HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-01-28 - Orange Coast PilotBy BOW ARD BENEDICI' '--.... all 1eVen crew memben, includina
tchooheacber ChrilU McAuliffe.
CAPE CANA VER.AL. Fla. -Fraamenta of the s l.2 biUioo
Space shuttle Chal1ensr q ploded ~ one of fow in NASA'•
into a ~tic firebelJ 7S iec:onds shuttle fleet, fell into the Atlantic
after liffolf today, apperently kitlina Ocean 11 miles aoutbeut of tbe
Cout
-ca1tren1 found• are
aought to police car-pool
lane on freeway./ Al
Calllomla
Ooctore announce the
death of rectu.tve Church
of Scientology foun~er L.
Ron Hubbard./ A4 ·'
l'f adon
Horrnet fir .. hundred a of'-
union meatpackera for
refu8'ng to crou picket
llnes /Al • ---Rooalng offlclaJa notify
cttlel of 1200 mllllon cut
In urban development
funda./AI
World
Cuba la appaJled to find
Libya backing Latin rebel
forces./ Al
Common Market nation•
vote to halt arma aaJee to
natk>n'a that sup~ ter-
rortem./ Al
Sporta
Ed180n Hlgh'a wrestling
team hu an eye on
league, CIF tl11e. /81
New Orleans la trying to
return to 'normal' after
Super Sunday./81
INDEX
Erma 8ombeck
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Bu~neaa
Claaslfled
Com lea
Crouword
Death Notices
HorOICOpe
Ann Landers
PoNde Log
Publlc Notices
Sports
TetfMllon
Weether
87
87
A3
A9-12
EM-6
88
87
~
87
A3 ee
81-4
A8
A2
.. -.
Kennedy Sl*IC Center launch ped.
There wu no announcement of the
F.a.e of the ~ but it appeared theft
wu no way they oould -survive. No
American astronaut ever had been
killed in Riabt.
The explo1ioo occurred 11 Cballenter wu 10.3S miles hjp and sperdi~ toward orbit at ~1?77 mph. NAS admini1trator w illiam R.
Graham wu meetin1 with con-
areamen on Capitol Hill about the
NASA budfet *ben they saw the
dilUlet on a.elevlsion.
.. NASA oflidal1 told th~ con· aresunan it doesn't I~ like any lives were 11ved," 11id Sa.eve 9ol$1stein, an aide to Rep. Manuel LuJan, R-N.M.
The otheT crew members were
commander Francis R. Scobee, 46,
pilot Michael J. Smith, 40; Judith
Resnik. 36;..'Ronald E. McNair. JS.
Elliton S. vnizuka, 39; and Gregory
8 . Jarvis, 41.
The launch had been delayed
repeatedly, most m:ently bec:aux or rears ~t icicles on the launch ped
couJd harm the shuttle.
It was the fint io-ftjpt diaster in
S6 U.S. manned 1pec:e millions,
aJlhou&h three astronauts were killed
in a I %7 launch pad explosion durina
the ApoUo procram.
The explosion was a devuutina
setback for the National Aeronautics
and Space Admani1tNtion after sue>
e,..e1aatt1e~aplodeeUortly 'liter liftoff from Kennedy Space Center tbJa morntnc.
.,,, l..411 .........
Developer
shows CM
tower plans
Man to betriedfor ·murder
of partner killed by of fie er
BJ TONY SAA VBDRA °' ...............
Developer C.J. Sqcrstrom A Sons
attempted Monday to diffulCI the
con troversy 1urro undi n1 ill
proposed 324tory tower ~vtilina
plans '° include a child<are center,
an art pJlcry and lush picnic areas in
the Col .. Mesa project.
Malcolm Rosa, Seeentrom de-
velopnu$n cbjef, outlined plans for
the fint.1. 2Q.ecre ptwe of the com-
peny's 9t-aere Home Ranch bul6nas
center in a mom Ina news confermce.
Proiect official• made the aame
, ........ DSVSLOPSa/ A2) .._....,.Dacal
CaseartsesoutofHunUngtonBeach
rythatculmina tedTn a s hootout
By STEVE MAULE °' .............
An ex-convict involved 1n a down-
toWD Huntincton 8e8ch 1hootouilast
yar will ~ tried this week for
murderina hit partner even thouah
the man was Dot and klllcd by a
policle officer,
, Themurdertrial1 to open Thursday
in Supttior Coun 1n Westminster. is
unJQue becaa. Olristopber M1ch1el
Sheehan, 23. did not fire a shot until
after his accomplice had been lu lled
1n an exchanae of Junfire with
Huntington Beach Sgt. Edward
Deuel.
Sheehan 1s charged with fint-
dcarcc murder, attempted murder.
robbtry and burglary. Ht could be
stntenced to hfe in pnson 1fconv1ctcd
on all charaet. ~htthan and his 'Partner. Thoma'
B~ach jOgg~r plans to run them ~11
· didn't seem IO even tt out," he M11d Lashley. who runs betWttn S~ iotillll'Y. m1k\ a yor l.111'koy fond be would only bt About llll ycan ''°he decided to
able to contiaue lais •voriec puume Jet a lona-ttnn aoal. .. , tbouaht I
if"bestollfednaa .... "'91oot ... It felt would run the whole c:oe t of the
lilttlWll~lild-...uwhcnl Western Hem11phc1T," he 111d. But
pul on die.-.; M '-led. whm he took a vacation to Alub he
He II.in timitl Wt 1-111 to tht realized how rocky the c:oe tal ~an
.... bec:IUJI .. nJ07I illl ~Mry W.J and dicc:Mkd {O lalle dOwn ht
aad •tbeft it IM> lmOI-wt.en I ca.n ambtt100 ... I'll probebty )U.lt nin 1t ~a ....u .. .-&M 111ttt •s in (W coast of Alaska) 1n Jptnl. ..
"9il * t'rOln IM..,, .... dM sun aJ luhley•ldwb1luatt1nainhi10can
ciomt11 ;T..-; -.. it _..,. mon ~ vettut o~
""'8tiftal -. .. bl...._ veral years -.<> he tqan takll''I
"'lnldll. 109 "'o...,.. IMft •ho weekend Jaunts '° other peru or .,. ......,,_ llid tttndly-:· :And the coutal Cahfom•• to nan it• bathes
blbai l6r" -"°"' 1Mc's 1n clcmmt n.o.b he Ml pan.apetcd an a
daat ..... mc~11nanni,_.. .. id inanillon and ~vaal IO.k1iomdtr
, . . .
Alben Oglesby. werr alleged!) roh
bing a Pacific Coast H1g.hway store
Apnl 13. I 98S. when §hoo11ng brolcr
out.
O&Jesby was killed in a hall of
aunflrc when Deuel clicked ofT eight
rounds from his ~rv1ce revolver aftrr
()aksby sho1 1hc officer once 1n the
Cht$l I
Deuel was wcanng a bullet-proof
vest and avoided scnous IRJUf) '
At\cr OaJcsby was killed, hcehan
o~ncd fire on Deuel but did not hit
the officer. accord1na to the charge~
Shecffan eKaPf'd but was arrt"ltcd
(Pl--... llltJ'RD&a/ A2)
t
lMu
Im
Focus or. THl NEws
NM. he prcfen toe.all h1mtelfaJ r
rllher than I Nftfttf .. l think IMIT I\
a dtfftftncc TM tenou ~ arc
ND"'"
"ktnaa,.,, 1 th1n Y)~ that 1(
I want to stoP a.nd look at a rock or
watch the 1t1ls and PG'flJC)1tei. I can
do \bat. rm n04 """""tome of tM naturtl beluty, .. ht atd.
~--ACJI/
cntfully carryma out lA ~
G'liMions tn sJiahlJy less than ft~ yean.
On a slow-mouon video mun ol
the exe>lotion. it was diftk:uh IO
de1ennioe the source of tbc ex-
plosion. But unmastabbly, •hen tbe
h• Cuti tank with nearly S00,000
pllolll of volati1e propellant nil>'
tured, 1t 10tt Challenaer i.nto ma.ny
pieces.
(PleaM -SP AC&/ A '7f
C.oast
shoWs
shock,
dismay
Teachers hOITtfied
b~ most would try
for anothe r flight
87 TONY SAAVEDRA.
PHIL SNEIDEllMAJ)I
u4 ROBERT BARK'ER °' ...............
Teachers throughout the Oranat
Coast were homfied this morning by
news that the space shuttle Challenser
exploded and apparently kJUed hisb
school instructor ('hnsta McAuhfte
and SJJt other crew members shortly
after hftoff
"We'rcaJIJUSt homfied.'' ~Id vcn
Lan_d1 , . a th a rd . grade teacher at .
Pomona Elementary School in Costa
Mesa ... , JUSt hope people realize that
ano ther teacher needs to go up. It
would be a shame to stop here.··
Oranae Coast instructors who were
amOnJ the estimated I 1,000 tc.achcrs
applying for the shuttle m1ss1on
echoed the need to continue the
ov1.han fltght program. o\nd most
said they would reappl}
"It's a temble tragedy and It could
have been me." said Bob Schureman.
a 56-"ear-0ld phvs1atl SC1('n~ teacher
at Costa Me\CI H1g.h School
"But I ..-.o uldn't he'i1tate to reapp.
I} ... Schureman said 'Tm an aero-
space nu1 When I didn't get picked. 11
was extreme!) d1sappoin11ng ··
Tekv1s1on 'iets and radios were
turned on 1n school offi ces and
classrooms throughout the Orange
Coast a\ shocked teachers and stu-
dents waited for final word on
Mc ~uhfTe and the other crew mem-
bers
Man) hrgh ~hool classc"I were
absorbed in final exams and did not "
1mmed1ateh hear about the disaster.
around 8:38 a m
( osta "1e<>a High School Pnnc1pal
Frank lnfrusino was waiting unul a
classroom recess at I 0 a.m to break
the ne..-.., O\t'r th" puhhc addreu
S\Stem He declined to allow re-
pone~ 10 be present for the an·
nouncement
"I don't wan1 to bl ow people o ut of
(PJeue eee TEACHERS/ A 7 )
School board asks
bulldlng fee hlke
Bv ROBERT HYNDMAN
OI -Delly,.._. llafl
rhc \.tddld'IJl I.. \ alle' <;Chnol
hoard unanimou\h apr>roH•d a resol·
u1111n "1onda" n1(lhl 1ha1 '4 0uld block
home lOn"ruu1on in th(' school
d1 \tnct unlr<o<o dnrlopcr<o r>a" bu11d-
1ng IN.'' ot up 10 ft\ e llmC'\ thr current
r:ue
The rl'\Olu1111n l j lh tor for\ of up lO s" (Ill() per unll 111 hl'lp thi: d1stnct
build nr"' \I. h1wl\ and permanent
hu1lding'i to arrnmmodatr its grov,,.
1n@. rnrul lmC'nt n \11 1\\IOn VicJO and
'urround1 ng u1mmun1l1t'' in \Outh
Orange < ount\
.\It hough • ,·pen fil fee ha\ not been
set. d1s1 nc1 \upcnntendrnt Pc~t
Hanman said h11mr builders will be
(Pleaee eee BUILDl1'0/ A.2)
Firm seeking
$50million
from Laguna
ly LAUllA MP!Rlt
Ot"" °""" .........
An investment aroup has fUed a
SSO m1lhon claim ..,a.in.st the city '11
Latuna BelCh. charsi .. the ~
interfered wit.ti n bustMll.
Will '•'· ownerof'Tierra Dll 111 Realty tl'I t.asuna ·8-c:I\. ud 1111
m&nlFf. Ima AJn, ftted daedlim an the name of the Maia ._..
lnvcstJMnt Oroup lac. 11 ..._Qlr
Cou~I mtmben. c::::..,.
m1..oncn, DaiP · .....
(Pinn-" ••1-.
l
•
--A BR8BT88ANDYt COURSE •••
... u lldaitect., Lalbley ., ... ; ... lliamlf...,,.... '° ,....
~i.e..::..-:. tlleoa~IM
bat nm aote1 rock
be9da lemia. detoun. ... .... _....... die ..... ...
--IO ~. He'I foad In nllallltins tihllbOU
11 IM nd of a nan, unusually
rocb doe •1 allow hila '° reecb
-..... wt.efe bit ride ......... ..._ ..... milil bed!; ao u openw
ll6lr a 16-milc rue can 1111n lib IM rifDn.°'~':s .ucs. b~~ border~::=
re fence, buih to divide the two
tries. did not llrc1dl to the •••• •"f'be 8blcnce of a ftnce •Iona lhe '6fder eeemed peculiar to him, "but I itto. the waves are too Stroftl for two !Sbntriea to divide people. You could ~that maybe this whole busincsa of 4Mdina countries is not that impon·
ant." be said. -lte will ~n runnin~ nortlaem
·California this year. He s covered
most of 1M beaches in the southern
· of the state. All the runs will
ade at low tide.
admits there will be inaccessible
areas, such as Point Ma100. which
v
........... '-......
Jla LMlaly lau nm moet of Ge .._tlaaa C&Ufonala OOMt
aadputllOIOncoa'•oout. bllt lle8dll laua ~..,..,,. .
will force him to iot on the nearest
hjpway. But hes convinced the
many hours be bas apcnt NM1n, the
local beaches will more than make up
for the ocean aras he'll miu.
Luhley prides himself on his
knowledae of beach terrain. lje ~ms ir he were blindfolded and
dropped off' on a beach in California.
he could name it.
His own Laguna Beach has some of
the most beautiful rock formation•.
Lashley said: But his favorite areas
were LovenholU and Moonatone
Beaches. scarcely known beaches in
northern California.
Thia year he wiJJ beain tak.ina
loneer vacations to make hi.a tre~
from Mexico to Canada. "On my
birthday I usuaUx t.rtat myxlf to a
new place to run, be aaid.
.. It may take 25 yean, it may take;
20. But I tbiak it is imporu.nt to u.y
that you don't hive to 1e1 (lmmedi-~
ate) p.ls, that people can 1e1 Iona·
tmn pis.'' aid l..uhlel·
__DEDLOPERSHOWS TOWERP~S •••
h'OIDAl----------~flch later' in the day dunna a joint wessmenll from business tenanll. ~le any more traffic 1baD Jhe
Qdy lellion with the Costa Mesa Moreover, 15 acrct -about 7S ~f'11lnal propoul. .
ty Council and Plannina Com-percent of the initial phase-would Rou added that ·$<430,000 an
l!sion. be planted with eucalyptus fl'OVCS, wetllDet\U would be ,eneraud &om
•1 .Tbe sprawling complell would be JrlSSY fields. orchards and pr<Sens. A the. main ~1enper plwe for a
8Ui1t over a 10 to IS-year period on J<>Uin& trail w!>uld flank the ~ felJOnal ~improvement Nnd.
ffma bean fields bordered by Harbor lined road runn1na throup the entut . He said the mo!lC)' would mOlt
lfoulevard, Fairview Road, complell,addjnatotbe''rural"flavor hlcely be Uled to widen IM?f1hbound
flower Avenue and the San Diego of the center. offramps from the San DiCIO Freo-
'i· It would be Scaemrom's However, Ross made it clear that ~y to Harbor Boulevard and Fair-
l!JWO,ect in Costa Mesa. those extra features would not be VJeW ROid. It would also be Vied for
The keystone of the sprawling economically possible without the ~theron andofframput the freeway 80sinas comple• is a pyramid-main tower. tn Cotta Mesa.
E SIO.foot 1kyscraper. which .. It's the landmark buil9ina of the Sementtom also plana to spend
be the taJlest buildina in entire site. It's the keystone, .. be II.id. anot&er S2 million to widen SOuth
County. The entire project was fint ap-Cout Drive, which runs throuab the
mDesoite the elltensive landscapinc. proved cooceptUally in May 1984 by project. .
mechild-carecenterandother1pecial the City Council, which chanted the Even with the lDlprovements,
Aitures, council membcn remained ~pert)''• peral plan status from council membcn Dave Wheeler and
c6Doemcd lha\ traffic from tbe total industrial to commerc.ial. Mary HombuckJe -both advocates
n of the tim trlt hucLcaU oflimited -mnained fearful
rlflenections in the area at a suod-for 2.6 million square eet oloffice e comp • wo ev Y t
st.ill. spec:e, two 400-room hotels and tratrac at ara intcnections.
Furthermore, questions remained 80,000 square feet of retail atea. Hombuckie u.id 10 of the lipa.11
.. bow residents would react to a Tbe project land wu divided into wouJd racb the •tale where tiaftic
sqscnper that would be visjble for eiabt blocb, each with a Limit on tt\e blcka up throuab other intenectiona,
miles. square footqe that could be de-even when the Tiabt ii peen.
City planner Rebe Touw uid the v~The maximum buildina .. Tomethatiscalledpidlock."she
tower will not cast a shadow over . · 1 was set at 2S stories. •id. "It's utoundiq the project wu n~rby neiahborhoods, except for ••a trom applied for permi11.ion approved before with the iml)ICt as
days, for a few hoUJ"S, in the dead lut ber to merae the blocks bad u it it."
nter." However, the beige-and-into rec sec1ioDJ, aUowina the Wheeler lddcld. ·'The council
• pnit.e-lined buildina will be developer to consolidate the square memben who approved"that earlier
seen from further away than any footqc from other buildings into the development should be shot ... It's
other structure in the city, she said. slcylcraper -puahina it from the clear the traffic is unacceptable:"
Segcnttom is tryina to obtain a maximum approved heipt to 32 Mayor Norma Henzos reminded
necessary general plan amendment stories. her council coUeques that the traffic
that would allow the company to Onipen also rearranged the pro-pro.jection1 assume that aU other
bUild the hia,h-rise office building ject to move the main tower from the prOJCCll on the drawing boarda for
Rbrth of lhe fretway, just east of nonb end of the 1itecloter to the San north Costa Mesa will be built. ~r Boulevard. Diego Freeway. She also uraed council members to
''-Publk bearings arc scheduled for The new plan would add 102,000 conaider only the flnt phue and not
Feb. 24 before the Plannina Com-:l,=feetofoffioespecctotheinitial the traffic impacll from the entire
f\\ISMion and March 17 before the p but would delete one hotel. It complu, which may not be con-
crit,Y Council. Construction is ten-would also contain 80,000 square feet 1tructed for more than a decade.
l.it1vely set to begin this fall and end in of retail, and I 0,000 square feet apiece Designs for each subsequent phase
1-rly 1989. for the child care center and the must also be approved separately,
Included in the first phase is a 400-restaurant allowing the council to keep a
flbom hotel, a 2, J 5~spacc parking An environmental study showed continuous check on the project. Ross
fjrqc and a restaurant. the change in plans would not added.
~·, l\lso featured would be an art1
jpUery as well as the employee child-
~lfd~~t~~:\~?.~ :g ~~~~~r.0 Arco agrees to pay $315 million fine
l·ift would be the first center in the
tOunty built as pan oh new business
~omplell, acco'rding to Rita Jamieson,
child-care consult.ant for the project.
t"he nonprofit child-care center
Would operate by chargjna moder-
lftcly priced fees as well as obtaining
JI
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Atlantic
Richfield Co, accused of viol.ating
federal price controls, has avced to
pay $31 S million in restitution and
fines.
The settlement calls for Arco to pay
$313 million in restitution and $2
million in civil pcnalt1cs.
Although it agreed to make the
payments, Arco admitted no wrona·
doing.
MURDER TRIAL SLATED TO BEGIN ••• T~Al
nine days later in Kem County.
•,.Jury selection in the unusual
murder tnaJ began today.
'"Jn a pretrial ruhng Monday, Judge
lean Rheinhe1mer said Jurors wall not
be told that Sgt. Deuel was invovled
in a se<:ond but unrelated shooting
incident last year in which he shot a
-tniralary suspect an the jaw.
Rheinhe1mer also said she would
decide later 1f Jurors Wlll be told that
Sileehan and Olgesby allegedly made
,a."dcath pact" before the robbery rn
~ich they agreed never to be "taken
alive."
~'·
According to coun documents,
Sheehan and Oglesby met an state
prison where they were S(f'Vrng terms
for burglary and robbery. Both were
released on parole only weeks before
the shooting.
Deputy District Attorney Rick
Toohey said Sheehan should be
found guilty of murder because he
was acting in a dangerous and
malicious manner that helped
provoke the shQOtout in wh•ch his
partner died.
But Public Defender Lawrence
Buckle y, who as 'resentina
~LAIM AGAINST LAGUNA.~. ·1':emA1
~mbcrs and several Planning De·
.1?.11menl employecs1 accordan& to &r!r Clerk Verna Rollinger.
, :,.Neither Sanger nor Allen would
w.mment on the claim, filed with the ~1fy Jan. 16. Their attorney could not
be reached for comment.
violation of constitutional riahll,
taking property without just com-
pensation. v1olat1on of due procas
ultcrference of business. slander, libel
and misrepresentation.
Sheehan, said biJ client abould never
have been charted with bit patl.DCt'1
death. He said !Mehan probably .t.11
take the stand in hit own defenae.
Deuel is ellpeded to be the key
witness in the trial, which could last
two weeks.
Durina a preliminary bearin&.
Deuel testified that be ordered boili
Sheehan and 9'1esby to kneel oh the
around with their bands on theif bead
after they emeraed from the Tfilnp
for Your Head shop, 41 0 Pacific
Coast HiatJway.
Deuel said OaJesby managed lo
pull out a aun, turn around and fire
before be could react.
"I was struck in the chest," said
Deuel, who said the force of the blut
knocked him into the street.
The officer II.id he aimed at.
OaJeaby and fired until be ran out of
bullell. One of the sholl hit o.Jesby
in the held. killina him instantly.
-'Rollinaer said the claim alleges
~a.a.es occurred at I 76-190 South
tlcific Coast H1&hway. The sate 1s a
i>rmer Aaron Drothers art store,
where construction is now taking
place.
According to pubhshed reports,
Singer said the claim wu filed after
conditional u~ permits were denied
for two business that wanted to lcuc
sites from him
The perm1t5 were denied because
the required number of parkina
spaces were not provided at the
busincue1, Rollinger ~1d.
Deuel aid that u he ran to his
squid car to relo.d, Sheehan ducked
into the 11ft shop and fired at least one
shot in his direction. Deuel said be
reloaded his aun and fired two abots
at Sheehan. who eventually ran ftom
the shop and diu.ppcared.
Sheehan was arrested nine days
i.ter when police traced him 10 a
public phone booth near Lake
Isabella. He is beina held without ball
at Orange County Jail.
b The claim seeks damaae• from city
c;,(j!fic1al1 for breach of aareement.
1 • ~t:S~E llily Pilat
MAIN OF,.CI
3JO W•" &., I• (;;:)tie !HM C.A
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VOL 11,NO.•
• •
D=-•• 0-MtMd
~,.,,. " '°" 00
Ju•tcall 642-8086 11()4 ...... """' ,,.,., by
• )0 0 "' eel Ol«Or• ' 0 "'
lflO """' coP't ... .. ........
What do you hkc about the Deily Pik>t? What ~-.... ..,... " l'Oli dO flOI ·~ ~ don't you hkc'> Call the number above and your _,, Dy 7 • "' C.ell IM!Ott
mes:ft walJ be recorded. tranecnbed and de-tO • "' ""° ~ 'GCl'f W11
bver to the a~propnate ednm . lllt ......
The same 4.hour answenna servKlC may be ctr.••••" used to ru.ord lelten to tbc editm on any topec. . , ........ Cootributon to our Lettcn column mu.st include
their name and telepbont number for verification. MOtl Tells uJ what's on your nund. OrMpCWl!r ---~ ............. ....
..
' ,. •
..o.• u
••• u 0.1
Reiner denies Fiedler claim
case a smokescreen _c __
LOS ANGELES (AP) -District
Attorney Ira Reincr'1 office denied
Rep. Bobbi Fiedlcr'a claim that ber
indictment for allepd.ly violatina a
campaifD law is a smoketereen to
cover h11 handlina of the McMartin
Pre-School molestation cue.
The Republican COq1eUWOman
made the claim Monday u she
opened a braid offensive to discredit
the indjctment aUegjnJ that abe and
top aide Paul Clarke tned to buy off a
rival in California's GOP primary for
U.S. Senate.
After winnina a delay in arrai111·
ment to aive attorneys time to study
arand jwy tranlCript.s. Fiedler, 48,
said outside the counbou1e that
Reiner needed a di1tnct.ion after
droppina five of the seven oriainal
def'endanll from the hiabty publi·
ci.zcd McMartin case. ••r think this aituation is a political
ploy on his part," she said. 0 Th11 was
a way of diveruna attention from
what he had done in McMartin. It was
a convenient vehicle."
Chief Deputy District Attorney Gil
Garcetti, speakina for Reiner, said the
conaresswom.an's case bad been
under invcstiption since November,
Iona before the decision lo di1mi11 the
McMartin charaes.
.. There is no way you can hide from
the McMartin deciaion," Oarcetti
II.id. "The Fiedler case stands on ill
own."
Fiedler and Clarke, 39, arc cbarpd
with oflerina to pay •1-te Sen. Ed
Devis' S 100,000 camP.&ian debt if he
would drop out of the race. Under the
Californja Election Code it is a felony
to offer money or other consideration
to induce a candidate to withdraw
from a campaip. ·
Meanwhile, the Los Anltlea Her-
ald Eumincr. quotina two uniden-
tified sou.rcea. reponed today that
after presentina the caae to the ~
jury, the .district attorney'• office
recommended indictment of Clarke
but not FiedJer.
An anonymous IT8Dd juror quoted
by the Herald said the panel had to
vote aeveral times before dccidinc to
indict Fiedler, but voted onl y once on
Clarice.
At her news conference, Fiedler
also II.id that arand jury member
Richard Ferraro could not have
objectively voted about her 1inoc he
once wu her coUeaaue on the Los
Anaeles Board of Education. Fenvo
would not comment.
Jn reference to Devis, Fiedler said:
..It's very difficult to understand the
desperate nature of an individual who
may not be doina as well u be would
have liked to have done ... and tryina
to tak.e advantage of hurtillf what be
mipt consider to be a stgnificant
opronent."
Davis, 69, and Fiedler are amona
nine Republicans entered in the June
3 primary. to pick the GOP challe~
to Democratic Sen. Alan Cranston.
Davis, in a Sacramento news
conference, said FiedJer and Clarke
"must have known the wronafulneu
of what they were attempting to do ..
In a separate development Mon-
day. the c-0~woman·s campailJI
fund.raiser in Wuhington, D.C.,
Brad O'Leary, said Clarke had called
him in November "to sec what could
be done to help Divis Clltinauish biJ
debt."
"I told Paul that in a federal race,
unlike in a city or state race, damn
little could be done," O'Wt'y told lhe
Los Angeles Times. Under federal
law, the Fiedler campaign committee
could donate no more than S 1,000 to
Davia' primary cam~ign, the same
limit placed on individual donations.
BUILDING FEE BOOST FOR SCHOOLS •..
From Al
required to nqotiete plans io fund
construction of school facilities in
step wilh the additional 1tudenll their
developmc:nta would ,enerate.
Without the IChool district'• OK,
buildina plans could be held up when
developen seek final approval from Ora.ate County planners, Hartman
said.
Local developers are critkizina the
plan and are questionina the !IChool
district's ri&bt to levy such fees.
Philip . Bettencourt, ~prnentina
the Buildina Industry Association of
Orange County (BIA). said de-
velopen are beina unfairly singled
out for school funds.
STORE HOURS:
'
"We're likely to get stuck with the
biU to devel~ the entire 1ehool
district'• f'aciliues," Bettencourt u.id
this momina. '"Developers have been
cauaht in the mHSd1e. We're seen u an euywaei. ..
Bettencourt II.id the BIA will try to
set lbe Oranec County Board of
Supcrvison to review the 1ebool
boerd's action and seek input from
developers.
For the put five yean, the Siddle·
beck Valley Unified School [);strict
has been requiri04 buildina fees of S 1,200 per new un1t. The funds help
pay for ponable buildinp and trailen
commonly used on the acbool cam-
puses.
But Hartman said permanent fa.
cilities arc now n~ded.
"After five ycan of using ponablcs.
I don't think you can still caJI them
temporary." Hartman said Monday.
"We need permanent faci lities."
Bettencourt, however, said use of
ponable buildings and trailen may
now be an unfortunate fact oflife for
California school distncts.
"Given the reality of Proposition
13, like it or not, all school districu
wil,I ~ faced with usin& ponable
buildings on some of their schools ••
he sa id . '
PER!i Y
M-f 10-8 . D
•
Dhitii
K 1l9our f-ren"h
& 511.nhury
Storewide
Clearance
20%-70% off
Entire Stock
Now In Progress
3321 E. Coast Hwy .
Corona del Mar
714-675-2011
SAT 9:30-6 0 SUN 12-S
'
IDtettacW lo~e
talk• at UC lrrine
Dr. Cbriltint HalJ. a countetina peycholOlist
IDd diteetor of 1tudent development for the UC
Irvine Collete of Medicine, wtu ~nt talkJ on
tnlm'leial dallna, nwrilee and children Wednet-
day ~nd Feb. '· The lectures are fin and open to the pubhc.
The first, on datina and ma.ma,e. wilJ be held
from noon to 2 p.m. in the Crott-Cultutal Center.
wbilc the ICCOnd, focuslna on children, i1 tcheduled
from $ to 6:30 p.m. in the Women'• Resou.ru
Center. Call 856-121' for additional information.
I Art lectmw fJJ Maa
The LAcuna Bolch Art Museum will sponsor
two lectures in its "Art ~ndwiched In" pros;ram at
South Coast Plaza in CO.ta Meta Wcdneday and
Feb. 2.
Artists Mark Stock and Michael McMillen will
conduct the ~ma, which· will include a tour of
the new pllery. Call 494-6S31 for details. ,
DnJ6 abue talk bi HB
Tim Chipman, proaram director of the adoles-
cent chemical dependency unit of Pacific Hospital.
will speak on youna people and druas Wednesday at
Editon Hi&h School, 21400 Magnolia St .. Hunt-
inaton Beach.
The proaram is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in the
faculty dinina room. The public is invited.
Funds sought to ~lice car..:pool la·ne
More patrol officers,
unprecedented blue
lane striping plan ned
ly LISA MAHONEY ... ..., ........
Oranae County will look to the 111te
Depertment ofTrana~rtation for a quick
infusion of funds to enforce car-pool lane
rules on the Costa Meta Freeway.
Hopma to shore up public confidence in
the uperiment.a1 car-pool lanes in the face
of orpniud o pposition, transportation
officials Monday aareed to t.tte steps to
reduce rampant misuse through new lane
t.\lntrols and -1f possible -more
Hiabway Patrol officers.
Caltrans Distnct Director Don Watson •arced to a.sk qis suoerio~ for mo ney to
pe_yovenlme to Cab(omia Hilb way Patrol
oftken to tbe 12 miles of car.,,ool lanet
can be brl1iet policed.
Tboalh he m8de no ~-Wa&IOll ~trim bounty oftiNb that a lbow of
force ia necnaary to curb violatiool and
improve tbe project•a ~btic. i"'IF:~J
think the toluuon to the vaolauon ra~ 11
betlef CHP enforcement. .. he said dunna
an ~ County TruspotUtion Com~
miuee mectina. •
... think we need to a-=t the mffllle out"
that cat·pool lane ruin will be enforced.
WatlOR Mid.
The dilttkt dimcior alJo announced a
plan to restripe the dividi• line between
tbe car-pool lanes and Fneral traffic lanes
an uo~nted blue color and to i . .nStall
nine·1nch hiah_pylona &loot tbe atnpe to
diaoouraae traffic ftom Ct'OlllOI it except at
established entry ind exit points. .
Data collected by Caltrans monators
show that between lO and 40 percent of
motorists do not use the car-pool lanes
co~ly. And up to 11 percent of drivers
don't be&ona in w 1anet 11 all
Moton1u nta and mt &he lana at MU, CIOiii~ doubk yellow lieet and ilnorint ettabUthe.d nuy and qras pol.nu. SotM
use the lanes to PA• ot.he:r t.ratnc.
Dependina on the time of day from 2.3
to I 1.1 percent of can uliQf the lanes may
have only one penon iOlide -anot.btt
violation of lane rules. Tbo~ transportation otr~1~11t·
isfied wtth statit~ct that show more~
are u11n1 the lanes now than if they were
opened to all traffic, public ~nee o(
them bas been a stick.ins poinJ.
"I'm not sure we're quite \here yet in
terms of public acceptan~:· satd Ora•
Mayor Jim Beam Monday. Beam. c:ha1r· man of the Route S5 Advi10ry Committee
that 11 overteeina the car-pool lane
expcnment, aske.d Watton to search out
enforcement funds.
"T o date, it appears that the undcrlyina
cause of public concern on this project
.stems from percept1ons rcprdina aafety
11n'1 ,.nfnrrement • Be8m WPOte in a tener
Agency wants gas tax reserved for roads
health, education' and welfare programs: M.,or WI revenues such as saJa tu.
i.ncome WI and bank and corporation Overe.ten..coaveae
Overeaters Anonymous will hold a public
information niaht at Murdy OPark Community
Center in Huntinaton Beach Wednesday at 7:30
p.m.
But consu ltant warns tra n sporta tion aneT
that proposa~ wtH en-eou nter s tiffappostt4o
"When you levy a tu which is for a
specific purp<>5e ou sh uld use tl for that
purpose," he 111 . ---
State transponation funds come from a
tax on fuel. Bcc:luse 1t is based on the
amount purchased, and not its value. the
motor vehicle fuel tax does not nse and fall
with inflatio n as sales tu does.
ta.xU pew wi•b the ooom y while .a., __ ...._.
source for transportatJoo -f'Uii41 lallDd.
Open to all those interested in the problem of
overcatini, the evenina will feature a film and talks
by OA members. Call SS4-I 440 for further details.
By LISA MAHONEY
Of ... o.lr ........
The Orange County Transpon.ation
Commission will bcgrn a cautjous sc.arch
for allies to support a plan to siphon
automotive sales taus from the state's
aeneral fund into transportation coffers.
move would surely meet with sharp
opJ)OSition from qencies that depend on
those funds and miaht even spark the ire of
other transportation interests who are
worltina toward a gas tax increase for nut
year.
In addition, the state Department of
Finance promises to be a formidable
opponent to any such plan. The depart-
ment has ~istorica~ly balked at channel~ng
revenues into spec1fic program categones.
Bauer said.
That lim1t.auon on transportation in·
come has made at difficult to keep ~
with the demand for road tmprovcmeots,
the commission contends.
Bauer said.
If the commission is to ao af\cr some
state aalcs tu, Bauer su~ it tu'ld a
portion of automotive 1 me. He e.d-
mated S 15.S billion wo uJ be available,
from the sale of new and ulCd automobilea.
pa and diesel fuel and auto putt over lbe
next five years. lo contrasti tta.nsponatioe
inteTCSts might receive SS.6 billion ia
motor vehicle fuel taxes_ Bauer 11id. CPR coane la Clemente
San Clemente General Hospital will hold a
cardiopulmonary resuscitatio course Wed nesday
from 6 to 10 p.m. in the hospital classroom.
The fee is SS and participants receive a
heartsaver cenjficale. Call 661-4405 to register in
the program.
Am Center talk •lated
The Huntinaton Beach Chamber of Com -
merce's general membership luncheon Wednesday
wiU-fat~presentation by-Katherine Van Bcuscrr
on the construction and future of the Orange County
Performing Arts Center.
Warned they would be treading on
dangerous ground, commissioners agreed
Monday to sound out other transportation agcncl~s rather than leap head first into
what is sure to be a heated battle for
previously committed fu nds.
A consultant, hired to evaluate com-
missio n Chairman James Roosevelt's
proposal to amend the state Constitution
to permit gasoline sales taxes to be used for
transportation, told commissioners Mon-
day that caRturina aeneral fund dollars
would resul in more money -ror road
improvement projects.
Strong opposition can be expected from
schools. local aovemmcnts and people on
the receivina end of health and welfare
programs, Bauer said. They stand to lo5c 1f
transportation inte~ts start dipping into
the Jtneral fund without an accompanying
tax increase. he said.
Bauer presented statistics Monday to
show how the motor vehicle fuel taJ. has
not kept up with hi&)lway use nor
construction costs in the past I 0 years.
Between 1975 and 1981. fuel revenues
increased 8.8 percent, accord1n1 to Bauer's
fiaurcs. They rose 44 percent between t 981
and 1983 af\er a tax increase and o ther
adjustments.
At the same time. the n1,.1mber of veh1cle
miles traveled on state hi~ways increased
I 07 .e_ercent while the ht&)tway construe·
uon cost index rose I f2 percent from 197 5
to 1984. Dunng those same years. the
Consumer Pncc Index went up 93 percent.
Commission staff will circulate a draft
constitutioiul amendment amona otbet
transportation plannina bodies to tee if
there miabt be support for reservin& 10me
sales tax funds for transportation.
The commission will not support io.-
Cl'Cased transportation ~es bccaute of the
rcsoundina defeat of Proposition A io
1984. The measure, which woukS have
increased sales taxes by I pen:ent with the
new revenue ioina to.ward co11D.1y~
portatJon projects, was rejecud by~
Count)' voters by a more than l ·t<>-1
ma.ri m. The program is scheduled for 11 :4S a.m . at the
SeacliffCountry O ub, 6SOI Palm Ave. The cost 1s
SI 0 and reservations may be obtained by calling the
chamber office at S36-8888.
But Arthur Bauer warned that such a
Roosevelt, eldest son of former Presi-
dent Franklin D. ROOKVC~beticvenha
sales tax on p soline and diesel fuel ought
to finance road improvements instead of
aoing into the state's general fund for
A•trolo67 talk at VCI.;>
Astrologer Joyce Jillson will make predictions
for audience members Wedneday at noon in the
Heritaac Room of UC Irvine's University Center.
Admission is free.
Jillson will speak on "Soothsaying; A Cure for
1986." Call the student activities office at 856-5181
for more information.
An Invitation:
Attention Of'ganlzatlon preeldenta and eec-
r .. arlee: We want to help m9ke yoor upcoming
ewnta. meeting•. Mmlnara and fundralMr• aue-
~I. Send bftef announoementa Including time,
plec., c:oat (If any) and • pnone numb« for
additional Information to: Bulletln Board. Dally
Piiot, P.O. Box 1560. Coata Meaa. 92626
Repor11 of yow ck.lb 0< 0<ganlzatlon'1 actlvlUea
-Ilk• community Mfvlce project• °' etecuon of
otflc.erl -should be directed to the Community
News EdltQC at the IM'9 ad<lr .... Non-<eturnable
blade and whit• photogr~ are weioome.
Tuaday.Jan.28
• 6:30 p.m .. l"lae City Coucll. C ity Council
Chambers, 17200 Jamboree Blvd.
• 7:30 p.m., Bntla1toa Beac• UDAOB HA111
Sclliool District, I 02S I Yorlctown Ave.
• 7:30 p.m., Lapu Bead Boe1t.1 Committee
. Community Center. 384 l...eaion St. ...
• 7:30 p.m., Lapu 8eacll UDJfled ScMol
Dt1trict. SSO Blumont St.
Te.ting the water
Legislation wquld
cut class size, boost
teacher standards
ay dte Ataodate4 Preas
SACRAMENTO -A b1part1san group
of lawmakers Mo nday proposed an eight-
year program to upgrade teacher standards
and cut class sizes in California. which has
the most crowded classrooms 1n the
nation.
The two-bill package: introduced by state
Sens. Gary Hart. D-Santa Barbara. and
Manan Bergeson. R-Newpon Beach. in-
corporate r«ommenda11ons from an 18-
monlh study by the Cahfom1a Com-
mission on the Teaching Profession.
"California has the worst .. clan s12es in
the nation. This state 1s giving new
meanin' to the phra$C 'overcrowded
schools. " Han. Senate Education Com-
mittee chairman. told reporter\ at a
Capitol news conference.
Han said his SB 1604 would appropnate
S60 m1lhon fo r the stan of the eight-year
plan in fiscal year 1987-88. The mone)'
would be used to m ake high school cla~sc"
in math, English. sc1enceand social science
no laraer than 20 students.
The national a verage 1s 18 students per
teacher in those classes. while in Cahfom1a
there arc typically more than 30 pupils per
teacher in such classes. he: said
to three years. placC the burden of provina
competency on the: teacher rather the
school. establish peer revteW of t.eachina
and create a touaher evaluation syslem for
tenured teachen.
It al10 would require reports to parcnu
every two years on classes sizes. teachers.
text books. co unschn& services. and
teachers' assessments of the quaJJty of
school leadership
Tht' measure also would bolster the
ongoing mt'ntor teacher program, an which
expenenced teachers arc selected to advise
new teachers. Han 1s proposing that 10
percent of teachers. rather the curTCnt 5
percent, be designated u mentors.
Bergeson. un ve1hng her SB 1605. wd
the stat<' must makt' sure the 8S.OOO new
~chers needed 1 n the ncx t decade are fully
qualified
"One poorly trained teacher means a
substandard education for too many
children every year for the lifetune of that
teacher .. she said
SB t 605 would abolish the Commission
on r ca her Credenuahng and rep~ 1t
with a new tou&hcr C.alifomia Teacher
. tandards Board. which would ovenec the
profession much as vanous boe.rda
monitor lawyers and doctors. \Vednaday,Jan.29
• 7 p.m., Lapu Beacll PWW.1 CommA11toa.
Council Chambers, SOS Forest Ave.
y~ and old alike took adftD-Cbrtatopher Miller and arand-
taae Of continued warm weatber mother Grace Hallowell, who teat
at OraJlee Cout beachee Mon-the water at Corona del Mar State ll••••••••••••••r" day, lncludtna 10-month -old Beac b .
For the past two years. s1m1Lar class
reduction measures received bipartisan
support in the Lcgjslaturt but were vetoed
by Gov. George OcukmcJ1an
Hart's SB 1604 also would increa~ the
probational') penod for tc:acht'r'I from two
Teachers would receive a prelimmary
crt'denual after five years of collece and a
permanent credential after pa.ssma an
examinauon and a one-year rn1dency
under closr supcrv1s1on at a school
Pou cE Lo e
Irvine men plead innocent
in illegal computer exports
By tile A1110Clated PrHI
LOS ANGELES -Two 0ranac
County men pteaded innocent Mon-
day to federal charaes that they
11l~lly exported hiah·ttth computer
equipment to China throu&h Hong
Kona.
Louis Luk, 29, and Jonas uuna.
32, both of Irvine, were ordc~ bad
for trial Marth 18 on a total of 23 ....... ....,.
A Bluebird Canyon Drive resident
reoor1ed I theft Mooday momina or S100 from hia home. Later tbat momina. a I 7·~ld male was umted on su'S"don of comnriu ina I the theft. ••• A mJnor IU'UCtUre fire WU elU·
i-1tbed prior '° tbe arrival or
flftftPWI Monday afternoon on
Bounty Way. • • • A burJlary attempt Wit rePOf1Cid MondlJ mcni111 at t..une -Balch
Kilb SC:bool on Part Avenue. No
I entry Wit mede. ..; .. A 11 )~ male was ll1'elKd ~ MOndaY on wapicioq of drivina
u r tM Ullhlnce of alcobol. Tbt
)'OU1b. .......... WU witbbetd, WU ~· DiamondScnet and SoudJ COMIH ...... y. He wu turned over
toltil .... L • • •
Pola arrated bar motomu on
sulPidon of ctrhint undcf the in·
counts. including allegations they
falsely stated the carao·s destination
to be Hona Kona.
Assistant U.S. AttOf'!'~Y Wilham
Fahey said tome $200.000 worth of
co~puterequipment actually made 1t
to China st.an1n1 in 1983 through a
Hona Kona couple. James Ng and
Lilly Wan. who have been named in
an arrest wamnt.
Fahey 11id China is on a U.S.
fluence or alcohol. bonald Bradley
McReU, 23'-~ stopped at 2:0.S a.m. Su_nday on victoria-Orive and South
Cout Hiahway. Matthew Xavier
Chudzinskl, 2S. was mated at 8:4.S
p.m. S.turdly on Creu and Olen· neytt atreett. Kelly_ Anne Shelden, 20.
waa atoODed It 2:40 a.m . S.tu~o:_n DiamoDa Street and Sollth t
Hitbway. David Oeorwe Marceau, 21,wu~at l:SOLm.S.turdly
on Ocan A venut.
government list of countnt'\ tor
which exporters must o hta1n 'ifX'l llll
federal approval.
Leung. who 1s free on S50.000 h:til
denied all S(vcn counts agarnst him
Lu~ ... who remained 1n custod). fan·'
16 counts. Lcuna's attorney. Wilham
Wong. declined comment. ~)1 ng h~
was not yet fam iliar with th<' ca~
Monday.
A resident in the 2600 block of
EnaJand reported that his $700 tb1cy-
clc was stolen from the corner of
Bach Boulevard and Yorktown Av-
enue Monday.
• • •
Tools valued at SSO were reponed
stolen from an unlocked tool chC$t in
the prqe of '.home in the 1900 block
of Alsuna Monday.
••• A $700 TV Kl was reponedly
B .t.~ 8 • stolen from 1 Mttnolia trcet home
•---110 by a thief who entered thro"'lh a front Athiefwhounubedarearwi.ndow bedroom window Monday.
to pin mcry '° 1 bomc on f1orida • • • S~ reponedly .. SI in c:aah and Two eolot TV KU. worth S .
S l S in food eutl ~Y-were reponed atolen from the Pnn-
A resident in &be 16.JOO block of cc. Hotel. 18400 Beach Blvd., over
Oenary reported U..1 bet car stereo the weekend. • • • Mia eo":'o11t~i-:-==-~ ":! Thtevn reponc4ly bn>te into the r--:-:"' Flett Feet ahoe lt<>R O¥er the wrct-1111 crinunal l&ldce bualdi111 ~ md and stoic an nti"lflled SS.000 in
Ooldn W~ SU. MODdly. TbC mttehan4111ef'romthe l8'7lM1in
loll ... atUna':-t. •i S6S. • e11.abUlhment.
I
Fountain Valley
A 22-ycar-old Santa Ana sales-
woman reported that her wallet
containing $35 in ca,h was stolen
from the desk drawer of her I 0661
Elhs Ave. office over the weekend. • • • A S350 car stereo was reported
stolen from a blue 1975 Mercury
Comet parked tn front of the victim's
business at I 7090 Magnolia St. Sun-
day • • • A S 178 lawn mower was reponed
stolt'n Monday from the prqe of a
home m the I 0500 block of
Margan ta. • • • Thieves rcponedly took $260 tn
cash. $12.800 in Jewelry. S2. I 70 m
computtr equipment. S IOS 1n
cloth1na and S3 IS in m 11ttllaneous
items from a Euclid Avenue home
unda)'
llTIDe
A skateboard valued at between
SSO and $200 was reported stolen
from in front of a home alona Ratn
tar Monday • • • A bicycle valued at between SSO
and S200 wu reponed stolet\ from a
shopp.na ~• at 4960 Irvine Blvd.
Monday.
Newport lleMla
Four S 15 atop watcbn and fCNr
U SO noor mats were reponed atolcn
from Erwan School. 20000ifft>nve.
o"er the wcekrnd. • • • A pair of SI 00 car nereo speatm
were reponed Polen f'tom a sreen
1971 Oltau.n '90 ouMd an the 400
block of f\lllmon Sunday n-.ht • • • S l ,OSO watch and r.o Sll ..UCU
wm reooned 1tolm "-' a home in
..
tht' 700 block ot Harbor l<;land On't'
Sunda) night • • • 4. SSO purse containing a SS walkt
and S80 in cash was reported stolen
from a car parked along &aeon Ba'
unda)
CoetaMeu
". th1tf reponcdl) stole doth1ng.
ba&&age. and a hair dryer. worth S664.
from the room of the: Cost.a Mesa Inn
at 320.5 Harbor Blvd unda~ • • • A TV set, cutlery and 'ilh c~are
were rtported stolt'n from a home
inthe 300 block of 4-lta sometimr
since ._..cdne~a' Poll~ reports said
the th1cfk1cked open the door to pt•
cntn The loss was t'Stlmated at S330. •••
". SIOO ca.ming case COT.Eta.I S 'i in beaut) supplies wu
stolen from a ~th cr 1985 o yoca
< t'hta parked in front ofa home 1n Wit
~ '00 hlock of Elden over the: weet-
<'nd • • • fntC'nng through an open bedrooe
\lo 10do~. a thief r.nsacked a ho4M ta
the '200 block of Turlock On~ ...
,iolt a camera rlinoculan.. a vMllio
cas~tte recorder and a stCTW, val..S
at S3.69S, last I ue'Jda
Woman killed in crash
BJ STEVE MAllBLE °' ... ...,,... __
The bod) of a 2 l-yc:ar-old San Juan
Cap1Stnoo wo man lay next to het
~cd va n alona th~ San Oteao
Fruway for mort than 24 houn
befort finally b(lf\g found Monda)'
Gail Mo1cll Brown wu k.1lkd earl
unday momma when ber Dodie van
skidded off the freeway near A very
Partcway and landed 1n a thick clump
of e\M:IJyptu1 whert 1t went un-
detected for more than a day. KOOrd-
11\I to C•hfomia Hifh•-.y Patrol
apotnman Ken O.aly,
"It •-as compk:tc:ly htddcn from the
frttway;· '81d 0.tl) "'It's; ttfc onl
p&ICle &Jona that pan of the frceqy
~re t~ are trttS."
Bro.n was retumtnt eaf1y ;:>unday
fi'om Fwlenon ~ w bad been
bcf f\& a fnmd wot'\i"f ll I pu.11
• 11141 Dail)'. He •Mt lbc called
fatha be ort nVl• but noer
-
j
Controversial religio~s
chieftain Bubb rd d~ad
.t LOS ANOEL.ES (AP) -L. Ron
n.abblrd, the rcchasi ve ICieDce flction
wriier wbo awted his~ reliaion, left "tensofmillionsof doUan" to the c;x>0trov~raiaJ Cburcb of ScientolotY
he founded th~ decades -.o. chureb
officials aaJd.
Hubblrd, 74, djed of a 1troke last
week on the rural Ceottal Califomja ranch where he iaolated himself with
two compeniona and a doctoT.
Ctturch officials announced hia death
Monday, a day after hia uhes re-
ponedJy were scattered at tea.
He lef\ the church'• Oilman Hot
Spriqs compound in Rivenjde
County, about. SO miles east of Los
Anaeles in 1980 and bad not been seen publicly since.
"L. Ron Hubbard,aftercompletina
bis life's work to his full satiafaction.
depaned his body on Friday, Jan. 24,
1986," said the Rev. Heber Jentzsch,
"president of the Church of Scien-
tok>IY International.
Hubbard in his will, lef\ "tens of
millions or dollars" to the religion.
said Earle Cooley, the church's chief
counsel.
"lt'a impossible to put ~ut an
usewnent on the value of the eatate
because there are ao many propertiea
involved," Cooley aaid.
A complete inventory of the eatate
will be conducted by Norman F.
Starkey{ executor and a lonatime
Sciento oai•t. Cooley said. Nearly · 4,000 Scientoloaists
pthered in Hollywood Monday niaht
to h"r the announcement of Hub-
bard's death.
• "We wanted to tell the Scien-
toloaists before we told anyone else,"
Jentzsch said ... It was his wish."
Aocordin& to the calendar Hubbard
was 74, but he once told his followers
he was 74 trillion years old from a
number of incarnations.
With him at the time of bis death
were Scientologists Pat and Anne
Broeker and bis personal physician,
Dr. Gene Jenk, Jentzsch said. The
ranch where he died was ID the
community of Creston, about JP
miles north of San Luis Obispci,
Cooley said. Local residents were not
aw~ of Hubblrd's presence. Cooley
aald.
Church officials Mid they had no
knowledac of bis wbereaboull, but they bridled at sugestions be beQme
a recluee.
"He was not secluded in terms of
wbat you would thi.nk oflike Howard
Huabes," said the Rev. Ken Hoden,
president of the i.<>1 Anaeles chapter
of the church. "He was out every day
on a sp1cious ranch."
To his followen, he was a benefac-
tor and teacher whose picture araced
the the rooms of the 600 churches he
spread around the world.
To his critics, he wu a false prophet
who formed a cult-like following
based on greed and went into
seclu1ion to esc.a'pc mounting law-
suits. In recent years, he took no
active role in the church, church
officials said.
"While completing his research
into the spirit of man, he-w~s also
involved in writinJ. composing
music and pursuing his life-long love
'World;-Sprtn-gsteen grab
~onors in Music A wards
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The rendition of the song. life as it 1s, it's also supposed to show
American Music Awards honored Michael Jackson, Lionel Richie, life as it should be," Belafonte said
"We Arc the World" and pop music's Harry Belafonte, Kim Carnes, Stevie during the J 3th annual awards show
Jmt of charity as "Born in the USA" Wonder and others who created the at the Shrine Audj.tprium.
rocker Bruce Springsteen took three song Jan. 28, 1985, sang the finale The show, broldcast by ABC and
trophies and nine artists or groups along with Miss Ross and EJizabeth produced by Dick Clark Productions.
won two honors apiece. Taylor. honored nominees in 27 categories of
The three-hour, nationally tele-Hundreds of people in the celebrity pop-rock, country and soul-rhythm-
viscd awards show Monday ended audience stood and clapped in unison and-blues.
with host Diana Ross asking as manr, with the song that has raised $44 Springsteen won favorite male
of the 45 original "We Arc the Wortd ' million to feed the hungry in the vocalist, album and male video artist
performers as were ercscnt to Join her United States and Africa. in the pop-rock category for music
Oil stage for a lint anmvenary .. An is not onJy supposed to show and videos from his 0 Born in the ----'---------_...:. ______ _:__..:...:._ ____ USA" albu~ Tlle awards capl)Cdllis
year-long success with a world tour ""1 .. that helped boost the 18-month-old I" ..... V 4. LP's sales to nearly 12 million
ti.. V .~-domestically. 4.~T "-(") Country s10ger Willie Nelson won
... ~-~~ two awards as a,. solo artist and I" .... ~.. another two as a "'11ember of the V country supergroup, Highwayman
See Your New Garage Door
which 10cludes Nelson, Kris Kristof-
ferson , Waylon Jennings and Johnny
Cash.
On Display Now! Also winning two awards each were
sexy-voiced newcomer Whitney
of photography," Jentzsch said.
"Mr. Hubbard has befriended and
contributed to people of all per-
suasions and professions and has
himself lived a life of stirring adven-
ture and stellar' accomplishment un-
eq,ualed in the world today," Jentzsch said.
Hubbard and his third and surviv-
ing wife, Mary Sue Hubbard. founded
the church in 1954.
State budget said
'$238 million over
limit on spending
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
Lesialature's non-penisan fiscal
anaJyst says Gov. Georae De~kmeJ~n's proposcd 1986-87.budftt.is $238 million over the spend1n1 hmtt.
But the aovernor's finance director
disputes the analyst's figures. .
The Republican governor. 1~
proposina his budget Jan. 10, sa~~ 1t was $JOO million under the ce1hng
imposed by Propositi9n 4, a Paul
Gann initiative to limit government
that the voters adopted in 1979.
But Monday, Lc&islati ve Analyst
William Hamm told the Senate
Budget and Fiscal Review Commit·
tee that tbe ap_propiations call~d .for
by Deukme11an's $36.7 b1lhon proposal for fiscal 1986-87 "actually
exceed the state's constitutional ap-
propriations limit by $238 million."
Hamm said his staff "idenuficd
several significant errors in the calcu-
lataons" by Deultmejian's Depart·
mcnt of Finance. But Oeukmejiao's finanoedirector,
Jesse Huff. told reporters he believes Hamm's"numbcrsareinem>r .... We
are not above the Gann limit."
After Hamm made hia statement
Los Angeles Mayor Tom ~~Jey said
in an ()Tang~ Countr, pohttcal speech
that Dcukmejian 'may ha~c de-
liberately attempted to d«a1ve ~e
Legislature and the people reprdana
the state's fiscaJ position."
Bradley, a Democrat seek.in& Deu-
kmejian's scat in November, alleaed
that DeulcmeJian has raised taxes and fees by more than $2 bill~on "in his _·
past few budgets .... Now 1t turns out
that the governor's latest budget is
based on sleight of hand."
Under Proposition 4, government
spending is allowed to grow each year
only to compensate for in flat ion and
population increases.
bong-Beach-
fumes over
radioactivity
LONG BEACH (AP) -The U.S.
government is thr~tening to begin
shipping radioactive fuel rods
through this port over the objections
of local officials.
"The co mmerce clause of the
United States Constitution guaran-
tees that materials transported in
interstate commerce C8Jl travel un-
impeded," a letter from the Depart-
ment of Energy to Long Beach Mayor
Ernie Kell states. •
~Al~ue!;-h•·,,,__.
authority to pre-empt state or local
regulations that arc found inconsis-
tent with federal laws such as the
Hazardous Materials Act, under
which the shipments are to be made .
The letter, from Adm. S.R. Foley,
an Energy Department assistant sec-
retary for defense programs. was
hand-delivered Friday,~ opposition to the proposed shipments mounted.
Houston, hard-rock..ing Huey Lewis
and the News, soul queen Aretha
Franklin, country singer Crystal
Gayle, veteran country group Ala-
bama, funk group Kool and the Gang,
and Wonder.
Harry Belafonte, Ken K.racen with •peclal award•.
The rods, from a reactor in an
Asian country, will be transported in
lead-lined steel casks. They arc to be
trucked to the Energy Deparunent's
Savannah Ri ver plant in South
Carolina for reprocessing. "DEALERS SPECIAL" STANLEY
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7·9 a.m. -At-Gate"Sales
9·11 a.m. -Future Sales
For Additional Information, Call
( 714) 893-2389
Goldenwest/Ed.iqer •Huntington Beach, CA •
,.
,
Special awards of apt>reciation
were gi ven to Belafonte, lnsh rocker
Bob Geldof and Nelson, who or-
ganized USA for Africa, Live Aid-
Band Aid and Farm Aid. respectively.
Jackson. QUID£¥ Jones, promoter
Ken Ktaaen and R 1chie each received
a special award for their role in
creating "We Are the World."
0
Geldof. speaking by satellite from
Voyager heads outward to Neptune
London, said he has been gett10g a lot
of awards over the past year.
"I'm very proud of them, but I'm
ambivaJent about them, because I got
this because people were dying and
because we did somethang for them,"
he said.
Kell, who had asked the depan-
ment for a report on the environmen-
tal effects of the shipments, sajd
Monday that he would ask city
attorneys to study how to respond to
the letter.
Govemorcrltlclzed on lotteryestlmates
PASADENA (AP) -Loaded with The probe also discovered strange S'y tbe Auodated Press
Voya&er 2's bewildering discoveries nows in valleys on the moon Ariel SACRAMENTO -Gov. George DeukmeJ1an has been accused of
from Uranus, scientists packed for and a mysteriously inactive lunar understating the schools' expected lottery reve nues in budget documents. But
home today as the hardy spacecraft geology on Umbriel, which is sur-a Deultmejian spo kesman says the 34 percent cut oflottery revenue that goes to
glanced back at the icy planet and rounded by moons with terrain that public education is channeled automatically through the state controller's
cruised toward a 1989 encounterwith reveal~ internal shifting. office to the schools. and none would be withheld. Deukmejian's finance
Neptune. director, Jesse Huff. testified Monday to the Senate Budget and Fiscal Review
Some of the latest findings included Tired after a busy week exJlJoring a Committee that the money is not in the governor's budget anyway. and that the
three-foot chunks in the outermost of planet 1.8 billion miles from Earth, estimates of revenue came from lottery officials.
~~d~'d~;tn~n':t: ~~;::~i~ge ~~r;,u~: ~e~ra~:~~ ~~:ff~i~~~/ c~~~11u~~~~ Baseball chlet won't run tor Senate
t~nt~ black rings; and_ surprisingly -called "the best of instant science" LOS ANGELES -Former Los Angeles 01,mpics chief Peter Ueberroth
similar stratosphere temperatures by Dick Lacser. Voyager project says his mind's made up: he ha s no intention o running for the U.S. Senate.
350 degrees below zero at the planet's manager at Jet Propulsion Labora-'.'No, ~bsolutely no," said Ueberroth, now commissioner of baseball, in an
llEW ZULlllD KIWI JOUR
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1 he's expressed in recent months as rumors swirled that he might be California
Republicans' best candidate against Democratic incumf>ent Sen. Alan
Cranston. But he added, "I have not shut the door on talking to people who
want to explore issues and/or the discussion of political office."
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Controlled bacteria tatlng po11tponed
SALINAS.-A ~mpany that wan.ts to spray a strawberry field in the first
outdoor ex penment 1nvolv1ng genetically altered bacteria has offered to
postpone the test and m~ve it to another location. "I don't blame you for being
concerned," Doug SarOJak of Advanced Genetic Scienc.es of Oakland told the
M<;mterey County Board of Supervisors Monday. The supervisors moved q~uckly to esta~hs~ .county control over the release of any "expenmental biological matenal' into the atmosphere.
Useless fire sprinklers found ln Monterey
~ONTEREY -More useless fire sprinkJeT systems. including one at a ho~p1tal, have been uncovered durin& investigations that started when
SJ?nnkler h,c:"d~ were found ,glued. to the ceiling of a school chapel. "It's a m~tmare, said Mon~ercy F1reCh1ef Anthony Fink. Fink said 26 inoperative spnn~ler heads were d1scove~d on M~nday ~ver an entryway at Community
Hospital of the Monterey Pen10sula. Fink said a two-inch feeder pipe leading
to the 26 heads had been .. disconnected and plugged." "We are working on
some other sites, too," Fink said. "But we aren't free to talk about them as et."
~ . .
Boulng officials
notifying cities
abO grant cuts
W ASHINQTON (AP federal bouaiaa officials are noti ·n cities
and towu 0-.t the Reapn minis-
tration bu decided not to SpeJld S200 million ln wben development .,anll ~bad approved for J 986.
Uwin DUe,, -~kcsm&n for the
Wbite House Office of Manqement
and ~t. aaid Mo nday that such
euu are pan of a whole s-ckaae of
dtferraJs and recisions that will go to
Coqress with the budset" next
Tuesday.
In letten sent Monday, Alfred C.
Moran, the Department of Housing
and Urban Development's assistant
!leCf'eW)' for community planning
and development, told local HUD
officials, "your staff should immedi-
ately return any new proposals re-
ceived durilf January for the March
1986 small-cities round" of grants.
Moran said the order was given in
response to directions from OMB
defcrrina the spending of money
already appropriated by Congrcu.
\:htless overturned by eo~ess.
the deferrals can stop the awarding of
the popular Urban Development
Action Grants until the end of the
fiscal year on Sept. 30. If the
administration wanted to stop the
spendio& beyond then it would have
to ask Conaress to not appropriate
any money for the program and
cancel its previous appropriations.
The decision met with criticism
from an official representing some of
the nation's municipalities.
Randy Arndt, spokesman for the
National league of Cities, said the
moYe is intended to cancel the
PfOITlm.
"This is not a deferral with the
intention to spend next year. This is a
deferral with the intention to cancel
next year," he said. "Even before the
questi<m'Offft~lt-l,987;-We1lf~Ag
the l.986 budaet being tom apart -
and by a method that flies in the face
of actions of Congress."
A formal deferral message, explain-
Energy cut back
to shield defense
WASHJNOTON (AP) -En-
vironmental cleanuPt and teCUrity
improvements at nuclear plariu are
beana scaled bllCk by the EnetSY
Department to shield weapons pro-
grams from mandatory budlet c:uu. a
House subcommittee chairman says.
The decision to shelter military
proarams from the Gramm-Rudman
deficit reduction law at the e•pente of
environmental and anti-tem>rist im-
provements is a "aross misma.nqe-
ment of the Eneray Department's
resources,•• Rep. Edward Markey, 0-
Mass., said-Monday.
SBA director
Sanders tells
resignation "Grambo is swinlina iu machete
through onaoin• efforts to. clean ~P
DOE's polluted nu~-mduslrial
swamp, . but the White House bas W ASHfNGTON (AP)-James .
ordered its technocnu to protect the_Sa.nders-1.ay.bc.iuCJ.ianmaas of
-ray ran o er~ ~ls !n the Small Business A<Jm1rus tion
the nuclear temple of doom,' be said because .. it's time td move o .. and
in a prepared statement. · not because of differences wit White
"I mportan.t eovi ronme~tal House budget officiaJsover e fate of
cleanup operauons. such as projects · tlled aaency.
to eliminate contamination from Sande 9 who has h the
mercury and PCBs, are absorbing SBA since' J ' said Mon be had
cuts of 6 to 10 percent, and projects to notified White of Staff
keep ~tter track of nuclear e•plosi.ve Donald Regan of his decision to mate~als and. protect nuclear in-resian on April I and would formally stallat1on~ agam~t ~heft ~.sabotage submit his resignation to President ar~ suffenng a s1m1lar fate, Markey Reagan later in the week.
said. "Four years is quite a while to head
ing the decision, will be sent to
Congress next week. HUD has
already started getting the word out to
the nation's municipalities.
"Thet'e's no sense to having the
communities finish up their ap{>li-
cations" if HUD knows it is not going
10 pr occss them. said·H UD spokes-
man Jack Flynn. -
''It's quite normal for the' deferral
to start be(ore the message goes to
Congress," OM B's Dale said.
an agency," Sanden said. "I have
pretty much completed aJI the things
that we set out to do.·•
He said he had argued within the
administration against its termin-
ation. However, having lo.st the
battle, Sanders said in an interview
that he had "advised all personr\el in
the agency-to suppon the-president-'~
hudget."
The SBA 1s among two dozen
programs slated for extinction in lhc
fiscal 1987 budget .
Cuba appalled to find Libya
backing Latin rebel forces
the officials said. WASHINGTON (AP) -Cuba is
appalled by increased Libyan support
for Latin American revolutionaries
and has warned at least one hem i-
spheric country to take precautionary
security measures, according to U.S.
intelliaence officials.
The officials said Cuba recently
sent a message to military leaders in
Panama urging them to guard against
a possible Libyan-sponsored attempt
to sabotage the Panama Canal.
They said Libya also is supponmg
two insurgent group in Colombia and
recently sent a large sum of money -
said to be well up in the hundreds of
thousands of dollars -to C hile's
Leftist Revolutionary Movement.
known by its Spanish initials M IR .
an authoritarian government since
1980, the officials said.
The officials said the Surinam
government, which once had close
tics to Cuba. apparently is allowing
Libya a~ss to the country in return
for sorely needed hard cash.
Meanwhile. Deputy Secretary -0f
State John C. Whitehead said Mon-
day the U.S. econo mic campaign
against K.hadafy had the suppon of at
least nine alhcd countries and was
makinJ the Libyan leader so nervous
he might tum away from terrorism to
keep his economy intact.
The sources. who insisted on
anonymity. said Monday that Cuba
rcprds Libyan leader Moammar
Khadafy as an irresponsible adve n-
turer who mi,aht unwisely provoke
American military action.
In addition. Libya passed on a
smaller amount toa leftist party in the
Canbbean country of Dominica.
headed by a staunchly pro-U.S.
government, the sources said.
Libya long has supported the
Sandinista government an Nicaragua
but recently has prov1ded small
amounts of assistance to rebels an El
Salvador. Honduras and Guatemala,
In mid-January, the officials
added. high-level offi cials from Ven-
ezuela. Colombia and Ecuador met to
d iscuss their common concerns about
Libyan activities in the hemisphere.
among other subjects.
.. He may be pretty crazy. he's also
crazy like a fox. and he will do what he
needs to do to keep himself in power,''
Whitehead said. ..If he secs his
country's economy crumbling. his
country's position being isolated. he
will then take action to change his
conduct."
Libya's base of operations in the
hemisphere is Surinam, a former
Dutch colony on South America's
north coast which has been ruled by
Israel's Peres and German leaders
discuss trade, Middle East issues
BONN. West Germany -Israeli Pnme Minister
Shimon Peres began a series of meetings with West
German officials today to discuss the Middle East, trade
iHucs. and relations between the two countnes that still
arc clouded by the Nazi Holocaust.
Peres. who made an emotional v1s1t to the Nazis·
BelJen·Belsen concentration camp on Monday, arrived
amid a new controversy over Germans' attitudes toward
Jews.
The Israeli prime minister met early today with
President Richard von Baecker, who invited Israel's
President Chaim Herzog to visit West Gcnnany.
A Bonn government spokesman. who spoke o n
condition ofanonymity, said the two leaders agreed that
Herzot's visit, the first by an Israeli head of state, would
take place soon.
P~ also was s.:hedulcd to meet with Economics
Minister Manin Bangemann, Defense Minister Manfred
Woerner and other top-rankina Bonn officials. and later hold three; houn of talk1 with Chancellor Helmut Kobl.
The Middle East situation. trade, and M_tions
between Israel and West Germany were cxpecied to be
'or points of d iscussion.
On Monday a West German newsmapzine publish-
ed a story quotinJ Kohl as saying a majonty of Germans
still harbor anti-Semitic feclinp.
But chief government spokesman Fricdhclm Ost
strongly denied that Kohl had made the statements
quoted in the left-leaning Der Spiegel.
An Israeli official did not rule out that the issue would
come up in two hours of talks scheduled today Kohl
welcomed Peres with military honon at the chancellel)
Monday afternoon.
In meetings today with Kohl and olhcr West German
officials, Peres was expected to urae more West German
investment in Israel and speak out apinst promised West
German arms sales to Saudi Arabia ..
Israeli officials quashed speculation Peres would
meet with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, who plans
to visit Bonn Thursday, the day after Peres leaves for
Berlin.
Peres arrived in Bonn Sunday niaht and Joined
German Jewish leaders in payiq an emotional v1s1t
Monday to the fonner Nazi concentration camp at
Berten-Belsen where S0,000, includiQ& 30.000 Jews. died
ofhu rand diseatC duri Wo War II.
NOW TH R ,U FEBRUARY 2 7 TH ·
s799
•
" .
Citrus
groves
escape
freezing
A.ueeta ... Pnu .,. .. ,
Bilterty ClOld air wa&bina over the
Deep South droooed temperatures to
record tows 1.oday but most Florida
citnd sroves apparently ete1ped
major dam•· and "one monstet of a
1tonn" delivered heavy snow and freezin& rain that blacked out more
than 100,000peop&ein the Northeast.
The MOrm was blamed for at least
11 deaths &om New York to Alabama
from Sunday into today. On Monday.
tbe wat.bef fon:ed Khools to close 10
at least 12 states and sent dcnens of
homeless people to Alabama shelters.
Low temperature records for
today's date toppled all across the
South, into the 30s in Florida and into
the teens and lower elsewhere.
In the Appalachians. Asheville.
N.C .. chilled to 2 below zero. down
from the previous record of 8 set 1n
1977, a nd Beckley, W.Va .. hit 7
belo~. 3 drsrees off its old record. also 5efiiil97T. --.
The lows of 13 at Montgo mery,
Ala., and Savannah, Ga.. broke
records that had stood since 189=!.
Greer, S.C., hit a record low of Just 5.
And in Michigan, Sault Ste. Mane
dove to a record 28 degrees below
zero.
While much of the East shivered.
parts of the West -and even New
England -basked in record high
temperatures. The temperature eaily
today at Lewistown, Mont., was 45
degrees, warmer than the 37 recorded
in Miami. The 334egrcc reading an
Portland, Maine, topped the record
26 degrees in Orlando. Fla.
The temperature an New York
City'i Central Park dropped from 33
degrees at 9 p.m. Monday to 15
degrees at 4 a.m. John F. Kennedy
lntCfll&t<ional Airport was-closcc:Hor
just over I 1h hours and some flights
were diverted because of poor v1s-
1bility and high winds, authont1es
said.
~
Orlf"9 CoMt OAALV PtLClflT~. Janully 28. 1 ... * Ai
ly&MA.111dllM.Pr...
WASHINGTON -Praideftt Rapa will at COiall• lllia ~IO
expend Medicare to cover the expmte of ca&u&.rophac iJ1aCll unoas ~)
cldtrty. Tbe tint call for coapaalcmaJ Kt100 Ud beeD ex~ io Ml Wrl
cancelled State of the U nioo lddl'Cll. Evn if tbe cawuopbiir care~;
eoverina lona-ierm bolpital .iays-iln•t pen of tht tpeCdl. a lmior oftk:ill ii(
the Health and Humu Servica Deputmmt said, Jeaislatioa pr0p04i111 _,.
eoverqic, financed by incn:ased pmniums. wiU to to Consma sbordy.
Ferraro often to nb la 1fY bribery ca• 'av n
NEW YORK -Former vice presidential candidate Qeraldiae ~,..,.~-II"·•
has offered to serve u Queens bofoueh president temporatjly lbou.ld Do..,d
Manei step uide becau.e of a bribery ICUd&l. Mayor Edward Koda. wtlo
recently called Manes a .. crook" and called for his resipation, said Monday 9'e
would be satisfied if Manet took a leave of absence while bribery a]Jqaupns
involving the awardina of tjty contr1C11 are resolved.
011 price. m•l'e •troJJI gaJn•
For the first time an nearly two weeks, pri0C1 for crude oil and refined
products have made ruona pins. Word of weekend delays in Soviet Oll
shipments to Europe, repons of oil production cutbacks by Iran and Egypt add
technical facton in the market aJJ helped the turnaround Monday. analYftS
said. Over seven trading days endioi Friday, crude prices plunged by aboui23
pcrcenq~anickina world marke,ts, But at the clo$C of tradin-1 on the New Yolk
Mercanttle Excbanae on Monday March contracts for West Tcus
Intermediate, the benchmark U.S. crude~ stood at $20.83 a 1?1rrel. up from
Friday's S 19.SO. --EateJJJ"4U-Llne.pUot. may~ --
. WASHINGTON -The union rep~nting'p1lots at Eastern Air Lines
took the first step Monday toward a possible strike. asktng its 4,300 memben
to authorize a walkout if ncccuary after a 30-day cooling off period.
N.CJC>tiations between the debt-ridden airline and the pilots broke oft'Su1Mi9y
ni&bt, trigerina the cooling-off period that would end three days bitforcr a
deadline for labor concessions demanded by creditors. .
Ua1on .age Jncreaw IUt 18-year low
WASHINGTON -First-year wage increases in the larsest collective
bargainina contracts negotiated last year averaged 2. 3 percent. the lowest in the
18 years that the government bas been monitoring the agreements. More tilan
one-third of the nearly 2.2 million workers covered an 487 settlements acoepWd
either first-year waic freezes or pay decreases averaging 8.8 percent, the Labor
Depanment said Monday.
Art111c1al heart Jr.eepJng man alive
HOUSTON -A patient at tlie Texas Heart lnstitute received an artific:Jial
mechanical heart n"ine days ago and is in stable condltjon awaiting a suitabk
!Tuman heart fbt tnmrplant; hospital offi~-todaL. The hea:tt
assist device. manufactured by Thennedics Inc. of Massac usetts. was
implanted Jan. 19 by a surgical team headed by Ors. Denton Cooley and 0 .
Howard Frazier. The unidentified man was returned to surgery th ref days lacer
bcausc offluid accumulation and clotting from the device.
,
Ar1ns sales to terrorist nations halted
By tbe A11oclaled Pre11
BRUSSELS. Belgium -Common Marltet countries
responded to President Reagan's call for sanctions apinst
Libra by announcing a(! end to exports of military
equipment to nations linked with terrorism. a move that
will have httle practical effect on Libya. Foreign ministers
of the 12 Common Martcet countnes did not name Libya
in their declaration Monday. nor did they impose any
sanctions.
Students' boycott appears over
JOHANNESBURG. South Afnca -Black students
across South Afnca streamed to classes as schools
reopened today. signaling a possible end to two years of
pcnod1c boycotts. Reports from Johannesburg. Pretona
and the Cape Provance. plagued by boycotts for much of
1984 and 1985. indicated a heavy turnout at schools
following negotiations last month between parents and
education officials. Police said meanwhile that three
blacks were a.xed or stabbed to death overnight at a
squatters camp near Cape Town and that scores were left
homeless after 50 shacks were burned.
Thate.her weathers the storm
LONDON -Two fonner Cabinet ministers whose
,,
resignauons were a maJor embarrassment to Pnmt
Minister Margaret Thatcher rallied to her defense in a
crucial parhamcntary debate. but OpPOnents Wei
Thatcher's crcd1b1hty had suffered irreparable damap!.
Thatcher won a 379-219 vote tn Parliament Monday to
end a three-hour emergency session devoted to charges oi
a oover-up in the leak of a confidenual letter. The pnme
minister. wbo holds a 144-vote maJOnty m the 650-
membcr House of Commons. was not an danger oflos1ng
the vote. But It was important for her becau~ v1nually an
members of her Conservative Party rallied to her defense.
~ 'Bomb caused Alr-lndla crash•
NEW DELHI. India -E"tdenct' ind1catcs that a
bomb exploded in the forward cario compartment of an
Au-India Jumbo Jet last year, causing n to era.sh into the
Atlanttc Ocean killing all 329 people aboard. said a
Canadian government report released today. The repon
by the Canadian Av1a11on Safety Board linked the Junr 23
explosion to a suitcase checked onto the flight in Canada
by a man with a 1kh name who did not board the plane.
The report su.,estcd the crash was connected to the
suitcase explosion the same da) at Tok> o's Nan ta A1rpon
that killed two bagga1te handlers.
• •
. "
• •
CELEBRA.TIONS 80 I W. B~KEB
IQ E DECORATIO A D PART ~PPLIE (Just W : of Briatol )
979-8570
J
O&na ~DM.Y N.Drl Tu••mr. Jlr"*Y 21. 1w
......... .,..
~ CbriNa McAuliffe bad Mid ... bope4 to .. humanize the tech· = oftbe ~ ... f~ her
ti but~ llerftiabt OD die tbYttle •CbaJ.leneer with a CbiJd'1
ofwoadet. •1 -llil1 c:u't ~e ~ are
-..aly Piii to let me to ~ m tbe .. amle ... tbe laCba' froin Concord
N.H., •id in Septemberu lbe pinmd
on ber National Aeronautics and Sl*t Administration identification ~Y her ftiabt ended moments
after launcb in a fireball whkb
lbattercd the spKeCraft.
McAulifle wu named in July as
wt.DCr 1.1DOQ1 11 000 ~n who
bed applied to be i,iH; fint educator in
• orbit
... wanLto ~mystify NASA~
1pece fliabt," she &aid durina com-
petition amona the I 0 teacher
6nalisu in HOUiton ... , want students
to lee and undm1a.nd the special
pmpeccive of spece and relate It to
~ ....
Throuah all the trainiaa, her bu.-
bend, Steven, a la~. and their
ch.Ud.ren Scott, 9, and caroline, 6,
bave remajned behind in, CooCord.
Sbe uid recently that Scott under-
stood wbat a.be wu doiQI. but th&&
Caroline called occaaionaDy to uk:
.. Mom, are you in spece yet?''
McAulifl'e, 37, tauaht elementary
school in Bow for nine years before
joinina Concord Kiah School u a
teacher in economics, history and law
three years qo. She said in her
application to the National Aero-
nautics and Space Administration
that she woujd like to record her trip
to help "humanize the tecbnolosY of
the spece aae'' throuab the obterva-
tions ofa non-astronaut.
"I think everybody who knows her,
1tnow1 -there may have-been can-
didates of her equal, but none
superior to her," her husband,
Steven. told {CP<>rtcn aft.er bis wife's
selection wu' announced.
Clarlata llcAallffe'• Uter Bet8y (left), parenta Grace and ltd
CorrlpD react u tbey watcla apace alaattle aploelon.
I
He said be believes she wu selected
because she is "unpretentious and
aenuinely a nice~ whom people
really identify with ... RetUJ'llina trium~tly to New
Hampshire, McAulift'e had told ~
porters and fellow teachers that spece
plora,tioo lnmtjl(IU~1:tm1W111.--
but is in the future Of eve:/ child.
"lf we don't prepare lcids for the
future we are not doina our job u
teKben," she said. "I really feel
stroqly that we really need to include
(1p1ee exploration) as part of the
curriculum."
. McAulift'e, who goes bJe;:e name
Christa. bu a bachelor's from
Framinatwn State..Collcae m Maua-
cbusetu and a master's~ from
Bowie State in Maryland. S6e and her
bulbend, Steven, were biab school
sweethearts in Framifl4bam.
pt ... Her fat.her, Ed Corripo of Fram·
inalwn, said he didn't believe she was
serious at fint. Tile 9paee alaattle crew walk to tile orbiter
••When she made out the appli-Claallen&er today. l'rom left are E~n
Onlaaka, Gre&ory Jar•l•.
llcAallffe and pilot Mike 8mltla.
Clarlata
cation and started all this She said, ~ti~.ri~!h~~al enger s s uttle crew the Judaes. Ll11enina to all she's aonc .
through so far bas been an education k d fo~:~in~icwdaysbeforelaun~h. had d1· verse bac groun s McAulift'c satd she was "not rwve ,
enouah to think that I am the best in
mr profession... r
I happen to be from a small state
that d.idn 't have as many applicants
as California, for example. ibere's a
lot ofluck in beina at lhC riaht place at
Commander flying his second mission;
2nd, 3rd women in space among crew
the riaht time," she said. By PAUL RECER
In the final competition. said
McAuliffe, she believes the fact that _,,,., ' " ,.,..,
she knew little about the space SPACE CENTER, Houston-The
pr<>1r&m helped. crew of Challenger included three
''I want to de-mystify NASA and trained pilots, an ell pert on lasers, the
space flight," she said. "The second American woman to fly in
utronauts arc not really connecting space, a Hughes Aircraft Corp. engi-
wilh the averaac student in the nccr and a Concord, N.H .• school
classroom. teacher flying as the ,first citizen in
space.
Francis R. Scobee, 46, commanded
the Challenger night was his first
space mission.
Smith married the former Jane
Jarrell of Charlotte, N.C. They had
three children, Scott, 17, Alison, 14,
and Erin, 8.
Ronald E. McNair, 36, was doing
rcscarch on lasers at the time he was
selected as an astronaut.
Ohio and earned a bache!or's degree
from Carnegie-Mellon University.
After college, Resnik was a research
sc1en1is1 for RCA, then the National
Institutes of Health and later for
Xerox. She wa.s selected as •an
astronaut in 1978.
Resnik trained on the shuttle's
robot arm and during her first fliaht,
an 1984. she used the arm to delicately
break away a chunk of ice that built up
on the side of the space shuttle
Discovery.
Resnik was single.
Cheering students stunned the flight and was making his v.cond
space shuttle mission.
Scobee was born and raised in
Washington st.ate, and cnroUed an the
Air Force after hiah school gradu-
ation. He trained first as a mechanic.
but attended night school to acquire
two years of coOcge credit. Later, he
earned additional credit and a degree
from the Univcnity of Arizona.
McNair was born and raised in
We City, S. C. He received a
doctorate of science degree from 1hc
Massachusetts Institute of Tech-
nology and was selected as an
astronaut in 1979.
He made has fim space n1gh1 in
1984.
Gregory ~is. 41 , is..a Hughes
Aircraft Co. ginccr whq was flying
on Challenger conduct tcsu on the
effects of wei&htlessncss on flu id
earned in tanfs. The Cllpcrimcnts
may give engineers new information
of the design of hq u id-fueled rockets.
Jarvis was born in Detroit and
graduated from high school an
Mohawk, N.Y. He earned degrees
from State University ofNcw York in
Buffalo and from Northeastern Uni-
vensty in Boston.
atMcAuliffe'shigh school
CONCORD. N.H. (AP) -A blast
of party horns and chccn turned
quickly to siJcnce and stunned dis-
belief as 1,200 CQncord H igh School
pupils watched the space shuttle
Challenger rise into the sky and
cxP.lode into pieces.
'It's awful. Just too awful even to
contemplate,'' Concord High Princi-
pal CharlC1 Foley said as he fought
back tears. "I hope God wilJ be good.
I hope he'll be good to aJI of us."
Television monitors carried the
long-awaited launch of Christa
McAuliffc lO classrooms throughout
the high school. where McAulifTc
taught social studies and law and
planned to return to teach in the fall.
About 200 pupils and teachers
watching a television set in the school
auditorium participated in the final
I 0.second countdown and cheered
wildly as the shuttle's engines blasted
the craft toward space.
Believing the launch to be normal,
the students continued to cheer and
blow their horns until someone in the
balcony seconds later yelled, "Damn
it! There's a major malfunction. Shut
up so we can hear."
Only the sound of the tclev151 on
and NASA reports filled the room as
the students and teachers sat stunned,
reporters and news television cam-
eras filming their shock.
The silence was broken by
murmurs of'this isn't real is it? This
can't be happeningr' The students
Launching Pattern
.
whispered to each other and to
themselves.
Within minutes, school officials
ordered reportcn out of the building
and students back lO class. Some
students protested the order, saying
the>: P!'Cferred to remain in the
auditonum. .
"It's not like (the teachers) arc
going to hand us an assipimcnt and
say 'now f.O to work.' ' said Allen
Little, 17. We want to know what's
hap,pening. Don't treat us tikc jerks."
'Nobody thouaht this was going to
happen," said Mart Letalien, 16 ... A
lot of us bad 1otten tired of all the
space shuttle and Christa hype, but no
one wanted anythina to 10 wronit."
Space Shuttle
Explosion
Dowrvange: 9 miles
The Air Force then gave him a
commission and trained him as a jct
pilot. Scobee flew combat missions
during a Vietnam tour and then
attended the Air Force test pilot
school. He was selected as an
astronaut in 1979 and made his first
space flight in 1984.
Scobee married the former June
Kent of San Antonio, Texas. They
had two children, Kathie, 2.S, and
Richard, 21 .
Challcngcr's pilot was Mike Smith,
40, a commander in the U.S. Navy.
Smith was born and raised in
Beauford. N.C., and graduated from
the U.S. Naval Academy. He also
earned a master's degree from the
Navy Postaraduatc School.
After a combat cruise in Vietnam,
Smith trained as a test pilot. He was
selected as an astronaut in 1980 and
McNair mamed the former Cheryl
Moore of Jamaica, N.Y. They had
two children. Reginald, 3, and Joy. I.
Air Force Lt. Col. Ellison S .
Onizuka. 39, was a former aerospace
engineer and pilot who ta~t courses
at the elite AJr Force test pilot school
in California.
He was born in Kealakckua,
Hawaii. and earned two degrees from
the University of Colorado. NASA
selected him as an astronaut in 1978.
Onizuk.a was crew member o n a
secret Department of Defense space
shuttle flight last January. The
Challenger mission was his second
space flight.
The· astronau I married the former
Loma Lcilco Yoshida of Pahala.
Hawaii, and the couple had two
children, Janelle, 16, and Darien, I 0.
Astronaut Judy Resnik. 36, was a
classical pianist wbo earned a doc-
torate in elcctncal engineering from
the University of Maryland.
She was born and raised in Akron.
He served as a satclli1e engineer in
the Air Force and achieved the rank
of captain before resigning to become
a Hughes engineer.
Jarvis married the former Mate1a
Jarboe of Spring Valley, N.Y. where
the couple made their home.
Sharon Christa McAuliffc. 37. is a
Concord. N.H .. high school social
studies teacher who was the first
private citizen selected an nattonal
competi uon to fl y on the space
shuttle.
She was born and raised in Fram-
ingham, Mass.. and earned a
bachelor's devcc from Framingham
State College 1n 1970.
McAuliffc was selected from
l I, 146 teachers who applied in
NASA's first c111zcn-1n-spacc com·
pctttaon.
A perfect liftoff-then disaster
CAPE CANAVERAL, Aa. (AP)-
Thc liftoff and first few seconds of
fliaht were a tieautiful siaht as
Challenger arced into the briaht
sunlight to the cheers of hundn=ds of
s~ center workers watcbin1 cx-
ettedly outside the building where the
shuttle is assembled.
Suddcnl)', somethina was dreadful-
ly wrona an wbat appean=d to be a
picture-perfect l1unch.
To those on the around, the
spacecraft riding the ..towering
column of pure white smoke a~
pcared to burst into oranF Rame,
briefly, ap.inst the clear, blue sky.
Almost immedia~cl , there wu an
inCTedi bly bi · t-oranaie ex-
plosion, with a ~ot of iny ITIY smoke
surroundina it.
Followin1 that, Cballen,er's twin
solid rocket boost.en apPeared to
scparttc from the orbiter, one spiral-
tnl off to the right and the other to the
left.
Hundreds of pieces of debris bunt
out of the cxplodil'\I maM and
elummeted toward the Atlantic
Ocean about 18 miles southea1t of the
launch pad.
"It's too soon. It's too soon. It can't
be seperation (of the boolteo)," said
one bearded worker holdina a tran11 ...
tor radio.
"I can't believe it," said a youna
woman, stanina to cry at lhc siabL
"I can't see the orbiter. 1 can't tee
It," aaad a youth waril'll a Lockheed
jacket.
Thtft WU total confusion. Some of
tiw oeoole were myft«inaqu.iedyUd abakini their hald1;
Shock had set in among the
engineers, techni9ians and others
who painstaltinaly-asscmblc the shut·
tic's three primary components-the
orbiter, two sohd-fucl rockets and
larac mustard-colored external fuel
tank -at the vehicle assembly
building Just before it i oes to the
launch pad aboard a mobile platform.
They had bundled up and come out
in.to the. freezing, sunny day to watch
with pn.de what they thouaht would
be their 2.Sth sucocssful shuttle
launch.
'Last words from Challenger
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -Words from space shuttle
<;haJlcngcr were all routine throuah _the 60 seconds of flighL There was
stlcnce after the spececraf\ erupted into a fireball.
Htre is a transcript of those seconds: ,
-MiMion Commentator: 10.9-8-7-6, we have main engine start
4-3-2-1 , and liftoff. Liftoff of the 2.Sth space shuttle m1SS1on. And it hai
cleared the tower.
-Pilot Mike Smith: Roll pr<>sram.
-MiMion Control: Roter. roll, Cl\aJlcngcr.
-MiMlon Con~rol commentator: Rot.I proaram confirmed. Cballc~r now headin1 down ranac. The cn11nes arc throtllin1 down
now at 94 pcrcenL NonnaJ throttle for most of the flight 1s I04 percent
W(ll throttJe down to 6S percent shonly. Enaines at 6.S percent. Three
en&1na runnln1 "ormalJy. Three aood fuel cells. Three. lood APUs
(auxiliary J!Owef uni ta). Velocity 22,0S7 feet per second ( 1400 miles per b~ur), almude .•.3 nautical miles (4.9 . statute miles). downra
dt1tancc l nautical m ilea (3.4 statute malea). Enainct tbrottlina ~
three cnaina now I 04 percent. • •
-Miuion Control: Cballenaer. 10 at throttle up
-Smith! Roeer, to at throttle up.
(Firebell occun)
-Miuion Control commentator: We're 11 a minute 1 s steonds
velocity 2900 fec:t per KiCOnd .< 1977 mph) altitude 9 nautical miln ~E!S ttanate mtla). ra• dtstance 7 nauucat miles (8.0:i stlltute ~ wu a Iona silence.
-Million Coa~ coc:nmentator: Flltht controllers •rt tooku11 very ~ ~t IM •tua&.K?n· Obvioualy a "'-JQr malfunction. We Mft DO dowillink (communat1on1).
,
I
..
!!~~BltRS HORRIFIED BY TRAGEDY •••
1M WW tmotionalb and 1CttW up ~d~ ex.am process, .. lnfrusino
\. Fouwo Valfev Kiah School ~ lacber O.vid Licata. who alto aooiied for the million, celled it a '"t.d Clay fot teacbina. ••
wrbc ttudenu are lhockcd and di~)'ed and saddened and they're
bavi .. tro\ibleJll!lYU\&attentio n to the letlOftl," be NJct
Licata •id be WU "ex~ly
saddened.·• but hoped the tnacd,Y
woukln•t halt the.space shuttlcex~n-mcnu. ·
... hope that the program proceeds
at Ml speed a~d tb~t it won't be bJnderecf by thas accident," Licata
said. "Thole of us wbo didn't make 1t
ue relieved. But when you sian up
you know it's da~ous and that
there can be aocidents."
He added: "I'm extremely sad-
dened for Christa McAuJifTe and the
othen and their families. I'm also
disappointed that ~e . nation won't
benefit from Chnsty s lessons in
space."
Licata •. a 32-yea.r-old. H!Jntinaton
8cach resident, said pnnc1pal Mike
KaaJcr made an announccment of the
explosion over the school's public
address system. He said he hooked up
a.computer monitor in hi' classroom
to act a commercial "news feed" to
keep abreast of developments.
Mary Schuesler. a science teacher
aa Marine VaewSdlool io HuntiftllOll
&e.ch, alJo was oac of tboec who ~~~plT'lidpate inthc•~tJe
11
t'obert Rubend, a science tacber
at Veudo Middle School in Irvine,
said he spent five wecka tlllina out
appli(ations forms, bopina to be ~ka.ed as the fint teacher in apKe.
Even after heariJw of &oday's
ll'Qedy, Rasband said he still bas
faith in the pr<>lf&m.
"I'd a<> bide and lpeftd another five
weeks on an •!>P.'ication," he said.
''l'm '1ad I wasn t on the shuttle thiJ
mom1na because of what happened.
but if another posjtion opened up, I'd
be applyina."
Rasband said be learned to fly
private atrcraft Jie\Wl ->Un aao and
takes students aloft lhrouah an avia-
tion club he sponsors.
He said be had another reason for
.wanting to be the first teacher on a
shuttle night.
"The prospect ofbcin• able to share
the experience of beina an space with ·
kids aro und 'the oourttry was very
inviting," he said.
When it was arinounced that an
educator would be placed on a shuttle
flight, "I was very proud to be a
teacher," Rasband said, ''because
after ycan of being called a uacbcr
derogatorily, someone was reoosniz-
mg teachers in an important liJht, as
prof essionaJs."
.a.1 ,,,.,,,
Tbe epace •battle Challeqer lJ.ft8 off from Pad 39-B at
Kennedy Space Center, Fla., jut momenta before It
abruptly blew apart. Tilt. wu the Ont time the laancblnC
pad bad been ued.
Rockwell built
" all five shuttles
LOS ANGELES CA Pl -The pnmc
' contractor on the space shuttle
Challenger. which exploded in a
fireball af\er takeoff today. was Rock-
well International Corp .. which has
built all five of the nation's shuttles.
Rockwell also was in charge of
overseeing shuttJe support operations
at Johnson Space Center an Ho uston,
Tens. home of the space program's
Mission Control.
But a competitor. l.ockh~ Corp ..
was in charge of ground servicing for
the shuttle at Kennedy Space Center
at Cape Canaveral, Fla .. from which
the Challenaer was launched.
"Needless to say everyone here is
stunned about what happened ...
Lockheed spokeswo man Janet
Wratber aaid. "At the m oment. we're
watchina the television news. like
everyone else, to find out what
haf,pened." n tradina on the New York tock
Exchanac. shares of both Rockwell
and Lockheed dropped sbarpl)'.
About midday. Rockwell was off
S 1.25 at $34 per share. while Lock-
heed was down SI. 75 a t S4S per share.
"Obviously we don't know what
happened It this time," said Brian
Daly, West Coast corporate spokes-
man for Pittsbursh. Pa.·Msed Rock-
well.
Pans for the shuttle's body were
mtde at Rockwell's Nonb American
pace Operat.iont plant in suburben
Downey and put t()fltthcr at another
Rockwell facility in Palmdale, near
Edwards Air Force Base. Edwards is
the blckup landina site for the shuttle
if it cannot land at Kennedy.
The prime cont'1iCtor for the thut-
tle·s main en~ne was Rockwell's
Rocke\dync Division in .suburi>an ea.,. Park.
An ()adcn, Utah. sohd·propellant
compen~onon Thiokol. tNilt the
thunk ter, and oompuy of·
fla als had no lmmcdlatt comment
on today's uplo ion.
The M c D o nnell Do uglas
Astronautics Co. of Huntington
Beach did sutx:ontract work on the
boosters. About 200 workers at the
Huntington Beach plant constructed
various parts for the carft's solid
rocket boostcn.
The shuttle's J0.000 heat-rn1stant
talcs, which keep the cral\ from
burning up when it reenters the
atmosphere. were made by Lock·
heed's Space and Missiles D1 v1sion in
Sunnyvale in Nonhern California.
Officials had no immediate comment
on a reported problem with ice on the
tiles.
Last September, Rockwell's Nonh
American Spacc Operations, which is
headquartered in suburban El Segun-
do. won an estimated SS.S billion of
future speoc business over the next IS
yean when it was selected by NASA
to manqe specie ahuttJe operations at
Johnson Space Center.
Under the contractl Rockwell will
consolidate spece snuttle support
functions that were provided by 16
contractors at Johnson for space
transportation. includina the shuttle.
Amona RoclcweU's duties arc train-
i"I u tronauts, pteperina for spaoc
fliJhts and manaaina the shuttle's
m1Mion cont~ center.
In l 983, Lockheed won a IS-year
contnct from NASA to providt
shunle p'C>Und tetVici~ at Kennedy.
That contract wu cttJmated to be
W01'1h 1bvout S6 billion.
Lockheed 11 ii\ cba,.e of wonina
on the shuttle from the time it 1ucb
until the lime it caka oft'. l..ockbc.ed
has two main putMn in the contnct
-Onammaa ~of8'dlPllC.
N.Y., which it responsible for tht
launcb-~r()(c11in1 system and
Monoa Tbioltol wtucb tt mpomible
for ~on \ht roctet boolAcr. ~ ltoc tMaih the Dltioft·s ftnt
stnmle. the now-retinid Enlffl)rite, in
1976.
..... ad aid he talked tbout aodaf• UwdY with bit studenll. Who::bad been followiq the million
clolely.
''They couldn't believe it either, ..
he Mid. ''Tbey were so lllld I wuo't on it.''
Roland Runcr, a tcicoce teacher at
Woodbfidee Hi&h Scbool~o lrviae.
bid also applied to become the 6nt
teacher on a abuttle mi.ton.
"I've always had an iatetttt in
s.-ce1•• he laid today. "When I wu a
boy, used to tell oewtpapen and
follow the Buck Roeen comic .strip .
My teachers told me that wu silly,
that space travel would never come
true."
RutteT said he'd still be iruaested
in flyina on thh.,.ce shuttle, dapbe
today's explosion.
··nunas like this ba&>pen, malfunc-
tions occur," he 11.1d. "But it's
~~ly still safer than drivina on a y in Southern CaJjfornia. ..
Gary Norton, principal at Irvine
Hi&h School, said he made a public
addttsS announcement rcprdina the
shuttle truedy at 9:30 a.m .. even
thouah students were in the midst of
final cuminations.
He said faculty membcn had paid
particu~ close attention to 1his
space mission because it represented
a recognition of the teaching pro-
fession. Shopper• watcb the tractc n ew. on TV eeta at 8oath Cwt Piasa •tore today.
SPACE SHUTTLE EXPLODES; SEVEN BELIEVED DEAD •.•
From Al
NASA said the fine pieces of debris and remained standing together a'
continued to fall into tlie impact area the loudspeaker brought the bad news
for nearly 45 minutes, and recovery and a NASA officiaJ chmbed a couple
boats and aircraft bad to wait until 1t of rows into the bleachers. walked to
stopped before entering the area. them and said: "'The vehicle has
Paramedics leaped into the water in exploded."
an effon to find any trace of A stunned Mrs. Cormgan looked
survivon. back at him and repeated his words as
After the explosion. the two solid a question.
fuel booster rockets separated ·a nd "The vehicle has exploded?"
continued to fly crazily out of control He nodded silently and the Cor-
in the clear sky, trailing long tails of rigans were quickly led away.
smoke before they plummeted into McAuliffe, 37, had been selected
the seas. from 11 .146 teacher applicants to be
One of them was seen floating the tint to fl y in the National
down on its panchuJc. Aeronautics and Space Adm1n1s-
Televisioo pictures of the impact tration's citizen-in-space proiram.
TClayedfrom a1rdicoptenhoweU-SpouJ4oftheothCT astronams at
no evidence of any large pieces were here. There was no immediate
floating in the water. reaction available from any of them.
NASA said the explosion occurred The shocking spectacle was seen by
at a point when the astronauts were millions of people around the country
bcainning to throttle their engines up who were watching the launch on
to maximum thrust af\er they throt-television.
tied them down to a 60 pereent level All 1,200 students at McAuhfTe's
at 35 seconds in order to-reduce the Concord Hilth School were cheering
forces of gravity during liftoff. the tclev1secf launch when a teacher
Among those who witnessed the yelle(j for them to be silent because
explosion were AulifTe's attorney· something appeared lo be wrong.
husband Steve and their two children. As It became clear there was an
Scott, 9, and Caroline. 6, who were in explosion. stunned students
a crowd watching at Cape Canaveral. murmured "This can't be real .... We
Also here were members of Scott's can't be watching this ..
third grade clas.' from Concord, N.H.. White House spokesman Larry
displaying a large "Go Christ.i" Speakes said President RCIP,n was
banner. "concerned" and "saddened · at the
They watched in stunned silence as accident but had no immediate
the spacecraft blew apart. Several details. "We don't have any more
began crying and parents hugcd information than what is being
othen and quickly cleared them off provided the public on television."
the viewing bleachers and herded First lady Nancy Reagan. watching
them aboard buses. the launch in the family quarte~.
Also here were McAulifTe's exclaimed. "Oh. my God. no1"
parents. Ed and G race Corrigan. of The House of Representatives 1n-
Framingham. Mass. They stood terruptcd its sesswn at the news and
silently during the launch. arm 1n arm the chaplain delivered a prayer for the
astronauts. The House then ad-matn tank. When Challenger h
JOumed. off. its huge fut'I tank earned S26.
The &leamang ship had nsen spec-gallons of volatile hqu1d hyd
tacularfy off the launch pad at 11 :38 and oxygt"n
a.m.·EST (8:38 PST). af\er a sencs of M1ss1on control reported that
weather and technical delays. and was was no 1nd1cat1on of a ny prob
climbing smoothly tra1hng a 7~foot wtth the eng.incs. the solid boost
geyser of fire when suddenly 11 any other system and that the sbu
erupted in a huge fi reball and shot out JUSt suddenly blew apart. -·oil
of control. Radio commun1cauons and •
A voicc at Mission Control said. emetry abruptly ended.
"We arc checking with recovery There was total shock and disbe
forces to sec what can be done at this among workers a1. the shuttle
point. ... Contingency procedures art' ~mbl) building as they watc
an effect... Challener break up an a ball offirc ~
The voice sa1d, ~veh1cle ha:s a-wtme and orangr smolcc.
J>.loded .... We arc awaalln,J word..;..fr:....:o:.::m:..:..... __ .. ...._."'".·1 bclicvUJ,_"-~_._pn..,.._l:.-
any recovery forces downrange. v.oman. almost cryrng. as she st •
Half an hour afkr the explosion. a among coworkers outside the build:
serpcnune trail of white smoke. 1ng.
lwtsted by the u pper wind. remained "I can't sec the orbiter -what
1n the clear sky, markmg the path of happcn~d to the orb11er:· said a
the shuttle's w~k.a~e. )Oung technician.
Af\er the explosion. the shuttle The launch was the first from a new
appeared to still be flying and sudden-shuttle Launch pad that was supposed
ly corkscrewed out of control and to give NASA greater nex1b1ht)' in a
plunged toward the ocean crowded launch schedule
The tha"t was the scrond of a Faer~ v.inds that blew an Monda~
e-• while tcchn1c1ans worked to free a record 15 shuttle fltghts that NASA stubborn hatch bolt forced the third
had planned this year v.cather postponement an as man)
It probably will be months nov.. d. a'-s C hallenfer. "'nh five post· before another shuttle can be 1
launched, while engin~rs ti) to ponements o this m1ss1on. wa ...
detennine what went wrong. drawing clos.e to Columb1a·s record
The explosion occurred about the t"arher this month of having seven
time Challenger was to enter a pcnod launch dates delayed
of max.imum aerodynamic pressure The purpo~ ol the m1ss1on was to
when wind and other atmosphenc rclca~ and retneve one satelhte io
conditions would place the maxi-stud) Halley's comet a~d launcb.
mum force on the outside of the another to ~come part ol the spaC't'-
veh1cle. based -.huttle communication'
There was no 1nd1cat1on whether ~tv.orll.
the ex plosion occurred 1n the solid \1c.\uhffe v.d\ 10 teach tv.11 '·
boosters or in the main engines fueled minute kc;~on' lln thl.' lnurth da' ~
b) h1drogen and ongen from tht> thl.' m1.,,1<in
Reagan stunned by disaster
President postpones State of the Union
talk, grieves for families of ~h~ttle cr ew
By MICHAEL PUTZEL
.a. ......... C:.I $1 f l I
WASHINGTON -President Re·
apn halted an Oval Office meeting
with top aides when be learned the
shunlc carryina the teacher he sent
into spacc had exP,loded and stood an
"stunned silence ' as be watched a
televuion replay of the fiery disaster
Presidential spokesman l.arT)
Speakes said the State of the Union
speech Reagan had planned to deliver
to Congress tonight was being post·
poned to next Tuesday.
"It's a terrible thing." Reagan told
rcporten. "I Just can't get out of m)
mind her husband, her children. as
well as the families of the others on
board."
In an account provided by an
Independent NeW. Network cor-
res~ndcnt who attended a lunch at
wb1cb Rcapn spoke, the president
eAprcssed confidcocc in those run-
nina the space PfOIJ'8.JD and said those
aboard were aware of the risks the)
were takina.
Asked what he would tell the
natio n's schoolchildren. who watch-
ed this fli&ht more closely than others
because a teacher was aboard and
many special projects were planned
for them, Rcapn said:
"You have to be out there on the
frontier takina risks. Make it plain 10
them that life must ao on."
Presidential spokesman Larry
Speakes said Vioc President Gcorae
Bush and Reap.n's national security
adviser. Vice Adm. John~· Poinde>.·
ter. intem.tpted the meeting between
Reagan and senior aides to tell ham of
the explosion.
"The president 1s concerned; he I!>
saddt"ncd: he is anxious to have more
information.
First lady Nanc) Reagan, watching
the launeh alont' in th!' family
quarters. exclaimed. "Oh. m) God.
no'"
Dcscnbang Reagan's reaction.
Speakes said. "Quit!' frank!). the
president stood there 1n almost
stunned silence as he v.atched the
television ...
Speaking without note<; at a lunch·
eon he said he had planned with
tekv1s1on anchors and correspon-
dents as a pleasant exchange o n the
speech he had planned to deliver
tonight. Reagan said watching the
telt"v1s1on replays of the cxposaon was
"a very traumauc expcnencc ...
But he defended the spaet" shuttle
program. sa)ang until today 1t had ~a
I ()().pcrcenl safety record . probably
better than we have out on the
highways.··
··1 ~ust can't rid myself of th!'
thou 1l of the families.'' Reapn said.
As cd 1fhe were speciall y sadd~ned
by the fact that one of those aboard
was a c1t1zen passenger. Reagan said.
"Well, the) were all c1tJZens. I don't
think anyone's bttn on there who
wasn't a volunteer The were aware
of the nsks •·
The president. when ~ was told of
the blast. broke off a mee11ng v.nh his
aides and 1mmed1ateh retired 10 ht!.
small stud) adJac.cni to tht' o, al
Office to v.atch de,elopmt'nt<o on
tele\'ISIOn
Reagan had bttn <;<.heduled to ho<ot
a luncheon for tele' 1i.1on anchor<> .ind
network White Ho u\t' corre<,pon·
dents tn the Roose, cit Room near h1\
office. But tht' pnnc1 pal anl·hor\
hastily lei\ the White Ho use "'hen
they learned what had happened . .ind
Reaaan. after tim postponing h"
appearance. canct'lt'd to av.a11 funher
reports. lea' ing C"h1ef of'\taff Donald
T Regan to begin th!' lunchl'on
meeting late. Deput~ White Hou'K' prt"I\ ~l ·
retan Peter Roussel."' hl1 "a<, pre<;en l
in th~ Oval OffiCl' "'h1k Reagan "d'
being bnefed tor h1~ lunl heon mt·c•·
1ng, said Bu~h and Po1ndC',ter v.alkcll
1n together
He quoted them a~ ..a~ ing. almo<.t
s1multaneousl). "\\ e hate to inter·
rupt, but v.e ha'e th1~ repon ·
Roussel said Ont' oftht' men then read
a hpcwntten rcpon ol the c.-'ph.1\lnn
to Reagan
Dunng his 1984 re·d<'ctwn lam-
paagn. Reagan surpnS('d 1he "orld
when he announced that a teal ht•r
would be the first c1tizcn-pa~ngl·r to
fly aboard the spaC'e shuttle La,1 Juh .
after a national compctll1on dunng
which 11 .000 teachers apphc-d. Bu~h
announc.cd at a \\ hlle Hou\t' l t'r·
emony that Mc<\uhfTr had hcen
selected b) N .\ .\ from among 10
finahsts.
As for the impact of the nplo..,on
on the futurr of the spaC't program
1nclud 1ng futurr en 1han pan1c1
oauon an fluthts. peak!'' '31d \Ulh
quemonc, v.ere ·premature ··
"I'm surt' It v.111 not alTt"CI thl.'
l n1ted talt'\ dl·ltrminat1on lo con
llnut' the l'\plma11on of 'pace ·· ht'
addt"d
"The I nttl·d ..,tat~ ha" m<'t
ad,ersll' mdn' times ht-fore an thl·
spacr pro~am "· the spokl''iman said
Marlin r 111v.ater Buc;h's pre~"
secre1ar. said· tht' 'll'e prec;1dt'nt wac;
1n h1~ oifin· in the \\ es1 "mg ol lhl·
~ h1te Hou-,c "'ht'n he v.as informed
of lhe npln<,1on h' a memb<'r ol the
'-at1onal '-,{'1,;unt' ( ounc1I st.afT He
~tood up .ind ""en1 10 tell the
Prt'\ldrnt
Thr rm·<.1dem·~ "1fe !'.anC\ v.a'
"31Chtnft thl· laum·h o n tt'IC\ is1on 1n
tht• n·,1dl·n11.il lluaner-; ol the.> Whu~
Hou'l jOJ "1" •ht' l.'\plo,100 "hen 11
h.ippt'ncd hn 'P<'""'"ortlan Ela1nr
l rl \pt•n 'jld
1 n 'pcn -iuntl·~I 1he rir't lad\ Jf
'J''"ll ·1 lh nl\ < 11M.I no'" C....
1 In ( .lp11ol Hill the Hl1use of
Rt·pre't'ntatl\ l'\ ~ 11n\l·nc-d at noon
Jnd nH·t tor J mtnutl' 11 -.ilent praHr
tht·n .sd t<•Urnl·d hr'"'" houn.
Thl' ~nJll' "hll h "a' not in
'4.°'>\h1n .it thJt 1tml "-hC'dukd a mid·
Jltl'fOOl\O p rJ\l'f \4.'"l(ln 8u .. h. lhC'
flrt'\ldcn1 ,,, thl.' \l•n.ill' ..aid '1nualh
all 'l(.'nJIM\ "l'r(' l'\pt'l tt•d IP att<.•n<l
"lemhlt-thing l<'m hk thing,'
"11J ')pcakt•r Thomd' P ff'\oc1ll Jr
\h.1!1.10~ h" ht•ad J' hl· "all.t·d lrom
the lkor 111 the H11u..._ h' ht\ nll1<.C'
neartn
()en John C1knn D-Oh1t1 a '<'I·
t'ran m1lit.in p1l111 and th<' lil"\t
.\mencan "ho 11rh1tt•d f anh ...aid ·1
gur" "l' alv.:i " knt'" tht'rl' v.ould tl<'
a da' h~l· thi' ·
Astronauts always face possiblity of death
l y RA.ARY P. ROIENTRAL . .......... .._
WASMINOTON -Never 1n SS
manned spece ftiabts. bad tht Uni led
States au&red a death. The o nly
faialitia in tbe IP9« prosnm had
occumd on the launch peel. while
thttc Apollo utroaauu wett Soin& tbrouab a rdMenal.
Death Waa a poaaib1lity all
UUOMUll 8laicl and one that tome ~laid wou~ have to happen
llOIDCtlmt.
Monday was the 19'b aanivenary
of the deaths of /Ur Foret LL Col.
Vifld (Ov.t) on.on., Air Fon:ie Lt.
Cot Edward Hw•~Wbhe II ud LL
Cmdr Roerr 8. Cbaflic. Tbey were'"
the Apollo I capsule. 218 feet above
the Kennedy 1pacc Center•s pad 34,
on Jan 27. 1967. -.hen fire sv.-cpt thro~ the craft
There v.crc other dote c:alls.
notabl)' A{>:Olk> 13. That ~•P was
200.000 males away. enrtutt to the
moon in 1970 when au O.ll)'lt'D tank
exploded. l.d\ without power and
heat. the astronauts cra-.lcd into the
attaehcd lunar lan<kr and huddled
thCTC lwtulc p vity carried them
around the moon and beck toward
Eanh.
Amcnca had Its first SJ*'C tea" on
the seconct manned ll*lt ft.'lbt. when
Ont.tam rode the Mercury spacttraft
Lahm Bell 7" 1n a I S.muune
suborbital flt&ht The '-P3l'ttr.ift para·
chuted mto the .\tlantil and \ilnl
Gnssom bad to swim for h1 lite 1n h"
awkward spaCC'Su1t
Al10 m the Mertu~ pr ram the
first Amencan orbital fltiht h\-John
H. Glnln Jr . M1 ion Control aot an
1nd1cation that a rotJcet pack.age had
broken loose and sxwuhl) would not
work. Without I\. Glenn would haH"
been trapped.in ortm
The rocket workt"d and he landed
safety
ln 1966. two Amcncan aitronaut
came W\~j'un tbf'l"C nds of death
on Gem1n1 8. The atronauts 'eal
Armstrona and Da\'1d n had
hnkcd up in spaet w1th an unmanned
-\gen.i rod.ti 0n1' m1nutt"\ latt•r.
lhe1r ~ r;ift tl<'µn to '\pan 001 uC
\.'Ont nil.
.\rm'1mn11 y, ho later gamed farue
a tht liN man to v.alk the moon,
finalh topped the ~pm b)' '""'a rt·
en ti'} rcx kel Th<' ~hip camt home
~feh
Tht \()' t ~hunle pr r1m. which
had m tir'\l n1,ht 1n ~pnl 1981. hat
had 1\\ \.h l'T tlf sea~. bu1 nona
bcfol'T 1n a hfc--th~atcn1na ca C'J1)
Th~ have been a number of
launch ped abon v.-hcn prtUu.ra U\
the hutde had' built to the liftoR
point and once tba'e •-as an ··a~
cootb.1", -h h mc:a.nt that'* of~
b1p' lhrtt t'f\IJM$ had lO bl" lhut
do_,, dunna a.xnt.
l
I
Ol••C....IWLYlltl.OTIT~ . .-nu.yH, 1Me
Witness describes actions of surgeon c~arged in deaths . ~ . ~----~-=-
N doct h l ed aona bedty and the patient died. up the telephone to lalk with <.:apt. James J. Quinn, a "I felt the11tuatio.n had~ whi~::1 ~ ~ , avy Or says e COmp aln The ClllC, invo.lvina Mrs. Lois Parent, forms OM of fonnercommandinaoff'acerat Bethttda wbowuby then feeliftf veryaJoM,'' wd. lee. ''I fed v~ ' 'twtce about surgeon's abilities, tbe five iavolunaary manalauaJltercbaraeupinst Billia.a vicle commander oftbe Navy Medical Command. I wu 1nt~midated, take~ ad~antate of. .d be nx:eived .. 1 oommaoder in tbe Navy. Mn. Parent wu the 41 ·year.old In October 1913, Billit'• clinical priviJetes in Durtna croswumanataon, Lee ~ · .. wife of a Marine terteant m~or. Last Friday, a third cardiothoreclc IUrtef'Y were lifted and he was relieved of non ounitive letter" fnr tivina "inconaasleftt testimony felt situation was whitewashed IUflCOD in the cue had testified before the oourt-manial his dulJea u director of the hospital's heart IUl'Ff'Y in the Billi& investiption. . . tdetail his
that Billi& panicked after puncturin& the p1tient'1 aona. pt()ll'lm, pendina an investiption an to his performanoe Lee detoribed the Parent operauon 111.IJU •
1 Lee, wbo came into the Navy in July 1983 11 a and his bacqround, which included beina fired from a testimony puaUelina that of Or. Phylhs A. .Edwards,
WASHINGTON (AP) -A second witness at the lieutenant commander, said he complained three times New Jeney hospital. another cardiac suraeon who operated unde.r BtUia.
jiourt-manial of Or. Donal Billi& said Monday that Billi& about Billia to John Aetcher, director of surgical services In the investiaation, Leetaid. because of pressure, he Billi& also faces mansla~ter counts an four other
accidentally punched a psh into a patient's aorta. then at Bethesda Naval Hospital. softened his stand on Billi&. ··1 said Dr. Billia's deaths duriflC or after operations be performed.. .
t'stepped back, starina. eyes &lazed, as thouah he was "I perceived problems with his hand-eye coordi-performanoe in the last six weeks was better than in the He also 11 cha,.ed with 24 counts of derehctton of
atunned." . nation, I saw an individual e~cessively rough wath tissues, first six weeks, but it was not so," he told the court-duty that stem from alleptions he fail~'to have 1 f~lly
, Surteon Charles K. Lee said he stepped in and put bis. and his execution and 1eehnieal maneuvers were not what martial. qualified heart suraeon prcsen~ when bas own opera~na
finteronlhetbree..quarter-inchholeintheaorta.lhemain I was used to," testified Lee, who had won a number of In December, the hospital's credentials committee privilCfCS were limited whale he W'll underl0•~
Jnank of the body's blood transport system, to stem the awards in his career. recommended reinstatement for BilliJ. and he .. ot his retrain1n1 for bean suracry, which he had not perform
•preadlna blood. He said Billi& later dad the repair of the Twice while be complained, Lee said. Fletcher picked privileges back. for seven yean.
Horine I
I
fires
union
workers
:Meatpackers fired
after they refused
~o cross picket lines
AUSTIN. Minn. (AfS) -Hormel
fired hundreds of union meatpackers
;Monday in Texas, Nebraska and
fowa for refusing to cross picket lines
set up by workers who have been on
strike against the company's flagship
plant for more than five months.
• .. We have contracts in place at
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those plants. and we expect our 1---------------------------------------------------------------'pcople to honor those contracts." said
Chuck Nyberg. senior vice president
of Geo. A Hormel & Co .• which is
based in Austin.
Minnesota's governor asked both
sides Monday for a 48-hour cooling-
otf·pedod. -
The president of the union local in
Austin said the firings increased the
stakes in the dispute that began in
August when I .500 workers went on
strike over wages and other issues.
"The fact that the company has
fired those people puts us in a
position to bargain. The company
will have to bargain with us all," said
Jim Guyette. pn:sident of local P-9 of
the United Food and Commercial
Workers union.
In Austjn, the Hormel pJant was
open Monday, but pickets walked
outside and National Guardsmen
continued to patrol against violence.
Local P-9's parent union did not
sanction the boycott or pickets at
other Honncl plants.• said union
spokesman Al Zack.
··we said it made no sense to spread
the misery. to put workers at other
Hormel plants an jeopardy in what we
thought was a hopeless cause," Zack
said. "We asked them not to send the
pickets. and now they have."
The firings came a day after a
neutral fact finder appointed by
Perpich called on union members to
vote a third time on a contract
proposal su~ested by a mediator.
The Austin plant has been the scene
of a hostjle confrontation since it was
reopened Jan. 13.
Eight hundred National Guards-
men were sent in after the company
began hinng replacement workers a
week later. and local authorities Said
they could no longer control the
situation.
The stnke began Aug. 17 after
Hormel cut wages by 23 percent and
dropped the base wage from SI 0.69 to
$8.25 an hour. Hormel said the move
was needed to remain compct1t1ve.
Union workers at other Hormel
plants accepted the concessions and
now cam SI 0 an hour. Local P-9
members fo ught the cut and. because
of an arbitrator's ruling, were making
$9.25 an hour before the strike. The
mediator's proposal would provide a
base rate ofS 10 an hour at the Austin
plant.
Richard Nixon
hospitalized
with influenza
MIAMI BEACH. Fla CAP) -
Former President Richard Nixon was
hospitalized Monday after coming
down with the flu dunng a Bahamas
vacation.
"We don·1 ant1c1pate an) prob-
lems. He should be fine." said Dr.
Loui s Ehas. who admitted Na mile
wes! of the worst pan of the road -
Dead Man\~safter examining him at
the request of a mutual fncnd.
restaurateur C-ye Mandell.
Nixon. 73. was suffcnng from maid
dehydration. a temperature I degree
above normal. fatigue and lethargy.
Ehas said. His patient was receiving
glucose, a saline solution and anti·
boucs intravenously, Elias said .
John Taylor. N1xo n·s assistant.
said an New York that .. he 's resting up
and doing very well."
There were no cardiovascular or
neurological difficulties involved.
Elias said. Hesaad he expected to keep
Nixon in the VIP suite here for about
three days.
His wif~ Patricia. was with ham.
hospital omcials said.
Nixon had been v1s1tma has fncnd
lcbc Rebozo on exclusive Cat Cay an Che Bahamas when he became 111
Friday, Euas aajd.
Nixon flew here aboard 1 priv11e
khcopter early Mond.ty and had
l)lanned to fly on to New York after
h11 cuminalion, Ebas said.
"I just fell he w11n'1 ~uitc up to
make a trip lO New York.' Eba Sljd
AnnotuKing the nc\\' C::..1lifr)n1ia Gold Rusf1, where you
don't need a pick .mJ ~ho\'d tC>r your chance to soike it
rich . Just a CaJit<m1ia Gold Rush ticket tTon1 the Lotter\'.
Match thrl'C pri7..c arnotult'i and win instant prizes o(
$2, $100, $SOO or $25,000. If you fi nd a nugget symhol
along with nvo matching pri7~ a1110Lmt~, you double
your winnings . A nu~ct plus rwo $2 syn1hols hccomc.\
a $4 winner. AnJ a nugget plus n vo $25,000 S)111bol
bccon1cs a $50,'000 \\'inner!
Uncover d1n.-c '4ENfR r· s~mhol , and you could
quaJi~1 tbr one of d1e \\'l-CkJy Grand Prize drawing hows,
\Vht.·rc vou '11 \\'in 10,000, 50,000, $100,000,
$1,oo0,000, or the muJri -nlillion dollar .rowing Grand
Prize. It bc~ns Jt $3,000,000. And grow \vith each
finali r' spm wlril there is a winner .. And then it Staib at
f
•
,,,,..-
'\
$3,000,000, and hcgins growing again.
Remember, n1orc than onc-d1ird of Lottery saJ~ goes
dirc'-tly to in1prove public education. So it's a good
feeling fr>r a lot of good n..-asons.
for n1orc intC>m1ation, call (916) 323-4143 or (415)
557-9550 in Northcn1 Califi:Jn1ia; (8 18) 459-4416 or
(6 19) 238-3304 in SoudlCnl Califon1ia. (Push -button
phones only.) ·
'"''""'"" IKn1f'l.l\ ()l~,..lll•""'-'1lt\\t11t1Nitt.An'.l'1M'lh.»l I lfllt l'nA"u(SI mth1111 .. nn\0
JI\ l\lk.l 111 l\flt.ll 1tN.llln11.1l~. MT 20 """"'· I 19M <..ll1f11rn1.1 ~ .. ~ , , lfTl."I'\
Califumia Lottery
Our sdtools win, too. ...
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Tuetd•y. Jenuart 2', 1Ne
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, A12
Leading indicators pointing up
BJ CHET CURRIEI\ ., ....... .....,
NEW YORK -When govern-
ment researchers peer into the future
of the econom y this week. t~C¥-arc
expected to see new evidence of
increasinJ growth.
The Commerce Department is
scheduled to report Thursday on the
index oflcading economic indicators
for Dece.m~r. Private analysts prc-
Ject t~at 1t will show a strong gain.
Smith Barney, Harris U pham &
Co. says it believes the consensus
estimate of a I percent n~ "looks
OK."
The econom ics depanment ofE.F.
Hutton & Co. is estimating a 1.6
percent jump, much larger than the
gains o f 0.4 perce nt. 0.4 percent and
0.1 percent reponed for September.
October and November.
Whatever 1ts size. a gain would Ix'
the eighth in a row tor the index.
which· 1s intended to detect future
trends in econo mic activity.
Nobody, not even the people who
calculate it. considers the index a
~precl5Canainfallf6ie means oraivin-ma the future-. But many cconom y-
watchers say its recent behavior
supports the view that the business
expansion that began more than three
yearugo will k«p forgintahead over
the next several months.
Roben J. Barbera, E.F. Hutton
economist. believes the civilian un-
e mployment rate, which hit a five-
Y.ta~ low of 6. 9 percent at yearend. 1s
licking down to 6.8 percent this
month.
It might seem a btt ironic that the
leading-indicators index. which 1s
supposed to provide an early gJ1mpSt'
of the future. is so readily subject to
advance estimatio n by economists
outside the government.
But the Lommcrce l.>epartment
makes no claim to possessing an)'
magic tools or set~t formula. The
system for compiling the index. and
much of the data that_J9 into the
monthly computations. are mattcri
of pubhc kno wledge.
For example. one of its 12 compo-
nents is the level of stock prices. as
measured by Standard & Poor's SQO.
tock composite index. which is
published every day in n€W5papers
across the country.
The strong performance of the
stock market 1n December. when it
reached record highs. is one factor
known to have made a positive
contnbut1on to the leading in-
dicators' showing for the month.
Smith Barney analysts say other
elemen1s pushing the index htgher
include the money supply. lhe aver-
a~e work week in manufacturing.
building permits and "vendor per-
AP~o Automotive vice unveiled
··111am1 Vice" •tar Phlllp Michael Thomaa,
rtDit, Introduced hla flaahy new line of
SS"0.000 •porUca.n -the Machiavelli o:rs
-during c eremonlea a t Beverly Hill• Gun
Club. The car, which I• almllar to the
Corvette. will be manufactured In Mlaml.
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'"•"' I 25 NL utt 8urnh1m US Gov I '1 1 I CaPlll 11 I• NL h r{let 19 2311 • h\ 6 34 6 M Lh Gt 10 oO Nt
formance" -the number of com •
panics reportmJ slower dehvenec,
from their suppliers.
Delays in dehveries suggest strong
_ d~man.d relative to su_ppl~, and thus
a~ prtsumed to fort'shadow 1n-
'reascs in production.
What are the effects of this whole
exercise? The leadina-ind1cator
index. of coune. aoes into the always-
bubbhn~pot ofstatisucs that g-ovcm.
mcnt and business policymakers use
to plan their strateg.aes.
DOUGHERTY WHITE DUBOISE
NB architect
~eads OC gro11:p
Investors in the bond and stock
markets usua lly d o not respond to
fluctuations in the leading 1nd1ca1ors
in any dramatic way After all. the'
arc partly based on the pre' 1ous
month's pecformance of the ~toe~
market, which by now 1s 'Cl) old
news 1n the financial world 'e"'pon Beach architect Brtu PHI Doaperty has been inaugurated as prei1dent of the Orange Count) chapter of the
If the figure should comt' in American ID1tlt11te of ArcllJtect1. He succeeds J ames R. Harris of
significantly higher than e\pectcd. Ne" port Beach 1n the post. O ther officers installed include. PHI J.
however. it could pu1 a new chill on Ruffing of Ncwpon Beach. 'ice president and president-elect and
hopes that the Federal Reserve m1~ht Donald W. Caskey of Irvine. ~cretar;. Jolla W. McMarray of Laguna
relax its credit poltc)-. encouraging Beach continues as treasurer. New board members include: David J.
interest rates to decline fun her Bub of In ine. Janet CuoniDgbm of Costa Mesa and Frederick J.
Assuming tha t the newest figures Gaylord Jr. and Robert B. S&ockloa, both ofNewpoa.__
~he-~x-ltf'e"Strnnr,thc\ arl'"'Vt'l'V-1.___ • • ----
likely to get favorable noti<.·rs from a't Irvine resident James Douglas Wlllte, adven1sing manager for -
least one interested pan) _ the Costa Mesa-based I'M' Jabsco, will receive an ITT PR-Press
Reagan administration Rela11o ns Av.ard for 1985. This 1s the Second 11me in three yea rs
A sustained pickup 1n economic Whjte has earned the ITT Corp. Best ldeas IDA Award. • • • growth. stan1ng this winter. "'ould Wayne OuBolse_, president of Mluloa Landscape Service-a,~.
appear to be ¥Cl) "'ell llml·<l tor the of Costa Mesa has been scle-cted Man of the Year b\ the California
Republicans· hopes in an election Landscape Contraclors Auoclatloa. M1ss1on Land~ape 1s a familv-
~ear. o"ned and operated compan) that has won 15 awards from the
BUSINESS CALENDAR
Network looks
at financia l
plan merits
"'f 1nanc1al Planning for 'h nmen"
will be lhe focus of the Ft"h 11
meeting of the Professional Women's
Network of Orange ( ount~
Ka) Byrum-Elkrman. cxeLUtl\C
vice pres1denl of F1nariual <;en 1ct"s
Unhm1tcd. v.111 be the si>eal-.cr at the
meeting at the WeC\tin 'iouth Coa~1
Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa.
Cost of the dinner arid program I'>
S 18 for members. $::! 1 for non·
members. wilh a no-host n>ekta1I
hour preceding the 6 30 pm. dtn~r.
For more 1nformat1on. call 559-44 0 • • • .\ seminar on franchising a .. a
method o f l.'\Pan'\1on will be held h\
Frucorp. an llltno1s managcmen"1
consulting tirm. on Jan :!M al the
Newpon Beach Mamou
The da)-long seminar for busmc~<,
O"-ners and CEO "111 deal with
operations. legal and marketing
aspects of franch1s1ng Franrnrp ha'
helped more than 41l0 compan1e\
become franchl'l'r<i
Cost I~$ I 2 5 pt.'r rx·rson or $1 ()() pn
person v.hen mtHl' than unl· atll·mh
from thL' '><!me firm For 1ntormat11111
and reg1s1rat1on. Lall <'\ 12 I 41i 1-21./1111
organ1za11on o'er 1he "ears for m landscape construcuon and
maintenance v.ork. · • • • James G. Hostetler Jr. of "'ewpon Beach. former marketing
manager for Pacific MutuaJ Life usorance co .• has been named
director of Precision Lilbo's nc" insurance and financial sec.vices
HOSTETLER LEDBETTER NUNIS ,
d1' 1s1on 1n ( arlsbad. C allf Prec1S1on L1lho sale' offices are localed in
:'>;ewpon. San D11:go. and 1n 1'-onhem ( allforn1a. . . ..
Alex and Debbie Hertz ol ( ost.a M e~ ha'c ach1e,ed the 111le ol
direct distributor tor Amway Corp. Thl· l Oupk staned their
d1stnbutorsh1p a hull' O'er a \l·ar ago Thl·ir rl·cent \UCLess v.on them
a 1v.o-da~. npen'>l'-pa1d bu\1nc.,, ..eminar at 1hc firm's \11ch1gan
headquarters • • • Huntington &-ach res1dcn1 James E. Ledbetter has been
appointed' ice president and manager ot Golden Stale Saawa Bank's
(uh er \1t' of1ile Ledbetter brings more 1han 30 \Cars of banking
1..''\pcrtl'nll' IO h1<, ne" P<•'>I • • • Richard A. Nunis h.i::. bel·n appo1nlcd to the board of Pl'\8
Financial Group. the holding compan~ 1or 'e"pon Bea1..h-based
Pacific National Bank.. 'un1' 01 Laguna Beach 1s president of
Disneyland, Wah Disne~ \\ orld .rnd Di ne~ land International. He
ha.; l'l<.'Cn l.\llh lhl' D1\nl'' u m pJn' '1nu· I"'' . . .
'e'' pon Rt"JL h nJll\ t' Oianr m1tb hJ' 1111m•d Manassero &
Associa1es nl \IJnhJtt.tn Ht'J l h J' Jtt11un1 •'\l'l ut1 ' t' rnr<1n,1hll' ltl!
hJnJ l!ng. puhlil rl'IJ1t11n' JJ\l'rll\U~g pr11grJn1', \m1th ltirmlrl\
'nH·<l.J' editor .ind v. rlll·r 111r Ir' 1nt·, Gic k Publishing
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Hottest '86 tip? n ·epends on inveStor' s goals
:Jo •r JOI HATHCOCK ...... c.. $ • 1
'The new h.i&h-tech center for
Southern California -coastal Or-
•• County -also bas evolved as t~e new financial center for the area.
Some of the world's biggest financial
Institutions have major offi~ here
IQd the county's almost legendary ~repreneurial spirit has fostered the
wth of some high quality small
ms-nies.
Althouah the financial services
6iarltet fias become more highl y d(vc~ificd fo~ the small and medium-Mzc investor in recent years, experts
in most categories agree that no one
ti or strategy is ri t for every
nvcs or.
Except for one. ~ Anybody who is serious about
1ruH11ng financial security should
:stratcaicaJly plan an investment pro-
pam to meet his or her curTCnt and
future needs.
' Tom Hansch, president of Hansch
'Financial Services in Laguna Hills
said the paradox of most financial
'planning stems from the lack of
:investors learning basic principles of
·planning. Unfortunately. most in-
vestors plan their strategics upside
,down, he said.
Today's investor tends to place the
·greatest emphasis on product, fol-
'Jowed by the portfolio and the
strategy. To meet the investor's goals.
Hansch said the strategy should carry the most weight folJowed by the
.portfolio and the product.
"Most investors buy and then
worry about accomphshing their
goals," Hansch said.
Investors should prioritize the six
basic concerns: taxes. inflation, safe-
' ty, liquidity, family benefit s and
·income according to the individual's
and family's short-and lona-rante
goals. be said.
William Staake. one of Hansch's
associates. said throuah their affilia-
tion with Financial J>rofiles, a na-
tionwide network, clients arc able to
select from a list of the top 50
investment types.
But regardless of the size of the
investment. the foremost consider-
ation should remain keeping all
investments in one family offunds so
that the investor only pays a transfer
fee each time be mod1fres bis stralCSY~
If the investor doesn't stay inside the
same transaction company, then he
has to pay a full commission every
time he makes an adjustment in his
portf&llo. S&aakc said,' _
Jerry Jones who is vice presi<len
resi dent manager of
Shcarson/Amcrican Express. Inc. in
Newport Beach said even the sorhi~
ticated in vestor with years o ex-Doaald Goldman
pericnce should not run a personal
in vestmen t program without the help during the next 12 to 18 months, be
of a financial consultant. said.
"He or she should select a compe-One of the best barometers for the
tent manager to run the portfolio ... stock market can be found in a table
and that doesn't necessarily mean a called "Key Rates." Jones said five
broker. Brokers are almost too close indicators in that table determine
to their clients and tend to dedicate whether the market is bullish:
more of their time to servicing client's •Three-month treasury bill rates
specific needs after the planning has arc below 8 percenL
bccn done," Jones said. •Three-month treasury bill rates
Most of the brokerages nbw offer a are below the discount rate.
variety of financial planning and •Fed funds rates arc below their
brokerage services within the same level of one year ago.
office. said Jones. •Long-term interest rates arc
If the investors want to choose below long-term rates of one year ago.
specific stocks as a portion of their •Long-term rates arc higllcr than
overall financial management plan . short-term rates.
and can invest $1 0,000 to $100,000 in Jones said that all five indicators
stocks, Jones said they should con-arc favorable now and that stocks for
sider certain tobacco, retail, electric retail drug stores took good for 1986.
utility and drug manufacturing com-However. certain brewers, retail
panics. Some stocks in th ose foods, and the electronics majors
categories will perform relatively well have been somewhat downgraded,
National University
Announces a new location in
Mission Viejo
I
You can now achieve your college degree at a more convenient
location in Mission Viejo . Continuous courses are available in
undergraduate and graduate programs at Nation_al University.
Our one-course-per-month evening format enables ad ults
to complete a degree while pursuing their career.
Financial aid is ava ilable in the form of loans, scholarships,
gra nts, tuition as sistance, and veteran 's benefits.
New classes start monthly.
Next classes begin February 3.
Call our Admi ssion Advisor today
at (714) 851 -4351.
Accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges.
Jones said. --
• Smaller investors or those just
startillj out mar favor mprc con-
servative strategies. Micba~I Flynn
has been a CPA in Irvine for seven
~rs and helps clients ranajng from
mdividuals to small businesses de-
velop financial plans .
"We put together personal
financial plans and help clients assess
their curTCnt status and may their
future course taking all o their
objectives into co nsideration. We
rely upon experts in each investment
category to provide clients with the
assistance they need," Flynn said ..
The Individual Retirement Ac-
count still remains one of the best
basic investment vehicles the begin-
ner can use to start planning for his or
her financial security, Flynn said.
With a self-directed IRA set up
through a brokerage firm, the individ-
ual can choose which types of
-.i.nltcstmcnt~ wilLbe...madc-wiue--wM"--
funds and pay only a small annual
account-management fee.
In spite of recent tow inflation
rates, Flynn said people who arc
planning for their children's college
education need to remain concerned
about a possible return of high
inflation. It co uld cost from $I S0,000
to $200,000 by the end of the ce ntury
to send two children through college,
Flynn said.
Zero bonds - a product which the
purchaser buys at a price substantial-
ly lower than face value ·and then
redeems at maturity for I 00 percent
of face value -yield 8 to 9 percent in
some cases, said Flynn, and can
provide funds for college.
"The key to success in any plan is to
start and maintain funding. Once the
goals and objectives are set fonh,
there will always be good vehicles for
getting where you want to go." Flynn
said.
Donald Goldman. resident vice
president of Merrill Lynch, Newport
Beach, said for the investor with a
sound financial plan and a stable
income, common stocks look good
for 1986.
"Drug stocks, health care. com-
munications securities and some
selected chemical stocks will perform
well this year. For the investor who
isn't afraid to go off shore, there arc
certain European opportunities that
will open up this year:· Goldman
said.
No matter how high the individ-
ual's income. all in vestment de-
cisions should contribute to the
fulfillment of the overall financial
plan. Goldman said.
Insiders'
trading
performs
NEW YOR K (AP) - A new
specialty fund available to the per-
sonal investor. The Insider Reports
Fund, is based on the analysis of
insider trading.
"Insiders in vest in their own
companies for one reason only." says
Aaron Feigen, a chartered financial
analyst who developed the Fund's
investment techniques. "They ex-
pect to persondtly make an above-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ averaite itain.''
Feigen says there is nothing illegal
Look w.here $10,000 in rare coins can get you.
Since 1980 clients of Hannes
Tulving Rare Coin lm·estm ents
have enjoyed average profits of 24%
a year after all commissions and
fees. H -as we believe -our port·
fol ios continue to apprecsate at thi s
rate, 5 I 0,000 will yield a net prof 11
of 519,316 after 1ust fi ve years
In 10 years. they will yield a net
profit of 575.944
In addition to exceptional per
formaoce, gem·quahty rare coins
olfer investors safety, liquidity
taxation at favorable Long Term
Capital Gains rates and the most
tophisticated marketplace of all
tangible investments
Coins also qualify for use 1n
most Defined Benefit Pension
Plans and most other corporate
pension and profit·sharing plans.
At Hannes Tulving Rare Coin
lavtstments. we've been serving
investor interests since 1976 In
ten years. not one HTRCI client
has ever lost money or had a port
fotio in anything but a profit pos111on
s 10,000
12 ,4-00
15,376
19,066
23,642
29,316
36,352
45,077
5.5,895
69,310
85,944
~ 1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
Ou r outstanding investment ser·
vices include:
• Pure~ programs designed for
short·term gains or long-term income
• Two outstanding liquida!_ion
prpgrams
• Quarterly updates on the perfor·
mance of all client portfolios
• A monthly newsletter filled with
expert adv ice and analysis
• Ltveraged Rare Coln lnvestmtnt
Portfolios™, • unique program tb1t
lllows investors to double their bu y·
lng power ind rup addition1I profits
• The ability to use your portfolio
as instant loan collateral with no
qualifying necessary
For a frtt information packet
dttaUing our managed rare coin
investment portfolios, call us toll·
fr« at 800-854-5 I 79 (inside California)
or at 800-854-{J016 (outsidt California)
Or rtturn the coupon btlow.
Servlrig '"""·•"'r' ince 1976. SS,000 lnftlal Minimum Requirement r----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 ~ • Free Information Packet .
1fANN151ULVING Sam'--------------------
'~ Addrt1o• -----------------------(11y ___________________ __.. ___ _
~tttt ----------------lip Codt'-----
s,,..,,,., /flWJIOf'S SIMI IY .,,
5000 lttell s. Sv»t 200
Ncwpot! lud1 CA '2'60
T"""* j'/lll I U01 Rn Phone 1----l •• CA llOlll 15' Sl7' 'Ovt CA I 5"0 016 ------
about it, since insiders are required
by law to report their transactions in
their own companies' stocks to the
Sec uri ties and Exchange Com-
mission by the 10th of the month
following the trade. Individual in-
vestors can get that information
from the SEC.
The Fund interprets the infor-
mation to identify investment op-
portunities. says Feigen.
In theory, insiders should kn ow
bestabout thei r company's plans and
prospects, and tracking and analyz-
ing_ SEG.suppliecLinf ormatio.n on..
insider trading can signal potentially
profitable investing opportunities.
Fcigen says that studies of insider
trading conducted at The Wharton
School and Michigan State Univer-
sity have shown that insider invest-
ments outperform market averages.
usuaJl y by 2-to-I.
Need a Resume?
Actlon-~tttng, personalfzed
resumes a fetters
759-7044 ~:/:/-1.IJ;t•~'l•J:J:~1
It It Dr. Wt. 2'° leed'I
Increasing Yield
SiRnificantly
by leveragin~
llJj(h yi elding
\YSE Listed Bonds.
I • 1r " pr 1\·ate consultation call:
l'h"rll's Lcwsadder
762-2280
Folow• ......
good tetur~. . . Christopher Weil. chan11"!an and
registered principal for Chns~oph~r
Weil & Co. Inc., with Cahfomta
offices in Newport Beach and Glen-
dale has been involved in investment
management since 1963. He s~
his brokerage-investment fi~ !n
J 970 and began a major expans1on m
198S. · . f Though he offers a vanet>: o
financial and br<?kcragc . se.rv1ccs,
Weil said one of his favon\e invest-
ments for I 986 is the all:eash real
estate development that 1s ~un~cd
through the creation of a bm1ted
partnership. . Under such a plan, a group invests
cash to purchase _land and ~nstruct
improvements Wlthout paying a fee
to a general partner, general contrac-
tor or developer. The general partner
joins all the lim ited panncrs and
manages the construction contracts.
,,..._-+--1-M--.u ... ei ves a-pcrcentaec-f'rQQl the
cash flow after the property is (Ulfy
leased.
Under the limited partnership de~
vclopment:
Michael Flynn •Risks arc tow or non-existent
For investors looking for high tiecause there is no debt and the
return potential, willing to take high limited partners don't have to worry
risks and who don't mind keeping ~bout foreclosure.
their money tied up for long peri~s. •The asset is developed at cost and
investment in a public venture capital as such. has a built-in profit <?n t~e
fund may merit consideration. day it is completed because 1t will
Tim Hay, president of Costa Mesa-appraise for more than its actual ~st.
based Security Pacific Venture Capi-•When full y leased. the proJect
tal said that although his firm is provides a safe high-yield invcst-
privately held and doesn't take any ment.
new partners, there are some venture Public storage facilities arc one of
capital companies listed over the Wcil's favorite investments for lim-
counter. ited partnerships and once they arc
"Al most all ve nture capitalists developed. he said the partners have
used to operate behind closed doors the option of: but they arc becoming more pu,r.i...·1>---...veeping the propcny-and-ICH1ng
now." he ex plained. it for a prolon.sed period.
"The advantages to becoming in-•Placing a hen on the property and
volved in a venture capital operation distributing the cash among the
arc that you can realize a tremendous limited partners. return if you are witting to take risks •Selling the property, realizing the
and tic up your money for long profits and being taxed on the capital
periods." gain. -
Hay's company discovered one •Exchanging the property for a
Orange County company that de-like-kind investment and deferring
cided to buy a company in Tennessee. the capital gains tax.
They sponsored the :icquisiuon in the "This all-cash concept offinancing
early stages seven years ago. When at cost is suitable for any capitaJ-
the company sold. Security Pacific intense business like real estate dc-
Venture Capital ~Jized a capital vetopmcnt or equipment purchas-
iain before taxes ofS 18 million on an ing.," Weil said.
investment ofS I .S mill ion. Hay said. All of the professionals consulted
For the inves tor with the warned investors to stay away from
temperance for investing for long any offering which promises huge
periods but without the fla ir for returns in short periods and to always
venture capital, some new types of make sure the investment fits in with
real estate investments are yielding the overall planning strategy.
Advice updated
f o~ high yields
By CHET CURRIER ""......,_ .,,..,
NEW YORK -Whatever bin 11s they brought to the economy.
falling interest rates over the past fe year have been a source of
frustra tion for savers and investors.
At t.he interest-rate pcak,.coun.tl~ss people wi~h money to manage
grew quickly accustomed to two-digit yields on highly safe and liquid
short-term investments like Treasury bills and money market funds.
Then the returns available in the money market dwindled to 9 and
8. and 1 perc.cnt as interest rates came down. And savers began to ask
what they could do in response.
Through 1treirown"'TCSCMCh-urbrolrers and other financ1a Siles
people, they found that there were ways to get back into the "doublc-digit club." l
Among the choices were long-term government bonds, mo!taagc-
backcd securities, even so-called "junk bonds'' that have proliferated
as a wa y to finance new ventures such as takeovers and buyouts of
existing companies by new owners.
For the ~mall investor, th~rc.wc~ mutual fund groups eager to sell
them shares m funds that spec1aJ12ed in an y of these types of securities
still carrying yields of 10 percent and up.
The response, not surprisingly, has been overwhelming. particu-
larly in government-securities mutual funds. They have anractcd
money in huge amounts.
But many financial advisers worry that individual investors have
traded up in yield without realizing the price they arc paying in safety
and liquidity.
''Junk bonds," for one thing, carry relati vely low credit ratinas
from agen cies like Standard & Poor's Corp. and Moody's Investors
Service. What that says is that the experts at these firms consider the
risk io be more than nqliaible. that the issuers might not be able to
meet i~tercst and principaf payments some ti~c.in the fuwrc.
\Yllh almost all types of lonf·te~ ~unties that pay interest.
there 1s the further nsk of loss stemming simply from fluctuations in
interest rates.
It may be safe to assume that Treasury bonds will be ~id off at face
value on their maturity dates. But their market value will fluctuate in
the interim. movina up and down in the opposite directio n from
interest rates.
Mutual funds that invest in 1ovcrnment and mortpac securities
have no maturity dates. So any time their net asset values fall. there is
no assurance of when and whether they might rally •in.
"With the flood of income productscomi .. lnlo the market, I am
not confident that the investon who are buy1na these products are
aware of the risks involved,•• says Stanley Etener..t a Wall Strttt money
manqer and president oflhe No-Load Mut"8l rund Aaociation.
"Indeed, I fe.el that man~oeoote are buyina the prod\aetS sim,pty u
1 different kind of CO but Wlth a hiaber ~kl lt is not tbe cue.
••
' I
Money managers take global view
. By CHET CUIUUER ........ ~-
country's borden. -· ·The awtftftRI bu dawned on"l!llny peopTCtliit they
need not sit idly wa1Cbin& in wonderment and envy as
sometbina remarkable like the economic success story of
Japan unfolds. Tbey ca.o ICek to participate in it with their
inve,tment capital.
men ts also ~ some speclaJ and considerable risk.I. '"" Wbenyciu riiili &airect Investment ouui& -=-----..;i..•
United States, you are most likely aoina beyond the readr
of U.S. rules and reaulatory qencics. f1uhuati•
... ,, r'
Money traden bad a hectic time u tbe U.8.
dollar opened at 19.5.10 yen on tbe Tokyo
Forelp Bzchaqe Market llonday.
NEW YORK -Here's a way to tum some heads tbe
next time you'r( talking investments with your friends:
.. , "I look at i.t from aalobal pcnpcctive," you tell them.
I ve been buY_!!'f.Japanesc stocks. and now I'm dabbling
in British bonds. •
. That's precisely the kind of that tta.s been happening.
tn earnest. amona many professionals who manage !"'O~y .for pension funds, mutual funds and other large
1nsututJons.
ForeiJn investments ttave always had a special
mystiquc(consider, for example. the Swiss bank account).
But now modem communication facilities and an ~ncreasi~ awareness of fin~nciat developments on an
tntema.tJ.onal scale are makmg them a more practical
propoSthon.
Practical, that is, if you have the time, the capitaJ and
the desire to learn tbe ins and outs of this often-complica~ undertaking, and arc witting to bear the risks
of entrusting your money to some entity beyond this
·Sa:veFs-knew CE>s 'pluses
By CHET CURRIER
........ W!tler
. NEW. YORK -As any experienced saver knows, ~·m~ ~n1ficates of deposit at banks and savings
inst1tut1ons offer a distinct advantage over shon-tenn
money market accounts.
WJ:lether interest rates are high or low, CDs generally
pay a_h1.ghe.r rate than money market accounts offered at any g.iven time.
There i~ a hitch, of course. To g~t that higher rate, you
!"'USt ~omm1t your funds for a specified period. Liquidity
1s sacrificed.
~~al's more,. buyers of CDS taJce a gamble. If the
preva1hng level ~f rnt~rcst rates ri ses during the life of the acco~nt, they will miss out on better opportunities -
powbly mu~h better ones. Anyo~e is perfectly free lo try to forecast interest rate ~s. trying to buy-torrg:tm"h CDs at lhe pea otcac
!nterest ra~e cycle. 9ut as any profcssionaJ economist or
mvestor wi~I attest, that's a difficult assignment.
. There 1s a way, however, to gain access to CD yields
without putting all your assets in a single basket. It assures
tt\at YO"! won't eet the best possible yield, but also protects
you against taktng the pl~ngc at pr~i~ly the wrong time.
It C!pera~es on the si mple pnnc1ple of "time di-vers1ficat1on."
Assume that you ar~ suddenly faced with the pleasant pros~t of investing a. $20.000 windfall, and CDs are your investment of choice.
A two-year CD offers a te mpting yield. But a lot can
happen before it matures to make it look much better or
much wo~. than it appears today. ·
So you compro.m1se by putung S5,000 in a two-year
account, and spread mg the rest among other maturities -
say, $5,000cach in a six-month, 12-month, and 18-month
CD. Then, as each one matures, you invest the proc.eeds in
a new two-year account.
That way, 25 percent of your nest egg will be available
lo y~u ev.ery six .months 3;t no penalty. And the return you
rcaJtZC will stay m tune with the ups and downs of interest
rates. This system involves some ti me and paperwork.
People who follow it most enthusiastically will also go to
extra trouble comparison-shopping various institutions
for the best available yield twice a year.
But with tt\at added effort comes greater flexibility, a
ttandy advantage io unpredictable economic times. ,
Reinvest nest egg
NEW YORK (AP)-Rather than receiving periodic
cash payments from companies and mutuaJ funds in
which they own shares. many in.vestors choose to l\ave
their dividends automatically reinvested.
Participating in dividend reinvestment plans allows
their nest eggs to grow at a faster rate. It can be usually be
done at little or no cost, avoiding such charges as broker's
commissions.
One drawback of dividend reinvestment: Even if you
do not receive cash paymentsofd1v1dends m the yearthey
arc distributed, you must pay current taxes onJhem. Still,
many people find reinvestment a handy wa)' 10 increase
their net worth with money they might otherwise spend.
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Ofcoune, some Coreipl investments have tong been
available in this country. Stocks of companies like Sony
and Honda Motor can be bouabt and sold in the form of
American depositary receipts, documents repmcnting
shares held on deposit by a bank in this country.
You may be able to buy a bond issued by a foreign
aovemment as readily as one from an American
corporation.
But tbe number of choices available has begun to
expand. Many mutual-fund companies now arc sponsor-
ina funds billed as .. international" or "global" with
portfoljos divenified 010 several countries.
These funds sboWed strong performance r'esuJts in
the summer and fall of 1985, aided by the decline of tbe
dollar in foreifJl exchange, which enhanced tbe value of
their boldinas in securities denominated in yen or pounds
or francs. Alona with possibt! benefits, many foreWi invest-
currency values add an extra layer of market risk.
People used to the political and economic it.ability
that prevails in this country may have to eon.sider IOme
dauntina {>O'libilities when they venture oveneas ~
their savtnu: How does Country X tax f~ investments~ Mi&bt Country Y nationahzc the industry
in which you have invested your money? Is the
aovemment in Country Z popular and 10 firm contr0lt
Conservative individuals, after weiahing some of
these matters. may choose to keep their money an the U.S;
financial system, which offers its own aencrous variety'of
investment vehicles.
But many experts believe the movement toward
international invcstinJ wiJI continue. They talk o( a
worldwide stock-trading network. operating virtually
around the clock, -PQjSi}>ly by 1990.
That couJd herald the day, they say, when ordinal)
rnvestors) buy or sell Australian or South Korean or
German-1ecoritics as readily as they trade tn Amencan
stocks and bonds tt>day.
eonsiderin4 tax shelter?
Check marriage stability~
NEW YORK (A P) -Mamage stability is an
1mponant factor 10 be considered when deciding
whether to invest in a tax shelter. according to a New
York investment banker. • '
"Unfonunately. tt's often overlooked," says
Albert Barrette, president of Astor Securities Inc .. an
investment banking firm specializing in rcaJ estate
tax shelters.
Tax shelters have been defined as investments
that lower current tax es. by either accelerating
ex penses o r deferring gains. A home or an individual
rcuremcn.t.atroUDl arc considered tax shelters. -
"Many of the people we've dealt with have
troubled marriages or have been divorced ... Barrette
notes. ·
If people who have manta! problems are
considering a tax she lter investment. he explains.
"we suggest buying tt 1n their own name. without a
joint tenancy rights of survival or tenancy m
common.··
In addition. he says. 1f mvestors expect a
difficult di"orce and the spouse rs familiar with their
assets and has access to their financial affairs. "we'll
disco urage them from getttn$ mto a tax shelter."
Barrette points out that 1f the marriage failslhe
1n,cstor may want to sell. which couJd mean gomg
out into the marketplace to find a bu)'er
··f or just a few years' tax benefits ... he sa) s. "ifs
usually not wonh the aggra,atton the 1n,estor will
go through." '
The most important thing tn\estors can do
before considering tax shelters 1s to decide clear!)
what their goa.ls and obJectt,es are wtthm the
framework of their O\'erall financial picture.
according 10 Barrette.
Other than manta! stab1ltt'. some other factors ·
to be considered are the '"' estor's health. age. th e number of-clttldttnGnd funlls available or t cir
education.
Health 1s 1mponan1. Barrette e'<plains. "be·
cause 1f the mvestor 1s an older person and 1s in Il l
health he ma~ not sun '"e long enough to reap the
full benefits of a deal.
"He ma) also jeopardize a pannersh1p beca use
of his questtonable longevtt). whi ch 1s cspeoall ~
true 1fhe takes a larger percentage of the deal
"lfwe know an investors ag<' and health statu\.
we can get some md1ca11on of his reurement plans
For mstance. 1f a man 1s 50 and his corporatton·s
compulsor) rettrement age 1s bS ""'~no" "e·\t~ got
15 years to do some "ork "1th him to shelter r,nme ofh1s mone)' ...
Every fam il\' h~ 1t~
secret s.· Mo m '~ real agt
Grandmas recipe for 01\'tn1t\ Fudge
Dad's secret fishing hole The content.S
of Oonnas diar\'. Fredd\ ~ fallure nnuce in
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American Savings fa.rrubes haw a speoal sort of
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Families who are workmg hard to make their
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t
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snnple Its a fle\1hll' rail' c {) thJt
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DO YOU WANT
FINANCIAL SECURITY?
PrtMnt.cl by
Robert L Schoner
Certlfl.cl Finand•I
rt.nn•r
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Attend our free one session seminar
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There is nothing to buy at the aeminar.
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requires a substantial interest ~ru.lty for earlv withdrawal Annual yield based on dally rompoundmg
when interest Is left on deposit ror entire temi Rate. yield and te:nn subject to change without notJCe
v;ay ·they ffilflJf,t'(i tn hm th:it nt"'
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•
Shuttle-er~~~fPQ--
NEw YORK (AP)-Lower ene'lY. costs and
growing optimism that interest rates wdl drop sent
the stock market surging ahead Tuesday, despite a
brief jolt caused by the crash of the space shuttle
Challenger.
Wall Street analysts said the market's ability
to shake off a tragedy of major proportions attested
to what they called an onderlyang strength in stock
prices, which often arc influenced by emotions and
the national mood.
WHAT NYSE Orn
NEW YORK (AP) J.n. 21 T' ,
AMEX LEADERS NYSE Ll AOER S
GoLo Quon s
Dow JoNES AvERAGES . . .
METAL S QuoTES NASDAQ SUMMARY
• n«.wport bzoch .
"faehaon salond, 711/&t't·5070
mant.hNfh \Oto9.~IOto6 ,~noontD~
V~queros
keep pace,
win, 69-60
- -Irvine puts-a step
to Laguna Htlls bid
wt th Patchell' s 20
Irvine Hi~'s Vaqueros kept pecc
with El Toro tn their f'lo9C for a berth in
tbe CJF 4-A besketball playofti
Monday with a 69-60 triumph over
visitina Lquna Hills in a tumovcr-
plaped pme.
The victory, combined · with El
Toro's loss to leaaue-leadina
Capistrano Valley, puts the two in a
tic for third place at 4-3 after the fint
niaht of the second round of South
Coast Leaaue action.
The Vaqueros had Monday's ver-
dict wrapped from the start. althoup
Lquna llills cut an early deficit to
2S-24 in the second quarter before
Irvine pulled.a-------_,
---.-rvine jumped to leads of 12-4 and
18-8 early, anoln the second ha1fled
by as many as l S before settling for
the nine-point margin.
Keying the victory was Shawn
Patchell, a 6-S senior wbo dominated
the interior and finished as the pme's
leading scorer with 20 points. Also
scorina in double figures for the
winners were Mike Herring (12) and
Mike Oden (10).
The win was Irvine's 12th overall
in 22 starts, matching the Vaqueros•
all-time winning mark of 12 in 1983
when they went 12-13 overall.
Laauna Hills bad four players in
double fiaurcs with freshman Juard
Chris Sheff leading the way with 16
points. Pete Colburn added 14 to the
Hawks' cause.
.. We played OK in the fint and
third quarters," said Irvine Coach AJ
Hcrrina,. "But we're aoin' to have to
cut down on our fouls apmst El Toro
(Wednesday). And, we're going to
have to score in the 70s.
"El Toro's quick with Bret Johnson
and Jeff Stone. Our front line, again.
is the key."
lrrine'a Sbawn Patchell (54) aoea up for
two of bJa 20 pointa, and lllke Oden (riCbt)
Super Bears
left 1&ark on~'. 1--------__ .,::=~::--~ ...
fires away in Vaqueroe' 69-60 South Cout
League Ylctory o•er Laguna Hill• Monday.
NewO~leaD
NEW ORLEANS (AP)-By sun-
up, an estimated 30 tons of debrU had
been swept from streets around 1M
F~nch Quarter and the Louisiana
Superdome, and the mob scene •
shifted from Bourbon Street to Inter-over their dnnks. shaking thctr h~
national Airpon. ruefuJly, failing to work up much oft
The Super Bowl crowd was beaded rnponsc even when Monqhaft
home. twmod them about the Patriou·
Check-in lines were long inside the 46-1 0 loss to Chicago.
airoon. and traffic ®.ulik crq>t At th ,perdomc. a National
thfOUgh a mile-long snarl. ---..__.__-«:"r"'ffiill League scouting opera ·
. At Lakefront Airport. a general startssendinghundredsofyoungmee
aviatio11 facility where 675 private through their paces on Friday. The
jets spent the Iona weekend, tbinp Dome is ready. said Bill Curl, a
were back to normal by ooon, said spokesman for Facility Management
administrator John Maloney. of Loutsiana. the company that runs
"We've closed down the parking lot the $1 63 malhon arena.
and turned it back into an airport Angelo Cheu.a, FML's vice prcst-
again.·• Maloney said. "There arc dent for opcrauons, said he estimated
very few left." that the trash hauled out of the
On Monday morning. the Jets faced stadium would have covered tht
two-hour waits for takeoff clcaranc:e. football field to a depth of six feet. ifi1
and some had to pull out of line and b.ad ~n caned there before at tut tbe
refuel. compactors.
A small viJlage ofluxunous private The city was almost back to normal
railroad cars coupled up and rolled on Monday. Local citizens could get
out of the train tenmnal. reservations at the top restaurants
The Super Bowl meant an csti-again. Businessmen could check into
mated S 120 mil hon to the city's hotels as necessary. sa~ng economy. But it's a short respite between
Jim Monaghan slum~ tiredly at parties.
· tree& bar...iippinga drink Niahtly C.armval parades st.an roll-_
and winding down from the hectic mg next week. On Feb. 8. tb~itty
pace occasioned by having his Endymton parade rolls throu the
"Molly's at the Marlcct" adopted as Superdome as part of an -ru&ht
Patriot headqu.aners for Super Bowl cabaret-style Carnival party 1or
week. 9,000.
"A good week:' he said. grinning And then. on Feb. 11 . comes this
through his grizzled beard. "A very city's really big party -Mardi G ras.
good week." And that's a celebration that makes
Eight red-dad New England fans even those wild and crazy Bears fans
refused to quit. They talked quietly appear tame.
Fantasies are becoming realities at Edison
Charger wrestlers
loaded in quest for
CIF wrestling title
By ROGER CARLSON
Ot .. Dllllr .......
Fantasies are a part of e very
athlete's psychic makeup, you just
don't lift weights and run with a blank
mind, you dream ofall sorts of things.
It's the daydreams oft>ecoming an
Olympic champion and the sort that
can tum drudgery into something
exciting. and the athletes aren't the
only ones holding on to dreams.
Coaches, too, keep going because of
the lust for the big one.
Edison High wrestling coach Terry
Lorentzen is no exception, he has
been guidinf the Chargers for 13
years. through the lean years, through
better time! and now, the pinnacle is
within reach.
His Chargers are unbeaten m
Sunset League dual meets with a
showdown with Fountain Valley
scheduled February 6; they captured
the prestigious Tournament of
Champions at El Camino College
recently; they were third at the
Fountain Valley Five Counties In-
vitational· and they arc rated No. I in
CIF 4-A circles. which if nothing else.
says they're the team to beat for the
Clf crown. ,
Tarkenton, Bom'i£1:m Hall a. e
CANTON. O)lio (AP) -Fran
Tarkenton and Paul Homuna. two
National f ootba.11 Leaaue &r'C•ts edaed out of the runnina in last year's
beflotina. were amona five former
playen named today to the Pro
Football Kall of fame.
Otben makina the 1986 list of
inductees were defensive bl.ck Ken
Houston, linebacker Willie Lanier
and runnina beck Doak Walker.
Len Dawson, the Most Valuable
Player in Super Bowl IV while
quartert.ckina the Kamas City
Chiefs, and Don Maynard, a star
receiver for tht New Yorlc Jcu, faitcd
to make the final cut after beina
amona the 1even finalists.
The 1election committee is made
up of one media repraentative from
each NationaJ Footbell Lcque city
otus 1 29th member from the Pro
t:ootbel.J Wrilen Aleociation.
Ground Ntel c::a1I for the elec1ion of
four to 1even new memben to the baU
eech year. To be elected, 1 player
must receive sappon from approx·
lm1tely 12 percent oftbole votina.
Homuna. a Nnnint t..rk and
kicker, became the un member of
tht 1961 Green Bay .-.Cken to be
indutted into the ball. ne odaen we~ Hert> Addtrie)'. Willie Divis.
Fonat Orea by NillCl*e, "Jlm
IUnao • ..,, Stan, Jam Tl)lor, ad
their eo1th. Vince Lombardi.
LoreatMD
"Hey," says Lorentzen. "don't be
saying stuff like that."
A former standout in football and
wrestling at Ncwpon Harbor High
and Orange Coast College. Lorentzen
knows his club is the team to beat. but
what he wants right now 1s to
maintain the attitude that has
brought the Chargers to this point.
that of the underdog.
It's. the very nature of the sport that
has most wrestlers o perating as
underdogs.
"Wrestling is mentally tough for a
It.id to do," said Lorentzen. ''ll taxes
an ego when you lose. To recruit a kid
into wrestling isn't an easy task.
"Everyone has played Little
League and Pop Warner. They don't
know what wrestling is. You get them
out of P.E. classes if you can con
them. And now. there aren't very
many P.E. classes. If you do n'1 ha ve a
l'otiades
coach o n campus to beat the bushes.
you're not going to get very man} kids
out.
"A wal~-on coach in football is still
going to $Ct a certain amo unt out. The
same wtth baseball and basketball.
b«ause the kids understand the
sport."
Edison's senior-d ominated team
appears to have a clear under·
standing.
"We have a viable shot at maybe
winning it," admits Lorentzen. "lt·s
as good a shot as we've ever had. Ju t
to be considered in the same c1rch.·s
with El Dorado and Loara. that
means we have a shot. But Loara has
to be favored ...
Edison doesn't have a single wrcs·
tier who can rea listically be con·
sidered a fa vorite to win an 1nd1' 1d·
ual title. but it's the overwhelming
balance of challengers that make'> the
.
Lewis disenchanted
with USC program
Ex-MaterDeistar
says he· s thinking
of lea vtng Trojans
Morrison said he would not comm-
ment on the situation in the med Ill.
•·11 is not my custom to air the
fa mily laundry in the media.·· he said.
"Tom is entitled to his opinion and
I'm ent itled 'o coach the 'cam the way
I see fit and will continue to do so.··
Lewis surprised many when he
From AP ~1patdlet chose to attend Southc('n Cal over
f reshman Tom Lewis, the leading other more prominent basketball
scorer for USC. says he 1s considering provarns that recruited him. such ;is
leaving the Trojan program because Syncusc and Nevada-Las Vegas.
hefeclscertainplayersarcbeinuiven He has been the Trojans' leading
preferential treatment by Coach Stan scorer with an 18.1-pointaverage. but
Morrison has strualcd his past two game
"I'm happy about school, the -effensivcly. makinascven of28 shots
faculty is peat, I love the area " Lewis · from the field.
uid Monday. ·•rm &tnhaJ>ey about 1:he posaibility of the highly re·
other thinp. Tbe~'• a lot of turmoil CN1ted ftcsbrnan tran fer bnnp back
and stufT aoina on inside the (beuet-Md mcmonn for the Southern Cal
baU) proaram. C,ena.in p1ayers are proaram. Tbe TroJans lost
treated dIIRrently. sophomore Ken Johnson and
"I've talked to Coach Morrison fttshman Gerry Wriaht dunng the
1bout it and it haan't 90nc 1n~. samt 191243 tealOn. lohnson trans·
He's not handlina it. I don t know femd to Michipn State lnd Wnaht
what rm toina to do. I'm aoina to sit to Iowa.
down and talk to Pat ( Ba~tt) and my MorrilOn aid his team has to
family. I don't know what rm aoina concenuaae <>!' ~aa for a a.amt
to do from there. ~tdnaday ni1tn ipinst c:ross.-town
.. When I can't take it anymore, n~al UCLA:
that's when I'm eoina to eo make a "To •Y lift la• bed of roteS wben
dedlio• wl\at I'm toina to do." you hlveuereata tumovera we've lewis, a biltucbool A»-Amencan, bad would be a talllcy," Momson
ti'ied wwtll lamtt wlllat a&teada• Mid. "When ,OU have a k>t of b1ah
W.. Dii Hilb. lama wu u.e.a an ICMol Man an die proeram. ,JOmt
..-nt •t Mawr Dei. Lewis• famaJy edL'* bcna tban odttn. f
Hva •n Anzone. My No I ~" riaht now •t to
•
-, • •
Murray
Chal"$ers so tournament tough. 1n
add111on to defending their Teague
champ1onsh1p as the fa,onte.
.\nd. really. 1t"s not coming as an)
big surpnse for Lorentzen. He '1r·
tually predicted 11 last summer when
he decided this was the team to
emphasize with a bigger and better
background.
"We took 12 of our wrestlers to
Oregon for a two-.... cd, 1ntensl\e
tra1n 1ng co urse... discloses
Lorentzen. "We had been so success·
ful the year before. "'e "'anted to do
something special. We wanted them
to have eve!) opportunat) and It
really devel o ped a team
camaradene ··
.\nother reason for Edison's m1d-
scason success 1s the la te start the
Chargers got from their football
holdmers.
Having gone the d1!.tanCl' en route
to the C IF Big f l'e conference co-
champ1onsb1p. the football players
am vcd late. and 1fthcre rs-a-burnout
factor for wrestlers. ll appears ll won "t
show at Edison because of at.
"Physically it's hard to come from
football and go directly into wrestl-
ing." states Lorentz.en "But ours
have c.ome out. stayed ou1 and
worked hard. And, the~·re good
athletes. That's the key. Good ath-
le tes make a good coach "
Lorentzen has been stressing ul-
ti mate workouts.
.. In every sport therc'sa bamerthat
kids have a hard u me brealung
through.'" says Lorentzen. "The bod~
can do a lot more than their minds
wlll k t them. We take them to the
bamer F1tne"ss-w11e we're there. but
men tall). the) "ve alrcad) been e\-
posed to some pretty vigorous work-
n11t" We're mental!) prepared to go
Dorman Pe ten
into O\ ertame an e'en bout ··
Lorentzen ~' s his secrets are
simple· 'Tm not opposed to stealing
ideas." said Lorentzen. "I used to take
our kadsover to Loara when they were
practicing for C1 F and watch John
Dahlem. I'd take some mental notes.
then run home and wnte them down.
Same with Gar) Bowden at Canyon.
"I tncd to incorporate some of
these good ideas 1n our practices. and
no"' that "'e ha'e some graduates
v.ho ha\e gone on. v.e put them on the
pod a um ;ind kt them shov. a move or t\\O ·•
"resthng 1s an ind1' adual spon -
there·s JUSt \OU and the other gu) on
the mat But it's also a team spon an
that moll' ataon through camaraden e
hl<.-nd.., ant Cl a ""re'> tier'<. match
..It . .., -;n mul'h harder for a kid lake
(Pleaae ae-e EDISO!'f/B2)
Patriots go public
with drug problems
At least four starters
involved. says Berry:
Voluntarytests voted
BOSTON (AP) -F1\C Nev. Eng-
land Patnots pla)'ers who reported!)
have a drug problem and five to sc' en
others who team officials suspect of
having a probkm won't ncoessanl)
be suspended. sa)s Coach Raymond
lkrry.
··All of us understand what the
world is about today ... he said aner
the National Football Lcaaue team
arrived at Lopn lntemauonal Atr-
pon Monday ntght from cw Or-
leans.. where they lo I an t~ Super
Tom Lewla Bowl on Sunday. "It's Just someth1n& we have to deal v.ith."
., Repons of drua problems surf~
prepare this team to pla)' UCLA and • in a~ interview Wlth Berry an
try to cntor into the upper d1vm on of today's cd1tton o f'fh( Boston G lobe
thr Pac· 10.. Nont ol the pla~rs allqcdly in-
Lewis, 19. had given no mdi~t1on volvcd were 1dcnttficd, but Berry told
prcv1ousl)' of hts d1sencha.ntmcnt at the newspeper they include at lea t
5outhcm C'al. four starters for the mcrican foot-
"f'm ul't'd of ly1n1 about 1t:• he ball Conhntt C'hamptons. w~o lost
51id .... thousht It WI JU t tM 46-10 to the C'tuctt0 lkars ID tht
freshman blues at finL Super 8o•l
"( Momson 's) ndn are rcall)' tnc:1. After htanna from 8m-y about the
I thouaht everyone pi by lus NJe. extent of the .,roblem. spKlficaH
But C'Crta1f1'playcrs M treats d•~nt· rocau~ \lit, and poatbk contc-
ly." q~ Patnou ptayen huddled for
nearh tw(l hou~ at a mttting earhcr
Monda' and 'oted to hecClme me
first NFL team 10 accept 'oluntary
drug testing. the Globe rcponed.
Of 5Q plavel"5 on the roster. seven
voted again t the plan and several
abstained. but the ma1onty approved
1t. the newspaper ~1d
"I would sa' we ma\ be 2 th an the
league as far as th1<; problem goes. but
thert art at lea t fi,e pla;.ers we know
who ha'e a scnous problem and five
to seven mort whom we suspect very
stronal} ... Bern \Bid
"We havt' a· suuataon that eA1sts
here that we fed as into lerable. It hu
been aoanJ on for a year. and I had to
wc1g.h the damages of do•ng some·
th1na about at 1mmcdlatel) b) 101n1
pubhc." Berl) said.
"We felt wt th the season going 1he
way at had. we had to kctp our e)'C Oft
tht bull's-<> e. That's why we didn't
do anythina before. But our bull's-eye
loo mg 1s over ... Berry said Monday.
.. h's ume to do somethina about
this problem. and 1t cannot be done an
secret.•• Berry Ald.
Amona the seven oppoted to t'4:
olan were playeT rqm1entati~ er,.. .
Holloway and tus assisiant, Roe
Wooten. both of whom ~ tM
tctuna on cotlectt~ · i ..
arounds.
Tbc Nattoeal F~tilllt 1.c I t Pla~rs Astociatioc\, lilt ,..ym ..
un10ft. hu ~ ~ ..,_,._..,..._
J
.,
GretaJE1•• atreak enda at 39
period tic and linemate o.... Aa•ar.. , Mart N"l1r'I pl broke a aecood-Iii
scored twice 10 lift &be Edmonaoo Oilen to
14:) vlC\Or)' over t.MClaic:alo 8ledt Hawb
• in National Hockey ~ action Monday niabt. But,
Edmonton'• wa,.. Gnt*J had just \wo shou on toe!
y,... AP and saw Ilia 39-Pme point streak come to an encl It
marked only the leCOnd time in SO pmcs that Orctzky
RADNOR Pa. -~ How· • hadn't collec1ed at least one point. EltcWhere. Mart
ard CClltll, who' criticiud bis former ABC Pa~_.. ~red with I 0 teWnds re~foina in t~ th~
Monday Niaht Footbell colleaaues in a eenod to hft the New York RanJets 1n10 a 6-~ tie ~th
book published last year, is winner of TV q uide's I I th Quebec. The Ransen were ~sana the Nordiques 1!1 a
anlJUat" Mr. Nf« Guy waroTof ••a sp<)ru liaure W"'l&SP--&t&cmpUo tel the ty•n1 p l wb~n-Pavchch
displayina boorish actions." ba"ltd a rebound put Quebec nctmind~r CUat
Coeell, wbote critically_ acclaimed "Sporubeat" MalattMll · · · Mata Nu._. ·~ored twice and
pl'Olmn wu canceled by ABC in December, "went out aoaltender ~ Seetaert . tnadt. 22 saves as the
an Nioe Guy fashion. knockina the firm that made him Montreal Canadicna turned in a sohd twe>-way cf.fort to
rich and famous and knockina beat \~e Buffalo Sabres .4-1. Naslund. scored his fim
collea ucs with whom be ac;>al wtth 16 sec-0ndsJeft 1n the first ~nod and not~hcd wort:c!," wrote TV Guide spons b1s 33rd of the .uson at I :3S of the th a rd when he lifted
writer Mel Ourslag. who chose the Sae,UM IUdler'a ~over SabTCS aoaltender Ja~
winner and contenders. ~~er · .· • All-Star defcrueman Ray Bffr1111e brok~ a
The mapzine disclosed the uc ~th ~11 13~ aoal ?fthc season at 7:33 oft~e third ~ults in its Feb. 1 issue. penod n1aht an rall~na Boston to a 6-3 win ov~r C.osell was chosen over Hartford. Bourqite drilleCt a JS-foot stapshot past goalie
buebaJI pitcher Joaquin Andu-past Mike~ after center S&ne h.,er won the draw
'ar. who as a member of the SL on a_fa~-of!in the Hartford ~ne ···Marc~~. ~uis Cardinals refused a bid to( playing ID ha~ first pme for Minnesota. scored twice an
.___..--......_ __ _, playinthcAU-StarGameandwas ~e first penod, as the North Stars coasted to a 6-2
ejected in the seventh game of the victory over New Jersey.
World Series for bump~ an umpitt_l:f c bas since been
traded lO the Oakland A s. Dalla• overcomes Gervin •• 45
Third pl.ace went to Indiana University basketball
Coach Bobby Kni&ht for throwing a chair across the Roludo Blacbnu scored 33 po~· nts 1
court in a pme apinst Purdue and for not pennitting and Sam Perklat had ciaht of his 18 pofots -iwoo£bi~yers1a.1l~m.e.from:e-m~~pinst-Ohio..--m-thc-<ftnal perioduthe DattarMavei -t-+·---
State because he was displeased With their pl.a¥· . defeated Chicago 124-116 in National
• Also named as ·contenders w~re J?etro11 L.aon~ Basketball Associatjon action Monday. The Mavericks
football coach l?arryl Rogers, University of M1arn1 overcame a 45-point effort from Chicago's Geor1e
football coach J1m~y Johnson. New Y_ork Yankees Gervla, who scored just 10 points in the second half ...
owner Georae Steinbrenner and tennis star John forward lteUy Trtpeeb scored 33 points, includjna
McEnroe. • . two free throws with two seconds remaining, to give Coscl~ became the ~rst br~dcaste~ to wm the Detroit a 118-11 7 vjctory over San Antonio. 3puck.a
award. Steinbrenner won at three umcs-in 1980, 1981 scored. 12 points in the fin.al period, includ· ci&ht
and 1982. during a 2~ Pistons' spun ... Milwaukee bui t a 27-
Coscll's book, "I Nev~r Played the qa_"'!c," raised a point lead over Utah by halftime. and. behind SWaey
furor because ofa chapter an_ which he cnt1c12ed former Mlllttlef'a 32 points, coasted to a 127-103 victory ...
broadcast partners Frank Gifford and Don Meredith. BW Hullik and Lafaye«e Lever sparked a I.ate first-
Coscll said Gifford wai a "Teflon man" because no period spun. leading Denver pa.st Oevcland 124-103
matter what mistakes he made, "nothing sticks to rum.. .
and television critics treat b.im welt He also said
Meredith was rarely prepared for a pmc broadcast. Seven SigD Dodger CODtJ'&Cta
Quote of the day
Fr1n1t Llydea, coach of tbe-l:Jtab-Jau,
expounding on jockstraps: "I know one thing.
The Russians arc putting them on right, and they
fit -both their men and their wome n."
Ryan topa list for Eaglee coach
coordjnator of the Super Bowl-champion c II•
.111: LOS ANGELES -Seven players
including relief pitchers Bobby Castillo
and Dennis Powell have signed or agreed to
terms of 1986 contracts wilb. tbe.J..os
Angeles Dodgers, the National League -Western
Division champions announced Monday.
Castillo and outfielder Stu Pederson agreed to
terms, the Dodgers said. addin' that they have received
signed contracts from Powell. infielder Jeff Hamilton,
and outfielders Ralph Bryant. Mike Ramsey and
Reggie Williams.
The club said it now has 24 of the 40 pla}'irs on its
major league roster under contract for 1986. ·
PHILADELPHIA -Buddy Ryan, [!]
Chicago Bears' ferocious defense, a~
to be the favorite in the latest handicap of
, candidates for the head coacb.ing job with the
Philadelphia EaaJcs.
In addition to Ryan, the entry list has David Shula.
Television, radio
TELEVISION
No events scheduled. Tony Dungy and Fred Bruney. RADIO
Nonnan Braman. owner of the National Football
Lea1uc team, says only that he expects to have an
announcement this week.
7:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Mil-
waukee at Laxers. KLAC (570).
EDISON WRESTLING ...
From Bl ·
Eddie Ruiz of Marina,'' said •Two others -Bill Dorman
Lorentzen. "He's really the o nly guy (I S-4) at 177 and Tim Peters ( 15-4 I at
at Marina for the past four yea rs. and 128 round out the major nucleus of
under different coaches. It really puts Edison's fonnat.
him at a disadvantage, because the "The kids arc wrestling well right
team concept is good for the individ-now,'' said Lorentzen, one of the
ual." coaching keys in football, too. as a
As for individuals -Edison has defensi ve line coach. "There are goals
plcnry, including Gene Patino ( 122), in mind as individuals and as a team
J ohn Lowcnbruck ( 128), Chns and a lot of them appear to be within
'" FotLadcs ( 140), Mike Warfel ( 147), reach.
Roben Murray ( 154), Don Aselin "Bur it takes a lot luck, too. Bad
( 165) and heavyweight Don Even s. draws, injuries. illness, someone
A bneflook ar Edison's nucleus: doesn't wrestle well ... then. well.
• Pauno (29-4) placed in rhc 48-we'll ~ close._ But we have the
team Reno Invitational where Edison potenuaJ to wtn CIF - and rhat
fi nished fifth. and he backs up his .. doesn't happen very often back 10
cffons w11h the endurance of a back (football-wresrhng).
distance runner.
• Lowenbruck ( 13-3-1) has seen
hm1tcd action because of a back
injury. but Lorentzen feels he can
p1dc up points an CIF for the
Chargers.
• Fot1ades (27-4-1) won at Reno,
Olson's mark
falls to 19-33/•
in converting ~ was third at the Tournament of
Champion' and could easily have
finished 1n the top two at Five NEW YORK (A P)-Bill y Olson\
Counties. but a knee inJury during a world indoor best in the pole vault.
qucstionabk l'illl 1n the semifinals originally announced as 19 feet. 4
was dec1s1ve inches, will go into the record book'>
•Warfel ( 23-2) 1!> obviously cons1s· as 19-3¥•. a track and field official said
tent and has become a "panner.'· He 1s Monday.
. one of the real backbones of Edison's Bob Hersh, records chairman of
Flames hot;
Kings not
CALGARY. Albena (AP) -The
Los Angeles Kings did exactly what
they didn't want to do against the
Calgary Flames, goaltender Darren
Eliot said.
And by the time Eliot got into the
National Hockey League game Mon-
day night, the Kings were already in a
predicament that turned into a 6-3
C~lgary victory.
"We've dug ourselves into holes in
this bui lding before," said Eliot. who
replaced starting goalie Bob Janccyk
af'icr he allowed two goals on three
shots before the three-minute mark.
.. We were very conscious of trying
not to do that 1001ght,and maybe that
played too heavi ly on Bobby's mmd."
The Kings scored three goals of
their own in the second period but
Calgary went on to post their founh
victory m as many games this season
against Los Anieles.
Janecyk was pulled after two
minutes, 56 seconds only to have
Ehot allow a goal 33 seconds later.
"They snuck a screen shot
through." said Eliot "From that
point on ll was a pretty even game.''
strength. The Athlctia Congress, the national
•Murra}' 120-6). one of the few govcmingbodyforthespon.sa1dthat
JUnion on the ~uad. was founh at Olson's leap, at Saturday night's
Five Counties. third al the Tott:. and Albuquerque Invitational. was
1----~mly. t-turd al El Dorado because an_ _cmasured metrically at 5.89 meters
official made a t1m1ng mistake and -which converts to 19-JV •.
'
Jamie Macoun, Hakan Loob and
Charlie Bourgeois scored early for
Calgary. Tim Hunter and Eddy Beers
fo und net in the second, then Lanny
McDonald rounded out the scoring
wilh fi ve minutes left in the third
period.
Brian Wilks. Marcel Dionne and
Bryan-Erickson seored--for -Los An-
gclcs. forfeited his match There is no metnc conversion for
•Asehn (18-4) 1s one of 1he big 19-4. The next mctnc measuremen1
surprises for Lorcn11cn since repon-of 5.90 meters convcns to 19-411.
ina from football. and among 1s However. Olson's Jump wa~
victories was an 1mpress1ve dcc1s1on measured imperially at 19-4, thereby
over a top El Dorado High foe causing the confusion.
•Evens (21-4) 1s a 6-3. 245-But for a jump or throw to be
pounder with Just one thing on his recognized as an indoor best or an
mind -wrestling. since he doesn't outdoor world record. 11 must be
play football because ofa back inJ ury measured metncall y.
1 UCI woillen rally, 64-61
l D Hig hi ·I -d sconng 11 poants, anabb1ng tour e n. as ea rebounds and dishfaJ offt~o assists.
Anteaters to PCAA She scored.seven of her points in the
final SIX minutes Of reaulat10n.
overtime victory
UC Irvine's women's blskctball
team came from IOpo1n1.Soffthc pace
at half\1me and eventually pulled out
a 64-61 overtime victory over visitina
H1wait Monday ni&ht in Pacific
Coast Athletic Assodition action on
the w1nncr'1 noor.
The verdjct ups the Anteaters'
conference record to J.-2 (11-7 over·
all). while Hawau falls to 2-3 ( 1()..9
overall).
Valene Dehn and Enn H1psh1
were the lctiders 1n UCJ's dnvc. Dehn
Higashi scored 16 points and had
1hrce rebounds and four assists.
UC1's fint lead was with n1De
minutes left with a 40-39 lead, and ID
a nip.and-tuck finish Hawai i's Bryna
Jones connected from inside with 13
seconds left to tend It into ovcn1me.
The two teams traded buckets 1 n
overtime, then Dehn scored four
points to send UCI up, 63-S9.
Hawaii cut it to 6)..61 with nine
teeonds left, but Nidia Burks hit one
of two free throws with four teeonds
left to ice it.
Hawaii's main souroe was Alex Pro~encio. who ICOrcd 14 of her
aame·hi&h 18 Points an the first half.
Clippers stop
Nets~ Dawkins
LOSANGELES(AP)-Tothclos
Angeles Clippers, Darryl Dawkins of
the New York Nets was a marked
man.
In the Clippers' 103-98 victory over
the Nets on Monday night, they felt
that Dawkins was the man they could
not handle so they decided to prompt
his removal.
"All !hrough the game we were
trying 10 get ham out," Cli~pen
Coach Don Chancy said. "'He s the
auy we can't handle.''
Dawkins, who paced the Nets with
22 po1Dts, fouled out in the fourth
quarter for the third time in a row
after aom1 21 pmcs without foulina
out He was c.a.Jled for four fo uls iii the
fourth quaner. when the 01ppers felt
the~_could so at him.
"That was the obscrvauon once he
was 1n fouf trouble," said rookie
center Benoit Bcnja.rmn, who scored
11 points and blocked five shots. "We
kept pushan1 the Mil inside and tned
to foul him out. And we did."
Dawkins' early u1t, however.
wa n't h11 own fault, 1.ccordm1 to
Nets Coach Dave Wo hl.
Vaqael'09 make bid -for CD' playoff•
Intae m,la'• "tm;!I aa,. (20) loob for ua
ODeDlU iOla8t --of Laaaoa mu.· CldU Aeft (lefJJ. wlalle llcott f"uiara (42)
Uld lllb Oden (52) dominate l>oud8.
lnbae won &oath Cout Leaaae •ame, 89-eO, to pin tb1rd place de with El~oro.
Fresno State ekes one out
.. Georgetown. Memphis State roll;
San Diego State tops Wyoming
Frem AP dil,-tcltet
Jos Kuipers sank a three-point basket with seven
seconds remaining to lift Fresno State to a S2-SO victory
over UC Santa Barbara in a Pacific Coast Athletic
Association basketball game Monday night in Santa
Barbara.
UCSB had taken a 5~6 lead with 21/J minutes
remaining, but. after Fresno State c ut the difference to
50-49 on free throws, Kuipers launched a 2 1-footer from
the left comer that went in to give the Bulldogs the
victory.
The winning basket was the only shot Kuipers made
m seven attempts. ·
Marvin Caner scored 16 points to lead Fresno State,
which improved its record to 5-4 in conference. 10-8
overall.
Henry scored 21 points, includin$ five 3-pointcrs. to
lead Santa Barbara. which fell to 3-6 1n the PCAA. 8-IO
overall.
Elsewhere in coll* basketball Monday:
Geor1e10wa U, Providence S4: In Provadcncc,
David Wingate scored 20 points to lcid 12th-ranked
GeofJctown to a Big East Conference victory ovef
Providence College.
Georgeto wn took a 4-2 lead within the first two
minutes and was never headed. The Hoyas took only 19
shots in the first half. but made 13 of thcmJ. and were up
35-25 at the break. Rcge Williams got I I 01 his I 3 points
m the first halfand Winptc contributed 10 points.
Mempllla State IS, Vlrclala Tedi 11: In Memphis,
senior forward Baskerville Holmes scored 19 points to
lead undefeated and third-ranked Memphis State to an
83·6 I Metro Conference victory over No. 20 Vira)nia
Tech.
The victory increased Memphis State's record to
20-0 overall and 5-0 in the conference. Holmes. who had
two points in the first half, also chipped in with nine
Charge• flied 8'alnet three
MADISON, Wis. (AP) -Three University of
Minnesota buketblll players were charlcd Monday with
sexually auaultina an I S..yar-old MadflOD woman after
1 Bia Ten be&etbaJI pmc and were ordered beck to court
next month.
The Dane County Distnct Attorney's Office filed
characs of first-deJtec sexual assault and second-<lcatte
scxua.I uuult apin1t two players, MitcbeU Lee. 20', of
C.rol Cit)'• Al., and Kevin ~9'ith, 2lj of Lan.sin&. Mich. A~1td ~· Ocorae Willjams r., 19. of0Akland1 was c with one count of leCOftd~ WXUAJ
assault. nivmity of Minnaota of6dal1 ~-Monday
that the Oophm would finish this 1e&10n'1 acbeduJe.
Former 111i1iant coech Jimmy William1, 31, wu
named Monday to 1ucceed bead coech Jim Dutcher who
quit Slturdly after the acbool said it would ~it a
Sunday pmt qa1n1t Northwestern.
rebounds for the Tigers whale senior cen1er William
Bedford added 12 points and 11 rebounds.
Sa.a Dle10 State.II, ~yomlag 8!: Forward Anthony
Watson scored 30 points. ancludinf four free throws in the
final ~vcn seconds, to lead San Diego State to a Western
'."thlcuc Conference basketball win over visiting Wyom-
ing.
The Aztecs, who outscored Wyoming 11-1 ID the
final I: 35 of the game, raised their record to 4-4 in
conference, 6-12 overall. Wyoming d ropped to 4-2 in the
WAC, 10-8 overall.
Cc,ntcr ~ric I..eckncr scored 28 points to lead
Wyom1nf. while Les Bolden added 18 points and grabbed
a game-high 10 rebounds for the Cowboys.
Dake H~ Harvard st: In Durham, David Henderson
scored 14 points and reserve Billy Kang was fi ve-for-fi ve
fr.om the field for 12 points to give No. 2 Duke an 89-52 victory over Harvard.
. Th~ Blue Dcvils1 18-2. staned sluggishl y, scoring five point~ m the first six m inutes. But with the Crimson
shooung ~I percent for t~e first half, Duke slowly pulled
away .behind the shooting of Hendcl'10n and Johnny
Dawkins to take a 41-19 halftime lead. T~c Blue Devi ls outscored Harvard 13-6 in the first fou~ m1nut~s of the second half and followed up with six
stra1gtlt points by .licodcrson to take a 61-27 lead with
14:07 lcf\.
. ~bama-Blr_mla1hm 71, So•~ F lorida H : In 81~1n~am. ~naor~uard Steve Ml&ckU pumped in 21
points, incl~di~ 19 m the first half, to lead I 8th-ranked Alabama-B1rm1~&ttam to a Sun Belt Conference victory
over South flonda.
.Led by Mitc~cll, UAB shot.65 percent in the first half,
lcad1n1 by 21 po1Dts at one point 1n the openina period
The Blazers took a 40.25 lead into the locker room. ·
College basketball
Anteaten romp
over USIU, 7 -2
UC Irvine's men'1 ~nnis team ran
its record to 2-0 Monday afternoon
followina a 7-2 non-oonferencc vic-
tory over vi1itinJ United States
International University of San
Oiqo.
Man Sona Hina. the Anteaters' No.
I player, led a sin~ bam&e with a ~. 6-2 conquest. and he teamed up
in doubles to accomplish a 6-2, 6-4
victory.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /TU9edey, Jenulty 21, 1-•
La t e surge on Patriot s sav.es boOkies :;:.'f':t:.c:i:
N~ EnaJand hne. But the Ref rtgerator · s TD
cost Vegas books plenty
LAS VEGAS (AP) -A late surie of bets on
the New EnaJand Patriots saved Super Bowl XX
from beina a dud for Nevada sports books.
althou'h some lost money on an oddball bet
anvolvina an unlikely running back.
place in the nation where spons bett ina is lepl.
Odd•makers said they would break even Qr
lose very little because of a late flu rry ofbetuna on
the Pat nots. who lost 46-10. The bookl do not
reveal fiaures on how much they won or lost.
Many books that offered a wide v~ety of
oddball bets took a bath on one propos1uon -
whether Chicaao star William "Rcfri~rator"
Perry would score a touchdown. Some books WCTt
offering 12-1 odds on the bet. but the odds dipped
as low as 3-1 when betto rs beaan gamblina on the
Bears' star.
Reazncr s.aad betun1 bcJan runnana hnvy for
the Patnots Saturday mornan1-
"We had doublt lanes and our people (wriuna
belJ) didn't look up.unuJ p mcumt Sunda)
afternoon. We could have had traffic cops an there
to help handle the crowd."
"The latt money on the Patriots saved us:·
Reizner said "If that money hadn't shown. 1t
would have been bad" for tht books.
Southern Calilonaia Coneer
men's ~ team rim its~·
talion apiut Point Loma '°°! w1th17:JOupoft'ia NAIA OiAric1
comprtt0a et the v.,...,.· C
Mtsa-bucd campu1.
With a vaaory they wou&d prov ..
their roach. Bill Reynolds, wilb Wf
IOOth victory asacoech in five~ jj
· Coach Grq . Patton's Anteaters.
rankN..No. lLin-lhc....nation.-aK..at
UCLA Friday afternoon in another
non-conference matchup.
Oddsmakers at the state's 36 legal spons
books..._wt(t saying last week the Ch1caf o &ars-
New Eiiiland nwchup wou ld be i>ne..J> J_ht least
alf racfiVe:l'()rbcttors because of tfie tea ms an vol vcd
and tht 10 poi nts &iven the underdoa Patriots.
"I think some books took qui te a loss, a real
pasuni. on that onC..:.'...saLd Sonny Jteimer...w.bsm
Castaways Spons Book did not offer the prop-
osition. "A lot of money showed that he would
score."
Mel Exbtr of tht Las Vcaas Club said the
htavy belling Saturda} and unda) kept the
bemng hnt =.anq the btllim -Ju.mo•rii... _
"We got heavy ac11on on the Patriots and
dropped tht hnc from 101 ·to 10. thtn finally 9111"
points for cw England. Exber said. ··when~ &Ot
to 9111. tht Bears bt11ors staned coming out of the
The VallJuards. 12.6 ovrrall ~
2-2 an conference play. arc tryi~ It
bounce back from a 107-83 el btbeiat IOSHm •Friday-apinst !rthat'ti...1e._.1a--111ie-~--...,.
Action.
UCLA awaits with No. 3 creden-
tials in national rankings.
But sports book manasers arc now saying the
ha nd le. or amount bet, could match the record $40
million bet last year at the spons books. the only
Pcrry·s th1rd-quaner touchdown. a one-yard
lunge. left sotne books sharing the sting wit h the woodwork. httrally ..
Jon Haar was the only player ..
scort consistently against AJA. ac>•ftf
for 18 points. •
..
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2 Person Family S10345 S144 60 ·s21s 30 S295 75
3 or More Family t S1•1.ao $1941.70 $262.45 $342.55
$500 Deductible
Single Party $42.65 $60.70 S92.40 s1 2•.2s
2 Person Family S76 90 Sl 12 10 S162 40 S220 00
r ~ 3 or More Family $105.50 Sl ... 95 s 195.35 S2S..9S
$1000 Deductible
Singl• Party t $10.35 $43.30 $73.80 S102.95
2 Person Family SSS 75 S81 70 Sl 26 05 S175 30
3 Of Men FMnity _ S77.10 . $106.0S $150.60 $201 50
S 1500 Deductible
Singte hrty S23.95 S34.40 S66 15 S91.15
2 Person Family S45 90 S65 00 s 112 85 S154 10
3 Of Mof'9 Famlty 164.15 $89.45 sns.oo Sl17.15
S2000 Deductible -Sln,M ,.ny $19.45 $2 7.35 S60.35 SM.•S
2 Person Family $39.SO S56 00 S102 00 s 142 10 --J Of Mof'e Famity S5'.50 $74.20 $121 .50 S16l.15
"Thest monthly duts are billed quarterly
Blue Shield
of California
CALIFORNIA r'HYSICIANS' <;E RVICE
,
.....
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letof\, \Hell, DI.Ml. J, Joe a.rt c.r-... ~ .... "'·*' .. .,.,,.. a_-.,., ~~. '" .. , .. '· ~ ...... ~. 122,QI/ 'II. Atwell .....,,.., ~IC. lla.111
haw• ......!.:.. ~::--· ....... 116"'1, 1. -• &..A. UMrl. .. ,..., l.
••• lne!IMI. o.i,,.,, 4IO,H2, 4. Mike Mite.NII, left Mtoftlo, •l..611; l -.,._ ~. L.A oi..er., M.J.1011 6. ~ mA Nall, 0•1h1~1 m ,tn; 1. Adrien Deftfltv,
WHT11M c:ue.ue-. Ulell, m.-: I Mlw1' ~. o... ,..._ .._ tn.)4; t. Xavl« Mc09nlel, S..ttllt,
W L N. .. Ut.uf; 10. R-.V Mt:CTev, ......__..._ ~'" 31 II ,7Q t•MO .........._ ......,.._,,
~ 111'Ja J -=' : : ~ ~Yl ~·~~ ~:..n~."i! ~ u 11 » 17 Antonio, m.w. 1 JoMnv ""-'•· * GOldln State 14 J4 .m ti Antonio, M ,1$'1; 4. ...,. ..... L.A. ,.._. DlfllllM °"""-.. ..., S JoM LUCU, ~IOll.
Houtlon JO 14 611 ltt,175; '-C11tla ~ ~ Sta ... ~ ~ It ,.$11 4v. 7",Ql; 7 Lefavette L._., Oenver,
San Antonio ?• 22 ,m 'I 1'UOO; t; __,, C...-rt:ao .......,.,,,,
Della• n 21 .JOO 1 27'...,1 t. CIYda Ofexler, Portland, 257,6211
Ulefl 22 H .... tl.'t 10, ltOIMdo ---~. Dallas, US.2CM.
s.cramento 17 • .31'1 lll.'t c.e...
IAJTaRM COMPaR•MC• At' ~ •
...... OMll9 -~ "' ~ Bo6ton Piii~
Nlw.JwMY WeM!lnoton
Nlw Yorlt
MflweUllM
Atlante Detroit
Cteveleno Cllleaoo
lncllana
» I ,MS 1NO<t11C-o11ne 1'31 21·0 12'0 1
2t IS -'" Sl.'t 2.MtnlPl\k Stete 20-0 1171 > 2' 20 .512 t l.'t >.Oeortlle TKll 16-2 IClll 4
23 21 .m 11\l'l '-K•nM• lt-2 lOM 1 15 7t ,)41 lW. S.Oull• 11·2 101' 2 c...I OM.-6.0klllllome 11· 1 tOO j
Jl 15 '7• 7.St . .John's lt-2 •t a
24 lt S71 s t.KentUClky 1•·J 747 11
22 n _, I~ t.Mlclllolft 1M 740 6
It 26 :.,, 12 '101.Nevs .·Lis "'"' lt-J n1 10
•• 7t .JS6 """ • YfKUM ls-1 70I ' f lt 31 27' 17"'1 12.0eotwet-n 1 .. 3 "7 12 ,_...,,., sar.. U.8rldlev 20-1 451 17
cou.8 .. WCIMIN UC.,,,...~...._.,,
(~)
...... ('1) .. ",. .. • t t " 2 I ) S
1 0 I 4
' 0 s 2
3 0 i ' I 2 ) ,.
' 4 ] "
uc ...... , .. , .. ..... .....,.., •• 1 14
o.M i 7 t 17 ~· 1 t a ' Crawford a 1 4 I lrOWTI 2 J 2 1
9Yrflt 0 J 4 ' Gral\am ! 1 O 5
Terrv ) 0 0 ' To111a ,. t n 61 To••lt n 20 16 .,.
Heiftlml: Hewell, )Ml
•etUllJtlon; S>·lll. Tedwlk•~ UC lrvtne Coectl Anor.
NML
C~~ c:c:•NC•
w L T "9a OP OA
Edmonton l5 11 • ,. 163 202 c .... ,.,, 23 21 • so 206 1• K• IS 27 6 36 17• 236 Vancouver IS 27 6 36 173 201
Wlnnfpeo IS 31 s JS 111 237 ...,.,... DMtleft
ChlcMo n It 1 Sl 211 214
St. LC>Ul1 10 20 6 .. 174 112
.wnn..o1e " 12 I .. ,,. ltO
'f.jlronto 12 JO s 2t 1tO 230 Oelrolt 10 34 s u 163 ,..
~ ICXI, New Jer'MY 91 l4.Notr1 Oeme 12·3 Jll 1' Dallas 124, Chieffo 116 IS.lnd!Ma 13·4 14' WALU CONPaRINC•
etroh 111, San Antonio 117 16.VlroCftla TKll 16-4 tt1 20 Petnca ~ Denver ,,., C,..,_nd 1~ 17.Loulslalla Stete 16-) tt• I• PtllllldeloNa 35 I• 0 70 215
Mllweull." 12?, Uteh 103 ll.Loul1vllle 11·6 222 fJ WHlllnelon 2' 14 • 62 1'3 ,...._., Gwnes Jt.Teua·EI PHO 17·) tot 1• NY lslenden 21 17 10 $1 194
MllWlufl.M el L.a111n 10,ltfdvnoncl 1 .. 2 11' Pllfs.llut"Oll 22 22 S 4' In Cllboo et Hew York OIMn r1eeMno YOltt: PurclUI 67, Ale· NY Ranolf's 22 23 4 .. 171
1nci1ana et Atlanta blma·l lrmlnonam SI, Wnlern Kontuc:k.,. New WM't l5 31 2 32 Ito
147
ISf 17,
1'2 170 m
Cleveland at HoullOn ... Alebema lS, Nevy IS, Mlclltoan St111 A-;;• ~ 6 I Portland 11 Pfloenlx 14, A'*"" 13, ~dine 10, Norin
N•w JerMY 11 GOldln Stele Carollna Sta,. t, Meroue111 I , Mlnnno11 7. ~ :: ~ ~:
223 171
70S ...
,
""" .......... .
w11a *' "· c....-.. o <S.V... ....... ) 100-\.enon IW) WOii bV ton.It 107-0...1 IW) WOii by fOf'fell. ll~ldlter IW) tech. pin over OelaYo, third period,
121-Slms (W) Mc. Mestert, 4·2.
1~~ (W) won by forlelt. 1,._J~ (W) ii. Crut, 2:2~
1 ........ mlen IWI fl, R-. H7 147-Suuetmen (CMI dee. Jone\, l•-0.
IS.-.OVd ICM) won bY defeut! over Hobert
167-Mwtuccl (W) o McFecklen, UO. m-e.c:on IWI WOii bY ~t.
19)-Grant (CMI 111. C•. I~. Hw~ IW) WOii bv IOt'fell
-~rri~sa~=::: _____ _,,Old""""""Oomlnlon--·r.-~ s~. ~":'N~h:-..--11eilCJl19fc 26 ~J ! ~
Al·Slw 0.,.. -Mtlern 2, W1'1tl1111ton 2, Xavier, Ohio 2, MIMIY'I SCWft
'" '" 202 Ito ,.,-,,,,__ ___ _ ~--UC:-Wliiii 7, uw 1
.,...... Mervland 1, MMlml, Ohio I, St.na 1, Tulw C•'-·~ '· w...._ J Totals In r.n '<li>tlno tor starllno oosltlons I. Vlllenov1 I. a;",, .;;;f;rd 3 In ,.,. )6111 Annual pq11ona1 8a1ketbaN HIGH SCHOOL ._.~1-.1 •· 1. "'•IO 1 Assocletlon AM·Star 0.me, to be oleved t--... 69 1 ~-H .. .u. ..._. • -vn Feoruerv t •• the llleunlon Arone In Dallas ,,,..... • --New YOl'tl R-s 6, Quel>K 6 IAST ALL·STAaS ISel!tll Cent t.eetwl Mlnnnola 6, .... w Jersev 2
C..... • UIUM .... ( .. ) 1N1M C.fl Edmonton 4, Chboo 3
1 Mos.n Melone. PNi.delotlla, '1S,Olt, .. ft '4 • .. It,.• T.,....,-1 Gamlt 2 P1trkt. Ewlno, New Yortl, 3'4.Ml, 3 Jiff Cotourn 6 2 3 I• Petchlll 10 0 4 20 Piil~ al Pfllltlurelll
Ruland. WHhlneton, 2'4.S16, • 81" Nelson O 0 1 O Tamur1 O • 3 • Waslllneton et Detroit
Lelmoeer. Detroit, 2 ... ne. s ltooert Per· Herov 2 2 2 • Uttllr 2 O 1 • TOf'onto at New York l1lenotfs
""· 8e>1lon, 251,57'; '-M41Mn Turpin. IC•w•~ 0 2 I 2 Herrlno S 2 3 12 ~ 6, Kln9S l Clevelend, 206,641; 7. Alton \.Isler. Mii· Sheff 6 • 3 1' Moceri 1 0 I 2 kw. bY p
w1uk", 202,723; t. Derrvt Dawkins, N•w Morevclk 4 2 2 10 Rave 3 J 2 ' I("* en.-J¥sev. 131,020; t. Kevin WIMl1, Ati.nte, Still I 0 I 1 Snoddv 2 0 2 4 Celoarv 117.901. 10. Herb Wllllams. JnclJane, 91,412. Sllctr.,,.., • , 2 10 Norton I O O 2
0 3 0-3
3 2 1-. p_.... Slf~tlc 0 0 0 0 Oden S 0 2 10
1 Lerrv Bird, 8oston, 702,440, 2. Julius Bllantvne 1 0 I 2
Erving, Ph~•. SffA7S. l tc.lllv Cooke 0 0 0 0 Trlooctte, Detroit. •11,(132; • Oomlnloue TolAIS 73 14 IS 60 ToleK lO t 19 '9
Wiikins, Atlanta, Xl.ISS; S. Knln McH11t, Sc9r'9 bY ~
Boston. l7t,6ff; 6. Terrv Curnmlnos. Mii· Laouna Hiiia 1 If 9 2......0 weuk", 294 ... t, 7. Wavman TIMlalt, In· lrvl,,. 16 17 1• 22-69
dlene, 261,079, I. Paul PrHMY. MJl'#euk"· s.utti Coest L-.ue 1SU'6; 9. Charlft Bwl\Jey, PtillaCle4Pl\la, &.-.ue C>Yetal 243.141; 10. Roy Hinton, CtevWl!d. m ,,74. w L -............ WL --Cepl11r1no lletllv 7 O 19 1
PlntP'er1ed 1. Celolry, Mlcoun S (Quinn,
McDonald), S. 7 Caloerv, LooO 13
(RIMOrOUOh, 8o1 ... ), 1'.56, 3 Catoary,
8ourOIOI• s IOtlo). 3:29. P-ltln-Sykes,
LA Crouehlnel. 7:53; Macinnis, Cel
lslulllnol. 7.53, Wiiiiams. LA lrouohlno), 1:09, Wtlb, LA (rouot1l1111 I, 1:09; Kromm, Cet (rOUOl'ifnol. t-ot, &ouroeoi1, Cel (rouon·
lno), t:Ot; ~•er. Cat lllOICllnol. t:31;
Ledyard, \.A (rOUOlllnol, 10:46; Bouroeols.
Cal, double minor lrouohlnol. 13:09;
Peterson, \.A lrouohlnoJ. 13:09; Mecoun,
s-.... Men Sono Hine IUCI) def. Ourrent, •·•. '·2; Yelll IUCll def. Ciutt1r. 6·2, 7·5; Derr
tUCll def. Soneru, 6·3, 6·4, Pamlch IUSIUl def, Downs, ,.4, 6·1, MVlll'$ (UCI) def.
L1rt1on1 S·7, 6• 1, 7·S; l<eolen (UCll def 8ack, 6·3, ,.4,
~ Men Sono Hfno·Yates IUCll def Ovr·
ranl·Ciuller. ..2. 6·•: Olrr·Kap&an IUCll
def. Soneru·hck, 6·4, 6·4. Pemlch·
\.anson IUSIU> def. Cadloan•Jenlcln, 6·7, 6·J.
WeMlft'a teurMIMftt
(at K~ lllcavne, Pta.J
Pint RMld S1n11n
MlcNl!e Torrn IU.S.l def. 8•1111111 8unoe (U.S.), 6·•. 6·4, Petre Huber !Aus·
trlel def. 8art>ar1 Gerken !U.S.), 6-l, 6·•. Andrff Teme1verl (Hut19arvl def. Eve
Pfaff (Wftt G«manvl, 6·3, 6·1, Cartl1111
Bassett (Canada) def, Pea1141t Louie IU S I, 6· 1, , ...
~-tsla41~·-_,..Mlc'llMI JordM. Chlcaoo, 719, 143; 2. Minion vi.10 6 -3 hornet, Oett'olt.-"'.-u· . v,,. "-4-'-3 --'17 10
Moncrief, Mllweufl"· SOl, 105; 4. Dennis Et Toro 4 3 10 9
JOflmon, lolton. 360,069; s Wono Fr"· San Clement• 2 s ' 11
--c.rcrooot11nol. ~ ~crr.t:A; ~ ----
minor lrOUOhlno·unsoortunanillte conOuct).
Ctevellnel, 3'7, 110; 6. Mauflce ~. L.a9UNI Hllh I 6 J 13
PllllaclelOflla, 247,"7; 1 G4tor01 Gervin. • Dena Hl~s o , 6 10
Cl\k.aeo, 273,411; L Danny Afnoe, llk>tton, Mlftd9Y'a se-
m ,761; t. Vinnie Jollnton, Detroit, 21',276, lrvt,,. 69, La11une Hiiis 60
10. Jeff Melone, Waslll119ton, 207, 14.S CaolWano llellev IS. El Toro 7S
W•ST AU.·STARS Mission Vlllo 79, Sen Clemente 60
C...... W...._Y'•G-·(7:JOI 1. Ila,_,, ......._.JeblMr,·t..A. Llllen, lrvl,,. et El Toro
6",1261 2 Ak~ Ol•luwon, HOui!on, Mission Viejo •• Dena HUI'
434,2'•. 3 Artis Giimore, San Antonio, S.n Clemlnte vs, Cee>lstreno VelltY 11 306 .... ; 4. WavM C~. Oenvlr, 25.s,~. s.ddltOaclt Colle99
14'10
s.c... ""*' "C•IMrY Hunter 4 18"n), 2:31, s LOI AllOllH, Wlllls 3 ISYlltt, Erldt1on), 3:1S; 6.
Lot Anoein, Dion,,. V (Peter\On.
Engblom), 4:32; 1 Caloary, 8"rs 11
(Bonk, Macinnis), 6:23 (OP), I. \.os An·
111in. Erlellson 7. 16:40 (OP) Panel·
tlfl-Wllllams, LA (lllon·1tlcklno), S:st; Erlek.on, LA (llOOklnol. 7:03; Macinnis, Cel
lllooklno>. 10-2•; lttclmond, LA (Inter· terenc:e>, 11-42; 8ouroeols. Cal. double
o... .........
0AVIY'1 LOCK•R ,......_, lleedlJ
-40 •l'!llllrl. 1 bonito, 170 c.ellco bau, 250
bltle perch, \I> sl\Mollllld.
DANA WHAR, -33 •note" 41 t>au, I llallbut, 60 rocl\ cod. 6 meckeret. 1 ""9Plllffd. 3 sculoln.
Nl~T \.ANDfNG -26 •noten .. Mnd bin, 1 s1\eeo$1\eed, 22 scutt>ln, •
rNClleret, 2 llelfbut.
,.
0
._ .... _...
K•nw•Cflv G.-..n l•Y
"" ........ . 0 10 0 0-10 1 1 14 ,_,.s
19't5-.....
) 13 10 1-lS
0 1 0 1-1• ............
Hew Yorlt Jef1 0 7 6 >-1' ..... mot. 0 0 0 1-,
ltJtS.., .... IV MlnnetOle 0 0 7 0-7
"-"Ml' Cllv 3 13 7 ~
Dalla• Miami
1'7l lUIMll' .... V O 6 0 IC>-l•
' 10 0 O-f3 1912"'"' .... vt , 1 7 7-14
0 , 0 0-3
tt73~ .... Vll
Miami 7 7 0 0-U
Wa"11neton O O O 7-7
MJMetOtl Ml emf
Plllt1>uro11
Mln,,.sole
Delles Plll.aMKOll
0.kland
MIMHOle
PltltburOll
DallH
Ill ams
Plllsburllh
1'74 S.... .... VMI 000 1-1 14 , 7 0-24
19715-..... IX
0 2 1 7-16 0 0 0 ._,
""~ .... x 7 3 0 7-11
7 0 0 14-21
1ms-.,...x1 0 16 l l)-J2
0 0 1 7-14
19115-.... Xtl
0 3 7 7-27
0 0 10 C>-10
lt7' S.., llewf XIII
7 14 0 14-JS
7 1 ) 14-31
1'90 $VIMf' .... XIV
1 •• 0-19
3 1 1 14-31
lttl ~llewfXV
0.kland 14 0 10 >-21
Pllllaoell>ftle 0 l 0 7-10
"2~XVI San' FranclKO rfrT 0-26 Clnclnnall 0 0 1 14-21
1ta Sutler ..... xv" Mleml 7 10 O 0-17
Waslll110ton O 10 l 1.i-n
ltt4~ .... XVlll
W15'\lr>0ton 0 l 6 0-t Raiden 7 14 14 >-ll ltUS-.... XIX
Mleml 10 6 0 0-" S.n F re.nclsco 1 21 10 0-ll ltM Super .... XX
ChlQQO 13 10 J 1 2-46
New Enoland 3 O O 7-10
su........ir.cWdl
~GMMReeerdl
Mosl Gemes. Coedl -6. Don Shula,
Mia mi.
SCC>ltlNG Most Polnll -II, Rooer Crelo, Sen Francisco, 19tS
Most TouclldOwns -3 Rooer Crelo. S.n Francisco. 19'S
Most Polnls Atter TOUClldown -S, Don
Cnendler, Green a.y, 19'7; Rov Gertie,
PllflOurtll, lt74; Cllfls 811\r' '"°' Aneeiet Raiders, l,..; l(evln Buller. Chlcaoo, 19".
Motl Field Go.II Allemc>led -S, Jim
Turner, .,..w Yori! Jets, 19'9; Efron H«· ,.., Oetfls, 1971.
Motl Fltld Got.. -4, Don Cllendltf. Gr"" en. IHI; lllev Werscnlno, Sen Frandsco, 19'2
Loneetl Field Goel -41 varcb, Jen SteMNd, KenMS City, lt70
Mott Sefetlet -l, Owloflt Wnhe. Plttsburon. lt7S; Reooi. Harrlton, Pit·
tsburo11. 1976, Honrv Weecllter, Chlceoo.
l9'4 RUSHING
Most Allernots -31, JOlln Rlo11fns, w1.,.1no1on, 1"3.
Motl Vereb Gelned -1t1, Mercus
Allon, l.M Aneelet Raiders, 1"4.
MefMlly'a "' 11ct11:• ..S.IALL
~'--'" TEXAS lllANGERS-AlrMd to terms
wflll M ........ ~ .Hff Kunlcal, I~. on_...,_ contracl1. -........ Leewt •
DOOGElllS-Sklned ao.v CHiiio and
Dennis Powell, Pltaws, Siu ~'°"' lt•1P11 8rv1n1, Mike RamMY and ,_ .....
Wlll!Mn1, ou~. end Jeff Hamllton.
lnfleldar.
CHICAGO CUI~ Rey Font-I,
;>!teller onc:t Thad eo.irt. outflelder. and
'"'" minor JMtuers. Tony Woods, ltllrel blMman, Darrin Jaduon, outtt.ldw. and
Gery Per"*lter, Pltdllr.
MONTREA\. EXPOS-Aeread to terms wflll Mllte Fltteerald, eetdler, and JoM
StUPer, Pitcher, on _.Y.., c:ontractt,
PITTSIURGH PllllATEs--Named Ken·
Miii C, Curcio vlce·oresldlnt tor finance,
effec11ve Aorh 1.
SAN FlllANCISCO G)ANTS.-Sklned Clllll
Davis, oulfltldar, JoM Uribe and It• T~. lftfltidan, to -·-ain· lrectl.
POOTaAU.
....... P ..... Leewt
GREEN IA Y PACICElts-HarNd De1e Llncbev llnlDacller coecll. MINNESOTA VIKING-Named 8ob
SCllnetkar offen1IYe coordinator.
HOCl(•Y ............. Leewt
PITTSllUllGH PENGUINs-RKAlllCI
Trov L-..., left wino, from 8eftlfMre f1' the American Hodu1y LIMul.
ST. \.OUIS l\.UES.-Saftt Denis CY'I',
forward, 10 PMtla of lftl lntwn9tlonll HOC!lev La9eua.
WINNIPEG JETS-S1nt Wede
c amow, deoNnMtnan, D•ve Siik, rloflt
wino, Anuv MelametM, lefl wl119, and lton Wilson, can11r, 10 SMl'l>rOOk• of ttle Amerl·
een Hockev l.MeUe. Rec.llld Marc
8eflronc:t, -ltender, M41rr'ay Ea-. center, and 8obOv Oolle1, .._.,...,,._,
from Sller1lrOOlte
Pllll.IC NOTICE Ptlll.IC NOT1C£ Mt.IC NOTICE Mt.JC N()TIC( Pllll.IC NOTIC( Nil.IC NOT1C£ Ptlll.IC NOTICE Nil.IC NOTICE I NI.IC NOTICE I Loving husband.
NOTICE ()ff hereof, I• $61, 169.67. llon In Ofdtr to h•vt the City IT IS FUATHEA ordtrtd Dally Pilot January 28. ~•D· YOU AA.E IN DEFAULT Contlnenlal Land Tiiie Com-fathe r, grandfather, TMIQTDITll'a IALE Dale: January 7, 1986 re1eu. lund• r.talntld Dy that• copy of lhlt orci.r to ruary •. 11. 1986 UNDER A DEED OF TRUST pany, 1015 North ••a1n gu rlghtl, and oth•r CONVWYANCa COWMY, great grandfather , NO.,.!!~I CALlfOfllNIA MORT· lhe City lo enaure per· ctuM be publlsMCI In T--02• "" hydrocarbons by what·!• aMI Tru~ ...._.
flll:M • !!,1_, GAGI MRYICI, A CALI-lormanoe ollhe contract. the Orangt Cout Dally Piiot, DATED SEPTEMBER 25. SlrMt, Santa Ana. California so.wr name known that M K..,, YtDe brother and friend to
•-•AU FC>MtlACOfllPORATION.• Plan•. SpectlieetlomJ, and new19aper of gen•r•l 1934. UNLESS YOU TAKE 92701. (71•) 835-5515. may be wflhltl Of under IM Prat'fnt. 1411 c..... A•· many well loved in
voeou ARE IN DEFAULT Mkl ......_, IY; GUAM>-official PrQC>OUllormtto be c;lrcutauon publlahtd tn tht• •-ic 111\Tarc ~gJ~O~Aoi~Ar\.~~T~~~ Dal~bl~f.:'J~~2~. 28
1• =~land~-~~ ....... "9tthrt4et. e .. t. h is 'communit y . UN A A DEED OF TRUST ...... TIIU9T MIO ~ uMd tor bidding can be ob-ty •• -once. week ,.._ nu ~ ., -· ....... .... ..... _ --~ , .......... .... DATED. MARCH 9Tti. 1977. VICES, • aorporettH, lalntd anly •• the omc. of fOf lour conMCUllvt woeic• BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC F•bruary 4, 1988 l*Pltual ( of ~. (n) 1'01·:1171 Clarence WU born
UNLESS YOU TAKE AC· ..,.nt. ttr; T .... ~ theCltyEngln-.r,CltyHall. p<iortollltdayofNtdhMr· SALE.IF YOU NEEDANEX· T--018 mlnlnQ.•xplorfnglnd<>c>er· Publllhed Or.no-Coeat andraiaedinMJmouri
TION TO PROTECT YOUR AM6ataftt a.cr.tary, 151'0 Coal of Mid ~ and Ing. NOTICE tNvmMO..,. P LANATION OF THE ·-IC llftfjiC[ •llllQ lhtfefor and •COf1nG In o.lly Piiot January 21, 28. and moved to Call-
PAOPEATY. IT MAY BE ... , 171fl ......... l,•Sptetftcatlons ,. S5.00, rn-DettdJAN 1319M NATU RE OF THI! ,_ nu andr~ngtheumefrom February4 19ee f
SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. a anla Alla C•llfornla 'cludlng lu 11 the bidd41r r• "9nrr T MooH ''. NO~ICE IS HEREBY PROCEEDING AGAINST uld !Md Of any Othtr land. ' T.Ol7 Omia in hia Mrly
IF YOU NEED AN EXPLA· "101, (714) M7-71n 'qutlll thai lhe Piana and .ludt• Of "011 au;.,.~; G. !VEIN ltl•t ... ,.d YOU. YOU SHOULD CON. ..:,:-°' lncludlng1h9 riont to wtllp-• twenty's. Clarence
NATION OF THE NATURE PublllMd Orang1 Cout ISpeclflclllon• be _,1 by Court propc>Mla for turnlthlng all TACT A LAWYER. Al'PUCATION TO atock or dlrtctlonally drlH and Patty have been ~GF THE PROCEEDINGS Dally Piiot January "· 21. mall, the malling and hmnd· Publllhed Orangt Cout labor, mtterlals, tqU!pmtnt, nn:>~~ ~LI! llU. ALCOHOLIC andlhan~I~ "1~.'~1 oro'!'!I married 54 years. Ji'u. AINST YOU. YOU 28. t9S6 llng c:tlarge lhall be an ad· Deity PHol Jen ary 14 21 lr•n•Port•lton and IUCh llVUtAGe .......... "' .-
SHOULD CONTACT A LAW· T--Ol3 ldlllnaJ $3 oo. Netlher lhe 28 February 4 u,986 • · other flcilltl .. at may be ro-NO • ...0 10-IOI 1_21.ee I wtllt. tunMlt and shalta O'BRIEN neral .er-vices will be Y~R,.LIFOAN IA MOAT· f::.!!~~=of~= . . T-016 gf9:~';Efg~11A~~~~ On Fel>ru~20. 1986. 11 To Wllom lt MayConoam ::~~~:.cs-::.::: R A y M 0 N 0 Jheld W2e9dneadp•Y ·
GAGE SERVICE. A CALI· Ptlll.JC NOTICE ling and handling will be r• AT VARIOUS LOCATIONS 10:00 A.M., Pacltk: Sentlnel WROCLAWSKY, Simon It 10 bottom klCh whlpetoc:tttd GERALD O'BRIEN. anuary •at 1 .M .
FOANIA CORPORATION u funded "8.IC NOTICE (198S-86)wtn be r~ by Corpol'atlon. • Ca11forn1a ~o the ~merit or dlrtc11onalty drill«! ...... JR. passed away at Pacific View Mem·
duly appolntto Truitee cm ctr 1 The City rtNrVet the rlgllt the City ot Costa M..a at the C<><P<>f•tlon. u duly •P-01 A .. ~ S.V.age Con· lunMlt and lhafta un<Mr January 26 1986 in orial Park Chapel. In· under lhe lollowlng de· FOUNTA .. YALL.EY, to rejeet an Of all Dkls FOUNTAIN VALLEY Office of the City Cl«k, P.O. polnttd Trustee under and lrol for 4 t On Salt Bee< & and beneath or beyond lhe • t.e will f Uow
scribed dMd of 1ruat WILL CALW'OMA I Efffrn ~ltndton City ICHOOl. OtallttCT Box 1200 (77 Fair Orlvt). purauent to the DMd of Wine (Pub. Eat. Pl.) lo Mil n tertor 1fm1t1 thereof, and Costa Mesa. Beloved ~nt O at
SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION NOTICE tNYITtNQ I Cltttl of tM City of,__ NOTICE°" Coll• Me... Ctllfornla Trus1 reco<dtd September alcohotlc bevlragea •• 735 lo rtdrlll, r.iunnel. tqUlp, hus b and o f E lv a Paobc View Mem·
TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER ..,. I talrl Yllltey CaltforNe ADOPTION ctr 92628-1200, untll lhe hour of 28, 1984 •• lnatrurnenl No. W Balctf B. Costa M .... CA maintain, rtpalr, clMpen and 0' Brien of Costa orial Park. Contribu·
FOR CASH or 11 Ml forlll In NOTICE IS HEREBY given Dattd J~nu 1986 MIOUITION ctr 2 00 p.m.. F•bruary 11, ~03651, of Olflclal Ao-92629 OP9f•le any 1UC11 wells or ti th Ame ·
Section 292411 of the Civil that the Cl1y Cler'k of the City PubllsMO ~ Cou1 INTENT TO L.EAIE 1988. at which tlmt IMy wlll ds. exeeultd by MlchNI PubtllMd Orangt Coul mlnel. without, howevtr, 11\t MfesaRa· Beloved father Canceons to Soce i t ncan
Code. a11 rlgllt. tttle erfd of Fountain Vallay, Call· Dally Piiot Ja.nuary 28 1986 IUN'lUI OtaTMCT be opened publiely and read F Logue. an unmarrltd man. DaltyJ>llot January 28. 1966 right to drlN. mine. stori. ••· o ymond ~rald r e y are
tntetff1 conveyed IO and IO<nle. Wiii receive sealed .T--023 MAL flttOfllRTY a loud In the Council trull<><. In lhe otno.of the T--022 plof• and OP9f•ll through O'Brien m. o f Lo8 preferred. Paclf ic
now held by 11 uncs.r uld P'090UI• untN lhe hour of M> NO. ,... C h • m be r a . S • e I• o nty AecorcS« ot Orange lhe 1Urt-ol lhe ~ 500 Altos CA . C letus T View Mortuary· l)j.
Deed or Trust 1n the prooeny 2·30 P M on Friday. Feb 7, Ptlll.IC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY proposals shaH bear tilt ttt.. nty. Stale of California, PlB.JC NOTICE IMt of lht tut>aurlaee of the • • " · """' 2700• llertlnel1er dftenbed 1986, tor dfttroylng weed GIVEN TH AT THE FOUN· ol lhe wO<fl end the name of WILL SELL AT PUBLIC land h•reln·abov• d•· 0 Brie n o f Costa rectors.~-
TAUS TOA VINCENT and removf, ruDblsh, re-flCTITIOUllU ... 11 TAIN VALLEY SCHOOL lheblddtrbulnoother dl9-UCTIONTOHIGHESTBIO-YOU AM IN Dl'AULT ecrlbtd, aa r.-ved In the Mesa; Linda O 'Brien PRICE
MASCIA LE AND MARIE lllH, & dirt n IOCOfdtnce NA• ITATIMl!NT DISTRICT hu declared lhll llngulshlng marka. Any bid DEA FOR CASH (peyablt et UMDKfll A 0.ID Of TRUaT, dffd recordtcl In book o f Cost.a Mesa. Mr EL I? ... BETH F
MASCIALE. HUSBAND AND wltll the Plans and Specifl· The tollowlnQ peraont art 1he tollowlng real property received alter the ICMdui.d he time of Ule In lawful DATtD .IUNm 1t, 1tM. UN-134•7 page 1838. Official O'B . ' ~ ·
W I FE AND FA AN K cations dOlng buslneu as-Pacific ~111 not b• n..Oed tor ol0tlng time I<>< tht rtctipt ot the Unlltd Siii•) LiU YOU TAKI ACTION Records. r!en was a Aero-PRICE. Elizabeth
MASCIALE. A SINGLE MAN Propoaall ll'lall De pres-Energy ConMN•tlon 21191 clusroom purp()MI: ol bids Shall bl rtturntd to t · oul•ld• lh• rHr TO PROTECT YOUR NOP-Also ••etptlng lherefrom space Engineer a t Mc Price passed away on
BENEFIC IARY CALI· en1tc1 under Mai.d cover AmDerwlc« Ln Hun't Bch Two ciaurooms at Jotin Ille bidder un<>pentd It attllll nyard entranoe of Con-IRTY. fT MAY M aou> AT all water right•. or lntw..i In Donald Dounl... for Jan1t•u ·v 2.. 1lllo• a\
FORNI A MORTGAGE SEA· end lh11f De accompemed CA 926'8 " ' Bushard Schoof locattd al be Ille 101e rM9Qn8'bfll1y of lntntal Land Tit.. Com· A ~ IAl.I. • YOU wtt• rlohla no matter how 25 d -J ,, ""°"'•
v1ce.acorpora11on by~ollhelormsofbtd-AIChatOPatrlc.kVuquez, 19899 Educa tion Lane , lheblddtrto ... 1tia1htsbld eny. 1015 North Main Nl"IO AN IXPLANATION ~ocf by the Grantor, years an a vet-the ageof89,ather
RECORDED Marcti 22. der s NCurtly required by 21191 Ambtr#lck, Hunl Huntlnglon Beach. Call· 11 r«*ved Jn P'OP9f tlmt. lreet, Santa Ana. Call· CW Titl M.AT\IM CW Titl a1id OWMd ano uMd by 11-.. e ran of the K orean Pahn Springs home
1977 as 1ns1rument Number Section toot the Specifl· Bell CA926A6 tom11 A Mt ol bid doaimeri11 la, all rlghf. tltla and ~• AQAJNaT Gr-n1or In conMctlon with Conflict Vlsi~t'o f 11 '
28923 BOOk 12112 Page cauona All Pfoposalt shall Thlt busln"• 11 con. The Boerd of Trull ... of may be obteintd at tilt 01· 1erett con~ 10 •nO YOU, YOU attOULO OOtf. Of with r"Ptct 10 tilt prop. Tuesday: from 12 ~ ~ illno owingM a O:~andy
1211 of Offlclal Records In be marked Weed Abate-ducttd by· an lndMOuel Ille Foun1a1n Valley Sdlool flee of the City Engineer, 17 held by It under uld TACT A LAWYlfll. .rty, wn.ther ~ wet• p M em. rs. n""~
the office ol 1ha Recordlf' ol meni-1989 end melted or Richard P. Vuquoz Dltlrlet resolves to !MM tM Fair Drive. Costa M.a, Call-ot Trusl In the PfOP9fly ~CW rloht• lh•H be riparian, OVW· · ., and recitation her deceated hua-
Orange Counly. delivered so H lo be In lhe Thia tlllenitnl wll llled faellltl•• eo lndlcaltd at>ovt fornla, upon nonr«undeble lbod •: Loi 1•. Tract TMlaTll 8 IALI lylng. •Pf>f'oprlauve, per· of the Rosary, Tues-band 0 W Price
Setd Deed 01 Trual. de-hand1 of lhe City Cienc el with the CounfY Cleft< or Or· under the tarma and con-paymtnl of s-4 00. An Id· 1. In the City ol Costa NO. 217111 colatlng, prMC:flptlve or con· day, 7 :30 P .M . Both at were •1nn.; time. _1 ICl'lbet 1he followlng prop. lllf' ottlce In lhe City Hall, •"OI County on J anuary 6 Olllon• •t•ltd In the ~ dltlontl cnarge of S2.00 wlll County of Orangt, On F•llfuary 24, 1986, •I tractual p<ovfded. ~. p · B B I -·... • ,._. erty 10200 Sia•• A....,.,ut, on or l986 _ · ulton of ttMI Board, ~ bl maoe 11 handi.d by mall. tate of Colltornla, a s-10!00 A.M. at THE REAR th.t lhe r....-va11on shall no1 te r ce r os. e 1 dents o f L•gun•
LOT 1 OF TRACT NO before the hour ttattd Al f12171D1 utlonNo M-19. Sptelfloatlona and 0111« r.coreled In Book 417. NTAANCELOBBYONSTH reNNe any rigflt to enter Broadway Chapel. Beach. Memben of
•0• 1 IN THE CITY OF the deslgnattd lime, all bldl Publrsn.d Orengo Cout The minimum monlhly conlraci docurMnla may 49 and 50 of Mia· TAEET OF CHICAGO upon IN aurlaoa of IN 110 Broadway, Cost.a the T ,.,.., __ f>reeb
COSTA MESA. AS SHOWN recetvtd win be puDflcly Deity Pilot January 7 1•. 21. leHe paymtnt for lhe term aleo be examrne6 at tht Of. aneout Mept, In the of. ITLE INSURANCE COM-proptfty ~bed ,_..n In Mesa. (714) 642-9150 te . -aCh..,_ h and Y· ON A MAP THEREOF RE· opened. exeml'*' al'ld de-28 1986 of Ille ..... Sllall not be .... llco ol the City Cieri! ol fhe of the County A.cord« ANY, LOCATED AT 501 N lhe •• .,clM of ~ right•. M . . . . nan UJ"C ac·
CORDED IN BOOK 138. claredbylheCllyClerk Bid· ' T--01" lhanllvehundrednln91yllve Cltyof Costa M .... Speclfl· I said County. Exc1pt AIN STAEET,lnlhe Cltyol ur~lnlht dMO,.._ ~JVe o f Christian t1ve in the American
PAGES 27. 28. AND 29 MIS· ders and the publtc ere In· dollara per claMtoom per cation• wtfl not be malltd un· llerefrom •II olt. g11, min· anti Ana, County of Qr· corded In t>oott 134•7 page Burial. W ednesday. Legion Post #2 l 2
CELL ANEOUS MAPS. AE· v1tedtot>e pr1Mnta1111e monlh Tiie min imum I"• Ille eddltlonal S2.oo alaanOotherhydrocarbon noe. S late ol Catllornla. 1838,0lflclalA.corda. January 29 a l 11:30 F 20 ... _·
CORDS OF SAID OR ANOE de c 1e ra11 on o I a 1 1 d P\IU.IC NOTICE monthly lease peymtnt tor charge 11 lnclud«I with P•Y· b•t•"°" lying Delow • A L I F O A N I A A E • Par<* 3: E-1• ea A M S J h . or years urc:y COUNTY CALIFORNIA proposela IUDMquenl period• may bl mtnt lh of 500 , .. t from the ONVEYANCE COMPANY. Mt forth In the Secllon entl· . . at t. 0 n The lived in Bluebird Ca·
MAY ALSO BE KNOWN Allbidaeortce!Vtd,exarn-flCTITIOUl IUaMll aojutttd annually at lht Ota-Each bid shall be madt on rlaoe of uld p<~y. but Callfornla corporaflon. u 11«1 "C.naln e...m.n1a for Baptial Ca l hol ic n yon . Survivon in·
AS 3067 TRINITY DRIVE lned 1no declartd will be ,. NAIK ITATl..xT lrlc1'• dlec;retlOn A Secur· lhe Proposal form, lhMla Ith no right of eurfaoa uly 1ppoln1eo Tru•••• Owners" and "Support. s.f. Church , Costa M esa. elude her da ....... -r
COSTA MES A C ALI · terreo by the City Cltr1l 10 T11et<>11owtng porson1.,. fty/Cloantnv dtpoalt wfll be P·I tllrough P·16 p<ovldtd try, u Pfovldtcl In dMd lhat 0tt1aln 0..0 of llen'lontandEncrOtlCMll!nt" Inte rment G d , ..... -•
FORNIA 92667 ,.,. City E.nglnoer and lhe dOlng l>ullneu .. : OLYM-rtqulr.CS prior lo ~·ncy In lhe contract doc:urntnt• . .cord«! In 8ooll 8353, Nit Htc!U1td by JAMES of tM At1lde entlli.d "E.... 00 E1 leen Ada ma o f
(II a street llddresa or City AttorntY tor ch.eking PIC COATINGS. 941 No commiUion llhall bl Ind al\all be~ 353. Offlclal R«:otdL AAGANDA AN D LINDA menlloftllto.claratlonr• SHhep~erd Cemetery. Palm S prin1a· aix
common deslgnetton ts and report 10 Ille City Coun· Peul•rlno Avtnue, Costa paid any HQonMd rMI ..itte by a C4H'tllled or cuhlar'a ht 11r .. t addr"a and USAN AAGANDA, HUS· r.r.cs 10 1t1 Paroel 2 above. untington Be•ch. grandda• ·-ten• and
\nown abOve, no warranty 19 ell fl It• rtg\llar mMflng on Mesa Calllornla 92928 brohr ltl lhl• rtgMd. and en.ck or a bid t>onO for not ther common dMlgnttlon. AND. AND WIFE, •• P11oel 4: ea..m.n11 .. Pierce Bros. Bell et'ght ..... and
given., 10 111 cornpteteness Feb. 18, 19&e Marie A Cherry, 2• 1 La-lher• lhaH be no Cleduetlon teaa than 10% of tilt amount If any. of Ihm r .. 1 proptrty rus1or1. r.coreled on July 3, IUClh neomont• .,. partlcu-Broad Di great tr •
0, correctness) Prior to commencing Jolla Drive. Newport a..cll, 1orn1 any pr090Mf In oo-of lhe bid, made paytb .. to d••crlb•d ab ove 11 1984, H lnatru~nt No. terly Ml forih In Artlcla XIII w ay. rectors. children. Rev. Gerry
ffle benehctery under said work. Ille contract<>< and all Calllornlt 920&3 111rmlnlng tht hlghell r• Ill\ City of Costa M .... No purporttd lo bo: 1002 Can-·274987. of Official Ao-(2) enlfli.d "Eaawnents" of Tankersly •• ..111 be of.
Deed of Tru$I, by ree9Qfl of 8 1ubContrac1ora 1111111 obtain Connie K Ch11rry, 241 IA '4)0fllll>lt blddtr propoaal shall b• con-nonade Clrc ... Cotta MIN. ICOrd• of Orang1 County, lhe dtclaratlon of cov. "'1:1.U
breach or Oel1ult In the Obll· • buslnttt lle9nM from the Jolla Drive. Newport eeoon. s.-.., propoula to ... tldertd uni.. eocx>mp911i.d Collfomla. .St••• O{ California. under.thl nanll, oondltlone and re-GULICK f!ciating at the cr1ve-
ga1ton1 secured th11raby City of Founlaln Valley In ac,.. C1fllorn11 920&3 MIO proptrty must bl r• by IUCh QUiiter'• ~ Thi underalgMd TNll• Powtr of .... ttier .. n con-11rlc1lonl r.coreled 1n boolc C L A R E N C E F side servicea, 11 :00
netetofori •~tculed end do-cordenQt wtth the CJty Mu· Thi• buslnaaa le con-cotY9d by the ~Id of· CMh, or b!OOor'• bond • dlactalml any llablllty for any lelned. will Mii et publlC auo-n 7M pag1 420 to •14. 1n-Gu LICK p assed A . M . • Thu rad a{k ltY91'td 10 lllt un<f«llgned • niClpal CoOe No Volume t,, duct.CS by husband and wifo fic.t at the Fountlln Vellty No bid lhalf bl conaldortd lncon.ct,_ of tht lfrMt tton 10 lhe lltgtlMt Dkld41r for cJUllve of Offlclal Aecoroa of • J •
wtlllen o.c1erat1on of Do-Tiiie 5, Ctiac>t«t 5 04 and: Marl! A Cherry School Dtflrlct E~tlon un .... 11ismao.on1 blank tlddr ... and othtr common cMh, or cMcti 11 dttcrtb.o Or1ng1 COunty caittomt• away January 26. anuary 30, at Pld
taull and Otmand tor s... 5 08 1 Thia 1111.,.,...1 was lli.d Cenler 17210 Olk StrMt form furnllMd by the City of 1M11Qn1tl0n. If any. etlown belOw, pey9IMa •1 tht tlfM of uno.r the hcftOn ~ 1986 at hia f't'Si~ Vit-w Memorial Park
end "Wfltlen nott0e of breach T111 conlrac lor •h•fl with '"-County Clerk of Or· Fount.in Valley California' Coate M .. ano la maot In htreln .... In lewful monty of tht In eucfl 11111deantltted •lot-ln Laguna Beach. He ln Newport Be.ch.
ano ot -.Ct Ion 10 c•uM 1119 provide tueh Work11r'a Com· ' •nge County Of1. t>ec.mtMlr 92708. no lat.,: than 2:o0 1 cc or d 1 n c• w 11 h 1 h • Said .... wilt bl midi. but Unlt.O Slat• of ArMrlca, lowt· "Owners' AIOflt• and p I vnderalgned 10 sell Hid penutlon lneurence .. ro-29, 1986 p m .. Wtdntedey. Ftt>ruary provtslons of tht PrQC>OUI wlthou1 eovtnan1 or wer-wllhout warranty •xpr ... or outte.. UtllltlM and Cable ls survived by hla lov. • c f 1 c V I e w
property lo U fllty H id Obit· quired by the Labor COde of neaeo 12. 19H. requlrel'Mrlts, ranty .•• pr ... or lmplltd re-lmpli.d .. to mi.. VM. Poa-TN\llllon," "Support and Ing wife. Pat.rice; llOn , M ortuary Dlrec:ton.
gallons. and i11et .. 11er 1111 Ille State of Callfornl•. and l'ueetetlod Dfanot c .... , &.for• acc9Pflng any Wl't1· heti bldO•r mu1t b• oatdlng title, ~. Of ....ion, or tneuml>ranc;et, S•tfltment", ··~ncroecll· J ohn Clarence of Rlo 644-2700
unoertlgned cauffd .. id 111111 exteut• a c:onlractor'1 0..., Not J-.ry 1. 14, 11, fen Pfopoula, IM cMltQaltd lfcanMd u requlrtd by law. tneumbrenoM. 10 pay lhe alt rlgllt, tltlt and lnler"t merit" end "Community Fa-Vista· three ct. h · ,--------c::-
notk:e of brnch and of 91ec. cert1flc1te rtgatdlnG Mid •· ,.. olflc« lhalt Call tor oral bid-ContrllCIOf 11'""1 • Cfafl or remelnlng principal tum of now held by It M IUCfl clflllM EaMmtnt" • ug
11on to be ~dod OCTO· Worker'a ComPtnMflon ro-T.-ding Any Pt'IOfl wtio hM c.lusHlc:atlon not e11own on 11\t not• MCUrtd by uld Trutt• In and to the lol!Qw. Cod•: 2&·131, Patool: t.era, Dorothy Wood.
BER 18. 1914 AS INSTAU· quirement• TM con1r1e1or her•tofore tubmltt.O e writ· the Oerwal PrtvaHtng Wagt 0..0 of TNlt, with lnl•Olt Ing dMCtlbeO ~op.rty situ-937·56--045 yard of La Habra,
MENT NO 8._.2953• of '"•JI lurthor rtc1ulr• 1111 1Ub-fltlll.IC NOTICE ,.,, ·bid m.y 1Ubmll en Ofal o.t.,mlnetlona. mey be re-!hereon. u Pfovld.o tn Mid at.cs In tilt lfor...id County TM totll amoun1 of IN Ed n a 0 a v I a of
.. ldOfftclet~d• c:on1rac1ors 10 almflerly bld •~c.tOlnGbytt .... tl!W QUlr.OtopeytN weoe ,..t• not"· tc1v-.., 11 an). 91ld8t•t•,towtt lnunpaldt.,•t ~,..._____, baieno.
1
....-..; Sunnyvale; Mary
Seid .. la will bl mado, but provJdelUCh W<>rk.,'t Com-IUPINOR COtM'T l*ctnl (5") IM hlgheet of IM craft ot claMlflc.etlon under IM ttrmt of Mid Deed PARCEL 1: Unit 45 .. •-wvn ..._.,_
wtlhoul cownant or war pena111on lneurance for all Of CALWo..MA. written bid f llt hlghMt ,.. moet cioe.ty r•a1.cs 10 It • of Trvtt. 1ee1. cl!eroet enct ellown Ind dMcrlbtd In lllt with r~bfy •im.t.d $ U d l n 8 0 f LO I
ranty,axpr•Norlmplltd.r._ ol the 1u1>contr11C1or1' em-COUNTVOfSCHtANQI 9'>0fl•lbi.bkklerlhall1M,. IN>wn In tht o.n.ar De-IXptn ... ottt-..Trvtt"llnCI Condominium Pl1n re• coats, ,.,,.,_Ind Id· Alam l\oa . Two
ga.rdlno 111 ... ~. or ployeea The contractor• In lht Matt11r of lht App11-1 qu1r.ci 10 execute tllt fOtfTI ,.,mtnatlonl -.Ctlve at tflt of tht true11 cr .. 1112 by Mid corded In boolc t3MS PeQM ~ at tM tllfte of ti-.. tn• brothe'a, Willlam and
encumbftnOM lo P9Y lhe re and tubeontraclor. • atlall cation Of RUTGER LANSING I Of ...... IUCfl '°""411 '* time of ttll all tor bide. [)Md Of Tru•t. for th• 576 to .... lnGllllNt o.~f Of. Hlal pvbllcetlon of ""' Hoo Frank GuUc&.· al-
metnlng ~ eum of the lufnt.n tilt Clly • Ctr1~rlca,. tor Oheng1 ot Name ,,.,.,of«• bMfl approwc The ~ty Coundl of the •movnl r .. IOfltblY "'"" llclel Record•. of °'~ !lot er• I 132,"4.&e. "" a ....
no1a11ocurtd by Mid OMO Of waJV9!' of tvbrooetlOn No A 131419 by lhe lowd of Trust-. City of Coita Mlle,...,..... mettd to b« 1181,90713. County, CellfOtftle. Curr.ntty dattd C...... ter, Or,Ua Grisham.
of Trust. with 1n1., .. t 19 tn u~ the lerm1 ol lhe ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE ?t'9 Boero Of True .... tht rlgtlt to ~ any or all TM e.n.flclery, uncs.r PAACf.l. 2: Aft undMdect °'**I Of C.nlfled CMcltc• A1lo survived b y 7
Hid tlOll provtc:ttd, •d Work ... Compenutlon In-FOACHANOE~NAME l'"all "'-·IM IMl•min. blctt. Mid DMd of Trutt, ... on•·torty•forlh (1/Ufh) peyablt to ttll T,,,.... Of -.....A..hlldrcn and 3 .,.ncee. If any unO« the auranc• (Sec 90$4) tlon • 10 ~Mr 10 i.... Tll• Contrac1or 111111 lofor• did ~ and d9-Int.,... In and lo tht Com-blddlf .,. ~ t .. -.......
t•me or aald Deed of Trull No bid Wiii IM COMid«IG RUTGER LANSING hat .. Id lacittlfi. Within ltn (10) COf'l'9fY with tN pr~ tlWf to ttll undtrlfltNd • "'°" ... , .. of LCM 3 of Trae1 Truet.. proVkt.O P<~, great erandchlldren.
, .... ctiargee and HI*\ ... unleu II ts madt Oft tM Of· lli.d • Ptt•tlon In uwa court days 1tt11r rocelpt of~ , of hctfon 1no to lTIO In-wttt1en o.cw.tlon of 0.-No t034t, In lht CJty Of ldlntlbtlon ta~ Mr. Gulick WU a
of tilt Trua1 .. and of tht llc1•1 Dltnk form f\Jrnltfltd tor an or~ .-110wtng pttl '"'or"'atlon conc.rnlnt ~. of fht Calttomla 11*"1 Ind Demend fOf ..... fnllno. County 01 °'~· From lnfonnatlon wflid'I Paand M11ter o f
trutl• creeled by u>d DMd by Ille City and 11 madt In 1ton.r lo ch•ng1 hla/htt IN P'oPOMI l'10llld ~ l(f. lAtbOf Coc:M. tht pte¥alllng and • Wl'ltten NCMtCI of 0.-State of Callfomla, • P« tht Truet .. a.... ,.....,.. Ga ~
otTruel 1ccor01nc1 wlfh the namt from Ru1g11r l.anelng dr~to:FOUNTAINVAL-rat1andacalt of wegM•'•autt and ~lon to Sell. INll>t«:Orded In boolc W butfot'whlc:tlTruetetmeel.91 wanza #
s.io .... wilt be Mid Ofl PfOVlslona Of thil Notlct Ind 10 l(y11 Cyan ~ L!Y SCHOOL Of8TAfCT, tatlllfled by tht City of Imo undef91gned ~Ulld PegM 35 llnCI H of M• no ,......,.cion or WW· 492, r .&A. o f ii~:iiiii:iiiii~~~~;
THURSOAY. FEBRUARY 8, IM ProPoMI rtqvlrem.nta IT IS Hl!RHY OAOEAEO 172100Al<ITMl!T,,OUN-eo.te Meu wtMcl'I we ftled Mid NCMlct Of o.fautt and <*llMOUI M..,._ In tht Of· ranty. tht ltr91t ~ 0t1 Hilhland Park Ke
itte 11 11 00 AM •• 111o and condlt10n1 tee fOttfl th.It alt S*'IOl'lt lnl.-....ct 1n with IN C"Y Qer1I of Mid ,llectlOn to 11111 10 be ""' no.°' 1M County~ otMr oommon ...,~, Ured Crom CaJI ConcordS Mt 1 vndtrSoctlOn2oftMQen. tNmatt.,tloNMld..,.._. TAIN VA LLEY, C ALI· ,lndtnellror.::r· cordedlnttleC(IUfttywti.re OfMIOCounfy.•IUGh..-m of IN IMft deeof"*i re . •
OUlldl tr~ ttt '~;g 91fal Provlllons of tM 8ciec> tNfor. tflll oourt Jn °'"'1• ,OANIA, 91701, (114) let PN90t~ !of the reel ptopt'ty ts IOcated. II defined In ttle antclt entl-pr 0 p • r I I 1 , I I fom.il lnk Co. of Los ~ ,11h'1.rMt 'S:,,~~AM. nc.t10n1 Eacfl bld6er mutt "*'' No s at 700 &..Mc 142-116 1 Atl•nlton of tt1e Mid 0.. ,,__., 10 ltll O•d "DeftnttloM"oftMO.O. HAVl!NWO~D IAVINI Ancel-. Followma
Ctllforn .. 92701 be bnMO In aocc>fdanct Cenl• Otl\ot Welt Santa CAAOl .IOHU , ..... _. ._atlon Of CowNnta. ~ CAL 12114 ' ' retlrement he worked
Tilt fol .. ttmOUnt of tht WlttrllPQHCabta81•1•,... Ana.Clllfornle.on ;~ .,!OU .. TAUI YALLIY ce.ft. c.i" c.... c~w·:.T·!'~l !"ioMlnd~11Geb11t (tM hid pr.-ny la .. ln Corona del ~--
un ... 10 DetillW:. 0, It'll OOfl Pur111an1 to C111tornta 24, 1918, •t tMI o'c:lodr -HOCM..M'n.cT 90AM ---";;;::"'._ ;:-Declwation I reoorded In JOld !of tf'9 ... ..-Of-.. .....-, ,..-• ~I Coc:t. hction AM and lhen Ind 1'*9 CW TMll181. m.y ..... -. . ......_.. Or ,__., _ _.,,. .. ... , boOll 13163 _,.... 348, Of· -=....-....-,....,. &1boe and ff~ gillon NCUrtd by Nici ptop-•HO .,. contractOf Wiii be • CtMMtt c..... .. .... ,....__ anoe COiet ... ...." ~ ... lldel flleconla. of Miid eoun. ""' ......t10t .. ..,,.., D-ull.. ID-hool !WtVIObUOld.lcioetft«Mth tlrted to llC)Pl'oved IMWQl\1Sf,ih")'lheyhe¥t, ..... ' ll'ttotT~.J~ •1U11ia.. ..... I) lryeeld OfTNlt.,... --.:n ~ •
lnt., .. t, latl CNI01'9 • ..ncsMOlfft,_~Cttyoran :v:Ptt.::~or,:-nc O.te.January23,1tll •1,-,::TW908Y,_. C .. ..., ......... ltlt 'utCl'flHO lHIAI· ~=:~of .. t.ric1a. Dwinl ...U.. ;,:,~:.:::= , flNnGlel lnatltuo oranted PllDlllNd Ofanoa CGe1t ' T.OH "::-_ 'AOM llol, ot "*'-o.tMJ . a;,_ rmnt wortceil1 _!!~~ln_!!the~.r-~~~!!~!i!!~ • ... 1>t OOtldl.tOttMI ~ ..-, ...,... CA l 1P0 ~ BMdl .,.._
•
,
S.--.... 1141 C.W W• ml C..... 1111 !'•et... ... ltatale tt I~ Cl rr.W '-= r,•I; t,::£,
19D/18A: 11100 ...... to ... = =· 28r 11a untum. ,.,, !*lo ~ ~ ... 18A, • •LIDO ISlE•• . \386 ~" IWWWW beed\, t ewy,"" hill,"" lnCt. ....,,dr/f, refrlg. "20/mo. NJ be9Ctl. No 1 lewl, ,_,.. yWd. oedW L.wt. MWty dee 38R 28A DANA PT F/non""'"lcr Xlnl ME.IA VfROE • GPtt a 9PC)ll, hi beM\ 11180/mo.661-3037 Plll.~Z dedt. =· walk-In .o.t._ L.a 1outh pallo P'Of.tolhr3t><2t>ab0me toc:etton 545--4123 _..,_,.., ~ iiii ce.n, new dbl mobile llAUT.,Ul 5 yw new, lg doee(, d · • friO, w/d 11'75/mo yrty 676-M 1 t $400 nr bMd'I. 240-~ ___ . -----H0~. tt. 1• ii111mo. hmon.,...~,...., ..... 3br+fem.rm.2itplc.tut> Included. °"u•o•· •LMlll.llPT• Eia1blufflhrw/P'of~r ••ftn.111'&
, Frptc. wHher/dryer, ftt» • ..,.._ weter, eunMt epe, lkvtlt•. bMfft cell-Sl50/moa1~-'°' .-, 2• 1aa. 102 AntJti. 0on Nwoman/ It ·~,!~~~~ Lrg = ~~~
btllne 7eo-eeot YU, 'fl .... n.lmkr 11416. lnQI . 5o9 NarclHUI. 175-1244 9¥1, 922-8795 + "",-, ~'"7..'!:.....,3..,.. -,._of Weetellff I ltWW IEAUTIF\Jl 5 )'Mt new, lg 499-2704 avt 4/1/M 11800/mo. tea-a2t.3 •• ...... ...,.. ..,,. ..,.,.,_ -----l'r'D---•
3br + *"· rm, 2 fl'PC, M> LAGUNA BEACH North lg fufnllhed 1 Room Apt ':t' ';:'~ 3s ~0~ 1~~· F 25-35 to lhr attrect. Npt .... 111 MANAUU\
..,., akyltee, ~ eel-end. •BR. 38A. VIEW. Aveilable now. Utlll pd. VMia R9ntat1 975-7015 Helghtl hM . Fum 18'/ba ..... -.. Inga. &ot Herct1au1. Avell 2/10 no le.... PMc:«ptilngl500 + 11t E/llde apec 29A l'MtA pvt entrance. NochltcHn RETAIL UNITS
11IOO/mo. Mt-12t3 12000 mo. 497-1445 ' .... 640-7119 TWMM -apt lg BAYSIDE DRIVE tBR. Of ~ '400/mo Utll 1100' 1400 aq ft. --· · · den, l'hba dl11 condo. lnci 54Mn3 ~tower, 2br 1ba. no ~ Newer 28r 289. frplc, pvt J*1o, dlhwf, lndry Frplc, pool. pvt beh. Reeionom6Ca 81S-97oo Must enjoy wonting
Qer. reft req·d, n-emlc avl 28drm fully turnlahed. baklony, gar $1050. So of fee. pool, eec. 1745/mo. $1700/mo 97S-l909 Fem 30+ to lttr ~· 1-..1• cnlldr•"· E11perl•n lmmed. 1975. 844-1271 Pool pvt beh. Security. hwy AYI 211. 720-9422 No peta. Curt ti 831-1188 2+2 apt E/alde CM .... helpful •
No P..a 11300/mo pp T ..,_ 2BR 1BA, patio. Siil 35tn wtnme $350. 986-5302 1UO aq fl 1762/mo. OC · LG 48' 31a+PCaep ~ e..2•1802 or 8314250 STUOfO. No kttch, we11c to 41 28f 18! In~&~ St. near Lido lhop1. Atrpoft ., ... 3015 Soutn we oner an excellent~
frplc. So of ICH. I bMch 1425 lnc:I utll. lex. End nont yr No pell S800/mo ulll Fem lhr 28r 28a apedout' Orange. S.A 832-4190 eflt program, paid • ~ $2000/mo. 509~ OCEAN VU MOBILE HM teo-M831tl75-92t5 g.,. P9t1ok1175/rno. Nr paid 873-03°'3 Irvine Condo. Pool, lee.! cations & ho41day1 ~ ..,..!A2.1 ~,..._l ~ '°'n,,..,~ 2~BR 2ba •. edttPvta, ~·. li::A: Ii::: .U !_9t"h 7& M~J'&-149tl E'BLUFF d•'u•e twn"'-·. lalce prfv . N/amlcr 30+ 2000 aq ft. 17th & Pl~ P'OQram and ~t.i Iii); _ .. .,, • ...,.., ,,_ .,.... ...... -.... .tsOff Iii.· "" .. .._ prof $450. 833-9550 I tla $980/mo Otc l&65 surance. Salary p
Mu9t ... to rent 3br &-$985. 99-5297 ev/Wltnd 1Gm. new c:rpta. G -·.. Avl now 2BR 2'n ba. FEM lhr ti.ut beck bayl Ptec:erttla. 64&-4292 mileage relmbu~ ,,.. 2be much $5l5 uttea Incl. No pelL -•a Frplc, nu atove w/mlcto. condo P~ ._.. lennia. p t
-·• ~ I JNIJlllUI fllW 313 W "ll-. 7eo-aotl3 1686 mo. 28R, 1BA. patio, dbl gartopnr "u cpu & • ,_. n••t UJlf1f Applicant mutt apply~ more ., 50 d•1• II Lg 28< 38a. ~ c:rpt 2 . _, pool, laundry room. Eaat· blind• No Pell Swim S350 Incl utlla 645-5123 Z'IM person It Dally PllOt .
53M191 Agenl tM matr Miil•. Avell M#cti 1BR, newly dee, ~ el<le toe .. doM to 811. pool & rec area F/Rmmt tq "'' 38' Condo 1g Unit•. Sta u;;: Xii west Bay St . Co
Pvt 2 BR & 1 den, behind 11t. S 1400/mo. Oya bMm cell. patio. encl Qlf. 149 E. Bey. I 1000/mo 11111111 -.. lndry, pool, Jae, C M 1 28dnn Xlnt asaumat»e Mesa. ca Appty 9-1
t·~·-.St~
......... ~ • '""' :tlfM!
sec gat•, AveM now. 47&-2tl57. Evea497-4325 F0< =~only. No TSl MGMT 642-1603 1250 MC Appt only ~··~ u111. 722-7642 , loans. ·L.eu than 9xG 11 am or 2-4 pm (Cir~
11900/mo. 975-5511 pell 20tl evee NICE 2ar 28&. bltna. d/w, 875-0068 Ii l.M>dmlll!Cc>umrvCJub.. 50,000. 7eo..aa62 ~n;:::~' !;::::=;;:::;;;;l"---j"il
of Nliwport 1BR + A,..qt GO SEE 1125 No Fortroe&\NFRONT sharp 11v1ng , angtfidy by· I liwl Fiaaacial ... ical ta I 710 W. JAMES"S . 642-7528 °' 790-1418 2br, gar. no pets. To 6/15 wti/mo. Comp! turn. prvl • 11P!Piu~-."'iP!.-"'P'~ *2Bt2L nr IC PGA. sl. (714) 548-5n7 POOL Patio, frpk:, X-lge $800/mo 8181795-3018 rm, BA & patio. Call after • .; /eve lshttt. GOod :r1.,...
Patio, cerport, pool, lmmed oceup. $1200/mo 2Bdrm 18&, garege, lrg 1Br 1580. 2Br Stl80. 1500 **LIDO ISLE** 5pm ~95 laUHll ftr Salt reco<d Knowledge 0C
$720 No P9t• 722·8011 W/835-2072 H/9&4-3307 pa11o. grnd fir. AYI now MC. Unf E·~ 557·264 l 3BR 2BA, lrg newly dee: nr Hrb< Rld94f Lux. Condo. 2tM area Karen 640-0140 :
$800/mo. Larry 646-5880 1 -·-beach & snopa. Vlew. lhr wt Atty & son S550 I ? •3Br 289, fem rm.:._ big 'SHORES' 3br 2ba hM ' ~ .._,_ S 1250/mo. lae. Ownr W/752·9«2 H/640·2434 Recently renovated cute 5 IEITll &Stll'TllT yard! Crpta. «pa "7!. guard tennla pool bch 2BR 1~BA. pvt lndry rm 173~/mo-. 2BR 1.,.,BA 8191753-0719 StationWntCo1t1 Mesa Waled perlencedR&».
Cell Pete. 811.r 751-3191 $1250/lae ownr 499-3e38 ln-'de unit, pa~ gar. Townhouae. Greenbelt. M 3S-.5, 4BR. 2BA hM., Be•uty Salon $7500 te~m :~iented per•
nice. No peta. ~/mo. laundry rm. All bl11ns. IEWPllT 1111111 C.M. Pool, apa. n~amkr OBO C.11 75 t-8399 loo•un for a carMf poe-*~ -* ltiuiea Yi I 7 Cell.-, 831· 12tle 2078 Thufln $925/mo 3BR 2BA lower S325+ uul 850-9311 I • it1on ~5337 3BA 2'MSA. dbl gar. frplc, ec TSL MGMT 642-1603 unit gar laundry room 2BR , BA UIMll , t.,,nla pool fecunl. ' f . ............ • M/F to lttare 1 h I .tuitats zto4 DENT AL RECEPTION! ' • I 50 deMfved xtru lllda pet• REMODELED 2BR gar acrou rom .......... townnoute wltl'I mate 1 -~.-.-"""'ii.-..-._"""""..,
Mont• Viet• Aw. 11 1 . S 8 0 0 , • mu• t • • • tlo 2 ~ No pets' 210 Grant Orange/Del Mar C M * *Can qualify you Newi><>r1 Beactl Endo ~
838-9427 Of 646-2" 539--6191 Agent cott Ceo· 3e8 Bey ·642-04e; TSL MGMT 642-1603 $360+'11 utll 722:.C,2e0 I to own a routetl'llt can flee Must have .. ... .. * 2BR 1'MlA twnhae pvt · · generate over $2000 Pef perlence wlln1uranQ9.. * · 1 LI Liii .. -pallo, frplc, gar. No
0
pet1. ... ftlW &ITS NICE 1 Br 1 blk 10 bch. 'n M/F to ahr nloe 2b< E/tlde I mo Call today 759-6863 financial arrangemerita & 1 + 1 + ~ + mk:fo. Al 28drrn, 28a wtloh. Golf S 8 4 5 /mo + de P . wl 28a 28drm blk to bay Garage, lndry. C.M. Condo D/W, W/D, I . X-rays Enthu11aam •
utlls pd. P9t ok. Only courae view. Lalce prMlt. 548-7610 Of 642-5722 l::rm va:~ eellln a patio $660/mo $300 d41p. gar $475/mo 722-8214 Need I worlllng Panner oonfldenoea must Exoef/'
$600. F• &458 Water paid Many up-a, ?i ' Drive by 1407 W Bay. Ca.II for a IUCCelSful Adven11-lent salary hours & b4lfl. lea1 lstatt fer lalt lntral 1112'. TILllllT 17...... grades SloOo/mo + ~ 2Br 1.,.,8• Townhouae. prvt dectt, Jecuz, bl1 ns for appt (714)675-7506 or NEWPORT BCH -S1991 to Ing Agency Been 1n t>Ys1-ellta 631.33ao
---------..... .....,. ..... _____ ,' t 643.8537 323 E 18th. Gar, lrpk:. No S895 No pet• 855-0865 (619)376-3571 ocn Pv1 rm + full BA., ness for 2'"' years & work ------Lft'ILY 1111-3BR 1'nBA trlpla)c, frpl, poll . pell $700 Agt 550-1015 •AVAILABLE NOW* PENTHSE VERSAILLES New deeor Desire clean, In the lrvlM & Tu111n LAB COURIER • A:t'P!!
1 ..... /C.U.. wi 9::;':n!!~.=,:r ~~~~~· ~~ltepeto 2:.CR_::~·'w':f:t!.~: ~;bi~E!,=~ f1!,~554~9:g· rec :;:~~t~f:~~~o • ~easEi ~:'~ t~ ~~ =~~~P:2~7 '
ltwal 1... Inga & oc>en bright floor 38r 28a. dbl garege. gdnr ocean loeded decof & full . $100. 9e2-6204 QUIET. patio. pool, spa. M ""'IOVS S89RM-e&A 8Mctl 'n block Vie10 area FO' funhar I.I.I Jart nm. mar ELY plen. M .... Bdrm enjoys Incl $950. 90tl w. Wltaon. yr1y 01'*-aval153R flJO NO PET ~2~ ...,.......,, om Need room-f n ° ca wn H 8 Dental Ole M6-2U5 ....... , * view of ~ garden No I*• 545-7983 Bast Rlty fee 2BR Eutalde Twnnae 28 ,....,Ba /WIW Next to bc:l'I. Ger-mate~ mo 646-4917 6-9pm 854-8552 Jim ·
YOUR VERY BEST atrulm w/waterfall. Garege. $720/mo. CeH Twnhee-styte r. · age Yrty $1300. Avail Cl · al/Off' S411 BLUFF'S OPPORTUNITY Located on quWI cul-de-2BR 2'ABA 2 tty twnhae, 2 Diet! e&&-4000 dya, patio, encl gar, ale, $650 now VIiia Rentals N/smkt shr 3Br Nwpt Bch SMALL BUSINESS me lff
G 38d 2'Mla MC Motivated OWMf'I $475. 1BR mobile hm. upper declct, lrg patio, 2 M0-2426 ev/wtmd No peta. C•ll Betty 675-4912 or 754-1792 nse. Nr beach. pool, ten-, CERAMIC CO Over 600 SIOlnllf °'~ rm, · .....,.,.h th« and Oul9t adult parit. No pets ,.., V/ball en & en.a 645-9191 or &«-2270, or nit $365/mo 543-9946 molds 2 Kiins. poorlng
19ecloua End Unit with haw""""" 1 ano 873-7787 or 759.5590 r'-9 old. St050/mo~ 2Br w/garege, crpts. water Carol 645-5974 SPAOlllS IPT Ibis Duncan paints Minor experience needed h• prvt entry court haw reduced the P'loe to ,. pd. 636-4120 1·5PM. 642 2357 Prof clean male 50 +. 405 ' Brushes. greenware Lag m R E Otf1ee Sal9') yard & coml*t• wrap-1158,000. 751-3191 Eu1alde 48R, 2BA, rem pets, IN Jean t173-4431 1571 Orange ,;B" ... $565 1 mile 10 beach. • & SC Plaza $350 + $25 I Cyn. lst S8500 497..,.552 negot Tom 642-3850
.,ound patio. Ulce new .SElECT rm, frple, patio. !'luge •OUTSTANDING* WI lfFll I OlllOI deposit. Atter 2.30 pm I -
Interior. Move.In freehl ~RTIES yard. Children & Peta OK. .....E ILIFFS * M... Verde d'lux 2Br w ant a aelecilon of great 432-7366 ... 17 Tt LM• 2t 14 lccm. Pay ct.rt
Offered t>y •very reallatlc ~ :$.1.200, 111 & IHI. Avail 111 281, new decor, d/w, gar llvlng? We can otter any-• h f For Developmt7Construct
&anxlouaownerattrulya t='°6b1.54&-1291 Condo end unit over-S750Nopets640·2495 tnlng from asmallaptto Prof fem to shr 3Br nr ,~g?W 51~oney: co inO C Airport at•
barg&lnprloeoll229.500 c.n.a ...... lft2 EASTSIDETWNHSE38R loolcing pool. L.R. wltl'I •FREECABLETV.Lg 18r a4bdrml'IOUM II look· ::,~ •• n~r/~30~go'1 cr~;l"' n~ pen~I~ cafi Mus1 have 9XPef~
Incl lend. High balence fml lllAT llYm 2'h8A frpk: yard patio F/P, Matr Br, & x1ra lrg Garden Apt. Pool rec rm l".19 In CM. NS, or HB • I Oef\1$0n Assoc 673-73 t 1 CALL 751-800
uaumat>le toen. Surety 11 H + , ._ ........ ...., bat<: 'w/d hkup dbl gar.· Br Of conv. den w/balcony SSSS. 710 w 181,..· Street tnmk of us flrst for tl'lat PROF MIF. n-tmkr Spec: ACCOUITS the nneet valoe now of· ouae """' -.. ~ · · 82~ 1 Br & Ba on 1oW leYel. choice of Ideal 11v1ng 3BR NB condo '533/mo Aauuct8Utl
fered. We are vwy proud 2) 6 Unite. 10.4 It groea grdnr S1050 mo. 831· 283 avall lmmed. $1800/mo. S550 1BR. air. fenced TSL MGMT 642· 1603 640-5128 or 760-1223 1 PAYABLE of thta Matlngll 3) S of 8eyaide Dpfx S339K E'SIDE 38' 21>a tam rm no pets .• n-smkr 973-5333 pool, carport, So. Cat _20 ........... PASH PROPERTIES l/p d/w dbl 'gar yrd: PIUarea.9tl6-1136 WllTIAYD.lllAPTS • rn 1st year's rent Prof person 10 lhr lge han•t111•••• H
_,.... • 720-9422 s 5 ' 75 :.0729 •WILi Tl 11111* 2311 ELDEN AVE decor NB hm lull amen--•• • aa•1 ClEll TUllEE &40-55e0 ANYTIMEI 112 tno peta 1 2+2+frplc+ gar. Alt bltln1. $820. El tide ·tg 2b< 1ba. Lr 2Br 2ea Easttide up. f URNISHlO Illes $450 mo. 1atllast. ut11 I Pll-/P--••-••y ... .._ lut. llrMu lMI E-SIDE 3Br 28a Optx, aml Elite kit seso ,.. 5-464 pool. 2 persona max. no .~airs overloolls pool. [~ s 100 cln'g 722· 1 t08 ~~27.5290Dlyr1 •xi>
831Cal8
l,.. Eniry level position Office --_,..,, &-fllO /-yard ger 1895 + saoo TIUlllT Ill-IHI pet•. &46-5137 G • pd Encl UNFURNISH I"""" ane • "'" & 10 key exper r.eiptut
Spacious 4 bdrm. 3 t>a1h • ~ • d41p:Nopelttl31-1757 u&:11:;5 645.57~· flT-SS RHpon clean M 25+,, __ ar---~ nis E11cellent benefits and e11 ecutl v e nome. •BR 2~b•. 2 atory. Beytront2br2ba,pvt19a, Nopet · -n/smkr shr 28r lBa E--• --working· condlllon1 in
Amenltl• lnclUde apa, $385.000. CrMtlw Weya llDT 4 TllM.lll comp furn + petlO furn, mealiBJIU Weatald• 2Br 2Ba. pvt CHTHS. TIHtS. side l'IM S300 548-88 l 4 I FOUND 2 6'mond e.;,. busy corporate office
wood decking, lath 64&-0520 493-044e Wee1a6<M 2BR 1ba duplex. dbl g.,. Hu silverware & patio. carport, storege S..-llC .• , lg 2 tty 3BR 2ba NB hse 1 nngs nr Magnolia & At· Apply 1n petSOO
hOuae, wet b9r. oall eabl-•• Ille~ Off str•!,! 1p7a00rklng. electronlea If dHlred APAITmlTS ~!~,·.1~~. fGac:,l~~~-.. 10 ... ..,,! s.rr,. Nr ben $450mo548-5776 lanta Cati & ID 536-3161 Tll ...UY-11111 •.
net• and muctl more. MOO/rno.uv2-S1500/moyr1y873-3777 Immaculate ler~ Gerden ..,._ -"'...,... .... ts.le4tls 499-1311 ex 2130 170•2GilletteAve Aalclng $234 000 '* ~H£JGHTS1" Ap1s. Beautifully land-$675 Sml pet ~9'--0433 ,.... •
33 ,.-----·--·--BEST PRJCE. Chef'rnlng Hey $500'1 2bdrm 2b• Baytront 3BR 2BA. 2 ear scaped grounds. pool/ Ofttl 4aily 9 to &. Shr Univ Part\ Irv Condo 1r111ne 714 250--0 t
brldcwortl. 8kr. 846-2111 539~191 Agent coat 10. $1200/mo 973-37n tBdrm $59S-le15 AttractfY9. beam ceilings. $200 d99 •, ulll also gar· Traditl'ona) 3bd 1'M>a. F/P & quellty l'lkupa & bltln• kids ok gar, avail Feb 10-June ape, patio/deck. No pela. DaH Ptiat 2'2' ~ d Nsmkr no pets S275tmo f OlJNO ADS ACCHm PAYAIU
Realty MJt 8-Lotn wtndowa enhance l805B W. Bay Ave 2Bdrm t't.Ba S705 2Br near Marina $595 00 age to renl S733-2085 ARE FREE 2 ~~~~~1:xr:, -~,an~!
.. n decor w/dffn gd Eut ad· E/BLUFF CONDO. 3Br 2250 Vanguard 540·9e2tl 496-9482 1 l am·Spm a rt t Carat ti f 11 -.,.-, Seno resume 10 Mtenaet 631-7370 ftr lalt 1111 dress $425 u1111 pd 2'h8a, lmmac .• no pets. -----~pa m t>n \ Caff·. t40t Dove St ... 290
-
COLDWeu
BANl(CR 0
N9W 3eR 25X. apace rent 539..St91Agent0011 avf 31 1$1450. 975--0112 2Bdrm t'l•Ba S725 IHI. ltac~ 2'4 Nnwport Buch So 2740 j Nwpt Ben CA 92660 S130.pet1,0<:Mr\b<eeze. Lll•Y .... ,. 1 151E.21st 548-2408 29R28X.~r.lndry. N 1 ,11, Intl ..,,,,.,, Enclosed 11ngle car gar· •~2-1171 I ,.. •• 1 u~-•~s.itu11:• • Furn deluxe oceanv ew 4 ..w.x let street 1 age. 399 W Bay St, CM -ACCTS PAYABLE & hght
n ~ -· --..v Brand new 3t>r 2~ba f/p, condo 28r 2BA. all ml,;to beech. No i>9ts. .JI p .. ,,.11 s95 00 650_6357 : I secretarial duties for
•SSOOO•Cenqllallfyyou fncyd.dblgar.petolc,pk amenltlea. ,11295/mo. "4etltfleld S650.CallJ .. n 631_1266 64l·'>lll I maJOr tlieater chain
to own a routethe1 can colors 1095. 642·11t166 Reh re q d . D • Y • 8 E'side CMlnfe clean sgl , Found lrlst\ Setter Nr Sena resume to J081'1.
oener•t• owr 12000 per PLUSH CONDO 28drm 642-0880, evea 831-4897 Fial IPUT91m 1·~ ~~I : ·· Nt-wpor1 v.t<h No on p"v alley Long term ! 1 c 11 p 0 Box 9099 Newport
mo. c .i1 today759-aee3 28a. Over 1tream1 & Furnlthed 18r, MCurlty Spertcllng ciMn large aptl ~: '\'Ill I•\ •• \\. " storage 195 673-3600 ~02~X3 1~~!~'· a Beach ~-92658
----llMrt ~ l falta.Dblgarwtopnr,w/d gate. pool, fac. ate. for lamlllM with 1 °' 2 -··---1 '
10
:"
11 C...trcial FOUND Lrttie Male Puppy lllllEEPEI -lnstetled. All new decor. 11000/mcrmo. 646-4270 cN!dfen. Neat Parll Heat &45 1104 Yucce a ey 5 acre• A 11 now l tOOO/mo • pafd. No peta. •LJYm II.mt* LI. Salt/Int Call & ID PCH & Pe>1nset· $6 hour 24 hours per Wk ••,111111 fenced Mini rencf'I. 1 Br s:O lty 54~_2447 LARGE 38drm 28a w/gar. 28drm 1'.48a $700 1 • 1 + fUll lcltchen, utllt -Ha Moo AllA 64>4.J 14 tor Pr009<1y Mgmt Ole
.. • _ rncety rum. tg new gar. aecur Walle 10 bc:h/Lldo Vlltege 28drm 28a $720 incl Only '425. F• IHI~ Ctaat ••trt !~ti Z7SO FOUND Male blk wl'lt Newpon Bch 673·2990 F~~3~:'1a1n'=. $45K. 1-819 365--0495 Plush P'of decor 1Br. den. $1200 mo. yr1y.'9&4-t1922 398 w. Wllsoo 831-5583 nLUllT 111-1111 .. EA~ g unlta 2300· Husl\y m1J male bll<. tan CLnl nPtST
4 BR a BA art atudlo bltlns. trplc. w/d. Over· II'' ..... $695 N'-2BR 2b&. ...... ,. 3Br 28a Condo sUs owners unit 1011gross Germ Shep ma1e 1.an FUU. r 1••E • • • foolcl lake & fount.int. ._.. I. """ YP" • $ 000 8 9"'., t 220 m gymnulum. llbrary, Pool Jae Clb HM Nr SC T/hN 3BR 2.,.,ba. Frplc. "4etlt:fiekl & drapes. Dishwasher Carport. pool. Jae. 725. kr ~ msh brown lge terrier Typing 50_60 wpm and
gourmet kltci\en, pool leat1l1 Ptz '19s01mo 840-1e12 ldry gar. HC gate, Call 714/960-4614 545-7131 or 731·5166 la1i•ts1/0flic1 lt•t m111t grey short nair cat l'lave gOOd organ1zat1ona1
and many arMnltles. • · 11200+ allp &42-2423 IPllMm 644·3656 skill Own car a mutt
......... lllTALIUllUllG CY Near H~ Hoap 2br 2be lllceb<end new1All utllllles SUWlll YILUIE •iac. lt•t•h Z7H LOST cat s100 FIEWARD , HO\HS 8 00·5 oo II lta'"/c.d• NOT A LIST A EN newer kit gar kid• pet no pakl. POOi. gar. no pets *htfellJHal INc* Gray M1n11 1no tall I 1nter11steo call Judy at "--I 2112 Solid rental near OCC 2b< I.at $700'153M191 28drm 18a $680-$690 Wll llTf IM•I HM 2 room detu11e auite 673-8035 Jack 548-5262 642-432 t Ext 316
.....-I • w/bltlna gar SSOO't Agent fee 301 Avocado &42·9850 Mat 4m h" untfn rmlfM. S275tmo w/ 1 yr Luse Joanne 213-830-5910 .Sii. LIU PllOIS. NB. AA 2&. 16' to bdl. •UM111* VIII Balboe 2Br 28a fam-•f .. UllU •W Ltve wnere you hSV9 batn fOf non.emlc. Wftt'g Pv1 ent & Rsvd pkg Marilyn Kern wkdvs
yr1y. $825/mo. Almost Newport 3bdrm a I 200 VI ~ ala • ---•Spectacular apta fem CM 5'6-1307 eves Ample guest pttg LOST red M Irish Seller 6 All HCEPTll•IT
Sunny & eky end untt E/SIDE CM 2BR 1BA hm 2ba ,,._., lclt no frlllt ~~91~ OR ,'~,7~ 2BR 2BA. upper unit, * 1 & 2Br. 1 & 2Ba suites Util & Lg sign incl years 010 Cl'l&rl11! vie of GroW1ng CdM Mol'19ge
w/wry private patio, Ml· w/yd. No peta, gar 1700. 1195 539-8190 Agt fM _ carport, lndry rm. dshWr •Spectoua townhovsea Fem n-amlcr. lcltch prfv, 1mmed Posa 64'2·9347 20111 Westmister c M Firm seeking F T mature
tng nook In lcltchen. Many HS 1 t>ltt to bctl, 2BR 1BA Others Unadv.rtlaed A ti Cuta & cozy. Close to all •Fl~ S255tmo CM nr S C11 Ptz 3000~368 545 & 520 SQ 549.3690 REW•RD "1tnded per~ Pieu.nt
ui>gradee. 4th bdrm la 91)t w/ll'ICMek & gat 1175 R9nt/Sale DeluH 2b< 2ba ~9;/mo * :.~1~:epa~~conies 01 75 t-0272or&62·1823 Ft 1617 WEST CLIFF •-:\Hla & ;;~ry d8~~~on~r;ented :ar:t•,:48~~0::!· Mllll IULn Etlde dpl~ w/2 car ettacfl Intra) •z TSL MGMT ~~-1603 FURN rOOllWt>a MIF. Npt Nwpt Bell 541-5032 Agt ~ J . 3012 SEAVIEW FINANCIAL ~ wanta lmmedlale PllPll'llllllT gar. S875tmo 960-9083 PL.1111 ··-Wll •Tt Bch $500/mo Incl u111 S25 SQ '' $425tmo astr.ctlOa 6~5-6500 call Shoshana .:-.:;:;-N $225 000 714/675-tl173 -•WlllLAll YILUIE• •3 Lighted1ennls courts Avall 2/1. 780-1448 ?AiNCH Lessons Native aate. ow • Unturn, E/alde 2BR 1BA, Completely refurblth•d B ' Ba . ' & S I I Balboa Pen1n Pv1 entry & F M ,., II NB lf~•L SEC•n••y wllend. Crash pad off Belboe $395 lrg enck>Md yd w/patlo. 2BR 28A In W•tmlnater 2 r 11, . new cp I *2 wlmm ng poo s Leg Ben rm pvt ba prvlgs ' balll Cleen 760·9792 r teaetoer ic e e •• " -
SALLY SHIPLEY unique decor & fr• utlla l 7l5/mo, 1at, laat & MC 5595 +MC 895-1108 d~~w, cf~~~!! •Streams & ponds 2 blk bch. Res~ prof· Approx fr'lx20 1763 Ot·I 673·596J msg 6~3·8464 FN Lt t1ga11on Attorneys
JOYCE DA.BOLT oth«a avalt 539·6190 d4lp $300. Small d~ & 1 + · ope 9 • :~;~~:i~;e!~an bus $385 ·~ utll 494·7346 ange Ave S200 incl 01115 Earloyaeat ~~;c~m~=~~ re~;:o;~
Beet Rlty fM child olc. Call &4._5 13 lalMI 1Br 18&, new crpt, gar. Gas le< Heating & Cooklfl{ ROOM In Newport Beacn Call Betty 645-9161 or "i•r ,n0 Partner 500(1 Ll'91 WU. 1111 Dua Ptiat Z l11ad ... frig, upatrs. t922 Wallace Paid nome Kite prtv or I will 644-2270 C~il• Care 3016 Bircto St Newl)O(l Beech SS 10 SMC 550-1015 1111 your mM1 Older lady CA 92660 BXvfiC&HiiN!BX. fem 2BA 2BX. ~·deck. yrd, loweron~~. ~ ··-· 111 ans WHY NOT CALL pref'd ~-253 1 llrwt lrtat!l' 1 LH. CHILDCARE NEEDED In
rm, wet t>ar. 12750/mo. walk to be $900 lae or 1,., a wrtter/.-rMOfle ~ -ltl-l 111 •&O<f Campy• Dr suite 1n m~ Nwpt Ben .,m~ •or 9 lHAl SECln&IY
---------yrty.Ag1875-77M laeoPt213-454-1181 "" -18', fttg. range. laundry Room ln-lgHec.homefor warm Cheerful 2 story moold w,c: .. sl\30·5 30 LtQaticin exper non-doeen't need foot trefftc. __. .. ____. No pell IL• ••I empU M or ttucs.rit nr JW If'--b Id 646-2088 B 7,,,, ...... py1n=.. ....u. $1400/mo. Barbera. COie ......... s550imo. WWlll y .... airport & occ ltl1c. pool llnanclal 0 -UI 1ng SM'" "'lpt en ...,.........,
NEW LISTINOI •-•... Yall!y ZU4 of NeWport 875-5511 931 W. 19th St 548-0492 15555 Huntington '(lllagt P'IV $375 Incl ut 54&-6740 852"1700 c .. LO CARE lljl!'eOfl<l 10•
Spectoua 4 Bdrm 11o111e --• .... rrom s.....---n.-r BRTM 1'11 B omce ~pn mt""'...,._... Go~~ u~ Lfl!•·L StmtR
with • bM<ltul View ol f-...&a 1117 .. I'll.I Piii al•H fH HI I IUll•TI UIYI II F;'~ay, nortl'I ~I~ ltM / ... h 2711 643 aq It lhWf Nr PC H "<>me M· Tn 8 ~ 642 2~56 Sectv ~~" 3 vrs Ctv & Ut
the ~· OOMl'I end City Q 8 rm hm w/t;IC Crpt9 appta & Qer accent Ill! 28R 1BA. c:ottege type. to Mcfedc:s.n • ...i °' Ul• IUll & Post otftee 646-2947 HELPER Help Jrd & S1h 6 Atty rirm 'Xlnt typing
llgtlta. M"'Y room. 3 Clll' bMiC lclt gar gar & oc:.llf\ thla unique bungalow rm • prtv•• pa1lo, ;ar, w/d McFadden. -• CdM dht Suites A/C, grader homewor ~ 111e skills wd oroc reQ'd
garege. protected patio. CIOM 1730 EZ move 53M190 8"t Alty f• ated. • Yeerly. Blk to hkup. No pets. le76/mo. lm'•t -~~ -·-ample pkg. utll• & Janitor meal prep Mu!lt l'l.ave ~n~ Judy 955·0560
lnPftt*'home f« 539-81908eetRlty fM ll'HI bHCl'I Cerpeta, ~ TSlMGMl 842·1603 ~Wkly rentala. low rat• 2855ECt1Hwy675-6900 I car M·F 3·6pm $4 l'lr PART llME 8 001\keec>et
entertaining. sseo.ooo .. ,lut .... , ""' $750 No pet• 87s-etol EeatalcM 2Br 1Ba. w/d Woob8R16GE CONDO '135 & Up/Wkly COior --C all M rs Hltd'Y av, 20 "
00 C........... II.. r nr 2 2b t TV meld aervloe lt'M FANTASTIC LIDO 8AV """ 0425 ~ 850 14()(1 S~r~ta" nrs per '* (71 .. )673 44 • Brkm.nt/ 11000 Lrg2BR 18aduplu.1300 hkupa. o•r. 548-6091 br •• c arpor coir.e hM1ed pOc,. & VIEW Prolnlt0nal offie• ......,.. Tvp1n9 snortl'land ~ ·~-* +dep AYl2/1 947-1295 If. rum Avell thN 8/M 1175/mo + dep. s925imo 720-0979 11991 '10 ooean Kltcn's wttl'I recec>hon arN and AUPAIR ror N B Ocean 1tet>t' 9 Computer
Studto,Mkltoh +11111pd ' ooeen $775. 818·"8-0352 EASTSIDE 2BR. g1r. ....... ..... avail 985 N Coe1t Hwy, private batl'I ltltchen and lrool tam 2 cMdrt1n 1tno .. 1e>0~ a plus Send
l oebte TV, onty_,75. file = ~= ~ . OCEANFRONT' white patio. 2 ~. no peta Croom WQI :;;;: i Laguna 8Mctl. 4e..5294 doc:k Side I~~.,.. Eng_ & d"ve 6?3.1120 ~~mep l<'O ·~~ 1~
TILWT ·~ MIO 3br 2be 2-etory ••t• view. 28R, frplc, NH/mo. 642"°"91 patlO 328 Thalia St. au w mm. S500 mo 6 4 O..tttica 3011 Coat• Mesa C• 926H
807 POeNIETTIA S8d 28e 539-41to ... t Atty fee 11 too yrty. Call eonn... -aide BACH tor t peraon S&oo1mo Call 832-4 190 Wkly rentale now avail. ... •T llAll H 0 u § e c L E ,. N f R §I ... u .._
2 Fpa, Jecl. 1_11k lo S.. R.E Prod 975--8404 New crpt. pelnt. etc All 2eR Fri>+c. g.ar. lndry, S 129 50 wtc & up 2274 Full SerVIOe Building WANTED SS hr m11e..lltaf btttt ...._ -.•• l1Ho/mo.~716-t391 ... ~.Smlpvt)l'dS495 vtew. nr bch $"51mo. Nwpt&llld.CM847445 CornerotW•tcllft&lrvine ege Cain« 722·9659 IE•perienc;ed Latge siA/2~ • to t.m1y hm. lniM IH4 ., . pet ok 190-8M2 496-tl593t49 .... ss4e Ill I .. L-sea!'!:~ v1ew111 autte ~ousECLEAN1NG f:=~ 4~5~ ~:'. = ·m.e~·~t ~·='~'= •••• w •• W• to bct\/noH:; no ft.Ull"U Almoat Ocntrnt. lurn l30H W.Pec:tftcC0MtHwy -WomenneedeO&OOd pey, CA 92628 Coohdentual
2 8'cwy,. ··-• CAlLUIMOARDINO pet,n-.noker.S /rrt0. 2324 EkNn,Ai>t 1 2br/t'-'ba. 8r'1 toe.~ Newporte..dl AefligT\I _,......... good"°"" 11 Rob-IRect10t1on1st Mutt IYl>f'
condltlOMd condo nr J!WtHE M NTALI AYI F«> 15. 759-5097 '42·5155 :0~2~~4 •u~11':o!' II l t2&• Wkegl, nodePC*t 5'6lq.11 oh;/store "'909, b ... 1 :1.~~iJ I 45wpm' Get1 olc dutl.s
8.C. ~=· ~ To ~..J:' .;:.mqe Ihm......... 1BA 1be duP91t. lllce new, 2~ :.t= '(;'d Htlh It Ht Harbor Ballet Centet 1131-0149 Asll IOI Nancy ~IOO. A~ Cell ,..... puMc. 111-T• garege, 8'0¥9, 1750/mo CIP' .,.,., end .,_, ~ety fum Lge 18A ftl4 3011>-A Harbor Blvd CM H•PTtt•T
_..._ .,,.,. _ ,.. •· M2-241t Ind:.,. fee • Utll• oarpo No L.aQ Walk town/t>ch .-ec:roea trom '90Go Call a.J--'-·l/ ... _ . r---,... ... _ a..tlful l ~ . , 1700/mo 175-7805 ·= IW SC Pili " ...... Mor. (9 19) 726-MeS Of ......... -Eng1neenng firm If\ ....... ..
Oellw ~1171 48drm .,._.a TWNwM teiil •700imo. No.,.... ~~ 1ng, '*C 13,51mo • (7141950-3388 M•lai1tratift Sltl Pof'I 6MCh neeas P 11tlme Clrr...C. -· a1----. r ... 7I02 .... .... • ..... ..-.. ~t Wltn typing •ing .....,,...., #om 1766 .. u,_ V'M--Small offi ce apace ........... , .. ,.., a ~lll\Q 2-3d•vt,,..... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~la..IC 11111 a 4 ._. l'Wnca. ~r atcwe SI 'I' old Prol/f n-amkr, $300/mo Loe: E 17tl'I St. Succeulut 1n11Htm•nt bperd onty 752·8MI _::::;;;;~-----t =., ""'.::'=:•.:: Ind. r.o Peb MMau ::=:..:~_:.~ S:. ".:"!:;or: ~::.-=:n~~~~ ~~ &mllllll1
lfl.l191 Aferllt "9 *1 ... 1111• home to tlw, or mwnt to nyon S525, 111 & t•t wor1t1n9 1ndlv1duel tor ~ Co Alrpor1.,..
Uni¥ p.,. twMm 2if' aM AefrtO, dWI .._, ~ -.di wtltl Aelo. ra. Avell now 4t<t-U52 ctya pef'l'llanelll full time ad-SOIM ~ • .,.. train
-1-!not NO PETS $46 4156 f.n Oftty 1111) 414-.2211 --""" m1n1ttr1tl"e poe;uon witn a.pend• -cer fOt •· dW ... ,.. _,.... ,_, --e..utlf'UI 2 ltl"t v uic't -.ari.ct rffOC)nt4bll1tt.1 l"9n0a UOO " rntlMoe
No1891..-.1 ,t'lflAor .='· 11tlHARP llr, oom.-,._COM 8'lr 2be h9e. tMle Condo 2274 9q_ h . pen A...,..__ tl'\U9' 119 OOoc1 CAlL 751·t003 . -,_. ~.Covwedpf'lma, tltt wl..,._ Ger. wld .. _ W•lofOC Airport ..,....-·· • d •lit
ctoee 10 Nnd Mott ""'9 MOOtmo ... ~"""' ,.,.,. Si00o1mo Gfoeetae.cen =~m::;•4'1·~.'~-•1nn11t
pd M2&tmo 1-...a H 7~ W 4T9-0ltt .wtet Vile Aem.al Pf~ iege ed not nK Ai>c>'Y by ,.., pieced aroiMno !MN
Mr 1.., ~. ~ ... Mgmt 175-4112 0 melt Ot'tly. aut>tn\1,...,.. l>edl't ~Ml Mn• w ... 1.-pd 1121/mo 794-1112 t., Deborah Sheflln, ~°'*'""tor per·
1•1 .. 1aa-1t-..1s WATt~kOO Ane1y11c lnue1ment IMl*\t poeltlon ..,..,M; _ ..,.., ..._ Mn: "'"'*' ~ Nte 13'0 a/ft MQmt, 21n Manin at. qu '"""t•: ecc1H•t•
\WW, t ;-"p, wld, lfWat .. MMflpni& 4f\ ftoor wlYU M2....,.. •230 lr•1ne , CA ,_. dllrloel,...or .. .._ ____________ _._ _ __:;___1~~==-==----1~=~==:~~==c=::::=:=:::::::=:1;~·~a-~1>1~mo~:Att~l7M~~m!l.i.· 1 .. .,... .. ,~u Mon-Fr1 t to s e211 14.14 ~ "'~
No room left In the 9ara1•
~ for the cart
A call to d•tlflecl
can help.
l
l
,
I
TYPlllTlU/
PU11 IP AIT1IT
Immediate opening tor
e•P« typesetter Must
nave nave mark-up
e.KP9f . put•up back-ground l'lelpful Xlnt ben-
efltl lndudlng medical &
dental ln1Yrance. con-
genial atmo.ptiere. Con-
tact .All .... S.2-4321 ext
29' ..... ,.
MA.YPUT
; 330 W. Bay Str .. 1
•Cos1a MeM, Ca. 92827
' 142-4121
Account Executive pos-
ition avallable In Claul-
Ued Advertising. SalH
experience helpful
Typing 45 w.p.m re-
quired Good 1al1ry plua
commisalon Cell for en
interview 1ppolntment.
Katnleen Olson .
642-4321, ext. 302
HAlllOIUT
IAIUPILIT
330 W Bay Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
IUlllCUUI Typaettlng end printing
Young 1ggres1t ve
grapn1c1 compeny ties
position for sales peraon ~/Simller qualllles Some
exper req'd, following
prel'd Strong potential for right person
Studio One Graphics
241-0194
lfll( FIH IAUI
In store end home.
Prefer retail experience.
Nettle Creek. Funton
Island. Mr Tom 6•4-8860
•llPUITUUI
PIT ~rs nex Retell e•-P«lence pref &45-0210
IALEl/OASllEll
lmmed opening• for ulel
P909le & ca1t1ler1. Home
rmprovemenu C•nter
exp a • PleaM 1ppty 1n
person Tuee or Thura
9-111m or 2-•pm
L-P HOME CENTER
1275 BrlltOI, Colla Mesa
EE 0 M/F
uus•m• Pert & full time poe1llon1
111111 EJ1per helpful wttn
pubhc & Cl9h PIUM
appty In P«IOf'I Atrium
Court, FHhlon l1l1nd In
lfte Irvine Ranch Market
.t40-4279 Toni
S'xces -~or Fun Nautl<:al
Gitt & Clotnlng Store
FIT Exp pref'd Ct1artle'1
Locker 875-82:?0 NB
n'"7manegement
WHAT IF?
•You mM!e an tnQulry
•You llh whet you n.er
•You do What 1 do
*.-You "'" 175,000 eall now 114/~e 111
J
BEST PART TIME
.JOB IN TOWN
Energetic people needed with a
pleasant telephone voice to con-
duct marketing study for leading
local newspaper. "NO SELLING."
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 5:30 P.M. to 9:00
PM, Sat. 9:00 AM to 1 :00 PM. $75 a
week to start, share in partnership
profits after 1st week. Pleasant
working conditions, private desk &
phone. Casual attire. A real fun Jobi
MANAGEMENT -OPPORTUNITES.
For Interview call David Grant at
642-4333 between 9:00 AM and 3
PM M-F.
642-4333
$2.40 per day
Tn1t'1 All you P•Y for
3 tin•. 30 dey mlnrmum
lntl'le
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
CALL TODAYll
lllfllLlll
Your
s.Mce Difec:tOfy
~eeent1t1Ye
142-4121 .. ,. an
aqgilage Oarrjer
fltgger every day ,
, When I JOt mx diploma 30 years
n EnalWt ~or, I spoke the
rather fluently. ~·
E ... W.•·
B•IECI 1~ ~
apeak it, but there's a lot ol'it
I don't undentand. It pains me to
admit thia, but I have nev~ u.nder-llOod a linale word that Carl Sapn
baa ever saia. That is pouibly because
I don't know a siqle thina about
uuonomy. As far u I'm concerned
die Bit Dipper works for Buk:in-Robbina. I bate it when everyone aits her prose," "freedom from quotidian
around waitiq for a punch line of an concern," .. duplicitous tictaon" and
utronomy jolte. I never know when "He is too coarse for the rarefied
IO lauah or bow 10.,._ Everyone looks aJmosphere she created." (Easy for
•you like you're weard when you say, him to say.) "fl'bat'a rjcb.'' Never do I feel more like an alien in rve never undentood Henry K.iu-my own cour.itry than when I watch
iqer. Every time he speaks J make a "Miami Vice." With an inte~reter,
concentraled effort to try to follow the I've been able to speak a little· vice."
tbou&hL Sometimes as his voice ''Dead meat" is pretty obvious and
drops, I find m)'1Clf puttina my head . when they refer to "White
down into my chestto bear bentt, but Christmas." I know they're not
ifl miss two words, t&!~·r-,---,--talkina Bing Crosby and Rosie
William-F.-&ckley as · ng. ~__:__ __ _
My fantasy is to ap_pear on bis show The offiCTliiifit I heard: "If you ad sit wath my finacn fonnina a chill out, those low-life, slime buckets
pyramid over my nose and looking up will sew your li!J6Crs Inside your
ftom the floor only to say, "It all mouth. Those m.,,oru.re lookin' for
depends on what you mean by •b.ilscoreatColceWid•ndifcustoms
eudemonism, Bill. As I've always doesn'tlikeyouyou're'°nna,erbde
aaid, money does n 't buy andshde. Thatmunsyou're/00Jcin1,
eudempnism." (I always wished I had at• dime and• half mandatory, so 1f
the confidence of the woman who was the deal's go in down pl•y ball or do
waitina for me to sign her book in t.he time and let us in on the sweep."
Richmond, Va., who said in a loud In the 15 years my kids have been
voice, '"You speak to men and listening to radios, stereos and MTV,
women. Erma. You're probably the I have yet to translate the lyrics into
QDly bisexual humorist in the country anything that makes any sense. Once
today.") in a while, I'll pick up an "Ob Bebcee"
Unless you dissect it word for word which will be repeated for five or 10
there is no way of comprehending a minutes, but the rest is lost It's
movie review in Time mapzine. J probably just u well.
kieep looking for somethina simple ·I have a feeling it's all going to get
like "I loved it" or "I hated at." worse, so if you have anything to say
Instead, I stumble over "tonalities of to me, put it in a letter.
Hot stuff may cool
heart attack· threat
Medical ~hers discovered
that people who live along the
~exican border are way below aver·
l&C in heart attacks, blood clots, strok~ circulatory problems gener-
ally. 1 nose people eat a lot of bot
peppers, and what makes those
peppers hot is something called
capsaicin. So now the researchers are feedina it to test subjects to sec if it's
really a Pf'CVentive medicine. Most
medicines have side effects, however.
What if it puts you to sleep every
afternoon around 2 o'clock? Shrug.
Would you cat a broiled baby
.,arrow? On purpose? Many would.
Sometime back several gourmet
lilaops stocked just such a comestible
-four to seven broiled baby spu ·
rows to the can -and rapidly sold all
t.bey could ~et.
Competition between the fund
raisers is fierce. '"Cancer is a death
1entence." says one group. Maybe.
says another, '"but arthntis is life
imprisonment.··
Q. Most common given name in
lhe world is "Mohammed." spelled
however, and the claim is thal
nobody except an Arab pronounces it
correctly. Docs this mean a lot of
those boxcn who call themselves
Mohammed can't even pronounce
their own names?
A. Might say that. Still. it's gener-
ally qn:ed the ways people pro-
nounce their own names arc always
the correct ways.
Science fiction almost always goes
before !Cience fact, but sometime'>
not Iona before. Take the artificial
beart. Author Alais Budrys described
a blood pump in his novel "Who."
Only five yean later, in 1963, Baylor's
Or. Michael DeBakey came out with
his "implant interthoracic pump." ,.
Q. Who invented Green Goddess
ulad dressina?
A. A cbefat San Francisco's Palace
Hotel. That old .. Green Goddess"
movie was showina thereabouts at
the lime.
L.M.
BOYD
A. In casks aboard shap, beer
soured quickly and water turned bad.
But not rum nor waler laced with
rum.
Air may not weigh much, but in
fact, the air you take into your body
every day weighs seven times as
much. typically, as the food and water
you take in.
Q. How do you pla) the v1ohn
··collcgno··?
A. Scrape the strings with the back
of the bow.
Eh Whnne' standardized nOc
parts so any Part of one gun could
wreplace any part of another of the
same make. It was a key development
in the industrial revolution. Music
wcnl through somc1hing s1m1lar. The
modem symphony didn·1 become
possible until violin makers stan·
dard1zed the whole '1ohn family of
inslruments. So composers could
wntc for any string section.
Ckphants. too. gnc' l' dL·mon·
'tra hh ""hC'n there·~ a death in lhc
fam1I).
In \aud1 ~rah1<1 mama1w "lx•-
ncath onL··s '>tat1on·· is a cnmc.
punic;hahlc h~ d eath.
Your hroom \.\ork'I best ti it s
handle 1c; fr< inchcc; longl'r than )OU
arc tall
Q . Where are most of the movies'
"Sahara Desert" scenes shot?
A. In Buttercup Valley west of
Yuma.
Q. How come the British sailors of L.M. 8•1' 11 • 11•tllcatetl
old were such bi& rum d.rinken? a1Jetul1t.
.
P£0Pl i
Ot9ft99 C09lll DAILY PfLOTIT~. Jlf"*Y 21, 1•·
•••n~~r.Jawr) tt IN THE UGBT 08.Df!I
ARJES (Match 21-April 19): New perspective concemina buic tasks.
employment is necetllt')'. What pRViously was taken for ~ted must now
be re-evalU.ted. Emphasis also on aeneral healtb, nutntioo, fitneu. Leo ~tive will Dlay top role.
TAUlllJS (April 20..May 20): Learn throuah teadlina -by sharipg
knowledlC with family member you make si&niflcant pin. Pleuure will be
derived from children, new contacts. Sense of direction will be restored.
ODONJ (May 21-Jwie 20): You become mote c:ontcious of '"body i~." Keep recent resolutions con-
cenuna diet, exercise, nutrition. Spot-
liaht on travel, unique invitation to
muti&ious social event. Spirits buoyed
by valid compliment. . SYDIEY CANCER (June 2J-July 22): focus
on security, lona-ranae prospects. peen
li&ht to reyise, remodel and possibly to Ollll
rebuild on more suitable bate. Lunar
emp~is on trips, vi~ta, .fresh concepts ••••••••••• and uruquc communacauon. .
LEO (July 2l-Aq. 22r. You'll be asked to disseminate .. special"
information. You could rcc:eive unique bonor, members of opposite sex arc
involved, your talents will· be appreciated. Focus also on payments,
collections and gain throuatrwritten word.
VIRGO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22): Emphasis on maJor ch~ on home front.
Money is involved, you will eventually wio contest. Take initiative.
biahli&ht confidence, maturity, willinpeu to have faith in your capabiht1cs.
&th vulnerable South dHJs
NORTH
•AQ5
-: Att32
" 7 •A 84
£AST
• 10
WEST
•J 87
J6 -Q 10 8 7
Q 10 8.' 3
•Q2
Jt52
•K.J97
SOUTH
•K98f3 2
)('
A
• 10. 5 3
The bidding:
South Weat North Eut
I • Pu• 2 --;'
2 • Pa.. 3 • 3 -PaH e +
Pua Pu•
Pue
Pue , ...
Opening lead Seven of •. ~RA (Sept 23-0ct. 22): Define temis, look behind seen~. pcotcs.t self
Tirelm>boruddioches. Re~O'"be~ wants somet mg -l)o---yoo-thmk" logic y at t e
of value.from you -for nothina. Dream, properly rnterpreted, couJd prove br1dge table? Let's take you
prophetic. . . . . through the play of a hand step-by·
. ~RPIO (~t. 2~Nov._ 21):. Empbas~ on dealings ~1t~ those 1n step to show you how easy it Is pos1t1ons of authonty. Fmanetal gain results af you stand tall, 1ns1st on your ·
ri&hts. Love relationship intensifies, you could become '"inextricably w~en ro~ know w hat dangers involved." might he in store
SAGl'M'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21): Reach beyond what had ~n "the North's bidding was intelligent.
limit." SpotliJ)lt o n prestige, career, achievement, ability to·anract wide South's aucuon s ugge5ted a six-
audiencc. Individual you respect wiU pay meaningful compliment. You'll card spade suit and a doubleton
flirt with fame. heart' honor -probably the king CAP~COR~ (Dec. 22;.Jan. ! 9!; New start indica~ed. you~ll be imp~sed for his opening bid and heart
by ~ption received fror;n speaal person: ETP.hasis o~ d~ire: persuasion. raise-so the spade slam had to
charisma, romanc.c. You ll make new start 10 different d1rect1on. have good play
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2~Feb. 18): You'll locate "missing papers." Your
position is stronaer as result. Family member decides to cooperate. Decision West leads a tr~mp. Where
reached concerning business maneuver will favor you. Cancer. Capncom s houl~ you wm the first trick?
persons figure prominently. Obvious ly, your problem 1s to
PlSCa (Feb. 19-March 20): Diversify, show that you are not without hold your club losers to one . To do
allies. Make inquiries, give full play to intellectual curiosity. Focus on public that you have to set up and be able relation~. legal atr~rs. possible partncnhip, marriage. You could win to c~h heart winners. Therefore,
populanty compellllon. you are -'2.i~ t9 need entries to IF JAN.HISYOURBIRTBDAY youarea natural teacher, psychologJsT. d -T · I you arc sensitive, prescient, and you usually know exactly what others are ummy . 0. mamtam max mum
C1111us
Go1£1
o ...
SllAllFF
should w in the first trick In
hand.
If trumps are 2·2, all is easy; 90
presume trumps are 3-1 and that
the heart break also is going to fol·
low probabilities and be 4-2. Whal
distn u ion will be a t h reat to your
slam?
Jf West has only two hearts and
three trumps, he will overruff t he
third heart to defeat you . Can you
avoid that'> Yes. by rumng the sec·
Ond heart'
Cash the ace of diamonds and
king of hearts. then cross to the
board with a trump. On the king of
diamonds discard a heart from
hand!
The rest 1s easy Ruff a heart,
c ross back to dummy with the ace
o f spades. m the process drawing
the last trump. and ruff another
heart. The heart suit is now good.
a nd ace of clubs is still on t he table
as an entry Use it to take two club
discards on the hearts. and your
only loser is a club
Simple, isn't it? thinking. Many consider you rebellious. unorthodox and "sensational." In commumcallon to the table. you
reality, you actually are conservative in sense that you know when status quo .--======================~---,
has run its course. You are innovative, a pioneer, a creative guide for others. ru,uTzz~rll•Y C.~ -0 ,i\.,.. i _ f) -C ~Q.• WOii
Cancer, Capricorn, Aquarius persons play important roles irf your hfe. • 0~ !'Qt.I ~'-(b p~ 0 HMI
· ··ctust will be memorable for you in 1986. You will achieve major goal. -------Etlit.4 tty CLAY a. f'OLLAN -------
Couples childless?
It's their business
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please
tell your readers to gi ve us a break.
The general public docsn 't seem to
realize that couples are childless for
one of two reasons: They don't want
children at the present time. or they
want children but are having fertility
problems.
At first. when people asked me
when we were going to start a fam ily,
I was polite and explained why we
decided to postpone parenthood.
After a while, I became irritated and
began to make sarcastic comments.
One of these days I may scream or use
some very unladylike language.
I know other women who arc trying
to become pregnanL I've seen them in
tears at the insensitive comments of
"concerned" friends and relatives.
The decision, if or when to have a
baby, is an extremely personal one.
Why don't people understand that?
Any suggestions on how to deal with
this problem?-COUNTTNG TO I 0
IN TENN.
DEAR TENN.: OalJ a~ woelcl au Adi a ..-u.. My advice 11 to
live tile ......... tk rHpollff IM
ilnenes. lt't MYOB.
TM men let1et' may be of l.Dterest
le IMle •llo 4eeNe NEVER to bve
cMJdreL • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I read the
letter from "Bummed Out in West
PaJm Beach" and saw myself. I. 100.
have a son who is driving me crazy.
Believe me, I wish we had decided 20
years ago not to have children. Our
lives would have been a lot less
complicated.
We have taken this boy to neu·
rolotista. the clerJy, counselors, psy·
choloaists and psychiatrists. We even
took one doctor·s advice and had him
arrested when hjs behavior became
violent. We hoped with every new
attempt to find a solution to hi s
problem and ours. Nothing works
with this kid.
My husband and I arc li ving for the
day when he leaves so we can lead a
normal life. We have aiven it our best
A11
LAIDEIS
shot. all the support and love poss-
ible. Nothing seems to malcc one bit
of difference. Sound bitter'? Well, we
arc. When I sec couples who arc
heartbroken because they can't get
pregnant I want to tell them to stop
trying so hard. Being childless 1sn·1
the worst thmg in the world. Some-
times it's the best. -U VING (.,)ON
LONG ISLAND.
DEAR W .; Woelcl It mab yoe feel
better to bow t.ut I bve ucl muy
letters expres11.D1 tM ume attlt•de?
TUakJ for yoer cudor. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: This 1s
for "Ticked Off in Cincmnau:· who
complained because some "crooks"
put a coin in a machine to get a
newspaper and take four:
I live in Pon.land, Ore. If there 1s a
malfunctioning coin-operated news-
paper dispenser in this town, 11 will
find me. In the last six weeks I have
dropped at least $2 into those boxes
for a 25~nt paper and the blasted
thing still would not open.
Just try to get )'Our money back
from the dealer who services 1he
d ispenser. 1 have waited months for a
50-cerit refund and finally got it when
I threatened to sue in small claims
court. So you see, the rcadcTS to this
commumty have the same problem
as the folks in Cmcmnati. -ALSO
TICKED OFF.
DEAR ftCllED: Win I eeeW Mlp
bat I bve ..... wen. Hew ..,_, a
word fr•m tlte felb wllo att ~-
1lble fer lite ~'! Wllat 11 a
penoll 1.,p1H4 le .. w'9 tk coiat
1• la u4 tltf' bes ,__,, .,a'!
0 l!eorronge letters of the
four scrombled words be-
low to form four s.mple words
S L A W E E
I I 1
1
I I
N E P N Y
I I I I'
P H I C R
1~ I I I
U N G 0 T H
V.'hen Granny gave us advice
n was always tor our own good.
When we were 1n the position to
give her advtee she said we were
being-.
G Complete the ct>uclcle QuOl•d
by l1ll1ng 1n the m1uing WOl'ds
you develop from step No 3 below
8 PRINT NUM8fl!E0 LETTEl!S IN
THE SE SQUARES
l 4 s
A UNSCllAMBlE ABOVE LHHRS
V TO GET ANSWER
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Con game
5 Ma1onty
9 Tramps
14 Ad1utant
15 Sman
16 Cn11ca1
17 Walked ov8'
18 Bring 10 an
end
19 Preteno
20 8111ng
22 Star-sna~
24 F rencn city
26 ~SI
27 0 T book
29 Gamma
30 In favor ot
33 Rabbtl
37 -Horsemen
38 From at><oad
39 Painters
produoe
40 Maren King
" 1 Allow the use
of
42 Sh()()s ot old
U Adversary
45 Wood
46 El Camino
47 Harmony
49 Ortnk
2 3
14
4
53 Place ot
10leness
57 Deplele
58 Removed
59 FOR s mother
6 1 wrse at>oul
62 UnworOy
63 Blue shade
6• Frankfurt s
river
65 In
66 l\Aontl'I abbr
67 Grow tOOd
DOWN
1 Evil soor 1t
2 Around
3 Beaut11'(
4 Ponoere<l
5 -Grundy
6 Animal 100<1
~ Watter or
Orf'd
8 Office
machine
9 Comet man
10 Pac11tc
11 Remnant4
12 $10011 Indian
13 ConStgn
2 1 l\Aonste1
23 Loyal Scot
6 i
PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOl VED
2S Re1a1tve 42 C_Loci.. part
18 F'h9t1ts ol 43 Stttten
steps •5 Rankle
JO Decant 4 -PocketbOOk
.11 Pto~ 48 Growing oul
32 Domesday . 50 Asian an1ma~
Booi. coins 5 1 Metric unit
33 Leq par1 52 Huge poet
34 0 11 prel 53 Dilatory
35 Fori.. part 54 Unfas1en
.36 Forelimb 55 Turnover
J • Re11ao1f' 56 Plunge
40 Senous 60 Insect
8 10 1 1 12 13
Woody Allen will take Manhattan 20
•1 &k Alaeda ... p,..
NEW YORK -WMlb Aa.
says If a doctor ordered llim to
move away from New York it
would be hUardous to bit bea.lth.
"I know it sounds ftulny, but I
just c:ouldll•t eee pnaofl'to some
location like Teus or Montana
for weeks on end. tivina ln a hotel
room. That's .tty 1 make all my
ft Ima in New Yon ... and al~ of
count. becaute I love tbe city.' he
aid.
MolalaC•tu
LOS ANOE.US-Newlyweds
... P-. and llaf are OD
locatioo in the far Ell& b '"Sbanabai Sunwiee." nich MOM~A dtlcri&e. 11 u Klioe-
pieked movie laced witb ~
m111C11udbumor ••
communications corqaany, a rr.
finery;. a retirement hdrite and \be
state ypitol.
Charles will arrive in Dallas
Feb. 17, Hit itincray there the
next day includes Vlsill to the
Electra Comm unicati0ot Corp., a
tclecommunk:ataons compeny.
and to lnfomart. a computer
matUt. the Bntisb contulate
11jd.
OeDeralclted
MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. -
Former Pres1de111 ~ 11.
Na-will attend South Carolana
Hall of Fame crremontes Feb. 7 to
pl)' tribute 10 1nduc:tte 0.. W...._ C. w .... .,., ad t.bt
cqanizltion's patdent .y;.
Watmott&and ._Anny dud'
olmlr dunl'I Ute fine three~
ol &lat NbOe 11d11d~
24
31
'
-.
l
I
"'
l
'
"Every time I coll grandma her phone
r---1ceeps soyin r zzp-oz.z.p-zz.p .... '
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
1-z, , ___ .,._,... ~
"You want him to go home? Just turn the
heat down to 60 degrees!"
PEANUTS
THESE CATALOGS WITH
TMEIR MODELS ARE
OE~ESS1N6! EVERYONE IS
HAHOSOME AND BEAUTIFUL!
GARFIELD
~
LOOK AT TMEM IN Tl1EIR
NEW 5PRIN6 CLOTl1ES .. IT
SETS AN IMPOSSIBLE
STANDARD FOR US KIDS ...
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
/-Lf -1i,
8
f
I
I jt
i
"You'w bean llatenlng to tt1at-;11.mr--tr-•-, ~~__,
paychologlat on the radio -oelnl" -u
DEN1'18 THE MENACE
NONE OF US CAN
EVER GROW VP TO
LOOK THAT 6000
by Hank Ketcham
' I
by Charles M. Schulz
by Jim Davis
~ ......................... .. __
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
JUDGE PARKER
u;H .. · I CPINT Ge.I
MY LEG-Tti~.
'l'OU SA'Y THAI 'YOU'VE ~
ONLY WORKED HERE A WEEK, ~NE? 'IOU,MR.
'IOV'"I: AN EXCELLENT WAITRESS ANO PRIDE!
l 'LL HAVE 1'0 TEU. THE MANAGER
~ 1-4!!'6 llQJNO A GEM!
11'5 FON ro LIE HER£ ANP MOSE ANP N\05£. ON iH£ MYRIAP Of ANP 'TO COONT TME CRACK4!> °" 'TME MEANING OF LIF'E , 50t.OTION!> ro 'THf. WORLP5 ~5, IN 1'M£ CEILING'
I
'
•
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DRABBLE
REM)'i R>R
T~ f.~A~
E~~M.IJE~?
R081tl8R08E
t·Z&
W€.U.,JV!>T O<:>t•f T
PE:£~ fl.1 M~ f'A?ER 1.
by Tom K. Ryan
by Kevin Fagan
PETT~ T"EfT,
lt-4 '(OUR CME l
by Pat Brady
~ DOOIQtSBURY
I
WELL, IF EVER V0U FINO THAT Tl-EY I'LL
DON'T APPRECIATE YOU HERE,~ KEEP
' i
' I
I
~ ME A CALL AT MY OFFICE ... IN MINO!
ANO I'M SURE we CAN FIND A
JOB FOR VOU IN MY COMPANY !
by Gary Trudeau
,..
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Odds on
'Prizzi' in
Osc&rrace
LAS VEGAS (AP) -••Priui's
Honor" is the early favorite 10 win the
Ac.demy Award ror best picture. and
Jack Nicholson is favored to wi n the
best actor award for his part in the
film, accordina to a Las Yeps
odclsmaker.
Altbouah nominations for the l 936
Academy Awards won't be made
until Feb. S1 Frontier Hotel od-
dsmaker Lenny Del Genio put out an
early line that favors ••Ptiz.zts
Honor" to dominate thi1 year's
awards. The actual awards will be
presented March 24.
Del Genio makes "Priui's Honor"
a 6.-S favorite to win best picture,
h'I Nicholson is also a 6-S pick to
e best actor award .
addition, Anjelica Huston is the
6-S favorite to win best supporting
actress award for her part in "Prizzi's
Honor," while John Huston is also ... ,
listed at a 6-S pick to win an award for
directing the film. •
In the best P.icture category, "Out of
Africa" and 'The Color Purple" arc
close behind "Priz.zi's Honor" at 1-S
odds, followed by "Kiss of the Spider
Woman-_: at-S..S.-"Witness" at 5-1-, • •== 1 and "Ran" at l()..l. •••U•L -ll..J es:yl--Stl'Cep'-spenorma tc--i. ____ _
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4 tuek ICU'f mB "Out of Africa" makes her a 6-S co-. ..;aw=" favorite with Cher's role in "Mask" in
1:is. 11:11 the best actress category, according to
Del Oenio. Whoopi Goldberg is at 7-5
llM JWI I nl for her role in "The Color Purple",
"TllCl II A followed by Geraldine Page in ·•The
Uf[Tll(" (I) Trip to Bountiful" at 5-l and Fion-
5:tl, 1:H, ltiH nuJa Flanagan for "James Joyce's
Women" at 8-1. edwarde VILLAGE
CINEMAS 891 0567
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William Hurt, in "Kiss of the
Spider Woman," and Gene Hackman
in "Twice in a Lifetime" are listed
ri&bt behind Nicholson in the best
actor competition at 1-S odds.
..
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By LAWRENCE &D.-MAN ., .... ,,_.,....
NEW YORK -A maJority of
American adults enjoy rock 'n' roll
music. but many think it corrupts the
young, and they support warning
labels and ratings for rock rec.ords.
according to a Me.dia General-As-
sociated Press pall.
•······~~~~~~~~~::5iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~l The kind of music that once lUXU.V THIATIHS symbolized rebellious youth is now
S u .n 111 z Mata. w .. 111101 * S •Ot•'Y d b 56 f WALK· IN * tat M•t. On1y ~t .. Sun .. a. DRIVE-IN •Ho'• enjoye Y percent o adult
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Less than 40 percent of the respon-
dents opposed warning labels and
ratings and thought rock music had
no influence on children'c; beha\Jor
The rest were unsure
Most o f those who believed rock
corrupted the . young said It en-
couraged drug use. d1so bed1cnce.
sexual aC1w ity. violent beha vior.
laziness and a disregard for authont~.
T he natio nwide telepho ne poll of
1.462 adult Americans found that
most of the support fo r warning labels
a nd ratings came from those who did
not like rock music. But hal f of the
rock music fans also supported warn-
ing labels.
The debate over the morality of
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rock music is as old as the music 11.sclf.
But the issue resurfaced last yea{
when the Record Industry Assoc1a •
tion of America. under pressure from
t wo parents' groups, agreed to label
some albums with the warning ··Ex-
phc1t lyn cs -parental advisory" or
to print the album's lyrics on th~
Jacket.
Twenty-two of the 44 record com-
panies that belong to the RIAA
accepted the idea. altho ugh mu•
sicians who have arusuc control over
albllm Jackets are free to ignore t he
agreement.
The agrC"Cment was spearheaded by
the Parentf Music Resource Center.
a Washington-based group founded b~ Tipper Gorr ~ire of Sen l\lben
Gore D-T l'nn and ~u..an Bakn-,
wife of 1 rcasur> ~·, rnar-James
Baker ·
Somt• prominent roe!. musicians
ObJttted to their cru~dc Frank
Zappa. forme:rl~ of the Mothe~ of
Invention and Dec Snidc.-r of the
group T""'1 sted S1!>tcr told a con·
gressional heanng last September
that warning labels ""'ere unnecessary
a nd a danger to freedom
In the Media General-AP poll.
those who said the\ likc.-d rock music
incl uded most of f 8-to-34-H·ar-olds.
half of the 35-to-5:'·\ear-ofds. about
o ne-quarter oft he 55:1o-64-year-old,,
and few of those old-erthan 65.
RUFFELL'$
UPHOLSTERY INC.
,... Y• Dalar Conn Mlrtl itu .._.aw .. cosn EA--su.115'
-
'TifE BEST PICTIJRE
OF THE YfARf"
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"tlilCore than a IT\~ .. ,. ~•fl~ 'V"9P IT'<O
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UA ll>Vl:S 8
952-4993
111t1•u
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---
''MOtJtSovl« lnteJllftnceaucce••••ftlhe i.wtof KGBco~·
amongemploJ1eaatddiiaaecontncton1llJce th~concentr11ted In
severiil key caJJlomla areas. •• ;t
School editor
needs lessons
in journalism
Hiah school editor Michael Shindler may have
'learned something about jurisprudence in his recent
battles over publishing an editorial he wrote on AIDS,
but the Westminster HiJh senior hasn't gained any
valuable insights into the Journalism business.
,
..
Finally
~etting
lier due
Jerry Stewart -
Shindler. editor of the student newspaper The
II, triumphed in his legal battle with the Huntington
Beach Union High School District. School officials
agreed last week to reinstate the youth as editor of the
paper,. y his legal fees and publish the disputed
'---t----1MltO • -----
_ ___..._dy whe-halkd.--
School officials had balked at publishing ShindJer's
piece, which took various.political figures and the media
to task for their stance on Acquired Immune Deficiency
Syndrome.
One official said it wasn't in the school district's best
interest to continue the legal battle. That's not clear
because it seems to leave unresolved the cruciaJ question
of who assumes responsiblity and liability for what is
published in a student newspaper. ·
Shindler, feeling vindicated by the district's
settlement, said it was a victory for the constitutional
rights of students.
Defense contractors:gear
effo~s to stem spy threat
.. "They haven't passed any amendments that
guarantee everyone freedom of the press, except for
students," Shindler said. Hughes has set up
The young man knows of what he speaks fi d t •
And first-line managers arc under
orders to report any major lifestyle
changcsamongtheiremployCC1, from
divorce to depressfon to sudden
· nfu1i0ns-ofmoneyimd1uxuri . constitutionally. But there's a thing or two he needs to some 0 n US ry S '--~-.~~ --1-'lurtraOOut tlie pu6hshmg busmess: --1---s-tr_i_c_t_e_s_t_ru_. l,,_e_s_e_v_e_r __ _ "When someone befriends one of
our employees or offers to help them
with money problems, jt might very
welJ be for ulterior motives," said
Best.
No. I -The Golden Rule. In the newspaper
business, that means be who has the gold, makes the
rules. In other words, the publisher, as the owner or the
owner's representative has the right to say what runs and
what doesn't.
No. 2 -Everyone Has A Boss. Reporters and
writers, even the best of them receive assignments from
editors. They wriie what they are told to write, though
the better ones are given more discretion. Later, the
editors take_ what has been written and change it.
Sometimes il's better, sometimes not and writers don't
like it. No matter, writers write and editors edit.
No. 3 -Newspaper Must Make Money. Products
don't exist in a vacuum and newspapers won't last long if
their readers don't want them. That means the publisher
in conjunction with the editor decide what they must do
-and not to do -to attract and maintain readers.
Shindler wouldn't know those things because
student newspapers arc publishea in the u nrealistic
environs that exist behind the ivory tower of academia.
Nobody knows who the publisher is so the editor is
allowed to publish a paper for himself. The paper is
distributed free since it's subsidized by the school district
as a laboratory learning experience. So if the readers
don't pay for it, there's no pressure to please them.
Whether Shindler's AIDS editorial was a thoughtful
yet scathing attack on the institutions in this country that
deserve it or a sophomoric exercise in journalistic excess,
the young editor must realize that he will never again
enjoy such a luxury unless he is fortunate enough to own
a newspaper.
The experience taught him a great deal about
fightin~ the system and about injunctions and legal
jockeymg.
But the entire incident has done nothing to better
prepare an obviously intelligent young man to make his
point while working within the system under the
constraints of reality.
Young Mr. Shindler has said he may pursue a career
in hypnotherapy or politics. It's a good thing. He hasn't
learned several lessons that he would need to succeed in
the newspaper business.
LETTERS
Belghts deserves better
buyout plan for lts hoines
To the Ed itor:
The core of Santa .&.na Heights ts beina rezoned so the airlines can
make more money. the bus1nc'i'>
community can make more money,
the developers of our properties can
make more money and the count)
can ultimately make more mone>
Why should these ent111e\ fill tlmr
pockets at our expense'> The purcha!>C
assurance program can serve as a tool
for makini amends to a v1ct1m1zed
community. We have suffered from
increaJCd noise. traffic and stress due
to 1ncons1derate planning by the ~County Board of upcrvtM>n
and tf\cir staffs.
HoweveT, the proposed appra1s.al
procedure bases the buyout on cur-
rent market value under present
&dverx conditio ns. This is a farce.
No one would pay top dollar for a
ho me an an area destt ned for busanc\.\
OAANGE COAST
lllilJ Pillll
and industrial growth with traffic;
routed through 1t and over it that
can't by law be rebuilt in the event of
damages. The appraisa l guidelines
should conside r a scenario under
legal noise parameters. normal resi-
dential neighborhood traffic and ar-
n ve at the replacement value of the
home within the !>phert of influenc.e
and ocean bree1es of Newport Beach.
It 1s lime fo r the government of the
people of Orange County to do
something for -not-to -the people
of anta Ana Heights. We challenae
the county to dev11c a man equillblc
means of compensating th ose of us
who are being displaced in the intt'ttSt .
of proareu. Do not add economic
di tress to an already difficult situ·
at ion
/ MARIANNE COX TOWER EY
Santa Ana Height s
,,..Dlt
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No billboards warn enginee rs and
technicians who work 1n the myriad
aerospace labs around California that
"Loose Lips Sink Ships."
But newly-intensified anti-spy
campaigns spurred by last year's spate
of well-publicized espionage cases
bear a message sim ilar to the old
World War II slogan.
"Everyone is susceptible to recruit-
ment by the KGB," FBI special agent
David Majon told one recent sem-
inar at Hu&hes Aircraft Co., the
nation's leading supplier of defense
electronics.
And recruiting of strategically
placed Americans at companies like
Huahes, TRW. Northrop and Rock-
well International is a top priority of
Russian intelliacnce scrvte:cs.
Their known successes here in-
clude fo rmer Hughes employee Wil-
liam Bell, who turned over top secret
radar plans since used by the Soviets.
and ex-TRW worker Christopher
8o1,CC. ·We know there's a heavier
emphasis today than ever before on
stealing our technology," says Edgar
Best, the Hughes sec urity manager
who last year was chief of sccuritX for
the Los An~les Olympics. ' The
Soviets identify up to 5,000 tasks for
their aJents to accomplish in the field
of technology eac~year. ••
And CIA official McClellan
DuBois recently reported that "One-
third of their requirements are satis-
fied annually."
Most Soviet intelligence successes
are the result of KGB contacts among
employees at defense contractors like
those concentrated in several key
California areas.
To plug the leaks, some companies
arc now staging campaigns featurini
everything from movies. lectures and
slide shows to slogans on posters,
company phone directories and the
coasten employees place beneath
coffee mugs.
"Our message has to go to 75,000
employees;· said Best. ..Our first
priority is to convi nce our people of
the dan&eT."
Like Hughes. TRW and Northrop
now run formal programs to educate
employees about spying dangers.
Some other large def en~ contractors,
most notably Lockheed and Rockwell
International, have no formal pro-
grams, but routinely brief employees
with top-secret clearances on secur-
i-ty.
Hughes' ~t maintains that's not
enough .
"We try to instill the idea sn our
people that they're doing something
of genuine interest to the East Bloc
even if it's not classified or it seems
minute," he said. "Much of what the
Soviets accomplish comes from get-
ting non-<:lassified information."
No matter how low on the corpor-
ate totem pole he may be, an y
employee of a defense contractor can
represent a potential leak. DuBois
s.aad.
Boyce, for example, was a message
clerk at TRW.
To prevent recruitment of its
employees, Hughes has set up some of
the strictest rules ever imposed in
America n industry. On paper, they
sound straight from George Orwell's
"1984."
Employees must report any con-
tacu they have with citizens of
Warsaw Pact nations. oo maucr how
innocent they seem.
Observed the FBJ's Maj ors, "We
often hear that a person is too nice to
be a spy. But that's his business. He's
trained to be agreeable. to disarm you
and to say what you want to hear."
The Hughes program even teaches
patriotism along with anti-spy tech·
niques.
··our people may feel there's no
real difference between America and
the Soviet Union, they're both big
powers with nuclear weapons," Best
said. "We have to bring people to
them who know first-hand what it is
to be a defector, what a nightmare it is
and how unglamorous."
But so far, the campaigns have
appaTCntly madc-futle dent-in -the
consciousness of exec uti ves or rank-
and-file workers.
"The only thing I've noticed is that
they've cut back on the number of
securi ty clearances." said one TRW
engineer.
At Hughes, a top corporate ex-
ecutive said, "The new security
program is something we've beard
about, but it hasn't been visible to me
beyond a little lite~ture placed on my
desk overnight."
No campaign can assume that it
will increase the safety of American
secrets, especially since. as FBJ agent
Fred Miller told one reporter,
"There's definitely an increase in the
number of Amcncans willin1 to sell
information."
Says Best. "It's just like the Olym-
pics were for security people. If we
succeed, no one will notice. But ifwc
have even one failure, you can bet the
·whole world will know."
TMma• EU.1 11 a Su&a Moolca-
based col•mnbt oa 1&ace l1n6.
-11tJ1m~IMll!.IM!I , .
Report on local employees
being terrorized confirmed
Embassy official refutes Nicaraguan
denial about natives working fo r U.S.
WA HI NGTON -When we
found out the Sandansstas were ter-
ronzing Nicara1uan employees of the
U.S. Embassy in Managua. they
responded with a brazen lie and a
colossal bluff. Now we've called d\eir
bluff.
Last month, we rcponed that State
Department cables from the U.S.
Embassy in Manaaua said that sev-
eral tocaJ employees had been hauled
in for 1nterropt1on by the Sandinista
security police. They were threatened
with death 1f they cont1 nued to work
for the Americans.
Women were asked for 1ntJmate
details of their sex laves, and at least
one was bumlJ~ted by be1n1 forced to
stand naked while bcsna questioned.
All the employees wctt subjc«cd to
Iona intetT011tion ind M>litary con·
finement -for as Iona as I 3 'hours.
The Nicarquan Embassy in Wuh-
in .. on responded Wlth a vehement ly
wnuen denial. In a letter to us. the
cmbeuy pre attache. Mariam
Hooker, contradicted our report on
every p0int: ~o one was threatened or
stnppcd, lhe said. and the question.
int-lasted no more than an bour.
Besidet, she u1d. the employees were
1upporten of tbe lite dictator
A na11.t1io Somoza.
Then Hooker pulled her bia bluff.
She informed ~ lha1 an Ao\abn
diplomat, 9ndlcy Jobmon. c:nuld
and JOSl PH $Pl AR
confirm the truth of her claims. As a
vice consul at the Manaaua embassy,
she eitplained, Johnson had accom-
panied the Nicaraauan employees to
the state security headquar_tcrs and
waited while they wen: interropted. ·
Unfonunatcly, Johnson was on cmbusy employees wbo were in-
home leave in the United States, the terropted, and was told that aJJ of
added, but if we could find him, be them bad been detained for more
would iell u1 that the St.ate Depan· than six hours.
ment was lyina and the Sandinistas Diplomatjcally, Johnson sugcsted
were tellina the truth. that perhaps the Sandinisw had been
It Kerned unUkcly that the U.S. confused because the Nicarquan
Embe11y would have falsified •ts woman he was datina had been
confidential repon1 10 the State summoned for questionana. and he
Department. On the other haJ'd, the had acoompanied her to the security
Nicarquans wouldn't make up a police bWJdins,
story that could be '° conclusively His friend. a 22-year-old 1tudent
checked out. Or wouJd they'? • who had nothina to do with the U.S_
The Sandlnisw were corTeCt abOut Embassy, was questioned from 8:30
one point: Johnson was indeed on a.m. to 6:30 p.m., Jobnton said. She
home leave. Jn (1(11 he was ofTsk.iina "wu told that ifshe11w mdhcwould somewhere, and tnc State Oepan· soend yean 1n pri.on,'' Johnson uid.
meat didn't know where. Evidently The police interropton accused her
the Nlcarquans fisuml we'd dn>p of beina • traitor and •PY for the
the matter after•ftl)Ortina \Mir denial. Americans, he Kfd.
We didn•t. Our aseocaatc Luceue Johnton was able to act his friend
t.aan1do eventually aot hold of out o( the country. Ac II.id that
Jo6nson. He was tanned and l'ftted, incident wu probably what led the
1nd•hl1 memory, was clear. N1caraauan Embassy to aive hi•
"They're 1)'1"'-" Johnton aid. name.
"What the Sandinisw said is Footnote: An American Embuly
ablolutely faJte. '' He 111d be bid official in Ma...,ua, reached by
never eccompanied any of the em· pt\one, Mid that ancc it had ~
buly employees to their •DtenOI· the barulment of iu ~oyea.
1tion1. lbcrt blV9 beco no funMr 1ncident1.
A11ma&Mtoffaa.JohMOOaolda&1. 1-1 Ufl --.,..,. ..... he had talked wtlb aevcral o( \be .,.. .,..,et..., err ••
otl well invasion
Wherever you live on the Oran&e
Coast. if you don't have a busy oil well
belching fumes and petroleum next to
your house, you can thank a lov
lady named Jerry Stewart.
I suppose I ought to referto Jerry
' Mrs. T. Duncan Stewart. But I'm
damed if I will. Du'nc heretofore Jud
aottcn all the praise and all the
awards. But thls time. a week aao
Friday night. Mrs. Stewart had all tbe
limcliahL The Newport Harbor
Chamber of CommcTCC gave her 1
wonderful new award -the Com-
munity Service Award.
And most properly so.
I've been a resident of the Oranaie
oast or upwaraor4U years. TITve
counted correctly on my finacrs, I
think. it's 42. .
Durini that time I've seen many
remarkable thinas happen. Not ~e
least of these wu gettmg the com-
munities of Corona dcl Mar, Balbof,
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa to
close ranks and dig in against random
oil exploitation.
Now, whenever a group of com-
munities works together, there)
always somebody heh.ind it -'a
pusher. And that's what Jerry Stewart
was. She pushed so effectively that
Costa Mesa -which had been
chosen as the first target of a aroup of
oil driJJing promoters -rejected
their enticements. She talked particu-
larly to the women of the community -
and showed them the scant reward for
allowing the oil wells to be put nex t to
their houses or even at the inter·
section olstreets. --
To help her, W. T. Jefferson. "the
black dirt promoter," advanced
en ough money to a man who. at the
time, was studying to be a la~cr.
Naturally we on the Daily Ptlot (or
the Globe-Hera.Id as it was then
called) also hauled on the-line. Jerry
pushed us to do M>. She explained t.U
of the negatives of town lot oil
drilling. Based on her information, I
recall writing an editorial pointioa
out the "stench and vomit" of an oil
well.
The Cunningham Shell Act whidl
Mrs. Stewan pushed so hard to v;t
passed is stilJ a bulwark ~nst tJC
kind of oil drillinJ that 1s a r•I
menace to the beautiful communa._
in which we live.
But protection against oil is a loM
way from being all that Jerry Stew*t
bas accomplished for the OraJ Coast. Wherever something for
1ood of the community is on
agenda, you'll find Jerry Stewart ti
there and rushin1 hard for it.
I wish had a list of all the fi
accomplishments as they were ...
searched and 1>fCSCTtted by Tom DiY
of Butterfield Savings&. Loan. Had l
not been quite so stupid as I was I
would have attended the banquet at
which Jerry got the Community
Spirit award -but I simply wrote the
wrong date down on mr appointment
book. Lucy and I got al gussied up on
Saturday only to find out that the
banquet had taken place the niabt
before.
The newspapers "covered" the
affair. But 1 guess they pve most of
the attention to the ''Man of the
Year" Charlie Hester. He, also, is a
friend of mine and r was delighted to
know that he was honored as he was.
However, it seems to me that the
award to Jerry Stewart merited biger
play than it received.
Walter B•rrMP• 11 UMt Pllet'• , ...... ,,.....,.
TODAY IN HISTOR Y
~~. --. .......
By Sitt AaMda ... PNU "
Today isTuetday,Jan. 28. the 1•
day of 1986. The~ arc 337 day1 left •n
the year.
TOdl)"s hilhliaht in history:
On Jan. 2f, I 547 Eqland's Kill
Kenry VlD died. He wu ~
by bis 9-year-old ton. Edward VL
On thil date:
In 1-'96• the Eqlilh naviptor, Sir
Francis Drake1 died durins • voy1111e
and wu burieo at tea.
In 1871. Franee surrendeTcd in lk
Frauc:o-Pruuiaft War.
ln 1878, the ftnt commerdal
telephone switchboard went i"90
operation Jn New Haven. Conn Abo in 1878, alto in New Ha-vet,
the ftnt da1~ newspaper, Ille Yale News, publication. :;t,,
In 1902, tbe • e tnltinate ..
et1abliahed in WllhilllfOn, D.C. i.:::.
In 1909, IM Unhld leata cftdld •
direct control over Cuba.
In 191S, tM CC*I Gun Wll
cra&ed bv an let ore~
. TUESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1986
. '
Medicare may be expanded ~
...
Reagan expected to unveil plan to cover
~atastrophic illness; fee increase likely
WASHINGTON (AP)-The Re-
apo admin1strauon will ask Con-
gress withm a few weeks to eX,pand
Medicare to cover catastrophic ill-
ness, with the ex pansion paid for by
an increase an premiums, an adminis-
tration officialsays.
Lawrence J. DeNardis. assistant
secretary fo r legislation an the Health
and Human Services Department,
said the proposal will be "budset
neutral" -costing the Treasury
nothing -but will lower costs to
elderly Medicare beneficiaries requir-
ing lengthy hospitalization.
The program is the brainchild of
HHS Secretary Otis R. Bowen, and
Bowen "has been able to coJlvey (it)
successfully to the president." De-
Nardis said.
"We wall have a catastrophic care
proposal.'' DeNardis said. .. ... The
president hopefully will mention it"
Tuesday night in his State of the
Union address. "and we win have a
full-dress proposal within a few weeks
thereafter ··
White House sources have dropped
broad hints in recent days that
President Reapn might propose
some form of catastrophic illness
protection durina his speech to a Joint
session of Conpcss. but they have
been Vll\Je on the details.
Bowen has been more explicit,
spellinJ out proposed details an a
ma_p21ne article written shortly
before he was picked by Reagan to
become HHS secretary. He has since
made the cawtrophic care proposal a
major aoal of his administration at
HHS.
The American Association of Re-
tired PC1:'SOns. a.major lobby1navoup
for Medicare beneficiaries, says at will
wall to sec the details before endon-
ang or opposing the proposal. noting
that at is not yet known ho w clOS'ely
the administration's b11J will follow
Bowen's earlier proposal.
In detailina llii plan last Novem-
ber. Bowen said a S 12-a-month
increase in Medicare premiums. on
lop oLthc CWTCDl s Li.SO a month.
would provide full protection against
cata1tropb1c illness for older peopee.•
providina unlimited hospiw ~
Cf11C and cappiq out~f-oockct doc>-
tor bills at a maximum ofS3SO a yes.
''There can be no doubt that IM
cost of cawtropbic health caft Is die
No. I concern of our nation's elder-
ly," Bowen sa1d. ..... Under dlil
proposed System, tM ~ of
cawuopbic carc would be~
over all 28 million Medicare
beJ>dicianCL A.Jmall ir:act1on...Klll--
(Pleue ..e IBDICAaK/A.9)
-Plan-for
32-story
project
altered
-stricter-~·
car-pool
policing
sought
Nlzon ill
•ormer President Rich-
ard Nbon wu h•pltal-
1.sed Monday after com-
lnt down with the nu
darlnt a Bahama• n -
catlon. Pace A 7.
Coast
A transient accused of
bombing Laguna City
Hall says he did It to draw
attention to police
harassment of street
people./A3
California
Legislative analyst says
Oeukmejlan's proposed
t>udget exceeds the Gahn
llmlt by $238 million./ A4
Nation
Hormel fires hundreds of
union meatpackers for
refusing to cross picket
llnes./A7
Personal Incomes rise
most In New England,
Southern states./ A5
World
Segerstrom proposes
amenitie~ to diffuse
~cism of project
By TONY LUVEDRA
OflMDellr .........
Developer C.J. Segerstrom & Sons
attempted Monday to diffuse the
controversy s urro unding it's
proposed 32-story high-rise by un-
veili ng plans to include a child care
center, an art gallery and lush picnic
areas in the Costa Mesa project.
In a morning news conference.
Malcolm Ross. Scgerstrom develop-
ment chief. outlined plans for the first
20-acre phase of the company's 98-
acre Home Ranch business 1..enter.
Project offietals made the.' same
pitch later in the day dunng a Joint
study session with the Costa Mesa
City Council and Planning Com-
mission.
The keystone oft he sprawling high·
technology business complex 1s a
pyramid-topped. 510-foot sky·
scraper. which would be the tallest
buildin$ 1n Orange County.
Despite the extensive landscaping.
the child center a nd other 'ipccaal
features. council members remained
concerned that traffic from the total
15-year project could lea ve many of
the 1ntersect1ons an the area at a
standstill.
Segerstrom is hoping to garner a
necessary general plan amendment
that would allow the company to
build the high-rise office building
north of the San Diego Freeway, just
east of Harbor Boulevard. The de-
veloper is hoping to win approval by
the end of March, with construction
scheduled to begin this fall.
Testing the water
Continued warm weather brlni• younc and
old alike to Ora.nee Cout beaclaea Monday,
lncladln& 10-montb-old Chrlatopher Miller
and &rand.mother Grace Hallowell, who teat
the water at Corona del Mar State Beach.
Or~e County temperatarea ranted from a
comfortable 71 ln Newport Beach to a wa.r:m
85 In San Juan Caplatrano.
Many violating rules
for using car-pools
lanes of 55 Freeway
By LISA MAHONEY
Ol ... 0.-, .......
Orange County w11l look to the
state Department .of Transportation
for a quack infusion of funds to
enforce car-pool lane rules on the
Costa Mesa Freeway.
Hoping to shore up public con-
fidence an the experimental cari-pool
lanes an the face of organized opposa·
t10n . transportation officials Monday
agreed to take steps to reduce ram·
pant misuse through new lane con-
trols and -af possible -more
highway patrol officers.
C'altrans Otstnct Otrector Don
Watson agreed to ask has supcnt>rs for
mone~ to pa) overtime to Cahfom1a
Hi&hwa) Patrol officers so the I 2-
m1Tes of car-pool lanes can be better
pohced.
Though he made no promises.
Watson agreed wtth count) officials
that a show of force as ncct'ssary to
curb '1ola11ons and improve lhe
project's publac 1mage."I thank the
sol ution to the '1olation rate as better
( HP enforcement." he said dunng an
Orange Count~ TransponataoJl (om-
m11tec meeting.
"I think we need to get the message
out ... that car-pool lane rules wall be
enforced. Watson said.
The dastnct director also an-
nounced a plan to restnpe the
di\ 1dang line between the car-pool
lanes and genera) traffic lanes an
unpr~ented blue and to install
(Pleue eee STRJCTER/A2)
Common Market nations
vote to halt arms sales to
nation's that support ter-
rorism./ Al
Included in the first phase as a 400-
room hotel. a 2.158-space parking
structure and a restaurant.
Also featured would be a fully-
accredated art gallery as well as the
employee child care center, equipped
to handle 120 children from infancy
to pre-school. It would be the first
center in lhe county built as pan of a
new business complex. according to
Rita Jamieson, child care consultant
for the project.
Agency wants gas tax reserved for roads
Sports
Edison Hlgh's wrestling
team has an eye on
league, CIF tltla /81
New Orleans Is trying to
return to 'normal' after
Super Sunday./81
INDEX
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Clusifled
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
Entertainment
Horoecope
Ann Landers
Opinion
Police Log
Publlc Notices
Sports
Television
Weather
B7
B7
A3
A9-12
B.4·6
B8
B7
B6
A8
87
87
A6
A3
86
81-*
A8
A2
Moreover, 15 acres -about 75
percent of the in11ial phase -would
be planted with eucalyptus groves,
srassy fields. orchards and gardens. A
1ogg1ng trail would Oank the trcc-
(PleHe eee PLANS/A:!)
By LISA MAHONEY
Ofllle0..,"94 .....
The Orange lount} Transpor·
talion Commission wall began a
cautious search for al hes to support a
plalf"' •n automotive sales taxc~
fro state's general fund into
tra nsportation coffers.
Warned they would he treading on
dangerous ground. comm1s-;1o ncr'I
Monday agreed to sound out othl·r
transponauon agencies on the mailer
rather than leap head first i.!'!9 "'hat a.s
'iure to be a heated ~Ille for
previously commmed funds
<\ consultant hired to evaluate
comm1ss1on Chairman James Roose-
velt's proposal to amend the state
eonstatu11on to permit gasoline sales
taxes 10 be uo;cd for transportation
told comm1c;c;1uncr'> Monda) that
captunng general fund dollars wo uld
Search continues for
county jail escapees
henfrs deputies expanded their
search Monday for a convicted killer
and a man awaiting trial for murder
who escaped Sunday from Orange
County Jail an Santa Ana.
Ten extra patrol cars were dis-
patched countywide Monday an the
hunt for Ivan Von Staach. 29. con-
victed of SC<lOnd-dcgrec murder and
attempted murder. and Roben
Joseph Clark; 23, dut' to be uicd for
the slayina or a Santa Ana man.
The pair overpowered a guard
Sunday mornina durinf. their rec-
reation period on the jail roof. then
lowered themselves 80 feet to the
ground using a makeshift rope
Officials believe the) ma' ha'-'e
stolen a 1972 blue Toyota to aid their
escape.
Staach. of Lake Elsinore. i'i dc-
scnbed as 6 feet :? inche tall. :!00
pounds. with brown hair. hazel C}e'i a
bushy moustache and sideburns.
Clark. of Palm Desert. stands 5 tcl't
11 inches taJl. weiahs 175 pounds. ha~
bro wn hair. bfoe eyes and J I
mo ustache.
Olson declined to dcscnbr the --
!COpe a t the search. State Sen. llarlan Beqmon
Beach jogger plans tO run them all
Laguna architect takes time out to run
~rom Mexico to Canada along the coast
didn't sttm to even it out:· he ~·d
1okJnaly.
L.Uhle)I found he would onl be
•'*to c:ont1nue hts favorite pa tame
afhutopptd Nftl\lftl berefoot. "It feh
Some people tab beby ateps to
attain short-term ~Is. Jim Laahlcy
II takint bil wides tO teeCh bll
hfelona pl -runnina the endrc
. Wntem coastline from Mnaco lo
Canada. He cttimates at may takt u k>na u u yean to reach has aoel becauae be
runt sporadac:ally, when lullt in htS
pnvatt buaineu 11 an arch•tKt allow
vacauon•. But Lashle y thinks it's an 1mb~t1ou pl for 1 person 48 yea,....
old
Lashley bepn JOlllnt on the bdch hkt I was wun~ ad ~ts wh<'n I
-berefoo1-In 1971 . Ht follows the p.11 on tht lhoa. · be rec:aDcd.
tide ICbed'* ud nam only I 'h boun He aull hnutt hat JOllJQI to the
before or afttt hish tidt to ensure tllt bi&wch bccauw he eajoys w 9«1'\er)
hanlat and ftaftlli ..:::'tri*''*· • and "there 11 no smoe. When I can .. You feel f'ret. h's nannins catch a monuna whctt the mist 1s an
throUlh tJw aurf," llid tM salv~ tht 11r from w surf and the sun i,
haired ....._.. ... 8each ........ dMntftl up -theft is noth•na mort
Bu1 10 yeen of· blie-lollint btaut1f'UI tban .... he llld.
toolt ltt. toff on his r.t nd blcI: be "lllldn. ~•people there who
uid. The llope of the bnch evmtu· ire happy and rn~. nd the
ally belln break•na down the archn b1k1n1 11rts -now tbat's an element
tn htt feet "kunmna both dirte1i0ft that kttpt mttt\JOYfftl nannma." Nad
•
Lashley. ~ho runs bet~ttn ~
males a year
.\bout 1x }cars aao he decided to
~t a loni-tcrm aoal. "I lhouaht I
"'ould run the whole coast or ~
Western Hem1sphe~ ... ht wd. But
~hen he took 1 vacation to Alaska ht
rtahzcd how rocky the coastal tcntan
was and dcadcd to 1e1lc down his
amb1t1ons "I'll probebt JUSt run u
(the coast of !ask.a) ln •ptnt."
La hk)' saich~·hale 1ttn'I 10 h1 Ottan
A \left\le Off.CC
Sc"cral )tll'I aao he bcpn takina
Y.Ukcnd ,aunt to CMbcr perts or
coe tal C'lhfomi1 to run its ~aches
Tbouah he tun J19ntC1patcd 1n 1
marathon and tc'cral 10.kdometcr
result an more mone) tor road
improvement proJects
But .\nhur Bauer warned the
planning bod) that such a moH:
would surel) meet with sharp oppos1·
tLOn from agencies that depend on
those funds and might e'en sparl>. the
are of other transportation interest<.,
who are v.orkmg tov.ard a ga" ta'
increase for ne~t \car
In add1t1on the '-tat(· Depanmcn1
of Finance promises to be a for-
midable opponent to an~ such plan.
The department has h1stonca1J)
balkc-d at channehng rt'venues into
specatic program categon K. Baut'r
\.aid
trong oppos1t1on can he expected
trom schools. loca l govc rnmenls and
people 1rn the recel\ ang end of health
JnJ "'l·lfare programs. Bauer said
(Pleaae eee AGENCY I A2)
Legislators seek
·to cut class sizes
By me Auoclate4 Prns
-\CR.\ME TO -.\ t11 parl1~n
group of la~mal>.Ns Monda'
ptoposed an eaghH·ear program to
upgrade teacher standards and cul
class sizes an C'ahfomaa. whal h ha" thl'
most crowded cla'i'iroom an tht'
nauon.
The two-ball p;lCkage introduced h\
state Sens Gal'\< Hart. D-. ntn
Barbara. and Manan Bergeson. R·
Newport Beach. incorporate rec·
ommcndat1ons from an 18-month
lAuli
Im
Focus o~ i Hf NEr\S
Nl\t. ht pttfen to call htmtt"lfaJ r
rather than a Nnnt'r "I thank tbtrt ·~
1 d1~ The ~nou people are
run~
.. Bttr\l•JOACr, I think. U ) that 1f
I want to to~ and look at 1 ruk or
watch tbc seals and Pof'PO•~ I can
do that I'm not ma 1na some ot the
natural beaut)," he said.
(Pl ..... a&ACHJA2)
:J
<,tud' In tht· t.. ahtom1a < nmm1'i'i1on
1in the T caching Profc'isaon
..( altlornia ha\ thC' wo""t clas\
\IZC'i 10 the nation This state 1sg1 v1ng
ne"' mt'an1n~ to the Pflrase ·o,er-
,r<'"'ded ~hool<. · .. Hart Senate
~duration ( omm1ttl.'c cha irman. told
reponer<. at a ( ap11ol news con·
leremt'
Han ~ad h1\ ~B IM.>4 would ap-
propnatr St>O million tor the start of
the e1jlht·~rar plan 10 fiscal year
(Ple&H .ee BILLS/ A2J
... Irvine pair
enter plea in
export case
B &aw AuMriatH Prua
LO .\ GELES -Two Oranair
Count) men pleaded 10noccnt Mon·
da) to fcdn'al eb.aracs that they
1llcpll) t"'portcd hi&h-tech computet
CQulpment to \h1na throuah Hona
Kof\I,
lout Luk. 29. and Jon.u ~unt.
32, both of trvult. wert ordcnld bid&
for tnaJ March l on a '°'81 of 23
COUJ'llS. iftdudans allcla&ioat Ibey
faltdy stated the carao'• dadMl'Olt
to be Hont Kona.
(Pl1•••-&DOaT/Alt
? •
J
I .
J
I
' .,
t
tPBJOGOERSETS SANDY COURSE •••
... aa archileel, Lubley also pn &.di bJnnetf susipina to ad-~ bomet built a1ona the t.ct.a. ~ diary be bas kepi on all !he
ia lie bu nan notes rock-1trol'Pintt. beach terrain, cktoun.
&Del ua.s wbere \be coeat was .-mc:wt to maneuver. He·1 fouDd
1aimsdf in exhaustina situations
when. at the cod of a NI\, unutually Larae rocks don't alJow him to reach
\bt road where bis ride awaits him. ~ur extra miles beet to an open area ""° a 26-mile run cu IOem likt t.M
0.-,Nee ....... ~LM ......
fi&On of boot camce:llid. :....~lhley remem a run acr0$s l~ Mexican border from San Oiqo.
(;.wire fence, built to djvide the two ~ountrics, did not stretch to the ~··-· • The absence of a fence 1lon1 the
Jim Lulaly lau J"llJl moet of tbe Soatbem Callforola cout.
and puts of <>recon '• cout, bat he •dll bu a Iona way to••·~
§rder seemed peculiar to him, .. but I
ow the waves are too sttona for two
untries to divide people. You could
see that maybe this whole business of
4l_vidina countries is not that impon-
ant/' he wd.
He will beajn runnin~ northern ~ifomta this year. He s covered
most of the beaches in tM southern
pc)rtion of the ltate. All the runs will
be madeat low tide.
He admits there wiU be inaccessible
areas, such as Point Magoo, which
will force him to ~oa on the nearest
hi&hway. But bes convinced the
many hours he has spent running tl)e
local beaches will more than make up
for the ocean areas be'U miss.
Lashley prides himself on his
knowled&e of beach terrain. He
clarms ii' he were blindfolded and
dropped off on a beach in California,
he could name it.
His own L:aauna Beach has some of
the most bcaulllul rock formations,
Lashley wd. But his favorite areas
were Lovenholtz and Moonstone
Beaches. scarcely kn""'1\ beaches an ,'
northern California. l
This year he will begin takint
longer vacations to make his tre~
from Mexico to Canada. "On my
birthday J usuall¥ treat myself to a
new place to run,· he faid. t
"It may take 25 years. it may talce
20. But I think it as imponant to say
that you don't have to set (immedi-
ate) goals, that people can set long-
term goals," sa~d Lashley.
·-springs een ops music a war
•• L.OS ANGELES (AP) -Blue-
rollar roclter Bruce Springsteen won
three American Music Awards on
Monday for his 18-month-<>ld "Bom
in the USA" album. while nine other
artistsorgroupswon two awards each at cercmorues that ended with a
f.lirring fint anniversary saJute to
·we Are the World."
.. 'Country singer Willie Nelson won
two awards as a solo artist and
lnother two as a member of the
country supcrif'oup, Highwayman,
which ancludes Nelson, Kris Kristof-
ferson. Waylon Jcnnang.s and Jo hnny
Cash.
Springsteen , won favorite male
vocalist. album and male video artist,
all in the pop-rock category. The
awards capped Springsteen's year-
long success with a world tour that
helped boost sales of his "Bom in the
USA" album past 12 m illion.
Neither Nelson nor Spring.stecn
attended the televised 13th annual
American Music Awards show at the
Shrine Auditorium. The awards
honored nominees in 27 categories of
pop-rock, country, and soul-rhythm-
and-blues.
Those who won two awards each
were sexy-voiced newcomer Whitney 1
Housto n. hard-rocking Huey Lewis
and the News, soul queen Aretha ,
Franklin. country singer Crystal
Gayle. veteran country group Ala·
b.&ma, funk group Kool and the Gana.
Stevie Wonder. Nelson and High-
wayman .
The awards show, in a special
ceremony, honored the creators of
"We Are the World," the pop charity
anthem which has raised $44 million
to feed the hungry in the United
States and Africa.
ORMESA PRO\JECT ALTERED: ••
P'romAl
lined road running thro ugh the entire
..(lomplex. adding to the "rural" flavor
of the center.
However, Ross made it clear that
those extra features would nol be
economically po$sible without the
main tower.
~ "It's the landmark building of the
entire site. It's the keystone," be said.
1 The entire project was first ap-
proved conccptuaJly in May 1984 by me City Council, which changed the
property's generaJ plan status from
.adustnaJ to commercial.
At the time, the first phase called
fPr 2.6 million square feet of offict:
!'!ace, two 400-room hotels and
~.000 square feet of retail area.
' The project land was divided into
eight blocks. each with a limit on the
..,s.guare footage that could be de-
·vetoped. The maximum building
height was set at 25 stories.
Scgcrstrom applied for perm1ss1on
last September to merge the blocks
into three sections. allowmg the
developer to consolidate the squar~
footage from other buildings into the
skyscraper -pushing 1t from the
maximum height to 32 ston es.
An environmental study showed
the change in plans would not
generate any more traffic than the
original pro posa l, said Paul
Wilkinson of Li nscott, Law and
Greenspan Inc. The Costa Mesa-
bascd firm was contracted by
Scgerstrom to stud~ the potential
impacts on local roadways.
Ross added that S430.000 1n
assessments would be generated from
the marn skyscraper phase for a
regional road improvement fund.
He added the mone) would most
likely be used to widen northbound
offramps from the San Diego Free-
way to Harbor Boulevard and Fair-
view Road. It would also be used for
other on-and off-ramps at the
freeway 1n Costa Mesa.
The developer plans io spend
another $2 million to widen South
Coast Drive. which runs through the
prOjCCt.
l:.ven with thc-improvements.
council members Dave Wheeler and
Mary Hornbuckle -both advocates
oflim1ted growth -rcmarncd fearful
the project would eventually bal(
traffic at area intersections.
HornbuckJe said JO of the inter-
sections would reach the stage where
traffic backs up thro ugh other signals,
even when the light is green.
"To me that is called gridlock," she
said. "It's astounding the project was
approved before with the impact as
bad as 1t is."
Wheeler added: "The council
members who approved that earlier
development should be shot. ... It's
clear the traffic is unacceptable."
Mayor Norma Hertzog reminded
her council colleagues that the traffic
projections assume that all other
projects on the drawing boards fot
nonh Costa Mesa will be built.
She also urged council members to
consider only the first phase and not
the traffic impacts from the entire
compleit, which may not be con-
structed for more than a decade.
Designs for each subsequent phase
must also be approved separately,
allowmg the council to keep a
continuous check on the project.
added Ross.
Designers also rearranged the pro-
ject to move the main tower from the
north end of the site closer to the San
Diego Freeway.
MEDICARE EXPANSION •••
• The new plan would add I 02.000
square feet of office space to the rn111aJ
phase. but would delete one hotel. It
would also contain 80,000 square feet
of rct.a1 I, and I 0,000 square feet a piece
:for the child care center and the
restaurant.
From A l
ally incur anpauent catastrophic ex -
penses. The fears of Amenca·s elderly
of being confronted with massive
catastrophic expenses would be re-
duced."
Medicare rnverage\..hmtts now
prompt between 65 percent and 70
percent of Medicare recu>1ents to buy
so-called "Medigap" supplemental
health insurance polices at a cost of
bet wee n S500 and $800 a year. Bowen
said. But he said they get coverage no
better and sometimes worse than
what his plan would provide.
BILLS WOULD CUT CLASS SIZES ...
From Al
1987-88. The money would be used to For the past two year<,, ~1mrlar clal>s
G)ake high school classc<, in math. reduc tion measure~ received
English, science and social ..c1encc no b1part1san support rn the Legislature
larger than 20 students. but were vetoed h~ (iov George
The national a verage 1s 18 students DeukmeJ1an
-per teacher 1n those classes. while in Hart's SB 1604 al\o would increase
California there are typ1call ) more 0 the probaunnary period for teachers
than 30 pupils per teacher 1n '>uch from two to three years, place the
classes. he said. burden of proving competency on the
~ tc.acher rather the school. establish
peer review of teaching and create a
EXPORT ...
Prom Al
• Assistant U S Attorney Wilham
Fahey said some S200.000 worth of
'computer equipment actually made 11
to Chin;t startmg 1n 1983 through a '~ona Kong couple. James N~and
filly Wan, wi1o have ~en name~ in
an arrest warrant.
Fahey said Chana as on a tJ S
·5 vernment list of countnec; for
h1 ch exporters must obtain specrnl
cral approval.
Leung. who ts free on $50.000 bail,
1Jcn1ed all seven counts against ham
t.:uk, who rematncd an custody. faccc;
16 counts. Lcung's attorney. Wilham
:Wong, declined comment. saying he
was not yet familiar w11h the case
-Monday.
~~~E Daily Pilat
MAIN OF,.CE
)1 "'""' 14, ,. .,,.,. II.I-,. ..... •"1f• ~ . atif• ._....... ,. •1~
tougher evaluation system fo r
tenured teachers.
It also would require reports to
parent~ e"ery two years on clas~
sizes. teachers, text books, counseling
services, and teachers' assessments of
the quality of school leadership.
The measure also would bolster the
on~omg mentor teacher program, tn
which experienced teachers are
selected to advise new teachers. Hart
" proposing that 10 percent of
teachers, rather the current 5 percent,
be designated as mentors.
Bergeson. unveiling her B 1605.
said the state must make sure the
85,000 new teachers needed 1n the
next decade arc fully qualified.
"One poorly trained teacher means
a ~ubstandard education for too
many children every yea.r for the
ltfctimc of that teacher,' she said.
SB 1605 would abolish the Com-
m1ss1on on Teacher Credentialing
and replace 11 with a new, tougher
Cahfom1a Tec.cher Standards Board.,
which would oversee the profession
much as various boards monitor
lawyers and doctors.
Teachers would receive a
preliminary credential after fi ve years
of college and a pennanent credentiaJ
after passin' an examination and a
one-year residency under close super-•
vision at a school.
Teachers would get an "advance<(
subject matter specialt y ctrtificate ..
after five years teaching experience
and an eumination on the topic.
An enforcement board with
authority to revoke or suspend
credentials would be created to police
the profession.
The measure. rn add111on. would
restrict issuance of em ergency
credentials. which have been used to
hirt teachers dunna short.ages.
The two balls arc co-authored b1-
Assemblywoman Teresa Huahes. the
Los Anaelcs Democrat who chairs the
Assembly Educatton Committee, and
11 other members of both panics in
the lower and upper houses.
leeladt M-1 5e78 ci.-t. .Otoue+ .,.2 •31•
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..... "' t ',Crf''ll"' ll'f'-What do you hke about the Daily Pilot'> What
don't you hke? Call the number above and your
message wtlt be recorded, transcnbed and de·
ltvertd to the 1ppropnate editor.
The lime 2'-'hour answenns service m1y be
uKd to record letters to the ednor on any topic.
Contnbu1ors to our Letters column must include
their name and telephone number for venficauon
Tells UJ what's on your mind.
'
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wttl'I hight In tl'lt 70., lh9 Nat6onal WMtl'ltr Servtoe Mid.
Ina 11111 Nght Md morning low ctoudl wtll rOll In lhlt
~and edneedey, wttl'I ~ fOG alof'O tl'lt cout.
lows tonight wilt r.noe from 44 to M. High• on W.ctnMday
In tl'lt UPS* eo. to lower 70.. Boet.,. wtll ftnd light vari~ wtndt becoming IOUtl'I to
• eoutl'lwa.t I to 13 knot• thlt aft ... noorr and ~Ing aiono the Inner coeltal ....... •
Tl'lt .....,ly 9"11le2 to 3 t.et.
Vlftable l'llQh ~ tonlght wllJ be accompanl.c! by
patchy fog and fOw Cloudt.
U.S. Tempe -~C@~:~::c~
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STRICTER CAR-POOL POLICING SOUGHT •••
From Al .
nine-inch high pylons along the stripe
to d iscouraac traffic from crossing it
except at established entry and exit
points.
Da ta collected by Caltrans
monitors show that between 20 and
40 percent of motorists do not use the
car-pool lanes correctly. And up to 11
pc runt of drivers don't belong in the
lanes at all.
Motorists enter and exit the lanes at
will crossing double yellow lines and
1gnonng established entry and egress
pomts. Some use the lanes to pa~s
other traffic. .
Depending on the time of day. from
2.3 to 11.1 percent of cars using the
lanes may have only one person
10s1de -another violation of lane
rules.
Though transponation officials are
satisfied with statistics that show
more people are using the lane.s now
than if they were opened to all traffic,
public acceptance of them has been a
sticking point.
"I'm not sure we're quite there yet
an terms of public acceptance." said
Orange Mayor J im Beam Monday
Beam. ch.a irman of the Route 55
Advisory Committee that is over-
seeing the ·car-pool lane experiment,
asked Watson to search out enfo~
meot funds.
"To date, it appears that the
underlying cause of public concern on
this project stems from perceptions
regarding safety and enforcement,••
Beam wrote in a letter to Watson.
More patrol officers, especially
during rush hours. and tighter lane
controls should satisfy the public th.at
the car-pool lanes can work, he wrote.
A group calling itself Drivers for
Hijtiway Safety has mounted a cam-
paign to do away with the car-pool
lanes. Citing safety problems, the
high violation rate and light use ofthe
lanes, 11oup organizer Joe. C. Catron
says officials shouJd.scra.p-1.be experi-
ment and let all commuters use the
lanes.
Catron was unimpressed wiO!
planned operatron.aJ improvements.
"It's another Band-Aid solution
they're trying to put on the public and
it just won't work," he said.
County transportation officials arc
determined to make tbe lanes work in
an effo rt to effect low cost solutions to
traffic congestion. If the lanes arc
successful on the Costa Mesa Free-
way, similar lanes will be constructed
on the San Diego Freeway in future
yean .
Irvine man appointed
to Harbor Court b ·ench
By tbe Associated Preu
SACRAMENTO-An Irvine man
was appornted to a new judgeship in
Harbor Municipal Court Monday by
Gov. George Deukmcj1an.
The Republican governor named
Ulenn Mahler. 38, of Irvine Harbor
Municipal Court in Orange County.
Mahler has been a court com-
missioner since 1979 and previously
was a traffic referee.
Municipal Court judges arc paid
$70,456 a year.
AGENCY WANTS TO HARNESS GAST AX •••
From Al
They stand to lose 1f transponation
interests start dipping into the ~encral
fund without an accompanying tax
increase. he said .
Roosevelt. eldest son of former
President Franklin D. Roosevelt,
believes that sales tax on gasoline and
diesel fuel ought to finance road
improvements instead of going into
the state's general fund for health,
education and welfare programs.
"When you levy a tax which is for a
specific purpose, you should use it for
that purpose," he said.
State transportation funds come
from a pllonage tall on fuel. Because
1t is based on the amount purchased.
and not its value. the motor vehicle
fuel tax docs not rise and fall wtth
inflation as sales tax does.
That limitation on transportatton
income has made 11 difficult to keep
pace with the demand for road
improvements, the commission con-
tends.
Monday, Bauer presented some
statistics to show how the motor v~hiclc fuel tax has not kept up with
highway use or construction costs in
the last I 0 years.
Between 1975 and 1981, fuel rev-
enues increased 8.8 percent, accord-
ing to Bauer's figures. They rose 44
percent between 1981 and 1983 after
a tall increase and other adjustments.
At the same time, the number of
vehicle miles traveled on state high-
ways increased 107 percent while the
highway construction cost index rose
122 percent from I 97S to 1984.
During those same years, the con-
sumerprice index went up93 percent.
Major tax revenues such as sales
tax, income tax and bank and
corporation taus &J'CW with the
econo my while the source for trans.-
portation funds laqcd. Bauer wd.
It the commission is to go after
some state sales tax, Bauer sugcsted
it target a portion of automotive
income. He estimated Sl5.S billion
would be available from the sale of
new and used automobiles, ps and
diesel fuel and auto parts over the
next five years. In contrast, transpor-
tation interests might receive SS.6
billion in motor vehicle fuel tues,
Bauer said.
Commission staff will circulate a
draft constitutional amendment
among o ther transportation plannina
bodies to see if there might be support
for reserving some sales tax funds for
transportation.
e.,,..o~d"i2 ~
CLOTHING COMD\NY
a
E L L I S
~
K1l~r. French
& Saanbury
Storewide
Clearance
20 %-70% off
Entire Stock
Now In Progress
3321 E. Coast Hwy ..
Corona del Mar
714-675-2011
SAT 9:30-6 D SUN 12-S