HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-03-18 - Orange Coast PilotI , Costa Mesa neighbors claim too much amphitheater.
Led by auiwist Jimmy ....
forrMrty of led Zeppelin. and e•·lled
Comp.ny lead linter Paul Rod8en.
The Firm anracted IOmt 14.000 'lant
to the arena Saturday ni&ht Sonat.I
said theft wett rew traff'ic problems
atnnated by~ crowd.
City offlrialt and rni*au in the • WoOd asked Jud9r Judith llyan on
Colle• Park and Mcu .. Mir tans Matth 7 &o dole the arna unlnl it
have been at war wilh aanollit.IM8ler-complill with local aoite and tater-
owncr Ned-Wm Int. fortlae ... llh aainmnt ordiunc..-n. . much rock 'n' roll at the open· air areria -
By TONY'S.UVEDRA
Of .. Oellr ........
The rock ··n· r,oll riffs of "The
Firm." performing this weekend at
the Pacific: Amphitheatre. brouaht 23
noise complaints from CoslLMesa
Ban ends for
Mays, Mantle
NEW YORK (AP)-Hall of
Famers Will ie Mays a nd
Mickey Mantle. banned from
baseball after taking public rela-
tions jobs with p m blina
casinos. were reinstated today
by new Commissioner Peter
Ueberroth.
"I'm pleased to welc:omc bac:k
to baseball Willie Mays and
Mickey Mantle effective im-
mediately." Ueberroth said.
"They are free as of today to be
plo¥Cd by bakball...LUq....LI~.
stric:tions heretofore placed on
them are now removed."
Mays and Ma ntle. who had
been ordered by former Com-
missioner Bowie Kuhn to
diassoc:iate themselves from the
pme bcc:ause of their employ-
ment as IC)Odwill ambessadon
for Atla-n~ic: City gamblina
casinos. exulted in the an-
nouncement.
Cout
Polson Prevention Hospi-
tal Olympics pitted
guerney po•hert, bed-
makers./ A3
California
Yuba City, the much ma-
ligned munlclpalt'y rated
worst by Rand-McNaJly,
hosts a funeral for the
map making firm./ A5
Na don
Tornadoes rip across
Florida town1<1fttrfg two,
Injuring 40 and de-
stroying 55 houses./ AS
World
Commercial flights Into
Iran are cancelled as Iraq
vows to down any aircraft
flying In that nation's air-
space./ A4
Feature.
Dick Dodd. former
Mouseketeer and singer
with The Standells, is
making a "comeback" In
Huntington Beach./C1
Tom Selleck and Johnny
Carson are leaders
among televlalon's high-
est paid performers./C4
Sporta
Newport Harbor Yacht
Club's Rod Davia wins his
second Congressional
Cup./81
Two.run singles by Jerry
Narron and Biii Ru ssell lift
the Angela and Dodgers
to exhibition baaeball vlc-
torlea./81
Entertainment
High school drama stu-
dent• get a look at how
profealonal theater
works.JCS
IKDEX
Bridge .
Bulletin Board
luttnell
C..-fted
Comlcl
Crouword
OMth Notlcet
Featur•
Horoeoope
Ann Lindert
Opinion
P.,,.-uzJ
Polk:e~~
PubUc ""lcee Sport a
Televtllon T._..,..
WMttW
86
A3
IM-5
C5-7 ae
C7
C4
C1·4 ce
C2
A8
C1
A3 c.
81-3
C3
C3
A2
rtSidents livina Mar the open arena.
Two of the complaints were made
bcfott t~ conc:en started. City Man-
qer Fred Sorubel said today.
Sof'sabel said the protests were aver-
• for • rocti: conttn 11 the
Queen of the county
The wi nter c:onttrt was • bit early
for the ampllithcater. which bepn ill
last staton durina the 'Prins. he said.
yean O\tr the spillover noiw from = hat upcd that the c:oncens. a · 1tt is ncmpt from thow
The bettle is at a und11ill while an laws ._. .. n is on &he 1tate-0Wned Ora• County Superior Counjucter Orllll9I Coun1y Fai,.,ounds. He weiltit c:ro11-c:Omplaints by City Al· ....,. ... , &he aty be onkred ao S'°P
te>rney Tom Wood and Ned-Wett C•::ronnen and Ned-Wett for atlorMy Neil Papaano. al ly violat1n1 Cost.a Mesa's
Rubber check
spree gets C·M
teen in ti;ouble
tion card that showed he wu a
nulitary dependent. accordina 10 a
local police spokeswoman.
---The next day at South County
Volkswascn in Huntiaton Beach. he
made out a check for S2S.7SO and
took delivery of a new Volkswalen
V,ana10Arthe-Jpokeswoman.aid .. J ie-
had no 1den11fication. police said.
Boy, 11--:-·oought'
van. two cyc les.
seized in Vegas
By--ReBE.&T-BAJl&Ell
Of .. Oellr ........
A allqcd check-writing spree by an
enterprising Cosaa Mesa 17-year-old
who travckod in hiah style with
several friends has ended 1n a Las
Vegas hotel after Huntinaton Beach
police. Las Vegas police and the FBI
got on the trail.
The caper began the weekend of
Marc:h ~he bo walked into
Bcacnvimaha in Hunungton Beach
and made out a $8.SOO check for two
198S Yamaha motorcycles. two
matching helmets and two insurance
p61icies. He produced an indent1fica-... .
because the Yamaha dealer kept bis
identification card. Again. u on the
day before. he-made the uansaction
on a staner check with no name or
address on 11. the spokeswoman said.
But things began to unravel Friday.
The Volkswagen dealer tried to cash
the check and it bounced. ac:c:ordina
to the s
e troubles deepened a li1tlc laatt
when an anonymous caller told the
FBI that he had heard a conversation
~t a truck stop in Nevada about two
(Pleue Me CllBCU/ A2) -
No increase slate·d
in UC student lo~s
Federal c u tbacks
reflected in lack
of new s ta te funds
From staff u d wire reports
.\lthough more college "iludents
need financial aid. the amount oL
Univers1t\ of California Mudent
loans and.grants will stay the same or
decrease next school year. UC of·
ficialssa). ~
for the same penod. the repor\ said.
Nearh 67.000 studentS -about
half of ·the total enrollment 1n the
n1ne<ampus UC s)'stem. mduding
those Jt l C In inc -received
financial aid 1n 1983-l 984. Almost thr~ out of four m1nn'i'lt} studcnu
and '"o of th ret' graduate studcnls
rcccl\ ed financial help. the repon
~Id
<\tut.lent aid funds from federal
grant and loan programs have bttn
stable for the past two yt'ars. the
repon 'Wlld. but the Reagan admin1s-
1ra 11on ha\ called for cuts fo r 1985-86.
Some of that los'I will be offset by
increased student aid funds from the
state. the repon said.
Dana AAlne, the 1984 Ill• <>raace
Coanty, cl'OWD8 ber .. ccneor, 28-yar-
old Dorie llatuon of <>ranae, a t competi-
tion held 8anclaJ alCJat at <>ranae Cout
Collete. Tbe conteat, the ftnt etep on the
road to tbe lllM America ~e::· at-tracted 20 Joane lacllee from .boat
8oatlaem Catlfomla.
Financial aid 10 'lludents from
federal. state. un1 vers1I) and pn,atc
sources grew bv 50 percent 10 total
more than S25J million 1n 19 3-84.
according 10 a report presented 10 the
LJ(' Board of Regents meeting at l (
In me last week.
But the growth rate for the fund
wa slower than the rate of inOa11on
C)tud<.'nt aid includes both grants
and loans. ""h studen ts becoming
mor<.' dependent on loans that must
tx-r<.'pa1d after sraduatton. The pros~
pcct of a large debt afler-graduauon
(Plea.ee .ee S TUDENT/ A2)
I
$4 million drug
'lllUndering' cash
seized in county
DALLAS (AP) -Whco federal
drua a,ents raided two Oranae Coun-ty mo&ck Junt 22. they found $4. I
million in •llcscd illicit drua traffick-
ing procceds that were about to be
"laundered" through a California
ban~. .\~thoritics olso found evidence
that a prominent Me xican invest-
ment broker. Mardoquco Alfaro
Maprino. had used an El Paso bank
and 1 Laredo savinp end loan in a
similar fashion. 1he Ollllas Times
Herald reponcd 5undly.
Alfaro has not bttn thaf'led with
criminal wroft&do1n1 and has ~ied
any involvemcn1 in dlW activities.
He ..... 111tntd th1t ht.ti simply an
invettsncnt ldviwr 8INt broker for
wealth)' ~11ican cititea
.. We di11vow any •"olvcment
w111t laundtrina motet. 1nd any
involvement with drugs. · said his
lawyer. Merwin Grand of Phoenix.
Aril. "Mr. Alfaro is a respected
businessman and broker ... a member
of the Lions Club for 20 years."
However. federal officials said that
almost Sl 6 mill ion was shuffied
throuah Tesoro Savings an<l Loon in
Laredo and the First City National
Bank of El Paso. They rqard 1t as the
largest known ~heme to launder drug
money throuah Texas in retcnt )Cars.
Federal officials are trying to seize
S6.S mill ion on deposit at the El Paso
bank and Sl.4 million at the Laredo
thrift. They also arc ~king reim-
bursement of S8 million that was
humedly transferred out of the in-
stitutions efttr the Internal Rr vcnuc
Scrvict pll<'td a claim on ahe Mex-
ican bus1ncssman·s funds. the new\· , ........ M .Ul/A2)
LIVING
SPACES
CONTEST
Entry Form
See Page A 4
90 mph pursuit
begari in Newport
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of .... Olllly ..........
.\ spcl'ding motomt kd NC'wport
Beach policl." on a 9().m ph cha'i(' on
Coast H1ghwa) la te unda ). weaving
through traffic and running red light\
bcfor~ colliding "1th a police l·ar 1n
Seal Beach
Dan1l'I Jo'leph ~hulls. ~Q. nf I nng
Beach wa~ am.:~1cd ahl·r thl' cha'ie
through thrl'l" c111c' .
.\fkr the rnlh'>ion ~hull'\ "3' rrponl."dh ct,m hat l\C' und refused to
gl'I nut ol his car. police said. He
"ould not tdl pohce at the scene why
hl' fk<l NC'wpon .
"ll·" ron Bca,·h police said Shutts
\\J' Wl·n ,ix·eding on Lido Island
.. honf\ bclon· midnight at speeds 1n
l'\l'l''' of o5 mph.
\\ h,•n 11fficr" attempted to stop
him ~hull\ allcgl•dl} tried to run the
pohn· car oil the road. As a result.
"hum "ill tx· charged with assault
\'llh J 1.kadl\ "capon. Ncwpon
( Pleue .ee 90 llPH/ A2)
heel at Irvine Marriott
It WU the MCond such bfaa at tM hotel tn •
)'Ml'.
Smokecoutd be teen wh9n fheftgMer1 •tlved
1t the hotel at 11Q.10 Von KanMnn IMl'tlr lfter "'9
out bt'Hk of the 8:39 a.m. fire.
No one was anjured and none of the :t.f •• (Pl __ ._ /M)
He's ttie cou ~ty' s 'hired gun' for airport fights
....-
of ~uper' 1'°"' 'otcd to abide b) i.-::;:.!~~------~:::--
ad' ice :and lik a prt~mptl\ c law~u11
3\kina a fodcral courtJud1l· to uphold
th\• count>} SI 0 m1lhon 11rpon
c\pan!tOn pt1n
Thr ltaal plo wai mundl> cnt1·
c11cd b John Wa)M -'\1rpon c~
penMon opponents \UCh I\ tM cit~ of
Nt-v.-port 8rach Ind tM ~1rpon
Work1n1 C1roup v.ho v.~tt caupt b)
surpnK b)' thccounl) action But the
mo'c •• quictl) applauded b)
Wptf' 1W>n. "P«•alh b) one v.ho Pf'1.,·1act) confklcd ·,ha, he ...
t*•~ c iattt.r hed Jc, 1tc'd • ··proec:·
"~~r than a ctJ(t1\('
1tratt(). --·----
"Our pl "'" to '' md "mna
Pf OPl [ IN l Hf NH-V S
uttht 1n I\ \huttlc bc-tv.('('n t'AO or
thrC'C d1lkrcnt "°"" " (1:m~c "'
pl 1ft\'<1 of1h boa~'\dr\.1\1onto,uc
He '-11d thJt he ~.. thl· h.-pl
prohkm' ,,.,irhn around John
\\a\nc .\1rpon '' .1 \<'rll'' ot tilmJX't
1n \lllll'' c,1l h damonna t r somt·
th1n11 d10l'rtn1 at the airport. Whale
th(' .urhnl·\ light for aetts' and
.11.lt1111111lill ll1ghh. n~.arb> re\1denls
al"\' Ii htllll ll' hm1t nm~ and the sire
nl the .urpon
.. l .ilh \tllCc \A,,int\ lO be the loudc t
and th pmpnctor. lth<' Board of
\upcr' 1~1"\I h;l\c to balantt (tht
'o"'''l .ind \tanJ 1n the middle." he
\IHI
C 1J11l,· \Ao ho 1\ paid S 13 an hour
h' the lOUnt~. \11d the fh t"' \\lpcr·
'1'>(•1"\ "I '-<'an 1mpouibk 1tuauon·
ond ore fortl'<I to m:ikc .. rou~ ..
dr, 1\lnn' r rd1n1the11rpon a~ 1t1
IUl\ltt"
(Pl--... A.JaPOllT I d )
r I
11,
---__,_....
Warmer wqather due Tuestlay
~
l'arfly doudY lilM wlll clNt tonight Md loulfwn Calltori\la
wit M-a ._....,.., T .......... NMleMI W...._ a.Me -
Mid.
The cloudlneea wu cauMd by•~ cold front In the., ..
todey Forecee..,_ UHi the len ca.brief end Saft letftlf'd6no vllhyt ~ h.v. a 40 percent ChMOI of conttnu1n9 ehowert
tonight. Notthetn <MMrt ., ... elto were given a lflght chancle of
lhowere tonight.
Along the 0r-.. Cout It witl be moetty cloudy with
acatterecf thowett ending from the norttlweat -this 8'Mftlng.
Pattly ck>udy t°'"Of't, becoming moetly -.nny Tueed9Y. Cooter
tonight. Hight TUMdey In the 901. L<>wt ton6Qht In the 40t and
lower &OI.
u...11eoee .. .. ···t)-fl**TI: Te~pe Ultle~ u 42 ~-(;Old"""' l.o\llelllle 52 2t Oc:CWN .. ~ HIOll IOIOf fOf 24 houtt 9nding et 5 e m ~ 11 31 ,...., ~ '""'" Snow Miami ilMctl 17 IO
............ .,TMl•-
Seal Beach officera aurTey dama&ed can followtna 90 mph purault from Newport.
90 MPH CHASE BEGAN IN NB •.•
From Al
Beach Officer Tom Lmle !>aid.
Shutts then headed westbound on
Coast Highway. running a red light at
Superior A venue in excess of90 mph.
With two Police cars 1n pursuit of
the 1980 Honda An ·ord. ShullS
attempted to strike other westbound
cars 10 block the police chase. Lmk
said.
l\t Golden Wc!.t Street 1n Hunt-
STUDENT FEES ...
From Al
said. .
ington Beach. where Huntin1ton
Beach police were waiting for him,
Shuus allegedly sideswiped a van.
The driver of the van reponedly was
uninjured.
Shutts continued on to Seal Beach
before colliding with a Seal Beach
police car at Bolsa and Silver Shoals
avenues. Little said.
Shutts suffered small abrasions and
complained of a· sore ankle. but
refused medical treatment.
M>eny
AICM>quef qu41
AmarilO Ancftorege
A ......
AtlenUC Ctly
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11ot1on
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CMtleet9.NC = .. ~ ~
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Dellel-'1 Wonll g:: o....:... Dettoil °'*"" 1!1.-.0
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Henton! Heltile
Moflc*ilU
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'6 u 57 » 11 ,.. ,. 29 13 M .. H
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53 27 .. 35 &t 30
5f :is 53 H 36 IO 51 34 ., •• It a .. u
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12 30 .. u 51 21 ., 7f 17 &a ... 22
......... 31 20 Mpil.ltPllUI 44 2t ~ 55 H ...... °' ..... .. 50 HewYOfll eo H Nortoei.11 .. 57 31 Calif. Temp• OtnellOme c.ty eo 40 ~ 15 31 OrWl6o 75 51 Htgh. low for 2• hour• .,,g1ng •• 5 e.m
PNledtlpNe 55 27 Wertlltlcl 71 45
PllOtnl• IO 57 fllttll• St « ::= . 42 11 ,,_ 61 51 ...... 45 n Lellcllll .. 61 44
Portllfld,Or 55 ,, LOIAftOtltl 72 50 ......... 13 27 ~ •• 47 .._ llloellt eo 40 ="Coty u a.. .......... 63 $0 .. 37 "9clwood Cfly 81 48 .... • 40 51 47 ~ ea 2t a.r-10 ...... 61 47 ........ .. 31 ... Dltgo ee 51 .. ,....., ...... ,, u 8 1 47 WL.aaCl!y .., " ... ,fendlcXI '-'Antolllo .. .. ....... llMlt. S9 41
... .-i,PA 15 71 ltoc*IOn 82 50 ..... ..., .. " -4' Hilfl, IOw IOt 24 llOut• enolnQ •• 5 P m .... flO 44 .... 12 41
lllrewepon .. 3' ..._... 12 38 .,._ .. 30 lllflocl .. 26
tr::~ ., 14 ~ 81 49
80 48 .. .,
r._ 14 .. ~.~ 118 48
T'*9 .. ,. 81 45 ==-· .. 27 MonrO\lle 11 42
u at ::"'~ 59 45
58 38 ..........,.,. ., IO ........ 78 49
~IMcll 82 4!1
EZtendecl OftlMo 73 42
~ 10 44 ...... 74 44
may affect the career choices of
students. says UC President David
Gardner.
"A student may be willing to
borrow $7 .000 to go to medical
school. but not be willing to go into a
profession equally 1mponant where
the ability to repa_J 1s very remote." he
The report said students have come
to depend more on loans as funds for
grants ha ve been cut. the repon said.
The average student loan doubled to
$1 .969 for undergraduate students
and $3. 988 IOrgraduates overt he past
fi ve }'ears.
Little said a blood test was taken to
determine whether Shutts had been
drinking. though the results were
unavailable. Two marijuana
cigarettes were allegedly found when
Shutts was searched and handcuffed.
~.Mt .. Jeck_.... ., ....,_, 37
XI ....... Md ~ ._ ........ a.m.dlno 75 43 ... Wmn.dey Md , """ --.... Gellflll 73 43 36 1(-Cily It ., llllMY'*lta '=ti HllMlll ..... ::. ... Joie to IOw 70.. Low ........ ..... Me
--------------~;;....--..--iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiii--.-----------cookt~eill~u~---~~
CHECKS GET MESA TEEN IN TROUBLE... ·steals $1 ,800
FromAl r\ lone robber amlfd with a knife
men having .. unlawful possession" of reccn·ed a complaint about un-book. who was not identified. was stole Sl.800 Sun~lty from a Sou1h
motorcyclei. · supen1.!>Cd juvenile~ sta}ing at the arrested and faces charge~writina _Coa1t Plaza cookie st.Ott, wh .
The FBI contacted tw~llil._ha1e: Police investigated-and fOlfffil -0aa c ks. grand1heft and drivinJ a employee was pre~anna to deposit
-had-me motorcycles. -l'tle men told the boy -the proud owner of the stolen car across state lines. the police th~ moncMy ata ba1~ · 'd h. k
the federal offi cials they were $25.000 Vanagon -at the hotel 1n spokeswoman said. '-osta . esa po 1~e ~1 t c ~or er
hitchhiking and that some juveniles the company of two other boys. two Police said they recovered the was clos!ng Mrs. Field s Coolues for
had given them the two motorcycles. girls and one young adult . all from expensive Volkswagen Vanagon at thceven11~g. when the robber came up
The FBI then put out an'all points Costa Mesa. the Las Vegas hotel and the FBI found ,frim, .~hind and d~mande~ the ba1
bulletin. alerting police agencies The} r<.'leased four of the }Oung-the two motorcycles. containing the store~ deposit. .
about the Costa Mesa yo uth. sters to their parents and didn't press Detectives were on their way to The robber. described as a white
Later Friday. employees at \J'l -cha~es again t the }Ou ng adult. pick -u~he-boy--teday-fFom-a ~t -!llln. about J 8 y.ear.s... oJd. .Lfoo.
Union Plaza Hotel in Las Vegas But the 'oungster with the chc<:k-· VcpsJail today. inches tall. 145 pounds. ned on foot · w11h the money ba& around 7 p.m.
' $4. lM IN CASH SEIZED IN OC ... FIRE •.•
From Al From Al
paper reported
"I feel we're JUSt looking al the 11p
of the iceberg:· said Phillip Jordan.
special agent in charge of the Orug
Enforcement Adm1n1strat1on·s re-
gional offi ce 1n Dallas ... Laundering is
here in the Southwest. ..
Money laundenn~ involves taking
cash reaped from 1ll1c1t ac11 v1 t1es and
using it 1n le~I financial transactions
to make 11 difficult to trace.
The newspaper said one of the two
people arrested 1n the motel raid in
Anaheim last summer told agents
that the mone} came from the sale of
drugs.
A few day~ la ter. an attorney
representing the two people told
prosecutors that the two were work-
ing for Alfaro and that he had paid
them to deposit the funds 1n the Bank
of Coronado in San Ysidro. the
newspaper said.
..aid. The informants estimated that
the operation garnered profits of
between $10 million and $20 million
a month.
Based upon that estimate. the IRS
1mmed1atcl) placed lcvtes on all U.S
assets 1n which .\I faro was believed to
have an interest. the newspaper sa id.
~uthor111cs !.aid they learned of the
Texa!> and California bank accounts
through material ~e11ed at the
Anaheim motels and 1ransact1on
records.
HO\i.evcr. Alfa ro and his business
associates allegedl> managed 10 slip
$8 million quickly out of the two
Texas institutions. 00ic1als said -$6
million from Tesoro Savings and
Loan and S2 million from First C'll).
Se\t·ral million dollars from
Tesoro Savings and Loan was wired
to Panama financial 1nstitullons.
coun documents said.
The banks said they had no
knowledge of Alfaro·s alleged connec-
tion to the funds and should not have
to gi ve the government any money.
Alfaro's attorneys insist he made
no attempt to evade tht IRS actio n.
hi~ name did not appear on any of the
accounts in question and that he was
not involved with any money
laundering or drugs.
Nonetheless. U.S. District Judge
Harry Lee Hudspeth of El.Paso ruled
in November that the facts of the civil
case backed the government'! claim
that the disputed fu nds were drug-
relatcd.
The newspaper sai.dJts attempts to
contact Alfaro for comment were
unsuccessful.
"as e\acuatcd. In fac t. most guests
probabl> wcrr not even aware of the
1nc1den1. fire department spokesman
Joe Kerr said toda)'. The damage was
estimated at S 1.000.
I\ similar fire broke out May 15.
1984. in a laundry dryer. sendina
smoke into the hotel's first floor and
forcing tin! evacuation of some 400
guests and employees.
Among those who fled the blaze
was former President Richard Nixon.
who was stayina at the Marriott while
in the cou nty for a speaking enaaac·
ment.
11-6 Senate vote
backs MX plan
St. Patrick'• party
•2 48 .. ...
tee;e-IC)M ut 0.. d c-c•
Sen1e Cf.a 88 60
Sent• M.,.e 63 42
T ellOe Yelley S3 25
T0trence es 4e
Surf report ........ LOCATION 1-3 llir ""'"1ing10fl BNdl 1·2 RNtr J911y. Ntwpof1 poor
40!11 S1ttt1. NtwPort 1-2 poot nnd Strwt Hewpot1 1-2 poor
Balt>oe WedQt 1 poor
l80U'\8 e..cll I poor
Sen Cltn*lte 1·3 ,.,, w.,.,,_ s1
Swell Olfec:Uon toulll-1
Tides
TOOA'l 2 OSp.m o.e S11eono low a·2ap m •• Second nogn
TUllSOAY
Ft<ll IOW 1.S•em 1.3 5.• F1ra1 "'911 7 54am
~IOW 2·32 pm 05
S.eoncln~ a 48 pm 41
Sun tell IOO•Y at 8 03 P m • ,i..
fueteS•y al S 58 am end Mia llQllln II
804pm
Moon Mt• today at 3 39 Pm • rlMt Tutaeley el 5 25 em end N II eg.in et
4 37 am
About the same lime. DEA agents
received information from confidcn-
l1al informants that Alfaro was in-
volved with a G uadalajara-based
drug-trafficking ring. the newspaper
Federal officials arc tr) 1ng to force
the two Texas ba nks to.rCJmburse th<:
government. since the mone} was
releaS<·d after the I RS had announced
its claim on .\I faro's funds.
-Court documents show that Alfaro
has moved vast amounts of mone).
Hudspeth founcf that at the time of
the Anaheim arrests. Alfaro con-
trolled about $25 million in vanous
locations.
The Judge said i\lfaro's expla-
nations about the transactions "lack
cred1b1lit) ...
W.\SHI NGTON (AP) -The Re·
publican-led Senate Armed Services
Committee voted 11 -6 Monday to
recommend freeing S 1.5 billion to
build and install 21 additional MX
missi les. as President Reagan per-
sonally lobbied undecided senators to
su ppon the weapon.
lllke Laae and llarlna Loechi&Yoyounc 11et into the aplrlt of thlna• 4arlDC a St. Patrick'• Day party Saturday at Lido
llarfna Vlllaie. The party wu a fund.ralatng event for the
Pfewport Jayceee Club. ~
AIRPORT COUNSEL oc·s 'HIRED GUN' •.•
From Al
"I think unc of our biggest goals 1s Vietnam said he was assigned to
to reduc<: the h11ga11on thar oc('ur~... rcsean.h a case involving no1se-
he said. "L1t1~11on 1'> no1 a way to related lawsuit'> at Lindbergh Field.
reo;olve an~thing. Thl' pol111cal pro-E\cntuall~. the law firm and Gat1kc
cess ,., a much l>cttcr wa}' for these nrcva11l•d following a long trial.
decmom to Ix· made. hut 11 doe~n·r Still. Ciat7 ke said he ha~ no 'ipccial
alwa yo; work. And rhc 1ud1l'1al '>Y'ltcm interest in av1a t1on. ha~ never con-
'" even IC\'i <krnocrat1 c s1dcrcd OC('Oming a pilot and. in fact.
.. L1t1gut1on I'> not a magic panacea tia .. a o;h,11,ht fear of he ights.
to the probkm' there I'd like to tr) to He al'>o \aid that sint·e he no"'
work m~ '>di out of a JOb as a tnal -;pends about 70 to 75 percent of hts
lawyer and I'd h~ to think we're 11me handling av1 at1on cases. he'
mo' 1ng in that d1rectwn .. rnn'>ciously decided against getting
(1at1ke puffing on an e'cr-pn.''>Cnt an} more 1nvohed in av1a11on.
cigarette said he fo und h1m\Clf "I might get too personall}
immersed 1n a' iat1on law almost h) "'rapped in techn1cali11~ and that
accident. \ftcr 1mn1ng a \an Diego rnuld hun my ab1lit} to s1mplif} and
law firm after ldw '>Chool fraduat1on translate issues for a la y JU() ... he
in 1971 th e former l ~ l\rm} ("<plained.
lntell1gente ofli c:er "-ho \Cl'\ ed in • The attorne~ also C'i:pressed svm-
Just Call
642-6086
What do you like about llae Dally Plldt? What don't you lilkt? Call tbe
number 1t ldt and yo11r mesu1e will be recorde4, tra~rtff4 H4 ff1Jvere41
to the a ppropriate editor.
The 11me 24-hour 1n1werln1 service m1y be used to record letters to tlte
editor on any topic. Contributors to oer Letters col•m• mutt lDclu4e tltelr
name 1nd telephone Hmber for verlflu tlon. No clrcal1tloD c1JJ1, ple11e.
D .. IJ Piiot
Def Ivery
le Quarenteed
MOftdjty Frio.; ti t"'• ~
t101 NI.. yOU< 118"4" by 5)0p m , .. o.lott 1~,., efld 'fCN' COC>f .,. I,..
OeiNt<'ecl
S.iuro.y et>O $Jl'o0al' "
'f°" 00 -I~ 1"" C09'1' Oy 1 • m c• Dt' :or•
10 1 m er>d •""' ec»1 ..,. Cit_...,,
ClrcO&Mton
T .. epftoftee
. '
Tell us what'• on your mind.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H.L. Schwartz Ill
Publisher
Frank Zlnl
Managing Editor
Karen Wittmer
Advertising Director
RoMmary Churchman
Controller
I
RC>Mrt L. Cantrell
Production
Manager
Donald L. Wffllem1
Clrculatlon
Manager
• !i•
Clrculellon 714/142-4331-
C ... ,lfted edvertlelng 7141142·1171
All ottter depertment1 142"°21
MAIN °''tel llO Wal .. , SI Co.la ""-CA I.I~~ 8o• IMO Cot!•...._ CA tMlt
Coc>1'~ 1tll Or•not eo.s. ~ COl'll)any Ho
-11or... illutlrafoOlll tOIOf tl'llll1• or ~_,,., ~-... ., Cit leptoOucecl wtCNllll IPtc»I ...
,,_of COO'f"IQlll -
t
Designed,
Finished
Installed
Two Garden Grove men were
arrested last weekend and booked for
investigation of the Jan. 2 rape and
sodomy of a woman who worked at a
tavern. police ~id.
1 31 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters
FINEST QUALITY SHU I I EAS AVAILABLE
ON THE MARKET ~ODAY ••• AT FACTORY
DIRllCT PRICllSI Call (714) 141 1141 or 141-1111
t
, --
FV High will stage
'Birdie' this week
ftounraTn-vat c~ 1e ool 11 "A h · comedy "Bye By"' · d.-.. w d wt prc'""nt t c musical . . ... 1r it e ncsday throu&h Saturday ~~~~~ '" the auditorium of Hunttnaton Beach Hiatt
. Bob Gaynor. Karen mith. Marci Schmidt and Lance
Whitson hnd the 62·member cast under the direction of
C'arol Cooney. Jean Clow~ conducts the orcht$tra Tom
Antal 15 the vocal coach and Barbara Noel is the chorcoarapher.
Performances will be Jiven at 7 p.m. Wednesday and
Thursday and at 8 p.m. ~riday and Saturday. Tickets may
be purchased at Fountain Valley High School or at the door.
Paln control work•lJop •lated
Dr. Alace Cary. a retired psychology professor will be
the au.est speaker at a three-day pain control workshop to
be held Monday through Wednesday at the Irvine Senior Center. 3 Sandburg Way in Irvine.
:Th~ sessions. which will cover pain control. group
med1ta11on. sel f-healing and acupressure. arc scheduled
from 9 _10 10 a.m. each day. There is no charge, but
reservations must be made by calling Michele Bats at 660..3889.
Retlree• to meet in Viejo
The. Saddleback Valley ChaptcT No. 1689. National
Assocrauo.o ofRettred Federal Employees will conduct its
regular monthly meeting Mo nday at 2 p.m. in the
<.·om~u~rty room of Western Federal Savings and Loan i\~~1at1on. 26940 Crown Valley Parkway. Mission
VtCJO.
_Retired f~deral civilian employees. their spouses and
survivors. active federal employees and guests are invited.
Call Peter Basone at 581-1226 for additional information.
Parental di.cipline dl.caued
How to assenrvely discipline rour children and be i;-
cttarge of your fam ily will be drs:cussed Tuesday at a
workshop conducted by marriage and family counselor
Lee Hachey.
The seminar will be held from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. at the
Ne_wport Harbor Counseling Center. 2900 Bristol St.,
Sutte l050. Costa Mesa. The fee is S 15 for one parent and
S20 for a couple. Call 545-2050 fo r information and
rcserva11on s. h _
Single•, couple. maer •lated
A friendship mixer for singles and couples will be held
I uesdaycveningat theSheFalOn-Newport Beach Hotel on
MacAnhur Boulevard under the sponsorship of the
Newport Harbor chapter of the City of Hope.
Music. dancing and refreshments will be provided at
the 7 p.m. event. which is free to City of Hope members
and carries a SS fee for guests. Call 540-1338 for funher
information.
Lecture on memorle. at UCI
'"The Storing ofMemorics" is the topic fOra lecture 10
be deltvered Wednesday by-Dr. James McOaugjr.ltirector
of the Center for the Neurobiology of Leaming and
Memory and professor of psychobiology at UC Irv ine. ThM~seminar will be-hdd fro m 7 to-&I S-p.nt:4n
1he Hashinger Auditorium of Chapman College. 333
Glassel! St .. Orange. Call 997-6831 for details.
Joint tenancy rl•k• outlined
It wasrft the sort of athletic competition that would
bring out Howard Cosell and a host of TV cameras. but
Sunday's first annual Poison Prevention Hospital
Olympics was wonh a aood $3,200 to the UCI Medical
Center's Regional Poison Center.
That was the cstMTiated amount raised dunng the
offbeat competition on the Chapman College track in
Orange where contestants competed 1n such events as the
Hurry Up and Scrub Relay. Bedmaking. the Wheelchair
Shamrock Rela y. the Mummy Wrap. the Potato Sack
Crutch Spring. the Water Pitcher Pitch and G uerncy
Rcla~s.
Each team 10 the bizarre olympiad kicked in a
sponsorship fee of$300apiece. according to Jack Culligan,
program development coordinator at the poison center.
_wh.o_dr~.cd. JlP 1hc..b.lruHaisin1-evenL sponsored b)
Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co. of NewJ)on Beach.
Proceeds will be used to supplement the center's
S 191.000 annual budget. as well as a 24-hour h<>Jlme at the
UCI Medical Center that provides frc ad vice for doctors,
hospitals and the public ~Mn.poison is swallowed. usually
by children.
Contestants had no trouble getting into the spirit of
the day. Above. Torry Conroy of Fo untain Valley pushes
fellow Wheelchair Shamrock Relay Team member Mary
Thacker toward the fin ish lane. They represented
Huntington Humana Hospital.
At right, Monica Colunge. one of the officials. wears a
full body sock during the Mummy Wra p ponron of the
competition. And at left another offi cial. Shanna George.
wears a surgical cap while performing her referee's <luf res.
Commanity volun~«Lfro01 scrv1cc_OJ"gan1zau>111
pitched in· as 11mekeepers. Judges. tic ket takers and
scorekeepers.
Dally P1Jot plJota. by Ho,,ard L1pln
Orange County attorne) Joy Dickerson will discuss
the risks of joint tenancy laws and premarital agreements
Wedneday at a lecture sc heduled at the Women's
1 Opponunities Center of UC Irvine. .
The event. which is open to the public at no fee. will be
held from 5:30 to 7 p.m. at the center. on the corner of
(Verano Way and Nonh Circle View Drive on the UC'I
campus. Call 856-7128 for instructi ons on pre-registration
and perking.
552 Club-lending Hoag a 4~lpinghand
By ROBERT HYNDMAN °' .. ~ ........
Burglary preventlon viewed What plays golf. shoots skeet. runs I Q..kilometer
races, hosts Christmas balls and summer barbecues and
donates more than half a million dollars a year'? A community burglary prevention meeting will be
held Thursday at Harbcir View School. 4343 Pickwick
Circle. Huntington Beach. 10 discuss methods of
combatting the increase in residential break-ins in the
Huntington Harbour area.
Detective Gary Meza of the Huntington ~ach Police
Department will discuss current problems and answer
questions about the community's Neighborhood Watch
p~ogram .
If you guessed an athletic Santa Claus who loves T-
bone steaks, guess apin.
It's the 552 Club at Hoag Memorial Hospital in
Newport Beach.
formed in 196 7 to help fund expansion of the non-
profit hospital. the 552 Club has since grown to more than
3.000 members whose yearly dues and fund-raisers help
provide Hoag with more than one-third of its total capital
expenditures.
Monday, March 18
Frank Hall . Hoag's director of community develop-
ment and community relations. says the 552 O ub is
responsible for brin~ng the latest medical equipment to
the hospital. These include construction of a new breast
imaging center to detect breast cancer and a cardiac
catheterization facility. • 6:30 p.m .. Costa Mesa Clty Coanell. City Coun cil
Chambers. 77 Fair Drive. Hall said the 552 Club's contributions make those
savings possible. With so many funds donated, the
hospital's board of directors can borrow less and.
therefore. charge patients less. Tue.ctay, March 19
• 6 p.m .. La1Ha Buell Clty Co.ncll. 505 Forest
Avenue.
The group was scheduled to install its new officers at
a luncheon today at the Newport Beach Marriott Hotel.
HB man held in stabbing
of his girlfriend's father
A lS-year-0ld Huntinaton Beach
man faces charaes iof attempted
murder after alleaedly enaaain• in 1
brutal fi&ht with the father of his l4-
yc1r-01d airlfriend, police said today.
The father was stabbed in the beck,
side and abdomen. He also suffered a
skull fracture when he was kicked In
the head durina an altercation, ac-
trYhae
A buralar smashed the front door of
Irvine Food & Spirits. 14805 Jeffrey
Road. about 2: IQa.m. Monday. Only
$20 appea~ tol be fuisslng. police
said. • • • • A G rccncap Avenue rttidcnt rc-
poned the theft of about S3701n tools
from his prqc sometime late last
wttk. A tool chest. power saw. drill
· and other tool we~ taken when the
11ra1e was left open and unattended.
police said. • • • n Irvine man roller ska11na in 'a
srttnbtlt area was arrc tcd on a
charae of rndettnt c•posurc after a
woman w1lk1n1 w11h her child
claimed the skater wa4 zipptna about
with hts bo1u open. Ja son C'. JefTu .
30. wM taken into custody Saturday
and booked at Orant.c ounty Jar I .. ' Police arrn ted '"" ~oplc oo
'usp1c1pn ofbtin1 under the inllucncc or C<Ka1nc. lbcrt M Mttchdl 23.
and Ka\C' C Koch. al\() !1. "''rt
cordina to police.
The suspect, identified at Brian
Anthony Krips. turned himself into
police and is beina held in ·Hunt·
inston Beach city jail in lieu of a
s~.ooo.t>ei1.
Police said the fi&ht broke out
Friday when the 3S-ycar-old father
taken into custody Saturday near
Bake Parkway and Rockfie ld
Boulevard after a police officer stop-
ped thC'tr vehicle for a p0u1blc traOic
violation.
HundftltOD Beacb
Thieves stoic three cases of bean
dip valued at $80 from a Frito van in
the I 7000 block or Pinehurst. The
v1c11m told pohcc some of the empty
c:an5 were found nearb} • • • Five s.hophf\en allcacdly fouah1
with emplO)l't 11 Ralph Market.
I Q()4 I Beach Blvd .. who succc full y
took &hem into cu11ody. woman
,u,pcct rrponcdly was 1nJurtd but
rcfusccJ.. mcdrcAI 11d The u pttt
allcacdly 1r1t'd to \ttal S 1 s in bat·
ICP.f' • • • Vandals. dc\(r1brd a~ punk rock
f ollo"'cr' dam a~ 1d1n1 na room and
bi'lthmom at Carl'• Jr R \&auttnt
21 SU Brookhur5& ~t. • •• \bnut S .1l0n in Jl.'"d" thl'\'C
went get his daughter "for the third or
fourth time" frol'Tl Krips' apanment
at S 19 Sixth St .. a police ipokes man
said.
The victim, who was not identified
by police, was reported in critical
condition at Hoaa Memorial Hospi-
tal in Newpon Beach.
cameras \lllucd at SSOO and clothing
valued et SI 00 in clothing "ere stolen
from a rtsrdcnce rn the 11000 block of
1JMain ~trtet O\ er the Inst fow da)"~. • • • Three pur'iC~ conatornrng-S53.S rn
currency and cr<:d11 cardc; were '1olcn
from a locked "eh1clc at Beach
Boulevard :and Pac1fk ( oa"t' H11h·
WO)'. • • • Thrc'c~ to k t~o "'•rt wheels
vulued 31 SI 00 from a Lincoln
Contincntal rn the 7000 block of
Ed1ewa1cr •••• t.•11hbor:ri romplarnC'd thal d1 o
mu"c all~I)' comrna from ar·
ficl<f5 Nrte ~H ~a' too loud.
~--eta
Polan · rt."1 J>Ond1.-d 'unJ:n n11ht to
rcpon ofa pro .... 1cr outfi1dc'an Onolc
Om 1.· ~omc. 'fhc \U'.\J)l'(l<'d pro~1,·r
on the roof ho\\cver. turl'l«l out 10 tii..·
.. r. 000 • • • Polr1.l' 11m\ll'1 four mot<>rHt\ 'l' er
the ""'\'~end on su\01 ion nf J n,1na
Featured speaker Walter Gerken, cha1nnan of the board of
the Pacific Mutual Life Jnsurancc Co .. was to discuss
health-care costs.
race arc held at Fashion Island.
Finally. a Chnstmas.ball rs held as the final fund-
ra1scr of the year.
Keo Steelman, the club's incoming president. says
membership has been growing in recent years because of
the obvious benefits the group provides for Hoag as well as
the involvement of its members.
Wrth members' dues contnbutrng more than
$300.000 a year. and the fund-raisers adding an add1t1onal
$200.000 to $250.000, the capital expenditures budget of
the hospital 1s supplemented consrderabl). Hall sa ys.
"There arc personal benefits to contnbuting to a very
rmponant part of the community," Steelman said. "Hoag
is a high-quality hospital held in high regard."
The group was formed 18 years ago when Hoag's
board of directors were considenng expansion of the
hospital, from about 250 beds to a planned 552 -hencr.
the club's name. The club's membership. composed mainly of
business men and women, reflect the patient population at
Hoag. with most living and working in Newport ~ach,
Costa Mesa. Irvine and Huntington Beach.
The idea was for the 552 Club. along wtth other
support groups. to offset capital improvement expenses at
the hospital. Contributions would not be used for
operati ng and other costs, Hall said. "We don't require that our members do any more
than pay their ($100) dues each year. And the truth is.
many choose to do just that." he says. "But quite a few are
also involved in our fund-raising events and serve on
committees ...
•· >\t that tame, the hospita l really needed to expand. It
was tembly overcrowded. with beds rn the hallways and so
fonh." Hall said.
With help from the hospital's women's auxiliary. the
fu nds were raised to construct the expansion prOJCCt.
(Actually. the hospital now has 471 beds. but the name
stuc k.)
Each year, the 552 Club hosts the Crosby Southern
Golf Tournament at the Irvine Coast Country Club with
corporate sponsors and extensive involve ment among
members.
FollowinJ that January tournament, a trap and skeet
shoot compe11t1on is held at Coto de Caz.a. A late summer
barbecue foll ows. Then. in October. a Sand I Q..kilometer
The 552 Club has remained active. along wnh the
auXJhary. the Sandpipers and the Orange Coast Hean
Institute to provide ongoing suppon for the hospital's
needs.
undl·r tht• rn llucncc of alcohol. ·\n-
d rca Man. 19. w:.i., stopix·d e:irl~
~unda~ along 1hc .:!00 bloc._ ol
Rroad"'a' Mark Townsend IV . .:!6
\\:l\ :.i rresicd ~turda} night on South
C oas1 Hrgh "a~ Lul\Alc1ardro Pcrc1.
31. "as o;topixd earl} . aturda)' along
tht· 700 nlod . of North CoaM H1¥h·
\\3\ . .\nd Rhonda Jan M u~chw111 .
34.'"a!>arrc'ltcd Frida) CH~nrngalon(I.
the 1600 hlod.. of 4iouth C oao;t
Hrgh"'a~. • • • M1St·clluncou\ ca'h and cloth ing
to~ethcr "'onh S 100 Wl'I'\' 'itolcn from
a car parked Sundn) on South ( oa\I
Hrgh"a). the \ICl1 m told pol1ce.1 ·
• • • Varrou'\ r lothl'll "'orth n rtponcd
SS.000 \\Cl\' l>tolt·n from an Ocean
~\l·nuc hOml'. thl' \ ll'lt m ~Id . un-
da\. • • • T\\O tool Ob\C\ worth a rcportl'd
S.lSO "ere rcponed '>tolen turdu'
nraht on Qui\ era Street. • • • OOiccn were called out to the nonh
end of Irvine ovc unda)" evening
following complaint of 1uvc nrlec,
1hrow1n1 oran~11 pa ~•na v('ht lt"S
Pohcc locatC'd thc orang~ but the
JUVCn1lcs had lll'tt.
Newport ae.cta rr--1
\ mu'\! 1an ""ho lcf\ hr CQurpment
unattrndcd for fhc minute 1n fmnl
of a e" port C enter On vc hotC'I
returned to find it mt\\tl'\I ~turda~
nraht The lo'\'i "a"' t ttmatcd ;u SI .~~ • • • k\\cln dothc., ca h ond nw•·
cllancou" 11cn,,,totcthcr worth $4414
1o\N(' '>tolcn from ·a )4th 'mttt
af)llnmcnt d unnJa pa.rt t1l htl\t~\
told t>Oli<.'l' 'wnJ a, · ·
• ••• \ \dndal thre" hrn.r.. thn'lu1h the
"inc.Jo" ol tlw BJlhn.1 hranrh lrhran
IJll' Fnda\ ur l'Jrh ~1urJc1". cau~rng
S~"'i 1n damJlW . . .
\ hon,.11 lrl'l' '"'nh .:!00 \\3\
'111kn trnm 1tw u )un\ nrd ot a Ba~
h nnt htlllll' ':ttur<l,n n1gh1 ...
11.'\H'I" \\11tth .1 rl·ported $2.200
\\J\ \Inf.. n I 11dJ' n1~ht Imm a BarnN
Ht•l't h11nll· "h1k lhl' ll'\ldCnt\ \\ert
3\\,I\
Costa Mesa
\n air lUlllfH l'\\111 '.1lul'U a1 2 0 "J' n·portl'lf \hlkn ti om Jn open
garap.l' .11 J hl•U"K' 1n 1tw ~00 hlod of
\t.1~n11l1.1 \' l'nm· ,1round I~~() pm
\Jturd.l\ • • • < a"h ~nd Jl''' l'ln "'orth mo rt than
SI \SO "'l'fl' n.'ll(lrt,•d \tokn from
'-;orthtop R ('J( l \IJtl' Im ti2 I \\
19th'' 'om1.·11ml' hct\\l'l'O "' 'II pm
F-noa\ and I \II pm \aturJa\ Ttw
front "1nJm\ h,111 Ol'l'n hrol.l'n and
thl· 11l·m, "~·rr 1,11.l•n tr11m .rn !itlin·
ol'\L.
C n'h 1.•,11m.t1l·d JI ~·°" \,,,, rl·
pom·J 'tokn \,(.lu1dt1' lr1lm lhl' l"<l\h
rC'gl\t\'I .11 11 l\.lata\h11 rl'\tau1an1
I fl!'! 'l'\\f>Orl Bhd \\htk lhl hU\I·
ncs\ "a" op:n'«ll 111 '\tl p 111 Po1i,,
rC'pont'd that .a nMn J,·" 1 ilx·d ·" .1
H1c;pan1c .:!Ohl '" \l'•'" ••Id '11101 i..
inchC'' tall 14'1 pound' ''•" '1.'l'll
taL.rnp. tht• monl'\ Imm 1h1 ''~'"In
m·ar thl' door • • • \ \\l'l\Ull \;lh11·d ,II \I 'll \\,I,
rcponcd 'ii Olen frnm .1 hou"' "' 1 hl· ~()() Oltk. L. C'f \\ i(,on \lfl't'I \\lllWllml'
~t\\l'l'n fl '\(I .1 m .~ind I I I ti J m
fnda~ T h,•n.• "l'rt' no "l?"' 111 lor\l'd
l'llll'\
Pair seized in pot dumping
T"o ml·n ~en.' Jrrl'\tcd "' tht" OrnngC' C ount't \hcnn', l~:paninent
afll.'r :i 'fX't 1.11 ollicer \J\\ 1hcm
dumpin1 ~&" and ho\('' full ot
martJlHlnn alon&"'k Kial l. \1.n c .i-
n, on Road
~hcrtff''i dcpullC'\ rel fl\ l·red aoout
100 Pound' of lo~·~r.ldl.' m.m1uana
from th<' r001<l 1d •and 1n\idt· a rrntal
trucl ~ b the men. Lt Did. Ol\nn -.aw .. Jam~\\ l.la'"' Jr 'l\ ol \Jn
Junn --~ \trano · ~nd I >:.Ila' tt
and). 4., of \nahcrm retu~d tu
... ,plain to offictn wh\ th\'\ Y.l'f"C!
Jumping tht Jrua ''°" \.J rJ Th1.:~
!'.\' ~l<\~l·d r m.t:i-. Or.mgt uun·
l) fail fnr tr.ln\pMt1ng manJuJnJ. :1
f~lon' RJ1I '' ""°' al 10 ()(1(\ ap1~-<r
< )1"4.ln " rd
l>J\l'\ and < and' \\l'r~· pa rl..l·d on
BIJl I.. \t.)1 < ·'"'on Ro.ld )U\t \\\'\I 111
\rh C'r.ldo Road Y.hcn 'Pl'l 1;1l 11flltC'r
Jrm Par\ notllt'd thl'nt dumprns
\'hat af)J'>l'<H'rtl io Ix· tra'h ll11m ,1
rC'nt,ll trurL. 01-..ln vitd
l pon Jflpm.1 hin@ th" men Perr'
r\'ala1rd the pla,tH has' anti
l·ord~ard bo\C'\ the' ~C'rt Hl\\lng
u1nrn1nl'll mar11u. na . bl• '"''d
\trc,•t qs lue ~I the dru .... ' Jll. 1.'t'\l
;it Sitn noo
01'.un '3rd the ~hen IT' dep3rlmC'nt
h•' no 1dc. \\h\ the mt n Y.tn.' Jt ·111n1
nd n( thr man uan .. Ihcrc' r. 1 to
hr .. nmt' r,·a\On but the\ 'r• •not
tal l..rn at tht'I f)\Hnt :· hr \aid. -
,,
I
I I
Airlines
~caacel-
ftlght~
to Iran
By TM AtMdated Prell
Ma"' 1urlinos cancelled ·niah1s lo
thccapltalsoflran and Iraq toda~ and '
others are considering doing so fol-
lowing Iraq's 1hre11 to shoot down
any aircrnfl it finds in ltan1an
oirspa~ starting Tuesday.
Meanwhile. a powerful explosion
rocked Baghdad loda) after Iran
claimed it fired a 111iss1le into the Iraqi
capital in rc1alia1ion for Iraqi missile
auacks on Iran ian c1t1cs.
Res1den1s in Baghdad heard the
blast at 11 .55 a.m .. but were unable to
determine 11s ourcc. O ne foreign .
rcsidenl. who poke only J:>n con-
dition he not be idenulied. said: .. The
·explo ion was heard by people at the
airport some nine miles awayJl'om
the city center ...
There was no official comment
from Iraq. which announced new air
raids on Iranian cities today in the
41/J-year-old war.
However. a caller to the AP bureau
in London also claimed responsi-
bility for the explosion on behalf of an
organi1ation calling itself lhc Arab
Socialist Baath Party.
ly tM AIHclated Pre11
WASHINGTON -Srcretary of tate tieorgc P. Shuhz .. whon~~~~a l\~«ts any arms contrql deal that cnn't be closdy verified. 5'!'(5 ~~d~~~ mobile
aboul n l\(•w. 10-warhead Soviet missile fired from easi be 1 lo edin
launctwrs. The S-24. a long-range. heavy rocket systef!I no~ ~n~dtrcth~r the
the Soviet Union. also "raises very rons1dcrablc quest.ions a u w. clear
Krenilin is complying with the SALT 11 ircaty li"'!ita~1ons on str~tca!c n~f the
\\(capons. Strultz says. "What i1 shows is the conunuingc~~eTr~{z'W~;k With
Sbv1ellond-bascd weapons." Shuhz said Sunday on AB s s . d onl David Brinkley." ·•t 1hink the emergence of weapons of that. kin . Y
emphasizl' the importance of ddcnse against them because t~cy re ns~~ic~
fixed place where you know where lhcy arc. Stani.slav ~c1 n~~1~r· ~he new spokesman interviewed by ABC. dented that the ra1l-mob1 e • or 11 we
single-warhead. stationary SS-"25 sys1em violate the pact. "We arc doing 8
can 10 maintain SALT II." he said. .
Prlze-"'1nnlnf compo.er Sealon• dead
PRINCETON. N.J. -Roger Hun unaton Sessions. who won a P~lttzer
Prize and a spccinl Pulitzer citation for his work as a composer .or m(usic. ha~
died at lhe age of,88. Sessions. who died a1urday at the Medical. enter ~t
Princeton after a Iona illness. was recognized as one ~f the n:ios! impo!"a r
composers of this ceruury. He was awarded 1he 1982 Pulitzer Pnze in mu~ic fo
his 1981 compositioo. "Concerto for Orchestra:· In 1.9~4. h~ had rccciv~d a
special Pulitzer citation "for his life's work as a d1st1ngu1shed American
composer."
Jewelry hel•t net. 'quite a •um' .
.. We arc not Iranian but we would
like to make a good fri endship and
good nci$hborhood agreement with
the Iranian government when we
destro) thl.' addam criminal re-
gime.'' said the anonymous caller.
who spoke with an accent. and
apparl'nll) referred to the go' crn -
mcnt of Iraqi President Saddam
Hussc.·in.
Belllcoee bear cube
Three-month-old polar bear cub• ahow
diapleuure at being aeparated-from mother for firat time •• Vienna'• Schen-
brunn zoo keepera ahow them off.
DEERFIELD BEACH . Fla. -Three quick-acting robbers held up an
exclusive auction gallery for "quite a sum" of jewelry and were gone before
outsiders realized any1hing was wrong. police sai~. The robbers entered the
store. which has held jewelry sales for ac1resses Elizabeth Taylor a~d the la~e Ma~ West. at about I O:JOa.m. Saturday whi le workers in were preparing fort e night'~ auction. poli ce said. Employees cooperated when one of the men
flashed a small-caliber pistol. possibl y an automatic. T~c robbers bou nd the
workers wilh plas1ic-coa1ed wire. locked them separately 1n a ~tc~r~ge closet and
ba1hroom and then cleaned out the safe. police said. Police 1nit1ally rei;><>rtcd
the haul asS5 million in jewels and cash. a figure disputed by Lou Sherwin. lhe
son of gallery owner Irwin Sherwin.
(
Ezecutlon delay •ought for killer
Hundreds of -ciYihans have bcerr
reported killed in the pa~t two weeks
of a11acks on c1 vihan largcts. and each
side has claimed to have killed or
wounded more than 12.000 1n ground
fighung in southeastern Iraq.
Iraq's air blockade would match an
"ettlusion 1one"-u imposed etreund
Iran's Kharg Island oil terminal last
January. Iraq a)s il imposed the sea
blockade to t'UI Iran's 0 11 export
income.
Bradley's drilltng approval
~riticized by his own staff
NEW ORLEANS-Lawyers for Wilhc Watson are asking a (ederalJudge
lo block hiscxccut10n Tuesday for kidnappinJ. raping and murdennga T.ulane
UnMr-sity mcdieal student in 1981. W1ttson s lawyer-s t~rned-te-U.S. Q1stnc1
Judge Adrian Duplanticr on Sunday after t~c LoutStana Supreme Court
refused their pleas Sa1urda y for a stay of cxecuuon and a new tnal.
Student not charged In •hoodng
ITHACA. N. Y. -Police say they have not charged a college stude~t wh,o
shot and seriously wounded one of two teen-agers who tried to rob him tn this c611c~ rown;-Pof~fficcr Mal'Vtn Ea!tmaMaid •he.shooting occurrcde
Sunday as the unidentified student was walking to his. home. •·f~on;i, my
understanding. he cut through an alleyway and two peopleJum.ped at him and
the student fired a handgun. injuring one of the assailants. said Eastman.
,.
An Iraqi milt tar) spokesman warn-
l'd in a statement distributed by the
Iraqi News Agency on Sunday that
after 8 p.m. Tuesday (noon EST) any
plane "that passes through Iranian air
space will becoml' a l)Ossibk targeti
view of the difficult} of d1s11ngu1sh-
1ng targets ...
In London. spokesman Norman
Lorn1e said Bnush .\irwa>S canceled
nights to Tehran and Baghdad on
Sunda). and had not decided whether
nights to Iran \\Ould eonttnuc.
S" 1ssair canceled a Zurich-to-
Tchran night Sum.la~ night. Satd a
c;pokcc;man The c;1a1us of the next
tl1gh1. scheduled lo lea' c T hu rsda).
"dcrcnd.-. on the s11ua1wn." he said.
T"oorthrcc f11ghtsdail) to lhe Far
Ea'>I "ould ha'e to be rerouted to
a,01d Ira nian :u rspacc.
---LOS .\NG ELES(.\P)-( ampa1gn
strategists for Mayor Tom Bradle}
sa) his decision granting Occidental
Petroleum Corp. the right to drill on
Pacific Palisades' shore ma) ha ve
hurt his guhernatonal cham·cs in
1986.
"I think it was one of th1: wo m
political decisiono; <ln} bod) could
make.~ on e ad vlsl·r c;a1d. "It "l'nt
contrary to ever}th1n g that l'\l'r~·
body agreed was ne<.'l.''i\ar} for him to
do as a candidate for go' l'fnor."
The ad' 1ser asked not to be naml·d
.\fter Bradfe, ·., sltm IO'>S to (10'
George Dcukml'Jtan 1n I lJtC. hi'>
strategists had cond uded he nl'etkd
to bolster his ~upport among en-
' ironmentalt!>ts tor a rcma1rh ir1
I 986. th e ne-.., <,paper said
B\ late 1984. Brnllll'\ had acrnwd
th e 'go"ernor of fa iling 10 clean t1p
toxic ''asll' dumps. called o n Wa sh-
ington 10 help with pollution 1n Lo'
Do You Have A Favorite Place
In Your Homa?
If so, we'd Ilka you to enter the Dally
Piiot' s ''Living Spaces" Contest.
Just send us a pb1t1 and description of
Ylll' fav ... 11 Llvtq Space.
CONTEST RULES
Thi'> c ontt•st 1s designed lo receive responses fra«l any ocC'upant of
a homP, l ondo, apartmjp"lt. mobile home, or liveaboard yach1. W e
will rc1N I Jny < ommerC1al entries. Photo(s) must aC'C'Ompany l'ntry
Photo('>) bc•c oml' property of Da ily Pilot and cJnnol be rl'turned
En1ru.•c, mu<,I bl• postmarked by March 28, or deltveretl to th<' D,11l y
Pilot, c /o LIVl\JG SPACES, 330 W Bay, Cos1a Mesa 92626 by 5 PM
March 29. W1nn<'r s will have pictures and stories published in
"L1v1n1< '>pM c•\" on April 11 . O ther pnze~ to b<' announc c•d . D,11ly
Pilot r mployf't'' M<' not eligible . Entrant.., must be 18 or over & must
ri •\idt• in Dc1dy Pilo t t trtulation Area. Dai ly Pilot photo~rc1phers will
photo1<rc1ph tlw win ners "Special Place."
CATEGORIES
Entrywa y • Living Room • Family Room/Den
Kitc hen • Bedroom • Patio • Dining Room
Game Room • Pool/Jacuzzi Area
Garden •or, Name Your Own Category r----------------------------1 Daily Pilot "living Spaces" Contest I ENTRY FORM
I Name of Res i~ent _-___________ _
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Phone Numb'cr ---
Day~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Evening ~~~-----~---~~-~~~
Address ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Size of Place ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Category ______________ _
: Description of Place __________ _
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•• .., ... "1111111 .... ,, __ ....,.
330 w Bay Costa Mesa, CA 92626
.\ngl'll'':I Harbor and pro posc·d a
la"c;u1t aimed at strengthening feder-
al air 4uali1~ 'it3Ildards for ofTshorl'
ni l dnllin~.
"There are a 101 of people out there
d>ing to develop the coastline .... You
don't want to do anything to en-
t ourage people to take advantage of
what they sec as an opening of ranks."
!>aid Tom Houston. the mayor's chief
of stafT.
Hui the .Ia n. I:! d~c1s1un not tu "1:10
a Cit) Council 10-4 approval o f thl'
drilling"' a\ a <:.cnous Sl.'tback. un1dl.'n-
11lied '\lratrg1.,1s said. "I have 10 s1re1ch my imagination ~
1u s.c.c a positive." 01.11Co.mr to-1.he ~een •tabbed In Ya.emlte P4rk Bradln aiso .. tra pped h1msc1r· b~
ra1Stng c;peci tic obJcrt mns to the
drilling pmpo'>al 'ii\ }Cars ago. wh<.'n
hl' Ii r\t opf)n'il'd 11. tn~trad of taking a
'~ mhohl \tand against all coastal
dnlltng. 1.,a1d an ad' 1ser. ·
decision. Houston added.
But politicians and businessmen
also \'1ewed Bradlc) ·s change ofheart1
as a tnbutl.' to Occidental chief
Armand Hammer's ab1ht} to lobb}
for what he wants
Canada, U.S. t&lli:
about Gorbachev
()l LHL( (\Pl -Prrndl'nl Kl'·
:igan and ( anad1an Prime Min1'itl'r
Hnan Mulronc}. follO\\lng a da~ in
wl11ch thl'\ c;mooth l'd over acid rain
1m tan1c; :ind ki cked up th ei r Irish
hl·cl'>. <i re deh ing into talks on East·
Wc~t rl'lat1ons and nurturing their
goo<1-lll·1g:hbor policies.
l r.s .. c.;o, 1ct arms rnn1rol talk \,
dl'll'n'll' r\..,Ul''> an d Mulrone\ 'c; mcl't-
1ng la\I \\l'Ck in Moc;rn" "1 ih S0\11.'I
kader M1t..hail Uorbachl'' topped thl'
agl'nda tod;i~ in th e 'il'Cond da~ ol
Reagan\' 1s11 hert·.
Mulronq ·., <hW\Sml.'nt of Jhc ncw
Sn' 1c1 katkr. an ·ord 1ng 10 White
Ho u'>l' c;pokeo;man Larr} Speakes.
Mulrone\ had met with Gorbachev
following the funeral of So viet Prl'St·
dl'llt Kono,t~tnttn Chernenko. while
Rl'agan rnst cad \Cnl Vice President
(11.'orgl' Bush to rl.'prcscnt the United
Stall'\.
Dl'o;p1tc Ille-stu bborn!~ hngcnng
Canadian sno"'' that ha ve piled up
agatn'il thl' mas<11' e 'itonc walls ofth1 s
JOO-}car-ofd t'll}. a "ell -rehearsed
atm o<,phc.·rc of "arm th ~rvadcs the
.,umm11
YOSEM ITE NATIONA L PAR K -A teen-ager from Denmark was
stabbed to death in lhe Yosemite Na tional Park this weekend. rangers reported
Sunda). The victim. who was pronounced dead at the scene Saturda¥ near
Muir Lake in Yosemite Valley. was identified as 1 8-~car-old Helle Olsbro of~
Denmark. said ranger spokeswoman Mallory Sm11h. Her hometown ~
unavailattc. Smith said 1n1,cst1gators learned that Olsbro was walking alone
about "r'p.m. when others nearby hear~ her ~ream. "She had. been stabbed
vc ral times." said Sm11h. who added in vcsttgators were perm1t11ng no other
.dclails of the murder to be disclosed immediately. .,
Magnesium fire erupts In Saugus
SAUGUS -Magnesium exploded and burned in a building at Space
Ordnance Systems early loday but firelighters could only l<><?k o~ while
awaiting a determination of how dangerous the blaze was. an official said. "It's
not safe. We don't know what's in the building." Los Angeles County firefighter
Ron Coffin said. The explosion occurred at J.2;29 a.m. at the company's
hcadquaners in the 25000 block of Sand Ca nyon Road. Coffin said. "All we
know it that it was primary and second ary mag~esium explosion." Coffin said.
Hedgecock vows fight to end
SAN DIEGO -Mayor Roger Hedgccock's chief of staff says Hedgecock
told a group of businessmen he will light "to the bloody end .. rather than strike
a pica bargain ~n perjury and conspiracy charges. Mike Mc Dade. Hed$ecoc~·s
closest aide. said Hedgecock made the comments at a Wednesday meeting w11h
banker Murray Galinson. Padres president Ballard Smith. and mortgage
company president Malin Burnham after the three executives met with
District Attorney Ed Miller.
I atn . pnnupal ad' 1sers \\l'rl' to
Jmn lhl· t\.\ll lcadns for a d1stu'>'>ton
on 1r:.id1: thl.' upoom1ng Bonn cnm·
onllr 1.,umm11 and other b1 la1cral
l~l'\.
Thl· prl·~1dent. after boasting of .,_amlly nf five die. Jn blaze
thl·tr shared ln!ih roots and ht'> bright r' """ . . . . .
green St. Patnt'k 's Da> tic. told the St\N BERN AR DI NO-A fam~ly offive. 1nclud1ng three children .ranging
premier upon arm ing: "We arc kin from I month to 3 years old. was killed when fire swept through their wood
"ho 10$c1hcr ha' l' built th e most -duple~. but the famil y in the other half pf lhc bu1ld1n$ escaped unharmed. Fire rtw I"' 11 ll'adt·r<, .-.harl' ··.,01td agree-
ment'' on m•arl~ all those subJl'C ts.
am.I Reagan \\ac, keen on hearing
product!\~ rcla11onsh1p between an} investigators said it was po~s1b.lc that q pie!:~. o_ffurn1turc J moldered for up to
t\\u i:ountne' in the world toda' ." two hours before the blaze 1gn1ted carry Sunday. and police Lt. Wa yne Harp
· said they thought it started in a bedroom. Battalion Chief Jim Knight said 11
---------------------------was apparentl y accidental.
Turtle shell, bones
fbtind at McMartin
MANHA TT AN BEACH (AP) -veetlgator• watched thll work 18
Authorities and par.enta of at-mllel IOUlhwelt of ~town
leged molestation victims dug LOI Angtltl, Mid· CurM Ind
near a pre·school and aald they poUoe Lt. Aobet1 CuNon.
found remains of a tortotM Md Deputy Dlltrlot Attorney Roger
broken toys, which one parent Gunaon decllned to~ the
said proves children were thr .. t· ttgnlftcanoe of tM dllocww1el
ened. Sunday bUt anowledged that The parent at.o Mtd chldren the .,_.ma• llCltont hlld fOtOed
polnteddeout a ahaffow pm~ the dig.
way un r a....-nce where .. __, ''They oene1n1y Oki,'' he Mtd. ·
said they were t9ken from the "When they caMed MCI told "'
McMartin Pretchool wtthout wt.t ther heel done, • Md to
their parents' knowledge Md oome out hire In IMt rNdcM of
abused. u. nWrt lftd eecure WI ..
Seven former tMChera at the lnlte9il ot oom1ng In '1lflth tt'8
school are accuMd of 20lcounta _.,.,.we wcMd ._..._.,,,
of chlld moteetatton and oon·
1plracy lnvotvlng 41 ohlkhn. The =.,,.. "'9 tlftce·
Children have t81ttfted In ,.,..,.., WM 4" 11111,,.,,, Cur·
hearings 1 over the mt nine ~·=-=to prov. tNlt month• tbat the teacher• _ .. 1 ," ........... ··1n mutilated turtlel 9nd other 11-• ,.....
an1rnels to thrMten the children an ...... ...._ • "*""' II lfx
Into litenee. tii11 till, Iii· =to Wiik In. U~ ........... -......... ___ , ......
about parente foUnd a .._ I back ,_ -"" ehov91a, we ... 3 "' ll•ll(tM
turtle thett In about two .... of ... ~!I .. • ......
Mnd, aakt perent Aob9rt eume. .~., dll •Ill The tortolle ,.,,...,. _. ~
found SaturdlJ, and ll'Mlfrt HO•\W, 11'°"* ,...t,
f .-..... .. .-. red In .......... Aritn Cc*nl. llld ....., "'* n~.,.._..... mo~ __ ,, no p11111•••r-fciwid. and continued u. dtg, un-
wthing wt'8t IPP•ed to be ''W• ..._, taUnd the .,..._
addttlonal bonel, ...... Uld. ......_..,... ...... CIOllll't
··we Md. dlG today to prove. meen rv.r;..., ....... ~
f9W thfnal, Md• proved .. of Mid. I tMrri:· ',Arid •'vie ~ found , .. _. Joe Clpolfa ~ "MY
90ft"9 8ddttton8' evtdence to eon talll,.. ._ Wttn1111~ ......
eubltan"ate the kkfl' Mortel wr ..... lndMI._..,.,
M»out turtlet'*"i~.·· C411· · lftcldiM.,...,.Clft.MDl•o rteutd. ....., i ·'....,. Ae .. .,. cllWll
DJ11rlct ettorney'a In· nved."
I ·-t •
Tax amnesty nets $100 million
LOS ANG ELES -More than S 100 million la1e or otherwise delinqueru
taxes have been paid under a state tax amnesty program. state officials
estimate. Under the amnesty program that ended at midnight Friday,
California taxpayers were allowed to pay what the y owe with6ut penally.
About 60.000 tax payers flooded the state Franchise Tax Board with inquiries
Friday. said agency spokesman Jim Shepherd. Due to the surge. the board
gra nted a I 0-day extension for al)yone who registered or called in before the
deadline
. WORLD
~ -
Soviet diplomat ml .. lng In India
NEW DELH I. India -Police said today a Soviet diplomat had been
missi ng since h.e wcn tJ°'8ing in a park the prev~ous morning. Igor Gezha. 37.
third secretary 1n the Soviet Embassy s informatton department. did not return
from his usual morning run at Lodi Gardens. police said. His car was fo und parkc~ outsi~~ th~ park. "We have informed all •.he. police stations. hospitals
and airports. said 8.K. Gupta. depu()' commissioner of police. "I don't
suspect any foul play because a.s·yet th~!'C is no evi~encc of it. But I ha ve not• com~ ''? any definite conclusion yet. Gupta said. An in vestigation was continuing.
BeJ6l•n• protat cru1H ml .. lln
BRUSSELS, Bclaium -More than 40.000 people marched throuah 'Br,us~ls to pro. test the 19vemment's dcployme~t on;:.~-.made cruise nuclear
misstlcs in Bclfium. Pobcc uad the-re we~ no violent I Ctdents in1h~Sunday
protest. Organizers claimed some I S0,000-200.000 de onstrators took pan
but police put thcftture at about 43.000. The march was held within a~ mi~
of the North Atlantic Trjaty Orpniza1ion's headquarter .
Jlabuak m-. Wit HaueJn
.\MM N. J6rdan -Prnident Ho lli Mubarak of EJypt and Kina Hu~sc1n met 1oday.to di1CUttdiplomatic movcsaf\cr the Eayp11an leader failed
to persuade lhc United lllct\Otaunch a new Middle East pcacednve Hussein
"-Clcomcd the Ea)'ptian lcadtr with o m1l1tat) ceremony at mma~ airport
upon hi' arrivar for a one-day v111t. which Jordanian sources said would 1nclu~c a .review of" rab 1c11on al lhc international levct" 10 resolve th( conflict wnh I racl.
Rome conred ln trlllt&•talt
ROM[ -A rare" March nows1nrm snarled traffic 1oday in the hcan of
Rome. kn ()('kcd down trccund CO\!Crcd most of the rest ofhaly jus1 thittdays
before the s1an of pr1na. L11ht now bttln fallina on the htllan c1pital on
unday af\crnoon and quickly melted. But O\!crniaht when tempentum
dl'Ol"P"d ~w fceu.1na tht rain tumecHn&o &Olfbell·saztd snow nakt'f. By atty _,..
mom1n1. J 9•tft(hC o(,nowrovcrrd pens of th( Cit)'. latcrtn the day the snow
lurncd lo rain und sleet.
l
-Florida
twist eF
kills2
VEN ICE. Fla. (AP) -A tornado
that anatched the root off a lhoppina
ctnter and turned SS houses into
ki!'dl,lna. killlna two people and
inJunnt at le~lt 40 others. left 25
blocks in a quiet nei,hbbrhood look-
ina "like a bomb hit. • officials sajd,
Gov. Bob Graham declared a state
of cmeracncy Sunday. and 45 people
fled to nurslna homes for shehtt after
the twister cut a mile-Ion' swath of
dntruction throuah this south-
western coastal ci ty. :·1 heard .•n ex plosion. a boom ...
said Curt St1vtrs, 17. who was in bed
when the twister hit about 4:30 a.m.
"Everythin1 just started flyin1
throuah the air."
Early this .morning. utility crews.
contractors. insurance assessors and
cleanup crews would continue "try-
lnJ to restore some normalcy" to the
affected area. about 25 streets io all.
said Sarasota County sheriffs Capt.
Earl Jacobson.
Some houses had no waits left
standina. Debris floated in swimming
pools and a nearby canal. Behind one
home. the force of the wind had
driven a 2-by-4-inch roofina beam
into a palm tree. lca.yi ng it like an
arrow sticking out of a dart board.
"It actually looks like a war zone.
like a bomb had hit." said county
Woman-ataDda neat to motor home deetr07ed ID twtater.
Commissioner Jim Greenwald. "lt is
terrible. It just hurts yoLr to look and
sec the damaae."
At least 45 peopl~ were driven from
their homes by the devastation. and were spending the night in nursing
homes. sa id Red Cross spokesman Al
Green. Man y others were staying
with friends and neighbors.
The tornado first hit at the Jacaran-
da ShoppinJ Plaza. snatch in, the roof
off much of the building and caving a
I •
36.000-square-foot supermarket
open to the skies. a jumble of air
conditioning ducts. vcaetables. and
checkout counters.
"'It's a complete loss."' said Orvil
Ray. area manager for Publix super-
markets. 'Half a dozen other stores
were damaaed.
An Ohio couP.le's camper parked in
front of the bu tiding was blown over
and shattered by the wind. kill ing
Dorothy Taravella. 65.
Ctromy o speec confirms
Gorbachev 'man in charge'
Foreign min ister's talk made to da mpen any
possible oppos ition by so-catted ·old guard '
Gromyko'S'SP«Cti con 1rme that
view.
It re' ealed for the first time that
Gorbachev was "in charge" of the
MOSCOW (AP) -Foreign Minis-
ter Andrei A. Gromyko's nominating
speech for Mikhai l S. Gorbachev gave
him a ringing endorsement by the full
Politburo and corrfirmed he ran tile
rulina body at times before Konstan-
tin U. Chernenko died. official docu-
ments showed today.
Gromyko's speech marked a show
of public backing from a primary
representative of the older 1cneration
for the first Kremlin luder of the
post-war generation.
It urged the Communist Party to
close ranks behind Gorbachev be-
cause "political enemies" are seeking
cracks in pany solidarity.
The speech was_published for the
first time in an official brochure on
the Cenlral Committee meeting that
made Gorbachev general secretary of
the Communist Party a week ago. A
copy of the brochure was obtained
today.
The booklet showed Gorbachev
opened the meeting with a memorial
to Chernenko and then turned it over
to Gromyko for the nomination
speech.
Gromyko's address seemed in-Central Committee Secretariat and d d also confirmed that Gorbachev ten e to dampen any opposition to "chaired meetinoc of the Politburo in Gorbachev among the party "old -guard.'' and quash any_public spec.u-the absence of Ko n stantin
latlon that the older members of the US1movich-C~rncnko.JL --
Politburo were not behind him. "He performed. without any exag-
"The Poli tburo has unanimously gcrauon. brilliantl y ... Gromyko said.
dec ided to recommend that you elect That was the only reference to
Mikhail Scrgeevich Gorbachev as Chernenko in Gromyko's 1.100-word
general secretary:· said Gromyko. speech.
who stressed several times Jha t the This contrasted sharply with the
Politburo decision was unanimous. speech del iver~ by Premi er Nikolai
He then outlined whiJt h.e said was a A. 1:1khonov 1n February 1984 to
Politburo discuss&on of the question nominate Chernenko as pany leader
of who would s cceed (hernenfo.!.,._Jµcceedins the late Yuri V. An-
who died March 10 at the aae of 73. <Jtopov. T1khonov devoted halfofh1s
.. All of the activity of Mikhail talk 10 eulogizing the late pany chief.
Scrgeevich in the carryin~ out of our Gromyko's speech focused entirely
internal and foreign policies confirms on the new leader. reinforcing the air
that he is worthy 10 be elected general of speed and decisiveness with which
secretary.'' Gromyko said. Gorba~hev came to power.
During Chernenko's 13-month Calling Gorbachev a .. man of
tenure. Gorbachev was widely vie w-prin ciple and of strong convictions:·
ed as the second most powerful man Gromyko praised the new leader's
in the Kremlin. and some reports said ab1l1 ty t~ analyze problems and come
he ran the Politburo during to a rapid._ correct C?~r~.
Chernenlto's summer vacation and "M1kha1I Scrgecv1c1h 1s a man wtth
then during the prolon~ed winter a sharp and deep mind.'' Gromvko
illness that finallv killed f\1m . said.
. ~
Wors t municipality
In U.S. puts on mock
ntes for. map makers
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -In
one of the city's jollier funerals. a
blaclt-prbed deputation from
Yuba City -accordinf to Rand
McNairy America's wont metro-
politan area -handed one of the
fi rm's top..rankina executives the
ashes of dozens of burned maps
published by the company.
The "mourners," following
merry. musical civic send-off in
Yuba City 100 miles non heast of
San Francisco. d rove in a li"-ou-
sine to the ceremony in a Rand
McNally ~tore.
Looking appropriately grave
for the occasion. Yuba City
monician Chuck McBride step.
ped slowly forward and presented
the ashes to company Vice Presi-
dent Russell L. Voisin, in charge
of publishing for Rand Mc Nally.
McBride assured Voisin the
ashes were of actual maps. draw-
ing an unamused comment from
the executive. "We ratherthought
that burning maps and books
went out some years ago ...
Voisin. who made a special trip
from C hicago for the event.
added. "I think this (the ashes
r~tationJ_displa a good
sense of humor from the city .... I
hope that we'll see (Yuba City)
moves up when we do another
edition ... we hope the Phoenix
will have risen from the ashes."
YalMl City mordclaa Clat1ell llc8rtde wttla map ••laee.
GOE'l'Z SUPP
SHOWN IN POLL
."On behalf of t~e city of Yuba NEW YORK (AP) -Subwa.y know or didn'tanswer. ~1t we would_ hke to ~y w~-~mhard Goetz and..cr:imc... !her find tft s of tht_Media Qe -int~nd to nse from thts .Cttle victims-wflo ta e matters into their eral-AP polls owed that about one ;..in--~~ ra~rng) and m~ke' bett.er city." ownhandshavethu~JP>rtofalal]C fi ve American famihcs have been
said Yuba City councilwoman percentage of An\encins. a Media touched by serious crime. and 56
Jean Cellini as she presented General-Associated Press poll says. percent of the vic1ims have been
Voisin with wrapped gifts said to ~espondcnts were asked. "Do you dissatisfied with the ~lie~ respon"'.·
contain pro-Yuba City T-shins. ~h~ve that people who become the ,Also. I~ percent said cn~e in thc1r v1ct1ms of mugings or holdups have communiucs was mo~ ~nous than
One of Yuba City's chief prod-a rig!tt to take matters into t~ir own otherpro~cms.J9 pcrccnuald it.was
ucts is .. walnuts. and the ashes were hands. or should. they let police. and JUSl as scnous7 and 40 percent said It
nestled in a handsome walnut box the courts deal with the matter'?' was not as scn~us as orh.er i;>roblcms.
that bore a brass plate engraved· Forty-tw~ percent ~f the 1.532 Two percent sa1~ they d1dn t know. .. R · adult Americans questioned by tcle-Goetz. who said he shot four youths and .McNally. Rest In Peace. phone in the nationwide poll said on a New York City subway train.
Yuba City 3.29." Number 329 was victims had the right to take mauers af\er they demanded SS. received th~
last on the list. tnt<? their own hands. 47 percent said suppon of 47 percent ofrespondentC -
U de M B .d . be fi pohce and the courts should handle Only 17 percent opposed the shool-
n ~ c n e s . som r .u-the matter and 11 · rcent didn't in netal suit was a T-sh1n that said.
"Yuba City -Better Here Than
Pittsburgh."
The Rand McNally survey. in
its new "Places Rated Almanac."
found Pittsburgh the most de-
sirable U.S. metro area in which
to li ve.
The ranking of the metro-
politan areas was based on
climate and terrain: housing:
health care and envi rorunent:
crime: transportation: education:
the ans: recreation and econo my.
E•rly Bird Dinner
Specl•I• 16.9S
Prime Rib or Fresh Fish
C""f*~ OlnMr With cholc~ of
soup or uJMJ and dnsBt
~ 4 to 6 PM
'MU:nu..14611 7 ..,. I W ... I
·ICU E. BALBOA 673-n26
J
DivOrce may be tougher on theTnale DIAMOND CLUSTER COCKTAIL RING
l 4 roand brlll. cut
diamonds for t.w .. 8% cl.
yellow gold settin•
Gndute~t
a.ppralsal..-•. --U .180.00 DAYTON. Ohio (A P) -Divorce 25 women and 20 men had been usually alone. and he 's lost his main
may be harder on men than women. divorced more than once. role. that of pro' 1der. He find s and practice doesn't make it an y "When we th ink of di vorce. we him s<.'lf s1111ng home alone slurping
easier. a sociologist has concluded usually think a woman comes out the his beer and watching the tube. He
from a survey of Dayton area resi-poorest.'' Cargan said. "If you're also finds tha1 single Hfe isn't as great
dents. dealing with finances. she docs. She's as he thought 11 would be ...
Leonard Cargan. sociology going to have financial problems. Lack of a sausfactory sexual rela-
professor at Wright State University. Maybe she didn '1 have the education. 11onsh1p is among the top male gripes.
included never married. once· Going back to the job market. she's Cargan said.
divorced and twice-divorced res i-soing to get perhaps a lower-paying Redivorced men listed depression
dents in J survey he spun ofTa singles 1ob. as a problem twice as often as
procram'. He says he's interested in "But she's got almost everything red1vorct'd women. but were the least
the topic because "up until 198 1 I was else J.Oing for her. Usuall y she gets the hkel) to seek thcrap).
a single man." familiar house. custody of the chi I-ingle males are more hkel) to have
.. Back in 1973. I started a singles dren. Being a woman. she has a tried su1c1de than females. but for the
proaram in Dayton called Inter-nurturing. different kind of rela-redi orced. the woman is most likely
11ction." he said. "I've always been tionship with friends than a man to have tried su1cid.c. Extreme dnnk-
interestd in singles and dealing with does. Usuall y. she has the kind of ing behavior is mote characteristic of
sin&)es." relationship where she can talk to men.
Ac made an earlier study of singles friends about things that arc troubling Sc-' cnl) percent of rrd1 vor<:'ed
and marrieds to separate myths and her. Usually she acts more suppon women and 72 percent of divorced
realities of being single. from her famil y and other relatives. women wanted the divorce. while 49
"Out of that study came the fact .. What does the man get? He had to percent of the males wan ted the
that it appears that the people that leave the familiar home. neigh-di vorce. and 22 percent of red1vorced
have the most trouble with bein~ borhood. perhaps even the friends. mal es "anted th e divorce. Cargan
si ngle would be the divorced male.' He doesn't have that kind_ of rela-said.
Carpn said. tionship with friends that a woman Men said the most help in adjusting
That led to the ~cond study on does. doesn't have the children. he's to divorce came from a p0s1tive which he compiled data last year. r-=l'::'=:::-:::o::=-1:':~~-=r:=-:=--~~..;;.~~~~~,;_;;:.....:;=~-=-~
That was the basis of an aniclc by two
professors from \.be University of
Windsor. Canada. ftiat is bcinaedittd
for submission to sociological
journals.
"There have been a few com-
parisons of sln.les and marrieds. b'!t
none that I know of did divorced and
rcdivortcd:· Carpn said.
Out of 1.400 questionnaires sent to
the Interaction mailina list. 205 were
returned by femalQ and 111 by
afn:-oOf ttm •n,pk. 1* women
and 58 men had bttn di vorced once:
·alfflLL'S
•IUIDt,K
, ......... lit
,1m-••~mt•--•11w
f ~RME RS INSIJR~NC.f
Just cat US For Alto Insurance
umfl-Ma i~ EST195l
attitude. new fnendsh1ps. keeping
busy. soc ial activities. dating and expressing fee lings. For women. the)
found the feeling of independence. a
pos1ttvc attit ude. being able to ex-
press feelings. new fntndsh1ps. keep-
ing busy. and social acttv1ues the
most helpful.
NOW ............ 1995.00
For women. the No. I problem was
mont'). followed b) having enough
time to gel things done. For men. the
main problem was ha ving enough
time to do things. followed b)
forming new relat1onsh1ps.
A GIFT
that
bers
... by
........ prng ot ers to live.
When you lose someone dear to you -or when a special
pereon has a birthday, quits smoking, or has some other
occasion to celebrate-memorial gifts or tribute gifts made
for them to your Lung Association help prevent lung
disease and improve the care of those suffering from 1t .
I t AMERICAN-LUNG ASSOCIATION
The Chn~1m~\ S al PeoPI '·i
' 1717 No~h.Broadway . Senta Ana. CA 9210I
•
~ -
...
i
We 're losing one.
of ourtrademarKs
-thank goodness
Across the nation and around the world -and wherever
else serious men play volleyball-Southern California is known
for its warm sun, its white beaches and its lqusy air.
So famous is the polluted air. it has its own name: Smot-It's
as much a regional trademark as the Hollywood sign in Los
Angeles.
But the foul air mar -just INIY -be getting cleaner.
Accordina to Jame$ N. B1rakos, deputy executive officer of the
South Coast Air Quality Management Distri~ last summer was
the first s.ince I 9S S with no second stage smog alerts. The reuon1
are subject to speculation, but two contnbuting factors are
receiving at least part of the credit.
. One is the 1984 Summer Olympic Games in Los Angeles.
Heeding warnings that heavy
smog could injure not only the
image of the city, but the health
. and performance of the athletes
as well, some Southern California industries switched to cleaner
fuels and motorists either curtailed their trips or joined car
pools. ..., ...
Ill
·'Now we know who the truly needy a~ and what ·s been caught Jn the
Mfety net. It '•Mlk~ Dea veranda BMW ...
•
I:
'Truly ·
needy'
now in
office
Accepting favors
jusfpartofthejob
for public servants
But the Olympic Games lasted only two weeks. When the
competitors and VlSitors went home, the traffic returned to the
freeways and the cooperating industries returned to business a~----------------------------------
WASHINGTON -Remember
the truly needy? Remember also the
"safety net" that would catch them
before they fell and splanered? Now
we know who the truly need are and
what's been caught an the safety net.
It's Mike Deaver and a BMW. usual.
The second contributor to what we hope is increasin~ly
clean air is California's smog inspecti01r program, which
celebrates its first anniversary Tuesday. According to Martin
Dyer, deputy chief of the state Bureau of Aµtomotive Repair,
rn~asura1)1e emissions ftonf ttie-stx miffion cars l nspectea at the
7, 122 licensed smog check stations have been reduced by 17
percent.
Does that mean we're breathing cleaner air today than we
were 12 months ago?
There is no quantitative way to answer that question. Dyer
says. B\Jt he notes that one-half of the pollutants in smog are
known to come from motor vehicle emissions. It would seem
ogical"lfiif a su s an1t a11'Cdm:tion in m1ss1ons woutagelterate
a substantial reduction in smog. ..
Evaluating the impact of the smog check program is
complicated by the large number of cars that pass the test the first
time. Two-thirds -·four million cars -were granted
certificates on their initial inspections. The conclusion Dyer
-draws from thatfact is tf1at people are getting their cars tuned up
before they come to the inspection station so they will not fail.
Dyer sees that as a sign of success. "Our primary purpose is
to-get people to pay attention," he said.
Orange and Los Angeles counties should be payi ng
attention. Taken together as the South Coast Air Basin. they
recorded the highest smog check failure rate in th~ state at 35
percent.
The smog check program has come a long way in its first
year. It has shown real progress in the war against air pollution,
1t seems to have won the trust of the public and it is financially
self-suslaini ng.
Still, questions remain. Are the successes long range or short
term? Will the achievable emissions reductions translate into
cleaner air? Will the image of Southern California be forever
sullied if we lose smog -and Texas gets it?
Serious men and women are working on the answers to
some of these questions. Jn the meantime, there is every reason
to support the smog check program as a positive step toward a
better, cleaner. healthier environment.
Happy birthday. smog check.
In any decade, half
the people own guns
· In about 50 percent of all American
households there are guns. What's
curious. I thank . is not the percentage
but the fact that the percentage
doesn't change from decade to dec-
ade. Whether public feeling of the
moment suggests guns arc desirable
or undesirable. the percentage of
c1111t~ns who own them remains about
the 'ame.
Bab> chicks. ducklings. _goslings -
liulc bards of almost all kinds -are
born to recognize and flee from the
silhouettes of hawks. Remackable,
th as thing called genetic memory.
Actress Meryl Streep's first name is
a run-in version of Mary Louise.
L.M. Boyd l• • •yadlc•red
columal1r.
Why is phone company
such-a-ding~-11ng Place.
Deaver. a White House aide. went
to Germany 10 advance a presidential
irip and there confro~tcd BMW
executives who. apparent y. lcnow a
needy man when they see one.
!\ccordingly. they offered Deaver an
expcnSl\e BMW motor car, quickly
adding the comfoning word dear to
And why-does the
phone still have
ajpha@ ri dial?-__ B1LL
This column is dedicated 10 some
really dumb things that have come to
my attention lately.
It's not that I really look for this
stufT. tr I were to go out on a search
minion: f'd know exactly-where o
stan . l··havc two favorites fo r dumb
stuff. The Depanment of· Motor
Vehicles. though I must admit that it
has ~en cleaning up its ac1 some·
what. and the telephone company.
There is actuall y a third. but it shall
remain nameless solely because of my
intense fear of retribution. Suffice it
10 say that the last thing it did to me
was to take twenty-o ne (21) (XX I)
days to deliver a check from the Daily
Pilot 10 my home. a distance of not
more than fi ve (5) (V) miles.
I also had deli vered to me a book. a
fai rly bulky package. that was
stamped "found in supposedly empty
equipment ." It was about two
months late. I mean. I could under-
stand a post~ard. or even a small
letter. but a book?
Anywa y. let's pick on the phone
company. I happen to live in the
General Telephone area. That's tan-
tamount to saying that I li ve in the
18th century. phone-wise. I mention
this because that's where I live. but
the things I'm going 10 talk about
apply to the phone company ""irl
general. (No pun intended.) ~
One of the dumb things. although
admiucdly very minor. is the fact that
we've had all-digit dialing for about
15 years and they still print the
alphabet on your phone. I once called
many people al the phone company
to ask them why. and the closest that I
came to an answer was "I think it's
some kind of a 1rad111on:· I swear to
you. they told me that
Another was when 1hey put the
number bullons on the phone upside
down an relauon to an adding
machine -that is. with the numerals
I. 2. 3 across the top instead of across
the bottom.
I asked about that too. and was told
11 was done that wa y so that people
who use adding machines all day
wouldn't be able to dtal the phone too
qu1ckly_for th~ .t:_q_uiprncnl 10 handle.
I'm posi tive that it never occurred to
thc phone company that people who
dial the phone all day would become
just as adept at lhc upside-down
numbers-as people who used adding
machines were al the right-side-up
numbers.
Next came "Please stay on the line.
An operator will help you. And.
thanks for using you r phone-book ... "
whenever you dial 411 . That was
supposed to la y a guilt trip on you by
thanking you for doins something
that )'OU hadO:t done. like the
"Thanks for not smoking" signs.
It didn"t work on me. because I was
using my phone book. I was usi ng it to
prop up one end of my work bench.
Finally. there arc two things new
that arc rea lly dumb. In my phone
area. al least. you can call 411 all day.
and they"ll gi ve you numbers thaV
you·re too lazy to look up free 6f
charge. But 1fyou call information in.
say. Chicago. they charge ybu forthat
call! I don't know about you. but I
don't happen to ha ve a Chicago
phone book at my house. I could
probably call someone at the phone
company and get one. but then. I
don't have anything else that needs
propping up.
The second thing 1s the new
machine that tells you the number
when you call 411 . First. you get a live
person. Then this machinc comes on
a nd says "iihc number i.s
5 ... 5 ... 5 ... 6 ... 7 ... etc. By the time it gels
to the last number. I've forgottcn-
what the nrst one was. Several times
now. I've called and gotten '"The
number is 5 ... 0 ... 9. Now. I'm not the
most intelligent person in the world.
but I do have a dollop of animal
cunning. I've been around.
I don't know anyone whose phone
number is 509.
If you wa it. the human comes back:
then you tell her that her machine 1old
you that the phone number is 509. us all: Discount. In the end.' Deaver
Then comes the inquisition. Your got his car for something like 25
number. who yo u were calling. why percent ofT.
you were calling ... and if you ask why Naturally. White House counsel
they need all of this information they Fred Fielding immediately cleared
tell you it's so that they can fi x the Deaver of anything illegal. improper. machine~t wa e ft•,-"'--1mmoral or unrr.nurat:-Thm1bst as
machine would be to take it to Joshua • quickly. he drafted new regulations
Tree and bury it. forbidding anyone from doing the
Ready for a few more? How about same. Unlike Deaver. who is clearly
multi-speed wipers? I've never under· need >, other White House aides
stood the need for them. Some things might be ~uspectcd of tradinLJheir
.should-be adjust.able. For uample.-if offiClal poSitionTor a 1scount. h's as
you're sitting in front of a fire. with a if it never occurred to BMW that the
glass of wine in one hand. and yo ur man they were hclpmg might some.
favorite other human·s hand in the da' be able 10 help them. As for
other. yo u should be abletoadjustthe Deaver. his idea of appearances is
lights. Music is another. Soft. scnsu· apparently the figure he cuts in a
ous music should just caress the car fann car. not th e way he conducts
drum. while rock should damage iH hamSelf in office. That's a fact. But. with windshields. there's Deaver. about to depan the White
cither"rain <or fog) on them. or there's House. is a poin t of departure himself -as good a place as any to no~ou should not be forced to sit understand that while government ma) 'not yet have adopted the there and decide. "Let's see now. I'd efficiency of business. it sure ha
say that th is is about a class 3b adopted its ethics. Herc is Deaver. a
precipitation. so we need. oh. about presidenual aide of the highest order. 11 strokes per min ute." The heck · I'. I'. with that. Tum 'cm on. or turn 'em simply accepting a 1avor 1rom a car manufacturer. If you wonder why he
offFinally. we come to the various -and not you -gets the discount.
names that we gi ve to those smallest ask )Ourself af you're in any position
rooms in the house that contain. 10 do BMW any good. It would be
among other things. the porcelain surprising af BMW did not ask itself
facility. I've heard them called "rest that question. Certainly. the car itself
rooms" but I don't know anybody 1s evidence the answer was. as they say an Bavaria. Ja. who goes there to rest. I've heard What d1st1ngu1shes the Reagan
public facilities of this nature -for adm1nistrat 1on from its predecessor example. in gas stations and res· taurants _ called "bathrooms" but 1s not its record of honesty -not
II I k what the Democrats in fhc campaign nobod~(wc .hard yanybody)ta esa called "the sleaze factor" -but
bath there. I've also heard them called rather its i.cnsc of entitlement. Gov-"powder rooms." When I was in the military. I was an ex plosives and ernment service is seen as something
demolition Sl'V'raalist, and powder akin to doing windows and so there -~ fli must be some reward for it -room had a much di erent meaning. something other than J·ust doing good One of the funnier things I've encountered is the time I overheard a for the people.
h h 1 Thus. CIA director Will iam Casey rat er pretty. very 5 ape Y woman. wa s stunned when he was criticized about 6-foot-2 and 140 pou,(lds. fi d 1. · asking a sales clerk where the ''little or ea ing in oil stocks even though
girls room" was. oil is something the intelligence
It 's time we stopped all of this community keeps an eye on. When
foolishness. We're adult human be· people said 11 didn't look right, it was
angs. we li ve in modem times. It's as i they had lapsed into tonaues. In
time to call a spade a spade. The next the same vein. yo u could not help but
time you find yourself in need of this thank that Ed Meese, maybe a six on
facility. ask for it by it!. proper name. an ethical scale of 10, never under-
Peepeeatorium. stood that ii did not look right for him ·
Col•mol.t Bill H.,vey live. la to .take fa vors that you and I are not
Hutlaitoo Be•c/J. going to get. All the banks I deal with
seem .to want their loans repaid.
GAO sides with Grace panel on federal waste
This sense of entitlement trickles
down to the lower levels of govern·
ment as well. Georfe Sawyer. the
a~1stant secretary o the Navy for
sh1pbu1ld10g. went from regulatina
General Dynamics to working for
them . Only the press seemed to care.
John E. Chapoton went directly from
working on tax policy at Treasury to
working on tax policy for a law firm.
He reportedly ea rned an additional
$400 .. 000 or so a year but not much
cnt1c1sm 1 as as if he desuved cv~ng he eventually aot. dtO'act. .. if.. it were not for some Pulfl'i~ized wife beating. the now
Federal agency cautious about savings
estimates, but shows overall optimism
WASHI NGTON -There should ommcndcd -along'w1 th tht• GAO's
be bad news today for the spcndthrif\s evaluation of lhl' commission·~ find ·
who are squandering the taxpayers· 1ngs:
mon('y. The General Accounting •The Grace Commission offered
Office is expected to release its 01ne~ fi ve ~pecific recommendations that
month. 1.312-page cri tique of the would provide a central f<><:us for the
Grace Comm1u1on·s work. ~ Budget and Pcrsormrl offices. The
neville Power Adm1n1s1ralion.
Ponland. Ore.: Alaska Power Adm in·
istration. Juneau: Southwc tern
Power Administration. Tulsa. Okla.:
Southeastern Power Administration.
Elbenon. Oa.. and Western Arca
Power Administration. Golden.
Colo. •GAO'~ ~rd-c,Yca cost cutters
~vc unqualifi~d . a~rov1I to the
savings can·1 be predicted until the Grace Comm1sS1on s rttommcn-
rccommendations arc tried. d11ion that user ftts for aovernment-
"What is important." the review operated hydroelectric pl1nts be in·
some moves in the spirit of A-76. "in·
spite of these actions. GAO aarus
with the Gratt Commission's pos-
ition that leaislation could be
beneficial in cncouragina more con-
sistent and widespread compliance
with A-76." t 'nolnnous John Fedders would be the
pcrsonjficatioo of Rcapn-cra ethks.
He took a aoverntnent post -
enforcement chief at the Securities
and Exchanae Comission -not to
!ICrve the public. but to make more m~ney. A S 165.000 a year la · The repon generally uppon~ 1h{ purpose is to encourage increased
-'!!1--~---c•ommission's t5'auit-on federal mt. producti vity 11mong federal'wol'kers:
minaacmcnl. Most of the exception\ which would save an estimated S 10.5
can be 111ributcd to difference~ on billion m pe'Wnel expenses over
rteommendcd changes 1n mOJOr poll·. three years.
l1in . thar the (;race om-· And hey-1pee-with 1ht--
m 1ssion and the GAO show slgn1fi. commission's tstimate that S ... 5
cant opponunitic~ for reduci ng fedcr· billion cduld be realized over three
al co~ts throuah productivity pan ... y~rs by'brintutt thc ustrfees more in
•The GAO finds '"merit" in the
commiuion's recommendation lhat
three federal wa~protcction laws.
1ndudin1 the controvcRial O.vls-
Blcon Act. be either repealed or
modified. The Oracc:· Commi11ion
u.imMed &heHM three ,ee"•~
would be S 11.6 billion: the GAO ••d
that estimate •~rt "'rtalOnablt ...
+l"'froltt pn r • t\c fol r1cn 1 e
was willing to take a cut to SS9.~ at th~ SEC' ~•use when he returned to
private bus1ncu. hf woukl be wonh
5400.000 a year. In the meantitne. he ~urcd a SIS0.000 line of credit in
effect. puning up his future · IS co~l~teral: Understandably. the 1d-
m1n1strauon aot u~t 1bout hi1 wife.
be11ina: h~s cynical u1e of aovem-
ment 1erv1tt tcemcd to bothtr no
cie• and in accounting meth ods. Comment~ the GAO review: "The
My associate Tony Capaccio pored ~vangs estimate provided b)' Grace
over the GAO review: here·~ a appear to be rea50nabfc. althouah
summary of the most important they cannot be rull y supponcd" -
savi np the Gracr Comm1ss1on,rcc· mean ing that thl' exa<"t amount of .
~ANGE COAST ...,,...
~....., 0ty OI .. ,.... 11 $30 w"' 6ey it C......,.. .__COl ...... OlllCI to 1191 IMC)
('Alie ..... (JI Ne2t
~
H. L. lcttw.tz Mt
Pvbltthef ,,..Zlnf
MenlO'f'O fdltor
Tom Taff
C•IY (ct.IOI
•
•The commission wants to &Cl line with what most utiijty cu1tomen
Uncle Sa~ out of 1hc hydroelectric Pl~·The Oracc Commission ul'ISd
power bus1~ess by sellana off fi ve o~-that fedtral qrncy procuremint
the cou.ntry s maJor dams and theu~. chief's _ the propk who are mpon-
gcncrauna plants. The sale .of 11\e ,jblcforwhattheaovemmcntbuys-
powcr .c~mplexcs would bring 10 abtdc by tM prov111ons of 1 2-~ear
S 19.8 b1lh~n over 1 three-year period. old d11tt1ive called Circular A-76.
the comm1 ~on. est1")•tes. -Th1t dir«ts qrnc1" to rely on the
The GAO 1sn I so tore. private 1«tor for commerc11I prod-
Whilc the ~ommcndation "m1y ucu and sen ices Wftcne\<Cr they arc
have some meri t ... G 0 set' a cheapt>r
number of obJtacles to implement mg TheC'omm111ion e111mated a three·
this rc(;•mcndat1on." the review year sav1np of $7.3 b1lhon from
ta1cs. The GAO auditor had ··no turnina over procurtiMnt 10 the
b&s1 to 1ssc s ... whether the com· prwatc W"Ctor. The OAO l'tVttw
mis ion's tst1matt'd sales price 1 rmther approves nor questions 1h1s
rtason1blc:." they point out. estimate. but it nottt that while the
The fi ve power plants arc Ron· Rcq.an 1dm1n1ma1 on had made
CONFIDENTIAL F1LE: Plra·
lu&)'ln Preslcknt Al~ Snoenner
disappeared from publk' v~ late i.11
aummer without tllplanation. In·
ttllilt'nc:t IOUl"C'CI have lamed that
ht was havina a mllitnant lfOW\h
removed from hla f8ce by l'omsn
SC)«iahats flown 1n for the opentioa,
•The Sov1e1 U.Uon. chroa6cally
shon of labor. has Md such IUCCtM
with its thouundl of ViftUlllat
worten 1n rt"ttnt )'een that it it MW
d1C'ktrtlll with India ovtr~ 1mponin1 unemployfd I to
work on rarrn1 or 1a the tftCl'D .
Unhkc t-Vittnamnt, tht f...._.
will prnum1bl)' not br vinUll illam.
JM!t AMrlM ,, • ., ......
tolll•lll1I. '-~
) -
OM. •
Thctt. then. are tht ftcw nndy
Thtir scn1e of tntitlfment would put
1 welfare Qijftn lO lhame ind maM
nch kids on collete lolnt fttl thty'~
taken poven r vows. You want a k>an
take a loan You .,."t f job from i
compeny ~ou·rr reaulat\ng. take •ht
Job. You Mnt 1 ar at discount. taM
thte1r You·~mtttlfd
~c-. ,,. ·~ .. C91r Ph'.
I
--
h Newport'sDavis sails off to victory-
~-·
YUMA. Ariz. (AP) -Jerry Nat-
,_.. two-nan .... t~ a
feuMun rlly In the -lnM'tg ......_ .. the Angela dowMd the
He captures his second
Congres siona l Cup __ ,
By ALMON LOCKABEY
O...,Net .............
If Rod Da\ 1s sails 12-meters in the
Amcrica·s ('up trials· like he sailed
Catalina-38s in the 2 lst Congressional ('up
Senes. the ··auld mug" mliy wind up in
Newport Beach after 1987.
Davis. skipper.for Newpon Harbor Yacht
Club's Eagle Syndicate. won a sudden-death
sail·ofT Sunday to break a three.way tic and
win his second Congressional Cup cham·
pionship. Hl· also won in 1981.
The sail-ofT was nec"sary because of a
three-way tie among Davis. John Kohus.
kipper for New York Yacht Club's America
II S)ndicatc. and Dave Perry. two-time
dcfcndin$ Congressional Cup champion from
Yak Corinthian Yacht Club. Fairfield. Conn.
Da vis' first race was against Kolius in a
bn k 12 10 16-knot breeze. The pair started
dead even at opposite ends oft he line and afler
about three tacks. Davis led by 12 seconds at
the first weather mark. Kolius made 11 a clo c
ra c on the downwind run and rounded the
pin only eight seconds behind Davis.
It was on the second weather leg 1hat Davis ~nd his crew outsailed their opponent. posting
a 32·S«ond lead at the second weather mark.
The Newport crew increased the lead on the
second downwind leg. roundinA 37 S«onds to
the good. increasing the pl11 to 37 secondsat
the finish.
1 he r:tC'c over a ~ax-mile course took 57.
minutes.
With the wand whistling up to20 to25 knob
between races. the start or the race between
Davis and Perr) was delayed an hour and a
half by an on-the·water hassle regardina
reefing gear on the two boa Ls.
Da' as complamcd to the race committee
that he had no reefing line aboard ha'l
( atalina·38. and requested that he be given
one or 1ha1 the gear be removed fromPerry's
boat. (Reefing gear 1s used lo shorten the
mains'l 1n heav) weather to prevent the boat
bet ng dangerous!~ O\ erpowered).
The C'nmm111ee granted Davis· request and
the ,ear wtK' 1nsualled by the cnw o( a
breaidown boat. Then Perry noticed that the •
reefing gear t>n Davis' boat allowN for an
easier "shake out" on downwind lcp or i(t~
winds de reased.
The committee answered that coml)laun
with 11 rulin& that neither boat would be
allowed to c;horten sail dur1na the race. Pttry
-.1gnalled that he would protffi such a ruhftl.
The winds "'ere then 1ust1ng to O\Cr 2S knots.
T~ dJSputc was finall y rtt0lved when the
committee ruJcd that each boat must sWt
w11h a reefed mains'! and keep t~ rttf 1n
during the ent1rt rlcc. Both Mnppers aareect.
Both Dav1sand Pen") were over the JUlntftl
hnc early and 1n return.in1 to re-ttart Davis
pined a 39·sccond advant.agt. In SIMittu'I
, .......... DAVia/88) Mn Diego Padree, 4-3, In 81'1 .......... ballpme.
-lft the o-ne. Angelt' atarter Ken
FOl"IGh WM femcwed att. the ftrt1 lrw*'O .. a prec.utlonary meMU{•
.... compllllnlng of t_...neu In tu pttc:Hng .. bow.
The Injury to Forech didn't ap-
Petr io be conMCted to htl 1984
lhOUlder pr~1 and wasn't
b1llwed wloul.
.
"I Jult felt the tlghtnea When I
threw a lllder to (Stew) Garvey,''
Mid ForlGh, who ml111d prKtlc.t-
ty Ill of ... , ... MMOn wtth •
dlelocatec:t lhoufder and a atlght
tellr tn tM rotator cuff.
"ProMbey just eorne routine
aptlng tendefneae. It WU a itwne,
though, becaluM I WU throwing the
b811wel8ftd wwited to get my work ._.. -·~ --With the Pedrft protecting a 2-0
teed, left-hMder Gene Watter
beprl the eeventh by loecfing the
b-. on Mlle• t°"8dl How911,
Diak 8chofteld .,cs Ruppert Jonee.
Then , .... .,., Gooee GOll~I
MCOnd pitch WU bounced 0
right by Narron to ecore Howell Md
Sdtofteld, end Jones and Narron
both lldYanced a bate on an error.
~Wiifong . bounc:ed ®.LIO
ftrlt, ecorrng Jones, and Narron
tcored on a equeeze ~mt by Merk
Mcumore. Jim Staton, the fhtrd
Anael pitcher, p6cked up the win.
Wiker took the toes.
lwo of San Diego'a runa came
on ICMo homera by Terry kennedy
and George Hinshaw. The Angela
lmpfoved thefr CectUI Leegue
record to 3-2. whtle the Padr• fell
to 1-5.
CraJg Swan. hlmMlf trytng to
rebound from trlcep eurgery, .._
~ only two hlta In reltef of
Forach-fter Kennedy'a homer.
Dodgers
holcf off
Houston
VERO BEACH. Fla. (A.P) -Bill
Russell's two.run -;ingk highlighted a
fiH··run second inning and the Los
Angeles Dodgers held on for a 6·5
exhibition victor) Sunda) over the
Houston A.stros.
Jerry Reuss. who hurled 4111 innings
before commg out amid a four·run
fifth innmg1 emerged w1th the wm. his
third in as man} e'\hibition stans. Joe
Niekro. who was battered for fi, e
runs on eight hits 1n two innings.
absorbed the loss.
The wm was the Dodgers' fifth in
eight cxh1b1t1on stans and their third
in a row. Houston dropped to 3-8.
Russell and teve Sax. each w11h
1wo hits. led the Dodger,.· I O..h11
attack. Jose Cru1 had a double and
two singles 10 lead Houston. ·
The Dodgers opened the o;ccond
inning with four straight hits. 1nclud·
ing a double by Mike Sciosc1a and
successive singks by Oreg Brock. R.J.
Rey nolds and Russell .
In the third inning Russell\ lnpkd
af\er two were out and came home
with what became the decisive run on
an infield single hy Reu'is.
Non-roster nght·hander Tom
Brennan came on 1~7the fifth inning
and gave uponc h11 ana no' run~ In :?!/1
innings. In four sprfnit relief appear·
ances Brennan has not allowed 3 run.
totalling T/11nnings.
Kenny Howell. expected to sharl'
the short relief duties with Tom
N1edenfuer. pitched the final two
innings. scattering thm: hit~ but
yielding no runs. In fi ve innmgs. over
three appearances. Ho"'cll ha'i not
been scored upon.
Dodgers pi tchers arc a combined 5
for 10 hitting. includHlg Reuss' RBI
singk in has one at·bat on Sunday.
Earlier in the spring Reuss hit a three·
run homer.
Ball-hawking
Syracuae'a Rony Seikaly (4) flthta for rebound with John Salley (22) of
GeorJ!a Tech (left), while lillnol•' DQ.ug Altenberger (22) kee1>9 the ball
away from Georl{ia's Cedric Hender•on (r{j[ht) •• Illlnola' E frem Winter•
looka on during ~CAA regional action SunClay. Detail• on 82.
Sconiers
may report OCC, Golden West tangl~ SEA VIEW
BASE BAL~
BEGINS YUMA, Ariz. (AP) -First
baseman Daryl Sconiers, missing
without word for over two weeks, ts
expected to report to the Angels'
camp today, General Manager
Mike Port said.
Port made the announcement
after a conversation with Sconiers'
agent, Nick Lampros.
"I atlll don't know the crux of the
problem," Port said. "But, essen-
tially, Nick called to say he'd found
him and wlU have him In camp on
Monday.''
Sconiers' whtreabouts have
been a mystery since he failed to
appear at the Anget•' Mesa, Ariz.
training complex with the rest of
the regulars.
··r had only one question for
Nick. 'Is Oeryt 1111 right?' He aafd
yes," said Port. ''Tl'Mt rest will take
c.re of ltpetf when, and If, he
reports.'' -
Sconiers, a product of Orange
Coat Cofteae, ha t>eert drawtng a
dally flM of $250 In h11 abMnce.
On Sunday, the total hit 14,250.
Riva ls try to s tay c lose to top
in Sou t h Coast baseba ll race
( urning un ~uuth ( oast Conferenl·e ba~ball (l))\l'\
Saturda). (ioldcn Wes1 and Orange ( oast colkgcs roll1J('
Tue~n) at 0('( ( 2:30)11') 1ng to sta) clos.: 10 the top spot in
the earl~ \lagco, of the race.
Orangl' Coast. the dcfcndingchamp1on. ha) a I ·2 S< <
mark follo\.}'tng Saturda) 's 8·3 setback a1 · Saddlcback.
while the Rustll•r!. arc 2· I after falling to ( l'mto~. 5-0.
Saturda). (\•rrttos. llR"<'enfcrcnce fa\Onte at thl· \tart ol
the r,1:n,on. "alonl' a'toP!hr standtnP.!. at ].()
"Our n,afr~ \~1th Orange ( oast " a good onl' ...
l'\plains· Gofd(•n West Coach Fred Hoo\cr. "bl'l'au-.c
nl'tther c;chool hac; dominated We al"a~ s SCl'm to 'iphl lhl·
<;eason !il'rte with them <'H'r) ~car:·
.\ <opltt 1h1'i season 1s unh~el~ 'itnce the team\ pla'
1hrcc games aga1ns.1 each oth1:r rather than four a in pa~1
<;eac;on' bccau'>l' oflhl' ntnl'·tl·am confercn<"e '>l'tup
"Th{'rl'"; a natural n'alr). of course:· S<l)S Orangl'
( oa .. 1 C oarh Mike Ma} Ill' "The games haH" al"a~s bc.'l'n
du'>l' I l..ntm the series rerord " '1:n dose."
\.\.11 h 1"0 loc;~ al read). Ma} ne rcal11e the 1mpon-
ann· of1 ue'>da) ·.,meeting ~•th Golden We t
"V. l· ran·1 fall too far behind Cl·rn tos." ~•d Ma) nc
"The' ha' l' lhl' ab1ht\ to run a~a' :ind hide.'' ~fa~nl' has non1inated fn.·shman right-hander Jim
Brennan a' h1\ 'tarting patcher again t the Rustlers.
lloo,er ha) 1nd1 ra1c<l he will c'tthcr go with sophomore
, tc\C 0H'l\"em. a product of Edi on High. or frc hman
rtF.hl-hamkr I om i...1lp..1lrtl l.. u.11h lhl' olhl'I rl'Jd\ h>
retie' C' 1f nl'll"•'Jn ..
Hmn a nwan" h1k ,.,n·1 1oolC1nll'rnl·d ..1t"11111hl' IJ\I
\tart of ( ernto\
··wl' can pl.1' ""h c l'mto' .. hl' \Jtd I hl'' dtd h.1,l'
a real goo<l da~ .1g..11m111' \.11urda~ fhc~ m.tdl' 'llnll' gn·,11
tkli:nSI\ l' pla ~ '· h111 '' l' h.1d .1 1111 o1 l·ha nn·, a nJ kit .1 Int ll1
nwn on h::t\l'
"M11'I ol OUI IO\\l'\ U\Ualh l00nW al thr \1.111 lll tlw
\t'::l\On ." he added "~l'0\l' ah'J'' hl'l'n .1 h'.1111 1ha1
tin1 'lhe\ \trnng I 1uc,1 h11ix· lhl' 1rrnd "1'l lun111111l' "
~1a,1w ha .. plcnt\ 111 rc'fX'll,~1~1 {111kk n \\l·,t l tl1 ng
Ru .. 1kr\ Sham· F-lorl'' ..1nJ (1ar' Bu'-1..k·, ·" 1"11111 tlw tllp
phl\l'r~ an thl' ldgue
"Thl'\.H' a H'n 'ol!J duh "''h \l'n J~tl'\\l\l'
htlll'r\." h1: \aid
Orangl' Coast"<o a11..1cl.. " kJ t" ~ophmon· ti"1
bawman C.11~nl· Roumampcr .inJ Dll\l' Roll,inJ Jn
outtkhkr lur the Ru r\ la\l \l'Jr ''h11 h,1, lx·l·n mo' l'd 10
thml ba-.C ·
• I hur\da~ ex ( hth lhl' ro.llJ to ffil'l'I \JnlJ \na
tx•furl' ho'lltng ( ompton S.uurdJ~ ( 111ldl'l1 \\ e't hO\I\
< 'P'l'" l hur-;da~ lxforl' pla}tng :ll I ulkr111n \aturJJ,
~addlebad, (::!-11 pla~s al C. 'Prn' Tul'\JJ' and h1''"
F-ullen un Thu™1a~ The (1uucho' h.1,l .1 h\l' 'a1urJ.I\
( oal h J 1m Bnde"C'ier's (1aurhm h3' l' .1 <1-..i rcuird 111
date. 1nduJ1ng an • '\ "1n o\l.'r (){ ( ~aturJa, \adJkhJl I.
also dl'feated \1t ' n .\nton10 in thl' '"uth ( ua t oix·nl'I
-4. ndw1c hl'd in hl.·t" l'l'n "as an l'tnl"-JnJ'"ng 1 l\-1 Inv~
to ( emtos
In tht.• game \\llh Or.ingl' ( na't \tl'\l' \ndwl'
sma hcd n home run to pal'l' the '1l ton
Two Sunset League games dot
Tuesday's prep baeeball agenda
before Wednesday's matchup be-
tween two of the three co-leaders
-Fountain Valley and Marina.
And on Wednesday, Sea vi.w
League action begins and It ap-
pears to be a wide open situation
with Newport Harbor. Estancta and
Woodbridge holding a sUght edge
on the rest
First. on Tuesday afternoon in
the Sunset League It's E~ ( 1-0)
at Ocean View (0-1) and Hunt-
ington Beach (Q.. 1) at Westmfnst«
(0· 1) The Sunset cruetaJ Wednes-
day matches Fountain Vattey and
Manna a1 Blair Fiefd an Long Beach
in a 7 o'clock game
University. considered a strong
candidate to bust Into he top three
of the Sea View Leegue desphe a
2-3 record. will be at Estanct~ In
what may be the IMgue'a No 1
matchup In Wed~ay·s four Sea
View openers
·Edmonton cOach: Kings one· of best in NHL to9ay
Estancia has recorded a •--3
record and bouts two ationg
pitchers In right-hander ..ltm Fotey
and Fountain Valley trana• Matt
Hathel~
Right-hander Jett 8econ 11
tc:heduled to take the mound for
Wooc:tbr d9e Whet'! the Wwnors
Invade l.aguna Beach. tne latter
wtn .... in tour 11wta.
INGLEWOOD ( P) -Ldmonton Coac-h
Olen athcr i n't ovcrl) e'\citcd about thl'
Oilers' probable mccun' wJth thl' Lo' \ngclc'>
Kinas earl> 1n the Nntaonol Hcx·kC'} Ll·aauc
playOIT\. "I think the)' ·re onl' of 1he bc'>t tram~ 1n the
NHL &oda>-" athcr 1d und3) niaht aticr
the K1n15 downed the 01krs .4 10 'itlUnrc the
season scnc bct"ecn the club' 3·3. w11h one
tac and one aomc rcm1wf1ng 1n lnatc\\ood
next mon1h
··vou look at all the top lour tc m 1n our
d1v1 ion and the) 're riaht up there an the top
IO 1n the tcaauc." \a1d at her. whose t tub kud\
the m\ the 01v1,1on wnh a 4 -f 7.IJ mark.
"h1lc the King' nrc fourth ut 31-20.1 l
'
-
"f he Ktnp Ori.' .a good hOl·kc~ team right
no" nnd the 'rcJO•na tog1' cnn)onc the) pin}
prohlcm ... l'dJu~ta'i 'iOOn fo c -;omeone el'4.'
because 1hc) 're vt'r) 'itrona team •·
The 01 tc,.,· W~> nc Grct1k\ agm.-J. mm·
mcnuna. "The d1tTcrence an the Kina' no" ''
tl'iat the\ hll\.C a lot more enthu\1a'tm and a
trC:'ll <'03Ch."
Rnnn ~facldlan "'on:d "'hat proH'd to be
the &;lrth.'·" inner c;unda)' night v.hcn he
lnOC'kC'd in ht\ own rebound om• mmutc into
the third sx·mld H" 10th fOal ot the 1.01mp•uan
capped n lour·flOlllt ,erlormnncc a he ond
hn1.•mca1c~ i\t:1r1.d 014>nn'' nd f)3, c l a lor
cnmb1Md h)r 10 point'>
M;11 ~ ~llan hot.I thl\.-c n'""" "hale r>1onnc
hJd t\.\O goal!\ nnd t"o U\"11\t~ and Ta~ tor hJJ J
pair ol U!>\ISh.
'-lad l'llan·., tall~ aa'l' the Km&' as.' ll·ad
hut lhl' Otkl"i tnmmt.-d thl' marain JU\I 46
'i«Ond, 13tl·r 3'> Mu\ 1cs ... 1cr ..cored htli ~0th
goal or the \C3'iOn. lrom In clo\l' nan in I L O't
.\ngclc'i aonhc Roh JnnC\:)"
Ho"c'cr. Jnnl'C\.k c;hul th<' 011('1"'1 out 1hc
re\! oftht• v.a~ to Prc'1Cnc the '''10~
1'1n ,. ( oach Pai Quinn h.11.t o 1,111wk
C\plana11on for Lo \niclc • \it.Wr
"I th ink 1 ratt rn1ah1 h 'c11>\'fn maim
on u ." ~ad the 1nnn1n 1'1n '.It co lh 1n
r\'lhcncc to 1t llc1na \It Pa1rad.·~a'
Hut ht• Jl't<l' h:id :i mnn· rnm:n.'H' rc11,on "\\ c"r1· 11 th\' \no ol 1,ur r.nmc ..
D11mn1• opcm'li the g.1nw·, '"'l>nn11"11h l'-'11
tto.11\ 1n a ~'·\Cl nnd 'pan t'f thC' tir't p..·11od.
h" ..i1n,t .111d -' 'nl ul tht• \Car
Thl' 01kr' lJnll' 1\,111.. hi tit• 11 c\11 ~11JI\ "'
P.iul l ntk' .ind Lla\l' Lumk' tx·lllfl' \.lw
~·raod ''·" '" '-'f hO\\l'' l'f
o-. .\n1d • r~mcd the lc.1J v.hl'n \11 \l'
\hull 11p~J 1n .l PJ"-'> :u 1.1 f\ u1 tht '"-'Hmd
J"(rit~ ~ut ( dmonton Ut'1I 11 ~ :un J' \.lil t•
i...rmht·ln"k' '>\nn.-J hi\ \ th 1n.il 111 '' I' 111 1h1 f)l.·1 wJ '
l h1· i..1nv' ""'"' •• "' '1•J ' \10 ,\ fll'\\lf pl '
"11.11 h' \t:11 I.. tl.ird' "ho 'thnt Imm 4 ~ ''"'' ".1, Jl'l1l'l l~,t pJ\t l dnlt'nhln 803'1, ( 11.tn\
I uhr
-
It appeera 10 ~ a game of rwatry
only at Newport Harb<>r ~• the
Sanors l'·' agatnat strong C°".\·
petttlOn) ..... ~ G-e Coron.
dil Mir.
The other Sea View gMM
matches Saddteback ( 1 -&) at
CottaM ....
l.rV ne, 8·3, begin. Soutti CO.t
L ue playW~!!.~th a*'
at Et :Toro. tt\t pr•-i-°'1 ~°'*·
Bird leta 48 In Boeton wba
Lart'y Blrd IK'On'd 48 pointi and m fteltert Parto added a 5tason h1ah of38 as
Boston took control midway throuah t~
second half and went on to a J J4. I 20
owners
gloomy Nauonal Basktrball Associa11op Y&CIOey ~t Houston ~
Sunday. The aame had bttn tied 1 • umn in the first
half before a lay-up by Bird with 13 Stt<>nds rtmainina
From AP-dl.,.k1Mt9 a.ave Boston me lead foraood and a 68-66 intermission
S ... , FRAN ·1~··0 Th 1 EIJ advaniaat .•. In other NBA pmcs Sunday, Denver 1 T.\MPA.Aa.(AP)-Ntaotiations A,.. " l ~ -e ona-• • -:cntcrOaalteelbttameprobaskctball's founhh1ghest between owners and players rtsumed standin.t legal feud between Los Anaeles ·.111-time scorer. but his celebration w's cut shon bv San tod 'th ana•,cm• t e "'*"'led to Raiders owner Al Davis and National / ay wi m " .. n x..-~ \ntonio guard Jeblly MM,., who cd the Spurs to a ofl'er more detailed proof of its Football Leaaue Commiuioner Pete Rozelle may be 124-119 win over the Nugets. Moore scored IOofSan
contention that baseball is in the near a settlermnt that could save the lcaaue millions of Antonio's last 13 points to ice the Spurs' victory over
throes offinancial "deterioration." dollars. the Midwest Division-leadina Nuuets ... B11ek At their last session. owners ptes.-Davis and Rozelle spoke twict last week. at the Wlllla1nt collected 29 points and grabbed 12 rebounds
cnted the union with a five-paac letter NFL meetinas in Phoenix. to set ground rules for talks and Darryl Dawktaund Mldleal Ray RlcMrdl08 each
that proj«tcd operatina losses of between lawyers for both sides. the San Francisco added 18to powerNcwJcrseytoa 129-IOSvictoryover
' SI SS million by 1988 unless the sides Exam iner reponed in a copyright story. 1l Indiana ... Rookie Odt Tltorpe scored 25 points and
agreed u~n a plan "to safeguard" the At'Cordina to an Examiner source, Davis told snared a career-high 15 rebounds to~wer Kansas City fi C. c d tio fthe -m,. owne-. 1'n executive session. that the leaguc. was 1nan 1a on 1 no -... •<> • toa 107-101 victorvoverUtah ... Jc'-elJontaahad Without naming the teams. owners "waving swords at windmills" by pursuing its laws"!ll a game-high 32 s>Ofots and Chicago rallied from a 22-
s.aid 18 of26 major league clubs lost against Davis for moving the Raiders from Oaktand in point deficit in the second half to rcgister If 119· I I 7
about $66 million in 1983. an average 1980, over objections,of the NFL. ovenimc victory against Milwaukee. The Bulls
loss of$2.5 million per club. Only 11 "This thing should be put to bed as soon as stormed back behind the clutch shooting of Jordan and
clubs had ubmitted detailed possible," Davis reportedly told the owners Wednes-Steve Jobto11, who each had 12 points in the fourth
financial information for 1984. but of day. . . quaner ... bl Vudewest-e scored 14 of his game-high those I I. nine had lost more than $2 7 Davis and the Los Angeles Coliseum won their suit 35 points in the first quarter as PonJand overcame
million. against the NFL in April 1983. It includ~d about 545 Atlanta. I 14-101. The Trail Blazers connected on 16 of
AOer that meeting. Don Fehr. million in damages. but other undetermm~ fees a.nd 19 field goal attempts in the first quaner en route to a
acting executive director of the Major interest on the damages has been accumulating during 38-J 7 lead ... Forward Tem Cllamben scored 10 of his
League Players Association. said the appeals and coun reviews. team-high 21 points in the fourth quaner as Seattle
union had asked for more detailed League officials estimate the da1r1ages could set ralli«t in the second half to defeat Detroit. 1()6..98. the
information. them back $70 million to $80 million. ahhouah the 9th 14th straight home victory for the Sonics over the _ "What was apparent immcdiatcf District Court has not yet returned a final judgment. the Pistons. is that we had no information that we Examinet said.
coold look at and understand without Sources estimated the league probably could save Balleateroe, 8
1
radley triumph more details." Fehr said. $20 million in an out-of-coun agreement. Although -;]
Sinct> November. the two sides Davis would 't't less in a settlement. he could Severluo BalletterH fired three l!I
have been negotiating to replace a immediately building luxury boxes a1 the Los Angeles birdies on the back nine and survived a
strike-born labor agreement that ex-Memorial Coliseum. a major source o(revenue for pro bogey on his final hole to come from two
pircd on Dec. 31. 1984. On Feb. 28. teams. strokesoffthcpacetowintheUSF&OGolf ·
owners asked for a moratorium in the Classic Sunday when Job MU.Hey double-boacy~
discussionofissuesuntilthetwosides gaote Of tlii liJ -the 18th. The vidory won Ballesteros the $72.000
could discuss the "grave economic winner's share of the purse. The Spaniard's bogey on
concerns" of the owners. ILL c.r, loeton CeltJca r...-w, on telm---1he 18th lef\ him tied with Mahaffey at I I-under-par.
h was a surprise move in which mete K4Mn McH•'• SI-point game llg9inat with Mahaffey still having two holes to play. But
owners. for the first time. agreed to o.trolt which Mt a club ecortna record: .. Aflw he Mahaffey returned the favor on the 18th. cardmg his
supply financial information to the got22Potntllntheftrstquarter,T Mkttohkn, 'Good double bogey ... Jue Blaledl, rolling in~ 15-fo<?t putt
union. game.' That'• a game for mo.t people." on the final hole. score~ a ont:·stroke .y1ctory m the
Second-raE d
Michigan nnst~
big upset victim
Villanova stuns
Wolverines; Navy
can't hold late lead
From AP dltpatclle1
DAYTON. Ohio Villanova.
behind o solid performance from
Dwayne McClain. made sccond-
ranked Michigan the first major upset
vipim in the NCAA basketball tour-
nament Sunday. beating the
Wolveri s 59-55.
Th( victory over the Big Ten
champion. which had been tt)e No. I
seed in the Southeast region. put
Villanova into the regional semi-
finals.
The Wildcats. the eighth seed in the
region. held a J0..26 half\ime lead
over Michigan. which finished the
season -at 26-4. but Michigan scored
the first nine points oft he second half.
McClain. a senior forward. hit
th rte straight jumpers and Villanova.
21-1 0. had the lead for good as the
Wildcats covened 25 of3 I free-throw
attempts in the aame. McClain made
all four of his free throws and he
converted eight of 12 ~hots fro!'" the
floor and wound up with 20 points.
"When he's shooting well and ~as
the rhythm aoing. he can shoot w1~h
anybody:· Villanova C~h Rothe
¥assimino. who has led hll leam to
six straiJht NC AA tournament
txrths. said. .
"I think their experience (in the
tournament) helped," Michipn
Coach Bill Frieder. whose team ft'as
led by center lloy Tarpley with 14
points. said. •·veteran clubs art the
ones that survive."
In the other Southent Regional
game: . Maryland 14, Navy H: Jeff Adkins
and Keith Gatlin each made two free
throws in the final minute to lead
Maryland. 25-1 .1. • Maryland trailed 45-34 with 16: 18
to play and used a press to force a 14-2
run that gave them a 48-47 lead.
By federal labor law. ifthe manage-Women's Ke~rO n in Maui. Hawa11 and ca tured
-------J_..,.,.nLsidc...in nqo1ia1ions..saµ.....u· _.·~--............. -...--Sea---:-Fi::t~-b-l--k-.---ire:-=r--,.1.;-o'rs:-.t CPUA tournament lite m 1ve yea~rs~. "dr.a~oc~:-t -=======::::=;==~=:=4:::=--::1:1'--
financially unable to negotiate union liOC:NleD, ver Ilrllll an shot a 75 in the final round and posted a 5-under-par Boston College a so
demands. it must provide proof. 287 total for the four rounds. Pat Bra41ey, who led for
Memphis State
survives in OT
1 '
I
'
While baseball's Player Relations Dwl1lat Gooden and To1n Seaver a the first two rounds. finished second after a double mOVeS On following Committee has stopped short of such added zeroes to their scoreless streaks in bogey on the final hole ... Peter TMm ... of Austral~
a claim. these moves could be a exhibition baseball Sunday while the birdied the last two holes en route to a 3-under-par 69 comeback Victory precursor to full financial disclosure. Toronto Blue Jays kept a zero in the Joss that gave him a one-stroke victory in the Vintage
Several times in the past including column. Gooden tacked on four goose.eggs to the three In vitational at Indian Wells. a tournament for players From AP dl1patclle1 during ncgotiations in 1980 and '8 1. he pitched last Wednesday. helpin& the New York Mets 50 and older.
owners have resisted opening their beat St. Louis. 5-2 ... Seaver pitched five scoreless HOUSTON -Andre Turner's 17-
books to the union. innings while Joel Sllluer hit a two-run homer and Flutie ehut down in 29-9 loee foot 1um~r with six seconds to play
Darryl Bo1to11 a three-run shot to power the Chicago Sunday hfted hard-pressed Memphis
WhiteSOx toa 7-2 victory over Kansas City. Seaver had •lvln Br 1 ran "or 1 'li""JraTC~uuJ,_J• State toa 67-66 ovenime victory over --::;:---------1-1-S) fU.e-shutout in•~1n;;;;c.--~A~ '' ~v Alabarna:Binniftlham in4he--aecond .-E;;;;:L • against Gooden and the Mets last scored twice and Cll•ck f'e1lu threw for round of the NCAA Midwest Re-.LY.I. C a1n Wednesday ... The Blue Jays. the 204 yards as the Baltimore Stars won their gional Sunday.
1 1 a st'll nbeaten this Maryland debut in the United States The fif\h-ranked Tigers will play
on Y e ~ 1
u · Football League. beating the New Jersey Generals. Boston Coll~e in the NCAA Mid-must Sta spnn$-rart their record to 9-o by 29-9. Baltimore. 1-2-l . playing 'before a crowd of erupting for six runs in the 10th west Regiona semifinals in Dallas' inning _and defeating Phi!ade!T 31.026. kept New Jersc_y qua.nerbacLDoq -"~---+--11eunion ATena Thursday night. -. i phia. 8-2 ... Riek S.teUffe, the scrambling all day. sackina him three times and Turner. who had 23 points. hit his l•n pr son NL's 1984 Cy Young Award interceptinghimtwicc ... El~hercintheUSFL.Cllff game-winner after Anthony
winner. pj~hed five scoreless Stoadt passed for 247 yards and two touchdowns to lead Gordon's bucket with 39 seconds to
TAMPA. Fla. (A P) -A federal
judge ordered former star baseball
pitcher Denny McLain ~Id without
bond Sunday. one day af\er he was
convicted by a Jury of racketeering.
conspiracy. exton1on and cocaine
possession.
innings and Leoti Dutaam hit his the Birmingham Stallions to a 34-19 victory over go had given the Blazers a one-point
first homer()f the spring to lead MEaemphiCs. cr;ating aTthhree-way tie 1atf\thhe tosp oHf the lead.
Gooden the Chicago Cubs to a J...2 victory stem on ierence. e outcome e t e ta rons. Vincent Askew blocked a desper-
over Milwaukee ... Nelson Slmmoa1 had three hits. Showboats and Tampa Bay at 3-1 · · · Oakland ation shpt by UAB's James Ponder
includin$ a three-run homer. and Du Petry pitched quarterback Bobby Hebert fired four touchdown passes with one second left to secure the
fi ve innings of three-hit ball as Detroit defeat~d and the In vaders intercepted new Jacksonville Bulls victory in agame billed as "The Battle
Minnesota. 7-I ... Eric Davl1 smgled with two out in quarterback Ed L•tlter twice in the final period to win a of Memphis" because of all the
the bottom of the 10th 1nnmg. continued to second on 42·36 shootout. Hebert had 328 ya rds passing before a players on both teams from that city.
left fielder Soto Leiuno's error and scored on Dave crowd of-I 6.6 78. "I was just trying to get best shot I
Parker'• single-to right a$ Cincinnati edJed Pittsburgh. Steinbrenner'• horee wine could." Turner said. "As a matter of 3-2 ... Fred Lyu drove in three runs with a single and fact I told my teammates I wanted
double. Fritz CouaUy hit a two-run homer. and Dennis the ball when Keith fouled out. I
Baltimore buried Atlanta. I I -2 ... Roa Ha11ey drove m Greatness m Sunday's S 135.600 San Felipe
wanted that last shot. too. I had
confidence it would go in."
Memphis State All-American
Keith Lee sent the game into over-
time tied at 60-60 by making one of
two free throws wi th 20 seconds left.
Turner had a chance to win it for
the Tigers in r~ulation after a Blazer
turnover. but his 30-foot rim hit the
back.of.l~I the buz2-'r. .
Lee scored t e 1rs lJ&sket m
overtime. but fouled out with 28
points just 50 seconds deep into the
five-mmute period.
In the second game of the Midwest
Rc-giomr . ----
Boston Collece 74, Dttke_ 73: Roa.er
McCready scored 20 points and
Michael Adams added 19 as Boston
College downed I 0th-ranked Duke.
The Eagles. 20-10, trailed 31-21
with 4:41 left in the first half and
49-41 early in the second half. Boston
College finally managed to take the
lead for good. 59-57. with I 0:53 to go
on a basket by Troy Bowers.
"In the first half I was concerned,"
Boston College Coach Gary Williams
said. "I thought maybe we had
concluded a good season when they
hadan 11 -pointlead."
U.S. D1stnct Judge Elizabeth
Kovachevich denied a request by
defense attorneys to have the former
Detroit Tiger right-hander free on
bond until sentencing April 19. saying
McLain represented a potential
threat to the community and coulcl
flee.
Mclain. 41. has been free on
$200.000 bond since his indictment
1n March I 984.
A nine-woman. three-man /'anel.
who listened to 350 hours o testi-
mony. found baseball's last 30-game
winner guilty Saturday of racketecr-
1n~. conspiracy. extortion and co-
caine possession charges.
Martinez allowed onl y one hit in fi ve innings as ARCADIA -The victory oflmage of !!)
three runs. two with a bases-loaded double in a six-run Handicap at Santa Anita did very little to
second inning against Brace Klsoa, es the New York unscramble th is year's West Coast's J...year-
Yankees outlasted Boston. 9-6 ... Brook Jacoby'• two-old thoroughbred picture.
run si ngle and ~crifice led Cleveland past San George M. Steinbren ner's cQMa>arely held off the
Francisco. 6-3 ... Ivan Calderon doubled and Spike challenge of the favored Skywalker to win and even
Owen singled him home in the bottom of the ninth to surprised his rider.
give Seattle a 2-1 victory over Oakland ... The "I didn't think this horse could JO a mile and a
Montreal-Teus game at West Palm Beach. Fla .. was sixteenth." said Laffit Pincay Jr. after his mount won by
rained out. a nose. "But Wa yne (Lukas) told me this horse was
Hu.rt does just that
to VCU' s title hopes
McLain. however. was found inn o-
ce nt on one count of conspiracy to
smuggle cocaine.
He faces a maximum penalty of 75
~ears in prison and fines totaling
S75.000. Co-defendants Seymour
Sher and Frank Cocchiaro each face a
maximum 60 years in prison and
fines of S60.000. said Ass1staot U.S.
J.\ttome) Ernst Mueller. the pros-
ecutor in the case.
Sher and Cocchiaro were convicted
of racketeering. conspiracy and ex tor·
11on. while a third codefendant. Joe
Rodngue1. was found innocent on a
charie of conspiracy to smuggle
coca ine.
LEASE OR BUY
1 ready. I thought at the wire that we were ahead. but I From AP dl1patcbe1
wasn't 109 percent sure." ALBUQUERQUE. N.M.
$352,503 Pick Sb payoff Bobby Lee Hurt. a 6-9. 240-pound Murray Craven and Doug Cro11man ~ intim1dator. scored 19 points. pulled
scored short-handed goals as Philadelphia , ARCADIA _ A couple from Tor-!!) down 13 rebounds and controlled the
grabbed an earl}' lead and held on for its ,..nee who said they've attended the inside like the town bully as Alabama
seventh straight victory. 5.3 over the New throroughbred races at Santa Anita each upset Virginia Commonwealth.
Y k I I d S d · h N I H k Lea k h been r: h 63-59. Sunday and advanced to next or s an ers un ay 1n t e at1ona oc ey gue. weekend the trac as open 1or t e weekend's NCAA West Regional at Pelle Llndbergll turned awa) 25 shots as the Flyers past IO years. hit it big Sunday, cashing a $352,503.80
opened a six-point lead over idle Washington in the Pick Six ticket. ~A;~~ the ninth win in the last 10 Patrick D1 v1s1on ... In other NHL acuon Sunday. The couple. who requested that track officials not
Tllomas Steen and Paul Maclean scored less than th ree identify them. picked the winners of the second throu~ starts for the late-blooming Tide. now
minutes apa n late in the third period to cap a four-goal eighth races. and held the only $2 ucket that had all six 23-9. and marks the second time they
W1nn1peg rally that hfted the Jets to a 5-3 victory over correct. have ever reached the round of 16. It
Buffalo . . Lmemates Greg Malone, Kevin Dlneen and marked the fourth time in the past
Torrie Robertson combined for three goals and fi ve T 1 Yial radio five years that vcu. third-seeded
assists as Hanford snapped a 13-gamc home winless e e OD, team in the West this year. has lost in
streak w11h a 4.3 vic tory over Pittsburgh ... Second-the second round.
period goals by Peter SD11d1trom and Don Maloney 19 ~ Trailing 16-14 midway through the
seconds a pan broke open a close game and the New No event1 echeduled. first half. Alabama took control of the
York Rangers coasted to a 7.3 victory over New Jersey RADIO game on the force of a defense that
Flyer• win seventh in a row
... Denis Savard broke a deadlock with a power-play 7:30 p.m. -NO aAIKITaAU.: Detroit at finished with six blocked shots. FLllT PRICIS goal early 1n the third period to send Chicago to a 6-4 Ctlpper1, KHJ (=ID The Tide held VCU without a field
vicfory over Vancouver. Savard scored his 36th goal of AY'a RADIO goal for tl}.e final 9: 10 of the half. AUTO & TRUCK IROKIRS the season at 3:47 on a sharp pass from Steve Larmer to 10:30 a.m. -M-AU.: Oodger9 va. allowingjust three foul shots and few 491.1445 send the Hawks into a 4-3 lead. BaltJmoreat Ml.ml, KA8C(7IO). good shots during that period. They
outscored the Rams. I J.3. to take a ·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. 2~19halftime~~as Hun~n to ~ assen himself underneath with seven
Even Warriors
beat Clippers
points in that spun,
"Bobby Lee played a lot better than
he had been playing... Alabama
Coach Wimp Sanderson said. "He
'boarded aggressively and he shot the
lnST IUWIOlfAL
inside shot very well."
The Tide continued the surge in the
second half. scoring the first four
points until Rolando Lamb finally
broke th~ field goal drouJht a little
over a minute into the period.
Alabama held a 37-25 lead with 16
minutes left before Calvin Duncan
led VC'U on a 9-2 surge that cut the
lead to fi ve.
They got 11 to 51-47 on a foul shot
by Lamb with 3:40 left. but Mark
Gottfried hit two foul shots and Hurt
powered his way to a three-point play
w1thjust under three minutes lef\ and
VCU only got close again in the flnal
20 seconds.
In the second game:
North Carolina State 81, Teu .. El
P110 73: Lorenzo Charles scored JO
points and Spud Webb added a
career-high 29 points as Nonh Caro-
li na State, 22-9. wore down Tcus-EI
Paso in the second half.
The Wolfpack led 31-19 but the
MinerncoTCd thi final nine points of
the first half.
North Carolina State then took off
as Charlcs scor~ 20 and Webb 22 in
the second halfuthe Wolf pack led by
as many as 11 . Luster Goodwin lcd
Teus-EI Paso. 22·10. with 22 points.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
Golden State Warriors have the
poOrest record in the National
Basketball Association this season.
but the Los Angeles Clippers have
been the lcaaue's worst club in recent weeks.
The Warrio,-, whipped the Clippers
109-lOOSunday niaht ina matchupof
NBA also-rans.
Georgia Tech powers
lts way past Syraclise
Our NO PAY. OAIVE AWAY ptan
1s ttmp6e! YOU PUT NO MONEY
UP FAONTl You drive one month f'REEf
Select the car or truck of your choice, equipped the way you want it and dnve eway on your good
credit' Give MacHoward a call now. and we11 ......, your queetlOnl lbout NO PAY DRIVE AWAY.
Auto & Truck Le1llng
1
850·1711·
301 w warner at Matn
Senta Ane Auto Center
The Clippers own the league's third
poorest record. 23~46. and are 1-7
under new head coach Don Chancy.
They've now lost 13 of their last 14
and 17 of their last 21 outinp.
Derek milh. wtio ~ the Clippers
with 2S points. said Chaney hasn't
really been able to make his mark on
the club \'Ct.
"We're the same team we've been
all )Cir," mith said. "We've had
only two practices under Don and we
haven't bttn a~ to.t.xcutc his pme ..
We nttd more ume under him before
wt'rc a~ IO play the way he Wlr)lS us to."
Golden St1tc Coach John ~h was
moved 10 say af\crward that he's been
impre led *ith his club's play rettnt·
I)'. remarkina. "We have been playin1
mu<'h better the la$1 I$ pmn. The
ttam now is much better:·
·~ .. ~ .J ...
J ..
From AP dl1patclae1
ATLANTA -Sixth-ranked Oeor-
gia Tech used its inside strcnath with
Yvon Joseph and John Silley to
down No. IS Sy111Cu1e. 70.SJ. Sunday
in the second round of the NCAA
East Reaional bu1'etball toumament.
Joseph scored 17 points and Salley
had lOofhis IJ in the second half as
the Yellow Jackets advanced to the
rtt1onal semifinals in Providence
R.1.. where they wil~ ftcc Illinois
Thursday niaht.
Tech. 26--7. held a 28·27 halftime
edgr and then uM'd a 6-0 spun carty in
the teeond half to build a 37·19 lad.
Bn.icc O.lrym~ 111ned it with twofrecthroYts.~ti Pttwayhita l S·
footer afttt a steal and Salley con-
vened another stc1l 1nto a llam dunk
to end the streak wtth I S:49 left 1n ttk-
pme.
Mark Price led the Adantk C09tt
Confm"" toumament cf\ampion1
1n scoring with 18 pointund Dalrym·
pie added 10 before foulina out with
Just over two minutes to play. "I'~ proud of our bia Pt<>Dle."
Ceora1a Tech Coach Bobby Cremins said.
"l thouaht Yvon Joseph won thi
tournament for us." Price said. "He
shot the bill well both aames."
In the Other Ea11 Reaional pmc:
..._.. Tt, Geeflle It: The No. 12
F1ptin1 Illini ukef a 16-0 sr:n in the
fi"' half to takt rontro nrty. Doua Altenbttltr ICOttd the ftrst·
and lut blskcts oft hf rally 11 llhnott.I
26-8. took a 32· IS ~ad and ltd 14-l 'I
at halftime.
.. We have bttn worltina o" tht fut
break ~he latt touplf of months and Coecll (LCM.) Hrneon ha1 rally ~
strn1in1 it," Altenbt-flltt •id
1
I
I
l
....
Wll'rHN COllfl•••NC•, .. ~.,.....
W L ~ v•LA ... en " II 111 Porlllnd ,, 36 411 "'*'"' • 31 37 • 4S6 ... ,... -LA~ •• 3' .426 ................ n " .m
-••••• " .. .214 ~·~ Ottlver 41 ·29 ••1 Hou•lon ,, ,. ""' o..... 31 30 .512
Sen Antonio 34 35 .$ff
UIMI 32 3' ·m
t<1n..t Cllv 25 <13 .361
IASTHN CONPH•NC•
At!Mek ONjtlell
•·IM1on S4 14 794
•·il'tllleOl!onlll 51 " )61 Wltlllneton :M 33 .S07
New MMV )4 34 500
New Yon n 4s na
c.Mrel DMtlell
•·Mllwl\lllM 47 20 701
o.tf'oll 3' 30 S4S Cllk-.o )J 3S AS
CleYNnd 27 .O 403
AltMte 26 42 .lel lndlel\e 20 41 .294
•·cllncllld Dllvoff Derth
v-cllnclled dlYl•loll 11111
S-..V'• ScWM Goldtn Slllt 109, LA a...ri 100
IMton 134, Houlton 120
New W MY 129, lndieNI 105 t<enw• Cltv 101, Uteh IOI
ChlclllO 119, MltweullM 117 (Oil
Sen Anlonlo 124, Denver 1 It
ll'wtlend 114, Allenl• 101
S..1111' 106, Oetrott "
TINlllt'• Glmft Oetrofl et LA Cl!Nen
0•111• •I Denver Golden Stelt et Uleh
Werrlen 109, CHt1Mr1 100
3
4'"J
' 10'1'1
11'.I'»
10',
14'h
to
21'1'> ,,,,
Merll Lve, 117,tOO
Tony Siii•, tt7,t00 . * Klkuo Arel. Sl2.S70
Joe lntNn, \12,S20
CltrlllGI It O", $ 11, $20
Hll SullO!l, s12.S20
!.'11nv Wtdklns, '12,S20
'10
Gtor·N Archlr, s7.94J Kelln Fergus, 17,943
GlllOy Glltlerl, \7,f<ll
Clll Cl'tl R~lout1, 17,9'3
Greg Tw10111. S1,94J
llrerr u-. '7,f4J
ltiehlrd ZOkol. 11,fO
2ll Fre.nk Conner, tS,400
Jim Nettord, 15.400
CorlY Pi vin, U ,400
Wiiiie WOOO. SS,<IOO
I(.., 8row.n. «.000
Jolln '*· '41000 &red Fn on, M,000
Chrl• Ptrrv, M,000
111
21)
Phi! lllec.km•r, 12.m
Qoonte Hammono, 12.121 ~v Lvle, 12.122
AllOV MIMl.12.721 Pettf' ~terhuf•, 12,722
l.!llcll Price, n,1n
Mike Reid, a1,722
0 1YICI TllOre, 12,721 Tom We,.on, '2,722
114
JI V Del\11111, s '·"' so llob G lldlr, 11, 147 .50
SCott Hoch, 11,847.50
J1ck Nlckleus, 11,147.50
L.lrrv Rinker, Sl.147 50
Jim Simons, s 1.a•1.so
Mlkt Smith, ll,147.SO
Terrv Snoogr1u 11,147.50
6S·7'·10
63·73·71
67·7'•69 6'·6N)
tf.-10•10
61-10·71
71-61·70
70·71-41
'1·72·10
71-6t-11 ... ,, .. ,
65·71-74
70·69·71 11·1'1·6'
'7·61·7S
6'·1» ..
... 71-71
67·71·13 ...... 74
... 10-n
10--10-n
'7·74·71
6'·71·1• ... ,,.,,
69·12·72
7>·70•70
67·74·72
72·11-10 69·73·71 ...... ,.
69·71-73
70·71-71
n -69·71
67·13·74 72·71>-72
71·71·71 ... 72.14
6'·75-71
66•7H J
'1·14·13
66·12·12
00\.DIN STATI Clot) -Sllorl 7·21 6·7
20, L. Snlltn 4·10 S•113, Wnlllfl .. d 1-13 S·S
19, Wllloft 4·1 0·0 I, FIOvd 1· 14 4·• 20
TnMIMu• S-6 O· I 10, Conftlf l-10 2·1 •.
ll'll.lrllmer 2·5 3·4 1. TIHll 1·2 O·O 4. Tot11,'. 41·1f 25-lO 109. . 81M ClllN, Sl,213
21S
6'·7•·73 6'·1•·12
72· 70·73
70-72·7)
69·72·74
12·11·12
&.A CUll'f"•lls ( 100) -c11cnlnvs 1-1 Lon Hinkle,' 1,213
2·2 ), Me. Jolln•on S·IS 1·2 II, OonelOM>n 81rrv Jeectr.el, $1,213
S·I 4·4 14, Nixon S· 14 0·2 12, Smllh 10-16 TllOmu L.ellman. 11.213
•·7 75, C•N 0-1 0-0 o. Welton S· 10 H II, Don P004ev. 11,213
Gordon 1·4 O•O 2, EO...erd\ 3-6 2·2 I, Mick Soll, '1.2'3
lrlOoef'Nn 4·6 2·2 10, White 2·3 O·O 4 216
Wllllmon 1>-2 0-0 0 Tote!\; •1·'6 IS·22 100'. Dave B•rr, 1962--73·11·12 6t·n ·74
70·12·74
7M0-7S
69·74·73
61·1S·73 11·72·73
10-1'·n
k-. " ~ Ruu Coc:11ran, S961 Golden Stele 22 lO 2' 29-10t Oevlel FrCKI, S962 O~ n-2rn--zr.100----w.,,.,, ... , .. ,.~o'-1•w"'ow-..... ,,.,_
TlwM·POlm ~1\-FIOvd 2. Nlaon 1 Ken Green, 1962
Smllf\ lteClound1-Gotoen Ste le SS (L'. L.t rrv Hinson, 1962
Smllfl 1'1. Lot Anoell• SO lC.lchlnlls 11). ; Ali.ti Mf!Mr, 1962
Aaalsl..-Golden Stile 25 tFIOvd II. Loi Tim Norrll , St62
Aneetft lO (Nl11on IOI Tote! loul\-<;oloen
S11t1 2l, Lo' AnNll\ 2• TKl!nl· cat-Welton ·
Allendenc -l,7)1
COLLI GI
MCAA DfVISK>N I TOURNEY
WHtR"6eMI
SICOND aOUND '-*¥'• k-l•t ~I
-AIMNm• 63. v e. com~ North C.,o4ln1 St. 16, Ttxu ·EI Pu o n
SIMtlllNALS
"'*¥'• Gamet (•t 0-W)
St. Jolln'• <29·3> v,. l(ent\Klw (11· 121
North c.,otln• SI ,,,.,, Yl. Al1blm• m-•> &u••..-..a
S•COND llOUND '-*'1'• k•n
1tA ......
IMlnol• 74, Georg I 51
Geofgl1 Tech 10. Svrec:u•• S3 SIMtlllMALS
TilwMllV'• Gemes
(It ~~-. ll.L) Geor111town (32·2) v• L.OYOI•. IH (?7·S)
G.Qrglll Teen 126·71 v• 1111no1, 126·11
seu-..1t ........
MCOND llOUND
'-*Y'• sc-(11 On ton, ~ioJ
v~nove S9, Mld'tlN n S5 Mervllno 6', Nevv Sf
SIMtfflNALS .. ,..,.,~
let .-mii...-, A&l.I
North CerOllN 126·11 vt. AuOurn 122· I I I Mervle~lll ¥\ Vln.nove en -IOI HtR"6eMI
SICOND llOUNO ~v·• sc. .. t (It Heu1•l
MemPlll• SI. 61, Ate.·Birmlnght m 66 (or)
801ton ColllOI 74, Duke n SIMtfflNAU TIMlr\dlY'• ~ ,., D ... ,,
L.oult l•n• Tech 129·21 vs O•uel'loma
ClO·SI 80\lon Cot~ (20· 101 VI MemPhll SI
11'·31
NCAA Df'ltllen II teumament
PalDAY'S SllW,.NAU
(lt~.Meu.)
Kentuc:llv Wnllv1n • 124·61 vs Jttk ·
IOftvllle SI (29• I)
$0uth Oek'Oll SI (2S·•l YI Ml SI.
MerY'I (2'·4)
Notr ChlmPlon•hlo wilt bl' Oleveo Set·
urOly
NIT
SICOND llOUNO
TundeV'I Gemet
~11ke 1"·121 el UCLA 117·121
,._ Mexico I If· 12) II FrHno St 122·1)
ltldlmond (21-101 •• lndl•ne 116· 131
Merouell• Clf· 101 11 Clnclnnell C17· Ill
St Jollttll'I llf·lll •t Virginie Cl•·lSI
W .... V'• GemH
Soulh FIOrlcl• (II· I 1 I 11 L.ou••vlne
( 17· 1'1 $0uthw111trn Loultlen1 (17·131 el Ten·
........ (lf·l4)
Tenn.·Cht t11nooge 1?3·7) II L.•mar
(20-111
NAIA teumament
TONIGHT'S S•IWfflNAU
W1vlend lleOllSI, Tt 1. (29·91 ¥\.
Mervcrtal, low• (3·3·S)
Forl Hn• SI , Ki n (33·3) n Centre!
w11n«ngl()(I 12'·tl
dn~ott: c111molon•'1lPj l11 bl ot•v•d Tue1·
cemm~c .....
STAT• TOUllNAMmNT , •• s.....-.,..., ,.,._,
._..,,.~SC...
$en Jott CC 61, ltlvertl<lt CC Sf
El Cemlno U . Lone lffch CC SI
TtNIM't CNll'•I•· 0-7.JC>-$en Jott CC v•. El Cemlno
WOM•N
NCAA DWttlefl I fllUtMV
WIST lllOfONAL fflnt ,.... K«ft
use 74 toellO 51
UCLA Jt, WHn ntton 62
o.C>reie fl, Tennet'" TKll 74
L.one a.ecn SI. 112. I VU IS
TllWMllY'• """"" ... ,., .... .....,..,
Lone leech $1 127·11 Vl. UK (21-11
Geof'gl1 116·41 vt UCL.A llO-f)
•AIT •le.GNAL ,.,...,....~
Norlll Cerollne ,,., •• , • St JoMlll\'I '3
Old Dominion M. Svrecu\I 63 °"'° Slllt U», Horv Crou tO
""'" St. ft, Nofltl Cerotlne 1' ~ ...........
Cit...-. Ya.) Old Dominion (21·31 vt. Hortn Cerolllwt
SI. (ti-II '
Ollfo St. 127•71 "' ll'tnn St (2'·4)
MIOmAIT a•e.GNAL ,.,...,....~
TH•• ... w..1tr11 ~ ., Mlfflltlettl ti, SO,Jtlltl'll MIHl11lNI M
TtMtl'" 61, vlrtfflle M
wetltf'n Ktniuc•v "· MlcNll TenneMe .,
217
JOM Adems. 1117
Merk 8rOOl<s. sen
Ont Devis, 1172
Kennv Knox, aln
Oevlel L.ullelltrum. W 2
Steve Pett , 1172
Jeff S1nc11n . 1117 J~v Sindlltr, 1172
L.enct TenBroeck, stn
111
Sieve 8owm1n S80
Georet"B\lrn•. sec.
Rea C1towe11. st04
Oave Elchllblra.r, '804
Buddv Garoner, ll04
Mike McCulloiJOll, "°' · Victor Regalado, s904
Jell Stumen, allM 21t
~~r'7#-
0 •vlO Eowerd1, 17S6
S).ffter .Hteth, s7S6
)..eonerd T11omPllOfl."l7S6
220
R11Ph Le ndrum, sn2 01vl0 ()grin, l7l7
--
72·71·7'
7HHS 1?·72·73
11·13·n
67·75-JS
10·13·1•
71-73·73
70·74·73
67·7HS
71-70·77
"7M0•77
71-71-76
71-10·77
70·13· 7S
70·74•74
72·7HS
70·73·76 ... , .. ,.
70·74·7S
71-72·16
n -10-11
71·73·76 11 ·71 11 . Vint•.. lnvttlltlenal
(I I IMiell W .. 11 -Petet Tnonuon, 140,000
111
Arnotd PeJmer. '19,2SO
Blllv Cnoe< l lt.750
112
Gene L111ter l I I ISO Jim Fetree SI USO
1ll LH Elder , 110.200
114
Don J•nutrv, 11.700
HarOld Htnntr19, 11.700
21S Mitter 8erDer, 17, ISO
Oen Si-n. S7,t50 ,..
Bob RosDur11 U ,400
217
Jerrv BarDer '6,000 ,..
Bob Toskl. SS.600
219
Tommv 8011, sS.200
2tO
Howle JoM,on, SS.ODO
2'1
8111 Johnston. 14.•60 Orville MooOv, \4,460
Gtof'a. 81ver, U ,460
Cnrllfy O'Connor ,J4,460
Roberto OeVlcenzo. l 4,'60
292
Gav 8rewtr lJ.I SO
Cnerlle Sifford, 13,ISO Stm SnH O, sJ I SO
K'fll Burton, SJ.SSO
2'S
71 ·70·70 10
17 .... 73 ...
10 70·69·73
61· 71 74·••
~1 ... 70·73
13·69·11 ·11 70·70·69·7S
12·10•11·12
10·11·11·13
n 67·18·69
6'·73·76·70
/4·7S·'7·73
11·11·12·10 ,, .... ,..,.
15-10-13 73
7HHJ 17
12·72·7'·73
11·1S·11·14
7•·6'·71 19 n 14·69·11 11 75·72·74
14·1'·12·1?
GttM McGihon, IJ,JSO 79·70·74·72
Julius 8 oros, IJ,350 76·11·7S·73
L.-GA Kemoer ONfl
(et KHNINll. HeweMI
111
J1ne 81•tock \4S,OOO 71·69·71·7S -Pat 8redtev S77.7S0 .. ·70·7S·7S
2" AticeMllttr, 120.2so 12·12·14·11 ,,,
8tlll Oe niet, SI, IS I 7S 7S 72· 11
81tsvKl119,U ,ISI 18·11-12·11 K•lllY Whllworlll, st. IS1 76·13 72·71
Judv Cl1tk, ll,UI 14·1'·13·71
l(ethv Posttewell, \l,ISI 1•·1•·13·12
Jtenn•ll• Konlh1. 11.1s1 76·11·7•·12
Jane Creller, al, 1SI "·77·76·72
Vicki l\lvaru. '8,151 73·71·7S·73
Lauri Peterson, 18,ISO H·73·70·75
P11tl Riu o, '8,ISO 74·73·71 ·7S
Piii¥ Sheen1n, U .IS069·72·76·76
2'4 Cindy FIOm, \l ,177 7•·7S·7S·6t JoAl'lne C1rner \3,177 13·15·1'·10 J1n Slt~nson, Sl.117 16·15·12·11
Lori Ger1>1c1, n .en 71-73·79·71
Dor Germ1ln, IJ,177 7HS-71·72
Cethv Mor-It, SJ,177 13·72·76·73 m
HOlll1 Slecv.13.0U 7H3·76·11
Muftn 5oncr·Ovll) SJ.OU 13·1'·1'·11 Donni Caoonl, SJ 0'6 7'·n ·74·7l
A1lc1 Rll1m1n, l3,0'6 1S·1S·6'·1'
aerb lllOmes, '3,0'6 73·73·71·77 2"
Calllv RvnlO\•Ofx. 12,712 17·74·72·73 Pel Mtven, 12,712 71·7•·74·7S
2'7
J1ntt COii•. s? ,.,, IH•·7M3 Jo Ann WH "-m. S2."2 73·76·1'·7'
Amv Aleoll, U ,'42 73·7'·7S·7S
Oonn.e Wllltt, U,'42 7•·70-7t·75 ,..
Oelt E IJMllng, S?.110 1'·1'·11·11
M 1 l~men, n 110 11·71-16·73
Oebt>le Mtu•v, 12. 119 1'·7,·7S·1S
w ilt B«nlt111. '2,11• 71·13·12·1•
1't l tellv Pet r10fl, Sl,476 1•·11·17·11
Mllil Ed91. S U7S 11-13-15·1~ Mtrtv Olckenon, s 1,'7S 15·1'·7'·1
O•wn Cot, 11,•7& 1M N M 5
LtflO(t Mureoi.1, suu 71·1>·7N• Mlfldv Moore. s l,611 ,,.,..,,.,.
OwdM Lnk«, Sl,•H 7N•·7S 1' MIHie McGtorOI, \ 1,•75 11•1'•15•11 -Clndv l'lto, Sl,347 /6-73·76-76
Olfnnt C>.tllev. I 1.341 _ 11 1)·1'·11
'" AltullO Hill .... ' 1,n1 14•74·90·73
Stndr • S-Ua !ell. t 1.7, 1 , •• 73.75.17 .,
OftOit Hell, S 1,017 1M6·7t 1) 1.AAM (lf .... y, al,071 ,. ,,.,..,,
l.Mlrle lllW.tt. t l,071 14·1•·1'·71 -.
L.YM S"tnt't'. am .. 71·1•·11·1•
°'°°" Mt•tltf~tl ttOJ 1Mt lM7
Vtckl Slnelllon, Sto4 n-n·u• -C.m'f Mtt1no ltlS 1s '' n ,., Cetnv Krell«• Ml• " ,..,, ., -lttfllv ~•, a1 •1 11 11-tll 11 -,,__ ......... 101 n·ll ., ,. ..
l.W l llif. '"' , •. ,,.71 a
..
SOUTHERN
SECTION
BOYS
SPORT SCHOOLS PARTICIPATION OFFERING SPORT
llaak 8 rt ........ lellaoole
1. Football 32,383 Bubtball .OS
2. Traell • Field 16.711 a..bell 382
3. Buketb.U 14,774 Football 366
4. Bueball 14,628 Treck •Field 326
6. Soccer 10,242 Cro.Country 314
6. w .. tlin1 7.930 Soccer '1:17
7. CrcMeCountry 6,814 Tennia 266
8. Tennill 6,622 Wnatlln1 221
9. Swimmin1 6,291 Swimmin1 200
10. Wa&er Polo 4,177 Golf 196
11. Golf 2,627 Wa&er Polo 146
12. Volleyball l,839 Volleyball 69
13. C<Hld Bedminton l l,197 Co-eel Badminton 68
14. GymnMtica 131 Gymnutics 6
16. Skiin1 .97 8kiin 6
I TOTAL 114,IM 1,111
GIS1LS
SPORT PARTICIPATION
Rank rti 8bMle•t.
Volleybell 9,620
2. Softball 9,616
3. Buket.ball 8,619
4. Tr.ck • FieJd 8,4'0
5. Ten nit 6,681
6. s~!Din1 6,396 -r. "* ountry -3,737
8. Soccer 3,M6
9. C<Hld Badminton 1,237
10. Gymnutica 970
11. Field Hockey 676
12. Skiing 93
13. Goll 74
'Qll'AL IT.HI
-s-anta-Anna-·---
suNDAY's llESUL. TS
(UrO Of "·deV lfll+WIMNICI ~) • l'lltST RACE. 6 lurlOnOs..,
Nr111wsr Emoeror IPdnl SO 00 "* ,.._
Socr•lts IPincavl 360 1IO
No Fttll 1Dom1nouer1 l.60
A•'o r•ceo Cron Ftao,, trosll S'Gelll,
Eeote's 8etk Gotov'' · Commenci.r,
Purlo•n Boto Pleovc
Time 109 I S
SECOND RACE. 6 > lurtonos
Le L. Arot nt ISllYtfl') IS 00 6 60 s '°
LVCkY Soart IP1ncevl s 20 • 40 Mtgn1t.cen1 Encore (Hawlev1 9 60
Af\O r•ctO A~O Lover Godden
Crvstet. Grev Vanetv Mv ScrH llCluHfl,
Swffl Ot tlltn, Ret0n111g Melodv Menger
Les. Mor 8alrec • .s.rene Fire Tome I 16 2 S
11 DAILY DOUILE !S·91 oe1d s.313 40
THlltD ltACE. One mitt
Jon 0 1McCarron1 u 40 7 20 3 60
8 o u·s Ballt t StevtflsJ 'to 3 40
A"enslon ISl'lo.maker) 760
Af\O raceo Tiger 01 Erin lltO Ou\lv
Oulo Siar. C'1eei.com1zr1
Tomt I 37 2 S -
l'OUttTH RACI. 1 1116 mitt \
Ch•mP•on Piiot (0m9l) 8 40 S.00 3 40
EP1on Downs I Mc Carron I S 60 3 60 Reoido Oom IHtwlt vl 4.80
Alto rect o Prairie Bro ker Vioeo I( le!,
Americ•n Standard
Time I 41 • S
SS EXACTA (1·71 oa10 \106 SO
l'IFTH RACE. 6 ; furlono\ on turl
Acaoem1c I Haw le• I 17 80 9 20 6 60
Run Ron• Run IMcCarron1 10 40 1 20 Too Mucn For TV IOl•veresl SeO
Af\O ractd Mldtoro Amarone, Record
C•rcn Re Ac• Au•umn Sunset L.ar.onov
T 8111 Svnorome For H1m~I Putstlt
Time I lS I S
\5 EXACT A ll ·SI Pa•CI '33600
SIXTH RACE. 1 I 16 m1~
Bernie L11t1t t Mera J 19 60 I 00 4 40
N0<111ern Siar !Ol1V1resl 9 40 4 60
K•nlt••O 1va1enruel1l J 40
Al\o receo L.uci.illol Quaclt••v Quick
Vaht nt Gtoroe II-wed EMrgv FH! Trie
Power
Ti,... I 4S l S
5EVINTH ltACI. I • m11es on Curl 8f'n R 1tOHfNO I Sllm~ rl 16 IO 960 6 IO
Penn net rMcHarvutl 6 40 s 00
K•vala «Oavl t 20
Al•o ra ced Naar. Voeux 8oucau 8vron, MorH Codt Carrlu o Alltr Br 1ein. L.1t
Fur
Tome 701 • S \$ EXACT A (7·l l oald '26J SO
EIGHTH RACE. I I 16 milt!\
Image 01 Grtn\ ( P111<:av I I 60 4 10 3 80
Skvw1•ker !Devi • •O J 60
No\lalg111'\ Star !Sl'loemaktrl S «>
Alto raced T"• llooen Four Ftoa11r19
ll1Hrvt F asi Accoun1. Sm•r1e11 Uo S!an'\
Bower Prtll<1'0r
Tomt 143 ! S
11 "ICK SIX tl l·l·S·7· II oa10 IJS2603 10 w11n one wtnn1no tocktl II.IX
hOr\H) l7 . PtCll $1.a con1o4• lion DI'° IS 110 ?O with 61 w1nn1ng toc:ket\ (llvt
l10fl9\)
NINTH ltACE. I 1 16 mot•
M•nClllO 1ve1enruelel 17 20 6 60 4 60
F0<e1gn Le11•on IPeoror•I 10 40 1 20
Mtrll. In Tiie Skv !Sltvt n'I 4 .0 ,,,.,.,. I 0 IS
SS IXACTA 1 IO·t l ot oO s.312 SO
All net 70 1&4
USffL
WISTI RN CONl'llll..CE
W I. T .. c:t. "" "" HOUI IOll ) 0 0 I 000 116 ..
Otnv•r -2 , I 0 '41 1t 71
Oeklt nd 2 I I 67S tl IOS
Arllont • 2 2 o 'i#J' 11 '1
Porll1nd 7 -2 0 SOO 61 0
L.A l~..-eu I J 0 1SO IOS tO ~" A111onlo t l 0 1SO 4' 10)
I A$TlllN CONP•llllMCI
Mf'ITIPfl•\ l I 0 7SO IA 70
T11rno. 11111 3 I 0 7S0 111 ..
8 rm•~•m J I 0 7lo0. 12' t 1
Ne• J"'"v 1 1 0 500 100 10 I 8•H•m0<• I 1 I l1S 1' 6'
/!lei. MKIV• I J 0 UO tt IOS Ot noo o 4 o ooo u 120 ...... sc..
l •rmono111m >• MtlMll•\ lt
at•l•mort 7', New W\f'¥ •
()et.II"° 41 Je<tuo"""' )6 T__., ....
Otn""° •t Hel.\1111 ~¥'\ .....
~'*''MIO_,,.._ ~.,.,._
&.A,..,.._. t i Af I
~ .. ,..,,. '""'illONt"' •I .. ,_. 0...11141 et~\
Poflle,,_ 11 HooAIO'I
TllMI la"' 11 ,._ -~
I
SCHOOLS
OFFERING SPORT
8 8elaoole
VolleybaJI 382
Baaketball 380
Softball 372
Track • Field 312
Crom Country 284
Tennis 280
Swunming 212
Soccer 180
Co-ed Badminton 88.
Golf 49 .
Gymnutica 44
Field Hockey 21
Skiin 5
I.Ht
~ . . . "
EYMtlMon
A"9111 4, .. lelrl\ l
C•llle><n•e 000 000 40!>-4 6. 1
Sen Otego 010 001 100-3 e I
Fe><Kll, Swen t2l S111on ISi Keulmt n
17J, S.nchlr 191 ano Narron. Snow, Witter
IS). Gou1ge 17> Woi1n Ill anG Kenneov l och¥ Ill w-St•ton L.-Watte r
Hlh-flt n"9<1v ISO> H'"""'"' ISO>
~ '· Alfffl s l•• Ven le•dll HOu\ton 000 140 OOl>-S 10 I
LO\ AnQlllS 1 ~ 1 000 OOC>-6 10 l
N'll\ro Mertr Il l S"'"" ISi CeJhoun 1'1 1"41 Cott>trt A\nbv <JI, llleu" Brennt"
ISi Howt!t l l •"41 Scio~ t Rtvf\ Ill w-Revu (-N1111ro
Otfl« S<wes
Oe1ro11 l M1n~ote I C1ncin11111 ) PlllH>urgll 7 I 10 nn•nQU
.., Yori, Mell s St L.OY•\ 1
Texas v\ MontrH I, i>oo ••·" Tor onto I 1>1111aoetP111t 2
8attlmort II All•nte 2 .
New York Yanl\ees ' Bolton 6
Cn•cego W'11lt So• 7, 1(1"'"' c .rv 7
Cievetano 6. S•n Frencl\CO l
Su 111e 2 0.-lano I
Chicago Cuo' 3, Mllwau"e 7
Colle9e KOl'ts
s1enrord is. use s
Arizona 6 Calllo•"•• •
Arta t>altba• lGhtdutt
TUESDAY
H\91 Sctlotl -EOl\on at Ocean Vrew
Hunllngfo11 8t 1c11 al w"tmonuer l IS om
CtfNnUfltf't C"--GOloen We\I at
Or1nge Coa\t SaOdl.O•Ck at Cvore". 7 lO
p m
'la WEO"ESDAY
Hitfl S<·hool trvont at El Toro Coron•
Cl-' Mt• al Ntwoori Ht•DO• Un1ver\1lv a•
E ••enc a ~oo•eDen a• Co\la Mu• WooooriQgl' a l LtQuna 8e&C'1 801noo
Amal e1 M•ltr Of • JI~ om Foun•••n
v1t1tv o Mar•na •' 8 "" F 110 L0"9
8eacn I om
THURSDAY
CMll'llunltv c ..... -Orengt Cou • 11
Stnta An• C •Ort" al Goiotn We\I
Fu11erl011 a1 Saoeli.Dtck 1 JO om
l'ltlDAY
HI"' Sdleel -Sen Cttmenie e1 Ir•,"•
e \tancoa a l Coron• ci.i Mtr un1Ytr\1lv •'
Newoort HorDOr Legu'1a Beacll II Co\tl Me\a We\1m1n\ler e1 Foun1a1n v a11ev
B11noo Amat at M•lfr o.. Woooonogt a•
Sado1toac• J IS om
SATURDAY
HllJll SCllool -EO••o11 al Hunt.ng•on
fletch Oct tn View a1 M•rt"I 1 om
Commllflitf c ..... -Comoron el Or
a"oe Co&11 Cold'" WHI 11 Futterro" noon
I
M9ft'• teul'Mmenf
(ti a rv, ..... leleiklml
~,...,
Ander, Jarrvd (Swedenl Oii Mtl\
Wilt "°'' I Sweoen I 6 • 3 ' 1 s tJ•rrvO win\ 117 000 Wllenotr w•n\ \71 0001 °"""" llMi J•rrvo Eooerg °'' Wo11t~ F Dlk 1Po 1endl lttv•n Curren IU S 6 l 1 6
Wom.n's teuma~
(II o.11\1
'~'-' Merl nt Nev• •l•loYI u s I Ml Cl\r '
Evert L.IOYO IU S 1 6 l 6 4 INevrt r.IO••
w1nl l2' 0001
Art• tennis ''~ TUHOAY
"'-""'"' -B•verlv HI"\ •I N••-t HefbOr !O•\Oll er Ocetn Vie w We ••
mmlter •' Hun1111111on &t•Cll 3 1\ o rn
Cemm"""°' C..... -Ot1"111 Cli>esi &J
Mt Stn Alllonlo 1 om ,
w•ONISDAY l H'9fl ~ -l.I Ouonll .. Hunl•ngt()fl
l u cl'I 1rv111t et i i Toro Coront dtl Mir Al Nf ... tofl Heroor UnlYl ftilV •• ( s••n<••
$eelcl<IO•Ck ., Cosr• Mn •. WoodlH'lclff .,
LH ll"I 8 .. C'h J IS a rn
THIMSOAY
"""' kMel -ld·~ 11 Hunl.nt!Otl ..ec,, Ge ro.II 6rovt 11 Wftlm•iuttr,
MM1t11 •I Ocee" V•ww M.;nt•MIOfl IH<P! •t 0 ·1"'0Nt h r l IS om (~ c ..... -°''"" (0111 .,
,Ullt•IGI' 7 • m
lllllOAY ..., f. ... kllMI ..... ,,, . .,.,.. htlt'1 •I
E•.on J 11.111••~ VI • ., •• Wf\lm<nl!er
~ c......., .. 11 ,,. nt ''""''' •• (ortN .... Mar U"'•ef'41• •I Ne•oort HlfW Let~t IM<" 11 CN'1 ~" Woodl>f' dee
•r s.H1tM<11 l lS a"' ( ..... flolllell -UC I•• nt TtMI\ C •\\< •t dtV
SATIMDAY c ..... Ml'\ -1.1c "" ,,. t .,,.._, c .. n ic
a "'
SU..OAT
( ..... Mtfl -UC ""-1 tMi\ C U < ....
.... ..
C ...... LL CONP•a•NC• ,,...,.. OMllell • L T ,_ .,. ..
.11•EC1monton 4i 11 • .. HJ 2W
1•WIM loet ,, 11 1 u ,,, JM
•·Ce!Oarv u " • to m 2111 ... ~ ,, ,. 1a n 311 ..
V1ncouver n 41 • S2 tS) ,.,
...,., .. OMliell
•·SI LOUii » 25 II n 2.S , ..
>·Cnlceoo ,. » s n 21' ns
Mhtnl\ole n 37 II S7 711 213 Ottrolt n ll 11 SS m m Toronto 17 .. 1 " 21S '°5
WALIS C<>ttff•a•NCI
"etrldt ~ .. ·Pfli•~• .. " 1 u >01 no • ·w .. lllno1on 40 ?I • et 21S 11• • NV l•lenoer' )1 ,, S 79 317 m NV ._.,,_, n l7 10 ~ 26S 307
PottlOurQPI 23 41 S SI 20 &JI
New JIUIY 20 41 9 49 2l6 JOO
~o;vw..
•·Montr••' 3A 2s 11 .,, 26S ns
a·Buffeto » 1) 14 11 US 207
• ·Oue111< 34 u • 11 m 2.s
8oston 32 29 I 1' 242 241
Harttor o n >e t ss 140 m
•·dlncNld oltvof! !llfm
SUllMY'• ,__ 1(1119t S, EO<N>nlO<\ 4
Pl'tlledelOl'lit S NY 1'19nOtra )
W•nn•a.11 S &uffalO 3 HerlfO<d 4 P1llst>urg'1 3
NV Ref!llln 7. N•w JerMv J Clllceoo 6, Vencouver •
TMllM's G-
Quebl< •' Bolton St L.oui' et T oron•o
C•lllerv er Mlnnnot•
Klntn S, ~I•
k-bV ..... !Mt
Eomon1on 2 I 1-4 LO$ Angele\ 2 , 1-s
~Int .. tried
I l.o' Angella, Dionne •2 (MecLwtlln,
TeVlorl 2 11, 2 Lot Anoell\, Dlollne 43
(Macl.etten, G1tlevl 2 •1, ) e ornon1on. CofflY 27 (Kurr!, Hu«M 11J7 tool, 4
Eornonton, L.umltv I lKrUMlllnv•llll, 12.42.
fli-llles-t.owe, Eom Cn19'1111cklt111), l'416,
Foooton. Edm 1m1nor·un1oor11m1nlikl,
maior·l111111onol 4 S7 W1l1t1m•, LA, 11111111·
Ing) 4 S2, Hunter, Earn (n llllllKlo.lf\O ) l 'J7,
G1t1ev, LA, lt l\arg1n9) 117, Hlcl'IOll\. L.A
lllOOl<tngl 1053. Geitev. L.A. tlloldlt111l I• n.
JICilton Edrn lcrO$Kl'IKklnlll 17 12
---_,S,K-...f!~ S Lo\ A"9NS Snutt!TlW'ell{J"" ~ 6
Eomonton. Kr~l\IWIY\kl )t (Kurr1,
Gret:tltvl. 9 4l fool 1 L.o. ""'11111\. Hardv
13 (Mec:Ltllen. 0 1onnel ff.J7 tool P-1·
11H-S.men1<0 Edm (et0ow1nol 2.34.
•Andlf'ton. Edm. OOUOlt rrunor (r-'1111111
1-0.. Wtll\, LA trowh•t111 > 10., SY1l11 LA
(rOU911•1191 • 06. Jacto.M>n, Ectm. dOOAllt mtnor !11001tiflg·ro119htnol. 1131, Nie~.
LA (rougllift91 17 32 GrellkY. Edrn (llOOI,.
p l 11 ~
Thif'd .. tf'IM
• L.O\ 'rt!"'' McLel•tn JO (T•~ o.-ni!. 1 6dDPI t~omon1011:-Mtt'llf 20
I AnOer\on Nto•tr I I '6 Pen a11v-W1IWam~. L.A lllOOll•"9) '50
SllOll on QOtt-Eomonron t ·l ·21-JI
Los A nQelel 14· 12· II. )1 Goa11e1-Eomon1on. Fuhr L.o' Angell\.
Ja"ecvk Allenoance -1• SOD Rettrff -Ron
Wtck'
~ • •
"
ArH .....,.. a<Mdute
TUESDAY
Hi11h SCMel -Octa" v '"" •• ..Ve\lern Boote Grtl\Ot 11 M¥•na ~I' o .. •• L.os
""'~ JI~ o "'-~••oel" Grove•' EO•ton. OH SD"'
WEdNESDAY
Hiett Sdleel -1rv.,,. •' E• roro Corona
Gel Ma• a• Un1ve•••'• Nt*DO" H•rPIOr at
E'•ancoa CO\le Mt\I •' ll\loooorl(ll)e
L1ouna 8eac'1 at !>•OO'eDec• l IS om
FRIDAY
Hltfl S<...., -S•" C1emen•t •' trv•ne WOOODrioge 11 Corona 04!1 Mer Stoottoec~
at Newoon MarbOr Co\la Mt'\I •' Un1ver \1tv Laguna 8tac11 a• E \lane<a 3 rs o 'Tl
Canvon Tour11amen1
•I
ArH 1wimmin9 scfltdult
TUESDAY .
H'911 k.hool -Cll' lle1av Pre"m.nar 9'
•' e .. mon• P•a1e
WEDNESDAY H'911 ktlOll -EO'W" .,t Wotm1ns1er
Co,re Mt\I a• Ce><or<t de< Ma• New00<•
HarDOr a• S..oa eDtclo. t1u•" "9'0" 8eac11 a•
~·· 11a Laguna BtaCll •• u ...... "''"' Octt" II tw a• !'ounte n Ve ·•v WOOO
Dr100t' al f\tal'C a JI~ 0,...
Cemmunitv c.._ -°'•"9l' Coel• "'
C •°'"' G<>'oen W"I a1 ~· San ""ton-o
THURSDAY H11J11 Schoel -Ma•er De .,, Pac 1.c.,
Irv ne •' Cao11traf'\O Va r,.. l '~ om
FRIDAY Hi11h Schoell -Oo;u r V•t.,. a• San•• I.re
Valle• Mate< Oe v\ A f'..,11"• .,, S100•t
Dae• ) I) D"' Communlf't Celle99 C.c. t:>t" Wt \I
O•anoe Coa\t at Cut\•O "•·•at.ona
SATURDAY
H191'1 School -'"' Re11. F nbl\ ... Betmont P•all 1 JO D ~ Wnlmon\ltr
O.v1no 1nv·ta••ona1 ~ a m
OHO ~• filftin9
DAVE Y'$ LOCK£1t (New-1 llffctll
-6l •"G"'"' \S\ •oc~ coo , <O• roo
NllW"OltT LANDING INtWHrl ~ !16 • ..., ... , I W 0 Dtu le 'OC• ,,,,._ 1 \Cu O·"
WMtctnd tnnMdien'
I AH I ALL
AmMtClllLH-
CH!(AC.0 WMITf \())( lt111rn.a I"
egr"men1 w 111 <ht •• C.amDJt OYll•ftlellf
O'I • -·•ta r CO""''' MILWAUkEE 81UWEIU-~nt Jve n
N '"'" ••lfMI• to tl"••r "'\•"Of ••llUI
com0ot• 1 " r N\t•ll,,.,,..,,,
NllllNIL-NEW VORk METS 51"1 Jflf 9,11-
ftrfY \t II •l'IO """ Poe.kttt O•IC,,_n [ 0 M .. r., e"ll 8t"V l •Ofl\ ~41l4Mf\ a!ICI
LI~ T•'vt'• O\.''~ IO l"t• -... 0 .... CO""'OOil• IOf 'flU g-1
H LOU•~ (JlltO•NAl\-\~ JOI
CIVIi' A"Cll;ie• 10 t(..... I e lllrff .... ,
(OftlrKI
I ASt<•TIALL ............ _. ..... A'*"'-'
PMtL.A0 1!'L.ftH14 1'tltS-"' l t lO c ff"'O'I "'''~ (t"t .. O' .... """'° ,,
S ~ .. ,._ H •t\ "°'" 10 • 10 Oh
COLLI CO I
NO•tHwl \T .,,, ~T A IL Ne"'•"
00<'\ !IN' • "t~O IN\• llDI t Cl\ ~TH CA•CX. NA 1tt 11t.••o •NI COl'I
•retl ol Jot Morr \Of! 1111 d IGO't>I" t " '"'..,.ii , ...
GA AM. M-. (Al')-l.Cltnd-
ary Bot.on 8Ntn1 dtftntetnM Eddie w.,Shott. wbo l\ayed in hodle)' for J6
years •fter rruretMnt 11 owncrof'IM
Amencan HCX'Uy LapitSpnqlJIJ
Indians. d~ Slturday. He ... "12.
The Hall offanv pllya. wboclilll
at I I p.m.Saturday atMttty~
in prinlfiekl had bttn in ~:f heallh for some tirM. He l\ed n.
the hospital Feb. 28.
Shore is idoliJ'Cd by veteran ,8oetoll
Br,tuns fans who have rtt0ll«tionl ol
his cnd-te><nd rushn, devMIMl.111 '
bod) checks and everylhina elK be
did to pla nt tM lttds of hoctey
interest 1n the National Hockey uaaue city. •
Considered by many• the patne
defcnscman of all tune. SbOre was
born 1n Fort Quep~ll. S&sbtcbewan.
No'. 2S. JlX>2. and moved up
throu&h amateur ranks 10 Mdv1lle
Milhona1m (Senior) in a~ 1923-24
season From there. he &raduat.cd to pro-
fessional ranks w1t6 the ResaM Caps
of the WC$tl'm Hockey Leaaut.
makina his start as a forward. He
moved blck to defcn.se with Edmon·
ton in 1926. when the Eskimos won
the ehampionship of the WHL.
Shore was the prize that then·
Boston Coach An Ross drew for
Bosto n when the WHL folded.
Short broke into the NHL in
1926-27 with ~ Bruins. He infused
the m wi th a spirit and color that
promptly lifted them from last place
to second place in the NH l 's Ameri-
can Division.
Previously ignored by Bostonians.
the Bruins.developed a loyal follow-
ing because of Shore.
Hammy Moore. who was the
Boston trainerdurinaSbore's heyday.
ontt saTd-of-Shore's-st~le-of attack-
'hat" he was the onjy player I ever saw
who had the whole arena sta ndina
ever) time he rushed down the ice."
Dunng his l 3-ycar stay with the
Bruins. Shore scored 108 p is and
added 179 assists, and in that time
was on three cham_piqnship teams
I
and two Stanley Cup winne-:.s-_ _..,.
~~and 1-93~ •.
DAVIS ..•
From Bl
tacks to the weather mark Perry
.sh~ lcad-to..1.9..seconds..but.
could not gatn furher on Davis until
the second downwtnd leg when he
reduced the splj u o ej&ht ~o_nds. On
the shon-v.eather leg to the fi nish.
Da' 1s kept a tight cover on his
opponent and won b) 13 seconds.
The 'Ntn robbed Pert) of his third
straight Congressional Cup cham-
p10nsh1p
··11 JU5t v.-asn·1 our da~ :·said Pert)
alter the race . .\sked about th<' flap
0' er the reefing ruh ng he said. ··11 was
a good call t'\Cn 1fthe wand did abatt'
some before the fi nish of the race. It
v.ould ha'e ~n toohsh to sun
"llhout r(.'('fing 1n that 25-knot
brl'l'tl' ··
.\\ll•d 1f his n('\t slop would be
Perth ..\ustralta. Davis gnnned and
\aid ··\_\ l''ll take 'em one at a 11me ··
Da' ,~: tac11c1an was Doug Rastello
of Nc\\port Beach "ho "'II also be
calling the· mo' es in the .\menca's < up trials. come 1986 Others tn the
cr<'"' "'ert· . kip &ck. taller: Geoff
D:l\ 1s. gnndc::r-Dave M1ll<'r. bow:
R t'\ Banks. mast
Judges for this ~ear's Congressional
(up "'ere Bill Ficker. Newpon
Harbor 't a ht Club. H~nn .\dt'rson.
"'e" 't or~ YC . .\k ' FO~) the. Ro)'al
\. anrnu' er Y<. Chuck ~Fuller. Long
Reach 't C C ' Gillette. Kanc-ohe YC'
( huck t\.ober. LBYC: Richard
Latham ( h1cago YC': Downie Muir
Il l l'h11.'f 1udgc. LBYC. and Juhan
Rtx>~' l'h Ro) al Cork YC. I re land.
Showdown
PHRFwinner
\h11~dov. n. \~1ppcred b) Pete
\kade oft he host club. wai. the Class
.\ "tnncr in Capistrano Ba) Yacht
C tut,.., lit Patrtcl ·s Da} race Sunda)
tor l\•r111rma n\c Handicap Racing
F kl'I 'al ht'>
< l.1" B "1nnrr "'a Rampa~c.
... 11kJ h' l.an•c McCabe. Dana Point
't arht c°l uh and the Class C wtnner
"a' Da,hreak. skippered b) Dick
\mtov.cr Capo B't C \\ i'iim·r 1n tbc Non p1nnal erClass
3' \11.'nehunr Bob hearer. Capo
R'IC
'iummaf\ 1>f rc\ult'
ll,.S\ 4 1 SPIOwoown ~tt Me-Ct oo
8•• YC 2 S•ero•rer Bvron W•t\Oll CI YC l
llto""' F•ea ...,., cave
C1..4SS 8-1 ll•rnoeM Linet McCabe Oent
Po "' Y( ' aol E 0 Bu ll OPYC l COIO Ru•h
""" a•o Don 8ec11~ CllYC (LASS C-1 OevDrH~ Boo G•!ft. CI YC 2
V"'9•' 8CM1•men O<ll AmlOWef C.llVC
NON Sl>INNAKER-1 ~ 800
!>ct1earer CI YC 1 Touc11 N Go L.IOYd Fornttl cave J w .. ,_ Mol(line Jol'tnlon. DPYC
Fulton capture. ref•ttll * •
t-on' boat'i tumcd out Saturda) for
Rah1a < onnth1an Yacht Club's an-
nual 'it Patm·k·., Da) R,•gatta. sa1IC'd
on cou~' tn'l1dc the ha~ Tm ph)
~tnner'
~HIELOS-1 C.r t11 F-u11on M•rvev Mudct
COlie<>e
LASEii-i Steve OoO<I L.•Pltlne YC
LIDO 14 I Marlv Lockllh LIOO ltlll YC )
M•r~ C.e uOoO I C YC l Chad T wlClllfl l•IDCMI
"l'C
5NtPE-1 0 •1' Sn omen Alem•IO\ , .. YC
OEFCNOE.11' 11-1 ./Of\'1 A1t111noer C•Dr"O
1 .. cn YC
SABOT A I "'"'"'<Nim ~" 0...0 YC
~AIOT 8 -1 ~"" M•ftlOfl I CY(. 2 H<I""
"'•"-)Oull•wttt..-" YC !>AIOT C-1 Gtoli C.8'1'1\0fl N_._1 HarW vc ~
Scllmldt lfHTC Yictor
llu o hm1d of t'wpon Harbor
't. ,ht< luh ~on \hr . l Patmk' Do
R~ 11.i \unda\ 1n a fhc-raC't ~nt's
tor Lchman-12 sailed II\ H't
"-"\ond "11'-Tonf hcxk NHV(
and 1hml ~3' o tt Barnard. ""
---
~ C... OAIL:V PILOT~. MltCt'I 11, 198&
Beverly Hills Sctvlngs promotes
Pearson to senior vice president
Laguna Niguel resident Br.ce Pearson has bt>en promo1ed to senior vice
presiden1 at Beverly HUit Savlll11. As such. hr is in ch!lrgc of 1hc associa1ion's
savinas division and works out of 1he administrati vc offices in Mission Viejo.
Pearson brings 20 years experience ~o his new post. serving wi1h Beverly Hills
Savings since 1980. ••• Irvine resident Cra.lg Sttvtas has joined IDM Securltiu Corp. as di.rector
of Optralions and compliance. with resJ)onsibility for operations functions of
1he firm and assistance in marketing real estate limi1ed partnerships. He is also
responsible for tnsuring compliance wi.lh all regulatory agencies. Stevens was
formerly assistant vice president, chieffinanc1al t>fficer and compliance officer
atAmericu Dlvertlflecl Equity Con. ' . . David K. LeJclltfass has joined Tlae Hammond Co. as executi ve vice
president in charge ofloan origination and marketing for 1he Newport Beacfl-
bascd rnortpge banker. He replaces Wayne K. Caffey, who has been named
cxcc1,1tive vice president of builder rela1ions. He comes 10 The Hammond Co.
from TM Mealn Co., also of Newport Beach. • • • WUUam James PUtmu has been named ch1cffinancial officerofN'ewport
Jobs in County spre>uting
as spring of' 8 .5 approacfi es
Th e sprinatime' job outlook is on
the upswing for the Orange County
area.
That is lhe conclusion of 1hc
Manpower. Inc. Employment
Oullook Survey for the second quar·
1er (April. May. June) of 1985.
According to the survey. 33 percent
of the employers inlcrvicwed expect
to add staff this spring. whi le only 5
percent plan decreases. The other 62
percent expect to maintain present
levels. ·
Marjorie Banok. manager ofMan-
power s Orange County •office. said,
.. This represents an improvement
uver las! quarter. when 20 percent
anticipated additions and 5 percen1
said the y would decrease staff. A
comparable survey last year was not
as bright. with ·only 17 percenl
reporting hiring intentions and 3
percent reducing staff."
the post-Christmas layoffs that occur
in the first qual'1er. but the 29 perttnl
planning new hiring and 6 percent
cxptcting declines in April. May and
June is well behind last year's pace of
32 percent planning additions with
only 4 percent expec1i ng to cut staff.
Prospects in the upcomina quarter
will be besl in the Northeast. while
hiring by the Southern and Wes1ern
firms will Ix> below 3vcrage.
FINANCE, INSURANCE, REAL ES-
TATE
For the second s1raight quarter. the
outlook in the finance. insurance and
real estate sector continues 10 Ix>
bright. Only in the Midwestern area
are there signs of employment stagna·
uon in the industry. Expcc1at1ons 1n
all other areas exceed 1he national
averaJe. where 25 percent of the
companies in terviewed anticipate
employment additions. while only 4
percent foresee decltnes. Financial
firm s are facing their most optimistic
period since 1977.
SERVICES
The growth in service jobs will
continue unabated. This sector.
which added the largest number Of
jobs in 1984. will continue the. tr~no
of recent years. A Iota! of28 percenl of
the firms in terviewed intend to hire
additional workers. while only 6
percent will be decreasing. Expecta-
1ions in the Northeast lag somewhat
behind those of other areas. ~~t~ern
companies are th e most op11m1sl1C'.
'EDUCATION .
Job prospects in the cducauon
field. a big stainant three.months ago.
should remain at the same slow
grow1h level in the quarter ahead.
Among schools contacted. 14 per,·ent
will be hiring during April. May. and
lune. Only 6 percent will be decreas·
ing th e number of employees. but the
willingness 10 hire laj5 behind 01her
industries and remains close to the
low levels of a year 1$0. Prospec1s are
a bi1 more fa vorable 10 1he Northeast
and West. but Midwest schools
indicate that no growth in thr
cmploymenl level isexpec1ed.
IRS study cited as proof
that Reagonomics is working
The local outlook for lhe coming
quarter is more optimistic compared
to the national outlook. where 27
percent of over 12.000 companies
polled said they would hire additional
employees and only 6 percent
planned to cut. The local picture R t b r· --Democrat) '>aY 1he program IS
compares favorably with other cities epor say num ers 0 upper-income unfair to lower-income people. who.
in lhe Weslem region. where 26 because the size of the tax cut was
percent oflhecompaniesinterviewed people, their s hare of tax burden up proportional 10 taxes paid. rcali~ed intend to add employees. while 7 far fewer dollars from the reductton
percent expect reductions. ·lhan did 1he wealthy. (For example. a
Local job opportunities arc predic-WASHINGTON (AP) -Admin-in !he number of upper-income 23-percent tax cut saves S230 a for a
ted by durable and non-durable goods istration supporters arc ci ting an people -and. thus. in their share of ~rson who pays $1 .000 in laxes and .....man.llfauurec~h.o..Jua.~e1ai I incrcase._in__tbe__number of ull.P$. -the tax burden -was caused b)'. .J]J.000 for one ..Pari!!s S ICl0.000).
merchants. and educational mstilu-income Americans and their share of gen$ral econonilcg rowtn anarrma:-Repubilcans say t at Is falroecausc It
tions. Other industries should remain the federal income-lax burden as tion. is 1he wealthy who can use lax cuts to
at about the pre~nt le,vel. . proof 1hat President Reagan's econ-"It wo uld be nice lo ~liev~ that the invest in ways 1hat benefit 1he Onageograph 1~b~s1s.al.l~eg1onsof omil.'policiesarewor~: -.-:..__ number of taxpayers mak.1 ng over economy. __
-lhe.-U.S. show s1m1lar hmng-pht ~w report ftOiTl the lntema ~S;eOO a year~ Th IRS 1 h d ti..ar
with a slightly more favorable Revenue Service shows the number permanently" becaus.e of the tax cuts. ~ 1 rcpork.s owe s·75 000 'BOSLEY FRITTS HUCHINGSON HANNA
Beach-based the J.M. Peters Co. He comes to Peters from a position as vice
presjdent and Airzona division manag.er for Robert P. Warmington Co. • • • Fred Bosley has joined Tbe William Lyon Co. as project manager for lhe
firm 's north Orange County division and Frank Jensen Jr. has been appointed
field operations manaser for The William Lyon Co.'s San Bernardino division.
Jensen's responsibilitles include the Victoria master-planned community in
Rancho Cucamonga. wher~mm.e.lhan .8..000 homes arc u.ndeLCOJlSltUCJion. ••• Corona del Mar resident Robert E. Fritts has been named vice president
of Newport Beach-based Bren Co. and president of Bren Co. Southern
Division. In his new post. Fritts heads all Southern California residential
homebuild ing acti vities for the firm . ••• Diane Hocbingson, sales agenl at Coldwell Banker's new homes division.
based in Irvine. has received membership in the company's President's Club
fod\er salesmanship. Only lhe top 5 percent oft he company's sales agents are
members of the club. ••• Urologist Jolla E. Haana has been elec ted Costa Mesa Center Hospital's
chief of staff for 1985. The Laguna Niguel resident serves on various hospital
co mm ittee. and was chairman of the emergency room commi11ee las1 year. He
also holds memberships in the Orange County Medical Association and the
Orange County Urological A11odaUoa. 0 1her medical staff officers include:
Frederick Flres&oae, president elect. vice chief of staff: Korey S. Jorgensen,
l mmedia1e f as1 chief of staff: Charles Robertson, secretary/1reasurer and
):hairman o medical records/utilization review: AUiia M Martinet, chief of
pathology/infection conlrol: Bruce Walter, member at large: Tlaomas
Scbnelder, member-at-large and chiefof medicine: and Frant DI Flore, chief of
surgery. '
Laguna Hills resident Cathy Bryan Jackson has been promoted 10 vice
president of City National Computer Services, a division of Beverly Hills-
based City National Bank. Jackson. who also serves as marketing and business
developmenl offi cer. is responsible for new busi ness development. She joined
'Ci ty Na1ional Bank in 1980. and is an active member of the Bank
Admlniatrators ln1titpte. ••• Newport Beach residcnl Robert Goodman has been named direc1or of
sales for the Southern Ca lifornia region of Irvine-based Ponderosa Homes.
Goodman has been with Ponderosa since 1976. most recently as a sales
representati ve. He holds a real estate broker's license. • • • Laguna Beach resident Rhonda Fedden has been named vice president of
Burton Advertising ofCosla Mesa. She has been with Burton srnce.197&. most
recently as account supervisor/operations director. She serves as special
adviser to the Sales & Marketing Council's executi ve commi11ee and as the
1985 chairwoman of the MAME a~ards. th e organization 's annual honors
program. She is also a membt>r of the Institution of Residential Ma rketing and
has served on several committees for the National Association of
Homebuilders. She was also on the communications committee of the 1984
Olympic committee.
NEW YORK (AP) -The following lisl 11 shows the Over -the • Counter 12 $locks and warran15 that have .gone up 13 ~ mosl and down the most based on 14 cent of change for Frldav. 15 o securities trading below S2 or 1000 16 shares are Included. 17 Net and perctnta11e changes are the 118 difference between the rreviou~ closing 9 Did Price and Frlda)''S las bid price, 20 UPS 21 Name Last Cha Pct. 22
3
1 ~ullFed 21h + 11/e UP 81.8 23 2 vrgTh 31n + ~ Up 21.7 24 nr11ro 4111 i J;., Up 20.g 25 4 tis un 1 3 '•'l UP 20. 26
PrvBost CelrPr
Ve11aBlo BusCmo Hylek Store wt Summa Oh Fero M ol8 io Prod~v Optel P Wlkr el Store wt Algorex CaliCPt Un Warn S ldlMd 21/e 5· 16 Up 17.2 6 Otfsvlle 23(. + ~ UP 15.8 7 LfeScl 2 S-16 + 5· 16 UP 15.6 Name I HelenT
' ~vmbin ~3M + 1/l UP S.4 9 vntne-2 21-2 + 11 -32 UP 0 10 llCPY 119 + \ii Up 13.9
2 ACMAT 3 Ritzvs 4 CullnFr
3118 + ~ 2~ +5-16
252·16 + 'I• ~ + ''• 2 9-16 + 'I• 293/c + 2~ 3~ + -lti !~ 13-n 39 31h
' 9~ ¥t 4~ -lti ]'h + ~ . ~ + ~
DOWNS Lal/ Cha Vi = r h ,,. -'" I -31/•
Up 13.t UP 13. UP It ~~ IU
UP 1~,7
UP 1 .i Up 1 . 8~ 1g:
Up 9.7 UP M Up 9.1 UP 9.1
UP 9.1
Pct
gn tl:~ 8n H.6
outlook in the Midwest. where hiring of people with incomes above he said. "But it would be too fil d f~P <' ma, in, ~ver · fi
has advanced at a slower pace in $75.000 a year rose by 5o oercenl optimistic to ~y that now." ~inarik' 1•9e8~ · ~perce1n ° 1 ~ ~e~3uOmTs h or recen1 quarters. · • r::-suggested a major part of the income . ·'·up irom percent 1n · ~y Within vari,qus industry sectors. since 198q and that. th~y paid 25·6 game for wealthier people was due to paid 25.6 per<:ent of the taxes. Their
seasonal advances are expected in the percent of in~ome tax.es in 1 9~3. That a booming stock market that total federal incom~ taxes rose 38
construction field and improvement COf!lpared wtth 20.S percenl in I 980. produced large increases in capilal percent over !he.period.
over last quarter will come in the an.!ncreast;-of 25 per-cenL garns. -Those earning between $19.000
manufacturing finance and whole-The figures confirm what was . and $75.000 filed 38.S percent of the
sale-retail industries: with the strong-argued in 198 1" when ~cagan's ta-x-~Ms. ~rnf'ein ~nd frenzc agreed returns (u p from 33 percent) and paid
es outlOOICJS'reJelfrtrrrhe-servi~~pragr-am wa5-f*t-ssed.-G~-it-n _ ..lhaLpai:Lo o the .mcome ...boasLw~ --OJ..pe-r.c~t:th~a.xe"-lhc..same.as.fo
sector. All seclors show intended a!'alys t f?r ~epublican i:nembers ~f caused by rnflauon and .economic 1980. Their tax burden .was up 10
hiring levels below last year. wilh the < ongre.ss Jo.mt Economic Commit· g~wt~. ?u1 ~01 'tCrlhe extent that percent.
sharpest year-10-year drop predicted t.:e. said . Friday. Those arg~ments Minarik implied. . ..:_Taxpayers making less 1han
by durable good manufacturers. who held t~at if tax rates on upper-1nc.ome w T~e new figures released this week $19.000 a year filed jus1 under 60
showed very sharp increases last year. A.me~icans were reduced ~onsrder-fi ere we first IO be based on rel urns percent of1he returns for 1983. down CONSTRUCTION abl y. they would transfer therr money iled. or lhe 1983 tax yea.r. They from 66 percent for 1980 T.ti4-paid
A seasonal rebound from the <•ut of t~x s~elters into productive. c~ntrnue t~e ~attern ~otcd '"· 1982. 12.3 percent oflhe Uixes .. down from
inacti vi1y of win.1er ~ill be underway JO~reaung rn veSlf!lents. .. . -k e yea; I e ·~st i:naJor r~on of 17 percent. The total tax burden for
for !he cons1ruct1on industry and that ThF. evade.nee is clear Iha! . is ea$.?~ s tax re u~lion too euect. of 1 his group dropped almost 22 percent.
recovery extends into the Southern happening. said Ra~heUe Bcrns1e1n. a shift in the ~otal income-lax burden The IRS report dealt onl ' with
states despite the fact that winier manager of tax pohcy for the U.S. to the wealthier. foderal income taxes. It drd not
weather. isn·1 much of a deterrent in Chamber of Commerce. The Rea.gan's program. e.nacted in . consider two other major economic
thal ree1on. Except for the unusually chamber ~as been ~ .vocal supporter 1981 . included a 23-perccnt cut in tax changes that have taken place during
brisk hiring in t~e second quarter last of Reagan s tax poltcaes. . rates. for most taxpayers. But ii also the Reagan years. Those changes. a
year. const~ucuon compa!11es are .But another analy~t. Joseph . Mtn· provided .an extra ~st 10 uppe~-Social Securily ta x increase and ~ow expressing,.mo~e opt1m1sm than an~ oft~e Ur~an lnst11ute. c~uttoned income people by. slashing th~ maxr-reduc1ions in the growth of various
rn any quarter since 1,979. The a~rnst JUf!lP•1!8 10 conclusions. He mum lax rate on investment income spending programs. fell dispropor-
Northeast and South are most op-said a cons1derab~rt of the growth from 70 percenl to 50 percent. 1ionately on I hose al lower incomes
timistic. while Western building ·
firms are more cautious than usual.
MANUFACTURING
The hiring ex~ctations of non-
durable goods manufac1urers are
exceptionally bright. approaching
mid-1984 record levels and surpass-
ing all other quarters in the survey's
nine-year history. This classification
represents the besl job opportunities
in the Western stales this quarler and
lhe outlook is also good in 1he
Northeast.
Durable goods manufac turers face
quite a different picture. Employ-
ment prospects lag somewhat behind
comparable quarters of previous
yea rs. Western and Midwes1ern com-
panies hold higher expec1a1ions than
other areas.
WHOLESALE·RET AIL
Wholesale and reta il employers
will once again be hiring. following
S Barton 6 Prot'-ol 7 MaxE un 8 AdCPI 9 Cooenic 10 Moncor 11 Scilnc s 12 SvprEQ 13 VlconF 14 Hllhln 15 BIWCb ii ~~fd
2j tnllSJi
l
2
4 f4r~; S PlvmrR 6 Wr1gtt1L
~--11111;11:111 •• r-----------------
-
OD ~
the
1
WHAT AMEX Orn
• '' • • • .. • t
Advanced Decllnea
Unc11anoe<i Toral issues Newlliglls
New IOw'
AM£X LEA DER S
f>rev. dav ?17
JU ts '
Nt:W YUl(fl. l Al"I -~In ... P.m. price an4 net change of tne ten most ecrive American Stocll Exeharige i'sun rreding l'laliona llv al more lllan SI. WanoLabB BAT Ind
Ecno8av o Verbatim Data Proa KevPharm 8rownFor B Rune II AmPalAI TIE Comm
lli; m· m . 176,. 17S, l~· 14''
NEW YORK (AP -Most active o~
tne ·counter stocks su1>911ed bv NASO.
Name V.Qlume 8iid Asked Cllt MCI 1,AJS,400 'ill ~1' -.,. AppteC 809 900 2 "2 ~ + ~ 1nt1Sv 74S~OO ~ '·'l -._ Gene!Cll 7l'JOO •S'"> •S~ -'I'> Alld6n 702,:B' 2•~ 2A~ -V'J LeeDta SS7, S~ 53.11 -11\ lt1lel SAO, 2Al~ 2S + 1. CullnFr 415,800 19 191 > -31,.. ~6~1f 387,900 7 1'" ""'~ FExec 379,SOO 1'~ IA~ +
GoLo QuoTE S
SelKtMI WO(IO OOIO ,,,_ MOndlly"
~ "'°'''"'0 It•~ $193.70, 111)$1 00
l.....,. atte,,,oon h1.1n9 Ute IS uo $6 1S ,., .. ,_n.,._ 1,.,ng S292 17. uo $4 27
Frenl!N<t ''°I'll S293 tO up S• 08 l"'"'" t•t• ette.noori 1>o<1 UM SO up S1so,1299 80 ... .., .. .
......., I ...,_,°"'I' 4alfy quote) S2M M . ue> 14115
I,......,_ lonty 4•11y quo1e1 S29t U, up M 1 S l~ ~ fonty «*IV qvol•I AIA 21 lop Ud NY c-• QOld 9POI monfh ,.,. ,,_. 50 llCI as 50
, MET ~Ls Quons
NEW Y()lll!C fAf'I -Soot ._.,.._ ~ P"1!W
"'-41Y ~ •I llO CN!lt I* oaund. HY C-t11181
mon1n doMcl '" c....,. t4~·61 -." • POuM u a _.......... c...., se 2.0 -ta .,., pouno NY c-. ..,..
1N111t"1e10MOF'n
L.-H ·2 I cen11 a !>OUM
Dtie 45 c.119 • pownd, Otll!Wr«I
Tiii U 61H Me( ... W.... ~·lb
--"810 Ot1t outlCe H~ & ~lltlMll ..... U It• O« t«>y-, N'f C-IPCll fl'IOlllll
etc>MOll'.rl
...,_, l3lOOO-U1000per 1111>n-'--"on.
,....,_. ~ 00·1250 00 0-lit "*'f.'IWll lf'Oy . _ ....
That· s an a pt desert ption of both bust ness and
,
business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of
where companies are going and which people are helping
them get there.just watch 'Credit Line' -everyday i n the
..,..• ____ Business ~ectton of yo~r new· a.ly Pilat· '
------~··-
• , J
by Tom Battuk DOONUBURT
--
~i~~
---11-----~
J
I
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
"You better stop that, Jeffy! Mommy
_con see you in he_r little mirror."
BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE
-
''I think Marmaduke Is trying to tell us
that It's cold outside."
by Hank Ketcham
~ 3-18 l
-~
~f};~
"THIS CAMOUFLASE SUIT OOE~l WORK .
MrtW ILSON CAN STILL SEE ME ~~
·~
!
DRABBLE by Kevin Fagan
GARFIELD
MOON MULLINS
As AeeeY GOES TO VIS IT AUNT
Belr1, LAURA
TA4..KS WITH
SAM•
M~ ~E.RO, ~f. MAL.ONE.
ul\L.L ~nWT TO R£1MN ~\? c~·~MPl~'\.\IP
~(,M~~T
01RT6~
J0f'4E.~\
1 l.()Jf. ~ ~TuN61.
IT ''> ~ CC>Nif.?T Of
~1R.f.NC:ill-l ~f'lO CU~\~,
~O Ii"' ~€.~~
O\&~l~IE.0 I
~'"'~··
YOO'RE ACTING'
STRANGE.l.IJ
LATELY,
GARFIELt7
by Jim Davis
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
PEANUTS
1£1" rr WON'T.
\
NT
IT MU
\
NT
If
/ll(Jl('f.
\
by Berke Breathed
~I ~/ I • -
DO 't'OV MIND IF I WMAT 00 't'OU REALLY waL, LET ME SEE ...
ASK '(OU SOMETHING? TMINK TME CAANCES AAE ~W CAN I PUT IT ?
WHEN SOMEONE DOESN'T
KNOW MOW TO PUT
TAAT YOU AND I WILL
6ET MAA~EtlSOMEDAY?
FOJLBETTER.OR FOil WORSE _~-
UH. ll"PH< Yoo -
UM~ ~
TUMBLEWEEDS
IT, VOU_J(MOW '(OU've 8E~N PUT r--
by Ly11n Johnaton
... ~~
Tlf'P~
by Tom K. Ryan
ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ
Q.1-Roth vulnerllble, u South you
hold:
+QJ09752 ~ A98 OJ102 •S
The bidding has proceeded:
Weet North E..t Snt ..
I • Pua Pa11 ?
What act.ion do you take?
A. -In the direct seat, this hand
would not qualify for a vulnerable
overcall of one spade. ln~pa111out po~ition. however, you t otf!ct
against the possibility tha artner
has been forced inlo making a trap
pas!I on a good hand with clubs. You
are not strong enough for a balanc·
Ing double, so bid one spade.
Q.2-Both vJtnerftble, a~ South you
hold:
•5 l~KQ.(762 O KJt •AJS
The bidding \tu proceed~d: w .. t N..U E..t s .. ta.
l • PaN Pua ?
What do you bid now? ~
A.-You are much LOo strong for a
balancing bid of one heart.
However, you can't dford a double
because of your spade shortneH -
partner might insist on a spade con·
tract. The tolullon Is to Jump t'l two
heart.a. Jn the balancinc .eat, that
show• a one·tuit.ed hand of at leut
o~nlng bid atr,.ngth.
Q.J -Both vulnerable, 11 South you
hold:
•KJ_. <:>AH OQJIOI .....
The bidding haa proceeded:
Wtet N_.. FM& 8"*'
1 • P... .... ?
What do JOU bid now?
A.-In tht balandn1 seat, a one
spade overcall could be made on a
hand conalderably weaker than this.
In addJUon, you can't even be 1ure
that apad • 11 your beat 1pot. Dou
ble. In the balancinr eat, you can
make I( takeout double wll.b a
'
weaker hand than In the direct posi·
tion.
I..
Q.4-Both v.ulnerable, as South you
hold: + QJH <:>At O QJ105 •Kl02
The bidding has proceeded:
We.t N_.. Eut 8"*'
1 • P... P... 1
What action do you t.ake?
A.-You have a balanced hand wllh
a stopper in the enemy suit. Bid one
DMAI
SHAii FF
no trump. In the p1110ut seat, that
action shows about 12·15 pofnt.a -
wlth 16-18, you would firat double
and then bid no trump at tht
. cheapest level.
Q.&-Both vulnerable, u South you
hold:
•AJt ~H OJltU •AK11
The bidding haa proeeedecl:
Wett N_.. Eu& 8-tla .
t • r.. ... 1
What action do you take?
A.-BecauM of your lenrth and
atrenrth In clube, It I.I obvious that
partner did not make a trap pua.
Therefore, tM rat..1 to have a fairly
~••k .. and. Sf ne. tM oppoeeata are
in your Mil l\llt, pua. It ..... that
Wtft hat a .tron1 hand, 10 If JOU
reopen the bkldin1 you eould ...U7
drtve the opponent1Intoa1upertor
conLract -heart.I, for 11ample. You
mlrht not •••n bt able to dtfNt a
pme.
Q.t-Both vulnerable, .. So.th JGU
hold:
•KQJ98Z OS •KJloeU ,
Your right·hand opponent opens the
bidding with one heart . Whal do
you bid now?
A:-It look• 11 ii there Is going tc
be some heavy bidding on this hand
If you overcall one spade, the bid
ding could eaaily be at four heart.I
when next It Is yoi.tr turn, and yol
won't know what to do. If, however
you chooae t.o overcall two clubs, m
CHAil£$
Go1£1
development Of the auction can em-
barrau JOU. You will •Imply ahow
your apadtt at the approprfat• level
to eomplei. the deecrlption of your
two-suit.cl hand.
Brau ring •till beckon•
•:::Jininer woaldn't enjoy tbe~U of a •P rfde on a wo04en etalllon? llerry-
10-roan date to 12tb century Arabia
where •killed honemen played the .tam• of
••uttte war.'' riding In a circle and tbrowlq
Butex-membero
Mouseketeers and.
Shandells mellow
"Good 1uys. bed 1uys. rich
1
is rich. T~ white-collar worker or tk dC.r
in the ditch. And who's to say who's
the better man when I always do tbe
best I can."
"S..e&lmet G--4 G•Y• Dea'& W•i ....... -n.e Slullelk, 1 tM
By TOM BOKARAE ........... ~ ....
As a !Cw Happy Hour customers
queue up to sample the complimen-
tary barbecued ribs. Dick Dodd is
making a living. Working with a local
DJ. he'~ playing records-some new.
most old.
While introducing songs. ~
provi des some. often personal. anec-
dotes about the tunes. Between mike
work. hc pinballs from table to table.
chatting and thanking customers for
their patronage and reminding-them
that h1<i band plays at the T .C.
Peppercorn restaurant Thursdays
through Saturdays.
hough Oodd.-J!}..cn}Oy.s the-wottt--
and candidly refers to the job as "a
comeback ... the above scene in the
longtime Huntington Beach res-
taurant is not one with which he 1s all
that comfortable. There one was a
difference in his career. a big dif-
ferenre.
A 19-)'Caf resident of Huntington
~~.u. -.000.._...,.d .... s.._.tarted Uubow--bi
years ago. While performing in a stage-
show put on by Stover Lane Dance
School. the 9-~.car-old hoofer caught
the C)C ofa Wah Disney talent scout.
Aftor three gruelingaud111ons. each
showcasing more than 200 talented
kids from all pans of the couotry.
Dodd was chosen to be one of
-Disney' ousc c eers: 1c 1e.
(fu lS no rcJation to the late
Mouscketcer leader. Jim my Dodd.)
<\ftcr th~ seasons 1n cars. he and
J ohnn} Crawford. late r of
.. Rifleman·· fame. received their
mousckc-pink shps.
Dick Dodd (baeet) of a.....,._ 8.-c~ waatll more eoa-n~ wttfa lloa8eketea' pMt ... nconl l'OJ&)tlea. .
circuit with her and Ja k ~nwn~.---DllrDJ.-Ju' ,,_just-sU around for-four:;....._.---'
1 e wtth Disney. Dodd was hours. then play a little and collect
taught to play the drums by t~fathtt &ood money. I was working with
of fello" Mouseketeer Cubby Sonrn' Bono. Leon Russell. Phil
O'Brien. During his Redondo Beach Spector and Glen Campbell. all who
High School years. Dodd played in were knockinJ down a grand a week.
locall) successful surf-sound bands. It was rough.' _
Orange Count) then was a mecca But Dodd did not drop off into
for radio station-sponsored hops oblivion. In 1965. on the strength of "I wa~ devastated. I panicked . Out
of work at 12... he says· only-so-
1okingl}. "I 1mmediatel) called my
agent and screamed at her. "Hey.
where Dodd's group performed as a De hannon·s rccommendauon. he
. "house band.'' behind touring an1slS 101ncd up with The Standells of Los
hkc the Beach Bo)'s. Righteous .\n~elcs. Soon af\er. he collaborated
a fra&lle clay baU of ecentecl water from rider
to nder. The more eklllfal remained an·
marked by perfume. Caroueel• are ecarce
today. bat they •till daeh Into fantuy at
South CCMUt Plaza or eome mueeum•.
come o n. do something. I need a job.·
She '>Cnt him to an audition where
Ill' and thrt•c other bo-.-cntertatners
wen· l'hO'ien to JOin singer Gisele
MacKcn11t• for two vcars on her
tclcv1s1on show and two )ear-son the
Lac; l'lta'i. Lale Tahoe and Rt·no
Brothers. Sonm and Cher (then h · rod I · Ed lnown a'i Caew and Cleo) and the wit t e group s P ucer wnter Cobb to wnte a song about an et>ne ( oastl'I"\ One touring 1ngcr. Jat·k1e Cobb c\ix•nence with muggers on his
DeShannon. llked Dodd.o;drum "ork inp to Boston. The song. "Dirt )
and hired him to be her studio Water.·· sold :! million copies and
drummer. 'aulted ThC' tandells into national
He now \3~ c; ~rc-asttc-alh . "I got (Pl-...._ SHOW /C2)
National award prompts .a fx_iendlyce1ebration
John C. Crean will be among
Hora tio Alger honorees in · 85
By BETTY PORTER
Dally Pttel C.,n Ill I •111
··Prc!i1dcnt Reagan was a rcc1p1ent and so were Bob
Hope and Dr. Norman Vincent Peale-and now' one of
our fr.iel)ds. John C. Crean, is one of the people who will
recc1 vc the prestigious Horatio Alger awards on May I 0
1n New York ... announced a joyous Tom Faente1 (with
wife Jolene ). head of the Orange County Republican
party.
The annual "Rags to Riches" award honors
Amer1 :ans who rise to success from humble beginnings
and wl1o arecommunity leaders dedicated to helping
the less fortunate.
(See more Paparo.I, Pa6e C4.J
The J 985 awardsannouncemeni.appeared in
newspapers on Mo nday so that more than IOOof
Crean's friends understood why they had been invited
by DouaCreaa for cocktails and aaourmc1 dinner party
celebration Tuesday at Carmelo's restaurant in Corona
del Mar.
"lt'<1 1rue that John (who was born in 1925 on a
North.Dakota farm) was poor." Donna said of her
husband who is chairman oft he board o f Fleetwood
Enterprises. Inc .. which manufacturesmobilebomes
and repor1edly took in a billion dollars in.sales fast year.
"Jo hn's mother wasa hard-workinajanitress11nd as
a child. he sold newspapers and shined shocstohdpput.
··My own ch ildhood wascomparauvclyeasiJrand I
h~d everything I needed until I married John and he n
the goi na was rouah 1 here for awh ile."
There wa~ h1tle question that thOS( "rough da)'s"
.1 ~ ..........................
John Crean accepta friende' conaratulatlon• at Carmelo'• wttb wife
Donna whoee drne wae dee .. necl by friend, Mr. Blackwell, fitbt.
Jane Wilbers Plereon •~ee wltb fellow aewlyweda Dorotll7 ...
Buddy Ebsen eome •napebota from a luncheon they all attended.
were dim history as Donna greeted guests ( w1 th son
AMnw,and restaurant owners Carmelo and J•dl
Muto.) She wore a brown. black and white Mr.
Blackwell dress while the designer himself s1ood bt!itdc
her. cahina~rhis "be t and dearest friend" and
announcing that he had JU t had no t a "face" but a ··bod~
lift from toe lo e)ebrow ...
Ncarb) ac1ressJaae Wltlters(a C rean fm·nJ for 18
yca~)and Tom Plersoa we~tclhngguc!itsabout their
recent marri'lae aboard the Crcans' yacht.
Rul'\lOfS circulated that the Crcans planned to take
a chartcr<.'d plane of IOOguc ls 10 New York fort he
a\¥ard ceremony and event coordinators Lola Lettdbert
and BobKUey(ofNason. Lundberg& J\.1St)').confimuxi
that rescrvauons"forat least 75guc t .. have been made
at the New Yo rk Waldorf.
Aftcrd1nncr(an11pastosalad. pasta, filct mtgnon. yqctabl~and tanufod"-s~n) 1wo Orangct·nunt)
Super isors -T .. Riley (with Emma JaM >and Bnce
Nee&aH«(w1th P .. )-prc ntcd the rcaM with
··0ran1c ounty Honored Ctuzcns ward~· which wa'
made at tht' request of uperv1sor Hanten Wieder.
Lona-time rcan fncnd.actor l.Wy DH•
tntroducc.-d h1 ncww1fc. Deredlly,and pro udl ho"l'd
hisJadc wcddinanna<wuh a carved dragon.)
C rean mod~tl>-insisted that ··a111tu ma~M mt'
unc-omforuhlc. C\cn embanustd-1emnaa~'Oladn
for a ltfc and carct"rthat h1H· )U t bc!itn a lo t<>f fun."
But morr anc:nuon wa 1n thcoffina b«a'4it BUI
r.r.611,prc 1dcnundacncral maft11Cr. l\C ~-TV,
C~nncl SO. ~•d he 11>0ukt be ha\'tnathc rcan ~uh
Jetty .. ....._ (at the pany in arm cast) for a f uturc T
JWOll"I O\c-.t.. . ncw C"_~anf~ ed ....... ,.(In btack rum~
--nd POl'ltnaa \hOner-than-uM&al b.aar-do) "A-1th J.U Ot
Vrtet.iaechhfwouldbc1nv11t .. CanMlO'"'" -_
gu11am1 BefpeC.Omo to pla} at her panics.
E lsa CUmberlal• (with Plefl"e Pots ... ). mother of
a<.·tor Rlcllilard CUmberlai• and another son Bill o f
.\nahc1m. said she ~ad "known and loved" the Creams
for more than ~"nts.
Other lo ng-time fnends hartd Crean memoncs-
1mIud1 ng Elmer and J aa Hellilr. Toay and Carol ya
Trifiletti. Clutd and Sebriaa Torres, E4 and Jey a_,,.,
PHI and Marty Aspqrem (ownersofK-WA VE radio).
Chrtes and Mar.aret Cringle, Mii'" P'6maa and
Ou• Lake with h1 fianccc. beautiful Alicia Meceltee.
Man) of them rcmcmbc~ when the runs
"owned the ran hat san Juan ap1strano" which they
reported I> donated to Dr. l\ebertSdl•Uer (who
rouldn 't attend the part) becauS( he wa out of the
rount~ )along with a m1lhon dolla" for the Cr) ~•al < nthcdral.
.. n.••rn has n '\Cr IO'\t lhc l'Om mo n touch." s;ud o ne
fncnd
\ "H~ nl"'n> n: pond~ to the (lhght o(!nc netdy.''
1d1no ther
"John ( rtan' a rut 1m1I) man. a great
bu \Oc,~man.1.1rt:n hn t1ananch at mcnan,"
toa tcd f-uenu~4!(wh w1ll o to 'cw OB -forthc ti~t
11mr -toaucnd< rtJn''lv.ardetrcmon')
"( 1ct\1na the Hora\to .\I r ""•rd ' a real hon r.''
rcphl'<l < ~.in "Rut hc1na"' uh our fncnd~ here th1\
c\cnm11\-.otnctl11nat nna nJl1tt11lnc'-crforstt
P.1r.1r.1n1 "r·t111t"C1 h.' l 1(\ P1I01 \f\ k Ldttor Vida
f. an · ------H
J
· 1
'1
I
I
:
..
I
I I'
j
Famine benefit to.fete Ethiopian artist
Sammy Davia Jr. will be at tht
Westin South coast Plaza Hotel on
Saturday as honorary chairman of a
fund-raiser sponso~ by lht An
Experitnce.a Laauna Beach non-
profit oraaniiation. and the Com·
miJttt Aaainst Famine in Ethiopia.
Guest of honor will be Et hiopian
anist Afewm T9'1e, who was
aranttd sptcial permission by the
Ethiopian govcmmtnt to attend.
The charily dinner marks his first
visit to America.
Others participating will be
American artist R. Brownell
McGrew, Israeli artist Yukel
Glulter1and92-year-old French
anist Erte.
Tickets. S350each. will include
dinner. ethnic entertainment and a
choice of a porcelain plaque by one
oft he four anists. More infor-
JTU1tion is available by calling
851-6494.
••• The Tustin Mansion ofSaady and
Leo lmPf'rl.-U will be thC-$Ctting
March 14 for the rystal Circle'
Italian Buffet benefit in& the Ora nae
Count) Pa 1fkS)mphon)'and the
May4V1cnnese 8all. ct1 v1t1c will
include informal modelina ofhal-
ian fashions. an art exhibit from the
Found1:rs Gallery of Beverly Hill s
and a silent auction.
••• A 6:30 p.m. Friday "Nighuuthc
Red Cross" at th e Blood Center in
Santa Ana will launch the Red
Ribbon 1oo·sfund-ra1sing efTons.
Organized in October. th e group
lisu women from all over Orange
Countron its roster.
"Thi s new council is devoted to
fund-raismgand to reach inf those
individuals iri thecommunlly who
activclv support benefits." said
Board McmberSbaron Pal1ley.
.. Wh ile donations received thrqugh
the Un ited Wa)' provide a major
portion of the Red C<oss· operating
l'Xpcnses. additi onal fundintt is .
ncccssar~ to maintain a high stan-
dard of sen ice to all cit izens of
Orongc\ounty,"
.\ pr01fam on eanhquakc prepa~ncu will bt prncn~ at
7:30withd1nntra18:l0. Te•
Niellft 15C1'1)l"C'ted 10111.:nd lO
~nt 1ht lrvinc:C'o.'1eoritribu·
tionofSI00.000.
• • • Southern California Resiaurant
Writers will present 32S awards on
Mal"t'h 24. includin&thcGoldcn
Sccpttr Award io the most
out tandin& restaurant and chef.
re taurateur,and maitrc 'd oft he
)Car. The black·tieevcnt at the
.\nahcim Hi I Ion and Towers begins
with a champaanc rccertion at .s
p.m. with internationa appetizers.
A multi-coursc dinnerwith strolling
musicians will tnltow with Vlell
Knl1lltactingascmcee. The public
ma y attend by reserving ticket s
($1 OOeach) with Dorta CrauaJI,
533-7644.
• • • • Saddlcbac-k College i41 18 years old
and a birthday part) fort he school i~
bcina plannt'd Apr1 l Jat tht' Ritz·
Canton Hotc:I. Tht blaclMK-OJ>-
uonal-dinntt-...will ,.ite f\ands
10 .. 111 tht to,_., PftJll"am•and
-wrvim. Ti('kflllSIOOrichorSl50
"'oup~)art limi1edand arren11-
men1s may br llUldc by c1ll&saa1~ ~velopmtntotrltt at 831 ~53.
• • • "4arch 29 is the deadline to sign
up for the 1'shuffic and serve" bridtr
and tenni tournament planned by
\he Junior Auxiliary of the Newport
.\ssistance League. Marjie WbUe,
646-1815. orKell4n Jacoby, 545-
8628. may be called for more
infbrmauonon the April 15 event at
Nt"Wpon Beach Tennis Club.
• • • Pa•la Ba1Uune, founding
president pfSpyaJass Hill Garden
Club. and husband Gerard, will
open lheir new Harbor Ridge home
Saturdayforapla IOthanniversary
ofthearoup. LUC.ney and Patti
SHH are assistina with the evening
of memories and elctant dining.
MoCCJbllll ~Vaovcrnmenl rep-
re1tnaauvcsat the federal. stale. coun1yandc:t1yk'v~~vc~.
invited 10111tndf'riday·1 ~a~
t;wcaUut beina hoated b)' tllt J unic
Lcaa•ofNewpon Harbor at the
Ritz tt111unint. The lc:qut. amo~
others. runs the Court Appointed
Special Advocates proa~m provi<
ingobjective representation for
children in abuse or nciJect coun
cases. Lau~rin theday. ltaauc memben
will be opening theSaddlebAck
Valley Adult Day Care Center in El
Toro. ••• Trojan LcagucofOranaeCount~
members will host their 24th annut
benefit Tuesday on the Univcnity
' of Sou them California campus.
Mlm Mayell, chairman. and her
assistant Dau ea..... expect to
greet 3.SO county women al 9:30
a.rri. on the patio of Norris Hall. Th
day's pro.,.am will highliJht the •
USC School of Business Adminis-
tration Entrepenc:ur Proaram.
SHOW BIZ'i'AST LANE TOOK ITS TOLL ON FORMER MOUSEKETEER, ROCK SINGER •••
J'romCl . . Id . . d h . prominence. archet) pc of t_oday"!i punk rock groups.·· says Harold dancer fou nd himself soft-shoeing around his credilors in kept a s1 co~gcr ~.'nd with me. I wou n t min t cm usin
··The Standclls were one of the most imponant Bronson of Rhino Records. the early '80s. All of this and a moderate battle with drugs me at ~ny ume. . ..
-\merica n rock groups of their day. They were the Bronson's firm specializes in releasing albums which intensified the what·might-have-becns and the I-should-His benefits _for bcma one of the _oriamal 2 contain .. older mu,ic for people who sull want to hear it. haves that still haunt Dodd's mind. Mousckete~rs co~1st of a Club 33 merf!bcrsh1p. three fre
.--------------------and don't want to pay collec1or prices ..... The Best of the He tQ.nccdes \O having a bitterness toward A VI. who. pas_scs 10 Disneyland each year and residuals ([om ref!Jn Standen~--album was so .. profitable .. tha1 Rhino has he feels. still owes him moncy. Dodd insists that he and his which arc now so small he keeps the chtt!? a~ souyenirs
recently released their "Rarities:· fellow S1andells thought money was bcina put away for Two yea~ ago. Dodd·s ne\V band. which !ncludes Jh
The Standells also were profitable during their eight 1hem. Even on the newer Standell releases. Rhino kecord s former !cad singer of the f~med'grQup Ambros~a and a~!
years as a band. They recorded fi ve albums and toured is . llnl y obligated 10 pay royalties to AVI. not 10 the horn man of Buddy Miles. captured the JOb at T.C
worldwide with the Rolling Stones. the Beach Boys. aul perf<5rmcrs. Dodd says that another member of the group Peppercorn. . . . .
Revere and the Ra iders and the McCoys. is bringing liti&ious action against their former record .. Owners Den ms ~cM.cekm and ~I Rem1f!aton too~ In 1973. though. B.J. Enterprises (now A VI Records). company. • l!k1!"g to Dodd. naming him ~f!t~s;tamment d1~ec~or Wit
managers for The Standells.-o~<!d for change. They His relationship with the Disney corporation also hm11ed management respons1biht1es. ~cMeekm 1s teach
convinced Dodd. a deep-voiced singer. to go solo. He was causes Dodd some dismay. Proud of his Mickey Mouse fog the ~rformc:r the. restau.rant business so Dodd cai
whisked off to Atlanta. recorded ··The Evolution of Dick Club experience. he speaks affectio nately for the company pursue his goal of owmng a niaht-spot. . .
_Qodd .. ..iDQ._J.QMmi \filh..roc.k Legend Roy Orbison. The as.one migh uor a lost rclau v _ --Tbe...restauran already has;>la¥ed a major ro~11
experiment failed . No solo ca reer. No Standells. But Dodd is seldom as~ed to participate in an y Disney Dodd·s -comeback ... In a ~anuary ceremony. T.~. ·s wa
.. r ve regretted that dcc1S1o n (leaving 1he Standells) or Disneyland promotions. such as the Magic Kingdom's the venue for Dodd's wedding to Jane Perry. a waitress a
ever si nce, and rm still paying for it." he now says matter-30th anniversary extravaganza. He notes that such the dinner house a~d a former Pla yboy Bunny for sevc1
of-factly. . opportunities "always go to the four or five most well years. . .
Dodd also admits that during their successful run. the known Mousekctccrs:· Dodd 1s more contented than he has been 1n a Ion:
four rockerS' forem ost thoughts were to make music and ··BccauS<.· I am an entcnainer and live here in Orange time. He's finally living his life happily. and hoping tha
have fun. Money not only wasn·t everything. apparently 11 Co unty. I am a little disappointed. I wish they would ha ve the .. foreve r after'' is next.
wasn't anything. Their yo uth. naivete and lack of
understanding of record business policies cost the boys
;;;;;y~:.d~i~~~~~~::~~~~, Victims-af ~ape shouldn '~., -
earnings. Dodd bought a house for his mother and a few h • t t ~~~:.~~~~~~l.lymemoncs wercallhchadtoshowfor h1s es1 a e in renortin d . crime
In 1974.DoddretumedtoOran eCountyandforni...,..___ ~ ~
a new &ana. Joshua. also under contract to B.J. ·. "Enterprises.. 1ha1 enjoyed limited success. But more · DEA R.ANN LANDERS: Your
conflicts with 1he record company and the sheer siLC oft he colu mn has pro' 1ded a refreshing!) ----:rn·cJ ( 14 musicians don·t fit into many clubs) contribut('d franlrfol'um for almost ever~ aspect
lo its demise. ofhuman behavior. One topic that
students are raped every week. but
1hey don"t consider it rape because
the male is an acqua intance or a
friend. Whal tticydon't undel"Sftlnd 1s
that ifa man forces a woman to have
'ic~ aga i mt her will. he is a rapist.
uuer Dodd bands formed and played. ifsporad1 calh. h~s been conspicuously abscn1 is
throughout Southern Cali fornia. B4t.thc western a,nd dis<.fo .. date rape:· cra zes and the trend for clubs not 10 use hvc cntcrlammcnt II \\Ou Id not surprise m<.' if at least Law en forccment officials say rape
ma~ be onl' Of1 he most under-
rcponcd of all crimes. On our campus
(" h ich I llhall not name) th 1s is
rt'na1nl~ true.
prevented Dodd from having much success. half of th(' raPl-S that OC<.'ur 1n 1h1s
The former Mouseketecr encountered more real {·ounlr) arc perpetrated b) men who
problems. arc kno" n to thl·ir' 1ct1ms.
A two-yea r marriage. which produced a daughter. Thou'iundsofhigh sc hool and college
The StandeU. toared worldwide ID •eo.. ended in di vo rce. Because of lack of consistent work.
Dodd's rising debts led to repossessions. Th" former
__ ,
lC \oo\d ~s a -YOUUUMTIEawasl
\.. Everywhere you look, Spires~ with newness.
The carpeting is new. The booths are new ... more comfortable, too.
The windows sport a new fashion treatment. Everything is fresh and cteanl
THE DECORATORS ARE GOIE.
Spires' decorating team spent last
YOU AID SPIRES:
A .. 1111 COMlllATIOI.
For 20 years we've brought you the
best in food values. You know that
Spires keeps the quality high and
the food check reasonable nb mat-
ter what the economic trend may
be. We work at giving you what
you want in a Family Restaurant.
COME AID SEE
WHY WE'RE SO PROUD!
week totally remodeling our
Costa Mesa Restaurant at 3125 \
Harbor Blvd., just south of the / ~
San Diego Freeway. v w ··~/~
/(::_ -'r d.J. ~
Beautiful earth-tone colors blend
together to create a rich,· enjoy-~
able dining atmosphere. An .l
abundance of hanging plants
and greenery works to
enhance the delightful
new setting. And we
Included touches that
make Spires quieter, too.
-
r ~ ~ ( -·, 'Jt-~~, J ~~"' l'r--· !-:
All of us at Spires are
delighted with our new look.
And we're eager to share
our new surroundings
with you. Stop In soon'
and eee what the
~•excitement ii all about!
3125 Hlrtlor IML, Cllll ... ti•• II .. S. .... fwr) OPEN24HOURS I
.,
r
Wh~ bl~, 11 ...... plnkl Shuml~ cob....,.,,,, ol
indivld~I strands of opultnt fmhw,,., p8arls. With one 01
mote, cte1~ your own one-o#·•lcltwl dls;,n. Thin, CllfClt If
•II totether In 1 bNutiful 14K told clasp. ~ •twist ol
five choicer /ertff.h 1tr1nds; '150,...ch The 14K claA
not shown; '150. lrrF#rff /~ty Collectlons.
Today throu~ WedMS<tl~ I ~la/ Shutni ~iYe lf?d pt!r ea wilt'& Wit us l;o;n 12i0~ fO p roy
c or CtNte )'OU! own cuhuf«J petri fanwy.
• South COIN Pf .. ta, JJJJ IJrlffOI StNIC. COlll MIU.
, .....
How to submit
wedc:Jlng news
The 0.11> Pilot w1n11 \.Our W«J.
dln6 ind cnMt'mcnt ncwi.
To htlp you 1e1bmit ,~ '!Qflirrd
infomu1ion. form• lft , .. ,,,.,. 11 lht 0.1/y Pilot offlrt. JJO W. •r SI CO.I• Mt'M. ' "
For wtddifllS. quali1r 1'ho1ot of thc-
brldal toupk or bridt onl; Mr
l<'t't'plablt. TM photo mu11 w ,...
mmcd no l11rr thin thtW ~.arr
tht ~in,. ot~rw•• 11 will not bt publ11hN.
En,.-mrnt inform•1ion ,, 10 M
tub= If ~.,, #'1tn weft• brlbft ,,... ,.,
Forms •nd 11hofot "'" ,,....,,_ otr it ,,,.. omtt or m111td ro llw
Wfddlltl lk1»rtmtn1. Diii) l'lloi I'. 0. lo' I S60. C0tt1 Mt11 ,..:,,,.,,· 91616. . ,., .
. '
ti
•
8
4
e s
e
t
l
Olivia ·still optimistic
By DOLORES BARCLAY -~~----
E.W YORK -OhYJa de
H:ivalland S"-cpt acrO\'i the mass1 vc
siaac of Radio C'i1y Music Hall.
trail1n1 o r loud or bab) blur t·h1ffon
and llish1n1 a mile thai even the last
row could appreciate. rhe applause
wa thundcroui -wave!I of love, somc.acto~ like to think.
Day& later. over a lunch of caviar
and chnmpaanc at
the Russian Tea
Room. the legend·
nry film star was
till giddy from the
tributl' &avcn to her
and such other
giants as Lord
Olivier and Sidney
Poitier at ··Night of
100 tar -11."
"I wouldn't have DeHavUland
m.1 ~d it for an}thiog." she said. a
shght flush making her flawless
checks J,IOw. "I loved c'eryth1ng about 11.
'\t 68. De Ha v1lland bubbks
(•nthusiasticall y about her work and
rarecr as though she werc the doc-
cycd unknown who w;1lkcd onto the
Warner Bros. 101 50 }car ago to pla)
1n the la' ish movil· production of
hakcspcare's "A Midsummer
Night's Dream."
But shC' has trouble a~'lCss1ng her
career. "h's hard to answer that. so I
won't. I J U~t kind of wa nt to do good
\\Ori.:· \he \aid .. , ""llnl 1111 l'I\)' 'har.tetr~ to he aood I h<' tasl ol
"'hnhcr ,.,."t donr aood "'nr\ 11i irn, e
m1nu1c~ 11110 the film I ). 'What'
he aoina to do nc\t'''and I forse1 that 11' mc Qn the \Crt'Cn ...
Sht• had ~ero tht' nc" MO M home 'idcoc1m1.·11c~ of thr lilm l'ltb'i1c
"Cion1; With thl' Wind" 1he n1ah1
bt.•forc and manelcd at the
memorable charal'tcr 'ihc pla>cd.
It's bcl·n , 46 )Cari.. since De
Havilland. fresh und honey sweet.
looked· up from her bed a the dyin~
Melanie Hamilton to tcll 1hc cuon1 v-
ing Hirt Searlctt O'Hnrn 10 loo~ nflcr
.\\hie> Wilke~ -Melani<"'~ hu band
:ind the mun ~nrle11 had lusted aflcr.
"Melanie woi. n modl•I for every-
one." De Hav1lland rrflC'Cted. "Mel-
anie was rcall} happ). I tried to figure
out wh\ Melanie '-'35 happ). It had 10
t.·ume from her fam11\. 'ihc had to
ha'l' su'ltaining love from her famll>
when she "'as grow111g up."
<\s for the 1t1ov1e. \\hlch '-'On 10
\cadcm' .\"ardco. Dc Hav1lland said.
··11 '"'as· one of the happ1ei;t cA-
r>enent.·cs I've C\ er had 1n m } hfc. I
was doing something I "'anted lo do.
pla} inga character I loved and hkl·d ...
J:lut "'hilc at one point 111 her life sht'
wa\avcraging!.Oml·t1mt.'\ t\\O or thrl'l'
mo' 1es a )C'ar. her work has tn<·kled
l>ff. She hasn't made a fcaturc mov1l'
since I 977's "The Swarm." lier la~1
tclc> 1'\1on prOJl'l'I\ ''l're u BAC
docu mentar~ on Bctll' Da'''' anti the
mo' J<' "C"hark'\ ond Diana: Ro>lll Romane~., .. 1n v.h1ch \he pla)_cd the -.J'1l:trt1:1:;;--.;;;..;:;~-Qucl'n Muthcf.
"l>o I mi .... work1na full time'! Not lfM ..,.. p. n1cularl). I thin._ hfc 1~ .wn ot !'£!!!P-.r.
1nwrcs11na on ll~ own." she said. "I iii\il:Mt'-.•rr h'c1na ~1I} whcrc1h1ngsgoonallthc =--lime I 1f~1<1 beau11ful.
"I do gt.111 lot of fan mail and I do •IMT..cm..
un'iwcr i1. lhat kl'CJ>'I me busy." * ~· (tte3) KM ..., ......... She 'Ill\) at home ·an Pnm the c .._
days in a small house with a 11ny rMCMEAl'ltt!Ofly
l4l1rdl'n" not far from the Boi11 de •'.4 "CftlldrWI OI Tiie Com" (tN4)
lfologne. 'he hn a big chestnut tree ,..., ~°"·Linda Hlmlllon and pigeo ns who frequently Jucst. MOVll
She al o ha!> memories or a career • * • "TWlliQflt Zone --Tiie Movie"
that included such movies as "ThC' (198.l)Jotln Llttlgow, Vic Monow
'inake Pit" and "The d vcnturcs of _.._
Robin flood.'' and brought her two •~IMM
->.cadrm) "'ards for best actress --*»-
in 1946 for "To Each His Own" and ~-I ~49 for "The Heiress." ~YIMMIN
It was at Mills College 1n Oakland IMC:m./LIHMR
"here De Ha ,1 lland bepn her love
'umn1cr N1gh1·., Dream." she '-'Cnt to MllllYw.1.81
Mike Fanell and 11.arJ Tanaer an fatlaer ...
dau&hter In .. PrlYate SeeeloDa, •• a aew TV
mo'rie al..U., ton1'Jlt at 9 oa NBC, Cba.Dnel C. affair '-'1th th t• 'itage. Whale prepanna 1~-M:aOFCUlTUM for a 'iChOOI production of .. Mid-
Holl)\\ood to cc Max Reinhardt's WIE.OFflORT\JNI ~~ ''""9le s-.c.· (Pr.,,..) Wille
rehear\al\ ofthnamr corned). l.MCa • MCME ' \ FINtl,~eenStlP6llon.
But 1nstl·ad of being a mere ob--7:00-***'h "Tiie Bid And The a.. •&MON
'enl·r. Reinhardt had her read fo r IC:.NlWt lul" (1952) KIR Oougt.a. Lana 'ThllWtleForHwt~(Pr.,.,...,P.m
lkrmra·\ undcrs1ud> he sta)'ed s-..NAMETHATTUNE Tl#ner Dllwtllr,RobenK•
through hl·r c;ummcr 'acation and =~~ :&~' l~Gllmf
"hen the '>tar couldn't &o on 1n the ew,w GJOICER'IWIL.D ..,.,s
fall . Dt.· tlav1lland stepped into the NEWS 1WKAP•CINCllNATI • "Frlghlmart" (1981) Ftrdlnlnd
r1lll' • THRIE'I COMPANY ENTERTAIMNT TOMOHT Mayne, Luca 8etco¥1d
"I nc,,·r fo ll such terror as that IWHEELOfFORTUNE MOYIE MOYIE
IJlTMATl,... ... 11 iru•H· * *'~ "Sole Surwvor'' (1969) Vince • * "The Gift" (1982) Pletrt u -.. 11ix•n1ng night. wnit,1ng in the wings." ~ ......... ,
()) P.M. MAGAZINE EOWttdl. Ricllwd 8IMNr1 Clio Gokl111111t1
9 ENTERTMMNT TONIGHT • MOVE -t:ao.-
-U:ll-E-1-mftll~ ocuu 1rv--~ -........
•ClUI MM:lt __ __
(e).,. .
• • ''Ndwd Prp • Hert Md
NW'(*3) .
-tt9-l:::"ZONI
U 1~ "W...,,,., Min" ('970) Godfrey Clftlbndgl, Etttll p..,,..
-scR hosts school drama students
a! JlOPARDV • u "The Great Caruso" 119501 e NEWHART
_ 7:30-Meno Lanza. AM Blyth (!) MOVll
8 20NTHETOWN eMUICAlPA88AGE *** "The ·Cl\IC>f'WI RtPOrf '
Qt FAia Y F£U0 • MOYIE ( 19621 Elrtm Zlmtlllltl Jr , JIN Foo. THAT'S INCAED9LE * * * 'Tiii The Clouds Roll By" da
lalliWNEWI .,.
• "Spec:ie Alldn" I tte31 Vinet Ed-
•dl.. Oewid W.ldtllftlll ----Prl-stnl and future theater pro-
fessionals got 11 backstage look at
SOuth Coast Repcnor) rccrntl> when
staff and compan> members held a
workshop on UtealCJ' professi-0ns-«>r roo high school drama tudents.
High School Career Da ). a special
rnmmunit> service prOJCC t of SCR's
scason-lo.n& . .JOth ann" cr!><lry cel-
ebration. examined the vari ous cle-
ment of producing th c.-ater and
allowed the students, from nine
schools to attend a performance of
.. The lmponancr of Bring Earnest"
'on the SC'R ma1n s1age.
According to C'R producing artis-
tic airmor-Gavtd-Emml'S. 'lhc ay
presented students with the realities
and opportunities of a career 1n
theater .
writing. stage managing. and lltl·rar}
ma nagement and technical direr lwn.
.\1 7:30. the· student'I and their
. teacher~ returned to the theater 10
alfl'n a jX·rffirmann· 01 "Earnc\t.''
"htch l'i . CR·., I 9X4-ts5 Theater
D1scovel") Projet·t produl·t1on. This
cduca110nal progr'am ufTer\ high
'il'hool~ and college~ the opportun11 ~
to 1ndude the II\ c pcrformann· of a
clai.sic pla) in a term·., thl·atrr ~tud1ci..
Following thc pcrforma ncl.'. cast.
director. and designer\ returni:d to
m ON L.A. I 194 7) Robet1 Wei.: er V111 Heflin 'ID MQHT GAl.L.8'Y
the ,tage lor a ques11on-and-answ1."r WMP•CINCllNATI ~C~~willgflt zone _ The Wcwie" -10:t0-
\l'S'>•On "'Ith the audience. whtt'h lhl' llJJ#llll'f (1913).Jom Llttlgow, VIC Morrow • e= LACEY
( arcer Da~ pan1r1pants101 .. nll-e-d.Sirn'.~ ~-n•~5 8J ~~~L=T,..----~MANIOC*I Schoo~ put-1t·1~ng--.., . . ' ~ • --ttTrMOYIE TOllTMIR • CONlaT: TIX
High ~hool Career Da} '-'Cre Wcst-MCING"'°"SAHTANITA **'It .-.... ........ 119811 JoM a.. ,,_, .. OMHITM
l'r.f'l High School in .\naheim. Foun-A\'181.EAOCK i.-. ~~";d '!:r::8AU."°'"1
1:11n Valk~ High hool. Wes t-**~Men Who Knew Too -t:aO-** "The 81111 Lagoon" llMOI
m1n .. 1cr High School. Garden Gro"c Much" (l93") Peter Lorre. Lide G TICTACDOUGH Brookt5""6dt.CMltoohlrAIUw I I 1gh \chool. Woodbridge High Bink• Cf) LOWDT MOYIE
\<.·hool in In inc. Corona dcl Mar -l:OO-• flTlW..8 **'h "Uni~ Yours"
High School. E~tancia High School in •(J)ICMICAOWANDMM. -too-DldlyMoor1,....._.l<inekl
( osta Mesa. El Modena H 1gh School ICING e ()) KATl a ALLIE r)) MOVE.
1n Orange and Tumn High School. 8 8TVlkOOPEMAND D a!MCME u "Recl•"PIMI Aldtn Oum,
• al LATI llllHT MTH ~YID LEllSWW
-~HmH:OCI(
----------~~-~-
.. In creaun.g a ·career Day'." said
"llliilif"la
ActlM Z'' (I) BODY
1 DOtJBLE
IOHRll 30 (lj sAr1stJ1 12 cr.-n~. a JO
SCR founding member Martha
-McFarland; who 't'O<mllnnrec!ll'ie:-
event. .. "'e wanted to offer something
that looked to the fu ture. So M '
dE"C1ded '°'present the mp"Sntnhcatcct
drama students in the area wi th an
honest look at the spectrum oftalenis
cmplo~ed in produc1n& resident
theater. We have found in the past L~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
_f_Q01~"'1,l'_ U CLU5!V£ E~AGEM£NT
"UVllLT HflU COP .. ta) ··a SUNOAf IM TMI COUNHY" (GI
MON-THUl'tS 6 00 I IS 10 IS \,... 7 20 9 lO
ICCON I INOWilQ .... ti > --<._ F ~T"""5120 Ott NIW •10 S" (I )
·1•14" 111 I 1 " 9 ••
that C\ en the best students arc
-.urpriscd b} the man) face ts of
thc.-ater production.
.. Man) of them were encouragc:d
during the afiernoo n. not onl> to
learn about their own 'ipcc1al interest
in theater. but to '>Cc ho"' valuable
and challenging areas arc which the}
may not have thought as a career. I
think the'ie student'i now ha'c a much
greater sense of1what l'i a\allablc."
Nine CR aMl'it~ and staff mem-
bers started the dn)' wi th an hour-long
panel discussion at I :30 in the Second
Stage moderated b)' James Wilson.
SCR 's Adult Conservatory directo r.
Tours of CR'~ Fourth Step Theater
complex were then gl\en. incl uding a
peek at a rehearsal of ''The Im port-
ance of Being Earnest··
1udenl'l then Joined the first of two
.. break-out groups" on the theater
d1sc1phnes of primar) interest to
them. Area~ co' crcd incl uded
producing. dcs1gn1ng. direcling. and
acting 1n thcall'r as well as pla )'-
THE HEAT IS ONI
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Ml.IC NOTICE MUC NOTICE Pl&IC NOTICE rtate NOTICE --------~-~--------..;.._----F. Ml.IC NOTICE PtCTmoul .,_.. PtCTmOUe ..,_.. _, ,tc:TtTIOUI IUIMll ftc:TITIOUI .,_. ~--.,,....-NAMS ITA,_. UM1 ITATlmllT NCmC1 M NAMS ITATIMlllT ~ ITATllmllT
I fhe ~ S*IOnl WI lhe f011owtnO per.one .,, TRUITU'I IALI Tnt fOllOWl"G pertOnt ltt Tiit fOllOwl"O Pl'IOnt
D911l'NM,..._lilf ... .._..
Nancy Remley talka fublon with Sb.trley Sheppard and Celeate Huret. co-cbalr.
. " Newest Easter finery
modeled at PT A show
S pring. summer wear
paraded to the music
ofthe ~sax Appeals'
The Newpon ~arriott ballroom
was tranformed into a giant Easter
basket for Newport Harbor High '
School PT A's first fashion lunch -
eon. Varied shaoesofpinkdecor·
ated the area with willow baskets
trimmed with lacy ribbons and
filled with pink azaJcascentering the
tables.
Jalle Flemln1'1 handiwork was
Jldmired by the 3001tte1tn en 1~g
and lun c hi ng o n turkey breast,
broccoli, fruit kabob and a di vin e
strawbcrrydessert. ,
Nuey Browa sh owcc?tash ions
from he r A 'Ma.recs shop in East bluff'
(hei:daughter:s were.student.sat the-
school). M oms Carol)"D Garrett,
Linda Bueti and Pam Gfeller and
11 high sch ool stud e nts paraHed the
spring a nd summer attire to music
provided by the "Sax Appeals."
Chairmen Amy Lee and Celeste
Hant generated a lot o f interest
when they began calling out lucky
numbers for prizes. Especially
happy were s•erry Hllbergerud
who won the A pple computer·
donated by the Dick Ea1tmus and
teen-agerTiffuy Wldlaker who
now owns a diamond and pearl
pendant given to the group by
Blackman Jewelen.
Among the guests were faculty
wifes Mmes. Mike Marplly, Tom
Jacob1on and Bill Nuan. Others
Jo Vandervort and Syd Balalia atlr tbe ticketa.
there were PT A Presidept Judy
Coyne and SbJrley Slleppard, who
gave the history oft he PT A .
(Proceeds from the show will go for
scholarships. teacher-of the-year
award and honorary service award.)
Committee m embers wereNucy
Remley, SJaaroa Soila, Debbie
BeaedJc t, Jo Vudervort, Sae
W e rner, Aan Header;-Sue
McLaugbll.n, Joyce AJJtson, Ju
Wood, Brenda Eastman, Marg.le
Dalton, Syd Balall1, Lou E llen Long,
BoDDle Egan, E s ther Fine, Barbara
Carr and Sudy Ryu.
Lyue Bloember1 was there and
other planners were Joaa Lyoa,
Jady Cookson, Kat•y Frtak,
Carolyn Garrett, Barbara Carr,
Rosemary Craig, 08by KnmlDs,
Sandra Montgomery, Ca day Crook,
R•oda Staaley, Linda Bleacll,
Eileen O'Toole, ud Mary Brad·
bury.
Paparazzi is edited by Daily Pilot
Style Editor Vida Dean.
Helene La Vole, Shelley Jolley and Amy Lee.
co-chairman Amy Lee look pretty aa a picture at Newport Harbor Kiah School
PT A'• flrat benefit fuhlon ahow Tuncheon.
doing t>ollntM 11, c:IOlnQ M1MU 11 Trwttr: ..... T. doing bUlllnMI I.I Donni M dOlng bvtlnMt N SWISS AMERICAN l.1'11 ON STAGE 'IS", I LuaM-., Smatt . AKA · BytH, 4412 R£$PIAATOAY It
AARITIU 1MOO Ftlfchlld, "1 Htmlffon, •660. eo.11 '·'· .... M-m Rllapaod)I Oflve. HuntlnglOl'I VICfS 21151 Newlend A lrYlnt, CA 12115 M ... CA nt21 NOTICI Beacll, CA t244t 21•. HunOngton he
David Hamllin bani, 32 rtr'ry 8 , falgy, 331 YOU A,RE... lH DEFAULT Donna M, .Smact. 4872 CA i2.8'0 Aoel!l ltnolt trvtn1. CA Lln11 ... Long 84Nicll, CA UNDER A DEED OF TRUST. AhaplOdy OflYI, Huntington NOfbeft Allen Jonn• t27t 80iOi OAlfOJVHI!"~. tteO t:tH• ~ 3(l(t 1'°° N~
Sandy Kellin, 2S2t W Thll t>usln•H I• con• LESS YOU TAKE ACTION Tlltl bualneu I• con· UT 84803
Mon111ey Aw Mela. AZ ducted by. non-profit blMfll TO PROTECT YOUR PROP· Ouctld by en lndhrldu•I NOfbeft Earn••• JOMI
85202 Ttrry 8 8algy ERTY, IT MAY 8E SOJ.0 AT Do11r11 M Sm•rt 2186 I N4twllnd Ave .•
Tiii• bualntH II con· Thi• •lltement ... lilld A PUBLIC SALE IF' YOU Tllll statement w .. lllld 214 HuntlnQIOl'I Belch,
dueled by • genetll Pitt• Wlih tlll County Clerk Of Ot· NEED AN EXPLANATION w1tll Ille County Clefk of o:.· 92646 net'lhlp ange County on Fet>ruery OF THE NATURE OF THE anoe Couniy on March 1,., Tllll bullnfft II cc
D1Yld H Ev1111 27. 1985 P"OCEEDING AGAINST 1985 OucteO by I general PC
Tllll 1t•temen1 w•• fllld ,_..1 YOU. YOU SHOULD CON-'771-nerthip with the County Cieri( ol Ot· Publl1"4ld Orenoa Coatt TACT A LAWYER Pubhalled Orange Cool NOfblfl A Jonnaon
lnQI Coonty on Febfuery Ottlly Piiot Ma<Ch 4, 11. 18, On April 12, 1985 11 9 15 Diiiy Pilot Marcil ti. 25. Tllta 1t1tement WH f
20, 1985 25, t985 1 m .. RELIABLE INVEST· Aprll I, 8, 1985 Wtlll lhe County Clerk of I
,... M-349 MENT CORPORATION, 11 M·313 1nge County on F1bru1
Publllhf(I Or•noa Cout duly appointed Tru•••• l't8l.IC NOTICE io, t985 ~ ~~~ ~~,r~. rr:t:? 25
' MUC NOTICE ~~u=~~:':'~t ~~ ruomiou.....r: .... .._. 11 Pvblllhld 0tenoa Col M·331 1980 .. lnll No 28155 In ..... • .u-D•lly Piiot F•t1ru1ry l flCT1TIOUS 8U ... H book' 13875 page lO of 01· NAMI ITATIMINT Merell•. 1 l. 18. 1985
NAm ITATIMIMT flCllJ RICO<dl In lhe office of Tiie followtng pertonl 818 M·3 "8.IC NOTICE The tollowlng '*'°"' .,. Ille County AlcOfder of Or· dOlng t>ualMSS .. ClaNI<: ·--------
doing butlneu 11 ange County State of C•H· Personnel s.tv~. 22994 Pta.IC NOTICE ftc:N~IT" .,._Tl~I AHMSCO. 2925 Col'-Ot fornla •-ecuild .by William El Toro Rd , El Toro, CA 1---------,. _ .. , Ave , Suite A· I I, Coat• T. Miiier and Lu•nn Miller 92630 IC Mt11
Thefolt6wtngperaon11re Me11,CA92828 WILL SELL AT PUBLIC Ftoyd Mesaer. 104 flUM.tCMOTICI
doing buslneu H Darrell VICIOf Fell, 820 LI AUCTION TO HIGHEST BID· Parkoenter Dr . •22. $anta .._... It ...,., ....
SOBER Z. 435 Fullerton Vitti, Leguna BellGll, CA DER FOR CASH (plylble 81 Ana CA tMt _. '*-' I, 'ttl
Ave . Newport Belcll. CA 92651 time ot 1111 tn lawtut money Tfl11 business t1 con-llt,llOIOO u. 1. ..,....
92663 Thi• bualneu It con· of 1118 United States) at Ille ducted by •n lnd1vldu11 ... Mf&M ~ a 1• P•ul Y. Barnes Jr., 435 ducted by an tnd1vldu•I front en I ranee 10 Ille Old Dr· Floyd Mesaer • 11 I c ti ~ t t_ 1 I , 'I/ I
Fullerton Ave . Newport Darrell v Fiii . •noa County CounllouM. Tllta statement wu hied 1CMA..MJA~ln•
e..ctl. CA 92663 Tt111 1111emen1 wu hied locllld on Santa Ana Blvd , w~ll the County Clefk of Dr· •lcl"lty •f 11111 ~ Cllarles Ray Meynor, Jr , w1111111e County Clefll or Or· between SyC41mOfe St. & anoe County on Merell 13, atr .... Gr--....., Ceil
28121·0 L• Re•I. Miiiion anoe County on Februery Broadway Santa Ana. CA ell 1985 torn&a .., ......._ ef : v~~;. C~~:~~~. ti con-27. t985 ,_ rloflt. 11111. Ind Interest con· ff71211 UIC •1. Mr,.,._.., Yeyed to and now 1111<1 by 11 Publtslled Orange Coall 1ftf .. ,.._ tM .......,
ducted t>y • general part· PubWll*! Or1nge Cout under ukl Oeld 01 Truat in 0111y Pilot Marcll 18, 25. tN ~ ...... Dltllrti
ner1h1p Dally Pllol Merell '· ·11. 18, the property sltullld In said Aprtt t 8 1985 COUl1 In .,.., .. ....._
P•ul J. B•rnes Jr., C R 25. 1985 County and State described M-372 tN ,.11111111 ew.., tlll Ma~or. Jr. M-351 85 Mtawe ,_... • ... tf1
This statement WIS llllO THAT PORTION OF LOT POOi.iC. NOTICE ................. "' e-.
Wllfl Ille County Cieri! Of Or· 23 OF FAIRVIEW FAAMS, IN °'"' ................ ~ ange County on February THE CITY OF COSTA FICTITIOUI 8Ull•H llt,.tloft, ,,0 .... 1-
21 1985 nlM1' f't&tC NOTICE MESA. COUNTY OF OR· .,AMI ITATl•NT h"t• Aftl, C1llt•rftl
ANGE STATE OF CALI· The fotlow•no peflOtlS are tf712, a ....... ~ ...
Publlslled Orange Coall 'tc:TTTIOUI MllMll FORNIA AS SHOWN ON A 00tng business as b-4 ef 11. ..... If ~ t
Dally Piiot Febru•ry 24, NAm ITAftftllMT MAP THEREOF. RE · ABM RENTAL CO , 117'1'r the...,..._ ...... ef"'
Marcll 4, 11. 18, 1985 Tiie lollowlno petlOflS 118 CORDED IN BOOK 8, PAGE Grand Canal. Balboa ISiand. P'...,.,, wNohl•• .. ....
M·333 dOlng bu1lnt111 II. 7 t OF MISCELLANEOUS CA 92662 W Mt ........ .....
POLE HOUSE KITS OF MAPS. RECORDS OF SAID Roy J L McCow1n, 117'' wlttl.,,,..,.. ._..., _ 1 CALIFORNIA, 220 Newpof1 ORANGE COUNTY, OE· Grand Can1I B1tbo1 lslend, 1Mfore Apr17, tm. 0....
---------Centlf Or., Newport Ben., SCRIBED AS FOLLOWS· CA 92662 wlN, IN ~ .. ~ CA 92680 PARCEL 1· Thlt buainess Is con· dlepeud ef Hur•• •
GOfdon A. Steen, 1521 BEGINNING AT A POINT ducted by 1n tndovldual llW • .._ ........ ,.,... .._
'ICTITIOUS 8UIMll M•rtnlf• Or .. Newport 8ch ' IN THE WESTEAL y LINE OF A Mccowan ftle ............ 11mr1111
"8.IC NOTtC£
.......... IT"...._WT CA 92860 SAID LOT 23. DISTANT T1111 statement was filed mMlfetloftef..,..._wttl -,. ',._ Tllia bu1lne11 11 con-THEREON •9 68 FEET w1111111e County Cieri\ of Or-the "•lld•"t AtHt h doin": ~!r::: ::"'n• .,. ducted by: 1n lndlvlOu•I NORTHERL y FROM THE ange County on March I, c-.. ............ 1t U9C
JABCO. 106 Allb•m• St.. Gordon R Steen SOUTHWESTERLY COR· 1985 1 t 1 I 1w. 2 1 C , I Tiiis llt!tmtfll wu..JJMd HER ~ SA10 LOT.~ • -'2?01tt 131CT-l::.'IQ .... • C..,, ~28!.'~n94-on-Beem, C Ill I~ County C~ of Ot· RUNNING THENCE EAST· Publislled Orange Coast t .1·t .7, wltllMt """t t
Judltll Ann R19ga, 106 Al•· •nge ounty on ebruary ERL y PARALLEL WITH THE Dally Piiot Marcll ... t 1, 18, cletm Md Met NM.
b1m1 S t., Huntington 27· 1985 SOUTHERLY LINE OF SAID 25. 198!> ,,Mele L ............
BelCll. CA t28'8 ,,_.. LOT, 230 FEET. THENCE M·34.o4 deftt ...... lit c-..
w111iem Bo11c11, 106 Ai. Publlllled OrlllOI Coatt NORT+iERL Y PARALLEL n111n•1c NOTICE c ... "° • •n blml St . Huntington Da~y PllOI Merell 4· t l. 18· WITH THE WESTERLY LINE l"UPI. Mereh 11. t9
'Be1ell. CA 92648 25· 1985 OF SAID LOT. •9 68 FEET, T 3tllt ,.......... Orlft9I CMll
Tiii• bualn•H is con-M·S..9 THEN c E w Es T ERL y NOTICE Of Daltr ,.. ...... 11. •
ducted by: 1 general pen. PARALLEL WITH THE T"UITH'S SALE Aprtl 1, 1-
nerllllp l'Ull.IC NOTICE SOUTHERLY LINE OF SAID F tOUS-'214
Judltll A. Rigo1 LOT. 230 FEET TO THE p 11 This 1tatement Wit lllld 'tc:TtTIOUI 8UIMIS WESTERL V LINE OF SAID Ta NT.,eoNnOTICE with Ille Count" Clerk ot Or· NAMI ITATIMIMT LOT. THENCESOUTHERLY IMPO" A ' ALONG S•ID WESTERLY TO PftOf'UITY .,. County on Februwy The lolk>Wtng peraons .,. L.1"'" ...... : rrr'T Tn T_..., OWNE"~ - -27, 1N5 . dol ... ._,__.-_.__.......,~ YOU ARE IN OEFAUCT
THA C. & AS· POINT OF BEGINNING UNDER A DEED OF TRUST
Publllhed Oranoi eo..1 SOCIATES, 180 Newport EXCEPTING THERE· 60 ESS
Diiiy Piiot Marcll i. t 1, 11, c.nter °". &Jtte 200. New· FROM. ALL. OIL.. GAS, ANO ~~EDTAS,:~8' ACTl~~L TO
25, 1985 port BMctl. CA 92ee0 OTHEA HYDROCARBON PROTECT YOUR PROP·
M-350 AllnK Blumenth•l.22365 SUBSTANCES IN OR ERTY IT MAY BE SOLO AT
Prairie Ad .. El Toro. CA UNDER SAID LANO. A PUBLIC SAtE IF YOU
ForCi..lfledAd
ACTION
Cati •
--e.tty-Pllot
AO-VISOR
142·5171
DEA TH Nor1ft,
92630 BELOW A DEPTH OF 500 Tilt• bu11ne11 11 con· FEET WITHOUT THE RIGHT NEEO AN EXPLANA TtON BIXBY
•---------dueled by 1n indlvlduel OF ENTRY UPON THE SUR· ~~o'~f E~~~~Re,.3:1~~~ C LARENCE WILSOI\ rta.JC NOTICE Aten I(. Bk.tmenlllll FACE THEREOF. AS RE· YOUr-YOU -SHOULD CQN-s1xav. lovmg h"9·
flCTITIOUI 8UIMH Tlli.-mtement Wll meet ·Sf-RVEO l~HE DEED TACT A LAWYER band o f Marilyr: N~ ITATIMRNT wltll the County Cleric of Or· FROM WILLIAM MOORES. On Marcil 27 l985 •I Bixby Belcwed father
Tile lollowlng l*'IOnl .,. ~9~5ounty on Febfuery ~~~~R~:6 6M~:~·HAN~ to 00 AM tntr11tate o ( "-"y and Sh-'la
d<>ing bulinfff 11· ' ,.... HM8 IN BOOK 1731 PAGE Esc;row Corpo1ataon. 8622 nl:ll .a
BOAT PRIDE MARINE Publltlled Orenoe Cout 136 'OF OFFICIAL RE· Wilslllre Boulevard. Beverly Bixby· Shannon and
SERVICE. 381 W. Bly St ' Daily Pilot M ch .. 11 t8 c 0 R D s A N D B y Hills C1ltlorn1a 90211 (213) A r t H a rd I n g . :ea. Cotta Mnl. CA.t2821 25. 1985 ., ' . . QUITCLAIM DEED DATED 559·334o as Ouly appointed Chris to pher and
Douglas Cll811es BriMy, M·l-48 OCTOBER 10, t9·57 ANO Trustee under and pursuant S 387 W 81y St .. •le, Coat• RECORDED OCTOBER u, lo Deed ol TruSI dated June and Y BI X b Y ; Mesi. CA 92627 POOi.iC NOTIC£ 1957 18. 1960 recorded July 5. Cynthia Mc Coy; Vic-
Gregory a.oroe Pilette, PARCEL 2. 1983 as inst No 83·28673• torta and Eddie Pritts 60 Huntington St . • 115. I( M110 A RIGHT OF WAY FOR of Othcutl Records tn Ille of· d Sh d
Huntington BHcll, CA ftc:TlTIOUl8UIMIS P IPE LINE PURPOSES hoeoftll~CountyRecOfde<I an e rry an
92848 NAME STATIMINT OVER THE NORTHERLY 4 or Orange County. State ot c h r I s l 0 p h e r
Tiiie bu1tn111 11 con· Tile follOwlng peraona are FEET OF THE SOUTHERLY Caltlornoa eaeculed by Anne Goodwin Mr Bixby is
dueled by: • gen«ll P•rl· OOlng bus1neu IS ROGER St 68 FEiT OF L.OT 23 OF E Patterson. Trustee WILL also survived by tus
nerslllp ENGINEERING SERVICE FAIRVIEW FARMS AS SELL AT PUBLIC A\JCTtON Oougl•• c. Briney 6169 Ronald Ctrcle SHOWN ON A MAP TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR brother Jack Bixby
Th'lt llltement wu flled Cypress CA 90630 , THEREOF RECORDED IN CASH (payable a1 11me of and sister-in -law Pat.
wltll tile County Cieri! of Or· Clllll·Chl Hu1ng 61&9 BOOK 8 PAGE 7 t OF MIS· Ille tn lewful money 011118 In add ll ton to 7
Inge County on Februery Ronald Circle Cypr~s CA CELLAN.EOUS MAPS RE-Untied Stalest at the Nortll grandchildren and a t 1. 1985 90630 · • CORDS OF SAID ORANGE front entrance 10 111e county
,_ Tll•• buatneu ti con· COUNTY. courtllouse 700 C1v1C Center host o f many friends.
Pubhlhed Orange Cout ducted by an lndlvtdual EX CEPTING THERE· Drive Weal, Santa Ana. Calf.. Private memorial aer·
O•ily Pilot M&1ctl 4· 11· l8, an 1ndtvtduaJ FROM THE EASTERLY 1°'"'1 1111 rtghr. title and vices. Pac1f1c View 25. l985 Tll•S 111temen1 WIS hied 418.40 FEET. THEREOF Interest conveyed to Ind
M-3•7 witllllle CountyClencofOr-ALSO EXCEPTING now lletO by ti under saio Mortuar y Directors.
ange County on Fetlruary 4, THEREFROM. THE WEST'. Died off rust m the properly 3500 Pacific Vi~w
---------1985 ERL y 230 FEET. THEREOF ••lulled '" Hid County and DI" Iv(' New p 0 rt •-"' 11111\TICE ,_ Tile street eddf"' ltld State described as Loi 98 or '"-"" Publtllled Dr•nge Coast olllet common dHIQnatlon. Tr•cl No ~23, m tile Ctly of Bea<:h, C~.'~·2700
ftCTITIOUe .,...,. Dally PllOI Merell 4, 11, 18, It 1ny. of tile rail prol)9(ty Costa Meta. County of Or-. EDKINS NAftll ITAftMRNT 25. 1985 described above Is •noe. Slllte of Cat1torn1a. as
Tile foHC>Wing pettone 11• M·3'43 purported to be 1978 Meyer per map recorded lll Book N E W M A N H
dOI bu1iNM · CEDAR PllCI Costa M"• Ca.It· 182· Paoes 35 to 3e incluS1ve EDKINS resident of ng 11 •-IC 11111\TICE I · ot Mtseetlaneous M1p1, 1n SPRINGS, COSTA MESA. l"VUL "" Or/lll tlle olltee of Ille County Re-Costa Mesa pasted 2082 Mand1rln Or., Coata Tll• underalgnea 01•· M h 7 98 M CA 92828 81..,.. clalmt any ll•blllty for any corder 01 said County away arc I • I ~ ~~r~e M Cempeau lte>TICI Ofl lnco,,ectneaa of Ille streei Tiie street address •nd at the age o f 7 I.
1955 B11ear1e Or Colla "'*-tC IALI address ind ou11< common otlle< common de11Qnat1on, Beloved fath er of
Mesa, C•hf 92626 . Ofl NRIC*AL des!Qn11ton, ii any. lhown if any ot the real property Sharon L. Van SlckJ"" Ja G Whit J 2082 ~fffY llereTn deacribad above la "' Mand:a~~n Or c:.,;·M... ..,1. • S•ld Nie will bl made. but purl)Of1ed to be l l03 Cof. 0 r c 0 !I t a M e I a .
Caltl 92626 ' ' Notiee 11 lletet>y given 11111 wttllout coveo•nt or war· ona Lane Costa Mesa Call· Brother of Wall.ace
Htram A ci.Fn" 2&486 purauent to S.Ctlon 1988 of ranty. e.11prHs or 1mpheo. r• lornta F.dk San Vere Cruz Ln Mt. Viejo Ille CMI Code. State of Cali· girding 1111e. po1 .... 1on, or Tiie und8fMOned Trustee ms of ta Ana. Call! 92691 · · forn11, Section 2328 of tile encumbrancn . to P•Y Ille dlactaims any lllblllly for any G r and rat h er of
Tiit• buslnesa 11 con· C1lllornl• Commerclat rem11nlng prlncipe.t som of ~c:grrectne~s 0~111• stree1 James and Jodi. Mr.
ducted by· joint V9111Uft Code. S.Ction 535 of 1111 the note(•) MCured by Mid d resat an ~· r common F.dkins was 8 reured
L•wrenu M CamPMU CallfcM'nl• Penal Code and Oeld of Trull with lnternt es.on• Ion ' any lllOwn
Tt\11 1111emen1 w11 hied tile provlliona of tlle Cell· the<eon. 11 provided In Nld herein mt'C'hamc a nd ma·
wllll tlle County Cletk of Or· forn11 Auction Llcenalng notl(a), 1dvanee1. ti any. 1~ald11811 will be made. but chinist for 30 years.
•noe County on Marcn 13 Act. tlllunderllQnedwlttNll und«theterm9"ofMldOeld w ou covenanl Of .. ,,. He wu raised In 1985 · 11 publlC llM tly competltlw of Trust. f .... cll1rges and renty, express Ot lmplted re-S '2'1• bidding on the 28111 ctay of ••pen ... o1 tlll Truat• 1110 gardtno !Ille posseu1on. or anta Ana. a nd laved
Pubfllhed Orange Coat M•rcll, 1985. at 10:00 of 11111ru111 crelled by llld encumbrances. Including m Costa Mesa, New.
Daily Pllol M11ch 18 25 o'clock AM, IOelted II Pub· Died of Trull. INs. cllarges and expenses port area all his life.
Aprll t 8 1te5 ' · lie StOflQI. 13241 Jeffrey The 10111 arnoun• of tlle 01 ,,,. Trustee and 01 tile He was a veteran of ' ' M-ln Rold, In the Q ty of lrvtn9, unpeld blllnCI of 1,,. obll· trusts created by 181d Deed County o1 Otenoe. State of getlOn ~rid by lhl prop. of Trust. to pay Ille rem11n. World War JI. having
Celll0tnl1, tile 1bendonld lf1.Y.~ bl Iola and 1"911on· Ing prtnctpat sums of •Ile been a Chief Petty
gooda, cllattles or petaonll •bli ettlmlled cotts ex· notfl(s) secured by H id O rf1t-er an the Navy. ·-"' 11111\TM"f' proptftydMctlb.ci below In pen ... end ldvtnc.s at the Deed or Trull 10 Wll l"VULRI "" rw. the mlltefl Of time of the lnlllll publk:ation SH,223 58 Wllll Interest He was a memr>rer or
• ... John Bruc1!1IH•ll • 2 t>lkl. of the Notice of Siii I• t~eon from l/18/83 ,, VNeran or Foreign
NOTICI M 10011, Ice chat, uMCI tlret. S33,3e0.78. 14 ~per annum as provided Wars In lieu of PUMJC IALI M mlac llm, TV, Sp. D 312 Tiie beneflcl8fy under Mid In .. Id note<sl plus Cotta •nd f I f NRIOMAL. ~Rn Geofge Rider, Auel~. Oeld ol Trull he<llofor• e.11-any 1dv1n<H of Snone wttll o w e r !I , am 11 y
,....,, State LldlnM No A 1~25 eootld •nd deHvetld to thl tnternt prefers contributions
Notice 11 Mret>y glVl!l tMt L•ndlOrd rnervea Ille right unde<aloned 1 written Dec:· Tne benehctary unoer U ld lo Los Angeles Heart
---------------------------------------------pur~•nt to Section 1988 or 10 bid 11 tile NII. Purcl'llMI lerallon or def11.11t end 0.. ~~t,Tr~a~ ~re•::t• ex-Institute at St V in · Ille Clvll Code. St••• ol Clll· muat bemttClewllllcllh only mand lor Sale, and a wr11ten undera"'::.O e ~11 t~ t'('nl Medical Cent.er,
G t I • k 6 fi dd ' tornta s.ctlOn 232t'ot IM •nd ~Id for et tile time of Nolloe of Default end E19C· . ., a.,,,. en • ran 1 es ego 0 er Cillfornla Commercl1I purchH• All purcll1Md tlOntoSell TheunderllQMd 11~~'°;' 0~ ~eu~ and De· Los Angl'les. CA. Pri·
Code s.crion 535 of the goods •r• lold 11 11, 1nd c1uNC1 llld Notlol of o.. m 01 1 · •n 1 written vate services were
c11110rn11 Penil Code end must be removed et Ille time fault •nd E19C~lon to Sell-10 ~:': :..~:!ut~nd Elec· ht"ld. Di reeled by
Ille provlllOn• of tile c..... of purcllue Siie ~bjflet to be recorded tn tile county u. e<llQneoo p
By T1ite A11odated Preti
LA MIRADA -Whether
the topic was his daughter, drugs
or happiness. actor Cary Graat'a
humor and philosophy delighted
an appreciative audience durina
an appearance at a shopping mall
theater.
With 12 movies to has c redit,
Grant. 81 . told an enthralled
throng Fnday his secret to Ion·
JCVity has been to "do everythin.J
1n moderation. Except mak.ina
love."
He satd he sc•s "a kick" out
of his occasional appurancc5 lilce
Fnday ni&ht's "one-man how•• CARY GftANT
at La M irada C'1v1c Theater. tfc called them "ego fodder."
S11tina on a h1a,h wooden bar stool. O raoua1d he ha
a terrific relat1onsfi1p with his daughter, Jennifer. by his
rourth wife. Dru C.uoa.
' "We levc with each o ther," he said "I know when
"he's look1naat me she'\ not thinking. ·r wonder 10 can a~
thas o ld aoat fnr a BMW • " '
With a thatch o(wht1e hair fram1na h'5 f1m1lrarsquare
race, the actor discussed his medically supervised
cxpenc ncc two decade~ ago W11~ I D.
.. , know that f became happ er because or ll." he said.
"Also I lost a lot of the fears that f had .. lhe hypocnsy ••
Bui he s:ud he doc n't recommend ''' U1C becau~ "11 1~
romt• AuC11on Lteenelng prior Qneeffltlon In 1111 where the rMI property 11 f::~nd ~tee~~~~ .. ~ aerce Bros. Bell
• • • Act tht undlrliOMd Wll Mtl IYent ot Mttlement ~ locltld. o Broadway Mortuary.
11Publlc1111 by competitive Lendtord end obltglled 0811: F'ebru~5. 1916 be reeOfdld '" Ille CO\lnty fl42-91~
NEW YORK -Actor Tom Sellttll is television's bidding on the 2tth day of p&11y D•ttd thl• 11111 end MLIMU 8TMDfT ;:::c,111• real prol)lfty " ~ 'd $220 ()()() . I' • • MMcfl 1N5 II 2·30 o'ciodt 18th day of Merch, IN 5 COWOllATIOM, " MN -------.... I est pa1 actor at . . percpaS<?<t~ 01 the htt sen es PM, ioc1t~ et Pubtlc Publlc Storage Menage• ,,,.....,-....,.....,.... Ott•: Fet>niwy 21. 11185 agnum.P.l.,buthtsesttmatedS4.8~1l.honannualsaJary Stor1g1,20ISP*llnll•Av· ment, Inc . Callfomll Aue· Lei A"•••••· CA,_"::. .... =~ Cet· HAMOR LA ...
falls short or JHa8y c.,....•, SS m1lho n, accordina to enue. 1n tne City of eo.11 tlon L1c11111 No. c t191. ,..,,......-. 11Jt AN 1. Mn ~ ._:::::· llT. OLM
People magazine. M .... County of Orange, Telephone 12131 '82·3801, ..-.... AHi•••• .... -....._ CA (11•>' Mort~~ c.m:-1 ... .-Y lo · · · · • Stet• ot Cetifornl• the Aoant for Landtord ,.g,y _,,_,r • • ..,..,
Also c ostng an on the SS m1U1on r...,rc 1 Alu ANe, .~ eood• c:t\et1tet Pl.tbfltNIO Orange COMt Publiened °'~ eo..t • 97: '-' ~ 1826 o...., 119•
who reportedly w1ll .recc~ve $4.4 millio n next ye~r under a or pertonll Pf°"'1Y o. D= P11o1 Mercn , 1, tt. D111l Pltot Mll'ctl 11, 1e, 25. D;~~:r'M~~~ 11 o~:t eo.t.a Me.a
contrac t for a new s1tua1ton comed y o n CBS. Jn its M arch acrlbld ti.IO'lr In the met· 191 M-331 198 1tU · ' • 540-5554
25 issue, t~e magazine lists paychecks or S 7 top celebrities. ter~: Olugejc::zytl • Bel M-34 I M·340
The kanaorshow biz earnings for 1984 appears to have ffeptct. oemnt cuttr, 15 bu: --------·•---------•--------
been rock star Mlcbel Jack ... , wh o rcpe>rtedly took in ml9C. oame Sp. D 109 PWUC flOTIC( PmUC llJTIC( "8.IC NOTIU
$10 million for his album "Thriller ... Jackson donated an JO-,::. Novele • 2 et:,:. 1 _ ·-........ _ ·-...... -..
estimated SS million from his Victory tour to the U nited U>' ..,! ~ ,,.::'.., .-.: ,v::.-:..~~:-::W1uTI~
Negro Coll~ Fund and other C'harit1es. c.M. m11c: "'"· 8' A 03t ._..... ..,... ,.,.. --_ .. ,
Jackson still lags behind the lifetime caminp o( <Horii!_,.._,.,, AuctloMtlr; • YIA':.=o~= r..""' CW
former Beatie Paal MeCarne" who "has made more s1111 Lfin1t No A 1225 ••·-·-c--·-- -·-· --.. h · · ,. L~d r~ the r!Qtll --• --•..,... ~ ............. money t an any m~s1c1an wh o ever hved." a total ofSSOO to bid .. .._ ..... "-°'*91 ,.. -.... ltfMt,
m1lhon. the magaltne said. mu.tlllflmedewttllCMflonty ,...,,.,..._,.,..wtet'h-.1110I
Runner-up o n the po~ c hans IA'st year was Prt.ee, end "'4 for '•t 1N t1m1 Of T 11 lld u es 951 2 •who earned S 17.8 m1ll1'0 " o r i..:a. "r.urple Ra1'n" alb"m . purchat. All purct1eMct 01 mtttld MMtt .. · ...... """' ......... " .. ·2 • •41
,, • • ~ r ., good• .,. IOld 11 II, and Totll ~-................. -..... .. ..... -. S2, 1ot.1ot.10a
0 must be r~ 11 the Umt Cepltll p.ict 141 ... · ........ • ........... • ... """'""" ... .. 0 L NOON -Pr't8ce AMl'ew, a Rqyal Navy of purchal a ... eut>j9Ct 10 °'°" plld 1t1 end contrtt>uttd Mptua .... -......................................... •• 'f'~··oi-'. o
helicopter p tlOt who new decoy missions durina the 1982 PflOr ct~lllon In the =""~ Fundl.. .. .............................. ., t 5 ,tq,ff()
Falklands War. will ~n the ialands' new airpon near Pon ....,,, ot ... ....,,.,,. ~ fund• · • ·~·-......... _ •·· 0
S I · M ""-I'. M · · landlord end obfl91t.cf o.ln (lOM) lfom OC*lllOM ...... ............. l ,4M,4&e tan ey 1n ay. t~ 1ensc rnmry said. P#ty o...., ''* ''"' and lftef .... 1o.cr .... 1111 cepttel end -p1cn dlHlne 1N4 . ............ (22,M&,7'81 The 2S-year-otd prince is currently in the South 1ath d~ of M~ ''"· 1neutenoe 1t1,orc.· N1110nW1Ctt..... .... . .. .. ................ ; . 1011.114,000
Allanttcon thcfripac HM Brazen, which platrolsthe2()().. Publlc lt0ttte Men...,. Aocldent & H .. 1ttqwtm1U1M .. · ......... ............................ 111.574.U3 'J t 8 · h • • t."' d i.. "*"' Inc Clllforl'le ~ lneurMCt"' Force ClltfonW lwtiMll Pap .. -... -...... 1 297.613.133 m1 e pro ~ion zone nta1n as mainta1nicu aroun lne LtcenM No c 1191 ,... AWMnt end'*"" prem1um1 . OW.Ct c.llforni. au......."'°* 1uu.111
Falkland since the end of the war with Aratnt1na. pllone (2 U) 412;3101 we ~ cenlfy ''* IM MOiie 11...,. .,. 111 ~ wttn 1111 Annw1
The Br11zen will remain in the Falklands until June. Agent ror ltndlOrcf' • s11111Nn1 tor !fie YMf ~ Oeotmt>et 31, IM4 INdt 10 the tneurtnee Com·
lllCM ICI
llMTUMY
1795 L..-c Cwtyon
1rreaal."
"Lake anythrna eltt thafi aood
"I hey take rt away .... "
A Buck.1~ham Palace "Pok-man ••id •ndrew 'P111>11lhld 0tenoe eo.1 ""~°'the a .. te f:A Ctlffomle. ~ 10 ,.. 1 " .. ,,. .-'°' "•" p M I Wllliem D Smith, VI09 lttealOellt and Confr..., for )Ou," he Jaad, decided to ~ orm 1he bpcn1n1 ceremony ror 1ht new IN~ t10t ercfl 11· 1 · J"'*, ""°'· ..,_lit'Y
LeguN ltec:ti, Ca .• , ........ ,.
11rpond~~~oo~~o~a~un~ ______ M_·~~~2--~-~---~-*-•--~--~--~~M=·~~~,:~~·~1·~·~·~·1j•:·~~·~1~~-~~~=c~==~S~~: .,
-
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.. •• en
>n
l'le
I/I•
11
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Ill
6,
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" • • '·
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I
-
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..
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HoRoscoP£
Pacific . Forfurther information
Travel •
r ...... advertitin~
School
610 I . lldi St .. S.... A ...
Ca. 92101
D«ANGI COUNTY'S ONL y rllVAn
ACCllDfTID TIAVEL AGENCY SCHOOL
placement in the
School. A lnatru~tion1
Directory -call
C•ll (714) 543-1415
6 4 2-4321 2 e xt309~•: ........ _._ ..... .._ .............
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROll
t Some foods
5 C1rd g•me
10 Skin sutt
1' Wll111Ung -•n
15 Living
16 limb
17 Ao1ter
ti Wrinkled
19 Annoyer
20 Atllde
21 Cager group
22 Voids
24 Soup b.-ae
26 MllP
27 JOUfnel
28 1nc1tn.ng
31 l(lod of nul
3• We1ry
35 "-F11tier " aeo1-
37 MMtcul
31 Contrlt>ulJOn
10 ,,,. pol
39 FjOfd
40 Newtpep«
4 1 P1rtlcul1r
•2 Furnlllled
44 Vettlcle
4SCurrenl
48 Tra....,oroup
50 Pfoc.aelOn
52 Advanced
53 11100 krone
54 S.frl«ld
55 Inventory
5 7 S Americ1n
upllal
58 Forfett
St An 11c111ngei
80 M1ple
61 PHl -
82 Pub~tngs
63 Couches
I Outward
2 ISiands word
3 -pole
4 Mrs 1n Sp11n
5 Picket
6 EV9!green ''" 7 Cettle
8 Sundown
II Snipe
tOEicll 11 Publte voles
12 Origll'llle
13 FIOor covers
2 1 Dotard
23 Putt
25 lMClled
26 srio. atud
21SlrN61
211 Cashews
30 CFL'1 -Cup·
7
3 t Pr•IUd1C• « S.ulS of
32 Unbleac'*S burden
Cloth 46 ln,,.,,.ed Y
33 Siren • 7 Alto or bits
34 Aecenorse 41 H•vlng guns
37 - -10 tries 10 49 Com.t clOM
impress 50 Hend p1r1
31 All 5 I Ending tor peeti
40 Luge 52 au.tier
• t 0..1 sa Thr" pref 43 ltetl'lers 5 7 Nlld 11ea
8 9 12 1
•
..
714 -833 1300
CHIClt
IVEaSON
POR HE
AUDI
CHEVROLCT
Hltl'IHI Ov•ll1'1
S.I•• I S.r.,lu
LARGEST SELECTION
Of tat• model. IOw mlMg9
CadlltKt In Or.nge
Counl)'I See us todeyt
140-1111
.. 9TLlll_.
S 199 d<Mn. C.E. Com--
merelal I•••• ALL-SAVERS 7141W • 1t n ........ ............. ....... ·~···t:s ., d<Mn. Ind
Commeirc6111 L ... OAC
IU.-llftll Lllll 800122...,..
71 4/'32-1&11 ·--·11 ma.;;;; ;;;n: a
t!Wle. ~ wNa. new
lit•. $1750 tso-7045
...
l
I
1
BUENA
PARK
GARDEN GROVE
...... _ ...
(
. .
HUNTINGTON
BEACH
..J 0 .... "' ir
CD
EDINGER
d~FRWY
Q •WARNER
e CHICK IVERSON
Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi
441 E. 0.ast hJ., le.,ert llHll
111-lllO
Highest Quality Sales & Service
9 NABERS CADILLAC ~j)
2100 llAlllll ILYI., COSTA IESA
(114) 140-1100 (213) 111-1211
• Best Prices • Convenient Location
•Great Location •Super Service
• Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People
< w CD
~ 0 CREVIER BMW ~ V! SALES • SERVICE • LEASl~G \,,I
"Where Professional Attitude Prevails"
Spect8tlztng In Europeen Dellv..-y. Exceflent a.Mellon of
New end ceretu1t1 prepar9d UMd BMW'• always In stock
835-3171
208 W. 1at St., Santa Ana
Corner 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.
Compet1t1ve Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals
20IO ....... , ....... Oest• ....
142-0010., 14,Q-1211
0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS INC.
• LONG TERM LEASES
• COMPETITlvt PURCHASE PRICES 0 * HUGE INVENTORY :...l:
dial MERCEDES
213/714 837-2333
Next to Santa Ana Fw\j (5) on
Manchester/Beach Blvd.
G ORANGE COAST JEEP/RENAULT
-.
LAGUNA
HILLS
-
0 CONNELL CHEVROLET
2121 •• ,.., lhtl., Oest• ....
Over 23 Years Serving Orange County
Sales • Service • L~ng
541·1211 S,ecill Pll'ts Ult 541-9400
MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM
SATURDAY -8:30 AM -8:00 PM
SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM
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. PARTS DIPARTMINT OPEN OC':n~e • SALES SATURDAY MOMINQS
r-oa t • sERv1cE BMW ~ ROLLS ROYCE
• LEASING 1540 Jamboree Rd. . ;li:~o • ACCESSORIES DEPT Newport Beech 840-8444
• JIM SLEMO~S IMPORTS o . COMMONWEALTH •
1301 Qu•ll St. =:.. ~C•r Location VO'"KSWAGEN 1001 Qu•ll St. -... ,. Dlvl•lon II
0 World's Larges lectlon of 0 ®· r' , MILY STORE SINCE ·53· -Mercedes Benz A. ~~t,. FA ~ DOVE ST 833-9300 Sales • Service • Lea•ing., -888
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UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE
HO,.DA
2880 Harbor Blvd.
Coata Mna 540-0713
3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy.
..
Tlae ,..., c., B•v•
la Or•••• Co••IJI ., .. ,
r1a. a •• ,.,. Ll•ted
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Development pro·posals raw attac s hcadq.uaners site at Jamboree lcaSt to outside tenants. City ofTtdals
Boulevard and the San Dieeo Free-have araued 1hat Fluor can build new
way. ofTtces for its own corpora1e use but from company's corporate neigh City officials said S.000 noticn not for specula&ive or aeneral ofTt«
about tonipa•s mtttina were mailed space. By PHIL SNEIDERM~ °' ...............
Irvine City Council members will
review busincn <kvelopment rules
toniaht that may hamper Fluor
Corp.'s plan to build office buildjnp.
Cout
Polson Prevention Hoapl-
tal Ofympica pitted
guerney pushers, bed-
makers./ AJ
Hoag Memorial Hospi-
tal's 552 Club raises a half
million dollars a year for
the Newport Beach fa-
cillty./ A3
callfornla
Yuba City, themuct\ma-
ltgned munlclpaJlty rated
woc.atby A8nd-McNaJty,
hoet• a funeral for the
map making firm./ A5
Tornadoes rip acrou
Florida town killing two,
Injuring 40 and de-
stroying 55 houses./ A5
still en Joys support of
many AmerTcans.TAI
World.
Commercial flights Into
Iran are cancelled as Iraq
·vows to down any aircraft
flying In that nation's air-
space./ M
Just-released text of Sov-•
let speech shows
Gorbachev ran the coun-
try for the alllng
Chernenko./ AS
Features
Dick Dodd, former J
Mouseketeer and singer
with The Standells, Is
making a "comeback" in
Huntington Beach./Ct-
Tom Selleck and Johnny
Carson are leaders
among television's high-
est paid performers./C4
Sports
Newport Harbor Yacht
Club's Rod Davis wins his
second Congressional
Cup./81
Two-run singles by Jerry
Narron and Bill Russell lift
the Angels and Dodgers
to exhibition baseball vic-
tories./81
Entertainment
High school drama stu-
dents get a look at how
professional theater
works./C3
Bulnae
Reagan supporters say
the increase in the
number of upper-Income
AmerJcans and their
1hare of the federal In-
come-tax burden lhow
that his economic poli-
cies are worklng./IM ~ I
DmEX ·
Bridge
Buletln Board
Bulf Mii
Clullfled
Comlcl
Crouword
Oeatfl Notk:el
FMtut•
Horoecope
Ann Lander•
Opinton
PIS*uzt
Police Log
Pubffc Notlcel
8portl
TelevtllOn
TMaterl ......
--
ee
A3
84-5
CS-7
81
C7
C-4
C1--' ce
C2
Al
C1
A3
C4
81~
C3
C3
A2
hotels. stores and other facilities
around its corporate hcadquancrs.
Tht council m~ts at 7:30 p. m. in a
special meetina called to review the
Irvine Business CQmplex zonina or-
dinance that aoverns Fluor's 162-acre
Queen of the county
to local property owners. businnaes The dlsaarecment sunaced a ftw
and communhy associations. weeks aao whe" Fluor ofTiciaJs un-
Auor officials prompccd a dispute veiled a two-phase master deve~
with their corporate neiahbon and _ ment plan callina for censtrucaion of
the city when Fluor announced its . three hotels. , a convention center.
plan to construct office buildinp (or nine hiah-rise office buildil)p, a •
Dana Adkins, the 1984 111-Onqe
CoantJ, Cl'OWD8 her HCCe .. or, 28-J9U·
old Dorie llataon of Onqe, at competi-
tion beld Sanday DICbt at Onqe Cout
Coll-=-e. The conteet, tae flnt •fep OD the road to the 111-America pa&eant, at-
tracted 20 1~ ladl• from tliroqbout
Soatbem Callfomta.
seized in
DALLAS (AP) -When federal involvement wtth drugs.''...,sa1d his
drua 11Cnts raided two Orange Coun-lawyer. Merwin Gra_nd of Phoenix.
ty motels June 22. they found $4. I Ariz. ..Mr. Alfaro is a respected
million in allqed illicit drug traffick· businessman and broker ... a member
ing proceeds that were about to be of the Lions Club for 20 years.''
"laundered" through a California However. federal officials said that
ben.k. almost S 16 million was shuffled
A~thorilics also· found evidence through Tesoro Savi ngs and Loan in
'th•• a prominent Mexican tnvcst· Lan:do and the First City National
men' broker. Mardoqueo Alfaro Bank of El Paso. They reprd it as the
Maptino. had used an El Pas.o..bpk larant known scheme to launderdrua
and a lAu'edo savinp and an in a ~-Y throuah Texas in recent yeart.
simillr' ,..shion. the· Dallas Times Federal officials are trying to sei?e
Herald ~ported Sunday. ~ -·"1'6.S million on deposit at the El Paso
Alfaro has not bttn charted with bank and S 1.4 million at the Laredo
criminal wron1doin1 and has denied thrift. They also arc setkina rcim·
any involvement in drua activities. burscmcnt of $8 million that was
He t-..111SWNd that ~ is simply an hurriedly transferred out of the in-
lnv'*mcl)t advitcr and broker for stitutions after the Internal Revenue
wealthy Mt""iatn citiins. Service ~llefd a claim on the .Mex·
"Wt disavow any involvement ican bu11nnaman's funds. the news-
whh laundtrina moMy. and any ( ...... wM.111/A2)
11"8duatt w"6 now specializn in
aviation law. bu bttn fWMi"l t~
('()Unty's many and v1md . letll
bauln ovtr Sohn Waynt Airpon
Mnct' 1978.
has tt~ the s..
Red Pon Au~lf ia ll'il9I
IO Undbtrih Fitld1nd lht
' I.* TaMr \ft Northcft C"alifomia lh at• airpon wan. In tlw
pi(Kftl. Mllinllmtd I~'""'. • '~ ...... •t11C'd &awytr. G1t1kr may have aaJaancM Ml
ttpuMlioe ... .-k •ft« the IO"ii\I
multi-scrttn movie theater, retail
shops. restaurants. a health club and a
day care ttnter -all on acreaeie surroundi .. the exi1tina areen-slut
Fluor faciliaies.
· The international enaineerina. con-
struction and natural resources man-
aatment company added a new
wrinkle Friday when ii announced it
was withdrawana the second p~ of
<kvelopment plan .
This second phale induded ..a 2j.
Story, 40C).ruom hoWl. a halth cWl. 8
day<are cnw and three o8lce towers im..siaaely acijlcmt IO ....... eat Fluor buildiap.
Fluor ofldals Mv-e admitted abet
lack the development ,. .. '° build
the teCOt)d plme. But they said tbry
Jw>pt to secure approval from the city
to build Pbate II. . -• (Pl••• w ruioa1~
Rubberch@ck
spree gets CM
teen in trouble
Boy, I 7, 'bought'
van, two cycles,
seized in Vegas
By ROBERT BAR&Ell °' .. ..._ .......
A alleged check-writing spree by an
enterprising 17-ycar-old Costa Mesa
boy who traveled in hiJh style with
severaljuvenilc fnendifiasended in a
Las Vegas hotel after Huntinston
Beach police. Las Yeps police and
the FBI goto~ .
The caper bqan the wee !ftlhJ
March 9-when the youth walked in&o
South County Volk~n and made
out a check of S2S,7SO. takina
delivery of a new Volkswasien Van-
aaon. a local police spokeswoman
said. ·
A day or so later. the same boy
showed up with friends in the
Vanqon at Beach Yamaha in Hunt·
ington Beach and purchased two I 98S
Yamaha mot.orcycles, two matdlina
helmets and took out two inswa~
Apin. he wrote out a check (or the--
purchases from a "S1aner" check
book without names or addresees
printed on the checks. accordina to
the spolceswoman.
But thinp bcpn to unravel Friday
after the Volka-.en dealer tried to
cash the ·check and it bounced.
accordina to ti¥ spokeswoman.
l'he lTOUtAerlSietpenectrilllc lattt
when an anonymous caller told tbe
FBI that he had heard a conversation
at a truck stop in Nevada about two
men havinc .. unla~ul potlellion04 of
motorcycles.
(...._ wCllSCU/AS)
Burglar thWarts
FV school kids,_
Disneyland trip
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' .. ~ ..........
Students at Vista View ~hool in
Fountain Valley sold candy, hosted a
potluck dinner and conducted other
fund-raisers to raise money for their
traditional eighth~grade graduation
trip to Disneyland.
But that trip is jeopardy now.
school officials say. because a thief
stole I 70 Disneyland tickets wonh
about S2.000 from the school office.
.. It sure ruined my St. Patrick's
Day.'' Vista View Principal Patrick
Monahah said today.
Even more disappointed. he said.
arc the eighth-grade students who had
been looking forward to a June
excursion to the world famous
Federal cutbacks .
reflected in lack
of new state funds
From staff and wire reports
.\!though more college students
need financial aid. the amount of
Uni versit) of California student
loans and grants ~111 stn} the same or
decrease nc>.t school \ear. UC of·
ficials sa~. ·
Financi al aid to sludents from
federal. state. un1vC'rsit~ and private
sources gre\\ b' 50 percent to total
more than $~53 m1lhon an 1983-84.
according to a repon presented to the. UC' Board of Re&en1 s meeting at C
Irvine last Wl~k.
But thc.-growth rate for the funds
was slo~er than the rate of inflation
for the sam1.· period. the repon said.
Nearly 67.000 students -about
half of the total enrollment 1n the
JEFF
Alul
P lOPlf I ~ HH N£WS
cau,t'll 1n a huJlc bcty.ccn two or
thrl'e d1tTtrcn1 coun •• aukc C\·
plain~ of th<' board' d«mon to sue
He ~1d th:u he ~" the legal
pmhkm' \'<'trltng arnund John
\\a} nl.' \ 1 rporf n~ n ~rn·., Of C"Omt't't-
Anaheim amusement park.
According to a Fountain VaJley
pollce repon. someone entered the
office at Vista View. 162.SO Hickory
St.. while the school was closed
between 6 p.m. Thursday and 7 a.m.
Fnda}.
The intruder opened a locked file
cabinet and a counter safe that may
not have secured properly. In ad-
dition to the Disneyland uckets, the
thief took S 1.090 in other funds raised
by Vista View students.
That money was raised throuah
Easter esg sales and was earmarked
for an eighth-grade tnp to Catahna
Island and a seventh-grade trip to the
San Diego Zoo.
(Pleue eee TICltltTS/ A2)
nine-campus UC system. including
those at UC Irvine -received
financial aid in 1983-1 •J84. Almost
three out of four minority students
and two of three graduate students
received financial help. the rcpon
said.
-· Student aid funds from f~ral
grant and loan programs have been
stable for the past two ye.an. the
repon said. but the Reagan adminis-
tration has ca lled for cuts for l 985-86.
Some of that loss will be offset by
increased student aid funds from the
state. the rcpon said.
Student aid includes both grants
and loans. with students bccomina
more dependent on loans that must
-be repaid after graduation. The pros-
pet't of a large debt after graduatton
ma) afTC<'t tht' career. i.choi~ of
st14dents. says UC Prnioent David
Gardner.
• •• <\ student may be willina to
borro" S7.000 to go to medical
school. but not be w1lltn1 to ao into a
(Pleue eee •TUDSNT / A2)
I -
'
Blaze a t Marriott
Hotel in Irvine
quickly quelled
Oran&l' County fircfi&hten quickly
put out 1 mall fltt that brokt out th11
mornm.a 1n the bescment of the 17· 'ilO~ Muriott Hotel 1n Irvine.
F1rcfighter say the fi re was traced
to a hc1Vy-duty •washtr-dcytt lhal
horcl emplo)ces use to launder hotel
linen.· ·
It was 1hc Sttond such blaze at tbc
hotel in a )Cit.
Smoke could be Sttn whco fire·
fiahtcrs arrived at 1hc ho1cl at 18010
Yoo Kurmann shonly after the out·
break of the 8:39 a.m. fi re.
No one was injured and none of ttk
FLUOR PLANS STUDIED •••
From Al
Tht" company says it does. how·
ever. have the ri1h1s or entitlemrnts
to bu ild its proJects in the first phase.
which include six office buildings and
two hotels.
In a statement released by the
company. David S. Tappan J r ..
Auor's chairman and chief executive
officers. said the withdrawal of the
Phase II plan was done "to eliminate
TICKETS •• ~
From Al
o s11n of forced entry to the offi ce
was detected. Pol ice say a master or
pass key may have bet'n used in the
burglary.
··Thi was monev the students had
any confusion rtgardin& the entitle·
ment issue before the City Council
involving Phase I of the master plan."
He add~. ..These entitlements.
granted in 1983. permit Fluor to
develop an additional 1.8 million
square feet of office space.··
Other business officrals in Irvine
ha'e criticized the Fluor proposal as
100 large and ha ve said it 1s likely to
raised themselves:· Monahan said.
"They (the thieves) have to be pretty
low to pull a stunt like that:·
On the positive side. the school had
earlier recorded the serial numbe rs of
the m1ssin1t tickets. which may enable
STUDENT FEES •••
From Al
profession eq ually important where
the ability to repay is vl!ry remote:· he
said.
The report said students have come
10 depend more on loans as fu nds for
gradts have been cut. the report said.
The average student loan doubled to
Sl.969 for undergraduate students
and $3. 988 for graduates over th e past
fi ve years.
100 aue,ts Wl!i C\ICUltcd. In fact.
m~t 1unt1 pr<>babl) wtre not even
awar<: of the incident. fire dtpartn1ent
'P<>kcsman Jot Kerr said toda)'. The
damaft was estimated ai S 1.000.
"mi&ar ftrt broke out May IS. 198•. 1n a laundry dryer. scnd1n1
smoke into the hotel's flrst floor and
for ina the evacuation of some 400
auc ts and employcn .
Among those who Oed the blllt
was former President Richard Nixon.
who was stayinJ at the Mam ou wh ile
in the rou111y for a speakina cnaaae·
ment
t'ausc scrio.us traffic problems.
But Friday's statement from Fluor
said the company "firml~ believes
that the project. as a whole. is well
pla nned a nd includes so und
measures to m11iaa1r traffic."
Fluor"s partner in the building plan
is the Dallas-based Trammel Crow
Co .. a major development firm that
has an office in Oranac County.
D11ne)'land employees to catch any·
one tryina to u~ tht-stolen Pl*'·
Also. the missina funds included
many checks. which will be difficuh
tocasti. Monahan said donors may be
willina to write new checks to take the
place ofthott stolen.
The pri ncipal said he has written to
Disneyland. askina for suacstions
about how to handle the ticket loss.
Meanwhile, students who are sttH
lookina forward to a Disneyland trip
will have to th ink about new fund-
raisina projects. he said.
·'We're aoina to st6'rt to raise more
money." Monahan said.
Parity cloudy lki.t wlll clHt lon&ght IW'd 8outnern Callfornle
wlll bee lttUe Watl'Nf Tut9Uy, t"-Netlonal WMthet Setvlce
uld.
Tht cloudln•• w .. ceuMd by • WMk cold front In lhe area todey. Fotecaeter1 ukl IN Sen Oebtlel and Sen llrNrdlno
vllley9 woukl have • 40 percent oNnce Of contlnulnt Mower• tonight. Northtrn dtMrl art•• alao wert given• allgtlt chance of
ahower1 tonight. Along the Orenge Coael It wMI be motlly ctoudy with
eceuered ahowet'1 ending from the northweel tNI evenino. P.nly ctoudy tonlOht, becomlno m<*ly .unny Tueedey. Cooler tonight. Hlghl Tuetdey In the 801. LOWI lonlght In the '°* end ,
lower 501
Tempe
• st
Calif. Temp•
CHECKS •••
From Al
The FBI contacted two men who
had the motorcycles. The pair told the
federal officials they were hitchhikina
and that some juve niles had ai ven
them the two motorcycles.
The FBI then put, out an all poi nts
bulleliaaluti '!l_pol 1ce aaencies about
thr Costa Mesa youfha nifllts mends.
n ..,.., .,oM ua o.i ., c-t•
Saota C.wr
S111ta M•rla
Ta1-V....., '°''-
Surf report
LOcATION ~lintlort IMCll
"'-Jelty ~ 40tll&lrMt.~I 22nd StrMI. Newpotl
e.ll>Oe Weclge
l9QWnae.c11
SanCi.rnenla
Watet !emf> 57
s-clirt!Cllon --·
Ti dee
TOOAY SKoncltow 20Spm s.cono "'Oh a 2ep"'
TUHOAY
F1UllOW 1·Mam
=~ 7•54 am
2)2pm
Second lligh •••pm
.. 50
83 41 53 H
15 ..
°' 44
u 54
05 ••
9"n Mii today at 8·03 p m ; rlMe
Tunday at !> $1 am and Nit aQllin M
• 04 p"' Moon Mii today at 3 39 p m , ri..
Tuetday a1 s H • m and Ml• aQMI at • 37am
Later Friday. employees at the
Union Plaza Hotel in Las Vcps
received a eomP.laint about un· ·
supervised juveniles staying at the
•r.:,,.ill!IPa.:;.,...-,,__ hotel. ~hcc-Ul VHt ip ted-and-f ound
the Costa Mesa boy at thr hotel as wtll
as two other boys. two girls and one
youni adult. all fro m Costa Mesa.
$4. lM IN CASH SEIZED IN OC •••
From Al
paper reported.
··1 feel we're just lookin~ at the tip
of the iceberg.'' said Phillip Jordan.
special agent in charge of the Drug
Enfort'ement Adm1nistrat1on's re-
gional office an Da llas ... La underi ng as
here in the Southwest.··
Money lau nderin~ involves taking
cash reapt'd from illlc11 activi ties and
using 111n le~I financial transactions
to make 11 d1fficuh to trace.
The newspaper said one of the two
people arrested in the motel raid an
Anaheim la'>I summer told agents
that the money t'ame from the sale of
drugs.
<\ few da)S later. an a11ornry
representing the two people told
prosecutors that the two were work-
ing for Alfaro and that he had paid
them to deposit the fundc; m the Bank
of Coronado 1n San Ysidro, the
newspaper said.
.\bout the !lame 11me. DEA agents
received 1nfo"rmation from confiden-
11al in formant.-. 1hat i.\lfaro was in-
volved with a Guadalajara-based
drug-1rafrirk1ng ring. the newspaper
said. The informants estimated that
the operation garnered profits of
betwee n S 10 million and S20 mill ion
a month.
Based upon that es11mate. the IRS
immediately placed levies on all U.S.
assets in which Alfaro was believed to
have an interest. the newspaper said.
Au1hori11es said they learned of the
Texas and Californ ia bank accounts
through material seized at the
<\na hc1m motels and transaction
records.
Howe,er. Alfaro and his business
a!tsoc1a 1es allegedly managed 10 slip
SS million quickly out of the twt>
Texas 1nst1tutions. officials said -S6
million from Tesoro Savin~ and
Loan and $2 mi llion from First City.
Several million dollars from
Tesoro Sa,1ngs and Loan was wared
10 Panama fi nancial 1ns111 ut1ons.
court documents said.
Federal officials are trying 10 force
the two Texas banks to re1mbur!>C the
go,ernmcn1. since the Q10ney was
released after the I RS had announced
m claim on Alfaro·s funds
The banks said they had no
knowlcdae of Alfa ro·s alleged connec-
tion to the fu nds and should not have
to gi ve the government any money.
Alfaro's attorneys insist he made
no attempt to evade the IRS actiQn.
his name did not appear on any of the
accounts in question and that he was
not involved with 1Ul.)' money
launderina or druas.
Nonetheless. U.S. District Judge
Harry Lee Hudspeth of El Paso ruled
in November that the facts of the civil
case back~ the government's claim
that the disputed funds were drua-
related.
The newspaper said its.attempjs to
contact Alfaro for comment were
unsuccessful.
Court documents show that Alfaro
has mo ved vast amounts of money.
Hudspeth found that at the time of
the Anaheim arrests. Alfaro con-
trolled about $25 mill ion in various
loca1ions.
The Judge said Alfaro's expla-
nations about the tra nsactions .. lack
credibility ...
AIRPORT COUNSEL OC'S 'HIRED GUN' •..
They released fou r of the r.oung-
stcrs to their parents and didn t press
charges against the young adult.
But the youngster with the check-
book. who was not inden11fied. was
arre11ed and faces charges 1n connec-
t 1 on with his check-writing
prochv111cs. the police spokeswoman
said.
Cookie monster
steals $1 , 800
A lone robber armed wi th a knife
stole S 1.800 Sunday from a South
Coast Plaza cookie store, where an
employee was preparing to deposit
the money at a bank.
Costa Mesa police said the worker
was closing Mrs. Field's Cookies fo r
the c.vening. when the robber came up
from behind and demanded the bag
containina the store·s deposit.
The robber. described as a white
man. about 18 years old. 5 foot 6
inches tall , 145 pounds. ·ned on foot
with the money bag around 7 p.m.
The employee was unharmed.
St. Patrick'• party
..._e Lane and llarlna L011Chla•oyounc 1et Into the eplrlt of
thin&• dartnc a St. Patrick'• Day party Saturday at Lido
Marilla Vlll&Ce. Tbe puty wu a fandralelnl e•ent for the
Newport Jayceee Clab. -
From Al
"I th ank one of our biggest goals 1s
10 redure thl' l1t 1~t1on that occur!.:·
he c;a1d. "L111ga t1on is not a wa} to
resolve anylhmg. The poh11cal pro-
cess 1s a much better way for these
dec1s1on' to be made. but 11 doesn·1
alwa ys work And the1ud1c1al system
1s even les'> democratic
Vietnam 'ia1d he was assigned 10
research a case in volving no1sc-
rela1ed lawsuits at Lindbergh Field.
Eve ntually. the law fi rm and G atzke
prevailed following a long trial.
Two county men
path) tor rcMdCnlS who hve near a rrested Jn r.·~pe large. noisy airpons. such as John a
Two Garden Grove men wtre
arrested last weekend and booked for
investigation of the Jan. 2 rape and
sodomy ofa woman who worked at a
tavern. police said.
'-<IH.I. dlltlln~ 111dt bail was set at
$50.000 for each man .
Following the aisault outside the
Sin Not Bar on Wel"lminster Avenue
in Garden Grove. the two were
detained and later released by 1n-
ve<111gntors. Johnson said. They we re
re-arres ted in the Buena Cl1nt9n area
on arrest warrants.
Wa yne. Lindbergh Field or Los Of ta Vern WOrker Isabel C Ocana. 32. and Pedro
Angeles Internationa l. While express· Gutierrez. 34. were held at ttte Orange
S11ll. Gat1kc said he has no special
interest 1n av1a11on. has never con-
\lderc.d becoming a pilot and. 1n fact.
ha!> a sh~ht fear of heights .
1ng sym pathy. however. Gatzke County Jail. police Sgt. Joe Johnson
pointed out that the residents still ~ri=~;~====;~;~~~;;;;~~~=;::;;:;~:~;~=====~:i represent only .. one voice (amon~ the
many) that must be taken into
account by the proprietors run ninaan
airport." .. Lit1ga1wn '"not a magic panacea
101he problem' there I'd like to try to
work m\'ielf out of a job as a trial
law)rr and I'd like 10 think we·re
mo ving 1n that direction ...
(1allkt: puffing on an ever·present
t:1garcttt'. said he found himself
immersed 1n av1at1on law almost b)'
accident After Joining a San Diego
law firm after law school graduation
in 1973. the former lJ S. Arm y
Intelligence offi cer who served in
Just Call
642-6086
Moncl.ly ,,.,,., If '"'' dn l'I04 "-.. y<Nt ~ l>'f
S30111" rato.!"'t 71>"
111\0 y<>ol' V 'f•1 ""' tlOt .......... .,
He al<.o said that !>tncc he now
spends about 70 lo 75 percent of his
time handling aviation cases. he's
consciously decided against getting
any more 1nvolvc.'d 1n av1at1on.
.. , might get too personally
wrapped an tel hn1callt1es and that
could hurt my ability to simplify and
translate 1<.sucs for a la y 1ury:· he
ex plained.
The.' attornc~ al!>o expressed sym-
He added. "Like wit h any urban
problem . there are people li ving in an
environmen t they'd rather not live an.
I accept this as a given:·
Gatzke as no stranger to life near an
airport .
He said his hou~ is sit uated not
more than 700 yards from the
depan ure line of the Carlsbad airpon .
which 1~ used largely by private
aircraft and some charttr fligh ts.
Wha t do you like abo•t tM Dally Pilot! Wbt d"'t yoe like? Call tM
namber at left and yo•r mena1e wlll IM recorde4, ltHtcrlbe4 •Dd dellvere4
to Ute 1pproprl1te e41tor.
Tlte 11me U -llto1tr .. 1wert•1 eervlee may be HH to record leuen to t•e
edUor oa 111y topic. C•t,....&ert to "' Leners eol•m• m1i 1 laclMe dtelr
n1 me Hd telepltoee a•mber for veriflcau ... No clrc•latloe cal11, pleate.
Tell 111 wb1t'1 oe yoar mlad.
ORANGE COAST
'llily Pilat
H.L. lchw•rt1 HI
Publisher
Clfoue.ttoft 714/la~
Cl•1tfled edwertlelnt 7MIM2·M11
........................ 1
MA* °"ICI 330 W ... a.y It Coel• ..... CA
Mell aoor.. lo• 15eO Cottt ..... CA t2e,.
s.t<lfGar eNI Si.n.1ay If tot> oo noi row~'"" 1ou1
COOY by 1 a m ca• ~·
10 • "' ...., ,..,. '""' ..... lie.,...,...,..""'
Fr..,k Zlnl
Managing Editor
K•r•n Wittmer
Advertl8'ng Dtrector
Cocrl'IOlll 1"3 OrenQt Coett P\llllotfltng ~ No -t10t• .,..,.._ •10t INtt .. Cit ..... , ... "*"' ....,_, IM1 .. feptOOllCH tf!!llOUI '"'"'' j)tr
11-'0ft of 000yf'9h1 -
Clrculettoft
T1l1pftoMe
~· ()t~(.,..,ty ...... , ~
la•7 .. •·~ ......
Aoeem•ry Churchmen/
Controller /
"°"'' L. C•ntretl Don•ld L. W1Mem1 Production Clrcutatlon
Manager Man~ VOL. 11, NO. 071
Designed,
Finished
Installed
31 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters
FINEST QUALITY SHUTTiEAS AVAii.ABLE
ON THE MARKET TODAY ••• AT l'ACTORY
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1181-Ml .. ICTllY 1177 Placentta Avenue• Cost .. Mn a. CA 92827
t. -.. ... _
I
I
~-1
..
e /1
-ncas aun ' at
Polson Prevention Hospi-
tal Olympics pitted
guerney pushers, bed-
makers./ Al
Hoag Memorial Hospl-
tal'a 552 Club raises a half
mllllon dollars a year for
the Newport Beach fa-
clllty ./ A3
California
"Yu68Cl1 y, t muc ma-
ligned munlclpallty rated
worat by Rand-McNaUy,
hoata a f\4nerat for the
map making firm./ Al
Ration
T ornadoea rip acroaa
Flori~n killing two,
In Ju ring 40 an e-
atroylng 55 houses./ AS
New nationwide poU
aubwa vigilante_
atlll enjoys support of
many Americana./ AS
World
Commercial flights Into
Iran are cancelled as Iraq
vows to down anyaJrcratt
ftylng In that nation's alr-
epace./ AA
Jutt-reteased text of Sov-
191 epeech shows
Gorbachev ran the coun-
try for the alllng
Chernenko./ AS
Features
Dick Dodd, former
Mouseketeer and singer
with The Standella, la
making a "comeback" In
Huntington BeachJC1
Tom Selleck and Johnny
Carson are leaders
among televlalon's high-
est paid performers./C4
Sporta
Newport Harbor Yacht
Club's Rod Davis wins his
second Congressional
Cup./11
Two-run singles by Jerry
Narron and Biii Russell lift
the Angels and Dodgers
to exhibition baseball vlc-
torles./81
Entertainment
Hlgti school drama stu-
dent• get a look at how
prof ... lonal theatttr 1
works:fC3
Baalnna
Reaganaupporteraaay
the Increase In the
number of upper-Income
Americana and their
share of the federal In-
come-tax burden show
that hi• economic poU-
c ... are working.JM
DmBX .
Bridge
Bulletin SO.d lultnt11 I
Ct111tfled
Cornlea
Crouword
Death Notlcel
FMtur•
HoroeGOPe
Ann Lindert
()sMnton
p..,_au1
Poetce Log
Puble Notlcel
Sportt
TeeevtllOn
Theater• w...,,.,
-
Be
A3
84-5
05-7 ..
C7 c.
C1·4 . ce ·
C2
Ae
C1
A3 c.
11-3
C3
C3
A2
•
Feds claim nearly 16M was shu
through savings Institutions In Texas
DALLAS (AP) -When federal
drua aaents raided two Oran,r Coun·
ty motets June 22. they found $4.1
million in allqtd illicit drug traffick-
ing proceeds that were about to ~
.. laundered" through a California
bank.
Authorit~ iso found evidence
that a prominent Mexican invest-
ment broker. Mardoqueo Alfaro
.
Mqarino. hlld used an EJ Paso bu*
and a Laredo •viftll ud &c.n ia I
similar falhton. the Dallai Tinm
Herald reponed Sunday.
Alfaro has not bttn charted widl
criminal wronadoina and hat denied
any involvement in drua Ktivitin.
He has asstncd that he is simply an
invcs1ment adviser and broker for
( ............ lM/A2)
Am hitheatre ._
performance
prompts calls
Mesa-net~ claim
too much rock ·n· roll
at the open air aren~
h v bttn a war with amphitheater·
owner . for the ......-.m:---....,_..-
>cars over the spillover noise from
concerts.
_IJ TONY S VEDRA
Of ... ~ ........
The battle as at a standstill while an
Oranat County Superior Co un judee
weighs crOSS<omplaints by City At·
..10mC.)' .I.om Wood nd Ned-West
attomc) eil Papiano. ----------;•
Qiieen of the county
Daaa Adklu, tbe 1984 "'lltu <>ranee
Coaaty, crown• ber aaccwor, 28·Je&r·
old Dorie Matuoa of <>ranee. at competl·
tloa beld SandaJ ntcht at Oran1e Cout
Collece. The conteet, the fint 1tep on tbe
road to tbe ..._ America .,-,eant! at·
tractecl 20 Joma& lad.lea from tJlrouCboat
Soatbem Callfomla.
Irvine c~lls special meet
to stuc;ty Fluor project plan
Development proposals have drawn attacks
from Industrial firm's corporate neighbors -By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of ..............
lrv1 nl' ('11y \ounl·il members wall
review busancu de' clopme nt rules
tonight 1ha1 may ~mper Fluor C~ to build Offict buildinJS.
hotch. storci and other facili11cs
around its corpora1c headquarters.
Thr council mee1s at 7:30 p.m. in a
special mcctina callina to re.view 1he
lrviM Busanns Complex mntna or-
dinance that .,vcrns F'luor's 162-acre
hcadquancrt • site at Jamboree
Boulevard and the San Diego Free·
way.
('icy officials 11id S.000 notices
about tonipfs m«tina were mailed
10 1«11 proptny owMR. businesses
and community lllO(illions.
Fluor oftlci1lt proml*d a dispute
with &lwir corporak Reiahbors and
the city when Fluo r annpu~cd ats
plan lo construct office buildings for
lease to outside tenants. C'i ty officials
have argued 1ha1 Fluor ca n build new
offices for 11s own corporate use but
not for speculative or general office
space.
The dasagreemt'nt surfaced a few
weeks ago when Fluor offi cials un-
veiled a two-phase master develo p-
ment plan callana for conslruc11on of
1hrtt ho1cls. a convention center.
nine high-rise office building~ .. ·W,
multi-screen movie theaters. retail
shops. restaurant . a health club and a
da)' care center -all on acreaac
surroundan• the existana areen·alass
Fluor facihtan.
The 1ntcmataonal en11nttnng. con-
,. ruction ind natural rtsourccs man·
1aement comptny added a new
wrinkle Fradar when 11 announced 11
was withdrawing the second phase of
dc,clopmcn1 plan.
This second phase included a 25-
slof}. 400-room ho tel. a health club. a
day-care center and three office
towers immediately adjacent to pre -
e nt Fluor bu1ldan15.
Fluor officials ha\C adm11tcd lhe}
lack the development righ1s tb build
the second phase. But they said the)'
hope 10 5"cure approval from lhe Cll)
to build Phase 11.
The company ~)s 11 docs. how-
ever. have the riahts or entitlement~
10 build 11s projects an the lirst pha§(.
which include m. omce bu1ld1ngs and
two ho tels.
In a stuement relea5t'd b) the
compan)'. David • . Tappan Jr ..
Fluor' chairman and chief eiux·u1ivc
officers. said the withdrawal of the
Phase 11 plan was do ne .. ,o cltm1nate
an confusion rt'jl,ardana lht' cn111 lc-
(P ........ rLUOR/ A2)
The roe\ ·n· roll nfTs of .. The
Firm:· performing thtS weekend at
the Pacific Amphrttl_ra1rc. brought 23
noise complaints frbm Costa Mesa
residents hvang near the open arena.
Two of 1he romplaants were made
before the concert started. City Man-
ager Fred Sorsabal said today.
Sorsabal \aid tht pro tests were aver-
age fl': 1 rock concert at the
amph11hl«1tcr.
1 ca ... , guhaml Jimmy Page.
formerl) of Led Ztppehn. and e~-Bad
Company lead si nger Paul Rodgers.
Th(• Farm :111racted some 14.000 fans
10 1hc arena turdav night. Sorsabal
said lherc were fev. 'traffic problems
generated by the crowd.
The v.intcr concert was a b11 earh·
fo r the amph11hca1er. which began 11s
last season during 1he spring. he said.
Ci t) offi cials and rcs1dc n1s 1n the
College Park and Ml·sa del Mar tracts
Wood aslced-·hadgc Judtth Ryan on
March 7 10 clo~ the arena unless it
compiles with local noise and entcr-
uunment ordinances.
Paptano has argued th.al the
amphitheater is exempt from those
laws because 11 1s on the state-owned
Orange County Fairarounds. He
asked that the ctty be ordered to slop
eating performers and Ned-West for
alleged!~ violating Costa Mesa's
noise ordtnanC't.
The Jefferson tarsh1p. Rod
1ewan and The Pretenders a~
among the acts lhat have been
chargc.'d v.11h misdemeanors.
-\ temporary rt:'stra1n1ng order has
· bc'en issued against the c ity. allowing
bands lake ··The Firm .. to appear 11
the amphitheater without the threat
of ~1ng med. The court order will
remain an effect unul Ryan issues a
de<'ISIOn
No increase slated
in UC student loans
From staff and wil't r~r11
.\hhough more college students
need financial aid. the amount of
Uni\ er511~ of Callforn1a studen1
loan'i and gran1s will sta)' the same or
decrease ne'I I school year. (' of·
fic1als S3\
F1nanc1al aid 10 students from
fedl•rol. state. un1vc~ll) and pra vat{'
source~ grew b) 50 percent 10 101al
more than S~5J m1l11on an 1983-84.
according 10 a report prcscnted to the
UC Board of Regents meeting at lJ(
In inc lasl "'eek
Rut the growth rate for the fund~ "a' \IO\\Cr than the rate of 1nf1a11on
for the same Pl'nod. 1he report said.
'kar1' 6 7 000 st udcnt~ -about
half of ·th~ total enrollment 1n the
nine-campus UC system. 1nc lud1n1
those at UC J.rvine -received
financial aid an 1983-1984. Almost
thrtt out of four minority students
and 1v.o of thrtt graduate students
rece1,cd financial help. the rcpon
said
S1udl'nl aid funds from fcdcfa]
grant and loan programs have been
\table for the past two years. the
report said. but the Reapn adminis-
1rat1l\n hascallcd forcuufor 198S-86.
~omc of 1ha1 loss will be offset b)'
1nl rca<;ed <,tudent aid funds from the
\tall·. thl· rl'p<>rt said.
\tudent aid incl udes both aranu
and loans. with students bccomina
morl' dqlCndent on loans that must
(Pleue eee STUD&NT / A.9)
Pair seized in pot dumping
1 v.o nH·n v.e1l' Jrrl''>ll•d bv the
Or;ingl' ( uunt' Shl•rtff, Dcp:irimenl
al1cr a \pcunl olfaa ~v. them
dumptng hag' and "°'l''> fu ll of
manruanJ along\1lk RIJd. Star < a·
nH1n Road
· ~hl·riffs dl'PUltt'' fl'\'O\ crcd about
100 pound<, of lov.-grade marijuana
from the r<Xld'ildl· and 1n~1dc.' a rental
1rur k used b\ lhl' men l 1. Dack 01\on
said ·
JJnw' w Da'c' Jr .. 38. of S.n
J u~in < ap1\trano ·and E>allas H.
<and' 4~ of .\naheam refused to
C\plnin to n tlkers why they ~
dumping the drug. Olson said. Thty
wt>f'l' booked Fnda> It Ora"fC Coun-~ Jail for 1ranspon1n1 ~rvuana. a
f elony Baal '"..ct at S 10.000 •Ptttt.
Ol«ln said na'<'' and< and} v.erc pa_r\cd o n
(PleueMeDa~/A.9)
ae 's the county's 'hired gun' for airport fights
araduatc who now spcc11h1C1 in
1vaauun law. ha •n flthuna tM
counl) 's man) 1ftd varifd le-pl
hlnlits ovl't John WayM A1t"J)Of1
""" 19?1. ~ 1lto "81 rtPftWfltcd the SU =fwd Pon Authority in~
c to la~ Fedd and t1't
" ty th Latt T1fior 1n NOntwra
C-ahfornua an '" a.rpon wars. In •ht pmttl\, hf he\ ctnwd I "'PUUilton M
1 N>Ulh. ,.,...,ntcd llwyn,
<iallkt ma) ha'c enhanttd ""
rtputatlOft "" ~It afttr 1ht 8oilnl
,..
of 'uptn a~"' 'ot~J to abide b ha
1<h 1C't' and file a prt'-tmpt1' e lav. uat
a'kanaa fwcml courtJudac to upholJ
the count 's SI SO m1lhon airport
t \ptn\aon plan
The IC11I plolt' v.as roundl cnll·
c11ed b John \\-a ne Airport e\•
PIM•on opponent\ Ut'h as the cit of
Nt•port Brach and the -'1rpon
Worluna C1roup v..ho ~~rt "au1h1 b
~1.tf"Pl'1tc blt' thC' counl) awon Rut the
fni>"e ·~" qu1c1f\ ap.,.audcd b)
wpt'1" a"'"· eilk'••lh b nc •ho
Pf1\8'el) rnnrt\k-d that h • "'a~
-~ C'taukc had d(' 1~-J a "prol(·
tavt.. na1hcr th:an • rtXtavc '4. .... 1
ttrll(I~.
"O~r goal "a' 10 ''°'d acu1na
P1nr11 , .. !Ht Ntv.\
tllU&f\I 1n a \huttle hctv.ttn 1v..o or
thr\.'\' daf1ettn1 court\," <1:auke e\·
plained ol the boar~r' dC\.1\1on 10 uc
t k \Oltll that h Wt"\ thC' lcpl
pro~' \v.nlant ar1l11nd John
\\ n\ n~ \trpm\ ._, J "-'rtC~ 1ll H•mpu·
an@""~~"' each clamoring tor 'Omc-
th1n3 d11lerl·n1 at the airport Whalt
thl· ;.a1rhne' light I r acct~ a nd
add1110nal flight\ nearb re 1dcnt1
:arc ti htang to l1m1t noa ind tht 11e
or 1hc ;urpon
.. t.1l h 'Oll't' wnnt\ to be thC' loudc\I
anJ thl· propraC'tOr\ (the Board of
\upcn 1~) ha'c 10 balanC't' ~the
\One.'\) and tand an the mlddlt • ht
)lad
(,a11ke. ~ho 1!. paid $1 3~ an hour
b\ lhc lOUnl~ \lid lhe fi\'e tupct'·
'i~ .. fl<'t 1n 1m 1btt uuatM>n ..
and arc fbKtd kl n\lkt "COU"lfO'd" ~C\l\IOnU\' r\tt .. lht......,aftda\I
fuHtrc.
~ ,......... /AS) ----
LDERSON. W, a. (AP) -A
membtr of the notorious Charle
Manson ''family" says she has strong
perso nal and political reasons for
want ina to ~tay in prison when her
mandatory "good time" release date
comes up later this month.
.. It's not that I'm lnst1tu-
t ionali~cd." said Sandra Good. one of
Manson's early followers. "An ybody
who has ever been in prison wo uld
rather be free to do th ings such as go to
the beach. walk in the woods and sec
their children.
"h'sjust that I want to be where mr,
fa mily 1s. and my fam ily is in prison. •
Good said she preferred her
cloistered existence a< the federal
women's-prison hcr.c. to a life in what
"he calls "the bigger instit ution"
outside.
The 40-,car-old former outhem
California · surfer girl has served
nearly· I 0 years of 1 he I 5-year
sentence she received in acramento
for conspiring to mail death threats to
corporate officials she accused of
polluting the planet.
he wa41 a~stcd when FBI aaents
searched the apanment she shared
with anoth er fom ily member. Lynette
"Squ(•ak) ·· FrQmmc. who had been
taken into custody for po1nuna a
p1Stol at President Ford.
G ood and Fromme. who was
sentenced to life in prison. have been
serving their time at Alderson. a
medium security prison that re-
sembles a colkge campus. They see It
somewhat differently.
"In a way. this place can be viewed
as o ur convent: Good said in an
interview at the prison ... We're like
nuns. working toward Eanh bal-
ance."
The two women keep their heads
covered in nun fash ion:·they wore
bandannas during the interview.
Good was dressed in blue. symbol-
izing "clean air and water." Fromme
was clad In red. "for the animals and
earth colors."
.. Bl ue." as Good calfed herself.
elaborated on her reason for not
FLUOR PLANS STUDIED •••
From Al
mcnt issue befo re the C'11y Council
involving Phase I of the master plan.··
wanting to be rc lcascJ.
"Tho ught can be a important as
deeds." said Good. her blue eyes
matching her outfi t. "8 laying
inside where nl)' famil) 1 . I k~p
myself outside of thou1hts that art
dedicated to money. power and
approval. I keep myself in the thought
of A TWA (Air. Trees. Water.
An imals). the thought of life." uood and Fromme work as
groundske~pers at Alderson. They
live in sep~ratc dormitories but sec
each othet dail>.
Neither woman was connected
with the Manson family murders of
actress Sharon Tate and eight other
people in I 969. Manso n and four
members of his counterculture clan.
who li ved on an abandoned moyie se t
near Los Anacles. are serving life
sentences for the wanton kill ings at
two houses in a luxurious Hollywood
Hills neighborhood.
Fromme and Good maintained
they wef't' in tclepatKic communica-
tion with Manson. They also said the
actions fo r which they were im-
prisoned. and the killings themselves.
were designed to protect A TWA.
"We all need ATWA to survive:·
said Good. "So. you can Stt thlt the
killings were done in self-defense:
Also. they were done to prevent the
world from being blown up. but that's
all I can say about that." He added. ''These cnt11lements.
granted in 1983. permit Fluor to
develop an additional 1.8 mi llion
square feet of office space ...
But Friday's statement from Fluor
sa id the company "firmly believes
that the project. as a whole. 1s well
planned a nd includes sound
measures to mitigate traffic." ...... -------------•
Other business officials 1n Irvi ne
have cri ticized the Fluor proposal as
too large and have said 11 as likely to
-~-cau~ ~rious traffic problems.
Fluor's partner in the building plan
is the Dallas-based Trammel Crow
C'o .. a m_ajor development fi rm that
has an office in Orange County.
DRUGS •••
Prom Al
Black Star Canyon Road just west of
Silverado Road wh~~cial o(fi~er
Warmer weather due Tuesday
P1r1 ly cloudy 1kle1 will clear tQf'jgh.tanel SOUlh9cn ~lllOIWML-.,.---*"' bi e llUli' warmer .,.~y. the National WNther Service ,..,_..,.
Mid. r-tt~l--r---"~ The cloudlneu wae caueed by a weak cold front In the arH
today. Foreca1t•1 ukS the San Gabriel and San Betn.,dlno
vetteys would hew a 40 percent chance of continuing ehowere
tonight. Northern deMrt ereas also were given a ellght chance of
lhowere tonight.
Along the Orenge Coast It wlll be mostly cloudy with
ecatte<ed lhowere ending from th• nofthweet Ihle evening.
Partly ctoucty tonight, becoming mostly sunny Tuesday. Cooler
tonight. Highs Tuesday In the 609. Low11 tonight In the 40s and
tower501.
Temp•
Foul low
Fttal 11'Ql1
Second low
Secood tllgh
TWSOAY
1 54 am
764 tm
2 32om 8 48pm
oe •••
13 64 0.5 41
--------------------------•iiliiiiiliii1Jl1mm erry nouceattiem umping ...._+..--what appeared to-be trash from a STUDENT FEES rental truck. Olson said.
I
..
I
• • • Upon approaching the men. Perry
FromAl real ized the plastic bags and Holy War
abducted
be repaid after graduation. The pros-
pect of a arge debt after graduation
may affect the career choices o f
students. says UC President David
Gardner.
"A student ma) be walli ng to
borrow S7.000 to go to med ical
school. but not be will ing to go into a
professton-cqttall}'-unportaru wne~
the ability to repay is very remote." he
said.
The report said students have come
to depend more on loans as funds for
grants hat'e been cut. the report said.
The average student loan doubled to
SI. 969 for undergraduate students
and SJ.988 for graduates over the past
cardboard boxes they wefe tossing
contained marijuana. he $aid.
Street value of the drug was placed
at $80.000.
Olson said the sheriffs dcpanment
has no idea why the men were getting
rid of the marijuana. "There's got to -ewsm be4-some reason. but t~ey're not £J1-tt-•---ktng-aullis poin1 ;:.he said. ---a.. .. a. .--__ _
$4. lM IN CASH SEIZED IN OC •.• in Beirut
BEIRl'T. Lebanon (.\Pl -An
anc:mymoo te~;>hef\«alleHays the
shadowy Islamic Holy War group
kidnapped Associated Pr{'SS cor-
respondent TctT) Anderson. as well
as two Britons who were abducted in
Beirut last week.
From Al
wealthy-Mexrcan citizens-.
"We disavow any involvement
with laundcrin~ mone). and any
involvement wtth drugs." said his
lawyer. Me~1n Grand of Phoenix.
Anz. "Mr. Alfaro as a respected
businessman and broker ... a member
of the Lions Club for 20 years:·
However. federal officials said that
almost S 16 m1lhon was shuffied
through Tesoro av1 ngs and Loan 1n
Laredo and the First Cit) National
Bank of El Paso. The)' regard 11 as the
largest known scheme 10 lau nder drug
money th rough Texas in recent years.
Federal officials are trying to seize
$6.5 mi ll ion on deposit at the El Paso
bank and $1.4 million at th e Laredo
thrift. The) also are seeking reim-
bu rsement of SS million that was
hurnedlv transferred out of the 1n-
stituti9n·s after the Internal Revenue
Service placed a claim on the Mex-
ican businessman's funds. the news-
paper reported
"I feel we're jU'>I looking at the up
of the iceberg:· said Phillip Jordan.
special agent in l'harge of the Drug
Enforcement Administration's re-
gional office 1n Dallas. "Laundering 1s
here 1n the Southwest.''
Mone}' laundenn~ involves taking
cash reaped from 1lhc1t activ111es and
usi ng it in le~I financial transactions
to make 11 difficult to trace.
The newspaper said one of the two
pcopTe arrcstcdln the motel raid in
Anahei m last summer told agents
tha t the money came from the sale of
drugs.
.\ fe.,_, da's later. an attorne}'
represen ting ·1he two people told
prosecutors 1ha1 the two were work-
ing for Al faro and that he had paid
them to deposit the funds in the Bank
of Coronado in 5an Ysidro. the
ne1Aspaper ~Id.
<\bout the same 11me. DEA agents
received information from confiden-
tia l informants that Alfaro was in-
volved wi th a Guadalajara-based
drug-traffi cking nng. the newspaper
said. The informants estimated tha t
the optra 11on garnered profi ts of
between S 10 million and S20 million
a month.
Based upon that estimate. the IRS
1mmed1a1cly placed lev ies on all .S.
as~ts 1n which Alfaro was believed to
have an interest. the news pa per said.
Authonues ~1d the» lea rn ed of the
Texas and California bank accounts
through material seized at the
Anaheim motels and transaction
records.
Ho"c' er . .\I faro and has business
associa tes allegedly managed to shp
$8 million qu1ckl)' out of the two
Texas 1nst1tut1ons. officials said -S6
m1lhon from Tesoro Savings and
Loan and S2 m1ll1on from First \11y.
evcral million dollars fro m
-Tesoro Savings and' Loa rr was wired
to Panam1l fina ncial institutions-.
court documents said.
Federal officials are tryi ng to fo rce
the two Texas ban ks to rei mburse the
government. since the money was
rdeased after the IRS had announced
its-daim o n Alfaro·s funds.
The banks said the> had no
knowledge of Al faro's alleged connec-
tion to the fu nds and should not have
to give the government any mone y.
Alfaro's attorneys insist he made
no attempt' to evade the IRS action.
his name did not appear on any of the
accounts an question and that he was
not involved with any money
laundering or drugs.
Nonetheless. U.S. District Judge
Harry Lee Hudspeth of El Paso ruled
in November that the facts of the civil
case backed the govcrnment'S-claim
that the disputed funds were drug-
relatcd.
The newspaper said its attempts to'
contact Al faro fo r com ment were
unsuccessful.
Court documents show that Alfa ro
has moved vast amounts of mone)'.
Hudspeth fo und that at the lime of
the Anaheim arrests. Alfaro con-
trolled about S25 mill ion in various
locations.
The judge s~11d Alfaro·s expla-
na tions about the transactions .. lack
credib1ht) :·
AIRPORT COUNSEL oc·s 'HIRED GUN' ...
From Al
The callrr said hl· rcprdented th e
group. known in Arabic as Jihad
lslam1. and read a statcmrnt unda)
which said the .. the detention" of
i.\nderson and the two British men
"comes wHhin the framework of our
cont1 nu1ngopcrat1on!> against Ameri-
ca and 1t~ aaents ··
i.\ P photographer Donald Mell
witnessed the abduction of Anderson
Saturda' morning. The 37-year-old
Anderson. chief Middle East cor-
respondent fo r the AP. was shovcq
into a green Mercedes by three men.
two of them armed with pistols.
The caller's statement. phoned to a
Western news agency. said: ··we arc
defin ite that Islam ic Beirut is full of
agents from all sides. and accordingl y
we arc workingd~~ and night to purge
ou r region of an> subversive ele-
ment:·
The statement also said that "as-
suming the profession of a )Ournahst.
merchant. 1ndustnalist. scientist and
religious man wi ll. from now on. be of
no avail to spies staying among us.
Thev have been exposed. and their
punrshment 1s "ell known."
St. Patrick's parfy
Mike Lane and Marina Loechlavoyoung get Into the •pldt of
tblAtla during a St. Patrick'• Day party Saturday at Lido
Marfna Village. The party was a fundralalng event for the
Newport JayceH Club.
T"o Ciardl'n (,ro,e men ,.,.rre
art'e'olcd last \\Ct.'kl'nd and bool>.cd for
1n' C'>l1ga1aon of the Jan. 2 rape and
~odom) ofa woman who worked at a
ta"ern. pohn· <;a1d.
'><111.1. Jl.llllll~ 111Jt hall was set at i 50.000 for each man.
"I think one of our biggest goals 1<;
to reduce the ht1~t1on tha t occurs ...
he said. "Llllflllon as not a way to
resolve anything. The poht1cal pro-
ccs<; 1s a much better wa) for t hesc
decisions to be made. but 11 doesn't
always work. An d the jud1c1al system
is c-.cn less democratic
Vietnam said he was assigned to
research a case involving noisc-
related lawsu11~ at Lindbergh Field.
E\cn1uall). the law firm and Gatzke
nre' ailed followan~ a long tnal.
Two county men
path) tor rcs1den1s who hve near a rrested in rape la rge. noisy airports. such as Jo.Jin
Wayne. Lindbergh Field or Los Of ta Vern WOrker l\ahcl {. <kana. 32. and Pedro
A ngcles I ntcrnauonal. While ex press-Gutierrez. 34. were hel<! at the Orange
f-ollow1ng the assault outside the
Sin Not Bar on WcMmins1cr Aven ue
in <iarden Cirove. the two were
<ktained and later released by an-
' C'illgaturs. Johns9n said. They were
re-arrested 1n the Buena ( hnto n area
51111. uatzke said he has no special
interest 1n a' 1at1on. has never con-
'i1dcrcd becoming a pilot and. 1n fact.
ha\ a 'ih~hl rear of heights.
1ng '>)mpathy. however. Gatzke Count} Jail. poli t·e Sgt. Joe Johnson
pointed ou t that the residents still ~ri:~;~::::;~=~~~~::;~~~~~:~~~==:~~~~=====~=i reprc'icnl onl~ ··one voice (amon~ the
man)) that must be taken into UTIERS cus on arrest warrants. •
"I 111ga11on is not a magic panacea
101hc problems there. I'd like to try to
work mvself out of a JUb as a trial
law-.er and I'd like to think we're
mo\ 1ng 1n 1ha1 darccuon ..
C1at1ke. pulling on an e"er-present
ngarelte. said he fo und himself
im mersed in avia tion law almost by
accident. After joining a an Diego
law firm after law school graduation
in 1971 the former U.S. Army
lntcll1gcncc officer who served in
Just Call
642-6086
?!"°' .. ~.d
Mot!Oly·fll<9y H ,_,. 00
llOI ~ '!(NI PllP4lf bl' a '° P '" ui11 oetot. 1 p '" Incl I'°"' C091 ..... tit
dllM!t<I
He al!>o said that )1ncc he now
\pends about 70 to 75 percent of his
11me ha ndling av1at1on cases. he's
rnnsc1ously decided against getting
an-. more involved in aviation.
·"1 might get too personally
\\rapped in technicaliti es and that
rnuld hurt m~ ab1l11y to s1mpl1 fy and
translate 1'isucs for a la) jury:· he
explained.
The auorncy al'IO expressed sym-
accoun~b)' the proprietors running an airport ...
I le added. ··Like with any urban
problem. there arc people living in an
en' ironment they'd rather not live in.
I accept this as a given ...
Gat1ke 1s no stranger to hfc near an
airport.
Hr said his house is situated not
more than 700 yards from the
departure hne of the Carlsba d airport.
which 1s used largely by pnvatc
aircraft and some charter Oights.
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