HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-11-17 - Orange Coast PilotFait
Dmcla.ares
.·olarms.deai.
IUJJder Waite
87BENDOBBIN
ft II' I .........
•
l.£)NDON -Oiun:h or Enaiucs '
envoy Tent Waite 111Cl today tbat
U.S. disclosu'"'s of secret arms deals
with Iran had complicated bis efforts
o fite os s 6erdlnU6inon.
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1•
'
' . SEE A2 FOR
lQO.AY'S NUMIEIS
captiv
. a, PAUL ARClllPLEY ............
After · former ho,tasr D1v1d
Power" nr.1t Su~.r. •
J.:·obteo was ildlated On'SelM. 19 •
and found hi1 fauh ~> sated. ftn1 bttau~ his capcors tOot Jwty .bit'· •.
81\>lc. then &Afr at wis res"med when • 't~y ~~1edly ~ed and ...
pla«d the haht bulb 1n bis ttll. •
0ncc they returned with a bulb that .
•
JKObwn was thrown lnto sohtary
·confinement ·last September, he re-
ceived a m"sage from GOd tba1 he
woWclbt' re\eQCd in early l'JO\iembef.
k to&d WOl'lhipcrs an•Garden-GrclVe
-S.ndey. bhnked e~cry fiH to 10 J«onda=''------.. mak1na it 1m~K to concenua~ . Jacobsen. S~. ofH untin11on Beach.
was isolated from the other host.aaes
in Beirut after his captors became
on his rtadina. .
E'entually, a ,uard teQlaccd the
anll)' ~th tum "because of some Jra.._i::f;..tltentwfU · irresponsible spcculai1on on a tele---~ vision network that I had sent out a be ao U.& .,,_
coded message," he said. ~ -'1lpmea.t9 to Ina. A4
Asked at a newt conference about
Presidmt Reapn's acknowledpnent
last week that U.S. arms went to Iran, Waite said: .. The revelation of that
fact. insofar as it ts a fact. .. has made
the JOb of a mediator such as myself
complicaltd." "==--=Wa.~ tpeCta1 en.voy,of t'hc Moll.
Rev. Robert Runeie, the Archbishop
of Canterbury, ipoke to ~rters
after he, Runc1e, David Jacobten and
the two other freed American
hostqes discussed ways of teeurina
the releatc of fore1an host.qeS still
held in Lebanon. American reprcsen-
tatives of the Episcooal, ~
and Catholic churches also partici-
''lfl had sent out a Coded message.
why should anAmeru:an TX ne&work bulb wilh a aood one. Jacoblea
tell my captots that l had ~nt out a chastistd himself ior losina patience
coded mcssaaeT' Ile asked. He sa1d he with God.
.
'
pated. •
Rndinaa len~y statement before
answerina questions, Waite said that
neither .. lnin. Svna or other natioDJ
(l'leue ... ll&DIATOa/A.2)
North Korean President
Kim II Sung la reportedly
dead.JM
did not send out any coded mesuaes. In early October. God told him he
But a deep &1th sustained him ~ould be freed ... , knew 1t would
dunn1·h11 17· months of captivity. happen.'·' he uid. "I was complttely
Jacobsen said. at cue.-..
· Ounna two $CTVtCCS an the 2.190-Jacobsen said he never fcaicd he
seat sanctuary of the Cl')'stal Ca-would be k1lltd b) his captors. -1 was
thedral, Jacobsen ans"-CTCd questions not afniid because I had the Lord with
po9Cd ~ tcle~ ision cvanJClis1 Dr me:· be Ytd.
Dt. . llobert llclualler IDtentew. freed
laoetaie. Dari~ J~a of Bantba«ton
Ki~nap, ·murder suspects·
face count}! li.rraign_ment
By DIXJE REDFEARN °' .. ...,,... ....
A tattooed ex-convict and bis
female companion probably will be
amianed 1n Ora.nae ColiUlty early this
week for the kldnap and murder ofa
Huntington Beach tcen-qrr.
A spoke$v.oman an the Oran..:
1>1strict ~ttorey's office will meet
toniaht wtlh Huntinaton Beach
Pohcc 1nvestipton to discuss the
details of the murder of Lyne!
Murray. The cast ·apinst the pair
could bHilcd as early as Tuesday, the
sP9ke1-.oman wd.
Mumy. 19. disappeared from her
job at a Huntinaton Beachdrydeancr Nov~ I 2. POiice foud her body in
Room JOO of the Hu.nrinston Beach
Inn the followinJ afternoon, Accord-
'"' to the 'preliminary autopsy report.
he had been strangled.
Novas, disappeared from the
Redlands Mall Nov. 7. Her body was
fourtd last Saturday after one of the
suspects led Redlands police to a
shallow arave 1n • Fontana vineyard .•
Redlands Police Chief Robert
Bnckley said durina a weekend nev.s
conference that the Aryan
Brotherhood. 1a whtte suprcmac1st ·
pnson pns: dru , ,~~ual -srali-fieaoon, and a po tble murder
v1ct1m 10 Kentuclty all were clements
that have entered mto the anvcstJp-
tion.
Robert Schuller. the found1n1 pa tor He dented being ph)stcally mis-
of thc church. trealtd, but had to learn bow .to
The servacc wtU be aired on exemsc with bis hands and <cct
Schuller's weekly program -Hour of --(Pleue eee JACO•&Pr8/A2)
Woman
awarded
$500,000
' inlawSRit
Mesan charged age
discrimination, ---'invasionofprivacy
Count} District Attorney's office said
Jamn Greaary Marlow. 30. and
Cynthl.A Lynn 'Coffman. 24, wdl be
prosecu~ an S.n Bemardtno Coun-
ty ftnt for the kidnap and murder ofa
youna female victim in that Jurisdic-
tion. Officials from the Oranae County The Redlands vacum. Corinna (Pleue ... 9U9P&eT8fA3~-Jamee ..UtoW' By LAURA MERK 0. ................
American Airlin~s. buys AirCcll Nicaraguan offlclal hints
at pardon for Eugene
Haaenfus./ M
A 60-ytar-old Co ta Mesa ~oman
v.on a SS00.000 settlement icrin age-
d1scnm1nation and invasion of
pnvacy lawsull filed an 1984 apinst
her former employer. the Ttny
Na)lor's restaurant chain -----------+~~~ffiffiH~~Hffffim~~~~ha~~~~ W~n~~l apro~l1s~~1ned, rom~~ ~th ~no~ un100~ 1 a J w1 rcpaiii1iin tfi&lif'"1Cno10rliyr~Al!rnn!e:r111~e:i:nnnc~hanm:1tn11mWTr11-fC~rainn~dabtHll·11te .. 1dd-llh~t -;J~~-.....J.-:iio.:1CC1x.Q1L--J~~1U..~---!!J
Coast
Coast titJes looking to the
federal and state govern-
rner;it for solutions to
transportation problems
wlN have to start look Ing
elsewhere./ A3
Calif om la
Fresno's real big shots
dress up for the premiere
of a televlslon spoof on
soap operas.IM
~Nation
Less than one In five
· convicted white-collar
criminals spend more
than a year In prison, a
new study says./ Al
Bualneu
It's unlikely amall busl-
nesMSWHI expand at.a-
au bstantlally stronger
rate next year.I Al
Sports
The Rams lose a heart-
breaker In the la•t sec-
onds but rookie quar-
terback Jim Everett
ahln ... /81 I
Old pro Jim Plunkett
thr~forthreetouch
downa aa the Raiders
down the Browna./81
INDEX
Advk:e and Gamet A 10
Buttetln Board A~
Butineea A8-8
Claleitled B&-8
C<>mlea A11
OpWOti A12
Pobk>g A3
PubUc Notlcet 85-t
Spor1a 81·5
Tlll\itlloh Al
W.ther A2
holeinserviceofnation'sNO. 2airline undertheAmcricanname. ant1cipa~ that all 3.400 nCal when · he was fired from the res--_ __ -.. Our plar11s to merac AirCal into emplo}ees wall be offered the chan~ taurant chain in Apnl 1984. received
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of ............
Amencan A1rhnes announced
today at -is l>uyina Ncwpon &ach-
based AirCal for $225 million 10
expand its service at We t Coast
airports,. 1ncludmg John Wayne 1n
Oranae County.
In a telephone press conference
from Fort Worth, Amenean Airlin~
bomtehaimumand prestcten1 Robert
L. Crandall said htS company needs
more sttV1cc an California to keep
pace wtlh competJtors such as Uruted
Atrhnes.
.• . . the (American) sy tcm, probably to continue working for Amencan the settkment last ~eek. three
. The ~·rC~I system. fi~ P.i:ec1scly within 1987," Cnindall said. The purchase will involve Amen· months before the tnal was scheduled
into the ~olc 1n our airb~e. Cran-._ Amenean 1s lhe natton·s second can's ~cquas1lJon of ACI Holdm&s to began.
dall said. T,he West Coast 1s th~ only largest airline. behind United Jt has Inc.. the Newport Beach-based parent A....;..,.rdi,.• •n 1..~·it#Wft""'• t p area where we ,~re dramattcally aboutjO,OOOcmplo}ccsand 0~ compa_!!.Y of A1rCal ...... .., ~_...ug_.. _ .. .._,, ......,'-LL._ ___ ._.
under-represented. 1.500 Oiahts a day from I 3S cities. h For the nine months ending Sept. Jaspers. the settlement as one of the
Amen can will acquire AuCal's now has 13 fhahts da1 ly from John 30, AuCal reported a loss of S6 2 laracst reported amounts for a wrong-
routes, which serve 17 cities in six Wayne Airport. malhon on revenues of S27 I S ful temunation cast an Southern
states and Canada. AirCal operates Departures from John Wa)nc are million. according to the A~sociated Cahfom1a.
309 fliahts dail) rontroUed by the Orange County Press. Sodcrbcra.. now a manaicr of
The 1cqu1s1t1on, which must be Board of Supcrnsors. but Amencan As a first step in the acqu1s1uon. Aleundn-'s Cafe an Co ta Mesa,
approved b) the U.S..Oeparuncntof $p()kcsm.an Steve McOreaor sai Amencan has a&!'CCd to purcha~ 6 declined to comment on""lhe sctilc-
Transportat1on, also involves 38 "We certain!) want to get (AtrCal's) m111fon slla.res of AO stod;. These ment
planes now owned by AirCal. one due slots at John Wayne. That would be shares. representing shghtl) more But according to prepared state--
for deli.,,cry in two weeks and four one of the auracuons of AirCal." than 70 percent of ACJ's outstanding mcnt b)' Jaspers. Soderberg worked as
more scheduled for delivery in 1987. Althouah arrangements must be (1'eue eee All£RJCAN/ A3) the waitres" tnuning coordinator for
the rcstaurant chain from l 978 until
-Brug abUse prevention
depends o~ education·
Apnl 1984. Two weeks before
Soderberg Wis fired for alleccdly
cnucmna the company and manage-
ment. he wa given the assl tant
night manager's po rnon of one of the
chain's rcstaur~JltS 1n Downey. said Ja pc~. . ... -
Ounng the prc-tnal heann&, the
manaacr of the Downey mtaurant
te ulied he had taken Soderbcra·,
conlidcnllal emplo)ment dial} and
Stnt copies of u to compan)' uper-
v1c,01und then-pmident Michael W.
Guarmen. ocrord1na to Ja pers.
Parents becoming involved in problem-
have made pr~gressac~ss the naffon -
Eighth In• Serl••
1ocal-polite, ~II the luna ·s hones and
By JOQ.N A. BARBOUR
,, ........ u,.. .....
l fit seems we move from one drua
epidemic to another. we do.
Without di ma)' or despair, the
people who battle drup can't see a
drua-frcc Utopia anytime an the
future. Even those who try to stifle the
influA of drup to th• country admit
their ctTons can only reduce, not end
the suppl)'.
Vanous eshn1ates put the cost to
the nation. to the utcr and society, at
upwards of$200 b1lhon -perhaps as
much as $230 b1lhon annually. all the kma's men cannot close ofTlhe
Dn.11 enfor«ment officials un-supply. .
cover m1lhons of dollars v.ortli of.· Drua treatment ctntcrs. womcd
cocaine, hashish. marijuana. parents. doctors. school c_oun~lors
amphetamine narcotics. synthetic can intervene 1n youna li"e gone
opiates. stimulants. sedatives, and astra). and ti)' to bnna ahem back to
tranquili1.en. \O bttle avail. Sttortaaes rourse apan. They u~ <?f\.en
raise the pttce of drugs on the street, enough. but at lrt'at pnce to and1v1d-
utcn act more desperate and the uals and society .
epidemic rolls on All fttel)' airce that the onl)'
Not that enforcement should not wcapan soc1c~y ha to ~all)' root out
procttd apace. But the Coast Guard, th,e problem " prevenuon.. nd the
the Drua Enforcement Aacncy! the s~rona edac of prevention 1 educa-
F81. the state pohcc. the shenfT, the tibn-conllnuou • rCdun~nt educa-
,
CRACKING DowN
tion:
Dr. Sam Brown of the Nauonal
lnstituteon.OruaAbuscsays there isa
prtvailing thcol') on drugabust: "We
have had numcrou ep1dem1c , a
wnina and -.anina in the abuse of
thi druaor that. lnd1v1dual b«omc
aware and re 1nct their behavior
Then an ia,norance of tt srow untal ll
blouoms apan a an ep1dcm1c."
Ln n~ are ~n fora.ottcn Every
(Pleue ... &Dl1CATl0l'C/ A.2)
Soderbcra wa fired the da)' a cop)
of th-c diary. 'Whi -atttcal -0f
Cruarnien. reportt'dl)' was placed m
her petsonncl file. Jaspers' 1-tatcmcnt
id
"o one from Tin~ Na)lor's Inc. m
Santa Fe \pnn~ could be reached for
comment
~crbefl filed a <;Omplaint tn the -
IC'dcr.il d1stnct court 1n l.os An clcs m ptcm~r t 9 4. Tnal wu "pe<tcd -
to bcgm 1 n Fcbru ry l 98 7.
It ~as not knov.n how much money
Sodcrbc11 h d ~ught 1n her com-
plamt
.. vc~aaftuc O\etlhcac aoni
Oldie hoeqp &lktn."'
• Afttr Shane MCKlnn kM!Al,Pl>Cn
(Ned two fmacll ~an ldJe.
noe &au Week. F111~ thanked 'yna
for '" role an htlpena urc their rcl~K.
Wail said the R ft minis·
,,.,eon nt'et to1d him of any amu upphc, to Iran ... ,.., m> convel'la·
tiont with the mcri<11n dm1n1 -
tf"3tion the) 1ha'e alwa> \hov.n
rtspttt f'o• m> poataon and honored
that po.auon. ·he said.
Alktd ~ht'thtr he frlt th Reoagan
adminamation had u~ him O) a
"-over for the arms deah, Waite
rcpli(d:
" 'USC\J' depend un the user, and
that as for them to an\v.er. But I am
roMCiou of the fl ct that v.hen -.ou
step into the· v.aters) ou run the ri Ii:
of being used b) a dOlen different pani~ ...
Appnn04 with Waite al a new
conference an front of a crucifix· an
Rain ....,.*9 ........... c.llbNa OOMt •tr tocMY ..
t dOudy IOlf Pl Ill ft~ Mowed..._. ftotl'I tM Pedllc. Cb* .......... 10 llllMel ... t9Q10n T~. bUt
the ch9nOe of" rein • drop trom ~·1 to perc.nt to 20 percent, the NetlOMI W.ther a... Mid AIOng the o,.,._ eo.t u.;e wlll be coNldefablt
dOOd6Mee wt1tt ettOWW1 lllety toNght Pertly doudy TU!Mdey
w.th • ~ ot "'°'"'' Mtne moinine tiourt. a..ct\ hlOh• ea to 73 LOWI tonight 54 10 51 "~ hight 72 to 71 LOWI tonight
62 to51.
From Point conc.ptloo to the ~llieln lofder -tnner
.. t.,.: Light dllabll ~· tonlaht '1/td Tueed~ morning becOfJ'lno wt to 10Ulhwlet 12 to 1-. knote Tuetdey .netnoon.
.... 2 ..... W...,-ty .... 2 10 3 '-1. Contkler..,._ dOudCneM
tonight wtltt lhOwetl lkefy, PwtfV doudy!Tueeday wtth I~
Of the>w9t• ~ morn6ng houri
Out• •• ,., •. Wlndt tonight and Tueedey morning IOUth to Q ~ ~ '"°""' aou~ 12 to 11 tcnot• becom6ng west to norttt...i 15 to 20 .,:.~ wtlfn -eo11t.r.
knot• Tueecley aft•noon. 8eM 3 to I *'· Conliderable '511 cioudtMle tonlQht with lhowell llkety. Pertty ctoudy Tueeday SllO•tlt ,..., n,,,, •• Sno-otcw.d~Sta!IOIWY .....
wtth cNnQe of ihowers dunng ~ houri. • ,,._,.., ._...., ~· HOM vs Ollll O! C-..•
·--------~,.........----------,.........-----------:: .. :--::~~ ......... '' " Calif T ..,. ,,_ 11 • ....... .. .. . empa. ----n .., ...... .._,, a 70 lllM•CI,. 12 41
• Le ~~ ., *2 ..,_.., •• •-·un••• M. UI ==-10 . !! ............ M M -~ <Q H .... .,.._. 11 It TaflCMfV.._, M -
U.S. Temps
• l.4mbCth Palace. the Archbi'\hop of Cantc,rbul")~s official rcs1d(nce. \l>:ts Ea-hoe~es David Jacobeen and tbe Ren Lawrence Run<:te and the former ho tagcs -• • Jacot>Stn of Huntington Beach: for-Martrln enco and Benjaniin metjoyfGlly lD LOn~~ t~J·.
Al........ II • ::-::... '1 It (.,,.. • , 64 ~ Ttrt-,79 17 =~ : : .._Y.,.Cllr" :: !: ~ :! :O v....-~ a at ~ IO IO ~Qly q It LM~ IO IO _ __,....._--:-, -------:---
:-;;,_ .. :: : ~.... · .:: ~. ~--· ~ ::·Tides· · ·
met bead of the Amencan l:Jn1' ersit) . • · . • ~ • . • · • •
• Ho pit.al 'in Beirut, the Re,, ~n-T·ACQBSEN'S ~A Y4T~·· · .... • ... • ,._. n • It ,.._...,. .. »• · ~OOAY • ~ 90 • ........... • " ,. ....... Clllt • ,, ......... 3S.Sp• o.s .,._ M ~ "°'9Mlf.....,. ... tT .__. • 4 t ..,_, .._,. tO'U p"' t I
_ .Jl.IIllO We11'.hcad.ofthc.Presb)tcnan _ ~ -.I:-~ .i.· .. ._,...-----Chvrch (US.A.). and the Rev. Lav.-From Al · ·
~•c,_....-.&...i.._., ta. ~.o... • ...._ 1 •·2'-----,..----.,.........~----..:--1 ~W\le .. -., ilWeWi -w 4e aMOlefe 71 51 TW90AY
rencc Manin Jenco. a Roman Cath-
ohc.prkst.
Waite, who ha hunled to and
from the Middle East for more than a
)car on negotiations to free hostages.
invited the three Americans to ~
don after-news of U.S. arm~ supphcs
to Iran ovcrwhchhed humanitarian
release efTons.
~H C IO .......... Oly '4 21 hl\F-70 6S Flf'1lllOlr t.40am 21 =:.. 41 » .... 17 U a.nia ..,..,_ 11 .. l'lrtl _,. t Oh"' U
41 U 8' LOIAI It » ltodl'°" • 0 e-11110w • S> p "'-0 t Chained during the fil"il ~h weeks o( unl\ersity professor'\ Wife he met ~ ~! !_! ~~ ~I 42 "91 •lotUNwtendw'etllpffl ._.,,. • 111•ptn' 14 • h I . rh ~ONo --_,...._ / 61 ~V*'t 71 41 ........ ,oct41\1 M .... P"'· ..... capll\ll) w 1 e v1S1t1ng ere. ~wor111 !! !17 ~-!! 42 .., .. ow 1i •1 ,.,..., ... 11•111 anct--~· "I felt like a rabbit in a cage,'' "I auess n was a <1111 from Ood to o.y,on .... .. -" u ~ 1s .. uom •
J lo.ra d • fh h h I f Leb th Oeft¥W l7 2t ..,.,_ 4) aJ 9lg lew H )0 Moolt .... IGCMy fl I'*> P ... ' ... acoux:n sat . · e wom pan "as.. s owt epeopeo anon. cywerc o.e ~ !! !I, TT~~ • 11 9llltlOC> • 17 s. ,...,91111741.,,. anc1r ... ~a1
the denial of all the basic. simple not aoondoned," he said. = ii is ,;;; ~ : =. ~ :: ...;;1_1•....:o;.."'...,·----·--------frecdoms -except the freedom to The woman worried about the 11 PMO • • 17 ... r-M ,. IO 5t
fi h .... • .. -w_.....1-.oc. 11 ,, ~~ 11 a1 Surf R•port think and to pra'-." count~'s uturc because all t e ..... • ... --.. -· -.... .. ·"' J , • ,..,.,.,._, 21 -44 ~ M n ~ ee aa Jacobsen said th<" church he and the Amen ifls were leaVlng. "She said f'leetlalt ae » .,_owi eo so LOCATION _. MAN Reagan's acknowledgment he had
< .. upphed arms secretly to Iran came
after days of intense speculation, But
he denied he had traded arms for the
O.ther hostages formed during their when the first American returned OtMCI....,.. M u MGMll a 18 IO ~a.di ,., ,_. · d be fi h 1 Hoolollllu " 13 E_.end-.,. ~ " •9 ~ JiMty. HewpOt'I 1•2 ,_ capti\ It) -the Church of the Locked there woul hope o.r our c 1 • ~ 1• 17 At. ~ ....,... t0 63 .ott\ltr• . ......, i.2 lllOO'
•'
Door -conducted scr\lcc<, twice a dren," Jacobsen told the congrcp· ~--""* ·.. • Hewp«18Mdl 10 11 t2nc1 llt .... *-POrt H ,_ ,,.._...... 70 • Hligllt.,,. ,,_.,,.,. IOw _,. .... dli °"WIM 10 M 11a1boa Wedll9 2 ,_
hostages' release • da). . tion · ~ 71 13 -Otlw'Maefllr""".,_.,,,..,._ ,....lpftnft 10 M L.-.._,. . 1·2 po.
The Re\ BcnJam1n Weir a Prot· Hewasabductedonthemomingof =City : ;~ =:~:..":..~~ :.=-~ ~ :;:~.. M 1•
Jacobsen was escorted b} Waite
from Beirut on Nov 2 after 17
months in captivity Wear. the first of
the three American freed b.r the pro-.
Iranian Shute Moslem group Islamic
Jihad. was rclca~ Sept. 14, 1985.
.estant and the Rev. LawrcnceJenco. Ma) 28.1985,ashe~allccdtoworkat w.v..-11 "., .. .....,.10t10.......,. L-1n111e aen .. 11111..,. eo 11 .,...,...,.'°""'
a Dtb~1~ took tum rond~11~ t~ Ammcan U~w™~ H~~~-~~~~~~~~~--·~-w.~ ... ~.~.·~···~--.~.~!~···•••n•1a.~.·.~ .•••••• r~ about 60 sen ices until \\cir was with a doctor. A van with three men
Jcnco. v.ho was released Jul> 26
after 18 months as a hostaic. s.a1d
when he arrived 10 London on
Sunday 1t would be better for othCT
American hostages to sta) an ctlPll' 1-
ty th.an be freed an return for U S
:rnns shrpmcnts to tran.
.. We're trying to find some ways
and avenues to get our brothers
· released from captivlt)'," ~e s.a1d
Islamic Jihad still holds Terry
Anderson. 39. chief Middle fast
correspondent of The Associated
Press: and Thomas Sutherland. 55,
acting dean of agriculture at the
merican UniverSll) in Beirut
The v oup repealedly ha claimed
to have killed WiUiam Buckle>.
poht1cal officer at the U 5 Emba<,s)'
10 Beirut. but h1 bod" v.as ne-.cr
found Lebanese and We tern in-
telh&cnce wurces hav(' said ht' ma)
ha"e died after being tortured
.,
fr~~:d.------------------------1:~~~1lfld-tttta:dc1:d-ltnnrr.---~
<\fter \\cir "auclcascd 1n ~ptcm-"As a touih Orange Counllan I did
ber 1985. Jacobsel}. told Jenco. not go gracefully," Jacobsen said "I
"You're not a \Cf) g6od pncst. After put up a light."
JUSt 30 sen ices )'OU'\c lost 20 percent But" hen one of the attackers shot a
ofl our congregation.''• gun into the ground. he agreed 10 go
enro was fr«'d last Jul) The v.1th them out of fear they \\OU Id kill
h'o~l~es agreed the) would ~ct the doctor
together after allnad been rekased 10 He said he still womcs about the
hold one last service for the Church of Leooncsc. but won't return to his post
.&he Locked Door. at the hospual.
till held in Beirut by the hiite "I don't k'now about the future. Jf
Moslem group Islamic Jihad are an)one needs an expert at Just sitting
Terry ~nderM>n. 38. the chief Middle I'm a\ n1lable." he said.
East correspondent for· The As-In n more serious ve11\, he said he
sociated Press. ond Thomas would be spending all of has tu~e
Sutherland. 55. arnng dean of Agn "orkintt toward the rclease_of the
culture a~ the .\mencan University of remaining ho tagcs.
Beirut. Hl· left during the second service
.\t lea'>t three other Amencans arc Sunda) to fl) to London where he
believed held ho\la&e b) other planned to meet with Anglican
Moslem extremists 1n the war-tom C hurch envQ) terr) Waite on
countl") '>tratcg) lor winnutg the release of the
Jacobsen said he deudcd 10 go to other ho~tag~. Waite's negotiations
Lebanon to become d1rcuor of the v.1th the Mosle.ms were credited with
.i\mencan Uni\er<,11~ Hospnal 1n aiding th<" release of some of the
Beirut becau~ of a plea from a hostage
GAME 10 I WEEK 10 I DAY 2
41 ·29
... 33 2 58
@ .
/// YUIL..AUlUDIJ HEIL /f ,j CHECK OUT OUR LATEST
-WHINERS ON 84.
YOU COULD IE NEXT!
HERE ARE TODAY'S NUMBERS.
..
Rules and I ow ro µlot the
gome ore on your game
. cord. or .. coll our btOTUNE~
642 ·43 33 9.5 V'\.f, OS
for WI ·GO nforma ion.
..
• I
74· \
EDUCATION KEY TO DRUG USE FIGHT •••
From Al
newborn means they ha(e to be
taught again Sa)S Brown.
"There have been some dramatic
chanies. There's It kind of con-
servatism in terms of personal behav-ior. There have been changes in
regards to what as tolerated and what
as not tolerated, especially in regard to
adolescent function. Jn general, tt is
good for the kids who need and want
structure.··
The 111.flrlJuana epidemic evoked,
finally. a JTIOvement an the country
which conunucd to proliferate. h
might be called Parents, Inc.
From Florida to Cahfomia, from
Nebraska to Gcoflia, from uburban
New York Ctty to rural lndtana. from
Te~s to Washinaton. D.C. parents
ha\e mobihz(d an thc1r commun1t1es
to put the brake on drua use. Activist
pare.nu'> The idea would have evoked
smiles a decade asa But, look:
MAIN OFFICE
•In Naples. Fla., t't\U parents
discovered tl}e1r two children were
deeply involved an druis. and stru&-
&led for )Clrs to chan&e things
"Naples loformcd Parents .. -NIP
-became the fulcrum tO' move the
Slate.
•In rural Indiana, what began as
one couple's ~ule against dru , was
picked up by a newspaper editor and
other community leaders. In another
Indiana town, a concerned law. en-
forcement officer .picked up the
cudgel. The state superintendent or
schools. Harold Negley. calling for
more antidrug education, found 1t
approP,rjate to echo Walt Whitman.
"I would rather be t8ACd for th('
education of a boy than the ignorance
of the man. J \\Ill be taxed for one or
the other."
•lo Omaha. parent went door to
door to hght a fire undeT the
'WrRE L1sTEN1Nc
I ----
communll). The) modeled thelr
movement after Atlanta"'s "Parents'
Resource Institute for Drua Educa-
tion" proar;im (PRIDE) and set up11
spea kers' bureau. a parents' hoillne
"and efTccti\lc methods for over-
coming the strong resistance of youna
people who believed that they had a
'rig.ht' to use drugs."
•Parents from black neigh·
borhoods in Washington. 0 .C..
fought to get a ban on the sale of drua
paraphernalia and won. That came tn
an areei where drugs are rampant and
PCP cl11ms the mmds of youna
people everyday. Businesses pitched
in. Wllh the help of the PTA. the
parents organized volunteer parent
patrols for schoolyards and play-
arou nds Parents otfered to
chaperone )Outh centers.
NEXT: Back from Nevt~Nenr
LaJtd
D•llJ Piiot
Deflw•rr
It Gu•rentMd
Justcall 642-6086
"" ,.., f,.,.,., • '°" 00 ,..... ,.... ·• 'our '*"""' Vi' ~ 30 p "' ta• ~·ll;'• 1 P."'
""" ):>ul ,et , .,. *'••f'd
What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What
don't you l!ke? Call the number a~ve and you r
livere to the appropriate editor.
'9turOer &"" s..n.Hr " tOU CO~·-·.,..... '-"'• br I • w• t.llllfl
I I"' I ~ ('.¥ 'ort ,.,.
T•,. OoanQ<! Cou1 (Jaly P.tc.! w ,; '"'""'"cm '"""9 ,,.,.
l<t,. P,..u .S f"'I~ Or ,,..... 0i•"'ll' C<W I P;t>Ool""ll
~f,."Y Thlff'' .,J ''°" a•;o OUOftll'lN MulcUl1 '"'OuO"
foc111.1 A !li"O'• ·~ •~''°" M II"~ S1•.,,C111r a'lCSV'!Oeft Tiie 1•1('(.JJllll~'"Vplant tSlt llO ~IPf• ~ti!• ... P 0 &I t t)N' C.. UI ~ C. 'DI' ... •.t•n
The same 24-hour inswenna ~rv1ce ma) be
used to record letters to the editor on anr topic.
Contributors to our Letters column mu~t include
their name and telephone number for vcnlicauon. Tells us what's on your mind.
Clrculetlon
Telephone•
VOL. 79, NO. 321 -
We are pleased to announce
the expansion of
Garys and Company
Opening This Week
outtuuick ·
#119 Fashion Island• NewPOrt Beach• 769-1622 • Bullocka Wilshire Wing
'
1 ~
Ralph ROdhcim ~all discu~ the Harbor Home
Chrastmas Liaht Show at Wcdnc:Mlay's 7:JO a m.
breaa.fa$l mttt1na of the Marine D1v1s1on of ahc
NcwJ)On Harbor Arca Chamber of Commerce at the Balboa Bay Club, 1221 W. Coast Hi&hway.
The h&ht show, scheduled fron1 Dtc. 13-23 11
ccHponsorcd by the Marine Di\·isaon and t.he Oaaly · ri1ot C'a!oh pn1 s totallna S3.500 w1U be d1v1dcd
mto categ()tiC$ •nd gJven 10 the winners· favorltc
charities·. The Wednc!.daf.proaram 1s phced at $9 so
.=.•!'d rcscr~atlons are ~'"I taken at 644-821 t.
'DarJc of Moon 'lat MVBS
The Mission V1e10 Ha&h School Maui Stage Pla>er~ wall pre~nt the mu~acal fantasy "Dark of the
Moon" Wednesday thrQugh Saturday at 7 30 p.m. in
.Che school thC'llter. Ori1inal music for the score has
been compo'ltd by MVfiS a.lumn\,ls Ron Schrader Tteket~ are S3. 50 for general adm~~ ac;m and $2.SO for
students, and more u1form tion 1s available at 83?-7722 . . • , . .. '
-Sochil worlcllho,,,nlafi-----
A monthly workshop for women on rela-
tion hip issues wall be held Wednesday from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. at locum Counschng Service~. 720
Paµlarino Ave., Su11c 212. an Cost.a Me\a. Marriage
counselor Elrlabeth Slocum as the 1n~tructor and the
fee as $8. Call 546-7708 for reM!rvations.
BUlldlng owners-to meet ·
Bob Bunyan~ vice pJesident of marketing for
M1ss1on Viejo Busine s Propcn1ti.. will be the
speaker for the monthly meeting of the Orange
County chapter of the Building Owner\ and
Manaiers A soc1ataon Wedne"iday it 11 .30-a,m. at
the Irvine Marnou Hotel. luncheon reservations
are $23 for non-members and may be made by
calllng the BOMA offices at 979-9131.
Orchid talk scheduled
Ernie Compuzano of Buuerfh Orchu:ls will talk
about phalaenopw~ and new methods of growing
them when he 1tddrcSSC$ the NcwPQrt Harbor
Orchid Society. The group wall meet ai 7:30 p m
Tucsda) at the Neighborhood C ommumty Center
1845 Park ve .. Costa Mc..a.
·Wllls, trusts talk set
The Women' Opponu01t1cs Center of lJ(
Irvine Extension ~•II prc~nt a free workshop on
w1Hsand trusts Wcdnesda) at 5· IS p.m. al the center.
Verano Wa) and North C'1rclc Vat'-" Dnvc. on the
UC'J campus Attorne) Joy Dackerwn wall d1scu'>i.
these and other ~lated issues. and pre-registrauon
information 1•a\a1lable at 856-7128
Legal secretaries conven-e
The Newport Beach-Pacific ~I 'iecretanes
Assoc1at1on wall hold its nex\ meeting ~dnesdB~ at
6 p.m al the 7th Floor &rand Cmll. 23861 El Toro
Road an El Toro Daniel Carlton will speak on real
C!>tate la~ at the ~!>Sion. ""h1ch 1s priced :it S 12 Call
Terr) Wade at 495-9195 for re~rvauon) and other
anform:u1on
Ivy wreath talk ln CdM
A ~o~kshop _on con"rucung a 'iucculcnt or an
WTeath w1rr began at 9 a.m. Wcdne\day al lhe
herman Library and Garden'I, Corona del Mar .\II
matcnals will be c;upphed Pre·reg1stmt1on 1s
required. and the rcgJstralloll f~ 1s S25. For
mformallOJl call the rden office at 6 73-226 1
Monday, Nov. 17
6. 30 p.m .• Irvine Fina.nee Comml11lon. C II}
C ounc1l Chambers. 17200 Jamboree Road
Tuesday,Nov.18
. • 6 p.m . Laguna Beacb City Council meetlllg.
C lly Council Chambers, 505 Forest A\>e. .
• 7.30 p.m .. Jrvlne Planning Commission. ( 1h
( ounctl Chambers, 17200 Jamboree Road. ·
• 7:30 p.m .. lrvlu Unified School District
Board of Edocallon. Dastnct Admin1'itrat1on Center, 5050 Barranca l'arkwa).
. By ROIBllT RYNDM,4N °' .............
:.i-r.;oa1 commun1t1n t~ w --t:'i'll
federal and st.ate aovtmmcnt fOi 10lutiont
to their transp<>rtat1on probltmi.wdl have
to ~tart look1ns elscwhe1t. .. •
Funds to build new road and tnainwn eiu5tin1on~ fallfarshort of the demand to·
spend them. transporuJion expert• uid in
lrvlneataspcc1al mecli"aoftbeC•hfomia
Transponauon Commis.aon. · '
"The wt'lh hst 1s ,peat. the ~ina is eas~ . Ra1S1ng 1t lS daffacuh." 11id A ..
• • " . • , .. scmblyrna.n of an. f riuclle. R-Fount.aln ·
rileh buita Coaatpilot . -......__,.,,..._.,va~t:J'w'Nmi-rnir.-a~m~r-of~·,·..__.._~...,
Chuck McCormick, 23,' of IAguna Billa wu · AJtadena were fijiftc (left) c~Ulded wt.th a Swift comm is ion and an Orange County Upe!'·
bo.pltallsecUn Corona after the World Warn era aircraft pllotie::i 8tnen Lu.nd, 39, of ~ta Ana. visor. $31d local commun1tiC1 will have to 8 'lhouldcr more of the furtd1na burden· for tearman biplane be and Hartley Fol•tad, 53, of All three aca major lnjurle.. , . their own roads. "'
\.. .. rhcrc's probably not &0•n1 to be a
Bil;J1e simplified for chjldren
by professor at Mesa college
wholi: lot offederal money or sta~ money,
so we need to find incentives for locals to
raise their own," Nest.ande said ... That's
~here the buck Ii being.passed."
Fcdtral funds· a~ being cut back and
state allocations arc dwandhna. while
traffic COnfCSllOn\ continue lO SCt worse.
In addition. other needs are competing
w1lh transponauon for limned federal and
state funds. said Dean 'M1sczynsk1 of the
By tbe A11ocilat~ Pre11 "itut the samphdty didn't mean chmana-to convey the onginal meaning usang Senate Office of Resurch. Schools and
lion of -any p3rt of the original .,ork. he word'I a founh grader cowld understand:-SC"-.er and water prOJCClS. for example, are
Tran 13tUl-g the Scriptures into simple said. Lot s\111 gets drunk and haS"~x with In the International Children's Babic. demanding government funds.
\.\Ords--was "the touahest thing I've ever his daughters, King David lusts after a "cherubim.. was translated 10 mean .\ccordina to Trap~p<>rtataon Com·
donc." says biblical professor William C. married woman and has her husband "angels.'' while "ephod" was defined as 8 m1u1on ( hairman Joe .1...tvy, traffic oon-
Willaams. who was a final authority in killed so he can sleep with her. "holy vest" worn on one's chest. gestion chokes about 40 ptrccnt of 'Cah-
productaon of the new I ntcmational Chat-"We tried to be candid, about as Sentences were kept 10 an a·veraic of 10 fornaa 's urban roads to stop-and-so speeds.
dren's Bible. forthnght as you can get wuho'ut using words. and that's hard to do while And. he say\, it's 1Ctt1ng worse. The W11liams,.a professor of Old Testament diagrams," explained Walhams, 49. &\erage !>peed on the state freeways 1s '4S at Sou them California College an Costa "We tncd not to pussyfoot around .. with retaining the beaut} of tbe language. mph and wall slow t6 30 mph by the year
Mesa. edited the work. Jranslated from the the Bible's description~ of sex and vLOl-Wal Iiams said. 20001f something asn•t done. ~
·original Greek, Hebrew and Aramaic cnce, he sa1d. "If kids gel the feeling that But the final product wa~ far from shon The soluuon may require m2$Slve
lan3uagCS by 21 scholars from 17 inStilU· you're being ICSS lh8n candid With them, Ind Choppy. he satd. "There's OO '$cc Sl)C'ndinJ. Offi~1a}S satd.
·uons around the country. their respect goes nght out the "VIDdow." Dick. See Dack run. See Dack run fast"' m Panehm praa~ efforts 11\ Santa Clara,
fhe new book "simplifies but d<X's !'IOI Williams, a Pentecostal scholar who has the book. Alameda and Fre no counties to raise their
poatrona1e." Wal hams said. "I )Nai. very spent much of his career studyana ancient The new book also was pack.aged for own transp<>na11on funds throuah local plca~cd with the way at came out:· b1bhcal texts and vasning the nations ch ildren 1n bnght shades of pink, buraun-taxes. ·
The International Children's Bible is the where the ong1nals were written. said Bible dy and blue. Irvine Co V1ccC'ha1rman Tom Nielsen,
fim \ers1on of the Bible translated translations arc difficult because the And ifs smaller than the average book · chairman of the Cahfomia Business
espcc1all) for }Oung.<;tcr$. Wilham'i said. Engh~h langu3gc has no equivalent to so children can handle at comfortably. Roundtable's TranspOrtation Task Force,
\n average fourth grader can easily wme of the words an the original text!>. Several full-color pictures arc scattered said an add1~onal $800 million a 'Year an
undcr-.tand the book. he said. Babies Quoting a famous lran~lator. he said. thoughout the book. state funds for h1gnway improvements is
al read~ in pnnt. lake the New Jntemataonal every Hebrcw wor'Clts a "small eJ1.plos1on." There will be an ad uh version of the needed co offsctthe emphuis 1n the federal
Vcro;1on. arc "'ntten for readers al the with a vanety of meanings for those who book pubh hed soon. Williams said. The h1ghway-prqgram
se' cnth grade le,el. he s.a1d The King understand the language. grown-up version will include the same An add111onal S 700 milhon per year
Jame!> -.cr!l1on m.4u1res I :?th grade read1ng Translaung for children doubled the simple language. but there will be no would be needed to provide for mamtcn-
abahl> d1fficul11cs, he said. because scholars had pictures anccofloC:il roads... Ntetwn-wd .
•..................................... · ............. 1 ........................ -. ...................... ..,........ To cru~ that revenue. he said, the
'Stalker' judge re~oves himself
By LINDA DEUTSCH
........... ~Wrtl«
The Judge in the case of .. N1gh1 ~talker"
defendant Richard RarnireL yielded to a
prosecumr "challenge toda) and remoH'd
h1msclf from the upcoming tnal but sa1d
he \\OU Id continue to hear a kc) motion.
• Los Angele) Supcnor C oun Judge Dion
Morrow. reJccting strenuous protests from
Ram1n-1'<) law)ers. said he believed he had
no choice but to. allow tM-c-halknge b)
cny bccau.se of ma'i!>tve pubhut)
Rnm1rt'2. 26. as eharicd w11h 14 murders
and 31 other felonies an the series of night
break-ins and allack.s on people in their
homes that terrorized Southern ( ahforn1a
in the summer of 1985 Tnal t'i current!\
schtduled to begm Dec. 2.
He faces separate charges an the attack 111
M1ss1on VieJO that summer.
Morrow set a heimng for NO\ 26 at
"hach the defense \\Ould continue to play
tape rcrnrchng.s of newM.:a~~ on the "Night
talker" case.
'\ttorne~ '\rturo HemandeL had argued
that Halpin actual!) lied an court about h1'
reaso ns for wanung a ne"" Judge. but
\forrow said that wa) 1rrclc\ant
"The cases ha'e held that thl' mola \e of
a part} 111 filing a peremptory challenge is
1rrele' ant. .. the1udgc said
~~·~u~twD~1~~r~ic~A~t~to~r~n~c~P=i:4ll!.!'~R'~~'~·--a1k-1l:Af1;;"l:=IJJ.;J~~~1'11'-1Ct~~~'.J;'1~.G4'-fRe~ "He<Ha 1n) aspa)ed 1s chalengca' h ft ••• to all of the re<it of the cao;e,'' Morrow told
the defcn-.e
Howe,er. he ..aid H:ilp1n's. challenge
wa-; filed in the mubtofachang&-ef·'f'enue
heann_g_1n the .QL!>C and thus could not be
granted as 10 that hearing.
Morrow saia he '-"Oula continue to hear
the issue of whether Rarrurc.z's mult1pk
murder trial shoulct ht' moved to another
SUSPECTS ••.
From Al
Hununiton Reach Police <ipokC<i\\oman
Jo Ann Bonkowski said police 1n 1K.t~h
have '!Cl up a 'lpcci:il line for an)onc:Y.ho
. ma} have 'iecn Murra) and the \U'ipcct11 on
the night 'ihe "a" abducted I ho'i4.' with
an) thing to report arc a\kcd to mil pohc:c
at 536-3999.
FroqiAl .
common 'il<Xk. bclongjw \\.1lham l yon
and C•corg<' l .\rg:rro ... thc Orange< ounty
busanco,\men '~ho :ire its rwo pr1nnpa~
<.harejioldel'\ .
In cQnJun(tmn "1th the merger agrc~
ml.'nt .\Cl hao, granted American .\1rlines
an option to purchac;e up to Ill m1lhon
authonzed hut un1c;\ued share\ of .\( I ll
~ummon stock ·
.\mencan chairman <. randall said h1\
airline beg.an talks '-'Ith .\1rCal a few "eek\
ago concerning onl> a JOant markeung
agreement \fore rece ntl). Crandall c;a1d
..\1rCal's O'-' ncr\ decided tht') \\ould prefer
to c;ell the airline
In a prepared ~tatement. \1rC :ii chair-
man and chief cJ1.ecut1\>'c otlin·r l ~on ..aid.
.. \1r( al\ board of director\ hn<i concluded
1hnt th1c; transaction 1s in thl' bc'it mtt·rco,1!>
·or all 11' 'harcholder., I am <''>penal!>
plca\Cd that \\-C haH· lound a \\J\ to merge
-.\1r\al's h1gh-qualll\ e>JX'ralion with
.\mcncan A1rhne\ J earner rcc.:ognw.·d
lhroughout the "orW for lhl' qualit\ ol m
.lief\ ICC.
..::The! )(.llD.lllg of lheM: lW4-ifca.l 1:0m-
pan1l''> will create new opportun111e~ tor
our people. l'nhun ce the r.inge of \en ice\
\\C offer our cu-;tomers nnd asc;ure ton-
ttnucd support for the nlmmun11te' "c
\t'f\e
·The tran.,auaon ha\ lx•cn appro' ed b)
the boards of directors of both rnmpanies.
.\mcman·, Crandall charartemed the
acqu1s1uon a' "clear!) pro-compctlll'<' ..
and ..aid h~ <.loco; not CApcct J1tlicuh~
Mnn1ng tCdc:ral appro\al of the deal
..\c;ked if an\ .\u{ al t'mplo)t'e~ "'•IJ lo'>l'
their JOhi. J\ J result of the acq u1s1t111n
Crandall '><lid. "I dll not ant1npaa· lht"~
\\Ill."
CQUl\.3 cnl o a 2-cents*l)Cr.pt·~r-t~~ -.-...;~
crca..c an the i.tatc's n1ne-cents.-pcr.pUon
f ucl tax ~ould be needed. Even then. funds
could fall ~hon of the need
Panch~t~. bo~cver. held oUt littll' hOlJC
that -.01ers, or Gov. Georic DeukmcJuin.
would appro\e a gas tu mcruse.
Assc:mblrman Richard ~u. [)..l..<?t
Angeles. said pan of the soluuon may be a
better u1il11at1on of cxastma roads
··0oes c'cryone who's on the freeway
have to be there?~' he asked
funeral ma\~ tor Ralph P. Rachley of
l 1do lo;le ~111 be held Wednc!tda) at 7 30
p.JIL at Our Lad} of Mounl Ormel
Cathohc Church, I 5th and ..Balboa
Boufe,ard Ne1,t.pon Beach
Ru:hk\. 56. died aturda) at h1s home
after a. long illness He was born Sept 10.
1930 a liffh generation Cal1forn1an
He graduated from Loyola High School
:ind lakr attended Sama Clara Univ.ersny
.rnd pla)cd foothalland part1c1p.tted in the
Or11ngl· Bo" I He later graduated from
t S(
Richk~ 1-. \urv1-.c.·d by hi-. wife. l 1nda · a
wn. Paul. and two daughter\. Mta and
Jeane of lido Isle He also lca\eS a brother.
Meh in Richie) of Lido Isle
The fam11\ has rtqucstt'd that donation~
hi: made to the l 1ttle Sisters of the Poor.
21 Oo <) \\-es tern <\' ~· • San Pedro
. Three seize(l in N: eWport
_on co_caine sale_ci.ar__ges _
Costa Men
\ "oman had her \\Jllcl \lnlrn lrom her
purw "h1k ~hc "a' \hnr1nnr. ma '"He on
th<' '000 hloe\.. ol Hathor lioulc\ .ml . . . \ S40 lat hauen. "'-ol' \IOll'n from nn
1117h "hll<' <..m•mhn par\..cd on the 11(X)
hl0< \..or Minrr -a &Al
. Some lutt nut~ """"' uokn lrnm 11 &n&> B I\\ U U p;trt.;r,1 nn lht' lllXI bind. of
Pa61annn '\venue
intruder tkd 10 lhc H'\lclcnt'\ "'h11c 1~7., Oldsmobile \ 1~tJ ( r 111~1 \la hon ... ;ignn
,·alued at S l U70 • • • \ "ru,tonwr· l'ntrrc:1I lhl· I lonw ( lu!\
'\l>rl' IM>til Uroot..hul\l "ii \und~n. llH>I.
t-lo chain!> ~"''· IC'f\ through a lice "'" "-llhout pa)tnl and ncd 1n a "'-llilln@ I 1r1t
"•" Thr los\ ""\l'\llmatl'd at "~"
11lar11t' .i humc l)n lhr 1-0l<Xl blO(;k uf fon
DJ\ a re\1dent report~ Sunda). The lO)\
111dudcd a tdcv1i.1on set wonh S400 • • • \ l\''1dC'M of1ht 6400 bloc.:k ut Warn<'I \'~nu( reported ~und3) that h1't rtd I Q86
1 o' n\a p1d.up tnid. v.as burJ1an1rd wh1lr
11 "·'' pJrt.t'd in h1\ carpon. Thl' lo5s 1n1 tu1kd \te~o equipment wonh S2SO • • • 'M•ml'onl' ima\licd a Ide ~inuow ro
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of .. Dlllr ..... ...,.
Ncwpon Beach police detectives
culminated a month-Ions anvc'lt1ga-
11on with the arrest Frid )' of three
people ~uspected or conspiracy to sell
coc:.une
Arrested were Bridget Ann W1hen.
19. of Huntana1on Beach: AlcJandro
£has Necocchea. 43. of Newpon
Beach. and Arm11ndo Alfredo
G1ora10. 59. of an1a Ana.
'\bout half a pound of coc inc was
<'onfisc.atcd durina the orrem and
sub!>Cqucnt \Carch of a Sea horc
Dnve apartment The coca1J1e. de·
pcndmg on its purit)'. has lfn C\ta·
maied street value of about S 14.000
to $15.000. Sgt. Ron Rodgers said
today.
According to detectives. Wilven
allegedly sold several ounces of
cocaine to an undercover officer who
!>Ct up a mectana Wlth her at the
Roadway Inn on Supcnor Avenue an
Costa Mesa.
rmed with a search warrant,
inve!tiji\ors then scuthcd the New-e.on E¥ach re 1dcnce . on Sea~hore
Drive where more coc,une wa found
Rod rs said <\lso seiLcd dunna the
a~ti. were a 1981 Datsun 280ZX.
several hundred dollar.. an ca'ih and
illegal weapons.
Whale police were . arremna
Nccocchca at the apanmcnt and
confiscating the illegal drugs, Giorgio
allegedly amvcd wtth \event! more
ounce of cocaine for sale to under·
cover offic~n.. ltodgcrs s:ud.
The arre t~ culminated nn under
cover investigation by Newpon
BC'ach detective~ in which a couplc of
cocaine purchaS<'s were made w11h
the 'luspccts ovu the pa 1 month,
Rodaets ~1d
• • • l hr front wmdo" on 1 hlue Dodge :?CW)
parlr..cd on the "'00 hlod. of S.kc:r '\trrct
was ~mashed ilnd the S 100 \M rad1U "'-•'
\I Olen I'
.\n SllllCl rc~rl n~~l:ce \\-aS \lolen lrom
a homt' on tht' HIX) block of Oran e. • • • .\ S 100 gold '1tclp1n was slol n from 11
hnrneun lhc.'!OO blcxkoffcdt'ral hcnuc.
Newport Beach
The O\\ncr of a IQ82 rord Must1na
rcponl"d th<' car \lokn S..turda} niiJlt on
Dorolh' l he door' tu ltic rt"d '"'o-Ooor 'rh1C'k "ere unltl(~t"J an11 th~~'°'' "''C'r<' icn 1n,1dc. • • • • • fn I ~ramtc 10\ 1dcnt ~turda~. the
o"ncr ot ~ Ill :To.,QQ_ Ccl.ica {tl
tl'J)l111rd the nr 'lnlcn on Dama Road • • • \ v.oman 'horp1n1 tor v(l('(nt'l 11 a
t omnhkl M1rsufl['t1narl.l't.l'(po1tcd tl'k
the 0 of about SI 00 t'I h from her punc • • • .\ car trlrphtlflf •nd \tcreo rq111pmcn1 10 thcr "nnh n t\Ulflatl'd SlOOO '*1l
rt'poncd 'lnlcn turJ ) nt hi from a 1~7a fmc<fc, Bent 4 O,.\l pa1l.:cct vn
f.,c111n1 Star.
Huntington Beach
\ l'l'\1den1 of thr Hll 110 hlo~. t. .. 1 ~lon,httK>l: rctutncd hOml' \unda~ ;an1t
found h1\ door a1ar and the haht' on and h1<i homr buralam«I Thr lo'' mdudrd
JC'V.kf'\ '-llucd ot Sl fl.000. rn1m wm1h
S 41.00«1 and appluanC't''i ".iluc<d :at S1. W I • • • I h1c,c'i hrot.c a rtar window "' hur·
burtil:im~ a home on tht 10100 bloc:!. or \1om bruol.. a rc:Mdcnl n:pon~ \und:a~
I h1· '"'' 1ndulkd ll'ln 1 ion ond '\lcrco n1u1pmrn1 ol an un(JctC'nmnt"\I value • • • \\ong\ Ko1auran1 imp '\dam1 .._,c
"'·" b11r&la111cd earl)' \url~" lt>lc:phon<'
had htcn nptw"d fl om 1hc v.all, and lhC'
1n11udt'r \ll1k $100 111 ca h anti li~uor '3llll'J JI S 71\
Fou~ sought in kidnap,
rape of woman in Mesa
.
orean pre ident
'
Nicaraiuan official MY•
HasenC-ua mayget pardon
reported sl&i~ in coup
Reagan: No. ffiore at.ms going to Iran
WASHINGTON (AP) t President Reagan says there will be no further continue.:· Speakes told reporters retummg to Washington with Reagan
U.S. arms shipm.tnts to Iran. and the Umted States is urgmf other countnes to aboard Air Force One on Nov. 4.
refrain from stndmg weapons to Iran as well. pres1dent1a spokesman Lart) Last week. Reagan told the nation 1n an Oval Office address that he had
Speakes said tQday. ordered the transfer of .. small amounts" of weapons to I ran a part of an 18-
Speakes was asked about the possibility of more secret arms shipments month secret diplomatic c~ort to reopen ues to the Islamic nation and to bnng
like those Reagan acknowledged last week. Sunda) Secretary of tale George P. aboui the release of ~mcncans held ho tage by lra.~1an adm1_rers m Lebanon.
Shultz, saymahc spoke for himsclfand not the full Reagan administration. s~ud Spcakes.~lso said t~y the admrn1strat1on 1s uram& third countnes not
he would oppose sending more arms to Iran to ship arms to Iran. · .. • President Reagan's nauonaJ secunty ad"1ser. meanwhile. said it is
Speakes, under qucst1onmg today. told reporters, I m saymg no further possible that more hostages may t5C released m Lebanon but that recent tories
an:ns shipm~nts; I'm saym' the ~tat) of .. state sa}'-s no further arms of secret dca1mgs wnh Iran may have hurt such chances · sh1~nts; Im sayma I said ll on Elccuon Day. Shultz, interviewed on CBS-TV's "Face the Na11on .''said, "I don't ~any
The spokesman's previous statement, however. was made at a time when need for further s1gnaJs" of U.S. good faith to moderate Iranians.
the administrauon had not acknowledged makm~:d~ shipments to Iran and Asked tf he had the authonty to peal.: for the entire Reag;in
seemed to discount pubhshcd r.c~tbat the-Um tates had sent weapons administration. Shultz answered, "No."
to the embattled Persian Gulf nation m spite of a U.S. embargo 1mposc<J on Normally the secretacy of state docs speak for the admm1strat1on as a
lran. for its support of mtcmauonal terrorism. whole on such majOT foreign pohcy1ssues hultJli. remark and t~ positton ~
.. As Iona as Iran advocates the use of terrorism. the arms embargo will took pnvatcly put him at odds with Reqan.
Israeli gunships attack Palestinian guerri~la bases in Lebanon
BEIRUT (AP) -fsrach helicopter gunships,
rocketed Palcsunian guemlla bases near south Lebanon's
pon city ofS1don,Joday, pohce reported. It was the second
Israeli air stnke into Lebanon 10 as many days. •
Organization chairman Yasscr Arafat's Falah guemlla Sunda) l~rach fighter-bombers rocketed two Fatah He told reporters that three Palestinians arrested 10
group. bases south of Sidon. and pohcc reported at lca~l three connection with the stabbing belonged to Dr. George
Pobce bad no immcdtate casuaJty report.
The gunships fired at least four rocke1s mto guemlla people wounded The raid came a day afier an Israeli Habash's Synan-backed Popular front for the Liberation
bases. Smoke billowed from the targets l1S ambulances scm10ary student was stabbed to death m Jersalcm·s of Palestine. which 1s opposed to Arafat.
rushed to evacuate casualties. the reporter said. Moslem quarter In Beirut. Shute Mo lem m1h11amen and Palcst1man · The&unsb1ps bla ted guemlla bases in fields between
the refugee camps of Mich Mich and Ein el-H1lweh at Gucmlt! pos1uons fired 23mm Soviet-made ann-An anon) mous telephone caller claimed respons1-gucmllas battled toda) with mona"' and mulubarrellcd
aircraft un s at the ra1d10g hchcopters but no hns were b1hh for the ~tabbing in the name of Fatah's Force-17 rocket launchers around the Cit) ·s largest refugee camp. ~---~---.,rhrirm-~.-M'l'ft;nr., .
A loca reporter said he saw at least two _J.unships
pounding pos1uons bclongina to Palestine Liberation
------------~~11· 'tt"f'-btoiitmit. _ Police smd five people w · 1 d and 52 wounded in
It was the 15th air stn\..e into Lebanon this }Car b) But luaeh C ab1ne1 Secretary El}'ak1m Rub10ste1n the fightmi. nipcr fire forced l e c osutt o 1ru
Israel. '1 said his go ve rnment did not believe that claim. airport's mam h1&h\\a) ant'w. according to p0hce.
Anotherteen turns in her Fresnans raisin' toasts for
JD other for narcotics use . . , By~A~~~ ... _.,~ .. ~5-year-old g>rl cone<"1ed for henelf1nd her young gaining a place 1n TV s sun
brother's welfare walked into a pohce station and told officers her mother had
narcotics in her apartment, authonties said. Poh~ were sent to the apartment
1.:-----.J::JIJA. WL)u:JOtCUmtt..;;i~d told &~ dc5k officer bee mother bad been usmg.
crystal methamphetamme at home. LL Bob Lein said. ''The officers found
some manjuana and some white powdery substance." Lem said. adding that
the woman tried to \'>low away some of the powder when officers arrived Police
arrested Debbie Anne Russell. 33. on mvcst1gat1on of posscss1ori of a
controlled non-narcotic substance, attempted destruction of evidence and
child ncalect. Bail was set at $2, IQO.
Sea World whale plns trainer t-o tank
SAN DIEGO -A killer whale at Sea World aquatic theme park brieO)"
pmncd a tra10er agamst the side otthe tank dunng a show, prompting the man
to scramble out of the tank. a park spokeswoman said. The trainer. whose
identity wasn't 1mmed1atcl)' ava1lable.JNasn"t injured in unda) 's 1nc1dent.
spokeswoman Jackie O'Connor said. It happened during a pan of the "-illcr
WhaJc Show when the trainer wa<; m the water with Kandu. a 4.000-pound
whale. O'Connor said.
LA schools clted over asbestos hazards
LO ANGELES-xhool officials have failed to properl) not1f~ parents
and emplO)'CCS of the hazards of asbestos 1n schools. according to federal
c1tauons issued to the Los Anaeles Unified School D1stnc1. The recent I> issued
citations are the second time the U.S. Em 1ronmental Protecuon A.gcncy has
warned Los Angeles school officials to follow rules on dealing with the
matcnal. considered the second-leadmg cause of lung cancer after smoking.
rRESNO (AP).-Evtn w1th a bad malte-bcheve story ·of sun-dried
Joke abOul Fresno to litll!R orr tn~parnon~ ano Intrigues among
television miniseries by the same Fresno's nch and not-so-famous.
name!, city residents basked m the None of the show's major st,ars no~lty of sauncaJ tale of schem10g showed up for the iJant·screen view-, ramn family dynasties set m their mg. but this much-maligned cuy m
hometown. Cahfom1a's farming heartland 1s used
Lest anrone gc15 the wrong idea by ro getnng~nd-clas m:atmcnL
watching ··Fresno:· the CBS-TV "We've got our t)'('-OOns ~nd our
mm1sencs that spoofs soap operas fam1I)' mtngues but it's small-fl)
like "Dynasty" and Dallas," former com~rt!d to what 'ocs on m this
Ma)or Daniel Whttchurst is offcnn& proarant." said ra1s1n farmer Don
a "viewer's guide." It promotes the o\Jagop1an at a premiere cocktail
c1t)'as "Cahfom1a'sbnghtspot."w1th part) before the show
a low cost of living and proximity to ·•for once we'd like for people to
m&Jor sh1ppm$ routes. think we're as glamerous as c1t1~ hke
''Fresno 1s indeed ramn country. Dallas and Dem er."
but we want to be sure you know that .\bout 2.000 re<i1denl!t attended the
1t is in fact. the No I agricultural black-lie affair at the cit)' 's conven-
count) 1n the United States." ~1d 11on center. where searchlights ht up
Whitehurst. who now heads an mdus-the night !lk} and a un1vets11y band
ti) promotion group. pla)'ed while iuesl were escorted by
The real tycoons of the world's Disneyland'\ offi cial M1ckc}' \1ouse
ra1s1n basket turned out Sunday for a rorty-se..-en limousines were
Holl)•wood-style premiere of the pronded b) 10<.al funeral homes and
car collectors for guests who d1dn ·1
fiavc their owi .
party orpn11er
"Some people are deadly serious
about this whole affair," said Gen-
evieve Sanders. 24. the National
Ra1S1n Queen. who wore a black.
hand-cmbro.idcred Ta1wantse gown
deStgned ~> a man who once created
dresses for the late Pnncc s Grace of
Monaco.
"But most take this whole thing
wnh a gra1 n of salt." she added
To prove they're &ood sports.
Frcsnans at the premiere w1ldl>
cheered the show's opening joke It
was almost cut from local broadcasts
by a ~omcd local station manager.
who relented af\cr publicity about the
proposed censure.
In the scene. a panish e'plorcr
tastes some, wild grapes after d1-s~
covering the San Joaqu10 Valle). but
spits them out."These taste like
Frc!lno," he curses.
SHUTTERS SPECIALLY 52 wi~ $8, 682 in lotto drawing
PRICED SACRAMENTO (AP) -Fifty-two people picked ftvr of six correct
numbe"' 1n Saturda) 's lotto draw1n1. w10ning $8,682 apie~. But no one
walked away with thc'first or second-P.lace pnzcs. state lotter'} official said
That means that more than $6 m1lhon m prize money will be camcd over
for next Saturda) 's drawini. -
The new set of numbers drawn Saturday night in the Lotto 6-49 aame were
41 . 48 4 7. 5, 4, 18 and the bonu number was 42
_ A tot.al of 3.476 people won.SJ 18 each for pitling four til the numbers..
spoke man John Schade said Sunday. Another 97.927 people won SS for
pttluns three winn1ns numtw-n
Prison pair
said parted
·for keeps
PLEASANl 01'1 (AP) -;.\ woma!l
Pleasanton speak'> from cxpcnence
when she S3}'5 Ronald Mcintosh and
Samantha Oonnda Lope1 will never
walk hand 1n hnnd agam
"They'll neHr see each other aaam .
ftc me an_d m~ bQ.}fnend~" ~1d
Joyce MatLOA, wh(} 1s_.sen.tng a Al · ~car term for using a helicopter to
help Jesse . Glenn m1th and two
others escape from a South C'arohna
pnson less than a H'ar aito
''The plans they had they ·re gone."
Mattox said in a tele phone mtcnicw
unda)
Mcintosh and Lopez were ex peeled
to be arraigned toda) on h1jac~ing,
escape and ~1dnapp1ng charges.
A friend of Lopc-l. Mattox was
quc\t1oncd b)' authorities shonly
after Mcintosh escaped from lhe
federal Com.'Ct1on Institute, hi-
Jlckcd a helicopter and swooped into
the pr1 on exercise yard Nov. S to fl)
awayw1th Lopez Mallox maintained
that she knew nothing of the escape
plan b}' the two swcethcaru. who
often held hands as the> walked on
the same exercise yard
Inmates at Pleasanton cheered
when Mclnto h and lopcL escaped
but there wis only quiet when the
new arrived that the two had been
captured on aturday, only lO da)s
later ~attox satd.
'"People v.crt c;ad,'_!_ ~-~id-.
"People v.ere shocked. We didn't· •
know "'hat to say.:.:
Customize your windows
with movable shutters in
colors, sizes & styles to
compliment your decor.
IN THE CABAREl LOUNGE-
...
•
, ...
•Cocktail Dancmg Tue·fri. 5·8pm
wlfh live entertamment by "H1gear"
• lar1e screen T. V. for Monday Hite Football
• Complimentary hors 'd ouevres Mon.·ffl . ..
-• Cabaret Stafood Bar from 7 p.m •
..
No'!' You Can ffa~e the_ Saine Top Secret Fonnu~· the Stars Uae to Look 10 to 15 . Y•;. Y~• . · ..
HOELYWOOD, CA -Make-up artist ..
Bob SiClell used to get calls in the middle · ·
of the night from eome of Hollywood's
most beautiful women. They all wanted
something from Bob that no one else
outside of the TV and film ·industry had
ever heard of .
. Some . Hqllywood in·siders :: call . .it· a
wrinkle eraser. Some say it's their· own
r1onal beautr1secret". And Bome"ju
won't talk, because for them it seems to
turn back the clock on aging skin -10
to 15 years or more -without the need
for dangerous and tostly plastic
surgery.
· . . First Used on "The Waltons"
\Vorking with a pharmaceutical
chemist, Bob first developed a new
technique to create the "natural" look ~
for THE \VALTONS TV series. The cast
had to 1ook as though they didn'~ use
make-up -and before Bob's discovery,
the only way to get rid of wrinkles, lines
and blemishe was heavy TV make-up
-but it didn't look natural, especially
during revealing close-ups.
More and more of Bob's celebrity clients
tarted using it off the set in their
everyday Jlves. Some were even claim-
ing it wa their "secret formula for
.... youth''. That's when. he started getting
late night calls from stars who had run
out of their sample supply and swore
their wrinkle were coming back.
Used· by Major Hollywood Studios
Once the word wa out, nearly every
film and TV studio in Hollywood started
a kin~ for Bob Sidell's secret. And up
I now, only the stats could · ,
and only from professional studio make-
up artist . \Vhat i it?
One of TV's most glamorous stars
named it "SilkSkin", because of the way
it made lier kin feel -smooth and sup-
_,,ple like fin_e silk.
It rapidly became. a rage among
Hollvwood's top tars. In fact, many ot
the stars asked Bob not to reveal this in-
credible beauty secret .. But Bob h~d a
dream. You see, Bob is a professional
skin care consultant. He's concerned
with more than ju t a handful of stars
who need his help. '°
His real dream was to make it possible
for anvone to look 10 to 15 years youn~e~ -not ju t a few privileged
show busines in iders. That's why Bob
Sidell, after ca~ful study, ha chosen
California Cosmetics, a trusted name,""to
form~plate SilkSkin under his strict per-
so nal't\upervision .
And now , for the first time, you don 't
have to be a movie star to have a movie
star's youthful appearance. You know
how good Hollywood's TV and film stars
look, why shouldn't you have the same ·
silky smooth complexion?
How Does it Work?
Like magic' Because unlike typical
department store cosmetics. or fad
mail-order .. face-lifts-in-a-jar" and
other expensive "miracle" products
you've read about, SilkSkin's Hyper-
... Synerg1 fie -Complex autornaticattr
balances itself to your_ own ~rsonal
body chemistry -as if it ha~~ mind of
its own _: whether your skm 1s dry or
oily, cr.acked or wrinkled, y~ung or .old.
This amazing formula contains a urnque
blend of Aloe Vera, Collagen, PABA,
Chamomile, Vitamin E, A, BS & D,
Allantoin, and pure natural Royal Jelly.
But ... the real 11secret" is in the ?ther 18
important elements (wh~ch ~b s.attor-
ney forbids u to mention an th~s ~d),
plu the ingeniou~ method .of pur1.fymg,
blending, hon.ding. and c~rmg. This new
and excitin~ process 1s called Syn-
erJ(i tie Che mi try, and it forces all 28
ingredient to work together.
~ilkSkin then relent_lessly attac~ the
ugly, aging look ~f hn and w.rmkle ,
..
. . ~
' -
4 -· '-
•
. '
Bob Sidell prepares popular actress Laura Grayson for a recent publlflty photo session. For over 25 years Bob Sidell has been helping
Hollywood's moat beautlf.ul stars look even more beautiful. He was the original make-up artist on such TV hits as THE LOVE BOAT, THE
WAL TONS, SPACE, and DYNASTY., as well as the make-up artist for movies such as BODY HEAT, E.T., M.A.S.H. and RHINESTONE.
zm mediately! You can actually feel it
working seconds after it gently absorbs
into the_s_kin -deep down to the cell
birth layer where it works to nourish
and replenish those natural elements
which are often lost through aging. It's
not oily or greasy, and contains no
damaging alcohol. -In fact, it's so sheer
and natural, you can even use it under
make-up ' ·
Beverty Hills Doctor Tests Fonnula
"/ qme perBonally examined tdr. Sidell's
,qkin treatment sys(em and have
prexcribed it to patients sufferiny from
premature aginr1 in the areu.'i of the face,
ueck mid huml.~. ·
Frankly, I uei•er expected .·uch im-
media te and remarkable results. In my
opinion, tile formula 's rehyd rat ing and
nutrient properftes represent an ex-
citing altenwtive to contienflio_nal
prtJeedtt-rett ~Heh a ~uvuu~ uuder slan
wj£ction ·, crnrl other product.ff l<'hich I
hfl t'£1 cailwted m1d furmd to be far less
e.t.Tectfre.
Th e form 11/a actually seem~ to r place
mnnt/ t:.'f~entw/ propertie lo. t due to
str Rs and expo. ure to du muging ele-
ments. :welt a u,eather, cigarette
.~mok 1, mul cr;m mon pollutants, l Ul'Hlfl
the .~kin soj~ mul z1pple lo the touch and
vmmyt r in a PJ'f'<l rmtce.
Congratulntfon cm your di cm ry."
0 0. . Cl.. 0 ~fl.. -~
Dr. A. A. Chaplan, ·~io. PhD
Bev •rl)' Hill • California
and feels younger. If they don't pick the
SilkSkin side, put it right back in the
same package, return it to us. and we'll
send you the FULL REFUNO-OF
YOUR PURCHASE PRICE IM-
MEDIATELY BY RETURN PRIORITY
MAIL. No need for even a word of ex-
planation. Just tell us the address you
want your refund mailed to -it's that
simple!
No-Questions-Asked Guarantee
As one of Hollywood's most prominent
make-up artists, Bob Sidell has too
much to lose if you're not absolutely
delighted by his discovery. A legally
binding contract with ~r .. Side,11
specifically states that California
Cos metics, Inc. shall issue a full refund,
\VITHOUT QUESTION, to any dis-
satisfied customer, immediately upon
request".
More secrets Revealed on Cassette
Order SilkSkin now and we'll send you a
free gift never · before off er~ ..Bob
idell's own SECRET~ OF THE STARS
cassette. In his own voice, Bob per-
sonally takes you step-by-step through a
simple five minute program tQ help you
look _yqunger with each pas ing day !
And on the same cassette, you'll hear
this top Hollywood make-up artist
answer the 20 question most often
a ked by the stars about make-up,
beauty and looking younger. Question
like. "how the star get rid of ugly dark
circle under their eye ?'' And "ho do
the~· keeP. liR tick from mearing during
a ki in~ scene?" You.'11 also find out
som v n intere tinJ{ in ide informa-
tion about things that go on behind the
. rcnes on· me of TV's m t popular
how .
ask for a refund. Ifs our way of thank-
ing you for gi ving SilkSkin an honest
try.
Ifs Easy to Order
Simply pick up the phone and call us
TOLL FREE <6 AM toB PM Calif. time):
dial 1·800-334-7755 Ext. 103 (in UT dial
1-800-662-2500) for immediate credit
card or C.O.D. ordering and SAME DAY
SHIPPING. (MasterCard, Visa and
American Express accepted). Or, if you
prefer, you may send a check or money
order to California Cosmetics, Dept.
103, 8025 Deering Ave., Canoga Park,
Calif, 91304. Each three month supply .
of SilkSkin is smartly packaged in a
beautiful signature edition vanity con-
tainer and costs just $29 .95. This
includes your free ca sette, and re-
member, SilkSkin comes with a no-
q u est ions -asked money back
guarantee.
All orders are hip~ immediately by
UPS, which mean no delay and no or-
ders lost in the mail. If you happen-to b
in our area, we in\tite you to stop-by the
California Co metics plant and pick up
yo ur order directly.
o please don't wait. You no longer haH?
an excu. e not to look your be t. G t
ready to look and feel year younger -
becau e yo u de erve it!
Bob Sidell, along with many oth r
Hollywood celebritie . upports variou.
charitable cau., . Becau of hi pecial
int.ere tin kin care and hi upport for
Danny Thom t fund rai ing efforts. n1
contract with alifornta ~o metic.
n<l .,;i\'e. your km back wha.t 1t ne~d
to feel oft, smooth and_appealmg again,....___~ ..
tate that t lea ·t 1.00 for each n w
SilkSkin cu tomer. b don tt~d to t.
Jud Children Ho~pital. Though lax
law do not curr :.ntly permit your dona·
tion to he tax d ouctabl . Bob thank~
---YOU:for \·our con r·bu.tion nnd -.u~~1rl.
• ..
1
Doq '~ exp.ect s~rong re b0~nd from small bµsin~~s #
Glum foreca s ts raise doubt lf Walliam Dunkribtq.. profn.tor al Purdue Univenit), 16 petttftl ~na that now IS a aood time. to ClLpand, And Ounkctbcra fOfC'C'Sl 1h1t u.sri:~m=:: ~ 1:! fOr \be Nauoul Fcdaauon oflndtpendtnt Busanni. compttt<t Mth 1 rttord·hi&b 29 ~m:nt an the first Juturt m11ht fl~d 11 ca 1cr to"'~ P
eCODOffiY aS a Whole Will grow • AYHStftl the lal.6t *Tilltf\ ruponscs from mort quan~. . . , 'i!"poertNCOf!l'd.lltt~~~ .. of ,nvcntory b41ldin" l(ftC~ly
1 ~ • • than 2:000 NFIB nwmbds. Dunkclbera finds "the~ mona dctatls of tht' sun-ey: · con idc~1~ measure of confidence in the~immcd1atc
BJ JORN CUNNIFF _......_.._...
NEW YORK -maU busancsscs bnc l<>Mrect their
«0nonuc expcccauons aprn, ra1Stng doubts that the
economy as a whole 1s likely to expand at a substantial!)
11..rOl\l'tf rate next )car. ·
The rclati\CI) &)um indications come &om the lattst
swd) of small-bus1nes5 conditions and attutudes by
appears to ~.no bat•• for .. • strona ttbound an srowth in •Plans to incttatt total emplo)mena.in the )UT's future ofahc economy. was found in \be urve)'. .
the small..tMaJtnns sector. fi 1 .... ··-a. f4 nd · 1982 ' · I nina c.a""tal oulla"• B~t the results did·~• th;at a hiah rate of inflation ina quarur were"~ ~est ou Janee · •The number °r[,~~'tlt·;,1~ ~o~~1dercd ;n indictt~r
ts not lake}) to be a factor an the ammcdaate future. •A rtt<>rd·low 18 pt~nt of small bu$iftQ9CS in the d~nnafi~c nc~~!~ 1hc \hon term. continued 10 ckthne
TM survey found aJoomy sales prospects. In .sune)saadtheyplanpnceancrataovnthcncxtthrttto 0 con 1 enc~ r althouah nol harply.
confidence an the strenath of tbe economy. weakness irf • six months, lcadina Dunkelbcra to the conchuion thlt from the t_hir quartc '. st ratl"i paid in the third
hirina. plan rcl~ta~ to build . inventories.. and a founh~uartcr anftauon should measure onl) :? pcrcc-nt. ~While. avcrqed '~!ert they remained "very hlah en conunucd dtthnc 1n capital expenditures.. , ~ . . . quaner~ntinu~ to « t~e. . . bo w' fi Amona the sharpest chanan in the survey was a Some 1nd1cauons of UJ>'t'ard pntt preuutt ~m comp nson to ~nflatton, _discoura'!nl rro ina or dcci~~1ft1nthebusipcssopan ionoutlook.~tthonJy p1ckcd up, cs~Uy from ~ressaooat ~ices firm 1n\Cntoryorcapitalt~~p to~. '.
-..
E• Ille 2U2 -lll.12 Hut1cN1 Gr-T F Mii. II 00 11 SS Eadl 6' 1• NL 9onc1 r 1216 NL TFMO 11 OJ II S1 F ... 1111 NI. c..!11 llUIUI TFNC lllOl207 F•a.. 1.l2 NI. GW1fl r IST• NL TFVll. II Of 116'
F,..,.. "7S NL °"'"' r • n HI.. MuHV 10 l1 10.11 GNMA 'II.JS NI. GY!Sc r 10 '4 NL Mtllllef\ IU O NL
"Darty Nelly'•" . Gwl Sec lo.ll NI. a.'1C r 1211 NL MftC'IW'l 1t.. NL Grolftc ll.,. HI.. IQH 1220 1271 Mef'rll L'rflCll Gr.Co 11 " \tcl3 NY IWJ II " 11'7 ... 1c 11 n II a
OPEN FOR LUNCH & DINNER
Monday thru Friday
11 AM to 9 PM
YO
r TWA
FINO OUT HOW GOOD WE AEALL Y ARE . .
lllGHrS AJAIAll llOM ~ CQ/Nrl T'O IM -~~=---~~.
~ GOUJENSTATl AlllNS
. '
. ~
t '
. . .
• •
, ~
I •
-. L
I • --~
· Nobody. likes a lazy dollar.
So we'll off er a proposition.
weak. chronically out-
of-shape dollars to Ollf
sparkling new corporate
headquarters branch
in Irvine's Koll Center
and we'll really put them
Naturally, Lincoln's
newest office promises
Irvine more than fiscally
fit dollars.
You'll find our new Access
CD"· that earns
extremely
competitive
rates while still
allowing daily
access either
..:
You;ll find the convenience of
our Teller Yes™ 24 -hour~ATM,
photo I.D. cards and interest-
bearing Check Yes™ checking.
You'll find the safety of your
savings insured up to $100,000~
by the FSLIC.
And Friday, November 21,
in-person or you'll fintl healthy portions bf
I
I
t ·'
. '
. . .
Not to mention that
state-of-the-art MARCY
-·
.;-
rGlucky-bo--~=;:==;d
ies will take home with
them.
So please drop by
November 21, 10 a.m.
to 6 p.m., and say hello
to Lincoln's brand
new 25th ranch. ~-----------~ And bring those tired
dollars.
We've got incredibly
competitive rates on a variety
of savings instruments designed
to whip them into fine fiscal
form.
Afte~ all, you've spent years
working awfully hard for those
dollars of yours.
Isn't it about time they
returned the favor?
~~~=~c'=~ using our 24-food, fun and free gift drawings-~:!t~X::~"'• hour ATM. including ticket:s to the Orange LINCOLN ~~~cn~~mbuildlngln You'll find -. County Performing Arts Center's
our exclusive Jr. CD that finally upcomir-lg Br-oadway5eries-all -SAVING~'--
-----lets little savers 16 and under--day long at our Koll C-enter --OYER.sa381l1JONINASSETS
·'
earn adult rates. . Grand Opening. W~.MakeltF.asyTo.MakeMoney.
ALHAIUUlA IA1llBAJQt
(818) l&9 MU ' (818) &41-:.~103
AICAJID1' HIU.S CAftAIUU.O
(714) 9'11·4410 (~) ~OQOl
AIC•DIA DOimU ~~---~(&l&) 44!)·2Qlm. (21')~21-~
COIUHG SOON TO WOODLAND KJU.S.
f..SCONDU>O HUlET
(019) ~8100 (714) 65i·2~1
GLEMDilE . ff<>l.UWOOD
• (818) 24i'6306 • (213) 406·0211
Gli&Dt\ HJU.S H1mTl"GlON (818)363 l ~
(714) &41'1738 I
lcs and Irv nc • .
11.VUfE
(714) 654·4780
LAGUMA ff IU.S
(714) .586 4°'°
LAJlEWOOO :(2ll}630 1404
.. .
•t.05 AMGF.Lf.S
(213) c.:za 4131
PAMOllAIU CITY
(818) 894 QJQ4
ltoW"G HJLLS ESIAnS . (2131371. -,,n
SAMTAAMA (714)$47~771
SAMA l'l0"1CA
(215) 4'1·QQJI
SHEMAMOUS 1e1 •
SUMCllY
(714) C>'9-6601
TOJUlANCE
(213) .540 4222
TUSTIN
(714)730 0245
WEST LOS A"6£LES (lll) 4?8·0461
·-.
l
Stock prices close lo~
NEW YORK (AP) -~tock pnrM clo5Cd
lower today. as th~ market failed to hold on to 1ts recov~ry from 3n oix-niog setback attributed to the
insider trading scandal
The latest development came after Fnda\ ·\
dost. "hen the Secunues and fachangc Com-
m1ss1on announced that one ofth~mark~' be\t-
known arbitragers. Ivan F Boesk). had aarccd to
pay S 100 million to settle insider trading charges
Boesk) also agreed lo plead 1u1hy of a felon)'
count, v. hach cames a ix-nail) of up to the ycal"
and which would mull an has being barred from
the indumy for hfc
Tht' Dov. Jones 8\'Cr:lge of 30 andustn.als fell
13.07 to 1860 .S~
WHA T AMEX Orn , WHAT NYSE Orn
'--
NEW YORI( CAP! Nov 17
AMEX LEADERS I NYSE LEADER S
ME TALS Quons
--: NASDAQ SUMMARY
•
,_
me treated I ghtly
W SHING10 ( P)-las1han 1hc rrpon 111ucd Sunday by the
one 1n fi\e ron,•1ctcd v.huc<ollar Bwtau of J111uc:e Stau1ucs. cnminal~ 1~ ntcnccd to mort than a h found aha& IAOte than 80 pcr«nt
year an P!:lson, •he federal go\ern· o(Wh11e-<:Ol., Criminals ~nd little / mtnt 11)11n a nev. stud). or no ume behind ban.
In a sum:} of forr.cl')', counter· Mort tha'\ .4() ptrttnt of those
ettl{ll, fraud and embcaJement 1n con vacted~rtJivcnscn1encnoflcn
eisbt i&.alts containina more than a than a year and the ltud) dad not
thml or the nat1on'.s populatio n, the mcasurt the amount 'of ttmc the
IQVCTPment found 60)>Crccnt of the prisoners actually served. Actual Pf:OPI~ con,1cted of whnNollu prison time acnerally ls shorter than
•crimes ~ere scntenttd ioJa•l terms J the wntcnce impo~ bcciu$C of
However, only l 8 ptrccnt or thO$C .)'fact on ~uch IS ~ntence reduction.
convactt J "C'f'C 1ent to prison for dur to aOQd behavior.
more than 12 month accordans to In contra,t, violent offcnden re·
Jaj>anese.~American
WWII internment to be
review~.d by top court. , .. . . .
" WA HiNGTON (AP) -The Su· 'alleged -consti tutional v1ola11ons and
premt Court. 42 )ca~ after it con·. $Celcin& to have the government doncd the go,em~nt \mass deten-admu 1t fraudulently declared the
uon of Japane ·Amencan in World internment a "military necessity."
War 11 pnson camps, aarttd toda} to Both si~ appealed to the Supreme rc-cu mu'lc that ep1~e 1n Amcncan Court.
history. . • # In the wake of the JaP:inese attack ·
The court sa!d It will, consider thc on Peart Harbor. the. federal govern·
Reqan adm1n1 strauon s. attempt t~ men1 fo rc1bl) removed Japancsc-
lull a 1983 lawsun stemm1narr~m the Amencans and Japanese citizens ao~cmmcnt's ~akina 120.!J90 U.S hvjna. m Cahfom1a and parts of.
c1uzeo and res1dcniaJ1cns from their Ortaon. a$hio&lD!1 and Anzon,
homes an plac•na tliem--.n The Trom-tneil homes. !hcy"sptnt as Iona
camps. 1s four )rars in the internment But the coun took no acuon on a camps
separate appeal aimed at broadening uch action wa authorized by
the u1t's scope. President Franklin 0 . Roosevell at
A fcdmrl wp~ls coun ruled Jan the urarngofLt. Gen Jotin L DeWitt,
21 that the aovcrnment must acfend head or the Western Defense Com·
itself at trial against claims secl ina mand, who said Japane$C·Amencans
compensation for property lo scs \\Crt disloyal.
su ffe red by tho~ interned. Those In a letm. DtWm said. "The very
lo are ~ti mated in the billions of fact that no sabotaae has taken place
dolla rs. to date 1s a disturbing and confirming
But the appeals court dismi~sed 1nd1cat1on that such action wtll be
claim scckina monetary damages for taken ..
Residents protest jail ter-m-
given to shoplifter's slayer
8)' lilt Assoclatd Prt11
CARROLL TO\, Ga - A one-)ear Jail term given to a store clerk for
k1lhng a tren·afe shoplifter has outragrd much of this rural. consenauvc area.
spawning ~1111on dn"cs·and lene~ dcmand1n1 a lighter sentence. Donf\a ~
Lant) tcsuficd at hcrtnal tflat she aimed a gun out the dooro!thecon"emencc
store \\here he v.orkcd 1n Apnl. in1end1n1 onl~ to scare bo>• she thought v.crt
stealing beer. But the bullet htt Lamar Emof) Smith. l m the temple. killina
him instant!) Lane). 28, divorced and with a 10.)ear-old daughter, 1s free on
SS.000 bond tlrr b(ina con"1cted Oct 22 of involunt.af) manslaughter.
cc1vcd prison terms of more t~n a
~ear 39 pttCCnt of the um!r the 1tudy
found . Propcny cnme onendtn tt·
ceaved prtson &crm1 oflon~r than 12
month$ 1n 26 ptrttnt of the ca1n. Forty ptrcent of ron,1ctcd white·
collar cnm1nal1 wtre a,i"eo probation
or other non·pnton penahin. the
urvt) concluded.
·Another type of olTcnder, cnm1nal\
committin& property crimes such ti
buratary or car theft. were aiven
pro&ataon or other non.prison penat:
ties 1n 35 prrcent of the cate
The tud) tracked the d1 ~iuon
, TV L1s11NGS I
or nearly half a million. tale felon> arrnu 1n 198)t but dad not rover
whnc.collar cnmcs mvolv1na federal
laws .uch as pn~,.fiJUn,a. whK'h
seldom result 1n pnM>n tune for 1hotC:
ronvicted The Bureau of Justice
tallll1C$ i1 prepanna I IC~\C
report on fedtral wtutc-coltar etu'ne.
Attord1na to the staae study. 81
percent of thOle arrested for white·
collar felonie. wm l)f'Ot(Cuacd. com· ~ wnh 82 pe'IUnt for violent
cnme1, 86 percent for · property
cnmeund8'1 percent for public order
en mes.
--t;~tlfl~ prostitution targeted ln·~PIHlffhi--
RENe~ The future oflcpli.icd pronituuon in 'c\ada 1s 1n doubt and an
effort to outlav. 1t v.111 surface dunna the 19871...egislature. kc) state lcgislatOl"S'
agrtt ~sscmbh ~peaker-designate Joe Dinr and Senate MaJorit) Leader·
de 11nate Bill Raa&IO predicted brothel foes would introduce a bill . to end
Ne' ada 's d1s·um. uon as the onl> state 1n the nation with leph.7ed pros11tu11on.
Ekcausc the state ha\ oo law legalwna or bannma pr~tituuon statcw.1de. Ne' ada·~ 37 lepl rural brothels are allo't\<cd to operate under local opuon.
Brothels arc leg.al 1n 11 of the state's 17 .count1e tate law onl) sa)S that
brothels cannot operate 1n Clarl County Nev da's mo t populous county. or
wnhtn 400 yards Ma chu~h or school.
Actor among antl-nulce protesters held
MERCL R \ \.lc' -At least 60 ant1·nuclear acttnsts. includin& actor
Martin Sh«n \\trt' arre~tcd todii>.· an a demon tration at 1he nation's nuclear ftSliAi ~WAd' ~01• prolc51et5 oncD} dcla)ed buses c.arorn& v.ockcrs on10
.
Mo•t parents wouldn't plck baby's sez
NEW YORK -A boy or a girl'! If .\mencans could choose lhc SC'< of
babtC$. nurh th~.quaners v.ould refuse the opponurut) aod let nature take
tts course. aecord1ng to a Media Gcneral·.\~1atcd Press poll. Overall the
poll of 1 464 adult .\mcncans found strong resistance 10 choosma the SC'< of
b1b1c , acho1cc nO-.!. f)OS\lblc because ofa~vance in "te l tube" fen 1hzat1on.
A!kcd v. hat they thought about partnts bt1ng able to choose the SC\ of babies.
49 percent 10 the Media Gtncral·AP poll said 1t wa~ bad idea and 29 percent
said it \\l good I wrnty-two percent weren't o;urc. When askcd,~.'.lf you were
able to choo~ the 'le'< of a child. ~ould )OU choose a bo> or a a1rl ~7 percent
of the rc\J.)Ondrnts \31d 1he~ "'ould choo a bo~. J 6 percent stud a p rl. and 57
pe~nt l'lad no prelcrcnct' or "'ere unsure.
•6\it~U fl (;di; I la'triRJ:
•. ,... ----. _. ....... w PO -,, ____ ----A
"A big hong-ten, heod·rush
romp of o oood time.· OM._ ;.r.;.Q" •s
... -. .._----
......... I -
11 "" I ·--·-"""' . --"" ru • "' ..... .. .......
\
'
-~ IFm -** .. T.-ror T"*t (1980) Ben John..
IOI\, Jlmll LAI CW1lt. • ••.oao PVMtM> i~ eWOVE
... "Joe Kidd" (1972) Clnt £Mt.
LA MIRADA GATEWAY
~.111:.1:1111.U..::•:a:..::.:"_.~..,c:.1l<Nt m-•n ,..., '"' v...., v-
,,._ CU.YIU 'I
W.UAM MIHIT
CMll'*" Of A LUlll 000 flt ..... u ...... , ....
AKEW
l~"'"' '>ou•h
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10M CllUtM
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1. ,,_.Oil mAT ...
1. ..,, i.otta rs
ftlOM MVOt• ...
a.~,.
AUINI ...
TMI PLY"
ORANGE ;:u.::::
TAl-f'A.Nlllf ,,,. .......... , ....
Of'-. "'°" ..... "Stal ,.. I'll M\IV'f---,,._IMQ ncal1I oe. WI IM.T
OOUT ITUIO ~Mlt ..... ........,.,.. CllutN
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fOM~
TOP OUN '"' ........... ........
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IWI t.U l 1» 7 .... 1.lt
OOUT l"f'lllO ............. ~
lntmt Of OOlD
QUllT COOl
'~
luHABRA ....
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eCIUT l~MA M0eM CIOCOOIU IMllll ,.,'I , .. a.» .... , ... ""
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SOUL MAN ..,.111 .... ........... , ....
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PIMTMIOfMAllBf"'lat . .... ~ .... ..., ...
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----~ICMfACltll
Judge won't block Bundy execution ~
T t.:LAHA £!, Fla. (AP)~ A J\ld;r loday rejec1ed tKoria to Tues41> '"1 K"Jieduled eucuuoa ofTllcodore llobim Buady, ldaeduJed aodil.aa the tlectnc cbair ror1be 1978 slayiaa oh ll·mr-old 11rt
Bundy OllCt wa1 wanted bytblF'll lor~onUllua ......,._.. .,_.
oryouna women. mostly an the ,_......._
II was lhe MCOnd lune Jft .. dlM a MK :that Cuaut J1141t Walle»
Jo,P!•na. who prcaidcd o"' er Bundf1 orillnel trial,~ 10 U11 IWtM0111m
tet for 1 a.m. at Florida lite Pmon near tarke.
At&orM)s '°' Jund>, 39, were~ &o take:'thear appe&l IO lbe 1'orWI Supreme CoUn tC>CUy. •
Bundy"' COftV1ctcd Ind .scnttnced IO ~th ln 1980 '"' 1M Feb:'· • ,,. abducuoq..rapundmurdtroft2.year-oldKimbcrl)·~oll..akeCil)'. bWM
ha ftn& e.uocutton warraru for ber Jll)'lftl. • •
·But he hH twa.ce outl.i'cd death warrants for the bnnal murdctl~IWO
soront) $lltefl 1n Tallah tee 1n 1978. Two otber Chi~ ~Aen _..heel
&n the son>nt) houte and another woman who Ji cd rarb) were .erioull)' • 1nJurtd:Jn 1nack1 by Bund).
aTONla" tPOI
EXCU JStVf lHOA0£M!NT •oo. 100. ~oo
·~~ "'ROUND MmMGHT"'
100. tao(A)
••M)UL MAN" (P0·13l TOM CRUtSE
C THOMAS HOWa.L "TOP QUN" (PO) e;.00. a.oo: 10 oo 6.30• 1 40• , 45· '2. 00 TUES & WED 1140 TUU & Wf.O
OlfCW"SCHEJ'O'ERi -1--•-JAM-ES--:-C~LA,,...-.VE~l'"'.'L~'S~•""""'
"52 PICK·UP-' (Rl "TAJ PAM" (Al
7 30. t 30 7 00 • so
12 00 TUES & WED $ 1 00 TUES & wm
•MELA!'i11E GRIFFITH• .C '™<>MAI HOWELL•
"tc>lt1E'nM WIJ>" CR> ••SOUL MAN,. (P0131
7 00 •• 15 30 10 25 12 00 TUES & WED I 15· t ' . 11 00 TUES & WED
.. JUMP1N' JACK" (RI -ROY SCHE.IOE"•
4 30. 10 10 -K-•-"WIED TO KLL" IA) "52 ~ -vr IRJ 145 .• 00. ,0 00 .. 30 . 12.00 ruu a wm 11 oo tuu a YtED~
.. CHU.OREN Of
A LE81ER 000,. IR>
WILLIAM HURT
7 30. t 4S
•JAMES CL.AVf\.L'S•
"TAI P4N" (RJ
4 TRACK DOLBY STEREO
7 15, 11 45
11JUMPIN' JACK" !RI
1100. 1000
800
~OUNTAIN VAtlfV
839 1 soo
"MA "°"IA) eoo. 1000
"IT AND av ME" (RI
I 15 $100 TUES & WED
-SOIETMltG ft.D" (Al I 30
''CUii PARADISE" !PO 131
135 10 25
1100 fUES & WED
UNIVER5TIV
R5l8811
~
•MfLANIE GRlfflTH•
"IOll1iETHltG WLD" '"' 7:1S, t .30
12.00 TUES & wtD
"THE COLOR Of '90NEY" (A)
5 15 730 t4S S2 00 TUES & WED
·~Wl.D"IR>
12 1S, 4 15 I 15
"ONE CWY ll-17Er
(PO) 2 IS I 25. 10 1S
.. CHLO..INOF
A LEINR 000" (RJ
12: 10, 2 30. 4 4&, 7 00, UIO
. 1 00 TUES " war
DUMOI!'" (P0-131
1·1.5. 3.30, 5 4& 1-00, 10"00
~ .• : . ~ c • • ;
HUNTING TON TWIN
8-l8 0J88
•AOY SCHE.lDEA•
""52 PICK-UP" (RI
7 15 • 30
11 00 TUES & WED
•C THOMAS HOWELL•
"IOUL MAN" (PG131
.~:·rt~ i-cJ-=.D·
f\.11 M.l. IUTI ---~
"ITAMD l'f _.CAI
U0, 10'05
• ~OUQM QU'YI" (PO)
I 15 •
·~AHH 1 1'1 ',\ '•
• '' ,I •
PAUL HOGAH II
'CftOCODlll DUMOll"
(PQ·•3)
e 1s. 1 30. 10 20
HO 8AMAIH PRICE
C THOMAS HOWELL uaouL MAN" IPG-131 e oo. 1 «>. to oo
Sl 00 TUES l WED
TOM CAlftSE
"TOP OUN" (PO)
1-00,. 15
$1 00 TUES 4 WED
"TAJ PAN" (RI
71S.94$
12 00 TUES & WED
WESTBROOIC.
0) lO l-ll).
... Wlft AT W DllWT
TIU-Tm Ml sun u•
"QUIET COOL" (R)
• 20 10 10
ll1flE> TO KU• IA>
I 30
"TOP OUN" (POI
1·10
"OUNO HO" (PG 131 e oo. 1o·os
W')C•DBRID' ~r
'i'i' OfiC,-,
"NGOV SUE
OT MA.MttED" tP0-131
t 00 I 1! 10 10 $1 00 TV£S & Wt0
ITMITI Of QO&.Dll
1 00 100.H&I~
U OOTUU&WID
. . . ..
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·.
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r..-y. Non•btr II
AlllES (Ma_~h 21-AP.ril 19)· Forces
\hat had been scauettd will now fall into ~ place. Authonuc -back your position.
ph1lo){)phv. pintua_I v lue), communication, po s1blc Jburney ~1 n1h<.i'lnt ANSWERS TO W£EKLY BJUDGE QUIZ
dom Ct d1u 1mcttli$fe&tutcd.Monc)qu~tiona.nbc am1 bl} ulod~in-~-----..,...-
You actually arc in "driver's scat." You'll $youEy· pm rccoanitton •nd ~ finished wi th ft
unntcdsary obligallf n. . .
TAURUS (Apn 20-Ma> 20): You 0
locate anicle thal had been lo'lt, missing MARI
or stolen. Empl\asis on creative hobbies. •••••••••••• personal possession ... ab1hty to increase
ancomc. What ap~artd to "slip away" is back in, your court. l..co figure'I
prominently.
GEMINl (May 21-June 20): Jn1u1tton nngs true. )Ou'll ~at nght place.
you could win major point and appro"·al of "powerrut people" Scenano
h1ghl1J)lts excitement, dt~overy. romance. You are being pulltd 1n two
dtrcctJons. • • • CANCER (June 21.Jul> 22) What h d been sourccofapprchcns1on could
become cause forctlebnatton. E\cnts.. c1rcumstane'ts tum 1n )Our favor. \crent
communicauon, appearance. body unage. ch.ance for travel Gemini figure
promineotly. · · ·
, LEO (July 23-A~ 22): Lunar,numcr1carcyclcs h1ghhsfttfnend . hope.
. WtShe , pttulat!On, fl1rtat10n that COUid become "meantngfUJ.': \ OU'lt tum In
outstanding performance. you'll receive tempting offer as result
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): U11hze ab1lit}' to anal~e character. avoid snap
decision . Focus on dealing: with those in pos1t1ons ot authority. lnd1v1dual
close to you has chanae of hcan. Look be>ond the tmmediate. make long
distance call. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 : Go slow. meditate, play wa1unggame. Focus on -·
)Our favor ' Q.1-Nettht'r vulntrable. a" South
CORPIO (Oct 23-Nov. 21 ); Define teml •. ste others in ~ah\llc hiJlt. you hold.
Somconc.'makespromisewh1ch i~d1fficultto fu fill. Be aware. lcr&, pr01c tself •XQ83 Q7l ¢AK10763 •5
in close quancrs. )nd1v1duet close to you u sincere but could be mi informed. t he biddlns h•
· SAGITf ARllJS (Nov. 22-0ec. 2 t ): SccnariQ hiahliahts lepl term • So'1th W.-at partnc~hip • cooperative efl'orts, mDrn.al statu~ You'll have . added 0
proct.>ed<>d
North Ea1t
2 Q Pa.111 re pon ib1ht)' and will be asked to meet specific deadline. Payments. royalues 1 2 • arc in\.olvcd. . .1
CAPl\ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. l 9): You'll fini h prOJCCl. )Ou·11 be capable What do you bid now?
now of reachufg beyo9d previous expectaUOM More people arc d..-wn to )OU, A.-Purtn~r hllSll good hand to bid
Sttk1ng au1dn.nce. counsel. approval. Don•t nealcct your own need frtt•ly at the t.wo-levcl In a '>Ull
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2~Feb. 18): Pcnons who were tnd1flerent could now higher than the on With which
become enthusiasnc -sqmc may even profe love You'll mo~c new t.an, you opened the biddJng ThNtfon•
and )OU will get to he3n of matters. Ph)' 1cal attraction 1 "cry much part or J.here is no reason tor you not wde·
scenano. " scntx-your · hand nawrally
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):1f'aath an family member will be re tored. Rebidding your diamonds ean wwt • unty 1s enhanced. long-ranac pro pects come into harp. clear focu Gain
indicated through llnOn.}\odox P.r~ure!.. Cancer. Aquanus pla}' paramount Bid two spade~
role • • •
lF NOVEMBER.. JI IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you arc d)'Jlam1c. cre3t1vc,
1mpulsl\c, could have unusual mark on head or face You are headstrona.
dtawn to the arts.. fascinated also b} lo)" and medicine. You arc intenst.
passionate. 5cnt1mental and seldom do anythma in halfway manner. Ar1h.
Libra play 1mponant roles in your hfe. You survived .. crisis .. this past
ptember. lt could now be smooth sailing. You'll meet creative md1v1dual in
No' ember who has )Our best interests at hent. August 1s your "big month" of 1987 •
Q.2-Both vuln<'rable, ns South
you hold:•
•JC95 • 7 <>J8763 . •KJ6
.The biddwg has proc eded.
North Ea.at South WHt
1 Q Obie ?
What action do you takt>''
" Lending to kids-borrowing trouble
A.-You are on the borderline of a
redouble However. thut action
suggests that you might want to
double the opponent'! when the
auction gets back lo you. and thsl
is hot really the~ase with your bal-
anced hand. You can describe your
hand better by b1ddtn1' one no
trump now.
What ~arcnt has not heard the term .. borrow • ., It 1 usually preceded b>
"Can I" and follo~ed b) even thing
you o"'n.
To''borrow"asparent ~no"' 1t 1sa
temporar) cond111on wh ere )OU ob-
tain or rect1ve a loan of something
w1th the promise of returning 11 or its equl\ a lent
E111
Bo11EC1
To a child ... borro"'" 1s the first stage of ownership. I ha\t· Sttn m y This 1<; not 10 say things arc never
• r. h I cd retumcd. It 1s to say when }OU pre tennis racr..ct go irom a e ter press for their return. they are ne"er quite on the top Jlelf of my closet to extra the same as when you loaned them.
tape on the &"P and nakednc son a lied I k tennis coun in the ram all night Our sleeping bags never sme 1 e p1na before we loaned them to our
To loan a blouse to your daughter is kids. The blankets we loaned them to
to say goodbye to your blouse and "'rap their furniture wben the>
, your daughter. To have your son moved looked like place mats when
.. borrow" an ice chest for an ou11ng IS· the> came back .... which happens
to hve the rest of}"our hfe without an ·when }"OU put wool into hot water in
ice chest. the washer.
Sometimes they act very defensive rust.
about 1t. When our son returned our Sometimes. I sec them standing tn
camera. it.made a gntty noise every the middle of the house, their eyes
tame 1t ad~anced He said. "You dllncing. their hps moist with exc1te-
should be tickled to death at advances. ment contemplating what to borrow
If I had dropped tt on the payment ne\t. lt 1s a look usually reserved for a
instead of in sand. 1t wouldn't lottery winner
advance at all •· Of course. the fav onte Item to
Id h bo ed "borrow" as )Our car W1thin 15 I had one chi w 0 rrov. a seconds after they climb into ll, the piece ofluggagcand when he returned d h d ed h it snarled.-f ·hope you're satisfied. mirror an t e seat are a JUSt • t e
The lock almost gave way on the radio can be heard by flym' aircraft.
carousel. This 1s a ·piece or,· unk. You and something slu~hy ts-sliding down the seat covers. It Wlll not be returned should get nd of it. The zipper gets to }OU unt1l 1t needs gas. 011. tune-up.
stud.. and the h.andle is ready to come battery. tares or new plates.
ofT" For a minute, l'tbought he was ~ The other day one of our t...1ds said.
going to ask for his money back. "C'an I borrow some firewood for a
They borrow cake pans to dram the cam pout?"
011from 1he1r cars. bread knives to cut 8) our defin1t1on firewood ts
ropes in half. beach towel$ to soak up something that can't be borrowed
the overflow from a stopped-up toilet because 1t can't be returned. By their
and tools to conduct experiments 1n defin1t1on. anything 1s poss1ble.
. .
Mammogram may hurt, but it's worth it
DEAR ANN LANDER . l read the
letter from "N.Y V1c11m" the morn-
ing after I. too. had a mammogram.
and I agree that the pain "-11'>
• cxc~c1atmg. I would rather risk
canter than go through that eJC-
perience again. -ORLA NDO. FLA.
DEAR OR; Tlwlkl for yoar com·
meat. Here'• aaother one from Lin·
cohl, Neb.
AllN
WDEIS
And now a word from Ann LaDGen:
I have read hundreds of letten from
women on tbJ1 aabject and some said
they almost pa11ed ool from tlae pal.D.
Otben said lt was 11lpUy ucom·
fortable for jUlt a few m1111tes. My
Cblcago eorre1pondent1, wh.o domJ·
uted tbe mail, said llle mammo-
gram• tlaey It.ad taken at Ute Portes
Caneer Center at 33 West Huron were
PAINLESS. Maybe the technicians at
Porlea ought to open a training
school.
Dr. Keltb Berodtson, medical di·
rector of the center, said Ute time of
tbe month could be a. factor. Women
with flbrou bru1t1 should not have
mammograplly just before Uaelr
menstrual periods. Bat to say, "No
more mammograms," because of a
bad experience with an incompetent
tecbnielan Is sheer la.Dacy. losl1t on
another technician and go back In a
year. You owe It to yourself and your
famlly.
Q.3-As South, vulnerable. you
hold·
+K73 QK942 -.>74 •9876
The bidding has proct•eded
North Ea t. South WHt
1 • 1 + Pus 2 +
3 0 Pus '!
What do you bid now'!
A.-OeRpite I he fact you m11(hl
have nothing, partner has forct>d
you to bid... pos ibly at thf' four·
level. Therefore, he muqt oo vt>ry
powerful and now a four-club preof
ere nee by you doesn't comt> close Io
expressing the value of your hand
Since you can't be sure of 'the
worth of your major-suit kings tn a
club contract, we prefer a bid of
three no trump to _five club
Q.4-East-West vulnerable a ..
South you hold
+83 V'K107 0 Ql0762 •A93
The bidding has procet>ded
North Eut South Wett
· l V' 2 0 Dble PaH
2 + Pua ?
What acuon do you take?
A.--By pulling your penalty dou·
ble of two diamonds, partner has
shown either a weak, di tribut1on·
al hand un!u1ted for defense, or a
powerful hand where he 1s afraid
the penalty won't compcn ate for'
what you might bt> able co make
CHARLES
GOREN
No matter. wh-ich hand he hekb.
you hould show your SUJ>RQl't for
h ., '>Ult by raising to three hearts,
or even four
Q.1>-lloth vulnerable. as Soulh
you hold
+J73 • 7 K8762 OQ73 H6
The bidding ha~ proceeded.
W.-st North f:ul South ·
I 9 · Dble Pus 7
What action do you take? .
A.-IC 1 not always an advantage
to have great length In tht"suil In
which the enf'my has opened. Here,
you ha\.l' nC'lther the str~ngth nor
the !tllll quahty to 1 convert
partner' takrout double to penal·
tie'> Since partner asked you to bid
your longe l suit, obhge by bidding
one ·,pade-when you have two
u1ts of equal len1tth. make the
cheaper bid
~
Q.6-As South, vulnerable, you
hold
+95 v AQ983 .,,Q10• •1e2
The bidding has proce~ed·
North East So\ltb Weat
1 NT Pu ?
What do you bid now?
A.-You do not have quite enough
to forrt> to game, so you have to de--
vise an 1nvitRlional sequence. Start
by rnqulnng whether partner has a
four-rard ml\.)or by bidding two
dub, If partner denies a major by
bidding two diamonds, you hav~ an
easy bid of two hearts; if he bids
two pades. you can complete the
mv1tat1on by bidding two no
trump, and If you are lucky enough
to hear ham bid hearts, you can
raise to three to ask hlfl\ to go on to
game tr he has a maximum no
trump opening.
Por lnformatlon aboot Charle•
Goren'• ·new newaletter for
bridge playen, write Goren
Bridge Letter, P.O. Box '421, ()t.
lando; Fla. 32802 .... 426.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your
cancer surgeon consultant from How-
ard Un1vers1ty made me funous. He
said there would be "!><>me d1scom-
fon"· dunng the breast e\am1nat1on
w1Lh the new equipment. but the
clearer X-rays and lower dosages of
rad1auon were well worth It Oh
really? You can be sure a male
tn\.Cnted that d1abohcal machine f'd
like to see the same thing used on men
for earl" detection of tcshcular
cancer .• -STILL HURTING
THREE DAYS LATER
DEAR HURTING: You weren't the
only woma.n who suggested that form
or retribution.
TllAT OAILT
'UUlll
WOID
GAMI TODAY'S
GHOllJJ ,,~
----------------------~~~--
Group W Cable
presents ...
SPEAK UP NEWPORT!
NOV. 18th 7:30 pm to 9:00 pm
also on NOV. 24th
eorronge elters of the
lour scrombled words b.-
low to form four simple wO!'ds
& PR NT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
CABLE
714/842-3260
Group Discussion on Measrue A
901 W 18th Street Newport Beech
t) UNSC RAMBlE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER
. .
'BARGAINS I
GOBBLE UR THE SAYINGS!!
HORNS-0-PLENTY GIFT ITEMS
HONEY COMB TURKEYS CARDS
HONEY COMB PUMPKINS AND MUCH
TABlf ENSEMBLES MOREii
INVITATIONS
. .
4 s
I I I I I 1
ACROSS
1 Of a city
6 Warning
10 "On your
way•'
14 Began
15 -morgana
mirage
16 Bovine Sp
17 Mrs Reagan
18 Patr10i
20 H1lar1ty
21 4 qlS
22 10-percent-.r
23 Holiday song
25 Deflects
27 Ovck wall<
30 Dai·~tlest
31 Get along
32 Stay
suspended
33 Nurih of Kan
36 Wearisome
J7 Foe a 100!
3\ Party
39 Gumshoe
40 Halet,'s
abduct~
41 -Rica
42 Salem's state
44 Gathered
45 Expunged
47 A grass
48 Icon
49 Steep
SO Beige
r;4 Electlc>•
resultS
57 • ape11•y
58 H1.rrow I
toe
S9 Edison name
60 r.me off
61 Sµanesh artllt
62 Ll~ar,IM
61 6urderao
DOWN
t Aulc> Syne
2 Exam type
J Ice cream
lr .. al
•Went up
6 Rumanian
coin
& Garbage
7 Emporium
8 Atrhne abbr
9 ~•npeck
tOPhases
I i Furtiveness 12 Kin of Jan t
13 Ctvil wrongs
19 Fluuer
11 Mild oath
24 Grand
Opry
25 Aria a1ngers
26 Refrlge!anr
PREVIOUS PUZZlE SOL VtO
27 Army gal
28 Soll prel
20 Coffeepo1
30 Out
32 Judean long
34 Small aufl
35 Draw a -on
37 Blow up
38 Nuflured
40 S1rongb0x"
4 1 RCMP's land
43 College
olltclal
44 Rendez-
voused
45 low haunts
48 Overact
47 Greek B's
49 "Please
repty'
51 Jagg41<1 hill
52 Rt1apaod1te
53 Kind of auto
55 Vehicle
56 -·Khan
57 Beverage
11 12 13
..
...
... .
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
o--·---..
l/·f1 >'1~
"I don't mind the dog food, the shots. the
vet's fees. but these taxi rides ... !"
PEANUTS
WE START OUR MIKE
IN EXACTLV ONE HOUR
GARFIELD
TUMBLEWEEDS
I 5066EST VOU 6ET
VOUR 6EAR T06ETHER
Rl6MT NOW
M'I PEOPl.~ HAV~l\J1" 1...AIV' A
MASSACRE: ON VOOR F'E:OPl..E: U\J~R FOR1Y-SEl/t:N V'A~.
R081t 18 ROSE
. ,
BIG .GBORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) llLOOll COUJfTY
• by Charles M. Schutz
A.NV REMEM&Eft, AU.
WE RE TAKIM6 W~ 05
ARE M NECESSITIES
OF LIFE!
..
by Jim Davis ·
-~-AlllllY .... • .....
FOR BE'l'TER OR FOR WORSE
SHOE
JUDGE PARKER
l>JflT'" ~ yoo ~
1b IHIS DecJSION '?
WOULO YOU M INO TAKIN6
ME TO see HIM, SAM? 010
YOU TAl.K TO THE OOClORS?
Wll .. L. HI! eE
AU. Rl(;HT?
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
DOONESBURY
•
by Lynn Johnston
by Tom Batiuk
by Garry Trudeau
'
J
. ' ' • f
i • I • t I •
I
f
Novof e
of confidence ~--~
for. Ezell pl~n
Howard Ezell, the man in charge of controlling
immigration in the West, has now put himselfin charge
of'"Controlling the.electoral process. •
Ezell, the Western regional c~mi:nissioner. bf t~e
U.S. Immigration and Naturahzat1on Service, .1s
worried that as fl'}~ny as20 percent of the votes cast m
this montb•s s~wide election belonged to illegal
• immigrants. ,
Based on the facts available, i\ seems more prudent
to worry that only 58 percent of the state's registered
voters bothered to go to the polls Nov. 3.
That was the lowest turnout in any California
election in which a governor was_ on the ballot since·
1942.
State officials ought to be P-Qndering methods of
increasing the number of registered voters and then
persuading them to visit the polling place on Election
Day rather than discouraging them. .
In Los Angeles County, for example( officials are
considering offering rewards to those who vote. One
pro~sal would give every voter who cast a ballot a
holiday on the Friday after Election Day. It's probably
not workable but it indicates the importance placed on
participation. 7
Citizen parlicipation is vital to a de~ocratic form
of government. . And yet, armed With tew facts and lesser logic, Ezell
is shouting from his soapbox that perso.ns illegally in our
country are affecting election outcome§.
Without being able to document his wild.:eyed
claims. Ezell calls for the abolition of mail-in
registration. ·
Calling mail-in registration .. an absolute travesty"
because it does not require proof of U.S. citizenship,
Ezell wants to junk a system that was instituted in 1976
to encourage increased voter participation.
Before that, a person wanting to register has to
appear before a representative of the local registrar's
office. .
What Ezell declined to mention in his panic
proposal is that even before mail-in registration was
1ml>lemented, a voter didn'~-need to prove citizenship to
rcglster to vote.
Ezell seems more comfortable with emotionalism
than reason, a~ he tries to capitalize on the hysteria
created by such proclamations as an invasion of illegals.
Let's stick to the facts.
Orange County Registrar of Voters Al Olson
doesn't believe there arc widespread abuses in voting. In
fact, Olson iJOinted out that persons in the country
illegally go tb great lengths to avoid the system. They
don't want their names or addresses on official
government forms that would eventually lead to their
discov.ery and deportment.
A spokesman for the Secretary of State March Fong
Eu, whose office is constitutionally charged with
overseeing elections, also discounted election abuses by
r.---:1t-~'tttettat-t'mm igrantS: Only-a-few-eases of i11egals-cas.tn
bal ots have been uncovered.
• Still, the system can be improved. But it needn't be
dismantled.._Lcave toe concept of mail-in registration
alone but instruct registrars and the Secretary of State's
office to scrutinize voter rcg!stration lists to verify
citizenship. Impose penalties for Offenders, especially
those who register illegals. That would discourage
overzealous recruiters, especially those of both politic;al
parties.
In this age of computer wizardry, it would seem a
simple task to check voters' veracity. That would be a
more responsible course of action than dumping an
effective system -certainly more responsible than
EzeJl's handling of the subject.
Op1n1onscxprtsscd an th1sspacurcthoseofthc Daily Pilot Othrrvicws
ex pre scd on this paJc art th~ ofthc1r authors and artuts. Radt'rcommcnt
1s invited. The Deily Pilot. P.O. Box I S60. Costa Mes.a. 92626. Phone 6"41-6086.
TODAY IN HISTORY
By Tbe Anodaied PrHs
Today is Mondaf. Nov. 17th. the
321 st day of I 986. here arc 44 days
left in the year.
Today's h1ghhght in h1s1ory
On Nov. 11. 1800. Congress held i1s
first session in Wash ington 1n the
partta.lly completed Capitol. ·
On this date·
In I 558. Eli zabeth I ascended the
Enahsh th rone upon 1hc death of
Queen Mary
In 1869. the uc1 Canal opened in
Egypt. hnkm& the Mediterranean and
lhc Red seas.
In 191 7, sculptor Au au tc Rodin
died.
• In 1925, actor Rock Hudson was
bOm in Winnetka. IU. .
' In l 934 Lyndon Bame Johnson
married aaudta Alta Taylor. better
known as Lad)' Bird
In 19'48. Bntam's House of Com· mona voted to nauonahzc 1hc COUD·
try's •tetl industry
In 1968. outraacd footooll fan f1oodcd NBC switchboard af\cr the
,nttwdtk cut away fr. m t fi~I
minutes of a game between the New
York Jets and the Oakland Raiders to
begin a TV ad'1ptat1on of "Hcid1 .. on
schedule. Viewers were prevented
fro m seeing Oakland come from
behind to beat the Jets 43·32.
In 1970, the Soviet Union landed
an unmanne,Lrcmotc-conttollcd. ve-
hicle on the moon, Lunokhod J.
In 1973, Prcs1dent Richard M.
Nixon told Associated Press man-
aging editors meeting in Orlando,
Aa .. that "People have aot to know
whether or not their President is a
crook. WelJ, I'm not a crook."
• In 1980, Pres1dent-elcct Ronald
Rcqan arrived in Washinaion for hi
first visit to the nation's ~pital since
his November victory.
In 1984, lhousands of moume"
packed a memonal service in Loma
Linda, Calif., for Baby Fie, the infant
who hvcd for almost three weeks wuh
the transpJanted hcan of a baboon.
Ten _>cars ago Prcs1dent-elcct
Jamm) Carter met with conart s1onal leadc~ in Lo'cJoy. Ga , for three
hours.. -~--
~,....,
C4ty fdtt«
T99 a.Ill Mewl Editor
cni111-...
'""' ldllor .............
:r_, ...
!cMor
, ...... ~a...
ClfQllellon Oir9CIOt ......... .,
~lllnO Olrel;tor
c::C.,~or
~OlnlctOt
... ,..... c......
DAN
WALTERS
•
ACR MENTO -The v.~rd
" herifr' Jure a number of 1m-
lltl in OIJf mu\<!\. The sfiliitr o( Nottangha.m. to fans
of Robin HoOd. ~as the evil. repress-
ive agent of'Plincc John.
her1fT:, both good and evil. were
staple characters in the countless
hundreds uf Western mo\11C$ and
televis1orrshowss
And there are the modem. rt.al life
shcnfTs who arc the elected chiefs of
Don't break t'h·ei law~ 8; ia;.~J~~~1~~i~c.~~to~~~asweit as other states, local shenffs have ~n bulwark of poht1ca1 stabilit)'. -h. h t th t • k t ~~~~en~ fo~"~e;~r~nJ" J!': Yea t at S e I " e mo,caintotheclectcdposauonwhcn
'
.
" ..,. it fall• 'a~nt1 oftm 'inuaOyjnhctjt·
ing me job fro1P bas prcdcct910r.
1t hasn't.~ unusual few Cab-
There's curre nt!)' a great beating of
the chest and gnash1Ag of the teeth
goinaon at )our local Highway Patrol
office. and 1t'~ bein~ ~ by t c
release of a video tape called "How to
beat a peed1ng ticket."
The tape sells for $14. 95 and
according to the producers. 1s de·
signed to "inform citizens of their
nghts and responsibilities with regard
to our traflic system."
Bull.
If that "'ere the case. 11 would be
cnutled "Your rights a nd
responsibihttes with regard to our
traffic ystem" instead of "How to
beat a speeding ticket."
In tt~ simplest form. this 1s a
scheme to charge you $15 and then
tell you all of the httlc tn~and-outs
that ma) - or may not -save you
from having to pay a fine for a traffic
v1olauon.
There arc. of course. many wa)'s
already in e~1stence that may prevent
you from having to dig deeply into
your pocket to reimburse the traffic
courts. but my cxpenencc is that only
one of them actually costs you
nothing. •
Don't break the traffi c laws.
If you do get nailed it's going to cost
you. oo matter what you do. Even if
you're innocent.
whatever that is. plus an envelope
and a stamp. plus -1f )ou•vc done
this many tunes before - a possible
increase 1n )our insurance rates.
If you decide to fiaht the ucket, &Ct
out your calculator because )OU
probably.on 't be able to do the math
in your head. Call the courts and tell
them that )OU want to fight the ticket.
You'll spend three to four hours (S 15
to $20) in coun, and be given the
chance to either plead not guilty and
get a court date, or you'll (depending
on your traffic record) be given the
chanc~ go to traffic school.
Ltt~y that your ticket was for
crossing the double yellow in10 or out
of the freeway commuter lane. That'
$52. and the procc ha already cost
)'OU S21.25
If )OU go to traffic school. 1ftl cost
)OU another $40, in cash this lime.
plus I 6 hours at your $5 per hour,
which totals up to 5 I 4 I 25 in ca~h and
houri) wll4c
But thats OK. You beat the ticket.
If )OU go to court. yo u'll be gJvcn
the opportunity to explain to the
Judge e'actl)' how 11 wa that the poor,
m1sgu1ded officer only THOUGHT
that he saw you cros 1ng that )ellow
hnc, and that you really didn't do 11.
The judge has a couple of opuons.
lfhe feels that you're telling the truth,
he may d1smiS$ the ticket. in which
case it ha$ only cost you about $40-
$50 in time.
--~--~------!" ___ ... fomia ~he~,pend decades 1n the
positions and become powerful local
political fiJUf'CS in the process.
'
Bill
Hum
tile tu(l $52. That's S92 to S l02
He also, by the way, has the option
of fining you any amount th.at he
detms appropriate up to a set amount
that may be more than the onginat
$52. If you bought "How to beat a
speeding ticket'' add another S 15.
I sus~ 1hat 1f this video tape
becom~ popular. the poltcc will be
able to rec<>jntze owners of the tape
by the regimented way in which lhey
react to being stopped, just as }Ou can
~ogo1ze an. expcnenced bnck hl)'er
b)' the wa) he la)'s bnck. The cop will
probably say to h1mself .. Hmmmm.
This gur has· How to beat a speeding
ticket' • and start to wnte no matter
what you say. or the degree of )Our
eloquence tn sa)ing 11.
TheJudge will recognize the video
t.ape owner as well, and react the c;a me
way.
As l see it. theft' arc two wa)'s to
keep ~our costs at a minimum. The
first 1s simple. the Stt<>nd pretty
radical.
• ~ethma. however, seems to be
disturbtrtg that bueohe-sHuat1on. ~
As never before in the state's
h1 tory. local ~henffs have found
themsch e on the political hot scat,
facinaanJ') e1t1zcns, rd>clh<?usdcpu-
ucs cnucal &rand Junes and
muckrakin&, neM coverage.
R~ponse fl.me to cnme repon.s,
'allegauons of favoritism andor 1n·
competence in the handling of crimi-
nal c . pe™>nal ·misconduct lllld
playing polattcs in tbe disbursement
of uch goodies as concealed weapons
permits arc among the pankular
matters that have caused sheriffs
much discomfiturt oflafc. And they
have not been isolated incidents. The
same sorts of things arc popping up
throuahout the state -and the
results arc being felt the polls.
In this )ear's elections. 57 of the SS
county shcnff s positions were up
( n Frani"iCO elcets its sheriff next
)Car) and when the du t bad settJed,
onl) 36 of the incumbents were ~
elected -including one dead man,
San Mateo County's Branden
Maguire
Your time Is worth something. so
let's award you a wage of SS per hour.
If your actual wage is higher than that,
multiply appropriately, You_sec the
~iiht·•n~f.A!&F ¥1ew ~r. and
the time clock starts. The cop pulls
you over and starts to write a ticket. If
the process takes 15 minutes. that's SI .25 that it's cost you already. That's
15 minute at $5 per hour.
He may decide lhat th ere 11re
extent1at1nft ciicu111s1a11ccs, i11 W'trtth case he wi find you guilty but give
you a reduced fi"e. perhaps $25. In
this case 11 costs you $65-$75 in cash
and hourly wage.
First, if ¥Ou get a ticket and you
do11e the c1 nut, you know It l'aylb~
ticket
Twet'e shenffs rcured rather than
sttk rc-clcct1on, including some
whose political position had been
damaged l?Y local controversies, and
nine sheriffs were turned out of office
bJ voters. lnnofmlf~ITil1' ...... ,-.trln"1""""'1"--------+m
Second, and this is admittedly
e>.tremely radical. don't break th e
traffic la\lo's.
enormou numben of ousters and by
the hi~toncal standards of sheriffs, it's
somewhat stunnlJ'.&.
He may al o decide that )ou'rc
lyini through your teeth and fine vo u
Coloma/st BJ/I Harvey
l/i111ti111fOa Bucli.
The spccificsoT.tachcased1ffer, but
JJvcs Ill 10 count) after county -all in
If you pa~ the fine. you·r_c oJll Norm-em Cahfom1a, mc1dc_matt.r-
challcngers elrcctively portrayed 10·
cumbents as ha ving fallen down on
the JOb. In scvcraJ instances, the Reports on Iran contacts El~~i~~~~·~~~~~.;;~
do .. bac, ,., alm· os• a ~ull ·~ear -~~£~c~~~ :::~::n~: t:::::0
: 8' .A 1,-;.I-'~ .T , sh~~~;;t~.d~~~u~t ~~tt~~ ~~
Disclosure of talks
circumspect because
of danger to hostages'
WASHI NGTON -For nearly a
year. we have been reporting on the
secret deal!> the R~agan admin1s--
trat1on was milking with Iran We
voiced our 'ehemcnt ObJectaoos 10
the secret nc>got1at1ons, both tn this
cotumn and in J>rivatc taJks with
adm inistration officials.
Because of constant warnings from
our sources that detailed repons on
the U S -Iranian contac\1_ would_en·
dana4r the Ii\ cs of mcncan hostages
1n Lcoonon, "'e v.ere circumspect in
outlinin~ the t);act nature of the
negotiations E'en so, other JOumal-im told us they couldn't confirm the
stories. and high admtnlSlration of-
ficials tried their best to convinct us
that we "'ere wroni.
But "'c knew we were riaht - and
we behe\ed that the administration·
policy was wrona. Herc's what we
wrote on Aug. I I: "The United States
and We tern altic continue to con·
interview with President Reagan.
Dale Van Atta pursued the story on
U.S. contacts with Iran. "This 1s on
Iran," he said, according to a tape of
the conversation. "For six years
they've been wngfoa a terrorist war
against us and there are at least 264
American bodies they can count as
being responsible for, 1nclud1na. as we
reported, (hostage) William Buckley
last )Cat. wbom they tortured merci-
JACK
AllDEISOll
and DAL[ VAN A TT A
lessly. 1 know there arc ull four
hos1age there now and that may "(T)he president's advisers ~hould
prccludt )OU from saying anyth1na.' ]Ult lose sight of the dubious ~ck·
The pre 1dcnt confirmed part of, ground of the people they're cozyina
our story, but then made a ~tatcmcnl~ • ._.P 10. ... (The) arc~ dcalina w1th a
that -on his condition -we witt be buneh of cutthroats. '
able to report only after att the We pcc1ficaJI)' warned about ~tag~ arc '3fely home But he R.aJsa1lJan1. who wa implicated in
made it clear he felt it wa pos .. able to the mur~er of t~o Amcncan scr-
dcal with Iran. v1cemen tn Iran an the 1970s. "U
Af\er further inqume\, we wrote officials ha'e pinned a ubstantial
t\\-O columns last Apnl that began 10 pan of their hope on Rafsanjani," we
pry the lid offthcsecret operation that wrote, "and have pre umably ti\·
has now been all but officially spuid torics in the press. which
confirmed. On April 28. we reported referred to him as moderate' and
that the administration "ha been credited him with hclp1na to fn:c the
quietly conc11iatof) in bthind·t~· mcncan hostages five years aao."
scene ncaot1at1ons with Iran overthe It wa Rafsanjan1 who blew the
Amcncan ho!>ta,e\ held by pro-CO'lier on the sccret arms-for-hostage
Iranian tcrromt · deal.
We added:•• This dramatic, ubtcr· . R Id R duct 1CCrct talk, and cut ~crct deals rancan shif\ in policy to"'ard Iran MlNl·EDITORIAL. ona c-
becomma commonplace.
Four )cars ago, a city pohcc
detecti ve named Robbie Waters suc·
ccssfull> challenged the incumbent.
who had himself won office by
defeating h1~ predecessor. And this
year Waters ;oi ned the ranks of
unemplo)'ed Sacramento County
heriffs: defeated by Glen Craig, a
fo rmer state H1ghwa)' P9trol com·
m1~'i1oncr. Ironically, the aHcgations
against Waters were similar lo those
he had made four )cars earlier.
One way to look at this year•s
count) !>hcnO election 1s with a sense
of irony. While mostshcnffSJOmed 1n
uraini voters to dump Chief Justice
Rose Bird and other liberals on the
talc Suprtmc Coun. many of them
also \loCtccauaht tn the same PQlitical
qullndary. h·eriffs. hke Jud cs, could
no lonJCr cla.1m immunity from r~tnbuuon by votm.
But perhaps Californian should
also look at the elections as a s1an that
the elected county sheriff 1s an
on=achronism more suitable to the
mo\ ie than contemporary reality.
GlVen the budget constraints. the
re paM1b1hties 1mposcd by the lqls·
laturc. the coun and other out.side
authonties and the sophisticated
technology available 10 both law
enforcer and law br'cakcr, runnina a
mOdcrn police qency takes more
L.. I
w1t~ t.ron while the Ayatollah Kho. oc be ond the fatt of the hos~~ agan's ch!l"tned sup~rters 1n 1 l
mcin1 s terrorist lackC)5 control. the fnto thl realm of aJobll ,eopolitu: . that the surpn~inaly dcc1s1ve lo of
fate of th~ • sum •n& Amencan Prcsicknt kcapn has l>Ctn convinced the Senate d!d . not conwtulC a
hostaac\. W.e "c reported before on b his sdvistn _ tbou&h I here arc pc™>nal rcpud1at1on of"1e pre •dent.
the ~rct 111! towa~d !tart b~ the • st~ll \Orne dl'~ntcf':\ _ tliat an clTort They have a point, ina much a 14 w •
R<"apn admim tration lQll ~-must be ade to t tabtish rclation1 Dt~rat ~ere ra';h cnol1&h tO 1cym1kcr\. We hl\cdcchnrihodetatl "ith (I nan ,. campa11n on 1n ant1-Reapn plat·
the extent and exact nature of the On ~i 30 we rtponcd that the form .. But there's a lot of &ra~eyard
contacts because they art !I<> cl<>tcly adminastf'llUon wu uttna cove11 I v.bisthn1 '°'"t on hetc, rtthS1 1,n intcrt'<'tncd with ~!'C fate of the racli shipments of lt S amu to bOth pan.cs now that Rtapn
than the ability to sway voters.
fhe pohtmlt things that a sheriff''---
remaining hostqcs. ntabhlh rtladon with Iran. We balm) days arc o'er. His opponents u.,t January, -.e d1tdoscd that added ~ll lhtrc had beCti h~tta will arow C'lirf f!lOrc COufllf'OUS -
form.er h1&h·lt\cl officials were con-diKUssion n tbt atonal S«urfty espcoalJ 1n the Senate, wheft no<mc
dt.Kun1 sccret &alb with Iran ovn 1ht Counal ilatc Int mr :about .. ~ will e~er ap1n ha~e to Nn 11111\S\ a
hortqn. o.,•th111hecau1outofthC ulaniina·· the anni now: lhll 1 ticktt that 11teludes Ronakl-Rnpn.
bq. v.e can f'C\CIJ Lhat ,.,'O o( the lhna Iran the weapons dtttcu) not It' 1010110 take more thmtent1rMn·
ncaouaton were 1 one-time Cl A lhrouah luael ' 111 locker-room rhclonc to Win man)
official and a h11.h Ptn~n offte)al We.~t'Md thal the arnu l&lct weft' more for this 01ppcr,
who wt're clQtCt) 1MOC111ed wnh pin of rtt dtahn with h bll' mi~ OA .,mt Edwtn Wilton. Raf11ru1na. speaker of Iran's ptfl1a· On tb 2A in an 0\"ll Office ment:On Ma 11 . nmcd
tlunk he must do to remain in office
often arc mcom~ublc with the rtqu1rtm"fnt of fair ana efficienflaw
cnforttmcnt and the conflict thu1
crnted bri~p forth political pld.
me shcnffs arc able to juale the
conn1Chl\I demands and Odien lft not; 1h1 year!. cltarly, many weft not.
h ' not abOut to happen, bUt tht
best luti0C1 would be to ehmtnatc
clmed shtrifrt ahe)lether and tteat
county law enbccrrimt hu we uat c:ity law atfoteemcnt, IS I prOret.ioa
rather than 1 pohucal matler.
The 11tcma11vc. unfonuna1dy, ••
C\Cn pta1Cf Polt1kbahon o( lht
olf ttt to the cktrimcnt of cvnyone.
llM Wa#Mn 'It e 0 1 :ICNllilf
C'91utflltl.
j
..
ut
....,,......,_.,nao.,.....
., IOaPll DUDltVOIB R*hed eut ofbcMifttb _.,..... 61
...,._.. a r 1 ball a.ck an jm& M h ::•llllld ii lu• '1'bc1 lbc .Rama weR about ~ £aU ~ ao ...,._.
~ penn1~ ~ end1na 10 maktEvnett'scomu~.-.,.,.,-, :JUMWtk flm EYCtttt's of'jubilauoa: 1 debut. tht N"' Ensland Fryar eAid the i*Y newr WOltll •
Patnots authe>Rd a sap of their own pnctecc aad bn never worW ia a
with a diffttent Set of htroes aJI pmt briore. But then~•••• Mtc1 ID t~. pnctatt a miracle •
.. ~~ui~ with a miracle finalh., tht .. We c:.&Aed it '.ur.de ._..... •
Pats epic.tale will be toup one to iop. ..what a 1r1nni911 New ..::find°*-'
Just don•t try to stll a copy to ~rns Raymond ~ tM .... y.
Coach John Robin10n. thouah. He .. I've nit\'et been 1nvolWd nt a ...,
hates a sad mdini. . • ' bu Jhis. ':' •
. After Irving Fryar. ~lied d9wia a And tht Hall of'flSDer ---~nfly from hca'Yen with no timc'lcft receivcrofthcBalaimoreCoha~ I
Sunday to lift Ne"'· Enll&nd to a J0.28' .. , never cauaht one tiu dl8l. eidler.
win in front of 64.3l!? 'at Anaheim Tho':iah be's not quite ready to l9r
Stadium. the Ram' saw themtelus. enshrined at Canton. Obao. Everca ~~n by a prayer after they showed one and an Mi's toial IO be 1 an~wercd the pra)ers ~Rims fans around a while. At least a week. e~erywhere by finall> puttana fint· "He's the s&arter now ... said a. t
)car quarterback Evcreu to the lest. inson. "I couldn't be more impreseed
And no one. includina Robinson, with the way he played today. I thulk •
WU disappointed with the mullJ. he's IOiftl to be a lfC&l quartati9ck.... '
Just ihe score. • _ • .Everett hu oo 12 of 19 pu1a for •
"A tou&h endina to a most excitina • 19) yards. three louchdown1 aod no •
day," was Romnson's rcspontc •fter i•ucrccpttons. At one staee he coe-
' Patriots quanerback Tony Eason nectcd on seven conteeutive pe11n. •
arched a high desperation pass into His counterpart. Eason. wasldti• ,
thcnfbtcomeroftheendzoneon the a New En&land sintk pmc comple. •
pmc s final play. w1th Fryer comina tion standard, h1tt1na on 36 of .S2 •
downwaththeball outofacrowdafter pessina for 375 yards and a pair of•
it was tip~ by Pats receiver tanlcy touchdowns to steal some thunckr. • l
Morgan. ··1 just wanted to So out there and :
Fryar. kecpina his f~ JU St an-make sure J said the plays riaht ... Mid I
oounds in the 6aai oTthe "end zone, (Pl--eee RAM8/BI) :
*** ***
For Everett, the future ·is
now as ·Rams-quuterbaci::
• • I back do~n s1gh1n1 a~ he hit the •
Rama rookie qaatartlaek Jim &Yerett drope back to pue
while Doac 8m.ltla (58) holda off Kew &qlaad'• Toby
Williama. E•erett threw three toacbdown pe•• in bie
de bat.. blit the a.am. l•t a heartbnaller. .
By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR .......... c. 0 ( I
He was cverythina everyone had
hoped for. And more.
around after bumpina into Eric :
Dickerson in the backfield. . :
Patr~Ots 'Siznday prayer.answered
Jim Evercttis no longer the Rams•
quarterback of the: .lutu:re. He's the
present after lDC' WI) he passed
. 'Sunday m the Rams• 30-28 loss to lhe
New En&)and Patnots.
· "I calf him The Blade because he's
so sharp," said guard Dennis Hamb.
.. He was so d)nam1c he's become my By ED ZINTEL ·
......... C:.I JI f 1
Say this for the New Eng.land sports
fans. they ure act excatemcnt.
Then there was Sunday at Anahetm
Stadium. '
In a near duphcation of Autte's
memorable bomb. the New Ensland
Patnots beat the Rams. 30-28. when
Tony Eason lofted -no. "chucked"
as more hkc it -a 2S-yard touch-
down pass to Irving Fryar with no
time lef\.
NFL Hall-Of-Fame receiver, tongue-
1n-check called the play "Miracle
Ra&ht.. and that, for the sake of
drama. pretty ~11 summed it.
thrown almosras h1Jh as 1t was Iona.
··we·ve never completed lhat pass
m pracuceandwcdo pract1cc1t." said
Berry.
hero." ,
And Harrah:s not alone. The ncar-
capac1ty crowd of 64,339 roared its
approval when the 22-)eat-Old rookie
out of Purdue trotted on to the field lo
take over for starter Steve Dils with
14:35 left in the second quarter.
F'rnt tt's the Doua Autae "Hail
Mary" pa in 1984 LO beat M11mi It
the Oranae Bowl. •
Whatever you call it. 1t was a
remark.able play, one the Patnots said
they would remember for a long ttme.
No. a play lake that is d1fficuh to
rehearse, at least successfully.
"You·re throwma somethma up for
grabs and hopana somethtl)I good
happens." said Eason, who, an four-
plus )tars an the NFL has estabhshed
himself as one of the lcague•s premier
A year later. the Celtics win the
NBA title.
A month aso. the Red Sox get to
wathan an out of winnina the World
Scnes. .
In the Patriot pla)book it's called
"Squadron 70All Up," or"7-Up" for
shon. Coach Raymond Berry. an
"Oh. wow, phenomenal." said
fullback Craia James who was one of
four Pa1nots, alona with some su
Rams. 1n the end zone lookmg to
make the catch on a pass that was (Pl-..e ... PATRIOTS/83)
• Has first pla) was a handoff to
runnana beck Barry Redden Then the
fans started com an a out their chairs as
Everett dropped back to pass. bu1 sat
It's a tough draw
·for Coast teams .
Marina. Woodbridge
only schools to get
home games Friday-
By ROGER CARLSON oe_DlllJ,......,.
ARTESIA -h may be the
touahcst overall draw for Orange
Coast area prep teams in rcan for the
first round of the C F football
playoffs -and as Westminster
Coach Jim O'Hara said, "I guess they
think we need to play the best." For
in tance:
•Sunset League champion Manna
draw sixth-ranked Loyola (8-2), the
winner to meet No. 3 seed Fontana
(9-1) or Scrvite (7-3) an the second
round.
• unset League runner-up and
defending ClF Big Five Conference
eo<hampion Edison (8-2) is on the
road apanst fourth-ranked C'respi
(9-1 ). another Del Rey Lca&uc entry.
•Westminster (S-4-1), lhe No. 3
team from the Sunset league, draws
No I ranked and No. I seed Bishop
Amat.
Sunset Lca.aue teams were not the
only teams to be handed stiff first-
round chaJlenges.
WJlere U.ey're pJaJin6
-llM c ..... enc:e LOV'IMA (1·2l vs... Me<IN IS·S> at West·
IT\!Mter
E411M11 <t-2• "'' Cc•pl (l·U -at llrm-lntNl'n Hlefl Westmln1ter IS-4·1) at 81"'°9 Amel
CICHl
~c.-w.
Wfttem 16-41 •I Tu.ton Cl·l)
Nofwdt 16·4) VI SNdleoecll 1,.1) at
S.nt• AN aowt, S.turo.v
Unlver11tv (6·•1 •I LAI H•br. (6-ll
Dewt·Meul1191n Cr h •.c.
Not'le Vl$1a (S-S) "" 0nnee (6-4) at Et
~ W ·Jeff (1·2) vs Woodbridge (1·2) et
trvlne L~ hKJI (1·2) vs LAI Sl«re l,_11
., lltlvenlda cc
cnppled and No. 4 ranked ~uad to
Riverside City Colle&e where No. 3
La Sierra (9-1) awaits.
•University's Tro1ans must travel
to Freeway League tn-champ1on La
Habra, cons1dcrcd by some as one of
the touahest draws Un1vers1ty could
have got. -
•Saddleback's Roadrunners, the
defendina Central Conference cham-
pions, were seeded fourth and drew
6-4 Norwalk. The only hitch 1s that
they must waat until Saturday to pJay
the aame at Santa Ana Bowl.
W.tstminster•s situation ums up
the Sunset League trio's circum-
stances as best as an) Bishop Amat
has run unchecked to I 0 stnuaht
v1ctones behind the uploits of thrtt-
•Pacific Coast L..ca&uc entnes
WoodbndJe and Laguna Beach, too.
drew tough challenacs. Woodbndge
(8-2) will host Bell-Jeff (8-2). sixth-
rankcd 1n the conference. Wood-
bndae as No 7. ·
Laauna Beach, meanwhile, takes a
)ear staner Enc Bacnem) ..
Bicnem) has run for 28 touch-Raider qaarterback Jlm Plunkett pllMee
(Pleue ... COAST /82 tlae ball dariDC 27-16 win OYer Cle•e,an4
. Magic'sjumperwith O:Olleftsinks·Kings, 1.13-111
Johnson scores 34 points: -........ ...__ Clippers lose again to 76ers --
P'rolll AP 411pa&dlet
INGLEWOOD -Earvtn .. M&IJC .. Jotin-
wn 5COrcd 34 point$. includina a l 2-foot
jumper wtth one second to pla~. lifttf\& tht' Lo
• ~les tike1'1 IO a 113· l l rNBA victory O\ er
the Sacramento Kinas unday night.
With the Kore tied. Johnson took: an
inbounds pen frorn Machatl Cooper. dto\lc 10
has npt, pulkd up be\wcen a pair of
Sacramento defenders and lofted the shot in.
Johnten srorcd the takers· final eiaht
Potntl and I j po1nt1 in the final quaner. Bmou St.e~ made two rree &hro~ wuh
fi\IO RtOnd to ~•Y to tac the pme at 111-111,
tcppe. who finished wath 24 point ·wa1 fouled
by B)·ron ou on a Jump hot from the
baschnc.
The Lakcl'1 hid takcft a 111 ·1<>9 Ind on a
pair of f'1ft throws by Johnwn wtth v n
SttOnds tO &O. Derck m1th. who led Sacramen-
to with 26 points. fouled out on the play.
Smith had tied the pme I 09-109 by h1ttina
one of two frtt throw'1 with 27 seconds left.
The takers opened an 80-68 lead with 3:44
toplay an the third quarter before the Kings ran
.. offa 20-8 pun to tac: tile pmc 1t 88 w1tfi 9:16
l ft.
• The Kin,a1 too.le their fil"\t kad tAllh 6V1
minutes leR on a thrtt-point play by math.
Eddie Johnson scored 22 point~ ofT the
bench for Sicramento and Ou Thorpe added
17.
Byron SCott added ~2 points and Jam
Wonhy 16 for the Lakcrs. ""'ho hl\C now
defeated the Kinas ~I 1ra11ht time al the
. forum, dauna beck to Oct. 20, 1974.
W1th :16 !cf\ tn the thtrd ptriod, Oc-rck
rnich tet up to stop a dnvana M11ic Johnson.
The two tammcd to the floor. Johnson got up
But m1th. •ho la t sea n ufTtttd tom
can1lqt 1n has ten knee and rn1 tCd 16 pmcs
after suf'll"'Y. "' <"amcd off the roun b
Olbctdma and Joe Kleine, his I f\ ._nee
....
dragana. Ph1ladelph1a 76ers defeated the Lo naclcs
Walkins on has own. m11h returned to the C'hppcrs for the 13th consecutive tame. 103-90,
Kings' hc'nch before the pc nod ended, however. atthe LA ports rcna.
lthouJh he suffe~ a trained left knee. Philadelphia turned back a Clippers rally
walked out on the coun as the fourth penod an the 1h1rd quancr by outscorina them I 7-6
opened w11h Sacramento do*n 6-8=1---~-~-o-.cr a 51 t·mmutc pan for a 78~62 I~ '41th
Any doubts aoout math's fitncs were 2:47 lef\ 1n the penod .
answered a '°°n a he powered hi ~a} do-..n The Clipptn had scored 12 trataht point
tM !cf\ bl hne end ~lam..Junkt'd 'M K1np to ro pull wutun 61 • 6will\1.10 Tif\ an ilfe pcnOJ
w1thin one point, 86·8S. with I l minute left to before the 76en made their run.
play. tddte Johnson· fau throw at 1hc 9:16 Ervif\& and Maun~ Check. who had ,_.
mark tied the r.mc. at 8 , for the fifit tame in points. led Ph1ladelph1a on a 13-4 pun an the
the K'C'Ond hat • first 3:42 of the final quartcn the 76cr5opcncd
mith' three-point play with 6:30 lei\ put a 93-70 lead. their larlc't of the tamt'. and Lo
the Kinas on top 97-96. f\cr tePJ>' m1 ~a Anack aot no C'lo~r than the final mariin.
nd free thro• mathvabbcJ the rebound. Benoit Ben aman led the Chppcn with 16
Johnson oTCd on a Jumper from the ri&bt poent bcfott foulaiia out •1th S:09 lef\ n'tn
ho hnc. and rmnto had a I Q Ind Mn\\"'lt !com! IS for l os fttel .
tth : l lct\.. Rohan~n·s production w cut \hon when
78en do It to CUppen ..,.in
the
h n::·inJurt'd ,/t1\ ttaht ouldcr with 2'h
minute kft an I~ th a rd Quancr. T~ i6cn ~id
X·nl" "111bc1a~en toda~ 1n Ph1la\Jelph1a
-rhc Ch~rf 1a\t vaetOI')' o'er the 76cn
came on Feb. 2. 19 an Sin o;qo.
Then on his next attempt, a third •
down pa s to Kevin Hollle, tlc threw .-----... 1"1
behind his retet\ler and came off as
lhe Rams had to punL
Then somcthma \ltry unu uaJ ~P: •1 ·
pened. The fans cheered a Rams
quarterback -even in failure. •
-It wa pt to hear th<»e checn ... !
E\erctt said. ••t know they can boo. •
but I'll try not ca\e them any reason ' to:· •
Nothina to worT) about. Jimmy. as
Iona you continue to post the kinds of •
numbers )OU d1d unday: .12 of 19 !
passina for 193 )ards. tbrce touch-I down~ and no interceptions.
faerctt aot his first compJctioo in a '
big way as he hit wide receiver Henry
Ellard with 1'34-yard touchdown pus •
(Pl-..e ... SVJtUTT /llS)
Plunkett
throws3
I • +
t
I
Raiders' defense
sparkles also as
Browns fall, 27-14 1
LO ANGELES (AP) Quar-
terback Jam Plunkett may be neanna,
39. but he can stall get the JOb done. I
And so can the Los Angeles Raiden' :
defense
Plunkett. who "''&S promoted to•
first-tnn15latUSJUSt last w~k. lhrew
three touchdown passes Sunday -,
two of them to Dokae Wilhams-to
spark the Raiders to a 27-14 victory!
over the Cleveland Browns..
Cleveland. which rolled up 558
yards 1n total offense dunna a 26-16
victory over Miami last Monday
night. manaied j u :t 21 7 )'&rds and
eight first downs aaamst a fierce Lo
Angele dcfcnsc.
The dccasion lei\ both teams wttn
7-4 records. The Raiders have won
seven of their la t ei&ht sames whale
the Browns lost for only the second
tame an their la t el,lht outings.
.. Jim throws the ball well, he takes
more chances than an)onc else would
probabl> take," said Williams, who
caught two touchdown passes from
Plunkett m the sccond half as ttic
Raiders rallied for a 17-13 win O\ler
Dalla a week a&O Unda).
"Jam iswitlina to call more audible
and he' not afraid ofmov1n1aiound
and takina a cl\an~ that a ball tAill be
mlerttptcd a ea 1ly a at Yrilr be
caught," William added .
"Sometime , I try to be con-
scn-11hc. and other time I hke to
take a n k," wd Plunkett, the NF ·
oldest quarterback.. "When }OU do
that. tt makes for a bia payon:
"Our defense pla)ed citccpt1onall)
well. Our offense dtd some 'good
thin It "4'l better than some dau.
and not a aood a~ oihcn ...
Plunkett. who turns 39 on Dec. t,
p\e the Raiden the lead (or 1ood by
f\cavin11 46= 1lN 1ouch3own pa: -to
Williams ancr ju\t 2:30 of play.
Plunkctt's ~nd TD pe was a J.
-arder to Todd Chn ten n in t
opcnan rninu1C of the nd quar
tt'f.
In bct"ttn th<*'"" touchdown
hn Bahr k ked 1 ~
pl. mc:an\aa1be Raiders ihed. 17
9dvamase after as than 16 man.-
of pla .
f\n 1ht Browns na~ &M
to I -1 4, Plunkett th~ a 43-
-n& pe to W1lbamt Oft tM
pla) or the fourtll quaner '° -~ ' Ratdtn mt blatbmt1 rootft
,
\
rlon 0 for Golden We t?
but even coach tsn 't very opttmlstlc
n \ntonio and PasadcDa. and
thlf\1$ ~t C\"Cn •Ql'lt. • Rustin Pf01111m ,,. h1cb •'Is
· trona 1a tM earl) Os but ha
Ooundcl'C'd he Pi l couple of )C I'\ d no1 ha' e an aa nob ahead.
"look•na at 11 nght now. I don·1
know v. ho \loC n bell." 1d C h
Jun Otttnfic1J. ''Pa1Xr~wi5'". "e'rt ;n
the bonom· half of the aue un·
doubti:tdl). tt:s a much ' trongcr
l~ue this )C1lr. We l~t twi.o l'\'erasr
teams and o~ 1ooJ team nd p1oed 0thrttgood on " The lo of 81')on t ~han· 24
po1nts pc:r pme l\C :snd KcHn
Smuh (l.e .S point'>, ,4 rcboundsl
lea'~ the Rustlers v.1th a large \OI~,
Tht Oftl)' two posu1on' 1ha1 al)Pl"ar poant per pnic 10 kid h11 rt'llOn.
10 ~Kt att frnhman EJbcTt De''' at Th mt of lh<' hn<'UP "where the
tM PQint 11\d IOpf\omott GU) lMCUll'~ mes blurr>. Grcitnll Id
Bro•n tt a for-llrd. third, suard fttls be' his iome talent but the Ton~ R11k,._~oukl nad dov.n tht-df· qunt1on b«omrs ho" w1ll thC} come
1uard ~ 1a11 he "'1 still~ out fon &lo,_
coupfc of-wttb 'lo\atb a btotca fi~. "Wc·rc definitcl) ~ouna. .. Grcm· o. .. is nttds 10 be a d0m1nant field sa) .. It""'" nnte PtQbkm for
fi&urt for the Rustltn to bc dftetl't'C a ~h1le. I 1hanl: there' some talent
•n ahtir runn1~-:-0,ncotcd gffm • lhett. but u depend~ on ho\\ a.he) °'"''wa anall·k'8SUC lcctaonh1s ptOC't'C'dandhO"-muchbcncrtht-)'ttl aruor)Ur 1n I 9S.C ll SantiMO Haab. dunnatht'}car. We'\'CIO'.I chance 10
wt th h11 top performanct a :f5~pom1, be a JntlY &ood t~m. Jt'i a matter of
8--a ISl hov.1n1•inst Lol Am11os. bow ra~nht) tan !tam to ,&4) wh.111t "Ofkn~'~'~ 11 IUlld. Elbtrt 11 thc taktt to ~in," U;
btst wt hlvt. • Grttnfic:ld ~id. "In P(rhaps Jht-.most taltnkd of lhr
1hc: past wc'"c: had h1ah sconna Point fro h crop as 6-6. 22S·pound Gkn
auardsbttauttofourofrensc,buta a Jdferson out o( Las Vcps. A con·
fttShm:sn I don't know how hc"ll • tercncc and zone M\'P in 'JOUthcrn
n-ac1." 'e\'1l<U. Jdfcrson 1s •trona and can
Rizk ~• Alke.a\t' honorable mm-' put pomts on the board inside and
11on last season at onh Pole Hiah in out. Greenfield's problem 1s to att
Fairbank Alaska; a\CraaJ?I 21 ,4 ham 10 "Ork harda.
. . ' Richmond wine NASCAR nee
nothtt polcnual t.antt on the
front line " 6-7, :?OS.pound Patnck
B«k Thrtt )l rcnlO' ed.. from
ao&A Grandt Hlah \lrMI\" he waun
i'll-Oankn Oro\"t t.cqut sclecuon.
Bed: $Pmt a )l'V 1n 1he rnl) and 1 a
httlr nw on off'mK' •1th the la)off.
"He'Hapelte of btil\I •\tr) good pla,cr, .. Grttnficld taid.
Other top candidates or tamf\&
~pou on the front hne 1ntludc Jam
Stewart (6·8. 20S. &tanC'1a), O:lrrcn
S1'ow (~S. 210, Hununston &a~)
and Ban math (6-6, 18S. ~
'Alamitos) Stewan has the ~lt. but
no biah school vanity upcncncc.
Rofx-rt Munay(6-S.190)and Ooua
McKuskcr (6-6. 19S) ould 5C'C
pla,yina time off the bench. M~u lier
11 lhrtc! )ean rcmo\td from Ed1M>n Hilb. . I
lhc Rustlcr1 arc not -.tton on ~izc
but arc shon on quic~ncs .
Ho~tulh. v.c atn win a couple early
to how 1licm."
* Gt6den Weit ~
WM HOv 19 -ti l-'1 lA ' $al NoY n -S.n pjt90..,.... (llOfN) y..,fl , Holt. 1S -SOVl~ll Cel ( ..... JV
tnomt) , Wtd•jal , 0tc ) 6, -al Anr~ V....,
·UCLA headed for
Freedom Bow_l~ SC.
to CittUs Bowl?
,. .
Rl\i ERslDE .:_ Tim Richmond •• ,
puOed a"a} at tht ~n<f to wm "tht' Winston
Area . ... ..
··we have cnouah size ror rebound ..
ina. bUt it's a matter of aoana out ant.I ~tina 1ht ball.'' Grttnficld said.
'h's a ~ttc:r of•not having every •
bod) e•pecuna C\el')bo4Y~I~ to do " it...,, ~ "' .. • t-~'• TIA ' WM·S.I DK. l.O•ll -GOiden ~I .f-·
r
From.AP dispalck"
UCLA will probabl~ a~pt a F~om
Bowl btd and USC 1s headed tor the Cnru
Bowl, it was announced unda)'. ·
1JCLA's 'Opponent for-1he Anaheim Stadium
Frccdom Bowl figure lo be A.ir Force or BYU.
according to the Assocuued Press. \I.hale USC probabl) "'II be matched against Auburn an the Curus Bo\\I
In the Gator Bo\\I, at figures to be Oemson and
tan ford. ..
The Orangr Bo"'I. ~1ule stdl hopina for a M1am1-
Nebraska pamng. lined up the South'ol.CSl Conference
runner-up as the opponent for the Oklahoma-Nebraslr.:a
wanner pro\lded 11 1s Texas A&M or rkansas. The
Aggies and Razorbacks. alona with Ba)lor and Texas,
still have a ~hcil at the SWC crown.
The M1ch1gan-Oh10 talc wanner will represent the
Big Ten in the Rose Bowl against Anzona Stale. The
loser will meet the SWC champion an the Cotton Bowl,
\\-hich has never had a Big Ten team
The Sugar Bowl ho 1 will be either LSU or
Alabama and the \ 1s1llng team will be the Oklahoma-
Nebrask.a loser. LSL or labama will play Wash1!)gton
an the Sun Bowl
Other hkel) bowl painng.s include
.\11-AJnencan -Flonda tale-Indiana, Hall of
Fame -Boston ( ollege-Georgia: Peach -North
Carohna State-Virginia Tech. Hollda> -· Western•
Athletic Conference chJµnp1on. (Air force. Bngham
Youngor sn Diego State) vs. Iowa; California -an
Jose tate-Miam1 of Ohio.
If&~ lordocsn'l wan the SW(', the Bears will go to
the Bluebonnet Bowl Anzona has been mentioned for
the Bluebonnet or Aloha bowls
Quote of the day
David McWUllams Te~as Tech football
coach. after -S-3. 130-pound T~ronc Thurman
returned a punt he probably shouldn't have
handled 96 )ards for a touchdown to tngger the
Red Raiders' 23-21 victory over Teus: "I could
have choked him. but 1t set lhe lone: for the
pmc.''
Noah wins tennis tournament
WEMBLEY. England -France's F.J Yannack Noah scored his first Grand Pnx
title victor) an Britain unda). beating
Jonas B. Svens~n of Sweden 6-2. 6-3, 6-7,
4-6. 7-5 in the final ofa men's tournament. .
The third-seeded Noah, who has missed 13 weeks
of the season with m 'uncs, outlasted the unseeded
ed ) hours; S0 muuite9.
In the doubles final. John McEnroe made up for his
d1sappo1nt1ngdcfeat lo Pat Cash in the fU"St round oflhc
sinfles when he teamed up w11h Peter Fleming to wm
their sixth Wembley title, 3-6. 7-6. 6-2 over Amencan
herwood S1cwan and Austraha·s Kim Warwick.
.\ftcr wmnmg the first set. tewart and Warwick
led .S-2 m the second set tiebreaker and then had a
match point at E>-5 But thr 40-year~ld Stcwan hit a
ser"\1Ce return wide tewart made amends when he
saved a set point with a big serve but two points later
McEnroe and Fleming evened the match, winning the
uebrcakcr 9-7. and nppcd through the final set 6-2 with
two breaks of ser,e.
Poll: Viewers want title game
NEW YORK-"1ineh-thrcc~rccnt
of the viewers responding" to a CBS.. TV
celephonr poll said they wanted a cham-
p1onsh1p g.amc to decide college football's
national title
CB reported ~unday that 40.136 calls were
received aturday. The voters had to vote yes or no on
the QUCllliOlf.
\\cstcm 500 NASCA R tock: ·car race
unda)' clo$ing the scawn with hi \COth
\lctOI'>.
Richmond. who failed 1n tits bid to take sttond
pl ce in the Winston Cup s&andinas from Darrell
\\ ahnp b) s" points, aa1nC'd the nscc lead for good
dunng the sa:uh of se,en caution pcnocb an the seasqn·
1 ndanaraccwhen he~cnt into 1bc pits second and came
out on top.
Winston-C-up ch~mpion Dale Earnhardt bumped
pas1 GeoffBodine at tflc finish hneone lap from the end I
of the 500-kilomcter. 119-lap race at Ri vtrsidc
In1cmat1onal Raccwa). holdanaon for second pl~. j1 Wallop was naht behmd Bodme in fourth.:.1
follov.ed by Joe Ruttman. Bobb)' Hillan Jr., Bobb}
Alhson aod Rusl)' . Wallace. the only competitors
remaining on the lead lap.
Waltrip's team picked 1.1p $225.000 for finishing
s«ond an the seasorr standan~ while Richmond's got
Sl4tOOO'fOTthird. Eamhardt, whochnched h1uecond
t1tle two weeks ago in Atlanta, will pick. u~morc than
S.S50,000 in postseason pnze money.
Richmond avCTllged 101 .245 mph and crossed the
finish hne 1.95 seconds ahead of Earnhardt.
Bodine, Richmond's teammate, dominated at
limes dunng the race and was holding the lead over
Richmond \\hen the caution flag came out on lflp lOS
bec,uSt' ofa crash in the last tum b Jim Robrnson.
Ex-QB Bobby Layne •critical'
LUBBOCK. Te~as -Bobby l'...ayne.
thl' Hall of Fame quarterback who led the
Detroit lions to three NFL lltlcs in the
1950s. was in cn11cal cond1t1on unday at
Methodist Hosp1taL
La)ne. 59. was an the hospital's surgJcal 1ntens1vc
care untt. said hospital spokeswoman Venita Bade). He
dro\e himself lo th e ho pita! and underwent surgery
Saturday to stop hemorrhaging 1n his low.er esophagus.
his w1fr said
Carol La) ne .said Saturda) night that her husband
"as doana well and that all his 'ital signs "'ere stable
la)ne had been hstcd in scnous cond111on late
Sa1urda). Ba1lr) said she did not kno"'" when has
condition had bttn downaraded.
· la)ncentered a Pontiac, Mich .• hospital on No'. 8
wuh a similar problem, but returned home lo Lu1>bock
on Wednesday. -
Fnends said he "ent to his office as usual Thursday
and Fnda)'. but that he woke up an pain shortl)' after
midnight Saturday and drove himself to Method• l
.Ho pual. about half a mile from h1'i home.
Another colllalon in triala
·sports ·
cal en Dar
Football
FrldlY HIGH SCHOOL-Finl reunc:I CIF •'flblfa
COMMUlllTY COLLIGa-EI Cel'lldlO YI
GOldeft Wflt ti °"111'9e Coe\I, 7.30
S.tunlaY .
ll eot.t.•GE-USC "' UCLA I ·-ao I ~ IUO om.
J I j
Jfea '• badetbal.I ' w....-v
COMMUMfTY COC..l.IGI~ Wnt el
!•$1 lA. 7::.1 •
TlMMIY COU.IGE--Honll"'*' HellOl'lel IMm el UC Irv-. 7.JO, Chrlll COll99e lntM TCMKIWMllt,
T8A
S.Nrdly
C:OLLIGE-SOUll'tlf'll C.I CotatH el C.t Stele
5en lerMrdlno, n/O, Gf\rlll~ Toumement. COMMUNITY COLUGE-~ DletO MHe •t GOldtn Wt$1, 7~ Pm
Womea'• lMdetbaJJ ~.,
COLLEGl-U Verne " *"'"" c. COi· ..... 7.30 81°'9 11 Olfl" Colleff ""'..,.· 7 30
llwnctlY COMMUNITY COLUGE-GolcMn WHI fl
Fullerton TOUfnement.
FrlclH CO\.LIGl-<llr1$1 Colleff lrvllMI ti ilt~l!Ch
T~I COMMVNTIY COLLIEGl-GolOetl Wtll el
Fu erlOll Tour~!
S.turcllv
COLLEGE-()(c~lel •• Soulhern Cel COi·
le9e 7..>0, Christ C°""9 lrvlne 11 Redlal\Ot Toutn-t , COMMUNITY COLl..EGE-Goloe<I Wnl ti
Fu"lerton Tour11emen1
Volleyball
WedMl.claY
COMMUNITY COLLIEGl-<errtlo' et Gold·
en wn1 7 om Ore,_ Coe'' •• Rlver''<le tc 1)0
Thunclly
COU.EGE-PCAA T-nemenl et L01'9 8ffCl'I Slele
Fr'lcllY COMMUNTIY COLl..•GE-EI Cem1no 11
Golden Wnl, 7, Orenot Coe't ti Cllrua 7.JO COl..1..IG•-PCAA Tour111,,,..,1 et L-
l"Ch Sra1e
SaNnflly
C.01..LEGi-PCAA TOUt~I el
IMC1' Slete
"The: Rostlcn: who MlOt 44 ptr~~1u
from the noor. )tar ago. do not have
the shootcn the> have h d aQer
sponi~ the South oast Con-
ferences lcad1n1 orcr 1he paSt th~
)can. Grttnfield said. addana ironi-
cally that this is the first }car for tbe th~·point aoal from 19 fctt, 9
inches.. Rizk 1s the only m:m strong
from deep range.
"Very seldom do \\C get a breather
in this leaauc:," Greenfield s~ud. "All
the pmes are ttally difficult hett
,bcca1.1se of1he players, so they'll have
to team what .c-Wr. ~ v. in It ma)'
take a while 10 get the kids going.
I COLLE GE B ~)I\[ TB~LL
--==-=== --
"TW{ll, TIA ' TINr.l •S.I ()« 11·20 -at H.-. Tour•
~'°'*''·TIA , ' • Ffl. $.et, OK ?• 17 -el CO!lfft Of Otw1
fOl.'l'Nmeftl, TIA
Wtd J•!\. 7 -•' C•r••OI'
s.1 .. J911 10 -El C•tflOftd" lllatMI
W9CI , )•II I_. --Pe~' (llOtftl)
f:r , ~ 1' ,,., 11 Ml S&ll 4'l'IOl!io'
WM. Jen 11 -Lotlf hKl'I CC• (llOme.) sat , Jan u -11 F ion• Wtd Jtll n -COIN>•on• Iheme)
s.1 , J•n Jl -Cerrito\" lllOtMI WM F9'1 4 -ti Et Cern."°'
Fr., ~eb • -ti PeMICHIN'
Wed , FtO 11 -Mt kl! MtOl!fo• Cl'IOl'nfl
S.I . Ftll ,. -., LOllO lffdl cc· .
Wtd. Fltl lt -FUlltf'IOll' (twne)
s.1 , Flt0 11 -•• como1on• S.I , ti> 11 -ltft<OMI Nnffa -.._oi\tn So.itll Coe't Conf~ MtM
Al HIM•' ti 7 lO P tn, UIMH "'41Celtd
North Carolina t~ps
preSeason r~n~ings
-~-11 -d plaCC\Ole .No 5Ne,ada-L.asVcp. Loulsvi e, In iana. \\hich had two. and No. 6 Gcor&1•
P -d -UNLV t d Tech , which had one. rvadi-us Ur Ue, ra e \ep,. had 901 points. whale Georgia
second through fifth Tech lin1)hcd wuh 110 . --1 Okhihoma, Kan..as. Na\)' and
From AP dlspat.cbfl lo"'a rou nded out the Top Ten
Oklahoma and Kansas, both mem-
North C.arol1Jla.. buoyed by a sohd be~ of the Big Eight. received 684 and
oockcourt and one of th<' nation's 645 pt>1n1s. rcspclt1\CI), while Navy,
leading f'rc hman b11 men. wn .mchon:d b~ l>-11 center D:l\,d Ro(>.
sdteted the No. I team unda\ in 1nson. had 560. and Iowa. ano1her
The Assocuucd Pre s' prcscason ·<'ol-member of the Big Ten. had 531
legc basketball poll. t--cntucl) led ofl the'SCCond IOJU t
The Tar Heels. 28-6 Jast )-C~r JS 11 did 1n llm )ear's prcseason poll.
rcttivcd 35 fil"'it-place 'otes and The\.\ ildi.:a1s \\cnt on toa 32-4 r«ord
1.2 15 points from a nationwide panel and J '-o 3 ran l ing in the final poll.
of 1ports "nters and broadca•itt'rs m follo\\lng Kcntu ky 1n the seconct
edging defending national champion 10 were fcllo" Southeastern Con-
Lou1sv1lle for the top spot. kn:ncc: members Auburn and AIA·
North Carolina lost All·..\mcnc.an bama. llhnm!.. the fourth Big Ten
Brad Dauaherty, the No I selection team \Hncu">C, Pittsburgh. North
"in the NBA. to gradunuon. but senior <. arohna tatc. C,corgelown. AnLona
Kenn) Smuh and sophomore Jeff and (le\ eland 1ate.
Lebo return an the back.court and the The \tlanuc ( 00 t Confercntc.
addition of6-10 freshman JR. -Re1d ""h 'forth (arohna. Gcorgut Tech
should help case the loss ofD:lugher-Jnd "'orth (.arohna tatc. tht' SEC
l) 's tebound1ng. and the Big East with yracu~.
.. This ts nice: honor for our proaram Pittsburgh and Georgctov..n ca h had Water polo and Kenn)' Smith and Joe Wolf," Tar Ihm: reprcscntall\CS m the prcsaso\'I
FREMANTLE. Australia - A col· ~ F~v Heels Coach Dean m1th said ... W11h poll
l1S1on matTed the Amenca·s Cup de-,..,::.-.o~ sc~~~ 3-:io '~A"'~c~~ the loss of Brad Dauaherty, Steve (k\cland State ""h1ch up\Ct In·
fenders' lnals for the ~ond day ma row icorone del MM "" ~ Hlllll. uo -o.m.. Hale and WarTCn Martm. they art d1ana and St Joseph·\ in last \Ca.son's
SuQday. .. ~~:,..;~~J'.-GolcMn w"' •• now our key people." NCAA toumament before lo 1n& to
The bow of Australia iv~· ski~: by Cohn '1'" ,,,,.,,••Merced co1~ ihe North Carolina coath believes Nav' b one: int. made Its first Bashd, t 1pped che backs~)' of ~ .... -i.u.-. -1------~ ......... ,,,...-------l~-4'li.lic;~~~~~~-tft11"Ce~mt1t---:1-:::p:::,,e~a;-:ra:::::ne;;;::c:--'1:-:n:"-1rl::ic~t~o-=p~_rrr''--'-.-...--'•
damaging the mast and the electronic acar at its top. but COMMUNITY · COL ... Ge~ w"' •• field g031 will ensure that this basl..et-AP ._ 20 causing no mjuncs. "'~~~~G·~~c;:,;~~."' uc INlne ball 'ieason will bt even more bal· F"'' piece vo•" ltn ~rtft•~w,1. t91i-M
Both boats protested me race. which was ~on b) .. ~;1-Pm. 1 anccd with SO or 60 capable teams 'K«cs •NS "" •• ~, ~ .... r.-,...
A I Iv K kab Ill d i.· d Louisv1llc:, which ehmma1ed _..,.. ,,, '""' ustra 1a over oo urra an its s-.appcr an 1NOt't11C.i-otina 1351 ,.. , ms , ro-des11ncr. laan Murray. by t~o.second:sin the second Men'• .aecer North Carolina 1n last )car's NCAA 2 Lou-,vl»t 1171 ,,_ 1 n M 1 round of the double round-robin series F~y tournament m the regional semi· l •ncJi•ne m 11 -1 ts. " ................ • ti I -" .,2 fi t I • Puroue m n -10 ns The coU1sion occurred on the second windward C""'"""NITY C.Ol.LIGl-lli,,...,io. cc " mas. rcce1v\.-u • 1rs ·Pace \Ole SHI• ..... ,""" 111 33• s tOI 11 leg. when Kookaburra Ill reportedly was on port tack. 0r.,,...coe1;1, > and 1.196 poinb. The C'ard1nals. 32-7 'G-o·• tK11111 ,,. 1 770 4
Australia IV tacked onto starboard and its bow clipped COMMUNITY ~~C:a-R"~ pjey· last ~ason. return onl) cw.o starters ~ ~~,':"' ~;: : :; 1~ Kookaburra Ill's backstay. oth. TIA • fr.om their national champ1onsh1p • Nen 30• s s.o 11 Apparenll~. Australia JV thought tt had completed team, junior forward Herbert Crook 101ow• 10-11 u1
k d d h .... f · 11117'omen '• -~,,,.·r and center Pervis Ellison, vot~ the 11 Ken•uc11v n· • soo i tts tac an a l e n.,.t o way. while Murray ""'' ~-~ 12..t.uourn tt·ll 491 deM:nbcd lhe incident as blatant. Ff'ldllv most outstandinapla}er 1n the NCAA 13 A'•'*"• , •. , 4s1
Television, radio
TELEVISION
6 p.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: San Francisco
at Washington. Channel ~
RADIO
6 p.m. -PRO FOOTBALL. San Francisco
at Washington, KMPC (710).
COMMUNITY cou .. o•-S•••• ~111111s. tournament as a freshman •• m.llOO, 1Mo * lt
TIA The Big Ten Conference: got four IHyrecus.e ,.. ' ' Saturcl9 1' Pill,bUr8'1 IS 14 312 Y teams into the pre ason poll. and 11 N CttOli"-Sta•• ?HJ m COMMUNITY cou.aoa-siere '-TBA two of them, I nd1ana and Purdue. "Glotoe•ow" , •• • m 11
rd d ti h I It ArirOflt n -t 2't Wre:.tlb:JI
Wednftclllv
COMMUNITY COLt.•Ol-<Oolden Wnt el Centi°', 7 JO
Frtdey COMMV,_ITY COU.aG•-GOl<left Wnl et
' Rio Hondo, 130
SaturdllV
COMMUNITY COLLIEOa-AW·ll4M' l'lleleflea
el Cutsl1 Colie9e, TIA
were: th1 an ourt . respect I\ e y. to c .. v .. •'ICI S•••• 2'· • 111 Indiana. which returns three °""'' r1<t•YM'19 vo•n Wt"tf'" lt ... luOv doublc·fiaurc scorers -including 11•. No1r1 O•tnt '"· ucu. 154, v "Ove 111. . fi ~ Ftof a. II• low• S••I• t7, Cel<for .... 71, Tuite seniorfuard Steve Al ord-1rom last "· O.P1u1 ... wrom•no o. si JoM'' •I. season~ 21-8 team. received two first-Moc11<oe11 ll. ttml)lt Jl. Cltm\on u. rcu 21.
I d 9s6 P rd Southern M•U•U•POi II. Oukt 11, LSU 11. Pace vote an points. u ue. v1ro;n1a n, Tutt·E• Peso 11. Miami, Fiii 10. 22-tO. mntched lnd1ana'<s first-place Noru"'""'" 10, wetnf110I011 10. tredltV '· OfllO vote total and had 935 points. S•••• s. s1 Jo'"'"'' 5, New 0rie.11s '· AW.·
Two other teams received first-~~'::=~e;,~i ~~~~~'l~~!r~ ~kt411vl 1•
COAST AREA PREP TEAMS HA VE IT TOUGH IN OPENING ROUND OF CIF ••• Ramming wins
Lehman-12 title From Bl ·
downs thaus year "ith over I 700 team. E\en Crespi was surpnscd." Lcaaue co-champion Tustin on the R__,, <6-41 et st JllM 10tco <10 01
yards The Lan,crs averaged 3S One sponswn1er from the San final niahl CIENT'llAL COH"•HNC• points a 0 "me, in .\ngclus Uallue Fernando Vallev pc"'•·--' the draw Woodb d ,,... h G N 1..°' """"' 16"41 •1 V•1e1>e1• ct -HI -,. I 'u:KU n ge \, oac enc OJI was Tror {t·2) ., ArJftle (7·3) compcuuon sheet. and had JUSt one comment greeted with video tapes, rather than L• °"'"''!M l vs. SuMv Hiil' !Ml•• lutN ''Redland~ (6-4) IS the wild c.ard bur .. TOO bad, Cre Pl lS 1" tbc sa~ the COJ\VC:OllOnal fiJm, tO his dismay. Per1l
&hey gave us the top set.-d,'' said bracket as Bishop Amat That means .. We're JUSI not scl up rtJ.ht for video An~~~ •• i:;~}O:!· Sed<llde.dl IHI •• Sen••
O'Hnra. "I gues-; that means we're the)'ll meet in the semifinals instead tape.. s:ud NOJI. NoJi. however. Uftlvtnlfv IMI 11 Le H•or• 16·ll
No. 16 1n a field of 16. Ma >-be we of the finals." \\Bsn'I unhappy with 1hc draw-not ~::.~:: t~:;~ :: ~ Mlft:nJ:·~~.11 belier not show up." not her called Russell Wh1t'C. the so much the feet he drew Bell-Jeff. but w .. ,.,,, 14-•> ,, TUlflll , •• ,,
O'Hara had his team stacked up 6-1. 190-pound Crespi sophomore. "a that he 101 a home game out of 11 m OHHT·MOUNTAIN CON"a1t1Na apinst No. 2-sceded R1 "er 1de Pol) a "once-in-a-lifetime back." the va t Dcsen-Mount"'in ('on-c11e'"in." <4-S-ll •' 11ootn•111•on no-o1
d h d b h l l c h M k c .. Ctbt'llo <•·•> .. C•ltlletel IS-4• ll
UDlf'ld t7·ll 'fl Horlhv t# 110 0) el COVIN
D '"let StediUm COVIiie (1·1) el LOI Alto' Cf• II
Hemet 17·2· II "' Gltndofe (7•)) Oltmond lar (7·1·11 n Soul!'! Hllli 19·11 ti COV11\f 01l1r~1 Slldlum. ~•lurd.l'I' p.,.,,, C7·)) el Be• Gerdtlll (10-0)
INLAND CON, ... INCI
&O<on IS-SI el l•Wloo CIO·OI
Wfll ... n Cflrlthall <•·n ., OnlerlO CIV•''''"
16·•1 K .. ,, Ve ev II 21 •I &ffumont 11·?1 I 11t1re11 (7·l l n Cerointerll II 2) el
Cet 11<11tet •e JUflJOt H 191\ Tehedleol ft ·l) at Trone (H I rear ago an on t e roo . ut t e n1\rrs1t)' oac ar un-fercncc ..,.Jeff <t-2I..,. w ....... (t·JJ et ir.,,..
ions tu med the pla)olTs '""de out nrngham got more than he b"..,"1ned Rcll·J"fT ,. coached by r.0 rmer 5-1111 ciere 1•·S> e1 AtllKedWo c1·1·11 '"
I r. h ~-" ~ 1' LA -..0 (8 7) Le Sier " l) Slt1tle YMr (6·41 vs MM-Ille lt•21 et S." with ao upset VICtOI). and c:ventua I) .or. s ow ms up early to fill OUI the Ram'I hncbacker DouJ Woodlief. .:. IHI v' SI 1!MOl'I 17·J~ .1.1t11n.111 MaflftO
II .. Clv'lll fO. (t 4) •t $91\ Jt<lltlO l •I•
there were thrtt un\t't League teams custom:il) an formation heet on his L.aauna &ach 1ntenm coach Llo)d Nor•• vi,1, CS·51 vl. 0r-1t-4I " e1 Pttecst1t <7 n •• ve '"""''-" tt·•>
in the S(mifinah. team for one and all to glean. Cotton was on the upbeat, not ~ I Mo.TI~UTHN '°""'HHCE
"They've aot us at No. I and riJht He had not rcce1Hd one in the mail b«au~ of the fact he must take his u ".;::~::O:"' 1•·41 "• ... ,".~" H •1 ~~~~~.~~·~;2~1,:~ cu, 110 Ol
below us is Long Beach Jordan (No 3 because the Cl F Ob\ 1ously did not Ani ., to R1vcf'\1dc. but because of SOUTHHN CON"H•NC• L• ce111d• u s1 ,, 1..~ c' 41 in the Moore League with a 5-4 consider University a candidate for the potential of suiting up tailback· Cenvon. Aneheim 1s-s1 "' ti TOfo 110 O> '' Mon11n1.t1ct. 16·3> •1 eurrOllOl'I,, eurblllk
m:ord) ~t f.iscnbuwer (No. l m the the pla)OIT: Afier &oana through that lincb<\ckcr Jonathan Todd for the Mo~io:,;::_ 17 11 •• Pffatnount 1..,1 Cl·~Oftv IM·ll •• 1tt00noo 1M1 1-~-·..,...,tt-.C1trus 8th). That•s a mockery." • process. he found his opponent. La aame. MIUoOil liltlO !Ml "' .. --H!Jn lt•l •ll al • MO<>fOV. 16•>1 •• $tilt• ~I• lf•ll
Marina Coach Chris Ramsey JU"t Habra, had not filled out a h<:et. "Thctt'i. no i.wcllina." said Cotton Stnl 11t1 F1t1c1, iroi..ooo Lew•""' IH·ll 0 Vttllum o.i <1 ,.,, 11
J11nned and id .. we·rcjust happy to ~ La Habn osslltant coach finall) of the kntt 1nJury. "'I think tte an 10• ~~.!!;4~~ t:•:*":.: ~~' ~·-~·:. '''!~!.~~ ,f..,"' ...,, 1•·11 •• c .....
be here.'" but the lo)ola coaching sho\\cd up. but without an inf or· \\1th a brote. rm JU t ffad"' aot him k•I!• ~low• ., Ce!tYOftt ~tall confirmed the u\p1c1on that mation h«-t.He was allo"ed to out of there when \\e_did" lto«e"'" 1e+11 "' '-~ .. l\f<Ol\k• 1M·•>--.-~:~r~~~~~~:~~HC•
By ALMON LOCKABEV
~ ............ ., ....
Phtl .Rnmm1na Nc~port Harbor
Yacht Club 1) the new owner of the
Barney Lehman Troph), S)Mbohc of
the Lehmnn· 12 ailtna cham·
p1onship.
Rammin&. with hi wife Kathi •
crew defeated e field of 2 Saturday
and 'unda) in a sevcn·racc \en to
win the coveted kudo .
Runner-up in the rqana was Tim
Hoa.an wuh Mau Mcrickle a~ crew
also from NliYC'
Top flve fin1 he:"·
I. Phil and Kathi Rammina.
NHYC. 32 S point'; 2. Tim Hoaan·
Matt Mcncklc. NHYC,32.75; 3. Jam
and Mary Buckingham. NHYC. 45,
4. \!l~lc and Ram~> Campbell,
NHYC, 48.7S; S. Hugo hm1dt·
Blrbara l.)-On. NHY 52.
Manna is lfie un ertf()I. duplicate nl\el'lll)' s 1nformat1on, La 1erra ,., coached by Da\t .,. =-~>~~•r•flll ve 11.,1 ••otow '', 11 ,,, CWM"lo 1s 0 e1 Mon1e111t
"We kind of c~pccted to get then len Cunninaham cmpt)·hand· Perkin • a former defcnsi~t b.tck for Cut\I« CllY CN > •• 1..-• tt+n •• Gto¥tt Ito~ U·SI e1 v1c:101 v.-.v tM·IJ ~iiii•-----------·
1anna," 1d l oyola 15s1 tant Jon cd Wad Wan.ut Nc:\lipon Harbor. and 1'""'"' COASTAL cowut..c• ~.:."d~~l,•!,'C::~f.;r tN>
Da"' n. "Obv1ou ly no one 1 ter· ddlcback Coach Jeri) Witte, an a 1 tant under 8111 Piuica. '"•N'r "•'11 <~ ·U '" 1iNJ1r cio-o •• AM• rM·ll o c.antw 1N1 et ,.,,, S.n
nblc and Marina ha won five an a ho~c\er. said lJnt\<'r~1t' 11n•t an over * •H•OtM cc MtonJo Cotltee mw. But W(' could have aot Fontana." il head . • ,.:::=-Cl·•> "' ..... v.,.. tHJ •1 INlle IS•MI "' C'ileRf !Ml •1 C!lf
£di!.On Coach Daye White was "If Unl\t~1ty ('lln ·play defenk." c111 ... .,..,. (#1_.,. rM111 fl'IOUWl!d Oil!• CM1 ~·~z. ~r,, •• A"gvo ,..,,
urpmcd. ancs acknowlcdltd the '1id Witte:.· •• "the~ have 1heoffcn1C!' ... ,,:rc:=.'.:...ca e:,~.'fj!;'~~~~1f, ,.11 , •MNtT·MA• coee,.HNC•
1. k. 'He<sophomort RuacD White) Cunn1n1ham ad:nowledacd La • .,...,..... U·•·n 11 aW1oeAiMt 110 01 "eMOtN •• » •• w .. 1 TCM'rtf!C• .... , ,.,.._~,.:=.-=:;::;i, lW
1 probabh the be l bade 1n CIF. But Habra's rcpu11tion. but itddeu. Lont tMcn Jorden ls •~IMMow« 1• 11 '°""' Tttt""• cMr '"' ai.... ~ Ma'"9 e1 c~., '"
thcrt are · no dop 1~ J)ta)oO, "I hc~·s nut 1 •hole lot of teams ~::.?·~ floty IM> •• 11 !.',~.:;_ ~ 0~ o..oi -.. .............. 1ny'u~~ \\t thoup& "d set• 1h1rd belier than Tu un. h' o( that we 1-.. ~ 21"' cNUJ" 1J., IAITW• cowm«• ~~ ~s.~ , " '"""' °"
plac<t rram, or at I st the worst can't play with than." H!Otl 1 ll9tltll0 "''' .. RemeN •IJ ~ er. 11 • aw 1 ,v.n:• ~ ...... m. I .n-l tJn1\Cn1tr ~utaktd into the eta"· ~(NI ., l"orlfena t• IJ N6t*lil ct·21 •• ~ c ,, ,. .. ~v .., ._ _..... n'. 0 f , 1.ovolt Ct 2> "' ,_,_ Cl•S) et Wft !ff HecJtNI HNN1 WllMn •Jn U SffNI (Hofe Al 11111'11" F 1hough1 I n ,,,.,, the wont 0 011: ~1th • # ups.ct IC •n CMI •I "~ llleUI ,, 41 ,, )) •• t~ Hl9"! nolecl
Stanford win•
••
•
.
lrYl:Da rryar cefebntee at• catch~ Tony ltuon • d~rado p&N.
RAMS LOSE ON MIRACLE PLAY . : . ~ From Bl
EvcretL "Then as I went on I felt
morc confidence and started to have
fun."
With evel)onc kccpina their eyes
glued to faerctt, the Rams' offense of
the past three )Cars. runn1n1 back Enc
D1dcerion. showed throwing the ball
doesn't hurt his productivity.
Dickerson had 102 yards rushmg on 24 carries.
"J1mm) 1s a real leader with a lot of
confidence," said Dickerson "He got
morc confidence a.s the pme v.ent on
and even aot a httlc cocky. ot cocky
like (Bears quancrback) Jim
McMahon. but to the point that the
confidence spreads to the rest of the
team."
The Rams now have some things
they have lacked an recent years: a
bal3nced offense, quack stnke ability
and the knack to come from behind
Whtn EvereJt took over for starter Ste~ Dils at the 14:35 mark of the
second quarter. the Rams found
themsehes trailing 13-0.
By the ume the fourth penod came
around they "'ere leadina 28-L6.
down and six play with )4 ~onds la.rd , who cauJ.ht e1&ht passes for 129
left )ards for ciu1ly his best game back
Then 1 Eason showed his savvy since hlS holdout. pve the Rams a
when he took off for a 26-)ard run to 28-16 advantaae on the first play of
the Ram 25 wnh :03 showina on the the founh quarter.
clock. It p vc the usuall) punchlcss Ram
"Eason is one oT the best quar-their h1Jt:icst ~int output orthe }Cir
terbacks in the NFL," said Rams And v.1th their defense. the Fl's
defensive end Gary Jeter. "That run No I. )'Ou'd think \his one wa.s on ice.
was the big Pia> of that drive. We :.·we didn't &ive E"crctt too much
rushed only thret guys and he got · help today," said comcrback uRo)·
through a seam. I thought he m1ahl'" Irvin. "I wish we "'ould ha~played
have sone alJ the way to score." better defense down the stretch. I've
Despite the los , which dropped the never been involved on a big play like
Rams to 7-4 and has put them an that. but it's &ood ·expencnce. Any-
dangeroflosmg their lead in the NFC bod) can do at once."
West depending how San Francisco And that's all tt took.
(6-3· I) farc-s tonight, the mood was RAMS NOTES: 11 wes a 51rarioe dav tOf
still one-of excitement ao the Rams tol'Mft>Kk t..9"ev 1r11n H• 1n1.,ceo1ecs '"'° lockerroom . 11es~. out llll'l'lblld botll awev on 1111 emu.no All "OU had to d~'was to check th• runbaek• He and 111e lll•m• oot luckv on 111e 1 v "' . MCond. llOW~tr wlltf\ an bH1cial oiew .,, Hrlv Stat Shtet (O 5CC why. wlllil .. lo ltl Ille lh«m It.NII POJWU'°'1 "I don'I A 34-yard TD pass from E"·erelt to tllonk aOOYt lumollne w11«1 I'm runnono w11111,.. wade -1· .-.. Hent Ellard, who DIM, · 1a•d 1rv111 ·1•m lu\t iOoklne to KOft
• '"'"" T ~· Tiie Patr.ot' TM McSw1111, ~ bloc .. ed • PUllt made a comeback 0 SOf'tS. made ll t nc:I reiurntct II 31 vards fOt' I louelldown to OlVI 13-7 A 24-~ard sconng toss to Ba"'-111e Pa" a 12-0 IMO u id "I wH ,ur.,,.1Mc1 T,.,
1 • ·' llflt llM'!I' t>IOCA«•> .w«• ca no out numbefs Redden gave the Rams a 14-13 lead 110 block> bul """' ,... .. ., 001 ca.i.. New
,,.. AP .. 1pelltlel.
Raul Allqtc kicked a 33-yud fidd aoa1 with 12
seconds lef\ to llYC' the ew York Ci11nu a 22~20 vtetory
o'er Minnesota ind fir1t pl&ee - at least canporanly -
in the NFC East m Nauonal Football 1.equt act101t
Sunday. The Gian cs, 9-2, lead Walhtnaton by a hal(pme.
Phil 1mmr., "'ho completed 25 of 38 passes for 309
yards, hit Bobby Johnson with t 22·rtrd pass on founh-
and-17 with l: 12 left to lecpthc wmn1ngdri' ealive. Four
playi later, Al~. who had five field aoals, kicked the
winner. . • :
• Minnesota. 6-S, Jlad taken a 20..19 lead w1th 6.Sl
remaininawheJ\ Wade Wilsoncameoffthebeach m place
of injured quarterl>at:k Tommy Kramer and tn~" a 33-
yard toucbdo~n to Anthon) Carter. • . • • : rn other iamcs: . . • . • • . • . .
Co_..ys U , CUrien U -QUllrtcrback te"e
Pellucr. aner beang sacked an NFL record-tyint 12 times.
scored on a 2-yard bootlca run with t ·37 as Dallas rallied
from an 11-point deficit to beat San Dteao.
The Cowbo)' • who trailed 21-10 earl)· in the fourth
quarter, drO\'C from tflcir 39-yard line to the Chataer$ 2 on
three completions b> Pell uerbeforc he rolled around riiht
end for the decisivt \Core. The Cowboys improved their
ttcord to 7~4. ·
The L.kw~~ 11.:t Yllth 1:44 ~Jfa*t
quanmeck ltancliU CuanmsNm ~-l1ntbKkerMiMQoJer~ itat &M J1,
With the aid of a~ dW pve Detrdit a.h at
tht 32. the laont ru Iii .-C"k dowa to U .._.. ~
Murray kkkecl the samt iliaaer. · •
• CUn111n&hem rulbed 1'4 timn fOr 113 ~ 10
become iht lit1t Ea&)a MJJ camtt to II'" 100 or more
)'lrds 1h1t season. . .
The Lions' defcnte bad 1 l tacb.
SaU.tt 11, Cu4laah 7 -0.vc W1ltoft·1 l().ymd
$Corina pa to M 1ke Jones and thru fidd pk by Morlm
Anderstn P' e New Orl~n• 1 victor) over5'. Louil Md
I 6-S record ror only lM third tune in 20 teMOftl.
· 1ntsrook1t Rutbtn Mayeuuibed for I Jt.)'lllde•
25 came ·and frtt safety Frank Waaidet ~.al SL
Lou1S" defeat with a foW1h-quaner ·~ IOUOwed by a 22· ard rttum. • •
• "'It n a w1n .• We alY>'&)S take a win," Ne"!' Orleans
C ch Jim Mora sa1(f, "I think we can~ bdt,er tban .e
i>la)ed today. lt"was a ph)ticaJ pint. I thank IMy (S.1,tst
know what they ha .. c"\o do.",
Dolpflalas af, 8U11 U -ML1mi rallied from a l4-
point dcfiC1l to Buffalo led by quarterback Dan MariAo
who threw four touchdowns and completed a carttr·hiah
39 passtS for 404 yards •
A 4-yard touchdown pass from Marino to Den
Johnson early in the founb quarter pve the Dolph1n'
dlcir first lead at 27-2•and Marino scaled the victory latC'r
with a 2-yard sco!1na stnle to_ Lorenzo Hampton .
Bnrs,t.t, Falcons 10 -Mike Tomczalc-directed1wo
thard-quarthdnvcund theCh1caiodefen5e-hctd'Allanta· .__Slttltn ll. Oileri 11 ~ton.self~
without a first down for the first 23 minutes of the second offens1,,tly, l<>iing sc' era I scoring oppottunities to
half to beat the Falcons. turnovers and penalties before bcina turned back on four
Tomczak, who completed just one of c[iht passcs-fnr-~~~·e pla)s from the Stccln-s' I-yard. line in the
Silt yards with two 1ntcrcepuons before halfum~ was 8 of • fourth QUaner. .
14 for 197 in the second half. Beaaala u , kwwu 7 _ Boomer Esiason threw 1 Chica10. which \\On its ninth game m 11 starts, wu thtrd-quartcr touchdown pa s to put Cincinnati ahead
held without a first down for the first 2~ minutes. and Eddie Edwards recovered quarterback.Dave Kfica'""'T5'----;>'......,;.ii
Jets Jl, Coltt 1& -Wesley Walker cau&ht three
touchdown p&MCS and the 'cw York defense forced SJ\
turnovers as the Jets e\tcnded their \\inning streak to nine
pmes with a victory o,·cr winle s Indianapolis.
Walker ~tabhshed a career-high with 12 toucltdo\\n
catches on 1he season. The I 0-)ear \etef¥ w1deout
caught a 19->ard scoring pass from quarterback Ken
O'Bnen in the lint quaner, and 5-yarders in the S«ond
and founh quarters. Walker's pre" 1ous high for TDs \\as
nine 1n 198 I. .
Rookie Jack Tru<kau ~t a Colts' mark \\Ith 57
passes. hmmg on-Z'Hor 359 yards.
Broncos 39, Cblefs 11 -Running back Gerald
Willhate scored three touchdowns, includ.tng a 70-yard
punt return. and the Den,er defense forced two Bill
Kenney fumbles to set up fint-quaner TDs as the Broncos
routed Kansas City.
The victory ampro,,cd the Broncos' record-to 9·2 and
increa\Cd their lead to two pmcs over Kansas City and
the Los An1ele Raiders. both 7-4. in the AFC West. ·
The Chiefs were tryina for a share of the AFC West
lead this late m the season for: the first ume since 1971 . •
fumble in the end zone as C1 nc1nnati shelled Seank.
The fknpb. 7-4, took advantaac of Scahawk
mistakes to hand Seattle its founh consecutive loss. a first
under Coach Chuck Knoit. ·
Packen Sl, B•ccuttn 7 -Randy Wnsht.. knocked
out of st week's pme v.1th a slt&ht concuaion, threw
three touchdown passes and the Greco Bay defense had a
season-high six sacb 10 ballDJ Tampa Ba . . •
Motltana, 49ersface 'Skins
\\ASHl\ovTO (A P)-Joe Montana says be h~
more important thin&$ to wolT) about than threats from
Wa\hington Red kins defef\s1\.C end Dexter Manley.
Montana. \\ho und.erv.ent back surget"} 1n Septem-
ber. returned last undayto thro"' for 270 )lrds t-nd three
touchdo""ns in San Francisco's 43-1 7 row oflhe t Loul•
Cardinals. The five-time Pro Bowl quarterback wfil be
-tf)1n1· fat an encore tontaht when the 49cn meet the
Rcdslt.lbsnRF)I. tad1um. ·
Then . the Pats showed their
bounce-bad.: prowc u their final
dme started at thcar own 13-)ard hne
with I ·45 rcmaininJ.
and scnubc fans out oflhett mind. El'O•ncl koer T..., ''"*'"ext•~"" t...., .. Hi's pe-1.onnan-••k•s the cd,,,. toet streak 10 12 ''"lolll ••th m.kn o1 a . •s HI ..... .. .. ... •"<I lt Vaid a11em111, He ' now 21 ol 3) Oii Ille off this loss." said \eteran guard tear,aPelrlOlrKMCllOt'tnOSl~ln •MetOft Lloosl3,Ea&IHll -Eddie"Murra)'s 41 -)ard field
Dennis Harrah of Everett's efTon . 1...,.~ed .. =' =~~ O.::: ~= goal \\1th 12 sccon<l~ remaining ga"c Detroit the \. lctOI)
"He took.charge out there. We were ,....,,. .,_.. ,..." 1tM, ,.,._., "'"'.., 111 "'"" over Philadelphia. snappin1 the Lions' four-game lo 1n1
all hoping he \\OU Id and he proved to OrlM"' T..v HllMw m '*' ,,,. Dame w 111 • streali::
Manie) third an the NFL w:ith I _I/, sacks, claimed he
\\On t forego a chance to clobber Montana 1f the
opportun1t> anscs .. Am l goina to pa up a cood hcl.:
because hes had Uf&Ct"}1'' Manley said ... ·o. rm &Otn
to nni hu dock. If he's hun. then don•t pla) him. Put a
skin on h1m and I won't hit ham . 1 promise." Eason \\IS 6 of 7 on the game
wrnn1111·senes. inc;ludina a SC\'Cn·
yard pass to Ton} Collins on a fourth us c s quite a man. ...,., 27.3 ooi!IO ll!to nw 1-111 -..ri. w 111 a h • · " br\llMd '1•1ft • C°"""9 "''° tr... •-IN Ila"" ~
Even"tt's 20..yard TO pass to El-••d 1.1'\Clef co.c:.11 """ • ....,,,...
PATRIOTS' SUNDAY: PRAYER ANSWERED
From Bl
quanerbacks On unda>. Eason
completed 36 of 52 passts for 375
yuds and t"-O touchdowns. More
1mportantl), he coolly directed New
EnaJand to the game-wannlna touch·
down. as he scra1Y1bled 26 yards and
onds tef\ to set up Maracle Right.
"The thought 1s 1f )OU can catch 1t.
catch at," Eason said of the pass. "If
not, tap 1t w someone else can."
The tipper in this case was wide
receiver Stanlc> Morpn. Morpn.
SJandtng ma pack m the middle of the
end zone. went up wnh the Rams'
Johnn) Ora~· and batted the ball up.
ala a Wilt Chamberlain finger roll.
;md toward the back of the end zone
where Fl)ar l\\lited. with hope.
FryarsaidaH he had do was jump a
few inches s1ra1Jht up to act to the
balJ. Thou&}\ it appeared a handful of
pla)crs had a hot at the ball after 1t
was tapped. F11ar said onl> be
touched 1t.
"I was tryina to stay inbounds," he
said. "I knew I was about a foot in so
1f I could get to the pass, it's a
touchdown. We pracucc that Hall
Man thin& but 1t's never worked.
What arc the odds? A million-to-one?
· •• tanley (Moraan) tipped it but I
didn't sec that. I think the Rams were
trying lO knock 1t out of bounds bul I
was the funhest back in the pale and It
came naht to me."
Fl)ar. Eason, Cra1a, all of the
Patriots said It was supposed lo
happen the W'&)' al dad, that. as fkrry
said. "great things happen to &int
pla~ers " But the look of relief on
their faces indicated that tbcy had a
Sunda~ tra_}er.anS\\Cred. . .
"Ton)' ~n) calledethe play in
the huddle and told us not to come
.
. ,,...,......
Rame-Knin Greene, Shawn Miller react after 1089.
and I can sec why," James said "If fo r the season. a Patnot club record)
(roolic quarterback Jam ) Everett can and Rod Mc \\&m's 31-yard return
pla) hkc he did today cons1stentl), with a blocked punt for a touchdown.
they could be \\Orld champs." The Patriots regained the lead in
Small consolauon for the Rams 1 the th a rd quarter. l 6· 14. on Franklin's
(7-4) who will drop to second in the third field goal, this one for 19 yards.
NFC West behind an Francisco 1f the 49ers beat Washington tonight. But New EO&land seemed to be on
As for the Patriots. at 8-3, the> ns wa) to ~cfeat when Henry Ellard
move to wnhin a game of the ~aught a .. 0-yard touchdown pass
dmsion-lcading New York Jets an the from Jim E"crctt to give the Rams a FC EasL 28-16 lcad earl) tn the founh quancr.
Lost m the phenomenal catch will Eason hit F11 ar for a 6-)ard sconng
be the Patriots' success earl) m pa s with 7·54 lef\ and when th e Rams
Sunda)'s pme. New Enatand built a "ere topped at midfield late m the'
11--0lead1n thc~ond quarter on two aame. the Patnot got the ball back at
Tony Fninkhn field aoaJs (hi three their O\\n 14-)ard hne with l:S4 lcf\
field goals unda)· 11ve Franklin 27 The mt. a thC) sa). ~'a.S rinrrack
b3ck "ithout the ball," James said._ --------------------------"He was sayinJ we ca n catch this
. I
th1ng so catch 1l. It ma)' have btto
caulf\t in trle nickel scats but nobody
"'as J01na to drop it.
"I d ne \cr seen anythina ltke it. But
without the~ kinds of P.la)s, )OU
don't win cha mpionship . •
James,-., who was in the same
backfield as Eric Dickerson dunna
their college days at SMU. said he
experienced a similar pla). but from
tb.c.:o.ther adc, when Jam McMahon
threw a touchdown pa s with three
seconds kfi to lead BYU to vic tory
O\Cr MU in the 1980 Holiday Bowl.
James. held to manus-one )W net
ru hmaon three c.amcs Sun&,ia). pH.
the Rams cr~ht for hotdint the lea<J
until ume nan out.
.. Their dtrensc 1• No 1 in the NFL
ThC' Pr:'" Si:\'(' ! o_..., l
· •1-n• .. , ..... ~ ....
..... .... C&.~--
EVERE1;'T: QB OF PRESENT ..
From Bl
that was first ruled out of bounds but
later called a TD when the officials
re" 1ewed the instant replay tape.
He prwttdN to complete ht next
Silt puses lo &o 6 of7 for I 01 yardsat
the half.
"Not to take an>thina awa) from
the 01hcr quarterback on thi team." ~1d de(ensa'e end Gal)' Jeter. "'but
when Jim came in somet ina hap-
pcned. I "on'tsayit's magic or what at
was. but it was areat:• ·
£, crctt.hit Rcddc.o with a 14·)"ard
D pa that showed the rookie''
ability to k~p hts cool and not for~"C
the ball an to co' eratt. He looked oil
two recca"er stepped up through
ru h and found Redden O\:cr the
middle all alone. .
He UlO\\Cd his arm strength b>
thrtadma a 20..)ard rope of a pass to
f.llard to &1\C the Rams what seemed
hke a safe '28 I 6 lead m lht fourth
quarter
"ll'lt the \ign of a areat new era,"
\aid Ramlt Coach ol\n Robinson.
··He did a Jrtat JOb working hard to
bc'comc a part of th1 team and had
bridatd an cnormou aap. Ye . he'll
tlrt ne\t wed:.''
And at'' le: bet to f.I\ th " k
af\cr that. too •
raid pblit I advnt-tnt of ORIDLOCI\ t1 t ! u,_ "~")
Y••••••••••YYYYYYY~Y.Y
;v0TENO oN"A "I HELPKEEPAWAY;
; FORTY THOUSAND CARS A DAY1 · ; • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••
I l
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::bozen~ lo
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mcludmg ..
Rolls Royce
Porsche
Ferrari
Mercedes
BMW
and Classics
FINANCING
AVAllA·BEE*
NO MONEY DOWN!r* *
JCsend
seasons. .
this week
Two weeks ago, Golden West
Coach Ray Shackleford said how nice
it was to be 7-0-and having the other
teams chasi ng the Rustlers at the top
of the South Coast Conference foot·
ball race fo r a change. · _ ""'
• Two losses l .. ter. all that has
changed. Now Golden West is doing
the chasma and Cemtos. following us
32-2 1 comeback victory over the
Rustlers last Saturday", is sitting
pretty.
The Falcons(S-1, 6-2-1) meet cellar
dweller Mt. San Antonio (1-5, 3-S·l)
at hofl\e Saturday night while the
Rustlers (4-2, 7-2) host El Camino
(3·3. 3-6) Fnday night at 7:30.
In other South Coast Conference
matchups, Compton ( 1-S. I ·8) plays
at Veterans Stadium against Long
&ach City College (2-4. S-4) and
Fullerton (4-2, S-4) travels to
Pasadena for a pme with the Lancers
(4-2, S-4).
gresult
.. oo HO )00 uo 210
210
NINTH ••c•. Pee• I Mi• JoMOh Cl04ltf*'tv CKnl 7600 12a UO
... ti I UCkWllMI (Paruf) J 00 140
Astounded 11<~1 Ulr
Tllnt 1.!7' Atio We!!I FIV Or 1)(1,,t, Tom CIOUOMrtY,
Loll• Fuel, Slo N Stir. Ntvtr A..,tl Me, Prlvlle
AtM'vt •
Saetefled NoMc
S2 IXACTA (7·Sl oeld Sll.UO
S2 DAl~Y T•.,.La CS-MJ oeld "3020
TENTH RACE. Pece I MJle
'S!lll"ITllrr NOittli tHMlnr-•7 tO Ht Ht
l<tllt lrevo (PllllO) • tO • '°
Frosrv Ltv11v !Dlfrt nco Jr I 9 IO Tl~ ?CH Alto Wtnt MIU VietlO,,.,., OietnCNldllo<t ,
Dru• Inv. Ct'10$ Lovt V~1. •wv
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S2 DAILY OOUILE 11·"1 otid131920
S2 •XACTA (6 7' Oloel S2I IO
Allt"dilt'ICt 2,m
Muluel Hl!ldle S1'2,4n .
Los Alamit os
race en tri es ·
TOtOGHT'S •NTIUIH
(t791 .. u ...... --~ mMf!M)
""' f"MI: 7:ll ft M. ,.ST lllACE. "°° Y1rd• Pun• '2.300 2
vur okll. c111m1no Prlet SJ 200
1 On Tilt ln.idl (Proctor)
2 Voom Veroom (F'9ueroe>
3 Doc cnevv !Gerci.>
4 Flr1t N Go.I IMe*'I
S Mevt>e Sl>lcv (lerdl
' S.nd Ot C&ill 'OkWICllMnl • 7 -"""e-iomt To T,.. Me• (Flore.I I Lovin Undl Rolo (Cerdo11)
t s.n1 ev An Anoec (8r00111l
10 Step On Thru IT19Pinol
AIM ...... •
1n m In m
In
122 ·m m
11'
11'
II TloetKH CGllll m
l? LIYIO L-el (Pll4Jllne) In
13 Hemocheree (lklcMlel) IZ2
l• C1•tlts1 Wllauier CHutit) 1n
SECOND •ACE. J.SO Y1rdl PurM SJ .00 l veer Olds & UD Cllml"O PrlCt ll.200
I 8111111 Sil)jt CWerdl ln
2 Mff llacon CGllt) • In
l L.ants Aoy1l 8-nd IG.,cl1I 1 It
4 llock1noNfOll (G.,Cle l lit
S Ju.111 Sec:reteHeo< IRuill I It
• ~ Pen 1Cr11oetl 1n 7 The Hl9f!Wevmen (Oidef'icMen) I It
• PeriMI Priest (TrMwre) 122 t Htddl Good HcltN (Lldltt) • tn
TMllD lt.ACa. l!O Yercts Pun1 '3,000
F Oft. 2 vHr old• Cll•m•no Price 11,000
l ..M.u sou.rt Olt>Cll' (Cerd011l m
l Mlolc MltmorY Two (V1uo11n) • 122
l lllclltst Gin To Go (Leclltvl m
4 A Foa On Tile Run (Me-er) 1n
S $111$ Atltfltlen (Mltcn.tl) m
• 1c111n FOf' Time !Gift> m
l"OUlllTH RAC•. 3SO Verd• Pvrte. 12..IOO
FIU!ft. 3 vMr okb. Clllmlno Price'. M,000
I Truc:kll lel'll IC•rdotel In
2 Jon1thon• Jene (Ruirl In
3 MY Old Gel llld'I (lrOOllt) l??
I lelltn AllCI sCr''""" lllu ll 122 , T ... AdVl'lleff (Gercie) 122
l Sovtrt'9"1 Smotll (Gercll) 112
• SC.I T Sii.io (l rOOll•l ".'-122
S Nuu Ruov Go 1Treuur1I lit
' Eacell!O' AO<Mtl IDtderidlsenJ 1n
1 Lofty E1111e ledrdolll 122 • Flnel P01n1 tlJelcf>:' .. 1) 1 tt
SIVEHTM llACl. lSO Verd• Pun• suoo 3
veer ok:l1 C11lm•l'O Priet ll.200
I TM Geml Plln (TIC>OtllO) 121
7 Soectecui.r JOtlV CGlt'cltl 122
l Tr\llV A Wre~ Ut11<1) l?l
• Five Dot MM'rttn111I IWtl'dl • in s A111 Z•oov (Proctor>-1n
' ll>e"'1 8nht 1cr11oerl in
1 eivt Moon Frlddit tLecuvl 1n • Soilmi IOIOtflCUen) 122 t Pe m•ld °""'1 CF.guwoe) 122
10 ..... Wl'lder Dude (C.rdote) 122
AIMU...
11 Pr"''""' Pel (8 rooasl 1n
12 S•rto 0\ eiue IMVleJI 122
13 Hort11en1 lil1t ILewlll 122 I• J"""'*'I Jtl (GerCll) 122
EIGHTl4 •ACI . .., Vereb Pvne ll.800 J
VHr ~ &. 11P Cllofft!'O Proce lS.000 •
I °'1 Tnt w .... IL~I 112
2 B•mn eue e.r, !Gere.el 120
l Proud St•rbue.k (Ftoretl 120
4 VldO (Glt'Clll 112
S Jemie 01¥ IPilktnton) 119
6 Mellftdl• Effort !OtdtriellHnl 122
1 ~-"" Su<•• (a.v.d) 122 I Sl\llofl Rtt> (Wlfdl 12? t Ont Tlmt Ov« CVeugnn) lit
NtHT" •ACE. e10 Yerels Puf'M '3 000 l
vter ok:I• .. UP Cll•m•no Price Sl.000
I Trovtllt wtllo (Flowroi) 122
2 Gtt Tiit GrtPn (MYia) Ill l lllvtrdete Ollie IOlcllricllMnl m
4 Putoto Clncltf IG.,cl.ll llt
S RCIOtf' Young IGercle) 122
• Snloov Merdell CVeUOM) lit
In the Mi sion Conference, Orange
Coast finds itself Wlth a chance for a winning for the first time since I 978
when the Pirates were 7-3. Orange
Coast (S-3. S-4) hosts Citrus (2-6, 2-7)
at 7:30 Saturday.
--+---tt-~~ef'!tt~todccd up the confe1e1ace
crown last Saturday with a SS-Q
trashin& of San Diego CC while San
Diego Mesa and Southwestern
battled to a 22-22 tie, both falling a
game and a half off the pace.
t Qet .. 1111r G5M¥ 4"•~> •ft
s Ms 11\ie OHtlnv (Gercl1l 1n I Sun Tff ~v (P~nt)
Ahl ...... t SWt" 8enlltr (S.V' )
119
m
119
Bill Nix of Bo I boo Island hos never won anything in his Iii e.
All that changed lost ..t-eek, however. Nix and his wife Janet won the ninth week of the Daily
Pilot & TWA Win.Go Contest.
They both agreed the credit goes to Janet, who has been playing Win.Go since 11 began in
_September. Bui Bill admits he like~to soy, 'We won."
"The biggest thrill is knowing someone who won o contest," said the solesmon for a computer
maintenance contract firm.
The Nixes have not yet decided where they will spend their vacation but because Bill's
bloodline goes bock to Ireland, they have considered a visit to that country.
Both native Californians, the couple said they look forward to taking the lrip sometime in the
spring, 'when school is 1n session and there are fewer travelers," said Jo .
Janet discovered she won the contest two days before the ninth week's contest ended. She was
excited about winning but said she had to keep quiet, "because I had one granddaughter asleep
on one side of the house and another asleep on the other end."
But the excitement began to wear off by the time Bill arrived home from work. "She very L
casually menlloned 11 to me between telling me about the grandchildren' scolds. She 1ust said, 'I
won,' sard Bill.
The only time the couple has traveled overseas was In 19 55 when Janet SQent two weeks witb
her husband 1n Salzburg, Austria, where he was stationed in the U.S. Army.
"That was before jets and it also was on a TWA flight," she said. Ahhough they couldn't
remember what the airline flight cost, Janet said 1t took nearly two days to get to Europe.
"I .. ..I • .. !.,..~ • H h • •Omv""mg<eoh-.~ ... tear , -~eso1Cf.---..;....-.....-..;. ____ _
YOU COULD BE OUR NEXT WINNER!
laili Flrl,!J GOOD WE Rr RE . -•
J
7
CALL OUR HOTLINE FOR
INFORMATION, 714 642·4333.
fl/GHTS AVAii AMF llOM OIANGl' CO>ITY TO lAX
YfA GOIOlN STA Tf AJllMS
In Saturday's other Mission games.
the Tigers (7·1. 8-1) host Palomar
(4-4, S-4). Southwestern (5-2·1, S-3-1)
travels lo Grossmont (2-6, 3-6), San
Diego Mesa (S·2·1, S-l--1) hosts San
Diego CC (0.8, 1-8) and Rancho
Santiaao (S-3, 6-3) plays at Saddle-
back (4-4, 4-S).
• Env WHhln (Pilkenton) 1n
7 FHIUl't Sllrlet (L.aclltv) 121
l"ll'TM RAC•. l.SO Verdi Pul'M IJ,.SOO
Fllllft. l v .. r Old1 8red In C.~forn11 Cllom•no
Price. M.000 I llldl And FHt (P1\lllnt)
2 Ont Women Sllow (Vl\IOM)
l SHrilltlllll OilmOncl (L-tJ)
4 Finl SdlOOI G ori <Werd) s Ruov Go (Trffturt)
' Miu LN thlf H Leet (CreeoerO!\)
1 T ... 11 IUC>Ola (P9ltntOl'tn)
8 Spring APOllO (0t4efld&M!I)
9 Hoot T-(LldltVI
10 S4NlrrelY StlltWV ( 8r00k$)
SIXTH RACE. lSO Yercts '°"'" Yllf' Oldl Oelmitlo Price ".000
119
1:12
11' m m m m
119 m
122
'3.300 ,
Edmonton outlasts
Rangers in shootout
From AP dl1patcbes
Mike Krusheln yski and Glenn
Anderson scored 19 seconds apan
late in the third period to boost the
Edmonton Oilers to an 8-6 National
Hockey Lcque victory over the New
York Ran1ers Sunday night in New
York.
Krushelnysk1 scored the tiebreaker
at I 8:SS on the rcbOund of a shot by
Marie M~sicr. 1'nderson scored his
scrond goaJ of the pmc •t 197 14 to
seal at for the Oilers. who trailed S.I
early 1n the second penod.
Wayne Grcl1ky, who scored a &oal
in • four-1oa1 strond ptnod ""for
Edmonton. assisted on Anderson's
aoal to improve his leaaue-leadin&
point total to 4S.
LoStna S-1, the Oilers scored five
stra1aht aoals. 1nclud1na four within a
4:37 span of the second penod. to take
RUFFEll'S
UPllUTUY llC.
.......... lliili llril lld-... mta--•UM
a 6-S lead.
In other NHL pm es:
Flyers I, Capitals ! -Two first·
period goals by Peter Zczel led
Ph1ladelphta past Wa hington in
Philadelphia. ·
Washington trailed 2-0 JUSt l:S7
into the game and 0-4 after the first
period.
It v.'8s the Ayers' seventh con·
sccut1vc home victory ovcT the Cap1·
tals, who have not won at the
Spectrum Since April I, 1984. The
victory moved the A)ers into first
place m the Patrick D1vis1on. one
poimahcad of1dJe Pimbul"Rh.
Jets S, llluden l -At Wi.nnipq.
Ray Neufeld pve Winnipca the lead
with a rebound 1oal four minute
from the c.nd and the Jets went on to
post • victory over the New York
Islanders.
Defenscman Jim Kyte launched a
shot from the point that New York
goaltender Billy Smith handled with
his pad. but Neufeld pounctd on th e
rebound and put the puck into an
open net to Jive W1nnipca a 2·1 lea<J .
UCl'e Kaplan
1"n• tennl• title
Unseeded ophomorc Mark
Kaplan of U I rvjac.: captured the
mm's s1naJ~ champtonsh1p in a
cOUeaiatc tmnis tournament Sunday
at Ut'I with a 3-6. 6-1, M v1nory
over Kip Btlldy of UC nta Batt>era.
Kaplan, alona with teammate
Trevor Krontmann, alto earned 1
bdth In the doublts finals. ~·11
mttt another UCI duo (Juhan
Barham a•d 0.mn Yates) today at U I. ".
10 Mo"lvecl Grtent (C.,doll)
PRO BASKl TB~LL
Blazers
win third
• 1narow
From AP dl1pattbff
PORTLAND-K1ki Vaodewqhe
scored 32 Points and Oyde Drexler
added 21. leading the Ponland Trail
Bla1ers to a 124-103 NBA victory
over the Utah Jazz unday night. ·
It was the Blazers' third traiiht
victory and ended a three-tame
winning streak. for the Jau.
l>'ortland shot a blistcnna 64 per-
cent fro.m the fiddln the fint half.
convcnma easily off the fast break to
take a commanding 68-42 lead into
the locker room at halftime. Steve
Johnson scored 13 of rus 18 pcnnts in
the fi~t half for tM-:Blucn.
In other NBA pm~
B•llttt ll4,. Pacen 111 -At
Landover, Md .. Moses Malone had
38 points and 2 r r~OO\Jnds and Jeff
Malone added 2S point as Washing·
ton overpowered Jndiana .
The ~ullets built a bia lead early.
controlhna both boards on their WI)
lo a Jl-1&. advantatc after one
quarter. Indiana had only six re·
bounds m the period, none of them at the offensive end.
The Pacen ralhcd to take their fir1t
lead at S2·S I an the first of the t«ond
half. but Washinaton ttp1ned &he
advant.qe at SS-SJ and novcr trailM apin.
Recllett U4, C.valiert lM -At
Hou ton. auard M1tchtll W•n1 tut
eight of 10 field pl attemptt and ~ored 19 of his carcer-h1&h JO po1nta
1n the th1td quantt, leta1nt the Rockell pest Ckvdand.
ll R.ockcts finiihed 111 double
fiaurc • "'1th center Akeem O~uwon
ackhna 24 points ana~~im ~trim
rontnbutma a seaton-hi&h. 18.
Rockct1 forward laJpt( m~.
who ha bttn 1idehncd by *~Jury,
pla)'td 1n ht1 fint .. me. but did DOt
tan; He ICOttd Ill of his 11 point
and handed o.t fiveattistl 1n only 14
manutcS of the first half,
'
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PMMll
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SATURDAY'S SCH•OUU .... use: vs UCLA at ltoM ao..
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UC Oevti 11 HurnOo1111 $1 aedliea
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BANl(n 0
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An outatanding Yalue on
bayfront with ~. taroe ., .. ,.,~ patlO, pool &
spa Expanded 5BR
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of bUlkhnd .........
In Newport H9igl'lta HIQh
wall g!YU prlv11ey to 3
bdrm mini •ta1a with
Franch doon & lkyfighta
Sep1tate lludiO & ape
sized yard S~35.000
873-6900
7~-9100
- ----
If you're looking for a job,
classlfled has news for you.
F
GnDllCOUNT
COUPONe WORTH 114
In our St Crafter• ~••·
log UM them IOI' graa1
klll boOk• KCft90flel -more than 1000 Items on M co10t ~ Order c.._. Hl.C. lend" to: AUdaf Ma~ 62 • tO Noftham Bflld , Wood· tide, N Y 1'371 •
•
OoN & tlllOJ 0\11 Jlfden stylt IPls Quiet, comloftablt ~.,
close to f,...ays I Se. Coast fltal1 wllllt on11 m111111es to
bteth. G«ICfl avlilatllt NO PETS PlCASC
....... u .uo1••t•11u
ua •• •11s.•H1 . .•.... . ....... .
11•••••• !76S.~71
U9,mATAmTWA.,_ ... .......... "' ....... ff 7Hlllt MS.tM
Mab l}f smart mevt le Part Newp9ft,
'ewper1 leadl't prtmlfr lu117 1'Uru1.
Fvm*4 u4 ufaraisM4 l. I, 6 S
~ .,artmeah &IMI '°""""" ealJ
m1n1el fmn ·e..,.n Ctaitr u4 FIA1"
W.... Pmn HH to SllM. _
Jamboree.al Su haq11l9 Hilll R*
(7H)~l900 .
• PARK.
NEWPORT
$2.40 per day
That't ALL you pay tor
3 linel. 30 dey minimum
In t~
SERVICE
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o COMMONWEALTH
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• Friendly People • bc .... nt Sefvice
11135 liOCli ~d ~ li«ti
(71 4) 142.1111 (21J) 5'2·14"
.,b ceteence tn ..... a.Moe & LMllng ""'°'tinge County'• No. 1 No Haille Dealertl.
W! HAVE Dl8COUNTS1tl
(714)M7 ••
1• 1 ···-IMt .• ""' ... , ...... _ ...... °'_" lch .
' '
•
..
25CENTS
-~-capuvuy. .. _....._._._._,..........,,....,.:,.,,........_-"';..._...o:..-=--~....-....,..., ...... _.=------=----=---"I ~It hke a rabbit in • Qllt,"' Jacobecn l&Jd. '"The w~ ~ -..
the dmial of all the bnicf amplt
fn:ectoms -e~ the 6eedom ·"'
IJ PAVLARClll.PLE! . · Power'." nextSu~ay. · thj=~sa~hechurchbeanddlt
............... . Jacobsen ~s .1$0latcd on Sept. l9 other hostqCS-fonned dun~ A~r former hOJtaae Oivid and found .h1' faith so~ly tnted; fim captivit')l-thc C'hutch ofthe Jicobsen wa1 thrown into soliJ.ary btcausc his caP,ton toolc. away h11 Door -col)(fuc:ted servicet IWice •
confinement last September, he. re-81ble •. then af\c-rn ~s.returned when day. . ~ ~ved a fnctaqt from God that he they re1>e•t.edly ~ctn_o"ed and .re--. . • The kt)' • .Benjamin Wrir, r ~
would be released irrcarly November,· ,Pla~ the. smalc Jipi bulb by ~hi<:tt estant, an~ Che Rev A Lawrence J~
he told wonhlpcr$ in Gar<kn Gro'(e be could l'~ad the Babre. a Cathohc. took turns coaductUa&
Sunday. about 60 tcrvices until Weir was
.Jacobsen. of Huntington Beach, RelatedetorleeonM. freed. · • wu isolated from the other hostaaes After Weir wat released In Septnn·
in Beirut after hiJ capton became ber 1985. Jacobsen tokt Jenco,
angry with him "because of some Once they returned wtth a bulb that "You're not a very aood pncst. Afttt i~ponsjble speeulation on a tele-blinked off and on every five to 10 just 30 services you've lost 20 percent
vision network that I had sent O\lt a seconds. makmf 1t impossible to of your conareaaijon," ·
coded message," he said. concentrate on his rcadina. ' . Jenco was freed la1t July. The
"lfl had ~nt out a coded meuaat, Eventually, a auard replaced the hos•s . aai:ced they ·would tct
why should an-AmericartTV network ·bulb wi\h a aood one. Jacobsen together.after all had ~n releatcd 10
tell my captor5 that I had ~nt QUl a chastised himself for losina patience hold one last service for the Church of
coded messagcT' he asked. He said he with God. . · the Locked Door .
. did not send out any coded messaaes. Jn early October. God told bjm he Stall held in BeiJ'Ut by the Shii1e
-But a deep faith sustained him · would be-freed ... I knew it would Moslem aroup Islamic Jihad arc
durina his 17 months of captivit~. happen," he said. "I was completely Terry Anderson. 38, the chief Middle
Jacobsen said. · at ease:t, East correspondent for The As.-
Dunne two packed services in the Jacobsen said be ne'1er feared he sociatcd Press. and Thomas
2.890-seat sanctuary of the Crystal would be k1lkld by his captors. "I was Sutherland. SS, acting dean of Aari·
Cathedral, Jacobsen answered ques.-not afraid ~use I had the Lord with cul tore at the American University of
tions P<>SCd l?Y tclev1s1on evangeli$t me," he said. Beirut. · . ·
Dr. ftc>bcrt Schuller, the founding He dcmicd l)cmg physically mis--At least three othCT Americans are
Dr.. Robert 8Clialler hater'Yleft INe4
~e Dadd Jacobeen of B~tJ.aitOD
-:----.,.-----~--:__,,-=--:c-.:.......;-.o:....~:.._~lOf-Ok . . tttatC'd. but had to learn now to believed hdd . hosuv-:or other'
The service wilt be aired on exercise . with htS hands and feet Moslem extremi'sts in the W'ar-tom •
Schuller's weekly program "Hour~f chained.during the first siLwcck.s of (Plaaeeee.JAC088Elf/~)
World
Callfomia
Fresnots-real bfg1)hots
dress up for1he-premlere
of a television spoof on
soap operas./ Al
FAA officials say enforce.
ment of flight regulations
may be Impossible./ Al
Nation
The pace of discoveries
Into Alzheimer's Disease
quickens./ A4
Sports ._ -·
Coast area prep football
teams get tough assign-
ments In first round of CIF
playoffs./B.1 . .
INDEX
Advice and Games
Bulletin Board
S.•slness
Classified Comlcs _
Death Notices
Opinion
Public Notices
Sport•
Television ..
Weather
A10
A3
A6-8
86-8
A1L
85
A12
85
81-5
A9
A2
Rams lose heartbreaker, find quarterback Fraud,
forgery --
°""' ........... -.""'De .......
treated
lightly
80 percent convicted
of white collar crimes
spend little ttine In jail ----..... -
WASHINGTON (AP) -More
than 80 percent of convicted whitc-
collar .criminal$ art 5enten~ D>
Judges to little or no time behind ban.
the fedefal aovcmment reported Sun-
day ... -I~ a stud> of forger}. counteT·
feiung. fraud and cmbenlcmcnl in
c14hl states conta1nina more than a
third of the nation's populatton, the
aovemmenl fou~d that 60 percent of
cnmes 'Were sentenced to prison ·
terms.
Howcv«. onl}l 18 percent of those
convicted ~ere sent to pnson for
more than 12 months, said the report
by-1hcBurcau of Justice Statisucs..
More than 40 pcrecnt of 1.D()'5e------~
convicted were given sentences ones
than one year and the study did not
measure the amount of time the
prisoners actually scrvcd. Actual
pnson tame generally tS short« than
the sentence imposed because of
factors such as sentence reduction
due to good behavior.
In contra~f. "1oleot offenders re·
ce1vcd pnson terms of more than ll
year 39 percent of the time, the study
l"<>u~y-ecime offenders re-
ceived pnson terms of1on&cr than 12
months in 26 percent of the cases.
Rama rookie quarterback Jim Everett drope back to pua Williama. Everett threw three touchdown p11aeea In hla
while Doac Smith (58) holda off New En&land'a Toby debut. but the Rama loeta heartbreaker. See Bl.
Forty percent of convicted white-
collar cnminals were given probation
or other non-pnson penalties, the
survey concluded.
Assassination in N. Korea denied
Criminals committing property
cnmes such as burglary or car theft
were given probauon or other non-
pnson penalucs 1n 35 percent of the
cases.
Ocspuc s1gn1ficarit differences in
"SEOUL. South Korea (AP) -The not say anything about Kim or a
Defense Ministry, in a broadcast shooting in its hourly newscast at 11
Monday . on state-run radio, said a.m. Monday (6 p.m. Sunday). Radio
Nonh Korean loud pcakers along the Press said the hourly news program
demilitanted zone were saying North was covering standard material ~ltch
KoTean Prc!idmt Kim JI Slm( bad as farmers ex]>fntnctnnd the l\ecd
been kilfed in a shooting. for sclf·sufficiency.
The same-broadcasua1d there was-In-Peking. a North K-0rean Em-
no confinnauon of the report from bassy official. who refused to give his
North Korean radio broadcasts or name. told The Associated Pre s:
sources here in Seoul, the-capital 6f-.=This is a sheer fabrtcatton. There 1s
South Korea. no such thin&. The South Korean
In Tokyo, Radio Press. a Japanese authorittts have always fabncatcd
news aacncy that monitors com-rumors" about North Korea.
munist bloc broadc•sts, said North There was no explanation why
Korea's official Radio PyonJYlng did North Koren would dJiiclosc the
F. '
information throu&h the
loudspeakers along the dcmilitanzcd
zone that d1v1des the peninsula. They
normally arc used for propaganda
broadcasts.
801the14-ycar-old Kim earlier was
said to have set 1n motton plans to
1)85s ~r-to-hls.-.44.) car-old wn.
Kim Jong II and e tabh h a dynasty
-a move opposed by some military
commanders.
There was speculation the use of
the DMZ loudspcake~ might in·
d1catc a power stru&&)c. Source who
follow events m North Korea ~1d
some in1lttary unm or commanders
Id ...._ 1 ed d h · h ~ntencin,a. "the cnminal JUStlce cou ~ ln\O v • an t at mtg 1 agencies in the 1un~ict1ons studied
account for the rouune programs on do not appear to ha\e trated lhe
official Radio ~ongyang. "8 o 12 h 11 d ffi ll Lee Hcung·sh1k, spc>kesman for the • . w ite-co ar en mes i ettn Y.
South Korean Defcn5e Ministry. said tha; they did otheT type of cnme, •
m -a brief announcement, ortn toe "Bureau of Justice Statistics. __
Korean pro1>3gan® loud pcakcn at The study tracked the disposition
the.front line.said on.SUnday ~ 11 of narly half-a 1TI 1lhon ~tate felony
5una had been shot and lolled. arrcm in 1983, but did t cover
He added that rqular . North white--collar cnmc involving federal
Korean radio broadcasts monitored la~ such as pnce-fixina, which
here had made no mention of such a . seldom re uh in prison time fbr those
happening.. and that no confinnatton convicted. The Bureau of Justice
had been rccc1"cd through other tatistic 15 prepanog a separate channels. (Pleue ... 1'. KOREA/ A3) (Pl~ eec 1nllTS/A2)
Educatio~ best weapon BB.woman stJangled,
a~topsy determines _· against drug abuse cycle r
• By JOHN A. BARBOUR
#"8 f I • .,_
• If it Sttms we mo"c fr0tn ono drug
epidemic 10 another. -ao. 1
W1&h0ut dismay or ~ar, the
pcoPle who blttk d,_. c:an ·~ Ke •
drua·free Utopta 1nyt1me an the
future. i~en thoeewbolrytostafkthc
1nnu11 of drup to this country admit
thtar tfl'ortl aan only reduce. "°' end
ttfe suPJ>ly. Yanous atitMt put the coat 10
~lg_ltlltln• ....
the nation, to the user and soc1et). at
upwardtofSlOObilhon -perha~ a
much 11 S2JO b1llton annualty. Prut .oenfortemcnt offtcialt un· cowr 111iH1oP of dpltars wonh of
cocaine. llMhuh, maraJU&na.
amphet.amanes. narwt1c,, iynthctic
Optata,. timulan1~. Kdat•' es. and
tranqulUzcrs. to ltulc l'Yiil. horta c
CRACKING DowN
...._Al
l'efOr\ on ftderal whate<ollar mme. collar cnm1nals were women. com·
pared Wlth 8 perttnt or violent
offenders an I) percent of' thole
committ1na property crtm('s More
than 40 pcn:ent of the white-collar
criminals were at least 30 years old
wti11t only a lhud of tht violent
othndtn ~re 1n that qt cat~ory.
The siudy covtred tnme 1n C'ali·
fornia. Minnaota, Ntbraska, Ohio, New York, hnn1,ylvan11. Utah, Vir·
ainia and tht Vtflin llllnds.
A«Ordin& to tht atate study. 88 ~nt of thow arrested for whito-collar felonan were prosttuted, com·
pattd with 82 percent for violent
cnmea. 86 ptrttnt for ~ny
cnmnand 81 percent forpubhcorder
crime:. uch as disorderly condu(t
and drua and aun ofTenSH
Sevcnt)·four percent of th<»e PfOS·
~~~-«uted for v;hite--collar fclon1~ wttt
convicted. compartd vo1th 66 percent
for violent cnme • 76 percent for
property crimes and 6 7 percent for
public order crimes.
Killer whale pins trainer
. .
Wbite-collarcnminak tended to be
older and mere of them tended to be
women. the survey found. fhirty·
sc"cn percent of the convicted white-
I
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A Jrainer at
Sea World aquatic theme park.
scrambled out of the killer whale tank
during a show Sunda) after one of the
whal6 pinned him against the side of
the tank. a park pokeswoman ~id.
The trainer, who~ identity wasn't
1m ediately available, wasn't in·
1ured in the incident, spokeswoman
Jackie O'Connor said. •
It happened A4arina a part of the
Killer Whale Show when the trainer
wa~ in the water with Kandu, a 4,()()().
pound. whale, Ms O'Connor said.
EDUCATION BEST DRUG ABUSE WEAPON ••• ·
From Al
All freely agree that the onl}' From Plonda to Cahfomaa , from
wea.,on society has 10 really root out Nebraska to Oeorg1a, from suburban
the problem I prevention. f\nd the New York Caty to f\,lral Indiana, from
frOn& c<tsC: of p~vention !!i educa-Texas to Washington, D.C .. parents
tion-connmtO\ls, redundant educa· have mobilized in ttu:ir cornm~n1tits·
tion. ro pui the brakes on drua use. Activist
Dr Barry Brown of the National parents? The idea "'oul<f have evokoo
lnsututeon DrugAbusesa}' there 1sa smiles a decade ago. But. look:
prcva1hna theory on drug abuse: .. We In Naples, Aa., two parents dis-.
Plave had numerous ep1dem1cs, a covered their two children "'ere
waiuna and waning in the abuse of .deeply involved in drup. and strug·
tllis drua or that Individuals become gled for years to change thangs.
aware and restrict their behavior. "Naples Informed Parents" -NIP
Then an ignorance of u ~rows un11I it -became the fulcrum to move the
blossoms again as an epidemic." . state.
Lessons are soon forgotten. E'(ery 1n rural Indiana, what began as one
newborn means they have to be couple's battle against druJ • <a
tau&ht ag:un. Says Dr. Brown: picked up by a newspaper editor and
·'"fhere have been some dramatic other communlly leaders. In another
chang~. Therc·s a kind of con· lnd1ana town, a concerned law en-
servatism in terms of personal behav-forccment officer picked up the
1or There have been chan&cs in cud1el. The state supenntendcnt of
regards 10 what is tolerated and "'hat ~hools. Harold Negley. calling for
1s not tolerated, cspcc1all}' in rqard to more ant1drug educauon, found ll
adolescent function. In general, 11 is appropnatc 10 echo Walt Whitman,
&ood for the kids who need and want '1 would rather be taxed for the
structure." education ofa boy than the ignorance
The marijuana epidemic evoked. of the man. I will be taxed for one or
finally. a movement in the country the other." , w~ich continue<! to proliferate. lt .• ln Omaha, parents went door to
might be called Parent~, Inc. · door ~o light a fire under the
community. ·They modeled their
movemen~ afler Atlanta's "Parentf
Resource Institute for Drua Educa·
lion" P.roaram (PRIDE) and set up i
speaken· bureau, r parents'· hotline
.. and ·effective methods for over·
com Ina the strona resistance of youns
people who believed that they had a
'ridu' to use drop ...
J>arents from black neighborhoods
in Washinaton, D.C., fought 10 set a
ban on the sale of drug paraphernalia
and won. That came in an area where
drugs are rampant and PCP claims
the mmds of young people everyday.
Businesses pitched in. With the help
ef the PT A, th parent"5--0rpnized
volunteer parent patrols for
schoolyards and playground6.
Parents offered to chaperone youth
centers. With the ai<J of a parochial
school. they asked for and got more
v1S1ble police patrols with nuns and
parents ac11n1 as spotters. More Jlnd
more parents began walking their
children to and from school.
It works so well, one organizer said,
there is a traffic jam of parents
coming 10 pick up their kids.
NEXT: Baek from Never-Never-
Lud
JACOBSEN: FAITH SUSTAINED ME •••
P~mAl '
country. ·
Jacobsen said he decided to go to
Lebanon 10 become director or the
American UnivCTS1ty Hospital in
Beirut bec.ausc of a pica from a
un1 vcrs11y professor's wife he met
while v1s1tfng there.
··1 auess 11 was a call from God to
show the people of Lebanon the> "'ere
not abandoned." he said.
The \\Oman womed about the
countl"'\ ·s future because all the Amcn~ans Y.erc lea\ ang. •· he said
when the first Amencan returned
there Y.Ould be hope for our chil-
dren." Jac~bsen told the ronif('ga·
uon.
Hewasabductedon themorningof
May 28, 1985, as he walked to work at
the American University Hospital
with a d0<;tor. A van with three men
pulled up and attacked him.
•· ~s a tough Orange Coun11an I did
not go gracefully ... Jacobsen said, '1
put up a fi&h t ..
But when one of the attackers shot a
gun into the ground. he agreed to go
with them out of fear they would kill
the doctor.
He said he still womes about the
Lebanese. but won't return to his post
at the hospital.
"I don't know about the future. If
anyone needs an expert at just siuina
I'm available," he said.
In a mote senous vein, he said he
would be spending aJI of his time
workinJ toward the release of the
remainina hostaaes.
He left dunng the second service
Sunday to fly to London where he
planned to huddle with Anglican
Church envoy Terry Waite on
strategy for winning the release of the
other host.aats. Waite's negotiations
with the Moslems were credited with
aiding the release of some of the
hostages.
GAME 10 I WEEK 10 /DAY 2
41 29 85
33 2 58
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WINNERS ON 14.
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74
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.Rain expected on Orange Coast
Tl dee
TODAY 2219.lft tJ
U7Ull It 1:1311.11\. ~s _to 2t .m.._. 11
TWIOAY
2 ~&JOI t03un . ,., ....
ttttpa
u .. .., ••
N. KOREAN ASSASSINATION DENIED •••
Prom Al
Lee said the South Korean military
\\&S on its usual alert. but gave no
other detaHs immediately.
Pohce officials announced that the
entire national police force had been
placed on full a~rt .. in connection
with the re«nt situation in Nonb
Korea and to block po1s1ble
subversive attempts by impure cl~
ments."
The term impure clements nor·
mally is us-ed by authorities here to
describe communists. pro-com·
mun1sts or their supporters.
Rumors had circulated in Seoul
Sunday that something had occurred
in North Korea. possibly anvolvina
the death of the North Korean leader.
They were said to have ong.inated
with South Korean reporters based in
Tokyo.
U.S. military authoriucs in South
Korea s.a.id Monday mornina said
they could not comment in any way
"'OAAH6E lhihf ....,_
COAST .... , r.a
MAIN OFFICE
p) ~ 8ay S1 Costa -/;A, lol a~ &• ISi() Ccala Meil CA 9162f. •
.on the s1tuat1on. The State Depart· d1v1ded at the end of World War II.
ment in Washington also declined He established one of the world's
comment. most cl~ commun1st SOC1ct1es and
Shortly after the ,Defense Minastry became the subJect of a lav1 h
statement. the M1n1stry of Culture personality cult.
and Information said in an an· nounccment: But little is known of his past. • o N 16 1986 trc -bl A former underground fiahtcr • n ov. • • t pu •c ... •ihst the Japanne army that oc· address $ystem along the DMZ --broadcast that Kim It Suns. North cupicd Korea and t_hcn an officer in
Korean ruter. was shot to death. a w the Sov1et army dunng World ~ar II,
spokesman of the Ministry of Na· Kim . became North Korea s first
taonal Defense said today (Monday). prem1e,r with Sov!ct support when the
"However, the official news media People s Republic "'.Is fo~ed on
of North Korea has not yet made any Sept 9: 1948. He rcmarned the
announcement or comment on the country s onlY, leader.
broa<k:ast. A bmer enemy of South Korean
"Republic of (South) Korea forces President Park Chung-bee, Kim
are. as always, 01aantammg their state never cased his dctcrm1na11on to
of readjness." reunite the two nations under com·
Kim, officially lasted as 74 years . munist rule.
old, and his communist rc11me came Even the national anthem heirs his
to power with Soviet backina in name -"The Sona or Gen. Kim 11
North Korea afler the pcnsinsula was Suna. •• ..
DellJ Piiot
DetifttJ
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Coi>J•ogll• 1983 ()!a~ Cou1 Pl.bl.:.IW>g Compjvlt No ,_, ""''* -...i•aloona edolOloal ma•ll• Of-• ....,." '*"" may bt '41P'oauc.d ~ IO«:ftl -..-t ol COf>V'tgl>I OW-
VOL 71, NO. 321
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