HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-01-04 - Orange Coast Pilot•
MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 1988 -' 25 CENTS
Badham to quit Congress
S en. Bergeson, Stanton are consid.ered
con tenders t o succeed I I -year veteran
By BOB VAN EYltEN
Ol .. Dlllr ........
Contenders arc. alrca~y squaring
off -for what promises to be a
multimillion dollar battle to fill the
congressional scat of l 1-year veteran
Roben Badham. who announced
today that he ~ould not seek re-
election this year.
A river patrol boat goes
through a diesel fuel s11ck
caused by collapsed
st__qrage tank In P~nn
sylvania that Is threaten-
ing the water supply for
750,000 people./ A4
" Coast ·
The Orange County
cbap._t~r of the Amedcan
Red Cross is running as
low as 62 percent of
desired levels of some
blood supplies./ A3
World
· Witness claims he saw· a
soldier shoot President
Corazon Aquino's hus-
band at the Manila airport
In 1983./AS
Entertainment
Robin Williams draws
praise from the DJ he
portrayed in "Good
Morning, yietnam."/AI
Index
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Opinion
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Public Notices
Sports
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Badham. R-Newport Beac h. told
friends and supporters Sunday at a
private reception that he will not run
for another term.
The 58-year-old congressman as a
·senior member of the House Armtd
Services Committee and is regarded u a key supporter of the interests Df
Orange County-based defense con-
tractors.
County
ge.tsa ·
federal
court
Ci vll and criminal
t rials will..now be
h eld in San ta Ana
By G. JEANE1TE A VENT
Of .. Dlllr ..........
After wajting more than eight
years. -Orange. Riverside and San
Bttn~rdino-rottn\ies new-have their
own federal courthouse.
Start~ng toda). criminal and cav il
caSt's will be heard 1n a new. one-story
building located on the comer of
Santa Ana Boulevard and Flower
Street in Santa Ana. In the past.
federal cases could be filed an Orange
County but were tried in Los Angeles.
Allhough • formal opening ttr·
emon1es are not schedultd until Jan.
15, U.S. D1stnc1 JudJC J. Spencer
Letts of Rolling Hills wdl hear his first
case in the new faC1 hty today. He 1s
expected to divide his time betw~n
Oranie County and Los Allgeles until
the middle of the month. accordina to
court exccutt'e George Ryker.
Later this month after a special
parking area has been modified for
the secunt) of the JUdges. U:tts will be
JOtned b> D1stnct Judge Ahccmarie
H. Stotler of Anaheim Hills.
lcns and Stotler will hear cnminal
and c1v1I cases while U.S. Magistrate
Ronald W. Rose will conduct primar-
ily civil tnals. according to Ryker.
Rose began heanng civil cases 1n
O range Count) 1n 1985. altho ugh he
can also ti) cnminal cases 1f both
parties 3gree. Ryker said .
When the new court facility is fully
opcrauonal. the federal judgcs-wtll
.average two 10 thrtt criminal cases
and 25 to 30 civil cases per month.
R.\t ker said.
(Pleue Me COUN:rT I A2)
At a press conference in his New-
port Beach offi ce today. Badham told
reponers that he was retiring after 27
years in elected office to devote more
time to his private life and to "pursue
private enterprise."
'"l thinl( I have it lcastanother good
career in me." Bad ham said. ··1 would
like to contribute to my community
from outside govemment." -
Badham did not say exactly what
he would do when his term ends in
Janual) 1989. bu\ mentioned water
issues. defense. and environmental
law as possibilities for a career in the
)
...
Fo.r the birds
private sector.
Badham has taken considerable
heat during his Ii -.ears an Congress
for his frequent travels and alleged
poor attendance record. But he said
the criticism wa~ not a maJOr factor in
his dec1s1on not to seek re~lect1on.
.. I can't sa) I'm not tired of the
criticism. but the fact as Bob Badham
wins by 65 percent to 72 percent every
time he runs. so I can take the
cnticism.··
Among those v.:::::ng on the stan-
ing l!ne for a run at the Republican
no mination for Badham's seat as
•
Brtqt.na tbe holldaya to a cnunbllnC concluaion . ~te•e
Johnaon of Corona del Mar toe•ea leftover Christmu
cooklee Sanday to appreciad•e aea 1un. at Co rona del Mar
State Beach. .,,
Roger Stanton. chairman of the
count) Board of Supervisors.
'Tve been talking to people aU
morn,ng and I'm g1v1ng 11 serious
consideration:· Stanton said today.
'"M) supervisonal d istnct includes
30 percent of the congressional dis-
trict and I've already had four
electoral victories here. including two
landslide ,·actones."
Stanton said. however. that he had
not yet made a final decision on
whether to run for the congressional
seat -or to seek another term on tti.e
(Pleue eee BADllAll/ A2) Rep. Robert Bad.ham
Four in county
killed on roads . .
over weekend
California leads
nation in holiday
traffic fa tali ties
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
ud LANCE IGNON
Of .. Dlllr .........
CaJ1fom1a ltd the nauon in traffic
cfeaths O\er the e>.tendtd !'iiev. Ye.ar"s
v.eelend "'IUl 43 people d~ing on
state roads. including four 1n Orange
Count'
The most recent local fataht\ ~as
re-corded tn If'\ ine Sunda) morning
"'hen a passerb} disco' ered the bod~
of a :! I ·\ear-old Manne 1ns1de an
0\ ertumed p1Ch.Up truck IO a COn-
StfUCllOn area
The '1ct1m was 1dent1fitd toda' as
Lan« Cpl Stanley F Ciesla Jr: of
Norco. He "'as stationed at Camp
Pendleton.
lnine police were called at 10:40
a.m . after the pasScrb} spotted the
\ 1cum's truck near the 1ntC1"St'ct1on of
Barranca Parl"'a~ and Tec:hnolog~ ~orth in the If'\ inc Speclrum Busi·
ness Parle said Pohcc Sgt. Mike
Ogden.
lnvt"Sttptors found a 19"""7 Ford
Couner in a field near the inter·
section The cab "as crushed and
Ciesla 1.1.>as still 1ns1de the cab
.\n tn\eSt1gat1on shOIACd that
Ciesla "'as dn' ing "'est on Barranca
approaching Technolog) No nh 1n an
area that 1s under de,elopmenl. 4Attl
roads in the: area are 'closed to the
public and there arc numerous signs
and bamcadesacross the road. Ogden
said
The trucl hit a constructio n
scraper. a large road building ma-
chine that "'a~ parled parallel to a
bamcade The truc l cont1nutd into a
din field. "'here 1t rolltd over.
Orange Count} Coroner in-
'est1gator\ determined Ciesla died at
I 30 a m of asph~ >.1a11on
To\Olog1t:al tests will be conducted
to determine whether alcohol v.as a
fanor Ogden said
In Huntington Beach o n New
'r ear's Da' a man was killed v.hen
his 'an ra'n off Pacific Coast High-
"' a~. police said
ln,esugators 1nn1all> 1denufied
the ' 1cum as Hector Manuel BaraJas.
34. of San Diego but the) now think
he ma' ha'e been earning someone
else's 1dent1ficauon. said Huntington
Beach Police Sgt Bruce Kell).
~ passenger. Lw.s .-\mezola. 12. o(
Ha"'1home suffered minor in1unes
and "'as arresttd on suspicion of
drunken dn\ ing because pottce at
lir'>t though1 he might ha'e been the
dm er. Kelh said
The na11onal death toll o\er the
hohda~ "'e-elend reached )"' ). up 34
death!;. from last ~ear . according to the
NauonaJ Safet) Council The council
had predicted that betw~n 380 and
4 O "'ouldd1ebetv.~n6pm Dec 30
and midnight unda~
The safet' council also esttmated ~N~h I "":UOO and :! 1.000 people
v.ould sutler disabling tnJunes in
traffic accidents dunng the ~nod
Last 'ear. 34 I people "'ere killed
and n<"arl~ I 5.00CI suffered senous
tnJunes
The council estimated about half of
all traffic accidents dunng the hohda}
"'ere alcohol-related.
The Orange Coast en1o~ed a reta-
il' cl~ qu1<"t Nev. )'ear's v.~kend
fol10"'1ng :-.;t>v. Year"s E\ema)hem an
Huntington &ach where man~ re ' el-
ers fired 2uns mto the air No one v.as
reponed-hun. l1tho ugh at least thrtt
~oplc v.rre k1lltd b} random gunfire
elsewhere 1n the Southland.
Sobnct} l hedpo1nts in Seal &ach
and Laguna Beach were quiet as well
~al Beach police arrested t"'o
suspected drunken dn-.el"5 Thursda}
01ghL "'hi.le Laguna offi~rs arrested
(Plea.ee .ee HOLIDAY:/ A2)
William Cagney, actor's NB bro_ther, dies
By PAUL ARCHJPLEY
Of .. Dlllr .......
William J. Cagney. real estate
magnate. Hollywood producer and
brother of late actor Jimmy Cagney.
djed Sunda} at the age of 82.
Cagne). a lo n,-time resident of
Newport Beach. dted of a heart attac k
Sunda~ m orning at Hoag Memorial
Hospital. said his niece. Terry Cagney
Morrison.
Morrison. daughter of late actress
Jeanne Cagney Morrison and also a
Newport &ach resident. said her
uncle had been in poor health for 20
\ears.
· Cagne)'. the founh of five children
"'as born March 20. 1905. 1n :"e"'
York Cm.
Hts ca·rctt included sttnts as an
a.:tof. talent agent and associate
producer at \\ amer Bros before he
and J1mm~ formC'd Cagne} Pro-
ductions in I Q4~
"He: v.as the bu!>ancss brains in the
famil):· Momson said '"He man-
aged has brother's care-er ··
He acted in nearh a dozen films
during the 1930s. including 1934's
.. Paloou·· 1A1th J1mm\ Durante. s~
said He also v.orkCd vmh such Holf\~ood ;tars as Ra} M illand and•.
Gre-~o~ PC'\'l
(Pleue eee WILLIAll/ A2)
Grand Jury: Long, hard work for little rp.o~ey
Members of the Orange County
Grand Jury sound a litt1c like an
advertisement Tor the Peace Corps.
It's tough. but the>' love it.
.. People who apply mi&ht as well
understand, this lS a full-time job,"
sajd James Lindbers. a retired Air
Force brigadier aeneral who ~es as
this year's GraJKI Jury foreman. "And
the S25 a day you act for it. that's just
a token. Bui lhe ..POSitive side is that
it's ''ery rewardina. extremely
in tercsti na and c:baJJef\lina. ••
Anyone who took civics in tchool
probably remembers the snnd~ u a body which decides whether is
cnouah evidence to indict a penon
accused oh crime.
That is still an impQnant function
of a arand jury. allhoulh · it is ..no
lontcr the pnnapal one.
, Since the eatty 1970&. most crimt-
nal catn in California ha~ bcaun
with the falint of comDlainu. lol-
Boa
VAi Em1
lowed by ~l hearings before a juctee.
Some caea still tqin with indict-
ments by the 19-meinber jury. but
jury members now spend lea than
ont day a ~ revfti,. aiminal
c:ata.
The rat of the time they spend
'"icwi"I and inwstilld• Onante
County's S 1 billion aovemmencal
structure..
"We're the civil watchd~ over
county government " said L1ndbcrs.
"If we can save tht tupayeR some
money. then we·re doinJ our job."
Often. the jury's job involves
cbcckin& up on the county's h•
1ovemmental aeencies. with lhc1r
thousands of tmployees and hun-
dred-million-dollar budsts.
"We're rcqumd to ao audiu of
variou1 rounlf. ·~ .. Undbcra
said. "We can 1'1. of them in a
year. but we try to do the ones that
ba,·en't doM in a while."
Sometimes. business is on a smaller
scale. as with the individual com·
plajnts that the jury continually
receives..
"Peopte will write to us with a
proble1'.f'I, usually somet~int involv·
ana scf"lacn from a put1CUlar .. C}:· said David Bunch. chairman o(
,....__OaAJllD/Aa)
Jury rieeds a few more good people
By BOB VAN EYKEN ' °' .............
Orange Count) Su~nor Court officials arc Sttking
19 people who want to work IOflg hours keeping an e}e on
count) '°'cmmenL
And all for about S3an hour plus airtt parkingspaa-
Membcrs of the Orange Count) Gra.nd Jury pend
their da)·s rcadina lenath) rcporu. v1s1t1ngjails and ottiff
facilities and mecun1 to discuss what the)' ve learned
They ride around in Shenffs Department hehcop-
kf1.. patrol cars or Harbor Patrol boats.
In short. they sample and review e'-ery upec1 of
c:ou.nt to'-cmmc.nt. Despik the Iona hours. .,,h1ch often in<'lude ~ends and evenina,s.;ury membcn SI) the)' find the
job an an...c:t1ve option for anyone who bas the tarM and
the taefl)'.
"ll '!> tascinating and challenging:· said James
Lindberg.. a reurro Air Fortt general who scrv~ as
fof'l'm:m of th IS )C'ar'S JUI) .. '\S far as f"m COn~td. it's
the bestjob J',~ e'er had:·
In ~l years as man) as scv~~I hundred people
applttd for one-year Grand Jur) teryns.
This ~ear, ho"e'er. wnh the deadline les~ than thl"C'(
weeks a"-a~. lhere aren't enough apphca.nts to make the
sel~tion process work.
Under standard procedure. a.pphants are reviewed
b) a panel ofSu~nor Court1u<1gcs. who scl«"t a pool of 30
people
.<\ppti<:at1 ons from the )() finahsts are then placed ma
ba~l from 1t.t11ch 19 arc drawn at ~ndom.
Tbott 19 berome the nnt JU.f') mcmben and lhc
remaining 11 berome alternates
• (Pleue Me lllOll&/ il)
Commuters offered Fastrak.to CM plazajobs .
... •
be s.atd. Sun. rlslon lldmmed that wettn'I
cmplo)'t'CS to 11ve ~p thctr CIR -
~en v.ith \M perks o fRdLlttd 1lra&
and1ntfebCd~suretime-won'tbc
~S)~ .. Tbn't ttnaJnl} ... , 10 be •
o'erall 11.\ts ,ob done ... ht said -a
don't dtn lba\ .. h's ~L• io_take a (Pl•• ep Purra.A&Jd)
JURY A BARD, Jl'ULL-TDIE JOB ••• ......
diie M"1 Criminal Jdke Commit-wbcthcTour reports ba~ anyeflCct... dealt Wllb.··
-. ""We recently Md a cate in which w said. .. So we're doint a follow-up Another thina that imprnsn tbt •-'•wifewasdeeliJlldnap. When study of •ncie5 that hav~ been jurori is how much tbty learn fro"'
dleSberifrs Oesienment tearebed his audited, to ttt whether they•ve im-their job. l ~ socnc of bis pouesaions wett plemcnted what the)' &aid they were "In one ycer 1f1 like laki!14, five
IMc1I ud he wanted them back. Wt aoina to do. The effect of the follow-yea,-,ofcivicscounes."hcsaid. You
.ere II* to act everythina returned up. I think. will be to son ofli&ht a fire 10 away knowina a hclJ of a lot about
IO laim \bat was suppoeed ao be wwkr them apin." :~ aovemment. And it's e1· te111r1e11.• 8'al the important lhina about the y varied ...
Nol C\'Cf')' complaint IS tttOlved in lf'lnd jury's IDVC'Stiptfons and rec-A lfpica.I day for a juror coWd be favor otthc claimant.. bowever. ommendations is not that they brin& anythana from a committee meetina,
.. There was a man who was in jail about immediate chanacs. Lind~ra to a trip to the Colorado River to look f~~kl abusc," he said. ••When your said. but that they stimulate tho~t. at water .Projects, to a nipt in a c~¥ ps to juvenile hall because o'f ~ "Here is our response from' the Sheriffs Depanment helicopter. he
abUte, the parent has to pay the costs. Board of Supervisori to last year's• said.
He wanted bis responsibility report,'' he said. "You can sec that "lt'sapat WIY for a person who is abrOlltcd on the grounds that he'd they've concurred with some rte-retired to rrmain busy and alert." he
filecHor bankruptcy. As it turned out. ommendations.. bul not with others. said. bis debts bad bttn settled and there With some. thoy'vc andicated panial
was still money lcf\. so he was not in concurrence. But the point is that
bankruptcy. So he s1ill had to pay." ha,·e to respond to the issues. With
Working togelher 1n such an in-
tense way fosters camaraderie, Bunch
added. The jury does no t investipte every some rec~mmenda.tions, they might
comolaint it receives. say. ·w e hke your idea but wc don'l
··w e answer every sin&le complaint have the money to implen:ient it.'
we mrive," sajd Lindberg. '"Some-The} at least have to say why It is they
, times we will determine that ifs not don't concur."
within our sphere of rcsponsibilit).'. The JUI'}. with its $200.000 annual
But we always tell people why wc wall budget. as something of a midget
not be lookmg at a panicutar com-when compared lo man) count)
plaint and we suggest ways that it agencies and organizations.
m i&ht be addressed." But Lindberg said he doesn't be-
Oecisionsabout whether to address la eve the JUI') has to play David to the
a complaint are made in consultation Goliath of county government.
with the county District Attorney and
county counsel.
Durift$ the course of the I 987-88
session. Jurors will handle about 70
.. complaints. Lindberg said.
"We've resolved about halfof them
so far." he said.
While matters concerning individ-
uals can often be resolved within a
few weeks or months.. larger issues -
such. H those involvang entire gov-
ernmental agencies -take longer to
review. and the resulis arc often oi>en
to question.
A case in point is last year's Grand
Jury repon. which contained a criti-
que of the Board of Supervisors'
management s1yle.
The critique went anto such issues
as planning. and what Jurors per-
ceived as a lack of communication
between the board and other top
executives, such as Shenff Brad
Gates.
The repon was not warmh re-
ceived b'' the board. ·
"I gue'ss you ~ould sa) the~ "ere
defensive about 1t:· said Jcxh
Harrod. another member of this
year's JUf)'.
Harrod said there 1s some quesuon
in man) jurors' minds as to whether
qtnc1cs and governing bodies in the
county actually pa) attention to the
JUI) 's recommendauons.
.. Wf' do ha'e Quest1ons 1 abou1
"The cooperation ~·vc gotten
from count~ a&enC1es has been
outstanding." he said. "There hasn't
been anyone v-ho has been an-
tagonistic to us. The.) all sit up and
take nQltce "hen "'c say we want to
come in and take a look."
Sometimes. those looks can even
be on the sneak~ side. and nobod)
seems to mind. said Harrod.
"The Shenffs Dcpanment has
e'en invited us to come b) unan-
nounced," she said.
By and large. JUrors sa}. the
relationship bet"'een the JUI) and the
rest of count) go' ernme nt has been
poSl tl\e'.
"This year "c've reall} tned to
"'ork "1th the Board of SuperY1sors.
not against them." said Bunch. "No
one lakes to be embarrassed. and
made to look bad. We're cogniza'nt of
that. If someone has a complaint
about )'OU. )Ou'd rather that the'
talked direct I\ to \OU abmat 1t. instead
of going to ~our boss first. That's the
"a~ \\C II) to \\Ork \\Ith people."
.\nd 11 isn't JUSt complaints and
q1t1c1sm that the JUI') d!Shes Out, said
Lindberg.
"If something is good. we ought to
sa}' so.·· he said. ··And there are an
a"ful lot of good people in count'
go,emment \\e''e been \Cf'\ 1m·-
pressed "Ith almost e\ Cl) one W(.'0
\ e
"It's like bein• in collesc. in a
fraternity or soronty.'' he said. "You
make some close fnendships. ••
Grand j uries sit from July I toJuM
JO. Haviogjust reacped the midpoint
in their term. this year's jury has
completed the work of screening and
deciding what problem areas to
tackle, Landberg said.
"The real hard work remains." he
said. "The first six months is really
deciding what to look at. Now we
have to complete the investigations
and write our rcpon."
Mca!lwhiJc. a panel of_judges 1s
prepanng to screen applicants for
next )'Car's j ul)'.
"We get a broad range of talented
people ~mong the 19 j ury members,"
said Landberg. "We have retired
teachers. engineers. housewives. re-
ttred milital') officers such as myself.
We have an accountant and two
ph}s1cians. one of whom is also a
la" )er:·
Lindberg added-that professional
degrees are not a prerequisite for
grand JUI)' service.
"There is no reason why someone
from the skilled trades should not appl~." he said.
.\n applicant has to have the time.
and the financial means to get b) on
the modest pa). he said.
.\~plican.ts must also be in good
ph)s1cal cond111on because the job
requires regular attendance. The rules
sa~ that jul) members should not
C\pcCt to take vacations except dur-
ing the t\.\O-\.\eek Chnstmas recess.
Lindberg said those rules are
stretched a little bit. so that Jurors can
sometimes get awa) for a few days.
"We tool-Thanksgmog week off.
for e\ample. ··he said. "Of course. we
made up the ume The idea 1s to get
the JOb done:·
MORE GRAND JURY HOPEFULS NEEDED ...
P'romAl
But coun offic ials have )et to get even the m1n1mum
of 30 for ne~t )Car's JUf). according to .\Ian Slater. JUI)
comm1ss1oner.
Slater said there had been onl) 11 apphcauons b)
mid-December and h estimated that there \\,ere about ::!O
b} nO\\.
"The response rate has'been do"n an recent 'ears.
ever since Silting on the G rand Jury reall) became a full-
umejob," said Slater.
In earlier times. Slater sa1d.1heJUI)' met three times a
week. Six )'ears ago. however. the jul) began meeting
Monda) through Fnda). which reduced 1hc number of
people willing to make the )ear-lo ng commnment. Slatt>r
said.
Nevenheless. there has usuall) been a pool of about
I 00 applicants. he said.
"Last ~ear we had a good response." he said. "I don't
know why 11·s been so poor so far this )Car. It's one of the
poorest responses \\.C·, c ever received.''
Slater sa1d,a high numberofapplicants as desirable. 10
ensure a "1de-range of talents and poants of' 1ew. "
"We reall~ need about 90 to IOOappltcants m o rder to
get a good cross sccuon of the pQpulation." he s~ud.
JUI) members sen e from July I to June 30. The usual
deadline for applications 1s Jan. I. but 1t has been
e\lCnded to Jan. 19 this \Car.
.\ppltcants should bC in good health and able to work
full time. The) should not be plannan& to take any long
'aca11ons dunng the }ear. The jury meets continuouslv.
c\cept for a t\\O-\.\CCk break during the C'hnstmas
hohda,s.
Jul) members rece1 'c S25 a day. plus 33 cents per
male for tra,el an their own automobiles.
.\n)one interested 1n receiving an application ma'
\:all 834-5::!77. or \.\file to the Grand Jury. P.O. Box 1994.
Santa Ana. 9::!702.
HOLIDAY •.. Honolulu declared disaster area
· -f From Al
HONOLL'LU (AP) -Go'. John no one at th.ear checkpoint Fnda}. Wa1hee declared the cat) and count~
lri other fatal Orange Count) of Honolulu a moJOr disaster area as
aec1d<.'nts. Roben Vactor Poswinskr. the estimate on th<.' number of homes
.21. of Santa .\na died Sunda} from ~stamang damage from floodang
inJunes he suffered an a motorqcle tb~~ 1.000.
accident on Ne-w Year's Da} _ ;-Most of the damage occurred in the
George Robert Ahl'llers. 69. wash1l w utbeast«n secuon of the island of
and k1~led b} a car Saturda} in Orange Oahu. where up to 20 inches of rain
al the 1ntersec11on of Katella Avenue fell Nl·w Year's Eve and earl) New
and Glassell Street. police said. Ycar'5 Da)
Federal Emergenc) Management
.\genry teams anived Sunday to help
Cit\ and state officials assess the
damage. which has been estimated at
$::!9 m1ll1on.
The Amencan Red Cros.s had
counted eight ho mes destroyed. 315
\.\1th major damage and 748 with
minor damage by late Sunday. said
spoki;-sman Ken Sanders.
FASTRAKSYSTEMSTARTSJAN.18 ...
From Al
,.
Cloudy, maybe rain for Tuesday
tt.s. Tempe
~~
Mdlor"llf9 ~ All9ntlc:Clty
M.elrl
~· ~ .. ... ... °" .,.,.
ciwt.ton.S.C
~W.Ya.
Qwtone,H.C.
~
~
~.Ohio
Oellee-Ft Wonh
~on o.-
O..Moir'91
Oectoll
°'*"" EIP..o er.
F81rbenkl
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~ HouMon
frldleMpolis
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-"-~City
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Loulevllle
Mernptlle
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WILLIAM CAGNEY DEAD ... -
vrom,A1
While an aswciate producer with
Warner Bros .. ·he worked on such
films as "Captains of the Clouds" and
"Yankee Doodle Dandy," the 1942
film that earned J1mm)' Cagney an
Academy Award.
· .\fterfonningCagney Product1Qns.
he produced such films as "Blood on
the Sun .. in 1944, in which both he
and his brother performed. He also
produced .. Johnn) Come lat(ly" in
1943. "The Time of Your Uff' in
t9.i8. "Kiss Tomorrow Goodb~" in
1950 and ··.\ Lion as 1n the Streets" in
1953. J1mm} and sister Jeanne co-
starred in "The Time of Your Life.''
In fact. the Cagne) famal). includ-
ing brothers Harry and Edward -
both doctors -v.-as "tigttt knit.''
~tomson said
"The) had dinner togcthe1· eve!)
Tuesda) nisht dunng the 40s and
50s.'' she said. "J1mm) spent a lot of
time here an Ne" port Beach with Bill.
too.··
After moving to Newpon Beach in
the earl~ 40s where he became one of
the fi~t residents of the Bayshore
communll). Cagne) became more
in' ohed in real estate investments. a
pasume Momson called "a hobby ...
But Don .\dk1nson of the Orange
Coast law firm Harwood. Adkinson
and Meindl. said Cagney was a
shre"'d in'e~tor.
As his attorne) for 19 years.
Adkinson said Cagney had a
"tremendous amount ot mental and
ph)sical strength" despite his con~
tant health problems.
Cagne) was one of the old timers
"ho pla~ed a big pan an the growth of
the Orange Coast. .\dk1nson said.
.. He was 'Cl) successful an four or
fi vc counties in Southern Califo rnia ...
he said. He staned off buying ·unim-
proved land and deH·loped 11. par-
11cularl~ shopping centers ltke
Monarch Ba' Plaza
Cagne) Enterpnscs 1s no" run b>
Momsion.
CaJne) also "as act1,e in the earl>
political scene. .\dkmson said.
Among his friends 1n the entenain-
ment and poliucal ~orld were Ronald
Reagan and Frank inatra.
"But the bcau11ful thing about Bill
"as his abnll} to recount the old
umes of Holl)\\ood. He had a
tremendous I n sh ab1ht) to tell a
stol). to rerount the h1stOI), of the
Cagne) struggle in Hollywood against
the establishment.'' .\dkmson said.
In fact. Moms1on said hct uncle
"'as most proud of the deal he made
for J1mm\ \\Ith Warner Bros. that
included a "happiness clause. which
meant Jim had to be happy aod 1f Jim
\\asn't happ). he walked."
Despite his success 1n theentenam-
ment and business fields. Cagney
remained unchan$ed . .\dkinson said.
"His lifest~le didn't change much.
He al"'a)s cnJO~ed people." he said.
Wll.Uam..Cacney at ..,e 21.
('agne) 1s sun t\ed b) a da~rer.
Jail Simpson. and t"o sons. Wilham
and Ste, en.
.\ Mass" 111 be said this week at O ur
lad) Queen of .\ngels Roman Cath~
ohc Church in Ne"' pon Beach. Mor-
rison said . .\rrangements are be1n1
handled b>·Pac1fic View Monual).
BADHAM WON'T SEEK RE-ELECTION ••.
From Al
Board of Superv1sdrs next Nov.rm-
ber.
"I want at mac'c clear that rm not
closang the door to runninJ for rr-
clecuon to the board ... he said.
Another contender insiders say has
a good shot at the nomanation ts state
Sen. Marian Bergeson.
Bergeson said she was exploring the
poss1b1lit) of running and had al read)
put together an exploratof) commit-
tee.
"I am intcrsted.'' she said. "but I
suit have to re' 1e"' m) potential for
hfe in Wasnangton. as opposed to hfc
in Sacramento.''
"Ob' 1ousl} I \.\Ou ld want to taJ·k to
Sen. Bergeson before making m .. final
dec1s1on," said Stanton. "I ·think
Manan and I would be the two most
ob' 1ous successors."
Another possible successor. state
Assemblyman Gil Ferguson. also
placed himself alongside Bergeson in
order of likelihood.
"Manan and I are tht onh tv.o
legislators "ho haH bttn elected to
pan1san office ... he said. "There as a
big difference betv.een partisan office
and local or count) office:·
Ferguson said. ho~ver. that he
m11tht bow to Bergeso n if she were to
d{'('tde to run .
"Before I made m} dCCISIOn I
\\Ould definllel) "ant to talk: to Sen.
Berg<.'son ... he said "I respect Manan
'Cl) much I'm not saying I would
defer to her but there would be that
poss1bllm ..
O thers who ha' e rcponedly ex-
pressed interest in running for
Badham's scat include Irv ine City
Councilman Da'c Baker and How-
ard Rosenberg. "ho v.o n 34 percent
of the 'ote in a race apanst Badham
for the Republican no m1na1ion 1n
1986. tremendous educauo nal job to get
\,j that done. But I guess we would say.
'You gotta start somewhere.'··
Amtrak operates three trains in the
morning and three in the afternoon.
The tnp takes about 45 manutcs from
San Juan Capistrano and af1 hour
from San Clemente. and free parking
is available.
busaness people who mass their train
or ha'e meetings within a five-mile
radius of the South Coast Plaza area.
The South Coast Metro .\lliance. a
group Of area dC\ elopers. IS planning
to anno unce a more comprehensive
transponat1on S)Stem 1h1s month.
Carlsson said Thal prog.ram . which
could affect as man} as .25.000
workers. "'ould include several
altcrnat1,cs for commuters. includ-
ing nde-shanng. staggered work hou~andpu~k1ranspo~t1on. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Ne"'pon Center has a commuter l'I
For a fee. the 'an wi ll shuttle
'an to areas 1n nonh Orange County
and Lhc If" me Spectrum office and
1ndustnal complell has a com-
prehens1' e program integrating ride
shanng. fln hou~ and public trans-
ponauon. Carlsson said.
COUNTY GETS ITS OWN FEDERAL COURT •••
From Al
Orange. R1 vcrs1de and San
Bernardino counties are part of the
seven-county central district which
-e•tends from San Clemente. to San
Luis Obisbo. Approved an 1980. the
~w court facihtes -were added to
relieve the overloaded federal fac1h-
lles an L~ Angeles.
With 22 j udaes and 10' senior
Judacs. the central d1stnct 1s tho
largest an the country m number of
ORANGE ... ....
COAST ~ .... .
MMtMFICI
" J»t\ a.,, s• ... •• ~ " . .. ' ... .......__ .
Judges and caseload. ~1d Ryker.
The new 35.000 squart-foot
counhouse an Santa Ana houses three
counroonu__ three small Jail cells~
officcs for fi, e l,.; S prosecutina
attornc)s. t~o public defenders.
probation officers. fcdcral marshals
and a coun clerk
The fi,e assistant U.S. auomcys
who ha'e been api>01nted to the
Orangr lnun1v Cf'11 n i"dude Nancy
Wieben Stock. "'ho will head the
prosecutor's office. Dwilht Moore.
Edward McGah Jr .. James McGinnis
and Thomas U mberg.
The federal Public Defender•s of-
fice. which represents cnminal defen-
dants who are mdiacnt. will be
headed b) H. Dean Steward. Vector
ChavC'Z will be the S«Ond public
defender.
~-&q~1· --'f'~>r • ~ .. ; £)2• Just call 642-6086 ..........,. '"'°"., • ~ ...... '°"' ~ t• ~J0Dl'I C .. o.'•1r.,
'
What do )OU hk:e about~ Daily Pilot? Wbilt
don·t )OU hke" Call tM number atx>'e a.nd )Our
mes~e Wiil be recorded. tranKnbcd and ck-
h,·md to the appropnate editor
The a.ame 24-hour answenna SCTV1ce ma) b(
uStd to record letters to tM editor on any topic
Contnbutors to our Letters rolumn must include
thetr name and 1elephone number for "enfica11on.
· Tdh us •haf son )our mind
r:.
~ ,.,., ---
Clrcute._ T .. ,,...._
I.
Cole Haan Country
Exclusive Outback Soles
• • .Great 'Traditionr
OnlYGets Better. .
119 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH• (BULLOCKS WlLSHlREWJNG) • 761-US22
'
'
•
Dance, knittin~
·cfcisses offered
at Iglesia Park
l&lcsia Community Park in Ll&una Hills is
ofTerin& classes for both those who ti'ke to kick up
their heelsand those who'd rathersit home and knit.
Oasscs tn both jazz/modem dantt and adult
bqinnin1 ballet arc available. with the ballet leuons
beainnin1 today and the iazz course 1tan.in1 Friday.
Tutorin1 in both beainnina and intermediate
kninina stans today.
The class fees arc $30 for ballet, S 1 Ofor jazz and
modem dance l\nd S30 for knittini. The park 1s
located at 246 7 I Via laJes1a. Laguna Hills. and more
information 11 available at 830-8318.
Open house at YMCA
The Newport-Costa Mesa YMCA wdl hold an
open house Saturday,· offering free fitness
asscssmenll. swimming and tours of the Y facilities,
2300 University Dnve, Newport Beach.
The YMCA is offering a week's free member-
ship to those attending. entitling the bearer to join
the fitness class of his or her choice. Call 642-9990
for more mfonnation.
Job search classes
A seminar designed for the man or women re-
entering the wock force or anyone wanting a job
change will be presented Tuesday from 12:30 to 3
p.m. at lglcs1a Community Park, 246 71 Via Iglesia.
Laguna Hills. ·
The cost is S25 for ci&ht classes. Call the park at
830-8318 for add1uonal mfonnation.
Hospital seeks volunteers
Volunteers arc needed to work m the medical
libral") at South Coast Medical Center in South
Laguna.
The \Oluntecn will assist 1n rcorganinng the
libral). cataloau10g audio-visual JOumats and
checking for mm1ni copies. The~ ork is from 9 a.m.
to I p.m. ~cckdays and more information as
available b) calling the Volunteer Center of Orange
County at 953-5757 or 582-3176. ,. .
..r
Tar law speakers
The Internal RevCfluc Service Speakers Bureau
is offering frte progr:ims to educate the public about
the new la>. laws. The IRS win provide speakers to
talk to social clubs.. comm unit) groups. ci" ic
organ1za11ons. cmplo)er groups and others.
An> business or organization \I. IShins a speaker
should call the IRS Speakers Bureau m Laguna
Niguel at 643-4069
Spring classes at G WC
Apporntmcnts arc still a\'aJlable 10 regmcr at
Golden W6t College for spnng semC'Ster clas~s that
~n nCAt Monda).
R~strat1on by appointment will be held at the
Adm1ss1ons Office toda)' through Wednesda)
Walk-an rcg.istrauon ~111 bqin Thursda). as space
permits. The last da) to rqJSter for classes 1s Jan 15
Call the Adm1ss1ons Office at 895-8306 for details
Chaplain school ln Mesa
The Smh Ann> will host the 29th annual
Chaplain and Chaplain Asmtant Training School
Jan. 11 ·I5 at the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel in
Costa Mesa.
AmonJ the topu~s for the e\cnt is "Min1stl) to
AfDS Pa11ents." Funher infonnauon ma' be
obtained b> calling 'the Ann> 's Public .\fTa1rs Office
at (::! 13) 493-8357
Orange Coasl O~ILY PILOT/Monday, JIN.lat)' 4, 1988 *AS":
County's Red Cross out.for 6lood ~?
81 PAUL AllCRJPLEY ..............
As con_s11tenl as Sana•s vmt, broken
New Year's rcsolut1on1 and the timepiece
1.n Gretn1N1ch, Enatand. the Amencan Red
Cross runs lo""' of blood supplies even
holiday teason.
The Oranac County chlptcr is running
as low as 62 percent of desired levels of
some blood supplies. spokeswoman S> lv1a
Fanton said Sunda}.
Unable to meet ns supply quotas to
county hospitals because of the shonase.
the Red Cross 11 making rtguJar delivcncs
only to trauma centers. Hospitals receive
blood on a casc-b)<aSC basis. Fanton said.
.. As is typical during the hohda)s when
people get bus\. blood donauons have
Ready to dive
betn Ht')' low the last ~eeks." she said.
"Normall). about I 5 perttnt of th<>K who
make appointments do11't show up. but an
Oectmber 35 percent who signed up d1dn 't
shov.."
Fanton said OraniC Count) ·s nttds
a\'crage about 4SO pints of blood per day
In December. the Red Cross 'INas collecting
an avera1e of 365 units per da)
The most serious shonages are for
Group 0 blood and platelets. a blood
extract used for treatment of bleeding
disorders and caJ\('er.
The platelet suppl) shonagc 1s cnt1cal
because platelets have a shelf life of JUSl
fi ve da)S. Fanton said.
GroupO posit1\C le, els are at 65 percent or desired le\ els. and Group 0 ncgall"C
levels arc at 62 percent. she said
The shortaiC could be quic~I~ erased.
Fanton said .
.. If people come 1n this ~eek. '\NC should
be able to iCt le' els back to normal." he
said.
Several communit) dn'cs arc undt'r
'\NB) in the Orange Coast. m add111on to the
permanent blood centers.
Bloodmobiles wall be stationed today at
Saddlcback Hospital. 2445 I Via Estrada.
Lasuna Hills. and St. Andrtw's Presb\-
tenan Church. 500 St. Andrew's Road .
Ncwpon Beach. Hours at both sues are 3
p.m. to·7:45 p.m .
.\ communal) dn"'c 1s slated from 2:45
p.m. 10 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Irvine
Presb\ 1cnan Church at 5 Meadowbrook
Twu pcrmaMJll«nt.crs rn the Orange
Coast area that are open SJX days a ,.eek are
Two akin dhrera prepare to enter the watef at Diver'• Co..-e in La.fUDa Beac b.
Countians awarded $70,000
to settle adojJtioJ;I nightniare
By Ttae Associated Pre11
.\n Orange C ounl) couple. sull fearful of
a '1olcnt ps)cho11c t~n-ager the) cla1'!1
the~ had to accept sight unsttn in an
mforma11on 'acuum. ha'e a cepted S ,0.000 to settle 1hc1r suit against the
count) placement agenn
Tom and Jan1Cl' Colelfa contend count'
social \l.o rkers tric ked them into accepting
the ) oung.ster as a foster child in I 977 and
ado pting the ··un·adoptablc·· child an 1979
"11hou1 idling them about his h1stol) of
house burn.ing. assault and mental illness.
4-nd after the OO). Tomm~. now 18. \I.as
released earl) last )ear from an 1ns11tut1on.
the Colc:llas ~•d the) \I.Cf( "1ct1m1zed b}
numerous death threats and obscene
moH to a ne\I. neighborhood
.. It \I. asa "'mg nightmart."' said Colella.
a 3"'-~ear-old electronics eng1n~r
The~ accepted the senlcment m !'.o' em-
ber. altho~gh the Oran&e Count~ Social
St-r\Tr~ .\genq admitted no \l.rong<'oing.
.\judge had al read) se'crcd the ad~p11on
Orange Count~ officials sa~ Tomm}
ma) be"' ing \I.Ith his natural mother m
Michigan. but the) don't kno~ for sure
Se11her do the Colellas ·
··from our perspective. 11 \l.asn't that \l.e
\I.ere" 11hholding 1nformat1on. 11 was that
\l.C didn't kno\I. the s1gn1ficancc of
Tomm) 's problems.'' said Bob Gnffith.
the agenc~ ·s chief deput) director
shov.ed the oo' had ·3 h1ston ot mental
problems · ·
.\sa toddlerTomm~ pla'ed Y..lth l ni' es.
abused animals, set small fir~ and
anad.ed other ch1ldrtn \\hen he \I.as 5.
his natural mother ga'e him up after he
reported!~ set lire to their home Thebo~ \I.IS found to be sutTenng from
fe tal alcohol s\ndromc. \l.h1ch can stem
fro m a pr~nant mother's alcoholism
His' 1olence became apparent 1n his first
"'ed. at the Colella home ""Ith an anal ... on
his foster mother
But the parents said count~ adop11on
officials do\!. npla~ed their concerns l·all·
ing his n:peated o utbursts normal
in Hunun1ton lkachat 16882Go\bardSc .•
and Santa .. na at 600 . Parkccntcr Ort\c t
Hours at Huntington Beach are l2~J&
p.m . to 1 JO pm and at Santa Ana 8·»:
am to 8 p.m Monda)-Thursda)'. ~
Both centers arc open from 8:30 a.m. to
)·30pm Fnda}sandfrom8a.m tol2:30·
p.m Saturda)S.
Appointments for an) $1tc may be made
b} calling 835-5381 . ext. 450
If the shonages aren't eliminated they
could effect plans for elecuve surgery.
Fanton said.
··Nonnall) 1n Janual") elecu"e surgenn'
incrcaM! because people put them off'
during tht' hohda}s:· Fanton said. ··eut·
unl('Ss donations increase. there·s a chance
elecll'<' surgenes ~111 have to be post-poned ··
Disabled
advocate ·
Waddell
.retires
By ROBERT BARK E;R oe_o.,,...,...,
8111 \\ addell tht' man \I. ho probabl~ diO.
the most to ma~t' lht'. beach and public..
buildings ane~s1bk to the hand icapped.
has roured a~ an ass1~tant c1' 11 engmeer for.
the cit~ or Huntington Beach v. addell \l.h o·s been confined to a
~ ht:1:lcha1r ~1nc1: he suffered a broken baclc
in high !>l.hool g~ mnastics. v.as the guiding
force in build ing "heelcha1r ramps at th.e
beach so 1ha1 hand1Capped peo pk could
v.'3t(fl the "a'~ at Hunungton talc.
Beach
He a lso \I.as a leading ad,ocate for
de' eloping 1ra1ls for the handicapped all
the beach and for making Cit~ Hall. th.o
hbran and the -..:e\l. land House and other Sii~ access1bk tO the 1mpa1red
He also coordinated a fishing derb~ and
other e' en1s for handicapped ~ o ungstcn
and has been instrumental in the installa-
tion of noise de' ices at traffic signals to
permit bhnd and ' 1suaJI~ 1mpaued people
to ..aft'h cro~ bus' inters.erctions in the
a rl·a of.Hunungton Center along Ed1~r
"'enue "He did so much to male the city
a('c~s1blt' to the handicapped:· said
Huntington Beach Commu mt~ Sen•~
upcnntendent J im Engle ··He used h~
contacts \I.hen mone) was scarce to le\
more 'oluntt"t'rs for the programs. He's a
super humannanan ··
\\ addell H a r~tdfllt ~ lf\1ne. satd
he·11i.:ontmuc10 ..en e as a mem~r of the
board of d1rt"Ctors for the "-1arch of Dim~
and v.111 still v.or... lo 1mpro' e the
cond1t1ons for handicapped )Oungstcn
and adults
\\ addeU. \I. ho rett•' ed dcgrttS in engi-
ncenng at LTL~. has ~n emplo~ed with
the rn' of Hunung.1on Beach for I 5 ~-cars.
His reurement was o fficial last wttk •
Four divide
$1 . 3 million
lottery prize
_ _.,t-1~~ calls. which forced /hem to
Medical and coun rec-ords. that surfaced
onl) in the course of ICIL31 proceedings.
.. II was an emotional game the' pla'ed
~1th us:· Mrs Colella said 5.\(R.\\1E:-.. TO I .\Pl -Four people
v.111 \phi a second pnze of more than SI J
m1lhon but no one ~on the SS m1lhon
Jac ... pot in the Cal1fom1a Lotte~ ·s ··Loll<'
M <r game o'er the v.cekend
Monday, Jan. 4 · Engine problem forc~sjet to return to JWA The four sccond-pla~ ..,.,nners guessed
fi, e of the SI\ fi~t lotto numbers plus \M
bonus number and v.111 rettl\C S33 .09:t
eal h a .on~ spo\;esman said onda~ • 6:30 p.m .. Costa Mesa City Coud.I. rouc1I By Tk Auoclated Prest No one aboard Flight 2519. beading
from Orange Count) to San FranClsco. was
injured and there "'as no damage to the
plane.
The pilot requested that emcrgcnn fire
equipment stand by. chambers,, 77 Fair Dnve. . A four-cllglnc .\mencan ~Imes Jet
v.1th 79 people aboard returned to John
Wa)'ne <\1rpon atkr losing po~er ID one
engine shortl> after takeoff o n a weekend
flight. offietaJs said
··1 wasn't scared unul "e htt the ground
and I sa~ all tbc fire engines.... said
passenger Barbara CMT. 38. of Fomt.hdl
Tbc passengers wett put aboard a later
fllgbt "'h1ch amvod 1n San Francisco at
.a 10p.m
The unclaimed S5.030.855 Jack.pot v.111
roll o'er to \\ cdnC'Sda) ·s game. whlt'h 15
C\.p«tC'd to ha' c a Jackpot of around ~
m1lhon spo ... e-sman John Schade saui
• 6:30 p.m .. Cotta Mesa Pla.a.ala& Commlsaloe
1t"4)' 1H1loa. C1t) Hall. 77 Fair Drhc.
Tuesday,Jan.5
• 8 p.m .• r ... aata Vall~)' City Coudl. council
chambers. 10200 Slater Ave.
The 8.\e 146 airliner. with 5 passengers
and four crew members. landC'd about I: IS
p.m. Saturda) because of trouble in the
No. 2 engine. said a1rhne spo ... esman Dan
While.
The spolesman dcscnbed the pllofs
dCC1s1on to return to the a1rpon as
prcca u uo na !)
"The plane as capable of fl}ing on thrtt
engines.. but he ~as so close to the a1rpon
he decided to tum around and come back."
Wh11e said.
Tbe FederaJ A viatJon A.dmtn1Strat1on
wtll '"' esuptc the mCldent. said F '\.A.
dut) officer Dick Tornquist
The \l.tnning numben ptcked Saturda\
nlght for tht 1141~-"ttkl) ~Lotto 6-49t.
game \l.Crt . 14. 18. 19. J9. 34 and the
bonus number. !5 •
>\nothcr 131 pla)crs chose fhc ~innt4\R
numbe~ and each ~on SS.303:
California leads U.S. in
deaths of police officers
of n Remo about 10 p m unda ~ • • • .\ pcrwn \1.85 reponed going door
to door on Emerald trttt about ~
p m Saturda~ asling for Chmtmas
trees to bum • • • .\ person uixet o'er an 1lkplh
parked 'chicle m the bloc ... of
Ha~es f(portedl~ thre~ ~ at the
\Chicle
and stole s.i .. l l 5 cash from a locked
floor s::tf~ The 1nc1d~n1 11.u rtponed
at 8 a m Sunda' \I. hen the T'C'Staurant
\I.as opened · • • • .\ Compaq computer andcom-
pute'r sofiwan: 'al ucd at SI q "'ere
reponed stolen at ~ 30 o m c~
Years Da' from an unlocked sara&?
in the 100 bl ... of Colton Street. -• • • \fa!IOUmeh Sc~cd Tabnzi. 36. of
'e~pon Beach Wl5 arTCStcd at 6:)()
pm \\'edn~' at 8 0 Santa
&rbara Dn"e On SUSPICIOO of chdd
abuse ..
MIAMI (AP) -More law enfo~
ment ofticcn d ied in California -a
toeal of I 5 -dunna 1987 than an any
otbcr state, accordjng to the National
Association ofCb.iefs of Pohce.
Last ye91', l47 (aw office" were
slain across the nation. association
spokesman Gerald Arenbera u1d in
Miami. Flonda and New York trailed
with 14 deaths each.
In 1986 there were 14 C..lifomia
peace officen slain and in I 98S, there
~ II. huaid.
T wo of tht of1iccn killed an
c:abfOC"Dia in 1987 wm from the San
fn.nci.ICO Bay area. T.-o were Costa
Mna police abo9id a bdJCOPC,er that
cruhed on Matth IS. They died alona with a aviban Oa_lbt tn tNCtor
lbe Utodation counted in the total.
"Cahfonua seems to be the tate an
• i.aa--•1acll
A ~t1 WU takm 10 South
Coest Medtcal Ctnw 11\tt bnnt
stNck by 1 blue Ford INCk at I 1:2T a.In. Fndat on LllpN Can)on Roed -a• of El Toro ROid.
Golf dubs and other mltceJllneous
ucms ,aJucd 1t S700 were~
1tokn at I 1$ p.m Sunday frotn a ruadt~ 1t f rftjure Island: • • • Lim-:-Oambein. 45. idmufied as
wb.kh bcinaa law enforcement officer
is a vay hazardous job." be said.
"I read tbat on N~ Year's Eve.
there was a rain of bullets fired at
midru_J_ht That is absolutely in-
credible," Areobcra adacd.
He said California. New York and
Florida can pen.ia.Uy attribute the biab number of fatahtics to mmo
involvina dJ'\111 and alcohol. Six of
the California cbtbs ~ rdat.cd to
traffic accidenlS. be said.
...A lot of 0... otbcr driven arc
undn' the inftumce of alcohol and
dNp, .. ~ tlid..
Has CJllllDiabOD ._ ODIY recmlly
btpD 10 pabticizie the -.W• facins
law en(01ce1Dt1at oliicen.
-unbtv.Daleb. we lee peOpk
actttna shot on TV an the rime and we
a tran~t. -as aconed 10 t~ acMith
end of Ilic city afttt bttftl cued b
asauh and bettn) al r .9:41 p.m
Frida> at 1401 S. Coest Hijhway. . .. . Jc~-dry '-alued a1 SS.000 ~-as
tt'P()rtcd stolen aa ll:O& am. Friday
from a restdcn« an 1he 500 bkx' of
S AnD's On~
~1man:
take it for panted. Tbele arc atwUy
loucs. .. said A.rmbeq. Dunn& 1986, some l 59 law en-Coeta Ilea Man-of-war kills swimmer
forcemcnt offit"Cn ~killed across T-sh1ns were e' 1dcntl) the
the United States and 120 in 198S. preferen~ o fa burglar \I. ho bro ... e into P<\LM BEACH SHORES. Fla.
TM touJ foTlast year still may srow. a '-chicle in tht-1700 block of ( .\P) -'\n a' 1d ~immcr died after
Attnbcra sa.ad. becaute bis poup bu P1a~nua ~' enue e-art~ Fnda~ Thr being stuna b} a Ponu.gucsc man-of-
yet to RC'Cive rq>c>rts &om all intruder rtponcdl) left tools and \l.3r. a blue bubblc--hkc rclau,·e of \be
urisdictions. other 'aluablc items but tool about Jeth fish 1.-.at 1s rard) ckadl\
J He estimated tbal up to half of the 10 I-shins.. \alued at SS6. Thr bre~lt-Emil) H. mall. 67. a former
officcn killed last year miabt be alive m occurred bet~~n 5· 15 and 5.30 housekeeper v.bo sv.vn an the surf
today aftbey bad better t.ctup wbilc a.m •• • da1l~. screamed and k>st conJC10us-answenna troubkcalls,oriftbey bad luaa&e and contents ,a(ucd at nt"SS~henshcv.~bmenaboutlOfttl
ttee vcd better trainina. $3 500 v."t~ stolen from the trunk of~ from sh~. said fncnd w1'o 'ft~
A 1 , tud by the FederaJ ca; parted at uth Coast Plaza on ~,th her. he was tn a coma for fh·c Bura'::~ 1:vcsT.-tion found the unda) bet~ttn ! and 3 p.m. ~1ys .txHf~ .~~ dwtcd FPaJnda) ~1. .._ • ' e e e I' If) S osplMU lft tsl m ~:u
Eum1ner'~ repon cited~ Portug.uor
man-of-war stJn& as the chtc'.f cause ol
death
"'f\.frn-of-v .. ar ttlca~ pb)saha
\eflOm. whtch lO~tC'Olopsts I&) lS lO
umcs mort powerful the the '·mom
of the EaS\tm 0.amondbld rll·
tlcsna.kc. 8ut not m<>&agb of tbc
poison u u.all)' t tttea1Cd to make ttie
tl op dt-adl)'.
"l''c ne'-tt heard of an> (
death.$... nl\'Cfl.U) ()( flonda l
<>11 t Frank Matu.ro sud. ava19C %:! ::.,. ofticct.killed tS 2~. Tv.o mt"ft ~Ponedl) anemptcd to The Palm Beach Co..nt Medal the most day of \ht week as lcaJ a motort')ck unday afternoon
Tbunday and tbt most daa+Jous '" the 2300 block off a11'1ew Om"t. -----------------ml!lllll!l-1!111!!!!1!!!!!1!11!11·~~ boun arc after 10 p.m. Ont ~. 19'-ur-oki 81)-an
ncqw'.' '!'the strttt 10 make at~
IS llloUib WM'DCOllC had bttft hit b)'. a
,·dtldr about I a.m. Sund.a)' near
f o Int ~"int and Pato l..ado. • • • A man was arrested Sunda.) for
rtmOVIJlll lift fiOfn a nhO ~
an a tarpOn 1n the S400 block of
Walnut A'tG~ on Sunde) afttr..
noon ••• smolc bomb was kft olltsadc the
front doOt ofa homt an tht 700 block
\
Patnd Kelk). oflMmond Bar. W'&S Two pit bull attacks reported in L
anu•cd. • • • Clotbint 'al~ at $700 was ""'
C'O\cr'fti and 1 man and woman •'a'C
IITtSKd 1n an •lkicd ancmpted
pnd theft a1 tbt Scan stoft ''South
Coast Pliu turda)' aftaaoon . .\r:-~ w.rft RamJto Watfrtdo ~ roso. 21. and Rosano Plnnoso. l l.
botb o( n&a "na.
Newport 811cll
Somtone ma$hcd a -.1ndo at 1hc
Ot-1 Txo mtaurant" l09 Palm
••
LOS.\ GELES ( .\P) -.. PJl bull
v.-as shol to death after at attacked a
small bo and a man._ ho Qmc l~lM
ch 1 Id" s rncue.; and in anothcf at\aek a
pt t bull btu l 0.)ea.t-old bo M ._,
~ l"Jln&. authori t~ iaid.
The uruckntif ltd l 0. r-old -..as
trH&ed and rckaJcd Sunda) It Pl~
nfldl Hospttal af\n 1 pn 11 ""'
ponedl> '°"' \he bo} from 1 \rtt ~1naat his l.a'-c \'~v. Tttr1tt home.
1&1d ftUntl'\I SU~n'IJOT luau
. Oil spill fouling ·
water· supplies
near Pittsburgh
Stonnfronts Students tatk of killing spree;
punch, blow encouraged to cry for four slain and bite U.S.. · ·
PITTSBURGH (AP) -Emerg-
ency crews raced today to contain a
90-milc 011 spill that has con-
taminated two of the city's three
rivers threatened to shut off drinking
water 'for 750.000 suburban residents
and halted shipping along the Mono-
ngahela.
The Western Penns)lvan1a Water
Co. closed one bf two Monongahela
intakes to prevent the fuel. from
contaminating water supplies 1n
towns south and "'est of here. No
communities had lost their "'ater b)
this morning. nut 50,000 people '4Cre
expected to lose th~1r water toda).
"They're going to .go down," said
utility spokesman Dennis Case~
"The main tanJc ... IS nearl) empt)."
The spill began Saturda) night
when an Ashland Oil Co. (uel tank
sollapsed and about a million gallons
of diesel fuel nowed into the Mono-
ngahela River.
Western Penns)lvania Water Co
implored us customers 1n two coun-
ties to continue conservine water
because the largest of its two n verside
treatment plants could not longer
draw from the Monongahela. The
public has apparently been heeding
the calls. Casey said.
Tile towns of Greentree. Dormont.
Carnegie. Crafton. Ing.ram. Mount
Lebanon and Scott Township will
probably lose their water suppl)
today. Water trucks "''II be a\a1lable
to dispense potable water: residents
would have to pick the water up 1n
buckets. Gov. Roben P Case~ put the
Penns~lvania National Guard on
alen io deh,·er cmergcnc~ water
supplies.
Residents of East L1' erpool. Ohio.
near!\ 50 miles do"' nstream. were
also as .. ed to cut bac .. on water use
because the town dra"'s m -water from
the Ohio River and was prepanng to
sw 1trh to reserve supplies
The c1t\ of Pmsburgh"s water
comes from the ~lleghen} R1,er and
"'as unaffected. The .\lleghen) and
\1onongahela con,erge near down-
tO"-n P1f;tSQurgh to form the Ohio.
Boat traffic on the hea' 11~ used
Monongahela was halted for 25 miles.
and1td1aren1 rail hnes and h1g.hwa}S
were temporanl~ closed. Ho!>pttals
transferred their most senous pa-
tien ts 10 unaffected fac1h t1es.
By Tiie AsMdate4 Prut
A snow and 1cc storm on the East
Coast npped do"'n power lines and
closed schools today while a West
Coast storm frustrated travelers. and
betw«n the two a S1benan Express of
Arctic air surged down the M iss1s-
s1pp1 Valle).
.. You ma) feel the punch of an
4.tlanuc Coast storm. the bite of a
cold Arctic outbreak. or the blow of a
Paci fic Coast storm t,Jut you arc not
llkel) to escape all three," said Hugh
Crowther of the National Weather
Ser' ice in Kansa'S City, Mo.
The Pacific storm. blamed for at
least one death. dumped snow on
higher elevatio ns of Oregon. Cah-
fom1a and Nevada. The Atlantic
statt'<' storm p1led up snow as far
south as Nonh Carolina. where 1ce-
ladcn trees and power lines caused
thousands of power outages.
Belo~-zero temperatures prevailed
across the Dakotas and Minnesota.
lnternat1o nal Falls, Minn .. dipped to
I below zero. with a wind chjll factor
of59 belo~ zero. The wind chill effC<"t
at Minot. N.D .. "'as 72 below zero.
The ea.stem .snowstorm came just
in ume to disrupt today's rush-hour
commute for people going back to
work after the holida)S.
DOVER. Ark. (AP) -Teachers bqan classes at
Dover's pubhc school tQday by talluna about a holiday
k1llin1 rampaac that left 16 pco~ dead and encouraging
students to cry for their rour slain classmates.
"The kidsare handlina it very well," said Dover High
School principal Lloyd Herrick as students returned to
class after holiday vacations. "Of courst, the kids are
talking about it among them~lves. Everything l
overheard was very heaJlhy. It's a good sign."
The slam students were children of R. Gene
Simmons. 47, the man police say is their only suspect in
the killing spree. One victim. Loretta Simmons. 17, was a
senior. Also lulled were Eddie Simmons, 14: Marianne
Simmons. 11, and Rebeccil Simmons. 8.
During the first period. only one pupil. a close friend
of Loretta. sought counseling. Herrick said. although the
schooi district had two eJttra counselors to supplement
two already on the d1stricfs staff. The school has
kinderganen through 12 .,.des on the same campus.
AdditiooaJ counselors were on '':A~dby m
Russellville seven miles awa). and five m1n1sters sat
sipping coffee in the First Methodist Church across the
street from the Dover school in case they were needed.
The Rev. Royce Savage. pastor ot t-1rst ~ethodast
Church. said there have been, ··all types of emouo.n here.
but we must bury the dead and go o n. There is nothing }O.u
can do to bnng them bac~ As far as Simmons .. tS
concerned. he's going to RCt his. one \I.IV or the other.
Relatives of Simmons' slain daughter-in-law made
public a lelter over the weekend in which the suspect's
slain wife. Rebecca Simmons. told one of her grown sons,
"Dad has had me hke a pnsoner ... and expressed a desire
to move away.
PTLspent $100,00(Jmore to hush Hahn
COLUMBIA. S.C. (AP)-The PTL ministry spent
ncarl~ S 100.000 more than previously reponed to tr) to
keep Jessica Hahn quiet abQut a tl")'St wtth Jim Bakker.
including S 10.000 for her signature on a statement
absoh ing Bakker. the Internal Revenue Service says.
Pa' ments for the fonner church secretary's silence
to taled ·s 363. 700. according to I-RS reports frled-itrtJ .S.
Bankruptc) Coun to suppon its arguments that PTL's
tax-ei1.empt status should be revoked. The IRS says PTL
o~es at least S55. 7 million in t1ack ta.xes.
Bakker resigned from the Fort Mill tele' is1on
min1str) last March amid rcpons of a se>.ual encounter
~•th Hahn. •
In its report. the I RS said the total spent on Hahn s
case 1 ncluded SI 0.000 paid to her in 1984 for her signature
on a statement absol"ing Bakker. then PTL president. of
wrongdoinJ.1n a 1980 sexuaJ~ncountcr:: Sl.100 patd lO
Heritage Village Church pastor ~m Johnson for h~s loan
of the S 10.000. and S85.000 paid to her attome) 1n Los
.\ngeles. Scott Furstman. for l~I fees.
Loss off armland threatens state agriculture
Boaalng eubd.hi elon• on productiYe farm·
land poee a major threat to California
agriculture. Farmland le being payed at the
rate of 50,000 acree annually.
paying up to
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~ • t . .
By ROB WEllS
' II I ,,.,_..._
FRESNO -California's soils are
being pa'cd o'er. polluted wuh salts
• and toxic chemicals and eroded at a
rate that threatens the fut~ of the
state's agriculture. a research group
contends.
"Of the state's crop land. appro>.-
1matel) I. 785.000 acres arc shedding
soil faster than nature can replace 11.
due to wind. water or both." accord-
ing to a rnpon b) the Amencan
Farmland Trust called .. Eroding
Choices. Emerging Issues." T}le state
has 33 million acres in range land and
farms.
Kem Count' offers one of the most
dramatic e~amples of erosion 1n an
agncultural area ~ 1th 250.000 acres of
crop land and ~46.000 of grazing land
"'hipped b~ wind erosion. said the
trust .\ J 977 windstorm near
SakcrsfieJd sandblasted crops and
unco,ered seed. causing S2.5 million
in damage. the repor1'9dded.
Loss of' aluablc topsoil can mean
1 ncreased use of e>.pens1' e soil con-
d1t1oners and fenihzers which also
can contaminate water supplies if the
chemicals are used improperly. the
rcpon said.
High quaht) farm land 1s being
pa' ed 0' er for shopp1 ng centers.
housing subd1' 1s1ons and other
urban uses at the rate of 50.000 acres
annuall). according to a report b) the
state Conservauon Department.
.\ son of "domino effC<"f' follows
loss of pnme Jarm land as farmers
turn to lo~er quaht~ lands to raise
crops. said the repon. called "Con-
sen 1ng the Wealth of the Land:·
For example, some western Fresno
Count) gro"'ers ma1nta1n that their
drainage problems are aggravated b)
1mgat1on on fields above their
propen1es. Disposal of drain water
containing selenium and boron has
led to wildlife deaths at Kester50n
:"\auonal Wildlife Refuge.
alt' drain water on 1.6 million
acres.:.. an area about the size of San
Francisco. Santa Clara. San Mateo
and Santa Cruz counties combined -
poses potential disaster for croplands.
the state report said.
The U.S. Soil Conservatio n Sen ice
estimates that fi ve million acres -
half of the state's 1mgated crop lands.
-could be h11 ~1th the saline soils
problem b:r the :rear 2000.
T he Farmland Trust stud' offer~
thlS assessment of the future of
California's soil.
'"L'nless (the problems) are ad-
dressed in a dec-ade or two. Calif9m1a
agriculture could fi11d that farm land
con' ers1on, erosion. salinit)' and
1mga11on shortages are so severe that
Its production of crops will decline
rather than ad,ance. the enormous
pubhr IA\CStmentJn agnculture will
ha'c been squandered. and a host of
related C1:"onom1c and ennronmental
problemscould follow 1n tum:·
Soil problems ha' e comcided ~1th
an erosion of the state government's
soil consen auon programs. In 1978.
the !>late Resource Conservation
C omm1ss1on. charged with a lead role
in protection ofCalifom1a·s soils. was
disbanded after nearl) a decade of
budget cuts.
Staff at the Depanment of Soil
Conse(\ aJ1on. w h1ch peaked near 50
in 1967. ha!> been cut to one full-time
pos111on.
"Present!). r m II There \.\ere one('
50 people in the state working on
"'hat useato be considered a model
program 1n the nation ... said Ken
Troll.
While other state agencies deal w 11h
soil erosion. Troll said he 1s the onh
person in state go,emment charged
~Ith coordinating the state's soil
conservation effon
State lawmakers and Go". George
Deukmej1an are pa) ing closer atten-
tion to this common denominator of
Cahfom1a·s phenomenal agnculcural
~ea Ith.
DeukmeJian signed a lhree-b11l
packaj~ _in September that earmarks S240.~ to comple te mapping of
farm lands soils This basic ~Kh 1s
mis.sing on one-third of the state's
crop lands. including the multi·
m1lhon dollar farms in Fresno. Kem.
San Joaquin and Tulare counttes .
according to state records.
.. lt.s time that California stopped
treating its farm land like dirt ... said
state Sen. John G aramend1. D-
Walnut GroH. sponsor of part of the
package.
Funds for soils studies \1.111 on1·
1nate from an mcrease fee on land·
owners "'ho want to take their lands
out of the state·s agncultural preserve
program • ._now n as the Wil~iamson
.\ct.
The package also calls .for forma-
tion of a ne"' nct~ork a mong Cah-
fom1a's I ~2 local Resource C8n-
sen at1on D1stncts 10 cam out the
goals of the ne"' I~ adopted state soils
report.
. ..J'hts lS probabl) one of the m.ore
1mpenant long-term aspects of the
bill." said Ja) Ziegler. a Garamend1
aide.
The federal Soil Conser\'allon Ser-
' ice alread) advises local distncts on
soils management plans. But the
federal salirut) and 1mgation man-
agement programs will be shelved for
the next three \Cars as the SCS
grapples w 1th a ··ne~ conservation
program outlined 1n the 1985 federal
Farm 8111. said Red Martin. a Fresno-
bascd Soil Consen a11on Service of-
ficial.
Will Shafroth. director of the
o\men.:an Farmland Trust. 1s op-
11m1st1c the lcg1slat1on passed this
~car"' Ill change (ahfom 1a to a course
that"''" rt'mCd) these problems.
.. This ~t'ar. I think. v.e are ~inJ a
fairl~ s1gn1ficant contnbuw,, .. being
made.. toward sa\'1ng Cahfom1a's
w1ls. he said.
.. This 1s the first ume the state of
(ahforn1a has provided mone) for
soil sune)"S of farm la nd . .\nd I
behe'e Cahfom1a 1s the onl) state in
the nation that has not done that:• he
added.
Who'sillegal?Woman, 95,
has lived here since ·1 ·912
R EDDING I A.P) -A 95-year-old
Polish-born woman facing the cutoff
of state medical benefits because she
couldn't pro'e legal residence status
has been 1n the n1ted States since
191 ~. accord1 ng to an official of the
federal lmn'ugrat1on and Natural-
1zat1on Sen ice
Sen ice ~or\ers in a St. Albans, Vt..
records center fo und Stefania '
Babinsk1·s name o n the manifest ofa
ship that docked on the East ~oast tn ·
191 ~. said Da) va Stewart. accuti"e
assistant to INS Western Regional
Commissioner Harold Ezell. •
·'There is even a chance she became
naturalized as a citizen aJong the
line:· Stewart said last week.
The manifest information will be
presented 10 Shasta County social
services workers as proof that
Babinski qualifies for the state Med•·
Cal aid she has been rcccivina for
seven )C~rs.
Babmsk.i. who still is on Medi-Cal.
has bce~awaiung the results of a
hcanng 'in her case. but a county
social services official said that with
the documentation expected from
INS. the case can be closed with a
happy end1na. ··t MVCT had 1ny doubts she was
acp1:· said Rose P0temko. 66. of
Redding. one of Blbiintki's five
children. "She belonp here. This 11
hct country. ..
The Shasta County ~!fare ofrict
sent Babinslu a not~ evher this year
adv1sJn1 her she was "not lcplly
present" add therefore not disible for
the Mcdt.CaJ atlo-ance a.bat hdPI
pay heT room and boerd at her~
hOIM.
The fam ily swaDowcd iis pride
~~ml weeks "fO and applied to
make Babtn1k1 a tqal rn1dcnt under
1he U lmmiarauon and N.atural-
1za11on Scrv1tt am nest)' ~m,
.. We had to amn,e specaal trant-
ponauon for her to tc1 a physical to
•
prove the wasn't ~"I 1n ch~
&om Poland:· Shartry tC'lns. ·O. Potrmko's daUlhttr. 11td.
Babinski railed her &mily 1n an
lRnct'<ll)' Detroit Milhbothood. SM
and htt'Utc bulblftd Md two IOftt 1n
the Navt dunna World War II and
ditplayC9. I.ht AmMcu .. CVn)i
Founh of July and Ala 0.y.
"The> •ett proud 10 be Amriiflns
and railed us up'° bt tlw same My;•
Pottmko said .. If~. didn't "°"· ~
'
~re conilducd lk>DoY ci11J1rM. .•. lf
she knew tht wtrc. hri• branded
tUtpl. !t -oukl hun her. They did
evct)1hu'I IOOd Ammeans would do."
Smns was annoyed that the procns
took to tona and uxd to mudt family
Cntfl).
"h •• ttnnccatary. • .aid Secin
.. and it Wat pun•• my inolhcr and
m) "8ndinothcr · tl.f'CMllb ..,..Y b not.tu..,··
I
•
I
-
,
Witness
describes
s laying
of Aquino
MA JLA (AP) -A 1Ph1hppine
'\1rhnes employee testifiC'd today that
he sav. a soldier shoot President
( orawn Aquino's husband. markina
lhe first ume in the cunen11rial 1ha1 a
v.11ness da1med he saw the killina.
Jessie Barcelona. 30. s11d he was
dnv1ng a towing tractor around the
Manila aU19(>rt on Aug. 21 , 1983.
"hen he saw former Sen. Benigno
.\qu1no descending from a China Air
lines Jet v.ith three uniformed ~
cons.
"I saw the soldier at the back of the
man in white point the gun at the
nape:· Barcelona said. "He firrd the
gun and he (Aquino) fell forward."
Barcelona. who was brought to the
counroom with seven security
guards. did not point out the assailant
dunng his testimony. which was to
continue Tuesda)
Prosecutor Raul Gonzalez told
re pontrs later that Barcelona's ac·
-:Soun1 indicated the kWer was Con·
\lablc I s1 Class Rogelio Moreno, one
of 40 defCndants.
The assassination of Aquiho. the
Phili ppines· best knov.n opposition
figure. touched ofr a wave of pubhc
1nd1gnat1on that helped topple Prts1·
dent Ferdinand Marcos in 1986 and
propd Mrs. .\qumo into the prn1·
denc).
Aquino was rttummg 10 the Ph1hp-
p1nes after lhree years ,self-imposed
C\llc in 1he United States to challenge
Marcos for the leadership of this
countn
.\ court 1n 1985 acquitted the
defe ndants in the ktlhng and held up
I~~ fi nd ings of a M~ppointed
commission that Aquino was
murdered b) a ·Communist agent.
Rolando Galman.
G alman. a pett) cnminal with links
to the mll1taf). was shot dead on the
tarmac moments after Aquino was
slain.
After Mrs. Aquino took office. the
Ph1l1pp1ncs Supreme Court over-
turned the·acquntals and ordeTCd a
new trial. which bc-gan April 28. 1987.
..\f\er Aquino ~as ..shot. Barcelona
testified . he heard another sunshot.
poss1bl~ the one that killed Galman
Barcelona said he had Sttn Galman
chatttng earlier that day with Col.
Rolando Abadi Ila. 1he former Mu1la
J ame Barcelona
intelhgencc chief. A.bad11la was no1
charged in the case but has been held
s1nec Jul) for alleged tn\Olvement 1n
coup attempts against M15. Aquino.
Barcelona was the' first witness in
the current tnal to test1f y that a
soldier killed Aqutn_9.
Dunng the 1985 tnal. bus1·
ness v.oman Rebecca Qu11ano. a pass.-
engc r aboard 1he China A.1r Lines
plane. testified that she peered
through the " 1ndov. and sav. a soldier
fire a pLStol at Aquino soon aft.er he
left the plane.
Qu1Jano said she was unable to Stt
the killer's fa~ The prosecution at
the time said the gunman could be
Moreno. ~ho follo v.ed Aquino dov.n
the airplane st 1"°'a) and had po~der
bums on his hands after the k1lhng.
But the firs& coun termed Qui·
1ano's tesumon) .. dubious:· so 11 had
no effect on the 'erd1ct.
Barcelona said he kept quiet after
the assassination Last month he
came foNard and gave a statement to
the Nauonal Bureau of ln,est1ga11on.
"'h1ch then alerted the prosttuuon
During a recess. prosec utor
Go nzalez said a Janitor at the
courthou5C.' had found a letter Sunda)
threatening Go nzalez· hfe if he did
not stop pursuing ne" endence in the
case.
Gonzalez shov.ed rtponers a cop)
of the letter. v.h1ch sa1d ··stop this
foolish nonescnse. )O~r life 1s in
danger... He said the letter was
v. rapped around a grenade.
The letter v.as signed ·· A. VSECOM
Blue_·· AYSECOM 1Sanacron)m for
.\\ 1at1on Sc.-cunt) Command. the
uni! v.h1ch pro ' 1ded sttunt) dun ng
Aquino's am' al
Many of the defendants v.ere
assigned to the un11
Hope Cµltural Cehter
gets splashy sendoff
PALM DESERT (AP)-ln a Joast
10 an. opulence and a master sho"·
man. Prcs1dent Reagan and a show
business galu.) threw a ...,.ukend
part) for entertainer Bob Hope that ht
up the dcsc.-n sk).
W11h ! laser hght show outshining
the n•,fn'ttime stars for miles around.
the S-0 m1llton Bob Hope Cultural
Center opened ns doors Saturday in a
ceremon) hononng Hope.
"Naming a cultural center for me is
hke nammg a monastery for Oat)
Han:· quipped the comedian who
had JUSt returned from entenaining
U.S. armed fo~ in the Persian Gulf.
A.ccepung from Reagan the first.
".\menca's Hope ~ward.'' the com-
edian said, "I appreciate the nsee
things he sa1~ about me. even 1f I'm
not Rllss1an.
"ho "latched from a bo' scat. Hope
said. ··eumped into Gerald Ford the
other da' I said. 'Pardon me · He
said. ·1 don't do that anvmore.' ..
Ford's appearance v.as a surpnse.
Hc-had said earlier he "ould no1
attend because his "1fe. Dem. 1s an a
hospital ~CO\ enng from surge")
.\lthough Fo rd left 1mmed1ately
after the sho". Ho pe: said the former
president reported that Mrs Ford "as
"doing quite v.ell... Hope said he
planned to '1s11 her in the hospital
this week.
The ded1cauon of the new l .166-
seat McCallum Theater. cro"n 1cwel
of the cultural center. had bttn
dubbed. "the pan~ of the decade." It
h\ed up to Its b1lhng..
The be1e~elled and fur-swathed
g~ts. who paid up to SI0.000 a
couple for the evening. were sv.-ept up
in a wh irl of glamor.
.. ..
..
Orange Coas1 DAILY PILOT /Monday. January •. 1~ * M
Protests eru.pt Over Gaza slaying
I .
JERUSALEM (AP) -A rash of
small.-scale prot~ls broke out 11\ the
occupied Ona tnp and We:st Bank
loda{aner an Israeli ~kher lulled an
Arab ~oman and the arm)' said 11 ~ould deport· nine Pakstin1an ae·
t1v1su
No tnJunes "ert reported.
Pnme ~mister Y1t2hak Shamir.
spe~long on Israel 1Ud10. sa.id the
brarli arm)' sou~t to avoid cas-
ualties and descnbcd the shooting
unda) as a .. regretful incident."
.. E,el)bod) kno ws hov. much we
14ant to a'o1d. as much as possible.
loss of ll\es ~e·re no t interested in
dead or in1ured people. neither Arabs
nor Je"s. The arm > 1s doing llS
utmost and shov.-s maximum rt·
)traint:·.-sham1r s.a1d
Israeli troops used tear gas and
rubber bullets to d1spe~ demon·
strators in the West Bank town of
Ram. v.here 25-ycar-<>ld Han1ya
Suleiman-was killed Sunday by an
Israeli soldier as she was hanging
laundl)
She became 1he 23rd Arab killed by
amt) gunfire since a wave of violence
beun last month
'the arm> said a curfew was re·
imposed on the Tulkartm rtfuJ«
camp 1n 1he West Bank. restncting
the 10.000 residents to their ho mes.
.\rab repons said demonstrators
thre" slones. burned trres and
qlockcd the main road
A reponer v. ho dro' e past the
Kaland1a rc:fugee camp near Jerusa-
lem said columns of black smoke
Death toH 26 from Israeli raid
BEIRUT ( ~P)-RC"SCum dug out five more bodies
from the v. reckag.e o fbu1ld1ngs hit when lsraeh Jets raided
Palestinian guemlla baYS, ra1S1ng the death toll to 16.
police said toda>
Three people wert still missing after lhe night-long
search b) lamplight throufh the rubble' of devastated
buildings in south Lebanon s pon of J1)e and the nearby
town of Barya. police said. •
The attack b) 12 Israeli fipter-bombtts was 1n
apparent rclaltauon for the Nov 25 raid. 1n which a
Palestinian guemlla Oew a motonzed hang ghder to an
arm) outpost 1n nonhem Israel.
rhe guerrilla killed six soldiers and wounded eight
others before he "as ~u nned down A secood airborne
guerrilla was shot down 1ns1de Israel's self-proclaimed
"st'Cunt) zone" tn south Lebanon
Lebanese police satd Saturday's raid killed six
guemllas from the S>nan-baeked Popular Front for the
L1berat1on of Palesune-General Command along with
three members of the Druse Progressive Socialist Part).
-the m1J111a that controls Jt)'t and Bal]a.
The rest of the fau.l1t1d. including at least four
children under I 0. were hsted as C\ 1hans
The guemlla group said o nly thrtt of ns gucmllas
v.erc killed. with another s1~ wounded.
The raid al$0 nanened thrtt of the front's command
centers and lefi 30 wound-:<!.
Those lolled included 12 members of t"o Lebanese
fam1hc:s. at least tour of them under a.,.;p. whose homc:s
took direct h1~. authont1es said
The three areas targeted v.ere the teeming Em el-
H1l"eh refufee camp near the southern pon of Sidon. 1n
the pon of i)e to the north. and 1n the nearby Druse--
controlled Chouf rqion inland.
A-l Ein el-H1lv.eh. refugees ran for bomb shelters as
the JCtJ illuminated target areas "'tlh parachute Oares.
Tv.o direct rocket ht LS Oattened the guerrillas· three·
stor) 'ilia in a ncarb~ banana gro' e
In Jt)C. a l~o-stof) headquaners v.as reduced to
rubble. while a l\\.0-SlOf) command post v.as 1o1>-rttked on
the outsk1ns of Baria in the Chouf region
from burning tires could be seen and a
squad df a dozen sold iers entered the camp.
Suleiman·) death came JUSt as
of1k1als "ere e\pressing cauuous
sausfaction that '1olence "'as ebbing
in the occupied 1crmones of the Gaza
Stnp .and W~t Ban~. wluch lsf<lf:I
captured from Eg) pl and Jordan in
the 1 ~7 Middle E.astwar.
reduce the number of soldiers in the
temtories. v. here there was a large
buildup.after lhe nots began.
brought bclore Judges and about half
pleaded guilt ) to incitement and
other not·rtlated charges. Most re--
ce1' ed o ne-or •~o-month St'ntenccs.
but one man in Gaz.a "as sentcncrd to
one ~ear for throv.mg a firebomb at
sold1e~ /
Israel Radio said the ne"' tensions
forced the arm\ 10 PoStPone plans to
The arm) refused commenL but an
arm) spokesv.oman said ··1f thert 1s
calm there·1s a tendenC) to reduce the
number of'sold1ers ...
AUlhon ties rcl~sed ~rl~ WO Qf
1.200 Pales11n1ans a~ted and s.a1d
the) "'ould fr~ mo re 1f calm
prevailed.
The arm\ said 500 .\rabs "ert
In the Gaza Stnp . }OUths burned
t1rts on Omar ~I Mukhtar StrccL &he
main shopping tho roughfare. and a
demonstration b' 50 students WU dispersed~ soldiers in Gaza Cat).
So viets plan to use orbiting space
station to study radiation , Mars
Chinese execute
1 7 in quick trials
BElJING (.\Pl -.\u1hont1es
called a mass ralh to tn and con' 1ct I ~ a ccused mminals and 1mmed1-
atel) afier had them shot in one oft he
largest reponed gro up e'(ecuuons of
recent )Cars
MOSCOW r AP) -So\ ICl space
officials plan to e\pand their o rb1 11ng
space station this )Car and gather dat.a
on gamma rad1at1on and ~1ars. a
moon. Phoebus. "h1ch 1s to be
launched m Jul\
n~paper fC'l)Oned. ·
Ne" modules 10 be attached to the
Mir space comple\ will stud) the
" Earth. its atmosphere and the Pacific
\ }achesla' Balebano'. depul) d1· Crean. he said
rector of the So' 1e t .\cadem> of The orb11ing space stauon 1s home
Sciences· lns1ttute of Cosmic Re· to cosmonauts \'lad1m1r Tito' and
search told the m1lital) nev.spaper Musa Manaro'. "'ho blasted off JUS t
Krasna)a z,ezda that one of the before Chmtmas on a year-long
. main goals of the So' 1et space mission.
program 1n the ne\l fi ve )ears will be Thfy replaced A.lnander .~.leun·
ptbcnng info rmauon about Mars to dro' and Yun Romancnko
prepare fo r a possible manned flight Romanenlo had been in space for
Balebano' said 1n the paper's almost 11 months. ~tung a space
Sunda' edlllon that the So\lets v.111 endurance record
take ·pan in the intemauonal Last ~pnl. the So' 1ets docked the
"Phoebus" probl: of Mars and ns K'ant orb1t1nJE laboratof) to the
WW $0
President Reacan pre.enu award to Bob Hope.
space station. and Balebano' 's com·
ments indicated that the space com·
pie\ "ould continue to gro"
..\n other obsenat or~. t he
Gamma-I."''" be launched to cam
out studies on ga mma rad1auon. be
said.
Gamma ra~ s art electromagnt>t1c
rad1a t1Qn emitted from a rad1oact1\C
substance "h1ch are s1m1har to 'C·
rays although the~ have a shoner
wa'e length.
So' 1et sc1ent1sts plan to USt' op-
ponuniues in 199~ or I ~4 to stnd
more probes to \1ars to stud~ its
atmosphere and ground cond1t1ons
for lhe e' entual landing of a manned
fl ight. he said
.\ rcpon reaching Be11ing toda)
~•d the I ~ "'ere con\ 1cted ofvanous
cnm~ including murder. rape and
robbef\ f 1,e o ther pnsone~ ~ert
con' 1cied at lhe same rail} of~
and "'ere scnten~ to terms of up to
ltfe 1mpnsonment
The Chn stmas Da~ rall) m Slle·
n~ang. capital of nonhcast Ch1na·s
L1aoning pro' ince. "as reported b~ a
pro' lnc1al radio ,•uon mon11-0red b~ the Bnush Broal!casting Corp.
The COO\ ICtS "ere tal en 1mmed1-
a1eh after their tnal to lhe execution
ground and shot. the report said
Highway patrolman
on trial for murder
SAN DIEGO r .\P) -It's bttn
nearl) a )tar sinet" Cra~ Pe~er. a I}.
)ear 'eteran of the California H1gh-
"'a' Patrol "as arrested in the in\.tst1gat1on of the murder of a 1().
)car-old college student.
Jun selecu on "as scheduled to
begin · toda) 1n Pe~er's tnal in the
deat h of C'ara Knoll. an El Ca1on
"oman whose bod\ was found Dec
18. 1980. in a rtniote ~kbcd off
Interstate 15 1n nonhern San Diego
Count\· Pe)~r. r . of Pov.a). was a~ted
18 da)s later He v.as fired in Ma)
after a CHP '"' esugauon found him
guilt) of the m urder
The proSC"Cut1on ·1 case is based
large I) on e1rcumstanual C\ lden~.
"h1ch the defense "'II t~ to d1sprov~
v.h1le stressing the missing p1CttS 1n
the picture ~nted b) the pros.-
ecuuon.
"\\ c: intend to p~nt "' adcntt
tha1 v.e thtnl will shov. some of tht"
c1rcumstancn art different from
"hat the prosecutors think the) arc ...
said Roben Gnmes. Pe,er's lead
defense attorne}. ·
Su.penor C'oun Judge Richard
Huffman. "ho 1s prc-s1d1ng o'er the
tnal refused a defense request 10
mo' e 11 out of San [),cgo Count)
because of e'.\tenSl\e pubhCll).
Kno tt. \lihO was a student at San
Diego State l n1vers1t'\'. was k.1lled ~
she was tr'l,ehng home from her
bo~ fnend·s houSt' in Escondido
~uthonues said .she had been
strangled
Turning his anent1on to the au·
d1ence. Hope pointed out Reapn's
chief of stafr. Howard Baker: "He's
.... eanng the button saying. 'Not
related to Jim and Tammy:·~
Afier the faser show and sp1nted modem .. st)k center. Then came the
entf) music b) l Manne Corps band show. "h1ch v.111 be broadcast o n
came cocktails in the chand~1er-ht NBC Feb. 6.
natio nal anthem as "'ell as a classical
ptect" he pla)ecl at the state dinner for
So' 1et leader M1lha1I . Go rbache'
Of former President Gerald Ford. foyer of the sparkling new ctescn Paanist an 01bum played the
!!!~~~~!!!!!!!~~
se'eral v.uks ago '
Two held in sI:iooting
-of deputy after chase
MORENO VALLEY ( o\P) -Two
men who alleacdly led police on a hrgh·~ chase after a shcriff s-
"deputy was shot and wounded were
captured e.arlr today by officers using
hehcoeters and trackina dop.
a uthonties said.
Ri,ers1dc Count)· sheriffs deput~
was shot v.h1le arresting the dn~r of
•carlintoppcd on Highway 60.
Deputy Joseph Cleary. 24. was in
serious but stable condition al R iver-
side Community · Hospital with
v.ounds in the abdom~n and wnst
after lhe shooting Sunmy night. said
r-. .
\'ill<l ~nci<l (7 14)
581-6111
Full &rvice
Rt"Ciremenr Living
from 1J~s.-
G~~=~:----~-----------------~1
I ~~SS.2 P•sf'o dt> \.1lenc~ • I I Llttuna Hin~. C.tt.fornw 926SJ I
I PIN~ ~nd more infoflT~llOI\ .tbout \ 1lb \.•lenl .., I
I -...imt> I
I I I .,ddrt'~~ ------I
I Cu~ Z"1p Phonl' I
I -DP I ~---------------------~-----~~ "We have two men in custody at ihli ttme. but their names are not yet
available.'' said Corona politt SIL
Roy Heightman today. "The third
rcmajns at larae."
shenlrsCapt.KenGokka
. Hclicopim and oflicrn with track· f-----------------------------1
The trio IC'd police on a bi&h-speed
chase 1n a car matchiQ& the dctcrip-
uon of OM that sued off after the
ing doss combed a sprawlina..shmly
lit industrial park near Corona early
today in search of two of thrtt men
believed involved in the shootina.
Ooldcn Slid.
Bettf Ford discharged
after heart treatment
.J.-~ Quile p~ssibly the most
~'2~T-' beau1if ul collection of
;) u.J doors in the world.
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( ConventiooaJ and
Slidinc Un_ita)
• Bey Windows
Ci.tom Windows .
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.
'88 mar ket worry: Where Wiil money come from?
By CBET C\JRRIE.d ,., .........
NEW YORK-A prominent item on many anal}'sts'
wo,.,..Y liSlS for the stock market in 1988 is a single won:t·
L1quidit)'.
So the Federal Reserve and foreign central banks
began to tum off some of the taps. Since the end of last
)'Car the growth of one primary measure of liquidity. 1he
basic U.S. mone) supply, has slowed s1gn1titan1ly.
oppos'11e eltect.
If the dollar declined further, fore11n investors and
domestic money managers worried about a possible
overheating of the economy miJht well flee the bond
market. causing 1nternt rates to nse.
tn other wurd1. 111 some observers.. the ~1
danaer for the •tock market may be not a weakcnina
economybut rather a pick up in business that 1s tQOstn>na.
As Prudcnual-Bache Securities anal)sts said in an
iappra1wil of the 1988 investment outlook. that oould
prompt invc IOI\ 10 conclude business was movi"I
rapidly into the la 11ta~ of &he expansion that bepn 1n
!1te 1982. and thus lhat the time was wrong for 1n\-cstmg
1n stocks.
For much of the 1982-87 bull market. opt musts based
their case for a continuing rise in stock pnces on an
abundance ofhqutdity, or money looking for a place to go
to work.
And the .. hqutdny bulls'' suffered a resounding
defeat "1th the stock mafket crash in October.
No" man) observers--are questioning where the
suppl) of mone} to feed a beallh> stock market 1n 1988
might come from
E'en 1f pohqmakers should find ways 10 keep an
ample suppl) of hqu1d11y available. there 1s concern 1he1
much of the mone) might be channeled away from the
~tock market.
The worl~ was awash in this liq~idit>. the argument
went. and the money was pounng into financial
investments because few alternatives looked anractl\ e
Encouraged-by continuing low levels of inflation. the
federal goxemment and policymakers in foreign capitals
kept pumping funds into the system
On Oct. 20. at the height of the market en sis. the Fed
!>teppt'Ci up with a promise to provide enough liquidlt) 10
~ecp the s~stem functioning. Today. with man) people
talking about the possibility of a recession or ~orse.
lOnd1t1ons might seem to call for the Fed to stimulate the
econom' \\Ith fresh doses of funds.
The market "as a powerful magnet for money in
recent year!>. anal)sts say. because it offered the prospect
of better returns than direct investment in business
e~pans10n and newbus1ncss ventures in a climate of slow.
slugg&sh groMh.
"The other maJor nsk," Prudenual-Bache said. ~LS
that ris1na dcmonds for capital Jeopardize the liqu1duy
that has been 1~ fuel for the phenomenal pcrfonnan~ of
the financial markets over the last thrtt )cat"S.
.. A rcvitahzcd economy ma)' u~ that ltqu1d1t) for
oict1' 111es other than financing takeo' ers and pushing up
the value of financial assets. But last )Car. fears rose that inflauon "as re' 1' ing
Funhermore. womes were m ounting over the U.S. tr.ide
deficit and the slumping dollar in fore-1~n e-.;C'hange.
One purpose of such surnulus "ould be to lo"er
1ntere~t rates m this country. But because of the scns111'e
pm111on of the dollar the effort could wind up ha\lng the
These da)s. said John Connolly. an analyst at Dean
Watter Re~ nolds Inc .. "the industrial side of the economy
1s in a mini-boom. Capital spending plans are beginning to
revt\e."
"We may have to choose between a strong econom)
and Strong financial markets."
Ex-waiter
outgaiils
experts on
Wall Street
LOS ANGELES -A 28-year-old
u-watter hving 1n Merced has set an
all-ume record 1n the .S. Trading
Champ1onsh1p. the nation's first and
onl~ open real mone) financial com-
petll1on. "h1ch ha~ separate d1"isions
for stock trading. options. opt1on-
\\ rtt1ng. futures. and mutual funds.
The compettt1on seeks to test
actual market performance of sup-
posed financial gurus
Gre-go~ Be~mer. \\ho \\Sited on
tables at the Mansion House and
\\inc Celkrrestaurants in ~creed for
se' en ~ears before quitting. mcre-ased
his opuon account from SJ.537 to
S2"'6.665 during the period from ~ug.
I to Nov. 30. 1987. a gain of 7.821
percent. This broke the prior overall
record held b' Dr Wilham Mentes.
an e\·.\rm' ,·etennanan from Fred-
cnd .. ~td.:of • 739 percent.
The best performance turned 1n b~
a Wall Street professional "as that of
.\ndre Boesch. from Sand) Hook.
Conn . a citizen of both the L' ni ted
tates and S"' 112erland. Boesch. an
• ~conom1st-pr" ate trader "ho "'orks
"'1th the "ell kno" n economist Ra'
Daito at Bndge"ater lnternauonal 10
Wilton. Conn . turned a S5.000
futures account into $131 .888. a gam
of 4.53"' per~ent This brolr..e the old
record 1n futures of ... 708.8 percent.
held b) John Connell~. an ell-broker
from R)e Beach. N.H
..\It hough the O\ era II record "as
broken 1n a big "a~. most contestants
conunued 10 ha'e difficult~ making
mone~. according to :-.:orm Zadeh. a
former tan ford L'n1' ers11~ professor
"ho runs the compe1111on
"The compet1t1on seeks 10 provide
the public "'1th 1nforma11on 101udge
·tctual abil1t1cs of brokers and other
Jd' 1sers -··rm e\lremeh tired of
listening 10 chronic loScrs g1' 1ng
1nH'Stment ad' ice .. said Zadeh. Per-
formance 1s measured b) the per-
ct•ntagc increase in market 'alue ofa
pre-<,pec11ied real account. "h1ch 1s
rnnfirmed b~ cop1e~ of monthl~
account statements.
The T rad1ng (hamp1onsh1p 1s four
month'> in length. "'htle its sister
compe1111on. tht' ln,es11ng C'ham-
p1onsh1 p nms for one ~ear and ended
DI.'\. 31
"Don't be m1~led b~ thC' big
peru~ntages ... sa~s Zadeh It's 'e~
difficult to make mo ne\ in the market~. panicularl~ tn fu'tures and
l'r11 on.,. Out of 245 top traders "'ho
paid s:;25 each to enter the current
l "m f'l'llllon 51 or 20 percent.
rl·poncd profits. he noted
\\inning thntock d1ns1on. up 87 Q
percent in spite of the crash. 1s Roben
Du' 1ak. a bro kl."r wtth Pruden11al
BJlhl' In Dallas. Ti:~as. Mutual Fund
'"itching "as ""On b~ Nick Kardas1s.
tr 1m Wellesle\. \lass. Kardas1s a
f \rmcr engineer and current I~ a
munt"~ manager increased his
mutual fund account -lO 8 percC'nt
()p11on-"n11ng "'as "'On b~ Chucli.
2&00
2 4 (1(1
noo
i bOO
noo
(!;Dots ind1Ca1e 55
rec.ord-break1ng
da ~in 1987
·--"··-i .... _ ................. . .................... .
--··-J -~ ---!-~:.~:~.' -~~.30
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Graphlc details daily closing figures and milestones for 30 Uidustrtale of 1987 Dow Jon ea Jnduetrlal Average.
Taking stock of year that was
. . ~
By MARC\' GORDON
:":E\\< YORK -Here 1!>a month·b\·month chronolog~ of maJur de' elopments in the stocl
marl..ct last ~car
J anuary
\\all Street k1d.s olT the nc"' 'ear \\-llh an
1mpress1\ t' rail~ that includes-I:! straight da)s of
record high tin1she-s for the Do" Jone 1ndustnal
a'crage Bur b~ the end of the month the market
finds Itself in a 'olaule decline that has some
anal~sts po1nt1ng to a long-a"'a11cd correcuon.
The broad do" nturn adds credenu· 10 the no11on
that tht.> marli.rt 1s ripe for'"' es tor~ to cash 1n lhe
gains made so far m I~ -
De-spill' the late decline. the Do" Jones
a'erage of ~u Stl'.k li.S finishes Januar) \\1th a
dauhng net gain or 2t>2 09 point!> -c-ross1ng the
h•!>toric 2.0IJO mJrk to 2.158 04
February
The long-running bull market li.ceps rolling.
as in"l."stors appear more confident about the
1nOat1on outlooli. than the~ ha'c tx-cn for a long
time \tam \\ all treeters ho\\eH·r arc l.\atchful
for signs that the market's unrelenung ad,ance
might be rcalh1ngt1 dangerous 'itagc ol fe,ensh
eupho ria
The blue-chip Do"' a'cragc dow~ out the
month "tlh :i morl' m1xk st gain ot 65 Y) potnt'i
at 2.223 99
March
.\s the first quancr drav.s to a do\C.' marl..l.'t·
"'atchcrs d1spla~ mt\l.'d feeltngs There 1s plent~
of ~a11on among '"' e'itors O\ er the marli.et·.-.
drama11c n sc during 1hl' Janua~-March penod.
one of the best quannti C' er for stoc~~ But there
"' also a "1dt'sprraJ suspicion that thl ·'cas~
mon~) ··has OCl'n made and'"' cstment dcl 1s19ns
"111 be much tougher w make heading inw the
'K'l"Ond quancr
T~ Do" glX'\ t•ut of "1arch hlr..c a h11n "'•th
an ad' ance 01 11 ~, pmnt'i. at 2.304 t-v
April
The marlt't 1<, JOited b~ the shd1ng 'alul." of
the dollar "'h1ch drops 10 record lo"s against the
Japanl''><-' ~en. \\all trect "'omes that a loss of
confidence 1n the dollar could depress inter-
national trade and might cause the Federal
Rcscn c 10 tighten interest rates in order to brake
thl' L · rnrrenc\ ·s fall
The Do"' p0s1s 11s first monthl~ loss of the
~car. 18 .H pmnts. slipping back 10 2.286.36
M ay
In' estors are in a test' mood as interest rate!>
l·ontinuc to Jump amid ta0lk of reviving inflauon
and "'ornes abound about the dollar·s "'cakness
The course of the U.S. econom' remains difficult
to d1sn:m. ·
For all its read1l) apparent volat1ht}. the
market has actually sh0\\-'11 vcr} little change O'er
the past t\\O months. The Dow a verage inches up
5.21 points in Ma~ to 2.291.57.
J u ne
The bull market stlll Sttms to have plenty of
kick. as ~·Hral prominent market indicators set
rccon:t highs. Wall Street 1s e ncouraged b} s1ins
that interest rates could be stabilizing. following
their upsurge in the cai'ly spnng. But the market's
ad\ance 1s no" coming mostl) on hght \Olume.
suggcs11ng a mood of wanne-ss.
The doseh watched Do" scores an 1m-
prl."ss1' c June gain of 126 96 points. at ~.418 53
-m highest monthl> le'el of the }ear.
July
The market confounds the skepllC'S v. 11h a
po"'crful rail~ tn the final week of the month . .\
crop of better-than-expected compan) earnings
rcpons gl\ es tn\'estors the perfect ex<.>use to pour
their mune~ into stocks. despite plent) of
ncgam c cconomte talk. The momentum still
\Cl'ms to be there
The Do"' racks up another ad\'ance for the
mun th. 1h1s ume rising 153.54points10 2.572.07
August
The Do" reaches a peak of 2. 712.42 on ~ug.
~ 5 hut the bane red dollar and nsing mteresfrates
ca~t a shado" O\ er an uneas) Wall Street. as rates
on long-term Treasury bonds surpass 9 percent.
In thl." la!>t "'l'eii. ol the summer lhe marli.et brcals
a lour-"eeli. string of gains. sending the Do"
do"' n 70.15 points -its largest "'ecli.I~ loss srnce-
September I %6
The blue-chip indicator still manages to
finish the month"' 11h a net gain of'XJ PQ1nt.-. at
2.66~.95.
September
In a landmark mo\ e. the F<.'deral Rt•scr' l'
raises us discount rate on Sept 4 b} half a
percentage point 10 6 percent The market se-ems
to absorb the Joh "'11hou1 much las11n& damage
But market-\\ ate hers "'am that 1f the Fed under
its new chairman . .\Ian Greenspan. takes funhc.-r
ste-ps to raise the key interest rate. Wall S1~1·s
response could be more SC\'C're
In m first month I) loss since .\pnl. the-Do"
a\era.ge retreats 66.67 point to :!.5% 28
October
Armageddon am' es. \\<all trcet crashes on
.. Black ~1onda) ·· Oct. 19 in the worst marli.et
panic of modern umes. The once·m1ght} Do"'
plunges 50!\ points. or 22.6 percent. 1n a marli.('t
colla~hat "'1pes out S500 b1lhon 1n "ea Ith and
casil} eclipsing the notonollS crash of I 929 that
inhered in the Great Dep~s1on
B~ the end of the moilth. the Do" has
dropped a staggering 60~. 75 points to I .99J 53
November
After nearl) a month of talks aimed at
calming Wall Street's Jtller) nen e~ negotiators
from the Reagan admin1strauon and Congress
sign a tentat1' e t\\O-}ear agreement to tnm about
S76 billion from the federal budget defirn.
..\!though the market rallies on the nev.s.
man) tn\ estors are disappointed with the final
budget accord. The Dow falls 159. ?8 points for
the month to 1.833.55.
December
The wobbly market plunges on De<-3. as the
Do" loses 72.44 points. Wall StrC'Ct then stages a
mcxjest comeback. after tossing ofT more bad
ne"s on the U.S. trade deficu.
Coastal
Realtors .
upbeat
for'88
By ILENE SCHNEJDE R ,,.., .... c... $ .....
Orange Count~ real estate ell.pens
think proSP\.--Cts for 1988 are s1m1lar to
those 1n 198 . Repn:tles-s of what
happens on Wall Street., real estate
continues to be a good 1nH~stment.
1he\ SB\. It seems that their counter-
pans 1n the "Big .\pple" agree.
"The Cit} ·s econom) has a b1bhcal
qualtt~. name!). "'<'.\Chad se' en e~s)
)ears. so perhaps no" "'e'll have
)C\en more difficult 'ears ... said
Lronard Stern. chairman of the Hanz
Group. at a po" er breakfast assessing
the 1mpa + of the recent market
plunge on ~c\\ York real estate. Stern
"as one ofa panel of~e" York's real
estate industr) leaders. including
JelTrc~ Giid. Peter Kahlo". Jcrr)
pe~er and \\ 1lham Zedcendorf Jr
.\mong the anendee "'ere 180 de-
' eloper!>. 3rch1tec1s. attome} s and
managl'ml'nt consultants.
The forum "'as sponsored b)
.\\enue magazine. "'hose. November
issue taclled lhc often-sensiti' e rela-
11onsh1p bt't\\Cl'n architects and
hu1lders \ccordmg to Jud) Pnce
prc!>tdl'nl of .\' enue. "Reahzrng that
recent de' dopments ha' e made
man) of m \'auuous. A'enue put
together this s~ mpos1um of kc)
pla) ers in the real estate arena to
cncouragr a dialogue. bnng problems
10 the surface and help sohc them "
~ot e'ei:ont.> "as hit han:t b} the
marli.et droD Gltcli.. for instance.
boasted a .., percent 1nc~ast in sales
during the penod from Oct. 19 to Dee-
l Glick. who is marketing t\\O lull.Ur)
condominiums in Manhattan. also
obscned that he sees big ad,antages
1n condom1n1ums as compared 10 the
cooperat1\e and res1den11al housing
market.
"There a~ se'eral factors:· Ghd..
..aid. "The cost of mortgage mone) 1s
rclatt'el) lo"' bu~ersareafTorded ta\
ad' antages from owning a piece of
Manhattan and a condo owner d~
no t need the stnct appro" als of 1ts
boards o sell or rent umts
.. Real es1ate 1~ p1call~ has been a
safl· ha\'en for 1n'e~tors 1n times of
economic uncena1nt):· according to
Ghlli. .. What "e ha' e SC'en in the past
sc"rral )ears 1n a Manhattan real
estate market \\llh 10 to 20 pem:nt
apprt."('tat1o n per )car ·
"E\cn 1fa slo\\dO"'n should occ6'r.
"'t' are s111l talking about a rate of
return much higher than other cur-
rl·n t in' estment opponun111es. cs-
pt'Ctall) 1f ~ou factor in the leverage
'alue and the fact that even a 10
percent increase can mean a 100
percent return on 1n,estmt"nt." Glick
concluded. ·
Zeckendorf said that 11 "as still too
earl~ to make an} long-term JUdg-
m<.'nts and sugg~tt-d that the 1987
na!>h has thus far had no apprcc1.able
impact on sales. He stressed that wcll-
located and coll('eavcd developments
"'ould conttnue 10 show strength.
Runndl. a Pos{ Office d1stnbu11on
derli. in Rancho Dominquez Bunnell
1m:reascd his S82.J J account 10
S I ~2. "'"4. a gain of 48 percent. The
hlp performance b~ a market letter
\\flter "as that of John W Fredenck.
lrom C"h1Cago. ·I. ... 34. I perce·ni in
options
Maktnj the most mone~ was
Manin Sch"'am. from New York
Cm . who increased his S400.000
futures account to SI. 704,000.
Dollar, stocks, bonds down; f actor.y orders up
By Tlae Associated Presa a nc" lo" of 1.5815 W«t German dollar-denominated secunttcs. which
h"artz. ~ss1bl} the world's
greate .. t pn' ate trader has made
more mone) than all other contes-
tants combined -eight different
11mcs. noted Zadeh.
The most famous pnor wmner 1s
Roben Prechter. Jr .. editor of the
Fll1ot Wa'c Theonst in Gainesville
C..1.i.
Contest standings wi lf -appear
1oda' in Barron's and fn,estor's [)3tl~
The end of 19&7 brought a rash of marks . erodes their value.
bad CX'onomic nc"s markl'd b' The dollars decline came despite Ahhou&h the cheap dollar has been
another lo~ 10 the dollar's ,81u;, hea\) dollar bu) mg b~ central ba~ks ~clcomed b) some tt0nom1sts as a
broad declines in the stock and bond and "a~ felt 1mml'd1atel) on Wall thcrap)' (oreas1ng the larse U.S. trade
markets and a dismnl repon on L'.S. trctt. '4-here the Dow Jones a"erage defictt and incrcasina American ex-
factof) on:ters. of 30 industnals was ofT about 17 pons. a rcpon from the Comme~
The "'obbl> U.S. currenc~ tumbled points b) noon 10 the 1.933 level. Dcpanmenl on Thursday said (ac-
last Thursda) in TOk)o trading to I 22 Broader barometers of stock ~alucs 1ory orders rose only O. I pe~nt in
Japanest" )~n. the lowest le~el Stntt also fell. In the bond market. pnccs of November. the ~orst howmg in
the late 1'940s and the 1.1 th ne" long-term Trcasuf) S«unttes los1 thrtt months.
closing lo" in 17 trading da\S Later more than SS per SI 000 in faet The rcpon SUUC$tCd that bu 1-
m Lo ndon the dollar fell to '121 60 amount. nc tn arc ('()Q('(med that con.sumen
\en. and 1n Frankfun the dollar fen 10 Fmanci~I markets a~ sens111"'c to "'111 ~U« purchases bttaute offears
• the dollars depm:1at1on because 11 that arose from the Oct. 19 stock
---------------------------·hc1ahtensprospcctsofdomc t1c1nna. market rrash. h also suw ted 1h11
tion and reduces foreign demand for f'oreap demand for U.S. aoods is not
growing as fa t as prcv1ousl)' be·
he\'ed.
But in a sign of op11m1sm last Thursda~. the Com me~ CXpan-
mcnt aJso ~1d .S. 1ndustr) should
ha\.e a m;th )e&r of increased pro-
ducuon in 19: 8. partly because of
expansion in computer manufac·
tunng. ·
On WcdnC$day. the d~nmen•
said its main tt'C)n()mac forcc.astmg
gauge tumbled I 7pcl'C'tnl1n No, em~
~r and that sa~ of' new ho~
dropped 1.2 pcrttnt tht same month.
The tndt" or Lead1ns E.conom1c
lnd1C'ltors •u blln~ b)> dttbn1n1
tock pocn and ~~ wtak-
ncss in other sc tors of the economy
in No,cmber
It was the first dcct1ne 1n the indc'
s1ncr last Januaf) and the biggesl one-
month do~ntum s1nct 1 2.2 percent
drop in ~ptembcr 1981 .
Tht 1nde' 1s comJ>O$iCd of 11
forward-pointing bus1~s stat1st1rs.
and has taken "" Added s1ani6ca.ncc
since lhc Oct 19 stock martct crash
as C('Onomist ~arch for lllJ'ah of
"hcth'r the tconom)' 15 •bout ,0 enter a rcceuion.
Thret con5ttutl\'C montM)" dedin-
" 1.n the 1nde'< often have Poin~ 10 an 1mpcndin1 downtum .
E't''S IKISB P U• Price Waterhous_e to study child aup~rt enforcement "Durty . elly' '
OPE ' FOR LU 'CH & Pl. :tR
Monday thru Frida'
11 A 1 to 9 PM
ACRAMENTO -The state DrllenrMnt or
Social Sen 1cn has awardtd a S 191.080 mntr1e1 to
Pnce Waterhouse. The com,.ny will rnrarch the
most cffcrthc ind economical method of 1m -
pltmentin& 1 st1l(w1dc child suppon propcn) hen
s)stcm 10 Cahfom11
Tht' stud)' \tf-111 bt a ('fJltC'll pha~ ID
implementing one of the ~'cn·e~mtnts of Go
GCOf&( ()(ukmtJ~n· "C1hfom1a Children's ln·
•
Hlllll\.C."
"An )onc ownina ~ propnt) '" Califomia
-.111 e"cntuall)' be wbittt to liens if bedi d uld
suppon 1s oYtcd. •• said lindl M('Mahon. dift!C1or
Of 1hc sta~ Dti>anmcnt of'SOCi81 ~ion. '"It "111
potent&all)' aftttt more tb8a lOO.<m atlilmt
parents 0•1"11n ~en o(S I billion ia put dut
ctuld uppGn.-
Prict Wa&MICMM -.s 1•1rCIH the coeuan
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Orange Coast DAILY PILO'rt Monday, Janvary 4. 1988**A7
NYSE COMPO SITE TRANSAC TIONS
MONDAY··s CLOSING PRICES
Stock market rebounds
'[\\ ) OR t... 1 ~p, -The stocl marlt't g.n r
I" a spintt'd v.t"kome \fonda~ rising sharp • 1n
bu~ ing cncouragl-d b~ an easing ol prt"Ssure on thl
dollar in foreign('\( ha nee
1 ht> dollar reboundt'd against leading fort•ign
l .trrl'Ou.t·s \fonda~ That shov. rng v.as aunbutcd
1r f.irgc mC"asure to 1nkr"t'nt1on b~ central banl~
1 n lb~ iorugn ~c.bangc marl..CJs..
'c\ enhcl~s n Sttmed to encourage stocl
trJdt'rs u. ho h.ad v.atcht'd the dollar fall stead1h to
nl·"' lov.s 1n the v.anmg da's of 1q ~
Brnl er.. also ~1d marL.et pan1c1 pants v.('rt'
h1..1~1ul for .i rail~ nnv. that ~t'ar<nd St"lhng for t.a'
~nJ ponfohu · v.mdo-v. dressing .. purpost"s 1s out of
thl· v.a~
In addlllon a monthh sur"e~ of coryoratt
puflhasmg C\~Ull'~ found <'' 1den-.e of t'\on·
u m11. gro-.i. th St·t11ng a .. mu .. h hnsL.t"r· pact' m
Dc-1..ember than 11 did th<" month bt-tore
"The ._'er. ~ 'plana11o n 1<. 1hc dollar ·· "11d
LirT) \\ a.:h1d .it Pn.ldt"n11al-Bachc ~untie'
.. Tht'1Y "'as fear that 11 v.ould rascadt' dov.nv.~rd
WHAT A ~ux Om
•AP~ Jef> 4 NEW YO~
Prft. ~1 . .,
1 Aovanc:ee u.
DKl•nfo<l 127 296 ¥"< ... ~ lSI ~ 6•a n~s 887 N~ .. ., wl'IS ~ ,
"'~""cw~ 1 lb
AMEX LE AD ER S
CoLo QuoTES
Seo9c1«I -9060 -'*"-"' T"9 ~ _..._
I
L--.. "'°"'W'48 i""'V e S... !O WO IO O! ~--~Jf'9•$..a~ alf'PS! ,._...,..._~~ 17 ot!SOCOO
............. •S...Mo1',S3l$ z.... .... ...._ DtCI ""° 80 ""'1$ 4S 5't130-ed . ....., a*"--•""° !oO o11 SJ " ,.......,.. .... ,,, oll '4 !O
f .................. ~07all'.'4 X
lf'f c-..... _. '"'°""' "-' ...... 20 "° 13 "'
META LS Quo TEs
'<£"" VONt I~ -SiDol _,..,.._ ._., -"'=--•oo----= ...., eo-.. -_.... OIOelld n...
C:...., • S1 4l ...,, •S <*"'• a "°""' u S _...,. ..
c:....,. 1460tr----.... c--~"l'lw ....... ~-·--
Doc• es-·---n..s.aani-...-..~-••t ...... 915 . ._..,,I_.._ ..., .• m_...,_ M'<C-. ... ........,.
=-n... ~-S>eo--s.l$$00-"'6111'-._v_ ....__.~so.a.50100-ca .,v 1-.ctl
..___.ISQOIO'-Y ~.fll:I«.-tr:-. oa n...
WHAT NYSE Dio
-~~~----
AP') Jan • NENYO'lK ~ . Miendav 8•
AdVM<ecl u .. m o.diNcS ltS
~ , .. ..,.
Teital tlllln 1"1 1"4
,,....~ • ' ~few'\ 1 11
NYSE LEADERS
Dow JoNES AvE RAGE S
NASDAQ SUMMAR Y
Stoett m8rtleta were
closed Frldar.
Dollar continues its
fall compared to yen
I TOK YO I ""P l -Thr l dollar f'('mams lo•.
c~ 11 I! I M ~<"n toda~. rndmg .. The tstock) marlt"-t v.-n laJstl~
IQ '$ fi~t cl.a~ of1rad1n b} contmu-dtSC'Ou~ b) tht ~t>n's renewed
1ni 1t fall ap1nst lM Japal"l('S( \'t"n in a~uon qa1nst tht dollar." atd
T ,o. m l~th rt"C'Ord lov. do~ng in Ma"Sahtro U memon of omura ~
l iradutg da"s toc~s dc-chnt'd cunun.. Japan· la riest SttUntlC5
Uw'pl). rompan~ T~ dollar opened a& 120 45 ~ r n. tt!. Prices dedlned across the baud.
lov.'..rst lcvtl 1n Tok)O saner modern Y.l th htgh·t«h and c~n-onccned
<''C"hancr rates ,,.'tft ~tabhshrd an the asSUC$ romina under tcllinl pressure.
lalt 19405.. Hrlpcd b) doll.u-bu)'U)I Tht Tok\o St Eact.net ~
b' Japan's ccntnl ban n rcboun&d C"losed Ott N..Jan l rot the~ )'eat so~bat and clo$(od 11 l1t 65 ~"'"· hohda) Tht T<>k\'O fe>ttisn Cl•
dov.n 0.3 )tn from 1u Pft\lOus change marlct • d~ Jan 1· .
rtt0rd lo• c:i0$ir of l l2 00 >en, set last
Thunda 1n 19 i's final trwtina r-----------------insaon
The TotYO tod. u cb.an,e hdd
Just a half.di> trMtans on Moo-da~. •,lb tM 'tltk.tt StoctAYC111Fof
22 s sdttted 1 urs klisina 3"66 96
poants md dosirw at 21,217.04
Taduki ehara of Wako Stcun-
ues said tM dollar's pl""lf had madt
'""a\on anl.t<>US about tM ptt• fionnancc of c•pon-oricn~ com·
plfttCS It I ll~ •hen \be C\l)C)ft·
Rliant Ja.panc:tC CCODOm> '' stuftana
10 &aJJtr depndcncr oa dome llC
4tmand. He a-.S tht NnTnt tJt'nd ~Jd
prot,etth conta~w as Iona dollar
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Robin Williams
Telling her atory
•1 aoa T11011AS ........ ,.s .. ,,.__
LOS ANGELES -If Robin Wil·
Iiams seems lea manic tbete day~ it
may be d~ &o ~ ~nee prodtty
named Zachary W1lh1ms.
"When I stan to act a little cruy, he
says., 'Don't do that' or 'Drop it,"'
Williams said. "He's a peculiar kid.
He's now 5 -or rather, 4~ -and
alr-cadt he. demands mesquite dishes
in his I unch box." /
The comedian made tbe comments
admirinlJy. Separated from bis wife
for a year and a balf and livina in San
Francisco, he bas custody of son
Zachary for half of the year.
··1t•s addictina, watchina the
chanaes in a child and seeina the mind
form. Zachary and I ao to a place
called the Exploratorium in Sao
Francisco, and he understands every-
thing. I expect him to build his own
laser by the age of I 0."
Alla .JllllaD ..... u benelf and Tony Lo Blanco play• her
Yloe cop hubuad In tbe tnae atory of her triumph oYer
.._. caaeer In .. The Ann Jllllan Story" tontcht at 9 on Riie, Clwmel 4.
Wilhams may be somewhat more
restrained around the younger set.
but his hurricane-force corned)
hasn't diminished. ltean be v.ifwed to
best advantage in the Toul'hstone
Pictures film, "Good Morning. Viet-
nam." Williams plays an irreverent
disc Jockey who battles the brass to
present his comedy and pla) rock
records on Armed Forces Radio in ;====:;;:===:;;:=====::;:::::::;;;:::::::::;:::===================11 Saigon. Critics have been saying
E D D I E M-U R plUI y I S Holl}woodhasfinallyfoundtheright n ••• casting for Robin Williams.
"The movie started with a one-" ••• H I LARIOUS" paragraph premise."' he said in an
__ ......... y ... .._ interview. "Then it took about four or " BRILLIANT fi\C different forms until it finally ••• de' elopeJ. I didn't take pan in any of DA~UNG" thc scripts. the production was put 0 • °""e>m..~cw.u-together b) my management com-pan} ...
Mnch Markowitz wrote the orig-
inal scnpt. and Barry Levinson
("Diner.'' "The Natural") became
d1rect0r
"Ob' 1ousl)' the radio stuff offered
me the chance to do some open-field
running." W1l11ams said. "Bar_r) had
been a comic himself. and he would
spar~ to some of my suggestions and
Robin William•
let me go wtttr them. Many ot the
. things in the movie. like the James
Brown tmP.ression and ptaying re,
cords at different speeds. happened
spontaneously ...
"Good Morning. Vietnam" was
filmed in and around Bangkok.
Thailand. in the summer. It was not
exactl) a fun location. The Thai
authort11es were helpful. but a key
scene - a terrorist explosion in a bar
frequented b~ U.S. soldiers -could
not ~filmed because of com plaints
b~ squatters in the neighborhood.
"So "'e had to shoot the sctne back
here in the desert." Williams said.
-The trouble was m fin'ding Viet-
namest "'ho seemed authentic. Most
of them hcid.. become too .\men-
can12ed.'.
"Good Morning, Vietnam" is
Robin Williams' seventh film. and
the one that might fin<\llY achieve the
success that's been predicted from the
beginning. He. has played amazingly
diverse roles. starting with the brave
attempt to impersonate "Popeye."
The black ·comedy "The World
AccordinJ to Carp" proved too dark
for the wide audience. Williams was
appealing as the Soviet immigrant in
"Moscow on the Hudson." But "The
Survivors.'' .. The Best of Times" and
"Club Paradise" somehow missed.
He "'as born July 21. 1952. His
father was a Ford Motor executive in
Chicago. He retired when Robin was
in high school. and the family moved
to Marin County. nonh of San
tride
l'raK11CO •
Williaml became entranced wida •1er at Claremont Metrs cones.
studied "ftder John Houteman at tbt
Jaalliard School in New York and
beun stand-up comedy in Los An· F.fn in 1976. Af\er the hit TV seriet
Mork and Mindy" he moved to
films.
He continues doina standups. to
hone his skills, detpjte the puni1h1n1
prelude: "h's that last two mlnutet
before you 10 on. I sit there and
underao narcolcpsy. the loss of ox·
YICD send in& me into a catatonic dive.
It's purc1crror."
Does he ever bomb?
"Sure. It happened recently 1n
England. They booked me into a bit
drinkina hall fiJled with 2,000 people.
What would work? I wondered. I tried
my American references. and nothina
happcJltd. It was like han1-&lidln1
nude over the Grand Canyon," he
said.
"To restore my confidence. I
played a couple of little clubs in
London. They got it aJI." ·
Williams also scored at a charity
event before Prince Charles and
Princess Diana at the fabled London
Palladium.
"I went hke-a bat out of hell," the
comedian recalled fondly. "The au-
dience was a bit restrained for the first
two minutes. and I could imaJine
them. saying, 'What's he doma?
Nothing bad about t-in. Thatcher. J
hope.'
"J didn't do anything bad."
What he did was an 1mverent and
suggestive routine involving a tele-
phone conversation between Presi-
dent Reagan and Bntish Prime Min-
ister Marpret Thatcher.
To demonstrate that Zachary
hadn't totally restrained him. he
launched into the rouune. It was
total!). outrageous!). pure Robin
Williams. TH ~fC f A T M ~Y.~ f
~;m ~-DI ~~;
11:.8 t I P-'l11!:mma I ... -
Real Vietna111 disc jockey says 'Robin did agreatjob'
NOW PLAYING
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sa..53:11 SI 1 S110 1$£41 ' 531 ~
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~~
Adrian Cronauer. Hut I'm Adnan
Cronauer. Onl). he's me. and I'm not
me. and he's up there and I'm down
here... Cronauer said 1n a re«nt
in ten 1e""
...
greeting: .. Goooooood morning.
Vietnam!" wrote a telev1s1 on scnpt.
But at that time. Cronauer said,
"Nobody wanted to hear anyt hing
funny about Vietnam."
1152•1 992 llOOO !6. ~ 634 950!>
• CllTA .U (-IW!lol T 631 ~I •LA ..wlA Ooc: lie t 1 Y.•>:1 ~ 1•110 ;;"~°""'"'
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f-vca;·c.-t !9~
~~ u•1o1., ftl.(16.16
HOLL\ \\OOD (A P) -.\dnan
Cronauer. the real-li fe Vietnam disc
JOde~ pona;ed by actor Robi.n
Willians in th e new film ·:Good
Morning. Vietnam." says seeing his
hfe portra}ed on the silver screen is a
little "'e1rd.
.. There's this guy up there. and he's
The 49-year-old Philadelphia resi-
dent be"gan to think of turning his
experiences at Armed Forces Radio
into a film in the late 1970s when he
and Saigon radio pal Ben Moses
The prOJCCt was revived a few years
later when Moses became a Holly-
wood producer and an agent sent the -----------------------------'---------------,------------------------------. script to Williams. He loved 11.
Du ring the Vietnam War.
Cronauer "'as known b) his broadcast
THREE MEN ANO A aA8Y ''°) ,_.. TUCll DCllT stolO
'tS-1 •-10 JO
--""1 IMOADCAST NEWI CR)
10ml-4 TUCIC DO.rt S ~O Slu•~s •
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8ATTa.8NOT
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6 1~1HI
CENTURY THEATRE fl
KOOtCllU•...V RAW (W)
5:30 7:45. 1:55
SUSl'llCT (W)
7: 00 J !'lowers In the Attic (.-O•U) 5:05 6 l :JI
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UNCINIOelO
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UW 111
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••
FATA&.. "TTaACT10ll ,.,
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J .... aAeAaY
.... ~Ill Can't IWY
Me Lowe (.-cl·U)
Cllll ..... u.A ... , ~"' Ernest Goes To C1mp (~G)
OOUY ITIUOIWllUAM MU&rf
M.llllT NOOaMeOU' """"' UOADCAJT NIWI 111
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IOUY ITmlO ...... ....... -aa.
•ATM ATftACTION .. tMI ... ._..,.._
"Robin did a great job, too."
Cronauer said.·· .\m I that funny? No
wa)! He doesn't sound hke me. He
doesn't talk like me. I wouldn't even
tr) to do that stuff."
RU Ff ELL'S
UPHOLSTERY INC. ... , ...... ~ ....
lW -&R~ CISTI IUA-~115'
~OFTHIMmr
GllPPING, GWllNG,
aDWNG, IOMANDC,
MOVIES IN YEARS..?'
-GmSWI, TOOAYH>W<*'l
"SCREAMINGLY
EUNNY!,.
....
=a-----· ._ ... ..... -· ..... ......... .. ..
•
•
Girl's bald-faced proposal
hairy iss~e for her parents.
PEAR ANN LANDERS: I am
wm1ng you this ktter because m)
wife and I arcdistrcsK<i. Our 17-year·
old dau&hter has just informed us that
she isaoing to shave her head. She has
alw~ys tried 10 sta) one step ahead of
fashlon, but this time we feel she is
aoing too far.
"Sara" is rernJrkably beautiful and
has a lot of self-confidence. According
to her. hai.r is only an ornament and
the lessof1t you have the more it says
about )'our self-esteem. She also feels
th•! too many of her friends spend
entirely too much time on their hair
and some of them arc actually
obsessed with 1L
We 'A'Ould hate for Sara to cut her
lovel)' shoulder-length hair on a
whim, onl) to have her regret it for
monthl to come.
We realize that this may seem like a
trivial matter or, wo~ yet. a put-on,
but Sara 1s an avid reader0of your
column and has s.aid that she would
be intertstcd in your opinion. -
• NERVOUS IN CONNECTICUT.
DEAR NERVOUS: I la.ave 1HD a
few lukloa mCMlels wJto t laave4 ~elr
laeadt ud oatt I cot over &.H tlaoct I
laad to coecede tlaaC two of t.laem '*" '81&e t&rWat. ne o&.Hn loolle4 kl4efft. (la onfer &o carry tlait.
off, a womaa mat& laave a pttfectly
tlaape4thll,1or1eou eyes, kaatilal
t tla _. ··~rieu ,,..rUe.>
U t.1a1s Is Mt u atae.U.-1ettia1
llevlff. Sara cu ce& t.lae tame effect
by laavla, 1au laair c.& very Uort. B•&
I laave a eellq tlaat Wa 17-year-old
l11olq a. do u tlae plealff .. matter
WU&, IO I laope )'OD doa'& make a bil
deal "' of It. Hair does crow back, )'OD b ow, aacl
~e won& tlaat cu laappea Is tlaa& yoe
IDa)' Uve a bahl·laeaded dHp&er for
afewmoalb.
•• Lu1us
• • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I would
like to express my concern about
silence 1n relationships.
It has betn m) experitnce that
people practice the worst form of
cruelty when they fai l to keep 1n
touch. don't answer letters. forget to
sa) thank you for favors done. and
disappear from sight and sound.
ka,•1ng families and fnends wonder-
ing what has happened lo them.
Silence can be devastating to the
mental and physical health of lhe
.. , ictims," and It can be enonnously
self-destructive as well.
PeopleTn<>w most of the time that
the) are hurting others when they are
silent. and 1t is an easy weapon to use.
M) ne phew has not Sttn his sister for
lhe years and says he will never speak
to her again. My husband and his
brother had a misunderstanding and
his brother has cut mx husband out of
his life. The years will fo by in both
these cases and they wit grow further
apart. How can people have so much
pnde that the) cannot somehow try to
lo"e each other qain?
The silence between ge nerations is
frightening. It is called the generation
gap. Loneliness is created by this
terrible silence. and loneliness can
create depression and depression can
cause death. Is there an answer> -
LONELY IN MILL VALLEY.
C o\LIF
Mw. VALLEY: T'laett It ao
•er. Ea~ perMll mut flad
• bllt of ~t JM cu be 1are:
I.Ave 11 better tla.u u&e. Talkia1 la
be&kr tla.u "' &alldq. Fol'SivtaK 11
better t1aaa ltokUq a 1n41e. ftlle
some relatioula.lpt may be Impost·
Ible. It lJ always wise (&M laeal&Mer)
&o leave die door ajar. 1)e uvtq
era« of maak1Dd ii &.H bowle41e
tkat people cu 1114 do claaare.
• • •
DEAR ANN LANDERS: From
umc to time vou have allowed readers
to air their Pel peeves. Here is mine
and I \\Ou Id loH to see my letter make
)Our column.
I am a longllme subscnber to
SC\Cral \\Omen's magazines but I'm
going to let all but one lapse because
of the follo"1ng 1rritat1ons:
I am tired.oflook1ng for the table of
content°s and linall~ locating it on
page IS or 18 because of th~-ads the'
"anted to put in first. ·
I am fed up "1th stones that begin
on page 77 and continue on page 94.
then skip to page 112 and end on page
146.
I detest those little renewal re-
minders that keep falling onto )Our
lap. into )Our soup or the bathtub.
depending on where )OU do )Our
reading.
lfothers out there who are anno)ed
as I am would speak up. ma'8.?mc
mavens might get sman and d1scon-
t1nue those maddening practi~s. -
MISERY IN MISSOUR I.
Dear M.: l, too, am auoyecl by tlae
very ~· yoe mead..ect. Tlaaab
for alapag my aoq .
hetUy, Juury S
lARIES (March 21-Apnl 19): Focus on "erotic
appeal. You.II turn in performance rated as "outstand·
ing. .. Ab1ht} to "pick winners" 1s highlighted. Gemini 1n
p1clUre. pleasures:· creativ1--------------t). style. vanet).
chansma. sex ap-
peal. You'll make
domestic ad1ust· SYDll£Y ment that could re-n
suit 1n reunion Wlth Oll•DR loved one. Taurus. """'
Libra pla> import-•••••••••••• anl roles.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You learn more about
real estale, propen y. how to separate lilts talk from
rcalil)'. Bcdi1'.rttL rcaliz.tlhata:.'.J(cret meetmi" is being
arranaed. You'll have access to privileged information.
Virio involved.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): lnd1' 1dual prev1ousl)
rcprded as "flighty" will now come through wnh fl > mg
colors. You'll be chief beneficiary. Relationship in-
tensifies. Shon mp involves visits. relauves. sales.
Capricorn involved.
CANCER (June 21 -J uly 22): Assignment is com-
pleted. money comes from surpnse wurcc. you locate
wha\ is needed. includes matenal and personnel. Yo u'll
add to income. prestige soars upwards. Anes. Libra figure
prominently.
LEO (Jul) 23-Aug. 22): Moon in your sign accenu
pcrsonalit). chansma. appearance. in1tiat1ve. fresh start
in new direction. Answer. You will get to he.art of mauers.
you'll learn where you stand in "arena oflove." Aquanus
involved.
Vll\GO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Focus on teaching.
learning. rising above petty differences. You'll ~cam a
sttrcL )'Ou'U have batbtaee vi~~ you'll be in,·itcd to JOln
.. e,ctusivc group." V1s1t one confined to home. hosfnal.
UBRA (StpL 23-0ct. 22): Wish comes true i "ou
d1' erslfy. Focus on populanty. speculauon. romance:sex ...
, SCORPIO (Oct. :?3-Nov. 21 ) It ma\ be tame to
relocate. Focus on supenors. ambition. general standing
in communit). Material recent!) subm111ed does require
rt' is1on. Don'rpcrm1t pride to block progress. Taurus
pla~s paramount role. •
SAGITTARIUS (No'. 22-Dec. 21): Be read) for
change. tra,el, eimtement of disco~~f). Member of
opposite se' "ill not be sausfied with mere fluuuon
Lunar position accents higher stud). communication.
possible JOume). '
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Be diplomatic. hold
fast to principles. realize )OU do ha"e mone) coming but
)OU cannot force issues. You'll receive partnership
proposal. perhaps ne"'s of possible inhentaoce. Libra
in\ Oh ed.
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 18): You'll break from
pre' 1ous "arrangement." Spotlight on pubhaty. possible
p:tnnersh1p, l~I affairs.. attenuon to manta! status. Take
special care with medicine. drugs. Check )Our prescrip-
tions,
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You'll surpnse man)
"Ith displa~ of "power:· Y-ou'tl meet deadline. emplo}"
ment pos1uon 1s bnght. peQple who reh upon )OU "111 be
elated. Lo,·e relauonsh1p-t ntensifies \'ou'll ha'e more
respons1b1ht). ~ IF JANUARY SIS UR BIRTHDAY current C\ck ·
indicates marnagc if sing) . 11Jon to fam1l) 1fmamed.
married or single plenty oflravel and perhaps creating a
profitable business enterprise. You are 1nqu1s111 ve.
d) nam1c. have seA appeal and ability to articulate feelings
through spoken and written word. Gemini. Virgo.
Sagntarius ~pie play important roles in ~our hfe
Domestic adjustment 1his month could include ac1ual
change of residence or mantal status. March and
[)c(-cmber "'ill also be memorable for )Ou.
Q.1-AI South, vulnerable, you
bold:
1lte 9,AM Of Ufl
When the automobile was I n its
infancy. at used electnc1ty only to l(l'llte
the fuel inside the encine. By tM lite
1920's, however, the electnc stafter
res>laeed the hind crank, electric held·
ICflts madt acetylene lamps obso61t•.
and the electric horn drowned out the
h1nd·squeezed air horn. TodaJ, an 11to-
mobllt req111res an elaborate systttn to
handle al the lltcthe1ty rtqlllftd b
mtyelay ocierabon. The c.ar's blllC
source of electncity is tM bltttfy. Oftct
tht..bitt«J Ills started the ~. an
llternalOf ~over to~ the CJJ's
ele(trical needs and to rtd\lrtt tM
bltt«y. So'msat• 1$ tht _., 12·
Yott tlectncal s~ttftl tM\ It ca11 .,,.
dNtftS of alW!afy acanones wtllll
..-itaneousl) Pf*"'& 1 c~
•its of 20,000.woft .-u to""" the ,...
"' the okt daJS. '°' co.Id Stlrt • Clf Wtttl l dead batttr) by ,.,... It ........
Those days ltl OM.~•·
tronac iystem "'IUltt • aood blntry
HIR It C6' WI 1411Ctlll• II Mr1tJCt
.lftd r .. onW IM YW. Wt'I '° __.
jok .., 1$ oll ~ ........
....... as wtl as ""'°' ...,... Mr•
... Wt'rt nurbr at 2090 ,....
()ptfl '' lot ,.,. COftwtl.... '"· .._.,10 AWowtd by AM. M1P
cttdit tM8 ~ •
• U95 Q AQ63 0 &113 • '16
Tbe hiddin1 bu proceeded:
.... 8-tlt W• N-* •• ow ... 1•
... f
What liCtioo do you take?
A.-You have a miaimum takeout
double. While fOU have excellent
IUppOr1 for panner•a spada, it is no
more than be c:xpecu. Since his
band la limited to about 9 ~ts.
Y0Q have DO pane. IO tell blm tbal
you ue near the bottom of your
raqc by's-aina.
CHARLES
Go1E•
sboWd So on.
Q.3--Both vulnera!>le, u South you
bold: ~
•KQtS QJ om •Q1"5l
Tbe bi+tina bu proceocled:
Wiit N-6 1'.1111 ScMaG
1, Q ow 4 Q '
Wb.11 acdoa do JOU take?
A.-Noc only do JOU have tittle to
ooMrlbate to ta.c defeme, your
--in the bl.ell ... dlllrac:u ftoa l*IW'°• .,..... ~
... Off ] ...,.., f ~ ...... I '°" bave
a pae•ieb ftDt bwl bec:aatr of a ...... JIL-..roar..-..
oomftd1nt dlM pmtmr bM at 1eut
fos-*lalM~ Q • ._,: ................ u South
Mid:
Q.US OAll •"'52
.......... proc~~ ·-~ .... Pmi INT._
•'
Ballplayer dubbed theaters
Q. How come so man) oldume
movie theaters ~ named Rox~
.\. Rox) was the nickname of a
Pennsylvania baseball player named
Samuel Lionel Rothapfel carty in the
1900s. Later he rnJnaged a succession
of movie theaters noted for spectacu-
lar hghung effects.. All lhOSt Rox)
theaters "'ere named after him. It was
he "'ho dcsilJled the Radio Cit)
Music Hall. might mention.
Tell your fnend "Red," 1f you have
an) friend so ollled. that Red is one of
the oldest nicknames m human
h1stof). Scholars sa) cetUm ancient
Eg) puans were known as Red.
.\m told hail rattl) falls bet\\ttn 5
and I 0 a.m. an) where.
Sa)'S here a ps)chological stud)
indicates one out of every thret'
people 1s emotionally disturbed
Interesting. I've b«n analyzing m~
t"'o closest associates The) seem all
nght. That leaves me. I resent th~
ps)cholog1cal studies. dMp1se them.
hate them.
Female guppies prefer homely
males. The homelierthe better. So SI'\
sc1ent1sts who'\e stu4ied the sexual
preferenees of ihbse fish. The) con·
elude females e' oh ed to pick drab
mates 1n self-defense In deadl~
!
What action do you take?
A.-With only 16 points in bi&h
cards, it m.iabt leCDl that you should
aracefully decline partner's invita-
tion. Howner, your three aces.
five-card suit and intermediates en·
bance the value of your band, so •·e
would carry on to thrtt no trump.
Q.S-As South, vulnerable, you
bold:
•Al3 QI OKQ63 •QJS.l
Partner opens the biddin& With th.rec
be&(tS. Wbat action do you take?
A.-Ac:cordinl to 1M Rule of 2 and
3, partner should have seven tricks
for bis bid. You arc delivc:rina three
plus (your kin& or hearts is worth a
tun trict.) Rabe to four beans.
Q.~AI South, vulnerable, you
boAcl: •m QM 0 AQll5G •tc
Panna opens tbe biddina with ooe
DO tnmap. What do you respood?
A.-AI. ftna lillat it miabt teem
tbll.. ..... 6 pomU, you slioWd be
....,. to pua. HOft¥el'. your bud
bM • ace.Omt cbaDCle or prochac-lill ft¥e ar tll trlcb. Qich is men tMa..., 10-909« bolctinp WOQJd
,wet. We would _..... ou_t tbree
DO .....
In the ...
LM.
Bo YD
~
cannibalm1c soc1eues. the) sa\. the
less conspicuous thr se~ panncr. the
better the odds ofsur-i,aJ
Q. Ho" long does a balding man
ha' c to la~ otT "Ork to ~t a hair
transplant"
-\.Half-hour per session. about ·He
can go bad. to "o rt.. the nc11:t da~
o\rgument conunues OH"r 14 hether
1t'!> o._a, to reheat coffee Noboch
used to thinl so But authonues noY.
sa~ reccntl) bre"'ed coffee JUSt cooled
can ~ reheat~ in a mtero..._,~,e
"1tho ut &l' 1ng ll that burnt W-te. ln
fact. 1t tastes better that wa'. the' sa'.
than coffee left too long on ·a wamung
plate
Q Ho~ come ~ou·re not supposrd
to !.tore ham in foil"
.\ Salt 1n the cure cats holes in the
foil. research suggests.
.\ computer run on J.600 sons of
mammals in "onh .\menca in·
d1catt"S :.150 are ro<knts. That's too
man\ rodent!. v. nte som~boch
abou·t this ·
.\gc-ol that unpt>rson called .. thl
.a'eragc-milhona1 re" 1~ :-~ ~c-ar.
-ld;i#llm~----------
ACROSS
1 Comperabte
5 Repetttion
9 Taper oft
14 C•t« or -POIUx
15 Knife: 91.ng
16 Actuator
17 Ore maa
18 Auto '*1
19 Snapehot
20 ··-Bode"
21 Rule out
23 Sheep
24 Regar~of
26 Troley
28SNn ~
29 Zlmbebwe -
33 Lattoriy
36 T r11 llP0"9
37 JounWt
~ Olmwtt
39 Suger~
40 l()nd of nut ,, ... ·~ 42 Vlnigo
43 .. Not "°"" ..
..... Out of U80 .a Mate enimlll
'7 Coloetng pro .a EM1hyono
52 ~to oer1'h
55 All .......
57 Unique tNng
SI inc.we eo w .. ..aton
61 Lynast -
2 3 4
14
17
20
24
Harbedl
62 Lethargies
63 Snat1
64 Yec:ht.,...
65 Styilh ee HesWJg
organs
6 7 Re&atnles
DOWN
1 Caesar -
2 Battery '*1
3 --• hatt•
4 Let off
5 Condition
6 S.a.d Item
7 Take on
8 Oepoeed
9 E>ec. unl1
10 "La -"
oper'8
1 t Fess up
12 HMd: Fr
13 G1"911k god
22 Runs...ity
25 Complntt\19
IUfftll
27 Cot••••c:iab 29 Hindu noble
30 -mechlne
31 Hercutea' c:ap\llle
32~moet
33 Summit~.
34 Soft tiUue
35 Attire
3e Ammo Item
6 7
39 Bird~
40 BtttWt
CoUnbia latc•
42 GuWul
43 Meuf'9 -
"5 ··--Out~
48 Vocelsts .a l()n of IClf\8r 49=:::
a
50 --fire
51 81h119a: ~ S2.....,.
S3Kk*up--
S4 a.-.,,..
Sfl~of y.,..,
58 kMte
10 ,, 12 13
•
TBB
f'AMD,Y
ClllCUS
by Bii Keane
"Hey! The puddles have all
been laminated!"
. llARJIADUKE by Brad Anderson
"Well, let's put it this way ... ysu can't make
m1sch1ef all day without getting tired."
PEANUTS
J41 LYDIA .. I T~Ov6HT
ASov-YOU A LDT
~RJN6 CWU5T"MS VACATION
·DRABBLE
m.-; I!> ™E fUWT1~.
L A.0-40 GMl6l£
R08El8R08E
INSIDE OUT
I
l
11
'• ,,
,C>
by Kevin Pope
Confetti
bENNJS THE MENACE
l STI L CAt-. T F 6~
OUT WM"r' '<OU UIOULON T
6NE ME VOOR ADORES5
PO c.,i()(J KNOW (
WHAT I LIKE .,.
AeouT CHINE5£
f:"OOV ?
by Hank Ketcham
~ ...
I
f !
by Jim .Davis
IT'!> AS M UCM
FUN TO 5AY A~ rr I ~ TO E.AT !
BLOOll COON 11
IA7l£j IW llillflUIDI ,
~ Mrf. 1'IS Ull1IA'1 d
MM CJlla:1/JlflfS. tn Al/lfJl/r
MM~ lt"S /llJIOl/f" flflf6>
MllJfCJ,Df
«At.1-._...
GAMIN AND PATCHES
DELIVER T~tS tt>
.wlS: F=l"T% ~D
SHE'u..~Y
GNE XJlJ A TIP
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
SHOE
AFn:R JEFF
RETURNS HOM E
WITH GRQCEAIES.
SAM FQU..OWS
H IM INTO THE
KrTCHEN WHERE
il-IEY DISCUSS I LAURA'S ORINKJN6
PR06LEM!.
/JOllT U11tll ., Nll1f
7"~~MEN t....-"""" 1MT5 AkP ,.., ""*"" a£MtY 1NIS lllltlfJU ,,_, IS
~ .~,.,,.., .
I
by Ber'ke Breathed
Mf.NWE>W
li&«ll fl • MIW
jR IOfl 1-'flfRJW .......
/Jlt:.K IV ~ 1H£ m111· '
-~. P!M
'
by Addison
by Lynn Johnston
by Jeff MacNelly
by Harold Le Oou x
by Tom Batiuk
DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau
M:U., I GUESS I
CAJtr M rr a=F t ANY~ ...
•
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•=-:.....'-':.! ~ ""'" ....................
L 'u 1 £ L T I
111 1'1 _
.............. -.--.............. .. ~..-. ....... ...
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M EF AC l •I I r I I .
L All U I:':.! I I I r _
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•••• -·=
,.
~ -~-----~ -----~
MONDAY JANUARY 4 1988
Dodgera' Sax unhappy about being moved to third base. 82.
UNLV atilt appears the team to beat In PCAA baaketball. 83: .
UCI eillharks onPCAA campaign to~igh ~
Surprtsln a
visltsforco erence opener ·
BJ JON FERGUSON
QI ..............
Just tiu \JC Santa 8artlen turned out to be
somewhat of a-sleeper comi"' out of the non-confcrmtt
collqr basketball schedule. ru 6-6 fll'nt« &uard Brian
Shaw may be betle'T than he sometimes is pven c:redit for.
.. Even Last year, I thouabt Brian Shaw was pombly
the best pla)'er 10 the conftteriCe ... UCI Coach Bill
Mull1pn wd as htS team com~ ~tiom this
week for ns Pacific Coast Athletic Assoaauon opener
ap.inst the Gauchos toniaht at the Bren Events Center in
a 7:30 upoff. ·
.. He's even betttt tlus year. He mJ&ht be the best
player.an the confettna this )ear."
That's sayan& a lot Wlth the lites of Ricky Berry up tn
San Jose, counted by many as the top auard m-tbe Wcsl..
let alone the PCAA.
Saints
never had
a prayer
·Hail Mafy' TD
gives Vikings lift
in 44-10 thrashing
N EW ORLEANS (AP) -In their
first -. inning season and fim pla)off
season t' t r. SC\ en sonp were wnnen
a bout the cv. Orleans Samu. not
counting -When the Saints Come
Marching In··
.\nthon) Caner. Wade W1tson.
Hassan Jones and NC't\' Orleans·
•· 1 :!lh man··"" tuch rnultcd 1n a -Hall
Mar)·· touchdown for the V1kmgs
insured Sunda) that the Samt\ went
marching out 6f the Nfl.. playoffs as
surpnstngJ~ as the) came in.
.. The} cau&ht us on a good da) for
them and a bad da) for us.·· Sam ts
• Coach Jim MorawdafteT M1nncsota
shocked the Saints. 44-10. in the NFC
v.1ld<ard pme. endtn& a nine pme
"'inning streak for New Orleans.
v.h<>s.t I ~-3 regular-season record wu
Sttond best 1n the FL
-w e p1cktd the v.rong da) to pla) badh ..
It Ctn.a in I)' v.-as one of th~ kind of
da)S as the \'1kings outpmcd the
Saints. 41 -1 49. tn tot.al }a.nia&t. ran
off 86 '"'rds to 47 for New Or1ans.
had 2a first downs to nine. and
controlkd the ball for 41 minutes. 18
S«Onds against :. tam that led the
leasuc 1n ball· control dunng the
regular scuo n
The "1ctof) sends a team that lost
three of 11s last four rqular·scason
games to finish 8-7 to San Fra0C1sco
nett Saturda) while Washingto n
v1sllS C'htC"aJO on Sunda)
.. The V1 k1ngs1ust manhandled u~"
Mora said
Shaw isn't the leading ~on the Gauchos at 13.4
potnlS per pme. Backcoun mate sophom~ Cam ck
OcHart. a PCM Freshman of the Year. has those bonon
at 16.6. But Shaw also averqes 11.3 rebounds and 6.3
au1sts (both tops 1n the confnmcc) for Santa Barbara. a
~n pick for fourth and a ~nfcrmtt pick to
win what has btcome the classic race f~ S«Ond place.
Shaw had 22 points and 20 rtbounds in an u,pset of
Nonh Carolina State tn Sant.a ~ bcfcn Chnstma.s
which P'C the Gauchos their best stan 10 biSlOry at 7-0.
Their loot loss came av.eek aao at the HOOIKr Oas.slc in
lnd.tanapohs ap1r\st Stanford. a team wtucb is showing
promLSC u one of the top Pac-I 0 teams behind Arizona.
-1 don't thank people thought they.d be as good as
lhC) arc, -M ullap.n said. -The on)) thing dccrivin& about
I.hear record 1s that the)·, e played six at borne. two on
neutral courts and o ne av.-a) at (University of)San Otego.
and thC) battl) v.on that one ..
Perhaps equal!) decn,,ng 1s the Anteaters' record of
S-4. v. h1ch includes convanang lossn at Iowa. UCLA and
Bradlc). UCI did not lose at home 10 four tncs and
sufftted a tWO:potnt defeat to a strong Pcpperd1nc squad
in Mahbu.
The Gauchos arc the last team to defeat UCl 10 lM
Bren Crnter. v.annins a 92·8S dtt1s1on sc'en games ago
after a late ..\ntcaters rail) last Febtuar). UCSB -.on at
a.p1nst UCI a )car 410. \,,.akin& advantage of numerous
Anteater tu mo' ers to 10 o~ a l~2 iun 1n the second half
for a rout, but the tv.o ~ ued 11-11 1n the s.tncs
The ~nteaters· h ncupconunucs to shuffle. v.11h of~
hun sophomore point guard "11l c Labat. v.orkmg h1' v.a)
bacl after m1ss1nga v.eek ofpractlct' for Jamming a toe on
ht\ nght foot
..\Jong v.11h DcHan and Sbav.-1n the Gauchos' thrcc-
man Juard offense IS f>-3 Bnan Johnson. v.ho hits ror 9 3
poants per pmc. but the guard depth docsn·t end LMrt
The first man ofTthc bench ts perlups the team ·s onl~ true
point guard. Carlton Da'cnpon ,., 3 points).
J un1or lo...e' 1n F\o~d I 1.i 9 po1n~ 4 I rtbounds)
returns to point ,uard to t~m v. nh s.cnior Mike Hess or
Corona dtl Mar High 1n the backcoun. v.h1Je Ste'~ Florcnun~ mliesa ra1hcr sufl)ns1ngJump from out of the
rotation to the stan1ng hncup an F\o~d·s spot on the
outside v.1ng
UC Santa Barbara·s quickness 1s a conct'm for
Mulhpn
··\\·r ·,e got to contain them ·• Mulligan said .. If v.e
gel beat on the ball v.c·\C got a proble1J1 If ,.-e ~t beat
v.e·, e got to help "e II probabl~ back ofT a hnk bll on
defense and to not get beat ··
The fof" ards arc cH> sophomort Enc Mc . .\nhur c ... }
points. 3 8 rebounds) and 6-9 freshman Gan Gra' I"'.:.
3 3 I Bacl 1ng them art 6-sophomon: \11ke Do~ ic c 6 I
points). a Prop .i · casualt~ I~ s.cason. 6-10 Junior Johr,
\\ estbeld .(5 61 and 6-8 sophomore Greg Tn~t<ld a
memberofthe 196"' PC".\.\ .\II-Freshman tt:am
.. I didn't l nov. v.hcn rLabat v.ould be back.."
~1ulhpn said · I put Flo~d at point -.1th the idea of
lea' 1ng h'm ther( On uncu' 'Dec ~ .. ). Flortnunc
pracuctd his taJI off I put him an there first fiH) and he's
bttn pla~1n1 v.ell He'll guard Shav. ..i.htch rm not SUfT
"'hether he can h.indlc 11 He be an tnere foT offe1u1' e
rebounding and delensc
\lulhpn also np('('t\ more ttme o ut of Flo~d and
s~J'1Cr lov. post pla\el"'i "J. nc Ergelstad I 13 ~points "'4
rc!..lvunds1 and Fra" " .d<. -.s 8> instead o-t~
mill·~·~ le\ ti t" rr .. u'e'> •he• . .:•e present!) at
(Pleaae 11ee UCl/83)
On second try,
Zendejas gives
Seattle the boot
Oilers eliminate
Seahawks. 23-20.
~~ fi~!d goal in OT
HOL TO-..: 1 -\P -The best and
v.orst times of Tor• Zendejas 'Fl ·
carttr rame vnh acx.ut 10 minutes
apan unda:. ·It couldn't ha'c
~mtd longer
un<le3as mis~ a 29-~ard tield
goalv.1th I 4-to pta: rqulauon ttme
but he ltCled a ~>.ardcr v.nh ~,.;5
left .r O\Crttmc g1,·1ng the Houston
Otlena~~-:. 'ICIOI"\ O\er Scaulc
.. That v.as m\ "')r\t .. -. and the
be<>t l 1cl 1n 'Tl~ .. arttr ·· Zende;as
~1d ··1 v.a!> too an\lous ll.1 loot.. to ~
and I ~anll"d up m\ head too KX>r
on the ~-,arder
-\ti.er rri ssing the Ltd •. Zende a<;
rttumcd to the SJdel "c. !-.oping he J
~ anot~ chance
.. E,enonc v.o uld ha'c blacnrd mt"
1f v.e l~t. and I ""ould h.a'l' bl1mrd
m' \elf·· said Zrnde1as ""ho alre~'
had fidd goals oi .i-·and ~Q 'ards ·1
t~ll h Ii..~ I kt the"' hole team dov.. n "e
could tu\e lost the game and I reh
p~ bad ngtu thc-n-··
Vic' 1..ton ad,3nctd the ()t~rs to
the "'le\t round ot •he pla,ofTs apinst
Lhe Broncos 1r Der, er on und<I'
"a~n \1oon hit "tlhc [)n-'11.n-,
ii.1th a ~~-~ard towchdov.n pass late 1n
the th rd quane• for a ~ i.1 3 lead
.\fte• the 01lers rehnqu1shr'd pos-
S('SS1on on Z<'ndeJas· mis~ lield
goal. the Seahav. v.ent 'ards to
11c 11 v.11h 26 ~ond~ leli on a I ~-.. ard
101."hdo""n pa~ f~om Da'c "-"~to
The Scatuv.ls v.on tbc O'-l'Tttmt
~OS\ "i .. t v.ere fortt'd to punt SI" ma
th::' 0 lt>rs another chance at '1etOf'.
01k~ Coach Jcrn Glao'1Ue k.nc""
t'\.3l 1 ' ""t:zi• he v. a·nttd to de ··1~1d 1fv.e grt thebalhno,erumc;
""ere thro-.ing tL' Glan\llle said,;
··" c'threv. the first tv.o routes v.c put
m v.hcn I became head ~h ..
Houston got a break.on its v.1nrurt1
d r \ c v. hen on first dov. n from the
011c."rs 3-\1oon appeared to ha'e
throv. n an tntcrccp11on that v.as
tipped b~ Seaulc·~ JefT B~am and
'>naucd Mar the ground b)'
ltneba .. l er Frcdd Young. Officials,.
hov.r,er ruled the ball v.as trap~
.and later upheld the call on inst.ant
repia~
.. I caught the 'ball .. ) oung said.
There v.~ rauth.tng I co.Ad do but
.. a1.h 11 I did v.:th both hands on 11.,
Tnere "'3!> no quesuon ··
Gian' le v.a$ 1r a forgi"tn8 mood
J'te• Zende a!> a.iet..ed the pmc--
v. n~r
··He s the Oest t..u:t..er " pr~
tootba. ·· Clan' 1llc said .. It coutd
ha'e been ~CT ,f Ton' ilad madr
the t..1 .. t.. do v.n the-re but v.e -.on and
v.e·rc tv.u g.lm~ a""a~ from the Supez
Bov.I
Sea1t1c l h (bu t.. M O\ said the
01len ~··formed .n O\e-rumc and the
.lhav. U did not
·"hen ""e got :he ball "'~couldn't
con1ro1 1L • ~nu\ said ··Th~ got 1t
and the' :no\ed The 11~ of
IX>'-"-~•un h.ld tc be .n t~1r f<t, or But ~ \ e u'> ~ redn )\ e came ba.:l and
ton.ed the o'cmme ··
The V1k1ngs also had four inter·
C't'pllons and fort't'd Sil tumov~
(Pleue Me VDmfGS/82)
A•=an Jonee of tbe VlkJ.nC• makee touch-
down recepdQn on lut play of flnt half.
Sainte defeuden Da•e Waymer (44) and
Reggie Sutton are unable to prevent .core.
le'e Largent It v.a$ the St'C'Ond
sconng C\. nnectton llf the µme
betv.~n the 1-.0
But urgent said the Seahav.u
-....ere fon.mate JUSt to ~t to 0' erttmc.
.. The~ ~med to pla~ a hnlc softer
.... ~n v.t mo'td the balL .. ~ said..
··The' a~e a good_driensi'r footbalt
(Ple&ee eee on,g•1ifB2J
L8.kers put away Portland, 98-81
But Riley is still able to find fa ult with
his team's I 0th consecutive triumph
Fr-HI T1w Assodald Presa
PORTLAND. <M. -Mqic John-
son knov.s Pat Riley 1s a tough guy to
p~.
The Lakcrs rolled past their nearest
Pacific 01vis100 rival. the Portland
Trail Blazers. 98--Sl. for their 10th
straight victory Sundav n1ghL
But t~ Lall.en· coach wasn't
happy.
-The defense was pal. but we're
not very efficient in tbc open court."
Riley said ... We're not dosina lh1np
OUl. We're makJng too man) m1s-
t.ak.es.-
Johnson said RJlc) 's comments.
e,·cn after a 17-point victor). wcren•t
unexpected. but he said the pla)ers
know thc)"rc maJung pl'OIJ""SS.
''I ~on't know what 1t takes to
please him ... He always wants more.
but 11 takes time to get more.··
Johnson said. -we·n: playing better
than we were I 0 pmcs qo. We have a
v.-ats to go but at least it's gemna
bettCT."
Byron Sron scored 31 po1n ts to
lead the L.aken..
The Blazers tlad aU-ume franch1~
lo>A~ tn field goal pt:Tttntagr at .~8.a
and total field goals ..,.,th 27 The
pre' 1ow low an the NBA this s.eason
v. as 314 b' San Antonio .
.. We v.(rc so bad., -Ponland·s
Cl)de Drc\lcr wd. -we rcaJly stunk
up the JOtnl.·and v.e ,.'Ct"C real fired up
before the p me bcca~ ,.'C v.-anted to
show v.c could pla) with these guys··
The Lakers took control of the
contrst 1n the S«Ond q_uancr-. boosted
the lead to ~5 tn the third penod. lhen
\lo<1thstood a minor PQnland ralh that
cut the lead to 15 in the finaJ quaner
The Blazcn. ~ho had won 11
stratght at home and beat the La.ken
Dec :! at the Forum. v.~ "'"thout
Ste\ e Johnson because or sore feet
and Ktk1 Vande-.~ v..1th a sore
back.
State of Florida ranked 1-2
Miami, Florida State top final
poll; Oklahoma rated third
For the first time in the S2·year biston of The
Associated Press coUq 1e footbelJ poll two teams from the
same state -MiamJ and Aorida State -ha~ finished
the season l -2. ,
The Maam1 Humc:anes. lbe nation·, only 12-0 team.
wcrt a u.narumous ch<Hce fof the national cbampionlliip
Sunday foUowtn1_ a 20-14 vic1ory over No. l~nkcd
Oklahoma lft the Ofaftllt IOwt.
The Humcana. wbo It.Id bcca ruktd No. 2. ~
No. I on all S 7 belk>ts and recfived 1oafect~ol1 .140
poutlS from a nauoawide pUd ol spons wnacn and
~ FlondaS&a~. ll-l ,ftidt••·tect~ll-2~
in lht F.esu Bawl. moved up hal dwd pl8« to tecond
With 1.071 poiDtL The SaJiillolel• o.alJ lam .._ IO MiliDi. 26-2.S oa oa. ) •bro • t~l CClllvenioa ... in tbt. ~
rft.lftUIC fiuled. "' Mia1111 COK'tl Jimmy Jatn1-. ..._. 10 ave tbr
Allaata and I.be A-..icm ,...._. COldws ~
lion'• ann..al coe-.= llill .. .._ MIMelltld 1br 1
cheftF,ba'an&ll*IO •to"domS.~.ililM. tw Md ebc*\ ...0 ~al ... falow1 .. Naanu·1 "lnday ...... , Oranar .,.. VKtOIY-MMd about ltll pi I M apec1abom for I team
&hit k)lll 1916 Har•H T""'1 tnWf' VdlJJ TaU~mk. fuUe.ck AJouo H--•tb and dcbsh-e
··"1th Ste' e Johnson out and Klkl
not a'atlablc. 11 kft them v.11h fcv.
otlenst' r op11ons ·· R 1 lc~ said .. This
game should tell Ponland pcop~ ho"'
1mpon.ant is 10 ha\ e a pla~cr hle
Johnson··
The Blazers· I pci1nts v.as their
lov.e-st total of the \Cason and was fi, e
fc...,, than their pre\ 1ous lov.
.. " e JU St ne'er got an)1htng
going. .. Pon land C each \!al e hulcr
$aid
Scou scortd eight pcitnts dunng a
I ~ outburst that put the Lalcn on
top -l.3-3~ m1d-.a~ through the S«Ond
quarirr ~ftcr leadings-~ at halfhme. the
Uilcrs outsrortd the Blazers I :....s 10
stan the tturd q~n('r tumani the
game into a runa"'a'
CUppen r1pped. 121 -84
,
•
~ Millmd bad lbtee bolcti• ea. oe Pio lo-t a-Id Brad ~maa. aad the Mienaioa front ~ thr .• lft lbe -ol quar-lftbects lobby Hebcn and Dave
:Wilton. "'Yeah., it WU my besl day,"
MiDardtaid..
c~. who bad JI.IA lbrec punt
.rttW'DI all year. mW"Md a punt M
yards for MinnctO&.a's first touch-
down. sivina the Vikinp a 1~7 lead
they never relinquished with 3:<>3 left
an the fiBt quarter.
"Wilson. who J'CPlaced Tommy
Kramer after Kramer fumbled on
exb of the first two~ ronnected
With Jones on a 44-yard .. Hail Mary ..
pass after Minnesota had been given a
lltt'Ond chantt because the Saints had
l·2 men on the field on the final play of
the first half.
That p ve Minnesota. which
trailed 7-0 after Kramer's first fumble
set up Bobby Hebert's I ~yard touch·
doWJ> pass lo Eric Martin just 1:23
i.nto the ganic. a 31-10 halftime lead
and effcctivet) ended the pme.
.. This game was a one-game
shootout. and A.C. (Caner) is a big-
s*Y suy. He's handled punts before.··
Min~ta Coach Jerry Burns said of
lais decision to use the 174-pound
Carter. his best rtttiver. on punt
returns. •
-He's got ncnes of stccL There's
nothing about football he doesn't
know. l always said the good Lord
expected A.C. to do everything in
football. He JUSt didn't give him the
body."
and lhat was m) fault. .. Mon s&ld o1 the I hlHnan pmahy ... It was cntal
for them to tet that~ at the end of
lhchal( ...
h was the first playoff llrM in tbc
-21-ycar history o( the Saints.
Chuck Nelson added flClt'Ond-hatf
field goals of 32 and 19 yards for the
Vikinp. and DJ. Dozier ran ~t
)ardS for a touchdown with I :46 !Cf\
10 the game to close out the scorina.
The Saints now have to spend an
off-season convancina an entire re·
gion that their first winning season
wasn't a mirage. ·
Only the stan was bnght for the
Saints.
Kramer fumbled on the second
playoflhegameand Vau&hnJo~nson
recovered for ewOrtcans.sctungup
Bobb) Hebert·s 10.)ard TD pass to
Ethan Martin two pla)s later and
New Orleans had a 7-0 lead.
Nelson's 42-yard field goaJ after
Mel Gray muffed a punt cut it to 7-3.
Then ~roe the explosion. set off b~
Carter's return. He s1de·steppcd and
uptoed past four Saints and burst into
the cle'ar 70 yards from the goal hne
It ga' e the V 1king.s a I(). 7 lead "1th
3:03 left in. the first quaner.
Wilson added a five-)ard TD pass
to Ste' e Jordan. and running back
Allen Rice th re" a I 0.) ard TD pass to
Caner on an opuon 1n the second
quaner as Minnesota completel~
controlled the ball.
•FoUowini the Rice-Caner con nee·
uon wnh wtth 6: 10 remaining in the
half. Minnesota had run 34 pla~s to
JUSt I:? for Ne" Orlea~s.
.,....._ -----------
OILERS.~:
~81
tam. Our p.me plan was the same
but we had to ao to pell later and bad
Suc:tt'SS. ..
After Scattk's O\ertimc punt.
Houston to0k over at 1tt IS. Moon.
who passed for 273 )ards.. com~cd
PISICS of 11 )'&rdS to Alonzo ltiaft.-
s.nuth and Ray Wallace pnor to the •
rontro\crstal call. Moon then hit a
I S.)'afdcr to Drev. Hill to the Seattle
41. and Mike ROiler had runs of9. 2
and 7 yards to the Seat tk 23.
Two pla)S and a five-yard penalty
apinst Houston put the Oikn at the
24. and Zendejas kicked the winnina
field Joal. Kriq threw his serond touchdown
pass of the game to ~t with 26
seconds left. cal>ptng an (&.yard dnvc
that bepn after Zendejas was wide
left on the 19-yarder. Pnor to the
mis.s, Zendejas was s.-of-8 inside the
30.
Kriq also had paucs of 10 and 24
yards to Largent In the dri\'C, and he
hit Ra) Butler wt th a 32-yarder to the
Houston 12 v.i th 31 ~nds left to set.
up the tyi'"J touchdown.
Moon hit Ortwre)• with a 29-yard
touchdown pass t!at put Houston
ahead with 2:34 to go. Drcwrey. a
third-year pla)er. ran under Moon's
third-down pass in the end zone.
breaking a 13-13 uc wilh bis first NA.
touchdo"n.
The Scaha~u. play1na without
injured rvnning t.ck Cun Warner.
the AFC"s No. 2 rusher. reached
Houston's 15-and 23-yard lines bu•
had to s.ettk for field goals of33 yards
in the second quaner and 41 )ards in
the tbtrd b) Norm Johnson.
But Carter. who also had six
receptions for 79 yards from Wilson
and Kramer. thought the last play of
t.bc half was the turning poinL
.. The 'Hail Mary' pass 1s what stung
them.·· be said and Mora agreed.
"It was a wlure to commu."licate
For the game. the Vilung.s "ere I~
of 19 on third-do" n conversions
The) ran up :?8 first do"' ns to nine for
the Saints. "ho "ere l-for-9 on third
do"'n.
Mike Rozier re' erscd field and
scored on a di\ 1ng one-yard touch-
do" n plunge. and Ztnde1as lucked Seattle defender llelYin Jenkin• leape to Ernest GlYilaa darlaa flnt qaarter of AFC t-.0 field goals to give the Oilers a
lnter,pt pa.M intended for-•B•oaa-•to•G-'•--wil-•d•-i:anl--,.._--e•Saa--u·y-ln-tla-ee• AMJA.a--o-•llol•D•m•e•.-•1·3·.IO-h.a•l•ft•1m•c•l•ca•d-----•
S PORT S B REAK
'Who Dat' ~ore
than a· rallying
crj' for com.pany
NEW ORLE.\NS -For most Ne"
Orlcanians. "Who Dat""ttaibecome shon-
hand for proda1m1ng the triumphs of the
Saints. But forSte\C and Sal Monastere and
Allen J. Ma\"ell. tt means mone~
, When the Saints fhned "1th a pla~off bid four
)tars ago. StC\C ~1on1stere and Carlo !'ucc10. then his
panner. formed Who Dat Inc. The compan~ produced
a record fcatunng .\.aron Neville and the 1983 Saints.
and a black T-shtn wtth ··w~o Oat'" pnnted m gold
across the front
That same -,ear. Maxwell. o"'ner of Tee's
Cnhm1ted in Kenner. produced a "htte T-sh1n -.1th a
black fleur-de-hs on the front and the "'ords. ··who dat
sa~ de~ gonna beat dem Satnts. "ho dat.''
Morustere sued Muwcll and state coun Judge
Jacob K.arno in Gretna had to decide"' ho had the nghts
to ··who Oat."
K.arno ruled that although the phras.e "as publtc
domain. a damage suit could still ~tabhsh a nght to
"hat 1s lmo"n as a secondar; meaning fo r 1L .\month
later. :--;FL Propcn1C1 Inc .. the franch1smg compan~
owned b' the ~8 mem~rs of the Sattonal Football
League. awarded Who Oat Inc. e~CIUSl\C franchising
nghts to ··Who Oat ·· ,
-w e ~tabhshed our scconda~ meanmg 10 the
phrase, .. said Ellts PaJlet, Monisterc's lav.~er.
.\round the same ume. Maxwell got an :--; FL
Propemcs franchise that allowed hts compan~ to
produce more tradmonal Saints products.
When the Saints made the pb)offs. both en-
trepreneurs sa.td the~ were hap~
Momstere 1n 1984 moved to San .o\nton10 and runs
Who Oat Inc. "tth his brother. ~ucoo. a mustnan. sold
bis interest and moved lo Los .t.ngeles.
"Evct)o~ thmks we are mwng a kllhng."
Monistett said. -we still work hard. We have a lot
expenses.. We aren·t ma.king a k1lhng. -
Quote of the day
Billy Mania. entcnng hlS fifth term as
manager of the :'IC" Yorlc Yank.en. on his
rclauonsh1p ~iLh owner George Steinbrenner.
"We ha\e agrttd v.~ are mends and -..on't let the
media get in ~lv.~ u.s.. fve got to tn not to gc1
mad and }ell back. He bas m\ heart. anc:f I ha,·e
his bank. -·
Shriver straggles to earn title
BRISBANE. Australia -Top-1eCded ~ Pam Shnvcr of Lulhen1llc. Md. ti.Ad to
struggle for almost t.,o bouts Sunday but
beat Czech temagicr Jana No\·otna.. 7-6
(8-6). 7-6 (7"-4). tn the d wnptonship of the Ariadne
Oassiccat Bnsbene's Miiton Coun.s.
Novotna. 19. bad chances to win both sets bul
Shm·er fought back on each occasion. •
Shrfrcr. 25. recorded lbc 18th IOUmalDCDt victor;
of her professional career as she won at .8risbaM for the
second tune. Her previous win was in 1983. It •'3.S her
fifth Brisbane final.
· Shriven~-on S25.000wbile Novotna. playing in her
first Virginis Slims final. earned S 12. 7SO.
-Jana pla)"ed unbelievably." Shriver said. -h wu
hard to bclieve 1t was her ftna final."
Novotna. the 11th seed. held four set pomts -v.-hen
she led 6-2 in the first-set ticbre.aker. but Shnver ca~
back by winning s1• straiebt poims..
The Cu-ch also led ~I •;th t•o breaks 10 the
second Kl. but Shn va came back IO S-S and evntualh
ba!d a second tictxuker. •
•
Unanimous decision to Curry
GE:-.iOA. Ital~ -Fonner "'Cl· m
terv.e1ght champion Donald Curt) con-
tinued his comeback today by sronng a
unanimous I :?-round decision over Lupe
Aquino 10 a super welterv.eight bouL
On the same card. Gianfranco Rost of Ital\. the
\.\ orld BoAing Council super w·elterv.c1ght champ.
defended his tttle b> knock.ing out Duane Thomas of
Detro1L Ros1 wlll no~ defend his title on .\pnl 8 agamst
Cum
Curq nicknamed "The-Cobra.". pi.led up .a wide
ad' antage b~ landing fast left hooks and prec1s.e
combinauons to the body and to the head of the 25·
vear-0ld Mexican
· Curt). of Fon Wonh. lost his -.elterv.c1ght u tle in
Septem~r. 1986. to Bntam's Uo)d Hone~ghan
\.\1th his \ 1cto~ toda~. Curt) has a :?9-:? record.
"11h ~O knocl outs Aqumo's record fell to 31 ·I ·-1
Four area surfers in top 10
C .\ROI FF -Four Orange Coast area g
surfers placed in the top I 0 Sunda~ at the
final round of the Bod' Glo' e \.\ 1n1er Pro
C\enthere .
In the men's surfing dt" 1s1on. Costa Mesa·s R1ch1e
( ollm) placed runner-up and earned S~.000 Finishing
in a ue for fifth "'as another Costa M~n. amateur
Todd ~Iller. -.ho~ s.ioocarnmg.s "''"be ins.ened IO a
trust fund
.\lso among the leaders "ere a pair from Laguna
&ach -Jeff Booth. ~ho earned S300. and .\11le
Parsons. "ho collected S 125
Theo\tcrall "'inncr-.asCartsbad's \fil e Lambrt"St.
the 19 -champion of the Professional Surfing
.\ssoc1auon of .\menca tour. Lamb~• "as av.arded
S.1.000 and 1.000 tour points for hts \ ICtO~.
This wa.s the second stop on the PS.\.\ tour this
season
Washington State falls, 80-65
Gibbs calls tea~ unQerdog
Reds kins to face
B~ars than~s to
Vikings' .victory
HER.1';00N. Va. (AP)-Redskins
Coach Joe Gibbs said Sunda~ that
Wa!Junglon should be considered a
"tremendous underdog" in.their up-
coming pla}off game against the
Chicago Bears.
The Minnesota \' 1k1ng.s' 44-1 0 rout
of:-.le" Orleans 1n the "'11d<ard gamt
und.a~ s.et up the k"COnd Washing-
ton-C"h1cago SFC semifinal m as
mam 'cars If M.tnl\C'SOta had lost. Washington
-.ould ha\e had to tra,el to San
Francisco to face the 49ers. "'ho
finished I 3-~.
.. The \ 1l 1ng.s dtd not do us a
fa\ or:· Gibbs said "Ch1caro 1s a
super football team I don't kno" of
an~ "l-alnes~ the &ars might ha ' c ··
The game "'II ~ held Sunda)
afternoon Bccau~ W~rst'fmtton
\l.Ould ha'e had 10 face the 49crs on
Saturda' in Se"' Orkans "on. Gibbs
said he ·had his team ronc:Tntrate a
little more on getting read~ for San
Francis.co than the Bean.
.. , figured "c·d ha\ e one less da' to
get read~ for the 49eTs ... Gibbs said.
.. In s1m1lar s11ua11ons I've tned to
guess "'ho "ould -.in and r\c bttn
"'rong. so rm glad ~~ practJC'cd for
both teams:·
Joe Gibb.
Last )car. Washmgton enltttd
Soldier Field as a decided undcrdoa
against the then-defending Super
Bo"'I champions.
But lhe Redskins effectt' eh
harassed quanerback Doug Au11i.
"ho replac-ed an m1ured Jim
McMahon. in pinning a ~7-13 defeat
on the Bears.
Gibbs said this )Car's task "Ill ~
much. much tougher.
"With (Jim) McMahon 1n there. 1l
-.111 ~ a "hole different game:·
Gibbs declared
"titre's a gu) that"s Y.On 90 perc-ent
of the games he's pla)ed 1n. a $U} "ho
makes the most out of a suu.a11on
""hen noth1n1.·s lhere. He's a "1nner:·
He also said the Bears' desire to
a'cnge last ~ear's setback could~ a
factor.
··Th,n ·re one of the most talented
teams 1n football the' ·re mad about
last war. and the~ ha\C their top ,
quarierbad. in the lineup." Gibbs
S3Jd.
"Scheve me. there "ere a lot f. '("
reasons I d1dn·t -.ant to pla) Chi ~
"We "'trt' a big underdog last )eat
and "'c·11 ~a tremendous und~rdoa
this 'e~r. too:· Gibbs addtd
The 5oCC'fft to beaung the &ars.. said
Gibbs. 1s to keep them g~1ng.
"You·,c go1 to tr) to be balanced
and take "hatc,er ~ou can get."
Gibbs said. "It -.111 take a gr~at
footbaJI game to be3t them. that's for
sure "
Gibbs said the Redskins •re
health} e\c~pt for "'de rettt\er .\n
~1onk.. "ho 1n1ured his kntt ""eels
ago and "Ill hkel) not be a" a1 lable for
unda~·s pme
That represents no small loss for
the Redskins. In the :-.;Fe ~m1final
tut~ ear. ~tonk caught fi\ e pass.t1 for
81 )ards and tv.o touchdo-. ns.
pom~~~:~~i.s·~n;e~~~J~~ff.'1~ ~ Saxm1•,1!1'_.ed btVmo•'e "-o thi·~d ~l~n~k;~ba~ln'll~~ o~~rn.tr~~:f~~~~~ ~ ,J,,J,' . J . r 1 ~·~ .& 1
St.atc~~~rs leading b" thrtt poma at halfume. Dodger s infielde r the Dominican RepubUc: wintC'f' sttond and eighth o,enfl r~ .. middle
outscored the Cougar\ .19-I' the rest of the "'"\ to . • league Sa' "'ould pla\ third base. and infielders b~ the Ehas Spons ~ureau
1mpro,·e lbctr record to µ \\asb1ngton late slipped Says SWltCh may \tile ~farshall could.mo\C to first. I ha\t more ~!11tng pov.t"r as a
to 3-6 for the season _ Sa\ thinks th~ mo"c to third se-cond bastman
WtSCOnsin eJ..panded Its lead to as man~ as 21 cause h im to leave "ouldn•t benefit htm fi nanc1all}. but SaJ. has little C\penence as at third.
points. 68-47. v.1th 4 13 left to pla). that a trade that keeps h1m..a.1 SC'COnd ha''"& pla~ed there for onl) a couple
Trent J~kson added 19 points. including 1.i in the base "ould. of innings dunng a game last )car
S«ond half. for the Badgers. "'htle Tim Locum had I:! By MARK McDERMOTT "Changing positions -.ill detinttel~ Staust1cs help s.u·s case that
and Kun Porunann and B'. ron Robinson had I 0 each cut down m} earning powt'r." he said. ~ond '--·-•hould '--hlS nnc:•tion. B W~·"' led h C h 16 -.o ,,.._......,. .. E,er;o~ perttl\es third basemen ...... UCIX'" uic ..... -nan ·~·t t c ougars v.1t points S.\CRAME~TO -The Los .\n· as po"er h1ttt'TS. and that rm not. He has impro'ed his fielding in·s11. of
c-ond ... __ is m\ fi-lov•. and the past st\en seasons. thouah in
Sabres take over third place
penod uc and goaltender Tom Barnsso , ~ Aniel't goal snapped a second-~
made :?7 sa\~ as the Buffalo ~at \,ISlung
Qu~bec. 2-1. Sunda~ night in' an :"IHL
ront~ The \>IC'\Ot). the S«Ond in t•o nights for
Buffalo. lifted the Sabres into sole poss.ess1on of third
place to the .\dams Dt\ 1s1on "ith 37 points. t"O more
than idle Hanford The loss ""as the third s1n1.gllt for
the Xordiqucs. v.ho are last 1n tt\e '\dams Elst'"" here
m the NHL Mite Ballar4 scored t"'O po"er·pla) goals
and picked up an assist and rookie cent~r Jee
Nieew~ Sol his 17th poYter-pla~ goal. loadmg
Calgar; lO a S-3 '1cto~ O\er tht Blad.hawks m
Chicago. Calpr; "h1ch O\ ercame • tv.o-p] first·
penod defio t on goals b~ l)mis Sann, took a thrtt·
point lead o,·er serond-place Edmonton 1n th< Sm\lh<
D1\ 1s1on ... In V. tnntpeg. Steve \'ttrmu scored thrtt
!oals a.s Drtro1t earned a 4-4 tte despite being outshot.
:?-:?9. b~ the Jets.
Television, radio
TELEVISION
4:30 p.m . -COLLEGE BASu:TBALL
V1llano\-a at SL John's. ESP .
S p.m. -COU F.GE BAS&ETBALL: olrc
Dame at ufa)tlle. WG '.
6:30 p.m. -COLl..EGE BA.S&l':TSALL.:
Purd~ at IU1nots. ESPN.
8:10 p.m -COLLEGE BA.S&ETB.U.L
KJtnsn at V.ash1D11on. ESPN
ILADlO ~
6 p.m -P1lO llOCSEY· Kings at ~ Jene) (dcla)cd). KGIL(1260).
6:30 p .m. -COLLEGE I AS&ETI AU..; Cal
Sc.alt fullenon a• ew Me:uco Sc.a.It. KM V
(1600).
7:10 p m. -PllO IAK.ETBALL Sa.n
AAIOOio at LUM.. Kl.AC IS °10).
1:30 p.m. -Q)ll l!G£ IAS&E'BALL.
C'olondo Seate at LSC. K1 X ( 1070).
7:30 p.m -COLI.EGE BAS&l!'T'aALL:
Santa a..tJera a.t Cl. KPZE <1190).
9;.JO p m. -cou..EGE I Al&EftALL:
~LIJ cpsat UJn1 lk41th SUtt (dda)~,.
kPZEfl I >
geles Dodgen ha\e told Ste\e Sa>. he ~ ucnc ,,.. .. 1983 "--~_.. ._ th "'II pla~ third base this season. but he that's the onl~ pos1t1on l'"e pla~ed 1n bl nc "1o..~ cu v: fi firo~f:10&
d · 1.....1 ·"-e maJ·or 1-agu-pro ems ha.t m 1t uns.a e or ans oesn t ~ 1e' c tnc mo\ e 1s m his best m .. .... '--h nd Ii ..._ __ interest ··r,e been a thrtt·t1me AU-St.ar at smmg uc 1 • int~
"(Manager) Tomm) Lasorda talk-S«ond. I was ranked th1rd ~hind The errors (he made JO that )Car)
ed to me t"o "~ks ago and told me R~ neSand~rgand Bill> Doran in the and theanenuon the) auracted are an
"'hat the~ had planned. .. Su said league last 'ear. and v.-as ranked albatross Su an do •·nbooL
.. Hes:ud that 1fthc mo\Cdldn't v.orlc
out and that 1fl "anted to~ traded. I
"ould. fm not realh sure lhe Dod~rs realize thl") m1iht lose me -
EH:n 1f Sa .. isn't traded. he could
ka'c Los Angeles at the end of the
1988 season "'hen ~can b«omc a
free agcnL
.. rm baffkd and not happ) b) this
mo' c. but I'm not gomg to moan
about u.-Sa.it said -r\e thought
about u. 3nd -v.ho kn<1v.s •bat n¥ght
happen J ~a> be traded 10 spnng
tr.unmg. or e'\cn mo\·~ bad to
second
··M ) dec1s1on n&ht no• lS to go and
do the bnt I can.11rm ao1n& to be on
that club. &hen I'm going to do
eU"n tbtng I can \o hdp 11 Wln. -
Sa\. 'ho v.111 tum 21 Jan. 20. 1s 1n
the final )ear of a fhe-ycar. S3 million
contract. If the Dodlrn 1M1st on tht
mo\e to 1b1rd bac. Su said 1he
chancn of re-M&D•ns h1m are not'
iood Last v.-crk. Su M>ld hts homt 1n
\1anh.lttan Beach and bousht 1 fh~
•CTC pared of land 1n Loomes 1n
Nonhttn Cal1f0mia. ~ conSlNC'·
uon of a 6.800-SQ..are-fooc honx •111
bqlnsoon.
-1 CttWnl) ~ldn·1 have &n)'
~.ons to bluina en front of Jose
CanS«O. Oa\e Parttt and Mart M~ift 111 Oakland. •• Ytd Sa' •ho
kno--s tht Oakland "'s ha\m't
offered tttond battmm Ton)
BCrna.Did and Ton\ Ph tH1ps con.
U"I(' .. The Red and PadM1n~t
'i:c!r°'r~s. the ~n ~ a ntw-
k>ok infidel. bt'"'"'I b1ntr A '1
Pb>« .Ufraio Gnmn 1t iborutop
Mana.no Danan .,he> pla)l:d short· ~top f; r the t~ tat tfttft
ia n\. f\ tr)m nd bHc 1n
U.S. poloists meet
Spanish team Friday
The United tales 111-~ter polo team
beg)ns its Ol)mp1c ~car .,hen 1t pb}~
hosl to Spam's nauonal team fnda)
at BclmQnl P\a.za 10 Long 8eac'h at 7
p.m
h wiU be the fint pmc for the
SI~ its ao'd~I •fln ovtt Cuba at
the Pan "menan Games 1n ln-
dian~is last .\uaust
Coach Ball Barnett. ~coacbcsat
~port Harbor H'lf\. sa)" mo11 of
the 18 Ol)'mpec hOpduls will 1tt
act ion ..-imt Spain. Spain is ooc of
~en ltanu that has ~ quah· f~ for the OtymptG 1n Kora
ID September ..
Spun placrd fi~ 1n lbc 1916
World Cham~ and uuh m
the 1917 FINA Woliil..Cup.
The U 1Qm, trbldl COMISlS
primanl> or Southern Cahfom .. ns.
.. 111 prKtK'C w.1tti -.., this wutc.
.. Thu snlion w.·111 ~ uted as pure
trainani.-BarMu YKl .. The pme
•di bt Ptt1t) 1n1cnx. but lhnc
pb)~art noc ph)'Sicalh PftPa~ to
pb) hai'd ·~ttt polo at thit pl)fnt '" their traanina 10 tht Otympec year.-
~ .. squadhasllOe~
•ottthtt JaM't ~. and Ban~u Y)S I.be la)-olr wil .,_ bim •h•d• oflttt ,..)'fftal'C ..... ~. The n1\Cd S&aln ckfMl!Cd Spain.
• in the World Cup m Ma). but ao.t. 9 •. laie Jtit) 1n a tournament tft
ha)) •
•
:.\~ ~ 1ocaJ 0t)mpte hopefuls
On &he l,; tiqiDd ~ JefT Campbe1l
Pner Cam Miu Evans and
John Va:rpi aJI from UCI. Otbtts
indudtr Jamn Bnsrson of e~
Bcadt. M.iU Gnn of Cosu Meua.net
()a,id lmbem1noofNc--l>Of1 &acb.
Tidt1 pnas for fnda) ·s _pme arc
SA for ~ults and ~for studtnts and
cbtkirm. Tlckcu v.111 ~ a'-a1labk the ncbt of the contm.
•
..I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. January "· 1988 BS.
Sllnie old Story: UNLV st.ill one to beat
Re be ls' 1 0-0 start . Tarlan1an calls the hardc-st -.o rlung ' .. ~
reinforces role
as PCAA favorites
By lON FERGUSON
Of .. Dlllt ........
Before the college basketball sea~n
began. Pa 1fi Coast .\thkuc Assoaa-
uon roaches assembled and talked of
a re\ elation -the proverbial light at
the end of the tunnel in the ch'.~ to
displace Ne' ada-Las egas al the top
v.as supposcdJ} 1n '1ew.
The Runmn· Rebels ma} n~t have
d >nam1ted the passage to blacken the
'1e "'. but prrhmmal') indications arc
that U ~L \' 1s sull a diesel being
chased b) steam.engin~
Sure tht' Rebels lost six seniors.
includ mg the ke) three (Armon
G ilham Freddie Banlcs. M ark
\\ adn lost La"'rence West to
ai;a ,Am1c111oesand6-l I ~nlerDa,id
Willard ~ent .\ WOL after .a 37-2
seawn 1n I %b-S-and aJl ~CA~
Final Four appearance .
But the facts are that ~o. I 5 lJNLV
1s I0-0 and "'on its lirst PC.\.\ game
on the road Saturda' at . e" Me,ico
State ·
T h{· Rebel\' biggest downfall is the
laC'k of a center "'uh Richard Rob-
tn'>On •Jut since m1d-Dc-ce mber v. 1th
an anlk IOJU~ -\ freshman fills 1n.
Thi: g\'<xi ni:"'s 1s that pre' 1ou.sl~
.\ \\ O L (t'nteo Da' 1d W illard.
'-uunll·J on ht:':l\ 11\. 1s back in school
and pral lit ing onct' more. although
his con1nbu11on "'111 h keh be httk
this St'a,on .;ftl·r so much lost practice
11mt"
-\s for the rest. (al Late Fullen on
"'as hun h' the loss of Henl"\ Turner
for .i couple of "'l·el s an Dettmber
and hasn't ~n as sha rp as eApcctcd.
It "'as supJ><X('d to be the Titans
a nd Rid.' Bern-led San Jose State
that "ould battle L"\ L V for the 11tlc
'\o" l ( Santa Ba rbara has entered
thl' p1tture "''th an -I stan and has
bel'n ele' ated to ~o .'.! status b~
man'
L"tl and Long &ach tate both
appt·ar bc11er than the~ v.cre g1H'n
.. n:d11 for pnor to the season.
Otha than \cg.as. Fullenon had
the best ~onforence roa d record a )ear
ago at 3-6 Vt ht'thcr a ny t~m beside
the Rl."bcls can find a wa\ to v.,n on
the road IS •lbl' k~ tO mounting an~
~·nous challenge. but v.11h the con-
fc rencc·s balance this season. a 111 in-
ning road record v.111 be ha rd to come."
~\
·Here's a lool at each team:
Cal Statt' Fullerton: The T itans arc
laden· "'1th l'\pt>nencc. 1111th Richard
\tonon (~5 points I a nd Turner 11 S
p<>1ntsl th!.' l e) clements: somcllmM
the on!: clemC"nts offcn~' cl) P1d:ed
as an earh !>Cason conference po"'er
the Titans ha'e not ll\cd u p to ·
t'\pt>ctauons
~n1or Eugene Jacl son returns at
tht• p<'tnt. v.h1IC' centcn \en1or \'an-
.. cnt Bio"' and sophomort' John ) kcs
ha\l'. nut Pro' 1ded Fullenon "'Ith the
~LM JO II
Deepite thh look of concern_, UNL V Coach Jerry Tukanlan
appean to ba•e the ta!ent to repeat u PCAA champion. ·
rebounding needed from them .
L tah transler Bobb' .\da1r 1s a l e'
ne111l Offit'.'T at fof"'ard and IS lool ed tO
for help in ~on ng. Oregon State
transfer \an .\nderson pro' ides
depth at off guard and small fo_f"'ard
be erratic at ctntl'r
Loac BeJiclll State: First-, ear Coarfi
J <X' Hamngton. pre' 1ousl~ at Gcorgc-
\1ason L'n1' ers11' 1nhented a ~nior
laden team from outgoing Ron
Palmrr. :md b:a.s 1ru.ta.Jled a. ~sure
Frttno Stat~ Ron -\dams sull ddcn~ and upbeat tempo v.h1ch has
doc:\n·t ha\e the Bulldogs° at the le'el hftc:d them from a (!U~llonabk team
the~ a11aincd under Bo~d Grant and to fl~pe<'tab1ltt~
the defcns1,e-m 1ndcd squad ha<, suf-Guard \torlun \\ ile' leads the
ier<."d "-''eral lo"'-sconng clo'>t' de-, team offens1\d~ 1 I ~ points Pl'r
feat\ game! v.h1k R igo \1oore John
Fof\.\ard Demd. Barden 1s a re-Ho ffman Bdh \\all.er and T OO\
bounding strtngth and the other Ro nzone offer dc:pth Oe-\ntnom
staning foNard Jer, 1s Cole: teams Langsto n 1s J four-~c:ar staner at
v. nh \tater Det High product \til e (l•ntl'T. and Jvhn Hatten 1s a capat:>k
M11chell and fr~hman three-point ba lup -\ndre Pu~ has returned I•'
sharpshoo1e·r -1.ndre 1ms pro ' 1de form :it fol""' ard and R ud' Har-e~ is
scoring pun h. 1mpro' ing.
Sims took the starting point guard
spot trom L1..·o \\all.er. but 1s a better
scorer than gt•nc.>ral. Junior "-e' 1n
Stt·' en son holds tht:' otT guard spot
and 1un1 or Rene Ebeh1escontinu~ to
St-uda~.&:,as Yt-cas: \\ h1k 1hc Rl'· tx+. ma' lad.. 1ht: takn1 <.'l l.ist ~a!><.in • s impres"" e squad the' '113 l'
uo fo r 11 b~ belng, "'hat C oalh Jern
group m his tc-nurc S«oodl>. tv.o
taknled ~n1or fof"'ards in Gerald Paddaol~ I r. ..,and Jan IS Basnight
( 16.6 --i l '-•UI') the icam as its top
tv.o scorers and rcbounders
The que'>t ion marl~ in T ark.anian ·s
'1e111 are thl· lad. of a true point gyard
~h1ch huns the te-am·s last-b real
potcnttal plui. dl·pth and sta~ht' at
center Dt-sp11 .. • the pro blemi.. their
offl.'nSI\ c: a' cragc fie-Id goal pcr-
ccntagr and re bounding margin are
t~ht· u nfcrl·nu·
T hi." ~ uungn brothers of former
Rebel great ~poon James. Junior ~cith :ind frnhman Karl along v.1th
freshman td1..<.·~ -\ugmon pro' 1dc
great speed and qu1dncss at gua rd
Thl· athk t1..·-. are there a'> usual and
no ma11cr ho"' much Tarlan1an Cr\~!.
ot the proble-ms. th, Rebels ar~ me
team tu beat
l\e• Mexico Stale: R~plac1 ng Kt'nn~ Tra' is· >tor\ng "'as.tht' ma1or
t.asl.. h.•r 'l ti \h< anh· ·, .\~IC'> but
6-3 JUOI ,, )'"'•"&mar. \\ 1lht fo'J<'ph
I I p...•1nt'> >X"r 1!.lmt a ( em1os
Colll.'gl· 1r.s,."'' '":i.n d<.•ne an ad-
r.i1rabk J '~ .,·,J :l".l-.\gg1e'> arc hitting
bettl·r thJn ~1 ;x"h\nl from the floor
-1.n JlaJer-.1 ... a'>u.ill. a _.ear ago
~ua r~ \ 1rgil H~" 'na<. rl·turnl·d and
1s a potl'n• · tlt 'i~ • e v.eapon alvJ
Soph .. mh.>rl 1-..:i tr Hill the in<.um·.
bent point ~ .... ..1 .. J rlJ<, frff \\ 1lhams
and rt•turnl·r L•! \l.t oul (Omplete a
takntt'd gr• "'' 1 , ..... " I men
L p trvn1 'l'tur'"\Jng t--!>tancn
-tr' c \h(1lu1h ., Jnd Johnn' Rob-
t'f)On .ir:.> ,. · ..: "1..t the depth 1s
qu1..0<-lll•nJhll ,j~.; rd" •U(ld1ng is a
"l'J ~ OC\)
'-e"' \lc\.tl/ ~t.ile !>main problem
is \\10r1Pg, "~ g..i.mt's. ha\\ng lost
fi, t· nun"'""~ ra,·ntl' g.ame'> b' a tot.al
of I~ P•J n:' 'h udin11 thrct one-
poin1 d\."feJt' 11 ~ J:-"1 ic.:1 an' ~ner
1n .lt~rda:-"•e!h(,P• -\--\ ~-nt'rasa
late ra il· !v. 11e \ l'~' l ~r.,ed to a ti\ e-
po;nt ks>
Pacific: Thl· r~·t"rn 11 r.-~ Domingo
Rv..ano a1 1 ''·'•m.l aner IOJune!> and 6-~ 2u<trd ( h·1,;1Jn Gra' form a
\tr vng ~orang Jul Jame~ Glea'cs
Jnd Ru~nv \t '(.k,; 1 o tTer returning
npcm:n .. I.' .st ~uJrd and r---\\ 1ll1e
T Jtum ' ~hl· t>t.·~1 retlounder oi a
')tr .mg grLIU P
Repldung !ht J.:parted Brent
( 1.•J:'l!> JI .. t'ntl't 1'> a problem. as o-9
fri:'>hmar l.X•r l 't:le -Holger
FJl·r;t J'IJ '· "e''>hman ~011
H~·:r.~·n t" 1 1i 1 1 ~01d
T h, T .gc:r\ Jr... pu\t.r.· po1nt'.>l1n 1hc
bvarJ i.,u Lht·' g.1'l" ..ip plent~ too
San Jou S~te: The 6-guard &rn
122 ;A.JI".:'> per ~f"11.·1. a t"'1.H1me
hnnnrat-~ me'1tton -\ll--\mt'nl3
.. n,11,t '>th<· c~tc1rthe par.ans:ind
rcg..m.kJ .i!> thl· tx·'!lt guard in the \\ dl
b\ mJ O\
Be-tore the !>eason Ekm ; father
;rnJ 1.oa, h. 8'11 Bc:rn 'Mild ·he hc.i~d
>•XTil' u• thl' .,__,,r rg prcssure could h(-
n: C.l~d lr1..HT' h.,' >n but that hasr·r
r.c..,.-n thl' ,.1-,e .;nd tht' offcn"1'e
1mprt"t·meri1 h( had ant1c1pated has
not l'l\.'l'n sl:iggn ng .1~ pcrcl.'nt fr •fil
thl· rlvor
The ~e~ ma_. tx-a quK l dek-x·
~ hu .. h has l 1..pl uppone9~ 1n :~.:
m1d-~1S "'nh J .• mb1ned fit'ld gl•.J.
profil ll'Ol ~ h\: ~ -iv pcr~'nl
Jun1ur guard Rudne~ 011 .i-.:
6-b . JUniur s:"1:..r D1etnlh \\JI< .. ""
the tl·am"' '"mv'>l mpro,e<l' !'.' .i ·~··
. arc '"' ,1thl'.r f\l.Jres v.hilc ... -·
guards .\nt~Pn' Pc:r': and l••..,r. _.., ·
1~ lOll:gl tra nskr It''. H-~~.
pro' tdl depth
l "C lniDe-x-n1or \\a~ nt' Enge -.1aJ
lead') th\.· -\ntt:"ater~ ""'hilt:" JUOtl'r"
..__ ... ' r. Fknd and Fran!.. \\ oods art> ll·~ l •ntnbutor .. tc :i potent "rTens.c "'""h .l\cragi:s .. : -point!> per gaml'
a nJ ( o.ilh Bill \1u llga n alv.a:\.
~·elT'' ll• land a "'3' tl> "'1n
\\ 1h ;-:on'>1qc·h' 1n the h.K ~tvurt \ti..lllgan no~\ tne mo' t'
ol Fl")d t~ thl' p.Jint ;i.1f. hdp Oftcn
1ri.1..rC"d \1 it.c: Labat ha-. not '>ho111n the
J"t1 .. 1pa1.:d . \1.dkn1.t' at tht: point
and '>t'n1o r \t l..e He'>s 1s S!ruggling
"IA 11r h1'> '>h••l
T hl' -\ntca tcr. ha• e not )h1:i"' n the
1mrr 'l'ml'nt 1.kt(ns1,el~ the~ had
hnpt·d I •r bl'1ng ... nahle to han.1k
qu1 .. M·r ·pponl'nh 1n the hall~ourt
m l\k Rl'lx~ndi:ig hl'!I ~n anothe~
wn.: '>pot paniculanl~ an &J' 101
opponenti. morl' than one shot each
time dov. n
f~hmen Justin .\nd~n and
frtT Herdm.sn are ma.lu ng ke} con-
tnbut1l n., ff thc bench
l'C Santa Barbara: Fo ur guards are
the .IJ">'> • '•nt· team "'h1ch uttliz.esa
thrl'.-g .. <i·.::. "K.. Leading the ""a~ as
'><r t•· Br..:r ;.,~a"',a 6-6 lcaper '-'ho
t••i'' •r, . rtl.'r~nce m rebound.Jn@
dl"J .l'' '" Bu• 1. pr. •Mure Ca mel DeHan
1...id~ ... , • :..Jrr 1n sconng and t~
.. '·. ·. ·.. ,.. 1h rtt-point field goa1
;v .r· .• • , ti I percent t cont1nutn!
,. ... --h' he ea.med PC.\.\
f • .,~ ~ , • i"ne ) car honor., a \CU
a.~ Br,_~ Jl~hn~n and s1'th-m:in
t .J. • • i>J•t·npon 1..-pp thoql.tanet of
.-~ .. J • ~ c.: te~
T 1l· ,!>ldC" m<."n are b-" fr~nman
t •w • t 1ra~ and !>-6 sophomore En~
\l.\"1 .. ur Frl'5hmar \111..e Do\ll.
.:rJ J .nn \\ estbeld 3'1." strong .:-on-
·r J-\i...t r~ up front ,ff the ben h. '
\\,. e the G aul hu'> art' not tail
••JP rg Jb1 l11' and rn~1de ~trengtr
, mPt'n\31l' vn the.: board~ and tM
~...,uJ..::' '1:1.•ng athletic 1alen1
P' · J_.., str 1ng ilete''l'>c
l"lab State: The .\ggtM are n-
l)l:n~n~e.J "'llh SI\ i,trong returner-.
(Ju. .. ·..! 1'\:' 1n ' \vn •~ the bes1 OI
t '1crn ., 'lO a1on2 "'11h frtl -\ nde ·
<1nt°! Rl·1d '-c"·c_. ~fO' 1d~ stro
shvot, ng irvm the guard spot
Fr f"'ard Dan Con~a' C't'n
1uv.ard (11lben Pe:e and 6-iO trans@lt"
1.C"ntt'' Gr~g Housd.e-eper l~
frort line. "'hile Jon Judl1n~ Jc en \ ., and .. ummun1t~ collcgC' tra
k • tar Pqx·~ pro' 1dC' depth wp
lrort '
~ ~ 'Pit' victimizes ~
~ top-rated Arizoncl
Ne\\' Mexico has
been the site of
m emor a ble upsets
-1.LBL Ql ERQl E ' \f I .\Pl
It •.·l"'"'a1-, ..! N\,...tb.s art'n:l "'hl"rt:·
th~ ripr •N~k hai. .i "'3' v ' bccom-
ine !~( Ol'\ tJ'°'ll
dLx·):-' mt"ar ar,~ IB ng at all · ~
Th( .... n 111.s<-the e1~hlh stra1g.ht (Of
'e"" \\n1~0 l ~-3 and beaded for.a
\\ t"'>terr: -\th~eu~ Conference c<t'
.1sl"lr "'Ith I tth-ran~eo \\ ~om1lll&
th1<. \4\_"('~ j
Rn~c~ a rt-x-n c. 'io<..Om:i IS poi
-and \k(r~ addro l} as the t
~r. .. ks• '··14 \le\ICO pla~en
pc.Hl"d1• pc:nciratcd ·~nz• na·~ m•
.rnd h•ri1. Jc1cn~
Area sports.calendar
j 1m \ .sb 3nt .;nJ hi\ '0r..h Can'-
1 na tate \\ 1.. ipa. i.. mo' ed into n for
. r:l. 14l't'l..C'nd n -1.pnl tiq· ~ears ~o
a.,J l'"t "'nr. J ,au "'3 title
I: v.a> hC're that Lorenzo l narks
100._ 3 ~rtt._ \\ h1Hc-nburg miss and
!.tulfrJ Houston·s Phi lamma
JammJ bid for a na11onal ll!IC'.
Kugcr~ .rnd \tcGet' tool. O\CT"'.ja
'-e" \k\1 ..... , •iTense that~.,,. Its tW
k.sd 'll? s.. Jfer\ Hunter GT'C'ent' a lllf
< '°lar 1c Tht,mas hC'ld 10 IC and:;J
r<. "'' 1111 -\nzon.J had a pair Of cha n
.... , :it .1 but 3 thrtt-point ~ot I&
El 101• 1ot.Hh ri' r: ~onds left
panial .. blcxlcd b~ Grttne ~
\\ 1l~kat Cra11 ~·~ \hllan mis~ *1
Jlen '• b&.9ketball
Tonitflt
COLLEGE -UC ... .,,. &.rbara •' uCt 1 JO
HIGH SC..ac>L -M.ar-a• .0"$ S..C"
Jo-ca• I Lt» "•'""·'t» a• In ~ 'lO c..-..
................ """Q'oi-' ae..cri 1 lO
Tu.scAv
COLLEGE -Wuwi• •• SoC.A c~ 7 JO
HIGH SCHOOL -u ..... P'"-'Y a• S...te ~ Ja ,.~ C~•• ~ •' E't9"C• "'-'••n "• •~
•• E To•o Cvi>rr u •' wn'....,."''"" ~•n v ...
•' LO"Q !HK " ·"'i>• W., •nn a1 L -·• c-~·• .. 'It' a• 7JG
W~y
COLLEGE -Ca l Ttc'l a1 Soea1 C~ 130
COllllMUNfTY COLLEGE -C.-wnr e t C~•o--1 JO
HtGH SCHOOL -<>•,_ a• ..__..
t<arbO' L•~ a.ec"' •' s.oo.eoe•• .-.ooc ·
IY ove a• ..,.~~-v ~oe eo-•' ... -!Hac"' W·~ ~,...,..,_, •' (O'~ Ol't #ti_., "'4vf\'--..O"~
8raC"' a• Y. •~a" a. a• 1 30
T'hundaV
COLLEGE -VCI a> Ca Sla•t "., .,...,.,.. 7 lO
HIGH SCHOOL -5.6~•• .\.•a Ya •• et
E ''•"<• ' )()
Fridn
HIGH SCHOOL -Ocean voe .. •' "°""'''"' -'•~• Ed-10" •' M.ar .,. ... ..,.,."'1.0" a..<" •' ~· "• U"'•r'" at Foo,.,. Ct»ia ~ a• Hrwoor• Ma~llOr S.00-.c' e t ~ Cor •
ona ~ M.ar a• ... OOObr~ Laguna !H~ a•
C•"'•Ot' Mat..-0. at 8 -Mor-1~ .. ,.. ,_ a• 1.. _.,. Crv~t •" a at 1.JC
Satu1"$1V
CO\.LEGE -SoCa Coo~ •' Crv~'•" ~ •aQr ) ve1 al Hr<>ao.·-.u v~ 130
Sunset basketball
season opens Friday
Marina-Edison
clash highlights
league oyeners
./
Wh1lc m ost area tt"ams wrap up
non-league pla~ this wttk. the SunSC'l
League bo~s high school basketball
schedule gets under wa} Fnday ntght
v.nh a bang. as Manna hosts EdlSon
at 7 30
The Chargers.. wrnners of the Coast
Chnstmas Classic. arc I ()..4 and one of
thret lcque teams that have com-
plied JO WIM ID non-league pla~.
Manna 1s 10.3 ~ith tbrtt one-.potnt
lo\SC'S. and Foun1.a1n Valley is a
surpnsmg I(). I. ·
Westminster. another Sunset
pov.t"f. 1s 7-6 but had to forfen thret
games and a tournament cbam -
p1o nsh1p. and v.111 host Huotingt9n
Beach Fnda). The Lions att led b>
6-10.ctnter Chns Tov.tt, ~1\o ts
l'eraJJn& 26 5 pc>ID\$ ptt pm~
10clud1ng a scason·h•ah -41 ap.aost
Scn·1tc In the other ~ opener.
Ocean 1e" (4-6) tra,els lO Fount.a.an
Valle} •
Corona dd Mar and Woodbn<ta'C
h1ghhght the non·IQa~ action tilts
v.cd: v.1th a ·JO pme Fnday. The
Sea IUnp. .runners-up an the Coa.54
Chnsunn Oamc. tthu·ned oal) ~ Geoff Probst from lase teaton &ut ha' e aotten off' to an M ,san
bctund \Omt outstandanc defenshe
pl~ Wamon (6-~) ba'e already
lost as man} pmt'I as they did all last ~ason .. hlk •1nn1 .. the tute c:t\am,.
paonship but tall ba\oe dam Kttft.
v.ho t\ ''ttl&ll'll 27.9 potnts ptt
pme.
Other to p matchups incluck Foun-
tain Valle) a t El Toro Tunda). Irvine
al Corona del M ar Wcdnesda) a nd
Mater De1 's. Capistrano Valk ) at
Saddlebacl Coll~e Suurda) at S
Costa ~ksa v.111 be on the road to pla~
n ' als Estancia and ewpon H arbor
Tut"sd:l} and Fnda}. rngrcta,eb.
Mater De1 1s at Bishop Montgom-
e11 Fnda) ntghl an the ~ngdus
League opener. whale Ltben) Chns-
uan continues --\cadem~ W&uc pla~
v.;th two home pmes. f ucsda~
against Wlulne) and Fnda) \S-
Hentage.
SUMSET l.IAGW ,,,....
Oc1a.an V-et F-'-.,,....,.
EOMI" at AA¥..,._
t1\,9\1"'9?0fl 9HcYI ., 'Wft~
ANGaUIS~ .......
Maler De< al •~ Mofd ... ne •
ACAOU.Y LaMWa
~
'Mlil"ft al lAenY Olr-.t.en ........
"""'-•'UMr"'~ ...... AeUll T_. •'I.one 8Mcfl Wein 7
Lot ......,.,,.'°' •t n-G41111dM., ~ ......... ,........ .
~·tv at Wiiia AM V .... Ca.a #MM at E..__
Fewnt-Vt/ltrl .. £> T-
Cf'll"ftl al -.~ OcM!\V-.. L ... ..._flWT •••• <>r....at.......,...,....
l...--IMOl et SI fPlllct
WV ......... al #8Wn VlillO E4'ton e!U..~WIMll at Cll"Olllll•:.Mr .............. leK!I .. ~ ,... .. , • ""'~if~~ . ~ ~"'·'' ..... ' c.. .. ..,.,. .. ~..._,
Sil 1c:;.a1~ c..,.....,,,,,., .. w11• ~
YewN leeO\ ., ~-,......
~ o.:" ~.,,.v..., • s..• -•-1~cc.... 1 .. l9ll'lft , .... ~~
COMMUNITY COl.LEGE -Ora~ Cu•·•·
Cf'"' 'O\ ] )Q HIGH SCHOOL -""8•..-~ •\ :a:o•··e'"'C
Vt•• a• s.oo~· Coo~ '
Women'• t.a.ketball Today
COLLEGE -Nev-·L.a\ VrQ8' a .,,.:
COMMUttfTY COLLEGE -~.,_... a
c;._., Wft! l
HIGH ~ -S."'• "'"' • • ~· a• Wr'l""'-\'..-7 LO"V 8«.C" ~ •' ":-·•a"
Va 7 15
Tuesav
COL LEG£ -SoCai c~ •• La .• f"' ~
J )0 lt~"C:S at CIY \I (~ '• .... 'JC)
~ SCHOOt.. -Wt-Mrv et • ~ CH-'
, .. ~ 6 C~'• AAi'w •' E"•'•r>e • ilO ._._ •
~•T't)()r a· s..>1a 41'8 7 v .a Pa·' a· ~·
Ote' 1 WooODroClve e• lh -,. 7 M.a'r< ~ e•
Eel"°'" 7 Cl'l>'".U •' .. _;., ~·O'I &..c• . ~
WedNsdaY
COMMUNITY COLLEGE -:y-:::·:· a c..-wn• 7l0
'ThuncNY
COLLEGE -UC1 •' Ca S•a•• t ., .,-•:y .... n..,. a• SoC• coo._ SlO
NIGH SCHOOL -Se1' cie..-•r a• .ao;.·a
B••c• & "°~.,..~ ..,....,. a• OcN"' ~ ... ·
Eo ~ a• Me•._. 7 ~ .... ""11!0" BMc• a W•vm "l'r< 7 5_..,.., ;. at ~-.!)la('• · Woodbr~ a• E,•a"C a 7' ~..,.a• v~-, ·
1
Fridlly
COl.LEGE -Pactf< CIY ,, •• a • :: ... •'
C:io -'"'°"'~ C~ COLLEGE -Cr··~ •' G~ Wftt 7JO '
HMOM SCl400l. -~··8" a• 1..ol>«"'•
("• ~ _.. 6 Nf'WOO'I Ma'1>cY a• Sw°'•a .... v ..... 7
Satut4eY
COl.LEGE -UCI et ,_,, ~ Sta•• '.)0 SoCel (~ al T"'r Y.a~!P ~ 1 )0
HIGH SCHOO\. -¥11U~'r a• .,. • ..-.c ..
l Nood/Ot'oCIQe ., u ... ~ 1 c-• ••
C:oun••.., Va SlO A ~ •• ••• .-. • Ocre· V ,_ et ~_. Ma'1>0' } C0\1 • ""'na e•
"~~v-1
Mea·•aoccer
W~v
MtGlt SCMOOL -o-a._ •' WooODroe»e l
Ccn•• ~ al ~ 'i 'S ] T...oucv H •' ~ &-" l E Dorado •' •-v .,. J Ee.-•' aru-oi.'* > 15 INnt.,.. ~·.-•• ~ Ha~.
Tilundtlv
NIGH SCMOCM. -~ a! s.r>a ~:ta
)
FndlV
Hl<PH SCHOOL --,..~ •· (:-\'a Y•u _.; ·~ ~·:· .. "~ ~ ) ... .. "-t"•DC' ...... 00" .. E c s.ot" .~ ,,,, ... ·a:
'""--..~ -r -:-.. a..c" ,. htt·--,tt""' ~ ~,.
" «'• •\ C;,,...,rt,t -0 ) ~· I -... ·• ""'G'O"' Sf..a;• ~
Women's soccer
Tooa'f
HIGH SC~OOL -:..· ~ C.-o. ~ e• .....a;_••
S•a,~ i :
T~v
HIGH SCHOOL -•• •f'""\"• •' Ca~~··•": .a~·~: ... ,~ ... ,!""''.:·, . .-.OOC'tr"~_.. l
9'i.•fll.C-C" -... ~~ • , • ~ ~ :-~-\:~ ... ·e: ••
~b ..... ,,.,. s~~-l : :: \~·....::,a •• ... _-· ·.;·:r
e.a•-'
·w~v
Hl<PH SC..OOl -. ,. •••• ,,~-~)
Thu~cav
HIGH SC HOOL -r --"• • , a~· •' :'le••· \ ,._.,,. l y._. .. -• .t E: ":-J -'tt·-~·~ ... •'
-........ ""O""' S..•~ ~ ... f'•OO"'' ~f'~ • ::.a··
.... \ l "'~ ~ .t ... -e : 5 -. • :>•·• •·
..._!.; ... -.. ~t .. J;
HIGH SCHOOL -E _..., t -· "41 •
WtdM$d.IY
HIGH SC~ -::z\'a ~ a• ...._._. ::>.
Thursdn
HIGH SCNOO\. -":v-•a • ••lllr> 11 ()c:Q-
"t-Y.a" ..... •' E: ~-"'"'._ ~s....,.. a• ..,. __ •
~·~ ~~ ~ 0::.'Y~• ~ Nia" •• • ... -
Sa:C~,... )" \.r ... _f""', '• '9~~ .... ,,.~ ••
Es'a"'IC .a hOOOO'~ a· ··a:ivc:i .. -i.
FndaYC H~H SCHOOi.. -~ :, • ~ ":.J •.
\4IP• Oct'•""\; .......... ..,, .... E'-'•""'<• ·,._ .• ..s._....• 3 ... """' ,..._,. ~r e.e .......
~· ~. a• E Ca--..; ... :--... ·:1~· l
S.turdn
~ SCMOOl. -E~·a-.c..a -~ 1;
1 -E Ca-~ ·~·..-"'""""f'""'• ., a -A!\f'\' _-\ ... a·~,.. 'J.•a-ot -~__,....,. : • -
E~ ""'" ....... •· ~"t '-s t ·:-._-..... ,..,..-·
Strlmmlf16
W~Y
COl.LEGE -C>-.c '< ·~ X
P¥-. -"""" •"'C .. _...
S.NrdlY
COLLEGE -VC -. ••o-a •
>•""• .....,.. ·~ -~ SunQY
COLLE" -UC -·•••-•
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\.nJ 1: "'as hen.>. at the arena the
, • .~~c "'as e:l:lall v.orld reiers 10 as
· T'lc~P11 ··:ha: '-o I ranked .\hzona
le ' •rt.,., 2r3~('
. "r..irreil t>' a ;,.ea-01-m:t cro'4d_
J--~·J 111 th ':l.;s~ctball's 'ers1on ot
'r -, .. 'ia:i e~ a suppo~I~ O'er-
r .!', i-t"d "e"' \k\ . .:"O team Sa turd.a'
r. ~... \lopi;xd the top-ranled
\\ • J.a:<.· I :.g.; .... l' v.1nmnl! ~1-eal
14 : f-J " j • )C \ ': n.
.\ · :t n4 111 n1,,.. had beaten iour l<'r
1c.lT.~ an l' .limb tl thc "o l
rJn • .,g.. dug :~1i a qu1 .. l hole a nd
'll''Cr '~'"'ered fhe '>hots. that bad
fa 1en •or :he \\ ildcats 1n the Great
-\ asla h1.X1tt•;.it in 111ins. o'er \11ch-
1gan and S~rJCUSt" and at lo9'a
__ ,ns1stenth (J'!lc ~P ~on
~e"' \le'1~, spr :itcd out to leads
.:i ~: and :~-" berore the Wildcats
a.vi ba, l to ;--~ a· ha lftime
-\\1th point g..iard~ J1 mm' R~.
and Darrell \kG~ pro" 1~ ng most 01
the offense. the Lobos ne't'f trailed
and "'1thstood a )('("Ond-ha1I .\nzona
rail~ led b) fof"arC ~an Elhott's ~...,
points
.\ficN<U'd. ~cv. \k\lro coach
Ga!'\ Colson rctteratN the no-plaC'C-
hl.e-homC' theme
..I l no"' the,-1\\1ldca1' ha'C'
pla'ed 311 O'"t'f the 111ortd but I ha'<'
10 thUU. the en' 1ronrne-nt had ~'me
thmg to d o ~tth their sh<X't ng.."
Col~n said of .\n1ona·s 3-perce-nt
dfon
ElhotL v.ho 1v.1C't' got -\nzona
"'1thm a oos.l C't an the fin.il fi,e
m1nut~ shrugged otl the 1JC"a the
\\ hkats ~ere int1m1Jated "' the
("f\)\4 J
~,~ \1e"co JUSt outp\a~~ us.
The" pla~ro i grnt p.m<' ·· Elh ott
s;a1d ··Th.I\. s~ loud CTO"'d ~ lo"\. ~II
I l\-ioote· ~ 11h one se-cond left :;
UCI ...
From Bl
· E..nl ~ tn the ~ear l "''ll.S tr) ing.
Stte,cf'bod~ and "'antedto pla~,
Jrt"Shmen m ore. out no~ lbe\ rt &IOl
pla' 1n.f J!> murh I didn't' e-n, 1si0r
Flo.,d a<. the ·point guard and di ·,
en' 1S10n En gelstad being as good_.,
hc has be<"ome :
.... I let Vt oods mo' e to the outsiit
v. h1ch I should not ha' e d o ne 9, t
a,J error I think v.c·rc do•"-n :
p1a~ing the wa~ wt' w-a.nt to rm a l!>t
hJ.pp1er no "' than I was afte-r fi, · r
SJ\ga'l'\C'S.. ;.
Engelstad ha.> stepped to t he f~
fron t 3' the team ·s IC"adc-rand avoided
foul 1~, uble in r«ent games. so111t-
th1ng ~ h1ch plagued h1m t0 ~pail..
-He· s one oft he five bcs1 pla~-aiin
the conference this )e&r en the w.;i l
sec 1t:· \tulltg.an said. -wekncw~
bad the ab1ht\ There's never a.n~ qu~tlon about has abdit~.
Question was ho"" hard he Tt'O
and 1fhe "-Ould male good dccui
He suU d oesn ·l ma~e good dccasi.
all the ume. but he goes hard.. ..
H rs ixrfo rmanC'C'S 1ndude a ca~r
h\gh 4 1-poanl ou11 ng against Brad
v.hen the team srort'd 119 points
lost b' :'O The "'-nteaters· o~sr
full (ort't' a' erag1ng 92. pom .t
g.1me a figure v.h1ch promitn to •u ~11h tOOfcrt'nC'C games against tQils
"'hC' prefer to sk>• 11 down more •
The ~). ma~ be. gcttulg lbe . ~
pcnnts ~r p..ax defcMl'e a,·e"'14~0
drop as much
r----------.--~-----------------------i"(I) . FREE ! IUY~::=··· i STWOLUGIPIZZAS
I ua1e, eaesm· Azm i · FREE I I 0 ....
•• HUNTINGTON MACH •• ·:~-::,~::~~·r~ •• L.,,. Sito Plues wttt. W.ntkel pin•,_ Ch•••• ond vtt to lit..._
I ,..,, -....eti.4.• ••-I I MOl4S7 I I
P'ric-t TWOft ..... IV oo -Gl>d I 1s~1 o.w-.... & ~ .-a-of "°PP"'9Jordend Voi.d I ....., .......... ~~ at ~ c
I
...._..~... I coupon c:n,.o;9 ~, I
.. ,.,... I .... ~... I I . COSTA MllA °' Oft I ~1 ......... -.... • us1.1ne-s.. 1entt.rt....., I , . I . · ~'~ ~:~ :.~~; I : 1.IUlrClll!aaPlm I : IJUleC101~aPlm L------·-•••••••·---------------------
••
... ,.
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.
•
...._
Ferguson heads
Caltrans off
at the.on ramp
Gil Ferguson -tht' !':t'v.pon Beam Repubhcan ~mb1~ man often mucucd for his shoot-from-tht'-hap
approach -hu the bull~'c v.1th has \t'rbal \ olk) at lbt' state
IApanment ofTransPQnataon. . ~
If Oran~ Count) e\er nttded a gunslmgr-r. th1s. 1s tht'
ti mt' and the issue
T he no-good. lov.~ov•n 'anmnt called traffte gndlock
thrc.atem to bnng the tov. nspcopk to thr Jr kn~ v.h1le the
Cahrans" (a\alf) v.h1ks awu the ti me an ad,lhc Fo n
Sacramento 8 ) the umc help· am' t'S fro m o n h.1gh. tht'ff
might not be an~ thing Y.O nh 53\ mg here
So Ferguson. armed v.1th the latest examplt' of
o ffic1aldom·s foot~ragg.mg tn the face o f v.orstnang C'(l s1s.
shot Caltrans full of holes v.1th a fie~ barrage this v.ttk.
The das.a~mt'nt betv.ttn the Cit\ of Costa Mesa and
Caltrans 0 ' C'r tv.o proposed frttv.a~ ·ramps pro\ 1ded the
ammun1t1on for Fcrguson·s tmpas.saone-d prose
Cit) o fficaals accuscd Caltransofblockang1ts S 1.1 mall 1on
plan to use de\ eloper ftt-s to construct an on ramp to the
no n hbound San D1ego Frttwa~ at South Coast Dn' t' and to
build an o ff ramp at Faan 1c-and w 5.
Somehov. state and federal traffic planners concluded the
addnaonal ramps ~ere not nttdcd. lhat therewasn·t suffioe'nt
traffi to "'arrant the tv.oramps •
That 1s. the bureaucrats held thos.e notions unlit
f t'rguson hll thcm v.1th both barrt'ls
Ferguson rounded up a pos.se of other mcmbt:rs of the
CQunt~ ·s ..\ssembl~ dclcgauo n and fi red off a lcner-tht' lCl.l
of "' h1ch appears in toda~ ·s ~Hers column on this page -
peppen ng Ca.ltrans for its .. arrogant altitude and burcaUCTauc
aJ oofnt'S.S:· .\blast o f .. thinh 'e1led nton1on-<Ynd a round or
tv.o of "obsun~ ··apparent!) coaxed some heads out of thc
Sacramento sand
..\ .. ,c~ franl .. m~ung bctv.ttn reprcsentatJ\t'S of
· CaJ trans.and the cit~ follo"'ed Gunslinger G il. '-'hose lcttcr
v.assull smol ing v. hen the tv.o s1dt'S con' ened sat an on v. hat
"'as descnbed as a .. ,er} productl\C .. meeting.
.\pparentl). the peace pipe v.as passed around after a
mutual agrttmcnt v.as re'.acbed to build the t"'o ramps as soon
as possible
Granted. ll 1s possible .the disagreement v.as no thing
more than a masSJ\e m1s understandang v.11h both sides
shan ng blame and that It might ha\ e ~n rt'SOhcd v.tthout
Ferguson forcmg a sho"'dov.n.
ll as JUSl as hkt'l~ the project m ight ha' e ~n pmne-d
do"' n at .\path) Pass m Sacramento for months v.1thout
Ferguson·s fi re
Kcq1shootmg. Gil. v.e nttd a transportation trailblazer
Israeli conduct
hootang and l1lhng dem onstrators. blo"'mg up the
homes o f suspected terronsts. putting peo ple in Jail "'llho ut
fo rmal charge o r tna l. restncung the press -all this sounds a
lm le like South ~ftica.
Instead these things ha' e ~n going on la tel~ m the areas
oc up1t'd b~ Israel since the S1 \ Da~ \\ar m 196"l.
The Reagan .\dm1n1s1ra1 1on had proper gro unds for
cnu mng the harsh response b~ Israeli troops to de mon·
strattons b~ Palest101a ns "'ho are fed up v.i th the ocrupauon
and their scco nd<lass status in lsrat'I. ...
B~ reacting "'llh such unrestrained n olentt. the lsrat'h
go,t'mment pla~s an to the hands ofthc anstigators.
Israel 1s dcpendent on Amcncan aid. espccaall~ an arrns
Thts gJ\CS the 'nited St.ates good reason to demand that
Israel condu t itself in such a wa~ as to JUSt1~ the rontanued
ald If 1t refuses. tht' atd oneda~ •i ll ha~10 ~1op
Alba.DJ' IOrr. J l>m:l«n t-B tt'aU
Turtle soup
~a tunle'S ha' c no pohtacal lobb~. thc~ don., 'otc The~
do n·t breathe unde'r water cuhcr. and man' of thC'SC
endangered anamals drov.-n Y.hen the\ are caught 1n the ncts
that shnmp fahcnncn use in the Gulf of ~k"co ....
But bcgJnn1ng neu )car. shnmpcrs "111 be rcqu1R'd to ust
tunJc e\cludo r de' aces. or TEDs.. on lbc1r drag nrts.. -·
Some m th~ tunic 10dust.r) arguc that using TEDs v.111
cost each boat as much as $45.000 per )car an lost catch.._
These a~ not pttlt) animals Th~·~ no use as pets.
Tunle soup 1s a 'lable mcnu Hem onl) m ... .\.lace an
\\ onder1and ··So"' h\ ~om about lhrni'?
Btt3use each Ume an anamal $pc'C1CS lx-comcs ntanct.
human beings eittant uash ano ther hnk m tht'ar own "' c~1' ang
chatn of C:\.IStCDC't'.
BnttleM'e f ~''-> llft~
Pilot welcomes comments
The 1:411) Pilot ~lcomn )OW opmioas OG matkn ol public
in1etnt
Lc<tten and &onstt &ntcln of rommmLU) must be llSDCd. Tiie)
should be t>lJird or dealt) •onttm and smt IO LETTERS so &ht'
EDITOR. OaJl)-Pilot. P 0 Bo• t S60. COSIA Mesa. CA 92626.
Pleaie.andudc ~our addrns and t~ number so Wt we ma)
,cnf) autbonlup If ou ~fer to mm a \-crbar'Staltmmt. }OU ma) all our \\'FR£
USTE! I G \dCpbone number-642-6086-and lea'<' a m:orded mcuav P1ca1iC ees> tbesr mcm11C1 bnd.
ECOAST ..., ...
...
a.. .. ........... .... ..... .. ,...
(.al_ ....
OiiM ..... .............
..
.. Onnge Coes! DAlt..Y PflOT Monday,~ 4, 1911 * • •
· · ... Deukmejlan has been cn?ng co r e-create the I 950s and 1960s
ratherthandealf4'fth the real/tie ofthe 1980 and 1990s. ·· -
Duke lacks leade'rship
on critical state issues .,
"CR-'ME,10 -George Deu·
l-nKJLan 1s a dttcnt son offeUo" and
M·s bttn a pas~bl~ dkctJ\e gO\·
emor for fi,e \eat'S
lXulmeJtan h.as done pren~ m uch
v.h.a.t one m1gtu tuH c:xpccted. based
on his long record 10 pubbc office.
The~ ha-.e bttn fe-v-m\Slerie-s lo ~h e k v. quirks lo pfobe. f~
~rpo~ to fathom ..
If, ho"eHr stab1ht' w bttn
lXul.meJtan'utro ng su1i. 1t abo 1s hts
most glan ng de_fiC'te-DC') as gG\ em or or
a st.a u ""~ onh consunt 1s cca~-
leu chanJc ·
.\ ~ear a,o. Deukmqian v.01s in-
a ui urated (or his second term. b.a' 1 ng
v.on a smnh1n.g re-dcctton. He
1.'0uld. morco' er da1m somrthmg of
a broader mandat~ ~Ott Re:publicans
also ~ p ins 10 state lcpslau'e
racn
It v.u a eok1en opponum~ for
lXul ~11an to ~ u tM m<>mni L to
u ~ the poll ucal capn.al ht had
a~umulated to c:kal v.1 th the st.ale's
pm!> ng pol~ ·~ man~ of• tcb
h.ld b«r neg)«\c'd dun~ •lll-'o-th.e·•lspgo,emonb1p of"~
km Brov.n
\\·uh a po~uoo that oontm~
to ~\pand a.nd become e'er more
CL.lturall~ compk• a.nd ,."'Ith a grov.-
m& and tncre.lllflgl~ dJ'ene e«>n-
om~ .. Cahfomi.a faces a unique set of
problems an such areas as cdUC311on.
1rans.poru11on housing. land ust.
r~uon and en' 1ronment.al pn..lt'l:'-
uon
!'o sute no nauon. no SOCld· in
the h1slof'\ of manlmd b.as dealt "'llh
such compk"I' Whether C&J1fo-nia
conunues to ot'rn the qu.afi~ of hfc
and opponu.nit~ that b.a 'e ~ ns
d1s.ungu1sh1 ng qi..ahues or bccorres a
socu.I cnspool m lhe ~I st CTnlUf1 a
loose collccuon of mutualh "losu e
tnbc-s ckoends largd~ on uie puohc
~ poh~ do: is.ans ~ing made no••
. That's ~ rcahl\ OM ttut [X.,.
L.meJia.n. as w sale's go' emor
cannot e'ade no matter hov. much ~ v.ould pref(( w east(( cho1c~ of
t~ past
Often. n has Sttm~ Dn!ltmeJt.an h.a~ been ~sng to rt<reatC"the 1q). I\
and 1960s rather than dcaJ v.1th the
realt l>n of t~ l and I~
h v.ould not ~ ~SM' for exu .. me1tan to '1-0ble hu . ron-
So(T'\ au\ e pnnctples to dcaJ v.1th the
pou~ 1ssu~ ronfronung the sutr
There art c c.n 5.('n all' e a pproar hes to
~ ISSU~ 1lu1 ha\ ( J USI as much
potential for efT«11,enns as hber.al
ones perhaps m~ It ~ u e
comm1tmen1a.nd 11n~gmauon
But lXuJ •. mc;ian (\en attn hts rT-
eim vn \ 1 .. ton w demonstrated a
prderarxe for· the pass1,e mana-
~! appro. .. h ratberthantheact1\e
l:ader'\h1p approach
In nu inaugural and Ute of the
tale aJdt(<\!oC'S a \Q I a lXu-
io..meJ1an did~~ h p~ 1CT to some of
tne P"'oih. poll\.: 1u~ faclng t~ s~lt' but v.l\en 1t came to offen "!
• ~.au' e luuon1 and follo•m~
thro -gh ... th d«1s.,e a..1ion the
~rforma.n1.e •as ~s than stefb t
Tile for eumple lrl'l'-poruuon
o~ of the most gbnnE probkrn'
fa1.ing the sute
ince the mtd-19 -~ lht number o:
'eh1 .. le-s on CalifQmta roads and
h1,ghv.a~ s ~in~ b) nearl~ balr
a nd the largtr urban ams fl!CT nnr·
gndlocl Local offi~.als. bus1nn<-
lca<k'r'S and JUSt plain ou.uns a.rt
cl.lmonng for ik-uon
l::)eulme11an sa~s ~e v.~1s 10 buuc
mo~ h1ghv.3~ s and undentle effo-;.s
to spread out ;ind redu~e tlv dmunJ
or the 0' erl ded '" s•em but tus
[Xpanment of Tran~ruuon ~.as
bttr: bogtd do• n a.nd hie ti.as failed to
DAJt
WALTERS
~t fonn a praruca.J ana polmcall.
<Kce-pi..abo.e plan fo· f;unc,ng and
de-11\er.n! the m'4h-nttdcd pro~ts
-1r par. ~u~ ne r-.as refa~ 10
s.anction an 1~~ m the pso ':'Ii(
t.a' th2t s the most rauo na. and
fa1rr-s1 means of finanont Lr"lH,\po!'·
tat1on
Instead CXu~ 'Tie,~n ~s ~
a-.mv..e d ) a.no .~T ... 1enl ~
~e "' CT": s st1. t td r...~ n ~
~s.at~re. Jnc :21.c'C o,~ ~ g ,.
C:""T~nu tv ra1~ ~es to buakt sa:e
"' g:."v.a~~ • : .. ,...JJ.~ lmk sense
I: .s r :x?~f " ;l3SS:'~ 3~:"t' :~at r;:"f'Om 1~ l1ttl e ·c."11e,. fo1
:'<"lcag:Jr.n'.! mt.: •Or.'>:5.. o-:e ::U•
~~ ll>e :,..Al ~O Ol~
Bui lX-J.m~J~n \OOu.a ~ 'T'uR
tt'o.ar a~ e ~ -u~ h.e SJ'!v.J .J be
0~1 r: fro:-t ~;1·:ig on": t:'le a~'!Wia
or a:-: ..,n :'uJ ~-ging :he l~ satare
to p .. : as .Je ts .. ""' n tendcTX ~ 1~•-vd
"Tl"le' a'lt p-n~rn.ansl'l p and ~1Jd..
ing the pubL ...... r~-s_.s nttnsaf' fo~
.....1 J anC d~"lS -.e a..-uon
It's t111s paS$,-. t' ~t 1s dr -. .. ,
x-ne .:··ex~ 1e ar s stron~1 po.1·
1: • .a J . •~ -~ lfl Repu .on ~~
Lu ~ a:-c r-... s n~s e-adm -'.A;' t~
·•a
T ....,~ ""ans 'oi :'IQ :-r-r lX..i·
r'. a~ ::i:-:-:-:n~ !>'~ upa~ n '""'l.l
aff~. · :"'e e' ob:•r.-· Cal fom · r
cc -: -.... e · <.ll .., ,. : • • s dt"
Du ff' alters f C • syw/JnlH
C9Js.auwt
Speaker-Wright tough nut
for bank officials to crack
T ..
. JICI
a.us. i
L£THR S
DAR W ALTSa
Col• .....
-~ -
Caltraris
puts up
roadblock
in Mesa
To lht E.dJ l....:-
Lcue• :~ D. -a L \\ alfOCl. lmrrim Di:~ • r 4 iv-i.a Depranmml al'
Tnns~" "'..l'M.. -~--ramcnto. CA
i).:-4. \.f • ·~ .HSO!l •
o\c -... ~ .. ~~ earned I.bat )-'UGI'•
<h'~"'i:n: : • de'T.and.mg that two
o•Tr.:~;-p·v.;«ts on J~S. m
C ~~ \!~ ~ je.3\ed for .a \CUaad
;i· ~ -:-i • n ~· T-. s is bl.It tbe lalest
:, ....... ;:-e • :=:' fa111..1It" of Caltrans IO
-C'\ r .1 • .,-.< .<k-Q...a•~ addrcu ...
~· "" ~E , __ ,-r., .:n!Ms1n 0ra.o#COUD-..
\A. e .. 3. e ·epcatcdJ~ •'&med wt...
'&el: ~.a1.>s.e of the ~ca.rs of too
1·:lc tOo !..lle 1rcat~l b'I. the stale a.~~ ,o ... r del)iU1mntL a ·rugbt..m.aft
.,.a., :x-1r.£ :reated fM our motonst.s
a·.: o .. • ;:.onom~ lh31 v.oi.Jd cnpplie
on~ of tl-e most d~namx rq;oos of
i:-~ s~te anc ab end' affect an of
(, 11.;M.4 •
T 'It' arrogant annudc and bureau-c-::· • ~ ·f~s reflected b'I. c.altrans
I'" ·-.:~ 1r.s~nce r es in the fatt of
.. ,.ammg5c
T~e is oo cu~ ~ to the
: ..... ~: , t: of the cit~ ·s pioposa.ls
... ,u-o::.r kdc:. and sut.e S'stnn and
sta:-.J.arcs c.:i. . ~ o:.rr ~ to ns
~
To d spute lbe dccrnons of t.br
~k-:ted C" t\ CaJncil ofCosu Mesa to
tOentl ·~ &nd pnon l1U llS Joa] needs
~ :J s.e ts lvcal fuods 10 soh e ns ow.12
prc.blems. as Slmpi~ outrageous'
lnstnd ofanrmpuni to impose ns
p.--e'eren...:es ~our depian:mcnt shoukl
~ do.ni ("\~th ng possible lO
llk. v Mmotiat.e dC'C'ls.ions •1Uc:h l.tt
.tppropnllet ~ ocal
Tat. e~ docwnmu i.ndx:at.e
!t':a: Ca.mans u first oackcd the l-405
"•i ram ix as co nee"' cd ~ sw.ed t~· ~..o ... tcl ~.W1~ for a negan"~
d~-~rauo: vr. the en'tronmenta.I
am pa.."1 ~po.~
B:.:: ~ o-.i • depran.mcct. the docu-
:ne:; ~ ' .. n~ sho• dldui about-Ott
~anh ~~.a.f~ LO lU ~trsl mttt·
1np ;. o.!l lht 01\ "t ou an oo-
.:! 1~~~iog or •'1Dt lO ~
i.:>eu aiu h ~ ~ o' U>C' aced b tbC'
;>" ·u a ~nned. ·
.\nG ~Min CY m<n to tbt Poust
: ~~ th•~ tbe a.~t ral.lO!Wie for
·~ .. de~·~( a. •--a .. s .~ r~ dcm.aodu::ag
._._ i ·~ t--a.m..itv.-a~ oti,cc'tJ''t
l'"' -• !> ... ~! a· I'.' ~·e fut~. ahd ~)
\ • . " :-. t -10 the k'tln'S :S.S.
s.; ..., • " •..3-'ol.an F -u zdlit bas •TU·
te-'J-:M FH\\ .\ opposing ~
1.-rp. ~ requ1~nt -~
\\,lw Al!'ll-. 'N led.
T:u<. lhtnh \ nlcd extornon and ~~: IS tOta.l ~ unacttplabk We
~n&r C'ocan1~ ~mt>I~ mcmbc:n
drm.and !hat )OU an.! C~~ curt
e'er. effor. lo ensu~ \hal the of.
f ram p.s fo· l-1 5 are C'\pcdned so that
1 '") are -nd~ consU\KlJOO b) Mvdt
1 .. ,~ a'" pn.i 1\ pbnoed
l~.
Orangr Co~1~ ~~men
Dmru$ 8row.'Tl
'oln F nz:zdk
Jobo a..c-.u
GtJ fcrgusoD
RouJobmoa Radw'd~
405ramps
needed in
Costa.Mesa
..
l l oD4' 1 .. H ~-o~·
-----~
•
..
'
l
,
CALL 842-5878
-----·-
7~-<.;K.XJ
-------
associated !
:;,. .. -. --... ~ _.,..,,. . ,• -~.. . .,.
r
$ell y .. ,,.,.,,,,
Cll CletllfW,
At-5671
for information
& surprisingly
low cost.
(
FROM NORTH ORANGE
FROM SOUTH ORANGE
lo i A ~ V"'ED ~.-. &
2 !:l)Pt,t S€i:><l-S800
~00 3C dose 10 [;Ct>
86-1. ·c;,·~ f>.'S-'74'J
\
----4 iines 7 days ~: pwty frif Ho Real
'10.80 = =~"..;~
HUNTINGTON
BEACH
llaftacu
•tnlekfw .... ,., .
.Wwwtl8el
T-11M _._....
~
clw='fle4'•
Hl•lb'
The Daily Pilot has a new way to turn
your Hidden Treasures in .. to CASH
$. 80
with
prepayment
4 Lines-7 Days s 10.80
No cNlrges In copy °' anc.ebtlon. Pnvat~ pa~s only. No C°'"""'oa1.
R~af Estat~. AutomotJV~. Boatmg or E~nt Ads. ~ ii no pnc~
hmtt to what yoo can adv~m~ It you ne1."d to set your couell. high ct\afr
or any unus~d ~rchandut>-c.111 ~ Otwly Pilot C~ssifird stan.or ~ UY
coupon~. Malto=
llilfl'lll
Daly Plot. l)() W . Say St.. COIU MeA. CA 92626
642-5678
PHONE NAME
ADDRESS_~ --------------------------
crrv __ STATE ZIP ~----------------------------~ AD COPY: 4 Ii~ "1inimum. ~ppropriat~fy 4 words per U~.
•
=
At~ you a subscriber to the Dady Pilot? dtdf 1JM; YES / NO
Tll 111.f PUT
new.ta., ..... ....,u.nus
LLL
SERVICE
DIEC TORY
CAUTOOAY"
&11 .. Llll
r
,
Gl R"''TEED
'400 PEP we:ac
WfTH POTENTlAl. TO SlOOO PER WEEK
LARGE fCSUR[O YEttelE ~ D
v.~ IN YOUR O'
1£1C80R>«)OO
LOTS Of OPPORT\.Hn TO
CROW WJTH US•
NO INVESTMENT REQUIRED
CALL MR. INGALLS
(714l 892-1449
.. ,~
--~ •c111111r ....., .......... r;.-
1 ••• .._ ..
I • ....,.
SALES CLERKS
MIERWEWS C*
WEDNESDAY NIGHTS
• FROM 7 -9 PM
at: --en.. v..., ,.,..,
.... 1 EJ I~
For more inf ormatioo call
(714) 474-6109
CUSTOMER SERVICE REP
2 positions available in our customer
service dept.
Must have pleasant phone per-
sonality; typin g a plus. Learn valuable
office skins and earn $4.50 to start.
Hours are Mon.-Fri. 8 A.M. - 5 P.M .
and 11 :30 A.M. -7 P.M.
Cati 642-4321 ext. 20 1 to schedule an
appointment. Ask tor Guy or Patt.
$ $ EXTRA CASH$ $
T .. Dair Pitt
/),.... ....
Delivering the Dail Hours are
approximately 1 PM Mon-
day to Friday. -•·a~ .. ~ AM Saturday
& Sunday. R or truck, proof
of insurance a print-out re-
quired. Call 642 . ext. 202 for ap-
pointment or ap person at The
Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa.
i
er.,..~ DAILY Pfl.Ol t t.tonday. ~ 4. 1981 In
~cmt pt
c4J ,.u:M, """' "" tu/ Ut ctaJ ,i/ietf
.. U2-5&l8 -
Work in the ever expanding
Newspaper Promotton f~d. If
y0u are self-motivated and hke
working W1th teenagers. this may
be the opportunity you ve ~
waiting for
$400 PER WEEK
(To Start)
W ith Potential
to $1000 PER WEEK
LARGE INSURED
VEHtCLE REQUIRED
Lots. of Opportunity
to Grow With Usl
CALL ... mlGALLI
(71C) 891-1 .. 9
,... ..
"M Fn l•l-111 .., ::,... ~ng A.Ac>
~ rJC. • a n cono M..IS'I
~ 2~ ...
THEODORE
ROBINS
FO RD
~= ...... ,Joi ! • ~
c~u ... 1~.a o.~.:
nG IS l
PMT-r.D. WE
• LOOUIGFC.
CAU. ._ IUllS AT
(714) ~2·14"
Motor Rou1es
available in
Costa lesa
Huntingto1 Beach
Fountain Valley
NO COLLECTING
NO SOLICITING
Deliver One Day a Wee -
Must have dependable car
and proof of insurance.
Call 842-1444
Ask foe Joanne Craney
If you re 10 or older. a rob as a ~
Gamer m.g111 be JUSl your sae Just send m
thtS coupon 0t can ~2-4333 Routes are
ava at»e no1\
If SI•...,. It I
Wy Netelfrir.
= ft:S! 1 d I e to find out more about =,I
lf'9 a Datt)' Ptk>1 camet
Name I
I AddJess ----------I I I
I Phone ~ • I I._., ..... ,... I
II m~-k JI c....._ca ma
----~-.---...i~-
G-..... -•••Nmm ,, .. .... ,. _ _.. .. ..... , ... ~ . ... _.__..
14 lZ» ~ ..... It "rn!
... 'il ,.. ~1lAl!il
.. us.
A iJSB 1• -llt&U
'1 1b &1 ..-1975
Sates -Servtee
Parts -Leas.ng
REVlE
BMW
135-3171
1500 Auto Mall Dr
Santa Ana
5 Frwy at Ed1nge
IPU 7 IAYS
Ser•~ ~rs Mon-Fr
7 30 am 10 10 O'Tl
642-5678
NEW & USED
CARS & TRUCKS
Ready for Immediate
Deliwery
,, :lf" v;. )!;·. :~ ?···~ So:, Pc~· & I ., Oe; :
__ -:~· •f ::a·~ :-.!a~ & Da 1 ;;!-'? ~
Sales
Leasing
Service
Parts
IRVINE AUTO CENTER
1-soo-e31-33n 714-380-1200
~ABERS. TERLI~G
SALES ' PARTS
"'ER\.ICE BODY SHOP
LEA. ING
~..., Harb< r Bh d ..
c~td ~te .. a 540-9100
&?ms. SEAVY.l L~~G &
NEW LOCATION'
'SANTA ANA AUTO MALL
1500 Auto .... I Dr" Santa Ana 135-3171
Newport 55 Frwy. at Edinger
SMJs Dept open 1 days Serw:e Hours Mon -tt 7am-1pPm
0 Sterling()Fl!.MW
SALES -SEIYICE • LUii• • PllTI
-IYEISUS IEUYDY IPllW.lm -
0 S< >Utll ( :( )Uflt) ·_f(j;;_ lt -
Thank You For Making Us =1 In
Amerl~ Come In and See Why
.
Z-•> -• <
:>i··~ :it.er M $ .. • e · ~ 30 Sdl c. .: :. ..,.
$e-• C" "" ic' • JO · 6 C: ,..
,_,,, &£ACH lkYO HUMTWCTOtil M°'"CH
> ~ -,
i
714/ 142-2000
:S..,£• ....
;>4 ;;.
' -11
PACIFIC
OCEAN
FOUNT A1PJ-----
\IALLE •
SALES
LEASING
SERVICE
PARTS
lift -M••n 1111, ••• llT IUll CALL ONC OF THESE
1
....., ~ S::. ._!l'4~_!~~ ~. ~~u DEALERS FOii THE IEST IUYS
8 JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS
JJ!Of OllMI St. -"'-•CM l-.utlon
1001 Ou.II St -,._..,. Dl•lelon
' -
THE BEST BUYS
IN ORANGE COUNTY
ARE ON THIS PAGE
CALL ONE NOW!
,.
l"Sl\'ERSITY
.. \LE & ER\"ICE
OLDS~IOBILE G~IC TR 'CK
1850 HARBOR BL \"D .• Costa ~1esa 540-9640
HOXDA ~IOTOR CAR
HARBO~BL\"D .. Cosu M~sa ~0-0713
3 bl.Och so. of -fv.1 .
Allvll'tlse 11 Tiiis Piii
Call far Details
714/842-5878
0 ~ABERS ~~~: CADILLAC
.. _~--
:?<1 YEAR:' SER\.JC E I~ ORA\GE COC \"n·
S:\LE.,~ LEA~l~G
. ER\"ICE :\LL ~lAKE.:3
PART"
BODY ~H OP
26i10 Harbor Bh cl. Cosca Mesa 540-9100
. 0 HO USE of IMPORTS 101
fi' MERCEDES -BE~~ \J 213-714 llllCOE
714/Sll-7250 • 714/750-7201
213 /!21-ISll
r ... Su..ce
s.a-•a A"a Frttwaf at 8eac St.-d
G CONNELL CHEVROLET
Zl21 ..,._, lh~., C.st1 Mesa
I
Over 23 Years Serving Orange Count)
Sales • Service • Leasing
5"-12H ~ P1rts Ult 54'-Mtl
a.t()M)A'r FA OA 't' ! 30 AU 9 00 PU
$ATUR0 A'f 8 30 AM -6 00 PU Su~OAV ,,, ·o 00 A.., -s 00 p~
C) HUIE CllST 'EEP /ElliLE = l 11 Tiit ll1st f 11
#tr1 !HI S.s F11 I rem
--OD1n2e. SALES L-Oa"St • seqvace
·-• •• • ltASI G 54~ • ACCESSORJES OEPl
0 t E CAMPBEi I
NISSAN/~~
• t.w ''"9' •Ne G 1mm"1at • ~eot S.'-'ctJOn
• ffMnd1y P..ple • f•ceUenl Sent<•
H l1 ~~ loi: ··~·:: le«
THE BEST BUYS
IN ORANGE COUNTY
ARE-ON ~HIS PAGE
·CALL ONE NOWI
..
I
DAY, JANUARY_-4, 1988
~--
William. actor Jimmy Cagney's brother
and local developer. succumbs at Hoag
vnclc had bttn in poor health for 20 · He ao('d 111 ntarh a doztn films
)tars dunng ~ C/30!, • ncludtng 1434"s
Caglle). thc founh offhe cbJJdtm. -PaJooU-"-tlh J1mm' Du:ran1t sht
'-'as born Ma rch ~O. 1905. 1n ~ satd Ht aJso '-'OrlCd v.1th such
) ork Cu~ Holl~ ood na~ as Ra' \,f1lland and
BJ PAUL AJlC8IPLEY ·.-...........
Wilham J. Cagne'), rcaJ cstatt
O"Q&natc. Hotlrv.ood producrr and
brother of late actor J1mm) c~.
died Suncb~ He •'ll 82. Caanr>. a long-ume rcsa<k'n1 of
tsr8efi military plans to
deport 9 PalestiniansJ AS
Nation
2 young women survive
10 days of freezJng
temperatures in car.I AS
Entertainment
Robin Williams draws
praise from the OJ he
portrayed in "Good
Morning, Vtetnam."/AI
Indez
Advice and Games
8oletin Board
Business
Qaasifeed
Comics
Entertainment
Opinion
Public Notices
Sports
Weathe<
. A9
A3
A6
86-7
. A10
A8
85
84.8
81-4
A2
;..:e-al>On Beach. dleci.of a hean attack
Sunda) morning at Hoa& Memonal
Hospital. satd his n~. 1 nT} C~C)
Mom son
Mcimson. daughltt of latt actrcu Jean~ c~ MofTUOn and also a
,...;e"' pon Beach restckn L sald her
His career included stJnlS as an Grqo~ Ptc
~or. t.ak nt ~n1 and &ssocutt Wh1k an assoc1~1t procfoct"r "'llh
produttr a1 \\a mer. Bros. before he \\ amt r Bros ht" 11. orl..('d on ~uch
and J1mm) formed Cagnt) ~ fi lms u ··capu1ns oftht Oouds· and
dun1o ns in 194~ ··Yanktt Doodit Dand~ ·· 1~ q~~
-He v.as tht business brains 1n w film that camt'd J mm' CagM' an famtl).-\1omson said -HC' mJD· -'Qdem, ..\v.ard ·
~his brother's career -.\tier (ormmg C :?::~~' Produmons.
Champion of handicapped,
civil engineer for HB retires
•1 &OBERT BAB&.ER ... .._ .......
Btll Waddcll. the man •ho proba.bi) dtd lhe most to
make w beach and pubhc bu1kbng.s accn.sibk 10 the
bancbcappcd. has m.tred as an aUlSlant C1Vll enginttr for
liK Ctty oJ. Hantu~1on Beach. '
e\CnlS for handlca~ \OUngs1en and has bttn
anstrumenuJ in w 1nstallau"on of noise dt' tees at traffic
s1anaJs 10 ~nrul bhnd and \1suaJI~ 1mpa1rcd ptO'* to
safel) ~s busy rnltnttettons in tht VQ of Huntington
Center along Edinger "venue
25 CE. 'T
he prod~ such films as -a.ood on
tht Sun-1n IC)4.a 1n v.btch both tK
and bts brolhtr ~rform(d Ht aJso
produced bJohnn~ C~ utel~ .. 1n
1943. ··TM Tu~ of ) our lJft .. tn
1948. -K.tu Tomorrov. Good~t·· 1'"
J950and -..\uon1s ntheStrttts· in
J 953 J1mm\ a nd sister Jeannt lO-
st.arrcd tn -"T'M T unt of) our Lift ·
.. Tne~ h.a.: ~ "'n<· r~heT e"~
T • l·><! • n · .: .r."' g lht 40s and
!> -sne ~ .: J m.,. \ sl>('nt a lot of
llmt' ~{'·~ r ''" ;--&ach v.1tb 8Jll.
~ ., • pon Sea.ch ID
-. · • "CC'ame OM of
.:. -, · the B.a~sh~
In fx't. 1ht Ca~ fam '~ inc ... d. '
1ng brothh's Ha~ and Edv.ard -
-!:-..
-· _ -t.'l' J'l\estmtn1s..a
· '~ .·('d-ahobb~ -both doct0r1 -v.a~ ··11gh1 11tt
\1om son \i1d Plea.e 8ee. FILll/ A2}
Commuters on
train to get lift
to Mesa plaza
9 )' ~1'1FER WEBER °'_..., .......
South Coast Plu.a empio·~ • "t'C
of frttv.a~ gndio..i. soon v.111 "2. t a
d1fft"reot v.a) of gcn.ng to v.or 1• ;n~
h'e 1n south Orang<" Count~ bL:· ~he
ahemau'e -.on·1 . mt c~p
Tht p~ogram dubb('d Fastra,-. s
\Chcdul('d ·o begin Jan I af'C s
~agntd I r "'Orltl'\ .i.ho comm.t<"
from tht sou:h count' 10 the uth
Coasl Mau ' t ... nil~ ~~man 03!'1
(ar1~n sa.d
Emp10)C't'S of uth Coast Plaz.a
To .... n Centtr and utr Coan P1az..a
\,ill.age V. \I be tht ftf"St {' glbk I .\t
the 1r.u n-and-,an S\Slt"M
l rtd~ the Fastrai piar emp "tt'S
~ 011 .... , ~3 r .l' :i.:n·~ .. ~ San
( <"ml"rH(' • "-.ar Ji.U." { 4r \l:.lflC
~:.1:1 n~ '..:.-.~ • ~he s.a.,u -\na
RC!Jon~ T ~ .... ~ ~at 'I e .. i~ and
i-:'! o::.: ~ • •IC' •• ~ 1 nh< •inal :-g to
. ,:_a \1~
-\ ruund·tr ;-•.irt" "' S 1: tJi tro:n
\.. -J :.l.l.. • .1p ~trar... af'\1 aooul S ' ;; •re,.,.. ';)a-tmC'r.tt
T nat '1"C'arc. a .i.vr tr ""'1 uses
F :is~ral C'' <T• .fa. •:om \an Ju.an
( ilP ~!rano .... ~JI -.;x C S25.~ a month
~ trar.~;>or~~ ' .a.'"'..! e~J)O\C"C'S
.... ~Oli•l: -:it"ic Sa'" C' ..... er'<'•"O""l I
~pt nd mor~ t'lar-S ; • • lo ta t lhc
1ra1 ... ,a .. ~·ail cat:~~
.\ :ii ~~,.. ('~r' .. "'\(' (. \l..s \1~
I Pleaee eee TR.Al1f I A2)
.Engine loss aborts
John Wayne flight
•l' TM Ast«Ute4 Press
.t. four-eng.t rli( -\mC'.,can -\t'"h~
)C'l "'1th -q pt'Oplt a board ~ iC' "
retum('d to Joh~\\ a'.,(' -\1rpor aftC!'
losing pov.c· 1r -'It tn.gmt ... ~..,,~
aft.er 1akt0ff o-: a "'tt-l cnd +1 gm
offiC1.a ls said
The 8-\t 14<-arl1-:xr v.t"' -,
passt'n~ and four crc-v-members
l.1nd('d about 1 15 p m Saturd.a'
becaust oftroublt in 1ht 'l.;o : t nginc
said airhnt spo esman D.i.n \\ n tt
'o o~ aboard F11&}u :519 i..cad·
ing frorr Orangt Count) tc \a.-
Fran.:-1s.;o v.a~ tnJurtd
T~ S;nk~"1an ~~-= ·:'I(
P• • ~ ~('\.. ' r, t -~!----" 1 :.~('
a1r;:io'"' .i• :-· ~autt ~:-an ·r" ;>.:-. sca;'.'.l eo• .1,m~o-
thrtt t:i • , ~u• .. -: "'"3' ... • -to
the .a1;;x;-... , jt'("'J.)!'C :o i ... ~ a'"n.~
.1nd come "4.... \\ n.a· s.a1d
T;,cp ··eqi..c-•e-dt!l:!:~mc~-~·
fi-:-~ ... :'-... ,.: \~ .. ~ !"'\ •a'-')o..2.'('.• --·1 II.{' -' :he
ir -nd 3-..! ~"' ~ "", ·ire" <"n! n<"S..
s.a .; pa.ss... -"' -Ba ·"-l· _ (a-'-"' "'
F -es: 'l -
..... e P3' .. gc~ •l'~ ;-.. • _i:,. .arc ~
ate• fl·g-.. -;,, .. 1 ..... ,~ ..... ~'I
Fran~,~ .!' .! : P ....,
.Holida-y
highway
toll rises
to3inOC
By PAll. .\RCBIPl.E)" °'_.._ .......
Wadddl •'ho·s been confined lO a •'heddwr since
be su&mi a broken beck 10 heh school pmoastacs... •-as
the pud1na fortt in buiklina wheelchair ramps at lhe
beach so that b.ancbcappcd people could watch the v.-a' es as Hun~ St.alt 8e8cb.
.. He dtd so mucb l&-ma.ke t~ 01~ acttmbte t-o ~
handJcappcd.... saJd Huoun11on Beach Communi~
ScnlttSSupnintto<knl Jim EnJk ··Ht u~ hucontacU
v.hietl IDOIX) was scarce to ~t mort 'oluntttn for the
procrams. He·s a suptt humann.anan ..
. . Cal1fom 4 C'C th~ nauon 1n traffw:
deaths o'er •he t \lt'nON ~ vcar·s
-....C"t' erxh1tl J~ ea'' 'V.~dyi~
He also •"U a Jod1na advocate for <k\.dopena 1ratls for lhe handicapped at the beach and for making Cit) Hall
1bc library and the cwland House and other SJtcs
ilcccssibk to the 1mp&1.ml. '
.. ..
He's also coordarwcd a fish.ti'f& cktbS'' and other
-..
Waddell. 63.a rn>dcnl onn inc. said ~-11 ronttnut 10
sen e as a member of the bo&rd of d11't'C'tors for the March
of Dunes and v.11l sull •-orlc to 1mpro'e the rond1uons for
hand.tapped )Ounpten and aduJts
W adddl v. ho rctt1' N ckgrecs 1n eniinttnng at
UClA bu bttn emplo\~ -.1th lbc Cll' of Hunung1on
8cacb for 15 yca.n.. HlS ~urtmen1 was officuJ last "''ttL
-
819 I'• e. ••Ht p • a a ·~ c1aml Ilsa. acne ..It' ta el Olit I ... ...,. ti-...... C..........
1111111111 -•-r • ... '~"_,....at C.1 •• Ml Illar ......... . .
.. st.ale roaas , .xiing threr m
Onngr Count~ •
The most f'f'ttnl lataht' k>calh •'U l"C\.'Ord'~ 10 JnU\(' --~~ monw.
•t-C'na.~d.k 'emithcbod)
of 3 \.tanoe ms1de ~us O'atwned
true m a C'Oflst~ton area
Tht ~uonal death toll bad rached
~ t>' o p m Sunda~ The ~at>Onal
Safel' ( ounaJ had ~ma.led ~ 1-....ttn ~ and people would cm
on th<' htgh •-a~~ dun ni lbc offiaaJ
:-r~r.t., pniod from 6 p.m Dec 30
t ..., dntght time
l .1J1•0niaa onceagam led the nauon
1n tbc gnm st.all lt<" follo•"td ~
Teu~ .... 1 ;: deaths and Flond:a ....... :..s
Tht satt t} .:-ounol also n.ucnaud
bt't'll>tt"' 1-. and ~1.000 pcoPc
• id suffer dJ bl1nc •OJuncs in
trafTK ~"O<kn&s dun~ the pcnod.
Lllt "nr 35-e> ixopk ·~ Dcd
and neut~ 15. suffered tmOm
ppltcan s for Grand Jury
sougbt by Superior Court
Slala said. ·• • ~ lbeft .. ...ay
bttD a pool ol .,._1 100 ~
be said.
-l.asl ya1 WC bad a good
rapoltlC, -be sa.ad. -1 don't k.notit' •ii) i.f s bfca to poor so far tlus year. Ifs
OM of dK pooRS1 idi)Otl:SCS ~·TC
evcrrcui~ ..
Slater said a bjgb number of
appl.anlS as dcslrabk.. to ~ a
-~ oftakftts and potnts of
\~.
-We reaU} oec:d about 90 10 I 00
applmts an onicr' M> 8'C1 a aood cross
Stt1Joe ot the populauon..-be sa.ad •
JUI} mcmbcn tin~ from J u.J) I to
June 30. Tbr usual dcadhnc for
apphcatJOos as Jan. I. but n has btta
euended M> Ju... 19 this )C.U.
"-ppbcuts should be ID good
bea.Jlh and able 10 ,."Ofk full-titM.
T'be') should not be pb..orung lQ lllt
an~ kq \""KalJons during the ~ur.
The JUI) mcm coounuousl). ocrp1
for a two-wcck bn:ak dunng t.M
Chastrnn bobda>S--
JUI) man.bus rariw Sl5 a da'.
plus 33 ttJllS per ma.It for tn\·d rn.
lheir own au~
AD)ont iftlC'r'e:SUd m reior:h"ing an
apphatioo ma) call U4-S2n . or
v.n~ to* Grand JUI'). P.O. Bo1
1994. Santa .\na. 9 2 702.
GRAND JURORS.FIND REW ARDS •••
From Al
He -aaoted bas respons1b1ht) • about unmcdia~ changies.. l.Jndbttg tttmd\ \VlCd.. -
abroptcd on the grouDds that M"d wd.. bu1 that~ sumulat.c tbougbL ~ t)l>tcal da~ for a JW'Or could be
6Jcd for bant.nipk). "-Sat turned out. -Hn-c is our resporut from 1M an~i.hang from a com~ mecunc.:
ha.s ckbl.s bad btto sen.led and~ Board of Supen1son to last ~ear .. s loa 1.nptotheCC>k>racbllivcrtoloot
•-as sull m~ kft. so be •-as 001 m ~rt. -bt sa><i -you can sec W l al •"atcT pro.JCCU. to a ffi&:lu 'in a
bankruptC'). So be sun bad to pa~ -~ ·, e concurred •11.b ~ ttt· Shenfl"s Dapnmcn1 bdicopla. be TbcJ~ dOtS DOI ID\est.tpte e'~ ominendauons.. out not •1th others. saad
complaint at rcttt'es.. V. nh some. th~·, e aod>c:atcd pa.nW -1c sa great •'a) for a pcnon •'ho tS
-v.ea.DS'll>~C'~ Stngkc:omplamt co~ &1 the potnt is Wt m1~ to rnn.a.in busy and a.kn. -he
•e m::t'f'C.-said bod~ -SOme-na'e to respond to the ~ \\ nh sa.td''
urms w.c 'lllul detemune that ifs not so~ recommcodauons.. ~ might Wo0.1ng ~ m such an in-·
w.nhan our spbcrc of rcspoOS1'b!ln~ sa' ·v. c lll.e 'ou·re Ida but "'°C don"l lens.e ,.,." fOSle'rScamandene. Bunch
But •C aJ•'llys tell people •h~ -~ w.1ll h•i\C I.he mo~ to implement 11. added .
not be k>okmg at a paruculat com-~ a1 last h.a" e to SI' w.h' 111s ~ -11·s hu bang 10 ~ 10 a
pb.Jnl and w.c suggtS1 v.-a~s wt 11 don:t concur·· · · · fr.uenlll' or soront'.-be said. -you
aught be addrnsed -. Tilt JUT). "'llh • ts S200. ., annual maU some dose fnendshaps.. -
Dectsaonsa.bou1v.bethef10 Midrcss b\;dget. 1s somcuung of a madgtt GraQdJunes snfromJ~ I toJ unt
a romplam1aremade anronsuha uon v.M11 rompa..mj lo ~~ count~ 30 Ha,1ngJustrcxhedlbemdpomt
•i th thecooo1~ Distnct "no~ and ~oes and orpmz.auoM.. an t~r tenn. tlns ~a.r"s JUI') has
rount" coonsd. But l.Jndberg said be dono"t bt-com~ltd 1M v.or\.of scrttmng and Dwi'°' tbt roune of the 19 --~ !K'c 1M J~ bas to pla~ David 10 1M dendmg 'Ill bat prob6em areas to
sns100.. Jurors •tll hand~ about -o Goh.uh ofcoun1~ go'crnmenL tad.Jc. Landberg saJd.
complaints... Lindberg sa!d -TD.e c6opefauon v.e·,e gotten ~The rca.J hard w.ort mm.JDS. -ht
-w e·, e rt"SOh ed about half of t~m :rom rount~ agrnci~ w been saKi -The first w. months lS rcaJh
so ear.-be ~d outst.andmg.-be said -TheTc h.asn·t deod1n1 •bat to ioot aL So• ... -c
While m.a1~ronttm1ng 1nd1,1d-been amone v.ho ~ been &n-ha'e 10 romple\e the ID\-CSUpb()ns
uals can often be resol' ed ,...nhan a 1..a&0nm1c lo 1.s Tb~ ~ slt up and and •nte o ur rcpon. -
fev. •ttk.s or months.Ja.rgrr issues -·a.Lr noucc 'Ill hen v.c sa' v.c ,...~, to ~teanv. htle. a paoef of Judges as
such as tbos.e In' oh ans cnu.rc Yl' · c~ 111 and take a oo ·-prcpanni lo screen appbc:ants f«
emmenw ~net~ -tal.e lortgn to SomC'llmC"S.. \hose looks can e'en not ~c.ar·sJu~
te\ ~.and ibc resultS are oft.en open be on the sneak~ side. and nobod~ -v. c gtt a broad rangie of t.akntcd
10 qucsuon ~s ro mmd. saad Harrod pcopk among the 19 JU~ membas.. -
.\cast 10 point 1s last ~cars Grand -The Shm"ts Depa.nme-nl has said l.Jndbcfg. -v.c ha,-e m.and
J\11' rq>e>n_ "nicb conu ancd a cnu-~'er. ll'l\tt...--d us to come tn unan-lc:aicber\.. engiDttn. bou.sc-a,,-n. l"C· qui of the Board of Supef" 1~· no u!k--cd -she satd · umt m1htar) offK:CrS such as myself
lIW\agttnmt st~lc B~ and largt Jurors sa~ the We ba1.e an aa:ounwn and t1ll"O
The cnuquc w.nu into such 1~1JCS rclauonsh1p bctv.ttr1 the JU~ and the pbysxuru.. one of •bom tS &bo a
as pbnm~ and v.hat JUfO~ per· res1 of roun1~ go'em~nt ruts been La•'er -
cn"cd as a lad. of .:ommumcauon posau'c a.jodbcrg added that professlonal
be1-.ttn ~ board and o1Mr top -This 'ear ,...e·,e rca.Jh 1.ned to degrees are not a pren:qu.isjt.c for
e'C'C'UtJ .. C"S.. such ~ hmff Br.ad •on .,.1tl) the Board of Su pen 1sors grand JU:f) scr'\·ter
Gar.n not aga1ns1 thc-n ·· said Bunch -,o -~ a..s no reason •b~ someoi>e
The report "'as nol v.vml~ re-o~ h~ to be embarra.sscd. and from the shUcd trades should not
cn'cd ~ the board made !O look bad v. e·rc cognazant of · ai>PI~--M saM1.
-1 g.ui-ss ~ou C'OJld s.a~ th~ •tte thaL If someone h.a.s a complaint .a.n appbcant ha5 to ba'-c the~.
defcns1"e about tL-said Joc:h about ~ou. ~ou·d ralMr that th~ and the finanaa.J means to get b)· on
Harrod. anothc:-member of lha·s u llcd d1rt".:-tl ~ to ~ou aboul 1t. instead 1M modest pa~. he said..
~car's Ju~ ofgoang to ~our bos.s first That"s the ..\ppbca.nts must also be in aood
Harrod s.a1d there ts some quc-suon wa~ ,...c tr: 10 "'on. v.1th ~ -ph~steal condiuon because the job
an m£n~ 1uro r5· mands as LO,..~ .\nd n 1sn·1 JUSl complaants and requares rcgularan.endancc. Then.ales
agenc1~ and go,C"rnang bodies an the Mtacasm that th~ ,u~ dishes ouL s.a1d s.a~ that JUf) mcmbcn should DOt
couM) actuall) pa) anenuon to th~ Lindberg.. • C\pect 10 ate 'ac:auons c:u:cpt dur·
JU~ ·s l"t'C'Ommendauons -1f~l'DC1.btnt lS good. -.-e ought 10 mg l~ tYto-•ttk Clmstmas rcc:cn.
-\\e do ~\e qucsuons about . sa~ so.-M saJd_ -"-nd ~are an Landberg saJd those rules a.re
,..hethcr our~n.a,ean,effcct.-a,..ful lot of good people an count~ strctchcdahttkblLsot.hatJu.n>ncao
s.ne said ··So ,...-c·rc doao,g a (ollo'a-up go1,emment. we·,e been 'er) am-sometuncs ~l U•'I) for a It-a da~~
stud~ of •noes that ha'e hem pressed ,roth almost C'~'OOC wc·H -v. e took Than.lscJ\-uii -~off.
audned. to sec • lxlher ~ ·\-c am-dealt ,..1th. -for eumpk. -ht saJd. -or counc. •-c
plcmcntcd v.hal ~ ~ the\ "'n'C .\.oo1.ba lht.ng that unprcsses the made up t:bc wne. The idea tS lO get
gomg to do The effCC'1 of the folio• -1urors 1s ttov. much ~ lam from 1M Job done -
up. I thmk. ..... 111 be to son oOtght a fire their Job. ~)one w.uhang lo appl~ for tbe
under them again. --10 one ~ear u·s h e lliJng fi,e 19&8-89 Grand JuT) m.a~ obuan
But the import.ant thing about tbe ~earsofo-..cseotJnn. -bcsaad.. -, ou anf~uon b) calling 834-51~. gnne ,Jr_. s 1:-,csupuons and rec-go a•'a~ nov.1ng a h~ of a lot about .\pphcauons must be mumed oo
ommend.allons LS aot that Lbe} b:ing count) g.o .. cmmcn~ .\nd ifs e1.· Later than Jan.. 19.
HOLIDAY-HIGHWAY-TOL-L RISES T
FnnnAl
Cloudy, damp day expected
U.S. Tempa .... -.... , ... ...._ •• D U
.
-~ rl • -•• . .. Calif. Temps Extended
0 11 ., . •• • a~ • • • 11 n
.. J1 ,, .
• w •• " ., • • •ca » •
• f1
" -41 Cl •
J1 • • >1 D• • • • w .. . . .. • • u .... . .. ... ...
• f1 ,, .
tS .,
56 D
llO -· u. .. u •• •• •• •• D 11
27 '1 • • a a
D a .. .
0 ZJ J1 • .,. 19
5e D • • • • u 11 51 ·.., » D .. » a u 1'0 .,
» f1
11 .,
» "" .... ,, u
111 • D• .. 27
DD
• 21 ZI 9't SI a a 7• 21 u 4.3 211 ., » w.
11 OI
1ID 11
1'1 R •a •• '7 llS
==---h-~" • JIS S1 .. • »
Sf • 51 • •• ~-., • » .... . ,. .. u . ~
• S1
S1 ~ v .,
9C C1 ,. ..
Kl ..
D 41 ll .. •• s. • a cs ., .. u 4S ,. Z1
57 .. ., ., . -59 415
S4 4 1 . .. ,, J1
SI •t 5' St ., C1 • • A ..
,_,......,._ ·--~~--,.... . ....,._....,_ ... -·· e .... ••••-·----i.-........ -_ ........ -._.,
Surf Forecast
Tides
T006• 2Z'Le 1:11 ..... •113-.,., ~ ...
2..S u ~· a•
2.S •• -4• ,,
--•U'l'&.&. __ _ ... ...
14 • .. ..oc an 40 • n.---~>&----·1 .......
TRAIN COMMUTING BOOSTED BY PLAZA ••• _
P'rolDAl
business and retail complex are
responsab&e for t.M plan. the buSl-
J>C'SSc."S are not undn-."nting the
opcnuon.. <;arlsson SI.Id..
He defended tht cost. 5a)1ng that
compared to rommuta" traJns an . c--
y ort and Cbacago. -, t" s l"Calh a prctt ~
good deal -
Sagn-u~ bcpn loda~. andCarls!on
.said officws •111 rons>dcr the pro-
gram a succn.s af Lhe) grt 30 pcopk to
rc"gJster
ll ts anuo pated th.at ndc:sJu p v.1 II
groa as lbc program becomes kncra'tl.
he SIJd ~
Sttll. Carlsson admutc:d th.at gt'(Ung
emplo~ttS to CJ'e up thcu cars -
e'en v.1 lh the pert.s of reduced SlttSS
~nd 10CT'CaSl'd kts.urc 11mc-•on"t be
eas~
-T"?xR cnwnl) has LO be an
o' min ~!C'S Job done:. -be wd -1
don"t den~ that lrs gmng to take a
un11e11dous tdCKabOiial ~
that done Bui I &uns •'C •ould sa~.
·y ou ion~ sun so~brtt: -
.\mtnk opc:ral.CS thrtt trams an the
mommg and lhrtt m the afternoon
The tnp aak~ aboul 4 S m1 nul.CS from
San Juan C apmrano and an hour
from Sao Oc~nte. and free: pll'tJ ng
1s a\ailabk '-
For a ftt. lhoe 'an v.111 s.buuk
tMwocss people •ho mw lhcir trun
or ha'e m«ttngs v.1lhan a fi,e-mtk
radius of 1M ulh Coast Pl.au am
The South Coast \ktro .\Jhancc: .. a
grou:p of area de' eiopers. 1s pbnmna
to annou~ a mo~ rom~bensoe
1ransporu1 on \~~ten lhas month.
Carlsson s.ard That program. •h.c-h
t ouk! atTeo as '"'lam as ~SJ)()()
• orkers -. ou d anciude s.e' enl
ahe-mau" e-s for commutcr'\.i mclud-
1ng nde-~nng.. ~ "'o rt
hours and pu te transpona11on
't"Y>port Center w a comln4.JtcT
'an to aren an non Orangt Count~
and lM In 1ne pectrum offatt and
1ndus1nal .. , mpic' • has a com-
Pf"ebensi' e program 101.qTIUl'lg ndc
sh.an ng. flu n and p..bhc trans.-
pona uon. C arl~son s.a Id
3 from cap sized boat spotted : 1 dead
S..\.°" FR-' 'CI 0 c .\Pl -One man dte"d but thrtt ot ~ •ttt'
spoued ID a I fe ran unda~ n1p1 aftef' a fishing boat c:apstlt°d 1n a shore
storm that ~ted h1.gh v.inds and ~ft, ocean s.,,.dls \.atd the L C oasa Gua.rd. .
-Ken Errac .oi..lhc..Caasl Guard satd an bd.1 ORJCJ C'd lhrtt
mm in a hfe raft Ooaung 44 m1tn nonh•CSJ of BodCga Ba~ or aho.Jt :~ -nl tn
from the boat
apparent \Jo•d~TI an drun .. :-n dn'.
•ng incidents
Ho•e .. er 1n,cs11ga1or\ d1dn·l
proachang Techno1or 'onh 1n an
area that 1~ under de' e iopm~nL r~1~ront1n~1Mo a~n ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ fte"k! v.htte n rolled o'er ~ d mtt ll •as found upside <i<ran. sull an has
salbdl rr0 .i. unda' 1f alcohol "'as a factor
10 the deatt\ of a ~ount \tan~ 1n
IT'•~
II"\ ane polltt ·~ caJled at I (r
a m aft.n" a ~ \PC>ttcd 1be
'1ct.m·\ ptC"lup ll'UC' ':lear w ntn-·
sccuon of 8arn.nca Patt• 3 ' and Tech~ ~onh 11 the ·1nme
Spcruum Bus1ncu Part sa~ Sgt.
~t e<:>pkn
ln\estipton found a 1cr~ Ford
C OOJ'leT 0\ n1umcc,1 1 n a fleld near the
anla'SCCtJOn. ~ ab ·~ crushed
•ltb I.be \ IC"l Im I made
\kmbtts of the Oranat Coun~
Firt Dc-panmmt rcco' ~ the bod~ U~lr& W-J3•S of IJR -
The 'K'ttm. wohc>K n.amt ·~
•ilhbdd pcodm& noufJauon of &.m-
tl~ • n a 11-~ car-old Lantt eo1 ponJ
from Camp P~ Oldrn said
.\n tn\ csupuoo show.~ the dn \ n
•'aS hdl1in& ~ oa Barnnca ai>-
.\JJ roads an the area uc dosed to
tM pubhc. Ogden s.a,d -..:umnous
road Sides and barraadn ~l"C 1n platt
sapu~ mg the roach ut t1osed.
~ uuck ~ ak-d to stop and st.rudt a
consuucuon ~-..per a W)IC rmd
building rmcha~ w: ._-as p;ukcd
paal~ lO a barra.."ade
Orangr Count~ Coroner an-
\C:Slaptors detemuned the \'1Ctlm
died at about 1 a m of asphy11a-
tton
T oxoiop::aJ lt'SU v.1 II be coodUC1ed
lO ck1crmane w. hethe<' &kohol •-as a
factor. Osdrn s.atd
Sheriffs de puty shot near Corona
Ju« call "2-6086
Cole Haan Country
Eiclusive Outback Soles
.. Great Tradition
Only Gets Better.
..