HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-01-21 - Orange Coast PilotTUESDAY, JANUt\RY 21, 1986
. Toxic trail leads to rental yard
0 ftcials suspect they have f ourtd a link
to illegal toxins along Ortega Highway
By STBVE MARBLE powdery substance, but initial tests
................ showed the matenal is a form or
A fleet of vans found at an El Toro cement and does not match any of the
rental yard bas raised the suspicions dan&erous toxins found on the state
of police and health officials_ who arc hi&}lway last week. chcc~na to ~ if any of the vehicl~ Complete lab tests on the powder
arc ~ed to illeuJJ1 dum~ toxic will take up to tw weeks, pohce said.
cbem1caJs alooa 11'~ urtep. lii&hw~y. . A California Hi&hway Patrol One van was spnnkltd with a white
NEW SLINE
Cout Mesa's
Weather and conat.'"""'.---.i-L..1-• gk-ton• problem• have . u 1.I 1.1 e
postponed the reopening
aOfthelagunaArtMu-homes eeum to 5eptember .I A3
Callfomla
Police have arrested a
suspect In the acid attack
on a 4-year-old girl./ A5
Nation
The plunge In oil prices
bodes well for con-
sumers./ AA
Sports
Georgie Garcia TKO'd
O~Munlzlnthe 11th roun~n Monday's fea-
ture fight at the Irvine
Marrlott./81
Entertainment
If Met Brooks la too
aertoua for you, you'll love
"El Grande de Coca
Cola" In Newport./ A7
INDEX
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Clualfled
Comics
Croaaword
Death Notices
Entertainment
Horoscope
Ann Landers
Opinion
Police Log
Publlc Notices
Sport a
Televlalon
Weather
A8
A8
A3
BS-7
B8-10
A9
A8
810
A7
A8
A8
B4
A3
B10
B1-3
A6
A2
spared
City officials decide
to abandon 527 -acre
redevelopment plan
By TONY SAAVEDRA Of .. o.llJ ........
Costa Mesa officials have aban-
doned further study of a pro~
52 7-acre rcdevclopmentarca, d1spell-
i ng rumors that the city was preparina
to condemn homes in the southwest
• portion of town.
Acting as the Costa Mesa Re-
development Agency. City Council
members voted last week to explore
other ways to rejuvenate an area
marke(:l---by.-~riorating houses and
rundown bus10esses.
"There were misconceptions
(among landowners) that redevelop-
ment automatically means c-0ndem-
nation and eminent domain," said
Marilyn Whisenand, city redevelop-
ment djrector. "There were some
concerns that redevelopment may be
a ncptive thing for them."
AmonJ the alternatives the city will
be considering arc tightening the
enforcement of buildmg codes and
providing more funding programs for
rehabilitation. Whisenand said.
Since last spring. redevelopment
officials have re viewed housing and
land-use conditions in an area gener-
ally between 16th and 19th streets,
west of Newpon Boulevard. Also
included was a strip alon,g Harbor
Boulevard, up to Fairview state
hospital. and a small ponion cast of
Newport Boulevard to Orange Av-
enue.
About 20 percent of the area is
severely blighted, while development
on 28.6 acres docs not comply with
the city's zonin&i according to an
October st uay prepared by the rc-
(Pleue eee PROP08ED/A2)
spokesman said the vans, because of
their peen and white markinas,
appear to match descriptions
provided by two motorists who may
have witnessed one of the ilJepl
dumpinp.
The vans arc owned by Ticc's
RentaJ Center in El Toro. said Officer
Ken Daily.
Both motorists told the CHP they
saw a \Qhite van with a green logo that
was emittina pungent odors.
More la being made
One of the witnesaes Mid the van
palled her car at a biab rate of speed.
She said abe saw the van later, t.ck.ed
into a turnout of the windina hiah-
way, which linb Oranae and River-
side counties.
Daily said 1everal vans at the El
Toro rental yard arc bcini inJpcctcd, in~ludina the vehicle that yielded the
powdery subltance.
Rept~tativct of six county and
state aeenaes were to meet today to
pore over evidence they have
pthcred and to determine if a second
sweep of the two-lane hiabway should
be made.
About 20 people, includina rep-
rncntatives from the CHP and the
st.ate Ocpanment of Fish and Game,
conducted a drivina tour of the road
Saturday to see if other toxic chemicaJ
dumpsites could be located.
No chemicals were found durina
the sweep.
About 60 chemicals WC1'C found last
week at three separate sites alona the
Real eetate denlopen and ..,ecalaton
ha Ye a new plece of P:J:: t)' lD tile ln•entory. A new Tolcanlc ~ wu bora lD
tbe Paclflc <>ce.n on Monday amid blllow-
lq cloada of emoke and babbllDf laTa. The
YOlcan.lc speck, tbe Ont new island in tbe
recton lD 71 ~ ,_,., la &boat SO mllee
eoatb~ of Jwo Jlma. Jt already mea81U'ee
2.s 10 feet tone. 990 feet wide and nearly 50
feet lllCh.
Watton environmentalists' side in new Irvine job
BJ me Auecla&e4 Pra1
SAN DIEGO -James Watt. the
bane of environmcntaJists in his years as secretary of the Interior. is now
makina a livina u the champion of a
company that markets antj-pollution
equipment.
Watt. 48. is the chairman of a
fledgling Irvine company called En-
vironmental Diagnostics Inc., which
manufactures sophjsticated tests for
detcctinJ hazardous substances in
food, dnnking water and drugs.
Once the chief proponent of the
Reagan administration's philosophy
of less government, Watt acknowl-
edged that the company's products
could lead to sharp increases an
federaJ rcaulation of contaminants in
a variety of products. But he said he
secs no conflict between his previo us
crusade and his current attempu to
expand government's role in protect-
ina the public.
For his role as chairman and
company spokesman, Watt was given
500,000 shares of stock worth nearly
S 1.5 million, and receives an annual
salary ofSS0,000.
Watt. who rcsi&ned as interior
sccrctarv in October 1983. was harsh-
ly cntJctZed by en' 1ronmentahsts for
supporting an easmg tn restncuons
on the granting of 011 (inlhna leases on
federal lands and offshore waters.
He also had supponed opening
protc:'Cted federal lands to grazing.
tim~r<utttng and 011 exploration
(Pleue.ee WATT/A2)
"*1, which cuts thr<>ueb tbe ilolaled Cleveland NatiooaJ FORSt.
The road WU twice doled wtaile
chemicals were beina diapoeed ol.
Some of lhe cbemicals weft IO
volatile that county fi.remaa opted IO
blow them up rather than risk movial
them. Otbcn were too daneeroua IO
detonate and were trUCked out oltbe
area by a pnvate hazardous ma1erials
fum:
Countv environmental bealth of.
(Pl--... TODC/A2)
Deficit
_places--
busing
in peril
School district may
halt busing or require
parents to pay fees
By ROBERT BARU!R Of _....,,.. ....
Ocean View School O.stnct of-
fietals are studying a proposal to halt
businf or to charge parents for the
tradiuonally free transportation ~r
vice as they grapple Wlth a series of
cutbacks destgned to stop the Oow of
red ink in the financially bard-preued
dlstnct.
Plqued by dcchniog enrollment
and soanng insurance and utility
costs, the elementary school district
has spent about SI m1lhon mo~ than
It has taken an for the past several
years.
Even with the infusion of about
$870.000 1n lottery money. ~
closure last year of four schools and
the consohdation of three others. the
distnct faces defict t spendin& of about
$250.000 tlus year, according to
board president Sheila Marcus.
And that docsn 't take in raises for a
teaching staff that's at impasse over
an 8 percent pay hike request.
Trustees a~ 10 ~Ice up the budget
d1scuss1on 1n their meeting ton1&ht at
., at College View School Teachers
Center. 6582 unnox Dnve.
Other cuts ~mg conSJdered m-
clude the delC't1on of about $23.000 m
night custodial pos1t1ons ("the
schools arc JUSt going to have to be a
lmlC' d1n ier:· Marcus said). $23.000
m special education funds. $44.276
for a pnnc1pal on assignment 1n the
cumculum area. $2,350 in travel for
thC' board of trustees, $I ,96 7 10
supphes from Superintendent Dale
Coogan's offioe and $83.000 m mam-
tenancc and v ounds personnel.
Marcus said officials will be forced
to u~ about $872.000 in lottery
mone) JUSt to keep threatened pro-
grams operattng.
Rep~ntauvcs of the Hunungton
Harbour Philharmonic Committee.
which contnbutcs money to the
d1s1nct from funds l"Blscd ID the
annual Chnstmas season Cruise of
lights, are urging officials to put a
portion of lottery mone} into the
d1stncfs instrumental music pro-
gram
(Pleue .ee BUSl1fG/A2)
Security
studied
following
slaying
Snafu delays Mesa's vote
on freeway agency again
BJ PHIL INEIDEAMAN ...............
The weekend alayi~ of a Saddle-
t.ck Collete attldent an a campus
pukina lot fed admlnjstraton to meet
today conccmlna possible chaneet in
aecurity patrols and the cstablith-
ment of a teholanbip fund in the
student's honor.
The ftrnily of the alain student,
Robbin Brandley, 23, of ~na
Beach, said a memorial 1ervic:e wdl be
held at 2 p.m. Wednetday at Rancho
Capistrano Community Church,
29251 Camino Capistrano. San Juan
Ca.Pi•~~· BnndleY'• mother, OeneUe Re·
il)ey, said the lef'Vic:e woukl be ~
to dae public. She Mid co&a. oflkiala
and Brandley'• frienda Would be•
permitted to Speak at the terVict ... r
doo't want it to be terribly bmal ...
she said.
Donna KatcMit. ~ b the Seddleblck Comm=.~• ..., .... ,......,....,......,
OilU'kt. said campus wen
meetiftl today to dilCUll tbe •JUil BodJ f••d ID lrftae
and campue teCUrity. ~ Mid 1M 11 tlai fl!Hll IMI&. .. .,_ •••Ila dae lllioArdas ::s:oa.:a~~:= _..... ....... l.i •• .._.,Dltw .. ••••s'l1•&1811I _ .. ._.. w Ml , ... w a ••1111111 at 710a dall ®~·e .. td thecollete may deode to •trfttlfl111llo•e'11 Pal .... ' dAI 1•• ";:t:ta•
(,,_.. ... &ATlllO/AI) ....... il11'?111••ae111l.., .. tr&eldmr ·--·
1 •
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of .. Dlllr ........
Costa Mesa apin put ofTjoinm& an
.,ency to fund and plan the San
Joaquin Hilla Freeway, this tirM
becau.ae city stafftn nqkcted to
provide the City Council with copies
of the ordinance Monday nl&bt.
"The staff aoofed... said Coun-
cilwoman Mary Hornbuckle. who
explained she won't vote for anyth1n1
that she bun 't rad.
"I didn't realize unbl I aot up here
that I hadn·t Sttn 11:· Hombud.k
said.
CounCll members agreed to po.;1.
pone unul Feb 3 a dCC'ls1on on
whether to JOln the JOmt powtrs
autbonty bc1na formed to plan the
proposed frttwa)' and coll«t dC'·
vclopcr fees to help pe) for It
The cities of Newpon Beach. Santa
4.na. ff'Vlnc. San Clemente and San
Juan Capistrano have JOIDcd the
county in a proanm to charie new
developments for near! half the $341
He '11 try to get cyclists
to keep-their heads-·
under their helmets
HunU oneducator
named to state panel
on motorc cle safety
aicMrd flhun. the director of .awai~ ....._ i9 dlle H~at·
l..-lwta Uaiaa Hilb Sct.ool
DilCrict, h.,.. '° ............ b'
wqdi"ri*n '° kitt -....ves. Phuft. wt.o•1beenICUW1n dn~
J
m1ll1on needed to construct the
lf'('t"'a' Laguna &ach has so far
d('('ls ned membership
( O'>Ul ~eo;a ~ould a~s new
JC'' clopmcnt proJ('('l'i in a 2.2-sq~
mile area nonh ol the San Diego and
Corona del Mar frecwa s LocaJ
dC'' elope rs and landowners would ~
charied Sl.-0 10 per smak dwdhna
unit. SSQQ per mulupk dwt'lhna unit
and SI 30 per \qUarT foot for all non-
res1dC'nt1 al l'On,truC11on
(Pl-..e eee MESA/ A2)
IOIEIT
BAllEI
Fo cus ON THE NEw s
.I I
---------__ .-~ ......... ~
Perrut hlta pole "
Two JAdaa Rftered minor lDJarl• lloD·
da7 wlaeD tlaelr Ferrari •PJNU'fDtlJ loet
oaatrol aad bit a u,Jat pole Ui Newport
Bsscla. Tbe drtYer, 19-year-old SteTen
Polaslo of Newport Beacb, and la.la pueen-
ier. ~k llWer, 18, of Coeta lleu, were
treated and rel•Md from B~ Hoepltal
after tlae 4 :25 p.m. accident on Jf"ord Road.
Police impound Coast man's
limo in hit-run investigation
By SUSAN HOWLETI' .... ..., ........
Investigators have impounded a
Newport Beach man's limousine an
connection with the mvesuga tion ofa
hjt..and-run accident Sunday that lefi
a Costa Mesa teen-ager with cn11cal
injuries.
The resjdent, Leonard Hall. said
his limousine was parked in his
driveway at 1634 lrvme Ave. all nigh t
Sunday while he was consl ucting a
business meeting at home. He said
Newpon Beach officers went over-
boerd with their investiga tion by
barassi~ his wife and friends.
.. I-don t like to scream harassment.
but they're trying to pin this thing on
me," Hall sajd, "This is a form of
barusment. They could have my car
for months if they wanted to."
Meanwhile, Claude R. Hubert Jr ..
IS, remained in critical condition
today in the Trauma CcntcT al
Fountain vaney Regionar l fospl tal.
Hubert was jogging in the bike lane on
Irvine Avenue near 20th Streetat 7:21
p.m. Sunday wheh he was hit by a car.
according to Newport Beach Police
spokesman Trent Harris.
He was running around a parked
car m the strttt toward the inter-
section oflrvine and 20th Street when
he was struck. Harris said.
His 17-year-<>ld sister, Patricia
Marie Hubert. was jogjng in front of
him when the accident occurred. She
was not injured.
She said the car did not slow down
or stop after-hitting her brother.
The car was described by Hubert's
sister as a 1980 large , Amencan-made
vehicle with square headli&hts. She
said 1t was possibly a dark color. It has
damage lO the right front fender
incl uding a broken headlight. Harris
said.
Hall said an officer told him that
blue material was found on the fro nt
ofh1s limousine, which was evidence
enough to-imj)Ound the ~hie.le... Bu ~I contends the vehicle "d~sn't
have a scratch" and shouldn't have
been taken from him.
l nvesu~tors have asked anyone
with any information on the incident
to r.leasc contact the Newport Beach
Po ice Department Traffic Division
at 644-3747.
NASA fine tunes TV
pictures from space
PASADENA (AP) -Scientists
have fixed a computer problem that
interfered with Voyager 2's television
pictures of Uranus for nearly three
days, NASA said today as engineen
sent the spacecraft orders for its final
approach to the planet
"Ever sine~ Saturday at noon time
through early this morning. there
were a large amount of (horizontal)
streaks across the picture." said Dick
Lacser. Voyager project manager at
Jet Proottls1en IAberatory. =..=;;._
He said engineers took two days to
determine t~c cause of the problem
and fi x it.
MESA DELAYS FREEWAY VOTE ••• _
From Al
Existing homes and buildings
would not be assessed for the freeway,
which would run through the San
Joaquin Hills linking the Corona del
Mar freeway with Interstate 5 near
San Juan Capistrano.
Costa Mesa stalled from joining the
pr<>sram in September. because city
officiaJs were waiting fo r Irvine-the
lafJest fee contnbutor -to take the
plunJC. Irvine joined a month later.
despite attempts by freeway oppo-
nents to block the city's membership.
later. Costa Mesa delayed mem-
bership while apparently playing
"you-so-tint" with Santa Ana, which
joined last week. Besides Llauna
Beach -which bas Iona opposed the
freeway route -Costa Mesa would
now be the Jut city to join.
The delay means the city won't
have a candidate when the joint
powers authority votes for a chair-
man and a vice chair during its first
meeti ng Jan. 30 at Newport Beach
Cit y Hall.
.. W e arc footdraggjng." Costa Mesa
Councilman Donn Hall conceded.
In other action, the council:
•Sia~ down Councilman Dave
Wheeler s proposal to limit campaian
contributions at the loCal level.
•Approved payina Sacramento
lobbyist Dennis Carpenter SS,000 a
month to contjnue pushina for a state
Senate bill that would allow Costa
Mesa to rqulate noise from tbc
Pacific Amphitheatre.
•Gave the OK for entrepreneur Ali
Roushan to build a 28-foot tall castle
tower and 14-foot-high block wall
around a restaurant he owns on
upenor A venue
r --'
u II 0.4 u
BofA fined $4. 75 nJillien--for violations
WASHINGTON (AP)-The aov-
emment levicdarecord$4. 75 millfon
penalty ..-inst Bult of America, the
country'• second laJ)elt benk today,
for failina to repon 1arJe currency
transactions u required by law.
The Treasury Depmtment said t.hc-
1 bank. headquartered in San Fran-
cisco. had committed more than
17,000 violations of the Bank Sec;recy
Act, which requires banks to report all
cash transactions above SI 0,000.
The fine is the largest civil penalty
the department bu imposed on a
financial institution for violations of
the rcportina law, toppina the reicord
of $2.25 mil.lion in penalties levied
qainst Crocker National Bank of San
Fnincisco. In announcing the penalty apinst
Bank of America. Treasury Depart-
ment officials said that aud1tors from
the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency had uncovered extensive
reporting violations durina aneum-
inatioo of the bank in the spring of
1985.
SLAYING SPURS SECURITY PROBE._ ••
From Al -
sfii more securily-penon~ EarHer--that evenlna.-&he -had-
dark petrols in the wake of the worked a.s an usher at a campus jazz
weekend alayift&. Jn addition, the concert and attended a reception
Oransc County County Sberiff s Of. afterward.
fice has ordered deputies to step up .erandJey's friends on campus were
their patrols around the campus. mourning their loss today.
Hatchett said &he Slddlebeck stu-"Everybody really liked Robbin -
dent aovemment offen an escort she didn t appear to have an enemy in
service to walk women to their can. the world," said Jim lane, manager
but she said the service is only offered of the Saddleback campus radio
on weekdays. station, KSBR, where Brandle~ bad
Reilley said that the family has worked u a disc jockey. "We re all
received many~ sympathy calls from beside ourselves with grief. We have
her dauahtet's friends at the colJesc. no clue as to why someone would do
For SAddlebeck atudents, te.achen this."
and administraton, today was the Lane is a faculty member who had
first day back at the Miuion Viejo tau&ht Brandley in several classes. He
campus after a three-day weekend. said she was very serious about her
Campus reptetentatives said a communications studies and was
somber mood prevailed today be-preparina to continue them at a four-
cause of the Saturday ni&bt alayina. year university after this semester.
Brandley. a fine aruand communica-"It wu a double t.rqedy because
uons major, was discovered stabbed she had just discovered who she was
to death next to her brown Chevrolet and what she wanted to do with her
compact. career," lane said.
He-uid the-weekend stayilff hi
prompted worries amona other stu-
dents.
''I'm concerned about the safety of
all ofour people." Lane said.
Meanwhile, police remained
stymied in their search for the person
who stabbed the Saddleback student.
"We have no suspects; .aad Or-•nac County Sheriffs Lt. Richard
Olson.
But he said as many as 10 in-
vestigators have been working on the case. No murder weapon has been
found, and no moti ve established, he
said.
Olson said deputies arc still lookina
for someone who may have witnessed
the parkina lot attack. He said the
attacker ma y have stopped some-
where after leaving to campus to wash
off blood stains. He said anyone with
information should call the sheriffs
department at 834-3000.
~rT IN IRVINE ENVIRONMENTAL POST... BUSING JEOPARDIZED IN OCEAN VIEW •••
rather than retaining them purely a'
wilderness areas.
While Watt now finds himself
aligned wah environmentalists. he
said he gets a special pleasure from
the knowledie that his former enem-
ies arc helping his company make
money .
.. The Ral ph Naders and the con-
sumerists are going to make Jim
Watt's company very successful."
Watt said. "I get great sa11sfac1ion out
of that."
Nader, a nationally kno~ri ton·
sumer advocate. condemned Watt as
an opportunist.
"He's profiting from the <Reagan)
administrat1on·s derelictions. the
backlog of abuses and harm\ that the
Reapn adm1n1strat1on ha' failed to
prevent" Nader said. "M y reacuon 1s
one of initial skep11c1sm about any
'consumer-sensitive' product by
James Watt. the notonous condoner
of polluters ...
Watt. in San Diego la'>t week to
promote the company before a
ptheriog of stockbrokers. said he
1oined the firm because 1t provided
the chance to "make a 101 of monc)"
and al the same 11me allow him 10 "do
a lot of good "
Wa tt said the company 's tcs1s -
disposable walle1-s1zed cards that
give color-coded rcadmgs 1n lcs'> than
fi ve minutes -are capable of
recording minute and previously
undetectable amounts of such toxic
chemicals as d1oxm and EDB.
Environmental D1agnost1cs cur-
rently sells five types of ant1b1ot1c test
kits to go ve rnment agencies and also
markets tests to measure residue from
two pc'>t1c1dc-;, paraquat and para-
thion.
Other product\ in the works in-
clude tcw. for coca ine and marijuana
use Watt \aid the comp.my 1s
developing a test• that measures
manJuana u~ge an the previous four
hours. a tt'it that Wa11 said could aid
law enforcement agencies.
He said he hopes to interest the
m1l11a ry. '>Ports teams and pnvate
companies once the drug tests are
perfected.
Wh ile Wan 1'> pushing en-
vironmental products, he has not
entirely abandoned h1i. old beliefs.
Dunng the San Diego luncheon. a
Jamee Watt
spectator asked "Shouldn't we save
the California condor'>"
"Why should we'>" Watt shot back.
CYCLISTS' SAFETY A 'PLUM' MISSION ...
Prom Al
said. "They say they have the ngh1 to
kill themselves." But Plum said the
bikers' attitude also has an adverse
dfect on "rebellious kids" who refust
to wear helmets. They wan t to be
macho like the bi kers. he said.
Richard Flo)'d. a Dcmocra11c as-
temblyman from Gardena. claims
the threat of outlaw bikers appearing
on &he doorsteps of l~slators prob-
ably bas sJowed eff oru to pu h tbrouah a mandatory helmet law
Allemblywoman Dons Allen, R-
~ sponsomi a bill that went
into effect Jan. I. 1985. that makes 1t
mandatory for Juveniles 15112 year'
okl and under to wear safet y helmet\
be said. .. , qree. It's OK af they ktU
thanserves," he said Tuesday .. "Tht
DrC)blem is when 1hey do not die and Be hke vc,et.abln for 20 or 30 years
wtto•a totllf 10 feed &hem and bet he
dlnn aad ,plek t~ up and care ror .-m? Pattnu do n for 1 while, bur
dlily ,et tired of it Md then the ....,.)'a'I hlwe IO lake c.att of thtm • ••t lned IOIC\I btll pated fi~e )'Cal'\
••
ago. But the motorcycle free ~pints
said. 'the day you make people strap
themselves in seat belts, that's the day
you can make us put on helmets.·
Well. that day has amvcd.
"But they're macho and they don't
want to wear their helmets. You can't
sec their grcuy 1tn ng of hair, their
eamngs and their Ad1da\ 'lweatbands
1f the)' pul a helmet on.
"Peo ple act anary. They caH me fa t,
'lloppy and ianorant. They're t~tally
11norant I sot a fetter from a JUY tn
San D1e10 who Ja1d he'd never vote
for me. r ve ncvcr,101ten a vote from
anybody in S.n Diego 1n my life.''
(Sa n Diego residents aren't ehaiblc to
vote an Floyd's AsKmbly distnct.
which takes m the area around
Gardena)
"They have a sayma. 'Let thoK
who nde. decide,'" Floyd said. ''But I
can make up '1opnt. too -Let them
who pay have their ta)'"
lhe \lfety helmet dnve has bttn
propelled by Mary Price, a rti1dent of
Rio Vista near Sacramento, who lost
htr I ~ rar-old '°n last \ummer in a
\,
motorcycle accident. The boy wasn't
wearing a helmet. but he would have
-and his hfe would ha v.c been
spared -1f helmets were mandatory,
Floyd said.
No leg1slat1on has been introduced.
Floyd sa id he is unccn in when a
pu h will be made
Mike Miller. traffic education of·
ficer for the Newpon Beach Pollet
Department, hopes that day will
come soon. he said.
"Safety helmets '8Ve hvcs and
reduce IDJUncs." hr said "You can
hve with one arm or one I~ but you
have only one head," he said.
He said there were IOI motoKyclc
accidents in the city in 1984 and they
included 94 1nJunes and one fa tali ty.
The one dea th involved an operator
not wcanna a helmet.
Complete fi aurcs were not avail·
able ror last year, he said, but there
wa one deat h 1nvolvina motorcyclei
and the nder ap1n wa not wcanna a
helmet. •
The accide nt was a solo, low•sl>ttd
afa1r and the dnvcr would have been
t.a\.Cd by a helmet, Maller bchcve
>
From Al
But board President Marcus said
today that the money isn't avajlable.
The district is expected to spend
about $245,000 in lottery money this
year and next in choral music pro-
arams. ''If we don't, we won't have any
music program whatsoever," sh('
said.
Administrative Assistant Gayle
Wayne said the district, which spends
about $300,000 more than it receives
from state sources for busina. plans to
hire a consultant to find the best
alternative, she said.
Ocean View School District had its
hi~-watcr mark in the mid-1970s
wtth an enrollment of 14,000 pupils.
The number of pupils has dro~ to
about 8, 700. The 19-school district.
with campuses in northern Hunt-
in11on Beach, Fountain Valley and
Westminster. has an operating budget
of about $23 million.
PROPOSED REDEVELOPMENT DROPPED •••
P'romAl
developent agency.
Some vacant houses have been
abandoned, boarded up or turned
into shed-like businesscs, the report
continued.
And 6 percent of the Costa Mesa
residents livina in subatandard con-
ditions arc in this southwest area,
while aesthetic landlcapina and park-
ina is ofkn i~uate or non-
existent at the 104 busineaaes, city
officials added.
"It is clear that the area under study
includes some pockets of deteriora-
tion, particularly &Iona Center and
Shalimar streets," said Arlene
Schafer, redevelopment chairwoman
and city couna1woman. She was
rcferrina to two neiJhborhoodt once
tarscted by narcotics and vice in-
vestiptors.
"However, it is premature to adopt
a redevelopment project when other
forms of assistance may be more
effective in ruolvina these prob-
lems.'' Schafer said.
Wh ile the study was completed in
OR.ANGE ........ COAaT __ , .....
IWNOPPIC9 ,_, w.. '9¥ II C:-. ..._ CA ............ '* C......_ CA l8lt
October, the council had not in-
structed Whisenand how to proceed
until she posed the question at the
Jan. IS meetina.
City officials have drawn criticism
for evictina about 30 downtown
merchants to make way for the $20
million Courtyards shoppina center
off Newport Boulevard, which open-
ed in November 1985. ·
Recently, a public clamor arose
over the councirs vote to move some
18 busiDellet, ei&ht homes and a Girl
Scouts' headquarters from anot.ber
downtown block to clear the way for a
hi&h-denshy, 160-unit apartment
complex.
But Whisenand noted that of the 200 acres of redevelopment land in
C:O.u Mesa, only about I~ are beina
developed. .
Denise Curry, president of the
Mesa West Homeownen' Aaeocia-
tion, wasn't convinced of the d ty'1
prudence in steerina the redevelop-
ment bulldozer.
"J think it it very controveniaJ and
redevelopment -tirat and foremost
-has created a bed taste for people.
To take another man's property and
sell it to (a developer) for a profit is a
crime1" Curry said. "lt will definitely
be an 1uue in the November election.
I will make it an iuue."
Mayor Norma Hertzoa and Coun-
cilwoman Schafer face re-election
this year.
TOXIC •••
From Al
ficials said the to,do1 do not point to a
specific industry, but noted that all of
the chemicall have some application
in the pharmaceuticals industry.
A penon convicted of dumpina
hazardous materials can be fined
S50,000 for each chemical dum~
and tentenced to a year in county Jiii.
All told, the chemicals found lut
week could brin& a total fine ofnearty
S3 million.
..s ..
c.....-~---·---.., ... 1 Ja.t call 642-8086 ~l-~C..~~Mwt --._.... ......... w"' ~ _.....,~ .. ,.,..._....,.....,w _ .. .,.... ......
VOL 11, NO. 11
I
What do you like about lbc Daily Pilot? What
don't you like? Call the number above and your
mes..,r will be reeorded, uantcnbed and de~
hvered to the appropnaac editor.
The same 24-hour answeriae tlfVicr may be
used to record lcttm to dae ldjtor on aay topic.
ContnbutOn to our Lentn oohnnn must tnchack
then name and ac&epboae n ... ber. verifkldon.
Tells us What'• on your mind.
'
Clrl'lll.._
T1l1,t IRll .,....
Or-. Co\ll!l'f ,., ....... ....
Dr. Thomas Cesario, profeuor of medicine 11
the UCl-Califomia Colleae or Medicine. will speak
on ... What Everyone hould Know About AIDS"
Wedneday even1na in UC Irvine's Science Lecturt HaJI.
, A question ind answer session i nd reception
wall follow the 8 p.~. lecture. Tbe proaram is free
and funber informahon m1y be obtained by callin.a 8S6-6379.
Peace talk ln Newport
The Oranae County Educators for Social
Reiponsibilily will have three featured speakers at
Wednesday's dfoner meetina. scheduled for 5:30 p.m. at 727 Bellis, Newpon Beach.
Elizabeth Lambe, PauJ Ponner and Mary
Cardullo will address the session. A $2 donation is
requested and more information as available from
Susan at 760-1681.
Cataract 11ereenlJJ6• .et
Free cataract screenings will be offered as part of
this month's meeting of the Saddleback Valley
Cataract Support Group Wednesday from 3:30 to
4:30 p.m. at the Simply Delicious Cafe in the Bank of
America build1Dg, 2352 1 Pasco de Valencia, Laguna
Hills. .
Dr. Charles Manger, a Laguna Hills eye
phi sician and su'leon will conduct the tests. Call
95 -4641 for additional information.
omen '• IJealtJJ ta
Free lectures on women's health topics will be
offered this month at the Santa Ana Hospital
Medical Center, 1901 N. Fairview Si.. Santa Ana.
beJinnina Wednesday at 7 p.m. with a talk on breast
cancer.
Other programs include a talk on eating
disorders Thursday and a video on breast self-care
Jan. 29. All sessions will be held 1n the hospital's
conference room. Call 554-160 l fo r reservations and
further information.
PR 110Clety to meet
The Orange County chapter of the Public
Relations Society of America will hold ils first S0C1al
event of the new ~car for local communications
professionals WcdneSday at Ravel's Lounge in the
Registry Hotel. 18880 MacArthur Blvd .. Irvine.
The after.work mixer is scheduled from 5:30 to
7:30 p.m. and further information may be obtained
by calling Anne Parsch at 550...1228 or Carolyn
Charkey at 953-7874.
Needlepoint gulld to meet
The Point to Point chapter of the American
Needlepoint Guild will hold ats January meeting at
the Huntington Beach Library Wednesday from
6:30 to 9 p.m.
Needlepoint teacher Judy Hunt wall lecture on
ethnic omamentt. £--all 846--0065 for mol'C-4nfoi-
matton.
An Invitation:
Attention organization presidents and MC·
·retari..· We want to help make your upcoming
events, meetings. 1eminar1 and fundralsers SUC·
oeaaful. s.tld brief announeiem.nts lncludlng time.
~. C081 (If any) and a phone number for
additional Information to· Bulletin Board. Dally
Piiot, P.O. Bo• 1560. Costa M .... 92626.
Report• of your club or organliatlon's activities
-!Ike community aervlGe projects or eleetlon of
ottio.r1 -1hould be directed to the Community
New. Editor at the same addr .... Non-returnable
black and wtilte photographs are welcome.
Tue8day,Jan.21
• 6 p.m .. La1ua Beacll City CoHcll, C'ounc1l
Chambers. 505 Forest Ave.
• 7 p. m .. HHtla1toa Beacll City Scllool District
Boa.rd of Tn11ttt1. 20451 Craamer Lane.
• 7 p.m .. Oceu View Sclaool District Board of
Tnstees. College View School Teachers' Center.
6582 Lcnnol( Drive.
• 7:30 p.m .. Hu t1.n1toa Beacb Clay Coa.ncll,
City Council Chambers, 2000 Main St.
• 7:30 p.m .. lrvlne Ualfled Scllool Dl1trlct
Board of Ed•caUoa, District Adman1strat1on
Center. 5050 Barranca Parkway.
\Vednesday,Jan.22
• 7 p.m .. Coaat Commulty Colle1e Dl1trict
Board of Tn11tee1, Dastnct Board Room, 1370
Adams Ave .. Costa Mesa.
e>r.,.COMtOAJLYPtLOTIT~.~21, 1• •Al
HB students march to IJonorKla•···
New Generation club
praises slain black
leader's power, goal~
BJ llOBDT BAAUA
Of .............
A bandful of HuntiDJlOD Beach Hl4h
School students honorCd Or. Martin
Luther Kina Monday, marchina nearly
five miles from their campui to Golden
West College.
About 2' man:hen, most of them
members of the Doors to a New Gener·
at1on school orpoization, penicipated. A
few parents. alumni a.nd friends of club
members joined the procession.
"Manin Luther Kina was a powerful
person," said 1enior Mike DuBrock,
pmideot of the New Generation Club.
Netlon honon King. 810
"He wasn't just black. He fought for the
ri&hts of everbody.\ He worked for world
peace and brotherly love. We're tryi ng to
keep the spirit of that continuing." ' 0.., .....................
DuBrock acknowledged, though, that
most of the classsmates "put down
Monday's march, and that it was just a day
Mike Da.Brocll and Anne Reinhart lead atudent
marcben from HantU:atton Beac h lf1&b School t o Golden W..t eou-.e to commemorate tlle btrda-
day of ot.U ripta leader llartiD Latlaer Kha&·
ofTfor them. "Most of them haven't made mo~ mucher~. but that she wa" not procession to make a tew remarks at the
up their minds on whether they want to be disappointed in lhe size of the turnout. end of the Jou rney.
RepublicaRM>c Ocm«IllS:." he said. --".'.f~ho arehercmean-a lot mere: -.. He repre9ented-afHhe-ntht ibangs the
Anne Reinhan, who was president of the "It 1s such a aood cause," she said, .. and Untted States stand for," she said. She
New Generation Organization last year l want to support it as much as l can. He praised the youlhful marchers for showina
and who now attends Cal State Lon_g (King) stands for freedom. equality and respect and for pausing to reflect on the life
Beach. returned to the campus to panac1· peace. "He did things in a peaceful wa y. and accomplishments of King.
pate. There was no violence." The Doors lo a New Generation
She said she would have liked to see Aossae Horpn. a parent, J01Ded the contnbuted S700 over a weekend last year
to 11ve to the Eth1op1an fam1De rcheffund.
O ub members also collected canned food
for the hwAIP'} and-look fc8:rt in a I 0-mLle-
waJkathon last fall at Mt 7 Square Park in
Founta.an Valley.
The group plans to raise S l .000 to
sponsor a panacapan t 1n world peace walk
in March through the United States,
Europe and Russia
Director
of Arts
Center
Laguna Art Museum
grand reopening
delayed to September ·recovering
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' ... .,.., ........
Thomas R. Kendnck. executi ve director
of the Orange County Performing Ans
Center, has undergone non-s urgical hean
treatment and is expected to return 10 work
ID a few weeks "without hm1tat1ons." an
arts center spokesman said Monday.
Kcndnck. ~2. was lu~ay from t~
Ken ncdy untcr 1n Washington • .D .. C.
year to admanaster the Costa Mesa ans
center. now under construction near South
Coast Plaza.
Kendrick was admitted to the cardiac
·care unit at Hoag Memorial Hospital in
Ne wport Beach Jan. 12 after complaini ng
of chest pa ID.
Monday arts center spokesman Dick
Kitzrow said test1Dg determined a non·
surgical heart procedure could alleviate
the problem. Kendnck is now recuperating
and is expected to leave Hoag shonly.
Kitzrow said.
He released the fo llowang state ment
from Kendnck·s phys1c1a n, Dr Darci J
Benvenuti: ··Mr Kendnck had a maid
heart attack. He underwent successful
balloon dilation of has narrowed coronal)'
anery. which restored normal blood flow
to the hean. Has recovery has bee n
remarkable. and he is expected to return to
T bomu R . K endrick
work 1n several weeks without limi-
tations." .
Knzrow said Timothy L. Strader. presi-
dent ofihe arts center's board of directors.
has expresS('d confidence that Kendnck
will b( able to resume his duties an the vcr)
near future
He quoted Strader as saying. "Tom·s
medical progno<11~ and today's repon from
has doctor (an~). andeed. excellt-nt news for
allofus."
Dunng Kendnck·., reco.,,en period. the
arts center 1s be1ngadm1n1stercd b) general
mana,er Judith 0 Morr. under <itrader's
direction Morr was recruited from the
Kenned\ Center with Kendnck.
The ans center'!> 3,000...seat main theater
1s scheduled to ooen Sept. .!9
By LAURA MERK
Ol .. Delly ..........
The Laguna Art Museum's debut a~ an
expanded museum has been postponed
from May to September.
Delays 1n obtaining permlls, co nstruc-
tion problems and the weather have
contnbuted to the prolonged revampmg of
the main comP.lex on Pacific Coast
H1ghwa). said Bill Otton. museum direc-
tor.
1985. Funds fro m a previous fund-ra1smg
campaign, wh1~h brought 1n S 1.5 malhon.
wall pay for the S 1.2 million renovations.
The museum is be1Dg expanded from
9,000 to 18,000 square feet and was
ongmally scheduled to reopen an lhe faJI of
1985.
But museum officials faced several
roadblocks when both the Laguna Beach
Caty Council and the Cahfomaa Coastal
Commission required changes an the
museum's plans
"By the lime we complf'ted our ai>-
provals we had to change the opcnang date
to M8' 1986 ... said Olton. Officials lat<'r
mo,ed the date to June
~hen cons\ruct1on began. e'<'l)lh1ng
wena smoothl} as planned. said Otton.
"When they dug the basement out. the first
12 feet, there were no problems ... he said.
But when construction workers staned
dagmg the bole for the elevator shaft. they
hll an undaground flow of water. Know-
ana the water table could nsc, they were
forced to redesign the foundation and
elevator shaft. said Otton. Chanaes an
plans meant new permits and new hear-.
an gs.
Now the estimated openang day has
~n set for Sept. 16
OttQII ,91d coo·slructJon as now_movmg
quickly. He ferls confi de'?l 1 w_ilLhc ----'-'!
101s ) Auaust and that the museum
can have ats grand reopening an September.
bm ortBtNiftes arc planned. 10clud1na a
Homccomming Parade w1th a king and
queen.
··Fortunately we have the South Coast
Plaza satellite wt11cb has enabled us to
have a hmned program April '85 to Sept
'86 1s a long time to kttp membership
suppon," Otton sa.ad.
When ftn1shcd. the 56-)'ear-old museum
bulldlDg will be thrtt levels with new
exh1b1uon spaces. expanded offices and a
storage facility for prepanng the anworh
Olton said the museum wall continue
sho"5 of h1stoncal and contemporar)
amw. The fi~t e1.h1b11 an the new burld1ng "'II feature h"1ng artists who have shown their works th<"re an the past fi,e )Cars w11h
a catalog exh1b1t1on of California ell·
pressaonism.
Hamilton new president of Newport chamber
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
OlltleDlll'I ..........
Bill Hamilton. owner of the C'annel)
restaurant and Malarky's lnsh Pub, has
been installed as president of the Newpon
Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce.
Hamilton was installed along wilh other
officers at the chamber's recent 79th
annual membership banquet held al the
:-.lcwponer resort.
Hamilton has served as president of the
chamber's Manne division and as a
member of the Commodores Club. He 1
the founder of Clean Harbor Day & nd ha~
been honored with the river Anchor
A.ward h> th e chamber'~ Dolphin!>
d1vis1on
Ham11lon Jl'>o has been named chair-
man for the C haracter Boat Parade in 1984
and Bu~1nc\s "1an of the Month 1n August
1985.
Joining Hamilton as vice president 1s
Ted Fuller of Johnson and Haggi ns of
Cahforn1a Others anstalled on the board
were secretary Leah Mar hall of South
Coast Pl:i1a Management. chref financial
officer Sac'c Rabago of National Corpor-
ate Finance. 1mmed1ate past president
Ralph Rodheim of Am1b Advenasang and
Public Rela11ons. Civic Affa irs D1v1s1on
president Tom Bay of Butterfield Savang~.
Commodores Club skipper Ted lnou}e ot
A.lt'under Grant and Co Dolphrns
D1v1s1on president Don F11ch of Coopc~
and Lybrand. Governmental Affairs
D1v1s1on president Jam Parker of Good.
Wildman. H~ess and Walley, Manne
Division president Johan Momson of
C'esl la Vie Cafe and Org:inaza uonal
Affairs D1\1Ston president Doug
Cavanaugh of Ruby'"
Newport Beach Ma)or Phil Maurt'I
installed the new eJ1ecut1ve committee
The chamber named Charles Hester
"'ewpon Beach's C'1111en of the Year
A.mong Heste r's acuv111es an the com·
munm he serve as treasurer and board
ml·mher at Hoag Memonal Hospital.
prt·~1Jen1 ofClllldren's Hospital ofOranae
Count'. board member of the Oranae
Count' Ct'nter for PerfonnlDg Ans. vice
president of the Orangewood Home for
Children. director of the Orange Empire
Bo\ outs of A.m enca board trustee for
Chapman College. hoard director of Prov1·
Jenee Stx'«h and I kannp.
Woman, 79, trapped in
smashup, dies at hospital
An undetermined amount of ll'"'
cir. was reponed stolen from from J
home an the 4600 block of Ro,hun
On'<' Monda} Police repon'> "31d
the thief entettd through a bmli.en
kitchen w1DdO\lo • • • A.n IBM computer was reix1ned
.\ S800 pc.-arl hra(elet v.a~ rcponed
,tolen unda' trom a home in the ~200 bloc Ii. \)( \tan1Dgale \\a' • • • .\ S llKI hnC'll3'1 containing S~ 50
1n cash and m"~cllanC'ou' papers was
rcponcd 'tolcn trom lht' front porch
nt a home 1n thr 1800 hl<X k ofTo~on
l.anr aturda' nigh t • • • Bf ROBERT BARKER °' ..............
A 79-ycar-old woman who had1ust
aonen out of a car with her dauahter
and 50n·1D·law to ao shoppina an al
lka('h was struck and panned for 4S
minutes under another car. She later
died at Fountain Valley f.le11onal
Hospllal. police disclo~d today.
Huel Williamson, a resident of
Le isure World. and her dau.ghttr and
son·in-law. Lewis and Hue! Maller of
Downey. were struck Monday af\cr·
noon by a car dn,ven by 86-~ar~
Charle Davis who iPP1rently black·
ed out while backina out ofa perking
spaet' and struck the accelerator by
mistake.
It knocked the th ree \lt1111h t\1 thl'
ground and pinned Mrc; \\ 1l11:1m,un
who was later freed b' pohcc and tm'
truck operators
The MillerY ~ufTen-d internal 111-
1unes. They are oc1Dg tn.•att'd at Long
Beach Memorial Hospital. th<' polltT
spokrswoman uad. Davi~ apparl'nll)
cKapcd scnou\ anJUf) Th : Jrc1den1
is under an Hst1p11on
Police rt'pon'> said the robber bit the
\1Ct1m with a ure iron and took her.
S90 necklace The extent of the
1,1c11m's 1nJune was unknown. The
\uspcct was descnbed as a 6-foot, I·
inch tall white male an his earl) 20's
we1gh1ng 19() pounds. The victim told
police he was weanna a gray~grt"Cn
denim 1ackct and blue jeans. • • • Vandals did S800 ID damaae to a
light blue 1979 Ford Fa1nnont un-
da} n1gh1 when they shol out the car's
w1Ddows wtth a BS.gun The 1nc1dcnt
took place 1n 1he 17100 block of
Golden West trt'tt. police repons
said
P'oun taln Valley
stolen from a busancss at "3 51
Jeroo1mo Road over the Wttkcnd
Police repons said compan) official~
susp«t an C'mplo~t'<' commatt<'<I the
theft
Newport Beacb
An $800 diamond nec klace "' rcPoncd $tolen Fnda) from a humc
1n the 4700 block of Neptune
\ andals reported!\ ~mashC'd the
ldt \Ide"' 1ndo" on \I' car\ parked at
the comcr ot \.tar \ 1 ta and \o 1o;ta
Rona ta ~unda' .\ ~th er Buick
l e<;ahrt' J hlalli. ( heHolet MontC'
C arlo a"' h1te ( heHolct uburban. ;a
v.h1tt' \ olli.\wagt'n Rahb11. an oranae
and \loh1t(' \o olkswa1en 'an and a
'lalver Ford Mustang t'ach ,u,1..ainc-d
S I O 1n damaae pohC'(' n-pom ..aid
A police spokeswoman said that
. c...11-
Tools valued at $4,200 were rt·
ported stolen from a shed in the 400
block of 17th Street sometime since
Wednelday. • • • A thief reportedly 1tole a SSOO
v1dto caoctte recorder and a S 150
ponable radio from 1 home 1n the
1000 block of Valencia unday. • • • A S2,800 tclct00_pc was reponcd
1tolco from Sclope Cily. 3033 Bristol
Suect. Monday. ?olice reports said
the thief ~ the front window
wttb a blteblll bat to pjn enuy. • • • A tbtef rcponedly broke into a
home in the 11® block of Wallacle undar, ran11Cked the madenoe and
1IOle 1 S.00 TV Kt and a S200 stereo.
Howcwt, the items ftf'C found in the
buthn 11 the front of the hou1e.
Potk'C ttpOftl Mid the bu,.aar •Po
piftfttly had hiddcft 1he 1tttftt In the
bUlbct and e•p«ted to cOtM beck ""'to mneve thtm.
Davis' car first struck another auto
and caromed into the Miller vehicle.
Lap.a••••
Tools worth an estimated $11~00 were stolen from a Caribban way lddmt, the victim told police Mon,.
day. • • • A purx and Ill COfttntl ~
rcponed a&olen Monday oa Part
Avenue. The loM wai.estimated at
$120. • • • A '*'*-and a ~ plait,
t0tether "'1b about S7S, were
reported llOica Monday from a hOiai
on Kilb Drive.
Friml rqK>rtcd that someone btoke
into htt homt Monday and stoic i
S2S BB-tun. Poli~ rcpons said the
thief tnltttd throuah a hd1n1
kitcbtft WJndoW. • • • Someone rcponcdly tole a $2,300
insulin pump from a Golden West
Colltle U\ldeat's aym bq white the
victim was play1n1 nK"Quetball al the coa-. Monday. • • • A S2j() abteboard. a SI 50 btC)Cle
.\ $15 TV ~l w&!I reported stolen
from the aaraat ofa home 1n the 9100
block ofl..a Ca 1ta Ave. unday n!l)\t • • • Jewelry valued at S20S was tt'-
poned stolen from a home 111lhe 9600
block of Guava over the Wttkend
The th1efbroke a bedroom windo-. to
pan entry. pohcc rcporu said. • • • lelephont. slufTed atumah.
clot he and alcohol ~ "'pontd
stolen from a home in t.he I 400 Basc~ood Monday. The I was
c t1mated at S80. • • • St 7S l'acket wat rq)Oncd "olcn from a 11 ver 1911 Datsun ptekup
truck petted 1n a 1thool lot 1t l 7 16
8ushan1 Friday
lntDe
and 1 SlOO poruble stttCO were
reponed ..-n Monday from the
open llflllt o( a home 1n the 1200
block -ol Dtllao. A S500 f\ar Jldet
.. 11i1o NDOned llOkn &om lnllek
... home. Pohar rcpons said the theft V andalt "1)0ftcdl) IPf'I) •p&antcd
oocwi9d IOIMttlftt an the put fl~ H.tudts an the Humhc:I Aircraft t'Om·
dlya. p&ny lo~ 1 71 '° V" on· K.anna.n ve .•
A rllideat ltt• .... 16800 WoCk o( urty toda). • • •
.._,., .W 111111 ._. .. _.. u. Jc-Mtey and Fk1 cotM ot 11n-
dll ... ., • .., .. ,. recaN JIOft I ckWfm•Md val• 'Wft't ~
M IM w ol111C19 .... wl tol«ft &om a 9">mt •Iona 9r1detpon W.-AW th1 .. ~ eur ,. Monday
•
• • •
Laguna borilb suspect s
face court Wednesday
l y LAURA MEAK °' ....... ,... .... T,.o su pect ant"Slcd for bomblDI
of the U.,Una kach C'lt)' Hall la t
Fnd&) were opcctcd to lllC am1n~
Wcdnetday an Ora.ntr Coun1y uth
Munac1pel Cou.n. l«Otduta to pohcc:
Donald Juan Whttkr. 23. and
James Louis Dura.nd, 27. ~ ar·
rnttd •1th.in et&ht hou.B of the
fnday monunt bom~na. Ll&una
Bach ~ said atrttt ,nfonnants
led \JW'm 10 Lhe pe1r 11\er the men
bcpn brasnt about the bombtnt-
8otb WhcJa IMOu,.nd hMed thear
llddraa as • 'Mao''• ~EPJCCIJ'9•
Churda., wild al-.~\ ~and often
wlien t~ ot ·, tttttt ~
lolb muin 11 On• Count Jatl
on $2 .000 bail ca h
The bomhina v.as a.n appan=nt
rc1.1hat1on .,ainst the poll~ c:kpart·
ment for 9'-hat many •trttt people
~htve 1s har'Hsment.
Because or the national hohda)'
hononna Man1n Luther KJl\I. \he
courts wcrt c'°9i<d Monday c:coni~
ana to Lt Jim White \ht)' will tcek
ctwJr1 apin t both Wbttter and
Durand for ft.Ion)' v1olauon of e•·
plod1na a dntrvct1vc c:kvK't.
No stn.actural damlflld oecutTed
from the d)-nam1te blast that wnt o«
m1nuia btfoft 6 Lm. Friday oullidt thc~ofCity ~K.ea fruL
About two dOttn .:indowt. matnaled near S200. ~ b4own out of \be
bulkti.ftl.
•
Kin of hostages
bring ribbon
to Washington
• W ASHINOTON (AP)-Tbe fam. · ilia of Ii.a American .,,,..,.,.. in
1..M1uOD bave a ~t for Prelident • na 0 : a 900o-ft>ot yellow cloth ribbOD aiped by men than 7,200
J*)ple.
~ Tbe families hope to preaent their lift to top Raipn ldmini1U-.tion
i'lcimll aa a way Of keepina attention loc..s oe the ptiaht of the miasina
Americlna.
.. We· would like to wrap it (the
ribboa) around tbe White House but we know it won't fit, .. said Tom
ADdenoD, 41 , a New York City
Terry Aodenon'1 father, Otenn, ii
pavely ill in a Batavia, N. Y., holPi·
tal. Terry Anderson was abducted from the streets of Beirut l 0 months aao.
Durina a three-di)' visit, the famil-
ies also will 10 to Capitol Hill and
contact the embulies ofleveraJ Arab
n.atjons.
The enormous ribbon, coml)Oled
of 3-foot sections sewn t<>sethelj Ul'FI
Reapn to work for the "sare and
immediate release" of the su Ameri-
cans.
Al'l& , ....
Surplus of oil
drives futures
·prices down
Analysts predicting
market's momentum
will aid consumers
NEW YORK (AP) -Oil futures
prices kept falling today. driven
downward by an overabundance of
supply, weak demand and. some
analystJ said, the market's own
momentum.
In London tradina today .• Brent
North Sea crude oil to be loaded in
April, which had fallen to a tix-ycar
low of $19.20 Monday, ,wu up
sliJhtly at S 19.SO, but still below the
psychologically important $20 level.
. ooliceman. He ii a cousin of hostaae
.,.erry Anderson, the ·chief Middle
f.ut correspondent for The As·
sociated Preu.
Thole vilitina Wuhinaton include
Mae Mihelich of Joliet, Ill., sister of
the Rev. Lawrence Manin Jenco; Eric
Jacoblen ofHuntinston Beach, son of
David Jac;obsen; and Patty L.inle of
AptO&, Calif., niece of Peter Kilburn.
Those who have •ianeci it include
Americans from all over the country,
as well as Sen. Daniel P. Moynihan,
D-N. Y:1 and Rep. Raymond
McGram, R-N.Y.
Tom aad8aeADdWeonofValley8tream, 1'. Y ., dleDlay800-
foot rtbboD of 7 ,200 ~tar. aratna Preetdent A~an to
work for tlae nteue of Amerlcalla lleli tao.taae ln Lebanon.
"Confusion. nervousness, uncer-
tainty -those are the watchwords."
Peter Beutel, an analyst at Rudolf
Wolff Futures Inc., said today.
After two hours of trading on the
New York Mercantile Exchange, a
barrel of West Texas Intermediate
crude, the benchmark U.S. grade, was
sellirfa at $21.10 for delivery in
February, down 17 cents from Mon.,,
Heatina oil for February delivery
was sellina at 60.20 cents a p.llon, up
sliahtlY from Monday's S9'.00 cents
close. On Mo nday, it had fallen 4.89
cents. February contracts for un-
leaded psoline, which had dropped
from 64 .cents a pllon to S9. 79 cents.
stood ai 60.90 cents, while reaulac
gasoline stood at 60.40 cents, after
having fallen S8.90 cents from·63.28
cents.
Analysts disagreed over whether
the slide would continue. "What's to
stop it?" Philip Vcrleaer Jr., a Wash-
inJtOn-based anaJyst for Charles
Raver Associates said Mondar,.
Tom Anderson sai Anderson
family feels a speci urxcncy
The ribbon was the idea of Heather
Lacayo, 16, another Anderson cousin
from Santa Rosa, who started the
project last November and convinced
Anderson relatjves to help collect
. turn,on-d~thcr's arand-
mother. Irma Stewart. them
totetbcr.
Since S2 Americans were held
captive ai the u .s . Embassr in
Tehran for 444 days in 1979-198 , the
yellow ribbon has been a symbol of
hostqes. --
The relatives of the hostages have
not met here in nearly three months.
At their last ptherina. President
Reagan told them his administration
was pursuinJ-!!1pedfac ini•i••ivcs"
regardina the host1aes.
day's close ofS2 I .27. • "There's no question there s aoina
to be a rebound, 'said Peter Beutel, an
analyst"atiWdoll..Wolff...EuJurcs Inc.
''The questio n is when, and where,
and to where?"
5 alleged mob leaders
convicted of skim,ming
from Vegas casinos
In a free-fall on Monday, th~pricd
for the samebenel-hac:tdropped.J2.26
over Friday's close. Last Wednesday,
before the latest price drop be&an.
that contract traded at S2S.13 a
barrel.
On Monday, William Randol, an
oil analyst at the investment firm
First Boston Corp. called the price
trend "great news for consumers."
adding that he expected the price of
crude 10 dip ~ow $20 by mid-April.
On the spot market today, U.S. oil.
which brou&ht $32 a barrel in No-
vember. fell 70 cents to $21.00 a
barrel, after having fallen S2.2S a
harttl to Monday's S2. I. 70 close.
Stephen Smith, an analyst for Data
Resources Inc. in Lexinaton, Mau.,
said that for the impact to be
significant fo r consumers, it would
have to consist of a composite drop of
the pnces of all oil used by refineries
from all sources.
Data Resources estimates that a
one-year drop of S5 per barrel would
reduce the U.S. inflation rate by one
percentage point and boost the aross
national product six-tenths of a point
higher, Smith said. KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP} -Five
aJlqed orpnized crime leaders were
convicted today by a U.S. District
Court jury followina a four-month-
Iona trial on charael that they
skimmed unreported pmblina
proceeds from Las Yeps casinos.
The five defendants were con-
victed on each of eight counts filed
apinst them.
Jurors in the Araent Corp. skim-
mina trial infonned Judae Joseph E.
Stevens Jr. shortly after tfiey resumed
deliberations this mornina that they
had reached a verdict. The j ury had
deliberated about 30 hours since
Thursday.
The-five defema-nts, who were
amo91-ninc when-the trial--.tartcd
Sept. 23, include Joseph J. Aiuppa,
78, and John P. Cerone, 71, whom the
government described as the boss and
Al' 1.&u ,.. .. -u~dCff?<>ss r:espcctively of organized
cnme an Ch1caao. From Ruula with love
Ala.el Lodlen. 33, a llcrriet cttben, baa• Ida wife, Sandra
Gabbi, S8, of Ke••••soo, lllcb., apon l&ndln.i at Kewark,
1'.J . lloaday. Tiiey were married ln tbe SoTl'et UnlOD ln
1881 bat be ba4 lieen wble to leaYe antil tbe Kremlin
allowed 10 coapl• to rea.Dlte after tbe Geuna Hlllllllt.
POSHS
The others found guilty were
Chicagoans Joseph Lombardo, SS.
and Angelo LaPietra, 6S, and Milton
J. Rockman, 73, of Cleveland.
The five, chafJCd with conspiracy
and traveling in interstate commerce
to carry out the al1caed skimming
Sew up big savings.
You can lahel yourself lucky \\ith savings
of up to 70°'n on our elegant . uits, spon coats,
a(.'cessories and sportswear.
The selection is still goOd so
hurry in toda)1
I
plan, face penalties of up to 40 years
in prison and $80,000 in fines for
conviction on all eight counts.
They were accused of using in· u i 1 1 d
fluencc over trustees of t~e Chicago-ran UID p ant c ose . based Central States Pension Fund of . t
~~~n~m~~~. u!i~i~~0 i;~t~te :~~ das leak is investigated
Stardust. ~mont, Hacienda and-&
Marina casinos in Cas Vegas.
The aovernment says they cstab-By Ute Attocllte4 Presa
lished a hidden interest and skimmed $2 m illion between 1974 and 1983. CINCINNATI -Workers at a uranium-processing plant reported no ill
without reporting or paying taxes. effects after a slightly radioactive gas leaked from a cracked reaction vessel, but
"
R GI. 1.. Gov. Richard Celeste called on the U.S. Energy Department "to clean up its A en . 1c~. a real estate .. Th I k ~ da th "-..4 I Feed M · I p od · C h millionaire from California, formed ac~. . e ~ .>Un .Y at e 1cuera. atcna s _r:_ uct1on enter was 1 e
Aracnt in 19-74-and used-lWo ~sion ~h1rd ~n~olv~ng uranium heJlafluoricft: gasTCpOrted ttlas year.-. an<l.ffie second
fund loans totalin.& $87. 75 million to 1n Ohio in nine days. The substance was confined to the building. tn the rural
buy and remodel the tardust and-commUnlly ofr~rnatd Ibout 11hniles nurttrof e mcinnatt, and officimdo no
Fremont. believe that workers came in contact wtth it.
Glick, who testified as a govern-
ment witness, said he later found he
had hidden partners who took credit
for getting him the loans and de·
manded S 1.2 million. He said he was
threatened with death if he didn't
follow orders and finally announced
in 1978 that he would sell out af'\er
threats that his sons would be killed 1f
he didn't.
Viet mother reunited
with children In U.S.
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -
Two children released to a U.S.
congressional delegation by the gov-
ernment of Vietnam were reunited
today with their mother, who had to
leave them behind when she fled that
country an 1980.
The mother. Xuan Thi Nguyen, fell
to her knees in the aisle of an Air
Force Jet, crying and throwing her
anns around Tran Thanh Quynh, 9,
and Nguyen Vu Chtnh, 10, afier they
arrived at Elmendorf Air Force Base.
The Vietnamese had turned the
children over to Sen. Frank
Murkowski, R·Alaska. after the U.S.
del~t1on's official meetings to learn
if Vietnam was holdin~ any of the
2,400 servicemen missing from the
Vietnam War.
Bonner releaRd from IJ011pltal
NEWTON. Mass. -Soviet dissident Yelena Bonner, 62, was released
from the hospital Monday a week afier underaoing multiple heart-bypass
surgery to rest at the home of relatives before undergoin' any treatment for
glaucoma. ··1 understand the doctors feel the home environment might be
more helpful, will contribute more to her recovery," Efrem Yankelcvich. her
son-in-law. said Monday night from his home in this Boston suburb.
Waahlngton fends off nuke alJ.fpments
LONG BEACH -Washington state officials say they devised a
regulatory obstacle course that ~y ~ve fended ofT use of their harbors for
radioactive shipments now bou for Long Beach. "We devised a series of
layers to protect Washington sta e citizens," Curt Eschel&, aide to Washington
Gov. Booth Gardner, said in a telephone interview Monday. The U.S.
Department of Energy plans 10 unload an Lona Beach a cargo of spent nuclear
fuel rods that were ~em<?ved frOJ!l a nuclear reactor in !aiwan and originally
taracted for unload.mg 1n Washington. After they ~mve here, they will be
trucked I<? a plant tn ~uth Carolina for reprocessing. Several community
groups objected to the shipments and planned to protest today at a meeting of
the Long Beach Harbor Commission.
Growing economy hum rural blacks
WASHINGTON -An Agriculture Department study of 10 southern
Georgja counties shows that not only did economic a:rowth tn rural areas help
whne people more than blacks, but that blacks in some ways became worse ofT
than before. The department's Economic Research Service said that between
1976 and 1981 , the perccntaae of white women eumined with jobs increased
while the percentaae of black men with jobs decreased. '
----Newport's Cannery Village----Violence
by strikers
prevented r==(Aff Uoo
DINNER NIGHTLY
6:00 P .M. to Midnight
Mondays & Tuesdays: .
Two Dinners for •15.95
Wednesdllys:
6 Coure-e Italian Dinner 89.95
AUSTIN, Minn. (AP)-Dozens of
National Guardsmen. riot clubs in
hand, formed a human barricade
today to cl0te Geo. A. Hormel It Co. 's
flaph1p plant and prevent violence
between strikina mcatpackers and
workers crossina picket lines.
"It was a joint decision by the
1 ______ _... _______ ..;;...o,.&.;.;....;....;;;...;;..;;=-.;;..;...;...;;;.;;..;~----' police department, the sheriff's office
and the National Guard," said a
policc.di11>1lcher.
,
She said she did not know when the
plant would reopen, and that the
action was taken "to prevent what
happened yesterday," when a ahot
Wis fired and an employee WIS
kicked.
Union 1tratqist Ray Roten said
he was told by police and the Ouard
that the plant would not open today,
"if they can be believed and I have no
reaeon to believe they can be."
"What you're seeln1 It the results of
Mr. R0ttn" policies of confrontation
hara11men11 intimidation and
&hreat," Siio plant man..-l)eryl
Arnold. "They talk a~ut non-viol·
ence whh ton1ue In ctMek."
Arnold said wortm would be
moved in 11soon11 Ouardamen were
able to tcCurc the area. A Dlant offtcial
who rcfulcd to identl~ blmttlf Slid
tome 1upcrvi10t1 and other wortm
were 1ble 10 eet inside today with the
Ouard'a help.
Meanwhile, tome pickets from
Ausun kept workm out of a Hormel
plani.1n Iowa.
Oov, Rudy Perpicb activaled
about 600 Q_"'rdlmcn on Monday after local otftdah requested help in
oontrollint the IV'ikm.
Union membln and tbeir wp-
Pof\tr1 t.ad blocked plant pea will\
thdr ca" and pkkup tndl MOftday.
Man held
in acid
attack on
girl,4
WHITTIER (AP)-A 26-year-old
man waa arrested for investiption of
a weekend acid attack on a little airl
. whose eyesiaht wu threatened by the
caustjc chemical tossed in her face at
an Orantt Co~nt_y puk1 police sajd.
ActJna on 1nformat1on from an
anonymous telephone caller, police
found a vehicle believed to have been
used by the assailant and then
arrested Mark Edward Hand of
Whittier •.t 5 p.m. Monday. said Lt.
James Smntn...
lnvestiptofi from Buena Park
where Saturday's attack occurred:
booked Hand at Orange -County jail
for invcstiption of aggravated as-
sault with a caustic chemical.
The victim, 4-ycar-old Rachel
Opwa, suffered first and sccond-
dcptt burns to her face, chest and
lep and some damaic to lhe corneas
on her eyes. Doctors at St. Jude
Hospital in Fullerto n were optimistic
her eyesiaht could be saved.
" !&Las her eyesi~t-goet;-1~ s~ken . with her physician and he
thinks It should be good, hospital
spokesman Norm Anderson said
Monday.
The airl's vital signs were good and
she appeared to be resting com-
fonably, Anderson sajd early today.
The attack occurred after a family
picnic as the child and her mother
were leaving a restroom at Los
Coyotes Regional Park. Without
provocation. the assailant threw two
cups of acid on the gfrl and ran away.
/
,/" // ~5 ,
;Y
p (' ....
"' ,....-._, -
He didn't get away -· JI,, I
Scott Aldrlcb, 33, a Loe AJaeelee pollceman, eaffered a
broken tee and a fractared akiall Jan. 11 while attempttni
to break up a n,bt. Illa fl•neee, 8beryl Baab.man, wa.n 'i
aboat to poetpone tbetr weddlnC. bowe~er, and tbe
ceremony wu faeld In a Van :Nay. b•pltal.
Gonimuterplanetried tosave
Nelson's aircraft before crash
DALLAS (AP) -A commuter
plane tried to reach Rick Nelson's
burnina OC·3 to guide it to the
around shonly before the plane
carryina the singer crashed. killing
seven people, accordjng to tape
rcoordinp quoted by a Dallas tele-
vision stat.ion. _
We got, uh. smoke in the cockpit." Eagle commuter plane acted as inter-
Rank said. mod1ary and relayed Rank's con-
Nelson. 45, and has fiancec, 27-versation to controllers.
year-old Helen Blair, died in the The controller asked Rank if he
crash. Also killed were band members could land at an airport in Teurkana
Bobby Neal, 38; Patnck Woodward. -or Mo unt Pleasant. but the pilot said
35; Rick Intveld. 22; and Andy he couldn't.
ChM>in_,,_20; and sound man Clark "He says he can't make it," an
Russell. 35. ---Amencan EaaJe c-rcw-~r said. The pilot of Nelson's plane radioed
air traffic controllers shonly before
the New Years vc crash that there
was "smoke in the cockpit." WFAA-
TV reported Monday night.
Rank anJLco-p1lo tK.cath Fug~n ··Have you got anything closer at all.
survived. · even shon er'r'
The ..Federal A v1at1on Ad minis· Soon after. a helicopter pa lot rad10-
Pilot Brad Rank told controllers at
the Fort Worth Air Route Control
Center that the OC-3 could not make
it to an airport 20 miles away in
Teurbna, the station said, quoting
transcripts of the conversation.
trat1on was expected today to release ed. ··we have aircraft in sight. Hc
offi cial transcnpts and tapes of the looks like he's gone do wn. You need
transmissions between Rank and the to call Texar~na for the air life
FAA controller. helicopter."
According to WFAA. the tran-Amcncan Eagle followed with a
scrit>ts showed controllers were relay message from the helicopter.
having trouble understanding Rank's "He says 1l's totally engulfed in
transm1ss1ons. so a nearby American flames.· "We've aot to get on the around.
AIDS te.t1ng cllnlc mobbed In LA
By ~e Aasociace.I Pru1
LOS ANGELES -A controversial chnic that plans to test people for
evidence of the deadly AIDS virus and then issue identity cards to those found
free of antibodies to the disease postponed its openjng in the face of massive
publicity. The clinic. called the National Association for AIDS Awarcneu.
planned a Monday opening, but called It ofT when reponcrs and news cameras
crowded in front of its Santa Monica Boulevard offices. "With the amount of
cameras out there. we just couldn't conduct business." said Knych Keller. a
spokeswoman for the clinic. which plans to charge SI 00 for a test and 1dcnt1t y
card.
H•urdoa• wa•te •pilled ln cra•h
COBB - A truck hauling hazardous JCOthermal waste crashed into
several trees, killing the dnver and spilling most of its cargo near a creek used
for drinking water. Lake County Health offi cials on Monday warned residents
not to drink from Kelsey Creek. Richard D. Blackmon. 28. of Loch Lomond.
was killed Sunday night when the truck carrying vanadium pcntox1dc from
The Gcxsers hit the trees and tos5ed him through the windshield, according to
the California Highway Patrol.
Andy IVUllam• l•ce11 drunken driving rap
REDLANDS -O fficers stopped Andy W1Uiams· Rolls-Royce con-
vertible and arrested the singer for investigation of drunken d n ving as he drove
home from the Bob Hope Classic fOlftournament, authonlles said today. "He
was drivina 65-plus. He was weaving in •nd out oflancs." California Highway
Patrol Officer Robert Crajn a id. Williams. 57, had played in the tournament
near Palm Springs and was drivina home to Los A'nacles.
Odds to get
better with
new lottery
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The lot-
tery will double ltS "instant"' pnze to
SS0,000 1n the new scratch-off Game.
No. 4 that unofficially begins
Wednesday.
Lottery Director Mark M1chalko
told a news conference Monday thal
the l-10-8 odds of winning some
money 1n the"Californaa Gold Rush""
game wall be sliJhtly better than 10
some previous games.
Michalko said the top instant pnze
ofSS0.000 in Game No. 4 will be won
by anyone who finds two matching
$25.000 spots on a SI ticket. along
with a gold nugget symbol. The
nugget will also double lesser instant
pnzes.
The director said Game No. 4 will
again feature 1t grand-pnzc drawing
Jackpot that starts at S3 million and
rises $65,000 every week someone
fails to win it.
Orlngil Co.t DAILY PtlOTIT~, ~ 11, .. * M
Car bomb kills 22 near
·Lebanon chief's office
BEIRUT CAP) -A car bomb
exploded today near an office of
President Amin Qm\ayel'1 Phalen~
Pan\' in a crowded rommerc&al
d11tnct of Christian eut Beirut.
kHlina at least 22 people and 1nj unn1
more than I 00, police said
The 'blast wu cauted by an e111-
mated HO pounds of ~~ploaivcs and
damqed teveral buUdinp. set fire to
othns, ~nd dntroyed more than 30
ca~ ~lice uid.
Chief' Warrant Oflker Yussef Bitar
said that besides explosives, the car. a
Mercedes, was loaded with p sohne
tanks and oxyaen bottles to tum tt
into a muaive firebomb.
Blood-spattered R ed Crou
rescuen urned out sco~s of black·
encd bodies from the smoldering
wreckqe of buildi~as. and other
COf]*l lay in ruined 1utomobnles.
Biter bad catber put the death toU
at 2S, but polM:c later chanted tbt
fiaure to 1t least 22 dead and 102
known wounded.
Resc~ officials said bod1e1 wett
ttill lyma inside the fire-blackened
buildlnJS. and that the death toll
cowd nse.
The forces of the blut shortJy
before noon burled parked can into
bulldinp. broke windows in a four·
block radius and &Outed a I ~foot·
deep bole 10 the ltreet. Retcuers
searched the rubble of damqcd
buildinas for casualties as thick black
smoke billowed over the di1tncl.
Poli~ declined to say if the taraet
wu the Phalan.ac office, which was 30
yards from the explosion. The only
damqc there was shattered windows.
• "h was a bee. tu.iee exploeiOe. .. Mid
Bldieb Kbo~ry.alboelbopowner.•
he surveyed blood..,.iwred bOla iD
bit wrecked l101'e. The blUI htW a
blue .Volkswaaien car into bit llOre,
terioualy wounded three of hi1 em-
ployees.
") eteapcd beeaUIC I WU ID I.be beck
room," he told the Auocialed Prell.
Polict said they did not kaow wbo
parked the Mcrcedel OD • comer near
a cluaaer of movae thee&en. re.
taurants, a depanment AOre ud a ps
station.
The car bomb1na was the first in
Beirut th1s year and fol&owed a week.
of fiahuna between Gemeye1'1 sup-
porters and Syrian-blacked Christian
and Moslem rivals wtUch 1everely damaacd prospects for a recent Syr-
ian-brokered peace plan.
South Yemen fightinggoes on,
but cease-fire being discussed_
a, me AalOda&H Prm
Warring Marxist factions 1n South
Yemen reportedly were discussing a
ceue-firc even as eac h claimed on
radio broadcasts to be in control of
the Soviet-allied Arab nation. Refu-
aeet uid more than a week offi$hting
had turned the capital. Aden. into a
.. cit of death."
The British Foreign Office 1n
London said today, .. Jt 1s not at all
clear who is in.d\arge and althou~
Aden itself is relatively quiet, 1t 1s still
not safe."
Marxist factions in the 1m-
povenshed nation began fighting Jan.
13. apparently after a coup attempt by
hard-liners who opposed South
Yemen President Ah Nasser
Mohammed's reported desire to lib-
eralize the economy and improve
relations with pro-Western Arab
countries.
The Briush Ministry of Defense
said its reports suuested spasmodic
fightina was continuing..
Official Addis Ababa radio in
nearby Ethiopia on the Horn of Afnca
quoted Mohammed on Monday as
saying he pardoned "all those who
were incited by a few adventunsts
and narrow tribalists" and appealed
to them to follow ham .
Mohammed, who was reponed to
have flown to Ethiopia over the
weekend. returned to South Yemen
Sunday n1ght. the Bahrajn-bascdOulf
News Agency reported Monday. It
quoted reliable soul'Ce$ in San'a.
capital of ne1ghbonng North Yemen.
as sayi ng Mohammed's forces con-
trolled most of South Yemen.
However. both sides claimed to be
in charge m nval radio broadcasts
monitored an Sa_n'a.
The Bnush royal yacht Britannta
rescued IS more Britons today, after
carrying 24 of iu nationals to safety
over the weekend.
The luxury vessel already has
broultht 659 people to Djibouti.
Infiltration Marcoshedgesonouster
of London of ar1ned forces chief Ver
peace unit
reported
LONI>ON-(AP~-Jane's Defense
Weekly claimed today that Soviet·
trained agents infiltrated the
women's anti-nuclear peace camp
outside a U.S. m1htary base west of
London where NATO 1s deploying 96
U.S. cruise m m1les.
The report in the respected defense
review provoked immediate reac-
tion.
The Soviet Embassy claimed 1t was
designed to ··whip up ant1-Sov1e1
psychosis," and a statement fro m the
women camped at Greenham Com·
mon SO miles west of London called-tt
··a ludicrous. unsubstantiated slur:·
The spokeswoman for the women
refused to identify herself further
The magazine. published by the
authontative firm that produces year-
books on planes. warships and other
military matters around the world.
quoted Soviet defec tors and mform-
ants as saying three to six Sov1et-
tra1ned women agents were in the
area "at all times" since cruise
missiles began amving at the base in
1983.
By Ck A1aocla&e4 Preti
MANILA -Ptts1dcnt Ferdinand E. Marcos. seeming to back off of a
statement that armed fo rces chief Gen. Fabian C. Ver w1'1 retire before the Feb
7 election. told businessmen today that 1t would be hard to find a replacement
In another development. an clecuon commissioner said U.S. and other forciin
election observers would be barred by law from goina w1th1n SO yards ofpolhn&
plate's dunng the ballotrng.. -wt arc an independent nation. and wt want to
make sure that nobody violalCS our laws:· Comm1ss1oncr V1ctonno A
Savcllano told the Associated Prns 1n an interview at comm1ss1on
headquarters.
South Africa keeps grip on Le8otho
MASERU. Lesotho-South Africa maintained its clampdown on people
and freight entenng Lnotho today and members of Lesotho's new ruhn&
military council flcw to South Afnca to seek a rclaxauon of border restrict.Jons.
Param1htary commander Maj. ~n Justin Lc khan)a, who ousted Pnme
Minister Chief Leab~ Jonathan 1n a bloodless coup Monday, appattntly 1s
seeking more amicable relations with South .\fnca which surrounds this poor
mountain kingdom
Japan.ese gang•ter leader murdered
TOK YO -A man wtth a gun and ano ther armed with a Japane~ sword
broke into the home of a reputed gangster in Ka~• m western Japan early toda)
and shot him dead 1n his sleep. police ~•d Hyogo prcfec1ural ~hce
spokesmen said Tosh1fum1 Ono. SS. allegedly a ranking member of the .... 800-
membcr lch1wa-ka1 underworld organizatio n. died from a single !>hot through
the temple. The offi cers. v. ho c;poke on cond1t1on of anon~ m1t). said poller
were looking for two low-le' cl members of the IO 400-mcmbcr Yamaguch1-
gum1. Japan"s large!it mob organ1za11on
Eqla.lon caused I.ndla plane to cra•h
The anicle said the a.gents were from Warsaw Pact and West Euro-NEW DELHI -Fl\e sc1en11sts studying the wrcckagc of an l\ir-lnda.a
pean countries. mcluding Bntain. Jumbo Jet sa)' an ellplos1on in the front cargo hold caused the plane to crash off
and that although they no longer were Ireland last June k1lhng all J:!9 people aboard. the Press Trust of India
at the protest site on a permanent rcponed. The new!. agenq said Monda) the sc1cn11sts expcnmented with
basis. they were positioned to return plastic explosives on a structure s1m1lar to 1he one 1n the plane's cargo hold. It
on short notice. siid they found that the damage caused was s1 m1lar to that observed in part of
The Defense Ministry declined to the wrecked front cargo hold. It quo ted the sc1ent1sts' report as say1!'& w
comment but lawmakers on both damage included "punched holes. pctahng and curling around holes. spikes at
sades of ·the House of Commons fractutt edges, curved fragments with small radius .lnd reverse slant fracture."
cxprcssed shock and said they would 1 ;=-~=---_...;;;-;;;;-;;;;-_,;;-=-=-~-;:.-:.=;;;:.;;;;:.;;;;:.;;;;:.;;;;:.;;;;:.;;;;;;;===;;::;~===ii'"
Question ministers about the rcrrt. ,,. ~o ~~o o o The Soviet statement sa1 the o ~
cmbassy "flatly rc1ccts this malicio us 0+.0 ~·~
slander:· which 1t claimed was o .,.,.
"aimed at d1scred1ting the Bnt1sh \S'~
anti-war movement.·· A' -?o~ ~
)DUE'S 14 AND
HEADW NOWHERE-,. ' t CQeTA •M
lf •'" ,..._. ....... \(('.
270 £, 17th
Hlllpett .. '9:
646-1235
1h Price Fabrics
10.. OOft 0.111
25% SAVINGS
oe ALLnM
f 1brln & Notiou LL 0.y!
-ltd hohbil\ fabric
pm , ... 1~ dhM'ouatd Fabrka a Pou~ l'OT leclud.4.
WHATS
NEXn
Julie Is 14, unmotivated.
Irresponsible, angry and
rebellious. She is falling in school
and associating with undeslra~
frienda. To her parents, 'family life
has become strained and filled
wtth fruttration. She 1s unresponsive
to parental guidance. They don't know
where to turn for help.
If you have a daughter like Julie. there 1s
an anawerl The parents of glrls wfth
dlfftcutt problems need special help
THE HERITAGE SCHOOL FOR
GIRLS• 11 hotding a seminar that
wtM IMd\ parents how to:
• DEAL WITH MANIPULA TIONI
• TEACH RESPONSIBILITY'
•MOTIVATE!
• CHANGE REBELLIOUS
BEHAVIORI
Thi MnW\ar will be held It the
Mlntoft (900 Newpott Center
OrM, ~ &Mch) from
7:oo.t:OOp.m .• Thurlday.J1n 23
Md fion"t 8:00-11 :30 a.m., a.udlY Jin 25th. For more
lnllnMa•0111·•n-121 1112
... , I Ill ~ fNiiMt
IPlnlnleoon.
..
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' -
IN HRMI SSIO~ ' ~ El Grande' riotous farce la NB
r here is comedy, there 1s farce . t~ere is burlesque -and there is "EJ < •rande de Coca Cola."
Ttus i~ entertainment for playgoers ~ho think Mel Brooks treats h11
111ov1e subjects too seriously If
Benny Hill is too subtle for you if you
think Milton Berle could have played
a little broader or considered Spike
Jones a classical musician then "El < irandc" at the Newpon Theater Ans < enter is the show for you.
Actuall y, the show qualifies as
\<m1cwhat of a reprise. lt was in-
lnl<luced locally at the Huntington
Beach Playhouse four years ago, and
the director (Kent Johnson) and the
s1ar <C!ark Burson) of that production
arc doing a. "play it again, ~·m " in
Nc:wpon with four new faces in the cast.
Burson; ak before. is riotously
lunny as Pepe Hernanzez, a son of
banana republic Ed Sullivan, who
presides over as crazy a collection of
kl utzy clowns as ever cavoned in a
la~t.ina.· Hair dyed black and per-
spmng profusely, Burson flashes his
!lntted-teeth grin to lhe audience as he
REVIEW
Toi
TITUS
attempts to rectify each suCQetding
snafu. h's a masterful perfonnanoc.
Kirk Gross. Carol Katz, Bob Nash
and Carrie Kcskinen arc onl y four in
number, but they'do the work of.40.
Gross is panicularly effective with hi s
deadpan mannerisms and Jerry Co-
lonna mustache, and his Toulouse
Lautrec characterization -in a
sequence where the languaJe is
swnched from strangled Spanish to
fractured French -is outstanding.
Both Katz and Keskincn are rub-
ber-faced comedjennes who special-
ize in outlandish comic mime. and
they shine in the show's slow-motion
wedding skit. Nash is the closest thing
to a straight man the show offers. and
scores as a Parisian gangster in the
F'rPnrh 4\P011enrC"
T~i' time around, t~ S"-IC is. the' 'lh~w, wttich will open Ma)' 9: ... sina·
traditional proscenium variety ~ actori and dancetS of all adult
(Huntinaton's was an intimate horse. lits arc needed and funhcr infor-
shoe format). which allows for more muion is available at 895·8 I J.4 •..
elaborate scenic dcsian and increased Auditions for Woody Allen's one-
elbow room for the actors. Jo~n~n. act plays "God" and "Death" wtll be
wh<? also doubles on set and hahll!li held Wednesday at 7 ,.m. in 1hc
des1"', has crtatcd. an ~uthenuc-Phillips Hall theater o Santa Ana
loolnna Sou.th A~cncan night cl ub, ColleJe .... call the performing aru
CO!flptete with chipped facade over division at 667·) 177 for furt her
bnck walls. informa\.)on.... •
·"El Grande de Coca Cola" 1s the Saddleba~k Colleae. has an.nounced
ultimate in physical comedy from the open aud1t1ons for us spnng l'h1l-
writers who created "Bullshot Crum-d1en's theater pr<Xiucuon. "The
mood" and "Footliaht Frenzy," both Hou~ on P~h Corners~" Jan. 29 and
of which also ha ve been produced at 30 at ~ p .. m. in ,t]?c Studio Theater on
Newpon. h continues through March the Mission V1eJO campus .... the cast
I with performances at 8 p.m. Fridays calls for five men an~ two women of
and Saturdays in the Arts Center collegcagc for themaJorrolesand five
2501 Cliff Dri ve, Newport Beach: other adu~ts for support ing
CaJI 631-0288 for ticket informa11on. parts .... call d1rcct<?r Bonnie Cogbill at
CALLBOARD ~ Golden West
College will hold tryouts for its spring
musical. "My Fair Lady," Jan. 27. 28
and 29 at 7 p.m. in the main theater of
the Hun tington Belch campus .... Bill
Purk iss is directing and Dave
Anthony I!> musical director for the
582-4747 for dew ls ....
Readinas for "Peter Pan" wall ~
held next week at Fullenon College.
with chiJdren·s auditions scheduled
Jan. 28 from 6 to 9 p.m. and all other\
Jan. 29 and 30 from 7 to 9
p.m .... funher informauon 1s avai l-
able at 871 -8000. ext. 409 ..
Fttflfly, the-Mttppetstlo-n't ook-30 -
By LEE MITGANG ,,,. ...............
NEW YORK -The camera pans
ac ross a sea of celebrities. zooming in
on a dais whereon sits the honoree.
resplendent 10 amphibious green.
The guest of honor, you see, is a
cenain frog named Kermit. and the
0t·easion is the Muppets' 30th binh-
day.
That happy event will be celebrated
tonight with rare ~ good taste and hil-
arit}' on a one-hour
CB~ special, "The
Muppets -A Cel-
ebration of 30
Years."
The black tie
gala includes more
than 200 of Jim
Henson's Mup-
Kermlt pets. Kerm it's true
love. a k.a. "Moi." a.k.a. Miss Piggy.
is there. naturall). demure as ever in
silver sequins.
Thl' ever-modest Henson insisted
in an interview 1hat he had no sp<..'Cial
knowledge of how Kermit was adjust-
ing to life after 30.
"But puppets have the same son of
graceful aging that canoon characters
have Orphan Annie is not 50 years
old. l'm sure Kermit will stay young a
lot longer than I will." he said.
If nothing else. th is special serves
once again to show the extraordinary
variety of characters that make up the
Muppet world.
They range from the sappy, child-
1 i ke. lovable Big Bird, to
rnrmudgeonly Oscar the Grouch. to
the normally counly Kermit who, ~mitten by a sexy Cher, pops the
question. "Hey, you wanna fool
around?"
Probably most viewers got thrir
first glimpse of the Muppe1s on 1960s
variety prugrams like "The Ed
Sullivan Show," "The Jimmy Dean
Show"and "The Tonight Show."
With due apologies to Miss Piggy.
the first Muppet to achieve TV
stardom was Row lf the Dog. who
appeared as a regular guest on
"Jimmy Dean."
for later Mµppet convens. there
arc remembrances of two of the
greatest children's series ever:
"Sesame Street," whi~h bcgaJJ in
1969. and "The Muppet Show."
"Sesame Street," of course. in-
troduced Big Bird. Ben and ...Ernie,
C'ookie Monster. Grover an'd The
Count.
For better .or worse. one can 'say
witho ut fear of contradiction that
these beloved "Sesame Street"
characters have succeeded in turning
on untold number of kids to simple
arithmetic and phonics where count-
less teachers ha ve failed .
"The Muppet Show" ca me later. in
1975, appealing to adults and chil-
dren ahke. In a phenomenally suc-
cessful five-year run, it reached a
worldwide audience estimated at 235
million.
Guest stars were encouraged to do
things they had always wanted to do.
Rudolf Nureyev did a Fred Astaire-
style tap dance. Dyan Cannon swung
through trees like Tarzan. Rita
5 GOWEN GLOBE
NOMINATIONS
I • ' j ' • ~ '\.. -! ~ ' ' • , ' : , • ' ' '
.,.._ thul a...,..... •n emouonaJ IU~ into
a tl1umJ>tl ol blinding bogh1nns h W>uld be
..gAlnst ihe l.>lw nol to"'" Th.-C.'>lor Purple
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Moreno was groped by a Muppet.
For thQse wtth lon&er memones.
the special also includes some vintage
black-and-white footage of Kermit
and his early Muppet friends.
who took a chance on 1t, la!>ttng eigh t years, and .winning an Emmy A-\\.ard
in 1958 for best local enterta1nm~nt
program.
One to watch for especially is a
hilarious old TV advenisement for
Wi lkins Coffee. an.d we won 't give
away the punchline.
Pan of what makes th1~ an-
niversary special so charm ing ,., m
modesty and sense of proponaon
The program also takes us back to
the very bcgtnning.s of muppetry:
Kermit's telev1s1on debut 30 years
ago on a late night. five-minute
program ('alled "Sam and Friends"
on a local Washington, D.C., station.
Henson does make a bnef cameo at
the very end -long enough for h1<i
jaw to drop when one of the Muppcts
walks over 10 his table to hand him a
nine-yard-long check for dinner for
200.
"Sam and Fnends" thnved. per-
haps to the surprise of TV executi ves
"The Muppets -A. Cclcbra11on of
30 Years" is must \ 1cwing for th~· entire family.
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1
Taking a hike?
Heed these tips
For all of you sedentary people out
there... and you aJJ know wbo you
are ... l thought J shoukt alert you to
the next aerobic spon geared to act
your hean beating again.
Every three or four years, therc's
somethina. Golf pve way to the
tennis craze which moved over for
joaing which waned when aerobics
came m. and now it's (drum roll)
backpacking!
It's a swell spon. Unlike jogging
where you just go out and run, this
time you put a paclc on your back
filled with food, water, medical aids.
ot just ~trap an~lber ~rson on it w.ho
is too httle or ttres easily to wilk ~th
vou. There is even a backpack for
your dog.
Then you pick out a trail that is
relatively free of rocks, fallen trees.
snakes. f alien backpackers or sno_w
and follow it to the top of a mountain
or until you can't go anymore. You sit
down and rest a spell and then you
walk back.
-r----Lla.;a!!}'be this doesn't -sound-f~b·
much to you. but people are going
crazy for it. More than 200,000 people
signed up for treks in Nepal last year
even though there was a. ~ar an
Afi)laolstan and travel re~tncuons !n
France. It's just another lmle rock in
the sock. as we say.
If you're one of those people who
hkes to get in at the beg,inmng of a
trend. you'd do well to listen to the
advice of Dr. Cyril D. Foutz of
Phoenix. before you start.
''Backpacking is planning and tim-
ing. .. he says." AJI you need are a large
Ace bandage, the smallest backpack
possible, a small bottle of glycerine
and an old sleeping bag.
··At the start of the trip, let
everyone know (a) you are glad to go
E111·
BlllECI
even thou&h your doctor advised you
to stay orr your sore leg and (b) you
borrowed the sleeping big from a
relative of Robert E. Peary who took
itto the ,North Pole, therefore givjng it
sentimental value.
"Since your bag is small, offer to
take the food. Then make sure it is eaten the first day. At the beginning.
be generous with the water out of your
canteen by sharing it with others.
Now your canteen and bag arc empty
and everyone owes you water and
food.
"On the second day, limp and
apply Ace bandage to lq..ak>og with
~Y~rioc to your face. It lO'Obiike..
swcat;biit does not evaporate. Repeat
story about valuable sleeping bag.
Tell everyone what a wonderful time
you are having.
··single out the macho man of the
group when he is talking wi th a lady
and tell him you arc dropping out of
the bike. Macho man will immedi-
ately offer to carry your 'valuable'
equipment to impress the lady. Do
not accept his offer until a look of
admiratjon appears in her eyes.
"Follow these rules and you will be
able to enjoy a backpacking trip
without the weight of a backpack. ..
I would add only one last word of
advice. If there is a Dr. Cyril D. Foutz
on your expedition, tell everyone you
have a blister and maybe next time.
Here's how to save
time in mornings
Sir. how'd you like to work for a
company that wanted you to show up
every morning unshaven? Such is the
Amencan Safety Razor Company an
Staunton. W. Va. About 300 plant
workers there test razors.
Q. Isn't "Fresno" Spanish for
.. poplar tree''?
A. No. that's "Alamo." "Fresno" 1s
"ash tree."
Was bad manners in the Old West
to ask a cattleman how many beeves
he owned. Likcaskinghim how many
dollars he had. The Sahara nomads
feel that way about camels. You don't
ask a man's camel count.
Farm kids may team something. if
they take agriculture courses in col-
lege. But it's not the farm k.ids who
learn the most. Eighty percent of such
students nationwide ha-ve never
before driven a tractor or hooked up a
milking machine.
Trees at water's edge along the
Pacific Coast bend inland. From the
wind off the water? you say. No. sir.
it's the salt. It kills all the branch buds
on the westerly side.
A night in a hotel room for two Wlth
breakfast 1n New York City now costs
an average ofS2 IO. 1fyou don't count
anything but the hotel room and the
breakfast.
Said Oscar Wilde: "It 1s better to be
beautiful than good. but 1t is better to
be good than ugly."
If the body of the murdered woman
found 1n bed appears composed, arms
at sides. legs together. covered to the
chm. she most probably was killed by
her husband or lover. Or so say police
researchers. This 1s what baffled
PEOP LE
detectives in yesteryear's infamous
Boston Strangler case. The murder
scenes were arranged an what police
called "compassionate setting. ..
Q . If a 24-year-old woman is
widowed. what are the chances she'll
take another husband?
A. Not as great as you might think.
research reveals. Only three out of
every 10 widows in that age bracket
-21to25 -marry again.
That name "Boleyn" is pr.o-
nounced "Bullen" by the English.
The human population grows at
around 1 percent a year. The dog and
cat population grows around 3 per-
cent a year. If 1t weren't for all those
people who make their living b)
killing dogs and cats -we use terms
like "humane" and "put to sleep" -
we'd be up to our eyebrows in small
furry anim als.
Q. Sir. how bi~ is President Re-
agan's vocabulary.
A. Wllich vocabulary -reading.
writing or talking? Everybody has
three. it's claimed. A typical set:
Reading. 9.000 words. Wnt1ng.
6.000. Talking. 4.000 As for the
President's. nobody knows. Clearly.
it's sizable. but not thought to be
extraordinary. He relies on delivery.
not word count.
One of 1he first western-world
item s the Japanese copied was a
baseball. The game was introduced
there in 1873 v:ith an imported ball.
Eventual!)'. that ball wore o ut. They
took apart the remains and made
something s1m1lar-with a boot sole
for the core and unraveled socks for
the yam.
L.M. Boyd is a syadi~ated
col•malst.
WH.lltMay, Ju .. ry U
AlllES (March 21-April 19): You may attempt too much, too soon. Be
awan:, akrt, avoid scattering (oroes. You'll have reason to celebrate, but
"enouah is enough!" Long-<tistanoc oommunicat1on verifies views. Gemini.
S.giuarius play roles.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Be awa'rt of financial resources. Study small
print, read between the lines. What you need is available, and you need not
pay outlandish price. Ind ividual close to you does care. is loyal.
GEMINJ (May 21-June 20): Gain through written word -scenario
highlights travel. romance, variety,
outline of future prospects. Mem ber of
opposite se.x helps you do some detec-
tive work. Virgo, Sagittarius persons
play roles.
CANCER (June 21-J uJy 22): Fam-
1lr, member reveals family secret Si&-
ntficant change occurs in home -this
will be to your advantage. Purchase of
SYDNEY
0MARR
art object o r luxury item could be pan of
scenario. Taurus, Libra. Scorpio play roles.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You get nothing for nothing. despite promises to
the contrary. Be realistic where money and romance are concerned.
Popularity continues, but you arc attracting rivals. Virgo persons figure
prominently.
VIRGO (Au&. 23-Sept. 22): Focus on power play. Success factors increase
an connection with career. business. Achievement is keynoted -you'll be
busy making money and love. Cancer. Taurus. Capricorn natives dominate
scenario.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): You touch on universal appeal -people are
drawn to you. many confide their emotional concerns. Be sympathetic
without becomin inextricably involved. You'll reacl1-1najor...goa1Jo.ye will
not be a stranger.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Emphasis on new start. ability to get job
done, pioneering spirit. contact which will prove valuable in n"!ar future.
You'll get to heart of matters, many will compliment you on vitality.
SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. 22-0ec. 21): Instincts prove accurate. Emphasis
on family, security, home, senseof diroction a nd purpose. You'll beinv1ted to
gounnet dinner, a "lovely lady" figures prominently. Cancer. Capricorn
persons play significant roles.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Long-<listance call aids in making future
plans that could include travel. Focus on authority, reliability, qualil).
intellectual curiosity. What had been regarded as lost will be recovered.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2()...Feb. 18): Good moon aspect coincides with
speculation, children. variety. creative project. You'll imprint style. material
will be revised. contract could be renegotiated. Taurus. Scorpio persons
dominate scenario.
PISCES(Feb. 19-March 20): Be ready for vanety of experiences. unu~ual
con tacts. possibi I ity ofobtaini ng exciting assignment. You have someth mg of
value to offer -know it, be confident. refuse to be int1m1dated. Gem1n 1
figures prominently.
IF JANUARY %% IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are dynamic. creative.
stubborn, romantic. sentimental, loyal and possibly were separated from one
or both parents at relatively early age. You did not fit into family pattern.
many considered you rebellious.
The odds still against
gambling for a living
DEAR ANN LANDERS: You
were dead wrong when you said
gambline was not a viable way to
make a laving.
A friend of mane uses a system
based on calculus and consistently
wins on the horses.
Another friend uses a pocket com-
puter when he plays roulette. By
figuring out m advance the section in
which the ball wall fall and knowing
the rate of decreasing velocity. he has
a good edge and will win consistently.
My game is blackjack For eight
years I have averaged I .~ chaps per
hour profit. not a bad li ving with $25
chips. I know two others who make
their living pla) 1ng blackjack.
Obviously, we rlon't want our
names or faces known to "the casinos
or the IRS. so I'm not s1gn1ng this
letter. If you will check with your
experts you wall find out why I am -
SMILING ALL THEWA.YTOTHE
BA NK.
DEAR SMILING: In u effort to
flnd tbe beat po11lble answer to your
letter I spoke wltla people wllo
frequent race tracks, gambling
CHlnoa ud lltOH wbo MID them .
Here's tbe stTalgbt goods:
Not a single person told me that a
living can be made by bettln1 tile
bones. A compGter la vlmally no
more belp Ln plcldng a wluer t.laan
"eenle meenle myatt moe." Jtaowl-
edgeable and u perlenced bettors
llave been known to do well for
several days, but if they keep at it,
U.ey wW lose wllat they laave won ud
Ulen some. Tbe only people wbo beat
tbe ponies are lltoae wbo go to tile
track once in a blue moon, get lucky
and never go back.
Slot machines? . Forget It. They
don't call t hem "one-armed bandits''
for notbLng. Folks bave a tendency to
tell you about tbat jackpot tltey bit Ln
Reno but tbey never tell you bow
Al•
l.u1es
m•cb It cotll to get It OT wut U.ey,
llave pat in alnce trying for a repea t
performance.
Roulette ud crap-sboot111g are
designed to benefit tbe establish·
ment. The bouse doesn't llave to load
tbe dice or tamper wltb tbe wheels.
Tbe odds are wltb them against tbe
customer.
Once upon a time it was possible for
a ma tbemallcal whiz wltb a
phenomenal memory to beat tbe
blackjack deaJer by aalng U.e "collDt-
Lng 1y1lem." Tbeae people could win
conalstenlly by rememberln1 all &be
ca rds that were played, especially
when U.e re were five or six people ln
&be game. Bat the casinos pat aa end
to tut by tllLng multiple decks. So,
my friends, blackjack Is now a boaae
1ame, like roulette aad tile slot
machines. After all, somebody bas to
pay tbf! salaries of all tbose dealers.
Alld wlto do you tlllDk pays for tbal
laala carpetLng aad tboae beaatUul
claudeUers? Yoe do, Claamp.
One same at wblcb a gambler CAN
make a living 11 poker (If Ute cards
aren't marked aad some sharpie
doesn't ltave c•ffllnkl or a ring tbat
cu serve a1 a mirror). ID a poker
same hick co~•. but so do •kill aad
JMpnent. Sbfewdne11 u d PIY·
cbology also can be useful . It belps to
know tbe personality and tempera-
ment of yoar opponents. Tbe player
wlto cu ldentily tbe bluffers ud r11t -
&akers 11 In a better po1ltlon to decide
when to bold 'em and wben to fold
'em.
Billy Carter pushing mobile homes
By &be Auoclaied Press
COLUMBUS. Ga. -Fonner
first brother Biiiy Carter has gone
into business for himself and as
plugging plans for a group of
mobile home dealerships.
Carter. whose outspoken. bec:r-
dnnkang ways and down-home
Plains gas station made headlines
while his brother J immy was
president. said during a visit to
Columbus that he plans to open
dealerships in Columbus.
Americus and Manchester. He
said he hopes eventually to ex-
pand to other areas of Georgia
and the Soutb.
Bil handshake
LOS ANGELES -Promoters
of a coasi..IO<ON4 hand hake to
fiaht poverty in America say
they'n: confiden! they can. man·
aae t he st.agcnng logistic., of
putuni totetber • human chain
4, 1 lS miles Iona.
·•People have asked ,me ~s this
tbi~ starts out: 'Wbo·s soina to
be 1n tbe dacrt?' .. said Kbay
~· one of the ockbnty
ctWrmcn of the May 2Sth cven1
BJUyCarter
"The answer 1s I'll be out 1n the
destrt Don"t leave me alone out
there."
Orpni1crs f11urc 1t w111 take
1.320 people per male. or
S,480.461 people for 1he en1jre
distance. To stand 10 the line.
pa.rt1c1pents must donate at least
Lionel Riehle
S 10. The chain will crou 500
c1t1es and 1owns. 1hree mountain
ransc 10 rivers and two deserts.
Riehle movie
LO ANOELES -Like Bina
Crosby. EIY1t Presley. Diana Ron
and others. singer Uoeel R.lcble
says he's ready to make the Jump
from gold records to the silver
screen.
"I am not com ing in asking for
the lead role an 'Gone With the
Wind.'·· Richie said. "Acting is a
studied CTafi. hke anything else.
You st.an at the bottom and learn
it."
Althou&!i he has no projects
lined up. Richie says he'll make
his first movie late this year or
early next year.
Home again
NEW YORK -Pianist
Vtadlmlr Horowlh says he didn't
want to return to tlis ~tivc
Russia as just a tourht. so when
the f{IRd State ancf the Soviet
U nion qreed to renew cuhuraJ
ties in November he volunt~red
as a performer.
Horowi1:r. wbo left 1he Sov1et
U nion in 1925, is schedu~ to
perfonn two conccns dunna a
~nna v1s1t -Apnl 20 al the
Bolshoi Theater in Moscow and a
week later at Leninarad's
Shostakovich Hall
AVOIDANCE PAR . .,:E::,:X~C::;E::;L;,:;;,LE;;.N;.;.C,;;.;E;;;,... __ ~~-
Both vulnerable South deals.
NORTH
•J6
~ Q9 5.
K 83
•KQ72
W EST
•.K10743
86
EAST
•982
~ A J 7 3
. 7 6.
+A 8 6
\ 106 2
•IO 94
SOUTH
+AQ 5
~ K 102
. AQJ 9
•J73
The bidding:
South West
1 NT Pa11
2 . PaH
Pass Pus
Nort h E .. t
2 • Pua
3 NT Pua
·Opening lead: four of +.
Omar Sharif's visit to new York
to film his video-ca sette "Play
Bridge With Omar Sharif" was the
occasion for some friendly bridge
wirntne-Goun staff. This hand
could easily have-bien included In
those selected for the cassette. To
test your s kill. cover the East and
West hands and see if you can spot
the sure-trick line for your con·
tract after West leads a low spade
and dummy·s jack wins the trick
The auction was uneventful
Once ~orth discovered that his
partner did not have a four·card
heart uit, he bid what he expected
his side to make.
After the jack of spades wins.
vou have tame to establish the i rn·k-; you need in hearts and clubs
1f you can succeed in kf'eping East.
the danger hand. off lf'ad. At trick
two. lead a low club from dummy
toward your Jack If East has the
R A N E A I I 1 1· I
. CHARLES
CoREN
OMAR
SHARIFF
at'e and steps up with ll, you have
nine tricks-two spades. four dia·
monds and three C'lub . So East
mus t duc k.
If West wins the ace. he cannot
attack spades without presenting
you with your ninth trick. and you
h ave tJme to !let up a heart. But
1.-.rs supQose the_jack of ell!
wins. Now it's time to turn your at-
tention to hearts. However, you
s ull need to protect again t East
l(aining the lead, so it is correct to
. cross to the table with the king of
diamonds and lead a heart to your
k inf(. Again East cannot afford to
rise with the a ce . and 1f West wins
vou have the time to sel up another
;·lub as your game-going track.
\'.ote that. as the cards lit>, you
l'an be defeated if, after winning
the Jack of dubs. you lead a heart
from hand East captures the
qucerr with the ace and returns..a
spade to set up West's suit. and
West still has the ace of clubs as an
l'ntry to cash his tricks before you
can take nine.
I
U S T I E Our neighbor who is always on
a d1e1 1ust discovered she had
5 j j' I I gained live pounds Whal this
. . . . . counlry needs .. she sighed "1s
..----------.a gooo bathroom scale !hat's
I s l 0 D A R I ..,_, -nr,9~,-......-,9 -.-, -....,--1 O Comple•e 1!.11 cl.udle quoted
. . • _ _ • by f,11.no ,,.. •he m•u.no w0tds
~----~---vou develop from Slep No 3 below r ,, r r 1· I' 1· r 1
I I I I I I I I I
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Less
6 Voguish
11 Son of: Scot.
14 Do penance
for
15 Pretender
16 Wedding vow
17 Gaplesl
19 Peru coin
20 Swiss artls1
21 District
22 Cavities
24 Be worthy of
26 Supplies
27 lnundales
30 Remove
32 Champion-
ship
33 Donor
34 Wing
37 Bohemian
38 Mainstay
39 -light
40 Miid oath
41 Serious
42 onlc4t gal
43 Hed to have
45 Piloted
46 Prlz ..
48 Hor.ce or
Thomas -
49 Hold forth
yocaJ!y
50 Beve<age
52 Baggage Item
56 COior
57 CoauthOf
60 Superlative
ending
61 Confidence
62 Bird 63 .. _
MIMrabtes"
M Lost one
65 Tlnters
DOWN
1 .. _the
Knife"
2 Chemical
suHlx
3 Not even one
4 Improper
5 Observe
6 Reject
7 Speck
8 Continent
9 R of rpm
10 Host
11 Abused
12 Dote on
13 Beverages
18 Rall units
23 Negallve
25 Simulate
26 Killed
27 -party
28 Fllament
29 Servants
30 Ate
31 Always
33 Scon
36 Apart
3e Footless
38 Turf pleoet
39 Dangerous
fish
41 Chooses
42 Heat aouroe
44 Ingest
45 Attire
46 Auto court
4 7 Ser ape out
48 Substantial
50 Obscure
51 Mias Maxwell
53 Storm
S. Charlo1 route
of old
55 Some swans
58 Remnant
59 CallfOfnla fort
I I
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by Bii Keane mo osoaoa by varg11 Partch (VIP)
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by Brad Anderson DSIHHB TD llE!fACE
"Phlll let Marmaduke ln ... he's putting on
his frozen-stiff act!"
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by Tom K. Ryan
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llLOOll comtTY
11001' llULLJ11f8
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l HAVEN 1TSEEN A
MIRROR 1l1.AT TOL.D
iW TRUTH IN
Yt;ARS···,
by Ferd & Tom Johnaon
iMEY MA~E Mr: t.o0K L.ll<E A Sf/AW(
CFilMB·BIJl..A ...
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A UTTL.E REMEDIAL ~SrTM~ illMNING EM.~?.
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SPENT MOSf (); HIS~
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I •
*· ..., ..... TUESDAY,JANUARY21. 1986 l:J
Alrf•r• from Chicago to New Orle•na: Teddy a..r. 82.
Home run alugger D•v• Klngm•n algna new contr.ct. 82.
Sluggertak~shint
Ga rcia heeds corner s advice, slugs
home run to win state championship
By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR
~,...Cole o F
Georgie Garcia likes t-0 do things
his own way, but that doesn't mean he
isn't open to suagcsuons once in a
while.
In the late JOing of his 12-round
feature fipt with Oscar MuniL for the
California State Super Bantamwei&h1
titJe, Garcia's comermen hinted tfuu
the I ~2-pouoder was. as he put n.
"Buntin& when I sho uld have been
slugiog."
his face That's when Hassett stepped
in to end 11.
Both men earned S2.500 for lheu
effons.
What Garcia wants now 1s. of
couf'S(, a utle shot
"I think I deserve 1t." he said with a
shrug. "I've fo ught some good guys
and beat some good guys. My record
speaks for itself.''
In a six-round heavyweight bout.
Nick Delong, a big crowd favorite
who hails from Long Beach, knocked
out I v Nalls of Los Ange les
Delong. who 1s known as the
"F1gh11ng Banender," must have
slipped Nalls a mickey.
In the earher goinJ. OeLona
taunted NaJl.s after the Los Anaeles
natjve kept slappma De Lona with the
back ofh1s glove an st ead of punch1na.
At one point DcLona lef\ both arms
do wn at has side and stuc k his hud
out for alls to hn You bqan to get
the idea Nalls was m trouble when he
missed the stationary target.
Delong raised his record to 9-2
With the win after finally bcang able to
get ofT work to bo).. He had had to
scratch has last two scheduled appear-
ences because his boss refused to let
Delong take the night ofT
This ume the 227-pound ex-foot-
ball player from ~an Jost late gave
the Nalls (4-3) the night ofT a little
earl) wnh a tourth-round KO
The next card at the Irvine Mamou
will be Feb. 24 and will feature Jaime
Garza. a former WBC Super Ban-
When the bell sounded for Round
11, Garcia showed Muniz his home
run swina and opened a deep gash
over Muniz's left eye to put an early
-end &o the Irvine Mamott's year-
opcnina boxing show with a technical
knockout with 1: 14 gone in the round.
DcU>ng. who 15 k.nown as th
"F1ght1ng Bartender," must have
slipped Nalls a mickey, because the
228-poi.:nd Nalls seemed to fa ll asleep
on the ropes after barely being hit.
tj,m~e11_ht champion. He'll
with Ame rrozal. a to~ratcd super
bantam from the Ph1lhpmes.
Arrozal fought for thC' WBA fl)'·
v.e1gbt 1n Korea. but lost.
o.car Munl.a jabe at Oeorate Garcia (riOt)
ln Monday'• 8-ht at the Irrine llUrlOtt.
0.,,.. ........ "' .... ...,..
·Munl.a loet an 1 1-round declalon by T KO
for the etate auper bantamwetaht title.
'83 draft was big one
Bears and Patriots
a re in S uper Bowl
of e grourulvior
NEW O RLEANS (AP) -Forget
that the calendar says 1986. The
groundwork for Sunday's Super Bowl
meeting between the Chicago Bears
and New England Patriots was laid in
a New York hotel ballroom on April
26. 1983.
That was the date of the 1983 draft
and a quick look at the rosters of the
Bears a nd the Patriots shows its
impact.
When the Bears take the fi eld 1n the
Superdome Sunday, six of their 22
stan crs will be players who were
chosen that day.
Left tackle Jim Coven and wide
receiver W illie Gault were taken on
the first round: left com erback Mike
Richardson on the second; strong
safety Dave Duerson on the fourth,
and defensive end Richard Dent and
left guard Mark Bonz on the eighth.
Another starter. wide receiver Dennis
McKinnon, went undrafted, but
made the team later that year as a free
agent.
The Patriots picked up five Super
Bowl starters the same day.
T heir fi rst pick was quanerback
Tony Eason. one of six quarterbacks
taken in the first round that day.
They got nght tackle Steve Moore
and wide receiver Stephen Starring
on the third: running back Craig
James on the seventh, left com erback
Ronnie Lippett on the eighth, and
Johnnie Remben. who alternates at
inside linebacker. on the founh.
* * *
James, ·New t:.ngland's leading
rusher. was a bonus. Projected as a
first-round pick, he signed with the
Washington Federals of the United
States Football League before the
draft and was allowed to pass all the
wa y through the first six rounds.
Despite low-round bonuses like
James and Dent and no-round
bonuses like McKinnon and free
safety Gary Fenc1k of the Bears.
however, both teams are built on
quality athletes. There are nine first-
round draft choices on each roster:
the Patnots have seven second-
rounders and the Bears have six.
Between the days of the Monsters
of the Midway tha t ended with the
1963 NFL champ1onsh1p team and
1975, when Walter Payton came
alo ng, ChicaJo's first-round picks
were distinguished by mediocnty.
For e very Gale Sayers a nd Dick
Butkus. both No. Is in 1965, Ch1-
cago:s top choices included such
forgettable names as George Rice
~966). Mike Hull ( 1968); Joe Moore
971): Craig Clemons ( 1973) and
a ve GallaP.ier ( 1974). ·
But the tide turned in 1975, when
Chicago took Payton. of Jackson
State, with the foun h pick of the draft.
Payton simply became the leading
rusher in NFL history and ran for
1.551 vards this season at age 34.
* * * McMahaon takes
needling seriously
chiCago quarterback
unhappy because h-ts
acupuncturist absen t
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -J im
McMahon would like to be able to do
50me runnina around during the
Super Bowl, if not before 11. For the
moment. though, there's a st1ckmg
point.
lt'son the e nd ofan acupuncturist's
needle -and McMahon would like i I
to be 1n his end. Literally.
The frce-spint quarterback of the
Ch i~aao Bears s we ars b y
acupuncture. but when the team
arrived here Monday, he was all but
swcann• at the Bears' manaaement
for rcfusma to let Hiroshi Shiriashi on
the team plane.
"The bull hurts," he iaid.
"Hopefully. we can act the guy down
here tomorrow." McMaho n said he
likely would fly hiriashi at his own
expense to this Super Bowl city. if
necessary.
McMahon. who hat hed more than
hi1 share of bumps and bruiees in hls
four eeatons an the National FootbaJI ~ue. took a helmet in the rump
dunna the Jan. 12 NF cha.m·
p1on1hip 11me. the 24-0 wipeout of
the Rams.
He didn't panicipatc an &ast week's
practices for Sunday's pme 111inst
the New EnaJand Pltrioit bcc:a~ he
uk!. it pains him to run, to sit, to
(Ollow throuah on his pua. He alto
tptnt a few moments lf'lphicaJly
deKnbin• the difficulties en-
countered in perform ma a more bask
human function.
McMahon said Shiriashi, the train-
er for the Japanese national track
1cam. had administered a treatment
hcfore the team left Chicqo Monday
and that McMahon wanted three
more two+<iay treatments.
That the Bears frowned upon such
treatment was irrelevant. McMahon
sajd. "It doesn't matter 1f they
approve or if they don't approve as
Iona as it worts. I had it done earlier
today and l could u1e some more
treatments. It relieved a lot of the
preuure."
McMahon met hiriashi throufi
wide receiver Willie Gault. who m
tum met him in Tokyo when Gault
was an international track •~r.
McMahon said he alto had under-
tone acupuneture while at 8ritbam
Youna to succnsfully relieve neck
and shoulder spesms. Bean media relauons dirtetor Keo
Vlklleerri •id the club would prefer
that McMabon suck with more
convCfttioul treatment. namel)' that
ldmin11ttttd by trainer Fred Caito.
And he downplard Sh1riashi'1 n*.
"He is not a muxle WOfter and bas
not met with mucb succaa, ••
Vaklilem said. po1nuna out that a.ht AC\lpuftC'tu~ WM conducted ••trith W
Btan' knowlcdlt but not thear •P.
pn>val. Mc Mahon wanted to e•pm-
ment ..
More blue-chippers followed Pay-
ton as Chicago's top picks.
There was defensive lineman Dan
Ham[>ton 10 -12.22. lLn.e.backer -Gt.is
WilSon in 1980, offensive tackle
Keith Van Home in 1981. when All-
Pro middle linebacker M ike Single-
tary was taken No. 2, quarterback Jim
McMahon in 1982, Covert and Gault
in 1983. linebacker Wilber Marshall
in 1984 and def\!ns1ve tackle Wilham
Perry in 1985. All are starters. and the
300-pound-plus Perry -also known
as The Refrigerator -has become
the season's major med ia event for
his occasio nal running and pass
receiving.
That seems to be the result of
Chicago's willingness to take a
chance.
"Coming out of college. I was 6-5.
225 and a lot of people thought I
would be too small." says Dent, who
beefed up to 255 and became an All-
Pro two )'Ca rs after his eighth-round
selection.
DODGERS'
MARSHALL
SIGNS PACT
LOSANGELES(AP)-Outfieldcr
Mike Marshall has reached contract
aereement with Los Angele~. but
pitchers Fernando Valenezuela and
Orel Hersh1scr were among six other
Dodgers who submitted salary figure\
for arbitratio n Mondav.
The Dodgers reP<>ncdl} ga'c
Ma rshall a S3 l 7.000 raise. v.11h his
one-year cont:-act for ne'<t ~ason
paying him $650.000.
Marshall hit .293 last S{'a)on "1t h
28 homers and 95 runs batted 1n
Valenzuela and Hersh1!.er. in-
strumental 1n the Dodger-: dme to
1he National League West t11le las1
year. apparently arc aslong consider-
ably richer contracts than the club 1s
offering. The lef\-handt'd Valenzuela. 17-10
with a 2.45 ERA last year. reportedly
1s asking for SI. 7 million and the
Dodgers are ofTenng him S350.000
less for 1986.
Hershiscr. a right-hander.,.. ho "as
19-3 with a 2.03 ERA in 1985.
rcponedly has bttn offered S600.000
but is submit1.1ng a figure of SI
m illion for arbitration. He was paid
S2 I 2,000 in 1985.
Other Dodgers who filed for arb1 -
trat1o n a rc ca\cher Mike Sc1osc1a. first
baseman Greg Brock. infielder Dave
Anderson. and the reccntl acquired
Ed Vande Berg. a lefi-hand~ re-
liever.
Arbitrauon hearings will be held
Feb. 3-20. With the arbitrator sclect-
in.& either the ftaure ~ubm1tt~ by the
club or that submitted by the pla)er.
Up until the time of the heanng. the
club can conunue to negotiate with
aod sian the player 1fan aarttment 1
reacMd,
Vanguards d uel
M aster s tonight
Southcm Califom11 Colle&C's
V'ansuards meet Masten Colfqe
(formerly LA Baptist) ton1aht an
an NAIA Oinrict Ill beskctblll
1tmc on the Vanauards' floor at
their C'osta Maa campus
TiDOft' ii at 7:JO with Sout~m
C'ahbitia CoUqe enten"f with
an 11-6 overall rmm!, -2 an
confrrnce play followint Fri-
day'1 eo;.67 YlaOr)' over Al\llol·
Plcifk.
Amona the sellout crowd of 1.460
in the hotel's grand ballroom were
two men who know a little about
swingina themselves. Rod Carew and
Garry Templeton may have sent a
note to the Santa Ana nat1ve's comer
with a few pointers. but Garcia (now
24-3-2) didn't need them.
"When I landed that n ght that
ended it. boy, that felt hke hitting a
home run," he said after adding this
title to his Cahfom1a State Ban-
tamweight titJe. "I was being a little
too defensive earlier.
"Before the fight I kept telljng
myself 1hat I wanted to go t..b.c
distance," G arcia said. "That.was my
goal because peo ple always say I can't
go the d istance. I really wanted to
prove them wrong, maybe too much.
"But my oomer told me I could get
to him if r wo uldn't jab as much and
tet the nght hand ofT earlier in the
round. I guess it was a prctt) good
suggestion by them ...
The fi ght was very tight before a
teary-eyed Muniz was forced to retire
by referee Chuck Hassett.
"I felt I was_abead.'.:..sa1d Garem.
· ot by muc-h, but I rhoughl I was-
wi nning up to that point."
The bout stan ed out all Garcia's
way, as he Jabbed at will and used the
whole ring to stay away from Muniz
(38-7). But for all his sconng and
dancing. Garcia failed to tire of hurt
Muou and n staned to tell m the later
rounds.
By the ninth round . the fight started
10 shift in the favor of Muniz. who
shook ofT the Jabs and came straight
in on Garcia wnhout m uch fear.
Muniz managed to stan land 1 ng some
s111Tjabs that he was able to follow up
on W1th sohd nghts.
"He was starting to come on." said
Garcia. "( was in a shell for a while
and he was pretty confident after he
hit me with a few good shots ...
l\fter Garcia held his ground in 1he
I 0th frame. the two fighters came out
and went toe-to-toe to begin the I I th.
with Muniz catching one n ght on the
chin and another over the lefi eve to
send a stream of blood running down
Georgie Gucla (rl&ht) reacbe. ln cloee quarters lD hi• auper
bantamweight fight with 09cal' Muniz. Garcia won by TKO.
Bulls perfect hangover tonic
CHIC AGO (.\Pl -The Los An-
geles Lakers ma) have had a "hang-
over" after losing to Detroit unda).
but the Chicago Bulls proved to be 1hc
perfect da,-after tonic Monda). fall-
ing to the Lakers 133-118.
Johnson "I JUSt ~I bad. Jnd ran 1h1·
club 1n the tirst half."
v.1th thrt'l' m1null''> 1ct11n thl· 4uana
111 Y~-1\, ti' thl· cnd Llf th( penod
"We had an awful hangovt:r after
losing to Detroit Sunday." Lakers·
Coach Pat Riley said.
"The Bulls had trouble going 1n51dl
and instead. had (Orlando I \\ ool-
ndgc and (George) Gen-in 'hoo11n~
from the pcnmeter." said Jaml''
Wonh' •1f the Laker~. v.ho <.1:01'1.'d J
game-high .H point\
The Bull' then narrov.eu the gap 10
St-\en P'•1nt<. on thrt'l' different ov
.-as1on' in tht: lounh quarter But
Jnhnc;on <.top ped Chicago'<, ti,-.;t run
\\Ith a thrce·pt)1n1 pla' earh 1n the
peml<l thl·n lookd off a c;econd spun
h' thc Bull• 1.1.11h J pair of free thro"''
But he added: "There 1s nothing
like the National Basketball .\ssoc1a-
11on. because after one bad loss. \OU
Chicago<. oach tan .\lbe<. I.. .tgrn·J
\a~ing. "Y..orth\ 1s nght. hut hl· 1,
\Hong in one re'ipe t -"e hJ' l "'
inside g.1me ··
Tht' l .11..l'f' pulkd av.a' 10 anothl'l
:11.po1n1 lead 1:~~JI): after .1
\\ •rth' ti.i,h·t" I' .l 1: rl·mamin~
can always bounce back " · The l1w. wa'i the tilth qr.n~l' I ' \n~l'il'' t ·•I !fie c.1d IM g11<>(1
l'Jrh 1n thl' '>l'u1nJ \.juartl'r "hl'r
~uJt,1 lhr11n '•••It ,,,1n·d thrl'l ~J\l..l't\ Junn~ J , ., ~ L.J.1.. r <,pun th.it
,,u,ht•J l "' \ nizl k., int" .1,, 1m mJnJ
•n[!. f) -': lt'ad .11 the mtnm1\\son
Earvin "Magic" Johnson was held
to six points 1n the fi rst half. but hr
erupted for 12 founh q uan er point'
to help the Lakers hold ofT the Bulls.
C h1cago. "h1ch got 2J p.11nt' tr11m v, 11l1lnJgc and I~ from t rl'f'\ 1·
\\ oolndge and Gcf' 1n ,,,mt-inl,'
tllf :11 po1:H<. 1n the third lju.111< ·
1nm the Lakers' :!ll-po1nt lU.,h111n "With c"cryone else sconng, · said
Pa~riots get a rosy sendoff
More than 10 ,000fansshow
to send New England in style
NEW O RLEANS (AP) -The Ne'' fngland
Pat nots, favorites of at least I 0.000 people "'ho sa"' them
ofT Monday on their maiden JOume) to the Super Bo"' I
amv~ here as substantial undertlogs t(\ the C h1cago
Bears.
"People don't expect us to even come 1n hcrc and
score points.'' Patnotsrunnana back Craig Jame~ ~1d "In
our hean and mind we de~rve to be hC'rc and "'c rclt "'c
would be htrc. There has to be an under-dog in •
battaame."
Despite that tatvs. the fans who swarmed 1 F
G~n State Airpon in Warwick. R.L began lin1ns ur
catiy Monday and b)' the lime the Pat nots amvcd at l 25
p.m. for&Mirohanerfliabt-an hour behind ht'-duk -
thcy~masacdbehind ,.,and beml~ that kept them
ofrtbe tarmac.
"No. I've nevir seen a Kndoff hkc ihat." said
defenuvc end Juliui Adams-a l~ycar "eteran ~ho will
retu'C after undats Nat1.onal Football Lcaauc cham·
peonship pme. "It s a aood thins to K'C the "" Fnatand
fins behind the Patnou.. ..
Thesi.rcofthe crowd may have bttn unusual. but the
Patriots are_,Jelliftl uJCd to road tnPt-The\ v.cm their
three playoff pmtt. away from home and arrh cd ~' cr:sl
days early fOrthtttcooie:sit wtth the I.As .\nack" Ra1dc"
and Mi.ami Dolphin .. The anticapellon (of the Super Bowl) rully ha n't
ICl •n \lftUI -Ir' nsht tfttO ~lltt ... t.atd ct1'tcr Ptie
ltock. "We·~ \tuft tOUlh pines on the road. h.ld t0
ttt l&Kd to l1V1ftl out of a suitcatt. eatina ho•cl food.
medal all around. So llus lS fatrl) routine:· C~ kaymoed lmy. an his fine upasutt Monda\
' \
n1gh1 tl> the 01cd1a nh1'..CH1nl·nng thl \ur11.·1 tt1111.I. ~1J
he d()('<>n 't e\J.lC'(."t ht\ pla' rrc. 1l1 ha' t' mu, h 1rnut'tlc
handhn them
"Thi I JU\t ll'ln of the fl\Utlne .. he said
The Patno t'i return Ill pra t1ce hC'rt' Tut-.-0.i' alter
"orl1n1 o ut on )U'>t t"'o of the eight da~' 'ilnl'C' th<'11 \ 1-14
'1ctof') o'er M1am1 1n the •\f < t1tlC' pmc
"W11h all ihnt "'<'.H' ~t,ne thmugh 1n the h1<>1 month.
wc nttded a hrt l ." '111d Jumt<'> "Wf!' nL-cdcd to ge-t a\
emouonall)' h11h a "'e \''Ould a.et t() "'In tho pme ··
The aarpon crov.d "'l'i characd "'ith cmouon too. a\
the Patnot.s tel'\ ev. En&Jand 1n Que t of the fiN league
tatlt 1n their 26-)-ear h1\tory ag.11MI a team tht11 ha'ln'1
&1ven up I point IO ll'i t""0 pll)CllT µme\
"\\eappr«iate ~ou ~1na hcl'\' "said olTen "e guard
John Hannah. sixak1ns to the "-ro""'d atop 3 0 t~ tfU('lt
"You've been behind us &II the.,..,." and now "'"<''re goin
to ~t ttlt Bears ...
Pohtt estimated tht rowd at 10, to 15.000.
Many of the fans appurtd to~ hoof~ tluldren,,,. ho
had the da)' off throuaf\out cw f f\lla.nd because of the
MartJn Luther K1f\I holiday
Earlier. official bad proJC(tC'd that a ~rowd of
up•'lnh of SO. ~-ould pttt tht Patnou
··1 think m a ~ all the publ.1 at) a.bout a huee crowd
miaht have k.q')t lhC'm awl ." su1c 11rport clirtttof
An•hon)' RosatJ said. -
'
Would you •Ive
fi~i teddy for a ht to game?
NEW YORK -Wade Bogs of the Ill
Boston Red So_. topped a record ci&bt
plafm wbo have submined salary mM·
tr&hon demands of SI million or more.
Boas. tbe J 98S American La&ue bettina cham-
pion witli a .368 avertte. asked for S T.8S million, while
the Red Sox have oftaed SI.JS million. ~ wu
awarded a S 1 million salary in arbitration last year.
Accordi~ to fiaures published Tuesday by the
CHICAGO_ The fint 7S Cbicqo EIJ New York Times, the other ptayen ask.in& for SI
Bean fus wbo brina teddy ~ into a •II• million or more were Fernando Vaknzucta of the
dowD&owll TWA ticket office this momina Dodaers. S 1. 7 million: Tim Raines of the Montreal
will receive he round~~i:'-•• to New Orleans for Expos, Sl.7 million; Don Mattin&ly of tbe New York. ~" Yankees,. S l.S million; Dwiabt Cooden of the New
tbe ~Bowl. TWA o · said Monday. York Met.st.. S l.5 million; John Tudor of the St. Louis .~J~ must Jive us tbe bear, and we'll donate it to Cardinals, )1.2 million; Rich Gedman of the Red Sox,
a charity, .. said Dann Oldani, a spokesman for Trans S 1 million, and Orel Hershiscr of the Dodgers. S 1 World AirliDel in SL LoWa. million.
TbeoJreriaonlyaoc>dattbeTWAticketofficeat 75 Last year, Raines rc<:cived the record arbitration E. Monroe in downtown Cbicqothis mornina, Oldani award ofSl.2 million.
said. The Dodacn have submitted a figure of S 1.35 ltdocsnotincludetickeutotbeJan.26SuperBowl million for Valenzuela, while the Ex,po-5 offered Sl.3
p.m£ between the-Bears and the New Enaland Patriots, million to Raines. The club offer for Mattingly was or hotel rooms irt New Orleans, be said. S l .2S million and for Gooden, SI. I million .
.. We've a<>t some teats left on the plane, and we Arbitration heari~ will be held from Feb. 3-20,
wanted to do somethina fruitful with them, .. Oldani with the arbitrator pickina either the figure submined
said. by either the club or ,player. Oubs may negotiate with "We can sell them," he said of the seats .. "But we want to bdp out charity... · and sign players until the hcaritlgS.
Commercial fliabts from Cbicqo lo New Orleans Kln~man •• .._. A •• contract . ~
had been reported sold out some time ago. ~ ... -
TWA does not \Bually fly direct between the two OAK.LAND -Dave Kingman, Ill
cities, but Oldani said the airline added three special whose 407 home runs rank him third
fliabts to handle the demand from Super Bowl-bound amona baseball's active players, signed a
fans. new one-Y,.car contract with the Oakland · Two of the l.rlOl ls, which bold 275 people, are A's Monday. -
sold out, be said. The fliabt for the free ticG1...hoi4J~---No-other contr£fl!euil:rwen: arffiounced by die
will depai(UiCiilbl"dfnl or Jan. 25 and return the American League club.
afternoon of Jan. 28, be said. Kioaman=37. ·oined the A's two years ago as a free
The trip normally would cost $264 each way, he aacnufterbci re by the New York Mets. In his
said. two seasons in d, he bas belted 65 homers and The airline has not yet determined which charities driven in 209 runs.
will receive the stuffed bean, Oldani said. Last season, l(jngman batted .238 with 30 homers
Quote of the clay
.. I showed the linesman the bite maria on
my band, but the referee (Bob Myers) said there's
no rule in the book forbit.ina-lt'scrazy-youget
penalized for pullina hair, but not for biti~
which is a deliberate attempt to injure, '
Vancouver player Mare Crawl...., after being bit
on the left hand by Bernie Nicholls of the Los
Anaelcs l(jnp.
Malone'• 30 •pub 78en' win
Motet Maloee scored 30 points and m ~In BartieJ added 24 as the Philadcl-.
phia 76endefeatcd the New York Knicks,
I 0~93 Monday in a National Basketball
Association game. The victory was the 76crs' I 5th in
their last 17 pmes. Elsewhere in the NBA Monday,
WwW 8. Free ICOrcd 18 of his 31 points in the first half
as Oeveland suracd to a 25-pfilnt halftime lead on the
way to a 108-"93 victory over visiting Phoenix.
Cle~eland:. 1-8-23. outsco~tlie Suns 18-fin The 1rst
five minutes of the game and
never was threatened. The
Cavaliers built the advantage to
66-41 for their bigge$t halftime
lead of the season ... Waymu
TbUle scored 29 points. includ-
ina 11 in the third quarter, as
Indiana routed Detroit 105-99 to
end an eight-game losing streak.
Tisdale also arabbcd I 5 rebounds
as the Pacen beat Detroit for the
first time in lO outings. Steve
•1•• Stipanovich also bad I 5 rebounds
as Indiana outrebounded the Pistons S9-38 •. , ~via
Willis scored a season-high 24 points, including a
jumper with 42 seconds left to snap a tie, pacing Atlanta
to a 101-98 win over Milwaukee. The Hawk.s opened
the game by going scoreless for the first 5:45 and trailed
14-0 before Willis scored Atlanta's first points.
Baylor placed on probation
MISSION. Kan. -The NCAA Com-m mince on Infractions announced Monday
that the Baylor Univenity men's bas~et-
baJJ program had been placed on probauon
for rccruitin$ violations.
The action prohibits the men's basketball team
from participating in National Collegiate Athletic
Assoc1ation championship competition or in any other
postscason play during the 1985-86 academic year.
In addition. only two new basketball recruits will
be permitted to receive initial athletically related
financial aid for the 1986-87 academic year. The
university's basketball program will be limited to a total
of 13 scholarships during the 1986-87 and 1987-88
academic years, a reduction of two from current levels.
Nine current or former basketball team members
were involved in tbe violations found in the case, and
the seven who remain on the team were declared
ineligible for varying periods· during the 1985-86
season.
and 91 RBI in I SS games, appearing mostly as a
desip.-ted hitter. He is tied with Hall of Farner Duke Snider for 20th on baseball's all-time home run list, and
the only active players ahead of him arc Mike Schmidt
and Reaie Jackson .
Jockeya hurt ln 4-borae aplll
ARCADIA -Jockeys Rafael Meza ~
and Martin Pedroza suffered injuries
durina a four-bone spill which occurred
durina Monday's second race at Santa
Anita. and both were admitted to Methodist Hospital
for observation.
Eddie Delahoussaye and Antonio Castanon. the
other jockeys involved 10 the mishap, were not hurt and
continued ridina later in the day.
Meza, 27, a native of Mexico, refused to allow any
information on his injuries to be released. A track
spokesman said he was hospitalized "for observation of
internal irtjuries."
Pedroza, a 20-ycar-old Panamanian. was hospital-
ized for observation
Borf ord to enroll at Miami
-MIAMI -The UnjversifY of Miami m
basketball program. which just resumed
this season after a 14-year absence, has
received a big boost by the impending
signing of 7-1 Tito Hortford.
Horford, who spent time at Houston and
Louisiana State in Ausust and September, was expected
to enroll at Miami today. That matter apparently would
have been accomplished Monday, but the school was
closed because of the Martin Luther l(jngJr. holiday.
"We're waiting on his high school transcript,"
Miami athletic director Sam Jankovich said Monday
night. "It's beina sent Federal Express from Houston.
Once we get it, we'll try to move as rapidly as we can."
Jankovich said the deadline for last registration for
the fall semester is Friday. It is expected that Horford
would not be eligible to play until the second semester
next year.
Bouaton Oilers hire Glanville
HOUSTON -Jerry Glanville, who m
took charge of the Houston Oilers on an • ,
interim basis for the final two games oftbe II
1985 season, Monday was named head
coach of the National Football League team.
Glanville was chosen after a lengthy search by
Oilers Gcncra.l Manager Ladd Herz.cg and the scrutiny
of owner Bud Adams. The other two other finalists were
San Francisco 49ers quarterback coach Paul Hackett
and Dick Coury, former head coach of the U nited
States Football League's Portland Breakers.
Televlalon, radio
TELEVISION
No events scheduled.
RADIO
6 p.m. -PRO BASIETBALL: Oippers at
San AntOnio (delayed), KMPC (710).
7:30 p.m. -PRO HOCKEY: St. Louis at
l(jnp, Kl.AC (570).
Navratilova near
.. $10 million mark
She overcomes
quesy stomach
to win tourney
WORCESTER. Mass. (AP) -
Although she thought nothing was
aoina ber way. Martina Navraulova
overcame a queasy stomach to win
$48,000 and the New En&Jand V1 r·
ainia Slims tennis championship
Monday night.
"I didn't know how much I was
goinlto win until they gave me the
chec .. ~he said of the S40.000 she
earned for defeating Claudia Kohde-
l(jlsch an the singles.
Navratilova added to her winnings
one half-hour later when she and Pam
Shriver defeated Kohde-K.ilsch and
Helena S\4kova, 6-3. 6-1, an the
doubles.
"h's ruce not to worry about
money •• said Navratilova, who 1s
Jettin11cl0te t~ the SI 0 millio n mark
1n careereammp.
In Che sinaJts match. Kohde·
Kil.ch. who had twi<lC beaten
Navratilova in earlier meetinp, took
the veteran ri&ht to the brink at the
c.enuum, buiTdioa a shon-lived PO
third aet lead.
NaVt'ltiJova. wbo said she ...
uoubled by lack ofsiet'p and a queaJY
9'0fM(h. raJlied for I ~. 6-1. 6-4
victory but gave credit to her oppo-
nent.
"She played well enouah to win,"
Navraulo' a said. "I think she's
played worse and beaten me. I was
frustrated. nothing was going my way.
It was a Rreat match. very exciung.'
Kohde-K1Jsch. 22, of West Ger-
man) had laid out her pre-match
strateg} of going to Navratilova's
backhand And she d id it with some
success. racing away to a 3-1 lead in
the first set and building a 2.0 lead
before losing her own serve in the
third
"I felt fine. ~ knew I was a little
tired. but on the coun I foraot
ever) thing. J rCally wanted to win the
match, that's why I played well. 1
really fo ught ofTa lot ofbrcak points,"
she said after acceptina the $20.000
loser's share.
Ko hde·Kilsch also warned
Na\'ratilova about the future. ·
"It was a great wctk for me, maybe
next time I'll beat her." said Kohde-
K.ilsch. "I know she's a areat player
but today I nearly made it."
Navratilova won her s1uh straiaht
tournament and ~tended her match
winnina streaJC to 31.
"I played well enouJh to win,·• she
said in between matches. "II was
unbelic\'able yesterday. J mined two
thou the whole match. J couldn't buy
a shot ton1pt," she said in reference
IO her .SO.minute, 6-1, 6-1 rout of
Shriver an the semifinals.
-~-=--~ --=---= -"---= - - -----------=--------
Geor&eto"!'D'• Ralph Dalton lay• It up o•er VWano•a·a Wyatt Maker, Harold..Premley.
Spartans drop 49ers
Ciiicinnati upsets LouisVTIIe;
Memphis State (No. 3) wins ---
From AP dHpatcbe.-
San Jose State's Spartans recorded the lone Pacific
Coast Athletic Association basketball victory Monday
night. and across the nation there were two ranked teams
in action.
Number 13 proved unlucky for Lou1sv11le as the
13th-ranked Cardinals were upset. but No. 3 Memphis
State pulled one out.
Herc's how it went in college basketball Monday
night:
SaA Jose State 7%, Long Beach State 6%: In Long
Beach. Ricky Berry scored 18 points and Reggje Owens
added 14 to lead San Jose State to a Pacific Coast Athletic
Association victory over Long Beach State.
The Spartans, now I0-6overall and 3-4 in the PCAA,
trailed 36-32 al halftime but took a 43-42 lead on a three-
point basket by Anthony Perry with 13:01 left in the
contest.
The 49ers. who dropped to 5-12 and 1-5 tn league
play. closed the gap to 58·57 on Reggie Wallacc·s three-
point field goal with 5:0 I left. But the Spartans built a
commanding 68-60 pad on Berry's two free throws with
I :09 remaining.
DcAnthony Langston scored 18 points and Wallace
had 13 for the 49ers.
Ward Ferris and Herb Simon added 12 points each
for the Spartans.
San Jose Stale connected on 52 percent of its field
goal attempts. compared to just 40 percent for Long
Beach State.
Clnclnnall 84, Loal1v1Ue 8%: Jn Louisville.
sophomore guard Roger McClendon pumped in 24 of his
35 points in the second half and Tony Wilson had a three-
point play with eight seconds left as Cincinnati upended
No. 13 Louisville 84-82 in a Metro Conference game.
The victory upped Cincinnati to 7-9 overall and 3-3
in the conference. The trium8h came in the Bearcats' first ~me since downing No. 2 Virginia Tech 107-104 in
double overtime Saturday.
Louisville fell to l l-5 and 2-2.
With Louisville holding a 56-43 lead. Cincinnati
went on a 14-4 tear to pull to within three points with
10:29 left. McClendon had nine points. mostly on long-
ran~e bombs. during the run.
Cincinnau uoo the game o n a 20-footer by
McClendon with 5:29 left.
The. two teams exchanged baskets until Wilson,
fouled after picking up a loose ball, hit two free throws to
put Cincinnati up 80-76 with 29 second left.
-Mempltit StatH8;-Mhtintppt-State H :-tn-Ha -
tiesburg. Miss .. Andre Turner's layup basket with 23
seconds remaining let No. 3 Memphis State rally from a
late five-point deficit and escape Southern Mississippi in
a Metro Conference game. stretching the Tigers· unbeaten
string to 18 games.
Vincent Askew tipped away an inbounds pass and
the ball was fed to Turner, who scored a basket to break a
tie at 64. Baskerville Holmes added two insurance free
throws with four seconds to play.
Behind Derrek Hamilton, Southern Mississippi took
a 64-59 lead with 2: 15 to play. but Memphis State got
three late points from William Bedford and a couple of
steals to rally.
The victor) pushed Memphis State to 4-0 an the
conference while Southern M1ss1ss1pp1 fell to 9-8 overall
and 1-4 in the Metro.
Neither team led by more than six points and
Southern had a chance 10 pull into a six-point lead w1th a
I :43 to play.
College basketball
WEST
S.n .JoM St n , Long e .. cll St 62
Aleika-Ancl'IOrage 90, ~attte Pe·
d flc 73
Puget Souno 7S. Al~k•·Falr·
Darlkl 6S
•OCKIH
E. WaS/'llllQtdn 74, telal'IO St S4
S. Utah 69, S C~aoo 67
aAST
Gaoreatown 76. VIiianova n
HartfMd 68, Niagara S8
HOlv Cron 62, F«dllam S9
Llhloll S4, Robert Morrll SJ ~rshaQ 61, Furman S8
Navv IOI, o.teware 63
Penn St. es, East Ca rolina S7
Pltt11>uro11 95. Ououe1ne 76 Siena 7,, 8olton U ,,
Watt Virginia 76, Towwn 62 waoner 91, Dominican 71
SOUll4
A-laclllan St. 66, W. Ca roline 64
Au1tln Peav 74, Voun1ntown St 66
ClnclMatl M, Loulwllte 12
E. T-nH St 90, David.on 76
l l otl
Gaoroe Mason 4S. Wiiiiam & Merv 44
Meml>llll St .... s. MIUIHIPC>I "
Miami ·13, FIOrlda SI. 7S
MIOO .. Tanna''" 66, E l(an-tuckv S7
Murrav St. 112, Akron n
Nicholl' St. "· SW Texas " Old Dominion 7S. South AleDama
S7
1t1e11mono 61. Jamet ~hon 44
!>am Houlton St. 6S, SE Loul1lana 49
Samford 58, Ttnne1'" St. S6 Sltonan F _ Au,tln SS, NW Loulal·
an• S4
Tenne1Mt Tedi 67, Mor-ahffd St
S7
VMt 66, Cllldtt " MtDWIST
Cleveland St. 60, W. 1Hlnol1 S3
Oralla S4. Wldllla St. 47
lttlnol1 St. n . lll·C.hic-61
N towa 71, V1'9erallo 70
Notre Dame 91, Hofstra 61
SI. Lo1.1l1 60, Butler SS
Xavier, Ohio 71. Ev1n1vllte 69
SOUTHWHT
Ol<lal'IOtna Cllv 7S, Ptllllot 61
Pen American 77. Stal'°" S4
E Texas St. 75. E Ntw MUICo n (oil 61
Lendl settles in
as tennis' N.o. 1
He says McEnroe
is under pressure
of trying comeback
.J'IEW YORK (AP) -Having
established his No. I ranking with an
easy victory in the Nabisco Master~
tennis tournament. Ivan Lcndl said
Monday the prcuu.rc is not on him.
but on John McEnroe.
"The pressure comes when some-
one challenacs you and succeeds."
Lendl sajd one day after his 6-2. 7-6.
6-3 victory over West Germany's
Boris Becker.
"McEnroe was No. I for four years;
(Sweden's Bjorn) Bo~ for 5iit years.
All of a sudden, a new No. I comes
alona and you have to try something
nc-w. lt's much harder to be No. 1. act
overthrown, then become No. I
apin."
Lendt, however, isn't overlooking
McEnroe's abiht1esor any others who
arc chasina him to become the kina of
men's tennis. But he said Becker has
to prove be bclonp 1n that IJ'OUP·
..There arc many players who can
play the pme." he said durina three
news conferencts he attended Mon-
day. "Fim1 Bons has to mabhsh
hlmtelf ap1nst the other players.
"McEnroe shit is a pat tennis
player. The wcdes -you can't
count them out, either. But Becker, he
seems to be different to me. Only time
will determine if he can be No. l ."
Four Swedes qualified for the
Nabisco Masters, the l 98S season·
endinf tournament featuring the
world s top 16 players. Australian
Open champion Stefan Edbera was a
first-round loser. as was Joakim
Nystrom, who lost to fellow Swede
Anders Jarryd. French Open cham-
pion Mats Wilander was ousted by
Becker in the qtlarterflnals and Jarryd
was beaten by Becker in the semi-
finals.
All four Swedes reached the
doubles final, with Edbefl and Jarryd
defeatfo& Wilander and Nystrom.
Asked about the muscular. t ~year
old Becker who last year became the
younaest pf ayer ever to win tbe men's
su~&les tlllc at Wimbledon, Lendl said:
"He's Just over-developed at 18 ...
When I w11 18, l was like a tootllpick. l couldn't pick up five pounds. That's
why I didn't plar, aolf then. I couldn't
pick up the bq. '
Lend! picked up another award
Monday, bein.a named the Seqram
:>ports Award t98S Men's Tennis
Player of the Year ll was bis ftnt
Seaaram award since 1983, aa be
joined Jimmy Connon and McEnroe
as t-o-t1me wannm, leCOIMt behiad
Bora. the only four-time men'•••
champion in the I I-year bial«) ol
the award.
Lencn M)ft the U.S. Opn • IM
fint time last StiManber.
I
.... W•""' .. COM"••NC• hcllk~ w l ftd. LM.,. 32 7 121 Por't&encl 26 It $71 ~I• IS ,. .llS S..ttll IS 26 ,JU ~ " ,. .3" Golden , •••• 14 JO 311
Mldw .. , °""'*' Hout lOll 17 1• .6S9 o.n~ n 17 S7S Sen A.nlonlo 23 It s. Dt11e1. ,, 11 Sl• Ulati 20 n .. s S.er•mtnto IS l6 366
IASTlllN CON,.llllt:NCI
A._llflc OMMell 8oilon 30 •• F'tllta<letohla 21 ,.
tffw Jtutv 2S 17 We .ntnoton 21 ,,
tffw York 14 27
Ctftlrll Otv!Meft Mllwtull.ee ,. IS .-.11an11 n 17 De troll 19 12
Cltvetencs " 23 Chlc.100 IS 19 tncste na 11 30
MendeY's Scores
I.alien Ill , ChlGIQO 111
F'tliltOtloille 103, New York 93
Cltveltno IOI, Phoenix 91
7H
6S9 S9S soo
3<11
651
~
463
4lt 3<19
261
oa
9
17
II
lf"°t
20"°t
l 'IJ
•''J • I
12
•'-'>
1
II
17')
• I
9
13
16
lndlt ne I~. Detroit 99 ~
Atlante 101, Mllweui'.M 91
Tlllltflt's Gttne1 a--s ti Sen Antonio ____ G.l!lslln-Sltte II New York -.._
O"enver •• u1111
Oelt11 et S.cremento
Houston 11 S.ettlt
WMllMcMY's Getne1
L.aken et Boston a-.. ti Delles
Pnotnl• •• PllllaOtlOlll•
GOiden Stele 11 Att1n1e
0.troll .. ci.veltno
New Jerstv 11 Denver
L•lltn 133, Bult 111
LAIClt:llS (llJ) -Wor!hv 13-23 7·10 33:
Lucts •·6 7·1 IS, Al>Out·JeDt>er 9·17 9·10
11. Scol! 6· IS 0·0 12, JohnM>n I· 15 l·I 2•.
Kul>dlett l·S 0·0 2, Coooer 6·9 O·O IS,
AC Grffl\ 0·7 0-0 0, McGN 2·3 0-2 S,
Lesltr IH 0-0 0, Sorloo• 0·0 0-0 0 Tottlt
... " 31-31 Ill CHICAGO (Ill) -Wootrlaoe •·16 7·7
23, S Gr"" S· 10 0-0 10, Okll\em I · 12 1-2 17,
M.tcv •·6 2·2 10. Getvln 6· 12 7·7 19, 8enlu
5·1• 3·6 ll. Paxson •·6 l·l 11, Cor~lnt •·S
2·2 10, Ot ltev I·• 1· 1 l , 0.klty 0·0 O·O 0,
Smrell. 1-4 O·O 1 Tolels 46·19 26·30 111 sc-by Quarttn
Ltktrs 37 31 29 34-133
CllktQO 29 23 33 33-111
Threo·oolnt voats-C~ l, McsGM
Fouled ou1-&1n11s Rebounos-Lellers •7
I Luces 111 CnlcaQO S4 (Wow iOOe Ill
Anlsts-Letters ?I IJot'tnM>n U ). Cl'lk:too
29 (PUM>n 1) Tolel fO<Jl1-Ltker1 25,
Cnlceoo JO Tecnnlcets-Cnic•oo Co.ell
AIDecl<. Chic.go csetey of lltmt, WootrlOoe.
8t nk1. LucH
Allenoenc-17.21-4
Coleee
AP !'NI 10
Rectf'd "" l"v1 l.J\ICWl.Gatoun.1621 19-0 ..U.cl I
_l OJ.i•• -16-1 1089 3 3 Memonl1 S111e -ir-D 1069 6
4 Geo<oll Teen IS·I IOSI s
S.()l(tenome 17·0 997 7
6 Mich1g1n 17-1 99S 1
7 l(an11n 16-2 .. 9 I
• SI JoM's 17·1 7S. 9
9.Svracu1e 13·7 67• 4
10.Nev ·Lu Vt9H 17·1 669 10
11 Ktnlucllv 14·7 6S9 11
12 Georgetown 13· 3 "87 IS
13 Lou11v11ie I I·• 440 11
I• Loui11tna Stelt 16·2 43? I•
IS Purout 16·3 346 19
16 Notrt Oemt 10·2 337 13 11 Brecs1ey 11-1 302 20
19 Al1.·Birm1nonam 16·• I•• 11 19.Tuu·EI Peso IS-3 111 17
20.Vlrglnla Ttten 14·3 IOS 16
0111ers rttet1v1ng voles ~lcnmono 34
lnoiena 71. 1111nol1 7S Navy 19, towt 17
MlnnH ole IS Bolton COICtvt i.. Alet>eme
13 Me rouette II Auoorn S Tenneuee S.
v1r111n1e S Anan''' 3 Ctev~ena Slt lt 3
SI JO,tOl'I ' 3 MICn1oen Stele 7, Wt\ltrn
Kentuc•v 1 OePeul I Peooero1nt I
Villenova I
PCAA standiMS
Ctnference
WL
Neveoe·Les Vegu 6 0
New Mu1co Sta te S 0
UC Irvine • 2 Fresno Stete l 3
C•I Sttlt Fullerton 3 4
Sen Jose Stele 3 •
Uttn Slt tt 2 l
Ptcffic 2 S
UC San11 8ert>era 1 S
Long 8HCh Sla te I s
Mtftde Y's Score
Ovetell
W L
17 1
" l 8 I
10 7
10 9
10 6
6 • ., ' 1 ., s 11
Sen Jolt State 7?, Lono Beecn S1e11 67
TllUrsdtY's Gemes
Lono Buen S1e1t t i UC lrv1nt
C•I State Fulterton •• UC Sama Bert>ere
Ulen Sltle •' Frt\no State New Meuco Slalt 11 Nevt CSt ·Las Vege1
San Jose Stele '' P1c1flc StturdtY'I Gttne1
New Mexico Stitt er UC Irvine
Lono 8eecn Stele et NtveCSe·Lu Veoes
San Jose Ste11 et Fresno Stele
u11n Stale et PeelflC
MllldtV's Gtmt
Fru no Stele t i UC Santt 8erbtre
Women's teumarMnt
I•' worcntor, Mtu.>
~,IMh
Mtrht\t Nevrelllov• (U S I Ciel Ci.IJClle
Kt!00e-Kll1en (West G~m•nYI 4·6. 6· I, 6·4
\NevrtlilOe wins 5.0,000 KllOOt·Kl!Scll
wins 120,0001
NHL
C.,,...lll COM,.•ENCI SmVWle OM.-w l T "'1 G, GA
Edmonton 32 10 4 " 2<13 , ..
Celoarv n " 3 45 '" m
Wlnnl~o IS ,. s lS 171 211
l(lfles I• ,. • 34 ''° 211
V1ncou•et u 27 • )2 , .. ltS
Nen1I DMtMfl
Clllct OO n " s ., ~ '°' SI Lovl1 It " • u ,., tn
Minne~•• " ,, • .,. ,., 170
T oronlO I) 11 s ,, 17S "' De1rol1 9 ,, s 23 IS2 2SO
"WAI.II CON,.•UNCI
ltW!dl t>M.-
Pl'lllaOtlPlll• lJ ll 0 " 206 131
W•\/llnOIOI\ '7 1S • 51 17S 144
P1tt.ovttf\ " 20 s 41 177 1'9
NY l.it'*"I " 17 ' •7 "' l..S
NY R~l 11 n ) 4$ 161 ,,.
Ntw Jet\tY IS 11 1 l l 1'3 207
A41WM DMtltfl
~'"'' u 11 • s. XII ,.,
Qutt>K ,. II t ~ 191 '~ I O"Ofl 21 " 1 .. m U9
H•flforel ,. '° ' 49 ,. 171
luff•Jo 71 19 • 47 16f ISJ
MIMllY'• SC..
H•nforel S. New YOrtl lttneen 0
~ J, MolllfH 7 Cot) ,....,.,..,..
~I Lout• el KINI M•~lt•IW~ ~~'lie •I ...... Yori! ltlalldW\
New .JefVV •I Vencouvtl' .......... ._
hl!Ofl If Dttro!I
WIMl ... 11 U...
...... Ylt1l It._,, •t TOf~O __ ..... c-... ..... ....,.,~
,..,~ •• ,.,._,Ill\
Tardie
Matw Del Hlttl bellr ....
YMr•bv·VMr
YHJ, CN dl
1'52, Dlek Coury
IKJ, Dick Coury
195', Ok:k Coury
19S5, Dlcll. COIKY
1'56, Dick Courv
1JS7, CMt Ct rr 1951, C"41 C1rr
19St, C"41 Cerr •
19'0, Ptt ROl>lrh
19'1, Pt! R~h
19'2, Pt! RoOer'h
1"3, Ntlh ltlv.,.e
1"'9, Ntlh Riven
19'S, Nash RI_..,•
1966, Ntsh Rivett
19'7, Emil NMmt
'"'· Emit NMrne 1969, Jerry T tr CS It
1970, Jerry Tardie
1971, Jerry T erCSI•
19n. JetrY Terdlt
1973, Jerry Ttrdlt
197•, J.,.rv Teresi•
1975, w rv Tercs14t
1976, J..-ry TtrCSlt
1m, J.,.rv Terell•
1'7t, Jtrrv Tero ..
llectnt
S·S
10·7
7·9
4·17 • 11·9
8-9 • 1'-9
• 1•·10 • 15-9
11-10
" 16-S • 16·5
• 17·9 ·n-s
7-20
S·IS
12· 13
16·10 • ?<>-7
16·9 • 13·12
• IS·I)
1•·11
'19-10
• • 21·5
17-9
17·1 1'79, J~rv Teroie
NO. Jetry Tarellt
1911, 1111 Altlltl\Clel'
• • • 19·S •-tt--t:
• 9· lS
1912, a m Altxeno.r
1913, Gery McKnlolll
1"4, G•rY McKnl11111
l .. S. G1rv McKnlelll
• CIF Ol•Yolf enrrv
•• CIF •·A 111\alllll
• 15·10 ••• 29·3 •••• 11·2
•••• 30-0
• LH1>ue eo·cnamolons
• • Letou• rnt molons
• CIF •·A ChtmPlonS
•• CIF •·A ChtmPoonl
S.ntl Ann.
MONDAY'S lllt:SUL TS
11111 ef "·dlY ~ IYIMflne) ,.ST llAClt:. 1 fvrtonos
Perlaoltno (H.,ntnot~) S.60 J,to 2 to
Llo111"4weynom. (Hlouere> 12 60 S 60
Slt !lleY lo.itllOUl\IVt) 3 20
Time 1-233
AIM> ren. P1rson Jonn, Some1n1no 8tYOllO, Conllnuet Cnenoe, Ten Goels.
Crffktrost
ScreltlltO Emmel Ka¥. WllCSol9n Orlv·
tr, Ktreke Ltd
SECOND llAClt:. 6 lurton11s
Llni. 8 11 lrlll'I 18ettl 10 20
Erlns Firs! (Vt ltl'llutle l
Two Doon !Stevens!
lffnt-HI l
S.IO 3 80
SOO •OO .. o
AIM> ~-Arl>ltre•• Muttt!Y'S 8ountv.
O•nsel's OttlQhl Tlliro Re1><1tve Cenov
Cnlos, GuerentM To Siert. M '1 lt>ececn•.
Rocky Recs
Scratel\e<I No1orlt1v Cerlmylt!ler
THlttD llACE. 7 furtono\
Prine.• Bloo<I (Pelltrson) 74 .eo
Botger Boy (Vei.nzutl•I
C01Kslno Eeoi. IStevtnsl
Time I 23 4
920 460
•80 3.tO
3 20
AIM> ren GOkl Assavet Et J-. Ernie
1<1n11, First 8teoe Rumee Oe ncer. Be
Thankful. Frtnefl Maieslv Scretcl\tO For1111n Prince• u DAILY ooual.E 11·41 P9kl lllo.40
,OUllTH RACE. I 116 miles
Big Plev (Stevens I 7,.0 II 20 8 .tO
oooo·s L111CS ICestenonl S 80 4 60
MterlD<H k Dancer ( Htrnt ndez I 16 IO
Tl,,,. I U l
Also ran L110v'1 Bttonn•t < Fine llzea
!.merl Cner1>er. Prince Amoert Reason To
Stuov Doctor LerM>nY Hover•no Pre~t.
M111er Tes Cn1ef OI Fire
ScrelCfl.a Ree1 Gooo Mv11trv AIDert
Prince. Hou ton, 8ronze Tudo<
FIFTH RACE. 1 I I m lles on lurl
Btut l!azor l!.leve11sl 3 80 3 .tO 160
H.ilO Biii ( 81•Ck) 8 AO • 60
Wile n (McCarron1 4 00
Time I 49•
Also ren Brlencnon Mr Director. All ·
0091, Tile Wth OI Swat. Vlneoeront
Oenlyer Slbe'len Hero Big Dan Rvan
Resetve Scrt1cheo Ovn1m1c Leeatr. North OI
L•ll• Norlll St•wev Gt lle nt Arcner
U EXACT A It· ll Nici 190.00.
SIXTH RACE. 6 I 1 furtonol.
wonoerlvl Frteno (McCrn) 9 60
Eteoenllv (Vetenzutltl
Leif ~er Merk (Plncey)
Time 117 I
420 320
l60 J 00
) 20
Al\O ren MevDe A Kin Marianna s
Girl GrMf! Fws, HIH Swffl Blue\
Scretcl\tO Full AeClelm. Viro1n1a Co-
IOl\y Teu Dusty Sare" s .._ Nelurt l
NODllllY
Slt:VENTH llACE. & furionos
Halo Fotlls (MCCarron) • 60 Rosie's I( T 1v11en1ue1a1
Ctrload ISl'\oemt ktrl
Time· 1'°8 1
310 160
•60 300
210
Al'o ran OtbOneire Junior Aymen
Ro•t>ury Perk
Scretcheel None
U lt:XACTA 16·11 Ot O 538 00
lt:IGHTH llACE. I I I m11t1 on turf
Mounteln BHr (Dtnuyel 1 IO S 20 • 00
Rovet Reo•"• 111.eeneo u 60 u 40
Jusllcere IP1nca v1 • 80
Time 14 2
Allo ran Ce1>lcn1 So1ri1 OI K1no110"
Feet Flncser . Ce1>r1corn Bette. Deify Buw
Oenclno Of\Olev Alflrmance. Sora veh
ScrtlCN<I None
NINTH llACE. I I 16 milts
Junture IStevensl 11 .ea
Fet>ulOUs Mt<T'rorv IMcCerronl
SCM'uct Herbor (()ClvtrtS)
Time 1.'31
Scolrn.o. None u lt:XACTA 15·7) Peles 193 00
soo )60
l 80 no
3 60
S2 ~K SIX 12·9-4-6-S-51 PtlCS
519,127.00 wllh elohl wlnntn UI• nonesl,
17 Pleil Six conM>lt llon paid 1343.00 wlf Pl U6
winners Cflvt norsn)
S2 ~I( NINI: 12·1 ... 7·9 ... 6+SI PtiCS
54~.00 wllh •S wlnne" IMwn l'IOfstsl
Allen<lal\ee' iG.112
.... Cat IPWll .,,,_.,
JUNIOtt FEA THfllWEIGHTS -Artreo
Gomer (Pomontl def. NoWto Ayalt
(S.nle Anti, ,.,.,.nlm~11 oec!Mon <Gomer
1$ now 1·1. Avelt I• 0-11
MIDDLEWEIGHTS -Tony PllMflO
(l.0119 letchl KO'CS Miiton •u111 (WMI•
mlnt ter>. fir" rovh<I lltef.ano It now J-2. •11$1'1 ,, ,.,,
HE.-.VVWEIGH'fS -Nletl Del.Clllt
(LonO had\) KO'CI IV ...... !Los All• .-.>. tlflll rOY!ld C~one la now •·7 ~It 4-)). .
MIDtxlWEtGHTS -L" *'lnela cw .. 1m11111 ... 1 def llUbell aieo,... <Lo•
Al!Hlftl, Nltll dtel11011 C*l!Mk la "°"" 4~0. l lK'llW91 11 1 ,. 11
$UPllt HNT AMWllGHTS -OW tit
O•r<I• IS.Ill• Ane) TKO'CI 0.C.r MUlll1
(ltlco·ltMr•l. 11111 ~ l~la .. -24-J· 2. Mull!• ,, •· 7)
D-.--OAAA wtlMW -Ill~ N ..... "rodl COil. "IMCMAI, U •-1,... W 1a1119111, ... Md\
1"6 NA teur ~
Jen. ll·lt "'-1• °"" Jiii\. JO-F.O t-Ptoole htc.n Nat!ONI Pro· Am
F ttl. 6•,_AftCIV W1iw.tn1 ONI\, T orrrt
Plntl f'IO. I). 1..-.Hewellt n ONI\, HOl\OMU
Fee. at-2>-Lot Anee!M Ootn, PtcHk ... "'"" Feo. 27·M.trcn 2-Honcse Cteulc. Corel
Sorl1*, ,It,
l\Mf'dl 6-f-E11i.rn Ootn. Ml1ml
Merch ll· 16-HtrU &av Hiii Claulc
OtltndO, Flt.
llMfcfl 20-l>-OSF&.G Cltulc. New Ot·
IHtlt
M¥<tl 17·»-TOUfntmef'll Pltvers C~ftl\lo, Point lledl'1. Flt
Alll'h l·6--Gre1let GrMl\lborO Ootn
AOl'll 10· 1)-Tl!4 Mtsters. Auousrt. Gt
Aprll 10· 1:>-Dt PO'lt Guerentv Cltnlc,
H•tllnburo. Miu
APf'll 17·20-S.t Pint' Htrllel>t Cit.Uk , Hiiton HMO tm!ld, S C
AorU 2•·27-+ioullon Ootn
AOl'll JO-Mt" t-Las V994s tnvllllional MtY I· 11-&yron Ntl\on Clauic, lntlno.
Tex.
Mtlf IS· 11-<0lonlet Nelionel Invite 1ion.1, Fl Wortn
Mav 22·2S-Mtmorlel Tourl'\tm.111,
DuDlln, Olllo
May 29·Junt 1-t<tmi>er 01>t n,
8ttl'ltsCSe, MO
June S·t-WHICl'ltsler Cltnic, Her· rtM>n, NY
June 12·1S-U S Ooen, Southemp1on,
NY
June 11· IS-Prov1otn1 Cten>c. Chit· ••nooo•. Teon June l9·22-All1n11 Cteulc Mtr1t1t1
Ge --June 26·19-<eneCSlen Ol>tll Ou vlli.,
0111
Jutv 3·6-Gru ler Heriford Ooen. Cromwell, Conn.
July 10· l:>-AnntuS¥·8utch Cleulc,
WIUl•msDuro Ve
Jutv 11·10--Heroee's Cleu1e Coal Vet-ltv llt
Ju4y 2•·27-8 u1c• Ooen. Greno Blt nc. Mien
Julv 31·.-.uo :>-we11ern Ooen. 0.k
BrOOll Ill
AUii 7· 10--PGA C"•molonlnlo, Toleoo
Ol\lo
Auo I•· 17-T"e 1n1erne1lone1, Cuti.
Roctt, COIO
Auo 21·2~EC Wortcs Strl91 of Goll,
Akron, Olllo
Auo 2t·ll-Mem1>"' Clns1c. Cordovi .
Tenn
Stot •-7-8 C 0oen En<11coll, NY
Sept I I· 14-Bosron CtessK
Seol 11·21-{;retter Mllweullff Ooefl
Stot 1S-?l-Soutnwest C1anlc, Abtlene,
Tu
Ocl 2· S--Soulllern Ooen. CotumDu$
Olllo
Oct 9· 12-Pensacote Ooen
Oct 16· 19-0isney WorlO Ctenlc, Lekt
Buen• Vista. Fl•
Oct 23•16'-T .. u Ooen Sen Antonio
Oct 30-Nov 2-TuclO" Maten Ple v
Chlmo<onsnro
Oct 30·Nov 1-Taltenauee Ooen
Dec •·7-Mlxeo Teem . Laroo Fl•
O.c ll·U-Tetm lnv11eno~1. Boe•
~aton, Flt
BOWLING
SMwbeet lrNtttifioMI
Ctf LH v ... sl
FIRST llOUND LEADERS
I Jim Sltftnlch, Jollet, 111 . 1,121
1 RenCIY L1ghllOOI SI Ch.trle' MC . 1,llS
3 Storm OeV1ncen1 Te merec, Fla
I IOO
• Jim W1nki.otectt Gtt CSllON. Ort
1,799
S Pete McCorcsk Houston 1.794
6 Rul!v Greiner R1c,,mono Ce hf I 1tS
1 Oen Hamilton. M1oml I 192
I Mer• Rot,,, Spr,no Loe He111Ms. N J
1,179
9 (!It ) Guoov Troup Nec>tur1e Beech
Fla . 1 no
I 110
Ma•• Wl1t1ems 8eeurnon1. Texu
MISL
Westen\ DM•len
W L ~<1. G8
San Oteoo IS 6 7U
W1cMe l• I 636 ' ,
St Louil 11 12 •71 S
Kansai Ct1Y 10 13 "35 •
Los Anoett• I 14 364 1 • Tacoma 9 16 360 I
Ea1ten1 Olvlllen
Belllmort 13 9 S91
Mlnnt101a 13 10 5'S >
P1mour11P1 11 10 S1• I ,
OellH 12 13 40 2 >
Ci.veteno I I l1 '11 2
Cn•c•oo • 11 400
MendeY's S<wes
No oemes scneouieo
T""""' s Gemes
CtevelanCS at Ch•ceoo
Wlcnlle el Delles
llledMtidtY'• Gemes
Lo1 Anoetes t i N'lnnew ta, n S• Louis et Bellltnore n
l(ensa1 Cl'Y t i Sen Dl990 n
P111s11uroh er T tc4mt n
~per .... xx
SUNDAY
let Ne• °'1Hnsl
New Enolancs "' Cn•c•oo 'Clltnr>t• • •'
1 o "'I I
~'*' .... odds Cl'llceoo I 1 ov., New Enoleno (,rem H1rnfl'• ,._ Stl«tl Beelcl
~V'• tnnMcttens
aAHaAl.l
At'Mf'lctll L. .. tue
BALTIMORE ORIOLES-S•11neo Jolln
S"'IDV, oulflflOar IO • one veer c ntrac•
OAKLAND A'-SIGMO Ot"t "-•"9men
09'191\eleo htll.,. to a ')nt vee r COl!••ec•
MILWAUKEE 8REWERS-$ oMO Rh
&urrh M t 91rllb«I\ Cllrl\ Bosio ~"
CltrCSI t !ld Tim LH l"Y e><ICl'lt r l ••M kflroeoer. caldl..-81HY Joe Roo1oou~
flrtl DHtmtn, Ptlll 110VMl\OIOtr l!ICI Oev•O
G"-1, outflelden 10 -YN ' con1rec1i SEATTLE MARINEltS-Stoneo Pelt
L.tdel tllCI Steve Flrtov10 OltCl\er\ Jerrv
Ovt>tlMlll, ll\Ofl\100 1.orenro Grev 1111ro
M-11 •no ll;eM11 MOort ""' DeMtmt n ......... '""-CINCINNA Tl ltEDS-S•onecl 'T onv ....,.t. ftr\1 bHenlall 10 a -·vea• con
lr'KI
NEW Ya.tit METs-.Aor~ 10 '""''
""'"' JftM OtoKO. Otte• on • two v .. r COl\lt.CI '4la Ill\ ootlon vear tl!d ~
IWll•lt •nel K'ftt H•rtUIOI" o<rcl'ten, Ltn Ovll1tr1, O\I~, ltOll GerlMlll\irt In
ffillder, JoNI Olllllom.. ctl~ t ncJ De¥e
~. l'l'l •d M-11. Oft Oftt v .. , C'Olllf 9(,.
I
Orange Coal DAil Y PILOT ITueeday, ~ 21, 1NI * •
Prep basketball log
COtlOMA OSL MM CIM)
67 LO' Ai.mttOI SI
63 Et Ctmlno SI
55 Le Jorcs.n 40
6S L•ouna a..c11 ., '6 Et Toro .. SS Foothll S6
.. Ftn Vt lltv 42
•S Mlsilon Vlelo 54 6S ltOMf'l\HCI ., as H 1n a..c11 S6
S. Mlulon Vlelo SI .. Oomlneutl ,.
64 LHUM a.eri• 40
13 Not. Ht~• 50
.. E1t1nc1e• 31
S2 Unlv.,sUy• ..
S6 woooor1esoe· s1
Jn-·cos•• MtM J2.._I ·S.Odllll•Ck J,,....., ·L.N. hKfl
Jlt-•Npf. HwllW
F>-tt • E llMClt
F j-• Unlwnltv
F7-I "WOOCIOrlcloe F 12-al •Co.It Mela
Fl.,_.Sa~
ISTAMCIA
110.-0
SS Wtrrtn XI
47 La Jorcs.n SJ
62 El Camlflo 11
50 Norco S7
62 DOii Luoo tA
7• Cenyon 60
50 MM-V1llev U 10 IOlt nl,Hew S2
•2 ECSIM>n .cl ., Oomln11ue1 S9
U Minion Vi.lo S4 n Coll• Meta• 43
S6 Unlvtrsltv• loll S9
JI COM• 44
S7 Not H•rtlelr • 5a
12 LHUM a.di• 60
J:n-.1 ·~
J2.,_·w~ICIM
J~I •C0$11 Mes.
J31-t ·untveollY
F)-•Coront Clef Mtr
FS-.1 •Not. HtrbOr
F7-"LIOYnt S..cl'I
F 12-"SaOCSltOKk
F 1.-.1 ·w~klllt
N•W'f'09T <•·11 U WMY HIUs ,.
,. "'''... y 40 Ottnee S7 ., OcMMlde SJ s 1 aurr°'*" •
.. YurNI .. 63 F...Wooa S.
g ·-.. " Let A*ml10$ .. M Hue tllenol 67
" Woo«1r1C1ot• i7 50 GcaM• n
6S UnlvtOJty• S4
S2 ffl•~i.· S7 "~·· .. Jn-"L.ff. e..dl
JU-111 "Co.It Mesa
JJf-11 ·wooooi-iooe
JJ1-I "COM
F,__.t • Unlvorsllv
F5'-"E11allde
F7-t "SeclOleotck
Fl,_, •Lao a.acn
F1.,_.Cottt Mn•
COSTA Mlt:SA
( 1· Ill
'6 San ClenWnte 92
62 L8 WllM>n 13
51 F In Vt lltv IO to S.nlleoo SJ
.. Ce nyon 11
S3 C•oo v111ty 103
6l El Moclene ao
Cl Ellt ncle • 77
d SaOOlaOeck • 61
SI Leount 8tecn• 77
31 Wooesi>rie1ot• 66
SO University• SI
Jn-1 "COM
J2t-"Nol. Heroor
J2'-0 Est1nc1t
Jll-el "Stdotel>tck
F>-tt "L•11 8eecn
FS-"WooOD<IOOt
F7-"Unfver\ll•
F-n-·~~r
Fl-a r "N1>1 HerbQr
UNIVERSITY
(7·11
7S Cvo•HI SS
e0tt0tt (11-61
67 Ceoo Vetlev 6l
11 Canyon ICC> •
S9 Cao-lllO St
4S s.n11 CIMt 4l '* l.Al<ewooO st 61 Et MoOtnt St
5' Hin 9Mcfl (Oil to
1-4 LOI Allot 6'
15 Laoune Hlll1 l9
40 E slt nclt 0
16 C11ttornl• S9 1• Hin 8etel'I 41 '° 1..a PolY 31 63 L8 Wilton 67
11 Westmlft11er• 4
SI Ocetl'I V14tw" 5'
418 Hin 8tact>" S1
J21-"Fln v .nev
J2....,., •Marine
J29-"~
J3t-e1 ·wes1mln11et
l'S.-.1 "Fin lletltv
F1-"Hul'!linoton 8cn F 12-'Marlnt
,TN, \/Al.LEY
MMllNA
llMI so lr.,IM '3
.. Lt Quinta 5' '8 SI JoMOll '3 '3 s.1111 f ro.rt 61
.. Dtl\t Hllll 5a
7S S.v•Mt 4"
S3 It Altmllos loll 51
., v111v.,Jllv • '° Ot•not •1 69 Irvine .54
11 Ort nge JV 0
75 Dena HINs so
74 Ceoo Vt llrt S3
Sl Stnte Ci.rt t2
6S Mtsllon V1elo n
S3 UllleWOOO .54 Cl Hin 8Hc:I>" 31
l3 Ftn v ... v• Cl
6S Oc:Mn vi..r 7' in-:ai •we11m1Mtw
J2-·Ecslson
J29-11 •f'tn_ Vt lltv
J)t-•Hrn BMcl\
-=s-·westrnlnstor
F7-t •OcNn View
F l2-t l "ECSIM>n
•wee ( 11•9)
6) Menllt ,.
s.l HH Wiiton I)
" S.11..wle .. "~ ,. '9 WOCNMlrldle 71 u Selltleeo •• *' ""'-VellWY U
61 hdit•••ct " 71 Et TOf'O n s. Mefl119 .,
61 C •llfOfni. 70
71 Glen. Hoo...w 61
16 Wtrftn 67
46 SA 17111tv 61 " •.. ~-" S3 '-"'-Hilla" 42 5' El Toro• S1 u Seo11 c-....u.· .i
7• C-Velie¥" IO
70 0... "*. .. Jl.-..1 "Miia. Vlelo
J17-LA9UM Hilb
J~ 'El Toro
JJl-"SM Clemente
FS-.1 •c..oo Vtllty n-1 -o.na Mrh F1..-•M1$.iotl \/ltlo
CAltO V ALLIY
t11·Jl '3 Edison '1
.. c.nvon '° I I Sotlor• .. nE~ 61
67 HH Wilson 64
SS Vtrtlum 041 u
S3 0c:tMn View SI
S3 Sant• Motllca S.
S9 F elnax S6
103 '°''' Mew Sl '9 Ftn. Vt lltv 61
74 M#lne 53 s. Mer.,. Det '7
n ~ " .,. El Toro• '7
92 t i ·s.n Clem 7l 7 HIHI" U ao Irv ne -
ao Mlu lon "'"'°" 69 J22-'Ll lJUl\I Hill'
J27-et "Et Toro
Ji.-•s.n Ci.mtn1t
Jl l-•D11'\t HUl1
FS-•1rv1ne
LAeUllA -.u 11· 11) .. L-• 415 Gw-.Grow
S1 "'*"*' SS Lot~ . -~...,,.,, ~~ " ...... M IOIMl.Hew
41 INIM' 57 Et Toro•
.. ' M ... IOll VlfiO•
" S.11 o.n.i.· .. '22-11 •e..,. Vtllrf n.-..1 "0-H• n1-• ·~ Jll-et 'Et Toro
FS---~ Vlelo F7-• •Sefl (,ttm Fl~ V.-V F ,.,_.. Detll Hiit
Mll1eC* VWJO lll·SI ,. StrVltt u
S6 W..tmlMlef ,,
61 Sees*•lleell .. 61 ._. Gtel!Oe •7
53 ~ Atnl9QI )!
11 WftlWft ..
'3 Woodbr10cle 70 tO ltal\CNI 41Wn SS
S4 COM U 10 Wtrr9!1 57 n Cyoreu ..
SI COM .54 s. E 11 enc1t " n Marlnt u
•9 Sen Cttmtnlt" :M
U D-HINs" 42
M LA9unt Hltll" tA
'9 C100 VtlltV" • J1'1-el "El TOf'O
J2_.lrvlne
JJ1-"Sen Oe<neftlt
J,._1 'Dena H'-'
FS--1 ·~ 'R1ll\ F7-•Ctoo Vt llev
F11-"EI Toro
Fl._1 •trvlnt
SAN CLaMSNTE <•·•l M Trov 61
LAGUNA aEACH
Ct·61
69 Trtic ~Ill\ JV )7
.S. Ganr 10
l7 LB W1 Ml" 10
60 Mtono''• o
(IHI
60 El Toro lS Comoron n Mire Colle
0 SI Anll'lonv
0 MIN111.1n
~ OClt:AN VMEW
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.\ rounJ-tnp f11gh1 for 1wo 10 San Franos"o
and a "'etkrnd a1 thC' Four ~asons Ho1rl-Cltf11s
1n \lore for thr male and female "'1nnef'\ ol
'>unda) '\ I Ok pon1on of thr third annual ptnl
Run. 5k. !Ok. "-h•ch "'111 bt' run 1n and around
:'-oe"pon Beach's Fashion Island unda~
Sponsored b' Corona drl Mar and :"'e"pan
Brach public \chools. 1he racr~ hcgin al~ >Oa m
15k)andl$ 30 a.m.110kl.
Enlr'\ fee\ "'htch arC' un drdud1hle arc S I~
"'h1ch 1ndudcs a T -shin
The '\e"'pon-Balboa Ro tar'\ < luh"' 111 pre<,c nl
, 11\tom a\\ards 10 d1' m on "'innt•r5 and 1nd1' 1d·
ual trophtC'\ 10 lhC' (i"' ft'malt' and malt' fin1shrr
in t"al'h race
Parl..1ng 1sa,atlable b' taking 'e"'pon C°<'nl<'r
Om c off Pacific Coas1 High"' a' and turning
ngh1 on Farallon.
For funhcr rnformatton phont' ~bl~ '4~0 or
~w-<r~J
Globetrotten la Anabelm
Th<' Harlem Globetro11en .ire '>l ht'dukd ll•
"''"d up their Southt'm ( ahlomtJ ttiur th!\
""CC'lt
o\ftcr a pair of games D' er 1hc \\('(' C'nJ at 1hc
Forum. the Globetrotters "'II cn1t'na1n fan,
WednC'sday night (7:30) 11 the .\nahe1m (on-
venllo n Center They ronclud<' 1he1r uthland
tour at the Lona Beach Arena Thursda~ _ al\l1 at
7:30.
T1c keuarcpnccdatSl 2.S IOand Sil "'11h .i S \
discount for children under I: T 1ckrt~ .ltl'
a'a1lable at the box officn and T1~ l..c1m.a,1cr'
Fonua ClaampJond.lp remu.
The fifth round of the Forum C:hamp1on,h1r
Trnms C'hallcnac Senn 1s hedulcd Wec:tnc\
dA) at 1he FOt'\lm at 6 p m and ft-11urn John McEn~. Ivan undl J1mm\ Connon. 'an
n1rlc N0th. Martina Navralll<l' a and 0.bncla
Sat>aun1.
T1clcc1 J)ntes are SSO. SH S I" ~O. $9 ~ and
S 7 SO and l\'a1lablr 11 the Forum bo' otlitt and
01 T1cke1muter loc.auons For more 1nfomu11on phone 1~1 \)4 J.232
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Sun Ft'b : -"e"' Yori.. Tue' Feb J -
Dalla~ Thur\ Feb 6-at Hou~ton Tut's Frb
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Phcxnl\
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Golden Stall" "rd March ' -al l uh Thur\.
\1arch ti -a1 C1oldcn talc \al March -
Sacramt'nlo •wn \iarch 1J -at Scl11le. Tue~
~1an·h 11 -Chppc~. Thur\. March I.'
Scaulr un \1arch I ti -Hl,us1on Tut's
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a1 \h!,,.Ju0.1."t' \\ ed Feb :.ti -a1 [)(-1rn11 Fn
Fri'> :" J I &>-i"n
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ClrHl.im1 l huf' \ian h r. -l>alla'. fn
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Drn,t1 lut'' \larch I I -JI l..lkr" "eJ
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'Iue . .\pnl I -al Utah. "ed . 'P"' . -L tah. Sat . "pnl ~ -GoldC'n 1.a1c. \\ed .\jml ~ -Dtn\et Thul'\ o\pnl 10 -II Portland.
Sat . o\pnl 11 -Dallas \un -\pnl I' -ill
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from S to SlO
'
f
. '
·'Beneath the surface th~ (elecUonJ campa/6ns will be far more hlghd
tech and lea personal than ever. even as tney try to appear more an
more personalized. • •
------------------------------...:.--.---------.....-...... ----~;.....--------~~y
Those responsible
f ot toxic dumping
should go to jail
When -and if -authorities find the persons
responsible for dumping toxic chemicals on Ortcp
Highway, we hope Orange County courts will be as harsh
with the dumpen as Los Angeles County .J'as last week.
A Cypress man lut week was sentenced to two ycan
in state prison after pleading guilty to four counts of
violating the Hazardous Waste Control Act. Ronald
Martin admitted be offered to transport barrels
containing hazardous waste for various companies.
Instead of hauling the barrels to a licensed toxic chemical
dump-&ite, he-abandoned"thcm.fD-Vaeant lots in 6iinge -
and Los Angeles counties.
Martin was the first person in the state to receive a
prison sentence for dumping toxic chemicals~ we hope he
will not be the lasL Whoever dumped the chemicals
along Onega Highway also deserves a prison sentence.
Some of the chemicals discovered last week were so
dangerous they could have formed toxic clouds had they
been exposed to water or improperly moved. In fact,
some had to be blown up because it was too dangerous to
move them. And it was inevitable that toxic chemicals
from the leaking barrels would have eventually flowed
into streams, endangering the plants, animals and fish in
the area as well as the people who visit the wooded area
on the weekends.
The persons who are using Ortega HiJllway as a
toxic waste dump have no regard for pubhc safety or
welfare. They are placing time bombs in prange Count).',
and when they go off or how much damage they wtll
cause remains a frightening unknown. 'l
It's easy to understand the motive for illegally
dumping toxic wastes: greed.
Since the closure of the BK.K land fill in Covina in
1984 -the last chemical dump in Southern California
-the cost of hauling a 55-gaUon barrel of chemicals has
risen from $40 to S 100. Unscrupulous_ haulers are
looking for economic shortcuts and some producers of
the chemicals will not ask too many questions if the price
is right.
But greed also motivates confidence men,
embezzlers, blackmailers and armed robbers and society
will not tolerate these criminals who prey on innocent
people. The haulers dumping deadly chemicals along
roadsides or in vacant lots should be treated no
differently than other criminals who threaten society.
LETTER S
Decide now whether you
will donate organs Jater
To the Editor:
My husband 1s a kidney d1alys1s
patient. He has been waiting for a
lcidncy transplant for over 16 months.
He must go to the hospital three
times a week for fou r-hour treatments
on a dialysis mac hi nc. He has been on
dialysis for 21'2 years. He needs this
transplant very much. as his health
continues to decline and he has to be
ucd so closel y to the machine that he
doesn't have much tt mc for anythmg
else.
There arc thousands of others hlce
him. waiting.
Some of these are in very serious
trouble and approximately I 0 percent
of dialysis patients die each year.
There is a new law this year that
requires doctors and hospitaJ staff
members to talk wi th families of
tenninally 111 or accident victims.
regarding the donation of organs.
This 1s a very good law and so
criticall y needed.
But I am ask1n& everyone reading
this to take the time to have a scnous
talk with close fam ily members and
loved ones about this. Malec your
decisions about donatin~ organs
while it is not a traumatic thing to talk
about. I can understand why families
Today .. History
By tlM Attoclated Prett
put this kind of subject off because I
did this myself. Only after my
husband's illness did our fa mily
members get together to discuss
donations. and we have talked with
close friends and neighbors about the
need for planning before the emerg-
ency.
I hope your readers will do the
same as it is very 1mponant. There 1s
absolutely no way that my husband
can get his needed transplant other
than from a donor. Remember that
the tragic loss of your loved one could
also mean that he. or she, provided
life for several others. My husband
has a large famil y and he 1s a very
1mponant and well-loved member of
It.
We will never know the donor of
the k1dnc) he will get but will always
be grateful for his or her acnerosity
and thoughtfulness.
If yo u make a decision to donate
organs. you ma y obtain donur cards
from the Department of Motor
Veh icles 10 put on the back of your driver'~ hcensc:. Please do not put this
off. as w many arc needina your help.
BONNIE J. SANDERS
Newhall
Today 1s Tuesday. Jan. 21 , the 21st day of 1986 There arc 344 days lcfi in
the year.
Today's h1ghli&ht 1n history·
On Jan. 21, 1924. Russian revoluuonary Vladimir II) 1ch ~n1n died of a
11rokc at a'e 54.
On this date:
In 1793. King Lo ui s XV I of France was sent to the guillotine.
In 186 1, Jefferson Davis of Mismsipp1 and four other Southerners
rcs11ned from the U.S. Senate.
In 1908, New York Ctty enacted an ordinance that made smokina in
public by women pun1shablr by a fine of S.S to S2.S and up to 10 ~ys'
1mpnsonment.
In 191 S. the first KJwanis Cl ub was founded 1n Detroit
In 19.SO, a federal Jury in New York found former tate Dcpertment
official Alaer Hiu auilty of pcf)ury. I~ an 19.SO. Gcorae Orwell. the author of "Nineteen Eiahty-Four" and
.. Animal Farm," died in London.
ORANGE COAST
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Computers will market
the caiididates this year
High-tech will
make campaigns_
look more personal
Want to know what this year's
political ca mpaigns will look like?
For the answers, it's best not to seek
out politicians. who will gi ve stock
answers based on the issues. their
panics. thci.r pe.rsonal~ties. and Lhcir
opponents' personalities.
But those fac1ors don't control the
way campaigns arc waged beyond the
local level any· more 1n high-tech
California.
So for a real look at what campaigns
will inv olve this year and beyond, it's
best to gjvc a listen to the campaign
managen who hire the media experts
who decide what the public will really
sec and hear.
And in the most recent meeting of
their lodge, better known as the
American Assoc1at1on of Politi cal
Consultants, the campaign pros ga ve
some hints.
They wi ll use high technology to
make campaigns see m more personal
than they really are. They will use
computers to pester potential voters
reluctant to make the tnp to the polls.
One consultant at the recent con-
vention told of a letter he composed
for a campai~ desperate for cash. It
looked as 1f it came from the
candidate's wife and moaned that "I
and the children arc very worried
about whether we will be able to keep
THOUS
EUAS
the house'' after her hu sband paid his
Caf\lpaign debts. .
Using computer.generated hand-
writing that closely matched the
wife's own, each lcncr received by
voters looked like a personal, hand-
written note. The results: An 18
percent return, com pared with the 2
percent to 3 percent that's usually
considered good.
Then there's the reluctant voter.
He can now be tracked down by
computers linked to precinct lists. If
candidates have run phone bank
operations during a campaign to
determine which voters are definite
supporters. which arc likely and
which are ccnain opponents. they can
go after the likely backers who
haven't turned up at the polls by
m1dafiernoon of election day.
And they won't need to go after
such reluctant folks in person. either.
Trusty new computers can do that
JUSt as easily as they can call up and
hawk merchandise.
Consultants agreed that this tech-
nique is the hottest new marketing
tool in politics. surpassing even
absentee ballot drives like the one
that ga ve Gov. Dcukmejian his
narrnw victory in 1982.
The idea is that when a voter hasn't
shown up at the polls by a certain
time, he starts getting calls urging him
to get moving. The call can be made
by the candidate himself. using audio
tapes plu&Jcd into a computer that
dials the phones.
And the calls can come as often as a
campaign likes. until a slow-moving
voter either goes to the polls or
unplugs his telephone.
Not that absentee ballots arc being
neglected. either. They're still con-
sidered a solid way of getting votes
from people who wouldn't normall y
bother. But ma-u 1rbs:cntee ballot
drives are consi dered pnmarily a
Republican tool because the follow-
ups required arc so expensive and
GOP candidates generally ca n
outspend their Democratic counter-
parts by a factor of two or three to one
in statewide elections.
Computer techniques. however.
are affordable for almost everyone
who might run.
The upshot is that this year's
campaigns won't look very different
on the surface from those of the last
few election years. There will be all
the usual television commercials that
tend to glaze over complicated issues.
And the candidates will still seem 10
be ev~rywhere 10 a constant efTon to
avoid offending anyone.
But beneath the surface the cam-
paigns will be far more high-tech and
less personal than ever, even as they
try to appear more and more per-
sonalized.
~mat Ella• It a Santa Monk a·
bated eolamnJtt on state lttaes.
-l'lllUdt.UI ~ i;,JAi!•i;t.11111.1 .. ---------------
Pentagon official queried
in probe of Asian gambling
Evidence of organized crime sought
in Vtetnames~ operations in-Virginia
WASHINGTON -A high Pen-
tagon official has been questioned by
the President's Commission on Or-
ganized Crime in connection with an
investigation of criminal ac1iv11y in
the Vietnamese community.
Richard Armita&e. assistant sec-
retary of defense for international
security. confirmed that the crime
commission had interviewed him
about gambling operations in the
Washinaton suburb of Arlington, Va .•
which has a larae Vietnamese popu-
l1tion.
Ann1taac recently returned from
Vietnam where he held high-level
talks about Amencan pnsoners-of-
war believed to be still ali ve in
Southeast Asia .
He told our associates Donald
Goldbera and Corley Johnson that
investiptors for the crime com-
mitsion asked about his relationship
with Nauyct Thi O'Rourke, a Viet·
namne rcfusee married to an Ameri·
ca n. She had been subpoenaed by the
commission to testify or oraanited
pmblina operations 1n the Washina·
ton area.
Annitaae had wntten a letter on
O'Rourkc's behalf ura.ina the Arlin--
ton County Coun "to show mercy •
af\crshe had pleaded suihr to cha~
of conductina an illqa aambhna
operation. She was sentenced to two
years m pnson with all but 30 days
suspended. and 1s now on probation
after Krvin1 the 30 days.
h ..D the letter to the coun. dated J UM
o. 'll 98S. and t}ped on DefenK
Depenmcnt stauonery. Armttaft
wrote that he had known O'Rourke 1n
the early 1970s, when she ran 1
rntaurant 10 Sa11on. He dtscnbcd
her 1n the letter" "a very successful
businesswoman (who) had a rel?""
tat1on for fairness and honesty .. '
Arm1taae wrote lb.at be had seen
her "on numerous OCQs1ons .. 110«
he was transferred to Wash1n1ton in
1978. He asked the court to view
O'Rourke in lhe context of Viet-
namese culture. say111g that "in Viet·
namesc society, gambling is a murh
more normal and accepted pattern of
behavior than in our own."
Speakin& to our reporters.
Armitaae said he told the crime
commission he was unaware of any
involvement by O'Rourkc in or-
ganized crime. He said her attorney
had asked him to write the letter. and
that he hadn't seen O'Rourke since
then.
O'Rourke could not be reached for
comment. Her attorney, John
K.ilcarr. called his client "a small-
time, nickel-and-Oimc pmblcr," and
said she had told the crime com-
mission she was not connected to any
organized pmbhn~ rina. Ktlcarr said
she was a.ranted immunity for her
testimony to the crime commission.
Accordina to a police report com-
piled at the time of her October 1984
arrest for runni1'& an illeaal football
pool, "All leads provioed by the
1nvestiaation pointed to ... Nauyet
Thi O'Routke as bei na the orpnizer
of the pmblin.a operation. Before
beina placed. all bets had to be cleared
by Ms.. O'Rourkc."
But O'Rourkc told police she was a
ao-t>ctwccn. "As the money aot more
and more, I couldn't cover the bet$. so
I passed lhc bets on to bi111Cr pcof>!e 1 n
Wash1n1ton," her statement said. "I
would be a middle person and would
acccpt a IO percent charae."
While awau•na tnal. pohcc records
how. O'Rourkc was stopped Wllh
another pel'10n leav1n11 htah•llak~
pmbhna operation 1n 1lver Spnna,
Md. The other individual had fired a
"M1am1 V1ce"-strle machine aun
dunna an altcrcauon With the aam-
bhnl operators O'Rourkc was cany·
1n1 3,8SO tn cash, ll«Ofd1n1 lO the
record1, and Arhnaton County of-
Oc1als souatit to revoke her bond 1ner
the lnndcnt.
JACK
AIDEISOI
and JOSEPH SPEAR
r~ ~~
According to court documents,
O'Rourkc came to this country from
Vietnam in 197.S with $700.000
worth ofvaluablcs from the profits of
her restaurant and bar. She told
mvcstipton she has lost about
$600,000 since then. gamblin& 1n
Atlantic Cit y.
When O'Rourlcc was arrested.
police found records 1n her home that
showed she had taken in $53,000
worth of bets in a sinaJc day. Poltce
later searched 12 different residences
believed to be in volved 1n the
operation and found quantities of
money and pmblin& paraphemalta.
Pohcc records show that $148,879
in gold, jewelry and cash was scitcd
from O'Rourkc. includ1na 34 S 100
bills. A 197.S Porsche 91 IS Tarp was
also confiscated.
flSHEYE IN THE SKY: Fash and
Wildlife Service officials don't deny
that they use 11 'lurvc1llance
technoloa1c to oveneo their 9().
million-acre empire, as we reponed,
but they insist they need them all to
crack down on poacher and dealen
1n illeaal sptt1c'l. Closed-c1rcu1t Lele·
vision, for uample, is uied 1n "stint"
operation• 1n ,_,h1ch fcden.I •ntt
post as bu yers ofpelt1 of cndan~
wildlife.Satellite will bt used 10 trtek
smuaJcrs bnn11n1 1n 11lqal birch.
monrcys and Other forbidden pet.J.
And h1ah~t«h senson arc used to
detect nflc shots 1n areas where
hun11n1 is proh1b1tcd.
MINl·EDITORIA L: We have to
thank formtt Rf'P. John Bucban1n.
R·Ala., chairman of ~pie for the
Amcncan Way, fot today'• coft'nntn·
ta.ry. When the Ro Jerry F1lt¥Cll
J•tt ........ ,... -.,.... ,,.., .,.,~1e4~
.
WALnl
801111111
Costa
Mesa
in days
gone by
Two week• aao -that is on Jan. 7
-there appeared a Searchliaht ~bich
tie editor headed "ReCilbnpnends
from days 1ona past." Since. th~n I
have had several c-0mmun1cat1ons
from readers who say, in eft'ect, "tell
us some more about some of the old-
timcrs who were your frie~."
I can't promise to 11vc yo1;1 a
complete report. but I can from ume
to time mention a few of them.
One name that occurs to me is that
of Paul Palmer and his loyal co-
worker Agnes Bloomquist. Both of
them arc aone now. The last time I
saw Paul was on the 10th floor of
Hoaa Memorial ,...Hospital Presby-
terian. Paul ("Pappy," as we used t
call him) was a person of tremendou1
dctennination. He c~plained to m«t
that I shouldbe of&oodcheerbecau
-"by God" -he wasn'taoina to diet
-regardless of what the docton said
It was that determination tha
made him one of the great succ~
stories of the Orange Coast. ,
He had come to this area t
"develop" Lido Island. Before lo
he found that established lendinl
institutions didn't want to len4
money to buildhouses on an island ii\
the bay. Paulccst;-ouldn't take no fOf an aruwcr~ ound he ~cd
savings and loan to finance houses SQ
he could sell lots on the new island.
So. typically, he formed the New
port-Balboa Savings and Loan
(That's not the present Ne~
Balboa Savinis and Loan. The oria·
1nal was bought out by Imperial and ..
only a few years aao. Dorothy 0oa1'
-a very smart and determined real
estate woman herself -headed •
group to establish the present New-
port-Balboa Savinas and Loan.)
Anyway. durinJ the tint days ofthe
Globe-Herald. after Dave RinJ and I
had bouaht it. we were aetuna no
motion picture advertising. so we
thought we should push to get a
theater in Costa Mesa.
The company that owned the
biggest theater in Newport Beach
didn't want another theater "so
close." So those people told their red
estate man, Paul Palmer, to "soothe''
the people on the bill.
As some of you old-timers may
remember, in those days riaht after
World War II. you had to set
permission from the federal aovcm·
ment for cverythina you wanted to
do. The people who owned tho
motion picture theater in Newport
Beach (not Jim Edwards) claimed
they couldn't act a buildina pctmit for
Costa Mesa.
Paul didn't know about that claim.
And they didn't know that I had 1
fonncr classmate who was a WasJ:ti
ington correspondent for a Scattlf
paper. So I called her and asked her tcJ
check. She did and found there h8CI
been no application ever filed fOf
pcnnission to build a theater in Costa
Mesa. The owner didn't bother tq
infonn Paul he hadn't told the truth.,
Paul was embutused and. almost
immediately thereafter, pcrmissi<>tl
to build a theater in Costa Mesa w-4
granted. Pappy Palmer. aood spo~
that he was, came up and peno~U~
delivered the news to the Oto~
Herald that work on the Costa M~
theater wou ld start immediately.
After she worked for him loyally fot.~ \Cveral years. Paul Palmer mpvcd hi
co-worker A&nes Bloomquilt up
the exalted office or president w~h· he became just chairman of the boa
When t sW1ed to write
Seardtliahl I didn't realize how man
100<1 friends I have had on the Ora
Coast and bow much I miu each oita
as he fades away. I have aJrady tOl.J
you in an earlier Searchliaht about_~
arcat service the late J!ldee Don
Duopn did for the city ofCoSta M~
when he was city man~. But mo
about that another time. w .... , ..,..... .. die Ptlet' , ...... ,. ...... ,.
ComJDent.
welcoJJle
•
OrenQt Coat DAILY PILOTnueeday, JlilMJ#J/y 21, ,.. •
•
COMPLETE NYIE COMPOSITE TRAN8~CTION8, 117
.·~enders like the look 9f st~ip ret~il centers
mall neighborhood shop clusters are
ottest developing property In CQunty
if llM HATHCOCK
o.lf,...C.. p u•u1
With the almost continual building
on major additions to rcgfonal shop-
pina centers or construction of shiny
buildinp around John Wayne Air-
pon, it's easy to foract that developers
arc still interested in building smaller
neiahborhood centers.
But a«:ordina to Doug MarshaJ,
vice president and regional director
of Ofanac County for George Smith
FinanciaJ Services, two of the hottest
propeny types under development in
South Oranae County arc strip retail
centers and off-price malls.
The neiahborhood centers contain
d usters of little shops. fast-food
tnl.lurantsLconvcnicnce and groecry
storcS:Olr.pnCM malls arc designed
for shoppers who arc convinced that
they don't have to pay department
store prices for quality merchandise.
Marshal said.
Strip centers have become popular
devices to renovate older neigh-
borhoods and developers search ror
parcels which they can buy reason-
ably. To fit properly into their
-----..... -----......... -------....__
investment strateay, the parcels must
be larac enouah to provide ample
parking for a mixed-use or off-priced
center.
"In the coming years, we arc 1oin1
to sec the cities step in and require
strip center developers to provide
more parking spaces than they now
do. I think the cities of Irvine and
Newport Beach will be more resJric-
u ve than some of the other cities in
south Orange County," Marshal said.
"In order for a strip center to
succeed , it needs to attract a major
drug store. Restaurants, dry cleaners
and photo shops arc also popular
candidates," Marshal said. Attracting
tenants with established credit ratinas
1s vital to procuring attractive ~
1"Uorthe-nrip centers, he said.
ost of the strip and off-priced
centers request loans which total
about S 15 million. In developments
1n which the lender participates.
interest rates arc typically 1.5 percent
over pnme. For developments not
involving the lender, rates average 2
percent over prime. But when the
developer and financial institution
enter into tbc development as equal
-----
A comic touch
aids economics
Free pamphlet from The Fed helps
k ids to learn about central banking
NEW YORK (AP)-"Once. long ago. 1n the middle of a very big
ocean, there was a very small 1slandiealled Mazuma:•
So begins "Once Upon a Dime," a tale for children about mone)'.
inflation. lending and other weighty economic topics as told b)' the
most powerful central bank in the industrtal world.
In a 23-page comic book, the Federal Reserve dcscnbes how the
make-believe island moves from a simple. barter-based econom)' 10 a
modem one.
The text 1s geared to children in the fo urth and fifth grades and 1s
intended to help them learn about coin!l, currency. checking and
banking. the Fed said Monday.
Natives of Mazuma discover the disadvantages of bartenng 1n
Part I of"Once Upon A Dime."
Dr. M1lhcent Diligent and Captain Sharky put their mamage
plans on bold while they try to trade fish and medical expenise for
flowers for their wedding.
The florist doesn't need a vaccination or fish but would hke a new
mosquito net. They attempt to trade their wares with the netmakcr but
he would prefer coconut mi lk. Dr. Diligent and Captain hark> despair
of ever obtaining the flowers.
They bnng their troubles to Kin' Bomba. who comes up with the
idea of using something that all the inhabitants could use in trading.
The wtse king tactfully discourages a su~estion of U\1ng fi sh. no ting
they aren't easy to carry around and don t keeP. well.
Kina Bomba recommends usint stones painted wuh the letters D-
1-M-E. standing for the an1st's favonte words: delightful . imag1nat1on.
mineral and eureka. The simple story sets out some fundamental concepts of money as
a medium o f exchange. Money is readily accepted, widely recognized
and a convenient way to transact busu'!css. • .
The economi c trials and tnbulat1ons of Mazuma s inh.ab1tants
continue in Parts II and Ill and the Fed delves into more soph1sttcated
monetary sub1cct matter.
. Besides .ronce Upon A Dlmc," which 1s available fre~ ~m the
New York Fed, the central bank hH numerous othe~ comic-style
bookJcts available that brina economics humorously to life.
panners. the financing 1s avaJlable a.
up to I percent below prime. Marshal
said.
Most of the small stnp centers
concentrate on subd1v1d1ng their
buildings into 5.000-square-foot to
20,000-square foot sections but space
can be leased in increments as small
as 1,200 square feet. The most
common sizes range from 6,000 t_o
I 0,000 square feet.
The prevailing lease rate for the
strip and off-price centers 1n South
Orange County is fairl y stab~ -
about S 15 per square foot, Marshal
said. Even with the accelerated rate of
development in recent months. the
centers remain 85-90 percent OC·
cu pied.
As long as lenders continue to show
fa v~r for the smaller centers. Marshal
said that the market for neigh-
borhood comers will stay hot. How-
ever. he predicts a probable
slowdown in 12-1 8 months and
expects vacancy rates to rise by then
because the rate of completion for
new product will exceed the demand
for space.
Another new trend 'in strip and off·
price centers is 1n the malcing as some
developers arc ~gJnnang to lease
their own property rather than work
through a commercial real est.ate
agent Other developers use a com-
mercial agent to lease and pre-lease
the soacc in1uall v but release the
space on their own. Marshal said.
Tax-incr_~ase talk won't go away
Many people reason that hike may be
only way to resolve budget differences
the annual federal deficit to 1cro b)
the fi scal )'ea rt hat begins Oct I. I 9YO
That law 1s being challenged in 1he
couru as unconstitutional But no
matter how the court rules. the
underlying problem -federal !.pend·
mg.far in excess offcderal re' cnues -
won't go away easily.
r
By CHET CURRIER ..,...._.,....
NEW YORK -Though President
Reagan says he won't let ll happen.
manx people perSISt in talk in$ Of the
pos.s1b1ht y ofa tu increase this year.
They reason that raising taxes
might well be the only wa> to resolvo.
a scnes of confrontations 0' er the
federal budget. Assuming that Gramm-Rudman
\tands. ll mandates automatic cuts 1n
spending by the government at inter-
vals 1f the defi cit c:it<ee<h specified
The Gramm-Rudman -Holling~
bill that was enacted late last year sets
a schedule of deacllincs for shnnkmg
Execs value writing skills
Mo'lt necut1H'> bche'c the ab1l1t) to write tonc1o;c
orga n1tl'd bu!>ine'>\ dcxument\ 1\ 1n,aluable to career
a1.h ann·ment and torporatc product•' •t). according to a
\\ t''>I ( ua\t sun n
l hl· !lunn ".d\ wnduned b\ ( ommun1spond. Inc
J nat1unal management rnn'>Ulting firm SpeC1ali 11 ng In
hU'>lnl'" lummunitat1on\
OI ~Oo n1.•tult\<.''> polled. 1n f)l'rren1 said bus1ne\'>
""''ng '"'II' "t'rl' l'\'.>t:n11al for ad,antcm~t. 41 pcru:nt
kit till''"'"' 1nut'a\1.·d prod uct1\ II~
"I ht· \tud' 1nd1u1tc:\ 1ha1 C\CtU lt'l"" rc alt1c: that a
firm grJ'>P un hu\10<.'" skill~ can ~l't' them lhl·
u1 mix·1111' t' cdgt· 1n tuda~ ·., busin1.·ss environment." ..a1.d
Rm <l ( 11ffman 'Ill' pr('s1d('nt pf ( ommunt'>P<>nd'
"t·\1em r~tonal headqua ners 1n Ncwpon Beach
Rt•gardk)'> of their wri ting abil111 es. the stud ) \hO"cd
1ha190 1x·rlen1 "rill' memm. 66 percent write lellcr\. 45
perrcnl prq1are r<:P<>rt'i and 29 pert ('nl wrn c proposal'>
Th1.· a' erJgc nelul1' c: "ntcs bet.,..ecn SI\ and 10 bus1ne->'>
d1x um1.·n1' per "eel. and spend\ b\.'t.,..een SI'< and Ill
hour' per \H·cl. rt·ad1ng hu<,1ncsc, commun1cat1ons
"'\), urd1ne'I,· "'a'> ton.,1dcrcd a significant "eakness
h~ 61< pcn1.·n1 uf the n ccull \C<;. "h1lc: 49 percenl l'tled a
lack of organ11ation as a pnman prohlem In lau 111
percent fell the ab1 lt t~ 10 wnte 1s one of the mo\l nt·gkt ll'd
sk1lh 1n busine!.i.." Coffman said
More than ha lf of the pan1upant'i felt th1.· mcrall
qualtt} of the bu~1ne\\ tommun1ta11on thc\ rn el\cd "a'
"fair" to "poor ·· .\\one t'\t•t ult H' \la led .. P1.·opk t1.·nJ lo
thin k "h1lc 'tl.nltng ralht·r thdn prmr to "ming
.\nothcre\t'tUlt\t' kit tht:1.·dut at1ona l "'tnn IA3\JI
foul1 da1 m1ng ""riling ,kfll'> .trl· not 1.iugh1 1n m'"'
(olkge'i 1n rcfe rt·ntt' IO hu"Ol''>'> appltl·a1 111n\
\\'hat arl'J\ do t'\nutt\l·' ..._.d. tu 1mpr•"l' m·"·
about tht•1r hu\tn<.'" 'tl.rtttntt • \1 11\t 1nLl1cated lhl'\ "ant.·\
10 .. .,ix·nd leS'> 11mc: "m ing fullu"l'd h' \Hl ttn[l m11rl
dearl~ .. and ··urg.rn111 ng <lex unll'nt' hl.·tll·r
"b,c:r ut1\C\ dearh n:al11r thl 1mport.inll' 111 h\.•111~
able to pre\C·nt th1.•1r idea~ on naix·r in a deJr \Ul't 1m t
manner .. < onmJn \a1d .. .\' onl' l'\l'lUll'e n·markcd
·1 he tonust• prc\entat1on ol an 1Jl·;1 "' ('r11p11,JI ma"n
the 'tl.rttcr loo!. good · ·
Thi.' slud) "al. umdul tcd among a \ ro\\·'-1.'l 11nn 111
mid-and upper-manJgl·men1 from \mall mt•J 1um Jnd
larg1.• l't>mpa n1n 1n linann· rt•al nt.ih' .ind I.ind
dl'' t'lopml'nt \ale\ u 1mmun1lJt111n'> JnJ markt·t111~
Farmer promoted
by Union Bank
FARMER KELLOG
le' els i\naJysu from Washington 10
Wall Street agree such reductions
would ~ incrcas1nJ)y nouceablc and
painful to the public.
Raymond F DcVoc Jr .. an analyst
at the investment firm of Lea& Mason
Wood Walker Inc dcscnbcs the
Grammr~udman budget<utt1ng ap-
paratus as a set of "automatic
computcr-dnvcn chain saws."
As DcVoc ~cs 1t. Gramm-Rud-
man "appears more and more hlcc a
lc,eragcd dc,.ice forcing some tax
increases through a president who has
promised to veto them."
The search for an alternau ve to an
increase in income taxes has turned
up only a fcv. questionable prospects.
One 1s a nattonal sales tax or other
form of tax on consumption This
idea has been noised around for years
without attracting much ofa fan club.
Tues on consumption arc widcl)'
cnt1c1zed as regressive, pulling a
d1sproport1onate burden on people
"1th lov.er intom~ Funhermore,
man\ 'ikept1cs ~' a regrns1'c tu might well create the demand for
add111onal government ~"ice-pro
v ams that would r'C'ducc or l"ll m1na1r
11., henefits as a source of T rea~u"'
rr' enue
.\ 'anauon on the !talcs ta\ Iheme
1\ the ··,alue added la~" "h1ch 1•
le' 1ed on bu sine!>~ a' the> procei.•
r:t\I. matcnals into finished good'> and
m<>' e them through 1hc d1stnbut1on
p1pc-hnc'i ol 1he ecunom)' c;uch la'<e\
natural!\ tl"nd to \hO\I. up 1n the
ul timate ":lh ng pntl' 10 consumer<.
"\\e '-l'(' abundant problems 'ti.Ith a
(Plea.e eee T AX/86
Newport Beach resident Jolul J. Farmer has been appointed area
executive in charge of business banking for Arca Three at UaMe Baak'1
headquarters banking office 1n Los Angeles. R. Lyu Hamlltoll has
101ned U•loa BHll'• south Orange Count)' regional offi ce 1n Irvine as a
vice president in the commcru al loan department. Farmer has been
wuh Union Bank -;incc I t./ti 7 He previously served as rcg1onal vice
president of the Orange Count) regional office in Orange. Hamilton
bnngs 25 years of expcnence 10 his new role. He 1s affiliated with the
OrHte Couty ud111trial League.
manager uf 11\ 1-ountatn Val In 11l11u· I hl· '-1 ~ pon Beal h rn1Jrn1 h."
morl" than IS ~ears c~pcnc nn· in ll'dl l'\IJtl' knding
• • • Costa Mesan Steven R. Kelloc has become an associate of the
PeridlH Groap, a landscape arch1t~ture and planning firm with
offices in Irvine. San Diego. Fon Lauderdale and Las Vegas. Kellog has
been with Pend1an since I 979 • • • Elabte Simmons has 101ned Tiiie Cox 6 Bvclil AdverU1la1 Co. in
Newport Beach as accounting coord1oator in the adman1strat1'c
~rv1ccs depanmcnl. The Fountain yalley resident is a fonner
elementary school teacher from Utah. • • • Ml&d Wells has fOined Great Amertcu Finl Savtaaa auk as
• • • Larry Hagewood ha<i JOI neJ Trkonn l Of1> a' ' ll l' pn·"dc o t • 11
marketing He comes to Tnconl•\ nl '" nl Imm Musuru Corp 1n
( upem no • • • OoaaJd L. Soper ha' Jotnl·d the lr\lnl· ol1i1l' tt! Sundt Corp. a'
'><.'n1or proJet. t manager for tht• l·um ml'rl 1JI , nn\tr u1 t11 1n m,11u~l·m1·nt
firm Soper ha'I more than :!U \l'ar' 1tf { 'IX'fll'nu· 111 lhl ••n ,1rul t11'n
1ndustr. . . .
SteveD H. McDowell ha\ been ndnll'J '>CnH11 '1u· rrl tlknt 111
a qu1s1t1ons for PMRealty Advisors of '<.'" pon &J, h J rc,11 1.·,t:ll<'
counseling firm McDowell has more than I~ ,l··ir' 111 C\pt:ricnlt' '"
commercial and investment reA I C4'U\W
RJXl'E.
LookJna for a CD lhat can really tanJ tall '
8'uld one at Great Ametk.1ln. Our IM CMor
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su·uet a rate al llve different ~tt level .
Scan1na at jUM Sl.000. And the larger your
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your yield. BuUd 1 CO on Grcaa AmcrK.~n·
Hrm foundllion . For your balance level lnd
rate call our 10U·frtt Financial Lmc:
1·800-42.\-BANK
$50,000
Minimum,
6Month 8.60 Current
Yield• 8.25 Current
R tc
Open your account today. CaJJ the toll-free Financial Linc now: 1"800-423-BANK .
100 '41n otSdlly • A.-0-.r S'f..S Ml.-W"" II te. .nill 0r-. C..,:
C America• • AIDlllt1I•... EIT.. U.-Hllt
........ Ft *V.-.Y ...... Nlpel rea t _ n ... , , " " ,,, .... ,...v.,.
.._,.OIN I ~ c.,..w._. a..._.illliilllt MowdaleY
0..--.... ,... ........ &.....,.. -........ ~ ........... ~--... • ·'"' ........ -~ ,...... ••• ~
\ \ '
t
I
• ..
.. -
ANNUALIZED YIELD
.38%
CURRENT RATE
. 05%
.... .....................
.., put ol FrtdaJ'• ~ opea•;t oeJ·
ebradoa of tbe Amerlcaa B..itla and tD ... s,. at aaa w. 19tla at. In CoMa .....
TAX BIKE TALK PERSISTS ••. ,/ ....... . -
value-added tu," u.ad Peter J. Davis ~nthus11sm at such other choices.
Jr., a Wasbinaton-watchcr at Pruden· many observers come back to the idea
tial·Bache Seeuritjcs Inc. of an increase in income taxes. There.
receipts. Wl'len tax ratcs chanae.
~pie respond by changing their
behavior.
"The rqretsivity is sever(. and too, they find a situation that 1s not as
exemptions for food. •hoUJi"' ind simple as it might appear at first. "Models of tax revenue and tax
medical expense do precious ht tie to Even if President Reagan, Congress rates typically do not take this
moderate the impect on the poor. The and the public should manage to behavioral rc~ponse into account,"
European experience shows that aov-' agree on a tax increase. its efTectiv~-notes the National ~ureau of Econ-
emment ouOays for social prOlflmS ness in shrinking the budget defic11 om1c ~e~rc~. a pnva~. non-profit
rise dramaticaJI)'. to oompensate, and might not live up to expectations. organ1zat1on 1n Cambrid,e, Mass.
the tax gets hombly complicated with As many analysts have pointed out. "Therefore, they ove~t.ate the rev-
aJI kinds of special exemptions and if you decide to increase tax rates by. enuc efT~t of both .. increases and
rates." -ca~. u percent. you do not n~ -.decreases In tax rates. . ..
av1n oond with little anly get a IS ]1Crtent increase in tax re tydepressing stufT.1sn t 1t?
-. (iJ(lit19iil)~,fl'tJ:l(JL--------------
Your family aJbum
It~ lhe place you ket.'J) lhe Ir.ill> pie
t ures, the repon cards. pressed nower5 from
the prom, the pas~port that brought
grandpa to America from the old country
Precious famiJy memories of the past
At American Savings we offor your
famil y another kmd of family album. It'.-; a
hook where you keep the rust of Bobbys
braces. Diana's dancing lessons and the
tuition for Tommy's college education
Precious memories in the making.
Our family album holds the content1i
of piggy banks. the down payment on tht·
family's dream house, the hard earned dul
lars you've saved for Wendys wedding. And
a whole lot more. 11
There's one big difference betwt-en
your family album and ours. however. Jn
time, the contents of your family album
will fade. OUr family album is guarantt't'd
to grow stronger day by day and make your
family album even more treasured in the
future .
You sec, the more you put into our
family album and the longer you leave it
there, the harder it works for you. making
family dreams come true.
~g p s Tow1eMt11 ~U:D 4:i I l~~pf •.s ~r Uo0 4,1 1 NUii wt u 4. 1 ~f'~fl.!!'11' ~~ ~ l rnfc!ontroltd
uo • 1rn~~~:rac: " uo l f • cn'VS1r Uo I U''i«lnt 8g McOrmlnt wt
UD Pct. il i~IJ~~, ~ 7.4 Am sO'i.
7.2 Fl~g!m of U ~18nt"to wt
-l•Mill'ldMllHil-------
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY llC.
...,.w.c.riMnt
"1•• Mrnlmum term of 6 months with 110,000 minimum.
Applies 10 term of 6 months Fl'deral regulation requires a subst.anual
Interest penalty for early wlthdlllwal. AnnU.tl yield~ on dally compounding when tn1er~1 ls left on deposit for entire term Rate. yield and term subj«t 10 change without notice.
ltU .._. IUD .• COSTA EA-5a-ll~
lncreasinj.? Yield
i~nificantly
by leveraging
How to live
with someone
who's IMng
with cancer.
Wh1.:n om.· pcN.>n )(1.'t'
rnncc:r. 1,'\'1,•rvnnc In tlw f.tnith
,uffcr'
COSTA Mf.sA/SANTA ANA
3929 S Bnstol. 92"'0-f
(at Sunflower)
(714) 979 9800
GARDEN GROVE
12141 Garden Grove Bl\'d . 92643
(at Harbor Blvd )
(714) 534· 90
•
HUNTINGTON BEACH
830 Edin~r Ave . 9264"
(at Huntington <:enter)
(714) 848·2222
HUNTINGTON HAJBOUR
16911 Algonquin St . 92649
(In Huntington Harbour
Shopping Center)
(11-.) 846 3355
LAGUNA HIU.S •
2408).£1 Toro Rd .. 92653
(at Pa.sec de Valencia)
(714) 770·2816
ORANGE
1965 N Tustin Ave . 92665
(nonh of Tafo nM> 9 4-1620
•
Ac~Q,unu ln1urtd up lO t 100,000.
SEAL BEACH
801 Pacific Coast Hwy. 9<>"'40
(at Main)
(213) S94·88SS
T STIN
641 E First St . 9Zc 0
(al ~ewport Ave )
("lot) 8 ~l l SHI
ERICAN .SAVINGS
Af\JD LD\l'J ASSOCIATION
t '
h11<h \'1eldin1<
\ \'!°')E l.1 ted liond ..
! ••I ,I pm rtlt• l'<Jn ultation Call :
L h11r1~.., L ... wsadder
7&2-2280
Folow1 ....
PrudenbeHlache
I :till llu • ~tM f\(',11111"
:'0~·~1 bot• h. ( \ 'l:ltAIO
• .._..,.•I
:'llc>tloU\' knll"''' lx·th.'t thJn "'t'
<.lo hrn~.· mud1 hl.'lp Jnd
under,q..ln<linK ~' OL't.'C,k:O 11'.11 '
"'h) our 'f\lc1.· an<J reh:ihllitJtlun
pmj(r<1m-. 1.·mph.a.,l1c 1h1.· wholl•
famlh". not IU'I tilt' <.Jnccr patient
Amon~ our rt.1(ul<ir M:l'\'tlt~
\\c: prom.II.· fnform.ttlon m1J
l(Ul<lan~ to p.u11.•nt.' .mt.I fJm1l1 ~.
tnn,pt>" p<Atl1.•nt: to 11n<.l from
trl'atrll4:nt, 'uppl\ homtt ''re ltt'm'
at\41 a.\\l\t p:.111 ·nt' tn 1t~lr n:curn tc>
l'\Cl)tbr Iii'
IJft.> I' l\'h<it mn~ •rn, u\. Til •
life ur unc.c:r p:.11Jc:nt.,. Tik' llV\.-... of
their fJmill1.•, ~' )1)4.l c-~n w..' •1.•
ar • 1.•wn mon· 1lun tht: r\.~.m.h ----t ur~n11...c.1un" · ·'-'>•'\'II knu•Ml Rooms, ae:irtments, homes to ~
classified can satisfy f \;n •int-I~ •m.·
your houslns needs. f' • a.tCN MIOC&n'
..
-
... '
••••n.-.-..... -.....
Stock prices decline
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock pnces dcdJ.ned
Tucsda) amtd fcan of pouibk probkms dut lO
faJhna otl pnoes.
Poor financtal rt"pOrts Crom a number of
companies contnbutrd to ""u.k.ncss 1n w marUt.
a.nalystS wd. "° abundanc.eo(mwic on """Odd martcts at a
urnc of fi-a;in1 demand b.as pus.tied oil pri:u
dO'f'"ft I ft l"CUO l days_
NEW YORtC (A.Pl JM. 21
T1 '
AMEX LEADERS
« Ylf 0.. 14"°> -~ • ,. +1·16 ,,.. ,
)OS "" + ~
Go Lo QuoHs
ME T~Ls Quons
NYSE L E~DERS
NASDAQ SuMM ~R~
famcw; la kls
-Jl
.....
THE MT OF •Lllll IS
UH EASY Ill TIE
DAILY PILOT'S
CUSSflED PAOES • . ~~~~--~~~;..~~~~--;.~;;;;::~~;:~;;.:.:;.::::;;.,~·=·=·;"::~:'..======~!!===~===============~~~==~~·~ M ..... r. Wt l•L..... IMI C..ta.... 1114 l••l!llt .... llU Cetta •111 MM c.ta... p ••el... .. ltatth t1 1•111 Leet I,.... ltU Cltdal/Offlft 1411 t
W MESA VIAOa Ea~ Around 11000 3bf 2M "'" 28< 1'Mla Twnh• f nd Pvt 1 •. frptc, poof, P91to, 2M upetM. 1ba, f\'y)IC, nit '0UND Coclltt Spanlel, CPA IN COM nttdl • 11 -/C!!le IA l~b•. 2 atory. 48R SM. ~ ape. OCMn cft frplo dbl~ l Unit, gw. 1912 Weleoe gar. No pete, 9tt W. lev gar, edutte-no peta. 1 Yr Amt• to ahr 38r NI '*· mele. bftc/Wht 11c1y Vic· b<>okkNC* l computer ,1 1316.000. C,..tM We)W ~ • ·~· 11tr .. kid• pet 53f'..419t #1, tt l8 Walleoe #104. at ... ,. MO-aa' .... 8730. mo. On Club A11all 2/1. 541·6718 or tona & Pleceolla. CM operator. Muat heve I fH•• IMI ~ 493-044e mo 541-1 ~t goet 1450/mo, 875-1211 Houee A\19. A11all. Jan. 499·1311. ext2130 831-3875 aome hand• on exper ... • •i. Ul1ll I HtCE 2bt. oountry kl1c. Beyfr~t 2br 2ba, pvt ape, 28r 18e Mao. ,. , .. anl~' '1ft~. 24· 41M...e303 Shr 28r Opfll !-elde CM Found· Ladl.e witch In w/comput.,'. Good op-t
.,.. f¥oed ~ c:wt~ ........ ~ In ellte ~1Hwn w/t>Mut furn & S550. Seo dep, 2020 Ful-TownhoU... Or~ A ••uoo ISLE•• Prefrem '325 + ·~ utN1. prklnQ tot of MlaalOn portu~ .: Improve \ e IMut + 2 .,.. -'"mo + patio furn HM 11iv.n..,. erton. No peta 131-M27 *"'°'Y rm Atl blt6ne ' Lux, newty dee 38R 28A Ref9 r9Q, •YI lmmed. Oya VltjO Comm. HOt.f>. Jan lklll•. t t....,., 2.,..._ Ind . 2 'W/fri ltul 3 bdrm bdrm CLN. Chg, 5'7·2787 & electrona If deelrad. 28R 1ba E'alde lilOOd 2011· Thurlrt • ept. l g •oulh patio 831-6290. Ev "42·7471 18 eppro11 8:30 arn. Mr. Hubt>erd 87&-2070 ' = =·.::: =.: ~~ ~.~~ p .. jfW $1500/rno, yrty 873-3717 location. ger, if40. DM* T8L MGMT . "42-1803 11475/mo yny 87M411 8hr •Br CM hM, 75 -+ 495-"432 mllllft a.rrUJ 1 J ~ ~ & offilr9d et pertc *-9.1211.000 HR 18A hOOM, new 8-yfront 38R 2BA. 2 ear 88'-4000 dya or ....... AfTI •L.81 .. IPT• dep, 14 utlfe, Ml Ptlva. Nr FOUHD Male Dog, (P<*-for MARKETING FIELD. El
_,.. prtoe tor prompt Mllll llM.n paint, crs>ta ywd l gar gar. eva11 Feb 1o~June &40-2428 9'1/wtlnde 11drm w/toft 2le. 28drm 2., 1.._ 102 Antlbea. Don trwy 405. 911-2811 ll>IY Keelhond) tanl blk Toro ., ... Contect Jonn .. ... ..::.T:' ,_.,.. II !:.~:W~itn Aot 13t -7370 10 1~~~~~7t!m 2BR 1ba, patio. frl)IC, 21a, 11euu9d c.lfl~ 87&-1244 eve. 822-8795 arattl 11 Ht 845-5317 Pearce. 889-2484 ' ...--~El l1•/IJM1JI PLUSH CONDO 28drm Beyrldge Plen C, grnd ftr, ~e:0.111 =011r~~ =5 =-~~~ . \e::":. ~~ ~iJ: . nta l::!h ~~~E~v~N.~~ M/f~~ *"'._.... 28a. ~ 1treema I gated comm. New, pool, "45-1.45' or 8~512 5HAAP 28A cpt & drpe micro. Encl 0-eOe. Prvt eotta g; 0-809. fear, whtlgry wired ChMka. tec0nnlquH. Accurate 2 .ecwy 3 bclrm 2 bettl eir fella. Obi gar w/opnr, w/d Jae. 28R 28A. St500tmo. •2Br 28e nr SC Piia. s.A. dlll'lw.._' ~-. nO bMc:tl, boet a11p ellallable nur f elrg round 1. (wolf wtllatle) 846-7959 typing 50.eowpm, flllng
oondftJonect 'conc10 . nr IMtalled All new cMcor 875-.4.491, bet 10-5PM Patio. e«pott, pool, peta, M40/mo, ~79 S1460/mo. Sorry. no 1515/mo. 852-9083 LOii SAPPHIRE RING prolldency, ltrong ""-tfi
S.C. Plaa, Poot, ape. I 4 e. 5 0 0 spa c • = now 11 1J..<:';:7 + Belcourt HIH 28r/den. '720 No Pete 722·I011 UNIQU! 8eohelor pet&. 79C).()119 EnclOeed alr""9 oer 99'· 112' ct llone w/~. Jan aklll1. Good auppty :::~Ac.~,~ S245/m~7:i11~797 or IUT-:u .. rty -&jH rn::c, =·=~1~ •IHl-.Y• ou180RIETM w/cerport M40 11111Ulllll m:ci" w . e.ie:~l5~ ~~d1~~3f;9.-.3e1~B. ~~r;~·::~~.~c::c11r:· 'p~... _. - -Studio+ full kHc:Mn, new .petlO, pool, ape, 28drm unfurnlllMd, W/O. . 957-5848 957.1399 , , ---
1
• lavv New 3BR 2BA 1Pac:. rent NOT A LIST AGENCY Lgt 3BR 2'~ba. Frplc. ldry cpta. drps MOO fM '314 NO PETS 1541-2447 1900 Avllllebte, 1at, laat. E/~ C.M . 20x20 llorage lOST:WHITE COCKA TEil --,...---·,-:-:~=-:-:=--RffM*R S 130, peta, oci..n t>reen. NrHttMl 5252b<lrmolder gar. MC gate, nr t>Mch. Tl1llllT IJJ. .... T..-.~2br t'Abeth (818)2,...710 onty,mln.8mo.1aes100 wtatcllff .,. ... Npt ecn. UllL .. nAIY . . In Coate M ... 845•8456 deCof but a11allable °' 11250. AYI 211 842-2423 -·"tio_,,. __....,... al .,..,,: ....__ mo.+ MC. "4&-7234 ~ard. 846-2334 fOf lltlgetlon Attorneyt. modest 3br under 1700 2BA 1'""8 " .... I ... rm pe •_....,gar, c,......, 7£ .....,.,., 3 I 4 Br 28e, N k N "'0 t I Lu11ury Harbor Rldga "' "• Pn n.,ry No pet1. Betty "45-9181 rnt11 11050-$1350 ti!~ 4 REWARD to tht per-on-emo er. .. .. r iiii~===~iiiiii ti I •lat-1111* Condo 4Br 3'.tBe, U11lng lnalde unit, petlO, gar, °' Cerol 645-Sg74 Rentall 87&-7015 . -aonlpet't0n1 thet plclcad Beach. Send reeume to ...... ,,. __ ,,,, Su~ landlord 90JXI arM rm, dining & lam rm. 3 car na. No peta. Mao/mo. · ST AGE CiAMGES up male Vlula p~ ~:;~~~rt~ 15000 MWlllJ _ ..._11 3t>r 2ba encloMd gar gar. Speclou1 wt ooean Call JMn 831-12M WI ..... _ BACH,LQB...:J.ltlla rtlfrlg, 12x20' &-12-.a ' ~~ hair rully cir" . New S..Ch,
1111• ~ lealfal 180 muat -..~ i.w....& city llghtt Gua.rO: ~,:~~-r Want r• r :tlutt of-vreet micro Incl. 2 bltc~l; 1p1 Bch/Coata Meea arM blu/gld coll~r w/10. 1 wtli CA. 92 . . 1 ' 70 tellC on the ~ with , 539·8190 Sett Rlty f• ed comm. Avl Feb 111.
1
,!.:,._~ · living? we can off« any. ...50/mo 846-ee73 24 Hr accaa. 548-3878 give 1 regl• mate pyp no UUL lllllTAIY
terge pl., and rloat.
2:r.121~A ~1~ n:P:· ~ Rent/Sale. Deluxe 2br 2ba S2650l mo. 760·8e35 ' ~~,;om ~111\f~~ Cannery Via tux 18R. IC. tall question• .. kad. for ult Law Firm In Orangt Coun· ' ~ Theufkeuf carport Kida/pet• OK Ellde dpl11 w/2 car enactt Off Jamt>orM 2br 2ba 1u11 m · 11auttect ceir. 1 car gar,; return. 775-5508 111 meg. ty Airport arM IMka Lltl·
deetgned 3 Bedroom 16915/,m,. HMt 11 rree: gar. $875/mo 680-9083 autte many xtraa saoo·1 •STUNNING lg 1BR Oar-:~fn~nof c:. n~!· ,; t~~ bay w . 1750, Incl utile. P,t~: C~~,~~s Su!!,
1
!Jllt•t gallon Secretary. Mutt
home, perfect for In-38R 28A 1795/mo. Agt RETIREES DREAM • Col· 539•8191 Agt fM den Apt. POOi & rec rm Choice of ldMI 11\'lng A11all Feb 1. 87~777 toe .,;/every actMty AYI - -h111e 3 to 5 yeer1 CMI ~or/ou~d~or 11~· LIM/Bert>ara 831-1266 1ege Pr!! Unit. 38' 2Ba, ON THE SANO •555· 710 w 181" TSL MGMT "42·l803 28R 18A, patlO, 518 315th Feb thru June/Oct tnr CklW C 3111 Litigation experience • t== 9 m~ 'p,.,_,ad 1425 ad den w/frplc. LR, OR By BR 2'~ ba k.lxury A11af1 W'SIOE CM. 3BR 1'ABA St.nearlldoahopa. Jun7'87. 1 1800/mo. art Good typing and die· 2
even r:""'t, ... "m.~· oomptete ~:'en low ~ park & ahop1 Adil• Feb 15 Ph 846-1945 bltlna & patio. S725mo. Wll11..AU WI.a.. No pete. '800/mo, utll (negotiable) 846-5608 cAitB CARE NEEDED -In taphone lklfia r9qulrad.
1175 ooo L H · 53M191 Agent c:ost pref'd No 1>911 S1050. 1111 ,.-:;boa 28r 28 .. lam-964-1«2, 962-8868 att Bac:hetor ... 95 paid 673--0343 my Nwpt Ben time for 9 Ptea .. nt 1Urroundlng1
' . Da11e L .. Agt 546-5880 .,... -. 5/wknd1 New Carpeting I Orepee F 0C mo old. Wkdye 8:30-5:30. Benefit• ottered. N/amkr
(714) 073 4400 X~~·~~3~.2~ SPACIOUS 3 SR 2ba, :~~9111l~Rv;t~~~~;la $820 Eltlde lg 2br 1ba, p2 BR 1V, bath 1185 ~. gar~,!~io~ I.I. laJe/lnt 846-20SS or 873•3893 praf'd. 7f2~~1:•m et
mo. ci.N. Cflo. 5'7-2787 lrplc, patio. dbl gar, ln<lry pool, 2 per90n1 mu. no 845-~2~ apa..no ~17 laool mo 8181795-3018 &g;;;ta 1751 ... "Hn r rm Harbor ti.S Diet. ANAL FRONT 1 Bed pets, 646-5137 833-89 _ _ _1 lllllU. lfm t
$975/mo, 9e0-8483 Cottage w/1llp S 1200/mo WESTSIDE l BR frl &Jm &NITmT EA Ff'I unite. 23001 MOTHERS ASSISTANT ,-1---•-•1-yrly nd r SsOo Be 2 + 1 + poo1 Bttlna HUl'ry owners unit 1oxgroae 2-&PM Wkdy1 N.B. Car IULn , .. ~-~ ... -·-~· .... ·~· Unfum. E/alde 28R tBA. Ill.A BALBOA 2 Bed & me81iBJIU ~~·I ry ~38:t othere •YI S700 fM 7581: $7215.000. aicr 953-1220 r9q. Mr 1-iood 759-1066 In Huntington 8eadl II lfouna U& ;;nt;i Q lrg encloMd yd wtpatlo. den lamlly rm bay llU • o 1>911 ---17• --HOUSEKEEPER S udent looking fCH a par1 time pad ,,.., ahops l wavee $715/mo, 111. laat l MC I 1s0o/mo yrly · ' &PUTlllTI W•t"de 28r 28e. pvt ,_...., ---laU.ftl/ fJce Int CH PIT em 'd • W~I a.cretary to work 30 hr•
fr• utlls et 53M191 <Sep S300. Small dog & 1 NEWPORT CREST 2 Bed, Immaculate l•rgt Garden petlo, carport, atorege **LIDO ISLE11t* 2711 Newport ~a~h Mo~ p/wtl. General office exp. 1
--------Agent coat Child Ok. Call 846-5413 2'hba. S 1150/mo yrly Aptt. Beautllully land-.,. ... ln<lry tee, Next to 38R 2BA, tr9 newly d« nr ; DESK SPACE ; need• help Approx 2 req. Call Roe. H 1-5910 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii BAYFRONT cut 2br 2ba lut ..... 4 BAYRIOGE New 3 Bed/3 tclpad grounda, pool/ Coeta Meea Oolf CoutN bMctl & lhope. View. $150/mo Garden offa hfll dy M-F Gen'I hM f()( more detail•
bMctl ti win~« ental ~ ba. llp. alr & MCurlty spa, patlO/declc No 1>911. 1875 Sml P91154t-<M33 S 1250/mo, IM . Ownr Lg Patt~ with 11_, view· work & ll'clry. Mutt h•11e ·--. ---~
COLDWC?U
BANt(<?R ll
... r • 1315 bach pad gar & yrd 11750/mo yrty 1Bdrm $595-$8115 8191763-0719 ... , · & .r-•
tum. eY1 lmmed SHOO .... 50 OCMn c11 cntld <>'< BAL ISLO· .-Bed targe 2Bdrm 111.ea $705 lut INck 1141 Good partctng. "42·5010 ex
1
r Re~wn7e:,r~~~or-ICH mfg• rep. In CdM. 873·3297 °' 839-3123 1550 2br frplc kid/pet home I 18oo1mo yrty 2250 Vanguard 540·9828 2eR 2BX inctry me; ..,llT Ullll 3000, 1368, 545 & 520 SQ. 11 on. 1 • Good telephone llolce,
tu •11 llar J S715 3t>r 2ba off Adame LI 0 0 PAR K t> R . -----4 le '8:e. ' $925/mo. 38R 28A lower Ft. 1817 WESTCllfF, T L 4aSf accurate typing, btlkpg & •
. 539-6191 Agent cost BAYFRONT PENTHSE 2 2Bdrm 111.ea 1725 ml~ 1~ beactl :,~ 1 unit. gar, laundry room. Nwpt Sch 5'1·5032 Agt IM•lfl • computer knowledge. •
---- 1BR 1BA a:iu1te Sand--Bed a den 12000/mo yrty 151 E 2111 548-2408 · -·•· acroaa from bMCh. TUOllll Pe<m. poeltlon. 769-1150 c .. t .. Condo w/tml yd, 4BR 2b•. Very CIHn, WATERFRONT HMS INC S85o.CallJMne31•12t6 210Grant 525 aq ft. $425/mo.,p I s aeekl
lrptc, wet bar, mlrrOfed atone fl~lace, 2 cer gar-· TSL MGMT &42-1603 Balboa Penln. Pvt entry & r 11•t• Ctlool ng r• lfflOl llLP
wardrot>e1, mlcrow•ve. age and ftnQed yard. 111·1... ~ bath. Cfffn 1eo.9192 fined, dedicated. lndMd-Self-Starter: Peraon to tr .. h compactor etc S1050tmo 675-7 t13 I t 17-1 •--=m1.1 ~ SPACIOUS 380RM 2BA j uats lor challenglng & re-help wl offlce work
A11111 now $900/mo. . • tan I y a••-m Mew. Next to bcn. Gar-Approx 11',.,x20. 1763 Or-warding po1tt1on1 Pre-duties an..., ptionea'
863· 1191 bet 9.5 m ABODE wont fut. 2br. NEWER houae: 38R 2ba. flMll. _._,_ , age. Yrly 11300 A11all angt Ave. S200 Incl utile. School • 8th Grade. track 'CHde<a. malntal~ country kHchen. Thr• P clo1e to bMch l 500mo. lptc, llove. refrlg, 2 car Sparkllngcteenlargtept1 New luxury 21R 2~. now. VIiia Rtntal a Call Betty 845-9161 or 842-.4908 tllet&do llghttyplng Wiii
flreplacee, t.rl <*Unge *""I llZf• CLN, Chg. 547-2787 g•r Soma peti .ok. ~':;11~~:1_1':.~~. ~~ ~~~f~o~d i',:;_=.. 675-.4912 or 754-1792 6«-2270 'Prt1"tltHJ/ -work t~
........ Studio + kitchen + cable Accustom to luxury 3br l 1175/mo881-28~ paid.No~. CH780-801.i ....... talt--AlrHrtlren#1l _,Aliaiaiat a,-9111 oHlii"Ume.Hourameybe
TV On!Y $375 ,.. 3ba rent/_f)Wn k ·~ ,0cn 'Vu~8r"29a, wanno 2Barm 19.lJI -Voo •eod' Cam • Or su:in II " tailored Ster11ng SS/HA.
&.1111.f mA-Tll.DllT 111-1111 539-8~90 o~~r,:. ~va ll t>ch $975 2 19 Calle Ser· 2Bdrm 28• $720 WWlll YIWll warm c~ul 2 llory *LMIPUllllll* Cotta M ... "42•9980
8MuttM 38R 2.BA I 38R. 28A wallctobMctl ty .. en~498-0500/786-7414 398W Wilson 831-5583 -lltt ..... flM financial offa building ,f .H.A IVA/Con11. Exp .,,..,,, ..
atry home wtVeuttad :J. ltldeck citw new appll. ' BeeullM 3BR Seaapray IHtai Ct....--•ttrt ,.., c;guna IQ i27S:Up. PY1. 852-1700 through olotlng. Small With typing aNpolnQ a ac-
lnge & °'*' br1QM flOOf carpet,'~ celling• • ~0• :C';,1
:1't P:!; 2111 ~ u 11e where you have ent. N-1mkr, prof.lbua CdM dt11 SultH AIC.
1
~~~~Coe~~ P~~~ countlngaklllt top-dOtlar
plan.MeaterBdrmenJoye ~150avt now 673-4243 $~/= a..2_...88f "~LI~ 1'rSpectacularapta 40+. TV. pool, 494-0451 amplepkg,utlla&janltCH 17 14)47~43 commeneurate w/abllity
view of peeceful garden 5BR/Fam rm. t>onus rm. Ctoae lo So Cat Plaza 2Br llaamlTI * 1 l 28' 1 & 288 aull• Own room/be UM ol h•I 2855 E Cst Hwy 875-6900 & exp. Scott 497-5843
etrlum w/weterfall pool/Jae $3500/mo ~-* !'-'\Ba Abobe Only $550 Llket>randnewtAJlutllltlea *~•towntlOuMa kit Nlc:4IMeeaVerdear.. MANAGER lllllT /ll•a
Locat: ~~:"cul-CS.-yeany NW crptldrp1: 48' 3B••e-r. rnccs yd, pet mo CLN Chg 547"2787 paid Pool, gar, no pet•. ·frFlreplacee $325. Incl ut. 850-1722 l: ~~~:-'n:"~!:.::. · Expanding ·na\:7ei.i(
:;;. ~~ anot.:':: Agt 6«-8896/875-5511 ok Otherl •YI lee 9884 T•atia Z 2~~ 1Ba 842·= *cf~'=•pa~~conlH or Rm In Univ Park, Irv. pool, taJ•. Mutt .... '497.2351 lmmeditte opening fCH !\ill chain, headquaners In '"
heY8 recfucect price to BEAUTIFUL 5 year new, lg TllDln 111-.... 1 3~ 1'lba, garage. great 30 OCado Jee. all amenltl.e, $350 NB. ore apace 111.u ICH .time Dletrlc1 Manll)tf' Faahlon lala~d. N.9 ..
S 151,000. 751-319 t 3br .. lam rm. 2 frplc, tub Ml. TINY , area ONLY $825 mo AYllUIU.. WIT llT! mo. lhr utll. 786-4806 eeereterlaJ or typing Mrv n.edt br1Qhl 11«1 fMt •
•
SElECT epe, 9kytltee, .,... m celJ.. N 3 BR 2 ·~ b CLN Chg 547•2787 2BR 28A upper unit •3 Lighted tennlt count .... la/ ... ll uae In 111ch for light Mutt tnJoY wonting wllll fMfner to antwer ~ Inge 509 Narcl11u1 ew • --· • .,2 8..... 1 11 ho d ty ... ,. 5134 chlldren Experience & uel1t etaff, light MC· PROPERTIES S1800tmo. 968-8283 Townhome on prt11 At1rta1at1 carpo.r1, lnclry rm, dthwr .. ....mm no poo P ,,. u .,_. evt helpful retartaJ sl<ill1. 844-9900 lagoon. 2 ear gar. 112 ml -Cute & cozy CIOM to all. 1'rStreame I ponds L.AlllA.. 1_ ••a•
IPll IYllY Wllllll LO 4Br 3Be+ aep. lam. to bch. Pool/tennis S«; lntral ZIOZ $695/mo. •SOfry, no pelt llTll • "",...' -.-1 We otter an e•cellent t>en· HIEPTilllST P/T
rm .. frplc South of PCH S 1300/mo 650·8342 2035 Pomona •Fumlattlnga 111111 Wkly rentel1 low ratet Full~ Building ellt program, paid va-Medical office. Energttlc. 1-4aM Tl. Ill.If lmmedlata occup. $2000 -! PUIM I SP&OIHI TSL MGMT 842-1603 S 135 & upiwkly. Color Corner 01 Wntciltt & lrvlne cation• & holldays. bonu1 S5 hr to ttan. Will traln , Charming 3 bdrm. 2 bath mo 509'"' ACACIA. NICE 1BR ABODE In quiet ,Completely relurblthed Wt1Y NOT CALL TV, maid Mr'Vlce, free 588 Sq Ft. 11lew 1ulte program and dental In-HB 848-0770
home. Wood lloora 633-2141 Daye Only. roe Only S485 mo. 1 2BR 2BA In Weatmln1ter •Wllll.UI YIU.All• 111-1111 coff•. KMted pool & 1•1-1101 iurance Salary ptu1 --------Move In condition Excel-CLN Chg. 547-2787 S595 • sec 895-1108 2Br. 1•1.aa. bltne. new eptl fl b 11•--llT
lent buy 111235.oOo. ~~ :g: 52~; 7;P~:r ~~ SINGLES DELIGHT -llalMI & drpa, DI W, bltlne $825 IUWlll YILUll !~:,• ~;15 ~~&.~1~~~ s5~~m~f~~·E :f.~~~ m eage reim urMment.' With c1er1c~':tii1 ror Prl· CA53R05LS~~NW"!BRUORN Lux 3br 2ba 2 gar1 I 1300 Cute & .. !:~zyO Cl o11S1g2e5. l lalaa• <tillNI! • $600. No pets 540-.4484 15555 Huntington VIHege Laguna S..Ch, 494-5294 C M 646-J366. Alk for Bili Applicant muat appty tn 11ate Club. M·F 6:30-2.
""" " 53M 191 Agent '" typer ...... n Y 4 _.,. 1111111111 &PTI lane. lrom San Otego · pereon 11 Dally Piiot. 330 Mu1t be reOable. mature, CORONA DEL MAR mo CLN. Chg 547-2787 11 BR BuHtlna. patio. Freeway, north of S..Ch Ill' &II ll1tl Beautllut 2 llry Office We11 Bay St . Cotta people-oriented. N/1mkr ti •~· I S625 •• 8 8128" "307 lBr, frig, range, teundry, to .. cFad'"-. ...-, on Wkt rental• now 111811. Condo. 2274 ~ ft . part Me11, Ca "PP~ 9· 11 752-790,.. Aek IOf Mr 10~~---~~!"'!"'lllOlll~--Xtra.,. 4+ 2ba. lrplc. g11 I mo 1 .... pool cat""" Non.ta "" ,,_, --· 2 • ( I 1 " -•• a..-.-Miii* wtth-v grNt ocean 111ew., ask tor Mr Pemberton ' s5s0imo. ...... · McFedden. S 1 .50 wk & up. 2.274 furn. W"t of Alrpon. • m or -~Pm. rcu •· Thomu. 38R~BA'9:bt tr le only S725 mo I Open House t lam-2pm, 93 I W. 19th St. 548-0492 Smell unrurnl1hed 2Br Nwpt Blvd, CM "46-7445 =~~frtaG=t~~P~ tlon Oep~ -.-, ... .,-=PTl--1-l_l_l _T __
tennl1, pool. °ia'cu~1: CLN Chg 547-2787 ' Saturdey, Jan 25t~ Beautiful Complex 2Br BMch Shack 1450/mo. WI Ill Lllll Mgmt 675-4912 OR TUAeGllOllT Nwpt Seti area. Typing C«eu .. Illar IW Monte v1111A11e.11150. lniat -2144 1 UClllfYEQl21& 1e1, patio. new klteh a 538-7838 302.tW.PacfflcCoutHwy 754-1792 Full time Cotta M .... lkutt a must. For Inter·
836-9427 or 845-2991 . New decor in & out 1800 crpt. Carport 1825. Gd Newport Beech. Refrlg TV -846-1838 or 758-9 105 lllew c.11 Jan 7524522 ~t=~Cd~or .uu... 2::c:b•poc::i~1.0c. '~~;. s/ISl600Bkr 642-l850 IOC360Vlc1orla54W523 swlNcli 2'41 S125+wtlagl.noci.poslt. E11~~~:~~:.T1~ko°<;,tt ... , •• l/Dntal SI u•1•11n
thle e11tralg1oqwopeny 1 • 1 + frplc ~micro All cpts.2dr gar S1200mo 1111~11 Puianla •HlllAll9"1• 'Tl:aroom Witn Vi;W I ----4th noor w/w 642-48-44 •n&L.lllllTllT Real Htate de11tloper .,.
CIOM to the water. Sen-utile Pd Pet Ok Only 675-5305 all 5pm 1 2H7 2BR 1BA, cottage type, patio 328 Thalia St ltatah tt Iii art Mon-Fri 9 to 5 P/TIME needt high energy reoep-
llbfy pr1ced at '575,000 $500. F• 8458 1irMTa1s prl111te patio, gw. w/d S600tmo Call 832-.4181 27•.A atrelaJ frtri'.:I Ex per, X-ray lie required tlonlat Good phone INtllla ~: with Miier catrying
111 TIUlllT 111-1118 * * Ull~ * * 128drm IBa. newly deeof. hkup. No pets. $875/mo. 2BR f..... I d .,. w/xlnt back & front office 1 mu•t light typing & 0 T.D Bkr 760-6892 CALL US REGARDING •ted Yearly Blk to TSL MGMf 842-1803 r.,..., 9ar, n ry, Bdrm fumluniUfn In nlCe sl<lllt Including ln1Yr.ance general ofc lklHa req'd. t
OUPLEX-28' 1ba .. So-
3~2f:5cf~w•w,p;;;r 1_!RVr~~ RENT~~ 1 ~;ghNo ~;~~;5_.J::• l Br 181 pstal 1 Ger =65':31~~;'mo, El TOfo hm w/prlv S300 1350 eq h STOREFRONT t 0 c 0 mp1 e t e 0 u r Send retume to Oevte
of-PCH S275,000 521 No --11 545-7963 n•lt _ ......... ,. .. v refr"' 92~ w..:.C. NO ,. <Sep. Evee 456-2958 Xlnt MESA VERDE enthUtlHtlc Cotta M... Oa11elopmenta. 1400
Carnation By owner ,... _ lM·llOO $350 Nice bachelOf, no P91:S500 Agt 550•1015 Almoa~ Ocnfrnt. lurn F/26-35 NB 3t>r apt. bay/ location. 5'5-.4123 team 831-1410 BrltlOI St NOfth. •2415, '
673-0241or873-15'1 3+ big garage. good ___ __ pet1. utll pd 106 EBay 2br/1~ba, on1 toc1. f....vt ocnvuN/Sev1 2/1 S350 ""'"" lnHl ---Newport Beach, CA E/1ld• toe. 1650/mo. 3Br 2Ba, 2 ear gar No pets Ave Apt 9 E·alde 2Br 18a, t>Mm bc:h, e-r .. u1 I pd 1.,.5, 7 -0 90 7 • • • •lllAL lllllTllT 92660 C.ta.... I CLN Chg.547-2787 S1100Lse (818)888··5510 . cell1, trplc, ger. 2 pet· 499-2704avalfnow. mo. 33 1 CH 6 3-2242 FREE TANOINO For OpnthalmOloQlll tn llllPTil•T '818)3~40 (LA •I Lrg 2BR tea duplex, 1300 aona, no peta. S700 + 111, F 25-35 to anr anrect. Npt Lrg Show Room & Offl~ Ne9wort BMc:h Front & 1&1T191TltPl.D 1825 fenced 2br hou1t __ ~ __ •f. furn A11111 lhru 8186 111 MC l 225 950.1798 Old Spenleh Vllla Stuc:tlo HelghtahM Furn 1ertba ComerofWMtclllf&lrvlne backofflc:4I 631-7577 Fulf..Tlme.frontOfflceap. All 2 bedroom, 11.t beth kid• pet ott1er1111a11 now WOODBRIDGE 2BR H~b• I S775 818-968-0352 · · Ocnfrnt. get.ct. tr .... pvt pvt entrm No chlldren ,.._.111 pearance, general olc
unite w/yarda l garagea. 5311·6191 Agent IM townhae. Frplc, air cond, . E-alcle BACH for 1 l)4n0n. bch 1975/mo 494-8807 or peta ...OOtmo Utll duti.t, light typing, etc
Auume 11% lnterHt Al oet •BA 2 lull BA close to tennlt l pool 13B ~~C~~:,~o FEE New crpt. paint, etc. All -Incl 5'a-a773 · DECORATOR to ahr Show· Cltrical/Offlct MOI Call Karen 6-5 660-9128
loan Full prlee $278,000 .'::it area, Only s750· ~~ S950/mo Av1ilable 211.
1
' S~951~0 15111~~1 '?-~ utll1 pd. Sml pvt yrd 14915 1-rrt .... .all . room. office & waretlooM 2 PERSON OFC WORK. ll•llllllT •
CLN Chg 547_2787 786·3635 A 1 635.3090 Small pet ok 760-8862 2110rm' 2L 1180 F.,. Fem m1tr BR/BA nr SC w/earpet bu11,,..a. Min. full time. a-4 30PM dally. • T d . · ) -g ,.. rm r._, Ptza, all amen. Sec comm rent Incl. deeoratlng no nigh II or wkndi Weekend• only $3.50/HR. t r a ltJOn& BIG & BRIGHT. IBA LataH lt1ea. 2141 lf1,iatrau luc~ E1~t=ead~t~l~~C::: ~~S ato119 =S 1450 utile pd 241-0851 fffde. BUI 549-8181 $8/hr Muit hllle g~ Jack Do~;: .. ~~hl Sa._ •
R ealty ~~:;;4~;~~~· form din. Arch Sch Hghts. 1paclou1 2111 S475 No pet1. 990·2982 .. .... fem.lrmmt non tmkr, lhr ..... trial 27 rho~·· filing,' ··pC d :
631-7370 CLN Chg 547-2787 3BR 2BA. 1pectacut11 28r 2Ba up11rs Duplex E-1ide 2Br 18e, garege, Ref~1dtehw..,_l!ove ~~A~l~;~~~~·:fi~: 1420 IQ fi.1712/mo OC l~1~t.~~1.~e-9~~1 lut ,!~tyf •
--------E -8R --ocean vu. lrpl $1400 S650 • ullls Incl garage Pi iio S675 2080 Garden Incl NO PETS 1545_..855 Airport WM. 3015 South --.,.v-"-v · .,~.. Of • MESA DEL MAR· 3.4 llltlde 4 ' lam rm. 494-84!>7 494-3872 681·3653 Alt 6PM Ln Drive by 546-5605 ' Fem to lhr 2 mut8' bdrm Orange, SA 832-418 I ....... Par lleft Cheerful rMl)Onllble Plf· 1 lrplc, patio. huge yard
0
' ----, 18 drm r emodeled. 3 apt In Pin.er•. CM. --FOf Oeveloc>mt7Con1truct eon wtlO can excel!. An• 1 Bdr.m, IQa tot I 149.500 Peta OK S 1200 t11 & Big Clean new dbl moblle Cerna ••I •ar 2122 Et alde 19ac 2BR 1 ~BA bloclca to Mnd. Moat utlll '383/mo Avall 211. Mary 2000 eq tt 17th & Placen-Co In 0 c. AlrPOf1 .,... phones, type 45wpm & •
Prine only 546-0074 tor , .. , A11111 Feb 1 hm on Blutf1. Treat Ille, BEAUTtFUL 5 ....... I TwnhN garden 9')1. Lg pd $875/mo 1eo..aae2 751-7835 or 955-1100 tla I MO/mo ore 1685 Mutt have experience Hlllt where ~.d . • tnformatlOn or appt 548-1291 lab white water aun1et ,_r new. g pllt patio. dlhwr, ln<lry · Plac.ntla 846-.4282 C"ll 7
5
.,.,. Donna W. 720-IM11 •
-------- -vu. yr lse, n .. smkr S 1495 3br • fam rm 2 frptc. tub tac. PoOf, MC. $7C51mo. 28drm 2 a.th. 2 car gar. lNe on bch. Prof rmmte. --"' l·vvv3 llaPI lmT • •U ftl• .n Eatltlde twnhH 3BR 499-2704 e\11411186 apa, skylllu beam cell-No pet1 Curt 11831;12t6 age, flreplec» 1475 Bkr 30+ 1575 Utllt pd. Ev .... fia&aclaJ •llllm • .._a_ .. By Owner 2 Story, 4BR, 2'YBA, lrplG yard. PltlO. _ Inga $09 Narc111u1 f.42-38&0 873-1552 Dy 494-5559 ---• •-& Clerlcal ·Full Of Pert-time. e
3BA.11Ylng rm, lor~I din-bale, w/d hkup, dbl 9ar. LAGUNA BEACH NCH th S 1800/mo 968-8263 Lg 2Br. In 4 Pfe11. ,.._ ' Some Accoountlng bade-Nwpt 8cn arM, 9·6c>m I
Ing, lamlly room LO lot 1 1100/mo 831-8283 end 4BR. JBA. VIEW BRANO NEW 2BA p11nt Carpeta, drapee. 28r 18e, petlO, pool, ger, Mature f9m n/1ml!r ahr ... ~ Tt Liia ltl4 ground & Word Pro· Benef1t1 7&0-1145 •
Many ••traa S185,000 . ----A11a11 2110 no ••11• I 1BA No pe11 2248 Canyon. Wat«l;et pd 1725/mo. CdM 28r 18e. CIOM to~w etaalng and/CH compu1w 1
"415-0258 E01lde taGrgtd 1 Br houMI S2000 mo 497-1445 trig. crpt, O/W S943tmo S595 ~ dep 832-17M 1801·8 15th 9t l50-8213 oen. W/O, atorage '350 ~~ l~rooo~ ~ • l>Ne Nltmkr pref'd llalTAIY • ar ar .,,.,.an ut t __ __ A1111l 1n111ted 575-1001 _ + ut"9873-6835EYa · • ..,.. CaltCarmen851-0517 EJtP«i.tlced legal See-•
pd S750tmo 492-1720 5 Ii I z 2 -LOFT APT Bach. w/frplc, 2BA on IN wet•. newty credit.,.. no penelty call retary or Exo'd S.C. 0. ,
-l•t lS Cetta.... 2$24 Piii patio/pool 1575/mo decorated. St501m o. MIF lfW 38A 2ba h9e 211 Oenl9on Aaeoc 873·7311 BOOt<KEEPER ASST w ing to train M leoel • llDIY W'I 4FI new 28r 281 fBdrm crpt1 drpa 1508 1ncld1 refrlg 845-8404. Boat 1llp avalleb l • to 4/30/85 1 bit! to bCtl ~ f~ ~II & date entry Win train Secty CdM Gen'I & lftl-Brancl new 3br 2'hb• f/p, Twnnma POOi, spa, ten-mo, ~1111 •net No Pttl LRG 28R 1 pie lo 873-2747 or 875-0149 1365 tncl utM. 873--4289 -L _,: _ Oetall oriented. 540-5850 gallon Precta 875-0200 •
Inc Y: dbl ger. pet olt, pl! nr1. gar. patio. lndry 383 W Bay 760-8083 bll·lnt r cle:: ·t:~o' M /Mature, ga in fully n · Onty. r me --" cot()( 1095 842-9666 nkup Micro, frpl. cable 548 8300 ICH 1 ""ic.t1on' empfyd 10 .,,, hugt .,_ L8gUna Apt. 30K. due In
Meta Verd• 4Sr sTtoo No Se11eral Unlll w/111ew1 1Bdrm, encl g11, frplc;, • p,.... ~P•hfl)U' ""II' .. '"'" CM l350/rno 1•111tt MC 48 mo·a. ptyt monthly BEST p •ay TIME 2BR 11>e condo 173,900 pe11 2921 Cnutnut Ave l875-S900 Call 384-5884 :5:0/m(I Catt Betty MESA VERDE 2BR Iba. 6 IWO brdrnom llPI' A11ail now 549-5231 " 493.-2797 ft
By owner 859-0848 Do not dt1turb 499-4721 QUAINT AREA 2BA 2ba .. "9161 or 944•2210 qultl CUl-d•MC Mao . We buy Truet Oeeda. We •oa IN T
--Condo near beach 18R with BA LCONY 11111ut & IM. •M.t93S NMd 1 ftm to "" w/2 al9o mate• q~k loan1 • OWN SELL Idle lttmt with a PARTY PAO, nice 2Br S850tmo Dy 499-4534 $486/mo 720 JAMES llft... feme. 48r 2'M>a unturn. 1t/9Qulty. No qualifying.
OeHy Piiot Cla .. lllad Ad E/lld•. fin• area S540 e11/wknd 496-6122 • ~T C11ll 831-8849 ••25 2BR 8 condo;.,.~ rent/ ... &<> Call Linda (714)524·5'5& Enernetlc naople n••d•d with a "42·5178 .. mo. CLN. Chg. 547-2787 ---... mo. • 1 A, patlO, dep. 7vv-v1t+meg • ...-
28d 181, cpta. drpa, gar pool, laundry room. EMt· ........... l~rt ltacli 2111 No pata Ad111 pref1100 atde 1oc . c1o .. 10111 * Newport Creet n/amkr, plea1ant telephone voice to con-
r ... y,. ''"'"'' e. Clea1111M,
Mt-5671
tor Information
& surprlstngly
loW·COSt.
.. bUT§fXNolNd* Lae Avt 111 s•a-123.-149£ e.y in ht year'~ rent ::O..~Z::fmo + ............. II• d t k tt t d 1: 1 di TIE ILIFFI 2Bd 1Ba. cp11, drp1. gar TSL MGMT e.-2.1603 fURNISH£0 01 uc mar e ng I u y ror ea ng
Condo end unit over-No pe11 Adlt• pref 1700 NICE 2Br 28e, bttna. d/w, UNFURNISHlD P:b~K =~~'ft.:n~: ,!!~i20ilPIUI Ullc local new1paper. ..NO SELL-tootcino poo1 LR wttn LM Alll 111 5•a.n3.-S825 No peta. N/sml!r1 5 11 7""5079 r__., 1 yre •11CP Ml
F/P, Matr er. & 111r11rg ,..2BR DUPLEX. Slngtt 842-7528 CH 780·1•1a ffTIHS 14, Imo ~"' e&0-2751Olene831·'"'4 ING.,. Houra: Mon.-Frl. S:SO PM ~re':',°'::'v ~b.:vtcony garage. llrg4tencl yerd. POOi. Patio. trplc, X•toe CllTUS. n•. Pr:''.:'::."°&=· liB to 9:30 PM. Sat. 9:00 AM to 1:00
eveil tm!:' S 1aoo1rr! goochr .. 1475 559.5001 t!c~ i~ ":1.:~ SI 11 I. .. ~ cu4 dU K , lactcbaY ii86 NfWXNb iOet ' PM ••• k .._ __
no pet•. n-tmkr 873-6333 ... ..et Stny, ... 1321. ~7 ett S Elbklff ., .. , male Htm. • ..,.. a "'" to ltart, 11...-e In ••u Tl.... WOODl.AI• v• I.. . .::::. ~. :;' i:!·:;:treo: partnerehlp profit• after let
Ellt• kit 1150 fM 15484 P _ ... w 2•2+frptc-+ fllll Anblt1n• a•an•--· ~ week. PluNnt workln1 con-
TILllllT llMllO (11',' '"'°"' "'' IJfdt'I Slfff '°'' °""' comfOffl.tH h•fllC f (lfl) ADS dltJone. private de1k " phone.
3 BR 2'hba Canel front • ..,,, •g ,,,., •• ,,'So c.. .. ,, P1.ua only m.n.,rts IO IM Ap•rt~"'' ARE FREE C.1ual attire. A real fun Jobi home Newport Sl'lofet °'I " WWt1 ... ,.,AA I«) PUS P\(ASf
No pete. S 1300/mo yrly ,.... • "11 • ~ -Ntwpc>f1 IH<9' » M A N A G E M E N T 0 P •
rental cen
762
•
7
•
74
MlmLll 1 1 1:1~/g~~ .. ~!"'•1 Cal: PORTUNITIES. For Interview 38A 2 ...... t pool New 1 •II• ......
por1 Ttrrec.ConooS950 ···~1111 -.rftt 64l·SllJ la-llTI call David Grant at 6a.a33 AV!,_., 1tt &42-7404
3M 20a. 1'°' bite• to Dtacft oc .. n view
'rplC, 3 baQ S 1100/mo
yny.873-8044117!-.4912
Ml. •t I llY ••-. Nf'wport IHdt Ne ..., Hunt betweea 9:00 AM • 3:00 PM M·F, .. ,_. N ~.'111 hw1 .. A~, ,.u.. 8dt .....,,. ftt 2lla, '0tJNO .... /WM C.00.
,...., ..,.... idl lhllit ........... l SH ~··Tetfltr M01 1-. Ml-CUI
ft45 1104 ,_.,_'°'.,.MO-ona ftlft,Hlbtt4i..e10 .._ __ ~....,~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!LJ ............. 111=:======:_.=~-
1.,
•••lllAIT llA.YPUT
330 W. Bey Street
Cost• Meu. C1. m21
ta..a21
EMn Exfr• C••h
FOi DellWlf'1 OI Thie Pa,,.r
HUNTINGTON 8EACH
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
INDIPINDINT
Deliver 1 day a week. No
collecting, no soliciting.
Must have dependable car.
truck or station wagon and
insurance
CALL 842-1444
Au for JoAnne CrMer
'
"
MllL ·as 1800. s eoc1. "'*'
t llv/pe1 •••c "'''· wom ~. 9M, '20,IK
&~or '31·et08
M8Z .... 220H .,..,,,t8n
w/2t0 mtr ,.., t>ucaee
opt • t04el '"'°''uon 815,000 090 47 .. 11'2
l'Olt$CHf
AUOC
CHEVteOlf.T
H1111 .. 1 0..allty
S.I.• a S.111lu
CHICK
IVU90N
"5 C..•1 Hllly ......,ponlucll
673-1911
Orang. Cout OAtLY PILOTIT~, .-..Y 21, t•
"
•• WE eUY Cl!AH, LOWMI~
DOMESTIC I IMPORT
CARS, TRUCKS I VAHS
-c.-..ui ....... $40.0UO
THIOOOPt
ROBINS
fORO
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~ ..s PmJC m1a :.l!Y..!1111 --La ~=.:e.~ ~~~"= ===-==: y ............. _. • IUIAN AWMDA. ~ • ..... IM ........... J:DJTH S WJCXIR. • ,_. et U~t. Htell ~"-"v&lft.. 8ANO AND WI"!. H ... ~-=-.. .. n9den .ol ...............
t11111t1 • ....._ ,_ -. \ ... , ..... 1no.. Dl61 ... ~. reoottMO Of'~ a. -.z::.:;: t ·--..-· -• ,..._. ~ ,,._ et.-,..... ~ ..._ ,.... • ""'""'*'' Mo. :r:: a.ch, .,_ct away .._ ... ._ ....... _. ce1u0tftl• Nth. Aun: M-2'14tl7. of OMclel,... ... =c'='9.:= January 19. 1• in ==-=-=-===-== ~~~"°"9r. =of~a:a'%~ ,.,. t 'HHter H• Newport Beach, after "1111:.t.:'•10U.'tOU H7tt Tern ..... lAQuna pow of ............ oon-,. .. Ult -=..e _. e~hylllnelt.Nn.
..... • ...... .... Celltornle nM$ ................. IUC> I '=~ -....... Wick« WU ptecieded
AMON '°'8llMA". -~1~°=' :10::.::r.::...: 111111 Ill -.. .._. In dHth by her =. i:*'.:'~uet= Letun. Hitt•. cemornla .,..;.,,..,...•Nttmeof P 111 I c • ...... , .. beloved hutbend, --.. ,... ., .....--.1.. utN.Mft.8-.nHuof*, .... •...,. moneir o1 .-:::.--f1:,-::::-~.~ Sherman ThomH ~ Af ltUIUC AUCTION ,,... United ...... al ~ •el lle41H ••••••• Wicker ln 1984. Mn TO 1HI ...... T leDOI" ldealar9.,,.,pen11tyof ~..,,~..,....°' ..,1,, 11 .. ....,...,. Wicker worked fat '°" CMH •••..,_Ill per~"*.,. '81 •1Di'IO • lml*d • k> '*· ~ ................ • the American Red ....._ ._ of .. CM1 INe Md. con.t .,.. M ....--. or ........... ..,.. • ...,
o..., .. ,....., .... .,.. • ....,etton ... •· .. rtaftt, •end 1n..-11 ...., • ..,uute • Crou and a lao
...... w ~ 10 tnd __, °" ~ 17, 1• now Med_:: It ·~ ,. .. uute • ...__ ,_.. worked u a real •· ... ._. -, ll Wider Mid M N9wpOr1 8ellcll. Celt-Tr'*M In to the ,...., et~ r lit ,..._ tate .,ent. WMn ahe
....... ,.....'" .. Pf'CIP9rty tome. lflQ deecllbed pr~ ..... -....... -..... and lliwibil1t& fl :"llled. Frt»I&.~ etedlnN....., . ' etret ••Nt ff H WU )'OW\I W TRU910ft NCHA9'0 w ~ 0r.,.. eoeat eind s ..... towtt: ,.,,11111 1111 .-. ... her (it'll hu.band had
MATTOX eind JUDITH L. OeilVP11oe.i...y21, ,... PAACEl t· Unit ~ .. .e;::c,_. ......... a crop dut~ buld·
MW !=021 ~c d wl ldeecrl~t the ..,.. ,. ' 11tt11 -Mrs WlCker w• MNl.ftCIA,.Y· MOAT· on om" um ,... tn re·.....-,,_.. ....... ·--· eMM 8ANKEM. CAPITAL. PmUC llHlC( cord«f 1n 11oo11 tMeS s>eoee ....,. ....., • • .._... an active member o1
INC. • ..onc:80P 575to~~of0f·,.,.,..1,.11,.,Ata •• ... the Beta S•gma Phi
fttut"lled Nov. 1a, 1MO T'M19TD'8IAl.I =ty~ 0r-. .. e • 11111••·,...... Sorlety. She held
• "-· No. -In boOll OTD NO... PARCEL a. A.ti 'undlvtded · ..._ e llft..,... •,.,.. many offices over the !•1 ..._. 1071 of Offtclel M: .. .., one-forty-lorth I t/44th).,...... lie all lllCll • • and held ..... WI .,. °"'-°' tM MAecMU 1n1 ... 1 1n w to the Com· w .... lie .,.... ..... years. many
"1 • Orenee County, YOU AM IH DUAU!..T mon .,_of Lot 3 of Tr9C1 J::,. ef .,..e.n. tele-honors. lncludin1 ......... fl"""' deecrtbee UNDER A DEED OF TRUST No 1034t In the City ol ). Valentine Queen and "'?.:~~\~.City ~r~M~~H:l~E 1~"J: trk.. CoYnty of ~enge. T,:;:,_Ne.and~dr'!.. of Woman of the Year .
.. .... C .. Gill .... .,., mep TIOH TO PRO~CT YOUR =· ,:,,~ l: the coun 19: (El nornbt• y She alto traveled ex-
......... 204. ,.9098 PAOHRTY. IT MAY 8E 35 Incl se of Mis-dlrecclon de la eort•· •): tensively with her ... 47, of ....... lfl ~ .. SOLD AT A pt)&l,IC SAL. ~ MI09 In lhe of· ORANGE COUNTY SU· I a t e h us b. n d
Coounly "9coldei''1 Office. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLA· nc;ie of the CountY Recorder PERIOA COURT. 700 Olvtc Sh Wi k MA'f 8E ALSO KNOWN NATION OF THE NATURE oflllldCounty aslUChltrm Centcw Drive WMI, Sant• erman c er. At: 15192 CMlon cu.. OF THE PROCEEDINGS le defloed In tti. wtlcie entl-An•. CA 92701. Mu wic ker I 1 ~ c.Momla827t4. AGA INST YOU. YOU tled "Oeflnltlonl"oftMOee-Then-. eddfe-. and survived by her .on.
'" e lll'Ml ~ or S.tfOULDCONTACT ALAW· leretlon of~ •. Con-1~ number of plllln-Kenneth Wicker of """"""' d .. t11nat1on 11 YER. dltlonl and Aeatrictlont (the tiff• ano<ney, or pletntm .. lflownebo¥9.nowem1ntyle CALIFORNIA MORT · "Oectaratlon"') r«orded In wllhOUt en attOl'ney, la: (El Haw.all, 2 daughters, ....,. to• coinp19tenea °' GAGE SERVICE. A CA1.I· bOC* t3853 pege 3-45 Of· nombte, ta dlreocfon y el nu-Mar.ia and Sharman a.-•L Al:._. • -Jabl·"'-n--d ..,._ta __..,._ r1..... ...,._, la Atlanta •1•t11W)." FOANIA CORPORATION as flclal Recorda of Mid Coun-mero de t1l1tono dtl Wicker both of New-gvvUll nca.D -."' -r ~OD a,. WIUll ---. peace m---.a •
The Vendor under Nici duty 1ppotn11d Tn11tM ty at>ogado del ~ •• 0 Be h Broth OeedofTNM.byr9MOnof• under the lollowtng de-.EXCEPTING THERE-def demandent• Que no port ac . . ers. • • . :d-r
....... MCUred thereby, SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION .,..., mlneril right•. MtUf8' ..6 FLATT. «00 Mec:Arthur Stephens orFn>l'fda-.. "t-.-:a-1· W'9J e · ...... Ol.....,..lntheollll· ecrtbed deed of llusl Will FAOMlllloll oltrlghU min-t~ebogedo ... ~ ALLEN EJmer acid Harold 1ng t1· b te 'The eamer
___..executed and<»-TO THE HIGAts'r8~ right• and other Bl'ld., SUlfl 370. IWiwport Four sisters Maureen U. e .._,tothe~a FORCASHOl'•Mlforthln hydrocerbo~a by whit· Ba1ch, CA 92HO (1t41 H bb (' G .
_....,, Oedwetton of o.. Sec1ton 2924n of the CMI eoewr 1\1111'11 known that 752-7474 o y o eorgia, k .11 d b h d f
and wrttten notice of breecfl 1n1., .. 1 convey.cl to and per09t of lend hereinab<Ne t985 Florida· Margie WoC-... eind Dlmend for Sell. Code, 1111 right. tltll eind may be wttllln or und9r the DATE (F.ch•) JAN t8 Grace Sullivan of 1 e ' ut not t e ream
.,.. of elec:tlon to cau• the now held by It under Mid delcftbecl. together with the L .. A. 9'encll, C'8rtl, bf f rd f · Fl · d . v ui1lle11igoed 10 Nit Mid o..cs onruat In the PfOC*tY perpetual right of drtltlng, o . ....,_, Depvty o o on a, e.ra
Pfoper1y to Ntllfy Mid ob*-hereinafter deecr1becl: mining.~ and oe>er· Publlahed Orange Coat Bennett of Georgia.
gMlone.. Ind tnerMf't• thl TRUSTOR VI NCENT •ting therefOI' end ltoring In Detty Pilot Deolmber 3t Stepson , Mic hael By GENEVA COLLINS
undenianed ceuMd Mid MASCIALE ANO MARIE lndremovlngtlleNrnetrom 198~. JanuilfY 7, 14, 2t Wicker o( Oklahoma A1111h11•,,_W,_ notice ol breech end of elec-MASCIALE, HUSBAND ANO MIO land or any other tend 1988 f llontobeAecordedAug. t3, w1FE AND FRA NK lnduding the right to wtll~ T·eilf and a stepdaughter, Some celebrated the first federal observance o
1111 In bo<* 14t80 pege MASCIALE. A SINGLE MAH ttodl °' dtrectlonelty d''" L'dyne Wicker of CA. Martin Luther K.ing Day in black tic, others donned
310 oflllld Offlcilll Reccl'd9 BENEFICIARY· CALI-end mine ~om tendl other f't8JC fl>TICE Four granddaughters overalls, but the sentiments of all echoed the words of
Seid .... wltlbetnede.but FOANIA MORTGAGE SER,: then Mid land on or gu 3 ... _ Se S R R Id Del • y "gh h L:lled th wtttlc>ut c:ownent °' --VICE.• corporation ..,.. tunnell ·and .nett• YOU ARE tN DEFAULT and granu:>1.1ns. r-U. . ep. ona lums: • ou mi t ave,.... e
rentv.•JtP< ... ortmplied,r• RECORDED Match 22, Into 'tllfougfl Of' acrota the UNDER A DEED OF TRUST vices will be held at dreamer. but you did not kill the dream."
gerdlng tttte, pa111111on. or 1977 • 11111rumen1 Number 1Ubturtace of Mid lend, end DATED SEPTEMBER 25. Pacific View Chapel The black ties were worn by those who paid up to
enc:umbranoea. 10 pey ""28923 Boote 12112 Page tobottomaucllwhlpet~ed 198A UNLESS YOU TAKE at 12 noon Wednes-S750a tickettobenefittheMartinLutherK.mgCenterfor l'elMiilillg principel aum of 121 t of Offidlll Records ln or dlreetlonally drilled .... ACTIO N TO PROTECT . .
tt11 not• MCUred by MIO the office ot lhe Recorder of tunnels and ll'latt• undei YOUR PROPERTY. IT MAY day. January 22. ln-Non-Violent Social Change and watch singer Stevie
Deed of Trust, with lnt••t Orange County. end t>eneith or beyond the BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC terment at Riverside Wonder and a score of other celebrities perform at
•In Mid not• Pfov\ded, ed· Said OMO 01 Tnnt. <»-ext.nor limit• thefeof. end SALE IF YOU NEED AN EX· National Cemetery. Washington's Kennedy Center Monday night. ~. " eny. un0er the ecrtbll the foltowtng prop-to redrill re1unne1 equip Pl AN AT 10 N ° F THE p · f V · e w The overalls we-l'ound on some of the hundreds of --of lllld 0..0 of Trwt. erty· melntain ~epalr ~end NAT u RE 0 F THE a c I I c 1 ... I•
..... c:Nrgee and..,.,,... LOT t OF TRACT NO. operate '•ny M:n wells or PROCEEDING AGAINST Mortuary. Directors. Wisconsin volunteers. led by Gov. Anthony s. Earl. who
"' "" T,,,.,.. encl of thl 404t . IN THE CITY OF min. wltflOUt however the YOU. YOU SHOULD CON· 644 -2700 used their day off to wade into snowy fields and help
!Nit• cretited by Mid 0..0 COSTA MESA, AS SHOWN right to drill. min.. store: ••. TACT A LAWYER beleaguered farmers harvest com.
of Trull. ON A MAP THEREOF RE· p6ote and opef'at• through NOTICE cw SCHABLEIN Around the nat1'on. the da6i set ast'de /'or the civil Seid .... will be held on CORDED IN BOOK t38. the aurleoe of the upper 500 TMllT!rl IA1.E R 0 B E R T H . ''
Jen. s1. teM. •t tO:OO A.M. PAGES 21. 28, AND 29 MIS-,... or the 1Ub9ulface of the NO.~ 14MOI SCHABLEIN born rights activist assassinated in 19 8 was ma'rked by protest
et the"°"' entrence to Of-CELLANEOUS MAPS. RE· lend herein-above d•-a. ' h 1· bell speeches and renewed .,. County Courtlloule. CORDS OF SAID ORANGE ICribed ... ,~In the On Fet>tuary 20, 1986. II June 8. 191 7. passed mare es. prayers. pea tng s.
7000lvlcCenterOrlveW•t. COUNTY, CALIFORNIA. dMd recorded In book tO·oo AM . Paclfte Sentinel away January 18, pledges to continue K.ing·s work.
Sent• Ane. Cailfornle. The MAY ALSO BE KNOWN 13447 pege t838, ortlcial Corpor1uon, • C11Uornl1 1986 . Newport Fifteen thousand people marched down Atlanta's tot• emount of 1M unc>lllO AS 3087 TRINITY DRIVE, Records corpor ation, as duty ap-1 n streets after a three-hour ecumenical service at Ebenezer belenOloftheOOMgetlon-. COSTA MESA . CALI-Allo exoeptlng tr-etrom pointed Trust• under and Beach. He IS sW'Vlved Ch h K' Ea I' cured by MIO property to be FORNIA 926e7 811 water right•. or lnt.,...t In pursuant to 111e o..o 01 by his wife Anne and Baptist urc , where mg once was pastor. r tt"r.
told. togeltler with lntereet, (If • street address °' water right• no matter how Trust recorded 8419temt>er his daughter Harriett King's son Dexter laid a wreath at his fat~er's tomb. a~d
lete charge&. and 19tlrneted common da1tgn1llon II acquired by the GrantOI' 28. 198A H Instrument No S lift · the 6 . dent Of tlt~ Sobthem €11111Sll3h l.ei<fcf'Shlp
coeta. ...,.,_, and Id-~no _,..,,1y le ancs Owned and uMd .... 1 ' s4-40355t of Offlctal _e. i 5 re Ts · a r 1 0 n C -h II ed th at on to move toward ~.•lo ffie dat•hei-: glV9n u 10Jtu:omp1et-OrantOf' 111 connectrori' with coras. •UCUted by Mk;tlael MakJey. Mildred Jor· on erence c a eng e n '
at;• 138.500:00. P"d ~ or oorrec:m.a). °' with respect to the prop-F Logue. an unmarried man . dan and Evelyn Fox: complete racial equality.
pelO lnl••· "any. The beneltelaryunder Mid erty wtlether IUCh water u trustOf. In theofficeotthe and a brother John "In the name of Martin. we ain't going back." said Dete: December to, 1985 o..o or Trust. by reason of• r""hiunatt be ....... _ oYef· County Aecol'der of Orange the Rev Joseph Lowery head of the onz.anization that "--f1t11l1MR. •MW brMCh °'default In the obll· ,;ng appr~" per-County. S1a11 ol Californfa.. Schablem Services · • · r T....... gettons aec:ured thereby, cotetiiig pr..criptlwewcon-WILL seu AT PUBLIC will be Wednesday. K.ing founded. ·:w e've come too far. we ~e worked too
PubWleO Of~ eo..t 11eretotore1111ew1ed ano ct.-tractuel ·PfOY\deO howevW AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIO-11 A M at 5 t strenuously, we ve marched too long, we ve prayed too
OellyPllotJenuarv • t4.2t, tlvered totheunderalgned• thetthe reMrV1tt0nsne11not DEAFOR CASH (paya1>1e11 Jo chims. C hurch hard. we've wept too bitterly. we·ve bled too profusely t98e wrltt~ Declaration of 0.. rllllfYI any right to entcw the time of Mle In lawful a • • and we've died too young •• T--004 tault and Demand IOI' Sall. upon the aurface of the money ol the United St•t•) Costa Mesa Inter-Lo d v· p' .d G B h So h ---------andwnttennotlclofbreech propertydelctlbedl'l«elnln•t outside th • rHr mentfoUowingatthe we.ryJOtne ice res1 ent eorge us . ut
ptRjC Jl)TlC( and of 11ec11on to cauM the the •••ciM ot suc:n rights. courtyard enuanoe of Con-Harbor Lawn Mem· Afncan Bishop Desmond Tutu. Sen. Edward Kennedy.
MOTICI cw uncteralgned to NII Mid u reteNed In the deed r•i Unental 0Land5 Tttle ~1 · 0 'aJ Park Services 0-Mass .. Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young and members of ___ .... • 1 property to utl9fy MIO obit· corded 1n boot! 134<47 page piny. t 1 North .... n n · v: • I' .1 h · °'~"TiRAL g111on1. eno thereefter the 1838, Offlctal Records. Street, Santa An1. Call· under the direction of n.Jn~.s 1am1 ~at t e service. .
NOTIC E tS HEREBY underlloned cauMd uld Ptrcel 3 e-t• u torn11. alt right. Otle and Harbor Lawn -Mt . Yo um1gh.!havt.k11ledthed.rcam.er.butyoud1dnot
orvEH purwuent 10 SEC-notice olbreedl and of llec· aet torth •n the Sec1ton entl-1n1wes1 conveyed to and 011 ve Mor 1 u a r kill the dream. Dellums. a Cahfomra Democrat, told
TIOH 9504 of the CALI-~tr,.1~r1~~N<fr~~ tied "~:~~·~tS: ~~rubit 1~,;:.nd:~ 540_5554 Y 2.59Q. marchers l~n i ng the steps of the Lcgislauve
FOANIA COMMERCIAL, ~EHT NO. 84-429534 ol ~and Ener':1riierit" deaerlbed H : lot 14, Tr1et --Butldtng In O lympia. Wash. ~~~b4:!~ NldOfflclatRecords oftheAnlcleentitled "E .... 9901, ln the Ctry of Costa ELMQUIST Philadeph1a's W. Wilson Goode told thou~nds !. Truet moft ~lculerty Satd .... wlMbemede.oot ments otthe0ec:W1110nr• Mesa County 01 Or•l'IQI. DOLORES E. ELM-gathered for a nine-hour ecumenical service. "Because' deecrlo.d heflin below. by( without covenant~ war· !erred to In Parotl 2 •bOYI State of ~:~n~ 4~ QUIST, a resident of Dr. K.mg marc hed to protest injusttce I can stand here as Commerc.e.nit onJ-·an. ranty.~Ol'n .. ,,. ..... .,,.. Parcel 4 ea-n.nt1 u map recor n N t B h f h fit\h I . . A . ,. Ch'
: --1 lg11ct1ng tttte. pouu11on. Of ~.....m.nraarepar1k:u· pages 49 1n0 so or Mis-ewpor eac . the mayor o t e 111 • argest city in menca. 1cago ~Jo,1~~~'!;: ~j eneum1>tanoeetop1ythet• 1ar1y Mt forth tn Article x111 cellaneous Mapa. In the ot-passed away January Mayor Harold Washington. who also is black. credited
a..ct1. ce111on11.a In 1hel malnlng ptlnclpal 1Um of the 121 entitled "&terntnta'" ol tice of thecCounty Recore cser 19, 1986 in Costa the Nobel Peace Prize winner for his elcct1on as well. ........_ of the ............... not• MCUred by MIO 0..0 ttle dedaretlOn of cov• of said ounty 11cept M fte I gthy ) S F . 60 000 I h d t C . ..,.,.,., ~ .... ,,.., of Tru11. wltll lnterelt as 1n nanta conditions and r• tl'letelrom all Oii, gas. min· esa a r a en n an r:anc1sco. • pcop e ~ ee~e a 1~1c thes!:'t.:!r~ con-Hid note provided. ed· atr'lct!Ons reoordeo In book erats and otl'let hydrocarbon illness. Beloved w1Ce Center Plaza when Mayor Dianne Feinstetn, speaking
OUC1ed by reaon of the ct.-vancea. II any, under the t t76e page 420 to 48A. In-sub111nces lying below a of Gordon D. Devoted beneath a double rainbow of colored baJloons. said the
f9Ult of Nattonwldl Home ,.,,,,. 01 said Deed of Trutt, clualve ot Offielll RecOfda 01 depth 01 500 1"1 from lhe mother of Jeffery D. reaJ1zat1on of King's dream wall be ··a black Amencan tn L Inc under the t ..... Chargea end • ..,.,,.. 0r-. County Cehlornle. surl1ee ol said r:><operry. t>vt M ) f S . ;*"p, · «;:of the Tntlt .. and ot the under the SecliOn l'leldlngs ... 1h no right ol surface ( arian o an the White House.· ~., = ~~-., INltl cr•ted by lllld 0..0 In IUCl'l ar11cie entitled .. lol· entry as prOVlded In deed ' Bernardino; JaY.. D. of In Los Angeles. some I o.~)() people lined streets for
Agreement 1n fevOI' of Com-of Trust. .._... lows: "Owners· RfOht• •nd reeord3~3 0
1n11 Boo, kR 835d3· Orange; Jan D. two parades. one down Marttn Luther Km~ Boulevard. B Said .... will be ,,_, on Duties Urllltles and Ceble page ~ iell ecor • t (R 11) p k ( · · · K.i • d merce •nk. as Hcured THURSDAY FEBRUARY 8 T...._ .. ..: ..... · "Su"""" _,.,. The street addr111 end1 u.sse ar er o while a Detroit celebration tn ng s honor rew a crow perty. and pursuant to t.he ' · · _..,'"""'" ...,.... ' ...... S C t · Julie D f 12 000 tlgM•• of the uilderl6glled • teM at t t 00 AM. at the Settlement" "Encroach· other common designation, un I y. . o . .
PfOY\ded uno9:SicnoN Concord Street entranoe to ment" and ·6ommun11y Fa-•f any 01 the reel PfOC*tY (F.dward) Weiss of In New Orleans. the Rev. Jesse Jackson told more
9504 of the CALIFORNIA the bultOlng tocated •t 1570 cllilles Ea.sement" described 1 booovec 1' Costa Mesa. Loving than 2 000 checnng people both blacks and whites that UNIFORM COMMERCIAL EMt 17111 Street, Santa Ana. Cooe· 28· t31 P1rcet purported to t>e 1 2 an-f R . . , . f h . 'I •. h CODE Celttornl• 92701 937.5&-0,5 · nonade C•rele Costa Mesa. sister o oseann the city has a special pla.ce tn the history o t c c1vi ng ts
At ~ time betDI'• the lhe 101111 amount of the The total amount of tile CahlOfni• Paterrut.e of Elyna. movement and a special duty to honor King, because
.... thedet>tormayr.o.m UllPllid blll8llCI °'the obit-unpaid Pflnopa1 balanu. Th• undersigned Trust .. Ohio. Loving grand-King formed the Southern Christian Leadership C'o n-the ~.,.,.,In 80C0fdance gtllon aec:ureo by aeld prop-Interest tl'leteon. together d1scia1ms any lteblllty tor lily mothe r of April I' h with hit riQlllll under SEC-erty to bl tolO. t<>oether with with rHsonably nttmateo Incorrectness ot tile street . · 1erence t ere. . . . TtON 850e of the CALI· lmerMt, lat• c:tiargea. end costs. e11pen1119 and act-address and other common Kyle. LtSa, Sal and Jackson. who was with King at the time he was ~hot.
FORHIA UNIFORM COM-19tlmeted co.ta. expenMI. vanoes at the lime of 1111 in-designation '' any. ShOwn Carl Gordon. Abo said the day was a "holy day," not JUSt a holiday.
MERCIAL co~ tender· :':.~:1~~~hed•t• :: :.b~~~,~~h•s No-l'llls~~ .. 1ewillt>emade. but si:irvived by four ''Holi~ysuggests frol!c ... and slceping.!ate," he said. "A
Ing the tum of 1nt!:=·C: Oete, January 7. 198& Currently dated Cutitera Without covenant or war.I ru~ and nephews, sacred hfe and legacy ts to be honored. . ~~7 es welt .. pay· CA!..IFORMIA MORT· Checks Of Certified Checks renty, express Of tmplled r•I Dav Id (Drema) He also accused the Rca~n admtntstrauon of ment Or ex.pen.-rMIOfl-a:.= ~AU· payable to tile Trustee or gardlng title. pc>SMSlion. or Patemite; Lisa (Oral) bypocntically honoring Ktng while working to erase his ~ ~ by, 1~ "':· :.W .,..... av;" OAJ~ ~~:_ a~ro=·~~~~ =~~~':'nC:1~~ P:.n'~ 0 ·D e 11. Su s 8: n accomplishments and refusing to meet with black ~ r.:O,,an:;: .C::orncri !AN TMllT DllD llR· identification 11 available the not" secured by said Patenute, aJI of Ohio: leaders. •
the ~ at Com-a-_.. ' ~·~ but IOf wttleh TruSIM makes notea advances. II any. Services wtll be held
City folk use holiday
to save farm crops
BARNEVELD. Wis. (AP) -Dressed in wann
Jackets, jeans and heavy boots. hundreds of secretaries,
executives, professors and other state workers honored
the memory of the Rev. Martin Luther K.ing Jr. by
tramping through snowy fields to pick com for farmers.
Edward Jabs. a 77-year-old invalid with a dairy farm
nonh of Barneveld. was among those wbo received a
helping hand from the city slickers.
"h came just in the nick of time," he said, wiping
tears from his eyes. "l've got hardly anthing lef\ in the
bin. It's wonderful. I reaJly appreciated it."
The effort was spearheaded by Gov. Anthony S.
Earl. who was concerned by agricultural estimates that 30
percent of the state's com crop was still in the fields
because of a wet fall and heavy winter snow.( Some
farmers were in despeTate need of livestock feed.
Earl in vit.w_talC-W<>t-kers. to-use-their'day-off to help
tbcfarmers, and-wcls.fn the-field~himsclfwittr300 other
state workers, sporting an engineer's hat. a red plaid
J&Cket and knee-high boots. Other harvesting groups
were organized elsewhere in the state.
Earl , SO, said the enthusiasm of the volunteers was a
heart-warming rebuttal to cynics who questioned the
worth of harvesting effons by inexperienced city
dwellers.
The workers gathered near the bell tower of a
Lutheran Church in tbis town rebuilt after being leveled
by a tornado two years ago. They held a brief prayer
session before heading out to pick and glean.
reminded a packed house at the University of Arkansas
1n Little Rock. Ark .• "More people started following Dr.
King the night he died than ever followed him during his
life. Many of us have forgotten that just before his death,
there was talk that his movement had come to an end ...
In Memphis. T enn., the town in which King was
slain April 4, 1968. the Rev. James F. Smith said at a
memonal service that young people know too little about
the civil rights movement. "They look at South Africa
and they can't believe It," he said. "Well, we had South
Africa in this country."
Many states o pted not to honor the federal hol iday,
which sparked protests.
The New York Stock Exchange was picketed for not
closing. as was a bank in Eureka Springs. Ark. Baok
President John Cross said honoring the holiday would
only encourage Indians, women. Hispanics Ind
homosexuals to seek holidays.
In St. Louis. three leaders of a parade. including
Alderwoman Mary Ross, were issued summo ns for
violating a parade permit and urging marchers to pata a
downtown department store accused of d1scriminal.ag
against blacks.
In South Dakota. state Sen. Thomas Shonbull told
the Legislature he planned to introduce a bill to make the
day a state holiday. The civil rilhts movement helpe<lan
minorities. Shortbull said. "ihere was a time when
Indians went into restaurants tn South Dakota and they
were not served ...
The gala at the Kennedy Center was pan of a three>
ctty musical tribute produced by Wonder. a seven-year
campaigner for the holiday. Concerts were taped beb't
li ve audiences in Washington, Atlanta and New Yortc,
then presented as a two-hour NBC television spcciaJ
Monday night.
,... end 1ege1 expen .... VICll, e corporetton, From 1nfofmat1on which Deed of Trust. with 1ntcwest and Gary (Venus) Bcn1amin Hooks. executive director of the National
sue11ten0ermayt>emaoeto ~-.bf;~Ten lc:Nftwt1...!: the Ttustee dMmS reliable, thereon." provided 1n aaldl Patemit.e of Texas. Association for the A.dvancement of Colored People.
merc•B•nk t 20 1 Dove '-1 11"1 ltreet, (, no representation ot w1r· under the l8'ms of said Deed Street~ e..en Call-l ent• Ane, C111fornla ranty tile street address<>< ot Trust,'-· Charges and Wednesday. January T t I fi t th • d
tornle 82880. Allt~tlon· t27'01,(714)M7·71n other common deslgn1t1on expen ... olll'le Truateeandl 22, 10 A.M. at Pacific u u appea s or an i• apar e1 O«>rge H Diiion The per Pub41ahed Or1nge Coast of the above deaerlbed of the trusts created by said V M 0 tu 8 r y aonal oPertv to bl IOld ,~ Deity Piiot Jenuary 14, 21 p r 0 p e, 1 y 1 a 8 8 Deed ol Trust. lor the I e W r deecri~•tollows. 28. t988 , HAVENWOOD. tRVtNE . amount re11onably ""·I Chapel. Newpo~t
EXECVTED BY· Mlc:tlael G --II" llt\JIM I Said Pfgperty I• being The Benaflcl1ry. under follow at Pacific View 1 as a 1 orn1ans on or Ill NOTE&DEEDOF TAUST T-01.:cAL 927 1' matedlobl $18t,90783 Beach.lntennentw11J r·ght c 1·ri . h K. g
DodOI Kimi• M Dodd• •nO r~ "" w. sold lor the purl)Oll of pay· Hid Deed ol Trust, ller•-1 M al p k v•-JulM 8er · ' ' 1ng the obligations eecured tolor• did execute and Ol•j emon ar · u.·
AMou:r•ns22s.ooo oo K Z.-by said Deed of Trust lnCtuo· llvet to the undersigned a itation for family and
Thi. Deed ot Trua1 It on ~~TO "'9 •-and ex~ ot the written Oectar111on of 0..1 friends will be Tues-By LYNN ELBEA r-• ..,_._,known u 215 Tru11ee and of Sall tautt and Demand IOI' Sall.I d bet th• • . 11 .. --L';'i.;~ Mallbu Call-MU A&.COttOUC Dated J1nuary 8 t986 and• written Notlol of De-a.y, ween "'11 1 ·~ ....,_
torn1e 9'\d 11 'teeurlly i<>< the MVW".AOH c AL t, o" N 1 ii "1. ·11u11 1nd e1ec11on to s.i1.1 hours of 4 P.M to 9 Memories o'f American blacks· strusale for equality ~ ,.,.,.. CONVEYANCE COWANY. The u,,d.,slgned cauHdl P .M. In lieu of merged with the present day fight for rights for blacks in onty CMtl °' cuhier'a To Whom 11 Mey eonc-n •MW TrwM, er klen-Mid Not1ee 01 Delautt andl flowers. family sug----•tcd South Africa as Californians celebrated the ~ meet. peyibte 10 MARCHESE. Angle & Clff ne Kelly becvthe Vlol Electton to Seit to bl r•I .__ --rv-I h I'd . .... · L h Ki J ~end d ate applylng 10 the 0tpart., ,.,.1l•1..f .. , C~ AY. C<>fded In the COUnly wMrll gcat donations ~ first nationa 0 I ay hono nng mantn Ut Cr na r.
on• nn.nc1a1 1nat1tutl~~ ment of Alcoholic: Beverage 1n11e •~rtllrldt• Cell· the, .. , pr()9erty '' tocateo made to the American Bishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa appealed for
oeptMle 10 Cornmerce8anl! ContrOI for "4 t'' On Sat. I,_,. ttm. Tata11ho.• No 0111 January to. t986 Diabetes Association belp fiahtlng his country's system of racial separation
.. be ............ ed. 8-&Wlne(Pub Eet.Pl.)10 (lt1)701·2'71 ,.ACIPIC llNTIMll l 1774.4 Sk k Bl d . Lo I fi . . da f OATiOJAN 17 teM NII aleoflolie 1>everage1 at Put>lilfled Orange cou c~TION. •• IAID ypar v ., Monday at a s Anae es unction cappinJ a y o car RCDAJM 9Yr 16540 H8fbOI' ~. Sult• Deity PllOt January 21 28 ""'9TU. -,: .. Ketew .. IUlte 110. Irvine, CA. parades and other events honoring KinJ. Ant1-apanheid == " ~ 'Vic~ "E". Fountain Valley. CA Febrvary '· t9&& · HM levtll ••1111IH4al 92714 Pacific View activists s~ed a sit-in at the South Afncan Consulate in • • 92708 T 01· ....,enl, LM Afttelea, M Dir lllNmilMlol Publllhld Orange Cout • · C111tor11te too4t, (211) ortuary, ectors. Beverly Hil s . ....=:~.... Dally Pilot JtNery2t. tNe P'\8.lC NOTIC£ -..-
1
64_;4;;::·=27=00==:ir:= Tutu. the Analican bis,hop of Johannesburg, called
STATE cw CALtfOANIAI T -<>20 IUfllMONI c!~,,::'.. ~:ri;:~ -, for a campajgn o( civil d isobedience a.pinst apartheid.
COUNTY Of ORANGE) (CITACION JUDtCIAL) pany to 1s North Main , but quesuoned whether the non-violeoc.e advocated by
I em ~ In '"-"8.IC Jl)TIC( NOTICE TO DEFENDANT StrMt, Sant• At1a, Celllorntal PACl,.tC Yll!W the slain American civil rights leader would work in
County of 0r-.. Stat• of OU AM ,AULT Alllto I Ac:ustdo) WA L TEA 82701 (7t4) 835-5575 I MIMORtAL PMt( South Africa.
CelfOtftle 1 em~1M • ~ .,.:~n.ueT AOCUNIER. DOES t Publllfled Orange Coelt Cemetety • Mortuery "I. m.-.lf. beheve that the strat...v of non-violence of 1f .0 not a petty to the A • THROUGH 25. •nclulive Deity Pllol JanuilfY 21 21 Chapel • Cremeiory 1--•1 _.., ectkln: ,,,., butlneet DATD ."'99 ,., """UN-YOU ARE BE•NG SUED F1btu11ry 4 19ee · · 3500 p su~s where there is a minimal moral standard," Tutu eddr... ta: 1~1 Dove LIM YOU TMCI ACT'ICMt BY PLAINTIFF (A ua JH•t• . •clllc View Drive said at a news conference before a Kin\c.elebrat1on ...... ~ 8eldl. Cell-1'0 '9M>TICT YOUR ...,... detnand•ndo) CONSTANCE Newport S..ch T di ..,.... t2llO. an, rT llAY • toLO AT Mc o o No u a" • n d P\8JC NOTIC( s.u .2100 dinn~r hosted by Los Anielcs Mayor om ra cy.
On.JMuery 11. 1 ... , ... A ~ IAU. • YOU IMICHAEt. McDONOUGH "Manin Lulhtr Kina Jr. wondcn:d whethcrh1snon·
_. t11e IOl9'0lil9 ~ NDD M IOUMATION Y• ...,_ • CALINDAll 'ICTmOUI euelNIH HAM°" L.A violent technique wouJd have worked in Nu1 Ger· .......,..., •Notice of l'ubo OP ntl MATUM CW THI DAYI .,._ ..... ""'"*" NA• ITATIMIWT WN•
11c .... of Cottat«•• on ~ AOAINIT 'te ..,... • ,_ .. lie a Ttit '°'~!*'ton• •r• M t MT. °'crv1 manr.i·n South Afnca. I suspect we don't have the =:= ~n!.~ ~:;. i~~ co.-:=":::=" ,.,,,.... et :.,~ ~a:;,,~r;c,~~ °' Cr~et:;•ttry coMt1tucncy wtucb bas the moral minimum standard to
..,. era..d 1n •....., ~ °' A...._•,...._°"".. AmberWIC* Ln • Hunt Ith. lb25 G1S1., 1'1111 which a~I can be made -which would be outraaed 9nwelOP• with PO•."'' ~ IA.LI .... ..,..... JM'; ~· CA 92&46 Co.ta Mesa d ,_ ..... h d --.on fully prepeld 1n tt1e MO . .,.. .,..._ , .. , 11111 ,.. Rlel'lard ~rleli. v...,.i. 540•555,. an appa ~. e sa1 . ""'*'•••Mall It N9w· On feen.y 24. tH6, 11 IR..,.,_....,..,...",... 2ttlt Amo.<wictt. Hunt Tutu, who won the Nobd Peace Priu tn 1984, was . '°" ....,._ CelffOtnl .. ecJ. to oo AM. et THE REAR .... the-' 1e....,,.. 8ctl CA t28"e presented the Man.in Luther K.Jna Jr Pace Prite dunn1 ..__ • ~ ENTRANCE t.ONY ON ST~ MOe. Thlt butlflfft la con, · I tJ • e\..... Ba ·
......,, ••• HofN "'*"·STRUT Of CHICAGO " ,... .. _. .. ,.. duCttd bY an 1nd1v1oue1 •--::::::-•! &n ccumcn1ca serv1oe at A anta s ~""neier pllst ~" 2"01,... Ct.-Aoed. TITLE INSUAANCI COM· , .. , .............. ,..--.. Rtcf\ar~ p VNqUOI ••• ,. Church earlier Monday.
L. .. un• H. 111.. canfornl• PAHY. LOCAnD AT IOI N ..... the .... .., ,.. Thlt tt•1"'*'' •• riled n Tutu said he lacked K.ant's sta'u~ and holds some '"'t, Attn· 11ftt91\ HugMe. MAIN $TREET. In trlt ~ ...... ......., _, ,,,.. w'lttl t~ County~ of°'•' ~!..~~t~D~ dtf'fertnl v~w ,,_ tam• AN. CCMtlY fll or-..,, .., -. ...... ..._. anoe1 County on January · .... -· ""' -·r 'I • ..... I I .. _ a....... Dr leddteue11 v111ey anoe. ,, ... of ~ ..._, • .,...... .._ .. '* P1101 Clae ti.d Ad• 10 ' do not Qll; 1eve am 1n tn~ 11.mc ,..,...ue as
1.ecrow. inc .. no to LAii• c AL IF o RH 1 A "I· ...,,._ · rMCt1 t"9 Orenoe C0411t Man.in &rut her Kina and I'm not be•na falsely modest.•· '°""'· Unfl c. t..aouM Htllt. OOHVIYAN0£ ~Nf'f. ""'"' ........... ,.. Plibllahtd ~ COM! INfll.et. ]utu said.
Cellfornt• Hen. """ • calfornle COf,.... .. ., • ......... v .. ,...,.,... Da11't,.,.,. J.,._., · t• 21 P"°"9 '42..$t78 .. He "'" an outstandint orator and an onainaJ ...._ ~ ,,_ duty tppo1n.1ed Trvet• te _. • ......, filM at, tN6 h n nd I t .._I teven a Alatll• J Uf\W t"-t 09f'lalJrl o..t., ...,. 1 .. ,. -...... T.Olt t inker. And be Ml a pea la am not. ~ 1cvc ---
' . ~' ...
there arc certain circumstances where violence is
justifiable (such as) when the world decided it wanted to
fight against Nazism." he said. •
In Los Angeles, suburban Inglewood, San Francisco
and Fresno, celebratory crowds turned out to Wllteh
politicians. school children and others march throuah the
streets to mark the first national holiday honorina a black
leader .
About 60.000 sang. earned sips and marched
through downtown San Francisco. where Mayor Dianne
Feinstein told revclen the realization of King's dream
will be "a black American in the White House because he
or she happens to be the best (candidate),"
Some I 0.000 people lined streets in Los An,ele1 for
two parades. one down Manin Luther .Kina BoUJevard.
"Oh. how he opened our eyei:· 72·year-ofd~Sarah
Oaynel Taylor sa.id of the slain black lcadd, who
championed non-violent civil di1<>bedienoc. "Hisdrtam
was beautiful, but there are still so few of UJ who tel the
chance to climb out of the bucket,"
"I wanted 10 be at marches in Selma lftd
Montgomery. but I «>uldn''·" said David Butler. 38.
"But today r share the same feellna that was thete thn. ••
Another march m fnaJewood drew about 7,000
spectators and panic1pants,
In Beverly Hills. some '° anti-apan.hdd demon-
strators jammed the tin~ anteroom of the cle>ted Soath
Afncan Consulate, t.ac~na a hand-lfltcred pot&eT to its
locked door l>cari"I K.Jna's words: "'He who 8CCeptl eYtl
Wlthout protesting ap.in.st tl is really attepUftl it.•·
..These waJls, these doors, are wbm: buai~en ~·
come to make deals for btllicms of doltan off the
oppression of my ptaplic," said dmlonltrator T~or
fowler. a South African native .tto baa blett In uUc!b
17 years.
The sn-ln p1rt•c1pan11 called f'oi a pennantrn
closure of all U. ccntulatn and mill'OM in SoUtb
frit"a
I
.,
I
T U ESDA \',JANU ARY 21, 1986
Oil ·prices tumblin ·down
Experts see no quick end to price drop
in good news for cor:isumers, economy
NEW YORK (AP) -The down-
ward plunge of prices for crude oil,
heating oil and gasoline accelerated
Monday, and analysts said there was
no quick end in siaht.
'!It's great news for consumers,"
said William Randol, an oil analyst a t
Former Interior Secretary
James Watt Is now chair-
man of a company In
Irvine that makes anti-
pollution equipment./ A3
Students were on the
mar.ch for Martin Luther
King Monday-with two
dlff en treasons./ A3
California
Man sentenced to two
years for dumping toxic
chemicals thinks penalty
Is too stiff, but pros-
ecutors call It a warning to
others./ AS
World
South Yemen's president
Is reported back In the
country as evacuees tell
grim stories of strife in the
nation's capital./ A4
Entertainment
the investment firm First Boston
Corp.
"There is no dispute, it 'fill benefit
the economy," said Steven Smith, an
analyst for Data Resources Inc., an
economic research firm in Lexington,·
Mass.
Man held .
ina~id
attack
on girl
4-year-old victim in
fair con dition , s ight
to be OK, doctor s say
By t~e A11oclated Presa
A man wanted for questioning in
an acid attack on a 4-ycar-old girl was
arrested Monday and jailed in Orange
County. where the assault occurred.
police said.
Mark Edward Hand, 26, of Whit-
tier, was arrested about 5 p.m.
Monday and was transported to
Buena Park with investigators from
that community, said police Lt.
James Smith.
He was booked at Orange County
Jail for investigation of aggravated
assault wi th a caustic chemical and
held on $25.000 bail in the weekend
acid-splashing assault of Rachel
Ogawa of La Habra.
The little girl was leaving a
restroom at Los Coyotes Regional
Park in Buena Park with her mother
Saturday when an assailant threw two
cups of acid on her and fled. said
Buena Park officer Terry Branum.
The sudden attack was un-
provoked. Branum said.
On Monday afternoon, police
found a yellow pickup truck believed
to have been used by the assailant.
The truck. which had been aban-
doned m Wh1t11er. contained items
that were traced to a Garden Grove
chemical store. Branum said.
Investigators obtam:d Hand's ad·
dress at the chemical store and
returned to Whittier to arrest him. but
he was not home. Branum said.
Oil traded o n the spot market,
which brouaht $32 a barrel in N'>-
vember, fell S2.2S a barrel to $21.70
on Monday.
Heatina oil. meanwhile, fell to 59
ccnu a gallon fTom Friday's close of
63.89 cents for February delivery.
February · contracts for unleaded
psoline dropped to S9.79 cents a
gallon from 64 cents.
Randol said he expected the price
of crude to dip below $20 by mid-
More la being made
April. Data Resources estimates that
a one-year drop of SS per barrel would
reduce the U.S. inflation rate by one
pcrcen• point, while boosting the
aross national product six-tenths of a
point hi&ber. The GNP is the total
value of aoods and services produced
in the nation.
A slump below $20 a barrel,
however, would bring problems,
Smith said.
Domestic banks that hold ex-
tensive loans to enetJY companies
and oil-produciq nations would
suffer, as would oil and oil-service
companies. Some U.S. "states and
nations that depend on oil revenues
woUld also face difficulties.
In Kuwait. which is a member of
the Orpniz.ation of Petroleum Ex,
~~Ill Countries, Oil MiniSler Ali
ifa al-Sabab predicted o il
producin& nations eventually would
reach a compromise on oil supply to
• .
e"nd -the chaos on the international ..
market."
In December, membcn of OPEC
announced tbcr. wo uld CQn<:entrate
on winnin' a • fair share" of world
sales. even 1fit meant a price war with
non.()PEC nations.
Several n.auons, es~lly Saudj
Arabia, dramatically increased ~
duction. adding to a glut of supplies
already on the market
~-
Director
---of arts
>
center
better
Given non-su rgical
heart treatm ent, will
be back in few.~e,eks
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN "' .. ...., ........
Thomas R. Kendrick, exccuuve
director of the Orange County Per·
fonnjna Ans CcnteT, b.as undergone
non·surgjcal heart treatment and 1s
expected to return to work in a few
weeks "wttbout limitations,·· an ans
center spokesman said Monday.
m<ffiek. 52. was luJea away from
the Kennedy Center in WasruD&ton.
D c tau.year to ad01111ister the Costa
Mesa ans center. now undcT con-
struction near South Coast Plaza.
On Jan. 12. Kendnck was admitted
to the cardiac care unit at Hoag
Memorial Hospital in Newport
Beach after complaining of chest
pain.
On Monda>, ans center spokes-
man Dick Kn2row said tcsuns ~
tenn1ned a non-surgical bean
proccdun could alleviate the pro~
lem. Kendnck as now rccuperattng
and 1s expected to leave Hoag shonJy,
Kitzrow said.
He released the following state-
ment from Kendnck·s phys1c1an.
Darel J Benvenuu. M .D ... ·Mr.
Kendnck had a mild hcan attack. He
underwent su~ful balloon d1la-
11on of his narrowed coronary anery.
which restored normal blood flow to
the hean. His recovery has been
remarkable. and he is expected to
return to work 1n several weeks
wi thout l1m1tat1ons. ··
If Mel Brooks is too
serious for you, you'll love
•'El Grande de Coca
Cola" In Newport./ A7
Sports
Georgie Garcia TKO'd
Oscar Muniz In the 11th
round In Monday's fea-
ture fight at the Irvine
Marrtott./81
Whittier police found Hand in a
shopping center parking lot near his
home and arrested him while Buena
Park investigaton were waiting
outside his house. Branum said.
Buena Park detectives interviewed
(Pleue He llAl'f/A2)
Real e.tate de'ftlopen and apecalaton
ha.e a new piece of property In the
lnYeDtory. A new .olcanic tale wu born In
the Pactftc Ocean on llonday amid blllow-
ln& cloada of amoke and babblln& Ian. The
Tolcantc speck, the nr.t new Island In the
reatoa In 78 yean. la aboat SO mile.
•athweet of lwo Jlma. It already mea81U"ea
2,S 10 feet Iona. 990 feet wide and nearly 50
feethlCb.
K.i ttrov. said T1moth) L. Strader.
~1dent of the ans centers board of
directors. has expressed confidence
that Kendnck will be able to resume
has duues tn the vel) near future.
(Pl eue eee IUtl'fDRJClt/ A2)
Jim McMahon of the
Bears Is unhappy, he's
without his
acupuncturlst./81
INDEX
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
Entertainment
Horoscope
Ann Landers
O.plnton
POiice Log
Public Notices
Sports
Televtalon
Weather
AS
AS
A3
8 5-7
BS-10
A9
AS
8 10
A7
AS
AS
84
A3
810
8 1-3
A6
A2
Coed's murder
jolts community
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN will begin additional patrols. pan1cu·
ot .. .,..,,... ,..., larly during evening hours.
Orange County shenffs deputies "It (Mission Viejo) has a repu-
will begin supplementing campus tation ofbeinJ a very safe commun1-
secunty patrols at Saddleback College tr.:· Miller said. "We get an incident
in Missio n VieJO in the wake of ,a hke this on a campus like this, and it
weekend stabbin~ that claimed the generates a lot of concern. We want to be responsive to those concerns:· life of a 23-year-o d female student. He said the victim. found fully LL William Miller sajd today an d. autopsy has determined the victim. clothed. was no t sexually assaulte •
Robbin Brandler, of 1 ""una Beach. but be added. "It appears she at-~ tempted to defend herself.·· ~ed ~o death rom mul~iple mstab Sunday about 30 officers. police
_oun s. A cam~ secuntSa o 1cer dogs and a helicopter joined in ~~~;e~: ~~wn fou~~oor tc~'!!. scarchina Saddleback's pa~king lot I · .. : -1 • No. 12 and the surrounding area. ro et in a. campus ~r ... ng ol r-hopina to tum up clues to the attack.
Jnvcsugators said Bran~ley had But Miller said today there were no ~orked as an usher that ni&ht at a significant findings. The murder
piano con~n on. campus. then had weapon is still missjng.
attended a rece~uon aft~. The attack was the second on a
The oommunny coll• is patrolled female student in less than a year at by campus secunry officers, but LL
William Miller said sheriffs deputies (Pleue eee COED/ A2)
Huntington man leads drive
to make helmets mand~t9ry
Opposition from ikers makes pushing .
law through state Legislature di ficult
I J ROBERT BARKER °' ..............
Richard Plum, the di~or of
alternative education in the Hunt· 1~ton Beach Union Hip School
Oi1trict, is tryina to make it harder for
motorcyde ridcn to kill themtelva.
Plum. who'• been 1Ct1ve in driver
education and dnver •(tty propam1
for 25 years. has been a~1ated to the
board of dJroc:ton of Califoniau tor
Motorcyde S.fcty It wtll. be his .)Ob,
alone Wtth other c:ommanee man·
'
bers. to u~ the state lqislature to
make it mandatory b evayone to
wear safety bcl~ts while opaatina
or ndina on motorc:ytlcs.
Plum 11td his ton 1utiained cuts
and tuff'aed a broRn note levenl ~" llO in a motoreyele accident.. 'He's ,ettina alona fine. but iM
injuries would have betn m uch WCRW
had be. not been warift8 a ~
bclmei.'' Plum Mid.
Plum. who's tcMduled to 1ttend
rnectinp of the pencl IOOft, l9id
~
IOIEIT
111111
Robin Brandley
Opening of expanded
Laguna Art Museum
defayed to September
By LAURA MERK
Ot!M0.-,"94Mllfl
The Laguna Art Museum ha<.
changed its scheduled debut as an
expanded museum from Ma) to
September.
Delays 1n obtaining permits. con·
strucuon problems and the weather
have contnbuted to the prolonged
revamping of the main complex on
Pacific Coast H ighway, said 8111
Otton. museum director .
The museum cl~ ns doo~ 1n
April 1985 Funds from a pre' 1ous
fund-raising campaign. which
brought in S 1.5 milhon. will pa) for
the S 1.2 m1lhon renovations.
The museum 1s being expanded
from 9.000 to 18.000-square-fect and
was originally ~heduled to ~pen m
the fall of 1985.
But mu'iCum oflic1als fae"r'd several
road block~ v.hen txnh the Laguna
Beach Cm C ouncil and the Cah·
fom1a Coao;tal C omm1ss1on required
change.; to th<' mu<;eum·s plans
.. 8, the llm<' ""e completed our
appro,als "'<' had to change the
opening date to \!fa, I q 6:· said
Otton The' later mo' ed the date to
June
When con'\lruct1on began e' Cl)·
thmg went mtlOthl) as planned. said
Otton ... \\'hen the' dug the basement
out. the fif"')t I ~ teet. there were no
problems.·· hr ~1d
But v. hen conMruct1on workers
staned digging the hole for the
elevator shalt the\ hit an under-
ground flo v. of water. Knowing the
water table could nse. th<''r were
(Pleue eee ART I A2)
·I
.. ,.l ...... lands • puina. _..>ft .... Md oil a~ ........... fttai• lban pwwly u
•iJ WllW. Wat Wan DOW ftDdl Wmeelf
~ ... m eevUonmell&lliall. he
M lilt -a SDeCiaJ ~ from m noa4• • that hit bmer enem-ies aft ~•his company make
~· . •-n-t ltalpb Neden and the COD·
wists lft toiJ'I to make Jim
Wen's company Vf:rJ IUCICellfW," wan mid. .. , It' area• satisfaction ou\ o(dliat. ..
Nader, a nationally known con-sumer ad'10Cate. condemAed Wan u
u .. r~~DI &om tbe (Rap~)
ldlllinistration •• derelictione, the
b1ckJot of abutes and harms tbat the Reep.n administration bas &iled to
prevenf' Nader wd. "My raction is
one of initial skepticism about any
'consumer-sensitive· product by
James Watt. the notoriuscondonerof
polluten."
--lAfttt:.-rn· San Diea ast w-eer-to-
promote the company befo~ a
ptherina of stockbrokers, said he
joined the finn became it provided
the chance to "ma.kc a lot of money"
ad•• lbe same time allow bim to "do a Sol o( 8l)Od," \.
For fli1 role as chairman and
compuy IPC)kesman, Watt wu ajven
SOO 000 lblftl of stock worth neatl).'
s1J miltioa. l.Dd receives an annual tAJary 0(150,000.
Wan aid the compUy'1 tests -
diepoeable wallet-siJ.ed cards that
live color~ reedinp in ICM than
nve minutes -are capable of
recordina minute and previously
unde1ec1able amounts of such toxic
cbemicals u dio•jn and EDB.
Environmental Oiqnostics cur-
rendy ltlll five types of antibiotic test
kits to aovemment aat-ncies and also
marteu iests to measure residue from
two pesticides, paraquat and pera-
lhJon.
Other products in the works in-
clude tests for cocaine and marijuana
ute. Wan said the company is
developina a test that measures
marijuana .usaae in the sn:evious four hours. a tat that Watt wd could aid
lavw enforcement •ncies.
He said hopes to• interest the
military, spons teams and private
compan\es once the drug tests arc perfected.
While Watt is pushing en-
vironmental products he has not
ntfrely abandoned his 0 IC •
Dunna the San Dieao luncheon. a spectator asked. "Shouldn't we save·
the California condor?" .
"Why should we?·· Watt shot back.
OAST MAK LEADS SAFETY DRIVE .•.
--Al
tbcmaelves." But Plum Wd the
• attitude also bas an advene
on .. rebellious kids•• who ~fuse
wear bclmeu. They want to be
lib: the bikers. &c said. .. Ricbard Floyd. a Democratic as-
pblyman from Gardena, claims
threat of outlaw bi.ken appcarina
doomeps of lelislaton prob--bas llowed cKorts to pulh
a mandatory helmet law. eblywoman Doris Allen, R-nsored a bill that went effect~. I , 198S,thatrnakcsit
tory for juveniles 1 S1h years·
old and under to wear safety hclmcta, 'be said.
· "I ..,ee. It's OK if they lcill ~Ives,•• be said Tuesday. "The
is when they do not die and
v~ for 20 or 30 years.
totftf to feed them and bathe
and pack them up and care for
Parents do it for a while, but
1ft tired of it and then the
*xpeyen have to take care of them.
•• '"I tried to act a bill pasted fi vc yean . ..,. But the motorcyck free spirits
wd. 'the day you mate people strap
themselves in seat belts, that's the day
you can make us put on helmets.'
Well, that day has arrived.
.. But they'~ macho and they don't
want toweartheirbclmcts. You can't
1ee their pasy striD& of hair, their
carrinp and their Adidas sweatbands
if they put a helmet on.
"People It\ anpy. They call me fat,
sloppy and ianorant. They're. totally
iJnorant. I Sot a letter from I auy in
San Dieao who said he'd never vote
for me. r ve never &Otten I vote from anybody in San Dieao in my life.''
(Floyd's assembly district takes in the
area around Gardena and San Dieao
residents aren•t cliaible to vote in his
AssembJrdistritt
"They have a sayina. 'Let those
who ride, decide;" Floyd wd ... But I
can-maktup slop-as, too-Let them
who pay have their say.''
The safety helmet drive baa been
propelled by Mary Price, a raident of
Rio Vista near Sacramento, who k>lt
her 18-year-old son this awnmer in a
motorcyde accident. The boy wun't
weanna a helmet; but be would have
-and his life would have been
spared-if helmets we~ mandatory,
Floyd said. ·
No legislation has been introduced.
Floyd said be is uncenain when a
push will be made.
Mi.kc Miller, traffic education of-
ficer for the Newport Beach Police
Department, ho~ that day will
come soon. he said.
"Safety helmets save lives and
reduce injuries," he said. ••You can
live with one arm or one lCJ! but you have only one head,·· be wd.
He said there were IOI moto~le
accidents in the city in 1984 and they
included 9 .. i_njuries and one utility.
The one death involved an operator
not wearing a helmet.
Complete figures were not av~
able for last year. he said, but there
was one death invotvina motorcycles
and the rider again was not weannaa
helmet.
The accident was a solo, low-speed
affair and the driver would have been
saved by a helmet, Miller believes.
1.ART MUSEUM OPENING DEliA:YED ••• ~rr-Al I
:eaevator shaft, wd Otton. Cbanaes in
!C':tn;cant new permits and new
' ; Nowthecstimated openfogdaybas
;t>ecn Kt for Sept. 16.
: Otton said construction is now
lmovina quic:kl~ and be feels confi-
~t they will finilh by Auaust and ,_ve their pnd reopenina in Scp-
~ber. Lots offestivities an planned ~~ a Homecomming Parade
.with a kine and queen.
: .. Fortunately we have the South
'
Cout Plaza satellite wbic:b bas
enabled us to have a limited propam. April '8S to Sept. •86 is a lo!'f, time to
keq> mcmbcnbip support,• Otton
said.
When finished, the S6-ycar-old
muteum buildinJ will be three levels
with new exhibition spaces, expanded
offices and a storqc facility for
preparing the art.
Otton said they will will continue shows ofhistorical and contemporary
anisu. The first exhibit in the new
buildinawiU featUR bv1D&arusts who
have shown their worts there in the
past five years with a cataloacd
exhibition of California ex-
pressionism.
A smaller exhibit will feature
selections from the museum's per-
manent rbotosraphy collection.
And i all aocs well the succ:euful
South Coast Plaza expansion location
will remain open if donations can be
found to extend the $95,000-a-ycar
lease which citpircs December 1986,
said Otton. ·
MAN HELD IN ACID ATTACK ...
ham Al
rum and took him to Oranae County
jail.
The child suffered tint-and sec-
ond~ bums to her face, chest
and lep and some damaae to the
oomeu on her eyes. but doctors at SL
lude Hospital in Fullerton were
optimistic her cycsiabt could be ·•ved.
' .. Al far IS her eyesiaht IOCS, I've
spoken wn.h her phy~1\:1an and he
thine it should be good. said hospital
spokesman Norm Anderson.
The girl remained in fair condition
and was resting comfortably Monday
ni&ht, be said.
The girl's father, Gary Opwa. said
be could not offer any mouvc for the
attack. addina that family members had not spoken to anyone during a
picnic at the park 20 miles southeast
of downtown Los Angeles.
Whittier is in Los Angeles County,
I 0 m ties north of Buena Park and IS
miles southeast of downtown Los
Angeles.
Buena Park police ~ makina
laboratory tests to identify the caustic
substance and to detect any finger-
prints that might have been left on the
cups. which were recovered, Branum
said.
Andy Williams stopped for drunken driving
., ... AaMCta&ed Preti
Sinter Andy Williams was a~stcd
Monday fQr investigation of drunken
drivina. police said.
.' Williams. S7. wu drivina his Rolls-
iloyce convertible when he was
pulled over about I p.m. in San
lcmardino County. SIJd California
fliabwar Patrol stt. Rieb Carroll and Ofticer urea Transue.
The lineer was booked into the San
9erna.rc.tirio County Jail. said sheriff's
spokesman Jam Bryant. People ar·
rested for investigation of drunken
drivina arc usually held for about five
hours and released, Bryant said.
Williams was stopped by a CHP
officer who had fo llowed the enter·
taincr for about three miles, said CHP Set. Jay Jones. It was not clear why
Williams was stopped or whether he
had aarced to a sobnety test, Jones
said.
The.officer had not submitted his
aricst report and further details
would not be im mediately available.
Jones said.
Repeated calls by The Associated
Press to Williams' home went un-
answered.
Last Feb. 8 in Carlsbad. Williams
was stopped for making an improper
U-turn and the police officer drove
him baclc to his hotel after decidina
the sinaer should not be behind the
wheel because he had been drinlc.ina, police said.
Police said they routinely five
borderline drunken drivers ndes
home.
COED SLAYING SHOCKS SADDLE BACK .••
~Al
Seddleback. In April, a 2S-yeaM>ld
r.-oman Wll abducted from another ~pus puki111 lot by two men who
·,truck her, stripped her, then dumped
her body about six houn later on a
~Y off-ramp. But repnlina Brandlcy's slayin,a.
Miller said. ••we don't ~e any
modve 11 all. This c1oesn•t appear
similar 10 any other crimes in our
Ca:~ .. looked like an itolated
·He aid invntielaon qunt.ioned .,
the student's family and friends over
the weekend.
"She was very active in school
s<>vemmcnt and school activities."
Miller said . ..:::She was known by
several faculty members and was well
liked."
Brandley was a communications
and fine ans m~or who had worked
as a disc j~key at the campus radio
station, KSBR. FacuJty memben said
SM was Pftl)lnna to paduate from
Sllcldlcbeck tJt11 temester and
DNDRICKRECOVERING .••
..._Al
~ He QllOlld Strider IS uyina,
':"Tom's medical proano11s and ~· ,.,_. &om his doctor (are), tsioil1a1.., for aJJ of us:
_ &.eadrick'1 recovery
"" caner i1 beina by tmcraJ manqrr
MOrT. underStradcr's , -----·--
duectJon. Morr wu recruited from
the ~nnedy ~nter with Kendrick.
The uu center•• 3,®teat main
tbater is ICbeduled to apen Sept. 29.
Oftkials of the Costa Mal center a~
coatlnuina their dnve to l'Wte SI•
million to pay off' the S70. 7 million
main theater.
planned to continue studying radio
and television production at San
Francisco State University.
Cam pus officials we.re jolted by the weekend slayina.
In a prepared statement. ~die·
bacle Community Collete District
Board President Harriett Walther
11id, "Members or the boani of
trusttts are shocked and saddened at
the news of the death of Robbin
Brandley. AJI or us are perents. and
~ and our families aneve With Ms .
Brandley's family tn their tmiblc
lo s."
The collqe•s prcsidtnt. Constance
CanolJ, said. "We at the collcac will
eiuend every Uldiaou to the 11u-
denl's familydunng this veryd1ft;cult
pcnod .... Wt also ~ our Ml
usistance to the ~frs depatJment
durina their invesuption."
Lieutenant MiUcrl&idanyonc who
may have witnaled the anack or who
has other information should contact
the hcnfrs depanment..at 134-3000.
.. ....
. .. •• 14 ., ., . ., .
u ..
... w w w w
eiao Lift,. !:Oep.111.
MtP-111.
...
·Cl.A ,.
Lebanon hostage families
hope to give Reagan ribbon
WASHINGTON -Relatives of
the Aoierican hostaeea in Lebanon
wd Monday they hope to paent top
Reapn administration officials with
a 900-foot·lona yellow cloth ribbon
signed by more than 7 200 people
Tbe11PDtiC nDbon, composed of
3-foot sections ICwed ioscthcr, Uf'ICI
Praidc.nt Reapn to work for the
"safe and immediate ~1ea1e·· of the
six Americans in captivity.
"We want to keep the bostqe-
situation in everyone's mind,.. said
Tom Anderson, 41, the cousin of
hostqe TC1T)' Andenon. "1t•1euy to
f<qet there .re people sufferiaa over
there .... "
.. We would like to wrap it (the
ribbon) around the \\bite House but
we know it won't fit, .. II.id Anderson.
a New York City policeman from
Valley Stream, N.Y.
Tom Anderson said his family felt a
special Ul'JCncy about their miuion
beca.use Terry's father, Glenn~ is
pvely ill in a Batavia. N.Y. hos~tal.
Terry Anderson, 38, the chief Middle
East correspondent for 1be As-
sociated Press, was seized I 0 months
ago on the streets of Beirut.
Tom Anderson and his wife Sue
joined other relatives for a reunion in
the nation's capital. the first time the
fami lies have llOttcn t~ther here
since late October. They saw Reapn
at the White House on the earlier trip.
On Monday, the families met with
officials of the Lebencsc embassy; on
Tuesday, their itinerary called for a
session with Sen. Charles Matbiu, R-
Md., and they hoped to aivc the
i'ibbon-toWhite Houtc officials. They
also sought a session with the Syrian
ambassador.
Those in Washinaton include Eric
Jacobsen ofHuntinaton Beach, son of
David Jacobsen; Mae Mihelich of
Joliet. Ill .. sister the Rev. Lawrence
Martin Jcnco; and Patty Little of
Aptos, Calif., niece of Peter Kilburn.
The yellow ribbon was the
brainchild of Heather l..ac:ayo. 16,
another Anderson cousin from Santa
Rosa. Calif.
Heather. a biah schl101 senior,
started the project at school.
Andenon relatives all over the
country joined in the project, collcct-
ina sianatures on cloth and scndina
them to Heather's arandmotbcr, lrma
Stewart who sewed them totethcr.
To pther names, Sue Anderson
said she approached pcofle outs!dc the post office and loca shopping
malls in Valley Stream. She ap-
proached her conarcssional dcl-
eption. roundina up sipatures from
Sen. Daniel Moynihan. D-N.Y., and
Rep. Raymond]. McGrath, R-N .Y. ·
The yellow ribbon has been a
hostaae symbol since S2 Americans
were held captiveat the U.S. Embusy--
in Tehran for 444 days in 1979-1981.
Although the hos ... in Lebenon
have been in captivity from 10
months to two years, Tom Anderson
said th~ famities are .. co-nvincatthlr
our ao vcmment is wotlcina more than
they were" on the issue.
Three months qo, the families said
that administration officials bad un-
veiled "specific initiatives•• they were
pursuina on behalf of the bostqes.
The Americans are believed to
have been lcidnapped by extremist
Shiite Moslems who want the releue
of 17 comrades held in Kuwaiti
pritons.
The dates and occupations of the
Americans1 . besides Anderson. who
tlavc been Kidnapped~=
•Jacobsen, S4, administrator of
American University Hospital, May
28, 1985.
•William Buclc.lcy, S7, political
officer at the U.S. Embassy in Beirut.
March 18, 1984.
•Thomas Sutherland. S4, actina
aanculturc de.an at the American
Un ivcrsity,'Junc 9, I 98S.
•Kilburn 60, a librarian at the
American University of Beirut. Dec.
3, 1984.
•Jcnco, SI , director of Catholic
Re lief Services in Beirut, Jan. 7, I 98S.
Israeli prime minister holQs
out hope on peace pact talks
THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP)
-Israeli Prime Minister Shimon
Peres said Monday that Israel is
"neaotiatina very seriously with Ki~
Hussein and the Palestinian people
about ways to start Middle East peace
negotiations. ~ referred to Jordan•s Kina
Hussein, but did not directly mention
the shuttle diplomacy ofU .S. Mideast
envoy Richard Murphy, who met
with Peret Monday and then returned
to London, whve Hussein is stayina.
Peres, in a dinner speech at the
Dutch Parliament build•'?J; said pro-
gress bas been made and, • I think the
remainina problems are very de·
m.andina, but not insurmountable. I
think we can manqc them if we shall
show dctenninatlon and under-
standjna."
He said he believed the Isneli
people were willi"I to make peace
despite broad diff'ettnces between his
sooalist Labor Pany and the riaht·
wina Likud bloc beaded by Foreip
Minister Yitzhak Shamir.
"We don•t look for a berpin, but
for a return."' he said, addiDJ
"Now we are neaotiatsna very
seriously with KJna Kuuein and the
Palestinian people and maybe we~
more than anyone elte, are aware or
the Palestinian people and ~f the
ORANG! ........
COAST --· r'ml
llut...cl n ow...., 11 c.... .... CA ..., ..._ .. 1MO C:.. ..._ CA NtM
Palestinian problem. We feel very
deet>IY for them, because maybe we
are m the same position.
"We think the~ are many wcll-
intentiioned people who would like
us to overcome this onaoina conflict
with such a hiah toll of victims and sacrifices."
Israeli officials said earlier that
Murphy•s shuttle was makin1 slow
prOIJ'eSI and the~ wu no break-tbrouah in raolvina the iuucs block-ina pcac:c nqotiations.
The main problem facina Murphy
has been findina acceptable Palesti-
nian repraentation becau1e Israel
refutes to ~tiatc with Yuecr Arafat's Palesune Liberation Or-
pnization.
Israeli officials travelina with Pera
said the wk or find!na alternative
ncaotiaton for the Palestinians is
utremely comp&ea.
In bis renwb. Dutch Prime Min·
ister Ruud Lubbers endoned lnel's
call for the PLO to renounce violence,
uPeresdemandedinaNov. l 11*(h
to the U.N. Oenera1 Aaeembly.
"I must heartily endone this appeal
.. . that all pa.rties refrain from viol-
ence or ~ threat of violence,.. he
uid.
Earlier in the day, an Israeli offtcial
quoted Peres •• 11.yina that throuah
contacu with the United States, and
indirectly with Jordan, .. more than SO
perocnf' of the distance has been
covered toward convening an inter·
national forum and findina Palelti-
nian r~prescntstivcs for direct Arab-
lsracli peace talks.
Peres was to leave for London on
Tuesday, and there was speculation
that there miaht be a mcctill& between
him and Hussein. But Pcm' spoket-
man, Uri Savir, said: "There will be
no mcctina."
Peres told Dutch leaders that direct
Arab-Israeli neaotiations were
necessary to improve the climate in
the Middle East. but that Arab
nations have rejected that idea.
Accordina to Savir, Pcm told
Lubbers, "It is very important to
open neaotiations and such an opea-ina of neaotiations would drastically
improve ihe climate, the atmosphere
in the Middle East." /
The l111eli official quoted Pera u
saylna the main Issue still block.inc
peace talks is Arafat's refusal to pve
Hussein an answer on whether he and
his IUPPorten in the PLO will
renounce violence and ~ti.ate on
tbe basis ofU.N. resolutions that call fo~ acceptance of Israel's riaht to
tltlSt.
c....-.~-• ...... .....a1 JiutcaU 642-8086
VOL 11,.0.11
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