HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-01-23 - Orange Coast PilotI
Cout
A fleet of vans la being
lnveatlQated u a poatble
link to the Ortega High-
way hazardous waste
dumping./ Al
C.llfomla
Poll Indicates baby
boom.era lean more
toward Democrats that
rest of population./ M
Nation
Reputed mob figures
convlctmt In 1 aaY
skimming case./ Al
Comptroller orders Re-
agan to cut budget under
new deficit law./ Al
Food
Super party fare will wln
cheers from armchair
quarterbacks./C1
Entertainment
''Crimes of the Heart''
offers somt maivelous
characters In search of a
story at the Gem./ A 12
Sporta
Sunday's Super Bow1 Is
already turning Into a war
ofwords./81
Edison Hlgh's Biii Work-
man Is an eartylavorlte
for the Orange Coast
College football post./81
Veteran University of
Houston basketball
coach Guy Lewis an-
nounces retlrement./82
INDJtX
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
Entertainment
Horoscope
Mind and Body
Ann Landers
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police Log
Public Notloes
Sports
Television
Weather
A10
A3
A 13-14
84·6
A 11
A10
87
A9, 12
A10
A8
A10
88
A8
A3
87
81-3
A9
A2
Irvine Co.
gets delay
on property
tax hearing
By USA MAHONEY °' ...............
Althou&h it has been 18 months
since the Irvine Co. appealed 1 $51
million tax bill from OranJC County,
nothinc was resolved dunna its first
hearina before tlfe county's
Assessment Appeals Board Tuesday.
Jrvine CD~•ttomcy-Robcrt Cume
promptly asked for a continuance on
the appeaJ and requested 1 separate
hearinJ on ··threshold issues" be said
( ........... VIN&/A2)
25~
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1986
AT standoff ends ~·
............ _, ................
llembenoftbeJlfewportBeach8WATteamwaltoatal4eRon ahoot hfmeelf, held police off for ab houra before beln&
Taylor'• home ID ltutblaff. Taylor, who had threatened to forced oat with tear au.
Newpo~cops
exonerated
byGranQJury
Perjury allegations
no subs antia eOfiY
evidence, Jury finds ---
By STEVE MARBLE
The Orange County Grand Jury
exonerated the Newport Beach Police
Department and two city majnten-
ance workers Tuesday for their ac-
tions and testimony in a SI 0 million
marijuana case that was thrown out of
court last July.
The Grand Jury investiption was
requested when a Municipal Court
judJe decided there was evidence
pohcc had committed perjury and
misled the court during a preliminary
hearing.
The Grand Jury also was asked to
invcstipte whether two city mainten-
ance: .worken conspired to destroy
evidence in the c.asc.
"Following an extensive review ...
the Grand Jury has determined that
there was no evidence of criminal
behavior by any of the principals
involved," said jury foreman Gerald
M. Charlto n.
The bnefstatement was issued late
Tuesday without fanfare.
Newport police made the five-ton
marijuana seizure Jan. 2 I. I 985, after
an officer noticed a yacht tied to a
public dock on the Balboa Peninsula.
Officers later found $1 0 million
worth of Colombian marijuana
wr;lpped in plastic and burlap in the
boat's cabin. Three Santa Cruz men
were arrested on suspicion of sm uggJ-
ing drugs.
But Harbor Municipal Court Judge
Ru~ll Bostrom dismissed the
(Pleue eee GR.Al'fD/A2)
' ' '
20 Ml
MOOR !
LIMI T
0.,,... --"'lAe .. .,_
City worken repainted tbla crucial algn leaa than two houn
after •Juctie had-ordered It photoeraphed.
Distraught man with
un flushed out of
house In Eastbluff
BJ PAUL AllCBIPU?Y
•STEVE MA.ABLE °' .. ..., .......
Police flushed a distrauaht and
armed Newport Beach man out of bis
home with tear gas Tuesday, endinc 1
tense six-hour standoff in the Eaa.
bluff nei&hborbood north of the
Newpon Center. •
Roniayjor 40.of2507 AJta u·-.!'---
was apprcbe~ at 6:~S p.m., lS
m inutes after memben of the New.-
port Beach SWAT team fired about
half a dozen tear ps fCTTCts into the
rear of his house.
··They staned finnc at the rear of
the house, and he moved to t.M
front," wd Newport police 1pok~
man Trent Harris. "Taylor came out
the front door rubbinJ bis eyes. He
leaned ap.mst a railins and three
SWAT officers arrested him without
further incident.··
Taylor was taken to police head·
quarters for questioning. after which
he was placed under 72-bour oblerva-
tJon at Hoag Memorial Hospital
Hamssa1d.
The incident began Tuesday morn-
ing when Taylor te~ooed two
friends, tell inf both be planned to kill
himself. Hams said.
Members of 1 construction crew
workmg on the house next door said
(Pleue eee BAIUUCADSD/ A2'
Agencies
me-et to
combat
dumping
BJ PAUL ARCHIPLEY
•LAURA MEJ\I °' .. ..., .......
State road crews will beg.an walk.Ing
along Ortega H1ghwa) through Or-
ange Counry Thursday in search of
11lcgally dumped toiu c wastes
The search 1s part of an inrer-
agenc) effort to locate more toxic
wastes in the wake of lasr week's
discovery of dozens of potentJall)
dcadl) chemicals th.at had been
illegally dumped along the rural south
count) htghwa}
Seven agencies met 1n San Juan
Capistrano Tuesda.y to map out
strategy for a tw0<ounty sweep an
search of tox.ac wastes and to explore
options for prevenung further 11lcpl
dumpmgs
l\ccording to Lt Mike Bau of the
Cahfom1a H1J.1:1wa) Patrol. Thun-
da) 's sweep will be a more thorough
(Pleue .ee AGENCIES/ A2)
Realtors advised
law doesn't require
AIDS notification
County forms foundation
to fund park developments
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of ... ...,"'4 .....
Respondina to fears about potential lawsuits. the Cahfomia
Associat1on of Realtors is reminding its members that current law docs
not require them to tell clients whether home's seller suffered from
AIDS.
"We recognize that it is a sensitive issue and we're not $OinJ to
itJtore it," said Kevin Sweeney. the association's communicallons
manager. "But right now there s absolutely nothina in the law that
requires a Realtor to disclose or not disclose anythinc about AIDS."
Published reports this weclc said the Realtors assoclailon was
advisina qents to tell clients whether the home they were interested in
buying was owned by an AIDS victim. (Pl ....... AID8/A2)
By LISA MAHONEY
OllMO.,Nelltllll
Faced with an S 18 m1lhon budget
cut over the next five years. the
Orange County Parks and Recreation
Department is counting on pnvate
donatfons and an increased reliance
on revenue·aenerating projects 10
finance its capital plan.
Told by county supervisors not to
count on local service d1stnC1 funds
for park acquisitions and pr0&!'8ms in
cominc yean. the Harbors, Beaches
and Parts Comm1ss100 in December
cut its anticipated $46 m1lhon project
budaet to $28 m1lhon.
The action. now under review h'
.-.upen 1.-.o nal ~tafT. fea, C'> one-third of
the department's fivc-~ear wish hst
unfu nded. so sen ·1ce d1stnct mo ntes
o nce reS<"f\ ed target) for parks can
no'>' be spent on flood co ntrol and fire
protection.
To make up for some of that
shonfall. supen,sors Tucsda) agreed
to allo~ 1he formauon of a non-profit
founda11o n. which Parks and RC<'-
reat1on Director Harold Knz.an
hopes will play a ma.1or role 1n
attracting pnvate donations for park
prOjC'ttS.
The donations could financt pro-
JC'tt!> "h1ch. for one reason o r another .
don·t rate high on the county"s
priont) hst but could be considcn:d
worthwhile undcnalt1ngs for the
Parks and Recreatio n Dcpanment.
KnZJtn said
That m1ght include some of the SO
prOJCCtS left unfunded under the
budget-slashing order as well as m<>R
than a dozen banging 1n the ~
wh~ supemsors aC1 on the capital
plan 1n two weeks.
In Its December mect1na. the
Harbo~. Beaches and Parks Com-
m1ss1on added SC\ eral m1Uion dollars
(Pleue eee COUJlfTT I A2)
Couple establish reward
fund in hit-run accident Susu
HoWL£TT
Saddleback College
increases security
f~llowing stabbing
Hoping to 'Catch driver who put youth
inhospttalanda ertj ersto angers
A N~n Be8ch couple is hoping
trqedy W'lU ,enaate awarmes. in the
cue of 1 COila Mea youth filhtu'I
for his life after a hit•nd·ND accident
on Irvine Avenue lut Sunday.
Bill and Carol Barren bave Cltab-
lilhed I reward f\and for lnfonnltion
leedina to the anat and convklion of
the motoritl reepoesible for die
ecdcleat. which ha left I ~yemo.old
Claude Huben in critical coeclhion al
Foun1ain Valley ll,..onal H09Phal.
"Wllatc'Vef we cu do." M Carol linen. "Someone Md to hive teen
iomctluna and ma)be this will lftUe
thm\ ~mcmbtr." -
Airpon, said J im Barrett.
The Barrens said they were an the
area when Hubert was struck b~ a car
at 7:21 p.m. last Sunday, but did not
witness the accident.
Huben wu hit wtuk Jotllnt With
hiuittcroo lrviM Avenue Mat 20th Stree\. The Barretta went to help
Hubcn wtien tMy heard hi1 sister
tcramina.
When they tried to admintlter ftnt
aid lO $t teverly i""'ured youth. they
fch mucb of tbe tame betpialnell
ti.I inveatilaton att now dellins wtdl ia tM1r battle to pther clua in
tMC*.
Ne~ 8mdl Police. WaUiem
Met ... llid lk taftld.lllboe ....
tumed up h leld.s anct no tVldtntt. .. We have .....,,..,. ..-o. .. Mein·
Foru s ON THE NEw s
nil Mid. He~ that invest1pton
act\&Ally ·~ the ~oe for any parude of evidence.
Hubtn'1 s.i1ter. Patna& Huben.
sa1d she wu ninnina 1n front of her
bf'o&ber on tbeoon.bbouftd side.of Ow
busy IUftt when bet brother "NaS
stNCk. She dacnbed lbe car as a llrae
I 980a Ammcan.,m• ~n. pou-
ibly daft in~. In'"""'°" impounded 1 limou· aine owfted by a Newpon 8eKb
ra.dent Tuetday, but rtleued 1t to
the owacr 1bt 1a1M day. Mclnru'
.... HI iud the car WU tD\'C'IUptcd
by pOticC becaute 1t had bl~ ftbn1 on
(Pl11•-awMA/AI)
11 PRIL SNEIDDMAN ................
Slddlebtck CoUtgt offictals <k--
Cldcd Tunday to increase evcn1na
securit_y patrols by campu.s p0htt on
the M1u1on V'<JO campus. wbett a
2).year-old female su.adent wu stl~ to dta1.J\ over the wee end.
Family iMmbm and hnds of the
vtctun. Robbtn Brandley ofl...launa
8tKh. arc prepennt to attend 1
tMmonal 1CN1Qe for her today
8ta.ndky·s body waa fovnd tn a
campus parklftt lot late turday
n•t bet* her brown Cbctt~t
Sk had bttft scabbed to dealh. EarlJCr
an the evn1ftl,. &ht had beet\ IJ\ Utltef
at a SldcUebetck ,a.a ~and Md
lllCDded I~ I~
• ••
SECURITY INCREASED •• •• ..._Al
......._ Ambtote Aid \be colleee Brandley. wbo bad been a fine an1
._ not yet decided wbetbtt to and communications major.
npud \be le1Vice to weekends to .-er activida such a.I wt Satur-.. Eve~body really hked Robbin -
.,.., ClOnCa't. ahe didn 1 a~ to have an enemy 1n
the world,' said Jim Lane. manqer ""::n.e Oraqe eo,::r Sberifrs De-of the Saddlebtck campus radio
1*unent annnou that its depu-station KSBR where Brandlev had ties will abo lncreue evenina petrols worked u a disc jockey. "We're all
lbe Miaion Viejo campus. tJtjide ourselves Wltb srief. We bave
,~Tbe memorial aerviet for Brandley ~:i:,!~ as to wby someone would do
ia1 ecbeduled fot 2 p.m. today at Alncbo C.pistrano Community Lane is a faculty member who had
Church, 2925 I Camino Capistrano, lauabt Brandley in 1tweraJ cla.ues. He ta Juan Capistrano. said she was very eerious about her
-t · communications studies and wu .. 'l'lrandley's motbtt, Oendle Re-preparina to CQntinue them at a four-
)i{fV.-aid the service would bco(>Cn year unjversjty after this semester. 'Uiibe j)ubti~. She said college officials .. h was a double t.rqedy because
iAd Brandley's friends would be she bad just dilCOvercd wbo she wu
permined to speak. ••1 don't want it to and what she wanted to do with her be terribly formal, .. she said. . ... _ " Lan• •• ;d '~ -........ ~--. Reilley said t.be family bas received Ke said the weekend $layin1 bas
many calls from her da~ter•s prompted worries amona other stu-friesr.k at the collqe. She wd the dents. .
fwuly hopes to establish a scholar--••rm concerned about the safety of
sftip fund at Saddleb9ck in honor of all of our people, .. Lane said.
Teen-ager
found guilty
ofslayings
LOS ANOELE.S (AP)-A tecn-qe
pna member bu been convicted of
four counts of fint-dearee murder for
the slayinas or tbe mother, sister and
two nephews of a former foot bell star,
a jury announced Tuesday.
Tiequon Aundray Cox. 19, C®Jd
face the death penalty when
sentenced because the j ury allO
convicted him of the "special ci~m
stance'' of multiple murder in the
deaths.
Former UCLA and NFL footbell
player Kermit Alexander's mother,
Ebora AleuDder. S9; her dauahta,
Dietria Aleunder, 2<4; and herJf'U'd·
sons Damani Garner, 13, and o.mon
Bonner, 8, were shot to death in tbe
older woman's Los Anteles home
Aua. 31 . 198".
·AGENCIES MEET TO COMBAT DUMPINGS •••
From Al
search than was conducted last week-
end when C1"eWI cbecked tum outs and
other' &rea$ 'adjacent to the highway
4tkre violaton could easily and ~Y dump toxic wast,s. Nothing
---t11at1t:nund in that search. Bair sajd,
-• .,~we·u be look.in& to sec if there is
anytbina we couldn•t 6bscrve when
Jeokina from the hiJhway." he said.
rMaybe soq)etbfoa under the trees or
~that ·wasn •t observable.··
'"Should CalTrans crews find any-1bina in this week's search, which is
'NpeCted to last through Sunday. the "Ota.Die County Fire Dcpanment's
Hazardous Wastes Team wtll be
brought in.
Tbe highway patrol will asmt
CalTrans on a sjmilar sweef on the
....Riverside Cow:ll¥ side 0 Oncp
Hi&hway, Baar said.
fo addition, the U.S. Forest Ser-
vice, which patrols the Cleveland
National Forest lands that abut
Onega. will check off-road din trails,
while teams from the county fire
dcpanment. lhe county Environmen-
tal Management Agency and the
California Fish and Game Depart-
ment will inspect county land.
\ The &Jendes qrced to meet apin
after thtS week•s sweeps to discuss
establishment ofan organization that
would handle the toxic waste disposal
problem--oou~de. as well as seek
P.rcventive measu~ns.ir future
11lcaaJ dumpin'5, Bair said.
Representatives at Tuesday's
mectma came from the California
Highway Patrol, lhc Orange County
Sheriffs Department. CalTrans, the
Orange County Fire Dcpanment, the
Orange County Health Department.
the U.S. Forest Service and the state
Fish and Game Department.
'BARRICADED MAN FLUSHED OUT •••
TromAl ~friends amvcd to talk to Taylor. 'bdt didn't take his suicide threats
seriously. '"' ,.. llowever. he was playing with a ~<!Jun._ and dnnking heavily,
]l.arris said.
· As bis fncnds were leaving the}
illlard him fire a shot, but wbcn they
.no back in they found him un-
harmed.
.-~0ne of tbe visitors ran to a
·abiabbor's house to call the police
who arrived atabout 11 :40 a.m.
• 1 I aylor fired a couple of more shots
ffside the house, and a SWAT unit
Wiscallcdoutat 12:30p.m.
-''"Next door neighbor Ray Watson,
lfanner president of the Irvine Co. and
'how an lrvineCo. board member and
chainnan of the board for Disney
tPtoductions, said he heard Taylor fi re
ooe shot before police evacuated the
.rt&.
r. Police used his house as a lookout
point. Watson said.
·"About 80 homes were evacuated,
tand police cordo ned off the neigh-
borhood.
Taylor's wife, Judy, a
schoolteacher in the Newport Unified
School District, was notified and
waited anxiously at a neighbor's
home throughout the afternoon.
"We established contac1 with him
by telephone," Harris said. "He'd
occasionally pick up the phone but
wouldn't talk to us."
Police repeatedly lost contact with
Taylor throughout the afternoon.
They suspected he was passing out
ofT and on because of bis heavy
dnnk.ing.
Police briefly considered bringing
1n a helicopter to hover over the
house and awaken Taylor, but the
EastblutT neighborhood is under the
John Wayne Airport takeoff pattern,
and the maneuver would have re-
quired closure of the airport.
Just before 5 p.m. they detonated
several M-80s. which arc similar to
small sttcks of dynamite, to rouse
Taylor.
After repeated attempts via tele-
phone and bullhorn to persuade
Taylor to leave his house, police fired
the tear gas.
Taylor was reportedly depressed
about financial and health eroblems
over the past year, H'arris said.
He was gettina back on his feet
financially after bis business went
benkrupt four years ago when he was
in a serious auto accident last summer
that left him panially immobile.
The IRS recently attached his
peycheck. and most of his funds are
tied up in bankruptcy coun, Harris
s,ajd.
Nei_altbors dcscnbed_ Taylor as
pleasant and fncndly.
Ray Watson's wife, Elsa. said. "I've
only talked to him once or twice. but
he seems like a very nice man ...
"He's a super guy who's j ust had a
bundle of problems recently." said a
man who desenbed himself as a
friend.
A neifbborbood youth said. "He's
really ruc.e. He was always out there
helpmg his son work on a float for the
f rcsbmen parade."
COUNTY· FORMS PARKS FOUNDATION •.•
Pt om A l
worth ofproJCCts at their proponents'
111Jlng. despite staff recommen-
dt::tions to the contrary.
Because of that, supervisors agreed
to delay cons1dcrat1on of the capital
plan Tuesday to give their stalls more
1imc to study the differenc~ between
the commiss1on-recommended pro-
jects and the smaller list proposed by
~arks and recreation staff.
'1ncluded in that limbo is the family
'h'ome of Madame Helene ModJeska
and a permanent mooring for the
Pilgrim, a 98-foot replica of a ship
itsed by explorer Richard Henn
'l!>ana.
I
Comm1ss1oners agreed to set aside
SI million for the possible purchase
of the Modjeska house and $400,000
for the mooring despite their low
priority with stafT members. A mu-
seum in the old Santa Ana
courthouse. a program at the Explora-
tory Leaming Center an Santa Ana, a
parking lot at Los Coyotes and a trail
m Hot Spnngs Canyon· were also
added to the staff list along with about
eight projects under $50,000 apiece,
Knzan said.
Supervisor'> want 10 take a careful
look at the additions. panicuJarly the
moonng. said Dan C Wooldndge.
chief aide to Supervisors Chamnan
Ralph Clark.
Whether a historically significant
house. a sculpture garden or a special
event, Krizan sees setting up a
foundation as one answer to funding a
project that may have captured the
unagination -but not the purse
strings -of the county.
Attracting influential people to
serve on its board of directors is a
must. as is obtaining tax-exemP.t
status, be said. "The foundation will
provide an opponunity for people
who want to contribute to the county
money or goods and services an easy
way to do so." Krizan said.
·REW ARD FUND ...
i'r";,mAl
It will also 11ve the county a means
of soliciung funds for desired projects
and programs. he said.
Along with turning to the private
sector for projects that may be "nice"
but not "necessary," the county will
have to increase the revenue-gcnerat-
mg potential of1ts parks, Krizan said.
the nght front side. Huben was
wcanng blue sweatpants when he was
hit. he explained
The suspect 1s currentl}' being
s ought for felony hll-and-run dnv1ng.
If Huben dies, that charge Wlll change
JO vehicular manslaughter
,,•·Mcinnis said the dangers of run-
ning in the street 1'1 something all
Joa&crs should sec clcarl) through this
Yraged) A dnver failing to SCCje>ggen
irt the street could hat them without
being 1n v1olatJon of the law, he
explamcd.
Nothmg 1s kno"n about the person
who ned the scene without stopping
or slowing down. according to Patnca
Hubert.
Barrell -.aid although the pcatn can
hard I} be erased. some of the person's
guilt ma) be eased by coming for-
"ard
··Somebod} out there has to be Just
sack about th1-.." Barrett said.
An example of one moneymaker
already set an motion is a planned
execut1ve·s1zc golf co urse at Mile
Square Park in Fountain Valley.
Like the existmg Mile Square Golf
Course. the smaller-than-full-size ell·
ecutivc course will be leased to an
operator who wall pay the county a
percentage of the profits.
A bid opening 1s set for March 17.
GRAND JURY EXONERATES OFFICERS .... ~romA l
Xllaargcs., ruling that police conducted maintenance ""orkers. who repai nted Christopher Strople. who was then
•illegal search of the boat. a moonng sign at the public dock less presi<lingjudge at the Newport Beach
-: 'Bos I d d than t-wo hour~ after he ordered courtho use. · . tromfa 50 or ere a contempt photographs of the faded sign. Strople said the allegations were -ll~arang or Detective David · k d h G d J
"Szk.aradek. The Judge said the detcc-The sign . \31d Bostrom. was critical ~nou~ and as e t e ran ury to
'lNe chanacd his testimony midway to the case because 111tated that boats investtpte.
dorina the heanng and ma} have could not dock fo r mort than 20 ~oliet said they have been antici-
tried to intent1onall) mislead the mmutc'I patina a response from the Grand ~n Jury for weeks but had no advance
· Bostrom ult1matel} decided not to word on wbat tho findinp would be.
The Judge said he also was hold a contempt charge but for-··we're very happy with the Grand
,.P.p1c1ous of the actions of two c11y warded the entire matter to Judge Jury repon," said Lt. Gary Petersen.
MAIN OfflCI
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64 ao It LOlllt 71 41 L.-83 SS
~ u 21 .,.....remcie 71 46 = .. .. LOCATIOll 11111 DA
~.a.c. t7 21 IMLalleClly • IO .. ~ ZulNlmdl 2A w
~Ott 42 2& l.nAnteNo 71 41 54 41 Sent• Monica 24 w
c-d,N.H • • --~,, .. a • ...,_,.. 10 .. ~~ M w
~Wont! n 61 ....... 47 • MOITUlll .. " 84111 '*'° Cloolnly M w
0..-47 22 ... '."l:ort n 51 ....., eo .. OultOoli lor Wtdl , >·'-'""~ .... ....,_ 83 51 0..-41 » ....... » 20 o.....,_ .. 21 ""*-• 12 ....... .. 45
o.Oll • M ~-M S1 =9-dl .. 52 Tldea 51 .. 10 •7 -----.. SI Onttrto ,........... .Q2 ·20 T-~ '"'° 2t 10 TUIM ~""""°' 78 43 TODAY I ,,.....,. .. .. Flrll low 12:0t ...... 2.7
:::-: ... u 51 21 Wlllfllnglon A 11 ,,_ "°""' 51 31 ::4:1'1ow l:IOLm. 5.1 t6 M WlcHta u 11 .......... .. 43 2.-GI p.m s0,4 .... , ... *' 12 Wlll-e.ne ... » ,_.....,.. " 39 9-ICI lllOfl 1;4tp,m u 0.•llllO:o,N.C 83 n ~Cfty 12 47 TMUReDAY ~ '° M Eztendecl -.... to 5e 40 Finl low 12-51 a.m :·: ....,. " 1) ...._ 12 ,. ::'0::1'1ow 7:07 L"' HoflOMu a 16 ... .._...IO .. 43 2-.Up. .... sO 7 HouMon ,. 57 P8111ydowdy ,.,._, ~ tllMi ~ l.nGellfMT 71 47 SecondNQll 1·150.m SI lr.dlel 1111 IJl!e 81 26 ::::r_,a .. 53 .-.-.Ma. 71 " tnel ...... ...__..._
11 50 ""'-M 32 wllll ._, ~ .. .... ... ~Joee llO 45 Sun r1tM IOCI.., at 1:541 L"'. encl .... ~Cfty .. aa cenyor-. ,.,.. ...... ::";'.tot ...Ma II •• :z::,a15·1Sp.m LAIYao-., • 10 mid 10.. ~ IMo ... on ......... 112 45 rteet tocMy .. 2: 10 P·"'· encl .... Lii* ..... 72 50 ..,,,..., end .... Lo. In ... 40e ...... CNI 51 45 ~ .. 4.30 •"' LOlllllwlle • 2t 10 lower IOI,
AIDS NOTIFICATION NOT ADVISED •••
F rom Al
Such notification could help agents
avoid lawsuits'even if there is no I.I
requirement to do so, the reports said.
·An attorney representing the CAR
was quoted as saying, .. The reality is
that agents are being sued and
threatened with lawsuits if they do
not disclose this." 1
But Sweeney said those reports,
culled from the association's meet-
ings last week in San Francisco. are in
error.
··There's no story;" he-Slid Tues-
day. "Yes, our board of directors
discussed the issue, but did not
recommend o r advise our Realtors to
disclose anything concerning the
AIDS issue.·
Sweeney said the statewide associa-
tion tries to educate its members
about current lecislation and issues
that affect real estate. Followin_f the board's discussion ofadvisinachents
about AIDS. directon said there were
no Jaws requiring such disclosure.
Sweeney said.
Medical studies indicate that the
ac.qufred immune deficiency syn-
drome virus cannot survive o utside
body fluids or water. and thus poses
no nsk to the occupant of a house or
apartment where an AIDS patient
lived.
While the CAR board made no
recommendations concerning AIDS
disclosure, Sweeney admitted the
topic bas been discussed often lately
"among real estate agents throughout
California.
But if the agents arc discussing it
among themselves, they arc reluctant
to be quoted publicly.
Numerous directon and officers of
the Newpon Harbor-Costa Mesa,
Irvine and Hunt.inaton Beach-Foun-
tain Valley boards declined comment
or referred inquiri• \0 the CAR when
contJtct«d T~•Y·
But a Lquna Beach real estate
agcni: who requested anonymity.
sa.id, 'My penonal feeling is that W'e
need to sec some legislation tbat
wouJd clarify that it (AJDS) is not
communicable (except) in some very
limited ways. We have to reduce the
hype and unfounded fear and panic
over the issue."
Another Laguna Beach agent, wbo
also asked that his name not be used,
said Realtors look to the CAR for
appropriate gujdlclines on disclos.urc
laws.
Legally, agents arc required to
mfonn clients of anything that miaht
lower the property value of a home
they arc considering buyina. said
Larry Alamo. an attorney for the state
Department of Real Estate. But such
requirements do not depend on what
the client deems significant, he said.
But local real estate aaenu said the
con-rn• ,...pa. luov~ ov,.r 4 IJ)S
complicates matters.
IRVINE CO.TAX HEARING DELAYED •••
From Al
must be resolved before the dispute 1s
aired.
A new appeal hearing is set for July
14 and Currie agreed to huddle with
county attorneys to set a schedule for
arguing other issues before the ap-
peals panel.
At issue is $31.8 million in propeny
taxes that the giant landholder says It
does not owe.
O range County reassessed 68,000
acres of Irvine Co. land after com-
pany C hairman Donald Bren
purchased a majority interest in the
finn in April 1983. The reassessment
boosted the firm's tax bill from SI 7.8
to SSI million and prompted an
appeal from Irvine Co. officials.
Webster Guillory, head of manage-
ment services for the Assessor's
Office, said be was frustrated by the
delay. "We're really concerned about
the delay after 18 months because we
want to get on with it," be said.
Assessor's staff bad reviewed their
material o n the reassessment and
were ready Tuesday, Guillory said.
And, since the Irvine Co. says that
assessment is wrong. Guillory won-
dered why the company 1s not
prepared to argue its position.
"You say we're wronf; We say &JVC
us the facts and figures. • he said.
But Currie contends there arc
several issues that must be decided
before proceedina with the appeal,
inclu4jna who must bear the burden
of proof.
The county and the landowner arc
at odds over fundamental questions
such a.s whether the sale of stock to
Bren should automatically have trig-
gered a new U1C1Sment. he said.
Also u·nrcsolvcd is who should
have the burden of proof in the tax
dispute, Currie said. Nonnall.Y, it is
up to the aps>ellant to prove his case,
but tbe Irvine Co. -citing the state
Board of f.qualiz.ation's Rule Two-
believes it is up to the assessor to
defend himself in this instance.
Assessor Brad Jacobs set the value
of the Irvine Co.'s 2,200 parcels at
S3.2 billion -S 1.8 billion more than
the fa ir market value of Bren's
purchase.
Ruic Two places the burckn of
proof on the assessor whenever
assessed value Cllcceds fair market
value.
Another complication in the tu
hassle is a recent ruling by the Board
of Equalization that a November
1983 merger between the Irvine Co.
and Newco I Corp. of Michipn
constitutes another cbanae of own-
ership.
That rulina st>cllsa second rcasscu-
mcnt for the propenies involved and,
although that probably won't mean a
significant change in valuation,
another reassessment would mean
the Irvine Co. is liable for supplemen-
tary roll payments for that year,
Guillory said.
What that means in dollars and
cents hasn't been determined. and the
Irvine Co. wants an answer. Currie
said.
SHUTTERS SPECIALLY
PRICED
(
Capture the outdoors
and create comfort
with these custom
moveable shutters
. In the colors,·
sizes and
styles you wantl
....
I I
Teen Jogger, who wu
struck by a hit-and-run
driver Sunday, dlee of
lnJurlel./ Al
California
Shutdown at San Onofre
Nuclear Generating Sta-
tton due to power failure,
called algnlflc.nt./ Al
Immigration offlctala
· claim lncreulng vlolence
along the border won't
atop untll Jobs for aJlena
are wrtalled./ Al
Nation
Environmental rotec-
tlon Agency alma for total
ban on aabeatos./ M
World
Thirty-eight people per-
ish In luxury hot .. fire In
New Deihl./ Al
Paparaul
Search Foundation
chapter forms to aid
substance abuse victims
In Orange County.I•
Sparta
University outlaats
Woodbridge to highlight
prep buketball./81
The lndtvlduaJ matchups
In the Super Bowt are
anaJyzed./IM
Entertainment
South Coast Repertory's
funny "Foreigner" has
had visa extended./ A7
INDEX
Boating 88
Erma Bombeck A8
Bridge A8
Bulletin Board A3
Business 86-7
Classtfled 810-12
Comics A9
Crossword A8
Death Notices 89
Entertainment A7
Horoscope A8
Ann Landers A8
Opinion A10
Paparazzi 88
Police Log A3
Public Notices 83, 5
Sports 81-5
Tefevtslon 87
Weather A2
Mechenlcal problem•
d•l•J•d dellverr of
tod9J'I DellJ Piiot. We
regret the lnconvtencee.
THURSDAY, JANUARY. 23, 1986
F'19eeway protest fizzles
Only 25 motorists tum out to demand
car poo opened to all drivers
By LllA MAHONEY ... ..., ........
Today's first freeway protest in-
tended to Jet state and cou.nty officials
know how some commuters feel
about the Cotta Meu freeway car
pool lanes was less than a resoundina
success.
Only about t.S motorists decked
out their vehicles with a red antenna
streamer and a sian callina for an end
to experimental car pool lanes u the
Driven for Highway Safety urpd.
But orpnizer Joe C. Catron says
he's confident the rollina procest
movement wiU pick up steam u
oeoole learn more about it. · "~'s j ust too many angry
people out there that are drivin1 that
freeway who think· the four lanes
should be open to all," he said.
Catron'• 7S-member committee is
intent on coovincina the state De-
partment of'Traospo,nation, the Or·
l.DJt Couoty Transportation Com-
m11sion and the Oranae County
Transit District to remove ex-
perimenw car pool lanes on a 12-
mUe ~ of th~ Costa Mesa
Freeway aDd open the lanes to all
driven.
Committee members say lhe lanes
are unsafe bccau1e they allow car
'i>OO&en to drive al hiab 11*41 ri&ht
next to ltop-and:fO ~hour tn1lic.
They are also dasutilfied with the
lanes' construction wbjch pins lane
users between a wall of can a.od the
median barrier . Startin& today memben ofDriven
for Hi&hway Wety made their daily
commute down the .S.S freeway with
beadli&hu slarina. sUQ.men atream· .1na and rear window placar4s that say
"stop .S.S car pool now."
In an effon to encouraae other
motorists to do the same, commi.aee ...
memben will be polled at heway
rampa staJtina Wedoctday to Mad
out red streamers to thoee who wut
tbem.
.. This will be somethina that will
build up over a period or time,"
Catron said,
Driven for Hiahway Safety will
also conduct ill own count ofmotor-
asts who use the car pool lanes to 1ee if
as many people are \&Sina. it u
Caltrans claims, he said.
(Pleue ... CA.a POOL/A2)
Family, rr1en s -~~-spect arrested
vowto
forgive
Memorial service
held for murdered
Saddleback coed
~
By PHIL SNEIDER.MAN
Of .. ...,,... ...
Friends and family members at a
memorial service for slain Saddle-
back Colleac student R obbin
Brandley oraed her troubled
mourners to focus on pleasant
memories rather than the senseJeu...
nC$S of her death; on forgiveness
rather than ~ir.
About 300 people filled the san~
tuary of Rancho Capistrano Com-
municy Church in San Juan
Capistrano Wednesday afternoon in
honor of Brandley, a 23-year-old
La&una Beach resident who was.
stabbed to death last Saturday in a
campus pukiq lot Police have
made no arrests in the slayina, nor
identified any motive for the attack.
On the church altar, color photos of
Brandley were surrounded by yellow,
pink and white flowers. Of'ficiatina
was the Rev. Robert Anthony
Schuller, son of Crystal Cathednl
pastor Rohen Schuller.
Schuller opened the service by
asking Brandley's friends to "find a
spark of hope and a glimmer oflov~"
in her death. In later remarks be agaJD
urged mourners not to react with
bitterness.
"Somebody chose not to love one
of the most loving people we had,"
Schuller said. "Tragedy has struck,
but our freedom remains.... (God)
gives you the choice to love o r not to
love. Tcacb love -that's what
Robbin would say."
He added. "The family bas chosen
to Jove. They have chosen to forgive."
Schuller's observations were
echoed by Genelle Reilley. the vic-
tim's mother.
"Unconditiollal love 1s the
answer," Reilley a.id. .. The person
~ --·llOIUAL/A2)
..., ........... .., .............
Genelle Reilley ub moarnen to forat.e Iler da~ter'•
killer at Memorial eenlcea. Wltla Iler la Jobn Reilley, fa tiler
of tile Ylctim, aobblD Brandley.
in ertega road
.toxic dumping
Three Arch Bay man
free on bail, ordered
to court next month
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. ..., ........
A resident of exclusive Three Arch
Bay who was arreslCd Wcdnesda)' on
suspicion of dump1~~xic chemicals
alona the Ortqa · way was re-
leased from.OranaeCounty Jail today after posting $20,000 bait
Richard Duane Leavitt. 37, 1s
suspected ofbavin& a hand in at least
one of three dumpinJ incidents on
Ortep Hiahway, whacb was closed
twice last wee1r so authonties could
dispote of the potentially lethal
toxins.
The dumped maten.a.ls present the
most dangerous toxic hazard ia
• county history. sa1d Bob Mcnyman1 director of county environmenw
health services.
Leavitt. described as both a builder
and 1mponq, was ordered lo appear
Feb. I 3 ID South Oranae County
MurucipaJ Coun in ~ Nipd to
face charges of dumping bazardOus
matcnaJ - a felony.
If convicted., he could be Jai)ed and
fined $.S0,000 for each dumped
chemical.
During a late-hour interroption
Wednesday. Leavitt implicated bis
brotbCT, who bas qreed through an
attorney to talk with authorities
todal, wd California Highway Pa-
trol t. Mike Bair.
Bair would not say whether any
arrest l s expteted.
"Our feelin• is that others must be
m volved 10 this.'' said Ora.nae C.ou n-
(Pleue eee TODC/ A2)
OC's water wells
to be tested for
contamination
By Pl(IL SNEIDERMAN
Of .. ~ .......
About 300 wells that provide
drinking water for most of Orange
County wiU be tested dunng the
coming year because traces of a
cleaning solvent -a suspc<'tcd
cancer-ausiog aaent -have b«n
found in several Nonh Orange Coun-
ty wells.
The monitoring Procram was an-
nounced by the Oran~ County Water
District, which manages the county's
vast underground basin. Distnct
officials said the dJScovery poses no
immediate drinkmg water hazard.
Nercus Richardson. a distnct engi-
neer, said the concern focuses on the
chemicaJ trichloroethylene. TCE..
which once was widely used as a
cleaning solvent Because It 1s rarely
used today. Richardson believes the
contamina11on 1s a result past dis-
posal pracuccs
"It could have cas1ly happened
more than 15 years ago... he said.
"Once It gets in lhc water. It doesn't
seem to go away. It doesn't float on
the surface of the water hke psohoe.
It mixes with the water··
Richardson said TCE has been
detected in water supplies m lhe San
Fernando and San Gabnel valleys
and said he was surpnsed 1t hadn't
turned up sooner 1n Oranac County.
Last summer. the chemical was
found 1n two Irvine wells used only
(Pleue eee WAT&R/A2)
State high court to hear theater noise case Radioactive waste
on OC freeways?
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of .. Dlllr,... ...
The state's highest coun will decide
whether Costa Mesa residents can sue
the Oranac County Fair Board and
owners of the Paafic Amphitheatre
for not UPIJ'lldina environmental
studies when plans for the arena were
e~panded.
Concerned Citizen~ of Costa Mesa
Inc. petitioned the California Su-
preme Court after beinJ denied by
appellate j ustices in October 1985.
The supreme court accepted the cue
Dcc.16.
The lower coun ruled the en-
Vironmental complaint wu void
because it was filed after the 180-day
1tatute of limitations. The clock be&an tick:ina when construction
IW1ed in early 1983.
Rua Millar, president of the home-
owners poup, wu excited that resi-
dents were now mak:ina 10me head-
way throuah the procedural t>.ttles
that have stalled litilatioa for two
yean.
"I think nobody on the other side
hao any thou&hT that we could t&U it
this far," said Millar on Wednaday.
"We think there's a Sood chance
justice will prevail."
The lower court had ruled that the
Control One holds
county together
in emergencies
• r
croup could sue amphitheater and
fair officials o n the grounds that noise
and other disruptions from the
18,79.S-apacity arena created a pri-
vate nuisance for residents.
However, appellate justices threw
out the environmental complaint as
weU as the alleption that the 21/2-year-
old amphitheater was a public
nuisance.
Millar said the environmental
u~t of the suit was the main issue.
It challenaes ffie Fafr Board and
amphitheater OW1ler Ned-West Inc.
of los Anaeles for expandina the
arena to nearly four times the .S,000-
stat capacity initially proposed in
PAUL
Ale11Pt£Y
Focus o ~ THf N H,~
In r.ct. Mid Wilton, more than two
miUioa ma1 .. are nan throup the
cieater's teletype switcbina terminab ~month.
T'Ut means.. for example, that if a
COIU Mesa rnidcnt u.ipped out on •
tnllk tdet in Eu~ and it pulled ~ b I traffic violauoa k>caU)', he
may be heeded for the ~
llMNld die ofl\cer uk Coalr'OI One to ._a dllldt oa bim.
'"We ma talk bot*' 10 bor*T-or 11~ .. Wilaaa ...... iDCNdi .. aD __ ..._.••cia So11•avcry
... .,_aeelO .... dlelawaQd
~!•••Mn ........... ..,. ....
.,., ,_ome1.a1.:ma1A11
\\
1977.
The line-u~ was also changed from
low-key musical groups and c ultural
presentations to rock bands the like~
of"Black Uhuru," "The Scorpions."
and "Acrosmith."
Residents contend they dido'\ re-
alize the extent of the chanaes until
after the amphitheater opened 1n
mid-summer 1983 as the largest
outdoor facility on the West Coast. l'MY filed suit in January 1984. lo~ time ran out on the statute
o( limiiationi.
lf residents are allowed to sue. the>
will seek to have the Fair Board order
more environmental studies on the
amphn heater's affect on adjacent
ne ighborhoods
Costa Mesa Cit} Attorney Tom
wood said such a repon could fo~
amph1lheater owners to turn down
the volume at rock concerts or find
other ways to muffie the noise.
"This as one new step toward a
soluuon and it's we]come news..~ wd
Wood. who wrote a thrcc-paae letter
1n December urgana the hi&h coun to
accept the case.
Stymied 1n ats own lepl attempts to
quieten the amphitheater, the city has
contributed $6,000 to help fund the
~idents' bettJe.
By LISA MABONEY
Rad1oact1H "aste shipped to tht
Po n ot Lo ng Beach from Taiwan
could t'lt' transponed ov« Orange
Co unt) frec"'a' on t wa) to a
rec;lamauon plant 10 th <:Molina.
a iEkcswoman fo tbt' California H' way Patrol said oday.
our frttwavs 1n nit Count)
arc included in a t of proposed
routts developed fi sue hazardous
matenal. CHP s an Sus.an
Cowan-Scott said ) 1 elude pans
of lhc Santa Ana. San ego. Costa
(PleueeeeW TE/A2)
Ocean View school& ~dopt
guidelines on AIDS kids
eluded ftom tchool for the ICVCO to I 0
dayi \bat the ~ cond1uoos
team MlldM!I lait CODditJon and con-
fen witb medical e•pen:s.. aocordtna
to Superintendent Dale Coopn.
••Tbia lllllt D IO vo&atiJe aad lbc1r's
IO muda mili.afonnatioe, •• Ccqan
.UCS W•sr tay. °'TMrc's DO realOn
10 bdieft it (AIDS) wall bit us aft)'
IOGeel' dlM ~die. But the aaw ol n•rsa 1 •.r it it .-.. to ...............
Ca I llid M t.M .ectic:e' *"'
wil cMc:k Wida -dUld'• .........
wtda ~ C09aty ~ ofticm belal9 tnH• a ..iommendaa.ioo on
whetMr the younptcr W'lll be read~
m1tttd lo tM clallroom 01' be reo-
ommen<kd Corbomestudy iftheft'sa
hkehhood that the vinas could be commun1clled Tbt Board of
Trustees woukt make \M final de-
c:isaon.
lftbe child is 1nd1ncd toward sudl
ICtivities u bttina that could -.s '°
lbe transnussaon of ~ h"c munc Defiaa.cy rome. he
would m~ hkely be hdd OUl of
ICbool •• ~ Qqu lald.
.. ,, 11 my \lDdemudi.11 diet AIDS
can be nnrauned wta tbe aurier'a
body h.9dl aft allf'wed imo die .....
JVat.m of UO*:r .. he llid. ...,.,r,~~'°" nil
the din•i h"1 IM • '9t ...,.. •
brokca lkia ol• ...... -.... (Pl11•-•IWWW/ •
. I
,.., ... CDUllPll'fG 8U8PBC'I' ARRESTED •••
State, county begin toxic
search on Ortega Highway
..... ooaay .............. "4ay .... o/tlae0r'9 ....... y fOMJIOWIODca=kMlftW---~dleudedlruilialolli tbe twcMMe "*--1'bnle cbemic91 dumpiae iacidea11 were reported laat week by motorilu travelhli dae l&all bWawn~ ... Ii.Db 0ranee and IUvenlde oouotia u it ~ ~ 1Mcrn.1Rd Nlllioell Forat. s.a .. DiDenment ol ~ ~will walk the 16 mUee of hilbwaY wtdWa dae 0... Couty limi&a.' IOOUrina embenbnen11 and tbe brialby environs aloe& tbe~roed.
01Uee County llrefiPtcn and lllte Depenment of Fish and Game
employeel will impect tbe ro.d.
No cbemic:ab bave been fOund dumped off the roed in Rivenide County.
Tbe 1weep will mart tbe loQlelt ancf mOlt antuoua inspection of the road
to date. Tbe .-rc:b coocludel Su.nday.
Mef'f'V1n•n. -In l:'~J. ~nearly 60 cbeiD1ciii were identinea.
Some of tbe cbemicah were.blown
up by a lberitr1 bomb lquad became
the toxim were CODlidered to da.Dler-
ous to move. Odien were movecl at
couidc:rable rilt became they could
emit buardoul fumes if detonated.
laidObon.
Sheriff'• investipton said Leavitt
told them be ii unemployed. But hit
attorney, Wayne Willette of South
Lapma. dacribed bis client u an
importer. One acco\lnt identified tbe
luspect U I builder.
lavettipton have not said
wbetbe:ra ~company bu come
under auapicioo. But authorities did
1ay tbe various cbemicals all have an
application in the pharmaceutical iDaUltJ')'. . .
.. We 1tilJ bave a lot of work to do,"
noted Olaon. .. We're not finished by
any means:·
U.8. TemP9 =: t
...................... I~ =,.,
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41 IO .... 10 IO ---------40 .. 47 .. ,.,_ 17 .. 8arf U aa ~ II II n 41 LMAIWllle 17 M
II lO o.lllli • M LOCA'nOlt • II ,_....._ 11 17 .... '*"'°".._..
70 S7 ~....... ~ 4114 ...,,._,~
.• 24 --· .. 40lll ....... ~ 74 ..
.__... II 4t
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17: ... _. ......... = . ...~ .... '-"'-.. 41 .......... 17 .... a..-.. II M ....... 17 IO w .. -.: .. !: ~ ........ ,. "°'" .... 'p.111. .... .....,,.: w..i
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47 14 ~ 11 ..
• ...._. 14 ,. r'!.!!!" .,._ a ,. -
Olllillll 11 • 17 n.. .... :l::l~T--Niiial{lllllr----~ ................ Fog causes 23-car pileup in Fontan_a _
__ ..__,,..AN~ -Twenty·th~ree=--~"----a,few minor injunes, ~~ties.
can piled up m zero.visalrility foe Savqe l&id. "Everybody wu aoina Patcbel of foe slowed Loa Aneelet
here today in the wont of a rub of very slow when they started slam-area freeway uamc dwinl the mOl"&-
Soutbem California hilbway crubes mina into each otber. We bad 20 foot ins ruah. but California Hisbway
blamed on the JrO~UlllDI cloud to zero visibility at tbe time." Patrol Ofticer Janet EnaJer dacribed la~. the Califomia ffiabway Patrol Nine tow trucb and two am-conditiom u .. just the usual"
said. bu1aneel were dilpatched to the crash CHP ~&cber Jack Roten in San
A dozen people were ta.ken to three ai~1 but Savqe said the hi&hway waa Dieao County llid a teries of crubes,
holpitals, but there were no lerioua atiJ! ~· ''KVeral multicar .. were reported on
i.Vuries in the 7:20 Lm. chain-CHP Officer Harry Beckman said hiahwaya iD the Temecula and Lake
.-:tion crub in the aouthbou.nd laid one car apun out of control and Elsinore area. '"but~ eerious."
lanes oflntmtate IS, 60 miles eut of wu stnack by another bead on. Ontario latcmational Airport was
Loe ~les, CHP diape1Cbet' Dee .. We don't know why it spun out." socked in at dawn, forcina divenion
Ulna'UJd. Beet.man said.•• ... Then. it waa juat of aome ¥~ to other Southern
CHP Officer John Savaae said aaid one aft.er the other. f'rom what California auporta. Jhree cars tint collided. then other victi.nu said, the fas came down all of The San Beroardino Unified
vehicles crashed into the wrecklee. the IUdden." School Diltrict delayed butet un~ CHP cruiaen bcpn runnina etCOl1J Tbe fot wu alto blamed for other the fot lifted. makina aome 1tudent1 i~ the shroud of fas a short time accidents in Loi Anteles. San up to an hour late to clules, officials
later, be said. Bernardino, Rivenide, <>ranee and laid.
,
WATER WELLS FOUNDT AINTED •••
ham Al
for irription J>W1)0lel. he said.
In October, the chemical turned up
in testinaat the Toerima well, which ~ 10 families in Anaheim. Thole
families are now usina bottled water
• or are beina booked up to a ci_!Y
~beutd:-
December tests turned up TCE in
f pur additional Anaheim wells -two
used only for irription and two that
oon.nect with the drinkina water ~ Becauae the contaminated
water was mixed with cleaner water,
there was littl& hazard to those who
censumed it, Ricbardaon said.
Beach and Fountain Valley, Rieb-next six to l:l months becauae of the
udlOn said, the underp'ound su~y TCE findina.
bu bet1ef protection becau1e It is R~ water quality in the
under a bard clay layer that keeps out coutaJ cities, Riclwdaon laid.
some contaminents. ..Riabt now we know of no problems ~unicipal-in lfte-area-ud we don't anticipate
and small district wells throuahout any. But that doean•t mean we won't Ora.nae Cou~ty will be tested over the find any."
CAR POOL PROTEST •••
l"romAl
. .., --.. ff Wll ................... . IO II ....... 70 4t .__,low ---------==· : : .__.,. . ,. •• :: ~It.tended
TODAY l;llp..111.
llllp.111. 0.1 u
.. 44 40 II 17 11 n • .... 40 II • • •• .. .
....... • 43 ........ ..... .. u f'lrll low
Ollllfll .. .. :'::1:1' Ir-~..... 71 47 -........ 17 .. .__,. .._.... .....
...,.,
1:Jt Lift.
fi42 Lift.
l:otp,111. l\40p.111.
t.4
1.1 0.t 1.7 ....._.CO II 4t '6111--~·1:14pA,,._,,..,
........... 71 II •t:llL111.M11.-..-i•ll1lpJ111 . ... ,,_ 81 41 W-,-. iOdl¥ al l:OI II.Ill.. .... ...,,... ... 'rtlMr•ut-. ....... ...-..
..... Crw 10 41 4;00 p.111.
WASTE SHIPMENT ON OC FREEWAYS •••
hoaAl
Mesa and Rivenide freeways, she
llid.
The u-yet unadopted routina plan
will be uaed u tbe buis for the COP'1
recommendations to the U .S. Do-
~t of'Enern, she Kid. She aaid
It WU .. a ..-ibiIJtt' that the radi~
active material will pus throuah <>ranee County.
The Department of EDeTIY is rcspomib&e for oveneeina tbe radi~
actlve abiements. DOE officials
uked the CHP bow best to reach
Intentate 10-et>m the-Pon of t.onl ~tbatl
sbipmen11 of ~t nuclear fuel rods
would be amvina IWti.na in late March. Cowan-Scc>tt laid.
Under federal and llate law, inter-
state biabwaya are the P1eferred
routea for radioKtive material be-
came of their bilh desip ltaDdards
and comparatively low accident
rates, lhe llid.
The state routina plan, fint de-
veloped in l 982, is intended to move
spent fuel rods from Califomia•s
nuclear rcacton to diapou.l and
reclamation sites. No such transports
have taken place but 42 shipments of
equally bazardoua material have been
1afely carried over California ~
way1 since 1980, Cowan-Scott said.
Althouah incomplete, pans of Or-
aqe C:Ounty freeways arc inc::luded in
the plan. She identified the sections u
all of the Santa Ana Freeway, the San
Dieao Freeway from the Orante
County bordtt to the Santa Ana
Freeway, the Colta Mesa Freeway
bc1'WlCn the Santa An.a and the
R.im'lidelmeway:und.alo.na section
of the Rivenidc Freeway from Or-
~ County to 1-21 Sand State Route
60 ID Jlivenide.
"We will make a recommendation
to the DOE that will no doubt be
identical to our (proposed) resu-
tations," Cowan-Scott said. ''[f they
stay on the interstates, the 40S (San
Dieao) and S (Santa Ana) would
definitely be involved.," she laid.
Federal officials are not obliged to
follow recommended routes. Cowan-
Scott noted.
Orante County Superviaor Bruce
Nestande expressed concern
Wednesday that shipments may
come throuah on county freeways. If
that is the Gase, he wants county
aovemment to be involved in routina
discuuiona.
"We want to be cooperative and
not an obstacle," Nestande said. At
the 11me time, 1uperviaon should
take it upon t.bemaelves to ensure
public 1afety and "protect Oranae
County's interests." he said.
iCowan-Scott-.ci It ti Up to-tbe
state to decide t.be best and safest
routes for bazardout material like
spent fuel rods. Allowina local
interests to have a ay could caaase
unnecccaary delayi in transportina
material• tbrouah various juriscli<>
lions and increue the chance of a
mishap, however slight, she said.
Safety is a pnmary conocm when
choosina routes for buardoua ma-
terial, Cowan-Scott laid. The CHP ii
notified 72 houn before a lhipment
of radioactive material is scheduled.
He said contamination is more
likely in North Oranaie County bc-~uae chemicals can more easily enter
~ underpound water aupplies
c,bere.
Jn coutaJ cities such as Huntinston
Comminee members are skeptical
about the mecbanicaJ count beina
made by Caltran.s and want to 1ee for
tbemaef ves bow many vehicles in-
cluded in the state tally are actualll sinaJe occupancy vehicles that aren t
supposed to be usina the lane anyway.
Two committee meetinp bave
been 1ebeduled for car pool lane
opponents. The fint will be at 7:30
p.m. Jan. 28 at the Oraqe County
Fairpounds in Cotta Mesa. Another is aet for 7:30 p.m. Feb. 6 at the .--------------------------------------
Foxfire in Anaheim Hills.
STUDENT AIDS POLICY ADOPTED •••
l'rolllAl
be llltuti.l contact.
.. Soap and water kills the virus. It's
not strona. But once it's in the
bloodstream , it's a concern."
Coogan said the auidelines were
put in place so that district officials
won't be ovemactinJ "politically ..
when the situation amses. "We want
lo act in the interests of the younpter
(who bas AIDS) and for the common
gOOd of all younpters," he said.
Coopn said officials arc assuming
that parents of infect.Cid children will
be forthright and will tell school
officials that their children are suffer-
ing from AIDS.
Ocean View's adoption of the new
guidelines came on the same day that
'the American Civil Liberties Union
challenged a ruling by the Saddlebeck
Valley Unified School District in
Minion Viejo alleacdly prohibiting
students with AIDS from attendin&
cl us.
The lawsuit, filed 1n Orange Coun-
ty Superior Court, contends that
Saddleback Valley's decision is un-
constitutional.
O s1ru~R 1Es
Sen. Bergeson's
father, 90, dies
I van Crittenden, fatherofstate Sen.
Marian Bcrseson, R-37th district.
died Sunday night in Osden. Utah.
Crittenden. wbo was 90. is
eorvived by his four children:
Berteto~ Or. Hunter Crittenden.
Mn. c.atolyn Tyler and Mrs. Sue
Cartoon. He alJo had 13 srand-
cbildren ' and two great-arand-
dlildrtn.
Servic:a are pcndina.
°c'::A':?E Illy Piii
_...Of'l'ICI
J30 WWI l9y Sl eo.ta loleM CA ...,,__low 15e0 Cotlt ...... CA 92$29
The ACLU liled its action as a
compuion suit to one filed last
November by Deborba Phipps, the
aunt and auardian of 1 l-yea.r-old
Cbannon PliiP.J>S, a hemophiliac who
bu AIDS anubodics in his blood and
is barred from attending school.
The boy is believed to have been
exposed to the AIDS virus when he
received blood products that promote
clottina.
"The interest of (Dcborb.a Phipps)
is to ensure Channon a place in his
local schoolhouse .. the ri&hts aroup
said in Tuesday's ftlin&. ... The interest
oft.be (ACLU), however, is to ensure me leplity and soundneu of the ICbool district's policy."
R. Kent Hann, a member of the
Saddlet.ck Valley Board ofTrustees,
laid today that district policy
prohibits pupils with any contaaious
dileate from attendina IChool until
the child's doctor repons that be no
loqer potea a threat to otben.
The ACLU's filina cited statistiC1
sbowina that 80 percent of the
nation's bemophiU.Cs test ~itivc
for AIDS antibodies, althoup few of
them develop the deadly disease.
MEMORIAL SERVICE •••
holDAl
who did this to Robbin wu not loved
or could never have done this ....
Plcue aend love to the person wbo
killed Robbin, that they may never do
this apin."
Several friends also paid tribute to
Braodley1 a fine arts and communica-
tioDJ ~or who bad been active in
atudent 1ovemment and at the
Miuion Viejo campus' radio station.
Vern Hodee. auociate dean of
students, delcribed Brandley u a
"vibrant, enerwetic and carina per-
aon."
.. Robbin bas been taken from us,
but her spirit, philosophy and her
love oflifit will afways ~a put of us,"
Hodaeaaid.
Constance Carroll, president of the colle:F., said. "We've all lost aomeone
1pecial."
Carroll said the moumen were
joined in their inability to undentand
the cin:umstanca of Brudley'1
death. But she laid tbe maden11'
"silent challenle" wu ~o honor
Robbin's memory by doina Sood
works."
Cindy Caldwell. Brandley•1 friend
since childhood, recalled the Saddle-
baclc student's playful spirit and her
devotion to ~ studies.
Caldwell sugested that 1f a radio
station exisu in heaven, "I know
(Robbin) is up there 'DJ-ing' it right
now."
Ann Mineo, president of Saddle-
back's Associated Student Body and
Brandley's friend, added, "I can't say
an~na to help us understand why
th11 happened. ... I wish I could just
say to ber, 'Robbin, thank you for
your sift, for sharing just a small part
of your precious life with me.' "
Rev. Schuller told B11ndley'1
moumen f\Pt to dwell on the ques-
t.ion of "why bad thinp happen to aood people." He referred to the
Biblical story of Job, who lost his family, bis fortune and bis health but
not hi• faith in God.
"You have a decision to make
today, a decision on bow you will
react to the loss of a beautiful friend,"
Schuller said. "(God) pve her to you
for 23 yean. Nobody can take that
away .... That's God's pf\ to you. ..
M=t
~-"1·5'78 ~ & --"1-4»1 Ja•tcaU 642-6086
~l'IOIY I JOI • llOI ,_ row. ,.., .,,
• )Op.., cmllo.fOI• 1 p..,
Md rOWr copy .. tit --.... COpyf.glll Ila Ol'lll!Ot C-~ COmcNlny NO
-.. _ illUetlel'°"' .ao!Ofilll "'911 .. "' ..,..,,_
,,..,we ~ lftt'f It 191l'Oi9llCM """°"' 00.-. W
~-~-
VOL.11.llO.•
What do you like about the Daily PiJot? Wbat
don't you like? Call the number above and your mauee will be recorded, trlftlCribed and de· ti vered to the appropriate editor. ~ aame 24-bour anaweri .. service may be
uted to record Imm to the editor oa any topic.
Contributors to our Lcuen column mutt inchade t~r name and eetephone number for verifk:adon .
Tdlt us wtm"a on your mind.
._,_,,MO.,,. II
~ .. "°' , .... '°"' cop,0,1 ...... ......
10 • "' ltlO rOWr gopy .. .,.........,
cn111•1n
T1t111••1 ... =rc-y ....
i...-... --
E!
(
0rang9 Coast DAILY PILOT /Tnuraaay, Januery 23, ltM •
Student aid talks
set for UC IrVirie
Hit-run llljurte·s fatal to boy;
reward for driver Increased
A free financial aid worksbop will be held
Saturday from 10 a.m. to noon 1n UC Irvine's Scl~nct Lecture Hall for prospective students and
their _parents. UCI financ1aJ aid counselors wdl
explain the types or.aid available and how to arply.
The :-vorkshop is open to locaJ hiah schoo and
community college studctns and their parents rega~~less of where the students ~Ian to study.
Add1t1onal 1nformat1on can be obtamed by calling
the UCI Financial Atd Office at 856-6261.
Head Sta.rt hearing ln HB
• 1 The Hun11ngton Beach Head Start preschool
will conduct a public hearing Friday for its 1986-87
budget. The public 1s invtted to anend.
The program will be held at the organiutton's
headquarter<i .9191 P1oneerDnve RoomD-15at 10
a.11).Call 96l-!!191 for details '
Ballet audltlons in Mesa
The Ballet Montmartc will hold aud111ons for
Junior company members. aies 8 to 13. and stnior
members, from age 14 up. Fnday at 4 and 5:30 p.m.
at the Newport Ballet Academy. 2632 Santa Ana
Ave .. Costa Me\a.
Scholarships will be available. Those with a
commitment 10 dance are encouraged to call
646-7644 for more 1nformat1on
-CDA anniversary planned
The Court Blessed Sacrament 2024 of the
Catholic Daughters of .\menca will celebrate its
15th ann1 versal') Saturday at the Blessed Sacrament
Church , 14072 Ohve St .. Westminster.
The 5 p.m. Mass will be followed by a banquL"t al
Marmac's Pnme Rtb on Knott Avenue in Garden
Grove. Call Maunne Bacon at 894-2383 for funher
information and reserva11ons.
PC Users meet ln Mesa
The Orange Coast I BM PC User group Wlll
meet Saturday at 9 a.m. at Columbia Savings. 2252
Harbor Bl vd .. Costa Mesa.
By SUSAN HOWLE'M' °' ...............
A Newpon Harbor Hi&h School
freshman wbo was struck by a flit.and-run
driver Sunday whilcjotaina with his sister
died Wednesday aftemooo at Fountajn
Valley ResiooaJ Hospital.
Qaude H uben, 15, died at 2 p.m. of
injuries suffered in the Irvine Avenue
accident in Newpon Beath last weekend.
Police arc searchina for; the driver, who
1s now wanted for felony vehicular
mansJauahtcr in connection with the
iocidenL
Huben's 17-ye.ar-old 11ster, Patricia
Hubut, WISJoUJna io front of her brother
when he was tlNCk from behind at 7:21
p.m. Sunday. She described the hit-and-
run vehicle as a larJC, I 980s American·
made sedan. possibly dark in color. She
said the car dtd ool slow down or stop after
the accident.
Newpon Beach poli~spokesl'l'\&D Trent
Harris said investiaaton will set Ul> a booth
on Sunday at the accident scene, localed on
Irvine Avenue near 20th Street. to att.ract
possible witnesses in the cue.
"We are requestina anyone who mi1ht
have seen anyth1n1 Wt mtaht help us to
locate lhe suspect who lra8Jcally ended this
boy's bfe to pleasie Jtop at the booth,"
Harris said. "We need your help 1n our
investiaation."
A reward rund bu been estabh bed m
Hubert's name by a_ Newport Beach oouotc
who donated S 1,000 to aid the effort to find
the susJ>CCl. Tbt Costa Mesa H0tp1taJ · •
Medical Center added another Sl,000 to
the reward Tuesday
Depo its tothcrtward fund can be made
through the Setunty Pacific Bank located
on 17th Street in Costa Mesa.
UCIAsiari ·~ • seminar
jolted by
bomb call::
150 evacuated from -: ~-~ University Center.
but no device found
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
' . . . ,
,
A bomb scare marred an otherwi~
successful A~1an-Pauf1r Awareness Coo•
ferencc at lJ( Irvi n.: ~ednesd.ay when an
unkno"'n su'ipe( 1 threatened over tbc
phone to "blo" up .. those in attendance.
Campu' pohLc n acuated about I \()
people from the l 'n1 ... ers1ty ( enicr
Hcntage Room at 9 a m after the
threaten mg tails were made said C Cit
spokes" om an ( ollee n Bentle}· .\dler The featured topic will be .. larbon Cop) .. Call
96 76-5250 be1"een 4 and I I p m for more
1nforma11on. ,,..., Nee,.....~ Le.~.,_
Control One dlapetchen monitor <>ranae County radio tran•mlaeion• around the clock.
A man made th ree phone calls to tht
Studen1 .\cu ' 1t1e., olli'c: across from the
Hentagc Room a"ik1ng 1f the rnnferenCT
had beaun. Adler said ~tudenh ans"'en~
the phone said the} couldn '1 tell thl' dgl' •''
the caller h' h 1<> '01<. e ; Museum eicurslon slated
The Irvine Community Services Department's
Family Services D1 v1c;1on will conduct a tnp to the
Norton Simon Museum Saturday from 11 a.m. to 5
p.m.
Those plan1n_g to atend should meet the bus at
the Hent.age Parle. Youth Senccs (enter The fee 1s
$10. which includes transportation and admt!.S1on.
Lecture serles offered
A scnes of monthl> lectures will be ofTercd at
the Mission San Juan Capistrano Museum. begin-
ning Saturday at I 0 a m with a talk by Dr. Frank
Bock. discussing his tnp to the Easter Islands
The second lecture is scheduled for Feb. 15 w11h
a talk by Professor James Allen on the Spanish
1nnucnce 1n the America!.. The fee ofS2 includes a
tour of the ground'>. Call 4%-4no for details
An Invitation:
CONTROL ONE MONITORS COMMUNICATIONS ...
From Al
Even if the person moves out of
California, Control One has the com-
munications ab1hty to qu1 ckJy aid inquir-
ing agencies from other states. _
ltscomputcrscan pu.toperatonm tou
with the Nattonal Cnme lnformatton
Center 1n Washington. D.C. and with
computers in the state Department of
J ust1ce and Department or Motor Vehicles
1n acramento.
Launched by the county 1n 1934 at the
request of several c1t1es that couldn't
afford radio and dispatch systems of their
own, Orange County's Communicauons
D1\ 1S1on is the env) of agencies across th e
state.
Santa Clara County has the only other
countyw1de coordinated system 1n Cali-
fornia.
Although each ctty police department
and many other local agencies use their
own pnmary dispatch channels. the high
density and blurred boundanes of Orange
Count> require frequent 1nter-agcnc} co-
op:ra11on.
and fire personnel. doors
.. A lot of people are out there hstenrng. Because the rnun t\ 's S\ \tt·m inc.lude'
and you never know how many agencies several networks. e ... eri ii <._ ont rol < >ne "'ere
might be 1n the immediate v1cin1ty of the damaged. rnics "'ould c;t11l tx· abk to
suspect VCJiicle.-Wilson S~lld. --~fO""n""'crr.UOn. Pie said
The valut of centralized. coordinated But the value of the '\\!em w the:
communications would become parttCU-average Orarige coun11an I'> more ltkel~ to
larly evident in an emergency. and the be noticed in cver.da' at ti' 1t1e.-.. "'hen a
county IS prepared. fire break!> OUt, when a cnmc l'l lOrnmlll<'d,
Besides its commun1ca11 ons head-when emergenq medical 1:are '"needed
quarters in OranJe. the county has an In fact , the paramcd1cs commun1cat10ns
emergency center in Santa Ana where key system, acuvated 1n 1974. allows< ontrol
personnel from agencies across the county One to assign frequencies bet"'cen para-
can meet to monitor and direct emergency medics tn the field and nearb\ hnspnals
operations. Once the radio link ,.., made d t.·t 1rocard1 0-
Rehcarsals are held regularl) to insure gram tclemetf). as "ell as 'OKl' rom
smooth operations in the event ofan actual mun1cat1ons. 1s possible
emergency. Whatc:Hr the emergent), ( untrnl One
The importance of protecttng a coord1-1s read) to summon add111onal aid
natedcommun1cat1onssystem1sn'tloston "When something occur'i -a d1sa,tcr
us users. etther that a single agenq can't handk alone -it
That's why entry to the master control. the) call us and tell u\ "hat thn nl:cd. "c'll
subconsolcs. computers and other equip-gel 11. from sand" iches to -..ind hag' to
ment ts stnctly monitored through electnc bu lldo1ers ... Wilson ~1d
On the third tall "'hen the: \USJ)Ctt wt..,
told the conference had staned. he <;ai<f.
··o o"n \I.1th .\51an studen t'>' The' 're aft
going to hlo"' up··· a1..und1ng to .\d.ler
C ampu.-. DQ11'1: e".aLualed the con·
fc rence hall .\<1l~r c-.a1d thn"\<R'1Jattnn wa.-;
orderl} and a.,."'a"h of the hall turned uy\
no e' 1denu· nt a homh
1 hl all-da' Lon lt.•renu· "'hat h h~usct1
on the need!> and prohkm'> ot .\s1d11
student\ rnntinucd "1thout further incl·
dent
Sharie' Par~ ( hd tr of lhl: u1nfc.-rt•°'·l
planning com m1ttet \.31d 'h(' IA.-3\ \ln'·
pnsed b~ the threat ·· "n "'3' did ~I.' thin~ a°' thing hl.c ttfa.t
"'ould hapix·n ·· Park <.aid · \.\ t' didn't
thin k "C ""t' dmng a0\th1n(l ltllt
lfl1\ ef\ldl
Rut ~hl: ajtrt·l:d that lht· nl 1dent 'erH•d
111 .lhi ,trai. th(' ra, 1J hatH'l'. '"mt· peof'lt
d1rcl t .11 \,1an \1 l'nlan' Jnd that
pandl\I' ''"' t1,v·J du1 n(l. lhl'" 111l'ren"
· It hr11uJ1.h' thr p t1H hl•rnt· •h,11 ,, hJ. •
10 comha11(l.n••r.1n<l' · 'hl' ,.11d Attenuon orgamzellon presidents and sec-retaries We went to help make your upcoming events. meetings. seminars end lundra1sers suc·
cessful Send 1:>r1e1 announcements Including time. place, cost (if any) and a phone number lor
additional Information to Bulletin Board, Daily
Piiot. Po Box 1sro. Costa M .. a. 92626
Through Co ntrol One, agencies can
share channels that permit instant com-
munication across the county.
Trained dispatchers and teletype oper-
ators arc on duty around the clock. Wilson.
an 18-year veteran of Control One. was
hired as a radio dispatcher before rising
through the rank s to become operations
chief.
Senate candidates clash over AIDS
Reports of your club or organ11at1on's act1v1tles -like com munity service pro)ects or election 01 officers should be directed to the Community
News Editor at the aame addrnt Non·returnable
black and wttlte photographs are )Y91come
SACRAMENTO (AP) -An <\ID
dispute between two candidates for the
Republican nomination for the U.
Senate has erupted into the fiercest 1ntra-
party fight so far of the Senate pnmar).
Danneme~er previous!~ had a1tad1L"d
Davis for ''otmg to outla~ Job d1\{nm1na-
t10n against homme\ual\ He ha1o al\o
proposed la"'s to ban '1c11m<, ot atqu1red
1mmun1t\ deficient' .,, ndrume trom
health·<:are JObS to makl' II ,1 fel<>n~ tor
<\IDS ' 1rt1ms to donate hlO\xl and It' ha1
.\ID~' 1r1tm'> from \thool<.
Dannt'mt'\Cr' rt· 11J 1•n \II>\ , .. .,uc"
l·harged tha1 I ),1n1wml''1.'1' pr.1rx1~1,
tah·n wgt•tht•r rprt•,cn1 ··a H'u1rd 1.d
hatrc-d tugntr' an1.l \pl1111.1l111n 111 h 'll·n.i
in J <.( r .. u, hl·at•I , S1t11ng at their consoles. dispatchers are
able to monrtor and assist county agencies
across the a1rwa ves.
St.ate Sen. Ed Davis of Northndge
started the latest battle Wednesday in what
has been a seneraJly pohte race among
eight Republican hopefuls
·· 1 d1.·n11u n, r H11 l>;i 11 1H mt."'l'I ..
e'lf)OU\31 n t h1g11t1 \ I'm a'k1ng HJll
I >annemr\l·r 1 , t'<•"l .111<! dt''"' I runt 111:-.
j!J\·ha,h1n>' I >.t\ '...i1,1
Thursday, Jan. 23
If police are in pursuit of a suspect. they
can lea ve their primary channel and call
( ontrol One on the .. red" or emergenq
channel. "so e .. eryone 1s aware 11's going
on," Wilson said.
Not only arc all police departments
alened. but other agencies that use the
communications system also arc tuned in,
includmg the District Attorney's Office.
Davis accused U.S. Rep 8111 Dan-
nemeyer of Fullerton of "bigotry·· and
"gay-bashing" for political gain.
In a <,tatemenl he later retrJdt'd
Danneme\Cr al\O a'>~·ned dunn(l. ,1 tour
announung his tand1dac~ la\t month that
<\IDS \lttims should be ha ned trnm
health care JObS bctJ USC the\ "l"Oll! 'PMt·,
that ha'e tx~n l.no"'n tn au'tt' btnh
defects ..
Dan nl'n1l'\ l"' \ rr (.'" 'P' •i..t•Vtl.111 Du.t ill
( rumh \J1.l ht• ,,,1, '.irpn,t·d h' 1tu
"unfair \tah'nll'nh .111.I 1h,111r11un, .. '"
!>J' , .. · rc:m.ir~'
• 6:30 p.m .. Laguna Bucla Board of Adja1t-
ment. Council Chambers. 505 Forest Ave.
« .in11rc:"m.H~ I 1,1111 l·rn1 ', r "'t'uk
•••••••••••••••••••r-..... animal control officers. m1htary police.
Dannemeyer was not available for
comment. but a spokeman 1n hts rnn-
grcss1onal office tn Wa shington said
Davis' allegations were unfair. and dis-
torted the congressman's record
Oa\ t\ in a \.\edne \da' ne"" ulnlt•rente
1n \:ll ra rn l"nto th.11 hl' l·alkd 111 att.11. k
agree 1h.tt Jt.l' tl·"'""ll antl htl(1llr' a-f\
repul\1\ C' .tnd rcputtn.tr l i. r '111n hut ho',
not t'll!(:J!(l'•1 •n thn\c .111, 1 rumh \,t ul
PoucE Loe
Suicide probed as man
crushed by train in Irvine
By PAUL ARCHIPLEV
Of tM Delly ,... .....
A northbound passenger train
crus.hcd a man whom poltce believe
wac; a \U1 c1dc v1ct1m in Irvine
Wednesday.
Just hcfore 4.30 p.m .. the engineer
of the San Diego to Los Angeles
Amtrak train spo11cd wPlat appeared
to be a tumbleweed or pile of trash
between the track\ about 300 yards
Lapna Beach
The driver ofa van tncd to lure an
I l·ycar-old child into the vehicle, a
wi1nes1 to the in cident told pohcc
Wednesday. The driver. who was
seen in the area of Dtamond lrttt
and South Coast H1aJlway, Oed the:
Itta. • • • A Cliff Dnvc re 1dent called police
early WcdnC1day with complaints of
a prowler on the patio. Offiet'1
respondina to the call, however, were
unable to locate any suspects. • • • A skateboard valued at SI SS was
rePoftcd stolen Tumay on Park
Avenue. • • • Two thieve were seen early Tue
day t>rca.k1n1 the front w1ndow of a
butintll on Nonh Coa t Hiah~Y
and stulu\I SI, 92 S wonb of sc:ubl
pr Witnenes Aid they Otd in a
while C'hevy Nova.
\ .
north of Jeffrey Road. said Irv ine
police gt. Mike Ogden.
"Just pnor to impact. the engineer
saw 11 move and thought 11 could be a
body." <>4dcn sau1
The lrain was traveh na at 90 mph
II traveled 1,200 feet after impact
before coming to a '10p. Ogden said
The engineer then backed ur. so
crewmen could invc~11gate. l pon
d1scovenng the remains of a bodv.
they c~ntacted Irvine poltcc. ·
Foanta.ln Valley
A $200 b1c:yclc was reported stolen
from the racks at Fountain Valley
Hiah School. 17816 Bushard St ..
Wcdf'lesd&y.
I nine
A purse was reported Stolen from a
Balltter's restaurant, 1046 Culver
Onve, Wcdnetday. ••• The hcldli&hu wtrt rq,ontdly
stolen from 11965 Volbwaaen 8"'1
parked alona Esolanadc Tuesday.
I I e e
Binoculan and aJaues were rc-
poned stolen ftom a car perked 1n
f'tonl of a home alona Topeka
Wednesday. The lo s wa1 estimated
It between $~00 and S..00. ••• Valium, codttne and ,ewtlry ofan
Undclem'ltMd valut wtrc ~
11olen from a home 1lon1
trcamwood Wectn~y Polte:e rt--
The: man was 1dent1fied toda)' as
Donn McKinnon. 27 ofTro) Mich' ..
The Orange County coroner 1dent-
1fied McKinnon through fingerprint.\.
Poltrc arc investigating the inci-
dent as a sutctde because lht' man .
appeared to be 1ntentionall) s11t1ng
on the tracks. OgJc.'n said.
"He.' wa\ bent o"'er tn a fe tal
pos11ton . wi th his hack t() thc-tr.1tn."
he.' said
pons said the thief entered the home
with a key stolen from the home's
lock box • • • Two microwave ovens were re-
ported stolen Monday from a con·
strucl1on site alona tan ford
Newport Beacll
A thief stoic S2S 1n cash from 1
home tn the 200 block or 41 St trect
Wednesday. the vtCl1m told pohet. • • • A 2S-)ear-old Westm1n tcr rcsi·
dent telephoned pohec unday to tell
them that someone tolt her camera
eqwptMnt from C'orona dcl Mar Hilh School, 2101 Eastbluff'. The lou was ntimated at $300. • • • A Sl70 car atcrco wu reported
stolen f'tom a yellow 1980 VolkJ. ..., v.,...."a •n the 1300 bloCk ofTustan y n1af\L • • A. thief ~l\' tole a vacuum
•
cleaner, tools and pool suphes. 'alut·d
at $292 from the bed of a blue 19 ~
Toyota pickup truck parked in thC'
carport of an apartment in the 1400
block of Supenor <\venue Monda'
night.
Coetallleu
A $500 camera, a S:!OO TV stt. .1
S~O shirt and S80 1n ca h was reponed
stolen from a home in the I I 00 hi<.~ k
of Buckinaham Tuesda) Pohte rt
pons said the lh1efbroke a" md11" to
aain entry. • • • An Oranae Coast Collt'ge ~tudent
reported that someone stole 1he ""·k
view mirros and a telephone .intenn.1
from his red I Q79 Po~he ~I 1-..<
parked in onr of 1hc .. C'hool lcm
Tuesday. The loss wa' eo;t1111. ted .11
Sl.200. • • • A thief reportedly ,tole a "'oman\
bra, ajar of peanuts and cologne from
red 1983 N1uan pickup parked 1n
front of a home 1n the 800 block of
West Baker trttt Monda) n1Jht
A.rrnted in connection "tth the
tnCldent were 17-ycar-old Wilham
Fredrick Schmidt of M1 ion VteJO,
18-year-okl Dwr"en Ra}' r u:holc; of( rl
Toro and 1 g..year-old Duron Jerome Lo~ry. no known addrcu Tht
atokn •tems were 11CO'c1'd. polt~
reports W.
B-t:tacton 81aeb
WllMli&a val\tt'd at S were ri atoln ftom a home 1n tM .._of l 2\b uut Monday • • • A ,....., o( an aJ)ennW"nt tn tk
16IOOMoctolPaciftcCoat H1pway tOld . ..,.. dllal tomeOM kftocbd
owr iir ~ta. csoena S200 in daftUllC
W9f111 •
Hearing slated for 2
in city hall bombing
By LAl RA MERK °' -o.itJ """" s-
\ prc:l11mna r' ht•an ng for tht t"'n
m<'n , h.ir~wd "11h 1hl' Jon 17 bomb-
Good idea,
bad choice
It ~·filled the logi"al thin Ill ilu
\\hen corgc H Ego of ( l'"t.i Mesa couldn't find his wa) home latl·
Wednesda)' he drove to thcctt~ poltll'
dep:lnment and a ked for d1rtt\IOn\
But Eao. 5 . forgot to roMulc-1 1h1·
alcohol on ht bmath
He wa &~led on '\U'\Jlll IOn ot
drunken dnvingaf\er pulhng 1nto tht•
'tafT f)3rlun1 lot behind the 'itatHln
about 11 pm and e\pla1n1nr. to
offietr R1 h .i\llum that he"'"'" lo\t
"He thdn't know where he wa' anti
the thma wu amomattcallv 1h1nk 10
do 1s u~ a pohecman." u1d ~t T 1m
Holbroo~ "He didn't ha't the pre-c;-
mcc of mind to ftaurt out a poh~
ft\aft ~kl a~ lum ..
Hofbn:>ot A•d F•o's blood 11lcohol
ltvel ~at 0 22. mOtt than duul*
the ... ~ hmn •t •tuch 1 dnvtr 1
prewmfd too into•1<11tcd to dn\e, Eeo (ound to bt on problt1 n
f'of a ~1ou drunken driVlnl ton.
viclioft. Holbmbk M1d
'"~Ill 1h1· I ··~?Ull.1 I~ .I\ t l • 1 l I
hc.·rn 't'l 1n1 I 1·b -4
1.1m<'' ( ,, ' I >1..1.111d ,-.tf\.
l >..1nalJ J t.a 1 \\ 1w• h-1 .., I "d
.trT3tp.nl·J V. t'd IH'\1.l.1 \ 11 •" o Ide
1.·ount' l".11 h ,,, 11tn1ttng J \ 'l'I"''
llr' itl' '"th tlw 1ntt•n1 111 ,·1HJ.rnitt'rt1ot1
ix·or k 1•r rr"I" rt\ anJ ~1'"L'\\111n fl
,\ lil'\ln11 I I' l" d1•\ ht n ,1 pulllt\ f'IJl r
"''" I >.:put' I >1,•ri.' \tt11rnl \ C ''
l'lh ~\11 \111Jlh I ll,ll\)t< ( Jl\1111\ 1\1 111\1\.l j'»
I •lUr't luditl· \1 I "11\'llt• \C"I thC' ~
111.11J.lll.11\1 l,tr• '\
R11th OH'll ,111 hC'intt ht'IJ '" ! .... 01111\~l" ( .iunl\ 1;111inheu 11t '111 tlll!I
hail ~R\ h
\\ ht"tkr and Durand ~'th 11-.tr,1
thC'H addre" ,,, \t '-1an ' f-1"1~0 I
c huh h tn I Alluna Re.Ith "'htl
l.ncmn tor the ;ud tl lll\C\ ll>
h1,mrk•" 1n tht• , II\ I itunA Re
Pohl l" ""l'tt lc.-,1 tn th<' "'"' '" ,\ 1ntonn1nant'"'h""ml 1hr .. hurd
men h\~'ttnJ • hout thl' ~ 4i' a
"'1mh1n'
Thr ti..1m h 4-el ouh1tk C 1h M -
t't l\.C'n Fnt nl.. 'otfi,e tOn\11\t
one ''I' k "' d)'namtte '' lruct dam -.a d nc.. althouah a
l"-O do1en w1ndnv.-~ •n hank'
thcctt) clerk' offic-e Y..trr t\an
tbt bla \
Poh~ htll(\IC the mbint
rrt.ahat n •tn'1 tht pohtt -.111m1-
mfn\ hcc'lutt l..quna . .i.~ ,~, potitt art~ .....
..
BP.A ilms for total ban ·on asbestos Pelsona11ncome takes
wASHINoToN(AP)-TbeEn-1oyean. nomuesnmaled, however. that in&inbiabcemperatum.. bid~;iump in December
viroemeDtal Protection ~. ·~-.. W e are takina this action bec:aUIC it coWd take tbe aeency u '°Gt u a The rule alto would el~te au t:J J
1:111tlaalD01JDOUDtolubelto111d of the sianificant and well-~tocompleteftOl'konbuniaatbe other uaes and imponauon of WA.SHINOTON (AP}_ Ameri-percenteaminpincreaaewautillthe
foi' lnunul. lllDOWCed today it documented threat to health that five product ca~ wbicb be laid ubettoe over the ne•t decade. can·• -·• iDCOme roee 1 4 ~ best perfonnaftcc ti.Dee a l.S peroent
...... to immediately ban five ubellOt ttpraenfs." EPA Adminit-ICC:OWU for about one-third to one-Tbomu laid that tome products not t ra·o;;m.., tbe ~ in· rite in January 1914.
prod\aCt ~ containiaa the trator Lee M. lbomu told a news balf of the ettimated 300,000 metric immediately . ~ned could be c:en in almOlt tM> yean.. while The report on pmonaJ finaneea ~ subl&ance and to confereftOe. "No level of opoaure it '°"' of ubestoe uted in this country eliminated eatber than ~t~ If =naJ spendina lbot up l percent, eerved to undenc:ore the fact that the ~ «Mat all other ubelloe Ute over without rilk." annually. substitutes to them a., av.... · the futett dip in more than a decade economy •taeed a ~ revival in
· Four of tbe product cateaories are Tbete products incl~ auto-tbe vernment repor1ed today. ' December.
used in c:onttruetion: •tu.rated and motive brUe and cl~tc:h hoinp. ~ ~ Commerce Depu'tment said The eovernment earlier bad re-
uotataanted rooftfta felt, floorina felt ubeuo1-contain1nJ P!:t''~'· the riae in penonal consumption poned tba( unemployment in De-
&Dd ubetlol felt-.becked abeet Door-adhesives. ~ts, pamtsa 0 er s"'""'ina wu ill belt performance cember dipped to ill lowest level iDlo vinyl-etbestoe ftoor tile, and types of COIU~ . sro;-1 2.5 peroeM rite in Mjy 1975. siftOe early l 980 while retail ules,
ubestOt-Cement pipe in fittiop. The The EPA d ~:.i esumai!fd bo~ While. me bia aain in apendi, industrial producion and housina
ftftb catetory i1 ubestoe clothina many .~nceb r ... s ~ rule outl*C<f the rue in income, the l. construction all potted bia pins. ued by fiiefiabten and people work-pcevenwu Y u.1e proyv-~~ ~
m\lc"~o ut of t he Old as it is to 6 Both sides
.... .,, .. ;:?-~ 30 o/o -50 o/o . ,.,,,, '"t. . ~ of a:bortion .,,r'-'=~~-:~ OFF ..,Jt; f "4,, ~... 4 <:trgument
~fervent
\
~ ~ By MARTIN STEINBERG .._....,.., __, I ,.-\...!... / ; I •11 I I ·p,w ....
I · LA./ ~ Thousands of d emonstrators
// ;I blocked traffinnctmarchcd on state --· ~-........::...--:OZ ~ ..__r -~ capitols, while others held a funeral
c::-..::------=.. / _),. 0 for an aborted fetus and met with ' \ A President Reapn as Americans on ~ ~ --7 CC:-__.. ;' ~ both sides of the issue marked the
\. ~ 2-~ 13th anniversary of the Supreme :>-~ _; \ ' -C:lfr Court decision lcplizina abortion. -<_~---.--'\~\. ,-.1r. ,.,. ·y'·'1/ ~ on~t!~rti~!'dn~~:~cc:~:
1_ • fuJ. However, 10 marchers were
arrested in Washinaton, D.C .• after
they broke throuab police lines to ~ • PraY and chant slopns outside the
~ _ _ -on Jan. 22, 1973, thejusticesruled 7-2
UNIDEN RECEIVERS & DISHES
\ ~ _ -CALL TOLL FREE-
)C 1 .. aoo-12&-4340
~---·-~ ~
4
U.S. Supreme Court bujldin&. where
that women have the right to Char Ii e is having a Sale! ~ ~:·:~~: ::·::~~:
-was among the laraest Wednesday.
Police estimated that up to 37.000
anti..abortion activists rallied at the
Elfipse near the White House and
.,. •. 1 ... ,. I ... k, 111 •• I Pl #111111 ~ #123 Fashion Island, Newport Beach 640-5721 Bullocks Wilshire Corridor 10:~·=~d:~r'~edrl1;/i~ili/c~~ ~ ~ Reapn told the crowd via teleohonc ~~=:=:::;;:;::::::~===================~~";~::-~QO~~~~~~=-.=QO=~==~==QO=~==~=-...=QO=~===~====to=~==fft== ..... =GO=~==~==~=~==ftb....QO====;---~ hook-up between the White liouse and loudspeakers at the Ellipse.
----lier COA~TI.!~·~ . . e ecourses C(~l~ll '\ITV ( 01.Ll:(.I· .. ___,,,,,_~
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Leading the procession were
mare m carry1n• 13 small white
coffins symbolizing millions of
abortions performed in the I 3 years
sinc.c Roe vs. Wade.
Later, the president met privately
with about two dozen abortion foes
and two of them -Paul Brown, chief
executive officer of the American Life
League, and Joseph Scheidler, of Pro-
Life Action -quoted him as saying
he miabt consider pardoo ina
abortion clinic bombers on "a cue-
by<asc basis."
However, Albert Brashear, a White
House spokesman, denied the presi-
dent had made any such remark and
others at the meeting said they
int~rcted the president's remarks
differently.
In other demonstrations, "Baby
Charlie," a fetus used to promote the
anti-abortion cause for nearly a year,
was buried in a cemetery in Milton,
Aa. More than 200 people attended
the funeral. The fetus was obtained
from pro-lifers in Wisconsin who said
it had been aborted somewhere in the
Midwest.
Also in Florida. directors of
abortion clinics bailed the an-
"jiliiiiiiiiiLiiif':::Aiiiiii~iiiiiiiii;;iil'iiji;iiliii;ii;;iiiliiii&;ji.-.l;iiiliiiiiil;iiiliijjii;iiNiAfiiiiiiiliAfiiiiiiiliAPiiiiiA~tANWNir-----------------------1 nivcrsary in remarks in Tallahassee.
SUPER BOWL CELEBRATION TIME!
•TEAM llAPlllS •BOOK MATCllES • IEUES •
• ENSE ... ES • c•s . DECORATIOllS • PUT AS •
*LARGEST SELECTION IN ORANGE COUNTY* *
'1 IVY &LL llT ll'IOTAGLll A'l D. PiUIU
DC&IJll I'll IKUT, 90'r u.ca" ~et
$39.00
BYBGLA88118
Mo,.. l.han half the eye
11uae1 &L Mr PMpet'I coat
no n\Ql't ( 8110C&ll &04 00 1 Now t.haL 'I a dJtcounl 11.c>"l! But you won't l.hlllk ltO M
Mr Pttpera Opuc1&111 you U
tl.nd I.he H lecuon H l'V\Ce
and prore111onal 1"9.ndar<11
you &JC1*!1. rrom hW! pn~lt<I
eyeweu t>Ouuquea
wt h&ve m.n'I M4 womet• '
rut'll"'1 d91>&1'\1Mnl.I bud«iot
Cl\U4ren1 new wave aun
and •Pol'\ &11d atrr••~url' d1t
pa.rvnent.& Vulll our Priv1ti.•
CoUecuon Bouuque We fl'&
ture & hUC8 u aorunem or
eyeciua a.cceasor1es lens
mat.er1&11 and Ln&IJl\ent.a
dl!llCJ'led t.o make your "Y"
Wl'&I' U btlaut.11\.&J IUld
durable u po1111>le
OW' own la~l'llt.ones ~111
t.om ft'llld every lens t.o metl\
or u aeed Feder&! 11.&11<1ard1
whllt l t.a\e llcenaed opuc1an1
co &IJ nwnc and meuure
mtni.a And when pou1blt
w11 maxt rtp&IJ'I on the •s>Ot
So II you h&vt mor. bl'&l.l'll
lhan mon,.y J>61 a 11111t t.o
Mr Pffpel't You·u .. ve ao mul'h. who ltnowa'> a.ta~
you·u Wl.nd up rich. t.oo
OPTICIANS
l
PUU.8TOlll ~ ---· --'"'~'-
, .... ..._ ..... _ ....
"""' ----·----·-" L.M WO• ·--.. --..... ....... ---... -.....
Lei--,._, ---...... ---
t •tt a ev••••n• •••tr•(,U•,-•••• ...... _ ... ,
•••11'11110 , , ...... .
8 arrested in
road block a t
Hormel plant
AUSTIN, Minn. (AP) -Pro-
union demonstrators tried today t.o
block a highway near a Hormel meat·
processing plant to prevent non·
strikina employees from actting to
work, and eiaht people were arnsted,
authorities said.
The meat-processing plant has
been the scene ofa bitter. five-month
strike, and hundreds of National
Guardsmen have been called in to
keep it open.
At least 2S cars slowed to a crawl in
an attempt to block traffic on Inter-
state 80, whlch authorities have been
uaina to brina workm into the plant,
said Mower County Sheriff Wayne
Ooodnature.
Police broke the windows of two
cars to arrest drivers who locked their
doors, Ooodnature said. The others
were arrested peacefully.
One man wu sprayed with broken
&lut when police broke the windowt.
the extent of hit injuries were not
known, the lheriff wd.
"We used only the force wu
necesury," uid Police Chief Donald
Hoffman.
Cartoon.lat hurt
In plane cruh
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) -
The cartoon strip ••Bloom County" ~ intemapted while canoon11t
Breathed recoven Crom a
hctured spine be autrer'ed in the
crub of an ultraliabt aircraft, his fatberllyt.
Breathed. 28, WU in utiafac1ory
condition WedDelday nJaht lftd wu
tcheduled to unde:rli> suqery today
for •bat St. Joeeob Hoepilal
IPC)kerwoman Ullian Panenon IUd was a comprellkm hcture In bis
lower beck.
Tbe .alnlilbt. which rnembla a
llider whb .. ~ne. cr'Mbed
fitdl HMy DOfth of Aftl=lll'le OD the !udia P\let>lo I rwer-
vatioe,
•
Border
attacks,
deaths
mount
Americans blamed
for off ertngjobs -
to Mexican aliens
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Violence
aJona the U.S.-Mexico border con-
tinues tQ etcaJate and won't slow
down untiJ American employers stop !urin~ vul~era~le ille~I aliens with
JObs, 1mm1arat1on officials said.
At • news conference Wednesday
stqed on a rock-strewn field crossed
niJhtly by illegaJ aliens. offi cials
blamed both employers and border
bandits for area violence that has
killed four illegal aliens since last
Friday.
"This kind of v1olence and crime
~~~-in-hand with the escalating
flowOi:tJ!epl aliens. Until we come
grips w_ith tnc flow of illegal aliens, we
arc 10101 to have aJI of the other
problems," said Alan Eliason, chief
Border Patrol agent for the San Diego
sector.
Harold Ezell, western regional
chief of the U.S. Immigration and
Naturalization Service, said the only
answer is strong sanctions apinst
U.S. employers who hire 11legaJ
aliens.
"The enemy is not Mexico. The
enemy is the open border. As long as it
is wide open and people come here for
jobs ... Until it becomes illegal to hire
an illegaJ aJien, there's nothing that's
going lO change this invasion,'' Ezell
said.
"I believe that if we don't do
something to stop this invasion. the
America that we love today is not
goi!!J to be the same America."
Eliason agreed, saying few Mex-
icans wouJd risk their lives crossing
the border if there were no jobs to lure
them.
Eliason said the four Border Patrol
sectors from San Diego to Tucson
have experienced a 65.5 percent
increase m apprehensions th1s
month. fn the last fiv-e.days, 11,
illegal aliens were apprehended in the
San Diego sector alone. Most were
from Mexico, but 193 came from 14
other countries.
Acid-tossing
suspect unfit
to face court
By tile A11oclated Pre11
Arraignment of man accused of
throwing acid in the face of a 4-ycar-
old girl was postponed after mental
health workers ruled he was unfit to
go to court.
Mark Edward Hand, who was
under orders to begin a psychiatric
evaJuation at the time of the Saturday
attack. had been scheduled for ar-
raianmeot today, depending on his
mental condition, said Buena Park
police Officer Terry Branum.
He said Orange County mental
beaJth department officials decided
Wednesday that Hand was mentally
unfit to face the hearing.
Hand, 26. who told probation
officers he had spent time in a New
York mental hospital. was arrested
Monday and booked into the Orange
County Jail for invcst1gat1on C?f
agravated assault with a caustic
chemical.
The Whittier resident was charsed
with throwioaacctic acid into the face
of bcbel opwa as she left a park
restroom in Buena Park. Branum
said.
The littJe girl suffered sccond-
dearee bums to her eyes, face. arms,
chest and leas in the attack. St. Jude
Hospital spokesman Norm Anderson
said Wcdnetday her cond1t1on was
4ppaded from fair to good. and
docton believe she will retain at least
some of her si&h t.
Electrical failure
led to shutdown
at San On of re
W ASHINOTON (AP)-An unex-
plained electrical failure wu blamed
for touchina off a ICries of problems
which forocd a shutdown at the San
Onofre nuclear plant in California
last Nov. 21, federal official• said.
"The event was sipificant," in-
vestiptor Thomu T. Manin told the
Nuclear ReauJatory Commission on
Wednctda)'. But he said there was
"no tipificant release of radio-
activity at the San Oemente plant.
Martin said the electrical ffllure
eucerblted problems offaulty main-
tenance and poor judament at the
plant. •
The most serious problem, the
investiptor said, waa the failure of
five check valves in a water system desisned to cool the reactor.
A m~ acrious accident wat
prevented by the five control room
technicians who shut the plant down,
but only after some hesitation,
Manin •id. Of6cials of the Southern.California
E.diloD Co .• which operates lhc San
Onofre plant, defended their mAMF-
rnent of the tacilifl, •yins their
maintnanee and .recy ~urea wn comparable ao lbole of otbcr
U.S. nudler power Mtion
•
Voyager2
ptimedfor
Uranus
PASADENA (AP) -Eqjoeen
sent new orders to Voyaeer 2 today as
it zoomed ever faster toward a
historic close encounter with Uranus
after findina two more moons and
wind-blown clouds in the planet's
atmosphere.
The orders, in the fonn of a
computer prosram tranunined 1.84
billion miles to the SP90CCfaf\, were
sent at S:S8 a.m., said National
Aeronautics and Space Adminis.-
tration spokeswoman Donna Pivirot-
to said.
The computerized directions will
control Voyqer's operations during
its closest encountcn with Uranus
and the planet's five major moons on
Friday.
Enaineers will revise the computer
prosram early Friday to make sure
Voyqer's cameras and sensors arc
properly aimed - a maneuver pro-
ject manager Dick Lacser called "the
tricky part."
OrMge COMt DAILY PILOT~. Janwry 23, 1 .. * A8
'Mercy' deatli of father
tiy aon is ruled honilclde
.,
j
MARTINEZ -Ofrlcialt Mve ru1ed that the death of 1 Richmoad 1MD il
who wu removed from a mecbaoical respirator wbile hi1 t0n bdd a aune at ~' J
sunpoint was a homicide. The ConU'I Colla County coroner's omce etiesrd •'l
1t1 Of'iainaJ findin11 iJl the death of Edward Bak.er from cancer of the etOPlt..-
to include .. removal oflife-aupport system•." Pro1m.non declined to •Y bow d l
the coronet's rulina mi&bt afl'ect their decilion on whether to brina murder -
chaJJCS apin1t Edwanilkker Jr., 37. the son of the dead man. )
Boaria '• lorce-leedl'W to coiitbJae I
LOS ANGELES -A qudriplesic cerebra.I palsy patient. who uked dw
courts for permiuion to die of tlal'Vation two'yean aao. will have to endure a
nose-to-stomach fcedif\S tube at least until Feb. 12, a judte ru. led. Superior
1
Court Judie Warren Oeerins refuted to issue a restrainina order Wedftelday
orderins dOctors to remove the tube, -.bich Bouvia. 28, contends cautes her ~
extreme pain. But be Mid her cue raised lepJ questions that required m0tt : 'I
araument and study, to be acbeduled the new heanng.. I 1 . . l I
Turbulence afa•k~ plaiJe, 12 Injured i !
SAN FRANCISCO-A puseflier·ona United Airlines OC,B flyinsii'om • ! Chi~ 'to San .Fra~sco said turbulence made 1t seem as though "the plane :
was falling to pieces. Twelve people aboard the plane were injured, officiaJ1 I
said. Airport spokesman Ron Wilson said turbulen~ shook A1&ht 127 over I
Utah on Wednesday. He said the plane carried a crew of six and 138 passengers. · :
I
' , NASA spo~sman Al Hibbs said
Voy...-was ''speeding up slowly but
steadily, with the gravity of Uranus Audit •Y8 Live Ald ralM:d $82JJJlllloa _. _1 ___
puUinaonit~ .
,., ..... , ....
l:6S ANGELES-=-The broadcas----.of the Live Aid rock concerts from
London and Philadelphia tut July raised more than $82 m1lhon for Afncan
Compoelte of Voyacer 2 tmacee of Uranaa •howa a dUcrete
cloud Menu a brfCJat •treak near tile planet'• limb.
The probe, travelinJ at a speed of
33,508 mph this morning, will reach a
velocity of about 421143 mph relative
to Uranus by the ll.me of its closest
approach to the planet at 9:59 a.m.
Fnday.
famine tel.ief, cc;>nccrt orpn~ reported. after an audit. Adding in revenue
from all Live Aid efforts dunna the first ct&ht months of 1985. including the
proceeds from a song recorded by the British all-star group Band Aid, the total
raised for famine victims was reported to be $92.127.000. -
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t38JJerlsh in New Delhi hotel fila:ze 'Lut-dltclJ IMlttle'~lnSoatlJ Yemen
BJ&M.\t11dlt.4IPNt1 ..
DJIBOUTI, South Yemen -Rival Marxist factions in South Yemen
fouabt hOWie to house in the capital of Aden u the impoverished nation's
president called on loyalist forca to rea.roup for a .. last-ditch bettle" apinst ~he
rebels, diplomats~ rcpor1ed today. Arab diplomatic sources in the f>e!'IJan
Oulf said more than 12,000 people have been killed and about 20,000 il\lwed
since fi&htina broke out Jan. 13 after an apparent attempt to topple Presi~nt
Ali Nauer Mohammed "While fiabtina rqes on in Aden suburbs, tbc tnbes
have been movina in with reinforcements on both sides," said one Arab
diplomat, speakina on condition of anonymit>'.
NEW DELHI, India (AP) -
flames and smoke raced tbrouab a
1 O.story luxury hotel before dawn
today and ofticiall said at ae.tt 38
people\ includina o»e American. were killed in the fitt. Some plVQed to
their deaths from the 1eeona and
third floors when they tried to cteape.
A U.S. E~bassy spokcsman1 who spoke on condition be not be ident-ified~ said a se<lond American had
bctn critically injured in the blaze at
the Siddhanh Continental Hotel.
Police said the fire sent panic-stricken
aucsts to the windoW1 to scream for
help. • The hotel is owned by Siddha.rth
lntercontinental Hotels Ltd. oflndia,
and is not affiliated with the World-
wide lntercbntinental chain. The
Uniled News of India news .,ency
bad identified the hotel as lntcr-
cpntinentat
The U.S. Embusy spokesman
declined to relcue the names of the
Americans pendina notification of
their families. He said six other U.S.
citizens reaistercd at the hotel es-
caped injury. .
A spokesman for CARE in New
York said that Christopher Rocscll 37, of Alexandria, Va., a tcchnica
adviser stationed in the orpniza-
tion •s Banakok office. suffered smoke
inhalation and was hospitalized. He
was in serious condition but improv-
ina, said CARE spokesman Bill
Dupn.
Five other CARE staffers who were
at the hotel for a mcetina escaped
without injury, Du.uan said.
Earlier, a U.S. EmbassJy
spokeswoman bad said only seven
Americans were registered at the
hotel and that one, i woman she
could not identify, bad been injured.
Tbouah no cause for the blaze was established, police and hotel person-
nel speculated an electrical shon-
circuit may have set a carpet afire in
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the hotel's around-floor benquet room.
Survivors claimed no alarm wu
aiven and that tbc staff and fire
department were poorly prepared for
an evacuation.
.. Nobody told us anytbina," said
Phillipe Ocmercy, a businessman
from Licac, Belaium. "I looked out
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SoatlJ African violence kUl• J 6 black•
JOHANNESBURG -Rival black tribes near the Indian Ocean ~n city
of Durban battled with 1uns and traditional fi&hting sticks today, kilh~ 16
blacb police said. In busy Cape Town Train.S"tation, an exploSJ~n bcbevcd ca~ by a bomb occurred on a loadin• platform among mail bap, but
witnesses said there were no serious casualties.
--
If you have to pay for your own coverage, you know
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CALIFORNIA PHYS ICIANS' SE RVICE
..
•
)
I SCRuteads vlslt
of lts 'Forelgaer'
"The Forcianer" may be a stranacr bas announced rea1strat1on tor us
in a stranae land, but he's picked up a winter session e1&ht·week acuna aood deal of popularity at South classes.
Coast Repenory.. This season the playhouse wi II offer
Ofange CoNt DAILY PILOT/Thursday, January 23, 1988 A7
.II. Ir.,; • (!J.,u I U-. ......_
"-.... (!l.M .2 ~ "--».
~ "-' 'IJ --' "-"'-"' j.. J-._ ~ Al/.U.
-SCR has announced a three-day a beajnnin& actina course Mondays
holdover for its current main staac from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. tauaht by Jon ma an.mt
attractjon a comedy about an Ena· Sidoti and a scene study class for -mo MZA
ITllTI FllllYI
u-.<m>M1-11u _._ ... NCR-•• lishman feipina ianorancc of the more experienced students Saturdays -,.121.-,.
l1n1uqe1taGeoflialodac. Theextra from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. under the _,. ...
., ... ..
U ... W.1611 ---•u IMt:lrf CDnl performances will, be at 8 p.m. Feb. direction ofSidoli and Alex Golson. _ ,_ MZ-4ttl
11 , 12 and 13. The classes wiO begin Saturday and •..s'
rGIC UftWIY
~a&.1 ,....11 ~Ill.Um! =--~~ "Our audiencn love this play," Monday. and additional information =.-=.:ti:o
explained TimothX Brennan. SCR may be obtained by calling Harriet -••u ----.me ..__...,_l 1111111•1•1 -a!.Mlcuro
acnerat manqer. 'They arc telling Whitmye r at the playhouse _ __,
their friends to see it and trying to (494-0743) from noon to S p.m. ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiii -U7.Qel •-mu WIWWWM•l·Jt~ -~IEl
come hick for another performance." Tuesdays throulh Saturdays. I Tickets for the extension may be • •
pure.hued at the ~R box office. 655 Rockwell In ternatio nal has
Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa, or donated $1 ,000 to the Lilliput Players
reservcd·by phone at 957-4033. touriogeducational theater to finance
Cary Grant wi11 ~:kc a return v1s11~hildren 's production.s (or over 4,000
to the La MH'ada Civic Theater next ~lementary ~hool•children:
week for a one-night-only per· The Tust!n·based tounng com·
formi"nce Jan. 31. pany ent~rtaincd more than 111 .000
The prosram. entitled "A Con· st udei:its in Orange and Los Angeles
venation With Cary Grant," will counties last season.
open with a special film clip compiled Lilliput's sister company. the L.P.
in his honor by the ~rtory, isioo.+ngfordfrcctors for
ohon"-Picturc Arts and Sciences. its summer season at the
Followina the film, Grant will discuss Muckenthaler Cultural Center i.n
h is life and career with the audience. Fullerton. A house manager also 1s
Tickets for the event are priced at being sought .
$22.SO and S2S, and arc available at Prospective directors should send a
the box office or by phoning resume and reviews to the company
994-6310. at 1481 1 Foxcroft, Tustin 92680.
• • • Those interested in the house man· The theater ans department at ager's position may call the office at Saddleblck Colleje has added two 73 l-2792. new professors to its pan-time faculty
list.
Victoria Tucker, a grduate of
London's Royal Academy of Ora·
matic Arts, and R. Craia Wolf, a~thor
of the li&htina section of the college
textbook "Scene Design and ~tagc
L!fhtina." will be teachina at the
M1uion Viejo campus this sprina.
Tucker will teach a beainning
actina clau and a theater appreciation
counc on Mondays and Wednesdays.
Wolf will jnstruct a staat liabtm1
dcsian cws on Tuesdays and
Thursdays. • • • The Laauna Moulton
~~~~~~~~-
5 GOIDEN GLOBE
NOMINATIONS
_,_ ........
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fill Ira 193.0W ua mmem MAU ~
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\(If JO MAL l
,2 \~L, b.,' .,•!
'•• ' U ... • I
..._... .. ......... ---
' I .,
I •
t
II • ' I '
Reach out and
soak somegne
A son who spQkc only fqur words a
\Car to me once dated a .JJrl who was a
n 1 nc-crn ts-fo r-t he-firs t-m 1 n u tc
phone call away. In one month he nn
up a S33 phooc bill.
Compared to today's kids who dial
pay phonr ~rvices, he sou~dcd like
Calvin Coohdge. A father 1n Ptnn-
svlvan1a discovered a phone bill for
s'40 run up by his 5-y~r-old son.
'\nother mo1hcr's phone bill was 11 to small talk or hear muuc IOtMOM
pages long with calls totalina SS6.SO pl~. who is the villa.in in Ibis
b) her tccn-aser. electronic niebtrnlft?
Who art these kids callina and Is it the phone company that
why? extends instant Cftldit to a tmention When the father of the 5-ycar-old of unemployed kids for a product
called the numb(r that occurred 62 which theysayfiUs 1 need?
times on his bill he got a "Ho. ho. ho. Is it the wo~ parents who ha~
this 1s Santa Claus. Today I'm in spawncda gcncratM>n oflaM:bkey k.ids
Afnca ... He then went on to descri.be who arc told to be self-~liant and
the holiday customs ~nd told him make decisions ... but o nly if it
tomorrow he would b( 1n Poland. doesn't cost anythina?
With the mother of the tcen-~gcr. _.h__.i itt the the I k.ids tbemeel~n !ibo are
the call~were made-t<Heeft'pb hnes. taki~ftlqe of a 11tuatton end
plus a couple of New Jersey and N~w defvin& adults. mud_a like playina
York numbe~ where a fema.le w_h1s-with matches or smoki~ a forbidden
pered suggesuve sexuaJ promises into cigarette when no one 11 around?
tm ear. lf his fi ngers had done any A lot of perents are usina the pey
more walking through tht Yellow phone service to teach a valuable
Pages. he wouldn't have been able to lesson. Everyone pays in this life.
hold a pencil. There arc no sifts for which someone
T here's a whole line of packaged has not paid. H~w im~na.nt is it to
goodies fo r children just a toll c.harge ~car ~nta descn.be.hohday customs
awa). They can dial recorded JO~cs. m Afnca? \\'.hat s 1t worth to hear
spons information, horro r ston es. ~vy breatb1n1 from some .stranerr
and forS 1.85 your child can listen toa 1n New Jersey who~ they wiU never
fafry story. see? You are rcspons1~(oryourown
But the most popular arc the gab deb~s. So stan paying ... or stop
li nes where two toe11ht chlldrcn hook talking. • . . .
up to a conference call where they arc I wouldn t be surpnted 1f children
urged not to p ve their real names or eventually rewrote AT & r s slopn.
personal information about them-"The more they pay ... the worse they
sclvrs. They JUSt sit around and listen sound ."
Don't lose your
head oveJ"a girl
Publtc kissing was serious in old
Italy. Early in the 16th century. Pietro
Lando. the podesta at Padua. saw his
son ktSS the young man's one and only
girlfnend on a public street, and
Pietro had his son b(headed. Pretty
harsh.
Babies of dea f mute parents learn to
use sign la nguage about th~ months
earlier than babies ofheanna parents
learn to speak.
You know those baked stuffed
potatoes you pick up in supermarket
freezers? Takes the in nards of five
potatoes to stuff three.
Q. Is the International Dateline
straight?
A. No. 1t deviates. Between Alaska
and Sibcna. It follows the 180
meridian. swings westward aro und
the Aleutians. returns to 180 degrees.
then minces eastward to take in some
South Sea islands with Australia and
New Zealand.
Q. A philosopher says no two
peoplt on eanh have the same
'"zenith." I don't get tt.
.\ When )Ou stand outside and
look straight up. the highest point
ovrrhead 1s your "zenith:· Each
person stands 1n a different place. so
each person has a d ifferent zenith.
And each wears different moccasins.
and Judges not lest. and all that.
Fishermen. plea~ note. According
to one otolog1st. fish can hear you
when }OU sing but not when you
whistle. Their ciens1ng mechanisms
pick up low vibes hut not high vibes.
as 11 were
Q . Ho" come t"arth bulges at the
equator and na11en~ al lbe poles while
Vcnul> 1s almost perfectly round?
A. Venus spins a lo! more slowly.
Rapid Reply No. sir. no real record
P EOPL E
-----
indicates the Old West outlaw Jesse
James ever gave a nickel to the poor.
Sure. you knew some kangaroos
live in trees. But how come you didn't
know one son of kangaroo lives
almost all ofits life underground? The
burrowing boodie. it's called.
Would you l'CCOIJ'l ize a m ynlc tree?
If not, little wonder. Myn les only
grow in two places: Oregon a nd the
Holy Land. -a redundancy. if you're
an Orcgontan.
Dunng the reign of Q ucC'n Eliza-
beth I. the law-and-order bunch
fo rced upon the populace a decree: All
people on the streets af\er 9 p.m. had
to carry lighted lanterns so they could
be identified. Excellent! cried the
robbers. Illuminated marks! Just
about eve rybody with light in hand
got mugged down the dimmer path.
The Queen reM:indcd. saying. That's
enough of that stuff. or some word to
such effect.
EHn though the spider has eigh t
eyes. it's "legally bltnd," so to speak.
Can't Stt wonh a hoot
On poltt1cal cautton. the Chinese
provr rbaltzed thusly: .. When walking
through your neighbor's melon patch.
never stoop to tie your sh~."
Search of the records turns up no
seat-belt wearer who came o ut of a car
crash with a permanent spinal cord
lnJUI')
The first fea ture-length film
produced anywhere was mack in
Australia. ·1 he ~tory of the Kelly
Gang.·· 1906.
If your sign is Taurus, your lucky
color is blue. Or so say the st;arpzers.
L.M.Boyd i. • •r•dlcate'
col•O'Ul111.
H1 iRll\l.tlf'I
l"rWQ, J_,, ••
AlUa (March 21-April 19): What appeared to be a n obstacle will be
removed. could be transformed into ste~1n1 stone toward soal. Dioloaue
with family member proves sumulattna. rewardins . Gemini, Virgo.
s.,inarius persons P.la>: roles. TAuava (Apnl 20.May 20): Study Aries messqc for valuable hint.
Focus Oil relatives s~ial relationships, trips, m~or domestic adjustment.
You'll be pleaed if diplomatic. You'll be di&appointed if you attempt to force i11ues.
ODONI (May 21-June 20): Look behind scepes. realize that whal you
seek is oloeer than originally antici-
pated. Money situ.atfon will be resolved
followina initial cklay. You are aoina to win, detpite odds. Pi!CeS plays role.
CANCD (June 21-July 22): Focus
on authority1 ~·intensity, passion.
You're in anver's seat, business as-
IOCia1e knows it and will back down. Judament, intuition ring true -love ~tioalb.ip forms strona bond.
SYD•EY
0111R
I.BO (July 23-Aug. '-22): S<:enario hi&hlipu mystery, intrigue.
excitement.. physical attraction, ability to finisn.lona.istandina assisnment.
You .. ooze" with charisma! People arc drawn to you, romance is accented.
JOU have wider audience.
VJllGO (Aua. 23-Sepl 22): Emphasize pioneerina spirit, inventiveness.
duina, counae of convictions. You could sell almost anythina to anyone -
wislil is fuJfilled, romance nourimes. You'll act to hean of matters.
LIBRA(Sept. 23-0ct. 22): You.are beinapull~ in two dii:ec1ions-:stecr
away ft'om schemes, sensationalism. ~mb_as1s on quaht>:, sturdiness.
deala~~tntlmfrhrpositions of a uthority. ama y rcunton proves a
bilbl" t. Watch for Cancer native.
(Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Diversify , look beyond the immediate.
formulate travel plans. emphuizc ability 10 disseminate pcn incnt
infonnatloe. Demands arc made on your time due to increased popularity.
IAOIT'l'AIUUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 2 1 ): Be willing to tear down. to revise. to
remodel -.d rebuild. Dia deep for information involving taxes. license
requirements. special investment or savings program. Partner or mate
dnervcs added attention. spcciaJ compliment.
CAPIUCORN (Dec. 22-J an. 19): Be ready for cha nge. travel, vanety.
exciti .. contacts with mem bers of opposite sex. What had been a defeat will
bt tnnsfonned into rousing victory. Emphasis a lso o n contnicts and legal
.. eemewtl..
ActUAalUS (J~n. 20-Feb. 18): Accent mode!'3uon, famil~ harmony.
iRventory ac:count1n1 procedures. Keep resolutions concerning general
health. reCrealion, work methods. Unique &if\ could be on the way.
PllCES (Feb. I ~March 20): Steer clear of self-deceptio n. Perceive
o thcn in trur ti,ht. You'll be com~iment~. flattered, and ultimat~ly y~u'll
dilCOVer motives. Youna pcnon wtll provide pleasure, penonal sat1sfact1on.
IP JAM. h IS YOUR BIRTBDA Y yo u will now be on more solid
emotioaal-fina.ncia.I p>und. Recent flurry .of activity which ~ired you ~nd
1cattered forct1 is finished. You'll soon receive news representma irccn h&ht
lor creative °' business enterprise.
Parents' mistakes
iead to big trouble
DEAR ANN LANDERS: O ur 11 -
month-old son was sitting on my lap
at tk diftncr ~b4e while we were
ha vi na de9lef1 and coffee All of a
sudden littJe Alb(rt jarTCd my hand
and the hot coffee went right down lhe
'front of his chest.
My husband grabbed Alben and
stripped off his shin . I put on some
co&d towels and that q wctcd him. A
friend who was having dinner with us
nin and chopped up some onion$ and
applied them to the boy's bums. We
took turns walking the floor with him.
A couple of hours later he was
pcrft'ctly quiet, as tf nothing had
happened. I rocked him to sleep and
he slept through the night.
The next day the sheriff came
looking for m y husband. He ordered
us to take little Alberi to the hospital.
The woman from the welfare agency
was waiting for us with a lot of
q uestions. She asked at least four
times why we didn't carry the boy to
1he hospital as soon as the accident
happened.
We explained we were treating him
at home. She said we used poor
j udgment and charged us with child
n~~· My husband spent the nil.ht
in Jail. We had to hire a lawyer that
costs mo ney we can't spare.
What is this world coming to when
loving parents are treated li kt com-
mon cn m ina ls? Pnnt this letter and
gi ve us an answer. -PERSECUTED
IN O KLAHO MA.
DEAR OKLAHOMA: Ua&ll rttn~
ly tltere wu very little protectioll fer
clttldrea aplut a1H11lve or nel)ectf•I
pareata . ....._k lileaveas tbt It clilu1-
la1.
Vo. aad yoer .... band tboald laave
ta.tea lite cllUd to aa emer1ency room
of a llospltal wltll Ute cold towels (llHI
Ice) H Ills cltest. (Wtaat't wldl die
cMpped HIHt? Never taeard of smell
• dlbt1.>
I ltope yow nperteace will prevnt
otlter pereats from mal.la1 tlte tame
ml1take. TM law It aow .. tlte tide of
die cllalW. Parenti mHt protect
•• I.MIDS
tltemtelYH a1ala1t aj•tt prot·
entto.. If yMr cllalW It .. J•rdl. tab
lllm to tlte lltotpltaJ at CMtCe u4I tell
tltem eHclly wllat llappe9M. • • • DEAR ANN: I am dating a 60-year-
old widower and would like to marry
him but his daughter. "Mary," who
arranged our first date. is No. I with
"Dad ."
I like Ma ry.but, I realtze now that if
she says "jump." her father will ask.
"How high?" This man is a business
executive and active in civic projects.
Every conversation is peppered with
"Mary." "Mary said I sh_ould buy a
new suit." Or. "Mary said I need a
vacation." Or "Mary said I sho uld go
to Florida." Now it's gotten to be,
"Mary said wr should see this
movie."
I'm wondering how happy I wo uld
be playing second fiddle to Mary. She
would probably pick the place for our
honeymoon and, worse yet. she and
her husband would go along. I heard
there was trouble between him and
his first wife because he always
deferred to Mary.
My mother always told me 1f
something bothers you before you are
married it will be worse. not better,
after the ce remony takes place. Am I
foolish to let this bother me? Please
answer soon because I would like to
make a decision. -UPSET.
DEAR UPSET: Have a fraak
dl9C11ttl" abotlt dllt problem. Stace,
accordbl1 .. tlte Blble, a maa 1'°9ld
pet lats wife before ltJ1 modter, It
seems IGOeal &Mt Ille 11toeld also pet
Illa wife kfore llaJt d .. Oter. Ualett
Ille 11 wlllt.1, yH'd be a fool to marry
ltJm.
8 RllJL t
THINGS AaEN'T WHAT THEY SEEM
Roth vulnt>rablt>. E1&st dc11hi.
WEST
•764
NORTH
•At83
J 8
Q7t 4
•&3 2
EAST + K 102
5 4
1098532
•J 4
K 2
AK J
•KQ10 97
SOUTH
+QJ5
AQ10 9 8 7 6
Void
•A 86
Tht> biddinl(
Ea st South Weet North
1. ' PaH PaH
Pu"
0J>('ninl'( lead .Jac k or •.
WhPn Uw ltl· nr l ht• t•ards favors
dt>dare r, you rnn somtttimes creat<'
the Illusion that bad thing art'
a bout to happen . F'ew a re better at
this than Pakistani ».<'f' Zia
Mahmood. Watch him weavP his
spell on declarer in a set>mingly Im·
pregna ble fo ur-heart cont ra<'t.
T he a uction was brief and no one
could quibblP wit h South's det i·
sion to bid four hearts. It might
seem that dedarpr's only losn s arf>
two clubs and a spade, since the
king o f hearts ca n be picked up
w ith a fine se .
West led the ja ck of clubs , East
overtook with t he q ueen and de·
clarer won the ace He ran the
queen of ~pades. and Zia <'as ually
followed with the ten.
Now declarer's Imagination
went to work. If the te n were a
singleton . East wo uld rurt the
!lecond sp_ade. then get to his
O Reor<ong• le!!••• of •h•
lour Krombl.O word> b.
low to fa<m fowr :•mple -d•
R E LVEC
I I I I 11
S I ii 0 Y
CHARLES
GORE•
partner either w ith a club or a
club ruff to trump another spade
for the settlnl( trick. Since he ap-
parently had !'\O spade loser, de-
clarer opted to play the ace or
hearts and anothe r. Finis.
_z a won the king or hearts,
cashei:JlWlSClubs and then tne e
king or d iamonds. Declarer ruffed
that. but It didn't help him a bit. No
matlttr how he wriggled , he had to
concede the setting trick to Zia's
king or spades.
There a re many situations where
this type or fa lsecard can gain a
trick for the defense. If you want
to carry tl ofr successfully, how·
ever. you must maste r the art of
maktng the deceptive play s mooth·
ly If you think about it for a while,
you fool no one
For lnform,tlon about Cbarlee
Goren'• new new1le tter for
brld1e playen, write Goren
8rld1e Lett.er, P.O. Box 4428, Or· .
lando, Fla. 32802-4426.
.... ....
0 J U T S
1 1 r r
Why •re you grtnning while
I'm yelling •t y0u? .. asked the
bad-tempered dad .. Dad ...
grinned the son ··11's hard to take I lARHEP ' I I I I I
I ;,;'-~"""' wheo you'<• woo<·
Co...pl~•• the chuckle quoted
0 ., ''"'"' ...... ··~·· -·· vow dttvttloP from >tep No J ti.low
A r; •.· •, NBfPf(I 111'! PS "l I ~ ~ IHf SE SUUARES
u~ .sr PAM81 ( A80Vf l [ 'T[ ts
,. I.; GET 1'1..ISWEP
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
I Slice
5 Showed fllm
again
10 G B S
14 Nimbus
15 AthletlC
16 -Alto
t7 Gen. Bradley
18 End. e g
20 Disl resses
22 Give - -
whirl
23 Laid a floor
24 Silk filaments
26 Obla1ned
27 Engrave
30 Ductile
34 "La -··
35 Volcano apek
36 M oonbflm
37 Askew
38 Gleamed
40 $pouse
'4 t Operate
42 Abide
43 Usher
45 Splashed
47 Vocalists
48 In lhe know
'49 Bovine
SO Nec:kwear
53 .. What's up,
-7"
5-4 Yugoslavs
58 Penniless
6 1 Ripped
62 Dawdle
63 Wrecks
64 Brelnwave
65 Slreaked
66 Brok9f'
67 Copper
DOWN
1 Emporium
2 Asian prle11
3 Jal -
4 Lion movie
5 UK heroes
6 Selfish one
7 Olaord4tfa
8 Can prov
9 Snout
10 Fractur"
11 Mansion
12 Oul of lhe
ga ..
13 PromlM
19 ~1
21 Tenuous
25 Oenc:e
28 Origin
27 Angle Irons
28 VIP
29 -barbital
30 Bon -
31 Inflamed
32 Anon
33 ObNrvers
35 o.tnure
39 0ec: .. v9d
40 -pole
42 Ill will
44 -SlatJ9hter
48 Called
4 7 Disgust
49 Hooch
SO Snakes
51 Organ control
52 Coal relidue
53 Auto rece
55 Aoated
56 Machine gun
57 E11change
memberatilp
59 Garment
6Q Adjectl~
ending
·I
I
.I
by Bil Keane BIO GltOROE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
"It's my nose, Doctor. Every time I blow It,
-...,--1·-t'I uU....C.anedl•n geese." -
llARllADUKE by Brad Anderson
;
"PJtt nothing! He considers himself
an equal!" L __-/
PltAllfUTS
YES MAAM. I LEFT Mv
LUNCM 80>C. ON TME CURB
6'< TME BUS STOP.
SOMEONE Is PROBABL '(
FOUMD IT 6V NOW
' JuS1 FOUOWI NG 1N M'l' {W)S
FOOTSlEPS. Vttl\T .\Rl 'IOU UP TO~'
by Charles M. Schulz
i JUST l-IOPE IJJl-IOE\IEI('. NO DOV6HNVTS '. ?~
FOUND IT APPREUATES
A 6000 UJNC.H f ,._----
Of81'ge Coaat DAILY PILOT /Thursday, Janu8')' 23, 1818 d ----
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
UP \N lHE. ATT\C.
HE.SAID WE
, D\DNI. HA\le. ~
INSOLAi\ON.
SHOE ·
Mike. extra caeh
lHffi""S Cffl1.'/. DAD .
DADI!!
at home in '<nir s~ •~ " r-~me,. ..
by Berke Breathed
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
M'/ FIELD IS
MARRrt:t>
M ISERY··
I~)' MOON
by Lynn Johnston
by Jeff MacNally
v-
/ Y JUDGE PARKER by Harold Le Ooux
QARJ'IELD
TUllBLEWEBDS
DRABBLE
aoes1aaoes
• •
I CAT5 ANl7 "°65 tVOLVfl7 H~OM I
A 51NGLE. ANIMAL C.ALLE.17 A ·'l .()(i". rr 6 E.C.AME fXTINCT
WMEN rr 6AR~£D UP iHE
WRONG 'TREE •..
A TRE.£
NAMED
: •'0U0BA" J
by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan
&00'1 1HOOGHT:
l'M t7'1'11\16-"t:> mY
HIS GlJCCIS.
by Kevin Fagan
oo.~\~I ~"· PMR\CK ,'10u'~ 50
MOM t JUf>i WA5.,fT ~uu.. (){. POLOGNI\ H
1\.4\N~ING' r
! t ..
j
by Pat Brady
•
-FAM005 CDMAJ5£RS -
CHAPf ER IHl -Ci.AUD£ BARi.CX.l)
~E £~Of a.AoOE BARLOW'S UVE PERfO~•l'\AV'l:Z:.•
~~ 10 5PRE.AD FA~ AND ~ ~ ......... --------
WIDE t f
DOONESBURY
•
•
by Tom Batluk
Of ({)()R$E. I NO 00£ AllHE
f1ME. HAD IHE F<X:hlES11DEA
A$ 10 WHA1' HE l\'1£A~I I Baf
IHE E:.FFEC.I WAS 51lW~.IN6
NEVERil-lELESS /
---1AP fAP
11p 1
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by Gary Trudeau
• ' ~
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•
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Y• n
p
u
Heights residents
get a baddealin
county noise plan
•I
Santa Ana Heights residents accuse the county of
stacking the deck in their dealings over how to solve the
noise problem in the neighborhood near John Wayne r
c
I
I
Airpo~e residents who .live at the end .of the ~rt's
main runway are crying foul over two programs designca
to allow the county to comply with state noise guideli~es
-the purchase assurance program and the acousllcal
insulallon program. .
In the acoustical insulation program, the county Wiil
spend between $5,000 and $10,000 t~ mak~ ho~es
quieter by adding window treatments, msulanng attlcs
----nd-installing ventitatron systems. -
-Under the purebase assurancca>rogram. residents
would have one year to decide whether they want the
county to buy their homes at .. fair market value. n .
As the· guidelines are proposed, the county is
holding all the cards, and some of them are clearly
marked. .
For example, to participate in th~ no~se ~nsul~uon
program, residents must sign away thetr aVlgallon nghts,
which some say arc more valuable than the cost of the
noise improvements.
And, accev.tina the noise improvements makes ~
residents ineligible for the purchase assurance pro~.
In other words, ifthe improvements don't make a noisy
house a quiet one, too bad. Residents who chose to play
the game would have gambled and lost. .-
The purchase assurance program isn't all aces
either. . ,.
First, priority would be given to reside.n.ts who tned
to sell their homes on the open market. Failing that, the
homeowners would have to choose an appraiser from a
list compiled by the county. The residents would be
bo\ll\d by the detenn~nation of the appraiser, ~ho 'Yould
be instructed to consider the presence of a major airport
nearby and the incessant noise overhead when making
his determination of the property's fair market value.
Finally, residents would not rece!ve a UJ..x break
from the county wnen forced to move tnto-houses,bat
will lilcely come with a much higher tax bill than they
now pay. .
Clearly, Sant.a Ana Heights residents will walk away
losers, since the county has made up the rules.
Let's remember, real people's homes are at stake
here not just statistics on some noise contour sheet. An airport, which exists for the good of the many.
has become an excessive intrusion on the lives of a few.
The few need to be compensated, fairly.
That's not to say the county should bankroll
residents with a blank check. But tt could reduce the
ante:
First, allow any of the resid~nts to hire two s~te
certified appraisers of his own choice. The county, which
wouJd pay all appraisal .costs, would hir~ 1t owns
appraiser. Throw out the high and low appraisals.
In no case, should a homeowner be paid any less
than what he orif!nalJy paid for the home.
That doesn t guarantee .. just compensation" or
ensure that the airport's proximity won't be considered,
as the residents want. but it will dispel fears of low
balling.
The county is right to balk at any tax adjustments.
They won't work.
But neither wiU the noise program, unless the
county compromises.
Orange County, which owns and runs ~ohn w.a~ne
Airport, bas created a noise pro~lem for residents hvmg
in the flight line. It has an obhgatlon to try to correct what
it has caused, with no strings attached.
Residents opting for the corrective noise program
shouldn't have to sign away any rights -avigation or
otherwise. Nor should they be stuck in Santa Ana
Heights if insulation and window treatments fail.
Residents should be eligible for the purchase
assurance program even after the county installed noise
improvements, provided they are willing to reimbunc
the county for half the costs. The residents could use
money to be made from the sale of the home to buy their
way 1pto the program within a year of the date
improvem ents are made.
As an example, a homeowner with $50,000 equity in
his home would realize only $45,000 if he opted to stay
and gamble the S 10,000 worth of county-installed noise
improvements would quiet the din above.
It's doubtful the noise problem can be solved with a
little insulation. But the county must make an honest
effort for those who choose to remain, and give those
who want to leave an honest deal.
Otherwise. the county's credibility along with its
airport expansion plan will colla~se like a house of cards.
Opinions ••pressed rn lhls space are those of the Dally Phot Other Ytew8
.xpresaed on this page are thoM of their authors and artiste. Reed«
comment Is invited The Dally Piiot. PO Bo1t t 560, Co1t1 Mesa, 92826. Ph<>M
642-6088.
Today is Thursday. Jan. 23, lhC'
23rd day of 1986. ThcrC" arc 342 day.,
left in the year.
Today's hi&hhaht in h"tory
OAANGE COAST
Illy Pilat
li'\IOllllNG ~ dlf'; I)! 111111 ..,.., Al l )r A
..,, •• • Ol:IMti ~ •"'11-c ~:olo1 1• Cc••"'"°
On Jan. 23 , 1968. North Korea
seized tht U.S. Navy ship Pueblo,
killed one crew member and held the
other 82 as spies.
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SOOttt Cdrtor
~c'*• •• Controllel
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~'~••.no ow.aor
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Jn reality. ORH (OraaunRUtbDaa HOlliiian)I•• liilJlcal re8pon8e toa
budget procet111alid • apeildthrtn ~60..M inad. '· -
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ON THE R IGHT
-
tRl'l r. •.
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.... DOaJllAJlf
Jnr1 iO\I Pli ~Pi AR
Tobacco
firm ads
targeted
young
But officials won't
' saywhether 1970s
practices conf nue
WASHINGTE>N-Tobaococom-
panies do a slow bum whenever
they're accused of trying to sell their
hazardous products to young people
through alluring advertisements. In-
Americil cannot abandon
Angolans to communism
dustry lobbyists have now been hit
with this charae by a prestigious
opponent, the American Medical
Association, which wants Congress to
ban all cigarette advenising.
The ensuing controversy could
shed belated light on a colJection of
secret industry documents that have
been in the Federal Trade Com-
mission's possession since 1979. Tbe
documents undermine the conten-
tion of a lcadina tobacco company.
Brown & Williamson, that its ads bad
not been aimed at ~tential cus-
tomers under the aae or21 .
Arguments that we can't help because
of South Af rtca' s effort& there off base
We have all been made familiar
with the problem of South Africa. but
there is also the matter of Soulhem
Africa. and that means Namibia.
Mozambique and Anaola, t.bc last
beina the most conspicuous because
Congress bas not yet decided what to
do: Help Savimbi. or don't help
Savimbi?
Jonas Savimbi (the leader of
-UNIT A.). you _will. .recall. is the
Angolan cquivalcnl of the contras in
Nicaragua. For yean he fought for
independence from Ponugat, pursu-
ing democratic government and civil
liberties. And then, at the moment of
victory in 1975, the coup d'etat
happened. This was a Marxist-
Leninist operation made possible by
Cuban soldien, who continue to
reside in Angola, approximakly
35,000 ofthc;m.
There is a nice piquancy here, ·by
the way: Cuba charges the govern-
ment of Angola S 1,000 per month per
soldier. How on earth does little
Angola get that kind of dough?
Courtesy of an American oil com-
pany. a subsidiary of Chevron, which
as busy pulling oil out of offshore
beds, netting $800 million per year for
the Angolan communists.
The arms the government (the
MPLA) receives are courtesy of
Moscow, but they need their other
income to stay ahve. Angola, which
used to export ~n, has become
another workers paradise: There
isn't enough to eat, and they need
thercf orc.10 import &rain.
Savimbi's position is different
from that of the contras. Because
although the contns don't hold down
substantial parts of NicaraJUa,
Savimbi is very much in control of30
percent of Anaola. wl)erc be runs
schools, and even hospitals.
And who has made possible Savim-
bi's survival? South Africa. Oppo-
nents of aid to Savirnbi stress that
..suchLlh.ina wo~in.a1c us,
because South Africa a the United
States would then be partners in the
same enterprise. Havina touched
pitch, we would ever after be defiled.
This is an argument we never did
bear, not even retroactively\ when we
joined hands with Josef Stalin to fight
Hitler. But we arc being told that if
indeed our goal is to ~cep Southern
Africa from communization, then we
mutt recognize that collaboration
with the apartheid government of
South Africa in the matter of Angola
would so antagonize the black popu-
lation ofSouth Africa as to drive them
into the arms of the communists.
Two observations become rel-
evant. The first is that in helping
Savimbi fiJht the Marxists in Angola,
South Africa is not enpging. so to
speak, in exporting apartheid. What-
ever one thinks of South Africa's
government, there can hardly be any
dispute over its anxiety to help ant1-
communist forces in surrounding
areas.
The argument that we stand to lose
the good will of black South Africans
requires us to be prepared to say to
WILLIAM F.
8ucKLEY
-· •• .... The internal Brown & Williamson
documents were ~ntly introduced
as coun exhibits in a libel suit the
company brou&ht qainst a Chicago such folk: If you aentJemen don't television commentator.
understand that fntemal opposition Company officials declined to say
to . commu~Sfll is an enterprise whether the marketina strategies laid
P.bilantbrop1c 10 character, then you outinthedocuments-whichdatcto
simply do n<?t kno~ enough to the mid-1970s _ arc still being
formulate forc~an poh~. :·· We~ followed.. Instead. ther descri6cd ~1&me-9~ns-bqinnm,-toanse "our policy" in this sensitive area as: !nth~ Pbil1pp10~. If we help Marc~s ''Brown & Williamson believes that
!n h1s war l&al!lSt the communi.st smolcingisanadultcustom. Advertis-msurgen~ ~ will lose the good wdl in& and promotion activities for our
oflb.e PhilipP1ne people:. . products arc aimed at adult smokers. It 1s conunuaUy aston1sb1na that we 21 years of aae and over."
wo.rr; so muc~ abo~t th~ &ood Apparently that wasn't always the
op1mon 9f,mankind .while los1na that case. A .. Strategic Positioning St.a~
aood. opm1on, .as witn~ v~te af'.\cr ment, .. prepared by Brown &. Wil·
vote 1~ the Uruted Nauons t~ w~1cb liamson'sad agency in 1974, included
th.e Thud Worl.d. ~r much of1t, sides young smokers among the crucial Wlt!t the to~1~ns. And all the targets of a promotional campaign
while th~ Sov_i~ Umon ~ ~ot ~fig intended to boost the sagging sales of
for pubhc op101on -and 1s lionized Viceroy ciprcttes.
all over the world. . . The document listed male smokers
"Do not under:c~ta~~te the imJ>?rt· l6 to 25 years old as among the "Best ~cc ~f y9ur dCClsaon, . Jonas Savi!"· Prospects" for increased sales. cx-
b1 W'!ltes !~the current ~ssue of Pol~cy plainina; ''Fif\y-five percent of young Revte~. For ~~ola as the Munich males 16-2 5 smoke full-taste o~ Africa. H~1~t1on, the refusal to ciprettes. Twenty-seven percent of
aad UNIT A an .•ts fia!tt aptnst the all full-taste 84mm smokers are
q ubans and Soviets, will~ tak~n as a 16-25. Only 15 percent of Viceroy Sl~I by all the CC?Untncs ID the smokers are 16-25. Therefore. there is
region that the United S~tes has ample opponunity for arowth in
abandoned them to the Sov1eU ~the Viceroy coming into alignment with west abandoned Czt:chos}ovalcia ~nd the catqory. •·
Eastern Euro,P.C to Hitler ID 1938. The strategy paper said the "pri-
Enough said. . mary objective" of the upcoming ad
WIHlam Blld.ley 11 • 1yNlcaf#Jd campaign was to "position Viceroy as
col•mal1t. to attract young males from com-
petitive brands" while hanging onto
the ciprette's own customers.
The two other aroups listed as
"prime prospects for Viceroy" were
"Females 18-49" and "Blacks 18-49."
Gramm,.,Rudman:Bad law
but one that may work
The ad aaency's repon played
down the importance of "starters"
(tint-time smoken) and "re-starters"
(those who had quit smolcin.g for
more than a year), explaining that
"starter and re•starter groups toeether
account for only 8 percent of all
smokcn."
A January 1976, "Marketing
Strateay'' paper, approved by Brown
&. Williamson. noted "problems (tha1
the) marketing plans must solve."
One listed solution: "Efforts must
also be made to increase the brand's
appeal to smokers 18-40 ...
By REP. ROBERT DORNAN
Welfare state enthusiasts have been
lookina high and low for a way to halt
the Emergency Deficit and Balanced
Budaet Act, otherwise known as
Gramm-Rudman-Hollings (GRH),
and they have concluded that· the
constitutional question may be their
last best chance to save the bloated
bureaucracy.
The argument against G RH is ~at
it is unconstitutional and by enactmg
it Conaress has relinquished its
constitutionally mandated responsi-
bility to tax and spend. Even Business
Weck has endorsed this position and
called for repeal of the amendment.
Just thjJ pa11 week on CNN's
Crossfire. liberal host Tom Braden tPC>U for welfare enthusiasts evcry-
Wberc when he took me, and the
entire Con~ to task on just this
point. Said Mr. Braden, "What
you've done, Mr. Doman~ you and
your colleques, is tum your powers.
.,.anted by the constitution to you,
over to a formula. Don't you think
you're abroptina your responsi-
bility!'
My res~n1e was -;--yes, th.c Conaras did a~te us responsa·
bility -and I explained that that was
one of the reasons I voted apinat the
measure. But the measure would not
have been necessary had Conaress
ac:1ed responsibly under tbe 8udeet
Act of 1974.
In raliry, GRH is a IQlical
rapon1e to 1 budeet process and a
spendthrift eo.,ress aone mad. If
Mr. Brlldcn. or the othu liberals
1poutina the ume line, believe that
tbis Coael• ii captblc ofbalandn&
t.bt tMldllt wit.bout the beneflt of
GRH. tM')' lie eorely mil\aken and
haven't been peyi"I attention the
pa.-I 0 yean.
,_
The CQnsututional argument ad-
vanced by Mr. Braden and his bunch
is a canard; a liberal fia leaf designed
to cover the real motive behind this
attack on GRH -savina the welfare
state that acts as job security for
countless liberal pobticians. Even if it
means raising taxes.
The liberals say that the Founding
Fathers would be shocked by G RH,
and yet they believe that these same
Founding Fathers would be sup-
portive of abortion and gun control
leaislation. And bow do liberals think
the Founding Fathers would react to
the Lepl Services Corporation. the
Expon-tmpon Bank. the 0crn-
ment ofEnersy, and AMTRAK
What wouJd the Foun~ Fathen
think about liberaJ pofiticaans who
cry out for more tuation when taxes
currently account for about 35 per-
cent of GNP? And what do you
su~ the Foundina fatherl would
tbtnk about federaJ fundina for
pomosraphic poetry by the National
Endowment for the Ana?
Try to imqine that put patriot
Benjamin Franklin addmaina the
Houte today 11 Conaressman from
Pcnnsyjvania. The noor deb&tc mi&ht ao somethina like this:
Benjamin Franklin: Mr. Speaker, it
ia obvious that a peMy saved is a
penny tamed.
Uberal Oemocnt: Mr. Speaker,
the ~tleman from Pennsylvania i•
obviously mistaken. I have here in
front of me a study done by tbe
CoqpaaionaJ Budaet Office wlticb
clarly tboM that all thole saved
penn1e1 wac not earned, but in fact
are a direct tttult of the Reapn w
CUtJ wbidt, althouah 8CtOll the
~ favored the rich. For my
::=to lit hcrt and make llKla I daim is f)'Pical of bit
uncomPMliCJMte natuie and it showl
his unwillinpess to help thoee in
need.
franklin: Gentlemen, surely God
helps them that help themselves!
Liberal: But Mr. Franklin, what
about t.lu>se that cannot help them-
selves, such u Boeina Corp., which
receives low interest loans from the
Expon-lmpon ~ or cities like
Greenwich, Conn.; wbicht althou&h
one of the richest commuruties in the
nation, receives federal revenue shar-
ina arants. Who is aoina to look after
them? What Mr. Franklin advocates
is nothina but social Darwinism, an
idea rep~t to Americana every-
where. I think Mr. Franklin should
.. wake up" to the realities of modem
America.
Franklin: But Mr. Speaker, early to
bed and early to rise, makes a man
healthy, wealth)' and wise.
Liberal: Mr. Speaker, if that is tile
case. then I think we lho1tld put a tax
on such activity. The healthy
wealthy, and wise have avoided
payin&'their fair share lont enou&}\ .
Poor Ben, he just wouldn't be
suited to lOdai s polit.icaJ realities. In
hi• day poblict was a _pan.time
occuJ)9tion and memben ofConpus
were exP«tecS to cam a livina thrOuah
outside activities in1te8d of lloppina
at the public lfOUlh. But today, ~tina elec1ed and re-elected hu
become an end in itlelf.
Balancina I.be bucllet is our No. one
domestic: priority. And althoup I
believe that Gramm-Rudman is oot
the best way to addrat this i•ue, if it
•ucceedl la balancina the budlrt aod ditmn&Ue the welfare •1e.lt may
well be won.b ihe effort.
the strat~y pa~r identified the
"Taraet Aud1ence' for each of thm:
Viceroy ads to be tested as either
"Full-flavor smokers and starters,
aaed 18-40," or "Full -navor smokers
and starters, aged 18-40, specifically
who think they smoke too much and
would like to smoke less."
Finally, after the four-month ad
campaian was dropped as ineffective,
an internal memo dated November
1976 soupt approval of Brown &
Williamson's vice president for mar-
ketjOJ for more rncarch "to d~
temune the reason for Vicery's in-
ability to attract st.aners and com-
petitive smoken."
Footnote: A Brown & Williamson
spokesman told our uaociate Tony
Capaccio: "Cipreue advertisina is
inherently public. Judsmenu about
the advenisina can be m8de only on
the basis of the published advertitc-
ments."
MJNl-EOJTORJAL: The bodies of
more than half of the 2A8 Amcricao
soldiers who died in the Newfbul>d-
land plane cruh last month remain
unidentified. One rcuon. the Pe•
tqon e~plained. is that medical ud
dental ret9fdl of the men wen
aboard the umc plane ud wen
destroyed in the fiery crub. Thj1 ii
strictly apintt Anny rqpalatJou -
for reuoas that have DOW belD made
au too paiaJ\ally dear. Yet eomeone aJoaa &be cbain of command mAde a tboulbtlnl decision that hit COit the
billa. ol the dald .. 'icetnca
untold and Dledlett anpilll. n.11
IOftllleOGe'• -.S abollld rOU. .... ......... ..,,....,,.,.
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........... ...._..
ail ors
ceept
hcindout
Laguna turnovers
critical as Newport
gets 62-52 -vtctory
By CHRIS MONAHAN
Dilly Net C.u c , ,,._,
Laguna Beach High basketball
coacli Ed Bowen probably said it best
while talk.mg to his team during a
timeout late in Wednesday njght's
game at Newport Harbor.
"You guys are doing it to yourself,"
Bowen explained.
What he meant by that was that too
-many-t~as th biggest factor
behind the Anists own demise - a
62-52 loss to the hosts.
The giveaway numbers fo r Laguna:
21 turnovers for the game, including
13 in the first half, when Bowen said
his team (3-3, 9-7) probably lost the
game.
"Too many turnovers in the first
half against what I thought was a non-
pressingdcfensc," said &wen. "They
also made a 101 of free throws in the
second half( 18 of 27)."
The Sailors (3-3. 9-7) -especially
guard Maunce Lee-took advantage
of those gifts, turning most of them
into easy lay-ups at the other end. Lee,
who led a balanced Sailor attack with
16 points, had no fewer than five
steals and four baskets off turnovers.
··we got some sohd plar out of our
guards and we pressed rea well,·• said
Newport Coach Tam Parse!. ''They
ran a box-and-one defense on him
(lee), but he d idn't get frustrated and
kept penetrating. He did a real good
JOb.
Celtlca rout LM-., 11G-ll, In NBA tltle Mrln rematch. 82.
7 arM tootbell plllren to be honored • echcUr-athleteL a.
(
Trojans .find
I a way, ·stun
Woodbridge
Un iversity rallies
for68-61 triumph
in double overtime
By ROGER CAR~N
Ol ... Dlly .........
"This is the year to gain some
respectability," -University High
basketball coach. Steve so,;,;n. a
Lhirtf~yeareoacb WJth ~ven undb"-
classmen on his rosier wirh a 1-/J
league record 1n 1985.
That" s how the Trojans' coach put
1t moments before his team took the
floor at Woodbndge High Wedoes--
day night and if they accomplish
nothing else. they have indeed at-
tarned that particular goal following a
stellar come-from-behind 68-61
double overtime Sea View League
victory.
Down b~ 11 at halftJme with Enc
Olin playmg hurt and hardly seen
with four pornts. semor Tim Warren
not play1nga1 all (ankle)and 6-4 Lasse
Glassco tn foul trouble. well. even
Woodbndge Coach Bill Shannon
admiued afterward he though! 1t was
over.
.. We JUSt wanted 1t a lot," said a
happy Scoggin ... We wanted to keep
Adam Keefe under pressure (wlth a
collapsmg zone) and they didn't hit
from outside."
Sea View •talldbJ69
~ o..1111
W L WL
Corona oet Mer S I 15 J
UniYenllV 4 7 I I
EllMCla l J 10 7
lo...-8ffcl' J J ' 1 HewPOf1 Hart>C)( l 3 f 1
~ 3 3 ••
WOOCIOl'ldoe J 3 14 5
CCKI• Mew 0 6 1 12 w ..... .,.. Salrw ,._POr, Heroor 62. ~ BMCll S2
s.odlttleck S7 Eatenc:le 40
COt'one Clef MM n . C0518 #MM~ -
l.IA!w•1"¥ "· >Nn•r'-. 61 (2 04) ,.,,.,,., ~ (1:JI)
W~IOOt 11 Eatel'lele ,.. __ , Heroor ., CCKI• Mew
Leotil\a hacn at Unlver'lltv
COt'ona del Mar a1 ~
Sull, there were big problems wtth
Glasscn back on the bench with 3:49
left in the tb ird quaner with bis fourth
personal foul In all. he was to miss
11·0::! of playmg ume during rqu-
lauon. but m the end n was tbc 6-4
GlasStn. along with 6-5 Brett
W1nslov. v.ho teamed 10 dominate
the inside.
And. v.nb Oltn taking cbarge in the
latter st.ages of the fourth penod and
1hrough both ovcrumes. 1t was a
combination which proved un-
beatable.
"We missed all those fr~ throws,"
said a dJsgustcd Shannon. •• Aod we
had poor shot selection. But U niver-
slt) desen es a lot of credi L"
While there were areas which the
host Wamors could dwell on. it was a
declSIOn which uruvers1ty won. "We were surprised at that defense
because Lee as not our marn scorer.
We have a balanced au.ack. Lee 1s
(Pleue 11ee SAJLORS/83) LafUna Beach'• Coby Nae.a benda down
for looee ball while Newport'• llark Crate (lef t) and Maurice Lee, and Artiat Doug
Lawler Crtcht) look on.
It went a httle deeper than that.
however. as Scoggin ordered his
qumtet to attack the 1ntenor in the
second half and a 31-20 deficit melted
to 33-31 m short order because of the
scoring antics of Glassen and Ohn.
Woodbndge did not trail in rcgu-
lauon and wasn't caught unul there
)
(Plea.e eee TROJA.llf8/BS)
Edison tops FV
in sloppy game
ChargerSffianage
51 -32 win despite
off-shooting night
By BARRY FAULKNER
o.ilr Net C.U i J I •nt
Edison High basketball coach Jon
Borchert wondered aloud after his
team 's 51 -32 Sunset League win over
Fountain Valley Wednesday night.
Was the sloppy play on both sides
due to the playe rs being lackada1s1cal
or of bein~ so pumped up 1ha1 they
were light.
Ei ther way. the Charger win on
their own floor lacked much in the
way oniardwood artistry.
The victory evened the Chargers'
Sunset record at 2-2 ( 12-6 overall )
ending a two-game losing streak 1n
league. The Barons, who had posted
two stra1ght victories. fell to 2-2 in
league play ( 11-8 overall).
Edison shot a measly 38.6 percent
from the floor ( 17 of 44), while the
Barons converted only 14 of 45
attempts from the field for an anemic
31 percent.
"This was an important game. but
neither teem looked very excited,"
Borchert said.
The Chargers were the first 10 show
signs of 1ntens11y in the second stanza.
after an opening quarter which saw
them tally only one field goal (on eight
anempls). ending up o n the short end
of an 8-4 score.
The Chargers perked up in the
second period, wrule the BarC'lnS
UCIHOSTS
LONG BEACH
The UC' Irvine men's basket·
balJ team plays the middle of a
three-game homestand tonight
when the Anteaters welcome
long Beach State fora 7:30 PCAA
contest at Crawford Hall.
The Anteaters arc coming off a
99-88 victory over UC Santa
Barbara last Saturday and cur-
rently rest in third place in the
PCAA standanas.
Long Beach State hu one
conference win to its credit, a
76-53 decision over Pacific last
Saturday. The 49ers lost to San
Jose tatc on Monday, 72-62.
Ron Palmer is an ht sceond
season as Lon' Beach State coach
bavina compiled a 9-3S overall
record. Lona Beach leads the
teries apinst UCI. 17· I l. but the
Anteaters have won the last sut
meetinp, includina 99--84 and
7S-67 verdicts last year.
The 49en arc led by sophomore
center OeAnlhony Lanaston1 who scored a carc«·hiah 24
points in the win over Pacific.
SOpl\Omorc auard Ball y Walker is
amon1 tht PC'AA leaden 1n
Ulittt. whlle freshman Andre
Purry leads Lo na Bach 'in rc-
boundana.
•
Oceen View
F0\11\laln Vallev
EOl•on WtS1mln11er
Hunll1>9ton &teer>
Marina
uetw O\lwml Wl Wl 4 0 i. 4
7 ? II 8
7 ? 12 6
2 2 s 12
I 3 1 11
1 J 11 9
WedrleMllY's Sc-WeslmlnSltf' SI, Marin. SO
Eolw n SI, Founl•ln Valley 31
Oceen View 56. Huntlnolort 8eecl'I 51
'"*Y'• ~ (7:l0)
Eolw n •I ~rlna
Huntlnotort 8MCl'I •t Fount•ln Vallev
Wetimlnster al Oceen View
matched Edison's four-point opening
period scoring effort 10 the second
quarter.
Edison turned up the backcourt
pressure, forcing six Baron turnovers,
and hit fi ve of its first eight shots from
1he field, outscoring the visitors 17-4
10 take a 21-12 halftime lead.
' The Baro ns shot only 21 percent for
the first half, while comm1ting 10
turnovers and they were never in 1he
game again.
"We played poorly," said Baron
Coach Dave Brown. "They were
pnmed and ready, and they came out
and got in our faces. Thev did a JOb."
Ken Ammann led the Chargers
with 18 points to take game-high
scoring honors. The 6-2 guard-for-
ward also pulled down seven re-
bounds.
Doug Katona. a 6-5 scntor center.
was the only other player in double
figures wtth 12. He also led both
teams with I I rebounds.
"Ammann staned shoot mg the ball
well later on." said Borchert. "Katona
did a real good JOb in the second half
on the boards." he added.
Borchert credited the defens1,e
pressure with turning things around
fo r the Chargers. "The defense got 11
going and we seemed to come out of
the doldrums." he noted.
Fountain Valley has been vulner-
able to pressure defense this )Car.
because it relies heavily on one
player. senior guard Todd Hanson. 10
handle the ball.
The Edison defenders. most
notably Dave Margulies. pla)cd
tenacious man-to-man defcnSt" on
Hanson and limited his efTect1 vencss
for most of the game. "They denied
Hanson the ball, which was real good
strategy," said Brown.
The Cha'lcrs also packed their
man defense into the kcy, limuang thc
easy lay-in baskets which have be·
come a mainstay for the Barons.
It's a game to savor
for Hannah, Payton
Veterans have waited
a lon time to appear
In first Super Bowls
NEW O RLEANS (AP) -As the
New England Patriots flew back to
Boston aftt\" the victory over Miami
that put them in the Super Bowl.John
Hannah finalty decided be bad some-
thin1 to celebrue.
"He went 10 the beck of the plane
with everybody and wudancina and si naina. which Is not \be John
Hannah we know," recalls Ron
Wooten, the other Juard on New
Enaland's offensive hne. "He had to
be the most 11tlsfled Patriot."
Hannah. conaldcred by tome to be
the best oftenaivc lineman nu to
play football. w.U Ix mMin& IM fint
Super Bowl appcuance Of IUs I l
National Footbel.11.ape ,.IODI on
unday.
So will Wa1ttr Plytoe. w1M> 111811.be
\atiatics to prove lllt'• ._. .,......
runnina beck -hll 14.'60 cmreer
rusb1na yanh in 11 ,_,.. widi a.
Chicago Bears are the NFL's all-time
best.
Hannah and Payto n profess to be
treating the Super Bowl as one more
game an a long career. Payton mort so
than Hannah.
"My idea of playing 1s to go out .ft.id
play a hard as I can whether it's the
Super Bowl or anything else." Payton
said.
But 1f the> 're pla)'mg down the
sianifiaance of the game. their team·
matei artn't. Neither arc rome of
their opponents.
Al a recent award prcscntauon an
Miami, Ho••1e t.on1 of the Los
Aneelcs Raiden said he hopes the
Patnots win the uper Bowl bccaux
be•d H~ 10 see Hannah aap a
diattnaui1hed career. Lo!ta's team-
mate; Marcus Allen. said he wa roouna for lhe "kin b«autc of
Pa)"'Oft, idd.11.\.f .. We runnina bach
at.id tQICtber '
Swt wnh Payton
'"To do all that he' danc~nd notao
al IM way it hkt IOint to the end Of
llw niD~ud not eemna lht pot of ialll. .. IMd Matt Sulte , who p&a
Seahawks, CdM roll
Marina's chan cesdamaged;
Roadrun-ners rout Estancia
Ocean V1ev. H1gh's Scahawks remain unbeatr-n 1n
Sunset League basketball pla} follov.,ng their fourth
straight wm Wednesday night. and one of their ch1et
challengers. Manna. continued 10 fade. falling three
games ofT1he pace.
Corona del Mar. meanwhile, remains atop the: liea
V1ev. League with a 9J-po1n1 outburst agams1 Costa
Mesa. v.hile Estancia ran mtoa 15-poml wall in the founh
quarter to drop into a Ii ve-wa~ 11e for third place in the
wild Sea View.
Here's how it went:
Oceau View SS, HutlDgton Beacla SI: The Oilers
overcame a I 0-potnl first quaner deficit and went 10 the
wtre with the Seahawks at Hu ntington Beach before
Ocean View hit three crucial free throws to ice the win.
Blame DeBrouwer scored 12 of his pme-h1gh 18
points in the first penod 1n staking Ocean View (4-0. 14-4)
to a -l4-l 4 lead.
The Oilers ( 1-3. i.11 1 battled back though and made
n a game the rest of the v.a~ \\ 11h 2.10 rematning. the
Seahawks held onto the ball v.11h a 51 -49 lead
Huntington Beach foukd with I 10 left. and bane
Morris answered b) malong both ,·hant~ shots for a 53-49
advantage.
The Oilers missed their next attempt. fouled T C'ln'
Panzica who converted one chan1y sho1. and htt onh ont•
more bucket before the buzzer.
Panzica put up IO points and collected 12 rebound co
while Dezi Hazely added ntne po1n1s and six rebound~ tor
the Seahawks.
Darren Snov. turned 1n 17 points and had nine n 1kr
rebounds.
Westmlnstu S8, Marina SO: The\ 1k10g., frll 1n111 the
unset ~llar as thr Lions combinr-d a ll"am drtemc "11h
some sohd second quaner sconng cffons trom f om
Dever 10 up their record to 2-2.
Dever scored 12 ofh1s 16 10 the second penod but 11
wasn't until the final tv.o mtnutes "hen the l 1ons
consistently connected at 1he hoe to iv.art a \tannJ rail)
which came to withm a bucket with two minute kit
"We were a little tentativelv with our offense.' unu l
about two minutes left.·· said Westminster Coach Dick
Katz. "But then we wcrt' able to put some frtt throws in.
Joe Smnh did a JOb for us inside ...
Sm1th, at 5-1 I . scored I I potnts to help seal the wm
fo r the Lions. v.ho put a team on~he coun at 5-9. 5-8. 5-11,
6-0 and 6-1 .
"Wr·rl" small but v.e press and pla' prelt) good
defense ·· ~1d Katz
Manna·s causr "'ai. hun b} 1he absence of6-~ Mark
Georgeson and guard 8111 Craft
Craft '"''ISied ht~ knee 1n l\..tanna·s first league game
and has ~et 10 score in the \ 1lings' shaA~ 1-3 start.
Geo'leson twisted h1~ ankk 1n pracuce Tuesda~ and
remains tr-ntall'e for Fn da'
.\nd. 6-1 M1kr-Mr-~ers.had 10 lea'e the game in the
late going after crashing into the scorer's table.
Steve Guild led Manna rebounding wtth seven. a
department which the Yikes v.on ~.i.18 W ilham Quinn
had four arnsts for l'vfanna
Corona del Mar 93. Costa Mua 43: Thr-Sea K.tngs
rebounded w11h a 'cngeance from last Fnda} 's loss to
Woodbndge. putting the v1s1t1ng Mustangs 10 a hole
earh
·Cd \-1 Coach Jal l Em on was able to clear his bench
earh. a 1he en11n: ro,tcr pla)'ed and I~ players scored.
·JeffFner had ~ I points. wh1k Tim Chnst1anscn was
credited v. 1ih 11 rehounds Doug Green converted 6of11
shots 10 finish with 16 points. as CdM hit on 55 percent of
ns shots from 1he tloor
\.\1th the '1cton the Sea Kings ( 5-1 15-3)
ma10ta1ned 1t!I onc-gamr lead JO the Sc4 Vie"' Costa
\k..a dropped 10 O-o and 1-1 ~
Sadclleback S 7. Eslallcia 40: The Roadrunners went
on a I S-0 run earl~ 1n the fou nh quaner 10 ewand a '\8-34
alhantage and dump thr Eagle\ 31 addlcbad
The game .,ta,cd dnSt' ml1'it lll the ~a' un11l thr-
spurt which helped \Jddlcback l.'.'atlh f<;tanc1a at \-l 1n
the Sea 1r-"
Jex Deal. v.ho ,,orrd eight p.11nt~ tn thl· tinal J'll'nod.
finished v.11h I ~ P<llOI' and 11 n:•hound' 111 i..c, 1he
Roadrunners' atta .. i.. Hn ant ~ alwn contnhutr-d I'\
rebounds and nine aco'i1s1s to go with his 15 points
For Estancia. Rnan Tift "d' the top potnt-gcttr-r v.1th
12. sconngall ofh1., point\ 1nthc 1ir.1 half He -.a.a<, the lone
Eagle 10 reach doul'ik tiiturc
Saddleback Jl\O nt"ned 11s 1nt•rall re\·ord at ~-8,
while Estancia 1s t • 1-.,
He gets the point,.
so McMahon reaay
next to Pa"Yton an Ch1caio's backfield
and 1s one of his closcs1 tnends on thr-
team. "No matter how much hc S3)S
1l's1ust another game. I think he rrall)
wants 1t."
"We've been kidding a lot of the
rookies," said llght end Erne~ Moor·
ehcad. who has ~t most of h1
mne-)ear NFL c.artt'r on lo 1na
team "It ~ms easy to them because
thcy'rt here in their first year. But for
people like WaJtcr and myself 11
means so much more. One of 1hc
thanp )'Ou want to do beforc ou'rt
throulft 1 play 1n thll game and now
we've Sot a chanct." ..(
"I ftC pcc1al ~t1sfa('t1on 1n
Walter 1 cue." said ~an Coach
Mike Dttka. who pla)cd 1n the I Q7 I
and 1972 usxr Bo"'b •1th the Dalla
Co"'bo tn the 10th and I I th n
oft l l·yttr c:arttr
''Wbenyoucanaccomph hovo-11
)tan what hc'J 1«omphshcd.. tt'
oicetot.akettn\Cl1'8fe A lot ofput
t.ckl nt~trmllde tt-OJ. ampton.
Jim 8toWw ......
Chicago quarterback
responds to sessio n
wtth acupuncturist ----
NEW O RLEANS (AP) -\h1~0
quarterback Jim McMahon aot hi'
acupunctunst Wednesday. and. ht 'i
sore buttocks rtponed 1mpro'ed
sccmed set to pla)' 1n unda 's uper
Bowl.
Af\cr11mnaout much ofTucsda)'s
practice, McMahdn was t.ruted
before Wcdnesda)"s s1on b
acupunctun t Hir'Olh1 bmash1. after
the team's manaac~t apttd to hi\
requeit 10 ha~ bim nown an from
Clu~
Then. weanaa • headband Wllh
"acupunctu~" tmt~n on n. the
imvcrent McMahon toot molt of
the snaps on \be lean' fim t-o 1ent1
It Pf'IC\ICe. Tblt WU mouth 10 encouraee Coecb Mike Dalka. who
earlier 1'ad 'a'Ol"ried about bll qua.r-
tcrllect '• condl tion.
''lllt nwn lbina I wu 1m~ With was all bis movement· Dnb
" .
"31d ··tte -.a.as WO percent better
toda\ I "'a~ not 'cf\ opt1m1st1c after
\e terda) · pract1re It was a pleasant
urpnse for me ..
E'en be fort the pool repon from
the 1ntel'\ 1ew. the official nuury
rtpon had hsted McMahon as "prob-
able .. for unda)'s game between the
Bears and New England Pltnots. In
official Nauonal Football Leaauc
~rlance, that means he has at least a
~rccnt of pl&)'lf\I.
That confirmed the as!CSStnCftt of
McMahon himself who had vowtd to
pl&)-.
''I'm not aonna mm this pme. rd
ne\'er want to m1 thll prne, ••
McMahon told rcportcn from bdund
the sunglasses that have become die
trademark o fh1s rebellious pcnona. ·-ru play bccaute of tbt traatments
I'll be aetuna. 1·11 play bttaU11C oece
)OU act on the field ~ ldremlia
mru pumpint and you put \ht .,..
out of )Our mand. ..
The bnUIC OD McMOoa't ..,
('nd, 1ncuned wbee 1te .. llnlek ~
he helmet of the llum' Jua Colilil
1n the Nabonal fOOldlall Cxk H
(Pla11 .. rr..-~
• • ii
t • '
I ~ I
. ...
; . ..
"' .
~ t -·
As a fU. do-401
Super Bowl not
ezactly la-cli-da
NEW ORLEANS -Al a fais do do,
the Su~ Bowl rues about an 8 on Jay
Hebert• tonpe.ill-choek IG-point Cajun
tcale.
Hebert, bittorian and flCOnteur, teamed with food
expen Mart'ICUe Bienveou for about an hOur in an effon
to explain to a kaot ofSuper Bowl writen what a Cajun
ia and why aucb people and their culture a.tt so
diJtinctive.
In m.aki:-L bis point&, Hebert slips in and out of the
Cajun aaieot acquired u a child m New Iberia. La.,
about 130 miles west of here.
A f.ais do do, be explained. is what Caj UM call their
&11-niaht faiivals offOQd. drink and dance.
lleben was asked ·bow Alphonse, bis persona for
Cajun leFnds. would rate lhe Super Bowl u a festival.
lled WlllC• mp Jgefnl •tnak
Wurm Y~ tcOm1 bis teOODd aoiJ ri'I oft.be~ I :32 ant.o overtime Weclnetda,y '
u,bt IO lift Detroit t.o a ~5 National
Hocby Lelpe victory o~ Bottoo. Tbe
victoty bt* lbe Red Wiap' ~ loliasm.k D!::c:' ~it'• l<>-tiamc .............
• l:Jtc U) the NHL. .. ...., aDd .....
8 11pnhh • ICOC'Od ~Y _..in a ..,.a ol 1~29
lase an the 9'00ftd period u the New York~ t.t
Toronto, 4-2. 1endina tbe Maple Leaf1 t.o their founb
CODICICUtive ddeat ... Dlft AMNJ• ' t IOOnd a pl
and wisted on two otben to lad Buffalo to a ~3
victory ovet Winnipea. The victory wu tbe Sabftt•
third straiabt &ince C:1 rnaQ11ef ._., a.wzsv
reolaced JC. Sdi1 ~ u <lOllCb last Friday ••• Diii wU...•1 70.foot alepW>t lase in tbe final perioc1
enabled OUCllQ to tie MontRal. 3-l # •• De....,.
ICOred three aoe.11 and Marie i..a.a let up three of
Pittsburah'• five aoe1s ill lbe third period to hdp tbe
Ptnauins to a 7-4 vicu>ry over E.dmonton ... Aanm
Brea. scored with just 49 secooda ~mainina in the
third period u New Jeney banled its way back for a 6-6
tie with Calpry. The aoal came with Devil IOaltendcr
.U... C11evrtu on the beocb in favor of an extra
auacker •
.. Fin'ofawl,atafaisdodo,cvuhbodydance'inde s•-n hold OD to beat Phoe-•-ltreet," be said. "For a Super Bowl. only about half the &A~ DMl
people. aon • dance.
"Secon' of awl, when de Cajuns do it. awl de a....tet BarkJeJ scored 29 points and m
merchant' on de main street take de window out dey pabbcd 14 rebounds u Philadell>hia built
stoh so dey can pus tni de beer and de wine. At a Super a IS-point lead in the third period and held
Bowl. only de merchant on Bourbon Street do dat off a late Pboellll rally to beat the Suns.
"Tird ofawl, you co to Mamou, and dcy 1ot the 118-111, Wednesday niaht in the National Basketball
pot of jambalaya steam.tn' ovah dere and the aumbo Association. M .... MaleM, Barkley's front<eun
bubbJin' ovah dcre, and man dat's good, yeah. At de partner, scored 23 points and collected 10 rebounds as
Super Bowl, you 1onna eat good, too, but you SQJl.Uojn__!be 76en won their tbint atraiabt an~lheir lut
?ne a elem restaur&ftln<rdc:rir. · 1 ... In other NBA pines, DeaaiUIH WlWu scored
"Bul mos' of .awl, dey alike~ Pass a good time, 25 pofots and RuQ Wlnmaa.addcd llto po.wer red-
cber." hot Atlanta to a 131-1,00 victory over Golden State. The
Bienvenu said it's no accident that jambalaya, Hawks shot 61.5 percent from the field, hitting 56 of83
crawfiab pie aod ftle 1umbo W'CJ'e the first btts of Cajun shots en route to their ninth triumph in 11 games ...
culture brou&bt to the attention of lbc outside world. 1.tUy Trl,.cb scored 24 points, including a threc-
Hank Williams aod Jo Stafford sold lots of records 30 point pl~ that broke a 102-102 tie with 26 seconds to
years &JO oflbc sons that promised, ''Son ofa gun. we play1 as Detroit defeated Oeveland, 107-104 ... NBA
have baa fun on the bl you." sconna leader Ales ~llid hit for 43 points, the sixth
Quote of the day
T•y I.~. writing in the Washington
Post on William "The Refrigerator" Perry:
"When he goes into a restaurant, be doesn't ask
for a menu. but for an estimate."
Satnta release Phillipa, •taff
NEW ORLEANS-The New Orleans m
Saints have released interim coach Wade •II•
Phillips and the rest of the club's coaching
staff, officials announced Wednesday.
A release from the Saints office said the men ''are
free to seek emP.loyrnent with other organizations." and
added that Phillips is "no longer in contention for the
Saints' head coaching job.
Saints owner Tom Benson and new General
Manaaer Jim Fin.ks are continuing their discussions
with candidates for the position.the ~lease-said.
A Sa1nts spokeswoman said ~did nm 1cnow if a
coach would be hirtd before the Super Bowl.
··1 know they do hope to make a decision before the
end of the month," said Sylvia Alfortish.
Alcott •tarta golf 11eholanhlp
LOS ANGELES -Amy Alcott. the !I fifth-leadina money winner in the history
of women's professional JOlf, bas donated
SS0,000 to endow a aolf scholanbip at
UCLA, the school announced Wednesday.
It will be called the "Amy Alcott Women's Golf
Scholarship" and will be awarded annually, the school
said.
Alcott. 29. who serves as an assistant coach for the
UCLA women's golf team, is a resident of nearby Sant.a
Monica. She has won 27 Ladies Professional Golf
Association events.
time this season be has surpassed the 40-point mark,
and Calvia Natt added a season-bi&h 30 points to lead
Denver to a 137-124 victory over New Jersey.
Lendl routa Noah in exhibition
INGLEWOOD -Ivan Lendl, the ~
world's top-ranked player, overpowered
Yannick Noah, ranked seventh inter-
nationaUy. 6-4. 6-3 in an exhibition tennis
match Wednesday night at the Forum.
Lendt needed just 69 minutes to win the match that
served as the fifth round of the Forum Championship
Tennis Challenge Series, a year-long event involving
the top men's players.
The winner of the tournament that concludes in
April will cam$ I 00,000. The runner-up will take home
$40,000.
In a preceding match, 15-ycar--0ld Gabriela
Sabatini downed Anne White, 6-3, 7-6 (7-4). White was
a late substitute for Martina Navratilova, who pulled
out of the match earlier Wednesday with the fl u.
LendJ. in control throuJbout most of the match,
.scored tbc.match 'sonly service brcak.s...J:l~r:oK-Noah
in the ninth game, in1:hcmtdst ofwinninglhe sct'sfinar
three games.
Televi•lon, radio
TELEVISION
I 0 p.m. -WRESTLING: Channel 56.
RADIO
7:30 p.m. -COLLEGE BASllETBALL:
Long Beach State at UC Irvine, KPZE (IJ90).
K WOW ( 1600).
7:30 p.m. -COLLEGE BASllETBALL: Cal
St.ate FuJlenon at UC Sant.a Barbara. KWRM
( 1370).
7:30 p .m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL:
UCLA at Stanford, KMPC (710).
7:30 p.m. -PRO HOCKEY: St. Louis at
Kinas, K.LAC (570).
•
,, .........
Tile Laken' BJIOD Scott (left) Jiu balf'kllocked away by Boetoa'• Dennla Johneoa.
Celtics rip Lakers, 110-95
Boston outplays LA
in every phase to win
first match up of year
From AP dhpatdles
BOSTON -There were no ex-
cµses. The Los Anacles Laken ad:
mitled they were outplayed in just
about every department in their worst
defeat of the season.
"They were on . their game, we
dido 't play well," Los Angeles Coach
Pat Riley said Wednesday night after
the Ccltks rolled over the Lakers.
110.95, in the first meeting of the
1985-86 season between the NBA
powers. since last year's cham-
pionship tcries.
"It's obvious K.C. {Boston Coach
Jones) and the Celtics were ready.
They played much better, much
biger and much lonaer.
"We learned the Celtics are a
different team than lut year. We
wanted to play hard and they took it
to us. Every time we aot close they
blocked a shot and got a deuce at the
other end."
The Celtics shut down the l.akcrs'
mipuy offense that averages 120.S
points a pme.
Los Angeles hit on only 39 of IOI
field goal attempts for 38.6 percent,
while Boston connected on 45 of 98
floor shots. 45.9 percent. But many of
the misses came with victory well in
band.
"It was one of our better per-
fo~cn," said Boston center Rob-
ert Pansh. "It was our most consis-
tent game of the season from start to
finish. We didn't let up at either end."
Dennis Johnson scored 22 points
and Larry Bird 21 in lead.in& the
Boston scorina parade.
The Celtics, still smartina from a
six-pme loss to the Lakers in the
NBA finals last June, led all the way
except for a few seconds in the
opening period in hiking their home
record to 18-1. Boston also improved
its overall recoro to 31-8, just a half-
game behind the l..akers' league-best
32-8.
Johnson and Bird got plenty of help
in-lhc-tooring-<le~ent as Parish
contributed 16 potnts, Kevin McHale
12 and Bill Walton and Danny Ainge
11 each.
Walton, a veteran acquired mainly
as a backup for Parish at center, also
had eight rebounds and seven
blocked shou in limited action.
Kareem AbduJ-Jabbar was hi~ for
the La.kers with 17 points. but bas slcy
book failed hitn for most of the pme. BJ!O~ Scott had 16 poinu, Earvin
"Mqic" Johnson I 5 and James
Worthy 12 before the Lakers regulars
retired to the bench after Boston built
an insurmountable lead in the fourth
period.
Boston broke away from a 7-7 Lie
with eight consecutive points in the
first period. The Laken responded
with a 14-4 run for their only lead.
21-19. before Boston went in front to
stay. ,4
The Celtics led 57-49 at the half.
then broke away in the third quarter
for an 88-75 advantage. Tbeyled by as
much as 23 points in the final penod.
* Cllppen damp DaJJu
DALLAS -Marques Johnson
scored 22 points and Kun Nimphius
added 21 to lead a balanced Los
Angeles attack as the Oippen de-
feated the Dallas Mavericks. 131 -118.
Nimpbfosi who went from Dallas
to Los Anae1es in a N~vem.ber trade
for Jamerl>onaldsorr.tJedius scason-
high poinnotal as 1he-etippenvon
for the fourth time in five games.
Dallas has lost four of five.
After leading 5S-5 I at the baJf, the
Clippen broke open the game with an
I S-8 run in the middle stages of the
third period.I. ~xtending a 6~1 ad-
vantage to 8.H>9.
Benoit Benjamin contributed ei&ht
points to the raJJy, endirtf it witli a
slam dunk with 3:55 rem&Jning.
DaUas, despite 26 points from
Derek Harper and 25 from Mark
Aquirre, never drew closer than ejght
points the rest of the way.
Cedric Maxwell added 18 points
for the Clippers, and Rory White had
15.
~~~~~~~~~~i ~S~nippedby~al,62-61
Super Bowl
Sala
2 Days Only
Sala Starts To•orrow 9:00 a.•.
Be a Winner-Dress to the Nines
with Prices to the Nines
--~ frO• ll;z;Jt-11 Norman Hilton ('&n:llQ
•outlJwick ~
Suits
Sport Coats
Trousers
Shirts
Ties
Sweaters
Shoe•
VISA
MAS TE ROA RD
Privele Label
$99 to $299 values to $595
$89 to S289 values to $445
$39 to S 89 values to $160
$19 to S 29 values to $ 75
S 9 to S 19 values to $ 45
$19 to S 49 values to $135
$49 to S 99 values to $495
AMERICAN EXPRESS
FASHION ISLAND CREDIT CARO
Taylor's 2 8 poin t s lead Bears
t o Pac-I 0 win over Trojans
From AP dlapak~n
California sophomore Leonard Taylor scored a
career-high 28 points to lead the Golden Bears to a 62-61
victory over the Universjty of Southern California in a
Pacific-I 0 basketball game Wednesday niabt in Berkeley.
Trojan auard Orea Kimble's 10-footjumper fell off
the rim with time runnina out, giving California Its l . .2th
win in 16 games this season.
Junior forward Denick Dowell scored 19 points to
lead Southern Cal, and Kimble added 18 points.
By the half, the Bears built a 37-28 lead.
California improved to 4-2 in the league. Southern
Cal evened its record to 8-8 and 3-3.
Trojan freshman forward Tom Lewis bjt two straight
baskets to pull Southern California to within one point of
California, at ~2-6 1 . Then, California guard Kevin
Johnson missed a free throw with 25 seconds to play. It
was California's fourth free throw missed in the final two
minutes of the pme.
"If they'd had hit those free throws in the last two
minutes, it would have made it easier on Jhe coach," said
Califom11 Coach Lou Campanelli, referring to himself.
"But I guess they don't want to make it easy on me."
he said.
Campanelli credited junior forward Jeff Huling with
"as fine anfodividual defensive effort as I've bad in a Iona
time." Hulinahelpcd hold Lewis to eight points, 11 below
his season averqe.
Southern Cal Coach Stan Morrison found a bright
spot in the team's lou.
"Given all the circumstances down the stretch,"
Morrison said, "lliked the fact that we aot a good shot and
had a good shooter (Kimble) taking it."
Morrison also praised taylor for his "outstanding"
effort.
The 6-8 sophomore's output was the best for the
Bean on the season. Taylor was a perfect 10 for 10 from
the line, and be also led all players with 13 rebounds.
In action involving top 20 teams:
St. J ob'1 H, F orAam '7: In New York, No. 8 St.
John's defeated Fordham for the 16th straiR}lt time. as
Walter Berry led the way with 17 points. ·
A crowd of 14,263 at Madison Square Garden saw
the Red men win their fourth straight game and raise their
record to 18-2.
The Rams, losers of three straight, fell to 7-11.
The 6-8 Berry scored 11 of his points in the first half
when the Redmen led 29-19. The Rams rtduced the lead
to 3 J-22, but the Rcdm~weot on a I 0.2 spree with Willie
Gius connectina on two dunks and Berry cappina it with
a dunk.
frank Williams topped Fordham with nine points.
St. John's built its bigest lead, 51-33, on a aoat by
Berry with 3:58 remaininf. The Rams outscored the
Redmen reserves the rest o the way, 14-5.
SfractiH ti, Prevldnce 73: Rafael Addison sank his
first nine. shots fr~m the floor, finishjng the game with a
season·h•&h 29 pomts as No. 9-ranked Syracuse polished
off Bia East Conference rival Providence.
The pme bcfor~ 25,631 in the Carrier Dome where
Syracuse is 12-0 this season, ended a two-game skid
~nst Oeoraetown and Louisvill~ on the road. Syracuse
improved to 14-2 overall and 5-1 in the conference while
droppina the Frian to 9-8 and 1-5.
.,.rtU 7t, LSU U: In Gainesville, Fla. And~w
Moten tossed in three free throws and scortd after a steal
late in the pme to pace Aonda over No. 14 LSU in the
Southeastern Conference.
Moten, who scored 11 points in the first half finished
with a team-hiah 17 {X!ints to lead four Gators seorin1 in
double fiaures. He packed up five of those points in the
pivotal 18-6 spun Florida put tasetber in the closing
minuets.
Ne tn Dame t7. Amtricu K: Ken Barlow scored 18
points as No. 16 Notre Dame strugled to victory over
American in a non-<:onf~nce aame.
Frank Ross led American, 7-9, with a pme-hiJh 23
points. includina 13 in the second half when the Eaales
drew within seven points with eiaht minutes remainina.
But Tim Dolan ..hit three stfliaht field goals and
American never pulled cl01Cr than eiah_t poi nu after that.
College, prep basketball scores
,.
SAILORS .•• Proaa1
averqina about 12 points a pme,
(Jobn) Alstrom about l J and (Mark) Pnia aod (Wet) Torell about nine e.ch." ·.
In addition to Lee's 16. the Sailors
1ot l S from Craja, who Parsel sajd
l>layed "his bestpme of the year." 11
from Alstrom aJMt four from Torelt
Parsel was pJcased with the play of
the offense, an offense he admitted
hu. ~n inconsistent, but said once
IPID It was the defense -particu-
larly on hi&b-powettd Coby Naess -
that kept diem in it.
"Our defcnsc'has kept us )n games
all year, whlle our offense has been
inconsistent," said Parse!. "Alstrom
wu the man auarding in our
diamond-and-one defense. He has
auarded (Corona del Mar's Jell)
f:ryer, (Saddleback's Bryant) Walton
and N~ and has done a great job
each time."
Alstrom and a sagging defense held
Naess, who is avcragrng 23 points per
game, to just I 0 and kept him out of
the flow ofthe off ensc. Forward Scott
Herdman hit for 24 to lead all scorers
in the game, but it wasn't enough.
"They were running the diamond·
and-one defense on Coby and we tried
to collapse him to the baseline to
make it into more of a 2-3 zone." said
Bowen.
ltwasbecauseofthcSailors ·ng
1ft on Naess tnartm er man ana
Bill Elfsten ( 12 points) open for long
jump shots that kept the Artists in the
game until the late going. Herdman
hit seven of nine hots in the second
half, including his last four.
Ot .. Coeet DAILY PILOT /Thwldey, Janu.ry 23, 1 .. * •
Dllllr .......... "' D.-. ......
!fROJA1'8 .-•• rro.a1
was no time left u Ohn's $i•-foot
Jumper rolled 360 dqrees within dN
nm three tunes ~ore falli.nl '° bl it
It S2.
WiJlllow's bucket U\ oveftimc P'-
Uni veraity i u Om lead, and a rwillilll
four-Cooter by Olin put the Troiani ap
5t..~. but eventuaU_y lolll ,..._
ju.mpen by Mike Sullivan and M.ib
Mwi>hy of Woodbrid,e sent 1t a.nio
aootbci overtime tied at S8.
Olin stole the ball and drovt thfee.
quarters of thc way fora lay-up toa.ive
Onivmity a 62-60 lead. which
proved to be the Winnfoa m&J'lin.
"I had to brina tU m out earlier
bec:au1e of the pa.in (sprained ankJc), ••
said ScOllin of Olin. "H.e jmt b8I a
heart as bi& as this J)'m."
He also had the flwd moves ud
hcad5-up abiliry to keep thinp wader
control in the final siaaes as Univer-
sity sleldily pulled away.
Olin, a Junior transter from foot-
hill High. netted 18 points, and with
the double d1gn sconng of Glauen
(21 ), Win slow ( I 0) and JOphomore
Steve Stolzoff ( 12). the Trojans
· offered a balance which matched the
Wamon' man.to-man pressure.
While University's win revolves
around the Big Four, Scoggin sinaled
out the pla.Y of CraiJ. Allton. Man
Gorzkowski and Will FC1TCU. es--
peclally dunng the stretches while
Gluscn sat on t~ bench in foul
tr • ---
Keefe. the 6-7 sophomore. led
Woodbridge wuh 17 points, and
Vince Bryan (14) and Mike Murphy
( 13) were 'also in dopble figures.
With Herdman hilting lrom long
range. Laguna was nearly able to
overcome all the turnovers and
trailed by only 52-49 wnh JUSt over
two minutes left
Harbor'• Mark Crala (21) bata away allot by Laguna Beach'• Coby Naeee (23) for ball ln Wedneeday ntcbt'a came at
Crate Alton. (left), wlille Sailor John Al•trom racea Artlata' Newport. Harbor poeted a 62-52 Yictory.
Despite all the and1v1dual heroict
and last-second moments.. fic-urcs at
the bne pro'ed decisive: Umversity
was 22 for :!6at the bnc (84.6 percent).
Woodbndge was IS for 27 (SS.S
percent).
Elfstcn stole an errant Sailor pass
and was driving for an apparent layJ
up, but Alstrom got back on defense
and forced him to shoot 1t ofT-
balance. Elfstenm1ssed the shot and
subsequently fouled Alstrom.
When Alstrom hit both ends of the
one-and-one situation, the Sailors led
by 54-49 with 2:05 left. The Artists
would never get any closer, but there
was still one more opportunity left.
Banquet to honor
scholar-athletes
On their next possession down the
court. Elfsten was fouled on the
dribble and was given a partial chance
to redeem himself. He hit the first free
throw. but a teammate was called for
a lane violation and the point did not
count.
Seven Orange Coast area prep
football standouts are among a group
of25 from Orange County who will be
honored Feb. I 0 at the 16th annual
scholar-athlete banquet by the Na-
tional Football Foundation and Hall
of Fame.
Rams quarterback Jeff Kemp will
be the featured speaker and the
master of ceremonies will be Rams
official Marshall Klein.
Tickets are available for the 6:30
event at the Anaheim-Marriott Hotel
at $2 5.00 per seat. Further infor-
mation can be gained by calling Dick
Slaughter at 639-3552.
ace.women rout
Compton, 90-62
With a minimum requirement of
all-league credentials and a grade
point average of 3.4, the following
area products will be toasted:
Herc is the complete list of student
athletes being honored. with their
grade point averages noted: -
COMPTON -The Orange Coast
ColleJe ·wc-.nen 's basketball team
remained close to the top of the South
Coast Conference standings with an
easy 90-62 victory over -Compton
Wednesday night.
Ocean Vrew'c; Pete Tuc'iec. Hunt-
1 ngton Beach's Franco Pagnanclh,
Corona del Mar's Steve Chabre.
Fountain Valley's Patnck Henigan.
Irvine's Bobby Hamelin, Wood-
bndge's Dan O'Connell and Mater
Dci's Mike Motherway.
Rick Costello. Mission Viejo (4.0):
Pete Tucker, Ocean View (3.95):
Franco Pagnapclla. li.un.1ington
Beach (3.95): Todd French. Canyon
(3.92); Scott Stark, Capistrano Valley
(3.91); Oscar Tavares. Santa Ana
(3.89): Leon Neben. Orange Lutheran
(3.89); Steve C'habre. Corona del Mar
(3.86).
OCC (5-1 in conference play)
decided it early in the S«ond half
when it expanded a 50-37 halflime
advantage· to 64-46. The win was
Coach Larry Sundcrman·s 301st
overall in his coaching career.
Lisa Schumaker (14 point!>) and
Amy Hathcock ( 20) supplied the I -~
punch for Coast. while Karen Rin-
done added I 0. Schumaker chipped
1n with eight rebounds as the Pirates
were able to force a number of
turnovers and utilized their running
game to thwart the Tartars.
Also being honored will be Orange
Coast College's Leon Skcie for his
contributions to amateur athletics as
a trainer, as well as Bill Chambers of
Fullerton College. Malung those pres-
entations Will be Dick Tucker. who
coached OC'C football for 24 years,
and Hal Sherbeck. a longtime success-
ful coach at Fullen on.
Todd Gold. ~nahc1m (3.81 ); Bnan
O'Neil, Western 0 .76): Darren Baird.
Dana Hills (3. 74); David St. Clair,
Troy (3. 73): C'hns Baile)', El Toro
(3. 73): Patnck Henigan, Fountain
Valley (3.66): J.T. Snow. Los
<\Jamitos (3.61 ); Michael Morab.
Garden Grove (3.61 ).
The Pirates will be home Fnday
evening for a 7:30 game against Mt.
San Antonio.
Former El Modena H1gl\ Coach
Bob Lestrr will be presenied a special
av.ard from Loara H1gh's Herb Hill.
e~-SC' All-Amencan Paul Ckal')
will be presented th:: outstanding
Americanism award by Paul Salata
and Cal State Fullerton's Kirk Col-
lins. the first Oran~e County product
to claim AJl-Amencan status. will be
singled out
Bobby Hamelin. Irvine ( 3.59). Oan
O'Connell. Woodbridge (3.5 ); Mat-
thew Bennett. Foothill (3.57). Make
Knaus, Brea-Olinda (3.56); Sefenno
Vargas. Brea-Olinda (3.51); Rob
Katzaroff. Los Alamitos (3.50): Allen
Ennis. El Modena (3.46): Mike
Mothcrway. Mater Dci (3.45). Terry
Page. Fullenon College (3.44).
8 100,000 nee. at Santa A.nlta
The San Pasqual and San Marcos handicaps. a pair of $100.000-addcd races for four-year-olds
and up. hi&hlight the calendar this weekend at
Santa Anita Race Track.
The San Pasqual will be run at I I/ 16 males on Saturday and the San Marcos 1s "hcdulcd al 111,
males on the 1urfSunday
The San Pasqual as a ma1or stepping s1one to
the SI million Sana.a Anita Handicap March 2 and will be run for the 4Q1h lime Prcc1s1onasl
the Eclipse Award·wtnnmg spnnter oft 98S, ·~ expected 10 make his season bow 1n the San Pasqual.
The San Mar1.us is expected to altraet a strong
lineup of grass runners. with defending cham-
pion Daha" R1vha and Strawberry Road all
poss1b1h11es from the Charhr Wh1111ngham
Stable. For more 1nfonna11on. phonc (818) .S74-72.2l.
CCMta JI.a •lo•·pltcb .aftball
The cit) of Costa Mesa IS ~ponsonn1 a coed
major slow pitch JOftbell toumamcnl Feb. 8-9.
Deadline to enter is Jan. 31. The entry fee as
$110 pertcam plus $7 . .SO per team per game for
officials fees.
For mon: information phone 642-0646.
Prolaodq
lJNGS SCHEDULE
Jan. 2.s-1t Edmonton; Jan. 27-at Calgary; Jan. 29-Mi11nesota.
Feb. I-at Winn lc>tS: Feb. 2-at Winnapq;
Feb. 4-All tar pmc •t Hanford. Feb. ~I
Calpry. Feb. 8-NY Islanders, Feb. 9-Calpry; Feb. 12-Quebtt, Feb. I S-Wub-
ll'l&ton: Feb. 17-11 Montreal( Fe~ 18-at ()Ve~ Feb. 20-at Philadelphia. Feb. 22-11 ~ew Jet1Cy, day; Feb. 24-Picttbur)h; Feb
27-chic.,o.
Marc'h 1-Montrul: March 2--calJary·
Mareh S-11 Edmonton: March 6-at \'an: couver. MMth 9-Edmonioo, day; Mardi
12-0etrou, March I S-BufY'alo, March 17-11
Toronto; March I I-at Wuh11'11~!'..1 Marth io-.t Botton. Mardi 22-11 Hanroni. Match
23-.t Buffalo: Marc.h 2~ Matfh 28-et Vancouvc , March 29-QUebec; March
31-WinntP'JI.
Apnl 2-WiJlnJ.,. Apnl S-Vancouva-.
All bOcM Jl~_ llcf.!O at 7:30 p,rn. Ticktt
P"<'ft """ ftom S7 to l 11.
Golf tour at M.lulon Viejo CC
Thr A.mencan Golf Tour will open an Orange Cou nty at 1he Mission VieJO Country Club
Monday J
The fonnat of AGT tournaments allows both
pros and amatrurs to compe1c for pnzr monr)
The Amen<'ln GolfTour ongina1cd 1n Spnng Valley 1n t 985 and plans over JO 1oumamcnts
for 1986. otTcnng the amatrur golfrr with handicap~ of 0 to 36 a chancr to cam mone)
co mpeting w11h has peers.
The cntl') fee for the M1ss1on V1e10 Tour-
nament as SI 00 plus gr~n fee. With 144 players.
1hc low gros$ and low net winners wtll t"«'eavc
S2,000cach and 1hc top 34 finishers wall be paid
Dcwls on .\GT tournaments, fonnat and
future plans ma~ be obtained from Joe Caraway
at 8»4489
Pacl.ftc. •poru medlctae clbJJ&
The Pacifica Spons Medicine lnsu1ute wtll
hold a spons chn1c Feb I from 8 a.m to 2:30
p.m. At the chnac. spons medicine spec1ahst and
orthopaedic suracon Peter Reynolds. M.D and Hunu~ton Beach High hool athleuc traanl."1' Mike O'MaJlc) along ~1th three ot her spons
rnedt<'1ne spcc1ahsts will d15Cuss 1nJunct most
common an SJ>'"!"I spons and their Prt'"<'nllon
For m0tt 1nfonna11on or to f'CIJSlcr for thf'
•Ports chnic phone 841-0611, e1tten11on 224
Oraadht.olLGU BNcb tJdea
Tteteta att now avaitabfc ror thf Grand PT'tl
ofloQa l aicll te"t f'or Apnl 11 I' 0. F'riday Apnl 11 prac11et and quahfy101
will be htkS. ~lutday fttture• tht pro-«lebnt>
ud 5'lpw V ec rva..alofl& with final quahf)-1 nJ.
ol On Suadey, tbc IWl o("t.k 9S-lap Gr1nd PriJt "°"' ..... IC\ b l:lO. It~ td$ b S.uHday end unday's
c~ ~ wtdl snttal admt K>n on Fnda_>, are M lJ IO 1 7$ (Or ad\th1 and SIS to S~S *J:M-:JU _. ..... ). _..,...,,bf l\Jled Oft. pnont
............. WIL Fw ... ~ phooe !JM Ticket
......... (ll)»~l.
Cbabre llamelln
* * *
Renl&an O'Connell
* * *
Bucs drop Compton;
Fullerton stops GWC
Rustlers· conf ere n ee
losing streak at 2 3
after 90-7 8 drubbing
Orange Coast College earned us
second South Coast Conference
men's basketball win of the season
Wednesday night. while Golden West
dropped its 2.lrd straight over three
years.
Here's a capsule look:
Oruge Coall 18, Comptoa ~t: After
losing Joe Seaier 1n the first minutes
of the game wuh an ankle injury. the
Pirates responocd to collect their
second conference Viet.Ory against
four ~tbacks.
Bob Mulcahey filled the void
created b) Seagers ~ncx Wlth a
season-high 15 points and had I I
rebounds. Mall Judd. who took O'\-er
Mulcabc) ·s forward po<,1t 1on.
chipped in Wlth 12 points and ~\CO
rebounds.
OC'C (9-IO O\ erall) as~umed c1
32-:!7 halftime lead. but Compton
13-3. 11-81 battled back to take a~ .,-46
lead with 9·0 remaining on a 1ump
shot b) Rod Robinson.
Fred Bicket scored from under·
ne.ath at 8.4 7 to gi ve()('(' a ~R-4"' lead
and the Pirates dad no1 tra1l 1he rest ol
the way. Compton did manage to cut
the deficit to 60-59 with :!·O:! remain-
ing. but the Pirates ta llied 1he tinal
eight points
Fallertoa M, Geldea Wat 71; For
the first time this conference season,
the Rustlers went into the locker
room with the lead (42-34). but after
the opening bucket of the second half,
the game was all Hornets.
The host Homeu outscored Gold-
en Wen. 16-4. to take a 50-48 lead
Wlth 14 minutes to play, and never
gave it up.
Hryon Strachan turned 1n a 23-
point performance: m tbc se<:ond half
to finish wtth 36 The Rustlcn.
meanwhile. dropped to 4-l 4 and 0-7
in South Coast action. bnnging their
conference losing streak to a dismal
23.
CCI knocks off
Wassuck, 86-70
DcTWJn .\pplcber'T) scored J Ii sec-
ond-half points to lead C~nst College
10 ine past Wassuk College of Las
Veg.as 86-"0 Wcdoesda\ an a men'<.
non-conference basketball game an
the Eagles· g~ m
The Bighorns held a ~2· \,I a1.h an
tage at halftime thanh lo Lam
\tan go's I~ first-half points
But Applebem made ht~ move and
finished the game with 35 points and
teammate Bnan Beal added It:> 10
1mpro'e Chm1Collt"ge 101ne to I +.4
ml"rall "'assui... dropped to 2-1..,
Edison remains unbeaten
Edison Htlh maintained ats perfect
record in the unset League. "h1le
Ocean View won a defensive battle
from Huntington Beach in bo) s
soccer action Wednesda'
Newport. Corona del Mar and
Woodbridge were among the winners
1n the Sea Vie". while Estancia "as
dealt a loss b) addlcback
Herr's a look at what rook place
Edison %, FountalJl Valley 1: M1kt·
Weiss connected on a first half goal
from six yards out and Dcron Winters
added a second half goal in the 25th
minute to provide the "inning
margin for the Chargers in a night
contest at Westminster
Steve Mullen broke up Ed1son·s
shutout bid in the second halfw1th J
penalty kick.
The verdict moves Edison up to 4-ll
in Sunset League pla> ( 10-3-i over-
all). Fountain Valley falls to 1-J an
league play.
Otto View l, Hutla(&OD Beacll t :
It took until the final 11 minute of
the match for the v\SltingSenha" ks 10
break through. but Gar) Ma1han)
f ,,.,,,,, ( tO'H ( t• , tt•
(01u,,1un11, ~''"',I''',,,~
Sailing
Adventure
Series
Jett. 11 -Httb 1"'1 •on
" NOtth ""'f••,et1 Crv ... -.q Ac7vt1"1 .. '1t r.-. 7 -•• .,. '"•"'° AC•on Tl•-OcHn• A''''"'\' Cr.,.a."Q •o••~h.••
F.-. 14 -1.tt_ ei.41 Ott I• Jt11...-• N>caraouen Nooll1,,..,• $• ..,,. l'ew111111•
F.-. 11 -.\I a!t41 9"11 I ltt-tt C~1t " c r.,.a•"t
~ COAST COLLEGE
~ .. ,,.
~ llOOM n..ATM r~ • ~ " eo. .. -.....
.._,.. It to -... '" ..... "( • .. to • "'-000• ..,._ UO ._...~ H> et Oooi
nctrnt a fn4t 411-1111
rebounded a shot b) Sean \an
Hemeh')ck for the lone goal of the
game.
Ocean \'1e"" goalie Gene C'habra.
normal!\ a rt~r>e. filled in ad·
m 1rabh · and recel\ ed strong de-
fens1' i suppon from Tim Tc-mbreull
and Cun BJ<'IJtac Pla~mg "ell an tht'
midfield lor the \caha~ ks "a'i \i1eet·h
Tahsequah
~ewport Harbor 4. Laguna Buch
I : .\fler a \u •rl'lt·s~ first half. the h1t'-t
.\ntst'i tonlt. the lead earl\ 1n thl'
second hall on a goal b) Dedfnh Roth ~
But after that 11 "as all Sa1lors a'
\tarlt. \\ood"ard ued the game and
~e' 1n ~ olfr tallied the first ofh1!i tv.o
goals to unlock the deadlock. Oa"td
Woodruff had the other sco~ for
~ewpon. 3-2-1 m league play.
Corona del Mar I . Costa Mesa I:
The Sea Kings ovcrpowerl-d the
Mustangs at Cost.a Mesa as five
pla)ers registered a1 least one goal.
Dre" Krumm c;cored twice and
Cd~1 re'Cc-1,ed sing.le scores from Tim
Galusha. Bnan Houston. Rich Rob-
ison and Jeff Jacobs teve MuZZ}
wa<; 1n goal for the Sea Kings. who
mCI' ed to 4.~ 1n league pla) and 8-4
o' erall
"oodbradgf' I, l oivuslty 0: J~
\.fa' '-1 oon· (llnh·n('(i on a pcnalt)
k1d.; for the nnh goal as the Wamors
m11' ed t0 ~-"\.I 1n thr Sl.·a \at·~ wt th
the ~in at l n1H'r<.1t\
S.ddlebacll %. E1tucla 0: Marco~
~1csa ~ored tl.\O ~oal'i a<. the Road-
runners handed the ho.,t E.lglc!t their
tir-;t leagut' lo""
The ~an cam" \Jddkhack a o;han
of the league kad "1th f-;1anc1a
The Fa&lc'i ( 4-1 I I 2· '-~ l rl"\'et\ ed
strong dcienst' e pertonnan(e!> from
Eduardo .\ndrad(' and John ( m-
ngan.
•
I : i
• • . •
I
s • ~
• II
>.
..
' 4 11
4 • ?
4 •
1
I
~~~--:-~--~--------------------------:"----~~~-----.....-.. ........ ---......;;;...;...;.~._..--~-----------------------
Best pre-game seats are on the A-train
Rallroa cars are super way
to trave to uper Bow game
NEW ORLEANS (AP)-While lhoutandl zip in by
jet for the Super Bow,, about a hundred roll alona in
lWturious private raill'Old can. eatina aourmet mealt.
watcbina the mila slide by, rocked to sleep at niabt by the
swayina of the movina ~re~.
h's the way rich people travded 60 years aao when
the National Football Lcilpe aprana from the mind of
Georae Halas. Wben tbe Four Honemen trampled Notre
, Dame opponents and Grantland Rice wrote about iL
"It's a time warp," said Clark John10n of Denver,
whose private car, The Cariw, is due in from Olicqo on
Fnday. -'
"There's nothina -well, maybe a few thinp -
more wondcrfuJ than aittina out on a warm eummer
niaht, 10ina 1Cro11 the countrnide, wa~ at Ult Oodt. ..
The 1G1111 Cottoll, a car built an 1916. rolls iD from
BinniQlbam today, the fin& of 13 private can ICbeduled
in for the Super Bowl, said Amtrak .-1.-womaa Debbie Marciniak. .,--.
The Kina Cotton is now owned by tbe Columbus A Greenville Railroed, Which Nnl ICroet Mu.iaippi from
the Alabama line to the Arkan•• border.
"The car WU bu\lt with a mabotanY pendiDI
interior. It hat never been rntored. beca&alC it bu always ·
been in u1e," said Floyd Tayloe of Binniaaham, who
leues the car.
''It has been conJWltly maintained. Aircondiliooi.aa wu added of course, and a aewqe tteetmeat l)'ltem."
The caritas WU built in 1948 U a Pullman car.
JobftlOD aave into a JifelOftl dream in 1913, bouaht the car1 bad Jt rebuilLand turned It over to delipcr' Tom
Bolin ao have iu interior done.
Tbe Cariw and Bolin. a member of Pwuiina and
Desip lnc. of Miuea~ woo the S 10,000 tint prize
aiven by the Amencaa Society of Interior Oocoraaon.
The car ii doae in art deco, tbe ,eomeuic lt)'le that prevailed ,. die I 920L
He said there are about 150 private can now
opendaa in tbe United Scatet and ot.ben beiftl Nl&ORld.
Wlule Amm•a puameer rails provide a smooth
trip for a private car, thlQll ca.n tel a bitjetky OG Uaet uaed
fot ~I. JohnlOn said .
Eacb car lleepe eiabL Elda carriet a crew of two -a chef' ud eomeooe to terve mea.lt wl drink.I, make beds
and tab can of die~· comfon. .Jollftloa. a pbysicill spldalizina in data ttorqe, uid be travels by jet for but.loeu purpotet, but aoea by train for pleasure.
.. ,, ea little n,..ed at &be end of a Iona line offreiabt,
but in....Una. •• he Mid. ·"TMre'• • lot of llack in a roo. car fretebt train. When it aon uphill and downhill, the
can bump lCJlether." . .. Ever liDOe I QOuld remember, ever since I wu a
small cbild. rw bid the~ .. be said. "I traveled wilh my
pettall by train, and we lived near the railroad tracb In Minneepe>li-.
Tayloe Mid that travel by private l'IJI car makes it
poelible to ettjoy ••aettina there" u much u "beina
there." .. People tend to eat more when they're on a train.
They eei ao *where they're aoina. They can ,et up and
walk around. And, pt<>blbly, 10me ofit has IO do with the
historical Upect of it.
"I uled to tee tbe prnidcnt of the railroad ao by in hit
private car -1 wu about 12 yean old. I found out the
president wu on my paper route. One day, he wu in bit'
........ went by,• I told him howniftyit wu IO have 6ia private car, and he took me to 1ee it at the roundbome.
.. Thete days. it'• !Qet from·A to &11..wt u J'Ollible-
and let'• have a plaatic lunch.'
"Well, -we ca.n 't match the jell that way and we don't
try. We're not out for speed. We're in it for the ler'Vice." .. AJ I arew Uj), I bepft to ICC private can, and the idea
ofbavinsoneormy own bit me."
Franklin, Butler
hoptngforc ance
to kick for game
·NEW ORLEANS (AP) -When
Tony Franklin played in his first
Super Bowl, he didn't know about
biah school senjor Kevin Butler. But
Butler certainly knew about Franklin.
"If you're a kicker comina up and
you didn't know about Tony Frank-
lin, you probably didn't have a drive
to succeed," Butler said.
In perhaps the ·most important
game of both their c.arcen, Butler of
the ChiCAJO Bearsandfranklin of the
New En&Jand Patriots are ~r for
the chance to succec:d by k:ick:ina the
winnina points in Sunday's Super
Bowl.
"I would love for it to come down
to me," said the Chicaao rookie.
"This is your childhood dream, to ~
in the Super Bowl and have it come
down to me."
Franklin. who was with the Phila-
delphia Easies ·when they lost the
1981 Super Bowl to the Oakland
Raiders on the same field where he
will play Sunday, wouldn't mind
lcickina a game-winning field aoaJ.
But be would settle for simpler
pleasures.
kick five extra points."
Butler has 10me sympathy for
Franklin, who left Philadelphia with
animosity for the franehi1e. Franklin
calls that period "ancient his&ory"
and refuses to discuu it.
"I'm afad for him, esl)Ccially with
all be's aone throuaJi," .Butler said of
Franklin.
The Patriots traded for Franklin on
Feb. 21 , 1984, after they had ione
throuah three unsUCXlCSlfuJ kickers
the previous sea10n.
"I fiaured after my fifth year in the
leacue, if I was to keep playina it
would have to be 10mewhenl elae, .. he
said.
Al a rookie out of Texu AA:M, the
barefooted kicker made 74.2 percent
of his field pl attemP.f.L But in bis
final season with Philadelphia, he
connectedonjust S7.7 percent. In his
first year with New Enatand1 bis
accuracy mark ro1e to 78.S, and this
season he hit acareer-hich 80 percent,
missinajust two of 19 attempts from
inside 40 yards,
Butler did even better :.hia season.
He made 31 of 38 attempts for 81.6
percent. He failed on just one of 29
kicks of less than 40 yards.
But he has been in a playoff slump,
mak:ina ju.st one of four field-aoal
attempts.
Kew EniJand•a Tony FnulkliD (left) aad Cblcaco•a Ke.in Batler wotald like to kick tile 1ame-wbullaC polDta Sanday.
"I, think ,ettina the winnina kick
aoes ihroup every player's mind," he
said. "It wouldn't break my heart lO
"I'm sure he'll do well bccauae he
dealt with ~ure) all year Iona,"
said Frank.Ian, who remaaned steady
by suoceedina on seven of hia nine
fiekl-aoaJ attempts in the playotrs.
"He came in and bad to beat out a
proven vettran, wbfob he did in Bob
Thomas."
The Patriots don't quite match up "If it comes down to me, I'll be
ready," Butler said.
Patriots Coach Raymond Deny has
no doubts that Franklin would react
the same way.
"When he aoes on the field, I forget
about the problem because he doesn't
have a problem." Berry said. "His
temperament for a kicker is ideal ...
He's a money f.layer. He's a touah
comoetitor. He s cool under preu-ure:r -
New England has edge at three spots,
but Bears ave lock on major positiotlS
ADAPaaaly1l1
NEW ORLEANS -Matching the
lineups of the Chicago Bears and the
New England Patriots in Sunday's
Su per Bowl, to be played at the New
Orleans Superdome:
Oua~: ChlCAOO'I Jim ~t'tOfl
'' the ufllm.t1 lmorovl1«. Ha tinted to by hli 16-vi rd deih up the mlOdll for the
811"' flrJI touchdown In the NFC lltle
o•~ 101lnst the R1m1. Hu the abllltv to
think on 11'11 run Ind undw prn1ure
elll'loullh I'll occa1ion.11v forCft PHMI Into
coveretM. In 1nd out of the lineup with 1>9ck
Probl1m1, McMtl'lon 11111 rtnked Meond In
tl'll NFC In PIHlng efficiency with 1n 12.J
ra li"1! beM<I on 2,392 vtrdl, IS TOI and a
56.9 Plf'CMlt com1>11t1on Plt'ctnteiN.
New Engl1nd'i Tonv E1M>n, one of she
quarttrbectl1 t1ken In 11'11 first round of the
19'3 NFL drafl, run1 a conMN1llv1
oroud-t>eM<I offense and PUied onlv 42
llmt1 In the Patrlot1' lhrM 1>11voff
vlctorl11. lncludll'IO 10 of 12 for 71 verd• In
the AFC 11111 01me win over Mlemt. Hu
ti.en much more effective ilnGe r1P11clng
tl'll lnlured Steve Grogan In tl'll 12tll oeme
tha n hi wu before Groo1n r~ tilm In
the fifth. EaM>n 11 mo«>lte end could give the 81•" trout>le on ronout1, as Di n Marino
did In Chlcaoo'1 only Jou
Grooan 11 on 11'11 t ctlve ro1ttr and could
be lnMf'led If Eison meth with di.aster
EOGE:a•A•S.
Runnllle .. dn: Chic.go•, Willer
Pavton had 1 ci.ulc Waner Pavton v11r
He ran for l ,SSI verd1 and •Oded 1nottwtr
record to the 1tl-llmt NFL ru1hl11Q record
he Mt i.1t ... s.on -nlM 1trel9hl oemes of
100 yards or more Stilt l>thM<I wltll orMt
soeed, he Mo Ml the POWtr tl'lel most
IPetd beCJl1 lectl a nd e>refer1 to run OYer
OPPOMnt1 In the ooen fllld rettwtr than
trOUnd ttwtrn. He also ltd !he 1Mr1 In
receMno.
Fuffbe<:k Mall 5uhev II uled as I
blocker and rece!Yer an •• 1 cnanee-uo to
Pevton, In wNc:h rote he ren for 471 vardl.
Oennl1 Gentry II UMd H I lhlrd·down
receiver and CaMn Thomas 11 • oood 1tiort-varcteoe runner who aomelfmes
olYet way to Wl"lam Perrv, the
"Rlfrleerator," In eoal-llM lltu.tlons.
New Enotand'1 runnlno 11 more
t>elenced. C,.lt .Jamet tooa over for Tonv
Collln1 tllls Meson and ran for 1,227 varcts,
Wlllll ColflM, Who beQme a IMd btodter
and the l•m'11Mdlno rece!YW, 111• ~ed
uP 6S7. James. Who was oood encM'9h to
11ternat1 with Eric Olc:kanon at SMU, c:en oo Inside and out, and 1'111 lCM vardl ... ,,,.,
the Raiders In the ptaVOff ,.,.....,*' the
onlv 100-vard oame aealnst tM Rams this
Mtaloon.
Co.cft ltavmond llerrv rests Jemes end
Collln1 wlltl RObert W•tMrl and Moll
T1tuPU, both former 1tartart. 9oltl have
com. tllrouefl -W•ltl•n' 45--vard
t1Cki.-t>rMklno run aealMt ~I was the
ktv 1>11v on lh41 Patriots' ""' toudldown drive In th41 conference cnamotonlhlP
Olmt.
EDGE: •VRN.
Of9INM U.: Chk99o'1 front, on
wtlkh flflh-veer rltttt tad(lt ICefftl Van
Horne 11 the Mftior men. II one of the
emerging llnn In tM .-me. L..n tad(lt Jim
Covert Ind center Jev HllleftOert we Pro
!Sowl e>taveu and H...,...t domlnet9d
ao1ln11 tl'll Rams In tM NFC "'*'""INP
01me. Allowed lust 0 Mdt• In 16 r_.,-
Mlloon oeme and '"'" In two Nvoff conrnr1. Van Horne at 2IO _.,... I• the
bl90ft t of ,,... bunch, Covert " 111, but Hl~CI 11W1rdl Met1' lort1 and Tom
Thayer trl .. Under 210, meklnt IN IM
1mat1 by modern NFL ,....,.., The¥
make Uf> fof' that lee* of llN wtttt
auld1nn1.
Adams, 37, expected
to play h ls las t game
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Julius Adam• uys hia teammates want him
to come back. Even some members of
the New Enaland Patriots' board of
diruton have asked him to re-consider ltla plans to reure.
Theoldatdef'en11ve lineman 1n the
National Football Leaaue isn't hsten-
in,. He wanted to make hts own
decition to leave the pme one season
after bjtformercoech almost made it
forbim.
"I definJtely can play a couple of
more years. but rm healthy and I
wanted to retire bealthy." Adams
._jd.
On Sunday. three months befort
1\11 38lh bhthday, he is npected to
1wt hit lllt ~at defaWve end for
the Patriou an t1'e Super lowl •inst
the CldC1190 ...... .. Dud.Iii die IMt duW ,.an. I
~t rd never eet ........ said
Adami, "until Colitb (Raymond)
Berry c:lme in.
"I knew wh11 type of coach be wu
from when he wasan 111ist1nt with ue
before, and when he came back I said,
'We &tJll micht have a chance,''' be
added. "The man appreciates die
thinaa you do. He doesn't worry
about whether IOmethina 11 toinl to
make him look aood."
Adams foUlld OUl qukkly lHt
1eason what Berry's predeceuor, Ron
~eyer, planned for rum. His playins
ume would be cut. He worked lat
season pnmanly on PIUiDJ downs.
"When J ~t into trajn1ns~,
tlunts weren tao•na tbtway I t
lhey would be," said the I J..,.r
vcttran. "It w111 bitter wee. I told a
bunch of suys on the team J would.a't
come back, but whe.n he (MC)W) ._
fired I decided to fin1sh my coanct.
''If tht tame coechi111 _,, W
been bm {th1J lalOn), we twouac1a•1
have m~ it'' to the Supirr Bowl."
The New Enetand lint II titted to the left
.side, with guard John H1nnah and ladtle
Brian Hottowav. The 3'-veer-old Hannah
11 c:on11dtred one of the bast ,..,., and tM
6-foot-7, • POUftd Hollowav tiaa beer!
voted to the Pro 8owt In thr• of hla flYI
... son1. Center Pete lrock, 1 10-vMr
man, returned 1tront efter missing the first
l'leH of the '"'°" fotlowlnt knee sureerv
and rloht 11u.rd !ton Wooten 11 c:onsldtrect • comer. Ontv Holoway and the rlOtlt
tackle, 2tS·POUnd Stew "'°°'a, NVed In
New Enetancs'1 20-7 lou lo the hara the
MCOnd w..-of the ... son.
EDGE: lllATRIOT1.
Reatwn: Chlca9o'1 l>IOotlt threat I'
Wiiii. Geull, IM wortd-ciHI hUrdler, wllo
averaeec:t 21.3 verdl on 33 catdlll during
the reeutar '"'°"and ha1 lmc>rovect on his two molt evident wwtlneuet -drOOI and
lmPraclse routn.. The most retlaf)lt pan-
cetc:herl ere Pav1on. wide rec.elver Oennfl
McKinnon and tlOtlt endl Emery Moor-
.lheed and Tim WrlOtltman.
New Entland l'lel ttne deep lhrMtl -
Slantev Moroan, SllC>hen Starring and
frvlne Frver, If hl1 lnlured l'lend heall
encM'9h to let him 116av. hrrv maintains
ttlat Sterrlnt, the ltllrd rec.elver, coutd be
en AM-Pro H he could bMI out thl others.
EDGE: av•N.
D1t•llM U.: Cl'llc.Mo'1 oYeroowerlnt
...,... aternt from ltt overpowerlnt llne,
whldl contains nr .. A."·PrOI -IUdwd Dent, Steve McJNdtec4 and Oen Hampton, wt"'-tM Intricacies of dtMMlve coordi-
nator luddV lltvaft'I 1tunt1 and btltzn
cauae confusion on OOPOllno offenlel, 11'1
ltloM lhrM Who wrMk "" haYOC -Dent with IMICI, McMldleet wlttl POWW Ind
Hampton with a combination of !tit two.
The fourth starter II the well-known
fullbeck Wiiiiam Perry, wt1o'1 •ti" IMmlno
lo control hl1 300-!Mut POUndl but can
move that POUndeOt wlttl frlOtltenlng
IOMd.
New Enoland'I ""°"° 111'1'1 .. dl1-llneullhed. but lt'I beer! almost H
tffactlva. The petrlareh 11 37-vMr-otd
Jullul Adami, the NFL'I oldest non-kldltr
or quarterback, Who w'" be 116avlnt hll last
game In the Super Bowl. Oelf»lt• his aoe.
Adami 1llH 1'181 IOMd and 1treneth. Note
taalal Letltr WIHlem1 and Dennis Owens
don't OVtrPOWef' anyone, but JheV'Ye been
effective tnOUOh kMP!ne off9Mlve llnemen
off !tit llMMc:klnt corps fhet'I "'9 heart of
the New Entland dlf9nle.
EDGE: ••AAS.
Ull .. ldltn: No llnebacbrl In the NFL
had 1 better VMt' then tM C"lcato'1 Otta Wltlon, Wiiber Merthall and Mike
Slneltfary, "'9 IMtUe'I clef9ntlvt ptayer of
the vMr. ~rlNM and Wilson often llne uP
next lo MCtl ottwtr In the ''46" dlf9nM that ornenll aft elttlt-man front to tM
OHOl!tlon. Wltton'a 10\.'J Mdt1 were
MCOnd on the ,..,,, to Dent's i...ue-
lledlnt 17. The 6-t Slnoltt•rv, once "'°""'' too lhort fof' tM NFL, II often left -. In
the mtddla and uaet Mt IOMd to cover
from lldellN to aldelne.
New l!ntlend boe1l1 the AFC MCk
IMdef' In A•·Pro outaldt llntf:ledler Andr•
Tippett, with 1611'1 NCkl. Theo twtr outside
llnebadler, Don Blectlmon, had tlthl
MCk1 and 11 aft out1tendlno run·ttuffer and
"" .... ., -he knocked doWn four of Den Merino' a pauas 89Hlst Miami.
EDGE: ••MS. Wt Mt W ~ Seunmrtea: Chlcaeo'1 cornen. L""-
Frailer and Miki Rldwdlon, WI
IUPtlOMd lo be the WMk oomt of tM
def9nee. ltut When thev'ra burned, It's
often bec:euM the eltht-man bltraa l'leve
left them atone In man-to-man coveraee.
Aoalntl "'9 lltam1, Frazier was able to 1tav
wlltl ()tymplc ac>rlnter Ron Brown
New l!ntland, whldl once had five No.1 ~1 In ltt MCOndart, II down to lull two.
rltrlt cornertMlc* llt•vmond Clavborn and
slront Mfetv ltoland Jemas. The other corner 11 ltonnle LIPPttt, Who had two
Interceptions In the NVOff eeelntl the
Raiders, and the free utetv 11 Freet
Merton, Who had an lmoortaftt lnterc.c>tlon
aeelnat Mleml ant w.-.
EDGE: ~ATRIOTI.
....-T--= ltooai. Kevin Butter,
Ch!Qeo'a IMaeeklc:kar, 11 v«v acc:urate H
not lono, eotWWtlnt 31 of 37 f1etd toet
ellemot1 In the rwu6ar IMIOn, the lonMlt from 46 yards. .._ mfued lhr" In the
•voH oame MIMI the Giants.
Punter MlwrV Buford, ~ad ue> from
San Dleeo, 11 averaee. Hl1 net aYer"' of
3-U PUt him cJoter to the bottom than the
toe> In the NFL.1tendtnea and allow r ......
makea NI ltldla btodlNll.
New l!~I pUftfer, ltlc:tl Camerllo,
1'181 had better .....,.. -NI 33-vwd net we1
io.. then 9uford'1. aut he'1 more ~ then "" CNaeo IMMtter. Ptecekldl• Tony Franklin, Who kicked fof'
the E ..... In tM 1911 ~ aowt, was 24
for 30 on .....,-.oet tries ""9 VMr, h11
MCOnd •treltht ... '°"over 75 percent.
Chlcat011 meln WMPOn It Oeutf, Who
had a "-vard kJdloff return .... ,,.t
WuNnotoft. f'unt retun.r Kefftl Or1"0 It
there more fof' NI oood hand& "*' IOMd. The Patrlotl ellMCI to he¥9 Fryer
a ...... to r9'Wn,..,... .-1ec1 .... ~
wtttl a 14.1 ........ ~ two flDr
toucNowna. Sterrlno 11 a nw.t on kickoff
returnt.
l!DGE: htrtetL
McMAHON ••• P'romBl
title pme, has been the m.,;or topic of
discussion in this pre-Super Bowl
week when hard news is traditionally
rare.
It became more so "'Monday aft.er
McMahon complained that team
officials wouldn't allow Shiriashi, the
acupuncturist wboae treatments he
uid had helped ease the pain, to fly
here New Orleans. But the Bean
relented Wednesday.
"If that' a what it takes lo have our
quarterback play as weU u he can in
the most im~rtant pme of the year,
we're all for 1t," Bean president Mike
McCaskey said.
At that point, the Bears appeared
seriously concerned.
"With all the hype, people auwne
the injury is a put-on,," Ditb said at a
mom1na news con1erence. ''It'; no
put-on. He's h'!f\ina ri&bt now. He•s
recovered aome from wflat he wat last
week. but he still bam't recovered
enouah IO play football. It'• not
serious; it's just a bruise, but it's very
dee ." ~cMahon, who depends on his
1CT1mbUna ability to keep dekn1a
from mountina an all-out pua Nib
-he ran 16 yards for a touchdown in
the 24-0 win over the llama -
oonc::eded that tle was still having
problem a.
OCC~s Carnett resign& SIDpo•t
Jim Carnett, Oranp Coast Collep'a aporu infor-
mation director for the past IS yean, 11 steppina down
from that post.
Carnett will remain 11 OCC u director of comm uni·
ty relations, a position be bu hetd concurrently with the
aport1 information usipment since 1971 .
"l p ve up my ~ information duties with
considerable reluctance, 'said Carnett. "Sporu hat been a
pa.n of this ~ob that I have truly reUlbed. I have
thorouahly en.1oyed work.ina with OCC"1 cotebina Mii'
and athle1et." t
Carnett'• public r~la1ioa1 and marketlna
reeponlibilltiea have srown IO such an extent ia recent Yel:" that be bu bad dif'f"JCulty lboolderint I.he l1'0f1I
111111\l'Deftl
··My dutia have been e~"I dramatically for the
put fhte or all ~. equern~ the time I bave available
to handle aporu, .. Carnett sa' .
"Dr. Donatd 8ronsard took over the colleee's
praidmcy lu1 Jaty, brh9ins with him a 1tton1empbuis
on lnttitutioaaJ nwtcuna and promotion. l am very
ndtld wttll my muy new "*""' .. u 111 a.•bllitiel. 1'hc new IMilnmcatt requite a tmnendouumount
of time, aad I WI can DO ao..., do jutdee to OCC1
(.
aportl infonnation J)l'Oll'lm."
The ool .. '1 sporta information duties will be
handled OG an 1ndepeadent-contnctor bui1 for the not
few week.I by fonner 0CC athle1c. Rieb Own. Dwul, a
pitdMr on OCC"1 1911 and 1912 bueba.11 aeama. bu a
8.A.iajou.maliam &om La Verne Collete and itC\li'TeGtly
I ~t for the Daily Pilot. iftl, ~that Carne1t hat eerved u OCC'1 SID,
he captured l6 national awardt for J)Ublic:atiou. Sis
publicadon1 were named "Belt in tbe Nation." The
awardl were praented by the Collete Sporu lnfonnadoa
Oirectorl of America. Carnett bat allO captured three fint-pA8ce .. PRO
Awardt., for belt community coUete spona pabtiaitiom
in California. He wu (W'elell1ed the awards la 191 I, t 91J
and 19M by the Califomil Atlociadon of Commuity
Collelcl. Carnett hat worted moR than IOO men•a _.
women'• athletic oonlelU durina his OCC teaun. Ha bll
1t.aflld l j) OOMKUUve Crull Coat bMW ...--
the lowt1 Wk ever reconled by I COllHllaity .....
1por11 fn,.._&ioa dnctor. •
Aa 0CC ....... c..tt Wiii a I.A......_.
COllHmlaic.aoM hmC'.a .... FV'llnoe•• 11.A: Iii
educaticm rro. ,.,._ •• Unl..Wty.
....
WllTla .. GOetfll•INCI ~ ......
W L Pa. M LMert 22 I 100
"ll'Ol'll9nd u 1t m 1v. ""'-"I• IS 2S 27S 11 a.er.. " a a.. 1e S..llle 1$ ,., U1 lt Gddeft Stttt ., J1 >CW 21
Mlllwftt OMtl9ll
H°"t lon , 1' 14 667
DtllYtr 74 11 .511 •
k n An1ot11o n 20 SlS s~
Dtllet lt 20 417 7Vt
UIMI 21 23 131 t
IKftll'lelllO 16 2' .»I IJ
•AST•RN CON~•R•NC•
At!Mllc DMllM
'°61on l l t 7tS ~1. ,. " 6'1 .....
NeW Jtl'MV 2S 11 511 I
Wt tlllneton 21 21 500 """ ... YorA. --lj '1 .>S1 11\'t c:.r..~
Mllwtulttt 2t IS 651
Allen!• n 17 SU )V,
Detroit 20 t1 •7• 71;'a ,,.., ... "° 11 24 .,. .....
Cnk eoo IS 11 .>4t tl
lft819ne 11 )Cl 2.. 16 ....... .,..~
Botton uo. Latrtn ts
CllNiwt Il l, 0 ... t 111
PlllltcMtPhlt 111, Pllotnl• 11 I
A11t1111 Il l, Goldlft S111t 100
Dttroll 107. CltY~ 10.
Dtf\Ytr 137, New WWY 124
T ...... 1~
Ptloenl. " w 1'11ineloll
Stuttnefllo 11 Howton
'"-JtrMV 11 Uren
S..lllt I I Portltncl
~ ... .,..~
Lalla i et Cl k t OOldln Stitt 11 8otlon
New YOf'l< 11 Atltnlt
MllwtUlltt 11 lndltnt
Pllltao.tllfll• 1t Cltvtleno
Detroit et Oeltu
S.n Aftlonlo el Otf\vt r
C.elka I 10, L.aken ts
LAKIRS (fS) -Luut 4· 11 1·3 t ,
Wor'tflv 5-U ,_l 12, Al>Oul· Jtbb9f •·20 S-6
17, Scoll 7· 1) 1-1 16, E .JoMtool 6· 10 >·> IS,
C-2-S 0-0 4, KuPC,...._ 2·9 2·) 6, Cr-
2·6 0-0 4, McGee 2·S 1·1 6, Sclrl9e• J-• 0-I
4. L .. ,., 1·3 o-o 2 Tot.m lt-101 16·2:1 ts
M>STOtt ( 110) -McHtle l · 14 •·I 12,
l lro I· 16 4·4 11. Perl'11 7· 13 1·1 16, D JOhn'°" t · tt 4·4 n. At"" s-• o-o 11,
W•"on S-6 1·2 11, Slctlllno )·4 I· I 7,
Wtclmtn 1-6 0-0 4. Ctrllllt l·l 0-0 2,
VlllUlll 2·) 0-0 4, Kitt 0·2 0-0 o. Tnwato.IM
0-2 O·O 0 Totel1: 4S·" 11·22 110
kert ltV QM"'9rt
L1ktr1 2$ 24 26 »-JS
Botton J I 26 J I 2'-110
Thrtt-ooln1 -•s-scon. l wd, Atnee
Fouled OUI-"-Rtt>ounOt-ulltr• SS «:.r-. LUU• 10), lk>\Jon 70 llWd 111
Anlttt-t..tktf'S 17 (E JoMtoft •>. Botton
27 IAlnet ll Totel ~~' ?l, la.Ion 21T~-'
AlllllOt--14..ltO
a...n 1J1, Mewrtdll 111
CU.IRS (1311 -~ .... 6·1 •·i 11.
WNtt 7· I) 1-1 IS, Nlmolllut 6·1 t · 10 21.
JoMWlll 1·11 6·4 22. Nl•on 2·7 )·) 1.
atnlemln 6-1 2·2 14, vei.nt1nt l ·I 4·S 10,
lrlOttmtn 1·4 0-0 2. Ctff •-t 2·3 14,
Gordon l · 7 0-0 4, E dweros O·O 0-0 O.
8rv1n1 1-2 o-o 2 ~ot1r1 4t-n >3·3' 1)1
OALUS ( 118) -Aoulrrt 9·11 1·• 25.
Ptrklnt •·14 1·2 9, OonalclWlll 4·• 4·4 12,
HtrDtl' ll·IS l-4 26, ltacllrnen 10-20 4·S 24,
Scfvtmelf 0-2 H 0, Devi• 2·l 2·2 6, Vlnunt
S· 11 0-1 10, lleo 0-0 0-0 0, E •It 2-1 0-2 S,
Wtnnlnoton 0-1 1-2 1. Ket1lno o-o o-o o
To1111 47.,. n ->1 111.
k-.b't OMt1w\ Cll-. 11 l7 31 ,._ ll I
Dt lltt 29 22 lO l1-I 11
Trvtt·oolnl ~trDll', ENlt Fouled
ou1-No111 R11>ound1-CllPPt" '2
(Nll'l'\Plllu1 14), Dtlltt 0 IOontklM>n 1))
Aul1lt-Cll-1 lO (Nlaon 10), Dtlltt 2•
lllecl\men 7) Totet foutt-<~1 31.
Dalu JO, Tecnnic.11-Nlmc>lllu1, Jonnton.
A lltn<St~ 16.141
COLLE GI
~AAmndlnel c__._
WL
Ntv•dt·LH V99H 6 0
~w M .. ~ Stett S 0
UC 1'1,,nt 4 1
FrllftO Stt lt J l
Cet Stitt Fullerton 3 4
Sen JOit St•te 3 •
Ut•n Stett 2 3
P9clfk 2 s
UC S.nte 8ert>trt 1 S
L-IHCll Stell 1 S T.......,..,G_
Lono 8ttdl Stele et UC trvlne
0vw ..
WL
17 2
11 )
• 1
10 1
10 ' 10 6 • •
' t 1 9 s 12
Ct l Stt tt Fulttrton 11 UC Senti 8trt>tre
Ulen Stele el Fresno Stele
New M111lco Stell " N•vtd•·LH VtQH
Sen JOM Stet• " Peclfk Sttur•v'• ~
Ntw M111k o Stele el UC trvl111
Lono ltlCll S•••• •I Ntv•O.·Lt\ V99et Sen JOM Stele t i FrllftO Stele
Ut111 Sti lt t i Plldfk ,.,_V't GMM
Fresno Sltlt et UC S.ntt 8trt>trt
INOIVIOUAL nATISTICS
( Tlwtutfl Jen. If)
SGOttlNG
11111evw G FG " ~
Crtnt. USU U 143 " lSO
Murl>tl'f, UCI IS 115 14 316
ltOOtrt, UCt IS 120 47 2'S
hrrv. SJS IS 94 IA 271
l1nlu , UNLV 19 12' '9 J41
Wllburn, NMSU 14 11 7t 23'
Jonft, UNL V 19 126 47 l07
Htnrv. UCSI 16 t3 SA 251
Fl.,..,. ucsa 1s .. n 1eo
()lwi.m. UNL V 19 IOS 1• 214
1t•M>UNOING
A .....
1~ 0 ,, 1
It 1
llS
11 '
"' 16..2
161
160
10 .... _
Owtf'•. SJS
<;rent, USU
ltOCltf'•. UCI
Clllem, UNL Y
Fl•Plef ucsa
WltOurn, NMSU
N'Ntl>tlv. UCt Ant me . UOP
Turntf'. CSF
lerrv, SJS
G ,.
u
.... A .....
llO f l
12S I t
ASSISTS
IS
" IS u
IS
II
" IS
llO • 1
1'2 I s
IOI 1 1
100 7 I
10. 1 I ,,. 10
170 6 )
IS S1 .... _
G .... A .....
Wellltr. LI S 16 '°' ..
WMt, UNLV ,, 116 6 I
,.._.., UOP " 100 H
Htnrv, UCSI " 71 ..
W11ktr, FSU 17 74 ..
ltnttt, UNLV lt n ,.
JollftMlll, S JS 10 )7 l7
luehentn. UC I 14 5l ,,
Jldlaon. CSF It 10 l7
9'00kl, UCI IS SA u
ftedk·lO cec .. IMIM>I O¥wll
WL WL
Weafllnelon s I 11 1
4 I • s °'"°" Sit It Arllone J I 1' s
CtlffcWnl• 4 ' UCLA > ' use l 4
WMfl!M,.n ,,.,. 1 4
2 4 Sl'"'°'d AtflOM llelt I 4
I s °'""' ........ .,. . ._..
Celffof'11ll t7, USC '1 T......,,._ °'"°" , ...... Ari•-°'"°" t i ArllOM Slllt UCl.A el Sf9"fef0 ....,.,. ....... -
USC t i ArtlMMt <-Ctl'ftf'tnal
UC l.A ti CelltWM ,
WMlllnetOft Sl•lt •I WetlllntlOll
OrtlOll 11 A.rtJON 0.-...,, tt.te el ArltoN Stelt ....,,_,AL ITA""1CI ( ftfW'9I JM. It) ICOll ..
.,." w ,, Ill ,, Jil
1t 1» u w
1• " 11 tM ""' .... ll Mil ,. tll
11t• a "' 11 ., .1 1'1
11 "' " "' 11 " ., .... " "' " ... MMUllllll
1J 4 • s I I
' 10 • 10
1 •
' 10
...
l'-7 ... ,,.
171
"'' ...... .... ... , ,..,
IU
• ,.
II
11
IJ
........
\61 --~ lit u
••
1• •• .. , ,.
IM U
Cllrtltt c..... ........ 11 c-.u ,, .... ,
..... (1't) Ont c-. , .. , ...... .. .... OOeiTI 2 0 4 4 Kello ) S 2 II
L.Alnetord t 0 0 11 Tiedt J 0 1 4 11'1* i 1 4 I ANlllfy It S I JS
MlllM t 1 719 1M1 1 J 416
Jtfl«Mlll I 2 4 11 ~ 2 O 1 4 Oeeont 111 1w .. , 2 •11
l'eletf 1 l • • 6
Tl'lelrnMll 1 I J 2 TOlll\ :n 6 21 1' T .. tll )$ i. It 8'
HtlttlrN We•Moti O· n T tcM1c.t1 J«twaon !WI
COfl'PWTY COLLl•I ~ C... .._ c.ms1a: ff ,.__c..ttc..,.,.1
c.,..... u•1 °"""" c..e·c•> flflll• ...... C.Wlltmt S 0 1 10 Jot\ &Ion I 1 4 It
ltoblnton 4 s > u Judd • 4 > " lll'ltmlf\9 0 I I I Kelly 1 I O S
MWlllmt 0 0 1 0 IMMf 0 0 0 0
l ulloc:ll • S i 17 McGe,,rn J O 4 4
Morrlt 6 2 S 14 ~ 4 1 2 15
Hen0rt11 1 0 I 4 llclt.ell t 2 2 6
COlllN 0 0 4 0 Mu1tt 2 4 I I
Crtwfotd 0 0 I 0 At'OrffY O 0 I O
To1e11 n 13 14 " To1t11 24 20 16 "
~-c...i,»-n
f'ullnell ,., G--. w.t n
(.._,.. C..1t G J WWW)
0....... .... (71) ~ ... , .. , .. ""'• .. """• E"*°ton I 0 4 2 Snow 1 • 4 20
$1rtcllen IS 6 4 J4 Mvtrt I 6 2 22
Smith • • 4 20 Me"'lleld 2 > 1 1
Oetlbt • 0 I 12 lll'f1W 1 J S 17
Utu . ) 0 4 6 L-1• 6 0 S 12
l row11 0 0 4 0 Mou 0 0 1 0
Sl'"PIOll I 0 0 2 MMton I 0 I 2
Macou11 o o 1 o crow.-1 o o 2 audt I 4 1 6
Ht ll-1 0 01
To1e11 l4 10 22 11 Tottlt l4 n 11 '°
Helf11mt Golden w .. 1. 42·l4
~ CMlt C.• tM>I
c ' -°""" WL WL
7 0 21 1
S I 15 4
S 1 IS S
) 3 11 I
2 4 14 1
l > 9 10
, 4 ' 10
1 s • 11
GolOetl w... 0 1 4 14
...... V",~
Onll9t Coett ... C-'on ff
F ullef' IOll 90. Golden Wt\1 1t
Cypr"' '1. ltenctlo S.11llt00 Sl C~rllot 12. Ml $tn Antonio ll s.tw•V"• ~ 17:») Or•not Coett et Mt !.t.n Antonio
~k " Coldtn w .. 1
CvPI'"' 11 Comc>•on Fulterlon 11 1l1ncno Senlleeo
NtJCf w.-...v-. ci-(7;JO)
Cerrltot " Or•noe eo.11 ••llCho Stntltto 11 SedClltOKk
Mt S..n Antonio et Cypr111
Compton •• Fullef'IOll
HtGff SCHOOl.
UfWwlltV W, WI I •n-.. 61
(See View L...-)
UfllYw1'tY U•> W 11 • "-"1 l .. ".... """'• Oun 6 6 I 11 8rn n 6 1 4 14
WlnlloW 4 1 S 10 M4Jrpny S J 2 13
GltHtn • t • 21 llttft 7 J S 17
Stolroff S 2 1 12 111~1 0 0 4 0
AU•on 1 O S 4 Twn1tt1<1 1 3 3 S
Fl'flll ~ l 3 'l'ork 1 0 0 2
Crrkw\kl 0 0 2 0 $ullln .n 2 4 0 l
Vettl O o o o Rounl9flt O O 2 O
VttOUOO I 0 0 2
To111t n 22 n " To•••• n IS 10 .i
~rt~
Unlvtt,llY 11 I IS 17 • I~
WOOCIO<ld9' IS 16 t 11 6 3-'6 I
Cerene d9 Mer tJ, c .... Meta 4J
fS. View L-)
CMll Mete (0 ) C--MM (t)) .. ...... .. """• Pllcnwlkl 4 O 2 I Frvtt I S I 11
NYU9tf\ 2 S l t T Ul'ntf' S 1 I 11
Mo!'rl1 1 o 1 4 c nr1ttn1n 1 1 • 3
Vootl 1 O S 4 8rt>ow~ I 1 0 4
Kot 0 0 I 0 Crttn 6 • 0 ,,
llCll'loutl S O O 10 MCGrelll 4 4 0 12
Well O O 0 O O'Ntll 0 0 1 0
lltmutlll 1 S I 1 Mllr·Stcn 4 0 l I
Nlnlmte O 1 l I Morrll 3 0 J 6
HOOi! 3 0 0 6
Freri.r o I 1 I
ao.1rne11 1 o 1 1
Ntntl<OCI I I 2 )
To1e1' 16 11 " ..i Total\ >7 lt 11 t3
kw• by °"'""" Colle Mete ' 10 12 ts--0 Coron. Ott Mer 12 20 1S 1.-fl
S.dcllebedl S7, E1tHcla 40
('" "'"' LlffYI) ••'-de (40) .. ""'. MOOlllY 1 0 2 4
Treto 0 0 2 0
8r11tll 1 I 1 S
Covt'f o 7 1 1
Tift 60 1 11
ltut kk 4 0 1 I
8•ktt 0 0 , 0
PlncklllV 2 ) 0 1
Steotl 0 2 0 1
~Clt U1) .. ""' .. Wt llo'n 7 I 1 IS
OHi • 2 l 11
Dottin l o 4 •
l utlef I 4 0 6
()ntlvtrO\ J 0 0 •
AIOMO I 0 0 2
Cem.p0ttt 3 0 1 •
Torell 16 I ll tO Totel' 2S 11 51
~ ltV QM,.,..
14 I 2 1-.0
16 10 6 1~51
N.woert H•"*" 62, l.atlUM ... di S2 IS-View .......,.,
u..-a..o cm -. "•,_.en> """'• ........ Elhttn S 2 S 12 M. Crtlo 6 J • 15
Ntftt 4 2 0 10 Rlc:Nrd• > 1 l I
Fortune 0 0 s 0 LM s 6 ' " Htrdl'M 11 2 1 14 Al"'om 4 l 1 11
Ltwltr I 2 4 4 Tortll 1 0 I 4
SNtn I 0 1 2 SNwet<I 0 J 0 l Enolt>Olf o o o o Youno 1 1 1 s
HouM 0 0 I 0 Gttrllnot 0 0 0 0
OevlM 0 0 1 0 Tolet\ 22 II 13 62
Totell n I It S2
kwt ltY °"'""" L1oun• 111tecn 10 11 11 12-s2
N-llOf'I illttcll 14 14 14 10-42
WM'"*'9tw SI, MertN 50
, ..... L....-l
MMtM (Ml ......,.._ ISi) .. """• ........ Cull<! l t J IS O.Vtt I O 1 16 ~· s 2 1 12 ,,..,,'°" 0 4 4 4
HllO.U9fl 2 2 4 6 C•t>lt• 6 I 2 1l
Quinn 4 I I t Smllll S I ) 11
HtYMellt 1 0 I 4 S~ 0 I 2 1
Manin I 0 1 1 Autlln • O S I
ll'edllle 1 0 0 2 Lovt 1 I 2 S
SltrTtr 0 0 0 0
TOll!t II 14 11 so Totelt u I 20,.
k-rw~ ~rl111 12 14 10 lot--iO w .. 1m1M1tt u 22 10 1...-se
..... SI, fl ...... V81ey H . ( ..... ~,
,..,.... veeev u21 ,._. u11
"""• .. fl ... Hell'°" l 0 4 6 A-6 • t II JoMtoll J I 4 1 Smlttl J 2 I •
Atllet•f1 1 0 0 2 HllOWMll J t 1 I
Welle I I l J C. 1 0 J t w .. .w 2004H1Mtt 0 1 0 1 larlNt 2 2 J 6 Kei.w 4 4 1 12
lof''4Ul\I O 0 1 0 ~I 0 2 J Ayers 0 t t 0
""'"" 0 2 ' , ..,.., ••• 0
To111t I• • 11 » Toi... 17 11 10 SI
._.. ... o-rwt
Ftulllelll V...., I 4 t 1,.._.
I._ 4 11 I) 17-tl
0-V6IW 16, "' • ,, ..._ 11
( ..... ~,
0.. "'" , .. , ....... (11) .. .... .. ... . ~·••11"9 ,, • ., '9Mlce 4 2 41t K.. •I 1 t
...... •lttJIMell 4tll
Mtr;te .,,,...,i..wttt6
.,._ J I • • V"1 t -4 •t 4 .,... t2t•""'-'1tl• .,...... .. , ....... ,,,,
,..., •••• ~ l tlt Dlllla t I t e
,.. tl ,. • .. T-n ' n II .............
o..111 V'9w .. ' .. " ...... ........ lwfl ..... 1.-.1
Sayonara aorenesa
CblcaMo Bean quarterback Jlm Mella.hon takee lnatruc-
dou lrom Illa acupunctmUt Hlroebl Sblrlubl Wedneed.ay.
Shlrlulll wu Oown ln to treat McMahon'• buttock.a, which
he bru.IMd ln N'Jl'C Champlouhlp &ame with Rama.
HIGH SCHOOL RANKINGS ...,, ct, S·A Cl' 4·A ...... TeMI RICIN
I. Metw Oel 11·1
1. Oc.-Y19w IJ·4
3 Stf'ra 12·4
4 v., t>um ()el 11· 4
...... TMl'l't ltKenl
S L8 Potv 10-6
• ''""' 12·4 1 St lttnMO t •S
I. lll'tft. yeeey 11-1
9 St Antnonv 1·1
10. ..... 116·•
I CePO Vetiev 17·2
7 Snt• Monlce 12· l ) Muir 11·1
4 S.m1 v 1t1tv 11 1
S Nortn IS· l
6 Culver Cilv 16·1
7 0omlnQUel 17·•
I lnottwooo 11 · S
t S.11te Ane ll·•
10 Sen Grgnlo 14·1
Cl~ l·A CJI' 2·A
I HH Wiison 17·2
2 GWIHN 14·1
l Kettlt IJ·J
I Sen &rdlno 16·2 2 lltlr 15·2 J s.nte , .. ,. 10-6
• MornlnotlOe t-1
S lrM·OUndt 1S•4
• Pomont 10-l
1 Et Ooreoo ll· > I 8urrOUOflt 11·)
4 C1t>rltlo 12·1
S Soutll Pt1 11·•
• 8ennlno 12 3 1 St JOWOf\ 10-S
t Ot .mlen 1l 4
10 Cteremont ll·S
I Ttmolt C·IY ll·S
• Murpny 11·3
10 La C.necse 11·S
C" 4·A Cll' l ·A
Muir 17·0 l r .. ·Olln<I• 14 2
2 8Utf'• IS·O Foot111H 1•· I
l. ""'" .,.,,,, 16·4 LOUl\Ylllt 11·4
4 ComPton ll·• 4 E toerenie 13·)
S LYrlWOOd 14·3 s Mln Vlt.o 14 1 • c:;.,,, 11·) 6 Pa1mo•le 13·3
7 Mornino"oe n · s 7 FonttN 14·1
I Hewtnor111 IS·• I litv Polv 11 3
t. OcMft View 11·S 9 Norco " 7 10 MIHlken U·3 10 S.n Cell<~ t7 '
Cllll' l·A CJF l·A 1 Cn1no IS I ' Vt lltv Cn< ,. 1
1 Lomooc 14· I 1 Stnte Cte<• ll·4
3 Le Heore 11·• ] A••K•<lero 17 0 • Mont-llO 17·1 • Mo••v~ .. 0 s lrewlev IJ I s '"''" 0.k ll·J
6 lnclio 10·5 • wn1111., Cnr I )
1 Onltrlo 11·) 1 8 retnren 9 3
I Lt Qu1n1e l1·S I Conntllv 14 0
9 Aoolt Vltev 11·S t Senti Ynez 10·3
10 Le Mlr1<1e IH 10 8 J&llOP II I
HIGH SCHOOL STANDINGS
SM View Leeeue
Ll8Wt Over ..
WL
Corone de! Mer S 1
Unlvtttl!Y • 2
E11encle l l ~ llltecfl l l
Ntw-1 HtrbOt l l
S.Odltl>tek ) J
WOOdt>rlOOt l 3
Cotlt Mtu 0 6 w ........ .,.,sc-
WL
IS l
I I
10 7
• 1
9 1
• I ,. s
1 12
Nt#POfl Herl>Of' '1. Leoun1 8eacn S2
S.<lelleOtO S7, El tt ncle .0
COf'one Otl Mer n. Co111 Mete 4l
Unlvertlt'( ... WOOCIDrlOlll " 17 Oii
111''*¥'' G-O:lOl Woodbt!Ooe t i Etttncl1
Newoort HtrDOf II Coste MIU
Legune 8"cn et U11lvtf'tltv
Corone oe• '"'' et Sto<lltoeck
S4lftMt L-.ue
Octen YI ....
Founlt1n Velltv
EOI'°" Wt\tml1111.,
Huntlnglon 8MCll
Merine
Ll8Wt WL
• 0
' 1 1 1
1 ' I J
1 )
w ........ V",~
Wt\tmlnlltt Y. Mtrtne 50
Edlton SI FOUllllln Vtllev n
o-..
W L ... " . 12 •
~ 17
1 11
l1 •
OcN n view 5'. Hunllnoton e.tefl s 1
..... V". --(]:JI) EOIWlll et Metlnl HUllllnolon lete:rl t i F-relft Vellev
Wetll!'llll\lt< et ac.tft V-
*"' C.lf ....... '--WL
CePltlrtno V1tle" 6 0
Min ton Yleio 4 1
Et TO'O J 1 l~vlnt J 1 s.n Ciemtntt 1 l
Di ne Hiii' 0 S
Lffunt HIMI 0 S
~
WL " , 14 s
' I
11 ' ' ' . ' 1 11
w ...... .,.,sc-
Cl l>ill••no Vt llev 11 L.ffuM Hlht •t
Sen Cle!Mf'ltt " 01111 Hiii' SS
MIU'91\ "-71 (I Toro ..
1rv•111 ove
~,..V", --(T:Jt)
lrvlllt 11 Ml\liOll v..io
LeeuN Hiit et ~ Hlh
El Toro 11 S.11 Ctemtrtlt
Ct olt tr1no Y11\ev, fft
--V"•O-
Lffunt Hlilt t i lr"lne Ct ol•trtllO Y111rf t i l!t Tor·o
S.n Clemtfltt et Mlu lon Vltlo
o.nt Mlltt, I>••
COMMUMT'Y COLL••• WOMmN ~ C•tt M. C.,..... 6t , ... c. .. c.......l
OrMlt c.t1 , .. , """"" ,.,, .. . .... .. " .... C:..IM J ) I t S<9lt 1 I i J
$Olt!lllr 11 J J 14 aurr J 0 1 4 ~1t l 41'C.rou 4 $JU ..... • ••• ""lllMll •• , 16
•IMIM J4 tlt a.tl\el S I J lt
'-"'"'' t I 1 I WllllllM P J J 0 .... .... ,~ ,,,,
~ >. 4. V....,.,. 0 I 0 0 nee. .....
T..-.. 11 11 • TO!tls 21 I U U
.......,.. ~ c .-1, ...,,
Tectllllcill ~ lC---1 .....,,. ... ,,. ...... ,
.... .......... , C' .... ~-Or-
5--.... XX
SUNDAY ,., .... ~,
Ntw En111enc1 v1 Cl\lcloo ICnenntl • •1
2om1
Cb1UllO I I ovee ..... &..flOllllCI
S4IMr .... lnlUrv ,....,,
CHICAGO &E ARS VS NEW ENC
LANO PATlllOTS -... ,. 06 Jim
M£.MMton (l'l•P·t>tckl, WR 0.,Wt Melltn·
non lll•PI OT Steve MCMlcrle4il lknMJ ere
Pl'OOtDlt Pl "'°'' TE Derrick ltemM't
11\ttMtrlfltl L8 Sieve "-(ll!OulOtrJ
Wit Pit """"II Frver lnencll ere Pl'OC.ble
SU... ...... ., ... tamNrtMfl
O,,•NH N.I. CM. C AMES IW·L1 )-0 2·0
FIRST DOWNS .. JO
llu1111n11 1' 1•
Peulno 11 " Pene11v 1 o
VOS GAINED 131 S9S
.Av11 °"' Geme 219l 1'7 s RUSHING S 10 1ll
AYOPffGem.e 1100 1190
llull•t\ 141 T7
l"erO\ oer ru\h ) S l I
P.ll<S.StN(; »I 3!1
A •II oet G.,.,.,, tot 3 111 S
Pu~.1'11 ..i 4'
(ompiettO 10 11
Pct Compoe•ta 6t I SI 7
"'erOl G••"•O 175 llO
MCkta 6 3
y trOl LO\I ., 13
H•O tnterceot O O
V•rd•()po llet O O
()pp T01 on Int 0 O
PUNT!> 16 16 •"'-o Yero• 39 t )6 7 PUNT RETUllN\ 6 II
Avo lhtur" 2 l • • lltl lor TO 0 I
It IC KOFF llE T t 2
Avo lleturn ••I 11 S
Ile• to-TO 0 0
PENAL TIES t I .,.o, oenelf1t0 10 61
FUM8LES av 1 )
F ""'Ole' Lott • 1
()pp F1.1m0itt ll 1
()pp F um Lott t l
POSS TIME l6 11 lS SO
TOUCHDOWNS t 6
Ru\l,,nQ 1 1
Pen 1n11 S l
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Course covers new ener gy rules llewlett .. Packard
'monopoly' sued
A ftee eiaht-wcek seminar coverina
new trends and requirements in
buildina mechanical systems beains
at 6 p.m. today at the Fashion
lnslitute of~ in the South Cout
Vila. Mercantile Buiklina in Costa Mesa.
Conducted by eneray manqement
expert Richard Palmer, president of
lllau* A. Paa..r-lt Alleclates, the
proparq will biahliaht the cban&in&
eneray rqulations for residential and
commef'Clal buildina.
The course will be hekS every
Thursday thro"'lb March 13. A
syllab\i\ will be a ~liable' for S 18. For
more information1 call 261-S704. • • • Three aeminars on ftnaneial plan-nina will be ptttented by the YWCA •f s..a OrMp C..ty as pan of its ..... , EX ... e ••Lmdll Break"
series.
Susan Consey,, an account ex-
ecutiv~ with Dean Witter1 Reynolds.
Inc. ofNewpon Beach. wdl speak oo
financial plannina on Jan. 29, per-
sonal investment alternatives on Feb.
12 and investing for your retirement
on Feb. 26.
The programs will be held at the Y
at 141 1 N. Broadway, Santa Ana. Call
S42·3S77 fOI information and rescr•
vations. • • • A free one-dar teminar on IRAs
and various 1nvntmcnt· related
..strateain will be held S.turday at the Irvine Hilton Towers.
Co-sponsored by Innovative
Financial Plannin.a Services.
Financial Network· COrp. and the
Oranae County Business Journal, the
lllA aM P..a. Fair 'M will include
sessions of various investment ve-
hicles, corporate retirement plans
and pension invC1tments.
KDC
JOINS THE
''EAGLE CHALLENGE"
... .
IN THEIR EFFORTS TO
BR.ING THE
AMERICA'S CUP
TO NEWPORT BEACH
HEAR "EAGLE UPDATE$"
FRIDAYS AT 9:30 AM & 3:30 PM
ON KDCM
m&t
PMsnlmll
Your Official Eagle Stotron
-..
The momu'8 session is from 9 a.m.
to noon, and tS re~atcd from I lO 4
p.m. No reservations are required.
and park,ina is free. • • • The Orua• Couty A•nrUJlq
PH•ratlu'1 .. Thirstday NIJht
Toa1t" will honor Theresa Doyle,
8dvenitil\l·markctjna director for
Covinaton TechnoloaiCJ at 5:30 today.
The Ad Oub meets each Thu~y
al Ravels in the Reaistry Hotel. 18800
MacAnhur Blvd., Irvine. An
8dvenisina personality is honored
each week.
On Thursday, Jan .. JO, all new
members for the month will be
honored. Members, guests and non-
memben arc welcome.
• • • A one-day seminar on "Accounting
and Computers for the Full-Serv'lce
Restaurant" will be prC1Cnted on
Monday by the Calltonala Rettaarut
A1MClatlelt. --
The seminar, at $85 for CRA ~
members and SI 00 for non-members,
will be conducted ·by Bob Martin, a
CPA who specializes in restaurant
accountina. For more information,
call (800) 252-0444 .
NEW Y~~"°-~fo.,wlng Hsi lhow• := ork Sloek x~noe 1toct11 werr•nts that hllve gone UP the most~ oown the most J-* on ~c.nt '1: r ... rdlfts volume or ednesda v .
No ~Illes tntdlng below 12 are I~ ·=· Md Hf'C9nl9" cM=' are I d ence ~ the orev ~ closing orlce an ednesdav's o.m. o r I c a UPS
MILPITAS (AP)-A computer maintenance firm filed~ S3S-
million suit qainst Hewlett-Packard Co. for alleaedly anemptmg to
drive it out of business.
Datagate Inc. charged HP sales and ens!ncering pe~nncl w.ith
falsely tcllina computer OWJ'lers that service companies such as
Datapte would soon be out of business.
In the suit filed earlier this month in U.S. District Coun.
Datagatc also ~!aimed Hewlett-Packard officials told potential
customers Datagate and other such companies often we~ i~capable
of repairing HP computers and would no longer be receiving spare
parts from HP.
Datagate asked the court to halt the aJleaed p~~tices and to
order HP to pay-at least $35 million in actual an,.d pumuvc damages .
Hewlett-Packard already has 90 percent of the-market for
servicina HP hardwar~ "and ii would ap~ar from t~eir behav!or
they want even more than 90 percent:• said Doug Willbanks. vice
president of marketing at Datagate .
The suit charges HP with unfair competition. defamation.
dispa.,.gement and attempted monopo.liz.ation .
Hewlett-Packard spokesman Gene Endicott declined to
.comment on the cale".-sayinge-0mcials were reviewirrg the sa· . -
The privately held Datagate. which specializes in the service
11nd repair of Hewlett-Packard computers since its fo unding in
1978. has about I OS employees and sales of Less than SI 0 million.
HP employs about 84,000 and had sales ofS6.S billion last year.
g:~~n I'~ t I Uo r 'Meulr n
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A Greet u~ ll ""~ It~~ FrMS(; 21'1• 21°" ~~le,~· Frr,:n: 27'4 2111'1
'\•31.1 .• :::;.p FulrH 11°" II-A NII Ill it~ I~ ordf ~ n ·n•" ,..,,.~··· Ol'e I I f~ 'i~ a AnG A ft t I 1 • J1 ~'" Ant.AG ' =\'' • ~ 77~ff ~=1 = IO''l~Ht Gr Ko 211
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Jorlco n .. ,, ... MotCIO 161') 17 RoeoSv JonlcD! • • • •• M~ 1J ' 2S ROOM yr JoiPMll 1 • 1 ,, Herr CIC " " , ROUM l Jo\!Yn lO • )OJ,, H~ete 11 17 .. S.c!tler IC.int I f• N lcrn Pt 3l. S.leco icemen ' u , '• NlwkS l IS't ISf't SIHIGcl IClvS A' "'. 41 viHdtOG .,,. ~32 SIPeut K91'T\P ,. 74l) Nike I IS!• 16 Scher or Klmo.1 30''• 31 Norosrr so•. so•,., ScrlpH Klno1n1 1'-•• ,, HCerG1 2l:J;, , •• ,, SH91te ~=·· •• ; 19·1' NwNG .,,. 10 SEEO ~l ~11PS , .. ~ i~ = : ~ ~ :; ~ .. m~1 i' I! 0 ~ ....... wml • • ., •;a.. Ilk Le on 3 1·16 '"' ... IWI
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* * * "Once Upo(I A Time In Ameri-ca" (1984) Robert De Niro. w..
Wooda.
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NEW YORK CAPl Jan. 23
T
AMEX LEADER S
GoLo QuorEs
METALS QuorEs
RU Ff ELL'S
UPHOLSTtlY INC. ... ., ...... ~ ... ,
19U i-. al>~ COSYI IEA-541-1156
Dov, J o~rs A ~ER4GES
NASDAQ s u ~MAR Y
Need a Resume?
ActJon-gettJng, personaNzed
resumes & le!Wrs
759-7044 ~:l :i.i.IJ;/a ~'[•J:J:i.1
'''' Or.~290 h-"
famou.5 labals ...
Manzanillo race gets closer
BJ ALMON LOCL\BEY .............. ~
The 1,110-Milc San Dicao to Manzanillo. Mexico
race. whkh acts under way Feb. 8 ofT Point Loma.
promiKS to be another downhill battle of the uhra-lite
muis.
. Eight of the bia downwind sleds att among the 28
crac" International Offshore Ruic yachts scheduled for
the run to the Las tiadas Hotel at Manzanill o on the west
coast of the Mexican mainland.
Heading the list of ULDB mu.is 1s Nick Frazee's
Nclson-Mattk 68 Swif\surc Ill from the host San Diego
Yacht Club.
Swif\sure Ill was first to finish in tht 1984
Manzanillo race and has won line honors (first to finish)
in several other Iona distance races. including the 2.225-
milc Los An1elcs to Honolulu race.
Other OLDBs in the running for line honors an::
I_ Sorcery, Jake Wood's Mull-70 OY+ of California
Yacht Cub.
-Sap, a NM-68 co-skippered by Doug Baker and
Gcorae Writer. Long Beach Yacht Club.
-Ragtime. a Spcncer-67. skippered by Pat Farrah.
LBYC.
Othcrentncs rcpresont yacht clubs from San Diego to
San Francisco •
Entncs 1n alphabetical order:
-Allure. Charles Jacobson. Monterey Peninsula
YC.
-.\rpanl1on. Wilham Allen Jr.-John Wintersteen.
Pacific Manners YC.
-Auspicious. Rob Batcher. Santa Clara Racing
Assoc1auon ( an Diego).
-Cheetah. Dick Penninttlon. Lonit Beach YC.
-Eclipse. Bill Bamasch-Les Crouch. SDYC.
-Encore. Ric.hard Kn oth. SDYC.
-Escape. teve Dilbeck-Jerry Kin1t Santa Cruz YC.
-Jubilation, Jack James. Santa Barbara YC.
-Kathmandu, John Landon, SDYC.
-Lone Star. Burton BenJamin. Southwestern YC.
-Magic. Jim Hoskinson. South Bay Yacht Racing
Club.
-Miramar. John Scnpps. SDYC.
-Morning Star. Larry Doane. St Francis YC.
-Ms Blu. Harry Thoniasen. Balboa YC.
-Nalu. Peter Grant. Newport Harbor YC.
-Notonous. Scott Pine. Santa Cruz YC. -Prima. an ~ c ~--.ii.crry Lingcnfelder. SDYC. -Prima. (Olso~Fred Kirschner. ,-;:;o;:;ro'-n;;;a;;rno-V1a...--
-Prima (N M-68). f red Frye-Terry Lingenfelder. -Kathmandu. John Landon's Santa Cru1-70.
SDYC.
-Cheetah. Dick Pennington's Peterson 68. LBYC.
-Lone Star. Bunon Benjamin's NM-56. South-
western YC. ~
Four Orange County yachts in the line-up. all bidding
for handicap honorsatt John Arens' Frcrs.-5 1 Tomahawk.
BaJboa YC: Nalu. Peter Grant's Swan-56. Ncwpon
Harbor YC; Ms Blu, Harry Thomson's Fttrr38. Balboa
YC: and Paul Queyrel's Holland-33. toboggan. Voyagers
Yacht Club.
SDYC.
-Ragtime. Pat Farrah. Long Beach YC.
-Saga. Doug Baker-George Writer. LBYC.
-Silberrad. Cliff Thompson. SDYC.
-Sorcery. Jake Wood. California YC.
-Swiftsure Ill. Nick Frazee. SDYC.
-Toboggan. Paul Queyrel. Voyagers YC.
-Tomahawk. John Arens. Balboa YC.
-Travieso. Ron Kuntz. Oceanside YC.
-Typhoon. John Olsen, Long Beach YC.
-Upbeat. Chris Sellars. King Harbor YC. The boat Saaa, owned bJ Doaa Baker of the Lone Beach Yacht Club, will be entered ln
the Manzanillo race.
Hobie sets ·'B6 events
Yachting events set
for local f>oat clubs
Hobie Cat. the World Hobie Class
Assoc1at1on and the Nonh Amencan
Alpha Cius Association have an-
nounced pre Ii mi nary details of major
1986 events. ·
The first ma1or regatta. and a
favorite among Hobie Cal sailors
from Southern Cal ifornia and
throuihoul the west. is the Hobie
Midwinters West. traditionally held
Voyagers Yacht Club will
host the Jack Starkey Memorial
R~t~unday for Soling Class
sailors. ·
South ore Yacht Cl ub will
conduct a Southern California
'---.r-i;;-:ac tmg AssocLaUon racing
rules seminar Sunday at its
clubhouse on Coast Highway.
Most important regatta over
the weekend will be the E. E.
Manning Series Saturday and
Sunday at the Alamitos Ba y
Yacht Club in Long Beach.
The Manning Series is the
oldest sailing award · for ·small
boat sailors in Southern Cali-
fornia, dating back to I 935. It
was originally for undecked
dinghies under I 4 feet but in
recent years has been changed to
include sailing dinghies up to 16
feet.
Defending champion is Paul
Noring of Huntington Harbour
Yacht Oub. Noring won it last
year in the Naples Sabot Class
against 51 entries. The trophy
goes to the winner in the largest
class.
In other Southern California
areas: Los Angeles-Long Beach
Huntington Harbour Yacht
Club -Winter Wring .Out
Regatta (PHRF-One-design
keel boats), Satttrday.
Santa Monica Bay
South Coast Corinthian
Yacht Club -Les Storrs Series
No. 2 (keel boats). Saturday.
King Harbor Yacht Club -
Winter Regatta, Saturday, Sun-
day.
South Bay Yacht Racing Club
-Champagne Series No. 2.
(keel boats), Sunday.
San Diego
San Diego Yacht Club -
Sugarloaf Rock race (Rumsey
Series). Sunday.
Coronado Yacht Club -
Woodworth Series (MORC,
SDHF), Sunday.
Mission Bay Yacht Cl ub -
Frostbite Senes (all classes).
Sunday.
•'
~~~~ :xe~~d ~~~~~~c~~i~%~~:
300 contestants. will be held Feb.
22-23. It is one of the three largest
1iobie...Cat regauas held anywhere in
the world.
A month later. P<pnl 1 l-13. the
Tampa. Fla. Hobie Fleet 41 and
Tampa Sa1lcraft will host the annual
M1dw1nters East with sailors coming
from as far nonh as Michigan and
other East Coast sailing centers. as
well as many W~t Coast sailors.
Some of the top Hobie Cat sailors
in the nation hail from Florida.
A new event. Alpha Speedweck. is
slated to be held April 17-20 at the
Ponds l reauon area near Palm
Spnn s he three-phase schedule
calls fo ompet1tors to face ofT in
slalom. one-on-one drag racing and
speed tnals.
peedweek is expected to draw
many top-name sa1lboarders from
throughout the we!lt to this high wind.
smooth water sue. Hobie Cat 1s the
U.S. distributor of Alpha sailboards.
Dealers in Riverside Count)'. will be
hosting the nearly 250 sailors ex-
pected to attend.
OC 1Searcb Foundation formed
to aid substance abuse victims
By CAROL HUMPHREYS
Delly,._ Cen~t
.\!though 11 took a )car. Beverly Tbompson Coil has
achieved a goal' Inspired b} hereon' ersat1on'i with Paul
NFwman and Art Unkletter, who both trag1call~ loc,t their
sons due to suhstance abuse. Beverl> ha!I founded thr
Orange County Search Foundation
"There 1s no place rn Orange Count~ for chemic all~
addicted children and their families to go for treatment
that doesn't cost a fonune.'' announced the philanthrop1t
pioneer. who hopes to gel a place stancd
"Search 1sa five-pronged program -in add1t1on to
helping th e children with drug and alcohol add1ct1ons. v.t'
lhill focus on m1ss1ngch1ldren. abused children and
fa mi hes in pain and educational programs " It 1s a non-
profit independent organ1zat1on ofTenng service. ex-
change of information. volunteer support. interface
groups and funding for the emotional needs of children
teen-agers and their fam 1I1es.
The gro up's ulumategoal 1s avmdance through
education and a video for the schools 1s being put together
Beverly has selected an enthus1astll. committee of
local ladies and long-lime fnends to help her launch the
Search organization and gathered them for lunch reccnll)
1n the Epicurean CellarofThe Ritz restaurant.
Dinin•on a menu of creme ofasparagus soup.
poached salmon D1jonnaisc, and grand mamie r souffie.
new "directors" discussed various fundraising
possibilities for the upcoming year .
According lo Beverl} several pro1ects are in th e
works. ''Search has been selected to receive some of the
proceeds from the Balboa Bay Club's Kentucky Derby
Day. I'd a!so love to see a Night ofGcrshwin, a fall
designer fashion show and even a New Year's Eve Gala at
one of the local hotels.··
"We need to raise a lot of money," explained R•U.
Jensen, bursting with benefit ideas. ''I'd love lo have a
Howl at the Moon event like th1;y do in Texas." (It
sounded fun ... see Ruth for details!)
Betly Sllamb•rlii)J>'lll act as Search director 10 the
newl y opened New~n Beach office and auomey Betty
Nunez has accepted the job of executi ve director.
''I'm 1n very few charity organizations. but because of
m} interest in m1ssingt:hildren. I decided to become
in vol"cd with the Search Foundation," commented
Nu nez.
C,eanngup forthe1r ~mbersh1pdrive(goal is 100)
were AH Colla, Amanda Elam, Barbara Harris, Jo Au
Keaton, Sassy Laby, Hedda Marotl, Mary Au MJJJer,
Beverly Mluey, Pat Neleer, Ga.rt. Sctalck, Bertt Sdllak.
Ca &by Scllwelckert, PHlette Clo.tier Semas, Au Sten
and JouSteveH.
Paparazzi 1s edited by Daily PJlot Style editor Vida
Dea n.
.. •
With three of the Hobie Cat
national champions coming from
Fon Walton Beaeh. Fla .. and one
world champion calling this city his
home. the town has become a mecca
for raci ng Hobie Cat sailors.
With that in mind. the Hobie Class
Association and Miles Wood . the
regional Hobie sales manger and
championship raci n~ sailor. will host
the first Race Training Week at Fon
Walton Beach. April 27-May 2.
Last year was the first ume the Las
Ycgas Hobie Gtanc:U!ti~a~he.ldon
Lake Mead and it has now become an
annual event. It will be held 'lh1s year
May 3-4 and will be hosted by
Thomas Spons Enterpnses.
One of the first ever organized b)
the Hobie Class Assoc1at1on was the
Lake Havasu Hobie Cat Fam ily Fun
and Recreational regatta. This year
the event will be sailed May 8-1 I
The Hobie-33 U.S. nauonal cham-
p1onsh1p is set for New Orleans Ma)
7-10 under the direction or the
Southern Yacht Club. This regalla
has previously been held at Long
Beach and 1n the Great Lakes.
A.nother new event. the H og·~
Breath 1000. will !>CC Hobie Cat
sailors racing thei r way from Kc)
Biscayne. Fla. to Fon Walton Beach
on the open ocean. Ski ppers will be
allowed to make some modification!>
to the normally stnct one-design rules
of the Word Hobie Class Assoc1a11on.
Tallsllip CaJlfornlan available
The official slalt' tallsh1p. Californian. w1I~ available for a whale-
watching e'<pedtt1on arurday. Jan. 25. and 'iund3y. Jan. 26. according to Jim
Wchan. director of sail training for the Nautical Heritage Society of Dana
Point.
Whelan said the cruise v.ould be a unique opponun1ty for members of the
public to experience sailing on a large working sailboal while watching for
whales m1grat1n~ along the coast.
The approx1matcl) J I /2 ho ur sail will hl!g1n at 12 noon each day. On
board will be marine biologist Rust} Mcml who v.111 gi ve a commentary on
whales as 1he) are sighted.
The Cah forn1a n 1s 3\a1lablc tor adults to sail onh a few day'i of the year
c;1 ncc her pnmary mlS'i1on 1s the tra1ningof}oung people in the life and skills
of the age of sail. __ _
Marlinspike Class
Prolcss1onal sa1lmaker and rigger Rudy Arau1 will present a marhnspae
seamanship class beginning Feb 5 at the Orange Coast College Boathouse in
Newpon Beach.
Marhnspikc seamanship 1\ lhc an oft) 1ng knots and bends in the running
n~ing on boats.
Tools and techniques of the sail maker and rigger will be demonstrated in
this ·hands-on class where students panc1pate 1n a wide vanet} of projects
ranging from basic sail repair to decorati ve ropework. Emphasis will be on
making repairs at ~ and preventive maintenance on !>ails and running riggina,.
The 14-wecks cour~ will meet Wednc~a)s from 7 to 9 p.m .. Feb. 5
through Ma't 7. The course Ice 1s SJ5.
The O(C Boathouse is located at 180 1 W Paci fic Coast H1gh'"a) in
Newport Beach. f-or rcg1strat1on information call Brad .\'ci: in the OCC
Communll) Sen 1n''i otlices. 432-5 725
Medicine at ea
Nev. pon Bcal h ..ailor .ind ph)S1C1an. Don Mc(11ll1c. v. 11l 1c.:ach a course in
Med1c1nc at Sea staning Jan 2R at the Orange ( oas1 ( ollcge Boathou..c. 180 I
W. Pacific Coast H1ghwa).
The essential\ offirst aid and mcd1cat1ons will be Lil\ cred 1n the nine-wee k
course. Dr McG1lhs will explain hov. 10 hdndle problems most common lo
small boat cruising. Thl· basics of d1agnos1'i and medical 'iu pplies will also be
discussed.
The course will meet Tuc,day evenings from 7 to 9 o'clock. Ttl(' kc 1s S45.
For registration information <:all Brad .\very. 432-581'!0.
Linda Nanes, Be•erly Coll and Betty 8hambur1.
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,.._,. It .. 1111 • • ~ =. -.. .. ~ ,'•. ·... ..... ~L,!!rvO". "..!~"0rANQI =o~...!.'U:..,__~ ftoe of IN Count, ,....; the Loen Quwenty ~No ~ ,_, ---FetwUlry 10, 1tM, "" ... day •t Our Lady
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(CITAaOll ~) I ,_ • ..... ,_ -. tllfa ettonwy, or _. Oellfotnle. execu1ed by: purpotMCS to b« 2t7 Knoa 1t1t • tnetMMnt No. of the OOt'll<~ al\d tf1M be ~ o-. .-.. ChrisUan aun.I. ~
li()TICI TO Dlfl'IHDNorr: I 1$ I 11 • -. ,_ .., • ....., .. ........ ~ *' ....,_,, II: (II JOHN C. WELLS AK) Al, Street, eo.ta Mw. CA a.ntl. le>e* 1*2. Peoe In 1M IOfm _. IOt1n tn 1M .eow. Tiiie tr.,.., of tm.-day, 9:30 A.JI. IJmr-• "
,,. • AouHdO) TIM ...... -. .......... , I......... nomtn,ledlreOOIOflyel~ U80H WE\.LS. HUSBAND t2927. 1~of0fftclal"9oorcle,•·oomredd0cumentl. Pfowernentl ~ to ment.. Padflc v .... r:
mero de 1etefono d•I ANO WtFt AS COMMUNITY ~--, "'lder9lgned T;:-a ecuted by JamH G. Pwtuent to Secb 45IO t-n. "-"Y 19 ~to Celt-Memorial Pert. JIOO
ebOQedO dll d9melldel• o ~ .. TY. I ,,,. ftl"Y lliMlllly WI'/ Mu"delt. and Ole Sun of the ~t Code of fomle Unlfoml CorMwa.t D--1.t<-VW'w Drtw, dll ~ qi.le no WELL SElL AT PUBUC lnco11ec111w al the ..,.. Mundel, Huetlend Ind wtte, the ...._ of Cellfomla. tM COde Sec1)on 1108 c-.;u.a;
NO INV1J1NQ SEALED lllDI cc--
Ilene• ebogedo. H): AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST ::~ r:-~ • truetcn. tn the office of contrect wtlt conleln Tiiie tr......., of only thoM Newport· Bw:h.· Jla. • .-
OONALO f . ~US JR .. 8100£R FOR CASH. (pey· '"""" WI'/. the County Aecorder of Or· Pfcwtelonl petmtt11hg tN certWfl It.me of impf0¥9-cific View Mortuary, . •
HOLDEN. ANDl .. SON, ..,._el time of .... In tewf\11 Sald ... _.bemede tlUt M09 County, Si.ae of C.. 1uccutlul bidder to ~ peNinlng lo tN Re-Direcion. 644-2700
FE..OUS I CEUO. 668 S. ~of ttle United 8'9M) wtttlOut CO-*" °' :..,_ tome. WIU. SELL AT ~ IUMdtlAe -=um ... 10t ney e1ty 11 not a normal fVI ~
Nodo9 i. ~ Qtwn that the City Councl of the City of Huntington
IMclh, c.itfomla ~ r9C9Ne ...ied bld9 fot the ............. ..,... 1111,rwn••• Oft Mel Aw ............ ••111-•IMI 9M1 11wr
"-In the City of Huntington a.di, Calllom6a In 9COOrd.noe wtttl the
pew llftd ~ llftd ...... JWO\'Wona on file In the omc. of the l:>nctor of Pubic W<lftle. Document• wtll be •v9'1abte on ....._, n.
,... A ctwoe of 110.00, not~. wta be required for MCh Mt of
~lone Md acc:ompenylng drfttngl.
Harbor IMS., ANNlm, CA at THE FAONT EHTAANCE UC AUCTION TO HIOHEST mon1et wlthMICI by the O. .. of IN bullfMel. Seid . CA.SWBLI.
t2t05 (714) 6S&stl71. T SUITE 205, (SECOND ~!l:._ ~ ~ ~·,.. llDOER FOR CASH (pey~ tt1ct to enfUl'9 per1ormance .,......., doel not lncillude the ., W B D C ' ' DATt: (F«:N) AUG 20 FLOOR), 17I02, tRVtNE ~I ~11,::''·.: Mle et ttle time of .. ln Ynder the cont/eet tr.... of ftl"Y l'cenW, &. 0 A .
1916 80ULEVARO. TUSTIN, CA ~ pmdptlt """ of '-"II money of tne Uftlted ~-.. 8-tll, •r etOdt In v.de. ~. °' CASWELL; .,...ct , ... ......,_ a. • ...._ c--. t2ee0. tilt _ ngtrt1 tttle end the ncNI MCUr9CI by ..., 81etet) et: outalOe the ,..., l/CftaMelfM D••fd A. any ottier .,.,..., ,...ung 10 away January 2 lllir Tent,-....,_, lnt•eet oon~ to end Deed of Tl'Ult ....., ..,_. ~ anlrMCe of Con-......... ttle buelnaea. ottler then the 1986 Survived._. bk
PutllitNd 0r-. Coe9t now held by It under lted tNreon • ~ In ...., ltnentel Und Title Com-Publlehed· Jenuery 23 • putcNM of "-certelJI . u7
Delly Piiot Januery I . 18. 23, Deed of rTNll tn the prop. not-'edll•ioea. " WI'/ peny, t015 Nortll Mein Jenuery 30, 1tee nem1 of lmprontMnll beloved wile, Pavtda 30, 1... lfty lltueted In Mk! County, • ' Str .... Senta Ana, Cllll, WellHllN· 10 ~ held on Pertaining lo tN Aeelty, CuwelJ. $on. John
Th-530 Ceifomle, deec:flblng the~~=-~°:: fomla, ell rlgllt, tllle Wld February •11. 11M • 1:00 ~are OOl.idet'ed reelly Cuwell of Ha-"·
DNCTO.. OP "*JC WOM8 •aTWAn lerld tnertn: • • ---lntantt conYe)led 10 end A.M. °'*' bldt on Febfu. ".,,. ttw~ the pun:heM --PARCEL 1: :=::!.cs"*:: now held by " under Mid wy 20. OM . 2"00 p M of the rMI P'GS*1Y by the dauahter. Shirley ·-........ Unit H .. lflOWn and 0. Deed df 1,_ Deed of TN9t In the property Publletled Orenge CoMt Tr....... lJ S.Ota Ana, ~Jn.Jlll.! toe.I ~of'"-' deectlbed •: LOI 22 of Trect 0111tY Pllot J~. Detect· J~ :r.1911 and Wendk Kelley ol · .. ·
1:-a.tng end grubbing UltnCI Sum
PtWI recofded on .. ~ ~of the ot*-. . In the City of 11M C.... ...... ,,Cl... , .. ...,, m... ' 1981 In 8oofl 141•, l)90e :::::=' MCUr9CI by the prop. trvlne, County of Orange. T~571 ~ ~. ~Iler ..._ .. na ....-; WO
2. &oavalton IN gred.. 2,000 C.Y.
3. ConaenlCt A.C. berm 1t· C.~.) 1.100 LF.
'ATCO .-w-1Mt of Ofldel Aeoordt of ::=j' be eok1 end ...-on-Stete of c.ltfomla. • per --......., 6 grandchildren. SeMl .•
..==:nee aeip'A~~2: ~ ~ 009ls, ~ ~~~ ~ ~~ • Ml.IC Jl)TIC[ ~., ~ and Heather Kelley; 4. Alptllilt ooncrete 850 Tone
5. ~ bme 2, 100 Tona e. CoNINc:t c:Nln tlnk ~ Mtt1 wooc1 l&ell 800 LF. An undivided 1/44th :::::s.:::.:.:.: Mee-. In the of· amw Cely Piiot '*"-'Y 23. 1MCI ~h~~l ~"-~ ·" IF YOUR PAC>f'£RTY IS IN lnterMt, • e l9Mnt In com-of the Notlc9 of S... 19 ftoe of the County Aecofder NOTICa TO Th-573
1, ~ Lumc> 9um e. .......,. "9r* ~ector toopa 1 No.
FOAECLOSUAE IECAUSE monlnttle'-ln--lnand of Mid Collnty. n,..,... Cuwell of Lo. An· YOU ARE IEHINO IN YOU.. t.othe common., .. of Lot 1 '67•341· 18· eddrell end other common CMDfTORa °' ~"~
I . Tempotwy ~ 750 L.F PAYMENTS rT MAY IE ofTrect 10484.•permap ThebeneflcleryunderMld deelgnatlon. If eny, of the TilAMllDOf geles; liater, m..uui-..
SOLO WtTHOUT AN Y llledtnloofl413Pee-Hto =:~~= rHI property deac;rt~ ~· Mc Krell and brother, In eocord9"09 wfth the pr0\'lllon1 of Section 1773 of the Labor Code,
the Stet• of Celfomla, Olr.ctor of the Department of lndultr'lal Aelatlont
IMll determtne the ~ pteVding r•t• of WIQee. apptlc:abla to the wortt to be done; cop'-of the late9t o-n-• w.ge r9t• determ4Mtl0na are
on ftla et the omc. of the City a.rte Md the omc. of the Dlr.:tor of Public
W<lftl• of the City of Huntington BMch. C•lfomla.
COURT ACTION. end you 37 tnctu1lve. of Mia· o above 11 pufl)Ofted lo ~: NRT~ TO ~. William Calwell Jr. A
IMY !lave the feOe1 rtgl'll to cellaneoulMaipl, rec:ofdlof ~o!t.::":c,°:.: 5152 YHrflng Avenue, THR~A,'f" LOOP friend to whom ever ..
1>f1nO your eccount 1n QOOd Mid county.• Midi term i. mand tor s.i., Ind• wntten !MM. Calttornla. ~---t1t1 MAUDE IDA LOOP. he met.. Ed WM a ~ ltandlng by peytne a1I of OeftnedlnttieArtlcleentttled . .._...Ir'-Tiie ~8'gned Ttutt• cc ' 90. resident of Foun· ~ ... _ ~ .... _ "Oeftottlonl" of the Dec:llWs HOl6ce of Del9Ult .... .,.._.. dledalml -........... for Illy ,., u. • .) member of the Navy •• I your_._.,.,,. ,.._ Ion ,..__ eon, ttontolell. Theu11deral911ed -··-·z NollCe II hereby given to tain Valley. Passed __ _. __, permitted coett end .X· •• of .,.,.,..._,i., <*IMd Mid NOUC. of De-Incorrect,_. of the ltr... credit~ having .,, lntereet J 2 League, auu a ~-pen ... within ttne montN dltlon• end Aeatnctlol•,.. ,.... and e.ctlon to a.I to llddteM llnd other common In c:er1ein ttetM ol tmpr~ away anuary 1. dent of Corona de! ,
Plane Md epedftcatlon•. t~ wtth propoul fonn, may be obi.med
et the omc. of the OlrectOf of l»ublc W<lftla, City Hall, Huntington BMc:tt,
Celtfomla.
from tt1e cset• tt11e noetoe of corded In 8oofl 14096, P-oe ~ teeorded In ttle county del6gnetlon, If eny, lhOWn mentt Pert~to the ,.._ 1986 Mrs. Loop was a Mar for 10 .,..,..._ . defeult WM recofded. 518 of Offldel Aecordl, (the lletein b f h J-•
T....... t"'Ml ""•"" "Oeclaritton") end eny wMN the rMI ptoperty la Seld .... witlbemade but elty tllal •tr le abou1 mem er o t e -------'----·-emoun • ,._. . .,.. located. · 10 be made on onl)' ~ Grandmoth rs Club
No ~ wtll be recetwd uN9a It II rn9de on a bt9M fc;rm furnlaMd by
the Director of Publk: W<lftle. The 9P9cial attention of proepec11Ye bidders i. c.ii.d to the propoul ~ta, Mt forth In the lp9Cffleatlona, for
full cffr.ctlon1 .. to the bidding.
The llboY9 quentlt._ .,. ~· only. being given • • bul• for
the compwlf.9n of bld9. llftd the City of HU('Ungton'8Mch doe. not
...,,._ 0t by lmpl6caUona llQf'M that the actual ame>Unt of work wtll corrtePOnd thefwllth but reMrYea the r'lght to 1ncr .... or «*:r .... the
W'ROWlt of lit'( dM9 °' portion of the wortt. • may be deem9d necN'*Y
or upedl9nt by the Director of Pubic Wortca.
All bld9 wUI be comp91'9d on the bula of the Olrect0< of Public Wanca
eetlmat• of the quenmi. of wOttt to be done.
Subetltutlon of eecurtti. for eny moni. wtthheld by the City to lneur•
S*formence INlll be permltt9d tn 9COO<dance wtth prOYlelona of the
~ GoYerrvMnt Code. Section 4590,
Each ~ ~ be rn9de out on • form to be obt.ined at the office of the
Director of Public Wortca, Development WlngJOQO...Maln Skeet. H4'A -1ngt~. Clillomll;ilfllfl>eliilidenct flied wtth the City Clattt •t the
CMc Ceni.r, Second Floor Admfntstratlon Buhdlna. 2000 MM'I StrMt.
Huntington Beech, c.lltornla, on or before 2:00 P.M. of lle(ctt 1,-,..,
Met lh.rl be°'** by a commm .. compc>Md of the City ewtt. the City
Attorney llftd b6r.:tor of Pubk WC>t1l• °' thW Mlthortad repiMentathle
llftd the r-..tta of Mid blddfng wtll be reported to the City Council of aa1d
City of Huntington Beech •t their regular meeting to be held on Monday,
the 1ntt.., .. --. -· •t the~ of 7:30 P.M. In the Ctty Council CNmW. In the CMe Center of Mid City of Huntington Beech. and ltlaft
be llCt.t upon by Mid City Council 9t the regular "*'11ng of ...,_ 17, -· TM City of Huntington a.ch, CallfO<maf...,..,.. the right to rejee1 any
or .. bfd9. llftd to ~t the bid dMrned for the beat lnteres1 of the City
of Huntington Beach. CallfMnla.
By order of the City Coundl of the City of Huntington Beech. California
thll Aug. 19, 1~5.
ATTEST:
u of December 30, 1115, emendmantt end Wld IUP-Oete: December 2e 1915 wlthoUt coll90el'lt or -, e«talll llenia of lmc>t0¥9-e
end will ~ untl 'fO'o" piementt tller .. o. ,, .. 1111.. CeH_.;._. =elq)f-or Im~ ,. ments penelninQ 10 tt1e ~ and the Happy
ecc:ount 11ec:omee curr'Mt. Excepting ti oil, ol r1gfltl, C.. _. .. , w. u. 9«' title, llOlllll e>n, °' etty (flxtureuncf eqUlpmenl) Homemakers Club.
You may not heYe lo• tt'9 mineral•. mtnefel r'9ftt• • ..:-'14 -. A 1t 1'.. CA encee. to pey the end loceted ONLY et the Bel ed th f :=n~~~ ::du::r,ebo~b~ ."::, ~ i:-11n4
• ., ::-.:= =::' :" ~ ~r:=..:c!~ FA:~ Mo:.°P~~.
peymenl wet demanded. 1oeve r name k nown. PubfllMd Ortl'tfile COMC Deed of TN9t, wftll 1n1w• NOT QOIK*Tled wtttl eny Arizona . Marjorie
but you mu1t pey the oeotllerm.11 lteem end .. OellYPllot Janueryt.18 23 tNrec>n.•PfOV\ded lnMld othe<lddr ... •lwNchukl Flane ry , Foun~in
amount at1ted •bove. How-prodUc:tl derived thei..,Olh, 1986 1 ' ' not-. edvencee. 11 any, Tran1leror(1) might be Valley; Reta Mae e ver. you eod your without. l\oweYer, tM rtQllt 'ThsS32 undettheletm1ofMidOeed located Saldlillollfnpr~
beneflciwy .or ITIOf1geoee to dr111, mine. ttor.. •JCPor'e of Truet ...... cnargea end mentt PertelninQ 10 ttle Re--Saunders. Phoenix,
may mutlJelly ..,, .. tn *"'' end opera1• ttwouaht \~ ~of ~he Trult• and 111y 11 on file 1n l-n. office of Anwna: Gaylord L. 1ng pt1oc' to the time tt1e no-aurtece or the upper 500-Ml.IC Jl)llC( of ttle tnm1 cnMited by Mid the 1,.,,...,. .. Wld 111y end Loop. Portland. Qr.
tlcle of .... II l)(*ted (WNdl of the aub9urtece of Mid Deed of Trull. for Ille ell lnqulrlM lholltd be mede egon. Darlene Well, mey not be..-tfWI the lend, • r......CS In Deed ernount reuonably ""' at uld omc. lelepl\one
end ol the tllr .... month from The lrvtne Compeny, • meted to be: S124,aet M. number s: 12131 437.7481, berg. Downey. CA .
period stet.CS et>cwe) to, Mldlfgen OOfJ>Of•~. r• The Beneflclery, under per*>n 10 contact la: Key Nonn.an M Loop Los
emong olllw 1111ng1. (1) corded FeOruwy 13.1181 In Mid Deed ol Ttutl. lier• S.Mt G a tos. CA A lso
ptcMde eddltlonet ttrne In Book 13948, pege 1'4e of lofor• did eucute end <»-The neme end butineN
wNd'I to cure the dlfeutt by Offldel Aecordl. ltver to the uodefalgned • 9ddr•• 01 Ille Intended s u r v 1 v i n g a r e 14
trlNfer of the ptoperty or Aleo excepting 1111 waler -AL< wrttten Declll'•.!.lon of 0.. tr....,.Ofi•).., . ertdclriidr~
otMI ..... t2) whltlllt• I • wNlt'«" UCIW for Sele. l)«ltion, Oba Olympic Cem-great grandchildren,
tc:hedlM of peymentl In rightuMll berlpar1an, ~-( ...... 1,..,__.,., end• written ~let of 0.. ere. 11 11 N 1wpo rt and 4 ~eat ,,,. . ...,1 Ofdlr to cure your def9ult; or tyfno, eps>rCIC)(1atlw, P«' U C C M4ll MIPI feull end 9ection to Sell. BouieYll'd Colll Meae CA e• e• -both ( 1) end (21. cotattng PfMCrlptlw or cons • ~ Met Ml' The undenlgned ceuMd 92827. · . ' g r a n d c h 1 I d r e n .
' After tllf .. montn. from tn1ctuel, wtthout, hoWeYW. NOTICE IS HEREBY ukl Notice of Oeleutt end Tiie location "' ca.ntomle Frie nds may call at
the date of recordetlon of the rtgl'lt ol entry IOt the ex, GIVEN to the Creditor. ol Election 10 Sell to be ,.. ol the ~ uec:utille oftlce P 1 e r c e B r ot h e r s t.,_ ~t (wtlld'I dete of •dee of Midi rigtlt9, .. ,. DOUGLAS E. MONTAN· corded In the county wher9 or prlnctpel ~ offloe
recofO.tlon ~ her• MNecl In Deed from Th9 DON Sociel Security No. the reel PfoS*1>' I• toc:etecS. of the Intended trentfetor II: Mortuary from noon on), untwa the obllgallon Irvine compeny. • Mldllpn T,.,,e,.,or end L.lcenaee, Date: Jenuery 14, 1MCI ume .. •bove to 9 P.M .. Friday.
being loledoeed IC)On or• corporetlon, recorded Feb-~ builineW eddrell II S..wlll be conducted by: Tiie nerne and ~ where funeral ser-
MPWllt• Mitten • ...,,.,, Nerf 13, 1181 tn Book 1S50 SYpertot unit 0 In the Continent.el Und Tltle Com·1 ~ ol the Intend.cl will be
betWMr'I you end '/OAlll ~ 13948. pege 1..e of Offldel City of Co.ti Me... County peny, 1015 North Mein tr.,..,., .. Is: Colt• .,.__ Vlduc·a:'.... at 11 Aro.Mn·.
tor pennlta • longer pertod, AecorOI. of Orenge. Stete of Cell-Sir .... Sent• Ana. Celltomla Rede..,.topment Ag.ricy ~
you heW only the legel rtght PARCEi. 3: fornle 12e27 ttlet • bufk 12701(714)835-aStt. P.O. Bo• 1200. eo.te.....: Saturday. Interment to atop the-. of your prop. Ea.Mment1 • Mt forth In transl 11•bout10 ~ mede '"*"' 11C•0011.1
lfty by ~ tlle entire the aectlon emitted .. ~ .. to DA: :im.N QA .. OFALO 6 Al 8AID TMleTD. ~
amount d«n.nded by yow ~ti lor Ownera end RITA GAROFALO. Soclel .......... C.po1........ -
creditor. Support. Settlement end Securi1y No T,.,..,., .. end ......, ., ._ """· To tlf'd OU1 tlle emount Encroachment" of th• 1 tended Tran..., .. whOM I• wt II I• p It I' you muet pay, Ot' to arrenge Article e ntltled "E11•, ~ adOr ... ti 1038 ....,.enl, l.9e -..-ie.
for peyTMnl 10 atop the for• men11·· of tile Dec1tt111on. Malkel In tlle City of Hunl· Celtfernl• NCM.I (2'1
ctoeura. or It your property II PARCEL 4: lngton 'BMch County of Of. -.-
In loreclolufe for eny other ~ts u tel lortll In St 1 · of Celtf le Publlehed Orenge
reeaon. cont.ct: HARRIS tile MCtlonl anlltled "~: ~ 1 e om Delly Piiot Jeouaty 23, 30
BROTHERS, a C1Ulornl1 t81n ~11 lo 0wnera n,.. locallon In Cetlfomle February 8, HIMS
partnerW!lp, (714) ~ 1680; end Support. ~tement of the d\lel execullve offtoe
c /o Paone, Ga noveH. llllCI Encfoecllment ol the or pr1nclpet bull..-a office---------Cellehlln. McHolm a Wlrtte>n, Artlcle entitled "EH•· of ttla Intended transferor 11.
Th,567 1470 Jemt>oree Ao.cs, New· rnenta" ot Ille Dec:terlltlon of ume · 1----.....;.;;~----------port &Hell. California eoven.nta. Condltlona end Al 'ottw bullneel nemee NOTICE TO
Pubflahe<C Or9n04t Coast Dally Piiot January 23. 30, 1988
•-.,. llftTlC( ~ •-.,. llftnrr ,--.-_-IC_llf\_Tll'_r __ t265&-neo. Attention: Vic> Reatr1ctlon1. recocded In end eddl 11111 UMd by the CON11'4CTORI nmLI\<"" ,.._... nu1rw. r-. nu1iw. Iona Power Book 14092, pege 1117 of Intended trentderor wttllln cAUJNG '°"
It you !lave eny quwttons. Otflclll Aecof~,l'l'le "M .... tllr• year1 tut put to fer llDI NOTI E INVmNG SEALED BIDS you should contact • lft)« ter 0ectaret1on > and eny u known 10 the intended s c11oo1 0t1tr1ct: co11t cc-ee1 or the gov9mlnent egency M*ldmentl lllld auppie.. trlll\lferw are· MIN Community College ~.
wnlell may llave tntured yow ment1 thereto The propeny 11 Cleecr1t>ed Bid cSeedNne· 2:00 o'clodt
Notic. la hereby gMtn that the City Council of the CAty of Huntington
8Mch Callfomla wtll rec«w wled bid• for the cot__... of w .. t c.er8I ,_ CW111l1n Laltd•n•• IRtipro•-•la In the <Aty of
Huntington a.ch, c.Htorni. In acc:otd9nee wtth the plane and apeclfl--
c.tloM llftd ep9dal provl8'on1 on flle In the offlo9 of the OlrllCtor of Pubflc
Workl. Document• wtll be •v•l•bt9 on ,,_, t?, ,.., A dwge of
15().00, not refund•*· wtu be requtr.ct fM MCt'I eet of apectfk:atlons and
11CCOmp9ftY!ng dr.wtnge.
toen. The atreet addr... end In ., ... AH ltoek In p.m of Ille 20tll day of Fet>-Notwtlh1lendlng IN lect otr-common o..ignatln, If tr~~ equipment rulfY. 1988
that yow property 1e tn tor• any. of the,... PfoS*1>' <»-end iiood w111 'or , <*1111n Piece ot Bid Receipt· Of.
c:loeure. you may of9w ~ ecribed llboYe la purported ReeteutWl1 a Lounge bl*-flee of Purct\atng ow.ctor,
property for ..... PfO'Med to IM: 5 EXETER ... IAVINE. ,_. known .. MONT ANA'S Betty Kalin. Cout Com--
Ille .... 11 conctuded prior to CA 12115. RESTAURANT AN D munlty Colllge District, 1370
tlle ooncluaion of the for• The underlloMd Truat• LOUNGE end loceted It Ad•ms Avanue. Costa ~ dleclalma"""' lleblllty for lny 1550 SYpertot Unit 0 In the Mela. 92828 Rem9fTl~r. YOU MAY h1C011ec:t1,.. of the ltr ... City of Coete Me.a. County Pro1e ct ldentlttcttlon
LOSE LEGAL RIGHTS IF edd,.... and other common of Orenge Stete of Call· Name: BIO # 1~ • OAs
YOU DO NOT TAKE ~ If WI'/. lhOWn fornta. end' tt.,,.,., tN ~ANGE COAST COLLEGE . ..-......
1.
OA 1. OA2.
DA3. °"'·
DNCTO.. M "'9llC WOMI 191111ATW PROMPT ACTION. ........ • !owing a6coft011c bevelege HOME ECONOMICS MECKs
NOTICI °' DDAUl.T $.id ........ be~. but llcer\M (Of tlcerw): OH ANICAL PROJECT 7 STATE
Qu.ntlty NOTICE IS HEREBY w4"'°'6t ~t or _,. SALE LIQUOR/GENERAL DEFERRED MAINT. PRO-GIVEN: That FIRST AMEAJ. rMty • ...-Of lmpled,,.. EA TING Number 47· 1S4953 GRAM-Piece Plent Are On
CAN TITLE INSURANCE gerdlng tltle. po1111rlo11. °' now l--1 to ptemleM Fli. Office of Oirect0t,
ConalTuct .. lmp0\19" ... llQ '°" tM Weet Centre! COMPANY. 1c:orpore~.-~. to p.y tN located M 1550 Super1of Eugene F Harrie. Phy Fee.
Pwk Cooca•IC111.,.... • ltloWn on the pletle duty appointed Tru1t" rernelntno pmctpet tum of Un" D for the ptemlNI Plennlng, Coul Community
endlnduded lntheapedflcetklnl LumpSur under•All-lnctuelve l>eed of tM nole(~aecured bylllld localed It t550 SYpertot College Ol1trlct. 1370 DedUctM A11emate 86d tteme Ttutt detect Oc1ober 28, Deed ol Truet. Wfttl Inter• Unl1 o In the City of Coet• Ad1m1, Trailer F1~lllty, n,. fo1ow1ng tow (4) deduc:tNe bid lleml muet 1182 execu1ed by RISING thereon, • provided In Mid MeN County of OrMQ9 eo.11 M ... 921526
becompteced•pertolttWpropoeel STAR INVESTMENTS •• note(•). edvenc-. If eny. StateofCelttomla. • NOTICE IS HEREB Y
Oele4e l~W'Y fencfnG ••credit to lhe cit) Lump Sur Cetifomla Hmlted partner· under the*"" of the Deed Tll•I tll• amount ol GIVEN tlllt tll• above· ~ bOufdlt9 et 1 cr.att to the city 5 Tona lhlp .. Tn.i1tor. In f8YOf of ol Trult, fMI. ~ end ctlMe prtce or conllder· nemed SchoOI Olttrtct of Or· o.. bollerds 11 •credit to tM city 41 Eec11 HARRIS BROTHERS.• ea. expenwe ol tM TNll .. end ::,,, 1n connection wttll Mid enge County, Cellfoml•. lci·
SubeCIM• l'rydlo•edfog for atOlontzlng for lorn le pertneralllP H of the lrulta creeted by .. Id trenaw of Mid llcetl9e (or Ing by lad tllroughl 111 Gov·
tUtf.,.. at a credit to the city 10.500 S.t 8eneflc:lary. recorded Nos O..d ol Truat. to-wit· llowtew) end lllld bulineel ernlnQ Boerd. 11er .. naf\er,.
773 of ..._ ,..,,.,._ v.nber 3, 1182, • lnetnr I 140. 734.12. lnc:ludlng the wtlmllted .,,.'. twred to u "OISTRIC't' . wlll In accord9"09 with the proYWone of Section 1 t ... Labor """"9, "*" no. 82-387425, of Of. n,. beoeftdel y under Mk! vent le the tum of recetve up to. but not lat• the a... of c...tom&a. onctor of the o.p.tment of lnduetn.I R9Mttona ftdel Record• In 1-n. Oftloe ol Deed al T,,,.. heretofore••· 1 1 10~ 00 wNd'I conelet• tt1en the eboves11ateo time.
"'911 ~le the 09'*'.S pte¥911iflg nne of W-0-, appkabt9 to the the Co\lnty Aecordlr of Or, ecut9d Ind ~ to the of ~ ~-IMled bid• IOI' the wet-of 1 wortt to be done; oopi. orthe lai.t O--.S w.ge r11t• ~lont are enge County. Celtfornle. utldel &1911.cs • wntten Dec-Ceefl In the. amount Of con1rec:t tor the •bove Pt<>
.._ _.. -..-...... oft-,....., Clattt llftd the ofb of the 0Wec10f of Publk: aec:umg, emOfl9 CltMr ot*-llnllon of OefMt end De-113,N 1.83•, .::..-.. Encums lec:t on ... -u .. vn-,,...,.,, Qetlonl.0ne(1)~ mendlOfSale,tndeWftnen brence 132,iOi:'H~ExtetlnQ 8ld9 Ill.it be r~ In
Wcwtt1 of the City of Huntington lleectt, ~. not• fOf the ortglNt aum of Nottoe of Oef9Ult Ind Eteo-Encumbrenee 142 tM.17: the l>4liCe ldentlfed above.
PIM9 llftd ~!Ona. together wtth P'oP0991 fotm, rney be obt.ined I 1,417 ,000.00 lhet th• tlon to a.I. Tlle~C: htt tl"I Encumbr•~ce end atlall be opened end at the oM09 of the Otrector ofl>ublc WOf1<a, City Hell, Huntington Beldl. DeneflClel tnl.,Mt uncle!' ca.ad eald ,...._ asa.000.00: Proml11ory publlc:iy r.ecs e!OuO •t the c.ltomle. tudl Deed of Tniet and the f..et end Elec:tlon to Sell to Note 117 444 78 1 bove -1t1ted time 1nO obligation• MCUred tMr9by be recorded In IN oounty l'Nt 1t' h.i .,e., agreed pleee, No bid_.. be received un-. tt 11 l'Mde on• btri fotm fumlehed by .,. ~ held by IN .._.the ,.... property IJ bet...-i Mid ...,._end n...r. w111 be • 110.000
the onctor of Pubic W<lftla. The aped.s •ttentton of Pf'09P9Cttw bidders uncteialgnect. tMt • br89Cll loc:Med. Intended t,..,.. • ,.. ~required for eectl Mt le Oiied to the Pfopoeel ~Mt'°"" In the~ fOt of end dlfNt tn the *" CATI.: 0111&1• QUlt9d by Sec 24074 of..,. of bid document• to guertn· f\AI ~IC)ne M tO the bfddtng. aetlone for whk:tl iuch.Dled fa I Ill 1 lf8 CI .. .. ....... ~ Ptof ... OW• ... IMlr return In gOOd oon-
'fhe ebcM qutntJttM.,. IPP'O.im.t. °"'Y• being QMlf\ • • bMlt for ~In•::~;:: =-. "'..=!r,~ ~ '::,O: ::::S = ~ ~ CS::S •"-
the ~ of b*. llftd the City of Huntington a.ct't do. not "°' '*" made of: Tlle fn. .,_.a. .... -. T--. ,,... and ..,_, of _.. Eadl bid must oontorm I
...,,... Ot by !mpllcdoM ... thet the llCtUilf" wnount of wort( wlll ....,,,.,,t of lntareet wNd'I CA -. (nt) nt.---.. i. IO be paid only end • ~ to IN
corr.-pond tt'M..tttl bUt , ... v. the f10ht to lnore•• or deOi •••the .,........ due on Sept..,.,., PubtllMd Or-. COMt ...., .-.s.,...., ,_~cont~ 6ocument•
of .... _ .--_, ....__ .,._.... • -...... +--,,_.c 111•"' 1. 11M end Ill ~' Delly Piiot .,.,._., 23. IO. ~ .... the "--· Eadl bidder ~ M>ml1. I .mount ~o.-or--·"' ............. .._, --· .... -•, lnat~i. of pnnctp•I Fetlfuetyl, 11M ;tO( ~ .. -:;-.g. on tt1e form l\lmllhed wttll
or ~ by W.. cer.c.or of Pubic ~.. endlOt tnwwt: dlflnqUel1t Th-Ml eontrot. tt1e oonlrect doc\lrnenta. •
AJ bide _. be compered on the be9lt of the DlteetOt of Pubic Welftla INlel .,.. on • pt'IOt died TIIM • ...., .,...., end 11et of n. P'GPC*d IUbcOns
i1161t11 .... of tt1e ~of wort& to be done. of truel. If lnY; ~ "8JC ll)11C( ..... 11M11t al IN .. 11etd trecton Oft IHI t:,.!!
.... If any; """' ..... ttodi "' ..,..., fbrt""9. required by .. " .. 1ub91ttut1on of ...,,_ fot ..,., "'°"'-wfttlNkS by the °"Y to lntur9 ""'*" of Bel~ plUI ..,. eQUlpmenl end goOd _. of and SubContrectlnO Felt ~fMllCe lhlll be permm.d In llOOOl'cMll09 with ~-of the .....,.. "*-" trom c:tMel NOTICI °' .W .....,_ _. .,. cion-Pttdeel A.ct ~1t ~ ~ OocM. a.ctton 4*. INdlt tMt by rwon tMt-. ,,.,.,.... uu NNTat111 • .., ._ ~ ~~ !!!' ~
....__ -*861*9 ... ----°' -of .... 111.....,...,. Pf'9M"4 , ....... ,, ,,., .......... ...., ....... --.._, -·'" ..-btdlhlllbe ...... o.ltonl._,..to_ -,,,. b8'111110ltlyUftdertudlDMd AU9 _. N IOI 11111....., tor ...... a.di bid t oMfleCl or
DINCleor of "-blC Wcwb, 091' II~ Wlna. 2000 M.in lln9e, Hunt· flt TNtl, '-eaeMeCS IN YOU AM tH DUAIJU the ...... M411 111'1 ,.._. CMftiat'I C..-~ ~
i.,.eon "9d\ ~ ..... M ....... lftd ftfiid _...,the Cler a.t1' ll the Mta .. to .... dAllf ep. ~A Dim°' ""UIT. f/l h • 11 Id .__ 4or tt'9 °'5TM:T °' • '*' _..,
CMD Oef"9r ...... "°°' Mmll•lllSOf• ltAdlng, 2000 ............ --n~. I ---OAT•D NOYIMel.. 14, ........ •to -,_Oft OI Ir\ .. fOrm -'°"" In ... Hwl ..... R liwita, ClltomM, on Of beb'e 2'!00 ft.M. of......,.., .. -IC:O... ..... WIOlllon1 of o.111 Md 1914. UHlEl8 YOU TAKI ..., the lr'CI -of "*v-OOfl41ect ~ In WI n9fillbe=bJIOOIU ...... oompoeadflfW..Qlya.t,tftlClty 0-.W tor ..... IN Ml ACTION TO P"OTICT .ry.1 ....... __ ... amountnot._ttwn 1:\:: ..._ _ _. --of 11t*1c Worbor ............ ,.._...... .. ...... YC>Uf' "'°"MV. IT MAV ......... f/l...,... 11orow .,_..........,.....,,.. "'•-·-., -=Co.Ml_._...... T..-, _. De8' • IOlD AT A lt\&IC C... • 81Q N. T~ ~ • • ...... ttlM ._ _.. and tftl,..... of llld ........ M reportM to.. - -TN at wt ti ,_ t•ltl IAL.l. JF YOU HUD AN p. ._ ._ car fJl .._ AM. fet Wiii entet lftto t"9
QtyofMW•l1111 .... ll...,,...,fMlllnatobe ..... ...,, 1U91l 1• • P LANATION O' THI ~-=-dPfC41Dll1 oonlred "tM
W.. ... -., ....... tml. It ttle fiour of 1:1Dlt.M. In ttle City c..ldl ...... _. W ... NA T U" I 0' TH I C S -...... _.,.. la ...... '° IYdl :=9~';=~~~::.r.:;.=...-:= ..-_-::.,:..~ ~~oc:~t~A= I" :.,.·~"',:e-c :=."':::::=
• If b .......... TACt A L.AWYI". .,..:, .......... fll.: Mlfl teQdy .... ,. ................ ()l~IO,,.._ ......... ,__ .. _.. ......
....., -• -~ A.M. ~ ~ '*"'_ ... _, .. r Ip> Tlle OlaTNCT ,_..... ... ~ ...... ,,.,...CotpolalOlt. 10.-.......... fll .. W. ""91 to,..... Ml Of lllr ................ ---par ........ _.. ............... OI. ~.,,, •
.._. -••l led T~ .................. ... -··-•1 .,....: ............ =-..-.....a... Dillllf..IM.---.,..,,, ................
-1'Ntl __, t•:au ... M. ....... & - , ==:' 11:8.r.:.::.: ... ,_... ••;au• Tl ..... _,,,? I ~ lif "'8 If .....
"· ..... • ._ ~ ...... .., f Os ....... a.rNCT'-.. IN'7, fll Ollllitl ._. ==:11 -• I -.. -............... ' 7 = ,.._ -o--r __., fll ~aw d .. D111iw. _, ...... _.,.,, ... "... ,. ...
ATT9T:
-............ ---
'ACIFIC Y1EW """ •MOlllllAL 'W
Cemet9ry • Mortuary
Chapel • Cremat<>ty
3500 PAC11ic View Oriv.
Newport 8Mc:tt
644-2700
HAMOR LAWN.-
WT. OUYE
Mortuary • Cemetery
~ Crjtl'Tlatory
1625 Gls. Ave
Costa Mesa
~0-~
Little Mia Muff91 Mt on e
Tuflet . e tong cem• • .., • 19ldef and reed In 11'19 .,
Delly Pilot Cte11ttled
MC\lon abOUt Mite M\lfs ' •
let'1 Tuffet end bougtlt h
lor 19.95 You can ...
your tuttet end Iott of , .._
otller thing& through # •.'
Deity P iiot CIH•lfl•d ,,,.._Cell 6'2..S.71 •••
~-"' .,.., ..... .-...y ,.. ..... p ' ... = II
~· ............ -Wll.L. -_._ ....... ~:L.~~=-.;;;;...~r=.-==~~~~l-.~~~~_.;..L:-=::::._;._~---~1-..-----~~~"--~---------......:.1-'--:::=-=::=--::-: ..
-----irn_ a·, · .. ~
GE 759-9100
----
____ ._ ........
..
•
lmm9dlate opening for
quallfled per90n. Harri.
UIOO, UMIO exper. hetp-
ful. Exceflent company
benefit• end working
condition.. Appfy: ..• ..,
111.YPUT
330 W. 8-v Street ea.ta Meaa, Ca.
Ot '*' 842-4321
SlfERlfTOOANT ........ ....,+ ....., .... fits,,.. ... ..., • ·•••rtaltJ fernwlll. Smiilr~ 8Mch 0.-aiOn & 0..elopment firm
wtth to y.-IOlld repu-
tetlon hu opening fOf 3
bondebte, reepon llble
meneglng employeH
(R.M.E.). We requlr9 oen·
wll contr.ctOf't lloenM,
minimum 10 'Jf ~ expenenoe, SIA dev per
... hard WC)rt{, hOnelty,
Ind own proven CfW.
Re1pon1lblllt" Include --~°' .. con-etructtoft ..,..., mW-
malng...,.... ~
BEST PART TIME
.IOBINTOWN
Energetic people needed with a
pleaMnt telephone voice to con-
duct marketing 1tudy for leading
local newapaper. ..NO SELL-
ING." Houra: Mon.-Frl. 5:30 PM
to 9:30 PM, Sat. 9:00 AM to 1:00
PM. $84 a week to 1tart, 1hare In
partnerahlp profit• after lat
week. PlnMnt working con-
dition•, private deak It phone. I
Caaual attire. A real fun Jobi
MANAGEMENT OP -
PORTUNITIES~ For Interview
call David Grant at 6'2-4333
between 9:00 AM· 3:00 PM M-F.
M2-4Sis faining '"' peced ICMd-ule, quality lnlp9Ctlon end report•. WOftllng __ ._ ____ _. _ _.~...,...._ ____ I
ltollgetdeetW. " you·,. IOc*lng tor •
QUiity """· """ ~ .,. ...., peopte,.,.....
eel tor an eippoWttment. ...... ., ........ ........... ,." r==:t
(8' JembOrM M .) ~._,,.,CAt2MO
(114)111-t•
!II
AocouM ......... ,..
lttoft ...... 1111 In ~
ft9d ~-1 .... HP•r•ence a lptul.
Typtng 41 w P·"'-,.. ....... Good...., '*" com:: 11111 ., eel ,. "'
............ II ... it.
K 1 t9'leen Ol t on , 142 ....... 1.•.;a
N!. c.--. -
Openln1• Now Av•ll•ble
-cAR ROUTES
E•tn Ext,. C_,,
Fot O.IWwy Of Thia 11.,,.,
HUNTINGTON aKACH
FOUNTAIN YALLIY
INDIP.INDINT
Deliver 1 day a week. No
collecting, no sollclttng.
Must have dependable car.
truck or station wagon and
Insurance.
CALL 842-1444
Alie tor JOMM c, ... ,
,,,..,. .................. .. ----· WIWMTYOll
• .,,.11011 0111111 , ... ..
.................... 11 .. .
............. 0 ....... 0..
t1lswr • 11• 1n.ot ... .._ .. ,...,. .... ,.e.
(7141141-4111
$2.40 per day
That's ALL yoo ~V tor
3 llnet. 30 day minimum
In the
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
CALL TOOAYll
&llF•Llll
YOAM
SeNtot Directory
Rep! ...... ,hie
142.a21 11t. an
M-F tlll 9, S-S till ti
tl2e 8. EUClld St.
FUletton. CA
-T1·*'4!1~i.Mf)-=--
21 S-.1-8701
.
Dodge
,_ -
llYm ... P/WW 6 1Pd ......... _....
=1111 • IS • COi ••
(IO# tGUOe)
(ltUllll)
11Ulltm -· Loeded • 33,ooo-.----~ S..003030 ...
DATSUN 2.al '7112,000.
842·9133.
FERRARI '82 30IGTSI. Xlnt cond.. .,.,., opdon
S31.1so10bo. n1.C7&
1••••• Lllllt• Loeded, Automelic
Ser.22302
111.-
HONDA
C....t/Ctunte ,.... • '
coRCME+e DAIVEWAYS FENCE"ft;&lr New ' old I Lawacart GLASGOW PAINTING
Patio•, blOCk, brick inlay. Wood, cheln link, patio's ALL STAR GardnllartdlCP I Int/Ext 30 yrs exper .
Tom Frlgone '496-72SM fr• .. t . Greg, 988-0 118 New lewn.t-trM tnm-cinup ref's 642-5214
CkiW Cart Fir..... sprnklr-fr .. a t 522...3255 HOMEOWNER EXPERTS
2'4HR CAilo CARE SERO FIREWOOD 179 501.., COf'd • t~Ew YEAR'S SPECIAL ~nt1Ex1 Acoua Ce+ti,.
VICE My home, CM area. New YNtS Special. Oual ~sh trlmm1ng•Yrd Malnt Uc~288597 &31-9295
646-2374 mix Detlv . Jim &36-85e1 Clean-Up 9&6-6499 QUALI TY at, ... Pfieea
Babylltt., wanll 2'~ to 3'-t lad~a 1 Land1eape 1n11anauona tntlext Reel Estate oieen-
yr old boy to Join them In . Manaonry conct'"ete up, ~rpets. wmdows, etc w Npt Bctl. Sltrtlng Feb AME AN HANDYMAN &4 2-3534 Ref's F,. .. , 557~91
t7 Call l0t more lnfor Carpentry, lenolnQ. wto-~,--,.~-----01722-9So48 E/856-30'4 1 dows. plumblng, mertlte. LANDSCAPE-MASONRY I~ tub erici, etc Arid v.. All ph .... done Brick· ""Pt~IP:" ... ~i:""!'Plll•..,.!'11.-CH IL DCA RE. C 0 ST A .19wa la LOfd .... •244 blodl-ate>oe-lr• .. , Mike A nlNG INTERIORS
S .........,. HANGING/STRIPPING
ME A '7~~9 TLC FENCES-GATES Tr .. trim 499-<l072 Rb &el-9584 VISA-MC 673-1512
Dump runs C M IN B ......., ANDY$ WALLCOVERING Cltuia• ·ce ar .. Jim Whyte. 842-7209 rm:; ells b&kwonc 1nsta1ti t10n & Removal Roeii:l's CtEXNIHd •GEN HOME REPAIRS. coner.1: ~P ~1109 1n1 pa1n11ng ~13
SERVICE· a throoughfy Paint Drywall C4tirpentry 15 yrs txper 64~834 I ...... 'DI 1111"
--------clMn l'louM 540-0857 etc Gary &45-5277 PTL SPECIALIST Block Walls DEPENDABLE QUALITY -:---....--.....-..:-=..----CLEANING LADY needs 1 laaliat Cement-ptenters-repa1rs w oncmanar'tlp &42..a813 Anu&.t--•= coople of m0<e Jobs•. -etc 17141545-0729 24hr l --,..., I 9&8-'4778 LT HAULING · MOVING --STRIP IT OFF THE WALL REB[OWN ~ED --_ ___ Garage & Yard Clnupa STUCCO MASONRY· TILE Fast c I ea n r e a 1 Alto tn1/EX1 Painting COLLEGE CIMnlng SeN Jon 545-8192 No Job to small Alt types Ltelbonded 638-6970
Llc#288597 &3 1·9295 Wkly cleaning SS PfH C-LEAN .., O ---Fr .. est Ltc 631-2345 room. Robin 722-1187 -u ..-vergro•n -We ga1s should llang MODERN ACOUSTICS yard Tree worll. dirt ,.._ lleftat togethef Hang remove
NEW & OLD CEILINGS H<>rM & Office cleaning by motal etc Biii, 495-0'407 *'-l ..... 839-0730 anytime ;::;-:~:':.. ~e:;a~ .. :2::~14r ,, .. ~::,~~~~:.:.,.. ~ir~e::~~ , .... ";Dry.an -
IC>f'•=::remcwe. Ory-HOUMCIMnlng, Ute melnt., moving 7 days. o4IM-2~ Lie T. 11e.428 730-,353 Int /Ext pateh plutenng,
--" ... 7 7"" 1 palntl"", dr""""' Loretta. cus1om te.xturlnn nualltv _ _, .,.. • ..., 722·"';,. .. 1 .. or··;;'}'2 ...... 5 Haullnn. M""""'. ~ +a--· .. ., . .., '' -:---:-..-------·~ .. ..... ......... UPI 7"0.y;·L:~ rat• --·--worll Probleml-NO Pro!> --•tut PREFERRED Home Clean-c.11 Barry, 722--M73 QUICK & CAREFUL ltlmst •326864 554-7831
-""'..___..__ w , .. ' LO RATES. T138046 PJ--1..1---.. .,, :""""........ e care "' I .:..: I C H --.... xm rm. Qrig.. you,. pteued, refs .. ~ Al._.. 112-M11 w~ Sc>ec. Apt ratn 548-0738 14 llf a f'~-Sett Storege Eltperta H IW D • lM-1111
dl9hwaafwa. UC 246-0717 tracttn ...._ting done .. IT.. ..... "Good IOb• dOne ftQh1"
.... 'UM DRAINS CLEAR From S15 ..... ......... VETERANS PLBO. & HTQ. CMeful R .. lable Proa Faucets OI~ Heeter ~ x;;; w;;:; I Commlr-kf ifH345 * Aec*>ee 1875 and ut>* EnthUSlHttc Referrals 851-"°4 M&M 722-tote ~ e ~ & Oratns a...c! te.75-up F,_ eet. Lie Me.3M5
Waterprooftng• a 1...i 191 B I WILSOt.t & SONS -Wtr htr 30 gel S205.5Ckip Expert Servtee & ~ -:-~,,...--,-----Rm Add Remodel Kite Toilet• ln9ftd I 1 t5.'42~ IT .... -.ull 32 yrs exp Reeld'l/Comm ~-.reptlir-9'11lng lotl Beth Tl4e •357417 IN H0-78:M 548-7"8 Mc ................ LI? 1'409035 """8t19 : =~: 30 yrs exp &46-l 740 ........... St=rMc;:~r9d WEEKENOPLUMB'iNG ~~drt¥9W9v-C.ttnltl• I........ Uc. T124-43e &41"'8427 N~me<>vertlme' ~e-.e~~I ,........_~ ·= ---NEWWatetlouMStor911f> ltictl/leodl wit 53f..03.45 La..,.. Tr--•.._ ... ._._.. MOVING? 2 Ex:pertence PMl 1~1 Rem---r ·Rooflng-,_....,...., .. ,.,_, M
"-
Meeonary & Home S.• T,.. Trlm end Alll•IOWll ~ -4M moYe you at a ''oo""U"'P ......... POO .. L,...sE·R~V ...
.__........ 2.a tw SeNlcl ~5 Lewn ......,.. & -cM•ie. IO\lr Coe4 Tony 842•9145 CJeanlnn nipalr1 ec10
ry _.._ Sprlntd• ....... Aepejr, ~= ... ,...,..,.....,,_ • ._Addltlont HOME IMPROVEMENTS Frw ~. s..-5 weah Weekly MMce
Door. 9'c, 1141 4tl0 E~ .. cleen, que& • .-v.. ™ 111-lllt "
f'9ftdl door'I cerpenlry, drYftill, paint-Gardening Full ~ pm.ate ~ Home cootc
ftrenotl ..... & Mcw9. lflCI, rooflng ~ ~t upe.,,_ ,,_... ~ettly 540-4101 ll ..... rw.""'1 ... -----
Addttlona & "91nodllta. wortt ~71t1E 1¥ IMll =-~ rec.over, r•·
U7110I 0on M4-8Nt •TOP-~-HAUL* pajra. hOt ter, tlle, roctl,
,ALL llXT So eo-t Ooof I Salih. REMOVf ANY TM£ °" INTING iy Aict:: WOOCS, "'... 750-IMI • · ENT,.Y I "' OOOM. 8H"U8 "-. pr10ea lb ... ..,_ 11 Y" ot ~ 2S YIAM IH AMA. Quelftv wonc. 131-7975 '*" wori Jam H7412; cwetomere Lie 2IOM4 BEST AOOF AEPAI" a.A" MW74t , • TMN·Voul "3-4114 CAN BEAT A.NY IMO IY
& N-(ntYy I t9"Cfl Doore 18Hte(AWA ~ --~ 722·7537
"""' .... By Norman The 0oonMn SOd a..t-""'9 ....,. MtN90W PAINTING .... ...... ~'Tc:: O.&Rr 157..ooc>A ~etc.lecM1'i ~'E~~ ..... Cir ...
Oool~:·: .. -...,.. C&a LAWN - -AFT HOUOAY 8~L .... =-dwk ...... flniiijiWWW Mo.4dlte1Wtcemo.UO. ~~·f:!.'::':n = ~ ac1 •o.-.. _, ..,_ Oullltt~....... m. ~n1. Mt-1112 adwdl,.... 5511-4r.o ~aw. s...
H77'41 ........ -•4lll1~ --7401 W --emctloft•i'iliiiii .... iT"_d _ ...... __ 7_10I_ ,_. A.AA PAINTINO IMlbt
MllOICOMM'l.ltNO H T~ c:a.r.,. LOWHT po.1Ma prtoe
C411 llr =~ 1"t-Do"" ......... ~ up,,.. ...... ,., .... ,. 10 ·-8er"'4lcl9 •.:am 1-Mi~i&:iTliiiiii~-~-1 ~1.AIMW~ a.MU,.•,_ ,....... DAHIALY'l"PAINntQ we 101• ~LiCfilbAN Yard..._...·~ UC • .._,. c11 ....... -"91~LoeillMl90 UOtm• ......,,.,... MIKI teo4"1 C.. ~ ~17 •
,.. .. ...,.,........, ..,.,,........,~ LANOeCAN..tiiMONltY .. AIH!P .... WOMJ .................. ~-,.... .. ~--..... tM/bt, ...... fwlft ... r ~.,-=::a ·::::..·~-r..:-=:.~· .·,~ .... ~=-~ '===·~7 ··v::.=•CMt
1114.,.... .......
loaded· Auto Trans
Sw.00390 .....
VW '73 Sqbk, Cid runnlnQ,
new lhocil•. llNe. ..ta
11250 obo 67&-3781
VW BUG '86 N~ brtll, en-
gine nd1 rtbulldlng,
1450, 756-928; Alt 5pm
SOUTH CbUNTY
VOLKSWAGEN
&
ISUW
..
Dodge
r--.-:
,_,, .... ,,.
361 v.a. auto, air, CIMM,..
(Lie •1U01101)
(Stk 11 4042) ...
HHOOORl
ROBINS
FOi.i Cl
• ( 1t.lo!i11• .... t../1
'-..(>''· ""' , .. ,, .\; ,\110
P!MllJ'1CE ~ _.....,.........,,.........,_ u..... dUC'9Clby'tQOtW*MIOI\ "°'1 .-,..-, ~ " & H MAINTINANCI f'ICifHOUI-HOhilOUI.,.. .. Plelntllt. JOHN STEVIH Vinotnt F~Wft9. .-.. .... 9'!1C11, CIMf. t"90 ~..._ Of ,...._.· 11Mm lfAW llMm ITAW ..,. ......... ~ -.• ' :rtle .............. ,,........,.. ........
"••Pendent MA .. IA Tiiie .......,..,. W flled ~--W~. ~ • ~.___ ..._..,.__ ..... .___.
CASEY *"ti 1M Co11n1Y o.ti 01 Of· Ollf 93421 ·q: Of ....,.,..., MOOQTONI MA&. TY Hf'l, U.SILL. tll5 C... No. 0262744 enge County on ~-fhll buelMet la OCMI" '' ' ADY180M. »41 NeWpott ,...._. IM. lulte t( MIRlllll ti, ,... _..., ltY-a Ol'*9I -"' • Scott Holderier IMI . .,.. 111, .....,.,.. Colla....._ c.M. tlt27
lllO'fat ftll ..... .... ,_,1 '*9lljp 111t-.. ~IO ,......,._ .._' 9Mef\, c.llf,...., lcMletl eo.t ..... lft .._TM wt......... ~ Orange eo-t f1*Ml I ..,.,_. Cliii MSUl .t '..._._I Mero Ill Tow Dell4d V ~ J., C.
...-. ,.. ......, ,.. DllllV ~ .J#l4My t. 1e. 1~. Thie ......._. ... ..., ttil ltull,,..• 11 con-Thia tuelMae 11 oon---. 10 l**'I ._
_........, .._ ,_,.. ~. ,... Wiii IN ~ Olertl of Or· ~ ~· 1 911*'11 1*1• ctucted W. en lndl\idu• !MM, c.llf. t27tf"
_.... ..... • ..... ~ TH~53S tntt County Oii 0.0 ....... nar1111p • ~"·Tow louU\ COMC .ok.,. lno lie.... 1U1 ~. 20, 1tee ""'°'*'Y Aot1ett Holder'9r Tiiie ICt*"-"t ... ftled UMM Collr\I 111 Uc
K Yo&I W'11t1 to_. "-ed-•-tit MftTM'C W Tiiie ... ,...,.,,1 ... llled wttfl IN County a.1l o4 Or· OrM, ~ IMdi, Ceil
Ytee Of en ettomer 111 "* ,...,._, "" -. ~ Ou1n.. CCMllll ...,. .,.. County Otlttl _,,. Of· .,. County Of\ o.c.Mbet NtlO
mitt.,, you lflOllld do IO fllCnnout .,..... Delly Pilot JINl.,Yl. 1e. 23, 1"111 County on December 2A, 1"5 Thie bullMll 11 ao-Pt~ttv IO thlt 'fOll writ• lllAMI ITA~NT 30. tMe 14 "'6 ,_tt1 Mted by: I OOf'POfMlon 1en reepotiM. If eny, ~De The flclloW'I per.on .. TH-537 • ,..., ~ Ot'tnge co.t David v. ~ •
"'9d on time. ~ .... ---.. . • "uUalled Otenge CCMllll o.ily Piiot JeitVAI'/ I , 1•. 23, Pr...,..
Av.eot u...d hi aldo d9o --M: ,..-. --.. lt'Y t . t 23 30, ltM Thie ... tement -nit 1'1\11\d.00 e trlbunll puectt TVM TECH SALES. "8.IC ll)TIC( '::"~ ~ JM!lll'Y ' 1 ' ' TH·5'1 with tM Countv ,.._.. of O ' Ud tin -102 ._,. '9ue PH 38. -· ,_ ., ,,_.,. decidlr eontr• -...__ ........._.. Callf 92693 ACTmOUI .UWU TK-545 .,. County on Decembo dlencla 1 menoe que Ud ,... ._, _., · 31 IMS
IC>Qndl o.ntro de 30 dlM Vernon E. Adtlg, 102 MAim ITAT-.T ' PMln I.•• le lntormeclon que SehUtl Plaa PH M. ,.._. TM following per.on II P\lblllhld Or Co. 11oue port a..cti, Callf. t2M3 doing bullneee • • Dally Hot J..U.~ t9 2· 'SI Uetld detlM eotidtlr.. Thi• buetneH .. eon-c J. MANATT COM· 30 1NI ry • • •
OQMejO de un ~ .,.. dueled by en lndMdu9I P,.,.Y, 7et w..t WMeofl um 8TA,,_,. MAim ITA,,_,. • T 54
81'8 ..into deberle heoer1o Vernon E. Adrte ScrMt, eo.ta MIN. Calif. The 1o11ow1f1g l*90n II TM fOllOWlne pereone ere H·
lnmedlttament•. oe •t• Thie ttMement ... flied 91U7 dolna bUeltl88e •: doing bulineel •= menet1, su retpUHll Wllh ttle Courlty a.ti of Of. Chef'YI J . Menltl, 7et J, $. Q(RMAN AUTO RE· SIRCO. 18019 Skypark "8.JC ll)TIC(
UIDrDS ... fM I·•,._. esctll&, II hay lllguna, puede enge County on '**'1ber Weet Wlleon Street. Coete PAIR. 721 W 19th St., Cotta Cir , Suitt 0 , lnllne, Calif l1ftUU\ --reeittrad• • tlempO. 12. 19'5 Mela. c.111. 12127 .,._., Callf. 9'2921 92714 PICTmOUI .,... .. v. Ton. V-8, 81110, PIS. t-TO TH£ .-esPONOENT . ,_ Thia butlneH 11 oon-Joza•f S tartdl, 1960 PIUI F. P9truna. 20935 MAim ITA~
CADILLAC (Llc#ZG29704) Ttle IW!ltloner Ila nled 1 Publlat*I Ot'enge Cout ducted by: II\ lndMdual Samw, eo.11 Meea, Callf. Sallmeker Cir., Hun1tngl0tl The folloWlng pereon1 er
(Stk# 3"0) petition eonc:ernlng your Deity Piiot Jenuar; 9, 19, 23. Cheryl Menatt 92'28 · 8eec:h. Callt. 92848 doing buelneee u : OuOec:t
L.AAGEST SELECTION IJMI n('atrlege. If you 1111 to Ille 1 30, 1NI Thie etatelnent WM flied Tiiie bu1lnes1 11 con-Jamee 0. Glwne, 2245 N. by Ou9ovy. IM1 Weme Of..._ model, low mllMge reeponM within 30 ~ ot TH-534 wllfl the County a.ti o4 Of. dUcted by. en lndlvldual Hlglllend. Freeno, Calif. Aw., Suite 1•. Huntlngto c Or the det• !Nit ttlll wmrnone .,. County on December JOIMf 8at9dl 93727 IMc:tl, CA 92847 ~s! :I': 11MN9donyou,yo11defeult "8.IC ll)TIC[ 23, 1985 Thie ttetement wee flted Thi• bu1!n111 11 con-Mlldr*' l , DuloYy, 9e7. tyl ue 1 'XI m.y be entered and tile ,_ with the County Cllttl o4 Of. ducted by: • generel l*t· Cory Dr .. Humlngton leecl" 140 1100 court mey .,,,., •judgment flCTmOUa .uwu Publllhed Orange eo..t enge County on December nerehlp CA 02847 • eontelnlng lntunc\fve or NAm ITATlmtrr o.lly Piiot ~uery 9, 19, 23, 24, 1985 ·Paul F. Pelruna Thie bulinea 11 eon
2eOOCOSHTwborA ue~d. oth9' order• concerning Tile 1011oW1ng petlON areJ30, 1Me TH•.1t.3.,. flmtD Thia 1t1tement w• !Med ducted by. t1r1 lndlYlduel ,.....,_. dlYlelon or property.~ doing butlMM u : l " • Publllhed Orange Coaet with tile County Cterlt ol Or· Mildred L. DuBoYy
CADILLAC '71 8'f0fedo FORD 'M TEMPO 2 dr aupport, c:tllld w.tody, c:Hld M 0 NA CO MAN OR Dally Piiot J~ 9, ttl, 23, enge County on Declfl'lbet Thie etetement wee tltec
Ivory. full pwr, eunrf, alt p/b ale prem. end~. tu00f1, enomey ,_., coet9. APARTMENTS/AND/SUN "8.IC ll)TIC[ 30, IHI 24. t985 ,_1• wtth tn. County Ollt1t ot Of
St350 173-Ss.5 allol: .,..,.. ~ 19t< and -=ti othet relief .. may ANO SWIM APARTMENTS. TH-547 p bit-.._.. ,..._ "-··t enge County on Decem~ • -.... · • be gtanted by the coun. The 2"45 MeM v.,de Or Eut FICnTIOUI IU-U u .,_, ""ange .,.,.. 10. 1N5 ••AU •a =m=I =m=o::bo:=l4e-;;;:;50;:79:;::;;;;;;;.l !J¥nlthtMnt 01 wagee. tell· Sult• 1 Co1t1 M ... · c1111' NMm ITATIMSNT . .,._II' ..,,.T.,.r I Dally Piiot Jenuary 9• 18,.23• ,._, USEDC RS & TRUCKS rng of money o< P'~Y or 92826 ' • The tollowfng pertOnl ,,. ,._,.. nu llK 30, t99e • Publllhed Ot'M99 Cow A Otl'llr court IUthorlHd Th<>mal E. 59efk•. 2036 doing t>utfneu ... -TIT10Ue .,..... TH·650 Delly PMot J~ 9, 19, 23
COMEINOACAUFOR proeeedlngemayettor_. PM-~ Newport NORT 8..llQADWAY r'MA.ITA,.._NT 30. 1Mer-----.~ • .--... •HIAMIPl,_IMl .. ll.IL -OCT 7 tt86 Bffeh, Calif. 926e0 PARTNERSHIP, 1 Cillf01i\ following -Th·&ee ~0-•• ~ L". ~·~ Roneld M.S. Perk, 22t5 llmlled pennerenlp, 188 E. doing buelnell :'°"1118 fltalC ll)TIC[ -•-1, -· --· ..__,r Port Harwick. Newport 17th StrMt, Co9t1 Meta, DOH QUIXOTE MOTEL, fltB.IC ll)TIC(
18211 BEACH BLVD. Cten 8each, Calll. 926eO C•kl. 92827 2100 Newport Blvd . eo.11 flCTmOUl .,_U CHICK
IVEaSON
HUNTINGTON BEACH David D. Murrey, Attorney Th11 bullnffl 11 eon· Thomu S. LM, 188 E. Meta. Ctltf. 92927 NAm ITAW PICnTIOUI .,... ..
•• l .... l'
&.41a.a••1 at ,l.lw, 2030 E 4th StrMt ducted by, 1 general part· 17th StrMI, Colle ~. Mthendre 8. Bhekte, Tile fo11owtng·penon111e NAMI ITATl....-T
--•• ~l!Wo~!Sulte 222. Sent• Ana, CA rleflhip Call!. 92627 2323 lrvlne Ave . ~ doing bueir'.-1 ta; Tile folloWlng pWeOn II
44~ f Coa11 Hwy
N«wport lk•<ll
-C~O--T-0--c--· -92705 Thomu E. Sp11k1 Donald KerkH, 22811 Bffeh. Calll 92MO M JANK COMPANY. doing bullnela u; m:fY IU&Jll Wll 'II LIN LN WN AR 7e. Publllhed Ot'lflge Coast Thi9 ltatement wu filed Betgenone. Miaslon Viejo, Re)endre 8 . Bhekte, 3257 Colorado L.n., Ool1e S(A CARPET. tl001 New--
23K ml. Lltle new thru-out Deity Piiot Januwy 23. 30. with the County Cl«k ol Or· Catt! 92692 11920 Long BMch Blvd., Mele, Clllt. 92928 port snor .. Drive •5. New·
673-09ff Auto, air, radio, w. COYef'I. S3950 673-8590 Febl'u•ry 8. 13. 1986 enge County on December This buslnees 11 con-Lynwood. cent. 90847 Mery T S1maon-Jank, port 8Mc:h, Celli 92883
r/rae(~lc • 1EAL592) PL y '12 GOLOUSTER Th-672 20. 1985 ducted by a limited p1t1ner· Thie buelneu 11 eon· 3257 Colorado Ln • Cotta P91., 8. M11c:ua. tlOO 1
PORSCHE '73 914, reblt eng, new brks, nf!W wtllS
&. tiret. lmmac. Hl\19 Ill
receipts. Like brand newt
$7500 obo 897 -7211
2 dr llnecond gc)od tlr" f2lllOO ship ducted by joint v.nture MeiM. ~ 92828 Newport Shor• Drtw •5. (Stk 4088) S70o 5-48-3 "a · ' P\alC ll)TIC£ Publtshed Orange CoeS1 Thomas S L.. Mlhendra e Bt\akll Mlc:hMI H Jenk, 3267 ~ Beeeh. Calif. 928&3 Sl"I 27 D11ty Piiot Januaty 9, 16. 23. ThlS statement wu filed This 1t1tement wit flied ColOf'e<!o Ln . Cotti Mela, Thi• bu1ln111 11 c:on-PLY'lldil 12 lt2J4IO 30 with tr>e County Cieri< ol Or· with the County Cl«k or Or-C.111 92828 ducted byi en fnc:IMdual
•.. ••--FICTITIOUI .,..... TH-536 1nge County on December enge County on December This bu1lna1 11 eo11<-Peter e. Marc:ua
__ , NAM1 STAftmN'T 24. 198S 24, 1985 duetedby:hulbandandwtte Thie eteMl'nent wu !Med #2 THI ODORE
PORSCHE S14 '72 Good
condition Mus t sell
S 1800/obo 631-2691
ROBINS Auto, alt. stereo, eesa.. The tollowtng pereons.,.. 111-ic 11nTIC£ F•121 r:•t• Mery Sameon-Janai with the County C*1I of Or-P/S, crulN, custom trim doing bullneu u : r~ nu Publllhed Orenge eo..t PubHll'lecl Orange Cout Thi• 1t1tement wu llled ange County on D.cemt>er FORD & whee4a. (1MFS 134) J L Prlcle Rench. 2915 FICTITIOUS llUtMNEll ID11ly PllOI Jenuary 9, 18. 23, Dilly Piiot January 9, 18, 23, with ttle County Cterlt ol Of. 24, 1985 ••1fl•J HA.Mh<>ll 8lV0
(0\TA ... (~A '•~l 0010 SJ"I Redhlll Avenue . D-101, NAMR ITATIMEfT 30 1986 30. 1986 erioe County on December Fm121
Cost1 Mela, Cell 92829 Thi following ~· er6 TH-542 TH-541 24, INS Publllhed Orange Coul
TOP SSS PAID
For Pempered ....,'*'-Benz
I MlfflAll
Top MerC*Sea Prloea Paid
CALL PETER o< AAY
....... Tl ..... n
213 or 714 637-2333
TIYITl'l4 ..
AutQ. ell';_.ltM90. -
Set 222794
SHU
HONDA
1 1 r .._~
" .
TOYOTA '74 CA11ca. runs gooo, look• good $1500
obo 546-1692
IN U.S.A.
Art> TRYING HUDCR
TO BE = 1
• SALES
• SERYICI
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• LEASlll
0 CHICK IVERSON
Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi
441 E. 0.est ..,,, 11.,.rt hHll
111-0IOO
Highest Quality Safes & Service
0 HUN I INl:i I UN ~HK' ~ltK / t'l 'MUU 111
Visit our A ward Winning Service
Department. The # 1 Chrysler
Corporation facility in Orange County.
16861 BEACH BLVD. HU•THICTON BEACH
842-0631 . • 540-5164
GSTERLING
SAUS -SHVICE -LWllC: -,AUS
Overseas Delivery Spec1allsts
BMW -ROLLS ROYCE
1540 Jamboree Rd.
Newport Beech 640-D4'141
8 JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS
1101 Quall •t. -N•w C•r Loc•tldn
1001 OUMI •t. -R•N,. Dl~l•lon IT\ World's Largest Selection of IT\ \Cl Mercedes Benz \C;J
133-1300
Wn · Lllsill · Pw · ._.. · W, SM,
J . L. Prioe "Trust A" By doing bullnesa 11: P _..._.. "'· ,_C 121 Daily Piiot J1nuery 9, te, 23.
Edith GOOdwln. TruttM, QUALITY CRAFT CON· Pla.IC NOTICE ubll .. ...., ""Inge out 30 1986 1915 RedhlH AY9tlU9. D-101, STRUCTION, 1760 Mtremer P\8.JC fl>TICE Deity Piiot January 9, 16, 23, '
eo.11 M-. c.llf 9262e Dr Batboe. Calll 921161 flCTITlOUI ._,..... Tm008 30. 1t&e °' Tl'll• bufineu l1 eon-Charles F Shepperd, N,.,_ l!ATl....-T '1C AMI IT ~U TH-544 i--.---IC-..,,.-T-ICE--
dueted by: ' buslneM truet 1750 Mlrem11 Dr S.lbo• The folloWmg pereona ere T~ IOllowl,: pereone 1,. n-. nu
Edith Goodllrin . Calif. 92M' . ' doing bullMn u : S.ker dolnii bullneN .. , --------,ICTmOU8 ..-u
TH-649
Thia 1t1temen1 wu lllld This bullnn1 11 eon-Aulomotlve. l l l7·D S.ker. CORONA PACIFIC IN-f'\alC fl>TICE NAM1 ITA.,,.....-r ,..,... fllll Jll4 'II with 11'11 County Cieftl Of Or-ducted by en lnc:IMOual . Colli Meet. CA 92928 VESTMENTS. 7372 Prince Tlle'fOllowlng petlOM lft enge County on December D F S,.,_,.•rd Doneld Clerk My9t'I, 1110 D ,IC_.._,. llU ... U Red, 5 ep<I, air, cassette, 2a. tN5 This stat~t Wll flied W Gerry Avenue, Santa r fl 104, Hunllngton ,.,...,... dOlng txlll,_. u :
raltywt\eels. fa..4 with ll'll County Cl«k of Of. Anl. CA 92707 Belch. Celll 92647 NAMI ITAT'UmNT ALISO ASSOCIATES .
(Uc ti 1NOM074} Puolltned Orange eoas1 enge County 00 Declmbe< This buelness 11 con-M11c: E~-1==· = csJ:: ~ ~~ II 1800 ~.;,ve.. Co1t1
($tit 4058} • Oaify Pilot J1ou1ry 2. 9. 16 12. 1985 (Jueted ~ Celrl 92877 ROSE & SONS. 10&59 El Allee W. ~. 1800 ..... 23, 1996 _ f2Ma2 Donald C. Myer• -·-...,,... ~·---TH-525 Publllhed Orange Coest Thia statement wu flied Glef\n Y llhlno. 19182 C1mpo, Fountain Valley. AlllO Ave.. Co111 Mell, "fllii~~..., with tl'll Count et.rk ol Ot-Alert Lene, Huntlng1on Cllll. 92708 e1~....,.~--=-_,..,.._.... llJl•~Mi i+---------+1l1811¥._HllC)UILIU<~Y.-J.G.-4!,a+=::::~;a~onb.=T.enu .. "" Beectt:-eellf . • Robert W Beverld~. Pla.IC fl>TICE 30 1996 = n Y -' ' This business 11 con· Campo, ountlln Valley, 1800 Alli o Ave.. Coll•
--------TH-538 19 f211M4 dueled by: 1 llmlted plrtner· Clllt. 92709 M .... Celll. 92827
FICTITIOUS MISINESI Published Orenge CoUI lhlp Thie bu1lnet1 11 eon· Thia bu1lne11 la eon·
NAiii'. STA nMENT P\8.IC fl>TtCE oa 1y Piiot J 9 19 23 M11.c E. Kazarian dUC'ted by: an lndlvlduel duCted by: huebllnd and wife The following person• 1te 30
1
1986 enuery ' ' · This stetemen1 wu flied Geotlrey M Peul Allc:e W. ~
doing bullness 11 flCTJTlOUI .,..... Th-559 wlll't the County Olertl of Of. Thi• stetement was Ille: This 1111ement wu !Med
FORTUNE PRODUCTS, NA• STAft•NT •noe County on December with the County ci.tc ol Of. with the County Cllf1( ol Or-,~ 12 L1dona Clrc:lt. Hunt· The following pereons ere 24, 1965 8nfl County on December enge County on December
lngton BelCh. Cell! 92~9 doing buelneu u : P\B.IC NOTICC F'm122 24, 1985 24, 1985
True Fortune Produell. HIGHLAND.CA p RI Publilhld Ot'enge Cou1 flm117 rm111
Inc. 1 Callfomla COfporetlon, APARTMENTS, 28'5 M... flCTITIOUI ........ Diiiy Pilot J1nu1ry 9. te, 23, Publlshld Ot'enge CoM1 Publlened Orange Cout
16412 Ledon• Clrcte, tiunt· Ve<ci. Or. East, Suite 1. N,.,_ ITATIMDIT 30, 1986 Deity Ptlot Jenuary 9. 18, 23, Delly Pltot January 9, te, 23,
lngton Beach, Cellt. 92649 Costa M .... CAlll. 92626 The fOllowlng pereons er• TH·S48 30, 199e 30. 1986
Thl1 bu1lne11 11 eon· ThOl'nn E. Se>etkl. 2036 doing txlalnele ... TH-552 .
0 s<irtti Wunty~
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THURSDAY, JA ARY 23, 1986
Toxic dumpin
Police say Three Arch Bay man linked
to Ortega dumping through rental firm
.
By LISA M~HONEY Rfchard Duane Leavitt • 37, was °' .. .,_,......,. taken into custody after questioning
A resident of exclusive Three Arch al shcritrs headquarters in Santa
Bay community near Laguna Beach Ana. Lt. Richard Olson said. He was
was arrested We(inesday on suspicion • being held in Orange County Jail
of dumping hazardous materials Wednesday evening, with bail.set at
along the Ortega Hi~w .. ; lacit week. SI00.000.
Leavitt IS suspected of involve-
ment with at least one of three sets of
1lleplly dumped toxic chemicals
found alongside the rural, two-lane
highway linking Oranie and River-
side counties. Olson sa1d .
Leavitt was allegedly connected to
the toxic dumping through a truck
rental firm in El Toro,.Law enforce-
ment authorities believe the firm's
vans may have been used to transport
about 60 hazardous chemicals left by
the roedlide, Olson said.
He declined to elaborate on the role
Leavitt alJeeed)y played and said he
was not swe if Leavitt is sus~ted of
involvement in all three tou c dump-
ina incidents.
. O lson also declined comment on
whether further arrests can be e x-
~· The investiption is continu-ana. he said.
Sheriff's investigators and the Cali-
fornia Hi&hway Patrol launched a
25~
massive effort to find thott respon-
sible for the toxic dumps discovered
last week.
Some of the mat.cnaJs found were
highly volatile and could have ex-
ploded if not handled property .
Others could have harmed anyone
who unknowinaJy touched or inhaled
them.
By Monday, investigators relying
on witness •descriptions had followed
a trail to T1ce's Rental Center in El
-F=::::::::::~~~ ...... lly.-r.---.;. ----,..t--tll--'Y'·\:li d el in es £
Mark Edward Hand, ac-
cued of throwtna acid
In the face of a 4'--year-
old ~e County •lrl.
wu rulecf mentally unfit
t o face a prellmlnary
hearing. See A5.
Coast
Shoppers cam pout for
store./A3
California
Shutdown at San Onofre
Nuclear Generating Sta-
tion due to power f allure,
called significant./ AS
Nation
Inflation remains down,
but economic growth
sluggish./ A4
Overweight problems In
children due mostly to
genes, study finds./ A4
Sp~rts
University outlasts
Woodbridge to highlight
prep basketball./81
Entertainment
South Coast Repertory's
funny "Foreigner" has
had visa extended .I A 7
INDEX
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Business
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Ann Landers
Opinion
Paparazzi
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Public Notices
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08
A8
A8
A3
86-7
810-12
A9.
A8
89
A7
A8
A8
A10
88
A3
83, 5
81-5
87
A2
friends
-urged to
forgive
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Ofllle!WrNot"""
Friends and family members at a
memorial service for slain Saddle-
back College student Robbin
Brandley urged her troubled
mourners to focus on pleasant
memories rath'er than the senseless-
ness of her death; on forgiveness
rather than despair.
About 300 people filled the sanc-
tuary o f Rancho Capistrano Com-
munity Church in San Juan
Capistrano Wednesday afternoon in
honor of Brandley, a 23-hear-old
guna ""Beach resident w o was
stabbed to death last Saturday in a cam us parking lot. Police have
ma e no arr s 1 !Ye---siai'Wr· ra-'""'~
identjfied any moti ve for the attack.
On the church altar, color photos of
Brandley were surrounded by5e1Jow,
pink and white Oowcrs. Officiating
was the Rev. Roben Anthony
Schuller, son of Crystal Cathedral
pastor Robert Schuller.
Schuller opened the service by
asking Brandley's friends to "find a
spark of hope and a glimmer oflove"
in her death. In later remarks he again
urged mourners not to react with
bitterness.
"Somebody chose not to love one
of the most loving people we had."
Schuller said. ··Tragedy has struck.
but o ur freedom remains .... (God)
gives you the choice to love or not to
love. Teach love -that's what
Robbin would say."
tie added. "The family has chosen
to love. They have chosen to forgive."
Schuller's o bservauo ns were
echoed by Genetic Reilley. the vic-
tim's mother.
· "Uncond1uonal love 1s the
answer ... Reilley said. "The person
who did 1h1s to Robbin was not loved
or could never have done this ....
Please send love to the perso n who
. killed Robbin, that they maynever
do this again."
(Pleaee eee SLAIN/A2)
.., .... ,......., .............
Genelle Brandley uka mournen to foqtn laer da11Chter'•
klller at memorial .emcee. With laer la Robbin Brandley'•
father, John Patrick Rellley.
Bomb scare aimed at Asians
UCI awareness c onf ere nee on needs of
Asian students receives added'lesson
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Ofllle!WrNet14811
A bomb scare marred an otht N 1se
successful Asian-Pacific Awareness
Conference at UC Irvine Wednesday
when an unknown suspect threatened
over the phone to "blow up" those in
attendance.
Campus police evacuated about
150 people from the University
Center Hentagc Room at 9 a.m. after
the threatening calls were made. said
UCI spokeswoman Colleen Bentley·
Adler.
..\ person "'Ith a male voice made
three phone calls to the tuden1
.\ct1vltlcs Office across from the
Hentagc Room asking if the con-
ference had begun. Adler said. tu·
dents ans\\-enng the phone said the>
couldn ·1 1ell the age of the caller by his
voice.
On the third call. when the suspect
was told the conference had staned.
he said. "Down with Asian students!
They'rr all going to blow up!"
accord1na to Adler.
Campus police evacuated the con-
tercncc hall. Adler said thr evacu-
auon was orderly. and a search of the
hall turned up no evidence of a born b.
The all-day conference. which
focused o n the needs and problems of
Asian students. continued without
further incident.
Shmey °Park. chrur of the con-
ference planning commmee. said she
was surprised by the threat.
"No way did we think anything hkr
that would happen," Park said. "We
didn't think~ were doing anything
controversial.''
But she aarccd the incident scrvrd
to Illustrate the racial hatred 1ha1
some direct at Asian Americans and
that panelists discussed during the
conterence.
Santa Ana Heights
ho_ineowners angry
over buyout terms
BJ USA MAHONEY
Of ... ..,,... .....
Santa Ana Hci&hts residents ac-
cultd Oranee County Tuetday of
tryina 10 take ldvant.qe of them
throuJh two prosrams that are "I~
p<>Kd. to ~tt no1tt woes in 1hc
unincorporated ne1ahborhood It the
foot of John Wayne Airport's main
runway.
About 300 residents _.tbcttd 1t the
Costa MCY Community Ccnttt to
team how county plannen intend to
carry out pum.ut .....,.IK'e and
acouttal insu.lation proparns. Most
o( them dad not hke what I.My heard.
Orumbhnp or blackmail and 1n·
vcrK condemnation thrall were
tented 11 Robnt F"her. dir«1of or
plannina. and planner Rich Adler
after they ditdOttd details of who
would be cti11bk for the Pf'Otl'tlTIS
and how they will work.
"That's not ~tthatt usuranct,
that's blackmaJI, ' •id OM man after
Jeamint that 1ppr111tn must be
cbown from a coun1y<0mpakd Im
and that noitt pollution Cluted by the
airpon would bt contidtted 1n de· i:mm:_'na the fair mar'Ut value of
"Noc only ·~ ~ Htekina the deck. bu• you're ICKtJnt it to bavlly
ift almost ........... the unideft.
ufied midn• Mid.
Residfntt Wdll"1 think much o( offen IO ~ iDMlletc their , ...... _....,.._,._, bvtaN ............ -.......
admitting pupils
with AIDS set
Ocean Viewdistrtct
first in area to tackle
controversial issue
By ROBERT BARIER °' .............
Ocean View School D1stnct in
Huntington Beach has become the
first district on the Orange Coast to
approve guidelines for dealing with
pupils who have contracted AIDS
. and who may pose a health threat to
their classmates.
When it's known that a child has ·
faUcn victim to the contagious dis-
ease, the pnnCl~l will ref~r the child
for a medical review and evah.lation.
Tbc medical team will mclude a
district administrator. the coord1·
nator of nursts and the cb1k1's
principal and teacher.
The infected child would be ex-
cluded from school for the seven to I 0
da.ys that the mediqal conditions
team is looking into his condition.
according to Supenntcndent of
Schools ~Jc Coogan.
"This issue 1s so volatile and there's
so much misinformation," Coopn
said Wednesday ... T~'s no reuon
to believe 1t (AIDS) will bit u1 any
sooner than anywhere elsc. lklt the
law ot averages sa,rs it is aoi .. 10
happen some time.
Coogan said that the medical lall'I
will check wuh the chikl~.ddc1or ud.
with Orange County health of!iic:eft
before malong a recommendation on
whether the youngstCT will be read-
mitted to the classroom or be ~
ommcndcd for home study. The
Board of Trustees will have the final
decision.
Ifthe ch1ld 1s inclined toward bttina
and fightrng or other activities that
could fcad to the transmission of the
disease, he or she would more likely
e OU
Coogan said.
"h 's our understanding that AIDS
can be transmitted by fluids ... like
saliva being entered tnto the blood-
stream." he said
"But it's v~ difficult to transmit
the disease. It's got to be throuah a
broken slon of an individual and not
be natural cont.aCt.
(Pleue eee AID8 I A2)
Boy, 15, struck by
hit--run driver dies
BJ SUSAN HOWLETT °' ....... ,... ....
A Newpon Harbor Htgh School
fl'6hman who was struck b\. a hll·
and-run dnver last Sunda~ wh1lr
jogg.mg with his sister d1rd Wrdnes-
day afternoon at Fountain Valle)
Regional Hospital.
Oaude Huben , 15. d1rd at 2 p.m. of
injuries suffered in the Irvine Avenue
accident 1n Newpon Beach last
weekend.
Police arr searching for the dnver.
who 1s now wanted for felony vehicu-
lar manslaughtrr in connection with
the 1nc1drnl
Hubert\ 17-\ear-old s1ster. Pa-
tncia Huben. "'as J<>ggmg in front o f
her brother when he was struck from
behind b) the car at 7 11 p m unda)
She descnlx'd the hit-and-run "chicle
as a large. 1980s .\mencan-made
sedan. poss1hl> dark in color She said
the car did not slo" down or stop after
the accident
NeilJJ)On Beach pof"ttt spokesman
Trent Hams said invcsugators will
set up a booth next Sunda} at the
accident scene. located o n In inc
.\' enue near 20th lreet. to at1ract
possible wnn~sses in the case.
"Wr are rcqucsuna an)one who
might have seen anything that might
help us to locate the suspect who
trag1call> ended this bo)' 's hfc to
please stop at the booth." Hams said.
"We 'need your help in our invest1_ga-
11on."
Claade Hubert-
.\ rt"ard fund has bttn established
in Hubcn·., name b' a "lewport Beach
couple" ho donated S 1.000 to 11d the
efTon 10 find the suspect Costa Mesa
Hospital Mrd1cal ('enter added
anothrr SI. lU to the reward Tues·
da'
Deposits to the reward fund can be
maJr through the Secunty Pacific
Banl locat<'d on 17th Street 1n C'o ta
Mesa.
Man hit
by train .
in Irvine
IJ PAUL AAClllPL&Y ..............
northbound paue,,.er tram
CNSMd a man 1n Irvine Weclnetday woo police bche\<e WU I ~
Vtctlm. 1
Just before •.lO p.m .. the enelDel'f
of the Sen Dtcao to Loa Melln
Amtrak train spotted wbllt ~·..,..
to be a tum~ or pUt b'aU
between Ute tracks abcMlt JOO YIW*
non.b of Jeffrey RoM. -lrviM
poll<C Make Olden-.
''JU pnor 10 tml'K'. -c::a 111
••1lfDOWud*-Ptil .... bod\'."~--
1\e u.a -... ~. tO ~ It tnVded t.lOO .... .....
f'l•••wft•BI
I 8) TOffYSAAVEDkA
~°' .............
• : t first. Costi Mesa City Council
' members looked worned.
Then 1hey smirked. giulcd.
1.huckJcd, and finally pve Ah
I Rou hen pcrm1s11on Monday to l buik! a stone castle with a 28--foot-
. high tower arouod a restat.irant build· I ing he owns on 5'apenor A venue.
Roushan caught the attention of
~"People" magazine and tht statt
SMpremc Coun 10 1981 af\er he
rcc~d four towenng red sculptures
on the propcn y at 1.550 upcnor Ave.
be renegade welder had also un-
veUcd plans to build a castle at the
~le:.
• Aftar a three-year baule with tht.•
y. Roushan dismantled the metal
itrl*k-includiqa 6.5-foot tall. U-
~d piece called "Tornado" -and 'lnnounced plans to ··tour the
: ; country 1n a compUkr-cqu1ppcd bus.
·: But· 1h1s week. •Rou han. 42. re-
; urnect to Ci1y Hall seeking the
• ncccssa') zone vanances 10 build the
; ' mcditval fortress around the barn-
; ~aped building that he leases to
• arf's restaurant.
' The fiery lra'l1an plans to build the
' 14.-foot-high wall and the castle 1ower
---himself. st~ as a
: 1 message to the governmental powers
·~that control the city. the state and the !r··ry .
L-?-
~~;TRAIN •••
:~·FromAl
· '. before coming to a stop. Ogden said
k The engineer then backed up so
'. C~cs-ewmtn could 1nvcsttgate. Upon
~ ~di&colfenng the remains of a body
:~-lhey contacted Irvine police.
• ,~ Although a wallet was found near ~ t(Ulescene. 11 conuuncd an out-of-statt'
: driver's l11:cnse th~t was no lo nger
• ·readable. Ogden said
lnvesugators determined from the
re mains that the bod)' "as that of a
· ''man an his .!Os. _
The Orange ( ount) coroner will
attempt to 1dent1f} the bod} through
fingerprints. Ogden said
Poller arc 1n\les11ga11ng tht: inu-
<lcnt as a •;u1'-1de because the man
·appt:arcd to be 1nten11onall~ ~1tting
r-0n the tracks. Ogden i.a1d.
._.He was -hc.-nt mer 1n a fetal
fipoc,,iuun Mth h1' had.. to the train:·
'he ~1d
:-
.. AIDS ...
. ..Soap and "a11:r kill'> the 'iru\ 1t \
·'nut strong. Bu t onu: 1t"s 1n the
liloodstream. 11\ d ~·onccrn ··
, (oogan said the guideline~ wcre
rut in place so that d1stnct official\
v.c1n't be o"crreac11ng ··po1t11talh ··
'~hen lhe s11uat1on amse~ .. We want
In act in th<.' interests of the \IOung\tcr
(who has .<\IDS! and for the wmmon
good." he said
Coogan said officials are as<;umin~
1ha1 parent<; of 1nfct:tcd children v.111
tw fonhnght and v.111 t<.'11 ..chool
iflic1als that thc1r children arc su1Ter-
1ng from the d1sea\<.',
n1 .. tnn official<. also are preparing
• gu1dehne'i on what to do should '>tcsfl
~members develop AID . ( oogan
• S<tld.
1 ................................. ... l
t ARREST ...
;vromAl
I ~parate SllC\
1 Some of tht: chemicals were 'io
: "olat1Je that county firefighters opted
to blov. them up rather than nsl..
1 moving them Other'> were too
dangcrou'> to detonate and v.cn·
truckrd out of the area by a pn\alt.'
hatardous material~ fi rm
( ount} environmental health of
tidal'> o,a1d 1he twons all ha\C o,oml·
..ipph<.attun 10 the pharma,cut1u1I
indu'\tr\ hut as }Ct no <;pcc.ili1
lOmpan ~ ha<. come undcr \u<,p1c111n
Ha1arclou' ma1n1JI\ dumping" ;1
-felon} tha11..imc' a ma\lmum fine o t
s ·o.CX)(J fur CcH.:h lhl·m1utl tlk·11alh
lt<;p11,1•d 111 ( 1,11\ tl llnn 11nild :il~11
rc'iult 1n a \t·Jr-lnnF ,t.1\ m u111r1
rail.
OBITUARIES
~
Sen. Bergeson · s
fath e r. 90. dies
Ivan ( nttendcn lalh111tl \t,111.· \en
"1anan Bergeson H ''It dl\tm •
died unda'< night in < >J1.J ·n I 1ah
( ntlcnden who "',1, •1 1,
• • o;urvivrd b} ht' lour 1 h1ldr1 n
Acrgt''iOn. Dr. Huntn C nttl'ndn
\.trs ( arotvn f \ ll'r and \fr, \w
c ,rnnon He Jl\n h.1J I ~ ¥r,rnll
t.hildren and t"-" (lrc;11-gr.1ncl·
\' h1ldrtn
~r" Kes are ixndin11
l
Rou hnn ~> the castle 1s wmt>ohc
ofa "ch~ s move" ht 111 us1na qa1nst
the United tates go"emment.
"When }OU castle. you're changing
the !ltralct} of the aamc mcda}.
v.e're ·'oina to pla~ che\~ on m}
board. he \!ltd Tuesda). dunna an
interview in the restaurant parkina
lot,
Council memben had tittered
at>o_ut how Rou ban's ca 1lc would
ccnainl} be "unique," and that 11
couldn't damage the ac111het1t.:'\ of a
souths1de 1ndustnal stnp marled b>
auto body shops and warehouses.
"Some may con<1ider it prctt),
some may cons1d~r 11 weird. but I
don't th ink It can hurt that area."
Councilman Donn Hall said dunn,g
the meeting
Councilwoman >\rlene Schafer
gushed; "I never thought I'd .change
my mind I 1h1(l k 11 v.ould be
something unique and different II\
ourctl)."
Roush.m 'ia}S his prOJet.t 1s more
than merely .. different " It 1s a
statement of defiance toward what he
bel1c,cs 1s an opprcs\lh' na 11nn It 1\
also a message for peopk w ~wme
self-rehant and produc11w
"Tbey·re so "braanwa,hed thl.'~
thinlrthcitosstams-thnrenem' The
enemy 1s an ( 1ty Hall. And w<·'v~ ~01 c1
cowboy (President Reagan) running a
bunch of cows," say Rou~han.
squinttng angril)' as he "ent nose 10
no~ w11h an 1ntcn 1ewer "Th~'>
empire ha!I got to collapse for ttll'
world to come to peace."
Roushan. who owns a home 1n
Costa Mesa and another 1n Lalw
Arrowhead. 1s an avo"l'd l\.1oc,kn1
and communist Heu~:. h1\ Jnv.uri..
and lifestyle to build a platform to
e pouse has belief of to tal indepcn
dence.
He wears his long hair an thi n
Afncan-~tylc braids adorned at tht:
ends w11h v..ooden bead\ -a" .i
reminder to be patient wh1k taking
thecastk idea 1oc11' official'> .. .<\nd 11
worked out that I had (the•hairst)le)
for Manin Luther King Day ... '><!)''
Rousllan. mar\eliiig ·a1 .whar· he
con 1ders to ~ more k1.,met than
01nc1dence
With ha prominent. curve<l no)(!,
th1cll mucil!lche and long goatee.
Roush n could pas'> tor h1Laae rode
suu Fran!. ZclpPJ
Hr bouJht the 1 l.~46-~uure-foot
indum1al compleit tftat hou~s the
lrestauran1 and w me small ware-
houses an J 971:1
Rou han pre\ 1ousl) used 1he prop.
en " tor his metal \\Orks busin~ s,
which his Ame11~an C 1\ 11 L1bcrt1cs
Union auorne) said was torced 10
close becau<;<.10f the snagglc w11h the
cit)
Roushan'<; lav.<,ull aga1n<;t Costa
Mesa for fin.mc1al damages 1!1 pend-
1ns 1n Orangc ( uunt) Supcnor(oun .
'iatd auorne)' Meir Wc!ltre1(h.
Roushan 'ta1ci he 1<,n '1 bllll'r against
the CH)_ for what ht• csumatt>'i are
$4()().000 in losses to his busine'is and
personal tinances for building. dtS-
manthngand fighting to maintain the
red statues He al\o \pent li"c days 10
1ail lor ig noring a Lllurt order for-
b1dd1ng him 10 build mor1· of the
c;tructure!>
Though forgi\ 1ng, Rou,han 1s
quick to call rnunc1l mcmbu~ "-ia11s
and Cos~a Mesa "NaDtov. n
.. I dian I go (101ttcrmint1I mcc11ng
to beg them I went to Lall 1hcm
famst. Nalls.'' he blasted "l here i!I
not one person on the counc 11 who ha-s-
m\ education. m) inner •.trt•ngths.
fht: problem 1s thC\ JU!>t want tu pla)
head games. l '11 pro' c wb.o ~stronger
mcntall)'." .
Roushan doesn 't yet know how
much the ca'ltlc v.111 co:.t to build or
"hen he will begin t le corx-eded that some ix·opk ma~
lahcl him eccentric or at ka'>t lana11-
t.1l.
·1 do fantawt· I do da}dream But
l''t'f)'thing I think I bring 11 about,"
he o;ard.
tk alrcad~ has a proJe<:l hnt'd up
l11r allcr the castle 1s fi ni shed· a huge
mirror that would make the ·subJCCl
seem IOU time~ larger -or 100 times
smallcr. "It'll reall~ wll )OU who you
are:· fie said.
0911r "'4 ~ ..,. Oelltd M•_.•
Cindy Caldwell gives an emotional eulogy for her friend .
SLAIN COED MOURNED ...
From Al ·
\t'\1 I t1 11 'd• ,d,., p,11d 1f1hutt· 111
Ht trd '• • 1• d, o111111111111 ,,
11 .. ,., m.11 1 '11 ·•··~ h1~11 J• 111 t 11
'ud.:111 e!• 1 I .111d .11 the
\1 1 \111n \ 1..1 J i'I• I h!tu \ltl' H
\ '"1 Ii tr , "'' •( 1,11 dl':ll nf \tudtri" l ,,,ti,d Br.111dll'\ ,,., .1
\ d11 I 1 •' ll• ollld \,11 llli-pt I
"''' R ,, h
l111 t I ·r
''"" I ,1 It ( ·dgt ,,!Ill
• II IJ~ l'll ltum II\
prnlo'l.opll\ .ind h1.·r
.ti\·" .. 111 .1p.1rt11t II\ ••
( 11r1\t Ill l'' .1111111 rirt'\llknt 111 lhl
111 I!•' \ti I V. t•'\ .111 l(J\I \111111.:ont
'll\. 1,1
~ ·"' ... 11cl ri11111rnn" v....:r1.·
1n111ul 1111lw1r inah1hl\ to undrr .. tand
ti • 1 .1.1111. •>I UrJndln'
dl'.1tt. K111 \ht· said the .,tudcnt~·
\lknt l h.tlkn~c.. v.a\ ··10 honor
Robbin ' nwrnon h' doing good v.nrh ·
l 1nd\ < .ildv..ell Brandle}'\ fntnd
~tnte 1.h1ldhood re<alkd the \addle
hilt k '\tudent \ playful \pant and her
WrRr L1s1r NING
, ..
tln111111n 10 hmadnl\ttnt• \lU(l>C'
( .tldv.1'11 \ll~l'\ll'U thJt If .1 rau111
,111 on l \l\t\ in hCJ\l'll 'I 1..nov..
l ~11"hinl "•tp lhl'f\' 'l)J llW 11 nghl
nc i'V. •
\ n n \.1inl11 pn·'>ldt.• n t of liaddlt'-
h<tl I.. ' .\\\01.1att.•d \)tud1•nt Bod}' and
Brandle>'\ lncnd clddcd , "I lan·t sa)
dn' thin~ l(l ht'lp U\ undC'r\tand wh)'
thl\ hJpJX'nrd I "l"h I wuld JU<,t
\41) 111 her 'Knbh1n th.ink )llU for
-.our gift tor 'lh.tnngJu'it a \OIJll part
of HlUr prn1nu!I Ilk v..111\ me···
Rl'\ \t. hullu told Brandle)·!.
mourm•r<. not 111 ll\&.dl on the ques-
tion ii \&.h\ h.id thtnf' happen to
t\ood peoplt Ill rcferrC'tl 10 the
R1hhcal 'itnr. of loh v..h'n lo'lt ht'i
l.111111\ h" torllln1. Jnd h" ht·:ilth hut
n.ot hi., f.i11h 1n C 11.><.I
., ou ht\\t' .1 dcu'>lon 10 make
toda) a dc<.1'>1on on hov. .. ou will
react to tht• In'" ot a heautllul lnend."
~huller \!llC1 ··1c •Nil i1n c her to you
for 13 year' ~ohfld) lan tnkc that
away •..• That \ C •<><.! 'gall to \11u "
Delly Piiot
0.11very
I• Quar1nteed
Justcall 642-6086
What do you hkt about the Dail) Pilot''> What
don't )'OU hkt? (all the number above and )Our
messa1e will be rtC'Ordcd, tranKnbcd and de·
h\etcd to the appropn .. te ed1t0r ..
The ume 24-hour an~v.<'nna K~1ce ma) ~
u~d to rt'tord leuen to th<' t'd1tor on any topic.
Contnbutor to our L.rtltn column mu t include
their namt and telephone numbtr for venfication.
Telb us what'\ on )our mind
•
Clfcutettoii
Telephonee
"
Motnlng ctoudt will e!Mt by lhls afternoon long the Orange
Cout. the National w .. thet Service sa d
Hlgh1 wlll ranoe from the mid 60I at 1he belle* to 70
Inland.
Toplght will remain clea,. with tempernture!J dropping to tht mid 40t to lowef 601
Friday will be mostly sunny and warmer wllh h•gha tn the
upper eos to upper 70a Boaters wtll find tight variable wu•1d!li through 1on1gh1
becoming westerly 12 to 18 l(not1 th•• a1ternoo11
The weaterty ..-1111 3 to 8 feet
Widespread tow CloudNnd fog thl'9 morning w111 burn off to
partly cloudy skies thla etternoon and fair tonl\)ht
U .S. Temps
H'9fll IOWI lllfough & p m W.or-dl~ ... ... Ml""•u-M I) ,,
.Alt>eny. •e 2• "'Pll 81 "'"' Ill 08
AlbuQ-Q"41 52 37 New O<IMn• T~ •• AmerMIQ •e 21 Hew Yoc~ S9 lJ
llncftOrec>e n 18 NOrfoo4< VI et 31 ......,_. .. 81 21 ()lrt.-a Cllv so l9
Allen•• .. 41 °"'.,.. 4 1 10
.Altenlic:Ct1~ se 2S Ori-47
:::~. se 41 Pl'•llde<I>' • \8 27
Ml 27 P-..i 76 ·~ 81111no• 31 12 P>lllbu~n .. 30
8lfm1no11.,,. ~· !2 P0tll1 Or 4 1 36
llltmetcAt. 26 04 P<OYICHnc;• SJ 2•
lolM <13 25 A::r 10 39
blon 52 211 A C•1, 39 12 .,_"" .. 79 SS "-"o S9 21·
Calif. Temps
HIQlll IOwt llVOU91'1 S p m Tttu<ICley
Apple Valleoy ee 31
8ehur1e1<1 eo 43
Betti""' • 3e 8Mumol\t N 39
8'tf>OP • " 21
17 .. 4t IO .. ,,
IO 11
8\l"lllO .. ._,I
__ ..
TO )5
~onY1 41 3S 'Sil.,..• .. i1 c;..,., 3J IS 5t p ... T•"'Cltt ,. 47
llylN 1' Q c...-Ctly .. 54
lu<lh '° eo Surf Report
Clwif1e11on.s c 83 •5 Seit L••• c:.i, 3' 11 Ill Fre<tnO 57 42 lancaatlf '2 27 .. w w w w
Cl\MIOlte.N C TO 5., At•ton-o II<) S1
~ •I! 19 Sen .kJ•n P R 83 1111 LonQ hlGh 8& $4
LO.A~ 87 U Chtc.go 39 28 'IHllle .. •O ClllCIMlll 37 3c 'lllfl•""°'I !>8 49
C......etld 38 Je StOU• fa"' 2? .0 l
OoN.mo.e.S C H 33 Sl>OI< .. ~ 34 ll
Colutnbue.Otl )8 36 Sr•ll<.,... .~ 2& Concofel N H 43 .ill Tlil)IOo .. •; 20
Dell--"1 Wortlt ~5 eo 4]
J8 l• "''" A(t 'II Den\W 39 18 W11fwl\ltnn 86 3•
O..Moonee '34 18 Ww.r I• 47 20
Ml"l•v~le 67 •I
1.40< <O••I 70 ...
MO<'l.0..IO • 52 Monter~ eo 43 Ml w~-. 5t 43
N-11 K 43
"l•Wl!Ofl 8Mcn IS3 82
Oakltlnd 82 45 On11110 88 4a
Tldea
ToeAY
o.l(OI\ 39 JO Nl•H 8••·• !>O 19 "-'m Sortno• 71 '1 "~· 67 ...
,,,. '°" 12:11 Liii. 2.1 ~a:J"iow 7:07 t.lll. u EIP-61 111 ,..,.,.,,.. I)(; . ,.
~ 20
Pu o Aoo•• 57 S6 J:Jttl.fft. -4.1 ._......, .. ,.,Ill. II Fieg91&" Grenel AapoOI ll 21 Extended· GrM1F• ~6 11
q,. .... c!f> ".!.-" H.o&.un ~ .a ~Oiy 84 M
l'M>AY
flt'll kM 1:2t ~"' 2,4
Or-o.H C ge 1 I s1e1-10 SI 4& 7:'2•111. .. ,
HerlfOfel !>3 13 Mott.., tv "• •1•y• "1t '~0 lhft 5Atutde.-S111n.. Sii 42 ::'a:1'iow 1:06 p.m. -4.t
9->cllllgll t:.Op.lft. u ~· 26 06 1n10U9h Mo 0•1 r•· Vi! (aft1 l.lf'Af San S..naro1no 88 441
Honolulu 8• RCI "'9'"• .. ,,.. ~· .. ·~ 'A•f(h r.-1 • 1tt~ Sen Oat>r>ei 71 52 Sen Oo<IQo 13 53 "°""°" 6A ~. 1nyon' ,., "'~ M 'd•Y Un·
lftd~ 4() jJ ..a.on.ht., • "' m ,,., 110111111\0 Sunday 51111 ''ll'C•KO 84 50 J ... k_.. ..... S7 4 ' .. "' "'O"" lf\41' • tom!d ft" c trog s.n JoM 81 42
.i..-34 '.l! "')O 1 ... 7()! A •"'•1 o .. .... 4/h Senll Al18 15 52
K.,._Oty 4() 20 Hc:-.s>I S<l• ,...,0 r P' e .., 5., •• 8-tbet• &1 42
HOMEOWNERS ANGRY OVER TERMS •••
From Al .
homes. either. The wunt) I'> propos-
ing to otTer a "pa1.kagc" th.it will
include window trt.•atml'nt'> altrl
insulation and a "en11lat1on .,.,..,tcni
for homes that fall v.11h1n m ~·<;1ab
hshed noise level 1..untuur
In return ·for mal..111g thqr 1111r h'
quieter. residents "ould hai.t· 10 ... 11111
away their av1gat10n nght' 1111h1 ..
which arc much more "aluahk thJn
the S5 OOO to SIO.CIOOthecuunt" m.1,
~pend on ansulatwn \omc honw·
In add111on. au:l'pttn~ thl· "''ul.1
t1on would make 1h1:m 1ncltg1bk 1111
purchase as_suraolc iJ the .acou\111:.11
treatment did not case thl.'1r "°'"
woes and they later "anted 111,,11
Se"eral residents u111c11cd uunh
planner\ for coming up w11h plan'
that don't square with what they wen•
told at previous meeting.-. .. I wa\ tuld
the last 11me that the appra1..er would
be told no1 to make noise polluuon .1
con'l1dl.'rat1on ... said r om Barl.l'I.
Pointing a finger at R"b •\dkr
Mar' annc r owcr\C} 'aid \ht wa' t• de!
..
a \\~Jr al,\" fh,11 '>h1.· "-<lllld not have to
l1} Lu • tll 111!.1 home oo the.. .open
m 111.;t 1 111 tx·< nnw l'11g1ble tor
fllll 'I\ l~\llr:llll\'
f 1,ht.•1 ,.11<1 la\t night that prC\IHIU\
,,1k l'll1111' ,.,,,utd he cnnc.1d<:rcd v.hcn
k· 1d1n ,1,.1 ha' pn1111l\ under the
fll '>J71 .1111
Pu rt ti .• ,.. .1\\uran1 t guaran-
lt'• 111i: rc\u.knto. tt"11 tlw county v.111
hu I l 11 IH•llll'\ -.tnd atoustK:ll
1n-.ul.1tt1111 1 >!!-r.Hn' 1rl· intended 10
•n·ln ,,,.,, .\n.1 I k1gh1' rc!>1dcnt'>
11 1til d h, .11rpt rt n11IO,l' .ind at t lC
,,tnlt 11111\' hrin~ ~h\· u 1unt} into
• , iph.111 "'"' ''ttll' n111\t' regu-1,tl l\
,,. pt fl•'"" hd\\ en \'\()and 450
h •IT,, \\I 1111 h1:cllg1hfc• l11r one ofthe
1 ruF' "" I h11,1• httnll' Jre in the
.1rl:i\ in11,1 '~\l·tl'I\ alfcctrd hy
1.11.c<llh .111d land1nf' at th1· J1rpon.
I 1111 r 1rntdll\C rule<, outhned
T n•,d 1'11111hlc 11·\ldl nt\ would
I. ' . \.II 101k1.1dt· 11 the' v.anted to
t111·11 hullil'' 111 tht• lO UJlt\ Thr
• '"iuld fl.I' t.111 marl.t•t pnu:
Those opting to insulate their
home& would have lO take a standard
packageof improvements, planners
said. They would also sian away their
av1gat1on nghts -J>C"!'ittina the
county to limit buildina heiahts. fly
planes overhead amt malce aircn1\
noise.
Angry residents accused county
ollicials of wanting to take more than
they will give.
They argued lhat fair market value
'ihould not be used in aPJ?!!isina
homes in the area bCCiuse a1rpon
noise has devaJued the properties.
··fos1 compensation" should be-the
cntena. elderly resident G retchen
Miller srud. The county should pey
the replacement cost for a com-
parable home elsewhere, she said.
lJ nder the county plan, there would
be no tax adjustments for people who
purchase a more costly home than the
one they sell to the county. Residents
argued that comparable houses away
from airport noise would be more
rxpens1ve .
E!
Sew up big savings.
'ou t .111 latw l \our <·If lurk~ \\ith savi n~
of up to -o ·· .. 011 our t•l<·gant 'ui t ~. sport coats,
au'('''"n<11\ ,rnd 'port~\\'<)a r.
TI1e selection is still good so
hurry in today!
..
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