ''!• -\t 1~ ·r =·~ ~-· v. -~ ~ = ~ 'I•
i i!f ~ •1. 'I• 11.
the manaaement responsibility for
the fund. He has a Jong record as an
entrepreneur. corporate executive.
venture capital financier and merger
and acquisitions specialist for emerg-
ing growth companies in Southern
California.
Hambrecht & Quist is a high
technology investment bankina firm .
Hambrecht and Quist has about $400
million of venture capital under its
manaaemcnt and has invested in a
portfolio of approximately 225 com-
panies.
Mayfield has about $200 million of
capital and has invested in more than ·
I 00 companies.
Workina with the general partner
organization and representing the
interests of Mayfield and Hambrecht
& Quist will be A. Grant Heidrich JI
and Grant Inman. respectively.
phone compan)"• mailina. but made
no other solicitations.
In six states. the local coml)any
sends a ballot with the list of
panicipatina Iona-distance com·
penies. But in most cases. only the list
comes. To sian up for a service. the
customer must notify the Iona-dis-
tance company.
Customers who make no desiJ-
nation usually are hooked to AT&T.
Wayne Purvis. equal access (>rod·
uct manaaer for Pacific Bell. said 6S
percent of the customers in some
neighborhoods pick a long-distance
company. while in others the rate is 20 percent. "We're really scratching
our heads to determine why we're
gettina such variances ... ~e saad.
Purvis said economically de-
pressed areas seem to have low
response levels. He surmised poor
people "don't have the kind of Iona-
distance bills that would tempt lhem
to look at Iona-distance alternatives."
Pacific Bell i1 now scndina out
ballots to consumers. The first wen&
out in early February, Purvis said.
and it is too soon to aauae consumer
response. . Northwestern Bell, which serves
Minnesota: Iowa. Nebraska and the
Dakotas, decided the fairest wa y to
handle what has become known H
"default traffic" is to allocate cu.
tomers who don't make a selec1ion
amona the Iona-distance compani~.
Since AT le T is getting such a b1*
chunk of the so-called "default
business. the Federal Communica·
tions Commission has decided to
rethink the fairness of its oriainal
dec ision to allow all default traffic to
go to AT&T. But FCC Commissioner Dennis
Patrick warns: "The problem we're
saing to have is customer objection
(to) being involuntarily assigned to
some carrier about which the cus-
tomer knows nothing ...
In fact, the way balloting bas
worked in Manncapohs. as many as
80 percent of the customers make
their own choice.
Presley will receive
Spirit of Life award
BuildinJ industry executive Ran-
dall Prctley will be prcscnted the
Spirit of Life award by the Orange
County Const.ruction Industries Al·
liance for the City of Hope on April 9
at the Newpon Beach Marrion Hotel.
Presley. chairman of the board and
chief executive officer of che Presley
Companies in Irvine. is io his fourth
decade in the construction indus1ry.
He has been responsible for the
plannina and construction of more
than 160 residential communities.
For more information on the
dinner event, call Ernest Spickler of
the Construction Industries Alliance
at (213) 626-4611 . ext. 295.
RepabUc Re.aarca
"1n• .ettlement In court
Republic Retourc~es Inc. Wednes-
day announced that it has been
awarded a judament of S 1.8 million
against the delinquent partnerships
and the former general partner.
The Newport Beach company said
it is ncaociating payment terms with
the new ieneral partner and expects a
substantial increase in cash flow in
1985 from these payments.
In addition. the company said it
has settled another lawsuit l'CJlrdins
a research project in arid agnculture
and expects to receive 50 000 tissue-
cuhurcd jojoba plants in ~all I 98S.
Megatroalc. open•
dlvl•loa la county
Mqatronics Inc. Wednesday an-
nounced the opening of the Anaheim
division.
This facility is the laraest utcd
circuit board manufacturina cquiJ>-
ment refurbishing operation in the
United States. In addition. this fa-
cility manufactures new circuit board
equipment of the same type currently
produced in the compeny's existing
Tempe facilitv.
The Anahe'im facility has 26 em-
ployees. including five manaaement
and sales personnel. A positive cash
flow is anticipated almost immedi-
ately from this operation based upon
$3 million to SS million in revenues
that arc expected over the 12 month
period commencing March 1985.
. ... --·· .... . ------·~.__........_.._.._._._ .. _________________________________ ----_________ .......... .... ... t·----· .....
------
OD
the
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NEW YOttl< (AP) F.O. 11
AMEX L E~DER S
NASDAQ S uMM ~R ~
Gotn Ouorfs ..... ..-.... _,.....~
.....-. --e lb.lllt '* '°· °" eo,ao L--. ...,_ ...,._.,.111 .,, a oe
...... ....._ ...... 119, 11. ofll2.>4
,....... ..... AtlO oo • .., u to z......•....,_ •ate 75.0't a"·-.-.....
......, • ..._"'"" ._ ... ,Ull rt.,,,,,.°' ~,~._., ... , .. ti.Offal• ..,-r-" ....... ,...., ............. ..,
'"C:-to'f .-~w.19 IM.Ja.•••
M ET~LS Quo:r ·
That's an apt description of both business and
business people along the Orange Coast. Tok ep track of
where companies are going and which peopl are helping
them get there.just watch 'Credit Line' -v ry day in the
Business section of your new
-• ..
' '
• Of' ... COllll DAl&..Y MOTmu.dly. FebNery 21, 1815
~ MUC •ncE Mt.JC ll>llCl W ND1a "*JC mlll
"!!'Jl'&llllJ' ~.-· ":.""':la~1
_.STAW rtem:U.-=.... PtC~aT411r "==':a==:' .,,.:= ....
11111111•--.. ·~=-.. ~ ......... TN...,......,...,. Tht~pet90MW. umeTAW TN~ l*9llft II TN ....... ,_... .. CUtHTY HITIUlf •
CCM.1111&.• , 1StH AO,AIC, t7ml MeM, 118. 7H W"1 11th JOHHIOH & COM,ANV ~bwlnlM... TlfOMASPA!NllM,llt (1 Ml..ctAL ~ 1M1 Me~ IUN W>l.0 H AUDIO. .... ~ ~-......... ~-~~-· Thetollo#lnol*90N we dolna~•· ~----,_..,., !Ii '° -...-..~.
I· Oii °"" .... °"""" .... G • .wie.CA ltrtet. Coee• ...... CA OINIRAL IUll.DING CON-e 1. D 0,. AD 0lerf\llnllW1Yunll13,Coata e" y .... VICH L.T.O ..... UA#T TO ~ 11442 ~l!Urlt, °""" ~ OOUMT'f. M1IO ~ CA Mea ...._ • ......,...IM. t t"21 TRAOTOft, 1047 Concord, P"OPMTIES, 1700 I!. ~ Meaa, c.llf. t2t21 12)C.P.S., 801 C 8 . (Uclld, ... OP CALIPOMU 0ML Clt0¥9. •-
-Dltle1 ..,... •r . .,..., .....,. ....,,... Cellfor"I• oorporatlo"· W.... & Qoembet, IM., Co«• Mau. CA t2ut Rd., lull• 110, Sen•• AN. TllOl'llM J. ~ 78Tf' ~ton. Cellf t2t32 COOi ~OrJ.,., J:~ CA M1t4 Tlllila' .,..._ It ~ 11NO Ne.-iQlle, ~ Clillfomla OOIPotMlon HetOld ~ JoMaon, CeMomla N70f Mad>onald St .• HUntlngton Ronald O tw.... 2191 Tr10onelt Corpotetlon. • ,...,,..._ .. -...-· OIMd C ,....._ ,.., ....._ W: "' ... 1*-f Villmw, CA ta70I Tiiiie INalMM It oon• 1047 Concord, eo.l• MeM. w .. ., IMIUI, .If . 1100 I. ~.Calif. 92921 Hwbor *•· eo.te MeM. Callfornl• corporation, ....,., CAYHMtT Y..... .. ... t ...... -.... ......... CA ~ ~ 1"" ~ .. con-by. oorooredon CA t2tH ~ Ad . .,... HO, a.nee This bllllneat It con· Clllf. 92821 wtlldl II IOCes.d .. 111U "°19' . .... --
•N Na lhl1 ee• w llM ..... ~COf?Of=~ A•Mt•ll L Ooet'llbel, fftla bVMneee le con-Ane. Celltornla t2108 ducted by: an lndMduel Ttllt buatnea• It con-MltCflell ltr .... IMM, C.. P~ !!! .. : ... ~ Tiiiie ~ la Mft-_.IN~ (illftl el Or• ~ , "'-·If Pn1lll1n1 dueted by: 1t1 lndMdWll A»xeincMr M. Power, HOO TtlOIW J NM1 OUcted by. e llMMecl '*''*" tomla t27 t•. lntendl to ... IWll. CA•-II ._..W.111MdM•• ... ~on~•. Thia ltlit •••t .. .., Thlll ••ement w fMecl Jll'nJdlMon e. Dyer"4..8uh•110,8en1• Thie tlltement wee llled lhlC) to end ..... bed! from Tt'lle ~-... ~
l*td c. ?.-.. 1t11 .-w. ~ an of Or· ti tN QollntY Cllftc Of Or-Tllit ~· .. flied Ana. CaMomle 92706 With the County ~ of Or· AonalCI twMI ~bton LMlinO ,.... duOted w.---Tllle •1t1-..lf w llM • ,_.,,..,... ~ on ~ ~on "*'*Y 4, wMltMCountyciatk of Or-tMnl!. Yodw,Jt, 11001. ~County on htlNety 1, thla ttettment wet tied aoclel•.•HMfJerMY'*1· ...,..,.J 'Yeti tied
_. .,_County a.. of Or· •n tt1Nd Or-.. COMC 11, 1tlt t anta Coutl~ Oft J""'*'f 2t. ())<• Ad., _,,.. 110. a.am. 1"5 will'! the Ce>unty Clerll o1 Or· ~. ioc.ced at C>ne Thia ~ ... ~ -.,... ~on~ ti. ~ Noe ....,,_, 14, 21, ,_ ,_, tHS Ana. CallfornM 1210f Pll1t14 anoa Coun1y on fleONar; t ~ Aoad. Pflnceeon. with "'9 Coutlty a.ti"' ...,.. ~ ...... 1, ,.. "*"'*' Orenot COMI Publllhed Oranee Coeet ,... Vltnle J. Shrader, 1100 I PublllMd Or.,.. COMt 1tl5 .... •wt ot640, tM IOI-.. Couftty on F*'-Y
"-" llt-1..a ~,...,. ~ t1, te, o.11y "°' '*"*Y "· 11. P\lbllefled 0r.,. eo..t ~ M ., S""9 no. Seit•• Oall'1 ~ Februaly 1, t•. ,.,... io.tng deleflt»ecl f*NMI 21. 1"5 .-..u1i.t C>niftp C-Metoll 7. 14. 1"5 21. MarOll 7. tN5 o.11'( Pilot ,.,'*Y 21, Ana. Ce1Horn1e 12708 21. 28, 1046 Publletled Orange °°"' pr~ ~era, dlllt ,_. Da1V Not f*'*Y t4, 11, -• mftftH' Th-791 l"h·13• Mttetl 1. 1', 2t, tN5 Thie bul!Mtl II con-• TH-71' DallY fll'llot ~uary 1. 14, drt\1111, termtnlle, pMWI PuOlllfted Oran,e ~ ae, ~ 1, 1M6 ..._ ...,,_ .,._IC ..,..TICE Th·7to ducted by: a oenetei pan. 2t . H tN5 end 0111er cornt>Uter per· Deity Piiot fet»NltY -·
Th-7.0 PIC11TIOU9• H•M rtaJC ll)TIC( r-. "" nerafllp "8.JC ll)TIC( ' ' · ll4-707 lphetel equipment. March 1. 14, 21. 1MI ...... na~ -----.. WALl<fA SMITH, JR. Ptf"'*on tanll. located T~m TM r---.....,..,. .-':!!!!.-eT•~ _..._!·~-.. 1111-IC a.nTIC[ Thl9 1tatement w• flied .. _IC Ml'llTM'r at 76 N..-i SttMt. P.O. flo--------fta.IC ll)TIC( d0Wlabuelni9 -.. ,_.., .--.. ·--'"-. "" wlththeCountyClertlofOr-'"-. ""'~ Box 311, Princeton. N9w Pl8l.IC N01IC(
---------MHA MAN':'OIMINT The fOllowlftQ pefaotla .,.. T~~=.,. T.., =County on FebfWIY 1, TM lollowlnO pertona .,. PtclTTIOUI ..,..... Jerwt Ots.42, lntende to i.-__;;.;:;:~;...;.;--=--.... -...... -f2.::.. ~ .. ~ ""·· Ooeta dOWIG.~s~oc·1:T•s. 7 ~ buelneea M! Uberty NOT)CI °' 1 -~IL~CENT= ,..,, .. _o um HATl•MT lflt• Into. aeourlty ~ •~,_ -.,,.,_, -..-•-J.S ,. o " " OlelrTI s.bluff n.\11Ttt9 IA&.1 r-•-MA """ ...._ The fOllOWlnO peraone 111• ment wttl'I M.,.,.,....f"eton fllCnnoul ....... The~,.,....,. ,,..; 0. at.ttuell. .,, FUiton, !MM. CA 92714 Ole1Dr .• ,.~.°'. !A..!~CA t2t2e T.1 ..... --Pvbllthed Orange eo..1 AdeMI A¥9 .. CoeM ....... doing bUllneM u : LeQ!ng Aaeodet• 10 ob-um STA'S I p dolrll~. 19: ~M .• CO.a ..... CA Jamal SMraf, 7 Fulton, ..,.,. -~AMTNOTtcl Deity Pfjot FetlNaty 7, 14, CAt292t I BAESE TT 6 t=ln'9rettlntM TNfollOWlno,._.W ,L~ MSEA~H. 7111 Nat ltYlne, CA 1211' Scott Wal'-, MO Vlrr.: TO ftWONfn'Y 21. 21. t985 Rlch.,d Pl'llllp Arcller, ENTERPRISES 2. PRO· a bed pertoMI tlUalMl9 M: ftefNM
Qwdttl OIOl'e eMt .. noo. ~ bUell ...... OOll· Tiits bull~ I• C:OI\• Pll Dr .• Laguna IMctl, elif OWNER TH-899 23301 Ridge Rout• Dr .• FESSIONAL REPORTING PfOC*t't located at 1n52 lntUfanot ....... 505 <*Y
Gatden Grow. CA 9* 1 ducted by. an lndMduel dUeted ~ an lndMduet 92T6h5
112 butJA••t 11 con· YOU ARE IN DEFAULT # ""7• Laguna Hiiia. CA SERVICES ~ 130 Hlllrla MltcnMr Street. IMna, c.it.-Petitw--Weat Of11n01, CA John Leung• H "n 0 -W; C. 8Mnuc:a JWNI Sarraf '._ UNDER A OEEO OF TRUST 92853 W S 1t' A N port tornla 927 '°'· The l90Uflty '
CMuno. 15312 NottlnahMI ,... .......... t ... llled Thi• 'eou'l1em.nct .:!'oflltedOr ducted~ an lndMdull DATED MAY 28. 1982, UN~ rta.JC NOTICE 2"T30•r~~do NRlc:k,•fl~, ~-~:,,nti 92~ agree.men• wlH be conlUftlo-t2~emont lndemnl1y COfn. Lane. Aunttnoton a.di. CA wtttl ..... County ci..t of Or· Wltl'I the nty ...... • Scott olf• LESS YOU TAKE ACTION ., De OU. ....... Sl'lelley c Breaette 4139 mated on or .,,., M.,cfl 8. t7ot w... I= 92&47 -,._,.,,,.-., on ir:.oruwy Inge County on January 25. Thia atatement WU filed TO PROTECT YOUR PROP· Nottoe...... "'" · Laguna HUit, CA Hiiaria Way· Sult• A . New-1985. It 78 Nuuu Sirwet. pwiy, • -.. ~ ,._ K..-.. ... ,.,, L .. "" -5..,... ..,,.V:-"7 1946 wltl'ltlleCountyOlerllofOr· of"9el~ 92853 • ' PO Boll 311 1 Princeton Str .... ....,." • ""7 .............. . .... 1 • 1.... -Inge County on February 5, ERTY, IT MAY BE SOLO AT .. ,,,.,,... .... Ttll• bualnHI II c:on· Port e.aoti. Cellfornl• 92M3 NW Jef oes.42 • lornla 90017-21 • (lttte Of
Tlmbef Run. lrvlne, CA ,_.,. Publlthed Orange~ 1985 A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU No. A 111088 duc:1ed by: ~bend and wife Thi• bu1ln•.. I• c:on-D eel~ 25 ii d Of lncotpotetlon: Calltomlt) 92:~ Hon Fong, 221'5 ~~~ 2~ Dally Piiot Februer; 14, 21, ,..,., NEED AN EXPLANATION In the Superlof Court of Rlctlwd Ptllllp Arotler ducted by: an lndMdual F~!.ry 't985 t t/'f Thll bulln ... I• con·
Debra St, EIToro.CAt2t30 M;d, r. 1', 1tlt 28. Mercti 7, t985 Pubflshed Orange Cout OF THE NATURE OF THE lhe Stale of Caltlomla, for Ttlla ttatement wu flied Thia ttatement WN flied TfUCOMIX ' CO•.,OR· ducted by;• COtpotltlOn
Tiil• butlneu I• con-Th-754 Tll--739 Dally Pflot February ••. 21. PROCEEDING AGAINST the County of Orange wlthtlleCountyClef'kolOr-wltl'I tile Couet Cieri! on ATtOtt •r: ......... , Fr.mc>nt ~ °°"""
ducted by: a generll pert-21, M1tch 7, 1985 i~~T xo~~~RULO CON· lnEtlle MaFtt«Sof ttle Estate ange County on Fabruaty Fabfuary 27. 1 ,_ ....., ................... ; ~~'!!, Edwafd J. u.Mr.
net........ ..-II' MnJIC[ Tl'l·726 O •• 11 27 1.,.~ It of dltl'I . l'latr«, Illa 15. 1985 Publl...._,. Or...,.. ,.___ Pul>ltlhed Or.,,,.. COM1 _..,_, ..._. .. ..,. l"-.n."" n ... arc • ...... Edith F Pick«ing end u E ,_ .. -.. -...-.,_., -...-I N5 Thie ttetement WM ....., AoyL.ae.HonFong,JoM rta.JCNOTIC( _ __.. .... -.. P\B.ICNOTICE IOOOAM CAL-WESTERN F Pictl«I OecMMd Publllhed Orange Coast Dally Piiot Febfuart 28. DallyPilotFet>ruaty2~n1 wltnlheCountyClltttolOr· ~ ... eernent ... ll6ed PM:nnOUe ........ .. ... TATUiiir RECONVE't'ANCE COR· Nottc.l~eby~tl'la1 Dally Piiot February 21. 28, Marc:h 1. 14. 21. 1915 Inga Ce>unty on febnlltly
.itl'I IN County ca.rtl ol Or· NAm HA,.._..,. The f--...... per90nl .,. FICN!!!l<"'81T"~I POAATION.aCalifomlac«· Irle undersigned Will Mii at Marc:ti 7, t4. t985 Tti-782 21, 1985 ~-""' .. _ .. ,__..., Por•tion IS duly •PC>Olnted Private Mle, to IN higtlelt Th-780 ,_
ange County on F*'*'f The toltowlng P«tonl •• doing bualne9I aa: Tiie following peraon 11 trustee undllf and purauan1 and belt bidder. tub)ect 10 .. -IC a.nTICE .. _IC W\TIC( Publllhed 0r.,. CoMt 18. 19'$ dOWIG bullneM M: THE DEVELOPMENT dol119 butlneu u · to Deed of Trust r9COl"ded conflrmaOon of Mid Su· "8.IC NOTICE '"~ nu '"-. "" Dally Piiot flebrUary 21,
,_,,. DELINEATIONS, 1542 CENTER, 18811 Florida St, DESIGN'S-ALIVE 2019 June 4. 1982. as Inst No. per1or Court. on°' ah« tile ,ICTJftoUI 9U ... ll ,tcTl'TtOU8 IUt8Nlll Maret\ 7, 14, 21, INS
• Publllflad Or~ Coeet Slntl•io Or .• Newport Huntington BHch, CA Or•~· Cotta MeM, Calll. 82·1900S3. of Olllc:ial Ae-1 ttl'I day of Merell, t985. at K·--.. .._ ITA~MT NAiii ITATRMDIT Th-711 ~t= 1~ 14, 21, --=n: 9= 8ac:llart, 92~ P. John Brvnatatl.,, 92Sco62 ti Ra.,_,...,. S'"..,._ cCords inR tl'le ollloel Ool tile the office of Audotlky & '1CTmout 9U ... ll Tiie folk>w1119 p..-aona are The following peraona wa
, .. ~.~ ••-,,... ounty ecorderao range Meo, 16255 Ventura NA• tTATe•NT dolnn buelneat .. : u · l---------Th-741 15"2 Santlaoc> Or., Newport 24982 S1u11t1to StrHt, 2019 Orange, Coa1• Meta, County. State of C1Ufornfa, boutevard Suite 1008 En· Tile fOlloWlnO persona are CAMELLIA COMPUTER dolAng buK Rllf'9NOOTEA.SERVICE .. -IC ..,,.TIC( IMctl, CA t"2teO Hvntlnglon BNc:t\. 929-48 Callt. 92827 executed by JOSEPH A 1 91..:ia Cou ty j L doing bualneea ... THE ALL PRODUCTS U 11 C + ' 1--r-.--..-.--"".-..---
Tt\11 bualneet I• con-Thi• bualn... I• con· Thi• bualn•H I• con-MCELROY ANO YVONNE L ~::..... Stita of ~om:. A M E A I c A N . B 0 y s NewbVry Or.. Hunt!~: ~~~2~tklna. Santa Ana, ftel1TIOU9 .,....
ducMct by:.,, lndMdual ducted by: lln lndhlldual duetecl ~-an Individual MCELROY. Hulbllld and all rigl'lt tltle and lnt«Mt of CHORUS. ee Fair Dtlve. Beach, Cellf 928"f WHbert Edward• Oram Ill NAm STA,.._y . =°' .:.:=r ... Ned ri.i!°Zi'a~=tr!,e;. flied T~ttsta"'t~t wu 1u-..1 WSElleLHTJOtPUntBTLenlC~UCta WTIOILNL Mid~ it the time of Bldg. 1 f·A, Coeta Meaa, CA John S. Waterl, ... 11 4522 Watkins Santa ,.,,.· The follow4ng pei'lona .,.
·--·-· .-.. l A " deatl'I and .. I.tie right, title 928}9 Cape Newbury Or., Hunt-CA 927().t . ' doing bUalMl9 ae: HOWARD wlttl tN County°""' of Or-wltl'I the County Cletll of Or· with tlle COYnty Clerk of Or· cT<?sHHIGIHEST .. ~1ooe, tRI FOoRf and lnt«eat tl'llt the ••11• Bova CllOlf Sc:hOOI of Or· lngton Beec:tl. Cant. 9264e Linda Orem. 4522 St.IN °'8TAllUTING, tH
MARCUS GOORGE ~5~~ on F'4lbruwy =County on February 8" ~County on February 1• ,..le 1 ,=•j" 1 ":t11e of Mid cleoeued Ila ec-:,r County, ee Fair~· Nancy M. Wat.,., 8411 Watkin•, Santa Ana, CA Roctieet«. eo.ta Mw. CA
HOW ARD, SR., ·~ ,_,, n.c74 ,.,... .. n s u money N h quired by operation of 1-or ooe 1t·A. Coet• Mesa. A Cape Newbury Or.. Hunt· 92704 92827 84 A mem~r of Or-Publllfled Orange Coallt Pubfiatled Orange Coat Publithed Oranoe Coul United tates) at the ort oll'lerwlM otl'ler tl'lan or In 929 ~on BMc:h. Calif. 9264e Thia bValneu I• con-St• v • Nu••' 1 5 5
. Count • found Deity Piiot FabruWy 21, 28, ~Piiot Fat:>rul/'Y ,.., 21. "-I"' Piiot F-"*uary 1 ,. lro~t tenl'I trance t~o't;: couCI n~y addition to that Of Mid ci. Thia bVtlneu It c:on· 1111 bualna1 It c:on· ducted by· hutband and wife Aoctlelt« Coeta MeM. CA anoe ya "8 7 ".u ..,.. ,, ...., • ... co.r ouse, v c c:eued. at tN lime of dMth, dUc:tecl by:• c:«po<ttlon duc:1ecl by: l'lu9band end wife Wit..__ .E Oram Ill 92827 • -..., • M111cti 1, 14. 1985 '" • arch , 1..,.., 21 28 1985 Center ~Ive West. Santi In and to au Ille oertaln rHI loya ChOlr Sc:hool of Or· John 8 . Water• Tht~;at9m.nt w .. flied Thia bualneH la con-ing fay'11es· PUied ~765 Th-733 . , TH· 711 Ana. Cahlornoa all rlgl'lt. title property situated In tl'le ange County, By: Riii M. Thia alttem4W'lt wu flied wltl'I the County Ci.rt! of Or· ducted by; an lndMdual
away ebruary 27, and Interest conveyed to County of Or.nge. Slit• of Keefe, Prealdent with Ille County Ctenc of Or-Count on Fabfullly Stev. Null 1985 et Humana Hoe-Mt.IC NOTICE rtllllC NOTICE rtllllC NOTICE and now l'leld by It under CaUfomla. partlcularly de-Tl'lla 1t1tM*!t wu fifed .nge County on February 1, ~985 Y Thia atatemant w• llled pital, Huntington said Deed of Trull In the ac:rlbedu followt,to-wtt: wlththeCountyClertlofOr-t985 . ,.... wltl'llNCountyClertlolOr·
Beach f 11 lng Ufa AND ACCIDINT AND HIAL TH IYNOPlll Of THE ANNUAL property situated In uld Lot 3 and the South ~l'l•lf ange County on February f117111 Publtshed orange Cout .nge County on '*'*Y
•
H ..... e,.;'na ~"~. Mar ITATl•NT-VEM INIM!D DECIMeER 31, 1M4 OF PACIFIC County and State described of Lot 2. Tract No. 514, u 13. 1985 Publtahed Orange Cout Dally Piiot February 21. 27. 1985
... ,. ·--o ~ , .. •-••• • --·-·-1 CftaaaANY 700 ........ -i Cenl-Drive u per map recorded In Book ,_ Delly Piiot February 7, 14, ...... / 1• 21 1"""' ,_ Howard was a grocer _.._ ........ --.,_,.. • -,.... .... ' Lot l3 °1 Trac:t No 6869. 17, Page 47 Mlsc:.ttaneoua Publllhed Ofange Coa11t 21. 28. 1915 ..,., ... , • ... • ... Th-781 PublllMd Orange CoMt ;.,. downto~ Hunt-P.O .... ....,, Newport !leech, CaHfomla t29A IS per map recorded In MIPS records of Orange Dally Piiot February 21. 28. TH-703 0a11ou Piiot Febfvarv ti .. , ~.. Total admitted eueta.... .... -··· .SA.755.520 Book 2S5 Paget 39 to 43 County. M.,cti 7, t4, 1985 M 'Cti 7 14 21 1-5' '
ington Beach for Tolll llabMlel....................... 429,6S8 Inclusive of mlecellaneous • "'°'• commonly known ~762 ., · · · Th-T7I
many yean and has Capital paid up.......... ..... 1.000.000 maps. records ol Orange u . 12371 Enclld AY91'1Ue, fltlllC NOTICE rta.JC NOTIC( retired as a caretaker Groat paid In and contributed surplus \ 3.000.000 County. Caltl<Kni• Giiden Grove. California. rta.JC NOTlCE
h H . Special 9'M'plus Funds. ..... 0 Tiie sfreet eddr•s and Said rell property 10 be sold 'ICTITIOUl.,_11 K•1m1 wit un ting ton Un~ funds (1Urplu1).. .. . 325,862 other common dellgnatlon ..... ,,.. ftcTITIOUI .,...., M.,_ ITATIMIWT '1CTITIOUI ..,_ ..
Beach City Parka in Galn(LOM)IYomoperationa.... 281.726 II any. of the real property T1tmaoftalecuhfnlaw· umlTATDmN'T The following peraon la N.,_ITA~ l9e4.Hewaaamem-1ncr .... (Oecr .... )inC~alandSu1p1usdu1lng1984 _t2A.219 described above ''tu f Ulecl T 1 owing dolngbullneaeea: Thefotlowlngpertonaare
Insurance In Force: Nationwide. ··· · · 1t1,028,000 purported to be: 3852 HAM· Stlat:O';: !nn~'"::atio':i t of dol::: :!ineaa :son• are PERFECT DETAIL, 512 dot~ bullneea •: FULL· fllCTITIOUI -..-u
um ITAT'lmlff The toltowlng peraone .,.
doing bulinell M :
bes er oafctheh HUunntington1· t e d ~".u':*1 • ...!-~nHro:'!~=~r~·&;11~as ......... sO 072 3"1~ IL TON ST . IAVINE, CA tale. Tllf'I per cent of amount L' J CARPET ANO WIN· ~lat St., Newpc>rt. Calif. EAT N SQUARE. 2925 s. ........ ···· ···· ··· ··· ··· · · Tiie underaigned TruatM bid to be deposited with bid W CLEANING 10310 La .. 2826 Brl1tol. Cotti M.... CA
Methodist C hurch, Accident and l'lellll'I pl'emlvm• dlaclaims any ltabillty tor any Bids or oHert to be In writ· H elnd• •M·•t Fountain John L;tt•. 1311 N. 92828 also the Coata Mesa ·Direct Cellfornla Bulin.,. Page ... ···· · ·· · · ····· ········ ·· ·· ·· ·· ·· .0 incorrectness of tlle street Ing and will be received 11 Val CA 92708• CreMnt H l'lta •208. Loa WHtar Fullerton Aa-
c ,,,..__,_ H We l'lereby certify tl'lat Ille above ftem1 111 in IC()()l"danc. wllh the Annual addresa end other common the alor..ald ottlcl 11 any Je Scott Oawaon Anoelft. Cal I. 90048 aoc:l•1•. 2925 S. 8tf91ot,
JDS & ASSOCIATES. 3407 l.ake Cent« Or .• Santa Ana, Cellf. 92704 hurch ol '--'~iat. e Statement for the year ended December 31. 1984 mede to Ille tnsur•noe Com· designeuon. If any. al'lown time '"'"" tlle first publl-10310 Hac:.inda. Foun: fill• bu1lnn1 la con· Cotta M .... CA 12921 was also a member of mltslc>Mr of Ille State of California, pursuant to law l'leretn ducted by: an Individual Rober1 T Beat. 2 Jade Jeff 0 . Soeder, 2715
=•I Pl .• Fulterton. Calif.
the H .B. n '...•,.rv Club ni-. C. hneft, "-'deftl Said sale wlll be made but cation hereof •nd before taln Vell9y, CA 92708 John l.Algatta CCMI Corona Oel Mar CA nu-J A-., L ...., 1ee1.eary • dale of Nie Larry Oawaon 2977 Men-Tiil 1 1 flled 92825 ' and the H .B. Masoruc Published Or-CoHt 0'"'"' Piiot February 28 Marcl'I t. 2. 3. 4 1985 will'lout convenant or war· Dated 111i1 25th dey of dou •C eosU. Mesa CA • ',.9.!.~,_~u 1 Or Lon Ctwlttopher Helton. 1ne 1eypor1 w~. Newport
Beec:tl. Clllt. 92MO
-..--• ranty. express or 1tn911ed. ra-February 1985 9212e · • with the """"'ty .,_,. o • Tl'lla bualn.., la con·
Lodge 380. Beloved Th-787 gard1no 1111e. l>OSMllton or ~ A.. fttclletlttg, Thia business is c:on· ange County on February 1, ducted by: a general part·
husband of Nana Bell .. _tc W\TIC( encumbrancH. including Adfnlftleltatot of the Eatete ducted by: c;o.partnen t985 neral'lip Tiii• bValn... 11 con-
duc:tec:I by: • oen-• pert.
ner9hlc>
Howard. al.90 surviv-'"-. "" fltllJC NOTICE P\8.IC NOTICE tees. charges and e~pensu of Mid Deoedeftt .Wry Oaweon ,.,.. WHtar Fullerton A•·
mg are five children, ot Ille Trustee and of the Rudoht;y 1 Meo, At• Thi• statement wH flied Publlll'led Orange Cou1 loci•t•. By: Mlc:tlMI M. RESOLUTION NO. 5497 • trusts created by 111d Deed tomep .t l..w 1Gll v-wltl'I Ille County Clenl of Or· Dally Pilot February 7. 14, Rue, General Partner
Marcus Howard, Jr, Cltv of Huntlnnton Beach of Trust. 10 pay Ille remain· twa IMS., .. 1GOt, .... •noe County on February 2t. 28. 1915 Tiii• ····-· WU flied Huntington Beach; , • 1ng principal sums or tlle etH CA .,,.. (ell) 15 1985 TH-704 with the County Clerk of Or·
Jeff D. Soeder
Thie atatement wu fled
with IN County Cler1I Of Qr· •noe County on a FebNary
1. 1985
Eileen Widener. note(s) aec:ured by H•d --· ~ ange County on February A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY Deed 01 Truat 10 w1t. Publltl*I Orange Cout Publlthed Orange eo.11 fltlllC NOTICE 21· 1985 ....., C.OSta Mesa; Calvin-Of HUNTINGTON BEACH OF INTENTION TO VACATE $71 .579 31 w1tl'I interHt Dally Piiot February 21. Dally Pilot February 21, 28, --------Martin, Redding. ~; thereon from 7/1f84 •1 Mitch 1, 7, 1985 March 7. 14. 1985 FICTITIOU8 9U ... H Publlll'led Orange CoMt
fll1't11
Publtlfled Orange CoMt
Delly Piiot Fet>ruery 1, 14. Emma Fitzhugh, EASEMENTS FOR STORM DRAIN PURPOSES, SHOWN 16 87% par annum " TnF-776 Ttt-759 .. ._ ITATIMDfT 0111y Piiot February 21.
C 0 -. ••• AND GENER provided in said notl(t) plus Tiie following '*'°"' are Mttc:l'I 7, 14, 21, 1985 21, 21. 1M5 Oakridge. Oregon; ON A MAP OF PAR EL MAP N . r.--, -costsan<11ny1dvancnw1th doing buelneea u : Th 7M TH·112
Jean Hollinpworth, ALLY LOCATED NORT"EAST OF THE INTERSECTION interest "8.IC NOTICE Mt.IC NOTICE SKYWAYS UNLIMITED. -------
Huntington Beach. Of CENTER AVENUE AND HUNTINGTON VILLAGE WAY O:::o"f9T"::,':1~:.':!e'!~ A P"8LIC HEARING TO ftCTITIOUI .,_11 3198 A Airport Loop, Coeta fltlllC NOTICE NI.JC N01lCl
Also surviving are ecuted and del1verecl to Ille GAIN c 0 MM lJ NIT y um ITATEmlff ~·.,~' ~~~eel Inc Ptcnnoul ......
eleven grandchildren The City Council of the City QI Huntington Beach does hereby resolve as unde<signed a written Dec· RESPONSE TO THE INITIAL The followlng penons .,. Celllornl• 3198 A A1rpoi1 ftCTITIOUI ..,_.. =-and thirteen great-follows: "" lar1t1on of Default end De-COLLECTIVE BARGAINING doing butlneM aa: · ' C .. .._ ITAT'lmlff MAm STA~
grandcha"ldren . SECT ON A II I h Id bef th Pl I C mandfv.51•1,andawrltten PROPOSALS OF THE (1)l»ETROBROKERAGE& ~~6 Coete Meta. alH. Tile following Pl'90ft la TMfolowlngP9f110Mate I 1. pub c meet ng was e ore e ann ng om-Notice ol Default end Etec:· OCEAN VIEW CHAPTER OF SERVICE. LTD. (2)PB&S. doing butlnMI u · doing bullnele -Friends may call from mission on December 1S, t98"4 at which time 1t was determined, pursuant lion to Sell. n<e undersigned THE C AL IF O AN I A 20902 Brookl'lurat St .. Hunt-Thia bualnns la con-MA APPLIANCE, 102 HUNTINGTON BEACH
2-9pm Thursday. at to Qov..,,.....,I Code section 65•02, that the proposed vacation of caused said No11c:e o! De· SCHOOLS EMPLOYEES lngton Beach, Callf. 92&48 d~1t!~. t=~=t Prince Ln .. Santa Ana. Calif. CF~~~is;.:_!84~4 11~u Pi Bros Smith easements for storm drain purposes, localed northeast of lhe intersection fault and Etec 11on to Sell to ASSOCIATION WILL BE Aromllene 011 Co .. Call-Thi 1 nled 92704 -....... un .,..on
Merce · H of Center Avenue and Huntington VIiiage Way. conformed to the city's be recorded In Ille county HELD ON MARCH 4, 1985 fornla. 20902 Broollhurat witl'l t~'c~-;:"~.~-of Or-Mlc:hMI David Rupp. 102 IMctl, Callloml• t264t
ort u a r Y • Un t -,...nerel plan. wnere 1he ruJ property 11 AT 7:30 P.M. AT THE DIS· St . Huntington ee.cn, Callf. ·~County on Fat:>ruary 1 Prince Ln .. Santa An•. CAlll. S Young HM FPattc, 10407 lngUm Beach, whett w-located TRICT BOARD ROOM, 92&48 • 92704 lat«Avenue. ountllnVal-tuneral Rrvices will SECTION 2. Pursuant to Division 9, Part 3. Chapter 2 of the California Dated Feb uary 15. 1985 t69.0 "B" STREET, HUNT· Thia buafne11 Is con· 19 5 fll7't:lt Thi• bualne11 la con· leys. Callfornla 182706 •• 1
be conducted Friday • .,.... end Hlgh••r• Code, commencing With section 8320. the City CAL·WE f.,TE "H "E· INGTONBEACH,CA ductedby·1c:orpor1tlon Publtahed Or-Coallt ductedby.anlndlvldual 00 Ran ohn. -.D1
Councll of the City of Huntington Beach hereby declares Its Intention to CONV£Y ANCE cm.PO"· PRIOR TO THE HEARING. Dan w Green, Prealdent -..-Mic:hMI 0. Rupp C•ldleberry. Seel IWll.
March 1, at l LAM. vacate certain easements for storm drain purposes. shown on • map of ATION. 1425 c-1no Def INTERESTED RESIDENTS Thi• 1t1tament w .. llled Delly Piiot Febf\11/'Y 7• 14• Tiils 1t1tM*!t wee llled Clllfornia 90740
with Paul E. Thomas, Parcel Map No. 79-585. and gene<ally located northeast of the inter· "lo loutll, lull• no, Ian MAY SECURE A COPY OF with the County Clerk of Or· 21· 28· 1985 TH-705 with Ille County Cletll of Or· Thie bualnee• la con·
Minister of the Coata MCtlon of Center Avenue and Huntington Village Way. more particularly Di.to. CA t21ot (111) THE PROPOSALS AT THE ange County on FebNll)' 1, ange County on Fet>ruery '· ducted by:• llm4ted ~-
Me.a Church Of desc<lbed .. follows: 2ff.5M1, •r: Lorri• P. RECEPTIONIST'S DESK. 1985 .. _.,. W\TIC( 1985 ahlp 0 NG Womecll SAME ADDRESS AFTER '217111 f'-.n. nu · '91t1S Y U H. PAN< Christ officiating That certain easement for storm drain purposes. 20-00 feet Publisl'led Ora~ Coaa1 FEBRUARY 28. 1985 Published Orange Cout Pubtlahed Orange Cout This etatement ._ Ned with H .B . MMonlc wide. as granted to the City of Hunllngton Beach per Deed, Dally Pilot Februiry 28. Publlal'led Orange Coaat Delly Piiot February 7, 14, lc-1t1'1 Daily PMot February 7, 14, wltl'I tile County ca.rtl of Or-
Lodge 380_ Family recorded Novembef 10. 1980 In Book t3828, page 192 of Marcl'l 7. 14. 198S OallyPllotFebruary28, 1985 21, 28. 1985 l'lCmlOUI .,..... 21. 28, 1985 anoe County on January I ,
Offlclel Records. together with those certain storm drain Th-765 Tl'l-772 TH-709 NAiil ITATOlaMT TH-713 1985
suggest in contribu-aasementa, 20.00 feet wide, as dedicated to and accepted by The 1011owi"9 persona are • ,_
tions be made to The the City of Huntington Beach on the map of Parcel Map No MllC NOTICE Mt.IC NOTICE Pta.IC NOTICE dolc8L'rf~~1:'~ APART-Mt.IC NOTtCE Publllhed Orange Coeet
American Diabetic 79-585, file In Book 1••. pages 3 t through 33, inclusive, o f Dally Piiot Fet>ruery 1• 14•
C R 0 NOTICE IN IT No SE E S MENlS, 2845 Meta V«de 21, 21. 1985
Association. Pierce Parcel Maps In the office of the ounty ecorder of range V I AL D BID Dttve Eut. Sutt• 3. Coeta PICTITIOUI IUt8Nlll TH-JH
Bro thers Smith Coun1y.Callfornia. CC-831 M .... callfornla9282e N.-ITATR•MT
Mortuary directors. EXCEPTING THEREFROM that certain portion Of the above P C Lumber Co .• a Call· ~ !...~ .. ~'°"' .,. .._.,. ..,,.TIC(
536_6539 descl'lbed easements which wlll remain 1n effect. being a strip of lornl• corporation, 28•5 8 T ---_ ....... .-.-.;;.-__,_"".-...-..-.._
lend. 20_00 feet wide. lying within Parcel 1 of said Parcel Map BeN011ceC 1s11fhereby g1 1ven that theledClty Council of lhe City of Huntington ~~ 3~~11 ~-~:~ FUSRNl~JR~. 1:.~ ct,!h~: PtcTmOUe .,._. BROCK No. 79-5S5. together with that cel"taln portion lying within the ach a orma w II receive sea bids for the construction of traffic rom11 92825 St., Unit K. Huntington MAm STA~
T U L A ( M A y ) southeasterly 50.00 feet of Lot 5 as shown and described '"that signal improvements and modifications at the Intersection of Warner T1111 bu1lne11 11 c:on-Beech. Callfomta 92941 The lolowtng l*90nt ••
SROCK ~.,,.-..A certain lot line adjustment. LL 83-3, recorded February 14. 1984 Avenue and Edwards Streel in the City of Huntington Beach, Callfornla In ducted by:• corpormtlon John Joaaptl P9nbw1hy, ~ bullnele •
February. 26". 19~~·~ as Instrument No. 84--064130 of Offl<:lal Records in said office of accordance with the plant and specifications and special provisions on 0oug1 .. E. Patty. Pr• 1111 Huntington St,, 15, Sf A"· TECH WEST.
the County Recorder. file in the office of the Director of Public Works. Documents will be dent Huntl"l:ton "hectl, Cell-24422 Dal ,.,adO, IM. 1t,
CosmottaherMoesaf F. rBeanlkovedH. SECTION 3. The City Clerk is directed to maintain on file In the office of avallable1on March 11, 1985. A charge of $25 00, not refundable, will be T1111 'eoutatamenc' WM nOrled forTn~~. 2~:lne .. 11 con· 0.0:,,'::f''·}.'~=•n,
lhe City Clerk maps or plans showing the particulars of the proposed required or each set of specifications and accompanying drawings. wttl'I Ille nty 1..-11 of • ducted by: an Individual ~ FOfmoea. Dana Point.
Brock , of Newport vacation of storm drain easemenll. as shown on the map of Parcel Map ~~C Counly on January :is, J o H N J o s E p H Calif. 92929
Beach; sister of Ola No. 79-585. and generally located northeast of the intersecuon of Center DIRECTOR OF PU•LIC WORKl l!ITIMATI ,..,_ PENBERTHY Paul V. H•bar~. 1 .. 22
M cWhort.er of John-Avenue and Huntington VIiiage Way, and reference is hereby made 10 Publlal'led Orange Coat Thi• at1tement WM llled Dal PrldO '11. o.na Point.
son City, Tenn, also such mapa or plans for particulars as to said proposed vacation. Work fl•m Ouentlly Dally Piiot Fabruary 7, 14, wltl'I the County C1et11 Of Or-Calif. 92t2t
survived by four SECTION 4. The City Council does hereby fix March 18, 1985 at the 21. 28, 1985 ange County on Jenull'Y 11, Br~StK. ·~1 .. 21•• ~ f 7 30 her ft the tt be he d I lns11llat10t1 or 16 Type 0 tell turn vehlele da1act1on TH-700 1985 ._, ....,. ,. ,_.,,,... grandchildr en and hour o : p.m .• Of' as soon t ea « u ma er may ar n loop• Lump Sum ,_ pon IWll, <:.-. tHeS
three great-grand-Counctl Chambers in the CIVIC Center. as the time and place for hearing all 2 lns1a11atlon of 30 regular type ven1ete detection loopa Lump Sum Publlal'led Orange Coallt Mlc:tllelJ. MCOraw. '3111
children. Interment persons interested lnor obtectlng to the proposed vacation. which time Is 3 inatallltlon of lour 400 w Hp s ivmlnalrM Lump Sum Ml.IC NOTICE Dally Piiot Fet>Nl/'Y 1. "· Olene Dr . o.na Polftt. Qlllf
not less than fifteen (15) days from the puaage of this retolutlon 4 lnstallatlon of four double sides 11.S.N s Lump Sum 21. 28. tN5 12821
at Memorial Park SECTION 5. The City Clerk 11 directed to cause a copy of lhls resolution 5 1n111J11tlon 01 traffic: algnal control!«, cabinet, potes. PICTinOUI 9Ultfllll TH-720 Thil buatneN 11 con·
Cemetery. Edmond, to be pubhshed In • weekly newspa?ef, published and circulated In wirn, bo•M, conduits, aer.,,ocn. signal heads and all T~':! .,. ~ by; • general 1*1·
Oaklahoma. Pierce Huntington Beach for at least two successive weeks pr1or to the time aet misc item• Lump Sum dolno buelfleM II: PlBJC NOTtCE nee~ ...
Bros. BelJ Broadway herein for the publlc hearing In acoordeooe with the provftllona of Section 1773 of Ille Labor Code, the Slit• of Pf..CIFIC ANGLERS Thil 11...,.,...1 ._ fllad
Mortuary. directors. SECTION 6. The Director of Pubflc Works la directed to poat. or cause California. Director of Ille Department 01 Industrial Relation• ahall determine the FLEET, 284151 Neceome Dr.. ,tclTTIOUI ..,_.. -'th the County Cter'll of Or-
N e w port Beach. to be posted. notices of vacation conspicuously along those easements oenel"al prev1111ng r•t• of wagee, applicable to tl'I• work to be done; c:optea of tlle Miiiion Viejo, CA 12991 ~ ITAT'lmNT anga County on l'ebNllY 1,
642_9150 proposed to be vacated, shown on the map of Parcel Map No 79-585 and latul genel"al w~ rata determination• are on Ille at tl'le oNICe of the City Clerk and Francitc:O Pllau Ramirez, TM following per.one ara ttl5
generally located northeast of lhe Intersection of Center Avenue and Ille ollk:e of Ille rector of Public Work• of lhe City of Huntington Beac:h. Calllornl1. 1135 Nacion A¥9.. Chula ~bu~ 9... ,..,_
HAMC>ft LAWN-
llT. OUVI
Mort~ • c.m.tery
Crematory
1825 Giiier Ave
Cott• u ...
5-40-555-4
NRCI NOTMIRI •LL llORADWAY MOATUAR'Y
110 Broed'Ney
Co•t• MeN
S.2--0150
Huntington VIiia~ Way, at least two~· before the date of the hearing. Plans and epec:tllc:ationa, logetl'ler wtth propoul rorm. may be obtained 11 the VIiia, CA t20 IO M ·• 21 t Adobe. Publllltlecl Oranoe CoMt
Th t. h 11 be ed h 300 f 1 t b t t 1 t on!Qe of 1he Otractor of Publlc: Worlie, City Hell. Huntt-ton a.en. Callfornlt Tiii• bullnesa I• con· Irvine. Clllfomla t2715 Dlilty Piiot tt...o...-1 14 e no iCeS • a post not mor• t en ee apar . u a Ml ""' ducted by; 111 lndMduel Kim L .. Farmer, 8211 21. 2, t..S __ , • •
thrM notices shall be posted The notK:ee shell atate the day. hour. and No b4<I wtll be received unteu tt ts made on a blank form tutnllhed by the Dtrac:tor Francleo Palau "9mlraz Adobe, Irvine. Clllfornla • • / TK-710 place of hearing, and shall refer to the adoption of thit resolution of of Public Work• Tile apec:lat attention of PfOIPeC11¥9 bl<ldera 11 called to IN Thia atet..-nent wee fled 92715
Intention. and shall describe the storm drain easements proposed to be proposal raqulfementa. Mt forth In tile epec:tflcetlone. lor full diractlon1 •to Ille with IN County Cllttt of Or-Tiiis bulllneaa ta c:on-1----------
vacated, or shall include a map or plan shOWlng the locauon of sucl'I 1torm btddlng ~1 County on llet>Naty 8, ducted:;{. '"L ~A..... MUC llJTICl
drain easements proposed to be vacated. Tiie aboYe quanutiel er• appro•irnat• only. being ~ 11 a bUI• tor the 1MS Thie ~"
PASSED AND ADOPTED by tM City CouncJI of the City of Huntington comparllOn of bldl, and IN City of HVntlngton 8-el'I dOet nol IXP' ... °' by ,_... With N 11~~6~ flledOr IMIW ••
S.ach et 1 r...,ular meeting thereof held on the 19th day of February, 1985 lmplic:atlona 119'• 11111 the ac:tual •mount of ~k Wiii corretpond tl'lerewlth tM Pu~ Orange Coeet =',.~~"on' .::,.!., ~-. ~~ ... !!.!!... ..., r..,,... the rtohl to Iner .... or c1ecr .... tile amount of any c:tua or portion of the Daily Piiot ~ 14, 21, ..,.,.,..,, ........ _,,. -., .. ,_.
work,•• m1y be dMMe<I necet11ry or ••P9dlent by the OirlCtOf of Public Worlla. 2'. Mardi 7, 1M5 Tt\·735 ,_, ~=~are RUTH •. •AtUY, Maror
ATTl8T:
Allele M. Wentworth, Clly Clerk
ST ATE OF CALIFORNIA
COUNTY OF ORANGE ) ..
CITY OF HUNTINGTON BEACH)
I. ALICIA M WENTWORTH, the duty -.Cted. qu1llfled City C19'k of the
City of Huntington Beach. end ••·offldo Cterk of 1he City Council of Mid
City. dO hereC>y certify that the whOte numb« of memw• Of the City
Council of the City of Huntington hid\ Is MV*': that tht IOl'egolng
rnotullon we1 pHMd 1nd adopted by tht afflrmatl~ vote of more than •
majority of ell the memw1 of Hid City Councll at • reguler tnMllng
thel'90f Mid on the 191h day of F•b"*Y. 1985. 1>y the followtng vote.
AYll: Councllm~: Kelly, MICAlllater. Mandie, Balley Finley. Green.
Tl'lomH
MOii: Councllmen: None
Aa81NT: Councllmen None
All bldt will a. compaied on the bUlt of the Dtr9'tor Of Publlc WMlll eltlmale of Publ~ OfMQI COMt A(QION II Of tHE
tile qu1ntltlel Of wotk to be done Dally Pltct ,et>rull'Y 1. 14, 80UlltlAN CAL1f0Nij1A
Substitution of MCufltlM ror any monlat wlll'll'leld by the City to lnaur• fita.IC •na: 21, 2e. 1te5 CHAP'T9" Of MAL U-
perlormeric. lfletl be P9fmltled In acc«dance wttl'I provltlont of the Calflornla '90TITIOUI 9UIMM TH·721 TATE HCU9'11111 AND
Government Code, hc;tlon 4HO. IUlt=TWT IYNOCATION MTIT\ITI.
Eaeti b4d al'lall be m.cie out on • torm to be obtained at tile ona of tM Dltactor The pertona are "8.IC NOTIC( 2026 ~ ..,.._d,
of PuOlte Workl, Oewlopment Wlng 2000 Melfi Street, Huntington 9eact\, C.,._ dOlna.AHCbullnelelAL M:p........, .,.T• AC"'10U89lJ11 BM ~....._"!!'i..:;; Mele. Cel-
IOtnll, .,, .. , be ......, end llled "''" lhe City c.tc •• the CMc c.n,.. lecond Floor Fllil """"" .. ---RW I Adl'lllnlttratton lulfdling. 2000 Miiin Str9et, H\lntlftQtOft leac:tl. c.llfomla. on or MANCITING atOI ....,.. ..._ eTA7-T aoutl'l1r" Callfornl•
bel 10 00 A ...... ·-.. -A..A ........ ~ ... 5• ,._ The~"""" ... ~ ot ""' ....... or• , .,. ...,. .... ·-· .... ·-De by• committee OOMPOMd ~! 1!-e-~ '" ...... ti dOlna ~ • -... • ..,m lllMI ~ of ttie City Clerk, tN City Attor~ end Dlr1C1or Pubflc WOfllt or f...., autflof'tled -. ...-.. _... ClJS -,. ... ,_IMntatM end the,..,... of Mid bidding 111411 be r~ to end acted upon by lnternetlonel, a Com-C TOM IUllDtHO IER-MfW, • C.•NI ~
tile City Coundl Of Mid City ol Huntington 1wt1 11 In.II ''f':' meenng to be held 1Mt06el ltotc__,. Cofn· VICH, 113 Nttl It • .._.. mw.I '**" _,.,. *'"
on ~. thl 11411 ef "-"'• ~. 1t the"°"' ol 7 30 M In t"9 Clfy Counoll ~,a C.-rom1a eot· POl"l~W~ ~. •"· ... "*~.=""lo.I!!!!!· CMmt>ert In the CMc c;en.., cf Mid Cfty Of Huntington IMoh. and et1e1 be ected ..... 3 ..., _ ..
ui>on by Mid Olly Counc11 at tN reoutar "*'lnO of APfH ti, ttea. TNa DullneM 11 con.. 11 Htn It., New'°" Ctlhu•• Miiiet Dr" a COfllOtetion leedl. CA t2M3 TNa h'"*9 It oon• Ttie Clly ot HVntlft91on IMcfl. C111torn11 r....-v.· tN rlgrit to rlljeOt •rrt or• c•....._ AM ltokOH Tf\11 butlneea Is oon· w ~ • ..,..._. Dldt. ml to ecoepe IN bid deemed tor tflol belt tnt•Mt of tile C1ly of HlHltlnOet!\ ,,.it';;;;;· ' ~by:"' lnCIMdUlf ""'"'fl ....._, ,.......
ltMcn, Callfor'* By order of tN City Council Of the City of Huntln9fon 8aldl. ... , Mad lf*ll W MMfl dtrll
Ctfifornla t"'• N~I* a. ,... Thll •1111 .... .. • TNI .. ........,. .. llld TNil ltll ...... -""""" c..rttty,:-°' Or """ ""eow.ty an °'OJ. .-.. ~ <*r1I °'Or·
ATTUT ~.~ ,..~ "*'-' ... County on '*'-'' .... 1 CGUflty on....,., n . Allele M. Weft""""-Clly Ce.ti_..,........_ CWll of IN Cttr C...al ,_,, 1119 1•
of h CftJ of tMultrt .. 111 ....... C ••• A .. WNt_. OI' C... ,_ .....
CttyC-.. ~,.:11.at. ~,.::1~ ~,:= r: C Puou.hed Orange Cont Dally Pilot FeC>ruwy 28. Maren 7, 1986 Pu.,...,_, Orange eo..1 DeityP'tlot~2'. Mard'l 7, 14 21, 1tu ~ 1, 14, 1• 21. S, ,_ · 21. n.·-
. ...::======::::_L-------L--------'------fh.:.;,:_7:..:6:.:.7-1 __ __.. ____ _.t. ________ ..___ Tflo.71• Ttl-117 "'-flt • ' 1*10t
I
•
tiniden: Best field ever T1clms for the Ul\J<kn lPGA
tournament•~ available lhioulll
all T1ck.etron and Tele-troe
outlcu as well as many Orariir
County _pro shops and at Me.a
Verde Country C1ub in C:Olta
Mesa.
TOI> 52 money w inners
to play in CM tourney
By HOW ARD L. HANDY
Delly l'tlM C.,r1 '' 'ndtftl
When Nancy Lopez returns to Mesa Verde
Country Club in Costa Mesa next week to defend
her Uniden LPGA Invitational litle; she will be
facing the top field ever in this area.
The top 52 money winners from 1984 will be
competing here this year. the first time the field
~as been this deep in four previous tournaments
ctt Mesa Verde. A total of 144 players will
compete, including 130 from the LPGk exempt
list, 12 Japanese LPGA stars and two players who
will be selected in a qualifying tournament
Friday.
In Friday's action. any LPGA or club pro
atliliated with the LPGA may enter up to 7 a.m ..
Ocean View
wins thriller
Mater Dei. FV
ousted: Warriors
advance in 3-A
In a tense struggle between two area
teams, Ocean VICw had the most at
the end and outlasted Mater Dei,
53-50, in the second round of the CIF
4-A girls playoffs Wednesday night.
However, Fountain Valley, the
other Sunset League e<><hampion,
came up two points short in its road
encounter at Westlake. In the 3-A
tournament. Woodbridge ran away
from visiting Schurr in the second
half to advance.
The details: Ocean View Sl, Mater Del 50: The
Seahawks received strong play off the
bench to oust the Monarchs and
remain alive in the 4-A playoffs.
Sophomore reserve Dalene Law-
son and Shelley Straight each gave
Ocean View needed lifts in the tight
contest.
"Lawson hit a fast-break bucket
and jumper to give us a spark in the
second quaner and Straight did a fine
job in the high post in the founh
quaner," said a pleased Ocean View
Coach Kell y Painter.
"We staned out rather ominously,
missing our first •three lay-ups and
first three free throws, but we were
happy to be down just three af\er one
quarter," he added.
three entering the final period.
But Ocean View rallied to tie it and
nearly won it at the end of regulation
when a shot rattled around the rim
but fell out.
"The kids went out confidently in
the ovenime," said Painter. "We
sank some key fre e throws down the
stretch."
Trailing 50-49, Dana Douty
swished a pair of free throws with 26
seconds remaining and Teri Zanelli's
lay-up with I 0 seconds left concluded
the scoring.
Ocean View meets Muir Saturday
night in the quarterfinals.
Westlake 49, Fountain Valley 47:
Michelle Stevens poured in 29 points
and the Barons hurt themsel ves wi th
foul trouble in the second half in
losing at Westlake.
The Baro ns ( 19-7) held a 19-1 7
halftime edge. but 12 seco nd-half
fouls led to Wcstlake's 19 attempts at
the line in the half. The Barons
attempted JUSt one free throw in the
second half.
. No Fountain Valley player scored
in oouble figures. but Jackie Cook led
the way as she scored nine points and
pulled down IOreboundsand Meli ssa
Handley also tossed in nine. wi th six
boards.
"They dominated us on the boards
(32-25)." said Fountain Valley Coach
Carol Strausburg. "They played a
little bit tougher defense in the second
half, too. I th ink the y were more
aggressive."
time of the first tee-off for the qualifyina round.
At the moment, there are live amateurs and 26
pros signed to vie for the two spots in the
tournament field .
A total of 14 players earned over SI 00,000 on
the LPGA tour last season with the top five
picking up more than $200.000.
All three previous winners will be competing
for the first ume in the Uniden event. JoAnne
Carner. winner of a five-way playoff the first year
of the Women's Kemper Open in 1979, didn't
play here last season. She was on an extended
fish ing trip with her husband at the time. Carner
fin ished with S 144,900 and wa s ninth on the
y list last year.
arncr has already won a tournament this
yea . the Elizabeth Arden Classic in Florida. She
1s in the LPGA Hall of Fame and is the all-time
leading money winner on th e tour with more than
S 1.824,352 in earnings.
Lopez. a two-time winner here ( 1980 and
again last year). played in only 16 of 31
tournament. last year but tin15hcd 1eventh on the
money list with Sl83.7S6 including the $45,000
she won at the Uniden. She ii also over the
million dollar matk in career eaminas.
• Pat Bradle)'. winner of the third tournament
at Mesa Verde an 1981 and second to Lopez here
last season. finished fourth on the monev Ii t a
year ago with $220.478. ·
Two players could reach the elusjvc St
million figure during the Uniden. Hollis Stacy
needed only $20.212 before this weekend's
Phoenix tournament and Jan Stephenson needed
$43.214. The winner at Mesa Verde will pick upa
check for $49.500 this year.
There are eight players over the SI mall ion
' mark and all will be playing here. They include
Carner, Kathy Whitworth (S 1.522,582). Bradley
(S 1.426.220), Amy Alcott (S 1.284.657), Donna
Caponi ($ 1.253,623). Lopez (S 1.250.153). Jane
Blalock ($ 1.090. 756) and Beth Da ni el
($ 1.022.058).
DlilfJ,... ,..._ .., _.,... u,w.
The the four..day, 72..hole tour·
nament begini Thurtday. March
7 at Mesa Verde.
Daily ticketu~ss for Monday
or T ucaiay practice rounds: $9
for Wednesday. Thursday or Fri·
day; and S 12 · fot Saturday ot
Sunday.
Season ~ a~ abo avail-
able for $4S each along with any
day books at $45. The any dlly
books include six adrmMioa
tickets. good for any day of the
totrnament includin• the week·
end.
Barons,
Newport
triumph
But Ocean View
nine drops opener
in Loara Tourney
The Loara Tournament opened for
a number of area baseball teams
We-Onesday, with Fountain Valley
and Newport Harbor posting vie.
tories, but Ocean View came oul on
the short end of its-iirst-round
encounter.
In non-tournament play Marina
prevailed. but Corona del Mar ~
ped a narrow decision.
He~·s what took plac.c:
Foantain Valley 4, Aaalaelm t : Bob
Sharpnack and Don Snowden com.
bined on a two-hatter as the Barons
opened with a victory on their own
field.
Sharpnack allowed a first-inning
double and Snowden gave up a
seventh-in ning single. but that was
the e·Hent of the Colonists' attack.
Fountain Valley got all the runs it
needed en the fourth mnmg as
Sharpnack helped hi mself with an
RBI sengle He was later caught
'\teahng. but Terry Reichert drew a
walk and am .\uguc;t followed with a
1wo-run homer
The Barons got their final run in the
fifth inn1ngas J1m Do~ le doubled and
Jim V.a)ne sengled him home.
Sharpnack worked fi ve innings,
allo"' mg 1he one hit wh ile sinking out
se' en. The seesaw battle featured Mater
Dei assuming an early lead, Ocean·
View taking a sli m advantage at
half\ime, and the Monarchs ahead by
Woodbrid~e 83, Schurr 63: The
Warriors. with field leader Sharon
(Pleue aee GIRLS/C2)
Ocean View High'• Michelle Chomicz (left)
and Dana Douty dlah off pauea during
Wedneaday nlaht'• CIJI' 4 -A playoff game
won by the Se&bawu In overtime.
Newport Harbor 8, Dana Hills 5: Jn
a gamt· called after six tnnmgs
(Pleue see COAST /CS)
Newport goes from frying pan into the fire
J erry DeBuk
bomingllez poses more
prohlems to Sailors
By ROGER CARLSON
Of Ille Delly Hot It.ff
The analogy is a rather tired one, but in the
case of Newport Harbor High's Sai lors. it fits.
Simply put. The hot water they found
themelves in Tuesday night is not goi ng to get
any cooler Friday night when Domingue1
High's Dons present the oppos1 t1on.
It's the CIF 4-A quarterfinals at Orange
Coast College with tipoff at 7: 30 and De Busk
is well aware of the Dominguez attack. which
1s similar to Muir's quick Mustangs. but
within a more controlled format.
'Tm not sure it's intelligent to say we wa nt
Vanguards host
Fresno Pacific
sec seeded 2nd
as dis tr ct playoffs
get underway
ByCURTSEEDEN °' ... _.. .........
Southern ·Califomia College, the
No. 1 offensive team in its district.
plays host to Fresno Pacific. the worst
offensive team. toniaht at 7:3Qjn the
opcnina round of the NAIA District
HI blskctbatl playoffs. SCC, the No. 2 seed in the eight·
team tournament. brinas a 24-4
overall record into the ..-me, while
Fresno Pacific enters wuh an 8-20
mark.
"I hope our players still realize they
have a job to do," says SCC Coach Bill
Reynolds. "People are making as-
1umpdon1 but f rcsno is not that bad or aw.am. Litt time, we killed them
by a whok 1b points, 6S.S9."
Re)nokts' Van1u1rd1. JUSt three
pma way from a spot in the 32·team
NAIA ToumarMnt in KanYs ity. ,._.topllyNo. ltttd Westmont in
die...,.. IWttd of the tournament ~ IWi_ICbn '°Occidental Collqc Oii ......,_ if they can aet past
•
Fresno Pacific.
"Fresno Pacific has a coach (Mark
• Eversole) out of the Fresno State
program. so they pattern themsel ves
after (Fresno State Coach) Boyd
Grant teams," Reynolds explains.
Comphcaung matters for the Van-
guards is an inj ury to starting forward
Neil Anderson. Anderson, coming off
a 23-point performance last week
against UC San Diego. sprained an
ankle and did not practice Wednes-
day.
If Anderson cannot play. Ken
Bardsley would move into the stan-
ing lineup.
Fresno Pacific finished third in the
District Ill Northern Division with a
3-9 ruord.
The Sunbirds arc led by the No. 2
scorer in the district in Ted Heinrichs,
a 6-7 Junior forward who is avc!'841n1
17 S points per pmc. In add111on,
Frtsno Pacific has a $plrkplua m
sophomort guud Wally Salata.
( b<lam hvc ~11ncn avcra11ng
m double figu rt) led by Bard~lcy at
14.1. .
Senior auMd Sherwin Durham i
the No. j n s1st man in 1hc di~
with a 6 avcm1c
to stop Rod Palmer. or Cun is Williams or
Chris Seballos." says DeBusk, "because I
don't know if anybody can."
Palmer, a 6-3 senior with a 13.6 scoring
average. is UCLA-bound; Williams, a 6-5
senior. averages 13. 7 points a game. and
Ceballos. a 6-4 senior with a 10.6 average.
teams with 6-5111 Michael Moore ( 12.1) to gi ve
the Dons fo ur players in double figures.
coached, consequently the~ play w11h more
intelligence and discipline. bu t it's also at nm
level, with a press and man-to-man defen~
and they rely on quickness.
l·hamp1on. t1n1shed third at the Tournament
of Champions hehmd finalists Mater Dei and
Ocean Vu~v..
Th1o; 1., th e Dons· Sl\th straight playoff
season and the~ ·\I~ allowed jUSt 51.5 points a
ga me . .\nd the avecage v1ctory has been by a
14-pornt mar~1n
"What we have to do ts eliminate that wild,
race horse out-of-control basketball that you
saw in the first half of the Muir game," says
De Busk.
"In one way it makes it tougher. but It might
be better for us because we had trouble
adjusting to that craziness agaenst Muir. We
got as crazy as they were."
The Sailors' physical condiL1on is expected
to be improved. and DeBus k says work outs
will be light in preparation for Domingue1
with hopes that Chuck McGavran's "turf toe"
will toughen up. and Dean Sorensen (anklcl
and Alan Fraser (th igh ) well improve physi-
call y.
Harhor's '1CIOI'} over Muir was an emo-
tional uphill dec1s1on and 11's obvious a
l"a rr) 0' er 1s needed. but De Busk says that's
u hc.-rc ass1o;tant Joe Dominic 1s in focus.
"That'' his department," S<1ys De-Busk.
··He"• the motivator. He getc; me fired up. I'll
tx• read' to o;tral' on m) helmet and get my
~1-lti"
"Dominguez is much more polished. with
experience in th e Tournament of Champions
and agai nst teams from Baltimore and Las
Vegas.
Darren Lrndsa} appears to ha'e Ou an9 his
availabiht) for Friday is doubtful.
Dominguez. the No. 3 seed with a .:! 1-..i
record and the San Gabriel \alley League
Harhor enter<. '-'I th a 24-' rc.>cord. wh ich 1s
more' 1c10nesand playoff wins (two) than an)
"ailors· .;q uad tn the 55-,ear h1 s1on of the "There arc s1milari t1es in Domin$uez and
Mu ir. but I believe Dominguez 1s better ~rhool · ·
UCI g ives UNL V scare again
No.-9Rebels
barely hold on
for 97-:gs victory
Special lo tk Daily Pilot
LAS VEGAS -Nevada-Las Vegas
clinched its third straight PC A>\.
basketball championship Wednesday
night, but it was the Rebels' opponent
-UC Irvine -which may have ~ally aC'Complished something.
The Anteaters entered the p me
against the ninth-ranked Rebels at the
Thomas&. Mack Center with an 8-8
PCAA record, but they didn't pla)
like a .SOO team.
Some key ftte throws tn the final 30
seronds by Fred Banks helped the
Runnin' Rebels hold on for a 97-9.S
victory before 11 ,692 urpriK'd fans.
Despite the IOS$, the Anteaters how-
ed they•~ playina some of their best
ball of the season.
h marked the second time in a row
'ha1 the Anteatm had aiven the Re~lsall they could handle. Back on
Feb. 16. UNLV manaacd lO hold ofT
the Ant.taten for a 99'·89 victory ''
Crawford Hall. .
"I think we pla ed creat but I thtnk
or all the opponun1uet we had,"
noted I Coach 8111 Mullipn
"Their prei utt> rcall hun us and ~e
PCAA •tandlngs
C...._.tftee 0v .....
WL W L
Noaoa·Lu lle9t\ 16 l 2J J
Fretno S1a1t 14 2 19 6
C114 Slate F ut .. rtO<I 10 1 " 11
Ulall Sia le I I IS 10
S.n Jo" State a a 13 11
UC lr¥1ne I 9 IJ lS
UC S.nle Barbare 1 t 11 U
Pacific 5 11 I 17
New Me••Co Slate 4 12 1 l1
Lone e.ec11 s1a 1e 1 1• • 11 w ..... .,., s.cw..
Nevada-LU VeoH "· UC INlne 9$ T-..r1~
Ul•ll Siii• ., Lone leKll Stal•
Frei.no State al UC S.nla &arbara
New ~Xl('O Slate •I s.n Jow $1a1e
S.Nr*n~
UC Irvin. a1 Cal State FIJll«rlOI\
L°"9 &MC.II $late el ~ada·L•i. V"8\
FrtSllO Sta i. al s.11 JoH Sla la
New Me111co State et Uran S1ai.
Pacific at UC S.r1ta lhfber•
had to make a lot ofadJU5tm('nt . "
The -\nteaters got 32 point~ from
Junior Johnn}' Rogers and 27 more
trom Tod Murph}'. I manlJC'd 10
make 11 a ufht ball pme d pnc the
fact staner ro Carmon 1n,urt<1 ht
knee II\ the first half and PQ\Ot JUlrd
Jeromt' LC<' wH tn foul trouble 1n tht'
1n1t1al half
Freshman aunrd Borts Kint ramc
off the ~nch to Of'( 11 points wh11t
fre hman auard Rodnev Scott had JO
for the ;\ntC'aters. •
lJ('t maintain~ a 4~ !tad at
halft1mc. but ti L V opencJ th
'\'u1nJ half ~Ith lour straight points
.ind l''\'ntunlh tooll. .i t17-5Q lead. But
th\' \ntl·ater\ rl''>ponded with nine
'1rn1gh1 !)<lint\ to ia t..c a 68--6 7
.1d\JtH.1@.l' ( "II\. '-'ent up 83-76
"'11h 1u.,t un<lcr ft"l' minutes left but
11nl·l' ••ttain l ( I managed to put the
pre"url' un h\ cutung the lead to
~2·~0 Mlh \4 \CCOnds left in the
ttamc·
But Bani.., h11 h" four frc-e throws
and E.d l a1l'h1ngs added another for
the Rdx·I,
81'\an \\ 1lhams' two free throws
:i nd a thrt'c-ro1n1 bask<.•t by Kin& with
th ree seconds k ti rounded nut UCT s
oring.
.. lllN L V Co.ach JclT)) Tark.aman
toll.I me after the same that the
couldn't handle Raters and Murphy
inMtk," Mulhi&an said. "l thtnk that
v.~ c' 1dcnt tonight. Ma)'be we ~an
pla' Vega!> 1n nc't ""ttk,"
Mulhg.3n "'u~ n:fl'mna to the
PC \ ..\ f oumaml'wnt which tarts a
""eek from tod&) t the Forum in
lngk,,ood
l (I do~ out the regular r<' A
~aIDn at C I t.ate Full<'rton tur-
da mal'u ( '7.30) TMtt IS I lood
t'han<'t the nte t<'~ and l 1tan will
alw mctt 1n thco"'°"n1na round of the
tournament.
cvada-Lu tp mcanv. M t .
1mpro,·e<d 1t\ ovttall rttord 10 2
.\rmon Ci1lham l<'d the Rebel" wnh 24
SlQlnl\ .
' I J
Bini collecm 38 u Celtlce roll
::.. cc~:f1~:h,:r s¥e:s.;~~~~ m ~yp'!~~lan~~~~~w!'!~!! ~~ .. !.~~~.~~~
t th rl I NF the National Baakttball AAociadon Wednesday nitht. • pushed back to Monday n1aJ\t. Ana. . 0 e va The Cthics .,abbecl l~ir bialn• lffd, ~29, early in Santa Ana topples Hert's what took place Wedncs· Golde!' Wet took its. l~st l~d It thesecondquancrandrtmaintdontopll-68with3:1S day: SS-54 with 1S:40 rtma1nm1 1,n the
left in the third period ... Jn other NBA action. Wayw G l.d W t (O l G) aamc after lcad1na I 0-2 carfy m the r ..... AP •1pe&dtel C...., and Mike Evut scored ei&ht points apiece in 0 en es -Comploe •7, S.441eltacll Ii: The contest.
EIJ the rounh quaner as Denver held olh late Wasrunaton -Tartan did what they had to to nay anui Ana assumed control at
L9S. ANGELES -Hasrry UFsher, rally and def~ted the Bullets, Saddlcback and Golden West col-alive for the Shau~ncssy playoffs but 94-84 with 3: 12 ten and was never
commm1ootr of the Unit~ tales 001-124-111. The victory was the .._, closed out South Cout Con-Cypress' upset of Cerritos put the threatened after t~t. . >
ball teaauc, on W~ncsdaY, issued several third in 1 row for Denver's fercnct buketball action with losses Cha!JCrS in t~e playoffs and ended The Rustlers suited up stx pla).'ers ' cb~Uenaes to the."'."•! National Football l.eque and Midwest Division leaders, win· Wednesday niaht, the Gauchos fall· the Tartars' scason. and were down to their final five '
111d he was opt1m1st1c about the futu re of the Los ners of 16 aames in 20 starts. ina to Compton and sec1~ their Ale~ander Hamilton and Eric when Kevin Smith fouled out. Three '
Anacles Exprtts. . Washinaton has lost nine of its hopes of a trip to tht' Shau nessy Comly scored 17 pointsd apiece for other pl ayers -Nathan Jeffers, J.T ••
.. Usht'1'_. ~~ue~tly rcfcmna. to the older NFL as last 12 aames ... Biid wma.m1 playoffs battered. and the ustlers Saddlcbaclc, but it wasn't enouah 10 Debb and Jay Mann each had-four monopohst~c. said that leaaue s proch~c.t has become scored 22 points and arabbed 12 losing a wild affa ir to Santa Ana. offset 20 points from Harold Flemina foul when the pm~ ended.
dull and bonn and could use c~~pem,1on from the rtbounds and Kelvla Ruff)' Tl\anks to Cypre s' upset win of and 15 apiece from Jame Stewan anta Ana, which placed fi ve
USfl. n<?w m its third season. added 17 points and a career-high Cerritos, the Char&ers are the fifth· and Darnell Bullock of Compton. players in double figu rts, was led by
.. Talkma about the . ~FL 17 assists as New Jersey defeated place entry in the Shaughnessys. Dwaynne Johnson. who added 12 the one-two punch of Scott Warner'
tyina up. the thrtt .. (tclev1S10!') Atlanta. 114-91 ... Dan Rood-Meanwhile. Cerritos and Mt. San points for the Tartars. sealed the (27 points) and Rya n Shaw (26). ·
networks in the fall ... l;'sher said fleld scored Detroit's first seven Antomo tied for the lcasue crown and victory with 1wo free throws with 53 Love had 29 for Golden West to top•
of the older l~gue: It s,bccome points of the founh quarter to push the Pistons toward will meet aturdlly night at a neutral seconds rcmainina in the game. all scorers. . .
the same thing day after day. a come-from-behind 108-99 victory over Chicago. Blll court to determine the automatic Golden West finished 1tscamP111ft
Sund•>: after Sunday. TJ:l~y need LaJmbffr scored 28 points for the Pistons. who broke a entry to the state tournament. The Saata Au IH, Goldta WHl ft: The at 0-16 in the SCC and 7-22 overall. th~ excnmcnt o~ c~mpeut1on ... I th~me losfoa sircak and won for only the third time lo~r of that game will ho t Jhe Dons broke away late in the second Santa Ana was 3-13 and I 1-18.
think the NFL;, 1f tt can wake up. 1n their last 11 games ... Clark K.ellog scored 21 points
would benefi t. and Hert» WlllJam1 added 19 to lead Indiana to a
The U~FL owners h~ve de-108-106 victory over New York ... Terry C1mmlq1
er c1ded to swnch from a spnng ~o a scored JO points and Rielly Plercecameoffthe bench to
. fall schedule -to go up agitinst add 20 as Milwaukee defeated Utah , 119-100. the NFL -1n 1986. Usher said he would rec.ommcnd
against switchina then only 1f a situation develops Jeta f1lfbt way n.a•t Pengulna where It would be "econom1cally silly." •-. r-
"Our only real challenge is to make sure we'll have
an opportunity to compete fai rly in the fall. on national Perry Turn~ull and Be~1t LIL!ldb~lm. fii1 TV opposing the NFL." Usher said at a press scored .th1rd-penod JOals to g1.ve Wm~1peg ,
conference at the Los Angeles Coliseum. ;..,. 6-4 victory over P1ttsb~rgh ma National
The USFL filed a S 1.32 billion antitrust sait -i-fockey ~ague game 1nt.errupted by a .
against the NFL last October. saying it has evidence of second-period. ~nch:-elc,anng brawl Wednesday night.
a secret NFL committee set up to put the USFL out of The bench~lear.ng incident be&an at 13: 19 of the
business. A spokesman for the NFL denied the charaes. second period . when Jets dctensema~ Jim ~yte
Usher said that two healthy football leagues could punched Penguins ccnt~r ~arto ~mleu. Lem1~ux.
elim inate one of the NFL's biggest current problems, who lea~s all NH~ rookies in sconna. suffered a shght
franchises shining to the highest bidder. concussion and ~1d not return ... I!' other game~. two
"If we can create a competitive environment, the goals by Calpry s Lauy Md)c~uld m the final minute.
problems of Phoenix and Oakland ... would aoaway," t~e scoond into an open net, hf\cd the flames to a 3-1
sajd \;sher. who became the USFL commissioner after victory over the ~cw York lslan~ers ... 8eb Gataey
serving as vice president and general manager of the ~orcd t~o aoal~. including a crucial shon-hand~ one
Los Angeles Olympics. in the third penod. to spark Montreal to a 4-1 victory over Edmonton . . . Duay Gare and Reed Laf'IOll
g.ote of tbe daJ
Klnga drop to fourth
ING LEWOOD -Peter Stastny
scored one goal and assisted on two others
as the Quebec Nordiques beat the Los
Angeles Kings 5-2 and moved into a
second-place tic in the National Hockey League's Adams Division.
The loss dropped the Kings mto fourth place m the
Smythe Division with a 28-24-1 1 record.
The Nord1ques took a 2-0 lead after two penods
Wednesday mght on first-penod goals by Randy Moller
andWilfPa1cmentat 13:12and 16:51 respectively.
The Kmgs were able to get on the score board when
Mark Hardy scored a power play goal at 8:36 of the third
penod.
Stastny's scored on a I 0-foot backhander high over
Kmg goahe Bob Janecyk's shoulder with 9:03 lel't in the
final penod to gi ve the Nordiques a 3-1 lead. Stastny
then fed Dale Hunter for Quebec's fourth ~oal as both
players broke in on Janecyk with 5:06 left 1n the game.
Bnan Maclellan notched his 25th goal of the
season with 2: 13 remaining in the game for the Kings
final goal.
Michel Goulet scored his 42nd goal of the year wtth
I :34 left to play for Quebec's final goal.
Gooden algna; Harrah traded
Dwight Gooden , 1984 Rookie of the ·m Year in the Na tional League. signed a one-
year contract Wednesday with the New
York Mets that could cam him more than ·
$400,000 this season. Although the Mets, who
announced the s1_gnmg in St. Petersburg, Fla .• did not
disclose terms of the contract, it reportedly w111 cam
Gooden $275,000 in base salary and at least $60.000 in
guaranteed endorsements. Incentives could bring the
value of the contract to more than $400.000. Gooden
was paid the minimum S40.000
last season ... In other baseball
news Wednesday. the Texas
Rangers traded outfielder DUiy
Sample to the New York Yankees
for mfielder Toby Harrah, who
was the Texas franchise's original
shortstop. In add111on. the Yan-
kees will obtain a player to be
named later. team officials said ..
. Ci ting baseball's "serious
financial situation." team owners
Oooden asked for a moratorium on labor
negotiations until the two sides can .. discuss the grave
economic concerns" of the game. The surprise move
could pave the war for the players' union to get its first
look at the clubs financial ledgers ... Two teams
selected their pitchers for opening day. still six weeks
away. The Seattle Manners named Jim Beattle as their
opemng pitcher. Bud Black was made the Kansas Ci ty
Royals' opening-day hurler.
Hyde not puraulng ASU poat
LAS VE(1AS -Un1vers1t) of Ne-m vada-Las Vegas football coach Harvey
Hyde ~)'s he 1s not actively pursuine the •II•
football vacancy at Anzona tatc Umver-
sity. although he 1s flattered that he 1s being considered
for the post.
The football coaching JOb became available at
Anzona State when Darryl Rogers departed to become
coach of the Detroit Lions.
Speculation about H)'de was rek.indled Monday
when UCLA's Terry Donahue turned down the job.
Members of Arizona State's selection committee
received permission to talk to Hyde two weeks ago. but
have not called.
scored three goals apiece to lead Detroit to an 11-5
victory over Vancouver. The 11-aoal output was the
highest by the Red Wings since Oct. 29, 1981, when they
defeated Calga ry. 12-4 ... Gary Leemu and JMll
Allclersoa scored power-play goals and Maple Leafs
goaltender Tim Ben .. rdt was spectacular as Toronto
defeated Minnesota. 6-• ... Clutch 'oaltcnding by
newcomer Gree Millea and a second penod power-play
goal helped St. Louis to a 3-1 victory over Buffalo ...
Left wing Al Secord collected his first two-goal game of
the season and linemate Steve Larmer notched ITis 36th
goal of the year to lead Chicago to a 6-3 victory over
New Jersey. •
Guerrero may report today
VERO BEACH -Third baseman Ii Pedro Guerrero did not arrive on schedule
Wednesday at the Los Angeles Dodgers'
spring training camp but is expected tod.a)'..
Guerrero. 28. who will cam S 1.2 5 million in 1985.
reportedly had passport problems and was unable to
leave his native Dominican Republic.
Last year Guerrero reported late and out of shape
and had a poor start to the regular season. He had told
Dodgers Vice President Al Campanis he would report
on time this season . The Dodgers will go through their first full-squad
workout toda).
Taylor top Pac-10 freabman
W .\LNUT CREEK -University of m
California forward Leonard Taylor has
been named Paci fic-I 0 Conference
Freshman of the Year.
Taylor. 6-8 and 220 pounds, has started all 24
~mes for the California basketball squad this year. He
1s tied for second in team scoring for the Bears with a
12.8 average and leads the team in rebounds with an
ave rage of 6. 7 a game. These figures are the best among
Pac-10 freshman .
He also leads the Bears in average minutes played
with 33.9 minutes, field goal percentage with .524 and
blocked shots at 20.
"Leonard is the most consistent freshma n I've ever
been around, and I've been around some good ones,"
California Coach Dick Kuchen said.
Auto racer Haynes, 25, diea
PHOENIX -Auto racer James R. • Haynes. 25. died Wednesday of head
injuries sustained in a racing accident at
Phoenix International Raceway last Sun-
da).
A track spokesman said Haynes, of Tarpon
Spnngs. Fla .. died at 10:45 a.m. at Barrows Neu-
rological Institute of St. Joseph's Medical Center in
Phoenix .
Haynes was flown by helicopter to the hospital
after his car crashed during the roadster division
championship race of the U.S. Auto Cl ub's Copper
World Classic.
On lap 23 of the race. Haynes' roadster hit the wall
on both the third and fourth turns, then veered down
the track along the pit wall and in to the wall on the first
turn before coming to a stop.
Televlalon, radio
ftUVl8tON
6 p.m. -'9IO 8AIKIT8AU.: Laker• at
Phoenix, Channel 8.
7:30 p.m. -cou.a• MllCaTaAU.: USC at
UCLA. ChanMI 5.
8 p.m. -9i8Aiu••B•AU.~.LL: Oodter ~ -Back
In the Swtng: An lnelde look 11 the ftret dey Of eprtng
trlllnlng.
IWMO e p.m. -PRO ~; LM<et1 at
Phoenl>e, KLAC (570).
8:30 p.m. ---~ol9ijl•••WMI UIKITaAU: Ari-
zona va. use, ~=08). 7:30 p.m. -MllmT8AU.: use at
UCLA, KMPC (710).KN~(1070).
7:30 p.m. -COll:Gl UIKIT8AU.: Utlh 8u.e. at Long 8-* .._, KEZV (11IO).
ST.JOHN'S
BLASTED
BYHOYAS
NEW YORK (AP) -Georoetowri
Coach John Thompton nad a
p.cked hOUM laughing Wed.,.._
day night when he lhowed up wtth
a lhlrt llmllet to the good-tuck
8WMter worn by St. Jc>M'1 CotlCh
Lou c.m..cca.
But a good part of the llllout
crowd ot 19,951 at Medteon
Squ•• Garden wun't too hllppy
once the MCOnd·r.nked Hoya
took the court and went on to rout
No. 18t. John'• 85-el, ending the Redmen'• wtnnlng ltt9ek at 18
OM'*· "I thtnk IOmetlmee you'v.oot to
laugh,'' Mid Thompeon. ~Md •
brOed grin When he opined hfa IUlt
Jacket before the geme to revMI
the tekeotf on the eweater
Carn111oca had worn through 13
gamee the wtnnlng 11rMk.
The 8'g Eut matehup wu billed
u the blggeet college buk.abaH
attraction at th• G8tden '" more than 30 Y9•ra, hetghtened by the
feet thet St. John'1 had def9eted
Geor~own lut month when the
Hoy• were No. 1 and had a 29-
geme wtnnlng 1treak.
Thia time, the defending NCAA
champion HoY• won It behind a
~-high 25 point• from 8-7 aophomore swtngman Aeggte Wll-
llama and 20 polnt1.
I VOLLE YBALL
No. 5 Waves roll
·OVerNo. 11 UCI
Pepperdine hands
Anteaters their
fifth loss of year
UC Irvine's men's ten nis team ran
up against a talented Pepperdine
sq uad in Malibu Wednesday. and
when it was all over, the Anteaters
limped out w1thjust one point against
the fifth -ranked Waves.
On the high school front. both
Laguna Beach and Newport Harbor
scored non-league victoncs.
Herc's how it went:
Pepperdlne 8, UC Irvine l: The
Anteaters' lone winner was No. I
singles player Bruce Man Son Hing
who defeated Dani Leal. 6-3, 6-4, but
it was all downhill for UCI after that.
Actually. it was a lot closer than the
final score indicates. The Anteaters
dropped three tie-breake rs to the
Waves.
UCI. ranked 11th in the country.
dropped to 10-5 overall.
Pepperdine featured some of the
top-ranked college r.la yers in the
nation. including Lea . who js 23rd in
the country. Carlos Dilaura. ranked
25th. defeated UCl's Stephen
Aniston. 6-4. 2-6, 7-5, while Kelly
Jones (No. 34) topped Ken Derr, 6-4,
7-6. . UCI returns to action Monda
when the Anteaters host Penn·
sylvania at 1:30. On Tuesday, UCI
will host Rice.
La1ona Beach U, HutlD1 ...
Beach t : The Artists' No. I doubles
team of Earl Wallace and Scott
Empnngham won all fourofthefrsets
to lead Laguna past the Oilers.
Ian Hawonh. Brad Majors and
Todd Brumfield also performed well
for the Artists in singles play. ,. ·
Senior Chris Ganz was the hiJh-
hght for 1he Oilers, easHy swccpina
past his Laguna foes. However, the
Artists lost only two other points in
singles and dominated doubles to
cam the victory.
Newport Harbor 1$ ~, LoQI Bead
Wll1on I% \'a : Price Kerfoot scored
wins in all four of his si ngles matches
10 lead the Sailors past the Bruins in
non-league action in Long Beach.
For Newport. Jeff Martin and
Jimmy Vanorden. each won two
matches.
The Sailors' No. I doubles team of
George Va lenzuela and Scott Watrus
easily won both thei r matches to lead
Harbor in that department.
Barons, OV, Warriors sweep
Fountain Valley rips Eagles;
Sea_!1awks, Woodbridge romp
Kcrinse,.ch posted eight kills and junior setter Joe Graham
recorded eight points serving. including six aces, as the
Seahawks won their season opener in three games, 15-10,
15-6, 16-14. in a non-league battle at Costa Mesa.
John Hyde had ~rhaps the strongest cffon for the
Mustangs. playingsohddcfenseand registering several key
blocks in the losi ng cause. Quinn Nguyen. who had four
blocks for Ocean View. had six kills.
.
Fountain Valley and Woodbridge posted sweeps
Wednesday night in non-league hid\ school volleyball
matches. Meanwhile, Golden West &rushed aside Azusa
Pacifi c in comm unity college activity.
The details:
Fountain Valley 3, E1tancla 0: The Eagles, who went
all the way to the CIF finals before losing a match last year,
arc now 0-2 af\cr the host Barons handed them a 15· I 2,
16-14, 15-1 1 defeat.
It marked the first time Fountain Valley has ever
defeated Estancia in volleyball.
Carlos Briceno sparked the Barons from his setter-
hitter position with 11 kills while teammate Eric Zeno had
I 0 kills.
• Estancia. which lost six regulars from last year's
successful team. was led by Adam Lockwood with 23 kills.
Lockwood was making his first appearance of the season
after missing the Eagles' first match because he was playing
basketball.
Ocean View 3. Costa Me1a 0: Scott Rachels and Mark
Woodbrld1e 3, Capl1trano Valley 0: Senior setter Gr
Pad&ett served nine aces as the Warriors polished off th
Cougars, 15.-4, 15-1 . I S-4 in the season opener.
Also playing well for the w1nners was senior middl
blocker Matt Hunkin who was filling in for returning all
league performer Scott Burch, sidelined for about a week
with a back injury.
Woodbridge is home against Fountain Valley Frida
night in a 7 o'clock match. I
In community college action:
Golden Wetl 3, A11u Pacific 0: Bill Brown drilled ini
11 kills and had five blocks and Scott TaJderwood had nio
kills and three blocks as the Rustlers swept the Couprs,
15-2, 15-4. 15-4. in non-co nference action at Golden West.
Freshman setter Tim Mclaughlin had six blocks and
four serving aces for Golden West. now 2-0, as the Rustic
tuned up fo r Friday's alumni game.
Morrison: Trojans
better be ready
WESTWOOD -When the Uni-
versity of Southern California meets
UCLA toniaht at Pauley Pa viJion,
Stan Morrison says his Trojans had
better be at a peak.
"We're going to have to play our
best game of the season to win." says
the USC coach. "Exccuuon's goina to
be critical."
So far. Southern Cal's execution
has been rather masterful over the
Pacific-I 0 Conference. with the cx-
ccpt10~ of Stanford. The Trojans are
tied wi th the University of Arizona
for the conference's top spot at 11-4.
Aller sccminaly bcina dead in lhc
conference race JUSt two weeks •So
after a series of close losses, UCLA
has morchcd back into the Pac·IO
race with four straiaht victories. th rte
in conference. The Bruins arc 9-5 in
Pac-10 play.
"The Bruins arc definitely on a roll
right now.·· said Morriso n. "They're
playing very efficient basketball and
the roles on the team are very wcll-
defined."
The Bruins come off an impressive
75-65 vktory over the University of
Louisville on Sunday. Before that,
they had beaten Arizona State, Lan-
ford and California.
The Trojans had lost two straiaht
aaainst Antona and Stanford bclorc
tfiey came up with a 7S-52 thrashina
of California on Saturday.
GIRLS •••
From Cl
Laguna Beach AD
Hamera resigns
Paterno violated NCAA rule•
by attending •lgamg of prep
Lyo n on the bench for most of the
a-me because of foul trouble. moved
up another SIC{> in the l·A tour-
nament by elim1natin1 the Spenans (20.S) at Woodbridae.
OUR LONG TERM
LEASE OR PURCHASE;
A LARGE INVENTORY
ASSURES CHOICE
7,.ltU 11141 • 1'411N 7JOI • llS/tll ... .,.,........_ .... , ............. ......
Walt Hamera, l..aAuna Beach
Hl&h's football coach (or four years
(I 9'78-81) and the school's athletic
director since 1980. has re 1a.ncd his
post a, at hletic director
A replacement is expected LO come
from wi thin the school's staff, 1ccord-
1na to Principal Bob Hushes.
Hamcra's fQur-ycar record as a
football roach was 18· I 8· I, 1nclod1n1
a c0<hamp1onsh1p in the South
Coast l..ca~uc in 1980.
He'll remain an on-campus teacher
as the depanmcnt chai rman for
Enalish.
YORK. Pa. (A P) -Penn State
Football Coach Joe Paterno violated
NCAA recruitint rules by attendina
the reoent sianint of a New Jersey
hiah school player Lo a nation.al letter
o( intent. the university atknowl-
edttd Wednttday.
rn a copyript sto~ in l~ York
Daily Record. Penn State Athle1ic
Director Jun Tarman satd the school
••i nadvenently violated" the rule
•hen Paterno IPl'Qrcd at the
Montclair, N.J., home of Quintus
McDonald when the linebec:kcr
i1ned his national lcucrofintent last
Fnda)' •
David Bent. director of enforce·
ment fortht NCAA. 111d that because
the violation was of an "itolated.
minor or inadvertent variety;• the
NC AA probably would not stan an
invcst1pt1on.
The rule proh1b1t1 Otv111on l·A
head cOIChct frOm bcma present
when a 11udcnt sipu a lettcr oflntent
of'f thc 1ehool's campu
Paterno ldmntCd the violation in a
ohone conver:gtion Wednesday,
Tarman said. Patttno then notified
the NC AA by phont and b)' mall
Wtdftt'lday. actotdin11n T1nnan
The Warriors. lS-3 and ranked No.
8 in the CIF 3-A. will play 11 foothill
(lS-S) in Saturday's quanerfinals.
Lyon manqtd to lead all acortn
with 21 points, but It was Jill Daniels'
10 pointt in the second ctuancr that
lined the Wamors to a 4S-J8 hatname
lead ancr Lyon 1prnt most of tht
quarter on the bench.
Ktlly Wilton Wit the contnbuttd
20 rebounds and 19 points 14 4(
which came 1n the lint half, While
Danitll finished with IS He>lly
I nlf'lhlm, who pul~ in 1 l rebounds
and d11hcd out 11• 1111ste, tcomi 12
points for tht' winnen
'
Compton Collqe stunned host On
Coast, 81-74, Wednesday niaht to advance to~
women'• community collqe state belketbe~ toum~ment. The Pirates were within one pme of'
reach1n1 the state tournament.
And on the coll* front, hoat Nevada-Laa Veps dropped UC Irvine
Here's how it went: ·
O.m~ ·~· Oraa1e C..et '7•: Coach La Sunderman 1 Pirates manqed 10 hold the No1
Maklna a bbr Gain( ey)
Mater Del•• aeJ GUney d.rlbbl• away
from a pair of Ocean View 4efenden dar-
1Vome11 '• •peedMK:cer toarne7 The Ammcan Spccdsocccr Association will
hold 111 first women's collcsc tournament Lhis weekend at the Los Caballeros Racquet and
Spons Club 1n Fountain Val~y.
Amons the teams partic1patin1 arc Santa
Clara. Chapman, Cal Poly Pomona. Sonoma State and UC Santa Barbara.
Preliminary rounds will bqin Saturday at 10
a.m. Final rounds will be played on Sunday at 10 a.m .. noon and 2 p.m.
Adm1ss1on is $2 for ad ults and SI for children
under 16. For more information. phone SS7-9272.
Tnc~olLalo.
The City of.Lquna Beach Rrcrcation Depart-
ment wall bclin a aeries of track clinics Tuesday
at L11un1 Beach H1~ School. lquna Beach HI Coach Stuart Calderwood
will conduct the cl nics which will be held on Tuesdays and Fridays from 4: I S-S:4S p.m. The
clinics arc d«i&ncd to teach the basics of track and field.
Rcais1ra11on 1s SI S per younptcr. For more 1nform111on. phone 497-3311.
s.rlJd ooaa-"dtloo ~ The Wiil't Carlsbtd Pipelines Pro surflna
competition wilt be held S.turday 11 tM
OCtantide Pier btainnina 11 7:30 a.m. The top 48 surfers an the United S\ltes will
comf)fte In men's and women's divl1ion1. The
men a pun1e is U,000 whale the womtn'a punc ''
$)()(). For more 1nfo""11ion. phone (619) 75"'°63$.
CdJI !fl611 .......... ftloa
The C'Uf'Oft& cld Mar H1Jh hoOI aqllldcs
tam wall hold a 200-lap tw1m .. ·thoft S.twday
an an effon to ra111 fUM11 fof IM •"'· More tMn 120 1w1mmtr1 and WMrf pOto ol~~m wall take pan 1n IM even& w9'idl bliiftHt
?1)0 I m. II tM hW. tcfM>ol.
For mott inf'ormatlOft. ,e-onc l4l· 'TlS2 «
644·21"J
..... ->
~ --· -' ~ --
leOfW U. IM confeftncc. Gari...,.. to;..-
12 ~inti. but the Tartar....,. llwll i\c tiPISOll !t OCC and eliminated COMt in the • .....,
nnalt.
Comp1on will join Flllllnon 11 11w· ScMidh
Coast Conference reprnncativtt la the acate
tournament.
·a for s
Betty Orou and Mona Brown ICOnd 26 lftd
22 poinu, ~ivel~, 10 key ComP'Oft (17·12).
The Tartan hat 37 on9 &hots ft'om tM floor.
0CC waa led by Amy Hathcock lftd Mary
Beth Thobe who acored 20 points apiece.
Sally Chriatman added l 7_1MMnu while TamJ
Parker ICored l 0 for OCC. Tbe Pira&n hit 50
percent oftheir ahota from the floor.
Thobe led OCC In tbe reboundint depert-
ment whh eiaht.
Mater Dei has
the numbers
Irvine, Artists also
l ure to e strong
in new eagues '
By ROGER CARUON .... ...., .......
Even without inspectini a sin&)e
name on the Mater Dei Hilh baseball
f'OIWr, sheer numbers supPlied by ~OKh Bob k~ Jive enou&fl i.nsiaht 1nao die Moaarchl to formulate an
obvious opinion: Mater °'i baseball
will be a force to be reckoned with as
the 1985 season unfolds.
straight CIF playoff appearances and
just three losses in that span betWttn
the end of Easter tournaments and the
start ofCff playoffs.
Among Irvine's roster are four All-
Sca View League returnees -senior
outfielder-pitcher Jeff Dielman (.•21
as a junior), senior pitch~r Mike
Henipn (6-2 with 8S"'1 1nninp under
his belt as a junior) junior Bobby
Hamelin (.488 and four scho'ol tt·
cords broken while a sophomore at
fint base) and senior pitcher Steve
Lipton ( 1.42 ERA).
Other seniors include Buddy
Mundt in the outfield after helpin&
the 1984 junior varsity to a I~
record. second baseman Jim Murphy
also from that JV squad and catcher Re~y ~abaiatulla, who baned .303
as a Junior,..
Irvine Hiah, meanwhile. playina in
the South Coast Leaiue for the fint ·
time, has a track record which
dictates pttseason optimism.
• And Laauna Beach, which moves
into these& View League. has a look
which demands some attention.
Among the junior class arc Stevt
Habermehl at catcher. outfielder
Mike Moceri, shortstop Gary
Renteria, third baseman Rick
Smetenka and pit.cber Brian Snoddy.
lJll WednMdaJ'• CIF 4 -A &lrl•' buketbalf
playott &ame WOD by Ocean View.
Karate toarnameat
An Amateur Athlcuc Union karate tour-
na"'cnt, sponsored by Japao karat~Do. Ryobu-K.a1. will be held Sunday from I 0 a.m.-2 p.m. at
the Boys and G1r1s Club ofHun11n1ton Beach Teams from Oranac and Los .o\niclescoun11es
will ~ compeuna for the Southern Pacific
Asioc1a11on Team Champ1onsh1ps. The 8o)'s and Girls Club 1s located a 19699
Education Lane. Huntmaton Beach
For more information, phone 774-5730.
Collete JPoJJe7baJJ tournament
The nation'\ top four ranked men's volleyball
teams will pt her at UCLA's Pauley Pavilion th rs
weekend for the ninth annual UCLA Collcaiate
Clauic. Teams partic1pat1n1 arc top-ranked Pc~
pcrdl~. sccond·rankcd UCLA. No. 3 U C and
foun h·rankcd UC Santa Barbara.
Here's a look at each:
lfaterDeJ
Those aforementioned numbers:
Four regular and four part-time
starters from a two-time defending
Angelus league crew. Ickes' 10-ycar
record at Mater Dei is 148-87-8 for a
:626 winning percentage and that
mcludcs a CJF 4-A championship in
1980.
Representina those primary
numbers arc shortstop-pitcher Bob
DcJardin, who batted .450 and had
just three errors as a junior: catcher
Anthony Follico. a three-year starter
with a .330 batting average and all-
league status as a )Unaor: and second
baseman Chns Gill. who batted .350
last ytar.
Tony Gardea. a returning starter at
thtrd base with a .400 averaae and all-
league credentials in 1984. completes
the package.
"We've got a strong nucleus." says
Ickes. "but the question mark as
pitching. This team has at least five
players who will go on to play college
ball next year. We'll be very strong
offensively and defensively and I
believe a strong contender for our
third straight Angelus cham-
pionship."
Other seniors returning include
outfielder Rich Albert. first bascman-
pitcher Ted Flores. outfield-catcher
Jeff Gately and pitcher Jon Hulshoc.
in addition to outfielders Kevin
O'Connor. Jeff Pierson and Steve
Schnick.
Among Ickes' 1uniors: Rick Barr.
John Dworzak. Tim Haider. Rick
Huntington. Mike Kelly. Jim
Mathews. Mike McCarthy, Jim Old-
ham. Ismael Perez and Steve Watson.
Sophomore outfidder Kevin
O'Connor rounds out the squad.
Irvine
Vaqueros Coach Bob Flint hats 1t
right on the head with the comment
"There's no dogs in this league.''
noting the fact Laguna Hills won the
CIF 2-A crown in 1984. Capistrano
Valley wonn in 1983. El Toro was the
1984 Sea View League champion and
Mission Viejo is considered the team
to beat.
Irvine. however. enters with some
trad1t1on of its own. mclud1nll five
Lafun• Beacll
Tom Klingenmeier begins his sec-
ond year with the Artists and he has a
handful of promisin1 players to build
around in Sea View League action.
Among the mainstays arc senior
catcher Bernie Falk; senior tint
baseman Ted Huds1nslci, who
doubles in the outfield and on the
mound: infielder-pitcher Ru Reasor.
a senior with a .457 batting avcra~
and 5 home runs as a 1un1or:
sophomore third baseman Scott
Merlo and junior pitcher Coby Nacss
Nacss. an all-league ba kctball star.
is a 6-S left-hander and Khngenmtacr
an11c1patcs he'll ha ve a low ERA.
"We 've got several new players:·
says the Artists' coach, "mcludmg
seniors Pat Fretman. Dan Testtr and
Brad Upton. I've been trying to get
them 10 play for quite a while and
they're a welcome addition.
Othtrs in the Artists' fold include
Juniors Tom Trager. Kent Chesley
and Rick Dumovich.
Soccer: CdM,
Eagles travel
Sea Vie" League champion
Estancia and th ird place finisher
Corona dtl Mar are both on tht
road in Fnda} 's quarterfinals of
the CIF 2-A soccer playoffs fol-
l~wan$ Tuesda> "~ second round
victones.
The Eagles. "ho disposed of
Rancho Alamitos with thtar SC<'·
ond straight shutout' actory in tht
playoffs. will be at Monrovia. the
Rio Hondo League's champion
and the No. 3 S«d.
Coronadel Mar. which stopptd
No. 2 ~d Edgewood 1-0 before
eliminating San Andreas League
champion A.pple Valle} 2-0 on
Tucsda)" 1s at .\naheam.
.\naheam wa s third 1n the
Orange League and lake Corona
del Mar. had to sun1vc n Y.ald
card playoff pme before ga1n1ng
entf)' into the 32-team system
It waa a producuve day for ltlliail
Lcquc prta softball ..,... w-.
day, u E.dilOn, MariM Md H....,
lnaton Beach c~ witb viclorin.
tn communtly colkle activitf,
Onnae Cout and Ooldal Wai al•
potted wins.
Here's what took place:•
£4.,.. •· '"* t: Julie c.pcnw limited the hott Vaquaot ao tbttil
hits whik Slnkint out 12 to lead tht
Charatn to a aeason-opeGiQI victory.
Carpenter, the ClF Player of tbt
Year two seasons -.a and a teCODd
team All.ct F selection last yar,
received offensjve "'ppon frotn
Linda Rudd who had two doublet
and two RBI and sisitT Terry
CarpentcT who was 2 for 2 with a puT
of runs scored.
MarlDa l, Mlra.lette t: Sophomore
Je11ica Duran threw a twcHlitter iD
her varsity debut as the Viki"lf
opened the season on a victorious
note.
Only one ~ira3£cs e playeraota1 far as second bue t Duran, who
struck out stvcn an Iced one.
Huuaai-Beadt t , M.a&a Del~
Allyson Hartman hit a thn:e-rua
homer to cap a four-fW\ first innins
and the Oilers held off Mater Dei.
The first Huntinston Beach run
came when Stephanie Swinale raced
home from third on a passed bell.
Onqe Coast •. PHda1 t:
Sophomore ri.Jht ficldeT Yvon•
Solis knocked 1n all of the Pirata•
runs with two hiu and a sacrifice in 1
non<onfercncc pme al OCC.
Meanwhile. Lisa Houa)tton and
Janice Sivits combined on a five-
hitter apinst the Lancers.
GoWea West I, Collete of Desert t:
Three different players knocked in a
pair of runs apiece and Lisa Brady
and Adnan Muon teamed for a
three-hit shutout as the Rustlers
romped. Lynn Alficn. Mason and Jill
Bellamy each had two RBI.
UCidumps.
Chapman;
Titans next
USC meets Peppcrdinc 11 S:30 p.m. and UCLA faces UC Santa Barbara at 7:30 Fnday. A
bcsl-of·thrtt consola11on beains 11 S:30 Satur-
day with the winners of Fnday's matches mcctinJ Saturday 11 7:30 in a best-of-five
champ1onsh1p match
COAST AREA BASEBALL ROUNDUP. • •
Tickets art available at Tteket.ron and
T1ckctmastcr outlets and at the UCLA ttotral 11ckc1 offiC'C.
Prices arc S6 for adults, SJ for )'OUths undcr 19
and non-UCLA students and S2 for UCLA
studcnu.
Adalt .ott,,,il Jea611• The City orlrv1ne 1 acctptin11ppl1ca110M fOf
111198' spnn,.summcr aduh slow.pitch t0flbtll pr()jram. TM ~•ton "'Ill bqin m m1d-Apt1I and
conclude 1Jt1th a ctty· pon.omi lula.ic tour-
nament an mad-Aupit C0tt ts UJO per tnm and will 1ndudt a 12-
lllM ~UC idtcduk, Plartk1patt0n at optn to mtft's. ~omtn'a and
coed tnms Gamet will bt pla)cd Monda> th'"ll' Fridl)'t 1nd s.mda) af\cmoon1 and f'#t=I,
IM for fth .. 8ft ~IOft t Wtdfteto
dly. AIPIK'8ti0a1 art •~•tlabte I\ tht t 1t)"s
• C'OftHftvtUIY wn~ ctt,anlM'tt it 17200 Jlft)o .........
For lftOft tnbmlattoa. phoot 66().)t,Sl.
From Cl
because of darkness at Dana H11ls.1he
aalorseruflcd for five runs an the top
of the fine inning to o' enurn a 5-3
deficit and take the first-round Loam
Tourney CMC>Unter.
In the sbth. Newpon filled the
bases with none out as Chm Parks
sinaled. Stu Hatch reachtd on a
llt'lder's choice and Tony Wren was
safe on a bunt aif\l)e.
Ed Milum, Jon Dishon and Todd
Lawttncc followtd with walks 10
forct in runs. A fielder's choice
accounted fOf the final tal~> Chris H.irahara ~nt 3 4 and
drove 1n three runs. inclu a run-
scorin1double1n the third I a
Dishon •.nd Ed Wagner 1>1tchcd
three inninp apiece w11h 01 hon
allowina one run and Wagntr four.
two ofshem unearned. Ne~pon pla s a sccond·round
tournament pm( Saturday
El Ten S, °'"9 View l: The
Seaha~ks· bets ~ suflcd most of
the way a lhit Chatten scortd four
111nes 1n t~ third innl"I to pin •
flnM®nd .-;n" EJ Toro K.etW O\'all ~ a doubk
over tfurd buc to ICOft Jcl'T)' K.ina
from t«'ond in Oc:ftn teW' fourth
1nnta& and rt\11 C'hal homcrtd to
left-ttnter ntkt In tM flft.h for the
Saha-. ' aiceond Nn.
..-~ .. ----------...;....-...----· •---•4i••••.._..._ • ._....... -· I
Ocean \al''" starter Rudy Tauh
lasted li"e anninp. allowina all fa,e
Charger runs and eight hm before
Cr11g .\ndcrson rchtH'd him m tht
sixth. Taub fanned ty.,o and walked
thrtt . .\.ndcrson \truck out one and
allowed no hm an on<.' inn1n1of....,ork
Marlaa l , Cerritos 0: Keith La zlo
and Mike Dec each had RBI double
and thrtt V1k1ng pitchers combined
to two-htt the Dons as Manna won its
sea.son opener at Bhur F1tld
Matt Hattabauah y.,orkcd three.'
innings tn relief to pick up the wan,
and starter Mark Guedea. who la'itcd
three anninp and allo~-ed JU\t one hat
while stnk.ina out three. and tihon
rchncr Dan Jen~n hcll)C'd to record
the \hutout.
David mmons led on Manna·~
fint 1nmn1 wt th a double and e"entu-
atl~ came a.round to score on an error
~fort the V1k1n touched the plate a
roupk timn mort 1hc follo\o\1n
innina to make 1t comfomblc.
Chns ublcttt •• who o~ncd
Manna's d 1nn1na ~•th •
double. ~ on laulo'~ double
and M1k.c Hu>kr came home on
ntt•s doubic the ymc mn1n
The V1k1np w1l1 ho t l.akc'4-ood
f nda> 1n a doublehc~Jcr at 8la1r
F1C'ld an Long Rench l>Clannang at •
o'clod.
Mission Viejo S. Coroaa •el Ma'r ·a:
n1or nght-hander StC'\t' Satchell hll
a thrtt-run home run m the fou rth
1nn1n1 10 11c the 'ame thtn ur-
rendert'd the Y.1nntng run to lhc
Diablo 1n the bottom haJf of the
1nn1ng on thrtt "ingles as the Daablos
topped the Sc:a Kings in a 1x-1nn1na
gamr 11 Mmnon V1CJO
1chel1's homer brought an Steve
Demal'\, "'ho had b«n awarded first
af\cr hcang hit bv a pitch. and Eric
Whona. who rca hed first on an em>f.
a Kang Marter Dami Landers
la 1ed thrC't' 1nn1nas. ollow1n1 thrtt
camcd run... hcfort ai Ina way to
tchell. v.ho "'orkcd the rcmain.iQ&
thttt annan
In a communtt) roll t gamt
l•ldact J, Wttt LA 1: J<>t
Holden hit i t-o-run homtr 1n \ht
founh mnma and thal v.a all that •
pair of Gaucho hurlcn nttdcd to pest
&he viaory,
03\-e Ward•s \ICnfitt n> en \ht
1\th 1nnina dehvcrcd Mart w~
v.itb Slddkblck' othC'f' run.
John nd11r. -ho wtnt tbc fim ~''" 1nn1 and Tim Phcncae cornb1ntd for &ht ·b1utr. Sadcle-
ba k. 4-1. pla ' Fnday 11 R 10 Hondo
'·
~ >· ... .. IT9 .. COllP••.-c• ............. w L ftct..
0 17 .11J
11 JI ~ 21 n ...
21 J3 ,QI
22 J1 .Jn
~Stele 14 ~ .t41 ...... ~
OeftVW • 21 ·'" HouUOfl ,. ,. .Jl6
0.-. )t ff .w ,.,. MIOlllo n ,, .475
Ulefl 2' " .415
-. .... citv " . .m
•AJTSU co.w••IMCI Alllllllk .,..._ •·9o&loft a 12 .m
"'111dlll .... 45 ,, .n6
WMNnflOft JO 2t -NewWM'r " " .500
New Yont 20 >t ,,,.
e-eret DM""' MllweukM 41 It MS o.trott 33 25 ·"" Chlcaeo ,. 31 .45'
Atlenle 24 ,. .'14
Cle¥Nnd 21 37 .JIU lndleN 19 )f .m
•·cllndled PlllVOff llef'lh,
W1dllu•Y't Scwel HoutlOft 117, LA ~ 109 Oen¥er 124, WnhlnelOn 111
Hew J•o•v 114, Att.nre fl
9olton 111. SM Antonio 102
tndlane IOI, New Yorll 106
o.trolt IOI, Clllcffo " MffllwellkM 119, Ulall 100 T ....... t GefMI
LA Lllllen et PMenlx Ptll~ el Kentet Cltv
Pofltend et Golden Slete
CleYetend YI. Snllle et Tec:ome
lt.Oets 1'7, ~ '"
..
Ml,\
IS ...... 20 n Y.
,.,,.,
5~
10
10 It
II,\
17
171,\
27
7Ya
14 16 ....
""" 2Wt
HOUSTOtl 11171 -McCrev 7·12 2·2 16,
SemMOn 1'·2S 6·7 30, Olllluwon 1·15 2·3 11,
Hollin• 4·1 4·• 12, Uovd 12· 16 2·> 2'. flllterMft M 0-0 2. Wletlnt 2·1 0-0 •.
L..M.., .. 2-4 0-0 4, •e1ct 2·4 0-0 s. L.ucu 0-2 o-o o. Tora 50-97 1'· 19 m.
LA CU"f'91U Clftl -c ... 3·1 0-0 6,
JollMoll I · IS 0-0 1'. DoneldlCMI S-6 J-4 12,
Smlltl 9· IS I· to 26, Nixon ,_ 17 M 20, 9rldMtNn 7· IS I· I 1', CelCl\lnft 1-2 H 2. Wtllte 3-S M 7, Gordon 2-3 0-0 4.. Totell:
., ... 13·" 109.
kwe w °'*""' HO\ltton 3S 23 JO ~117
LA Cll-1 31 21 f7 Jl>-IOt
ThrH•Polnt eo•l•-••to, Nixon,
ltrlclttman, Fouled out-NOM. • .. ~Hou1ton S7 CS.moaon 12), Los
A""'91 31 (Ooneld1on 131. As·
tlals-+4oullon l l ILlovd I ), LM ... ,..... S3
(Nixon 14). Tote! foult-Houaton 71, Lot
Aneelet 20.
Atttndence -11,S1'
COLLEGE ....,...Las v ... 1 f7, UC 1rW1e '5
(lllCAM
UC •vtHI ('5) -C.rmon 0-2 0-0 O.
"""""v •-10 11-11 21. •ooen 11-n 10-10
)2, L• 1 ·9 4·4 7, Scott •·9 o-o 10, Wllllem1
1-1 2·2 4, Kine 4-6 M 11, Eneellted I·• 2·2
4, Clecclo o-o o-o o. Totets: Jo-6S 30-31 ts.
N•VAOA·LAI vaou ('7) -.l•met 2·4 2·2 6, Giiiiam 6-9 12· 13 24. Adema I· IS
0-1 "· "'*' S-9 4·• 14, J-1·14 S-• "· •oblmon 2-2 1-1 S. C.telllftoa 2·4 M S, Gref\9m 2·6 0-0 4, Humon l·S 2·S .. Tolela:
35 .... 27·34 97.
HelftlrN: UC Irvine, C2·40
Tofel foljlt; UC INlne tt ..... vede·LH
""'' )0, F°"'9d out: '-" IUCI), Scoll IUCll. E ..... ted IUCI), Jemet IUNLVI,
A4ems IUNL V). •lf:loundl. UC lr¥1nt l9 IM41rollv 111,
Ne¥edl·Lea Veoe1 lS (Jemet 71 Aulat•
UC lrvlnt 20 IL• II, ...... ede·Lu Veoet 11
(~71.
Attenoence: 1 un.
PCAA
(~
WL
Nevede·U • Veoe1 " I Fr-Srete 14 2
Cel Stele Fulenon 10 1
Utell Siii• I I
Sen Jose S1111 I I
UC Irvin. I t
UC Sent• 8ert>ere 1 9 Peclflc S 12
,,.._ Meltlco Slit• c 12
L°"9 lffCh Stele 2 I• ...... ,,.Sc-.
0....11
WL 2l J
" ' I• 12
IS 10
13 12
13 IS
II IC • 17
7 17 .. 21
Nev.O.·LH Veoe• 97. UC lrvlM ff
T ....... tGeMet
Uleh Slel1 el L°"9 IMch Stell
Frnno Stet1 11 UC Sent• lert>ere
New Me11lc~ Stele et Sen Jote Stele ....... ~
UC lrvlne •I C•I Sl•I• F\lllef'ton
LOll9 8eedl Stete el Ntvedl·LH Veoet FrelllO Stele et Sen JoM Stet•
New Mexico St••• II Ul•h Sl•I• Peclflc 11 UC Sent• Berller•
c.-...~
WUT l'ffv•Oe·lAt Vee•• 97, UC lrvlnt fS
•OCKIU Cotore<IO •• MIUCIYrl 7' (Oii
£AST
Geor11tlown IS, Sr. JOM'a ff
Lelevtlle 70, o.l1were 6S
Lovoie, Md. SI, Towton Sr 5' loll
~Ider S9, Hofllre SI
VIH1nov1 IO, S.ton Hett 7S Wegner 9S, L°"9 ltlend u '3 (011
SOU'TI4 Dv11e 90, Clem.on Tl
Ftorld• SI ... Clncinnell 60
GeorGt ,....'°" 93. N•vv n Georgie 94, MIHln lool ..
Georoie Tiell '7, Nor111 Cerotlne •2
LSU 71, Aul>v<n Tl AM•vlenc:t 71. N0<1?1 Cero41ne St 70 venoer1>111 11, Minlu lool St 71
VMI ... IUchmonc:t •7
Wekt Forts! 61, Vlrolnl1 6S
Cemot>tn 60, Eur Cerotlne SI
MIDWIST
l(entu SI. 61, Iowa SI 67
Mlchloen St 61. NO<lhweatern C7
AMrQ1.1tll• ... V•IPtrelao 46 8owllng GrHn 90, N IMinol1 79
Cenr Mlchlo1n 11, 1(1n1 St '9
lttlnol1 SI JS, lndlene SI ...
Mleml, Ohio 76, W Mlcllloen 69
Ohio u .... Ben Sr S6
SOU'THWIST
Ol<tel!Ome 19, Ol<JePIOme St ...
8evtor 97 It ou 11
h••• 44M 11 ~"on n TCU ~. Tutt S1 Tues Tee" Sf SMU ~
COMMUNITY COL.LEGE
Senf• Ane 106, ~ Wnt "
IS811tti CMtl CM!erence)
OOLDaN wan '"' -Jt'tte<l II, LO•t 29, Smlll'I 9, 0.00. 11. Menn 16 Brvu 17
Totett· 39 71 ·31 99
SANTA ANA 1106) -\t•t1•~ l HV911el
1•, Werner 27. E KOOedO u \hew 7'
McCeN I•. Wllllems '· H•I• 1 P••llOt 1 Torell co 16-41 10.
tWtttlme S.nte Ane. 44·CO
Totel IOU11· Goldefl Wetl n S.nle Ane
'1 Fouled OUI Smilh lGWCJ HU9hfl C\A)
c....... .,, Sed•1uai u
( ..... GMtl C.•11-..1
IAOOL.l•ACK (6S I -H.-nllton 17,
ConilY 17, TllOmea tS, ~ 6. DewM>n 6,
Slilllven 4, Clrr o. h VICH' o Tot•I• " 7 tO '5. COMf'TOtl ('11 -F1emlno 20, ~11w1r1
15, •UllOCk IS, CrtwfCH'd 3, It JOhn.on 2, D
.JolWltol'I 11 Tor1I&. 21 11-17 67
HeNtlmr Com91on, l7·l4 T Olel fcHJll: s.dclleOecll It, Compton I~
l'O\llM out· •. JoMIOl'I CCI, Thomet <S>
T edlnlc.el. ComlMon '-"'11
COMMUNITY COLLIGI
S....C..•tC......~
CFNll c. ... -..
WL Ovtfll WL
Cerrltol I) 3 Ml left Antonio 13 )
'"""'.., It • °''"" Cotti • 7 C~t11 I I
hd,llCllCll P t
ComtMOfl 1 ' ...,... AM , ,,
OOlltft Wftl 0 " ..............
s.tlte AN IN, Goletfl W..t " ~67, ..... ct .s
, ........ "· C«rnot f7 Mt ... MIMeR.,~• ••• .-uua .. ~
n ' ,. 4
" 10
" 12
14 " 17 IJ
13 IS
10 19
1 n
c •• , ...... .,,,.... •oWDt!!.... ~.=-~.~ 2. T... 17·• .. , c:wr.... •• 11 .. u....... .. .. , °'..,,_, 1'>1 " 6.C...... , ... . , ... s........ ... . • • .......,. ,,... n
'· ,.....,,.. .... 11
10 ..,,..., ... "..., ''"' lt °"""' ....... ~ 0...... (It· Ill, If,,_~ a. 1•1>. I); Meor..-
(1' .. I. '1. ~imte Cll-tl, 1, -.-....
CIP....,..NUU ,,......,,. .... ,
l·A .....,. o.I C»-t> 11t. COINllOll (15",, ti e-;:: ~:,.,,•"" c,...i ( ... 7) .. II
~c-.. LAM e.cfl ~ C II-71 vt.. It AlllNftY (1'·71 ., Cel ..... Oonllnew1 .... 0-YW CD•J> vt. SI . ..,_d et
9Wloo MoftleOfM'V
4·A
Gtendelll 125-0l "'-C-'ttreno V llltr(
122·61 et SedcleMc1l COlleee Lynwood (U·ll YI Nortll, •tv. (21-J) el
UC •tvenlde
Oom1neUe1 m·•> "'·......,, ~ (M·J) et Or•lllM Coast Colltol *t• Monlce (fM I VI. luene m -21 ,,
\ltnlllf'e ColleN
J.A PonlOlll (23·31 v~ lonlt• ,,, •• , ,,
Ol~lar NotJe1et (71·•> v1 Monlcielr Clt·l l et
Ont•lo G•MSNI ( 11·6) Yl MornlnOlldt (20-41 et
lllllewoOd 1(11... (21·41 YI. Olrnlen 120·1) et
GttnOore
1·A Sen Olma• 11'·9> on Sente Clare 124·3>
er Moon1erk COl!eOt Aeour• 113· 11) v~ TemPll City Cll·f) et s.n Merino
Sen hrnet'<llno l2S·31 "'· NordllOff I "•l l et VenlUl'e Hien
South Pe..O.ne 124·2) va El Monti
( 11·7) et Arce<ll•
l·A
LA leP!ltl 111·Sl et Clledwlck (23·2)
Wllllll« Chrlallen 119·41 e t F 1llfl 9-tlat
llt·4l Serreno C:n· 11 et Cron roedl 117·11
Mofttclelr Pf• 122· 11 11 l rlttven
(1 .. 10)
s..11 kMltl
Ten'lllllton 11 .. 31 et TtmOll Ctw!Mlen,
venture 120-21 W000crett Chf1t tlen I 17·Sl et Herlteee
120-Sl Wflltnev (17·61 etHeedlea 11'·Sl
e.t·Alr Prt11 ,,, ... , •• HeNlef'I• Cllrla·
ll•n l lt·21
COLL•G• WOMl:N
Ne¥Ne· L.a1 v ... 1 71, UC 1rV1M 65
(ll'CAA)
UC •VINI (66) -Lewlt 10, HIHllll I.
0tM •. Crewford 3, WeHon 6, Simoson f,
Vtne* Poet 13. Grehen\.....6, •endd 6. Totell: 2S U-21 U. llllt
NR'VADA·LAI V•GAI 171) -Thomes 22, L.IVern 6, Chrlttleft I, Herrlt 10, .._. 0,
MoNOlt IS, Crewtev 17 Tolelt: 31 1'-22 71.
...wtlme: Ntvedl·UI V ... 1. t2·l2.
Totel '°"4: UC Irvine 16, Nevedl·Let v .... 20.
COMMUNITY COLL•Ga WOMl:N c...... .,, Or-.. C..lf 74
(8lilu• IY ,,.......,
COWTOtl ceu -.,_,, n.
DucktW«lh •. Gron 2•. Herrla J, l lnohem 12, McOow .. 6, hthel I. TotM: 37 7-12 11.
OllANGS COAST (74) -HetllCOCk 20,
Perfler 10, hrn.11 4, KOOeYHhl J,
Chrlttman 17, TlloOe 20. Totett: 30 14·19 74. Helftlme· Comoron, 41-lf.
Toter foutt: ComotOft 20, Or•nee CCM1t I I Fouled out Duclttworlh (C).
HIGH SCHOOL ~LS
OCMfl "" SJ, Mltelf Det st (C11' 4·A s.c..i •WMl
MATS• Dll ISO! -M Gelnev 22,
AMnfr1 •. Wood 0, G. Gelnev II, Ellemlen
6, Formaneck l, Di.hf 4. Totela: 21 I· 15 50.
OC•AN VllW OJI -Ch0mi<:1 10, Dourv S, Hountell 0, uw.on 6, Slmell. t,
SrrelOfll 0, Vlecho1 1'. Zentlll 7. Totelt: 21
11·21 S3
kel'9W~
Meter Del 13 7 14 10 6-50 OcNn View 10 12 9 13 ~
Tolel loula. Merer Del 11, Oc .. n View
14. Fouled our: Merllfl IMO) Ttctlnlcel: G
Gelnev !MDI.
w" .. ere 4', 'eune.'" v..,_,. 47
(Ctl' 4·A SeCIMf •WM> l'OUNTAIN VAU.•Y (47) -HanOley 9,
Welln S, Cook t, Clowlf' 2, Glelerowslll 2 •
MYlf'l •• Lewter 6. Tot11t· 14 ,. 13 47.
WHTUKI 14'> -Stevena 29, Fuller 7,
Heu 2. C. Smllev I, Comoton o. s. Smiley O.
Totelt: IS 9·21 49. sc..w ~,.,.
F01Jnleln Vellev 6 ll I 1~7
Wetlleke 10 1 I 14--49 Torel foutt: Founteln Vellev 16, Wntleke
11 FOUied out; CIOWer IFV), W1Hn (FV).
W11•1'14191 A, lcNwr 6J (QI' J.A lec8M .__.,
SCHUlttt (Q) -SUl\ede IS, Y1mebe 20,
Yemellllte I, Tenlmoto 4, Pflllllct$ 13.
Olluno I. Wont 2. Totelt· 21 21-31 '3
WOOOMIOGI (IJ) -lnerellem 12,
Lvon 21, WlllOft It, Kerrv C:.UMY 4, l<etlv
Ceutev 6, Denlefs IS, ZNko 3, Ont 2 To1111:
3' 7· 14 13.
sc..w~
knurr 21 17 12 I~
WOOdbrl<kle 20 2S 22 I......, To111 IOUlt . SChurr I•, Woodbrle191 23. FouteO out· Lvon (W).
Gittl' llNVeft ~
(II' 4·A MCeM ,._..
Comoton "· Pomone O Weslleke )9, F-leln Vellev 37
LvnwOOd 60, Mornlno110e l7
Cutver Cltv 55, Doa Puftlol ll
Muir 64. Cheltev 4'
Ocffn View S3, Met., Del '° (Of) Gehr S3, Lone &eedl POiy S2
8uene IO, Mire C0tlt a1
QI' >·A M<eM ,._..
8ree·Ollnde 11, Or1net 5'
Loer• S2, North, litlvenldl 41
sen G1orl.i .O. l\nleloH Velltv 39
~lver1l<1e Potv 6S, W•lnul 44
Foolhlll 63, El Toro 50
WoodbriODe 113, Schurr 63
E111eren1e 49, Loultvlllll "6
P11mdete S7, N0<co S2
Cll' 2·A ~ ,._..
L• Qulnll '7, Genesllt S2
Lomooc 55. Le Mlr.O. 41
Indio )9, Temllle City 31
Celon 45, lA HMlre 41 Chino '5, Ger6eft Grow a Monleoello S2, St Mel'Y'a .,
u Puenre S3, u Slerre • sen Lull 00!100 St, Mlllr0¥1e 50
Cll' l·A 9""" ..... senre Clere S3. SI. JOM9fl )f Sent• Yne1 4t1 Wftlem Chrlttlen 47
Sen Dimes 60, Whittler Chf'ltllen S2
Connelly SI, Eltlnore f2
P1rec1e1e 5', AtelQWo 51
V1t1ev Cllrlstten ... SI. Mlttlllles )f
NordtlOfl 5', lrettw111 47 •Im of Ille World 6'4, .,.,_"
Clfl """ ~ '""" ..... FdntrJOgoe Sec.red Hewt G, OekWOOCI 14
WettrlOllol 37, Sl!Yer Vf!lttrt 14
Trone 5', Twentynine ,...,.,,. "
Merlcooe •s. Pllerlm ,,
Yucce Vlllev '3, CrMll'... llMI• Mona> 29
Woodcrftl Cllrltllen ,,, ,. .. HoMo ~..
ltemOfte Convent '3, Cellfwnle ~
S1 B«on 44, T~ M
~ . . . " .
~ UC lrWlt 9, Q..,._ 4
UC Irvine 211 -.... la t Chn men 201 1" __. t 1
lrlM, C1rr ()), #11\et"tlft '41, I(.....,. m. JOllMon 16111(1111 m. ~ ... "' Md Moreen, l.OINC' °""" m. ,,_.. (I),
Pelllf'lOll It) end VOfl ..... W-~.
1-0 L.-Lomelll ,.......errwftMll (UCO,
An<ltraon IUCll Ht-fllwry (UCO t.
Eye opener
Aa&el .a.., ....... .JllCUoa ...... Ida ,, ••••• after bettlDI priCtiee tili WMk ID Mwm, Art.a.
""" Kltell .. ...... Vf!lttrt 4, ~ t
Anehelm 000 000 ~ 2 I
Founteln Veltrt OIO 310 x~ 6 0
Klolher Ind Ptrklf'; SherOMCk, Sflow·
den (6) end •11e11ert. ~. l··O. L-Klotheir. 21--f>erller (A), Dovie (FV).
Hlt-Aueutl IFVI
MllU. Vlltl S, C-_, Mw J
Corone def MM 000 300 ~3 • 2 Mlulon Vlelo 003 IOI 11-S I 2
Lander•, Selellell 14) •nd '°''' C.mc>Oetl. l ruceto 14), Houlton 161 llld •01>er1on w-eruceto. L-Se1c11et1 21-loel ICdMI, •ot1eraon (MV)
H•-Setchell (CdMI.
.........,~l.DeMH .. S
(c:.M efter Mii ..... , .,..,..,I
NewtlCH'I Herbor IOI 015--4 9
Dene Hiiis 001 1.-s 7 2
Dishon, WeGMr (41 end Perin, Molle 161, T-v. Str0\1911 (5) end l'eroulOl'I.
W-Weot'¥ L-Srrouon. 28 tlefnl! (OHi
2, Hl1111ere (NH),
II Ttrt S, Oc.-VW 2
Oc.un View 000 011 <>-2 S l El Toro 104 000 a-5 I o
Teub, AncttrtOn (7) end Klno; FIUlll.t
end APPie• w-Feulka. L.-Teub
211-51-IETI, StoYlll (0\1). Hlt-Clwts
(()V).
MetW a, c.n--. •
Cerritos 000 000 ~ 2 2 Merine 120 000 11-l 6 O
LM and •odtieutt. G'*'N, Hell'""9fl
(SI, Jensen (7) and Torrn. W-+4•11eMutlfl.
L-LM. 21-'Sublelle IM), L.11100 (M ),
Off (Ml. Emmons (M ).
...,., NCC«
Cll' OUA•TIRl' ... AU ( "'*•• > !Mft.I 4-A Oxnerd et Pelot Veroes
Sen Goreonlo er Foothill
Meter Del et •ot11nt Hiiis
sent• llrtlefl ., CulYlf' City
2·A U Selle el leldWln Perk Trov et KetlCltl ••ttMle •• Monro1tle C..... .. Mer et AneMlm
...,,. llNYeft~
Cll' >·A MC.a,._..
HH Wiiton 1, EIOll'entt I (Wltson
e<IYancet on PtNllY klc:ktl Sen Get>rlel s. Lone 9"cll Wiison 2
Genew ), St. JOhn lotco 2
Dena Hlllt I, •owtend O
Lek-OOCI 2, CYOf'HI I
Crnol l. Htrvero 2 12 011
lut'berWI 3, Olemond Ber 2 12 Of)
Clf' l·A _...... reuM
Clf'rlroa VIHev Olrlttlen 1, lrtntwood 0
S.nte Peule 2, ltlrn of Ille World 1 Cw lllo •• LA Bnlltl 2
Aoour• 3 ••. loneYentvre O
GWtl' .... .,... ......
Cll' 4·A _...... rwM
Torrtnce I, Mlltlon Vlelo 0 El Toro 2, University 1 (Oii
l!dllOl'I 1, Leoune Hlllt 0
Cteremont t. llafloo Monl90merf 2
ICJeremonr ednncn on Ollltltv llldttl
C"J·A~r..-Le Quint• 2, Vllte Perk o
Cll'1·A~•a •lo,_.. S, Clledwlclt I
Montclelf '· Oak '"" 0 Gtnew 2, Souttl ... Mlldenll 0
~ . .
9 "
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~Ceftt4,f'nlilllll. PIMC!ent 000 000 o-t S 3
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L-•odrloutz.
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Desert 000 000 o-t 3 2 GOiden wnt 201 cm a.-. 11 2
MIW encl Newmen; lredY. M.atlf\ m end MelOl'I, Holn'louiat 15), Alfierl 17). w-erlCIY, 4·2. L-Mller. a-<.ermone
(COOi, •emos (GWCI.
HIGM SCHOO\.
MlwW l,Mlr .....
Mlreletlt 000 000 ~ 2 l Merlftl 001 000 a-I 6 2
Cntw and Fenton; Our'41 end FereutOI\. ...... .,..,....
EdllOl'I IOJ 110 ~ t O
Irvine 000 000 ~ 3 4 CerOlllllf' end Pfotlaf; loolllrOYO end
Mitter. 21-ftudd IEI 2, Semreu IEl,
Ne¥111e <El.
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SU!llven end •ice: Foee end Albert. H•-HerllNll (HI).
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WinnlM9 )2 2' 7 71
CelNrv 31 25 1 " °"' • 24 11 " Vencouwer 11 11 • ...
Ntrme>M.-
SI. L.CMJla 30 21 10 70
Chice90 JO 30 • ..
De.,ol, " 33 11 ...
Mlnnnote " l4 11 47
Toronto " . 1 )f
WAL•I CON'l•IMCI
jt1ltl1dr DMtltll
WHhlfttlon )7 " ' 13
Ptl~• 37 " 1 .,
NY ltlenc*t J2 26 • " NY •9fl9«t 20 31 ' ..
Plllltlu!'th 20 3S s 0
Nr#MteY " 3S I .... ......... ~
MontrMI 32 ,, 10 74
'"""° " 20 12 70
QueMc JI 24 • 70
lost on 26 ,. • '° Hertford 20 J4 1 47
r ·dlnclled OleYOff IHI
W••nllV'& sc..a
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Detroit 11, Vencouver 5
Wlllllklet 6, l"ltttburth 4
Tor onto 6. Mlllneeot• 1
Cllbeo6 Ntw~l
SI. L.oul1 ), luff1llo 1 CeteefVJ,NYl"911dWI I
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~ ..... toft
W1thfntf011 et NV lllMtn
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277 MO
21t m
m 210
2• 2 ..
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212 25"4 200 272
UI 113 257 113
211 2"3 224 256
213 • 206 25"4
U2 207
221 17'
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111 ... ., .................. , pan llAC& OM ,,. ..a.
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Time: "1* I IS.
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Je1WW CleucflO l•ttc:Ht> UI a.it
lf'IMtCCCeleftl 7,0I AllO'TeclMl Wiid And Crezv Guy, Wen
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I '"""' ,. :If S. II 8XACTA <Ml INld 92.(00.
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~ Prtlrte C,,.,cftttldl UO AM rlCltd: letlllt Cew, Tlmeront
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Time: HI l/S.
P •XACTA (1·•> Hid 11a10.
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N4*il • ...,. (Fltctl UO UO tAO
N4*il Arnett• (Mdlnonl uo uo
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MOfl'WeY Smooltllt. Tlmt: ,.1 J/S.
P IXACTA (M ) Hid ttl.50.
......,.. llAC•. OM ,,. Net.
Skk Swllt (Aullll\J 7 A 4..00 UO
~ •tdlet (~I UO UO
Momtl'9Y knlthl (Clolflln) ,.40
AIM rtced: Geometric, HelcYon Hotldev,
Ful PocMI, Ntttvt Ho\llld, Prlnt"*ter, Scorl'IO G.
TllN: t:CIO 215.
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IJ PIClt llX (1-2-2·6• Ml Mid
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110tte1>. ti flltcll Sia COMOletlon Hid ms.oo
with 15' wlMlnt lldlltl (five h0t1ft).
TSMTM aACa. One mile rrot.
HlehlMll Ftur J lMrcM) UO UO 2.10 lfttr*""9 Ster (Cliff) uo 2.10
lul (OMornlrl 2.10
Aleo reced: Frencll Cloulhertv. CM
Frotl, s.-n.t. Tlmr. , ......
SJ •XACTA (._41 pekl $7.50.
8L8Y8WTM •ACL One mile Nee. T tllemon ( Pw!ler) 6.20 4..00 2 • .0 Cuteln llhltr\ (Anderton) 4..20 2.40
Howctv 5Hf'lt (,.....C.) 2.20
Also r9C19111: Ive Ive Sconv, WlndY C.n
C.n, C-trv Comfort, Fire And •11n, ~ Ted, •llllv Chllnce. T lme: 2:02 315.
P IXACTA (l•ll pekl W . .O Allendence: 3,71'
lafa~
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Wine SwMI. Sall'• Pflnceta, Ml KtlmOy, Cellfornl• Jut>llte, l lMY JMn, Merrem,
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SerelOl'I IH•wtevl 7 . .0 • . .O Sw.t ... l\lnle IC>otnlntw1) 4.00
Also r~ Neumlt'a Girl, Stekft To Win, Tetnll'IY L.u, Frlvoloul Netut'e, PfOUO
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U DAILY DOUel.• IS-l l Hid 162 . .0.
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l'CMMTM RAC•. One rnlle.
YOUll8 '"" (..._levl UO UO 2.10 heu11 laffl u.orovel 11.00 100
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Time: l:J7.
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Clllrnoe9M .W (Sl'blllel UO 2.20
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Allo ttetf: AvNn. •111lne •un. T.,ron
lev, Jonecrt.. Time: 1:1) llS.
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IUCTH •AC8. 1 II 1' mllet.
Pun"enr To (Oomlfleuez> 1'.IO 11.00 6.00
Tlff9nl'1 Toy CMcHer9Utl 6.00 MO
SCl'UfldlV (OtllftoulMVe) UO
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•ecoen111on, ... MY Clnnon, Commuter.
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Time: 1:.44 4/1
sav•NTM •AC•. 6 """°'* L9"Ut Hit• (Me¥fnll 12.M uo uo
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u ""' IUl <>>t-11-1-1) Hid
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~-·-----...... -...
MW•• ..... ( ........ ,
SectM-..... ....
Mll'tl OtckJon (U.S.) *11. Jimmy Ariel
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(lll'MI) def. TINY Mo« (U.S.) ftef. Ttrrv
!MM (U.S.) ... 7. 6-4, 6-4. w.,...., ............
(etHtirtMY,h.) s... .........
""""' Louie (U.S.) def. SelldY C.-nt (U.S.), 6-2, •-21 ~cell Skuhtrtkt
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9"dlf'O'ft (~ekle), .. ,, 7 ... ; Anne
Mlllftr (U.S.l ctef. Grece klm (U.S.), .....
S-7, 7·S. ,.,, ....... 0.-..
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~ "• ... a.ucirw.1 .......
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0.-..
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lrumfltld. ..1, dtf. Me91rt1 6·2, def. KlmM•, 6·1; Kelln (HI) IOll1 6•7, 6-7, 1·6,
4·6; Fowttr IHll Iott, 3-6, z·•. 4·6. won,
6·2; Armand (HI> loll, l·t . 3-6. 0·6, won,
6-2.
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......., N.-r 11\'J, &:a..._ lM ....... Keriool (NHI dtf. OMo, 6-'J, Mardllls.
6·3, ~. 6-2, l(emoc:Mn, .... ,
Mertlft (NH) WOft, ..... IMI, t·•. 1·6, WOii, ._3; Oonel (NH) IMI, 3 .. , 4·f , •·7, S·1:
Venordefl (El IMt, 2·t , 6-7, WO!\, 6-1, 6-J,
~
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!·6.
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m u.1~ iiia; · ~' i!;!1~1f ~r:!~1:: ':' :J •:;!' ~, •. ! :~ ;;:~ .:~~~~!!!£1 liH!:H!!!;r 1 ~ 111 l!u::u:L1Elllt!!!!t1:.elL ~;t l!!~!ltl•1111!;i1Y ··.-~ 111 ~-. ~ u: ~mi~ 1~ ~t, !:!'1;~2r!11 /11~·!t1 n:•1; ~::·i 1·1111111ii11 ii i~~it:!~•· ~ 11. •· ::ni~'i•I i~-1;nu::11 ~~,[J111• ',r,n11.
.......... .......... ...... .... ,. v -~.............. ........... ......... . ....... .... c.w...... 1111........... IMI ..... ...... • ... 2t10USESGrotel1t,IOO. ......... lll~l!l!J•~rt~-... ~ .. !l·!.--uii•~~~l!eilta:!'!!!.J•!•!!!•!....-JIT!!!l4 c.ta.... ltM........... nil •• .,.., .... IHI -=====•==i·----;;;mnmr---a180.000 15%0n.0wner _11111 _ _ __ • .. ... •TRAOE• Don 009'*' 487-8217 29R, 28A Condo, quiet ............ ....., SPACIOu8 & 8HAR, Studio 3 btke from OONn. VEASAILLH 1 Id JClftt,
:•: ~agntftoef1t vtew. SBA. H.,bcw Ridge Condo for I.I. bt= JIM =hborllood. frplc, 4 bd. pool, Wll'Y countrf, 1728/mo e..t8lde 2 Id 1 28d 1 be fMNNil ww mo . ..mo. t-400/mo ..,... ~ tocetton. Full eeour· 4300 eq ft. PP 4M-0033 Jumtne Cieetc #&°'Big , 2 eat at1edt gereoe very charming, evttty 14 Ba ~ownhM. Frplc:, yd, car pet, llt·ln A/O now. Aft 7pm. 497.3277 Uy bldg. Ava II now
Canyon McLain Condo. PALM SP I OAffi. . Ml-3507 .. ,,., gdnr & PoOl MtYtot gar. ti M ""· nice IOc. D9'lW9hr prty dee* 2 8121/mo 8"-7215 AGt ll!)llt IMa Jiit 751·71M 01 720-0454 CIMr Trade Onty. F« Of. ClrC6e & call t• 2tlr o6d Incl. 8Wmlt S)etl. lwe, 23 •=Ma parking' epacH. an ...,.._..... ITlt •--"'--ml. anv-Co. property. Pnc. town clWk: updated $2000/mo. ltS-7644 TIL ----•11 Hamlnon 1175/mo T'lami'iPt on 8eY in ... "-" .... -.rJIL lu J .. ~ 1171 '295.000.F«dMaMuall, kltc:h gar $4M no IMt Ywty rentll OOMnfront la·1111 Mgr64e-t794 Newport leech S'150/mo. eonao. OOW1 =· iir
-~ Condo: 3 IA, s;;:amr l5CMt ™ Bkr 845--0203 eve only. 531-tfto a..t"""... bac:fl bUnaGIO'* '375 Incl i12a1mo EMtllde 2 8d 1 +STUNNING ~ 18drm (714) 761-1742..,.. 2la. pool, .... *"*· IMl• ---~ d=, :-~ 9y 0wnre 3000 SF.~ t I :l.e' utll hurry call 'Abe TwnhM, trplo, yd, 18a Gwden t. Pool 18' l&eO 28' 28a ii&O. MC *-1155, 1$6-2210
3 Bdrm S Ba amid ~ v.-y' OOod buy loen. 33801 & 33811 Ave ..... f--•-L.....11 IUL....... 1241 180 ... , Alty,_ gar lndry rm. Off ettMt $415/mo. 710 1tttl r9frlg, detiw.hr, etove a.i ..
C ~ ~ 700 . Call ta 1274,500 & ........ Jll ... ft IT qutM nice 1oc: ' ..... Incl No pete Cell btwn of COM. rown ~~: 1..v• S2&UOO. OPEN HOOSE l!McWwetetfrontw"8i ' . Super lharp 2 Br 2-aty M -delly S45-.. 55 IEAUTL HB ,_, *-'
WOOd bWM, UMd • .., ...... lltr, SAT/SUN 11.5 493-7325 laDN 1111.. 1111 boet lllp, wtr. caller, 2 GATED VILLAGE COM· TIL~:.~:-unit, So. Cout M9tro. pY1 reep. mature. '350. Peg,
charm. 1319,500 .... nit rnt .. F~. '2to01mo oeo MUNITY. 2.ldrm 2~8a. _._.., gar & yrd, only 1750/mo. 11A Apt. on the nter 754-N70 or M0-912& UPlllllUJ 11C)~ti· luu &u!e t•l w/gar a porc:ti. aef5. mo. A9f 7~780 t800 eq. ft. ~ PURE Ml-1111 Small clllld/pet OK. (Newport Beyl •1000. Maluh<....,. Balboa Penn A.nor. 17i-e05o EMTBLUff S8r 2Ba. air, i FAdH PDW"4iR 2be ytty IN 8'8/&42•8388 M t t""I H bo LUXURY. Gar •. SPA In 720-8730 17&-5-412 • ..... .:!:.... ~~ · den w/frplc LMI• new Pl G H F/P · ue ... " • er r meeter tult" Dining .. "' ,,._, ,_....,, ... r, View, be•utllul yard: ti':~ 84~~ A ,· ce ....... .., llU Condo Widen ~ lky-room, wood tMnlng fir• ~. WI ..... '.... 1 B~. pool· blk to oo:*'· m•tur•. 1280. 17&-7418 Cetta ... 1111 patio. V.-y pm 1215.000 · g · lltee 1550 cg: opt to plac., mlcrowtY9 oven, ~'-1 -=--" Want • MlectJOn of grMt SOI aclH. pref. MOO mo. Mala to w 58' hOfM
.... ... .. ... By Owner:-lAnd incl. leMit ..... l lil Del6gMr "'1'r,~r~ t 2 8:1 buy! &3M 1 8Mt ,.. pt1v•t• petlo. ELEGANT INl1m11 IMng? W• can offer :To Oall 842•5002 w/fattier' ton '300/mo
3M 2ba O/A + cau..t Financing negotlabl•. BXvslbe Vil Ude Spec. :1,:'~;5 873-0a:n • SELDOM AVAIU WMttier· LIVING only 16 mfnut.. Spanc11no dean ~ apt• ttttno trom • ematt apt o Hunt. Bch-att·.8004 • • 842-0350 Of 780-8388 · .., Bau Townhou boat to Faattton ltland, 15 / ..... " 1 f .., • 48d tiM. If tooklna In hM/Pool 846-7008 A9t # 1.09. 2BR, prloe mid ~ ~L '141 t1''1p ~... 38a. d9!:. mlnut• to So. Co. Pl-• w MP ..... am '7 MC• CM.NB.or HB think ol ue Hpt ~ room. kitchen 20 • Own« financing. U • a . .,_... , "' gar, --. tlona. Heat pd. Ho pet•. f'· ... t t .. at .... _,__ _. -1-12-Incl ... II
*Tll-PLll• 1111• -... Ad h-E 1•1,. ••20 tenn PoOI all am.nit... Ju•t ... , of Newport IMYd 28drm 28a 1175-MIO ... , or " .,,......,. "' .... ,,...., "" · "' " ---•-••w u •· ve v .,...,.. 2Br oblle Home. I 875 ' 1 & eoutti of San OleO<> Ideal IMng · nail lmmed. A 1·5Mt w .. t CM 3 2BA 1BA unlta. 'Carmel' mod•I 3 Bd Lr SpacloUI Obi like new. Fully furn. Max 2 partone. 1 mo. 4 2-oeM treewa . 2473 Ofano-898 W. Wll.on 83 t-5&83 TSL MGMT 842-1503 IN NEWPORT BEACH Roommete went.S. M/F. ~~~~~~~~";°· S240,000,f•. gr•t IOC. ~ 2Y,: 2ba, fem rm, wet bar, Avl Aprll tat. 1150/mo. 8 Ave 1~1-5439, By appt NB AE.AlTV 175'-1842 AJirNt place to live on the
Quldc Sale."851-1Soo or ~~;:;g 'C.~2\~ 5* Park. 0wnr 531-3159 ~~.':1~::"~e::''· ln!at + 1l44 only. Wl:!tilfleld 8'he&alrynucpte&drpe. c1~C~~u1~:v-, P~l::i:~ ~~':;. °t.:~:
3 E·llde Iott aclje)lnlng. 2 AQt 873-1781 1 ..... It M ..,.. 8:"'+~ 'r,5:0-::! Wt1tala1ter , IPllTmH 1400 eq ft 28r H48a epu. 8 tennle court•. 7 83t·213edv1173•2411eot
vecant. 1 w/4000 SF HAWAII TRIP FOR 2 1329 ~.ltfwrtlthJ_. 873-5581/t~S Atmoet HUnti;;oton i358 a.eutlful;:;;.n apte Towntiou11, Micro, frplc, pooll, CIOM to bualMM. ROOM OHL Y In quiet EM1
..-hrne. From S75,000. Bonue to t>uyet ol ourl i ..-.I .... rente quite Ill pad w/yd & lo' BBQ' rr· CUcadlng ltrMml OC Airport, FHhlon C.M. Condo, 111 & taet,
Owner will tine. A· 1 high· large. tux OCMnll'lerbOt ~ ~°'ti & = RENTALS eulpped kitchen call ~ ~ :::o-· ' waterfall•. Pool/epa ltland, convenient lhoPI '275. mo. &42-0e70
., deneffy prob. Pl only, Y19W condo. 2bf. tam rm. 173•1~ -JACOBS REALTY 53t-e190 Beet Alty fee 28dr,.;, 1ea . 115$-SllO '875 No peta, 5'9·2447 on eight. ~-WJ 84~1°'821·7103 2be, den, upgradH. PROP MANAGEMENT 301 Avocado 842-NSO °' 545•3115· --~ If ftlll Priced undet llPPfalul at law ?!!r 714187M173 &,.rt.tab fuaitW -w .. tllde 28r 18a, new SlnQ+M 1 & 2 Bdrm Apat1· ...
1279,900. 831-13e7 Li ... L1::J .._ ...... BMut. 1BR cond<>, PoOI. cpt all utll pd M50/mo "*''' & Townhou.... .... &a•1M1 l 'h'-YL -· 141 FIBI lmTI .u ..,... .... .., epa, wt rm. 1525/mo, utll +S3oo MC Kid• ok (Aek about fu rn11tied
4 BR. 1v. ba .. fernlly rm, IB.L/IPTlll ONLY 118,000 par unit aBR 28X ail upetalre. blaM · 1111 pd, 875-8099 831·5230 att.5 pm apte. complete with TV, w~ ~,,.!!::..! up,
me. b-* yard. Quiet OupteS2Jt75
1
000320 !!:.. ~t:>a. Alvertlde7~-7,!!ldc2 BY9'• S 1350 yHr around. Cryetal Xve/1IR. avail BEAUT. 3 bf 2 ba condo, W t·""-••• ...iftftf 1BA llnena & utentll9, maybe tlMted =· •:r.' to street. 2 Cir ger · · _.,. ~•., """' n · 472-8959 or 848-ttoe t •22 ,,...,.,.Imo I....,. d/ /d ,....... 1u .. _.. -ge "'""'" '*'l.S for lhort term Of • S 142,000. Ph· 841-8473 Bkr/Co-op/eet-upe malled mTILI now 0 ... · ....,.. · r.,..., w, w • """'' x 1ba, DIW. retrtg, porch. 1 ) On Jembof" ocean. ltcti • ·
OPEN SAT /SUN 12 • IPYaAll cer ...... ILi DD CALL us AEOARDtNG 873-8900 Of 848-4541 grd•. re· patio. HOO. 1450/mo ~7 egt ,:0: 8.n Joequtn Hiiie 815 N. Coast ~-
971 Sprlng11efd St.. 1g~:~.81~~ Comple~~y~odeled. •RXRDTOFlNDiCLEANt IRVINELEASES C!lttF 1114 "'°· c..::1::.2
•
2149 lut . .-~ Ifft Ad: I IM Laguna BMcti.
4
e4-
294
Ill.UM Piii rm & PoOI-1575,000 GrMt r9'ltal er-. Only 1 3 Bdrm towntioma, quiet, Ir"-.... ~ 2Br 1,,. M. nlcely fUrn pref -• --44-1 all IM lll'IL NI09 family hQme• 3 BR LaV••&lrne Bkr mile from Lorne Linda wtthl)OOl,tennl1,epatac.. 18124Cu!YerDr.trv. couple/nopett.MOOmo. PlaYWILLlll llLllllDIUll WkJy rentale now ..-i.
lovely country kltc:tien' 1 ... 1.. Medtc.ICenter.LOwdn. Noemkre.Nopeta. 111-llM Men Verd• araa. New Apartment complex. OelightfUI oce.\ bf...... S12tlwtt&up.2274New·
famlly rm addition' Caatt flow. win trade fOf St350 mo 11t/lut. 751-8778 an 7:30pm RMdy for ~WICY In All new er .. Pt• & drpe, loet 2 & 39drm 28a Yftt, gar; port Bl'fd. C.M. 64e-7"'41
1 t3•,900. Agt 54s-o31I . TRl·PLEX w/room for 2 property tn Cotta Meea (213) 37 .... 13 TURTLE ROCK OLEN '400 Dix mobile hOme no Ai>fll. 28drme /mo & OI CloMtl. Pvt J:.-0-· NMr bMch Se~ ..... -
EASTSIDE DREAM more unh•. Super Npt or Newport. Approx lWllM .... YllW 2Br. den. 2'hBa, •le, peti Mature adutt• • 3adrme '805/mo. Ou 6t>d~!_f.~Y2n~2naaec•,r.! 876-4812 754-1792 etct Wklle)::Atale ~~-". Height• loc. S2t0.000. $200,000 equity Rick gorgeou• w , c:tiolc9 loc, · Qui.t • range, garbage dlepoeal, p ......... -w ,.,... ' ·-· ,..,.... --•Br 38• 2 etory, cuk»-Own</agt 84&-1N2 8Y9f'• 780-7292, i4 hr•. Little Corona 2 8d lrg dee* tenn, l)OOI, epa 11200, 99 '~8373 rtfrlg & catpOrt. F« In-& balcony. teo-al1 2BR 1ba. Quiet, no pete. S1 wit & up. 2274 New-
nc. 2 pvt yrda. Owner BkrCo-Op 'eet-upemalted 12300/mo. Agt 7H·to70 544-2054 Evee/Wknde 1 1 Newport. formation c.11 38' 2'h8a Exec Condo Yearly. AvaU now. 1125. port llYd. C.M. 64e-74'5
anxlou•. Bkr 720-8730 YllW Exec. Irv. TMr. PoOI tim 4 Lit -.... O&UR•I TIPI~-S11001mo. Mlero, d/w, Cell 850·2483 IUIRI L-11
IHL .... , fMI I...... ~~~ bdrm. $2200. mo. Call u;:;'Oft( tn t ,&! ALL UTILITIES PAID (111)111-llM pool, epa. tenn, raqU9t· 28r 28a on 10th falrny 302t)V eo.tHwy 9:-UOO oo:;; ig: 1 Bdrm Pll,111 Ju:i ' raruc•d o:ner Carolyn, 720--0280 WOf'k 2~ wood Compare t>etor• you rent. BetWNn 2pm-4pm Mon· ball, dbl oar 780-I083 91g Canyon gott cour•. port~ k~ TV
\/l1ia Warner pool, MC Hurryt And you wtll own•' anxloue to Mfll , Matr t>drm+orc S725+ 'h t:9 8ctl I rs::g_ 4ft..2/t'l Newly decorated. cuetom day ttwough Friday BACH: Stow, frig, utile pd Lndry tilcupa, ale, mtcto, S 126+ wit igi, no depollt,
gate .... 995. 842·70•2 Bdrm, 3 ba wlfamllY rm, TOM L£.E 842·1502 utll•. Lg 2 atry 39, hM. dfflgn !••ture. pool, Eutllde 28' 18a /beam 1475/mo. 11t, Tut+dep. dbl gtr, pool, Jae, fUll M----~----lrg 80 x 150' tot. Thie II CIMn Male pref. Cheryl lwpt IMC• Bit bbq, cov rd oer•· eur· oelll frplc w 1155 14th St teo~17t ourlty 11ff5 No I*'· IU I .. Ulll
lnia• t 4 '!:eu~~~ti• * .. •W• (213159MsesX292. 1F1'1a&nd0. my r~:":,S:e:'~ 1 ... ':'.eecadt.2 par~ IUWlllYIWll P-..ct111844-0aot aoaw.co...MwvHew·
llllDllLI mf&.-Tll TRIPLEX on C.btllto In C!lta JllU 1l14 bktg,pool,epa&gym.No ~. 842-1871 eone.nopata.850-1188 NC,~,~~72:;1f"IM r,;1&+8::'·k~
12400 down. Hiier ••11w eo.ta Mela. Newly r• 28r+hoeqn lhopepace s>et•t750tmo.113-274t I t..... lid EA8TSIDE2BR t BA WITllTt . 191,no....,._ •.
provl<MI FHA flnandng, .. • ... furbiehed lnllde & out. MOO/mo. 842-5&>2 -U • Large, clMn, quiet, lnd'l. •••• , .... ... Bil
low fixed tntereet rite. 1230.000. Cell ror detllh. ..... W IWI lee carport from 147 uve whW• you ttew BMuUful a Id 30a Condo
2BR towni'IOUM wt1h gar· .... ., ..., 3BR, 2lhba, comm. PoOI. ··-11111.:TB.Yl •••n• .... " . ~549 . *SpactacWlr ept9 actOM from PoOI & tennlt LUXURY BOARD & CA .. t: age. Only '83,500. Call Jee. gar. Nr S.C Plza arH -·-1 ... .,_ -• +1 6 21k 1 & 2a. eutt c:oun.. Wlh/dyr 2 tlofM fOt eldetly, 1 Mml-=P=eg~D=-• .... mer_o=n=5=50=·=9400:::::a:::::!.::::::::::::========='=1=1-11==l=I=== f7851mo. 1·080-3298 38r+f8m rm Twmae e.utlfUI & park Ilk• FOR Eaetllde 28'. new decor, +s~ town~ gar patio 1 ~ pr1vatt a 1 ~ eutt•
HOROSCOPE
38R all lnaide rport 720-1313 THE C»SCAIMiNATING dw9hr, encl J;':. & patio. +Flreptacea 113oo/mo · IYlll. 478-2172 ~
-------------only. no ":aoe. g;adener TOW:~~ 1 ~r~.! ~sieleenlno +Private balconl" or 100 Intrepid Yacaiitll
Incl $850 mo. 983-8208 IMM AC. EXECUTIVE Unfurntehed . Garden petl09 TSL MANAGtMENT ...... 1M7
SYDNEY
0MARR
BMutlful Spanleti etyle HOME: 38R. bar, 2ba. utlllt ... FrM Eutllde lg quiet 28'. New -llft 842· 1803 Frp!c, 2 car gar. New LA QUINTA HERMOSA crpte, dr.,_, paint, lndty & ••• LG Ilg ..., C.bln. Pool Twntiee. 2Br 2~8a. Court cpte/all new ament.... 18211 Parkllde Ln HB patio Mt5 mo 848-7383 *3 Ught.S tennll oourte NIWPOAT VILLA APTS table, cotof TV, 2 frplca.
yrd +patio. Gar + prkng Pvt ape. Pool, tennle ... 1 ..... ,· *2 Swimming poote Approxtmatety 1 INlt from SIMpe 14. 545-8918
epac.. Avall 311 11000. walk to bch 115751,,,o -·-Triplex 28', gar, '850 he +Streama & ponde the 8Mcti. 842·2357 ... :c
5'&-3155 or 998-3434 84M880 or 831-3088 ~· s .... k Mil Sun 3/3 10-4. 1802 Of. +Sorry, no pet• VetMlllte Cond t ... tt Euttlde 28' 1B• quret _ '!' _ ange 821-5159 7-tpm •Furnlahlnge avail 0 LMtlng IUn .. lg BIG CANYON 3BR 2~BA conao on Bay 1950 Sunny 28drm ••miiiiii~,... .... -.-... ~·o:. 1reo fe~:..~~· EXEC. TOWNHOME. View o.elgn« turn, MC parlC~ WUTL.111 ftU.111 WHY HOT CALL Agt 131-4880 3t:' ~ "L~ :: =
of golf courM, city llgtite, Ing f1H61mo 873-0IH 2 Bdrm Apte, PoOI. epa, 111·1111 YEARLY: 21A. BLOCK l'lall 3115 17&-5011
Friday, Marcb l WT191 • -pvt tennte oourt & pool S 28' Ba get, lndry rme, no pett. FROM OCEAN & BAY ----------.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): A "different" approach brings '825. L9Ulldry rm. Cfpte, S1850/mo.840-5183 . ~'fc: ~~r ~-it now 1tir~ 84::LMANAGEMENT 11&-YILUll 1185,e.itUO.toet . CdMf Slf'2Lr.w/dbl
desired results. including security. You'll make contacts which enable drapee, fenced yard, gar .. Eutbluft-41k 21A8a, fem Mey NaO+dep 850·2012 · 122 or 842"1803 15555 Hunttnoton VlllaOt Jll ..... IT S:,.3fV:-:,~ "'"'
you to learn wonh of property, to bring long-range plans into focus. child wtlk:ome, No Peta. rm. 2+gar. Jae, view, .a-.. ..a-ah E·ltde 2 bf 1 ba, petto, no Lane, from Sen Diego GATED VILLAOI COM·
Romance lends spice, involves Leo. 543-&195-2tff•ll Orange. grdr. 11850. 541-7415 =r== ' • pete, 317 Cabflllo St Freew:'/i. north of IMCtl MUNfTY 21drm 2"'1a 'tm f!On4Mkr * 3 8d
TAURUS (Apnl 20.May 20): Trip'I, visits. psychic impressions E'SIDE 2 8d ,._,ti home EASTBLUFF VIEW 3Br w... bW.. 1711 seoo. 831-4038 to Mc aclden ..... on 1to0 .q, ft. °' PURE .. w/2 OCMn In CM.
dominate scenario You'll know. moments :n advance, when for 2 wttti gar., no pate 2Ba+den exec houM. ~ E'tlde 21r new cpte a McFadden. LUXUAY. GatlOf, SPA tn Ave11 3i 114i-taM
telephone is lO ring. You'll sense when rclat:ve IS to be "in touch." 1'l-:~dep. 11y' 2c::"'o,~· AIC, newt)' renovet.S & A~.cttwt 1~A ml~ decor FIP nopett 2H3 in&M 1Tt4 matttr IUltff, Olnl1'9 Fem NOl\•tmkr 10 lhr
Element ofluck is prc'lCnt andcriou'll choose "nght" card. Call Eerie 857-.a.400 _ . .,.... lndtcpd. No J>e1•. Aefl 1:1.:..• 1 1c&a r,w_. Elden: H1511&-m1 21M 2il or-free room, wood burning f"9. IUM'I COM 2 Id 2be apt.
GEM(Nl (M 2 1 J 2 ) S d T El f r9q. $1850+ t1soo dlP: · · .. .. -...... piece. INCf~ oweri 8425/mo 640-1157 . . . . ay • unc : tu y aurus f!lCSsagc. • ements 0 MESA VERDE 38' 2Ba. '200/mo dlecounl 1111 1575/mo, 875-0247 EXTRA NICE l.g 18r condo, lot• of IWMfllt.... prt¥ete patio. ELfGAHf
timing. m1u1t1on, luck ndc with you. You could win populanty contest, FR f/p country kltcti Aug. 842-03soneo.9388 Loe dllu .. 1 br Apt yrty. w/pool. Ho .,... 1475. 1178/mo. A¥911 tmmect. UVING on1y 15 mtnulea Firemen wtfl * Cltm
you could also make itnanc1al gain through "correct choice." You'll 112oogidnrtnct.Drttleb'I lt014 DIW. r9f'ri9. no ~18att3:30 552-12ttcwM4-4320 to Felhton llland, 15 ::'"9~~~·=
locau: article that had been lost 2812 S.ang Pl en-2"0 ..... mTILI ~ ina. mo. 17~'473 FIREPLACE. pool, patio. ~ tg. '°.e.C:W, '1:1 w/P"t entr. aep. trom
CANCER(June21-July22):Lunarcyclch1gh,evcntstakesudden MOVEFASil BALBOA ISLAND : ctltuWLI lfU X8•1~ .. !a!Up~.~2!:..1E· 1 .=of a.i Oteeo twMe. 9300/mo • utll.
tuminyourfavor. You'llknowwhcrc toobtainnecdedmatcrial,you'll 1485 flat gtllb ttile 2bf •-ont duS*JC 2 .,.._ "" -fr 2473 °' ll0-2514
bcon a more firm financial. e m otional base. Taurus. Scorpto, Aquarius crptd oecor bit In• li{i;,.,.. Sfll:tmo yrty·. 2tlr 1: 2 frple.on.,-:; mltllT • A:w:l1.54af. ly = '""to..,,., 28a OOftfrnt
pcrsons3tay out<1tandm1 roles. prcwldecl otNrl avalt =·Lal 11J:'ta0-0473 1550/mo net tM only. N8 tPf... N/"'*1, prof fm4
LE (July 23-Aug. 22): You'll accurat~ly dehneatc trends. cycles. • ...... 1M* PWUC MJT1C[ · Ill btt·IM. lndfY rm. IM-M42 ~ 8ue M
A secret meeting could result an uc1tin• assaanment that includes Bia 3bf 2be"" acit ._, ~~gar1 !'!111 '° "'bctl & lhOt>e-;tMi to * Mr HI ,_, · bl" h ' bl t G ~ v· Sa • elory dellar1 dbl GI' yd EWPORT ISLAND· ._,,,., .,. .. aauna..1.....no 741 W ttttl ST .....__. wntana. pu . tS ma. possa c trave . cm ant, 1rgo, gm.anus persons 1730 539-1190 IMt,.. On Marcus, Sbd lo · s>e'l 1750/mo. 111-w71 TSL MAHAOEM!NT -M outooin&o 11c9
figure prominently. , · ewer 3 3 2 • 842-1803 "*'81 mUllO '310lmo. VIRGO (Aua. 23-Scpt 22): Wash comes true includes areater N~'fr D°f:.· AYI Mey 1 w/dock for 2& power Oupltll 9:-:_ / • rJ:: 147·1"3'"" lpm
financial ret0Urte1, ability to decorate or rcmOdel so that home :. .... ,:.r:..·2= boat. New dnpee & =mo 87 ... ~ . man. '°' ~ lftf0f1'MllllMI """"" .... , _, ·-,,..,
surro"!ndinaure moru.ttract1vc, comfortable. An "admirer·· presents lttOO+°MC 541 •• dyf =~:==--.... tllil... lfli -==-~~1r!:; p t•u• call (7 t4J '*"'·!'Wt be,."'°'"'°+
you wtrh token of affection. Not ,., ao Newpor1 hr ._ rm .. bit• "pe1 oil 152.0177 Mol*'W .,,._ ~ ""'· ~ t114 O.M. LJBllA !Sept. 23-0ct. 22): A void tclf-deception, be open-minded fam/elnai.. petto+yrd 111· 1• lla.tlll 2 lldnn ~,.... req, '41-t2!1.,;.1.tcnde · day 8:30 __.._.,., Ml' W rm ttou• In
but avoid be1~ullible Individual "at top" is subicct to chan .. ,. could ISOO'e Nt-t1to No pete. IOO. mo. TSL MANAOIM!NT 1 ... Auilllllll It 1.A11Une leedl, no '*' _ · . . "' -· MMttt aa2 "'°'°"" .. i-.,, H.,11.=u.. ruRMSHED 1211+ _.. .... Mao be victim of" am·Oam." Know 1t, keep options open. Pisces plays a.t ""r* Ullll .. _ IP 1'itbe itldO. lnc1 1 A UNFURNISHCO iilJmw11ttof#ht ,,_
unusuaJ role. . . . °'*"Y'• ttie word abode 3 er or t +-•·at get,.. paflo Mal. 1,0 JolM It Hlot 2 Id tbe. no pate, n-c M TwnNe SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): NothtnJ. occurs halfway-1nu:n11ty w/frplc llPt* _,.,. .., •r• ...,..., ldnr, AdUftl ,....,,.... lfMll """'· 1121/mo Miii a" &•lll'li• csona; 15+ HEALTH ~· utl 141 11~+ as the key. Focus on communication, pos11blcjoumey.1ptritual values. $400'1-..1eo oornrn poot 11400'/mo. dot OK. Ml 14N 142-711117•14119"91 loft."" DOOt • ..,... Mt .,......
You could 1lto be .. madJy in love.'' financial picture it briahtenban ._ ""r tee No ,_.,ac:!',;:-..., iM 1~ TCllWMDim 6filfli9 TNe Terrw. ilA I/ti iln mo. 1?M111 ~~':~":~, NI 4'i """"· a;,...
o riainaUy ant.iapeted. w..-.. 21A tbe. ..,_, paeto ...,. .. no ,.t tM COndO, w . ......_ Oren1• f ,.. Condo m11<h mort' Sorry ~.:: ~":":""·
IAOlnAJUUI (Nov. 22·Dec. 21 ): Finish rather than initiate =J ~541.~ ~C: ~·::C: .... ~ ...:1110" tlOO/fftO "'· Mt.uet u1r+loft. Al .... 1-~ Ptl' Modtl Neid rn a:::;:: to
projec1-dotbotoulbjobofmearch in connection with tues. licerue + _.. _,...._ ..,.. oon w iGMAT tlr 11(1.-.la HHlfii060 Al'tl i• .,....:..!_11,•+l1I0110. ow~ q to 6 * .;;.;;".,......._, '"
requirements, retOUrCCI of one who would be partner. Aries, Libra IU 111101mo. Aflt M-2211 ~. ..., ... •1•1mo. wl_.,. ,.... & GWPOr1 ~rw17 or._,. ...~·· _. ~ -..... 1111 ..,. ..
nativesplaydominantrolet. .' . • Y ,._...,.MlfNii Alf' ..._,.. '450lfM.l4M074 LI•-~ ... , ....... +.,...... CAPIUCO~N (ptc. 2l.Jao. 19): You re beana pul~ an two + 1 lllllto•·a..10 •MliAVti&y; iii.~ 1ii,.._=-~· ..... ,...... CSMt~~Ni dirtet1on1.Avo1daot111beck&oput-bteak!'ewaround.p1n~tcr t>onuetm~llllillt _,..,........ MW o.oor. dwlfw, ; .. r::i---...J:J L&.tiUY"fTifiiril-A,1rt1N..ee =--:U\o• .:=r·
andcpendcnu, take cbafle of your own dcsuny. Focut on publicity, gar •ltlf** • llOO'• on w;;f .,...., ;;;: .... No ........ n . ' lfl llHettlt'OW INtM, "z•-rt• ._ ...... a-. Mo
pannersh1p marital tatua. 531-t1IO ._My,.. 21r 11"° Cel lletY iit ,.,.,_ 6f9li "° "' iiWP t IW ' ._ ...,.... ~ ...... • -. ""' _... --... -jllNf 11 liWlia
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fd>. 11): Emphasis on t>Uic termt. leases. ..._ ..... t11 «..._mo Nwpt ....._· '"*•"=· =-::.,,.n:w1 =-= ==·..-170016"' Strfff lftc.1,..,._.,19,.~ cmployment,depcncknll careof'pn.t. Jntu1uon nnttt.tue._you'Uk.now htiil ...... 5*M 11 """9t111mo. 1 ..-.. ... ,...,kid.Ok THAT · C•t DoWfJ ll1-M'1, 1-..e7-
"'h11 todoat riah1 itme. Otdet......, wiJJ Jend bencfit orupcrincc. o ... ..-. '"*Y:Q: ...__ .,.., .._. ~MdlfMtlitll."'9o. 1171.IN .•11to • ....-.,.. MZ·51U ••*iM tiiWI Leo l)fan too role. 1ttti..t, "' ... 1100'• otJMra a.alt ~· .. ....,._ "' n. Ntt/A.111. IM 1u1 f!Mw'9>1 hd Ne. t"'IH. ,..,. .... -.,
l'dCP.f (Feb. 19-Mardt lO): D6venity, -elcome ~venture, be *-*1.... ..... • ._,_,. .. ,..,,C:·1e MiNiLiiiil16,nt 880 IMMAWnw --.Oii,._,
=:ir)' ~,~::'Fve. '~i1r1=. ~ c:f: ~~;e!,n;t.:,~ <:,~-;::,·~ •,r,~':';.'.~1'::, •sn2!. " =-,_~~ = ~~~:r~ '=":.!.'== cooecminabodyimqe.di~n.ulritioa. NM1to._.""Y,.. Ml .,.. ... ,... t7'-M'lorl4'Mea .,..,_. .,._.
• ·~_....---·~------·~;;....----..----------~~l----------------------------"" .......... ----....o.----------------------...... -------.....:.----------------.-;;.,---~-----
wr <, rr 1 1r f m oc
•41 J.. I ' I~ ' rU .'\ 1 n
Office epece 200 eq ft Xlnt
Newport Ben aru S300/mo.~3
PRIME Oftloe apace In
Nwpt lc:tl. Cennery VII·
lage .... 1500 SF. High
vlllblNty loc. 281-11181
Snare 112 of 585 eq ft. ol
P<lfM CdM ornce ipace.
Avail Mw. 1 '115 Your
11\are I• 1337.50. call
Mlck9Y •t 875-2311, 9-5
Mon ttwu Fri.
• CdM dlx tun•. AC. ampl
prilg, from 1395. 2855 E.
Coat Hwy. 87M900
ILITLIOATill
ILITUftl
CALL FOR APPT
(114)11M111
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
AC ROH
CllCLI l·llRIETS
IOW 111118
0111••• AllllTAIT •&IHIRS
lntervtewt Wednesday i-1 1
A.M. at 2511 Newport Blvd .
Cotta Meu (on Newport
Blvd It 0.1 Mar)
e..11 (714) 537·48•0 for
mOf'e Info EOE
(714) 541-7058
\ '
J'"~ Ult
catm = Jd MOO~t-Olt2
... . . .
714 -833-1300
79 S.Wte. gr-.n w/Yf"'
top, ""' Int, ldnt OOftd 5eKmlS10.0004"-1021
NABERS
CADl.l.AC
.. UIULll
lllllllULD
WlllY
OWlllll .,. •.
I
•75 PINTO STATION
WON, 4 IPd. Yel'Y c:IMn
MOO!obo, 845-0497
· n Or11nada Xtnt body &
~ cond. Nd• rebft eng.
S700. 6'6-2330
Prtv psrty 19 7 4 MuttW'g
V&. Auto tran1, fec10!'Y
4PM
•
•
.,
r
l
BUENA
'ARK
GARDEN GROVE
HUNTINGTON
BEACH
EDINGER
tj WARNER
<(
0 CHICK IVERSON
Chevrolet • PorKhe • Audi
441 E. hut lwJ., h.,.rt hull
11J-OHO
Highest Quality Sales & Service
w
IX)
0 NABERS CADILLAC ~·;;l
2100 111111011 ILYI., COSTA IESI
(114) 140-1100 (213) lll-1211
• Best Prices • Convenient Location
• Great Location • Super Service
•Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People
~ 0 CREVIER BMW "' "I! SALES • SERVICE • LEASl~G """'
"Where Professions/ Attitude Prevails"
lp.c:lellzlnt In Europeen Delivery. Excellent Selectlon of
New end carefully prepered UNd BMW't always in stock.
835-3171
208 W. 1at St., Santa Ana
Comer of Broadway & 1st St Closed Sundays
0 THEODORE ROBINS
FORD
U.S.A. 's # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer
Modern Sales. Service. Parts. Body, Paint & Tire Depts
Competitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals
20IO larMr lhel., hsta ltsa
142-0010" 140-1211
0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS INC.
• LONG THM LEASES
• COM,ETITIVE f'URCHASE , •• as
• HUGE INVENTORY ·
dial MERCEDES
213/714 937.2333·
Next to Santa Ana Fwy (5) on
Manchester/Beach Blvd.
G ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT
;r 1 /11 T/11 W11t For
#1w }Hp Slll1 Fir I Y11r1
O(':n~e • SALES -t •SERVICE _, oa • LEASING m~;:.~~:.--0
• ACCESSORIES DEPT . 549-8023
GJIM SLEMONS IMPORTS •. COMMONWEALTH
1301 Ou•ll St. -New C•r Loc•tlon
1001 Ou•ll St. -R .. •I• Dlvl1lon IT\ World's Largest Selection of IT\ 'CJ Mercedes Benz \C;J
833-9300
Sa&es · ltasl•& · r1rt1 · Senlct · lo4y Sllop
•
VOLKSWAGEN ~'FAMILY STORE SINCE '53'. ~Sale• -Service -Lea•ing, -
BRISroL AT EDINGER Ml·0110 lN SANTA ANA
••
'·1
91 FWY.
LAGUNA
HILLS
0 CONNELL CHEVROLET
2121 larlttr lhel., Onta 1111
Over 23 Years Serving Orange County
Sales • Service • Leasing
546-1200 Special Parts UH 546-1400
MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM
SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM
SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM
WE'RE
IEW
Salta
w1111
Rtltll1
AcroH lrom •It •A' on Kat•, )tfet -•of 17 (Orange),,,.,
& HU~ ~.!~R~:G PUTS IR
Overseas Delivery Specialists
PAlltTI D!PART•NT ONN IATUfllDAY MC>ft.-.01
BMW -ROLLS ROYCE
1540 Jamboree Ad.
Newport Beach 840-1444
II I e e A II
888 OOVE ST NEWPORT BEACH
714 833-1300
MISSION
VIEJO f{ ·
I.AKE(_)
"''"""" VIEJO
SAN
JUAN
CAPISTRANO
0 BILL YATES
VIUIWAlll • .... • NHllT
SALES• LEASING• PARTS• SERVICE
12112 , .... 1114, ... , ............
411-4111 111·"80
UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE
HONDA
2880 H•rbor Blvd.
Coat• M•N 540-0713
3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy.
Tiie lle•t C•r B•v•
la Or•••• Coaatv ., .. ,
Tiie De•l•r• Ll•t•d
Oa Tlll•P•••
IN THE
Dail Pilat
•
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,
I I I I I ~ . I ' I I i \ ' I (, I, y , , I ''
HUNTINGTON BEACH
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
()Ii AN<, t l ( · 1 JN T 1 r A . 'f r , 1 • ~11 1 A • ~ •
Citizens seek Irvine route clout
Resident group launches petition drive
for voters ' approval on freeway fun s
By PHO. SNEIDERMAN
Of ... O.., .........
An Irvine community aroup is
launching a petition drive aimed at
aivi ng local voters a treater say
conccmina the city's participation in
plans to build three new freeways in
Cout
Chemical waste In the
ocean off Catalina Isla nd
Is a threat to marine life
on the Orange C oast./ A5
Callfomla
They're going to make a
four-hour TV movie out of
the McDonald's
massacre and the killer's
w idow gets $100,000./ A4
Nation
Pan Am s trike le a ves
39,000 s tranded passen-
gers with only 14 of 400
dally flights leavi ng U.S .
runways ./ A5
Diplomat-statesman
Henry Cabot Lodge Is
dead at the age of 82./ A4
World
Three Chinese enter-
talners are convicted o f
Oranae County.
The proposed initiative would
require voter approval before the city
could bqin collcctin& new taxes or
fees to help pay for the freeways .. A
le'81 notice announcing the petition dnve was scheduled for publication
today. and the collection of signatures
Still no
SifD~f
m1ss1ng
flier .
Off shore airpla ne
cr ash a puzzlement:
3rd sea rc h fruitless ---
By STEVE MARBLE
OfhO.., .........
A third underwater search off the
coast of Newport Beach Wednesday
failed to unravel a growing mystery
that has surfaced in the wake of an
airplane crash thi s week that killed
two peofcle and left a third unac-
counted or.
lnvesti'8tors said they have no
proofa third person was nding in the
two-seat, single-e ngine plane but
admit there is amf1e suspicion.
The bodies o Richard Michael
Brownell, 27, and Sandra L. O'Grady.
25. were discovered in the wreckage
can begin in 21 days, orpn1zers say.
Fees on new development arc seen
as a key source of funding for lhe
proposed Sao Joaquin Hills, Foothill
and Eastern transportation corridors
(freeways). The proposed highways
would run lhrough or near Irvine, and
an estimated SI SO million for their
construction is expected to come
from feet characd (or new homes and
businesses built i., the city.
Orange County has begun collect·
ina such developer fees 1n unio-
oorporated areas, but the Irvine City Council has not yet approved local
freeway fees. ·
On Feb. 12. the council. in a 4-1
vote, a~ to join the county and
other cities in planninJ the design,
financing and construction of the
three frcways. Representatives of the
county and affected citjes arc ex-
pected to form a Joint-powers authority to oversee the projects.
The lone council opponent, Larry
Agran. proposed a "Ciuzcns· Ri&ht·
to-Volt Ordinance" that would su~
m1t the freeway fet issue to local
voters, but noothcrcounc1I members
supported his measure.
SubseQuentry, a community aroup
called the Commince of Seven
Thousand (COST} formed plans to
put the measure before voters
throu&h a petition dnve. COST
members have claimed the proposed
freeways will cause air and noise
pollution. will exceed current cost
estimates .and will not relieve traffic
conption in Irvine. Freeways suppoinen baw .,..S
that tbt new h1...-ays att IMllldilll to
reduce t.raffk on lrvint'• ll'ltrial
streets and to channel coaamutdll
motonsts around the city rather thin
throuah it.
COST is named for the approx-
1rna1t numbers of sipatura that will
be needed lO place the freeway
1n1t1ative on the ba.llot.
William Saxros. cbai~ of fPlwe ... en /A2)
Suspects blaqie
each other for
Hughes ' murder
But murde red ma n 's
kin s ays couple was
in cahoots in sch eme
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. ~ .......
Huntington Beach resident James
H u&hes was planning to lea ve his wife
ancf stan Life afresh in Florida when
he was murdered in what's allCJed to
be a cri me of love and greed. 1t was
alleged in court Wednesday.
Boyd Bccnstra, Hu&hes' brothcr-
in-law, testified that Hughes had
kicked his wife. Jeanette, out of the
house on at least one occasion and
intended to leave his wife.
Hughes was smothered and shot
twice in the head as he slept 1n the
early hours of Jan. I 0, 1984.
Jeanette Hughes. 30, and a man
..
(Pleue eee BUGD8/ A.2) Jeanette aucia-
spying for Taiwan ./ A4 of the Cessna I 52 just hours after the pre-dawn crash Tuesday. ..,
Both were still strapped to their Wieder attacks
HB's 'wish list'
Boating
Forty-five yac hts will st art
the Newport-to-Cabo
San Lucas race Marc h 9.
That' a a lot more than t he
seven boats In the In-
augural race In 197 1./81
Boating columnist Almon
Lockabey writes about
the Importanc e of having
a lookout ./81
Sporta
The Unlden LPGA lnvlta -
tlonal next week features
Its best fleld ever./C1
UC lrvlne throws ~lg
scare Into ninth-ranked
Nevada-La s V~as
beforefalllng, 9 -95./C 1
The Orange C o ast Col-
legewomen's bas ketball
team falls to Compton ,
8 1-74, In Shaughnessy
playoff actlo n./C3
Entertainment
NBC's peacock Is flutter-
Ing toward Its first finish
out of the Nie lsen cellar In
10 years ./83
Gen. Douglas MacAr.thur,
the ''American Caesar.''
wlll be e xamined In a TV
documentary two nights
next week.JIM
Bulneu
Companies s uch as MCI
and Sprint are hoping the
gradual switch to "equal
access" to the long-dis-
tance c ircuits wlll bring
them aome of the $11.27
bllllon In Inters tate tele-
phone c alla that AT&T
handled last year./B8
INDEX
Boating 81-2
Bridge 85
8ultetln Board A3
Bualnat 86-7
Clualfted C5-7
Comte• 85
CrOMWOrd C7
DMth Notlca 88
HorOIC~ ce
Ann Landera 8 2
OpWtlon A&-7
Paparazzi 81
POiice Log A3
Pubffc Notlc• C5
lport1 C1-4
Televtlk>n ,8 2 ,.,....,, 83 ..
WMther A2
If
seats in the airplane, located in about
48 feet of water near the Newport
Pier. According to officials. neither
was a licensed pilot.
Brownell and O'Grad-l; described
as close friends. left a estminster
nightclub late Monday with a third
(Pleue eee PLAJlf&/ A2)
Mental
hospital
rejected
for Deluca
By STEVE MARBLE
OfhO.-, .... ...,.
Accused killer Gabriel Det\1ca will
not be moved to a state mental
hospital while awaiting a second
murder trial. Orange County Su-
perior Court Judge Luis Cardenas
ruled this week.
Lawyers representing the Hunt-
ington Beach man asked that the 19-
)'.Car-old Deluca be transfcmd from
r>ransc County Jail to Patton State
Hospital because he is mentally ill.
Cardenas said there was not
enough evidence that Deluca 1s in
need of"spccial" attention. The judge
also denied a request that a private
psychiatrist be appointed to treat
Deluca at the counth jail.
Deluca allegedly as tried to com-
mit suicide three times si nce his arrest
for allegedly killing Huntington
Beach mail carrier Ida Jean Haxton.
He is being held in protective custody
at the county jail.
Judith Sanders. one of Dcluca's
coun-appointed attorneys. said her
client is seen only once or twice a
month by a psychologist for five to
30-minute sessions.
"He'N!ust rcuina crazier," Sanders
said. " ow e has scratches on one
side of his face so he's apparently hurt
himsclfapin ...
(Pl-..e ... D&LUCA/ A2)
Under
theB:
Bucks
for kids
Irvine parents run
bingo games to aid
t~ htgn sc ools
When )'OUth aroups need to rlllr
mone)'. thty usuallk II cand)' b1ts,
wuhrarsorrameo somcthintliku
donated ponabte tdcv1Jton .ct. But
"
o..r .... .--_,~ .....
Coml~atyou
Rob Bania of 111.Mlon Viejo aeta airborne OD his pc>IO •tick
wblle 8alaal1 Kballl of LafuDa RW• wanna ap ID tbe
1-ckCJ'omacl u the memben of the Jetatar Poto Stick
Demoaetratloa Team allow their eta.ff at UC lntne. Bania
once potoed 19 laoan and Ul5.102 jampe to earn a place ln
the Outnn ... Book of World Recorcta.
By ROBERT BARKER
Of .. 0.-, ........
OranJe County Supervisor Har·
rien Wieder today crittcazed cny of
Huntington Beach requests for feder-
al revenue shanng money as "frivol -
ous at best."
The prOJC'CtS for whi ch the Cit)
sought mone) included park
sculptures and street median statues.
"Where we put our ~nn1es these
days 1s very important.' Wieder said.
"It's not appropriate 10 spend 11 on
statues. It would be embarrassinaand
the umrng IS IO bad.-
The comments on spending pn-
ont1es developed after a meeting
Wieder had last month with Hunt-
ington Beach Mayor Ruth Bailey and
other city officials over c11 y needs and
pnonucs.
Batley subm111ed a list of projects
for possible funding that included a
sculpture at the Blufftop Park area to
reflect the ci ty's oil town henllJC and
six sculptures to be placed in the
(Pleue eee WlltDER/A.2)
S econd suspect in NB
hit-run crash arrested
By STEVE MARBLE
OflheO., .........
A Costa Mesa man who alkgedh
tned to co,er up the 1dt'nt1ty of an
accused h11-and-run driver who
struck and crit1call) inJurcd t~o
b1cychsts Last November. was ar·
rested at his rt~1dence earl) today
Hassan Asshar .. 32. was chargt'd
with being an accessor) to tht' No' I I
hit-and-run accident on Dover Dnve
1n Newport Beach. said traffic in-
ves11gntor Rick Bradley
Ma rgarito .\cc\Cs. 19. and
~h ador D1aL 18. were b1cychng
home from their kitchen JObs at the
Rueben E. Ltt Restaurant when the\
were hit from behind by a woman
dnv1ng a s1h cr Datsun 280Z.
(Pleue eee NEWPORT/ A2)
Toppled pole stalls traffic
Tratficwu becked up along 8eec:t\ ~Boulevard Wedn 11dey
Whef\ the top of a power pole WM toe>Pted after a truck atructc a
1Uppor1 wire to the pote, omctm Mid.
The aoclden1, at the lnffnletton of a.ch Boutevard ~
Medl90n StrMt In Midway City, knocked out eewral trafftc lignllla
Ind ~ trafftc north of the ~ Fr.way.
Meet of the power. which wa1 dllrupted In the •:20 p.m. accklem,
wu r91tored by 5 p.m., according to &tit Compton, .... tuperVttor
for the Southern CaUfomle Ecfteon Co.
The truck ctrtwr was mektng a turn when he hit the aupport wire.
Compton said.
Sentencing hearing begins
for RB teens in fatal crash
Fo cus n~ lHI No._s
those arc u1uall y o~•·)Ur proj«ts
that tt1te limited amounu or money. In lt'\'inc, percnu intent on hclp1na
hiah 1ehool athletic u.ems and mu 1c
FOUPI have turned instdd to a
popular pastime lhat has helped
churches and other non·"'ont aroups
bllancc their book -b1nao.
"We feel It w11l r11sc more money."
u1d Fred Gahm. 1 puttbHsn& man·
qcrv.h 10nOtoff1udrumm~
1n the Irvine H1ah hoot bind a~ a
clarinet pta)'er in tbc orchestra "And
1t ettt nd of the ltHtt hav1na to ttll
candy and thin., to the ~me family
mcmbtn and fntnds " , ......... 8DIOO/AS)
By JEFF ADLER
Of .. ...,,.. ....
n Otanat County upcnor C'oun
1udsccloscdh1s nta n;a counroom
Wednesday as a ~nng bqan to
determine sentences for tYr-o Hunl·
snaton Beach H1&h School Kntors who~ no contat 1n November
to vetucular manslaughter charees.
Judsc Luis Cardenas d1rtacd that
the di1position hanna bt doted to
t ht public bccauec the two defendants
1n the taK. 17-ycar-old JefTf'C)
ThomH and Randall C'raf\. now 11,
are JU-.tn11t\ •ho are enutkd to a
doted bcanna by lite law.
The judtr said 1nomc for one or
the )Outh had allftd to open the
hc'ann but 1hc anom for thf other
movNi to ._C'C'p the pr'O<'~mgs be·
hind closed doors
Cnin and Thoma fact a maximum
sen ten~ of three ye.an 1n a Cahfom1a
Youth u1hont ) 1n t1tut1on Dcput\
Dmnct '\ttomey Mike Maau1rc ha,
S11d he would a k thCJYdac to 1mpo~
"a subit.1nt11I amount of 11mc 1n
custod "for the Pl"
ardent saad that based on h1
reVltw o( the t'lst and dcpcnd1na on
the te umon prt"Sentcd dunna the
hean he would con 1der ntenc· ina the pair to no more lhan five
month 1n Juvenile Hall folio~ by
probluon.
Th' htanna '' C)l()«ted to take l'ict~ttn thrtt •n.d four da and
conclude' somcumc n t ~tt .
Tht Huntinaton Beach tttns
cntertd the no-contest picas Nov. 27
afkr the Judge d11m1sted ste0nd-
deirtt murder characs ap1n l them
1n the de th of Glona Chana. 4 . The
no-<"ont~t plea 1s thecqu1valcnt ofan
dm1 ion of1u1h 1n cnm1nal cases Ca.rdcna~ struck the '-CCOnd-dtp"CC
murder charge~ as a "matter o( law"
folJowina a ~talc a~llatc coun
ruhna that held second-del!ec
murder could be characd 1n tralf1e-
relatcd ca.-" only 1f alcohol or dNP
wctt 1nvohcd. ,l ohol or drua utc 11
not allqcd 1n the Cate 11P1n1t raft
and Thoma
11\f.. 1 f'ounta1n VaJ~y mother
0 fi\'C dltd IDIUntl 1n tht Dec. 2. , ....... _,....., .. ,
.,
-------------,=---------------------------------..--!!!IC::'.::....__ J
Al * 0.1n99 COMC DAJL Y PILOT~, FebNIWy 21. 1"5
Brmther i n bogus lawyer
case puts blame on sibling
BJ .. Aaecla&e4 Prtt1
Two brothers who allqedJy am·
penooated lawyers ind bilked un·
k.nowin& clients out of more than
$100,000 pleaded innocent tocharaes
of conspiracy to practice law without a license. friaoo and 192 counts of
theft.
However, Frank Vescera, ~4,
claimed in a statement in coun
Wednesday that he believed his
brother, John Vescera, 28. had earned
his law dearec from the Univers1t1 of
Southern California and that JOhn
Vcscera made the bulk of the pair's
court appearances.
The Vesccras, both convicted bur-
alars, are accused of opening a t>oaus
law office in Santa Ana last April and
taking in mostly poor clients, many of
them suspected illegal aliens, and
entering guilty pleas for relatively low
fees.
However, because the Vesceras
never took a case 10 trial. many of the
clients are serving terms in jail,
Deputy District Attorney Jan Nolan
said, and they are entitled to new
trials.
"Ther, wreaked havoc on the legal
system, ' Nolan said.
Superior Coun Judge Richard
Luesebnnk set the brothers' ball 11 SI SO.OOOeach at\er theirarraipment
was moved from Municipal Court to
Superior Court because John VesctTI
hadappcartd before alt the Municipal
Coun judaes in Oranie County's
central district.
"Every.thing I did was under John's
direction or at his request," Frank
Vescera said. "It was under the
di rec lion of a person I believed to be a
member of1hc California State Bar.
"I was not an equal partner with
John nor did he equally share in the
fees that came into the office. I was in
every sen~ of the word a salaried
employee.
Investigators charged that John
Vescera obtained his California Slate
Bar card by notifying the bar that he
had changed his name from John
Helmick. The bar, unaware that
Helmick had recently died, re-issued
the card to Vescera in October 1983.
Nolan told 1he coun that Frank
Vescera 1ried a similar ploy several
months later. telling the bar 1ha1 he
had changed his name from Bunon
Cohn and requesting a new card.
Bar officials rejected the request
affff'karning that Cohn had died.
Nolan charged that Frank Vescera
then cont1c1ed the bar several limes
to report a new addl'H$ for attorney
Wesley Harrison. lnvestaaators aJ.
lctedly found Harrison's renewed bar
card. alona with about $26.000 ~
lievcd to be payments from clients. in
the Ve~ras' office.
Nolan told the coun that the
Vesccras were convicted in I 979 of
obtaining a J.C. Penney JeP.lnmcnt
store rubber stamp and 10f11n& sales
receipts to obtain $1 S,000 in refunds
by pretendina to return merchandise. -The prosecutor said the brothers
had similar rubber stamps with the
seals of the May Co .. Broadway and
Scars department stores. She said
John Vescera had also served time for
forgery.
The brothers' alleged scheme was
uncovered Feb. 6 when Municipal
Court Judge Jacquelyn T homason
called John Vescera into her
chambers after receiving a com{>laint
that he was soliciting clients in an
illegal manner.
She ordered Vescera jailed for
contempt of court after she learned
his bar card, now in his name, was
first issued an 1922, and he could not
prove he had a law degree.
WIEDER BLAST S HB WISH L IST •••
Jl'romAl
medians in major streets.
She aJso threw into consideration
for fu.nding such things as land-
scaping and expansion at Bluffiop
Park and furniture for the new
Emerald Cove senior citizen
clubhouse.
Bailey said Wednesday that
Wieder, herself a fonner mayor of
Huntingt<>n Beach, had frequently
asked for pnon1y hsts from the city
and allcjedly claimed that city of-
ficials often failed to respond.
"We thought we were being accom-
modating," Bailey said. "We pres-
ented a lovely shopping list of items
that ranged from small amounts to
large amounts of money. I thank
historical statues would add to the
city's beautification image.
•
TEENS' HEARING •••
From Al
1983 traffic colhs1on near the inter-
section of Adams A venue and New-
land Street in Huntington Beach.
The prosecution alleges Craft and
Thomas were street racing along
Adams A venue at the ume, their
speeds approaching 80 mph. How-
ever. attorneys for the two contend
their clients were not street racing
when the accident occurred.
"She (Wieder) has expressed a
desire to fund projects just as she has
forotherci1ies in her district. We were
not given any set amounts."
Wieder said she was very interested
in the funding requests for Bluffiop
Park landscaping and furniture at the
senior citizen cl ubhouse.
However, said she didn't request a
list of items to be considered for
general revenue sharing fundina.
"The timing is bad," she said. "The
present revening fundina (money
returned to local entities from the
federaJ governmenl) is scheduled to
end in 1986 but President Reapn has
recommended we stop funds now
because of the obscene federal defi-
cits.
"I think the taxpayers have had it. I
hate to say it, but there's no free lunch.
Some of the requests aren't ap-
propriate."
CITIZENS SEEK FREEWAY CLOUT •••
From Al
COST, said he has a list of 600
concerned residents who may be
willing to help collect signatures. If
about 7.000 valid signatures are
gathertd by late June. the group can
force the City Council either to adopt
the "Right-10--Vote" measure or put 1t
on the November general election
ballot.
Speros said he 1s concerned that
Irvine will have little say in how the
freeway developemcnt fees arc col-
lected and that such fees will ri se
sign ificantly because 1he cost of
building the highways has been
underestimated.
··1.don't think the public can be
fooled on this." Speros said. "Getting
at on the ballot will force people to ask
specific questions and get specific
answers."
At Tuesday's council meeting.
Irvine Councilwoman Barbara
Weiner indicated the petition drive
organizers may be premature in their
concerns about the developer fees.
She said city officials plan to press for
revisions in the fee plan currently
outlined by the county.
"The fee program 1s far from being
designed at th is point." she said.
Irvine Mayor David Sills was
critical today of the petition dnve's
organizers. '
"What they've begun is a dis-
honest, very misleading campaign,"
he said. "They're 1rying to make (tht:
developer fee) into a tax throuJJl
political slei&ht of hand. They re
JOing to try to make people believe
it's a new tax that they're signina a
petition aP,jnsP."
Sills said the freeway funding plan
is similar to sewer connection fees
and other charges levied against
developers of new homes and busi-
nesses. Under current proposals.
owners of existing homes and busi-
nesses would not be charged.
DELUCA STAYS IN COUNT Y J AIL ••• From Al
Haxto n. a 37-year-old U.S. Post
Service employee and mother of two.
was attacked and killed Jan. 3. 1984 as
she delivered mai l in Deluca's upper-
class neighborhood in Huntington
Beach.
Her battered body was found the
same day in the trunk of her mail car.
which had been abandoned at a
church parking lot an Costa Mesa.
John Dolan. Dcluca's other at-
torney. acknowledged during the tnal
thal Deluca killed Haxton. but said
has chent should be found not guilty
because he was "unconscious" at the
time of the attack.
Dolan claimed Deluca had smoked
mariJuana and gulped tequila and
does not recall killing Haxton.
Deluca. a fo rmer student at Edison
High School an Huntington Beach.
was convicted June 13 of first-degree
murder.
But Superior Court Judge Leonard
McBride overturned the conviction
and ordered a new trial after defense
attorneys successfully argued they
had not seen a piece of evidence
important to their case.
Since then, McBride disqualified
himself from the case.
Deputy District Attorney Bryan
Brown appealed McBride's rulina but
a decision on whether to uphold the
conviction has not been reached.
A new trial date wall be se t July 12 if
the appeal is rejected.
PLANE CRASH STILL A MYSTERY •.•
From A l
Fair skies after patchy clouds
1
._.. wW be fair In SOuthern Ctlf0tnll ""'°""' Frldey eicmpa tor.,. ... of petotty MtlY "'°"*'8 cloudl on IN COiet end
tog In .... "---·~ Nailonef~ ..... Mid. HWt preu&¥etn0Mo Into Neveda and U\lh kept lowctoude
and fOG r•trlcted to tN coest Mftv today •fttt • WMll of deep
lnt"*>ft by• dtnM mar1M l•Ytt· lty Friday,~. tN high
.,,._.. wttl -.ktn 11 •trough Ol IOw ~ ~ eo.rth
from ... northern Aoclc ... and the c:outel tog and low ......
begin to Inc.. .....
Atono tht Orenge Cout It wftl be f.U thrOUQh Friday •~oept
.,... Ol iat9 night Ind Mtly metnfng low ctoude ,,.., the co.et
and patchy Nrfy momlng fog In the v~. Lowe 31 to •S k'I the
Velleyt Ind •7 to S3 Mir the cout. Hight In the eoa nMr the
oout end 701 Inland.
Tempe "*-City 0 " • ~-"tONfl· Lie ....... .. .. .. , ' ···"'· I.title floClll .. ao Wtlm-COllO,.....
Hlglt. IOW tot 14 -.n ...... I ~ IO l 4
Ll'tl MernpNt " 81 SNwert "'91 F"'1ltt Snow ~ ..... SlellOIWV .... .. "-....ihlctl 71 .. ......... w.tltt ...-.Ce HOM US Oilol OI ~ ~ .. 11 .......... $4 ae ='QW 12 « Mp!e-lt Pu n 30
6& 87 NMIWtlle &1 H
Mdlotll09 .. 2t NtwOl"IMM 12 ...
Atlen\e eo H NtwYOt'll N 14 Calif. Tempe ..... 16 'I AllMtlc Olly It M ~Olly u 37 Blylllt It 48
AiMlllll 541 41 ~ 41 S3 Cltellnl ., 48 ......_. 57 2t OtMnclO 14 IO High, low lot 24 llOul'9 ellOll\O at 5 I m LonglMd> ea 52
•flWllMI " S3 ~ 5t n Molvo\118 11 ..
llerNtCll 41 31 PtloMla 12 IO ...... fielcl 7t •• Monterey eo 48 ... 40 2t ==r. 40 17 (lol(et(a 10 43 MIW-ea ..,
eoaion 63 11 ...... 11 14 Fr-71 48 O!lllllO 7& 42
lwftelO 3t 10 P«tland,0. 81 ". l_atl., 12 S4 PallOenl ~ 44 c..., 35 21 PrOll!denoe 53 11 LOI A::r-9 78 52 RI-tide 17 43 ~on.S.C. 71 5e =11~ " 32 Oak.la 89 .. aan letnlfdlnO 78 41
Clwta.ion,W V 49 23 eo 22 PMOAOOIM 10 37 Ill\ Oal>flel 16 .. Ctwtot1t.N.C .. 3t ~ H 23 l\ed llN" 78 49 Sln.>oet 71 43 =·~= .. 42 27 Nl:NnOfld .. :)0 Radwood Cllty 78 41 .... .. ,,.,,. 97 &1
33 n SI L0\1111 u 27 Saet-10 71 43 lant•Crul u 52 =:' .. 20 81,__Tamp1 12 12 ~ ... 42 T.,_V1181¥ 82 32
S3 ,. Seit Lall• City 17 .. San DleoO 12 S3 y oell'nlt• Vtw .. 83 CeMNlua,Oll 42 24 Sin Antonio 12 50 Sen Fl'llnCIKO .. 50
COftoorcl,N 14 52 13 Siii Julll,P R 1t 72 Santi Barber• 51 45
S1oc1uon 75 44 Olrllle-F1 Wor111 $1 .. St It• Mlflt 15 CM Tldea = 44 22 SM nit 53 ,. High. IOw I« 24 nou11 fl\Olng •1 5 p "' 81n1ow 12 31 43 2t Spoll-41 2t o.~ 44 32 8ynM!U .. 40 14 81g8Mr 51 18 TOOAY o.trolt 3e 21 Topel(• 41 2t SecondlllOll t:fl pm u
OUlutll 28 27 TUC*ll'I 75 51 l-41ow 583pm. u
SP-17 51 TlllM 52 32 S u rf report Faroo 411 33 W~1on 57 2t "'9DAY ....... 51 m Wlclllt• 50 ao Finl 1llgll 4. 12 ..... 4.1 =:,"':I:" 31 11 w ......... ,. .. 1f LOCATION ICD IMAN Flrtl low 12 17 p"' 02 T 1llgll , ,. p I'll ,,.3 45 34 Hunttno'on IMcfl Hatttofd 51 15 "'* Jeitly. Newpotl ..... 42 34 Ezteilded 40tll Stree1, Newpotl
HoftOllAll 82 12 22nd 81.r ... , NewoOt1
"°""'°" 58 52 8alboa w.ooe lllClllNipolit as 22 Fw llllctpl pertly CIOudy ll>cl l>rMZY ~a.en Jaok-.,Ma. 54 35 at llmet 811..,day tllr::rc Monda~ Sllno..n-t• ~ ., H Hight In Ille eOe llld IOwer 0. . .._ Wetart~51 "'-' 41 M th9 '°' Ind IOwer 50a. s ...... direction· IOUtll-1
NEWPORT HIT-RUN •••
From Al
The two Costa Mesa residents were
left sprawled unconscious in a bike
lane on the shoulder of the road. Diaz
sustained a broken nei:k and Aceves
suffered head injuries.
Officer Bradley said police found
the sports car abandoned at the
condominimum complex in Costa
Mesa where Asshar lives. Hairs from
both victims were found embedded
in the car's windshield and sun roof.
said Bradley.
Police identified the driver of the
car as Rhonda Joan Buonato. 24. of El
Toro but did not arrest her until the
following month when police found a
witness, Bradley said.
Buonato. free on her own re-
cognizance, is awaiung trial for felony
hit-and-run driving.
Asshar, rcponedly driving in front
ofBuonatoat !he time oft he acc:1den1.
later drove the woman home after
permitting her to leave the damaged
sports car near his residence. Bradley
claimed.
He said Asshar also returned to the
scene of the accident but did not
render first aid to the injured men.
A warrant for Asshar's arrest was
signed Wednesday by Municipal
Court Judge Selim Franklin after a
witness reportedly identified the man
as an accomplice.
Asshan is bein& held in lieu of of
$2.500 bail at the Newport City Jail.
HUGHE S MURDER TRIAL •••
From Al
identified as her lover, Adam Salas
Ramirez, 43, are standing trial for the
murder. 801h face possible life
sentences if convicted.
Prosecutor Richard Toohey told
the eight-women. four-man jury that
the two plotted and carried out the
murder w11h hopes of collecting the
dead man's $442.000 life insurance
policy.
Defense attorneys, however, told
jurors there was no murder plot. Each
attorney claims the other defendant is
responsible for the killing.
Mrs. Hughes was asleep in bed
when Ramirez, disguished and armed
with a rifle. shot her husband and
punched her in the face, explained her
anorney Don Rubright. H.e said she
called police believing a burglar had
stormed the house.
Rubright said Ramirez, who was
romantjcally involved with Mrs.
Hu&hes. took it upon himself to kill
her husband hoping that he would be
able 10 marry Mrs. Hughes and live 1n
comfort with the insurance money.
Ramirez. according to his attorney,
was set up by Mrs. Hughes.
Public Defender Pa ul Stark sa id
Ramirez was called to the couple's
home and discovered that Mrs.
Hughes had killed her husband when
he arrived. Stark said Ramirez agreed
to help "cover up" the killing but was
arrested when Mrs. Hughes called
police and descnbed the car Ramirez
was drivina.
Seenstra. a witness for the pros-
ecution, testified that Hughes and his
wife had experienced money prob-
lems since the earlr 1980s and had a
strained relationship.
Hughes talked constantly of mov-
ing and starting life over but at the
end indicated he planned to leave his
wife and move to Florida where he
had friends. said Bcenstra.
"It was obvious because he kept
saying 'I' and in the past it always was
·we,'" said Bccnstra, who admitted
he never actually heard Hughes and
his wife discuss breaking up.
Beenstra. under questioning from
Rubrilh1. acknowledged that he and
his wife stand to collect a portion of
the life insurance policy if Mrs.
Hughes is convicted.
lhe brother-in-law, though. said
his testimony in the m urder trial was
not mouvated by the insurance
policy.
In other testimony, Guy Chloros
stated he had seen Mrs. Hughes and
Ramirez together at a park in Stanton
about a month before the murder. He
said be loaned Ramirez, who he
identified as an acquaintance, $20 for
a motel room.
The star witness for the pros-
ecution is expected to be Ramirez's
21-year-old son. also named Adam.
1·3 leir
1 POOt 10w 105pm IA
1 POOt 1 POOt Mii IOCI~ et 5'48 pm. ,..._
1 poot Frid~ al I 22 Liit. llld M111loelft et 5;41
I poot Pl!t
1 poor Moon rlMe IOClay •I 11·11 Lm. Mt•
Frldly at 1;22 a.m. and r1-~ 11
12:07 p.m
Cash register
tapped in H\B
Huntington Beach police are
searching for someone who stole $400
to $500 from a restaurant cash
register when the cashier left it
unattended.
Police said the theft occurred
Wednesday evening at the Skinny
Haven Restaurant, 7702 Edinger
Ave.
The cashier told police a man was
loitenng at the front of the restaurant
shortly before the theft.
She told police she stepped away
from the register briefly. When she
returned she saw the drawer open, the
money aone and the man walking
briskly_ from the business.
Adam l=.dward Kamirez Jr. also 1s
charged in the murder but has been
offered a six-year prison sentence for
conspiracy in exchange for his testi-
mony, which is expected next week.
The younaer Ramirez. who is being
held in protective custody. reportedly
told Huntington Beach police he
dropped his father off at the Hughes'
house the morning of the murder. man, according to w1tnessc<; at the
nightclub.
The man's car later was found at
John Wayne Airport parked where
the Cessna normall) was tied down
said Orange County ShentT Lt Dack
Olson.
pany spokeswoman sa id.
The airplane. owned by a Seal
Beach resident. 1s used b) :i fl ying club
that incl udes a large nu1nber of
McDonnell Douglas workers.
authont1cs said
person an the cockpit would create "precarious" fl ying conditions. t;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii===========-=-=-=-=-=-=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiliiOiilim ____________ lilli
··out we're not saying he was
aboard that plane." '>a1d Olson. "We
don't know that."
The man. 1dent1fied as Kevan Lee
E1seminger. has not been seen since
the early-morning plane crash.
Easeminger as employed as a prec1S1on
inspector at McDonnell Douglas
Corp. in Huntington Beach. a com-
J ust Call
642-6086
o:r..'~'
I• Ou.rantMd
M°'1n•y Ftt<!41y 11 you ""
no1 """" yOUt Pfll* oy 630pm c1Mo.l0tt lPm
11'4 Y""' cc»y ,.., .,.
oetNert<I
Olson said in vestigators originally
d1sc1,,..:nted 1he possibility of a third
r>erson being aboard the airplane
'>1mpl} becau e of the small size of the
plane's cockpi t.
A spokesman for Martin A v1at1on
a1 John Wayne Airport said the
Cessna 152 has two seats and is
designed 10 carr}' no more than 1wo
people. He said the presence of a third
"But anyt h1ng·s possi ble," added
Olson. "If you can fit 20 people in a
phone booth I suppose nothing's
1mposs1ble."
The fuselage of the s1ngle-cn,ine
airplane 1s scheduled to be raised
from the ocean Friday by a pri vate
salvage company. Olson said a
sheriffs scuba team has inspected th~
sunken craft three times since the
crash.
A coronor's deputy said 1fthere was
a third person aboard the plane. it is
hkely the body was 1hrown or washed
clear of the wreckage.
What do you like aboat tltt Daily Pilot? Wlla& doD 't yoa like? CaU tlle
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editor on any topic. Contrlb1tort to our Lettera col1m1 mast ladade tllelr
name 1ad telephone aumber for verUlcatlOD. No clrc1lat101 calla, please.
Tell u1 wbat'1 OD yotr mlad.
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Managing Editor
Keren Wittmer
Advertising Director
"*"'• .... .., "'llY tit ·~ MlflOUI 0. _, .. f.00\'fd't -
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46 Fashion Island
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714·640-8310
I ---
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FORICAITI ON A2
r • • · r. • t t H 1, 1 -. 11 , . " • ...
Coaat
If state funding comes
through, Laguna Beach
schools might be better
off next year than this./ A3
Callfomla
They're going to make a
four-hour TV movie out of
the McDonald's
massacre and the killer's
widow gets $100,000./ A4
Nation
Pan Am strike leaves
39,000 stranded passen-
gers with only 14 of 400
daUyftlghtsleavlng U.S.
runways./ AS
Diplomat-statesman
Henry Cabot Lodge Is
dead at the age of 82./ A4
World
Three Chinese enter-
tainers are convicted of
spying for Taiwan./ A4
Boating
Forty-five yachts will start
the Newport-to-Cabo
San Lucas race March 9 .
That's a lot more than the
seven boats In the In-
augural race In 1971./81
Boating columnist Almon
Lock a bey writes about
the Importance of having
a lookout ./81
Sporta
The Unlden LPGA Invita-
tional next week features
Its best field ever./C1
UC Irvine throws big
scare Into ninth-ranked
Nevada-Las Vegas
before falling, 97-95./C1
The Orange Coast Col-
lege women's basketball
team falls to Compton,
81-74, In Shaughnessy
playoff actlon./C3
Entertainment
NBC'speacock Is flutter-
ing toward Its first finish
out of the Nielsen cellar In
10years./B3
Gen. Douglas MacAr.thur,
the•• American Caesar,''
will be examined In a TV
documentary two nights
next week./84
Bualneu
Companies such as MCI
and Sprint are hoping the
gradual switch to ''equal
access'· to the tong-dis-
tance circuits will bring
themaomeofthe$11.27
bllllon In Interstate tele-
phone calla that AT&T
handled last year./BI
INDEX
Bolting 81-2
Bridge 85
Bultetln Board A3
Buttnea 86-7
Ctuttfled CS-7
Com Ice 85
Croaword C7
0.th Nottc. 88
Hor~ Cl
Ann Land•rt 82
Opinion A&-7
PIPWIZZI 81
PoMce Log A3
Pubflc Notices C5
lport1 C1_.
Televtlk>n 82 ,....._, 83-4
w.e... A2
Still no
sign of
missing
pilot
Offshore airplane
crash a puzzlement;
3rd search f ruttless
By STEVE MARBLE
OftMO.., ..........
A third underwater search off fhe
coast of Newport Beach Wednesday
failed to unravel a growing 111ystery
that has surfaced in the wake of an
airplane crash this week that killed
two people and left a third unac-
counted for.
lnvcsti~tors said they have no
proof a third ~rson was nding in the
two-seat, single~ngine plane but
admit there is ample suspicion.
The bodies of Richard Michael
Brownell, 27, and Sandra L. O'Grady,
25, were discovered in the wreckage
of the Cessna I 52just hours after the
pre-dawn crash Tuesday.
Both were still strapped to their
seats in the airplane, located in about
48 feet of water near the Newport
Pier. According to officials. neither
was a licensed pilot.
Brownell and O'Grady, described
as close friends, left a Westminster
nightclub late Monday with a third
(Pleue eee PLAB/ A2)
Mental
hospital
rejected
for Deluca
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. .,... ..........
Accused killer Gabriel Deluca will
not be moved to a state mental
hospital while awaiting a S«ond
murder trial, Orange County Su-
perior Coun Judge Luis Cardenas
ruled this week.
Lawyers representing the Hunt-
ington Beach man asked that the 19-
year-old Deluca be transferred from
Oranee County Jail to Patton State
Hospital because he is mentally ill.
Cardenas sai~ there was not
enough evidence that Deluca is in
need of"speciaJ" attention. The judge
also denied a request that a private
psychiatrist be appointed to treat
Deluca at the county jail.
Deluca allegedly has tried to com-
mit suicide three times since his arrest
for allegedly killing Huntington
Beach mail carrier Ida Jean Haxton.
He is being held in protective custody
at the county jail.
Judith Sanders. one of Dcluca·s
court-appointed attorneys, said her
client is seen only once or twice a
month by a psychologist for five to
JO-minute sessions.
"He's just getting crazier." Sanders
said. "Now he has scratches on one
side of his face so he's apparently hurt
himself aaain ...
(Pl ....... DELUCA/A2)
Under
theB:
Bucks
for kids
Irvine parents run
bin o ames to aid
twb
•
Comln& at you
DDT, PCB, cyanide and even napalm
dumpedoff0rangeCoastfor2decades ·
By tk A1soclate4 Press
LOS ANGELES (AP) -ChcmtcaJ
wastes such as 001', PCB and
cyanide were dumped in the ocean off
Southern CaJifotnia for two decades
beginning in J 947 and remain a threat
to marine life and coastal residents.. a
television station reported.
The chemicaJs have poisoned fish,
ki lled birds and pose a continuing
health hazard for bcachfront home·
owners, KCBS-TV reported Wednes-
day evening. ·attributing its infor-
mation to government documents
and marine biologists.
Earlier Wednesday. a Univenity of
Southern California research team
released a study showing that high
• levels of POlychlorinated biphenyl
(PCB) and DOT were fovnd in the
tissues or such fish II tbe Pacific
bonito, queenfilh and the Pacific
mackerel, 11 wdl u in le&ls •n4
dolphins that feed on them.
KCBS quoled one tMoloPat IS
sayjngthedumpliie20milesDOrtbo(
Santa Catalina Island and 11 milet
west of the Palos Verdel Paaintull
could be the wont ocean POilution
disaster of its type in world history.
-rhe site's been marted on tbe
naviptional cbans for years u a
dump," said Rimmon Fay, a marine
biologist who owns the Plcific a.
Marine research firm near Marina del
Rey.
"This is the fint I've heard or it, ..
said David Cohen. an EPA spoket-
(Pleue ._ CATALDCA/A2)
• ...
• ... Hearing closed
in fatal auto
crash_ ~entencing
Huntington teens
pled no con test
in racing fatality
By JEFF ADLER
Ofllieo.IJNMS ....
An Orange Counry Supcnor Coun
judac closed his Santa Ana courtroom
Wednesday as a hearing began to
determine sentences for two HunP'
ington Beach High School seniors
who pleaded nocontesrin November
to vehicular manslaughter charges.
Judge Luis Cardenas directed that
the disposition hearing be closed to
the public because the two defendants
in the case, 17-ycar-old Jeffrey
Thomas and Randall Craft, now 18.
arc juveniles who arc enta iled to a
closed hearing by st.ate law.
The Judge said attorneys for one of
the youths had agreed lo open the
hearing.. but the attorney for the other
moved to keep the proceedings be-
hind closed doors.
Craft and Thomas face a maximum
senten~ of three years in a California
Youth Authority institution. Deputy
District Attorney Mike M-cuire has
said he would ask the Judie to impose
··a substantial amount of time in
custody .. for the pair.
Ca rdenas said that besed on his
re view of the case and depending on
the testimony presented during the
heanni. he would consider sentenc-
ing the pan to no more than five
months in Juvenile Hall followed by
probation.
The heanna is expected to take
between three and four days and
(Pleue eee TS&NS• / A2J
Wieder terms HB
spending 'list'
inappropriate
By ROBERT BARKER
Ofllieo.lr ..... ...,.
OranJe Count) Supervisor Har-
riett Wieder toda) criticized Cit) of
Huntington Beach requests for feder-
al revenue shanng money as "fm ol-out at best.··
he projects for which the Cit)
so ght money included park
sculotures and street median statues.
"Where we put our pennies these
days 1s very important." Wieder said.
..It's not appropnatc to spend 11 on
statues. It would be embarrassing and
the taming 1s so bad ..
sculpture at the Bluffiop Park area to
reOect the city's oil town hentaie and
six sculptures to be placed 1n the
medians in maJor streets.
he also threw into consaderauon
for fu nding such things as land-
scaping and expansion at Blufftop
Park and furniture for the new
Emerald Cove senior citizen
clubhouse.
Bailey said WC'd nesday that
Wieder. herself a former mayor of
Huntington Beach. had frequently
asked for pnonty lists from the citl
and allegedly claimed that city o ·
fic1als often failed to respond.
Rob Banla of 11189ion Viejo &eta airborne on hla poco atlck
while Sa.bail Khalil of Laeana HUia wanna ap In the
bacqroaDd u tbe membera of tbe Jetatar Poto Sdck
Demoutratlon Team •bow tbelr ataft' at UC lmne. 8&n.la
once pocoed 19 boan and 125,102,Ja.mpe to earn a place ln
the Gulnneee Book of World Recorda.
The comments on spending pn-
onucs developed after a meeting
Wieder had last month with Hunt-
ington Beach Mayor Ruth Baile} and
othercuy officials O\Cr cat~ need :ind
pnontaes. •
Batley submitted a last of projects
for posstbk funding that included a
··w e though t we were being accom·
modaung ... Bailey said. "We pres-
ented a lovely shopping hst of items
that ranged from small amounts to
large amounts of money. l think
h1stonc:al statues v.ould add to the
ell\' 's beaut1ficat1on image.
(Pleue eee WIED&R/ A2)
P•L
S-,
Focus u ~ lHf NH'Y S
those arc usually on«-a-ynr PtOJttts
th1t raite limtted amoun&Sofmoney.
In Irvine. parent in~t on htlp1n1
h~ sthool athk-tit' 1cam1 and musac
poups hive turned inaad to •
popular putnM thlt hit h<"ll)N
churchts and other non·"'°flt aroups
tMlllncc thttt books -blnao.
"We fttl tt will ra11t more money ... said Fftd Gahm. a purdia11na man·
qer Wh~ IOft Gcoft'11 a drum ~
in \ht lrviM Hiah Schoof tMnd and a
dannet paa~ 1n \ht on:htttra ••Aftd
it tttt rid of the k1cb bav1,. to alt candc:-&tu~ to the '11me family
TMm and ~'-•· ........ mJllOO/ Al)
Irvine citizens launch bid
~~~~ck~~~~!~!!~~~~~::!~
1 (f~ways) The proposed ht&}l9.a)s Avan. proposed a " ttJttnt ll'lht·
... ..._........ v.ouldNnthrou1horncarlrv1nc.and to-Vole Otdtnan«" th.at would tuti-
An Irvine community 1roup 1 an esumued SI SO m1lhon for their mat the frttway ftt issue to local
launchina a petition dnve aimed at con tNction is expected to come voters. but no otberoouncil members
&iv•na local votcn a vcaicr sa from fttS c~ for new home and upponcd his measure.
conccm1na the cny' pan1c1petion in busin built in Lhc '-1ty. SubteQuent1Y. a community pwp
plan 10 build three new frttways 10 Oranie Count has bqun collect· calltd tht C"ommitttt of ~
Oranat ounty ina ~ <k"elopcr fees 1n unan· Thousand (COST} fanned .,.... to
The proposed injtiative would corponued attas.. but the Irvine City put tbe mebUl't ' befcn ~
rtquire voler approval befort the city Council has not )ct approved local thro\llh a pcht1on dnve. COST
could bcasn ooUeni .. · new wes or ~r ftts. membris have dauned the PfCJtN*d
f«s ao help pay for ·tht ftte*lys. A On frb. 12. the counol. in a 4-1 ftttways weU cau1t aar ud noett
•' notice annou~f\& the petition vo~. lf'ttd to Jotn the county and pollution, -.n uceed cunna COii dnve wa tw:duled fOr eublitat1on other cuin in pl1nn1na \be doip. est1m1tet and wdl not ~ nftk
IOday. and tbuolkcnoe of sapaturcs financ1na and con tNction of the ~ •n lrvtnc.
can bcain in lt dlya.Gf'IM'ittn ay. thtte fftwa) Rcptc1tntaltv oftbe flft"Mys ,..~ ba\111 ...-. r-... ..., .............. .., ... aiun1y and all«ltd """an: u -1ha11bu<wh· ...,._.,:;,
u 1 key toUtt"e of f\anchll& for tho pcacd to fonn a jo1nt-powcn m!uct traftk on ,1,vmn p~ Sen JoeQUln Hilts. Foothill authont to O\lrt"ltt t~ pn>J«l • {PIHH .. a I • .,
•
--· --· -
roth er in bogu lawyer
case puts blame on sibling
Pr Ille AMtdAIM p,...
' Two brOlhiri whO al~ly Lm-
~ICd lawyen and bilked un·
1'nowi_• dieftta ou1 of morr than
S 100.000~1nn0«nt lOcba'1tl
-0( COlllplracy 10 ~ ce law .t1hout • Worntt. fraud and 192 counts of !hift.
• ttowncr, Frank \lcscm. 34, dlilned in 1 11ai.emen1 in court
Wec!netdly thlt he believtd hit brother, John Vtteet1, 28 hid earned
bistawdesJu rrom 1ttc linivmilyof
Southern Cahfomla and that John
Vetcera made the bulk of the pair's
coun appearance•. .
The Veteer11. both convicted bur·
&Jars, are accused of open1na a boau•
iaw office in Santa Ana last ApriJ and
lak1n1 in mottly poorchft'lt, many of
them 1u1pecttd illtul al~ and
"enttrinuulhy ple11 for rtlat1vcly low
recs.
However, becaute the \leKftU
ne-ver aook a cue IO t riaJ, many of the
chent1 arc 1erv1na tffmt rn Jiii,
Deputy Ot1tnct Attorney Jan Nolan
11id, and they are en1111ed to new
malt. ··T~ wmked havoc on the lqal
1y1tem. • Nolan 11ld.
uprrior Court Judat Richard
Lunebrink 1et the brothen' bl1I 11
S 150,000eath 1fter their arra1anment
was moved from Municipal Coun 10
Superior Coun because John V ncera
hid 1ppearcd before 11l 1he Mun1c1pal
Coun JUdset in Oranac Coun1y'1
central distnct.
"Everythina I did was under John'•
dir«1ion or 11 hit rcqu1.m. •• Frank
Veteera 111d. "It was under the
direction of a penon I bchcvcd to be a
member of the C'1hforn1a tate Bir.
"f was not 11n equal paJ1ncr with
John not dtd he equally 1hare 1n 1he
fftt tbal WM l•IO IM OR'ke. I WM in
tvff)' ~ of the word 1 ....,.....
tmploytt, I
f nvcsu111on characd chit John
Vacera obtained h11 C'alilornla State
Bar card by no1i(yin1 the bar tha1 he
had chlnaed hi• name rrorn John
Helmick. The blr, unaware that
Helmick had recently died, re-l11ued
the card ao \leacera In Oc1obcr 1983.
Nolan told the coun that Frank
Veteera tned a 11milar ploy acvcral
months l1ttr, tellioa &he blr that he
had ch1nud h11 name from Bunon
Cohn and" requc11in11 new card.
Bar official• reJCC\cd the request
af\cr lea rnina that Cohn had died.
Nolan 1old 1ho court that the
Vncera1 were conv c1ed In 1979 of
obtainina 1 JC Penney department
atore rubber uamp and forai na 11lc1
receipts.
:WIEDER BLASTS BB WISH LIST •••
l'romAl ' "She (Wieder) has eJLprctlCd a
••ire to fund pro)ccu JU,t 111he ha~
olorotherc1t1n 1n herdi1tnct, We were
not &Jven any set 1mountt."
, Wiederurd she was very intemted
1n the fund1n1 reque1li for 8tumop
1Park land1capin1 and furniture at the
• 1en1or ciuun clubhouac.
Hov.cvcr . .aid she didn't rc:que11 a
ltst of ttcm• to be con11dcrc:d for
acncral revenue ,harina fundinJ.
"The 11m1ng 11 bad.'' the 1a1d. "The
~re11tnt rcven1na· fund1na (money
returned to local ent itic• from the
federal &0vcrnment) i• scheduled 10
end 1n t 986 but Prc'l1den1 Rcaaan hi\
recommended we •top fund• now
because of the o~cne federal dcfi·
Clll.
"I think the taxpayers have had it I
hate toqy it, but there'• no free lunch.
Some of the requests aren't ap.
propriatc."
·PLANE CRASH STILL A MYSTERY •••
Prom Al
'man, accord1n1 to wilnc1scs at the
niahu:lub.
· The man's car later was found at
John Wayne Airport parked where
the C'estna normally was tied down.
said Oranae County hcr1fT Lt. Dick
.Ol10n.
"But we're not 11y1n1 he w11
,aboard that plane," ta1d Olwn. "We
don't know that."
The man, identified u ~v1n Lee
£iseminacr1 hu not been 1«n 11nce
the carly-mornina plane cra~h
E11tm1nger 11employed a.a prec1J1on
m1pector at McDonnell DouiJ.I'
Corp. 1n Huntinaton Beach, a com-
pa!!)' 1pokc1woman 1111d.
The airplane, owned by a Seal
Beach rctident.11 u~ by a fly1naclub
that includes a larsc number of
McDonnell Douala\ worker..
authont1e1 sa1d.
Olson wud inve111plor\ on1.1nally
discounted the po11ib1ltty of a third
person bcina aboard the 1urplanc
timpll because of the 1mall 1tz.e oft he
plane 1 cockpit.
A tpoketman for Martin Av1a11on
at John Wayne Airport said the
Ceuna 152 ha1 two scat' and 11
des1sncd to carry no more than two
people. He aa1d the prc\Cnce of a third
~rson in the cockpit would create
'precarious .. fl yl na conditions.
"But 1nyth1n1'1 po sible," added
01.on. "If you can fit 20 people in 1
phone booth I suppose noth1na'1
1mponible."
The fuselqe of the 1in&Je..cnfine
airplane it te:hedulcd to be r111ed
from the ocean Friday by a private
salvaat compeny. Olson •id a
sherifr1 scube team has inspected the 1un~n cran three time~ since the
craJh.
A coronor'adcputy said 1ftherc wa1
a third person aboard the plane, 1t i1
hkely the body was thrown or wuhed
clear of the wrcckq.c.
TEENS' SENTENCE HEARING CLOSED •.•
Prom Al
conclude sometime nelll week .
The Hunt1naton Beach teen11
entered the no-<:onteat plea~ Nov. 27
af\cr the 1udac d11ml.\~ second·
dqree murder char,ac• ap1n11 them
In the death of Gloria Chan&. 48. The
no-conteJt pica 11 the equ1 valent of an
adm1H1on of 1u11t in cnminal catc'
( ardena• •truck the 1econd-dqree
murder charatt ai a "matter of law"
ro11ow1ng a \talc appellate court
ruhna 1hat held 1econd-dc1rcc
murder could be char1t1d in traffic·
related case' only 1r alcohol or dru•"
were involved. Al<.ohol or drua u'I<.' 11
not allcacd in 1hc: ca\C aaainst ( rafl
and Thoma&.
(hang. a Fountain Valley mother
of fi ve:, died iMtantly 1n the Oe4.. 2,
1983 traffic coll1111on near the inter·
teetion of Adam* A venue and N<'w-
land Street in Hununaton Beach.
The pr01CCUt1on allqcs Cran and
Thomas were 1trcct racing alona
Adami Avenue at the time, their
speed• approach1n1 80 mph. How·
ever. attorneys for the two contend
their chen11 were no1 street racina
when the accident OC(Urred.
·DELUCA STAYS IN COUNTY JAIL ••• Prom Al
Haxton, a 37·ycar-old t ~ Po't
· 4icrv1cc employee and mot he of two,
waaaltackcd and killed Jan 3 1984 u
$ht delivered mail 1n fJcluc "uppcr-
ch111 neiahborhood 1n fi 11n11on
Beach. .
Her battered hody waa fou nd the
\ame day in the trunk of her mail car,
which had bcrn ab'.tndoncd al a
church park1n1 101 1n < cnta Mc~
John Dolan. Deluca'• other at-
torney, acknowlcdacd dunna the trial
that Deluca killed Haxton. but ~1d
hi\ c.ltent \houlcJ be found not 1u11ty
because he wa. "un conac1ou1" at the
time of the attack.
Dolan claimed Deluca ha(J amoked
man1uana and aulped tequila and
doc'I not recall k1ll1n& Hu ton
L>eluca. a former Mudcnt at Ed1\on
H1iJl xhool 1n ff untin,ton Beath.
waa convicted June 13 o fir.i-dciree
murder.
8ut 4iupenor C 'ourt Judge Leonard
McBr ide overturned the wnv1t.t11>n
and ordered a new 1nal after d<'fcnsc
auorney1 1uccc11f1.1lly araucd they
had not teen a piece of evidence
important to their caae.
Since then, McBride disqualified
hlmselrfrom &he ca1e.
Deputy OtJtnct Attorney 8ry1n
Brown appealed McBride'• rulin1 but
a dcd1ion on whether to uphold the
conviction bas not been reached.
A new trial date will be set July 12 if
the appeal it rejected.
CATALINA WATERS ENDANGERED •••
.. Fro m Al
Fair skies after patchy . clouds
Tempe "--Cltr 41 " LMV~ .. 44 IJ!llt~ M ao ......... .., 14.....,.~114. ~ to 24 ..,.. =r'e.ui .. lll ..... 11 ..
"""""' .. 1t =~:..... 14 H =' ... t2 44 tr IO :: 11 NMfwtll " #I
Mdlet ... H ,...~ " M ...... eo .. New Yorll
MIMlle Cit' .. n Oklellome CllV
AWllll .. •• OIMfle
.. II t .. ~ Calif. Tempe ... , .... ....
UN ,. .. ......,. 11 H OrleNIO .. ~· tow kit U l!Olllt encllflO 9' I Lm .. "."'"" .. N ,,, .. ~ .. tJ .........., 7t .. ......,... 47 ll1 ~· ..... 40 ti ~'-=r.: loill4ft u If l'Ofl ~ .... .. 10 "°' lltnd.Ot
&:'11011.ac. u fl l'ICWIClellU
71 .. =::rCll, CfMf1111.0ll, w v ... fa ~o .. M A.lo
4'l 21 ~
E ,, 21 •• ~Ollie .. IO ...... ,.,.,.,.
" •• lell &AN Cll, s::::=·°" .., , .. tll\MIONO
,HH 07 1) tlft Juell " "
u IO ~I 40 17 ''""" •• 14 .._.., .. H LOtAllCIMI ., " .. u 0 ... lt<ld P-l'IOlllM 8(1 n "90 llulf .. ,, .. '° l\MwtoO Clly ,. n lec:rM*!tO
u u .... ,, " lenDlllOO
12 IO ..,, ,, encitCO
11 11 ..,,... ..,.,.,.
l!OG*IOll
70
11
T'l
11 H to , .
7t 71 ..
t2 ..
" 71
4J •• ,.. .,
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.. ti r. !I 11 ... 71 .,
11 41 11 ... 11 ..,
t7 It .. 12 :: c
Diiie-ft WOt111 M ... ....... _ 11 04 = .... 22 IM!llil u ,. Hilfl,lowtoo2•llOlll•..-.•lp111 leifetow 12 JI Tl dee
0 ti lpoll-., 2t
Die .... .... u ly..CU. 40 14 ---N II
DMrO!t II 21 TOCN1t1 41 2t a... 21 21 ffolCton 76 81
TOOAY heoMIMOI' 1.'4p111 ,•1 a-id tow u~ pm .,,_ 17 61 ,., .. •• )) :::-;.,.. .. Ill
r.-12 WMl!lnOlon 11
WICNIAI to
32 Surf report ... ao
,..y
.. 12 I Ill
12 11 p Ill
7 Hpm I Olp111
a1 11 WlfllM.11111 ... " .. , ... 41 M --· .. ,, ....... 42 " Extended ........, 12 12 ......,. N 12 ......... H 22 ,.., ~ Plllly ~end Dt-.Y ,,.._, ... ... H M !"'* lltllfdlly llV::fc Mond~ ......... 11 N Hlgl\l In 1119 IOt lllCI '°"' o.. LOwe
LOOATIC* Huft•=...,, ..._ 1y.~1 '°"'IV•. N9wpOt1 22fllllfllt!,~ ........ ~~ W11ttlM1P II
1111 ....,. ,., ''* I ,,_
1 poor
I poor
t poor
1 poor
I ""°'
lull NU IOClay II I 4t P 111 tllel ,,ide)' MI H 1 111 Md ... , i194Nn •It .. ""'· Moon, .... 10dty It 11' 17 I 111 , .... --41 H IN 40t llld tow.! toe lwlll OlltOllOI' ICM,,_. ,fld., It '·" • "'· llld t1MI ....,, .. t:l01, Ill
Artukovic said competent;
deportation hearing begins
l.DS ANOELES CAP) - A U.S.
maji1uate rtjectcd 11 <natute-of.fim1-
t11fon1 challenac to the cxtrad1t1on of
Andrija Artukovic Wcdne~ay and
declared the Orun~ County man
accused of bcina u Yu&0'llav1an war
criminal compc;tcnt to proceed dc-
•p11e a medical findin& of dementia
Teatimony then bepn in the elltra-
d111on proceed1np. which ha ve been
det.yed 33 year•.
The frail . white-hatred Artukov1c,
wearina a blue bat hrubc with a white
blanket draped aero\\ h11 lap . .at in a
whcdcha1r, li\tc:n1n& attentively '" 11
translator interpreted the tc\t1mony
ordocto,..
Artukov1c'\ lawyer~ had araucd
that the KS-year-old fus.it1vc who now
lt vcs in Surfodc( olony \hould not be:
sent back fo r trial on wartime murder
charat•. because the Yugoslavian
1t11utc of lim1tut1 0n'I on murder had
uplrcd.
But U.S. Maal\tratc Volney Brown
11id the only \tatutc of llm1tat1on\
that need be con11derc:d here 11 thot of
the United State•. fJut he did he
would conudcr 11 defen1e 1tllepl1Un
that Artukovic " bc1n1 pro1ecutc<.I
under law1 which did not exi1t 11t the
time of lbe alleacd murders in 1942
ind 19•3.
Later, a psychiatntt retained by the
defense for Wednc.day't ae111on tu·
tified that Anukovic tJ "totall y In·
competent," dctcriorat1na daily, and
quoted Artukovic a~ 1ay1n1: "M y
memory 11 in p1cce1."
However, a aovtrnmcnt pt)'·
ch1atrt1l s:ud Artukovic knew where
he wH, who he was and what the
extradition procccdtnp were aboua.
A youn4 Navy doctor who ha.
attended him for the pa\t "" week\,
Or. David Hill. tc111ficd that he
1huuaht Anukov1c undcr11tood the
nature uf the hearing, but "I do not
think he would be able to 11vc yo u
detailed 1nfurmat1on on h1 1
past ... such as date. and places."
Artukov1c'1 ouorncr. t iary
Fleischman, araucd he C4n t conduct
an ad~quntc defcnw: wi thout the
an1stancc o(h1• clten1.
rxfcnk p1ychintri11t r>r. Oav1d
Gottlieb, who examined Artukov1c
out11ide court. \aid the defendant
suffer, from dementia, but that
despite hjs poor mcmMy, defended
him.elf dur1n1 their convcr\AllOn.
"He s:ud, 'I am here forcxtrad111on.
I am accu.cd of being a warcnm1nal '
And he went on to protetl he had
never killed anyone," Gottlieb iild,
The aovcrnmcnt psychiatrist, Dr.
Saul J. Faerstein. said he 11ked
Anukovic if he knew what the
lawyers were talkinJ about and If he
could follow the proceedin111nd was
told: "Ye1. I can follow them aencr·
all . " ~e1schman. who •id he would
appeal the competency ruJina. then
t.-allcd his first whncn, Sacramento
colleae adm1n1•trator Charles
Michael McAdams, a specialist in
Croatian history. who detaiJed the
me of fall of various a.ovcrnmen11
there and Artukovic'• ascent to
power.
Anukov1c'1 1ccuscn say he i1
rci.pon11hlc for the w•nimc llauahter
of some H0,000 Serbs, Jewt, Or·
thodoll Chrl1tian1 andJypsict durinf
h11tcrm11 a cabinet offical from 19"
to 1945. But Croa1ian·American1
defend him 11 an an1k:ommuni1t
freedom fishier who wa1 unju1tly
accused of atrocities.
Woman robbed, raped
t-oun.-1n Valley detecti ves are
1nve11114t1na th<' rnpc and robbery of
a 27-ycar-old woman who was H ·
aaulted 1n a carport near her con-
dominium.
The woman wat removf nt peck-
·~ from her car trunk late Tueldly
niah& when 1he w11 attacked .
CITIZENS FIGHT FREEWAY FUNDS •••
rromAl
1treeu and to channel commutin& torcc the t 1t y < ounc1I either tu adopt ll on the ballot will force peol)le R>•k
moton,turoundtheca1yr11herth1n 1hc"R1aht-to-Votc"mca•urcorpu1it 1pecif1c 9uc111on1 and act specific
throu&h 11. on the November icncral election answers.'
: man rnntat.tcd late Wcdne'lday 1n
-. Wa1hin1ton. D.C . "lt'11 an Cll·
• traord1nitry t:a\C . I'm c.crtain that r there arc no ocean dump \llt''I
c11nccr, ano l>I> I. the now-banned
pc11ic:1dc. 1n tl'l'lue of fi11h that were
caught t>ctwecn '°)anta Monica and
Loni Bcalh
COST 11 named for the approx· hallot Al Tuesday's council mcetlna.
third ol'the time. 1mate numbc,. of 1ianaturc!l that will Spero-. -:11d he 111 com:crncd that Irvine Councilwoman Barbara
"There have been animal 1tudie11 be needed lo place the rrccway Irvine will have little suy 111 how the Weiner indicated 1he petition drive
1hat clearly indicate that PCB con· 1n111at1 vc un the ballot. freeway developcmcnl fees are col· orpn11.cr1 may be premature in their
tam1na11on hill cau!led reproducti ve William Spero•. cha1rpcr110n of lcc1cd and Jhlt such foci will ri te concerns about the developer feet.
and hcan abnormaltt1e1 and even ( ~1. u 1d he hH a h•t of 600 11an1ficantly bcc.;ausc the cost of She •id city officials pl,an to prr11 (or
chromosomal chansc-." Puffer .aid. concerned rc11den1• who may he bu1ldina the h1Jhway1 hu been rcv1tiont In the fu plan currently
currently on our 'upcrfund '"'·" f-a p a1d h1Htud1e\ have 11huwn the
deadly cfrc{l\ of c:hcm1c:al'I on manne
1trr for ycar1 in \outhcrn C altfornu1
COl'ltal waten I 11h popula11on'I have
been dec.1matcd 11nd remaining ~pcu.
"" dH1w h1ah contenlrationa of to.111<· <'hem11 al'I he 11111<.1
l...ut December, a report l'\ued hy
the \outhern < altfornrn C 11a\t11l
Water Re\Cart.h l'rOJclt found c.11·
trcmely high level' 1,f PC Hand DD r
1n mammal' 'luch a'I \Cilia 11nd
dolph1n11
"Rut there have been no human w1lhn1 to help collect 111111a1urct1. If undcrc111matcd. uualincd by the county.
\lud1e•." about 7.000 valid 111anaturc• arc "I don't think th e public ca n be '"The fee proar1m i1 far from bclna
"Mammal\ wrrc 1Ccd1ng on fi1h
that were al"' heavily <.ontaminutcd
with P< fh and l>l>f " ..aid R1<.hard
<10\\Cll. a \CC WRP m11rine re·
ll\CUlher
According to KC HS. almu\I 2 pthercd by late June. the aroup can fooled on thu1," Spero• ~Id. "Oetting dc1lancd at thi1 point," she said.
m1llton gallon~ of 1ludsc conta1n1n1 fJllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii::::;;;::::;;;::::;;;::::;;;::::;;;::::;;;::::;;;::::;;;::::;;;::::;;;iiiiiiii::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii=mllil----------------.. trace• of ()()I were dumped at the
ncean 1ttc in l'JS? llnd 19S8 Ac1d1.
napalm and IUlh chcm1cal1 H
bcryhum and formaldehyde alw were
dumped at the t1tc, K( BS u1d.
Another ln11lf>jl\I Robcn R1"4'n ·
hroush of 1hc fJn1ver•11y of C alt ·
forn11t at \anta <rut, told KC R\
"'I Im wa\ the wont ta\C: of w:uUtl
pollutmn that we know of. ftatcd
upon all th e 1nformution that we havt'
111\ '11111 a hot'\J><1t ol l 1mtam1natt0n 1n
the ilobal pcrt1pc4.t1vc "
R 1\Chrouah "'"d 1w11 'lpct:1c\ "'
h1rd• d1..af:pcared I rom the area bctau~ of >r>l contjmtnat1on
I ht: lJn1ver\t1y of ~uthern C alt·
f1,rn1a \tudy •howed h1ah lcv<'I• of
I'( fh which 11rc •u•pcc.:1rd of cau11n1
Just Call
842-6086
I J4)( l)'.atholo&y pro(c''"' ltarold
W Puffer ~1d all of the conti;minatcd
fhh arc: frequently c:au~ht and eaten
hy luul 11'port li11hermcn
Pulfer'' rc\e11r<.h team 1ntcrv1ewcd
I .OS1J !inlier\, find1n• that halffi1hcd
a1 lca\t onu· a week, that k2 pcrunt
reaululy ate while <.roakcr. 77 pcr-
t en t ale: Pac1fi<. h<1n1to and 1h11 the
white uoaker wu cauah1 about one·
It w11 nttmatea 1h11 the offahorc
area of Sou'thern C 11tforn1a w11
contaminated by aa much u1 1.9
m1llton k1lo&ram1 or rnmmerc1al
J)f>'I between 19.S0-1972.
fhc Monlro'C C hcm1cal ( o of r orrancc, which wa. 1dcnt1f'icd 1n &he
broadCHt HI MIUrCe (Jf 0[Yf ·la1n1td
•ludac. formerly opertted a plant on
Norm1nd1e Boulevard that manufac·
lured 001 .
Wllat do Y" ltlle abffl tlM Dilly PUol? Wlaat '"'t yt1 Uu? Call tlle
Hmber al left u4I f"' met••I• •Ul be recor•H. lrHscr•M4 1114 ,.llHrH to Ute 1pproprl1tt e4ttor. ne 11mr U ·laottr •H•trl•I eervlce ••Y be Hed to re«'ord lelten to &lie
HUor 09 Hy toptci. CoetrtlHltort to "' Letters c.l1ma m11t l1tll4• U..lr
Nmt all4 tele,._.. HmNr f•r nrlflt1t .... No clrc1lallff call•, plHH.
Tell 11 wlaat'• oe )'tit mlM.
H.L. khwart1 HI
Publlthtr
Clroulattoft71•11U..._ c .... "'" .. .,.......11•1ea.-n ........ .,.,. ................
MMN °''tel I <#11'"11 !Hy II "',.,,-....,. (A
,,, .. AMO!_ llo• tMO "M• ..._ CA t)tlfi
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Managl~ Editor
Karen Wtttmet'
Advertl9'~ Director
"oeem.,y Churchmen
Controller
Don*L W...._.1
ClreutatJon
M1n1ger
'
YOL71.NO.•
'
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' •
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lntplred bf TrldltJon
•