HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-01-14 - Orange Coast Pilott
TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, ·1986
Dumj>ed cliemical$. iletoDateO
_ K.lp Klnnlg&,a of tbe dlatrtct &ttora9-•• office and Mary
DeGaelle. a crime 8Celle lil~ator for the a erl.t"ra
·• ":....-.. .#
Coast
Community college of-
flclals are keeping an eye
on enrollment figures as
students return./ A3
Embattled student editor
says 8=Chool ousted him
Nation
A layer of fat surrounding
the heart may cause heart
attacks by producing
chemicals that prompt
the growth of leaky new
blood vessels./81
Paparazzi
By STEVE MARBLE °' .. .,.., ........
Michael Shindler. the high school
student who successfully sued his
school and principal over a disputed
editorial he wrote on AIDS. claims
school officials have retaliated by
removing him as editor of the campus
newspaper.
Shindler, who attends Westmmster
High School. filed a complam1 1n
Orange County Supenor Coun ask-
ing that the school be prevented from
replacing him as editor of the Scroll.
the school newspaper.
Commissioner Greer Stoud grant-
ed Schindler a hearing for Jan. 30.
Shindler was informed Dec. 20 that
lus role as newspaper editor will be
terminated at the conclusion of the
school semester on Jan. 31 . according
to his attorney Susan Borges.
"That's highly unusual." said
Schindler's attorney. who said stu-
dents trad1t1onallv have served two-
semester stints as editor.
"We contacted past editors and
nobody had ever heard of something
hkc th1~ ... Schindler said. "We have
documents going back five years."
But Roben Boehme. pnnc1pal of
the high school. said Schindler has his
fellow students to thank for what
could be perceived as his ouster.
"On a classroom vote of 13-2,
(Journalism) students decided they
wanted to elect an editor for the
(Pleue 8ee STUDEl'fT / A2)
Volatile mix illegally left by highway
too dangerous to move from remote site
BJ STEVE MARBLE
~ ...............
A volatile mix Qf h.azardous
chemicals was detonated early today
alORf the Ortcp H1&hwa y when lire
officials qrecd the leaking matenal was too danaerous to move.
A-l 0-mile st.retch of the rural
roadway. which runs between Orange
and Riverside counties. was closed
when a sheriff's bomb squad blew up
the chemicals that had been dumped
onashouldcroftheh1gbwayabout 15
miles east of San Juan Capistrano.
"It was a successful operauon ...
Oranae County fire spokesman Pat
Antrim said. "The bomb squ~d
detonated the matenal and that was
that. There were no 1njunes or
anything."
Ortega Highway. closed since the
chemicals were discovered Monda)
evening by a passing motonst. was
expected to be reopened b)' m1d-
aftemoon today. Antnm said
Among the chemicals was an acad-~ed box of hydraz1n.e ~Uets.
which arc used for propulsion in
rocket fuel. Antrim said. In all. as
many as 20 chemicals were dumped
near the road.
The.chemicals, including acids and
corros1ves. were packaged 1n a vanety
of containers rang10g from mult1-
gallon drums to smaJI bottles. Antnm
said tbey were strewn over a small
area j ust off the highway.
"Some of the stuff was far too
hazardous to move It would have
been rcaJ nsk) ... i\ntnm said "So we
~toblov. 1tup."
llicbael Shindler
Before detonauna the moit volatde
chemjcals. t mcrgcncy crews removed
&emicals deemed to be stable
enough for transportation. ·
Tht explosion occurTCd at 8: 12
a.m. after bemg delayed nearly •n
bour becaust o f media helicopters
c1rcllng above the highway, fire
officials said.
Antnm sa1d It as believed a truck
driver probably du11\ped the
chemicals rather than taking the ume
and expense of hauling the matenals
to a proper dumping faahty.
The nearest facllny for dumPUll
explosive chemicals 1s 10 Nortflem
·California. county firr Capt. Lou
Furst said.
"Unfonunately. the dumps keep
getting moved farther away and that
probably is a consideration to these
people." Antnm said .... They can't
afford to haul ll. so they dump u
"It's become JUSt about a weekly
occurrence ID Orange Count)." he
added.
The chemicals were discovered
about 6 p.m. Monda~ a moton st
who reported a noxious odor along
the highway about 2 miles 1Ds1de the
Orange County limits.
Hazardous matenals spec1ahsts
from Huntington Beach. Newport
Beach and the count) along With a
bomb squad and 20 firefighters. all
wearing protective breathing $car.
were dispatched to the site followmg a
prehminary mvesugation by fire-
fighters.
Evacuations were not nccnsat) ·
because of the remote location
-tPleaeeeee-BAZARD/ A.2)
Woman
gets 12
years in
slaying
Pleads guilty to
mans laughter rap
in drug robbery
The Sandpipers raised
$90,000 for Hoag Hospl-
tal this year./ A7 Apartment cleanup plan rejected By STEVE MARBLE °' ... 0.-,,... ....,
o\ ~I -)ea r-old v.oman who cla1me-d
she unw1tt1ngh stumbled mto a
murder scene ID Huntington Beach
last )Car pleaded guilt) \fonda' to
manslaughter and robben charge.,
and v.as ~ntenced to I~ 'ea~ 1n
pnson
Sports
Another took at the retire-
ment of Orange Coast
College football coach
Dick Tucker./81
Business
The Pacific Stock Ex-
change Inaugurated Its
new quarters Monday
with members enshrining
their economic predlc-
ttons In a capsule./85
INDEX
Huntington threatens prosecution of
landlords over health.safety violations
By ROBERT BARKER °' .. .,.., .........
A plan by absentee propeny owners
to rehabilitate the blighted and over-
crowded Commodore Circle apan-
mcnts is unacceptable, a top Hunt-
ington Beach official said Monday.
And if the owners don't o ffer a
satisfactory cleanup plan soon. the
official said, the health and safety
violations will be turned over to the
city anorney's offioe for criminal
prosecution.
"This has gone on long enough, ..
said Rich Barnard. an assistant to
City Administrator Charles Thomp-
son. "It's the worst housing I know of
in the city. They (the landlords) are
the ones who allowed it to get where
it's at today."
The apartments, a group of20 four-
plex .apartments on Commodore
Circle just off Main Street and west of
the refurbished Five Points Shoppmg
Center, were constructed in the
1960s.
They arc overcrowded largely with
Southeast Asian refugees and illegal
ahen~ from Mexico. according io
officials.
The units have spawned repons of
backed up toilets, broken heaters.
holes in floors and shodd) repairs.
Barnard. who's coordinating cit)
efTons to bnng the apartments up to
standard, said that recent nego-
t1a11ons vm h the nine landlords have
fallen through because of the lack of
assurance from all landowners that
the apartments will be properl)
marntained once the) are rehabili-
tated.
_ Barnard said citv officials have set
'aside $450.000 m ·federal mone) to
help get rehabilitation work stan cd .
Owners want all the mone) to go
equal!) to the units, he said. But the
Cit) opposes g.iv1ng the mone) a" a
grant without an) apparent Wllltng-
ncss oflandowners to contnbute th ear
own cap1taJ
"In their acuon repon. the~
haven't 1nd1cated that they're "'ilhng
to spend one nickel of their monc~."
he said.
In their proposal to Cit) otlic1als.
the Commodore Circle landlords
asked that the cit~ pay mongagc
payments dunng the umc that the
units are "acant whale the'~ are being
rehabilitated. The) also asked for a
news blackout to pre' ent "masin-
formanon."
Neither cond1t1 on was acceptable
to officials. Barnard said .\n in<;pt.'<'·
tor was assigned this w~i.. to 1n-
\'CStlgate health and safet~ threats 1n
the apanmentS. Barnard added
Lisa l\.1ondragon ong1nall~ "a!.
charged "'1th first-de-gree murder 1n
th.c Oct 14 19 5 stabhmg death of
W1l11am Fran!.. Co<h . a 30-.. car-old
Hunungton Beach 'man "ho v.a<;
kJllcd dunng a drug robbe~
The Santa 4-na "'oman said she
onl) "anted to buy manJuana and
cocaine "hen 'lhe accompanied two
men to the H unungton Beach apan-
ment when· the slaying tool.. place
Dunng a murder tnal last fall.
~ estm1nc;ter residents Clement
(Plea.ee 8ee WOMAl'f/A2)
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Death Notices
Entertainment
Fun & Games
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police Log
Publtc Notices
Sports
TetevlsJon
Weather
A3
B5-7
88-10
A9
88
A10
A8
A6
A7
A3
B8
Murder charges filed against
drag su_spects after fatal crash
Teen commission given
Newport council backing
Newpon Beach (it) ( ounnl"oman Jaclo..1c Heather v.on
unanimous council suppon Monda~ to rstahh'>h a tCt'n commission
aimed at stccnn$ the cit) ·s )Ou th to" a rd pos1ll' e act I\ 1t1c'>.
81-4
A7
A2
By STEVE MARBLE °' ...............
Murder charges were filed Monday
aiainst two men who were involved
in a dtu& arrest that led to a freeway
car cbue and. ultimatelx. a fatal
accident that claimed the hfe of a 23-
ycar-old coUese student.
Cotta Mesa resident Luis Carlos
EICObar. 2S. was reportedly speeding
Firemen pitch in
for boy with burns
Family couldn •t meet
payment for son· s
This ii the Mory of a mildUevou1).
)Uf 411 ad a vwtcTan ftreman whoec paths~ *rouD milf'onune.
Both n better •from knowina
each olber.
It WU the fint week ol December
when Raymond ~ de-cided. u cbildrea ...._ will, to uplore the top of \he kitdten counter
in bJ1 parent'• Huntilll'On 8elcb
-=-hit ··~ w -..
Stm
IMau
about 80 mph in a high-performann:
Jaguar late Thursday when he lost
control on a freeway offramp and
struck two cars. ldlhng one of the
drivers.
Escobar, a convicted felon. was
charaed Monday with murder. po •
session of a loaded handgun b) a felon
and six charges relating to the sale of
cocaine.
A second man, who was miles awa)
when the fatal accident occurred.. also
was charged with murder because of
his suspected mvolvement m a drug
deal that prompted the freewav chase
Da"1d J. Gutterrez. 25. was charged
with murder and six drug charges.
Both men arc being held in heu of
$250.000 bail at Orange Count' Jail.
(Pleue'eee DRUO/A2)
The fonnauon of the commission. to ht' compoS('d pnmanl) ot
tccn-ag'trs. comes at the request of an ad h(l(. romm11te<" created in
October to explorT the po<;s1b1Llt} of1mpleml'nt1n~ the comm1ss1on
Hutber. ewpon &ach Mayor Phahp l\taurrr tcrhng 'W olfe ot
the cny's Parks. Bea ht's & Recrcauon Depanmrnt tC'<'n-age,..., from
Newport Harbor and ( orona del Mar hip.h hools parents and
(Plea.e 8ee TEEl'f/ A2)
Supervisors approve
fitness academy plan
Jurors 1null
OC'sworst
boat crash
By USA MAHONEY °' .. .,.., ........
Oranae County supervisors thts
momma scaled the deal for the
nonprofit Nauonat Fitness Academy
to locate in Aliso Viejo. appro'Vlf\I a
2S..year lease-opuon plan for the
ocnter.
With upervisor Ralph Clark di tcouna. \be board 10 a 4-1 vote
•PPfO"cd a oonceptual plan for tbe
ICadcmy. Altt\outh be ltkes the
concept of a fitness academy. OaR
said be bthe~es the ~ should
mcluck f\tnbtt protect>Onl fOf tbe
county in cue lbc undcrtakin& fails.
The col\CeP\ual plan approvtd by
superviton '' not in tune wt the loc:a"l couca1 plan appro\ted by planruac
commissioners on Monda~
Comm1ss1ooers wd no pn"atr
road nor parkina fic1Llues would ~
pan of the plan Supen1<;on.. while
not acuna officiall) on com-
miuaoom' rccommcndauon rq.ard-ina the local roastal-plao. made it
c&ear in acccpt1"g the conceptual plan
that rolld and partma facahttell would
ttmatJ\ a pan of the plan
The local coastal plan Wlll come up
fOf 1Uper'\'1tors' cons1dcrat1on at
some fUture dat
Supervtton approved a 25'-montb
._ opbOft. provullna cnou&h umc
fot the 1lional Funu Fouodauon tooome up with tpeetfic development
plam and obwn ~ pmn1ts
and 6ftucina panntcd CoftStl'U(· ~~--ptl I wHJNW/A2)
Jumf' rt''umed dehbernuon-. toda\
on v.heth('r a Seal Beach man 1s 1u11t~
of man.,lau&hter 10 a 19 4 boat
accident that claJmed the h"c offhc pa~~ngen v.hen th• craft rammed an
unht buo}
V1rl Earle~. 2q. 1s charged Wl\h five
counts of m' olunW')' man la"Shtcr
and could ~ tmtena:d to tiahl )Ur\
10 state pn~n
The llttlcknt oct'UJ'ttd Oct. 2 .
I 9M. 10 the chan~l cntrantt to
Anaheim Bay. which leads to Hunt-
tnf'Oll Harbour. It W8$ the worst PfWI~ bOetant eoOdcftt e~ In °"• C'Ouftl)' .nd w ~ lft lbt \alt ID 20 yUtl.
(P'MM -9GATDIQ/AS)
•
-
•
PITNE88ACADEMY1GETSAPPROVAL ••• ...... 1
don •Ult be "nderway in 60 months.,
accorili!ll to the late.
The fe>wdaticm will also have to
proWk tbe county with tecurity to tba1. aboUS tbe fitneu academy
ICbeme fail. the county will have tho ftmdial '**911'Y to complete tbe
COGIU'UCaioL
The plan allows 8ve years• rent-free ae.te on the land with a.n oPlion to
extend it for 40 yean more. While no
detailed plan for public aceeta is inclUded. speciftctonditioucould be
placed on the foundation when its
coastal development permit is con-~ by the Coaatal Com million. ~oQOWUll approval of the I~
option aareement, AlJcn said, "It's
been a Iona. bard euJJ.
.. This is a hisionc decision because
the United States is the only (major)
country in the world that doesn't have
a titneu leademy,., he ldded.
The Oraqc -County Pla.nnina
Commia&ion ~nday recommended
that about 200 acres of the Aliso
Greenbelt be merved fbr the. non-
profit National f itneu FoundatioJl,
which Wants to build a fitness
MMemy there.
Commitmonen voted 3-2 to
amend the Aliso Viejo Local CouaaJ
Plan to replace a money-makina reson ..boiel-convention center oon·
cept with the academy tebeme
promo1ed by Oeorse Allen, chairman
oftbePresident:sCouncil on Physical
Fitnaa and Spona and fOnner coach
of the Lot Anseles Rams.
Only one commissioner, new
chainnan C. DouaJu l..c:avenworth, wu actually opposed to allowina the
academy to make Its home along
Aliso Creek. H.O Osborne, who also
voted l&Ai-nst ameadlna lbe Local
Coastal Plan, objec10d to las"'minute
cbaftln included in a motion by
Commia&ioner Tom Moody.
The commiaaion's action pleased
Allen, who maintained he bas al•'l)'I wanted tbe fitnen academy to be an
OnQle Cowny deloite some doubts byodietmembenoftbe board.
Local environmcntaJiala were not
p&eaKd with lbe commission·• rec-
ommendation. Lquna Greenbelt
Inc., an o~don dedicated to
preterVation of some I S,000 acret of
undevek>J)ed. land in south Oranae Coullty, fouabt for 2o·ycan to tel t.6e
open space set aside for wildlife and
nature loven, said Jon Brand, fonner
Greenbelt president. Brand is a one-
time mayor of Lacuna Beach iand a
possible contender for Riley's Sth
District teat this November.
· WOMAN SENTENCED IN BB SLAYING •••
_hamA.1
Brown and T utuila Tuvalu were coa~icted. o{ftrSt..dearee murder and
lellteoced to 25 yean in state prison.
But the same Jurors who oonvicted
Brown and luvalu were unable to
re.ch a unanimous verdict on Mon-
draaon, deadlocking 11 -1 in favor of
auift
Mondragon, scheduled to be retried for murder. agreed to plead -I
auilty to reduced clwJes after Su-
perior Court J u<tae Leonard McBride
ruled Monday that her incriminating
statements to Polioe would be allowed
as evidence.
The statements to HuntinJton
Beach detectives were not penrutted
as evidence in the first murder trial.
Deputy District Attorney Rick
Tooh~y said Mondragon·s pica
marked a satisfactory conclusion to
the case. He noted Mondta&on had no
prior criminal ~rd ana WIS not
directl_y involved in the stabbina.
"The work by the Huntington
Beach-police in this case was excel-
lent," Toohey said.
Mondrqon will be eligible for
l>AfOle in about six years.
FIREMEN COME THROUGH FOR BOY ••• hoaaAl
the boy's ri.&ht band and arm with
ICalding oil.
"It burned bis arm, several fingers
and the inside of his elbow," said the
boy's mother, Sharon, who'd stepped
out of the kitchen moments before the
accident occurred. ·
The boy•s parents rushed Ray-
mond to a nearby walk-in medical
clime where a doctor diagnosed the
wounds as sccond-<legrec bums. The
doctor was wrong.
The bums actually were lhird-
degree, _, Raymond's parents dis-
covered the next day when they
hurried him to the UCI burn ward.
The boy's atm later became black
with infection and.,he was hospital-
ized for eight days for treatment and
sk.i~ operauons.
"dnctoc.said he mi&ht JQse u.se
of his right ann, .. the mother said.
"But the grafts took very wen. L think
he'll be OK."
But there was another problem:
Money. Raymond's parents didn't
l'lavc much.
"We just moved out from Detroit
about a year ago and we've been
living on a pretty low income,"
Sharon said. "No insurance."
The mother works days at a grill in
the Seacliff Country Club in Hunt-
ingto while her husband
dcliv rs ornang newspaper.
were so distraught. This
ha ning right before Christmas
and aJl, it sort of made us feel like
nobody really cared," she said.
But H untington Beach Firefighter
Jan Sander did.
·:My I 8-year--0ld daughter works
with Sharon at the country club and
she came home one day really
bummed out. When I asked her what
was wrong she told me about Sharon
and Raymond."
Sander learned Raymond's parents
did not ha vc enough money for
Raymond's medical bills. Not even
thc$500 they were being asked to post
immediately toward medical ex-
penses.
"I though 'What the heck.' My
family's doing pretty well and I
thought we could help out." Sander
said. "Somebody helped me out once
when I was getting going and I
remembered that."
Sander said he and his wife decided
to ask his colleagues in the Hunt-
ington Beach Fire Department for
assistance and then pick up the
balance.
"It was sort of a down time for the
department, too. Tommy Townsend,
one of our guys, had just been hurt in
that downtown fire and we'd been
thinking about that," Sander ex-
plained.
Acting on his request, the fire-
fiahter's association agreed to donate
$300 toward Raymond's medical
bills. Sander called up bis counter-
pat!s in Fountain Valley. They kicked
1n $200. He phoned Westminster.
Firemen there came up with $250.
"It was grcat,0 the fireman said. "I
called her up Christmas Eve day and
told her to bring Raymond down to
the station. We gave her the check and
I told her if she still comes up short.
rll just write her a check myself.''
The boy's mother said she was
stunned.
"h was a wonderful thing to do,"
slic said "It helped us out. It made'us
realize people care. too."
Sander said a bank account in
Raymond•s name has been estab-
lished to defray medical bills. The
boy's parents, meanwhile, have ap-
plied for state aid.
"'I've never done anything like this
in my life," Sander said. "I guess I've
been missing somcthina because it
really makes you feel good."
TEEN COMMISSION •••
From Al
representatives from the business community rnadc up the ad hoc
committee.
"The formation of the Youth Council culminates months of work
by the Youth Ad HocCommitteeand many other supportive groups in
the city," Heather said. "It is anticipated that the Youth Council wiJI
provide a positive impact on community affairs affecting the city's
youth."
The idea for a teen commission surfaced on the heels of a I 0 p.m.
curfew imposed by the City Council last J unc 24 allowing police to clear
the streets of loitering visitors under age 18. Under the ordinance.
police officers are allowed to pick up juveniles who "loiter or idle" in
specified areas.
The curfew action was prompted by complaints from residents
and merchants on the Balboa Peninsula, where teen-agers congregate
on summer nights. usually around the Balboa and Newport piers.
The new Youth Council will be comprised of a school board
member, a City Council member, a Parks, Beaches & Recreation
representative and I 0 student members. The students were instructed
to notify Heather when they have chosen their method of selecting
student representatives for the council.
Jo other council action:
• Council members continued public hearing of an ordinance
toughening massage establishment requirements. The matter is
scheduled to be heard in four weeks.
• Council members approved a plan by the Bren Co. for the
development of the Corona dcl Mar Seniors Project Planned
Community, a I 00-unit housing development for senior citizens.
• The council approved a 9,500-square-foot addition to the
Pacific Mutual Building located at 700 Newport Center Drive and
accepted an environmental document for the project.
• A Corona del Mar couple were permitted to construct an
addition including a second-floor balcony onto their Jasmine A venue
home.
• An encroachment agreement was approved allowing for the
installation of a Ferris wheel with the renovation of the Balboa Fun
Zone.
STUDENT EDITOR OUSTED •..
From Al
second semester," Boehme said.
"Mike could run again if be likes.
"It appears he wants to hold onto
his job because he's worried he won't
be elected," Boehme said. "He's
afraid of running against his peers."
Schindler accused the school of
"involving Journalists with popu-
larity contests" and charged they are
breaking a promise that he would be
editor for the entire year.
Schindler was named editor last fall
by the journalism adviser and said he
was told that he would direct the
student paper for the entire year.
Borges said school officials are
retaliating because of a lawsuit tile
high school senior filed in November
against Boehme. Westminster High
Scht>ol and Huntington Beach Union
High School District Superintendent
Marie Otto.
The suit claimed sc hool officials
were violating Sch1ndler's ~onstitu
uonal rights by refusing to pnnt an
editorial he wrote on A IDS.
The editorial attacked Moral Ma-
jority leader Jerry Falwell and Rep.
Wilham Dannemeyer, R· Fullerton.
for allegedly having reactionary
views on AIDS. The editorial also
criticized the mass media for what
Schindler said was its sensationalistic
approach in its coverage of the
disease.
Otto said the editorial was of-
fensive, poorly written, badly re-
searched and potentially libelous.
On Dec. 5, Superior Court Judge
Judith Ryan said the district could
not censor the editorial and ordered
the district to publish it. It still has not
been printed in the campus news-
paper although it has appeared in
several newspapers, includina the
Daily Pilot.
BOATING CRASH •••
School trustees voted to appeal
Ryan's decision and a hearing is set
Eeb. 18 on that issue.
PromAl ·
Attorneys made closing statements
Monday before jurors began their
deliberations.
Deputy District Attorney John
Conley told jurors Earles should be
held accountable for the loss of life
because he loaded the speedboat w1th
too many passengers. was operating
the boat tn-a-rcckless manner and had
been drinking.
A blood test that showed Earles had
a blood alcohol level of 0. 11 was not
~~:,.~e Illy Piiaf
MA•OPPtCI
JJO w .. 1 Sey 11 Coll• ..... CA Me~ .ad<-8oa 1MO COM• M9la CA 9l6l6
admitted into evidence because
sheriffs deputies failed to arrest
Earles before administering the test
An alcohol level of 0.1 is the
benchmark at which the driver of a
car is considered too drunk to drive.
Boating laws. however. don't specify
when a person 1s considered too
drunk to operate a boat.
Defense attorney Gary Pohlson
blamed the accident on poor liahting
cond1t1ons in the channel entrance.
HAZARD •••
From Al
"That's the one plus," said Antrim.
"ft was pretty much away from
civilization."
C riminal charges could be filed
apinst the truck driver and any
com panic. involved in the dumpina.
But officials admitted chances of
identifiaatioo are sHm.
o~
,.Q.;;;'-s
C...... ldl. e.l•lf1t; ---• tdlortel 5'2-•311 Just call 642-6086
MON»y F1t0ey K 10\I 00
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fl.IPS t4'1-IOOI ....,tpllOf'I Ill' ~-J~ 26 "'°"'' 1 oy ,_, 51 "" lftOf\!Ny
(
Wbat do you like about the Daily Pilot? What
don't you like'? Call the numbn' above and your
me.saae will be ~rded, trantCTibcd a.nd de·
livemi t<> the ~te editor. .
-· The samehOur ans~rina servic.c may be
used to record let1en 10 the editoT on any topic.
Contributon to our Lcuen co1umn must include
their rwn~ and tel~one number for verification.
Tells us what's on your mind. .
I
•
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Tele~
After Nttlng a record ternperature for a fourth day In • row,
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to mkS·SO., the we11ther ~ N6d . High• Wedneeday wlll
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mkS SO.. Htahe Wtdnleday'85 to 75. · "1tQt-
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Bush vows U.S. support to new
Guatemala civilian government
GUATEMALA CITY (AP)-The
first civilian elected to govern
Guatemala in 16 years says his
-priorities upon-talcing--office today
will be to improve the ailing economy
and c-0ntrol human rights abuses.
Vinicio Cerezo, a 43-year-.old law-
yer and Christian Democrat. will be
inaugurated at a midday ceremony,
bccomine the first civilian president
since Juho Cesar Mendez Montene-
gro, who served from 1966-70. He
replaces chief of state Oen. Oscar
Humberto Mejia Victores.
Vice President George Bush. who
heads tbe U.S. delegation for the
inauguration, called the event "a
most historic occasion" in brief
remarks after his arrival today. "We
view this as a turning point not just in his term is "unconditional economic
Guatemala's history but also a mile-aid and willingness to truly support
stone in this hemisphere," he said. an autonomous democracy at the
"We-see-the-demoeratie-tideming-scrvice-of-n..Uo nal and CCntral ·
and we want to be of assistance tCI American interests."
President Cerezo. We want to help This country of nearly . eight
him as he consolidates democracy, we million half of whom arc descend-
want to help him as he endeavors in ants of the Maya Indians, bas an
difficulttimes to clcvltc the standard international debt of $2.3 billion. Its
of living, the prosperity of all of the economy slumped in the late J 970s
people of Guatemala," Bush said. , when world demand for its chief
Cerezo, who appeared with Bush, exports of coffee, cotton and sugar
said, "I consider this a new step in plunaed.
relations between the United States Ccrezo also says be will reorganize
and G uatemala" in which "a tra-the police so they arc under political
ditional democracy lends itself to control and will name a Supreme
strengthen a new-born democracy ... ·· Court that is independent and honest
Cerezo ~d Monday what he needs enough to rule against those who
most from the United States during violate human rights.
DRUG SUSPECTS FACE MURDER RAP •••
From Al
The car accident on the Lincoln
Boulevard exit of the Santa Ana
Freeway in Anaheim claimed the life
of David Vaca, 23. a graduate student
at Cal State Fullerton.
Officers said Escobar apparently
thought he was being chased by drug
agents when he pulled off the freeway
at about 80 mph. His Jaguar hit the
curb. became airborne and landed on
top of Vaca's Volkswagen, police
said. Vaca was kj]Jed instantly, ac-
cording to a coroner's deputy.
State law permits murder charges
to be filed under certain conditions
against drivers involved in fatal car
accidents. But no one has been
convicted of murder in a car accident
in Orange County to date.
At the time oftbe accident, E5CObar
and G utierrez of Orange had been
under investigation for about a week
by state drug agents, according to Kati
Corsaut, a spokeswoman for the state
Attorney General.
She sajd Gutierrez was arrested
Thursday evening outside a res-
taurant in Orange. Escobar, apparent·
ly watching from his car, sped away.
Initially, drug agents tried to chase
the Costa Mesa man but they were
easily outrun by Esc.obat's Jifuar and
gave up the chase, California High-
way Patrol spokesman Paul Caldwell
said.
"There was QO way they could keep
u with him," Caldwell said.
.....
He said Escobar continued speed-
ing at about 100 mph, apparently
under the belief that drug agents were
still following him.
Escobar, umnjured in the accident.
ditched his car and fled on foot,
according to offic.en. He was found
later in a clump of bushes. A bag
containing about $35,000 was found
nearby.
Deputy District Attorney Carl
Annbrust said he decided to file
murder charges against Gutierrez
because he viewed him as a co-
conspirator in the incidents that led
up to the car accident.
Both men are to be arraigned Jan.
23 in municipal court in Sant.a Ana.
.
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"""' (71.4) 197 ·-........
71..Qt !My, "' 12710 Ptlont (9'1) ,. •• .... ...
5218 Afltntton Avt
(HttMln Ct!\ltr) 92504
flllont (114) 681·9811
!
HONEl'BAKED ,,..
r
Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT/Tueeday, January 14, 19N * A8
Irvine's seniors
planning dance
Learalagfromoaeotthebest Students
retuFnte
. The "Bia Swing Band" will entertain Friday
niaht at the Irvine Senior Center for a dance
scheduled from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m.
The cost 11 $3 a penon and refreshments will be
available for purchase. The center 11 located at 3 Sandburg Wa y, Irvine.
O!herdancescoming upth1c year include the St.
Paddy s Dance March 14 and the I ndepcndcnce Day
P*finceJu}y 18. Call the center at 733~ IOSS for further tn ormat1on.
Marriage course at OCC
Pnnc11?lcs for establishing a healthy and open
marnage will be d1sc~sscd in Orange Coast College's
sociology course cntnl~ Mamagc and Family Life. ~ven different sectJons oftfie three-unit course
arc being offered. meeting mornings, afternoons and
ever:iings. Dr. Charles Leviton and Ao Hanchett are
the instructors. and registration is currently under
way through Jan. 24. Call 432-S772 for details.
Lady angl1;rs sought
T~e Newport Harbor Lady Anglers fishing club
is looking for new members. The club meets once a
mor:ith. on the third Monday, at the Western Federal
Savings and Loan Associations community room at
4 Corporate Plaza Drive. Newport Beach.
The ob1ect of the club 1s to interest women in
rod and reel lish1ngand to a1d 1n the conservation of fis~ in l~al waters. Call Victoria Wareing, member-
ship chairman. at S48-396 I for additional infor-
mation.
Chlnese uerclse taught
The Newpon Beach Parks, Beaches and
Recreation Depanmcnt will offer a course in Tai Chi
Chuan. tht' ancient Chinese way to eJtercisc
Sometimes called Chinese Yoga, 11 1s designed to
stimulate every muscle and vital organ in the body.
!he class stans Thursday at the Mariners Park
multi-purpose room and runs Thursday evenings
from 7:45 10 9: IS p.m. Call the department at
644-31 51 for funher in formation.
Irish concert at UCI
Mic~ Moloney. Robbie O'Connell and Jimmy
Keane w.111 retumto UC Irv ine Fnday fo r a concert
of trad111onal lnsh music in the Heritage Room of
the University Center.
The 8 p.m. program will include 11gs. reels and
uad1tw nal ballads played on the button accordion.
concertina. tenor ban10. mandolin and guitar.
Tickets are ~8 for general admission. $6 for UC"I
st~dents -and $7 for other students and senior
c1t1zens. Call 856-6379 for ticket information.
An Invitation:
Attention organ1z.at1on P<esldents and sec-
retarlft We want 10 help make your upcoming
events. meetings, aemlnara and lundralsers suc-
cesslul. Send brief announcements including time.
place, coat (II any) and a phone number tor
addltlonat Information to Bulletin Board. Dally
Piiot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. 92626
Reports.QI your Club or organ1zat1on's actlVIUes
-title community service pro1ect1 or elec11on of
offloers -ahOuld be directed to the Community
News Editor at the same address Non-returnable
black and white phote>graphs are welcbme.
Advanced ballet students at UC Irvine were treated 10
some special 1nstruct1on Monda) from 1ntcmat1onal
ballet star Alexander Godunov Godunov. wh o
defected while tounng w11h Russia's Bolshoi Ballet tn
I 979, v1sttt'd the campus as a fa vor to UCI dance
instructor Israel ··Er· Gabriel. Godunov. who hves in
Be.,,erl\ Hills. ha taken dance classe'i from Gabnel in
Los ..\ngelcs. Though not currentl ) affiliated with a
dance com pan~. Godunov makes guest appearances
v.11h troupes in 1.anous c1ues He launched an acttng
carcer tn the 1985 film "Wuness ··
Colleges
By PHIL SNEIDEl\M.AN
Of .. OlllJ ........
It's sprina at area community collqes, the time when
officials tum to their fancy markctma lechniques.
CoUeac otlictals were kcep1na a cl~ eye on
enrollment fiJUrtS because state fundtna for the two-year
campuses 1s \Jed to the number of students attendina. To
rrversc a decline m community collete enrollment. local
administrators s.ay they have launched more agreM1ve
marketing campa1ans to attract ~nt hi&h school
graduates and older students.
Beyond the traditional maJltngs. Orange County's
e1fht communtt) colleges have poored money to publish
JOtnt newspaper advertisements. lnd1v1dual coOqes havt
purchased their own pnnt and electronic ads.
As the enrollment ~nod conunucs. coUeae offictals
will be 1ry1'ng to dettrm1nc the impact of their marketJn&
tactics.
While the calendar may say it's mid-January. spnna
instruction began Monday 10 the Saddleback Community
College D1Slnct which o~rates Irvine Valley Collqe in
Irvine and Saddleback Collc~e 1n Mission V1eJO.
rhe spn ng tenn begins Wednesday m the neiah-
bonng Coast d1s1nct, which includes Orange Coast Col~c in (osta Mesa. Golden West Coll* 111
Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley-based Coastline
College. which offers classes at more than 70 satellite locations
Saddleback d1stnc1 spokeswoman ·Donna Hatchett
said the opening da)' enrollment for almost 3.000 spnng
classes was 19.512 which was 5 6 ~rcent below the fi rst-
da} registrauon fo r spnog 1985 She said the 1n1ttal spnng
1986 enroll ment breaks down to 14.998 Saddleback
students. 3.624 Irv ine Valle~ st udents and 890 simul-
taneously enrolled at both schools.
Hatchell said her d1stnct has promoted spnng classes
wtth ncwspa~r ads. bus placards and tnformauon
progra mscamed on south Orange County cable telev1s1on
channels
Regular addlcback rcgJs=n continues throuV!
Jan 24 with late registration 111cd through Jan. j I
wtth the instructor's approval. •
Although classes at Orange Coast College don't beg.i n
unt1I Wednesday. OCC spokesman Jim Carnett said his
school seems to be bucklng the trend of dcchnmg spnng
enroll ments reported at other campuses..
ThrouJ)l Fnday, Carnett said, ()( C had enrolled
18,417 spn ng students - a 3 pe rcent increase over a
comparable date in the spnng 1985 term '\_Jthou&h spnng
attendance IS usuaJl y l9wer than that Of the (alJ term.
OCC-s most current figure put It 14 pe rcent ahead of a
s1m1lar date last fall .
Dunng peak years. ()( ( 's enrollment has ap-
proached 30.000. but in recent ~cars n has plummeted to
as lov. as 23.000 Carnett predicted the campus could have
as man> as 26.000 students this spnng 1f the trend
continues
He said OCT has promottd spnng classes \ 1a
newspaper and radio ads. bus placards and 30-sccond
spots cam cd on the Music Tele,·1s1on and ESPN lspons1
cable channels.
OCC"s regular registration continues through Jan. 22
with late rcgistrauon .allo~ through Jan. 31 with thr
teacher's ~rm1ss1on
Golden West College had signed ·up 12.254 spnng
students as of Fnday. according to Nanc; K.Jddcr. acting
dean of adm1ss1ons and records he said the college 1s
about 5 percent below a comparable enrollment figure
fro m the spnng of I 985.
Tuesday, Jan. 14
Protesters asking school board
to explain vote to remove Barnes
But she said the drop was 10 li ne with a pred1c11on h'
Golden West otlic1als that enroll men t would be dov. n h' 6
~rccnt throughout the 1985-86 school year
Kidder said Golden West's marketing also 1ndudc<. J
J~SC"Cond MT\ ad feat unng unrchear~ 1est1m on1d "
from students at the Huntington Beach campus She .-.aid J
10-minute version of the Golden West '1deo is shown t~1
area high sc hool students at coll ege night programs • 6:30 p.m .. Irvine City Council, Cit} Council
Chambers. 17200 Jamboree Bl vd.
• 7 p.m. Ha11tlllgton Bucb Union Hfgli Scbool
District. District Educatio n Ce nter. I 0251
Yorktown Ave.
\Vednesday,Dec. 15
• 6 p.m .. Lagua Beacb Energy and Environ-
ment Committee, Communit:r Center. 384 Legi on
St.
• 7 p.m .. Lagana Beacb Planning Com mission.
Council Chambers. S05 Forest Ave
• 7: 30 p.m .. Lagaaa Beacb Parklllg, Traffic and
Ctreolatlon. City Hall Conference Room. SOS Forest
Ave.
• 7:30 p.m.. La1au Bueti Seismic Safe-
ty /Dl111ter Preparedutt, Police Department Li-
brary. 50S Forest Ave.
• 7:30 p.m .. Irvine Comm1talty Services
Comml11lon. City Council Chambers. 17200 Jam-
boree Blvd.
By LAURA MERK
Of Ille Delly ...... ..,,
;\ group of about JO people 1s e'<pcctcd at tonight'<,
school board meeting 1n Laguna Beach to pro1cs1 thl'
panel's recent dcc1s1on not to rene"" Supcnntendent Bill~
Barnes· contract.
According to Ursula Ea'itman. a La~una Beach
resident and membe r of a loosely organized Barnc<.
support group. many people tn the communtl) arc angr.
over the 3-2 dec1s1on last month and want 11 re' crscd.
Board members Ja net Vickers. Cha rlene Rega11 and
new membe r Susan Mas voted not to renew Barn<.',.
contract. HalT) 81thell and Dr Carl Schwarz \'Otcd to
retain the supcnntendent
"We were shocked," Eastman !Mltd of the decision.
Former board member Dan Daniels said that
although he 1s affiliated wtth the support group, he wi ll tx·
representing only himself when he asks the board 10
1us1ify its dec1S1on at tonigh t's mecttng at 7:30 1n the
adm101strattvt' offi ces. S50 Blumont St.
That Daniels considers Barnes "an exccllcnt admin-
istrator .. 1s onl) one of the reason' fo r his unhapp10l'\<.
wtth the board \Ole
Poucr LoG
Police discover crashed
cycle rider shot in chest
Irvine police say an appartnt traffic
accident early today turned into an
attempted murder C8$t when officers
discovered lhe fallen motorcyclist
had been shot in the chest.
Sgt. Leo Jones said a motonst along
the San Diego Freeway near the
Jeffrey Road eiut reported seeing a
motornck 10 off the road at ·1 a.m.
today.
The w1tnes~ alerted Cahfom1a
Highway Patrol officers. who found
a-ttactoa Beach
A thief reponcdly broke into the
storaae unit of a Brookhunt Strut
apanmtnt Monday and stoic SSOO an
tools. • • • A Sl,374 camera was reported
Slolen from 1 brown 1983 Datsun
Muima parked In an AMC J~p
dater lot at 167SI Beach Blvd.
Monday. • • • Officials of Elite Imports, JS841
Chemical, reported Monday_ that an
u-cmployec stole 1 S7,?00 chttk
from the compan~ and rcuntly roracct . •ianature to cash it. • • • A Westmlnater mide.nt cal&cd
poiliet Su•y IO repon that bia SlOO
auitar ... ttolcn rrom hi• friend' home in the 1300 block ofVaknct .. • • •
1he motorcyclist l)ing nc'<t to h1\
vehicle, complaining of pain Jon\.'~
said. CHP officers then u w that tht'
man had been sho1 1n 1hc chest and
summoned paramedics and lrv10t'
police.
Jones said the motorcyllst. 1dcnt-
1fied as Raymond Charle" Broulcllc
27. of Mission V1c10. was ru hed to
the trauma center at Fountain Valle'
Regional Hospital. At m1d -mornini.
the shooting v1ct1m remained in
A S 16.S Jacket conta1nini a wallet. SI .SO in cash and a S2SO nna 1n the
pockets was rcponed stolen off a
motorcyde parked in front ofa Taco
BeU restaurant, 818 Pacific Coa l
Hiabway. Monday. • • • Thieves stole SSOO in quaners from
the d~n of five laundry rooms and
did $3,000 In damqe to the ml(h1nes
unday n[&ht. • • • Vandals repontdly did S200 dam·
ate to three Pac 'n' Save compuy
trucks when they spray";P9inted lhem
while lhty ~puked 1n front of tbt
2l082 Beacb Blvd. sun tomctitM last~kend..
r-tala VjlleJ ' Cash. check and Cftd1t ard l"'9
C(lPU. tot.alina $6SO 74. W'CIT re-
cn 11cal cond111on. the police <;<"rgeJnt
~Id.
"W e'rt: trca1 1 n~ th1~ "" a po1c.-nt1al
auemptcd hom1c1de." Jones \atd
He said In inc officer' Wl'rc \<.'l.lrt·h-
1ng for evidence a1 the frce""a) cr.J'h
site and wailing at thr hosp1t.1I
hoping to talk to the v1ct1m
Joneua1d Irv ine officers are """'"ll anyone wtth informa1100 un lhl·
'>hooting to contact lnvest1ga111r
U IT) Montgomery at 660-3737
ported stolen Miners mall EnJint
Clinic. IOSlJ Eiits ve .. over the
w~kend. • • • A $300 car stereo was reported
stolen fTom a tan 1982 To)'ota SRS
earked at the comer bf Gloxtna and
Bopn unday. • • • An 18-ycar-old rt"t1dent in the
18300 block of Mt. Waterman wa~
cited for \llinallnl lf'l _ pubhc earl)
Monday in the 17000 blOt'lr of
M-.nol&a Streu Ptuhp R. Kine l'i
due to appear an Wcstminuer Mu·
nicipel Cou_n on Feb 2S
lntM cu""'° val.a at brtWMA S200
Md S..00 ... rtponed 11*'1 from •
vebidt puted an 1 lot at 17211 Rtd
HtU ~-Monday. • • •
Barnes "crved as supcnntendcnt for the past 11 •~cars
and v.as hired 11 years ago as director of instrul t1onal
<,en ICC'S
Regular Golden West reg.istra11on conti nues through
Jan. 24.
Coastline ( ollegc. whi ch ha\ no formal campu ....
conducts most of'tts pre-semester rt·g1\lrat1on b' mail The \Otc to end his contra<:! came at \1a'>· first
meeting. Mas succeeded Daniels on thr board .\s of \1onda'. 13.JQJ 'itudcnt'i had '>1gned up tor
spnng Coastline classes C ollcge spokt·sv.oman ~hb1c
Ta)'lor said tht' figure was 16 9 ~rcent bclo"' a
comparable date 1n the spnng 14K<i term and wa!> llf ft
percent 0elo"' the figure fo r fall I '/M5
"I am amazed that .-.he could make that dec1s1on I
don·1 kno"" ho .... , tn good consc1c'}ce <>he could place that
swing vote and I would li ke her to1uc;11f~ hcrdl'lt\tO n .. he
said
But Dan1cli, had oth <.'r concern-; about the vote that
took place al ~ a m. The ct1scuss1on of Barnes' contract
....a., put on the agrnda ao; a .-.upplemental item and
discussion'> took place 1n clo<.ed session Su ppk ml·ntal
11ems arl' usual!) placed on the agenda at the last minute
.\n) board member or the ~upcnntendent can add
add111o na l c;ubJ<.'Ct\ to the agenda w11hou1 the knowledge
orco n-;cnt of the othrr members. When the board reachc'i
that 11em 11 can chose to vote on tt or table ll.
But she noted tha t 'O p:rcen1 of oastltnc'\
reg1strauon 1rad111onall~ take.; place 10 d ass dun ng t!w
beginning of the semester 'he said the d1sappo1nung
spnng mai l reg1s1ra11on ma' Ix' r<.'lated to d1.-.tract1ons O\ er
the hohda} ~ason
Taylor said Coastli ne's spnng mart..c11ng has mcluded
ads on four radio stations .\I<,() the college has promoted
its tekv1s1on cour;c'i through ad~ an campus nC"wspapcrs at
C lr.1ne. ( al State Long Beach C al State Fullenon.
.. .\ matter of that s1gn1ficance ~hould not han · lx'en
(introduced I a~ a <,upplemental item." Daniels said
Orange Coast ( a llege and Golden \\-e.-.t ( ollege. These ad"
arc designed to kt .. 1udt'nt., t..nov. that the~ can fu lfill some
degree requirements through C oas1hne·.-. tel<"Cou~s. at a
lov.cr cost than a stair unt\l'f'll\ da\\ .\ccord1ng 10 Eastman. the group"''" as!.. tht' hoard 10
recon\1drr II\ lk C1s1on and plJce 11 on th e agenda fm a
luture meeting
( oasthne'" an " la"' rcg1<.trat 1nn u 1n110ues for 1wo
v.eek'i Tht' tt·kwur<.l' <.1gn-up rx·no<l run" through Feh "
.\n undrtcrm1 ned amount of JCV.-
df") "a" r<.'poned stolen Monda'
from a home 10 th<.' 5100 hlcxt.. of
Bordeau\ \\cnue • • • Ca~h wtahng $1,100 was re portrd
qolen from the c;.1fc of a bowling allc'
a1 34 1" 'Vt 1chd ,on Dn' c Monda' • • • .\n SI'\ 'in g.a" gl'nC'rator "'as r('poned
stolen from from a busincs.-. at I ,""~
(. O\\>an • • • ( arpcnll'r'' tool<i valued at S4.000
v.cre rc poncd \tolen from th<' bed ofa
pickup trudc pa rl..l•d in a lot at I 7'i~ I
'Vt ttchcl l '-onh "1onda)
Newport Beach
Tv.o mun('\ hags conta101n& SJ"''i
1n cash .... r re rcponed tolen from the
'\tut\ Noodk re'1aurant. ~I 'i R1vtr-
~1de Drive. aturda )' • • • .\ 5 -\car-old resident 1n the.' I 00
block oi' North ~)front reported
c;unda\ that a S 12.000 diamond nn& ~as stolen from hK home c;omettme
1n th<' pa$t two months
.CoetaMeea
.\ thief reponcdly stole S24S 1n
fi htna cq\l1pmcnt, 1 SI 0 c"en~1on
cord. a $90 etrcular saw and S 0 m
do1h1na from the beck of a 11ttn 1969
Ford p.ckup tNCk perked ta the 2300
block offa1rvttw ROild Monda, • • • A lhtcf rcponedl> to~ a S300
tereo syitem from a bc>me •n thc-2 200 bJock of Harbor 8ou~vard
Monday.
l\.1tss1 on VteJ o home in thr ~'i on
block of Via Pera over the v.-ec l..l.'nd
The tou J loss was esti mated at s 1.875 • • • <\ S500 color TV St't and a S4 'o
microwave oven were rcponed \!Olen
from a Laguna Hills home 1n th<.'
2 '"' ~· bloc!.. ol \ td ~n l 1ahnel o vc-r
th<' v.erl..end • • • .\ S 10 "'alkt contai ning SnO an cu h
.... a~ rcponed .. tok n from a Ind.er al
the Laguna "11guel R1t1 ( arlton
Hotel. ~~511 Shorchn<.' Orn l" atur·
da' nigh t
Driver, daughter, 5,
killed in auto wreck
.\ Huntingt on &ach man and h1\
'tOuna daughter were lolled v. h1k nn
their "3) lo Palm ~pnng..'i v.hcn their
car went out of control and ~lammed
mto a din embankment. a < ahfom1a
H1.1_hwa> Patrol offiC'Cr said toda\
Killed 1n the smgfc<ar aC'C1den1
unday on C'ahfomta 60 1n the
Moreno Valle' area v.-erc <;1e,·en Paul
l..ambdcn. 16. and h1<1 daughter
Samantha. S
' '\nother dauJhtcr. Chenl ~ <1uf
fered a C'Oncus\ton and a hrokcn le•
he was reported m u u faC1nn
condition today at R"c"1dc < ('Im
mun1ty Hospital
C'HP mv"ttptors said the cJr "'a~
travthnaabout 60 to 6S mph when for
unknown ru n 1t dnf\ed into the
din ~nter dav1dtr It traveled 5t'"eral
hundred feet into the dJ\ adCT,
~beck to \M eastbound lane ,
tht_n ran off the shoulder of the road
and struck 1 dart embankment he.td-
on. •
Lambdm wast~ ahve an the
~ of lu1 l 91 l HOftda Accord
for about u IM>ur, acc:otdtnt '°
'"" t~•iptftn. He ... pnmounttd
dl'JIJ m 11'1<' eml'rgenq room ot n
( •<'l'J<'n111 l'as .. Ml'monal Ho!.p1tal 10
l:ka uml1nt \3man1ha v. as pm -
nounrt'd dt'ad at Rl\ers1dr Com-
muntt\ H<>,p1tal
Nenhcr Lamtxkn nor Samantha
"ho wu nding in tht front ~at. wn'
~canna a scat belt.
lhen I wa' nd1na 1n the back <w:at
t'lu l ht'r tnfant ~at wa not attached
properh acrordafli 10 the ("HP
'ipok~man
Funeral ~" 1oes arr ~ndtna a1
Pttk Famil) \olon1al Funeral Home
an Westm 1nsttr
Deputy k illed : 2 h e ld
• .\ DIEGO (AP) -Two roen
wuc 1ntcm>p&ed earl} today 1 the
f'atal shoouQJ of an ofl'~uty lherttrs
dt:l>\lt)' ~ho bad bttn on the ron:e 10
dalS-Ht.bonbn Mid. . oe,uc!, kdJy .... la, ad •
modm "' ""°' ... killed MOliidiy Diibt-by mn Wbo Md Nllbid a ~YMaft..SweN ~ba
""8Y car. IUd SIMritf ~-~.
...
'
~O... OAJLY ptLOT/TUelday, Jenurt 14, 1Ne
Drug-testing program gets
strong support from NCAA
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Oel-
eptes to the NCAA convention pve
overwbelmina suppon to a dnl&-
testina pt"Opam today.
The lqislation establishes a
lenatby list of binned performancc-
enbancina substances, including
anabolic steroids. The list includes
sueet dnap identified as cocaipe,
heroin, &mt>betamines and and mari-
juana. .
Athletes will be tesled at football
bowl pmes and NCAA cbam-
pionabaps and will tteeive automatic
90-day suspensions of eligiblity if
~tpostive.
bes or other 1ebool employees
will be subject to suspension or
termination for not reportina ath-
letes' ~use.
"There is no question that to test is
to deter and to deter is to prevent,"
laid one ~te tn support of the propam.
In other action this morning,
deleptcs approved a vaguely worded
measure that reaffirms a player's
retl)Onaibility in uphoklina recruitina
rules and turned down a bid by bia-
time proarams to raite the Jimit on
federal lllistance prosrams for ath-
letes to $1 ,400.
Meanwhile. charges ranging ftom
insensitivity to racism arc beina
burled at the NCAA foUowing pass-
qe by \be predominantly white
aovemina body of coU. atbJetics of
eliaibility requirements black
educaton insist arc inherently biased.
The end result of Monday's vote,
which followed the rejection of two
other black scbool.;sponsored
proposals, could clear the Division I
benches of thousands of incomina
freshmen, who would be ruled in-
eligible because of less-tban-suffi·
cicnt hi&h school grades.
Today, the convention will tackle.
more sensitive issues ... amona them:
-An involuntary drug-testing
program in which coaches as well as
students could face penalties.
- A plan to expand an athlete's
eligibiity to a full nve years. rather
\ban the traditional four an a live-year
span (better known u fed.abirtina).
-'Reducina from eiabt to seven
the number of sporu needed to ~main a Diviaion IA school (after a
similar measure to cut the minimum from ei&bt to aix failed Monday).
· -Tlie bannina of booltcn f!c?m llkina pert in on-campus recnuuna (ofl'~mpus recruitina by boosters
has been probibiled for several~):
The addition to bylaw S-1-0) of the
NCAA Constitution -more com-
monly known as Proposition 48 -
employs a mix of hiah 1Chool ~
point averaaes and Scholastic Ap-
titude Test or American CoUeae Test
results.
0 1 don't undentand academicians
beina. that asinine, insipid and
bucolic," Eddie Jones, the faculty
rejtfnentauvc at Gramblin&, railed
after the NCAA rejected. by votes of
47-248 and 66-233, black-sponsored
proposals to etiminate SAT or ACT
scoTeS as a measure for atbJetic
eligibility.
Get the point?
811.Dd rock mulclan Ste'rie
Wonder laope9 to opea tlae
o6 ,..., =le to tile aacl ••• Uld
tla tlala new poeter,
from 1,100 eD·
trl• 8J»OD80red b)' R•der'a Dlleet 1Da1ulne.
Oil firms rebuffed
by Supreme Court
on_pipeline taxes
WASHINGTON (AP) -The .Su~ CIU•rl ,.. .. rm. "'"' on preme Court has barred major oil -rn1
companies from mcoverina billions fllOW m.kHP of g,.nd
of dollan paid tO' Alaska in taxes on }urltl& ·--on ...
oil pessina throqb the Alaska Pipe-·-'
line. ffi ·al The court, citina the lack of "a tax even allowed state o 1c1 s to pay
substantial federal question," re-S 1,000 cash dividends to each state
jected an appeal Monday by four ~sident: . ~or oil firins and their affiliates The oil companies -AtJ:&nUc
that &rJUed the tax was unconstitu-Richfield, Exxon, BP, and Sobio '7
tional. said the levy was u.nlawful because at
The oil companies filed a federal amounted to double taxation. They
suit challengina about $2 billion they said Alaska 1aXed the companies on
paid to Alaska from 1978 throu&h oiltransponed to other states and was
1981. ,. taxed there as well.
The tax was replaced in 1981 by The Alaska Supreme Court ruled
another -le¥¥-not cballeQaed in the -last Auaust that the tax was lawful
appeal acted on Monday. The fonner tax used ~ technique
-the oil companies are the main called "separate accounting". to de-
owners of the Prudhoe Bay oil field on termine an oil company's tax bill. The
Ala.sk.a's North 'Slope and of the technique based-.....the tax ~n 1:he
Alaska Pipeline. amount of oil prodUeed and its well-
Alask.a's oil taxes produce nearly all head value; in other words. the crude
Old, new songs, writers win country hon~rs of the state's revenue, and the former oil's market value. ~
Gases said gre~terthreat to ozone
NASHVILLE, Teon. (AP) -"My
Onty Love," a No. l bit by the Statler
Brothers, was voted top country
music song by fans who also picked
"Hello Mary Lou." first popularized
by the late Ricky Nelson~ as another
favorite.
The two songs and the writers who
composed them were honored Mon-
day night along with other country
music comooscn at the nationally
televised sixth annual National Song-
writer Awards show at the Tennessee
Performing Arts Center.
Statler Brother member Jimmy
Fortune, who wrote "My Only Love"
for bis brother's wedding, won the top
award for the second straight year. He
won in 1985 for his composition,
••Elizabeth."
.. My life is truly a fairy-tale come
true," said Fortune, 30. who joined
the veteran quartet in 1982 after
writina service orders at a car deal-
"Crship in Charlottesville, Va.
"My Only Love," which made the
top of the country music chans last
March, is about the bond between a
man and woman. Fans also voted the
song the year's No. I traditional
ballad in country music.
· Fortune said his brother wanted
him to write a Lionel Richie-type love
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song, "but I couldn't do that. It came
out to be a preny 'ood sons; they liked
it so we recorded tt. It turned out to be
,a pretty good idea."
"Hello Mary Lou," a bit for Nelson
in 1961 and brought back last sum-
mer by the Statlers. was voted best
traditional upbeat song. It was writ-
ten br Cayet Manaiarancina and ex-
rock n' roll star Gene Pitney.
WASHINGTON (AP) -New research sugests that depletion of the
earth's protective ozone layer by man--made .-~ could be arcater than
previously thouaht and areater in far northern rc&JOns than toward the equator.
Ozone, a fonn of oxygen that is a pollutant near the ground helping.to form
smoa. miabt even increase at low altitudes near the equator. according to a
draft repon prepared by I SO scientists from 11 countries.
The rcpon, made available Monda)'.. raised the question of whether the
predicled stiipPinfaway of protective ozone mi&ht already be occurring, baSt'd
on an unexplained but now confirmed "hole" that occurs in the sprinatime in
the ozone layer above Antarctica.
Mideast nations fear
threat of superpowers
MANAMA, Bahrain (AP)-Iran's
interception of a U.S. freighter has
increased fears in the Persian Gulf of
superpower intervention in the lran-
lraq border war as Iran apparently
escalates its campaign to detain any
ships suspected of supplyinJ Iraq.
An Arab diplomat based m Kuwait
said he believed "the Americans
wouJd not hesitate to shoot to kill if
their ships were endangered in the
rcaion." He spoke on condition of
anonymity.
''The French at one st.age sent a
warship to escort a French-nag
merchant ship in the gulf. and in
recent weeks the Iranians harassed a
British ship, and now we have the
Americans being forced to protect
their ships," said another Arab
diplomat, ~lso speaking on condition
of anonynuty.
"The situation is fraught with
danger. and the American warshi~
arc not exactly safe to play with," sa1d
the diplomat, who also spoke on
condiuon he not be identified.
The U.S. warships-the destroyer
..Conolly and the frigate Boone-were
sent as a precautionary m ove to the
Gulf of Oman. where the U.S.
freighter PresiUent Taylor was stop-
ped and boarded Sunday by Iranian
sailors. U.S. Defense Secretary
Caspar W. Weinberger said the war-
ships wert there "to prevent anything
other than what happened."
A maritime shipping agent in the
UnitedA.rabEmiratessaid U.S. Navy
units were "shadowing" American
merchant ships in and near Persian
Gulf sea lanes to protect them against
harrassment by Iran.
In Washington, however, State
Department spokesman Bernard
Kalb said in a statement Monday that
a nation at war traditionally has
"certain ri&hts" under the rules of
naval warrarc to find out whether
neutral frci&htcrs arc supplying con-
traband to the enemy.
"We arc continuinJ to assess the
facts of this particular mcident. not all
of which arc yet known, todeterimine
whether the sto1>-and-search was
appropriate under the circum-
stances," Kalb said.
Iran bas said the move was allowed
by international law. The 39,000-ton
President Taylor, the first U.S. ~hip
stopped by Iran, was bound from
Pakistan to the gulf port of Fujaira in
the United Arab Emirates.
No property damage or injuries
resulted.
lran and Iraq have been fighting an
indecisive border war since Septem-
ber 1980.
Neutral tankers first came under
attack in 1983 when Iraq. determined
to deprive Iran of the oil revenues
needed to fight the war, threatened to
attack any ships coming within 50
miles of Iran s K.harg Island oil
terminal.
Iran -which. unlike Iraq, is not an
Arab state -retaliated by raiding
Arab and other vessels m inter-
national waters south of the zone
declared off limits by Iraq.
Iran's Parliament speaker,
Hashem1 Rafsanjani, warned at one
point that ifthe Persian G ulf sea lanes
were not kept secure for Iran's oil
exports, then they would be "made
insecure for all" countries. On Oct. 18, Iran tried to intercept a
French freighter, prompting a French
warship in the vicmity to move in and
chase away the Iranians.
---------------4 S~ Yemen Viets probe
sightings of
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• EllSbaES • CUPS • HCOUTIOllS • PllAT AS •
*LARGEST SELECTION IN ORANGE COUNTY* *
chief hurt
in coup try
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Vietnamese aovemment has pledpd
to investipte nearly 100 "livc-si&bt-
ina reports" of Americans miss.in& in
Indochina, a top Pentagon official
said Monday.
MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) -Per-
sian G ulf sources said today that
President Ali Nasser Mohammed of
Marxist South Yemen was critically
injured in a COU.P attempt. In London,
the Foreign Office said unidentified
planes bombed the airport in Aden,
South Yemen's capital. today.
Diplomats in Aden reported the
bombing and also said tanks were
seen in Aden's Khonnaksar district,
according to the British spokesman,
who demanded anonymity.
broke out," one sb~g executive
told the Associated .
Richard L. Armitage, the assistant
defense secretary for international
security affairs, said hundreds of such
sightings in tbe past decade have been
dismissed by the Pentagon as fabri-
cations or involve men already ac-
counted for. But 95 reports ~main
under U.S. invcstiption, and the
Vietnamese aovemment bas prom-
ised to look into them, be said.
He said small-arms and artiJlery
fire were heard in Aden throughout
Monday and resumed at dawn today.
He said the rebels' identity was not
clear.
A Japanese executive, spcakin' on
coodiuon of anonymity, said, • We
arc told that at least four (merebanO
ships we~ on fift Monday ni&ht" in
Aden harbor. He said several seaside
buildinp also were ablaze. The Vietnamese have also betun
investi4Atina ~ports from their own
people 1nvolvina the status of missina
Americans and to allow joint U.S.-
Vietnamesc teams to conduct "mul-
tiple" excavations at sites where
American planes are known to have
crashed during the war, he said.
"A Japanese frei&hter called the
Daffodil reported &y radio to its
headquarters in Japan that heavy
fiahting involving tanks at the Aden
harbor and gunboats in the waten
State-run Aden Radio confirmed a
coup a_t1empt and said the four
rifll)eaden were executed. The men it
named incl\Jded leaders of a political
faction closely tied to the Soviet
Union and opposed to any overtures
to pro-Western countries.
Reagan pushes for·Contra aid renewal
By tlte Auedatell Prest
W ASHlNGTON -President Reapn bas decided to
ask Conaress to renew military aid to the anti-Sandinista
rebels in Nicaraaua and will soon consider an inter-
depertmenlal talk force recommendation that the as.-
sittance ranee between S2S million and SJO million.
accordifta to a publiabed report today. The WuhiJ\aton
Times. quotina u.nidentified senior administration of-
ficials • .Mid the president woukl reeeive the wk force
fpOlal in the next several days. While House spokesman
SpeUn said Monda~ that Reapn has not decided
be q to teek military 11d , which was suspended last
year. But. the Times SAJd other sowces indicate Reapn
bad decided to ask for arms for the Contras but bad not
decided on the eitKt amou.nt.
MeetbJ6 on apartbeld rejected
JOHANNESBURG -The laram multi-racial 1Dt1-
aparthcid sroup said today 1t tu med down u invi.atJon to
meet with the State Ocpanment'a top Aftica upen, sayins
he was raponsiblc for U.S. pobcies thlt u.ndenninceft'oru
to reform south Africa's race laws. MeanW'hile, the official
radfo in laotho, a small African k.inedom completedly IUITOUnded by South Africa ADCI "1000mically dependent
on ii. accuKd Sout.b Africa of impoejas an economic
blockade. Chester A. Crocker, Ulistaat tec:reW)' of state
for African affairs. met today with COMtitutional and
.. .
I
Development Pla.nni~ Minister Chris Heunis, the official
m South Africa's wh1te·led aovemmcnt in cbarae of
dcvisina some form of black ri&hts.
S. Korea.a rl61at. 'det~rlontbJ6 '
WASHlNOTON -Human riahts conditions in
South Korea have deteriorated in the put year while in
North Korea, f'iahts such as freedom of s~ 'auembly
aod . de~onstralion. ~o not e~st, a bu~an riahts
mon1tonna sroup said an a repon issued today. The Aaia Wat~b Committee, releu~1 its flnt major study, said that
despite the claims by President llelpft'a adnuoistration
\bat the United States is ftabtina for democracy around the
wor1d, "we have vinually abandoned the~ to lbe
fon::cs of dictatorship and reoresaion n in South K:ora.
SoatJa Pole uploren rwaed
LONDON -American aitttaft bave racued 24
membm of a British expedition wbicb wu ~ tbe
route of British txplOftf' lloben f akoa Scott to the South
Pole in 191 l . Three Britons trekked to the South PWe ud
were.picked up Monday by U.S. aircnf\ after their su~
ahip WIS crusbed by ice and ...t S.turday. TM 21 ...... ot Ge •Pedilioll ..,_... d9I ..., Sowdwta Quest took~ -~ke floes wben 1be abi_jt ... k .... WtR
raeucd by U.S. l:out Quant helicopeen. Tbe lritoea were taken to McMurdo Squncl. 900 miles fio'Om the South Pole.
..
GOP blocks override
of Deukmejian vetos
on state investments in S. Afrtca,
aid to schools losing enrollment killed
SACRAMENTO (AP) -As.
tembly Republicans have blocked
effons lo override Go·v. Oeorae
Oeultmejian's veJoes of anti-
apanheid and school-f undina bills.
The school bilJ. AB998 by As-
semblyman Lou Papan, ~Millbrae,
would have given $10.2 million to
160 school districts that have dcclin-
in& enrollments. Such districts say
they suffer financially because state
school funds are based on enrollment.
When enrollment drops, districts say
many of their fixed costs remain the
same.
Tbe bill was passed by the Legis-
lature with RepubUcan votes in both
houses. because many ~f the school
districts arc in Republicans' lqjslat·
i ve districts. But the override attempt
received only a 41 -28 vote, with no
Rtpublicans votina for it.
Tbe apartheid bill1 AB 1134 by
Assemblywoman Mwne Waten, ~
Los Anaetes, would have prohibited
future state investments in firms
doina business 1n South AfFica.
Deu.kmejian, in his veto meuaJc.
said the bill would not distinguish
between finns "abiding by pnnc1ples
of ~uality and good corporate con-
duct ·and those "taking advantage of'
the system of racial separation in
South Africa."
Waters said the bill was ··an
opponunit)' to send a message to the
South Afncan government ... You
have an opportunity to strike a blow
for freedom and equality."
However, Republicans opposed
the bill when 1t was passed by the
Legislature. The vote Monday on the
override attempt was 41-33 vote, 13
5'lort of the two-thirds majority that
was needed. ..
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, January 14', t98e * Al
State picks firm to build
radioactive wast~ dump
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The state
bas chosen a Kentucky firm to build
ad operate California's first dump
for low-le vel radioacti ve waste, de-
spite a finding that dumps run by the
com.pany in other states had con-
tamination problems.
"The past history of U.S. Ecology's
operations casts doubts on their
ability to perform future activities,"
said an August t 984 rcpon by a State
Department of Health Services com-
mittee which evaluated firms bidding
The Health De panment had to
gl vc the job to U.S. Ecology because tt
was the only bidder after the state's
first three choices dropped out. saying
the financial and legal nsks were too
great.
Murder suapecta enter pleas
Ruby Paqett, 20 (MCOnd from left), and
Mitchell Carlton Sima, 25 (MCOnd from
rl.Cht). appear ln Glendale coart to pl•d
innocent to charaea of ta.rtu.rlng and
murdertna a Domino'• Plua dell•ery man.
Sims abo la charled with the murden of
two Domlno'• employeea l.n South Cuo-
llDa. At left la AMlatant Dlatrlct Attorney
~ Batt and at right la attorney
Joeepb DeVanon. ...................... -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~-~
The dump is expected to be in
operation by 1989 at a site to be
selected by the state. The desert areas
of Riverside, San Bernardino. Im-
perial and Inyo co unties are con-
sidered the most likely sites.
for the dump project. ·
The repon also said the Lou1sville-
based company "bas shown repeated-
ly throughout its application and
operations of this type that they will
do only what is necessary to keep
operating."
'Toxic Bill of Rights'
pushed for state ballot
SACRAMENTO(AP)-A Demo-
cratic lawmaker is proposing a "Toxic
Bill of Rights," which would give
iftdi viduals and local governments
greater legal rights to sue alleged
polluters or to sue the state for not
enforcing pollution laws.
The measu~e. a constitutional
amendment by Sen. An Torres, D-
Los Angeles, would go on the Novem-
ber ballot if approved by two-thirds
majorities of the .Senate and As-
sembly by June 26.
Torres said Monday that he had
not approached the leadership of
either party for endorsements, but
that he anticipated broad suppon in
the Legislature. He said he already
has strong support among en-
vironmental grou~ and among locaJ
government offica.als.
Sierra Oub spokesman Michael
Paparian called the proposal a "bold
and creative approach," and Plan-
ning and Conservation League
spokesman GeraJd Mcral said it
"gives new powers to local govern-
ments. which they desperately need."
Major provisions would give every
worker "a right to participate in any
dedsion" affecting his or -
tial exposure to toxic substances. and
would require that toxic cleanup
programs "require that the quality of
the air. land or water resources be
restored. at a minimum. to that
quality that existed !>cforc the con-
taminatio n."
Sperni bank for canines
very popular with donors
ly tllle A11oclatecl .Presa
U.S. Ecology officials ha ve ac·
knowledged problems such as con-
tamination around dump sites at
their other waste dumps in llhno1s.
Kentucky. Nevada and Wash ington
state. As operator of two of the three
active low-level radioactive waste
dumps in the United States. company
officials also point to the firm's 30
years of expenence.
Officials of the firm. a wholl>
owned subsidiary of the Agoura H1lls-
based Amencan Ecology. said most of
" the company's problems occurred
more than five years ago. before
rece nt ad vances in the field of
dumping rad1oact1\e wastes.
Artificial star
built by laser
LI VERMORE (AP) -The bnght-
est arnfic1al star ever made in a lab
"'as produced by phys1c1sts at the
Lawrence Livermore National Lab-
oratory with the help of a huge
''Nova" laser.
The "Nova" 1s a battery of lasers
co mpleted last year 1n a building big
enough for a football game.
Ph~s1c1st Enk Storm said Monda)
the achievement inaugurated a ma-
chine that nuclear weapons designers
.... 111 use for classified stud) of ma-
tenal!. under cond1t1ons s1m1lar to
those of thermonuclear explosions.
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LOS ANGELES -Dogs throughout Southern California arc barking all
the way to the bank these days -to the pooch sperm bank in exclusive Pacific
Palisades. that is. "One lad y was bringing her dog quite frequently. and every
ti(l'le she turned onto our street. the dog would JUSt go crazy.' said Carol
Bardwick. founder and president of Canine Cryobank Inc. "Once they know
where they're going. they're very enthusiastic." Canine Cryobank collects and
fruzes dog sperm to produce new versions of old favorites. Founded in 1981.
tM firm has been growin$ by leaps and bounds ever since. "We're offering
J>COPIC an extension on their doe's life." said Bard wick. "They come in and sa y. 'I want a ~~ of him back~ my Ii~.·~ ~ople take this very. very~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
seriously:·
Allen• offered 'tourist boo.t •
SAN DIEOO -There is a new tourist book availabre for foreigners that
otTcrsadvice on the cheapest places to shop, what to do if arrested in the United
States and even how to make a telephone call. It could be meant for any group
of tourists, but the intended audience is illegal aliens trying to ma.kc a go oflife
in the United States. Written in Spanish by two New Mexico residents. the
booklet costs SI and is titled. "The Other Side -A Guide for the
Undocumented.'' "The other side" is Mexican sJang for the United States or
the other side of the border.
Singer'• crash case lnve.tlgated
LOS ANGELES -The district attorney's office needs more information
before decidina whether characs should be filed aaainst sinaer Luther Vandross I
in connection with a car accident that killed one of his friends. police said.
"'There arc other pieces of evidence we need to further investigate before they
(prosecuton) make the final decision on whether to file the case." Detective
Don Bclante said Monda>" Prosecutors rejected an initial police request that
they file manslaughter charges against Vandross in the Sunday accident.
Vandross and four others were injured when the singer's 1985-Mcrccdcs--Bcnz
veered across the ccmcr line of Laurel Canyon Boulevard in the Holl~ood
tfills. 12 miles northwest of downtown.
Prince body6'Jard to be .entenced
BEVERLY HILLS -A bodyguard to rock supentar Prince pleaded no
contest to one battery count involving a scuffle with phOtOlf8phcl"$, and a
second bodyauard charged in the incident was ordered arrested for not showing
_. in c:oun. Municipal Court Commissioner John Murphy set a March 7
scntencina date for Wallace Anthony Safford, 26, of Detroit after he entered his
plea to the single misdemeanor charg~ said Deputy District Attorney John
Reid. BodY&u•rd Lawrence Gibson. 2 1, of San Francisco, cha,._ed w11h one
count of battery and one count of petty theft, failed to appear 1n Murpl'ly's ooun. and the comm1Hioner issued a warrant for bis arrest. Reid said. The
c:barteS stem from a scuffle with freelance phot01f8phcrs outside a Sunset Strip
restaurant followina the American Music Awards on Jan. 29. 1985.
A
Soviet detector face. marder rap
SANT A MONICA -A Soviet deftctor was held wiChout bl.ii afttt bcrna ctwaed with murder in the punlina death of bis lover. a Russian emiarc who
hMI testified at the espionaae trial of former FBI aacnt Richard W. Miller.
VJadimar Ratchikhint, 44, is accu!ltd of k.HlinA Ludmilla Kond~tjtva, 38. of
!ania Monica. Los Anaclcs County Deputy Oistrkt Attorney L111 Han said
Monday.
O.boame blamed tor teen•• •alcfde
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LOS ANOELES -The perents of a lec1Mltf who shot himself to death
blame the hdvy metal music of Ouy ~and lope. throuah a laws~it.
to bold the rock 11ft1tt and a record CX)ft'lpany mponsable becaute of tona lyncs lbcMrt suicick. John Dulef McCollt.tm, 19. wu listen• .. oa t.dphona to an ~me album tided .. !peat to the ~w· when he shot himwlf Oct. 27;
1914. with hit father"• .ll-caliber pi11ol. Two qhbt albwn'uon11. "SuaCldc
Salulioft" and "PartftCMd. .. teftr to suicide ... ll as my opituon lhote IOnP Md
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..
OrMge 00Mt DAILY PK.OT I Tu.dey, Jenuwy 14, 1111
Give Deukmejian
passing marks
for school funds
California Gov. George Dcukmejian demonstrated
be bas a~ gra~p of the ABCs of J><?li~cs and th~ budget
business wtth his proposed $37 bdlion spcnd11\1 plan
that pays more than lip service to cduca.tion for 19~6-87 .
Give the good governor ~n A-manus fo~ his S 16
billion commitment to educat1on for the commg fiscal
year. It's the richest .budget for the state's sc~ools in t~o
decades, according to the governor, who stJll must wtn
appro.val ~or the ~roposal from the Legislature. It was a
long ume in commg.
.· During the past 20 years, education ha~n 't ~ways
been at the fundinf forefront. In fact, Cahfom1a bas
·slowly seen itselffal from a leading role in education to
an embarrassing position at the back of the pack.
Treating education as a. stepchild bas been an
expensive mistake.
Students have paid the cost in being poorly prepared
for the workaday world. ·
Businesses have bad to bear the expense of trying to
be both employer and teacher to its ill-prepared
workforce.
And, further compounding the downward cycle,
many of the state's best teachers have been lost to private
enterprise. which could afford to pay them what their
services were worth.
Filrthcr, the fight over money bas placed school
administrators and teachers in an nasty, adversarial
position. The resulting confrontation have proven to be
distracting and ex~nsive.
And once agam, education has been the loser.
It seems a basic tenet of a society that its future
success is rooted in how well it prepares succeeding
generations.
Give Deukmejian a B for helping to get us back to
such basics.
Educators around the state won't let us award top
~ades because everx item on their wish lists wasn't
mcluded in DeukmeJian's spending proposals.
Nevertheless, the governor seems to have allowed
for the bite that inflation takes out of the education
apple. .
The budget for kindgergarten throusJl high school
would increase 9.9 percent to $11.6 bilbon, under the
go vernor's plan.
Community college funding would increase 7
percent to almost $1 .3 billion.
The University of California's system-wide budget
would be increased 8.5 percent to $1.8 billion and the
California State University and Coll~es budget would
be increased 7 percent to about $1 .6 btllion.
The ·numbers don't add up to carte blanche. But
they are more than just status quo. They reflect the
potential for real growth. Sorely needed buildings will be
constructed, laboraories wiJI be added and neglected
classrooms will be repaired
Salaries will be raised. While the increases will not
be dramatic, teachers won't have to worry about lositig
ground to inflation.
Add to those_ improvements the $700 million that
California schools will realize from the state's lottery and
the coming year looks to be a banner one for education.
Not comcidentally, it is also an election year for
Gov. Deukmejian.
The governor faces a strong challenge from Los
Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley and his chances for re-
election won't be hurt by being a friend to education.
It makes good press with voters and the education
lobby has shown itself as a force to be reckoned with at
the ballot box.
It's just too bad it took so long for the friendship to
flourish.
Give the governor a passing grade in politics and a
C-minus for being tardy.
By tk A110clated Press
Today is Tuesday, Jan. 14, the 14th day of I 986. There are 351 days left in
the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On Jan. 14, 17"84, the United States ratified the peace treaty with Bntam
that ended the Revolutionary War.
On this date:
In 1964, in her first public stateme nt since ihe assassinatio n of her
husband, Jacqudine Kennedy appeared on television to thank the 800.000
people who had sent her messages of sympathy.
ln I 969,2Screwmembersofthe U.S. a1rcraf\camer Enterprise were killed
when an explosion ripped through the ship duri ng maneuvers off Hawaii.
Ten years ago: The go vernment of Spain drafted several thousand postal
wotkm into the army in an effort to stem tabor unrest.
Five years ago: Outgoing President Jimmy C-arter said farewell 10 the
nation in a nationally broadcast speech: and the Federal Commun1cat1ons
Commission freed radio stations of several major regulations. including limits
on number of co mme rcials and minimum requireme nts for news and public
a«ain prosramm 1 na..
One year ago: Bowing to protests, President Reagan's maugural
committee. in charge of the inaugurauon fe st1v1t1es. reversed its dec1S1on 10
birc 200 amateur performers for free. and agreed to pay them triple union
minimum waae.
Today's binhdays: Producer HaJ Roach is 94. C'BS commentator Andy
Rooney ia 66. CBS newsman George Herman 1s 66. Actor-author Tom Tryon
is 60. Georgia Statt Rep. Julian Bond 1s 46. Actrt"ss Faye Dunaway 1s 45. Actor
Marjoc O onncr is 42.
Thou&}\t for Today: "The mind of man 1s capable of anyth1na. because ev~~luna as in it,, alJ the past as well as all the future.'' -Joseph Conrad.
Briu sh novcliSl (I SH-1924).
ORANGE COAST ~ llailJ Pilat_~~ .,.,...,
City Editor
T-ce.lil'l
"""'htor c.-.-... 1oor11 EdltOf
..... ......,c ........
Controlltr
...... LC....
PrOdUCtlOll Maneg.
0.-.L .....
ClfeulltlOt'I ~
"The C-average, No -Fs rule ... has caused athletes and others In after-
school actJvltfes to attend more classes than bdore and their grades
havecomeup."
THOMAS ELIAS columru.t
SEARCHLIGHT
WALTEI
Bu11oucHs
I
P r oud of
Pilot's
l n g-f rsoll
alliance
When I agreed to return 10 the
" ITEM EIGHTY-SIX .... ONE AMERICAN SERVICEMAN, ARMY PFC, AGE NINETEEN,
Daily Pilorpart·timc a couple of years
ago it was because I thought the
Ingersoll Publishing Co. would deal
more sympathetically with the ncw!i-
paper l had founded. I didn't feel the
same about the Times-Mirror people
from Dallas. Texas. who had taken
over direction and management of
the Daily Pilot.
BODY BAG INCLUDED .... THE BIOOtNO STAATS WITH DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS ••.. ''
• Tough school eligibility
There was no reason for washing
the family dirty linen 1n pu~hc .. so I
said littfe. But, now that the P1lot 1s on
the way back to its foaner greatness. I
think it m ight be well to tell you, m )'
good friends, the story.
rules a clear~cutsuccess
Grades of students
affected showing
real improvement
When Los Angeles administrators
adopted America's toughest eligibili-
ty rules for high school sports and
other after-school activities. there
were doomsday forecasts of massive
dropouts, depleted football teams
and undermanned tuba sections in
marching bands.
But 30 months la1er, the C-average.
No-Fs rule, which has spread to
dozens of other school districts. is a
clear-cut success.
It has caused athletes and others in
after-school activities to attend more
classes than before and their grades
have come up. That's been especially
true for athletes.
Because of its giganfic size aod the
fact it was fi rst with the rule, the Los
Angeles city school district provides
the best yardstick of its success.
And there were decreases in the
number of students fa iling to qualify
for extracurricular activities in nearly
all categories during the 1984-8 S
school year and the early fal l. ·
Of the 383.271 students in grades
four through I 2 last fall, 66,20 I
attempted to participate. A total of
15.S percent of them failed to meet
the district's academic standards at
year's beginning. By last spring. that
figure was down to 10.8 percent.
But it was athletes who improved
the most. At m id-semester in fa ll
THOUS
Euas
1984, 21.5 percent of h.igh schoot
athletes either weren't maintaining a
C ave~e or had failed one course in
the previous grading period.
But by the middle of the spring
semester. o nly 15.1 percent of athletes
were ineligible fo r their favorite
sports.
And by the end of the· school year,
that figure was down to 13.8 percent.
By contrast, among aJI students
(not just those in after-school ac-
tivities). there was far less improve-
ment, with the percentage of those not
meeting the eligibility standards at
20.8 percent in the fall and I 8.3
percent at the close of the spring
semester.
This striking success at bringing
athletes' grades up suggests that Rita
Walters, the current city school board
president and author nf the rule. was
correct when the standards were
passed three years ago.
Walters drew heavy oppositio n
from coaches and others when she
insisted that o nly toughness would
encourage minonty athletes to 1rcat
school as something more than a
sports training center.
Coaches claimed their squads
would be decimated as afllletes would
drop out of school when declared
ineligible for either faiilng one cliss or
falling beneath the C~average level.
And at first it seemed that might
happen. Some top athletes switched
to neighboring school d istricts
without the C~average rule. But that
didn't last long, as at last count 32
other districts in California had
adopted similar rules.
So theTC was soon nowhere to go
except class for an athlete wt thout
academic inclinations.
That's precisely what Walters in-
tended when she pushed the rule
through and the results indicate that
when more athletes attend classes.
their a verage academic performance
nscs.
"We've seen a decrease in the
number of students disqualified with
each 10-weck period," says Barry
Mostavoy. the d iitrict's ch ief
academic statistician.
"The best evidence of the motivat·
ing effect of the rule is that more
students have redeemed them selves
and won their eligibility back each
grading period than the previous
one." .
Taken in combination with the
sharp ri~ in College Board tes1 scores
that has foll owed two years of
increased state spending on schools
and the resulting extended class hours
in many districts, the success of the (-
average rule is evidence of one truth·
Don't, please. for one moment
think I have any antipathy for the
people at Time~Mirror in Los An-
geles. Otis Chandler, now chairman
of the executive committee. 1s one
person I still like very muc h. Just as I
was fond of his fa ther. Norman
Chandler.
I feel the same way -maybe even
more so -about the current pr~1-
dent of Times M irror Corp .. Robert
Erburu. And I have an ~ually hl.tl)l
regard for Phillip Wil liams. the
executive vice presidenl in charge of
newspapers and broadcasting.
Why then. you might ask. did I
disassociate myself with the Pilot for
so many years -pan icularly as the
man who succeeded me as publisher
is one of my closest friends. Bob
Weed?
I .guess the reason 1s that I became
convinced that. spurred by the
advertising department of the Ora nae
County ed ition of the Times. the
group from Dallas appeared to me l.P
be deliberately trying 10 wreck tqe
Pilot. Consequently. a couple of years
ago when I fo und the lngersolls were
intc~sted in acquiring newspapers Of'
the Orange Coast. I cheered.
I didn't know Ralph Ingersoll r,.
Nor. for that matter, did I know his
fa ther Ralph Ingersoll I. except q~
reputation. Then. th1<1 month, then•
arrived a copy of "The Retired
Officer" for Janual) 1986.
Maybe 1t won't be of as m
interest to you. but for that s
group of true friends of mine. J th
nomas EUas Is a Sota MoaJca-you'll be interested in some of
based col•maJ1t oa state l11ae1. thi ngs the an1cle says. The headlin
"World War ll's Master of De
tion." The subhead: .. A well-kno
journalist turned Army Pfc. ad van
wartime deception by develop
'life-size rubber toys' for use du
When more is offered to students
and when they arc exposed to m ore
academ ics. they respond with higher
performance.
Subsidized tenants object
to mandatory meal plans
World War II." Herc's tt-.e·way
Hoopes, the author, wrote it:
"Ralph Ingersoll. who died
March at the age o f 84. was w -
known as a JOurnahst who play
catalytic role in the ongin or e
ut1on of four major U.S. publicati
-"The New Yorker. "Fortun
"Life," and "P.M."
But federal government backs rules at
some projects requiring food payments
WASHINGTON Elderly
renters in several states have com-
plamed that the federal government is
helping their landlords force un-
wanted food down their throats.
The unhappy tenants hve in feder-
ally subsidized apartments. They pay
30 percent of their incomes in rent,
and the feds pick up the balance. Fair
enough. What some tenants o bject to.
tho ugh, is the landlords who insist on
a mandatory additional-charge for a
meal a day, whether the tenants want
1t or can even eat it.
Most federal-subsid ized tenants
are free to choose what they want to
cat and where they want to eat it.
Hundreds of housing projects have
cafeteria s where low-<:ost meals arc
served.
But an 98 subsidized projects with
almost 7,000 elderly, low-income
residents. the tenants arc required to
buy one meal per day provided by the
landlo rds, according to a recent
congressional survey. Dozens of ten·
ants have written complaints to the
Ho use subcommittee on housing and
community <kvdopmcnt which is
loolana into the problem.
One woman wrote that the man·
datory meals actually make her sick.
but she still has to pay for them.
Several low-Income tenants oom-
plained that t be reqw red meals cat up
most of their monthly budteU, lcav-
in& them with almost nothina for
other necusities. Obviously. the
subsidiud rcnten can't afford to
move elsewhere.
The Ocneral AtVpuntina Off.ct.-
which conduc1ed tJll survey for the
Ho use subcommittee, qreccJ with the
landlords. however. The GAO con·
duded that meals mmt be mandatory
tO m&U IJ·em financially feasible for
the laDdJordt, and lO make 9'lte &hat
the elderfy teMntl tr' It ..... OM
ft\ltritlonally balanced meeJ • day.
The GAO, tberefoft. dedded no
cha._ wete needed in the rules that
allow maJ\dltory meals.
The controversy isn't new. We first
reported on it in 1983, and little has
changed since then.
In one New York City housi ng
project, Randall Sm ith and I 9 other
tenants have refused to pay the S 11 0 a
month demanded fo r the one daily
meal, which they do n't cat. The
landlord, a non-profit corporation
founded by the Episcopalian Trinity
Church on Wall Street. responded
with ~iction notices. A court order
has blocked the evictions tempor-
arily.
"The meals are terrible," the 70-
ycar-old Smith told our repon er Vic
Kolenc. Even assumin~ he could
stomach the chow, Smith said, he
prefers to cook his own meals. which
"most of us" have been doing for
many years.
The proJCCt manager said most
tenants were satisfied with the meal1,
and many wouldn't be able to cat
properly w11hout the program. The
tenants have filed a lawsuit against
the landlord and the Housing and
Urban Development Department
seeking an end to the mandatory
meals.. They araue that since meal
charges arc included in the leases, the
total cost must be considered rent -
and thus cannot exceed 30 percent of
their incomes.
Landlonh and the federal aovcm-
meot bave already woo C&JH in
Califonua. Colorado and Minnnota.
where Judaes ruled that mandatory
meal chi~ arc not pen of the rat.
But a Cahfomia judac last summer
ruled th.at the aovemment must
publish 1wctclincs for mandatory
meal PfOl'U\S.
HUD officials said they have been
usina unwritten 1uidelina, wbicb
will aoon be publllbed. They an allO womna on new ruin I.Mt uc
unlttdy toft,,:: ...... Oil poundl of blldlbip. •• ii
pn:cudy thole ......... ... man-
datory meal propama arc intended to
help, o ne oma.1 said.
"Less well-known 1s the fact t t
~ ~~
1 Ralph lnJcrsoll may have had e
most distinguished military carcc f
any drafted civilian in Wo rld W.ar .
When war broke out. he was editor Of
the controversial New York ne~
paper. "P M .. " which he launched n
1940.
Jac1
AIDEISOI
and JOSEPH SPEAR
Legislation beforeCongrcss would
allow exemptions for financial hard-
ship, and would require landlords to
accept food stamps for meal charges.
among otHer things. House and
Senate conferees are expected to
co nsider the matter soon.
DISAPPEARING ACT: Was
President Franklin Roosevelt secretl y
operated on for a skin cancer during
World War II? Photos of FDR began
to show a sp<?t over his left eyebrow
starting in 1932 and growing biger
and darker over the next I 0 to 11
years. The spot mysteriously disap-
peared in November 1943. Dr.
Joseph Treat ofOcoraetown Univcr·
sity speculates that the pigmentation
could have been either a basal
carcinoma, like President Reap.n's
skin c.nccr, or a mclannma -a
malisnancy that sprcad virulently
throuahout the president's body.
There has Iona been speculation that
FOR had inoperable stomach cancer.
WATCH ON THE PENTAGON:
For almolt 10 yea.11 now, the-Army
and the Air Fo~ have assumed
uKtly the opJ)OSite about a particu·
lar mmwy hotpi\al in Europe. The
Air fo~ a urned that the hospitaJ
would be dest~~ or captured in the
car1y 11qe1 of bostilit1cs1 and has
con,cquently made plans to abandon
it. The Army, on the other hand, bas
usu med the hospital would be saved,
so iu war planes are oountina on its
avallabiJjty. How lO resolve the
dispute? "By a chanee in an in·
tell.,enct auasmcnt." DOlel a recent
Houtt Armed Services Committee
rqJOrt. The report didn't lft4kc clear wflicb view wu "ra.11e1M!Cf" into
obllvion
"In the spring of I 942, he suddctlJy
received his 'gree tings' from the draft
board.
"W inston Churchill and Franklm
Roosevelt had recently met in Wash·
ington and decided 10 plan for an
invasion of Europe fro m the Bntish
Isles.
Ingersoll read the I 13 legal-s11c
pages of the secret plan.
What bothered him most abOut
Overlord was its dependence o n fhc
clement of surpnsc.
"Iniersoll poro poscd that, instead
of trying to conceal Overlord, the
Allies use the Dunkirk evacuation
fleet to mount a ligantic phantom
invasion involving what would ap-
pear to be at least I 00.000 men
presumably destined for Calais .. ,"
After General Dwiaht Eisenhower
became supreme commander, he
intervened and ordered that ln-
gc~ll's plan to deceive the Germans
go into effect.
ln the south of England there was
established what a~ared to be an
enormous invasion force . There wCT'C
tanks made out of wood. The roads
leading into and out of the pJlony
enc.mpments were also widened and
camoufll&C(l to took like two-lane
roads. Then they were camouflaaed
with just cnouah showina to let aerial
reconnaissance planes know they
were still there.
!Ater. lnacnoll's t~m made rc-
cordinas which. at niaht, simulat«I
lbe staruna of ef\&incsl complete wt th
backfires. and the caantina mo,,,c-
mcnt or tn.icks, tanks and heavy
equipment. 1
Well. )'OU act the idea. I think you'll ~ that the present Ralph's rathrr
was quite a man.Andt0ilhisson. He
wu well-trained. That'• why I 'm
proud lO bet.ck on t.he Ptlot even in a very small way. 1
Jld ANfl'llN -4 i...,. ,,_,. Walter hrr...pa la d9e PUet'1 ..,.. .,.MntH t9I nffta. ., ,._..., ,.we111er.
PAPARA //1
90,000
'raised
or Hoag
CAROL HUMPHREYS
,...C.r11p 1~1t
It was a very good year for the EndpiJ?Crs. a support aroup for Hoag
cmonaJ Hospital Presbyterian, and
mbers gathered recently to ccl-crate and to present the hospital
th a check for a whopping $90,000.
"The Sapdpipers started ten years
ago and our first check to Hoag was
S'T,000," sajd Abbie Forester, a
founding Sandpiper member.
~=Q
ICBIEl4 HAGIN
~T /HOn.JNE
* "The le. Pirates" (1984) Robert
Uric;h, Mwy CrOtby ·
AEMEMW:R WHEN: WHEELS,
... Ml) WHIST\.ES
flNOINO llEU
MOYIE **'A "Gans 01 Thi Whitt OrcHCf"
( 1983) Ann Jiiiian, Jtnnlfet JMOO-
ltlgl'I.
MOYIE *** "The Utt Of 81\wt" (1979) Grlhlm Chlprnen, John C.....
-U>-A great deal of credit for the
Sandpipers' successful year went to
ways and means chairman Mlcllele
Va•ou. Michele was mpoosible for
a gala dinner and auction held at
Bullock's South Coast Plaza and a
lfotiinsoo's spring fashion show and
16ncheon.
lllcbele Va..,,..n and lllcbael 8tepb!!D8, 1 ~=FOR COMFORT IEDl'APt:lf
MACNEll. I Lew:A
NP#IHOUR
Amazingly, both retail stores were
major underwriters for these two
1985 fundraising events. Bullock's
plans to host another Sandpiper
benefit this fall when the store
completes tts new 93,000-square-foot
addition.
Ao artkula te Michele said. ..In
presenting this check. r think of
ttatitude, pride, and fruition. Grati-1u~e l<? our members a~d supporters, pn~~ in our accomplishments. and
fruauon of a dream begun ten years ago.··
IPMITINQ WtTM W<E SOtiM:R
Q'.I NlWS
WHEEL Of FORTUNE
OM 9CHEAFF8' IWIETTA
-7:00-
1 ~ :AINMEHT TONIGHT TAXI 1=~
I THREE'S COMPANY
WHEEL Of FORTUNE
llU8INE88 REPORT P.M.MAGAZIHE Q! HEADLINE CHASERS
(ID PRAISE nE LOAD
MOYIE **'it "Sevannan Smiles 11982)
Mark Mlllef. Donovan Scotl :l.. INOEP£NOEHT NEWS
-7:15-
NBA BASKET8AU.
-7:30-
• 2 ON THE TOWN
In accepting the "largest ever"
donation. Hoag president .,Mlcbel
8te pbcD1 said. "I started at Ploag at
the same time that the Sandpipers
were. shall I say, hatched! Because we
began together. I take a personal
irttcrcst in your progress. I'm im-
pressed and grateful for all your
hardwork and outstanding contribu-
dons to Hoag's Cancer Center ...
The $90,000 will go toward the
purchase ofa linear accelerator forthe
Radiation Therapy Center and is pan
of almost $500.000 that the Sand-
pipers have raised since the group was
formed by the late "Corky"Ellloari.
Janet Sawyer took l••el from Laraine Jealeston. I PRICE IS AIGHT
WHArs HAPPEHINGH •
EYE ON LA 0 Mill.ION DOU.AR CHANCE Of
AlffTM
Outgoing president LaralDe Eg-
leston passed the gavel and ex-
changed floral bouquets with incom-
iflg '86 prez Jaoet Sawyer. Also a
founding member, Janet com-
mented, ··1 didn't really have a maJor
office this past year. I took a break.
Now rm ready and look forward to a
great year."
Enjoying the day at the Santa Ana
Country Club were hospital emissar-
1es Dr, Robert Suplro, Dr. Rusell
Hafer, and Katlulleea J acll1oa. Also
seated at the head table were Bull-
ock's store manager S•e Grwm and
Diamond Club donators Mary Re-
labold and Cecil Horowlr. w1th
<taughter-tn-law and new Sandpiper
Pam Horow1t1.
Additional members attendmg the
-pat-Qn-the-back" afternoon were
LolA MaJoae, Mary StradllD1, DodJe
lllallelmu, Karen W.Jtaller, Joyce
Piercey, Pattt Estabrooks, Carolyn
Piile, J oy Carry, Lorraine Baba and
Elaine Cauldy.
Paparuz1 is edited b> Daily Pilot
Style editor Vida Dean.
western fashions
stage a comeback
NEW YORK(AP)-Today'syoungmen and women. who grew up
watching Westemshowson televis1on. have~nUysecntheretum ofa
classic. the Western movie. And now they're secina the re tum of another
classic: the Western look in fashion.
That look iscmef'lingin virtually every type of casual wear. according to
Gil Truedsson, Coty Award-Winning fashion designer and spokesman for the
W estem Boot Council of America.
"I doubt that there has ever been a style of apparel that is more durable.
more comfortable or better designed." he says. "The primary concerns about
clothingyearsaao in the West were that it protected you from the elements and
the temin. and that it lasted. That quality is still present in today's more stylish
dcsians." The popularity of Western styles is enormous, cspeciaUy in the Wcstem-
style boot, says Tom Duffy of the boot council.
"In I 983alone, more than J0.6 million pa.inofWestem boots were sold in
the U nited States, and now Western boouare bHtingevcry sidewalk from Fiflh
·Avenue to Rodeo Drive. ·
• . "Bootsarepc;rfect for winter wear in the city because thcyttueld the
... eareT's leas a.nd feet from snow, rain and wiJ'ds," he adds. "The tou&h leather
tole stands up to cement. and when it's betn broken in, thebootconfOnns to
1bc foot well and is very comfortable."
In thearcaoffbbion. boouareequallydurable, Truedslon points out.
··They can be made from exotic sk.ins such u ostrich or alliptor. or from the
•moretnditionalcowhide, tanned ina multitude of colors, and wom with
casual wear in any tettina. M~ than anr other article ofWcstcm clolhiq.
boots are an expm.sion ofindaviduality. •
Available to the boot purchaler are options Wt include two-toned
lea then, a limit.lets numberof sti1chiq pet terns, inlaid aold or a.iJver, and even
booU encrusted wi~h ,emstonet.
Other itemsofWestcm apparel arc pi nina in popularity. Trucd110n says.
The hottest thina in handblp is the "Mddlebla look," and cknimjcans, an
"Jradittonal blue and many fubion colon, are more J'OP'dar than ever.
Western ttyteconon llrirtl in tolidaud ........... 1111acomebeck.
ucde and leathervemare f'u.bion favontes:asaretooled1Jtlt1 with s1lverand
turquoitebuckln . r
• M'A'S'H e NEWl YWED GAME
• Wtl.D, WllD wcw..o Of
ANNALS
~ TME MOVlEMAKERS Cll S.O. AT LARGE III PEOPLFS COURT
Q!JEOPAROY '1' RACING FROM SAHT A ANITA
'"P)NEWS
-8:00-
• (I) BUGS BUNNY / LOONEY
TUNES AU.STAR SO™ ANNIVERSARY
D ~A·TEAM
8 MOVIE ** ·From Noon Till Tttree' I 1977)
Charles 9ronson. Jltt Ireland
I ~ WHO'S THE BOSS? JOKER'S WIL_O.
WKRP IN CINCINNATI
GJ NEWS m> MOVIE
• • 1 S1ranoe nvaoers 11982)
Paul leMal Nancy Allen
9tK>VA ~LONESTAA Gil PfWSE nE LON> '1' PETERGlMH c_ MOVIE • * * All 01 Me (198AI Slew Mar-
tin. lily T omlan
P CAASON'S COMEDY Cl.ASStCS
* ,,.,,, c,,,,,,,,, to/ ,,,r. Jlflr\ •
HOPPER FURS
"'ESENTS THUR PRl'.·OWNl'.D & Nl'.W
Hundreds •nd Hundreds of luxury Furs
•I • frectlon of ec1u•I wonh1
Wedncsd1y
~an. 15 0 ........ , ..... ,
Tbun. & Fri.
Ian. 16 & 17 1 ... ,. ..... ~
S.t. 6: Sun.
Ian. 18 • 19
k 1Mp..111 .
..... \ ~ p.111 •
Co5ta Mesa HOLIDAY INN
BRISTOL PLAZA
3131 Brtatol
Santa Monie• MIRAMAR
SHERATON HOTEL
101 W11ahlr11 Blvd at Onan Blvd
Lot Angtlts
HOLIDAY INN
rmllNATIONAL AIRPORT
990 I LIClmet• Blvd
Sensational ~vings!
• FM& U.YAWAY f
• lllAL1. DOWM "YWNT
• CWNl'M>UI TMOt..-. ALlOWAHCI
• All llAJOR CMOff CAM»9
..
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tueedey, Januety 14', 1988 A'1
Coantry maaic Rpentan Dolly Parton
and Wlllle Nebon are uaona tbe at.an who
pa,_aibate.to tile wodd•a Joncmt ranntn~
radlo •bow on •The 60th A.1mlYenary o
the Grand Ole Opry,' broadcut toni(ht at 9
p.m. on CBS.
$,MOYIE * • * Yenl1 ( 1983) Barbra
Str81$1nd, Mandy Patanlun. t. AWA.ROS TMLwmt awl.ES
CHAMPLIN
D ®~~Ai..s
Q T1C TAC DOUOH
TRAP9eA JOHN. M.D.
GJ P.M. MAGAZINE
'1'DAAGHET
l> HONEYMOONERS
-9:00-
•• llOTl4 AHNIVERSARY Of THE GMND OLE ()f)RY
O Qt RIPTIOE I L MOONllGHT1NG
m MOVIE
• • • Murdef In Texas· (19811 f Par1 2 of 21 Farran Fawcett. Sam Eh
hott SI HE.Al Tl4 CARE ON M
CMlCALUST
C!)~A Gil PRAISE T1-IE LON> '1' ESPECIAll Y FOR YOU R MOVIE • * • Maolu & Maude" 119~1 Dud·
ley MOO<e. Amy Irving P STAATREK
Z MOVIE
• • • Duel In Ttte Sun l 1947J Jen.
n1ler Jones Gregory Peclt
-9:30-
9 MOVIE *• •' r Ttte VIC1ors" (1963JGeol'ge
Peppard. George Hamtl1on
C MOVIE • * • Evet)1ll1ng Yoo Always Wanl·
ed To Know Aboo1 Sex 1Bu1 Were
Afraid To ASllJ 1972J WO<Xfy Allen
Gene Wilder
-10-00-
D ~REMINGTON STEEl.f 8m>NEWS D lI SPENSER: FOR HIRE Q THESAJNT SI H~~TOHB..l
Cl) CAMPAIGNNl ON CUE: THE
PRESl>ENTW. El.ECT10N Of 11M Gil BEHIND THE SC0ES '1' CAWNG AU SPORTS
l MOVIE * • 1 Erend1ra 119831 Irene Pa-
pas, Claudia Ollalla
P COMEDY BREAK
-10:15-Gi REl..lGIOUS ~AAMMNJ
"S)MOYIE
tl.'.t. '.lbe. HMeO Face' (19M)
Roger Moore,~~
Gil CAWNG DR WHrTAl<ER r~ 1 INDEPENOEHT NEWS
-11:00-1 a• m Q])a!NEWS
l ==cussa 8BlJN ALEXANDERPlA T2
a!) 8USIESS REPORT Gil CANDI ST ATOM-SUSSEWEll 8' NIGHT GALLERY t' MOYIE
• CMstana 19~1.lewel $1\epard
H 1ST & TEH
p MOYIE * • The Amerocano 19551 Glenn Ford frank ~ove,oy
-11:30-
• SIMOH & SIMOH
U ~TONIGKT
8 000COUPtE D ~ABC NEWS NIG.HTUNE
G PJTFAU
GJ DYNASTY
41) YOU CAN 8E lltNNER
~MOT~ Gil PfWSE THE LON> '1' NIGHT GALLERY ~ 1ST& TEH I MOVIE ••·1 Iceman (19~1 T1mottty Hu1·
ton. Lindsay Crouse
-11:45-
L MOVIE
'Lapps And t.4cCMi INo Oa1eJ
-1~-
I COMEDY WAI<
EYE ON HOU. YWOOO
G MOYIE
•'1 Fangs 01 The lrMg Dead
11969) Anita EJlbetg
I~ AMERICAH STYLE
®l MOAE REAL PEOPLE
., 700ClU8
MOVIE * ••, Manas LOYerS 1198AI Nas-'s~a . .Jolll" Savage
• * Roman1ac Comedy 119831
Oudtey MOOfe Mary S1een1>uroen
·A special supplemenl 10
The Doily Palot feoturang
the 1otest 1n Spring losh1on
occess0<1es moke up ond ho11
Publishift9
Thursday Jonuory 23rd 1986
To reserve your 'POC8 coll
6'2""321 Ext 250
The Or~ Cocm OoUy Pitot
330 West Boy Street,
Costo Meso CA 92626
S MOVIE
• • • All The Righi MCMIS ' ( 1~
Tom Cruiw~Crll!I T Nelson
-1:55-
MOVIE
....... 'Apocalypse Now" (1979)
Marlon Brando, Martm Sheen
-2::00-
1 (I) C8S HEWS NIGHTWATCH
RECOfl> GUIDE
~HEWS
e LOYESONGS ., MOVIE * * Jusi A Lillie 1nco1wen1enoe··
119771 Lee Maj()(\. James SllC'f P UfE Of RILEY
-2:30-
m MOVIE
• • Blondie In Tiie Dougn I t9'81
P9nny Sanglelon. Ar1t!Ur Lake
Em 8EHN> THE SCENES 'J" INOB'£NDEHT NEWS
-2:45-
~ ~ PAOGRAMMNJ
• • t No $maJ Allellf 1984) Jon
Cryer Demi Moore
-3:00-
8 MOV1£
• ' Massacre Rrver f 1~91 GIJY
Madison Rory Calrloon
,~~ANDREW
• *'" Untll Sep1emt>er" (198AI t<aren Allen Thierry Ulemlltte
P OPEH MINO
l MOVIE
• • t Ttte Lile Ot Bnan" ( 19791
Granam Chapman Jol\n Cleese
-3:25-s MOVIE
• • 1 'Savage AnractlOtl 11983)
Kerry Midi Ra!pl'I Scnecna
-3:30-I FAmi20
EI!) JOY
P GREAT SPAa COASTER -•:OO-T ~
m MOVIE * *' Blondie S AMMnat'f I 19'8l
Penny S•ngieion Ar1nuf tMte
p HE.ATMCl.ff
-UO-
l" BOOS BUNNY
Eli) CAHO! ST A TOH-SUSSEWEU
p JETSONS
~.
Or-.. COMl D~LY PtlOl'/ Tu.day, J~ 14, 1Me
Maybe we should
alljust hibernate
A lot of animals hibernate in the
winter with success.
Humans arc not one of them.
Researchers say pec:>ple who live in
the snow belt suffer from winter
depression attacks that bring on
"dark moods" and they don't know
why.
There is one theory that sugests
our ancestors hibernated much as
bean do. They just slept through the
Ions winter.
Another study proposes that our
ancestors stored fat for the coming
winter. (I'll buy that!) So11 another
trick of early survival was instead of
mating all year around. they tuned
their reproduction so that the young
were born In the spnng or summer.
Whatever they did, they did 1t in a
full -length fur coat and did as little as
possible. The trouble with humans 1s
they carry on in winter with .. business
as usual." If the snow covers their
driveway, they remove the snow. If
ice threatens their car, they cover at
with a blanket. If there is a life-
threatening blizzard, they get a snow-
plow to take them to the beauty shop.
J say humans arc not physically or
mentally prepared for winters. Ir's a
time when they put on fur-lined
boots. a coat, heavy gloves. scarf and
hat to go to the ma1lbox to discover a
card from Ed and Lois from St.
Petersburg with a pink flamingo on
the front of it and a message, "Please
keep )(jUer for another week. Declded
to stay over."
It's a time when an Act of God
closes schools and as soon ~ their
kids arrive home, they con mothers
into driving them back to the
schoolyard to "play."
It's a time when their backs go out
more than they do.
Little thinas bother people in the
winter months that they ordinarily
could slough off. Havi'?f a stranger
say, "Have a aood day,' is grounds
for assault. What do they know about
you? What is good? What is day? If
yo u wanted advice from them. yo u'd
ask for it.
Having all their warranties on a
winter schedule really ticks them off.
You'd think manufacturers would
stagcr them out so that some
appliances would break down in the
summer. but no, all of them are timed
to expire on a weekend durin& the
worst storm in the history of the state.
J am intrigued by the hibernation
theory. No wonder bears are so frisky
an the spring. Did they sit around and
watch the garden hose swell and
burst? Did they watch the plastic
hoOsc plants drop and fall offthe stem
from the weight of the dust? Did they
sit by the window and watch the
mailbox rust and drip down the side
of the house?
Researchers have also hit upon
something else. Light can bri$}1ten
your depressive moods in the winter.
A fluorescent bulb or ray from a lamp
can make you feel good again.
Maybe. But if anyone hits a ltght
switch before I clean this dump, l'll
break their arm.
Haunts of the rich
too costly to keep
If you owned one of those fabulous
old English homes of yesteryear, what
would you do with it? Am talkinJ of
the great estates of the fox-hunlln$-
bird-shooung bunch. In the 1920s. ll
came clear they were almost imposs-
ible to keep up. So during the next 35
years. about 400ofthem were simply
demolished.
The son of clothing worn b} the
earliest Seminole Indians in Florida
as known . Also known 1s the sort of
clothing worn by the ancient Incas.
Garb of both is almost 1denttcal.
Coincidence? Maybe.
If that sea beast called the manatee
-the oriJinal mermaid -didn't at
onetime live on land. how come 1t has
toenails? Fish don't have toenails.
Did you know palm trtts grow in
the south of Ireland?
Q. Can an octopus tum white at
will?
A. So it's said. Or pink or aqua or
green. Most when scared tum brown
or dark red. however.
Q. Here. a soldier is a "G I." In
Australia. a soldier is a "digger." Why
a digger?
A. Goes back to the trench diggers
of World War I.
Q . What was the Hollywood movie
wntten by President Franklin D. Roosevelt~
A. The script he wrote was about
"Old Ironsides," but at was never
produced.
Every man should have a hobby.
what? That Soviet Union forefather
Nikolai Lenin was something of a nut
about mushrooms. He devoted a lot
of his later years to gathering same.
The U.S. Military in 1940wanted a
candy that wobldn't melt in the hand.
no matter what the chmate. So
Forrest Mars and Bruce Murries
created such, and called it by the
initials of their last names.
Historical footnotes indicate the
Iroquois Indian men were committed
by their own law to sto,P. the planning
or fighting of any war, 1ftheir women
so insis.ted. Uncivilized rascals.
L.M. Boyd l• • 1y11dln1ed
colom11l11.
AJUEI (March ~I-April 19): Creativity domina1.c1 -you'll imorint
atyle. m~ ~pk wtll be aware of your df'oru, romance that had been
morfbuf!d wdl b1<>s~m. focus on cbaqc, travel and pin throuah written
wold. V1rao. Sqjttanus play roles. TA~RVS (April 20)May 20): FaJ!?Uy member is tryina to tell you
someth•na. Be .~ert, ~~ ~nd recieP,ttv~. Aooent on secrets, temporary
confinement1 V1Slt to 1nsutut1on. speciaJ interest group or hospital. Libra
fil&lrtt _prominently.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You'll tum·in outstandina perfonnancc
You11 be rid of superfluous material, · unn~ expenses. Someone behind
scenes is Singing your praises. Secret
mcetina relates to romance.
CANCEll (June 21-July 22); Make
this your power-play day. Spotl~t on
romance. achievement, responsibility
and high finance. You'll be asked tC'
meet deadlinet to accept added
challenae. Capncom, another Cancer
SYDIEY o ••••
play top roles. ,,. .
,LEO (July _23-A~a. 22): Be agrcssive wit~out appearina belli9erent.
Ypu 11 be s.wcep1ng ~de ~wood. Stat~s, quo ts eent .J?:ICk.ing; you'll rc•ch
b1ger audience. you II pm added ~t1C?n. Love Will not be a stranaer.
-VIR~ (~ug. 23~pt .. 27): EmP.b.uis on ne~ starts, acttina to heart of
matters, d1~nJ deep foT in~ormauon concemllll fiscal responsibility of
others: Psychic 1mpress1ons wtU be on taract. You'll discover special reading
matenal -very good.
.. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct.. 22): Farni~y .member is sincere but could be
m1s1~formed. Chee~ lcgalngh~ perm1ss1ons. Focus-on partnership, public
... ~~u~ns. clash of ideas. manta! status. Cancer, Aquarius persons figure promJnently. - --·
S;COR;PIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21),: ~versify, ma~e inquiries concerning
c~ores which oth~rs neglected. ~atntain ~Im, reahze you arc in position to
~n. rcs.pect, to pin valuable allies. Long-d1stancc call oould relate to unique
invttat1on that includes travel.
~AGJn~IUS (No-.:. 22-~. 21): G~ !Jmar aspect coincides with
chansma, phys!;at at~~~on, vanety, entertatnment, ability to dance to your
own tune. The no exit signs arc removed. Doors open for progress, greater
fuJfiUment. ·
CAPRJ~RN (Dec. 22-J~n. 19): .Empbaais on written notices relating to
pr~pcrty, f~1ly, safety, basic sccu.nty. ~ some persona! detective work.
D1sccm motives .. Look ~yond the 1mmedtate. Refuse to give up something
l'f value for nothing.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Shon trip may be on l!JCnda relates to
family. Domestic adjustment could include remodeling. ~building..
purcba~ of an object or luxury item. Loved one seeks approval, makes
con~s1on.
P~ES (Feb. 1 ~-M~rch 20): Someone attempts to dc.ccive you
co~cerning money. Maintain balance, humor. Show that you are not without aJh~s an~ that you bear no grudge. You arc going to emcrae a winner. Virgo
native wtll figure prominently.
Cocaine users must
admit they're hooked
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Having
grown up with your column I know
the impact you have on your readers.
Please print this letter. There is a
desperate need to educate people
about a problem that is WTecking
millions of lives. I'm talking about
cocaine.
I have been mamed less tban two
years. My husband was in a business
that put him under a lot of pressure.
He is smart. wonderful with people
and made a great deal of money.
For the first eight months of our
marriage. I'm a.shamed to admit, I
was completely blind to the problem.
I knew cocaine was being used by
some of our fnends but my husband
swore he would never touch it. I
believed him.
He began to stay out three and four
nights a week. I didn't know where he
was or what he was doing. When he
started to stay out all night. I became
fnghtened. His excuses were pathetic.
the day he lost his job he admitted
he was a cocai ne user. I told him I
would stay wtth him only if he went
into a rehabilitation program. He
agreed. 1 called a friend who was a
ph ys1c1a n and he hospitalized my
husband at once. I wen t back to work.
It has been three months but I
believe he has made it. He is still in
therapy and must attend group meet-
ings four times a week. Our rela-
All•
lMD£1S
ttonship as stronger now than it ever
was. He is back at his job and doing
well.
Please tell your readers the symp-
toms of cocaine abuse and urge them
to accept the fact that a "coke head"
will not do anything about his
problem until he is ready to admit he
1s hooked. Pleading. crying and
threatening will not make the least bit
of difference. It's the same as with
alcohol addiction. Until the abuser
admits he is powerless ~nst the
substance. nothing will chanJc.
Please, Ann. print this letter. I'll s1fn
it -LOVE ALONE WON'T DO T
(FLORI DA).
DEAR LOVE: nulls for u ucel-
lat letter. I ftdone every wo~ yoe
uve wrtttea. Here are ttie symptoms
of cocalH abue. If aayOH oet daere
cares abMt a penoa •M us die
f0Uon1 •1.r:r::m•, be aware ~t
JCHI bve a J OD yoer MM•.
Redgrave averts PLO questions
By tbe Associated Pre11
LOS ANGELES -Vane11a
Redcrave stuck to the business at
hand at a news conference for
NBC-TV's "Peter the Great"
miniseries. refusing to discuss her
support for the Palestine Libera-
tion Organization.
"This isn't a political press
conference." Redgrave replied
when asked 1f act•. ofterronsm 1n
1985 had made her question her
support of the PLO.
But Redgrav! rccaJled the
period after th•: Boston Sym-
phony Orchestra canceled her
1982 appearance as a narrator
because of complaints about her
sympathy for th<· PLO.
She said she was blackballed
from working for the next I 3
months. until she was gtven a role
in the film "The Bostonians ··
Redgrave won SI 00,QiO in a sui t
apinst the orchestra. but a Judge
.et aside the award. ll ruling the
actreH is appealing.
Redgrave also refused to dis-
cuss another television special
she's worluna on now for CBS.
"Second Serve," in which she
plays tennis pro and trans~xual
Re~ Richard~. a man who
bec-ame a woman. • • •
HARTFORD, Conn. -Poet
Jamtt MenUI'• verses ha ve
earned him a Pulitzer Pmc. 1wo
National Book Awards. the 8oll-
1ngcn and the Cn1ics Circle
Award
aeacan
Now the Stonington nati ve as in
the running to be named Con-
nec11cut's first ~t laureate.
Thursday the C. onnect1 l'ut
Comm1ss1on on the Arts named
Mcmll the state's first l>O(t
l:iurcate. an honor created h) the
Lea1slaturc last year.
Mcmll. 59. said last month he
wasn't ~ure he'd bt interested in
the honor 1f 1t cnuuled specific
duties. Memll would carry 1he
title for life.
BcinJ poet laureate wall carry
no duties or reimbursement. said
Gary Young. cxtcutive director
of the aru comm is ion.
"It'~ an honor being given to
\Omeone wtth a good deal of
accomphshment," Youn' said.
3ddina the comm1u1on is likely 10
rahfy lhe Jtdvisory panel's rcc-
ommcndauon. but 1s under no
obhption. • • • NEW YORK -First lady
Naecy Reac•• will appc.u w11h a
group 01 mus1c1ani., sports llgures
and actors, in a music video
filmed in the White House and
dedicated to preventing drug
ahuse.
"Stop the Madness" will be
aired for the first time Friday on
NBCs "Friday Night Videos."
which begins at 12:30 a.m.
John Larroquctte and Markie
Post of NBC's "Ni!Jht Coun" will
be guest hosts of the show.
Mrs. Reapn taped her appear-
:incc in the video with a chorus of
children in the Blue Room of the
Whue House.
New Edition, Whitney Hous.
ton, Latoya Jackson. Arnold
Schwarzenegcr, Kareem Abdul·
Jabbar. David Hasselhoff.
Michele Lee. Stacey Keach, Herb
Alpert, Toni Basil and radio host
Casey Kucm are amona those
who appear in the video.
"M ts. Reqan waa excep-
uonal," said Brian Dyak, Cll·
ccutive producer of. the video.
"We h.ad e11ht·f00( spealcen in
the White Rouse and ahe kept
wantinJ. to tum the music up
louder.· • • •
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) -
panisb opera star,_... 0..U-•1• underwent surpry lo cornet
a double hernia, \M ta\or's
secttt&r} said.
Paul Gamer said the ~tion
at Barceloaa's Due~ clinic was
performed succ:eufuUy by a three--
person medical team headed by
Dr. Joan Piera Mas-Sarda.
The 44-year-old sinser was
given local anesthesia from the
chest down to avoid risks of
harming his vocal chords, Piera
Mas-Sarda said.
As he entered the clinic accom-
panied by his wife Marta Omelia,
Dominao said be had felt pain for
several months but a full schedule
had prevented an operation u11til
now.
Piera Mas.S.rda said Domingo
decided to have the operation
now while filmina of "Otello" is
interrupted ·by the illness of
Italian di~tor Franco Zifferelli.
DomiOfO was e~pccted to be
convalescma for at least six
weeks. • • •
SANTA FE. N,M. -Je11lca
Lap has &iven birth to a 7-
pound, 4-ounce airt, the flnt child
of the Olcar-winnina ~tress and
ptaywriaht lull~.
1'bt baby was bom Saturday at
St. Vincent Hospita1. accord1na to
hospital records. Larte and
Sheperd live totether near Santa
Fe.
Lanae. 36, has a 4-year-old
dauahter, Ateundra, by dancer ........ .. ,, .......
lal\lf, who won a supponlna
actress Oscar for her ro&e In
"T oouic. .. also has appeared in
"franci.!t" "The P<>1tman Always Rines 1 wice." "Country" and
"Swett Dreama.."
-
Both vulnerabi.. South .....
NOaTB
•&114
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0 ll1054
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WEST EAST
•QIOtS •S2
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0 ·1 o AJt1
+QJ986 +71
.SOUTH
• AJf
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0 Q8SI + ll54
The bidding:
Se.Ida / Weet
-J NT P ...
2 0 , ...
P ... Pue
Nerda
2+
I NT
Opening lead: Nine o( <::>.
Simple addition and subtraction
Ls sometime• all you need to pohst In
the right direction at the bridp
Lable. When you know how many
tricks you require, it is easier to
(ind the winni ng line.
North·South reached t hl"6e no
trump in a straightforward auction.
North used the Slayman Conven·
tion to check on a pot1ible 4-4
spade fit, then used arithmetic to
tell him that there were ampAe
points for game bu t nol enou,ti for
slam in the combined holdlnf.
West led a top-of·nothiof heart.
and declarer could count seven fast
tricks. The obvious place to look for
t he two tricks he needed for rune
was in the diamond suit.
If diamonds were 3-2, 4edarer
co uld come to two tricks by feree
CHARLES
GOREN
OMAR
SHARIFF
regardless of how he playeQ. A
quick perusal of the spot cards in
the suit revealed that declarf'r
could make two Lr1cks even against
a 4·1 split.
South won the first trick with the
queen of hearts and led a diamond
to the king-East took the ace_ and
continued with a heart. Declarer
rode that round to the king. led a
low diamond and inserted the eight.
Had West been able to win the
trick, declarer would have had the
last two diamond tricks. When the
eight held. declarer had only to cash
the queen for hi s contract. Observe
that ~d East played the nine of
diamonds, declarer could promote a
.aecond dia mond trick by winning
and conceding a trick to the jack.
Had the king of diamonds won
the second trick, declarer would
have continued with a low diamond.
If East shows out, declarer ri~s
with the queen and. although tliat
loses to the ace. declarer sets up a
second trick in the suit by leadinf a
diamond up to the ten when next h e
gafo1 the lead.
TUT Nin
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TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACR088
1 Gelt-gee•
5 Burgled
10 Wey off
14 Brllny
15 Sanctuery
16 FrenchlM
17 Cont•t
19 Weterleu
20 Offer mot•
21 -de Janei<o
22Smeffef
23 Radar'• kin
25 0-..-aw.
26 Next to NV
30 Triumphed
31 Hat type
34 Prohibit
36 Snake
36 Ethlopfan title
39 NV-Ont.
rMOrt area
42 Fabric
43 Felony « Verdl'worlc
45 Store fodder
47 Geln
49 Cetd
50 Male animal
51 Conducted
Indoor•
-53 Kind of
chelc«k>ny
55 Unfamlllar se erac.r.
61 EntrMty
62 Excttedty
64 AdYoc:ate 15 ..,, ..
M Actot Aide
67 Gr9de
81 A Muetteteer
69 UK rl't'er
DOWN
1 Treaty gp.
2 Arab perent
3 FeMt
4 Europaen
5 FOiiow
6 Cep
7 Ended a a... rtero
9 Inner: pref.
10 Arthurten
peradlM
11 Cautioner
12 Monkthood
13 Leftists
18 Nqht
24 Some hofMt
25 Monte -
2t Lengttl untt:
lrlt.
27 Cotor ...
21 Arterlal road
2t Smell ootn
31 Foo4t*e pert
32 Sierra -
~I "1ZZ1.E IOl YED
33 Vetuate
35 Holy song
37 Hed e meet
40 Exist
4 t Relevent
41 Iodine
compound
48 Femlly of
giant a
51 Honetl lleng
52 Negative
53 Wrengle
54 White matter
55 Altronautl'
Otg.
57 Undiluted
58 Lazily
59 Family
60 "Auld lang
63 Addlllonelly
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"Of course you can't find your knit gloves
... Marmaduke is using them as earmuffs!"
PEANUTS
[ WONDER WHAT WOULD
1-lAPPEN IF 1 ASKED TAAT
UTiLE RfD·HAIREO GIRL IF
l COULD SIT NEXT TO HER,
..\ND EAT LUNCH ..
l (
.. --
GARFIELD
MAYBE SHE1D TELL ME
TO 6ET LOST OR. THROW
A ROCK AT ME Olt i-llT
ME WITM A STICK ... ---
I· , ..
HANP6 OFF',
GARFt£LO. C'M MVINO T HAT FOR
OPIE.
·TUMBLEWEEDS
t•IPOO, .. ~. ~ASTlfUl~UI· L.AMNe MP A LIFa seNTSNC•, rs
-ntlG ~IN6-'tt>O'P UKlt"I> S/11:(
' !
f ,
DRABBLE
I·
R09BI8R08&
~\I ORAB0l.f. I 00 '(OlJ
i"INW:. !>t~ ~ M I~
TOO U.RI.. ~ iO C~U.,
M"'4 0€.61 H<IE 0 1
BIGG&OROB by Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
"It waa ao cheap, I coutdn1t reaf:at It:"
1 JUST CUM6EU UP TO SMELL 'EM ANO
M'( TOOJ}4 GOT ~UGHT IN 0N€. •
OR LAU61-1 IN MY FACE
OR SCREAM FOR 1-lELP OR
rJCK ME IN THE STOMACH
7 ( -2\ .) >
~Ll ~.
1 GUE.~
NOi. ~E.IL I
by Charles M. Schulz
I WONDER 11= SHE
COULD DO ALL rnOSE
THINGS AT ONCE .
7( -1
..
! . . , . .
i
by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan
by Kevin Fagan
BLOOll COUNTY
11001' llULLl1'8
WRITE()N ...
Yt:S, You Do
HAVE A FL.AIR
WITH WORDS.;
~.$W IVE L,,~
8uT. ~ ~
POR BETTER OR POR WORSE
SHOE
DOOJlfESBURY
JUDGE PARK.ER
----..--.
by Pat Brady P'URKT WINDRBltAN
1...151'£~ , 40U FOR!( ov~
IHE ~ 1t>N'IOR~ OR ! 51'AR"f ~IN' e£)OC)
~..:.~'U.1 ~IT . ~!
A
Oranoe Cout OAILY PILOT/Tu.day. Januwy , ... ,.. • -
.
LO
()l{A'J I /
WI/{'
K!WT
I
by Lynn Johnston
by Jeff MacNalty
b y Gary Trudeau
by Harold Le Ooux
r PLEAS€ CASH IT 6EN °
THEN 00 ~ITH rT WHAT-
EVE~ "r'C'(.I w 1SH •
by Tom Batluk
•z.oo _,a _,
ONLY AT 'JHEATRKS
INDICATED aaLOW
'El Grande,, ' 'Crimes' open Friday .
•
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A musical farce with a Latin accent
and a Pulitur Priie·wlnafoa
leriocomedy comprise the new ar·
rivals on Oranae County •taaet this
leCOnd f'ull week of 1986.
"El GraMt .. C.Ca c.aa;• a wacky
cvenina of south-of·tbe-bordet niahl
club acts, arrives at the Newport
Theater Arts Center Friday evenina.
Shari~ the opening ni~t will be Beth
Kenley s prite winner 'Crl•" of IM
Heart," bowiJ>I in ll the Gem Theater
in Oarden Grove.
Kent Johnson, who directed the
county's first production of "El
Orandc" at the Huntinaton Beach
Playhouse, also is sta&ina the New-
pon ven1on, with aatk Burson
ret urnina as the parapatetic emcee
Pepe Hernandez. Com pletina the cast
are Kirk Gross. Carol Katz, Bob Nash
and Carrie Keskincn.
• Perfonnances of "El Grande de
Coca Cola" will be given Fridays and
Saturdays at 8 p.m. through March I
at the Arts Center, 2501 Cliff Drive,
Newpon Beach. Reservations a.ct
bc1na taken at 631--0288.
"Crimes of the Heart," a comic
drama about three Mississippi sisters,
features Joan-Carrol Baron, Wayne
Watkins, Boise Coopersmith, Susan
Adams, Elizabeth Faulkner and Rick
FranXlin under the di~tion of Dan
Can melt.
The show runs Wednesdays
through Saturdays at 8 p.m., with.
Sunday performances Jan. 19 and
Toi
TITIS
Feb. 9 at 3 p.m. and Jan. 26 and Feb. 2
at 7:30p.m .. at thc0em, 182S2 Main
St.1 Oatden Grove. Call 636-7213 for
ticket information .
After seven months and over 200
performances, "A CMn. Lille" is
windina up its run at tbe Orand
Di.nner Theater with final per-
formances Tuesday through next
Sunday at t.he Anaheim d inner house.
1 Hotel Way. Curtain times vary and
reservations are taken at 772-7710 .
Continuina their respective en-
gagements on Orange County stages
are:
•'"Be Porelper" at South Coast
Rcpcr10ry, 655 Town Center Drive,
Cost.a Mesa (957-4033), Tuesdays
through Fridays at 8 p.m., Saturdays
at 2:30 and 8, Sundays at 2:30 and
7:30 untiJ Feb. 9.
•"Tatt..1 Steps" at the Laguna
Moulton Playhouse. 606 La&una
Canyon Road, Laauna Beach
(494-0743), Tuesdays through Satur-
days at 8 p.m ., Sundays at f:30 until
Feb. 2.
•"La,..a" at lhe .forum Theater
on the Fe tival of' Aru lfOunds,
Luuna Beach (634-1300), Thursdays
ana Fnda~ at 8 p.m .. Saturdays at 2
and 8 p.m., Sundayut 2 p.m. throuah
Feb. I. •"Some of My B"t Frlelld1" at lhe
Wcstmfoster Community Theater. 7272 Maple St., Westminster
(995-4113), Fridays and Saturdays at '
8:3P through Feb. 8.
•"All Becute of A11Uaa" al t~e
Hunlinatoo Beach Playhou$C. Main
Street at Yorktown A venue rn the
Scacliff Village sho~prng center.
Huntington Beach (832-1405),
Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30
throuah Feb. IS . •"file JmportHce of BtlDI
Earae1t" by the Ana-Modjeska Play·
en at lhc Anaheim Cultural Ans
Center 931 N. Broadway, Anaheim
(937-0J79). Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 2 p.m. through
Jan. 26 .
•"KJ11 Me, Kate" at Sebastian's
West Dinner Playhouse. 140 Ave.
Pico, San Clemente (492-9950), •
Wednesdays through Saturdays at 8
p.m., Sundays at I and 7 p.m. until
Feb. 2. .
•"My Fair Lady" at the Curuun
Call Dinner Theater, 690 El Camino
Real, San Clemente (838·1540).
nightly except Mondays at varying
cunain times through Feb. 2.
•"Caralval" at the Harlequin Din-
ner Playhouse. 3503 S. Harbor Blvd.,
Santa An.a (919-SS 11). nightly except
Monday at vary1n1 curtain tunes
throuah Feb. 9.
CALLBOARD -Coastline Collejt
has announced auditions for us
production of .. A Chorus Line"
Thursday and Friday at 7 p.m. in the
N~rt Beach Center, 3101 Pacific
View Ori v e t Corona del
Mar .... Robert Michael Conrad ii
directing and ho~s to cut 60 roles for
the musical, which will be presented
April 4-S and 11-12 .... call 759-54().4
for further information ....
Readings for the poi&J\ant comedy
"Talk.in& With ... " are scheduled
Wednesday at 7 p.m. and Thunday at
3:45 p.m. ·1n Oranae Coa1t Colleae'•
Orama Room 102 .... dhutor Alex
Golson is lookinJ for an ail-female
castofl I forthefeb. 7-16production
in OCCs new Studio Theater ...
Interviews for the LP Repertory
Company's rroduction of .. The Un-
invited" wil be held Jan. 23 aJ 8: IS
p.m. in the MillerCommu9ityCenter
at 300 Centennial W.ay. Tustin__thc
cast calls for four men and six women,
and all roles a;c open .... call Sarah
Coleman at 73 I ·2792 for details ....
Twoboysbctween 11and14willbe
cast Saturday for the roles of Anna's
son and the king's son in "The Kina
and J" at Elizabeth Howard's Curtain
Call Dinner Theater .... auditions are
scheduled for noon at the theater. 690
El Camino Real. Tustin .... call
730-8249 for details ....
edwards VILLAGE
CIN£MAS 8Q 1-0567
Bt a .. 14 • h • , "" ,._ ••
' •IJ[ ' ... '"',,,, ....
Jack Ewing arrives in the nick of time
""'""' iH :,-)( :1 ·-;
. "• I ; I
By LINDA HIRSCH car and aCCJdenlJllly runs her over. Oaudia he'll take over 1hc company while
THE COLBYS: In New York. Zach DALLAS: J.R. ·g~s· on television in Blake is ailina. and make certain that
outbids Sable for a Matisse painting. search for Jack in an attempt to locate hjm. Oaudia &ets her mine back. In an attempt
When Zach later offer$ the pain11ng as a While on the air J.R. reveals that Jamie -to escape Joel. K.rystJe fakes 1ppcndic111s &lft. a funouJ Sable beads back to LA. bu been critically injured and needs a attack. Sammr. Jo wants Danny Knl to
Miles telJs Fallon he wants her to remain blood transfuSJon from Jack if she is to nurtery schoo . AJexis stunned when her
his wife and will adopt litt.Jc Blake. When survive. When J.R. shows no interest in sister CarttS, who wrote a nasty book
Fallon insists Jeff would never qree. Matt Cantrell's emerald buy. Pam decides . about Alexis. arrives in town. I Miles grabs her and blames Jeff for all bjs to invest.in the venture herself, sin"• Matt r•• ~N CR.,.:.r,• • Ch I woes. ln London, Francetca tells Jason >b "" 1UA.>v c.aa: When rislophcr she's engaged to Roger. Adam brings and Bob "/ were such clost friends. Miss overhears Lance trying to bribe a union
letters from the late Cecil Colby's file to Ellie rcahzcs that Clayton is afraid of official In order to destroy the Chase's
Connie.Conn1c1Sthirlledwhenshefindsa los1n1 his business. J.R. reaJius Mandy vineyard , he confronts An&ela was1nonschcmetomaJccJ.R.belicvc 1hat Chn'stop'"-ta•ar 1elJs ... n.,.la h k letter that proves Jeff wu named heir to '"'' "' ,., ..-e nows h C lb 11 2c Jack wa.s not a Ewing. Jack arrives in time he'll find no peace al Falcon Crest and 1 e 0 Y ortune " years a&O· Later. and doctor says has blood is compatible moves out. J.J. Roberts continues his run
• 1UCI llOllY SIUlO Adam gives Je(J' a lellcr Phillip wrote with Jamu:'s. for political office. When he decides he's 'tlT • -statui& that the baby Francesca was ••• • •-" carrying was not his. Jeff is determined to DYNA.STY: Steve and Fulmont arc 1oin1 to take haJf of his money and give II 7:l5. IHI IN) -find out his father's true identity. AfterJetT attracted to each other. Adam decides to toashellcrforab:Jsod children, Jordan can p M JW Im shows Connie the lt'ttershe runs out of the make use of the at1ract1on of the two men. no longer stand her father's lies. Later.
hou.. 1'n .-..~h of Sable. Una........ R ~ ,._ 1 ·i bo · · Jordan tells her mother she will not cxn c.s .... .......... -.. .. 1ta ns to 1tt1 1u1 ty a u1 po1sonin.1 h fi h . 1 1 · Connie's in lhe dnveway, Sable backs up Blake. oticing Bia.kc's Illness. Adam tells support er 11 er s po itica a,c;pirattons, .. SPIU UR IS" and reminds her mother that J.J. once
1:11. t.IS CNI '-------------------------------molested his own dauJhter -Jordan.
---------•• &.UXU•Y rHfAT•fS Unable to find Cass, Richard decides to P •JIU i m marry Terri. --'a''ALK INS '2•
1
' 111 2 Mota. WHlld•r • * DRIVE-INS '1°rl1•0flt• ,yy, • * 111 Mot. 0111r s.1 .. 51.111 . • -• • • ~ 1nfJO • Holl••"• U111• .. Not" I.NOTS LANDING: After Cathy reveals
'WM lfflCr (K-U) [4(f,Ul!NJdruJa\i4;14 ]~.~l!,~,.' ...... , .. 1 10 Val what happened the night Josh died.
t.lS. l:IS. lt.11 ........... •-•••-••••••• • .,_, --<! VaJ convinces L1llimae to 10 to police so
edwards
WE STBROOK
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S llUNAWA V T"Af"' (") S HOWS AT
7 00 .. 9 o:.
WMtTE MNiHTS fN.-1 al
SH OWS AT I 30 & 9:16
IN 70 MM I NO PASSES
DfSNIEY"S ••• _ut 11/R !•trll• "'" Suf•y"' that Ken does not slJlnd tnal for a murder
DAl.lllATuun fGJ S he did not commit. Gary tells Abbey
SHOWS AT Ill.ACK 1tooet RIS""G they're through, and that the only import·
l :•O a. I : JS (R) :1:;.~r.::..~1w1c:::phia ant person ID they're rela11onshipsecms to
YOUNG SHE9'LOC1t be her. Ben hun when he realizu Gary
HCM..llC:S r:.-u) knows the twins arc his children. not :~~~ 9 "o~ YOUflG SHOILOCK ecn·s. Altlloug.h he believes Val did not w~~tritJ.~31 tell Gary the truth. a depressed Ben stam
6J4 H~J Ch•P"''" 10 hit the bolt le. Karen learns that Abbey is
& S1n11 Ant F wv ~Y'S 101 interested 1n the commissioner's post that CEnTUAY ClnEDOmE r;J
Redford • StrHP DA UIATIAlllS CGJ Karen thought she had locked up. OUT OF AP:-9'M:A fPGJ Aho Th• lhby t'C) • • • n ~·,l,;s~0~ ~ 10 CHILO PRIC s HJU. STREET BLUES: Bclker's wed· ding must be postponed when h1~ PCP
undercover case runs overtime. A rookie
cop shoots a runaway drug dealer who
took aim at him. When the gun can't be
found. the rooloc's panner, a fnend of
CHO .. US LIMI[ ffllQ·I~
S HOWS AT 2·00 •:30 7:20 & t :•S I IN 70MM
911[.S LIKE US fPG)
SHOWS AT I 20 3:30
$ •07 SO& IO·OO
-NO PASSES-
COLOR NttP\.E .. ,
S HOWS AT I :00 • 00 7:00. 10:00
D•11n11 Quaid
l[MUllY ..... PG·• J ) Alto Lifeforce (RI
..OCKY fV , .. ,
Plu1 Co-H t
Red Sonja (PG·1ll
Mic hael J. Fox
eACKTO -nt« f'UTII ltl[ ,....,
Aho Rambo II (R)
011111 ( IU o,u I JI WU 1y1ll:H Whd1/Ud11 U F110 U•lt M ••t••
• • • • • • • • •••••• • • • BARO.l.INMATINEESM""'[lA• T>H•1•ff11[1A•' T "''" , ..... , •• ,. • * ',AT 11Rr1A • '•.1 .' f•t l<f l'MIH< ' ' * * •I j I'" A• \ jl,l<i I • J A , •
LAKEWOOD
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11 JO l H • 40 • 11 IM 1•JO
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A CHORUS llNI:
THI MOVIE '"°,,,
11 JO > 10 I 10 1., 10 10
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ltl CINlr 11 41 l Ge I.JO 1•01 ""' .... A c-.1South
l11JIU• Ult '"""'~ Del •'"• --RUNAWAY TIAIN 10
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OUT Of AflKA '"'
---·~ CA"fliMllN n'9•1 JIWIL Of THI NIU , .. ,
t 11 l JI J·U loll IO>JJ
INIMY MINI ,.,._,,,
1 l JO l 00 I JO I 00 10 JO
.............. °" ..... . WHITI NIGHTS , ... ,., 'JJO l 10 110 l·M 11 It
........ .,,.., ........ "'' YOUNG SHlllOCIC HOlMIS ,.._ .. ,
11 o l,.1 l•U r •I to•1
eoll T IUltO ION VOIOMt RUNAWAY TRAIN 111
It II J IJ I U • .. It lt
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100• 111>t IOJO
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1,.1 l II HI • ti 100
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>:c ...... , ..
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wau ...,..,, w IOl DAlMATIAHI 191
llWI\ Of !Ht NH.I , .. , COMkM00 1!) --IUNAWAY fWH 1e
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COMMAHOO •••
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NATIONAL lAM~I
l~VA(ATIQH ... .•. _ .........
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lOOH Kaiwi ••
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5 GOIDEN GLOBE
NOMINATIONS
I I· .. 'I .. ,
~ ll] ,_ " ...... ,. ....... ~ . . .. .. .... .... ,,.. ... ·---·--
.-ra ..,. s..nu
8"Ma SOUlll COAST PWA
IL Tm Sll·t500 • EDWMDS n TOIO
.,.., ........ 770 ,
~ C*l1ll COIT1I
-mzm c....
'
Stan Jablonski, plants a JUD near the
victim. Unaware of what his partner did,
the rookie tells police that the criminal was
only carryin1 one gun. and an investip·
11on is staned. The veteran cop lwcars that
he didn't plant the gun, leavrna'\hc rookie
open for d1sm1ssal. La Rue shocks himself.
and everyone else. when he turns down a
set-rich-quick scheme, because it would
cheat Bclker out of the wcddina present his
fellow officer's had purchased. After
tellio& Joe she realizes she will never have
a husband or chil~n of her own, Lucy
spots tlle mother ofber former foster child.
Fabtan, in the slJltioo for a dru& busL
Later, Lucy calls the child. who is living in
South Carolina. • • • ST. ELSEWHERE: Roscn1hal's 9-year·
old son rums into a smok.io&. bt&·moutlled
braL A bomb ellrlodes 11 the abortion
clinic where Phi rs doina community
scriicc. The doctor who hcadJ the clinic
dies. and an injured woman socs into
labor. Daniel's 1llcpl alien housekeeper
Maria runs off when she fears she'll be sent
back to her homeland. The abortion cli01c
bomber leaves a bomb at St. Eliaius. Both
Fiscus and his fiancc Mona have cold feet.
Although Morrison's ap.inst abon.ion, be
eventuaTly reaJizcs the metally retarded
Pru. who 1s also prqnant, is a perfect
cand1date for the procedure.
'Dallas' star Keel
has heart surgery
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Howard
Keel. who stars as Clayton Farlow on
CBS-TV's "Dallas," 1s recovering
from eleftivc heart surgery.
Kecl,66. underwent double bypass
surgery o n Wedncsdal at a Los
Angeles hospital. Keel s physicians
ex pect the actor to remain in the
hospital five or six days. It's antici-
pated he will return to work Feb. 3.
Keel will film his seen~" when he
returns to work .
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY IJIC.
... ,_ Dlllr c.... .... ,
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11-°""'"' .. , .. _ .......... 1"•• """'c-~ ...... ---IH'l••CNI --
WINNER
-.. Am--
Meryl Saeep ............. o..~
_ .. Qi. ····-_,.,.,..0..0.. i...-..... ..... 0..-.-
I
I
: \
* lllJ 11111 TUESDAY, JANUARY 14', 1988
Integrity overshadows the win~, losses
Others take a look back
at Tucker's coaching
·team and Dave White of the 1975 juggernaut.
Here arc comments pthered since Tucker
stepped down:
Sluacklefor4, of Golden West College: "It
surprised me. I know how much he "enjoyed
coach.ins. We're all aoina to have to qujt
sometime, but f thouaht he would coach a
couple of more ycan, at least.
to compete m a very compeuuve situa11on m
terms of recruiting the same athletes from not
very many schools."
Woucou, one ofTucker's chief assistants:
(area h1an schools which Coast recruits from)
and there were more four:year schools around
re<:ruitin' our bi'1t schools. It became hard to
find really aood football pl~ers in our own area. Most were recruited ri t awa (to four.
year schools) just on size a one. ncy'll take
them on the come and maybe they'll develop
and maybe they won't. In the old days they
came to Coast first and developed into
winners."
By ROGER CARLSON
bf .. Dllr .........
Dick Tucker, who guided Orange Coast
Collcae for 24 yea rs. a span which included two
national championships and probably some
I ,SOO football players under bis hand, resigned
Friday .afternoon, clearly the end of an era. .
With 11 years under his belt as Brca-
Olinda High's. coach, Tucker concluded 35
stra.iaht years as a head footbaJI coach.
"When people like Bob u ster of El
Modena High and Tucker retire it's krnd of a
sad thing. A tradition steps aside and 11's
different. It'll be very strange next fall when we
play and he's not there.
What strikes me with Tucker is the
continuity that was there. We've competed
against them for 20 years and they were never
the type of team that is going to try to trick you.
'You erctty well lcncw what to expect. n was a
question of whether you can execute better than
they can.
"No, I wasn't totally surprised. After 35 years
there comes a \ime when you have to chanae
and I think the chanJ.e will be for the better for
Dick. He can enjoy hfe more, taking care of the
atblellc department and not havmg both Jobs
on his back. He'll have more time to enJO)' the
golf teain and he'll close out his career with a
little mprc enjoyment.
"I've never heard of any staff which was
encouraged to go to clinics as much as we did A ~oup(e or thr~ every year. One of his secrets
was that he did keep up on it. He stayed on top
of the best strat~y ad was 10 vogue with the best
programs in the United States.
Fair, another of his long-time assmants
and scheduled to retire soon.
"I've never met a more honest fuy 1n my
II fc. He will not break a rule. I know if had been
the coach I mi(ht have got in trouble I've got a
lmle more larceny 1n myself than Dick has. • keaction to Tucker's de<:ision 1s consistent
-whether you were on the same sidelines or
across the way, as a fellow coach or former player.
His 35-ycar record of 226 victories, 120
losses and 6 ties pales when compared to the
person, as evidenced by the following com-
ments from Golden West College Coach Ray
Shackleford, his. own assistants, Dale
Wonacott, Jack Fair and George Mattias and
former players, such as Gary Carr of the 1963
"We've had some tremendous games in
our series and I don't expect anything to
change.
"I think it says a lot for both schools when
you consider there has never been any blatant
animosities between the two. We've been able
"His leadership ability 1s the first thing that
comes to mind. He was fa ir with everybody.
with coaches and kids."
Success dwmdled over the past seven years
and Wonacott says everyone shared w11h the
dark side, too.
••.Jlick got the maximum out of what we
had. There are no magJc1ans in this game and
no SC(:rets. Without housmg. campus JObs or a
'boosters club there is no way you can do 11
"First you have to get a boosters cl ub and
then yo u have to go out into the communll)
and fet cheap housing for the kids.
Dick's not onJy my friend, but a damn
good football coac~. I JUSt wish he would have
!Pleue eee TUCUR/83)
"When we 1lad the people we were
winning.. But schools got smaller and smaller
# ' xx. ,
Dlck Tacker
u
.., AP•o0
•
Two happy Patrlota fan• •how off their Super Bowl XX dcketa (left) and lD Chlcaco tbe fa.a. were whooplng lt up from the •tart u the Bean ateamrolled o.er tbe llama.
Like Cubs' fans,
Bears' fans wild
May e its the-wait
that brings it out
for Chicago fans
CHICAGO (A P)-William Perry.
Steve Fuller and J im McMahon rea11y
wanted the Chica$o Bears to beat the
Miami Dolph10s m the Super Bowl.
Anoth er time, perhaps, Perry. Full-
er and McMahon -not the Chicago
players but avid fans who share their
names -will see their namesakes
meet the Dolphins.
Instead, these same-name fans,
who sometimes get the Bears' phone
calls but little of the glory and none of
the pay the players receive. will be
watchin$ the Super Bowl Jan. 26
along with thousands of Bears fans,
hoping their team will pummel the
New England Patriots m New Or·
leans.
"It was awesome." 'Mlid Perry. a
controller for a food service com·
pany, af\er the Bcari. shut out the
Rams 24-0 m Sunday's NFC cham·
pionship ga me.
Meanwhile. fan s across Chicago.
some of whom fed on "Ramburgcrs"
in preparation for Sunday's game,
cheered and swayed to the "Super
BowlShuffie."
But Perry, the controller, wasn't
celebrating.
"I'm aomg to wait for the Super
Bowl victory," he sa1d. "That's when
you party."
least IUU pounds less than the Fridge.
"He's the Refrigerator," said Perry.
"and I'm the automatic 1ce<ube
maker."
'Tm happy, that's for sure," said
McMahon. shouting over the din at
Sher's, a nei$h borh ood bar on the
city's north side. where he watched
the game with 20 other screammg
fans.
McMahon. 24. a telephone oper-
ator for Navistar Corp .. reall y wanted
a piece of Miami. the only team 10
beat the Bears this season.
Nonetheless, he was elated by
quarterback Jim McMa hon's per·
formancc against the Rams.
"I think he did a good JOb," said
McMahon. "The Bears should come
out throwing more than they have "
When the TV screen Oashed an
image of quarterback McMahon
wearing a he ad band with
"ROZELLE" scrawled across 1t,
McMabon the operator was a hit
confused. Sunday's headdress was in
apparent defiance of National Foot·
ball League Com m1sioner Pete
Rozelle's fine fo r weari ng an 1m·
proper headband in last wee k's game
agamst the New York Giants.
"It took me a while to figure 1t out,"
said McMahon. the opera\l>r. "I
thought it wa~ cute."
Fuller, not the quarterback but the
news intern for WBBM -TV .Joked, "I
didn't do much in the game today."
With jinx aside,
Pat.fans to party
It's Foxboro Fever
for New England's
faithful after win
W~RWI CK . R.I. 1.\PJ
Thousands of football fam gret-ted
the Ne\A. Eng.land Patnots toda) a~
the} am ... ed home from their third
playoff upset. a JIO'~nding '1c10~
over the M1am1 Dolph ms that earned
the team 11s fi rst uper Dov.I bcnh
The National Football League
team sta)ed aboard II' chaner~
plane for nearl) 10 minute'> after
landing at 2: 10 am at Tr Green
State Airport because hundreds ot
fans broke a pohc~ line and \v.armcd
the runway
About 150 state and local police
used not sticks and 'ih<n e' to t kar J
path from the plane to the team huc,e"
Warwick police c;a1d the' arrl''lrli
ti ve fans at the airport. thrt.'t' tor
trespassing. one for larceO\ and onr
for assault on a police offi n·r
No IOJunes were reportl·d
The players went dirctlh lrum thl·
plane to the bu~. h,r;i.-..,1ng .1
platform that had been set up Im ,in
impromptu new\ ronferenn· JnJ
rail).
"l'h1s 1s reall) great but it\ kind nl
scary." said veteran quatcrbal Ii. \tt'' t
Grogan. who led the Painot' IP '"
consccuuve m1d-sea..on '1dom·'
before suffenng a broken leg "l hr
crowd 1s out of control ..
Before ~unda). the Patnots had not
\A.On a game 1n the Orange Bowl m
M1am1 in 18 consecutive contests
dating back 10 I %6
Warw1d De1ec11 vc ( mdr John G
Glendinning ..aid there had been no
maJor prohlem'-w11h the crowd,
\A.h1ch he t''>t1matt'd at 18.000 10
~U.000 people
"It' he-en a hllk unrul). but you
ha\e IOC\~l 11:· he said "Ifs called
fo,boro FC\ er ..
"\I. c·re going 10 unplug the refnger·
ator ·· S<reamed John Coughlin of
Fall R1' er Ma~.. in referen~ 10
rool 1c dt'lens" e lineman William
Pem of the Chicago Bears. who the
Patriot<. \A. Ill meet Jan 26 m the uper
Bo..-. I at "'.J('w Orleans
Man' fans earned banners uriin&
\.c"' England to"&~ the Bears," a
rdcren~ to Nev. England Coach
Ra,mond Bern
··\\c erased· a 101 of memon~
111n1gh1:· \aid .\II-Pro linebacker
. tc' c Nel!>On. the field general of the
dctcn<.e that held the C'PIOSIVl'
Dolrh1n' 10 1uc;1 14 points "Wc'rr
rolling nght mw ...
Patriot fans throughout New Eng·
land cclehrated the 31-14 victory.
\\ h1ch ga' e the team 11s first i\men-
1.an r ootball Conference title.
Bmton police sealed ofT a block-
'Q uarc arca around Non heastcm
l nl'Cr'11' a'i o;tudents "got o'cr
an\1ou<i celehrnllntt the v1cton ... said
J commu01cat1onc; officer of thr
~ Jmpus poh<.'t' \A. ho dC'Chned to 1dent0
1f\ herself
"v1n11.-.achu'Ctt\ Go' Michael Perry is the same height as the
Monster of the Midway he admires
and .would like to meet, but the
controller weiahs in at onl y 190 -at
But. hoping to see his namesake
play in the Super Bowl, Fuller
spouted player Fuller's Imes from the
Bears' "Super Bowl Shuffle" rtrord·
ing: "See. I run like lightning. paJS hke
thunder."
One Patriot faa ~-a bear and another pata fl.re to lt
Monday moralnl wlille awalttnc the arrlnl of the Patrlota.
"It's been a long time tor thc-.e tan'
and we'rtJUSI ha pp) wr \A.-tln the iwmt·
for them." said safe!\ Roland Jame.-.
"h 's long o'erdue ..
Du~ak1'\ wac; among th<' pohucians
\A. ho 100~ t1me0 out Sunda' to watch
the gamt· on tcde\ 1S1on
. Who says you can't go home? Theriot doing it
Ex-Sat ersprtnterruns
tn Sunktst meet ~riday
IJ JOSEPH DUDEVOIR
Dllf""'C:.lltfl f I
Thomas Wolfe wrote You C•n 't Go Home ~in, but that wn•t sto~ Brian Tbenot frOm retumina to Newport h ancr 1 dtcade
away in what he caJl1 .. hvina hell."
.. lt'1ju1t pat to be t.clt homcapJn, .. 11y1
Thenot. a former Newpon Hut>or Hilb track
1tar1 wbo bun•t liven up the ahott yet. .. rm
blc1t trairu?::1lh my old hiah tchool coech Bob Kailey wbo Thmot 1fl«tt0nately refm
to as U~le ) and lo"i"I 1t." Riabt now liaJJey 11 whappina Theriot
(who now nan1 for Team Acbdu) in lhlPC for
lbe 800 IM1m event 1n Friday's Sunkill Track
and f itld lnvitauoul at the LotAn,eela ~
Arena. •
"I'm back on that old dirt track thal I
earned my name on." said Thenot. "i\nd I'm
atttina the k1nd of coaching that was never
matched since I left hiah school."
For Theriot. the Sunlost meet will be Just
one m~ bi& race out of the man) that ha'e
taken the lS.ycar-old. soon-to-be laW)cr
around the world. •
"TblS apon bas enabled me td do thma\ I probeblr would have never aouen to do ... he
•ya. ••• ve bttn to Europe e\ en }CU tor the
put JO )Uri and met all k1~~ ·of peopl<' It\
beta ll'Wy a ateat UPtnenc:c.
Aod thewayThcno1 i;alks. h<' 15n't read\ 10
stop 1n1 thott clpcnentt1 quite )Cl
'1'm ptaniuna on run•1na unul 198 ," he
11)'1. "I'm really tra1n1n1 hard with Coach
Haile'f. Tbe COKhina a better than v.hen I w.~
at UCLA (*"tte he .,actuated 1n 19 ). and 1 bad .... eooci ODel theft .••
After UCLA. Thttiot went to · uth·
•
v..estem law school. where he fini'ihcd h1'
tud1es 1n 1984.
ln I 98S. Theriot returned ho mt•
"Let me tell }OU, I don't m1'.., Los i\ngcl~
at all," says Thenot. "It wa hke h.,.ma hell
thcrt There's 100 much of cvei;thmg and
everythin& theft" is a hassle. It was hke a culturt'
"hud 10 me ..,, hen l fir5t v..ent there. but I
gradual!) aot u\Cd to u. 8u1 I never hked at ..
No"' that he• heel home training w11h h1~
fa\.Onte coa h. Theriot has put his pt"nd1nJ
carter 1 n law on the back humer v.htl<' h<' bum~
up the tf'ICk at Dlvldson field.
"I haven·1 \lien the bar ~t." Thenot SA)S
" Ocr I vaduated I $1111 tra1n1n (or the
01 rnp1 (he JUlt m15'Cd. fin1sh1na th in the
U. tnaJs) and dtdn't ha.,.c the llm<' to study
ru probably 1t for It soon. thouah ..
t the moment, Thenot 1 work1na a what
he calls a la w clerk fo r attomt' R~
AlaJ•tuan. wbo tttJ Thcrto• ft half da
""fuk 10 lrt.IOLf\I.
..
"( •\gaJan1an) ha' l'le'cn \CT) good to me."
\a\ s Thenot "He and h1i. fami ly arc all pon
nuts and hkc what I'm domi. so we have a
prctt) good rela110n sh1p I'm also learning the
busmc~!> of lav. prett~ fast ..
E'eryth1na ~ms to running fut fi rward
for Thcnot. as hC' will wed Mt'hsa ockrell on
March I He has also JUSl purchased a hom<'
back m ewpon. wh<'tt h1i. fondest mcmoncs
still 11 ... e. thou&)\ he hu a bit of a probkm
n:ocognm ni them at times.
"I've ~n a lot haPPC'O m 10 yea" .. he
\a)S "Things arc much d1~nt today than
when I was at Harbor For one thtna. I'm
amaz~ at the way ~pk carry t'hem1elva.
When I wai 1n h tah hool °'°" wun ., the dnae
and alcohol problem that u1 t today You can see the effcas of 1t.. too ..
nd you11 have to n c\&IC Tbmo4 if be
tttm I littk l)lr\1&1 \0 the ltbJrta ol baa da •
rather &han the CUrTnt C'fOt>. (Pl•• ..... ..,,.,..,
..
* °""'90..DM.Y"'-OT/T• 11199W,.MNwy 14, 11M I
Track allens get break
atwnu were anelled at tho track.I.
Cops accept a payoff
'° fUe anl dama,t l&llu. .. We rw very oAeued we can tet0lve it ln thlJ
LOS ANO£LES (AP) -In Ute
wake or recmt lmm.lantaon and
Natw'ahation.-eepeoflu..J alxns
at bone race U'ICb in Southern Califenla. u ... eanimt hu betn
reached to pant temporvy viaaa.. h waa announced Monday. ·
On Dec. 12, the U.S. Depan~nt
of labor cerufied that a auffident number of American workm were
no& available to fill the Jqbl, and that
the &emporary employment of aliens
woWd not advencly affect Ameri·
CIM.
HARRI B RG . Pa. (AP) -Heavyweiaht bour Omy Cooney ~cd Monday to• benefit match bcrc.
In return, Pohce dropped a di'°rdcrly conduct charae
lbat 1&1d be wu tovol~cd in an altercation 1n a b<Ucl
lobby last month ~--•w-Summary chaf'IC1 apin•lt ooney and thru of h1
companions were wuhdrawn dunna a hcanna before
Di1tnct Mqsttnue Michael tcwan.
manner .. said C.00ney'1 auomcy, William Cos-
topoulot, who a1ona with Cooney'• m~r. Oenn11
Ral)Plpon, proposed the benent. At the request of
police. the proceedt 1111'tll to to the Amene1n Hean
At;;dat1on. CostopoulOt 11id. A Pititioo Md bec1I Ned in October by the Hor1emcn'1
Benevolent and Prolettive AMOCia-
tion aeek.ina temporary lepl status
ror alien• wOrkina mainly u nerciJe ridcn and ~men It Del Mat ,.,
San DietQ, Hollywood Park 1n ln-lkwood and Senta Anita in Alcadaa.
.. Thia i1 1n hitlOrical event," aaid
IN We1tern Reaional Com·
mitaioner Harold Eun. "We hope 1rt
the bqinn1n1 or a 10lut1on of a lona-tenn~em.··
The acUoa, wh•ch will an.nt 1ep1
Mlut to 363 temporary worken 1t
tbe thru tracks, folJowed raidt by the
INS durina •hteh hundreds of iJJcpJ
Each worker who will be paid about
SI an hour mutt file for an H·2
temporary vl11 at the U.S. contullte
1n Ti.J~na, Moico, accordina to INS
Lot Anaelcs director Erne1t
Gustafson.
Rozelle niay have
_not seen the last.
of the headbands
Fr•m AP 41U,.~
c ttrc A00 -c·h·caao &Jn quar-1!11m tert>eck Jim McMahon -who dC>Cl just
about evcrythina his own way -aay, the
National Football Leque was "n1t·pack1n1" when 1t
fined him for weanna an Adidas headband.
"We aotta worry about nit-picki!'la "uff like
labeltT' McMahon complained after the Chicaao Bean
defeated the Ram1 on Sunday 1n the National FootbeJI
Conference champ1on\h1p pme.
Dunns the aame. McMahon
wore a wh1tt headband with the
word "ROZELLE" wntten on the
front ·rhe move wu a swipe at
National Football Leaaue com· ,c mm1oner Pete Rozelle. who fined
the Bears SS.000 last week bc-
cau11e McMahon wore an Adidas
headband in a same.
NFL rules require playcn to
cover up compeny loaos on their
clotb1n1-
lle....._ ''He's amuina." Coach
Mike 0.tb said Monday. "I didn't know what 1t
(headband) 111d, then I read tt ...
"Why do they worry about th11 chicken atufrr'
McMahon 111d after the aame. ··They're try1na to take
111 lhe fun out of the pme.
'Tve been with Ad1da1 for years:· McMahon said.
"And rd wom their headband all season. rd been
warned about it, but what the heck.
.. , 1ues1 thc networks don't ltk.e U'I &JV1og publicity
to thete compan1e1." added McMahon. "So, the lcaaue
hiti me for five arand, and I fiaure, I'll &JVe Pete some
pub. Maybe he ncc:d• 1t. ..
Rozelle, who wa~ in the Soldier Field pren hox
Sunday, called McMahon's 'ltunt "a ffe&t pa."
"Tt broke me up," said the comm 1ss1oncr. "I'm JU~t
upaei that I wHn't able to act a 'lhoc model out in ume "
The comm1u1oner'1 office .aid he had nothing
funher to tay on the subJect Monday.
Runn1n1 back Walter Payton had McMahon make
up a 11m1lar headband.
"He a'lked me to make him one. too, so we hoth
wore them," McMahon said "What'\ the big deal? We
all wear different 'lh~. different aJovei "
Quote of the day
Ed Dderty, ba'lketball coach at John
Hopkin' Un1ver'l1ty, on the debate over whether
the NC'AA should hnns back the regulation that
allowed athlete\ to rece1 vc laundry money a' pan ofthc1nchola"h1~ "It would be nd1culou\ A\k
old coache~ about laundry money No I alw<ty'
had more laundry than No 12 "
Cardinal• •lgn Coz to contract
()T LOlJIS -The\t l.<11.118< ardinal\ ii reportedly have ,1gncd ""ht-hander
Danny (ox, an I S-pmc winner Int
season. to a one-yearcontracl that include•
a druJ·te,11ng clause
Em ( 10ld'IChm1dt. (ox'\ agent, 111ld the St. l..ou11
Po•t-Dnpatch on Monday that the 26-ycar-old pitcher
had agreed to term' even though he-win eh&Jblc to fil e
for arh1trat1on
The Po'lt-f)9'pateh reported that <ox·, contract
1ndude• a pruvl\1on that allow\ the cl ub to tc't him for
druas at 1l!i d1\Crct1on.
C <JA ma.de ~I 2S 000 It'll ~•on, and the new
contract "believed to be worth $400,000
Cllppen belted by Bulleta
Qlff ~--ICOred 12 points in the m third q~r&er Monday niJht 11 the Wash-
m1ton Bullet1 .. broke open a low-teonna
conlclt and defeated the Los Anples -
ClipPCt'S 90-77 in National Bukttball Auoc1a11on
aciton at the Capital Centre. Wa1hm1ton outtcored the
OiPOCrs 23-13 in the third quarter to take a 16-point
lead, detp11c makm1 only e1&ht of 21 shot• from the
noor. Three of the field aoar5 with which the Bullets
were credited came on aoa1tcnd1n1 calls apin'lt the
Otppen. Washin11on did not put
the ball lhrou&h the basket unhl
Robinson made a dunk 'lhot w11h
4; IS remainina 1n the period. The
Bullets, 18·20. were abk to in-
creaJC their 47-41 halfi1me ad-
v•n• because the (11ppen'
ahoollq wat even colder. Lo~
Anselca, 12-27. 1hot only four of
17 in the third quarter. F.l~where.
AJu EllllJ•• te0rcd 42 ~inti '' Denver field off a late Milwaukee swt.c Bucks charae to clinch a 11 9-11 s
victory. The Bucks pulled to within two Points of the
Nuucts with leu than two minuict len, but a foul 1hot
and basket by Enali1h pve Denver a 11 9-11 3 lead with
44 1«ond' remainina. "Pa&rtck Ewtq scored 20 of ht~
24 points 1n the fim half u the New York Knie~ built
a 22-point lead and coasted to a 11 S-97 victory over the
Sa.cramento Kinp. Ew1n1 did not play 1n the fourth
quarter bccau41C the Kni'cks took a 19-point le.ad into tht'
final 12 minutes ... Jay H1mpllries tied h" NBA carcer-
h1&h with 27 point• while Walser O.vl1 !OOred 11 1n h1'
firtt pme 1n a month 11 the Phoenix Suns rolled to
121·98 victory over the San Antonio Spurs ... Sam
Perkiltt unk a 11•-fOOtJumpcr as 11me ran out to 1ive
0.1111 a 90-89 victory over Sc:attle. The Sonics took an
89-88 lead when Rlctiy s.Mn canned an 18-foot
Jumper with five seconds to play ... P1rvl1 Aon , Joe
Barry C.rroll and Erie Floyd combined for 87 point\.
led by Shon'1 33. as the Golden State Warrao11 broke a
s1x-pmc IO'lina streak and beat Indiana.
AJllel• open '86 8eUOD away
NEW YO.RK -The 1986 Amcncan • Leaaue IC&IOD wall open Monda y, Apnl 7,
with three afternoon pme' -C1cveland at
Baltimore. Boston at Detroit and Mil-
waukee at Chic.go -the league has announced.
The Kansas City Royal'!, 198S World Serie\
champions, wall begin their sca'°n Tuc'iday. Apnl 8.
mceuna lhe Yank.eca at New York In other Tue'ld.11y
l?J>Cnera, the Anpl~ w1U be at Seattle, M1nneM>la at
Oakland and Toronto at Texas.
The lcaaue sch~le include~ 77 1 n1&ht pme1. a
decrease from 802 1n 198S. and only four
doubleheaders -1nclud1na the AL's only tw11i&ht·
n1&ht doubleheader. at Texas The other doubleheaders
include two at Oakland and one at Octro11.
Navratilova trounces Shriver
WASHINGTON -Top-seeded ~
Martina Navratilova u~d a boomina serve
and an unemn1 net aame to brcc:u: patt
Pam Shnver 6-1. 6-4; Monday 1n the final'
of the SI SO,CXJO V1flin1a Shm\ of Waah1naton tennis
toumamcnt ,
Navratilova, who fin1,hed the week without losina
a \Ct, blasted 11x a~ and 1<>'1 her ~rv1cc only once 1n
defcat1na her close fncnd an 66 minutes.
After collect1n1 a check for ~27,000 follow1na her
c1&hth 1tngles tllle here. Na vratilova. ranked No. l 1n
the world, teamed with Shri ver in the doubles final 11
the top-seeded team.
<;hnvcr, ranked No 4 and the ~ond-1JCCd here,
u1d before the match that in order to win 'lhe would
have to hold her tervace early. She failed to do so, and aa
a re1ult was forced to settle for S 11,600 afler falhna to
Navratilova for the 13th straJght ttmc
After slammina two ace• in winning the opcnina
pme of the milch
A charae of 1111avatcd 1111ult on a police ofTic.er
aplnn a rounh companion. Robcn We nortlt.e, 371 of
Huntin,11onSt1tion, N. Y wudroppcdaflcrWcsno1tke
aareed to plead au1lty to two count of d1wrderly
conduct.
We1nof1ke wu fined S6<JO plu• co~ns and aarced to pay s~ an ·rett1tut1on to c'1ty detective Richard t1lo.
whose weater was nppcd durina the Incident Dec. 9.
ooncy and h11 fnends al~ uid they would
aPolOIJzc in wnt1na to Police office11 and prom•aed not
Kareem, Magic mlu practice
INGLEWOOD -Center Karee~ Abd ul-Jabbar and auard Earvin "Ma11c··
Johnson mmed the Lo~ Anacl~ Lakers' •
practice-Monday becau~ of illncu. a
spokesman for the National Baskctbell Anociatton
team 111d.
Abdul-Jabbar hu a throat 1nfcct1on but will
probably be able to play 1n t0n1(iht's game at the Forum
apinst the Phoenix Suns. said Josh lfo11Cnfcld, the
Lakers' pubhc rclat10n'i director.
Johnwn has the Ou , and 1$ QUe5taonabJe for the
conte~. Rosenfeld said.
The Laker,, who already had Larry Spngs out
with a 'pratn in hi1 left arch, practiced with only nine
players Monday.
Spng.\. wh o\ m1'l~d the la!U three pmcs, may be
able 10 make the Laker,· upcom1na road trip, openina 1n
Detroit nCAt ~unday night. Rosenl'eld .aid. .
Former Clipper• ownen •ulna
SAN FRAN( IS("O -A federal m appeal1 court on Monday revived a au1t_ by
the former owners of the San D1eao C'hp~rs basketball team apinst Nike Inc.
Pre11dent Ph1hp Knig.ht that claim.'! he broke a contract
to buy the team for fl 3.S million tn 1-980.
Six months af\cr the purported deal fell throu&h.
the ( hppers were sold for a reponed S 13.S million to
r>onald Sterling. who moved the National Buketball
Associatton team to Lot Ansetcs an 1984.
But former ownel'I f rvinJ Levan and H.arold
Tipton claim Sterling's actual purchate price was
"substantially lcas"'than Knraht' offer. They also blame
their los'I of SS20. 700 in attendance and conceuion
re venue\ for the la" half of the 1980-81 scat0n on
Knight's allc&ed breach of contract
Dartmouth coach geta job back
HANOVC.f<. N.H. -roothall coach m
Joe Yuluca. who refused to accept bc1na •II•
fired by Dartmouth College, repined h11
JOb Monday for one more season after
reaching agreement with the school over a contract
dt'lpute that auracted national attention.
"I hope th1'1 ca~ show'I that a contract 1s a contract
and that I ca n g<> <>ut \3)'1ng I retired rather than beina
\ummanly fired," Yuk1ca ~ud. He w1d he hoped hit
case would "give adm1n1'ltrators cau'IC to pause when
they're under pre'l'lure :ind \ay, 'We have a contract
with tht\ coach ·"
Yuk1ca wu removed a'I coach in November by
Athletic Director ·1 ed Leland, who said the Ivy Lcaauc
JChool would pay 't uk1ca for the remainder of the
contracl to June 1987.
Maple Leafa, Red Wing• brawl
Rookie left wing Steve nomaa scored ~
two aoals and as11'lted on two 01her1 u the '
Toronto Maple Leaf, dcfc:iled the Detroi t
Red Wings 7-4 1n a National Hockey
Lcque pmc Monday night that erupted into a bencb-
clcarin1 brawl with five minute\ remainina. Nine
players were eJe1..ted after a delay of 19 minutes. In the
ooly other NHL game Monday. Gleu .uder ... ~red
two pis and \Ct up Wayne Gretzky and Mart Mettler
for two others, lead1na F..dmonton to a S-3 victory over
the Boston Bruins. Although out'lhot lR-22. the 0 1lrr1
aot a.oats from Andcr~>n . (m~t.rky and Meu1cr on
Power play'I while the pun1..hle\\ Hruin" were 0-for-7
playina with a man advantage
Televt.lon, radio
TEl~EVISION
No evcnh \Cht duled.
RADIO
7:)0 p m -PRO BASKETBALL: Phoenix
at Lake"· KLAC <S70).
No dale was set and amn,emcntt were not
completed, 1hhouah the event thould be tchcduled
within four to five weeks, Cost0Poulo1 said.
"We•re workjnaon it riaht now." said Cooney, who
has been trafo1n1 in nearby Lancaster.
Cooney and several companions had come to
Hamsbura Dec. 9 for dinner whh a fnend and while 1n
town, the sroup visited two hotel bart.
At the downtown Holiday Inn, Wdnof1ke fOt into ~!' araument with Stilo, 1CUfflcd with the detective and
"as momentarily knocked out by the Policeman
-v icago as
anew name
BOom Town
CHICAGO (A P) -Fl11ht~ to New Orleans arc ~o
out and ,...me tickets arc only available to a select 4,00
but that s not stopPina fanis -. and merchants -fro
reveling in the Ch1caao Bean,' first tnp to the Super Bo"'
Two wcckl before the Monsters of the Midway tal
on the New EnaJand Patnota, fcvensh fans arc itockir
up on souvenirs heralding their team·, first tnp to tt
Super Bowl. The Bears won the National Football l.,A:&&l
championship 1n 19ti3, beating the New York Giant\, h1
there was no Super Bowl until 1966.
"I've never seen anythini like this.'' s~ud Ste\
Shaev1tz, co-owner of SPor1S 01.,tnbutors. a Nonh Sir
wholesaler and retailer or spona items.
Less than 24 hours af\cr the 8ca1' clinched the NF
tatle by maulinJ. the Rams 24-0 unday, Spor
D1iitnbutors received its first ,hipment of upcr Dov
paraphernalia.
'Tm )USl to Jammed here 1t'i unbelievable ... ·1 h
will break all records," Shaevitz said Monday in
telephone interview, adding he'd had about 600 phon
call~. too. Sales of lhe Bears' 25-minutc mu~ic video. "~upc
Bowl Shuffle." alto surged after Sunday'i game.
"We were sctt1n-phone calls this morning eve
before we opened;' said Mia Poland. a clerk at The V1dc
Kina in trendy Lincoln Park.
She uid out-of-1tatc fans also were calhna about th
S I 9.9S video featunna the football-uniformed w na-and
dance team.
"h's the No. I bctl-ltllcr," Poland \aid. "We kee
getting them 1n and they keep selling."
Half the revenues from the Rears' video and rccori
are 101ng to a fund for needy Chicago fam1l1e<J. accord in
lo officials at Red Label Records, which produced th
effort.
Most Ch1caao fans will ha ve to settle for 'K'.Cing th·
Jan. 26 Super Bowl on tclevm on.
The.Bc.llr'I' share of tickets to the game -abou 14.00C or them -will ao to those among the t\t1matcd I J.SOC
seasorr-ttterholders chosen 1n a special lottery Wcdne'I
day.
Those who have the most sca'IOn tickets and hav1
had them the longcst will hold the advantage If a fan ha·
bou&ht two sea'IOn tickets forc1&ht yeaf'fi, his name will g<
into the lottery 16 umc'I, said Jean Jensen. 1
1poke!lwoman for the Bears' ticket office.
Alt scah will sell for '7S.
And lottery winnen hctler have made tra vC'
arran&ements early. All 01&ht' from Ch1caao to Ne"'
Orlean'I ha ve been sold out for "C'"k\, 'lald travel agent
Cynthia Hall at Amcncan Fi1 prc.,.,· Michigan Avenu<
outlet.
Bears' die-hards
in line for ducats
CHICAGO (AP) -fhe C h1cago Bean havt
anractcd thou\llnds of foir-wcuther fans &'I thcy'vr
bulldozed to a I 7-1 record and their fir~t Super Bowl. Bui
only die-hard fans will act 10 sec the Beal'\ battle the Ne"
England Patnoa fo r the champ1on,h1p 1n New Orlcan'I.
T1cket'I to the Jan. 26 contest at the Superdome wil l
go only to the estimated 13,SOO Bears season-ti cket
holders -and only to th o'<: whose name' arc chosen 1n a
'lpcc1al lottery th1\ week.
Fans' chances of ha v1na their names pulled from the
hat will be decided by how Iona they've had M:a"4>n 11ckch
and how manr ttckets they hold . ..aid Jean Jensen. a
spokeswoman for the Btara ticket office.
"The number of years that they've had them ume!I
the number or t1cketa they own" will determine the
number of11me, fan 'l' n11mer. will come up in the lottery ~euW. '
Player of the Year 111le with a record· ~tuna. 33-under.par tnumph 1n th1\
event 1111 sea.on
Other ma1or fiaurcs 1n the 128-man
pro Oeld include I 98S money-win·
nina leader Curt1t Stranac. two-time
Hope winner John Mahaffey. Ray
Floyd and Cnua Stadler. a playoff
lo.er here a year aao who has a hittory
ohucce ' 1n th1uvent.
The format call' for the pros to play
one round on each off our oou11t1 -
Bermuda Dunc,, La Quinta, fnd11n
Well' and Eldorado -cach day with
a different set Of lh(CC lmalCUrl,
before the pr~nly finish at Ber-
muda Dunes on 'unday.
Poruon.• of the final two roundt
Satuday and unday wJll be tclecu1
natlonally by NBC.
Borlord to pla;y
lo_r Keatac~y
• l£XINOTON. Ky. (AP) -
Alfredo 0 T110" Horford 11 reponedly
com1na to play ba1ke1beJI at the
Univmil}' of Kentucky, but tho 7-1
native of the Dominican Republic
will hav~ to tit out one seuon. and mtybf h~O
An N AA 1ppcal1 committee
ruled unday that Horford w11 ln-
elle'ble to play for the Univmity of
Houtao1t bcuu of an iJleeal rtm1it-
iftl COftt.IC\ in 19M. Horfoid Metallo
•rolled at LoulMaftl Slaw U8'¥Wr"· lay, and that could (Oftll hiM btto
t1lt1n1 out hwo ynrt,
•
• •
d
).
ti
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ii
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-·
MercD bolds his cycling to just a breeze
Now the boldJy bandlomc •Jsian Uva in
8ru1ecl1 and travel• the world promouna hat
line of bicycle equipment and j ust tMkina 1n
,cneral1 which he calls ''the niMt apon in the
world.'
mot1v1uon to nde anymore in the rain or
snow, .. he admitted. araph tttktn and ~11-wilMn. appeared t(I ttt a charae out or Just rem11ute1J)J about &he old
alory day1. Oestunn1 with chnched fista lO h11
chest, almott convey1na the 1uddtn Adrenalin
rush he pronounced, .. Every tame you wan, you
WU\ for yourself ..• lO make you llrOftl for your
act ofluffmr\1 (tra1n1n1) " IJ IUllY FAUL&NEll
...... 0.: i , I
The s-ntheon of 1pon -thOM Uhwriou.a few Who pai"orm beyond the level of reahlttC coms-riton, ~
Hi1 travel• brouaht him to into the coal\ area last Saturday for a 20.mlle ride wi lb about
HO adorin1 local riden to promote h11
merchandiec. "It'• like a worthipful experience," 111d
Juhe Emerson, a eclf.OOnfessed "bike nut" from
Buena Pa~ about the chance to ride with
Merclu ... There w11 j ust none any better," she
aajd wl1h a alah.
He dad not t.ck motiva11on 1n h11 rac1 na
dayi however describina hi• rul&Cd train1n1
rtaimen of H ,000kJlomoters(2 I, 700m1ltt)per
year, includina bolh races and workouta Thote
workouts of\en involved eeven to c1aht hours
on tl\c bike each day, three days a week.
M~u. who wanted to be a profeu1onal
~r ever since childhood. remembered the
thm:·week. 4,000 lulometcn (2,480 mile) Tour
de France events with a lflmaccd face .
"It was &real, he continued. "to btat the
other ndtrs. l'm proud of what I did When I
waa ndanJ at that momcn1 Ctn compeli11on) I d1dn~t think at Wiit a bt& deal. but anerward
(now) I think wow!" . Amona those considered wonhy of 1uch pra1ae: Babe Ruth, Jim Brown, Wayne Gretzky, T~~-Abdul Jabbar. Eddy Merckx? ... ... t'1 riah1 Eddy MercU.
. When asked 1f 1heequivalent to the bilu na
Wotld Series could coms-re 10 a 26.2.milt
marathon. in terms or physical ache1vement. Me~u u1d: "No. th!! wH every day. You
can't run a marathon every day You would
spend up to 11x or seven houn on th,e bike per
day. sometimes cltmbrna for two hours at a
t1m~on-• ll'Mll srad~.~ (The counc o~nhe
French Pyrenees includes 6,000 foot mountain
chmbs.)
Mcrckx made up to S400.000 in h11 .. best
yeaf' of rac1n1. No,i he marvelut the escalated
endoncmcnt contract\ and pr11c: mono-avail·
able to prt<sent day nder\ "Now 11 1\ double that," he said
To many hl1 name seems out Q( place with
luch tee<>tnizable North Amencan 1pon1
beroet. But to international bicycle rac1na
enthu1ia1ll, the comparison definhely fits.
-M•rckA, in h11 17 yeart of compettt1ve
raclna .C 13 11 a profcstional), dominated the
1pon hlce no one had before or hu 1ince. He:
won 524 races, mostly in Europe: from 1962· 78.
Merco said later at a bik.ina equipment
show at the Lo na Buch ConventJon (enter
that he has noticed the level o( Amencan
pan icis-tion 1n the spon has incrcu:d since
the recent Olympic 1ucce11es of U. . nden and
thcJ.9U Wodd.O>ampion.Jht~ win-by another
American Orea LaMond.
"You can'1 do 11 JUSI for 1hr money
(though f,you have to Hkt 01n111 It'\ 100 hard
(Ju•n ) for 1hc money," he ('IOtcd.
Amon' h11 titles: five: Tour de France wi ns
(1969, '70, 71. '72 and '74). li ve Tour of Italy
crowns, lhrec profcu1onal "VP''~ ch•m·
pionshtpa (one race event),), 32 clan1c events,
&he.-wqrld amatuer title in I™ and 4'eVen
overall 11Ca10n points champ1onsh1~.
"This (Sou them C'ali(om1a ) 1s a very &ood
area (for ridina) because or the wca1her," said
MerckA, addjna "It's much differcn1 1han 1n
Europe, where It's cold much of the time "
Mercu, who recently turned 40. now has a
busy schedule whieh allows li ttle 11mc for
ndina-"h refreshes me." he said. He n~
"only when the weather 1s nice. I have no
Merclu, whose pul~ rate" an economical
38 beats per minute: (the averalC man 1i around
70). said he never aot u~d lo the-physical
demands of the Ion& events. "fl was like a new
threshold every year," he recalled
Mercb, who shrt can't walk 1he nrc:e1s of
Europe w11hout encountenng throng,11 of au10-
Asked if another nder would ev('r domi-
nate the spon as he did. th(' mo\t lcgcndal)
a1hlc1c the 'lpon has yet produted an\"-Cred
humbly, "Wh y no1? I'm not an ('Jltep11onal man ··
Forgtvc them Edd) but ~our lam m1gh1
take Cll cepuon . Eddy llercu
.
TUCKER •••
From Bl
quit four or Ii ve years qo,.. There wa\
a lot of heartache. I've been around a
lot orfootball. but no one has worked
harder than Dick . Most kids that have
played for him come back years later
and realize."
Matt1a1, also an usastant and stall
open for more of the: same under the
nut re&Jmc 1fhe's asked:
"I don't know how I could put 11 in
words. Twenty-three years, he's the
one-~ brough t me to Ora nae C:oas1.
which wanny aood fortune. ft was the
faJlest 23 yeara anyone: could have.
"He was JUSI honest, loyal to has
staff and to the: colleJC and a supreme
optimist. The last few year' ha ven't
been thal lfCal, but lhere Wll\ alway\
the: nut game com1ns."
Carr, whu wenl on to play at the
Lauer to def end ·uniden championship
Bonnie Lauer gave warnina to other membc"
of1he LPGA that she 1s ready to defend her tttle and
become the first repeal wanner when 1he Un1dcn
LPGA Jn/1tattonal tournament 11 staged al Mesa
Verde Country Club 1n C'o\ta Mes.a, Feb 27-March
2.
Lauer was at Meu Verde CC Monda)' for
Defendinf Champions Day along w11h LPGA
\omm1ss1oner John Lauphe1mcr.
• "I really ltke 1h1s golf cour'IC and the
tournament comes at a 11 mc I am working hard on
my game," U.uer said. "I'm al..o fresh bccau8C at 1s
al the stan of another sca<JOn I thank I play heller
on the more: difficult course!. and th111s one of 1he
1oughcst we play. I'm not a long hitter bu1 I feel I
can dnvc for accuracy and that'' wha111 take' here
I also ltke the fast arccns
"Put all of these elements logcthcr and 1hc
course is good for me."
\yndrome who'IC •ymptoms arc numbnn~ <1nd
\Omcumcs oatn an the hands. •
In recalhng her bout w11h 1hc ailment '>ht
q1d· ''I'd wakt' up and bang my hands on 1hc Lat>lt'
10 lry and get some feeling back 1n lhcm It JU'lt
\C:emed ltke \Omething was being bloc ked in m'
hands. II wa\ pcn1stcnt and scary ·•
Her performance in the Un1dcn ln v11a111mal
last year when she sho1 277 for 72 h()lcs, prove\ \ht'
1~ over lhr problem Her .score wa'I 11 under par
lhe lint LP(iA player 10 ever wan al Me\a Vcrdr
hclow par an fi ve even ls She also won SI HJ IS21J 1n
pn1e money. more than double her prc"1ou\ be\t
year 'ihe finished 16th on lhe m<m<') It'll Tht·
Un1dt'n wa\ ht'r -.ccond tour 1111t' \tnC<' \hl· wa\
rookie oflhe year an 1976
It'll I could wt.n When I WH in contention on the
final da) of1hc lJ ~ Open, I pu1100 much pressure
on my\Clfand 11 made me ~1t back and look at 1t. I
wu wa1t1n1 for ~omcl,,1n1 bad to happen instead o(
hc1na po'i1lrvc II was d1fTeren1 here lait }e<&r" Lwer·, goals for the year include wannin& 1wo
111urn.1ment!t and finishing in 1he tup I (Jon the final
mont') h'lt for the . -.cawn ~he will play 1n
apprrmmatel) the \amc number of tournaments
d\ Ut\t ~car. 21
"I am reall> l<t<>k1ng forward to rttumina here
to M t \a V('rdt' Tht\ I\ one of the h(o-;1 t·our'ICs we
f)ltl\ and ti ha\ d \peCtitl plac~ tn m ~ hcan " ..
Umven11y of Wash1n1ton: Bonnie Laaer Lauer had operations on both wml\ an 1983
because she was \ufTenng from carpel tunnel
"lf1hat's 1he wofsl thing that ever happen\ tr>
me, 1'11 t?C t'Xlrcmcl y fortunate," ~he \.aid about her
wrist operations. "r think I am playing hett1·r now
lhan I wn before the operat1onc;
"(ioang into the last round here: a year ago I
TOUttltAMI N"T MOTi\ [.•ec.lll•ve Proo.A:M L..errt
~ • ..,. •"nouncad • -•Ooff .,._,, IC>< ,,,. •ovrn.ment to lie r...a on
, • ...,,,.,. I o.,, F'rlo.v F 90 " •I ,,,. 01.,,.vle~ MOI .. '"
.t.tte ... lm It I\ the 800 H-,.., .. lhetrl 8ell ... h;•'l"U ltw femed
r ll"'ltdlen •' • OIKll. lie elfelr ,,.., elM> Inc:~ Oln,,.. •~ denc;lflt
•o IWIM't HetmM'a o<tl"lftl•• F0< lurt,,... lrif0<me tion cone.er""" •><-et1 I(•• 7St·Ml0 Tiii\ 11 • IOKlel frNf IC>< IN _.. In
0-9"" C-•,; leefetl>I ...0 II 11 111\0 e llfNI wev 10 U«I our '°"' ......... ' "He was really an 1Mp1rat1on
offensively His orpn1ut1on and
staff was really SlrUC1urcd and well -
orpn1zed and I 1hough1 11 all led 10 a
areal team.
"As 1hc season wen1 o n 1hc
camaradenc really brought everyone
totcthcr and he did a very aood JOb of
bnnaina kids from different areas to a
closcnen
"It wun'I somethin& that was
spoken about hul he led u'I to believe
we had a Jood football team and
evcrythtngJU41t fell 1n10 place
"He alway11 made 11 a fun 'lttuauon
at the end o( practice, With V&rlOU$
compellllons to sec who would act
out of this <>r that. But of cour'IC, when
you're win ning. everything I\ fun."
ftlte, who went on to Oregon
State and '" presently an as'11stan1
football coach al Edison fftgh, among
other endeavors:
"I had two really good year\ there
( 1974-7S) and 11 wasa aood 1ran'l1llon
rrom high school Ther<' was a 101
more 1nd1v1dualt'lm. II wa'ln'1 a rah-
rah type of lhing. hut h<' lei me call
about 7S Pf'rcenl of my play• an my
sophomore year. He1ust let me he my
own person and gave ktd\ a lot or
freedom .
"We had won the conferentc as
freshman and were a prctly mature
crew an ·n
"8111 Work man was m y high school
coach (al Ed1\0n) and Tucker my
junior collear coach and r vc bor-
rowed from both of them ·1 he main
thtn& w111 get11ng along w11h y~>ur
players. 1r they respect you and
believe 1n you that''I No. I.
"I re'lpccted and tx:hcved tn htm ··
Estancia
rolls past
Sea Kings
E11.1nc1a H1gh '1 Eagles ,wept to
thc:tr K<:Ond victory and 1hird
dacis1on without a lou 1n Sea
Vi ew l...eafUC soccer Monday a'
Enn Wn"1t John Compn and
Russell G nit.th1 scored to 'park a
}.J dec111on over v1s1t1n1 Corona
del Mar.
Eatanc1a (2-0-1 an league play),
dropped orona dtl Mar to 1-2 an
leque. S·4 overall, with two 1oal1
in the first half off aasasta from
Eric K.irth and Wri aht.
The winners wrapped at up in
the ecwnd hair when G nffiths
tcoted off David McK1eman'1
aui1t. orona del Mu's p l
came from Drew Krum, who
ICOred off Tim Oalusha's assist.
Also an Sea View play. Ncwpon
Harbor and Uni versity. hooked
up 1n a tc0rele11 duel. Harbor 111
now l·l·l •n leque. S·S.I overall.
whale Un1ven1ty 11 stall try1n1 to
acape the ttea. The TroJ•n• arc
()-0.3 an lcaaue.
In alrl1 action: c.r..a Ml Mer 1 £1...a. t : Semi Allen'• pJ In the 32nd
m inute off a cr0t1in11>9ttern o n • .,... ft'om C.thy Rinaldo wa1 1he
loM tcorin1 in the Sea View
Latue ,.me, leav1n1 dM at 1·2
in teepe, J+l overalt
C'.ammy Chabtt (four u vea)
and Jennifer Noonan (two uvea)
combined for tbe shutout. Eatan-
cia'1 Karen Farquhar was Cftdt·
lld Wtth 12 •vn. The IOll dn>pt
Etunda to 0.2.
*"'9rt ...... u. ... .,
Is 1od9 remain Ultbeeteft wtlh
2..0.J recordl after ...... MtNy llnhld of ...,._ ud Athley
IUlllof'Unlvmity l8dl tMtd Wfr
aw11wttllft¥e• ...
Wilbur llanball (58) pat. tbe fbalalllne toacbee OD San·
day'• i4-0 Bean' Tlctory o~er the Ram• wttb a TD ae ltrtc
Dlckenon panaee ln •aJn. Cbtcaco DOW beade for New
Orleana for a date In tbe Super Bowl, Jan. ~6.
Already, it's Why Bother Bowl?
Bea r s establish ed quickly
as heavy-handed favorite
From AP dl1patdtH
11·, 1tart1na out a~ 1he Wh y Rother Super
Bowl. A' an why hother 10 play 11 when the National
Football Lcaaue can Ju,1declare1hc < h1cago Bears
the champion?
No sooner had the New Ena.land Pa1nots
fo llowed Ch1ca10·, 24--0 'hUIOUI or the Rams by
uptett•nJ the Miami l>olph1 ns 'I· 14 unday than
the prcd1ctton11 abou1 the Jan. 26 111lc: l(tmc an New
Orie.ans started rolhna an.
Silltcen·lhrce Bean . "1n a very bonnt pmc,"
predicted a M1am1 television analy~t 1 wcnly·
four.seven Bears predicted a te'IJ)C{"tcd n111onal
football wntcr
'fhat may be a bu premature. particularly
since for only the third hmc 1n 20 ycan. both teams
are playintin their first Super Bowls. a ptn1cularly
d itoricntan& expencnce for 1 lot of players.
The Bears, I s.1 in lhe reaular season. hav<'
Iona 11 ncc been anointed as the National f-ootball
Leaauc'a belt team. T hey tolldlncd that pM1t1on
by 6ctomin1 the fim team ever to rqis1cr two
1tra1aht 1hutout1 in lhe playoffs -21.() over the
New-York Cllan11. then Sunday•• wh1tcwuh of tht
Rams.
But while cveryone'1 been eycina the Rca n .
the Patnota have quietlr snud t up on Ptople1 w1nn1n1 12 of their lut 4. nd ud na thr'C'C roea
vacton e11n lhe playoff•.
Their only k>Me1 1n the &att three month• were
by 16·1 10 the New York Jeu in ovcn1me and
J0.27 In Miami, loun they avmecct 1n 'the
playofti
They belt lhc Rakkn at the Los Antele
Collaeum a week aao. then ended an etaht-pme
Miaml -.ttlnlna streak and lheir own 1g.pme
lotlfta nruk at the Orantt Bowl -.,vi na \hem
quallly road \liC1onn over qualtt lelm 1n •m
(
tn which their \Cason wa\ on lhC' ltn('
"Jimmy The C1rcck w11l g1'C' u'I nn t hance:·
New Enjland runn1na oack < ra1& Jam<'' \81d all('r
unday<I ' pme, ta Ile 1 ni nhou1 1hc tdc Vl\1on
pundit "l..a\t week. when wr ploy('d 1hc Raiden..
Lester Hayes u1d 'two cllance'I, 'Ihm and none!'.' I
hopt Jimmy the Ortrk ptlk~ U'I 10 lo'iC by I S "
In fact. w11h a few cxcrp11on\, th<' Pats ma1ch
up ptttty well w1 1h the Run, who ~•t them lO-7
an nucaao tht serond wt>ck of 1he \Ca\On But 1h11
m came when New Fnl)and ( oach Ra)'mond
wa• sull u nmenun w11h ht• lineup.
\'Cn 1fthe tn·t play a ~1nh) dcfcn~ hkc the
Bears' "46," even If 1hc)' don't have Rcfn~ton
and punk quancrhe h . r vtn 11 they ha ve no rock
videos. they 11111doa101 of the .amr th1n1' -like
fortt turnoven New CnaJand "onr of the fee NH
team• 1h1t Pf'l(Uet rc<ovtnna fumhk' aod 11
tho ...
In the1r thrw playoff w1nt. 1hc Pat' took th<'
ball away from thrtt aood 1c1mt 16 11mc'I and
coUlhtd It up Ju t Ovt. a ratio that 1r PfOJKled over • run ltalOn would be an 111ound •n1 plu 60 The ee.ra led the NFL th11 year W'llh a plu..,23 ratio.
"I thank an ()ftkr lo beat tht Bal"\, New
fnlland Ml 90110 keep dot n1 what 11• t.n dotn' iiid that' ~na a lot of umovtri. .. u~ Miami
Coach Don \hula u.ho\t' team h.tntkll < h1 Jlo!•• '''
onh lo'I\ hnau'I<' Dan Mannu u.a\ .1hh 111 h"J' 1111
pa'' ru'lh and p1l k apar1 tht"tr '1<'((10d.i1 '
.. T hr Hear' arc an out\tand1n1t 1kll'n""
lt'am I he) 'rt' not going In lt't a tc<im run 1111 1twm
ltkt' Nt·"' I ngl:rnd rnn o n U\ ..
I ru(' C"nouah
I h(' 1•a1noh , who ran lnr ~'' ,,11th"" 1h1
l>olphtn\ \unda' ....,ere held In JU'-t : ~ tn th1·11
~plcmb<-r pmt' tn C h1ta1n and the· lk"" ltm11<•d
( "" 01ck<'rson and the R.tm \ 10 IH~ In 1.11 t the
Ram .. were held lo IU\I ntnc rir ... t llo .... n' .11111 Ill
yard\ ove!"Rll
Oul th<' Pu1nol'I nlw havt• nnt" o l tht "''' '
• ~'t <>fftn<J1 vt' hne\ anchort'd on thC' l<'tt "'It h'
auard John Hannah. an all·t1m<' 11.r w .rnd 1.1< l lr
Bnan Hollowa). who'' hct-n ~k1.1C'\.l l111 th11·t 1'111
8<,.,..l\1n live~a\<lft\ 11th<"' protKt fnn' '·"'1"·"
well a\ lh<' l.o' >\naelet hn<" proleC't<'d Drr1t·1 t\11)< ~
~unday (lhn:t' \3Ck\). f:.IL\On should Ix' .ihk 111 tl11
mort than ~roc k'• 10 of i 1 fot M ''"''"
pan1cularly in the wmdle" Nrw <>rk11n' '"I'<''
dome .
T ht NC'W l nahrnd delcn"" t1n1. hm1"<I h\
out\ldt hncbacllrn <\ndn-ftppc'll ""'' l>on ~kmon. ront"rbe k Kor.mnnd ( la\ohnr n 11n1l Im·
safety F~ Manon, 1\n t a\ 1nt1m c1 .. 11na ' lhf
tkan But 1t compe~ well to the §Ohd drfen\C' nf
thc (iaanlond Ram\, who held( hie Cl Pl"\'11\'W<'ll
until thr 1nah1ht\o nf thr1r of1rn~' to me" c """' them down ·
Thi " not 10 "Y New naJ1nd u.111 ""'" '" even k«p 11 cl~
Whale Ea.M>n throW\ ~uer than Rmc. k hi\
lack orc,penen t rould well~ lht' d11Trrrn<<' In
that c:ar1y lo, to 1ht lk n ht wn I~ of'' for ~"'
yard• wnh thru 1nltf\"f'pho"' and 90 of tht 'ard'
came on ont founh.qu1rtt'f s-" 10 Jamc' that
a«ounted for tht only New Fn.aland tou h'1own
But 11 Ramie oa1.h John Rob1n~n 'lid ofth<"
Beara·
··1 th1nk lbc haH 10 *1n thf nnl prrw: ~fore
they can ~ cnn'1dcm.1 a ~at team ••
Dodgers
already
tune up
LO"i "NC1E:U:.~ (A P1 -A da"
after one Lo'I Angclt'\ team \aw 1tS
'ICatK>n rnmc 10 an ahrupt end.
anoth<'r took the field
T.1c l "'>' .\ngele\ Dodger\ pulled
out th('ir hat\ and gl ovt'\ \•fonda> for
their fir" 11rgan1L<·d workout of 1986
W11h \pnng trarn1ng ,1111 fivt' week~ a"''" !ht• lOO\CTCJ.allOO di ( havc1
l{,I\ rnc fluttuatc.-c1 tr11m ha\t'hall and
f 1111Ih,r11
· Bro• k 'V. hrl h 11nt· l111 \!HJ ''"tnl I<•
t.slf.. .ihc1u1 l>1t·11·r H rtK f.. 111 rfir<>t
hJ'o('man I< 1rcg Hro< k ' ~1d r>odgcr
\.fanagt'r I 11m L.1\(mla
"I hof)t' n ·crvont· ''J" ~·hind
Du~tcr Brod tlt·cau">t' I J..nov. h11v. he
feel\," \aid Dndg<'r rt•ltt•\'('r I c1m
'I 1t'dt'n fucr
Ihm.,· ~uancrhad. I >1t"l<'r Brock
wa\ at th<' hrlm 'unda' "'hrn the
C h1l ago Rear\ ga'c tht· l<am' d 24-ll
druhh1ng
'-lrt·dentun v..a' tk.il1ng for the
Dodger' "'h1·n J<1t ~ < l<1rk ol lhc t
I 11u1\ < • .rilrn .i l\ 'lammcll a homer
int11 th<' kit fidd -.c-at'. a1 Dodaer
\1ad1um tu v..in tht· llJXS Nat1on•I
I <'agur fl('nnant .ind -.end the
l>od1t<'" • •n "'I nt('r '<il atton
l>od(trr pm h<'f' and ( Jtcher; rt'
due 111 report 10 Vero lkach, f1a . on
I rh .!II ,111lJ lh<' lull -.quad will check
in fivt' duv\ later
l hr l>ndgrf\ apJX'arcd op11m111t1c
ahou1 th<' cnndllrnn nf their flllrhtng
,1an
~ 11tht h.1mfr1 \k1andrn Pe na
hriwn thm .... 1111( lr1thth for 1hr fir;t
t1mr \l11nlla' l'cna ~ho It'd the
'a11on,d I caguc: in <'llrn<'d run aver·
"lie 1n 1"11<4 " attrmpttng to romc
h;11 f.. l111m \houlckr \\lf(tCr.
II'\ h<-cn a lnng ~tntrr a long
\t .11 , .. ,d PC'n a addintt 1ha1 ht'
hupc·ll 111 he read\ for \pnng 1ra1nan,1 r lt ... tgrr lra Iner 1\1 II Huh Irr u1d
1'1·11.1 miH hf 4lhlc: lll hlllll"-lht ..amc
~11rku111 rrR1m1·n II' thr nth('I l>ndgrr
pill h1·r, 1n \(lrtn~ 11a1ning
I Ir \.'l \' tw'll flt ll h th" vc:ar and
th.it ' 1t110<1 C'nt1uRh for mr · Huhl<'r
,,\HJ
Thi I >tt<l(lCf'> arc 111"41 kct'p1n(l an
l'\C' 11n ptl< ht'r Rid HnnC'\\ 1111 who
ha' hJd arm trouhk <'Vt1 ""l<' hl•
1 am<' 111 l O\ >\ngck1o rn i\ul(u't I ~I«'
Irvine gains
65-62 verdict
lr1. Int' I llp.h \ \ 3<.IUCfO\ puJIC'd out
thl'U <,('tnnll win 1n thrtt ~nulh C ,,.,t
I ('8(lUt' lla'>kt'tMll '1\Ul'1"i Monday
n1gh1. dropp1n1 ho'Jt \an C'k m<'nte
M t\2 ~htnd 1ht dou"k d1g1t ~nnn@
of\ha""'n ratlh~ll 122) M1._<' lkmna
I I ~land J1mmv RI\<' 111 l
·our fmn• hnc rf'allv pla f'd well
and l1mm\ Raye ran \hf oflt'n\C rttl
w('ll ·• u1d Irvine oach Al lttrnna,
who \IW ht" team up Ill rt' ord tu 10.:8
ll' crall. 2· I 1n lcq,ut pta\
;· Tht •holt ltam pla}<"tl wtll 11\0
that'\ -wha1 .,,·vc bttn \tnv1n1 for, ..
dJrd Htmna ··11·, t~ flnt 11mt an a
qu11r 1 wh1lr that t'"tl')t>nc'\ CXlf'I•
tnhutrd ••
lrv1nt ~tu ms to 1<'11on WC'dnnday
niaht w11h a home cncmmt~r aplM\
ltaauc·ludtr :aptatrano Valk}', then
cl OUl IU ~ Oft
I nda h ••nt Dana H Ut .
.-
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'
BrfCham Yoani·• Alan Pollard (rtcJit)
•teal• the ball eway from Notre Dame'•
,,, ..........
Donald Royal ln noft--conference Naket-
ball actton Monday. BYU won In OT, 80-78 .
Pacific dumps Titans
Duck s, Louisana State, Duke
a ll breeze to routine victories
Prom AP dl1p•t<'hH
~l < >< K I< >N -\cnmr forward f >rcw Rodw;"
\<.<>red a \CaV>0-h1gh "' p<11nt\ 111 It-ad lhc I 'n1vcr;.1t) ,,f
the Pimftt 111 a '0-4() v1c.tory over I ullenon l\tatt 1n tt
Paofic. < 11a\t Athlct1t A'i\ouat1on ha\kecllall game
Monday night
rhe I 1gcf'I jumped out Co an earl)' 11 ·4 lead th<"n the
1-ullenon r11an\ \(CJrtd ninr \lret1ght point\ The two
team\ l 11n t1nued 10 ext han11,e lrllc.I\ until the half when
Pac1f<: led 211-27 In all. there were llS kac.I c.hangr,dunn1
the pme
Pac1fit took tht lc<tc.I tor g.oo<l on d turn arou nd
Jumper by forward Karlwin Matthew\ <ti HJH in the
"ICCond half f orward < hn\ < 1ray h11 two frrc thr<1w\ with
13 \CWnd\ left to gi ve the f1gcr'I a four-point rdge and
rn,urc the victory
tfrrman Wcb\1er led f ullcnon with I 2 Jl''"11'
(:l'K'whcrc on the college level Monclt1 y
Oreaon 83, Stanford II: At \tan ford guitrd Anthony
I itylor \C.ored 24 prnnl\ and forw11rc.I Keith llltldcr,1on
added IR to lead Oregon to an IS1-tW vic:tory over '>U\nford in u Paci ft<.-I(} game,
I he l>uc.k\ led fr1r virtually the t•ntm: game I he
C ardtnal c. l11'1Cd 111 w11h1n \IA po1nh of the kad with ()4. 5H,
but ~tanford pluyer11 mt'l\Nl four 'llrfl1~ht free throw\
while < >rcg1m 'lank \even \lra1gh1 ''"'" pullintt 11ul a
7}.{)() h:;id with I 57 lc:h 1n tht· ganw
In ..ill Orc&on tonr1cunJ 1>n 17 111 .!l lrt·r lhrow
allempl\ 10 the final 4 I 7 Ill r n\UTI' lhf Vlt 111ry with
f aylor \<:Ortn& four of hi\ five frccthmw attcmpl\
Orerion had taken a l6-25 halftime lcitd pa1 ('d h)'
Baldenton'\ 14 potnC\ and Ta ylor'\ II) p<11nt\
1 he hard·nOM:d lJut k\ forc.cd I~ \tanf11rd tu move"
and had five \teal\ 1<1 1hr11w the < ardinal <1ffc-n\(· 1nt11
d1\8rra y
~U H, Ml11l11lppl 18: In Baton Rouge. ~ophomorc
fo rward John W11l1am, ~ored 21 po1nt5 to lead No 8
u1u1\1ana Stale to an ea\y victory over M1"S\1u1pp1 in a
"11Juthea$tCrn ( onlercnce game
M1,\1'1'11pp1 plciyec.I the I 1ger'I even to an early tic at
10, hut I .\ti went aheac.I 44~29 at 1ntcrmt'l\lllO anc.I never
looked hac.k
The v1(;tory improved l_\I J to I S-2 overall anc.I l·l in
the· \f-.( , whtlc M t\\1 \\1pp1 fell to IS·6 and 1-4
Ric ky Rlanwn ~ored 17 point\ for the T1gcn. N1k1U1
W1l\C1n added 16 and Dcmc.k Taylor chipped 1n with 11
Rodcn<;k Harne\ pac.:ec.I the Rehcl\ with 22 point\,
wh1leJoeAyer .. put1A lhandC unl\R1"hwood<1dded 11
Dake 87, St. Jo1epla'1 M: In Ph1ladelph1a, Mark
Alane \Cored 22 point\ and Johnny Dawkin\ 21 as the
1h1rd·ranked Dulce Rlue Devil\ remained undefeated
with a win over \t Jo\Cph"'
I >uke of the Atlantll ( oa\t < onfcrc:nu·. earned 1a
15th v1<.1ory 111 the \Ca\4'>n by out\Conng ~I Jo\Cph\ 22-2
during Js11, minute\ 1n the: <second half 1urn1ng a \IX -point
lead into a 2fi·p<11nt advetntagt•
I he ltw1 \napped an c1&ht-gamc w1nn1ng 'itreak for
\t Jo\Cph"1. which fell 1<1 9-l
I >uke led 4 f . Wat halftime, then 't(..'11cc.l thc fif\t nine:
p<11n1' of the \Ccond half 1 he Blue r>cvil'l inuca'ICd their marg1 n to Sti-4 S with 14 W left
BYU 80, Notre Dame 7•: BYI J'i. Tom (1nc1t1ng ~ored ~ven ofhl\ I IS p<11nt\ in oven1me to lead the upset
of the 13th ranked hght1ng rnsh
C 1ne1t1nJ Kored on a layup and added a free throw
with I 33 left 1n the ovcn1mc to "1 vc: ttle-Geupr~~7}..6'J
le:jd Bngham Youna then hit \Cven free throw' 1n the
final I 'Ii minutes 10 \Cal the v1<:1<Jry
RY IJ u\Cd a 1 l·2 "Spun mi dway through thl'. fir\t hill(
to 111 frc1m a 19· I fJ dcfi<.11 to a 29-21 lead. I he lmh did not
regain the lead until Mark \tcvcn\CJO conne<.ted on a I 0-
11101 iumr>cr with 2 5X left in the ovcn1me.
Hut C 1ne1t ing <.ountercd wi th a layup ill the 2 lO m<1rk
and the { <>uR;tr\ d1dn·11ra1I again
THERIOT RUNS IN SUNKIST Herndon's
lawsuit
Prom Bl
"I l0<1k a1 the1eam, 1ha1 wt·n1111 lhr
4-A (IF football final\ and I know we
could have ~a1en th em," he: 'lay'
"We had a really sood team."
T·he fir\! nan'' up fo1 dc:hi.irc. hut
there'' not U)o muc.f1 qut\l1on about
th e \ailtJf\ hl1v1ng 3 &11<><l 1eam r hey
wen1 l<J.-2 to win the ~un\Ct League
w11h Theriot playing 1a1lbac.k and
Gordon Adam'I (who would later I"
on to quanerlYt;<:k the I J\C T ro1:tn\)
do1na 1he ••anal u.ll1n14
Theno1 u~d hit 1pecd ''' • verage
5 I per Clll'fY on h11 way to nearly 11
1.000 yarot ru,t11na hac.k on New·
pon'\ I "74 ed1uon
8ut track 11 where he rcall_Y. made
h11 mark In h1' prep c.arecr, fhcnot
Iott only o ne 44().yard dl'h event,
1nd that waa the •tatc finalt ht\ \Cnt0r
year HI\ llc\I 11me 1n thAt ract WH 46 CJ
And·hc '"" hold11 1hc Sun~1 Lcaaue m .ord iu 47 3. a record 1h11 he "111
hold• quite dear"' him "f chemh that m :urd .'' he u y' "I
wat '° afr11d (hip R11h (of Manna)
would beat 11 th1a yrar. Now I feel a
hule better becau.r 1f he couldn'1 do
ll, I Oaure It' &e>lnf to nand for qune
" wh1rc.''
Thtnot calla R1•h, who went on to
win lhr caa1c title l<J\I year with 11
hll\tt·rinK t1mrof 4 ~ 9. "l\n 1n<.red1hk
athlclr JU\t Krc:JI "
But now lhcnot doe•m '1 run thr
40() He\ mt1ved up C11 the HfJ(J and
I ~(l(J with h1\ Oe\I lime\ tx-1ng
I 4 5 79 1n thr HOO anc.I J lfi 1J I for the
I J!,I() I both outdom t1mr\J
()( h1\ two t)lgc'\t thrill\ on th e
trac.:k , break1n1 the four-minute: bar·
ner 1n the mile 1\ onr I le owni a Oe\I
of l SJ 9 1n lh31 rac.e
fhc other mo'lt eventful c11 penen<.e
for Thenot wa1 li ving and training
with New Zealand'' John Walker
"He'' the ve1te1c miler ever "Y"
fhcnot "I w11 in the rac.c rfhcnot
al'4'> dipped into the "thrct'') when he
ran htJ I OOt h 'ub four-minute mile 111
\Ct the record. f hal wu &reat "
With three more year. 1hc1d of
him. there arc no doubt more 1hr1ll•
1n the runn1na future oflheriot. Rut 1f
for \Ome ret'<>n the f\Jn runs out, he u y' he know1 when lo hana up the
\pike\.
"I'm making $30,CXlO to t40,000 1
year riaht now, '!<1 I'm not -tarv1n_1,''
he uy1. "And f 1t1ll win my •hare. fJut
1f thin1utow down I'll know when to
SCI out of II."
to· begin
\l\N I RAN< IS(() (AP)-·1nnl1'1
\(hedulc:d to hc11n today in a ito
m1ll1on law\u11 by Detroit T1,en
outfielder J;,rry Herndon which
claim' the ant1b1ot1 c tetracycline
CIU'iCd ml\\IVe b1nh defectl '" his
daua.htcr
~fcrndon alleaes an acne-control
mcd1une con111n1na tetracycline,
11ken hy Faye Herndon, cauacd
M1y1, now 6, to be born with moat of
her arm' m""nl and 'tum pt for lcp.
4)1n foranc1\Co SupC'nor Coun
Judac Frank Shaw said the tr11I could
11\t two month1 Herndon waa en
ou1ftclder wteh the Sen Francisco
CJ11n11 at the time of the 1nc1dcnt.s
allcJCd 1n the lawau11.
Ocfendant1 named include Parke·
Oavl1 Inc., makerofthedrut Vcctrin,
Lcderle Laboraton~. which market•
the drua under the name Minocin.
and dcrmatoloa11f Dr. Robert 1>1ctz,
Jn coun documents, the dru1 firma
arauc that 1n 32 ycar1 ""cc
letracycllne became 1v1tilable
Co~lege, prep basketball scores
Le M"9 It, H~t ''"' •1 Hltfffl .. Vet"*"' '1 ~ ...... .,,. " luttt \7
)I IOft•"«llufe f 7 ·~ l\lt ltd II ltft
"
..,,,.,...., ti COM«: IK\11 tf
We\I Vl•O•llil 6), l"eM '' U • '°""" ••• •it,,,.,......., .n '°""' "'• ....
Dt vl/ltoft 9' W ,.,., ,.. II
I f-.. ... \t H MMtlltl 6J
l ttl (.,"""8 M. Wlll•om ,. Mer1 , , •!If,, ,.,..,..,. tJ ( •
T~ t 11e•t•""'9 M, ,IWIT\efl ti
LSfJ ... Miu "-.i .. l 8'Jftf",. ~ 1 M fO llllllOI S'
Mtt~llt el, IW LWUltl'lt 11
Ml<ldlt T--61, Autllll ,...,. 17
Old ~lt!IOll ''· M' •Cl'ltrtOllt .,
•ic:M'IOtlf 7t, H C WlltntnetfHI U ..,. ,.,,.,,,,.,. • ....,. n. J•IMI
Me4'Mfl SI
•
(
Top broadcaster
joins Nevins firm
Journalist M&rpret Ha1n. ronncrly With Wn&laPoeM
BrM4e&9tla1'1 AU·N'ew1 Ra41e ltf'WB, has JOincd Mldulel Jliiile~lu
C.mma.tcalloa1, lac. or Newport Beach a~ vice president or the
public rc~t1ons firm. t-la,en <1pcnt eta.ht years with KFWB. earning
such awards aa the 1983 and 1984 &st Radio Newscut Over 15
M inutes. She ha'I also received a Golden Mike Award a nd won the
Martm R. Gatnsbrough \1tat1on of Distinction for d1i1t1ngu1shed
economic news broadcasung. · .. . . . . ..
_ l.ar:rY ffl!rm•H ha~ l?ccn 3P_R9ll\t_td_markeuDJ. man~i<'!r-1n--thc
lrv!llC Oflicc of LU.cola (>.f'operty Co:N.C. IAC .. The Newport Beach
resident 1s a former land'ICapc architect with Lalld Coecen Ltd. of
Santa Ana. • • • • Rokrt DuJel1 ha\ rt JOI ned 8 .J . Stewart Advertl1l91 uct P•bllc
Ret.&ieu, lac. of Newport Beach as production manager Daniel\ L09 An&elea Mayor Tom
Bradley ri! the bell to open tradJn& ( t ) at the Pactnc
Stock ~ac nee'• new~
rt.e qaarten at Beaudry
Center Monday mornlftC.
----~
Pacific Stock Exchange moves
HARMSE N HAGEN OANIEL.c;
returns after 'l<:rv1ng ai. broadca'lt operauon 'ul)t'rv1\<Jr at J. Walter
Tltompsoo in l,o, Angele\ • • • Wes YHDltttdat ha\ been named an director at 8800 Olrect'1
new office 1n Newport Reach Youngquist. of Jlunt1ng1on Heat h "
former art director of Todd Hapes Mcrea 1 n I r111 m·
• • • Steve Gall•p recently J•i1ncd the marketmg department 111
8Hlou1 Proper11ea Development Co., an lrv1 ne-ba-.c;d l1Jm mnual
real estate development firm The Huntington fka1 h rc\1dcn1 " a
former broker with 8Hlee11 P ropertlea Brolrcr11e Co.
• • • Bird Hird ha\ Jotncd Marketing Images Corp. cit ( O\lu Mc\a a\
1.0\ \!\J(;ELES (AP) l hc
Paulic ~totk Exchange 1nauguraJed
1t\ new quancr'I M~nday with 11'
mem~r\ cn\hrining their twnonll<.
prcd1ctHm\ tn a time c;a p,ulc and
Mayor r om Hradley ranging the fJ 10
a m opening bell
.\ blo<.k of S,0<1J \hare\ 11( l'autic
(,a, & Flntnc ( o v.a\ the tir\t 111
move, a1 t<J11-. cm the lomputc:r
equipped new trading nC)()r on \outh
Beaudry \trec:t
lhe exchange I\ hllptng llJ upgrade.·
ti'> 1m~gc, a\ well a4' g1"c t\\ mcmh<·"
more elbow room h'f moving from 11\
hr,mc <if more 1 hd n ~4 )Ci.tr\ on 'inn ng
'it reel r he new quantr\ IW<1 ffoor\ cx.-
l UfllCd under a I S·H·a r lt:at,t· w11h
\un( al Pmf)('.nlC'> Int 1.,. moll· than
tw1c.t· a\ room) a\ tht old ..aid ~u'W.ln
Kktn of ~an n1nK \alvagc & lee the
l'lllhange "publtl relat1110\ firm
\dm1nl\tra11vc 11llitc\ c.1nd lht·
tomputcr hardw&.1rc -"111 ~ 1n the
\lime building \h1· \did In tht• old
quancr'i u1mputn tct hn11 "'"' wr rc
hnu<,ed fi' c block\ fr11m the cu hangr
noor
.. We're the mO\t automated e\·
thange right nov.. · \a1d Jame'> (Jal·
laaher. pre\1dent dnd 1.h1ef e~ctut1ve
ofTicer of the SI f,-mrmher r.x< hangt·
.\ bncf tercmr1n: tx·Kan at f1 I 5
w11h remark'> lr11m Aradk> and
exchange offitt·r\ .irul tht: ded1c;a1wn
ot a tame cap\uk t11nta1ning pred1t-
tion\ fr11m mt'mhi·" Hradle" and
wmc J<>Urndll\l\ ''' "hat the Dov..
Jone\ lndu\lm1l \,c.•rJttt ..... 111 be: 1n
the ~car ~ 1u1
.\ \Ctrttdr\ ., t c.1\h ~n '>('n.·cd a\ Lhc
tcmporLin rcf)'1\ll11n of the prcd•t·
tton\ a\ the p.-rmant·nt item had not
amved on ume
Bradle) o pened the da)'\ busmeu
with a hand-held bell
bumated tradmg volume on the
exchange in 1985 WM I 3 b111ton
\hares
The exchange wa\ founded 1n 1899
a\ the Lo\ Angele.. 01' Exchange. and
changed rt!> name to the LM An1elC1
\tock Exchange the next year It
merged with the San Francisco tock
fachangc 1n 1957. and Ol>ltOM
trading now 1o; earned out 1n ~n r rann~o
rcgwnal manager of Southern ( alafornrn Marketing Image.·'> " a
creator and promoter of cxclu\lvt mall credit rnrd\ 11 ird tmng\ five
years of retail sale'I and management <.0n\ul1ang expcnenu: to hi\ ncv.
post H1.-. credtt'i include \Cmtnar\ 1n pcr\Cmal mo11va111in. goal
\Ctttng and clcmng \ale\ and a tra1n1ng manual t alkd " r ht·
Dynamic.'> of Retail \ale\ I ra1n1ng ··
Court allows banks' expansion
• • • Deo11l1 A. Wide and Mull J . Ml11ler h<Jve ~en Jppo1nted lo kc~
pos1t10n'> at the Ncwpon Beach an vc\tmcnt hank mg ti rm of MOC lac•
Wade I'> v1t.c pre\1dent and M1\'ller t<irJ)<ir<ttc trca\urcr o f thc
YOUNGQUIST GALLUP HIRO
company. which deal' pnmanl) with high technolog~ firm\ ~a1k I\
formerd1'>tm1 manager for AmerlclD Appr1lHI Auorlate•. Inc· dnd
Missler" a rcg1s1crctl ~f ( 1nve\tment adv1<;er
• • • S~cldon M. Sten ha\ hccn aprxnnted direttor ol nuhht rd.i11on\
for Foraytlte, Mucelll Jobson Ad vertl1ln1e. Joe·.. a hultbcare
ldvertl1l1111'-ucy Uuat la e~p1Ddln& lt1 public r ela tion• 1crvlcu lo
clle11t1. Stern 1 b1ek1r0Hd lacl•dea 14 years ID puhll« Info rmation at
Ute UCLA Center for Heall~ Scleocca.
Lingerie firm shows
better bottom line . .
LOS ANGJ-.LL\ (AP! frcdcr·
1ck'~ of Hctllywood Inc.. 1rtailcr ot
racy lingerie, s~ud Monda) 11 ha\
improved the bottom lane 1n the lin1
1986 fiacal quarter
Net earn1np 1ncreucd to \24,000,
or I cent a share. from a net lo"" of $286.000. or 17 ccn1' a 'lhare. a year
aJO. the com pany rcpuncd. '\ale, for
thcquartcrcnd 1n1 Dec. I advanced to S 11,37',000 from lut yrar'\
SI0,217,000.
The introduction of new rroduc.t
ltnes, an increa'IC 1n ma1 order
1hipmcnt9 a nd the addition of 1 new
~outhcrn C altf111 n1a \t111c homtc<l lhl'
t ha1n\ pcrforni:imr \a1d (icorgc.•
Town'lon, f·rcdcri1 k'' lhairman and
chief citccu11 ve nfli c:cr
Opcra11n1 profit'I for r rcdcmk''
rcuul \tore• ro'C tu S2K7.(J(JCJ for the:
lir'lt quarter ofli\( al I 9K6. frum a "''\
ofS 147,000 a year ago r own'°n u1d
"fredend'' finanual tond1tion
remain, "rong, and Wl' look to the
future with a high degree of op-
t1m 19m," he q1d
Frederick'' opt•ratC'I 14H lx1u1tqut·'
1n 33 'ltates, and a no11nnw1dc mad.
order d1v1s1on
---~
Discount securities
broke rage bust ness
p ractices ru led lega I
WA\lflN<1 H>N IM')-l hl' \u
prcmc < oun ha\ allowed thl' kdrrnl
g11H·rnmcn1 10 nnm11 hrodtl n
pan\111n 11f nc.11111nal hank\ into th•·
dl'>{OUnl \('( llflllt'\ hr11kt'ft1j(l' hu\I
nt•\\
rh,. IU\111 t'\ v..11h1iu1 u11nnwnl kl
\I.ind on \l11nd<I\ rulintt.' th.ii .i floy.,
1ng hank' 111 hu , anti '><"II <rtoc. k\ .i nd
hond\ 1111 1 U\lllmt·" d11t·\ 11111 '111IJll
J 111 l I kder.il hanking lav.
l..i\I H•df the \upremr < 11ur1 ruled
that the f cckral k c\Cnc Board .1111·<1
proprd) 1n ;ipprov1ng the pun ha\C· 1.t
lht· nation'\ largc'it d1'>tount h111
kcrngl· h\ an anit1atc of a han~
hr1ld1ng I o mpdn\
Electronics
1 show crowd
sets record
I ·\\ VE<1AS CAP) -I hr y,1<Jnl
( nmumer Elcctron1c\ \hov. v.h1th
t lnc,ed Sunday, \el an allrn<l.imc·
re<.urd for an a nnual trade <ihnv.. w11h
104.163 people v1~111ng lht· nrnl
\how offic1al' ..aid
fhc figure top\ h)' ~ 111/11 Iii•
prev1ou'i a11endanC'<' mark '>('I .11 1,1\l
~t·ar'\ ( [~ i,how tn La \ Vrg.I\ l he
rt•t urd 'IUrpa'~' any of \omr f1 f Jl~I
1radr 'ihow' held annualh 111 lht·
I · n 1 ttd Sta tee. atn irdang to < I \ 'H 1·
prcc.1d en1 Jac.k Wa) man
\how offic1ali; had ung1nalh hnpnl
to equal la\t year'' mark thl'n -..1111
la'lt week the attcndant.e tnuld run·"
high a" 1 0~.000
\ome I 400 compan1ec. d"fllJH·d .1
wade range of product\ at the 'ho-...
ning1ns fro m video cqu1pml·n1 111
telcv1\1on.\ and rad10<1. camtnrdt·r,
and '8lrl11tc d1~hc,
1 he ,how" arc held every w1ntrr 1n 1
l.u Vega" and evt-ry ,ummcr in c h1u1a<>
The appt·al aunt •in 111<la) prn
t·ntcd a c:hallcnl(c 111 1h1· .1u1horit\ 111
th~· I \ < 11mptf11lkr •111tw < urrc111 \
111 .ippn1\t \lmllar t'\Piln\11in h·. tv.11
n.ilHJnal hank\ \1« uni> Pi1l lfi1
< tirp w11h olfitn in C ,1ltf11rn1<1 11nd
el\l·Whl're 1n 1hc ~1·\t and l n111n
l'IJnltr\ "-Ja11onal Hit nk 111 \·frmphl\
I t·nn
111 l'>X2 lhl'n C 11mp1rolkr 111 th1
' urrrm ' < I < 111111\l'r f}l 'rn11111·d
\1·1 ur11. l'.iulH 111 \I 1 up ''' ""'''
d1t,t:11un1 br1>hr&1gc dnd allowed
I n11in Plc.1ntt·r' vi purcha\C lirennt·r
\tl't"<l and -''"KIJlt\ Int .i "1emphl'>
hrokcragc
D1'><.ounl hroker' d1Mge l11v. l<1m·
ml\\111n\ to -..·l uni 11:' t u\tomer\
v.11h11u1 oflcnn~ 1n"c'1mcn1 advice
prt1\ 1ded h~ 1h1· \land,m.I hmkeragc
firm\
Bank npan\111n into the o,t·cunllt:\
h r11l11· r ••Ill h 1i\I nl·\\ " p.tr'I of J
1tr11,qng •n ml hlurnn11 trad111tin.1
line\ r,cparaung vanous fi nancial
ln\lllUll<>OC,
The traae as'IOC1at1on -.aid the
C''<panc.1on violates a 0..-prcssion~ra
I.iv. called the (Jlass-tcagall Act, that
hm1tcd bank1n~ act1 v1t1e!>. The a~
peal ..aid the actions by the C omp1rol-
lcr of the ( uncnC) cleared the wa> for
more than 2.00() bank'> to offer
d1'<11unt brokerage \tf'1ce\
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F inanfial aid 1s available tn the form of loam, .. cholcHsh1p<.,
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t M'lf ..... -............ ....
j'
• ~ I I
. a e 0tMge Coelt DAILY f)tl01' / T~. J9nU1WY 1', 1911
Is second weei: of year
too early for '87 peek?
Equity research firms dect now entrenched, ,
For ush'sLawwillprevail
Forbush ist.herevcneofpoorold Murphy, accord1na '
to the Salomon researchers. i.n that everythina that c.an
possibly ao ritht proceeds wen above expectations.
The key barometers of stock marlcet activity, they
IJ JORN CUNNIPP explain, make it .. hard to believe that Miu Forbush will
,........_...,.. , not have her way.'' a stat~nt likely to be viewed as the
NEW YORK_ With so weeks to IO in 1986, two of ultimate exprns100 of optimism in an optimistic year.
tbe coun11y's .,.._t equity research firms. Merrill Lynch In fact. conttacy thinkers -those who Question
and Salomon Brothen. have decided it is time to look into trends, consensus views, and expressions of optimism -1987. may see the viewpoint as evidence of the smua euphoria
They like much of what they see, includina no arcat that, they say ~inn before aoy stock market fall.
thrau from thote old bupboos of inflation and interest The Salomon researchers, however. irrcn't without
rates, which probably accounts in part f.tr the unusually ammunition to defend their view, and they Point them
early forecasts. out riaht at the be&inning of their analysis.
ML expects t 987 .. will be another year of real Interest rates. they note, have faJlen to the lowest
growth," with arou national product swelling 2. 9 percent level in five years, moderate ec.onomic growth has left
With a 4.3 percent forecast. Salomon is even more bullish. credil markets in aood condition. and the dollar has fallen
Last year's JrOwth rate was 3.1 pen:en1. 20 percent in lea than a year.
Their interest in the futUTe iJ rcasonablt enough, That's only the bea.inning of the bright picture.
because.current stock prices are set by eipectations of Theycootmue: lollation has been onl y moderate, oil
future pins or losses, but these forecasts come at a time prlce1 a~"«takcnina. Congress seems to be-facin(tannd
when mOif fonicas~ aren't even throuab with 1986. deficit problems, there are underutiljtcd resources in the
ln W:t. some institution~ in the past have continued economy, and the Federal Rcserve·s posture ha ve been toi11~ .. foreca1t revisions'~ntoeartysummer. a practice .. accommodative."
thatisrouahlyak.into placing yourbetsonaborsebaJfway This is how ML's chief economist.. Donald H.
t.brouah the race. Straszheim, pictures next year:
Salomon seemingly oouldn 't restrain itself. explain-"1987 will be another year of real growth (2. 9 percent
ing that after years in which Murphy's Law held sway we m our forecast~, not appreciably differcnl from ihc fresh-are now into a new era. one marked by supreme confidence that Forbush's Law will be a dominant force. start year of I 86 (3.1 percent). but better than the son.
Most people are aware that Murphy's Law postulates landing year of 1985 (2.4 percent)."
that if anythina can 10 wrona. it will. It became Other points in his "first look at 1987," issued
fashionable in stock market circles during the 1970s, yesterday: .~ when rising interest rates, oil pnccs. inflation and deficits Growth is likely to be m onger in the first half of the
repeatedly tripped up the bulls. year, weaker in the second. Consumer spending,
It's alJ difrercnt today, say the researchers, who claim employment and disposable income will rise modestly, all
Forbusb's Law, named for Miss Nelli Forbush. the between 2 percent and 2.S percent. The declining dollar
cockeyed opitimist in "South Pacific," the famous will ~elp exports, and the federal deficit ··will shrink
musical by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammers1ein, is somewha1 but remain high."
WE'RE 1 -imE llJllEll~-----
01 YOUR SIDE
Overtime, turnover. and
overttafftng are some of the
Indicators that a company may
not be operating In the most
coat effective manner.
One way to cope with the8e
problems la to flnd workers
"who are nextbte. Becau• TAC
la concerned about Y.OUr
profltabUlty, we wtll tletp you
man.ge end contrOI costs with
our unique billing system. Call
and let us show you how TAC
can lmpaci your bottom line.
NEW Y"'~ (~~p -~fo11ow1no 1111 Wiws ,,,. ~ York Stoclt E11ctianoe
stoc:kS and warrants lflet NIY• oone uo lhl most and doWn the most baMd on PWC*'lt of en.nee reoardllss of Yolumt for MondllY. No s.ewrltla tradlno below S2 ere Ind· ·uded. Net and percentaee c:tlal'l.OIS ere the difference t>etw-.n ltll prevloui dollno orlce end Mond•v's 2 o.m . o r I c 1 .
j Ster~to ~~VA f ~~ utct4~ MvertL 2~ ~ Uo t •
Alleen •'I• 'h Uo l 4 Maney m.4 1.4 UP 1 • swwt ~Upl 6 LCC P YJ I/• UP 1 .1 7 Oat YI V. Up 1 .1
Y 1ur famil~ alhulll
It!> the place you keep the baby ptc·
1ure~. thl' rtport card!'i. pressed flowers from
the prom. the passporl that brought
gnmdP'.t to Anwrica from the old country
Prt't1ous farml) memories of the past.
ANNUALIZED YIELD
.38%
CURRENT RATE
.05%
Minimum term of 6 months wllh I 10,000 mlnJmum.
Applies to rerm of o month~ Federal regulaUon requires a substantJal
interest penalty for earl> wllhdrawal AnouaJ yitld based on dail)' compounding whfll
interest Is left on dt'po!11t for entire term Rate. yield and term sub1t'Ct to chanRe without notice.
COSTA MESA/SANTA ANA
3929 S. Bristol . "92704
(at Sunflower)
(714)~79-9800
GARDEN GROVE
12141 G2tden Gro\C Blvd 92643
(at ff arbor Blvd )
(714) 534-8690
HUNTINGTO ' BEACH
7830 Edinger Ave .. 926-1"'
(at Hunungton c~men
(714) 848 2222
HUNTINGTON HARBOUR
16911 Algonquin St . 92649
(in Huntington Harbour
Shopping Center)
(714) 846 3jS5
LAGUNA HILLS
24085 El lbro Rd , 9265.~
(at P2seo de \lalencia)
(714) 770 2816
OllANGE
I S N Tu~Lm Ave . 92665
(nonh of Taft)
(71 ) 974 1620
At American Savings we offer your
family another kind of farmly aibum. Its a
book whert you keep the co~1 of Bobby s
brace~ U1ana~ dancing lessons and the
tuition for 10mmy s college education.
Praious memories in the making.
• Our family album holds the contents
of piggy banks. the down payment on the
familys dream house. the hard earned dol
lar' ~ou"ve saw:'<:! for Wend}·\ w1-dding And
a whole lot more
Theres une big difference between
~our family alt>um and ours. however. In
time. the content'i of your family album
wiU fade. Our family album i.s guaranteed
to grow stronger day by day and make your
family alhum even more treasured ln the
future
You St.1!. the moll' you put into our
family album and thr longer you leave it
there, the h~mler it works for you, making
family drta1 .. ~ come true.
ji ••
Accounts ln1Urtd up 10 1100,000.
EAL BF.ACH
80l Pacific Co~t Hwy . 90740
(at Main)
(213) S9-t·88S5
T STIN
641 E Fi~t St .. 92680
(al Newpon Ave)
(714) 832·2581
.
·AMERICAN SAVINGS
mLJ tL>ANJ ASSOCIATION
' .. ,,,
... -.... ,,.
·-11M"HldMllHil-------
•
..
-
NYSE CoMPo s1 u T RA~:)Acr1 0Ns
TlllMl'l Ulllll ••Ill
I -
..
NEW YORK (AP) -The r.tock market
turned in a mtxed pcrfonnaooc in moderate
trading today.
In the latest news on the econom1. the
Commeru Department reported that rcwl sales
rose I. 9 percent last month, the biggest gain smc.e
September.
WHAT AMEX DID WH ~T NYSE Dio
NEW YORK IAP) Jen. 14
'
NEW YORI( (AP) Jan. 1•
T' '
AMEX LEADERS
GoLo Quo 1Es
Dow JoNE S Av E R~G E S
ME TAL S Quor Es NASDAQ SUMMARY
famous la b<l.ls ...
-
'•
' l
'I L I
I '
-. • -.. • ... .. •
I Wu ,c H , C Ill ........ .-n. 31, 1 .... • tO'.OO A.M. unc111r .... ONd Of TNlt In llO'flCa TO JOHN MATOH, AM . MllC ll>Ta
Gra11djurj' selection ~~-II= .. IN ffont ....,_to Ora tM ~ lltuee.d In Mid ~OM Oil MAMID MAN WUf1 ~~-~~~=::~-::r~ =~ ~~at~ =-.... e • ...... 8ente Ana, c.lfornl&. The 41 'IA MAI' IWCON>IO U.C.C.) CA8H ~ • 1i!ft
II • II ....... tote! emount ot IN ~ IN 900K ... ~AOU aa Hottoe 11 --~ to .. In ~ MOM¥ .. • • ••trOI ...-MIMCeOllMOOllgetloo ... AND S4 0' Mii• cr.ctltore of t"9 w1t11ln Unit.ct StatH) 11 ..................... ~byMIClptopertytobe Cl.UANEOUI MAPS. IH nemed pen• 1'1111 1 tMk COURTYARD AIU
...... Ell I 1 •• ...,, 1ogethef wlttl "!-~J TH! 0'"01 0, THI .,..,..., • ebOUt to be Made TWE!N lHe TWO -...._ 9 .......... ,_.. dlargee. and ... WNleCll COUNTY MCON)(R Of onpereonelproperty...in-WAYI AT THI i C--et ......... ..._ coeta. Ul*IM9. end ado-OAAHOa COUNTY. CALI-ett« dMCtlbed IUILDIMO FACING ~ VencM..1.,!! to the de .. ,_.. FOAHlA. The ~ and ~ STREET, 14011 Y I c.. .... ...,.n of. " Ne,600.00, pM I.Ins T?le .... llddtele and ~ of the In~ STAUT. TUSTIN. CA The MMe and...,_ of peld IMtfMt. I l/IY. other common~. tran1feron are: Rl8· elf flelllt, title end . bias taints conviction
WASHINOTON (i-The Su~
preme Coun bu suo y rea.ffirmed
a century-old ru~ . \ convicttd
ctiminalt l'Qufl be retried if membe:n
of their owa race were ex.eluded from
tbesrandjury that indicted them. BY a '6-3 vote, the justices on
Tuelday ordered a new trial for a ~ black man, Booker T.
Hillery, wboae 1962 conviction in Kinla County wu thrown out bes
ca1&1e b1acu were barred from serving
on paodi_wies there at the time. Jumce TbuJIOOCI Marshall. writina
for the court, said the exclusion of
black pandjwo~ tainted the convic-
tion. even moup Hillery received a
fair trial and it may be difficult for tbe
11ate tO rttry hlm now on 2+ycar~ld ctw,ea.
"IDtentJonal disciimination in the
.election pf pand juron is a grave
constitutional trespass ... wholl y
within the power of the state to
prevent.'' Marsha.II said "Thus, the
remedy we have embraced for over a
Qentury (tbrowinJ out the conviction) it not disproportionate to the evil that
it seeka to deter."
He added "If arand jury dis-
crimination beWmes a thina of the
past. no conviction will ever aaain be
lost on account of it." .
Hillery was convicted of killina
Marlene Miller. l S, who was sexually
usauJted and stabbed in the chest
with her sewina scissors. Her body was found in March 1962 near her
home in rural Hanford, CaJif.
Hillery, who worked on a nearby
ranc~ was free on parole at the time
from a previous rape convictaon.
He was sentenced to dca~ the
Miller bllina. The Sentence t was
set uide and twice re: imposed during
years of litigation in California state couns.
Then in May 1983, U.S. District
Judge Lawrence Kartton in Sacra,
mento overturned Hillery's oonvic·
tion and the 9th U.S. Cin:uit Coun of
Appeals upheld his rulina ln April
1984.
K.arhon ruled that blacks were
systematically excluded from arand
juries in (Gnp County since 1893,
even thot.iah blAcks comprised flve
percent of the population there.
The California anorney acneraJ's
office said it would be difticuft to.retry
the case now and any retrial would
"rekindle the anef. sufferina and
aaony" of the victim's family.
But Marshall said Tuesday that
bias in piclcins a grand jury taints the
criminal jusuce system. no maner
what the treatment or outcome of a
particular case.
~·Even if a grand jury's detennina·
tiotrotp-roblbtt cause is confirmed in
hindsiabt by a conviction on the
indicted offense, that confirmation in
00 WI)'. Sua&eSts that the discrimina,
tion rua nOfimpermissibly infect the
framina of the indictment and, conse-
quently, the_naturc or very existen~
of the proceedings to come," he said.
IN~ le: (() "°"*9 y Diiie: Decernber tO. 1M6 If 111'1· of the ..... PfOP9rtY TAUfllANT CREATORS, conv9)'9d to and
.......... de ie OOf"9 •): ..,..., l11trn.1. ....... d11orlhd above II INC .. e Cellf. oorp , 3303 by It und9t a OfllAHOI COUNTY au. bweM pufpotled to be: 11 DEWEY. ~ llvd Sult• K.. Ttlllt In IN ""'°" coulln 700 CMc PublttMd Orange ~ IRVINE. CALlfOANtA. Coeta M"9 CA tH2t ' 1ted In Mid County • Cenw Drtwoe WMt. 8ente DelfyPllotJenulll)'7.14,21, THI! UNDEASIONID Tiie name and~ tomla, ~fblnO ~CA 12101. ttee TRUSTEE DISCLAIMS ANY addr... ol the Int~ tlweln: Tiie rwne, adchM. and T-004 LIA91LITYFOftlNCOAAECT trtnlfetff are: DANIEL l'AAOEL 1: I
tliMpllolie numc. Of p1e1n. I N F 0 A M A T ' 0 N KUWAOA. c/o lntemetlonlll . Unit H ... .nown Md
tiff'• enomey, or pllilntlff "8.IC NOTICE FURNISHED. . HOUM of Pane.It•. 921 w. ll!led In that C«tm
wlttloUt .., •h~. le: (£1 THAT Nld .... 11 mede J«ftrton &Nd .. Lot An· domlnlurnplenr nomtwe ... dlr900lon y .. nu-NOTICa cw without cownant or ... gelee CA 90007 tOC* 29. 1HO In I mero d• teletono d•I TRUtTU•tSAU renty reoardll\g title. pee. ~t the r:operty pent-131\1. pge 413 of MooadO del demendenee. o QTD NO. 1211 ..-ion or enoumbf'enoee. nent llefeto deecrlbed In A«l0td1 of Otano-Cf'I
del demendanl• que no M: Mu.I or u to ln.,,llbillty of tme. gen«el ae: tumlture. ft•· CellfOrnle. tlence ~. •I: ALLEN llllAICWoa THE totll emount of the IV'•. ~t. IMMtlOfd PARCEL 2:
I Ft.An. 4'400 MeoAtthur YOU ARE IN DEFAULT unpeld baNinoe of Mid ot>tl· lmprovementl end It An undMdN 1 2 I
IMI., ._ 310, ~ UNOEA A DEED OF TRUST O-tlont tooettl« with ad-IOc:MN at: 3001 S. 9flttOI, ttonal lnt«ee1 • i.n.t leech. CA 9He0 (114) DATED. MARCH 9TH. 1917. vencea, end eetlmeted coeta Senta Ana. CA 92704. common In end to .... ~ 762·7474. UNLESS YOU TAKE AC. 1 n d ••Pent e I · 1 t The bU11neU MIN uaed lnOft .,.._ being ~ •
DATE; (Fedie) JAN ti TION TO PROTECT YOUR S70,S34." by 1M Mid tr...-Ofl el Treet no. 10815, II~
1M5 PAOPEATY. IT MAY BE THAT notice of br'Ndl of 11ld locetlo. n l.1: GOD· on• mac> recorded~
Lee A. ........ ~"' SOlO AT A PUBLIC SALE. aald oOllQetlon end etec1lon FATHER'S PIZZA 452. P0M 14 encl 15 I D • ....._ .,.._, IF YOU NEED AN EXPLA· to NII Mid rMI ptaperty wet Thllt Mid ~ tranlfw It ~ Mept. d ~ Orenge COMt ~TION Of JHE NAUJRE recotded 11 lnetrument No. l111ended to be CQ(ltUl'I\-~ County. DellY PIOC DeoMlber 3t, OF THE PROCEEDI 15-358iM on SEft'TNeEA IMtud It IM Office of BUR-together With ell lmff< f~ Januery 7. 14, 21. AGAINST YO\J . YOU 20,1M5.of0fllcletfllecordt ROW ESCROW COMPANY. menta IMleon ..... 1119111· SHOULD COHT ACT A LAW· In tN office of the County 1157 E. Llnooln AYeflue, Ot· therefrom condo~nt T ·tel YER. · Recordef of OAANGE Coun.-ange, CellfOfnla 92tt5 on "' unlt1 1 10 M Inell•
--------CA_LIFORNIA MORT· ty.Sl.ateofClllfomla. afterFebtuary3, 1tee. loeatedthereon. \
•-.,. Mft\'U'C OAOE SEAVICE. A CALI· Truttw Of' l*1Y conducting That the lest~--ftlloQ Elloec>Uno ftler9frOll'I ---'-'"~--.....;.""-.;.1;.;..;;;~--FORNIA CORPORAT10N u Sele ctetmelntheHCrowrelerrec1 Off. Oii rlght1, miner ... n
llOTaCW duly eppolnted Tru1tff COIUIONWIALTH to '*91n It JthA/Y 31. trllrtghtt.nttural Is
a.ATM CW under the tollowlng cl•· LAND TTTU COWANY, 1111e. and other hydr t
INllaT .IOMN 1CHAQ tet1becl deed of trutt Will .. Cefltwy hlll ..... So fw u 11 known to Nld whatlOe'<IW neme
Layer Of fat around heart causes
leaky blood vessels and attacks
....... IT ,10MN ' SELL AT PU9LIC AUCTION ...... 1f70. t.. ~ Intended TrmnlfetMt Nld geothermel ltNl'l'I 8CMAQ,.. TO THE ...OHEST 91DOER Cellfernle .... 7 ltl) Intended TtanatefOft uted produet1 def!Yed t
Mm Of N ilflOiil FOR CASH or u Mt forth In I I 1 • 11 I 0 • C II ' the followlng 1ddlt1onal Without. h0'#9Wf the TO AD•llTWA 8ectlon 2924h ot the CMI llONWIA1. TM LANO TTTU bU91neu nemee and ad, drltl, mine, 1t0te. llTAft NO. A 1aul7 Code, ell right. tltttl end COICPANY. • Celffernle dr .... within the lhrM and0f;>Wetethro11QM t
To .. 11e1r9. ~· lnt...i con~ to end ...,.....,, • ~· lut put: None. face Of the upper SOC> cr.ctlton end contlnoent now held by It undef Nld MY M. ...... Al•.. Thie bulk transfer It eub· IM tubaur1ac:e of credlton, end persone who Deed of Tru.t In the ptopeny ~!reo~~23"f , .. ,5 jeot to Clltlornla UntfOfm M r...-..d In Deed fr may be ot11erw1M Int.,... herelneftw cleecrlbed: · .,... · '"' Comrnetclll Code Section lrvtne Coft\pany, • In the w111 and/« ettete of· TAUS TOR: VINCENT Publlthed ~the Otenge 8108. Corporation, recc>f
ERNEST JOHN SCHAO, elta MASCIALE AND MARIE i~11~;i'Y r t '*f"b9r14 Dated: Oacember t7. Book 13e20, P9Q4I t ERNEST JOHN SCHAO SA. MASCIAlE. HUSBAND ANO • · enuery · · 1985 • Offlclel RecOfdt ..
SARASOTA, Aa. (AP) - A layer off at surrounding
the heart may cause heart attack.s by producing chemicals
that prompt the arowth of leaky new blood vessels in the
walls of the heart's arteries. and the discovery could lead
to new ways of preventing heart disease, resean::bers said
Rcseardlers have found indirect evidence that these
tiny, frqile blood vessels lead to the formation of blood
clots that arc often the cause of heart attacks, which kill
more than '°°·()()()Americans each year.
T t': • f A peUt1on ha beer! 'filed WI FE AN 0 F RA N K 1988 ~ KllW ... lfitended ALSO elCcepllng the . he aormat1on 0 new b.lood V~SSCIS, a proc~SS called , by EAHEST J SCHAO JR MASCIALE. A SINGLE MAN T ,997 Tr....... lrom all water rlgh
angJogencsas. has been a subject of mtensc study m recent 1n the~ Court of Or~ BENEFICIARY: CALI· Publlthed Orange Cout whether IUCh wet• 119 y~ars. Thi.s proc,css ha.s been ~plicated in a variety of .. County reQUeltlno that FORNIA MORTGAGE SER· PtBJC NOTIC£ Delly Piiot January ''· 1986 ltllll be rlperlan, owr1y\
diseases including cancer blind ness and rheumatoid ERNEST J. SCHAG. JA. be VICE,a COf'POf•tion T-Ot• ai>Pf~llw. P«cotllill
anhritis: • ==.:::::.~= 19~~~~~r~:: '~ rALUY, MlJC NOllC[ :.4:,T,t':.w:.,~~
Doctors have identified a variety of so-called etteteoftMdecedent. 28923 Book 12t12 Page C""'CMNA ltDnl of entry f0t the Hwc:IM
• • It'. h · d h Tiie petition requettt 1211 of Ofllclel Aecofdt ln NOT1CI IUCh rightt. at r~ angJogen1c 1actor t at m uce 1 e body to make the~ new euthoflty 10 edmlntet• the the otnc. of the Aecofder of IMTINQ llDI NOTICE TO CMDITOA9 Deed lrom the lfWle ea blood vessels. ...... ""*' the lndepen· Oranoe County NOTICE IS HEREBY cw .... TMMln1' AND peny, • Mlchlglo Corp
Their findina could help explain one way that aspirin
and other drugs prevent heart attacks as well u provide
another reason why a high,fat diet is bad for the heart.
The research, bcina conducted at Childrcn·s Hospital
and Harvard Medical School in Boston, was presented
Monday at a science writers forum sponsored by the
~can Heart Association.
The coronary arteries run through a layer off at called
ep1cardial fat. And the researchers believe this fat
produces an angiogenic factor that causes the formation of
the tiny blood vessels.
dent Admlnlttrttlon of e... 8-'d Deed of Trutt. ~ GIVEN tnet the City Clertl of °' lfTUfT10lll TO TRAN9-lllon, recorded In ac: tet• Ac1 tctlbe9 the tonowtng ptop-the City of Fountain Valley , I A A L C 0 H 0 L f C 13e20. pege 1090 of <>me A hewing on the p«ltlon eny· ... Celltornla, wfll r.-M ...,.: •VIAAGa ~ICIMll(I) Recordt ..
w111 be held on FEBRUARY 5 LOT 1 Of TRACT NO. ed propoellt untll Ille l"IOur (leoe. t101i_t117 U.C.C. The ttreet eddreee 1 1111e .. 9•30 A.M In Dept 404 t, IN THE CITY OF Of 2:00 P.M. on Friday. Janu· end/Of aeon •• ,, other common clellgnet~ No. 3 et 700 cMc c.nt« COSTA MESA, AS SHOWN ety 24, 1111e, IOf TURF Notlca It llefeby glwn thel If any, t>t the rMI Pfope
Ottw Wett Senta Ana CA ON A MAP THEREOF RE· MAINTENANCE FOR ME· • bulk tran1fer ot pertonel ducrlbed above
Hungriest
counties
in Farm Belt
BOSTON (AP) -More than a
third of the rnidents of 150 of the
oation•s poorest counties who are
eligible for food stamps never get
them, accordina to a report issued
today.
Tb~ pockets of highest poverty and
lowest participation in the food
stamp program arc distnbuted widely
but unevenly across the country.
allhou&h many arc in the Farm Belt,
Mys the report by the Physicians Task
Force on Hunaer at the Harvard
School of Public Health.
Texas had the most "hunger coun-
ties," with 29. followed by South
Dakota and Missouri, while more
than half the states had none. Eureka
County, Nev .• was rated worst. with
only I. 7 percent of the needy said to
be receivmg food stamps .
Officials in areas cited generally
criticized the report. with some
sayjna -the statistics were skewed
because they did not take account of
population density and other factors.
Otben complained that the study
was based only on government re·
pons and not on first,band observa·
tions. •
Harvard Public Health Professor
Larry Brown, who chairs the phys-
icians' &roup, said field investigators
this sprina wilJ visit Oklahoma,
Texas, Georgia, Florida. Arkansas,
Missouri, South Dakota and Idaho.
He said data from those trips will be
published in May.
"l think the possibility is very high that the
angiogenic factors that arc reaching the coronary arteries
arc coming from fat." said Dr. Bruce R. Zetter.
Astronauts try, fall to ta shuttle camera
By tile A110dated Pre11
CAPE CANAVERAL, Aa. -Like many shutterbugs whose cameras give
out at a critical moment. Columbia's astronauts tried and failed today to fix a
photo device that could provide clear shots of HaJley's comet. Space agency
officials, meanwhile, were considering ending tt)e shuttle mission a day early.
··1 just finished working with the image intensifier again. and there is nd
amplification at all," crewman Geo'le Nelson rcponed after trying for several
hours to fix the instrument following instruct1ons from Mission Control.
Controllers said they would try to wo rk out an aJtemate solution. ·
66% of joblea got no monthly benefit.
W ASHlNGTON -Two of every three jobless workers last year. on
average. bad to get by without any monthly unemployment compensation
benefits, a new study shows . An a verage 5.6 million people, or 67.4 percent o f
tJ?e nation's 8.3 million unemployed. were not drawing the benefits in any
gJven month of 1985, the private Center on Budget and Policy Priorities sajd in
a rcpon released Monday. By contrast, throe o ut of every four jobless workers
~re getting the benefits a decade ago, when the unemployment rate hovered at
8.5 percent at the peak of the 1974-75 recession. the center said. The nation's
unemployment rate averaged 7.2 percent for all of 1985. but fell to 6.9 percent
in December.
112702. ' ' CORDED IN BOOK 13', DIANS, CURVED SIDE· praperty and • tranefer ot pwponed to be. 22 MOI! IF YOU OBJECT to the PAGES 27. 28, ANO 29 MIS-WA ll<S. TRACT EN. llquor llcenM It lbovtto be ING STAR •5. IRVINf;. 1
grmntlng of the p«ltlon you CELLANEOUS MAPS, RE· TRANCES. AND FRON· made. 92715.
tf1<MM either..,,,._ at the CORDS OF SAID ORANGE TAGE ROAD S In ao· Tiie name. Social Security The undertlgned Tru1t
hMr'tng end ..... 'lfNI oO-COUNTY. CALIFORNIA. COfdance with the Plana and °' Fees.el Tu Number. and dlldalm• any 1r.bMlty for I
jectlont or flle written obfee· MAY ALSO BE KNOWN S~tlon1. malling lddr.... and ZJP incorrectneea of the ttr. tlont with the court before AS: 30e7 TRINITY DRIVE. Propoaelt thlll be pre. Code Number. of the Irene-eddr"' and other comm
the heerlng. Your IPP9W· COSTA MESA, CALI · enled under ... led GOllUI' tarort are: FRANK H detlgn1t1on. If any, 11\0'
lllCle may be In peraon or by FORNIA 92ee7. and "1ell be 1CCOmpenled SHOWAL TEA and LINDA E. herein your ittomey. (II t street addr ... 0t by one of the tonne of bid· SHOW AL TEA, 1514 E. Said 11141will be made, t
IF YOU AAE A CREOOOR oommon detlgnatlon ta der• MCurtty reqylrec:I by P1lm. Orange, CA 92eae. wlttfout convenan1 ot' wa or 1 contingent creditor of thown above, no warranty I• Section 10 of the Specttl· Tiie name. Soclel Security rtnty. expreN Of lrnplletl, • the a.cuud you muat flle given u to ltt oomplet-cattona. AU ptopoNlt lhell Of F«Swal Tu Number. and gardlng title. l>OIHHl6n.
l'OIK cielm with the ooun or Of oorrectneeaf be mark.tel Turf M1lnlan· melllng llddr .... and ZIP encumbranoea. 10 pey t pNMnt h to the peraone1 The beneficiary under Mid enoe for Mecllant, Curved Code Number. of Ille Irena-remalnlrlg prlncip.j ..,, r~tatlve IPC>Ointad by Deed of TNlt, by reuon ot • Sldewalh . Trect Entrance1, fer ... arr HYO 00 CHUNG the note(1) ..cured by 11 the ooun within lour monthe bf'MCh or default In the obll· and l=ronlage Roede. end be I Ml WON CHUNG, t3 t72 Deed of Trust. with lnt•t ffom the dete of tlrat i. gallons MCUtec:I thereby. malled °' dellYeted eo 11 to Yockey St. Apt. 29, Gerden thereon. u provided In 11
tuance of letters .. provlOec:I heretofOl' ... ecutec:l llld -be In the hand• of the City G<ow. CA 112~; KYUNG note(•~ ectv.ncea. ti ,,, In Section 700 of th• IMwtd to tile unoenlgned • CWk In her office In Ille City WAN KIM & INSIL KIM. under Ille term• of the 0. Prot>ete Code of Clllfomla. written Decleratlon of o. Hiii, 10200 Slater Avenue. 29224 Stet A ..... South. of Tru1t. fees. cnargea .,
The Ume for fMlng c:lelrnt w111 flUlt end Demand fOf Sale. on or before the hOuf ttaled. Au bum . Wuntngton ll8002. ••pentea of the TruM.• •• not expire prior 10 four end written notlca of breech At the dee19neted time, all That the l*'IOnll Pfop. of the trult• crMtec:I by 11
montht from the date of the and of elec11on to «*IM the bide ~ wlll be publldy eny lo be trantlwred ta~ DMd of Truel. to·w
hMr'lnQ notice above undetslgned to Mil Nld opened, examined end ~ acrlbed In gen«al u m• S 189,834.21.
YOO MAY EXAMINE the property to tatltfy Mid ot>li-ciwed by the City Cieftl. Bid-terlall, tuppllel, mercften.. The beneflc:lety un4er" .... kept by Ille court. " you ~tlont, Ind lhWMft• the def• end the publlc .,. Ins d I U . • q u Ip m. n I, 0 r Deed of Trutt hetetofor•. are 8 l*90n lnt«eeted In underelgned cauMd Nici \'hed to be Pfteerll al tile l'urnlture, ft•turet. equips ecuted and del!YWed to ti
the .wit•. )'OU rflll'/ ..,.,,. notice of breech end of -.c. d •ct tr at Ion o t , a Id merit, tredename, goodwlll, undertlgoed a 'Mitten o.
upon the executOI' °' admlns tlon to be Recorded OCT(). propoael1 leue. leuetlold Imp(~ leratlon of Default and o 1ttret0t, Of upon the 91• BEA 18, 1984 AS INST RU· All bldt to received. eum, mente. oovenent not to com-mind for Sale. and 1 wrttto tomey for the axec:utor °' MENT NO. ~534 of lned end declered wltl be peta, •tock In trade, ABC Notice ol OeflUlt and Ele admlnlttr1t« end f11e with Nld Olflctlll Recordt. terred by Ille City Clrk 10 the llcenM of I bull,_ known tlon to Sell The IH'ldertlgnc
tne eou11 with proof of -· Said .... wfll be made, but City Engineer and the City .. SUNSHINE UOUOR end cauMd ..id Notice ol O
Yloe, 1 written raq-1 1191• wlthOul c:ownent Of WW· Attorney IOI' Checillng and It loceted a1· 724 W. 19th fault end Ei.ctlon 10 Sell
Ing that you deelre tpeelll ranty, 9Jl9feet or Implied, r• reported to the City Council StrMI, Cotta M911, CA be reoOfdec:I In the eovn notice of the nNng of an Ins gardlng lltle, poueaelon, Of et It• regular meeting on 112827 together with the lol· where the rMI property ventory end appnllaement of encumbrences to pay tiler• Feoruety 4, 111H. towing deecrlbed ll<:Ohollc IOcated.
Bo:Dner recoverlnd l.rOm heart SUF.'d,e,rv •late MMll or of the p«I-mllnlng principal tum of the Prior to commencing bevarage llcen .. t : OFF Dete. t21111/85
.a ' a .IJ a· • .,T tlont °' 9CCOUntt mentioned notn ..cured by tlld Deed work. the Contractor and ell SALE GENERAL UOUO R 'O"ICLOIUltl Co•
BOSTON _ fami'ly members hope to reach Sovi'et di'ssi'dent Andrea In Section 1200 Ind 1200.5 of. of Trust, with Interest u In tubcontractora "1eJI obteln LICENSE NO. 2T· 127739 IUL TANTI, INCet ttiec.Nfomla ProoateCode. Hid ~ote provided, •d· • bullnMI ltc.nN from the now luued tor u ld Tn.tee. IY:.,.... . C> Sakb:arov by telephone to tell him about his wife's heart SUfJery, although ~. ........, end vane.a. I( any. una. the City ot Foun111n v111ey In 11es premltet. for prem1 .. , 111erod, Vice l'r•• 111
Yelena Bonner. 62. is still recovering from the six-bypass o peration and cannot "!!""'· AtterneJt ter 1wm1 of Mid Deed of Truat. e«danoe with the Cfty Mu· loeatec:t at 724 w. 19th {T14) n1·11U. 1•1 °"
k b. h Jf "I • · r ............ ,. 11IO Ct fMe, charges end upenaee nlclpal Code No Volume I STREET, COSTA MESA. ttNee, 1Wte ·DI spca to tm e r:sc . t wont be ~ss1ble 1or ~e~ ~o tal~ tomorrow at all. DtM. ~ .._,~ or the Truet .. and of the Title 5. Chae>t•• 5.04 .nd CALIFORNIA. c.._.. .... '
Efram Yankelev1ch said Monday night after v1sttmg. his m other,in-law at ...., trutta crMted by Hid Deed 5.0e. That the totel conlldef· Publllhed by the <>tang
Massachusetts General Hospital. "She's still under sedatives. She's still half Published Orange CoMt of Tru1t. In eoe0<denoe with the •llon tor the traneter or Mid Cout Delly Ptlot Oecemb4 asleep " Delly PNot January 13 14 . Sllld .... will be held on provision• ot Section 1700 bullneu and ot Hid llcenN 31. 1ta5Januery 1, 14. 111e . 20. tllle ' ' THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 8. and 1780, lnctutlve, of &he le the eum of $282,000.00 T·99 MT '"3 1111e II 11;00 A.M. et the labor Code of the St1te of Includ ing Invent Of)' H tl, Kennedv IJodvds•ard he· 'd 1.0, .. -•apon• 1--------Concord Street entrance to Celllomlt, Ille City Council mated et $47,000.00. which .,, ., a -'i .I I .. --rtaJC NOTIC( the bulldlng loeatec:I •I 1570 of the City of Fountlln Valley conalttt of Ille followtng; DEA TH NOTICE S WASHINGTON -A pnvate bodyguard hired to accompany Sen. 1-, ---------Eut 17tnStreet,SantaAna. hat by reeotutlon adopted Checil · pertonl/ Checil
Edward M. Kenned y, OsMass., on a tnp to Latin Amen·,.,. was a,,..,.·sted a nd NOTICI cw Cellf0tnle 9270 1. the prevelllng houfty r•t• of u o.ooo oo: Prom111ory SATl'LER ..... • •... 1"UITD'I IAl.I The total amount ot the wegea for eedl craft or type Note · Demand Note 10 be briefly b~ld Jan. 7 when he 11:1ed to enter a Senate office building with two You we In defeun under 1 llnpllld belence ot the obi+-of WC>ttlman Of rnedlanlc reptlCec:I with cash through ~rge H. Sattler, J 1
automatJc weapons, U.S. Cap11ol police and a Kennedy aide said today. The dHd ·of truet . dated ~tlonMCU<edbyUldptop-needed to •JC«M• the con-eectow ·$t20.000 OO;Prom-Age 67. Passed awa• bodyguar~d Charles J. Steirf J r., 47, was arrested a t the entrance of the Russell 101a11et. unleM ~ 1e1te eny'o be~. togethef with tract which will be -•ded 1aaory not• · not• end.. Janu!>rv 7 1986 of ·
Sc 0 action to rwot_. ....,., rw-... lntereet, late chlr,_ and to Ille auc:ceNful bidder curtly agreement In fftVOf of -J ' nate . cc Building after he asked pohce where he could check two 9mm eny,1tmeY'be";;.det•"'pub: eetlrnated c:oett, .~.Prevailing waoe In a..: Miier 1&5,000.00: Promise-h ea.rt a tta c k autom~uc ~pons, Uzi automatic pistol and ammunition. said Lt. Jeffrey 11c ..i.. 11you need an eJIPle-end adVencee, n otthede1e flcatlona not provlOec:I tor by ory note · not• end MCUr1ty SW'Vlved by mot.her
Zanotll. Stem was charged with various fireanns violations and later released nation of the netin of the hereof, le Mt, 1et.e1. the reeoiutlon """ not be egreement '"fevof' of Miier -Mi Id red brot be r
hi . proceeding age1n91 you you Dete: Januwy 7. 19ee tett ttien the moet rec:.nt 147,000.00; Demand note to Robe • 1 I on sown recognizance. enould contact e ~. CAL.,O•UUA llORT, w• determination I« the be mned Vold upon ctoee • rt, ong l m•
AARON FOIOELMAN u GAOi lml¥11Ca, A CAU-Orange County.,_ .. pub-ol eacrow. and compltance residents of Balbol
duly appointed Tru1tH Po.NIACo.oAATIOM.• llelled by the U. S. Depert· with Bullnfft end Pro· Island and Corona de Sanctuary backers Clai h h i under the followlng d• .... .,.._, IY; QUAID-ment of labor end In no fftliont24074·S30,ooo.oo. Mar CA two sons m C Ure Spy ng tcrlbed CIMd of tru8t WILL IAM TMl8T o.aD llR· eventlflallltbeletathllnthe Thi! It hM l>Ml'I agreed • • . SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION VtOll, e oerpeteUen, .. tabllthed tec:teral mini. betWMrl Mid lrtntfer... Ste ve and Paul TO THE HIG~EST BIOOEA ....... br, Ten ........... mvm wage. end llkl trentferore that daughter , Cathy De
SCOTTSDALE. Ariz. (AP) -Four Arizo na The INS used at least two informants and two agents FOR CASH or 11 NIfontl1n Aeelltent lecNWy, 1m The Contractor t h•ll conlldefatlon f« the trane-yden of C.OSta Mesa
churches have been joined by the Presbyterian Church to sec. rctly tape record conversatio ns d uring van·ous Section 2924h of the CM! ._. 17th ltNee, ...._ I. provide 1Uch oompenMtlon ~of Mid butlnett •no of and three grandsons
(U.S.A.) and American Lutheran Church 1'n a civil suit f Code, •II right, tllle end lent• An•, Cellfornla ln1Uranc. u required by Ill• .. d Ileen-1' 10 be Plld · meetings o the Alzona Lutheran Church of Phoenix lnterMt conveyed 10 end ta101, (114) M7·71T7 Lebo< Code of the 8'11• of only ef1• trantfer,,.. been G eorge a ttend ec
accusing the fcderaJ go vernment of unconstitutio nal Camelback and Sunrise Presbyterian churches in Scot2 now held by It under tlid Publllhed Orange Coatt Ca11tom11. and e111111 e11acut• IPC>'Ovec:t by Department of schools in Fullerton
church spying in its sanctuary movement investigation. tsdale and Southside Presbyterian Church in Tucson Deed of Trutt 1n the praperty Olllty Piiot Jenu11y 14, 21, • contrect«'• oe111nca1e r• Alcoholic Bevefage Control, and was a grad~ 0 ' Fa' led Mondah . U S Di tn'ct C urt . Ph . th be M h N herelnaft-..__...._..,, 28, 1t&e ~rdlng Mid oompenNtlon purauant to Sec. 24073 et 10 . . s o 1n ocrux, e tween arc and ovember t.984. TAusro.t'AiCH'AAD w. T--013 raqulrementt. TM Contrac-aaq, , th e Mar 1 t I m•
suit alleges that t e United States, Justice Department ~e govemmen.t sought evidence from the church MATTOX Ind JUDITH l tOf .,,.,. torther require 111 Thal IM herein deecrtbed Acadamy in 1942, ser
and Immigration and Naturalization Service and its gathenngs as pan of its "Operation Sojourner" investiaa· PARKER "8.IC NOTICE Sut>eontractor1 to aiMIWty tr_,,.,, are to be coneum-ved 3 years in Europe
1Fn
1
.f4f\honnantsand employees violatedlhe First..Fourtb ~nd UOf? into the Central American sanctuary movement. BENEFICIARY: MORT· ~eu:! ::r::9~': ~~~~R~ & South Pacific dur
. Amendments through u_nden:o~er 10.filtrat1on. which resulted m i!'dictment o f 16 people last January o n ~~~E BANKERS CAP1TAI.. T..a70 contractOft' ~ .... TM \/ICE ESCROW COMPANY, mg World War D as •
without co urt. w~rrant, o~ worsb1~ services, Bible study charges of conspanng to smuggle Central Americans mto Reciofded Nov. 13, 1tf> ~ ~ Contrector1 and Subeon· 14212 IMch 91.. w .. 1, Commander, he was 1 groups and m 1ss1on planning mcebngs. the United States. • tnetr No. -in bootl Tl NO •wa tract0ttltlllltumlehtneCtty ~J·· CA !2&a.3 on °' Ma r ine Engln ee1 13831 ....... 1071 of Offtc:lel • • oertlbt• of ...... of .... enuery 31, 19ee P\ll.IC NOTICE •-ic MftYll'r •m•te 1111\TICE 1--------Recor,.~ YOU ARE IN DEFAULT eut>rogetlonunder1M*'"9 AJI otMI buelneet nernea until retirement lr r-""'nA r-nv Ml.JC NOTICE P\8.IC NOTIC£ Recor:r ~ otrlceC:., IM UN~ A DEED OF TRUST of the w«k•'• COtnpenM-and ldelfeoMet uted by tile 1984. Memorial aer·
K·Dal 1985, Jwiuar; 7, 14, 21, wtttl tlle County Clerk ofOr· prlor 1011le deyof NJC11'1eef. Mc DONOUGH 1 n dMkldtedoft::ideecrl~ e~l~~~i:£1~ tlonlneurenoe lt1nlf!!~1 within thrH viceswereheldatthf PICTmOUe ..,.... ,,ee .. County on Oecember Ing MICHAEL McOONOUOH the followlng property. T No l*I .. be conliderW ....,. -· put, ., far .. '-~-I N •. Bot ~ ITA~ T-002 ff, ,.. beted JAN 13 1988 v ......... CA&.IM)A,R Lot 48 Ol~red 1o20. C"1 ~~e~ri"~iE<JA~~~ ..,,,.... It II made on IN of· 11,_-. to ·~ we: IJUIJ~ 0 ancy (X ' ..]!!= ~ ,__ HenrJ T. MHre, Jr., DAYI ..._ tNt 1•• ... of!Mne,Cllllfornia,permep SOLD AT A POBLIO SALEj tclel ~ !!J'l11~ ~ W1C1 adclr ... of ~!~le~~~~ Corona de, _.., ..: P1aJC NOTIC[ , .. Alt•• ~ C.... 'Mte .. 1"9 l•peTlor le MnM .., ,_ .... •recorded 8ootl 204 ~ IF YOU NEED AN EXPLA by IN _,, -IMdi In .., ... ' '""'"' couetooment, •M eypr.. DetttNet......_, 7.14.t1. CeW1 ""•'"""' ,.., .. , .. et 48 . o. o1""'Pt1n '0renee NATION OF THE NATUM eccordence with th• ;r~~6n=Ao:EJ~" GARG•~o OrM. l.agune Beecfl. CA '1CntJOUI .,_.. .. ._ PublllheO Orange Coatt tMe .-..t. County Aecorder'I Oflloe OF THE PROCEEDING prOYlelont of tNI Notlae end • "1"
'*D 1 I l d hi •119 ~·TA,.....T T ... Dall~~· January 14, 21 A ...... ,... ..... MAY 9E ALSO KNOWN AGA INS T YOU YOU IM pr~ ~ • ..J! w'~'!.:. ... .!...4.!12c .. a..ct19 ......... 91.. Angelo Gargano arry un • . .. The fo4lowtng 28 ery 4 ttae not,.,.._..,..;~ A$ 15192 C"9IQn Otta. • end cor;...i1on1 Mt "'"' ..,'"""''-· " .._, bel ed h Cypr .. 1 Drive, Legune doing butioete~~':c; •-IC Mftfll'r . T-0 18 '!""9ft ,...... •lrvtne,Cellf0fnllt2714, • ~~LO COHTACTALAW• und9ta.ctlon20lthe8"d-Dllled:JenulfYI. tllle OV n....n-~~~
ewn,CA92t5t EnergyCOnaerwtlon 211tt ...-. ""RA: "',.,.,.....,..,...,.. ''(If• •treet lddr-"' ftl:dOrl9,bc:fl'::cLi: "-A·" k · ~uc ..... _ _.....,
Tflle t>ulln"' It con· AmberWlck Ln .. ~. lkitl, IWtlfllCMt COURT "8.IC NOTICE • .,. the oewt .. ,_.,,..common detlonetlon 11 1 0~ ~AN~~~Y. ~2· b~.t~ l>e llCenMCJ in ~~· fat.h~r of Joan Sinith. ~~lnd!Ylduel 0A9214t CWC~ORMtA, ceee. ehoWnltlo¥'9,no w•rentylt MONWEALTH LANO TIT\.f wlti:u""'=~o~=la HYO DO CNUMO Ill Wilham and Vick rNe ~t ._ filled Rlc:Nrd PetrlClk Vaequm. COUWTY CW OMNQm K·U..1 ,. • ':. =.::.. .. ,._ :'c,.~~o lie ~--or COMPANY at duly ep· ~=-t Code tectlon woeeCMUNQ.KY'UM9WAM G arga n o . · """he
.,.. iMCounty Clertt of Or· ~9bA ~'*"**· Hunt tn the Men• of !fie APPi!-flltTmoul IUIMll .::; ._., .::' = The ~ ""*' Mid pofnt.ct Truet .. under and 4590 ft.. Contrector wtll l>e • W. "• ,,_ survived by n ine
... County on December • cetlonofRUlGERLAN81NO ...... ITATlllefT ..._ ... OeedOfT pinuent to Deed of TN91 entl.td to poet ~ d hlld d 24 1111 Thftl tllnl.,... I• con· for Change of Name Tiie fOllowlng l*aon• are == .. -.._.., • ,,. b ruat, by rweeon Of a ... cutect by RICHAAD ~....., tM oren ~ ~ Collt gran c ren an • .... ,., duct9dby.anln<IMOuel No.A 131419 doing bullf'lllMH· hrreno !Mt ............ l'MCfl0tdefeult1ntt1eoe.a. l<ANIAA, a 11naM men • OW'9d f1MnC11e1 ftVsOeltyl'1totJMIMf}'l4, tllle four great·&r nd-~ Or Coeet flltcWd P. VMqum ORDER TO SHOW CAUH ~~Apartment•, 3090 .,..,._ .............. ,c:= MCUfed ltMeby, T~or for the ben9ftt end :'In.,,., to litM.,. Cfty f.Cl15 children. Ser lees ~ l'ttot 0.:::., 3 l ... i'*11e"t!i*'*'6.:-o1 ~ FOA CHANGE Ofi NAM! l'ullm1n Avenue. Cotte n...,. .._ ..... ,.. livered:~:-:"~:. NCurlty Of DONALD L. ,..._. fUnde ~ by •-.,. wtll bt held T\Miiday
1111. .-wy 1. "· 11: .,.tOovntyn:,J.!,vy a· RlfTOt~~HO h• ~A~28~ ...,, ••mee.._v • .., ..... wrttten ~etlon °' o.. =t&A~ll.!; tfle Ctty to IMUf• ~ ,._N()'QC( l:OOPM at Church 1• tllle arm .. .,.ton, • ... ., ......, "'°" teu1t end OemenCI tor ..... • flormenoe of.,. oomreet. -Of ,.;. __ T-GOa ,_,,., flMd 1 petition In ttlll OOUf1 3090 Pullnren Avenue, ...,, .,.,.. .. _.-...end wrtt1en notice of tried\ wlf9 • Jolflt 1enem. • ,..,., ~lot,.~ -·-nece•lonal, Foreet
--------, blltMd °' eo..t fOf"en 0tdef 8lowlno pet1o Coet1Mee1,CA112t2e .. ...._, ,...., .... ,endote1ecttontoc..1N t.nenctery, dltect otcrM~ oflldel~~ 1>e ~uu Lawn Glmdale. ror-
PmJC llll1Cl -P'ttot J~""';, 14. 21, = rr':n '= =~:~~CO!'· :·~:-~·~·-== =::• :.= ~~~~~·::"~ ::..'°' ~i:no.::.~ mu MO. M=
1
· ~~~n Mortuary, H .11N to l<yteCymn, JenieeP Wlnnlngton ._,.._._.,_ , _ N~tl1t2onJANUAAY13 -Qty~ ~Hel YOU AAI IN OlfAULT ., .. -.....
• ll!!'lllN• .. • 111 f-O H IT 11 HIMAY OAOlMD T'* 11e1W111oW1t w flled 0..,.. ..... II _. .,,.,..,...:;: '== ~ t.... OAANGI County: C. ,j ..... Md .,._. VHDlfll A OHO Of' TfllUIT -:;:==:::==:-=:::=~ Mlm1t•• H•ll ..... Pef'IOnlin.....edln tMCounlyCtettcof Or, ..._ .... ....._ ..,_l"°'*Clhfwtlendr1' -tt.eotCelllornle. ....... le •.oo ....... DATl.D Ol/Ollla UNLUS ...... .,.., I MlJC NOTICE .,_ metw llfOfeMld appew C4unty on o.c.rn. ....., _... .... = ton10 .. AecordN1wt-S WILL SELL AT PUIUC -. •.,...-.,......YOU TAKI ACTION TO
TM fsle t4 ,.,_... l>efote tNe court tn 0epar1. "· 1M6 ••cu.a CM-~-ttet -. bOoa 141IO • AUCTIONTOHIOHOTM>-llet ........ and..,._. "'°1'1CT YOU" ""°'' ~ ...._ • 'IZ1A PICl'mOUI ..,_. ment No. 3 et 700 ..,_ ,_ pere ptHHler He a1o Clf Mid Offtc6el ,._"r. DIA f 0 A CA lt Hi A _,.. .. ...c br NII. IN lf'fTY ~y M IOlO AT !!.!.0 !_8 ~ .W.eTATDmff ~~IW Weet. Senca Pvl>llllMd Orange Ca.I m••rtw _.. e ... llldllle .. l>e!Mde.M ~ .. ~1 2·1 CH OK:.:.~ aftf t.•1t•ll1tt ANllD .. N ~~ = -.. "'"*''*'... .... The~ PW10n1 ate Ana, ..._n1a, on~~ Piiot 0.0.rnMt 2A 81 ........ --.. ~ ~ """"""" """ A 8tATI 09' 1f111 M ., .. ~ """ 2 doil'O ~ .-OLVM-24. 1 .... et 9t$ o'd0c:4 1~.J~7. t•, tMe . .....,,.._...... cw °'WW· NATK>HAllANK,"8TATI .....-•eo .......... Of THI NATUM OI THI
Dennte ldotto. t0241 IC COATINGS, • ., A..M .. and tMn ... th«• T·"2 7 r' Rf• -...... =.-:-::QI~~': ~.!.J!IDIAAL CAIOIT ...................... y~~~!AHtst .... MM ••• M #tl7, ~eularlno Awenve, Coste lfi0we9119a lf anJ ttley,,.._. t • """"" °" A ITATl Of' ...... ... OOll ot vv, •vv .._COM-19' oe.o. CA ti tM Ca11tom1e t2t29 wtty lllld ci9t1t1on tot cnang9 •-.,. ~ :.;.:.11 4 • 1 I 11 • lo P9J IN ftOlAAL SAVINQI NfO end""!--.. IN TACT A l.AWYM.
TNe ...,._ le oon--Mett1 A CllerTy, 241 La-of natne lhCMlld not be ..._ null'K ............. =-·· prlnc::jpel Mn o4 LOAN AllOCIATIOM :=i= ·--.. On 01/lt/lt llC 1000 _... .... td .... Drl\oe, ~ hecil O'llMed •H !NII 1 •••,9"..... lee fer· --.. ~T ~ ~ Miid ~IN THI ITATI _,._ -IN-A.M. 'OMClOIUM COH-O.WW...... nM3 ' rT 18 fUMH!A ordered (CITACm,.~ IU •t:,·-.:~•tee ;;;:'-= "'"'.,,.._ Of'CAUFONt!A~ee ...... _., .............. " IUlTANTl.INC.••-
TNI EISI '*" W ... C°""'9 It Clwr). 2'1 la tttat 1eooyOftt14tOl'Oflt10 HOTICtTOOl : : '11 .... ==-= .,_, • "':·: ttlNOf .. lflte.M,,.... j'1\n~·-•••fltM TNNe ...OW
..... C..., Cllllll d Or· °""'8, ~ '-'1 lflOW ow 1>e pivll•INd In ~*° • ~l WM.TM -. .,,.. Clf ... 91i.: ot T Of II* ~ ,_ • .. ~=!~ _., C:.'° Dlld Of -,---~£..~:: If) 9ft 011 w•• ce_ "'!.~ I • .-ar...,., eo.if ... b.lr~:·TH"~!f.'!.11:·~ f If .... ":.:... & • _. NTr.':ta:"' • ••= ~= .. :: -__... I Of'-!."C.iv.::::e.•a'=I .... ,... .-v~~:....: ~~~ YOOA"I llJNO IVIO I IP[~· ........ ~ M.cww -:. .. o:: o....r OrM ·w.i. mi-at~ o:;. lollPUA~MIAOfot.
,._Ur,_ ~ c.r,' Metil 'r C1wry CCM'llY M onoe e ..-IY ~INT.,,:~ Ud. lu ... ~-•:.it..'.: f o .. TMt br -~ ~ .. ca.:,._ ..-Y "-fm =-~ --or:::.
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631-7370
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642-5671
for Information
& surprisingly
<I low cost.
Your iv1 l~L i.~ a u a,v to
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11'1Nortn8r\HI " /
S.nla An•. CA 92708
Cheefy room CdM female lirMrt Artas # 1 LM.
only Non smlu' S350 Avt 41Socf C&l'l'IPu& Or Suite In Feb 1 759-9143/evs warm a-tul 2 ttC>ry
Costa Mesa S275tmo • •.., lmanc1al ottice Duffdlng
utll W /D all prtvltege& 852-1700
642-8386 an 7pm NPT BCH Nr Hoeg Hoec>
Dana Pt fem n--;;-,k, prot 6 olca .,,.,, wilh 1000 9Q
10 .,,, 3 Bt 2 be "°"'91 n ea s 1 '* 9Q n. 1-s Y'
$400 nr bch 240-889• ..._ Agt Nan 675-4630
E1ti>ertSeMce I Reip.w
321yrs exp. Aeetd'l/Comm.
L IC • 409035 M4..et 19
WEEKEND PLUMBING.
No OY9rtlmel Cell Any
Time 146-8712
cOUhE+ P&St stRV
c1ean1no. repelra eeld
wash w~..w.
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.... Cll~IJMIDi .... Co.M o.?,.,.,, .... on 'Job ·i::::-:: .. 111111 lnt1Elc1 PWtt ~'" forat.IO=....,._,· TOVOTAL.lndonMr'M. :"t:9 ........
l•ell OfftH .,OH '™ CIGiilit liW ,_. Mull~ 111:6-. "•ve pleHont per-lrnmt d'I.. Gl*MI tot ___,., Own lfMIP 711• 71 fUlly equlpC 1424408 WNle. laolt OOftd. ..... ~ =....
_,__L-.L '"":t ..... M ...... Lallle. IOftOllty Hunt lcf'I,.. ww. ~ need .. _ _,, ~ ......... •FIMW bl10,2IO, 411-M71 l?IOOoe.o. •1-1,1 C.M~~ :'1~ :.-~.7= NI 't~IEJ.M.._.., 141-H11,MtM, !~1~,:-;:,. Mt>-=~ :e'r.ern? J~ Chemlca orr>t Ml 1111r p=~i~'1i::.'1:s ,...... !!I HI 'N 11 WAt~J IU)G Of 1414002 • • . --Fiii 11111 •""---a ..... compeny lntllprltee hM .,., .. '8'1pC)tytNClc. &4$-1()1;1 ....,.d F ................. --1 "'1r"dXUiN6 w.-=: ..,,,,.y ""' -,,,_ ..... ..,... 13IO .ift. motivated poreon luly~~·--beneftte and working .-*'oe IOt lhoM you -· ·--· ..,., trwt. ~ ....
4tfl laor w/W ~ tNlll'I rn w/~. '-' dr•, Alf>. I __, noedl ._,'!!'!!. ~ Apply: oen ef11t lmmodlettty PIT MAINTl.NANC! I*'· Unl\Walty Am.tic Cfub t~~;io"'e1::-(11TM7) ~=I.,
MOft.ftrtttol ~·~ gen 00Nt. ~~..'. p/tl I -WOtk WMtl ~ 11 Ot eon neodld fat offlct memMllNlt. Mek•Ofter. Comt1uter ~it.0710 me roo=.onlet "'Rl-.T ~ whO.,. ~ clunlng. llght land· Bob 156-ltll, 0y9 w MSWEI$ t~~.lu.!!,.l,·01 O =~ro:=r•nce*':: ..... •w !!!&!'_ motlvetod wlnnorl. ICaping ~ cat gent eAiW Vlflf 71
-""1'" 1Wde~twllftl(41 --.. ,_ ap.nd.tnterlnloutMM ~J.FlelChra....... HOVI Cutt a.o...... wpm) end froftt .... eo.ea ...... ea. CllffotNo Ind,,.,. 11 oall ogore ROllt) AM,, .. 0111' I OIP• Momdlllena =~WU~ ~ lftMnn• ...._ hm 1em to 1 pm. 0t cell 142-4321 :=7.:~~l~t:: e7&-23 1 WOAK STATION w/1310 '3250, 13e.-ot72. lllll•!J!.."I. "I'm oMllftiO my ...... " ftlllUl Mon ttw ffl. C.. Linda .... t..,,,. Paid trelnlnQ pr~ llTAIL UUI FLOPPY Ol8K DAIV!. 00001 '78 1 ton ven, Top Mol ndn
•COrnbfMd ~ ,,,.,., CO-wortlw. SfNnUY ' oft 1P"'•tl44-a727 , llll gram betting f>Onu1 Pan ttme openlftQ for 52250 &4&-7t1lday9 cl•an/run1 wlll , CALLRIT"'or M V
126 ft c ''WlthCM"MWbw.109\ \IKllW\ ~ •••l/llllT 81Mi=.• pten, !)fut high Mmlnot. ~ ctotMe at0te. No an/ 12eoo1oe.o. 941-7 -•••II
C..2 ...:'n':.1:t :::W~~ .. rteM Needed to --buey Fullttme.U1·234& 111UllllUI ~trtnaP .. ~um ;•P•r.0 n,:o· Hre MM .... El.II ~' nHISJliiPet ..._ o.p.t-~ ... Pl'odUct to,..,_ air 1iu•r1ntMd. 111 :30-2:3 • .e. arH , 213°'714137 n:a ~TC>Rtolflrlhow-'atfl Ill "*"Job dl*oa~ llllftllY k•U ,_..t OrcMrll ..._ Mon-rt ~Cell len 14S-.13'forllPPt. ANoNd ~ Clllan IMI . :7!"'.-:-°"":.!t~ -I ......... pftoftee. , .. t:I0-2!30, I "-· TYIMna ' ...... No Compeittlonl Smltll....... 1 '1-3pm 111.D..... Jeweffy, ~. 50 Pee. '87 itt&Dk@M p;;: T'OVOTA ... ·C6"1LLA rent~ c1eoor-.......... ,,_ ••• OOtd keeping, tYP6nca (IO and 10 "-V· Wlll .,.., on No Travoll Complot• lllYEI for buey~ru etoro. MO .... 945-9441 «Mnt. Oflg ansl1 Int & df. Run• GR!ATI OOI
--· ----wpm) and~ In ~.M&-3350 J'rolnln0!{102)731-4711 • M-~ ru11 Ii~~ ~= pelnt mlnt .... 7313 SHAPENI0.141-«>3 ............ ._, iilfilffiM 1•/ovor -1oue P'ofecta. Send • Noedod '°' '-growing •• • ' ' ==:..-:,=--::r-.::--~ lllllflllllllll T.,..,r1 mY CM home ~or~ In per. lllllTllY Aetall Growth opponun11y newepaper odv.rt111ng =21;a--s1t. 10·7, ~Ci Alltel ........ llM :r~o!: ~.., M\/t
14.,.. • 40 -. 301 .. A O... llft. a, 141-1113 oon to: ~ 1 Qlt1 oMoe Nik• wttri San Deoeo'• tiott.11 d • p • r t m o n t , cep. propane. Ttlpl• XO& ~.,...-aeon "" cw .,,, .-. ...,
Harbor llvd. Cot t• DI laY I 'IT l1ld1 ~ =:rr =~~!~ ,....,. ehlln now~ ==-=~ ~ a1.m •HH = ittt':~~.J,"-ml, em/fm cw, driwl '300o. 1tMlf
MH•. ecrou from 11• • ~.... lkllli. co"'"~~ ~Dene Point. heklnO of tide. 1..,....._ and Airport ., ... • ~"" """' Biii 54t-8181 • xtnt. 1875/obo, 710-0771 Tlfftl Fodoo. c.11 Mat: tt1t) ~""'°kw erNI ~ ... ..,,., '*' Houri 10.7 • .,... tnOfY, ~ ,,,.i1 Relponelbte ..it Mon-Fri, 7.3()..3.30. $4.15 ,,,_""'-=".,,..--~ ------liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
72e-Nll 01 t60-3tM &46-4810 -fllodbio. fuii nm.. ~ =WMel. Mltlt ,. or9enli.ed lndlvidullt p/hr aae-1410 Deve SHOPSMITH Merk IV l.AAOE SELECTION Of Attend ow ..... _.. ~~~!. ..... .![!!I 11111 •II ..... ...... eotnm9f'teurato w/exp. ~"rf:' ::::J*'Y wtth OOod drMng rooord •••-w/~lo~ 11500. NEW & useo IMW'SI and teclevo • fre i! J •--. M llUT 142'4411 M.lfM/• .. 'lfY i*t r• & nevtgatloNI lklill ~ •-• 1 5 .... -.-.. pottlbto mlftl noulit\
2000 .. ft. 17' Im DMlf fiM rm 7em _, ory: In pereon to· Tho Orange --UUI ........ -ltiwn •bout IMelng I
tie IMO/mo. Oto 1W -1:30pm, ~ CM hm or A/P OLEll a11n.11t Att11: Scott Devldoff Coaet Dally Pttot. c:t AUTO WM~ Fltlme. a ... t IMT siA~: ~:l:~ our ofb nw &Out W::i'il:w =::*etttom 0,:!,1!.~~ ~·an~c~':°P•~~ e1:0AC:.~~~& T~~,. ~:.:7c~':'e2e ... ~~+ oommlMlon ctosnm'TastAiii· 3170N.°i&Zct..,.·LONO eoaet.=-..i,.,:.>
_____ v ___ aalery. !ldo~ :.,:. pfue. Xlnt boneflt9 & e7&-4Nl Sen~1gi_~121 • Alk f0tMollnda __ Tu Plannlng &.#Pf-s>· ==r~ (No.Cherry~) IU.-UftllLUll
.. ,. ... , outalde d9v ~t WOfklng eondttlon• 111 aHrrMY (81g> si1-1ea1 .. ITIIYAllT PiT anatlon r9011tor. adding me-<114)Nl-llll 1H/Ql-1HT '*· Cel 14~..eet2 bu9Y OOtPOrete oftloe. Exp. ectylbk~ for well Aocep11no r.ppllo. 3333 w P.A. er ehlnol, alerm and pt\One T'rect.lne Welcome vw ·7i Conv lklg. wtrt/bllt ..........., 1111 tiOUSEKEEPER ::~-4~ et:pereon =~b. lnterlof Doelgn EOE M/F Cout Hw•,!I!_. f.-5 M~ U.A. ayaMme. ~114 ~OPEN SEVEN DAYS 1/c, c ... , MW tfro
Chartor Yecttt looklna tor· 2-ePM Wkdya N.8..--V. 111-.&.J -• lllCI • ~r= ......... ... lllftl:S Elll/ Two part °' Ml time non-EXECUTIVE . Deek hM M000 080 780-MOO 5:.~· Pr.._ r9q. Mr Hood 7H-10M . 11MI ..... a... Fr( 8:30-5:30. 54i2221 PIT. Hre CX: ~ ••-r11•T• MD =~•r:~dF~nt~~~ ~w/Wtllnut nntih 132"/. •AUii llllNll VW ·ao v111. ortg ownr
c.llent tu~-HOU8EKEEPEA -COM-irM 114/ftl.aa 1 llmfllf perience pref. &45-0210 able 10 drive bOb-l ell. OMV v.,,.., ~--Acclg l In-__ 78 ' DELIVERY OEPAATMENT oxlt runn:t· new Ur•
Cell e.ny 87$-MM · =~, Elderly Fordo'o'lt~t company ....... /Alelet'91f report roq. McMahan veetment firm. (I~. Pttt Liula Utt McLAREN'S BMW 12750· W 831-e340 =' ...,.. dti. & C:-:l •11 ... ... In o·c Airport ., .. FINE Jowolry china Ouk , Santa Ana Contr. Ot Employee OK) UOCOCCXAcockXfoo VWBUG 'NNewbtit .. 9r1. _ L '· 30 ~. C-., L~ ~w.-IQetldellvety. mu9tf ~ ll!lllt, Nina ••~ cryatal, allvor.' Fltlm•: __ 5-40-3375___ ::.:n=.o~ LOYMblo w/boeut tOll l*IO M·Fllll 9, 8-S tMI I' Jlno ndt rebulldlng
hM money for t40-l5t1 -er.-.._,.flONo perlence roq 751-tOo:s Udo Vlllege. Friendly EASY ASSEMBL y WORK 8' C9g0. Mutt ... l2000. ea s. Eudld St. 600, cell 1ae.121 t
To·1 110,000 up. No dutloa l-= Gk. C.. atmoephore w/growth seoo 00 per 100 Guaren-T~ WOtk 131-5087 or 840-9012 Fullenon. CA
credit.,... no penalty coll H~8fKEEPEA/Uw In. ~12, 152 100 Mertlyn IR'Tf/ ... IJllllJ pot1nt111. Mull have teed Payment. No Ex-11 .. p/. SHELTIE ele I I-color e :~~-=
Denleon.Ateoc e73-7311 Gd· .... ~~g. Tff: '9fa. UU&.allnllY Smell~ egeney upor. Call Jull• P9fience/No Saloe. o.-s.tting ~ntmente. No mo'• ofdm nci rkldl AM •--------1--------•----~-11 -~' · t-411 5 r-lollCO In Fln'llty L~ ..-. lndlvld-e73-e334 tall• Mild Mlf~addreeeed MIHng, no exP9(i.nc. thola , • .;. ..... ; ,..,..7· SOUTH COUNTY ............ ,...... -...Ir ~ . 956-0 .___ '* 10 hondle numorout It amped envelope· p ·...,.. ~ ...,..., _....,....,....,oiiiiiii-..--•• N9wport 8ooch. 700 rHponaJbllltl••· Mull I aw• a £Ian vital -003. ~i 1~~ 11~d=t• hra.•~w,_,.A.,..,N""T=e=o-: -S.,._h_ort--h-atr_od_ VOLKSWAGEN Aueuewatl .... lllllLTIH I .. l.LLTml have eiclt MC 1111111 l S50-100K AMu.tft. Na.-3418EnterprlMRd. houMWI.,.._ call J~.: baby-kitten C all l
Plll•ll PU.. C=h Mlnletry. ECE IULn ~~ooo!r,~: ~~5:.:.m: Ft. Plerr». FL 33482 lle2-5843 • 759'-0451 btwn M . •• •• 011 ISUZU
rMder, 20 yraoxp. C.. ~. 842-tl.lt In Huntington 8eedl II 942-7192 egment& ..... PC>lltlona a.IW Um/ l /N TEXAS REFINERY CORP. .. 181
850-275& Olene 831""9&4 Ill....... looking f0t a Part time _1 .. -IValla.,_ In Calif., Colo. & a.tW ..,_ off«• plenty of lftt &•Jiii
1 ~ ,.... K.28' ~ Sellboota NCrocaty to worlt 30 llf1 nne• --Nev. & A1lz. FMI lld-SoelclnQ enwio. well plu1 ceth bonuMa fringe --• Welkondl ttOW. ~ p/wtc. o.n.re1 office ••l>· Pe/1-llmo .. •f1"8. Sant• vencemei1t. higti com-Mgan&.d cwoer 0tlen-beMftll 1o ~lrod Hammond Condlord 2100 ~ e 11_,doul
f(Ul)ADS
ARE FREE
Cal:
la-1111
eummor. M6-7lOO 1'9Q. Cell Roo. 991-5910 Ana Co. 40 WPM. Cell mlaeiont-atete of I~ art t9d person tor buey H B P«IOn In Co.ta MoMf Ml', wht pad bnoh. Tepe Hllation ol W I.
"
.. __._;;.t fortn0fedet8ll1 Louie, aft. 2PM. produeta. Mult attend offl~. Cell Grolchtn Newport8eeetur-. ~ deek.Mlnt.Sec:$2400PP __......._ =~ ........iJ ...---5-45-1008 EOE Sa1urd1y Somlner to 848_1255 8,30am_5 • 09td .... of experiola, &4._...81 or MOc-9•95 ___ .. ,. wv
Meiwiltratfw SIM PA~ _1_.. qualify NOUVELLE VIE M-Frt. . .pm wr1te1 H G Hopktn1. Old Uprlgllt, playt weft, PlecMlfted I tn __../TYPtlT nne• INC .• Mr. Hudaon, (7 14) Pr .... Sox 711, Ft. Worth, Ivory le.ya bench S250 ltodr. ' UlllA~ W I 1-1,. Im, modi" 1 •t•~lng for 752-te04. out of ltato. A.tu&. 11111111 TX. 78101 873-1338or 142:91N · tt ----... a -111ft11 QI.ft u -t mo ., ...... wtttl gen-(800) •23--30019 Ex FIT PIT u -,_ _. ..... /~ 1.. .,., office .... 8pMd per. or -· p/hr a.,i.,.... ..... YAMA~A '85. 8'111d new •enoe ..... you
lm1Mdio1e opening'°' fUll lmmedle-. oponlnQ-M'laN and aocurecy • mutt. SALES -F°' Fun Naut"-1 •tan. &45-0093 Diane SHI Eloc Ofgan. VINe $3500. purcf\Mit ~BMW.
eounttna ' lnvostmon1 F/T Exp Pfef'd Charfte'I nm IUll HSEKPNG OFFERED•xd\1s:;:::-..,.------=---...,.._
tlmo D19trlct MMagor. Founlaln Valley fax Ac-(714)20-7313 . Gift & Clothing S10te. GLASS aoll for 11500 M l-709$ «AeVD
Mutt 9'\to)' working Witt. F1rm neodt nott--emoker Ttc al/ ,.... Loeker 87W23o NB toett rm prlv ba/entr aomo , tllM, tctnmta =~~~~~~~ children Experlonco (Greetf0toologoatuden. 1 llM .._... 8!:'.,.Calt~·7:oo'9 ut111. M1ture F 11uclent, 1111 11'1•)1111111
FOUND Baby Samoyed helpful. or houHwlfof) Min. llTl•I 'W •• turuh roft.Neodnowf5-48-41857 Pm 1611 c:oi:o;: TV iii
Puc>Py, wtitlblk. b'k t .. Wo ~en noOllent ~ =1': ~~ EXPER'D Witt. Foreign & HM ...... ~ W..e.4 UdiM grH1 pix 1250 obo: ex:..-=~
tur•. w 18111 8'&-1372 oflt program, PMd ..,.. 1ntorvt9. ~cell 9-5 Oomottlc oar r•palr. .. llllTU mP S::::: ~ In l 99Una Sanyo 50 watt 4 et\annef _;~-==:.==~:..II
Found DOBERMAN Jan. c:etlon1 & h<>Udeya. bonut 0 o or g • St o v on i Mull have own toola. Celt FIT PIT Newpor1 BMcti. . M apply In Aadt... 1110 1teroo r~ I 150 ObO
11 Santa Ana. Neer O.C. program and dent81 lft.. $40-40f4 for Info M2-7070 Call Bill 0t &Mia 873-3152 peraon. •M-9717 tiW. ct;;\ Of d 3 Pac TOI phone,,_ deM BMW ns '79 Greet cond. Coli.ge 5-47-3503 1urance. Selary plu1 mlllDPlll • ,..,,, model ISO obO. 780-8851 Stlcic lhlft, S 13 900/PP FOUND ~emblklwt11 Cet mltuoerolmburwnent. UllPT/IDLIFI IUfTmlTll•UL al I The Ritt Carlton Laguna ~;:-'t4s.-~1 gd condSANYO TV. 50". 8'and Oay1 873-8la2 o;
Fem Calleo Cat, Fern Appllcent mu9t apply In Fott paced wholoaal• Engr. Co. San1a Ana. entry * * eeXOfY· Station Nlguel 11 Interviewing . New Cott S«oo. aoll lor 91111/Wt<nd 844-1997
Gldo FWtr w/BennlnQ ID. perton at Deity Pllol. 330 lhowroom. nr O C. Air-~~~ti~ oxpe~· Av1ll1bl• In w .. 1cllff quallfled lndlvlduala for CUlle Antlquee now openl S 1800. 941-709$ _ BMW ·ao 320!. Uk. • ""·
Male Cn.a.P"tc Retr Woat Bay S1.. Colte port. Needt good pnone -a . pm. arM. GOOd perking. buty our HouMlceeplng Dep1. t12 E. 181h St.. C.M. -Cuttom Paln1. Low mllM,
Mix. brown. Fem Delma~ M .... Ca. Apply t-11 ri~~~'!;!~C?f~~rlond-.......... lhop. 6'8-1877 Mornln~ 9rld evening Conllgnmerita. 148-~ MUST SEE. SHOO.
tlon ~'~?& Husky ~.C: ~1 p.m. (CWcui. ofd compeny c: yr F"'NI AFTER ~"'or ~:;cone:,"~ An!!unL .11 Tru1rrt1dn 880-aoe&/D "3-1437 /E
~ Mon-Fri. WC>f'klng lorem.n, mull l)feferrlld bu1 wlll train fllY]ff[UIBS BMW '6' 32h. ~na rod.
FOUND Gldn FWtr type TU AllHITllT ll•TlllllT ll1ve oxPMrt handt-on SCHOOL ' llard working poop ... Ex-I 15K ml. pwr aunroof. Puppy, male. M ... Verde Full ttmo Coeta M'eea oxporMnoe In the aervtc:ie. <*lent wagee and ben-LES 957-8133 p ... h JtJ • epoc rime, LOADED .
., .. 545-8849 6'&-ll3e °' 7~9105 · Hucol'• Huntington ropalr. overheul, and re-eflta 811 PfOVlded Apply *IALll •••El* lftl • 21,950. 548-2354/eve
AM> TRYIHG HARD£R
TO 8£ ~I 8eedl S.... OffiC9 h .. PC>'"' of gu and dloeel JOBS M d TU.CS , f ... • FOUND Lg Collle-typo, ... ical/ ... tal I an opening for a Aecep-marine englnoa. Al.eo the 1 ~~~· ay. rom Refrigerator• 1129 & Up 12 Game Fllhor w/10 tip FIAT 124 Spld9r '78. Rod.
wh1 w/blk In Nwpt 8eh _ Uonlet. ablllty to repair and In-EARN · · P.M. tn tne Wuhert 189 & U outbOotd. Many ox1ru. ••<* cond very dean.
• SALll • HlltVICE 1/12. M 2-5t50 af1 4pm mTIL .. lll•T Ro1pon1lblltl .. Include ltall drive tralnt, ••hlUS1 ~~-..!.~!3~ ~rOllne Dryore, get/etoc 199 & u~ 1725. 948-1958 new top/bell S2750,
Found: tom Goldn FWtrvr P!eMent group prectlce In t~. typing of 55 ayatomt. lhef11, 9trvll, --vv lg --Sloves 199 & Up 14•· REINNELL all wood mutt ._ 950~2577 • ftAltTI
no 11Qt vie Brkhr11. H.B Newpor1 BMch. Denlal wpm, maintenance of d• p<QP9, otc. Mutt be fam-MOff'Y M INTENANCE PERSON "Complole Line of Home w/trlr. many oxtraa HONDA Accord 1980 LX.
M I I e 1 S q p 1 r k ••Po' roqulrlld. • dtiy pertmeol m... ~al Iller wllh m9Chino.t opw-h .... r:t:. tlte neodod for office c:leanlng, Furnllhlng9" S 1500 0 80. 548-1231 oood condition. AH. PIS,
• UAllHQ
lAIM Sr 1NV1 NIORl
839~9359/E ... wtth allernate Set-reception dutlH ., •Ilona. (lelhOt & rnlflt~ light landecaplng & gen'I ALL APPLIANCES . --Pe. AM/FM CHHllO
urdey AMI 64()..1122 clerleel IUpport lor a var-BI u e pr Int r 01 d Ing MILJ gen«al clean up. Flex ,...._ ...... -e......... 111 DUFFIELD ELECTRIC, $4 100. 241•8849.
ON flit wrs1 COASI
FOUND: Nike Shoe & 8oclc . i.ty of peopi. noceeury Ablllfy to dMl ...... lloure Pieue cell Rover• _, ...._ SURREY TOP, 19000
on Beyeido Dr & Jam-O:,~A'Qc, REc,~o;;:; Xlnt beneflll i Nlary 10 with cuttomora. oetlmel• If you W::CS:t.t'f~ extra RMltY 875-231 1 hH ..... IH..... 875..e181 MAZDA GLC ·91 Hatcnbk.
£VEIY flD)(1 I COLOR c•ur•aY =u:'s::::O c:ell & tel • .p roq~B &42~2t2t !!~ orp~~ ~.!.'!: l<>bt10 ~ ICJporvtM.'!.!.O lapendlng money, or IHt• Ulllml ASSIST U~l~~es~~~~~RE 18' T-BIRD Formula OMC ~e..~:nrn&: .,., ....,.._.., _.,.,,.... f!or con--o go plac.e Ilk• M1glc 8 · 190 hp "78. lo hre. xlnt b / , ....._22•2 Jeff Found: Pel Rabbit -lllllAL lllPT 10 •lion. PIMM Mnd re-Mountain. Knott1 S.ry Part-tlmo. 8am.-2pm In· ante Ana cond SG500. 875--0283 11 0 '
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1/08/88 In MHdOWI Group prac;11ce Falhlon aumo and Nlary roqulr• Farm. ()( win Prtz .. Ind vellmenl Advllor "9od• Btwn Edlng« & Warner Ott -.------MB ·19 450 SL lmmec.
MoOlle Hm Partc, Irvine t1ltnd PhonH -Apptl IUCEL CllP men11 (mand11ory) to Ad Award1, Call u1 nowl we miture P«IOn for lele-Mein 51· See the Beerl 28 Chrli ~en 1980 lvory/Tob1cco. Orig
H ,, ''J' •' •4 r f. H
f/1 l 1 842-2000 5 52-780 evu or Exp req"d. FIT 6'4-1025 140 N. Orange Ave. ••2. Dally Piiot ClaHI-have MVeral openlng1 In phone worlt, computer• 111-1220 lwn VB. Sl5,000 ALSO · ownr 127.500 575-03!9
250-112• dye. Nurtlng ___ -lnduatry. CA 9174' fled, Sox 1580, Colla C M • H.B. or J: v exp h411pful 840-5500 Open 10-e. Sun 12-5 ~~~°':.!~~Dy MBZ 230 •75 4'0r. Sunrf,
FOUND Wht mele Poodle •tu EOE Attn L Sott~/F/H Moee. CA 92128 M2~ lllll091 Tuma 3 5 cu f1 Senyo refrlg. xlnt 3-· -AIC. NEW: radlelOt, "'"· ..... e.I.
v c I y H 1m111 on i EllP« All lhlf1i for home _ AUTOMOTIVE DELIVERY Engineering Co. Santt cond I 125. Phllco uprght L • ~~Bini~ :,M wtr pump, brk1 & eerb. .... lH
<chard. HB ite2-8313 c:er• Mull have phone 1 llllnll•IT TYNllTTll/ ss.10 p/hr PIT. 1tudent1 An• No oxp. noc Freoior. xtnt eond, wn110 ::: cell 873-2500 · <>-Rent tuno up, emog oer1. "cXil0"17li5P-ie::&jjiiiiiiiiiiii,.•:t1t_,w.•&tg•
LOST cnocotete Lab rellablo tran1p. CHA '°' N.8 . Aftt/Dwelopor, PUii IP llTllT pref MS-5780 af1 3-Stove 5-4S-1008 •11 2pm EOE S 150945-9441 15000. 642-1939 ownr. utro rOOf, • MW
heed, mele. vety Hw°p:1 Ml p /ht NA S5.25/hr. PIT morn•. eomo bkkpg. &m PllTl/1 "' m'I ~D... Litton comb. -WcrO-FOR SALE.BY OWNER MBZ ·93 SEc. Top of the tlr .. & brkt. 75K ml.
MoM O... 557-8078 Homemaker• $4.75 p/hr. Ille typing. 873-3771 Immediate opening for Muat have vaNd C~~-,_,_ w1ve/range/elec gd end Beaulllul 51 See Range.. llne. laciory trelh, tMe 15250 831-e340
:-=-:::-::--::----,-.,...----CaH for lf)pt DOCTORS oxpor typeMtter Mu11 era lie, good driving r• ... ._.., ~ 1500/bO 780-0485 Mot0< Yechl (Slmlller over peyment1. Mutt heve CAD •81 ELDO ~
LOST Gold brecoiet, vcty & NURSES. Prvt Duty ll•flt•T have heve mark-up cord Apply at Hub Auto The Sponlng Houle. Npt llyle to Ha11era1 53) good credit. 472.(1127 buullful. Llko new Balboe Vecht Club ~ 3900 Birch $1 NB M~ F0t Orenge County Photo Hper., paste-up back-Supplleil 2120 Harbor 81 8ch lam 10 2pm lhlfl Portabte MaytlQ Dryer, Twin 871 Detroit o.11, 1 000 wat'df 875-8089 Frt.9-5,851-2112 · Lab/Merkettng firm. ground helpful Xlntben-CM a.e.'.2414 ... cteud' evlll.CellAlch.752-0515 •lntcond.1110. •Br . 3 81. loaded MERCEDESBENZ '85280 7 .Aft 6pm 873·9384
Loet· .,..,. Shih Tiu Dec PIOMant phone manner, eflte Including medk:el & • 145-94.41 w/elec'lrontea. prof~ SEL loedod. enthr grtiy, CAD •94 El Ooflldo lake
20 CdM "'Port ThMt trical/ accuaratt typist. front of-donlal tnaurance. con-lllDY Ill.NI lllll.W 111111 R.ooncS refrlgt walhora & muctl morel A tMI buy ~ 100origml133.800 over IN '3 mo' toh
Rftwd •99-5883 ev1 re BOOKKEEPER· um no. appearance MUS1 bo genl91 llmotphef•. Con-Loolclng f()( mature reap Lonnye Hair Salon & Photo d'Y9'• S75 10 S275. 1830 II S259.000. Low Down. 2 ..e&.48 for IPPt $398/mo: Hatter It blUo:
1 yr exp. con1truc1lon 1blo to Interact with taci All11a, 8'2·4321 ext peraon 10 work In Bek~ Studio want1 maik•up Superior, CM 831_3 197 Gd fine w/1pprovod MERCEDES BENZ .8~ fullyloedod pp 6'6-6476 la,•u-... exprhelpfut 848-9501 cllon11.(71•)2•1-7313 291 Sl'lop.WINtrlln.Mull llke modol1. Woman, ag1 8 credl1 Clltf830-2400otc, 300TDWgn. ~wt~. CAO CdV ,71 1000 B·y ~=======~;;....;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..1 ..... nllt1f1•1t 17-25. Pholoe In ••• WA HEA & DRYER S1•5 145-7525 Evea1Wknd1 I . t __.. ....... r llAlllll,.T 1° CO<* Hra 5em-1pm, changeformodeltng.Call MCh.G .. 11oveS125 llhr nl,enrf,alr. 23, · owner. Xlnt motor/Irena
.B rHI "t•1• office. _, on B•lbOa latand. Betty, Lenny 876-0823 CdM Dllhw9hr 1100. &48-5148 ll h 7 4 ( 1JWS 10.4) s•e-CARS Gd tr111a. &41-1458 After School-
Student Jobs!
Do You Need $ Cub $ And
A Good Job To Start Tbe New Year?
W• .,. lootclng for Jr. High and High
School ltudenta end other9 who ~
enfoy telclng wtth people end ~
wtth other etudenta tMtr own •· Vou can eem 125.00 to sso.oo ..o, week In
commlMION end MUCH MOREi You cen
wortc PART TIME In the 1nemoone end
~end""',..,. pfenty of free ttme. Vou T 8E FREE AFTtR ICHOOll
We ~ oomplMe tralntng end provide
tr8ftlPC)rtaUOn. Thie la NOT A PAPER
AOUTE ANO 18 NOT SEV£N DA Y8 A
WEEKI Come out end help u. get new
cuetomera for our ~ end Nive 1
grMt time doing It. Vou hew nof'*'O to roe. end • 8"C* job to gain. Call lodey
end meyt>e you can 1tart tomorrowt
Call Mr. F.arl
~48-70H or 241·102
:~·::~1%. p~o;:urpa~'; 330~~t.~~-t Beeuty 873-7437 MOTHERS MARKET & tut 4 2:·e,a'?so;,, w/lttif ~ NABERS
m•HQe taking Ind ""ht COil• MeN. Ce 92627 KITCHEN hu Ollpandod . ·-r .. Ota1 on.
omoedllt1oe.ca11 "" M2·Q21 TILDTDmurr andnOWhMlmmodl•I• lllYFllllTllE •2500 oa0.788-t519 CADl.LAC
Ir'/ Lu 759-9100 M-F th fotlowlng to work In oponl"Of fOt: LES 9574133 2 La9W rec:lflo '*lboete
-grelt Hlon Hlglloll mf/lllJlll 7 F White hull $900 & Y .. low • ee e e •• ee ee e e • e ee ee e e ee ••" commlMlon. Aleo looking Ill.I Plllla t. c04JCh S95. Loveteot hull 11000 87s.,.1181 LARGEST SELECTION
0 -lor ambllloul ualetont --•-S75. 2 Velvet matching • •• '111•• of lato mod91. low mltoege • DELIVERY DRIVER I Call Anthony Micha.. ......, .. 111 ehalrt, apflcot aso ... .,, :;r;~ ..... l Brown/Tafl,OXCCOnd .low Cod"*-lnOfenge
• • S11on. M S-031 t •• ,.,. like new. &42-4397 la 11 1t21 ml.. ~ rocordi, 1 Coufttyl Seo ut tod.,i
• Daily Piiot motor route • Wl1Dll llU Apply 255E. 17th St. C.M All ElectrlO Hoopttel BodQki oOf-)'Ht w1rran1y. (975281) 140-1100 • e wtth 1t1act1mont1 1150. BOARD MOTOR a 111,111 2800 .... ..... • available. in Huntington • E•perloncod: GrlH ~ • ... •Mimi Crtb witn mettr ... s20 500· M llmla Harbor ... .... : e General Worllor No S.V.al e>penlngt fOt ordel Call ~ 5pm-7pm c:ell 5-48--0289 ---· .._ COSTA MESA
0 Harbor area. 1-2 hours O =:i, or9wtc75nd52•57&-2:30. tM41fl In Santi Ana ofc Tun. or WOd. M2-:Je.41 H,./hck1 terwt OOt ••JI CHEV Cemeto '78 Ane gel.
Per afterno • • · Mull be neat courtlOUf - --•• 1 Ovall 81 . NB nu motor/point. 13200 : On. o • ...._. & have car C.,i Jimmy AH French Provincial Din -833-9300 • Call 642 4333 M • --·-•LP ee2-58'4 Mt ong l 2800.w .s1400_ 30'8EXRXYweektAoeR --------obO ~uetao11 941-7oee • -; onday -• Brtoht. energetic pereon Col tbt Ml 1550. o!Ogant CIOan. Rod. to $31 5M 11•••• L•1•11• .. "'AU • Friday 10-5 P.M. Ask for • needed for count• help, ... nnn eofa/loVMt $150, occu 8rotter 873-6200 ..... -IU--USEDCAAS& TAUCKS
0 Art • 1 Hr Photo lab AMc '°' No Miii no .. ,,., nee Chr11150.XtnlfS43·4705 .....,.,........,,... COMEINOACALL,OR . • Gary. MS-242• e ';l: PM N.B SUP: e..· lnQ, 18.2 Attend our ..... Mmlnor : e -"'V911P•M CF. 5-9 M. Sal Antique reproduction wldo etralihl fn ap· and reclove 1 frto .. ifflAllM.
0 C o 011-tr PtrtH •-· ompany w I Lewyere Bootccaae $75 ' h 8 I I ......... -'-• OoULLO e r•nr,• 088t 0 •• !rain Cell Jonni e Antique Enoliah oM d . proao . oro ac I. porta.,.. ""'" vacuum. • Del v Piiot • 0 e11P«tenc. noc. wt11 882-58'3 •• S300 83'1_7975 In Powor/aoll 752-9511 with credit epprovel. -....0 e 1 train 8am-.4:30 Appfy In • SLIPS A~ 25•30.,..,. 12. LMtn lbOUI '"9lng In 1121 1lllACH8LVD. • 330.W. B•y Drive : P9faon 1-44-4•21 P/TIUNUU -ESTATE SALE: Time 11 of 3333 w CoeatH~ our oftloo ,,.., South HUNTINGToNBEACH : C t ....__ • llLMIY Plllll Meture bookkHPln, the ouonce. Entn EMt· ~ 9eh .. 5 Mon-Fri eo..1raa. MT....,, ... 1111
• 09 • -..•, CA : 2809 Newe>or1 INvd. ~~ T time In N.e blU1f htNd. 7ao.93t7 UP TO 50' LIP or END-AU·~· 1"'1 WE I UY CLEAN,
-••• •••••••• •••••••• •••••• Nwport Booch 175-1353 7~2 Cerol 0~~!'[~~=~ TIE on '=~lneuta. l141Dr.1'f:r ~~~1~a:.o,t..r
_.. ______ "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!-m!!llm!!!!!!! __ .. •••••••••eeeeee••••••••• .. 8AMPL.ES 0 8 lrondon CARS, TAUCK8 & VAHS.
BEST PAR • · • Ltd Doelgn Ctntor at. rau,.rtatln -
Openin1• Now Av•ll•ble
E•rn Extr• C••h
For O.llvery 01 Thi• P•per
HUNTINGTON BEACH
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
INDEPENDENT
Deliver 1 day a week. No
• collecting . no sollcltlng.
Must have dependable car.
truck or station wagon and
Insurance
CALL 842 -1444
T TIME : paftT TIME • Sou1h.Sto101.&43.()339 CHIC. •oe IN T • " : FULL a•z.E IEO eu.~ .... • • • . • OWN • TELEPHO~E • •mo·°"'·"' &cwmtt ,.,.._. ~ : l "W e _ &4()..0.f11 Flt1 e ft. bod. $250 obO. POUCH! 0.1.1 M-640 Qd() Energetic people needed with a • A LE • Muet ao11. MllhoG ltdnn 541-1231 AUOt
pleasant telephone voice to con-: : ~t!:..~ia~ .. ,.,... H~~~~ .. ~.!Jn-""•
• • Chra sao1 ... "°'*' con· MOTOAtiOM! ........ ,vtc. .._ duct marketing atudy for leading • t.a rn A \ ou I f'u rn : ec1to 1 150. hot rte* 930. ·11 or nw.r. PelO for or CHICll ._Yonodol..,,_
local newepaper. ..NO SELL-• • '7MH1 . .....,. moa not. (415)134-1147
ING." Houre: Mon.·Frl. 5:30 PM ! .!:~;: ~ ·~l'.~g ::~~ ~:,"u~~·~_:· : :~~~i;f65:/. tlitl Liii ~!'
to 9:30 PM, Sat. 9:00 AM to 1:00 "" • oote 111 ~t I~ : • MOO. tolebd 1HO Oek: fllll111 671-•te• PM. $84 a week to atart, ehare ln • t:urltr111 "'nrk ln1t i·o n · : Mlunttl380,bdrmMOO .... 1!:::=====~~ite51!!1lt'ffiii~
Part hi fl f 1 • 1·11 I I • dln..ctaeo 14S-47os mt.... ,.,.__,, nera p pro te • te r at o '• on... "8 11n p "" r nm· • HuNTiNOTO•UleACH POMQ4I '?9 111 to. 11.&o.1
week. Plcaaant working con-• mi,'-lon.. • CHAVS1.t,.1Pt.VMOUTH Coupe. hOll, Jow mlee. im:;;;:r:n.,.:;~;:;; .. ;:•;;114~\~ • • ~,... .. "*"'"'· 10 842.()131 M0-f114 117.200,c.11414-1117
dltlon1. private de1lc It ph•n•. : : ;:11~°"20~ .... 100~1'1'-, ~ ·11 .,1,-1-80-.
C I t I A I I t • • .. ...., ..._ ,... ---aeua a t re. rea un Job • • s11.v1A OOIOCtton 117 ,..,, 1.,, im , """-;;:
MAN AG E M E N T Op 4 : •
10 1121. -.. .. teooo. g::. cond. 11t .too.
PORTUNITIES. For Interview • I ur ''" "l'Jrninano-111 rnll : :!.:':,=· PlHNtU. 1111118 . . -.1n1 "'""'
• h '2-•322 • Wfleetlo ~.!':9'1C::. 11 OOff"9-"" p/e. ..... .,, .......... call David Grant' at 64J·U33 • " t t • PEACE 11.~A .. .,: ..... w ,.... *-. .._,....,., lllfb A·' r-: e l9cfton 1'21 to 1135 (lor#Ol40)(l•U2417) OOIM, flK fli, .._ "'l&OiJi=-'rlr"'fO=-:r.il1:r.if,..,.,..,~-iiili-r--
between 9:00 AM . 3 :00 PM M-F. • fi.•f \\1'4'11 .HHl-IHHI I'·"' : Vt111t 11000. _.. toi -now. 111,110 ..... 1'N plb • .,......,lrli:
• • 1 1eoo, too t>r#llont un-OMHcli COAIT a. GNP ...,.. -. 1111
Au tor JoAnn• Cr•.n•y 642-4338 : \~k for tw.n \\ 1ll1~m... : :.~ :::· :Z.,.-: ,.,.4~.._ ~~.=-= ...., ;.. 2 -------'!!"~ ----~--..1!!!!!!!~~---111!~~------.. .. ............... ... .... 10'4 ~ .. ,.,. •• 1111 . Cll......,. ,..., iiiiii ~-')
..
ao.
ilo,
l)O,
Id
If • I.
~
\
25~
TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1986
AIDS--.column author ousted
By STEVE MARBLE °' ... ..., ........
Michael Shindler, the hiah 1ehool
student who successfully sued his
school and principal over a disputed
editorial he wrote on AIDS, clainK
school officials have retaliated by
rcmovina him u editor of the campus
.
NEW SLIN l
C~•t I
Five prospective Re-
publican Senate can-
dldatee disagreed on gay
rlghta laaue./ A3
Nation
Task force report aaya
hunger exlata In 150__
counties, many aurprta-
lngly In the nation's bread
basket./ Al
World
U.S. offlctal auggesta Iran
waa wtthln tradltlonal
war-time rights to H&Ch
merchant vessel./ M
Guatamala' a prealden~
elect Oppc>MI U.S. poflcy
toward Nicaragua./ M
Sporta
Another look at the retire-
ment of Orange Coast
College football coach
Dick Tucker./81
Former Newport Harbor
High track atar Brian
Theriot will be competing
Frlday./81
Entertainment
The tights go up on stages
In Newport Beach and
Garden Grove thla week-
end./ A 10
Buaineu
The Pacmc Stock Ex-
change Inaugurated Its
new quarter• Monday
wtth members enshrining
their economic predic-
tions In a capaule.1115
INDEX
Bulletin Board
Bualneaa
Claaalfled
Comics
Death Notices
Entertainment
Fun& Games
Opinion
Paparazzi
Potlce Log
Public Notices
Sport a
Tetevlak>n
Weather
A3
85-7
88-10
A9
88
A10
A8
A6
A7
A3
88
81-4
A7
A2
newapeper
. Shindler, who attends Westminster
Kiah School, filed a complaint in Oranae County Superior Court aslc-
ina that the 1ehool be prevented from
replacir\a him as ed1tor of the Scroll ,
the school newspaper. Commisaio~ qreer Stoud' on
Friday &ranted Schindler a hcanna
for Jan. 30.
Shindler was informed Dec. 20 that
his role u newspaper cditor will be
terminated at the conclusion of the
school semester on Jan. 31, acc0rdin1
to his attorney Susan Borses .
'That's htahlY. unusual," said
Schmdlcr's attorney, who said atu·
dents traditfonally have served tw~
semester 1tinll a1 editot.
"We contacted past editors and
nobody had ever heard of somethina
like this." Schindler said. "W~ have
')
documents aoina blck five'yean." Schindler accused the achool of
But Robert llOeb~. pnnclpet of "involvina joumaliJta with popu-
tbe hiah ICbool, laid Schindler bas his ~1oontett1" and cbaraed they are
fellow atudentl to tbanJc for what . • a _promi.1e that fie would be
could be perceived u bis out1er. ednor for tbe enure year.
"On a cluwoom vote of 13-2, SchiodlerwunamededitorlaatfaJI
(journalism) ttudents decided they by t.bcjoumalism adviser and said h~
wanted to e*1 an editor for the wu told that we would direct the
leCOnd temester," Boehme uid. student pepet for the entire year.
''Mike could run 111is:t if he likes." 8otles uid school officials arc
"It appearJ he ~u to trold onto'jretaliltina because of a lawsuit the
hi1job becaute he's worried be won't hiah 1Chool 1enior filed in November
be ~lected." . Boeh~e sa,id. "He's apinst Boehme •. Westminster H~ah
afraid of runn1na 1111n1t h11 ~n.'' · School and Hqntanaton Beach Union
Hiah School Dt1trict Superintendent
Marie Otto.
The suit eJ.aimed school o~
were violatlnj ScbindJer1 oomtitu·
tional riahts 6y refuainJ.. ~ print u
editorial he wrote on A1PS.
The editorial attacked Mota.I Ma-
JOrity leader Jerry Falwell aod Rep.
Wilham Dannemeycr, R-fullenon.,
for allqed~ un~ ~
views on AIDS. The editorial .abO
criticized the mus media for what
Schindlff said was 1t11ensationaliltic ·
(Pleue ... 8TVDSllT/A2) •
~Ing fro• one ~fthe be8t ... Fitness center's
use of greenbelt
gains backing"'
Daw maJon at UC lrriDe learn from oae
of tlle bellt llOladaJ d~ a Ylalt to tlae
caapu "1 latmaatloaal ballet ..., Ala-..._ OodaDOY. ~ a ,,._
ballet clue ID a daaoe 9tadlci at tlut rtne
Arta eo.g~ Goda.Do• proTtded ....... ..
1eaJ'Md Jean of perf ...... OD ~ aroand tile wor1a. Amo... the
danoen wbo recelnd ladbtdaal polDten wu llary OedJ, top. of lrriDe.
County commtsston
votes to amend local
coastal plan for area
Moody.
The commission's action pleased
Allen, who maintained he us always
wanted the fitness academy to be an
Orange County despite some doubts
by other members of the foundauon's
board.
BJ LISA MARONEY Allen said he canceled a board of
.... ...,,......., dfrecton meeting set for today to
The Orange County Plannmg decide whether. the foundation
Commission Monday recommended should stai:t lookin1.claewberc for~
that about 200 acres of the Aliso a~my s1te. Kc said the board w~I
Grecnbch be™~ foe lbC-non-~aat to sec how the acadcm s
profit National Fitness Foundation, conccptua P an a~ be o~ t
which wants to build a fitness board of ~upc:rvasors this m~mang. .
academy there. Supervisor Thomas Riley, an
Commissioners voted 3-2 10 whose dastnct the academy would be
amend th~ Aliso Viejo Local Coastal located, spoke an favor of the ~t.aJ
Plan to replace a money making plan amendml'.Jlt Monday, an andaca-
rcsort hotel900nvcntion center con· uon that ~arher mistrust over th~
ccpt with the academy scheme foundation s commitment to Ahso
promoted by George Allen, chairman V 1e10 has been smooth~ over.
of the President's Council on Physical Local env1ronmentahsts wc!'C not
Fitness and Sports and former coach pleased with the comm1ss100 s rec-
ofthe Los Anaeles Rams. ommendauon. ~una <;Jrccnbelt
Only one of the commissaoncrs, Inc .. an orpnWltton dedicated to
new c hairman c. Douglas prcservauon of some 15.000 acres of
Leavenworth, was actually opposed undeveloped land 10 south Oranac
to allowing the academy to make its County· fouabt for 20 Y~ to .act the
home alona Aliso Creek. H.G Os-open space set a~adc for wildlife and
borne. who also voted apinst amend-nature loven, said Jon Bra~ former
ina the Local Coastal P1an, objected Greenbelt president, one-tame ma,yor
to tut minute chanacs included in a of Lquna Beach and a pouibk
motion by Commiss10ner Tom (Pl_.. ... rITNS88/.A.2)
Murder charged
in crash death
By STEVE MARBLE °' .............
Murder charges were filed Monday
apinst two men who were involved
in a drug arrest that led to a freeway
car chase and. ultamattl)'.. a fatal
accident that claimed the hfe ofa 23-
year-old college student.
Costa Mesa resident Luis Carlos
Escobar, 25, was reportedly speeding
about 80 mph in a high-performance
Jaauar late Thursday when he lost
cony-ol on a freeway offramp and
struck two cars, killing o ne of the
drivers.
Escobar. a convicted felon. was
characd Monday with murder, pos-
session ofa loaded handaun by a felon
and six charges relating to the sale of
cocarne. ·
A Sttond man. who was miles awa}
when the fatal acc1dent occurred. also
was charged with murder becauS<" of
has suspected involvement an a drug
deal that prompted the treeway chase
DaVld J. Guucrrcz. 25. was charged
with murder and six drug charges.
Both men arc being held an lieu of
S2SO,OOO bail at Orange County Jail.
The car accident on the Lincoln
Boulevard exit of the Santa Ana
Frcc:way an Anaheim claimed the hfe
of-9av1d Vaca, a 23-ycar-old graduate
student at C.al State Fullerton.
Officen saJd Escobar apparently
thought ht' was being chased by drug
agents when he pulled off the fret"way
at about 80 mph. His Jaguar hit the
curb. became airborne and landed on
top of Vaca's Volkswagen, police
said. Vaca was lulled instantly. a ·
cording to a coroner's d~puty
State law permits murder chargcs
to be filed under cen.aan cond1t1on'
against dnveT"i involved in fatal car
acc1dcnts But no one has been
cdnv1c1e<l of m urdcr in a car acc1dcn t
an Oran1te ( ountv to date
(Pleue eee MURDER/ A:.2)
Firemen pitch in Fat layer linked to heart attack;
discovery may lead to treatment for boy with burns
Family couldn't meet
· paymentforson's
skin raft operation
-This i1 the story of a milCbievous ).
year.aid and a veteran fireman whote
paths croued thtouab mjsfonuise.
Both are better olr from knoWina
each other.
It was the fint week of December
when Raymond Mientkiewic:z de-
cided, II children IOmctimet will, lO
ellplore the top of the kitchen counter
in his perent'• Huntinpon Bllch
home.
But his Clltplorations had an un·
fonunatc endaftl.
Raymond beciune ~in a cord
atuc6ed IO I -"1e'" ftUed with boillna~ oil. Whetl bl tried to ~
• himeelf, UM ~ apilled, lplaueriftl
the bar'• rilbt Mad UMI arm wi"' ecatdial oil.
"It birned Ma um, •veral fta,m
and the iMidl °'""elbow," Mid 1be boy's motblr,...,.,.. M9o d ~
out oftbe kitcben mome11t1~ tbe
ICddn• OCCUfNll. The boy'1 ..,_ .. nallMd Ray·
mond to a w"'Y .aHa medical dWcwlln•-=-«s= ... ..... ••a1111••1'1111
doctor waa WfOlll.
STEVE
lllllf
Focus o~ rHf NlVv S
The bums actual!).'. were thlrd-
depec, u Raymond s parents di-. ............... ._.
coveted the ne.t ~Y-when they aaymomd -..tMewllia hwrie4-him to the UCI burn ward.--
The boy's arm later became black "We wen eo distnUlbt. This
with inf'eCtion and he was hospi&al• happenina npt beb'e Christmas
ized for eiaht days for watmcnt and and all, h eon of medc u.1 feel like
skin Jnft operations. nobody really ~ " she said.
''The doctor Mid he miaht lote UIC But HuntiQ&tOn lelCh rU"efipter
of bi1 rilbt arm,.. the mothtr said. Jan Sander did.
"But tbeftfta took very well. I thank "MJ. II-year-old daulbter worb
he11 be mt·· witb.,.,.. at the cou•tty dub and But tbere wu another problem: she came home one day rel.Uy
Moaey. Rlymond'1 parents d idn't ~mmed out. When I ubd her wbat
bave much. wu wroat .a.c IOld me about Shal'Oft .. We Juat moved out from Detroit aad RaytnOllCI. ..
about a ,.ar lllO and we•ve been Sender leernecl ltaymond'1 ~ts Hvi1t1 on a pretty low income,•• did not bave enoiiO money b ~ ..W. "No ialuruot." lb~ IMdical Wt.. Noc ~
Tiie ~'"""~YI at a lrill i~ tbeSSOOthcy_.. bli11111bd to po1t .... ~ CCNallY CUb iallwt~ ima.dill .. ) ..,.... ..... ....
.................. h ........ ~
cleliwr11 momiftl ne-....r. • (fls111 -IM •IM)
SARASOTA. Fla. (AP) -A layer
of fat surroundina the heart may
caux heart attacks by producin&
cbcmical1.that prompt the arowth of
leaky new blood vcncls an the walls of
the hean'1 artencs, and the discov~ry
could lead to new ways of prevcntana
heart diseax, rcsearchcn said.
Researchers have found 1ndlred
evidence that these tiny. fraaile blood
vct1els lead to the formation of blood
clots that are often the cau1e of hean
at&acka, which kJll more than ~.000
Americans each year.
Their flndina could help uplam
one way tut upitin and other dnaat
prevent bean 1uacks u well •
provide another reason why a high·
fat diet is bad for the hcan.
The reteU-ch, being conducted at
Chijdren's He>1p1&al and Harvard
Medical School an Boston. was pres·
ented Monday at a science wnters
forum sponsored by the Amencan Heart Aaoaatlon.
' ~ fOrmahon ofnew OloO<I ves·
tels. a proceSacaOed ana.aoaencs•'-has
been a subject of inten~ study an
recent ~. This prOC6s has been
imolicated In a vanety of d111CUCS.
lncludlna cancer, blandness and
rbeumatoid arthritis. -
Doaora have 1dent1fied a vancty of
IO<&lled ansioeetuc factor Lbat an· ---
duce the bodv to make th<-'f nr~
hlood vc SCI\
The coronary anenes run through a
laytr of fat called «"p1card1al fat And
the ~rchen hthevc th•~ lat
produces an angaogcnac factor that
causes the formation of the tan-v bloo•l
ve5$el&.
"I thank the poss1b1hty 1& very high
that the an11~nac factor" that an-
rtach1na the coronary ant"nc~ art"
comma from fat." sa1d Dr Rrut'<' R
Zcttrr.
"Wr have found chat virtually all
km<h of fat ancludina ep:1card1al fat.
(Pleue-P'AT/A2)
Cl~ finds cleanup plan unacceptable
''Tb!• bu toM on Iona cnol.l&b. ••
Rich Barnard. an uaaa&ant to C'aty
AdminilUlitor Charles ThomptOn
said. "It's die .ar'lt bouaan& I know of
ln the dry. They (the landlords) are
the ones who allowed it to It\ wbert
it'• at today."
Tbe apanmen11, a srouJ> of 20 four·
._ apettlMfth on Com~
l"itde .1utt off Main S1fttt and west of &be~ Fi~ f>otnuShoppena Caw~ ~ COllltructed in the
IMOL
TMy are overcrowded laqel wtlh
Soutbea11 Asian rcfueecs and 1llepl
aliens from Muaco. eccordlna to
otfiaals The unns havt spawned repona of •
becked up IOlkU. broken beaten.
boles ln tloon anct lhodd1 ~""· Barnard. -"'<>'• coordinatint aty dfon1 to bnnt the apen.ments up to
staftdard, u1a that reomt -.o-
t1ation1 with the nine laJtdlordt bave
fallen ttu,,. becaute of dw tect of .....-..cc,.,,. .......... -----~,1
the ..,.,unen•• win bt .,..,,,
(1111a11 -CL&AllVP/U)
L~una group plans protest
of supecintendent' s f-irieg
., LAU&l MD& "-tonl&ht's sc~ool boaf'.d meettna. •• con1en1 of the other members. When ... .._,...... T6at Ouuel.• C?Oftllclen 8uMI an the board racba that hem it can
exoellent ldm1nastrator" is only oae cboee IO vote on it°' table it.
A lf'OUP of about. 30 people are or the reasons for hi' unha1>9ineu ~A matter of that aaanificance aflClld lO tuna out lD pro~t oftbe with the board vote. abould not have been (introdU«d) as LallllM leach School Boerd •recent Barnes served u the super-1 ~tal item .. Deniels Wd ~ DOt 10 renew Super-•tntendent for tbe P9lt J'h )'.earl and Oorina bis four-~ term Den.iels •~'I ~Y lamct contJ'IC1 at a was hi~ 11 y~ 110 u director of II.id they often talked about solicitina IDl!IUlll _.L insttUCuonal servtces. bl' Aol:lciclina lb Ursula Eastman, • The vote to end hi1 contract came pu• tC~mnaent. • • • •
•.-Bellcb resident and member at Mas' first mcetina. Mas succeeded ·~1.1 ye h~ 11, let 1 brina the
ola loolely Of'Pllized Bamea support Daniels on the board. • pubbc an. I thin~ I wou)~ like to know
eroup. muy people in the comm,uni-"I am amu ed that she cou&d make more abo"!t tbelt deci~on ,tha~ was %.. lft 11111')' oYet ~ 3-2 Dcce.!Qber that decision. I don't know how. in made at 2 in the mom1~ Id llke to
cWoe and wrut It reversed. aood conscience, she could place that know ~.~ ~e pubhc was not
loud members Janet Vicken, swins vote and I would like her to notified, e wd.
ClllUteac Reptz and new member justify her decision.'' be said. Mcetinp of th~ ~ of t!le
..._ Ma voted n9t to renew But Daniels bad other conc:ema l..quna Beach Unified School Dis-
Blrnet' contl'ICl. HarrY Bithell and about the vote that took place at 2 trict often extend into the wee hours Dr. ~Schwan voted to retain the a.m. The discussion of Bames' con-or the momina leavina few in the ~tendeat. tract was put on the qenda u a audience. We ~ abocked," Eastman said supplc~ental item and ~scullions Ac:cordina to Eastman th~ aroup
o(1be deci11on. took place in closed session. Sup-will ask the board to rccons1dcr its
·Fonner .. board member Dan plemental items are usually placed on decision and 1,>lace it on the qenda for
Daniela said aJthouab be is affi~iated the agenda at the last DU~ute. Any a future m~una..
witb the .support ar~up. he wdt be board member or the su~nntendent The meeui:ia. Wiii t;>e held 7:30 p.m. :-ottna only ~~lf w~~n he can add additional subjects to the at the admintStrauve offices.. SSO
tbeboardt0Ju1ufy1tsdcc1s1onat agenda witho ut the knowledae or BlumontSt.
C-ounty finally me-ets court
ordei:edjail-populationlimit
8J .... A.aada ... Press
SANTA ANA -Orange County
.... 6nally aotten its jail population
llllCler limits aet by a court order, but
lben are no Ju&rantces the low figures
will lut, officials said.
OD Monday, there were 1.450
i•meta in the men's jail in down-
town Santa Ana, 35 miles southeast of
LoeAaeeJes, said sheriffs Lt .. Richard
Ollon.
That's SO prisonen under the
number which U.S. District Judge
Toxic spill
shuts down
highway
Wilham P. Gray said would be
allowed on Jan. IS. By April I, the
county has to rcduc.c the number even
fu rther.to J,400. '
But when asked if the numbers
would remain under the coun allot-
ment through the Jan. IS deadline,
Olson said: "The department is doing
everything they can to meet that
deadline. However, you can't prcch ct
(inmate levels) ahead of time."
When Gray ordered sweeping
changes last year, more than 2,000
inmates were crowded into tbe jail
Ortcga-ttighway was-closed for-at
least six hours Monday when toxic
chemicals were found illegally dump-
ed by the side of the road.
No one was injured by the sp ill.
An Orange County Fire Depart-
ment hazardous materials team re-
sponded to a caJI l·ust before 6 p.m.
about an unusua odor about I. 7
miles west of the Oranie-Riverside
county line. said public information
.
built to house I, 191. The judae firat
ordered the county to ease crowdina
in 1978L
FaiJure to follow hi:s initial orden
resulted in heavy fines, a contempt
citation for Orange County SberifT-
Coroner Brad Gates and a new round
of ordeis. ·
The county shifted several inmates
to new modular uniu installed al the
James A. Musick branch jail
"That certainly helped a lot by
giving the depanment. more ca-
pacity." Olson said.
officer Pantntnnr.
They found six, 30-gallo n
cardboard boxes containing the
chemicals benzene and diethyl
sulphate in liquid form, Antrim said.
The chemicals are toxic if inhaJed
and mildl~ toxic if touched, he said.
Officials clOted down Ortega Hi.gh-
way in both d irections from La Pat.a
A venue in San Juan Capistrano to the
Riverside County line.
FITNESS AC.ADEMY GAINS BACKING •••
J'romAl
contender for Riley's Sth Distnct scat
this November. One of the county's conditions o n
preterving the areenbeh was that the
peenbelt pay for itself through rev-
enue-senerating activities Jj\:e the
~ proposed resort ho tel-<:an vention
center, Bra11d said.
He questioned whether more in-
tenlC development of the greenbelt
would now occur to make up for the
county's gift of land to the fitness
foundation.
Brand, along with Laguna Beach
City Manager Ken Frank, also urged
the commiMion to ,JC1 stronger
suarantecs that the public will be able
to use fitness academy facilities.
A lease pre~ by the county's
real estate divuion sets no minimum
requirement for public use of the
parcel other than unrestricted access
to iu bicycle trails and a promise by
. the foundation that it will allow youth
I aroups to USC its sports fields on an as-
availablc basis.
T he U.S. Fitness Academy as
proposed by Allen would include a
250,0QO.square-foot main bll_ilding
wi th playing fields for a host ofSports
along with swimming pools, tennis
c-0 urts, classrooms and dormitories
for students.
The fo 11ndation·s goal is to teach
physical fi tness to teachers, walk-on
and part-time league coaches and
others in hopes of providing better
fitness opportun1t1es to everyone
from youths to scmor citizens.
Tlie academy would be constructed
with private donations.
The foundation chose Orange
County for its proposed academy
because of its climate and location
near a major metropolitan center
Locations an Malibu. Houston and
Dallas WC{e m the runnmg for the
opportunity to host the academy. as
was Coto de Caza. a private com·
m unity south of Aliso Viejo.
The fou ndation's eagerness to get
on with the prOJCCt coupled w11h its
architect's unfamiliarity with state
Coast.al Commission requirements
seemed destined to topple O range
County from consideration in mid-
Deccmber.
Some foundation board members
reportedly wanted to look elsew~ere
for an easier path to construction.
prompting two count)' supe~isors to
question the $60.000 m st.afT~1me that
had been dona ted to the project.
But Allen seems to have won the
tug-of-war over guarantees de-
manded by each side that the other
show its commitment to building the
fitness academy at Aliso Viejo.
While county planners have
worked feverishly to prepare the
Local COastal Plan amendment, a
conceptual site plan and project
guidelines for the board of super-
visors blessing, the foundation has
yet to to accept the county's offer to
donate the 200-acre site.
FIREMEN COME THROUGH FOR BOY •••
Prom Al
.. I thou&h 'What the heck.' My
family's doing pretty well and I
• thouaht we could help o ut." Sander
said. "Somebody helped me out once
· when I was getting going and I
remembered .that.··
Sander said he and his w1 fc decided
to ask his colleagues in the Hunt-
iqton Beach Fire Departme nt for
Ulistance and then pick up the
belance.
.. It was sort of a down 11 me for the ·, ~ment. too. Tommy Townsend,
ooe of our guys. had Just been hurt 1n
that downtown fire and we'd been
th mking about that," Sander ex-
pla1ned.
Acting on his request. the fire-
fighter's assoc1a11on agreed to donate
SlOO toward Raymond's medical
bills. Sander called up his counter-
parts in Founuun Valley They kicked
in $200. He phoned Westminster.
Firemen there came up with $250.
"It was great." the fireman said. "I
called her up Chnstmas Eve day and
told her to bnng R~ymond down to
thcstation. We gave her the check and
I told her 1f she still comes up short.
l'IJ1ust wntc her a check myself."
The boy's mother said she was
stunned.
"It was a wo,n derful thing to do."
she said. "It helped us out. It made us
realize people care, too."
Sander said a bank account in
Raymond's name has been estab-
lished to defray medical bills. The
boy's parents. meanwhile, have ap-
plied for st.ate aid.
"I've never done anything like this
in my life," Sander said. "I guess I've
been missing something because it
really makes you feel good."
· MURDER CHARGED INF ATAL CRASH ...
From Al
At tbe time of the accident. Escobar
and Gutierez has been under 10 -
Wlliption fo r about a week by state ' dnlt -.ents,. according to Kati Cor-
MUt. a spokeswoman for the state
Auomey General. ·
Sbe said Gutierrez was arrested
Tbunday evening outside a res-
• taurun in Ora nae. Escobar. apparent-
ly waachina from his car. sped away.
Initially, d.ru& agents tned to chase die Costa Mesa man but they were
easily outrun by l:.scobar'sJllfuarand
aavc up the cha~. CaJ1forrua High-
wa y Patrol spokesman Paul Caldwell
said .
"There was no way they could keep
up with him," Caldwell said.
He said Escobar continued speed-
ing about I 00 mph, apparently under
the behef that dru& agents were still
following ham.
Escobar, uninjured in the accident.
ditched his car and Oed on foot,
according to officers. He was found
later in a clump of bush. A baa
containing about $35.000 was found
nearby.
Deputy Dostnct Attorney ~
Armbrust said he decided to ale
murder charges against Guile
because he viewed him as a
conspirator in the incidents that led
up to the car accident.
Both men arc to be arraigned Jan.
23 m municipal coun in Santa Ana.
o::h'::' •• OU.••••d
~,,...,. • "°"' _, --~~tty Sl!Jp"' iii' • ..,,,,
l"CI '""' ~ ii. .....,.,
What do you lllce about the Dally Pilot? What
don't you like? Call the number above and your
messaae will be recorded. transcribed and de-
hvettd 10 the appropriate editor.
The same 24-bour aruwerina service may be
used tO record letltrJ. lO the editor On ID)' topic.
Contnbutors to our "letters column must mc1uck
Lhcir name and telephone number for verification.
lurO•f a_no ~r II '°" do no! ·~ yOAll COC>l' Cly 1 e m C.W Ot'Ott 10 • "' .,.., .,_ QllOy oe-.o
Tells us what's on your mind.
'
Clrad9tlon
T1l191Mnee
MOtl ~~Colil'1, ....
Cloudy sky to bring cooler day
eon.kMr••_... ................ br"-.,end
tothe=COllt'allillMWi•--· llMlt•=--of rlln It~ OfllW..,.,louthlrnOaltomll'1 "'"'°"°"· the NatloNlt W..._ lerw. llAd .
The doudl Wll bMO oooter ...,.,....., too, rlftllnQ from
..,_UP'* IOI et ttw bWl'9e too.. mid Ind upper 10i w.nct.
()vetftlOtlt !owl.-dip Into the low -to mid eo.. Boet•• wtl ~ gr..-t br W.t ~ wlndl. WMt to eouthwe9t, renglnO from 10 to 20 knota tNe lft«noon Ind
.wnlng.
The weetetty llWll of 2 to 4 teet • Iner••• to 3 to e teet
todiy under mOICfy otoudy lk• Mct • elelhC cher'°9 of...._., ~the northern we••· · , • W•t to not1hweet Wind• 12 to 22 knot• will' blow tonlQht
-through the ou1er COMtll wat.,..
If 42 . .. •• n 11
.. 40
N IO .. .
.... u ,,
O.t
FAT LAYER LINKED TO HEART ATTACK •••
P'romAl
have potent angiogenic activity," "found that a drug called in-letter said the 1 research a1ao
letter said. ~ domet:hacin could stop fat from provides more evidence that people
Another member of the team, Dr'. producina anai0tcnic factor. Since should not eat fat, since dietary fat is
Clifford Baraer, bas fo und evidence aspirin also blocks the body's pro-stored as fat in the body. He said the
l.batktb•I clots may fo~•poU duction of-prOltal)andins,-7.cue~aaid -amounW>C.. fal-&rOUnd the ~rt is
on the artery walls where tiny new he believes this could help explain proportional to the amount of total
blood vessels exist. He theorizes that how aspirin is able to protect people body fat. and that the fatter people are
these vessels leak blood that form the from hean attacks. in aeneral, the more epicard1al fat
clots. letter said the team's research they have.
A heart attack occurs when a clot or sugests that it may be possible to However, Dr. Larry Stephenson of
some other obstruction forms in the protect the heart from apparent the Univenity of Pennsylvania Hos-
coronary arteries that feed the heart damagina effects of fat by using drugs pital disputed this aueruon.
muscle. The' muscle is starved of that stop the production of As a suraeon who has seen at least
oxygen, and some of it may die. prostaglandins. 2,000hearts. he said. 0 lamamaUJdat
Although a n angiogeoic factor "For ansioacnic research to be how poorly fat around the heart
fro m fat around the heart has not relevan'tto heart disease at this time:· correlates with the fat in the body.
been purified, the researchers believe he said, "our most imporunt role I've seen some very thin pco~
that 1t belongs to a family of body should be to find ways to prevent or to whose hearts are totally covered with
chemicals called prostaglandins. cause the rearession of the new· vessels fat, and I've seen fat people with
In test tube studies, the researchers fou nd in the large artery walls." minimal amounts of this fat"
CLEANUP PLAN FOUND UNACCEPTABLE •••
P'romAl
maintained once they arc rehabili-
tated.
Barnard said city officials ~ave set
aside $450,000 in federaJ money to
help get rehabilitation work started.
Owners want all the money to go
equally to the units. he said. But the
city opposes giving the money as a
grant without apparent willingness of
landowners to contnbute their own
capital.
"Jn their action report. they
haven't indicated that they're willinA
to spend one nickel of their money,
he said.
In their proposal to city officials,
the Commodore Circle landlords
asked that the city pay mortgage
payments during the time that the
units are vacant while they are beina
rehabilitated. They also asked for a
news blackout to prevent "misin-
formation."
Neither condition was acceptable
to officials. Barnard said. An inspec-
tor was assiJned this week to in-
vestigate hcaJth and safety threats in
the apartments, Barnard added.
STUDENT EDITOR FILES COMPLAINT •••
P'romAl
approach to its coverage of the
disease.
O tto said the editorial was of-
fe nsive, poorly written, badly re-
searched and potentially libelous.
O n Dec. S, Superior Court Judge
Yttlt llHtHt ..... , ... H •llft 11
I
J udith Ryan said the di5trict could
not censor the editorial a.nd ordered
the district to publish it. It still bu not
been pnnled in the camS>Us news-
paper though 1t has appeanld in
I
several newspapers, includm& tbc
Daily Pilot.
School trustees voted to appeal
Ryan's decision and a hcarina 1s act
Feb. 18 on that issue.
•• ..