HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-01-07 - Orange Coast PilotI
'OMCASTI 0. A2
•
TUESDAY, JANUARY 7. 1986
\
Mi·ssing con~ultant tied to.fraud
Al ege ly bilked at east 40 Investors
out of more than $2 million over 3 years
By FRED VOOEUTEIN
0. .. 0.-, .........
Cc?sta Mesa and Oranic County
shentrs detectives are investipting
the business dealinp of a 49·yca.r.ald
Costa Mesa financial consultant who
alleaedly bilked at least 40 investors
out of more than $2 million.
COQt .
About 200 Inmates spent
tbelr fl rat night Monday In
the county' a new modular
bulldlnga./ A3
Nation
Federal budget cuts
could bring about a new
federalism through the
back door./ M
Sporta
Rams Coach John Rob-
inson analyzes this week-
end's NFC championship
game In Chlcago./81
Entertainment
The new year gets off to a
lively start on the local
theater front wt th seven
new productions open-
lng./87
Baalneu
The tale of two Balboa
banks -one that moved
from the penlnsulA and
one that stayed -turns
out profltabty .I Al
INDEX
In a reported sc.am that spaJlJ'ed
three ).'ea.rs. Robert W. McCarthy
allegedly took money for fictitious
investments. includina a trust that
never existed, shares-of insurance
stock that were never bought and
interests in real estate that were never
purchased, aocordina to an attorney
for some of the investors.
40flee
bre·akin
Irvine
gas line
No one Injured as
drtlltn operation
ruptures 4-tnch main
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Of ... 0.-, .........
More than 40 people were evacu-
ated from their College Park homes m
Irvine Monday when a gas line was
ruptured during a drilling operation.
spewing pungent natural gas into the
·air. No one was injured in the
afternoon incident.
Orange Cour.!y fircfightcn and
Irvine police began evacuating resi-
dents at about I :30 p.m. after a
subco ntractor hit the 4-incb gas main
at the intersection of Sawlcaf and
Poplar.
Gas lines were shut off at each of
about 80 homes as a safety precau-
tion . including residences o n
Redwood, Beach, OaJc and Sawleaf
streets. The gas, which is laced with
the odorizcr mercaptan. could be
(Pleue .ee GAS LEAK/ A2)
McCarthy is SUSJ".CCted of feather·
in• his own nest with the money and
fiyana the coop. His business telc·
phone has been disconnected and he
no lonaer lives at his Villi Park
address, according to a Costa Mesa
police report made available to the m~. Police said their efforu to find
McCa.nhy have been unsuccessful.
McCarthy's Villa Park neighbors ~d they don't know where he went,
either. Golsham Manouchehr, a resi·
dent on Crestview Circle where
McCarthy lived. said M~by
moved two to three months aao. "I
beard be moved out of the state "
Manouchehr said. '
Another neiahbor who requested
anonymity said she beard a number
of people are lookina for him .
.. A lot of smart people got burned,··
said Attorney Richard Dionebicr.
who represents about 30 of the
victims.
Much of the money came from
investors saving for their retirement,
he said.
"It's a massive scheme to say the
least," Dinnebier wd. "It's very
frustratJna to .ee. He took some of
.t.hcte people's life savings. That's
'what wts me.''
Acoordina to the investipt1on
report, most o f the victims had aooe
to McCarthy since the late 1970s for
tax prepualJon and financial consult-ina.
One of the investments McCarth)
bcpn offerina his clients in 1982 was
a special hiib-intemt trust fund from
Lloyd's Bank, offerina investors a 20
percent return. the rcpan satd.
A load nwltln& noUe from a raptured au llne proapta a pl to co'ftl' her ean u ahe
...,,... .... .., ............
nacaatee tbe area wttb her mother. ID the
b9ckCJoa.nd, men work on tbe break.
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
Bulletin Board
8u8'ness
Classified
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
Entertainment
Hor~pe
A7
88
A3 Mesa OKs beer ban at mini--marts
Ann Landers
Opinion
Paparazzi
Pofloe log
Public Notices
Sports
Tetevl8'on
Weather
A8-10
88
85
810
84
.86-7
89
A7
A6
A7
A3
84
81-5
86
A2
By TONY SAAVEDRA °' .. ~ .........
An ordinance to ban the sale of beer
and wine at future gas station mmi-
marts won preliminary approval
Mondar. from the Costa Mesa City
Counci .
Hoping to curb drunken driving 1n
the city, council members voted 4-1
to prohibit the sale of intoxicating
beverages at gasoline stations that
add convenience stores or snack
shops.
Councilman Dave Wheeler op-
Poscd the measure. arguina the ban
would cmatc a monopoly for existing
gas station mini-marts that already
sell alcoholic beverages.
Furthermo re. Wheeler was
doubtful that concurrent gasoline a nd
alcohol sales were encouraging
motorists to drinlc and drive.
"You have granted a special privi-
l~e to the people who have come here
pnor to this ordinance,.. he said.
"People that arc going to drink and
dnve arc going to do 1t anyway. It's
not going to make an impact on the
situation in this city to make the m
drive a half-block farther (to buy
alcohol)."
Councilman Donn Hall, summing
up the majority view, said: "It may
not decrease the amount of drunken
driving significantly ... but if it saves
one life then the ordmancc is wonh-
wh1le." \
While all'Gwmg existing businesses
10 continue scllmg beer and wine. the
ordinance would prohibit them from
rcfriierating the beverages or d1splay-
1ng signs advertismg alcohol sales on
the premises.
The proh1b1t1on must pass another
counctl vote and a 30-day waallng
period before 1t becomes law.
Six of the estimated 12 service
station mini-mans selhng alcoholic
beverages m Costa Mesa were ap-
proved in the last year. according to
Developme nt Services Director
DougOark.
~owever. city officials became
concerned about the po1en11al hazard
m mid-October after bans '-'Cre
passed a month earlier in Laguna
Beach and San Juan Capistrano
Concurrent alcohol and gasoline
sales have also been outlav.ed 1n
Garden Grove. Hunungton Beach.
Irvine. and Orange
Falling sho n of a ban. the ci11e~ ol
Anaheun and Westmmster hm11c.-d
the amount of beer and wme that can
be sold at gas stauon mm1-ma11s.
while also prohibiting the be"erage1,
from being rcfngcratcd. Service sta-
tions m those c1t1es are not allowed to
displa~ signs adven 1s1ng the sale ot
!Yrr ::inci Wini" .
(Pleue eee BEER/A2)
Airborne killer gets 25 yearstO life .
Arizonan eligible for parole in 12 years
after friend· s death in coke-plane case
By STEVE MARBLE °' ... .,.., .........
An Arizona man was sentenced
Monday to a 25-year-to-life prison
term for hjs role in the drug-related
slaying of a childhood friend whose
body was dumped from an airplane
2,000 feet above the ocean near
Catalina Island.
Lawrence Cowell, a fonner Orange
County resident and a one-time
owner of an Anaheim sports car shop,
~ smiled and waved to his parents as he ..__ _ __, was led from the Santa Ana
courtroom followina 9entencing by
Supenor Court Judge Dona ld
McCartin.
He will be eliaible for parole in I 21h
years.
Cowell. 37. was convicted Dec. 9 of
first-degree murder, robbery and
conspiracy in the mysterious slayina
of Scott Campbell, whose body has
not been found since he disappeared
nearly four lears ~-
Campbel . a ra1dcnt of San Juan
Capistrano. was killed while riding in
a small airplane piloted by Cowell.
according to trial testimony. His body
was then tossed into the ocean,
wttnesscs said
A pound of cocaJne and about
$2.000 m cash were taken from
Camf)bell dunng the slaymg. ""h1ch a
prosecutor descnbcd as a cnme of
"intrigue, mystery. greed. vengeanrt"
and robberv. ·•
Campbell had thought he was l'n
route to Fargo. N .D .. to sell the
cocaineto avaupofdrugdealcrs But
Campbell dad not know the dealers
were actually federal drug agents who
later would help unravel his demise
Cowell confessed to the sla ymg
during a conversatmn that wa<1
secretly recorded by drug agents
about a year after Campbell vanished
Another man, Donald Di Mascio. 1s
cbaraed with k.iltina u mpbell b)
brcaiina his neck. His tnal 1s set to
open May 12
"We f~I he should ha"e bttn
sentenced to hfo W'lthout chan1.c 1if
parole or ('ven death." said th('
victim's mother "But this '-'Ill kC'ep
him offtht street!i for a lon11. t1mc ..
Cowell could have been ..cntencrd
to die 1n the gas cham~r but
McCart10 d1sm1ssed the death pen-
alty aJlegauon m1dwa} dunng the
trial. ruhng the mouve for th<' slaymg
appeared to be revenge and not
robbery.
McCanin s.a1d the robticn ap-
peared to be an "aftenhought" more
than anything else.
The Campbell and Co~cll fam1heo;
on~ were close fnends and oc-
cas1onall" vac.at10Md together Dur-
(Pleue eee ltAJll/A 2)
Jack' Reilly vice pi:nident and
senior trust officer or the·benk. told
police no such account existed.
McCarthy is also suspected of
b1lkingothers who invested in an Ojai
real estate development.
Developer Dick Komorowski said
McCarthy and his investors had
agreed to purchase a mini-warehoute
Komorowski was buildina.
McCarthy paid Komorowski for 1
pon1on of the $975,000 project,
provided a list of contributina io-
(Pleue ... ALLSOED/ A2)
College
Chief
Stevens
resigns
Saddleback board
agrees to buy out -
j)actfor 104.000
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' .. ~"-lewl
Saddleback Coml']lunity College
Dtstnct Chancellor Larry Stevens.
who has been embroiled in a bitter
two-year feud wnh dtstrict teachers.
res 1g,ned
M onda)
night.
His ~1g
nat1 on 1s ef-
fective Jan
31
The d1s-
tncfs sc"en'-
m ember
board o f
trustees
agreed lO pay
Ste, ens
SI 04.000 for
I he I 8
months rt· Sieveaa
ma1ning on his contract. d1stnct
'>pokeswoman Donna Hatchell said
1oda~ Th( ~hanc:ellor·s annual pa" 1s
S"70.5~5 and he has a contraCl
running through June .10. 1987
he said te' ens. a resident of
Dana Poin1. will take a pa1d leave of
of absence rrom ltlda} through Jan
31 She said the chancellor is declin-
ing to mah an' public statements
concerning hi' depanure
Da,·1d Habura e:11ecuu'e ''~
chan~llor "'111 oH·r;ee d1stnct oper·
auons through the c:nd of Januan 8)'
the beginning of Fet>rua~. d1stnct
trustees "'111 appoint an interim
l hancclk1r to d1rt>cl the d1s1nct while
a ~arch 1~ rnnducted for a permanent
'uccessor tu IC'' en'
(Plea9e eee SADDLEBACll/ A2)
Scott Campbell
Cpuntypushingfor nurse
to help patients with AIDS
Health officials say that counselln could how to l"C'COIJ\tZe early sym{>loms of
common diseases and infecnons that ~w~ t.rutment. accordina to a ~.()()(}.a.year pt'Oll'lm proPoS&)
aubmittcd to the state Department of
Health Services.
LISA
MAHONEY
Focus ON THE NEws
More water Urged
for Irvine Lake in
winter and spring
help f rlghtencd sufferers extend their lives
Tbc news is l\lllCrina. thouah
oftentimes not une1.pec1ed. Leamina that oae bu acquired
lmmuae deficiency syndrome -
AJDS -is like &ic1na a death
tentence. There ia no kJIOWft cure for
the diteue. which an.cu t.be im-
mUJlC aysicm and It.aves ill au&ren ~ to il1nm aftd infections.
· Tbe only "uestionl are bow and
when death will come.
People with AIDS uaually live
about two years after the diMUe is
detected, mearcben 11y. Op-
pomaniltic diaeuet -ill--. I
._._.., penon could abake olf -
nt11tUa.lly kill them.
But <>ranee County bealtb officials
are concerned that some AIDS vic-
tims are ram.,. prey to NCb diteate1
Iona befON it'• inevitable.
f riptmed and confuted upon
leam•na they have AlDS many
petieau fail to abeof1» coun.elins they
receive on bow to auy belhby 11 !c>al u pot.M'bte,. J~illUed Heehb Qui
~~=l" county oftkialaani
eeekina ... te aid to pay tor a public
bealtb nune to vitlt people after they have been dilpoted u MviJll Al OS.
SWtiQI MAtQ I, tbe • ..,. would * Ill Ciiimated I 0 nrw "Jl!IUentl I
moath in their homa. tdli• them
The nune would see to 1t that
s-tintt take care of themselves,
kfto• where to ao to aet available community raourccs and cducat1on,
and receive countd1na on death and
dyiftlt IMllC'ial lld and 1n-bome
lwalti.1enices> the propotal states.
... , really •• bm ofeut ~
-:.; .rd Dr. tlu Ehlint. director o1 ic .e.tm and medical Kf'\'1(a. .. ..., ....e IMt they ltl lbt ap-
P"'Pftlfe medical ~ that they
Dow wMre IO II' It and that they Ire
DCM_.___. ia ..-, tftOnl 10 ,rt il"
Selkaft and "'°"'"' m.tmmt or
~
potenbalty deadly illMSSeS would be
cmphuized in an ancmpt to slow the
number or AIDS death
AIDS tn:atment as comphcatcd by
lbc relative newneu of tbe diieue
and the stiama IOme attach to thote
who coatnct at, EhUna Mid. Havtna a
nurx IO i>tlow up on cues will ensure
that s-lien11 are not hampeftd 1n
tbci.t tratmcnt by prtj~ Of their
own ~ over \be utcu,.bie
natutt olthe ctinan, be Mid.
.. We try to maintain the q..ality of
life to the bac enent pollit& It's all
rt la tin. Jt '1 euy IO fillJ IDIO tbt kind
o( panern of •rial .Ut'• me '*· ...
We waDt 10 M • M'e people I~ . (Pl•• -JlfU'llM/ AJ)
• IJ JlOIEllT RVNOMAN °' ............
lm nc We would be filled dunna
the wtnter and spnna 10 conSt'rve
wawr and improve the lake's rec-
rauooaJ u under a proposal to be
considered later this mootb b) local
water official
The plan b)' the Metropoh\an
Water Olstnct calls for lddtna up to
10,000 acre-feet of watef to tht lake
eut of m. cit} of Oranet d\lnn& th~
sa~ months •bcn k>cal water demand
bmoncally bas been lowest. (An ~
fooc of water it 326,000 pUons -tM
amount it takts to cbvcr an .ere wtlh one fOOt of wattt)
IMDC Lake, •tuch ha a 25.000.
~foot CAOtaty, C'Urrtntl bo&&
about 5,000 acrt feel of watn -1t1 lo~~t le'-el 1n rece'nt memory
The lake is fed onl} by mountain
runofl from • ant1aio Creek but the
Mctropolt un Water Dt)tnC1 hat fa.
C1ht1cs 1n pl•ct to d1vcn c'lcaa
( olorado R1 "cr water into the lake
The water 't\.'Ould be s1ored for \Ult
dunna dry ummer and fall months
Y.>hCfl 1rrt$1ll00 and rt'CIUlJOnal cie-
manch art at their h\lhCSt
Wben lhC' .-atcr level t.1 low. u ll ll
now, lht rocrvotr 1 unattncbve to
the boaters and fiihcnnen who u•
\M lake and mu t walk liCfOll
bundrtd ofyardsofmudtotetto\lile
water'a edfr.
C'o ra bo.,._tea'-t
~-WA'ftm/&91
\
J
----~-~ --
....
Rush-hour water line break
snarls, soaks Valleytraffic
-
Hot winds:boost Coast mercury
BJ PBD-IN&IDUMAN °' .............
Traflic on lk'ootbunt S1ree1 io
Fountain Valley WU beck IO oomW
today in the wake ofan uoderaround
waler line break that created a rush·
bour .,..,.. for mocoriau Monday
aftmM>on and kept repair~ busy
alm01t,un1il mkiniabL
The break wu reported at about 3
p.m. on Broolchursi. aouth of'Talbert
Avenue.
Wayne Osbomet the city's public
works dirccto~1 sa1d the break wu
associated witn water connections
beina installed for tbe Fieldstone
homes under construction on the
west side of Brookhurst.
"Water shot all over the ~:
Osborne said. "The rush·bour uamc
was a niptm.are."
He wd police were forced to close
Brookhurst between Talbert and Ellis
avenues while repairs were made.
BEER BAN •••
From Al
Costa Mesa officials noted an
Orange County AlcotwJism Advisory
Board survey that revelled SI percent
of the 679 people interviewed at
drunk drivers' schools purchased
their alcohol at gas stanon mini-
maru. The survey said 84 percent of
those people consumed the beverages
in the car,
Whc-cler, a NeWp<>h Beach at·
tomey who has represented numer-
ous suspected drunken drivers,
balked at the study.
"I have never in my Hfc, out of the
hundreds of cases I've gone through.
found a person who bought their
alcohol at a gas station mini-mart,•·
he said.
The auee1 pavement broke, and
thouaandl of'p.llooa of water eacaped before the fto. ()OuJd be turned off,
Osborne said. He said no homes or
buaineaes were affected by the
shutoff, however.
To further reduce t.ratftc probJema,
the southbound Brookhurst Street
exit from thoS.o Dieto Freeway was
elated durina the repa1r period. ,
Fountain Valley polk:e Lt. Dave
Brokaw said five traffic accidents
wc:h reported Monday in the vicinity
of .\he water break, includina one in
which a car became caupc in a bole in
the street pavemenL He. said no
tivunes were repofted in the acci·
dents.
Public works dlrector 0.bome said
the repain were concluded shortly
before midl\iaht, and a tempof'll)' street patch was installed to pemut
traffic to resume normally today. He
said a permanent street repair· will
probably be made within aboul a
week.
Osborne said the city will compute
the value of the lost wattr and other
expcn1e1 UIOciated with break and
send a bill to the contractor, L & S
Construction Co., that had been
workioa on the water connections for
the Fiefd1tooc homes.
SADDLEBACK •••
From A l
The Saddleback district, with
about 25,000 students. includes
Irvine Valle}' CoUcfc in Irvine and Saddlet.ct. CoUeae 10 Mission Viejo.
Hitchen said the chancellor's rcsig-
04tion qreement wu approved by
tbe board after a cJOled-door session
Monday ni&ht. She said details of the
agreement arc confidential. and said
one erovision forbids either sldc from
makinaocptivecommentsabout the
it
Stevens baa served u chancellor of
the disuict since July 30, 1982. He
previously spent seven years as
president of Tacoma Community
Collete in Tacoma, Wash.
Over the put two years, be has
been at odds with district teachers,
who have criticiud bis style of
adminiatratioa and bis hiring prac-
tices. Faculty P'OUPI bade voted .. no
confidence" in the chancellor's lead-
ership. Saddlebld teachcn su~
ported recall campaians aimed at
oust.in& trustees who backed the
.
chancellor.
Stevens' supporters on the board of
trustees claimed be was hired to
reorpnize the colleses and to control
the district's budaet, 1oals that made
him unpopular with teachers.
Sttvens' defenders also attributed the
criticism to difficult labor oeao-
tiAtions involvina the district and the
faculty.
Still, even after the faculty cont.rac:t
WU settled in early J 985, the teachers'
criticism of Stevena continued lo the
Nov. S election. three candidates
backed by the faculty were elected to
the board of trustees, and -two
incumbents wbo supported Stevens
were defeated.
One of tbote incumbents, former
board president William Watts, pre-
dicted Stevens' depenure in an tnwr-
view the day after the election.
"Without a doubt, SteVens is
aone," Watu said on Nov. 6. ..I
haven't talked to him today. but r m
sure he's peckina bis baa."
U.S. Temps
MAN SENTENCED •••
From Al
• 20
'7 a:t
74 •
17 -CM 03 ·11
42 81
62 ... 17 21
53 S3
53 22 20 .oe
70 62
42 2$ ....
2• 16 '° 01 52 S4 M II M J2 ta 07 52 24 42 2t
32 ot • 55
40 13
... 31 50 lt7 51 41
34 12
27 oc ao 01 .. 4-4
441 23 ... " 47 12
31 11
Calif. Temp•
Fiery cr ash cl oses
freeway Jn Bay Area
:t.7
ALLEGED FRAUD LINKED TO MESAN ••• in& the murder trial, the two families
sat less than 12 feet apart without
talking.
sentence will tun concurrently w11h
the murder sentence. Defense at-
torneys indicated Cowell will appeal.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A
gasoline tanker exploded into flames
near San Francisco International
Aif1>0rt today, closing Hiptway IOI
dunng rush hour. deJay10g fli~ts.
melting the pavement and spcwmg a
tower of acrid smoke visibJe for miles.
No serious injuries were reponed.
From Al
vestors and promised to J>9Y the
remainder at a future date. But
McCanhy allegedly neglected to band
over the money from an additional 20
investors.
Komorowski bas asked a judge to
resolve the cooOkt of ownership
created by investors whose money
was never delivered.
David Koch, a 57-year-old Santa
Ana resident, believed be had a
$13,000 trust account at Lloyd's bank
and thought be invested $10,000 in
Komorowski's project.
Koch said everything on paper
showed he was receiving dividends
from the invested money. The ap-
parent truth was that Koch bad
earned nothing but a soose cg.
"I've been left with nothin&," he
said. 'Tm destitute."
Koch said he bad known McCarthy
for four or five years and that he and
his wife used to see McCarthy
socially. In fact. most of the other
vidims were also McCanhy's friends,
be said.
"Althou_gh there are more import-
ant things 10 life than money, I'm pad
I didn't retire as I had planned,' be
said.
Koch added that he also bought
sha!ts of the American Insurance Co.
wonh $3,600 and was supposed to get
a dividend each month. But that
money wasn't invested either, be
said.
The chances of the victims recoup-
ing their investments are slim, ac-
cordinj to Orange County fraud
invesugator Tom Garner. He tqged
the losses at ''certainly over $2
miUion."
Costa Mesa police declined to
discuss their investiption but wd
they expect it to be concluded in a
month. At that time. the case will
probably be turned over to the
Orange County District Anomey's
office, Gamer said.
Although fnud cases ~ tricky
when it comes time to prosecute
Gamer said there seems to be enough
of a "common thread" in this case to
warrant cb.ar&es offelony grand theft.
If McCartJiy docs not return, an
arrest warrant will probably be is-
sued, be said.
Frank.Jin Miller, a 46-ycar-old La
Habra resident who stands to lose
more than $50,000 in the alleged
scheme. was amazed by the size of the
operation.
Miller also said he was surprised
that such a notable financial counsel-
or would allqedly orchestrate such
misdeeds.
"He's even listed in the California
State Teacher's Guide to Invest-
ments," Miller said.
In a prepared statement,
Campbell's father described Cowell
as a callous and brutal killer who is
beyond rehabilitation and will "take
up his path of violence and cheating
where be left off' if ever freed.
"Larry Cowell knew of the love we
had for our son, be knew that there
was no mom and dad that could be
hurt more by the loss of a son."
Collene Campbell wrote.
She described Cowell as "scum."
Cowell's attorneys, Oer:ald Re-
opclle and Orea Jones., waived ajury
trial, pinnina their hopes on Judie
McCanin. They successfully argued
against the death penalty.
McCartin gave Cowell twin
sentences of 25 years to life for
murder and conspiracy but the sec-
ond sentence was stayed be<:ausc it
represents double jeopardy.
Additionally, Cowell was given
three years for robbery but that
After the bearing, Campbell's
parents said they were relieved but
exhausted.·
"We're just really ti~" said Mrs.
Campbell. "This has gone on nearly
four years. There probably will be
appeals and maybe the Supreme
Court and, of course. the second trial.
"It never ends," she said. "It's
never over."
The Arco tanker, carrying 8,800
gallons of three grades of gasoline
Trom Brisbane to nearby Foster City.
jack.knifed just before 6 a.m. and was
allowed to bum for all'1'0St four hour,.
Christmas tree burn cancelled
A Christmas tree bum scheduled
this evening in Irvine has been
cancelled because of Santa Ana winds
and the risk that the safety-minded
event could be turned into a disastcs:.
The tree bum, sponsored by the
county fire dcpanment. bas been
rescheduled for 7 p.m. Friday at the
northeast comer of Alton Parkway
and East Yale Loop.
The two similar Christmas tree
bums, one set Thursday evenillJ in
Mission Viejo and the second Fnday
ni&ht in San Juan Capistrano, arc
scfieduled to be conducted as
planned.
Irvine ~idents arc urged to dis.-
card Christmas tree at the J rvine
location for safe destruction.
WATER BOOST URGED FOR IRVINE LAKE •••
From Al GAS LEAK FORCES EVACUATION •••
From Al
smelled for blocks around the rup-
ture.
Workers from Datum Exploration
were operatina an auger to study
JrOund water seepage, said public
information officer David Pie~ of
the county Fire Department.
The subcontractor for the city of
Irvine was drilling the 1-foot-
diametcr hole to m onitor the ~ge
problem, Pierce said.
More than 40 people were at home
when tfficials be&in clearing the four-
block area, and dozens of school
children from nearby College Park
School were sent back to the school
grounds while the Fire Department's
hazardous materials team pinched off
the ruptured main.
Although no one was hurt, ooe man
on crutches had to be helped out of
the area, said Irvine police Sgt. Scott
Cade.
Red Cross volunteer Judy Ritter
and tackle shop at the lake report that consider the proposal when their
arrived at the elementary school to set revenues arc off 67 percent. boards of directors meet later this
up a shelter for evacuated residents, "There will be recreational advan-month.
but officials had scaled off the leaki ng tagcs," said Bob Gomperz, a Metro-Both agencies draw water from the
ps line by 3 p.m. and permitted politao Water District spokesman. lake for agricultural purposes.
residents to return home. , • "But the real benefits will be realized The Metropolitan Water District
Southern California Gas Co. in t.he summer months when water would like to store excess water
allowed to draw more than its share
for its Southern California customers.
Local water officials are anxious to
store those supplies in underground
basins and reservoirs like Irvine Lake
to soften the adverse effects of a
drought. workers immediately began repairing demand is very high." supplies in the reservoir as soon as
the ruptured main. Co-owners of the lake -the Irvine· possible, Gompcrz said. With the "We're always looking for more
Gas company district manager Ranch Water District and the Serrano Colorado River runnin• full in recent creati ve ways to extend the supplies
Gail Roseen said service was returned Irrigation District -are expected to years, the water distnct has been that we have," Gomperz said.
to tbcafTectedhomesby aboutlJ!.m. r=::::::::::::::::=====================---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_:_~~~~~
Monday.
NURSE WANTED FOR AIDS PATIENTS ••• SE PREVIEW
From A l
adequately deaJin& with that," Ebling
said.
The proposal is supp<>rted by the
Oran~ County Chapter of the ~
sociauon for Practietoncn in Inf~
1100 Control and Charles A. Rob-
ertson. l Costa Mesa physician whose
patients include a laric number of
AIDS victims.
"The advice I frequently give them
after tellin4 them of their di~se 1s
often lost tn the overwhelmmg de-
pression of the realization of their
diqnosis," be said.
There is an onaoing need for
individual evaluation and education
of AJDS i-tients, Robertson said.
In Oranae County, 181 people -
most of them py or bisellual men -
have been diagnosCd with AIDS. Of
that number. 77 are still alive,
accordin& to Health Care Agency
figures.
New cases are expected to crop up
at a nte of about I 0 a month.
A profile drawn by the agency
shows the averlJC AIDS patient in
Orange County is a py or bisexual
white male belwecn the ages of30 and
39. Most are hi&hJy educated and
have professional jobs.
AIOS patients li ve all over the
county. but the hi&hest concentration
-19 percent -1s found in the
ORANGE .......
COAST --· r•I
MMI Of'PICI
l30 Wwt '9y .. , Colle ..... CA .,..,. lddr-loll 15IO C-a ...._ GA t.HM
Laguna Beach and South Laguna
area.
Others who have contracted the
disease in~lude 22 intravenous drug
users. thrct hemophiliacs, three who
got the disease th.rough a blood
transfusion. one baby. three heter-
osexual men and three others whose
characteristics were not known.
Three of the above victim! were
female.
The primary opportunistic dis-
eases plaguing AJDS patients arc
1Ypos1's Sarcoma -a rare form of
cancer -and pneumonia,
Recognizing symptoms of infec-
tions that result from lowered im-
munity and acting to set prompt
treatment can prevent the onset of the
dangerous opponunistic illnesses, ac-
cording lo the Health Care Aaency
repon.
"We know that attitude llu an
awful lot to do with the healina
process." Ehlini said. Overcoming
num.bmg.depression to hve a~ fully as
poss1bft 1s important, he said ... We
have to realize that we all die. We
have to maintain a good quality oflife
(no maner how shon).''
While scientists search for a cure
for AIDS, county health officials say
~he number of victims can only
increase.
AIDS was first identified in 1980.
Resean:hers since then have de-
termined that AIDS is caused by a
virus called HTLV-111 that can be
transmitted through blood and
semen.
Steps have been taken to protect
the nation's blood supply as well as
alert high-risk populations of the
danger of certain types of sexual
activity and drug use. But those with
the virus may not exhibit symptoms
of AIDS for up to· five years after
contractini it. if they develop the
disease at all. And knowled&e of how
to prevent transmission lias only
recently become widespread.
As a mull county health officials
believe 10,500 out of the estimated
14,000 p ys, bisexuals and in-
travenous drug users in Orange
County arc infected with the HTL V-
III virus and arc pottntial carriers.
Another ~ in the acncraJ popu-
lation arc also"'believcd to nave the
virus throuah contact with a carrier,
includina a bisexual mate or prosti-
tute or throuah a blood t'}.Qsfusion.
Of those infected perhaps fewer
than JO percent wiit contract AIDS
while 30 percent ajay develop non-
fatal symptoms caped AIDS-related
complex.
CIMlllldadt.~---& dotlal t42·4"1 JustcaU 642-6086
MOll<ley·fttOey II ffJA1 00
nol Plllve ro..t pel)to Dy ~lOo"' oetort 1 om MO ~ COO'; ..,. De ~.grtt tta QI.,. CO. ~ Comoetiy NO
--~ ~ edltOt\ll -Of *""901•
-,,.,..,. """ .. ~ --~pet ~Ol ~OMW What do you like atK>ut the Da.ily Pilot? What
don't you hke'? Call the number above and your
messqe will be recorded, transcribed and de·
livered to the appropriate edjtor.
The aarne 24-hour answcrlna servtee may be
used tq_ record ktien to the editor on any topic.
Cot\tnSuton to our Lttttrs column mUSl include
their name and tekphone number for verification.
Tells us what'l on your mind.
-90
$atUfOly •'WI Svnoe; " YOio! 00 ll01 1.C-~
COC>y 11)' 7 t "' Ot'Oft
•O t "' •NI '((II.If COOT *"' Of-to
Cln:utetlon
Tit1ptwM..e
MOtl Or-.CfluM,
Al911t ....... ....
Jan.
Award W•nners
HEADLINER 1986 Ro'Je or lhc
Yt'iir A ~pec111cular tucolor
tr't'am~· pc1ols edged With c
l\narmw PICICC Oil lhc In
P<'lalio widen" un11J the ou __......,· OTRER AWARD
WINNING VARIETIES
F-.S*ially Ad1pt.ed
For Our So. California
Clim1t.e.
'''' llr't' nurly t1ll ttd A 111!1Nlllf'1 bloomer rin 1 tall. ac11ve
M11n1 Pa1cm Applied J-'or
BROADWAY' 1986 All Am_.tca
Wanner c;row~ S tu 6 feet 1a1I
liloom~ lift a hlcnd or rich yt'llo"
tdllt<I wnh ma"C"nta .Swccrh ~cnt~ ~lan1 Pa1cn1 Apphw .. or
Ame
•Pl'ICOI• o~n to 6-to '· m lrotn
ivory pink end1n1 • h dttp rose on ourcr ptt•I• A ~ndahle
bcau1y Plant Pace.nc No 3998
f A WJNNER I
'' TttE AM!REAM ttQRrEllllrllR1'tJ llBBTT I .. CITATION FOR CONTRIBUTIONS TO COMMERCIAL
HOR1'JCULTUR£.
• FrH 6lb. RoH Food •
To Everyone Attendinc
The O.morutratJon
Plut Free Door Prl1e1!
Visit the Victory Garden, Ro-
gers We t Coast home for
PBS's national televl~cd
11arc:Jenjng show
, . ,
Senate debate
planned at UCI
·-
. A candidates' debate for the U.S. Senate race
will be held Saturday at 2 p.m. at the Social Science Hall at UC lrvme. ~ from the event w1ll 10 to the Owij.ht D. Eisenhower Scholarship Fund which is sponsor-
ed by t.be Republican Youth A1ssociated and the Rep~bl.1can. Party of Orange County. The studtnt a~m1ss1on .•s $2 and the aduJt price is $10. Tickets
will be available at the door. Pros~live candidates invited to attend are
Reps. Wilham Dannemcyer, Bobbi Fiedler, Dan
Lun11en and Ed Zscbau, State Sen. Ed Davis,
Assembl¥man Ro~rt Naylor, Supervisor Michael
Antonovich, Dr. William Allen, Dr. Arthur Laffer
and Bruce Herschensohn . .. .
Single• league farming
The Orange County unit of the American
Cana:r Society is looki ng for volontecn to join a
new smgJcs league, which will meet once a month.
. The group ,w_ill contribute time, energy and
ideas toward raising money for the fight against
cancer. The money will be used to fund research
public and professional education and -service to
cancer patients and their families. Call Joyce
Severson at 751-0441 for details.
Artl•tll plan HB uhlblt
Three international anists wall exhibit their
works at the Huntington Beach Library and Cultural
Resource Center through Jao. 29.
The exhibitors are Lucy Wang, a C hinese brush
painter; Sergei T1vetsky, a gradu.ite of the Moscow
School of Art, and Genevieve Bennett. who
spec1ahzes in American Indian culture. Call
842-448 1 for further informauon.
New Zealand trip set
The Natural History Museum of Orange
County ~ill hold a.pre-trip meeting Wednesday for
anyone interested in its tour to New Zealand Apnl
3-20.
The session as scheduled for 7: 15 p.m. at the
museum. 2627 Vista del Oro. Newport Beach.
Airline and tour cmnpany representatives will show
films and answer questions about the trip. Call
640-7120 for additional in formation.
MS unit meets at Hoag
The Multiple Sclerosis Suppon GrouP. of Hoag
Memorial Hospital ID Newport Beach wall bold it
oext meeting Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m. in the
hospital's rehabilitation gymnasium.
Bert Keilin, director of the Newport T herapy
Group Counschng Center, will discuss the psycho-
logical aspects of MS and will present stress and
relaxation techniques for patients. The meetlDg as
free and further information may be obtained by
calling 76()...2353.
An Invitation:
Attention Ofganizatlon Pf~enls and sec-
retaries· We want to help make your upcomjng
events, meetings, semjnars and tundratsers suc-
cessful. Send brief announcements including time,
place. C09t (If any) and a phone numbef fOf
addltlonel Information to: Bulletln Board, Dally
Piiot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. 92626.
Reports ol your club or organization's activities
-like community 1ervlce projects or election ol
officers -should be directed 10 the Community
News Editor 1t the same address Non-returnabte
black and white photographs are welcome.
Tuesday,Jan.7
• 6 p.m., Lapaa Beacll1 Clly Coucll, Council
Chambers, 505 Forest Ave.
• 7:30 p.m ., Irvine Unified ~llool District
Board of Ed•c atlon, District Administratio n
Center. 5050 Barranca Parkway.
\Vedneaday,Jan.8
• 7 p.m., Coas t CommuJty Collete District
Board of TAstee1, District Board Room, 1370
Adam s Ave .. Costa Mesa.
• 7:30 p.m., f.a1ua Beacll RecreaUon ud
CommuJty ~rvlces, Community Center. 384
Legion St.
• 7:30 p.m.. lrvioe CommuJty ~rvlcet
Comml11loe, City Council Chambers. 17200 Jam-
boree Blvd.
Orenge Cout DAILY PtLOT/Tueedey, ~ 7, 1111 • Al
Diesel spil1 in Irvine creek halted
81 IVIAN llOWUTI'
Of ..............
Ora.nee County fire ud environmental
manqement ofBcl.als wert succnsfUJ
MQDday in cordonina off a diesel spill io
lrvine'1 San Di~ CRiek that at one point
threatened wildhfein Upper Newport Bay.
Orantt County fire Oepanment
spokesman David Pierce said fuel from the
10 a.m. sj)itl reportedly came from United
Concrete Companies on Construction
Ci.ttle East in Irvine.
An Oraqe County hazardous matenals
crew jointa Newport Beach and Irvine
pOlice otftciall, county &vironmeotal
Manatement Aeeocy repretCGwiva and
State Deperu.ncnt of'Filh A Oame officials
in blockiq the spill.
Ao Jrvine city worter spou.ed the fuel
let.kina into the creek u be was cleanina a
nearby bicycle lane, officials said.
Concemed about the pou.ibility of fuel
spcwinJ into lhe Upper Newport Bay
Ecol<>s>cal Re~e. county firefighten
called to tbe tcene blocked the layer off uel
and soaked it up with special sponacs.
Pierce said. He said altho~ they were
worried a bit at fint. the s~ed fuel was
confined to the Campus Drive location.
Orante County Enviro1uomtal Man ..
-.ment apok:eswoman Nin YamaWka
l&id an inv~ revealed the dietel
fuel probably came from a mack parted in
front of the~ company.
Some o( the dietel also could have
wuhed ofT a coatiq apphed to the trucks
&s an a.ntj-'Stick subttancc. Yamashika
said.
The trucks are covered with •·mixture of
diesel and wu to keep the concrete from
stickina. When t.be uucu art washed,
some of the mixture comes oft'. she
explafocd.
..We wtlJ have a ~ wi&b dae
man.1tement of the company t.o tee iftbey
blve an ~problem l:ba1 needs IO be
lddreued, y aawbika laid. ,
Oran,e County Fire Oepertmeol
spokesman Pat Antrim aid today the
Styrofoam booms used to block the dietel
fuel are nill in place arot.tnd the 19llJ t.o
make sure. the fuel doet not IO any fwtbcr. ·
''The booms are still in plaoe ud they
will probably remain io place for a oou~
of days," An trim wd. Colloty fire officialt
will check the area today for a.oy leaks, be
said.
County.'s Prist;iners get new ham~
Prefabricated units
replace tents for 200
honor farm inmates
By LAURA MERJt
Of .. Dlllr,... ....
Some of the county's overflow of
minimum security inmates spent their
·first niJbt in prefabricated living units at
the James A. Muslclc Honor Farm in El
Toro Monday.
About 200 county prisoners have been
living in tents on the honor farm since
August. They were moved to the mini-
mum security Musick facility after a
federal judge orderd the county to reduce
overcrowding at the main jain in Santa
Ana. ·
Inmates from the main jail will be
·moving in throughout the week. said Capt
Jack DeVercaux, supervisor at Musick.
Each of the new living units is CO-mpriscd
of three to five 12-foot by 60-foot trailers,
which are connected side-by-side to form
the new U-shaped complex. The complex
also includes a d ining hall, command
center and reception center.
The county bought the 63 trailen for
S 1.6 millio n from an Oregon construction
company that used the trailen at a remote
site where it was building a power plant.
Another SI million was spent to m odify
the trailers. said Norb Puff, senior analyst
for the county. ,
Forty-one of the trailers were used to
form the eight living units for male
prisoners. The remaining trailers are used
for general operauons, such as medical
area, barber shop and commissary, -the
command center. reception center and
eating area.
Four of the trailers will be used to
expand the women's area at the honor
farm enabling it to increase its population
from 60 to 100 inmates by March.
All eight units, which pa.sscd inspccuon
by tbe State Board of Corrections Monday.
"are expected to be filled by next week."
said DeVercaux.
Though the new living quarters are
temporary, they may be used for up to two
years. "How long they will last. we really
don't know." said Devereaux. "But from a
security standpoint, the sooner I itet
C.pt. Jack DeVereaaa 1tne reporten a tour of the
new prefabricated facUldee pa.rebated by the
....,,...,.._.., ...............
county to h01Ue o•erflow of prhonen at the
Jamee A. Maalck honor farm ln £1 Toro.
something with steel and cement. the
happier I will be."
Master plans arc on the drawing board
for a pennanent expansion, said Steve
Blaylock. a facility planner. "liiinal con-
struction 1s expected for mad-1987 at
which tame the honor farm will be able to
house ap proximately 1,535 inmates. said .
Blaylock.
Orange County is under a federal coun
order to reduce overcrowded conditions in
the men's section of the Santa Ana mam
Jail. U.S. District Court Judge Wilham
Gray found county supervisors in con-
tempt of court last March for no t comply-
ing with his 1978 order to reduce the J;til's
population. Gray levied a $50,000 fine
aga1Dst the county and a SI 0 nightly fee for
each prisoner who went over 24 hours
wuhout a bed.
As a result. supervisors are under the
gun to meet ever mort stnngent popu-
lation hmns at tbe Jatl or fa~ possible
imprisonment themselves.
Jan. 15 1s the next m1lcsto nt in 1he etTon
to give inmates breathing room. That's
when the county will have to stan lim1t1Dg
the number of prisoners at the main 1ail to
1,500. The Jail was designed .to hold 1.191
ID mates.
The t.: -shaped fac1ht } surrounds a
grass\' recreation area \A. Ith p1cn1c tables.
O ffictrs stand guard round the clock in the
command center tra1lcr \A. h1ch o-..erlooks
the recreation area
.\II pnsoners who hve at the new
add 1 uon to \he honor farm will work in one
capacity or another Those tn the count) 's
v.ork program w11l be bused o utside 1he
compound for work at places hke the
county dump. Inmates on work fonouans .
will travel to their regular Jobs and many of
the pnsone~ v.111 \\<Ork on the farm at
Musick
Each of the new living units at Musick
have individual. wood-paneled cubicles
for pnsoners. rccrcauon room s with
television, pi ng pong and pool tables and
piped-in music. The Mus ick Honor Farm 15 located on a
The drab beige units wall house .iu'I w.+•roo-acre sHe in El Toro whel"l' a h' e-stoclt.
1Dmates bnngrng the inmate populauon at •lrchard and farming o perauon arl." ma1n-
Mus1ck to 669, said DeVereau~. tJ1nC"d
Parker-Hannifin fined $2 500 2oofacing . I . t ll t• ' lossofjobs 1n rv1ne wa er po . u ion case after strike
By PHU. SNEIDERMAN
Ot-.Olllr ..... SWI
An Irvine-based company that pleaded
guilty Monday to a water pollution charge
was placed on informal probation and
assessed more 1han $2.500.
Parker-Hannifin Corp.. an aerospace
firm, was charged by California Fish and
Game officials in connection with an
illegal oil discharge last July. A Fish and
Game spokesman said construction
workers in the Lane Flood Control
Channel nouccd an oil buildup behind a
temporarv dam in the channel.
About SO to IOOgallonsoflubricat1ngoil
soilled into the channel. the state official
said. If not blocked by the dam. Lbe 011
co uld have 1raveled into the San Diego
Creek and eventually into Upper Newpon
Bay. he said.
Parker-Hannifin pleaded guilty to the
single misdemeanor water polluu on
charge Monday in Orange County Central
Municipal Coun in Santa Ana.
A court clerk said Judge William P.
Hopkins sentenced the company to two
years of informal probation and ordered
the finn to pay a Sl,500 fine an<tSl.050 in
state•mandated legal fees.
"We were unable to determine the
source (of the pollution). but 1t was clear 1t
came from our facility." said Chuck
Friedersdorf. a Parker-Hannifin v1c~
president.
Fnedersdorf said that l>u1ld1ng. located
on Von Karman Avenue south of 1he ~an
Diego Frttwa), was closed shonl~ after th{·
spill. and its operations were mo' ed 10 J
new. larger plant m East If'\ me He said the
Von Karman building 1~ !>Chcdukd IM
demohuon.
The Parker-Hannifi n incident v.as one
of two Orange Count) water pollu11on
1."ases heard Monda) in the: Santa .\na
counroom
In the second case . .\u10 Master Im l>I
"ianta .\na pleaded not gu1h~ to tv.olounl'>
ol 1llegall) d1scharg1ng wa\te oil 1nh• .t
storm drain . .\ coun tnal v.as 'iCht"dulrd
for Jan JO.
LO .\'C1ELE !.\Pl -ome 200
"'arehouse \\Orker<, lac1 ng the loss of their
11'b" unles\ the~ grant a maJor pa)
wm:ess1on J.rl· being p111ed against Team-
'ter k adcn. tf'\ in~ to pre!>Cf' e their b1gest
'H:tof'\ in a protral tt>d food-industry
'tnkc
.\t 1-.~ue 1<. lht' 4ucst1on l)itv.o-t1er wage
SI. ale' v. 11 h nev. v. or~a' be mg paid less
1han l'urrent ... nrkers
'\ou1hem l altlom1a supermarkets from
')an Lu1c; Obi'>~' to ~n Diego drop~ the
dc.-mand to seuk the eight-week stnke and
kid.out ·
.\Iler the pall \\3\ announced. 4Jpba
Ek tJ ~1d 11 planm·d Ill dl>st' m Fullerton
...arehou'e putt1n~ ~1111 union members
1 •U I Of 10h\
Newport ~an sentenced
in land bilking scheme
reponed a home burglar) \fonda'. hom e Saturda' nigh t. Pohl<' r<.1 1
morning Wlth an estimated lo\\ ot mated th<' lo\\ at $7.000
$1 .000. • •• • • • An Alpine stereo syste m. 'alucd at
$957, was stolen from a car parked
Monday on Brooks Strttt. the '1ct1m
told police. • • • Police arrested Ra) m ond
A n:s1dent m the bOO block of l ~th
~~ ~ned Monda)' that txY\l''-
contatning S 1.()()() m leather puNl''
and an $800 TV stert'o .,...crc <,Wkn
from her home as o;he v.a" in thc
process of mo\ mg oul last .,..t"d.
'tokn \I 'hl.J' t rum lhe bedroom o f 1
horn,· r hl 1'lXJ block of Momin.@
l 1\()1"' 1,1,: \\l'l'k
• • •
.\ 1h1, • 11'\\1rtt•dlJ' <.tolt" $700 U)
.. 3 ml rJ. ·~,11prm n1 trom the bedroom
,,1 a h,•r1l• n lhl· 11'1-itlO block of Mt.
~n .. t J, •11l't1mt· ht'tv.ttn Wcdnes--
Ja\ ~ "'u'lJ.t\ r oh1;c: reports llJ.d
th<" m1ruJ,•1 l"Olc:'rt'd h\ brt'ak1na 1
h'ing n••., ''lt'l\h'\A. 8y STEVE MARBLE
Of .. Dlllr .........
A Newpon Beach businessman
was sentenced Monday to 21/J years in
prison for b1lkin& investors out of
Sl.2 m1lhon ID an Antelope Valle)
propeny investment scheme.
Though 1dncy Binder. 57, faced a
maximum sentence of 75 years 1n
pnson, the Newport tax consultant
could be free on probation in 10
months.
Binder was convicted in November
on IS counts of mail fraud relating to
Newport 8-cb
Video equipment valued at $2, 100
was ~ported stolen from a home in
the 400 block of 8eywoo4 unday • • • Thieves repottedJy brokt mto a
home alona C•nyon bland Monday.
ranllCkcd the residence and fled with
six itmn of1cwtlry, silvcrwart and a
duffel baa. The lc:>H was estimated at
S7,0SO.
Coetall-
A S I 00 'ool boa contain int S.300 in
tools wu rtporud 11okn from lbC
Pl'llt of• home 1n the 900 block of
Tuua Place Sundav. • • •
I ..
the sale of land in Antelope Valley. A
second man, Daniel Lem~. 46. of
Mission Viejo, also was convicted of
15 counts of mail fraud and is
scheduled to be 1mtenced Jan. 30.
U.S. District Judie Richard Gad-
bois ordered Binder to Krvc fi ve
ycan probation when he is rcka~
from prison and ordered an examin-
ation ofBi*r's finances with an eye
toward payina Mck investors.
Gadbois told investors 11t.bercd m
the Los Aneda counroom tbat it was
unlikely &hey would ,et beck a -·
Someooe ~ _. S27 in
cash from tk ol a home in
the 2 100 block of"9ceatia Avenue
unday. • • • Three items of jewelry worth
S 1 ,060 were "'c.:1 **8 h m the bathroom of 1 ia IM 1500 block
of Maa Verde Ori~ Eaa Sunday.
Soatll Oomalf
Thieves nDGnlidlY ... a s~
microwawt oYml. a 1500 eolof TV 1et
and a .21...c:alk Mlldp8 &om •
lAluna Kath M.eia IM)UOO bk>ck
ofC'•m1nto Aho. Police repons aid
the thtd cetet'ed by pryu'I • patio
ahdina ata-door. •
significant amount of their money.
"(But) I'll do what I can." the Judge
said. . .. ,.
Binder and Leffler wert' charged
with forming several corporation, to
buy unde' eloped land that ~Y
resold at inflated pnces. allqcdlin.a
promising investors that tht' land
could be rtsold fo r double the money
within two )CU'S.
The corporations dtd not not own
50me o f the land and other pal"C't'ls
wert to ned as claimed. accordana to
the aovernment
• • • A Misa•on Viejo res1dcnt m the
24600 block of Oardanaa rtportcd
that someone rccel,ltly pouttd eofTte
pwnd1 in the p,s <ank of his car. • • • Tbe anendant of a L.aauna Niauel
TuacotaVKle ttatJon. 28922 Crown
Valley Plftway, rcpon.ed that some-one seole two_, belted rad.al t1ttt,
wonb sno. and an uncktennined amoun&otallineoll ftom thutation.
1Apa•110•
A lky blue 191 I To)'Ota Supra was
rc1)Clt1ed .... Moeday Oft South
COU1 Hlshway ud S*py Hollow
Lane. • • • Mou.ntatn View Dn~e midcnt
Brancheau, 22. on suspicio n of dn' •
1ng under the mflucncc of alcohol
Brancheau WIS stopPCC! at 2: 15 a.m
Monday on Mountain Road.
Banttncton 8-cla
A $320 car s~ was reported
stolen from a 1980 O.uun 8-2 10
parked in front of an apartment
rom p&ex m the l 7100 bk>ck of O.k
Monday. • • • A $325 surfboard was reponed
atokn Monday from outside the
Ekctric Chair Surf ShoP on Main
Strttt near Paafic Coast Hij.hway
lluanday. • • • A SlSO video cassette rec:ordcr. a
•••
Someont' rcpon<'dh ~tole 1'nt'
ounce of dtnttstr. gold from J
dentist's labal "'4bb Edinger .\ \ l'
O\er the v.cd .end Thr lo\\ "'.l~
t suma1td at S '00
• • •
.\ resident 1n the 19 0(.) bk~ k '' Deep Harbor ttponed th'a1 all tnu1
hubcaps wt'tt tolcn from ha•
Merttd~ parked 10 fr<1nc ofh1s homt
unda' night Th~ las~ was csumat«
It $200
P'09Dtab\ Valley
AS 700 diamond rini wu f'Cl)l)ncd
lr.tne
..\ hl ut '"1rrh1n' nng 'alued a\ more
than S-ll• "J' t'ported \tolcn from a
homt' a, 'lt-\k 1,\J, lane earl) today
• • •
.\n und<'t<'rminC'J number of 1lvcr
items "'onh ~.1'<00 were rcponcd
)tolcn 'vfondt' trom a ho me tn tM
W()() blcx l ~"'II (°)\i, (' \trt'et
• • •
4. SI l car tereo v. u rcponed
stolen trom •J«P parked 10 front of a
home alo ng E'planadt' Mo nda)
S2$0 TV 1et and 1 S2X> micro.ave were reported nolen from a home m
tbe JG> block of AJabama Monday.
Poltee ~ said the thief Cft&ertd t.btoulh a fint noor window. • • •
\ Bandit hits FV store
A \luef, entenftl ~a shd•l.\I ~ door. ~ -* 1 $~ A robber cbcnbtd as "c~~n cut"
JCWClry bol oonlainn11 stoo in ,cw-ft'PCM'1Cdly held up a Fountain Valle)'
clry fTom 1 home la the 17000 block cltttron1cs store Monda> momina of Edfewlter tometime in the put end eteaPCd with S21 S an C'I h
few days. • • • Vlctona nnc ~ldcrlon, th< 26-
A raldcnt 1n the 21600 block of year-old mat\ll!CfOftM Rldto hack, Dviee repoftld tMt iOftleOM! MR told P!)hce &bat tbe u.,ct wralk.fd up
bit 16-foO& aham1num boet.. an 80 c.c to ba lttVl« coun~ at the 161 7 ~ two sw1boetdl and flsb · Harbor Blvd. l\Ot'C, ouJkd a sun and ,,.. eca~t from in &ont of lu ckmanded cash. He fted oo foot.
Pohtt said th1i was the fourth \Unt
the "Ott bu bttn robbed 1n the past
tY<<H-nd ... ·b.&lf months.
The robbtr wa dctenbcd u a 6--
foot. l •lftCh Wtll\t mak I 19 \0 2() ran
old • \\1th a hea \ > 'bulkl ud tllicw'\
blood hair. He WU wcanna ~
panl$and a srttn ~..-Cvcd T-lbin
watb "HUDOnp C.anuna" pruned• tM~
~ --=-====~~~---=-~~~~~~·~~~-I
Benolael tM -Uon -tbe ft•"'DC......,. of tbe a.nant 14Cka ln Seattle.
Firecrackers rout fish pirates
SEATTLE (AP)-Herschel the sea
lion and four of bis salmon-devour-"°' companions beat a hasty retreat
&Om the aovemmeot locks at Seat·
tie's Lake Washinaton ship canal
today after p me -aents set off two
underwater firecrackers.
"They were lounaing around in the·
water but now they're gone, .. said Bob
· Byrne of the state Game Department.
"We don't know when they'll be
back. ..
Game officials plan lo detonate
fi~ckcn underwater for a week
near the locks. hoping the booms will
~Henchel and the other sea lions
out into Puaet Sound and away from
tbe salmon. ·
"They're sman." said Byrne, who
spent a day recently watching
Henchel and at least two other sea
lions catch 30 fish, ••teanoa them up,
throwina them out of the water, 1*tina and having a aood old time.••
Henchel is an old hand at it. He
herded the fish to a closed gate in the
locks and ate u many as he wanted,
16 that day.
Henchel. who weiahs between 600
and 900 pounds, and at lcut three
smaller, younger sea lions have
stationed themselves at a kind of
ecol<>sica.J bottleneck downstream
from the Hiram Chittenden Locks.
The sea Hons dine on stcclhead and
other fish beaded upstream throuab
the locks or a man-made fish ladder
adjaocnt to the canal, which biaects
Seattle on its way to Lake Washinaton
and the Cedar River system, the
fishes' s_pawninj pounds.
Tounsts applaud the si&ht of a sea
lion splashinJ to tbe surface with a
fish in its J•WS. but officials arc
concerned because the number of
stcclhcad. a teaaoina trout. returnina
to spawn in the Cedar system bas
been sharply off in recent_years.
IRS promises better responsiveness
WASHINGTON (AP) -The lnternaJ Rev-
enue Service; so plagued with problems last year that
an estimated 100 million telephone calls went unans:fered. is promising improvement this year.
more lines, more workers and less crankiness.
By mid-March, the IRS will be able to tell you by
pboae whether your return has been received. If you
call with a question about a deduction, the agency
promises a better effort to aive you the right answer.
Apd while there arc no guarantees. IRS officials arc
ptcdicti_ng no repeat of last year's massive back.Jog in
processtDf returns.
"I think 1986 will be a SlJbstantially ~ifferent
processing year -substantiall'y better, much more
like a normal processing year," Fred Peniue,
director of returns prooessina. told reporters
Mondav.
He said the IRS bas expanded computer
capacity and stepped up work.er tra.inina in the 10
fe$:ional scrvioc centen, where an estimated I 03.8
m1Uion individual returns arc expected to be
processed this year. It was a new oomputer system in
those centers that CTCatcd most of the processing
back.Jog last year and delayed refunds for millions of
taxpayers. ·
-----~~~-------
Postmaster general fired;
airline executive takes job
W ASHINOTON (AP)-The U.S.
Poltal Service bu fired Pottmut.cr
Oeneral Paul N. Carlin in the wake of
IClClllltlODS be WU too slow to
increue automation of the ICfVice
and streamline its executive staff and
has replaced him -at leut tem~r
arilr -)¥jth Alben Cuey, a retired
airhne executive.
c.atlin's rai&nation. wbicb was ~ues~ by the pottal board, and
Casey's appointment were an-
nounced Monday by POltll Service
spokesman Ralph $t.cwart after the
board made the chaqe at a clOICd
meetina-
c.atlin becomes an adviser to the bOard tbat ousted bim.
Caley, former cbairman •nd prcsi-
den to( American Airlincs,.tak.es over
immediately and-becomes a member
Cities,
states
[acing
crunch
W ASHJNGTON (AP) -Groups
representing cities and slates say
President Reapn'• upcomina budget
proposal for fiscal 1987 will include
major reductions in aid to local
aovernments for community de-
velopment and hou&ina.
The cuts, if enacted, would amount
to a withdrawal by the federal
1overnment from its lonptandina
role of helpina local aovemment.s
provide housina and encouraae econ-
omic development, the municipal
officials say.
of the postal board. As postmaster
· acneral, he will be the 66tb sucxieuor
to Bcniamin Franklln.
Carlln , who 1ervcd oftly a few days
more than a year, was called "uupetb
and inilovauve adminjstrator" wben
his appointment was announced in
No'!ember 1984 by John R. McKean,
tbe board chairman who was respqn-
aib&e for telliQ& Carlin he was out.
The search for a succ::essor beaan
three mootbl qo, Mc~ean told a
news conference today.
Casey appearinJ with McKean,
said be ~d been brouaht in to help
the Postal Service "strcn&then its
ability to compete" with other car-
riers of packqes and advertisina.
• Asked bow Iona .he would be
posi:muter acneral, Casey, who is 65,
said balf-jokinaJy, "The primary aoaJ
of any chief executive is to arrute f<!f
bissucceaor .... lfl'm really aood. •&X
months; if I'm poor, nine montbL"
Asked it'Caaey was a ''caretaker,"
McKean uid tbe board bad made no
commitment as to how Iona Cuey
would hold the post.
c.atlin bca&n rus aovernment ca-
reer in 1969 as President Nixon'•
lia.ison with Conama. Before beint usiP.ed to top postal manqement
positions in the eastem and central
reaions, be was a labor and employee
relations specialist at postal head·
quarters in Waahinaton.
Durina his year at the top, Carlin
implemented a labor qreement that
allowed new workct5 to be pa.id lea
than those hired before the contract
went idlo effect.
LiVe grenade p-anted at
U .S.-Soviet hockey ganie
By tM A.11odated Prna
BOSTON -The FBI and police searched today for the person who placed
a live grenade in a sports arena shortly before an exhibition hockey game
between the ~ston Bruins and a Soviet team that w~ed by 11 ,458 fans.
-'"NObodfs confessed or tried to take claim" for planting the device at the
Boston Garden, said police O fficer John Mclean. Police, actina on a
telephoned bomb threat, removed the grenade Monday fro m a trash barrel
inside the main entrance of arena 20 minutes before members of the Soviet py~os team arrived, said police Superint.c114ent Martin Mulkern. No
uuuncs were reported. -
Agricaltare Secretary Block re.lgnl.ng
WASHINGTON -ApicuJturc Secretary John R. Block. one of the few
remaining members of President Reagan's ongjnaJ Cabinet, was expected to resian today, sources said. The sources, who asked not to be identified, said
Block would make the announcement. He called a mid-afternoon news
conference. The secretary could not be reached for comment. Sources on
Capitol H ill said they expected his successor to come from within the
department.
Shuttle laanc.IJlng po11tponed agaln
Reapn came into office calling for
a federal withdrawal from many locaJ
activities, and while his 1982 "new
federalism" plan to transfer many
prosrarns never aot off the ground,
-::::::::;::;;;miiiiijl;;;:;;::;::;::;::;:;;;;;;;;;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;;;;:;;;:;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;,;i1oca1 aovemment officials say the I"' latest budget cuts would accomplish
CAPE CANAVERAL -The launch of bard luck spaoc shuttle Columbia
on its first flight in more than two years was postponed for a fifth time today
because ofbad weather here and at emergency landing sites in Africa and Spain.
NASA rescheduled the launch for 4:05 a.m. PST Thunday. Officials said a 48-~our d.elay i~ necessary t.o ~rovide time to inspect engine compartment
msulat1on which has been subjected to two straiaht days of fueling.
Uta.IJ convict clalm• .IJe '• D.B. Cooper for •ll your nH d• from lel•ure to luxury-Jncludln11 car.er 11lrl dreuln11. his aim.
Semi-Annual
Sale
2 for 1 c+ .... ,
So1nething Special
I eminine I ash ions •
250 E. 17th, Costa Mesa • 645-5711 ..... , .................. ......, ......
"It goes beyond the 'new federal-
ism' proposals that have been trotted
o ut in the last four years," said John
Gunther, executive director of the
U.S. Conference of Mayors. "h's a
backina away from the economic
develoPJ11ent policy that bad been in
place in this country since the late
1940s."
Officials of local government
gro ups who have obtained
preliminary versions of Reagan's
fiscal 1987 budget plan say it will
propose a one-third cut in the one
major urban program that he didn't
target last year -the community
development block grants.
S.~ T LAKE CITY -A Utah prison inmate's claim to be 0 .8. Cooper,
the hiJ~ker who parachuted from a Northwest Orient 727 in 1971 with S2Q<?,OOO ranso~. is being investipted. the FBI said. Agents have interviewed
the mmate, David Westmoreland, 41 , said Terry Knowles special agent in
charge of the SaJt Lake City FBI office. Westmoreland bas been at the prison
since Jan. 25, 1982, serving a sentence for second-degree murder. ~.estD_torclan~ told K~TV reporter Bob Loy Monday that be carried out the
hiJaclcing,_ w~1ch he claimed began as a $100 bet that he could bail out of a
commercial jet. ·
Badget cam 'won't affect' a1r ufety
W ASHTNGTON -Donald Engen, head of the Federal Aviation
Admini_stration, said Moi:iday that air safety ~~I no_t be affected by budget
co~~nts that are forcmg the agency to hm1t hiring. travel and other
acttv1t1es. Engen told reporters that plans to hire addit ional air traffic
controllers and airline safety inspectors over the next two years will not be
affected by a new d irective. ...
~~~~~~~=~=·=~~·~~~~~congressmanfightingbudget
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cutbacks that reduce his salary
WASHING TON (AP) -A con-
JTCSSm&n presaina for speedy court
action to strike down a new, sweeping
budact<utting law says he has legal
standina to challenge the act because
it would reduce his salary.
Rep. Mike Synar, [).Okla., said in a
court affidavit Monday, 0 1 will be
directly injured" by budact cuts
under the law that automatically
would cut bis salary, office «penses
and the pay of bis aides\
"My constituents wi ll also be
injured by the budget act, which is
designed to cause automatic reduc-
tions in numerous programs upon
which they rely," he added.
·Demonstrauna they have standinf
is the initial hurdle for Synar and I
other members of Congress who filed
suit challenging the so-called
Gramm-Rudman deficit reduction
measure on Dec. 12, the same day
President Rcapn signed it into law.
A three-judac federal court will
hear UJtuments in the case Friday.
Ironically, Synar and his oollcqucs
have both an ally and an adversary in
the Reapn administration's Justice
Department.
While Reagan signed the measure
with a declaration that "deficit reduc-
tion is now the law," the Justice
Depanment later said key provisions
arc uocotf'Stitutional.
Like the Synar lawsuit, Justice
Department lawyers said the new law
appears to violate the constitutional-
ly mandated 1eparation of ~wers
between the executive and lqJSlativc
branches.
But the aovemment lawyers said
s'.~~~E /i
& AC~~SSOR!ES ~
"A speclol supplement to
The Doily Pilot f eoturing
the latest in Spring fosh1on,
occessories, molte-up ond l'loir."
Pubtiahlng
Thursday, Jonuory 23rd, 1986
To reserve your spoce, coll:
642-4321 Ext 250
TM Oranoe Coast OoUy Pilot
330 West Boy Str .. t,
Costo Meso, CA 92626
Toxic gases
top hazard
in accident
WEBBERS FALLS, Ok.la. (AP)_
Mott of nearly IS tons of radioactive pary.icl~ released durinJ a deadly acclden~ wu confined to a uranium
proceu1n1 plant. but an adjacent roed
needed an "old-fashioned acrub-
bina. •• offkials said.
Radiation hazards, however at the
Kerr-Mt<Jee Corp. plant are Kc:ond.
ary to the danaen of toxic IU
rniduea Kid R.icl.ard 81.npn, chief
of a Nucielr Reaulatory Commiasfon emeraency team.
The leak Saturday killed one em-plo~. tent more than I 00 people to h~pttals for treatmeut. lnd IDftllld
White vapor containiQI bydroflYOric
add up to 18 miles frotn Ute plant in
rural cut.cm Ok.IMoma.
M~t of the lliehdy tldeoective uranna.m putkiea *OODed away
from the ~ .... btfon the add "Clped ......... ;. llJd
Monday. hca •the== an be&°f1 and IUC:ky. they ..,. noc drifti~ ~ the level of rlldioecdve
CODWIUftllKm outsade .... compee.
WU vtry low, he a.cl.
"We 1n tolna to detmnlMH' ...
arc any amonts or rldiltiail --We are .,._ lhere W011°1 lie a
requirement b' an oft'.eite c:t..•A .. he mid. ....
------___J ----
Legisl&ture
renews toxic
waste debate
Top ic's introduction
en live n s congenial
start of· 8 6 session
SACRAMENTO (AP)-The CalJ.
forn.ia Leai~ture has started its 1986 ~on wtth ~dshaJces, sports
JOkn. a machine failure and a re~ fiaht over toxic wastes.
That '':-the Asaembly did all that
Monday an a two-hour mcetin&, half
of whic~ consisted of closed-door
Repubhcan and Democratic
caucwes.
The state Senate, by contrast met
for less than 10 mjnutes and' con-
ducted only a few item s of routjne
buliness.
But Stnate ~ident Pro Tem
0.vid RoMrti. O.Los Angeles. beat
Gov. Oeorae Oeukmejian and other
lelialative leaders to the punch by
deljverin& bis own "state-of-the·
1tate ... messaae at a press conference.
While th;e Assembly Democrats
and Repubhca.ns battJcd over a bill to
create .a toxic wastes dcpanment, ~~r:tJ UJ'ICd lawmakers to put aside
politlcal and personal motivations"
and fulftU "an Agenda of Opponuni-
~y· -CX{>&nsion of ec;tucation, hous.-
LD&. toltlc, waste, msuranoc and
public-safety programs.
Deukmejaan, Assembly Speaker
Wittie Brown and Assembly Re-
publican leader Pat Nolan arc sched-
11led to outline their 1986 priorities
later in the week.
Suddenly. to the surprise of the
Republicans, the toxics issue emerg-
ed.
. The Atsem~ly's fioaJ fatbt before
ats rc<:c:ss early 10 the mom in• of Sept.
14 was over a bill to rcorpruze Gov.
George C?cukmejian's toxjc waste
a&enC1es into one Depanment of
Waste Manaaement.
The bilf, AB650 by As·
scmblywoman Sally Tanner. O.EI
Monte, was qrecd upon by Deu-
kmejian and lawmakers and ap-
proved by the Senate, but was caught
m a partisan squabble over an
unrelated Medi-Cal bill and never
passed the Assembly.
Tanner rose Monday and asked for
the defeat of the bill, without ident·
ifying it. Republicans voted no before
they realized what it was, but then the
Assembly's vote-recording computer
malfunctioned.
Staff members had been tinkering
with the machine before the session
started to make sure that Rjchard
Alato~·s nam~ was no longer in it;
he resigned from the Assembly last
month because be was elected to the
Los Angeles City Council.
Another vote was taken and Re-
publicans voted for the bill, with
GOP leader Patrick Nolan of Olen·
dale denouncing Democrat.s for at·
tempting to avoid a debate on the
sensitive issue.
Tanner said the bill had technical
problems and added she has some
"serious questions about the gov-
ernor's reorganization plan.·· Brown
told rcponers later he wants a new
plan written by the end of the month.
H.eart of boyfriend
transplanted in teen
PATTERSON (AP) -Fehpe Garza Jr. gave his girlfriend the thing she
most needed to live a healthy life -his bean.
Felipe, 15. learned three weeks ago that Donna Ashlock, 14. had an-
en~ed heart and needed a transplant.
' He just told my mom out of the blue, 'when I die. I want to give my
prtfriend my heart,"' Felipe's half-brother. John Sanchez. said an a telephone
interview Monday.
The family thought Felipewas m.perfect health, but a blood vessel burst in
his bead Saturday, and he was declared brain dead hours later.
Felipe's last wish was followed, and his hcan was transplanted into
Donna's chest Sunday. The two had attended school together in this fanning
community 75 miles southeast of San Francisco~
"It was just one of those things he wanted to do for a person he cared for,"
Sanchez said.
The first time the family realized something was wrong was when Fehpe
complafoed of pain in the left side of his head when he woke up Saturday
morning. After his death. friends told Sanchez that his younger brother had
been suffering headaches and blackouts.
• The boy was declared brafo dead soon after he reached a hospital in
Modesto, but he remained technically alive because he had been pla~ on a
respirator. Sanchez added.
With the family's penn1ss1on. he was flown before dawn Sunday to San
Francisco's Presbyterian Hospital. where a five-hour transplant operation
placed his heart in Donna's chest that afternoon.
Donna's condition improved to good on Monday from critical. and
doctors removed a breathing tube.
Baby k ill er wh a le is
off to swimming start
SAN DIEGO (AP)-The newborn
dauahter ofShamu the killer whale is
propessing swimmingly and will
soon join her famous father in ~
watery world of show busjness, Sea
World officials say.
the 350.pound baby u ller whale
1pent its tint days swimming with its
mother, nursing and bccommg used
to iu 1urroundi~ in the aquatic
park. said Lanny H. Cornell. Sea
World's zoological director.
The calf, who hasn't been named,
wu born Sunday. Her mother, 12·
year-old K.enau. spent about five
houn in labor. The 27-year-old
Shamu is the father. and the calf is his
second daughter.
Me r cy killer placed
on 5 -yearproba Uon
PASADENA (AP) - A Pasadena
man who ended bjs terminally iU uncle's life with an overdose of drup
wu placed on probation for five yean
and fined SIOO in.a case the JUdae
called 1 true mercy lcjlli.~
Wallace Lambert Cooper. 46,
pleaded 1uilty Monday to voluntary
mantlauchter charges flied against
him nine months lfter the Sept. I,
I 9M, death of his uncl(, Wallace
Goulden, 81.
"It wu a true mercy killina." Los • A.DFles County Superior Court
Judie Coleman Swart said after
imJ)Otiaa the tentenoe Monday .
.. lb.it it a difficult cue and a lf'llJC
situation." . Cooper~ a maxim11m tentence
of 11 yan in oflison.
Cooperand h iuttomey, Ron Bajn,
ref\aled comment on the tentence.
'
Barrlet Nel8on
I ,000 attend
upbeat rites
for Nelson
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Singer
Rick Nelson's relatives and friends
recalled arowiQI up with him on "'The
Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet,"
and a family minister assured them
he was safe with God and bis late
father.
Orange Coelt DAILY PtlOTIT~. JMu.y 7, 1NI * Al
Saudi Arabia 'will help
Libya repel U._S. attacks~
TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) -Tbe
aovemmcnt·run media claimed
today that Saudi Arabia's ttMtally
pro-Wesiem King Fahd promited to
u.te all the "mate0.1 and financial
resources" of bis oil·ric.h country to
help Libya repel feared U.S. and
l1raeli attacks. .
In a related development, a pro.
Libyan voup calling Itself the Arab
Revoluuona.ry Committees in l.ebe·
non threatened in a statement pub-
1.isbed in Beirut to conduct "suicide
operations io the bean of Wasbini·
ton" and in Israel ifthe United States
o r Israel attacks Libya.
Last week 1J.b~an leader Col.
Moammar Khadafy threatened to
send suicide squads that ·•will operate
on the streets of· Amenta;~ tn the
event ofa U.S. attack.
Threats and counten.hreats have
flown since the Uruted States accused
Ubya of aiding the terrorists who
launched coordinated grenade and
submachine-1un attacks Dec. 27 on
passenaen in the Rome and Vienna
afrpons.
Among those killed in the assaults
directed at the check-in counters of
lsrvl's El M airline were five Amm·
cans and four terr0ri1u. Mo~ than
120 people weft wounded.
Eft'oru to~ Saudi offiei.a.ls to
verify the Libyan reports were not
immediately IUCCCSlfW, and the of·
ficiaJ radio and news qcncy were
issuiaa no such ~ru. S&udt Arabia
is one of the Unned StalCS' closest
allies in the Arab world.
Libyan &elevision, monttored tn
LoQdon, said Kina Fahd telephoned ~ on Monday and "st.rnsod
that 'the Saudi p()lition is tbe same as
Libya's and that Saudi Arabia stands
very suoQlly by the side of Libya in
confrootina the imperialist and Zion·
ist tblull and places all its material
and moral resources on the s1de of the
Libyan people."
The JOVcrnment news agency.
JANA, similarly said KJng Fahd ·:put
all its material and financial resources
to face the American and Zionist
threats.••
The New York Times today quoted
an admirustration official as saying
up to IS Palestinian and terrorist
t:raiJuaa c:ampa bave bee.e tet up i.o
Libya. Tbe 9dmin.i11ntioa probably
will detail publidy in the ant few
day• whit it mows about Libyan
1nvolvement wit.ti terrorism, the
new1pa~r said.
Khadafy hu 4enied tho Wltenoe
of terrorist camps in LibyL
On Monday, JANA claimed luaeli
Jet fiJbters were aboard a U.S. aira-aft earner in the Mcd.itcnUCanSea fora
planned strike at Libya.
The U.S. carrier Coral Sea led a
seven-ship iaU foroe out of Napiel,
Italy, o n. Friday, but U.S. Nary
sources in WuhillJlOn flatly denied
that any Israeli Jet figbten were
aboard. , They said Iarael's most
modem warplanes, includin& U.S.
made F-I 5s, are not equipped for
earner operations.
The U.S. Navy sourt:eS alto dis-
puted Libyan claims th.at ships of the
U.S. 6th Fleet are on maneuvers off
the Libyan coa.st, sayiaa the Coral Sea
task force was on a routme training
exercise 10 the nonhwcstern Mediter-
ranean and not near Libyan waters.
U .s .. Representatives tour Africa
"I'd like to think God wanted to
enliven the halls of heaven," the Rev.
Frank Parrish told 1,000 relatives. By lJae Anedaied Prest SAM -6 m1ss1les were fired at noon, but d1d not say where
the second m1ss1le exploded. The rad.to said the planes
released ho1-a1r balloons th.at deflected the hcat-seek.tng
m1ss1les
friends and fans gathered for a memorial service Monday at the JOHANNESBURG. South Africa-Six members of
Church of the Hills at Forest Lawn a U.S. Congressional delegation have begun a week-long HoU~ood Hills. · fact-findina tour of South Africa during which they att to
"Id like to think Ozzie was there m,cet President P. W. Botha as well as opponents of the
waiting for him," said Parrish, who country's system of racial seareaation. Their visit began
then referred to one of the enter-Monday just as a platinum mine in the nominally
tainer's hit songs. "'I'd like to see him independent black homeland of Bophuthatswana fired
as a travelin' man walking through 20,000 ~lack workers. It theatened to fire the remafotng
the corridors of heaven. I 0,000 today if they did not end a 5-<tay strike over wages.
Nelson, 45, died in a. fiery New In the delegation arc black Democnts William H. Gray of
Year's Eve plane crash in Texas. Philadelphia; Walter E. Faun troy, the Dlstrict of
Nelson's daughter, sons and Columbia's non-voting delegate in Congress; Charles
brother recalled cherish¢ moments .Hayes of Chicago. and Edolphus Towns of New York
wi th the entertafoer during an upbeat City; a white Democrat. Peter Kost mayer of New Hope,
service 1n which the famil y urged Pa .. and the lone Repubhcan, Lynn Manto of Rockford:
mourners not to weep. Ill., a white.
"Nancy and I are deeply saddened
by Rick's tragic death,.. President
Reagan said in a telegram to Harriet Israeli's klller fouad handed Nelson. 71. She entered the 275-scat e ·
chapel through a rear door and didn't
speak during the 45-minute service.
.. Rick would have liked this tele·
gram," David Nelson. 49, said in a
quavenng voice before reading the
White House message. Reminiscing
about younger days, David rccaJJed
play1ng'h1de-and-scek with tbetr late
father.
"At the end Clf the,day. dad would
kneel between us and' put one hand on
Ricky's chest and the other on mine
and we'd sing the Lord's Prayer .... "
David said.
Approximately 1,000 fans and
fnends heard the service over
loudspeakers outside the church on
the grounds at Forest Lawn Holly-
CAIRO. Egypt -Pnson guards today found the
body of an Egyptian border pohceman. who was
conVlcted of murdering seven lsraeh to unsts, hang10g
from a barred window an a military hospital. the st.ate-
owned Middle East News A'ency rcponed. Sgt. Suleiman
Khater. 24. was found bangmg by the ncclc from bedding
tied to bars over a wmdow in his room, MENA said. A
military prison statement said authorities were invesugat-
mg. but had not detenntned how the 1nc1dent occurred.
Khater was convicted last month for the Oct. 5 killing of
seven Israeli tourists, including four children, two women
and a man, as he stood his post at a check.point at Ras
Bourka on the coast of the Gulf of Aqaba. about '25 miles
south of the E~ptian-lsraeh border crossin~ at Taba.
Radlo says Syria fires mlBSUes
wood Hills. where Ozzie was interred BEl RUT , lebanon-A rad1osta11on said Syna fired
a decade ago. anu-a1rcraft m issiles today at lsraeh warplanes fl ymg o"er
Hunger strtten end fut
BELFAST , Northern Ireland -Three lnsh na-
. 11onal1st guemllM on hunscr stnke at Nonhem Ireland·~
Maze Pnson ended their fast Monda). the Bnush
government announced. Officials an Nonhern Ireland
!Mild there were no concessions to the strikers· demands
for early appeals of their murder convictions and a
1ud1c1a1 rcv1ew of all conv1ctJons based solely on the
testimony of pohce informers. Bntatn 's domesuc news
agency reported the men may have been told thc1r appeals
could be heard tn record lime. b) .!\pnl or May Lord
Gafford, a civil ngbts lawyer and member of the Bnt1sh
House of Lords. spoke to all thrtt men Monday after ht'
had met m Belfast with pn son officials and rcprcsenta·
u ves of the Northern Ireland Office. the government
agency that administers the Bnush province.
Colombia lU'ts volcano alert
BOGOTA. Colombia -The e.overnment hftcd the
st.ate of .. max1mum alen·· Monda) 1n some areas near the
Nevado del Ruu volcano. which sent down a wall of mud
in November lhat k.tlled 25.000 people and bcpn
rumbling again several days ago. V1Clor Ricardo , head of
the National Emergency Commmtt. said ma nationwide
broadcast that thousands of people were returning to their
homes tn the Andes Mounwn tov.nsofHonda, Guayabal
and Ambalema but the alen was sull an force at Cbanchana
and Manqu1ta. He bad said earher Monda) that the
volcano showed signs of a possible new erupuon that
could be v.orse than the one that melted pan of its
snowcap ~o" 13 and st"nt a I 5~foo1-h1gh v.all of mud
do\A.'n the Laguo1lla Rner About 50. people 1t ... e an the
area in v.h1ch the emergenq was lifted. and abou1 I 00.000
in the rc-gions still under m~1mum alen Ricardo said the
sc1enufic comm1u~ mon1tonng "olcaml acuon reponed
a lesscmng of se1sm1c acu" 11) in the I 7, 7()().foot Ne" ado
del Ru12. but also noted that the change wa.s slight and the
danger of new erupuons and mudslides was not 0 ' er.
"'Dad wouldn't want an) bod> to be eastern Lebanon·s Bclcaa Valley, but missed. One m1ss1le
sad. so stop crytng over there:· said exploded harmlessly over the Chnsuan village of Deir el-
Nelson·s teen-age son. Matthew, Qalaa near the mountam rcson town of Be1t Men, six
before he and his twin brother. miles non .beast of Beirut. the Chrisuan-<:ontrolled Voice
Gunnar. sang "Easy to be Free." of Lebanon radio said. It said at least two Soviet-supplied ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--=-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GENUINE
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case ends tn mis trial • All L111~1r Off Ice Chairs STAITl•AT s211
STAITI• AT s799
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STAITI• AT s999 LOS ANGELES {AP) -A jury
deedlodr could not be broken ud a
mistrial wu declared in the murder
cue llainst a member of a Holly· wood 1treet .. ~ily" who wu on trial
for the t 9M ldlllna of a maAe
prc;llti l Ute.
Superior coun Judie wmu a.
Poundtn dedand tbe miltrial Moo·
dly after the i~ deUbmtiat the cblrll--Olll Pimky, 20, de9doo iocW .,., . iD •vor ol ecquiftal The
Cllt ... '° 1he jwy Dec. l l. nij.rydktW....,,1 ~ u.un~ """1 ol ...., .......
c:ou•olWlied iobbel"J 11 IM RQllll Vikttlf'~ ia HolyWood.
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,
Supreme Court .
makin~ mockery
of deatb penalty
pespite the fact that the J)C<?Ple of ~e sta~e of
California have lcplly voted to purush cert.am conVlcted
murderers with death, the state Supreme Court
continues to find ways to block the implementation of
capital punishment.
In its uiost recent rush to delivery mercy to those
who have denied mercy to othets, the court overturned
five death sentences on New Year's Eve. If the decisions
were intended as a resolution, 1986 will pass as the tenth
year that capital punishment has existed in word only in
California.
The people of California are not a bl~ thirsty lo\,
intent upon the perverse gratification a state execution
might deliver. Rather, they are believers in two basic
concepts that seem ..to... be anathetmr to the-current
Supreme Court. First, the Californians whose votes
reinstated the death penalty in 1977 believe that capital
punishment is a deterrent to murder. Second, they
believe that they and their elected representatives have
the right to determine what the laws of the state will be,
and that the Supreme Court has the right only to
interpret those laws.
ln each of the most recently overturned penalties,
the court had what it considered valid legal reasons -as
it always does. But we cannot judge this court on the
basis of individual cases, especially when the justices
themselves are not unanimous about their decisions.
Instead, we must look at the body of cases that have •
come before the Suprei;ne Court since 1977. Of the 49
cases on which it has rllled, the court bas reversed 46
death sentences. There is an indictment here of
something. Either of our trial system, which, based on
the court's rulings, is only producing supportable
sentences at the rate of six percent, or of the manner in
which the Supreme Court ts interpreting the cases that
come before 1t.
We think it's the latter. The Supreme Court, while
using the letter of the law as a shield, has made a mockery
of the death penalty law and ill~timately usurped the
power of the citizens in the bargain.
This year, at the polls, the people of California will
have the opportunity to reshape the institution that is
unrepresentative of the society that created it.
Opfnlona expreaed In lhla apace are lhoee of the Deity Piiot. Other views
expreeeed on thl• page are ttlo9e of their authors and artists. Reader comment II Invited. The 0-'fy Piiot, PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa. 92626. Phone
&42-eoa6.
I
-~----~-
•
"(Rajlv)Gandhlhascreateda momentum of hope, ofachoolsopen':/, _
of factories being built, of a middle class emerging. of the stlrrltJIS
opportunity. · •
They are off and running
fordubiousNo. 2Statejob
Powerful politicos
regularly fight for
obscure position
Something remarkable that hap-
pens every four years appears certain
to occur again in 1986:
Political figures with clout, visibili-
ty and influence will give it all up to
run for lieutenant governor.
This is an office about which the
most recent former incumbent, Mike
Curb. has said "I have serious doubts
about whether I should have drawn a
salary.··
It's an office about as obscure as the
vice presidency. of which one former
occupant once observed. "It ain't
worth a pitcher of warm spit"
Yet with mystifying regularity,
respected and powerful figures seek it
out. Jn 1982, there were former
Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy and
onetime Republican Assembly leader
Carole Hallett fighting it out.
Four years earlier. Curb gave up his
old career as a music industry kjngpin
to unseat Mervyn Dynally. Dynally
himself had sacrificed an influential
role in the state Senate to seek the
sta1e·s nominal No. 2 post.
And this time, as McCarthy seeks
re-election. Republicans like Don
Sebastiani and Bruce Nestande -
one an influential legislator and the
other a powerful Orange County
lHOIAS
ELIAS
supervisor -cons1der joining Curb
in vying for the chance to oppose him.
All these ambitious folks have seen
the same potential in this obscure job:
Not only do they get to be acting
&uvernor when the head man is away
from the state, but they just might
take over the state's top office if
lightning strikes the incumbent.
Lightening. of course, comes in
various forms ranging from death to
elevation to the presjdcncy.
Never mind that this latter form of
lightning has never struck an incum-
bent California governor. Never-
theless, those now seeking the GO P's
nomination obviously hope such a
miracle; will happen to Gov. Dcu-
kmejian if he's re~lected next fall.
Deuk.mejian, of course, would love
to have one of the GOP hopefuls oust
McCanhy. For as long as a Democrat
sits in the lieutenant governor's spot,
it's a safe bet presidential lightning
won't strike the governor.
For how likely is the GOP to lap
Deukmejian in 1988 if it means
giving uf America's most visible and
powerfu statehouse job to a Demo-
crat?
But the other Republicans aren't
runoingjust to push Dcuk:mejian and
"'1cCanhy isn't seeking re-election
just to spare the nation 1'rom the
governor.
All clearly believe this office is a
stepping stone. But tQ, what?
The only time in the last half.
century that being lieutenant gov-
ernor has led to the top job came
when Goodwin Knight succeeded to
the governor's job after Dwight
Eisenhower tapped Earl Warren as
chief justice o( the U.S. Supreme
Court 32 years ago.
Since then. there has been little but
obscurity for ex-lieutenant gov-
ernors. Two -Dymally and Glenn
Anderson -arc in Congress today,
but neither has much influence there.
One-Robert Finch -eventually
became a cabinet secretary under
Richard Nixon and oow practices law
in Pasadena. .
Another -Ed Reinecke -was
indicted for perjury, losing a good
shot at running for governor in 1974.
Eventually acquitted, Reinecke later
became state Republican Party chair-
man. But where 1s he now? And where
is John Harmer, who succeeded him
as lieutenant governor?
This history is what makes the
quadrenniaJ quest for this almost
invisible office so curious.
But, as always, the potential light·
ning is present agam, and that's
apparently enough to entice plenty of
politicos into the running.
TMmas Ellu l• a Suta Momca·
bate4 col•mal•t • state lanes.
WAI.TEI
Bu11ouc11
Recalling
friends .
from days
long past
The death last week of my good
friend Bill Lord naturally has turned
my thoughts to a lot of other residents
of the Orange Coast area who have
contributed so much to these com·
munities. Happily, so~e of t!'em are
still alive but many, hke Bill, have
crossed o~er the Great Divide.
As I am sure I must have told you
long be(ore this, at the end of ~o,,d
War II finding a place to l~ve tn
SoutMrn California was a difficult
problem.
I had left my wife and. small
daughter in an apartment 1n San
Francisco-my first and my last duty
station during World War II.
As you may rememt?Cr MOid Ma.n"
Jefferson was determined to cnuce
me to move to the Orange Coast. It
didn't make any difference to him
what city . He just <r.-af?tcd !'le to
supply a little companionship be·
cause most of his friends in the
newspaper business and the advertis-
ing busmess had died.
Part of his campaign was to interest
me in buying a small newspaper. J
ended up. along with Dave Ring. my
executive officer During World Wa11
11, with the Costa Mesa Globe-
Herald. I still had no place to live but
the officers at the Santa Ana Air Base
were pouring out of there, so one of
the buildings in Costa Mesa that.
became vacant was a duplex. Tw()
small places to live.
Dave and I grabbed them and t
broullht my family to Costa Mesa.
However. before that. two sons of
an experienced builder saw a bi9
opportunity. They bought land on
both sides of Broadway in Costa
Mesa. Jn order to get a permit from
th~ federal government to build they
had to give first opportunity to buy
either to active service men or to-
rescrvcs. I was still in the lat~
category so I bought one of the
houses. To the west of me was a young
Marine flyer whose name I don't
remember. Next door on the cast was
a family of Marines whose names I do
remember. The Wirt.as. 1
'Safe and sane' roadways
require alternative ideas -1Zi$1iU:tijt.J:l~!j ,J,f1!.i,[.fllll•I-------------
In that block of Broadway tbercj
was an alley back of each house an~
the Marine lieutenant used to walk
down the alley to see Elmer Wirta. At
that time there was a great deal of
rivalry between Anny flyers and
Marine and Navy flyers. Apparently,
these two Marines were discussing
some of the difficulties between the
two services -Army and Marines. To the Edj tor.
It was recently announced that the
State of California has to pay more
than $2 million to a Lake Elsinore
man injured in a crash on the statc-
owned Ortcp Highway, based on a
jury ruling in the Orange County
Superior Court.
There have been frequent serious
and many fatal accidents on the
Ortega Highway; and thinkina in
termsofOrangeCounty. most of your
readers know of the lethal charac-
teristics of Laguna Canyon Road
which. itself. has helped to spawn
numerous lawsuits against the state.
Jn cases such as these. and similar
cases, fo r instance, in whjch swim-
mers and surfers have been seriously
injured in the cit y of Newport Beach
through diving into sandbars and
getting seriously injured, it always
seems that the accusing finger is
pointed at the ··responsibility" of
something or somebody, but least of
all the question of what responsibility
the injured individual had. to begin
with, which may have brought about
the plight which ga ve nse to the
lawsuit
Certainly. 1n the recent Onega
Highway case, 1t appears that the
roadway itsel f had detenorated and
that the injured party was not at fault
Nevertheless, it 1s very d1fficult for
public authorities such as the city of
Newport Beach or the State ot
California to publish wapung noti ces
at frequent intervals tcllinf. people
that they "use these facilities ·at their
own risk. The bi1question is, do these people
use thcte facilities at their own ~!Ilk,
and if the answer is "no," then why
should this be the case? •
If state law pennined it, wouldn·t 11
be wise to turn the Dnega Highway
into a toll road; thus, aj vina people
the opponunity to "buy·· their ngh1
OAANGE COAST ..., .....
to utiJize the facihty; and. at the
checkpoint. two other purposes co uld
be accomplished. one of which ""ould
be to ensure that the dnver of the
vehicle recognized tha t he was about
to use this road "at his own risk.·· and
also it might be an opportunit} to
check for sobriety and other misde-
meanor-type actions which people
seem to be involved in when they
travel on roads such as the Onega
Highway and Laguna Canyon .
Failing 1h1s as a sol uti on how
about the state selli ng these roads tu a
private enterprise that would take on
the respons1b1ht) of mainta1n1n~ the
roads and ope raungthcm asa prl\atc
tollway?
Isn't it time that authontu:~ ~Ulh as
Caltrans took a good hard look a 1 how
they spend th e public's money'>
ff they're not going to keep roads
from detenora11ng and 1f the y arc not
going to keep them up to the legal
standards set for other h1ghwa) s. then
wh y should we as the taxpa yers be put
in jeopardy with lawsu11<1 in excess of
S2 million a crack'l Wh) is 11 that we
cannot find other altemat1ves for
operaung bctiwccn the pnvate and the
public sectors of ou r lives?
Perhap~ 1n the near future there wHI
be no insurance whatever for
authonucs tha t are ··at rlsk"' wtlh the
public. and that. 1n 1t'1Clf. might put a
stop 10 the la"" suits
However. roadwa ys arc our life·
line. part1('ularly in Southern Cali·
fornia. 3nd a\ such. they must be kept
open.
How about making them safe at th~
same ume and try to mak.e sure that
the people who use these facilities use
them 1n a safe and sane manner -or
is that so met hmg that is reserved only
for the Fourth of July?
,, .... %1111
Eo.tor
TMITlft
Ma~EOtlO! Deft,..,
Clt1 £0i1or , .. c.....
Ntw9 Editor ==
DAVID AW. YOUNG
Newpon Beach
re111 WWJ a•••*'
Cqn1ro19F
...... L.C.......
PY~teon ~
hnllN&.. ..... Clri:Uation ~
........ JIJ Mln9MO Dlrtttor
c:::Ec, '=tor
Gandhi wil~ing to mediate
peace among ~uperpo -wers
If India can be united and revitalized,
he is the man, this is the time to do it
WASHINGTON -India's Prime
\1inister Rajiv Gandhi . a charismatic
young leader in lhe John F. Kennedy
mold. believes peace not only is
possible between the superpowers but
1s desired by both sides.
He has developed a warm rela-
tionship with both President Ronald
Rcapn of the United States and
Soviet leader Milch.ail Gorbachev. "I
found in both leadeT'l, .. Gandhi t.old
us. "a aenuine want for peace. But
because of the various constraints,
they were not able to do u much as
they wanted to."
Ira third party could help break this
closed circle of futility, Gandhi is
willin& to accept the "very difficult
role .. and .. do whatever I can."
We visited Gandhi in his modest
home in New Delhi during the
filmina of a television documentary
on "Rajiv's India." Some of his
comments will be aired toniptt
(Tuesday) on the public television
network. Spcakina of the two superpowers,
he said: "1 don't thin\ that either
country wants to write off the other
country. But it 1s very difficult .to sell
this idea to either of them. There 1s a
d«p mistrust."
The best approach, he suaiested.
would be to focus on the roots, "not
JUSt the man1festat1ons." of' the mit-
trust. In Gandhi's opinion. the q.ita-
tions over the a11'ns n ee and "star
wars" arc merely the ma.rufe tat1ons.
lt would be better. he said. to 10
straiaht to t~ causes of Sov1e1·
American discord.
He would bqJn with the hunan
clement: "How the leaders relate on 1
personal basu with each other." He
wo\lld ljke to create "an atmosphere
in tbe wotld where weapons would
not be req_uired." But he is not 1n
impractical dreamer, "We do live in a
ml "°rtd. and we c.n't pretend thll
thm~ don'1 h1ppen," he said.
There is a subdued, philosophical
roll to Gandhi's conversation that is
impressive in a youn~ man. The
world, he said quietly,clt--not ~
divided into blocs. "Any alignments,
if the West has a bloc or the East bas a
bloc, is undemocratic because, by
definition. it means that we arc gain&
to say what you say. not what we
think."
Rajiv Gandhi is a commanding
figure. tall, athletic, handsome, with a
caring face and a con•agious smiJe.
His unique leadership ca~ties have
SJipped the Indian imaitnatjon. Tbe
temper of the times is such that if
India can be united and revitalized,
he is the man to do it. and this is lhe
time it can be done.
"Our way of thinking has to
change," he said. "We are not
dynamic enough. We don't take
enough mitiative." He attributed this
to India's "colonial legacy."
"We have lived for hundreds of
yea rs under tremendous subscr-
vicnc.e ," he said. .. A servile at·
mospherc makes 1t difficult for
people to just come out and develop
their personalities.··
But Gandhi has created a momen-
tum of hope. of schools open1n&, of
factories be1na built, ofa middle class
emef'lina. of the stimngs of o~
ponunity. He hopes to rqenerate has
country. to enef'liie Indians out of
theu aae-<>ld wtys without corrupting
them
All oentunes of lnd1a·s history
coexist to,ether. he explained. "What
wt are tryina to do," he said, "is to
kctp the best in our bentate. in our
tradJ1ion1i wtule modenuzina. We
feel that if we modernize and v."e IOle
this inner stren,atb that India has, we
would have Jost ouL"
In a real 11en11e, Oandhl lw become
1n embodiment of the llMl'll will.
He fsawareofhit humen ~
ofhiJ youth and 1ne:xpcnenet. Bua he ..
it.
.
J1c1
AIDEISOI
and JO Sf PH SPEAR
draws quiet comfort from a Hindu
philosophy called Oharma. This is
bow be described it to us:
"It means that you do what you
think, what you feel is correct without
worryina too much of the conse-
quences. It means standing up for
certain beliefs and doing basically
what yOll think is riabt ... at your best
level. And, well, Uiete is very little
more that you can do than that."
AFRICAN AXIS: South Afnca and
Somalia have ananaed a modest
military deal: Soulb A1rica is provid-
in& money, uainin1 and some
weapons, and is helpin1 the
Somalians tune up and maintain
fi&hter planes obtained from the
United Arab Emirates. In return, the
Somalians have siveo South Africa
ei.&ht aroundcd Mi0·21 jet fiahters
left over from Mopdishu't busted
alliance with MOtCOw, and have
offered South Africa access to the
Soviet-built port of Berbe:ra on the
Oulf of Aden. as well as to a Somalian
airfield.
MINI-EDITORIAL: The National
Park Service ls plannina unique
memorial• to our tbree livin& ex·
pmiden ... We doa't quarrel witb the
restoration oftbe Ptains, Oa., railrold
station in honor of Jimmy Caner, or
the I"''*' ... Oon of a litmoft po~ ID Yon. Unda, Calif., in boDor or
Richard Nilon. But reconatnldioe of
Oerald Ford's Omaha, Neb.,
boybood bome out ot p&utic? Sllftly
there mUlt be a betW way to hoDOI'
the mu who Mt probably our mot&
pub.e paida& -&be lieut~
if you wiD-llnct Harry Truma. .... ... -.., ,.... ,,.., .,..,. ........... ..
•
The young Marine officer just k.new
that all Army people were no good. To
which Elmer Wirta replied, "Well,
maybe, but that old Army man that
lives next door to both of us isn't half
bad."
That "half bad" relationship de-
veloped into a close ffien<!ship.
Naturally, as ~ids always do, the
Wirta kids and my little girl played
together.
The Wirta kids kept telling my
daughter about some wonderful
friends of theirs -Aunt Dottie and
Uncle S~i.
Out or that grew some fine friend-
ships for the grown folks, too.
Uncle ~ki turned out to be E.L.
Zelinsky. one of the bravest and most
patriotic men I've ever known. Aunt
Dottie was a Navy nurse who married
him during World War II.
During the Korean war our side
was short of supplies and Sk.i volun-
teered to fly a carao plane from here to
Korea. Where most officers would
take advantage of every chance for
leave after a round trip Like that~ Ski
simplysbook his bead and, as soon as
his plane was loaded a.pin, he took off
for Korea.
Amon& other 1ood friends at the
time was Bill Lord whom we lost just
last week. Bill died just before New
Year's Eve and I'm sure. that as long as he had to ao. Bill would have
atoned in that distinction.
I used to sit in his barber chair while
Bill would talk about his ambitjons
for his home town and what he
proposed to do about It. Hedidaareat
deal.
for one thioa. he thou&)tt there
should be a lot of"service" clubs and
t~ that thdr members should
do th1np for the home town. One
thins I remember D&t\icularty wu his
devotion lo the MOOIC club.
Somehow, Bill always equated \be
Elkt Club in Newport Beec:b with th<
prosperity and wdfare of that city. So
Bill ttarted °"' to tet a MOOIC Hall for Cotta Mesa. One day, while be was
widdiQI bi1 sharp lduon on my
thiA.U111 bai.r, be penUlded me to buy • "bond .. for that purpoee.
t never did know tuctly what
blppened to tbe DtOJect but one day,
not too lontllDt lWl nlked into 1ny office ud buded IDC a cbeck. la paid
in f\&11 tar the ~ tbat I had
boulbt to beJp tlM Moote Hall. 1f"aJter .. ii.I le lllit ..... f1•*1 I H l11 •
--------------.
-P APARA l/I
~oen Oeoqe and Barbara lloralee with Terry and BubUa 11.W,~.
Jean and Roy Stader actmlre b.and8ome dolpbln.
>
Ponies, dol'phins
at yacht club party
By VIDA DEAN
. Tw~ ponies were 1n the ball, a unicorn and pon~centered the Bahia
Connthian YaehtOub~iniogroom, fourdolphms werclcapingaround the
dance floor and at midnight members and guests were snake dancing around
the c!~bhouse admidst confetti, streamers and poppers.
. One of our best and most beautiful New Y car's eve panics," said
c.ha1rynan JeuJe Lowry (the.re with husband PHI). Lights were focused on the hf~sized crystaJ ~arousel animals owned by Du Hageny (Gnzzly Adams) to
make them p ow an color.
The animals are large enough to bold people and were g~ttlng a workout as
the most popular place to have a photograph made.
&a&Meee Zamkley, ass1sJant to film produce Roser MeDde ofH unungton
Beach, the curre~t sponsor of the ~rystal Carousel said," It 1s Haggeny's dream
to ha.~e a park ~uth ~round the animals for children to enjoy."
. It ~asqu1te a1ob getting them moved into the clubhouse. It took men,"
said Jeanie.
. Addin_g to t~e fest1v1t1es was the music of member Loa Catalaao and has b1a~nd Wlth wife A.aJta sinf!ng. "lt'sa tradition to have the Ca,talanos pla)
and sin, on ~ewYear's eve, ·commented Jeanie. Fordrnner. the 175 guests
had theirchQlcc of co mash game hens or veal.
~ere wascru1sin.s talk ... the club's recent one to the Ca nbbcan and the
upcommgone later this monlh to Cabo San Lucas.
Among those th~re were Commodore Roy and Jean Stader, Staff
commodores Jim (with Velma> Emmi, Terry (with former Rose queen.
Barbara) Malllcaa, Jim (and A!Mlrey) Moore and Lew (with Kim) Spruuee.
(All oflbc staff commodores are past commodores).
Joe and Verna Deeenhardt with Ruth and Dick llonteom-
ery.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tueedey, Januwy 7, 1988 A7
, ' . /
..... .... ,._..~ LahrM
Chalrman Jeanie Lowry ta.kea a pony ride while Paul wait.a
hla tarn.
CHAllBERLIN·ORDAHL
Charlotte Ann Ordahl became the
bride of Timothy Lloyd Chamberhn
an the Corona del Mar Community
Church Congregational on Nov. 23.
The couple greeted 130 guests at their
reception at the Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club.
Rapist's unusual sentence
causes some controversy Al11
luDERS
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ordahl of
Newport Beach and Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Chamberhn of Littleton.
Colo. arc the parents of the couple.
T he bride wore a trad1t1onal ivory
satin gown with a lace and tulle
trimmed bodice. Her maid of honor
was Joan Marcus. and bndesmaids
were Denise Chamberlin. ~fancy
Wilkins, Lisa Kansriddle and Debbie
Cavin.
Mark Chamberlin was best man
and Kevin Ordahl. Rack Wilkins.
Dave Hock. John Colvin. Dave Cook
and Greg Bollendonk were ushers.
The couple are residents of Irvine
after a wedding trip to Northern
California. She is employed at
McDonnell DousJas 1n Huntington
Beach and he as with Enterprise
Leasing in Irvine.
Mary Urban
DEAR ANN LA NDERS: I read an
anicle in the paper about a judge. who
. when sentencing a convicted rapist,
p ve him a choice between 30years in
1ail or going free but without his
testicles. It was stated that this was
not a punitive sentence but a curative
one because removal of the tesucles
was supposed to render ham .. sex-
less."
I always thought sex ual ideas. like
all others. originated in the brain. 1 f
this is true wouldn't castration create
the opposite effect? It seems to me
that a man who already has a history
of violence would be tembly frus-
trated. in addition to being hostile
and aggressive. Would this not make
him more likely to commit a violent
crime? How about 11'1 -CONS-
T ANT READER -\ND AM.\TEllR
SEXOLOGIST
DEAR C.R. AND A.S.: My consult·
ant in tbls matter is Harvey Baller.
M.D .. eltief of arology at Mebarry
Medical College LD Naaltville.
Dr. Butler said, "Tlte braia 11
stroagly LDflaenced by tlle 1exul
bormoaes tllat clrc.late lllroapoat
tbe body. Ca1tratloa woald dramati-
cally redace tllle ltormooal level bat lt
would aot ellmlaate tlae sex drive
completely.
"A castrated man eoald go to bll
pbyslelaa or obtal..n testo1teroae ll·
legally, take It orally and raise l1111e
hormonal level la lti1 body. The drive
and erecttoa woald be present bat lte
could aot get aayoae pregnant."
Obvloasly, tllle judge's knowledge
of physiology ls sharply limited. (Tltis
statement Is mine, not the doctor's.)
Also let as not forget tltat rape Is an
act of violence and tbe pleasure Is
rooted LD the rapist's sense of power
over bis victim.
• • • DEAR .\NN L.\ 'IDERS: W h\ do
guys bother asking girls for their
phone numbers 1fthc)' don't intend to
call them?
The other night I went out on the
town with fnends. ' The swecte t
fellow asked me to dance. We talked.
laughed and danced together for the
res\ of the evening .. Before we paned
he said he had a great time and
wanted to sec me again. I told him I
had fun. too. When he asked for my
pho ne number. I gave It to him.
Please tell all those flakes o ut there
to stop getting girls' hopes up by
asking for phone numbers 1f the)
don't 10tend to call. Fear of re1cct1on"
Nonsense~ If a girl doesn't hke a guy
she doesn't give him ber number Oh.
Ann. why do the) do 11" -LET
DOWN IN DENVER
DEAR DENVER: I believe most
fellas who ask for• phone aamber are
genaiaely laterested at tlae time and
intend to call, but they procrasU.nate
and after a while fiiure tbe women
woaldn't remember tlllem.
Otllers have no latentloas of ealllag
bat It's dlfflcalt to say good.D.lpt
wlllloat mak.lag some refereace to a
fata.re me-etlag. so tllley a11l for tbe
aamber to spare tlle girls' feeliags.
Tltis reqaest i1 DOI viewed as a
commitment; It's merely a polite
sip-off. Smart girls doa't take tatffe
tllllacs seriously. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS. When
the city gal asked her count!) cousin sf
milk could be blue you replied.
.. Udderl~ nd1culous!"' Well. hide
)O•Jr head an shame (and }OU from
l0wa ) et! I .\II farmers know that
skim milk (known as "blueJohn") ha\
an azure cast to 11 -D J'.'I
PENS-\COLA
DEAR D .. : Looks as lf every bod)'
from Iowa knew tlllJs bat me. Boy. did
I get letten! Get 0.1 lllle wee aoodle.
URBAN·BAGGETT
A Dec. 21 ceremony in Laguna
Beach's Tivoli Terrace linked Marv
Larke Baggett and Donald Dean
She's not snowed by sport EiMA
Bo11Ec1
11r. and lln. Claamberlln •
Dr. and Mrs. David Furnas of
Corona del Mar have a nnounced the
enpaement of t heir daughter.
Heather· J. Furnas. to Francisco L
Canales of G uaynabo. Puerto Rico.
The bride~lect 1s a graduate of
Stanford University and UCLA
Urban II. They grttted 100 guests at Evel)one sa)S Joggers are fanatics tree trunks to his feet and took off
their reception. also at the T1 voh about their spon. but beside skiers Thal is no longer true k11n11. is C\el)
Terrace. they almost seem lucid . bat as demanding on a dasl~ basis as
Mrs. Mary Elinor Thompson Bag-Skiers are really weird people. Who Jogging.
gett of Newport Beach a nd Mr. and else would pick a pastime in which When snow as falling nov.here 1n
Mrs. Donald Dean Urban' of Pied-yo u select the m ost inaccessible place the United States. enthusiasts ski 1n
mo nt, Okla. are the parents of the in the country that is going through the1r hvingroomswithwarm-upsand
couple. the worst weather in its history. spend e\ercases that keep their legs in shape
Thebridewas giveninmamageb> two treacherous rtays getting there. (:-.iote:lfyou'regosngtomal'T):ic;k1er.
John HomerGowe II of Burbank. She strap two planks of slippery wood on mal'T) tall. because )'OU v.111 ha\ e a
wore a gown of white slipper satin )Our feet. nde to the top of a man or "oman who will v..alk "Ith
with a bodice of lace, seed pearls and mountain and1ry to get down wtthout knees bent 11 months out oft he }ear )
sequins designed with a sweethean the help of the ambulance at the Then the> stan on -.1tam1n .\.
neckline, and off-the-sho ulder bottom of the hill? which gives them breath that smdl'
sleeves. A pointed waist ended in a Money is e'Xchanged for this. hke that of a thousand camc\c; "ho •
deep pleat of lace. seed pearls and Before l select a doctor. lawyer or have JUSt eaten 54:janes.
sequins, which also former her accountant. I ask 1f they are skiers. I As soon as the furnace 1s turned on
chapel-length train. Her headpeice of don't care 1fthty have 15 diplomas on the)' start to get their equipment into
seed pearls held a shoulder-length veal the wall and graduated at age 16.1 will shape. waxing the skas and l he\ king
Jfhand rolled tulle. not entrust any pan of m y future to a the bindings on their boot~ Th" •'
Honor attendants were Mrs. Rob-person who thinks the ground 1s followed b} the v1g1I of the 'no"
en Daniels and Charles Thomas softer 1f1t 1s covered with snow. Where is tt falling and hn .... l'Jn \IHI
Urban. There may have been a time when get there when tt doe~'l
After a wedding tnp to Pans and skung was a seasonal spon . When the I am mamed to a skt pc:r~on .... hp
London. the couple will become snow fell. everyone strapped the two has astounded me "1th h1~ Jm·
residents of Oklahoma City in Janu-..--------------------
ary. He is employed by Paxton -----Newport ·s Cannery Village -----
Lumbcr there .
School of Medicine. Her fiance 1s a
graduate of the Harvard University
and Stanford Scbool of Medicine. He
is the son of Mrs. C~rmen Canales of
Kentwood, Mich., and the late Dr.
Francisco Canales.
They will be married on April 5 an
the Memorial Olurch at Stanford
University.
r=Gtf lJoo
DINNER NIGHTLY
6:00 P.M. to Midnight
M ondays & Tuesdays:
Two Dinners for Sl5.95
Wednesdays:
6 Course Italian Dinner S9.95
HoW to submit wedding
.and engagement news
2900 Newport Boulevard •Newport Beach • 676-2968
Talct hur1, harried mothers oftbe bn'ck and bride-to-be ... 11 's t&SY. IO
publish yourwcddillf news in the 0.ily Piiot. '
Fint,,etcopklofourettp1ment•ndweddi111fonns. Youe.tneither
pickthemupinourlobbyat330W. Bay St., <;osi.Mesa, MondaytltrofJlh
Friday /Tom 8•.m. to$ p.m .. or mail yourrequnt with a stamped. ~lf..
lddm$edenvdope to the Wt:ddill1De1Mnment. O.ily Pilot. P.O. BoA 1560,
O»ta Mesa.~ 92626.
~iMnrnewsmustbesubmirtt:datkut~venWttbpriortot.be
weddi,.,. In answer to to many requau, the Daily Pilot i1 now acttpd"'
photolofcbebrido-to-beorthcen,.,edcoupk. lfyouh6ve•ph0fo. include
it with the fonn.
Weddi1J11willbepublished•fttrthtweddi1!f.date. ~itypborosofrhe
bride or the brHMJ couple•~ welcome. Bl«k;wlute photof •~ prefmod 10
coloT. lfyou with fOUTphotoretumcd. pkueput yournMM•nd Niliiw
19M•oa rltefllct(urea idt.fipped pm.,.._).
I Weddi111ud~ment~11publishedon•~v•1lablebai1.
Wecaa'r,...,.,,leryou•JP«ifkdareforyownews, butMU)'topublish11
•toaa•P'*i'*-
b1\alence He v.111 ska for eight hour<i
unul his feet are numb. his mind 1
confused. and the hairs in ht& nose
break off. onh to come back to the
lodge and complain to 1he manager
that there is no heat 1n his room
I ha\e seen skiers hobbling around
on crutches and sponing a cast lake ..t
medal of honor. and crazies gewng an
one last run before 1he blizzard do<;es
the chairlift.
Rc-centh in C"ahforn1a. sl 1ers "ere
told there possshl~ ""a .an actnc
\ olcano under the slope'< The repl\
""as. "He\ ""<''II ta~e our chances
'-'here else lan 'l'U get a '5-inch
ba~.,.. ·
I'll he honc:o;t "llh \l)U I "ouldn't
""ant m~ daughter to ma~ a "kier
PUT THE
BOSS
TOWO
FOR YOU.
And get a Credit Line Account up to $200,000.
You'veworked hard for it all. Now. isn't it time you put the boss
at Beneficial ' to work for you Right now. there's a Benefictal
manager ready to talk about what you want just you, the boss
-and a Beneficial Credit Lme up to 5200,000. So talk to the
boss at Beneficial-who's always ready to work hard for you
Tiiie ..,.,_la iD at the follawba( locatiom:
ANAHEIM-
SXSWlJncolnA14 5'lote140 17'2.->7
COITAMESA-
3'ZOS BnatOISt Su1te3lO ~
C'f'MSS-98'1WllkerSt 121-5100
fl l'OR0-
23704 El TOl'O Rd Suite 1 YMl11
f'UUPTON-
512$ HaftlOf BM en.-.
QAROIN UOYl-
•750~ A'le ~CM
HUWTINOroN IEACH-
HS 121 8Mctl 81\ocl
~-
1 1 eo "fbttle un0e Blvd
OAAlltOE-m s MfllnSt .Suite 10
.. , 1253
S.-11001
i-&S.0001aUOO ....... ..,_,"""" a.-,,_.-.--. .... '-_.taAMMI ,._....,..,...,,.,.._.w.0.nw•·~"'-"'*'111 , • .......,., .. ~-•• ...............
ar.._ C... DAILY PILOT/ Tu.day, January 7, 19M
' COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, A10 ~, ,
11 't
Tale of two banks on Balboa turns profitable t
•
Great American stayed put,
but Bank of Amertc~ moved
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
The two financial institutfons' plans to withdraw
their branch offices from the peninsula wouJd have left the
neiahborhood without a nearby office to do its bankina. Ana with the chronic traffic and parking problems on the
Balboa Peninsula, driving to another branch office would
have been a chore at best.
Ulrich said the number ()f accounts has grown
substantially while the amount of consumer loans had
grown by about 300 percent. The savings and loan office
has added an automatic teller machine and improved its
ni&ht depotit services.
At the Bank of Amenca, officials have no rearets c
°' .............
about the move. ,., I .. "The relocation for us was exceptionally success1u ,
seid William Crawford, manqer of the Newport ~ch
branch at 3444 Via Lido. "We had a 95 perccnt.ret~~uon
ofaocounts. and that fiaurc mi&ht be conservative.
A little more than a year qo, Balboa Peninsula
merchants and residents were in dan&er of losing their
only bank and savings and loan offices.
But as the dcadJinc approached. a petitio!!_ drive by
local merchants persuaded Great Americ€ Federal
Sayinp to stick around and give the 5-ycar-old peninsula
offiee another try.
Marc Sandstrom, executive vice president of Great
American Feder'al, said the savings and loan's change of
heart, however, depended on busmess pickina up at the
Balboa Boulevard office.
In addition, the Balboa office has the hiahest number
of merchant aocounts of all the San Dicao-6ased savinp
and loan's 117 branches in California.
"Wt; would credit the support of tbe community, an
9verall good economy and the hard work of the staff and
manager Linda Carlisle for the excellent performance
overthe past year," Ulrich sajd. "We've done very well"
Crawford said there was 101t1al resistance among.
custemers to the closure of the Balboa branch offi~. a
fixture on the peninsula for half a century. But after ~ng ,,
advantaae of the expanded services offered at the Lido ·,.
· Marina Village branch, they welcomed the change, he As • 984 was drawing to a close, officials at both the
Bank of America and the Great American Federal Savinas
said they planned to close their peninsula branq.es and
consolidate ICf'Vices at nearby offices.
Mike Martin, owner of the Balboa Pharmacy in the
heart of the peninsula's business nei&hborhood, was
tnstrumenlal 10 rallying Balboa merchants to keep
banking services nearby.
~. Balboa The Bank of America's closure of the .
Peninsula branch was part of a year-Iona effort to tnm the
number of its branches in California from 1,07 1 to 9SO. But Great American officials c~ their minds
and they've prospered by staying put tbio\!ah 1985. Now, a year later, Great American Federal officials
say are pleased with the decision to stay. "Things seem to be prOlfCSsina well for them (Great
American)," Martin said. "When they were considering
the move, I sent letters to other merchants askina them to
support tht bank that stayed. And I think they have."
The building was sold last July to Griswold's
Development Corp. for renovatfon as a steak a~d seaf~
restaurant .and bar, which is expected to open m comma
months.
The Bank of America closed, and bank officials there
say the consolidation with its Lido Marina Villaae branch
was ''exceptioaally successful."
"We had one beck ofa year at tbe Balboa branch,"
said Ken Ulrich, vice president of public relations. "We
f11r ~~~I'd all the goaJs we bad set for .. 1985."
Growth
of IRA
• savings
amazes
Old-fashioned way of
compounding getting
renewed ptaise today
By JORN CUNNIFF
., ....... AMtrM
NEW YORK (AP) -Would you
rather be paid one cent on your first
day of work and have the amount
double each day for 30 days, or lake
$35,000 in one lump as payment for a
month's work?
This question is sometimes asked
by those seeking to show the power of
time and compounding in building a
nest egg, a procedure that is almost a
lost art these days, when some folks
seek to make their bundle ovemi$ht.
If you grabbed the $35,000 nght
away you would, of course, soon
regret it, because the financial
Horatio Alger who accepted the
bumbling one<ent offer would have
more than $5 m1llton by the end of the
month.
The moraJ , which will be pointed
out again and again by those promot-
ing Individual Retirement Accounts,
is that young people can become
millionaires if they arc willing to be
patient and relentlessly consistent.
Again this year, April 15 is the
deadline for establishing an IRA for
the previous year. That is. mdj viduaJs
have until then to put aside up to
$2,000 in retirement savings, and
have the amount deducted from
taxable income.
Since taxes are deferred ~ until at
least age 591h -mterest on the $2.000
adds to the sum regularly com-
pounded, helpmg to make it grow in
the manner -but obviously not the
swiftness -of that fabuJous penny
investment.
fn 10 years. for example, a $2,000
annual an vestment at 7 percent would
be wonh more than $30.000. and the
benefits of taJt-frec compounding
would have only begun. Thereafter.
the growth becomes incrcasmgJy
swift. ,
The value of time and compound-
ing in accumulating a financial estate
is one of the oldest of investment
fundamentals. but for years you
d.uin't hear much about it from the
investment community.
There were good reasons for this.
Smee many 1n the investment com-
munity make their money on com.
missions. they couldn't afford small,
inacti ve accounts. Req uired to make
their hving 1n the present rather than
future, they couldn 't exhibit the same
paticnc.c as the small investor'.
More highly praised and pubhc1zed
by Wall Streeters and others was the
active account, m which the investor
traded in and out of stocks. bonds or
whateve r else the investment
portfolio consisted of. It provided
commissions.
But now the old-fashioned method
1s geninJ praise again, and much of
the credit goes to lon$·term, tax-
deferred Individual Reurcment Ac-
(Pleue Me TDllNO/A9)
Spendlngup.5%
for construction
These proclacta are •napped up
Batton-abaped etalnl.,.. ltteel dleca, called
uap dom•, pro.tde a poeltln uap-back
action when an operator depre1eee and
actlTat.es a flritch on a IJ'apblc cliaplay
panel. The uap domee, .ome meatna.rtnc 3
mllllmeten ID diameter, are ued ID
trademarked Data Panel •witch aMembllee
manufactured by TEC, Inc., in Tuceon, Arb.
W ASHlNGT-ON -U.S. construc-
tion spendina rose 0.5 percent in
November, pushed upward by strong
advances m construction of office
buildings and shopping oenters, the
government reports.
However, an.ilysts expressed co n-
cern about downward revisions in
earlier months·that they said reflected
unexpected weakness 1n the building
industry.
The Commerce Dcpanment report
last Thursday said the November
increase left spending at a seasonally
adjusted annual rate of$348.2 billion
in November, compared with a
revised $346.3 billion in October,
when spending advanced a shght 0.1
percent.
The October gain had originally
been put at a stronger 0.4 percent but
was revised downward in Thursday's
report, which also lowered activity
back to July.
Analyst Michael Evans, head of
Evans Economics here, said the string
of revisions was troubling because it
showed that construction, considered
one of the economy's strong points.
was not doing as well as had been
previously thought.
"Construction spending, after ad-
justing for inflation, probably rose at
an annual rate of 4 percent in the final
three months of 1985. That isn't
terrible, but it is lower than we had
been expecting," Evans said. "This is
discouraging for those of us who
believe that the economy is going to
stronger in the first half of 1986."
But Jack Carlson. chief economist
for the National Association of Re-
11itors, said construction activity had
still registered sharp gains in _I 98S
with the total rate 11 percent higher
than a yw &JO. He credited lower
interest rates for the increase. ·
The strength in November came in
construction of non-residential build-
iop, which rose by a sharp 1.6
percent, and in government spend-
Ul& which was up 1.4 percent.
Construction of dweJ)jngs dipped a
slight 0.2 percent in November to an
annual rat.e of $150.3 billion. The
small decline was concentrated in
singJe-family homes, which fell by 0.1
percent. Construction of duplelles
and apartment complexes rose 0.3
percent. •
Construction of non-residenttaJ
buildinJS chm bed to an annual rate of
$89.8 b1lhon, 14 percent above a year
earlier.
The Novemberincreasc was led by
a 1.3 percent gain in con!itruction of
shopping centers and other com-
merical buildings. Acu v1ty 1n this
cat~ory was 26 percent above a year
carher.
Construction of office buildings
was up I perrent and factory con-
struction rose by 0.6 percent in
November.
Government construction spend-
ing rose to an annual rate of $64.5
billion in November to a level 16
percent higher than a year earlier.
Spending on conservation projects
was up 13 percent, the biggest rise of
any of the cateJories in November.
while construction at military facili -
ties dropped by 13 percent.
Can you spot the value of growth stocks?
Observers of nature and the stock
market kn ow that mighty oaks from
little acorns grow. And the dream of
many mvestors is to discover a
company that will sprout from rela-
tive obscurity today into tomorrow's
business giant.
"Emergmg growth" stocks -
shares of small to medi um-sized
companies whosesuperior growth
potential has yet to be full y re-
cognized -can offer more aggressive
investors opportunities for substan-
tial capita~ appreciauon over the
long-term.
Successful investment tn these
stocks requires both thorough re-
search to uncover promistng com-
panies wtth attracttvel)~nced shares
and pattence to watt for the market to
recognize the value you ha ve spotted.
If a company·s earnings contmue to
~ow rapidly year after year. other
investors should eventuall y see its
merits, and their buying should
propel the stock's pnce higher.
Whtie emergmit growth stocks offer
potentially supenor returns. they also
carry greater nsks. Given the nature
of these companies, some wtll un-
doubtedly fare better than others over
time. So, it 1s important to diversify
your holdings by buying shares in
several companies operating an dif-
ferent 1ndustnes.
You might think that the best place
to look for com panjcs on the fast track
MARY
RUDIE "' I . .
is in high technology industries with
rapid JrOwth prospects. Op·
portuniues do exist there, but these
stocks typically involve greater risks.
High growth markets attract many
competitors, which can erode a
company's market share. Then. too,
changing technology can make a
company's best-selling product ob-
solete overnight.
Another approach is to idenufy
fast-growing companies with a strong
and growing position that operate in a
large mdustry that is highl y
fragmented and exhibits slow or no-
growth. Fragmented industries arc
not dominated by industry giants -
most range from $1 billion to $1 O
billion in size, and the combined
revenues of the top 25 companies
usually do not exceed 30 percent of
the mdustry total.
That the m~ustry is gr~wtng slo.wly
or not growing at all 1s of pnme
importance because these mduslries
attract few new compet1t1ve entrants.
This creates opportunities for aa-
gress1 ve companies to grow by tak.Jng
market share.
Many. attractive e~erg:ing $fOwth
companies operate 1n service or
service-related fields. such as hospital
management. temporary help ser-
vices and advertising.
Many service industries are hi~ly
fragmented, and they can be particu-
larly attractive as investments for
several reasons. They tend to be more
stable and less affected during econ-
omic downturns than manufacturing
concerns. Also. they have lewer fixed
costs than manufacturing companies.
which gi ves them better control over
their overall costs and can help them
achieve more consistent and higher
profit levels. Furthermore. the ser-
vices thest companies provide arc
consumed wlmost immediately.
There is no need to finance inventory.
and only timited capital investment 1s
required for growth.
Although emerging growth com-
pantes tend to be smaller than the big
blue chips, many are quality com-
panies with long and successful
operating hjstories.
The following profile drawn from a
number of well-regarded emerging
growth companies suuests some
characteristics you should look for
when choosing emergina growth
stocks. Your financial consultant can
suggest individual companiCf and
help you do the nec.essary research. In
addiuon, some full-service brokerage
firms have securities analysts who
specialize in emerging growth stocks
and publish periodical reports wi th
lists of stocks they recommend.
The average company has been in
business more than 20 years, has
after-tax net income of more than SI 0
million and has demonstrated its
ability to maintain consistent, rapid
growth in good and bad economic
times. Average caminp-per-share
growth rate has ran&ed from 20 to 26
percent annually -for the past six
years, and analysts feel the company
has solid potential to continue grow-
ing faster than major industrial
COrpQ~tions.
The emerging growth company
also has a sianificantly higher rate of
return on equity and a lower debt-to-
equjty ratio than many AAA-rated
industrial firms. Above-average re-
turn on equity and below average
need for capital investment ~ves the
company the ability to self-finance
hi&ber growth in earninp per share.
Management also plays a crucial
role in the tompany's future. Quality
emerging growth companies have
established manaaement and control
structures, which arc crucial because
these companies arc small by usual
standards. Manqcment should also
have demonstrated the C1P1city to
shift from an entrepreneurial to a
more fonnaJ manqement style as the
BUILD YOUR QWN
business matures.
In scouting out good buys, look at
the stock's price/earnings multiple or
P /E. The P /E provides a measure of a
stock's value. and it is figured by
dividing the company's earnings per
sh.arc into its stock price. Emerging
growth stocks usually sell at a
premiu m to the averaite market
multiple because of their superior
earnings growth prospects, but you
should make sure that a company's
gr~wt~ ~tential is f~vorable enough
to lust1fy its stock pncc.
n the current market, a dt versified.
well-selected portfolio of emerging
growth stocks might have an average
P/E not more than SO percent above
the market's multiple while the
portfolio's projected earnmgs growth
rate might approach twire the
portfolio's P/E.
One final point.: Growth stocks
should be monitored regularly. Be
ready to pull out if the company·~
prospects sour. But at the same time.
don't expect instant results. If you
have selected investments that are
fundamentally sound -with an eye
to strong finances, strong manage-
~ent and a strong competitive pos.
1t1on -yo~ should reap handsome
returns over the long-term.
Mary J. RHJe ls vlff presldeat Ir
muqer of C..Hmer Sector Mar-
ltetlas Servket for Merrill L)'ltc:ll,
Pierce, Feuer Ir SmlG lac.
•
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--«~H'"i"d.Jlliiij;I~-------------------
TIMING •..
P'romA8
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Strv1ce. _
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WHAT AM EX Dio
NEW YORK (AP> Jan. 7
AMEX LEADERS
.... • 1"""
GoLo Qu orE s
........ .-ld.,..Pltoee T~. UMl9~llllrle1311.tO, wp IO IO LeMm .,..,_ llJi1"0 8330.00, up $2 00 ,... .,__ '3a0 40, up,, 11
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ME TAL S Quon s
TllllAY'I••• .. ••
WHAT NYSE D1D
NEW YOJtlC. (API Jen. 1 Tl l ·
NYSE LEADER S
famol.45 labc?J.s ...
TUESDAY. JANUARY 7. 1986
Mlnneeo .. Coeoh Bud Grant retlrM tor ••COW'ld Ume. •
Miami defensive coach admit• unff 11111 needa ~ 81.
R~nis hoping for ·hot hand f toni .Brock
Ro inson ban king on
QB 's exper.ien ce tn cold
~· .. All tboee years playing in Canada
might pay off lhi1 week."
That may be lhe case, but first Brock wilJ
have to do an •bout-face from his latest
oerformance. Jn the Rams' 20-0 win over l:>altas, Brock suffered throuah a miserable
pme, his worst yet in the NFL The numbers
rea<t 6of22 for SO yards and one interception.
.. And if you have the quarterback stand back
there with the ball for four seconds he'll come
ofTholdina his head."
Brock, not know for bjs mobility. will have
to be on the lookout for the Ch1cago swarm.
which. according to Robinson, "gets going bke
the laker fast break. Once they stan , it's hard to
close the door qain."
the fUYS to Jel them up. J>Iaxcrs sleep through
motivational talb, anyway.'
For thc•Rams to win, Robmson said, they
must .. control the football and ta.kc advantage
of any turnoven_ ••
BJ JOSEPH DUDEVOIR
This could be the week that Dieter Brock
finally makes Rams Coach John Robinson look
like a genius.
.. He had a bad game," said Robinson. "But
the whole passingpme was otT. The only thing
that wasn't bid was the pass blockin1t"
Robinson will be hopmg to keep some of
the heat off Brock with a repeat performance
from running back Eric Dickerson, who ran for
a playofT-ru:ord 248 yards on 34 cames an the
Wln over Dallas.
Throughout much of this season. Rob-
inson has aid that the Rams are one of the top
five or six teams in the NFL. but that the Bears
were a cut above the rcsL
Asked if he still feels that wa>, the Rams
coach replied: .. From an achievement stand-
point. we were 12-S and they were 16· I. so they
obviously have achieved more. .
As the Rams go into Chicago to take on the
1urly 16-1 Bears this Sunday for the right to
represent the NFC in the S.u~ Bowl, Brock's
cold-weather experience migbt be tf'e deciding
factor in the Jtam1' upset bid in lhe NFC
championship pme that will probably be
played in frce-zina temperatures.
"Brock is used to the cold," said Robinson
of the I I -year veteran of the Canadian Football
That is something Brock and the Rams wiU
need plenty of when they face the fearsome Bear
blitz.
Chicago completely shackJed the Giants in
the Bears' 21-0 win on Sunday. New York
quarterback Phil Simms was sacked at times
before be took two steps back.
"We'U need a good mix to keep (Chicago)
off balance," said Robinson. "But the most
amponant part of a football game is physical
dominance and handling the ball (no turn-
overs). That's what will decide the game.
"Bu t as (Chicago Coach) Mike Datka said.
this pme is between the two best teams m the
N FC.'' •
Asked about the Bears' most-pubhc1Led
player thil year, defensive tackJc·backfield
blocker runner and receiver Wilham .. The
(Pleue .ee R.AMS/83)
-'"TCs f001ish to ltiink you can pass-
consistcntJy on the Bears," said Ro binson. -
"Everyone knows what's at hand here:· he
said. "l don't think I'll need to say anythinR to
Bears like Raiders?
Ch tcago's Dtt ka
makes comparison
to NFL' s bad boys
LAKE FOREST, Ill. (AP) -The
Chicago Bears might have captured
the imagination o(thc football world
this season, but Coach Mike Ditka
doesn't totally~·
"We arc met with disfavor in some
quarters," 'Ditk.a said at his news
conference Monday after a 21-0
National FootbaJI League P.layoff
victory over the New Yori Giar1ts.
"We're a lot like the (Los Angeles)
Raiders," he said ... Some teams are
fair-haired; we're not. Some teams arc
the Smiths; we're the G rabowskis."
Asked how he would identify the
Rams, who the Bears will take on
Sunday for the National Conference
championship, Ditk.a smiled and
said: "They arc the Smiths."
The "fair-haired" Rams will be
coming from the sunny climes of
Southern California into the bitter
cold of Soldier Field o n Sunday -a
factor that should gjvc lhe Bears a
tremendous home-field advantage.
But Oitka again disgrccs.
"Their quancrback (Dieter Brock)
played in Canada, so he knows what
it's like to play under adverse con·
ditions," Ditka said. "And I'm sure a
lot of the Ram players arc o ut of the
Midwest.
"I know one thing. These arc the
111.keDltka
two best teams in the National
Conference, and they'll be playing for
the championship," Dilka said.
"The Rams play a basic zone
defense. and thetr philosophy is. 'If
you can beat us, beat us.' They don't
beat themselves. They're playing
good.
"They have excellent cornerbacks,
excellent safeties, and their
linebackers don't get as much credit
as they deserve. And the same goes for
their front three," said Ditka.
The Rams qualified for the title
game in somewhat the same fashion
the Bears did. The Rams shut out
Dallas, 20-0, with Eric Dickerson
dashing for two touchdowns.
"Anytime you shut o ut a team in ,
the playoffs. you have to be sur-
prised," Dltk.a said. ..You don't
expect shutouts in playoff games. The
Rams' defensive philosophy is not to
give you the big play."
The Bears this week find them·
selves in almost the same position
they were last year when they de-
feated Washmgton in their first
playoff game only to lose the con-
ference championship to the San
Francisco 49crs, 23-0. The only
d1fTcrcnce 1s the Bears will be playing
at home, where a victory will lift them
into the Super Bowl.
"Our main goal is to try to do what
wasn't done last year," said Ditk.a.
"What happened last year was an
embarrassment and an insult. I felt,
and I'm sure the players felt, we could
have played better. We might not
have won the game, but we could
have played better.
"The only measunng stick. in pro
ball is the top prize," D1tk.a said. "As
Jood as the year has been. it is nothing
1 f you don't get to the Su per Bowl."
The Bears were 15-1 in the regular
season, losing only to the Miami
Dolphins before their devasting tri-
umph over the Giants on Sunday.
"If lou assess that game," Ditka
said o Sunday's victory. "you'll find
we had no sacks. r:io penalties (on
offense), no interceptions and no
turnovers. The quanerback (Jim
McMahon) did a great job of getting
rid of the ball and avoidjng the rush."
Chica.co quarterbac k Jlm McMaho n (left)
bu a chat with head coach Mike Dttka
,,, ...........
darinC win o .. er the New Tork Olanta. Th e
Bean DOW prepare for the RaJu Sanday.
Pats putting earlier
frustrations aside
Pirates dropped in OT
---f Orange Coast still winless
at Cypress after72-69 loss
stan \\Inning no\\··
(~press 111·5. 1-11 "htch lost a tough Q6.q,i
o' en a me battle to Cemtos tn 1ts lOnfcrcnce o pener.
"as on target at the hnc \\hen 11 counted and sank I 0
frtt throv.'s 1n the 0' ert1me penod to break apart
from a 62-b2 deadlod. at the end uf regula11on.
New En land up beat
as team gets ready
for Dolphins Sunday
BOSTON (AP) - A "new" New
England Patriots football team re·
turned home Monday after havmg
gone further in the playoffs than at
any time since joinin' the National
Football League and, tn the process,
putting to rest some bitter post-
season memories.
With its 27-20 triumph over the
AFC West Division champio n Los
AOJCICS Raiders, New England set·
tied a l~year-old grudge and began
thinkina positively about a return to
the Oranae Bowl to battle Miami for
the conference crown.
The Patriots had seemed headed
for a victory in the 1976 playoffs over
the the then-Oakland Raiders when a
roughing tht passer penalty Late in the
game allowed the Raiders to sustain a
drive that led to the winning score.
The Raiders ultimately defeated the
Minnesota Vikings in the Super
Bowl.
Tbote associated with the team
have Iona talked about that call
apinst defensive lineman Ra.y Ham·
iJton, now an assist.ant coach with the
team. Hamilton has charged that
because of the penalty. he was
"cheated out ofa Super Bowl ring."
But come Monday, Patriot fans
and former players were looking
toward the future.
Jim Nance, who carried the ball for
the Patriots when they were based in
Boston and played in the American
Football t.eaaue, said be is not
worried about the Patriots' AFC
championship pme apinst the
Dolphins Sunday in Miami, where
the Pats have lost I 8 consecutive
times.
"The yountcr auys are comina
along. They arc not going for the
superstition of being unable to win in
Miami. lt'sa new team, a new attitude
and a new baJI game," said the former
fullback. "They art saying, 'Why
should we go to M1am1 and let a
superstition that we had nothing to do
with upset our desire to wm. ·
"I would really like to sec them beat
the Dolphins in Miami. And I
definitely think they can.''
That feeling . wa.s shared by the
more than I ,000 fans who turned out
at T.F. Green State A1rpon m
Warwick. R.I., early Monday to greet
the team as it returned from the West
Coast.
• Players walked through the packed
terminal, slapping hands with fans
wbowcrcchanting"Bnngon Miami"
and carrying banners, including one
that said "Squish the Fish ...
Former Patnots center Jon Mom s.
who played for the team between
1964 and 1974. said much of the
Patriots' new-found success must be
credited to the way Coach Raymond
Berry bas handled the team. .
"He's a low-key. players-type
coach." said Moms. now the color
man on Patriots' radio broadcasts.
"They've had a lot of talent for a long
timc • ...Buveverything was pulling
apinst each other. Give Raymond
credit. He's the right man in the nght
place at the ri&ht time."
But Morris also said it m1ght1ust be
that the Patriot~· time has come.
"Maybe it's the law of avcrqes."
Morris said. "They arc a team that
just gets bener every week. They
believe now. You can sec 1t in
(quancrbeck Tony) Eason. And with
that defense -defense wins when
you get down to lhe playoffs."
As runnina back Craig James, who
rushed for 104 yards apinst the
Raiders Sunday, put it: "Destiny 1son
our side. Or if he isn't, he's standing
awfully close ...
Jon Jolmaton
By RICHARD DJ)NN
0.-, .... ~
Orange Coast College ma) ne'er again come as
close to winnrng at Cypress College as 1t did Monda}'
Olght. but OCC' Coach Tandy Galhs figures man)
more South Coast Conference basketball games will
go do" n to the wire for the Pirates this ;ear
OC'C is now 0-8 at Cypress followmg Its 72-6Q
oven 1me loss to the Chargers 1n the conlercncc
opener for the Pirates. now 7-7 overall.
The real nemesis for Oran$e Coast. ho"e' er.
accordmg to G1lhs. 1\ the 1nab1ht) to wm lhe dose
games.
''I'm tired of sa~ing lhat we·re mc·q>enenced "
s.a1d G1lhs, after watchmg his team erast an caght-
pomt deficit late an the second haJf before Cypress
won 1t at the frtt throw hne an oven1 me ... We ha ve to
.. Then" have ~n a lot of o' em me games this ~ear ·· C11ll1s pointed out .. That ~ the \I.a) this
conference I'> gomg 10 be this ~ear liut we ;ust k.~p
losmg the clost games ..
This one "'as close from !>tan to finish. but
perhaps because ofaalmcnts that plagued the Pirates
this \\C~ 1hc' ma~ ha' c been ;ust a step behind.
Gilh-. cared not to use the tlu bug as an t"xcuse.
~ut 11 was clear that not all tht" Pirate<, were playmgat
full !>trength pan1cularh Sc-011 C'kments and Fred
Bickett Ckmt"nt and B1ckC'tt cam~ off the bench
and "ere for\."ed to pla\ more minutes than G1lhs probabl~ v.ould haH' laked because b-10 center Joe
~ager ~as 1n foul trouble most of the evenmg.
Jon Johnston the Pirates· 5-10 sophomore
(P1eue eee PlllA T&S/83)
CoaSt Christmas Classic a class act
PerrYs'brainchild
immediate s uccess
and may get better
The idea came just over a year ago
at the Mission Viejo rc.sidcnccof
John Perry. Tbccbatterwa.sabout a
recent tournament which Estancia
High's Eagles felt wasn't put together
nght and ultimately John Perry asked
h!S brother. An, to either put up or
shut up.
Well. the Pcrrys don't generally
back off and asa result the Coast
Christmas Classic was born -a It-;
team h1&h school basketball 1nvita·
tJonal at Estancia Hi4h. ~
And 1f the fi~t edition lsan
1nd1c.at1on It's a pretty ~ bet this
one will be around for a Iona time to
come.
Their messagt" 1s a goal to create the
premier prep 1nv1tauonal an outhem
California. and ina sense the) ·re' en
close to n no \\
That's not to be construed as
meaning the tournament challenge\
the Tournament ofChampaon'i 1n
Pomona in terms of sheer 'ltrength of
entries. There's no tourne' in the
st.ate that can do that. ·
But in terms of pumngon a cla~\
act, well, when the Perrys( .\n.1he
athlet1cd1rcctorat Estancia, Chud..
the tournament director and John
the financial wuard) pulled out a
tuxedo-dressed chorale group under
the lead ofDr. Phil Orlando to sing
thcnational anthem pnor to the finals
1tjustabout summed up theenure
production.
Games ran o n tame, seedings ~ere
beyond reproa h, the floor and g) m
~in impeccable conditJon and all
_ oflhe fringes were there, too.
Roe El
Ca1LS01
PREP SPORTS
"I've been to tourpamcnt'i v. hert'
·we had alrcad) pla'M t\\ogamt'S
be fort 30\ one even spok(' to me ··
~ad \\ al"[C'n ( oach Ja) 't oung. "'ho
"as 10 thE proces of l't'lattng h1~
sat1sfact1on for the JOh thC' Pem., had
dont".
-\nd 1tappea'"' the IQ ~ t'd111on"
iust tht" ~nnmg Thert' v.el't' no
rolf • edg('S. hut Perr) S3H at'\ gomp.
to get better 110\wa\
"We're gohl to add tv.o more
game-; ··!>aid Perr) .. a ~vcnth and
11th place game. so that 12 tea.ms wtll
beguarantCC'd four games."
Therr \\t'rt' nme Orange County
entnes 1n the 1n1t1al shot and Perry
o;ays he hope the 19 6 Classic wtll
encompass a bout 12 Orange Count}
teams. wllh the tournament ultJmatc-
1\ to C'tpand tO near\) an aU...Qrange
l ount\ tournament.
.''Wr'd hke to get the top two teams
rrom e' cry league m Orange County
in It with the exception of the An&clus
League." said Pc.rrv.
··\\ic want a stronger field. but a
rtasonable one with evt:')'one to htvc
n \hot at thechamptonsh1p."
Dominguez is n pected to return as
thedefend1nacbamp1on. and Perry
would lake to act anolhcrlong.
distance foe to take lolan1's spot for ·
the · ti Classic.
"\\'e'rt' rcaJlycxcitod about this
tournament." continued Perr)' "'The
cooperataon that we got from the
Bears enjoying·a home ice advantage in playoffs
booStcrs and f acuity 'W&S really aood ...
It ta« cu lot of suppon to make 1t
nght The tJmt' inveslcd by the Perry
brothers. alona W1th Vern McKown
(pmc program) and Edwards Pho-
t<>vaph) 1n El Toro(travclingto 1 lof
the 16 hoolsto acquu'C team shots)
1s1u 11he lip of the 1cebcra.
IJ Bil.RY WILNER ....... .-...
Chicqo, ChiCllO, that toddlio• town.
Chicqo miabt be the Bean. kind oftown.
but it doan't do u~ina foe the New Yon
Oianta. And it doeln t fipft to be any kinder to
the Rams next wekend in the National
Football Lape playof'll
swirtlna 14-mpb wind and the chill factor was clements. Tbe Miami Dofphms, who ralhcd for
10 beloW zero. By contrUt. lhc Rams' 20-0 a 24-21 vtctory over the Cleveland 8towns on
blank.ins of the Dallas Cowbo)'l on Saturd3) Saturday. will hott the surpnStn& New England wu olayed in balmy 7C).deptt tcmperatutcs 1n Patriots. New Ena1and. a wild-card entry, SQUthttn Califomaa. upended t.bc Raiden in Los Anlelcs. 27-20, on
"I'm t\lre we'll be cold,•• 11id Rams Coach unday.
John RobintCKa. "It's jUJt one olha challcnaie The hotts next ..ukend ~ tbe OftJ) two we have to face. teams not to loeca home pme this year.
"We're bener otri1 our own envuonment. The NFl was fonunatc not to havt any
noquatioft.8ut1t'1oneoftbelhinlswthavcto tcbeduhna ~ for the c.Mmpioellup
faccandaccicpt1fwcwan110kecpwuin1na1nd pmes. Before the weekend ..... it was
be 1n the Super Bowl." po91iblelhat botht1tlecontestswoUNblDlried
It v.-a n't too longaao that o~of
the treat toam~cnb do v.-n throup
the years-the Hunllnaton Beach
In 1~ttonal-fokkd.
I rcmembertbefttlin&and lbe tone of p. heoe voacc ~hen diJCUuina
It. ap had slat1ed tM l0utname:Df1n
\he late 'lOaat Hunli.Gl'On a.ch
H.p a.nd lt bad cMwed tome 50
years ltwuabittttpill{orbimto
swaUo'W .
~,
The Bean. who weet IS. I dunna tlK
tcUOn. continued wtbeltcn at home with their
niDtb comecutive vtciory at So6d.ier f'tdd. a
21.0 maulins of tbe New York Oiant.s on Suda~. Tbe Ram• are up nat in the NFC
championship pme Drat Sunday ud they
can't o~ u y bet1Cr conditions or any nicer
arecti• &om tbdr bolts.
Robinaon aid tbe ~ malthes two in Los Aoarlel. dktabn& • mom1aasun for 0ne
.. power tams. lt'U cenamty be a physical in order '° accomodate tclev111on. And when
contest ftom our penpectiw 'becautf we caa•t the Browns tool a 21 ·3 lead O'Vtt the Dol~in Thttt IJ'C no pillt ba'e. -.0..\ld' ·-==~~,~ a.wt ilthOuiah An~..,. it .. ...
ne ftm p1a~ 111ne lD Ot~ rinc:ie 1963 wu pla>cJ an 11~ wm\ber with a
..
play U)' Olbcr way." • • tM pGmbittty loomed Of bod\ C'levelapet aftCt
The battle Q ~other slot Ult.he $uper C'hlaieo beiftl the bome Uta Ml' ~kCftd,
Bowl ctottn•t ftp~'° be &ft\c1ed much by tbt TIMlt would have mc.nta la~..,, 1n
i.
'
..
lO~ bctta', h11j0b'1 ...... ..
'~" b-ct .. \he fot a ltllO& ._ bcata.td.
Landry's choices
for Super Bowl:
Bears, Dolphins
...... AP ..... tdlft
lRVlNO,Teus-OaJlasCoachTom • Land~ predicted Mooday that the Miami •II• .
Oolphannnd &be Cbicqo Bea.rs will meet
in Super Bowl XX at New Orleans on Jan.
26. The Rams travd to Chicago for the National
Conference title ~me Sunday, while New England
plays at Miami. .. ,. Bean have that SU'O"I defense," Landry said.
"'They also will be play1ng at
home and are used to the cold
weather."
The Rams blanked the Cow-
boys. 20-0. Saturday to knock
them out of the ~layoffs. ·with
running beclt Enc Dickerson
pining a National Football
League-rccord.248 yards.
Landry said New England-
was on such a roll that he would
like to pick the Patriots, who arc
Landry coached by Ray Bc:.rry, a Dallas
assistant coach in 1968.
"I'd pick them if they were playing anywhere but
Miami." Landry said. "They arc on quite a losjnestrcak
there ( 18 in a row). It's very difficult to beat Miami in
Miami, ~cularly after you've been on the road for
two straight weeks."
Landry was back in his office Monday planning for
the Cowboys' 1986scason-his27lh with the team. He
scotched rumors he might not return.
··1•m always coming back," quipped Landry. who
said he "bad no feeling one way or the other" when he
will retire.
"They always ask me the same questions every
year and someday I won'! be coming back," he said.
He sajd it will t.akc awhile to get over Saturday's
loss to the Rams.
"When you lose lilcewe did.you're kind of down in
the dumps, but it's a feeling you usually ~et over." said
Landry, who has had five teams make 1t to the Super
Bowl. two of them winners.
"We need to strengthen the team ma lot of areas,"
he said. "We need some backup people and we need
help at positions such as wide receiver. It takes a game
like the one we had against the Rams to show you the
shortcomings on the team."
The Cowboys will look harder at making trades in
1986, Landry said.
"You come to the point you have to look at the
trades." he said. "You can only draft as far down as we
have been just for so long before you have to find some
help."
Quote of the day
Larry Bird, Boston Celtics player, reacting
to bis selection as one of Esquire magazine's
youn' leaders in America: "Yeah, sure. Mc and
Cyndi Lau per."
Lakera' Spriggs sidelined
INGLEWOOD -Reserve forward, m
Larry S riggs of the Los AnJcles Lakers will
miss 1 <f to 14 days of Nauonal Basketball
Association play because of a foot injury.
the Lalcers sajd Monday.
Spriggs, a 6-7 player in his fourth year in the NBA,
has averaged 4.3 points per game but has seen action in
only 15 of the Lakers' 32 games so far this season.
He landed off-balance after a shot in the lakcrs'
118-88 victory over the Washington Bullets Sunday
night, and team trainer Gary Vitti said an examination
by a team doctor Monday showed that SpriJ&S suffered
a "partial tear of the plantar fascia (connecuve tissue)."
X-rays showed no bone injury. V1tt1 said.
Bears, Miami favored Sunday
RENO -The Chicago Bears and the [i]
Miami Dolphins arc the picks of Harrah's 411 •
Reno Race & Sports Book to square off for
the National Football League cham-
pionship in Super Bowl XX.
Harrah's hsts the Bears as 10-point favorites over
the Rams in Sunday's National Conference title game
and the Dolphins as five-point favorites over the New
England Patnots 10 the American Conference game.
Ortiz honored by Pacific-IO
WALNUT CREEK -Oregon State m
center Jose Ortiz has been named Pa-
ci fie-I 0 Conference basketball player of the
week . conference Cort1miss1oner Ton
Hansen announced on Monday.
Ortiz. 6-10 and 2 10 pounds. scored 22-points and
collected 10 rebounds to lead the Beavers to a 54-49
victory over UCLA . '
•
,
Deaclllne no conce1n to Glbeon
DETROIT -With a d£.d1ine for m sianina with tbe Detroit Twmtwo days
away, ri&ht fiekkr Kirk Oibson'u,ent says
he and 6is client don't feel ptt15ured..
"I don't think there's any dowuidc risk from a
financial standpoint in JOint beyOQd the ei.abth (of
January) if we have to," Oibton 'ueent. Ooua BaldWtll.
said Monday from his office in Seattle.
While BaJdwin and the American Leque team
reO'ain at ~ Oibsoo was hooeymoonina in
Glbeon
Australia.
. Wednesday is tl\e deadline
for players, who have declared
themselves free qents, to f'e'.'tsi&I>
with lJ\eir current clubs. I the
dca<lline passes, Gibson would be
unable to sign with Detroit until
May 1, about one month into the
season. .
The Tigers reportedly have
offered Gibson a $3.9 million!
three-year contract. Genera
Manager Bill Lajoie has called it
their final offer.
Gibson, who batted a team-leading .287 with 29
home runs and 97 runs batted in, has said he wants a
fi"c-year contract but would accept a three-year
contract if it included some language which the team
has turned down.
Meanwrule, 221 of the 1,040 major leaguers arc
eligible for salary arbitration - a different issue thln
free agency -and have until midni&ht. Jan. 15. to file
for a hearing. Among tho5c eligible, Dwight Gooden of
the New Yorlc Mets and Bret Saberhagcn of Kansas
City, the two Cy Young Award winncn.
Generally, only a small portion of players eligible
to seek arbitration -those with at least two years'
service but less>than six -actually file. And only a
small number of those filing ever actually reach the
hearing stage.
Last year, 13 of the 98 players who filed got as far as
a hcarina. The teams won seven cases. the players six
and the others were settled without arbitration.
Sheff, Wooda qualify fo,r Open
LOS ANGELEs -Dave Sheff of l!I Irvine, and Eric Woods of Corona del Mar
each shot I-under-par 70s Monday a t the
Hillcrest Country Oub to qualify for the
next month's Los Angeles ()pen.
Sheff. 36, and Woods, 11, beat out a field of 140
amateur playCTS who teed off Monday at the par-71 ,
6,411-yard Hillcrest Country Oub course for the two
starting berths in the PGA tour event reserved for
amateurs.
Fred Hanover, 23, of San Bernardino earned the
alternate spot. Hanover was one of four golfers to finish
at even-par 71 and won a playoff on the second extra
hole.
The Los Angeles Open will be played Feb. 20..23 at
the Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades.
Montreal asaames Ad•ma lead
League's highest-scoring rookie, collected '
KJelJ l>Ulla, the National Hock.cy ~
three goals and an assist Monday ni&ht u
Montreal routed St. Louis. 9-2. Center
Bobby SmJ" bad a goal and four assists as the
Canadiens moved back into first place in the Adams
Division with their third consecutive victory . . .
Elsewhere in the NHL, Terry RukowakJ scored wilh
I :37 left in the third period to ii~e Pittsburgh a 4-3
victory over New Jersey, extending the Devils' losing
streak to eight games ... In an exhibition game, Ser1el
SveUov scored two thfrd-period goals and Vari Leoaov
one, sparking the Moscow Dynamo to a 6-4 victory
over Boston.
Sizers race past San Antonio
Guard Maarice Qeeka scored 23 m
points and Mose. Malome added10 to pace
Philadelphia to a I 08-102 victory over San
Antonio Monday night in a National
Basketball Association game. Malone also grabbed I 3
rebounds and Checks had 13 assists to help the 76ers
win the ninth of their last 10 games .. :In other NBA
action, Larry Nuce scored 27 points and James
Edwards 25 to lead Phoenix to a 114-97 victory over
Seattle in the completion of a game that had been
suspended Sunday ni~t because of a leaky roof. No
other game in NBA history has ever been suspended
once it started ... Reale TlleH had 16 assists and I 7
points as Sacramento won by its biggest margin of the
season, a 106-87 victory over Washington. It also
marked the first time this season the Kings have won
three straight games.
Televialon, rad!o
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4:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Clippers
at Atlanta, K.MPC (710). 't
Garys-J anuary
Shoe Sale
Starts
Wedil:esllay
January 8
At Garys & Company, our shoe
department is not just another
shoe department. It is a special
shoe store within a special
We will be open at
9:00 am January 8
clothing store.
Vita • MMt.erCard • American Express • Newport Center Card'
119 Fashion Island •·Newport Beach • 759-1622 • Bullocks Wilshire Wing
•• <
• I
~ ........
Soatheut Conference club Monday ntcbt.
Auburn captured 60-58 declaton.
49ers drop ·tough one
Santa Barbara wins in final
four seconds; Fresno beaten
From AP dl1patcllea
SANT A BARBARA -Conner Henry hit a Jump
shot from near the free throw line with four seconds left
Monday night to lift UC Santa Barbara to a 68-67 Pacific
Coast Athletic Association victory over Long Beach
State.
The 49ers. who led most of the ~nd half. had taken
a 67-66 lcad on a Morion Wiley's 10-footjumper with 34
seconds to play.
After Henry's jumper, the 49crs tned a 60-foot alley
oop pass from the left sideline from Billy Walker to
Reggie Wallace, but the play was broken up by Mauryc
Carr just to the ri&ht of the 49er basket.
Henry led UC Santa Barbara with 19 points.
including three three-point baskets. Kris Fortson added
17 points for the Gauchos, who improved their record to
1-2 m conference, 6-6 overall.
Walker scored 13 points to lead Long Beach State,
which fell to 0-2 in the PCAA, 4-9 overall.
A seesaw first half ended with UC Santa Barbara
holding a 37-34 advar.tagc.
Lona Beach State ~cgained the lead 18:28 to play on
an Andre Purry sbonj,umper that gave the 49ers a 40-39
edge. Long Beach only relinquished the lead three times
before Henry's game-winner.
In other West Coast games:
Sa.a Jose Staie 55, FrHltO State st: Guard Ricky
Berry and forward Reggie Owens each scored 13 points to
lead the host Spartans past Fresno State in a PCAA
matcbup.
San Jose State, which led by as many as 14 points
early in the second half, survived a Fresno State
comeback bid.
With San Jose State ahead 52-42 latc in the pme, the
BuUd<>15, who played without starters Jos Kuipers and
Mike Mitchell, ran off ei&ht consecutive points to close
the gap to 52-50 with I : I 9'1eft.
San Jose State guard Ontario Johnson made one of
two free throws attempts at I: 16, then had a chance to ice
the game, but missed.
Reserve center Mark Gustin sank a pair of free
throws with 12 seconds left, bringing the Fresno State
Bulldogs within one at 53-52.
On the ensuing inbounds pass. Berry hit teammate
Ward Farris with a baseball pass and Farris dunked,
giving the game to San Jose State. 8-4 overall and 1-2 in
the conference.
Callforaia H, USF H : Junior forward Leonard
Taylor hitaJay-uP-with~wo seconds left to lin the Golden
Bean over the Dons in a non-<:onferencc game in
Berkeley.
Taylor's last-second basket produced California's
first lead in the second half.
The Bears' comeback hopes had seemed dashed
when, with 15 se<:onds to play. they were assessed a
technical foul for having six men o n the floor. Dons guard
Jimmy Giron put San Francisco ahead, 59-56.
But after Dons center Peter Reitz missed the front
end ofa one-and-one, California guard Chris Washington
hit a driving lay-up with five seconds left and was fouled
on the play. Washington's free throw attempt to tic the
game bounced off the front rim, but Taylor grabbed the
rebound, pivoted and nailed the game-winner.
In top 20 action:
SyraC11ae II, VIiianova 57: Senior forward Rafael
Addison scored 25 points as fourth-ranked Syracuse
stretched its record to 11-0 with a victory over Big East
rival Villanova in Philadelphia .
The Orantcmen. leading by only 31-26 at balftjme,
used their heilbt advantage to hit on seven of their first
nine shou at the start of the second period, buildina a
47-lO lead on a layup by Addison with 13:43 to play.
Trailing 53-37 three minutes later. Villanova scored
six straight eaints to come to within 53-43.
The Wildcats then forced a Syracuse turnover but
gave the ball right back. and the Orangemen went on a 6-2
spurt to end the threat.
Rony Seikaly added 20 points and 14 rebounds.
while Dwayne Washington scored 12 points for Syracuse.
3-0 in the Big East.
Kaaaaa IO, Detroit 51: Ron Kellogg's 13 points led a
balanc.cd Kansas attack as the No. 9 Ja) ha~ k.s sumved a
scare Detroit and went o n to a non<onfcrentt vtctory.
The host Titans battled back: from a scvcn-point
deficit. 35-28. at 16:58 of the second balft0 ta.kc a 40-37
advantage with 11 :34 remaining when senior guard
Kevin McAdoo scored on a lay-up.
But Kansas battled back to knot the score at 40-40
wtlenjuniorguard Cedric Hunter connected for two ofbis
12 points with I 0 minutes left.
Detroit P'3bbed its last lead of the game. 42-40. With
9:33 remaining when sophomore guard Arctuc Tullos.
who had a game-high 16 points. scored from 20 feet out.
The Jayhawks lied the game at 42-42 wtth 9:07 to go
when Hunter scored from I 0 feet out. Kansas went ahead
44-42on a pair of free throws by Chris Piper with 7:03 left. ~ Mempbl1 State St, Souti. CaroliDa 81 : Sophomore
guard Vincent Askew scored a career-high 23 points to
lead sixthth-ranked and u'ndefeatcd Memphis State to a
Metro-Conference victory over visiting South Carolina.
The outcome put Memphis State at 13-0 for the
~ason and gave. the Tigers their .29th straight victory at
home. It was their first leaeue outing of the year and their
14th straight conference victory.
In a women's game in Ruston, La.:
Lo.lalua Tecb 75, USC 53: With Nora Lewis scoring
22 points, Louisiana Tech, the sixth-ranked team. upset
the second-ranked Women of Troy.
The lady Techsters pushed in front at 8-6 with 16
minutes remaining 1n the first half and held command the
rest of the way.
Monday's college,
prep basketball
~
WHT
UC Sent• 8erber1 61. Lonv
lleKll St. 67
Sen Jo" St. SS, Fre,no St. S2
Cet Sf, S.n Frenc:IKO SI
C.J S••I• LA '1. St. Amorow 76 Coloudo IO, St Mery•, 70
E. WHhlnoton 74, W. Utlnol' H•vw•ro St 15. -Ale~~w-bentls S7
Oreoon Tech u . S.Cremento St
64
Senti Clere 73, l rooktvn Coll SS
.-OCKllES
IOlllO SI S7, PortlencS SJ
Soutl\frn Ull l'I n , W"ll<n St 61
Denver 62, K1nses N1wmen 61
EAST
SvrecuM IO, Viii.nova S7
West Vlrgtnf1 64, Rut114t" SI
&oston u. 62, Cot111te o
Cornell n. NleNre S9
Fefrlllofl Dfclltnson 67, Lovote,
M4. 57
Lellltl'I 11. Hervera 7S
,._, St ... /MSM<:l'IUMllS 63 ltl!Ode 111enc1 n. Cieoroe Wes11-
tno1on 51
St. JOMOll'' 11, SI. 8on1vetituf'1 ,,
SI. Peter'' 63, I-S9
Weener 7', ~rlst 75
't Wlill•m Petter.on 11. CCNY 's SOUTH
Ale·l lrmlnoNim 57, S. FIOrlde ..
A"-an 7', N.C.-Wltmlnoton 6t
Aullurn .0, Kenlueilv S6
9eoflllts,Clledll6S
Ctemtoll 9), Witll Fewest ..
EHt TenMt-'4, Funnen U Florlde St 7', Cenf. Floflda 51
Jlldlto11vllll St 11, Mlulu l"1 7t
JI CkM>nvllle SS, SW L.oul,tene SI
Loul,vllll 16, E Kentucky SS
McNftM St 91, St MMY'\,
TUH S6
~1>111' St "· Soutl'I Cerotlne II N1vv 67, E Cerotlne ,,
S.mf«O IO, Ooletl\Orpe 62
SE Loulstene n , NE Loulst1ne 1l
T em~ 73. Pielff« 's
--MIOWH't
llreCltev 74. IR WIM9v.n 64
Clnctnnett 7', s. Mln lulHI 63
tndi.ne St 51, lllll!Ola St. S4
1(1nw1 '°· Oetrott SI K1nwi, St n. WfcNll St 60
Mtn ourl 11, Mlu lu fppf VII. 67
NIOrHke n. Ev1n,vllll 70
SOU'Tl4WIST sw Mlu ourl St IO, Ttus·Arllno·
Ion 69 6S
l.J0411MTM>M
low1 St 114, WklOM>r, C1neoe 61
C~Cllleet
SOUTH COAST eote'H•NC• c,,,_, n. Orenee Coest " (OI)
C!ome>ton "· GOiden w .. 1 74 Mt. Sen Antonio '3, Seodlloeck S7
C1<rllot 74, FUiierton '2
H .. MM11
NC*0 UAOW ~Ir o. Foun11111 Veley 37
RlncllO Alemltoa "· 1rv1ne '1 BolM Grende 71. Mll'I Coste 60
St Paul 17, La Hebfe SJ
C4fMtUR1t1 all9I .....
SOUTH COAST C0te'UillC8 Otenee coe11 67, c~ '° Com.toft H. ~ w .. 1 12 lotl
Vlklngs' Grant re.tlres--agaln
Assistant Bums
selected as new
Minnesota coach
EDEN PRAIRIE. Minn. (AP) -
Bud Grant has decided to step down
11 head coach of the Minnesota
Vikinas and assistant coach Jerry
Bums will succeed h1rt1. General
Manaaer Mike Lynn announced
Monday.
Grtnt led the V1longs to a 7-9
record thi& season. his first smce
replacina rookie Coach Lts Steckel.
tcckel was 6red as V1kinas coach last
year after the National Football
La&uc team posted a J..13 record. Its
worst ever.
"There are othtr th1nas f want to
do. " said Grant, SS He said he was
).
rcsignina "for the same reasons I had
given earlier."
When he fint retired in eatly 1984,
Grant said be wanted to spend more
ume huntina and fishing.
Burns, 58. tbe Vikioas' assimnt
head coach and ofrtnsive coordi-
nator, h11 been with the team since
1968. He joined the Vikin~ after
workina two years as the defensive
backfield coach with the Green Bay
Packers.
Pnor to that, he coached at the
U niverstiy of Iowa for 12 years. flve
u head COKb alld aJIO@ICMd ltlR
U nivenity of HaW&Ji.
"Ob\riousJy I'm very elated, very
uc:itcd," said 8wm. He said Lynn
contacted him lu1 Saturday in Jamai-
ca about becomina tbt VWncs head coech.
Orant said he wu Jeavina ~team with "a aood taste in his mouth." He
N•d \ht teem wu onty a bloct or•
pass awty from makina the playoffs.
Orant coached the Vikinas for 18
years includinJ this ICUOn and led
them to four Super Bowl berths .. A's
head coach of the Vikinp his teams
compiled a rqu.1ar season record of
158-96-S. Under his auidance the
Vikinp won IS championships: I I
Central OiVlsion, one NFL and thru
National Footbell Conference.
Asked what he would do differently
than Grant. Bums said, "h's hard to say. I'm not a. Bud Grant. rm oot a Georse AJlco. I just try to be mYIC.lf:'
Bums had been a caftdidat.e for
head coach when Orant fint retired in
198' and Lynn d.efclMSed the ldectlon
of Steckel over Burns.. •
••voa caft't bet 1 tboullftd pctCeQ1
in anythinayou do and you can't b>k
beet on th1np, vou•ve llOC '° look
for"Qrd," Lynn aid.
J
•
Sea View wars resume
Woodbrlqe'• Mike Murphy (left) and New-
port Harbor'• Maurice Lee WW be ln action
&Caln Wedne.day ntcht. The Warrlon are
at Lafuna; the Sail on ho.t Corona del Illar.
Muir boards up FV, 45-37
Barons lose in finaf pre-league tuneu-p;
Irvine drops 66-61 d ecis ion to Ra n cho
Fountain Valley and Irvine com-
pleted their pre-league slates Monda)
night a nd each came out on the shon
end of decisions on their respective
home floors.
Here's how it went:
Mair 45, Fou &aln Valley 37: The
Barons. who will challenge v1s1ting
Ocean View in their Sunset League
opener Friday. fell to the Mustangs at
Fountain Valley due in part 10 lack of
rebounding.
Tallt-r M'u1r controllec3 the boards.
outrebounding the Barons. 37-17.
Kevin Waite had nearly half of
Fountain ValJey's rebounds. hauling
down eight.
Even with the rebounding disad-
vanta.ge, the Barons (9-6) were within
striking distance a t 34-30 midway
through the final quarter. But the
Mustangs ( l.l-1) put it away wnh an
11 -7 run at that pont.
Scott Wessler was the pnmary
source of o ffense for Fountain Valley.
pounn~ in 15 points. No other Baron
·· PIRATES LOSE IN OT ...
From Bl
captain, kept them in the game.
"I think that's has best game of the
year," G1ll1s said. "It's a good sign. He
was a big part of our offense tonight.•·
Johnston was a big part or the
defense, too.
He stole the ball fro m Cliff Umans
wtth 25 seconds to go 1n ~gulauon
and went the distance for a lay-up to
tie the game a t 62.
ing OCC with slim odds of coming
back.
It was 55-50 when Seager left the
game. but thanks mostly to Johnston.
the Pirates were able to send the game
into the extra sessien.
Chuck McGavran also sparked
OCC WJth 12 points and nine assists.
In other community college action:
could hit 1n double figures.
Guard Todd Hanson contributed
eight points and also dished out five
assists and was credited with four
steals.
Muir held a 23-20 halftime lead
before Fountain Valley closed it to
28-26 entering the final quarter and
the Mus tangs were unable to sbalce
the Barons untJI the final stages of the
fourth quarter.
Ra.Debo Ala mitos H, lrvlne • t: The
final free throw totals told the whole
story in this game as Rancho
Alamitos outscored Irvine, 20-7 in
the game and 14-1 in the second half.
from the charity stripe.
Rancho ·s R<>Jer Carter went to the
line 20 times himself, convening 14.
and despite making only three field
goals. he finished Wltb 20 points.
Mike Herring of lrvme was the
game's top scorer W1th 25 paints and
led the team with I 0 rebounds.
"We're just not playing very good
defense." said lrvme Coach Al Her-
nng as his team prepares for Wednc.s-
• day's South Coast League opener
against Laguna Hills.
"We played a real good first quarter
(Irvine led, 19-12), but we w~t
downhill after that."
HTANCIA
(1·4)
S5 Werrett
•7 Lii Jo<O.n
'2 El C.mlno
SO Norco
67 Doti Luoo
1• Cenvon so Moreno Viv
70 IOlenl
'2 EdlM>ll
., Oomlnvuei
66 MJu. Vlelo
l3
SJ
17 S7
"" 60
"" S7
.0
S9 S4
'3 17 C0tte Mew
J.-•unlvenltv
Jl~et 'CdM
JIS-•Not Hert>or
Jl7-• ·~ 6Mcl'I Jn-er •SebOleOeck
J24-' WOOCIClf'ldue
J,._.t 'Coste Mew
J31-r 'Unlvenltv Fr•C«one de4 Mltr
F~t 'Nol HerDOr
F1-'uovne &Hell ~ 12-' S.dclleoeck
F 14-et 'Woodtlf~
LAGUNA ••AC"
C6·SI
69 TrDC Hf\ JV 6-t Norco
., T1ntln
.. COM
60 Footl\IM
7S CVOl'HS
•7 Lii WllMlfl
11 lluen• Perk
.tO COM
37
S4 .,
6$ n ..
S9
S7 ..
0 ll"'1>enll ?Cfrtl)
SI MffnOlle
J.-·WOOt11:K~ •
J 10-.1 ·c011• Mew
J 1 S-et 'Seocllel>Kk
J 11-•e ll•ncl•
.Jn-et "Not H•rDOr n..-...1 ·unlvenltv
J1'-'CdM
Jll-1 'WOOObrlOff
Fr'Co•I• Mew Fs-'~k
F7-t 'Ell•ncle
F11-'Not Herticw
F 1-·unlv.-nllv
Orange Cout OAILY PILOTITueedsy, Jenuety 7, 1Ne * 98
His long jump shots from the
outside kept the Pirates close late in
the second half, but 11 was his timeh
steals -his finished the game with
six -that allowed OCC to catch thl·
Chargers after being down 53-45 v.11h
6:52 lef\.
Compton 86, Golden West 74: The
Rustlers lost for the 18th straight time
1n conference play. as the v1S1ung
Tartars received a 30-poant effort
from Andre Wiley. Coach comes· to his unit's defense
Johnston had 20 points. to ps on the
squad, and six assists. He was 9 for 12
shooting from the floor before fouling
out with nine seconds left an over-
ume.
"We didn't take care of the ball
when we had the chance to,.. said
Gillis, whose Pirates turned the ball
over 16 times. including two crucial
times d own the stretch. "Jon John-
ston got 1t going a little bit."
Seager, who had 17 pomts and eight
rebounds. took an early shower wnh
4:07 remaining in the second half
after committing his fifth foul. leav-
Compton was leading by nine
(42-33) at halftime and guickly built
the advantage to double figures where
1t stayed the remainder of the contest
Bryon Strachan poured an 27
But Studleyadm its tha t Dolph ins still
n eed work wh en the other team has ball
points. 16 in the second half. to ke~ MIAMI (AP)-Forthosc who say
the Golden West attack. J.T . Dehbs four teams, but only three defenses,
added 17 for the Rustle.rs (0-2 in the stall are alive in the National Football
S1CC. 4-9 overall). while Compton ., League playoffs. Miami Dolphins
(--0. 10-5) ~as paced by Andre Wale) defensive coordmator Chuck Studley
Wlth 30 1><>mts. "' has no quick retort.
Mt. San ADtoDJo n . SaddJeback 57: He doesn't appreciate that shght of
The Mounties pulled away from a the Miami defense. a nd be m ight
48-43 lead at the 6: 16 mark to score have argued the a.ssertion a week ago
eight straight points in the nex.t I :25 But Mo nday. he agreed that the
to assume a 56-43 advantage and the Dolphins still have a lot of work to do
Gauchos never threatened after that on the defensive side of the ball.
Asked to discuss his run defense
which gave up 25 I yards in the
Dolphins' 24-21 victory over the
Cleveland Browns Saturday, be re-
plied "What run defenser' and laugh-
ed.
1shmg Chicago Bears defense 1s the
best in the game, and the Rams'
defense carried a lackluster offense
much of the season.
Then. there's the Miami defense.
ranked 23rd in the league. giving up
360 yards per game. Tampa Bay
v1cumized the Dolphins for 38 pomts
and Detroit got 31 .
Studley admits his unit has had us
problems, but he thought 11 was
coming around near the end of the
season. After all, the Dolphins shut
out Buffalo in the final game to give
them two shutouts for the season.
equalling Ch.icago for the league lead
1n tha t categof). ··we , a t.ainl) hadn "t reached the
point or perfection ~el." he ..aid .. But
we weren't givmg up mao' points 1n
the last few we-eks and I tho ught
things were coming together. It v.a!. to
the point where I thought "e "ere
playrng better than v.e were at lhl\
stage last )Car.··
The Browns shot that Ilka "'
pieces.
"I rcall~ thought the Bro""ns cam~
out 1n a forma11on 1ha1 v.as rela11,t·h
cas~ to defense.·· he said ··The' l1nnl
up that one big back and then put t"P
tight ends 10one side ~nd the' d1dn t
do an} thing fanc'
··1 know (Earnest) B~ner is a good
back and the) ·ve got a ma<.SI\ e lint>
but the~·s no e'\cu..e ror "hat
happened Saturda\ I v.u n t make
an\ \1. c·, e JUSt got to go bad. to v.ori...
to · make sure 11 doesn't happen
again ··
tudl<'' lo..ep1 h1.., linebacker<, out ot
the ti"ld 21l min u 1es a flt'r practice
\.1onda' fur somt• e\tra "'mi...
··\1. \' k)(1kl"d at tht> film'> and sav.
some thing'> that the' v.ercn't doing
v.ell 1nd1' 1dualh so we took advan-
tagt' ot the ntrd Ja~ to v.ork on
them·· he nplJ1nc:J "V..e ha\en't
had mulh t1mt• 1i1 "orlo.. o n fundamen-
tJI' '
11·, hack to bast\' 1n preparauon for
the Patnots ""hu v.111 test the
Dolphins ddton'>C v.1th the running of
t ra1g James and Ton~ Collins. James
ru\hed for I 227 ~ards 1n the regu hu
~aMln "h1le(olhn had 65 7. Pirate woinen hold on;
Rustlers fall in overtiine That he still can joke about his
problems indicates that Studley
doesn't think they are u severe as
~ome statistics indicate.
RAMS HOPING FOR HOT HAND ...
Orange Coast College opened play
in the South Coast Conference on a
high note . while Golden West hit a
snag at Compton in co mmunity
college wo men's basketball Monday
night.
Herc's how it went:
Oru1e Coast 17, Cypress .. : The
Pirates had trouble but were finally
able to shake their stubborn visitors
from Cypress.
The sec-saw battle was close most
of the way with Oranae Coast only
owning a 37-35 halftime edge. The
second half was more of the same
until about midway through when
OCC began to expand its lead at
48..4S, S3..48 and finally to 61 -SO WJth
four minutes left.
Lisa Schumaker led the way for
OCC (12·3 overall) Wlth 18 pomts,
wh.ilc Amy Hathcock added 14 to the
balanced Coast attack.
points. one more 1han teammatl·
Melissa FeJdasz.
T he Pirates arc at Fullenon
Wednesday before bostmg Saddle-
back Friday night.
Comptoa 85, Golden West 8%': After
malcina the first basket in overtime,
the Rustlers missed the front end of a
pair of one--and-one opportunities 1n
dropping the decision .to the Tartars.
Golden West had sent the game
into overtime when Kim Abeyta
made a free throw with three seconds
left. I
Karen Chase wilt ' the game's top
scorer with 2S points while Abeyta
finished with 21 .
The Rustlers had a nine-pomt lead
at halftime, and still enjoyed a sax·
point cd.ae with three minutes to play
before a rash of tumoven helped
Compton act blck into the prne.
"The game ~inst the Browns was
par11cularly disappointing because
for the past five weeks we've been
improving." StudJey said. "We rcaUy
thought we were getting better. Then,
gee. we gi ve up . two-hundred and
something yards and a six-yard
average and a 66-yard run.
">\nd now we've got to be con-
cerned because of New England's
ability to run."
The Patnots W111 brina a 13-5
record and an impressive thn:c-game
winning streak into the Ora114C Bowl
for Sunday's AFC Championship
game against the I 3-4 Dolphins.
While the Dolphins struaJed at home:
against the Browns. the lfatriots have
won playoff games on the road
against the New York Jets and the Los
Angeles RB1ders.
From Bl
Refngcrator" Perry. Robinson <;a1d
"We won't change an ~·thmg 111
Perry's installed an the &ar'I·
backfield).
"I kno w it's a p ubhc
phenomenon. but it's not a coaching
phenomenon. It's not something of
the h.ighest magnitude m m ) m ind ··
As if contending wtth the Bears
won't be enough. the Rams will also
have to deal with the numbing cold
that could reduce the game to a ·nov.
Bowl.
"I won't pretend llhe weather
isn'ta factor," said Robinson. "Wc·n:
goina to Chicago Tbunda) to start
acttioa used to the cold. r m sure
when the l\lys first ICt OUt in It th<') 'II
say 'Oh m y God. I'm aomg 10 die ·
But after a wb1Je you th.ink ·oh. I'll
survive.'"
But survivtna apinst the fear-
some Chicaao defen1e m1&ht be a
diffettnt story.
D1tka has done a great ;oh "1th th.it
team Thc~·\t' phy~1all~ \1,ntr01lrd
almost e' Cf) team that thl'' 'l' plJ'
ed v..e·\e got to do ~'"'l' thing:.
d1 ffere ntl) on o ffe nse to kl'<'P th<'m ''"
balance a little.
~nd v. hat art tho'<' thtntt''
··-w e ha~e n pla n. but ~c re n1't
going to shart 11 v.1th th<' rt''' ot thl·
world ... he said
* llAM MOTES: Items cenw OW. """" •
De ec1•vet90 !or .,.. NFC Cll•,..C>-Oft\"•0 ~.,...
encl mlollt '1•rt H ,,. '' anv•-• .,. •• '"S oa•
lorm •cc:orOlnt IO ROOlnM>n T..-. Sim..,, ......
,.,., 11119<1 In lot Sm1tfl line• ""' ,,..o '""'' • ~' Ole"9CI ··.,,9"' _,, w9* acc:ord'nG •o ltOO•""-'"
T',,. lt•ms ,,..,,. Olev.O '"-a..,,, •• .... ·~
tlle '-'' two .,,..,., wlll'I lflC lt•m• w M•no it IJ
In 1fM and 21·1• tn 1"3 '" l"OM •"II\ 00111 A ..,,,.,,..m Sledlum runnfnQ l>K' lrtc Ole•~
.. a· -.. .... I)! ., .. !Ht\I l>l8Y ... S '" 11-ll•SfO<'v Of
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• ,.IC lloo•n'°" II°\ 00,111..,. • ,_, i.r .,
'lour rs QO S••IO<' ''"" •toe r~,,., ~ Yeufte PlaM \tr•no •no -rt~ ~ ~ " ur.o oe!• •.no ll-1 •r• IN °""" It.,..,, ~ .... "G •l'ICI w •lf oe •v•llellle for Sunoev
RU Ff ELL'S
UPHOLSTERY llC. .... , • .,..c-.~
1921 i.-. aw~ COSTA IOlr-*-1156
!led oemH '""°'"" ot 127 •••01 1 tJ •"Cl i.•
1 ... ) The MUI rim.,,,. 'tam\.,.,.,"' an "'""" W AN'TED TO BUY
1 ne oeme ~ oeleeteo T .,.,.,_ 8-v • 0 ·~ C•lltd &Hr -rl ... IW>{.. J4rrt Old Tov Trains Md---• Wlfte tl'8 ot•• 9UV '"-' I" ,,,. I ~lltv ol "'91 '""' ,.. s chlneml( °"
Clll<ffO r\IM!nt bee' WllfW ,._°""' ltOO<nlOI' DEAD OR ALIVE
~14 .... "'°I>'-'" •" _,. •o ,,,., , .. ,., A F & .,..., ~ "-'' .-""~' .... ,,..,. Uonet. . .. lvea
.
I
Karen Rindone sparked the Bucs
offt.hc bench by aoin• 6 for 8 from the
floor. Rindone finished with 12
Golden West dropped 10 1-1 in
co nference and 13-4 overaJJ wtth a
home date qajnst Ml San Antonio
on tap WednC1day niahl
The New England defense is rc--
"°'mzed as o ne of the best youna
units 1n the le.ague. led by All-Pro
linebacker An~ Tippett. Over in the
NFC champ1o nsh1p game. the pun-
"We all know how &ood the
Bears are," said Robinton. "Mike ,_ "'9' ...,... *• .._.,. oi....o ,,,..., Er < 644 68 9
-• ,,, 00•" ... ' >JO ()ti .... \>CM'llfte\ ~=:;==::;=::::;:;:::;-=~~==~
-------------------------------------------~-Starts Angels' Autry,
Moore to talk
Rdie( pitcher Donnie Moore and his
rcpretentatives tehcduled a mectina with
Aneel• owner Gene Autry in a 1&11-dltch c.tfon
to hMta out a contract for the riabt-handcr.
The meclina wu rcportedf}'_ to take place
todar. at the Anaels' Anaheim offices.
·r ube very. v~ ahocked if we.don'\ have
a aipature. ·• saidNvufPinter. one of~oott's
,.eats.. .. Now that Gene Autry's involved. I'm
very optimistic.
"He's tbe boa. the one IUY wbocan say yn
or no. (Tbe Antell) have never had a rcJ1cf
plecw lab Oon..U. Moore beb-e. and Mr.
Avuy baa told me be wnu Donnie bKk."
Moore. who saved 31 pmcaforthc A,,.eb
1u1 1eUOo, bis first with the chm. hu bcco
teekilll a lont-ttrm deal
cmCAGOENJOYINGHOMEICEADVANTAGE... ~. Friday & Boat ()al j~ 1 holDBl
''Sackman's comina. name of R1ebard
Dent.
"Qua.netbed;'s comina. it aonna set
bent"
The Bears mull be penicul&rty concancd
with stoppina Eric Die.tenon, -ho aet 1 playoff'
rccol'd W1th 248 yards ruthint. He outpincd
the Cowboy oflmtc bv ~ yarck
APan". ho~. bictenoa wu openbQI
on 1 dry arau ftdd in warm we.ther and he
wun't fadna thc awaome Bean dcftnee. ·
"We wd we were totna to ao at Dania' sttt~ and that's Nnnina the balf, •• 06cbnoa
aaid. 'Evcryt,ody uid ~ couldn'1 nan •• Dallas. but we did. We looktd, I thtnk. pretty
1ms11·e•h·e t::!f' T'hey'U to be 11ltastas1mSftlllVC tn
I 1
have a chance nut week.
In Mtami. the Patnoll will be aoma into
the <>ranae Bowl fTcsb off a p&lr of tulJ!Ctt>
pomeaton efforts. beati .. the Jett in New V ork
and t~ Raiden 1n Los~ But \.he Patriots
have not won 1n Miami unoc 1966.
.. ~last nme New Ea&aaod wu down
Mft. .. Mtd Oolpt\m. C09dl l>oa Shula. °"tk
P!"e came down 10 the wire and w won 1t
(J0.27 1n a Monday niaht pme).
··They ha~ an ucdlcftt ddm.ae. On
oflcme. they conuol \be t.11 with an acdlent
Nllftiae pmc. (~ Toey) EM0G lbe lat nwo ,.mes pm1y ft\d •)'Id crror-&ce
blD. He's makulf t.be plays wkft be bu to.••
Delpetit t.bdr ~ Nft of le.a l8 tk ' a.... lowt. tbc Patttob lft &Hious \() take oe the Dolphins once .... o. •
S ............ J . ~3500
"We'd hke 10 pla M1am1:· running hac.. • n..vv
Crall James said, "That v.a our goal af\er our A f 8
Monday nt&ht 1 We'd hkt to 1o do v.n thert cres o oats and RVs
and pl~... Fishing & Hunting Hall ~ ~~ ~rW:~1a;:.n:~ ~!~~ j Komell Champagne Boat
Unebed:erStcve Ntlson Yid "Now. at'& beck t.o Tom Mix'a Guns ..-
-M"wn1 &pin " N Do--' S Ra.1dm All·Prockftns1vcmd Howie l-Ont ew "" peedboats
thutkJ ew EnaJand 1s rod) to end 1u M1am1 Hunting Dog Hall
11n.it •• Td say iM Pauiou have a Sood chanC"t." A m1ss1on $5, Children $2
Lof\I sud. ~·1f ~y run the baJI the .... > the> cbd Senior C1ttZ ~s $2 50 w,..,...,,.T,~ ...
todly. make \.he blJ play JC1 the aood •
perfonnant"e from lhc.1r field aoal ktckcr. the) 11 ''am
beat 'cm.
··The Patnou arc -~ the)< art' they delc:r'Yc to be thm M • '
-t
,,,
.. • Onlnge C0Mt DAIL V Ptl.OT I Tueed9)', January 7. 1988
Looking back at the NFL 's 'Final Four'
P ayoff games featured some
top individual, team efforts
runners. KeYin Mack and Earnest Byner, drove the ball
right up the gut of the Dolphin defense.
It should be noted here that the current Miami
defenden arc hardly the l(jllcr Bees they oooe were and
the Browns' well-planned ground attack e~posed the
Dolphins' Achilles heel. It was 14-3 Cleveland at the haJf
and when it grew to 21-3. chalk playen all over· the
coun~ were chokmg. Fortunately for them. the
Dolphins didn't.
By BAL BOCK ,,...,......,
Rams %0, Dallas 0
Two shulO!JlS, one gJant-si.zed upset and one
dramatic comeback. The National f ootball uque's
venion of the final four -games, that is. not teams -
provided some outstanding indi vidual and team per·
fonnances over the weekend.
That's O as m 1cro. Nothing. Zilch. Nada. Z1ppo.
R1cn. A shutout.
Miami U , Cleveland %1
Oeveland's over-achievers bad M1am1 rct"hnsrn the
Oranae Bowl heat as the Browns' twm l.~'tard
Never before had this happened in a playoff game to
America's former team. But then a lot of things happened
this year to the Cowboys that had never happened to them
before. Like. Chicago 44. Dallas 0.
FOR THE RE CORD
~LA YOF, LOGS
N,C~
Rams (lMl
ZO Denver
17 Pn1i.cit1on1a
3S Sffll ..
17 Allanl•
ll MlnMsota
31 Tam1>11 Bev
16 Kar1s.1 City
I• San f;~nclKo
21 N•w OrlH "' 19 N•w York Glenli
1' All•nl• :U Grfff'I Bn
3 Ntw 0.-lterlS
27 S.11 Franc•sco
~ SI LOUIS
6 lbloers
16
6 24
·6
10
11
0
2t 10
1• 30
17
19
10
1•
16
20 O•llas 0
J•n 11-111 C111090
Chlc.aeo ( 1'· l)
lleeui.r SNHtl 3' Tamoa Bav Z8
ZO ~w E119i.n<1 7
l3 Mlnnnola 1•
•S w.i111n11ton 10
27 hmoa Bev 19
26 5-n Franci\Co lO
23 Green B•v 1
27 Mlnnnot• 9
16 Green Bev lO
2• Detroit )
.. 0•118' 0
36 Allanl• 0 U Mi.~ ~
17 lndler110011' o
19 New York Jets 6
37 Detroit 17
PlllVoH$
21 N•w Yori!. G11nts 0
Jen 12-llami Cn<>mal
AFC CMmcMnlhip
Miami (13-4)
R...-r S-.Mll
23 Hou,1on
lO ln<ll1n1000s
31 Kenus Cltv
30 Denver
24 F>ltt$0Urgh
7 N-Yorlt Jets
•1 T1m1>1 B•v
?1 Detroit
13 Ntw E11911r1e1
21 New York Je"
lA ln<lll ... l>Olll
23 e utt11o
38 Clllcaoo
:U Grfff'I Bev
lO New E119t•no
210 BuffalO
26
13
0
26 zo
13
l3
31
17
17
10 14
2•
2• 17
0
24 Cleveland 11
Jan 12-Ntw E119t1n<1 lllOmt J
New EntAnd ( ll·S>
ll ...... r SNHti
76 Grffn B•v 20
7 ClllC•llO 20
17 8vH•IO U
10 ll•lelers lS
20 Cleveland 1•
1' Buffalo 3
20 New Yori< Jets 13
32 T•mPll B•v 14
17 Ml•ml I)
34 lndl•naoot1s 15
ZO Seellle 13
13 New Yori!. JI" 1011 16
38 ll'ldi.n11001ls 31
23 Detroit 6
17 Ml•m i 30
34 Clnctnn1t1 23
Plllytff'i
26 N•w York Jets I•
27 lleldtr\ 10
Jen 12-•I Miami
NFL pqyoffs
CONFERENCE CHAMl'IOHSHI~
S~'1"1 Gemei
NFC
Rems a t Cnlc•110 <C"111nne12 ar930 • m l
AFC
Ntw Eno11no et M1amo '(ll•nna1 4 ••
om
SUP ER BOWL XX
SuncMY, J•n. 24
<•t ~ °"""'' AFC cnamo•on vs NFC cl'lamolon 2
i>m
NFL pqyoff odds
Nl'C
Cn•C400 over ~ams ov 10
AFC
M1am 1 over New Enolano bv 5
Fr""' H•rrell'' It-~ 8ool!
Bowl scMcMe
SATUROAY'S GAMES
Enl·W•'I ShrlM G•ma
.(el S.n Fr•MIK•l
E•'' vs Wt" (Cllennat 9 et noon
HIM .. wt
(•I HaMIUlul
Ees• vs w"1 <Cn•nnat • at t o"'
.lalNltl ....
(•I YMIMnwt, JH•n l
Nortll "' South, 6:30 om
SATURDAY, JAN 11
S.......80'#!
(•I MeMt, A'-.I
North vs South 10 " m
All tlm•s F>ST
MISL
WESTERN DIVISION
W L Pct. GB
San Olevo 11 6 ~1
wtcl\lt• 10 1 sea 1
SI Lou!' tO 10 500 2 >
t<•nus Cltv 9 9 500 1 ,
hQOl'N 9 " •19 • LA l.AIMl't 6 11 l3J ~ •
RASTR•N OIVISIOH
Mit1net0!• 11 I 600
Cwvalend 10 I SS6 I
8.tlllmon • 8 S19 1 1
F>lrtte>vrOll I 9 471 1 ,
Dalles • 12 m 3 , Chieffo 7 9 ~ l ~Y'• k ff'fl
No Hm.t Kl'loeduled T..._.,1Gamt
I(~• OfV II WlcNta
-(_ >·
NBA
WESTERN CONFERENCE
PKNI< OMMeft
W L PC1.
Uklf't 27 S 1144
F>or11•nd 21 16 S79
SH llle 13 21 311
F>ll04Hllx II ZO JSS
~ II 23 314
Golden Slate 12 2S 324
MidwHI Dlvlslen
Hou,1on 21 n 641
Oenvet 19 14 S76
S.11 An1on10 ZO IS S71
O•lles IS IS 500
Ul•ri 17 11 46
S.cr•mento 12 21 3S3
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Bos Ion
F>llllaO.tohla
Nh¥ Jersey
WUlltl'IQIOf\
New York
A~ OM'loft
2S 7
21 13
11 14
16 11
11 13
111
611
600
41 1
32•
"67
(;8
• IS
15 ..
11
11''>
2 .,
2 )
5 s•,,
10
s
s~
10
IS
Mllweuket
""ar1ta Cleveland
Ottro1t
ClllCIQO
t11dlana
Clf'lh"el Dlvlsiotl
2• 11
11 IS
15 1•
IS 19
1• n
10 22
SJI s .. \ . ••1 • 389 10
)13 12
MoendeV'I k«fl
F>11tt•del0h1• 109. Sen Antonio 107
S11cremento 106, Wu111119ton 11
F>noar11x 114, Se•llit 97 T.........,, G•ma1
O~' et Atlllt1t•
l'ld••ne •• New York
Bo,1on. •l O•troll
New Jersey at Ch1c•11<>
Ctevetend •' Miiwaukee Golden State at Hou"on
Dall•' at Oenver
Ut ah •t Se11ttle
We«IHdlV'' G•mas
Porna nd at Uklf''
Cl'-' a1 F>hlt1deloh1a
Cttvtl•l\d er Boston
M1lw•uto.ee a t New Jarsev
S.cr•manro at tnole na
Wuhlngton al Plloan"t
COLLEGE
AP tOP 20
Record Pn Pvs
1 Nortn Cerollna 1461 14·0 12~ I
2 M1c111111n < 131 14·0 1193 1
l Oukt l •I 11·0 1136 3
• Svrecuse I 10·0 1on • 5Georol•Ttc'1 10·1 9"8 6
6 MemOhis State 12·0 99S 9
1 Ol<t•l!Oml l3·0 .. 1 7
I Loul"ana State l•·O 126 I
9 Kanu 1 12·2 161 S
10 St JoM'' I•· I 738 10 I I KtnlUCllY 10· I ~ 11
12 Nev ·Lu veoes 13·? •n 13
13 Gtor11tlowr1 10· 2 '" 11 14.Ala ·B1rm1noh1m 13·2 •19 16
IS To u ·Et F>u o 13· 1 342 19
l6 Notre O•mt 7 1 ll I 17
11 LOU•,V•lle l ·) 242 II
111111no•1 10-3 1se ••
19 Vir11ln1a Teen 10-2 139 10
20 F>urdut IJ· 2 119
Others rece1v1n11 vottt Clemson 34
Br•dl«V 31. i:>111,oor1111 18 lnoiane 2S
Mlclllo•n $t•tt 72. Tenneu tt 12. Temote
11. Iowa 10. Marvlen<! 1 on10 State •
Pto1>81'dlne •. Navv 3, Norm Cerotln.i Staie
l Sout,...rn MatllO<ll" 3 Ate~ma I
G80<1111 I Mar111en I TulH I Xavier
()!Ito 1
COMMUNITY COLLEGE MEN
Cvsw.ss 72. Or•nee Cout 69
(Seu11\ CM\! CetiferltlCa)
Oi'enea CNS! (691 Cyiirtu (721
'9 fl pftil tvf!Of tii
Mull'' I 0 2 1 Mrtnuu S 6 I 16
Joflr("on 9 1 S ZO Hor,. S O • tO
McGevr" 6 0 I 12 DODOS • • 7 11
Mulcahey I 0 3 2 Ltve\av 3 • 1 10
S.•oer 1 J 5 11 Swa~ner • 6 1 14
Clement' 0 0 3 0 Jn-an\ O 2 O 1
B1c1teH 6 1 4 13 O• •a •!I 0 0 2 G
Judo O 3 2 J .c ,. i.t• 2 • ' 8
Tota ll 30 9 2S 6Q Totes 1J 26 11 n
H1ttt1me Cvo•en ·,, 2l Re9u1e11on
Tied 62·61
Compton 8', GOiden WHt 74
(Sovlll CNS! Cem.rtnu)
C~ll61 Geldeft WI'\ I (141
lo " l)f Ip '9flpftp
CWlm\ s t 7 Sttac,,ar , I) s 27 Morr I' 6 , I 1' OtDDs 1 3 s 17 Hnder,on O . t)t"" ,,.. • I 5 9 Gui •orv • . • J', s t ' 11 . Roo nso• ' ) I • E° ""'e"\Or ) 0 l " F'"tem•"ll • 0 6fVN " 0 0 • 0 MWlm\ I '• Si,..,O)Or+ 1 0 t • ("'ra Mor~ I A11t• 0.-11 0 0 0 0 l'I · ev
C,rn"Noor t;
Tc•o s ,, ~ ~t -•a \ 78 18 2S 1•
1-1a1ft ,....._,.. :""'t.1•• A7 ))
Mt S.n Antonio U , S.~dr S7
ISovltt COii\! CenM!'-•l
Mt SAC IU J S.ddleblcl1 (S7)
lollpltp "'"Of l'P Ora~· • ) J On 1•no S 0 3 10
Jar..,o• 1 , 7 T avlor 1 1 I 16
JonfS • e f • M1t1ltr 5 0 I 10
Freie• ~ J Lemon 3 l I 9
LfO"ll'O ~ 1 17 McGff ) 0 4 •
Ma" •tl 0 Q 1 Mvltt ] 0 J ~·-
Oeoa,....o• / Su111va n I 0 0 1
Tt>ta \ 76 11 n ~J Total\ 26 S 13 S7
He•· ••• Ml !..tn Antoruo JO• It
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Souttl Coast Cont.I .nee
Ct r• 'O•
N 1 4i•r 6 • " ...
Como1r.1r
Rencnc \J1•' •~·
CvorH•
O•a"llf' r •• ~ vl·•,.-o ...
Golder> w.,,
\40C!l!!Dan
c..--. o-..1
WL W L
7 0 16 I
7 0 11 J
' 0 10 s 1 0 13 )
0
0
0
0
I II S
1 7 7
7 6 ' 2 ••
1 ••
N\of!CMV' I Sc ...
C 1o•t\\ 11 0.•"98 Coest •• 1011
C ~""D' ,. 96 Golden w"' 1 • M1 ~8' I n1on10 63 S.ddi.o.c.-S7 (~•r 1M 14 Fut•trlOI' 61
W~Mll'I"\ G-(1;)9)
Fu t••()n a• Ont111a COiis!
GOIO.n <Ht s• •t Mt S.n Anl0!1•0 \t<IO•~O•(• "' C..-rllo\ lhtlCllO '-'"t!H O ., Ce>tn.,IO<I
COMMUNITY COLLIGI WOM9N
Oraneit C:..Jt 67, c.,..,..s 60
(SeuWI c .. ,, ~aNe)
CVYWtn 160) Or._. C.Ut ('7) ........ .. ...... f•"tue"' I t ' t K9\'Hl!i t t ) ..
1101tmtll 1 l I 7 lO H•tll(OCll 6 1 J 14 Jtn\00 A I I t $(...,,.tr 9 0 S II
hoot I 0 0 7 '~" ' I 1 ll L0119 1 0 1 4 Trioot 4 0 J I ,.,,,,,.,, 1 0 0 • ·~ • 0 0 17
W•lktr 4 l 4 t C•lllh'IS 0 0 I 0 8NUW\rt 0 0 1 0
WM t 0 0 0 0 lt•Cfla 0 • 0 0
Totn ?S 10 17 .0 'l'ot•l• Jl S 19 '1 H•'"'"'' or-.noa Coet•. J7 JS
New1*1. He"*' Hiit\ blMletbel YMr-bv-veer
YMr. Ceectl
1931, ll•ton RH<!
1932, Ralon Rffd
1933, ll•IC>tl Reed
I™, R•lpll llffd
1935, ll•lp11 Rffd
1'36, R•lpll Rffd
1937, R•IC>tl RffCI
1931. Okk Si>vk:llng
1m . ll•ton RMd
1940, llalotl Rffd
1941, ll•loll Rffd
1942. R•lpll RMd
19~. lhton RMCI
19'4, Raton llffd
1945, b le>f'I Rftd
19 ... Re1p11 Reed
19'7, lle1Pl1 Rffd
19'8, AelPll RHd
1949, R•IC>f'I R~
1950, Alton RMCI
19S1, ll•IOh Rffd
19S2, R•lon RH<I
1953. Ju .. , Geoe
1954. Ju .. , Geoe
19S5, Jules G•oe
l9S6, Jules Geri.
19S7, Jvt•s G•oe
19S8 Jutes G•o•
19S9 Jule' Geoe
1960, Ju .. s Gaoe
1961, Jutes G•oe
1961, JulH Geoe
1963, Emit N-
19 ... Emit Neame
196S. BIM Hatch
1966, Biii H•tcn
1967, Al Hacknev
1961, At Hack,.tv
1969. O•v• Wumen
1910. Dev• Welfm•n
1911, O•lt Hegey
1972. O•te Hagay
1973, Oele Heoev
1974, O•le Heon
1975, O•te H•oev
1976. Ken Ammann 19n. Jt rrv OeBusk
1971, Jarrv Oe8u1k
197' Jerry 0•8v'll
1980. Jtrrv OeBusk
1991. Jtrrv O.Bu'lt
19'2. Jerrv De8usk
1993. Jtrr-v OtBu\k
198•. Jtrrv OeBusto.
1985 Jerry OeBv'k
• CIF ornotf efltrv
• League co·chemo•ons
• • L ••Out cnemotons
R~
2·10 M
l·I
2·S 6·• 7·7
1·7
HI
S-7
10-7
••• lS-2
4·6
1·6 ••• 11 .. 1
7·7
9·7
7·9
10-1
15·3
9-1
"• IS·3 • 13·4
3·16 ••• 17·4
13·• •• 12·9
••• 19·6
13·6
11-12 9· 16
9·13
11· IJ
13·10
14·7
• 20-S
17·9
7· 12
16·1
12· 11
17-8
1S·9
1-16
12· 12
• I•· 11
ll·ll
4·11 • 17·12
12·11 .... 11
••• 19·7
• 16·9
13•10
10-12
1'· 10 .•• 2•·•
Compton I S, Gatden West 12
(Soult! Coe'! CenMl'atiee)
«;-Wt" 1111 Camtl'l'ln (ISi
foflpftp feftpf tp
C llatt 8 9 • 2S Wttl1 9 0 • 18
At>ev•a 8 S • 21 8 urr I 0 0 2
Bff' 7 0 2 1• Gron 9 2 • 10
Sto•t' 2 O • • S.vaMen • 1 S 10 Amo~ 1 O 1 • Bet,,., 6 2 1 1'
Barnn S l 2 13 Wiiiiams 9 3 3 21
Total\ 32 17 16 82 Totets 39 9 II 15
Ha ••·me Gold!Pt' Wttt 4J·:U Reou
a• O" Tied. 79·79
T tcMlcet C omotol' oench
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS
Muir 45, Fount.In V ... y 37
(Han·IMtu'9)
Mulf (4Sl
"' " pf "' Brow" I 0 2 2
Augme" • • 3 11 Womack S I 1 11
Owens I 1 2 J
McCuttoh I 0 0 2
F>o111 2 O O •
W•onar 2 I I S
MclnlOlh 2 2 I 6
Ftn. V ... Y (l7) feftpftp
Weuler 6 3 2 IS
JOMM>n 2 0 5 4
Weltt ~ 0 1 2
8or11outst • O O 8
H•t1\0n 4 0 3 8
Goroor1 o o 2 o
Gamot• o O o o
Totals 18 9 10 .S Tota ls 11 3 13 37
Score bY OU•rtan
Muir la 10 S 17-S
Founlll" Va1'4!v 10 10 6 11-37
Randlo Alamitos 66, lrvtne 6 I
(Hori·IN-1
•• Allml'9' (6') ll"VIN (61)
19flllf tii "'"pf"'
C•r•er
Mor•IH
F>•outllt
Vl•Ouel
Flor•s
Rambvn
3 14 2 20 F>•tch•U 1 0 2 2
8 6 3 n T •mur• 0 I 4 1 • o o a Herrl119 11 3 s 25
) O 3 6 A•v 3 0 J 6
• O S a Snoddv S 0 • 10
I 0 I 2 Norton s I 2 11
Od•n 223 6
Tot•I' 23 10 .. 64 Tol1 t1 27 7 23 61
kw• lrt 0Ue"'9n
R•l'CllO At1ml10' 12 16 11 17~
lrvlna 1' 13 IS l•-()1
HIGH KHOOL STANDINGS
S.. Vlew LM9U9
LNeUt OVlf' ..
WL
Coror1• d•I M•r I 0
e,1.r1e1a 1 o
Newoort Harbor I 0
Unlv•nllv I 0
Woodl>r ld98 0 I
LffV"-Beecn 0 I
S.ddleOaCk 0 I
Co,t• ~ 0 I
WL
11 2 • • I 4 s 6 11 )
6 s s •
I 1
W~'f'I Gamel (7:l0)
CorOf\I Ciel M•r 11 N•woorr Harbor
Ut1IYerlllV •• E "•r1cl1
WOOC!l>rlOOt ., L•OU"-&Hen
s.ciotet1ee1< •• c~•• Mna l'rld9'1"1 G-17:>0)
E st•l'CI• el CorOf\• Ciel Mar
WOO<ll>rle!Oe •t S.ddteb•ck
Unl...,sltv a t Ntwoort Hert>Or
Le11uti1 e .. ch •t Co1te Ma'•
,,,.,,, teumllfMnt
lat • ....,..,
"Int • eullll Sllllltt
,,,..,.,,., COMO" cu s) 091 Yellnk.t'.
No.II CFrtn«l ' • , ••. JoM MCEMot
IU S I Otfffttd t(.,,,ln Currtti CU S ), 1•6. ,_,
It was ~o ~s· c~it that it won the NFC East A f.Ust of wind? Why then, Giant fans miaht ~ond~r. crown desplle •ti L!'COIWlt~. It could not, however couldn t the wind blow place kicker Eric Schu"bcn s chap-
ovcroomc the consastcncy of tbc ~ams' Eric Dickerson: shot 20..yard field aoaJ thtou&h the upriahts, instead of ofT w~o fl!' for 248 yards, more than any man bad ever one oftfle poles? .
paned. an any playoff' pmc before. Wind or not, this pme belonaed to the Cbaca&o
_Dack.erson aobbled up the around. in huge chunks, defense. The Bean sacked Phil Simms six times.
putunt on a one-ma~ sho~. ~eanwhale, the Cowboys N E• 1 .. 11 Ra14ers H proved most cooperauvc Wltb six turnovers. It was as if ew Ir• '
they couldn't beUeve what Dickerson was doina to them ~· w fl bled unt and New EnaJand ~nd k~pl giving the ball back to him. to see if he could do scored 11~ch~':!. Sa~my tJle fumbled a kickoff and
at again. . New Enalaod scored another touchdown. . Ke could. and he did. This is calJed giveaway football a~d the chantablc
<-"tea1o !l, New ~orti; Gluts. 0 Raiden played it to the hilt, gif\-wrappin~ the game for
. This game escaped the Giants fast, when a gust of the opponunistjc Patriots. .
wmd blew ~e ball away f~om punter Sean Landeta's foot The Ra.id~n even wasted a couple of ttmeouts early
and the miscue resulted 10 an early touchdown for the and so didn't have them available when they needed them
Bears. at tt1e e~.
L..eeune...O.._ ........
y..,. • lrt. Yelf"
YMr, CMdl R~
1'3S, Rtd Guv•r 1 ·I
1936, Rtd Guver 0· 10
1937. lltd Guvtr •·7
193e. Atd Guver S·S
1939. lltd Gvver 6-S
1940, Rad Guyer 6·9
1941, Red Guy•r HS
19•2, It.a Gvver S· 12
1943, lleo Gvver 1·6
19'4, Laurence Langley 10-S
19'S, Leurence L•nvtev 9·7
19~. Lavrenc:e L•Offltv 1·7
19•7, Rte! Guyer 6· 13
lt4, Ate! Guver 9·1
19•9. Bo«> F>•loe •· 11
1950. Rte! Guyer 6· 7
19S I, John RudotOll 6·9
1952, Jonn AudolOll 9·7
1953. JO/\l'I RudOlon * • l•· S
1954. Oe .. Lachv 9·S
19SS. O•I• Lad<ev ll·S
19S6, Owen JonnM>n 10-9
1957, Owen JoM10f\ 7·7
1951, C w Mvrralt l HI
1959, C w Murret1 10· 1 I
1960. C W Mvrrett 4· 7
1961, Ed Bowan 11-11
1962, Ed Bowen • • 23·3
1963, EC! Bowan •• • 17·7
1964. Eo Bowen 6·12
196S. Ed Bow•n • 14·1
1964. Ed Bowan 9· I•
1967. Ed Bowen 10-9
1961, G•rv Norton I · 17
1969, Garv Nor!Of\ •·20
1970, J•rry F•lr 3·21
1971. Jarrv Fair 8· 11
1972. Je<r1t F•lr 13· 13
1973, Jerrv Fair "19-7
197•, J•rrv F•\r 9· lS
1975, Jerrv Fair I · 16
1976, Ed Burttn11n1m • 14· 14
1977. Ed Burtl1191M1m 12· 13
1971. Mike Roelle S· 17
1979, Mlk' lloel>t •·II
1980, Mike Roe,,. 3· 11
1981, Craig Fekontr • 11·7
1912. Jt<oma Kare> 9· I•
19'3. Crelo Feic-6· 17
1914, Craig Falc:One< 10-12
1985, Cr•lo Fate-l ·IS
• CtF otevolfl entrv
'' CIF l ·A flM ll\h
" Soulll Con t Laeoua co·cntmolonl
• LHllut ~ml>lons
• CIF l·A Cll•molons
Nolt. 1m rteord Include' 0·2 ''•rt
vn<ler Craig F•k:oner
Les AJametM
MONDA Y'S ltHUL TS
(Slnd af Sf ·llllM ~ ,,_..,..,
Fiil.ST •Ac•. 400 vwcn
Fn• Doc !Pauline) 11.10 6.IO 4.40
Flvlng EH l•r Cooy (E.Grcl 4.40 J.60
Mh1tr M•n (Rull ) S.00
Time 21 •5.
Also r•n Zlaten, Mu•ten. MoonlOOO. A
L .. der Roon, C•H Arid R•lse, Jollffn
RllO<le. Frl•ndty Ooc
Scr•tchad: Orlao. Cut• 8•r Tredtm•rk.
BlH t t<lo, Surorlse' Sl•rlel U EXACT.A (9·10) i>eld 136IO.
SECOND RACE. 350 verds.
Two Mlcklfl (H Gercle) 3 IO 2.IO UO
Mil Cnlc (Lewis) 3.60 2.60
Ech•r Flores IE G•rd•I J,60
Time 11 19
AliO r11n. Cl'leduino. Elv\lvalv, Siiken
StOCllll'IQ\, L•dv LIH Two.
No 'cretcoo
51 EXACT.A (S·61 i>eid Jll 40
THIRD llACIE. 350 verd'
Luelf• Ruth tTr•uur•) 16 40 S.40 J.IO
Miu E111tr Scooo IOrc1<,nl 4.00 3 20
F>otrt ro\ Geme (Ward) UO
Time ll •S
Atso ren Coon Prtclou•, Trtl F'e41·
11ro'•'· Anotlltr Slo, Bird' M4rry, Ptallnvm
Ro", Junt Election, WOf\ Wl'f Wiich.
Scr1tcna<1 Your Siio' Stlowlno, Crv•l•I
B1ouom, Laoy Bird Joy
U EX.ACTA 17·91 i>eld 517 00
FOURTH RAC•. 350 verd•.
Minni Z•nlnl (Maalleld) IUO 1.60 6.00
Unlver u t Ml.n IBrOOk1l ZOAO IOAO
Ave Ooo Too <W••dl 4 40
Tim• II.SI.
AtiO rert: Oell~tt llktl. Ona Wom•n
Show , Lanrv B• O•vllghl, Lii I ll 9 1Ua. Mad
Houi•wKa, Mar1a C•lcller, True Looo.
Scr•tcha<I: $e>lrltr•n. t<lotvs Wlone
FIFTH RACE. 300 .,.rch
Mtrrltlmll' (Traesural UO 3.20 2,60
Orl•nttl Lt11an<1 (8r00ks) S.00 3.60
Lultl Ptcnlrllo tP•vllnal 3.IO
Time IS "4 "''° r •n. CollM Ketlv, Min Summit
M0nev. t.ov• To Tr•val, LuekY I.Adv
Llnd,•v, Lov• On Trl•I. Tiie lennon Plan.
Comlr1 Finl
Scratcha<I· Hl'f To Huslia, Plnlt
Ol•mond UOY. Ill!• Cotnellnetlott, Ftvlno
Unoto U RX.ACTA (I• ll i>eld '31 00.
SIXTI4 RAC•. 550 yards. F>en N •1111 (P•ullM ) >040 10.00 u o
T,... OVlltrm.n (lard) S.40 l 20
Rebaf' G-.. (E G•rct.I UO
2U7
AttO r•n: Coutel Rock•t. SCMltn.rn
~u~o. ttecafornellrM
No screlchM. U •XACTA (4·5) H id Sl .. .0
SIVINTM aACI. HO 'flfch
B•• I Car1 !Cr-> i.40 4.40 l 20 Don! Hold hck (Lewi•) 17 20 7 '°
B•nk Tiie CH I! (MHfleld) 4 00
Tlmt; lUI.
Al\O ran· Rte! Entf'rf, ~ Jun, ·Im.
GOIC! 0'"-• I" Soni '1trtls, AM!et Tomor·
row. Tn ton Shor'!, Miu Shuck N Jfve
S<relc:Md. Wini« G~ U •XACTA (7•4) H id 112' 70
l .. HTH RAC•. 350 'f•fOl
JOM O'NeAI • to ··'° , zo ~--Utnll• '00 , '° Ettnot Metfldoc 120 Time:. 11.13 l
AIM r\cM tm A Llvt 0..... Sllldo Tai,
~ ltldl Mall
w alcMd none
MIMTH -ttACI, .00 v.,lk
MeJI 111 ~" <Ptllntnl •1 00 11 to '20
EH i Auslln (Hert) ) 00 UO
Mo•lll Wttl (M\lltd > .0
Tlf'l'tt 20 IS
AIM ractd '"" c~utlon, l'ldl SHrk•, Vt lldv"• ttollcv, Pur• Hemo,
Ntll ... Scout. SvnMl JDN\ Sa•... """"' ""'* ~ Mlll lf.1+7·H) Mlf t.714-20 to D
iNtMtrs wrtll to.Ir l'Wlttft MK Nlfltl lt-t-++.e-M ·H I MIO
$704.40 lo 9 winners with \IX llOrift.
Tltnl4 •ACI. 350 Y•rdt.
I.MY Ell-• <Oclrwn) 10.40 uo 3.00 A~l't Adv•nc:. ( ... vine) 7.20 3.40
Ftst N Tvff (Werd) l.00
Tim« 11.56.
Also r.c.ct. Trlclla Time Rosia, Merv Go
Reclnt, Lentv'1 hlla, Just Trlckln, L ... I Gedaoovt, A ltlth Cnlck.
12 •XACTA (1•31 H id .... 40
U DAILY DOUM.• <•·ti H l<I 1269 40
Attendance: 6,fU.
~ . ' . "
............. lcMdu9e
TUM., Aorll 1 -Sall Dleoo
Sun., Aorll 6 -Los Angele\. l:OS II m
M«I .• Aorll 14 -S.•11 ... 2-0S om.
TUM., Aorll IS -S..11 ..
Wte!., Aorll 16 -S..11 ..
Tllurs .• AOf'll 17 -MIMHOI•
Fri .• Aorll II -MIMftOt•
S.I , Aorll 19 -Mlnnnot•. l:OS o.m .
Sur1., AMII 20 -Mlf'lnHol•. 12-o7 o m
Mon., Aorll 21 -0.kl•nd
TUM., Aorll 21 -O.ki.nd
Wad .• Aorll 23 -0.klllnd
Wad., Mev 7 -Toronto
Thurs., May I -Toronto
Fri., May 9 -Mllw•uk."
Sat., May 10 -Mllweuk"· 7:05 o.m .
Sun., Mav 11 -M"""•"""· l:OS pm
M«I .• Mey 12 -"°''°" TVft., May ll -9o1ton
Wtd., Mev I• -e o,1on
Wad., May 21 -Detroit
Thurs .• Ma'f 29 -O•trott
Fri .. IN'f 30 -e.nlmor•
Sat., Mav ll -1.tttllf-•. 7-0S om
Sun .• June 1 -B•lllmort , 12 07 o m.
Mon., June 1 -New Yori<
TUM • June 3 -N-York
Wtd., Jvne • -N-Vork
Tnurs • June 12 -K•nu\ Cltv
Fri . Jvna 13 -t<•""'' Cltv Sat., June I• -t<anuis Cltv. l:OS om
Sun., June lS ..._ K•nse• Cit'/, 1-0S o.m
M«l., June 16 -T HH
Tues., JUN 17 -T•us
Wad., June 11 -T .. H
Fri., June '11 -Clevalend
S.t.. June 21 -c .. v ... nd. 7:0S om.
Sun., June 29 -l laYN nd, I-OS om
Mon., June 30 -Cllk-oc>, S-07 1>.m
Tuts.. Julv I -Cllboo
Wed .. Julv 1 -Chtc.110
Tnun . Julv 17 -Toronto
Fri. Julv II -Totonto
Ser., July 19 -Totonlo, I OS om
5'.IA., July 20 -Toronto, l:OS 1>.m
Mon .. July 21 -Mltweuk", S-07 o.m
Tun., Julv 12 -Mllwevk"
Wad .• Julv 23 -Mltw•uk"
Frt .. Julv 2S -eo,1on
S.t • JulY 26 -8o"on, 7:05 o.m
Sun., Jutv '11 -Bolton, l:OS o.m.
TlllK~. Aug. 7 -S..ttle
Fri., Aug. I -S..llle
Set, A119, 9 -Sffll ... 7:0S II m
Sun., Avo 10 -S..llle, 1:0S o m
Mon., Avo. 11 -Mlnnasot•
Tu••-· Aug. 12 -Mlnnesol•
Wtd., Aug 13 -Mlnnesol•
Fri., Aug IS -Oeki.nd
S.t , Aug l6 -Oekl•nd, 7-0S om
Sun .• Aug. 17 -Oekt•nd, l-OS o m
Tllvri., Au11. 11 -Detroit
Fri , Aug 19 -Detroit
Sal , Aug JO -O.troll, 7-0S om
Sun , AVO 31 -Detroit. 1~ II m
Mon • Seol 1 -Balllmore. 1-0S 1>.m
TUM .• S.ot. 1 -&•lllmore
Wad .• Seol 3 -S.ltlmora
Fri. Seot S -N•w York
S.I., *' 6 -New Yori!, 7-0S II m
Sur1., Se91 7 -N•w York, l:OS 1>.m.
Tues .. Seol. 16 -K•nu• Cllv
Wad .• Se91 17 -K•nus City
Thur\., Seot. II -K•nse' City
Fri., Seo• 19 -ClllcAtoo
Sit., S.Ot 20 -Cl'l!Qoo, 12:20 1>.m
Sun .. Seol. 21 -Cl'llcaoo. 12:07 o.m
Mon., S.01 12 -, ....... nd
T.-,;; S.Ot 23 -C .. .,.._nd weo;, s.o1 2• -c1a.,...ncs
Fri .. S.01. 26 -TtHI
Set., S.01. 27 -Tea11, 12:20 o.m.
Sun .• Seot 11 -Tens. 12:07 o.m
AN N me1 •t 7:30 I> m . Utllet\ Indicated
~· Mnw sc:McMe
Fri .• Aorll 4 -A""1'
Sal., Aorll S -An114111. 7:0S o.m.
Mon., Aprll 7 -San Olaoo, I-OS o.m
TuH., AorN I -San Olaoo
Wad., Aorll 9 -Sen Dleoo
TllUr\., Aorll 10 -San O!aoo
Fri., April II -San Fr•ndKO
S.t., .\Of'll 12 -San Fr•nclsco, 7:05 1> m
Sun . Af)f'M 13 -San Fr•ntlKQ, I-OS II m
Thuo .• Aorfl 24 -Ati.nl•
Fri .. Aorlt 2S -Allanle
Sat., Aorll 26 -Ari.nt•, 7:0S o.m
Sun . Aorll 27 -Ati.n••. l:OS II m
M4n , Aorlt 11 -F>lll,t>uron
Tun • Aortr 29 -Pllll~Oll
Wtd .. A?rll 30 -Chlc.vo
Tnur1., Mav 1 -Chlc•11<>
Fri., May 2 -SI Lout'
Sal., Mev l -St Louis. 7:0S om
Sun , Mav • -St Louis, 12-0S om
Fri, Ma'f l6 -N•w Yorll
S.t .• Mav 17 -New York, 1·0~ om
Sun., Mey II -N•w Yori!. 12-0S om
TVft., May 20 -MonlrHI
Wad., May 21 -M«llrHI
Tnun., Mav 22 -MonlrMI
Fri., Mey 23 -Phll•daiPl!le
Sal., INY 24 -Pnl~le. 7'05 o.m
Sun , INy 2S -l"rll~. 1 OS o.m
Tnurs.. June S -~ton
Fri .. June 6 -Hou"on
Ser.. June 1 -Hou"Of\· 12:10 o.m.
Sun., June I -Moulton, 1:05 P m
Mott., June 9 -Clnclnnell
Tues., June 10 -Clllc:l,,,,.11
Wad , June 11 -Clncl,,,,.11
Fri.. June 20 -San Oltoo
Sel .• JuM 21 -S.n Dlffo, 7:0S D m
$vtl., June 22 -Sen Dlaoo. I-OS om
Mon,. JVM 23 -Allarll•
Tues., June 24 -Allanll
Wad., June 1S -Ari.nt•
Tllvrs., Jutv 3 -F>lllU>urOll
.Fri., JulV 4 -F>llh llut'ltl, 7:05 I> m
Set., Jutv S -Plllsburtfl, 7-0S 1>.m
Sun., Jutv 6 -Plllsburtfl, l:OS 1>,m.
Mon., July 7 -St 1.0UI•, l:OS om.
TUM., July I -St. Louis
Wad , JulV • -SI Louis
Tllvr1 . Jvk'f 10 -c~
Frt .. Jutv 11 -Chieffo, 5:20 if.nl
Set., July 17 -Cl'lkffo, 7:05 o m
Sun , Jutv 13 -Chieffo, hOS p.m
Mon • .M"f 21 -S.n Francisco
Tue', Jvk'f 2' -S.n Frttiel.co
Wad , July lO -Sen Francisco
Fri., A111 I -Clndnnetl
S.t , Auo. 2 -Clnclnnell, 12"0 o.m.
Sun .• Aut l -ClftclMat}, I-OS Pm
Mot\., Ave 4 -Holnton
T wtt , Aue S -Houll0!1
Wtd., Aue. • -Hovllon, 1-0$ 1> m.
M«I .• Ave. 11 -Ntw Yori!, S-OS 1> m
Tun., Aue 1• -New Yori!
WM, Al.It 20 -New Yori!, S 20 P.m
Ffl., Au. n -Montr .. I
kl , AU9. n -MolltrMI, 1:os 11 m
Sun., Avt. t• -MonlrMI, I-OS II M
Mon , Al.It U -""'ll•dMlni.
Tun , Al.II H -PtlllecMlllflle
Wed., Allt 27 -~llad9loPlle. 1-0S 11m
MllA,, s..i I -Allallfa ~utt , a.t f -Alltnte
wed., S.I 10 -Houston f'llUn , S<tof 1 I -Haut ton
Fri., WI 12 -O ndMetl
kt , s.ot 1J -Cll'lc:lnnltll, 1Ut 11.m
"'" , s.t 1• -Clncfnnell, 1• 11.m.
WM• s.t 14 -SM 0-..
TllUra , .... 1' -S. 0-.. ll'rl, Oct J -Sel' ll'rlflClect, ,. 11,fft
kt • OC1 • -left fr,...,.., lttl 11.m.
Sun., Oct. s -kl\ flrlllldtca. •• MW\.
Al NtMt •' 1JJ 11.m . ~ .,.._.
IMS NA menev IMdl.n
I Curt Ii SIT anM JS.fl ,321
2. unny Wadllln' 446,"3
l. Celvlll f>MI• .....
•.Jim Tl'IOroa 37',091
S. Ray FIOyd 371,9"
6. Corff Pnln 367,506
7. ti•' SY!ton 365,lfO I. R091f' INlll>le 3'°,Ss.t
9. John Mal)otffeY l41,'9S
10. INrk O'MMr• MOMO
11. Cr•le Sladllf' 2'7.m
12. *v Slndalllr 212,762
13. lernti.rd L•noet 271,0U
14. Tom Kii• 2se,m
IS. FVU'f Zoeller 2'4,003
1•. HuOart Green 233,S17
17 1.ArrvMh• 231,041
ll Tom wetton 726,m
19. P.vne St•warl 225,119
20. M.c O'Grady m.aoa 21. ~ .. l urni 223.352
22. w...,na Lavi 211.'25
23. P9fe< JICOOStfl 114,959
24. AnOV North 212,26'
2.5 Denny Edwuds *·"1
26. S.Y• S.l!Hleros 206,631 21. Jeck It-207.761 21. D•n PoN 1,.,m
2t l'tlHl1> 81Kt1mer ,,.,S37
30. 8111 Gi.uon l9S,UJ
31 L..rrv Rinker ltS.390
32. H•la lrwln ltS,007
ll. Mark Mccumber 1'2.7S2
34. Andv 8Hn 190.871
JS. Joel .. Mlidcl 116,6fl
36. Scort Hocfl 116,020
37 Mark Wlaba 111.tt•
31 &IR Kr•ller1 llO.lll
39 Frtd CouDIH 111.2n
40. Scotl Slmo'on 11l.24S
41 Mlk• R•ld l",171
42 W•yne Gredv 167,497
'3 Grao Norman 16S,451
'4. JKk Nlc-"i.u1 16S,'56
•S. Tim Slmot.Oll 164.702 tt. &oCI Twn l .. ,OZJ
47 Don F>ooiay 162,09•
fl. Mlllt Smllh 15',911
49 Oeml1 W•l.on ISSMS
SO. Wiiiie WOOCI ISl.706
SI. O,A. Welllflll9 153,07'
S2 8oO EHIWOO<I IS2,139
SJ.Kan Green ISl.lSS
S4. O•n For1m•" ISO.lJ.4
SS. L•rry Net.on 1 f3, "3
S6. •Of\ Sir.ck lf2.afl
S7 L" Tr•vlno 140.113 se Woodv Blllcllovrn 139.m
St. Oou11 Tewell 137.•26
60. Bruce llelilo.e 136,"2
61. 1<•1111 F•rous 13'.lS2
62 &r•ll u-136.117 '3 Gil Mor~n lll,t•1
64. Ci.ranee llou lll,610
6S. JO/\nnv Mitter 12,,616
66. O•vt B•rr 126, 177 67 Tony SIMI 12S,2SS
6'. &uddV Gardner 121.aot
69. Gwv Koc,, 111,566
70 Jn HH $ 121.•
11 O•vtct Fro't lll,S37 12 Ed Flori 116,002 n ~rk Ln 112.n.s
7' Oen Heltdorion 112.102
75 George Arc,...r 109 096
NHL
CAMPaELL CC>ftl'ERENCE SmYIM OMSiel't w L T '"" GI' GA
Edmonton 19 7 • 62 212
C•INrv 17 11 l 37 161
v •ncou'ftf' I) 23 • 30 143 Winnipeg ll 1S • 30 154
K!Ms 12 22 4 21 133
Nern• OMUefl
Cllk•11<> .. 16 4 40 110
St.Lout' 11 15 • • llS
Mlnnawte 14 17 7 lS IS7
Toronlo 10 12 s 2S 141
Ottrolt 9 2S s 23 121
WALES CON .. ERUKR
"•""<*OM.-Pnli.delonle 29 11 0 SI 113
w11nl1191on 24 10 4 S2 IS6
NY lillndar\ 16 I• 9 " IS1
NY ll•nolf'I 17 21 1 36 .. ,
Plll,tluroh 17 19 4 38 153
Ntw J•nev IJ 24 I '11 139
Adams OMtMtrl
MontrH I 22 13 4 .. 113
Quel>ac n IS 2 " ISt
Bo, Ion " 1• 1 () ISi
Butf•lo •• II 4 40 1'4
H•rtford 19 11 I 39 ISl
Mende'f'I Sc-
Montru 1 9 St Lou'' 2
Pllhtlurllfl 4. New J«'W'I' l
T.....,,10-.
St Lout' at Quebec
O.troll •I Washl119ton
MlnMM>I• al New Yorll 1,i.ndefs
Vancouver •• Wlnnloeo
H•rttorC! ., C•INrv
W...._Y's~
I( .... •I F>llll~lll'I
a o,tOf\ 11 MontrMI
Edmonlon e l Tor0ti10
N•w J«i.ey •t en~
MeftdaY's~11
8AUl8ALL ......... ~
IS6
146
169
196
119
173
1•7
150 , ..
10S
l73
123
I•
139
1•7
176
140
121
13S
134
IS 1
NEW YORK ~T~ toQoy
FIO'fd ~"--Of L'fnc:NlurO ot IM C.ro· tine LH9ua.
SAN FRANCISCO OIANT!--N9f'Md
Jose Morlltt H llnt Mr.a !Mid l'lllllnt CNCI.
8AMllTaALL
WASHING TON 8Ul.1.E TS-Slt ntd
Fr""'4tn WN!ltMt, 9UWcl, 10 e MC11t14 10-
0.'f conf r-ct
... _ .....
---•..-.-----
,
Orange Co•t OAILY PILOT/Tueedey, JMU9fY 7, 1M8 •
FUNKY, WINURBltAN by Gary Trud11u
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
SHOE
by.Sil Keane
"Couldn't you ·take baby steps, Daddy?"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"Could we close the sunroof while
it's snowing?"
i
I• 'r
"Hold It, George! You're busting up my
entryw•yl" ·
• Aw,"10M .. . NOT AAOlHER ONE OF "THOSE
DINNERS \'MERE YOU HIDE A I.Of Of ,Sl0ff1N IT~'
.o. WA.'liM "
Ii~ MOT MU~C.
,_, ..
JllJOOM COUNTY
{)()CTOlf I
HOf/1'5 asw ' 15/E~M'
Pf() 1£ (.Q5t
H~ ft05E T
SOMETIMES l WISH
l ~AD SOMEONE TO
SNUGGLE UP TO ..
f!J<1'fS ~ ltrTU mE.llP
IS ~ flJ 6€ 11 /Nf/M
1'1Ut££R JN n£ ~
FN,(}f(fJO{ Of M~lrl.£
,t°£PICA/. lfE:i€ARCH I
\£;, ~ ~ 11.iE
PJ:l,1'ttJIT Of !1£
kKJR!.P'5 f/{(5 r
PE~M/Wfif
MCCHANK:llL
"O'l<£R. I
by Charles M. Schulz
TUM8LEWEf05 DON'T DO
MUCM FOR ME EITMER ~
by Berke Breathed
by Lynn Johnston
DRABBLE by Kevin Fagan TUMBLEWEEDS
GARFIELD
5Ai1~fAGilON \!> 64.lARAN
IE.t.Ol i"E. UJ5iOME.R'':>
AAP91~~ IS M~ OOL'i
~~=-~CQt.lCE.'2~ ~
MOON MULLINS
THI WRIT! DRECTION .. )bulRE M.AJ(IN<S
Qu1Te-A Fsw ... I 'M L.ATE WIT~ T~E NEW YEAFl'S
~eSOLt.JTloNS' ..
®
~
' T
e'-JT, TEU. ME ... WOULD TI-IE V19fT ~ 8USINe!l6
OR SOCIAL?
by Jim Davis ROSE IS ROSE by Pat Brady
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
I NEeC>
M~E P,APER.'
by Harold Le Ooux
90CIAL W l'Tl-4 JuST A
SMAT TERING OF l!JU&INe55. eEN I
BRIDGE
Nor th·South vulnerable. South
deals.
NORTH
• AJ86
<:;) Q J 101
OS
•A 8 •3
WUT EAST
•ttt7 •QSJt
<:;)J <:;) 8
O AQHI O kl0t86
• J1tt1 •an 80UTB •K• <:;)All tU•t
A 'HOMETOWV COl'P
incorporates man,. 5ound ideas that 1CU1dt> him. declarer would probably
are or use to tht e~perienced tour h:ne settled for tht spade fineae
nament player and ftOne down one. Because ol
That Dr Rosenkran1 1s as l(llOO \\ ut's overcall. however. deda..rer
with the pasteboard5 u with the tlec~ lo place Eut with bottf lhe
pen " borne out by th11 hand from queen of spade and king of dube.
the recent M1ud Pair Champion Since he was ra1st>d and Niucat.ed in
ship at the Fall North American Austria. wha~ better way to play
S
OMAR G
HARIFF _.
CHARLES
Go1E1
0 JJ
•CU The bfddinr: Championthi ps i n W inni ptt the hand lhan on a Vie nna Coup?
....... Wett N~ Eut Ottpite the title of ht' book. it it his [')pclartt won the heart in h&nd.
l 0 J 0 4 NT t 0 bel~f that you should not talk at the ru ffed a aa&mood In dumm1, cuhect
OW. ,.. t <:;) ,... tablt unlu1 you havt M>mtt.hin1 to tht ace of clubland tMn ru All Ma
,.. ,.. say. That Wttt dot not subel-l'tbt trump.. Ht ~me den.a to I( x of
0,.nlftf lu4: A~ of 0 . to that th ry 18 1llustraled by t111 spade and th. queen of dube la
Or. c;.._. Roetnkrana ol Mnte0 dee ion to mah a weak jump OV"tt hand, aod A.J l of ap1.du on the
CftJ it -. o.I)' 11111 ~·· fore. call of tk one h.art o.,.nlnc btd. tab!.. Eut C'OUld not aJford to pan
..,., p"1er. Ille it allo a leadiDI orth bounc..t Int<> Blackwood. and with U.. tttnr of chat.; 90 H .-u
brkl .. t~ Hla new .. Or. RoaenkranJ and h panner forced dowa to Q.a i• .,..., ni.
( .. Bri4n: T... lkNtr'a 0 1..... . ~heel the heut •lam d pitt lO· kil\I, ace and )ack of ...... &ooll tM ,.....-.. "1 Dl•J'• ..,,..., .. pp.. &erferrence by lM oppo.ilioo. lut th'" triUa ud the._•• 11
' I ,
,.,.r~tk, SU .Ht brl111 tlia We t led thti att of d'*mon.dt and the bag .
.........,~~·.;;;=;~&o•n AJ•~m u~tt, and alt0 hilled lO a trvmp. iith 110thtnw to=~~=~~~_,,l==-~~~.;a -....-r.11
0..,.. 0... DAILY ptLOT/ Tu.day,~ 7, 1888
(l)~
Ht "The Collon OIUb" (1984)
Rletlatd Gett. GttgOry Hlnll.
-tt.a&-
®MOW U 'A "The Niiled F11»" (1914)
She'·& Agatha Christie
with a Yankee accent
Iii:..
HOf llAT I HOTlM . WCM!
t wlotltly Deer1Wd" (1t77) Al P• *· Mer1tle Kaler. .. (%)MOYIE
tt "Ullconwnon Valor" PM31 Gent
Hackmen, Ao«lef1 SlO. _..._
1---i TOO Q.Oll '°" OOWOR'I' .,,,,,,,
llllACIB. / L.EtflER
la=-DMICHfNffA UMTTA
lllOVIE ** "Metllslorm: The Destruction
Of Jer~yn" (1983) Jeffrl'y Byron,
Tim Thomerson
Cl) tlOHT Of AT LEAST OHE ~STARS
-7:00-
CISNEWS
~ ENT£RTAINMENT TONIGHT
AICNEWSQ LOYE COHHfCTlON
NEWS
THl&'S COWNtt
WHEEL Of FOftTUNE
llU8IHESS fEIORT
p Jl MAGAZINE
HEAOlH ()WIERS
!=TlELOfl>
• • • "Choose Me" ( 19841 Gene-
vle'lt Bujold, Keith Carridine
IHOO'£NOENT NEWS
-7:30-
1 20NTlET~
PAICE IS RIGHT
WHATS HAPPEHINGh
EYE ON LA.
tia1JON DOUAA CHANCE Of
At.ffTW
l u·A·a·H
NEWLYWED GAME
Wl.1>, WILD WOAlO Of
N9Ml.8 I ~~
PEOPLE'S COURT
MJIAK!'f
RACING FROM SANT A AHIT A
NEWS rrsSHOWTME
Patty Dake and Jmepb Bolotna portray a
coaple wbo reTene roeea to M"Ye tbetr family
OD ••A Time to Trtampb • • toniCbt at 9 OD CBS.
Channel 2.
-t:00-
1) Cl> MOVIE
"A Tll!le To Trunph" (Premiere)
Patty Duke, Josepll Bo4ogfla
I Cit AtPTIDE III MOOHLIGHTINO
O NEWS
• D't'NAS'TY • ADAM SMITH IN THE NEW
· ~ F1'0M MARX TO
MASTEACARD7
8WJVA
81) PRAISE THE LORD m ESPECIAll Y FOR YOU
MOVIE * * ·Cf.mes 01 Pawon" 11984)
Kathleen l umer. Anthony Perkins.
(!)ST AR TflEJ(
• "Nlghidreams-· (19811 Dorothy
LeMay. Jennlfet West
MOVIE * • '11 "Banle Of The Commandot"
-11:30-
1 Cl> SIMON & SIMOH
Q!TONIGHT
I OOOCOUPLE
(!)) ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE G PfTfALL
l =AVE-0 MOTOAWEEK GD PRAISE THE LOAD
!=GALLERY
RICllard Gere. Gregory Hines
-12.'G0-
/"6\ ........,,., 8 Cf) COMEDY BREAK
1.i.1 """'",.; 8 ~ HOUYWOOO
-9:30-
* * * "A V«y Sl)eCial f8VOI" 119651 0 .....,,,~
Rocle Hudson. lestKI Caron • * "Coc~lestiell Heroes" 119561
-10:00-Jose Ferrer T rfMJ' How11d
Roger Moore. Rod S•
-1.2:40-
• Cl) MAOIGAN _,.._
•MOW tt 'A "Once You Kiit " Snnger'' &r~ 8urkt . Caiol Lynlty
... "Hawlli" (Plt1 l of 2)(19M)
Jult Mdr..s. Alclwd H#rla.
•MOW **'I\ "Anatomy Of TtfrOf" (1973)
PIUI lkrtt. Polly Bergen.
~~
-1~--
INEWS
HOU.YWOOO Cl.OllUI' COMEDY TONQHf
AUNTHEFM&Y
PMl8e 1"E LON>
-1:A5-' (l:}MCWIE
t * * "OY« The Brooklyn Bridge"
(1984) Elllolt Gould. Mwgiij• Hem-
lngwey
-2.'GO-
I (I) Cl8 NEWS NIOHlWATai
AECORDOODE 8NEWI ,.
LOYESONOs
MOYIE
•• t "Merry Ctwlsl!MI, Mt. Llw·
rlOCll" (1983) David Bowle, Tom
Conti ~=AILEY t "The Bitcll''.,.p979) JOln Collins,
Micl'olel Coby
-2:26-
CB) MOVIE ••t,; "RazorblCk" (19841 Gtegoty
Harrison, Atltle Whi1eley
-2:30-
.MOVIE • * •,; "Red Dust" ( 1932) Clark
Gable, .leln Harlow.
ID EN THE 8CEHE.8
N>EP9l>EHT NEWS
-2:S5-
(%) CHAAl.E8 atAMPUN ON THE
Fl.MSCEHE
• -2:45-
IB REUGIOUS~
-3:00-
8 MOVIE • * ~ "Gteat Dey In The Morning"
(1956= Mayo. Rober'! Stade ' ~OPEN tlMJ AHOrEW
MOVIE ** ** "Yo)lmbo" (1962) Toshlro
M1tune. Ei;ifo T ono.
-3:30-
(!) FAITH20
Jean Stapleton stars in mystery drama
'Dead Man's Folly' with Peter Ustjnov .
By JERRY BUClt llT......._.,..,
LOS ANGELES -Jean Stapleton
plays an American l}lystery writer
whose "Murder Hunt" pme at an
English estate turns into the real lhina
in the CBS movie "Dead Man's
Foll .'' It~ supposed to be part of the
amusement during a country fair at
the estate. The clues planted by
Stapleton led to the first "victim" in
the boathouse, but somebody has
done the victim in for sure.
However, Stapleton, as writer
Ariadne Oliver, docs not solve the
crime in the manner of Jcuica
Fletcher in "Murder She Wrote."
Leave that to detective Hercule
Poirot in this delicious romp by
Agatha Christie. Peter Ustinov stars
as Poirot and milks the Be~n
detective for every eccentricity:
"Dead Man's Folly," which CBS
will telecast Wednesday, also stars
Tim Pigott-Smith and Susan Wool-
drige (from "Jewel in the Crown")
and Constance Cumminp. It was
filmed entirely in England, particu-
larly at West Wickham Estate.
"We also filmed at a cottage on the
Thames where Queen Victoria once
came to tea," said Stapleton. "It was
also a scene of the Profumo Scandal.
It's on the Astor Estate. The river and
the sky was so beautiful. It helped me
to understand the En&lish landscape
painters. It changes alf the time."
The mystery writer she portrays is
actually an Americanized version of
Agatha Christie. Christie oc-
casionally put herself in (by another
name) in the Poirot books.
"Ariad ne is a great admirer of
Poirot and when she runs into him at
Harrod's she invites him to the
Murder Hunt," said Stapleton, "She
has a hunch there's going to be a real
murder. He is disdainful of bunches
because he works with reason and
logic.
"Of course. there is a real murder.
Two of them. He solves them, but by
the end of the picture he ajves ber
credit for her intuition."
Stapleton. best known as Edith
from .. AU in the Family," is no
stranaer to Aptha Christie. She twice
played her detective Miss Marple on
the su,e in "A Murder Is An·
nounced" and "Murder at the Vicar·
qe." She also played her in "Some-
t!iina's Afoot," a musical spoof for the
Showtime pay television network.
"In my opinion,'' she said. "the
endurin&_quality of the mystery is in
the characters. And ~tha Christie
wrote wonderful characters thft can
be played. Poirot is such a wonderful
character, as is his sidekick. Captain
Hutinp. He's deliahtful. Agatha was
havi04 fun. She made her two
detcctJves like Sherlock Holmes and
Dr. Watson."
Stapleton appeared last month in
Jules Feiffcr's .. Grownups" forSbow-
time. The play, which also starS
'Charles Grodin, Marilu HennCT and
Manin Balsam, will be seen later this
year as pan of the "Great Per-
formances" series on PBS. ·
She will also be seen on a two-hour
"The Love Boat" filmed in Egypt.
The special episode was delayed
because of the Achille Lauro hijack-
ina. which took place off Egypt. It will
probably be shown in the February
sweeps.
"I play an old friend of the
captain," she said. "She's lost her
husband and she transfen her affec-
tion to the captain. But she ends uP.
making a date with Joe Campanella. •
She said she accepted this "Love
Boat" aft.er turning others down
because it offered a cruise on the Nile
RivCT. After the filming she flew on to
visit Israel and Turkey.
Since she left "AJI in.the Family" 1n
1980 she bas bad a number of offers
for a series.
"People bring ideas to me," she
said. ''It would have to be so
stimulating that I would have to do ir.-
Jean Stapleton
rm enjoying the freedom and the
diversity. People a.re COOkif\4 up
thin.as, but it has to be very special to
follow 'All in the Family.'
"An hour series would make more
sense. but it would also have to be
very special because of all the hours
you have to work. It's such a major
commitment. When you do films you
h3ve time off."
Since the death of her husband.
William H. "Bill" Putch, she has sold
their Totempole Playhouse near
Chambersburg. Pa. She said. "I've
pulled up roots in PennsylvaniL I
worked there for 25 ycan.'' Her
children, Pam Putch and John Putch,
are both perfonners, and John has
directed a l 6mm movie that has led
to being promoted by ~ director's
agent.
Stapleton also does a 4S-minute
musical monologue called "The Ital-
ian Lesson." It's from a Ruth Draper
monologue which Lee Hoiby set to
music. She performs it m11nly for
benefits.
-1:00-
1 Cl) STIA CAArf
Q!A-ruM
MOVIE
• • "Bloody Mama" I 1970) Shelley
lwin;·~~BOSS?
JOKER'S WILD
WKAP .. CINCINNA Tl
NEWS
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8!)JOY
-3:35-
(t)MOVIE * * * "The Blues BtothefS" (1980) Jolln Belusht, Din Aytuoyd
CHEECH & CHONG: GET OUT Offl'( ROOM 89 BEHIND TME SC£NES -12:15--,.u,...,, ALL "'""'"'S <Si MOVIE -4:00-
IU;I ~ ,.....,.,, * • '• Unfal1htully VOW$ 119841 (p):vc::;: Dudley Moore. NilSllSSjl Kinslcl ~ ~
Brazilian director tackles
acclaimed American novel
e MOVIE (S)MOVIE -l2".30-By MARY BETH SHERIDAN Kennedy, will be the first North
• • ~ "Mary Jane Harper Cfied list
Night" t 19771 Susan Dey. Kem
***"The Cotton Club" !1984) D Q!LATEHIGHT WrTMDAVID JMOVIE -4:05-•• 1111•,,_...., Americanfilmfor the Argenti ne-bom
AlctlaldGete.Gr100fYH1nes LETT£RMAH **'" 'LaSS1ter' 119841romSelteck, ALBANY, N.Y. -William Ken-director, whose previous credits tn·
(%)MOVIE 8 RAT PATROL Jane Seymour nedy has been called the Homer of elude "Pixnote," a tale about child
l=STAA PRAISE THE LORD
PETER GUNN
MOVIE • • * "The Blues 8<0111tr1" ( 1980)
John 8ellshl Dan A yilroyd
MOVIE
• • "Mar1m's Day" (1984) Rlcherd
Harris, Lindsay Wagner
CARSON'S COMEDY ClASSICS
MOVIE
• •''r "Into the Ntghl" (1984) Jeff
Goldblum, Mlchefle P1elfftf.
(?)MOVIE
• • • • "NolOflOUS (1~6) Cary
G<ant. lngrld Bergman.
-8:30-• 9 GAOW1NO PAINS 0 TIC T~ DOUGH
Cf) TRAPPER JOHN, M.0.
• P.M. MAGAZINE 8'DRAGHET
HONEYMOOHERS
***"' "Mepll1sto (19811 Klaus D THREETHREEO _4:10_ Albany for his searing novels about thieves in Sao Paulo.
Maria B<andaoer. Krystyna Janda (!) 8) INOEPENDENT NEWS f..$)NtGH'T Of AT LEAST ONE the ctty's bums, scoundrels and Babenco picked up the Kennedy
-10:15-• MEllY GAlfFIN DOZEN STARS heroes. novel in Brazil on the recommcn-
CB RE.UGIOOS PAOGRAMMING 9'! ENTERT~ TONIGHT -•:30-Hector Babenco, the Brazilian di-dation of a friend, "The book started
=GROUPS: STORY Of A ft; r:tvi~E THE l RO (!) BUGS BUNNY rector of "Kiss of the Spider to work inside of me; it started to ask *'' Estape From El Olablo" !19831 OJ MOVIE Woman," p vc many Amencans me to be a movie," the 39-ycar-old
-10:30-Jimmy McNocllof T11T10thy van Pat· • * The Clltnese Rtng" (19471 Ro-their fi rst gl1mpie of a Latin Ameri-fil mmaker said. "I said, 'OK. if your
Cl) CAWNG DR. WHITAKER ten Ian<! W1ntllfs. Lou1s CurrK! can prison cell ma film of torture and desire is so great, I'll make yo u a
(8) MOVIE fantasy. movie.·• * • · Trie Lasl American lllfgm· CHANNEL LISTINGS What unites the two men is Francis "The thing is that he's an anist in ~~:,~\111 Lawrence Monoson. Otane Phelan, a booze-ridden Albany bum film," said Kennedy. "His control of
(}), tHDEPEHDEHT NEWS who goes home for final absolution in those two clements, ltis fu sion of
-l l:OO-II KNXT •CBSJ l ., Angl"I!''> the Pulitzer-Prize winning ·no vel, those two clements, were what con-D KNBC NBC •> Anqcles -oa CI>--~ "Ironweed." vinccd me that he could do 'Iron--W1111a1 ~"~ 0 ICTLA .in J • l Angt-t!!i 8 CARSON'S COMEDY ClASSICS g KABC rv 1 A Br, Lo <> Anqeies "We arc talking about an emo-weed.' That's exactly what we .need."
G BIZARRE \L l\FMB 1ca-:.1 5,1n Diego tional landscape I know very well," "lronwccd" is the story of Francis
• WKRP .. CINCINNATI O l\HJ rv •no Los Anqt.'1 .. ., said Babenco about portraying a Phelan, once a crack baseball player . m BARNEY MIU.EA ~ KCS l 1 ARC Sdn D•ego character carved in Albany's De-later the inadvertent killer of a -~~TZ m l(ITV dnrJ I ... :>s Angele., pression-cra landscape. "I do n't see strikebreakerandhis infanfson.Af\er
Ii> CANDI STATON-SUSSEWlli m KCOP f\i '1n11 1 Los Anqp1pc, people in terms of nationalities. fleeing the consequences of his viol-
'1' HIGHT GAU.£RY fll) KCE r r • PBSI Los AnqF-"" professions, boxes.'' ence for more than two decades, he
0:JMOVIE '11> KOCf T\i PBS! Hun tin it on Beach "lronwccd," with a screenplay by returns to his family and a cast of -~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;~:;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~--::..11iiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~!!!~!iiiiii1iiiliilillliill .. a;::=1 ghos~who re5urrecthisput. lUJU.MY THfAfltfS While the 57-ycar-<>ld Kennedy has
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written other screenplays, most
notably Francis Ford Cop~la's "The
Cotton O ub," "lronwccd • is his first
novel to be adapted to lbe screen.
· In separate interviews, he and
Babenco were reluctant to ai ve details
about the project, which they said was
in an "embryonic" stage. Kennedy
said a ••major studio" has made an
offer, and such names as Sam
Shepard, Jack Nicholson and Gene
Hackman have been tossed about for
the role of Francis Phelan. The
producen include Gene Kirkwood
("'Rocky" and "Gorley Parle") .
Babenco and Kennedy churned out
the screenplay in a 12-day literary jam
session at Kennedy's Albany area
home this fall.
Kennedy, the author of "Legs,"
"Billy Pbclan's Greatest Game," "O
Alben)'!" and "The Ink Truck." shot
to fame after winning a MacArthur
Foundation Genius gran1 and a
National Book Critics Circle Award
in 1983. The Pulitzer came last year.
The awards followed a long period
of obscurity, during which the author
worked as a journalist. professor and
screenwriter, scribbling stories about
Albanians real and imaginary while
he struggled to pay the bills. Thirteen
publishers rejected "lro nwced"
before writer Saul Bellow wrote a
scathing letter to a publishing house
that had dropped the book. The
publisher. Viking, changed its mind.
As one of Albany's bcst·"n9wn
cheerleaders, Kennedy would like to
sec most scenes shot in his home-
town. The office of New York Gov.
Mario Cuomo has already offered its
assistance in arranging shooting lo-
cations.
Babenco came to d irecting in the
mid-70s after traveling extensively
and playing minor roles in Spanish
films.
The d irector switched from Portu-
guese-language films in o rder to
appeal to an international audience
and obtain funding he could not find
in the cash-starved Brazilian fi lm
industry. However, coming up with
the money for "Kiss of the Spider
Woman" took more than three yea.rs..
he wryly noted, and he nearly ga ve up
on doing the film i~nglish.
The relationship between director
and writer seems harmonious, with
Babc neo spca.ki n' of Kennedf s
openness to SUUC'ttons and Kennedy
praising Babenco's desire to stick to
the characters as they appeared in the
book .
However. Kennedy, a self-de-
scribed film addict, does not e"tpect
the film to completely mirror the
book.
"The dialogue is there, the charac-
ters are there, the visuals a.re there~ the
real world will be the~~ aaia. "I hope it will not mi nt the
book, but it will not be the book. It
will be something else."
101 DALMATIANS 111
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LOS ANGELES (AP) -Louis
Gossett Jr. was only looking fo r a
doctor to treat a skin condition
incumd during the making of the
movie "Enemy Mine."
"l really didn't mean to scare the
doctor," be explained.
Gossett was on location in Iceland ·
for bis role as an alieo from another
world. 1t took many hours in makeup
for him to tum into the reptilian alien.
"AIJ that mak~ wu aivina me
skin and eye pro~ms and I doctor
was caUcd lo the let." he said.
"She took one look at me, IClUmcd
in horror and rao away."
The doctor later returned to treat
Gouett when be wu out of makc\lp.
Seven shows kick off new year·
The new yara.rrives with a Oourilh
this week as eeven local lhQter
Jf9UP' na.ai from the winp with their
initial oft'erinp of 1986.
fint in .line is South Coast Reper.
tory, which unveils tbe West Coat pmn.iere or a new comedy, ..,,._ P:r," \Oftipt. Thunday finds c0 1y continwna to be kiq with A.Ian Ayckbourn's • .,...._ Stellt"
openiq at the Laauna Moulton
Pt.aybOUle and Neil Simon's "c.me aa..Y .......... It the Sao Oemente
Community Theater.
Round.in& out the week, also in a liaht.er vein, are ''Seme ef MJ Beta
,..._..,, at the Westminster Com-
mwtlty Theater, .. AU Beeaae of
........ a\ the Huntinaton Beach
Playhouse, "he lmperiuee el BeJiac
Eannl" by the Ana·Modjeska Play-
ers add "Ready"'-v .. An, C.B."
at the Garden Grove Community ~ter. All will be openina Frida)' ~·s "forcianer.. involves an
Enalilhman vacationin• in the
American South and fe1aning un-
familiarity with the lanauage because
of his lhyn.eu. Jeffrey Alan Chandler
takes the title role, with Ann
Gillespie, Art Koustik, Robert M~
nauahton, Anlela Paton, Don Toole
aad Michael ''Tulin completing the
cast under the dmction of Ron
Laaomarsino.
·1 ..
Tms
'The Foreianer" will be presented
on the SCR main S\qe Tuesdays
throuah Fridays at 8 p.m., Saturdays
at 2:30 a~d 8 and Sundays at 2:30 and
7:30 until Feb. 9 at the Fourth Step
Theater, 6SS Town Center Drive.
Cosa Mesa. Call 957-4033 fo r ticket
information.
British humor also infesu "Ta.king
Steps," a tw<KOuple romantic farce,
at u,una, where CraiJ Aemina is
directing. John Greenslade
Catherine Rowe, Steve Shaffer'
Michael Greer, Deanna Watkins and
Michael BieHu comprise the cast.
The comedy will play Tuesdays
through Saturdays at 8 p.m. and
Sundays at 2:30 p.m. until Feb. 2 at
the Moulton. 606 Laguna Canyon
Road, Lquna Beach. Reservations
are taken at 494-0743.
"Some of My Best Friends" are
animals, babies and plants -with
which the play's l'eading character
discoven be can converse -at
Wettmin11er, where Jaa Afllelioo is
directina the Oranae County
premiere of the comedy. Amona the
cast memben Aft Lany Blake, Carol
Albriaht, Kcrenc Barnard, Gi~r ~ranci1i Tony Grande, Helen tua-
11ns, Wayne Mayberry, Alan
Schneider and Ed Stcneclc.
Curtain time Is 8:30 Fridays and
Saturdays throuah Feb. 8 at the
playhouse, 7272 Maple St., West-
manster. Reeervations 995-4113.
At Huntinaton Beach. witchcraft is
the topic of the Jonathan Troy
comedy under the direction of Scott
Zuchman. The show will be pres-
ented Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30
through Feb. l S in the playhouse, l~ted in the Seaclit:f Village sbop-
p1na center at Main Street and
YQrktown Avenue, Huntinaton
Beach. Reservations 832-1405.
Oicar Wilde's "The Importance of
Deina Earnest" opens a ~week
end run Friday at the Anaheim
Cultural Center~ 931 N. Harbor
Blvd., Anaheim, Wlth Ross Clarie
directing. Don Barren, Todd
Breau&h, Marion Christie, Jonn
Lander, Ann Marie Mcfadden. Mike
Owens, Carole Phillips and Debi
Schmidt perform in the classic com-
edy Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m.
and Sundays at 2 p.m. through Jan.
26. Reservations 937-0379.
No information was received on
the San Oemente and Oarden Grove
produetion1, both o( which were
tchedulcd to open this weekend.
The~ are no productions clo&iaa
this weekend. with all five lhows
already on the boards continuiQ&
their respective ensaaements. They
include:
••1..apu" in the Forum Theater
on the Festival of Arts aroundi. Laauna Beach (634-1300), Thursdays
and Fridays at 8 p.m., Saturdays at 2
and 8, Sundays at 2 and 7 p.m.
through Feb. I.
•"A aieru u.e•• at the Grand
Dinner Theater, I Hotel Way,
Anabcim (772-7710). ni&btly except
Mondays at varying cunam times
throu&h Jan. 19.
•"Kin Me, &ate" at Sebastian's
West Dinner Playhouse. 140 Ave.
Pico, San Oemcnte (492-9950),
Wednesdays through Saturdays at 8
p.Dh, Sundays at I and 7 p.m .. until
Feb. 2.
•"My Fair Lady" at the Cunain
Call Dinner Theater, 690 El Camino
Real. Tustin (838-1540), nightly ex-
cept Mondays at varying curtain
times lhrouah Feb. 2.
•"Caralnl" at the Harlequin Din-
ner Playhouse, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd.,
Santa Ana (979-S51 I), nightly except
Moo.days at varying curtain times
throU&h Feb. 9.
Newscasters anchored to each other
Massachusetts broadcasters among the few
on-camera news team couples in the country
By BART ZIEGLER love with each other to have
• ' ,..._._, chemistry on the air. you don't even
NEEDHAM, Mass. _ Chet Cunis have to rttlly like the other person,"
and Natalie Jacobson may be bus-she continued, "Just as long as
bind and wife at home, but when they professionally somehow (you are)
take their seats behind the news clicking as you're talking and think-
i1 together." anchor desk at WCVB-TV, their
private lives don't even enter the acobson and Curtis certa.inly have
· more in common than other co-P'~~n I sit on that set I don't think anchors, but Curtis, 46, said that
of Chet and Nat," said Jacobson. "I bond could become a handicap.
don't have time to think of that. I just "The~ are times when the fact that · bo th • )j we arc married makes us comfonab&c think a ut c story I m tel na you... with each other ... and '--ina com-Added Curtis: "We don't even l,1111; come to work together, mostly." fortablccould, if you didn't work at it.
The couple, married 1 o years ago Lranslate into a lack of energy when
after meeting at the station, arc one of you 're on the set." he said. "So maybe
the few husband-wife news anchor sometimes .we might have to pump
teams in the nation. ourselves up a little more."
Nationally, the most well-known "We have professional disagJU-
couples are on Cable News Network, mcnts about placement of storiC$,
where Chris Curle and Don Farmer about what is the lead (story), bow
share the prime-time newscasts long should it be. We don't sec eye to
"Prime News" and "CNN Evening eye on that and I don't expect we ever
News," and Lois Hart and Dave will," Curtis said.
Walkerco-anchor"Takc Two" in the "And we also don'talwayscome to
aft.emoon. each other's defense just becaux
The two CNN couples already we~ we're married," added Jacobson.
married when they joined CNN at its "We're very much individuals. If
beginning in 1980. One other married Chet has a problem with a collC!JUC
couple at CNN, Lou Dobbs of or employer or boss, I stay out of 1t."
"Monc~ine" and sports anchor Curtis said he doesn't know of any
Debbi ura. met at the network. negati vc reaction from station cm-
ln the ighly competitive Boston ployces or vicwcn to WCVB's selcc-
market, Jacobson and Curtis have tion of a married couple as co-
anchorcd news shows toacther at anchors,
WCVB for more than a decade, a.rid Several years ago, Curtis said, he
for the past 31h rears they have and his wife balked when the station
presented the two nightly newscasts. considered promoting them as the
"Co-anchoring is a very difficult busbando:and-wife news team.
thin&.' said Jacobson, 42. "You can't "I don't want people to watch us
just sit next to that person. For it to solely because we're married, (that)
work, you have to have some lcind of we're Mr. and Mrs. News. I want
on:-air relationship there. people to watch us because they think
"I don't think you have to be in • the product we present is better than
Anchor coaple Chet C .. urda. Natalie Jacobeon.
the competition, that we le.now what
we're talking about."
Judging by fan mail and ratings -
they are consistently either No. I or 2
in the Boston television market -
viewers seem to agree with him.
Jacobson said many people who
wntc WCVB consider her a role
model for professional women.
. That interest among female view-
ers ~ed about five years ago when
JacobSon was pregnant with the
couple's daughter. Lmdsay Dawn.
Curtis has two older daughters from a
previous mamagc.
Jacobson continued to anchor the
news until the day before she gave
binh. a decision she says signaled
many viewers that "it's OK to be a
professional and not to hide the fact
you're pregnant. I got tons of letters
about that."
Despite their high salaries (it bas
been reported they jointly make S 1.2
m11J1on a year) and high raungs.
Jacobson and Curus sa1d they maJcc
sacrifices because of their fame.
"You Jive up a lot when you're
doing this." said Curtis. 'Tm not
knocking the job. But there's a price
you pay. too. in terms of your private
life."
"I JUSt never got off on walking into
a restaurant and having people re-
cognize me." said Jacobson. 'Td
rather come in a side door."
Music publishing 'recession-proof'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -In the pen::ent.anabadycaryou'rcJusttlat."
entertainment world, music publish-Chuck Kaye, chairman of Warner
inahaslonabeenconsidered the plain Bros. Music. said music publishing
little sister of the more ~orous · can provide a songwriter with income
movie, TV and record mduslries. for 15 years, the length of the
That imqc may be chan&ing. bow-copyriabt set by statute. •
ever. "Music is so subliminal," Kaye
"Some people see music publishing said. "It floats around you every-
as a dull, niclcel-and-<iimc business where -in the elevator. in airplanes
because publishers collect very mod-"
est royalties from thousands of A songwriter is entitled to royalties
copyrights they own or administer all every time bis song 1s used. Wllh the
over the worl~1" said James Harmon, current ceilina on royalties fued at
chairman of New Yor'k-bued Cha~ 4.S cents per sons.
pell A Co .. the world's larpt mUSJc While the amount may seem small,
publilher. consider Mic hael Jackson 's
But Hannon says music publishing "Thriller.. album, which sold 37
is a stable source of income that million copies. Assuming be received
doesn't have the volatility of the other 4.5 cenu for four so~ be wrote on II?.' of the entertainment industry. the record, his publishiQ& income
In fact. t would say it is almost would be S6.6 million.
recession proof," Harmon said. ''If "Blowin' in the Wind," for cum-
you have a aood year, you·~ up JO , pie has earned Bob Dylan about 5100,000 a year since he wrote it in
HepbanJ hosts
Spencer Tracy
movlesoa PBS
LOSANOELES(AP)-Katharine
Hepburn will be the host and narrator
of a retrospeeti vc of Spencer T~
movies now bcina prepared for PBS.
Hepburn. who ttamld in nine filn\I
whb Tncy, will rem inisce about bet
fonncr co-tW' and talk to 1uch stan 11
Elizabeth Taylor, Richard WkSmatk.
Robm Waper, loen Bennett and
director Slanley Kramer.
Tnicy. •ho d*1 in 196 7 ahottly
after c0moletlna ··oue11 Wbo'• Com-l.al To niD.Der'I"' wifb H~ won rwo AQdemy A wardl fOr KliQa.
They were for ··captains
COWM10U1" in 19l7 ud ''loya Tawn~ln 1931.
Dlvtd Hee6ey IJld Jou Kramer, wtlo colllboftlect on mtilr' _. ..
about,..... AIWre, Jwly o.taMllld ~-:-~·!l!e~ b MOM ..-UMf ~:New
Yott. l .
1962. The IOftl "As Time Goes By."
made famous in the 1943 film
"Casablanca." earned more than
S 100,000 in royalties last year.
"That's why people are reactr, to k.ill
to Ft hold of sona~· ts, • Kaye said. "There a.re you've never
heard oflivina in Be -Air on royalties
YOUNG
iiOLMF.S
from music publisbiOJ:"
Jackson recently p&Jd $4 7 .5 million
for ATV Music. which owned more
than 4.000 copyrights, including 25 I
sonp by the Beatles.
Ex-Beatie Paul McCartney's MPL
Communieations has bought up
thousands of copyrights. including
such old standards as .. Sentimental
Journey" and "Autmum Leaves,"
and the sonn from such hit musicals
as ''Grcasc.:r
In addition to Warner and Chap-
pell & Co., CBS Songs and EMI
account for the lion's share of the
industry's estimated $7SO million
annual revenue.
A second sou~ of pubHshing
revenue is created each time a sona is
performed in any medium -radio,
TV. nightclubs or concerts. This
"performance income" is monitored
and collected by two competina
performance rifbts societies -the
American Society of ComJ)09C11..
Authors & Publishers and Broadcast
"" PU FECT TIAJI.,,
-NCR_.. .. .,,.._ -·-· -..i --·-· ..... ----.. 11'Ml'1 ·--_. ..... ----n --· ... _ .... _
CJIJ) ...
u-~ClltmT
~·Ill ~~.-m.COUT
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ASCAP and BMI license their
rcpenoirc to all music users. pnmar-
ily broadcasters, but also hotels. bars.
circuses, ice shows, concert
promoters and companies such as
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"W.e monitor the perfonnances
and pay our members based on the
amount of usage," ASCA P President
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impossible -to monitor every per-
formance or every work. David said
ASCAP monitors 60.000 hours of
radio programmina each year and
30.000 hours of TV in North Amen-
ca.
A third major soul't'C of publishing
revenue comes from the hccns1ng of
music to advCT'l.isen for use in
commercials and to movie com-
panies for use in films.
Last year, Warner hccnscd Cole
Porter's "Anything Goes" to the Egg
Council for its "Anything Goes With Eas" commercials.
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IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANQI
C....,..., llU L!twli1 .. 1 1151 Ctnaa•elMu MU c..ta!l!M •1411.,.,...,.
~ Ii& retttlulllt B .. uuful new 28r 28a Fully remodeled 3 BA 2ba, 1Br 198. 1922 Wallace NEWPORT MARINA APT8 l'l'Pr~""llllP.!"'llP.~!!Pi~ ;;;;;:::;:;;;;:;:;1!!!!!!!!!~~;2!! 18,. home off PCH TWnhrnet Poot, 19a. teo-2 ~r gar, new crp!•· Gar, retrlg, upatah. No Luxury 28r 2Ba. flirplo, I r • .., nr
ut41t1 l!Gt coet nit crta. gat. pa11o. lndry drpt. paint & appll a. pe11 $510 Agt 550-1015 micro. Encl O*age. ~rvt S.C.P12 Tenn/pl, 1m0k'g fNIU\ ADS
Attrectlw 2 atory In Olde hkup. Micro, frplc, ca* $1300. mo. 780·1519 _ beact\, Sl<450/mo. S0try <>k S350 548-8178 ev UU'1ll
CdM. 38A 2ba. No petl ~~vte!:vM~5 ;~7/'~: Nice 2Br 2Ba up1tr1. 1 car LbR10 21 BR frptc, gar .. patio, no peta. 760-0919 ' Ma Magnum. P.I.? Stir old lD£ FREE
Rilfa. 11350, 494-3082 Paul or MOii Ann• gar, OIW, lrplc. L .. 1950. I· ne, clean SHO. Nwpt Penn 3 & 4 Br 298 Spanf1h Man1lon NB M
C'*"*'a c::tMrt 2BA ·1ba <495-e&.47 Ask about our VIiia Rentals 675-7015 548-8300 IQf appllcelion. yrty rnt11 11050-$1350'. Beckbay. NNI, quiet. Cal•,
!W>UM, petlo & ~· Holday Spec:talt Unlurn, very n ice 28R M ... Ver!'-38' 28a S950. VIiia R«ttal1 1575-7015. helpful. Rent? 673·8338
Mu1t enjoy WOf'klng with
children. Experlence
helpful.
11000/mo. Oell 4 ... 210 1 ~ 1 ..... IHI 18A Avail 113. $800/mo :•!~0:,~·5~~~2~~·· Charming 2BR 1.BA, patio, NB 2bf 1ba, bk yrd, t>Mch, 142-lllJ Lo..., 38.-+ MP• twn. -~ Agt675-6000644-1211 _g__ utll pa.ld.nearlldoahope parkng, n--tmkr AVAIL weotteranexcellentben-
rm trp1c ~Of PCM "5Tmo. 3iM 2~BA. 2 f M ... Verde [)pix 38' 298 No pell S900fmo yr1y IMMEO. $400+'..Wtll eflt program. paid va·
lmrMctlate'occ:uc> l2000 lrpl1, gdnr, lrg yd1. 2D 12 la no pell. New decor: 1573-0343 ' 67S-5796/H 851.0470/W cations & holld1!; bOnul
mo 509'.4 ACACIA Port Card II f . n r S 1000/mo 9S7.e<>71 Npt Penln M/F 20.-.35 n· FOUND: fem Germ Shep, program and tal ln.-
rn-2141. o.p Ontoi ~~~~r 1~~~ Avall ri"oc~m7~~41 James. •YI• •• E~~~~~f,~~~;9~~ amkr. S375+ 13 uu1 Nice btkltan. lem ~helg:. mlK ~;e, .. ~::,~~~·
C 2 1 " ' S a.4! Amigos Way 64~ nr lido. Oa\19 e7Sa50 pup, go6d ma-Uttle oron. ju9t h .. 2BR 2\.iBA condo w/gar. 18R Garden Apt. Beamed "25/mo. 18R tBA, aH . tlon blk/whl, male gray Appllcant mull apply In ..-y. Stand new 2 lty, ~mile to bctl. Pool & spa. oelll s Cable avail Nr bltln1. Laundry room, FUf\N 2Br 2Ba w/tg patio .Prof/Fem 25+ non amkr, Hulkle mix, male Bffgle 900 at Dally Piiot, 330 ~s ~~~·3 S975/mo 531·5575 Falr~ounds. S C Plaza & near 7~. ~~h'~'t"' f:n:~11~ b:le.:~ & ~~ ~~'. :~::: :~ii!:~~~·~~~'· :'!st Bay St.. Coata
lrplcs. mstr bdrm •NEWPORTCREST• PaclflcAmphttheate< No TSLMGMT a.42·1803 .,., Npt.S350.S4'8·~7alt5 . Mela, Ca. Apply 9-11 w/beleny & OCMf'I vtew, 38R~ den 2'it8A pets Avail Jan 15. FURN Studio apt. Avail FOUND lg Orange Persian Lm or 2·4 p.m. (Clrcula-
lge Jae. bath·tub, fam-rm. Twnhome. Appx 2000 sl $530/mo 641·3078 •n • .. now LuK. loo nr Futilon Prof.IF IMklng same lor Cal vie Seashore Dr. Npt tlon Dept.).
din-rm, lndry rm, lge kltch dbl gar, cv1tm oat< bar. 2ed lBa. cpts, drps, gar $626 mo 28R, 18A, petlo, l1td $700/mo 640-6220 c~~'! ::;5 ~~· ~";;5~f Beech 6412-3067 1-.-.. -ic-al-/"'.":Dn:---ta-J:--S:::-:-IH:::-: WI·•" bnna. Courtyard, eleg. decor, pool, lennl1. No pets AdllS prel $700 pool. laundry room East-LUXURY BAYFRONT . . . FOUND Pair of reading -
gar.Aval!. Feb. 1, 111, IUI walk to bctl $1500. Bkr, Lse. Avl 111 5418-7234 aide toe . clote to alt. 1500 eq It 2br, 2ba, lam. Prol M/F, apeclou1 38R 0181181 on Irvine Ave. lllTAL &llllTllT
& MC. Reta req. S2500. Sherry Coshow 6-46-6002 28d -d W--1419 E. Bay. rm loft flp xtras dbl COM hM. Pvt bath, gar. cro11 lrom Nwpt Hrbr Full time po1it1on for
·mo. Mlct\MI, 548-S.49 -•-rm63, c:pts2, Orps.5p•!te< TSL MGMT 642·1803 gv. $1350 6"2·96Se Close lo bch. 1650. HS 557-fS9341 motivated profeaalonal In *-•••-* paid ..-411 1-M ---' • 673-0822 · N tPort 8Mch 01 New beaullful large 38R 111 ••1Pfl 2566 Orange "B" $595 Newport acrosa the ltrMt. 1~1r IMllll Found· Whlte/blk/orange busy ~801 • 28A, lrplc, o•r. w/d. -( 1) 28R 1'~8A, lrpl $7$0. .,.,r9 Prof, reep pereon to 1hr lrg cat . Galax Newport lice. 646-801 s 14100/mo. 760-()909 2200 al con.do/Home. 2BA ,,,..,BA El slde TwnhM. (2) Bachelor $475 utll incl $925/mo. 38A 2BA lower dee: NB. home. W/O, lurrt Be h c II ~8-3270 c1......1 I/ ti ... , 2 Mstr BR s+ BR suite. pV1 patio. 276 Cabrillo. PASH PROPS 120.94122 unit, gar, laundry room. rm avail S4SO/mo 5100 ac · a wnca _ ct ~
Nice collage 2BA Iba, 3BA, F/P, ove<IOOka pool $675/mo. 6•0·0639 -a<:ross lrom beach. cleaning' 531.3776' LOST Beagle Puppy, trl· *..-nm* frplc. 1 car gar. Walk to 2 car gar Immediate -Nice 2Br 2Ba. bltna. d/w, 2 10 Grant color female "Daisy"
t>ch. $975/mo 673-1039 Occup81}cy $1800 per mo. 2BR 1'i'iBa Twnhse, no $625 No peta. N11mkre TSL MGMT 6412-1803 Reep F 25 1Mk1 aame F CM irea Very sad ehll: Statt posltlona with Newp. 11~ l 4 No pe1s, non-smokers. pets. no gar Avail Jan 15. 642,7528 or 760-14118 ----------22·28. To find & rent apt drenll Ca.II 641e-1728 Ctr CPA llrm Advenc.-'-Wtl Mtu (ll.a) ll• t••• $565/mo 642·741041 --- -IOWFlllT In NB or CM. 675_72419 _ ment & gd benefit• .
28R f',~BA Twnhse unit 1 " •· ••• 28R lba, p'f't yard. own NICE large 3 Bdrm 2ba, 18r 1ba + blt·lns utll Incl Lost butterfly pin, red Degree+ 3 yre. exper
car gar , $750/mo *T11••1ffl* garana. New carpels & encl gar, no pell. Mesa S5001M ' Resp. prof 1.em to lhr Irv wings, diamond center reQ 759.0101
631· 1169 or 873·3117 -•-det Mar S750/mo Avail TILllEn 111-1... ~e Non smkr. $330 + Family helr1oon. *SPACIOUS Exec. bay paint. S530/mo. lmmed Jmmed 364-605& Iv mag .; utils & c19P.. 651.0$03 REWARD. 963--02 l9 * la, Ul'l lfl
view, elegant, remodel occupancy 851.041241 ----3 PACIOUS APARTMENT -PIT Insurance olc, airport 2 BA 1 ba. dbl gar avail
now $725/mo No pets
5'48 Bernard 6-46-3627
2BA + Retreat S 1700 mo 2BR 2ba on Victoria. nr POOL Patio, lrptc, X·toe Rmmt needed lor Mllr LOST male Gold Lab, area 852·8573
•YOUN,G FAMIL y Ideal. 41 Newport 81. Squeaky 18r S580 281 SISeO. S500 1 MILE~~~~5~EAN br/ba/~ In 3bf 2ba hm HarbOf' & Wiiton, CM on
BA 2 i.BA Townhome. clean w/lreth pal'nt. MC. Uni E·llde 557-2841 I ~!~mo~~~'!:.~~ C.M 12121 Reward. 646-541 13 ACCOUNTING Clerk, PIT. 3~~ 2g~ .. ~~o~~~tn~ ava1~I .~-. $595, no pets. 990-2962 Pvt 1 Br, frplc, pool, patio, Westclllt 28R 28A. pool, REWARD Slberlan HusJcy ~':i~,~~\~s:~l:s c~ri IJS -gar No pets 399 w Bay lrple Yr lse, $900/mo Room to sttr by ocean & blk/whl male bfn/blue pets $98 mo 6441-9079 5e0 * 2Br 298 nr SC Plza, S.A St se 15 1550-a357 Cell Jolene 646-6398 bay Choice 1oc $200 t eyes nds med. Bal Pen Patsy 760-8866
nice landscape Gar· 3BR 2b1 dupleX. upstairs, $700. No Pets 722-8011 -_ 48A 2ba. Frplc, 11oua1, o-=-------,.-Patio, carport, pool, ~ L-•Tlll s200 sec 673-0632 673·6017 or 41941·3685 lCOllm PHUU
lrplc. jac, pvt sundeck. , 8 $75 2BA H\BA pduOu\ "ngll' nnt' Sep enlr bdrm/bath, S M LETS Bank rec's, multlpte Mt ol
-Cea_tt_al _____ lOl-..291 ~!:' ~. '11:1~~~· Bltlns. 2 car parking. Lg 2Br 1 lo\ a twnhM-t1yle TownhouH. Greenbelt, 6 two bt'droom dpl' Balboa Island. $367 Avt CRA • books. send reeume to
26 W/0 50 yrds to bctl. Apt w/pallo. '(.d & ~ar laundry rm All bltlns. 1/ t 5 F~m only 67$.8803 Consumer health, Inc.,
LO Attractive 58R 3BA 71411~ S 1395/mo yrty Call te95 No pets 48-5&0 2078 Thurln Student to lhr 38A ANSWERS 14'01 Dove, Suite 290 . :.~ S f;~le~!.n!~; Avail mid Jan SSOO's 2BA Debbie 731-3128 wlmds & •WTllH.. TSL MGMT 6412· 1603 Nwpt 8ch home w/same Nwpt Bch. CA 92e80
..... IH2 oocupted. 241 hr notice to ~~~s ';;!Zt ;:ug~9-~~: all 6_wkdys Beautiful 1 & 2Br saoo Up. SHARP 28R. CPI• & drpa, $2415/mo 642-1884 c~~~ p~~
;=:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Show. Marshal Plan Inc. agt cost 38R. 3BA POOi Incl gas cOOklng, heet & dllhwaaher, garage, no I t I W tt4 27•• VOICE ADVERTISING
SECRETARY
Br-"-.• ..... a or Claudia. ------S 1800/mo, ?indr & pool hot water Incl enct gar. ....... ta I I la a. ....... ......... -pell. ~01rno. 5418-6279 * Someone who hu poise llJ,111 (213) <450..04115 CM ILIFFI malnt lnct ISO· t399 2323 ELDEN Open 1 -5. Specloua 3br 2ba lrplC. 'ln I st year's rent Compatible male writer has the ability to ralae his .... T IUll MESA DEL MAR-3-4 Lrg 28A 18A house w/gar 1100'1 Ill HA Belly Wall 549-7954 age 32· ... kl a peaceful eyebrows Instead of rais·
·--· Bdrm, lge lot. $149,500. & yard S750/mo Aak for A 1astelul decor w/frple & *Lrg 1 & 2Bdrm. newly ~~;,..c•te;~1nfo~lnth1t ~~~~~SN~~~[~ f~~11::~~a:e~ ~~~~~~ Ing his VOICE
Can ba bought with only Prine. only. 546-00741 fOf' Jlm/agt 631-7370 gar 539-e 191 agt fee redec: 'quiet, cool $530.up dren welcome. 964-2087 lorm handyman/houaealt Pt11ta1ls •• 250 d 1 lit~ lnlo & appt. Compare! You'll rent 38A _ 18841 Monrovia 5418·0338 -1 X 1:;.; ____ ,_....;-..--· own oqua """'---------Beautiful Big Ca.nyon 28r TOP AREA MESA PINES flTIUS dut es. Int back ·•· t>uyer.Cheeperthanrentl llPUFAaYll. 2BA nr OCC $750 tncts ~ Oen. great loc. •STUNNING Lg 1 & 3Br BACHw/carpona5410 CEITHS, THllS , ground/refs Call Jettlor WllPlln
Nicely lurnllhed condo lmmac.3BA 2ba.hm.New gar toot Ktd. 539·6191 Sl 4IOO/mo 759•7602 2Ba Garden Apt. Poot IBORMw/garage$64IO SWl-C .... s resume (7 141)960-14181 Looae up to 12 lbs In '4
wl1h mirrors. bar and cpts/palnt. Xtra lrg family agt cost _ · S555 & S725 710 W 18th PATIO pool, spa Quiet. IHCll 1 Ser Clllftl ftr I tat ~~roogea!'.~~ ~~=~
privet• deck room w/used brick flr• Easlalde -clean 38R 1BA Ill CAIYM * •STUNNING Lg 1BA Gar-No pe1s 549·24417 Mft. ry, 2740
place $134.000. hse. Obi gar, No pets 3 Bdrm, 2'h ba. executive den Apt. Pool & rec rm •,eta. lleMfs peanut butte<. For your
Agt Pat Cobb 67S.2D13 $795/mo. 548-USO townhome View. pool, $555. 710 w 18th WI lffll A OWi .,.. ..a, t to 6. $75 . Eaatslde Costa copy, send S:i, check or
LUll-tmll/Ulf
ea.ta Mesa prime loc 2
8drma, 2'h ba, air cond ,
nice ywd, comm pool
and epa. s 13$,000.
Acf.UUIJI •..• , ...., ........
•~ 1acunlltennla $1350/mo Want a selec:11on ol great d M sl I 276 money order, to WHIP lnprtlnc• 1061 Good posalbltltles ... oo Days 2l3/384.3773 38A1'i'i8AdshWlhr.garb. llvlng?Wecanofferany· ~ esa, ng e DIET 328 N Newport
-bch bungalow nice E·Slde ev/wl<nds 71411760-0671 ' dlsp Twnhouse style. thing from a 1mall aptto ~ Cabnllo 640• 839 Blvd 's1e • 115. Newpof1 Ill lllYll 111Kt address Utlls free Call _ _ __ S725/mo. 964-14412 a 41 bdrm hOU9e II look· VV S80 Single car garaoe. Beecn. CA. 92663
Absolute bargain! Pres-539-6191 agt cos1 BIG CANYON Condo Gotf Ing In CM, NB, or HB A par1menh storage only. 32S.J 17th •-L I
hg.lous 3 bdrm, 2'h bath --..--LllllY ,._.. trntge 2BA 2ba pvt gar, SS50, MOVE-IN BONUS think ol u1 first lor that Place C M 646-5137 ~• .. I
eitectwnhme.Pool.spa -·· pool11ennis $1500/mo 18drm,A/C,pool,earport cholceolldeal llVlng Newpor1 8 eachSo E/slde Costa Mesa latttactila 3112 Cat:rn~at~%~~:=~ sr:c~d~:t!~;.~tb:k.I~ 759.5597 ~97·5•7 1 No ~t~41~~~3:raza TSL~2·1603 I :1111 lhtl ""····I storafg, sngle w/electrk: MIPPM'r.Tlll
760-8702 Of 631-1266 COIOf' S 1095 6412-9666 B~p~1~~;. ~~~ O~b1::" S565Jmo. lrg beaut l BA, h H Ttiit 1Hi ~~ r.'~;; 11 encl 95 646-0988 O~w':t~~ ~~a~:
WM~R
.. .. . . .
FIUl&YYIEW
BLUFFS 3 BR 2 bath
by owner. s210.ooo
Cell 760-1108
Mesa de 3BR 2BA Vu $1500 Agt 6414.5535 all bl1ms. trple. Muat see tBr 18a. ctose to bctl & it1111t ---iffi
nu crpt. peint $1200 _ 366 Avocado shopping All ullls pd Newport Buch No STORAGE GARAGES lllSEL TlllllCWI
gdnr incl 64'0·1539 BLUFFS 38r 2Ba. new TSL llWCEMllT $4150/mo 661 ·61412 )l'<I• l!\ir o .\~, '·'' 20. . Enroll now al GOLDEN -----crpt, drps. paint OIW 6•2 9•12 ., ... 2 1603 t2x & 12K2l WEST COLLEGE MESA VERDE EKe<:ul1ve $ \200 No pets 759·0666 .. · .. or""' -DPLX Lge 28A lba, ocean I J' I 111111 Npt Sch/Costa Mesa area Call 895-6306
41BR 3ba. A~ood spa $620 Etside lg 2br 1ba 'IU Lndry hkups. 2 car 645~1104 241 Hr access 5418·3878
Gardening & spa serv1ee DECO.AA TOA PERFECT pool 2 persons mu n~ gar S750 mo avl 1mmed Coaaercial Eapltyatat
S 1400/mo 5416-9950 28R 2 rBa den Unit pets 6"6·5 t37 496· 74178, 760· 13 13 C - -ne~t 10 pool Air & n1ghty · SH ltatatt 2676 I .E. S.lt/ltat
PLUSH CONDOS Over upgraded A'll 1mmed ff Ht. ltac• 2140 1 BR near General Hospl· • Dt•t1tic1 3011
streams & lalls Gar S 1795fmo Call 6410·5321 ..,...8.,.B69U IBA, 41 bike from beach, all tat View Patio Stove la11at11/0ffict Ital AoDsECLEANING w/opnr. micro, w/d hkup -.;;;;. U ._ 2711 18r $750 & 2Br s 1100 EAST BLUFF 68R 4ba T /H ulll paid 207 Chicago. Cpt/drps $500/mo Avail Women needed, good pay,
2Br WIHcluded view Wll·P Close church. SChl. APUTIEnS Apt 41. $4125. 985·•9541 Jan 21, 5413-7375 525 sq ft. S425/mo. good ~oure .• Call ~ob-
Needed to ... 1st busy
newspaper Sales Oepaf1-
ment. Job duties Include
answering ptlonfl, r•
cord keeping, typing (60
wpm) and assistance In
varlovs prG)«ts. Send
resume or appty In per·
son to •
ltllHanttltfJ
·~ ... ~
HI W.6.,"'r.rtet
Cetta IHI, IA 12121
... IHPD
Owner ol the Starving Col·
lege Students need1 at-
tractive Intelligent perlOO
to assist w/bkkpg IOf'
gen. company operation•
Single. unallached pref
but not manatory Call
Randy 722· 1062
CLHMW. USIST&IT
Perlect paf1 time Job -41
hrs plday. good pay &
pleasant surroundings
Laguna Niguel Cati Paul
582·7233
Enjoy views from 9Y9fy Lge bMch Oplx, quiet loc,
rooml 2 bdrm lri·tewl cloM to l ido Village
home on Big Canyon Golf $290,000 Great Invest·
Couree. Gated entrance, ment Owner 673-7 .. 27
sunken llvlng room It l wlflreplece, wet bar. 2-1 ..... •-.ta....,.1 _____ _ $950 Avt now 5419-241417 bch S 19$0 Al 458-2 108 Immaculate large Garden 28R 1,,_.,8 A TwnhM Nev. S t• -C-t Mt Balboa Penln Pvt entry g ble s Allg & Mop
car garage. $239,000. SPACIOUS 3 BA 2ba, Gigantic 38r 2Ba w/gar Apts Beautllully land-crpts. drpa. b\illtlns, lrplc ta HI 2Ui bath Clea~~-97~ __ IU-0111 RETAIL SALES
trplc, patio, dbl gar, lndry Walk to bch & L1<10 Vig seeped grounds, pool! encl gar w/elec opnr $725 . 16 months sub H O U S E K E E P E A , •.ST fUlaUTilll lta'"/Cta•M rm Harbor H s Dist $1300/mo yrly 964·6922 1 ~;,~atioldec~5~~-~s5 $700 Oulet 536-0921 28A H«BA Adult Condo. lease 5410 sq II Recept OUPAIAE For 2 sml chll· KIMBER BUTTS
--
COLDW<?U..
BAN~eRO
l/j_-aeral 2112 S975tmo 960-64183 IEW,lltT CHIT 2Borm 1' ·Ba S705·S7 tO 2BA 2BA, gar, lndry Nl<le ~D. ~~~tg, a~cS:~ ~· area 2 large pvt olflees. dren Salary Negot. Pos-Will train personable
-Time to rent A-1 E·s•de L 38A 2, BA 2 2250 Vanguard 5410.9626 41 pleK Quiet street, 1 1 111~ 1 i. poo 6415•0887 · 1st llr deluxe ottlce bldg Ilion avl lmmed 955.3900 poesed appllc~nt• Bf'" New Luxury &:Mnlfont rg "' car gar· mtle to beach No pets 1 s sec. on Birch 0 C AlrPort sates eitper. or r dal
condo, 38R 2'hBA, IOf'-~::O 1~~~.6~~r1 ~.~~~~ ~~~~1 s:~~~smociose 28drm 1 .ea S715-S725 S6SO Ca11Jean631-1266 3Br 2Ba Condo $825 area WORKl~G~~VISOA ~::. :::~~:;~ :::.d~~~mb~~ai~llf3 Unturn, E/side 28R 1BA TSL MGMT 6412-1603 151 E ~~ 5418-24108 ··~~~>•? ~~~~~·or~~~~s1s':c llisllt • .., 112-2111 AESIOENTIALCLEANING f 0 r e n 1 hu al u ti c
decks Yrly, S2200fmo lrg enclosed yd w/pauo NEWPORT HEIGHTS_ 1 ~•-• ---CdM dlx Suites AIC, SS 50·$6 SO/hr ~Ing mo11vated persqn. C.M ~AffAIS •R••n $715/mo, 1st last & sec Clean pre1ty couage 3 BA ~ll!kl fl . S800·Lrg 3BA 28A/patlo, ample pkg, u111s & janitor on exP9f Minimum 2 yrs 859-5559 5'6-3995
-.._ dep S300 Small dog & 1 2ba lrptc patio Non . -2 car gar w/lndry hkup. 2855 E Cs1 Hwy 675·6900 •KP As sprnr Of' own Retail Sales .... ''l'MMll child ok Call 646-54113 smokers refs & credit &Pllmlfl Ltg 38R 2BA. c:rpts, drps. Nr Cal Chapel 963-7055 LUXURY-Npt Beh 785 bus Clean cut & bond· 11./.1M11• s 10001 \s II t ·~ b\illlln1. frplc, dbl gar, ------. able Fluent Englllh NB ----• Raat. ltac.. 2140 mo • t u • 1,.; MllTI FIH w/d hkup $900 Ve') Mile ltatal1 sq/ft olf1ce Ne111 to 0 C area lnt8Mews Mon &
lllTu .. -••II! gaslelec 6412'25 ~ Like brand new• All uttllttes quiet 536·0921 • Atrport Robt 955-1222 Wed 642-68241 -I! .. _. -5-*IUCIOln&IE* --_ _.r• NOT A LIST AGENCY l • 1 i-~.• utll $.500 .. _ Shouts value 2BR 28a paid Pool, gar, no pets IUWlll YILU-~E N.B olfl<:e to lhare -Room ---M,IH-Se+ect 2BR 28A bfke to '"" rvv bllins provided crpts 28drm 18d $680 • lttal 2711 lor 2 desk1 lido area Urgenll Exper'd c0uple or
Oceartfront "tala -tlJO ooean S650 must aee TfUIEIT 111-1111 thru·out $650 Hurry 301 Avocado 642-9850 em n-•-"r, kit-". s. $265/mo, 675-41705 nuses aide, li\19 In, take S39 6191 ..,,, 1 WIT HT• ...... ..... lull charge, boarding view, ocean and * *lll ... 1H* * 5 blks to ocean 2BA · -• " ' C.M nr So Cst. Ptz $2 5. oo!Ce & garage $335/mo hOme $1800/mo. Call
ch One of ...., ow renl hlgl\ varue $69s-3 510 Nmth S1 $725 1.,111ast Veraa1ua 2BA 2BA. sec. "'2&trll!kl Live wnere you have 751-0272. 662· 1623 Near Mariners Square & today, Rocio 642·151412, ,lmaget rttq~r.. a part
11andlng homea In bdrm 2 bath nr Nwprt. ldep 738·6077 Wknd/evs ocean view. Avall lmmed *Spec:tatular apts M/FMatr Br In N.B ·~ blk Coast Hwy. NB 646-7641 Newport Oomea11c1 & time SALES ASSISTANT ~~ k~h. 5 BR 539·6190 Besl Ally lee BEAUTll"UL 2 story .nm $900/mo Call Herb ~s FAMILY AP&IMITI * 1 & 2Br, t & 28a suites to beach, garage, $383. PlllTillMS LIOlTlll J1nl1ora1 Services Agcy to work ewe/wl<nd1 for
• .a.atolO lal... over 2500 sit. Newly 645·2702, eve~22· 13 5 Sparkling clean large apta •Sp~loua townh0uaea ASAP 6.415·41'423_ Retall/ofc anace 1681 ell, Ttl"Ltll .a••• one ol the ltneat Hallmark ~ ..n O remo• JBA 3ba lormal V 1 LL A 8 AL 8 0 A 2 for families with 1 or 2 *Fireplaces .. ... ._._ llores "' ll'Hi U.S. II you Pt.aa1ala 21 7 dining rm Huge master Bed/den, family rm. bay children Near park Heat *Private balconies or Rtltb/Mtttll 271 corner McArthur & PCH lllLIM-T1-• nave high fiandarda and
I Vu. S,500/mo Yrly Paid No nats. Garden patios Prime spot in landmark "'• _, enloy• d allng -It" • I • 1022 Great ocalion, 1 blk to suite w1sunken 1ac \ub .,v UllU •••01 2 E c u 26 26' c 1 1 Sallbo 1 " -'' ertal t If bay & bch 38r, 2Ba. Up-Encl courtyard Beaut B~ YAIOGE New 3 Bed/3 2Bdrm 2Ba $720 ._ loc. 4111 oast nwy, • ru 1 ng 8 1· people, we want to meet
OUPLEX·2Br lbs ea So-graded • co t 1 age rear yard wlcovd patio t>a, f/p, atr & security 398 w Wilson 631·5583 WIY 101' MTlll ml Ste 200. CdM 675-41900 Weekends now Full time you. PleaM call Julian at
of-PCH S275,000 521 S 14150/mo yrly 673-0706 Cul de sac. st Walk 1o S 1750/mo yrly -----•3 Lighted tennis cour1s Wkly rentals. Low rates Small Corona Del Mar ol· ~mer M s-7 ioo 1531-8888 IOI an appt.
Carl'lalion By owner -bch S 1775/mo 771-6275 LIDO PARK OR. 3 Bed & &YllUllf llW •2 Swimming pools S 135 & Up/Wkly Color flee close to everything P1tft11ita1~ Cl•/ I ta
1573--024110t673-15411 htM Y1 T14er Dntl• Charmin O·ho s 11 den. BAYFAONT PENT-2BR 1'-'BA E/1lde Twnhm *Streams & ponds TV. maid service. lree S3 i 5/mo Agt 759•8389 Uaiaa'atra " SllO 1uaa Brand new 38A 3BA. 0 u e o HOUSE $2000/mo yrly S795fmo. Frplc, yard, *Sorry. no pell coffee, healed pool & -112' DUPLEX a real charmet _,,., S 2 PCH S-4150 or blks-ocean w•TEAFRONT H••s INC garage NiOe tocatlon •Furnishings avail s1eps to ocean Kilci'l's WATERFRONT BLOO
only $239,000 ' :~!r q•;~rn ~a~~~ed 2BA w/gar $600 detalls " "" 1780 Santa Ana avail 985 N Coast Hwy, Executive MJlt .. 1350 11t1 TU lllllllllT 111 fll Al •llllll t
IS UNITS 10 4 x gros1. Un· s25ooi mo negotiable 539-15191 agt cost 111-1400 TSL MGMT 642· 1603 WHY NOT CALL Laguna Beach 4194-52941 4th floor wl vv 642"46441 Full time Cotta Mesa. Work lor th• orlgtnal
believableloc.S7SO,OOO. 973.2217 0r 67s.6173 lm'at 2144 s.ataha. l O •n•••--••ai• 111-1111 ---·---Mon-Frl9to5 648-1~0f758-9105 Coco'11 SERVERS & Paeh Proe>. 720-9422 1 ---...-.. ..._ llMJll •Tll C 1_ -,-. --. COOKS needed. AfJf>tY In .... __ 1 c., ... , ... 1,u .. VERVNICE 2BA . aen. Pfazaarea3BA28Apoae-28r.1'1.Ba.bllns.newcpts IUWlllYIWIE Wkly rentals now avall ta•ttc.. nptrty perton 3·5".>m. 2305 e -_.. 2111 detached Turtte<ock home Ible rent oPtlon at 1775 & drps, OIW, bfllnt '325 15555 H 11 1 Vin $129.50 wk & up 22741 2771 IPf•T•r Cout Hwy, CdM
" ......... '···-.. -··-··-$1250/mo 75&·7602 53M191agtlee •$600.Nopet1540-«8'4 L fun nose: ~ NwplBlvd,CMe.416-741415 1350eq tt STOREFRONT ' 1573-90$3
EASTSIOE3br,bMut.r•
2=~B~F~C:,d2'=· **IEITILI** A,!rianti l&llAIWUPTI F~,~h;IBeeci\ IUllllLllll Xlnt MESA"EROE knock• often wnen you -l&-Ylm--Wl---
done.lge)'l'd.17100.dn. f/p lgkitc gar mat cpl. CALLUS AEGAROING 18r, Ing, range, laundry. to Mc adden. wett on 3026W PaclflcCoestHwy locatlon.54~123 uM reeutt-gettlng Daily Loc:atedlnthe BalboeFun °'*' Son. 2•5• 2308 noPeiss10oomo tst ~see IAVINERENTALS lalha Ptalaula pool.catp()(I No pell McFadden NewPortBeach RefrlgTV •C Oftl(;e/ShOp Piiot Claaalllad Adi to Zone.Nowecceptlngapol-w .. tmlnilter, 857• 103 l 4g3.8eS& 0t 831-9220 _..,7 . 1550tmo ~-.. -L ••~ a 125. wti ..... 1• no ..t-11. 1525 n r ... c M fMCtl the Orange eo..1 leatlona rOf al poeftton1. lmat C.llt lt1fttr1 .._ 931 W 19th St 548.04192 aaa IC. .... ... .........., c .. N'--.. ~•12 " m8"1et ,._ .. ,,.. ..... _..a-...•..o• "'591 UITIM Tllft.ll a HI 111 122 ••2bf 21); compl. fUrn. Ymst ocnff1 furn 0t unf I -SL.--., """area .-o-41"' ...., "' .. .,.,...__....,
.... 2 ~ 1·~ .. _,h 711•7HO ...... •• 27•1!! ..... t11·1 tt;ii .,-, ... n _, ....... oom. ..,. 1 1 deluxe and· l/p, Winter on oceenfront -..an llYI 2Br 1•..,ea, pY1 bch, gar ., .. : ... -
unite w/yerd1 6 garegn. castle Condo w/sml yd 3Br 2Ba. 2 C818 gar. No petl Imm &eaft 1895 673· 1943 2BR ,.... • Perfect 41 Sharing S 1100 I••--.. ~---""""• Phone '42·5679 1695 !MM, C.M. La C.ve Aa1ume 11% lntereat . • $1100 LM ( 14) 888·5510 B"Y"'RONT lBr-am P"' l '""·tJo cottaoe type, 4199·270• Avall 1115 2Br nr SC Plza. quiet llv· Rell. APf)fy bet 11-12
Jc)en. FUii pr tee 12715,000 lrptc. wet bar. mirrored or1818) 3415..()4410 .. r ., pr vat• pe • gar, w/d mg. ~rpof1 $3 15 t ,_.., For leaM 5000 11 lndutf\ ~~~~~~~~~======== wardrobes. microwave. bctl/labuloul vus 1 car hkup. No pe11• H7S/mo. vtlls Call Aft 41 30pm apace, ale ofc'a, IQ yd :: traah compactor. etc GOLF COURSE VIEW 28r, 1pc/util incl $700/mo TSL MGM1 8'42· l603 17 14)549•0234 sptce, xlnt toe 230~ So Trad.iii on al
Realty
631-7370
Avail now 1900/mo. Oen, wet bar, San Joa· 752·9511 _ --SuMn S.A 8'48-7512
883·1 191bet9·5pm quln $1350mo.551-5193 -Easttlde 2 BR 1ba, AtldY,-athtelic,profper·I•-------• OR 8181883--0665 Unlvrn 1 Br Apt• $500 & beamed celling. lrplc, aon IOI' luit lurn NB home 1--•stnote or e<n:y cpl. Small SISOO No pet1 Olf ltreet gar 2 pereons, no pe1s $4115 , Joan 645..()9t1 aaiaMI fl1udal 1br, no garaoe. utlla pd liNlvERSITY Park 28A prllg Biii bch 873·5198 $700/mo 1111111, aec seeo No pet• 72-2·8011 2ba •. oar, avail lmmed v·c·NT NO "'EE $225 650· 1798 Avail 1mm;, beaut ,;;; I -======:..;:=::;..~m;;~...;. • .---.... -· ~~~;;~;,~~~~/mo. 38r 2Ba ~~ blk ,; beach ·llde-tharp 2Br. encl gar, condo to ll'lr E·side CM a"'t•nl
-,.,,1'!'!' 0.11t'O i\111..j -/) t, b d.• H•t $995/mo lllllU1' sec i pvt yrd ,. .. ,Id & _, .... 18drm Seo<> FWrlg. dish· M/F 1400/mo • ')iutfl O,,.rlHlty -~ l'4U ~· 'fl <rO ~ •--· 4~ "'" ,...... "" walher & ato~ Included $418-9159 -"' a.' • rouM aaa 99H •• Agt 635-3090 725 Avt now 760-l&e2 Charter ~t IOOkl~ 1or NO PETS 545-41855 Emptyd M/F 410-; 10 stir •.......... .._. "' "-urn f8R condo Large lfv· tH ••I 11 H22 ,L~ view Apta next to Patk -SOV. Partner Pro ta* ,._ .........,. --. -.. Newt rernod & 281 1ea. patio, ~. 08I lurn 2Br 1'..<,ba apt w/pool •tablllhed Du9'neee b · a-,. i.-._.,,..... -• Ing.,... Y · · 18R tbe o;;lx, 1111 W16, rplc, vaulted eelllng1. lrg Water/ga1 pd 1725/mo $350/mo. 11tllst, ulll pd cettent 1-.. eclveni-
lurn 180 deg wt'llte Wtter gar. lk new, s1&o1mo ape Prvt baleony 1801-8 15th St 850-8213 llCPI ph . 5'18-1200 c --I N V E R 0
O r R E E
I* I I I
I s ( ( A c ' r I I I
view overtooklng Main lltllut. d-992.2419 Newly redec:ofatad _ all a.ry Us.MM
beach S 1000/mo Incl _ _ -Chltd ott $795 No peta F 2$-35 iOlt1r attraet = 'l:!'~ d'n4
utlllties Call Al O""'a 18A Apt w/baleony, we1k ~~5• C..11 ... 2'J4 E'~ta M ... nM. Furn '..... an
(702) 732·9228 Of Vlrgll In ctoMI. lmtnK 1750/mo tBt/ba PY1 ent No Chll-money Jo:
Webb locally 11 (714) 931.5092 or a.40-2* dren or S4001mo Utll TD'• 110.000 up Ho
4197·438'4 or '4M·7515 ---····~u• v• 1 A• incl a.t-t713 Cf'ec:llW . no penafty 2BA lbe tge 'PK~" ..._._ ----Oeni9onAaeoc 673·7311 *~* t000./14115 PoPPYi000 a•• .. •111111 ~ --1 2Br tully turn Poot pY1 mo to mo Ownr 1515-0180 .,.,... • ry ,..:0. n-,:: ~5o ~ II
bct'I, MC f1300 ~O-"'tt 21R Iba n.., bMd\, no 'llljgj M P/dtl'Utrlf.U Ulllllollltlit~fl"C. 846-1D1 21)1~121_• t '.:::t I J~~ M '42· t802 Of t3 t<.1250 pet a. n·amkr Oarege 'IO\l lo lttt•~r\ & Sil ~I P'tm .,.,If on1, rn1nwl~ lo tt>t .,.. ._ A
WOOOSY tit•.., 1 Bd .. 1 $820/mo 813-6246 bf'J<ll '"" mA~ II() '1 rs 'LlASE ,.EM lo 81'\w. IOYtfy l'IOfM s 000 REW ~r Qat, ~ Vtnege 2BA 1BA w/gar WI O, lrlg ..... ••U • ~T -~v::,:, :.t*'oc:.iO:: f } ARD
S850Jmo 4f4.2 l29 Ne¥11 crpt, fire HOO Avl I'-· Mii •• Point 75-3873 For return or cflatm ~ --0r8Qlllet S500 AtwAAO .a H I Ill Pl II .... It Fem wented 1450/mo, nr for lnfortNMlon of r9lUm
I •DH• -.atll IC Plaui Mt1r 8r/ba or ~huff\ brH•let
Ill, IUT I llY ... ._ SeGur1ty 141-0eSt &4t-a'44
MIF ~kr to atii 28R .. ,..nm
n...1 ....... 28A, Bte" lky ... 'OUNO F~•lil 9o•.,,
S300 ... ~ utMI 8te¥9 I tide td ~ *Y ffllM-
J)y 13.l·HeO ~ 54$-! 1ft Ir ~t'f FY ad.t027 ..._ ________ t
Openln1a Now Av•ll•ble
CAR ROUTES
E•rn Extr• C•h
For a.livery 01 Thi• P•,,.,
HUNTINGTON 81ACH
FOUNTAIN VALLIY
INDIPINDINT
DeHver 1 day a week . No
cottectlng, no solloltlng.
Must have dependable car,
!ruck or st ation wagon and
insurance.
CALL 842-1444
A1k tor JoAnne c,....,
CALL TOOAYll
&llFH Liii . Yout
s.rvlcie OhctOfY ~eterttall8 142;4121 ext. IOI
q e Oct
•yed or remo¥G. Ory-
•11 Repairs. 8.47-7901
REBLOWN OR PAINTED
Also Int/Ext P•lntlng
lc•288597 631-9295
•
\
Orange~ DAILY P\LOTITueedeY.JMuiwy 1, Mel -
MBZ '79110,000JOe()
POASCHt t12E '71 118,000, 54-, .. ,2
MBZ '71 30oc5,....llt-:-p-1-t -al..,...G
Cf\lltt. .,,_ wndw9, ..
ctMrl aMOO 113-MH
CHICK
IVE•SON
P()ttSCHE
AUDI
CHf\IROLfi
H19h•" 0..•111~
S....6 !Wrvlu
CHICK
IVE•SON
SYDNEY
0MARR
--~ ---------...
0nnee CoiMe IWLY PtlOT/ Tu.deY,. JMUiiy 7, 1811
a.e. tie .. -.,. ll)llC( -.JC llmcl Ml.JC llOntl Ml.IC MmCl Ml.IC 11>1'Cl MUC llJTICE PllUC M>TIC( _Ml.IC ll011Cl :::Ii== ,._ oontrect Pf1Ce ~ ecc:om-01 • or Thie 't>Vlineee 11 con· ~el aa: ~ lbl-IOUTI COONn ..,. ....., ... won. t31 '1i pge • 13 al cotlldel AMICM"f'• City Of HUm· ~ L..2,~ '!.~ T=8~ f*'Y ewiry oontrtiet ~ of wortllMll ,..... to ... duc1.S iw. l'Nlllend lfld.... r u,... • Cl I.I Ip"'. ft •• 900d runnlnQ car. Mutt Aecofoe of Orenge ounty. !not e..c,, · .-_. :no 1111 eJ(penditUN lrl .._. ecwM die cionerect. lklCll Met1I A ~ aradeNIM. QIOOClwll. lllW, VOLKSWAGEN ..... 700-lf6.1MO ClllfOmle L~noet Otdtown Ind IH IOOt( SM. PAOH SS al'2SOOO .... ICale ..... fot1tl et Thie.....,,..,,. .... tied ~d !MprOvefMftll.
• - -PARCEL a A N 0 3 • 0 , M I '. The .IUOOMlll.ll blOder ... ~ lfl "TM ll.tlldlng with IM County a.t1c al OJ-~ not to ~ ISl1Yll F0N>'71f'Uture2dfhrdtp Anundrtided 1.a~tteQ-~~hefty CEt.LANlOUS MAPI, JH be fequif.S to-· Into . Tl-Wege .......... ln09 County on OeceMber 1toctclnlr.S..endleaocil.t "~ crwn •/bucket ...... ttonal In*-' .. tenent1 In . T ,,.,.,,... l HI OFFICI OF THI tf1M:'tUll eorwt "' lidOC>*' by tM City~ H . 1915 ... 11715 '*-'tie. Colt• IPC)lle -.... I cyt. Aune common In lfld to the com-o 1t1 COUNTY AEOOAO€A OI' c:Ofl of "8taMerd ~Of NIM .,. on Ille In ,_ ....... c.1MOrn1e.
... t 12100. •M-0301 mon ., ... being l.01 a Of ~ ~o ~im::..:: OAAF,,...!!OIAI COUHTY. CALI-::..::... .;,,. tTO 2·· tM OMc9 al die city a...c. l'UU t •• 0.-.. c..e The .,..,_. MIN ueed
IN U.S.A.
AM> Tlllli twtD£R
TO IC =-1 . •ALa• • URVICE
•f'MTS
• &.aAllNq
LARGEST INVI NIORY
OH TH( WCSI COASI
EBY IQ)(! 6 COl Ofl
CAUT•AY
. . . . ~ . '
. '. • •• •·f f\.1 H
I '11 8 42 -2000 ... • I '
cXB '71 sedan de VII,,
fully equip. elllt cond
15276. 631-6279
CAO '82 CdV. blk classic
styte, 26K mi Perfect
cond. $11,000. 675-6896
C AO '83 B IAARITZ S 13.950., Digital dasll
loaded. lrtllr Int. Eiu
wen. 979--8637 aft 7pm
NABERS
CADILLAC
LARGEST SELECTION
of late model, low m ileage
Cadillacs In Orange
County! See us today!
140-1180
2600 Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
WI llY AU llAlH
USED CARS & TRUCKS
COME IN OR CALL FOR
FIU&nUISAL
OeLILLO
CIRllUT
18211 BEACH BLVD
HUNTINGTON BEACH
.. l-IOllsa.t-1111
CHEVY '81 El Camino,
53K ml, AfT. air. stereo
SSOOOIOBO 67~286
WE BUY CLEAN.
LOW MILEAGE
DOMESTIC & IMPORT
CARS, TRUCKS & VANS
WIWAITYMR
OUAlllUUll S.. Veno dos Santos
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
JOt>O HAllllOll Ill VO
('J'>IA Ml \A 041 0010
-OfllO ·13 T·Blrd va !:: ,:; ,':,!~~-= elOf'Y, ~ cklllllfl n;·..,... ldOtw end wfllch INll beC:::. upon !Mr:,=:::.,:.,-:= :r.'l..,....-..,'1, M,tt, cr:fi::;,• ~ "::hl: ~;::n 111:;~~~ 9:.::!
._ltege. Orig OWMf. 452 P998 t• end 1& of ...... In IN Qtdtown find Towneot °''* COIMIOn deliOMtlon, IM State of 8 only llllllt In looetlno, ~. • T .... NIMd tr.-.,or(I} ttwt • IUAOEA.
l..oeded. Charooal 0'9Y a.I~ M~t. recordl of dlllflCtl wfth ~lfNnt If any, of I'-r..i P'oPMY upon ..,.,.-cwel by t~ NtiflO end lnCfMllnt 1M • ~ tr..-.r le ebOUt to be TNit Mid ~ 1r.-. le
'1500. Mary 751-7164 Ot Orange County. ~nle.. ~~ P'OWfelOn of~ docrlll•d 1bove 11 !nhl.:::'~ ':... ena ~• o1~8'0UI>.,,... __ .,. _,,,...,... made on l*'90MI proPWfY Intended to be ~ 1~ totM'* wttn e11 im.,,~ """"-°'*'eoeoe'° ~ robe:l70IW£V, .... ~end llPC)llOlntl fOf ,._ ""'""' ~~!Md. met.Sat the omoeot. NT·
lftenlt tnereon tll~tlng Mid "'· ~· IR\llNI!. CALIFORNIA. vntll It le 8PP'°* "'T • ~ ..... '°"" In Thi nlll'NI Md bullr*I TEA HAVICI! l!ICM>W
i I therefrom condominium .l·A~~:i:..o:c.'*.::..~ T:uHa\·E~NJt~~~Q~~e l= ~~·~ Ellecutlw o;. 1124' Mel l'tCnn:.:-1....... ~of the Intended COMPANY. INC .. 1'214
::: •• ,'.~ lnckllM, eooric.l'Y ••emot from the l.1A81UTYFOAINCORAECTlpettrMnt ol ~-Ser-u:sblde.,. to tie com-MMmeTAW ~~~ (!.,~~ :!1~4:':'::; E.ll~tlng lhef9from ell provWone of the Clllfotnle I N F 0 R M A T I 0 N I vtcM. If r9qUlf«S. per.S on the beMa of the Thi folloWlrlO .,.,_. .,. Apt. 103, Hewellen Qltdlnl. Jenuery 24. IHI.
Oil oil ........ miner .... min-Environment• °'*"Y Act. f'UANl8~~0. I AM nonexempt ••••• con· Enc"'-'• EaUmat• Of the doing bu*'--Serrano c.wom1a 9071'. Thie bull ,,.,...., le II.ti>-' ·r · • ., rlgtlt.1 ON PILA: A copy of I'-THAl __, Nie 11 made trect1 oft&.000 or more ar• . .,,........... ~ APef1nMn .. , 3090 -· CeltforMa Cel#otnle unitotm = "f'ri: ~;:,':'oc::n. by p«ipoMd code ~·• wlthOut ~t or ww· eubteet to lttt• contr11Gt0t ='1i. of llrOrtc to ti. Pullman Avet1ue. Co•t• Thi ::r" ~ Oftlol ~dlll Code Sec:tton
. wt1at:O.V. name known. Is on " .. In thl ~t rlnty r-oarding title, poe.. nondlecrlmlnetton end com-Ho blCI will be eooeptld Melia. CA t2tH • of the bUllr"8I ofltol
i thefmel ltll"' end ell ofO.. .... tts.Moel. MMlor1 M lftCUmbfencM, pllence r equlr1mentt fromacontreot0f~l1not Jamee P. Warmington. :t~":~treneterorle: e1:..naMelfldliddr'WOI
iMojlMii,..lgec>product1 derl\led tl'leretrom ALL INTERESTED PEA· or u to lnlllfebillty Of tltae. l>Ureuent to Government lloenMd In tccOl'dltlCe wttn 3090 Pullm1n Avenue. 111• Plaoentla, Coat• Mele. Ille na11on with whom ,,,.....~--.,,.--':::----:-;:;:-"""'' t SONS .,. lnvltllcl to ettend THE total tmc>U!lt of lhe Code Seotton 12990 and ,....,.__ CO.ta Meea CA tH2t u .. -· .. llT
OLDS '78 Omega, A.IC , wt~~.!:~ tht er..;,_! Nici '*'1no and eicpr ... unptijd balanOe Of Mid obll· Cellfornle Admlnletretlve ~L~ !._vo~~ Tiiie bu.iMU la con· CallfOMle.All ....._. .... ........_ narnee deim9TER SmtyE VbelCl~•"ROW A /T gd trtn1p car. dr .... ,._.., •ore, ,....... .. 09lnlonl M eut>mtt IYldenoe Code Tltta a ONtslon 3 .,...,.....,, ~ "' .... --llcl ...,, ~ ..,. .... --IEA, ,._.....,
St2oo 080 769:5859 endoe>erltelhrougollthelUr-fOforeoaiMtthlec>Pleetlon getloM t~ with ad-s.ctk,,,1201.· 'en<1Profu1la.•COde ckf.,,,.;'P':wmlngtbn endeddr'MMltuMdbylMcOMPANY INC .. 1•21• ~ f.oe or the llPC* 600 ,_.of llned bo All ec>PI-vane.a. end Mtlrr •tld coat• I eooordence wttfl thll The City r....-wa "'-right . flted Intended trtnlMfor within 8Mdl Blvd .. W•t.,.._,
OLDS '10 CUTLASS the tu.,_,** of Mid lend. :t::!a er.~lbl::· and de-;10 d&:M et P • n I .. • 11 1 pr!..ioni of Section 1710 to ,...eln al bide fOf a period wtt~":i.'~ci::'ot Or· tllf .. YM'• ... t YMfl IMt Callf0rnlet2tl3end the leM
Brougl\am 2 dr, very asreMMldlnl>Mdfromttle teflpttoftt of ,,. OC>OMI • • •of the lM>of Code the o.-of 30 deye for ·~ Coun o.o.nt1er peat 80 f81 .. known to IN day for '*'Cl Clllf'lll by MY
good oond .. all new tires. Irvine Company. • Mlehlgan .,. on flll wtttl the~ of TH~A l notlOe :r:.:: pert"*lt "-..C..a1n11c1 Ind compwleon, Ind to ~ ~"5 ty on Intended tran...,.. are· 01.sttor llieli be Jf/lff4Wy n . $3100 S.8-5392 Corp0retlon, r.corded In the City CMwll 2000 MM! Mid tlOn that the general ~let• any P<>f"'°" of the WOf'k • .,._ none, ttN, wNch le the~
----Boot! 13820. page 1090 °' · to ..,I r-.i P'OP9'tY wu I of pllceble In from the contract. The City ,. _ _. Tiie "*""C•I end bulil'9ll dty befc>fe !hi ~ OLDS '81 • 88 RoyeJe. Offici•I Record• Streec. Huntington BMct\, recorded u ln1trument No. "'" wegee ep reMf'Vel the rlGflt to retect Publllhld Orange ..,.._, · .. oif the Intended Ion date ~ ebOW.
Fully eqpt. • dr, good ALSO excepting tiler• f,!'~=· tor lnepec:tlon by 86-358 t58 O,::TEMBER ~~oC:~~ ~,.,!: = any end ell bide Ind to welve = ~~ l:J t, ~~lferee(•) are· ~OA t Detect: .1enuety 2. tNe
cond $2500. M0-8• t7 from ell weter~I 1111, HUNTINGTON ••ACH 20, 1985, Of Records "'1•blithed end publleiled any lofOtmallty In Mlfl bldl. . • . T·tt2 BENSON, 12132 CNipmen HOA MMOM. Ill ........
OLDS• Cutle11'76 2 Dr wnethef Md! water r 11 CrTY COUNCt!. MMe ~~ ~=E~~ by the Director of lndl.llt~ CVrTYC °' fc:MINT~ Awnue. APt. tlA, Garden Tr~=a ,._a.AO II\ lll•ll be ~en. • ........ c Ca.ti Aeal•Uon• CopiH of Ifie Li • AUPOMllA. A.--, Grove CellfMnla 92MC), Orange ........ llrdtp. Blue. ml;,. :1~ r • epptoprlel ve. percoletlng, ~ (71') r.· Sl•t• ol Callfornle. wage ret.i .,. on file 81 the ter c..........., bee~ NI.IC ll)llCE Thei the f:OS*tY pertl-Delly Pilot January 1, ttM
$2200. &44-tO • pm prMCrle>llvtl or contractual 0 ed t 21211ee rv1t" or petty conducting Office of the Clllef Of Plant -t. CttJ Ca.rti ef Mid nent ,_., ~In T.010
wltllout. l\OWeVef, Ille rlgm et Sale 0 Ion Fel leW 0.-CttJ ae-W
of entry for , .... uerdle ot n!:.'.~~~ ~· c 0 II II 0 .. w I A LT" v:-'~1!i een:!. Sit• In· Pubffen.d Orange Coaet (CITACION NIMCIAL)
SUC11 rlgllta. ., r.-vect In ..,..,, • T .IVIS LAND TITLI COWANV, epectlon will be held Tuea., Dally Pilot January 7, 198e .NOTICE TO DEFENDANT:
Deed lrom the Irvine Com· r .. C•tury ..__ IMt. Jin tth 10.00 A,M Fair-T-008 (A*<> e ACUMdO) WALTEA -
P811Y • Mlctllgen Corpor· tON, lAe .,....._, . ..........:. n.-' 1 ta• Center PROCUNIER, DOES 1 ...... euon' recorded In Book PlJlllC NOTICE •lltort1I• .... 1 . (211) ....... .,.., 09fMI• • CNef rtaJC NOTIC( THROUGH 2&. lndullW
13620. page 1090 of 01t'lc:lal MM-. Yk:tot ..-..C .. YOU ARE BEING SUED
Record• NOTICI Of -'AV M. WWISa. • .-. °' =:.=:~ Onihee K·DUt BY PLAINTIFF: (A Uct. le•• RICHMOND H a 1 e n pf I u g o f The street address and TMllTll'I SALE TAlff VICI flMWMT Coeet o.-, Dlnftlllru flCTmOUe ...... demendando) CONSTANCE MICHAEL L . RICH -Walnut Creek; Laurie ~1:'y c:."=r~~Y deye~ .,0~ In,:~~~ 0~~':. 2Br: 11. ,_, .,_, 7• ";'... T~~= •• ~,g~A~~ a2:~~ n d MONO. pal8ed away Olsen and Karen
deecrlbed ebove 11 10131111. unlaM you tlk• Cout Daily Pilot December dolngbualneaeu:Ovw.... Yeu ....,_ • CAUNDAlt January l , 1986. Age Sch ag of N ewport
purported 10 be 22 MORN· ecuon to ptotect your prop-3t , 1985. Jenuwy 7, 1•. DI-IC NOTICE Conlignment, •98 Cyprw DAY•....,....,. _ ... ,,. 34 years. Born [)e. Beach; Tracy ~
ING STAR •5. IRVINE. CA erty.ttmeyb .. c>'chupu«>-19845. ...~ Ortv•. Laguna a..cti. CA .. lln'M -'°" ...... rember4, l951 in Port of Paris. France. Mr 92715 hc:sate lfyouneedenexpte. T-997 NOTICI 92651 .,.._,..._ ,.. ... ,,... et I S
The underllgned TruslM neuon ol the nature of the .,YmNO..,• Oerryl Lundahl, 08 IMeoowt. Smith, Virgin a . Sch ag was uper·
d1sctelm18ny lleblllty tonny proeeectlng eo.inet you, you Pl&.IC NOTICE Notice Is hereby given that CyprH• Drive. Legun• A ""8r., ,.._. _. wW Came to California 10 visor of ConllUCt.lon
1ncorrectne11 ol the strMt anould contact• I~. Haled bid• will be r«*Yed BMch. CA 92951 Mt..,,...... r-:,...,..... years ago & settled m & M aintenance at
addrMI •nd Olller common AARON FOIGELMAN .. NOTICI TO by the City of Fountain VllA-Tfll• bu1ln•1t II con· ......... ,.., I M II ..... -Cost.a M esa. Survived Disneyland, and was
deSlgn•tlon, 11 any. &lloWfl duly appointed Trull•• CMDtTO..a Of ;ey Agency lor Community ducted by an lndlllldual lfl ..,..., ...., "'"" W,.. by loving mother, m e m b e r
0
f he<eln under the lollowlng ~ llUU( TRANaNR DfWel metlt at the office of 0 . Lur>dahl •eM h oowt to '*" ,....,
Slld .. 1ew111 be mad•. but ICrtbed deed of tru" Will ... 1101 .. 101 Ille cc:f ci.;1c In the City Tlltl "•tement WU filed -Annie L . M y~rs: Carpenters Local 946.
witllOUI convenent Of wiv-SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION u.c.c. Hell 16200 Sliter Avenue wltll Ille County Cler1t of Of-" '°" ......... ,.. father . Alvis Rich-S er vices Tuesday
ranty. 1xpreM or Implied. re-TO THE HIGHEST BIDOER ~ Fountain v1111ey Cellf0tnla enoe County on Oecember ' .... ' ... ' ~ • ..... ~:? mond,· alaQ survived Jan.
7
• l0:30AM . Pa-QJrdmg htle. ~. or FOR CASH or U NI forth In Nollce II hereby gtven to before 2 00 p M' on the 17th 2•. 1985 --,~
encumbrances. lo pay tile Section 292411 of the CMt credltore of the wltllln d •01 Jenue,Y 19ee 11 Fmtt1 .,...., ...,_., Md .C by sister . Llnda Ham-ci fic View M emorial
rememlng prlnciplll sum ot Code. all right. tttte end named tren1feror(1) tllet a wtl8t:n llme tlley wm be Put>-Publllhllcl Orange Coast ....., 1Mf M-... ii ton : grandmother, Park Chapel. Inter-
lhe nole(SI MCUred by aald 1n1ere1t conveyed 10 end bulk tran1ter Is •bout to be lldy opened end reao IM'
1
0.11y Piiot o.c.nt>er 31, ~ ...... "-' IM Sadie Wiley; neace, menl Pacific View Deed of Tru11. wltll interest now lleld by it under Nici made on personal property WARDLOW FIRE STA-1985. January 7, 1•. 21. _._
thereon N prov!Oed In se1d Deed of Trust 1n the property hen11netter deeer1bed TION NO 1 wlllCll contlltej 19845 There -..._ ..... ,.. M ichelle Carroll, all M emorial Park. In N>te(s~ adllenoes. 11 any. lleretnelter desc:ri04ld: The nemt(•I and buetneee 1 1 d 'olltlon ol exiit-T-003 .,.,........._ Y•...., WeM of Port S mith. Vir-lieu of flowers family
undet tile terms of the Deed TAUSTOR RICHARD W eddreu of the Intended ;:::•~:i: and tltewor11, to cal "" ......., "9M mnja; beloved friend I J 01 Trus1. '-· Cllergea and MAnox end JUDITH L trensteror(t) ete. wltll remodel end •xpaneion ... _.,. N()Jll'C _.,. 11 ,__,•...ell-e· requests memor a
.XpenMI of lhll Trustee and PARKER WILLIAM E. CAMPBELL. of the e•itllng fec:llttlM .. ..._ ~ _ .....,, '°"...,...... Kathy Shore; fonner contributions to Hoaa
ol lhe trutts cr .. ted by said BENEFICIAR Y MORT-.o685 L• Colima. Temec:ute, ellown on contlrucilon K·IMll 9"0fMf,...,,.. ""*er wife Cindy Kunz. Memor ial H ospital.
---------Deed ol Trull, IO·Wll GAGE BANKERS CAPITAL. Celllornl• 92390. ANNE doc:umenll Tiie Arcllltect'I '1CTITIOUS ....... • ..... llN ..... ( ...... "' both of Coit.a M esa; 301 Newport Beach.
Plllt.IC NOTICE $l69,83•·21 INC CAMPBELL. •<>ea5 La Cot-81tlm•t• of probable cost la NAm STATl•MT IM,.._-..,. a nd many loving CA. 92663 Pac ific _ __;,....;..;..;;...______ Tiie t>enetk:lery under said Recorded Nov 13, 1980 Im&. Temecula. Cellfornle $600,000.00 TM followlng pertone ere Dee..-• ..... _. M I I
NOTICEOf Oee<lofTrustlleretoloren· u instr No -1n book 92390 ThllNldworlclllellbeper-doing bulinMI u · PIZZA .,...... .... ~ ,_.. friend s . emor a View M ortuary, Di-
TRUSTH._ SALi ecu1ed •nd dellvered to the 13831 page 1071 of OtflCllll The ~tlon.,.. Celllomlli l0tmed In strict oonformlty CITY 1810 s El 'c11m1no ...., _.. lleM • ~ service pending. In-rectors. 644-2700
TMltnE NO. 301.,.1 undetli\)ned 1 written Dec-Reoords In tile offlOe of ltle of tile clllef execullve offlc:e with Con tr ec:t 0ocumen11 Real • Sen ciemente CA de ao DtAI CA&.mNDAlllOS 1 rm en t 1 n p o rt 1---------TIT\.E NO. 1415142 laratlon ol Default end De-Recorder Orange County lor principal bu..,,... olflce d•ted November 19, 1995 92972 • per• prHe•ter 1111 e ROGERS
YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T man<1 lor Sele, end a wrllt8tl said deed of trutt ()e9Ctlbel of the lnlerlde dtr-leror ta· end now on Ille In tile Office O.nnll Sclotto 102•9 ~!!_~ .... ~.· ~emu!tohf, floVwireguurs· • !.aml~ Margaret F. .Rogers, UNDER A DEED OF TRUST No1ooe of Oefeutt end Elec-Ille IOllOwlng property !SAME AS ABOVE of the City Cterk'1 Offiee Bled< Mounteln Rd • 121 _..... ---u '"''' b 1 d f f
DATED 0210Sl 82 UNLESS hon los.tl TlleunderSlgned Lot 48 of TrllC1 7020. Clly AH other buSIMU nemee Copifl ol aald pl-end Sen "'-o CA 92126 . UM carte. -~ orial donations may e o ve W I e 0
YOU TAKE ACTION TO caused said Notice ol De-of Irvine. CaJllorma. per mep end addreS891 uMd by the spec;1flcat1oni may tie ob-Thi...,,b~elneu 11 con-...... , .. • II etreoere be made
10
the char-W allace M. Rogers.
PROTECT YOUR PROP· faull and Electlon to Sell 10 recorded Book 204, Pages Intended 1renslet0t within lalned by proepec:tlw blO-duc111d b 1111 lndlvldulll ~:c.~....._ ... ity of your cL.-'-. Lovmg mother of Pal ERTV. IT MAV BE SOLO AT be recorded In Ille county <16 . 47. of mape. In Orange tllrM years lat put to,., den from Ille Flrt Dec>art· e>enn11"Scio,10 -----l !UnX Send M g,_....
A PUBLIC SALE IF YOU wt1er1 tile re11 propef'ty 11 Coun1y Recorder• Ottice 1u known to tile Intended ment. Thi• stetemerit wH flied cumpllr oeft I•• fer-ra. rs. 0 ''8"'rs
NEED AN EXPL.ANATION ~led MAY BE ALSO KNOWN transferee ere: NONE. Etdlbldmuslbe8C()om.. witlltheCountyClerk of Or-melldedH ••••••• ZIEGLER isalaosurv!vedby her OF THE NATURE OF THE Dale 1211918S AS 15192 Chel<Wl Circle. Ttien1"14!(s)endbullMU anled by 11 oenlfled or Coun on December ...,.,.......,_..., Robert Ziegler. bom son -in-law Fre d
PROCEEDINGS AGAINST f'O"fCL08UAf CON· l"'ine C1Jlforn1a 9271• addrns of Ille Intended ~snler's cneck pay•ble to ~985 IY July 5, 1916. Los An-Sendra; three grand-
YOU YOU SHOULD CON· SUL TANT8, INC.. H Ill a sireet addren or tr1nleree(1) ere thll order of the City. 0t bye ' ,_,_ I C A p d H t I
l ACT AL.AWYER Truet ... IY:DM!efW.Of· common <IHlgn111on Is MARK A CHERRY. 241 bidbondHecutedbyacor-PubHlhld Or1nge Coul gees. asse c hildre n . 0 y
On 01121186 at 1000 merod, Viet ''••ldeflt, ahown ab0ve,no werran1y1s La Jolla Drive. Newport porate surety eutllorlU<I 10 Dalt Pilot '**"ber 31 away January 3, Payne, James Swajn,
AM FORECLOSURE CON-~t4) 7't·3M2.140l1 Yorba given to Its c:ompleleneu or BHCll Calllornl• 92693 do bullnell In lhe Stele of 19:1 January 1 14 21' 1986. Newport Beach. and Sue Runkle; and
SULTANTS,INC 11111eduly ., .. ,, l uh• 231, Tue•'"· correctness)· CONNIEK CHERRV.2•tL• C•lllomielntlleeumofnot t98& · · ' Survived by wife four great-grand-
appo1nted Trustee under C8'ft°""9 t2'80 The VendOr under 18l<I Jolla Dnve Newpon 9e11Ct1 leas tll•n .10% of tile tot•I T-002 M an'nena,· !IOns, John chi'ld-n. ,_ lieu of ind pursuenl to Deed ot Publllhed by the Orenge Deed ot Trust t>y rHson of• Cel1torn1a 92663 •mount of Ille bid 81 1 '"' .u1
Trual Recorded on 02125182 Coast Delly Piiot Oec:eml>ef breach or default.,.. the obli· 11111 tile properly per11· guarantee 11181 the ' bidder I---------& Jim: sis le r s . flowers contributions 89 Document no 82-096465 31 198S Janu1ry 7. t•. 1986 gallons secured thereby. nenty 11er1t Is delc:ribed In will entet lnlo tile Pfopotllcl PllllJC NOTICE M argaret Cox. and may be sent to 'nle St.
Book NI A Pege NIA 01 0 1· T-99• heretoforeexewtedand de-generel as All lurn1ture. 1111-contract 11 It be ewerded lo H el e n Constable. A ndre ws P resb y -llGlel Rec:otd1 1n the offtGe o1 hVetecl to Iha undertigned • tu res, equipment and him FICTITlOUI ...,... ..
1tie Recorder ot ORANGE. Ml.IC NOTICE wriuen Oec:tarauon ot De-gOOOWlll •nd ts •oc•ted 11 Bid docurnenll 111811 be NAm aTATl•WT M em o r ia I services t e r i an Ch u r c h •
C1tolorn1e. executed by l1u11 end Demand lor Sale. 64 t Pau1er1no Avenue. enc:lo9ed In an envelope Tiie fOllOwlng pcw-eon1 ere will be held Tuesday Margaret F Rogers
JOHN SEATON. 'AN UN· NOTtCI Of and written nottGe ol breec:ll Costa Meu. Cellfornla wtllCll 111811 be M8led eod doing bullllMI u : PaclflC 2:00PM al Paci h e M e m o ria I Fund ,
MARRIED MAN WILL SELL l'Uel.tC HEANNO and ol election to ceuse the 92626 clearly tet>elllcl Wllll the pro-Energy ConaetV8tlon. 21191 View ChanPJ. In beu New po rt Be a c h . AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO COO£ AlleNDMENT un<lerllgned lo se41 said The btJ91nest neme UMCI jeC1 lltla neme ol bidder Amberwldl Ln .. Hunl BCh, ,.-
THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR HO. 11-n property to sausty said ooll· by the said 1ran1erorcs> 11 and d•te end time ol bid CA 926-48 of flowers donallons M emor ial service1
CASH (payable et time ot OLDTOWN a gallons. and lherealler tile Nici 1oc111on 11 Olympic: opening In order 10 guard Richard Petrlek Vl.IQuez. may be made to The l :OOPM Wednesday
ltHJ In 1ew1u1 money of tile TOWNLOT DtlTAK:TS undersigned ceused Hid Coeungs llO•ln" premiture ocien1ng 21191 Ambenwleil, Hunt H
0
a g H
0 5
P i t a I , Jan. S. Pacthc Vaew Unlled Stelnl 81 THE NOTICE IS HEREBY not1eeotbfeach1n<1ote1ec;. Tllatsaid bulklr1Nfet 11 ofthebld 9c:ll.CA 926'48
COURTYARD AREA BE· GIVEN that Ille Hunhngton 11or1101>eReG()(<le<IAug t3. 1n1enoe<1 10 t>e con1um· Tiie bidder 10 whom Ille Tiii• bu1ln•H 11 con· Cancer Fund. 301 M emorial C h apel ,
TWEEN THE TWO STAIR· Beacll Ctty Councll will hOld 198 1 1n t>ook 1• 180 page mated a1 111e olllce ol contrec:t 11 ewerded by tl'le ducted by an lndMdu•I Newport Blvd, N ew -3500 Pacific View Dr,
WAYS AT THE ALLAN 1 public rieanng in the Coun-310 ol said Of1tc1a1 Records Grover Escrow Corporation. City shell execute Ille c;on. Rlcflerd P Vaequez port Beach. CA 92663 N ewport Beach. Pa-
BUILDING FACING YORBA oil Chember at lhe Hunl· Seid sale will !>@made. but 111 Soull'l lllinot1 SlrMI lrect end turnl.,.. 8 IMKety Tiiie 1tetement Wlil flied pa c i f I c y i e W cific View Mnrn••rv, STREET 14081 YORBA lngton CtlllC Center 2000 w11Mut cover111n1 or war· Anaheim Cal1lornl• 92805 bond In the amount of t00% wltll lfle County Cler1t of Or· ~· ·-J
STREET TUSTIN CA 92880 Mein Street. Huntington ranty e•p<eu 0< 1mphed re-on or 1tter January 23, 1986 olllle contract prtce gueren-ange County on Jenu.ry 9. M ortuary. Directors. Directors. 644-2700
ell right. title and 1nter81t Beecfl. Cellfornll. on the gard1ng lllle. possen1on, or Tiiis bulk lrensfer •• sub· teeing Ill• fellhful per-198e 644-2700
con119yed 10 an<I t10w lleld dete and 11 Ille time in· encumbrances lo pay Ille 1ec1 to C1lllorn1e Uniform lormance of the contract ,,,,,,,., --------
by II under Hid Deed of oic:ated ~ 10 reoeove and remaining P<inc1pal sum or Commercial Code Secllon end It ..shllll remain In force Pubti9hed Orange Coast u11·1 ettor~. or plelnt SCRAG
Trust 1n the property Situ· c;onllder 11141 stalements of the notes secured Oy l8ld 6106 tor • period 01 one YM' after Delly Piiot Januert 7, t•, 21. wlthOut en ettorney. le: I Enerst J ohn Schag
eted 1n said County, Cell-811 persons wllO wtlll lo be Dee<I of Trusl wtlh interest The name end addren Ol llnel llOOePtanoe. An ad-28. 1988 nombre. la dlrlCCIOn y el nu-Se Bl f Co •
lornt•. desGr11>1ng Ille lend heard reletlve 10 tile apph· as 1n said note provided. ad· 111e person wltll w'1ol'I" dltlonlll bond tor 50% of the T-011 mero d• t•lefono d•I mor, age • o r -
the<Ojn. talion described beloW vances ii any under the clelms m1y be ffled 11 Grove; cocurKt price •h•ll be ebogedo del demandent•. ona de) Mar. C A .
PARCEL 1 DAT£: Tuesclay Janu1ty terms ol sa1<1 Deed ol Trust, E1Grow Corporation t 11 fucnlthed 10 MCUr• the~-PU8UC NOTIC( del oem1ndanta que Passed away January
Unlt•S.at"1ownandde-21 1988 ,lees chargesan<1 e1tper1M1 Soutll lll1no11 Street mentofclaimalorlebofend tlenoe1boglldo.•l:ALLEH
4 1986
S rvi ed b
FORD '66 Country Sq. St• 1 hned 1n 111e1 c.rteJn con· TIME:. 7 30 p M ol ·~ Truslee ind ot 11\8 Anaheim, Californ1e 9280S mllert•I• rurnllhed for the ftCTITIOU8 _,_.. & FLAn, •-400 MllCArtllUt · · U v Y
Wgn orio owoer JClnt dom1nlum plen recorded Oc· A,pl,ICATION NUM8fR:1 lrusts crea1eo by said Deed ATTN Linda Rubenecke1 work NAMI ITA.,._..,. Blvd . Suite 370, Newport tons, Enen1t J. Jr of
cond $795 760--0500 tober 29 1980 In Book Code Amflt'ldmen1 1110 85 17 or Trust and the latt <lay tor 1111"' Bidders ere hereby Tile following per.ant.,. Beech. CA 92ee-O (1 t • N ewport Beach and
-Said sale will be held on c111ms by i ny creditor lhel noltfled Ill•• pursuant to the d......,. bullnM8 u · OL YM-7S2-7474 Ronald H o f W alnut
PAClftC V.W
•MONAL ltAM
c.metery • Mortuary
Chapel • Crematory
3500 Paclflc View Orl\Mt
Newport Beach
644-2700
TODAY'S Jtln 31 1986 •• 1000A M t:>e Janu•ry22, 1988wtlk:tt lt PfOVlllonS of the Callfornl• pj(;'V COATINGS 8•1 DATE: (Fecfl•I JAN 18 .
at tne lrnnt entrenc. to Or· 111e business day belore 11\f LaborCode.theCltyCounc:ll Peuletlno Avenue.· Coll• 1985 C r eek . grandsona,
ange Coun1y Courthouse, consummetoon date lf)ecl· llu aacerteined the general MeM Celllomta 92926 Lee A. llreMll, C._., ~ John. 8 . Schag of
700 C1v1c Cenler Ortve w .. 1. lied abOve prevailing reta of per diem MWtt A C"-ry 2• t La-D. ~. ~ Palm Desert· Ronald CROSSWORD PUZZLE
HAMORLAWM-
MT.OUVI
M ortuary • Cemetery
Crematory Santa Ana. Calll0t;"1te Tiie DA TEO O«ember 24 w1ge1 and the generel Joll1 Drive ~ 8eac:t1 01pl~ubliPlhldllot ~~-Coat31, Schag of M~nhattan total amounl of Ille unpeld 198S l>f'8Ylllllng rite tor legal llol-Callfornlli V2ee3 ' ..._....,.,.... l t>alance 01111e obllga11on"" MARK A CHERRY, CON· Idly Ind overtime work In Connie I< Cherry 2•t La t98 . January 7, 14, at. Beach; and Michael o f L-------------------=-------~ curedbysald1><oper1ytobe NIE CHERRY, 1n 1ended thetoc.lltylnwhlc:htllewor1t Joll Dnw ~ a..cti t9845 WalnutCreek;grand·
SOid logetller with lntetut. TrensterM(sl .. to be perlormed tor MC:h ca1: I V2ee3 • T-996 aughters. Catherine I .:::::=========-ACftOSS 66 Mineral tutlix
61 No1 sotto PREVIOUS PUZZL.E SOU£D
1825 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
540-55~
I Po}ce 90e1n
6 Set Ille P8ct't
t 1 ArtlcM
1• - -ol ttwmb
IS Harden
19 Oetreud
17 Edge
t8WIM
20 'Aln I We _,
22 Work109
23 VtlCOU'
25 Hornet • ep1'
24 Brlhlh gun
29 Bed humor
30 Lock1•w
32 Agent 9 CUI
3' T 1ed score
39 En1nerea
42 Stella tske<
43 Amt>ertoke
4S Oleor1111n
46 Sllaw1 meker
49 Grieve
SO T8'egraphy
1~un11
S4 Nov ..
55 Planet
S6 0t9')en~
SS Otc:telor
60 s-1 llulf
83 Weld
voce.
68 Ermine
69 Sun tal~
70 Swa1ms
71 For that
reason
DOWN
t Cac>f'
2 Silkworm
3 RuhnQs
•Admixture
5 veoe1a1>1e
6 Outcome
1 Liar
8 Pull
'I Period
10 Tenth prel
I , Steeiriead or
rainbow
'" of Ae1>•aseo
1a1111ea
n Oan(;er
Buddy
l'il Presenl
oll IC4fhotdeu
l t Aomon1t11
men1
23 Me1rte un11
2<1 OaugMe< .,1
Them11
late charga. end utlmet«S Orov~ fKf-Cor'pof-orna
1
_
COSIS, fl•e>enMI. end ad· 1tlon, 111 louttl ...,... DI-IC NOTll'C --... -_-IC_lll\_TIC(___ Pl&.IC N()TIC( Mt.JC NOTIC( vancea, aa to Ille date Iler• ltr .. t, AnaheMI, C...,... r~ ~ r.-. r,y
ot i9 S38,5001>0. pfus un-taos ~;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;;:;;:;
p1ld 1ntere11. II any Putsllmed by the Orange
Date OeQemb« tO. 1985 Coast Deily Piiot Jenuery 7
Aaron F~." Mid 1986 D E l E T E S Truet .. ···~ I f D A T T R E S S Publlll\ed Orenge Coast
T-OOt
G A l E S D tO r(•E S \/ I 'A 0111) Pilot Jenuery 7 14 21 ___ Dl ___ l_C_NO_T_IC_[ __
' ~ += • • 1986 r~ .ER I N F,E1TE D t,L+l(·1 T-004 1A~I v A p ,o R v I l L E ..:r~i~o
L A B R ~A o .o R P _.A N Plllt.IC NOTIC£ cONTAACTou
AI E S 0-+~lN I A l S 1 "9tOJECTNO.MMC•2
GA 0 T 1 ... R~E SI St L'll PI T~ Sealed proposals wlll ~ l I G lH T T ~A tc T T I N E NOTICE Of received .. the ottlce ol
l_J) L,E ._A E,A A .L E ~V .~ N; nwaTll!'llALI Plenl Operetlona Felrvln
• ~ ' ' E ~ ~ Ta NO. •1• O.ve1opmen111 Cef\ter. 2501 B.E,E A .'I' D A .L RE N ,0 YOU ARE IN DEFAULT Harbor Blvd , COiie Meea
26 fermllO'I "'" n Duple•
lO you JI Fleer
"13 Numerot ''' oreri•
lS Cos111 "" l Sur~y
l7 Thtqhl>'"'' '8 French
.co Singt>r l • v
41 Be lttllf•Q
u Arena
4; vnoun~
.c9 Cur11,
!.O Groun<1wo•ti
SI H1111ng wing'
52 S1om11ch ill
S3 Med"
SS Card geme
~1 Pror>0un sq A<1vM111e
61 B4'Yet10@
6;> Ego1
6<I f oe ·toe
6S Vimv lelt<>f'I
UNDER A DEED OF TRUST Cell!. until 2 00 P M on Jen
DA TEO December 22. 1983 14, 1986 et whteh time tllery
UNLESS YOU TAKE AC-wlll be pubffdy opened end
TION TO PROTECT YOUR read for perlormlng WOf'k to
PROPERTY IT MAY BE turnllll ell lebor. meterlals,
SOLO AT A PUBLIC SALE 10011. end equ1pmen1
IF YOU NEED AN EXPLA· necesNty lo lnaten eight (8)
NATION OF THE NATURE retu<n elr ec:onomtzers. by·
OF T~E PROCEEDING pau ey1tema 1t FalMew
AG AINST YOU , YOU 0.vttlOPmenlal Center, In
SOOULD CONT ACT A LAW· ecc:ordence wllll plen1 end
YER apeciflcatton1 tllerefore
ON JANUARY 22 1966, ., Preference win be granted
1 0 O'O A M c 0 M • to blddetl properly IP•
MONWEAL TH LANO TITLE proved u "Smell BualneN"
COMPANY H duly •P· In 8000fdencie Will\ Section
Pointed Tru"" under Inc:! 1899 11 Mq . Title 2, c.i;.
poreuen1 10 ~ of Trull lorf'I• Admln tretlve Code
IUCUlld by RIC"1ARO Appjtcallon1 lor preteten<:e
KANSAA. • Slfl9le m1n at mull be eubmllted lo and
Truator for tile benefit ar>d approved by the Office ot
1ecur11y of DONALD L Smell end Mk\ortty Bull-
MCOONALO AND ELSIE P nett. 18'2 1•1h StrMt,
MCDONALD llu1b1nd end A001n 200, 811CfementO. CA
wlle 8t j()lnt tenenta H 9581•. not i.. than five (5) Benefiel~ dlleo OECEM-calend., deya In edVance of
BEA 21 t083 end reeordllcl b+d Opening d•le
• • In I Ir u m." I N 0 AeQuel11 f()( ltnall tw•
84-011192 on JANUARY 13. nM11 ptet.fenc4t In the IW.,d
t98•. ORANGE Coun1y. ol theoontrect tor the 800\le
St1te ot Celffom.e mentlOnllcl protect II f'llade
WILL SELL AT PU8LIC by 1UOmltt1n9 • ~AUCTION TO HIGHEST 810. l0tm STD I 1 t wlrtl the bid
0 ER F 0 R CAS H . A propotal No p,_etenoo wi•
C ASH IER'S CHE C I( be grented "'""8 the bid IS
DRAWN ON A STATE OR accompanied by the S"TO
NATIONAL BANI( A STATE t ll
OR ,EOEAAL C"!OJT No bid Wlfl ti. conlldetld
UNION OR A STAT[ Ofll un .... " ~medt on a 1ten.-
FEOERAL SAVINGS ANO d1rd IOl'tn l'ufntal'led by the
l 0 AN AS$ 0 CI A Tl 0 N 09perttnent end II 11\ecN In
OOMlCILEO IN THE STATE accordance tWltll tfle • 1n-
Of"'CALl1'0ANIA fr>.tVatltl ., 1truction1 to 810detl"
tlfM 01 Nie 1n laWfur mOMY Pr011p«t1ve tModef• 1N1J
Of 1M unllld St•t .. It Ille 1.11tm1ne 8r\d OC>11ln plaM,
North front entr~ to the 1pec:1t1cetlon1 •110 bid
County CourtllouN . 100 tormt by~ 8'I or rnelllnO
CMc Cet\lef Dl'M Welt,• request 10 tile ()ftt(;.e of tfle &ante Ana, Celifol'nlt llfl Chief of Pltnf ()pentlQne et
r~I lit .. •nd ,,,1.,.., con-,,. •bove addr.. ,..
"")'9dte>ltldnowhlldbyltp,llone 11umber f lt•I
unci.r Sltld 0..0 Of Trust 1110&1.5212
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
PUBLIC MEETING ..
HELD BY
ORANGE COUNTY PLANNING COMMISSION _
SUBJECT:
PROJECT
PROPONENT :
APPEALS OP NEGATIVE
IP210003 POR BLUPP
INITIAL STUDY 3PPOlO
ACCESS IN SOUTH ·LAGUNA
DECLARATION
DRIVE BEACH
POR TOTUAVA
POR INITIAL STUDY
ACCESS, AND POR
BAY (Sth STREET)
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT AGENCY/PAR~S AND RECREATI ON
MEETING DATEi January 13, 1986
MEETI NG TIME1
LOCATION:
1.30 p.m. (OR AS SOON AS POSSIBLE TH£R.BAPTER)
10 CIVIC CENTER PLAZA, PLANNI NG C~I SS ION BEARING
HALL .OF ADMINISTRATI ON, SANTA ANA, CA 92701 ROOM
ALL PERSONS SITHER FAVORING OR
DETERMI NATION AND SUPPORTING
THEIR VIEW~ AT THJS MEETING .
OPPOSING THE COUNTY'S ZNVIRONMINTAL
DOCUMENTS ARE INVITED TO fUSBNT
POR PURTB!R
834-6959.
•
INFORMATION, PLEASE CALL PATRICIA SHOIMA.ID, AT
SUBMITTED IY,
ENVIRONMJJNTAL MAMAGIM&NT AGBWCY
1rie IJl'°'*1Y •llullld In Nkl A 0-~1 bOfl'd, Stett P • N • OLIOW, MAllAGD
COunty and S1111 O.Ctlbed dard f'otrn 107 In t~ al'V11t011M!WTAL/IPIC1AL •JtOJICTI ~nloflthyperc..n~t!O~fl~l'le!J,...,..., __ ...., __ _. .... _.~lillilooiiiii-:iooioiiiiiliiiiilil-----.llltioiiiiottoii .... __ ._._"""".~----------~--...,;ii.iilt.-,.;m,.,;..-;.-.-..;,..-.._._._~
~~-~~~~~~J~==~~=-~~ . .
...
-
25~
TUESDAY, JANUARY 7, 1986
Best ·pal'S kill~r get$ 25 year&
-rt end thrown from plane Judaic Donald McCartin.
He will be eli&ible for parole in l 2'12
years.
A . pound of cocaine and about
$2,000 in cash were taken from
Campbell durina the slayina. which a
P.rosecutor described as a crime of
•intriaue. mxstcry, greed, venscnce
and robbery.·
IC:Cfttly ~ by dru& qents
abouta year after Campbell vanished.
Another man. Donald DtMucio, is
McCartin dilmi.ucd tbe dea&la pe-.,
alty a19ation midway durills 9
tnal, rulJna the motive for the •yUi&
appeared to be revenee ud DGi(
robbery.
near Catalina in drug-related murder Cowell, 3 7, was convicted Dec. 9 of
fint-devee murder. robbery and
conspiracy in the mysterious slayina
of Scott Campbell, whose body has
never been found.
· his neck. His trial is set to ~with k.illin& Campbell by
By STEVE MARBLE °' .. ..., ........
An Arizona man was sentenced to
2S years in prison for his role irnhc
drua-related slayina of a childhood
friend whose body was thrown from
an airplane 2,000 feet above the ocean
World
Khadafy claims Israeli
jets are stationed on U.S.
carrier, calls Reagan
'Israeli dog.' IM
California
Chrl1 Nelson hugs his
eecond cousin, Davtd
Nelson, following a mem-
orial service for Oavtd ·a
brother Rick Nelson./ AS
A judge refused Monday
to lift her ban on camera
coverage of ''Night
Stalker" hearings./ AJ
Cout
Motorists who are not
wearing seat belts may be
IAUed a cttatk>n for not
obeying the state's new
law.JAi
Sports
Rams Coach John Rob-
inson analyzes this week-
end's NFC championship
game In Chlcago./81
Entertainment
The new year gets off to a ..
llvely start on the local
theater front with MYer\
new production• open-
lng./87
Baalne.a
The tale of two Balboa
bank•-one that moved
from the pentn1Ula and
one that stayed -turn•
out profltabty ./Al
IKDEX
near Catalina Island nearly four years aao. Lawrence Cowell, a fo1mer Orange
County resident and a o ncti me O.)Vner
of a Pantera sporucar shop in
Anaheim, smiled and waved to his
parents as he wu led from the
courtroom followin& sentencing by
Alleged
conman
and$2M
• • m1ss1ng
By FRED VOGELSTEIN °' .................
Costa Mesa and Orange County
aberiJrs detectives are investigating
the business deali~ ofa 49-ycar-old
Costa Mesa financial consultant who
allegedly bilked at least 40 investors
out of more than $2 million.
In a reported scam that apparently
spanned three years, Rohen W.
McCarthy allegedly took money for
fictitious investments, including a
trust that never existed, shares of
insurance stock that were never
bought and interests in real estate that
were never purchased, according to
police reports.
Campbell, a.resident of San Juan
Capistrano, was k..illed and pushed
from a small airplane piloted by
Cowell, according to evidedcc
produced during the murder trial.
Campbell purportedly tbou&ht he
wuenroute to Fargo, N.D., to sell the
cocaine to a iroup of drug 'dealen. He
did not know the dealers were
actually federal drug agents.
Cowell confessed to the slayina
during a conversation that was
open 1y 12 in Superior Court.
.. We feel be should have been
sentenced to life without chance of
parole or even death," said the
victim's mother ... But thls will keep
him ofrtbe streets for a Iona ume."
Cowell coukl have been sentenced
to die in the ps chamber, but
McCani.n said the robber)'. ~
peared to be an ·•aft.er.mOQlbtmo,.
than anythina elee. ••
The Campbell and Cowell fiuni-
once were cloee friends and 00!
cassionally vacationed ioeet.ber at•
Colorado River. Durina the murdl[ , ........ ,ASJ
Gas line
breaks;
residents
evacuate
Irvine roundwater
drilling results in
,direct hit on m ain
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Of ............
More than 40 peo ple were evacu-
ated from their College Park homes in
Irvine Monday when a gas hoe wu
ruptured dunng a drilling operation,
spcwina pungent smelling natural ps
into the air. No one was injured in the
afternoon incident.
Orange County fire fighten and
Irvine poll~ bepn evacuating resi-
dents at about I :30 p.m . after a
subcontractor hit the 4-inch p.s main
at the intersection of Sawleaf and
Poplar
McCarthy is suspected of fcatber-
in• his own nest with the money and
flying the coup. His business tele-
phone has been disconnected and he
no longer lives at his Villa Park ·
address, according to a Costa Mesa'
police rcpon made available to the
media. Police said their efforts to find
McCarthy have been unsuccessful.
McCarthy's Villa Park neighbors
said they don't know where he went,
either. Golsham Manouchehr. a rdi-
den1 on Crestview Circle where
McCarthy lived, said McCanhy
moved two to three months ago. ··1
heard he moved out of the state,"
Manouchehr said.
A load naotna nolae from a naptured au
lllle prompb a pl to coTer laer ean u •he
.............................
nacaate8 the area with laer motlaer. In the
backCJOaDd, men work OD the bl'M.k.
Gas hncs were shut off at each of
about 80 homes as a safety precau-
tion. including residences on
Redwood, Beach, Oak and Sawk:af
strecu. The gas, which is laocd with
tbe odonzer mercaptan. coukl be
(Pl--eee GAS/A2)
Another neighbor who requested
anonymity said she heard a number
of people arc look..iog for him.
Honor farm units ready for inmates
"A lot of smart people got burned.··
said Attorney Richard Dinnebier,
who represents about 30 of the
victims.
EfTorofacilities expected to house 406
more inmates to ease OC jail crowd ng
Much of the money came from
investors saving for their retirement.
be said.
"It's a massive scheme to say the
least," Dinncbier said. ..It's very
frustrating to sec. He took some of
these people's life savings. That's
what acts me ...
According to the investigation
repon, most of the victims bad gone
(Pleue Me ALLltOED/A2)
By LAURA MERK
By LISA MAHONEY °' ................
Minimum security inmates who
have been livtog in tents at the James
A. Musick Honor Farm in El Toro arc
ready to m ove into modular build·
ings purchased to hold prisoners from
Orange County's overcrowded main
Jill in Santa Ana.
Inmate transfers will begin Tues-
Funding sought
for AIDS nurse
Officials say nurse
could he1P extend
lives of AIDS suffers-
The news is staaering, though
oftentimes not unexpected.
lamina they have acquired im-
mune deficiency syndrome -AIDS
-is like facing a death sentence.
There is no known cure for the
diteaae, which anacu the immune
system and leaves its sufferers open to
illness and infections.
The only questions are how and
when death will come.
People with AIDS usually live
about two years after the disea.sc is
detected, researchers say. Op-
portunistic diseases -illnesses a
healthy person could shake off -
eventually kill the m.
But Oranac County health officials
are concerned that some AIDS vie.
tims are fallina prey to such diseases
Iona before it's inevitable.
FriJbtened and confused upon
lcarruna they have AIDS many
patients fail toabsorbcovntelina they
receive on how to stay healthy as Iona
as possible, a just-issued Health Care
Diesel fuel spotted
in San Diego Creek
stopped short of bay
An Irvine city worker spotted t.be
fuel leakina into the creek 11 he wu
deanina a nearby bicycle lane, of.
flcials said.
CoDClemed about the l)C*ibility of
fUel IJ'CWi"f into the Upper Newpon tl EcolOlk:al Reaerve, county fire.
ten QlJed to the tcene blocUd
tbe• off\ael and soaked it up wida
1POG1e1 Pierce said. He aaid
d9fiy ~ wofried --~ ftr-.. die IDilJ f\ld WU CODfined to* C....put Drive aoc.tiocl. °""" County En v11onmc:nw M•ns 1 eat sootawornan Nira
Y•=ssbib md an invaUta~
,. ..... 11 .. dietel tutl ~
came tom 1 "** swbd ia ha& Of tile coeane compeny.
(Pl1 , .. IPILL/AI)
day or Wednesday now that the
modular units arc ready. said Lt
Richard Olson, Shenffs Department
spokesman.
All pnsoncrs housed in the hufe
tents at Musick will be given a bed in
one of the eight new living units. Each
unit is comprised of three to five I 2-
foot-by-60-foot trailers. which are
connected side-by-side to form the
newt: ·Shaped complex. The complex
LISA
MAHONEY
Focus ON THE NEws
Aaency report says.
To combat this. county officials arc
seeking state aid to pay for a public
health nurse to visit people after they
have been diagnosed as having AIDS.
Stan1n1 March I, the nurse would
see an csumatcd 10 new patients a
month in their homes. tellina them
bow to recognize early &ym{>toms of
common diseases and infections that
require treatment. acoordina to a
$40,000 a year prosram proposal
(Pl--._ '1JJIDIRG/A2)
also includes a'd in1ng hall. command
center and recepuon center
Low-nsk pnsoners from the main
Jail will be transferred as necessary.
Olson said. All the units .. arc expected to be
filled by next w~k." said Capt. Jack
DcVercaux, who 1s in charge of the
honor farm. The modular units
passed a final inspcct1on by the State
Board of CorrectJons Monda).
Orange County is under a federal
coun order to redua overcrowded
condiuons 10 the men's ~lion of the
main Jail in Santa .\na. U S Distnc-t
Court Judge Wilham Gra) found
count) supervisors in conte mpt ot
court last March for not taking ht1
1978 order reduce the Ja.Jl's popu-
lation to hean
.\s a result, supervisors are under
the gun to m~t ever more stnngent
population hm1~s at the Jail or face
posssble 1mpnsonment themselves.
Jan. 15 ss the next milestone in lhe
effon to give inmates more room .
Thafs when the c-ounty will llave lO
st.art hm1uns the number of pnsonen
at the main Jail to 1.500. The Jatl was
designed to bold 1.191 inmates.
The new living units at Musick
ha"e 1ndl\ 1duaJ wood-paneled cubi·
cles for pnsoners recreation rooms
(Pleue eee BUU.DINQ8/ A.2)
Irvine outfit fined
for disc~arging oil
into flood cliannel
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' ..............
An Irvine-based c-ompan} that
pleaded guilty Monda) to a water
poUution charge was placed on 1nfor·
mal probation and asscs~d more
than Sl.500.
Parker-Hannifin Corp . an aero-
space firm . was charsed b) California
Fish and G ame officials in conn~
tion wtth an 1llqal osl discharge last
July. A Fish and Game spokesman
said construction workers sn the Lane
Aood Control Channel nouctd an oil
buildup behind a temporar) dam in
the channel
About 50 to I 00 gallons of lubn-
cating 011 sptlled into the channel, the
state official S&Jd. If not blocked by
the dam. the 011 could have traveled
into the San Dteao Creek and eventu·
all} into Upper Newpon Bay, he wd.
Parker-Haonifin pleaded guilty to
the single misdemeanor water po1.
lut1on charge Monday in OraDff
County Central MuniC11>9l Court 10
Santa '\na.
(Pi_.. Me OOllPAn I A2)
'
Oww .. C... DAil V PILOT/ :f~, '*"*Y 7, 1MI
G~ LltAKPROMPTSEVACU'ATION ••• .......
uneUed for blocb ·around tbc nap.
TUR.
Wortaa from 0.tum Expioration
wwe opentiQa a.n •.-r to study ~-tee~. 1aid public 11lfornw.ioo officer D.vid Pierce of
the COUQ~b!;: department. Tbe au tractor for the city of
lrvine wu drilli~ the I-foot· diameter bole to morutor the seepaae
problem, Pierce said.
More tba.o 40 people were at bome
wben oft\dals bcpn cleariq the four-
bloCk area, and doten1 of ICh.ool
child.ten from nearby CoUcte Park
School were sent t.ck to the tchool-arou.nd& while the fire depattment'I
hazardous materials team pinched off
the Nptured main.
Altbouah oo one WIS hurt, one man
on crutches had to be helped out of
the area. aaid Irvine police Set. Scott
C'Ade .• Red Ctou volunteer Judy R1ner
anived at the eltmenwy tchool to set
up a sheller for evacuated reaideoU.
but oftldU bed ltaled o« the leakina
111 liDc by 3 p.m. and pmnittcd
Nlideau to retura bome. SoutberD Califonlla Oaa Co.
worbn imnw.liltcly bepo repeiriaa
the fUl'IWed main.
Ou company dittrict manqet
Oail Roeeen 11.1d lerVice would be ~ to t.be a&c1ed bomn \by
about 7 p.m. Monday.
BEST PAL'S MURDERER GETS 25 YEARS •••
F rom Al
trial, the two families 1at les$ than a
dozen feet apan without talkina.
In a prepared statement{
Campbell's father described Cowel
as a callous and bnital killer who is
beyond rehabilitation and will "~e
ul' his path of violence and chcauna
where he left off" if ever fn:cd.
"Larry Cowell knew of the love we
had for our son, be knew that there
was no mom and dad that could be
hurt more by the loss of a son." wrote
Collene Campbell in a statement to
the court.
She described Cowell as "scum."
CowelJ's attorneys, OcraJd Re-
opelle and Gres Jones, requested a
court trial. pinnina their hopes on
McCanin rather than a jury. They
sucx:essfully araued apinst the death
penalty.
McCartin pve Cowell twin
sentences of 2S-ycan-to-life for
murder and conspiracy but the sec-
ond sentence was stayed becauae it
reprnents double jeopardy.
Additionally, Cowen wu liven
lhtte yean for robbery but that
sentence will run ~ntly with
the-murder sentence. Mc:Cartin also
found tbat Cowell was in violation of
parole on a.n aartier vehicular man·
alalllbtcr convict.ion. but did not add utra time to hi1 eentence.
After the bearlna. Campbell's
pueGll said they were relieved and
exhausted.
..We're just really tired," said Mrs.
Cl.mpbell. ''Thi• bas aone on neatly
four years. There prob9bly will be
appeals and maybe the SupTeme COurt and, of coune, the second trial.
"It never ends," she said. "It's
never over.••
Sun to bUrn tllrough morning fog
BUILDINGS READV FOR JAIL TRANSFERS •••
homAl • whb televisi~~~ ping pong and pool ~and pipco-in music.
:rbe drab beige units will house 409
idinates brinain& the inmate popu;
llOion at Mu-sicl: to 669. said Dc-
Y"creaux.
"The U-,haped facility surrounds a
~Y recreation area with picnic t"1>1cs. Officers will stand guard
round the clock 1n the command
~ter trailer which overlooks the r~tion area.
•Prisoners at Musick will be main·
~Ding the grounds at the minimum-
socurity facility, work outside the
compound at places like the county
dGmp if they arc in the work program or go to their reJUlar jobs 1fthey are on
a,.,,ork furlough.
The county bought the 63 trailers
from an Oregon construction com -
pany, which used the trailers at a
remote site where it was building a
power plant. The cost of the trailers
and modifications WIS not revealed
by DeV ercaux.
Four of the trailers will be used to
ellpand thewomcn•sareaat the honor
farm enablina it to increase iu
population from 60 to I 00 inmates by
March.
Founy-one of the trailen were used
to form the ei&bt Hviq units for male
pisonen, anO the remainina trailen
~ used for tenera] operations, such
as medical area. barber shop and
commissary, the command center,
reception center and eating area.
Though the tra.iJen are temporary,
they may be used for up to two yean.
"How long they will last, we fa.fly
don't" know," said DeVerQux. "But
from a security standpoint, the
soonl:r I get somethina with steel and
cement. the happier I will be."
Master plans arc on the drawing
board for a permanent expansion,
said Steve Blaylock. a facility planner.
•
Final constnaction is eapecU!crfOr
mic&-1987 at wbicb time tbe honor
'--will be able to boute ~JI· ~ 1,,3, iamates, said Blaylock. Judie Gray allowed the county to
erect tenta for minimum·ICCUrity
inmales in June as a temporary
measure until t.be modular units
arrival More tban 200 imnates
sweltered tJlroueb tbe summer
wit.bout air conditio:!::r then shivered durina ID eMfy IDal) iD
November before tbe county in·
l1alled rented beaten.
Supervilon hope the additional
beds will be the IDlwer to bepina
witllin Gray's jail l)OOU)ation limits.
said Paul Carey, an Ude to Supervisor
Chairman Thomas Riley.
.. Beds are the aaawer. We'R after
beds and this will provide us with
m\aCh·necded bed Spece to meet the
needs of the oven:rowdina situation
at the main men's jail," be said.
COMPANY FINED FOR OIL DISCHARGE •••
Prom Al
A court clerk said Judge William P.
Hopluns sentenced the company to
two years of informal probation.
Hopkins also ordered the firm 10 pay
a SI SOO fine and S l ,OSO in state·
mandated legal fees. the clerk said.
"We wett unablcto determine the
source (of the pollution). but it was
clear ii came from our facility ... sajd
Chuck Fnedersdorf, a Parker-Han-
nifin vice president.
Fricdersdorf said that building,
located on Von Karman A venue
south of the San Diego Freeway, was
closed shortly after the spiU, and its
operations were moved to a new,
larger plant in East Irvine. He said the
Von Karman buildina is scheduled
for demolition.
Tbe Parker-Hannifin incident was
one of two Orange County water
pollution cases heard Monday in the
Santa Ana courtroom.
In the second case, Auto Master
lnc. of Santa Ana pleaded not auilty
to two bounts of illcptly dischargjng
wasle oil into a stonn drain. A court
trial was scheduled for Jan. 30.
Water main bursts at rush hour
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Ol lMO.., .........
A broken water main in Fountain
Valley snarled commuter traffic
Monday and forced repair crews to
work ioto the night to stop the flow.
One driver found himself in about
two feet of water when he attempted
to dnve through what be thought was
a puddle. after the brealc occurred at
about 4 p.m. on Brookhurst Street
south of Talbert Avenue.
No ooe was injured and city
officials said no residents lost water
service because of the break. But
traffic was "a mess" as southbound
drivers on Brookhurst were fo~
into t single lane, a Fountajn Valley
police spokesman said.
Lanes were closed to southbound
traffic on Brookburst between
Talbert and Ellis avenues as crews
worked to seal the pipe.
CalTrans also closed the 40S Free-
way offramp to southbound traffic at
the Brookhurst exit Monday night.
ALLEGED CON MAN MISSING WITH $2M ••.
From Al
to McCarthy since the late 1970s for
ttx preparation and financial consult-
ing.
One of the investme nts McCarthy
began offering to hJs clients 1n 1982
was a special high-interest trust fund
from Lloyd's Bank, offering investors
a 20 percent return, the report said.
Jack Reilly, vice president and ~enior trust officer of the bank. told
police no such account existed.
McCarthy is also suspected of
bilking others who invested in an OJai
real estate development.
Developer Dick Komorowski said
McCarthy and his investors had
agreed 10 purchase a mini-warehou'>C
Ko morowski was building.
McCarthy pa1d Komorowski for a
portion of ~he $975.~ ~rOJl'Cl,
provided a hst of contnbut1ng in-
vestors and promised to pay the
remainder at a future date. But
McCarthy allegedly neglected to hand
over the money from an additional 20
investors.
Komorowski has asked a judge to
resolve the confl ict of ownership
created by investors whose money
was never delivered.
David Koch, a 57-ycar-old Santa
Ana resident. believed he had a
S 13,000 trust account at Lloyd's bank
and thought he invested S 10,000 in
Komorowski's project.
Koch said everythina on paper
showed be was reccivins divuicnds
from the invested money. The ap-
parent truth was that Koch had
earned nothing but a goose~
"I've been left with noth1na." he
SaJd. 'Tm destitute."
Koch said he hld known McCarthy
for four or five years and that he and
his wife used to see McCarthy
socially. In fact, most of the other
victims were also McCarthy's friends,
he said.
"Although there are more import·
ant th1ngs1n hfe than money, I'm &lad
I didn't retire as I had planned," he
said.
Koch added that he also bought
shares of the American Insurance Co.
worth S3,600 and was supposscd to
get a dividend each month. But that
money wasn't invested either, ~e
said.
The chances of the victims rccoup-
ina their investments arc slim, ac·
cordiDJ to Orange County fraud
invesugator Tom Gamer. He tagged
the IOSICS at ''cena.inly over $2
million." •
Costa Mesa police declined to
discuss their investigation but said
they expect it to be concluded in a
month. At that time, ~e ·case will
probably be turned ovC1' to the
Orange County District Attorney's
office, Gamer said.
Although fraud caaes arc tricky
when it comes time to prosecute,
Gamer aaid there seems to be enouah
of a "common thread" in this case to
warnnt clwies offelony arand theft.
If McCarthy docs not return, an
arrest warrant will probably be is-
sYed, he said.
SPILL STOPPED SHORT ••• Franklin Miller, a 46-year-old La
Habra resident who stands to lose
more than SS0,000 in the allqied
scam, was amazed by the siu of the
o peration.
Jl'romAl
Some of the diesel also could have
been washed off from a coating
applied to the trucks •s an aotj·st1ck
substance, Yamash1k.a said.
The trucks are rovcrcd with a
mill tu re of diesel and wu to keep the
concrete from sticking. ·When the
ORANGE ... .... COAST __ , ... .
MMe orPICS
330 WWI a., II Co.le,...._ C> ,,.... ..._ .... IMO, C.... ..... CA 92'2'
trucks are washed. some of the
miJ1ture comes off. she e•plained.
"We will have a meeting with the
management of the company to Stt if
they have an ongoina p,roblem that
needs to be addressed,' Yamash1ka
said.
Miller also said be wu 1u.rp'ited
th.at such a notable financial cou.n1el·
or would allqedly orcbatnte 1ucb
misdeeds.
"He's even listed io the California
State Teacbet's Quick to loves\-
ments," Miller laid.
c-.--.~---I don.I IM24321 Justcall 642-8088
.. ....,,_,., ,.. .. ,_ .... ,........,..,
6IOJtlll ....... 7P"'
C#yt""'· ,.., Omwt e... ~ ~ No ---. ............... ,..ill!' (/I ..,.....,_
_. ,...... l'IWJ' .... I 0 -Wl!"IOUI IPlt* 09' ~-~..,,. What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What
don't you like? CaD tbe nYmbcr Ibo~ and your
messqe will be recorded. ttantcribed and de·
Livettd to the appropria~ editor.
The same 24'-hour an.swmna ~ may bt
used to rcwrd lettm to tbe cdjtor Oft any took.
Contnbuton to our Let~ column must iodUde
their name and telephone number for V9iftc8rioo.
Tells us whars on your mind.
"'° .,.., .., .. .. .........
~ .............
~---,<.OPP'll!l'7 •1!1 ..... 10 e fft IN .,.,, Ollf .. .......
Cli d Bl l A T l191t aw. ..... =:-Cloulll'( ..... .................
TODAY Ari! NQll ..-00 .. ,...
Arll IOw 1!21 P""-9-ld NQll l'CM p.m
"°'91DAY 12:221.m ...... ,..
2:1' p.m.
e·~P·"'·
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FUNDING SOUGHT FOR AIDS NURSE •..
From A l
submitted to the state Oepanment of
Health Services.
The nurse would see to it tha&
patients ta.kc catt of tbenuelves,
lmow where to ao to get available
community resources and education,
counsel them on death and dyina.
financial aid and in-home health
services, the prol)Olal states.
"It really is a fi>nn of case manqe.
ment," said Dr. Rea Ebling. director
of public bealthand medical services.
"BeinJ sure that they get the ap-..
propnatc medical care, that they
know wbeTe to act it and that they are
not thwarted in their efforts to aiet it,"
be said.
Self-arc and prompt treatment of
potentially deadly illnesses would be
emphasised in an attempt to slow the
number of AIDS deaths.
AJDS treatment is complicated by
the relative newneSs of the disease
and the stigma some attach to those
who contract it, Ebling said. Having a
nurse to follow up on cases will ensure
that patients arc not hampered in
their treatment by prej udice or their
own depression over the incurable
nature of the disease, he said.
"We try tci maintain the quality of
life to the best eJ1tent possible. It's aJI
relative. It's easy to fall into the kjnd
of pattern of saying what's the use ....
We want to . be .sure people are
adequately dealing with that," Ebling
said.
The proposal is supported by the
Orange County Chapter of the A~
sociation for Practiaoners in Infec-
tion Control and Charles A. Rol>-
ertson. a Costa Mesa physician whose
patients include a laJ'IC number of
AIDS victims.
''The advice I frequently give them
after telling them of their disease is
often lost in the overwhelming de·
pression of the realization of their
diagnosis," be said.
There is an ongoing need for
individual evaluation and education
of AIDS patients, Robertson said.
rn Orange County, 181 people -
most of them gay or bi.sexual men -
have been diagnosed with AIDS. Of
that number, 77 arc still alive,
according to Health Can: Agency
figures.
New cases are ellpccted to crop up
at a rate of about 10 a month.
A profile drawn by the agency
shows the aver&JC AIDS patient in
Orange County 1s a gay or bisellual
white male between the ages of 30 and
39. Most an: highly educated and
have professional jobs.
AIDS patients live all over the
county. but the highest concentration
-19 percent -is found in the
Laguna Beach and So uth Laguna
area.
Others who have contracted the
d isease include 22 intravenous drug
users, three hemophiliacs. three who
got the disease through a blood
transfusion, one baby, three heter-
osexual men and three others whose
characteristics were not known.
Three of the above victims were
female.
The primary opportunistic d is-
eases J.>laau ing AIDS patients are
Kaposi's' Sarroma -a rare form of
cancer -and pneumonia.
Recognizing symptoms of infec-
tions that result from lowered im·
munity and acting to get prompt I
treatment can prevent the onset of the
dangerous opportunistic illnesses. ac.
cording to the Health Care Aaency I
report. ,
While scientists search for a cure
for AIDS, county health officials say
the number of victims can only
increase.
AIDS was first identified in 1980.
Researchers since then have de·
tern:Uncd that AJDS is caused by a
virus called HTLV-Ill that can be
transmitted through blood and
semen.
Steps have been taken to protect
the nation's blood supply as well as
alert hiah·risk populations of the
danger of cenam types of scaual
activity and drug use. But someone
with the virus may not exhibit
symptoms of AIDS for up to five
years after contracting it, if they
develop the disease at all. And
knowJedae of bow to prevent trans.-
mission has only recently become
widespread.
As a result, county health officials
believe 10,500 out of the estimated
14.000 gay~. bisexuals and in-
travenous drua users in 0ranac
County arc infected with the HTLV-
111 virus and arc potential carriers.
Another 800 in the aeneral popu·
lation are also believed to have the
virus tbrouah contact with a carrier.
including a bisellual mate or prosti·
tute or throuJb a blood transfusion.
Of those infected; ~l>Cfhaps fewer
than lO percent will contract AIDS
while 30 percent may develop non-
fatal symptoms called AIDS-related
complex.
SE PREVIEW
Jan.
tory
Award Winner
H£Al>UNER 19(16 Rose or the
Year A spec1acular btcolur
crea.my petals edtJed with c
A.narrow Piette 011 the 10
pe1als widen, un11I the oo
ieh a~ net rly all red A • .,....,,
bloo~r. on 11 tall. 11"1ve .......
Plant Pntt'nt J\pphed Fur
BROADWAY • 1986 All J\m4tlca
Winner Grow~ '\ 10 6 (ttl tell
Bloom a~ • blend of rich yelll)"' edltd w11h m•1en1a SweNI)
~enlcd Pl•nt Paien1 Applied t'or
c
Amt
11pncot·
opea 10 6-to
ivory pink endll\I
on outer petal• A ndable
beauty Plant Patcnl No J998
I
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