HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-01-16 - Orange Coast Pilot,I •
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CLOUIW
FOMCAaT8•AI:
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THURSDAY, JANUARY 16, 1986
T~ird toxic. dumpiilg closes road
Ortega Highway 'safe' after 10 hours;
ch emical removal costs top 25,000
were spread across an embankment
less than 30 feet from the edge of the
state highway, used by more than
3,000 commuters a day.
If exposed to water or tampered
with, some of the toxins could have
exploded and formed toitic clouds,
fire department officials said.
By STEVE MARBLE
Of ... 0.-,,... ....
The Ortega Highway was reo~ned
early tbday after toiic specialists
removed nearly 100 pounds of haz-
ardous chemicals -the third time
this week lethal toxins have been
discovered alOnJthe remote tU&hway.
The latest discovery of · illegally
Coast
Approval has been grant-
edfeH zone change that
paves the way for the
Fluor Corp. and several
other companies to build
hotels, off!.ces and specu-
lative projects on their
Irvine properties./ A3
World
The Soviets propose a
15-year phase out of nu-
clear weapons, and Re-
agan says some elements
of the proposal are prom-
ising./ AS
Sports
~orona del Mar' nips Uni-
versity and Ocean View
tops Edison In high
school basketball./C1
Entertainment
British comedy Is t ickling
audiences In Laguna
Beach and Anaheim ; two
new stage productions
are reviewed.IC.
INDEX
dumped toxins was made late
Wednesday afternoon by a l..akc:
Elsinore man who smelled the
chem icals which were leaking from
containers near the shoulder of the
hiibway. The containers had been
dumped near Lucas Canyon, about
eight miles west of the San Diego
Freeway.
The chemicals. nearly 60 in all,
A march for Martin
It was the third time in three days
that hazardous chemicals been found
beside the Orteia Highway, which
winds from San Juan Capistrano to
Lake Elsinore through the Oeveland
National Forest. ·
At least 13 toxic chemicaJs were
-
UC Imne atadenta march Wectne.day to honor lla.rtln
Luther Ktnc Jr. on hU blrtladay. The march wu put of a
three-clay .,-mpoeham apoD90recl by the a.ninnity, tided
discovered Monday by a passina
motorist and a sbentrs bomb squad
detonated the most explosive one
early Tuesday. They had feared that
movina the leakjng drums would
have been too risky.
A se<:ond, smaller cache of
chemicals was found Tuesday. They
were removed without incident by a
Lona Beach firm that specializes in
removing hazardous waste.
The discovery Wednesday of a
third batch of chemicals forced
authorities to close the Onega High-
way for nearly I 0 hours. The road was
I
reopened today at S: 10 a.m.
"There were at least 60 chemicals
in various bottles, drums and
canisters." said Orange County Fire
Department spokesman Pat Antnm
"Some are h1ghl> toxic. some arc
explosive, some are shock-sensitive
and some arc water-sensitive." he
said. "Some could be deadly." ;
This time 1t would have been too
risky to detonate the chemicals be-
cause several of the toXJcs could emit
a gaseous cloud that might pass o'er
populated areas, said Antnm.
"There wo uld have been some
"LI~ tlie Dream." The a1aln cl'ril rlahta leader would ha•e
been !7 years old today. ArounCl the nation othen
remembered,K.IDC ID a n.rlety of actiYltee. See C8.
cyanide gas that would have pated a
real threat to public safety," said
Antnm.
Chemicals found Wcdnctday in-
cluded hydrochloric acid, benzene
sulfonac acid, sodium methylatc,
ammonium oxylate, ammonium
thaocyanitc and sodium methylate.
Eight of the chemicals have not been
identified.
County health officials believe the
chemicals ma)' have origi~ted from
a lab engaged in work for pharma-
ceut1cal or aerospace firms. They do
(Pleue eee CBBIOCAL/ A.2)
Mesa
school
maybe
closed
District trustees
weighing options
in CM High a rea
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of ... ~,... ....
At least one of the s1). schools
feeding Costa Mesa High School may
be closed in 1987. depending on a
review over the next few months b}
d1stnct trustees
. cwpon-Mcsa t..:nified School
Otstnct officials are weighing their
options for handling lackluster enrol-
lment at the five elementary schools
and one Junior high in north and
central Costa Mesa.
Onl) one on I Opltons gi ven 10 the
school board b) upenntcndent John
Nicoll this week would preserve the
status quo and leave all the campuses
untouched. The rest call for the
closure of one or two clcmentarv
SC'hools in ~rtember 198'" ·
Boating
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
81
8 2
82
A3
85-6
CS-7
83
C7
Arts Center pla~s going smoothly
:-.learl~ hat th<' op11ons v.ould tum
( osta Mesa High into a 7th-
through-I 2th-grade school w11h
Da\tS lntermC'd1atC' either ~hut or
turned into a grade SC"hool
Board president \hen: Lootbour·
ro .... said trustees .... 111 also con~1der
reopening Pres1d10 Eleme n ta r~.
closed b' the d1stnct 10 1973. and the~ wili'pondd shutting at lca~t one
other site.
Death Notices
Entertainment
Horoscope
Ann Landers
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
Television
Weather
B4,C4
82
82
A6
8 1
A3
Executive director's heart attack s houldn't
s low preparaffi>n~ fo r Mesa fac ility oJ)entng
C7-8
C1 -4
C4
A2
By TONY SAAVEDRA A
Of ... 0.-,,... .....
With Executive Directo r Tom
Kendrick recuperating fro m a mild
heart attack. Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center officials are
confident that preparations for the
opening season would continue
smoothly 1n his absence.
Kendrick, 52, will remain al Hoag
Hospital in Newport Beach pending
Direct mayor vote
due on Irvine ballot
By PWL SNEIDERMAN
Of!MO..,,_ • ..,.
Irvine residents will decide in June
whether the city's mayor should
continue to be chosen by the City
Council or should be selected instead
by locaJ voters.
The council voted unanimously
Tuesday to place an ordinance o n the
June 3 ballot concerning direct elec-
tion of a city mayor. If IP.proved by
Irvi ne voters, the council would be
required to adopt a procedure for
choosing a mayor in this manner in
time for the 1988 election.
Currently, the council picks a
mayor annually from among its own
fi ve members.
Coun cilman Ray Catalano
proposed the change. He said the
mayor's role has become increasingly
important in the v owing. mastcr-
planned city. He pomted out that the
mayor is often called upon to be the
chiefspokesman for the city.
Because of this, Catalano said he
wants the person serving as mayor to
be accountable directly to local
voters, rather than to a simple
majority of the council.
"I would like to take the (council)
politics out of who becomes mayor
and aive the decision to the people,"
he said.
Councilwoman Sally Anne Miller
said she was "not opposed to the
system we have now.' She also ..aid
(P1_.. ... MA TOR/A.2)
funher tests, according to center
spokesman Dick K.Jtuow.
The center's top administrator was
admitted to the hospital's cardiac care
ward Sunday with complaints of
chest pain. Kendrick had no previous
history of he~n problems. according
to o fficials for the ans com pl ex und~r
construction in Costa Mesa.
With opening night less than a year
away. center officials are working to
8bertn Brad Oatee
Historic Huntingtoµ Beach
house saved from bulldozer
/
80-year-o d Victorian structure to e -
relocate 3 locks away, ref ur ts he
Tbe Pope House, a Victorian
beauty that'• 11ood for more than 80
yean at the corner of OUvc Avmuc
and Ninth Street in Huntinaton
Beach, has ~n saved rtom the
bladtt of the bulldoier.
Bui it was a clOIC call.
Built by a pioneer farm Ina famil)' in
l 90S-06, the home WU ICC)Utftd
rec:ently by Ed and C',annel&a lllueel. who hid hoped td tell h, bavc it
moved, then build a dupln on the
downcown pn>perty two blocb away
from Pacftc Coat Hilbway ud lbe
But the wtathered old buildina
didn•t attract any bu~ and the
Rueel• feared they "WOUid have to
demolish the one-story-and-a-half
redwood buildina.
But memben or the Hunt1naton
Beach Historical Socldy. who have
been actjve in tryins to P"Htt"e
historic bomet that I~ in the peth of
redevelopment. IOt involved.
move it to 1 larst lot thrtt bttX'ks
away at 12th Street and Ohve Av-
en~. •,
"This is the oldest Victorian house
alona the btach in Oraf\IC County,
accofdina to the ~h I've do ne."
Catt said ... r m CllClted about aettina a
chance to ref'urbuh it."
City officials said that by the time
Cate poun a new foundation. re-paint~ rewires, putt in new plumt>tna
and does other work, costt could
mount to about S40,000. C..te satd he
doesn't think costs wwkS ao that hiah. but didn'\ offer estimates.
The hOUlt WU buah by John H.
complete the lineup for the premiere
season. The curtain 1s set to rise Sept.
29 on the complex's main 3.000-seat
auditorium.
Officials are also working feverish-
ly to raise the S 14 million in
construction fu nds needed to keep
the the S70. 7 m illion theater from
opening m debt.
Judy Morr. general manager. said
Wednesday that she didn't expect
Kendnck's ill ness lo hamper the
center's progress or affect its ab1hty to
raise funds.
Morr. who was recruited from the
Kennedy Center 1n Washington.
D.C .. along "Ith Kendnd. la\t ~ear
will take over operations of thr
Orange County comple'I: while the
administrative chief recovers
Officials are not sure .... hrn Ken-
dnck will return to the director·~
chair
Morr said she and Ke ndnck v.,ork
as a team and that she was pm ) to
most aspects of the center s oper-
ation. She also attended all nego-
11auons w11h gro ups cons1denng en-
gagements at the ne .... ans com pie '
.., ~hevc operations .... 111 go on a~
usual Certain!\ on the 1m ponant
(Pl eue eee ARTS/ A2)
Loofbourro.,.. stressed that the
board is merel~ explonng its o puons
and has not reached an' condus1ons
on .... hether to close SC'hools.
··Evaluating the s11uat1on dOt'sn't
presuppose an\lhmg." she said "But
11·~ not fair to other student\ through-
out the dastnll to maintain 'iC'hools
that a~ undcr<nrollcd. b«auS(' It
uo;a more to opcratt' them ··
(Pleue eee 8CHOOL/A2)
Sheriff ordered to attend . .
hearing for tactics onjail
Judge agrees to hear claims by inmates
that mandated privileges a re violated
By LISA MAHONEY
OflMDellfNotl ....
Orange Count}' Sheriff-Coroner
Brad Gates will have to defend
himself against inmate charges that
his depanment violated a 1978 coun
order mandating that county J&al
pnsoncrs arc entitled to certain
pnvilcges.
U.S. D1stncl Coun Judge Wilham
Gra) Wcdncsda) set a contempt
heanng for Gates after El Toro
attorney tephen Buckley asserted
that the Shenffs Oepanment main-
tained pohc1cs that 1gnorrd ( ora\ '
orders to provide recreauon 11me to
inmates in adman1stra11' t' 'ctuc· ~on. install pay telephcmt•\ 1n the ·
jalf and rtv1se wntten Jail rule' to
rdle~:t the new pnv1legc'i The Mdel"\
stem from an earlier la .... \Ult on 1.ul
condmons. _
Gray also ag.rttd to hear a da"s
action suit on behalfofall prr'i<'nt and
futu~ Main Jail inmate\ that allege\
Gates violated pnsone,...· \I\ 11 nght\
b~ restnct1ng theu aCCC\\ to oer\Onal
,11rn·~pondenll' nh111ographs ,rn,1
rt·ading material
The \U1t a"o ma1nta1m that th('
\ht·nffs Depanmt·nt u'>t'd f('(~ for
run1\hment and d1~1phnaf' 1~nla·
llc'n -"h1c h pn<;one~ call 'the
hok" -1n a t rurl and unuc,ual
m.rnncr
RCllh the cla"" actmn \u1t and a
\hn" cau<;c hcanng on th(' rontcmr11
charge\ are' tcntat1,eh <.et for Junl' 2'
(rra\ tra' {'led to Santa -\ na to hear
Budde' 'Homplaint and another iail·
rdatcdc1' ii t a\t' on the \3mc da\
Orangr (\'lunl) bcpn to com pl ) ~ 1t~
a contempt order he ""ued in "1arch
rt'prding Jail 0' ercrowdang
-\mencan ("1,,1 l1bert1r\ l nion
(Ple&H eee GAT~/A:l)
Ro1ERT
BARKER
Focus ON THE NEw s
Irvine woman getting
$2.6 million for head-
injury in auto crasi.
By STEVE MARBLE
H1ston cal Society member Cuy °' .. ._.,... ...
Guzzardo. The famtl)' of an Irvine woman
..
h rt who uflercd "ere head 1nJunes 1n a "The) were amona t e ca 1 t 1983 car accident v.111 rttctH S~ 6
colon1 t t'O am"c in Westman 1er million in ih out-<lf-coun stttlement
Colony." lSuzzardo added. "They reached this week.
were ttal pioncen." h111cy McDaniel. SS. was 1hrown
John Pope built the home because from he1"etude when 1t coU1dcd with
h11 wife had \Jred of hv1na an the ,n oncom1na car and ufTered such
countl)' and wa.nted to move to town. senou head U\Junes that ib( later
Guuardo said. • undcrwtnta Pll\lal frontal lobotomy
John's 18,year-old daull\ter. Thc.~oman's fam1l)' lutr sued tht
Laumte. hves at a retm:ment com-driver of tbc other car and tht car'
munjty and provided mlK'h of the owner. Roben Ttlltr. chairman of the
1nformauon about lhe o4d ho~ Bob·s Okt·fash10M'd let C'rtam
\icct
.\aron 1gmund. the dnvcr of the
I q 2 C amaro that rammed
McDaniel's car, all cdl) was dnv1f\I
at pccds approaching 0 mph when
ht l01t control of the car on R1dtthnc
On\t
A tnal was set to open Monday. the
same day a ~ulcmcnt wt ttached.
l\t the umt of the acadtnt. Teller
and h1 fam1l wtrt oo a ski tnp 1n
Utah lthouah he rcponedl told
i.amund not to utc lht car 1n hit
absitnCf. Teller'' maid •PC>artn\Jy'
~rm1tttd iamund to "'"'°"t keys \0
the Camara from the mtde~
Denni .a.lt"W>f\. an IUOf"MY rep;
..
Plciflc °'9IL
Tbcy took the ho"9t off the R\AIClt' hands. u a pfl And lben they found•
proepe_iciive owntt, TOfty Cate, a 33-~ &aw student Ill Fullmoo.
C• ...-'°..._.a. a.o-:...s
P•· who moved to the West·
ntin1ttt-Founta1n Valley ane rtom
hnn1ylvanaa With bi1 percnta, Harry
lmd AftM Poot."' aan:aoeo .. tj• '° cb&iA and ma,,or 1todb kier tn the (ft1•1-_,GalC/ASJ--=OrneP Con F~ .., (f'I••• ... IUn/MI·==••
1
&I
,..,... tioD oonem.iaa lnter-.... '8§· . .ue.,.nmmt 01
Z 1=.i · "-er~~:C':: ... ..,.,. ~ Prettet•1 auppon
of Ille w'n '•iatratioe ia tbe l 980 and ••••I• campaips iDfhlenced 1be C---oltbe iDv~tioD. •• .. A..fdaouP tbe commi111op did no1
009d9ct an inv~tion for any ~ olWl'Ollldoinain t.bc Pmler ~ .......... lt is coavinced that dte .._ o1 ~ coatactl can lad •••a tlrnolpublkc:onftdenceand e. '11 * delire to end racketeer--!l'l. .,.ii .W.
!_~ ~ Oela. Edwin Mette lw
._... My •voritism tw been .,_ ..... or the Teamsten. Tbe =• I llid ... .:ICbaal .~~;~v:,oaa:it;!~
1rida tlae torial by W.poli•C-:~. ~ welf-lmcit polillca} contribut10111 can
trea1e ID appeeranc:e of improprie-
ty."
''The panel. without namina names,
llid that ••former enforcement of-
8c:ial1 of the Oepe.nment of Labor
.. ve noted that the opening of
iftveatiplions into funds related to
cenaia powerful unions, or a sianifi-
cant local of those unions. often
tttulted in prompt intervention from
the office of the aecrewy of labor ...
r' .. One of the key obstacles to more
"W'i~ ovenight of labpT-manage-
mrit-ratUteerina by-the Department ~f labor is the department's un-
dlnlable auacepdblbty '° potidcel lftMUn ft'Om the .. ,_ I •rail ol the
c:omtitUCDC')' it it auppoeld to ~ tee.••
Oftkiala •t t.be l-..UllMll member T••Mn'~iDWMlaiat
ioe did DOC lmmedill..., man I reponer'ac.lk.U.•11'vd,~
was aubpoenaed to telCify at tbe trial
of five repu&ed aUd·ae•m crime
boeMa, but his anomey iDdicl&ed tllat
he would refuse to.....,~
under bit Fif\h Amadmlat riabla-The judie then 'polqlDMd die tub-
poena.
The other three Ulliom, unlike tbe
Teamatcn, belona to the AFLCJO .
••we have not teen the report ud will
have no comment uJltil we do.,t" II.id
Rex Hardesty, a 1pokesmu ror the
labor fedentJon. last year, AfL.CIO
President Lane KirtJ&nd blamed
aovemment for allowina comaption
within the labor movement. 11)'\ftl ··1
don't have the tools or medlDdl ... any
way of provina guilt or innocence.
Crooks hun us ... we're entitled to
protection from tbem from our law
enforcement authorities. ..
The commiaion, wboee memben
include Seo. Strom TblU!llond, R-
S.C., andllep. Peter W. Rodino, 0.
N .J .• chairman of the Senate and
House judiciary oonunittea, uid
that tbrou&b domination of certain
labor unioni in ~ cities. or-
pnjzed crime controh and rqulat.ea
a number or nwtdl in tbe c:omtruc-
tion. wholetale and retail mat ~
•=--:llh.~~~c:anina,and
It died four unJOD1 .. with bistoria
ol CGMrOI or WlutDCll by orpoiJed
crime:•· Tbe lnternat1onal
~of'TCIUDMerl; The Inter·
...... Loapl= ~-·· Mlocia-... the Hotel Emplo)iee9 and Re.
...aat Employeea lDternational
Union. and 1be laboren ln&er·
•lloMI Union ofNortlt America.
Tbe summary did~ to lnto detail
..,.. tJae lllelld ncbteerina ac-~ of ID~~ cr.P· !:':r"it'e. tuu-:'u~~ ·~°ft
become dear when the report is made
aV8ilable1" ~na that it contains w ... taon ftlevant to pendina in·
~· ~theft, tA&ortJon, bnbery,
prb-ftuna and restraint of trade, .-i-d crime "dilions the cost of doial bulineu, •• and thus increues
Pl'kiel to consumers and results in lower waaes to worka1. the rent\rt -. -.
.. Orpni.zed crime," it said. "is
iDa'elllinal usina labor unions as a
lool to ol>Wn monopoly power in
certain markets ud fo ai ve mol>run btaiaeaes an ectee ...
The report didn't venture a precise
ftpft. tM&t said the. costs ·or labor ~are18111Cri111-'.11'8yue aoc;. borile by UftJOn memben. but
by aoQcty U I wbole.
8TRUGGLEGOESON,SAYSKING'S SON ••• Prom Al ·
ilther fouaht 20 years ago are un-
6nished.
" His address was part oflhc second
annual Martin Luther King Jr. sym-
-JK)lium on the Irvine campus. The
pountry will be marking the first
national holiday of the Nobel Peace
Prize winner's Jan. l 5 birthday next
)fonday.
(I Martm JD said the turbulence of the 60s, includina the assassinations £!'~dent John Kennedy and his
Robert, as well as his father. ~uted a period of adjustment in the .,Os. "We needed time to adjust, to internalize;• he said.
But the time has come Lo confront
aaain the nation's problems, he said. tO reject the yuppie .. me-ism" that he ~ "a sick mentality." ·
~ .. We are interdependent. No one
ean survive alone," Kina said.
He suaested Americans shouldn't
31)end tJiis national holiday with
~es and picnics, but rather with
rtilstina and prayer.
'
"In Amenca, we have to stand up
and try to do somethina about
bUOFT. Every minute rYe stood up
here 28 penoni have died of bullFf,
18 of them aae Sand undCr;'be laid.
He said fastina wu a way to clean1e
tile mind .. so batted, malice and
violence don't come in . .,
Callina upon the students in the
audience to take up the fiaht for
justice and equality. Kina llreaed the
imponance of beina acU\IC, individu-
ally and united.
He said unified aroupa ~ able to
achieve milestones in the 60a like the
1964 Civil Ri&bts Act. the 1961
freedom rides and the 196S march
from Selma Lo Montaomcry over the
right to vote.
"Twenty years lattt, many of us
still don't vote. That bothen me.
because many died so we would have
that riabt, .. be said.
But Kina also cited individuals
who, UR his fatbet', took stands
IPd1lt popular opinion because they
belined in their causes. .. Every time I tee Miss ROii Parks I
bavt to thank.Jw', bccaute in 195 S wben lbe 11t down (in the •whites
only' front leetioo or a bus) many
Amerbm were able to 1tand up," he
said. Healso~continues
ll the hilbeat levels in America.,
where the J<>Vernment calls for sanc-
tiom 1P1Mt Libya when whitt
~ are killed by tenorisu in ~ieana and Rome, but ipores tbt
ldllilllofthousands ofblacks in South
A.&ic&.
"Freedom and equality isn't yet a
reality, but it can be. It wasn't popular
in the 60s for blacks and whites to
wort together for civil riahts. but it
wuri&bt.
.. Let's ICt the pendulum riaht.
whetber it be feedi.Qa people, cloth inf
people, 9r aenina people totether io
love," K.i111 said. --That's what we
sbou1d be doing 011 the 20th:·
USE OF NOISE BOMBS APPROVED •••.
homAl ., .
~er tnp the chance to reel Ul their
limit.
" The bombs lrC considered a non-
lethal method of harassment by the
federal agency and have been used in
1hc past by commercial fishing oper-
ations.
" But Bill Ford of the Laguna Beach
'Friends of the Sea Lion contends that
4he ruling further weakens the Marine
'Mammal Protectio n Act of 1972,
which has helped increase the sea lion
f>Opulati on from 20,000 to 80,000
over t.he past 15 years.
, "Tests have shown that repeated
use could cause deafness and they
won•t know until the animal dies and
lbey run tests. If (the f>ombs) land on
i.he animals and explode, lhc debris
'COuld aJso damage the eyes," Ford
'Said.
The FederaJ RegJster reported that
ttudies done on the bombs "indicate
J.h.at the devices tested arc loud
'nough to be painful, but probably do
aot result in damage to the auditory
system." But later the report said.
"animals could conceivably become
'tteaf to a narrow band of frequencies
~r repeated exposure to these
<!evices."
at the animals. Dou~ Fam:ll, part owner of
Davey s Locker in Balboa and one
sportfishina operator . who plus Lo
use the noite detcrruU, II.id llK>lt of
his clientcle are families wbo enjoy
watching the sea lions. lf be miluted
the bombs and threw them at the sea
lions, he said, his customen would
not return.
"Can you 1maginedoingsomethin&
hkc that in front of a 6-year-old girl?"
he asked.
Sea hons, who arc noted for their
intelligence, know they can set a he
meal near tbc boats. lbey follow the
boats and often scare the tcbool fish
away or become hooked when tlyina
to sna~h a fish from a fisherman's
lane, Farrell said. They have become a
nuisance and a financial ~hip.
"We take people out tor a good
time. The sea lions are smart. If we
scare one away. they communicate
and all go away," he said, "We're out
there for only four hours. They have
24 hours to fish.
"If they can be trained not to
associate a free lunch wit'h tbe sounds
of our engines, we'll be real happy, ..
said lhe 43-year-okS fisherman.
"Even if we move a couple of miles
out they follow you like puppies,"
Farrell said.
made many fish migrate north, ford
said. And m years pest, commercial fisbiAa operaaon have decreased the
full auppl)'. by overfishing.. "We are
lloMy depletina our fish aupply and
the tportstisbennen are complaining
it is the sea lion,·· Ford said.
"Other countries that have over· fis.bed have started aqua culture
~s. We also will have to stan
l"lisana fish," Ford predicted.
Bolt operators will have to com·
plete a training program before
oerrificatcs will be issued for the seal
bombs and cracker shclla, according
IO &be ruling. Every time they use the
acare tactics. they must submit a
report detailing lhe time and date
they used the devices. the type of
bombl used, an estimate of the
number of sea lioos affected and
delcrit>tion of behavior changes in
the animals.
In other efforts to aid fishermen,
the National Marine Fisheries Agen-9 this spring will begin feeding sea
lions dead fish injected with lithium
chloride. The c~emical is supposed to
make the sea lions nauseous and train
them through a neptive condhioning erocess to stay away from the boats.
OWT a three-year period, the state
Ocputment offish and Game will be
allowed to test the chemical's effect
oa lOO California seaJions and I SO
barl>or seals in the ocean.
Rain expected to dampen coast
., u
4.3 o.e
OLD GUARD STEPPING ASIDE •••
homAl .
frustration.of promotion-minded of-
ficers stuck in what became dead-end
jobs.
"There hasn't been a lot of
enthusiasm around the depanment
because there hasn't been a lot of
positions open," Holbrook said.
Nearly half of the administrative
posts are expected to ch~e. Neth
said, explaining that promouons and
retirements would create the need for
as many as six new 11ergeants, five
lieutenants, three captains and a new
ctticf.
While conceding that high-level
promotions have been far between,
Neth dislikes suggestions that veteran
administrators had created a dynasty.
He said the 137-member depart-
ment, formed in 1953 when Costa
Mesa incorporated. was experiencing
the first cluster of retirements by
supervisors "who came in at the
ground floor." Neth added he ex-
pected a quicker turnover as older
officen move into the top posts.
"Most of us who came in the early
years became ranking officers.." Neth
explained. "Some people say it's not
aood for an organt.zat1on (for people
to stay so Iona). It may not be, but it
means there's stability there."
The chief conceded that infrequent
promotions had become somewhat of
a morale buster.
"I wouldn't say it's been a serious
problem, but certainly the fact they
have no1 been able lo move up has
been there. It's amazing those people
have been able to perform so well
with that frustration," he said.
Neth added he expects the new
opportunities to boost police spirit
and spark new enthusiasm amona the
troops.
"When you've been in rank a Iona
time, you don't try to invent the wheel
every Monday morning. You don't
have the fight and fire like these
(newer) guys," he said. "More people
will now ~ tr)'1n' to prove they are
worthy of promotJon. •
Lt John Repn, 49, said he never
gave much thought to the idea that he
was bein& held back.
·:when you worry about that stuff
you won't be in the business very
long." Rcpn said. "You always want
to make 1t, but when that becomes
your No. I priorily xou start bavina
some real problems. •
The bottleneck became especially
nerve-wracking for officers taking
exams to become sergeants or lieuten-
ants. Sgt. Holbrook said.
OFFICER DETAINED PAIR AT GUNPOINT •••
J'romAl
An investigation by the Irvine Co ..
which provides secunty for Fashion
Island. found its security personnel
were not in volved in the incident at
the shopping center. spokeswoman
Sally Smith said.
Powers and White were told later
that they were suspects in a robbery
that occurred two months ago,
Blrham said.
Newpon .Beach police spokesman
Trent Harris said an employee of Raff
Jewelry store in Fashion Island called
Ncy.rport Beach pol.ice because "they
had been robbed by a png of blacks at
their store in Los Angeles•• and
thought Powers and While were the
same suspects.
A plainclothes Newport Beach
detective workfof undercover re·
sponded to the cal . Harris refused to
identify the detective.
Powers and White allesc that the
plainclothes man "pulled a aun on
them" and detained them until after a
marked Newpon Beach police car
arrived.
According to Harris. the in-house
pohce investigation dealt onl y with
the chain of events that occurred
when Powers and White were pulled
over by the detective. who was
driving a while, unmarked police car.
shortly after they left Fashion Jsland.
Harris said the investigation re-
vealed that the suspects aUeaed-
ly''dumped something out of the car"
when the detective was pulling them
over. and the detective "pulled his
gun out and ttcld it behind his leg in
case something happened." He later
put the handgun bacldnto his holster.
Harris said.
Officer Danny Reynolds and a
female dispatcher who was riding
with him also responded to the call to
assist the detective.
Oriajnally. ~lice said Powers and
White were "immediately released"
after the Newpon Beach officers
arrived and investigated the repon.
But after the investiJatiOn follow-
ing the incident, police supported
Powers' and White's charge that ther
were: detained for another 40
minutes.
Hams said the detective a nd of-
ficers held Powers and White "be-
cause they were trying to determine
what they threw out of the car." The
suspects allegedly tossed a rum bottle
out of the car as they were stopped,
Harris said. It was not known whether
the driver was cited for ao open
container violation, Harris said.
Barham claimed the detective told
Powers and White to "get out of
Newport Beach and don't come
back'' and subjected them to racist
rema!ks. ff c further allqes that
Powers and White were followed in
their car to the city line by a marked
Newpon Beach police vehicle.
Harris countered the charge, con·
tendina that after the officers let\ the
scene, they responded to a traffic
collision at Bristol Street and Jam-
boree Road.
''They were responding to tht
accident and they probably passed
them," Harris said.
He denied the claim by Powers and
White that the officers or the detec-
tive made any racial remarks.
,: Ford also argued that there is no
'tneans of controlling the use of the
bombs and that some 1rrespons1blc
'lportfishing operators will abuse
them. At the Friends· rehabilitation
Qenter in Laguna Beach, sea lions who
-have been pffcd or shot arc often
brou&bt in for care. he noted. dcspitt
laws prohibiting anyone from kill ing
But Ford maintained the mammals
are not responsible for the ftsher-
men' s problem. Environmental fac-
ton, pollution and overfiahina by
commercial fi shermen are what 1s
depicting the sportfishing catch. he
said.
Ford is worried there will be no way r;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::==::;r==============;;;:;;;:;;;:=;;;:======;;;;; to follow the sea lions to detect the 11
• 6r inJurins the animals.
"Not all party boa t operators arc
doing it, but they arc the ones we're
1ifraid of." he said. adding that some
crews miaht throw the bombs directly
Th( 1983 El Nino effect, which
warmed the coastal waters and forced
nutrients to the ocean floor, have
effects of the poisons, unless the
animal dies and washes ashore. ff a
similar program is approved for
commcrcaal use, Ford said
audlorities will have no way of
coniroUina the lithium chloride *J1111C the fishermen use.
,. .. ···~PATTERSON OFF AND RUNNING •••
Prom Al . -1'tpiesenung western Orange County
ap.Jn," he said in a press conference
Tuesday in Santa Ana.
"1 he IR>eta or Supervisors makes
m~or decisions affectina people's
liva every day. It certainly isn't a slCP.
down or even a step sideways, ·
r .f1tten0n said.
'" The former consressman said he is
"tired of commut1na to Wash1naton 1n
•'his role as a lobbyiSt and wants to
settle down ip Oranae County where
,Rhc has Jived for 27 years.
,, Pattenon•s dec111on en\lils a legal
0 AAM0l ........
COAST --· rml
.... OflfllCI
sepera11on fro m his second wife,
Sally, who wlll remain in Washing-
ton.
Puterson uid he will camj)eign Oft
issues such as the need for more
aff ordablc housing. better transpor-
tation solutions and answers to the
growing problem of toxic~.
A.nd he is bao,kjn, on hit hip
profile with voters and his «Mnmanty
with the ins and ouu of WMhldJ'Qn
politics to win out over omer cafto-
didates.
"I'm counting on hl&h DaJ!l( ~
mt100 and f1vorablt name recoa-
Dition," Patterson 111d.
"I know who to talk to, where to ao
and what projecu work (in the
· WntmJstol\ trtnl), .. be 11id.,
Panerso~ 11 al~ counting on
$1001000 an commitments he said
M't oeen offered by supporters. He boJllts to raiae s2~0.ooo for the June primary.
• Plnenon promised that. if elected, fM wouJd serve a full tenn. He 11id he
would not utc the SlApetvtSOry seat as
a jalpifta off pouu for another
political race.
nQ w.11 .., ti . Colle ,.._ CiA
Mii ..._ eo.. tMO Colla..... CA t1626 o..tM-. ...,.....,. ....,_ • ldllof'lll ti)~. Justcall 842-8086 ~lnoey " '°" Oo
'IOI -"°"' -°' • )C) p "' C.tlll DlllOt9 7 0.111
COoy"9f", tie) Or ..... COM' ~ eomp.r, NO
,.... -~ &il•M-edllOtW men .. or ~·•
-,..,_ 1Ny .. r•ocM:l9d ""''-ICMC.., I* --~--What do you likrabotlt tlle D•ilY Not? What
don't you hke? CaU tbe number abo\'e and your
memF"Will,.be recotded. trantcribed and ~
livered to the a'i>orooriate editor.
The same l4-..0. •-ai• ~ may be
ultd lO ~ ~·Ip tM eMlr' • ..,. topic.
Contnbuton to oe....,. • Ill. .. includt
their na~ and..,..... n.....,IWwMcaaton.
T tlll us .,,ba1·1 on ros mi8d.. •
*""' ,_ COOJ .... °' ....,.., ... ..,., _, ..,._.,. "
"°" 00 'IOI ·-""" COOi' Iii' 1 • "' (,ell °"'°'' IO I !'I .0 '/#NI Coot' • °' OllMttd
, ... _... .. ..... ~c:-., A._ ~
~-----
WHY INDEPENDENT
JEWELERS GROW
In es>tt• of multiple chaWI etore
credit operatlOnt, direct mall
MtNng and ow. .... buytng, the
Independent jeweler 11 tteadlly
growing both In number and
vofume.
Why? BecauM an owner..op.
.,ated Jewetry 1tont, which we
are, 11 part of thl community,
contributing to ltt welfare and
off.,lng personal MIVtce to It•
cuttomere.
We off9r Mtter ldMI. better
MrVlc:e and ueualty lower pr6oet.
The tpartcle you ... In our
new ttor• It not the gNtter of
expenatve nxturee Md dteptay
caMe. tt'• the bieuty and quaff·
ty of geml and jewelry Mtected
per90nelty by ua. Our..,,.,,_ wMI ~ you ct.
sign th•t untque .,.,. of jewelry you·w atweys wented. Thi
peopte whO ..w YoU .,.
hone.t and courteoue. They wtll
ueuaaty be hire when YoU return
for MrYtce or help.
F ro'Jl the people
making crystal a legend.
SWAAOVSKI
The Gift of Joy.
Th• authentic Swarov1kl
teddy bear. Setect
from MYeral ~zea In •
the SwarOYlk,. Sliver
CryataJe Cottectlon.
The G1ft-of-
F riendshi p.
The perfect gift for
your host or host ....
The Swarovakl
pineapple • long a
symbol of hospitality.
8WAROVSK1·
32•1.
Full Lead
Auatr'8n
Sliver
Cryatal
lC.HUMPtlB!J:,rS JbWFlR&5
BINC• IIU'1
1835 Newport Blvd., D-152 Coeta M-
MlMKA AMlRJCAN OEM SOCIETY
• •
• f •
-----= _r • __:_ ----------~ •--·
*
THURSDAY, JANUARY 16, 1986
Third toxic dump.iilg c·loses road
Ortega Highway 'safe' after 10 hours;
chemical removal costs top 2 ,000
were spread across an embankment
less than 30 feet from the edge of the
state highway, used by more than
3,000 commuters a day.
If expo~ to w;uer or tampered
with, some of the toxins could have
exploded and fo rmed toxic clouds,
fire department officials said.
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. Delp .........
The Ortell.8 Highway was reopened
early \oday af\er toxic specialists
removed nearly I 00 pounds of haz-
ardous chemicals -the third time
this week lethal toxins have been
discovered alone the remote highway.
The latest discovery of· ifle.gally
Coast
Approval has been grant-
ed for a zone change that
paves the way for the
Fluor Corp. and several
other companies to build
hotels, offices and specu-
lative projects on their
Irvine properties./ A3
World
The Soviets propose a
15-year phase out of nu-
clear weapons, and Re-
agan says some elements
of the proposal are prom-
ising./ AS
Sports
Corona del Mar nips Uni-
versity and Ocean View
tops Edison In high
school basketball./C1
Entertainment
British comedy Is tickling
audiences In Laguna
Beach and Anaheim; two
new stage productions
are revlewed./C4
INDEX
dumped toxins was made late
Wednesday afternoon by a Lake
Elsinore man who smelled the
chemicals which were leaking from
containers near the shoulder of the
hi&hway.• The containers had been
dumped near Lucas Canyon. about
eight miles west of the San. Diego
Freeway.
The chemicals. nearly 60 in all,
A march for Martin
It was the third time in three days
that ttazardous chemicals been found
beside the Ortega Highway, which ~nd,J. from San Juan Capistrano to
Lau Elsinore through the Cleveland
National Forest.
At least 13 toxic chemicals were
-,
UC lntne at'lldenta march Wedneeday to honor llartln
Luther KlnC Jr. on hU blrthday. The march wu put of a
three-day qmpoelum spouorect by the a.nt.enlty. titled
discovered Monday by a passina
motorist and a shenff's bomb squad
detonated the most explosive one
early Tuesday. They had feared that
moving the leaking drums would
have been too risky.
A second, smaller cache of
chemicals was found Tuesday. They
were ~moved without incident by a
Long Beach firm that specializes in
removing hazardous waste.
The discovery Wednesday of a
third batch of chemicals forced
authorities to close the Ortega High-
way for nearly I 0 hours. The road was
I ,
reopened toda)' at 5· I 0 a.m.
"There were at least 60 chemicals
1n vanous bottles, drums and
canisters," sa1d Orange County Fi re
Department spokesman Pat Antrim.
"Some are tughly toxic, some are
explosive. some arc shock-sens1t1ve
and some arc water-scns1uve ," he
said ... Some couJd be deadly.··
This ume 1t would have been too
nsky to detonate the chemicals be-
CjaUSC stveral of the toxics could cm11
a gaseous cloud that might pa~~ over
populated areas, said Antnm
"There would ha ve been some
''LlYl.n.i ttie Dream.·· The •la.ln cl...U rt.ahta leader would ha•e
been !7 yea.rs old today. AnnmCl the nation othen
remembered KlnC ln a n.rlety of actlnte.. See C8.
cyanide gas that would have poled a
real threat to public safety." sa1d
Antnm.
Chemicals fo und Wednesday in-
cluded hydrochloric acid. benzene
sulfon1c acid, sodium methylate,
ammonium oxylate, ammonium
th1ocya01te and sodium methylat.e.
Eight of the chemic.ls have not been
identified. •
County health officials believe the
chenucals may have originated from
a lab engaged in work for pharma-
ceutical or aerospace firms. They do
(Pleue eee CllltlllCAL/ A.2)
Mesa
school
maybe
closed
---District trustees
weighing options
in CM High area
By TONY SAAVEDRA
°'""'Oellr"'9t•wt
At least one of the six schools
feeding Costa Mesa High School may
be closed 1n· 1987, depending on a
review over the ne\t few months b>
d1stnct trustees
• ewpon-Mesa l ·n1fied School
Distnct offi Clals arc we1gh1ng their
options for handling lackluster enrol-
lment at the fi ve clement.ary sc hools
and one Junior high 1n north and
central Costa Mesa.
Onl~ one of2 I options gi ven to the
school board by upenntendent John
'1'1.11coll this week would preserve the
status quo and leave all the campuKs
untouched T he rest call for the
closul"t' of one or 1-wo elemental)
schools tn 'ieptemllcr 198..,
Boating
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
81
B2
B2
A3
85-6
CS-7
83
C7
Arts Center plans going smoothly
Nca rl~ half the option~ ~ould 1um
< osta l\1esa H 1gh 1010 a "'th-
through-1 :!th-grade school '41th
Da<v1s lntermed1a1e e11her <.hut or
tumcd into d gradr S{ hool
Board prc\1dcnt \hen: Loofh<lUr·
rov. said 1rustet'' "di also (On sider
reopening Prcs1d10 Elcmentan.
closed b} the d1s1n ct 1n I Q7J and
the) Wlll pondt'r \hu111ng at lca\I <tOl'
other c;1tc
Death Notices
Entertainment
Horoscope
Ann Landers
Opinion
eaparazz'
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
Television
Weather
B4,C4
82
B2
A6
B1
A3
Executive director's heart attack shouldn't
slow preparations for Mesa fac~ltty opening
C7-8
C1-4
C4
A2
By TONY SAAVEDRA °' .. Delly ,... • ...,,
Wtth Executive Director Toro
Kendrick recuperating from a mild
heart attack. Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center officials are
confident that preparations for the
opening season would continue
smoothl y tn his ab~nce.
Kendrick. 52. will remain at Hoag
Hospital in Newport Beach pending
Direct mayor vote
due on Irvine ballot
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of !tie Delly ..........
Irvine residents wi ll decide in June
whether the ctty's mayor should
continue to be chosen by the City
Council or should be selected instead
by local voters.
The council voted unanimously
Tuesday to place an ordinance on the
June 3 ballot concerning direct elec-
tiof_l of a city mayor. If aP.proved by
Irvine voters, the council would be
required to adopt a procedure for
choosing a mayor in this manner in
time for Uie 1988 election.
Currently, the council picks a
mayor annually from among its own
five members.
proposed the change. He said the
mayor's role has become increasingly
important in the erowing. master-
planned city. He pointed out that the
mayor is often caJled upon to be the
chicfspokcsman for the city.
Because of this, Catalano said he
wants the person serving as mayor to
be accountable directly to local
voters, rather than to a simple
m~ority of the council.
· I would like to take the (council)
politics out of who becomes mayor
and ~ve the decision to the people,"
he-laid~
further tests, according to center
spokesman Dick l(jtzrow.
The center's top administrator was
adrffilted to the hospital's cardiac care
ward Sunday with complaints of
chest pain. Kendrick had no previous
history of hean problems, accordmg
to officials for the arts complex under
construction in Costa Mesa.
With opening night less than a year
away. center officials are working to
Councilman Ray Catalano
Councilwoman Sally Anne Miller
said she was "not opposed to the
system we have now." She also 'lid
(PJ_.. ... llA TOR/ A2) Sheriff Brad Gatea
Historic Huntingtpn ~each
house saved from bulldozer ~ . -
80-year-old Victorian structure to re ocate 3 locks away, refurbished
The Po~ HouK, a Victorian
beauty that s stood for more than 80
years at the comer of Olive Avenue
and Ninth SU'Cet in Huntinaton
Beach. hes been 11vcd from lhe
blades o! the bulldottr.
But it was • cloee call.
Built by a pioneer farm int family in
190s-o6, the home was acquired
recently b)' Ed and Carmella ~ueel.
who bid bQPed &o •U h, bave It
movtd, then build • duoln on the
downt.oWD propeny1 JWO block.I away
from Pac& Cout tupway aed lhe
PKiftc Ocean.
But the weathered old buildina
didn't attract any buym and the
RUtcl• feared they would ha ve to
dtmolish the one-story-and-a-half
redwood buildina.
But memben of lhe Hunun1ton
Balch Historical Society. who have
been active 1n tryina to ~e
historic homes that he in the patb of re«velo~nt. lOt involved.
They took the hOUte off the Rytels'
hands. u & IJft. And thtn they found a
prospecuve oWMr. Toay Ca~. • ll-~-old II~ studcat 1n Fullenon. Ca~ IPftd to lake tbc boute and
move 1t to a llf'IC lot thrtt blocks
away at 12th Street and Olive Av.
enue.
"This 1s tbe oldest Victorian hou)t
alon1 the beach 1n Oranee County,
accordint to the rnearcb I've done."
Cate 11id. "I'm eitcitcd about aeuina •
chance to ttfurbith it,"
City omcia.11 said that by the 11me
Cate pours a MW foundluon, ~
paints. ttwiret.. puts in new plumb1na
and does olhtt work. costs could
mount to abo\at S.0.000. Cate 111d he
donn 't think cosu would ao that hlah. but didn't offer Cltimatet.
The. hou• WM Wtl• by John H
Pope. who moved to the W dl·
m1nACt·f ounwn Va.Uty .,. from
~nMylvaftia W1lh hil puHU.. Hatt)'
11'd Anne Poot. 1n 1177. ICCOrdt• to
complete the lineup fo r the pre miere
season. The curtain 1s sc-t10 rise Sei>t.
29 on the complcx·s main 3,000-seat
auditorium.
Offici als arc also working fc vemh-
ly to raise the Sl4 m1lhon in
construction funds needed to keep
the the S70 7 m1lhon thca1er from
opening in debt.
Judy Morr. general manager, said
Wednesday that she didn't expect
Kendnck's illness to hamper the
centtrs progress or affect its ab1hty to
raise fund s.
Morr. who was recruited from the
Kennedy Center in Washington,
D.C.. along w11h Kcndnck la\t ~ear
will take over operattofl<i of the
Orange Count}" complc1( while thl·
administrau ve chief recovers.
Officials arc not surc when Kcn-
dnck will return to the dirtttor'\
chair
Morr said she and Kendnd. v.ork
as a team and that sht> was pm' to
most aspects of the ccntcr\ Opl'r-
atton. She also attended all nt·go-
t1a11o ns w11 h groups considering en-
gagements at the ncv. am com pin
.. , hcheve operauom v.111 g<1 on 3,
usual C-ertatnh on the 1mnortant
(Pleue eee ARTS/ A2)
Loofbourrov. stre\sed that the
hoard 1s mt"reh C\plonng 11' opuom
and has not reached an\. condu,1on\
on ,.hethcr 10 close schooh
"E,aluattng the \ltua11on dc')('\n'1
presuppose Jn\ thing.·· ~he !-lid "Rut
it's not fair to othrr students through-
out the dl\tncl 10 maintain school'
that arc under-enrolled. t>c<-au(,(' 11
u1'>ts more to opcratt' thcm ··
(Ple&K eee SCHOOL/A2)
Sheriff ordered to attend
hearing for tactics onjail
Judge agrees to h ear cla ims by inmates
that mandated privileges a re violated
,1tfTt''-pondcn1.t• nh111np.ranh' .111d
rt·.1111ng ma1c:n:i l
l hl· \Ull al,11 111a1n1.iin' thJl thl'
'ht·nff, IK-panmrn1 u<.ed frn'<I lor
pun"hment an~ d1~ 1phnar. "'''·1 tr'" -v.h1l h Jlrl<i.Oner<o call thr
h11k -1n a l rud and unu\u,11
mannt"r
By LISA MAHONEY
OllMOelly,... .....
Orange Count}" henfT-Coroncr
Brad Gates will have to defend
himself against inmate charges that
his department violated a 1978 court
order mandating that count} J&tl
pnsonen urc enntled to certain
pl'i v1lt1B. U.S. D1stnct Court Judge Wilham
Gray Wcdnesda) set a contempt
heanng for Gates af\cr El Toro
attomcv teohcn Buckley asserted
Ro1ERT
BARKER
Fo cus ON THE NEw s
H1stoncal 1efy member Ouy
Guzzardo.
"They were amona the earliest
colonists to amve 1n Westminster
Colony,.. Guzzardo added. "They
wert real ptonttra."
John Pope built the home because
his wife had ts n=d of hvina 1n ti\(
counlt)' and wanted to move to town.
Ouuardo said.
John's 88·year·old dauahter.
Laurette, li"es at a reurement com·
m"n1ty and proYt<kd much of the
information about the old boute.
(Pl ....... TOalC/ASJ
that thc ~henlf\ Dcpanmcnt m.11n
ta1ned pohc1es that 1gnortd (1r.1' '
orders to provide rccreauon llmt· "'
1nmau:s 1n admin1strat1H' 'K·gn ..
p11on. install pay tckphonl''> in the
1a1I and re vise wnttcn 1a1• rult·' 111
refl et:t the new pn' 1legc-; fhl' llr1.kr.
stem from an earlier lav..,u11 11n 1.11f
coodtuons..
Gray also agrttd 10 hear a do"
act1on su1t on behalf of all prescntJnd
future Main J11I in mate$ 1ha1 allege'
Gates violated prisoner.-""ii nghh
by restncting their acces~ to 04.'r .. onal
&th the d a"" artmn 'u1t .rnd a
'him l3U'r ht·anng on 1hc tonlt'mJll
l hargc' art• 1t·nta11vet' ~·t for Jun t• 2'
< 1ra' tra,cli:-d to Santa .\na to hear Buel.I~' \ 1.nmpla1nt and annthl·r 1nll·
rcl atcdc1' ii l a\\· on th\' ..ame Ja\
Orange Count' hc-aan ln l'nmph v.11h
a l<mtempt 1lrdC"r Fie i\\UC'd in \1arl'h
rtgarding 1ail 0' ercrowdmtt
>\menC'an ll\ ii L1ht-r11t'\ I n10n
(Pleue eee GATES/Al)
Irvine woman getting
· $2.6 million for heacf
Injury in auto crash
By STEVE MAftBLE °' ... ..., ..........
TM fam1I)' of an lrv1nt v..oman
who uffercd WWrt h~d 1njune 1n a
1983 c.r accident will receive S2 fl
millio n 1n an out-<lf-<:<>un settlement
ruchcd this ~le
hl11e McDaniel. SS, ... th ro""""
from her vehicle when It colhded with
an oncom1na car and suffered uch
amou head 1n,iun that ~he later
underwent a pan1al frontal lobotomy
\1ett
i\aron \1 mund. lhC' dnvcr of the
1982 C"a maro that rammed
McDaniel's car. alleatdly wa\ dnv1na
at spttc:h approa hina 80 mph when
he lo't control of the car on R1dachne °"'(' '\ tnal v.as ~t to open ~nda,. the
Mime da' a \tttlcmcnt wa ruchtd
"' the time of 1he accident. Teller and h1' family "'ert on a slu tnp tn
Utah .A,lthouah he rcportcdl)' told
\lmund not to u!e the car 1n h11
aMn\tt. Tel~' matd apparm\ty pcnn1ncd 1pnund to rcmo\;e to
the C'a.rnaro from the resicknc:c.
Onln1s "-leV11on, an anomty ~
The woman' family later ucd the
drivu of tht other car and \he car's
owna. Robtn Telkr. cha1nnan of 1hc
Bob's Old·flsh10Md tee < rt'am
chain and m_,or 1tod.hoWcr 1n the
Orarwr Coun FalQroud -.,.~--(Pl 1 w ... ealT/MI·~__,,_...
't
ledJef!· planning to seek
t hird term as s~ervisor
.,LaAIWIONBY ..............
0.... Comaty Supervitor Har-rilll M. Wieder allnoulkled plans
today IO nm for a third term.
Armed with I k>Jll lilt of political 'f:r' and more than S2'°,ooo ID but. Wieder laid lbe hoped
• ~~be no cballeaeen for her
MIU Diatnct teat 10 lhe could con-
liDue her efforts in tbe areas of ..,.... bouaina, tran1portation,
.... for Southern California, nood
control and toxic waste.
Wieder allo promitcd the Board of
Su,erviaon would stop wafflina on
ftndina ~lite, "bite the bullet" and make a 'lion on the controversial
matter once a new 11te .election study
bu been completed.
"While much that I set out to
1COOmpli1h already has been com-
pleted, a number of items on my
atendl remain unfinisbod. TbJt ii
wby t will seek re-.election thj1 year,"
Wieder said in a momina press
conference at the county Hall of
Administration in Santa Ana.
Wieder was accomp&nied to the
press conference by more than a
dozen mayors, city council members
and police chiefs in her district.
Supervisor Roaer Stanton, who
sham responsibility Wlth Wieder for
Westminater and Oatdeo Grove, also
attended in a ehow of suppon.
Wieder'• re--election effon is
t.cked by the ma yon of all but one of
the communities she represents:
Huntinaton Beach, Cypress, Garden
O~ve, Lios Alamitos. Seal Beach,
Stanton and Westminster as. weU as
the president of unincorporated
Rossmoor. Sunset Beach officials
were not included on her list of
supporters.
Wieder was first elected to the 2nd
District seat in 1978 and is the only
woman ever elected to the Board of
Supervisors.
Coast c~upleheld in em.bezzling
BJ PllJI. SNEIDERMAN ...............
Irvine police concluded an eight-
month investiption ttlis week wtth
the arrest of a l...quna Hills couple
who alleacc:lly embezzled almost
S500,000 from a locaJ yacht manufac-
turer.
Lt. Al Muir said Arthur James
Sallee, 61, and his wife, Arlone Ann
Sallee, S 1, were arrested Tuesday on
suspicion of arand theft.
Muir said the two are suspected of
atealina $473,573 from Islander
Yachts and its parent company,
Atlanta-hued Fuqua lnustries. be·
tween 1980 and 1985.
Until last year, Islander Yachts
operated a manufacturing plant in
Irvine at 1922 Barranca Road. The
company bas since been sold and has
relocated outside Oranae County.
Muir sajd.
_liuaidArJooc.sallee._\Y.bo.alsO-wn
known by her maiden name, Peed,
was the controller at Islander Yacht$
durin& the .period when the money
was alleeedJy taken. Muir said her
husband alJo worked for the firm on a
part-time basis.
The suspected embezzlement was
discovered during an audit by the
parent comeany last year and re-
ported to lmoc police, prompting an
ei&ht-month investigation. Muir said.
He said the investigation end
Monday when Orange County
Harbor Munici~ Court Judie
Russell Bostrom issued waJTants (or -
the anest of the Sal lees.
Irvine police arrested the couple
early Tuesday at their current places
of employment and placed them in
Orange County Jail. Aocording to
Muir, Bostrom later reduced the bail
for each to S 10.000.
~CHEMICAL DUMPS PLAGUE HIGHWAY •••
Jl'romAl
not know, however, if the dumpings
are related.
.. There's the possibility they're
connected." said Antrim. "It's bard
to tell how lona the chemicals have
actually been there."
Because it is isolated and patrolled
infrequently, the Orteaa Highway
maybeapopulardumpingVound for
toxic waste, fire officials said.
Bob Merryman, director of the
county's Environmental Health Dc-
panment, said authorities are at-
temptina to find out who dumped the
chemicals by correlating the
chemicals or finding· Klentification
marlri• on the abandoned drums
and carusters.
Offenders would face a $50,000
fine for each chemical that was
dumped or a total of about $3 million
in the latest episode.
The chemicals, if disposed of
properly, would be hauled to a
hazardous waste dump in Northern
ratifomia. one of the last remaining
dumps in the state that aocepts toxic
chemicals in liquid form.
Crosby & Overton. the Long Beach
firm hired to remove the chemicals,
probably will transform the liquids to
solids and deposit them at a toxic
dump in Casmalia outside Santa
Barbara.
The cost of cleaning up the
chemicals found this week on the
Ortega Highway already is nearing
$25,000. said a county official.
GATES FACES CONTEMPT HEARING •••
From A l
attorney Richard Herman proved the
county was violating terms of the
same 1978 order Buckley bas cited by
not pfovidin& inmates with beds or
living them enough time for sleep
and meals.
not both appears to violate an order
th.al segrepted prisonen be allowed
daily use of the dayroom for at least
twA.houn. Gray observed. Showers
arc permitted at the jail every other
day.
Gray found county supervisors and Twice weekly rooftop recreation
Gates an contempt last March for not.. may also have been denied for
carrying out bis orders and appointed segregated inmates, Gray concluded.
a jail monitor to ma.Ice sure steps were . Sin~tticre a.re 14 segregation cells
taken to lower the population in the and Jail policy only alloM two
main men's jail to 1,500 by Wednes-sqrepted 1nmatesat a time to use the
day. rooftop recreational facilities at a set
A spokesman for Gates referred hour each day, the Sheriffs Dcpart-
questions about the new litigation to ment could not both follow its own
Deputy County Counsel Ed Duran. rules and meet Gray's order when the
segregration cells were full, Buckley
argued. Duran Wiii represent Gates an the
contempt bearing. An attorney
chosen by the county Risk Manage-
ment Division will defend him an the
class action suit.
"We're goin$ to make them prove
their aase, and 1f they prove anythil1,8.
we're J Oing to attempt to show the
sheriff has attempted to comply with
those orders," Duran said. "Our
contention is he was in compliance
most of the time if not all of the tame:·
Buckley, representing former in-
mate Phillip A. Senteno and current
inmates Willie R. Wisely and Ronald
S. Rodriguez. presented the court
with evidence and statements he said
show that inmates are not getting all
the privileges they are supposed to.
O ne piece of evidence -a note
written by Senteno while in adminis-
trative segregation (one person in a
cell by himself) -asks for access to
the jail's dayroom. A shentrs depu-
ty's response that he could chose
either the dayroom or a shower but
As to pay telephones. Buckley
disagrees with county claims that the
collect call-only phones it has in-
stalled meet Gray's order. Gray
agreed to hear further argument on
t6e matter as well as took into why the
county never incorporated his orders
into written rules provided to in-
mates so they would know their
riibts~
Duran said at the Wednesday
hearing that the county did not
believe that directive was a~ of the
1978 order. Gray assured rum it was.
Buckley said after the hcarinJ that
he expected the class action suit and
show cause hearing to take about five
days. He planned to call between 20
and 25 wttnesses, including SCnicno
and another man who arc currently
servinJ time in Soledad Prison.
Earlier Wednesday, Gray ordered
the county to pay Herman, the ACLU
attorney, $38,563 in fees and clwJcs
for work stemming from the case
which resulted in his March contempt
finding against the county.
Herman was seeking about
S 148,000 for three cases but was
awarded fees in only one.
Gray also agreed with county
a11uments that Herman should be
paid S 125 an hour for his work
tnstcad of the $200 he was asking for.
The award coupled with S 7 5,830 in
penalties Gray ordered the county to
pay for. violaung his orders on inmate
housing bring contempt fines levied
to SI 14.393.
UndersherifT Raul Ramos said the
Sheriffs Department was in com-
pliance Wednesday with Gray's most
recent order to ke-ep main Jail popu-
lauon below 1.500.
Low-risk inmates were shuffled to
branch jails over the weekend to
make sure prisoners in the Main Jail's
men's section did not exceed the
court-imposed limit, be said.
Come April, Orange County must
further shrink jail population to no
more than 1,400 inmates. Antaci-
pating \hat, Herman a.sk.ed Gsay to
order triple bunks removed from the
Main Jail.
Duran successfully argued that the
bunks were needed to maintain
flexibility an the jail. The county will
also continue to use tents that were set
up at the James A. Musick Honor
Farm as temporary housing while
modular units are being prepared, he
said.
The 409-bcd modulars are in use
now, but the tents continue to be
sorely needed, Duran said. Herman
has not raised the tents as an issue, he
said.
ARTS CENTER DIRECTOR STRICKEN •••
From A l
issues I'll talk to Tom:· Morr saad.
"frankly, we've done: everything
tasether as a team ...
Though confiden1. center officials
aoocared concerned that pubhcaty
abOut Kendrick's cond1t1on could
derail their efforts. Hoag Hospital
was ordered not to Jive out any
information on Kendn ck, according
to a hospital worker
Meanwhile. center board member
Henry Scgerstrom channeled press
inquiries to Kitzrow.
When asked if Kendrick appeared
to be bucklina under the st.rain of
preparing the center to ~n in 8'h
months, Morr replied: What job
isn't stressful? I feel Tom was pleased
with the way thjnp were goina here."
So far, the American Ballet
Theater. the New York Caty Opera
and the local Pacific Symphony have
been s1aned to perform.
Coincidentally. heart problems
contributed to the retirement of the
center's first exccutjve director. Len
Bed.sow, in late 1984.
MAYOR ELECTION •••
Bcdsow underwent open-heart sur-
acry a year earlier. Although he
returned to work within a month,
Bedsow was never able to maintain a
full schedule. He also cited job stress
UTprinciptcrcason fot h iS"departll re.
Prom A l
that direct election could permit a
candidate with no council expenencc
to immediately become mayor
But Miller said she would support
Cat.alano's proposal as Iona as the
mayor's role is not expanded to usurp
theauthorityofthecity manager, who
overtttt day-to-day caly operations.
ORANG( .........
COAST --· rm91
.-°"'ca JJOw.I ~II C...MIM CA .... .--eo. IMO C41118 Mlle CA 12t26
After approvina the ballot measure
on direct election of a mayorr the
councat directed the city staff to
return Jan. 28 with several other
changes that also may be placed
before voters, ancludina limitation of
council terms and a chanae of election
dates.
SUIT •••
FnamA l
rescnlin& the Teller tamaly. i.aad
becautt the maid let S1amund take
the keys "it was enough for ham
(Sipnund) to be covered under h1<1
(Teller's) 1nsuranoe policy."
c:-...-........,., ....... ' edllOllll "'1·•32 • Ju•t call 642-6086
lo'""CMt Ft'°"' ! ,0.. OD
"OI ..... "°"' ~ °' ~ '° o "' c• Otlot• 1 r. "' M'4 '°" (OOj .. -. 0. OllM<.O ~ ,.., a.-. c.-~ Cornpeny ~
-tlona ._ ..... .-otill l!llllMI' • .o-i ... ""'"",..,..,...,.•,..,.a,...,-"'*"..-..-'*
""'9IO'I Of~ -
What do you like about lbt 0.ily Pilot? What
don't you hke? Call tbc number above and your
meslllf will bt ttc.0rded, transcribed and de-
livered to the appropriate editor.
The same l4-hour an1wtrina KMoe may be
used to ~ord knm to the editor on any toPtC.
Contnbutors to our Letta'I column must include
their name and tcliq»hone number for vcnficataon .
Tells us .-ha1'1 on you.r mind.
la!ulClly 111(1 _, " '°" 00 no! ·-~ COOy Dy 1 a If' ta ~· dO 1 '91 I N! l'(llJf t'OOY Mii t..~"4
ClteUletloft
T1l1p..._. .... 0r..,..eowr-., ., ...
... at 47 21 '° 40 10 a Jt 01
14 21
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24 u
21 u ... .. ... 40
71 ..
24 15
70 ...
24 14 " ., 40 $7 ,. ot
M H M 2t so .. aa ao •• 17
11 ... ,. 24
7' SI
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.... a eo ......
M aC>
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M "* M Mir 24 ..., 24 ...,
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SCHOOL CLOSURE WEIGHED IN MESA •••
P'romAl
While Loofbourrow said no cam-K..illybrooke and Sonora arc listed in
pus in the Cost.a Mesa Hi&h zone is six.
targeted for closure. 13 of the altema-Loufborrow said the ~rd will first
tives under review signal the demise decide whether to send seventh and
of the long-embattled Bear Street eight.h graders to Costa Mesa High
School. before addressing potential closures.
Trustees have twice considered Parents are invited to testify Feb. 4
closing the facility, but backed away at a special study session on the
atthe urging of parents. Enrollmentat proposal to combine intermediate
the school has dropped 40 below the grades with the high school. Three
district's minimum of 300. , board members will conduct the 7:30
"Schools come in for serious con-p.m. bearing at Davis Intermediate.
sideration when they start hitting that Fliers announcing any develop-
mark," Nicoll said Wednesday. ments will be sent home with stu-
He added that Bear Street School
dents, while several hcarinJS and
study sessions will be held before any
decisions are made, ·Loofbourrow
saad.
Trustees arc hopin$ to decide on
the high school consolidation and the
potential closures by the end of
March. However, Loofbourrow said
the dcadhne could be extended.
Sinoe 1973, Newport-Mesa bas
closed I 5 schools -scllina three of
the campuses. using others for district
offices and teasing some to communi-
ty service agencies.
was being studied not only because of
enrollment. but because of safety
reasons.
"It's on a heavily traveled street,
and the traffic will increase once the
new shopping area is completed,"
Nicoll said, referring to the South
Coast Plaza expansion about a half
mile up the road.
Wrong house; 'man' arrested in NB
Nine of the alternatives drafted by
Nicoll call for College Park Elemen-
tary to be closed. Seven peg Pautarino
Elementary for closure, while
An Anaheim man who apparently
went to the wrong house intending to
borrow some money was arrested
early Tuesday after pounding on the
door of a Newport Beach home
screamina. "lam the man."
Newport Beach polic.c spokesman
Trent Harris said officers arrested
Eugene Helm, 26, after he told pohcc
he was carrying a .25-caJiber hand-
gun.
Helm said he thought he had gone
to the home of"someone he planned
to borrow money from," but got the
wrona house.
He was taken to the Newpon Beach
City Jaal where he was booked for
possession of a fircanr1.
E!
Sew up b~vings.
You can label yourself lucky with savings
of up to 70% on our elegant suits , sport coats,
~ries and sponswear.
The selection is stiH good so
~In~
\
First NigJJ.ters
meet in Laguna
i:'he Laauna First N1aJ1ters Assoc1at1on will hold ns annual meelina Saturday afternoon at the
Laauna MouJton Playhouse, and pro!>pect1 vc new
members arc 1nv1ted to attcnd.
. The aeneral meeting, scheduled ror 2:30 p.m ..
will include president's and chairmen's repons and a
backstaae tour of the I.beater, 606 Laguna Canyon
Road, Laauna Beach. J(eserva11ons may be obuuned
by calling Ruth Bryson at 496-3176.
Telescope a•er• convene
A telescope users chnic w1 II be held aturday on
the UC' Irvine campus. The day-long seminar will be conduct~d by Western Obscrvatorium 10 help those
cons1dcnng the purchase of a telescope and those
who ha ve one and need advice on 1ts use.
The clinic will be held from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m
w11h breaks for coffee alld lunch. For registration
1nforma11on. call the lJCl Extension program al 856-6411 "
Swlng danclng slated
Swing dancing will be taught by the Newpon
Beach Parks, Beaches and Recreat1on Department
wuh. classes beginning Saturda)' at 7 p.m. 10 the
Manners Park recreation hall al Dover Drive and Irvine Avenue. •
Ballroom dance-J<;SS&AS will precede the swing
classes ~t ~ p.m. over the eight-weekend period. ~nze-winning dancer Toni Piazza will be the
instructor for the course. which 1s priced al $34.
Pontiac drivers meet
The third annual Ponllat· De.aler Concourse,
open 10 all Pon11acs and Oaklands from l 980 to the
present will be held Sunday at 10 a.m. at Stadium
Pontiac. 2225 E. Katella Ave .. Anaheim.
. The registration fee as S 10 per car and the public
will be adm111ed at no charge. Call Rich Plastino al
644-7269 or Lou Han at 854-2453 for more information
Vlolln recltal slated ..
V1olin111t Karen Lak, assisted by members of1he
Pac11ic String Quartet and pianist Laszlo Lak, will
perform Sunda} at 8 p.m. at the Tustin Presbytenan
Church al Mam and C streets in Tustin.
Rescrva11ons ma) be made by calling the
church al 544-7070. There 1'i no admission charge.
howe,er. a free-will offenng will be taken.
Retlrees to meet
The addleback Valley chap1er of the National
Assoc1a11on of Retired Federal Employees will
conduct 11s regular monthly meeting Monday al 2
p.m. at the Western Federal avings and Loan
Assoc1a11on, 26940C'rown Valley Parkway. Mission
Viejo.
Reured and active federal c1vil 1an employeec;,
their spouses and ~uests are 1nv11ed 10 allend.
Additional 1nforma11on ma) be obta1neJ by calling
Joe Greve at 830-76 70
Comet study ln New Zealand
A tour of New Zealand in conjunction w11h a
s1udy of I lalley's Comet W111 be -offered by
Saddlcback College's Commun11y Services Otlin·.
w11h the deadline for payml·nt 11cheduled for
Monda)'.
Dr. Y.ong Kim. professor of astronomy at
addleback, \\Ill host the tour. "'h1t h 1s pnced at
S2.5 78 per person. in cluding .i1r fare. accommn-
da11ons and ~me meals. (all 5X2-4650 for a
complete 111neral")' and brochure
An Invitation:
Attenhon organization presidents and sec-
retari.t We want 10 help make your upcoming
events. mMl•ngs. seminars and tundra1setS suc-
cesalul. 5-\d brief announc.ments Including 11me,
place. colt (II any) and a phOne number tor
addltlonal Information 10· Bulletln Board, Dally
Piiot. P 0 Box 1560, Costa Mesa, 92626
Reports ol your club or organization's activities
-Ilka community service projects or electton of
oflloers -should ti. directed to lhe Community
News Editor at the same addreu Non-returnable
black and white photographs ere welcome.
'Ihuraclay, Jan. 16
No mttll111 1cltedaled
Orange Cout DAIL y PILOT /Thurtday. JMuery 18. 1981 * A.I
Disputed CdM .senior project OK'd
11 SUSAN ROWLETT °'.............. .
Amid bo&h praise and opposition from
lona-1ime residents, the Newpon Beach
City Council has approved conJtruction of
a planned senior citiz.en housina develo~
ment in Corona del Mar.
The I ()().unit Corona del Mar Seniors
Project Planned Community District. to
be built by the Bren Co., will be located
nonheast of Maraueritc and Fifth avenues.
The council approved it in a 4-3 vote
Monday with council members Don
Strauss, 8111 Aaee and Evelyn Han voting
aaainst it.
A traffic study for the condom1n1um
development will be considered by thcdty
as pan of the •ar«ment.
The project was desianed ''to provide a
method whereby propeny mar be classi-
fied and develo~ for muluple-f.amily
residential iaes an accordance wilh lbe
Newpon ~ch General Plan," accord in&
to the adopted ordinan«.
The implementation of the prOJect wdl
limit re11dcn1s to those SS years and okler.
State law may funhcr restnct occupa_ncy of
the project to people over 62 years.-old.
Bur Corona del Mar midcnts who spoke
apmst the project at a public hcarina said
us construction would '10m promisc the
beauty of their quaint neiahborhood.
Resident Jean Slack said sbeplhered 63
signatures on a petition oppos1na the
complex.
"This don not fit 1n10 the ~1he11c
quali&y of Corona del Mar," Slack ~1d. he
aaid the wheel• of proaress sp1nn1na u1
Coron&del MartttJeopardmna the safet)
and st.atus quo of the commun1t)
"Does Mr. 8rtn w11n1 to make this
ano&hcr LA?" she asked
Ott.tr speakers were 1n fa vor of 1hc ~· They said they behc.,,c NcwpQn
h needs mo~ affordable hou!>1n1
plans for its. seniors .
H. Ro55 Miller. of Fnendi. ot Oasis. ~•d
after about 80 mttu n~ and four )Car~ of
nClOl11lJons with the Cit) and builders a
compromise has finalh been worked out
Fnends of Oasis is a local senior c1t1zen
group.
Tom Cate plane to refarbiab the 80-year-old
houee, built by a pioneer fa.rnllnC family, which
Delly ..... ...._..., ... ~ ..
wu M•ed from tbe bulldozer with the help of
local preeerntloniata.
HISTORIC HB HOUSE BEING RELOCATED ...
From Al
<.iuzzardo ~1d It was she who sold the
home 10 11s current owners. he said.
"'This house has true histonc s1g.n1fi-
cance. It's the first old house we've been
able to save. Maybe 11 will start a precedent
and the old house'> will be saved. not torn
down."
The house, which 1s weathered and
obviously has seen better days. was built Ln
the style of classic revival in the V1ctonan ·
theme. Guzzardo said. It has four
bedrooms. a formal den, li ving room.
k11chen, laundry room and two bath-
rooms.
Cate, the new owner, plans 10 move n
Fnday morning at 2 a.m. The mover w1ll
take 11 two blocks to Pacific Coac;t
Highway. travel three blocks south and
then head back cast to 12th Streel.
Many of the overhead power and
telephone hoes have 10 be removed for the
move. Cate said.
The old Pope House is one of about 300
remaining 1n downtown areas 1ha1 are of
Victonan Era vintage, according 10 Mike
Adams of the city's redevelopment office
. Members of the H1stoncal Society have
launched a vigorous dnve to save the
home and others hke 11
C'11y officials have contributed S IS 110(1
that "'as u~d 10 retain the Th1nieth \trce1
Architectural firm of Newport Beach 10
conduct a survey of up to about 2.00() old
structures for possible pre~r.-a11on
The company has slated an open hou~c
next Wednesday from 5 to 7 pm a1 11'
office in the Main S1ree1 libral")' annn
People arc encouraged 10 share famil)
photographs and hlstones and part1c1pct1e
in the survey ofold buildings Office hours
are slated Tuesdays and Thursda"" fr1Jm 1-5 p.m. and Wednesda)<. from ,_., pm
''Tb1s · ptOJ«1 1J not perfect bY uy
mans." Maller u1d. "But n's whtt the
Bren Co. has come up with and we suppon
II "
An Orat1ie County n1or Advtt0ry
Counci l Poke man tehoed Millet's Nit'·
men1 say1 na. "If we don't appro"'e
prOJCCt like 1ha. what can we approver
Hren Co. ~poke mao David 8 Neish
said the development will bt a benefit to
the ne1&hborhood. and appealed to the
tounc1l 10 uphold the Plann1na Com-
m1\s1 on· ~c S dccu1on to approve the
prOJeCt
"~cgard 1n' propen) 'alue. we 1t11nk
1h1) propen) will ht-a trend M"tter:· Ne1 h ).Uld
200want
carpooling
lanes open
< o\lj 'vic">J I rn'"J' car pool lane foe
J<X < < a1ron ~,.,he ha'> collected morC'
than ~00 '>1ina1urc' 10 thl' past v.eek trom
people "'ho "'ant 1ht· re\tnctcd fo urth U1nc.-
open to all traffil
Catron, who'>l' Drl\Crs for H1ghwa}
Safet~ comm1ttt'l' hc1' called a ml'ellng at 6
p.m tonigh t at 1hc Orange ( ount' Fair·
grounds sa~ ~ ht" hope\ 10 ge1 n en more
suppon lor hi\ po'1111on alter 55 Freewa}
commutt'n ha't' thc l hance to )pe.sk their
mind~ I ho'>c agcnl•l''> Jlong with lht' Orange
(ount~ Tran~tt ()1.,tm:t, arc te\ting car
pout lane\ along a 12-mile !>trctch of lhC'
Costa Mci,a Frct"wa\ The lane!>. one each
nun h and \outh ""l'rt' canl-d from tht'
1n!>1de mcd1Jn and b~ "1hn nk1ng the
C'\ISting \I\ I.int''> h' a loot ao1l't'e
Suspect in kidnap.
r obbery captured
.\ man "ho 111IJ pol1u· he "ork> a\ a
\(:l unt) guard 111 In tnl "'a' .irrcsted
V. edne'>Cia~ Jlln hl Jllegedh rohht-d J
"'uman at l.Jl1kpotnt 11eJ he1 up dnd tore
off her cluth 1n~
Garden < 1m' r f)Uhn· \gt Bruce
Beauchamp '>Jld th1· ~u .. pettt'd rohhcr
V. a' ne .\J..&m f ord ~~ "a' MTl'\lcd 10
that ut' at about I ~ .l11a m n 1h1· C J'alier
Motel. '1 1 11 Hartl< r Bl' d
Beauchamp '><ud Ir 1·nd\ 111 tht" 'llllm
flagged dov.l\ an otft, < r and d1rt"ctcd htm
to the molt'I roum ln'-t<lt' pol1~e lound
Ford and d "'Oman P l nn' ( ruol..1n 25 ot
<\nahe1m who 1411.S 11cd up and nude be
said .\ kndt "'"' ><11cd al thc. "enc
The pohtt' -.crgednl "11d 1 ord "'ho told
polict' he "'orkt'd a\ d -.et uni\ guard 1n
Ir. ine and ha\ ~t'n "' ing rt·ccnth in h1'>
truck wa\ plal cd 1'n Orange l ounl\ Ja1l 1n
lit•u of$~· t 1011 h.111
Irvine backs industrial rezoning plan
By PKIL SNEIOERMAN
Of IM Oellf ...... SIMI
The Irvine ('11y Council has approved a
zone change that wall pave the way for the
Fluor C'orp .. Parker-Hannifin and several
other companies to build hotels. offices
and speculative projects w11h develop-
ment nghts onginally rescr.ed solely for
corporate e'\pans1on.
But rcprcscn1a11 ves of the Koll C'o. and
several other companae!I expressed dis-
pleasure over the change. arguing Fluor
and Parker-Hannifin will be rece1v1ng
special treatment.
The dispute 1s rooted in the intcnst'
compeuuoo to build in 1he bustling 2.500.
acre Irvine Business Complex, adjacent 10
John Wayne Airport. Irvine offi cials are
hm11mg development in the area because
of traffic congestion. The disagreement
over who can build in the area and what
type of projects arc permitted has d1V1ded
some oflrvine's leadingcorporate c1111cns
"I don't 1h1nk an absolute consensus can
be reached on 1h1s." Mayor Da vid Bakt'r
said Tuesday night.
"'Someone. regardless of what "'e decide.
1s going to think 11's unfair to them "
The 1one change was approved 4--0, with
Councilwoman Barbara Wi ener declining
to vote because of a potenual conflict of
interest
In cleanng the wa) for the Fluor and
Parker-Hannifin prOJects. the council ~up
ported an Irvine Planning Comm1ss1on
recommendation. rejecting city c;iafl's
advice.
Councilwoman Sally t\nne Maller con-
ceded that ··equity for all panics on aJI
issues 1s 1dealis11c, not reasonable."
Miller said she fa vored the proposal
becau~ 11 would require the proposed
de' elopments to proceed through the
c1ty"s regular review process. Also, she
said, the measure requires an advanct'
payment of fees to cover road improve-
ments around the projects.
The dispute surfaced last March w1th the
disclosure that Fluor C'orp. was working a
Dallas-based developer. Trammel Crow
Co . on plans to build hotels. offi~
bu1ld1ngs. retail shops and restaurants on
the pnme acreage surrounding Auor's
tam1liar grttn-gJa" hl·adqudna' JI J.im
borel' Bouhard and lhl· 'i.tn Dito.go f n·l·
Wa)
In Jul) the Fluor prurxn' ""'
purchased b) a partncr\h1p 1n,11h 1n11.
Trammel ( ro"' .ind Bo-.t11n·t"l.i'l d
W1n1hrop Financial •\\'iOClate<. n u11r
recel\ed S305 m1ll1on 1mmedaall'h hu1
S35 m1lhon was w11hht•ld pending ... un ·
firma11on of the Fluor deH·lopment nghl\
Fluor offi cials ~1J their corpurtat111n
had been been granted de,elopmt"nl nghh
that would permit the fir'it pha'>t" fll thl·
development. But i.omt' Cll\ official' J illi
bus1n~ss lt'ade~ cla1mt'J the ngh1' ••rl
perm11ted Fluor 10 build more offiu·.., 1111
us corporate opera11ons -nol tu lea'4· 111
other<>
Rt·pre~n1atl\e'i ol f-luor Parl..cr·HJ11
nifin, 1he In ineC'o .. lhc Koll Co .rnJ 1llht·1
firms have condurled mee11ngs In int1. I••
rcsol' e the dispute
The Koll Co . "'h1lh ha' ma11•r 11' n
de' elopmc.-nts that could lau.· l.Om~111 .. 1
lrom the.-propo~d Fluor proJel't'>. t•PJ'< •'1.•1
tht' 1une rhangt' appr<>"l'd h' thl' l "11'"
R it hard Ort"t'in. a K oll JI\ "1011 Pll''
.knt 1111J Hh ,11u1, tr1.1• '·•i11 lt x.a
tiu\lnt''""' tlJ' 'lt' 1 •1i.·1.1 11ril 1ndt•r
rUll'' that othl"" wJnlt'J: • liJO~l IJl1 1n
1hr g.1 m<'" lk < h.tr~ri! it .11 Iii<· ruk
di.tll~l'\ W11ul.J 'k,11 h ht !Wiii J "-k<' ll \\ '
Hui n .1n 1n11·n "'"' \\ ·d•1c '"·'' n11•rr IO!f ( lr1 W 'In \,11<! "l lo.. ( 11,1' ~' plJft\
h , hJll1 tl~l' ti\\ l!J lll •I !Ill' ,11un, ii'
dn 1\1on I fr \.IHI hr :intintiJIC'' rt·n'-'e"ll
, •l•l'll:rJt111n .11:1 r ~ In •n< Hu'ltlt'"
< u\nlflll·\ ,k , l11rx·r, ''.t h thr· .11m '''
m.1l.1n~ •t '11n • h1 p11·11111 rr o !t1u
IOl.dl l•fl 'lll '•'I 11111 ( ,tll111l1ll.I
I 1tlr I. •I r 1.,d.I\ ni tithl 1h1•
~· 111\ I • \pp111Hll.! \l,1Ht1 liJ"<'I ' H'Pfl \l'fl
thl·, ,1, •II :t1r 1u1nr P''"'' ' 1iz1•n, 1n 1h,11
\\Ill <t\ t'r\t'l' J'IJOllin>! ~.llhl ltll,llh IO• 111 lhl
p111pu,nJ 'Jn l11,i.11Hrt ll1lf, I 11111h11l and
L1,tt"rn lrl."l''°'·'"
• Rout1nd ,kn11·d •11,11 l.1111" '1'l'l..ing
1111."' S l '11111111•11 ''' .i.1 m.1~c' a'"~•au:d
\ •t· 1hrN.0 llJll I .11 \ IUl Ill' Jl\J unr Jlkt1l•d
.tltn1..1l111n "'1111 p11l1 t •!''" ,,
• 'r r<••ntt'.t I •·• •t'• H. • :hi ,,
\ • 1•1 Put-Ii, l'J,,_.., \ · '' "" \11
'' \ H1 IJhl
PoucE Loe
Ex--CHP officers receive
probation in false report
Kemmer. 19. was arrcsted at I 2 -lX
.t m Wednesday on South Coast
t llghway Richard M. Tramblay, 21.
was arrc'>tC'd at I : 13 a.m. Tuesda} on
">oulh Coast Highway.
Handncton Beach
<\ S600 cu stereo was reported
~IOltn from Jray 1984 Honda Accord
and a SJSO c,ar stereo was reported
•Holen from a white 1985 Volkswqen
convertible while both cars were
parked in the Ocean View High
School lot a1 the comer of Warner and
Go1hard avenues Wednesday.
Luggage. a pu~ and i.,.,' '•' 11 •'
at S '60, "'t're rcponC'd 'itt)le n 1 .1m • h
rtar seat ot a black 11r~ < t1<' •• 1,'
C'apnct' parked in 1he I"' .:'1" • Iii," 1. '
Newhope trcet Tue~a' n1~lll • • • Vandal!I rcporlt'Jh .. m.1,h1·,1 h•
front w1ndo"' ol the' 1-.r.il.u' I'),, ., ,,
lessen doing S \00 in dam.1tt1 • tin
16027 Brookhur)t I c-.whh-.hrm 11\
Tuesda) n1gh1
\'; •1 I I'll."~ ... I ,, •I,\
'••Pl.I p.11 I. «I II 11" • ,,), " ~ 1'
I' l1l'f'I • \\ llU \\ '" I ,d,1
\ 11111 l.1f'l1 '''"' 111 1'1,l \1 I .1nd
,lllll ,1 n1l1 pltl\ I '-l r ti llllflt•d
'tllll'll 11 •f'\ t1 t 'I 'tl I l,1 \,I\ In
•1,t 1 hnr, h ' \' • 1lh l 1 "'·" •
By ST£VE MARBLE
OflMOellr .........
Two former C'ahfornia Highway
1'<111 01 officers were placed on three
}c:irs' probation and ordered 10
perform 120 hour'i of community
~rv1cc \\Jednesday for fals1fy1n1 a
drunken dm 1ng repon.
Robert Scott F111gcrald . .2S. and
Gary Sterkel. 26. pleaded au11ty Oct.
19 10 filing a filtR police ttpon and
obstruclin& ;us11cc in a drunken
driving case. The officers were fired from the
CHP following lhc 1nc1den1. which
involved a 23-year-old Ma !llOn V1eJO
"'Oman WhO WI$ dr1v1n1 00 thC San
Oi~o Freeway.
Kimberly Ann O'Hara was rttum·
1na home April 19 from a bar in San
809tla Coulty
Two items of JCwtlry worth SJ. I 00
were rcponcd sto~n Sunday from a
Mission Vtdo home in tht 22900
block of Via Nuct. Pohce ttPofU said
tht theft occurred t0metimc 1intt
Dec. 1. Jewelry valued at S900 wu
aleo reported stolen from a ~
bOme. • • • all turtceya. 11x Jidel of bttf and
three hams, valued at $680.SO, were
reported t1olen ftiom a JU1n ,
Clemente when '""o officers ap-
proached her car. which she'd stop-
ped on the freeway. she said.
The woman churned she 1old th1·
officers she'd been dnnking but had
stopped because she was 111 and had
been 'iUfTenngJrom the flu for ~vt'rnl
days. fht officen said the) "'ciuld
dnve her homC'. Sht' reported.
Al that point. officers F1ugerald
and terkcl pulled up 1n a second
Police car and a ked O'Hara 1b
perform M>briety 1es1s. The officers
then handcuffed her and lC>Ok her to
Oranae County Jail on susp1c1on of
drunlten dnv1ni-
Bu1 1n their police rtport, the
officers claimed they had ~n
O'Hara's ca.r wcav1na on the freeway.
• tccordin• to rtc0rds.
Both officers later tc 11fied to that
C1p11trano sandwich tore al 322 11
Camino Capistrano. • • • A thief reportedly nok two bicycle•
and two flsbina poles from the Jlfl&C
of an El Toro home an lhc2lJOOblock
of Newbnd&c. The 1011 was estimated
II S87S.
1At9M9eaoll
An unknown su pcc:t broke into a
car parUd early Wcdnetda)' Ol\ Circle
W1y, 1he ~am told pohct. •
\latemenl under oath before ')outh
County Mun1c1pal { ourt Judge Rich-
ard Hamilton.
A subsequent '"' es11ga11on re-
vealed the off~cr'i had never stcn
O'Hai:a dnv1ng her car and concoclcd
the statc.-ment for their police rrpon
They compounded their error v.-hen
they 1cs11fied an coun. 5a1d a dt'tnc.1
a11omcy's SPokcsman.
ln scntene1n1 1hc former oOiccrs.
Superior Coun Judge Franc1vo
Briseno ordered both 10 perform
communny service work, complt'tt'
~rec yta,.,· proba11on. and I>"> fine~
ofSIOO
Bn5Cno also alf'ttd 10 ~uC'C th<'
felon)' charaes 10 m1tdcmcanor<i
O'Hal'll said the drunken dm 1na
charges later were dropped.
••• Pohc:c arrested BN« &Swani Mur-
ray, 29, on suspiaon of .,..uh w1th a
dndlf weapon followina a Tuaday
niaht 1nc1dcnt on Lomita Way • • • A power saw valUlfd at SSO wu
stolen ft-om a COftllnletioll 11te on
South COlll tftlhway, dw VIC:Um told
police T.-,. • • • Polac:e arremd lwo l'DCMOflstS on
'u p.aon of dn~ uDdtr tht n·
ftu(ftct of alrobOI. Snnnc Colttn
• •
• • • A resident 1n the 17100 block of
Sims reported that someone threw a
rock throuah a back wtndow of her
home Wednesd.ay The damqc was
tsllmated al $200. • • • <\ thief rcpQnedly ~tole a· S 12 5 TV
and a SSO l)'l)CWt1tcr from a home in
the 6400 block of Harvard Wcdncs-
da)' • • • Four th1ev() 1tole S 1.250 an
aud10/v1dco equ1pmtnt from a home
in the 14200 block of Hammon, the
v1ct1m told pohct Wcdnelday. • • • A rt 1dent an lbe 19800 blodc of
Vermont rtpon.cd that she saw a man
weanna a bl1ek k1 mask hold up a
beauty salon 11 9951 York\own A\lt
Wednetday afternoon An emplo tt
of the est.abh hment 111er rtponcd
1h1t tbe aunman fled wnh S.tOO to
S SOO ln ca.ab.
r-tala Y.U.,
A SlOO Schwinn bi cle wa ~
pol1llld 11.0ttn from the OP'ft Pratt of
a home 1n the 9900 ~ of Rtrhan w Cdftctda)I • • •
lntne
A car stereo 'It.Orth tx·t"''l'n " 111 sioo wa reportl·d \hlkll ''""' ·' vehicle parked in .i hntt•I 1111 .1 1 1 ·~ 11 1
Jambortt Road '>' C'dne~J ' • • • A blue.-Murra\ BcJ, hlful\1 r
b1cyclc "'onh hctv.ecn S'1 1 JnJ ~:t1e1
was rcponed ~olcn tronl the' ltJrJ~l' nl
a home along Mcadov.hrrn1l • • • A m1cro"'a'c o"'tn "ti' H'l'l<11l("'ll
1olcn from a ho me lllOf\i Roh11"11"tt
Wednesday
Pfewport Beacb
Vanda.ls sma hcd lht ltnnt "'111,1
shield of a while 19 S A\.iW \:11
parked in front of a home 1n the ~ 111
block of Baywood Monda). n1aht The damaac was nt1matcd 11 SSOO • • • T""9.'"eh1cl wcrr rcpont'd 'an·
dahtt<i y,,h1le parked a1 the rnmt'r nt
Vta Genoa and 11 Lido \oud
Tuetda Police u1d a wh1h" I 9tc6
h_f)"ler hnl'I "'t'nue \u~ua1ntd
$200 damqt to lht '1n)'1 top and a
white t 977 llChllac Coupe dt Ville
JUSWncd S2SO to tht' V'ln)I top and
therearWl~
tcm> ••' rrpnrfr-J
\ S' ;i,k nl·1..l.IJ .. ~ "J' rtpu11l·J
"' 1kn \\ ·1.lrw --J;n I• .,, ,, t 1 ni<' nth\
.i k hi •d 11 I 'lhn . . .
\ II ' 11.ll'l 1 .11!1 <'I ,1 \\ •" rl'
l"•llt'\1 ''' ll I II•••' 1 I''"" r: l "k .i
\ ••ll.'\'·l~1·1t "'" p.11 l.t·1I • lht ~1 ll'll
"k11. lo.,,, c 11n11n1•111.1
Bandit robs
·cMbakery
.\n armN ri1htlc"r 1\ at 131'J<' afkr
hold1np up a < n \13 \.1~ bilk.ct'\
\\('\:)n('-.d;A\ ( tl\la \kQ polile \aid
I tilOrn"C'ill I hntl \tOIT l\t ·~ \\
B11kt'r \t "''1' t'mfll\ ot cu,tomcn at S
p m \\hen 1hr \U'P«\ "'alkcd ,1p to
tht' clt'rl hrnnd1\hC'd a hand ut1 and
JrmanJrd mont'\
Ht hlllowcd the fcmak ckrk who
ptlh,-c JrdmC'd 10 1dent1f\ to a ~r
offi<'t whrrT 11hr opened the salt.
The \U\pt('l tkd on f()Ot Wllh sno
He "'u la t sccn h~d1na nonh •cro
f\a ltet Utt I
Thr su :p_(\: t v.u dc:tcribe<i as a
~ hnc ma~ 1n h.I\ mtd· 6 kt iall,
abo\lt tj() JJ9"&\Ch Ud ftcMii'tmtl wanns a rtd band&S\.a and l.e'VI
kt1 and J)3nh
Government feels Gramm-Rudman pinch
WASHJNOTON (AP) -The
<Jrum..Rudmu defici~reduction
llw ii mcm.. from the Wkin1 atap
IO .. tlplDC)i .. CUii, with federal
...... MyiJll they wUJ delay 'P.i"C
llatlQle ~provemet1t1, make co~
llUdeata dil a Uttk deeper into their PGCbtl anCI .PfO&ect Pmident R~ ...... , -sear Wan" plan by llashina
oiW Penuison prosram1. Aero-. tbe JOVemment, there will be .. all but a tteeze•• in hirina. Office
of Maulement and Budeet Director J.._ C: Miller said Wednesday in
anDOUDCina the cuts, which were trille~ by a record-break.ins $220.S
SIZES s .......... 6 -10
btlhon detic1t.
He said the admini1t.ration would
try to avoid fur1ouaht and layoffs u
the aovemment acijuru to the fint
round of cuts required in the budtet·
belancina law.
"The adminjstration's firm pos-
ition is that we're aoina to meet these
challenJes In a way '\hat mirumizes
di1ruptaons," Miller told a new.
conference.
Miller and Rudolph G. Penner,
director of the Conareuional Budaet
Office, released a 400-pqe document
detailinahow much each qency mutt
reduce spendina this year for the
Fiumone
Comfon combined
with fine craftlman-
~nhil
und&l • cru1ee
f1Vorit.e. Bone,
white or navy calf.
N ......... 6~-10 ~ _M_ ..... _ .... ·-' .i~o t~~ SHOES ---
99 Fuhion Island • Newport Beach • 759-9551
aovemment to reach \he required
S 11. 7 billion total cut.
OveraJJ federal IJ)endlna WU mi· mated at S996 billion thi1 year. But
Social Security, interett on the na-
tional dcbi. welfare prosrama and
military personnel accounts have
been exempted from the cuta, ao the
S 11 . 7 blllion cut la comina from just
S224. I billfon fo planned spendin ..
Wednesday's announcement waa
the first 1tep toward imposing the
acroas-the-board 1pendina cuts re-
quired by Gramm-Rudman, 1ponaor-
ed by Sen1. Phil Gramm, R· Texu,
and Warren Rudman, R-N.H. The
Amtricm ~avings helic.'Ve; caring is good bu!>ine\.' Thats
why we would like to thank our employee; and rn~tomel")\ for
1rnning with us in making possible a contribution totalling mon: than
SS<X>JXX> to fosemite ~ationaJ Parle this week
Hecause we cared enough to dedicatt· our centennial ye-ar to hdping
fosemite prepare for 1ts centennial. future g<. m·ration.' may en1oy the splendor
of our state~ oldest national park
\Xe could have left funding of Yosermte~
ket um of Light campaign up to lht government
But. American ~\'m~ ha\ proven that people
worl<mg together for a common goal can span·
tht gon·mment a grt.1\t ~dJ of expt-nsc
And we think that~ uncommonly good
hll\111('\ ...
~l're pmud to knnw our rnstomers ft1.'I that
v. a\ ti .11., And. wt extend our ~incere thanks to each
,uH.l ert:~ one.: who htlp<'CI to makt our centennial a
11< CC''\ nnt onl\· for f11tt1n' gt·rwrauons of Yo~m1H·
\ 1 ... 11c ir\ hut fc >r i utun· gt r 1erat1c 1111i of wildhf(· that
n·'i1dl' lht·n,
At Amencar1 ~a\'11~ we lart'
.1ho111 1.,m mg mon:· than
I llC II ll'\
Tlw Am<:nnu1 family
111 t·mplo}l'l'S and nl'itol11t'I'!\ ,.,
po JL1d to han· had a hm1d m pr~rving
)o<.,t·rn1tt· for Lht en10Yment of famJlies
hkt \Clllf\ from iKTO\.'i tlw U lllnll"\ . .
,111d an 111 nd t ht' world
law mandates lfldually amaJler deft·
ciu until a belanced budfet ia reached
in flJC&l 1991.
Miller and Penner predicted that
without the cuts the 1986 deficit
woiild be about sho.s billion -far
above the law's waet of S 171. 9
billion lnd $8.6 billlon over the
~ord ICt in fiscal I 98S.
Convess limited the automatic
cull th11 year to the S 11. 7 billion, but
the deficit estimate undencorcd that
deep cull or tu incrcuea will be
needed to meet the S 144 bilUon
deficit taraet for fiscal 1981, which
bqinJ OcL I .
COSTA MFSA/SANTA ANA
3929 S Bristol. 'Jl"'t>-f
HUNTINGTON BEACH LAGUNA HILLS SF.AL BEACH
(at Sunnower)
(714) 979 9800
GAIDEN GROVE
12141 G2tden Gro\it-BIH1 92fl'i ~
(21 Harbor Blvd )
(714) 534-8690
HW Edinger Ave . 92647
(at Hunungton Center}
(714) 848 2222
HUNTI GTO HARBOUR
16911 Algonquin St , 92649
(In Hunungton Harbour
Shopping Center)
(71't) 846 3355
24085 El Toro Rd . 92653
(at Pa.~ de Valencia)
(il4) 70-2816
ORANGE
I 5 N Tustin Ave . 926M
(north of Taft)
(714) 9.,4 1620
801 Paqftc C-0as1 llwy, 90740
(at Mam)
(213) 594 8855
TUSTIN
641 F. Fi~t St . 92680
(at Sewport Av )
(714)832 2581
·AMERICAN SA\llNG
.............. _ AND [QAN ASSOCIATIOf\J -~
L . ' ' ... '
Tutu In Detroit
Tile an. o.mond Tata dona bla mJter wlaile preputn,i for
Wedaeeday DJMbt'• Mrricee at the Cathedral Ch1irch o'18t.
Paal ID Detroft. The Soath African blabop la on a three-
week U.8. toar to ra.t.e monty for tbe &oath African Coa.ndl
of Charela•.
'French Connection'
figures nabbed again
NEW YORK (AP)-In vestigators
have smashed a drug ring that
imponcd millions of dollars in heroin
from Europe, arresting many of the
same figures named in the celebrated
"French Connection" case,
authorities say.
The arrests, announced Wednes-
day in New '{ork and California,
culminated a yearlong investigation
into an international ring that in-
volved U.S., French, Italian and
Israeli citizens, said Larry Lusardi,
agent in charge of the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Agency office in San
Jose, Calif.
The drug ring dealt wtth all levels of
the heroin trade. from raw opium to
processinJ labs to smuuJing. he said.
Lusardi was unable to say how
much heroiJl was 1mporte<f. but that
the trade was "obviously in the
millions of dollars."
The investigation resulted in at
least one seizure of heroin when
agents confiscated a 14-pound pack-
age of the illegal narcotic in Florida.
Authorities in Italy, France and
Canada as well as the United St.ates
were involved in the investigation.
Jt began in December 1984 when
French and Italian heroin trafficken
operating between their countries and
New York were identified, said Joan
Marin of the DEA io New York.
In November, raids in Switzerland
and Frallce netted $45 million in
heroin des1ined for the United States.
Two Frenchmen arrested at a coven
drug laboratory in the raids were
French Connection . heroin
"chemists," French authorities said.
Weather postpones return
of space shuttle Columbia
By tbe Auoclatecl Presa
CAPE CANAVERAL -The space shuttle Columbia. which had trouble
lcaving£arth, had more trouble today when its return was called ofTbccautc of
a frequent Kennedy Space Center jinx -clouds and rain. If Columbia can't
return here by Saturday, the ship will be divened to land at Edwarda Air force
Base, Calff. NASA said that would mean cancellation oft.he ship's next minion
in March because of a ti&ht ti met.able. The seven crew members, includlna a
congressman. received tfie bad news just 19 minutes before they were to have
fired brakjng rockets to start the descent for the first shuule landing at this
spacepon since Discovery blew a tire and damaged its brakes on the concrete
runway nine months ago.
Navy di.count. na.te accident peril
WASHINGTON -The Navy has had only two scrio.us aCCldent.s with
nuclear weapons in the put 20 years and neither of those threatened public
safety, said Navy officiaJs, respondina to a critical repon iuued by a peace
group. From I 96S to I 98S. the Navy experienced 630 .. incidents" 1nvolvina
nuclear weapons or their training counterparts, officialt said Wednesday. But,
durin, that period, only two accidents were classified as "Broken Arrow!t" the
Navy s code phrase for the most serious nuclear-related accidents, the onaciaJs
continued. And, neither of the incidents caused an explosion or posed a hazard
to the public. they said.
Government'• Team•ten link defended
W ASHJNGTON - Attorney General Edwin Meese and Treasury
Secretary James Baker say the administration has done nothin& wrona in its
courtship of the Teamsters union, thou ah a presidential commission views the
link as unbecomina a aovernment which has declared war on or.aanized crime.
Meese, at a news conference Wednesday. turned aside quesuons about the
propriety of social and political cont.acts between ltimself, other adminis..
tratJon officiaJs and Teamsters President Jackie Prester, sayina he is p~luded
from talk.in& about Presser "because of 1he onaoina cases which involve him."
U.S. 'prepared to attack terrorl•t.'
WASHINGTON -Secretary of Defense Casp&r W. Weinberser uid
today the United States is full y prepared to attack terronst tarscts in Libya or
elsewhere. but o ly 1f such au.acu would "diminish-.nd ditoourqe-.f'unber
terrorism." Weinberser made it clear that he does not favor military strikes
a~inst terrorist bases for the sake of military action alone despite threats by
Libya's leader. Col. Moammar K.hadafy,
Teet amputated after 12 day. In bozcar
DANVJLl.f. Va. -A 3S-year-old man who lpt'.nt 12 days locked in a
railroad freiaht car in a switchina yard had to have hat feet amputated becautc
of frostbite, authorities uy. Edwin 8alli1tella wa1 discovered Jan. 4 in the
Norfolk ~uth~m boxcar where he had been tlnce ~· 23, yardmaa~ Sam
McCormick 111d Wednelday. The temperatutttdiPOed into the 20.dunna the
period. ''There was no way ne could waJk. His feel had turned blue or black,··
he said. Balliatella wudrened "mostly in rap" and an Army fatiauejacket and
app&rentijl\acrhad noll'ltn1to eat or drink foT 12 days.
rlre tnJM J 0 bJ lreJ61'ter oil Tua•
GALVESTON, Tnu -A fluh fire broke out today at>o.rd a
tovemment frciPter =dock~ trappin110 workm for about an hour and amdina 11many1124 to a hoepitaJ, authorities said. Nine WOtken were -
taken to John staly Hospital's bum unit, but their in.luria apparently~ not
terioua, 11id hoepit.al IPokeswoman.Un W~.1'bc blaze broke out about
6 a.m. aboerd the Ploneer ContrlCtOr, a Navy freiahter llw bu been out of
commitsion for 1everal yean, offtclala •id.
Oeael'fc dra6• •n Amedcall• mUUom
WASHINOTON -Althoutb they only cboee the lower-priced~
drup about I' percent of the time, Americam 11ill •ved bet-. S tJO tDilHott
and S236 maU1on in 19"4, a new 90vemment teudy •.11-Ute ol ~ *-
-when available-increued frOm 7 .l percent in I 910 to about~ fn 19"4, Alison Muaon of &be Federal Tnidl Commllllon'18UNIU k:a
reponed Wednetday. MlllOn laid lhc QOeCtl Ule o( teft(ric dftlll IO CODliaua
to increaae a1 both coneumm and their pltylidam bec.omc IDON IWIN o(dte
availability of the prodt1et1. • '
' ' , )
. '
Arms talks resume after_dramatic Soviet proposal ·
OENEVA (AP) -U.S. and Soviet wide nuclear dlwmament takes place an Geneva " • neeotiaton met for more than two ln Wubiot10n toda)'., PJ'etj~~t He Mid the new ~viet proposaJ ~-ioday~o resume ll.llu on Reap~ called the .~,v1et Unions was"justaboutthefirsttirnethat(any nu;u~ ~nae r weapo~s. and. the lweeJ>ll\J proposal different from Soviet's) ever proposed actuall y ~~vwt5delepte came<! details of thlnp that ~·ve heard in the pall" eliminatina nuclear weapons."
the new SoVlct proposal appear
unchanfed from their prev1ou1
proposals and caoee ua concern "
pre11dcnt iaJ spokesman urry Speak-
es said today.
Gorbachev tells plan
Mikbail . Gorbachev s latest bur reserved Judament on whether it propoMI to ben aJI nuclear arms by sianaled 1 serious commJtmcnt from Asked whether. the p~an rep-
lbe )'~r 2000. . the Kremlin to neaotiate 10 arms rC1en~ed a new Soviet commnmcnt to
Req.an wd in a statement
Wednesday that he ->ould ajve the
plan careful 1\udy.
MOSCOW (AP) -Soviet leader Mikhail S. ~ .,ee'ed to all
nations with nuclear arms 10 eliminate them in •taeet by the )'eel' 2000.
"Of coune we wall introduce those aarecment neaot1ate an aareement, Reagan re-
pr0posa.l1 t~y because ~e feel. ther, "~e·re yery ptcful for the offer," plied, "~e're goina to find out."
His plan was rtad on Soviet ttlevision Wednetlday n.iatn .. the eve of thC
resumption of superpower arms talks in Geneva -the fint since Reapn and 1
Gorbachev met in the Swm cily Nov. 19-21. are the key points for our d1.scuss1on, Reaaan said, respond Ina to questions A White House, spokesman, mean-
Vlktor P. ~v lold Journalists durina a picture-takina 1euion in the whUc, expressed concern "\hat the
before the meeting at the Soviet Cabinet room. Kremlin continues to t.ie cuts in
miuion. As to whether it will lead toward otrenalve weapons to the elimination
Speakes cued "the continued
linkaae of reductions to a ban on
'space-strike arms,"' a reference, to
the Stratesic Defense Initiative, more
popularly known as Star W111. "We
believe stratqjc defenses can make a
1janificant contribution to stability in
a world free from nuclear weapons."
"Mankind is at a crucial staae of the new Space A,e. and it is time. to
abandon the thin kin' of the Stone Ase. when the chief concern wa1 to have a
biger stick or a heavier stone," saJd the statement from Gott>acbeYuftveilina
the tb~s~ disarmament plan. Oorbachev's plan, announced disarmament, the president replied, of President Reapn's "Star Wars"
Wednesday niaht, calls for a SO "We're studyma it with pat care and defensive proaram. Gorbachev also announced the Soviet Union will extend it1 unilaten.I
moratorium on nuclear tests for another thret months. percent. cut .in. the superpowers' it's oin to depend now on what .. At ftrst alJancc, many elements in 1tr1te11c m1ss1le arsenals and ~natina their European-based
mechum-ranae rocket! Wlthin eiaht
)'QR, followed by a universal nuclear
weapons fl'CC1e and. finaJly, world-
Factions seek
cease-fire
tnS. Yemen
ly "" A110Clated Pre11
Weiiemaaplomats and shipping
fOurces said the capital of South
Yemen was rocked by loud blasts and
"sky-hiah balls of flame" today. and
one report said opposing facti ons
were trying to reach a cease-fire.
Two Marxist factions have been
fiahtina since Monday for control of
the pro-Soviet country.
Kuwait News Agency reported
representatives of the warring groups
were mectina in the Soviet Embassy
in Aden, South Yemen's capital.
Quotina what it called an official
source in Paris, the agency said that
representatives of forces loyal to
South Yemen's President Ali Nasser
Mohammed and rebel factions met
this morning to try to reach a cease-
fire aareement.
On Wednesday. a Kuwa1t1 news
agency reported that rebellious armed
forces had been largely isolated by the
aovemment.
Maneuver called
'security probe'
MASER U. Lesotho (AP) -The
information minister said para-
military police who surrounded gov-
ernment buildings for several hours
and ordered employees to leave were
"carrying out a sccunty probe.''
The minister. Desmond S1.u she,
denied rumors Wednesday that the
police action signaled a coup was
bcin& attempted.
"Life is back to normal," he said at
a news conference three hours after
foreign residents of this black-ruled
mountain kingdom said troops sur-
rounded 1ovemment buildings.
"Chief (Leabua) Jonathan (the
prime minister) 1s at home and the
kiDJ is all right. It was nothing
acnous ," Sixisfie said. However, he
did not di5Close what "it" was, and
neither King Moshocshoc ff nor
Jonathan were seen in public.
3131 lritttl St.
, .;
()
AFTER INVENTORY ARA-WCE --
THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY
TAKE AN ADDITIONAL
THE TICKETED PRICE OF
ALL ALREADY REDUCED CAREER AND
DRESS LOOKS, SPORTSWEAR, OUTERWEAR,
SHOES, ACCESSORIES, SLEEPWEAR AND
ROBES FOR WOMEN, JUNIORS, MEN AND
YOU.NG M.EN ... PLUS SPOmWEAR,
OUTERWEAR AND SLEEPWEAR FOR
CHILDREN.'
HERE'S JUST A SAMPLING OF THE SAVINGS YOU'LL FIND.
TICKETED
REGULAR PRICE SALE PRICE 11 °"
All already reduced dresses for misses and petites .............. 29.99 to 146.00 . . . 9.99 to 99.98 . . . . . ... ti ..
All already reduced active separates by GI~ VfQderbilt and
Bonjour in vetour and French cotton terry ..................... 32.00 to 40.00 . . . . 24.99 to 29.99 . . . . .. ti ..
All already reduced Monet earrings, necklaces and bracelets ..... 9.00 to 42.00 ..... 5.49 to 27.49 ..... 1.9 ti a W
All already reduced famous maker men's patterned knit shirts ... J>.00 to 32.00 . . . . 19.99 ............ tUI
·ooes NOT INCLUDE MISSES' LONDON FOG COATS. FINE JEWELRY ANO ACTIVE StiOES FOR WOMEN.
. SELECTION VARIES BY STORE. NO MAIL, PHONE OA SPECIAL ORDERS TAKEN .
•
THE BROADWAY
ti IOUFHlll# CAll,Oll#IA
\
Badham' strip
leads to lesson
in art history
The cognoscenti descended like a swarm of locusts
on last week's editorial criticizing Rep. Bob"Badham for
his propensity to board airplanes. .
No, those who wrote and called were not defending
the right honorable Mr. Badharn. In .fact, they left the
impression that they want to teach hun a lesson: They
are determined to send Badharn back to Washington
every two years until he ~ets the idea that they want him
to do something there. Like show up to vote.
But, I digress.
The spark for the bonfire of outrage was the ignorant
:rssertiOJrthat Vincent an 6ogh performed his-art-'
and a little home surgery -in Tahiti, where Badham
was basking last week. Chastened by those in the know.
I must set the record straight It was Paul Gauguin, Van
Gogh's one-time P~sian roommate, w.h<? earned fame,
if not fortun~, captun~ ~n canvas the VlVtd colors of the
island paradise of TahitJ.
Van Gogh, I know now, was not much ofa traveler.
Perhaps embarrassment over the ragged job he did on his
ear lobe kept him from venturing abroad. One version of
the disfigurement episode has him responding with an
incredible degree of literalness to a woman -perhaps a
lover -who said if he'd lend her his ear, she'd tell him
how to improve his painting. Perhaps he waited in Paris
for her to return it.
According to a more authoritative source -the
Encyclopedia Britanica-Van Gogh cracked under the
strain of frustrated creativity. The ear-cutting was the
first major indication of the mental disorders that led to
his eventual suicide.
I might lean on a similar excuse for my error, but my
earlobes are staying-for now.
As long as I've gone this far, I'll go a little farther,
stretching for redemption with just a hint of issue-
oriented significance, as offered by Mary Jane Wood.
Wood called from Laguna Beach to say, "lfBadham
sends us a postcard of a self portrait of Van Gogh paint~d
in Tahiti, I'll cut off one of my cars .. .I don't favor Rapid
Robert junketing around the globe at our expense, but
heavens to Warner Brothers, let's get our Gauguins and
Van Goghs straight."
Of course, i(Rep. Badham had sent us postcards, as
we suggested in that previous editorial, we might have
learned an important bit of art history. By educating us,
he might have found some justification for this leg of his
trip, which at the moment looks suspiciously like a
vacation for which Badham's constituents are footing
the bill.
FRANKZINI
Opinions expressed 1n this space are ltlose ol the Dally Pilot Other views
expressed t>n this page are those ol their authors and artists Reader
comment 1s1nv1ted TheOa1ly Pilot. PO Box 1560. Costa Mesa. 92626. Phone
642-6086
_J LETTERS
---
Electorate didn't know
what it was gettlng into
To the Editor.
The Pilot was correct when 1t wrote
on Jan. 3 that the (Irvine) "c1t1zcns
exercised their nght to vote when they
elected the (Irvine) City Council that
approved the (San Joaquin) freeway
ordinance ... ··
But how was the electorate to know
how such pleasant. nice people, and
apparently 1n the community. would
behave once elected? How were the)'
to know that they would elevate the
greed of notonou!I land spoilers
above the needs of thl· pcople'l How
were the) to kno1.1. that the~ would put
freeways above environmental quali-
ty?
Or how were thq to know that.
perhaps an their innocence. council
persons would harken 10 the siren
voices of those cuddh ng and bund It ng
with developers who avowed that the
SJF was only to relieve future traffic?
How were they to know that the real
motives were not traffic relief but
handsome profits through con-
version of wildlands anto build1nas?
And bow could the electorate guess
that these gentle council persons.
trustjng)y installed into office, would
-
By t•e AHOClaled PrcH
ignore their pleas, watching only for
the silent signals of their developer
cronies? How could they know either
that these council folk would ienore
the freeway destruction ofwildltfe?
How could they know too that their
own elected representatives would
fight to deny them the ri&ht to vote on
potential environmentaf destruction?
How could they know?
And could 11 be that the council
members' apparent succor for a
cou ple of developers or tho~ who
had been fooled into believing they're
relieving traffic -would now be
found out'> Could that be?
So what are the fru strated c1t12cns
to do -now that they feel betrayed?
They tum to the vote. confident in
the democratic process. They have
done what they could.
The Pilot implies that the use of the
initiative process is anarchistic in
seeking to halt what the voters
perceive as a wicked political-de·
veloper-sponsored freeway. Wonder
what iLwould call a government th&t
denies tts people the nght to vote'>
TOM ALEXANDER
Laguna Beach
Today 1s Thursday. Jan. 16. the 16th day of 1986 There are 349 davs left
in the year.
Today's highhght 1n htStory:
On Jan. 16. 1920. Amenca went "dry·· as the 18th Amendment to the U.S.
Constituuon took effect. and Prohibition bccam"C the law of the land.
Today's birthdays: Author~d1tor Norman Podhorct1 1s 56. Opera s1naer
Marilyn Home 1s 52. Auto racer A.J. Foyt is SI . Country singer Ronn1t' Milsap
is 40. Movie darcctor John C1rpentcr 1s 38.
Thought for TodAy "What we really arc matters more than what other
people thank of us." -Jawaharlal Nehru. Indian statesman ( 1889-1964).
ORANGE COAST
Daily ~·· ..
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C.iy (dtlor ,_c-..
NIWl~IOI
e,...IN!ff
$oar!• £0 IC)t
Put>14t,.,
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...... LC ....
filr~1.oo M~Otf
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MetllelltlO Oltc:!Ot
~~'!':'()I
•
.. Silly as (Sylvester Stallone's) cart ca tu res of Soviet v1118Jrs are, .tf>ey
can •t be accused of exaggerating the evil of the Soviet sys em ....
JOUPB™
-i----
Shall those who advocate
jenocide simply go free?
What if they threaten to prevail-as
they have done in so many countries?
The American PEN, yo u will have
noticed, invited Secretary of State
George Shulu to address its 48th
Jntemational Congress. which con-
vened last Sunday in New York City.
Needless to say. there were those who
objected to the invitation, perhaps
most prominently E.L. Doctorow.
who wrote to The New York Times to
make the point th.at exactly what
writers do not want ts politicians
addressing them.
He sounded1 really. rather flat, and
here's guessing that if Adlai
Stevenson, or any old Kennedy. had
been scerctary of state. E.L. Doctorow
ct al. would suddenly have viewed the
invitation as utterly felicitous.
An opening address by the sec-
retary of state to an international
congr~ss is a fonn of diplomatic
court~y. surely. It happens that
George Shurtz is a scholar. a former
professor. whose views arc interest ang
whether he speaks as a secretary of
state -or writes (four books. in has
case).
There arc writers who fancy that it
1s 1he1r obligat1on to be 1conoclast1c 1n
virtually all matters. Besides. Mr.
Shultz 1s associated wi th th e foreign
poltq of Ronald Reagan. which is
enough to d1squaltfy him from ap-
proval by wntcrs who, never having
cxptricnccd life under such as the
Sandm1stas. are prepared to side with
the Sand1n1stas 1f onl)' because they
are ant1-Amencan.
But George Shultz also faced a very
concrete questton. na mely the
McCarran-Waltcr Immigration and
Naturahzauon Act of 1952. That act
authorizes the government to deny a
visa to any alien who ts a communist
or anarchist or advocates communist
or anarchist ideas Professor John
Kenneth Galbraith. addressing the
conarcss. declaimed that that act
should be repealed, and Mr. Gal-
bmth, who Is thoughtful enough
never to leave detaifs unattended.
suggested that the president's State of
the Union speech should begin by
calling for the repeal of the McCarran-
Walter Act.
George Shultz did not address the
question directly, satisfying himself.
and getting spot applause. by saying,
'"We will never deny physical access
to anyone ~use of the beliefs he or
she may espouse."
Mr. Shulu 1s quite right in taking
the pragmatic position that our
republican institutions arc in fact so
sturdy that it is highly unlikely that
any one, or even two communists or
anarchists come over here to sow
seditious .seeds need to be-kept 001.
They can make the usual lecture
circuit -mostly the expensive
cOllCJCS -receive their standing
ovations. and eventually go home.
But two thoughts cross the mind.
One of them is the current agitation
for pa.ssagc of the Genocide Conven·
tion. many of whose features I have
myself approved (e.g. in my book.
"United Nations Jouma1"). Jf the
Senate confirms the convention. gi v-
ing to it the supremacy that attaches
to treaties, then an individual ex-
pressing genocidal convictions could.
some lawyers betieve, be hauled into a
court and imprisoned.
I should add that except for the
U.N. factor io this, I am not auto-
matically intimidated by the idea that
people who preach that whole sets of
other people should be killed should
be removed somewhere. say to the
other side of the Berlin Wall. until
they cool off. But we have, e.g.. in
Nicaragua. people who not only have
advocated genocide. but practiced it
WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND
WILLIAM F.
Bue KLEY
-against the Miskito lndjans. And
in China. the Cultural Revolution.
though not strictly genocidal, was its
e~uivalent, if you believe that the
elimination ofa class by profession is
not very different from the eltmana·
tion of a class by race. One can. I
believe, properly refer to, say. Pol
Pot's "genocidaJ" war against all
literate Cambodians. So maybe
Professor Galbraith should tell us
how he is going to square that circle?
And then, also. people tend to
quote Jefferson's famous sentence
without gi ving it due thought. He
wrote, "Those who wish to dissolve
the Union or to change its republican
form should stand undisturbed as
monuments of the safety with which
error of opinion may be tolerated
where reason is left free to combat it"
You catch the catch in that sentence?
Jefferson 1s saying. lt"s OK to tolerate
anti-republican agitators because tt is
safe to assume that they will not
prevail, if reasonable men are frel' to
combat them.
But of course the point is: What 1f
they threaten to prevail -as they
have in so many countnes in our
lifetime, most conspicuously. Ger·
many in 1933. Argentina in 1945. and
Russia in 1917? Arc we reaJly
prepared to take the intellectual
position tha1 Lenin, Hitler and Peron.
assuming there was an alternative to
letting them inflame their followers.
were better off left free?
Tou&h one, that. But then 1t will
give Pl:N something to do.
WUlJ•m Badley l• • •YadJc•ted
coJamal•t.
High time U.S. took action
over nursing-ho~e abuses
Needed regulation
tsn 't ready even
after 5 years' work
WASHI NGTON -Federal bu-
reaucrats have spent more than five
years dotting the i's and crossina the
t's on a sorely needed regulation that
wouJd puoLSh nursing-home oper.
ators who mistreat thear elderly
Medicare patients.
Congress ordered the rcaulation
drafted in 1980. It has yet to be issued
1n final form -an inexcusable delay
that no one seems able to uplain.
It's not that the proposed rcau·
lat1on 1s all that complicated. Esten-
ttally, 1t would hit neaJ1gcnt nunnng
home operators where 1t hurts most
-in the pocketbook.
Calluig for "int.cm\edia&e sane;
ttons" short of kicltina lransaressors
out of the MedJcare proaram
altogcthe.!l the regulation will 11low
federal omcials to withhold Medicare
reimbursements on new admi ions
for up to 11 months untal the tl'ICted
nur')1n1 home brinp its operations
into compliance With federal urety
and health stancbrds.
"T~ ability to impose intermcdi·
ate sanctions will certainly ~retent
a positive ~\Cl> lOward tmprovin.a
nursina home condmons:· Hat.1th
and Human ScrvlCCt Deoanmcat
Inspector General Rachard litultef'OW
wro1e 1n •draft ~pon last November.
"The sanction's deterrent cft'cct can
have • ••an1ficant impect.. Howv~.
..,nsive enforceman wtU bt
nece pry,"
The record ~ ftt aivc1 little
1nd1cat1on of agarcss1ve follow.up b)
the qency re pons1ble. the Health
Jac1
AIDEISOI
and JOSEPH SPEAR
Care Financing Administration. A
spokesman acknowled1e4 that the
preparation of the rcaufaiion had
taken "an unusually Iona period of
time," but told our associate Tony
Capaccio, "I haven't gotten a satisfac-
tory answer to why it has been
delayed.•· He added that the agency
hopes to have the final rule ready
soon fbr submission to Health and
Human Services Secretary Otis
Bowen.
Kusserow's report, usina the
health-finance qency's own com-
~ter-information concluded that
'the incidents or substandard nurs101
f1c1llties is widesprca(J." In fact. his
investiptors arc pohsh1n1 up a list of
~ nunjna homes across the country
that are "likely candidates for the
intermediate unction and require:
(the qcncy's) immediate attention."
The aacncy en(orcement chief,
Philip Nathanson, assured us: "We're
waitina to sec that lin. we•rc: soma to
chase them all down."
The .. homn on the inspector
~ncral's hit list have• tot1J cas-c1ty
o( 6,618 P9ticnu. and include facih·
ties in 21 stain: Alat>-ma, Alaska •
Arkansas. California, Colorado,
florid.a. 1Uinoi1, Kantu. Maine, M~huwus. Michipn, Miuts..
•ppi.M~wu,NewJeney,New
York, Nonh Olk~ Ottaon Tcn-
nnsce, Tens, Virsinia encl W1scon·
1n. All ~ homes .. display atrona
1nd1cations of chron.c 1utn11ndard ,
conditions." Kusscrow wrote.
In addition to the 44 homes for the
elderly, the investigators found 946
nursing homes for the mentally
retarded that have repeatedly viol·
ated at least one of the federal
standards regarded as critical to
quality care.
In 38 of these fac1ht1es -including
11 in Connecticut and four each in
Louisiana and Ohio -operators
"applied physical restraints to pa·
tients without just cause or apphcd
mechanical restraint devices which
could cause physical injury."
In another 27 homes for mental
patients -including 11 in Missis-
sippi and three each in Connecticut
and Geol"J.ia -opcrators "used drugs
excessively as runishmcnt. for the
convenience o tht' sttff or as a
substitute for active treatment"
An additional 96 mental homes -
incJudinf 4S in New Yofk, 10 in
Connecticut and ei&ht in Louisian1.
'"were out of compliance with the Ufe
Safety Code of the National f:ire
Protection Association," acc:ordina
to Kusserow's rcpon.
SVrNG UNCLE AM : ln an
unusual lawsuit •inst the federal
aovemment, Or. Stcvanne Auerbkh
charses th•t the ·Dcpanment of
Health and Hum1n Scrvicei stole the
material on chlld cart she submitted
as • v.ant proposal. She say aaency
officials tumed the material over to
another firm. which later used it to
prodt.M:C • book for the aovemment,
which distnbutcd more than 100,000
copies. So far. officials bavtn 't denied
the s1milaritl~1 between Or.
Aunt.h's 111nt propoul and t.be book. bu• claim the· matmal was in
the pubUc domain.
Jld ....,... -,...,. ,,..,
.,.. qll/Mt91f/4 t .........
JOSEPH
SOBRAN
col••nlat
Soviets
frothing . .over our
movies
WASHINGTON -The Soviet
Union is in high dudgeon against
Sylvester Stallone, for both "Rocky
IV" and "Rambo." 1w0-Smash,.h1t
movies that feature Soviet villains.
..furthermore. the viets !l!ve
induced ABC to postpone showmg a
TV movie called "Amerilca," which is
about a Soviet lakeover of the Unttcd
States. They effected this by hinting
that they m~y just. retaliate against
ABC by rcstncung its news coverage
of the Soviet Union.
Soviet film criticism 1s not gcner·
ally held in hi_gh esteem here. but you
have to admit it packs a punch not
even John Simon can match. S«·
retary of Education William Bcnncu
says accurately that the Soviets ~re
"bullying'" ABC. and w~ms. with
equal accuracy: "What this means 1s
that the Amenc.ao people's television
fare is io jeopardy of being censored
by Soviet officials."
The Soviets have even found a
panial defender in David Rem nick of
The Washington Post. who contends
that "Moscow's right; Stallone's films
aren't even good propaganda." Mr.
Rcmnick agrees that it is "unfair" for
··Rambo" to show a Soviet thug
carving the hero's ch~~t with a red-~ot
knife. for "Rocky IV to show Soviet
athletes as ··mute technological Vis-
igoths," and for John Milius' film
'"Red Dawn" to show Soviet invaders
shooting down Amencan school kids.
The Soviets. he says. "should be
upset. But." he adds. "so should we,"
because these arc all ··cynical, ex·
ploitative films" that make the view·
er feel "diminished. s ltm y.
cheapened."'
Well. the claims of art and the
claims of propaganda arc two dtf·
ferent things. Hitler, who understood
these matters. said that/'ropaganda
has to be crude, and i box office
receipts and whoor,ing crowds mean
anything, these fi ms are first-class
propaganda.
The Soviets realize this. Docs Mr
Remnick really suppose they are
ob1ecting on merely aesthetic
grounds? Surely he doesn't think their
aim is to help the Stallone school of
cinema improve tis rabble-rousing
capability.
Aesthetically, the films are as bad
as Mr. Rem nick says they are. But his
co mplaints and those of the Soviets
arc, I hope. made from opposite
moti ves. The Soviets know how
powerful this crude stuff 1s. They
ouJht to know. They produce enough
oftt themselves.
Which brings us to a relevant
d1stinct1on Mr. Remnid. overlooks
Sylvester Stallone 1s a private en·
tFCpreneur. He isn't workrng for the
govemment. In that sense, it may be
unfair to call his film s propaganda at
all. since their apparent purpose is to
make a profit from popular anti·
communist feelings, not to create
those feelings where they don't exist.
And silly as his carkaturcs of
Soviet villains are, they can't be
accused of e~aggcrating the evil of the
Soviet system or of the means
employed by the Soviet rulers. In
Afghanistan. tbe Soviets drop bombs
disguised as toys, so that children who
find them and pick them up are killed
or terribly maimed. Even Stallone
might find it inartistic to depict
something so devilish. He only wants
his audience to shout, not to vomit
and faint.
As a schoolbor. I myself ne.arly
vo mited. and did faint, when a
classmate gleefully read aloud a
passage from a book by Dr. Tom
Dooley about communist tortures of
Laotian children. My friend was
trying to gross out the girls, and aot his
buddy by mistake.
Ma.ybe we ought to hear lesa about
crude inti-communism and more
about crude communism. I am wait·
ing for all the liberals who accused the
Reaa,an adminstration of stifling di,..
sent to sr.n scrcam1n1 about the
Soviets' bold attempt to intimidate
ABC -bold. and successful.
What deepens the irony is that tht
Soviets themselves traffic exclusively
an Pf'OP9Pnda. How many t1mC$
have you _bard an American new•
cast bq.in, "The Soviet news qency
Tass today accused the Rcapn ad-
ministration ... "? Whr, is that funny?
Bcelruse Tau is not a 'news aaency:·
News aaencies deal in information,
not accusations. (lmaatne: "ABC
News today actuscd the Soviet Union
..!')Ta 1s a propqanda orpn.
But we persist in tht polite fiction
that the institutions of a totalitarian
country arc a~us to lhoee of a
free country. Tberi we take teriously
the Sovicu' propqand11dc ch1J1e
that our mov.e andunry i1 awlty or peddl" nda. Mr~~uld unouace that
lnY. f\lnher baratement of AIC NCW1
ln ibe Soviet Union will mutt in lhe apullioD of Sovtet .. 1ourMlilta .. &Om AmeriaL ,, __..._ • .....,
ocaDon IO pocn• C*t -. ltl'kdy c•'-there ti no IUC:ll """' •• Vlrt )Oumahtt.
J...,a ..,._It a IJll•HtN
c#lrz'n
' r\ •
Orange Co.I DAILY PILOTIT~. ~ 1t. 1-* A'I
Nelson ·dldn 't do cocaine, 'manager says
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tbc ~of former TV airlmmd werc as1eeo wader a bl9Ull& Wlae9 die ..-e •tar and rock 'n • roll idol llick Ndtoe ridiaded publilhed occuned, .. McOoeafd aaid ia 1 ...,._,.. ialcnicw tom
rcpona that \be aiJ1)luc craab \bat killed Nehoa and ID. his Palm SoriDla IMMne.
.Pal state trustees approve
tiff er entry requirements
-LONO BEACH (AP)-Freshmen anendina a California state univer-
sity in the fall of 1988 will be required ao have three years of math, two of a
Torelan lanauaae and other credits to
meet atift'er entrance requ,rements.
others may have mulled from 1 c:abiD fire pied by McOOnald" attnbua.ed die UlforlMliae to pilol lrad
chancellor of the 19~mpus state .. ~~:f~=uy they hive~ to determine the ~~e~to;aa:::~~=
Fourteen trustees voted in favor of
the new requirements Wednesday.
One trustee, George Marcus of Palo
Alto, abstained.
The requirements were approved
as policy In November. Wednesday's
vo&e was an implementation of that
poljcy.
To meet the new admission stan-
dards, hi&h school graduates must
have completed three years of math,
two yean of a forcilUI language, one
I
year each of U.S. history and aovem·
ment, lab science, visual and pcr-
formina arts, and three years of
electives in Enalisb, advanced math,
social studies, qriculturc or foreiin
lanJuaae. •
Before the finaJ vote, Marcus
moved to implement only one year of
foreign 'tanauage and one year of
science. After a lenathy debate, his
proposal was defeated 8-4.
Marcus argued that students, their
parents and bi~ school are in a better
position to guide students on courses
than arc the truskeS. He said bis
arguments were based on freedom of
choice.
John Bedell, associate vice
univenity system, pointed out that of cause of the New Yeat's Eve craab (,( Neltoe'1 OcMclas Free.buiJts requires miJli:.: with flanunabae
the 15 units required, eiaht were OC-3 in "feua. But Gres McDonald. Nellon'• pcnonal ether or Mimoeia. After die · eivaporate, the
electives, leavina the students ample manqer, insi11ed Wednesday tbat the cru.h was not "free-bate .. cocaine is u.tually smoked ie 1 llaM pipe hc&d ne~ibiJity. related to uee of cocaine. over a steady flame. •
Chancellor w. Ann Reynolds de-"We know why the plane went down." McDonald "That's pure oonacDIC; Rick NellOll didn't do free-
scribed the new requirements. sup-said, blamina a broken paoline-bea&er fuel line. base (cocaine)," McDonald aaid of the ~ in ttw ~rtcd~~m~widcA~dcm~---~-~~~~-·-~~_n_w_~--~-~-~·R_k_k_N_e_~_n_and __ h_i_s_w_a_s_~~-o_n_~_~_t_~ __ ~ ___ M_~_i~na~N-~-~~·-~.
Senate, as a "courageous and import-
ant chanae."
Oov. Gcorae Dcukmejian voted in
favor of implementation but did not
comment on the guidelines.
Under current policy, adopted in
1984. freshmen must have completed
only four years of English and two
ycan of math.
Rebirth of state toxic agencies
draws cries of 'politics' by GOP
SACRAMENTO (AP) -An As-
tcmbly committee approved a
Democratic plan1 opposed by Gov.
Gcorse DcukmeJian, to reorganize
the ""Stat~ toxic-waste agencies
Wednesday. promrting bitter com-
plaints and politica accusations from
Republicans.
"We ought to quit playing pmcs.
It's too damed important.' said
Assemblyman Charles Bader. R-
Pomona. predicting the partisan re-
organization fight could "besmirch
the imqe of the Legislature."
A 9-4 vote late Wednesday night by
the Environmental Safety and ioxic
Church boss
Armstrong
dead·at93
PASADENA (AP) -Herbert W.
Armstrong, founder and pastor gen-
eral of the Worldwide Church of God
and originator of the widely dis-
tributed Plain Truth magazine, died
today in his home. He was 93.
"At this point I don't really know if
there was a specific cause of death,"
said Earl Reese, who works in the
church's legal office. "He was 93 years
old, and had Ii ved a very long and full
life.''
Joseph K.. Tkach, rurector of
church administration for the past six
years, had been dcsi&nated eartier to
follow Armstrong as head of the
wealthy, 80,000-member church
based in Pasadena.
Tkach, S9, was appointed deputy
pastor aeneraJ of the church a nd its
affiliated organizations, church at-
torney Ralph K. Helge said Tuesday.
"I am in a very physically weak-
ened state, enduring severe pain and
with virtually no strength what-
soever,'' Armstrong wrote in a letter
announcing his choice to church
members.
Motorists litter
at a record pace
SACRAMENTO (AP)-Mainten-
ance workers found cverythinJ. from
dentures to militiry projeculcs as
they collected &4rcc<>rd 155.000 cubic
yards of litter Trom California hi&h·
ways last year, the state reports.
The trash pickup program set new
records in 1985 for annual volume,
up 7 percent from 14S,000 cubic
yards in 1984, and for cleanup cost,
up S900,000 to SlO million during
Materials Committee sent the bill,
SBI048 by Sen. Art Torres, D-Los
Angeles, to the Ways and Means
Gommittcc. which planned-a-hearing
Thursday on the measure.
Democrats want to push the Torres
bill quickly through the Legislature,
despite the Republican governor's
stated opposition. Dcukmejian in-
stead wants approval of his own
pending reorganization plan.
Much of the 90-minute heanng
Wednesday night consisted of Re-
publkans' angry recollections of the
agreement reached last September
between Dcukmejian and legislators
over a toxic reorpmzation plan, and
the falling apart of that agreement on
the Assembly floor in the closing
hours ofthe198S semOn.
The agreement was contained in
A86SO by Democratic As-
semblywoman Sally Tanner, w~o
chairs the toxics committee. The bill
was passed by the Senate. but never
taken up in the Assembly.
Since September, Dculcmejian's
Toxic Substances Control Division
llas come under investigation by the
federal Environmental Protection
Agency and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation.
After
Christmas
Sale
Up To
70%
Off!
1985, the Department of Transpor-
tation 11jd Wednesday in a ycar~nd tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~il ~fl.rrans maintenance ruvision
chief Jack Cropper predicted both
records would be broken again in
1986.
~ Second man ejected
lnNavyplanedlee
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The second
of two Navy officers accidentally
ejected from their F-14 fiahter plane
after it landed on the USS Enterprise
has died, authorities said. .
Radar intercept officer Lt. J.g.
Stephen P. Enaeman. 28. of Rock-
ford, Ill., died Wednesday, two days
after the accident, said Navy spokes-
man Lt John Scmcken. The pilot, Lt. Joe 0 . Ourmon, 34, of Fontyce, Arc;
d ied at the tcene.
The two crewmen from the 2 I 3th
Fi.&hter Squadron had landed the
, F-14 normally aboard the Enterprise,
about 70 mlJes off the couti when the
ejection sc.ats fired as tMy were
'aehina out of the plane, Scmckcn
said.
(., Carln•Ul'Ulce blu i~ ,praenecl by panel
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Anothtt
• attempt to prevent automobile in-
• turance compenica from considftina a customer's lddm.s when 1emna
ra1e1 bas ,one do~ to defeat ii\ a
state Senate commutft.
I The latat bill, S876 l by Sen. Blll
Oreenc ().l.DI ,......., Wiit ~
' by tbe SeDatC'• iMUrance committee
oa 2..1 vote, despite 1 aouth lM A~ mident'1 testimony dlat llw
ii uafiirty dwled S4,000 1 yar for covener.
The biU would have oudlwed • called .. red-ti~ territorial ,.,.
iftlt in wbicb ti o(low-lncomc
and la;,tMilt ~ ... ~ drivins Nc:orda. are~ more for
........ ~ ... dri¥1ft ••
......... ., ...... facome d6111ka
I
Semi-Annual
Shoe Sale
~p to 30% (}F-F-
Women's -Selb y, Amalfi,
Evins and others
Men's -Florsheim, French Tech,
and others
Selt'rttd 6tvlts · broktn s1zts
Entire Stock
John1ton Murphy Alter Houn
• 5 9 90 2 pair • 110'0 reg. '70
Eatire Stoek ')
Me.11'1 A Women'• Sloa.s Moc Uppnw
20'r<> OFF
Entire toek
20%0FF
Final Days
Through Sunday, January .19
YOU'LL FIND SAVINGS ON MUCH
OF OUR REGULAR SELECTION OF
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NO. I fAelDC)llll IKAJfD, Mt:Wroat KAO.. CA,.... ('JU) 644 .. 164
9-t1E
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A powerful, new, original
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two American eagles
soaring freely in
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• lndlvtdually cast. hand·
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to the rtch luster or
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• Serially numbered. hallmarked
and accompanied by a
Certlflcate of Registration.
• Issued In a Limited tdltlon -
of only 9~ sculptu~s.
Wheeling aloft through the vast Ameri·
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touch, ror an Instant, In a brief moment
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sight which has Inspired the famed
American sculptor. Michael Boyett. to
create his dramatic new work. 'The
freedom fag/es. ..
A powerful portrayal of the soaring
symbols of our nat1on·s liberty. ''The
freedom f.1,gk:3-1$ now being Issued for
the nrst time ever by tht ~ Cn~land
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tr ~rton SUversmllhs. tht distinguished
American nrm whkh has been creating
nne products since 182•.
'Th~ 1'reedom fagles .. Is Is.sued In a
permanently Limited r.dltlon of only
9~ Individually ~rlally number~
sculptures. tach sculpture will al!O be
hallmarked and accomp1mled by a CcrtJr.
lcale of Reglstr1tJon.
txceptlooall~ detaJled to a degree ol
Intricacy that will astonish you. e.Kh
"'f'reedom 019a" sculpture ls lndlvld·
ually cast In cold<ast bronze. tht special
blend of Rntly powdtrtd bn>nx and
resins which c.aptura twn ftntr drtall
than t111dltJonal hot<&Stjng. It Is a mas-
terpiece ol Arnericm\ .rt In • mwieum
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tttasuttd fmnlty hektoom.
To acqulft your ~f)ftdom Olgles# b)'
... ichal ~ "° ,,.,,,.,,., ls reqWmf "°'°' But b1' k.lrt to mall your ramiatlon
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nteJlt c iw:ct. -• • I [:! "'-"'' KV4Ptlll"f ., n'.llOt kw "'~ I ... lk bl!""' foe "'~ CltpOtll ol ••!I 'IO and 11\tJ ,,._,. 1or ·~ ~, 111 ltlrft -4Jll)' ~ o1 Mt~· nc 11 I ~I _..., ,., "'l '°"' f'CIUal ~!Mltb GI t"9 ,,,. <llMgM ID Ill) t lt'dll t..O 118 I ~ 1'Atl~--\<N ~~ bl>
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Member American Gem Society
Accredited Gem Lab 642-3310
3 for 1 CHEESE SALE
Sharp Cheddar (8 oz. Aced) 8/241
Edam < 8 oz.> Holland Style 8/241
Colby Cheddar (12oz. Wisconsil)
Gouda (7oz .) Holland Style
Good Tlru Jan. 31st, 1986
Whilt Supply Lasts
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Veta's
SEMl-ANNUA"L
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rohcs. Ii nger ie. lou ngewear,
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Today through
Saturday, Jan. 11
10 AM -6 PM I ~ 200/o oH :': 1a
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Veta's
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\
Four Newpoit yachts in Manzanilla race
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY °""' .................
Four yachts from Newport Beach
yacht clubs are among the 28 entries
in the 6th biennial San Diego to
Manzanillo, Mexico, yacht race
which 'ets under way Feb. 8.
Entnes for the 1,100-mile down-
wind race closed Jan. 10, but Tom
Money, chairman for the sponsoring
San Die'o Yacht Club, said late
entries will be accepted for another
two weeks.
Local yachts expected to make the
race arc John Arens' Tomahawk,
Balboa Yacht club· Harry
Thomasen's Ms Btu, BYC; Peter
Grant's Nalu, Newport Harbor Yaoht
Club; and Paul O uerel's Toboggan,
Voyagers Yacht Club.
The race is open to any single-hull
yacht whose owner or charterer is a
member of a recognized yacht club.
The race will be sailed under the
International Offshore Rule (IOR)
handkap system.
The race will start ofT Point Loma
and finish ofT the Las Hadas resort
hotel at Manzanillo, a hotel originally
Marine AssoCiatiOn
·boat show planned
developed by the Jet set by l:k>h v1an
tin mqnate Antenor Patino.
The Manzanillo race takes the
place of the once °popylar San Diego
to Acapulco race. The Acapulco race
was abandoned in 1974 because of the
distance ( 1,400 miles) and the hg!lt
airs that existed dunng the last 400
miles.
The inaugural Manzanillo race was
in 1976 with 43 yachts on the starting
line.
Elapsed time record for the race. 6
days, 2 hours, was set by the 67-foot
Merlin in 1978. N1ck Frazzce's
Sw1fisure 111 finished the 1984 race in
6 days, 21 hours.
Pre-race festivities at SDYC in-
clude a gala cocktail party, the
commodore's cocktail party and din-
ner fOr owners and charterers, and a
fesuvc brunch on the mominf of the
race start. Post-race act1v1tics include
the invitational comodore's cocktail
party and a Mexican fiesta type
cocktail and dinner party for the race
participants.
Following tradition. the prcstigJous
MEXO RC (Mexican Ocean Rac1n1t
Circuit will be held Feb. 20-27.
USYRU claamplont auounced
Seven Southern California sailon made the United tates Yacht
Raetng Union Honor Roll of Champions in 19U .
THURSDAY, JANUARY 16, 1988
' -5
• •
Bel.maman Tom Blacka.ller, at left, and na•al architect
Guy lla11 dlacuM protreee of the St. Jl'rancla-Golden Gate
Challenae 12-meter tliat wu built at Stephene llarlne ln
Stockton. ~
i
'
Luitury yachts _ will share the spotlight with family ~eekend cruisers,
sportfistling-boau,..inflatablcs, and a wiCfevariety-of manne hardware and
electronics at the 30th annual Southern California Boat Show Jan. 31-Feb. 9 at
the Los Angeles Convention C,cnter. . . . . .
Heading the list was Mike O'Bryan o f San Diego who won the
Massachussctts Bay Tropb¥,.in the U.S. junior sailin& champ1onsh1ps.
O'Bryan also won the lightweight boardsaili~g. c.hamp1onsh1p. and
Tom Ryan. San Diego, won the heavyweight d1 v1s1on. CtiiCk Hearn s voi ce-
The stiow is produced by the Southern California Mann~ Assoc1at1on,
with headquarters in Orange, and will feature about 900 boats. including new
1986 models. .
More than 70 brand name power boats, including bass boats, high
performance ski and racing boats, trailerable fa!"ily cruisers and offshore
fishing machines. will be represented, according to . Tom Eliott, show
committee chairman. Among m ajor builders will be Bayhner, Carver. Cobalt,
Olastron, Regal, Sea Ox, Sea Ray, Skipjack, Tiara, TroJan ~!'d. Wellcraft..
A special anniversary feature will be the "Boat A Day giveaway wtth a
boat to be awarded each day to a show visitor as the result of a free draw1ng. The
10-boat pnzc package includes a Hobie-14 catamaran, two 10-f<>;<>t inflatables
with outboard engines, five outboard runbou~ from 11 to! 7 feet in length, a~d
two sterndrive cruisers. All boats eitcept the inflatables wall be equipped with
trailers.
The show will be open from 2 to I 0 p.m. on weekdays, 11 a.m. to I 0 p.m.
Saturdays and 11 a.m . to 7 p.m. Sundays. Admission is $5 for adults. $2 for
children. and children under six free.
There is no scheduled yachting
activity in Orange County this week-
end. Activity in other Southern
California areas is also lie.ht as many
sailors arc resting up for the giant
Midwinter Regatta in February.
Events scheduled 1n other SCY A
areas:
Lot AJlgeles -Long Beacb
Navy Yacht Club of Long Bcach-
Commodore's Invitational (all
classes), Saturday.
Los Angeles Yacht Club
Frostbite Series (j unior and senior
Sabots). Saturday.
Saata MoaJca Bay
South Coast Corinthian Yacht
Club -Les Stom Series No. 1 (kecJ
boats). Saturdav.
PAPARAZZI
Redondo &ach Yacht Club -
Winter Wine Series No. 3 (PHRF).
Saturday.
South Bay Yacht Racing Club -
Ladies Shoot the Breeze race (PH RF).
Sunday.
San Diego
Silver Gate Yacht Club-Pnvatee
Series. Saturday.
Mission Bay Yacht Club -Thistle
Midwinters West. Saturday. Sunday.
Coronado Cays Yacht Club -
Claire Fans Southern Belles Sencs.
Saturday.
San Diego Yacht Club-Boffinger
Series {MORC. IOR). Fiore Senes
(PHRF), Saturday. Sunday.
Oceanside Yacht.Club-Shannon
Series (PHRF). Sunday.
Other Southland winners were:
Mark Golison-Bruce Golison, Long Beach. Pnnce of Wales Bowl
(match racing).
Allison Jolly, Los Angeles. Mertz Troph) (women's doublc-
handcd championship).
Kevin Hall, Ventura, Sm ythe Trophy (Junior double-handed
championship).
Steve Rosenberg-Brodie Cobb-Jim Brad). Long Beach. Cham-
p1onshjp of Champions.
Bill Buchan. Bellevue. Wash. who won the Star Class !n the
USYRU one-design world championship. Buchan was the gold
medalist in the Star Class 1n the 1984 Olympic yachting games.
SCY A Mldwillter Regatta
It's approaching that time of year again -the time when the
Southern CalifQmia Yachting Association M1dw1nter Regatta -
largest wirter ~tta in the world -launches another year of yachting
in Southern California.
This year's . Midwinters. as they are known in the yachting
fraternity, is scheduled Feb. I S-16-1 7.
Six Orange County yacht clubs arc among the SCY A affiliates
which will be hosting the regatta involv ing clubs from San Diego to
Ventura County. Local clubs involved are Ncwpon Harbor. Lido Isle.
Balboa. Bahia Corinthian, Dana Point and Capistrano Bay.
Most of the action for small boats will take place Saturday and
Sunday, Feb. I S-16, with Los Angeles Yacht Club hosting the large
boats on Saturday. Sunday and Monday.
'Z' Cla11 opening
Has sailboat racing in the Newport Beach area declined 1n recent
years?
Officials at Bahia Connth1an Yacht Club thmk so and have
designed a plan to increase at -especially in the highly populated
Performance Handicap Racing Fleet.
Beginning with the popular Angclman Senes for PHRF yachts
(with the first race in March), BCYC wall inaugurate a .. Z .. Class wruch
will be open to any yacht with a valid PHRF rating which dunng the
past year has not won a trophy. The "Z'" Class will also be included in
the club's Summer Series sailed on Friday evenings starting June 13.
and the Newport to Coronado race in August.
Laughs at'The Foreigner'
of the problem during the holidays.) By VIDA DEAN
Dunng an Early Call Reception prior to the
lflaughter creates good health. the crowd spilling ou( production, SCR board president Jeff Stack introduced
of South Coast Repertory Theatre's Premiere Night Soadra and Jack Rub of Newport Beach. who are now
opening can fiYe-up apples for a whale. "honorary producers... Their gif\ went directly to
The audience was responding to the comedy of"The productio n costs of"Thc Foreigner." (He is president of
Foreigner" which runs through Feb. 9 and features the Jack 0. Raub Division of the Mission Viejo Co. and
Jeffrey AluOudJer,AuGWesple,ArtKoo1ttk,Robert she is a visual artist specializing in teittiles.)
MacNHplH (Master Harold and E.T.'s Michael). A number of college students home for the holidays
ADcela Patea, Doa Took and Mlcbel 'hlill. ded · I din 8 t CJ--.. {U ·t f C lorado) "It was the funniest thing I have ever seen." said Pam atten me u g e •Y .,.;a niversi Y 0 0
with parents Dot and Ralpb and Torrey (San Diego U.) Goldttela (attending with husband Sam) during the and sister Barbie (Cal State Fullerton) Boaltingbouse of reception which followed in the lobby. The Le Cake
"chocolate lady" was just back from Paris where she went Laguna.
with friends to recuperate from the holiday orders -Others laughing, and/ or m1n&ling with actors and
·Will promote show
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Dellr,... ........ ,_
Chick Heam. the fast-lalking pla}-
by-play broadcaster for the Los
Angeles Lakers . of the National
Basketball Assoc1auon. wi II be the
.. voice" of the the 30th anniversary
Southern California Boat Show to be
held Jan. 31 through Feb 9 at the Los
Angeles Convention Center
Heam will narrate the radio com-
mercials for the show and will be seen
and heard on tele\ 1s1on com merc1als.
The commercials wall be broadcast o n
I 0 Southern California radio stations
and three network tclev1s1on chan-
nels commencing Jan. 17 before the
show's opening da~
"We arc very pleased that Chick
Hearn has agreed 10 assist us with this
show project... said Buster Ham-
mond of Newport Beach. president of
the Southern Cahforn1a Man ne .\s-
soc1a11on. producer of the sho"' "We
believe this a great matchup -
Hearn's broadcasting presttge and
integrity with o ur show's stature as a
major Pacific Coast showcase for the
boat1 ng 1ndustf). ··
Last Year. SC MA enlisted Dennis
Conner. famed America's Cup sits~
per from San Diego. to be lhe
commercial voice for the annual
Southern California Sailboat Show
held in Long Beach.
More than 900 boats. ranging in
Chick Beam
size from 8-foot dmgh1es to luitury
~achts up to 61 feet will be available
for inspecuon at the Convention
Center. A wade vancty of mannc
equipment and services wall also be
on d1spla) dunng the I 0-da) eithi-
b1t1on.
SCM '\ i!'> the trade association for
the recreational boating industry in
Southern Cahforn1a wtth 800 mem-
ber firms. including manufacturers.
dlstnbutors and retail setVlCC com-
panies
about 6,000 roses and 4,000 truffies. visiting the buffet tables (South County Gujld's treat)
"Everybody around me was taughina. but I was the were ~~rya TMm.,... (she is VP of the board). Renee E
1
C 11 loudest," commented Lea MWer (with Mary Au>. Th.cir and Beary Se1entrom, Jim and Sbra Henwood, Jack Raab, Darid ltmmee, Son? ~ab and Jeff Stack a t ar Y a ·
Balboa Peninsula home is scheduled for an upcoming Harriett Witmer, Anette Harwlh, Cbrlotte.Rotan, Gall
progressive dinner/home tour and the. imme~i~te and Peter Oc~1. Carl and Pat Nel11er, Carl and Margaret
problem is actting the water-<:auscd hole m the living Karc~er, the David Blaakaltoru, Marilya and Tom
room repai~ CA Santa doll stuffed in the spot took care Nleltea, and J .. y and Rope Hemley.
....
..
................ -...:
A.ad, Bantette .... wldl c ........
.
' •
Fram the people maku""!g crystal a legend.
SWAROVSKI·
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OURG T
SELECTION _CONTI
Ve t(l's
SEM I-ANNUAL
SALE
--~,o to 50%-eff-
Starts today!
20o/o to 50°/o
REDUCTIONS
rohl:s. lingerit. loungewea r.
bras. slippers. etc.
A very special wedding present or the most
thoughtful of gifts for br1desma1ds Delicately cut from
32Qb full lead Austnan crystal. Exclusively yours from the
Swarovsk1 • Silver Crystal·· Collectt0n.
Today through
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10 AM -6 PM
I c;;5' 20%." thru
Jae. 18
I '0 LGA Scoop Sal•
CH A RLE S H. BARR
Member American Gem Society
Accredited Gem Lab 642-3310
3 for 1 CHEESE SALE
Sharp Cheddar (8 oz. Aced ) 8/241
Edam (8 oz.) Holland Style 8/241
Colby Cheddar (12oz . W'esconsil)
Gouda (7oz.) .Holland Style
Good Tlru Jan. 31st, 1986
Whit Supply Lasts
3;311
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WE MAKE
PARTY TRAYS 842-0872 z -
ESTCLIFF PLAZA
17th & Irvine, Westcliff Plaza
645-0792
Pers onaliz ed
Co untry Plaques
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-.
QuALITY IN J;AsHION, G1FTS AND SERVICES FoR You .
A NDEE'S PLACE . A NTHONY 'S SHOE R EPAIR . B ANK OF A MERICA'. CHARLES H BARR JEWELERS
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---
Four Newport yachts ip. Manzanilla race
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY
Oellr .............
Four yachts from Newport Beach
yacht clubs arc among the 28 entries
in the 6th biennial San Diego to
Manzanillo, Mexico, yacht race
which sets under way Feb. 8.
Entnes for the 1,100-milc down-
~-'""~ ... ~n:-10, but-Tom
Money, chairman for the sponsoring
San Di~o Yacht Club, said late
entries wall be accepted for another
two weeks.
Local yachts expected to make the
race arc John Arens' Tomahawk,
Balboa Yac ht club; Harry
Thomasen's Ms Btu, BYC; Peter
Grant's Nalu, Newport Harbor Yacht
Club; and Paul Querel's Tobouan.
Voyagers Yacht dub.
The race is open to any single-hull
yacht whose owner or charterer is a
member of a recognized yacht club.
The race-will be sailed --under the
International O ffshore Ruic (IOR)
handicap system.
The race will start off Point Loma
and finish off the Las Hadas resort
hotel at Manzanillo, a hotel originally
Marine Association
boat show planned
Luxury yachts will share the spotli&ht with family ~eekend cruisers.
sport fishing boat , · nflatablcs, and a wicf~ manne hardware ano
electronics at the 30th annual Southern California Boat Show Jan. 3 1-Fcb. 9 at
the Los Angeles Convention Center. '. . . . .
The show is produced by the Southern Cah forn1a Mann~ Ass~1auon,
with headquarters in Orange, and will feature about 900 boats, including new
1986 models. .
More than 70 brand name power boats, including bass boats, high
performance ski and racing boats, trailerable f8!11ily cruisers an_d offshore
fishing machines, will be represented. ac~rding to . Tom Eliott, show
committee chairman. Among major builders will be Bayhner. Carver. Cobalt,
Glastron, Regal, Sea Ox, Sea Ray. Skir~ack. Tiara, TroJan ~!'d. Wellcraft.,
A special anniversary feature wil be the .. Boat A Day gi veaway with a
boat to be awarded each day to a show visitor as the result ofa free drawing. The
I 0-boat pnze package includes a Hobie-14 catamaran, 1wo I 0-foot tnflatablcs
with outboard engines, fi ve outboard run bouts from I I to ! 7 feet 1n length, a~d
two sterndrive cruisers. All boats except the inflatables will be equipped with
trailers. ·
The show will be open from 2 to 10 p.m. on weekdays. 11 a.m.10 10 p.m .
Sa1urdays and I I a.m. to 7 p.m. Sundays. Admission is $5 for ad ult i,. S2 for
children, and children under siJl free.
There is no scheduled yachting
acu vity in Orange County this week-
end. Activity in other Southern
California areas is also light as many
sailors are resting up for the giant
Midwinter Regatta in February.
Events scheduled in other SCYA
areas:
Los Angeles -Loni Beacb
Na vy Yacht Club of Long Beach -
Commodore's Invitational (all
classes), Saturday.
Los Angeles Yacht Cl ub -
Frostbite Series (junio r and senior
Sabots), Saturday.
Suta Monica Bay
South Coast Corinthian Yacht
Club -Les Storrs Series No. I (keel
boats). Saturdav.
PAPARAZZI
Redondo BCach Yacht Club -
Winter Wine Series No. 3 (PHRF),
Saturday. •
South Bay Yacht Racing Club -
Ladies Shoot the Breeze race (PH RF).
Sunday.
Su Diego
Silver Gate Yacht Club -Pnvatce
Series, Saturday.
Mission Bay Yacht Club -Thistle
Midwinters West, Saturday. Sunday.
Coronado Cays Yacht Club -
Claire Faris Southern Belles Senes.
Saturday.
San Diego Yacht Club-Boffinger
Series (MORC. IOR). Fiore Scnes
(PHRF), Saturday. Sunday.
Oceanside Yacht Club - Shanno n
Series (PH RF). Sunday.
developed by the Jet set by Hoh v1an
tin mqnatc Antenor Patino. '
T he Manzanillo race takes the
plaoe of the once popular San Diego
to Acapulco race. The Acapulco race
wasabandoned in 1974 because of the
distance ( 1,400 miles) and the ha.ht
airs that existed dunng 1he last 400
miles.
The mauguraJ Manzanillo race was
in 1976 with 43 yachts o n the starting
line.
Elapsed 11me record for lhe race. 6
days, 2 hours, was set by the 67-foot
Merlin in 1978. Nick France's
Sw1ftsure Ill finished the 1984 race in
6 days, 21 hours.
Pre-race festivities at SDYC in-
clude a gala cocktail party, the
commodore's cocktail party and din·
ner for owners and charterers, and a
festive brunch on the morn inf of &he
race start. Post-race activities include
the invitationaJ comodorc's cocktail
party and a Mexican fiesta type
cocktail and dinner party for the race
participancs.
Follow1ng tradition. the prestigious
MEXORC (Mexican Ocean Racina
Circuit will be held Feb. 20-27.
USYRU claamplon1 a.DDouced
Seven Southern California sailors made the United State!> Yacht
Racing Union Honor Roll of Champions in 1985.
Heading the list was Mike O 'Bryan o f San D1ego who won the
assachussctts Bay Tropby..in the U.S. Junior sa1hn&-c.bamp1onsh1ps.
O'Bryan also won the lightwcia.ht boardsailing champ1onsh1p, and
To m Ryan, San Diego, won the heavyweight d1v1sion.
Other Southland winners were:
Mark Golison-Bruce Golison. Long Beach, Pnnce of Wales Bowl
(match racing).
Allison Jolly, Los Angeles. Mertz Trophy (women·s double·
handed championship).
Kevin Hall, Ventura. Smythe Trophy (Junior double-handed
cham pionship).
Steve Rosenberg-Brodie Cobb-Jim Brady, Lo ng Beach. Cham-
pionship of Champions.
Bill Buchan. Bellevue. Wash. who wo n the Star Class in the
USYRU one-design world championship. Buchan was the gold
medalist in the Star Class 1n the 1984 O lympic yachting games.
SCY A Midwinter Re1atta
It's approaching lhat time of year again - the ume when the
Southern California Yachting Associauo n Midwinter Regatta -
largest wirtcr ~tta in the world -launches ano ther year o f yachting
in Southern California.
T his year's M idwinters, as they are known 1n the yachting
fraternity, 1s scheduled Feb. 15-16-17.
Six Orange County yacht clubs are amo ng the SCY A affiliates
which will be hosting the regatta involving clubs from San Diego to
Ventura County. Local clubs involved are Newport Harbor. Lido Isle.
Balboa, Bahia Connth1an. Dana Point and Capistrano Bay.
Most of the ac1ion for small boats will take place Saturday and
Sunday, Feb. 15-16, with Los Angeles Yacht Club hosting the large
boats on Saturday. Sunday and Monday.
'Z' Cla11 openiDg
Has sailboat racing in the Newport Beach area declined in recent
years?
Officials at Bahia Conoth1an Yacht Club think so and have
designed a plan to increase it -especiall y in the highly populated
Performance Handicap Racing Fleet.
Bcgjnning w1th the popular Angel man Scnes for PH Rf yachts
(with the first race in March). BCYC will inaugurate a "Z .. Class which
will be open to any yacht with a valid PH RF raung which dunng the
past year has not wo n a tro phy. The .. Z .. Class will also be included in
the club's Summer Series sailed on Friday evenings starting June 13.
and the Newpon to Coronado race in August.
Laughs at'The Foreigner'
By VIDA DEAN
lflaughtcr~tes good health, the crowd spilling out
of Soulh Coast Repertory Theatre's Premiere Night
opening can $ive up apples for a while.
The audience was responding to the comedy of"Thc
Foreigner" which runs through Feb. 9 and features
Jeffrey Alu CU.adler, Au Gillespie, Art Ko.1tl.k, Robert
MacNHptH (Master Harold and E.T.'s Michael).
Angela Patoe, 0.. Tools a~d MlclLael Toll.a. .. .
··1t was the funniest thing I have ever seen, said Pam
Gold1tela (attending with husband Sam) during the
reception which followed in the lobby. The Le Cake
"chocolate lady" was just back from Paris ~here she went
with friends to recuperate from the holiday orders -
about 6,000 roses and 4,0001ruffics.
of the problem du ring the holidays.)
Dunng an Early Call Receptio n prior to the
production. SC R board president Jeff Stack introduced
Sondra and Jack Rub of Newport Beach, who are now
"honorary producers... Their gift went directly to
production costs of"The Foreigner." (He is president of
the Jack G. Raub Division of the Mission Viejo Co. a nd
she is a visual artist specializing in textiles.)
A number of college students ho me for the hohda)S
attended including Betsy Clock (U n1vcrs1ty of Colorado)
with parents Dot and Ralpk and Torrey (San Diego U.)
and sister Barblf (Cal State Fullerton) Boaltl.Dgbouse of
Laguna.
THURSDAY. JANUARY 16, 1986
ANNLANDER8
C~MIC8
Helmaman Tom Blackaller. at left, and naYal arcbltect
Gary llull dhcuu pro.ireae of the St. Francia-Golden Gate
Cballence 12-meter that wu built at Stephen• Marine lD Stockton. .
Cfi1CK ·Hearn s voice
will promote show
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Oellr elet ~ .,...,
Chick Heacn. the fasHalking pla}'·
by-play broadcaster for the Los
Angeles Lakers of the Natio nal
Basketball Assoc1at1on. will be the
"voice" of the the 30th ann1versaf)
Southern California Boat Show to be
held Jan. 31 through Feb 9 at the Lo!i
Angeles Con ve ntion Ce n,ter
Hearn will narrate the radio com·
mcrcials for the show and will be seen
and heard on telev1S1on commercials.
The commercials will be broadcast o n
I 0 Southern California radio stations
and three network telev151on cha n-
nels commencing Jan. 27 before the
show's opening da}'.
"We are very pleased that C hick
Heam has agreed to assist us with this
show prOJCCt." said Buster Ham-
mond ofNewpon Beach. president of
the Southern Cahforn1a Manne A.s-
soc1auon. producer of the sho \I, ··w e
believe this a great match up -
Heam 's broadcasting presuge and
integrity with o ur show's stature as a
major Pacific Coast showcase for the
boating industry."
Last Year. SC MA enlisted Dennis
Conner. famed Amen ca's Cup skip-
per from San Otego. to be the
commerc ial voice for the annual
Southern Cahfom1a Sailboat Show
held in Long Beach.
More than 900 boat~ ranging in
Chick Hearn
size from 8-foot dinghies to luxuf)
)acht~ up to 61 feet will be a vailable
for 1nspect10n at the Convention
Lenter. ~ wide "anet) of ma n ne
equipment and St:rv1ces will also be
o n d1spla~ dunng the IQ...da y ellh1-
b111on.
CM..\ 1~ the trade assoc1auon for
the recrca11onal boating industry in
Southern Cahforn1a with 800 mem-
ber firms. including manufacturers.
d1stnbuto rs and retail scrvtce com-
pan 1e~
"Everybody around me was laughing, but I was the
loudest" commented Lea Miller (with Mary Au). Their
Balboa 'Peninsula home is scheduled for an upcoming
progressive di~ner/home tour and the. imme~iate
problem is getting the water-caused hole 1n the living
room repaired. (A Santa doll stuffed in the spot took care
Others lau&hing. and/ or min&)ing with actors a nd
visiting the buf'fct tables (South County Guild's lreat)
were K.at:Uya 'nemptM (she is VP of the board). Rea«
and Beary Secentrom, Jim and Shroa Henwood,
Harriett Witmer, Auette Hanril1, Cbrlotte Rosu, Gau
and Peter Oc~•. Carl and Pat Nel11er, Carl and Margaret
Karclter, the David Blukealloru, Martlya and Tom
Nielsen, and Jll4y and Rope Hemley.
Jack Raub, Da'rid ltm.mee, Sondra Raub and Jeff Stack at Early Call.
f
l I
':'::".:-::"'-:":~~-:---:o~---;:;._-~-------~8111t ... ___ ... ~_-r_-i:•
AM;.~ cllata wttll Ch.._.
'
at.,.. CoMt DAILY PILOT/~. JfllQIY 18, 1918
Family perfection
nice but bor~ng
For y~ l've had a dream. I'd
wake up one day and all o~r kids
would be employed and then cars
would be runnil\j. In my" mind, l fantasized about bow
we'd all sjt around the kitchen table
and talk of happy thinp that had
nothina whatsoever to do wilh n::-
sumes and carburetors. We'd be a
family apin.
Well, 1l happened. At 7:30 p.m. last
Thursday, the "Halley's Comet of
Family Llvina" occurred. All of us
stood around the kitchen and ccl-
ebrate<i the· phenomenon.
.. Well, this is really great," said my
husband.
"It certainly will be wonderful to
talk about something meaningful and
get on with our lives," I added
Possibly five full minutes passed
without •nyone saying anything and
then I said to my son, "An::n't you
goina to act a·baircut .....
"Made-an-a~intment for the
weekend," he satd.
"Did you pick up all that mail that's
been collecting here all ... "
"Got it yesterday," be said.
We sat m silence. Finally, m y eyes
brightened, "I'll bet yo u forgot
Grandma's birthday and she's always
so thou&htful about ... "
"Too"K out her present last week-
end. Had a nice visit."
My husband turned to our daugh-
ter, ''I don't suppose you've started
saving a dime toward your car
insurance?"
"Paid it last week," she said.
Throughout the dinner hour we
struuJed to find some sin against
parental wisdom that we could dis-
cuss. When they were between jobs it
bad been so stimulating. We could
give them our "Pull yourself up by
your bootstrap" speech (an oldie but a
goodie), and when the cars broke
down, it was wonderful to march out
E1u
Bo11Ec1
the traditional "If you hadn't been so
stubborn and held out for a classic
qu-, you'd have wheels today. Maybe
' next time you'll listen to your
parents."
The evenina drqged on. They
couldn't do anything wrong.. They
bad put oil in the car. Their laundry
was done within the last week. They
were eatina well. Their health in-
surance was paid up. They had no
traffic tickets outstandina. Their rtnt
was paid.
I never knew peTfcction could be so
dull. But then I was new at it. Was it
possible that controversy bound us
together aild the parent<hild roles
provided a common ground for
rappor:t?
As they Jett, one of tbe motors sn a
car refused to tum over.
"Tum off the engine before you
flood it and then floor it," said his
brother.
"No, I know that car. Pump it ...
said his sister.
"Nonsense," said my husband.
"The battery is dead, and if you did
what I told you to do in the first pla~.
you'd have anotbeT year on the
warranty."
I was putting together the "You
probably left the door open and ran
the battery down" speech.
We were a family again.
-Friday, Jaaury 17
ARIES (March 21 ·April t 9): You are in driver's seat. Know 1t, be
selective, choose quality and insist on clarificati~n of te"!'s. Som~one ~htnd
scenes speaks up 1n your behalf -express gratitude. Pisces, Virgo persons
play roles.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): What appeared to be lost cause will be
revived. You are headed for victory, despite some detours. Focus on
responsibility, sccrets. clandestine meeting. special arrangement. Cancer,
Capricorn persons fiaure prominently.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Love wdl no longer be elusive. Greater
emotional fulfillment hilhlights excit-
ina scenario. All stops are out, reach
beyond previous limitations. You'11
complete major assignment. Anes,
Libra play roles. s
CANCER (J une 21-July 22): Focus YONEY
on new starts, pioneering efforts, chance
to act in on ground floor of exciting. 0MARR .
creative, possibly profitable project.
Display originality. independence,
courage of convictions. Leo will play role.
LEO (July·23-Aug.. 22): Emotional n::sponscs flow. heart could rule head
as result. One who pretends to be moody should not be taken seriously. Heed
your own counsel, articulate future prospects.
VJRGO (Aua-23-SepL 22): G iv:e full rein to intell.ectual curiosity.
Individual you respect will vofunteer pertinent ihformauon. You'll learn
more about production. basic costs. long-range prospects. News of
inheritance is J>OSSibility. -
LIBRA (SCpt. 23-0ct. 22): Go slow, be specific. check dl?Cument.s .. be
positive. concerning legal ramifica.tions. f'.ocus on partners~•I?· pubhc1ty.
clash of ideas, marital status. Some 1nstrucllons are due for rev1s1on. Scorpio
plays role.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Read and write, discern motives. do~·t·be
satisfied that something merely occurred. Find reasons and act accor~ingly.
Former ally is back on scene, will prove valuable aid. Sagittanan will play
paramount role.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Good lunar aspect me~ns you are due
fo r exciting changes. messaJe from loved one that could ul.t1mately lead to
journey. Major domestic adjustment is featured, harmony will be restored on
homefront.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Go slow, review property values, define
terms. $Cl rid of superfluous material. By st~ml!ning techniq~es. you'll
make s1gnificant gains. Focus also on secrets, sntngue. prophetic dreams.
Pisces figures prominently.
· AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Emphasis on power, authonty, inten~1fied
love relationship. Numerous questions will be ~nswere~. cunos1ty ~111 be
satisfied. Close associate lends benefit of expenence, w1ll pay meansngful
compliment.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Emphasis on payments. collecuons. ab1hty
to be rid of burden not rightly your own. Greater recognition due. numerous
doors open. valid opportunities multiply. Aries, Libra persons play
paramount roles.
IF JANUARY 11 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are a natural executi ve.
capable ofhandlinJ responsibility. s~cccssful when there i~ a cn sis. you m~et
deadlines. you pro1ect aura of authonty. You also are sentimental, .romantic,
intense and seldom forget favors. Cancer, Capricorn persons play 1mponant
roles 10 your life. Major domestic adjustment occurs this year. could snclude
actual change of residence or marital status. You have unusual mark on one
or both knees. February and November will be outstanding for you in 1986.
Politico put politics
in true perspective Can't quit smo~ing?
Ann offers some tips It was that professorial politico of
yesteryear, Eugene McCarthy who
said, 10 effect: Running for office is
like coaching a team -you've got to
be smart enough to know how to win
and dumb enough to think it's
important. To ho.w many other
pursuiu can you apply that hoe?
Quite a many, no?
A deer, like a dog. can hear a whistle
pitched too high for the human ear. If
you mounted such a whistle on your
car-so the wind oftbe car's motjon
blew it as you drove -would it alert
a deer in the road ahead? WouJd that
deer fe1 out of the way? Yes, says a
Michigan outfit marketing such a
whistle.
Reluctantly, our Love and War
man includes in his files the defi-
nition of marriage by AmbTosc
Bierce: .. A master, a mistress, and two
slaves. making in all. two people."
Size is relative. Even among sov-
ereign states. Liechtenstein is 360
times bigger than Vatican City.
' Q. Docs anybody ever get that
killer disease of the Middle Ages
anymore. the Black Death?
A. Bubonic plague? It still turns up
Rarely in lhis country. Maybe one
case a year. Almost as rarely 1n
Southeast Asia. Researchers blame
Oeas on wild rodents. such a~ squir-
rels.
Q. Why when you're fired 1s 1t said
you "get the sack"?
A. Skilled workers had 10 suppl y
their own tools. When one of same
lost his job. the foreman handed him
PEOPLE
a sack to carry off bis gear. During the
Industrial Revolution in England.
th.is.
Ifs said insomniacs can trick
themselves to sleep by trying to keep
the1 r eyes wide open in the dark. The
Lids. straining to close, tngger sleep
when they do so.
One out of every 25 is not much,
relatively. but it's sufficient to satisfy
the cartoonists: One out of every 25
dog bites is on the scat of the pants.
Oaim is made that about a fourth
of the clams you eat in clam chowder
are at least 100 years old. According
to this claim maker, clams live to be
about 150.
From uric acid. the chemists got
barbituates. so named because their
discovered occurred on S1 Barbara·s
Da). ,.
Two out of fi ve: women with one
child 1cll the survcytakcrs they don't
want another one
lhcd to be a son of hippopotamus
on Madagascar about the size of a
dog
To equal the feat of a golfer's hole·
in-one, a basketball player would
have to sink an 88-foot shot.
"Seventy-four percent of the
world'~ surface 1s covered by water,"
said one Earl Bntton. "and the other
26 percent by mortgages."
L .M. Boyd J1 • 1y11dlc•ted
col•m•llf.
DEAR READERS: The s1x m&JOr
American cigarette companies spend
SI .5 billion annually to promote their
products. Some 320,000 Americans
wiJl die prematurely this year of
diseases linked with smoking. That's
as many Americans as have been
killed in all the wars fought in this
century.
lfyou didn'tjoin the Great Ameri-
can Smokeout Nov. 21 , you can start
next Monday. Here arc some tips to
help you quit the filthy habit from the
American Cancer Society:
•Wet down all cigarettes sn the
house and throw them in the trash
can. O can out all ashtrays in your
home and office and store them.
Discard matches; hide lighters, or
give them away.
· •When the urge to smoke bits, take
a deep breath. Hold it a second, then
release it very. very slowly. Taking
deep rhythmic breaths is similar to
smoking, only you'll inhale cleao air,
not paisonous gases.
•Exercise to help relieve tension.
O imb stairs rather than take the
elevator, park the car a block or two
from your destsnation and walk the
rest of the way. At home. pracuce
touching your toes. JO& in place, do
jumping jacks.
•When tempted to reach for a
cigarette. think of a negative image
about smoksng. Select your worst
memory connected with the habit.
The lime you burned a hole in your
suJI or when you were left completel)'
breathless runn1n~ for a bus that
pulled away. Imagine this experience
for IS seconds whenever the urge
occurs
A1111
UllDERS
•Reward yourself with oral
substitutes in the same way you may
have used cigarettes. Good examples:
chewins sugarless gum, lemon drops.
pumpkin or sunflower seeds, apple
slices, carrot sticks, unbuttered pop-
corn or stick cinnamon.
•Eat three or more small meals a
day. This maintains constant blood
sugar levels. and helps fi&ht the urge
to smoke. A void sugar-laden foods
and spicy items that can trigger a
desire for cigarettes.
•Scramble your day and change
habits connected with smoking.
Drive a different route to work: eat
lunch sn a new place; leave the "scene
of the urge.'" At home. avoid your
"smolung chair" after dtnner, reach
for gum rather than a cigarette when
answenng the phone.
•Cleanse your body of mcotme.
Dnnk liquids -lots of them. Water
(six to ei~t gJa<>sc~ a day). herbal teas.
£ru1t JUICCS and caffeine-free sofi
dnnks are recommended. Pass up
coffee. caffesnated soft drinks and
alcohol as they can increase your urge
to smoke.
•Keep your hands and msnd busy.
Work on a crossword i)uzzle. knit a
sweater1 balance your checkbook, fix
somcth.ing around the house. sham-
poo the dog. clean out the closets.
Kaye wiHcut up on 'Cosby Show'
By lite Atsoclatesl Prn1
NEW YO RK -0...y Kaye IS
aoina to rlay a denust in an eoitode o NBCs "The Cosby Sbow" that will be telecast later
tbilseuon.
Acuess s..Ja Brae, ("Kiss of
the SptdeT Woman •) made a
recent appearance as a school
teeeher. Sc.vie W_., is sched-
uled to play himldf in an episodC.
to bet.aped sn February.
What cll .. atera?
LOS ANGELES-Is produ~r
lnrta Ann tctllna away from
disaster moVlct? He says he really
doesn't tee a difference.
Allen produced the two-part
••Alice in Woodctland.. movie
cclcast on CBS in December.
Now be'1 workln1 on
"OutfllF, ··a CBS drama in wbicb
a fttheT (a..t ..,.._) seek•
h11 own J"9lice after &be man who
raped arid murdtted hd dluthter
iJ hied Oft I a.J loophole.
Allen •YI he doeln"t -It II I
Dumy&aye
SWJtch from such mov1~ as .. The
Towtrina Inferno.. and ··The
P~idon Adventure:·
rrbey ut me that after every
Jack Benny
movie I make," said llco.
.. Thur rnlly ts no switch. The
name of the pmc 1J cnlef'Ulln·
mcnl."
Benny atamp?
LOS ANGELES -The c.am-
paign for a J1ck Beuy Com-
memorative Stamp has been step-
ped up by comedians Norm
Croeby and Geor1e 81ra1.
Crosby and Bums boo a
committee of celebrities uraina
the U.S. Postal Service to issue
the stamp. The aroup has sent
letters to all senators and aov-
emors askina them to join the
comm1tttt.
Drui• attacked
LOS ANGELES -MCA Re-
cords is relcasina 1n and-drva
r«ord and video called .. Stop the
Madne s," which includes se-
quenetS filmed at the White
House with First lady Nuey
Re11aa.
It will prcmiete Friday. on
NBC"1 .. FridaJ ~11)\t V1c:kot.''
said Bnan L Oyak, president of
lM Entertainment Jndusmes
O>uncil for a Drua·Free Sodcty.
PLAY IT SAFE, SAM
Neither vulnerable. North deals.
WEST
+ K 109
'V Q1074
0 9864
• 72
NORTH
• 652
<:>AK3
O AJ7
• AKQIO
EAST
• J 87~
<:>5
0 Q532
• 9865
SOUTH
+AQ4
'V J 9862 o K 10
•JU
The bidding:
Nortla Eut Soutli WHt
2 NT Pue 3 <:> Pa11
4 <:> Pua 4 + Pua
6 <:> Pua Pua Pue
Opening lead: Nine....Df_Q..._
Transportation from hand to
hand is vital in many contracts.
South, declarer at six hearts. had to
overcome an early attack on one of
his entries to be able to take a safe
ty play later sn the hand.
West led his top diamond and a
careless declarer would have sealed
his fate quickly. He would have
played a low diamond from dummy
at. the first trick and, if East plays
the queen. t he diamond entry to
declarer's hand is removed before
he can put it to good use.
Declarer overcame that hurdle by
playing the jack from the table: if
East put in the queen, declarer
would win and the ten would be an
entry: if East did not cover,
declarer would still .have the king.
Now the contract was on ice if
trumps were 3-2. or if either
defender had a singleton honor.
And declarer knew how to protect
o ••on-o..., ..... ,_. of ,._. '°"' .. ,..-.led '#O'dt ...... ..... ... '°"" '-·-i. -·
CHARLES
GOREN
OMAR
SHARIFF
against other 4·1 trump splits.
The jack, queen and king of
diamonds completed the first trick.
Declarer cashed dummy's ace of
hearts; caine to hand with"'tlle Jack
of clubs and led the nine of trumps.
Had West shown out, declarer
would have r isen with the king of.
hearts and returned the suit toward
the jack. hold ing East to one trick.
When West played a low heart.,
declarer simply ran the nine. He did
not mind if East won the trick
cheaply, for that would have meant
that trumps had split.
When the nine held, the rest of
the hand was routine. Declarer con·
tinued with a heart t-0 the king,
came back to his hand with the ten
of diamonds he had so cuefll lly
turned into an entry. and conceded
a trick to West's queen of trumps.
That was the only trick for defense.
For laformadoa aboat Claarlea
Gorea'• mew 1eweletter l•r bridae
playera, write Gore• Bridae Letter,
P.O. Bo. 4426, Orlando, Fla.
32802-4426.
WOii ....
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROH
1 Muter: Heb
6 Schlam
10 Earthly life
14 Right-angled
to the keel
15 lroquolan
16 Frenzied
17 Understand
18 Shut out
20 Next to Sun
21 Drlzzle
23 Sounds
24 Canvass
25 Osiris' mate
26 Reduced
30 Minimal
34 Paint layer
applicator
35 Agts.
37 A Wesl
38 Treadmills
39 Piieup
4 1 Volcano roek
42 V91'b ending
43 Ball holders
44 Ridge crests
46 Jocund
48 Lays by
50 Former
52 Weight
53 Bearer-bond
part
56 Paragon
57 Browbeat
60 Non-
conductor
62 Lyric poem
64 Galley proof
mark
65 Golf word
66 Strong bast
fi ber
67 Ran
68 Arrow poieon
69 Posh
DOWN
1 Jazz numbers
2 Luzon river
3 Ah)'1hm
4 Some grads
5 Make better
6 Aeplenlah
7 Golf club
8 Ev91'green
9 Age group
10 Beggage Item
11 Bible boolC
12 Give up
13 Makes do
19 Entwines
22 Sandarac
tr .. wooo
i 4 Chuma
25 March date
26 Curable
, .
I I
' f'MV10UI "1m.I IOLWD
cotton fabric
27 -Of
Commons
28 Evaluator
29 Remove
chalk
31 Vlolln maker
32 Conserved
33 Kid
36A~ta
40 Lie down
4 1 In C.M that
43 Alpine area
45 Beams
47 Distinction 49 .. _ gOOd
newa .....
51 Mix-up
53 Stone cheat
54 WIMaup
•bout
55 EicplOlter
56 North wind
57 Ouecl state
5a Wleegod
59 Time P«lod
61 Maximum
63 Foot
TD
P'AlllLT
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane
by Brad Anderson
"Boy, are you in trouble. You've got your
date book all mixed up!"
PEANUTS
WHAT uJOIJLD HAPPEN IF
VOU AND I NEVER GOT
VIA~~IED A~D LEFT MOME ?
GARFIELD
W~AT IF '(OU ~ND l 1-lAD
TO LIVE T06ETHER FOR
THE REST OF OUR LI ES.,
CATS HAVE AN lf\K.RE~10L(
INNAT E A61LliY i O 5EN~E
W"4fN YOO ARE FEELING BL UE
. TUMBLEWEEDS
DRABBLlt
PJ\RLE2 \J006 ~0.1!> ~
~l -bJt> F~ANC.AI!> 1
aoes1saoes
:
..
Or~ Co.t DAILY PtLOT /Thurldey, ~ 11, 1.. -
BIO O&OROB by Virgil Partch (VIP)
--··---~
"Do you be 1eve In reincarnation?"
DENJUS THE llltl'fACE
ANO NOW ITS &OTIME
FOR LITTLt UfNNIS~
bv Hank Ketcham
~
\
• SHE M~ 6f. NEW
~NO HF.Rf .•
by Jim Davis
i
BLOOll COUlfTT
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
SHOE
J:ricff>=~~ T ~~~~::
PAC m.J ...
JUDGE PARKER
~ FUNKY WINKERBEAN
nv.T~ A OU()(I i..IE c.AN'T
EVE.N ~~ E.NG»U-::>~.
M\JC."' Lftb ~RE....ic.'-\ I
by Tom K. Ryan
by Kevin Fagan
by Pat Brady
HI 1HERE ! WOUkD C..CO
kl KE 1t> ~ -rnE. OfF/CJAl
SAAD CAND'.t> OF 1HE WEST-
VI E.W HIGH ~I.. F16H11~
E:£APEGOAIS ~
DOONESBURY
WHAi KIND lb rr 2=-
~M]f
6'.116/NG
AHfOFJetf """l' »e ~,.-'l(XJP
=l;r
. '
., I
by Ferd'& Tom Johnion :
.
by Lynn Johnston ;
1He:RE ARI:. l oo ~NY PARE.r-rTS '·
IN I H\S 1-'\COSE:. .~
by Harold Le Doux
YOU ASl<EO IF l l>Nt STI~
IN LOVE V"'f"T)-4 HeR I n1E
ANSWER IS ves.. aft'
SME OESE""'-'ES ~
ONE MUCH BETTER.I
by Tom Batluk
~PEC£JA!~1 1..J( ru06f. 1
by Gary Trudeau
. .;
. • . . : . . . . ' .. .
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.-
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/ Thurlday, January US, 1988
Movie boasts CBS again
• . . . . By FRED ROTRENBJ!:J\G BerdnelH, fooled tbeexpensandpve CBS, witb lhird·ratcd .. Murder, ~~....._...., CBS successive weekly wins for the She Wrote" pinina its hiabett au·
D ' I D NEW YORK-CB , traillna NBC first tJmc this teaton. dienct ever and ''60 Minutet" takina
..... C-by 21/J ratio,-points after six niaht . CBS finished the week of ]Jn. 6-12 the fifth spot, averqed • 2~..9 ra~lna
--:.-:.--:. rallied to win the weekly ratinas raoc with an averqe ratina of 18.0, while for the four houn of pnme ume ·~-.......,... wMn its new "Sunday N1aht Movie" NBC, led by another record·tettina Sunday, mark.ina the tee0nd bett
PO· ---....... W M o t=,:, :,i:.. made a spectacular debut, fiau rcs performance from the No. I .. Cosby ratinp niaht this season. Only Game "'~" from the A.C. Nieltcn Co. showed. Show," had a 17.9. ABC. with only 7 of the World Series did better. ·-"•» ·-"'-'-Vl4tel
CllllAMltl
Uo\C-.
::::,..""' =...-After checkina Saturday niaht's "Who's the Bossr· in the Top 10. "Rockabye" ranked founh for the u'"'° ,_ • Nielsen results, researchcn at both averaaed a 14.0. week with a 2S.3 ratin" the third belt
..oew :-""' :;:;I>~•.. CBS and NBC fiaured NBC would After 16 weeks of the JO-week movie performance th ts seaton. ~~;"' ."' ... "" win the week by close to a full ratings prime-time season, NBC leads with a "Crazy Like A Fox," replaced ~ n-, .... ,.,,__. M•• -'"-"" '-"''
nMT01t ::.-... ""':1w~ point, but the powerful performance 17.6 ratina to CBS' 16.9 and ABC's the "CBS Sunday Night Movie,·
•-·:;:.".:!.:~:· of "Rockabye," stamna Valerie IS.2. . bcains Its Wedn~sd&y run ~inst ~.~ :;:::-.=. t-----......;.'-------='----'--...----------------. ··Oynasty" and "Blacke's Maaic' thb _____________ _. Sell thing• fut wltl\ Daily Piiot Want Ada. week. CBS' other m-.jor Wednesday
'Eijiiiijiil~i.rlllftJll_.'ftlC..------'-~ CLLlBHOUlE f>1'ct• '°Ee.. hopeful, "Mary," ranked 43rd. one ~" week after at bad cracked the Top~'
WINNER -a..Aar..-
Mcryl Streep
"""~-c--
-81.i O.om .... "''-Nrw y ....... C-c..lr
Loo~,..0-"--
A UN IV F.IS.\L Picture ·----....····~-
The Man of Your Dreams is Back!
"A CLASSY THRILLER ..•
Wiid and scary ...
Giv~you
goosebumps ...
I LOVED IT!"
Kallie Kiiiy. Alt· TV
tl~re ~ONB.MSIREEU
FREDDV'S REVENGE
•mm•n,.... .. .,,...unmt•1:11111n..-.,.•,..·•ITlll mOTIUSUl·~ ....... .,Qll ..... IMU. .. mlf_....•...,1!11111 ... ., ... CllAD ...... .,.., Slllft • ...., ., ... 5111111
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11011 n .,... sa1.9500 IUMl 637-0340
FllllYI EDWMDS ll TORO AMC mMGE MAU
AUllll 639 -1770 FIUllTll 525-4747 IUMl 634-2553
STADU9 oa ... FOX FWBTON SY\J"Y CITY conn
llU 529.5339 ..,_ 154·U ll ITllTll 191·0567
...,..lmArLW EDWMDS lllVllSITY EDWMDS VI.LAGE COfTD
MITA 9111 979-4141 u ..... (213) 691-0633 WllTWTO 191-3935
EDWUDS CllllA conn AMC FASHION SQUME EDWMDS CllllA MSl
lllTl .... s..6-2711 ....... 49S-6220 WUTWID 191·3693
EDWMDS SO. COAST l'UZA EDWMDS VE.JO MAU PACflC llWAY 39 Da·"
•••••• • •••••• • • * BARGAIN MATINl!ES MONDA Y H1RU J RtDA v IS T 1 Pf RI< 11H,<1Mi1 t '. • * S A llJPCIA• 1 "'I Pf Rf r>RMANrl '• • * f f If ' " lo 4 Ahl•f • I I /j. 1 Hf •
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Mt<M4fl. IOUOU.I
A CHOIUS llNl:
THI MOVll ,.., "'
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I) >0 1 >0 •JO I JI I 11 10 10
"'' °"",,JO 1 10 ... 100 HIV14w t oo
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eot_e• •••-.o •••ote """ OUT Of AfllCA ,,.,
LA MIRADA GATEWAY
MilCiMAt' OOUOUI Untttl..i h ll.._t JlWll Of THI NIU ,.,,,
1 IJ J-U IU l·U IOJI
INIMY MINI 1o0 u 1 ll JO J OO I JO f 00 !OJO
............ O'-....... WHITI NIGHTS ,,. u
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A CHOIUS UNI:
THI MOVlf 100 '11 ,,.,,,110
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LOON KllWI,
FAMILY FILM Here are the prime-time television
ratinas as compiled by the A.C.
Nielsen Co. for the week of Jan. 6-12.
Top 20 listings include the week's
ranking. with season-to-date rar0001
in parentheses, rating for the week,
and total homes. ~n "X" in parcnth·
-cscs denotes one-time-only presen·
STARTS TOMORROW
U" Mc.,.
990 "11?
MUrAlll
ll41.t.._
N •99•
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SIAlllOll f~llf4110\'l/"4Mlf f'"''' 119•~'
!Al!>eal" "! loQj'~"~"'·. 6no
tat1on.
I (I) "Tiie Cotl>v Show," NIC. JU retlftO,
31 1 million homH.
1 (2) "Femllv Tlfl.'' NIC. l2.•. 77.1 mffllon
hOfMf 3 <•I "Mura.r Siie Wrote," CI S, 2t S. 2'.S
mlMIOl'I homft 4 Ill "RockaOvt" -"CI S $ul\dav Nlehl
Movlt.'' 2S J, 21 7 mlMIOl'I l!Omft.
S (S) "60 Minutes:· CI S. 20, 20.t m!Won
hOme• S 161 "C"""·" NBC, 2U , 70.t mllllon hOmn. 7 (9) ··Mleml Viet, .. NBC. 24.0, 20.6 mlHlon
hOm" 1 ( 101 "Golden G)rlf." NBC. 7•.0. 20.6 mllllon
nomei
9 (IJ) "Wllo'• ,,.,. Bou 1", AI C, 2'U, 200
mltlloll ~• 10 ( 111 "HIGll••v lo HH Vllll," NIC, 23 I, It I
mlhlon hOmfl
11 (1) "Oellu ,'· CBS, ?2 I, 19.0 mlltlon hOmn.
12 (24) "?27.'' NBC, 21.1. 11 7 mlMIOl'I hOmn 13 1121 "Nl11llt Court," NBC. 21 7, II 6 mllllon _.
U 1141 "Kelt &. AMlt.'' CIS, 21 6, II 6 ml•lon
noma• IS. In ) "Growlno Ptln\, AI C, 11 S. II S mlWlon noma•.
IS. (IS) "Kno" Lanolno," CI S, 21S, llS
mltllon hOmft 11 (I) "Ovnurv," ABC. 21.1, II I mlmon
hOm" 11 ( 17) "Newllarl.'1 CBS, 20 0, 17.2 mlttlon
no~• " 1111 "8 1ac1te'1 Magi(," NIC. lt .I. , ...
m lMlon nome1 .
20 (11) "FtlCon Crest," CI S ... 3, IS.7 million
llOmft ---
5 GOLDEN GLOBE NOMINATIONS
rnE BEST PlcnJRE OF rnE YFARI
"~Color Purple' Trtumphal It's hard not to be moved by Spielberg's film
and its formidable CASt ''
NC-HK~"'-'
"The Color Purple' I• the vur'• bat ftlml **** (4 atare-hlghat rating):
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(
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TAAN8ACTION8, •
MONEY SENS E
Which is best short-term haven for money?
Loold na for ~place to inveM a lump
sum temporanly'! Need a low-risk
investment that won't tic up yo ur
money for emergencies?
Today's most popular shun-term
an vestments -those you employ for
a year or less -arc ccn1ficatcs of
deposit, Treasury bills, monc) mar-
ket fu nds and money market de po sat
accounts. Each provides a haven for
your money, with varying degrees ot
safety. And each has its own pluses
.;and minuses, depending 0 11 your
needs.
CDs. for example, arc for peo'plc
who arc most comfonable w11h
auarantccd interest rates and safety of prin~ipal. but who care less about
liqutdtty.
You can buy CDs at banks. S& Ls
and some brokerage houses. They pay
a fixed rate of interest for terms that
usually run for three, six. or 12
_ ...months, and most CDnre1nSUTcd up
to SI 00,000 by federal deposit in-
surance. It takes only $500 to buy
most CDs. but you'll typically find
Sl,000 or $2,500 minimum!>, es-
pecially where higher rates arc
advertised.
MARY
RUDIE
There are different methods of
stating yields on CDs, which makes it
difficult to compare one · with
another. The clearest way to compare
terms is to ask a financial institution
representative cuctly how much. in
dollar terms. you get and when you
will receive 11. ·
Yields on CDs are generally higher
than those of T-bills, money market
funds or money mark.ct accounts. But
for som.c investors CDs have two
critical draw it:k . You can't write
checks on them. and your principal is
locked up until maturity. The mini-
mum penalty for early withdrawal of
principal on CDs maturing an a year
or less is one month's interest. But
many financial insu1ut1 ons charge
ni~rc.
If you think you may need your CD
principal before maturity, try stager-
ana pu~hases of smaller CDs
throuahout the year. By doing so, you
are never far away from a maturina
CD.
Another choice 1s 10 buy your
federally-insured CD from a bro-
kerage firm. Brokerage firms, unlike
banks, ·maintain active secondary
markets in CDs. so you can usually
avoid the standard penalty, but your
sale price mar be more or less than
your principa plus interest. depend-
ing on whether rates arc up or down.
Also remember you have access to
any interest earned on a CD as soon as
11 1s credited (unless 1t is a zero·
coupon CD). So if your credited
interest meets your cash needs. you
can void early wathdrawal penalty by
Wllhdr:!_wing only your -&~dited
interest.
It's not difficult to find a financial
institution that pays I or 2 percenta,1e
points more on its CDs than financial
institutions in your neighborhood.
That means. for a 22-cent stamp you
may be able 10 cam an extra SI OO to
S 200 per year on a St 0,000 deP,OSI t
You'll find CD rates advena~ 1n
the financial pqcs of newspapers Or
you ca.n check Barrons. Each issue
lasts the fi ve institutions paying the
haahest current rate&. You can also
shop for h1&her rates by consult1n1 a
brokerqc fl.rm that deals 1n C'Ds of
many banks around the country I( a
rate, however. seems unusuall) high.
find out why before you put your
money in that institution. The mo t
important thing is to check whether
the CD is insored by the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporauon
(FDIC) or the Federal Savings and
Loan Insurance Corpo ra tio n
(FSLIC).
Treasury bills, backed by the full
faith. credat and taxing~powers of the
U.S. Government. offer maximum
safety and liqu1d1ty. And. as an added ~s. income from T-bills •~exempt
from state and locaka"-
However, you need at least SI 0,000
to get into the T-Bill market. Each
week, the Treasury auctions T-811ls
with maturities of 3 and 6 months.
and once a month. a T-8111 with a
matunty of one year 1s alsoauct1oncd
You can purchase T-B1lls through a
commercial bank or savings & loan.
or throuJh a brokerage firm as pan of
the auction process or 1n the second-
ary market.
T-Balls don't pay 1n1'crC\t 1n th e
conventional way. They're \Old at
discount - a way of building your
interest ra te into the pnce -and then
redeemed at face value when they
mature.
There is a h1~ly acti ve sccondaf)
market an T-Balls 1f yo u want your
money before matunty. The pnce
)OU get wall reflect the trend of rates
since you bought the bill. If rate~ arc
down, the pnce will go up. 1f the) arc
up. the pncc will be down.
OTC UPS & DOWNS
~(ct~:i
Uo ' Uo 0 Uo 2 Uo t92 Uo 190 uo 188 Uo 110 Uo 160
uo 116 Uo I 4
Uo t 0 Uo 1 0
f ·B1tlure par1 1rularl) attract I\ e to
1n ves1ors dunna ~n1.1<h of economic
uncertainty. And the~ provide a
good. safe place to park fund\ at 11me'
when )OU can't take nsk\ on more
spcculauve 1n"e~tmcnl!>.
Money market fund'> have a power-
ful appeal for \hon ttrm 1nve'>tors
The5e mutual fund\ 1n«-.t :your
money in T-811ls. largc c.en1fic:atc'> of
deposll, government bond\, and
short-term corporate dC'bt f hc1r
y1clds fluctuate da1l) You need onh
SSOO to gel in to moM mune) market
funds and the) oiler compel ling
benefits: The} olfcr competitive
yields. provide prole\\lnnal manage-
ment of )Our mone\ g1\l• \OU
tmmedaate actC\\ to \Our funds and
provide check"' ri ling prl\ dcgl''>
(ahhouth m101mum\ ma' he S250 or
more per check I
Most monc) market lund'> are not
ansulltt.-But g1¥tt11he \tah1lit) oft
underlying anvcslment\. that I\ not a
ma1or concern for mo\I 1n' c-.tors
But 1f you"re the <aut111u\ t)pc you
might opt for one ol the Jund' that
invests solel) IO I \ r Jl"<l\Ur) St'CUrl·
ucs. even though 'ou l •in u\ualh earn
about I pcrcentagl· prnn1 higher from
a fund thatal'>o tn"l'\1' 1n nnngcnem-
menl sccunt1e\
Money mar~et <.krm1t accountc;
are. bas1call) '>it ' 1ng' atlount!> at
banks and \3\ 1np.\ and loa n\ that pa~
noaung interest rates. The y1cld1. !
guarantttd month to month, usuall~
fall shlbtl) behind rates for moo~
market funds. CDs and T-Bills. lftoc;;o:
financial 1nsutution 11 FDIC ~
FSLIC insured. your money marled
account usually 1s, too Of OOUl'SC, all
your depos1b must be added together
for coverage purpo5C'S.
Mont'y market deposit accounts
also allow you 10 wntc three checu a
month, make three preauthorize6
transactions (such as mortp&c oc .
insurance payments) and give you.,
un hm1ted access to teller machines.
You Clrf withdraw your money as.
often as you hke without penalty. ·.
However. af )Our account balan~
falls below the bank's m1n1mum..-·
rcq u1remcn1. yo u may cam only
5-1 /4 perce nt 1 nter~t and may be
subject to account Tccs-norprevioustr.,
1mpo~d. f>t'!>p1te the dcchn~ 111 interest rates'
dunng the past year, shon-tcrm •
in vestments ltlce these arc still vahd··
for man) investors. What they lack ll\~
yields they make up for an safety and.
hqu1d1\\" - two bencfiu that max
prove cquall~ important 1n the Ion'.'
run J
Mary J. Radle 11 vtce pre1Weat ud:
maoa1er of CODH me.r Heter maRel-
lDI nrvlcff for MerrUI Ly~.
Pierce, Feu er & Sml~ lac.
~Losa•"••
First bi ds for ECU F utures
Tradenjam the Cblclto Mercantile E•c hanCe pit Wednee-
day aa trading openedl n the European Currency Un it. Tbe
Commodity F uturH Tradln& Co mmlNion approYed
trading of the c ontracta, a compoe!te of currencies ln 10
member-countries o f the European Monetary Syatem . Uo 14 8
Uo 148 ,-------------
Uo 14 ~ uo 14 Uo 14. Uo 14
Uo 1}6
Uo 1 1 Uo I Uo tl
UPS ANO DOWNS
NEW YORK t APl -The lollow1ng "'' I snows lhe New Y0<k Stock E llC~nGe siocks 1nd werrenis 11\el hive vone uo Ille mo" ind down tne most beHd Of'
percent ot c"1119e re9erdleis of volume
lor WedntsdlV No M(lJrlllei lre(llng below J2 1 rt 1nc1
-v<ll<I Net 1nd oercentai>e ch1noes ere Ille (lltflt'ence t>elw"n IN previous Clo\lng or Ice 1n<1 We<1nud1 v 's 1 om o r I c e
l
D ELANEY'S IRIS H P UB
··Durty ~f'lly'"''
OPE\ FOR Ll \CH & Dl "\,ER
\1onda' lhr 1 ~ rid.1'
11 \ \1 '" '' P\1
TllE
•
h'Dlul'fe awwu•aP911GU1Loaia 24._a.
At Bene6ciat. tbe bola just IO happena to be & very friendly
~Someone J'O'J wi talk to about what you want. No
colllmittla )Ult JOU. tbe boa-and a Pmonal Loan inJUSt 24
boars. So go •lwd Sbab baack And talk peraonally to
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NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
..
WH AT AM£ x Orn
TllllllY'l ILll•I ....
let U1 a... Y•
Sell y .. ,, .. ,,.,,
Cal ClutlflN,
642-5671
for Information
& surprisingly
low cost. . a.. ___ _
W HAT NYSE Orn
NEW YORK. (AP) Jen. .. . NEW YOttK (AP) Jen. 16 . T1 7.ev~. T~~ Adv~:r j dv 7 ~~ ~ =IOw1 ~--
AMEX LEADER S NYSE L E~OERS
GoLo Quoas
Dow JoNES AvERA GES
METALS QuoTE s
NASDAQ SUMMARY
fam~la~ls ...
J,
Sutton
shares
Hope
New clubs, swing
gtve Im s h are of
lrst-round lead
PALM DESERT (AP)-In his first
four seasons as a touring pro, Hal
S\itton won:
Rookie of the Y car bonort, the
1983 money-wirrnin.g and Player of
the Year utles. the PGA national
championship, the important Tour-
nament Players Championship, three
other PGA tour events. and S 1.2
million.
So. naturally cnou~. he wants to
improve. To do IO, bes aone to a new
set of CTUbs and is tinkerina with his
swing.
"The swing worked pretty good for
four years. but I believe the change
wiJI be a m.,;or improvement, ..
Sutton said Wednesday after he'd
compiled a 7-under-par 65 that gave
him a share of the first-round lead in
the $600,000 Bob Ho{X'. Classic.
He shared the position with Bob
Tway, who won more than $164,000
a.s a rookie last season.
Tway. who did not make a bogey in
his round. and Sutton both played in
warm, sunny weather at Bermuda
Dunes, one of four desert courses
used for the first four rounch of this
90-hole. five-day tournament.
They shared a one-shot advantage
over Jeff Sluman. Larry Mize and
Paul A.zinger, tied at 66. Sluman and
Mize played at Indian Wells. A.zinger
at Bermuda Dunes.
Craig Stadler, a playoff loser in this
event a year ago. led the group at 67.
Also at that figure were Bruce Lietzke,
Steve Pate. Gary Koch. Jim Thorpe
and Gene Sauers.
Stalder played at Eldorado. Lietzke
at La Quinta. Pate and Koch at
Bermuda Dunes, Thorpe and Sauers
at Indian Wells.
The pros play one round on each of
the four courses. each day with a
different three-man amateur team.
before the field is cut for the pros--0nly
fjnish at Bermuda Dunes on Sunday.
Lanny Wadkins. who used a vic-
tory rn this event last season as a
spnngboard to Player of the Year
honors, manaJed a 68 despite the
distractions with an amateur group
that consisted of the host comedian,
former President Gerald R. Ford and
House Speaker Tip O'Neill at La
Quinta. The team was 10 under par.
Individual amateur SCOT'CS arc not
compiled.
Calvin Peete, a run-away w1nncr of
the Tournament of C'hamp1ons last
week, struggled to a 73.
Sutton, who won two individual
events and combined with Ray Floyd
for a team title last year. said his swing
chanac involves his take-away. is
designed to produce more clubhead
speed and has given him an added 20
yards off the tee.
"I feel it's goin' to be easier on me
in the long run, JlVe me more length
and accuracy." Sutton said.
He missed only two greens and
saved par on both of those. His only boseY came on an agrcssive 3-putt
on the I 7th, and he got the shot back
with a 2-putt birdic-4 on the 18th.
------~Jr
VCI se_eks consistency
AnteaterstestFu lerton
in PCAA contest tonight
By DENNIS BROSTERHOUS
.Of ..............
UC Irvine basketball coach Bill Mulli~n as
hopina to use Saturday's 83-75 win at Pacific to
sprinaboard his team into a winoina streak
which could continue when the Anteaters v1s1t
Cal State Fullerton tonight.
: Tip-off in Titan Gym is 7:30.
The Anteaters lost at Fresno State earlier
last week before rcboundinJ to beat Pacific an
Stockton Saturday. The spht helped UCI stay
4withan ranae of the leaders in the PCAA at 3-1.
"The Pacific win was im{>Ortant for us
because-it was only the second wm for us on the
road this season:• sa1if Mulhpn. "It's ~n
tough for us to win on tne road this year."
lnconsis1eney has been the Anteaters·
trademark this yeu. In Fresno, UCl suffered m
worst shooting na&ht an Mulligan's tenure.
shooting just 25.9 percent from the field and
18.2 percent an the first half. But UCI did an
about face in Stockton two niJhts later. winning
its 12th st~1&ht apinst the. Tl&CfS.
"Our 1ncons1stency shouldn't be from lack
of expenencc," said Mulligan, "but our guards
arc all new and maybe that's a factor.
"Against Fresno. we bad trouble geu1ng the
ball to (Tod) Murphy and Rogers was just 5 of
19. When Rogers doesn't hit outs1de. 1t'<, tough
to play our inside ~me."
Murphy had has worst game 1n three years at
Fresno. scoring JUSt four points. but rebounded
with 2 1 at Pacific Saturday. He conunues to lead
the team in scorin& at 21 .2 per game and as.
averagina 7.2 rebounds.
ROfefl, mcanwhalc. hu hat an double
figures an 37 stra1aht pm« after h1tt1n& 26
Saturday in Stockton. The 6-10 senior 1s No. 10
on the UCI list 1ocarecrsconn1with912 points.
The Anteaters dropped &JI three sames
ap1nst Cal State Fullerton last season. but the
Titans have struggled .so far this year, 19in& 2·3
1n the PCAA and 9-8 1n Ill aamcs:""Oneoft
conference victories was an overtime apfost
Long Beach State.
Coach GcofJC McQuam'sT1tans have been
h11 hard by 1njun.es, specifically an the
backcoun. Semor 1uard Kevin Henderson, a
product ofSaddleback College, went down with
a broken bone an his nght foot apinst Portland
Dec. 22 and the Titans arc 2-5 since.
Sophomore Richard Morton suffered a
sprained ankle at San Jose State Saturday and is
hsted as doubtful this week.
~eahawks top
Chargers with
56-51 victory
Butler, DeBrouwer
ead Ocean View -
to Sunset triumph
By ROGER CARLSON °' .......... ~
Ocean View High"s Seahawks
withstood the challenge of Edison an
Round 2 of Sunset League basketball
Wednesday night -holding the
visitiJ1g Chargers off by a 56-5 I
verdict before 1,400.
"It waseverythang I expected," said
a rcheved Ocean View Coach Jam
Harris, who had 6-7 Ricky Butler
P.layinJ the high post and shuffled an
111 Blame Dc9rouwef in and out to
help keep things together.
"I don't ever want to blame
officiating for anything," said Edison
Coach Jon Borchert. "but they did us
no favors. In fact I thought it was
blatant. They (John Valenzuela and
Speedy Castillo) let the banging go on
and on and then all of a sudden they
call it."
It was that kind of a contest -th~
winner was happy to get out alive, the
loser found it tough to swallow.
Ocean View broke away from an
even contest with a 14-5 spun early in
the third quarter to assume a 42-33
lead. then Edison roared back to tie 11
at 49 with 2: 16 left.
EdisoJl had been unable to pare a
49-47 deficit because of three straight
turnovers. and when Chns C'ole
drove the lane for a lay-up. a potential
three-point play and the lead was
denied by the officials, who sent C'ole
to the line with two auempts at the
hnc instead.
He made both to tic the game at 49,
but moments later Blaine DcBrouwcr
put Ocean View into the lead for
good, dropping in a six-footer with
1:42 left on another controversial
Sa.a.et •taJJdhJ6•
L-OWwal
WL WL
Ocean vi.w 2 0 12 4
E01'°'1 I 1 11 S
Founteln Vetlev 1 I 10 1
Merl,,. I I 11 1
Wnlmlntler I I 4 11
Hunlln111on IM.c1I o 1 6 10 w ...... V'1Sceret
Ocffn va.w S4, EOIMWI SI
Wn1mtni1er 61, Hunt11191on S..CI\ ..
Founreln Vellev 42. Merl,,. 33 "'*"'' 0.-(1:Jt) OcH n VI-at Merine
Edison e1 Hunllnelon !Mech
Founleln Vellev el Wn1mlns1er
(no n-ca JI) decision to make it 51-49
Borchert felt DcBrouwer travelled
before shooting and he went to the
line for a potential three-point play on
what appeared ~o be similar circum-
stances to Cole just seconds earlier.
Ocean View withstood the
challenge at this point, spreadmg its
zone and forcing Edison to miss two
shots before tying the ball up, regain-
ing possession and fo llowing with two
hanc Moms free throws with 28
·seconds left to gain a 53-49 edge.
"That really hun." admmcd
Borchert. "We got the ball inside and
it was JUSt strength and against
strength:·
Butler finished the night w11h 17
points and sax blocked shots. with
De Brouwer( IO)and De21 Hazcly ( 11)
in double figures. assisted by Tony
Panz1ca's nine points.
Chris Cole was Edison's chief
scorer. netting 21 points. 17 an the
second half as he was able to get into
the open creases with the Seahawks
apparently paying a little more atten-
uon to Ken Ammann after the latter
dropped in I 0 of his 12 points an the
first half.
Despite his team's mistakes. un-
happiness with the officials and
lukewarm shooun~ ( 19 of 49 for 38. 7
percent), Borchert s biggest concern
was a third-quarter d ry spell
High and mighty
Vlk.Ina Mark Geor&eeon ( 44) &rabe rebound Rattabaa«b (51) flCbta Glenn Gordon for
o•er lfaron Tlm Job.n9on (left), while Matt reboand (riCbt). See atory, C2.
CdM escapes Uni's
upset bid, 52-49
Estancia finds hero, win
Pinckney hits four clutch free throws
as Eagles drop Newport Harbor. 57-52 °""' W L
Green. Fryer manage
keYbaSkets to keep
SeaKlngsunbeate-n _
By CHRIS MONAIL\N
........ Ceiil ti •1 1
It's common knowlcd&e around the
Sea View League, and the rest of
Oranac County, that the way to beat
Corona del Mar is to stop its fast
break and slow down forward Jeff
Fryer.
Wednesday niJbt, thinas looked Jood for Unaveni~ Hiab. The Tro-
Jlns had the Sea Kif\IS' fast break in
check and had partially neutralized
fryer, boldina him 10 points under
his 29.4 averqc. But color this
picture Green -as In Doua Green.
The 6-0 senfor auard had spent
most of the second and third quarter
on the bench with three fouls, but
scored 11 of his l ~points in the founh
quarter, includint 7 ofl from the free
throw hneu the Sea K1nas(4--0, 1 .. 2) csca~with a 52.-49 victory over the
bolt TrojanL
In addition to his offensive per·
formance, Green was also asked to auard Steve Stotioff', Univcnity'a &iab«Orina aoohomore. Stolzoft" led
the Trojans (2-2. 6-8) with 18 points.
but 10 of &hole came before Orem
took ddenli" watch on Stol1oft' in
the leCODd qulnet.
•·1 wu lmpreaed witl\ "the way fry~ ~ hit poiee throoihout Ind
the way Oren came throutb with
thole ttec throws. Thole arc bi9 pla~" _CdM Coecb Jldl Errion Ilic[
••Bc>U) Oreen and Mart Mdlralh
(Wbo IUed in for Onln duri ... tbe
middle lWO quarten) did I IOOd job oa 9eolzoft' and Sean T\llMr did a
_,.,.. inh on 0.,.-) Olmea lfts dae W.~ KlONd 10.··DOin-. llUI
ooly two lD ... teeoed haft .
Even dascountmg Green· clutch
shooting in the last two minutes. free
throw shooting was a definite advan-
tage for the Sea Kings. They con-
verted 20 of25 (80 percent). while the
Trojans went to the line only four
times. all visits by Bretl Winslow. Fryer
who made three.
&rrlon
By RICHARD DUNN
0.., ..... CMT I 141 I Mel t
Stcv<.· Pinckney, a non-starter for
Estancia. was a hero for a night
measure \\llh four second' k it 111 l\t·
11 and the Eagles (9-61 haJ 1hrn
second Sea View League "ID 1n lour
1nes
University Coach Steve Sc~n Mar ahead. 45-43. for good.
was visibly upset with the officiating At this point the Sea Kings went to
during the pme, but didn't offer that their slowdown game, forcing the
as an excuse afterward. Trojans to foul Green -in this case
Having no idea he'd be thrust in th<.·
'>pothght of the game aficr spending
most of 11 on the bench. Pinckne)'
sank four clutch free thro"s 1n the
closing S<"rnnds of the founh quaner
I<> hft the Eagles to a 57-52 VICtOf)
O\er Ne"pon Harbor (8-5. 2-2)
Wedntsday night on the Eagles· noor
"He·5 a 91 pe~nt free thnw.
shooter:· said Estancia < oarh .1111.•
Reid. who was sull fuming O\{'f tht·
loss to lln1vcrs11y (59-56 m 0H·n11nr1
last wc-ek when his team missed I'
frtt throws.
"Corona played a better game than the wrong man.
1.os -no speci~c ~ -just played "He just happened to t\avc the
better than uJ, he said. ball," said Scogin. ··we would have
The Trojans' lone three free throws liked to have fouled someone else."
and a j ump shot by Stolzoff put therlf7'Errion said he was not surpnscd his
ahead for the last time. 43-39, with team encountered difficulty with the
just over four minutes to play. Trojans.
But Fryer hit two more free throws ··We knew they were &ood. We had
(be made 9 of 11 for the game) to play our hearts out ju.st to act an to
sandwiched between two baskets in it. From now on out. none of the
less than a minute to put Corona del pmes are aoina to be easy.' he said.
Pincknc). with the NcWl)On 1de ol
Ille g)'m stomping hkc an canhquake.
came to the hnc w11h I 5 ~nds lef\
when Estanc ia led b) one (53-52) and
promptly quieted the Ncwpon crowd
with a pair of 'lUC'CCS\ful frtt thro"s
Ht sank t\\-O mort' for good
"He's the auy I wanted at the line "
he added. "That's what ~ couldn 1
do in the U na game We should ht· '·I
nght now."
cwpon scored sax straight P<'tn''
at the line to o pen the final ~uanrr
and moved within three (44-41) Rut
Estancia tarted pohshing the ~110"
off when it r~pondcd with ~H·n
straight m1dwa> throu$h
Cra11 C'ovey capped at w11h a thrN"-
Six area community college players drafted
Sb. area community col!qe players were
picked in Monday's m~or lcque basebaJI winter
free .,ent draft the Deily Pilot has learned. The aop ~·1.; the area was Oranae C'oaJt
Collete riaht·~ pitcher Jay Makemson. who
Ptepped at Lons Bach Jordan. Makcmton ....s
seleC'ted in the fint round by the New York
Yankees. Three other OCC playen and two Oolden
West C~ players were drafted.
They include Sam Aupatt. Anthony Toney
and Pauf E11ieon from Coe1f and Keith Kaub and
Todd Nub ft'om Goldeft West.
Aupsc.. a riaht-huded pitcher fiom Fountain
Valley Rish who pla)'ed llH>ttAop as• l>"P. ~as
drifted in the eec'Oftd road by Houston. TOftel'!.~·~ outftelder who pit~ at c..-•wa iaa ...... , ftooftt C'.al w~ Loi
Aftll)es. WM Picked i• tbe lbtb round by Oakland.
Ell._ it I ft>rmft' EdilOrl H'lfl 11andout -tto
,..,.,.,... • tt-.b"-Cout Coeftftftc::e hOnorl n a
catcher (or Ora.nae C'oast las1 season He h.')\lt°d
.340 I year &&O. Ellison was ~lcctcd by Oakland in
the I Ith round.
Nash. a sophomore center fielder. batted 349
last 1eason with 18 cxtra-ba.K hats. The Ldtson H~ product was drafted 1n the ninth roun~ by
Bald more.
Kaub, a fint baseman chosen an the c1lhth
round by the O ucaao White So,. led the Ru,tters
ln home NJH with e•&ht and hat J 18. Kaub
attmded Lot Alamitos Aaah.
None of the p&ayen can sip a contract unttl
the 1916 teatOD at over s.ncc all su attended their
mpecti" 1Cboo11 pnor to the draf\. FOf the ftnt hme in the event's b1 iory. the
draft .. bcld •• .-ret. Memben of the ~ia ~ bam-d from Jhc draft*'* "°"'"''•oner~. orlke and It the omen
o( tM ...... ~ official" II has bttn lht Ca~.
mede tMir jiQI in 1 wltpbone hoo up ho.
......... olim ..... tdy releui111 the names of all
the playm choscn an the tirst two round~ (If the
l'C'lular phase and all the pla}ers sclc..·ted 1n the
secondary pha as wa customary. ba'tCball
offictals were told not to d1scl~ the choice unul
tevcn days later nd then, only an alphabtucaJ
order. without not1na the rounds tn whu;h the
player wa drafted
Rcponcdly. the chanac wa made to tnmnu c
coll~ recnuters. ··our draft wttt turn1na anto rccnuuna h t
for some school •• o~ bateball club's srout1n1
dartttor was quo ted as •Y'nt 1n eW1day "We'd
do all tbc wort~pcnd 111 the money. soouuna h'ih
school t.aknt. 1 Mn, ai 100n H we had the dral\,
obllcee coetha wouk1 call thetc p&a)~ tn the fit'lt
couple of round and offff theM fWI acholanhtps. •'&ht untecn," • R~ty. another 11m of the baeckout 1 to
prtWnt lltftll &om leamant wtuch pie~ •tt
most hlahly "llrded -thole whcutt ltkel)' to
command lk lillMf tpa,_ boftutn.
( 0'0'11 CM "'"
LaQuf\a 8NC"
Newoor1 t<arl>O· Un•v_.,,,,.. e,1.nc .•
WOOdbl'•GOe S.O<ltebaC~
• I
Co"•~ ' W ....... V's k~•
E ''•nc.1a S7 NawC>Of• "d' ""' ,; WOOOl)(IO@e .. (O\le '11111\• 1
L eg.,na Beech TJ ~00'"'"' • •"
Ca<one ~Mer S' U"'"'"' •• '9 .... V'\ G4lm9' II JO I
Esta"<•• et La9 .~a &.. ~
""--et (. o• f\a 'P 'V\1" ~oo+eoao. el NewC>Of• Merl>O•
Co'" Mew 11 Un·••"'''
point pla' '1.1th '~I ri·m.11n1ng
' ~ • • ~ ,
9 •
) ' • 8
I I
In the fo unh.quant·r momentum
"" 11ched 10 tht· Ne" pon <.1de again
whtn th<' 'ia1lor" madt• 't''en f~
thrO\\\ tn a ro" 10 J')ull "11hin o n<'. but
that'<. "ht•n Maunc:t l l't' 1 I~ po1nl\l
toult'd out to put P1nl ~ nn JI tht hne
··1don·t1hink thr turning point wa~
tht ~'rn-pomt lead 1 .i ~ l~l we had
(after th rte quanr" l " Rt"1d said.
"Last )tar's team wo ul1.J''C' put them-'° tht dec'p frtc1t' and "on by I 5
points. The) kne" ho" to handle
ptn5Ure
"ih1\ team doc\n·a k.nov. what
that's hke. wnh 1he prc~surc of the
crowd and cvrl') thll\J I put pmsurt
on m)' t~m bc<'ausc they're fO•n& to
have to d It '°°ncr or lattt •
Senior suard Jeff ouna hn a flee
throw with 41 ~conos Id\ and l.tt
sank two more v.1UI 36 seconds on the
clock to''*" NC'Wl>On's comebed,
but at fell JUSt ho n as Estancaa had
v.-hat at toot v.hcn 11 counted
Plncltnry. a 6-1 Mtf119.L j)q__defi-
rutcly bttn on a roll ~YICCORlma
to Reid. "He made 19 out ofl 1 at one
point." he said. "and 25 out of 29 11
another."
Bnan Tift~ the~ Wltb 14
potfttl. ltldwht11 two k:~ ftdd pit
-bcn Ea.tanc11openedup1tt halftime
leld (2~25) mtdway an lbc third
quantt. whale o~ tidded t I llOIDtl
and t I rdlo\lnch
' ·=-~..___._--=·~~~-=---=-=~~-=-~~~::::=~~~~~~==ii::::=~~===:;:;;==~~:;;:===;:=:=:=-.:.-~~~~~~~~~~---=~~~=-~=====-==========~~::::::::::::::~~~
I I
Oda ..,._ICOred 27 pointsu New m Jc:ner snapped Pt\lladtJphia•• ftve-ttme
wiDD.l.DI auak with a 123-89 NalioDal
Buketblll Aaociation victory Wednetday
nipt. Bllel WUU.m• coUected 18 poinu and o.n,1
0....., 17 in tbe Nets' fourth victory out of their lut
lia pmes ... In other NBA tames. &..-Me8ale
ICOled 33 points and lMrJ BIN 24 u Botton rode-.
NEW YORK -Nancy Lopei. who !I 14-0 third-period outburst to a 123-100 viciory over
bad a recorcl•settina season oo the women's Denver. oappina the Nugcts' five-pme winni~
1olf tour. was named the 1985 Associated atrta.k · · · lllal........, tc0red 28
Pre Female Athlete oftbc Year Wednn-points and BW Lalm ... r added
day. h was the seciond time she bu won the annuaJ 24 to lead Detroit to a 123-115
award. , thvi~rcltory . o~cr hC~!~10.1 only ~
Lope1 was named on 48 baJlots cut by 221 sports • Win an t e wut J sames ,or
· d · ·de T · ...i. lhe Pistons. The Bulla ~re play-wr\lers an sportscasters naUODW'li • enrus .,..yer ina without stanina center Manioa Navratilova was $e00nd with 43 votet, followed by basketball player Ja.•au OIAut, who was sittina
Cheryl Miner with 31 and dis-out a one-pmc susrnaion for
tance runner Mary Decker Slaney fightjq Tuesday wit Wuhiaa-
wi th 29. lon'sMMeaeBel ... Forward I.al
Earlier, pitcher Owiaht · VUllewepe scored a aame-biah
Gooden of the New York Mets 31 ~inu and auard Ten., Perter
d M I tbJ ( h made two free throws wttb nine seconds to ao to seal
was name a e A cte 0 1· c Portland's 109·104 victory over Indiana ... Forward
Year. Lopez and Gooden will R&lpll Sam,... scored JO_points, including 11 in the
rccei vc their awardsat the Tampa second quan.cr, as Houston downed San Antonio,
Sports O ub's annual banquet 119• J I 3. J• IAeai and Akeem OlaJ••• added 28
Feb. ~Pc? first won the F~malc and IS points respectively for the Rockets ... Rookie
Lopez AthleteoftheYcarawardin 1978. Gerald Wllktal scored 14 of his 19 points in the founh
· SS h' period and Patrick Ewiqscored 2S points to lead New She is the I I th woman an the award's -year istory to York to a 116-11 2 victory over Dallas ... T•J Tea,Je
win the Athlete of the Year honor two or more times. scored26points-including14in the fourthquarter-
Shc said she was "very pleased, very honored" at being to lead a balanced Warrior attack as Golden State" named I 98S's best.
Her selection came as the climax lo what sbc called routed Utah, 150-104.
··my bcsl_season," a rear in which she set three major ll
Ladies Pro"fcssionaJ Golf Association records, led tbC-C ppera etop11Gnlca, 110-103
LPGA Tour in many categories and was named the
association's Player of the Year. LOS ANGELES -Marques Johnson m
She won the most tournaments, fi ve, and was in the scored 20 points and rookie Benoit
top I 0 in 21 of 2S starts. Benjamin scored seven ofttis season·hi&b
She set a single.season money winning record of IS points in"the fourth quarter as the Los
$41 6,4 72. Anaeles Clippers held off the Seattle SuperSonics
She broke her scoring record with an averaae of 110-103 in an NBA game Wednesday night.
70.73. Los Anaeles put together an 18-9 run midway
And she set an all-time low of 268, 20 under par, in throuah the final period lhatculminaled on a slam dunk
her victory in the Henrcdon Classic. by Jofinson that gave the Oippcrs a 107-93 with 2:4S
Her other victories came in the LPGA Cham-remaining.
pionsh1p (her second). the ChrysJer-Plymouth Classic, SUttle, however, then scored eiJht of the next nine
the Hall of Fame Classic and the Portland Oassic. points in a two-minute span to pull within I 08-102, but
could aet no closer the rest of the way.
Quote of the day
Cberyl MJller, basketball star at USC, on her
aspirations to become an actress: .. I see myself on
the sil ver screen with Eddie Murphy. I also sec
myself on 'Dynasty.' I wouldn't mind being a
villain. Villains always seem to have the best
wardrobes.•'
Rangers race by Kings, 4-3
Rookie Mille RldJey scored two goals ~
m the final 51h minutes Wednesday nipit to ,
ltft the New York Rangers to a 4-3 victory
over the Los Angeles Kings in a National
Hockey League game at the Forum. Ridley tied the
game w1th 5:36 to play when he tipped in a pass from
R.almo Helm1nu, who also had a goal. The rookie put
the Rangers ahead to stay with 2:44 remaining when be
knocked in a IS-foot shot after being left aU alone in
front of the Kings net ... Elsewhere in the NHL. Wayae
Gretzky extended his scoring streak to 3S games with
two goals as Edmonton defeated Hartford, 4-1 ... Ttm
HJgJ.u scored his sixth goal of the sea.son I :23 into
overtime to lift New Jersey to a 4-3 victory over Detroit
... Patrick Roy registered his first shutout while
Stepllaae Rlclaer sparked the Gtnadicns' offense with a
pair of goals to pace Montreal to a 4-0 triumph over
Winmpeg . . . Mike BaJlard scored two goals and
Pittsburgh exploded for five goals in the third period to
beat the New York Islanders. 6-3 ... BenaJe Pederto
scored two goals and added three assists. leading St.
Louis to a I 0-1 tnumph over Toronto ... Billy Gardaer
snapped a 1-1 deadlock with a second-period goal and
rookie wmg Wayne Presley connected after a two-on-
one breakaway to hfl Chicago to a 4-2 triumph over
Buffalo.
Records fall at Japan meet
OSAKA. Japan -Ben Johnson of m Canada set an mdoor world record in the
60-meter spnnt and Sergei Bublca of the
Soviet U mon set a mdoor world mark in
the pole vault Wednesday during the '86 Yomiuri
lnternauonal Indoor Track and Field Meet.
Johnson turned 10 a sizzling 6.SO seconds in the 60
m~ters to break American Houston McTear's 1978
world mark of 6. S4 seconds.
Bubka, who holds the outdoor world record ar 19
feet , 81/• mchcs. beat his cider brother Vasily with a
jump of 19-3.
The previous record had been 19-211• set by Billy
Olson of the United States last year.
The Oippcrs had established an 85-78 lcad in the
tint three quarters only to sec Seattle take control early
in the fourth quarter.
The SuperSonics cut the 0jppcn' lead to 89-.84 on
a pair of slam dunks by Al Wood and a basket awarded
to Tim McCormick on a goaltendina caJI apinst
Benjamin. The Clippers. however, then responded with
their clinching run.
McEnroe oueted from Masten
NEW YORK -Hard-hitting Brad ~
Gilbert, pumped u by a small but vocal
crowd, shocked derendinJ cbam_pion John
McEnroe. Wednesday night. ousting the
world's second-ranked player S-7, 6-4, 6-1 in an
opcninB-round ma1ch of the Masters tennis cham-
p1onsh1ps.
With the victory. Gilbert, ranked 18th in the world.
joined Wednesday's other winners -top-seeded Ivan
Lcndl.ofC~hoslovalc1a, ~weden's Anders Jarryd and
Amencan T im Mayotte 1n the quarterfinal of this
season-ending tournament.
Lend I crushed fellow Czechoslovak Tomas Smid
6-1 . 6--0 after Tim Mayotte ousted Yannic.k Noah of
France 6-4, 6-4 and Anders Jarryd outlasted feUow
Swede Joakim Nystrom 0..6, 6-1, 6-4.
. The surprising vict~ry sends Gilbert against Jarryd
10 the next round at Madison Square Garden. Lendl wm
face Mayotte, Ecuador's Andres Gomez wiJI play Johan
Krick and Wimbledon champion Boris Becker of West
Germany will meet French Open winner Mats
Wilander of Sweden.
The winner in Sunday's nationally televised
championship match will collect SI 00,000. with the
runnerup pocketing $70.000.
Televielon, radio
TELEVlSJON
7:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Clippers
at Lakers, Channel S.
10 p.m. -WRESTLING: Channel S6.
RADIO
7:30 p.m.-COLLEGEBASKETBALL: UC
lrvmc at Cal Stale Fullerto~. KPZE ( 1190),
KWRW (1370).
7:30 p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL:
Fresno State at Long Beach State, K WOW
( 1600).
7:30 p.m. -COLLEGE BAS&ETBALL:
Anzona State at UCLA, KG IL ( 1260).
7:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL; Clippers
at Lakcrs, KLAC (S70), KMPC (710).
8 p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Ari·
zona at use. KNX (1070).
-(ij,Jiiiiji:-r--------------------
Syracuse suffers first loss
From AP dt1patcbe1
LANDOVER. Md. -David Wingate scored 12 of
his 18 points in the second half. including the game-
winn1n1 basket. to lead No. IS Georgetown to a 73-70 Big
East Conference victory over fourth-ranked yracusc
Wednesday night.
Wmgate's ba'tket with 2: 16 remaining snapped a
66-66 tic and gave the Hoyas a lead they would never
tehnqu1sh.
After Ralph DaJton made a free throw to give
Georgetown a 69-66 lead, the Orangcmen's Wendell
AleJUS rul a jumper to cut the gap to 69-68.
But Wingate scored the Hoyas' final four points.
including two chnch1ng free throws with two seconds left.
to help Georgetown hand Syracuse 1ts first defeat of the
season
In other acuon 1nvolv1ng top 10 teams:
St. Jolul'• 74,Seton Hall U : At East Rutherford, N.J.,
Walter Berry overcame a boll.·and-one defense to score 20
point' and ninth-ranked t. John's hm1tcd Seton Hall to
14 po1n.,1n the fina l 13 minutes. btating the Pirates 1n the
81 East Confercnct\
The victory wu the I 6lh 1n 18 games for the Redmen
and raised their conference record to 4-1 . It was the sixth
stnught los for Seton Hall, now 9-8 overall and ().4 in the
league.
Mem,-.b c.ace It, Clltcluatl 71: Junior center
w. 1lham bcdford ICOttd a aame-h1ah 23 points and tnaaercd a sc:cond.-half rally that sent No. 6 Memphis
Stt1te 10 an 89-71 Metro Confc.rcn~ victory over hos&
C1ncinnau Memph1 t1te. 16--0 and 3--0 in Metro s>lay. hit a
'il11JID& 68 pcrttnt from lhC 0oor In the first haf f IS It built
a I 9·po1n1 lead. o nly to lcl n hp away after the
1n1ttm1 ion
Ku1u 11, N..,.... 7t: Danny Mannina scored 21
po1nh 10 lead cipth-nnked Kan.at to a come-from-
bth1nd \llCle>r)' over ebntta in 1 811 E1&ht Conference
cla~h at Lincoln
Tr:uhnti 37-32 at h1lftune. Kansas weht on a 17-S
tear at the start of the second half to take a 49-42 lcad. The
spurt was keyed by guard Cednc Hunter. who scored
three straight lay-ups to gJve the Jayhawks a 43-41 lead
lhat they held the rest of the game.
Olla~oma tj, Colorado U : In Boulder Tim
McCalister scored 27 points and Darryl Kennedy' added
23 as seventh-ranked Oklahoma defeated Colorado in a
Big Ei&ht game-tcrrcmam undefeated
Bucs sweep GWC
It was a clean sweep for Orange Coast Collqe in
communtt) college ba kctball against arch-rival Golden
West Wednesday n1ah1. as both the Pirate men and
women ~ured South Coast Confertnce victories.
Here's how it went:
On the men's side:
Oru1eCoa117l,0.lde• West •7: The Pirates earned
their firs1 conference victory of the campaign, but it
wasn't easy as OCC had to rally 1n the final three mlnuln
to cam the wm at OCC.
Golden West took a 63-60 advantaac with 2:S6 lef\
followina a Gary Brown lay-up, but John Mullet hit a
J~mpcr with 2:38 lcf\ and a free throw 12 seconds later to uc the score.
Then. with I ;47 to play. the P1ra1es scored four
stralahl points on one tnp down the floor to put 1t away
Bob Mulcahey htt the front end ofa one-and-one, mined
the second and Mau Judd rebounded 1t.
Judd put it tn and was fouled. then converted the free
1hrow and Coast had a 67-63 lead which broke the
RusUcrs' backs
Jn a commun1l) colleae women's aamc:
<>ruse C..11 7•, O.W. Wat II: The Pirates led by
as many as 30 points, 70...0. with 1i• minuJes left and coasted lo the conftrcn~ win at Golden West.
Mary Beth Thobe led Coast'i tcorinl Pll'lde with 19
poinu and three other Buc.s (3-1, JM) were an doubk
flJUrcs Kam Abeyta and hanoa Beeucored llpo&n&sfor
1M Rustlm(l-4. 12·7).
....... ., .........
11.arbaa'• Sten Galld clrln. tbroacJa P01111taln Valley defeme for buket WedDeedaJ.
Barons overcome Vikes \
Fountain Valley shrugs off
sluggish start to win, 42-33
b1ghcr than that, we don't hke it," be added.
The Barons were able to exploit the Marina pressure,
both full· and half-court, for easy inside buckets, notching
26 points on lay-ups and two-foot jumpers.
Tim Johnson, a 6-4 senior forward, was on the end of
nine of those easy shots, finishing with a season hi&h 18
points on nine of 11 from the floor. He converted five
offensive rebounds into l 0 points and pulled down 11
rebounds overall.
By BARRY FAULKNER
o.IJ,...C•n 4 •u•
It was a classic case of good new~bad news for the
Fountain Valley Hiab baskctbaJJ team Wednesday ni&ht
as it took on Marina at the Vikinas' aym.
First the bad news: The Barons scored only two
points in the open inf period and 1hot only 34.S percent in
the first half (including I for 8 in the first quarter).
Scott Wessler scored seven to pace the rest of the
Barons, while seruor center Glenn Gordon had 12
rebounds for the winners. ·
They went for stretches of ciaht and four minutes
without a score, converted only 6 of 11 free throws, had
only one player scored more than seven points, and made
only three shots from outside the eiaht-foot range.
"Johnson and Gordon did a real good job,'' said
Brown of the insjde tandem, which constantly beat the
Vik.i~efensc to the insjde rebounding spots.
" Todd) Hanson also did a good job controlling the
press. e handles the ball and everyone knows it, so he's
got to handle the pressure and he did a nice job," said
Brown. But ultimately, the good news: Fountain Valley still
managed a 42-33 win over a strualing Marina team to
even its Sunset Leaaue record at l:J ( 10.7 overall).
Marina folded after gaining a 22-19 halftime lea1,
ru1ting only 3 of 22 second half field foal attempts (13.6
percent) to fall to 1-1 in Sunset play ( I· 7 overall).
Marina had only one player in double figures,
(William Quinn with 13) and seemed to miss the play of
Craft.
"They were ice cold," said Baron Coach Dave Brown
about Marina. "They had (startina point guard Btll) Craft
hurt (twisted knee), and (Mike) Meyers had the bad eye
(suffcrina a cut below the left eyebrow in Friday's wtn
over Huntinaton Beach). We may have caught them
down toniaht."
The Vikings were indeed down, shooting only 26
percent for the game and lacking "any kind of flow
offensively,'' according to Coach Steve Popovich.
"Meyers is used to playing the off-guard and tonight
be switched to the point guard, .. said Popovich, who
added, "It (Craft's inj':'F,Y) just changes our rotation and
depth at the guard spo1.'
Popovich said be was reluctant to come out of the
trapping defense, burned so effectively by the Barons,
because .. we didn't feel we could match up with their size
inside," he said.
Both teams played pressing. trappina defenses
effectively enough to destroy any type of offensive flow
the game may have developed.
"They played well. They did a good job on the
wcaksidc boards," said Popovich. "The players that have
been playina well for us just didn't do il tonight (Meycrs1 junior center Mark Georgeson, and sophomore forwaro
Steve Guild had been averaging 39 points between them,
but only scored 4, 9:nd 5 respectively)."
" They had a better tempo and more continuity
(offensively) ... we looked lles1tant," he added.
"We're used lo playing a slow tempo," said Brown.
"This is a typical game for us ... if the score acts much
Laguna, Woodbridge roll
Huntington Beach falls to Westminster;
Irvine beaten at foul line by Capo Valley
Laguna Beach and Woodbridge
high schools claimed Sea View
Lcaaue verdicts in boys basketball
Wednesday, whjle Westminster top-
~ HuntingtOn Beach in Sunset
uc play, Mater Oci breezed in an
Angelus League Jame, and Irvine
came up short in South Coast action.
Here's a capsule look:
Lapaa Beacll 7S, Sa44JeMd It:
Coby Naess and Scott Herdman
scored nine points apiece in the
fourth quarter to pace the Artists past
the Roadrunners at Saddleback.
The teams were tied 49-49 after
three qua.rtcn. but Laguna Beach
capitalized on 22 trips to the free
throw line by malting IS for the
winningedJC, while the Roadrunners
(6-8, 1-3) rut 9of10.
league-leading Corona del Mar Fri-
day.
Watmluter 11, Battacta Beac'
H : The Oilers dro~ their second
straight Sunset pme as the fourth-
quartcr blues struck in the form of 11
Huntinaton Beach turnovers and a
19-for-24 performance at the line by
the host Lions ( 1-1 ).
Huntington Beach had trailed
36-34 entering the final period.
Steve Pemper led Huntington
Beach with 1 I points and I 0 re-
bounds. Shane Pariseau added I 0
points.
Mater Del I!, Bldaop M•ttomery
U : The Monarchs were ice cold.
hitting 21 of68 from the floor (30.8
percent) m what was generally con-
sidcred a sluw sh start. It was,
however, their 17th straight win this
year and 46th over two seasons.
Stuart Thomas picked up 17 re-
bounds to go with his 16 points (6 for
20) and Le Ron Ellis finished with 21
points. hitting just 8 of 19 from the
field.
Kevin Rembert had 10pointsand9
rebounds in 17 minutes of playina
time off the bench for the Monarchs.
Capl1truo Valley 88, lrvllle 7':
The Cougars pulled it oul in the final
period at the line. connecting at a l 3-
for-13 pace to give them 26 of 30 for
the game (87 percent).
Irvine was still withfo two points of
Capo Valley with I :22 lcf\, but the
double punch of Ja.son Trask (22) and
Shawn Reed ( 19) eventually won out.
Irvine had four players in double
figures -Al Herring and Jimmy
Raye at IS. Shawn Patchell al 14 and
Scott Tamura with 10.
Naess finished with a game-hi&)\ 29
points and Herdman added 23 as the
Artists improved to 9-4. 3-1 in league.
Joe Deal and Bryant Walton
crupped in with 16 each for Saddle-
baclc.
Edlsoa tops OV la soccer, 3-1
Woe41uiclp M, Cole.a Mesa SI :
Adam Keefe scored eight of the
Warriors' first nine points and fin-
ished with 21 as the Warriors crushed
the vishing Mustanas.
K.cde also bad l 3 rebounds as
Woodbridae pull~ away from a
13-10 lead after one Quarter and
outscored Costa Mesa 32-11 in the
middle two periods.
The Mustanp were without the
services of top scorer Mitch
Pelicbowski, wbo was sidelined with
the Ou. Woodbridge, wruch bas won
two strailht after a pair of loues to
open the "Sea View season. will meet
The Edison Hiah boys soccer team
stayed unbeaten in Sunset League
play W edncsday ·with a 3-1 victory
over Ocean View on the losers' field.
Rob Sanc htz Jtored a pair of 1oals
in the second half to break a 1-1
deadlock.
John Castro, with an assist from
Kun Lund~ pve-Ediso1' a 1..0
advantaae I 0 minutes into the match.
but Ocean View's Kun Bjc~ac
knotted the match siit minutes later
on a penalty kick.
Sanchez took a feed ftom Castro at
the 27-mlnute mark of the 1eCOnd half
to aive the Characrs the lead, and
Sanchez supplied an insurece aoaJ
with just 30 seconds left with an assist
from Darren Yakota.
I
Edison played a strona defensive
pme, headed by stopper Greg
l..eavcy, in postina 1u second straiaht
lequc victory. Ocean View falls to
1-1 in Sunset play.
Jn a girls match:
Newport Harbor %, E1tuda I: NancyCoyn~ scored a pairofsecond-
balf &oals as the Sailors moved to
3.Q.1 in Sea View Lcague play with
the shutout win at Estancia.
Newpon also received fine de-f~nsive play from center-fullback
Kirsten Otis and sweeper Michelle
Bums, while Sailor aoaJkeeper MJuy
Bcrshad was credited with six saves.
Estancia &oalic Alicia Miller stopped
five shots.
J
....
WI STllUt C:O.l'HlttC.1 ,klllc ~
W L 30 •
2S ll
14 n IS 24
14 21
" 11 Midwftt DMtltll
~ct. Ga m
ill I Y,
319 " MS 16 .,
Jll It
.32S • It
Houlton ,. 13 6'1 o.nver t3 IS 60S 2' , $en Antonio ,, 19 S2S 51,,
Deh$ 11 11 rn 6
Ulefl 1' 22 ~ 8
Sec:remtnto IJ 26 333 13
I ASTlllN CONl'llllNCI
lost on
Pfllle<lelOhle
New Jer1tv
WHlllngton
New York
MllweukM
Atlante
Detroit
Cltv.._nd
CtllctllO lndlene
AIMtk DMUell ,. .
2S It ,. 1•
19 20
14 24
C:tllltrel OM.-.
,. 14
10 16 ,, 21
" n IS lS
10 n
w.-...Y"a k er-. ~ 110, Seema 103
&Olton 123, O.iivtr 100
771
641 .600
.417
3'*
650
4.,.,
6 101h
IS
S56 4
447 •
421 ' 37S I 1
263 IS
Ntw Jersev 123, PnHeo.tpnle 89
O.troll 123, Clllceoo llS
Portland 109, lndl•ne 10.
Ntw Yori!. 116, Ot llH 112
Ho.itton I It, Sen Antonio Ill
GOIQen Sla te 150, Ul•ll 10.
T...._..1 C.-Cll9ew'I et LMWI
_CltvNoll et Atlanta
Wt'1!1ngton at Mllw•u'H
l'ri.'1'1 c..mes
New Jtntv tt WHlllngton ~vtr ti Ottroll
8o1ton et lncllane
PnlleOt!Phl• t t c Ilk •llO Ntw Yoril et Sen Antonio
Delea•• Utan
S..ttlt ., Ptlo4wll •
Sec:remento et Goto.n State
°"'"'1 110, senks IOJ
SIATTLI lltll -McOt nl.i 13·23 l·t
33, Vranes 1·2 0-0 2, Slkme a-17 6·9 n ,
Ht ndeoon 2·6 0-0 4, PhtfPl 3·9 4·4 10,
Weoo 7· 12 1·2 IS, McCormick 1·4 4·4 ••
Young 4·8 O·O 9, Sobtr1 0-3 2·4 2. G
Jol'lnM>n O·O 0-0 0. Total•: l9•M 2•·32 103.
C:U~lllS lllt ) -~•well •·1 6-6 14,
Wflltt 6-f 1-J 13, NlfNlfllus 3'-9 0-0 6, M.
Jonnson l ·U 4·4 20, Nlllon 2·6 1·2 S, CIKlt
0-0 2·4 2, Eoweros •·t 7·7 19. 8rio-ntn
4·7 0-0 a. atftlttnln S·t S·S 1S, Goroon •-t
0-0 I. Totats: 42·11 2 ... 31 llO
Sc--.~ Sfflllt 16 21 31 U -103
CllPOtr1 n 33 30 U -110
TllrM·oolnt 1><1•1\-Young, Foutt d
out-Goroon. ltt00und1-S.ettlt 45 (Slkme
13), CllPOtrl 49 (M JoMJon 10) A1·
llllS-S..tti. 24 (Hendtr1on 7), CllPOtr1 11
(Nixon. EC1werC11 S) Totet lovt1-S..ttlt 11.
Cll-1 '14
AlllftOe--' 107
COLLEGE
UC trvtne statts1ks (7-6)
.... .., G l'G l'T P'b. Av ..
MurPhv 13 101 11 215 211 ,._, 13 107 40 162 20 2
8rookJ 13 49 l3 144 11 I
Carmon 11 31 22 U 1a
8uellenen 12 l S n '1 11
EntlftteO 13 32 21 t s 6 S
Htu 13 lO 1a 79 6 I
Clec.clo II I I ta 16
OolllorUYI\ 10 s I II I I
Cetciwtll S I O 2 O 4
Sir a u" 4 O O 0 0 0
TtiNlt IJ 400 229 1054 au
Clvist c ..... M, ~•clftc Cl'lf'tstten 61
IWCAAI
Clw1lf C .... IM) ~adlk CN. 161) .. """' ....... KtllO 6 I 0 13 Rt Oforo I 0 , '
Pelotte S O 2 10 T"'"'r 3 o S 6
Aooitwy 13 2 l 21 Staton o o I o
8tet 6 0 J 11 Lt lk 1 0 5 14
S<XrlOllt 4 1 I 10 Clln tnsn S 0 S 10
ThOmPln 1 0 I 4 Scllwtrll ' 0 s 4
Tlt<lt 1 0 J 1 OtPro100 1 0 i 14
Crall 0 0 1 0 Stonlger O O 2 0
WHMgtn I 1 0 l Htn<ltnn S I 1 11 c llt nelltr 1 0 0 2
Totel1 l9 6 IS M To1e11 JO I 2t 61
Ht lftlmt Cllrllt COlltQe trvlnt, 39·11
h cllnlce t Lehi I PC J
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Or.,._ C•at 71, ~ WHt 67
(Stvtfl CeHt C...,._.l
G.,_. Wttf (61) Ore'* CNlf (111
.. fttlftll .......
Emtr10n I 0 3 2 Jonnl!on 6 6 3 18
StreCl'len 12 t 3 l2 Kelly 0 0 3 0
Slrnoson o 2 o 7 S.eger 10 3 4 n
8rown l 0 S 6 Muletn.v I I 2 3
Smll h l 3 S 9 Ille.U lt 0 0 0 0
0too. • 0 4 I Mullet 3 I 0 1
Ma1<ou11 o O 1 O Juctd 3 6 2 17
Utu l 2 S 8 Ci.tnenll 1 0 3 4
McGevm 1 2 0 4
Andrilv 0 0 3 0
Tollll 26 IS 27 67 Totel1 26 19 20 11
Helfllrne: Orenge Coal!, 43·3-4
TK MICel1 Utu IGWC), Jofln1ton IOCC)
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Seuttl C•st Ceo,. enc•
C...._. OVwel
WL W L
C«rllot 5 0 It I
Ml. Sen Antonio S O 14 4
Comoton J I 11 •
CVPftH l I 13 S
llt ncno Santiago i l 13 6
Fu1•1on I l 1 10
Orenot CoH t I l I t
SeO<llttlectl I 4 S I I
Gotoen Wt1I 0 S 4 12 w.-...V'•l<Wft
Oref1941 Coell 71. Golden Wt1t 67
Cypress 6', Sed<lteoeck 63
Mt Sen Antonio SJ, Compton S2
Ctrrllo1 '6. llenchO Senlleoo 56
S.tunllY'• Gemes 17:>0l •
Ort net Coeat t i llencno Santiago
CvPftlS el Goloen Wt1I
F ulltrton e t SedOltl>•Ck
C«rllos et Compton
HIGH SCHOOL
OcMft "'"' $6, ldhen s 1
ls.n..tL-...l
.... (SI) OcltM Vltw ($6) ........ .. ......
Mergvlltl 2 2 5 • Pantle• 3 3 2 t
Ammnn s 1 s 12 H•ltfY 4 J ) 11
Smith I 0 2 2 8ut• 6 5 7 17
Colt a S l 11 Morrl• 2 l 3 1
Ke tone l 2 2 a o.a r-l 4 I 10 Htn«ton 0 0 I 0 Vt ll't'lllM 0 0 2 0
Prlnce 1 00JOOl1t 1002
Henen 02 12
Aven o o I O
Tota.Ii It U n SI Totals 19 18 12 S6
kwwlrt~
EOIJon It 14 11 14-S I OcMn Vlt w IS 1) 16 12-56
WHtmlftltar 61, H ........... s ... a ..
(IUIMt Ltelille)
""" letdl (4') w..•11-..-(61) ........ """" s i 3 l1 °""' s • , i4 ~
,..,1"8\1
Sftow
1Mttl1
""' art ntl
l(eo
MOOerlY
~...,
Dt•on ~
L.ene G•INf Totell
2 • l 10 """" j l l 13 l 0 1 6 Aintln l 1 1 1J
l 0 • • CtlelAOn 2 • • 17
12>•c.i.1 7135
1 2 , 4 'YOtiodt 2 0 4 4
10 72 Lovt 00 4 0 o r o 2 0 I ) I
0 0 I 0
0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
" l• 24 4' To1a11 If n n " sar..w...,..,..
HIMlllRe!Cl.i a.ct\ 14 11 ' ,,_.. ~tm!MIW • 14 1A H-61
Te<Mlal. Sntw (1111
\
Wt1e~ M, Cetta Meta 11
c ... """' l.Aewel
CM .. MIN (al) WI I• 1-( .. )
ll04'ltll
Mofrl• Vottt KOi
HeuYtll
........ .. ......
1 2 4 • •rv.i1 3 0 4 •
"""'"" Nl•lll't'lle
Wtll
t , • 6 MurOllV 3 2 I a • l I 11 KMft t 2 ) 11 0 0 I 0 ltlttllCfl 1 3 0 S
I 0 3 6 Tow~lld I 3 2 5 0 3 I l VWk 1 0 2 2 o 1 t 1 •ou11et111 o o 2 o
0 0 0 0 Sulllv.-i 2 0 2 4
VtrCIUllO 2 0 I • Sone 1 032
Oonellut 0 0 0 0
Anderson 4 1 0 t
Totals 10 II 16 l l Totals 27 It ~ "
kw9 llW Qua,..,..
Cosle ~ 10 S • 10--ll WOO«lrldot 13 13 19 21-.t
a..... 11eectt n, s.,._.cac "
C ... YltwL.._.)
L....-..._ (TJ) ~(ff) ........ .. ......
NMU 11 7 2 " Wellon • 0 4 " Fortune I O 4 2 0 .. 1 a O 4 16
EH•t.ii I 1 1 17 Dottin 4 1 J U
H•omen 9 S 2 n 8utttr I 0 S 2
l.awttr 0 2 l 2 Ofttlvero• 6 O I 12
. Aton10 3 2 2 8
Totals 2t IS 11 13 Total• JO 9 19 "
k«e .., o.i."9n
Lffvne a..c11 II 16 IS U -13
S.OdltOedt " 12 ,. ~· TKll!llul. We llQll lSI
c ...... die Mllr St. Untvenh'v 4t
(Set Vltw LMWtl
c-tlll ~; 02) Unlvtr\ltv 14') .... ,,.. "" .... leerbwr I 2 I 4 Warren ) 0 4 6
Gr Mll 4 7 3 IS Olln I O J 2 Frv• s • I 19 ilOllOll 9 0 4 ,.
Turner I I 2 l G1ant11 s O 4 10
CllnlllMll 2 I l S W1n1111w • l , 11
McGretll 3 0 0 6 F1rrtN 0 O 2 0
AUton I 0 I 2
Totell 16 20 10 S2 Total• 23 3 10 t9
kart b¥ OU1"9n
Cor one Ciel Mer a 12 12 2C>-S2
un1ver11tv 14 12 12 11-49
Eatllnclll 57, HewPor1 H•rbor S2
(SN View Ltteue)
Haner U21 E llt ncle (S7 I .... ,,... .. .......
Al,lrorn 4 J I 11 co... s I 4 I I
L" 2 8 S 12 Moo.,.v J 3 7 9 Crelll 4 2 4 to S1eoe1 o o o O
Tort44 J 0 J 6 Till 6 2 3 14
ltlclle rCI• 3 2 1 I Bra1t ll ) 3 J 9
Sheward 0 clo I 0 Ru\IC~ 0 I I I
Young 1 I 2 l Trtt0 J I J 1
G-llngs I O I 2 P1nc~ney 1 4 O 6
Total• II 16 19 S2 To111\ 21 IS 16 S7
kart llV Ouer~o
N-oort HtrtlOr 10 IS 10 17-S2
E1tenci. I• 15 1l l~SJ
Ttcnnkel• nont
Cape Vahv to, lrvlM 74
(Seu"' (Mil LMtut)
CtPt V ... V (80) Irvine l141
.. ft pf fl> .. ftpftv
8elglltOI 1 O O 2 Parcnell S 4 s 14
Sterk 3 0 1 6 Tamura J 4 S 10
Weikle 0 I I I Herring 6 3 4 IS
Tresa 1 a S ?1 Moctrl 0 1 I 2
lttt<I 6 1 0 19 it .. • 6 J 3 IS
8tleoot I 1 I • SMoov 1 2 I 6
Oevt v l S 4 II Nor 10,, 1 0 0 2
Mont" 0 0 I 0 Ooen S 0 S 10
McCurtgh 6 J I IS
To1111 27 26 I• 80 Total\ 18 II 2• 7•
Scel"t bY OUt rtwn Cepl11reno Vetltv IS 16 ti 21-IO
lrvlnt 19 16 19 70--74
Ttcn,,1ce11 Pa ten.II 1trv1nt )
Matitr o.i 62., .,~ Mentvomerv 41
(A"91NI L.._)
a1111eo Mtflt. (41) Mii* Del t6l>
fw ftpff1> fw flpff1>
Ortner I 0 1 2 Mounce I 0 l 1
Aki I 1 4 3 Owver I 0 2 1
Def Amico 1 1 l 6 E 1111 8 S 3 1 I
Lene I 0 l 2 Thomn 6 • 2 16
Tev1or 6 I S I J Petton 2 I 2 S
Rtvnoso 1 12 Rtmoeri 1 6 t 10
Seit 2 J Pettnon O 4 I 4
OutM V 0 0 I 0
011t1~ I 0 I 7
Scllm•OI 0 0 0 0
Rocco o o t o
Rtoou•ev O O o o S111>n..,1 o 0 0 0
Tote11 16 9 20 41 To1111 21 71 17 62
kart bv Ou•rtwl
811nop Montgornerv 11 10 7 IJ-• I
Maler Ott IS 17 u 21-62
Ttcrin1ce11 Oellam1co tBMI
HIGH SCHOOL ST AN DINGS
S.. View LNgue
LM-WL
Coro"• oe1 Mer • 0 Leou11a &etch 3 1
Ntwoort HerbOr 1 1
Unlver1ltv 1 1
Es tancia 2 2
WOO<lbrl<llJt 1 1
S.OOltl>eCk I J
Col!t MaH 0 4
ov .....
W L
14 1
9 s
• 6
6 I
9 6
13 4
6 •
I 10
Wtdrlnclt Y' I SCOfft
Ellencte S7 Newoort He rt>Or 52
W00<1br109e 6', Coll• Mna ll
Legune 8t1dl 73. S.ooltcac-69
Corona oe1 Mar S2 Unlvtr\lt v t9
l'r'ldll'1'1 Gemes (1:301
Ellencle e t Leou11• Beacn
WOO<lbrtooe et Corona dtl Mer
Seodtt bec• •• NtwPOrt HerbOr Co1ta Mew et Unlvtr\llV
Sunwt LN9Ut
Ltttut
WL
Ocean View 1 0
EClllOn I I
Foun11ln Valltv t I
Marine I I
Westminster I I
Huntington &teen o 1
WedMtdll'l'•kWK
OVw el
WL
I? 4
II S
10 1
11 1
4 II
6 10
Ocean View 56. E Ol1on Sl
Wt1tmln11er 61 Huntington Bt1cn 44
FOUtlttl" Vellty 42. Marine l3
l'rtdt'I'• C)lllMS I 7:JOI
Octen View et Marine
EClflon et Huntington 8tacn
Founllln Vt llt v ti Wt\lmm1ter
S.Uttl Coast LN9Ut
LMM o ........
WL
Capistrano v allt v 4 0
Mlu lon V\tlO l 0
El Toro ) I
trvlnt 2 1
Oen• HIMI 0 l
Legune HIM1 0 3
Sen Cltmtntt 0 l
W....._Y'• Sc-.
C•Ol•treno Valttv to, lrvtne 74
Min ion Vlelo M, Lallllfl• Hlll1 «
El. Toro 66, Dena Hiiis ~
Sen Ctemtnlt, bvt
,,...,., ~ (7:)0)
Dene HIN• ., trvlnt
MJsJlon Vltlo et CePlllreno Velltv
Sen Eltmtn19 at Ln un• HI"'
El Toro, twe
W L
16 2
IJ 4
' 1 10 •
• 1
1 10
1 •
COMMUNfTY COLLIEGI WOMSN
OrM18 C..st 76, Gelden Weat 6S
c~c .. ,t~e>
~ ..... C:..1t 1761 ..._. Wttl 16Sl .. ...... .. ......
KoC>v\111 I 0 4 ' Chest 1 0 1 4
Ht llleoc.k 1 > J 17 Kemott I 0 I 2
Scllumlo.r S l 4 13 Alltvte • • 1 ti Ftfdtu 1 I , IS Stevens 1 0 0 4
TllOllt ' I 3 It a-t 2 2 11
lllndont I 0 0 , Storer 2 I l J
Cet11ln1 2 2 l 6 AfJIO" 0 0 1 0
INtvw•rt O O 1 0 "'"" 6 2 3 14 ..... 0 0 I 0
V•ndt'W1 0 , 0 2
Tofil\ 32 IHt )f ' Total\ 17 11 15 U
Hlllftll'M' Or.,_ CMi l, l7·21
C... .. Mllr Hlttl NY ......
VMr·IW·YMr Y-, CMdl ltectN 1"3., aoo LAU.. ,. It
1"4, 90C> L"llt ' II·•
IHS, 90C L"tlt 11 · 11
1"6, 90C Ltsllt IS-t IH1, 81M 8toom ' IS·I
IHI, a 1H 91oom •• • 1t·2
lht. 8 hl 810on't • 11· 10
1970, 8Ut 810on't • • • I~· II
1'71, llff &loom 13•13
ltn, Tendv Gllll1 ·• 23·3
ltn, Tendv GIH11 • • • 76·2
"''· Tendv GI~•· 3·" lt1S, Tandy GINl1 17-a
1'14, Tandv GIUl1 • • • 1S· I 1tn. Jeck Errion •• •2s-s
lt78,' Jeck Errlon • 14·9
1979. Jeck ErrlOn • 21""
19'0, Jeck Ernon '" • 22·S
1911, Jeck Em on • • • 22·5
1912, Jeck Errlon ••• • 20-S
1913, Jeck Errlon • • 18·1
19'4, Jeck Err ion I S·I
191S, J•cll Errlon • 19·1
• CIF OleVOff .iitrv
• L"gue co·dlemolons
• • \.,H gue d\emc>lont
'•' CIF 3-A flnallt lS
• CIF l·A Champ~
Wetael Carllale
Eatllnda Hlttl Niie.._,
YMr·bY ·VNr
Y"'• CMdl 1966. 81~ Wtlltl
1967, 81JI Wllltf
1961. 8[M Wtlltf
i969, 8111 Wttztf
1970, 8141 Wt1t.i
1971, Gery Carr
19n , Dave Cerll•te
1973, OIVt C.rll•le
1974, OIVt C'erll11t
197S. Dave Cerh11t
1976, Dave Certl1te
1917, Dave C.rll11t
lt71, Larry Suneltfmen
lt19, Larry Sundtrmen
1990. Lerrv Sunderman
1911, Larry SUn<ltrmen
1912, L..errY Sunderman
Aec«d
l ·IS
IS· 12
3·21
11-14
• 14-12
t ·IS
S· 16 ll·U
•· 13 14·9 • 17·1
••• 21·6
• 11·1 ••• ?O-•
•• 22·5
•• lt ·t
•• 22·S
1913, L.trrv Suneltrmen •• • 22·7' • 19'4, Le rrv SunO«mt n ••• • • 26·4
19'S, Joe lttld ' 2S·4
' C IF pleyoft1 t ntrv
"CIF Hmlflnt tl1l1
•"CIF rtnellfll
• L"gue co·cnem1>1on1
• • LMllUt cnemoloni
NHL
C~9ELL CONl'Elll NCE
Sm""'9 DIYl&len w L T '"" GF GA
Eomon10" l1 9 4 .. m Catoarv 19 10 3 41 17 I wlnnl~ll 14 11 s 33 165
KIMI I) 1• s 31 147
Va ncou1t1t>r I) 76 s J 1 ISJ
Norrts 0.,,1,lon
c n.ca11<> 21 11 s ., 191
S• Lou \ " I• 6 •• 162
M1nne~o•a ,. •• I 40 171
Toron10 12 1S s 29 168
Oe•ro11 9 )0 s 13 144
WALES CONFIElllENCE
f't~lelr OM"-'
PhllllOtlOh1a 33 II 0 64 101
wunlngton 2S IJ 4 S<I 164
NY lstenden 18 16 9 4S In
NV Re"9trl 20 21 J 43 tS6
Pi Ill burgh 19 10 s 43 169
New Jer1ev IS 26 I l l 157
Adema OfVhltfl
Ovel>ee 2S 16 2 52 Ito
Montru 1• IS S2 ,.,.,
8o11on " 11 4S 167
Htrtloro 11 10 43 167
&uff eto It It s 4l ts&
Wt<IMM:te V'1 Gemt1
New Vork Rengt(I •. kines J
Edmonton 4, Hertford I
Montreal •. w1nn11>t11 0
P.1t1bur9n 6 Ntw Yor., lil.tndtf\ l
New Jer1ev • Oerrolt 3 101 St Loul1 10 Toronto I
Cn1ct go 4 llulft lO 2
Tef'lleht'I Gemtl
Celgerv et 801ton
St LOUii et MlnntM>ll
R•,,.....s 4, Kines 3
k -bY f'tr'lech
179
165
2" 101
182
191
163
167
lOS
131
l?'i
IJ9
IS9
149
16S
197
141
I SS
IS6
163
1SO
New York Rtnger, I 0 3-4
K1"9i 0 1 1-3
"'"' ~9f'ltcl 1 New York. Helm•ntn a IMetontv
SIJn<l•troml. J 11. P9Nl1tes-Lt0vero u1
llnltnertnet), 11•, Gru cnnt r NYR hOOk
Intl, 5·20, Hul>tr , NYll (crou·crieck1ng1
1-tt, ~vck, NVR (rou11n1n11) I 01
PellrlOll, LA l1le1lllng). 8 01 MerLPllan
NVR (l'IOolllng). 12,ll, Rloltv NVR
(1leil)l1111>. 17·76, P•ltrlOll, LA c11un1no1
11.16.
s.ce...~
2. Los Antttts. Nldlol\1 2 I I Fo• Wt11\1
12-0. P91\eltltt-Ma<:Lellen, NVR M•9"
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(Htlrnlntn, McEwen), 1 )0 (DO), s LO\
Anlltlft. Taylelf 15 (Pett r10n, Olonnt )
12·37, 6. Ntw V0tk, ltlOltv 12 IMllltr
McEwen). 141 4; 1 New York, RIOttv 1J
(Mitter) 11 i• Ptnettv-Tt vtor LA CnOOI\
Ing). 7:21
Sbo1J 1111 toet-N.ew Vort Refllltf l
11 · f· ll>-30. LOI Anetlt$ 2 • 10-9-7•
Jil'Ow«·Olilv 004l0f'fllllllln-Nt• York
ltenetn I ol 4, Lot """"' 0 Of 4 Goellff New YoB lttflll9n, Hanton 116
1110fl·2J sevt$) Los An9tlti. M.ienJon
, 110•lt ), Jenecvll (0.00 tlllfd, 10-7)
A 1tenC1ence-11,sn, lttter tt-8 ob
Mevers Llnftmtf!-Jonn O'Am lco, Oen McCourt
.... _ ..... ~
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Howard Twitty
Greg Normen
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Mark Wltt>t
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Cur111 Strenge
W•vne Levi
Merk M<:Curnl>tr Scott Hoell
Sob Lollr
0 a¥t Slockton
Tim SlmolOll
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8rlen MolJg
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David Grellt m
Donnie Hammond
8ud0v Gardner
Dave 8err
Ja y Heel
Jeff Grvgltl
Tom Sltckmenn
AnCIYMal>M
&obCIV Nlcnoll eoo MA.r Pllv
0 A Wtlb<'lng
8ernnero L.enger
JOllMY Miller
At Gelt>tr11tr
Mike Rttd
8oot>v Wedkln1
Ken GrMn
Tonv SNls
Lor.ii It Ol>tr ti
L" Eioer AndV Norin
TomPurtier
Lerrv Ri1>ktr
Mac O'Greov
Pet McGowan
ltuu Cocr.ren
Frenle Conner
Ronnie 8 tac1t
S.ndv Lvlt
Ru Ce tciwell
C11rl1 Perrv
Stu 11111r1nem
Merk Hlvh
Tom Pernice
Lt nnlt Ctemtn11
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Jim COll>tfl
Tom 8vrum
Hul>trt GrMn
Oen Htll<lorwn
Ron StrK ll
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Rknero ZOkOI
Ga v Brewer
DOU9 Stndetfl
J'm Woodward
Stoll Simo'°" Marll O Meara
Bren Upper
JOOleMuoo
Peter Jec01>1en
Wevne C.raov
Eouer<IO ltomero
Leonero Tnorno1on
Pt vnt S•twtri
Lou Grel\em
8tnCren~w
Ktllh Fetrgu1
Oennv Eowero•
Calvin PH•e
Barrv Jae<i.e
Pet L1no"v
Mike Oona•o
Jc Sneao
Oo..i9 Tewt
M1-t Sm11"
Tim Norr' Ar~o Pt mt•
Merk Lve
TC Chen
8reo Fabel
Tom Kite
Don Pootev
Tom Nleoorit
Ptttr Oo1 ltr llul\
8 1•1nt McCa1111ter
Miiier Barber
Rooer Mt1101e
Jom Gtll•ll"t r
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8rao Faxon
6111 Sano11r
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39·37-16
39·38-77
40-:»-1'
40·3'>-1' 38 40-11
43-30-19
Strl COlldmens
SOUTHE llN CALIFOtlNIA
Getd Mint -Firm pecked, 17 14 inch
Dalt. ) hit~ ootrttlng
Mluftt 9*" -CIO..O
Mtvritaln Hltfl -F lrm lleGktO 24 1nCI'
..... 4 loft\
Siii SunriM -Cto..O
Sntw Summit -Firm oeckeo I 74 "<~
Due 1S oercen• of 1erreln ooen S "''' Snew V ... y -Cto..o
SIEAAA·NEVADA AANGE
Lt ntn Ptrtr -No rtc>Ort
9wN I -6 onc l'!t1 new on • l ·S tt be\t
Groom.a eno PI Cl\e<I oowoer J'lvt Cl\elr\
ano 1wo cn11n tt nlgnt •
0-Siii ••ftdl -•·• tllChtl new on a l ·S fl belt PllCke<I OOWOClf ThrM
Cl\etn
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Talltt 0--No rtoorl
Ntf'tfl Ster -2 • ln<hft new on • 1 S tt
Due Firm Ot Ckl<I groomeo Gonoo1e
Hvtn ch••"
Sliter ltWI -6·8 lncllfl ntw on •·• II
but Powo.r groomeo. oowO.< F •t
OOuble Clltlrt ecceu gonctole
.,.,.. ~' -S·I new ]·6 11 t>eu
Groomeo oowoer 111<1 HCkt<I oowoe<
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HtmtWtttl -4 • lochft new on • l·J tt
Dalt Powel« t nO PeCl<ecl oowoer -
0011ec1t1 TWO Cl\elrl, lllr .. wrltct Nftl
Squaw Vf//Wf (I,• fl.) -6·8 lnCPlfl
new on • S fl bot Pow~. groomed t
cr.a1n cable car •nd llOllClola s.uew VetltV (6,100 ft.) -, 1ncn11S "'"' 01\ a 1 , ft DeH • Powoer groom.a t nel
1omt ob1•11<1t1 Four CNI"'· •wo "'' •
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OOVOlt dltl" .,.. '"'" Wf'feet llftt-. Mil llldMa -1 tncl!ft new on l''I 2 fl
bot. Gr"""'°. firmed NCllecl oowW
end '°'"' Obll•Cln SI• ~ c11e1n ~ ~ -l •ncntt "'"' on • l ''I 11 belt CrOOMtd firm oecllecl end 00.la•
Cit\ Ttv" Cfleln ll'W'tt ~ac+e 1111
,._ ~ .. -J lftC1'tl new Oii l ~ "
best Pe<UO oow-encl tr~ flw ..
~It'•
MINI,,,,_ -) lllC""1 ~ tn t • 11
OtM "'°...-end Ill',., MCtitd ON -· ooie T1 CMln encl lour -1ece Mt\
-..... ... w ....
(et .... YM ) .............
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•·I. M . atM °'"" I U SI def Jelwl
Md.IW'M IU .S I P, • ' ••
' .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!Thuraday, Jan,u~ UI, 1911 * C8
'--Mt"9 W9DNHOAV'S ltlWLTS , ... "., ....... u ..... ,,...,
,.ST U CL • !\i<>Onlll
Marf Suiwtlftt (l(ffNI) • 20 4 00 3 00
A4'1\et."t.,,_I ~'°' -'00 Ct.nk II Uo CFernenot11 Sto Tfme 111
Abo ran Enoteu S..erc11 £11uwen1
Effort. POlln \.II ltHUI, Fe trv Goomot"-'
No tert tc:tltl
SICONcfllACI. 4 'u'IOn9' ciev., coin 1ve1tn1ue •• ~ 20 3 ao 2 to
l"llt l ulltt 181ec.. H O HO
VOIU Of Tnt WlllCI Htrntnotl) ?60 Time I Ot 4 S
AISO ran G""' l,.torm•n• 0.1•• Garv 0..n, Jurv T ,.... E •O••t A•Dtlor SPenO N
Save 81M Ptvt r Gille" Soiementt Uno
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n.•o ltACl • , lu•IOnQ\
Covotero lS1tvt t1\I 6 00 4 20 3 40
Ztc K IMcCt rr1111 t S 00 • 00
LOt'd Pancllo ll1e<.1< I I to Tlmt 11S , s
A!So ra n ltK•one• Cr.o•arcn. COft•t••
ice C•-Court~ ""'"' ""'''"'' C w Velgty °"
Sc<elctlee Er n 1 1.0<0
U DAILY 00U9Ll )·I De •O I II 20
l'OUttTH llACE • lur.o'lgs
8ootln l!ltfl IKHnttl S9 80 11 60 I 40
FH I Fllng lVt•t n1ut ·t1 7• 40 I• 00
llt«ltllloui ROH S b I 11 to
Time I II 2 S
Also ran Cnenge Pockell U11·vtrwt
~ewn. Ml~ Or ,,.. A~t..••-L.l!WDO!L
TM • emmtr Mov t iliiii.• Sc r Oii Lock For Tiie Le1t T ,.... ,..,_. 8 ruGt
su.1cneo Pe1n1eo W•"!Ot Ser'°"'' Plev. El C.eleoen 80•• Dancing
l'll'TH llACIE 6 , t1;r•on111 on turf
Amerone (P1r1Ctv1 16 00 8 00 S 60
PHktntll (Soi11) 6 20 t 20 Quip Ster ( Peorozt l 00
Time I IS ) S
AllO ran R.,r R ·' ~ ... ., • notK Oowf'
AOOllO FUl)hl Moor ' C."•"'D RevOlut•on
arv. He'' At11r,..~eo ""'•"" Gtac·~' Serveent Geraro
k retchecl Ameno•,,.rorotner
U EXACTA •9 7 oa o 137900
SIXTH llACE 6 • • ,roon91
Time For 21mo1t r S• '"' 73 20 10 60 6 00
Mlklwl (K-1 4 00 160
Sieve To Fe\f1oo~ ••t••~•a • J OO nme 1 11
AllO '•" l.t BP a N •or A,m•re
Donne's 8 u"0 t ilprf'I '''"C'lt C.rao Scf>OOI Fune fl'llrl'u fr~ Crowoeo Av
enue. lnol•n a ......
Scr11c"t0 Biro ()j Pana11e Se tar
LteOtf, Pra11t a lvh l ar1v Me t=op s
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SEVENTH A.ACE
Oomlnetl<I •Toro
Ml<lforo l 81ec-.
C>Oftnv K f Pon<a•
Tme 116 1S
6 , l'JrlO"Ol Oii turl
16.0 910 1.0
11'0 1 40
1 to
AllO ran Mu,...rr<r 1 P ee,ure F a.rlt•
Oeclleata v ron OOOOIHtC• Feu D· 1tv
Stuov 8olcl T t1••mO"• Nortnco•t E •l>'f\I
Scrt •cneo "''"II' C.enera• U EXACTA tS·11 H rO ~ )()
llGHTH llACI 1 •.,rt0nlll
Her Rovallv IMcCerrofl ~ 40 l 60 l 00
Norr" S1oer c Pl1K•11 1 to 'to
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111~0 ran Jon IJ Ber C.0t01-• M·•·
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Scra•cne o B•roneu O •e t • Oumoeour.,090.,m
NINTH RACE. t 16 ..-11e1
Ftu nv Fiore cs• Mer11n1 19 IO 10 'D 4 60
Sllanreh"" fMaza1 6 40 2 to
A tC1u For t<.a11t Otlt houu•v• 410
Time 1 •S •
AllO ran Tric•v Turn Cnrn•a Eegle
N '" N 8vt Treo,1+on ()I HOPI Ouc11eu
Petrone c.o-n 8t nl'« Su¥llf0<' S.
Sc.r1tcPltO Nortntfn Pereoe Fr'"°'°"'
Num Sil,
U EXACT A 10 2 01110 l lU 00
S2 f'ICI( SIX I 9 5 s 4 or J-101 o••O
'23 '3J 00 to 'o""'' <N ""•no 11c• •'' f1vf' nor.es • Carr vovtr 0001 '9J ll2
J I f'ICI< NINE S l t ' 9 S > • or J 10
e>a o \979 70 •o t O"'' </Ill ""'ng •.c1o ''' ' •
"O''t\ Carr•o•tr 000 l62 1'
""9'08 "<t 19 269
Misc.
AP AftMtit ef YNf' Voflne
MALE
0 .... 11,,, Gooo•"
Welter Pav'O<'
Bill E•lion
Pett ROH
"'"""' Acou Jeoca• Bret Sttier"•ll•"
Wevnt Gre11"'
Larrv B"o
S•e•e Cr a,..,
Mt rvtl0<1\ Ht \I t '
W,1 e 8e"•\
C nuck L o<'ll
001' Mtll•f'OI•
6ori1 Bec•t•
Grtll Lemorto
8 0 Jac,1on
M1cn111 SP "" George 8ret1
Anciv Norrr
Wiii am Ptrrv
Wl•t McGte M•rcu' ~-'1•r Pe•"·c• Ew ng
S•••P """'.
P:Ull\AlE
~a,,(-.. LO~I
V\•r•ina NttY'l 'ilOY•
C~trvl Miller
Ma r.-Decker Slent¥
L ~"'"' woooero Cnr•\ E••" l.IOVO
~.,,. Me no11,.o••
A~Ce Mllltr
Pet 8rtOtt v
Gttlt We It
M•C"91t Mltcllt •
Mom·, Cornme.-o
L1b0" ~IOOIH
WtnOI 11 telller
ltettv" H09tuno
P•llv Snethe n
w...._.-, treMactlerts
aASlaALL
A"*'<M L~
T01'0 NTO 8LUE JA YS-S Q...O ;r.,...,.'
li.ev !MICM' Jtfl ~rron c••crw· ·~ ~Hll Ol./tfil!Otr
,........ L .....
A TLANT .t. alt AVE s-s111...o Ow e v •
•• ce~ '° • '"'" vffr conirec• NEW VOA~ M ETS-S•llfttO Dt •h
JolvllOll ~ 10 • """ ""' cont••<• ""°"°41 lflt I .. IMJon
aAMtaTaAI.\.
............... AJMC:ldtn
INOIANA ~A(EIU-Actlveled C .. r~
t(tf!OOO forwt rCI PIKM °"'"" 811C • ,,.. .._..,,,on"'' .,
SIA TTLE Su PE IUOHI(' ~ o~ra
0.vle ..... lorwt rCI oov
~.-.. GtlllW'\ AlMC.111-
T"I INTl!ltH.t.TIONA\. TOUlt Nt\Mll!!NT-He~ 1eu'f 0 T'll e t~
K\11 "'' Otf-10' MOallY ....... ~~ 11AR'T,0AO WHAl.10 -Loentel \" •~ n Ctte ~en. 'O !flt HU!! °"'"' ~ ...... ~ ,..._ .lvlhOI' Hoc, ...
L"-IOCCllt Mater ..._ leciow ........
MISl.~tr .. ~ l llf'tem .nr-ec!IW OI ,._.. ~ ,...., •
COt..Lt e l
GATEWAY CON~P HCC '"'" £11 TK WMMr!wr ~ lottbe" 91 •
" LOUISIANA Hi'TT:-~ 1"81 ttvn~ ' ._. ,.,...... .. •tC "4 •• ~ -1•-•. ,...,.. De1"9
4Allg~l•,
8 ,~era
seeking ·
arbitrat1oa=
NEW YORK (AP) -Nall09i
J.Qaue Cy Yount winntt Dwi11t1
Gooden of the New York Meu and
1he Amencan Lcaaue·s~ Most Valu-
able Player. Don Matt1naJy of ttle
New Yo rk Yankees. were amq
players who beat the deadm.t Wed~y 1n fihn& for sa.IM} arbi-
u·1t1on.
The dcadhne for filing was mid·
mght Wednesday As the' dcadhot
past a record 158 players had filed f'or
arbitration. Last year 98 players filed.
Eight Dodftrs and four Ansets alto
filed for arbitration. They included
.... ngel outfielder Gary Pcni5, shor.
stop Dick Schofield, p1tcher Roo
Romanick and utilit) pla)cr Rufino
Linar".
The Dodgers included pitchers
Orel H ers h 1s.er, Fernando
Valenzuela. Carlos' Diaz and Ed
Vande Berg, cat~hcr Mike Sc1oscia.
o utfielder Mike Marshall. first
~man G reg Brock and infielder
Dave l\.nderson.
Also -am6flt the late filers were
third baseman Wade Bous of8os10«t
and pttcbers Frank Viola or M1nne·
sota and Dennis "011 Can" Boyd of
Boston.
Last )ear. 98 players filed. but only
13 went to hcanngs. Clubs arc
allowed 10 continue ncgouauons w1lh
pla>ers until their hcanng dates.
which will be set 1n about a week. All
hearings will be held betw~n Feb.
3-20.
An) two-year player whose con.
tract has e:11;p1rcd is allowed to have
his salar) dispute settled b> an
1mparual arbitrator After 1986, play-
ers will need three }'ears· maJor leagut
cll.penence to quaht) tor arb1trat1on.
Before last season. the :! I ·)car-old
G ooden and his agent. Jim Neader.
negotiated a onc-"ear contrac1 won h
about $275.00() plus tncenuvcs that
pushed his salar) to about $400.000
In 1985. Gooden was :!4-4 wlth a I. S3
earned run a' erage and v.·on the C)
Yo ung A"ard tn his second ma1or
league season
Neader. reached b) telepho ne at hi~
Tampa. Fla offi ce. 10dicated there
was a good c hance Goode n could
a' 01d the arbmauon proces~.
He said negottattons "'tth the Mets
\.\Cre "go10g q u11e well. and I think
we re both wo rking tov.ard reach 1~
agreement There are sull a lut ot
thmg!> to talk about though "
"eader satd he 11o o uld knov. mo re
about Gooden·!> chan<;es of ncgottat·
1ng a rnntract 1n a lOUple of weeks
"The heanngs could ~ a monlh
av.a\ .. he said "That's a long ume m
contract negouauons ··
Area preps
to coinpete
in Sunkist
Estan c ia· s Dorn .
Harbor's Rabbitt.
Henson to compete
\ numhcr ,,, Jrt"3 high school trad
jnd tieJJ \t.lnduuts are Sthedulcd to
lomix·11• 1n tht• "lunlo..11>1 In' 1!3t1onal
1nJ 11111 flll'l'I I riJ.i, n1gh1 J I the Lo'
.\ngek ' "P''n' \r<.'na heginn1ng at '
The 'lll"l'I .. 1)a, a balanct' of high
~hl)l)I .tn.1 OPt n ('\Cnls 1t·a1unn~
'omc l I \hr hr ntl·mat1onal Jthkte'
E '-tan, 1.1 ' l m Ot1m v. ho'>C' top
high Jump "J' b· w 111 be up agatn\l ~ .i 1umrx·r Patm lo.. \11,hcrg and ti H·
11th('r' Dnrn ..1 11o 1dc f<.'1't"1H·r lnr tht
E.aglt'' '"• Jht1 "'m l'll:tl' in tht· ton~
1umr He "'l'nl tl1 the 'l.lll' nll'l'l 1n tht
1nrk 1ump Jll('r h1lllnl!: ,.J t11o ll'e a'
.t JUntllr
Ir.inc lltgh <.ent1' tv.o oo'' t•
,,,., !X"h' D11ug \h \l 11lcn '' enlt"ll'd
111 1h1· 1'M Jnd l,1mc' Oho n "\l..11c.1
.. u11thl·~ecd1•Jm1k Rtch Bruolo..,,,.
\\ "dhndgc v.111he1:umpc11np 1n llh
'•• >!l'IJll pl.i\t'r' ti• nH·tl'r da'h
''''port H.irbo1 ''>l·nJing 'l'' l'TJ
•1·rrr'l'lllJltH'> 1nduJ tnJ1. Buth lhti
i'11 "h1 "111 ti(' ,nmpc.•1mg nth(' t<
\l .t~•c !11•1" "'" t'n1t·r\·t1 n lh\ filtl•d
'111 It J n1t .1 1"'1Hl'111· 1 ( l,I\ il·a 111
Thi· l<•~ ~1rl <, r.i.1· l'11l p11 1"" ~ .. ,
\ ll'" l 1•.tj..Ut' ,t.Hhh•uh and 111\l'
\un'><'I '' 11 1n H1· ".," \\ 1~xthndgt
High , '"' rn \0111h JnJ l J1)un
lhgh, ', 1k R 1i.h1•t \m11h enll't'
"1th J ' '' .it. m.tr\. H"n .. on ha ·• 'no \ .md K1tchm ,jrr C'' a 4 5~ l
T hl' \\ jCTtO~ v.111 Jl'-41 '>('OJ \and'
\tnx1r I" run the , PC \trll(lJ'l t\ .i
11uh-: :11 h.1lt m1kr
In thl If.IT 1' '°'' I ft() rd." h.11\1l0 "11.
lil'IS ,, 1r.1m aga1n ,1 I 1•n~ Beath
\\ 1l\l1n 1 ,~ \..r anlt \\ ,.,, l 1irram·<'
< Mon.t 1h' \lar "tll l h.lllcngl·
H1" th1111u I l11. l.r .loll Rov. land 1n
the rn1k rcl•H
QCC punter Moss
Ha w aii-bound
Orange l oast ( ollqt·., communt·
1\ collegl ~ll-o\mern:1 punter
Gordon Moss hu rtctt~ a full
~holal"'\htp to \'ontinue h1s coll~.atc
football ca rt"er at the l 1nners1tv of
Haw111
Mo a ~-IO. I CX)..pound" from
Corona del Mar High. ~• an OC(
C1lrttr rKord ..-.11h a two-year pul'lUt\I
•'·~e ot •t Oon 111 It/( He"'
the M1u1on Conference lt'adtr m
19 5 -and ranked third 1n the state
-with an avcrqt of 4l-O.
. finot-team aU..M 1 ion on·
k~n~ perfonn~. -..'Oft 9em\cd lO
~' monacr the ' S 5910fl pru-~. He had a punllna a~ of
• S 0' er the flnah1' pme'\ of the
C'am1>91p.
\
-
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f$WfTOM.f TOUQt.nlMU.ll _..Oll_.. ....... -. n....111._ ....... ,.._,,_, ..... "'"" ........ ,.... ................. .,.... ........................ ...
·C&N ,...,·a..-•<Mri.....,,.... ... ., ........ '*'°'·
-'Taking Steps'
circuitous comic
far-ceinLa ------ByTOMmus ..............
Bick in the early Seventies. British
pla~t Alan Ayckbourn -the
Neil Simon of bis side of the pond-
created an innovative and screamioa·
ly funny comedy called "How the
Other Half Loves," which transpired
in two re&idenc:lel simultaneously.
The play was introduced to Ora.nae
Coast audiences by the Lacuna
Moulton Playbowe, wbicb currently
bu another A}'Ckboum off~ on its
atqe. And. like this earlier bit, the · ~tina is equally u imponant as the
aouapon thereon.
This one, called "Takinc StepS,'' is
p&a~ out in the same buildi.n&. but
m vanous rooms, bal.lwaY$ and. y~
stain-hence the title. Two flipts of
11ep1 are employed (one a windi.na
staarcase on which the actors a.re
required to circle twice before arriv-i.na at their up or down destination).
Unlike "How the Other Half
Loves," however, the staae gim-
mickry ultimately is more eotertain-
ina than the story itseU: a feather-weiaht bedroom farce much like last
1ea10n's .. A Bedful of Foreipen "
only not. nearly . so detennio;;diy
hilarious. lo "Taki~ Steps," Lquna
offers some ribtickluaa character in-
terpretations, but the cbancten
themtelves are hollow and one-
dimensional.
Director Craig F1emina keeps his
audience's eyes flickerina back and
forth across the immense staae u the
plot unfolds on the mufti-tiered
tettina -skillfully condenled on a
sin&le level by tel desianer Steven
Wo1ff Cf"Ri&. One can only imaaine
the coofuSion which must have
reianed at reheanals before the aet-
tinp were constructed.
The story, such as it is, boils down
to a failure in communications -
between a wealthy businessman
(John Grecnslade) and his dis-
satisfied wife (Catherine Rowe) .. be-
twcen her bore of a brother (Michael
Bielit.z) who talks peo_ple to sleep and
his dizzy, erstwhile fiancee (Deanna
Wat.kins), with a bumbtina attorney
(Steve Shaffer) and a mercenary
developer (R. Michael Greer) thrown
in to s(>.ioe the mixture.
Shaffer, wbo manap to wind up in
bed with both the female characters
quite by accident, is the most con-
vinci04 of the cut and the most in
tune wtth the understated fan:icality
of the play. Rowe does her best with a
chlnc1er whOIC outstandina trait is
indecision while Grcenslade plays
bis stuffy Briton to a weU--Oone tum,
etrecuvdy ignorii:i4 vinually every·
lhi~ ellC around him.
81elitz enacts his doltish role with
fine comic enelJ)', even when boring
the others to tean. Greer bites off the
show's physical comedy acms, ·with
an assist from a motorcycle helmet,
and Watkins (who spends much of
her time in an attic closet) has
precious little to do.
There are peaks of laughter that
wash up periodically like the surf, but
in general, Ayckbourn takes too many
steps to aet up bis pp. More
attention to character at the expente
of stqe chicanery would give the
show a Jood deal more comic bite.
"Ta.kin& Steps" continues throuah
Feb. 2 at the Moulton, 606 Laguna
Canyon Road, Lquna Beach. with
performances TuesdaY1 through Sat-
urdaY$ at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2:30.
Call 494-0743 for ticket information.
First-rate 'Earnest'
from Ana-Modjeska
(passed on through careful inbreed· 1na. I'm sure).
Oscar Wilde's comedy, "The Im-But where Lander merely looks
portanoe of Beina Earnest," is beina down bis noae, his more biably bled
bonomi by a tint-rate production by aunt, Lady Bracknell (Carole Phil-
tbe Ana-Modjeaka Players of lips) manqes to look down her chin.
Anaheim. · PhiUips speab in that detached way
A prod.act of the transitional "late Britons brouaht to an art form durin&
Victorian" period, commooJy called the Oreal Empire, speak.ins u if ber ~ py '90&," this invened morality fcelinp danaled unattractively at the
y wu one of Wildn most tn· end of a 1ollJ'"ltick held at arm's
umpbant succ:eues. Wilde was an leqth. Could people really have
eloquent epokaman for the 1ehool of talked this way? .. An for Art's su.e:• He once u-lef1Cld. witb ~• hyperbole, that Schmidt is appealina and believ-
"to ~ ~rhtbree.fourtbs of-all able u Gwendolyn and UICI aood EDlland ~n all poinu of view i1 ene of •tqe businesa. Mcfldden is-equally
tbe i1nt elemenu of sanity." aood as Cecily and hu an enoaina •tllt pretence. Both ladies a6e>W i
Tbe l1C>ry involves a couple of 1urpri~ mastery and coMistency in
~ refined bechelon named Jack the difficUJt accent and lntonationt of
. (Todd ~the uorilllt and their clau. Don Barrett u the aood IClrioui, and on (John I.andei)1 vicar topt up tome of the. exceu
tbe eelf· QI hedonist ana lillineu with calm aanlty and IOOCi
iconoclut. wbo ~ _and win 1enee. Misa Priam (Marion Ouistie)
bMutH\al ~ OWIDdolyD~Debi i1 ~ u the tutor to Cecily,
Schmidt) tho savvy and ist.i-deliveryina a finely tuned sen1e of
caled,UdCeciJy(Ann Marie cfld· comic timina. ~ JOUlll wt emot.i~ tut. but certainly not least.. is the :..10tyranaia~~ bat ~~ :...._ lhoulisb butler, Lant (Mike Ownl)1 ..... ..,.._ .. _ ,,......,.. ....... a weilb'Y pneence. Oweoa iuhnilles
himtelf in and out of rooms, lite JkaUlb cuta a 11rikint comic tometbina out of ""The Addams ~ wltb I proper lriUab deconun f111tily," bil face I veritable ()nck
..... inside I Jobn Cleele . . chorut of COllUMQt.
Lander Is equaUy comical ~ 1bil Dl'Oductioo ahina witb ltyle
habit of looti111 doW'D hi• DOii and {eomethlna Wilde maintained wu
apeakiQI lbroup tem.J-Hdded eyes tbe .. vital tllina"l Ind an amy of ...._ __________ --. taint rarely .. la such lbunduoe
on.1commuity tbll• ._.A *Y enioYable evnl111-~ .. Pridl11 wl In·
urdQI &I I p.m. Ud Suiadl11 at l e.m. ulil Jaa. 26 II tM A•...,m
Ollturl1 Ana Caw, 931 N.ut
Hllt»or llllllvard. For .........
about ....... ,,.-4135.
• # J
Afty ~ ,_ N ie wttfttfll ...... ,.....,,..., .... ""'°""'' ... °"' .... -!ff IO.~ c--C-•t I>~ ol "'° --..c.--c--t'Ottt lftd ·"~ , .. ~ ••• ...... ~,, .. ,
' ·' .... ,,, .. . ~ ' '~
' .. :· t:... f~ ,.~ ..... . .. ..... .., :.....,.
.. ··-"""'!I'·'
..... lllt Cetta .... llM .... .... 1111 Cetta... • .. c.ta ... .,. .... ... ...... •• .. ... 1~.!A-·-·-------..:: ..
NWPT CONDO • Stepe tc "-'ti ... 0-... 2br be DICORATOA PEAF!CT *lrO 1 & ndrm. newly ltOOl Patio. ~ X-lae 2ildfwl 28a 1700 'rta. 1114 ....
bey & ooeM. 9ec 'Y'.:. In-b6de dpl)I w/1 w ett-=t\ 2'Mll + den. Unit redee., quiet, QOOI ~ 1Bf ueo. 28t MIO. l500 dlhwahr 1tove lndwdeCl o.n. ft\ fem,,...., prof --•
teteom, 3 decla1, <ilP gar. •15/mo MO-toe3 neict to pool. Air a hlQhlY tlM Mouovt.. 6~ eeo. Unf E-elde 557·2141 NO P!TS s.1 4HS to w '3 1r 2 be 'helmf o2~A~~At~'':ndo ,..... -mt:,'*'· c:'~= •NIWPOM HEJGHTI• Pvt 1 Ir.~. POOi. l)etlo. * ,_ .... MOO. IV bdl 240-Ul4 lw!~liif!i . .
Hfll 21"iA. '2200/MO 'l!!S 11u mo. lecMIOr a..11 utlla Incl G'lf. No peta,,.. w. Bey fWrlg diatl ~ l F 2546 to,,.,, ent9Ct .. ~·1 .... .... ~-··n ~ blutf•38eCondo. AY9111ntmed720-t422 Sl.M15 llCM31t Incl ~m-:Z~ ~-.Fum1ittbe =&::: ...... ~-------&:lilty iii: 8 rm inCil c:rpt1. tlltlne. frp6c. Al· •STUNNING Lg 18A Ow· . pvt entrence. No cHdr9n . 1111. .,_ W ,_WllllI di i 2bedblOW+kldapetolt tr90tl~ cNc:or 11700 IWt ~ Pool & rec rm 151mTLIU1,;.M1..._8 A28r1a.. ~. tlo. pool. ger. or !*a '400/mo. Utll _.. 711-1111 '1./11M1'• 1100 UM191 ~ ,_ Av• 1mmec11 ~3544 .... 5 1•0 w 1-... 1 6imo-a " .,, WatarlgM Pd 11211mo. ....... .............
• .._.. -• VVl TOllW\hOUM. ~. 1801-8 15th St '50-at3 ...... _..,,.. .. .....
Xtra '**'· 3br, 21MM. luL .... 1141 T&UFF 88A 4be T IH W'M>E CM. MR n+BA laundrt '"'· Al bleN. • ,.,,... nnmte to ...,. I I I' .. hk•. rnuotl mor. l70C wlf-p.Ctoee chl.Wctl, achl, bft1n1 a petlo. 1725mo 2071 Thum 28A on the wet«, t*"Y 28R28A ~ ~. 15 llof
mo.Cf9d.Chg.547·2717 3"" ~~ ~~O~ bctl.S1t50.Al451-210I M4-1442, M2·MM eh TSL MQMT M-·1803 decoreted IHO/mo. 1375/mo.UllCM-4 C....Y .... ,_.tW =· 751-3~:1r SELECT Fum deluxa oceenvtew 5/'Wlcnde REDECORATED EMt96de. =~~,.~~ 5:~~·::1• FerNlef/ltr 2 tllry ...... 50% ,.,.,.. ,,.. .... ._a.._1_ 11_ P~RTIES condo 2Br 21A. all Me5/mo, lrg bMut 1 BR. 2bdrm. petlo, gerage, 2 nice gWIC.,. l2'75/mo. ...1U 1h9d bl * 11. .. • .. __ ... •• , amenttlH . I 1475/mo. .. blttne trptc. Muel .... ~no peca '700. 28R .._.,,, 1be, "'*· Krtt 714/116-7Mt 0911ttt tu ..,... • I , IXYW *92bi!fGI A800E wont ~2br, Refl re·q ·d . Da ye MtA~ 271Cabrtlo.842~1 ow.adult..nopeta.1Yr C.-llrry~
beedl ._ ..., rwtta1 ctoee to ~ ....,.,, mo. 842-0880, .-831-4197 w•••••n rea. s1ao. mo 0n Club ~ "'* WM "' sc = 1 ..:.= •1: bn ~ iinmed S11o0 Cf9d. Cho· 547-2787 na. --· ..... .. ... HOUM AYe Avell. Jen. PU. .. amen. lee conwn iiiiiiillifioil·~-~~~I! 87~7orl38-3123 ... TlllY i.=.;-:v..~= 842 .... l2orM2-1803 18drmw/toft,29a.29drm 24.494-6303 IA50utltapd241.ol61 liM .....-;
If==-: ..1-1 llu 1112 New 3 BR 2~ be Pd 63CM111 Ag1 ,_ M20. E/llde lg 2br 1be. 28a. YeuttM ~¬. 2BR upstaltl 1ba frp6c F~ prof 29f 28e roomy, TD'a.. Sl0,000 •· --
.,.._ -pool 2 penona max. no PfVI deck, jecuz, bttTna ~It • ' • ... -. h M>Od -' NB c:iredtt..,. no ~ a:::r Townhom• on prlv. GloanUc 3Bf 28a ·'s· -. 841-5137 $895 No~ l6$-0M5 gar. I-no i>et• 1 Yr :;-' , UA .. ~.. DeNeon A.-oc ~nu. 1BA 18A deluxe ,_...,. lagoon. 2 car ow. 112 ml Waltl. 10 bCf'I & Udo ...-·•· JM. 1730 mo. On Club .,.30 • <Mp -Pl
ce9tle Condo •:::i yd to bctl. Poolltennle. Sec. 11300/mo yrty M4-9t . SHARP 2BR. qtta l drl». HOUM AYe. Avell J11n. ~IN 3 Ir C.M. condO. ~f!LI ~. wet bet, rorec: 11300/mo MO-«M2 mle8'iBllU dlshWUher, ger1199, no 24. 4~3 n-ernkr tndfy poo1 Jee ~ s::I:
wardrobee, mlcrowe~ NICE 18A A800E In-"-* Luxury Ha rbor Rldg• .. . peta. SMO/mo.-546-8271 ••uoo1st£•• '400 -+;4 uttl 722-TM2 . J.o tMll9 .;;.~ ._'J. tr• compector. etc __. Cond0--48t 3'Mla. llYing · · ._...•:a'
Avall now. SIOO/mo loc. Only '485 mo. er.cs. dl""-&tam'1;4;:-IPllmlTI Spacloua 3br 2be "'*· Lux, newly dee~ 28A f'om. 38r N.I . apt, 1 ~..-No =I
883-1111 ~ Chg. 54'1-2787 -~ Y' Jjl(ge Garden new ca.rpet, p.+nt & apt. Lg •outh patio bctl, tndry •· n-amttr. Cel Unde {714~ •
38R ZBA-to baldl, on lndlaMpola MM 5 rm ~a otty llahtL Guard· Apta. BMutlfUlly land· drapea "951mo. CNI-S 1475/mo yrly 87~ 11 1240. mo. NO-l25S '•--ll•Mll o
Indeck, d/w, new 11P91I., hM upgraded kll lndry *' cornml Avt ~eb 1•t. ecaiped,.r,:daNo~~ dren welCOme, IMM-20l7 *Ull llU "'* Male 10 lflr 4IA apt "' •
. ,· .. -s~. ~~ carpet, beam oalllngt · hkug• g rauy yrd S2e501rno. 780-M36 1:fn:-s59s.C1s UNIQUE 8actlelot S540 :!Bf 18a. 102 Antlbea. Don b .. ch, NI. '300/mo. ,~A~a;-.r;;-1r;1•!11,ll1.11111F • 11150 ~now. 573-4243 539-111 Agt coet -ZBdrm W•Ba 1705 1BDRM wlearpott M40 875-1244 evs. 522.-715 850-8573. betwn t-Spm I" -
Ac:cultom to luxury 3bf SINGLES DELIGHT s~-:-~=~~ 28drm 28a 1750 ~g1rer~atlo, ~~· .. 7 1111 IUlllU M/F 25-35 to"" 2br 1Pt ='=",,,.. c.I
2be hm 1Pace ege kit db• Cute I Cozy Cottag9, f/p 11095. Agl 75$-5090 2250 Vanguerd 540-98211 . 28dnn unfumllhed, WID COM. 1350+ l200 <Mp. l50-2iA ~ 9ii1.-.. gar I 1300 dalall r 1Upar dMI. Only 1425 -----YIW ••-•• S""" A -•I ..... 1 1 ,__. ulll Incl a vall 211. 53M111 Agt CO.I mo. Cfed. Chg. ~7-2717 VILLA BALBOA 2 Bdrm, 2 2~ tv.ea $725 --..... """ v .. a._, •. -·· 873--0518 .,.., 5pm. -=-p-ASS-="""'POA~=T,....,..L08==r::-:-1n--..i0-.
Ba PwtthouM. Spacloua, 151 E. 2111 541-2408 212• 114ft ... 1 <815)21M710 . COMt Ptaa.,...... COft-• OPLX· 815 Marigold. 3 BP Xtra lg 4+ 2be, frplc, :· bright. neutrel cofor1. a.411• 1111• Nwpt P9nn 3 & 4 8r 28a M/F 3& 2be v. ecre beCk tact VloMit Plr9ll
3ba, 11400. mo with ~l'Mt ocean · Gate guarded. CALL .._. yrty mtt. $105()..$1350. bey,horleprop.Newport (714)5'4-i7ZS 840-0900or720-9218 ml 25mo.C<N.Chg. Eve lyn 840-4888 or "4e9t:field 2Br28a.famllyl'"6come. VltlaRentaltl75-7015 8ch Large pool, INltute
YUPPIES· 38r 2be dbl gar 54 •2797 87~9 DIW. drapea, end ow. parton. '400. 852·1251 Lett I ,.... .. canyon · prtvecy. tie.m l ut. ....... 1141 VIiia Belboa 28f 28a. fwn.. , .... , AP..,....,1 laundry lac .. utll. pakj. 1111 l&Y AIU NPT BCH. Fl rmmt to w U& MEWXND. IO:t rr;
cell, 11250. 780-0189. m. a 11y rm, S 1200 Vitia Rentall Spettlllna dMll large apla large play trM. no pets. 20102 Bltoti St. 28dnn 2 3br 2be IPt. Metr bdnn E/bluff .,.. .,... .___ ~~· . ..__ It 875-4912 OR 754-1712 tor fanMliea with 1 or 2 S700 mo seoo depoalt. 8-th w/lrg blMooy. Utlle $200/mo + utll. 53 1~131 1eyan cet t9n1bm !Mftt .. DalllftllllTm """'""'• grt -.-. rwn. children Ne9rpartt H•t l-Incl $700 No P•t• 1w ~ 7eo-a •r hd() +full kltc:hen, ut1f 11250/mo. Ml-t123 VILLA BALBOA 28r 11MS&. pakj . ..0 pets. · WI lffD 751-1828 or 833-33e3 Pant Newport,~· tenn6a.1iiiNiiiiii._.iiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
pd Hurry ontyS375 ,_ tnlM 1144 Febbey/ocnvu.Fum 28drm28-S72il W11nt • 11l1ct1011 ofv-t ltlr wln/tmlt(r Twnhme11 ... .. m _.__. 11•.;.... S1400-$1200. 846-4375 398 w. Wlteon 531·5583 IMng? We CM ofter 111\Y-1&11 l&Y AIU S325 + ut111 ~187
•-• -xury thing trom •em ... apt lo 20102 Birch St 18dnn 1 ~..,...,.,=----..,.~-.,.-
:. "' ~~~"" ........ f)
~ ~
....... "'«·~.-...,.,....
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Beet StrMt In Old CdM LG 48t 38a+ Mp. tam Princeton Townhom" La Cilliftte llH •WlllUll WILUll• • 4 bdrm hOuM. If loolt· 8ath"wllr8 belcony. Utlls ;:: ~:. ';;:=.!: ~50 CI C... Endtw poealbllltlea for rm .• frplc. Sooth Of PCH. for ...... SHO/mo un-ocn Vu 381 2L'. w:& to 21r. 1v.a.. bltn1. new cpl• Ing In CM, NB. or HB Incl $8 0 No P•1• . thll extra lg lot ptoperty. Immediate occup. $2000 furnl1hed + utll• or bctl 1975. 219 Calle Sar· & drp9, DIW. bltln• aa2~ think ol us first for tnat 756-l8.28 Of 833·33e3 • utll 75e-C281/ev.
al 1112 ~to Iha Wl1er. Sen-mo. 509'A ACACIA. $1500/mofumlahad. c.. ena 496-0500/786-74t• +seoo. Nopet154G-448-4 Oholce ol IOMI llvlng. Cannery Vig lux 18R Prof MIF. ""'lmkr. Spac
llbly priced at 1575,000 &33·2141. Deyt Only. 954.7554 LAeveM .. age 8actlelor Eltld~ Qui.t TSL MGMT 842·1803 vaulted Cell 1 cer ga( 38R NB c:ondo PYt BR & • *""' UllD• * r:r ~~ 111
L 28r 18a Cott1199. 28 R 2ba condo. frplc:, IHlla Ctlll ltlrt WID u111 pO. S-495. +-$.450 WllTWI YILUll bay YU. S7So. Incl u1111' BA. '533/mo. 840-5 128
FOlll> ADS
ARE FREE
Cat
..... Bluff'• Priced Opptyt · · rr= garage 1825/mo 11100. pool/Jae , new 1111 MC 531-3848 avall 2/1. BacMlor $.495 Avall Feb 1. 673-3n7 Prof MIF, tpedou• 38R L!t' 38r 21.AtBa End linil.-2 et.ta ... 1124 Avl 2i 11t 7141835-0344 . cpt1. 2 dr gar. $1200 mo. cki: to SO. Ci t PiaU 28( ~a•a Ma• a.-~ Ctrpetlng & Dfapes ATTRACTIVE 2BR 1eA COM hM. PYt bath. gar ~~~~~~~~ hUoe petloe, '*•new Int. 875-5305 aft 5pm. H~Ba Abobe Only 1550 -·-_..,. 2 BR 1'/• bath $685 • Cloae to bch. 1550 . .;::
Ml-1111
==l~l~ U.:t~. :L1oi~t1~i.~~ ~~.tw~d~~~::;; **lllTIU** mo.C~ect.ChG,541-2787 1~~~ra~01~~ry a..~ct,:;dspa-~:17 ~::.,:-=so~~.~ 673-0822 FOUND Baby ~
"9ht at 1229.5001,.. Prine only. 546-0074 for bch 1f:'so 2131433-3088 CALL us REGARDING Tulia IHI S~/mo. 673--0343 Prof mother .... rmm1 ~w ~~blk~~ ._..__I... Information or appt Nice cott-oa: 2BR tbe. IRVINE RENTALS 3+ 11Xba'. ~·· grMt 931 W. 19th St. ~48.0492 Wet!•lde 28r 28a. pvt Furn Oceanfront Apt, view. ~o ltlt~ 3:;,.:~~ '
a . .':,•::!":!':NYTIMEI I 1 w-u. 1-.1-a •-aat .. "'-· O ••"5 patio. carport, stOfage rear IBR wfnar Jan 20-m. """'"' ,_, Found DOBERMAN Jen. _,,.........," 1111 • -rplc. cat gar. ..,. to "._ -11wn area. NL .-mo. IWllAft 9IYE II area. lndry lac Next to June 15 $.4So '" utlla llp. 95 552-5187 11. s.nta Ana. NMt O.C. •11Y ........ Large 2 etory 5 bedroom. bch. s975
imo.
673
•
1039 111-JIM Cred. Chg. 547•2797 29R tBA. collage type, Costa Mesa Goll CourM Wsl'lr/Oryr 1YI. 675-5449. QUIET nwemkr for 2Bf 2be Colleoe. 547-3503
2 ltory 3 bdrm. 2 beth, air 3 bath tamlty home. Low UNIQUE Trf..lewl. Nftly 3Br 2a.. 2 cer OW· No pets Aprtanb private patio, er , wld $675 Sml pet 549-o.433 I •
2
BR
1
houae, 2 t>lllJ to beh, FOUND ~ T.,,,.,,
conditioned condo nr malnten.noe yardehand r~. ~D2be ":::· S1100LM(5t8)M8-5510 A---• 2112 T'!_ku~ri'~r''· 84~5~r;,g.q WISIOE 2br 2ba, new L~~ S~lr beac~ 1375.+ utll 84-3130 Nndycotorwl belgacol,
8 C. Plaza. Pool, IC>&. In F~.!~111~ eoc:on. m o,, te<>o .",.,.gar7.,..1 ' (815)348-0440 (L.A.#). ...au ~L • ~ paint no pets. S8 10+ MC. lhop~ View. S 1250/mo Rmmte to lhr Hunt Bc:ti Hrbr Vu Hmae 640-1117 = + carport. ~ "''........... . . gar.. __,.. "' Priced below tha reet Sn5 PL• I...... 19r 1Ba up1telra. Gar 646-1549 or 780-3832 Ownr 6191753--0719 modern 28' 28&. rec FOUND Fem ~ c.. ·~ ~~ 1
Tra dita·ona l C..ta... 1114 de1alte 2br 2be 53Mt91 Completely refurbl•h•d r~~A~~~01~0 Baal. ltecla Luxury furnl•h•d 18 r .... ,GW~,:,.5!!;.., ReM Fem Cellc:o C.t. Fem
---
COLDWeU
BAN~C!Rll
2BR HUX tm unit. t Agent tmell ,.. 2BR 2BA In W•1mlnlter. ~ .. • Condo. MC ;at•. pool, rent. "utll _....no.. ~ ~ W/BainrMQ ID.· Realty car gu. 1750/mo. UNIV PARK SPACIOUS3 $595 +aec895-1108 EutlkM 2Br 18a. 1ng1 llL-ITllmAI etcSIOOOlmo ~270 9"' 48t CM,.._, 1275 + M ... Chea..,._ 1'etr
531·11Mor873-3117 1 · · .......ia 1-·a JL p l I parentpref.Nlsmkr P•1' Delightful oc.-n ~. <Mp 'l•utll 11pr1va Nf Mbl.t>rown.FemDlilme-631-7370 BR. 2ba. gar."""'" ~.: I •H H Ha 1 oil. $650/mo. 845-a8 t3 Spacloua 28drm. 28a, ..,llT lllUI t • 405 -2511 tlon wllrg ~ Hulky. 28r 2'A8-Condo. 1 ml to no petl. 1 1050. 733-2,,_ 2117 dahwshr, lrplc. Plu1h s9251mo 38R 28A lower rwy D"S4M41..;:i*I-
• I •--L--IMI ocHn. Aval! 2/1/H . ~ ... la I 28d 1L newty kor-E·Side 2Br tBa. beam crpts. drp1 Lota of un.tt ga;. laundry room Y01Un9 prot i...n ,..., u.--1895/mo.731-te99 _ rm. '·iv. ll calla. frplc, gar. 2 per-ck>Mta 8Mu11fultyland-· · • eametollnd&rentcondo FOUNOFISNlftlCtoee.1 .1-... 11 ,_ expan1'9 OCHll ated YHrly. lk to IOnl, no '*'-$100 .. 111, scai>ed 960-8331 actou :c:;n °'bM:h In NB/CM 952-5008 Of 'If, YCty ,..,.,,... ' 11t. ,__.. ••• W 38r 28&, dbl OWll09· gdnr view frplc Jae lge bMCh. Catpet1. bllndl lat MC S225. 550'.1795 . S GJr an~2 1803 835-2122 CMryt S.A. 432-M20 Evea 48R 2~b•. 2 ltory. Incl ff50. 908 w. Whon atn~k lndry $1100 $750 No pell 875-eeoe • 2BA 1'.\BA Twnhae New T l M •
1315.000. Creettve Ways No pet• 545-7983 1 unfum. 'Furnlthed &/~ _ 11 T11•1rt* WTllll MITI Ill& crpts. drps. bulltln1, lrplc, Hwpt Hot• Cape Cod 38r Ulftl f tr ltat F~~.!'!..° Glctn .. '!:': v:=
Me-0520 493-0«8 3+ bl ar991 good pet poulble 417·2779 ·-. ~ Baoh, carpor1, trig, mlcre>-encl gar w/9*:. opnr 18a Colet ngtibrtld. Sml Z741 r.._y. "*-----I =la ~=· Elsld: l~c. se50lmo. . StodlO apt rncl utll $395 wave, Incl utll $.400/mo S700 Qu1at 53&-0921 pet & 1 child oil $950 -.. . .,.. 545-8349 UYllllD !~ Crect. Chg. 547-2787 31BR1 2dBA. ~1tl~~ view. Id. 31BBr 18a2 oceantrscx;:Josoo SMALL 1BA. gar. SOOlmo 28A 2BA w•r lndry Nice sec 642-0823 LY meg EndoMd3""' ~-carst PCM "5uND Houle Key on Or· RX'lfm5I HO nc u .. r.,, •"' w r + car gar Call Sllery1. 673·3 117 O ' tr 1 age "" ... , • enoe A-.. In front of Com· ~...... Monaco 38r,e'I:. fam-rm, Atmoat 4BR. 2 ful!BA. gar. S12501mo. 51·3037 ftUIOT lll-UIO 4 1~~~ ~ ~o"i!ets ON CANAL . 2BR 19A. no $95 00 850-5357 pteT. on curt> 642·2711 1 ..,._,~ .!;1..:..:ncs ~ xtra lge yrd .-
795 t:i!s~.~~ -~~~mo. A~i~ ~B~~= Lge 1 Br apt. on c1na1. USO. Call Jee~ 631· 1266 ~~ U~tl~gr:;i· P::; ",t term 4 FOUND· Keyct\8'n wf1tl 4
t.elln Femlly room C.lallna *"' Heat the BIG I BRIGHT. tBR ocean vu. lrpt. 1 . pello. lrplc. mlcrowv.. ••r ,: pe Nie $t50 Or Belt offer lot.Cel16"44o 1127tol.O with graclou• country ... llT llllT . • 400 great vu. newly decor. lge I ~·~\·> ,, S750 650-8145 LG !n5RXGE sAEb for keys. CdM H_S par1clng
hobbvg.room, 4 BR prut turf. Plan 4.' 38 R 3ba. w/r.ft carpet, form din.. 49-4-8457 or 49-4-3872 D/W, poulble boat sllp. EASTSIDE Lux. In I pine ~ PENTHSE VERSAILLES S3&-4 189 C
INMd'e. Belt locallon. Hlghty upgraded, MUii only S485/mo. Cred. LAGUNA BEACH North S800. 759.9491 forest, lge 19R, O/W, frig -:--~--18r $775. Sec bldg. rec STORAGE GARAGES F~N21~g In :t~ 144-... be tffn to be •P· Chg.547-2787 end. 4BR, 3BA, VIEW. Lr 2BR18aduplell.1300 ~:;o,and w~lerAgal~~ *""~* fac,pool548-5953 12x20'&12>t21 1112842·51501ft4p'n
preclated. 1192,000, BLUFF.,.... 3Br 2'Aba. 2 Avall 2110 110 leaH. ,?, furn. Avlll thru 6186 Nomot!' a..'::.08S: · 1+ t + frplc, refrlg. stove. veraa111esov1111 Balboa Npt 9cl'llCotta Meta.,. .. ~---.,....-,....,....--,~
M4K exletlng tit, owner tty, frplc, cath. oell1. cul· $2000 mo. 417-1445 S775. 815·968--0352 . pe . -All ut111 Pd Move-In coat. 1 & 2Br S725-S 1195 24 Hr 9CCMa 548'-3878 Found. Long hair fem Shih
• IAIYll •ITllY ~~811der carry bacll o.w. 11000 54Mt84 "'Lua •!eel 1112 OCEANFRONT 2BR "' .. 2BA HtBA. pvt lndry rm only $700. F• 5367 Agl 531-4980 ~~ud ,rr:I~~· T~
mMIWI -OPEN HSE SaVSun 1-4 Charming Ill bungalow Ju•t B:titi new 2iif 2L ~. white waler . view ~:1e N~n~llpaSe~I~. ftLllDT Ill-.... llM. In I '14.f GarfleldlMagnot1a. HI.
FabUlout tlorM lor ax-10KAM.AUICOURT !!!!.!''~ ~J!~ Twnhrnel. Pool,.,_, 19n-S1100 per mo.yrly. RE Call Jeen 63,.,286 SUWlll YILUIE PALM SPRINGS 1 yr 962-1410
ecutlve llvlng. 30 ft lit iLDL ..... l IM ..._..... tny nit, gar, patio, lndr, Prod. Connie 675-8404 leeM on 35' 5th wtlMI FOUND Nltt•Shoe & Sock
down bat OYeflooklng ....._ Agent coa hkup. Micro, frpl, cet>le VACANT NO FEE S 1900/mo wl~lon 2nd on Ba.,......,. Or & Jam-
9Qff courae. etereo room. NW SIR 2L GOldel1 .. et. CIRCLE THESE S.verll Unite •Mewl 3Br 2Ba 'h t>lk to beach WIT Mn year A t>e1u11tu1 lot t>o<ee 'Rcj Pleue cell &
pool tabte .,..., 25" mlr· ap. rent 1 130. peta. 8luffl Check thl9 E·lide hM ren· U75-S950 Call 3&4-5el4 $995/mo. 11t/laat+ MC Live whefa you he"e ~~.!ry~~560:11 rec· 1ndet1t1ty 551-a&ao
rored wardro~ w/OOMll brMa. &45-e45e .., w/frplc bltln• & yd lor Stepe 10 ~ 28t 2 be Agl 535-3090 2BR 1'.\BA TownhouM no •Spectacular &pis r • FOUND Orenge Male cat.
::!'1t=:ooo. IPEllllSE kld•**!8!.n:w111* Condo,W/0 ,Mwtydec, IJl1lr1at ltac~ pe11,noga1age.681 Vlc-•1&2Br 1&28asultas Ca rport pool. l•c C... ill vcty Tutun & 16th CM DOROtHY HARDCASTLE -"79 comm. pool & .,a_ '800. ~II tori• S5e5tmo e..2-74041 •Spac1ou1 townhoules 545-7131 or 731-5198 trc 650-6642 Saturdey & SUncSey Look, you II Ilk• thl• mo. 419.4534 da y1. . --------•Flreplaces Iliac latalJ ll kit/lat ---::----,::--c,....,...,,.,-~ '·'l .., ~·· Brand new Two Bedroom elegant 3br 2be wlfrplc 498-e122 ~ l wtlndl 28( 2L \IPl1 o:;pi; 2Br 1•..;B1 TwnhM End •Private balconlH or • Found Pet Rabbit.
Mobile Homee newer tctt 2 G'I' 1895 at M50 Ill. 1rw • Unit, gar 1912 WallM:e Garden pallOI ..... rlM l~tl 2751 1108186 In MHdows
321wa:=· c. M. MM191 A41t ~1 ·~>--J!!! ee1~Att 8~Mgarage :S~5~~1: ~~~=1• '
04 Fem approx 30 vrs BOO. EXSt8Wlf 6u~11 2S&f ~~r~eH•~ P!'!e~""':; • EMt1kM 4BR. tam rm. f V'etr sc;;;;'1",4 6:°' certu .. J Jlar 2tll Wft lln 20 ~unit 10xgrou
250•1124 0ys UITm.. PIR Rent · '215 "'*· ~llo, huge yard. lownhome. Prof decor'· · Eutslde small 1 br pert. 1t3 Lighted tennis couru 1~~:.~~ :,v: 1J~9 1725,000 Bt!r 953.1220
LS-38A •If--"" room lllm llE&it Pete OK. 1120(!, 111 I atM Pool/~, i 1d8/rno new.r defuxe for 1gl adult, super cleln, •2 Swimming pools _ _ FOUND wm male Pe>oc*, .Ni abundeni"'~b IP--.&11111111• last. LM opt. AVlll Feb 1. 0-1199· Vy qulee. e.a.nt Hr 2k mini view olocn $.475. No pets 990-2962 •Streem1 & ponds Udo 111e. quiet, PV1 M STR luiaH1/0Hlet lat v c t y H 1m111 on &
=.Thia .. not. A-..0-534-IM5 530-0805 548-1291 patio S1000/m ~3 M N6a6Mn. Rnr 875-7070 -EISIDE cn7V 1 bdrm. Ilk· •Sorry, no'*' STE BR-8A-Den·Hall F Z711 9u1Char<f. $912-8313 ..,_,, _, •Fumllhlngs avall NIS d • but 1119 atrely worth ,.;;;;ttllJ 1 -a-Eutlide clMtl 3BR 18A **RENTALS•• 18R Apt. w/baleony. walk Ing reeervetlons for 1 mat. resp · M9 gr n '* DES K SPACE * LOST ca1. lg long hairtd
morethal'ltt'elowprlceol ~ ..... l\M. Obi gar. No ~t1. 11000 to $3000 per/mo. In ok>Mt, lmmac S7501mo quiet person to enjoy WHY NOT CALL entr. no acc... hM Wat 51501mo Gafoen off1oe '1f'IY mate Rewwd! Of•
$152,100.751-3191 Crzrta .. IUS 1715/mo.54&-MSO Agl.Martl842·1183 e31-5082or840-2098 g.arden ept Uhl paid llS-1111 bar.frlg .Qnbd.tel,w/d LgPttlo wit h BayV\ew angeAve,CM 531·1H•
2 ____. i!1! at p!!S! ...._. ,.__. T__...~ $435 ' SSOO sec . avall SIPS·bay/tenn A\11 3 15 GOO<! par111ng 6'2·5010 Of 846"50401\1 "'9" sp SElECT ._,,..ery ..,.. _,,,., Econo-branc:t 3br 2be nr ......... .,.... • .,._, ... ,.,.,,. 28r 18a unfUm, gar S820 F b 1 631·2124 E S750 + dep 875-«852 rlll'll,,_~RTIES View Memorlal Park. N'#pt dahwehr lncld S895 4Br 38&, 2 ltry, new 18r 18& furn 1575. No ~ SUWlll YILUli 3000 1368. 545 & 520 Sq Lost· Male Shltl Tiu Die PROPE 1960 each. 841-8428 53M191 Agent coat crpt/~lnl. air, dbl G'I'· pet1, no em«re 873-8246 E/slde spec 28R t'\BA 15555 Huntington v 111aoe Own room/be uM 01 hM/ Fl 1617 WESTCLIFF, 20. CdM nf Por1 Theelr9. iiiiiiiiiii;;;Fiiiiiiii Cemet IOI at WMt 1 g • • PO O 11t•n n 1 • TwnhM garden apt Lg Lane from San Otego kit Nice Meta Verde.,.. Nwpt B<:h 5, 1-5032 Agt Aeo.ard 419i-5883 ..,.
-'-
1 -V Memortal Pant. L-J... 11400/mo, AllWI lmmadl U25. 28f, ~llo. So of pvt pello. dshwr, lndry FrMay north of Beach 1325. Incl ut 550-1722 __
-·--mnater . ·-Dye (714)711-2575 Of PCH, rw bCf'I I lhopl. I c pool MC $745/mo F . ' Me9a v 525 SQ It S41 25/rno Lost SAPPHIRE RING. ~ '260 obo. eat-1432 3BR 2"6BA, tennl1, Ev/Wknd (213)402-IM7 F'reetlcpt/pelnl 573-3852 :o·~ .. Curt 11 53 1·1™ ~cF~~den. wes on "="'/kit r:fv69· 4t>r BalbOI Perun PYt entry& 112 ct atone •'y,:s •Jan
......... lliu ili ill :::.Ci1J:.~:~· •OCEAN VtEW48r,11vt, 38t21eApt,frp6c,dedt,2 ··~~:s•1 a.,re la WID.SsOOI~ 558-7530 bath Clean780-11192 ~d1~t~3~;9<4-3et~B. 3::':.;~u;:. '1~J,.n=:*: LllllYH•l'I !e.-·:::.r.\~~: m~~=.:i:~ ,.-w ~ N&tt\ Leguna. ...... /!!!Ill ITl l 4~m~a11c!1~1:~n Found Gotden R1w pup
tal. Fir..--. beamed CM area. A u im.tor or Brand new 3br 2,M>a f/p S20001mo. 840-20'4 I AAND NEW 28A lBA • l Frptc. pa110 Nr bCh Nice Ulm.. warm :Mertvl 2 ••Of'f fem H B t>twn Lake 6
otmnge. fwllnmlnO ::!J current ownr moving? fncyd.dOlgar,paeolt.~ 3BA 2beduplalt.upeuft. tng, crpt. DIW. '843/mo. Lg 28r. In 4 Ptex New S925 494-19{Sel49'4-3 196 ll'fll• l\nancial omo. bulldlng ~75~~t ~~~-7= ~loc:etJon. Aed Mr.Po.(213)824--5333 color S10te.842·tee8 ~ )ac pvt~ Avellmmed.17S-t001 paint Car~ts drapes I Studio Blll tobCf'I ocnw. Wlc~~ LcM ,.._ 852·1700 ~t--3002 to &218,IOOI • · • No pets. 2248 Canyon Utlla ft; Moal Cow No ,._,_ -°' ...._ Verde Ur 1y.a. Bttlna. 2 car pattllng. H9WW ~ 29a, trptc. s51S+ dep 532-1768 1)9-2&9o $1 l UO/'Mlly .,....... CdM di• Sult.. AIC ---------. (714)673 4400 a.lalt r...ty ~. fl'plo W/D. 60 yrde to bcfl. ~.~Avt2/1. · pet• 7S1mo 4 TV. ma6d ~. ,.,._ amplel)kg,utlll&janltor la t =· Qd loc l117S 1 1396/rno,yrty.C.il S10IS/mo720-t422 LOFT APT Bacil w/frplc.1Studlo..pvt &qulat.OcMrl coftM, haee9d 1>001 .'-:Zl66EC..Hwyl7~ --. (211>t•2121 ttt-...a...... -T.-..Ofe474-0IOO ~731412awt!MI& pv1 ~flO/pool SS7Sfmo ..,.._ No pees Gnlwtr ..._.to~ !Otcfl1 ••• HAllOI liiiiiv:== o.ve Hme M0-1531 aft 8 wtldyl « Mice at Upper unlUrft 28t 18a lndds ratrlg a..s.&404 I Pd $550 • MC 497~97 9Wllt. 115 N. co.t Hwy, •••T BTll aiW Can
• 752-3474 wtldyl Mao 19l, lelt + MC, N-l 1 BR wlpool & Ind ~ leeet\, 494-sn. Offtce 8'*le a&H*t Free llal"ll!'lit!v"§l'l'llT"'f"E"Rr--nta"'/~o~v.~11
..... 1111 ~v:a~~~: 38A tum dUpm. 122~ ~:::1.7:ar'· ;,ove & frig turn S5~ .• ..,., MMm81'8. =~~~if°.%"!, ~ ;'Y
5
i.\:9 1 biOdi tooew1 I& SGr Do not dlleurb 4-..721 25th St, 1/2 bll lo bef'I.. l300 dee> M2·140t I Wl(ty NM• now ...,. entr..--l yrsstertlnQit • • ~1 1tltchan,.; gar MESA ww Exacuttve •
725'"'°· 2131
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7
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• CPJl'LllM LAG 21R trplc, gar . patlO. 'r" 1,.,, ""qi .. 1111~ S1H.60 • & up, 2274 s1 87 '" 7141790·17}9 1 -.:==~~=~g :~~~~~~=:1:::~::-::Aeant::::::;=;-;; 48A .. ~ tp9.. 58A SBA Somenat. a.a. l9d , ... opee, ~ ..,. bit-In•. CIH n 1550 b b~J1t .. 1m ctPI' Nwpt ltvd. CM ..... 7'46 Small office 1p1e1 lfiXIQ§ll ms..,.;;;+;;( L::=:..... 1w'aA 29A condo"' S C ~&.,. ..w.. wind. Comm. pool,*"· No .,.._ Adle pref 1700 &4&-5300 for apc>llcatlon IU I• Lii• l3001mo Loe E 17th St ·5 30pm My~ Ml Or _...._ _____ oiiiiiiiii ___ ..... -.1 Plua. Pool, •P• + 11400/mo. 54tttl0 11800/mo 759-0540. u.. A\4 111· ..... ~ MESA VERDE 2BR 1ba. *9W P.-c:CO.. Hwy C.M M6-33M ~tor Bni youn 957·1~.,."""
DU"-!X•28f tbe ... lo-c.port, l(ldalpeta OK. Mela Verde EJll90lllM 38r leyffont 2br 2k pvt apa. ** °""-!X. iinOlt qu'9I OUkle-..c. MSO. ~ Jeedl. ""'"8 TV WATEAFAONT BLOG MOTHER'S ASSISTANT
tf.l'Ct4. '27&,000. 521 "'8/mo. ..... .. he. 2la,... ,,,. ... rm. come>""" W/belUt tum & ........... Md. yerd, 11t/laet & MC. 4M-11341 S 125+ -.. no__. beeuttve IUl19 1350 '"' 2-8PM Wkdy9 N.8. c. .&•nation. By owM' HA 29A S7"/mo;,.Aet pt S1S50 Deb 722• 114t petlo Nm. HM••..,. IOOd .,._MN. Mt-llOC>l .. • .. --' 4tt\ floor w/w 842.......,. req MfWood 1"-l otl
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Ulal ... a l3h.1 ~ T/HM: aii :1==~8=7 "' 11e MIO. ,., lie M2S mo. 28A. tBA. patio, • 1n I$( Y'" s rent .... ••. ••a•·u· Mono-Frt t to 5 --HOUSEKEEPER •
... y ......... . a. G11111na•. Ml·"'' tor Information
& aurprlllngly
low coat. .
• Iba, 2 -......... ...,. • ll50. S.C dap. aoao M-pool. i.undry room Eut· --PAN ION tor Elct•r~
•· ~'90. IHOlmo. layffont-~-t~~ .ion.No petl l3l-M27 lld9toc..ctoeeJoall. fURNISt:flO or PMl.c:;mrn c ...... """" ~ »uat.,-~
Diwtd °' Nldcl9.,_.1171 ~· t IOOI 17347'77 2 iM jff 111iOAllWit 1411· Bey. UNFURN'5HCD "°"' *"* _......... ntl flat\, drive & Oooll. M-~ NICI ... oountry ltltc.. o.,,:...w~-A¥9 .... , 8 .0 Pina. TllMOMT '42·1803 ~ ..... ,., vw.,.. fSideqft ffoWT F, 30 ln/wll. Cell~
ouetof11• d9oor 1" .... MH/mo. c.11 MMttl ..... 3 lldrm 2be. flllUS ~In N.I , "'* ~ME.SA vtAOE 840-IM7 ~
.,.. tllllmo + Ored. ·elliill~..:· ... ili,.ICl'llO.~.A -.r· "°ed:!-COTllS. n-. c.-.a, .. no -..._..,, HOUllXEI """ "'· ~1·1111 ~t1t0o/mo: Ntc>.wport~, ::.....a:.:-... AV91 SJJ113Ll.,... Htl I ti AH* ~ ~.~ct;1;.;:r.~
,, ;Ai), Nol • 1, Mt'°"""' t720 No..... 11 !Ng ..a -.tf Sef'fy, lfM 911 eq ft ,... C M 1_,,~=~· =~~~
ll*e.. ... ... ....4 " Cif;oft .., .. .-t1. ..... • 1m m ;c c..a ..a.,. w-1241 HOUlaC"""'. ~
mo. CNd. a..147..rm 9.:9' o!. t rH t toe. WOD•LAI• WILLA• ""'..., t It I. AWi ,_ 1, .... ,.. & TOA 1oetw ...,_. ~~. ,;:-~~
Pt. ... COii)() ...,.... S1400/MO. 719-ftll .&•.a.--••n• ~ i.t, lltle lfte . ....,_ ,....,.,oflllcl9&.......,.. ,,_. ._ ~ -.. o.. ....,... & ...,..~.-. a 1.ao1 • n1.-10 .,..,.,.. ~ ~ '"' .... ...; ca.i .... fllll.l*llrwl.,.,,wld ,..,."'° ........ ...,. _; .... _ --.. ... ,. M ,_ ..... ~,....,.,..,..,__,,..lff\ Qlie(;r•"'t _. ~ .... _. ... --. ..... tit wottt I .. _,. -._ ~-now '''°°""" + ~wreh...,Y'i So c..tl'IMJwWto.-,.....,t Ap•rt,."b ........ ,.,.._Ulla • & a.i .,.,...,, ll00~...,...7 itUHi i5 tk ,.. llt«ll ~...,,,._ i.or£tU\£AS( N••fH>f' luctl So pd 14-1•....,.. -Ulllllill _...-__ ._,..._,_.,.._....__ _ _..,.
crpt, .,._ -.e. DIW .......... ~-A ...... ,,,..,,__ 14~-it-io--.•1t-A PAQOUI I • IM. S1IOO ... ,_,.._ 1.tttl lhll \1t11t aon '-M'ft .. lltoMa Harb or l lvd, Coata
,.,... ..... dllf ltr, INry 1111 •• '"' ('11~111 1415 • JoM ..... U Me... H t OH frO"'
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••• oenAL --~'°""° nwa·1..-11911-... _, •• 11 ...... ..... ™™™ ..-. .... tlllMol "*"' :M'Qtl, ... cab.,.:: . •'W,.fdp--= Oen---~a W d ~· F••t pee.ct --.aie •TF'W.. peraon WhOIUale FU1 & Parl•""'9 bp not neectedfOtoftlce~. -'· 12 ~.~ ~~~1==r· o-
r _.._.. .......... •-mt .. --or ro-enowroom f'f OC. A/tf-1• pradUCe, OOMIT'Hlan • nee., ~ peya ...,., !Wit~ & Qlft·I end tbm _ .. , .,.......... -• ca....a!~ ~ wtd/0t ~ pon Nieedl fOOd ptlOM • fl •• ~'Y ....... -... ..... lllPfY N t193 genetlll dNil Uf». llW Ohrt NOi•, etet*> con-• tt<lftJACK 20 Tr •"'"'".,.,..'°'_. .. !: •.,..,..NJ'"*' .,,.r'd 1yping16&llle.Prottrleftd.WMll'IG ~. "'-* ptan&...--Mume• aoeo.ttwy.ue'ti houre.,.....ea11~ I06ett10.Ntrldcl30. ,blmlnl.ucetoand DlltNeMln .. •. .__ II cai1Cermenllt-ot17 ..... envtrONNnt w/64 -Mlle..,...,, henda--Oft NH d19cltlMM & ----.f1&-2'11 176-Ntt."911emae .. ......,. ""6'M7't
....-----.., r exp..-i.I096ft lt'9W"'°9 eMt\19 eel -.-AUTOMOTM DEUYIRY ._, -·"""· --.. entoY worttlnO wmi .-11111Ne••11111~wt,, .,. .. ,.,..,,, o1c1 com.-ny <:.-n;;lf.. ~and,.: or · 557•1* ae-10 p1tw PIT, ...._ -lllH 111 OueM •a po. aect • .-•-FOA~SA-1.-!-BY--=-=,.....
children. h~lence ...... ,.... ~· P*'1 Time. Pierce Ito.. 6'0-MS3 Mon-lfl, powet" of gee end dl-.i 11111........ pr9'8'5-5711hfl,.._. ·d 1n dill a ""11'111d(~toondll2$0: a-.tlM 51' SM
NepM, ~I 10 ~ -.ir. Mot1UllfY. C.M. 842·1150 WWW lll•IT P/Y l'Mtlne englMe. Alto d'9 PIT. Hrs C::......, ... AITI NITl/I ..,: Tf19~ & Microwave HO: .kl. Motor Yectit. ( ar
W.ofteranUCIFlntben-~ "&:::::. .,~ --/a.-..&..a N.I reel _, ... omc. at>lllty to repll6( end In-pel'lenoePNf.Ms.o2W u ....... _ _....,.!!"n ....... ~lnpereon .. 1fwoad~rocll(_!!' )' ~ to HetW9e 531. Morrie "4..I010 ._.,, .._, -~ -rteHant phOnf per• Malt MM tt9ina ... Muet -• ,,..,. -..,..., drN· at 1ea1n Mllrine tnc. lulchet -,.,..awey Twtn 171 Detroit Dela. ::.O:T~ ~ ~<>Pt°"':~ .J:.'f= 1on e I It y. • cour a 1 e tyeNma. lhafl1. ltNt•. Wiim UL.a .,. llc1 good dtMfte r• ...... &H. 15f.S400 •Ir. 31 •. Io• d •d
• lft. "-II.~·" btwn • INWI09 ..... Ing.and. llQttt prf191, etc. Mutt be tam-Hot~ tor )'OUn9 cord. AW'/ et Hub Auto 11111191. ....., Own bed llrend new. atlll w1.-.,onac.. ptof d800r P'C9'M' end8 1 F ,,,_ 1 1 • I I u -offk1e duttM Cell *w with "*"in.et OI*'-mwtcetlna ... pettOn. 11....-. 2120 HerOor 11. P.,Mtme. leM-2'1tf'. In-In okOI. ~ 1115 must... & muoti motel A rMI buy ._,,.noe. •lary p UI Of UV I CIP'Y • •• -wrr~ M Lu 75f.-t100 M-F etion.. , ........ mlllt). Ground troot ooocwtunhy CM, 14&.2* ... a...ct \leatment Advteot Mede 1'19 •. , • 2.tOI et 1269,000. LOW o..n' ....... ~t. Co. lnO.O.Alrport..., U1n1nger/~. muet ary Blueprlnt reading torflnancleltllli*lngper. mature perton for...._ t3 S ·2 S-5'&-Gd fine w/apt>roved ~t muet appiy In Muat M11e ...,...... hM * =r:tlonitt QmllllllT P /TI• neceuary. Ab611ty to dMI ton. S.lna •c~t lllDY.,. phone work, com,utft Sote a ~. 2 trundta Ct9dlt. Olin '30-2'400 otc.
per.on at Delly Piiot, 33oO CALl 751..aoos ~~ 16~ = M~-Buey Newt>Ort ~ u1dlo with CUltometl, Htlmate & potential l hlgt\ Ml'n· looll:tno for ~ ,..,. -..-p "9fpM. 8'0-5500 bdl & mlec. ~ tor $600. 845-752.5 E~nd• w .. 1 Bey St., Coeta 1111 M &m · · 1iatlon need• energetic Job•. and IUP«\liM uc> to Inge. New ventute with peraon to~ 8alte Oeyt 191·1811 ....._ ca. Apply e-11 FOf OPi-..!m Computer lllllAl.... pltlme receptlonl•t 10 people. W:ot conalder· reeourc• manaoem•nt snc::••~aln.~uetl*e •"l...a-90fA8ECTIONAlt750t !j!; ..........
•.m. or 2-• p.m. (Clrcute-Input end~-omce. M/F. Exoelent tetephone w/good front otne. lltMl1 allon, plNM Mfld ,... firm In Newpott BMott ~ BalbOa ~:and -1pm, ITTWIT Oak/glUa/brw: Cot tbfa 7
tlon Dept.). can Suiy ~ technlquH. Accurate and appearance t~ sume and ulary requite-'""' Oall 171•> 17).t:HIO 873 7431' Betty, The SP«tlnO Houee. Npt $450 dtn eM 1375 bet A uzOki ~
typing 5()..l()wpm. flllni! htndle phOnH, typli!:"' ments (mandatory) to Ad btwn tern-4:30pm wlcdy9. • Bc:tl. 1em to 2.J: INft 1tooti t7S. SOftJloveet BOAAO MOTOR &500 TU MllBIHIT HllBEIM proflClency, atrono meth wi>',"J_ ,,and ... front 1 k !~· Deily Piiot Clastl-I llW• I BOAT DETAILING •veil. call Alctl. 52.()565 saoo IOfebd 1364. Oek: call s.46-0299 •
ruM time. Coat• Mela N.B. Oev\p Co .... 111 1klll1. Good iupply dut-om .am to pm. '""'· Box 1seo, Costa En«getlc n-lmkr needed ... ~$350 bdrml4001----___,-~-:---84&-183e ot 7~1105 motlvetad per1on purchailng. Excel or· Mon thN Fri. Call Linda Meq, CA 92828 S50-100K AnnueFV. N.-'°' boat ~. PIT. ... .. llllLJ din let $350.'M:M705 Pair 350hp Cruaader en·
w/cont. loan ctr ... A/P, & genlietlonal ikllli. art tpm •t "4-2727 II tlonal nutrition compeny Cell 157·2* LWYI Hale Salon & Ptloto glnee · w/2.1 redcutlon
•16a&/._lal SIM ~~p:'e~t. k~J,.::. 157·8Mi lllU'TillllT 1mmed~~~~n1ng for :~, ~.:::::;...":;; ILAmlllMTD ~ •. w;:U~~ ........ .., 1111 =· c:;,w~.P,:'r. ™a=-11111n helpful. 852-0700 LllM.IHllTAIY , .. tgrowlngCo.Opptyfor Quallflad '*'°"· H11trls avalla.b6e In Cellf .. Colo, GrowfngNwptBctl~. t7·26. Photoe In ••• •cXNPEtiNd/FliAicX 17 .500. Call rt ... , ..._. e.12AM,Merllyn. E.xpenencelnFemitvt..w c"-t'ful rffp. per1on 1eoo. 1eeoexper. help. Nev. & Ariz. Fut ad-Co.2~a.preq.P~ cNingefOtmoOellno.Call Neltneworlg.$40yerd e75-M95
..,....._t group practlee In 'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Newport Beecf'I. t5S-4700 who c:an axcell. A08W9f tul uoellent company vapcement, high .com-Group Hnlth clalm1. Lenny 17$-0823 COM. ... $10 yard. 172-"178 /..__b/ • ~. ....8;:: ~':Y 11 phonee, type 45WPM & benefit• and working m Mk>t'11-1t•I• of the an Good t>eneflt1. ulary 3 Ultk Set ,. -ter ---. ...., 11\VERn.llM' LllAL IHllTAIY uallt where needed. condllloM. anniu. prodoc:tt. Muat attend neoot. 714fl52-5145 pc Luggege$ oo' W.-with alternate Sat· NI lhJlnQ For Udgetlon Attorneyt. Donna W 720-9411 ~, Saturday Seminar to Opportunity tor mature blkllan trim. -Mt 1 i,."":1:1=:n!:d=
urdeyAMt6"0-1t22 Non-smoker. Newport NllUOIUT quallf)I. NOUVElLE VIE am/lllllT-petton, wcman pref. 1et.SuMnnG. 7~n7 i~
1 SECRETARY eaam. Send l'9IUtM to U9Tll•ITP/T 111.YPILIT INC .. Mr. Hud1on, (7H) For Gift & Card Shop 1n working with gr~ Brand ~ p~ Vig .arH, for , .....
IUllAL llWT Hiring Partner 5000 Med$ lcal omc.. Energetk:. S30W .. _Street 752-eeo.4, out of ltate. Newport Sett. &40-7373 f!llNOf\-~ offtce 191 Chiropractic bed "30/mo. 87~
Group practice. FUhlon ~ s:':~~ ~lroh ~ Newpor1 BMc:h. Hi ~~~ro· WIN trlln. Costa M;., Ca. (800) 423·30019 Dana Point Harbor GH1 =1;;-~~--Compl $90/bo 722-n"l et ft CHOICE NEWPORT
1111nd . Phonea·Appts. ment. Jo«> duties~ A. 9 . or call 8'2-4321 1'911111 Shop, 4.5 dys per week, malUng. ahlpplng & ,.. *FIREWOOO• MOORING. $15M.
Exp req d FIT 644· 1025 answering phones, ,.. ... LL~ RECEPTIONIST /TYPIST Tll .. l llAI Incl wllndt. 49~791 c:.IYlng, light computor. PreriWum MHOMd or-Call Broker 873·2500
Nurllng OU/U ;o'~>k::''!i.i~~I~ IULn ~~~.'C1~:!1~f-:1~1n TYPlllTTD/ Experienced help wanttteS. 111.l.IBl·ILDM Alt( for Sandy. 754-1211 ::;,;:::.:.1~~ ~t:~~!·NoU....A=
Exper. All lhlftt tor home varloul projects. Send l~~l~'?o',~ ~,,,!! ll•PTll•IT PAITI IP llTllT CCl!'H' 7/59.3555 F!Tc :::t/m~~~ a:t:~ .... mW•..... FROST fr• r9frlg. Slnger Side tie to 25' GE 5
carelrle
8
.bMteu1ttTh
8
anvet P.ifloCneN~ =u~ or ~ In per· MOretary to work 30 hfl With Ci«lcal lltllte for Prl· Immediate opening for a llUHll 714/955· 1330 Chemlc:atl onty WMI treln MW mad\ cab, rug lham· SWALES ANCHORA 1IO
"' pfwk. Generel office exp. vet• C1\.lb. ""M·F 8:30·2. exl)«. typesetter. Mult SSIO & ply truck. S45-8064 pooer I floor pobher. Daily t-5 5-46-1
S8.p./hr. "'NA • llelll41 ~ r . Call Roe. 9t1·5910 Mua1..Qt...r•ble, meture, have hev ark·uJ> Demonitrators IUP • vecwm~5::UZ!. SLIPS Avt 25'30'
Homemeker1 $4.75 plhr. lr~ .... t or more detaHa. peop ... orlilmicf. N/emkr. exper .. pat•up biat-l&LllA UY an hi• P/TlllN &DI ST!RllNG FLATWARE. 3333 W eo.t
Call f0< appt. DOCTORS Pllet -••••Ill 752·7903 Allt for Mr. ground helpful. X.lnt ben· •Tllll/.....waH • Are you adventuroua and Mature bookkeeping Grand Baroque. , pc-e Newport Sett 1·5 M
& NURSES, Prvt. Duty, 41111 W aa......J wrr-------Thomae. efit1 lncludlng medlcal & .... ,_ need money? Are you clerk. part time In N.8 pie MttJna w/2 wvtng ••-T ... _ 3900 Birch St, N.B. Mon· I-• __. With typlng, lhlpplng & ec~ dental lnturanQe, con· FIT for PM lhlft. Minimum bright, well-groomed & Travef Agency. Carol. $ 100CJ. 846-1945 lllftll• , ... ,... ....
Fn.t-5,851·2772 0ett1leu,IAIHll oountlng16&111.To9"doll# llllnllY genlalatmosphete.Con· 1yrexpef. eager to IHrn? JP • 120-1042 pc8. • .. __ •tt oommen.urete w/ablllty For development company tact Alissa. 642·4321 ext. 1 Enterprlsee hu aeverat Un~ Athletic Club .,..~ 1•••• ••••••• • •••••••• ••••Q & exp. $()()tt 417·5&"3 In O.C Airport arH. 291 IDf• 111 ATTIU opening• for thOM you PIT MAINTENANCE per-memberahlp. Metia offer . .--iiiiili~iiill!Pe .. R.,.SH~E .. (.;;[--.-•. DELIVERY DRIVER :. PART TIME Typing IA!lll1. fifing ax· -•-• -·-PIT. 8 ITI09. •lCJ*'. For can llert Immediately son, neededl II ~ort ,o.~leed· Bob 756-3181, Oyt Fill 8 ft. bed. $250 obo. perlencle req 751..eo<>3 --• 9')Pt. pleMe call Mon . Work with peopfe 18 ot 0 ean ng. g 5-48-1231 • llllPT /lTNT UI. y Pl.IT Fri 9 AM-4 PM dally over wl'IO .,.. aucceutul .c8')1ng and car genl Univ. Gym 300 ..-. xtra ~-------
•. Daily 'Pilot motor route •• 1-1 /1-1.. n•nllYP/T 330W.BayStreet 645-5000ext 521 . motivated wlnner1: ciMn-up.Flexhrl.f'tMM attactwnta. paid.~· .... ,. ... /
... Wiii trein Blllngulll helpful · Spend winter In Southern call Roger1 RHlty W tor $2000, men• I ~ •• available in Huntington : lm-~te'=i;/l-1 ,_,u Pierce' Bros. MortUlllY . Costa tHN. Ca. 92827 --UY... Callfornla and travel 11 875-2311 gold Prffldent Rolex 111•••
2 h .. _,.. _ ..... Colll Mesa M2 9150 MJ-4111 W•tern Stat• with our --dy/dat• $5000 786-1844 ·78 vrm TT 500 • Harbor area. 1-ours •. Founte1n V#/Wt ax Ac· · • ITllD llTlll. IALll M t • counting & Investment Ttclaaical/Tr .. nl• ILDI iupervlHd marketing Part time opening for C..'Llln 1111 ~ = ~~8199 • per afternoon. • Firm need• non-tmOker SSH Sain SSH to wi.t In Pufcheelng twn. Paid training pro-ladles ctottJM etore. No llU '1511PUY WRITER .....,..-...,,...._....,._ ___ ...,,
•. Call 642-4333·, Monday_ : (Gr .. t forcoltegettUdent Dept. FIT. M :30. No !.':,· ..... :X~~g..::i~: up er.. nee . H r1 WORK STATION wteseo till fiil •• or houtewlfel) Min . RESPONSIBLE perton to exp. nec: .... ry. Some Com~ ;;:,sp., r.;c:.n 9:30·2.30. N.B. arH. FLOPPY DISK DRIVE. Liii Wll : Friday 10-5 P.M. Ask f-Or :. 75wpcn·-IBM PC ex.per. train In S JGNS & ..JIYOTill• l'leavyllftlng. fair ~uarantHd. C.aJJ 645-413etotappt. l2250.s.45-7118d9'19 •~
Art • '*Pful. For oonfldentlal GRAPHICS. PIT or pou-TELEWllR ... 111.--If& ltllmlT a-c; Nllllft
•• • • Interview p1ea1a call t-5. Ible FIT Ser1ou1 only· r..-s em-5• FIT & PIT, muat beftulbte a.eon.. rl .only. Cell Ian ·mft ..wa htt II I• MU ·
G S •• t ...., .. •111 to ,,_ '°'AM/PM ...... -._ Smith. 846-3337 1 t·3pm. -Hill Plllll• .. fer • C • e o rg• teve n1 .... us U'tll ... , ng -rn. A t Ex ti .... , -----••• .., BLIND Au1trellan lllT .... • Orang• oeat • S-40-4014 Cl•udla875-4180 1:"!va11a::-'1;9c1:: Forappt.pleaeCllllMon.· lllftllmPll/ EarlyA.M.tolatemomlng. Shepherd Mf Puppy nde • D II Pll t • P dver1191 mes-.,_... .....__,_, S •-Fri. 9 AM_.. PM delly. Selery + company ben-lcMng home. 722-8328 HUNTINGTON BEACH e 8 'f 0 e RNd the cluelfled ad1 for ul your a ng ,_, ,..,.._ • ... ng. ...... 645·5000 •t. 521 ·~ mll eflll. Femtty man pr.t. CHRYSLER/PLYMOUTH • 330 W B D I • tt:1 l>Gat deal1 In ~art· sage where the readers experience helpfu l. able to drive bob-tall. OMV Cell 557_13c.a Puppee: lea), 8Mp9fd. 8'2~1 5-40-s184 • • •Y r ve • ment rental•. 842·5678 ., •. 642·5678 Typing 45 w.p m. re-... UllB report req. McMahan .,,., Doble-Mix. Sholl. To 4 ..... .......__/'J •. Coat• M ... , CA •. quired. Good u fary plus For C18Mlc Bistro. Inter-De• k . s ant a An a IMJl ILDI good home, 957..()820 llRPW TJ commission. CaH for an view. btwn 3:30-5PM The s.40-3375 •o •••• •••••••• •••••••••••••• N A ii bl Interview appointment. Golde Truffle 845-9858 for bu1y druQ atore. J ... hJ/fan/Art • Openings ow va • e Ka t hle en Olson . n EASY ASSEMBLY WORK Mature. dependable. full llU ·A FOAb Bronco. MW
642-4321, ext. 302. .. llHIR BP $800.00 per 100. Guaran· time, Tuei-Sat. t0·7• eng, trens & dlff, xlt bdy. After Scbool-
Student Jobs!
Do You Need t Caab t And
A Good Job To Start Tbe New Year?
We .,.. toc*lng tor Jr. High and High
Schoot etudenta and othera wft<> woUid
entov teldng wtth peopte Md W(Wt(lng
wtth otMr ltudenta tMlt own 1199. You
can ..,,, 125.00 '° '50.00 ~ .._ In
comml11lae.e Md MUCH MOREi You can
work PART TIME In the aftemoonl Md
~ d heW DlentY of tree time. You M T BE FREE .AFTtR 8CHOOU
We offer oomt*le training Md prcMde t~. Thia ta NOT A PAPER
ROUtE ANO IS NOT SEVEN DAYS A
WEEKI Come out and help UI get MW
cultomerw f« our ~end ·haW a
gr•t tlm9 doing It. Yoo hive nothing to
IOM end a euper job to gain. Call today
and maybe you can 1tert tomorrow!
Call Mr. Earl
S48·70$8 or 241-HS2
CAR ROUTES
Earn Extra Ca•h
For De/Ivery Of Thi• Paper
HUNTINGTON BEACH
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
INDEPENDENT
Deliver 1 day a week. No
collecting . no soliciting.
Mus t have dependable car.
truck or station wagon and
insurance
CALL 842 -1444
Ask for JoAnne Craney
IUlll llAST FIT PIT. Newport e.actt. teed Payment. No Ex· 5-48-2128 Aaaofted coetume Nd1 101ne work $1500 •••Lt -n ca.11 Bill °' Erika s1s-s 1s2 perlence/No sa1e1. o.. UMm Rllll . Jewelry, nice. 100 Pea. obo M&-2338 Ew. -,... -·-I·-tall• Mnd telf·addrMMd A.__. .,.. Full time $15. 1111. 845-9441 •71CJ7 u---t ...... 1 330W.BeyStr•t _,_.,_ stamped en~: .. ...,.. . · . ..,_= ~~ . . ....... 09.... ·
Coste M .... CA 92826 --Elan Vital .903 Mon-Fri, 7 .30-3.30. $4.85 .... Uphol. aml frn ceet. , ~~~~~~~~ ,._,.. 3418 Entetpri .. A<! pthr 939.1.-10 oaw Fd~llE 14100Rich..,120-1 ~ L19una Nlouel. Btwn 1·5 • AITI SALES 53 1•77101ew 873-.«03 Ft. Pierce. FL 33482 ..,. WllTTD cap. propene. Tripi• DATSUN •x• KING e
Position avail. for ..... IOf'I EllllW amt l /N .. UI IALll Stege Maet·Hard TlrM. •WO. "*'· ltereo. • ........ F• lllftll Rune l*e new. $7800. ber, AC 14800 t'o to join new & growing Don JoM'I Relteurant. & E111ft..... c~o:;UTO -t A H Flt s.4M181 ....... 701 . ~.J~JzJ~t:~::. L1gun1 Hiiia. Lunch S..lng enthulsutlc well 54s-%f:Y SHOPSMITH Mark IV .... alP
Exper. In auto salel or Shlftt a110 avallabl•. organ&ed carMf orien--w/ecceuOfl ... 11500. sa;ea background. Cor· 633-78« Mon· Fri &-5. led perton tor busy H.B. lenlH lblllH AtMt 240-1355 •11111
mler Suzuki 23663 Rock· 1 SS office. Call Gretchen, Exper'd S5 hr + comm It comet wltf'I pit. buci*et Oeld. Lake Forest. Call for Ill 848· 1255 8:30em-5:pm Day .hitt Sundey on: Offllt rualtut Mata end redlal tnl.
appointment. 110..1001 *'* 8eXutY: Station M-~r1. ectM. ~1151 A lnl~t IMJ (Ser.ttMMO)(StU24VJ
--------:,~~ ~ark'f'~~= FLtul mllm Tax Plennlng & Prep-c[oSiNdlUsiNESS: O~AST • A ll.Ullam lhop. 64&-t877 Exper. FIT or PIT. $6_ plht eretlon Mult ... deltl, c:Mlrl. Ne -*Pl~ 1111,111 l YUi etart. 845--00il3 OiaM P .I. If cabiMta. electronlc caeti 2524 Harbor Coeta Meea
Dynamite Produc1 to Mar· AFTER GLASS .,.I. ~,:~~::,o ~ Ml ma
ketl Repeat Ordertl Re-ITm ll.lll Two part or full time non-1y11em1 5-40...3114 Sldualsl No Cornpetltlonl SCHOOL Shop tech. needed, eome 1mokert nHded for · TOYOTA LandCNIMr 'M.
No Travel! Complete exper. Call 84&-7474 emall growing Founteln lb White. Excel cond. St1Dr1·
Training! (702) 731-0718 JOBS Valley Tax Acctg & In-§A@lfiE m:i:. trl:cc&. I flee $10,250, 415-5&71 ...... ..,.,. Wlllh4 vestment firm . (lndep. mo'• otd nde kldt. A• T--L.. ms ....... lllPPE E·RN $eaelln Motel In Laguna Contr. or Employee OK) hot sa5 957-0e07 ·---Position• available. PIT ft BMc:h. Pl .... apply In For confldentlal lntervtew 1 '· · ·71 1 ton GMC dUai .
Salee, will train. Also MONEY person. 494.9717 pleaM call 540-4014 EOE Pil•• IU 45-4 motor. under 351( ml.
need Alteration person. 1111-·n MSPCWll WORK AFTERNOONS In ... , $7000, call 845-5808 Call 548·8284 5-wrURWW le=flte HOUSEKEEPER. Full &/or food oonceulon at pree-Hemmond crna 2100 FORD 'M V.ton Longbed. •••y IT P/tlme. 673-3800 N.B llglout tennll club In ..,, wnt pad bnctt. Tape Very 'dependable, xlnt -Nwpt Bc:h. 751-1587, aft deck. Mint. Sec $2400 pp cond. SttS. 873-3135 ~· .a&llTll 2pm 844-81•8 ' 844·8"81°'8"·9415
If~~ ~•or°'•:: p:::· ~~t.I~~·~ la,l.,.nt Wu... YAMAHA '15. Brand MW
,.__ C Li /C If ..r--to go · Ilk• Magic Ideal for student or 1139 Elec: Orgen. Value S3500. i-;;;;;;;=;;;;;;1 ~••11tll ••• llH tn Pai•u:i ~ountain. Knotts Berry houaewlte. 8181960-"393 HSEKPNdoMAibJ Mii for S115001'1·70H
11 CONCRETE DAIVtwXvs I . ·~cord RENT . STRETCH LIMO, •a•u··-LJiiiiTlilY ..... -.• r-... -.-,.,-.___--. Farm or win Prlne and ...,;., b''_. " la--~ "' • ........... ' c I w The fa1te11 drew In th• rm .,... .,.,,., IOme 1 ... _, ........_. $2.40 per day
That's ALL you P•Y lor
3 lines. 30 day minimum
In the
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
CALL TODAYll
ASIFll Liii
Your
Service Directory
Repreeentatlve
142-4121elf.301
Patio.. b'Oc:k, bOctc lnley. New Year• Special Oual. l hr lree w/4 hr min S35. tnl/ext. Real Estate clean· Award1. all u1 now • WHt ... a Dally Piiot utlll. Mature F ltudent; .. Tom Frlgone 496-7294 mix. Dellv .. Jim 636-8561 p/hr, TV stereo, bar up, carpets. wtndOWI, etc_ heve eeverel e>penl"t' In CIUllfled Ad Call Today refl. Need nowt 54&-W71 ______ ..,...,.
CLU• ,....,, 642-0620 or 5"8·7619 Ref's. Free .... 857..()891 C.M .. H.B. or v . 842-5&78 . M-L .. , SANYO TV. 88". erind • ~ 842 .... 333 · ...n•l--M New. Coet $iMOO. Mii for
Mother hu p6enty of TLC I H Mattary P1~ria1 $1800, 1'1·70H
tor your child. Newborn Carpentry, lenctng, wtn· •Block wans. brickwork. FARTHING INTERIORS BEST PART TIME hdew 1111 .......... to t year. ~ -<lOWf, plumbing. marlite. concrete Comp patios. HANGING/STRIPPING 16w.a;;;t of dr ...... 4 ~~-~~~~~~~
C tub encl, etc. And Yes 15 yrs e1t.per 646-4834 VISA-MC 673·1512 ;;; 111at;, Jelus 11 Lord 83&-820 •o& IN TOWN drawera. very 9d cond c.ta ... llM ROB S CLHNjun All block·brtclc-conerate-AHOYS WALLCOVERING • S100. 8'~1 i!E IS
""' m.JO Carpentry·Rooflng-Tli.. g1tea-declcs-c:overs-roof1. lnstalll tlon & Removel 4 Femly Genge -· .-. SERVICE: a throoughly Muonry·Home lmprov&-• 458459 ___ 530-3277 Int. palntlnn. 5~8 ~"13 Energetic peopl• n••d•d wlth a ATTENTION LAWYE~ tam. Comer W. 17th &lar~_...;;='-----z:irr.ti clean houM. 540-0857 manta & Repair. 6"6-6661 ... .. .._ • ~., ~ Antique o•k partner • Monrcwta. Klett 1tuff & IMBJr''71""TTo~;.
Housecleaning, carpell & FENCES-GATES Tree trim s~~~~.:n~=~::,~:: ~TRIP IT ~FF THE WALL. plea1ant telephone voice to con· :::."J~30~'= houeehld Items
uphol1tery. Wlndowa. etc. Dump run1. C.M./N.B. etc (71 4)545·0729 24hr a ~~ibo~C::.ne3s-6;U · f I d 80x30 llOO. .-.._ 102• FRIOAV ONLY •31 Out i. $2800/obo. 8'1·70H llrtlJ ...... 111-1272 1rea. Jim Whyte. 642·7206 STUCCO MASONRY-TILE .,..,~1 --~----duct marketing study or ea Ing Uk tor Art or Jennifer. goes! Muatcal lnttru-1.,.---.,....---=--r.n= CominerCIAILIOQ.._~ GEN, HOME REPAl.RS, No Job to small All tYP:tl•.... •..!!!!L.Drrw•ll local newspaper-.. NQ _SELL· C~ntlQuee oow openl ment. golf clbe, *'..,.,.., lattl ........ HM
Energetic young woman P11n1. Drywall. Carpentry Free est Lie 631·2345 * DR y w ALL AN D 112 E. 18th St .. C.M. =-m~~-= Xe& ircSSP9i$1. i+R
does Super H°""°'"n-etc Gary 645·5277 PTL II --SUSPENDED CEILINGS ING:• Houn: Mob.-Frl. 5:30 PM Coneignment1. 846-3333 etun. all kinda atored ml, am/trn caae. dr~
, ....... ~ .... ~~-Ing Call Pat 733-2373 HANDYMAN LARGE and tTiat CALL TED 859·9395 . ¥111--~ 1111 mltel Prloed to mow! xlnt. S975Jobo, 770·077 l
*A 1 •• YI •• * to 9:30 PM, Sat. 9:00 AM to 1:00 ..._. 2ee v1rg1n1a Pf 84&-7to91=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9 Home & Offiee cleaning by smell t DO IT ALLI • Int /Ext. patch plastering, llY iiil 111111 ' I• JODI. PleaM call for frM 531·5579 Pat or Iv• mag. CLEAN & EXPERT custom texturing quality PM. $84 a week to start. share In ..-n MOVING SALE Din ... LARGE SELECTION OF
estimate. 84247.te 0•1er 25 ye1rs ••P4trlenc:e work. Probtems.-N~ Prob-LES 1574133 IPHker1, applle~cei: NEW & USED BMW'S!
we gel• •hould hang IHli•J Lie. r.116.428 730·1353 1emst 1132886" 554•7831 partnership profltl after l at ... .. book•. record•. etc. Lm ......
tQ99tl'ler. Hang/remove. Lt HAJu Nd . UOV1Nd + ••• M"IH+ Pl •1-week. Pl•asant working con-*Ill.II.-..* Cro11 1trHt. Santa VOLUME SALES UC•2M597 831-9295 831-0730 anytime Garage & Yard Clnupa -9 aa ... s Aetrtgeratora t129 I Up IMbell/Santa Ana. 253 SERVICE & LEASING ·~s-· 1"2 QUICK & CAREFUL 1~ •• ~1tr-uiiiiii· ~.-1 .. --.gM-1-,.-•-h w,...._ ... & • ... .._...__ .... 1·-~ 34570 N c-Ave LONG MODERN ACOUSTICS ,._ Jon .... 0 • LO RATES. T138046 &.. --dltlona, private des k ac: p one. --· ..,. _ .............. ,_,, ·-. ·-·T .
NEW & OLD CEILINGS .,..trldln CONA 111 .... 10 •Good )obadone r ~· gu/elec =: ~ lut. ..... lfti (No. Cherry ~~~5)
SPRAYED. 527-2589 AM'• 111~ I••• MOVING & DUMPING. Self storege Experts DRAINS CLEAR From 115 Casual attire. A real fun Job! .. ~ Une of Home M UllM llLI {l1•llll-llM
.... Comm/reeld. 1·2345 Call 850·4206 ... -n· .. _.. Faucets. DlspoMI, H•ter. M A N A G E M E N T 0 p • FurNlhlngt" Tr.-.'IM w~ --t._,1 B I. WILSON & SONS NPl /CMILAGUNA Area -__ ,..._ 851·9604 M&M 722·toe& All APPUANCU IA0T2Jen011. lem to Jf""· OPEN SEVEN DAYS ..... ,_ I I C•r•tul. Reliable Proa PORTUNITIES For interview =••rlll11• ' etrolt .. ve .... ______ _ xppa;;c;;m Refrlg Rm. Add. Remodel Kite;. Haulng·Cteanup.palntng· EnthullHtlc Referrals Expert$erv~&Repalr • ·--·---• o.-/d9k c:f\r, flle ceb,11•_-====-====:-~8'\QM .• Bath. Tiie. •357"87 Ins. moving 7 dt yl. "9"-2341 Fr .... t. UC. 646-3885 32 yrs exp. Resld'l/Comm call David Grant at 6'2-4333 ...... blcydee. book: INM9, -.UTI ......
dllttw.,_a. Llc 24().()711 30 yrs exp. 6'8-1740 Heuflng. MOYlng. C!Mn· n•-•WU Lie •409035 9M-8919 UNIQUE FUAHITUAE lteNO unit. TVt. ~ OEUVERYOEPARTM!NT ~~~§=~~je4~tn1:: ... ~::---upe 7 o.y.. lowee~.r13•t... 1n.:::.-,, ··-. •WEE)(END PLUMB! G. between 9:00 AM -3:00 PM-M--F. !~a~ 8t ~ ~ '!!.. '!'.. ,,.1_ u.J IDrll•s ...
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Call Barry. 722·vv .;;; -• No Overtime! Cell Any ....., .. ..,,. ,..,,_ """ ,._ -vno ~ •n --laiWl8t Orange Co Orlolnal TI 2 II! ~2 ~sss Btwn Edinger & Werner on oft. '78 Ford Grenada. Aeeutf~•~&& m:Qr.·ROOflng· lt1tl!t hatt StudentMoWr1.Tnaured me. 54&-Ul .... •• MeinSt.a.lt'98w1 eacel cond·low ml. M·FtlH.8-ltlH
wateriirooflno• 831-4199 Meeonaty& Homes.1... HwDf 711-1111 Lie. T12...,.3e.841-M27 PMI l~a Ill-IHI 11500/0b<>tet-1"'41 t2tS.EUCldlt.
Aaphatl-repetf·pftclng Iott 24 h(. Servtee 5"«·M05 ~ .. tlngdonerlght4f--lllEWWarehouMStorage COMPletfP6ot stAV .......................... Open tCM: Sun 12·5 ESTATE IALE: Jan. 18. :~~
apt. comptn-l'lee\ly roller. INrt lutiat Ct Cleanlng. repairs acid • : 3 5 cu n 8an)tO reff1g •Int 11. 8am·5pm,. 18182 213-Mt-1701
Joe54s-..29971m·9Pm ititfY&mrsoc;;; Ll .. 1C1fiat &elo:;;a;;;ln11cenM waan ~~:.~ • PART TJME • i:!!,~2:.~=~ =·:~c.H.B. Furn.~·;;;i~liii!mP.
Aemow eephalt dr1wweye By Norman The Ooorman A La ... ut ptlvet• home. Home ~ • • s 5---------.--...............
replacewtthConcrete Oek &Flr.857·000R Tllma... MMll.1Uthy5..0...101 Pt~ • TELEPHONE : 15084 9441 ........... IHI
Brldt/Btoc:tt w1c 53t-0345 So. Cout Door a SUh. i..wn-Tr ... shn1b 1n11a11. dat UXDXUe CATHERINE : • Port::.-~1~· ~8!"1:1 r'!!11 ... ,J
ENTRY & FR. DOORS •. Tr .. Trim and RernoYel. PiAiMATINd iY MfdF Pttm. Terotcardl,P9YChlc • SALES • "5-9441 a.i. . ..._....~. x w-WAtl word:· Word Quality work. 831·7175 L•wn Main & Aototllllng. erd SlnOf. 18yraofhappy Reeder a ,Advleor. I wlll •• : .._.. __ ,-_......_. ..... Acwi.t. ,_,.
-1 • Sptlnkler lnltllll, ~. witomer• Lie 280844 reedyourl.teli.eenoe>en .,....,..,.. .... ,...1.--·· • ,. .. _._
ProoeMtngl ,·. l Speci.lla In . Fr .. E1tlmat• 54eo&5 ThAnk·Y~t '993.411• book: lwllltellyouhowto • L'."'rn ~\ '-o u Learn : dryer• S7S to N75. 1UO .. 9tootf, ......_., Ooft lren9Cttplf0n, '"""'"• .......... .. ...... IUcceed ~you~ : f" a • I ~rCM 1314111 Clubl, ETC. Mewl lJled.1A91-~. P9nny 9&7-3021 ,.. __ 11 ... nN• Gerdenlng Full SeNlce RAINBOW PAINTING failed. I glw ne¥W.taFtog , • t:M ~ lllJDr. No.-==='~ ~wont.free•. Mow-ectoe-c!Nn u~tr.. Oualtty IS our policy adVlce on low "*Noe • rn 30 P\I \lon ·fri. • W"'"E I°"'"' , .... L•tun• ••t & lvnlcl !'L U2551 "8-7401 work. Hl-2718/E m19 450·88"8 JEFF Lie e&aa end tMlneM. 'it you are : I :: · 8:. : o::.,..o.;,:i.~1:;.1 lem-"Pm IYI .......
=trySeMce RESIO/COMM'L/IND 28 •TOP·TRIM..KAUL* AA'°APAINTINO lt'11Ext worr'ledor ln OOUbt,don't • •1::\0 . l ::W "'' ~alurdu~ •
....,..... 1-MdlUon• yr-. Do my own wor1t. Uc. REMOVE ANY TREE OA LOWEST polllif)le prtoe. tall '° c.u me. •97-1173. • • .... .....
Ooor9-etc. 54MHO •278041 Al 84&-812t SHRUB. Reas pr~.&· 10 Step S4IMCe ae2-3235 483 N. COAST tNIY. e e -..-.-r .__....._ 91 ... -a ...
llepltlldoWe-Fr.nchdoor• DOH'SELECTRIC pertwonc,John557-6121 L~IMGh • Eurllt•nl "'orkin~ 1·011· • IRJP-.-'"""'1-;;._~. ....,. ·
Frenc:tl Sider• a More 498-3117 hMcecalta tSHIKAWA LAN08CAP£ DAN SALYER PAINTNO • ..tition... ..ul1.ar\ 11(u... l'Ofll• •• LU 1174113 ~ Ille 'no. ---Addltlone a Remodet9 • • Lie -.Ht2A • I. 1 puieflll ~
••7f10I Don "4·5949 . dryer OU1'-'9-c. bonded. Sod. Clean-ups Malnt. Cell Anytime "4-20t7 recover, r• • rni~sion.. • Al FNndl,.,..... cam ~ ~ •·
ElECT"1ClAN lprlntllefa. 8'0. 850-4147 -. palra. hot tat, ttte, rod!, • e Mt~ IUOO, llO. IMOD. !ii!i!iiii:==j~ ~bay wtn-Llc.t23310I Stnaftfl~ C&S LAWN SEl'VICE ln~~~~w ~~N~': WOOd. fr .. .., 760-65M • : Cot ....... ....... ~booms;:~{::~ IOOl &,...,..S4._S Mow:'l;l'Mcamo 12Q. ref'1 842°$214 HST ROO" AIPAiif : • ~.-:.-...... 00:::,...... Jiii a ......
#477..:-PN wor NEW:...:.~ 125 " !3
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1• 1545722 HOMEOWNER EXPEMS ~ ~::.~~r llO IY : : Antique reproduction fP WWW WWW :Ji i; KfTc,:~g:Ntt r,::t .. llc'd 831~5 TOC>l*Slr~ ci..t· L~~~;~ ~l~5 ·~··~·i-~iiiilr..:_· .: I 111 .111 o&fllllllfllfltr lll r·a ll : $~ ':: rrm.,:r ...... :i:::::':lc:ri=~--.._,-
CaUor ........ M..oet1 up, new &ewM. 751·3'71 PAtNTEA NHDS WOAKI . •M •HEDI• () l2-l:t!2 : ... · 1-1111 1•• 11 WOOd
' Ooof9-"1t11lll' .. 8'6olie . Clw't Upf•T,.. Tfll'nmttl9 Int/EAi. ~. refln c:aO Orange Collet~ • . • ...,. ... _. • *• wltrlr, '""' ntr•. ~ weod, ctlall'l llM, pelo't Yard Metnt •Hauling (28) yrt .. p .. WOrtl fuel, r•~ IM. 644~ e e dt 1111........... ..... t tllO 090. Ml-tlJ1
31,....,,..,,., ...... 7 ,,_ .. t Grte.IM-0111 MIKIU0-3263 Oav11P.,tlng~3837 '""" .. -M•• I lwl\\l'l'tl \ Of)..ff:fHt I'·'-"-·-~-• -.••'1WI!!, if aw; Iii ... -aii•ll1iitsi'A=~:r7' -----1----AFT HO~Y---e I 1000 ALIC> V!NC€Lf™l'lnllMd TM fHtHt draw In the ALllTAAGwdnl tandlCP Heve llOmethlng you went Comp! WlndOwS.lkteenf •• \ .. ' for l'·•n \l illi.lfJl 1o, •• 0UUN -_, ,, •. tsn YI, , · C~ I°""°"',.. WHt a Oally PUot New!Mm•tr .. frlm-ctnup toM111~fleded1do ~CtytlalCIMr a.t· Ill " ~'!~.~.~'7.t•t Hw*O._"°::.r.:.~
"10dllll19-Lie. ....... c1~fled Ad 8'2-~TI eprntllr•fr .. •t. 522~325$ It Mii 1'2•&e71 tefaetlon oue,..d, 115-7109 • • • • •• •••• •••••••• ••• •••• --·-,., __ lfn .... ~...a-----"!-:-~.;.......;....;....;_.;.....~---------~~-='·
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pr PmJC I -:":" ,_ $ 4 N•w,..1 9-1t ~~·~~2dr, ~..=."-"'°°"II 1MO ~ .!c!· a«I r==~ll~ Lot.J_!'....!.._NGl•t,111 .. ----~"::! !P!P de~'rl••-0:::-Ti 6 J S·lt•• 11 t>tu9 ..,,_. WT, VOITUM ~ IALU t2097 900ll 1M1S ,. ....... ,_. C _... -,,_ .._, Counly -• leoCll In T,.,._ Air· I.MM._,.. pur]Mlftld '° k -*-t '';~;;~;;;~::;~~ te MM0.144 osao 102 8otlUll ,.... '" ,.: 2M oi Oflloilll Aeoordo ........... 0.:-...... or.,.. ...... ~ lur••. !qulpment Ind a• ua Wlioft. , ••• c-..... Iii WI .... -Newport....,_ c.w t2tU ~eRober1 I o.;._ 111• r • s • • •Pl',...,...,.... ..._. of a a.toin 1111Dt -.-c.lllcw'flle tltln PORSCHE '73 914, reblt _, ,,... Vernon l 'Aclr'lO Ind A ~ ..._: -· ~1 • .... In llooll 17, _...... M ,..._ hrtof Wiit! II.-Ind wine "AH ~ OI THI Tiie llllidw ....... TNll!le eng,newbfkl,newwtlta ----8ohutz ,....,,.. ae:.'~ ~ M. .• .-.. .... :-.:=· ::::. .:;:aali::~lfl .... ...,_ •4t.otf427 bu111-CfTY 0~ HUNTINOTO.. dlUO'mUft~~--
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' ..: ., · Terga, red w/bllt tthr e7K wttfl the County C1ert1 of Or· CASH(~ It lie time of The ,... end .....,_ of OY I ""."' Y' S "Z Z • "' tlM EOITIO.. OF -~ Of _. • ...,.,. 1W92795) mt xlnt $18K 873.7225 MOe County on 0..1Mr .... In lelwM ~of tN tN oourt a (19 ......,_ ~to be: Hf l<llOll PAM.Oft ITANOA"O IPfOlfl, =-=-or..,_.,,. (Sttcl4085) ln;;:;;'w:v:;~,-;:::-=-..,,...,.....:...::_::_ 12, tM5 UNted ate.) It: ~ ~,. .. cone .z =· Coete ...... CA 8llCI ... .,.,,..., .. """CATIONI FO" PUILIC .... Pl lllllD •• or
..... PORSCHE '79 91 1 SC. ,_ tM ,_, OOUl't)WCt .,..._ MUNIC"AL COUM O; · ~to be~ WOMa COHIT~IOH'" '° P9¥ IM
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• '"" "'l\A r.~1 0010
~.~~4~~· l/s~~!~:?1FM ~-=-t~ ~II~.=~~~~=;=~==~~.~-~ ~~ No. n1i 9.s:= :".:
PORSCHE '83 "'11SC, etereo, T·t~t1tt,~·..__. 30, 1111 ' 1-.. Sime Ane, Cell· CountyM11ci191 Dlilertct. 7GO ....,_ lftd ---= •~· ,..':.,,....._ ._ G. ~· tM HYntlntton ~ 1\191. .... .,__ • ..._ TH-~ tomll, .. ,..., .... -()Mc c.... ~ ..... .......,_. ----~Or-_, ......... COdl by ---··•~lnMld gt~/gr~ tthf Int, ale, (Lie 111 W033) •---------.,,..,_ OOft!Artld 10 n aau...._Celllomlat2102' :::z;-•· 1 Sf't, lftoMI MOeColintyoncw.,..,feb. ldclP*'8 by, ..... _._ noel(•). ~ If -.. Mrl, 11.ifbo laJI, $2$ 500 (Stk~) I nGW Mid by If Uftdlr Mid The f111M. eddrw, Md ' Nery•. lMe. ,... eilMofl of M 0 4 Uftdel'tN.,,,.aloeido.d
(11T897)648-<CARS ' . SJ• PmlJC M)TIC( DlldofTrwllntNpniperty ~-nul'llber of,...,._ .::. ..... tlelftlde,llut Thia bl* tr...., 11 not Ir« 5 tor ,_..of Trwl, ..... dllrgll ll)CI S ~•Lot 13 of Tr.ct lllff'e .nOtneJ or _. OCMIWlt or ..,. IUbtact to ~ ~ w.a C1 a• 7 lldl ...,_.of the T~ ...S ~e. x~t2 .. !
900
urtio_ .,~_c1r280• s. ACTmoue IUH•• No. 10030 111 .,. caey a1 without on eticw.,., i. CE a:: or llnpled,,.. '°"" Commerc1a1 eoo. a.o. l&lnCWde .. ,..,.,uaklM .. of the tMlta Ct..-d ~ -.. ......, .., ..,., MA?m ITAW nine, CcMtty of °'*"9-nomtire.1a~'y e1nu-911' tlail, pa 111•171, or fton etoe. ...._.tor .. purpoee a1 Oeed ot lfuet. tot 1M
47&-aaao, 83t·2932evea ~Tile=::pertoneare St ... ofCellfomia.alflolM't mero d• '"efono d•I ~ ~~ ~ tlleTherWMlndeddr-.ot pnMdlnojllll,..,..llbla ob-emount rMIOnebty •" .. ,.. C
0
•.... on • ~ thereof NCOfded abogedo del ~ 0 tN noea ::.:..~ !1"' "' ... ~on with .mom )ecttvunclfl'd:'O'I dM-,,..., to be. tt2t,M2. t.4
THIODORI
ROBINS
1112TIYITI
llUIA
LOldad, Auto Trant. 5«~005887 ...
vw ·ee Bug, 1oo1ca greet,
ndt engine work $800 oeo 64&.2m Suzie
VW '10 Bua. auto, runs
well, new tlrn , 87K ml.
S 1500 obo. ~6-3503
VW '78 VAN. vwy c:taen.
Must Seel S2675 0 80.
FORD
Jor,u HAIUIOR Ill\( 0
(')\!,. ""'~" 641 <)010 .... ._..,
Sttdt lhfft, *·AM/FM ttereo, CMMtte.
(Lie# 2C2078e)
(StkT34221 ......
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
]01)C HARll()W nlY(I
CO\TA MHA t>4; 0010
... 1.JllYU'M va. auto, AM redlo. Good
mllea.
(Lie# 2G.297CM)
(Stk#39e0)
11111
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
~a•,') HARllOR Ill• u
(Q~TA Ml ~A ()4J0010
... Tllm'll v-a, euto, tHt.
(Ue#n2JEP)
(Stk #3999)
l1HI
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
"" .. ANO" ln~425 Pooa48to41 c1e1 ~ ' --~1Mid-•meybe!led11 AC-dWd~wMNby The~underoeld . ~=~~~HTS/ANO/SUN lnduelve of Mieoetlailw tlence abogedoqw .:t =: TrulC . ...,, .,.,..,... T~ ~.INC .• IOO N. admlililllltltM ~ Dead of Truoc halttob• •' APARTMENTS, ~ Aeeotde of Mid Or· DONALD E. FEAOUa JR.. • • pnMded In llld Tustin Avenue, ~ G. COMtl\ICtlon ~ ~ ~ and ~ to tt1e
2145 Meaa Verde Dr. &at, MOe County. !tie street Id-HOLDEN, ANDERSON. notes. actvencea, If any, s.nta AIJ' Cellfornll 92106 llNCtlon ~ and ,.. 11110ar89ied • wrtttan ~
t':!.1· eo.e. MeM. Cellf. esr... and otflW common FEAOUS I CELIO 551 s' ::crthe~ofaektOaad and the IUt d9)' for Mna qulremanta .... be....,. laratlon of~ and 0.
&V delignltton If Sf'1 of the HlrbOr lllld ~ CA l'WI, -c:Nrvae and Clalme by any credltot et'8I Wiid for .. pullllc worka mend for S..., and • wrttten
P T~~ 891Ra. 20M r .. 1 pro.,9rty cie.crlbed t2I05 (114=71. ' ~,we°!~~ and be Februery 3, 1Me wNdl la CIOMINctlon. end ttom the Not.lea of DMautt and EJec.. ..~ ....... .'~:...--·•· H9Wpor1 llbo"'9 la purpotMd to be: 24 OATt: ( AUG 20 Dead of T "7 llid Iha bulll'W d9)' before tM dMe on wttlctl ttMI aactloft tlon to Sell. The uodal8'giied __.., ...... eaeeo 8eln'ICll'IW nina; Cllfiom6I: tlN "*· c:oneumma11on date "*"" t-.. ~. 1t1e prcMalona <*IMO Mid Hottoa of o.
Ronald M.S. Pn, 2215 Tiie ::~ Truetae .....,. .. ....... et.ti. Tiie tvt* amount of .... -fled .._._ tflaraof ...... ~ 'au!t Ind ~IQ(l.J0-8tl to
Port Harwick, Newport dlecll6l;;;~far_.. llJTeryl,.,.., unpe6d .,...,_of IN~ Dated: Daeenit>ar 27, .ttNn•~8la.Ji!lltaof be r41cofded In the county -~ lnconecttW of the atr.-Pubilltled Or Coeat toMCIUl'ed by the prop. -the city of Huntlng'lon wtler• the raal pr~
T.-buelneel le oon-eddr-. end other common Delly Piiot ~T. erfY be aold and~ It I IWTVIFWI INC Baadl. located.
ducted by: • general '*1· dealanltlon If Sf'1 lflOMI 30, t... • 11• 23• ... ......,..., ooeea. ... IY: AA* L ce>Wuv" ..,,. flUU. nxT "" THI Date-. '**"* H . 18115 ... '*91n. ' ' Th--530 penMunchdWlllOOUt the ..... ,..llDDT, T .... OIUH .. AMCI II AVAIL· ~ HMCONJ .. A
ThomM E. Sperka Seid ...... be made but !_l!M of Iha lnltlal publcotlon twor · A e LI I.. TH I CIT y CA .... C:. ,_, 5 IA •
Thia ~ WM fllld without ccwanont cw ~ "' ttle Notloa of S... la It I Z A AZIZ 0 DD'" CUM .. CMIPa MN Tr--., ., ~ L
with the County CWtt of Or· r=expr .. or lm.,iled r.: Ml.JC M)TIC( 157,341.18. IHOOU YAQHIUll: AOOPT!.D by the City .,...., -I . u a-.. anoe County on J)eoarnber gar tttte, pcmmlan Of Thabanaftdatyundeneld Tron .. •ew Council of tN city o1 Hunt· ~11-•Md.CA.-,, 20, 1815 ~ MOaa to pey 'the K ll01 Dold of Trwt her9tofc>N ex, Publilhed Orange Coeat lngton e..cti at a ,._. T1hphcM1e (2U) 4t1.el1'7
,_ reme1n1ng pnndp.i aum of Al>riSiiWWT eou'9d end ~ad to the Delly Pilot JWIUVf 11 1tee m.!inQ 1*c1 Mondey . .I.nus TAC•1171 .
Pvblllhed OtMge COIJlt .. not• eacured by Mid Nodoe .. hereby~ !Mt UliOarliQnad • wtltteti ~ Ths5e2 ary I. ftee, by ttle foAowtng Pvl>llshed by the Or119
Delly Piiot JWMl#lf'f t , 18, 23, Dold of Trwl _.., lntwMt on o.c.tnbet f , tH5. lardon of Oef9l.llt and 0. rOlt cell YOl« Coat Daily Pilot Jenu111y 2. 30 u..on, .. pr~ In Mid 14.850.00 U.S. currency-. mend fer S..., and. wnn.n PtllUC lllt'ITV'I' AYES· Councllman: Kelly. 8, 14!5, 1W .
TH-531 not• actvancea It alllad al Anaheim, Cai-Notloa of~ and EJec.. nu1tw. MecAlllater. Flnley, Balley Th-623 1---------underthatamwof0NlldC:: totNe trom the Anaheim ttontoSell. Theundei8'giied 'ATCO •141• N0£8· Counclltnwl· None PmlJC llnTll'C of Trwt faea. cNrvae end Potlce OapertlMnt (000-ceueed Mid Notioa of 0. fCt ...._ ABSENT· Councilme n· rtllJC M)TIC( _ _........-..-.;;;...""=:.:.:;'-.::...-_,,.....;.of Iha Truatee and lnaly eetled ~ tN Anaheim tlUlt and Elac:tlon to Sell to M'OllTAl!fT MOTICI Mandie. Green, Thomla . ACnnoue ......... of ... .,,... ereel9d by Mid Polee Oepet1mel1t on ~ be recorded In ... county IF YOUR PROPERTY IS IN CfTY "" ...-nMOTON '1CTITM>US ........
Ulm ITA~ Oeed of Trust. for the wmbar25, t185,lromTerry wMf9 the,_, pniperty II FORECLOSURE &£CAUSE e1 ACH, Allele M. MAm ITATllmln
The tolowlng pertone.,.. emount reuonabfy •ti-~) ~ ~ :.tt ~-Oeownber H tl85 YOU ARE BEHIND IN YOUR ~ ~ ~::::: ~ -dolno ~ea: meted to ii.; lt.27,051.14, '-· ~·1 ..--· ' ' llll C ' PAYMENTS, IT tAAY 8£ ~-._ Coeat H & H MAIHf~NC!. QUALITY CRAFT CO... Tiie 8aneftelety under ~IN metter In the c:. re• • ... ;.... OLD WITH 0 UT A NY Deity Piiot ~ 1'· ttee 5 t23 AA1er Dr ~
STRUCTION, 1150 Mlronw Mid Dead of TMt, ,_.. In Ofder ~:':it'::':~ .::-A~ I\ ,.2:,1
1.,_· ~ COURT ACTION. and you Th-583 C.... ·
Dr., Balboa. Callt. t2t11 tofote did execute and o. .,._... ,_1 1 "' 4 may ha"8 tM legel rtgM to T\mothy Aot>en Ho6derw
Charlaa F. Shepp1td, INw' to the undel8'giied a = C::.-_.: J!: ~ ~.:: • MM, ., tlf1ng 'f04M account In good l'\aJC fl)TlCt 4123 RMr Dr ~ 1150 MlrlnW Dr Bllbol. written Dec:Watlon of 0.-,,_,, Pv atandlng by oeytng ell of Cllllf • · Cllllf t2te 1 ., IUt and Demand few S... Aean1 In 0-ge, Dr\lo En-blllMd Orange Coeat 'fOUI past due peymanta p1U1 IC 1811 RtCt1et s rni. bullneaa I• con-and • wrman Not.lea of 0.: fore.man! Admlnletratlon. Daily Piiot Januaty t , 18, 23, permitted C09t1 and ••· MOnca °" 2311 P.:.!:" Coat~,
ducted by: an lndMdual t1U1t and Election to Sell. P.O. Box 12908• Santa Ana, leat S--wltNn tlw'ee INlntha MATH OI Calif -
D.F. Sllappatd The undertlgned caused C.ilfOmla 827t2, • c:lelm Th-632 from tM date"* notloa ol .....,., Tni. bualneu I• eon·
Thll etatemant .,,.. fled Mid Notice ot Oatault and and coat bond °' s.95.00. In defautt -r900fded. DOUOI Al HOON ducted wttntheCount';ClenlofOr, Election to Sell to be,..~="~:"'°' Pl&IC M)TICE Thlsamountlel81.«6.05 AMDOIHiihOM nersnlp by a general P8'1' anga County on Dacambef COfded In lhe county wMf9 ble peys M of Oaoernber 30 1815 TO ..,_Tiit TllnOlhy Robert HotdaMf
12. t985 tM real property ls located. • to the U.S. Deportment MOTICI °' 8AU and .... lnerMM untU you; HTATE MO. A 111• ThlS .mernant --ftled ,_ Date: Oeownbar 23, tl85 of Justice. or eppro....ci _.. OI HMOMU. account beeomea eurr.nt To .ii hen, banaflelarlea. with the County c.... of ()r,
Publllhed Orange eoeat WOODI I.AF llORTQAQI ty,M °' before Januery 22, '9K>HRTY TO You may not h8118 to pr; 1"9 cradltor9 Ind eontlftgetll ange County 00 Dacamber
DailyPllotJanur;t, t8,23. COMPANY, Al IAID ~~~~~~Ion HIGHllT~9' entlre-unpaldponlonofyour credit~. and~ who 24. 1985 30, 1888 TRUel'IE, P..-._.... n •coal Notice la~ gNw; tllat occ:ount, ....,., though luH may be ottlerwlae lnt«astad1
,._,.
, ••
'
TH,538 c.,_ ...... • ....... 9'; ~~!i"~rnin:~ ,:.::; bids will be ~ for Nia peyment WM demanded. In the wlM and/or estate ot: Publllhed Orange eo.t
Auto. elr, AM/~ '!leo.
8
---------:::. ... "=· .. :.:--a.: fOrlettad pursuant rto 10 :~~= ~ ~~~;:a~y ~ ~~:.EA~ ~E~E~~A ~: ~~t Januery 9. 18. 23.
tractc. Hlghblck budtet P\aJC M)TIC[ ......... Ca981• ..... U.S.C. 1:0-· ~!!' bedla-hasbwldedared~to aver, you and your HOON. AKA HD HOON.I TH,5-45
]l)l)Q HARBOR lll\o'O
CO~IA Ml ~A ()41 0011)
Mets. {til)...... pOMd 0 aocot ~ .. to law. lhe need• of the Coeat Com-beneflelary or mongagee AKA H DOUGLAS HOON I
(Lie# 2"
786731
'1CTIT10Ue .._.. S... _.be condue1ed by: lnt•Mtad pattla may Ille• munlty Collage Olatrlet: may mutually agree In wrtt, A pet"lon tlM be8fl fllad1---------Ulm ITA~ Continental Land Titla Com-petition for remiaak>n Of SALE OF SURPLUS COM-Ing prior to the time Iha no-by DAVID M HOOH & "8.JC fl)TIC(
HON
769-3872 Rusa 41Ms 1952
DA ·n ACCORD. new I:-=~.,..,,-----
point, runs good priced VW 80 Ven, orig ownr,
for quid( ..i. 'S 1700. ntt running, new tfrM .
645-7329 or $.4~77 . $2750. Worlt 631-8340
(Stk# 4019) The lolowWlg pertone are pany. 1015 North Main mlt!Qallon of l°"911U<e with PUTER SHOP EQUIPMENT tlca of .... IS poated (llfNCtl CHARLES W HOON tn the _ __;...;;.;;;.;;;;.:;;....;.;;::..:.;=.. __
""' doing bullneee le! Street, Santa Ana. California the Realdent Agent In ORANGE COAST COL~ mey not be_,.., 19\an the $4.iperlor Court of Or '1CTTTIOUS ...... HIGH LAH D ·CAPRI 92701. (7'4) ~5575. Charge pursuant to lt LEGE. end ot the tht ... month County raqueetlng ~I NAlm ITAT'DmJfT APARTMENTS. 2145 Meaa Publllhed Orange Coelt U.S.C. 1808, and will be die-$-'ad bide_. be open-parlod stated MICW9) to DAVID M HOON I The loeowlng ~ It
Verde Dr. E.Mt, &ifte 1, Oallv Plot January 2 t 11 poMd of aoc:ofdlng to law ad and publcty read aloud among other thlnga pj 04ARL.ES W HOON be., ckMtlO ~ u: Coate ....... CA.llf. 92128 tNI . • . lnt•eated S*tla may Ille • '°' aagragated Items .. pr<Mda llddlUonal UrM In pointed .. ~ rec>-J s. GERMAN AUTO Rf.
ThornM E, 89arQ, 203e Th-524 petition for remlaion Of llsted on IM propoaacl form wNerl to cure tM defill.llt by r-t8'N9 to IOmlnlater IM PAIR, 721 w 18tto St.. eo.ta
THEODORE
ROBINS
~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii IVW BUG '64 Or1g ownr, 1.u
-
aa Wlty gd eond Movtng,
-must sell. $2200,
.. 790-02M "" 5:30
AJr, Auto Trena.
Ser.027147 ....
lllDA u l 'Ill' '11 Poe>uler 5 epd, full power,
llr, etereo, aunroof,
IMthet, 1lloy Wheele. S
mo/5000 mite w11ranty,
Low, low mllea
t!CHE169)
llltl
SOUTH COUNTY
VOLKSWAGEN
A
ISUZU
FORD
]u()O HAllllOR 81 <D
(UHA Ml~A 1>41 •,Jll)
Port Aamagote, Newport mlt!Qatlon ot l~we wlttl et 10:00 a.m .. Fndey Jan. ~ of the property cw estate of IN deoeOant MMe. Calf! 92626 8-dl, Clllf. t2t80 P\aJC *>TICE th• RHldent Agent In 24. leat In Illa ~ M-othel.._: (2) aatebllltl 1 Tiie petition reque•••1 Jouet SzaraOI. t650
Rueeell Maybefry, 400 Charge purauant to 1t mlnlsttatlon building 1310 ~ of P8Y'Wta In eutllorlly 10 aomll,... tna Semat. Costa MMe. Callt
Chl$Wlcll Way. Cambria, '1CTrnOU8.,_H us.c 1618 and 2t CFR AOamt A\18 eo.ta'Meaa.. cwdartocureyoyr datault:cw at••• uno. the lnOapen.-t2e2t Cellf. 93428 MASm ITA~ 1316.71'1311.81 Without Ill-CA. Al b1d9 must be ci. both (1) and (2). ' dent Admir*tratlon of Es-Th&t bu-.a ~ eOfts
This bualneu 11 cons The fo11ow1ng l*'IOnl are "\ 8 clalm and coat bond. tNetad 10 the offtoe of Iha After tN9a moi.ttw from ta1• Act. ducted by an lnOllllOual ~by:• general pwt-doing~• ~de11 t Atut lfl OlrectorofPurc:hallngatlha IN dat9 of 1acar8tklf1 of A '-1lllJ on !he petlllon ~Sured!
,_..,..., ALISO ASSOCIATES -.-al>OYa addr .. prtor to tt1e thlsdOeumant(wflletla.teof willbellatdonJAHVARY2t "ltSt"'*1t WU fllad
Thomae E, Spark• t800 Allao A\18 Coate C-: RO-M-OC>l2 time Mt for the~ to l'ecx>fdatlOn llC>P89'I ..... 1888 •• 8·30 AM In Dept' wtlh the County Clenl of ()r,
Thie 1tatement w• fllad MeM. Call!. 92827·· Date: Oaoernb8f 20. 1885 be allglble ror eonlklerstlon on). um-the ~ No 3 at 700 C:Mc Canter llf'09 County on Oec.nt>et
with the County Cieri! of Of, Alloa W. Bewrldge 1800 Pvt>llllled Orange Cout lat• bid• cannot be ae~ being toreeioeed"upon or • Drive W•t. Santa An&. CA 24 1985
ange County on Oeownber .Allao Ave .. Coat• ·Mesa. O&lly Piiot January 2, 9, IS, oepted MC*•I• Wfttt.'I ~ 82702 ~ .-..~~ 20. 1885 Cellt. 82827 1aee PropoMI '°'"" and com-~you and your cred~ IF YOU OBJECT 10 Illa P\J':lllstled Of•noe eo..1
---------Pu ,_ Robert W. Beveridge, Ttls528 pie!• lnttruc110n1 mey be tor permits a~ period, granting of lhe petition. you Daily PtiOt January 9 18. 23. lllT• bltehed Orange COlllt t800 Allao Aw., Coste obtained at the Purehaalng )'OU 11a .... Oflly ttle .__, FW!t lhOuld altflet appa« at ttMt
30 1
986 -.,.-Tiii.i ,._. Dally Pllol January 8, 18, 23, MMe, Calf!. 92827 P\B.IC NOTICE Department of the Dls1rtct at to atOC) tt1e..,. of ydJI r:wop. ~ and 1ta1e 'fOUI oo-n~,547 ,_ -30, 1eat Thia bualneu le eon-the •bo,... addr .... FOf e6-erty by paying the entire JaCt;ons or Ille Mittan objae2
---------
A blec:k beluty WI v-e. •. TH·537 ducted by. hulband and wife IC naa dltlonel Information Of In-amount damarided by 'f04JI tlon• with the court before f'ta.IC NOTICE
full power, tltt, crutM, 1-------....:I.-Allee w. 8e'lerldge ADYIRTIMMINT 1P9cilon ~ntrnent, cell cred"or. lhe hearing, Your IPPMf' __ ....;;,.;;.;;,...;...;.;~:.=--at«eo. CAM, low, low l'tlUC M)TIC( Thlt 1teternen1 -flied Notloa 11 hereby glwtl that Shannon B MeCarttly. (714) To flod out tlla amount anoe may be In parson 0t by ACTITIOUa IUMNEaa mlles. wire covere. with the County Clark ot Qr, on October 23, 1885, "432·5754. )'OU mull pay, 0t to arrange your ettomay NU. STATEMENT 5 mo/5000,,,... w11r1nty. '1CTIT10Ue .._.. ange County °" o-nw 1 15, 158. 15 us currency Bid• mull be aceom? for paymentto atop lt'8 for• IF YOO ARE A CREDITOR The followtng persons .,.
( 123628) • MAim 8TA~ 24, 1t85 was Mind et Orange. Call-penled by e CERTIFIED or cloaure. 0t 11yout property11 or a eontlngen1 oredl10t of dOong buSlneSS u 111,411 The to11oW1ng per.on la '*111 tornla from the Orange CASHIER"$ CHECI( made In foracloeura for 111Y <>'her the d«HHO, you mutl tile DON OUIXOTE MOTEL doing~• PutllWlld Orange Coaat Polloa Department (orig-payabte to the Coat Com-rauon. contact: HARRIS your clelm with Illa eourt °' 2100 Newport Blvd Coate
C. J . MAHA TT COMs Dally Piiot January 8, 11, 23, lnelly Mized by Ille Orange munlty ~ Oiatric:t. or BROTHERS. • Calttomla Pl'aaant It to the panonat M .... Calif 92627 PAHY. 781 w.t WMeon , 1M8 Po41oaDapartrnentonOC1o-cMh In an amount no.._ partnarllllp.(114)..-0.1880: feP'_,tatlwlPQOlntedby Manendra B Bheitta
Slrwt, eoeta MeM, Callf. TH-640 ber 23, 1985, from George than 5% of lhe I<>'., bid. Ps· eto Paone, GenoveH. the COUtt wlt'11n lour months 2323 '""ne Ave ~
t2tl27 w. Wajdowlc:z) '°' vlolatlon --cMolla -.... -Callanan. McHolm & Winton, trom the d••• of flrt1 IS-I Beach Calif 92660 Ctlal'yl J. Manatt. 791 of 21USC181 Any parson ~. Oapoelt ol IUCs t470 Jamboree Road, New-eYanee ollett8f'IUPfOVIO.cl Raienore B Bnota.
WM! W1laon StrMt, eo.e. daalrlng to place 1he matter oeaaful bkSden wlll be • port BHeh, Calltornla •n Sectton 700 ol th• 11920 Long Beach Blvd I=:--:--=-:-="'~---MMe. Calif. 92127 In the United Slat• Olttrld plied to the pun::ftae pnca. ~neo, Attantton. Vies Probate Code of Calirornie , Lynwooo. Callt 9()6.(7
nu.., ynu Pinto '72, AfT $150 or beet Thie b4l8lneM le con-Court In cwder 10 eontMI the Other depoalt dledt• f/NJ/Of lorle Power The lime few flllng claitn1 will T'1os t>ullneu ,1 eon-r"""" uu offer. 1 owner. 642,2970 ducted by: an lndMdual probable cauM tor tllla ..iz, c:uti wtt1 be '9tumed ~ If you heW any QUaUOtll. not ·~ pnor to lour oueteo t>y to1nl ._..tur•
11'111111 Thll ~ wao lllect R ea: dent Agent In Charge Drug Boetd ot T"*-0' aecap. Of ttle ~t eo-IC'I '-1lllJ notloa abo-le I TM stetament waa m.cs PLYlllm ,., 'lL with the County Cle'1I of Or· PANY lo":1°1~~ CO:t· Enforcement Admlnl•? tanca of Ngfl b6d wNdl ... wNdl mayllaW tnauredyour YOU MAY EXAMINE the With the County a.ti ot °''
V-8, auto, llr, radio. MOe County on Oacambef • l02 ' Coate ~ ~· tratlon. P.O Bo• 12908, be w1t1'11n 30 cteye of b6d loan. ftle ileol by !he court II you eoge County on o-nt>er
(Lie# 7850ZS) 23, 1815 j SantaAna.Callfomla82712, opening ~ the fact .,.. • l*'tOfl Interest.a tn 24 1985
f#~2US after 6pm. a.yi Manett buelnea . ura. muat Ille with 1tie Real-Mlean (15} days after 111e you stQlld contact a~ mon1hl from ll'le oe1e ot 1,.,. Mahen<lra 8 Bhakta
(Stk If 3979) ,_ 11-. M • Clelm and coat bond of All upenoa of eertage tNt 'fOUI property It In rot. the estate. you may ~ ,_129 PvblllMcl Or9flQe c... -;,•R .. , · Urt>lna, 4.a S t.518.00. In the IOIT'll of 1 and ramoval .,.. the ,.. doaura, you may of* 'fOUI upon lhe eaaeutor Of eomin, Publlsneo Orange Coet'
MBZ 230 '75 40r. Sunr1, 11• OallyPlotJanc.,'l, 11,23, .:c:~ r2taJHewport caehier't or 08t11flacl ct-* aponeit)lllty of Purchelara. property tor Nia. pr~ i.tretor. or uoon the at, Oai1yP11otJanuaty9.16,23
Al
e NEW di t I 30. 1Ne Thie ..... ~ I made payable to the U.S. 8% ..... tax wlll be added to The ...... oonduded prior 10 tomay for lhe HeQJIOf Of 30 1986
· : ro •or, t rea, IN U S A TH-638 ,:: .. n~ ... ..1.-~on, Ofparttnant of Julllce, Of all amount• uni.. veld ,... the ~ of IN tor. admlnlltrator. and Ille wtth
-~pump, b/1(1 & c.tb. • • •
1
_______ .....;;;;;t~~ •!>Proved aure~y. on or tall Mlal iuy-mtt cans~ c::loaure. • • "'-eour1 with proof ot -·
'79 450 SL lmmec.
lvory/Tobocco . Orig ownr 127,500. 975..ooag
· S t tune up, Am09 eeif. AHO TRYING HARDER Thll before January 22. teat ~n compau• bid;---Remember. YOU MAY vlOe • written requet'I stat, 5000, 842s1939 Pl&JC M)TIC( atatwnant wu flied lndlgeney petition° may. be All Pf0t)8fty.llated Mt'aln LOSE UQAL RIGHTS IF mg !?lat )'O'I OM!rt IP8Cl'IJ
M.BZ '83 SEc. Top of the TO BE :: 1 '1Cnnou9 --u h ~County Cleftt of Qr, flied In ueu or a ooat bond IS off•ed rcw aa1a "u It, Y 0 U DO NOT TA I( E nollce ollhe fifing of an ln-h flci f • SALES -MOe nty on Januery 9. OthclrwlM, 111e property win wh8fe 11". and without r• PROMPT ACTION ven10tV ano SC>Prel_,,.,,1 of
DEATH NOTICES
• O<Y reeh, 11lk• MAim ITATW ltae be admlnlltratlvety lorf91ted courae agalnll tl'le Olatrtct. MOTICI OI Dl'AUl T eetale auets °' ot the pell-
o:,s::*'11. Mu1t nove •SERVICE NITIAl ...... '11 Tha~pertonewe Pvb41ahed Or '211712 pursuant to t8U.S.C 1808, Th• Olatrlet makff no NOTICE IS HEREBY 1ion10taccoun11mentloned VAERSTAD g It. 472.0127 • PARTI ~..._._II: ange Cout and wMI be dlspc>Md of ace gutnntM, -ranty or ,.. GIVEN: That ARST AME.RI-In Section 1200 and 1200 5 ol OLA v v AERST AD. a
MfiZ '
851900
,
5
1pd,amk , LEAllNG Auto,AM/FMltereo. RTH IAOAOWAY ~anuary 18. 23. cording to 1-. tnt.,_.ed .....,tatlon. ~ Of CAN TITLE INSUAANCl theCallfOfn1a Prot>a1e Code. long tune resident of
tJlv/pol, •l•c ...... Cotlectorupecimen. PARTNE~HIP,1Callfl:lmle • I.teat partlamayllleapetltlonfor lmpllad,wttnregardto~ COMPANY.•COfJ)Of'•tlon,la f . AHrJ Cr••J •• Cos
otwom whle, 9M, $20,9K LARGEST INVENTORY (L(IQS,t"WX#3~72115)) ~sparv•INp, 111 E. TH-581 rem!Mlon or mlt!QatlOn of dltlon of property or fttnea duly appointed TrwetM Menne. Mwmper a ta Mesa. passed 526-410eorl3
1
-el08 ON IHl WlSI COASI " • C.: ,:;::· Coeee W... lorlaltur. with tM Rea!Oant of pr0t)8f1y for any uea cw undaraAll--tnduelw.Oaad of ....,._, Altomef tllW ,..._ away Januarv 14..
(
..-.y ,_, & Cot-eeaaa . •-111 llf'ITJC( Agent In"" ......... ,..._,_. to putpOM. Ho cMim _.. be Tn.iae dated 0c:t0W 21 . ..._, ,,_ e....-om., 1986 t N •
MERCEDES BENZ '15 2IO WU. ~ "" ..... T'homll s. Lea, tM (, .--"" 19 u.s.c~iioi. ';;s "";Mi' be coneldared for *-a Of 1812. eltMUtacl ~ RISING ~ .... CA -a t"W port
SEL lolded, enthr grey, CAll r•AY ~ =· Coetl MeM. ·~$ dltpoeed °' aocotdlng to ldjuetmentorreclalonoftne STAR INVHTMINTS. • Pvblltn«I Orange Coast Be.ch He IS survived oNy 100 orig ml 133,800, · (ctr Mic. .,uafc&AL) lew. lntareat«I pattla may .... beeed on tailut'a of IN Clllbnia llmftiad '*"-' Deity Pllol J-.y 8 10. 11. by tus lovmg wife, ~for llPPt .:::::: K=., 22111 l'K>TIOE TO OEFENOANT: Illa a petttlon for ,..,.,...,,, property to completely INp, • TNOeOr, In t.\IOf 01 lNIS HjOt'rdl.s. of 59 vears; Celil. t' •1 Vlllo. A'llaO • AQIMdo) TIM Of mitigation °' lot1altur9 utWy ,,.. ~ In .. HARNS ll'OTHEM,. ea.. ThF,533 daughtt"r Kari of
M!ACEDES BENZ 't4 T~ f2!!!.___ E. lnd~ly and With the Aaident Aoant In ~ No retuma allow-tornla patt11et1hlp u S aoc>TDWgn l¥ory •IPlll ,_ --la °°"'" ~•Ml~ Cherge JKlr•uant to ta ad. The DlaCrtct INll noc i.e ... ~, • .......,.. No-~alt I e WA .
'91rlnt • .wf, •. U:.soo: :;-sby:allmfeadper1ns. Of CALlfOANIA; u.s.c . 18tl Ind 21 CFR1•eac>01--forf1'Yaoddafle *"'* 3. 1112, .. lnaJN.. PUlJC *>TICE brothers. Robert of 1.JW!J1~641-CARI_ *' ..._ m ~I LM ~CHA.ALO, fndMdu.. 1311.71s13'lll wlttlout._ 0t Injury reauttlnf from ,_,.no,1241741'5,ofOf... MOTaOI Norwa\ and Ovar of -Mflit:J NlJC __ ~ end dolltg 1>u11neee .. lnQ • dMft anc1 ooet bOnd • putetlMI °' pniperty on flclal ~ 1n ._ OMoe °' TMMTll't IAU I San Di w;;m; ;J;1 ""'~ wtttl~ ~~ tlld WOALO OF CAl!t 1'Hl4ut A1ut j,. .-. flt ~1'KIOldlw o1 Or· .... ...,_ bur ego . SlStel', ln· °""" ... , ;OOf • .... County °'Or· , 0 " N I A : M A R I( a.we ' ~ In tull ~ ... enee ~. Callfomla. YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T ge g, of Norway
tW. • & tJ,
7
stc ':' PICTmOUe .._.. ~185 on 0.C•• .. D'OM0'9'10, 1ndlvtdue11, C..-RON 0003
1
made wttNn (14) ~ ~ .,_.. oe. *'-UHD(1' A DEED Of TRUSl Aho survtved by 4 $&250 '31.a.4o • Mt.m ITATW ,..,. end'°"" buelnea. Ml1'-Oete: Oaoernber 20, 19111 Calendetdoyuftetnottoeof ---0no(1)AWl'ldUe1'119 OATtO MM 22 1813 UN-gn.ndctuldren and 4
• • The IOIOWln8 .,.. P\lllllatlld 0.... " 0 " W 0 9' L O o F Publlaflad Orange Coeat aoomptanoa of b6d enf 1N note tot 1'le ~ """ °' LESS YOU TAKE ACTION nddul
CA,,,.,..0,,,......'1""1__.E-lDO--, -loecteo---, doing tiuain-~ Delly Plot IUlrtl. CGellt CAlJ'OHNA. DOES t to II Daly Piiot ~ 2. t . t. llemelnl.Ctle,.,_.,trom 11,417.000.00 that 1h• TO PROTECT YOUR PAOf', great gra dren •• ·J·-· bHutlful. Lllce new J. L. Prtc. Aondl 2115 30. 1MI Jlfwy • 11, n. YOU AM MINO SU£ t8N IN 0...,. Co.t COlegl -~ .,,..,... undef ERTY IT MAY 8f SOLO AT Mr and Mrs Vaerstad lroWn/Ton.•coond tow 17000.Aft5pftll7'S-t3M Aedhttt AYenU.. 0.10,, 9 ™-Ml~,~~:..'!~ Th-527 =~~.,.,.,.,..=:~~A POBLIC SALE. lF vou ha~ madE' their .-........... .• co.ti ....... Calif. t212t ~ -.......... _ ---......... ~ ~--7 NEED AN EXPLANATION homt' III Costa Mesa -~ recotda, 1 CAD Cd'! '71. 11000. 1y J L p,a "TNat A" ey CINTUI Oft AHA.HEIM. rta.IC M)TIC( Thta not• ta In 11¢• .,.. Pi-~ ,_, by lfle Of THE NATU"f OF niE ! werrenty. (t712t1) owner. xir,t motOtltrW. Edith . OOOdwtn Tru"" PmlJC M>TIC( INC., o oarporMton eordenee with Section wlOWaigl-I'll I breadl PROCEEDING AGAINST or the pasl 30 years. 11-. OcllrW.146-1451 1t111~A~1 D-to1' Y• .... •CM-AA Ml1t 8t•50 Of lM Cellfornla ot. Ind .... In..,.~ YOU. YOU SHOULD CON· Servicn w1ll ~held ••11 Ill CoataMeea.Oallf.t2t2t • ~J¥r••n :a:.:-..... .:· MOTICaf1' ~.e:-Lll A ::-'°'rn:.':=:-:..Oaad TACT A LAWYER Saturday. January
.""
... ..._ Tllll bU91neM II OOft-n Ir: ee .. 0 TNM'ID'a 8ALI 1rmw1i ..!......-. _ __. .... --00-On Jtl'luMY 23. t8M, .. 18 I I AM at J>ad••~ ' RIKI\~ ducted~:~tNat ThefOIOW'I,._... AIU fl .. 11111 It T.1. .... ,1 tN/ ,...,,,_-a 1111 •-·-'".._.~Ml 130P M .•duty ~led V ' lJ\.'.
1001 Quell I., N.8. c•rw I I Edltfl dolltg ........ -... -" AU.mt .... •• A..... Cwt not bWI ,,.... of; ,,__ In-Truatw under Mid puf'IUal\I I e w M 0 r t u 0 r y
r W-9300 Wftc Thll ~ W11 ftled Automoel_.. 1117.0 ...... ,................ YOU AM: IN OUAULT ~ 6 .. c..._. 1111-:=" 04 ""'--wtlldl to Oaad of Truat NCOnMcS Chap.f"I , Newport
LAMlllTllllCTION wfttltheCOunt'yaRotOr~ ec:.~-
111
:;.c:•,.: ~.~:':. UNDIAAOHOOF TRUST, NllaNd 0renee C... t. 1• = = :r:.1:t: June 2t, tt13 • inetr No &wh lnterm<'nt will ..... •n•••• ofletemocllt iow-.. Coumy on DeolMOer w ~ ~-~ .. == ..... ... • DATlO NOVIMHA 1•. Oalw "°' JlftUiWY • fl In.,....,'* of --..IHI 1Ss271t10. of Offtclat ... follow at PaL'lfiC View ,,... --•-• ..__.. 23. 1M5 · *"'9o --... ,_ tM4, UHLESS YOU TAl<E 1... • • llWSI ......... .., .. _...... QOtda, auevted by M p Ce1SJDJ "'Orwwe .._. Ml. CA ., _. ..... ,_ ACTION TO P"OTECT • ..: • ....,._..,, ~ E Woode,.~ emonal ark Pa-
··-~ ..... todeyt ........... 0...,.. COiie TtMe ......_ II OOft.-. YOUA ~"TY IT MAY ~ •••lllOftlll"°'dillCI wom.n ano Otto l(aly a/\d ahc V~· Mortuary
l.oeded·AMtoTflnl .... ,. DllW .... .-..y 2. .. M. .,::'..'rc°"........ • ,. ...... ,.. • SOlO AT ,,.· PUKIC ~·.-.: ~ COl*8110e Kelly. huebend Ou~1on. 644·2700 • ... IOOIU as. ... c,..... u ..... ,. .., "'~ w YOUNEEO AH Et-PWUC Mnll ,........ :r .. #fl. a:"•IOll Md ..... ·~·i. In IN -;;;.:i------.---=-
MGOHlrtMwlhd TH.at TNI -· -.... .. -. ... ,_ PLANA TION 0, TH! ...... I , .... °' IN °°""1 ... COITA~. WMllll~alftlltOr--. ..... _. ... NATU"l 0' THI _,_,.. _._ ..... .,.,., ot 0...,.. CWYty
•
!"' ~ llJTIC( = ~ lfl ~ I. ::L. ... : r:-.=s: P"~llOING AOAINIT 1:-l!Mf OP :-: ::..:""':" ...= .... el ~ WILL 'ACFIC VIEW •••••'14 __ _. Y~ YOU 8"0Ul.D O()N.. .... ,.. IC k ,1 llJJll0.111.L AT PUIUC•l.CTION .._.Al'W
T·top,Y.a,IUIO,llt, PICnnov9• ••II •q PW 0...."C --~ ......... T On ALA~ 1MI. II ce-e...::.-e• of TNll. '9 ...i ~t'lfOHDT ~--~ c.m.tery • MortiMry ~ ........... ,. 11Am llA1W Dllllr ............... -• -. ...... 1HO ~~ Con-........ ...J,, ......... --....... =-~of tM Ch~. Crwnetory ~-.Ji==--.. ··-"i·:£!.:U..:.'!:-"""'----·-..... •:..::: =-..,!-;;,,:,..-:--.. ~ ... '"'°0.:"""'-"'"" -.,·=-, ... ---· ~-..................... ...., .................. ·-...:.. ......... ~ ........... .....,~8eedl ._.. • ·-~I • ,.... • ... D.... T.,.., Yftdl9r ............... --JC lltt • lAllllll av... Or· ~4-2700
t .. 12Lld0Ma.rae.,...... P9lJC ...... =· .............. 0... .. ,.............. == ·---:i: .... Cllflilllllt. .. """ ~-=--c.11;.~ YOU AM IN w1.••T ~-==...-. 111 = =.: t',••M. '* .. ~.:'!!!.!.''~~ .. nv."::.-:O.,lflf,..,.'":' .... °':'W:: ~LAW. ~•C•s 1111 .. ---• •:: -• .,.. ---• ••• •• an1n • .. "" llT .... -_ -~ .. A_,OI"""' 1 ..... ,_., • ..... ...._ ...._,.,......... _.. o.d II TNll In N ·-•• .,,:~~~ ::=::..: m n;;.: ~-=:r;.:lc::.:ra:: e.~:.=t; =~.::!:::: ~~ •=.!JI~--=~ ..u:.c-~'fDAT = r~. = ·--.:.~-=--•a ,. = _,-==--r:-ilt911--.::-::.•u. CoNMw ..,.. M -..w:.Z: ==~=~"' aau.J.. .. lft ., .. ..., 9•:... ::-..:;a?-, _ _. ..... :r, 5«)...SSS. AT • ....... -..-.... -~.. ., ...... '1 ...i .a _, -. .___.,_.J_..;;.._~ -a-.........
I -·
0 CHICK IVERSON
Chevrolet • Porache • Audi
441LlwthJ.,.....,..._.
1111111
Highest Quality Sales & Service
The Best Car Buys
In Orange County
AreAt
The Dealers Listed
On This Page
~ 0 CREVIER BMW ~ w SALES • SERVICE • LEASING ""
"Where Professional Attitude Prevails"
~ In Euro,.. o.1¥try. l1celent lat1etton Of
.... end carefUllJ prapered Ueed IMW'a alway• In ltock.
835-3171
20I W. 1•t St., Santa An•
Corner or Broadway & tll St. Cloaed Sundaya
GSTERLING
SAUS -SUllCl -LWllC -PUTS
Overteet Delivery Speclall•t•
BMW -ROLLS ROYCE
1540 J•mborH Ad.
Newport Be•ch 940-..... wu
• JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS
001 0-" •t. -""1 CM Location
1001 a..11 •. -,.. .. Olmlon
0 World '• Largat 5-.ctlon of 0 ~s.nz .A.
113-9300 ............................
I
., .. "'"'-
0 South County ~
VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU
CALIF'S .rt1 a LARQEIT YOLKIWAQEN DEALER
NEED we SAV MORE?
Parts Open M-Sat 8 -5:30 Sat 9 -4 p m
Serv!Qe m-Frl 7:30 -6 p.m.
11111 llEACH 8lVO HUNTIMOTON llEACH
7141142-2000
0 NABERS CADILLAC fil
. 2IOO 111111 ILYI., OISTI IEll
(114) 148-1100 (211) Ul-12H
• 863t Prices • Convenient Location
•Great Location •Super Service
• CourttK>us & Knowle<:Jgeable Sales .People
PACIFIC
OCEAN
CARO(" CROV(
o COMMONWEALTH
VOLKSWAGEN
&n 'F~Y STORE SJHCE '53' -~ s.1 .. -S.mc• • Leuing ~
Ml·OllO
0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD
U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer
Modern Sales, Service. Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Oepts.
Competitive Rates On lease & Daily Rentals
2111 ..................
la-M11., M0-12l1
0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS
• LONG TllM LIASIS
• COMNTITIVI PUICHASI PllCIS * HUOl INVBnOIY
dial MERCEDES fJ:\
21sn14137.2333 'O
~ext to Santa Ana Fwy (5) on
Manchester/Beach Blvd.
MISSION
VIE.JO fJ
d) ....
BUICK Laius JAGUAR 1SUZU
the PROFESSIONAL APPROACH
71 4 -979-2500
2925 Harbor Boulevard
• Costa Mesa. CA•
a mcv01
SUBARU
• TRANS_,. SLASHES • FIMBIRO
" 5000 STE
• PARISEH e PRICES! •
• BONIUlH
• GRANO PRIX LIQUIDATING
• SUN8IR1l COHVERTl8l.C
• T·lOOO 1985 MODELS
• GRANO_,. lN>CR NfY alelllSTNUS ...... bclt•••lt W£WU
NOT 8£ llURSOl.O! C1 rroJDl • ~ PONTIAC SUBARU ,.,.
2411 """' ~. 2ao ..... -. c.tallesa .......... adt
714/549-4300 c.taMnl ............ -•
714/549-4300
G ORAICE COAST JEEP /RENAULT #l",,,, lflt ,,, ,
,_"" 11111 F1r I '""
f 0)Jll12e • SALES Loa'"St • seAvtce
..---, ... .....,. I I.YO • LEAStNG
-r ·-• sti'iiia • ACCESSORIES OEPlt
• UNIVIRllTY OLDIMOBILE
HONDA
....:::..J.. -2110 Hllrbor Blvd.
'·-coeg •••• l40-0713
' I
I
l· ;
25~
THURSDAY, J NU ARY 16, 1986
·oates faces conte·mpt he&:ri~g
OC sheriff ordered to a.nswer charges
prisoners dented mandated privileges
By LISA MAHONEY
Of .. ..,,... ....
Orana.e County Sheriff-Coroner
Brad Gates will have to defend
h!rriself against inmate charges that
his department violated a I 978 court
order mandating that oounty jail
prisoners are entitled to certain
privileaes.
U.S. District Coun Judge Wllliam
Gray Wednesday set a contempt
hearing for Gates after El Toro
attorney Stes;>hen Buckley assened
that the Shenfl's Department main-
tained policies that ignored Gray's
orders to provide recreation time to
inmates in administrative sqre-
ption, install pay telephones in the
Jail and revise wntten jailhousc rules
to renect the new privileges. The
orders stem from an earlier lawsuit on
jail conditions.
Gray aJso agreed to hear a class
action suit o n behalf of all present and
future Main Jail inmates that aJICfCS
Gates violated prisoners' civil rights
by restricting their aocess to personal
correspondence, photoaraphs anti
readina material ..
The class action also maintains that
the Sheriff's Depanment used food
for punishment and disciplinary
isolation -wbich prisoners call tbe
hole -in a cruel and unusual
manner.
Both the class action suit and a
sbow cause hearing on the co ntempt
characsare tentatively set for June 23.
Gray traveled to Santa Ana to bear
Buckley's complaint and another jail
rclatco civ11 case on the same day
Ora• County beaan to comply with
a contempt order fie issued in March
reprdingjail ovcrcrowdinJ.
American Civil Liberucs Union
atto rney Richard Herman proved the
county was violating terms of· the
same 1978 order Buckley has cited by
not prov1d1ng inmates with beds or
aivina them enough time fo~ sleep
and meals.
Gray found county supervisors and
Gates in conte mpt for not carrying
out h11 orden and appointed a jAl1
monitor to ma.kc sun st.cpl were
la.ken to lower lhc population in iM
main men's jail to l ,SOO by Wednes.-
day.
A spokesman for Gates ro*11ed
questions about the new litiption to
Deputy County Counsel Ed Dwan.
Duran will ~Qt Gata in the
contempt bearina. An auomcy
cboten by the county Risk ~~
ment Division will defend him iD the
(Pleue ._ OATa/A2)
More
toxins
found
on road
Ch emical dumpin
closes highway 2nd
time In three days
' By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
ud STEVE MARBLE
CM .. Dlillr .... """
---
Rock 'n • roll .tar lllck
Neleon '• aaentrebata re-
porta that free-butn1
coe•lne had anythlna to
do with the plane cruh
that kllled the •tncer.
8eeA7. ... --I • f -_
Authonues closed Ortega Highway
for the second ttme 1n lhrcc days
Wednesday ntght after findtng
another batch of deadly toxic
chemicals. Cout
Car-pool lane foes to
gather at Orange County
Fairgrounds tonight./ A3
Performing Arts Center
director suffers mild
heart attack./ A3
World
A march for Martin
UC Irrine atadenta march Weclneaday to honor Martin
Lather 1UDf Jr on b.la birthday. The march wu put of a
three-day aympoelam aponaored by the anlYenlty, titled
"LlYinl the Dream." The •lain cl'ril ~ta leader would
han been 57 yea.re old today. Aroancl the •tate oth~n
remembered Kln& ln a Y~ety of actt..-itea. See A 7 .
Nearly I 00 pounds of chemC1als.
stored 1n a variety of containers. was
found alongside the road about nme
miles cast of the San Otqo Freewa)'
near Caspers Wilderness Park.
It was the third illegal dumping of
hazardous chemicals located on the
highway this week. said Orange
County fire ~llcsman Pat Antnm.
Antrim wd the chem1cals were
stored in a variety of containers
ranging from quan--s1ze bottles to
five-gallon cannisters.
The Soviets propose a
15-year p hase out of nu-
clear weapon's, and Re-
agan says some elements
of the proposal are prom-
lalng./ A5
Mandatocy union dues irks teacher
Nearly 30 different chemicals \ll'Crc
1dent1fied. including cyclobcxanc.
hvdrochlonc aad. benzene sulfomc
acid. sodium methylate. ammonium
oxvlate. ammonium th1ocya01te. and
sodium methvlate
o\ shenffs ·bomb squad was dis·
patched to the scene 1n ~ the
chemicals were too volatile lo trans-
pon and would need dt'tonauon.
Sports
Corona del Mar nips Uni-
versity and Ocean View
tops Edlsc;m In high
school basketball./C1
The UC Irvine basketball
team meets Cal State
Fullerton In a PCAA con-
test tonlght./C1
Six area community col-
lege baseball players
chosen In major league
draft./C1
INDEX
Boating
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
BuUetln Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Death ~otlces
Entertainment
Horoscope
Ann landers
Opinion
P~arazzl
Police Log
Public Notices
Sport a
Televtaion
WMther
B1
82
B2
A3
BS-6
CS-7
83
C7
B4,C4
B2
B2
A6
B1
A3
C7-8
C1-4
C4
A2
-~ Huntington Beach teacher complains
---------he didn •t have vote on union dues issue
By ROBERT BARKER
Of .. Dllllr ..........
Bill Waxman. a teacher of theater
ans and English at Ocean View High
School, claims that Huntington
Beach Union High School trustees
arc forcing him to join a union and to
pay UOIOn dues.
"It is a fundamental IDJUStice and
an appalling infringement of my
rights," the 36-ycar-old Waitman told
school trustees Tuesday.
He also charged that because he 1s
not a member of the Di~nct
Educators Association. he was not
allowed to vote on a new contract last
m onth that approved mandatory
agency fees. a long<oveted goal by
teacher union members.
He said that being shut out of the
voting booth amounts to taxation
witho1.tt ~presentation. American co-
lonists staged the Boston Tea Pany 1n
Irvine mayor issue
to~be put to city vote
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of .. .., .........
Irvine residents will decide in June
whether the city's mayor should
continue to be chosen by the City
Council or should be picked instead
by locaJ voters.
The council voted unanimously
Tuesday to place an ordinance on the
June 3 ballot concerning direct elec-
tion of a city mayor. If •,P.proved by
Irvine voters. the counetl would be
required to ado pt a procedure for
choosing a mayor in this manner in
time for the ) 988 election.
Counci lman R a y Catalano
proposed the change Tuesda). Hr
said the mayor's role has bernmr
increasingly important 1n the grow·
ing. master-planned city. He pointed
out that the mayor is often called
upon to be the chief spokesperson for
the city.
Because of this, Catalano said he
wants the person serving as mayor to
be accountable directly to local
voters, rather than to a simple
majority of the council.
"I would like to take the (council)
politics out of who becomes mayor
and &ive the decision to the people,"
he said.
1773 to protest the ~me pnnc1ple. he
said.
Waxman must agree b) Jan. 17 to
district_ officials deducting the union
dues from his payroll checks or lv
have the union attach his wages. he
said.
"How would you feel to have S400
arb11ranly removed from your pay
check each )'tar'>" he asked trustees.
Trustee David Warfield. who was
backed b) the District Educators
o\ssoc1al1on in last November's elec-
11o n, said today he's opposed to
Waxman's request to rescind the
agency shop provisions.
But Warfield said that Waxman
and o ther "consc1enuous ob1ectors"
Currently, the council picks a
mayor annually from am ong its own
five members. (Pl ....... &LSCTED/A~) Rep. Dan.lei E . La.DIJ'eD
.
Historic ~untington Beach
he use sa Ved from ·b·ulldoser .·
80-year-old Victorian structure to be
relocat 3 locks away, refurbJshed
87aoaBRTBAAKER • ...............
The ~ HOUtr. a Victorian
beauty that • stood for more than 80
yean at the corner of' Olive Avenue
and Ninth Street in Huntinston
8mch, hu been •ved from the
bWdet of the bulldozer.
But it WU I cloee call.
Built by a pioneer .,_ina bsl.J in
190'"'°6, lbe bome wu ICQUired
rec:eatly =-C'anl;Mlll .... do Md IO eel1 tl ud ..
buUd a d.a • on tbe downtown
proecny, two blocks away trom
Pacfic Coast Hiahway and the Pactfk
Ocean.
But the weathered old bu1ldina
didn't annct any buyers and the
Rueel• fated they wou&d have to
demolish the OnMtory-and .. ·balf
redwood buildina.
. But .mmbnl or the Hunllnaton
Balch Hlstoric:al Society. wbo have
been active an U'Yina to pracne
biMOric bomet wt he in the petb, of
redevelopment, aot ia~ol~
Tiwy took the hcMc olf tt.e R ....
huda, U a pf\. And lhen the fOund I
prospccuve owner. Tony C•te. a 33-
~ar-old law~tµdcnt in fUllt11on.
Cate' i&JUd to take the h'outc and
• move it· to a lar,e lot tbne blocks
awa)' at lltb tRet and Ohvt.
.. This is the o1delt Victorian house
alona the beKh in Oraiwe ounty,
accotdina to the ma.rcll r·ve done."
Cate ta.id. .. I'm ucited about aetuna •
chaMe to refurbish il."
City ofliclalt Mid that by the time
Cate poun a new foundation, re-
peints. rewuu, pull in new plumbtnc
and doa other wort. COlll could
mount IO about $40,000. Cate Mid he
doesn't thank COICI woWd to that
hilll. but dldA't o&r .......... Tbe 1MMllt WU bUilt by Jolla H.
,.,._. wtMt moWld to tM We.
mtftlttf•F<MlDtam Valley ll'la frOm
ROBERT
BARKER
Focus ON THf Nf\\\
•
Pennsylvania with his p&rcnt~ Harry
and Anne Pope. in 1877. llCXOrdmJ to
Histoncal Soc1et)' member Ou)'
Guu.ardo
"The were amoni the carucst
colonists to amvc ln Wcatrnintt~r
Colon)'," Guzzardo added. .. They
were real ptOnttrs "
John Pope bu1h the home beaute
his wife had ured of hvu'I 1n the
country and wanted to move to town,
Ouznrdo ••d.
John's 8S·)'CIN>ld da.a&htcr,
Laurene. hvct at a rwretMnt com·
munat)' and prov1dcd much o tbt
inbftwtion lbout the okt lillomt, (l'I•• -.. io.IC/All
are not required to JOJO a union and
that they can assign their unio n fees ol
about S375 a )'ear to a chant)'
O thers. howe\er. claim that
teachers ma) not ~lect chanues 1n
place of union fees unless the' ·,e had
a proven record o f past contnbu11on~
to the chant)'.
Waxman said toda' he hehe' es his
constttutional n ghts ina~ be '1olated
by the new contract and that he olans
to stt an attorney
He saJd he and otht'r non-union
teachers' were asked to pan1n pate in
job action~ taken b) unio n teachers
seek.mg conta(;t approval but ere
"left out lD tht' cold" when 1t came lo
vot_mg for the new contact.
However. offiaals detennaned they
could stab1hzt' the chemicals on site
before removing them to a legal
dumpslle.
._n tnm said the operauon would
take from four to six hours and that
the h1ghwa) v.ould reopen around 5
a.m toda' ~n un1denufied Lake Elsmore
resident who commutes from his
home to Orange Count~ on Onega
H1ghwa) d1sco,ered some of the
chemicals in a 32...quart cooler and a
small cardboard bo~ al about 4 p..m.
The commuter notified Caltfom1a
(Pleaee .ee llOR.E/ A2)
Lungren out of
U.S. Senate race
Didn 't rai~e en ough
money to seek party
nomlnation:tie says
By Ute A11oclated Preu
LONG BEACH -Rt'p Dan1d l
Lunarcn announced Wednesda~ he 1
withdrawing from the race to un~at
U .S. Seo. Alan Cranston because he
faded to raise enough mone~ to
continue the c.ampa1gn.
During a year-lonJ exploration
campaign, Lungren raised S ~40.000
tar short ot th(' S lk.l 000 ht• ... ud he
"o uld need b~ Fcbruan to go ahead
"1lh his campaign
"Therefore. it's 11me for me to
announce it's not \l't tt me for me to
run for a Senate <;eat " Lungren told
reponers at a n('ws conferenC( at his
ofTi e here "'\\ 11hout the money. I
.:anno t gel m' campaign across "
""'' campaign suffered from a
terminal case of v.n ter's cramp We
rnuld not ~rt enough people to wnte
us 1.he<'k.s.,' he said.
"I :im withdrav.1ng from the Snlate
race:· he add('d
Lungren. 39. voungt'st of 11 oro-
(Pleue eee LUl'tOUPf I A2)
Irvine woman getti~g
$2.6 million for head.
injury in auto crash
., STEV·! MARBLE. Mttt °' ..............
The family of an Irvine ~om·an
who suffered severe he•d ltlJunes in•
1983 car accident will ~1ve S2.6
m1llton m an out-of-<'01.tn settlement
reached th I W'ClClt.
Shirley McO.n1cl. SS. wa thro~n
from hcf\'eh1de•hen 1tcolhdcd with
an oncom1na car and suffered sue~ tenout had injuries tba.t U'lc lat~
u~nu parual frontal lobotomr .
The woman' famll) later sued w
dnvef of tbe o\hcf car and the cat•s
owner. Robtn TelJtt. dwnn.an of the
Bob'a Okl-FasluoMCI 1«' ram
cbain and m_,or Oicthokttt ln \he
Ora• County fausround 5-.p
•
1
"1alcla wu •Yed from die balldOMr wltla
UM llelp of local p~111nadoalm.
RISTORIC HOUSEBEINO-RELOCA TED •• ~
r....aAl
Ouzran:to laid. It wu the who sold
the home to itt current owner~. he
11id.
'°'fbjJ houJC has true histonc
Jianificance. It's the fint old hou\C
wt'v~ been able to save. Ma ybe 11 will
ttart a precedent and the old house\
will be .. ved, not tom down."
Tbe houK, Q~ is weathered and
obvioutly bu teen bett.er day\, wa\
built in the style of classic re111val in
the Victoritn theme, Guzzardo p1d.
It hat four bedrooms, a formal den,
hv1na room, kitchen, laundry room
and two bathrooms.
(atr. thc new owner, plans to move
11 Friday mominJ It 2 a.m. Thr
mover will take ti two blocks to
Pacific Coast Hiattwa~vel three
blocb aouth and then back east
to 12th Street.
Many of the overhead power and
telephone lines have to be removed
for the move, Cate 11id.
.Jhe old P~ House ia one of about -300 rcmain1na-rn-downtown ards
that arc of Vi~torian en vintace,
accordina to MikMdaJMofthLei1)"1
redevelopment office.
Membcn of-the Historical Society
have launched a viaorous drive to ~ve the home and others like it.
ELECTEDMA YOR •..
City officials have contributed
SIS 000 that waa used to retain the
Th1n1eth Strce1 Architectural firm of
Newpon Beach to conduct a 1urvcy of
up to about 2,000 old structur~ for
pou1ble preservation. homAl
Councilwoman Sally Anne Miller said she wu .. not oppoted to the
syscem -e have now:· She also
pointed out that direct election could permit a candidate with no council
nperience to immediately u1ume
the ladin1 post. But Miller 111d she would •UPP"•n
CataJano'a proposal as Iona u the
mayor'• rok ia not upanded to u1urp
theauthontyofthc C1 ty manager, whc>
oversees day-lCHiay cny operation$.
After approving the ballot measure
on direct ell!ction of a mayor. the
council directed the ci ty \taff to
retum Jan. 28 with M:veral other
chanacs that also may be plaud
before voter\, 1nclud1nc limitation of
council termund a change of election
date\.
The company has slated an open
house next Wednesday from S to 7
r..m al its office an the Main Street
brary annex. People arc encouraged to \hare
famil y phot<>vaphs and histone• and
panicipatr an the survey of old
buildings. Office hours arc slated
Tu~ys and Thurlday\ from 1-S
pm. and Wednesday, from S·7 p.m.
MORE TOXIC CHEMICALS FOUND •••
ham Al
Hiabway P1trol offiaal1, and an
officer escorted him to the teene.
A county fire hazardou\ matcnal
tam detcribed the find a\ '1m1lar to
the deadly mixture found Monday,
which included 13 chcm1cal,, many
of them hiJttly toxic and u plos1vc.
A eecond, smaJler dumps1tc was
di1COvere.d Tuesday, Antrim u1d.
ThOIC cbcm1cal1 were removed and
the roed remained open
On the scene were offic1ah1 from the
county fire dcpenment, 1he county
Environmentar Health Depanmcnt,
hipw~y petrol. IJ.S fornt c;en.1cc,
U.S. fiah and Game, and a \P«ial
invest iptor from the d11tnct at-
tome')''I office.
Atlistina Wat a ha1.ardou~ material
team from Anaheim
Antrim didn't know whelhcr 1hc
three dumpinp were related.
-rhefe't the ~>H1b1laty they're
connected," he 1a1d. "It'" hard Lo tell
how lone the chemicals have actuall y
been there."
Meanwhile, Orange ( ounty en·
v1ronmental offi caala w. ere trying
Wednctday LO trace the ori11n of the
polentaally deadly· mi.xturc of
chem1cah found Monday on a
shoulder of the Ortq.a H1&hway 1n what was considered the c.ounty·~
mO<\t danicrou\ ca1e: of illegal dump-
in1-
A \henfr\ bomb squad detonated
the mMt unstable chemicals early
T uc~ y by plac ing aboul two pound\
of upf0\1ve' on top of the l<>Jtl(.
material after 11 wu lowered 1n1n a
threc·foot-dup pll
The rc111duc wu 1eooped ou1 by a
Long Beach h11,ardou, wa'llC dt\p<t'lal
firm and wall be hauled w a toxic
dump.
The expl0\t0n sounded like a
shetaun report and could he heard for
about live m1lci, according 1<1 wtl·
neHcs \tandtn& at a roadblock on thr
rural highwa y east of San Juan
( ap1strano The chemical\ appear to ha ve
on&Jnated from a laboratory, perhaps
conn~cted with the pharmaceutical or
acrJ05pau indu\tnc-.. uid Bob Mer-
ryman. director of the county's En-
vironmental Hcahh Depanment.
"But the odd m1llture doc'ln't point
10 any one indu4llry," Merryman \81d
If located, 1he offending party
would face a maximum S50,000 fine
for each c.hem1cal dumped. or a total
of Sh50,000 for all 11 chemical'
found
Merryman ..aid the odd'> arc as;ttn\I
tra cing thr c.hcm1c.al, to a cipcc1fic.
wmpany unle!>\ oflk1al11 arc able to
find 1dcnt1fkat1on marking on the
cann11ncr'I. drum\ and bottlt'i
The illegal dumping 1n<.1dcnt "
probably the mo'it dangcrou'I one in
wunty hl\IOry he 'l31d
GATES FACES CONTEMPT HEARING ...
rromAl
clul action aull ··we're aoinf t.o make thrm prove
~heirc:nt.ud 1f they pro¥f!.anythin
we're_J01n1 to attempt to •how the
ahmffha. attempted to wmply with
thOIC orden," Duran u1d.
··our contcnuon 1'1 hr wa., 1n
comph1nce most of the time 1( nol all
of the time." he 'Wiid Buckley. rcpreKnt1ng former in-
mate Phillip A. Sen ten" and current
1nmatet W1ll1e R W1~~y and konald
S. Jlodnaue-1, prc'\Cnted 1hr court
with etKlence and statement\ he '4i'f'
1how inmate• are not ¥Clltr\g al l thr
privi .. they arc tupPQ"K'.d '"
One piece of ev1dcnu· a nolc
written l'>y Senteno while 1n adm1n1'"
tra"tive sqrept1on -a11k' for ae«'' to the j111'1 dayroom A 'hcnff,
dcout)''I re1pontoe tha1 he r 11uld choM"
either the dayroom or a \huwcr hut
not both appean to violau: an order
that eqrepted pri.oner' hr allowrd
daily use of the dayroom for at lca\t
two houri, Orly obferved. Coihowtn
are permitted 1t the Jail e very other
day.
o.111 ............ ..,0.... .........
Jaqe Wllllam Gray I
di.agree'\ with (.(Junty da1T'Qt ~t lhc
u1llcc.t mil 110lf'ph<1ne' 11 installed
mccr ( 1ray"\ <lrdcr (,ray aareed to
hear fonher iir¥umrnt on the matter
as well " look. 1ntt.> why I.he coun ty
never 1ntor-ptira1cd h1'1 ()tde,, into
written ru les prnv1dcd to inmate' "'
thry would know 1hr1r nit}\"
and 2~ w11nc\..c11. 1ndud1ns ')cnteno
and another man who are t urrently
vrvini time 1n Soledad Pnwn
Earlier WedncM:lay. <may ordered
the county to pay flcrman , thc A( LI J
attorney, $38,563 1n fcc11 and t hargc11
for work ritcmmina fr11rn lhr t aY'
whu .. h rc-.ultcd an h11 Mart'h tontt·mpt
find1na aga1n~t 1hr counl y
tfl!rman wa' 11cck1ng ahoul
\141'.f.)(J(J for lhrcc t:a\C'I hut wa<1
awarded fon tn onfy on('
(iray alvi agrl-f''I with t11unt y,
11rgument\ thal lfrrrnan \hould l'>c
paid \ 125 an hriur for h1\ work
1n\ICad of lhC \21J(J ht• Wil'I il\king for
1 he awarc.l u 1uplccl w11h S 75.830 1n
penalt1c\ < 1ray '>1'krcd the county to
pay for v1r1la11na h1\ order8 on inmate
hous1na hnna c·on1tmp1 One8 lcvic<l
w Sl 14,'l<H
lJnde"hcnn Kaul Ramo' said the Co)henfrt Department was 1n com -
pliance WcdncM.iay with (iray'' m()'jl
recent order to keep m:lln Jail P<Jpu·
la11on below I SOO.
Comr Apnl. Oranae C ount y mu\t
further shonk JaJI .popul:UJon w no
more than 1 .4<~1 1nmA1t" Ant1<:1·
pa11na 1hat. Herman ukcd < 1ray to
order triple l>unh rcmci vecl from the
M1un J"l.
Twice weeldy rooftop reuc1111on
may ut0 have been denied ~vcgatcd
inmates, Orly concluded ~inct there
ate 14..,.tion u llund)11J policy
only alloW1two1qrcp tcd inmatf''\ at
a Litne to uic the roof\op rc,rcatwnal
facilh~ at a set hour e.ach day. the
Shrrifra Oeplnment could not both
follow its own rule• and meet Ciray''
order when the 1t1tevatton cell• wrrt'
tall. Buckky atped.
r>uran \Al(I at the Wcdnetd.ay
hcanrJa 1ha1 the <()unty dad not
• believe lhll d1rt"C;l1 ve waa a part of the
1978 ,,r&r C 1ray auured him H W8'
Ouran 'IU(..(;('\8full y araurd lhllt lhc I
bunlca wcrr necdrd ''' rn:unuun
OeA1b1hly 1\'l thr Jlltl fhc t11un1y will
il'°wnt1nuc to U\C' tent\ that were wt
up II lht J&lfll!\ A MU\IC.k Honor
Farm H temporary hr>u\1na while
modular unllit were benrf prepared,
he111d A• t.o pty teteohont'\ Rut.klcy
~=;lllljMI
--~ ---~ .. c..---, .. 1111111 ..... .._ IMO Goel•.... , .. ·~· ... ca--........,. ..,._ • ""°""' .. , 4)'/.
Buc.klcy \at<l 11ttrr lhr heannJ lhlilt
he expected thC' claa1 action •ull and
•hoW-<'aUJe heanrfJlOtakc aboodive-
day,. Hr planned 11• call between 20
Wf RF L1 srf NIN L
~ , ... Or .... c;,.... ,,~ c,.._.,, ,.., ,... ..... ...,...,.. ~ _" .. 6' _.., ...
Ju•t call 642-8086
..... ,,.... ...,, .. ••00>"'9'1 ,.,.J,.,. "'"""" ....
~-~.,,,,..
•
What d1' you hk.e about the Daily Pilot'> What
don't you hkt'> (all the number above and your
mrmac w11J be recorded, tranKnbtd and dt·
lavtrcd to the appropnate editor
The \lme 14-hour antweran1 1erv1u may bt
uw.d to rtcord lctteu to the editor on any topic
Con1nbu1on to our Letters column mutt include
tltcJr name and telephone I\ umber for vcnfttat1un
Tcllt ut what't on your mind
•~"II lAt ' f f I "" ,,.,
"CA '•<ti t'"I ("'I '11 !I :1111'1""' ,,...,. ro"'
•"" ;)U" _., •• IA ~ ... ..,
'
Clfoulettoft
T1l1p..._.
I "
'
Skies to remain partly cloudy
"'••
U.8. Tempe • ~, t• t ••
.... •• .. .. •• .. . •• " .
...
* • .. •
.,,
2.1 .,, o .. . ... u It
1J
LUNGRENWITHDRA WSFROM RACE •••
rromAl
spective candidates for the Re-
publican nominttion, sa id he still
thouaht Cranaton, D-C...al1f.. was
beatable. ''I'm still convinced Alan Cranston
can be beaten, 1hould be beaten and
wall be beaten if the Republican Partr,
comes up with the naf\t candidate, ·
he said.
He uid he believes Cranston 1s
"more vulnerable today than he wa<J
when I embarked on my exploratory
campe1an.''
Lun11en tefu,sed to apcculate which
candidate woald be best able to beat
Cran1ton, but 11id one of the prob-
lem' facina him in hi s bid to raiJe
SUIT •••
Prom Al
reM:ntma the Teller tamily, said
because the maid let S1amund tale
the keys "1t wu enou&h for him
(S1arnund) to be covered under his
(Teller'\) insurance policy."
••
mone y was the \hadow of Peter
lJcbcrroth, the co mm1n1oner of
baseball and former he.ad of the Lot
Anaetcs Olympic Orpn1zina Com-
mittee.
"There 11 thr thou~t Peter Uebcr-
roth will still come in. and a lot of
people arc keeping their pocketbooks
closed because of that," Lonarcn said.
When asked 1f he cx pc:ctcd other
Republican hof?!fuls to drop out.
Lunven said, 'If Peter Uebcrroth
~tJ 1n, there will be a war of attrition.
Jfhc doesn't, there won't.''
Uebcrroth has not announced his
plans. .
Declared candidates for the June 3
Republican primary are Los Anselet
Countv ~upe.rv1ior Mike An-
tonovich. Rep. William Dan-
ncmeyc'J_ slate Sen. Ed Dav11, Rep.
Bobbi r-iedler. economist Anhur
Laffer, state Assemblyman Bob
· Narlor and Rep. Ed Zschau.
Television commentator Btuce
Hcrschensohn \Clys he will decade in
the next few weeks whether to enter
,
the race. Two other prospective
candidates, state Sen. Bill Campbell
and ICU>r fep Parker, have not
formally withdrawn but are not
activ.ely campeianina.
Pollster Men-in Field reoort.ed
Lun11tn's 1upport bad sJipped From 6
percent of the Republicam surveyed
last May tO' 2 percent in early
December; lut place amona the 1 l
announced or potential OOP can-
didates. Field reported that only 25
percent of the Republicans surveyed
recoanized Lunaren'a name. Lunaren. who detcribes himtelf u
an "unconventional con.servati~e.,t
waa first elected to Conareu in Iv 18
at qe 32. He now chain the Hou.ee
Republican Task Foree on Crimttnd
played a major role in draftina the
Comprehensive Crime Control Act of
1984.
last May he was listed in U.S.
News It. World Report story on
leadera under qe 40 aa one of the
••most likely future leaden" of the
nation.
E!
• ..... ,. .