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1988-01-25 - Orange Coast Pilot
---... -.....-----....-...·----·--·----------- * MONDAY, JANUARY 25, 1988 25 CE 'T $30~000for election funds· traced to Karl Ftleads bldfarewell toEad Cafe Possibly unlawful donations made to Hart House races Frem staff ud wire ttrrts Democrauc ~1dcntiaJ candidate Gary Han and tv.() congressio nal aspirants alleged!> received over $30.000 in possibly illegal campaign do nations from !'l:ewport Beach video producer Stuart .Uri. a news.- paper reported. The contnbut1ons. lasted m rcpons filed "'•th the Federal Elecuon Com· m1ss1on. "'ere made to Han 's 1 98~ and 1988 campaigns and to the unsuccessful 1986 congress1onaJ clec- uon cffon s of Kathleen Kenned) To"'nscnd of Bah1morc and Orange Count}. upcnor Court Judge Dave , Caner ~ccordmg to ca mpaign rttords, Han rece1,ed a total of S l6,7SO for his 1 98~ and 1988 campaigns from 20 IUrl-Lonmar "'orkcrs or their rela- t1' cs Caner recc1'ed SI0.000. and To"'nsend SS.480 for their 1986 conp-ess1onal campaigns from K.trl- Tbe contmumJ aJl~llons mvolv-Lon mar em plO)CCS, the rt"Cords ma the ho me-video marketer were sho'A. reported Sunda) by the Orange ··Evcf)thing we d1tas illcpl as Count) Regi-stcr in a copynght stof) · hell and Stuan knew · .. satd Rama C1 tmg a rcvae"' of campaign-finance Whatc M1ddcl. Kar s former e,. reports, unidenuficd sources and ecull' e aide at the Karl-Lon mar former employees ofturt. Home Video. SourttS said the 34-year-old tun M1ddel was-responsible for sohCl- . used cmplo~~ to hide campaign ung same of the contnbuuons and donations an exttss of the S 1.000 rcpa) mg cmplo)CCS wnh cash she federal hm it an individual can donate withdrew from Karl's bank account. to a campaign the newspaper reponed. Former Karl cmplo~ces said they ··Just about all those contnbutaons WC1'C prcssu~ into making dona· are bogus Of the mooe~ solicited uons for v.hich thC} ~ere rctmburscd fro m emplo)~S for elecuons. 95 b) Kart. percent was p<?•d back to them 1n cash Karl. who resides i n ~ exclusn e b) tur1:· M1ddcl said. communll> of Bag C~nyon. has been M1ddcl has said prnJoush that u na vatlable for com mcnL (Pleaee eee ICAJlL I A2) ., PAUL AJlallPLEY ........... _ Dot.ens of pink balloom caulbt tbt Sant.a Ana winds ud ·..aas toWard Catalina on Sunday. elCll beanna a memory about a Win landmark. The Ead Cale. The balloons~ launc:Md bY about I 00 fnmck Md fDmler" employees of John G-a&oo. who operated the popular eDel'y at lhe end of the Hunlitlsloe Beach Pitt for I 0 years. The launchina capped• .... ebntton .. oft.he memories carried by supporters of the c:afe tbal opened an 1933. A flC!tt Pacific s&oml .. stro> ed the end of the PICT' aeid die cafe o n Jan. 17, just two ,an after the restaurant f'al4'Cl rd followin& a similar t,..ty ill 1983. Surrounded by bis Wife aDd childttn. Gustafson said dllat despite tM desuuctioo. ...Life today is the best its ever hem. Md the best is yet to come ... Tbe event was orp•md by several former manaeien -t.<> -.worked at the cde. Tom Bapbaw said they started oontactina former employees ud ..-ord spread rapidly • .,.IO WC ID'\-;ted C''U)~ ... Julie Koasch aid they alto were m1~M to besin .a fund-. ........... ,A2. 0 . 0 0 World Shooti~g victim's unborn child killed Sandinista soldier in- spects wing of a Contra supply Qlanewhich was shot down over southern Nicaragua./ M Nation A deranged man was urged by a crowd of •. bystanders to shoor a • Dallas policeman who died pleading for his life. /AS Sports Area high school and community college foot- baJI coaches tab Denver to win Super Bowl next Sunday./81 Entertahllnent S8lly Kirkland and M6cheel Douglel wtn best dramatic ecttng honors tn the Golden Globe Awards.JAi lndez A9 ---A4 A3 M-1 84-1 A10 M • A3 87 81-3 A2. A5 Poli~e arrest boyfriend a fter inc id e nt in couple's HB home: narcotics found By PAUL ARCHIPLEY oe .. ....,,... ... A Huntingt on Beach t~n-agcr remained m scnous condnaon toda) after suffcnng pellet -.-.ounds that lu lled her unborn child Saturda~ \1clod) \.1ontgo mCT). 18. "'as rushed to surgtt) at Fount.am VaJk~ RC'g.Jonal Hospi tal after her bo) fnend Lagunan' s answer for perfect crops: Send in the clones Alkn Hardason's famil) has been puttina s.ccds in the ground for thr~ icnerations Hardison sulJ consaden h1msclf a farmer. although he has found a more up-to-<iatc "'a ) to make plants gro"' H is· fields arc a collection of tan\ plastic Jin and pctn dishes 1n a dtmanuta'c laboratof) o\Crlook:ang Pacific Coast Ha&}lv.'3) an Laguna Beach. Harchson. 35. makes has II\ ing chopping p~nts into little teen> bits. and growing the fragments into more or less idcn t1cal clones of the onginaJ Tb1s ma> seem hkc an unncccss- anl} labonous ""a) of propapung plants.. compared to. sa),JUSt planung a bunch of seeds But 1t has some d1st1nct ad van- ~ according to Hardison. "·ho caJls bas 6-ycar-old business All Ag Inc. them fast('r than through trad111onal methods .. Gctung plants that arc ··true to t)pc·· has 1mporunt ad,anr..agcs 1n agriculture ReproduClng plants throudl ~s 801 VAN EYKEN PEOP LE IN THE NEWS • ' allqcdl~ shot her in the buttod..s at the coupk·s a panmcnt at 1~ 11 CXla· "'are t Booked into Huntmgton Beach Cit} Jail "'as Craig Lawrence Ostttn ~3 He "'u ~ing held on susp1C1on of m urder assault "'llh a dcadh ,.capon. po~s1on of a sa-.ed-ot'f shotgun an-a po\SC"Sston of nucouo.. said LL Chuck P~ Huntington Beach pohcc v.~rc called to the couple·s homCJust after~ p m follov.1ng a rcpon of a shoou ng. P<X said Officers found the tnJum:i ~font· go mcf) 1ns1dc the apartment and called paramedics Montgome~ "'as tal en to the hospital and rushed into sur~ v.hett d0C1ors d1SCO'-C~ the 5~ month-old fetus she "'li carn1ni v.u de.'.l.! ur gunsh 1 \1.1,,unds. Pcx said 0flicers '>C<HC hed ~t~n and hur>J ~me "htte po""dcr ~hc'cd to he n;ircotio none of his oocl ets Officers at~ rtto' ercd a ~ri..pugc sa"'ed-<>ff sho tgun bche'cd to ha H been usee sn the shooung. P<X said P ~e c ~not ~'cal "'hethcr the) ~he' ed the shoouni ~as a1.x:1dcntal or intention.al 'either did the) r~'ea 11.hat pr~edcd the 1.hooun~ .................... .. You let plants that arc true to type. ancf ,rou set clean plants." said Hardison ... .\nd we can multiply as a h1t-or-m1ss process. P1aJl~ ltke other h' 1ng ~lures. arc gcneucall~ da,crsc Cross l mak and a female plant and you may get some taU offspnn1-or some short ones. You ma) get some that arc resistant to (Pl--... GllOWINO/ A2J ClonlnC adTocate Allen llanll90D 1.D8pectm a tarraeon pla.Dt ln a cal hire • r 11 el. Football put on hold as fans await Super Bowl Some even watch g lf while marking tlme until the Broncos-Redskins clash BJ PAUL AACBIPLE\' ............. It wu ume out ac:rou l~ nauon Sunday -.ben America's sporu fans huddled 1.n seatt'b ofa play that •Ou.Id keep them oo the ball fot another Wttk whale they IW81ted the ullunatc footblall fix -the Super lowl The w.ttk bctWttn tbt-1.asi or the p&&)'Otft and tbt cbamptomlup ptM pro.19Ca a dn:ackd b>cball4al Sun- day, ~vina f~b•ll 6ms. a Wte of wUl I to come after the Dt1l \tr 9roMol play tM Waslunaton Rficbtint 1n swxt 111'ftk's finale.: Olrious io find out bOw foot· ballolaoha """copi"I •1tbo!at a JWO pmc on the fim SUndaf'kn: four moatM. we wmt oo tbc o · \"t. A rmamna lbaDc ~ somcthi1111 like: .. Yea. rm a a,. fD. but 1 cu ta~ ...,.. ... oaa-a W1IK> do ,... thmlt's aonna Wi n nut Sund.a).,.. Fnu Yalltdi, a.n upu:i.na com· ed1an ntt aaOC'. ntt footb&Uosopher. lwl1 from Colorado -where Bronco qll&J"\trt.clt Job.n Elwa could be aovemor for \be ask.ins. Altbouah a ftominal football fan h1mwtf. Yatbcb daa..S he cou1d lilt it or ave 1L He na1ed football .. a boutuimponan1as1 pipbn tn a poke.- His &tbcr, ~-t)'plficd the I.Ne Broncomanitr,. T aklicb lUCl .. Kc"d watch the DUIS in t.br &uit- ~l -hc Spon1na a R..n r•imlllun. Y akbcb s&Jd 1 t •'IS tbe ftlllOft he came to Cahfonua -Ln Cob-ado. ~ a IWdm sb1n -'tantamount to Man!ll • sbeet to an 4.ACP mttUQ&. .. he aid. -ou rrU&bt SI) Ip run out of town oe a Raider ... 't akhch 1lso cntcra1ned a prtdic- uon that guaranteed he wouldn't be -.ckomcd bacl .. , )utt v.ouldn•t bet on the Bron- cos. I kno~ that .. he said. "Bccaux if the) CTnm EJ~ .. ) lfS alt OVtt for them. and he's about due - In lhe local ta'cms.. v.bttc TVs "'~re tuned to M"WS.. old moviei and ()IV•'n) ,olf. football mJJ domtaated COn \cn&llOM.. Al Johmon. a lf1lduatc of Otlt0 St.ate Uruvemt~. SOC into a spcnicd an<S unpn'nl.abk dl!t'USuon-wltla SOCM other ptU'Ons 00 the merits aM Ii ru ohhe lat.e Wood Ha He abo provided a m1nonay ~ that tbc Recbhns ,,u prevaal Sunda)' --~ a fidd pl .. And •bat v.ill he do Mn the XUOft 6 nall)· cncb• ... , bat.e •t. bu• ru •'ltCb bukrtb&ll." JohMOG said. $k\~ Gilfbil. an admu1ed IOotbal1 fanauc. Just mumed to bas COili Mesa bomt from Ha wait '"lrkft lie tuntd into na,U'Sit of Ka•-au pl(bron pmes. (Phan .. l"~/AS) Coast welcomes balmy weather, readings in 80s • million theater viewed for downtown Huntington a, aoam BAUD ... ..., ....... City officials a~ h')'ina to proJCCt wbt\bet 1 aianl lhelter five storin biah and ~ about S7 million sbould be buill 1n downtown Hunt- iqton Beach. Tbc buet tbcaier. envisioned to show films about surfing and the city•s oil history, is beina pushed by downtown business leaden as a major featutt to attract ~velo~ ment to the oldest pan oftbe city. "lt'1 an..ibtercstma concept." said Ma)'or John Erskine. "but it has a lona~~Y to ao." Officials explained that the pro-cess. designed b) the IMAX S}stems Co'l). of Toronto. features projc-c- tions of h1gh~uahty 70-millameter film onto a scrttn in the top of 'he multi-story dome buildina. "It would be an outstandjna antac· tton." said Nata He Kouch. a down- town business operator. "h 's lar1er than life -cxcitma and dramauc. It would make sense to have it in connection with a surfini museum and hall of fame ... Althou&h she said she'd "dearly love it," l<otsch said it appears the at traction is striclly a lonJ shot for the first phase of construction in the downtown redevelopment area at Main St~t and Pacific Coast High- way. She harbors hopes. though. that it will cventuaJly be built. Councilwoman Grace Winchell. who panicipatcd 1n f'C'ttnt talks with IMAX representatives. said the plan sounds like .. a nt~ experiment. .. But she said it ma) have. perhaps. less than a SO percent chance of aicttma of! the srouAd because of &be <05t of the buildina and financial C:OCDJIUt.mcnts to .lhc company for use of its equipment and films. If constructed, the theater would have about 3SO scats and would offtt about 2S sbowinp a week. Mike Adams. the city's principal !"development planner, said the in- t tal ~eet1n1 sparked interest for more mcc~nas between IMAX and city official~. Adams said that, if a~ proved. o.fficiab might dC"Si&n the first two stones of the theater under- ground. The nearest IMAX thcatCT is at the Los Angeles Museum of Science and Industry althoUJ}I other cities re• ponedl} are considering tbe attrac- uon. Courts may bar witnesses to punish defense lawyer WASHINGTON CAP) -Couns sometimes may bar defense witnesses from tesufying at cnm1nal trials in order to punish the defendants' lawyers, the Supreme Coun ruled today. By a 5-3 vote. the JUSttces upheld a Chicago man's attempted-murder con,·iction and 10-)car sentence even though one would-be defense witness was not allowed to tesuf\ because of a defense lawyer's proeedural '101- atton. Writjng for the coun. Jusuce John Paul Stevens said bamng a wuness from a trial 1sjusufied-and does not violate a defendant's fa1r-tnal rights -ifa defense lawyer's v1olat1ons are aimed at gaining some tactical advan- tage or to conceal a plan to present phon} testimony. "It 1s plain that (this) case fits into the category of willful misconduct in which the severest sanction 1s a~ propriate, ·· Ste\ ens wrote. Ray Taylor was in an Aug. 6. 1981. street fight in Chicago tn\olving himself and some fnends on one side and Jack Bridges and some of Bridges' relatives on the other. Bridges was shot durinJ the fight. Ta}lor "as not indicted until 22 months later . when he was charged wuh auempted murder in the shoot- tng. His tnal. in large pan. amounted to a test ofwnocss crcdabiht}. While Y.itnesscs for the state testi- fied the) saw Taylor shoot Bndees. tY.O defense witnesses said they saw Bndges· brother acc1dentall} shoot him "hile t~ing to protect him. The da .. before the defense wat-ne~ .... er=e to begin tcsufy1ng -well into the tnal -Taylor's lawyer sought coun perm1ss1on to put Alfred \\'ormle) on the stand. Wormley was read\ to ttsuf'. that he saw two of Bndgcs· relau,·es with pistols the da.) of the fight. The Judge, sa}ing the laW)er had committed a .. blatant '1olat1on of d1sco'el) rules" b~ fa11tng to notif) the coun and the state's prosecutors of the proposed testimony sooner. refused to let Worm le-. take the stand. Ta~ lor e"entuall} ·was convicted and sentenced to 10 years 10 pnson. His aw.I had argued lhat his fair- trial ri ts were sacrificed even though e. himself, had not caused the procedural error. In today's decision. Stevens said the re<"ord in Taylor's ca.sc indicates that his laW)er deliberately was sed:ing a tactical advantage in not hsung Wormle} asa potential witness. .. More 1s at stake than possible pre1udice to the prosecution," Stevens said ... We att also concerned wtth the impact of this kind of conduct on the integrity of the 1ud1cial process n.sclf. .. He was joined by Chief Jusucc William H. Rehnquist and Jusu~ B)TOn R. White. Sandra 0d) O'Connor and Antonin Scalia. Justices William J . Brennan. Thurgood Marshall and Harr) ~. Blackmun dissented. Wnting for the three. Brennan said. ..The court toda) sacrifices the para- m o unt values of the criminal system in a misguided and unnecessary effort to preserve the sanctity of discovery ... GROWING DEMAND FOR PLANT CLONES ••• From Al pests and some that are not. But find a good desirable plant. and then clone 11. and ma relativeh shon while you c.an get thousands o( plants with the same desirable charac- teristics as the onsinal • ~pile its htgh·tech 'enecr. this b1otechnolog.ical o peration 1s done entirely by hand. The muJtiphcat1on starts out slow- 1). Hardison said. From the onginal plant. Hardison sa1d he can general I> clone five ncarl) 1denucal copies during the first month. From each of the fi ve new 1ndiv1d- ual plants. five more can be grown. gjving 25 at the end of the second month. So the process gcxs. from 25 . to 125. to 625. to 3.125 and so on. Doesn't it get tedious~ .. Well. 1t is a ton of Y.Ork:· said Hardison. ..A smgle person can usual!) do about 800 to 1.000 plan is a da). lfwe need to. wc·11 run 24 hours a da) to serve a chent. We ha,en't had to do that. but "e ha'e had some I and 20-hour da\S. ·· Another. ad' antage IS that cloning ttsults m disease-fret planas. said Hardison. Oonmg 1s done under stenle cond1t1ons in a la boraton "Ith mech- anicall} cleaned air .\11 .inwuments arc stenJ1zed ~fore the .. are used and techo1c1ans "a.sh their hands and arms in a d1S1nfectant similar to that used b~ surgeons And the process generall~ begins with ussue lrom the plant's apical menstem. or center of gro.,..1h. full of ideal plants. But the rub. from the gTOwer's point of' 1e". 1s the cost. Cloning can cost from about 35 cents to $2 or more per plant. dependmg o n ho" difficult the species as to v.ork with. It might not be feasible. therefore. for a strawbem· or tomato farmer to order 50.000 perfectly cloned plants. .. But a nurscl)man could get a cenain number of cloned plants and then reproduce them himself. usmg runners:· he said ... You JUSt take a cutttng and plant the runner m the ground. which gives you another plant." .\nother method would be for a farmer to obtain a few hundred or a fe.,.. thousand cloned plants, to allo" 1hem to produce seeds. and then use these h1gh-quaht} seeds to plant a crop. Hardison said. Hardison said he has clients all 0' er California. but onl) one so far in Orange Count)_ .. In ume we v.111 have mott business in Orange Count).'. he said .. It takes a "ht le. Fann mg 1s nsk) business and farmers are con- sen au' e people. You have to get peo ple used to the idea that )OU can get 15.000 d1scasc-frtt ficus plants Y.1 lh no bemes. and } ou can get them \Cl) qu1ckl) ... ~o bemes., .. Ficus 1s an ornamental.'' he said "You don·t want the hemes The' make a big mess.·· · Hardison· s permanent work force consists of himself and his "tfe. Terr). although he said he has had up to s1' assistants at limes. big kilhng. ··he said ... We JUSt want to pro' 1dc a premium product at a compeuu .. e pnce:· But his plans are grandiose in other Y.a}S .. B1otechnolOI}. I think. 1s going to be a tremendous benefit to agncul- ture:· he said. ·Td eventually lt ke to do something wuh food crops that helps reducx v.orld hun&'(r. The technolOJ} 1s there to reproduce hard). d1scase·remtant plants that are going to increase crop yields ... .\ natt"e of Ventura CountY. where his famth farms. Hardison wound up in Orange Count> quite b-. aoodent. Hardison. a graduate o(UC R1ver- s1de's school of agriculture. met his wife. an Orange County resident. "h1le taking summer cou.rscs at L1CI. .\fter earning his master's degrec an business administration at Pep- perd1ne UniversJt}. Hardison re- turned to Orange Count) to work for The In inc Co.'s agricultural dl\IStOn. Hts stint with The ln ·ine Co. was folloY.ed b} sc'eral )cars of private consulting. In 1982. he and has wife staned All .\g. And Laguna Beach turned out to be the pcrfect/'lacc to locate. he said. ..One o m) professors at Pc~ perd1ne OY.ns the building. and he let me know about the 'acancy ... he said. Hardison spends much of hLs non- " orkmg ume helping look after has 3- ~ear-old daughter. Stephanie. ..\nd v.hen he's not raismg plants or little girls. he devotes his lime to looking after the mterests of local U.S. Temps MIMlle.ctl 75 72 ...... lt ,. ......... .,, 21 -oi ....... .. 2S .. ~ .... ~ 5' : Calif. Temps Tides ~Ql.9 • '5 ..... Yortr City 47 Anclhof199 2S ,, ~Oft) 48 25 AdMc.e 54 ~ OrwWle n ~1 T"Oeo\Y ACMnttc City 46 • ONMo $7 4' ~ 2• IMU'l9f\dlne• :...,..~ ...... u Alletln &I 31 t:6'•AI. PNlldllpflle .. 31 ~ eeu..,._..• 7.511~ u lelllmof'9 52 37 ,,,__. .. 4S .. " ....... 50 SS ~ " 2t I'.-a M TUUO&Y ... ,. 11 ~l'l au PorOlnd ........ 37 35 : ;! ::::' uia-u ea.ton 42 lM 10'41&.111. ... .,,.. 31 2t "°"'9nd,0r• .. 33 ,._~ 1:11 ..... u ~.sc 5 1 4S .......... M 40 =:.,Olly 14 14 =:::' .... , ... t• AIPd Cl1y ~ 07 11 4 ' Chlrteeton.W Va. 53 2t A9no .. 22 Sea-MO ~ :J ...,._ ... ,.""',....,~. CMrlotle,N C 54 41 Alclwnpncl 54 40 ...... 71 •• .., ___ ..., ... 11 r-= Cll6cago " 13 SI Louie 41 11 ... °""° 1'0 ., ..__ .... ..JS,..._.,..., Ctndnnell 41-.1t ... ~ Stft Llk• City S2 14 ... ~ • .. .. 11:26 &."'-... -...... 1 ~ 37 23 ,.,, AnlOrio ., 31 S1odl10ft a '° a.m.Wedll••' ~.Ohio ~ 17 a..... 42 37 !¥. ... '°' 14 _.. ........ :tjlft. o.a.-fl Wortfl 55 35 ~-2t 2S ::::... .. : Extended oe-;.on 40 II Denwr SS 10 ~ q ~ eio--I I It Dee~ S5 00 Tempe.StPtrq 57 4t ~ '1'2 ._,,.w .. .....,.-~ Delton 31 22 T~ '5 10 CatalN . "' __ ,...........,.....,_ Oulutll 17 -06 'fuc:eon ee 34 ~ ... 48 .,.,,.,.,._ .. ...,. ...... ._. TUiie 50 22 Lono 9eedl .. ., _ .. not111em~--~ EI Puo 52 20 WMNngton,0 C St SI ~ a • Miii .,._...,. .,..,•dlJI 111 .. Erie 38 27 ~ 48 IS Monrovle 50 41 coo1111t 1Mo IN tell ~ .,_. Flllr~ 12 oe ~ 71 .. ''*Y~.,_.,111 ..... 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KARL MAY HA VE DONATED $30,000 ••• From Al Karl told her on many occasio ns to Y. tthdra"' cash from his personal bank account to ttpay workers who had given to the campaigns. She said Karl and others told her that cash should be used because it could not be traced. Middel said she. herself. made a S250 contribu11on to Townsend dur- ing a fund-raising event at Karrs house. It was also reported that another former Karl-Lorimar employee donated SSOO to the 1988 Han campaign and said she felt pressured b~ Karl. "I felt hkc I was doing something "rong. but I needed the JOb. You couldn't go against Stuan . He 1ssuch ad~ nam1c personaht). it's hard to sa~ no:· said the emplo)ee. Y.ho was &l ' ~n anon~ m•t). The emplo)'ee said she also gave S 100 each to the Caner and Tov.ns- end campaigns at Karl's request. She said M1ddel repaid her in casJt all thrtt times. Bernie Schneider. general counsel for the Han campaign. said Saturda~ that most of the contnbuttons for "h1ch Karl alleged!) reimbursed his employees "ere made dunng the 1984 c.ampa1gn. Campaign records show that S 12.250 was contnbuted by K.arl- Lorimar emplo)ttS for the 1984 efTon. the newspaper reponed .. With regard to the 1988 campa.Jgn contnbuuons, the pos111on we have taktn as that. 1f there 1s a hint of impropriety. ""e are going to send the mone) back ... Schneider said. "The 1988 campaign 1s legall} a separate organization. We'll look into 11 (the 1984 campai&n ). but art not responsible for what 1t did." Former K.arl·Lonmar employees said the' had contnbuted S4.SOO to Hart·s 1988 c.ampa1gn. but Han said Frida' that his staff found onl) two donations totaling S 1.500 and lhat refunds were made to the two em· plo~tts. Both Town send and Caner said the' "ould contact all contnbutors connected to Karl's business to ask if the~ had been reimbursed. To" nscnd said she would refund all such donattons to Karl. Caner said he would seek ad .. ice from the Federal Eleclton Com- mission concerning the d1spos111on of an) such funds. The allegations mvolvin1 K.ar1 ma} prompt an investigation by the Feder- al Election Commission. According to San Francisco at- tomc) Barry Fadem. an expen on WARM WEATHER ••• F rom Al Lifeguards at Mam Beach in Laguna Beach rcponed about I 0.000 sunbathers and strollers at the half-mile stretch of shoreline. Many Orange Count1ans who d idn•t go to the beach went to local parks instead "l had people coming out of m} ears Sunda} ... said Comet Stmson. a rangerat Mile Square Park 1n Fountain Valley ... Everbodywas ha\•1ng a great umc. The} were playing soccer and Fnsbec and even~ing )OU can think of." • The park 1s a popular locanon for model a irplanes and 1tc fl ymg. and Sunda) dttw a bumper crop of flyers, Sunson said. ··in the afternoon we had a little bit of wind come up. but tt wasn't enough to bother anybody." he said. "It just made It better for kncs. There v.ere thousands of them out there. getting tangled up in each other all over the piece." Stinson said attendance was up ·· 1.000 or 2.000 perttnt" compared to the previous Sunday. when rain kep t pcopl~ at home Kent Kosa1, coordinator at the park's recreation center. said the center's basketball courts were all occupied late into the mght Sunda> .. But that's pretty normal here." he said. campaign and elcct1on law, an FEC invesugauon must be prompted b) a formal complaint. ··Any person. 1(he or she believes a ' 1olauon of the law has ocairred. can file:· Fadcm said. "They don't even have to be an auneved party, John Q. Ctt1zen. anyone, can fik a com· plaint." The FECs acneral counsel would then re'1ew the application and if it met cena1n cntena. would place the matter under re\ lCW for investip- t1o n. Allcgat1ons like those mvolviaa Karl would be subject to a wide rantt of possible penaJt1es. Fadem opined. depending on their severity. FANS ••• From Al " football po"'u ifs not. a.a ofTcnng a defense for watchm& thC'lt pmes that would make the Honol• ChambeT of Commerce crin,e. G1lfo1l said ... It was something to do.'' A.I Spem. also of Costa Mesa. rtcled off a f 1st of posS1bilities to keep one's Sunda) afternoons occupied dunng the dreary months to come. "You wash )Our car for the fiffl ume in four months. You talk to your old lad). You save money and p&)' \Our taxes instead ofbenina it &JI on tootball," Sperl') sugested . Ph1losoph1cal about the ~n finale. Spert') said. "It's kind of a relief. rtall). The Super Bowl is an appropriate end. .. If iMy ran 1 t all year like basket.- ball 1 t 'd tel bon~ •• Cathenne Hanle) of Fullcrtoe, "ho has hvcd foot.ball with the best of them since September. claimed sbe Y.as not 1oing through football w tthdrawals Sunday. .. But I thmk it would be DI~ 1fthcrt Y.IS something be11des &olf on TV ... shewd. Pondcnna how to spend her fr~ afternoon. she came up with an 1da that has Ion• kept f ootbaJI widows from commmina retomcs apiOSt their agin&Jock husbands, .. I thillk I might go 5hopp1oa." sbc said. "There 1s no circulatorv tissue there. so disease organisms ·ha,·e no wa> of reaching that pan of the plant:· he said. So a farmer or nursery operator could. theore11call). get a whole field For the time being. he said. he 1s content to remain a relat1vel} small operauon. ~multu re.aspre~~nt ~t~O~~~~~!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·····~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ange Count} Farm Bureau. 11 The Hard1sons ltve in Laguna .. We're not interested 1n ma~1ng a Beach. FRIENDS REMEMBER THE END CAFE ••• From A l raiser for Gustafson to rebuild the cafe :'lie1ther the bu1ld1ng owned b) the c11\ nor the contents owned by Gusta(son were msurcd. .\nd 1 f the cit) decided u would not rebut I~ the destro)ed ponton of the pier. Kotsch said the group might make that a fund-raising endeavor as v.ell. lromcally, the balloons were lef- tovers following the 1983 stonn that le.ft the cafe hanging off the end of the pier. A messase pnntcd on them stated. "l hel~ save The End Cafe." Panicipants were invited to write a message on surplus meal c hecks from ORANGE .... .... COAST .... ,.._. MA .. OfflCE ).iQ W"1 S.. • WM CA ..... •» . ''t .:ct~ -..... -· , c-.r.o-6-tl sr• --' the cafe. put the message into a plastic foam End Cafe coffee cup and attach It to a hehum·filled balloon 'Tm gomg to put m} fa, onte memof) of The End Cafe on mme:· Gustafson said. "Noboch wall knov. what 11 was unless the} find the cup .. Just a week earlier. Gustafson said he was "numb" and didn't know 'IJl,hether he was prepared to tf) )Ct again to open lhc eatery. Hts ebulent mood on Sunda)' provided a sha'l) contrasL Hi~ dau&hter Christine said the suppon of rncnds made all the difTercncx. .. People have ~n ve~ su~ pon1ve." she said. "When you feel )Ou're not &oing through 1t alone it reall) helps:· The tragedy also pulled the famtl) together. she said. "We"d just gotten to where we tho ught we were O K." she said oftbc business. '"Now v.-e'rc back to square one. We'tt gonna have to get real creative." Christfoe G ustafson wd the f.mily held a pow-wow over the weekend to discuss their options.. "Our bignt USC& IS 1r WC ban& toscthcr ~·11 be OK.'' she said. o ... , P1'ot Deh911J leO..eMMd Justcall 642-6086 \\-'bat do }Ou hke about the Dail) Pllot? What don·t )OU lik,• Call the numbn' tbo~ aftd )'OW· messaat will bt rttorckd. transcnbcd and de- h\"Cffd to the appropnatc cdtlOf The jlfM 24-hour ans~nrw 1ien1ce may bt used to record lcutn to the cdttor on anr topc. Cont.nbuton to out uun-s column must 1nciude their name and ttltpbone number for \Cnficauon. Tells us •hat's on )Our mind. c~ ...... , .......... .TllAY 111011# SATlllAY ZIS t. llS lff Clothing• Furoishinga. Shoes W/11 Bir Bat Blllll' 1st P RIZE: Polo(. Ralph Lmu... Bl!Jier (value 435.00) Rum1er -up will receive ~-HAAN Boat hoe (value $75.00) • In ~of• IH, • dmvirw will bf Ji.Id. tr no l»ff«-t ~;, •ubmJU«/, tM rlcwtt Pttdinion flrill wi OM tncry ~' ptt'IOtL No pg~#»# ~· (0.JC. co _. out ~ •r.11 fOir U..ir bot tipa.J 11• Predict the exact S uper B owl score and bring in this en try form to Garys & Co.• I R edskins --·vs. Broncos -:i I Name I- I Street j L~o~-----.:hone _ • .. ' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday January 25, 1988*1\'A3 Seminars slated on world issues at Saddleback Ruling threatens coastal wetlands A tenn of te"minars on nauonal aqd world is.sun will be presented at Saddlcblck College, bcginnin& Thursday Wlth a forum on .. The Superpowers: Nuclear Weapons and National Sc<:unty." . ~ event will be held from 7 to I 0 p.m. in Room 321 of the college's Busancss and General StudiC'S Building. Fred KJose, an archivist and facuhy member at Saddkback, will lead the present.a lion. A donation ofS2 per person wall be collected at the door. Cont.act Joy~ Hanna at 582-4650 for further information. Peace talk at UCI Mtcbael Oosson. director of the dn1er for Econom ic Conversion, will lead a free workshop on ll'ansforminadefensc plants and m1htar) fad htics to ov1han use Thursday at 3 p.m. at tJCI. The ~sent.ation as sdleduled for Room 640 of lhe Social Science Tower and is sponsored ti> UCT s Student Activnics Office and the Global Peace and Connact Studies Center. Call Peter Bowlcr at 8S6-5181 fordcta1ls. Women'•forum set A lect ure for women enutled "How to Change the Beliefs That Keep You Stuck in Dcstructtve Relationships" wlll be presented Thur~a~ at 7 p m at 2212 Dupont Dmc. Suite I. tn ll"'1ne. Janeen H. Cunningham. a mamage and fa mil) therapist. will lead the d1scuss1on and adm1ss1on as free. Call 476-0795 for f'C'scrvat1ons Blood drive ln CdM The second annual Red Cross blood dmc sponsored by Priestley Chiropractic "'111 be held Thunda) at thc Priestle) office 2 67 E. Coast H ighwa), Corona dcl Mar. Prospective donors ma) &l' e blood bct"een IO a.m. and 2:45 pm. Call 675-7113 10 rest'" c a donatio n lime. Financlal talk in CM Free information on bcc:ommg a ccnificd financial planner in thrtt months "Ill be SI ' cn Thunda) at 6 p.m. at tht Cost.a Mcsa Commun11~ Center. 1845 Park Ave. Call Shannon Ismail at (8051 644-7197 for rewrvauons Mayor's breakfast Jn FV The next Fount.am Vallc\ ma\or's brcalla'>t v.111 be held Thursda) at 8 a .m 'an the aud11onum ot the Fountain Valle~ Rcg.i onal Hospual I., J()'J Euclid St ly BOB YAN EYJtEN ... ..., ...... Environmentalists say a stretch of rare coastal wetlands 1s threatened with de- struc11on no" that thr count) has rejected an appeal apanst a proposed south county rr-s1drntial de' clopmcnt. Two en' 1ronmental groups. Laauna G~nbeh Inc. and the Sea and Sage chapter of the Audubon Society, had 101ncd an an appeal against a 271-acre tract an the Ahso VitJO planned communtty. Thr de\'elopment was approved b) the Count) PlanningComm1ss1on last month. But. bascq on the recommendation of count) planning officials. count~ super- ' 1sors voted 4;-0 last wet"k to rtJC'Ct tJle appeal. Supervisor Hamett Wicdcr was absent. Group members charge that thc natural habitat alona El Toro Creek has c-hanged s1gn1ficant)) since 1978, "'hen the en- ' ironment.al impact rcpon for AJ1so VieJO G'Day in Costa Mesa was submitted. .. The y,etland and npanan area that v.<i) not there 10 1978 1s there now." ~1d Dr Ehz.abeth Brown, a b1ol<>1Jst and member of Laguna Greenbelt El Toro Creek has become "etler in recent )Cars due to a number of factoa indud1na runoff from u1sure "'orld w that 1t nov. supports v. 1llo"s and other wetland plants. as "ell a) v. 1ldhfe Bro" n said. The wetland now suppons a 'anel\ ur birds and other "'1ldhfc. and eHn largt: game such as mountain hon~ ha'e ~t"n seen 1n the area. she said Bro"n said there had been inadequate m onuonng and documcn1a11on ul m- v1ronmental changes afTtc11ng tht: .\h'>v VieJO project. Another change. Bro" n s.a1d ha., 10 do "'tth the proposed San Joa4u1n Hills Transportation Comdor Ongrnall) proposed as an l·1g.ht-lane frcev.a~ thC' comdor ha nov. been der,ignatcd to be toll road That change. Bro"' n said. could mcan that the \.Omdor came!> lc!oi. traffic than ong1nall~ planned which would mean. parallel rout~ such as Pacific Coast High"a' "o uld ha'c mo~ traffic "\inle studies indicatc thai al leas.1 3~ pen.t"nl of lhc traffic on the San Joaquin C t)rndor 1s going to be gcneratcd b\ .\hso \'1l'JP an~ Po~tbll' reduction in the rnmdor r,huuld be subJecl to funher l.'n' 1mnmental stud' .. she said ( uunt\ '>t.aff mtmbers SI\ hov.e' t:r that lhc:'r~ ha\c.' bcen 00 CO\ aronmental Or pldnntn~ 1.hangcs significant enough to "'arrant addiuonal stud' Ro~n Fisher. the count\ s director 01 planning. said the {''UStence of the 1,1. etland'> "'as II.no"' n as earh as 1979 He: ~1d the ~l1S!i.1on VieJO Co de- ' eloper .Jf .\hso \ teJO v.ould take stcp\ to m1nim1ze damage to thc v.ctlands • .. h 's ackno v.leda,ed 1b.11 some ~bet.au arc going to be lost,' he said. "\\ e argue that the most imponant thing 1s to protect the maJor natural habitats an 1he area and v.e feel tt>at thc open spa~ prescr,es "11h1n the comm unit) do 1hat " said Fisher The State Dcpanment of Fish and <.iame has rcspons1b1l1t) for regulatmg an) "t"tland. and the\ .,.,111 str\c as an ad' 1sor to the M1ss1on \"1eJO Co. wnh respect to those "ctlands. hc said V. d) ne Peterson a spol csman for thc \11)s1on \ tCJO ( o . said his compan~ v.ould v.or "Ith the statc to presel"'c 1he E T uro (red. "etlands Bro" n said hov.e' cr. that sht' bchc' ed t!l( frag.ik v.etlands "ould not be pro 1..-r'tt"d ··'>'hat the supef"\ 1sors art' sa~ '"f 1s v.e'll gi 1 c ) ou a g.reen b<ll and Lhen v.c'I .. 111 the rest·· r,he ..aid ··in a fragile coastal c-n' irunment th.st doesn't v.ork · School trustee Overton, 46, di~s Jan Q, en on. a trustee tor the C apl)trano l n11ied School D1stno d1C'd ·unda~ morning after collapsing at her home 1n Dana Point Shc '-'U .i6 Paramedics tool Q, enon tt ~n Clemcntt' Gcnt:ral Hospnal "'here \ht'. "'as pronounced dead at 11 5""' am according w the range Count~ Coroncr·s office .\n autops~ 1s scheduled for tod.a) to de- termine the c au~ of death .\lthough <,ht: had suffcred from a ~II.in d1~a~ dunng the past ~car and had illSt "'eight rcccnt1: o, enon appeared 1) b< n good health said '>Chool d1stnc1 "uPt·r- 1n1endcn1 kromc Thoms~' ··~ c v.crc J U St stunned b> "11 tthc dcat h 1 Tho ms le' ~1d ·· 1 v. as "llh hcr la't Tue'\da' ·and as usual shc v.as 'C" op11m1s11c about thc futurc.. · (), enon "as descnbcd as a d' namo 'Oluntce:-,uggling hcr ume bet"c-cn 'anous edu1..a11on mattcrs. hcr pn' atc bu'>tnt'S!> and fam11\ City F1rcCh1efR1cha.rd Jorgensen .,.,111 speak on fund-raising and Sh1r1C) Walton of thc Volunteer Center West will discuss fund-r.us1ng options for communal) organizatio ns. Call 965-4003 b' WednM<ia) noon to make rcscf"\ at1o ns. Morton Hanaen (left) play• the didjerldoo du.ring the Aut:ralla Day Fair held ove.r the weekend at the Orange County Fairg.rouncla. ActlYitlea ln- eluded aborigine dance. (right) aad booth9 d..laplaylng Au.strali.n curloe auch u boomerangs and the ao-called national food, Vqiemlte. 1nce 19 : sht' had ~n rt..rlC'C"tcd e' cn tv.o \C'-af"S as one of S.C't"n Orangc C'ount] dt"lciat<"s to the (ahfom1a School Boarcl .\!>S.OC1a11on and "'3S actt'C m the .\ssoc1a- t1on for Lov. ·'>'ca Ith hool Dlstnns In l" b--'>he v. a~ president of thc Orange C vunt' '-hoot B<:fa rd .\sr,01.1auor Wlnter classes slated Winter recrcauon 1nstruct1on classn "111 begin Monda) at L:Cl's Campus Recreation O tftcc. v. 11h coursts offered in aerobics. ho~back nding. ice skating. man1al ans, scuba da' 1ng. tcnn1s and sailing. - All clautS a.re open to the public for a small tl-c CaJI the rccrcation office at 856-5346 for add1t1onal 1nformauon. Skies getting unfriendly for small--scale aviation at JW A Tho msle\ s.a1d 'ht' had been a past board mem~r ofttK sch'X..,1 d.stnc•' Regional Occupation Prugram and thc Orange Count\ Traffic ( omrnmc-e "ihc "as clC\ted to her ti~t four·'C'ar ll"nl un the ~ hoo1 txiard 1n ~C> he al~ had bttr a pn' atc computer , >n'\uh.ant Retlred teachers to meet Marun Mathieson. current prcs1dent of the Cahfom1a Reurcd Teachers' Assoc1auon. will be the featured spcakt'r at tht JOIOt luncheon mec11ng of four CRT A di' 1sions Tuesda) at lht Elks Club. 2 12 Elks Lane. Santa Ana. Rcscnauons at 53:!-3:? 19 arc required The mccung wall be followed b) the regular!) scbcduled aencral meeting of D1v1s1on 44 Monday, Jan. 25 • 6 p.m.. Rattait-Beac• City Cou cil. council chambers. 2000 Main St • 6:30 p.m. Cetta Mesa Ptauta1 Commission. council chambers. 17 Fair Dnve. • 7:30 p.m Lqu.a Bad Arta Commission. council chambers. SOS Fornt .\' c Tuesday. Jan. 26 N• IDfttimp sclaHale4. PoL1cE Loe By BOB \.'AS EYKE~ Of -0.-,,... 1W mall aircraft traffic at John \\ J\OC .\arpon has tall.en another noscd1H' jnd some local pilots arc v.omed 1he aa of small-sc:ilt' .,, 1at1on ma' bc com1'ng 10 an end !...Mt month thcre v.as a nt'ar :: ' p:rlent dt'dtnc l'l small plane tratftccomparcd 1oa ~ear ago. anord1ng 10 tigurcs rejl'Jx·J late last "eel There v.crc dcchne'> 1n 111 •ut .11 I:: months dunng IQ -a((11rdtn@ to the figures On the v.holc figure') 'h"" that small aircrafl or general a' 1a1wn 1ral1il v.Js do"n 12 percent la'\t 'ear .:nmpa~ to 1986. .\irhne tratlit on tht' 01hcr hand chmbcd .,, percent o'er thl' past 'ear .. I don't II.no" "'hat's goucn into -\menca." said (1al"' '\aiz\ l'" ner of the JG 5~ A ~mg Cluh anJ Training Center at John Wa~ nc ") ou'•e "'11ne\s1ng the death kncll of corporatc and general a' 1<llton 1n this countn ·· a~ attnbutl·s tht• ded1nc in gencral a' 1at1on to poh11cal and economic factors ··wc'rt gc111ng cost·factored and ta'\ed nghtoutofc\l\tt'nce ··he said ''-\ndv.e'f'C' ge111ngrcgula1ed ou1 ..:>fbus1n~s Then •OU add 1n 1.;>ur It.p l hab1 ht~ S\Slem .. The tear ol legal hab1ht\ has mcant that manufa1::turen ha'e had w Jdd the cost ol huge insurance premium' t•' the pncc of aircraft. :'\ag~ saJd .. ( omparc toda~ 10 19-ll · he \a1d "In I q -Q there v.ere 19.000 nc"' 11i!ht a1n:rall sold in th1scuun1" Last 'car ~h a: v.as t about ~OO The le-pl hab1ht' ., '>i.h.., ;hat 1muram.e rirem1ums ha'c gone' ' h1pi ~nd the~ ·,c iust about l 1llC'd thc marl<'!· He said airspace n."gula11on" "'hKh fa, or airlines at the e\pen-< •I 'mal' planes d1!.<'ouragc people from k a r'l 'lg''"' fl~ ··Proplc Stt that 11·s ge111ng t1gh1er Jnd ughtcrand the~ sa'. 'to ht'I v.11h • ... h~ should I '>pend all this mom•\"" \.ag' said E'en the airlines will sut1er 11 t'c1A.er people gl1 W pn,ate ll1ght schools he s.;i1d "\\ho's going 10 fl~ thOSt' h1g airline~ 1! not~h kams tCI fl,~ .. he said ··It uS<'d 11.1 be that mo'\t pilots camc from thc m1litan But not ""' morc .\bout -, per<t"nt 01 pilots toda' come from i..1' th.if' 1rain10g programs -\t John \\a~ nc. the poh11c~ Jnd e ... on- om1cs ot tiu1lding a nc" tenninal ha'c: FatrDn'e onJan It> • • • maJe ltt..-m0re d '"\ u t for operat •r' .,, 'mJll am r.111 a .. cording 10 (. hns Barron a r'1 111 Jnd 1n\tru1. tor"' th '>'~tar .\' 1a11on T J mall' rvom ror the ne" tt'nninal all gt>naJI J' 1 . .mon ha~ ~n mo,cd to the v. _.,: ''dl· ,,, the a1rpon s.a1d Barron .. ThJ: ' ~"\T a tvta d1~s·cr '\o"' <''Cf'· ••:1(' I'> ,rt,Sinll <1't'r ('\(''°\bod\ elc;('\ run"'J' · ~ · Barron ..aid no"',' l'r that hc had n 'l n \1u.·d J dedtnl' ., '"ll'rcst 1r sMall-..,..alc "' 1.11 •n ·'f', e '><'l'n a Jr"r-<'ff th1~ m\._nth \1ut thJt°'• J ..,,uJ thing k..'r altl.°r { 'in~tma'> · hl' '>.1 J "Pl't'Pk ha,._. -.~nt al' :her mone~ .. r t hl 'iohd.n ~ .\nvthn pilot ah. \.lid t':t"" hJ\ln 1 nvt1\l"d .l ... de'" tnl' in gt'nera a' :w- Tha..-·s no 1ndi~at "r. thJ: '.;r o per JI mr, hJ' e dt""Crt'a"K-d '-I j \\a' ne T u1•m ala. uv.ncr ol \tan" .\\1atl0n l<.x Jtt•d at John \\J,ne \1rt"1n .\Ian \1 urph~ ass1s:Jr1 @t nt•-a man.igt'r >1 thl· Jtrpon )..l td • '1t d~, "'l •n <.ma t. 31'l'J!t !lights at Johr \\ •. ~. ~rtl~tcd a OJtll.. nal trend It .. :ould be the ll''' '" • ~,· ·:!'le \."OSI 1.11 thl' Jirtraft but all 'l" l~ll' '' uOI:-\ :ratli\ ligur1.•s for genl•ra J\1J:1 " ~J'' ~n going do"n ·· he <.J1J Onh t"o of(), crton s s1 \ ,olkattucs :\D the ~hoot board ~aJ SC'f"\ C'd l•nger Thi..,mSc."h nott"d \\1th : I u studcnt\ the d1stnll 1~ ,,n, 01 1hc ,c unt~ ·s largest Thomsch s.11d tht' S4: hoo1 d1stnc1 ha lh(' uptton of e1tha appointing <.0meon1: 10 tin1r,h O't'n0n" tt'rm -v.hKh "'ould ha' c: C\P reJ in 'q~ -or holding a r,pec !a l t""IC\:'tlC n . ..,ht" "a~ d \Cf\ COOt dt'I berate <.tabillllng turll' · he s.a1d ·· hc "-Ouh.! 1..'llen ..a' ·1 mt• cut Ho"' 1s this going to atll-1.t the ,hildrcn and our d1stru. :""" Hal"T' Bithell J lonncr member \)! th< L.111una.Beach l n1f1ed hoot D1sme1 "'he ln(IA. ()\t'n<'n ~1d \hc "a' a tr-rcl~s v. 'r\.cr ·she: "as alv.a~s a pc~n o,a,hl ""1r c-d : v.ard' aCCl'mphshmg th1"1gs B11hel '>.1 d '"I ltJUnd hcr to be a\('!""\ ro'\11 \e f'l'~1n .. -he 1s sur' l'ed b' her liushand Rich· Jrd a son Enl. ""ho 1s a 1un1or a: Dana Hills High hool to,a,o stc"pson'> .\.iarl ol '-:I f' Diego and Da' 1d of pain thrtt' ,•q'l\iaughtcrs \telan1t ot Capistrano fka,h \ alt:nt' of Boston and "'-'m~rh. "'"' 15 S('f"\IDg tn the l ' .\1r Fo~ and •14 '"' 1~.tcr\.. "'-a ' \kDonaJd of Ba\.crsfidd JnJ l arol Hollo"cll of Pomona \kmonal ~" 1c~ arc pending bct1A.C'Cn noon and 8 pm • • • Midair crash killing Viejo pilot and son investigated Cash and food "'uh a total 'aJuc ol S l5t-v.ere rcixmedl~ stolcn in a burgla~ at tht' East I ~th t~t Dc-h. I -o E I "th 1 Fnda' night or Saturda~ morning The break-in oc- curred ~t"een 5 -l.5 pm and -:!.5 am Boule' Jr.J lrrine ;.\ maroon I"'"' T '""Na p1cl up truck. hccn<.c.' nl>mhcr 2l I -4 't-"a~ rt'poned 'tl'kn 1n the ::ti() blod of Hunungwn On' c 0' er thc "-eelend Thc e"10 d3tc and lime ofthc thctl 1s not l no"n .\pair of sk i boots of undetermined 'aluc v.t"rc rr-poncd stokn from a garage in thc first bloc._ of \'1qo Dn' f' Thc theft 1s belle' ed to have lX'CurrC'd somc t1mc 1n '4tc Dc-ccmber or rarh Januaf"\ . .. ... .\ gra~ boat co' er ,-.Jued at m~ than S "as stolt-n 1n the t 4900 blocl of umac .\' t"nue late Saturda) or ea rl\ unda~. The theft occul'Tt'd bct'"ttn 10 p.m and 9 a.m TEMPLE CITY (AP) -The twisled remains of a small aircraft that pluneed into a yard after a midair collision with another plane weR removed Sunday as federal 10-~·cstipton continued a probe of thc accident that killed two people. Pilot Roben H. Kapncc, 44, of Mis.sion Viejo and his 1 S-ycar-old son. Todd. died Saturday afternoon when their sinak~nsf ne Cessna I 52 plunaed out oT control after its tail was Sheared off. A twto~aaiM Cessna 411 and 111 pitot maneuvaed l.S maks 10 Bwt..llk Aarpon and landed safely about tcvt:n minula afta the col- ltsion. dnpne W"CTC' damage to thc plane's left ~ropeller. Tht' colhs1 on occurred dunnaclcar. sunn) "-eather Kagantt's plane landed m the front yard of a borne OINlled b} a veteru Walt Dlsnc) cartoon animator Thc t.atJ section was found a haJf-m1IC' awa)' and debris was sanercd O\-er ~ve~ blocks.. No one on the ground was injured. "The plane has been rcmoved from tht yard," Los Angeles Count) Shcrifrs i:Xputy Gar) Gnffith said Sunday. "The area bas bttn ckarcd and ~·ve had no ca.Its or complaints of 'looklc--loos' 11 all." Both aucraf\ *'"' nyina under Newport811ell A .ti outfit. a ni&b1 bq. 1vro llt'IMftl blip and a tedd}' be9t" ~ amoac the uems toleo from • l 91S Toyo&a Cebca perked last month on Campus Drive, t.bc vtetim load polite ~)'. The km ·~ estimated at $4ll. • • • • A vandal a&uhed a Ure and ~ COftvutlbk top to I .... ) 19 7 Vol~ c.brlokt per\ed Sun· di) aftcmooa 11 fuluon b&&od ~ ..... was estima1t'd at S4. I ?0 t4 \. lsuaJ flight rules and ncnher ont' v.as in contact ""llh the Federal "\•1at1on .\dminmrauon when the acc1dcn1 occurred shonl) after 2 p.m . tur- d&\ kapncc's plane sliced throu&h a magnolia trtt an the front vard or Ward K.Jmball ~ His ...-ire: lkm. 6. and dau&hter. 1-..ell). 48. \\crt not IOJUred after the plane crashed JU St ei&ht feet from their home. KimbaJI rcttrcd aft.er a 40-)car carttr at DtsnC)' S1udio. dunna v. h1ch 1be animator and d1rtttor •-orkcd on ncarl) e'n) an1m11ed feature t~ tudao produced. anduchna " no• \\'h1te and the ~en O-.-.rfs.." .. Dumbo .. and .. ~nottluo." • • • Jew.~Jr')' valued at S 1.150 •"&S rq>c>ncd stolen Fnday from a borne on Rt:V'tT. the ~lC'tim IOld pohcc. c.-.... Food and cuh., witb a \Ota) value Of SI i.c •"Cft "'1)0l1ed Sloim an a bur&)ary at the El Ra.ncbo Remwu\. 19.S E. 17th 1. late Frida or ~ Sat\ll'da) The break·in OC'CWmt bt-t•«n 6 pm or 6.4S am. • • • Jc•~lr'l , ... ~ 11 Sl.300 ~ tokn from a booth at t.be wap fDtt1.. • • • .\n un11knt1ficd man ~as annted unda) :it 5 ::o p m m conn«t1on "'1th thc theft of compact disks from the K-Man storc. 1:00 Harbor . . . .\ b1l 'cit 'alueJ lt S I~) "a!> stol<'n 1n thc ti~t bllx l 01 _ ngs~rrov. unda\ Th<' bluc Murra' Bcachcrua~r "as f'C'ponedl> stolt"n Authorities send blast of noise at bombing suspects· compound TbOl.C bam'"aded ba'c said t~' v.oo't ldl'c until 1ngtr. "'ho v.as '' mumcatC'd from ~ church and "'2$ ~ to death ntn' 'ea.rs 110 this month b' pohct u he aimed a aun al l.bcm. ·~ "murTttted M Ntnc cluld~ arc amona lh~ bamaded l.S a .... pp'$ 21 •\Uf~ btotbtt. J than OUISidt tbt rompound ~ . "'"pp's parcDts. Ramon and Hamtt v.app. carric-d ~s that rod: ..~ let u.s vrsit our famil . nttTd). the ~nts of ~m and Jon •-.PP. .. aod .. We Lo"' You' Me>m and o.d .. They abo tntd to deb'n mtl. and Ood to tM fl mil) bu1 ~ ck'nicd "'\\ e ha\C-tft told wm that tt's out oflhf~~ .. id Boc1rtro ··1fahe P'OrR t~ lbttt •ould ptC' uptNlt tt~honc and cst.abhsh somt com- mun1cat1ons and ""~ ~t anunnm thal 1f Y.~ send pcoplt an lhtrc lhr) .,.,ouldn·l tx t.al..en capt1\'e, tht) v.ouldn'l tx harmed -• Thote an dt Nl"-c not t.aJted d1rt<'\h •lth au\h()nlln for moft than a •'Cd. Bod.mo said be .,....., ~the wapp p!Um\$ ~ ah~ entered -we're not dc:ah Wllb a rau mind. -Bodrcro said. ~ ··we do ha"e some anfonnau.n lha.t t~ ba\'e O.ptoci'-U lft 1ht restdmcc a.nd lhat the') are ~ tO Utt lhotc t,piosl,.tt tf ~ dcen tba t ntttsSal) •• ~ut.hont ~"Cttd po•-n \O rompu.nd Wed~) and on t•r· da~ ('U\ tht ,. .. in-. quake registers 5.3, but no dain&ge reported Cali=~ (AP)-A large eanhquakc struck Baja &..--.:___ Mexico, early today, shalcina some Cali- ._ ..... awakt but trigering no immediate damage l'lpOIU eitbrr nonb or south of the border, officials said. The quake rqistcred S.3 on the Richter scaJe, struck at ~ 17 LnL and wa.s centered in a sparsely populated area about 4' miles cast of the 8-ja t alifom1a resort town of ~said Robert Finn, spokesman at the California Institute of Tcchnoloey in Pasadena. A quake of that maanit"de is capable of causing considerable damqc in a popufated area. The U.S. Geological Survey in Golden, Colo .. measwcd t~uake at S.0. An earlier, preliminary reading by the California Office of Emeraency Services put the quake a1 6.0 and in t.be same aeneral are.a, but those readings often are re' ised drasticalJy. In Enscnada, a Pacific coast resort about Set miles soutlloftbc U .S. border. theq\Ulkeawakened guests in the El Conc:z Hotel. -It was really hght. Some guests called down to the desk, but it was really peaceful," said Jose Luis He~ra. a desk clerk. There wasn't any damage at the three-story hotel, he said . .. We felt nothina here," said Luis Rcymundo Siordia. an ambulance driver on duty at the Red Cross in Enscnada, Northern ~a California. "We don't have any reports of any seismic movement. Everything is very quiet." There were no immediate reports of damage in Ojos Negros, a town to the cast, Siordia said, addina that thett are no telephones in Ojos Negros. The earlier report put the ~ter near the a.ewn of San Fehpe, about 100 miles away on the Gulf of California coast, where firefighter Luis Abaroa said he felt nothing. The quake was felt across a wide area of Southern Cahfom1a. but no damage was reported. • ..We felt 1t. It didn't feel real strong, and we've gotten JUSt a few calls about it." said Pat McNew. a San Diego Count) shenffs dispatcher. -- There were "o immediate reports of damage, shc- sa1d. Dying refugee, mother reunited SAN JOSE (AP) -Their long·sought reunion took seven years. but a young cancer patient dung to lifr long enough to sec his final wish come true when his mother .,arrived from Vietnam over the weekend. continues to hang on," said Dr. James.Thompson ... He has a lot of drive and a very strong will to live." .. Mom. I love you.·· said 20.year-old Nguyen Ngoc Anh, his eyes filling with tears as Dinh Thi Ly arrived at his hospital bed at the Santa Clara Valley Medical Center Saturday. .. Be brave. I'm here. I love you and I missed you everyday when I was in Vietnam," his mother responded. Anh. suffering from spinal cancer. also is grateful to those who enabled his mother to cut through the bureaucratic red tape that had kept her from joining him from Saigon earlier. Looking around his bed Saturday, he looked at some of those who made his dream come true and whispered .. Thank you" in Vietnamese." Hospital staff members say An h's condition is still grave but that his spin ts were v151bl~ lifted by the visit. MThe whole staff has been impressed that he Anh escaped from Vietnam on a small boat and came to the United States to live with his father and two sisters. His mother and another brother were on a different boat. which "as intercepted and sent back to Vietnam. Teen, four children perish Bakker plans as Montebello home burns new retreat By ne Associated Press MONTEBELLO-A teen-age girl and three children died and t\.\-O other youngsters were cntically injured when a fire roared through a house where a smoke detector was found unused in tts box. authonttes said. ··w e ""ould ha\'e saved lives had the) used the smoke detector." Battalion Chief Ro) Richardson said. "It's pathetic.·· The fire was reported about 4.~0 a.m . Sunda) . at the Walnut Avenue home of J oe and Glona Medina. who were celebrating the I-year-old birthday and christening of their son. Jacob. $5 mllllon lottery jackpot won SACRAMENTO -i\ lottc-ry player who bought a lotto ucket at a Concord mini-market has won aS5.3 m1lhonJackpot. state lotter) officials sa). Someone picked all of the six winning numbers m the w~kend's ''J_,otto 649" game to earn the $5.334.850 pnze. the California Lotter) announced Sunday. The Jackpot ucket v.as purchased at a 7-Ele\'en store on ~onument Boule' ard 1n Concord. but the name of the winner"on't be kno" n unul he or she tums 1n the ticket at a state lottel') office. The "inning lotto numbers picked Saturda) night "ere 16. 13. 43. 7. 23. 3 and the bonus number. 38. Ele' en uckets had fi, e correct numbers and the bonus number and are \\Orth S 133.337 each. lo tter) o fficials said Sunda). Those tickets included one purchased 1n Huntingto n Beach. JANUARY GRAND OPENING SALE .-."' REGISTER FOR DOOR PRIZES FEATURING GIFT BASKETS FOR YOUR SPECIAL VALENTINE SILK FLORAL DESIGNS ART DECO AND IMPORTS BAND PAINTED AND SUEDE F ASWONS SPECIAL TEE SHOPS 2816 NEWPORT BLVD. NEWPORT BEACH (ON THE PENINSULA! OPEN 10 · 8 DAILY CLOSED HOLIDAYS 675-9500 in thedesert PALM SPRINGS (AP) -Ousted PTL leader Jim Bakker says he's making plans to build a $2 billion rehJious retreat in the Southern Cahfomia desert that will be bigger than Heritage U.S.A. in South Caro- lina. The sprawling compfex, called Heritage Springs International, will feature a hotel. condominiums. shop- ping center. cafeteria. dinner theater. tele' 1sion studio, a recreational fa. ciltt) for bo"ling and tennis. and a ~0.000-seat church auditorium. .. I "111 be one of the pastors:· Bakker said Sunda) evening 1n a telephone inten 1e" from his rented home to Palm Spnngs. The retreat wtll be designed in a Spanish Med1temmean mouf and be almost enureh enclosed to accom- modate the seorch1ng temperatures that soar abo\C' 110 degrees in the summer. .. You will be able to walk ever)· "'here 1n this \'lllage," he said. Hentage Spnngs "ill also feature a Hol) Land S«llon that will have re· enactment of b1bhcal stones. The Bakkers also hope to do a TV show. sort of an Ann Landers-style advice shov.. from their studio. he said. Bakker said the complex will be built somewhere in the Coachella V.alle). 100 miles cast of Los An$eles. but he ded1ned to say in what ell). He also declined to say how he will raise the money for the S2 billion pric\. tag. but added that some of the mone) has already ~n pledged b~ backers Sancllnleta MldJe.n a-rd downed Contra aupply plane. Downed Contra plane took off from CIA base MANAGUA. Nicaragua (AP)-A creY>'man o f a Contra supply plane shot down by Sandinista troops said the aircraft took off from a ClA- manned base 1n Honduras, and the Nicaraguan $Ovemment claimed the pilot worked for the C IA. President Daniel Onega said late Sunda) that the statements by Alejan- dro Sanchez Hernra proved Hon· duras is v1olaung provisions of a Central Amencan peace plan b) allo" mg anu-Sandinista rebels to operate out of Honduras. The ~fense Ministry said four crewmen -three Nicaraguans and a Colombian pilot -were lolled when the '1ntage OC-6 suppl) plane was shot down with a Soviet-made. sur· face-to-air m1ss1le over southern Nicaragua late Saturday. There "ere no .\mencans on board. according to the go,emment and the U .S.-backed Contras Sanchez Herrera. a Nicaraguan. said the pilot was known to 1he other crew members onl\ as "Richard:· The ~fense M 101StF) said the pilot \\Orked for the C l.\ Sanchez Herrera was allo\\-ed to talk to reponers Sunda) while under military custod) in the to"n ofSan Carlos. a fe" miles from the crash sue. Sanchez Herrera said two men parachuted from the plane "1th a suppl) of food and ammunition for the Contras befott 11 "as shot down. He didn't 1denuf-. them but said he believed the men ·had been trained in the United Statt"S 10 1he handhng of explOSi\'CS. He told reponers the plane took off from a CJ .\-manned base 1n S"an Island 10 Hond ura~and that about 30 peo'ple from the Cl.\ direc1ed the mission from the island. Swan Island has been used for decades b) the American m1h1an 10 monitor ship. pmgand m1htal') aCtl\ rt) 1n the area. Spokesmen at the State Depart- ment "ere not 1mmediateh a' a1lable Sunda) night to comment on the charges against the Cl.\. .\ddress1ng leaders o f the "'lat1onal Fermersand Ranchers U nion. Ortega said Sanchez Herrera's statc-menl is proof that Honduras 1s allowing 1hc L'nited States to use Its tc-mlof\ 1n act1\ 1t1es against :"\ 1caragua · N. Klorea euts0tf contacts with U.S. TOKYO (AP) -Nonb Korea retaliated today (or the Uniled States brandina it a terrorist state by severina contacts with U.S'. diplomats and ttf usins to discuss the return of the bodies of 1CrVicemen miSJUig from tbeKora.n..ar. The move came less than a Wttk after the State Depe.rtment put North Korea on its list of countries that support terrorism. dedarina that it did not "live up to the standards o( civilized behaVlor." Thursday the United States withdrew authonution for U .S. diplomats to hold .. substantive di.,_ cussions" with North Korean d iplomats in neutral scttinp. cancel· ing a policy set last March to help. pave the wa) for Nonh Korean parucipauon in the 1911 Swnmer Olympics, bem& held in South Korea. The action was in rnp<>nK to the bombint tn November of a South Korean Jetliner carryina I IS people. A \\Oman who had been a puscnaier on an earlier part of the Oijbt confessed Jan. IS thatshe was a North Korean aaent and had planted a bomb on the jct. which d1sappearcd over Burma. All aboard died. South Korea said the bombina was intended to discouraae othrr nations from part1cipatina in the Olympics in Seoul. Nonh Korea had demanded unsuccessfully to be made a co-host for the 1988 Olympics. Nonh Korea s communist 1ovem4 ment has denied involvement in the destruction of the plane. Placmg Nonh Kore.a on the tcr- ro nst hst means additional rcstnc- uons on U.S. trade with North Korea and requires the Un1led States to vote against loans to Nonh Korea by inte~1onal lending fTOUP5-The other tions on the list are Iran, L1b)a. na. Cuba and North Yemen A Nonh Korean Foreign., Ministry spokesman. 10 a statement earned by the Korean Central News AFncy, mon11ored in Tokyo. said Nonh Korea has "suffered due to the United States and has the right to take even SC\ trer steps than sanctions against the Un11ed States:· He did notspecify "hat action Nonh Korea would take, but later mentioned bringing the L'n1ted States before an international tnbunal. ore' en harsher retribution. Prince Andrew, Fergie expecting LONDON -The Duke and D uchess of 'l orl are eApect10g a bab) 1n August. Buckingham Palace announced toda). The child will be fifth in lane to the Bnush throne The bab' will be the first for Pnnce Andre\\, second son of Queen Elizabeth II. and his "1fe. the former arah Ferguson The couple were mamed Jul) 23. 1986. The 28-)ear-old duchess 1s 10 "excellent health.·· said a palace spokesman. speaking anon)mousl~ in keeping w11h British custo m. The spokesman said she "ould continue pubhcengagements. includ10ga "i51l next month to Los Angeles where she and her ~7-}ear-old husband are patro ns of a Brittsh festival. Israeli leaders spilt on truce JERUSi\LEM -Pn me M1n1ster Y1tzhak Shamir and Foreign ~t1n1ster Shimon Peres spill toda~ on \\hether to endorse E$}Pt's ne" peace m1ttat1"c and a moratonum on Je" 1sh settlement building m the occupied tern tones. Thert "ere also reports of scattered anu-0ecupa11on '1olence 10 the West Bank t&nd Gu.a ~mp -\nd t~o liberal lsrach lawmakers chuged in a report that soldiers ha\'e broken the bones of more than 200 Pales11n1ans since the ann) began discourq.ing the u~· of"' e ammun1uon to quell unrest. relying more on ph ~ s1ca I force Manigat winner ln Hald PORT·AU·PRINC E. Ha1t1 -Political scieotast Leslie Mamgat pled~ed to le.ad an honest government repre~nung all sectors of Haman socict,Y after beina offic1all~ declared the count!') ·s new prestdcnL A m~n "ho sen ed as a police chief dunng the Duvalier d1c1a1orsh1p "as declared the winner of the mayor's contest 10 Port-au·Pnnce. Opposition leaders called the election a sham. and two defeated candidates said thC') would contest the results. announced Sunda). PARKING ALEITT! SAINT JOSEPH BOS PIT AL 0c.-r1S Deborah and David Hilleal'). If' 1ne. bo~ Juury f Mr and Mrs. Robert Nelson. lnine. bo~ JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT HowdyFclbl My name isO.C. and rrff trusty friend hn ls MlcAt1tu Wt'\49 belf\ tnd ~ the peope at.John wayn&Airport to lceep )QJ k1bmed ~ ttwt nlW llirport ~ projecl We'\tt ~ IO'M important news tor II d)QI tllkJW~ ~from lhl*Port. On F«lruliy 1, the lanQ-W:mpningJcinor1h """""'*"' wllcbe~"9y. Wt'•~ two long-am kD on Main Sirwet bett e 1n Rldt1ill lwe. and MlcAt1tu aw., lr:ftm a. blu~ftorn the llirport. Faonty S5.00 f>!dl¥ )QJ get a Uly ~ pattcing lotthll'lopen 24 hculadav. 385dllyta )W We ~~ ac:omfortarM~ butthll wl drop you off~ It thewminll. AM )QJ need to do ii allow an mra hll hcuwt'9fl you pan to &.-the north Iota end we'• doh rtll · Weft Chltls II for now, but -.p 1n •out tor us. We~ IO leap )QJ ~todateon theQIMl thf9 hipper ling llthe.k>tvl Wayne Ahport. -?f"'m ~I O.C.lndMKAtttu .. • ' Novembertt hal')n and Raymond fla,1n. "est· minster. bo) November 30 l 1h and Forooz.an Sarcon. In ine. girl Dttember % Janna and Wayne Woodroof. Hunt· ington Beach. girl Dttember 14 Carmen and Felix Alba. Santa Ana. girl Dffembet t'7 Pam and Dennis Bennet!. Costa Mesa. girl HOAG MEMORIAL ROSPIT AL Nonmber U Mr. and Mrs. Charle Wolfe, Costa Mesa. bo) Ottember 31 Mr and Mrs. Fredd~ Figueroa. M1~s1on \'1eJO. girl Ju .. ry t Mr. and ~1rs. Michael pe)er. Hunt· ington Beach. girt Jaaury3 Mr. and Mrs. John Sturgess. Newpon Beach. girl Juury4 Mr. and Mtl. Robert Capelhnt, Mission V1eJo. bo) Ju•ary s Mr. and Mrs. Randy Schafer. Foun- tain Valley. girl Juuryt Mr and Mrs. Lcon•rd Ka-.·abe. H untington Beach. boy Mr. and Mrs. Wilham Cloud. Costa Mesa. &)rl Mr. and Mrs. Re•d tc1nblut-r. Mission V1e10. bo) ,_,, Mr. and Mtl. David Sammons. ev.- pon Beach. twins. bo) and airl Mr. and Mes. Marl Coller. CO!.t.a M~.bo)' .........,. Mr.and Mn. MK'had Kovan. Foun- tain Valky. boy Juury II Mr and Mrs. Llo)d Schroeder. lnmc. bo) Mr. and Mrs. George Hamill. Cost.a Mesa. boy Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wakefield. Hunt- ington Beach. girl Juury 11 Mr. and Mrs Michael White. Costa Mesa. g.irl Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Spaeth. Irvine. girl Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hansen. Costa Mesa. girl Ju .. ry It Mr and Mrs. Richard Shepperd. Westminster. girl Mr. and Mrs. Ste\en Ewald, Costa Mesa. bo> Mr. and Mrs. Gal')' McK.inenck. Irvine, girl Juury 11 Mr. and Mrs. E. In~. Laauna Halls. girl Mr. and Mrs. Mkhael Burnsi<k. Costa Mesa. girl M r. and Mrs. Traq• Matiow. Costa Mcsa, airl SAN CLEMENTE BOSPIT AL Dtte:mMr It Infra Martinet and 8ot1ifas10 Sanc- hez. Dana Point, gir1 Dttnlkf'!l Mal') and Walter Allen, San Oeme01c. boy Dtttmkt-H Bcatnz and David Mancilla. San Clemente. airl • ~Sl Sandra and teve Coo-per. San Ocmcnte. 11rt J~t Rebecca and David Giete. San Ckmentc. bo) J191!1UI~~ Juba Mendt1 ~"4 Alfredo MeMea.~~-- n ~mrnte. boy "~· Ahc1a and RHI flotts, S.n Clemen~. bo) · w 142-1111 Blooiltllirsty crowd urg tt officer's slayer; city council blamed DALLAS CAI>) -Police officers She said an~ w1tnestcs who were cnrqedoy reports that a crowd shouted ··shoot him·· were uas sick as urg~ a deranaed man to shoot a the suspect who d id 1t." policeman who died pleading for his Police Capt John Holt said today li~e •. ~nd some offi(Crs charged that that authorities were tryina to idcnt- cn11c1sm by politicians undermined afy those who shouted .. Shoot b1m" as support for law enforcement. ~ officer pleaded for his life, and .. , think I can speak for a lot of said if they could be found. murder officers. We feel at>aodoned:· police charges m1gbt be cons1dettd. ··we·u ofrtOCr J.C. Harris said Sunday. a day seek the d1stnct attomC')''s..adY1« and after officer John Chase. 25. was shot guidance." Hoh said. to death by a homcltSs man with a Holt earf icr said offid als were history of mental illness. unable 10 identify any of the people Pohcc Cbicf Billy Pnnce blamed and didn't know wha& they could be l~e shooting partl) on recen1 cri1i-charged with if found c1sm of the department by City Chase was ~panna to wnlc a Council members who have at· traffic ticket at a busy downtown 1nl>uted problems betWttn the de-intersection shortl) after 8:30 a.m . ~ment and the community to Saturday when a pedtStnan who did raCtal tensions. not know the driver began araumg The Dallas Polt<-t .t\sSOC'1a11o n. with the officer. satd police representing rank-and-file officers. spokeswoman Vicki Hawkins. agittd w11h tht chief and askc!d The attacker took Chase's .44- Ma)or Annette S1rauss and thTee 'caliber gun and shot him 10 the face council members not to attend before a crowd of about 30 peo ple. Chase's memonal services. sched: .. The officer was sa~1ng ·Don't uled for Tuesday. shoot me! rll help you whatever wa) I This momang eight 0f the cit) 's 11 can!' But the guy shot him 1n the council members gathered in the head,... witness Melitha Johnson parlting lot whc~ the shooting oc· said. curred to show support for the police. "One girt said that people 1n the .. We'\c had a tragedy in thisc1ty. a crowd were saying. 'Shoot him. shoot tngcd) that could have happened him again .... said police Lt Jerald anywhere." said Strauss. She blamed Calame. the shooting in pan on the pnson The suspect. Carl Dudle) W1l- system and the problem of homeless hams. 34. "as fatall\ shot bv off-dut~ people with menul 1llntSs.. officers . ' Ex ecution of Darden halted by high court TALLAHASSEE. Aa. (AP) -The U S. Supreme Coun 1oday agreed to halt the scheduled e~ecution of Flonda dca1h row inmate Willie o ... den. whose inn~nce has betn proclaimed by death penalty o ppo- nenlS from New York to Moscow. The Sta) will remain in effect at IC:a$t until thccouncan hear Dardcn's latest appeal. but 1here was no 11\dicataon when Utat would happen. Darden had been scheduled to die Feb. 3 in Florida'sclcctncchair. Soviet d1ss1dent Andrei Sakharo'. Rep. John Con)crs Jr.. D-M1ch .. Amcncan actress Margot l(jdder and Bnt1sh rock star Peter Gabncl ba\ce joined AmntSt) lntemauonaJ in ask- 10& Gm_ Bob Ma.rtrncz -t0-grant clemcnc) 10 Darden. ThC) cnc affidavits from a minister and a woman 1ha1 Darden could not ha'e been at the Sttnl' oftbc murder of a Lakeland furniture store owner dunng a September 1973 holdup. Death penally opponcnlS sa) Darden as facing electrocuuon be- cause he 1s black and victim James Turman "as "'h1te. "This 1s not a unique case.'' said Jaqu1 Hunt. spokeswoman for Amnest) lnternauonal an New York. "People think the death penalt) 1s a qu1clc fh for the crime problem. You can S) mpath1zc with people's wish to be secure. but ~hen )OU sec the people "'ho arc being executed you sec lhey arc ahe poor. the mental!\ retarded. JUVentlCS an~ people who arc poSSlbl· I> innocent -J~ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. January 25. 19'J8 * A8 Shultz leading campaign r to ratify missile-ban pact . WASHING TON (AP)-Sccrctaf') of State Georsc P. Shultz assured the Senate toda) the Reagan adm1n1s- tration would "react v1gorousl}" 1f the Soviet U nion appeared to be viola tang a treat) banning U.S. and Soviet 1ntermed1ate-range nuclear m1ss1les. Shultz led off the adminastrauon's dn' e for Senate.approval of the treat) v.1th a 48-page Stalemtnt It declared that the ~unt) of the Un1 ttd States and us NATO alhes v.ould be bolstered b) the treat) signed last month b~ President Reagan and So' 1et Communist Pan) GcneraJ Sccretaf') M1kha1l Gorbac he' at thctr We5h1niton ~ummn menrng Cnucs ha\C questioned the "'1s- dom of the proposed "llhdra .... al of ~mencan Pershing 11 and ground- launched cru1'>t' m1ss1les from West- cm Europe·s nuclear shield. and contend lbat thl' treat) 's safquards against cheating arc inadequate. Shultz. tes11fy1ng befo~ the open- ing session of Senate Foreign Rela- tions Commntcc hcanngs, sa1d 1he l ntermtdJate-rangc Nuclear Forces or INF treat) actually strengthens tJ .S. and allied secunty. .. It enhances in1emauonaJ s1.ab- 1ht). h ma~ be openanga new chapter an arms conlrol -the bcginniog of rcd.!ct1ons." ShuJu said. The treat) pro' ides that within thrtt >cars ofrauficataon. both coun- tnes would finish eh m1oaung all their nuclcaf-rruH1les v.1th rangn-0f315 to 3.125 miles. Thl'SC weapons account for aboul 4 percent of their nuclear arm ones. Whale Shultz was testif) 1ng before the Forc1~ Rela11ons panel. ~ h1ch has legal authont) to act on the treat), Defense Secret.al') Frank C. Carlucci was maktng his case for ratification before the Senate Armed Scrv1cn Committee. v.h1ch pla)s an influen- tial ad' ISOf') role. The treat) 's fate ulumately will be decided b) the full Senate. probabl) in earl\ spnng. Shufu acknov.lcdged tha11he trea· t\ might not conwn air-U&ht u- surances against So\ 1ct viofaiions. Reagan has repea1edl) acC\Jsed Mos- co"' of '1olating past arms control agreements "~o treat) in and of itself can fuJI) guarantee compliance with its_ terms.-Sllulu told a .packed heanng room an the modcm1st1c Hart Senate offi ce building ··~o responsible L" S offiCtal can tell 'ou that v.e do not need to w nslder possible cheating." he s.a1d Democrats' contenders heat up debate as poll positions change DU RH .\ \1 . ~ H (AP) -Bruce Babbitt could take 11 v.hcn Alben Gore charactenzed his propo~ na- uonal sales ta\ as regrcss1H. though But the Tennessee senator had the unfair practices last word: .. Well. don't put out a Rcpubhcan idea. then " he vehementl~ disagr~d. But when The exchange came "'Ith a ne"' poll Gort Galled 1t a ··Republican idea." putting Babbitt's suppon at 13 per· the former .\nzona 80,emor got his cent 10 New Hampshire. "h1ch hold~ had.ks up Its lcadoff pnmaf) Feb 16 The l o!> ··The "'hole purpose .. 1s to move u~ into a changed snuauon where we can reall~ brea~ foreign markets open .. Gephardt said R~agan favors putting·Contra military aid in escrow account >\ngclcs Times poll had Mass.achu- "To m) ~a} of ahinking. Re-setts Go'. Michael Duuk1s leading Gore said the automauc feature of the Gephardt b11l "tnggers a trade v.-ar ~au!>C of !>Orne feud that'~·· publican is a four-letter "'Ord." Bab-.... uh 37 percent. followed b) Illinois non~nse b111 said Sunda' after the close of the Sen. Paul Simon "'llh 19 percent Gore then heard Babbitt lump him founh ~mocrat1c prts1dent1al de-A p<>ll in 10...,a, .... hos.c caucus.cs art an the rann of protecuorusts for bate 1n 10 da)s Feb. S.. sho"'ed Rep Richard suppon1ng an 01l 1mport foe. .WASHING TON (AP) -Presidenl Reagan as lcanin1 toward a plan that would provide humanitanan assistance to rebels in N1ca~gua but put military aid an to an csc,row account pending thl' outcome of regional peace ncaot1allons. an adm1n1stration official said today. ··That's across the line." Babbitt Gephardt among the leaders there .. Did . .'' Babbitt told ~hardt. making the Massoun congressman a ·T,e got some good ne"s for ~ou tj told Gore during the most heated target Sunda) for repeated a1tac~s on Gore is a protcct1omst. too. He's "~o final dcc1S1ons ha' c been made on the le' el of the e\lhangc of the nauonall\. tcleva~ his ,...,de prooosal. f nd h fi I f4 f h ka ; .... ad' ocaungan oil 1mp<>n fee. which 1s u 1ng nor t e ana onn o t e pac gc." t"'o-1four encounter "I spent time 1n another form ofprotecuonism ·· The adman1strat1on o fficial confirmed. ho"'e' er th~t .. Selma. ~labama. 1n the c1v1I nghts Gephardt said ha~ bill "'ould 1m- the idea of an escrow account is being considered . mo' ement and nobody came and pose automauc sanctions against .\dded fo rmer Colorado Sen Gan The offic:ul also confirmed that N1caragan President Dani~I Ortep had wntten· a personal letter to Reapn. prom1S1ng to give up power 1f national tlect1ons dl'term1ne tbe people want another lcadtr. House Speaker Jim Wneht said Reagan's aid request questioned m) crcdtnttaJs as a nations that have trade imbalances Han ··The v.-orst old idea r'e heard ..... 11 ment careful cons1dcrauon 1f the president does not Democrat " with the L' n1tl'd States as a ~ult of of in this campaign 1s protectionism ·· 1ns1non1mmed~1tm1l1~1') aad. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Responding to quest1o·ns Sunda) on ABC-TV's 11 But the official. who refused to be named. dismissed On~·s letter as "nothing nC"." sa)ing the Nicaraguan prcsadl'nt had m~de s1m1lar promises earlier. The offic1aJ sa'fd Re..,.n would l"l'J>I> By m1d-w~lc. Rcapn wtll scnd a request to Congress for more aid for the Con1ra rebels. "Tha~ Week With David Bnnkle) ... Wnght. D-Texas. said he "ould be "'1llang 10 take a close look at such a pac~age 1f 1t contained adequate safeguards Sp«1ficall). he said. at should proh1b1t m1hlaf') spending for the Contras without funher congressional rt'' ie ..... Wh1te House s1>0kcsman Roman Popad1u ~ said. .\hhough he stop~d shon of giving such a plan his outngh1 suppon. Wngh1 said ··1 think 11's something "onh> of consaderauo n .. State of infant health in jeopardy WASHl'NGTON (AP)-The L'.S. infant death rate stopped improving in 1985 while the health of man) 1nfa111s. children and mothers worsened. sa)s an analysis ~auonal <..enter for Health Staumcs said the dro p rould ha' e been the result of random chance and was not sta11st1call) s1gnific.ant. the anal~ sis noted released toda). . "If the infant mortaht) rate 1s a barometer of the health and conscience ofa na11on. the state of the union 1s 1n Jeopard) ... saad Mano n Wnght Edelman. president of the Children's ~fensc Fund. The 0' erall l '.S. 1nf1nt mortalla~ rate put 11 at 19th in the world for 1985. Bul CDF said the rate for blad. an fan ts alone "'o uld put the U nited States an 28th plact' -belo"' Cuba. Czcchoslo,akaa and Bulgana. among others. The fund l~y released a rcpon entitled "The Health of America s Cluldren: Maternal and Child Health Data Book." .. Sav1n1 o ur babies' la ves 1s not a budget issue. It 1s not a deficit issue. It as not a pohucal issue. It is a moral issue:· Edelman said in a statemcn1 umcd to comc1de with President Reagan's Stale of the Unio n address toniJtlt. While the L S. mon.ahl) ra1e for all infants sta)ed Oa1. ··, 1rtuall) every cruclal 1nd1ca1or of ma1crnal and infant hcahh de1cnonated an 1985 ... said Sara Ro~ nbaum, an author of the CDF book She cited the following erosio n from 1984 to 1985. -Neonatal m ortahl) -death .... 11hin 1he first 2 da> s oflife -roSt nat1onall> for blac~ infants for the first time 1n over 20 ~car!. from 11 8 to 12 I per 1.000 The 2SO.piaae COF book. based on fedcraJ stausucs. says the rate of infant dea1hs an the first )eat of lifc wen a from I 0.8 per 1.000 an 1984 to I 0.6 ocr 1.000 in 1985 The -The lo" b1nh-.c1&ht rate -babies born under 5 5 p<>unds-increa~ forihe first umc in o'er t"o decades. from 6 7 percent to 6 8 percent BAILEY-HALLORAN Mar) Sw of the Sea Catholic Church was the senina for the Aug. 22 nupual mass un1tma Patnc1a Mar) HaUoran ofNcwpon Beach and Mark Oanton BailcJ of La Jolla. The Rev. ohn Joseph Hallorao.- uncle of tbc bnde. officia~. The coupl~ greeted I SO aucsts at a dinner reception at tbe La Jo lla Mamou Hotel. Of. and Mn. William X. Halloran of Costa Mesa arc the parents of the bride. She wore a des11ncr aown of ivory satin with a Queen Anne neckline and bows accenting thl' cathedral tram. The bodi« was trimmed with seed pearls and Alen- con ta« and she wore a matching finacntp veil. Vanessa Halloran was maad o( honor. and bridaJ attendants wtfE Anna and Finola Halloran and Mn~ II.ark Balley LSWIS-llAUO•R Charlene Kay lewts of Newport Beach and St.even Ray Hauaen of U\'crmOrc have announced p&ans for an July 30 wtd4ina in lhe First Presbyterian Church in San Luis Obi.lpo. Tht ~l«t is the oi«e of Gcra&d and Beuic Ellis of Newport Beath. She is a paduatc of N~port Harbor Hip School. Her faanc:e iJ the son of Wallis and C1audett.c tttueee of Lavcnnorc. He 11 an alumnus of u\·mnore Hi1b School. The coua* are araduates of Cal Staer Poly Sin t.Ws Obdpo. SYSll.STT.·llOa%GOllSaY: Hu.ntJQIMN' lcecll raidlftn am.. da A. Ewmt ud Ma.et A. Mont· IO'ftG'Y wtU be mMied ill ID April 9 ca rmony lD t.bc H~ntinstoa Hart.our Bly Club. cut. Cal Pol) San Luis Obispo. wtth a dC&ttt in cconom1C'S ~nd received her MJl.A. dcarcc from Oarcmont Graduate Sc"hool. Her fiance is an Edison Ht&h School graduate and rem'·cd his busintSs maJllltment degrtt from Arizona State Univef'Slty. W'UllT8-1'0W ACK Mr. and Mn.. Cana 8. Wuru of Corona dcl Mar have announced the cnpaement of tbear dauabter Marcdla IC.a>· Wuru to Dean C\lnis NoWK'k. son orMd,,.in and Ooroth) owa o( Manhanan Beem Corona ckt Mar HIP School araduate, the bnck-dcct 1nenc:kd lbt U1t1~ty of Klwau oe Oatna. Htt futUft ~ a.s 1 paduait of Mini C<*.l Kilb SclM>OI 1ftd UC Sula aut.ra. A Ju.I)' 2 wcdcbaa " plaftDtd m L Mart Presbyterian Ch.u«b in Carona ckt Mar. OA V&Lllt·llAllLIR The C"Plfii~l or "'° M. Ga'"'drn and Daniel M fflmtin bu ~n anoou~ b)' htt s-ints. Mr. Manann Ho' t The bndegioom 1s the son of;-.;ann . Baile' of Li Jolla. Dan Nu.on was best 'man. and ushers were John Halloran. ~l 1chael Hartfield and Ste' en Z1m~roff The bnde rccel\ed her bachelor's degree in busrncss at Cal State Fulknon ~here she was affiliated "'Ith 1sma Kappa Sororit). She 1s a senior loan undcrwnter .... uh I TT Mongagc 8ank1n,g Corp. Her husband is a graduate of tht' l'nn.crsll~ of Southern Cahfom1a "'hm: he ea med his bachelor" s degrtt 1n accounting. He studied la"' at O'\ford Un1verstl)' an England and obtained h1s1uns doctor degrtt from Sou1hwestem U nhcrsll) School of Law in Los Angeles. He is an attome) with Gilbert. Kell). Crowle~ and Jennett ~ftcr a "eddina tnp to l~land. the couple arc rc-s1dents ofCos1a Mesa and Mrs Sta& Ga,·ehn of 1 e"WpOn 8c3C'h. A ...,cdd1na in St. An~ 's Prnb)tman Church 1s planned for Janl.W) 1989. The bridc--ckct 1s a graduate of Ne-.pon Omsnan High School aod as a Sludent at Cal St.at.e Lona Beach tt.hcre she IS maJorina in health 9e1Cntt. Ha f1ancir as the son of Mr. and Mn. Bob Hamhn of Sant.a Mon1a.. He as a padu.ate of Venitt Hiah Sc-hool and earned a mcdwucaJ Cftllnttnna delrtt fTom Cal State lo"f leach. Re ts cmplo)'td b) H~ Aarcta.ft Co llcCAJIQl.ecoT T A May .1 ~ wtddt"I is plan.ned b) Doftna M<Onn and Jdf'·seota Of ~Bract.. Their ~ts are Mr. and Mn. DonUd McCann of l.oial ae.ct. Md Mr. and Mn. W SccM1 of'Nc:wpon Bc-ach. Tbe eous;k p.ci•ted ft'om n - pon HaltM>r H• Srbool. Sbt altO is a aractuawe or UC' l~inc l.nd ht is an alumnu1 of C nta 8lltt.nL .-· / / What's Being Planned Why This Ad What•s Avallable Wh et You Can Do When and Where Contact PUBLIC NOTICE Announcement of Public H.arlng (Negative Oect.ratlon/Envlronmental Assessment Available) _..,.... .... CAL TRANS (CaUfomia D•partme nt of Transportation) is proposing to build a new direct entrance arw:i exit ramps from the proposed John Wayne Aifpon t.rminal to the Costa Mesa Freeway (SR-55) m Orange Coonty and to Widen the Campus Drive overcross•"9 ol the Corona del Mar Freeway (SR·73) in Newport Beach. CAL TRANS has studied 1he et19Cts this projeci may have on the environment. Our studies show It Wiii not sgn1hcantly affect the qualey of th• environment. The report that explains why 1s called a Negative Oeclarstion/Evirom•"tal Assessment (NO'EA). This notice rs to t•• you of ttt. prepwation of the NO"EA and Its ava1labil1ly to you to read and pl'O'lide na4ic» of the acnedulwci ;: ubllC H.anno ~. &tt. NO/EA and other pro1ect Information are av1aliabl• al tM CAL TRANS District 7 Offioe. 120 South Sprang Str"l. Los Angeles and the CALTRANS Oistnd 12 offa at 1610 17th Strffl. Santa Ana~ w .. kdaya from 1:00 Lm. to S'OO p.m. TM NO/EA IS a1so available at the John Wayne Airpo'1 Admtn1Slrat~ Offices, 3151 Airway Avenue. Surte K-101, Costa Meu and tM tolowing tibfanes· Newport Beach ~nners Branch l.baty. 2005 Oovet Onv•. Newport Beac;:t,; Orano-County-Costa MM.a Branch LJ>q,ry, 1 &55 Partl Av.nu•. Co$ta M.u; and tt\e Uni\<'9tsity Patk Public l.l>rary, '512 Sandburg W1y. IMn• .. Do You haft any comm•rc.s abolJt processing th• Pf019d with• NO/EA? Do you diugr .. with the f1ndirvs °'our study as sec tonh In the NOE.A'> Would you c.e to mak• any comments on the proJ8df ~ ~your mmmercs in wrt.ng no tat•r than March a. 1988 to W 8 Br' Iii-. CAL.TRANS. E~ P\anning. t20 So~h Spnng Str-. Loe~ ;ah t. CA I0012 February 24, 1-. 1:00 p.m. County ot Orange 1300 1aoutl\ Grand, auacHng c AOOlll 208 Santa AM .._...,.. protrd ..,__.be on cllplllr ..S c.nnt .,...an.• wll be -> .. '°.,..,..., qUMltDnl beb9 ~ .,._ &he tDrmal ~ .. Convertible bonds offer investors double appeal Some investors are on the horns of an 1nvestmen1 dilemma. They see opponunities in stocks after the steep market decline. O n the other band. should interest rates fall, the bond market could show new strength. An answer for -------------- M11Y RUDIE these in vestors may lie in convertible bonds. Convenible bonds, also called con~erttble deben- tures. offer an in- ' esto.r the op- ponunit} t0 panic1- pat1: in any future gro'.¥th of the stock market with less risk than stocks themselves. The convertible bond is a hybrid security, combining features of both bonds and stocks. Like a regular bond. a con' ertible pays a fixed rate of return. Because it may be converted. or exchanged for common stock. a convertible also has the potential to appreciate if the underlying stock ad,ances. So. you can pan1cipate in the growth potenual of common stocks while enjoying the higher income and '.>afe1' of fixed-income securities. in fact. one of the best 11mes to own convertibles is "hen interest rates are dropping and stock pnces are nsing. because }OU benefit from the fa,·orable pnce trends in both markets. Depending on their quaht). conven1bles offer tn'estors three advantages. • First. their yield is usually higher than the dividend ~ 1eld of the company's common stock. · • Second. the) tend to be less volatile. The higher ) H~ld keeps their pnce from falling as far as the pnce of the stock tn a market decline. If the stock pnce advances. the convenible's value typicall) will rise as well -although generall) not as much as the stock's. (f e11her the stock or bond market falls. con' erttbles may_ offer some downside pTOtcction because their pnces are ued to ~th market~. However, ifboth markels drop at the same t•.rJ?e. convembles may fall even;nore in straight debt sccunues. • Third, c.onvertible securilies are considered safer than common stock. Because they have senior status in a company's ftnancial structuQC, hold.en of convertible bonds always receive. fotercst payments before holders of common stock can rcc:eive dividends. Jn the event of bankruptcy. the claims of these securities must be satisfied before the equity interests of common stock holden. When a company issues convertible securities. it sets the number of common stock shares for which the conv~niblc may be exchanged. That number generally remcuns fixed. although it may be adjusted to reflect stock splits and stock dividends. It's importa.nt for the investor to know the conv;enible's conversion value-what it would be wonh if it were c-0nverted into common stock today. For· example. if XYZ stock sells for $40 a share and the convertible can be swapped for 20 shares of stock. the bond has a conversion value of$800. Convertibles usually trade at a premium (called thq conversion premium) over the conversion value because the} P3¥ more income and are relatively safer than the under!) ing stock. Forinstance. if the X YZconvertible has a conversion "alue of $800 an? tt 1s selling for S 1.000. it cames a conversion premium of $200. or 25 percent of its conversion value. Normally. the-lower the conversion premium. the greater the probability that the convertible will mirror the pnce of the 1:1nderl) ing stock. So investors seeking aggressive capital growth would generally invest in converubles with lower con' ersion premiums -no more than 20 to 25 percent. Western Digital earnings down West~rn Digital Corp. has reponed net income of $8.3 m1lhon, or 30 cents per share. for the second fiscal quarter ended Dec. 2~. a decrease from $1 I m1l11on. or .e cents per share. in the second quarter of fiscal 1987. Re,·enue totaled $160. 7 million. 40 percent higher than revenues ofS 11 4.4 m1lhon in the second quarter of Ii seal )"Car 1987. These results are consistent"' 1th those set fo nh 10 the In 1ne-based com pan~ 's prehminar: earnings release dated Jan. 6. Net income for the first six months of fisca l 1988 ro~ to a record $20.5 m1lhon. or 73 cents per share. compared with S 18. 7 million. or T2 cents per share. for the first half of fiscal 1987. Revenues in the first six months of fiscal 1988 increased to $300.8 million from $:!09. l million 1n the first half of fiscal 1987 While pleased "Ith the record re\C~nue. Western Dtgital Chairman Roger W . Johnson indicated that second-quaner profitabiht~ "as lo"-er due to se' era I factors that the company believes are temporai: He added that all current measurements. including order rates and acceptance of ne" products. 1nd1cate that revenues dunng the remainder of the fiscal ~ear will continue to sho" strong growth. In Laguna Hills. Geatre Laboratories (former!' Genex lndustnes) has acquired I m1lhon shares o·f Omn1Source Inc .. in a pnvate party stock purchase. The acquired shares of OmniSource represent 5.o percent of the company's outstanding shares. The ~ind .. "'as acquired for 1n' estment purposes. OmniSource Inc., whose common stock 1s traded in the 0' er·the-counter markets ,·1a the "pink sheets ... enJO~s a growmg reputation of being a qualitative "1anufacturer and distributor of high-tech ekc tronic components and better health products. ..\dd1t1onall~. the com pan} mamtains a full~ inte- grated media and marketing div1s1on that assists companies in product development and market introduc- uon Omn1Source·s expected re,enues in 1988. according to com pan~ 011ic1als. should e'ceed SJO million. Jonathan Sterns. president of Gentre Laboratories. <,a1d. ..Our JO\ estment 10 OmniSource reflects our confidence in Its long-range potential and will ser.e-to strt•ngthen the rela11onsh1p bct\loeen our t\loo companies." Southern California Edison Co.'s directors ha' e declared the regular quarterly d1v1dends of 46.0938 cents per share on the 7.375 percent series of the preference stock and S:!.24 on the 8.96 percent series of its $1 00 cumulat1,e preferred stock. The folio" mg di\ 1dends also "'ere declared on c ·1mulat1\ e preferred stock: 25.5 cents on the 4.08 percent series. 26.5 cents on the 4.24 percent senes. 29.875 cents on the 4. 78 percent senes and 36 25 cents on the 5.80 percent senes. Each of the d1V1dends 1s pa~able Feb. 29 to shareholders of record on Feb. 5. -1:,1\'.!ll--1----------------- NEW YORK .AP -Tl'le lollow1ng tis• snows •l'le New York. Stock Excl'lange stocks a"d war•an1s tna1 have gone uo tne mosr and down ll'le most oased o.., oercenr ol Cl'la,,ge regardtess ot volume tor F••dav No secur ties 1rad1ng below S2 are ·ncl· -:Jded Ne• a,.,o percentage changes are '"e d•lfere"IC'e oe•weer the previous clos1r g o• ce ano F••dav s 2 om or~ce Name 1 Newt> Tr 2 Al egnln• 3 BMC l'ld J Han so,.. "'1 5 NHI J'OwO UPS Lut Cn9 PC1. 2~ + 1 Uo 18 8 S l + !o.e UP 12 8 5 2 ~ UP 12.8 2~ • UP 11 8 2 l • uo 111 6 (L( ;.~ - 7 A.;9a1 8 Par-Am 9 McOo.., d 10 ~ •an(o 11 PueOIO ,.,, 12 (Olllnd n 13 Soumrk. ao1 of 14 F ielders! 15 Ben11ue1 B 16 Danal'ler s 17 Un"•CP 18 Can...onGp 19 Wolv•neTcn 20 Navs!r wrA 21 SllfelFn "l1 viToddSho 23 SeaCl'tLIO 3·e + 14•11 + 3 • + 71, ~ 3311 .... 24~9 + 101. + 26-+ 17 + )'8 + 9~, + 2 + 4 . + 12 ' + 2 • + 6~ + 2 t + 21 1 + 1" Uo I • Uo • Uo ~ Uo • UP l 1. Uo 3• Uo P c Uo 1 1 Uo • Uo ~ Uo e Uo • Uo 3• Uo ._! Uo -.. Up 0 8 UP 1 • Uo 10, 93 87 8.6 8.0 77 7 5 7.2 7 1 69 6.9 6.7 6S 6 5 63 6.3 63 62 -l@i;lillld.tl!IJlil,__ ______ _ I) > 1) .. )7 > JI • 21'-2l I? 11 , 10"> 101. '"· 12 14 IS > I r: r: 17a. " ) ' ) . 1 J·l• ,,. • 41 , S7 ' .. "' IS • 15 1 2) • ,,..., 10. ·~ )1 ' 32 2 -2 • .... ' 0 ' 10 • 11· )2 I !.,, 1>. ) J , 41 • ""- II l~: I .. ~: • •• , • '' • I 14 J " is , i• I I\. 113-T• , ' 1~ • .\., 1 ,,~ f''" I l l ' • ,, •• ,., I mn~ 11 21 • I ,, • 2 , u ·fr; J ,J ; ll... . IJ ~ ~~~'L ,ao • , '• . :1:: 'f~ I • 1 '-• , t •• ' ., EY'S IBISB PIJB "Du.rty elly't0 OPEN FOR LU CH & DI Monday thru Frida y l l M to 9 P t • ER 24 M un!ora 25 GEO ln'I 26 ToscoCo 20 + 1 e UP 4 , + • Uo 2 • + e Uo 60 ;9 59 DOWNS Nam• l lnl!Tcn 2 Canon 3 Fi11rcn1d • ParTecn S Aileen Inc. 6 EmrvAF 7 FIReouDA 8 Marcad~ 9 Zaoal., Co 10 Bol!Ber"~ s 11 MCoro 12 AoacheCo 13 P1~ssev 14 &CA Cp n IS reenTree 16 rientExo 17 ReoGvD$ 18 M versLE 19 N!Semi w• 20 ciaoirCo Last Ch9 Pd. 3 1 OH 10 3 • OH 77 8 ;-~Ott 68 5 1 -"' ()fl 6 • 2 ~ Oft 59 61-1 Off 55 2 • -I 011 5 3 21 -8 Off 5 0 2lot -e Ott 5 0 141, -1 , Ott 48 21-w Ott 48 7~11 -lot Off 4 7 27~'8 -11" Off 47 2~ -a Ott 4 5 1J • -)' Off 4 s 2~ -• 011 • 5 Slot -Off 4 4 2l • -OH 4 3 21. -Off 4 3 2'~ -a Ott 4 2 21 FedJHmeLn 22 Zenithl ab 23 Guff Resrc 24 SovUnCo of so1 • -2 • Off • 2 21• -• 011 • 2 15 AmPresid 1 P• -, Off 4 1 8>. -1' Off • I , •• -1 Off • 0 OTC UPs & DowNs NEW YORK <AP) -The following hsl sl'lows The Over • the • Counter stocks and warran1s that have gone uo l"e most and down ll'le mosl based on oercenr of ctiange tor Fridav. No securilles trading t>mw l2 or 1000 snares a•e iRCtude<I Net and oiercentage cnange1 are tile difference oerween tile orevious c1os1ng price and Friday's last or bid price Nanw 1 o auexMed 2 Oaltex un 3 Or"Mtl 4 AmAircrft s S THE F lin\ ur> 6 FHP 7 THE Fitness 8 Porvcse11 9 t oJack 10 lolcllnalntl 11 tnlgen II 12 L 1posomeTcn 13 NAmHOlcl 14 NAmHldA IS SleYe}HICr 16 KouCP l7 RoadrnrEnt 18 PionrSvFL 19 Av101n10 ' ,. 0 UPS Lut C~9 27·16 +I 91.o i p .. ,l_. 1 • 2'• l.t I" + ~ 14 + , •• • + l 29· 16 +9· 16 3 + "" )1't + >>. 2 + ~ S12 + I 2l· + ., 2~ + ·~ 2. t ~ •1' "' ~~-+ t \'"J J~ tt~l6 2·. + ~ i + ~ 11 + ~ ~~ + ~ 3•. + ll't DOWNS U GNI GrOVo lnsHutmGp wr Schwartt8l' s 23 v\'AfJSolar ~s i 1u11 1mens ~6 Vltronic ust CM )•. --J:1 S -I ... -~ ,~·~t~ -'1 -~. -~., 2 ... \ ~ ' , 14 t = ~· f•, --.. l tr1' -s-l6 ' ";= ~ 14 --~-- ~ore ~OnS:Crvativc investors -those IQ<>king for relattvely tugh income and moderate price appreciation -: wo~ld typj~ly invest in. higher yielding convenibles wnh shgbdy h1$}ler conversion premiums. To determine wbicb convenibk3ivcs you tht-rnost valu~ for your money, look at premium payback period and inv_estment v.alue: ""f:he lengtb of time it takes the conver:tiblc to repay. m u~tcttSt, the amount you paid a~ve us conversion vaJue 1s called the premium payback penod. If. for cic.ample. a bond bought at a $200 premium pays SI 00 1n annual interest, theo it will take two years for you to break even. Payback periods of a few years are generally considered attractive. The convertible's investment value is an estimate of what the bond wouJd be worth as a straight bond without the conversion feature. The closer a bond sells to its investment value, the more it behaves l,ike a fixed-income ( investment. Convertibles. in short. af"( a 'ersaule ~unt} t~at can satisfy a wide range ofinv~tmenl obJC'Ctl\·es. but like all investments the) must be analyzed . .\ssess the c~11 sta.ndinf of the isswng corporation, and onl) bu) a COO\':CCUble if you would want to own the underl}1ng common stock. The outlook for interest rates 1s important. Con· vertible prices are affected b) interest rate trends. If interest rates drop and so cause pnces of fi:\ed-1ncome securities to climb. the value of a ron,eruble ma~ nse Conversely. its value may decline 1f inte~t rat~ nse Check wilt\, r.our financial_ consultant to determine whethe[ convertible bonds suit )OUT goals and. if so. which ones might be most appropn'lte for )OUr s1tµa11on . Muy J. RIHlle J1 vl£'e presJdeJJt ud 11JAM6U, COllHmer Wormadot11ervi~•. at MtrrllJ L_vud .• Pitrtt. Fea'Dtr & Smit• IJJ£'. l J Ora~ Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. January 25, 198811l'*A7 NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS MONDAY'S CLOSING PRICES Stock market advances 'E'-' 't ORK I .\P) -The stock market mo' ed broad!~ higher ~onda~ led by issues related to pending d1' 1dend pa~outs and t.a.kCO\'Cr mO\CS .\nahsts said the market aho benefited as trader~ mo' ed from bonds into stocu after last "'ed."s bond-market rallv ~nt interest rates lower Bond pnccs ttma1ned mostl~ flat Monda). Trading v.as hca'1· concentrating on a fc"' issues due to pa' d1' 1dcnds short!~ Th~ included Southern Co. Cha~ \1anhattan Bank Corp .. Eastern L'uhucs .\sS0C1ates. and Pinnacle West Capital Corp Ed"'ard P S1cosL.1 a technical anal}st at the Piper Jaffra~ &. Hopwood Inc secunucs firm. said Japanese traders -.ere hea'') bu)cn of such stocL.s He said Japan~ tu laws make n ,.onh~h1le for them to bu'' the' issues for the d1 v1dends. even 1 f the~ !>ell them ·at a capnal loss a da~ or~ later Some' taL.eo' er-related stock!> "ere also trading hca' 11~ These included Eastman Kodak.. "h1ch "-3S lo-.-,.er and terhng Drug. which Jllmpcd higher folio"' mg KodaL. ·s S q 50-pcr-sharc b1d for Sterling last "'eel WHAT AMEX Orn WHAT NYSE Orn NEW YORK I AP) Jan 25 Prn. Ad1t•nc~ 1 oecr.n~ rJ fl} ¥nchafl9ed ~ ffl 'lei ot•~ nu.es ... , ,..... ll•Ql'S 'I Nf'W loWs I 7 AMEX LEADERS GoLo QuoTES M ET~Ls QuoTE S •• 00 --_,,, ""c-tpot --dDl90~ -C:-.-• $1~• 2t -I _..., U$ ..... -c:-.-. 120 .., -"' -_,,, ~ c;o.._ ..,.,. ..... Fl\ ~---· ......... __ .,.7 __ ,......,_ ,_. . ..._... .... .__.,.._.,__~I --.... ·MINt•----.,. -'"" -.,., c-.. ... -.... llw\ __, ___ '* ao_ ,.. • ..._ ... .,.°"-.--.. . ._-..c ,,..,.._ .. ., ~ .___ ... t.kY ~.--... -..M -\ I NEW VORIC API Jan 25 Prn. Mef*y ~ll Advanct<l !!15 Otoneoci :ll ¥'1CO\e"9e0 39• o•a n..es l97l 1~ ~-"'~s u ~io..., 9 7 NYSE LEADERS Dow JoNES AvERAGES I NASDAQ S UMMAR~ , -.. 'Emf)eror' commands 4 Globes ., IM)9 TBOMAI The press association chOIC ••The and the sardonic Dabney Coleman Last EmpC"rOr" from a ~up of best-scored as best star performers in a ..__ draQla nominen that included "Crv musical or comtdy TV series. BEVERLY HTU.S -••The Last Freedom:· "Empire of the Sun/' Ullman. ch<>Stn for her Fox Broad- Emperor" won four Golden Globes. "Fata.I Attraction.." ••t.a Bamba" and casti~ series' "The Tracey Ullman indudina best dramatic movie, while "Nuts..·· Show, · appeartd in a dress that the comedy film "Moonstruck'• and The Swedish comedy "My Life as a seemed suitable for a waitress in a NBCs "L.A. Law" earned t~ •Do&" was best foreian lanauaae film. I 960sdincr. "I'm thrilled to bits," she honon apiece from Hollywood s The awJrd for oriainal sona was gushed. fore~ press corps. won by "(I've Had) The Time of My Coleman, selected for hi$ role as the M1c~I Doualas •. star of "Wall Life.•• from "Diny Dancina. .. written opinionattd si;><>rts writer whose pri- Strcct. and Sally ~rkl~d. star of b y Franke Previte. Donald vatelifcisind1sarrayontheABC-TV "Anna," woi:i d:ramahc act~na honors Markowitz and John OcNicola. show "'Slap' Maxwell Story." glanced Saturdaywh1lecomedyactingawards The prcssgroupgaveitssupponing at his gold-plated &lobe trophy and wen~ to ~b~r for "~oonstruck" ~nd film pc.dormers awards to Olympia cracked: "Actually I thouaht it was a Robin W1lhams for Good Momma. Dukakis the feisty mother in ··Moon-little bigger than this." Vietnam." struck."' and Scan Connery. the Best miniseries proved a tie be· .. Hope and . 9lory," Joh.n incorruptible policeman in "The tween CBS' "Escape From Sobibor" Boorman~s rcmuu~c~ of his Untouchables." and NBC's ··Poor Little Rich Girl: boyhood m war-torn Bntam. won the Clint Eastwood received the honor-The Barbara Hutton Story." best comedy or musical film category. ~Cecile. OcMille Award. Top actress in a miniseries or TY Golden Globes for 1987 film and Television's top drama Golden movie was Gena Rowlands for ··The television productions were pres-Globe went to .. L.A. Law," an one of Bctt) Ford Story," and the actor coted Saturday ni&ht by the 88-the ensemble cast members. Susan I honor in t~.at category went to Ra~,dy member Hollywoo<f Foreign Press Dey. won the trophy as top dramauc Quaid for LBJ: The µrly Years. Association before a Beverly Hilton actress. :relcv1son supponmg awards went audience of 1,200. Richard Kiley of .. A Year m the to Claudette Colben for .. The Two Bernardo Bcnolucci won thedirec-Life" won the dramatic actor award Mrs. Grcnvilles" and Rutger Hauer tion award for "The Last Em~ror" for television. for "Escape From Sobribor." and shared the scttenplay award with ·'The Golden Girls ·· NBC's saga of "I can't think ofa more memorable Mark Peploe. The panoramic history four women as they ~dvance an years b1nhda} than this one." said Hauer. of modem China also earned David in Florida. was named best musical or who turned ~4 Saturday. Byrne and Cong Su the Golden Globe comedy television series. The two-hour ceremon~ was synd 1- for original score. British comedian Trace) Ullman cated b} Dick Clark Producuons. ••••••• ••••• • •• • •• &. 4~t~-~:.;;.F-:..~:. ... :.v ;:• •. ='c; ,., • ~Qf~f "'c. •• • • •• ••••• • •• ••• ( HllLEDUIN ~outl i.1111 pt on ·~ : .fl/ ~VUIL1 ;;( '•".' ·~; ·:•,:;~;· • ' : 7 Flnal Weeks ceu: ro~mJ'~-~~~ r -~ I =.?f':Aaan J A~~_,e..-y0y~ • Elegant. Sumptuo~s Buttel Dinner • One PrtGe Inc. OinntW. Tax and S ow BRADOOCK-MllllNO IN ACTION S (R) f'l~lt.• O.•,... TME COUCH TNP (R) , ....... 1 .. lldllll ...... 111 WALL ITMIT (fl) ~ltl5 MOADCAST NEWI (R) t.*1'.Jl.11:11 THREE_,.AND AIAaY (N) l:lM:Jl. lt:JI EDDtE MUlltPMY RAW <"> 7:tt.t.tl Pl.ANES, TRAINS ANO AUTOM09A.ES (R) 7:tt.t:tl l...S ..., ....... FOR KEEPS (N11) US.l:I0-11:11 BATTERIES NOT INCLUO.D tJl(N) OVERBOARD (N) t.zt.lt.ll EMPIRE OF THE SUN (N) l'.6-tieS EDWMDI ON8MAL Cl'IMA ......... , ....,. • TIMEE •Na A IAaY (N) ~lt:JI ,.,....,,...., .. 0000 MON•to YIETN~ ~-1.-.10.it (Ill) IROAOCAST NEWI (") ~-7:Jl.ll:lt OU& llelcl Ower SJDl/lf. Sll11tJ111/ •1SIU/ -''"'"' ........... • watter ~rved Otnner 8t Your T~ .... Yorti Po••. "T•rtftc .• IMl"'9. I04'Ch1n9 ---,.., lf'8t ..,... .... ,oy ... ·· WAU tTMET <"l 7 lS.t.ll THE COUCH TNP (R) S:4S.7:4S.tieS MOONSTINCK (N) l:tt.l:Jl.lt.ll PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOA.ES Cf') 7:tt.t.tlltM BROADCAST NEWa (") S:IW.*lt.• I WOODBRIDGE IRVINE UADOOCK-lll8Uit0 IN ACTIONS (Ill) ·~·lt.45 FOft KUH (N11) ........ 1 .. OYEMOAN> (N ) ', .. 11:11 BATTEMa NOT INCLUDED l·IS (N) EMPtRE OF THE SUN 7:t0-lt•(N) THREE MIN AND ABAaY (N) ............... WAU STREET (R) 7M-t.ll THME MEN ANO A BAIY f'Js.l:lS-lt.lS (") ...... °""91 II WALL STREET (") S'.Jt.7-U.11:11 THREE MEN AND A8UY CPO> S..._1 ..... t:IS GOOD llOftNING V1ETNAM S:4S-1:1S-10:l0 <"> EMPtM OF THE IUN (N) 4.JI. MS-ll:tl IATT£Rlll NOT INCLUDaD tlS (N) DtRTY DANCING (NU) l:IS.11:15 EDOtE MURPHY RAW <•> '=Jl.1'.Jl.•.JI MADDOCK ... IQ lN ACTIOll I (It) ~, .. appcanna Jive in some markets and tape-delayed in others . Herc are the winners of the 1988 Golden Globe A wards: MOTIOM~ll Movie. Oram. -"Tiit Lail E,,_cw," Mo•le. COIMdv Of M1.11lcal -"HOiie alld G!O'v " Olrk11on -ltrnarcto &trlOluCCI, "The Lui e-or ·· SCrtenc>lllv -Maril Pec>k>e and eernaroo &tMoluecl. "The LH I Em-Of." AC10f. drama -Michael Oou91111. "WaM SlrNI" Aclren, 0.-1,,-,. -S.llv ltlrll.land, "Anna " AClor, mu1k al cw com.clv -ltotlln WIUlam,, "Good Mornlnt, Vlt lnam " ActreH, mu'lcal or comtdv -Cher, "Moonilruck.'' SUl>llO'llnt actor -S.en C~v. "The UnlOUCl\a~i " Sullelbtllnt ecireu -Olvm91a C>vllatr.11, "Moonllruck " • Forlltn Fiim .,.. "My Lift Al A Dot" (Swtdttl). Ortelnal .core -David l vrne and Conv SU. "The Lall El'l'ICle<or " Original \OnO -"(I',_. Had) The Time of Mv Lit." from "Olrlv Oat'dnt." mu\lc and tvrlc1 llv Frenlue Prevlle Donald Markovll1 and Jol\ll OeNlcota TELEvtSION X . T. Voet. Peter Mot.on, Robert Almodo•ar (f~?m ldt) ha Te aleepleu JliCht lD .. lloantaln• and llolehill•. SCRyouth show probes problems PROMISED LAND L1fr· on rhe edge ot ch<: American Dream . • CINI..._,......, .. ...,_ VIC'TWAM ca) 70Mtrf 12:15 1 :45 5 :15 7 ·50 .. : 5 r:o• U.IEft CN-1~ 11:50 1:55 5:05 7:101:15 CtNTURY THEATRE 0 901 Mttto .. 111111 Cit Cntt. Sii. C11tr. MTft•tUllOT MCLU.-0 .. ) 5 :10 7:10 .. ):10 80UT.._ ·---·----·...., .... 1 ... WllaltNSfdf ... , llftlO'C ... MOONSTRUCK 1N1 lt>U *ill ... 1.SJ 1 .. U ... ,. .... _........,IAW111 "'' .... , ...... l AKEWO 1.. ,. ... ,..\out., _ ........ ..... CIOUCll W.. MfM AnucnoN .. w•••• Ma ........... .. -. ........ .. "'1TS .. , SHOWS AT 5: 10 7:15 .. 1 :35 ...., a mua n ....,,.... IOOt -¥llnlMI Ill , .. ,, ...... 1'23 .... WY Rmolftlll tal.ICI RM•l ,__ .,..._ ... ...., ... , ... !!JI ... , .. , .. ..u ........ ~ MOONIT1IUCK ,.. 1W1Mollt:lt1 ... tt1tt OIUCll--.. ..oclli MIUINO .. ACn0N Ill 111 111tldS ......... --•atllMMll.•_. WALi. llltln 1111 111111111 ..... 11 .. -MUUMTIAW• ... Ml ............. f 1 IOU'C> • llll ICNt '6 --MYIOCICMlll_ .. ~-· llAIM WllM IV CIUlCDOWN• .. -·----&.-Y,.. tm&O ..... ,.. ~·moA•D ... ) '"'u' laUerlel Not Included ('"GI * • olWl*IC.Cll •• *IOAYS I ... U•DS I W ,_ ... 11 f Mt UlllUS lllOTf -··-............. TMI COUCM TRIP 111 , .. a.ti ... 1121 11111 ...., "-••a u1 l9llMU ~..._. POil KllPS ,..1. , .............. , .... ........... -.. MlllRN ......... u ........ I TILIPllOMI • ......... , ..... _ ......... .. I.,,....._,. ITMIOUt• WT-I' .. _.. ..... .. -. ......... -· ISJYMW• RlllWEIW•',_ _ ........ Cybill gets a walk star, sans Bruce LOS ANGELES (AP) -.. Moon- liahtina" co-sar Cybill Shepherd ~ ~r. fim public a~ntt s11K't 1Jv1n& btnh to twins last Octobtr and unveiled her star on \ht Holly-ood Walk of fame: SMpherd, who rttlrnlly mumect to &he ··Moon· l~&ina" stt after 1 mllttnily 1ene. la'!lhed Ind aid. "Ouu1 who~" when Holl~ honorary mlYof Johnny Or11u ~-radi"I. ~tcan•tbc ~.tMltOMof'... ft J' I. ~ !O wort;•~ 9r'9tt Willis Mid •• dlit ttlemnm. The Ila!:; .lit •.164th dedQted a1oaa IM wait of' F--. .. located ·~wmo-11• ~~ dedQaed ·--............ ~ Fftld Nillo; • TMMay, J__,., H ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19): Money comes your way alona with added re------------- sponsibili t Y, and mane)' belonging to another 1nd1' 1dual. Focus o n investment. news of possible 1nhcn1anct. Important domc5tic adjustment takes place. }Ou could acquire luxury item or art ob1ect. chance to 1mpnnt your own style. Love plays major role, Svo .. rv more people will be IK. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-No" 2 1 ). Pia) warn ng game. Someone w~nts you to "rush to 1udgmem ." Appl) delay1n1 tactics, cspec1all) 1n connection "'•th contracts. ~I affairs. Empham on possible partnership. public rclattons. mantat natus. fascinated by )Our 0 views, action~. Libra 1111 fia1.1ret prominently. •••ii••••••••• TA\Jlt.llS (April SAGl'M'ARIUS (Nov 22-Dcc 21) It'~ a ll out. pressure 1s on, respons1b1httes ancrca~ but )OU also ha'c chance to h11 financ ial Jackpot pothght on chansma. variet). dtSCO\ef}, st~lc. ~x appeal Cancer nattH 1s 1n picture. 20.May 20): Circumstances swi"S in your direction, Moon in yout sian hi&hliatus penonality. charisma. correct Judamenl. timinJ-You'll majc new start, you'll have chance to be mo re independent in thouvit. acuon. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You'll surpnse man)' b> fulfilling assignment an relatively easy fashion. Someone behind scenes stands as your private chttring section. You'll mingle fun 1.1.1th professional activity. Career advances. CAPRICORN !Dec 2:!-Jan 19) F1n1sh "'hat \OU stan. realize )OU are on nght trad. Stud' Sagm a n us message for 'altd hint Spotlight on change tra"el. \anet). ph)Stcal attraction You'll gain added rccog· nation. and funds. CANCER (June ~I -Jul)· 22): Wish a.s fulfilled. popularit) zooms up"ards. fun and prospent} featured. You'll be 1n\ 1ted to unique event that could rcquu~ additional "'ardrobe. boumey. Gemini. Sagittanus in picture. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Fcb J ). Emphasis on fresh start, o ng.inaht). independence lp1onet:nng spinL You'll learn more about propen~ home. plans of famil) mem bcr. Young person plc1 ~ '5 ma1ur rule helps boost morale. PISCES (Feb. 19-March ~lJl You·re being pulled 1n t"o d1rect1ons-unorthodo' approach results in success Rclau vc talks about short tnp. 'aca11on. fresh emplO\· mcnt opponunit). Cancer . ..\quanus figu re prominently. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): f ocus on revision. review. process of rebuilding on more suitable base. Lunar position. accents business. carCt'r. prestige. ability to n sc above je.alous people. obstacles. Scorpio plays paramo unt role. IF JANUARY %6 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY ~u rrent cycle emphasizes pressure of dcadhnes. business enterpnse. financial dealings. strong lo' c relauonship. Vigor returns tn Februal'). ~ ou'll ma"-.e fresh ~tart. op11m1sm v. 111 replace ennui Taurus. Cancer. C a pncom people pla) important roles 10) our hfe Your father has had more of an influence o n }Our St}IC. character than has ~our mother Older peo ple harmonize v.11h )Ou. espec1alt) men. September "''II be outstanding for )OU 1n 198ts VIRGO (Aug. H -Sepl. 22): Discern motives. analyze character, communicate "tth "old flame." Good lun ar aspect coincides 1.1.1th tra,ct. d1ssemmat1on of J>('rttnc nt infonnat1on. Gain indicated through reading. wnung. expressing fee It ngs. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): You'll be asked 10 handle Road back from tragedy ·nearly took a tragic turn DEAR ANN LA NDERS: fl\·e months ago m) lo' 1ng husbarfd died 1n a car accident.' It was nobod) ·s fault. Both dmers were cold sober. The roads v.cre tC) and the dnvers lost control My husband v.as m) lover and m\ best fnend. Life "''thout him wa·s unbearable so I staned to dnnk I sta)ed drunk for three sohd months God somehow got throujh to me and made me sec ho" selfish and s.clf- destruc11vc I 1.1.as. A fnend persuaded me to go "'Ith her to a meeung of Alcohohcs Anon' mous .\t first I felt uncom- fortable "'hen I saw shabbily dressed "'ork1ng-class people there. I thought. ··1 ha'e absoluttl) nothing 1n com- mon v..1th the~ folks." After the third meeting I bt-gan to sec our s1m1lant1cs instead of our differences. I felt ashamed of m> suJ>('no r attitude and the "a> I looked down at people 1.1. ho wcrcn•t 'A>'Cll-drcsscd and articulate. M> fncnds 1n A.\ have helJ>('d me vie" hfc from a tot.all) d11Teren1 perS{>CCll\C. I used to be a blamer. looking for reasons to 1ust1f) m) dnnk1ng. No"' I knov. that each of us 1s responsible for ourselves and the cncm) 1s ME. I know. too. that I am a wonh"h1lc woman. God doesn't make garbage. lt's going to take work. but I am determined to be the dependable. honorable person I once was. Too bad I had to hat bottom before I got the message. rm 28 )Cars old and nothing can stop me from reaching m-, goaJ. -ONE DAY AT A TIME IN CO LUMBUS. O HIO. DEAR COLUMBUS: n...k yoe for 1M.r1a1 yoer story. For U years I un beft tdlla& my ruden tbt AA oftea 18Cttff1 wka psycM.atry, re-- up.a, ~YJMSI•, etc.. etc.. fall. I recomll)eM It as lk most effttUn way to beat lk problem. ~------~~~~~~~~~-- ~ AUTO FACTS --"' 111111•111 I ,..., ..... CLEANER FUEL A1t1 LANDERS Tltett are AA ebplen all over the world. (Look lD tbe pltoat book.) And the meetLD11 are free. U yo11 see ynnelf ID my colamD today, for tbe sake of tbose wtao love yoa, 10 lo AA -It cu tarn your llfe aroud.' DEAR ..\NN LAl'\DERS This 1s a letter for the "I hope I can benefit from m' m istake" fi le For se\Ci"al months I WU Stttng a man "'ho "'orked 10 the s.am e office Unfonunatcl): our dating rcla· uonsh1p 1s o'er but our "ork1ng rclauonsh1p conunucs. What "'as once an c'c1unggamc of secret mcct1niS and "'h1spercd con· \ ersauons o'er the inccroffice tclc· pho ne S)stem has turned 1n10 the datl) agon} of facing up to a failed lo' e affair. M) point 1s this: Weigh carefull) the con~qucnct's of e ntenng into a romantic ha1son "'Ith a CO-"-Orker Consider ho"' it "'ill afTe-ct )Our JOh 1f things go sour. & aware of ho1.1. painful at can be to work. 1.1.11h an ind1v1dual who has shared 1nt1mac) "''th )'OU after the affair has ended. I !tamed a veat deal about m \self from this relat1onsh1p. Hov..cvcr. lam too uncomfortable to continue to v.orlc here and am S«kmg emplO)• mcnt "1th another firm. That's m' stof) It's not 'Cf) exciting. In 'fact it's not even great reading. but 1t 1s a lesson I l~med the hard 1.1.a) J ust sign me -SADDER Bl'T WISER IN THE WINDY CITY DEAR WISER: Some office ro- mucet tan oat rather well. Sorry yoiars eaded OD a blae aolt. Yoar letter, ttowever, does serve to wara otbers about die burds tllal lark beblDd the waler cooler. nub for 1urta1. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a single mal~ who loo~s forwa~ to being mamed and having a family. I understand from reading your column that you arc o pposed to letting children sleep with a parent of RUFFELL'S- UPHOLSTEIY llC. ........ "-' ..... .. l tll -IUt.. CISTl lDA-$41·115' RABBITT INSURANCE FOR 30 YEARS! . 1 . 1• ... .,. I ' ... , the oppo~11e ~' I am the ··fa, ome uncle·· 1 listen to m) n1ccc!> and ncphe"'s and treat them "'1th rt:~pect. \.\hat should I do 1.1. hen a httle 5.,ear-0ld sleep-a' er guest <,neal..s into ·m~ bed at night" I remember "'hen l "'as a child I "'ould ha' e lo' ed the chance to sleep "'1th a parent from ttme to umc. but 11 "'as nc,er allo1.1.ed. l"nfonunatcl\ I come from a long It nc of cold fi!;h ~ho raised children 1'1ke crops. J don't "'ant 10 see this kind of 1solat1on continued for another gcnerauon I a"'a11 )Our repl~ -(0'.\· CERS ED IS MILW.\L'KEE DEAR MILWAUKEe: Is that little ~-year-Gld a bo) or a 1irl? U it's a boy ud yoa bave absolutely DO "fltllll)' Helt" teadncles, I say. OK. But a ClrJ tof U) &Ce) d°" DOt belong lD yoar bed llDder any clrcomsltllcH. DEAR .\S'\ L.\SDERS I ha, c an aunt 1n 8 1smarcl . '\.D .. Y.ho 1s a bu dott~ he has sent me ~rthda) card e\CI"\ Jan IOs1m.e 19-5 Mvb1rthda' 1~ J une 11. Shall I tell hef'l [,ci: ye.a·r I s1.1.ear l "111. then I chicken out Help me -W.\USAL . WIS. Dur W.W.: A•. Ugbten up. No barm done. Wbv embarrass the dear womu? · Q .1-A South. \Ulncrablc. )Ou hold: •1762 71 952 • .\J72 The b1dd1ng has procttded: 'ilorth Uis1 o uth \\ t<;I J • Pas 2 + Pa\~ 2 'T Pass '! \\ hat ac11on do ~ ou tal e., .\.-Partner has issued a game 1n,1· 1a11on "'hale \ho 1.1. tn@ a balan .. eJ hand <;mcc 'ou ha' c a dead mini· mum. \OU C'<"rtaml) intend reru)1ng Ho"'e'er, )OU arc still obliged 10 find the best contract a nd. '411h a ~nu" n nine-card fit. the su11 .. \.)0- 1r.t1:1 should be better CNrec1 I~' three 'pades Q.2-Ncither 'ulnera ble. a' ~,,uth \OU hold · +Q76 95 Kl0765J2 •8 Partner opens the bidding"' ith three no trump. \\hat action do ~ou ta"-.e' A.-Panncr 1s describing a bal· a need hand o( 2~-2 point' 11 hi: has diamond suppon and top .:on· trols. lam should be a good prnpc 111on Bid four diamo nds. "llh the 1ntcntton of bidding lam if pannri ho1.1. tntercsl. H O'AC\er. ht rre pared to end in four no trump 11 he d()(S not Q .l-Both \Ulnerablc, as South \OU hold: •KQl652 QlO l •QJlCM The biddin1 ha pr~td: of1lt Ealt 5"111 Wat l Pass l • Pass 3 ' Pass 3 • P NO TIME FOR LUNCH? rrv .. 6'C9llo'• Lmac• •11et ... All you can eat c.old cuts, salads. fresh fruits. veaetables. hot entrees & pizza. . too!! ONLY U.75 Also -Complete Italian Luncheon Specials and Full Menu AvaHable From Under S..00 I 75el ... c• at Slater a-e. 11e1a • at1-sses Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 25, 1988 A9 TV Lis TINGS MecN1111lellrtr NewsH041t 1llfOl'lil Stafm ll .. II tttt U111011 Address Wllett ot l:Jeopantyl I f0'1vlll L.M. Bovo To h AllMllJIUO 1hlllM DIM •SCINS Uwre11t1 Weft >i'T"(A.S '•e-1t ~ ~ , Mod S Ears, nosekeepongrowing ... Q Old JX'Oplc ha ' e bigger ears and noses than \Oung people \\'h~ ~ ~ C'"amlagc keeps on gro"'ang That's "'hat some doctors~' Others sa) cars and noses on the clderl) JCSt 5ttm bigger because that ossuc doesn"t shnnl.. 1.1. h1lc the ttssuc around 1t does ~m told medical Sc:hools general!} de' otc less than four hou~ in four ~ears to the stud} ofpa1n T nbcsJ>('o plc since ant1qu11~ ha'c decorated their bodies for ornamen- tal reu ons \\ere the\ as "'c are. regretful 1n old age of ih~ tattoos of their) outh" I 1.q)nder 1f some cider!~ CHARLES GOREN 4 Pa ~ 7 \\ hat action do 'l'U · J 'c' "·-E'en 1h,1utth \OU hJ'e J rart1al mhf11. 'our 11.1.0 honl'f' '" ranner·, t1r\1-ti1d \Ull make '~'u' hand 10\.' good 10 pa•\\ .\ rahe to J1\e heart~'' lea1o1 ~ou can do. Remcm~r. pa rt· ner has shov. n a minimum ol ~'' hearts on this aucuon. Q .4-Nc11hcr 'ulnerable. J.' \C'uth \OU hold: .• AS AQ876J2 ' •.J92 Tht btddtni ha' procccdt'd 'orth East "°uth \\~(ii I P as I Pa!" 2 • Pas 7 \\ hat do 'ou bid no'4 " .\.-You h.l\e onh On<' <.tor~ 10 tell . and ~ou ma' a<. "'ell tell 11 quacl l) Bid four hc.lrt' That not onl) de· ,,nbe' the length of \UUr \Utl. but ,,,ur "~nin~ l:itd ~1ren~th a' 1.1.cll Q.5-Both 'ulneral:ile. a South ~ou ht) Id +QS .\~Qt094J Q6 •S 'our rt{lht-hand opponent o~ns rhc b1ddini v. tth o ne diamond \\ hat dt' \OU btd 00" °' .-\\ c "ould tat.c our shot at four heam ' ou art probabl) 1om& to get a diamo nd k1.d. •h1ch will bnng ,our total to n1nt s hntc as • diamo nd rufl or the 1'.ing of pad~ in t1anner·s hand •ould produtt the l°'h tml Q.6-South. 'uln~ablc. \'OU hold: +QJ9 1Ql"6 QJI •6J The b1ddan1 h ptoettdtd: ~ortlll East Soetat "est l . p l .... 1 . , ! What do )OU btd nowl A.-You don•t ha\.t LO tdl pAnJlef tha• )OU ha\t a (aSOMbtt fi~--caid htan un . h i more impon111t to ad'u.t bjm of )-OUr balanced bud that nttds onJ) a bit more than a m1nsmum ~1n1 to ploctuce pme. The ••Y to d() •hat ll to tn\.1tr With t-o no trump. '.\e"' Guinea nau'c "'llh a foot-long bone through his nose e'er stares '4 tstfull~ into a retlc-ctmg pool and murmu~. ··1 "'1sh I hadn't done that·· :-..obod' e'er u~ that v.ord · ul· tenor"" 1.1.i1hou: ··moll"C · Wh~ not" o\notherd1s11nct1on claimed b\ Los .\ngclcs 1s that 11 has more palm ·,rrc~ and p<>OOles than an~ other .\mc ncan 11~ Quite su \1ade for c-ach other ma~ be' Boston ou1la"'s bndgc pn1~s Something else ~ou can bu~ "'llh 'our ta\ refund 1s a ~cmed mscn 'ou ~hp into ~our telephone's mouth- p1C1.C uppo~d to emit a fragrance that lasts s1' months -\ hockc) pla~er can challenge the kngth of a s11d. used b~ a pla)Cr oa. the other team But 1f the sud. turns out to be lepl the challenging pla~er get' 1v.o minutes 1n J>('nalt~ bo\ v. hat \OU ma' not rcahze 1s a gonlla .. an cost ~ou more tha n a new car T hrtt out of I 0 .\mcncao grov. n up~ nc' er dnn"-. liq uor of any son -ldif.ii--~-------- ACROSS 1 Suites abbr 5 Curvature 9 Masterdom 14 Goods 15 S•ngle perl0<mance5 16 ANniated 17 Agitate 18 Trudge 19 Beddcng 20 South of Can 2 t Bicu$pids 22 Prectude 23 Eta and mo 25 Partake o• 27 CKenched 28 AJUs end 29 Rabid 32 Chef's - 35 Annul 37 Sacred image 38 Cords 39 Distress 40 Forecas1s 42 Spttef\11 43 Ham's brothef .... Being Sp 45 Oecompoa1110n 4$~ 47~ Island 51 Anguish 54 HOISt 56 Ash df$M.98 57 Semt>tanoe 58 PositlOn 59 tee mass 60 Bonanzas 6 ' Hypotl'leSIS 62 Rubt>emeci. 63 Kaon 6' Aerie 65 -GY"t DOWN 1 Terrible 2 M aly'H a 98f'ltence 3 Pay fOf all • EstabhSh 5 Announoe 6 Cl'laracte<S 7 Coegui.1e 8 Great expectations 9 Conhwenee 10 Manin! Item 1 1 Vermouth. • g 12 Eternal~ 13 Rupture 2 1 -off drove 2• Nasal tone 26 NoggS 28 Soup 29 Fooclstuft 301~ 31 A9nounOe 32 au.ns 33 Estate unit 34 Impend 35 ----law kin 36 OelOge 38 Kin of shan't 41 Handiest .. 42 Merry king •5 Move to a new chu ~ Aecel~ and underStood ·· 47 Mentions 48 F~ tatlt 49 Nice IChoOI 50 Predpctous 51 OMl- S2 o...1oc* 53 Wod-Lat SS Keiper 59 a.., BrumtMI ' ( r ---------------...--------~----------------cc-- Qr_,. Coat DAILY PILOT/ Mondey, JMuery 25. 1118 by Bii Keane "My teddy bear doesn't HAVE to talk. We have ESP." MARMADUKE b y Brad Anderson "I wouldn't expect you to obey all the time!" PEANUTS l CAN U~DERSTAND YOUR FEAR OF 8EIN6 ALONE, CMAAUE ~ROWN .. GARFIELD TUMBLEWEEDS DRABBLE ROSE IS ROSE \JJW( CAtlT "fOU AND '{OUR D06 DO SOME T~IN65 T06ETHER?60M AND C~ASE S~E RA861T5 .. 9!UJ3 '8 :J9MSUV DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham 'tloN1T ~RY.JOEY. Hf's WAG61N1 H\S TAIV11 -~ 0 · l ~l I ' I I e ~ I l'i '(EAH ,BUT HE'S 8ARKIN1,TOO,AN1 1 ~'-r KNOW WHlCM END 10 BELIEVE '• ,..,...,-------...---. by Charles M . Schulz A RABBIT C~ASED US FOR FIVE MILES ~ by Jim Davis WHO £L5E. 05E5 8ARNYAF\l7 &E.NTEP STATIONE.RY ? by Tom K. Ryan by Kevin Fagan by Pat Brady ' I BLOOM COUNTY SHOE "™AT'GANOW IT ~A EXP~ .. GCOt'Ffl.EtV ~ ./L.;-<..... ·1~ ·. ~ ,, ·' JUDGE PARKER FUNKY WINKERBEAN E£J 1HE.RE ~ ARE,ALJ)NE IM "fHE c.AR (AH1H 1HI$ ~ FROM 1HE F0018AU.. ~ ... AND HE'~ PRES~l~ ©..> IN IH£ Wfr.<5 WE 'V£ DISWSSED ! WAA'fl~ ~ REbPON5E I CtNDQ~ DOONESBURY ' by Garry Trudeau •. a"6 f5S{)f; aJNT/NlleS 70 IXJMINAT6 1fft3 P()(,ITTCAL- ~-TJ/6, 1!61£CF 6lial66 9lJ5H'5 lfDtelN~ IRAN ~ ~! """"'==l _ __.-.,. I \ I I • by Berke Breattied •ff€.N . \ MIPAfAH81 ~~ ... ~NIP f:bJP/l/IY. I ~ / by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNelly by Harold Le Ooux IT CERTAINLY CAN BE ... Aa""tt.f'lg !MM el ~ ''Who lflO.lld .... llClli!y WI h - OI Ill ~?" P111en1· "I would ho~ you'd cell rnv _,.. . HI CLR Y l I' I' I I I' o ~ .~ ~·=:.:..a:= __ ...,., __ ._, ....... mr I' r r e l' I' r r I n• '!!!'-... --e:: Daily Pilat MONDA Y, JANUARY 25, 1988 Sprinter Ben Johnson named AP Male Athlete of Year. 82. Keeping score down biggest problem for women'• team. 82. Area football coaches tab Broncos. Consensus of poll ts Elway will be dtff ere nee vs. 'Skins T he Denver Broncos will win Sunday's Super Bowl in San Diego over the Was~ington Redskins, according to a poll ofarea high school and comm unit)' college coaches. By a vote of 1 ~3 (wilh one offering no opinion of who will wan), the John Elway-led Broncos should prevail over the Redskins in Sup« Bowl XXIJ whlcb will be bdd at San D1 ego's Jack Murphy Stadium Sunday at 3 o'clock. Bollaad Many of the coaches credit Elway as the difference. The averase score of those sclectinJ Denver to"' in IS 28-22, wl 11le w1th those fa vonng Washington. it's 25-17. what its about .\nd I thin~ Elv.a} is one of the greatest e'er." Herc .. s are the views of those coaches contacted : Jeff Brla.kley, Newport Harbor: Denver 28. Wash- ington 21 "Elv.iay 1s awful good. I really think he 1s going 10 be the deciding factor. He can do so man}" things out there." Seu Clark. WestmiDsttr: "I think it's a tossup. Broncos finesse \S. Reds~1ns pov.er I pick 1t a draw." Mark CaJUlJagbam, Unlnrsity: ben, er 28. Washing- ton 21. "Elway 1s the main reason Doug W1lhams 1s a hot and cold passer. Elwa) v. ill pull 11 out in the end.'' , G•y Carrouo, Oceu View: Denver 27. Washington 24. "Denver has been there before recenU) and knows <;llaek Gallo, Mater Del: Den' er 31. Was hington 21. Others can't make move, so ·aaas holds on His 2-under-par round eoough for Hope< ;1asstc win INDIAN WELLS (AP)-With the last two Pia•. ers of the Year unable to make a mov1!.Ja) Haasneededonl> a 2-under-par 70 final round to score a two-stroke' 1ctor) Sunday in the Bob Hope Class11. Haas. IA.ht 1 led or shared the lead throughout t he last round. acquired the seventh 11tle of his 12-year PGA Tour career with a 338 total, 22 strokes unde r par for this fhe-day. 90- hole e\Cnt Haas' unc le. telev1s1on commen- tator and fo1 mer Masters champion Bob Goalb). \l.alked v.1th him as Ja) secured the b 1ggest pnze ofh1s career. S 180,000 fo >m the purse of SI m 1lhon. David Edv 1ards finished \I.Ith a 5- under-par 6" at Indian Wells and claimed scco nd. v.onh SI 08,000. at 340. . 'Tm kind of surpnstd." Edwards said. ··with ti 1osc gu)s so far 1n front. l didn't figurt the rest of us had much of a shot at 1t ... Haas led Be· b Twa) b) one shot and Paul Az1nger b) two. with the rest of the pack well t 1ack going into the final round. and the st.age appeared set for a three-man stn Jgg.le. But Twa), vvfio won the 1986 PGA and Player of 1 he Year titles. couldn't m o unt a chal lenge and Az1nger. the 1987 Player ot'the Year. simpl) sclf- destructed wu h his putter. That set 1t 1JP for Haas to stay in fro nt wuh a st nng of 10 consccu11ve pars that was chmu.ed b\ an eight- foot birdie put I on the 18th. Ho• they Dnl•.bed Jav Haas 63·61-69·61·70-331 David Edward' 66-71·71·6S·67-340 Bob Twav 69·66·67·67·n-:U1 Pavl'!e Stewart 72·71-67-67-67-~ Mark O'Meara 71·66·61·61·69-342 Scott Hoch 69·66· 72-61·61-3'3 L Thompson 61·66-76·70·U-3U Gil Moroan 71·67-71·67·61-3" ChlP Beel!. 72·67-69·66·70-3" GtnL.Sauen 69·67·6.9· 70· 70-:US Paul Azinoer 67·61·6S·70·7S-3•S Curlis Strange 7•·61·66·72·66-3'6 Fr ed Couples 61 ·77·69·70·67-3'6 Andrew Maoee 6S·70·61 ·73·70-3'6 Br ian Tennvson 67·71 ·72·71 ·66-3'7 Mac O'Gradv 69·7•·69·63·72-3'7 D Hammond 67 ·67-70·70·73-3'7 Curl Bvrum 67·69·n ·70-69-3'1 Tom Bvrum 70·69·71·69·69-3'1 John Mal'lattev 61·6S·7'·73·61-341 Peler Jacobsel'! 72·71·61·69·61-3'1 Davis Love Ill 71 ·61·72·67·70-3'1 John COOk 70·61·71·67·71-3'1 Dal'! Forsman 61·67·75·70·73-34 "l JUSt didn't pla) as well as I had earlier in the v.eck:· T~a) said. "To tell the truth. It "asn't rtall) spectacu- lar out there." h \I.as cons1derabl) less than spec- 1acular for .\zinger." ho shot a 75 that included a fh e-pu tt tnple-bogey on the founh hole and a four-putt double-boge) on the 11th. . .... That sent him reeling bacl to a 11e for I 0th at 345. Payne Stewan. Scott Hoch and Mark O'Meara tied for fourth at 342. Stewan closed wuh a 65 Hoch had a 67. O'Meara. the o nl) one of the three wuh a real chance to ovenake the leader. had a 69 despite hilting into the water on the 18th hole. T"a) tied Haas for the lead ~uh a birdie on the sixth. •'John Elway. and I think that the Broncos bt'heve 1n themselves a little better than the Redskins .. I think the emDt1onal factor will have to do with it (the outcome).'' Terry HeaJgu, Irvine: Den,er 20. Washington 17. -Elwa)' -he looks prett) good to me .. Dave Hollud, Corou del Mar: Washington :!.i. Denver 14. "The Redskins' defense 1s a httlc bt'tter than Denvet althouih Elwa) can shred 1t He can take an) defense apan. Williams didn't have a real good sccond baJfla.st week but the defense held up. I tlunk Washtngton won't tum the ball O\er The edge nght nov. 1s to the Redskins .. Job Utbeagood, Estancia; Den' er 38. "ashington 28. "The> (the Broncos) were there lar.t )ear and kno" what }OU ha'e to do to IA.In . and the) have one of the top quanerbacks around "ho can thro1A. as IA.ell as he CJSn run ·· Mike MliDer, Foui.aiD Valley: Denver 32. Washing- ton 18 "We haq: a kid that pla)s for Den,er 1A.ho used to pla) for Fountain \ alle) (Mike Freeman). so I wouldn't bet against them ·· Gene l'liojl, Woodbrld&e: Den' er 21 . Washington I~. ··e1"a~ 1s a n:al ~a'><>ned pla)cr He can make a broken pla~ into a tuulhdo1A.n and Den,er has got those recie' ers that can ma~e the big pla~ (You) nee~ a big pla) -.omev. hl."n.· 1 • ~et a qu 1ck touchdown to help ~ ou ps~~holog1lal1' · Georgt' Pas{'ot, Haatillgtoa Buell: Washington 31. Den,er ::..J lk • .iu!.e I'm a National Football Conferen~ (Pleue eee COACBES/82) Building through trades Super Bowl teams have been willing to wheel and deal SA.N DIEGO I .\P)-Theda' after T he Trade. Bobb> Beathard "as asked \I.hat he ~ould do 1fhe h.ad the half-dozen top draft cho1c~ the Rams obtained in the deal "1th Buffalo and Indianapolis th~t sent Enc-Dldcerson to the Colts. "What would I do \I.Ith them<r' laughed the general manager of the "ashington Redsl ins ··1 probabl~ "ouldn·t ha'e them 'en long .. Contra!"\ to the sFL·s con,rn· uonal v. 1sdom that good teams build through the draft the "ashingtoo Redsl1ns ha'e had onh three first- round draft picks 10 the iast 18 ~ears. ) et. the' ha' e been to the Su per Bo\!, I three tunes in lhe last s1~ 'ears Their Super Bo"I opp0nents. the Den' er Broncos. are not afraid to v.heel and deal although the~ ha\C b«n much lesse,tra,agant IA.Ith theU" top draft p1cls The Redsl ins ha' e JUSt SI\ first- round p1cls on their roster -only three of "horn ~ert drafted b~ \\ ashington \I, 1de r<'C'e1,.er ~n Mon~ comerbact Darrell Green and otlcns1' e tad le \1ark ~1 a' Quanertla.:-~ Doug ·~ 1lhams. Tampa Ba~ ·s top p1d. in I Q78. was signed as a I~ agent after the USFL folded. running bad. George Rogers \I.as the first pick in the 198 1 draft. talen b' 'e\I, Orleans and he cost \\ ash1ngton. natural!~. its top p1cl 1n 1'1 5 Defens1,e tack.le Da'e Butz. St Louis· first p1cl in IQ-4. was o btained 1 n a t ~ p1cal George -\lien dt"al for t IA.O S o Is and a "'o 2 "hen -\lien "as roach and general manager Twa) matc-hed par 72 on the shonest course· on the PGA Tour and held on for th1 rd at 341. Haas. ho~ever. engineered a two- shot_sw1ng on the SC' enth -his five. foot birdie putt against Tway's boge) ~and he led the rest of the WI). Jay Bau (left) Oftl'COme with joy upon wlnnlDC tbe Bob Hope Claulc Sunday. lflvea caddy Bill Harmon a hug after ai.nk- fng a birdie putt 011 the 18th hole. The Redsl ins are basicalh the creation of the 51-> ear-old Beat hard. "ho quanerback.ed Cal Pol~-San Luis Ot11spo to t~o Q.) ~asons in the 1950s ~~?ijiiji:~Jjfb!•·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ UNL V hands Temple first setback of season Rebe l~cle n5ecomeslhrough : Arizona ~;poils UCLA's upset bid Frem fte A110 ela&ecl Prell Nevada-Las Vegas is known for 1tseX'plos1veoffen~. But 1t was dcfc"nsc that triagertd the Runnm' Rebels' come-from-beh llDd victory over prcviousl) unbeaten Temple Sunda)'. No. 8 UNI .v held the third-ranked Owls scoreless over the last four minutes as it made up a 58-51 deficit to win, S9-58. RC$1!fVC Anthony Todd hit a l~foot jumper with tv.io seconds left to cap the comeback at the Thomas and Mack Centc r. "It's j ust a 1 niraclc fo r us to wtn Ibis game," UNL V Coach Jerry Ta rkanian said. "With seven minutes to play, our dcfens.c went up one notch hlgher. We got tnto total denial." Brothen K eith and Karl James each hit threc- pointers for UN L V durina the late rally. "Tbct rc a hi& play tca.m and they got the big plays today," S&Jd Ten1'ple COlch John Chaney. whose team fell to 14-1. Tarkanian l•:t his team free-lance for the final shot after Temple's D"Uanc Causwcll missed a free throw with 17 seconds left a nd the Owls leadina. S8-S7. "I started t •t> call timeout when we 1ot the ball." Tarkantan said. "Then I said. 'No. no. no.' You don't want to call timeout against them. They've got so many different defenses. If we called timeout. we wouldn't know what defen~ they'd be in." After Todd hit the shot. Temple called t1mC'Out to set up a final play. But a desperation pass slipped through Mark Macon's hands as lime expirtd. UNLV. 17-1 , finished the game witho ut its t~o leading scorers. Jarvis Basnight and G«ald Paddio. Basnight. who led the Rebels wtth 15 potnts., fouled out wtth 4:01 remaining. Paddio. who srortd 14 t><>ints. ~ft the game ~ith stomach cramps about two minutes earher. In other games Sunday: Arheu h , Ua..A 74: ln a Pacifk-10 matchup in Tucson. Sean Elliott srortd 17 points and the top-ranked W ildcats withstood a late UCLA rally to post their I th WlO in 19 pmes. UCLA. which trailed S6-4 I early in the serond-haJf. rallied to take a 66-64 lead. But the W1ldcatsouucored the Drums. 17·4, over the next 41/J mmutes to rcpin control. Kevin Wal~er's thrce-pointcr with S:49 rcmainJOg had put the Bruins ahead. but Elhott, Steve Kerr, Tom Tolbert and Craig McMillan each scored two points in an 8..0 spurt that put Arizona in front 72-66. Kerr added a three-pointer with I: I J let\. and (Pleue .. OOLLBG&/U) . Lakers snap Sonics' home streak SEATTLE {Al?) -O&Jc Ellis was u cited about pla yi04 the NBA cham· pion Lakcf"I on national ftvision, a.nd he ldmiu maybe be payched bimld( up too much. Ellts cntemt th c pmc avCflllna l4 points over hrs hut c.Pt pmcs. But Ellis shot S-for-21 from the fidd and ICOf'ed 14 poir11S in the Sonics' I 16-l09 lou Sun day, The Lakm' ' 1e1ory snapped the Sonics' 17-pme bomeccMan W'lnnif\I streak. StatiJt's h Omecour1 m:ord fell to 11-l. "I was my owo worst cncm) today," EUil saw1. "Maybe I tot loo ucitcd and wan1 cd ahott to ao down too muc b. I bad open shots. but I JUSt couldn't act it aoina. ·• Maak JOhnson ICOfed l4 points and James Won.by added 24 potnts and 12 rebounds for the Liken. ~.nlc lost de1pitc Xavier McDu.id's 3~ poentsand 32 by Tom Chambcn. Chambus tcOtCd tevcn •lf'lllht poinu late in &be fourth q'*1er to pull the Sonia witbio two Poinll W'llh J:Sl left in tbt pJM. After a l.akcn timeout. JobMOn hit a 2().fooler and K.arttm Abdul..Jabber folio~ W'lth a st.)' hook WJth 2: 1 s left. asvina tbt Lakma lOS-99 te.d. ' Danny YouQ&hit a lhrce-.pointerto puJl the Sonics Wtlhlft thrtt_ but \he Liken pulled IWI)' wbn Wonhy ~orcd afte.r aa olrtnlive ttbouod and Abdul-JabW followed wilb a tq>in to put Los A._tes ai.e.d, I 09-102. The Lakcn j mprvved that i09d record to an NBA best I 3-6. Loi nactts tw now won 19 ofits last 21 pmtt. The Lak.m vwere pla}iftl without dtfensa"c 1ptaahst ~ichlcl Cooptt, v..ho usuall CO\US Elbs. COOfe! was su pc~ for one pme for fill\UQI 1n Fnday n'lf\t' pmc IPJIW w Ne" Yoft Knick But he "as cut b' the Redskins in 1959. pla~ed fi,e "games v.1th San Otego 1n I Q60 and staned his front office career in 1963 as a scout for the Kansas Cm Ch1ds. for whom his ~ounger brother Pete v.<ts a quar- terbacl From I q-2 until 19"8, he v.as d1rt{'tor of personnel for the M1am1 Dolphins. Then he took over a Washington teams lef\ bertft of almost an~ draft choices b' ~lien. whose motto ... The future IS OOV. .. left the future IOOktn& bleal But Bcathard's ph1losoph) isn't that d1ffertnt. He would just as soon stoclp1le I01A.er p1cl s or bid for a pro' en blue-<h1ppcr b)' surrendcnna high p1cls Four ~cars after he took o'er. \\ashJOgton won the Super Bow I wuh 26 free agents and 11 (Pleue eee SUPSa{D) Kings edge Jets, 2-1 WINNIPEG. Manitoba (AP) Jim Fo·und OavcTa,lorscorcdand Ken Hammond had tWo assists as tht Los i\n.gdcs K.in.p edged ~ Win- ntpq Jets. 2-1 . Sunday in an NHL pme. Foll. lied the score in the fil"5t period after ~ndttw McBam had IJVel' the Jets a 1-0 v.ilh his llnd aoaJ o n tbe pov.~r pla). Ta)'lor ICORld htS 16th goaht 3:44 of the SttOod for the pmc-wanncr Luc Roblta1llt ~ Taylor the pua for the~-After talona a pass &om Hammond., Robtt.atUe htt Ta)iOr i9 the slot and then he ~t a move oe Bmbiaumc before alidi1'& tbt puc:l U\tO lft opm net. Tbc Jets pra:wmt Los Anetks •• tht final m1nu1a ol tbt tame but coukin't beettoeltndttGnn Heel- 1)', wfM> maitt 27 SI YeS. Ouiel Bcrthwumc made lS sava for W• 'i:'aam stutod the IC'On.ftl at .-.-oa of"thC fi~t. ~took a pass &Om PHI Maclean tn the comer and ... ~ it put H.ealy. 8oame111 c.JUOl'DM ,._, ao .. The 32nd annutl Southnt\ C'al.Jfom&a Boat Show will open Fnday. Feb. Sat IM Los Al\ldC1 Convcnlion C'entc-r and nin throuah Sunday. Feb. 14, Apprownlld) l,000 pleasure boatt will u~mbled at the show, ransina in size from e1g.ht·foot outboard d1nSh1cs 10 SS-foot luxury yachts and 6S.foo1 hou~boats. Tbc fleet will abo ft"t1urt tra1lerable fishina boat$. family wettkcnd <'NIKI"$ and hig.h.performancc run· abouts and ski boats. Special event features arc "Boat a Day" aivtaway and e1sh-and-cury Manne Bazur. A total of 10 new boats. with an es1ima1ed rc~il vaJue or $65.000 will be g>ven away. one each day. The bu.a.ar will offer boa11n1 accnsoncs for sale. In adchuon to boats, 1he show will include innatabldboaB. inboard and O\jtboard ef\&incs, and more than 27S booth displays of equipment, supplies and s.erviC'CS The show 1s open to the pul)hc on wcekda)'s from 2·10 rm . Saturda)s 11 a m.·10 p.m . and unda~sl am -7 pm .\dm1u1on 1s SS for adults. S2 for children 6-11. and ch1ldrcn under s1A arc free D1scoun1 ud.ct coupons arr a'a1lablc from Southern California l\llannt' o\uoc1a11on mcmbtrs and many manne retail stores Tht' con,cnuon ce nter 1s at t201 South Figueroa 1n do~n1o~n Los Angeles. Gun, Knlfe ct Collector'• Sbo• The Gun. Kn1fl' & Collector's Show ~111 be held aturda' and unda' at theAnahcim ConH•n11on tenter Hours· arc from 9 a.m.·S pm bo1h da~> Admission 1s S5 lor aduhs. S4 for students and S:? for chaldrl.'n 5-1 ~ -\II children under fi ve wtll be adm111cd fr~ The latt·~11n "'c:-apunr. tor hun11ngcn thus1asts and target and ~l..t"el shooters ~ 111 be on exh1b1t. Door pnzc~ 1n lhr gun and gun equipment catciones "'Ill alw be g1,en awll} For funht'r 1nforma11on. phone (213) .i)O.S 11 ~or tht' -\nahc1m Con,cn11on Center at (71 4) 999-8900 Keeping score down is biggest problem for women's team From Tbe Associated Press PITTSFORD. ....; Y -Therese m Tobin. the leading rebounder on St. John Fisher (olh:gc·s v.omen·s basketball team. rolls her e)CS and speaks apologeucall~ v. hen she tal "-s about a recent game "I alv.a) s get a little 1enta11' e "hen v.e're up b) like 50 I'll tf'\ not to shoot as much." Tobin said ... The clock seems to uc"-realh slov. h when 11·s hke tha1 ·· "It's ll "e )Ou ~ant to 1.hange unifonm and sa~ let me help )OU" said (r I !>enior center hell} Ba) hurst. h's not eas) being the best team in small collegt v.omen·s basketball although for St. John Fisher. 1 l--0 and ran"ed :"-o I in the countl). the problemscurnntl) seem to in'ohe being too good. The school leads D1' 1s1on Ill in "blowout" '1ctones. outscoring opponents b) an a' erage of 44 points. e-.c~n though Cardinal Coach Phil Kahler inmts that he does e'er)thing he can to keep from embarrassing teams ··"-e·re not running up 1he score. E'el)bod) knov.s that v.e could score 150 points in some games. but we don't:· ~1d l\.ahler .\fter the Cardinals trounced L'uca Tech earlier this v.eck b\ 60 points. 86·~6. L't1ca·s coach Vern Lesko' arcame o'er to Kahlerto thank him . .\fter all. in December the C ard1nals crushed L Ilea b) 64 points. 96-n It's nothing nev. for t John Fisher. which last )Car led the nation 1 n a' cragc margin of \ICtOI) and has been a bas"-etball pov.crhoosc for more than a decade. .. I think pan\) has no1 hit v.omen's basketball." Kahler said ··There arc teams that are good and there are teams that .ire not so good and "er) little in bct\\een .. : L nfonunatel) Fisher bumps into man) of the inferior teamc, Thie, i,cason the) beat the College of Staten Island 11 ·I~ l "" ersll) of Rochester. 89-45. and Cas1le1on tatc ol \ ermont 91 -42. Quote of the day Tony Wallingford, basketball coach at M1ll1- gan ( ollt•ge 1n Tennessee. on his pre-game talk before h1' team pla)ed Chnch Valley College of ·virg1n1a "I tncd 10 tell the fellows what 11 taJcc:sto ~in The first letter·~ ·o· "1obodysa1d anything. The second letter 1s ·E' By the time I got to the third lct1cr one of the guys asked if he could buy a ,o....,cl .. Johnson Male Athlete of Year NE\\-YORK -Spnnter Ben John· son. acclaimed the "World's Fastest Human .. afterbrealong the world record in the IOO-meter dash last )car when he went Ill unbeaten in :! I races. 1.1.as named The Associated Press Male .\thkh.· of the Year on Sunday b) an over· 1.1.hclming margin Johnson became 1he first Canadian track athlete to win the honor and onlv the second Canadian 1n the award's 57-}ear h1~tor. :_the other was hocke) pla}er Wa) ne Grctzk) an I ~82 Johnson rccc1ved 48 first· place \.Otes. 18 \CConds. 28 thirds and 322 points in balloting b) spons wnters and broadcasters. Points ,.,,ere alloted on a 5.3.1 basis. Wide rec<.'1ver Jerr} Rice of the San Francisco 49en. who set an N Fl record with 22 touchdown receptions in only I~ games, finished second with 222 points on the baStS of 22 tints. 26 seconds and 34 third$. Chicago's Michael Jordan. the NBA's leading scorer this stason. was third with 206 potnts.. includina 24 first -place votes. 2:! ~conds and 20 thirds. Payton flies ault in stock deal CHICAGO -Walter Payton. the EiJ NFL's all-ume lead1n1 nasher. as suina a ••• Houston compan)' for SSO m1lhon. con~ • tend1n1 ll unloaded stock on him that 1s now alm 1 wonhless. The manaaemcnt of Mcfaddin Vcntwn Inc.. ~bJCh o.-ns and operates. n11luclubs. was clwpd witlt fraud. stlf-dcahna, m1sm1~ ad masutit of corporalt' ~sets. the Ch1eaj0 Tnbune rqM>rttd Sunday. The c6mpan)'•s 1tlephone ~nt unansM'Rd Sun· da). The la~ uu .r.-as flied laSI monrh in Cha~ Coun of fomsl County. Miu.. •here Payton s allomc and ad~ilCT'. Paul H ... ~-HolmH. h\·ct Holma also LS lisaed as 1 pla1nt1n: s .. tl.Ufoll a.di~ meet The llifi Annual Katin Memonat Team C'balk •• the ~·s $ter 1e1m 1urfLna competition and tbe nuinins pto- feu1onal wrfi111 C"vcnl in fomia. will lake place at tbe Hu1u1na1on ae.cfl Pler Feb • ._7, The conin1 wall featutt a St 7,500 punt. The 1camchamp1on will re«iveS4.000orS I .OOOpu nder. while the 1ndiv1dual 1l1hs1 will earn S3.000. There will be prcltm1nary rounds Ftb. 4.S, with the 1nd1v1dU1I finals on Saturday. Feb. 6. On Sunday. 32 surftn ttpresenttna the top ei&bl teams will battle in four-man heats -two men from each of two teams-1odctcnnane1heteam champion. Amona the earl~ entrants of the expected 192 surfers arc Mark Occh1lupo of Australia, ShuJi Kasuya of Japan. OP Pro runntr-up Sunny Garcia orHav.a11 and U.S. Pro Tour champion Mike LambrM1 of Carlsbad. Top CaJ1fomi&ns include Jim Hopn orCapisuano Beach, Costa Mesa's R1ch1c Collins and a tno of Huntington Beach surfers -Bud Llamas, Scott Famswonh and Gar) Chsb) The defending 1nd1\lduaJ champion 1s two-t1mc "'orld champion Tom Cumn of Santa Barbara. ~h1lc 1hc defend1n1 team champions arc the Co1cha Domma1ors of Costa Mt'SI (profcn1onal) and the Bod) Glove Future Stars of Hcnnosa Beach (amateur). On Sunda). a scncs o,f cxh1b1uon heals amona surf en of the t 96<h and I 970s will also be held. Newport c1a .. c Pro-Am The 14th o\nnual Ncwpon Class1<' Pro-Am golf 1oumamcn1 will bt played on Fnday and Saturday. The tourney w11l be held at 1he Newport Beach Count? Club (1600 East Coast Highway). A total o 74 pros will team w11h 74 amateurs and pla) a 36-holc. two-day e' ent for a total pu~ of S4S.OOO and team pnzcs The winnina pro will r«c1\C SS.600. T1ckc1s can be obtained wnh a SS donation to thr SS:! Club and arc a' a.table ai the course.. The SS:? Club 1s a suppon grou p for Hoag Memonal Hospital. For more 1nforma11on. phone 76().S9 t 9 San Marcos won by longshot ARCADIA -Great Communicator ~ pre\ ailed in a battle of longshots to win the San Marcos Handicap by a head over Schiller Sunday a1 Santa Anita. The lnsh-bred Bello Horiz.onte took third as the fa,ored coupled entry of Swink and Rivlia finished in the last two spots of the I ().horse race at I 'I• miles on the turf course. The crowd of 41 .138 sent Grc.at Communtator. v.1th JOCke} Ra) S1b11le. off at 12· I. The 5-year-old v. inner paid $26.80. SI 1.80 and SS. Schiller."' 1th Rafael Meza. left the gate at 4().1 and returned $31.40 and S 16.'20 while &llo Horizonte. at 11-1 with Sand) Hawley. paid SI0.40. The ttme over a firm course was a relatively slow 2:02 3/5. The race gave trainer Charlie Whmingham a triple d1sappo1ntment. In addn1on to Swink and R1 vlia. he saddled Forhtano. second choice in the betting. which took founh. Ueberroth: No replacements HARTFORD. Conn. -Baseball ( omm1ss1oncr Peter L:eberro1h S3)S he \.\Ou ld not allov. teams to use replacement pla ~crs 1f ma1or leaguers go on stnke in IQ90 l.Jeberroth said the club O'>'-ners had discussed the possible use of replacemc:nt pla~ers who are not members of the Ma1or League Baseball Pla )ers .\ssoc1.it1on "It's ob' 1ousl\ been discussed because 11's been done 1n other spoi-ts:· the commissioner said in an in ten 1ev. published in unday's ed1uons of Hartford Courant .. But be careful not to mentton the other spans because the) ·re not rcall} comparable. This one 1s reall) an 1ns11 tu11on I don'1 v.an1 to make 11 sound sacred. bul 11 has a !>Pl>t.1al natuf'(' amongst the people an lhe count!"\ It's a lo' e affair " Replacement pla)crs v.ere used dunng 1hc 24-da} :--.FL strike last }ear Hawks win, Fratello East coach Domhalqu WlllllDS scored 31 potnlS m and AtJanta v.1thstood a founh.quaner rall~ to beat New Jer~~. 118· l I I. Sunda) The "1cton ga"e the Hav.ks 1.1.1th the best record in the Eastern Conference. :!9-11 to Boston's 28-1 1. and made Miiie FrawUo the coach of the East team in the NBA All·Star Game at Oucago on Feb. 7. The Netsare 1.1.inlcss in I 6gameson the road this season ... In other NBA games. Benaari IUaascored 25 points. leading Washmi,ton to its third consecutive victory, 131-99 over Philadelphia. The 76crs have lost three straight games. and their last seven on the road ... In Indianapolis. Jolul Long scored 24 points and Waymu Tlsale had 19 as Indiana took control early and coasted to a t 28· I 09 win over Phoenix ... In Portland. Cir* Drexler scored 27 points. mne in the decisive final quaner. as the Trail Blazers pulled away for a 119-111 tnumph o"·er Detroit. North Stars halt 10-year streak W Brooke's second·ptriod goal Iii broke a uc and Minnesota went on to ' defeat Ph1ladelph1a. 5-3. Sunda)' for the Nonh Stars· first NHL victory at the Si>«trum sintt 1978. Minnesota had not won a regular season game an Philadelphia smcr Apnl 9. t 978. accumulatina an 0-11·5 rttord m that time. The Ion broke the Fl}crs' fi ve-same winning streak . . . Elsewhere in the NHL. Ray Fttnre scored 2:2f into overtime to &JVC Hanford a l-1 victory over visiting Detroit for the Whalers' fifth strailht victory. Femro stole the puck from J9e)' ~ &chind the net and stuffed 11 1nto the net for his 12th goal of the season ... In Qucbtt. Mata Nul•, ClaMe Lemleu and Sttpe Momaso each had a pl and an assist to lead Montreal toa S·lvictoryovertheNordiques ... lnChi~.lcne nom.1 snapped a lie with a pl at 2:26 of tht thtrd period. spar\in' the Bladthawb to 1 )..I victory over Vancouver, whl(h suffered its thtrd straiaht loss. Television, radio TELSVIUON 4 30 p.m -COl.tm& IAS&.ETBALL: Pro ' 1dtnce at Pitt. ESPN. 6 JO p.m. -COl.LSGIE 8ARE'1"1AJ..L: lo"' at WlK'On11n. ESPN. 9 pm. -TENNIS= Nike lntemaltonaJ uh1b111on. John M<'Enroc vs. ndre1 Chtinoto". from Pon land. Ort .• ESPN. RADIO o C\~nts Kheduled. • Lollll auc.11 Ora11d l'rU ddm Ttcfrts for the IMI Orud Pnit of Lone kach. IC'hcdt.lled for Apnl I S.17 tht'O\Wh the <'llY ntttit. .-cnt on l8Je today at the Liebl office located at 130 North Pint Ave. in l..oaa 8eecb Mano Andtttli 11 expected to retllm tO dcfmd his t 987 chamP.tonshi_P,-his third Indy car win on the l.67·m1le seaside course 1n the Jut four years. While the CART/PPG Indy cars wtll be the ftatured ~vent of the weekend, thtte will be a variety of additional races. The mutCUlar SC'CA Trans-Am ca~ will be 1t Lona Beach and wi1J be JOined by the popular pro«lebrity race a.nd the nimble o~n-whttled Super Vee <'Ofttttt Box office hout"I are 9 a.m.-6 p.m .. Monda} throu1h Saturday. Sunday hours are 11 a.m.·5 e.m. T1<'kets may also be purch.ued at Southern California TicketMast~r locations.. Credit card purchaJCS usina Visa. MasterCard' and Amen· can E.a:prns m.ay be made by calhns the ticket hotline number1t (213) 436-~Sl Aaabelm Stadium motocroN The nauon's top two ranked supercross nders ue amo"I the entrants for the Anaheim Stadium Motocross Saturday at 8 p.m. Jeff Ward. the I 987 AMA Supereross cham· pi on. and Riek Johnson. the 1986 title holder "'ho ~as runner-up to Ward last year, will renew their long-standing nvalry. Last year at Anaheim. Ward was vinonous after Johnson took a spill and was knocked unconscious. The purse for the race is SS2.300. la,.est ever for a ~tad1um supcrcross event. Tickets are ava1labl~ at TicketMastcr outJets 1nclud1n1 Ma) Company, Music Plus and Sponmart stores and a1 the Anaheim Conven· t1on Ccnlcr boa office. Ticket charie hncs arc (71 -i) 74().2000 and (213) 4~3232. For ticket 1nforma11on. phone (714) 999-.8900. SUPER BOWi; ••• Prola81 playm drafted below the fifth round. . More ~tJy, be has done ttbll AUta did -tnck ~ away haab picks. • He tot Rotitrl for a No. l. and he wd tll 1M biddtna for both Otckenon and lincbecker Comdius le;ftMtt. but. typicaUy. he didn't have cnoup hillt draft dM>1ca to aJve up for them. . . Bua no one cam 11 Iona as the Redltim wm. And they_ do-they have hadJu.stonetosJnataJOn-: 6-IOln 1980 -and have been 'M-33 sinCIC Belthlnj hired Joe Gibbs the next year. .. I just worry about coachina and let Bobby ao ou1 and get me players.'' Gibbs says. "I don't know where he acts them. but he never fails." True enough. Joe Jacoby, a fixture at left tackle this decade and a three-time Pro Bowler. was signed as a free aaent out of Louisville. The three sta.nina linebackers arc Mel Kaufman and Neal Olkewicz, both free 11cnts, and Monte Coleman. an 11 th·round draft pick. . . . Barry Wilburn. who led the league tn tnte~pt1ons this season was an eighth-rounder in 1985; ~\attint defensive taclde Darryl Grant a nintb·rounder 1n 1981 , the same year Dexter Manley was taken on the fifth round. Then there's Jay Schroeder. the quarterbark who succeeded Joe The1smann and wtll likely succttd Williams. He played o nly one c.ollcae football game -u a freshman at UCLA. then signed a baseball contract wilh Toronto. Schroeder was grabbed by Beathai:<f on the lh~rd round in 1985. astoundmg even the draf\mks who pndc themselves on keeping tabs on the most obscure player5. A year ago. in his first full season. he thrcwfor4.109 yards. the 10th best in NFL history. Beathard is not always perfect. In 1986. he traded his No. I choice in 1987 to San Francisco for a chance to move up in the second round and grab wide rttr1ver Walter Murray. He couldn't sign Murray. so he traded him for a No. 2 to Indianapolis. where he ha!t been a disappointment. He also used his fi1'$t pick in 1985 (in the second round) on comerback Tory Nixon. then dumped him off on San Francisco. where he has been a marginal player. But Beathard 1s willing to trade with an)one. 1ncludinJd1v1sionnvals.gJvmguphisNo. I pickm 1984 to the Giants for their No. 2 and an extra No. S. Neither player taken with those picks amouat.ed to anything. Denver. whoscdealtng is done by Coach Dan Reeves and General Manager John Beake. 1s also wilhn g to take chances on trades panly bcoluse the) 're willing to spend money Three of their major cogs -quarterbnck John Elv.a). com crback Mark Ha)nes and hnebacke r Rickey HunJe) were obtained through trades. Area sports calendar Me.a '• baaetbal.J TllftaV Ctf't(' S lO Cr1r1\I COi'-lrv1,.. el WHtmof'll, s·:io O•O ., lJ" ... ,,,.. l L•ll<IM ll••cPt •• C°'•· Me\a l WOOOOf•CIQe a1 TraOueo l-1111t l. Irv.,,. •' Oel\e H,n, 3 Octen v-•' Marl,.. et We\tm'""" 6 .,.""' no•on &tee t • vi Founlein VelW!v •• Hunt,ngton 8eacP'I. ;• Ed•Mlft at Wtslm•n\ltr I COLLEGE -SoCal Colltve 11 Azu\a Pa· C•hc 7.30 (l\r1\t COllt9e trvint 11 Wntmot1t 7 30 HIGH SCHOOL -COita ~ ar Oranot. woooor1e1ge •' Laouna &t«ll e,1anc1a •• S.001eo.c~. Un•v,..sltv at Corona Ofl Mer~ T u\lin er Ntwl>ott Ha1110r, •• a t 7 WedN\dav Wedneldav Women'• .occer TUfldav COMMUHITY COLLEGE -Gol<le" WMI e l FUl~ton 7 JO. Ri•tr••<te •• Or•noe CoH I, 7.30 HIGH SCHOOL -S.O<lltlMICll •I E"e r>ela , Coron• cMI Mer a l Un1ver11tv. 111-oor• HertlM at Tvttm. Ore~ et Co,fa Mew. Woodbridee et Laoune 8tacll, MIUJO!I Vleio If lntN, Servll• "' ~If' De1 a l Cll•Dtl'lan Co!le9t, ea a t 7 lO COMMUHfTY COUdEGE -Fvlltrlo" at c;oioen Wt\I 7 lO. Ora~ Coa\t •• R1 .... ,.a.. 130 HIGH SCHOOL -Ocffn VIit • a l FO\lnlaln Vet't v. ECl•\O" et Mer1na . Hullli'IGIOll 8tacn al lo'l.tslm1"''-' LelllJ"• hacn a l Woociorioo.. Saoott0ec• •• E\1anc1e COl'OI',, Ciel Mar •' U""''''''" Nt ... oorl Harbtlr al "J 14t111 aR al l Thundev T'hun.cNv COLLEGE -UCI al Frts"° S1a1t 7 lO HIGH SCHOOL -Wts1m1n$1er el Hunt• mv10n lklldl 3. L•9Vll• 8tac11 et CO\la Mew. 1. woooor'°" el Tre0uco H1M1 7 e,1enc1a et T.nt n. 7 l\lt..,.PO<t Herl>O' al CC>fona CM M4ir, 7. Sadelltoacti; •• Un1ven11v 7 Thurs.av HIGH $CHOOL -Founle " 11 altv al Hunt· •"91on 8eacn. Mar,,ta •' Octar1 View Wt\•· '""'"''' a• ECl•M>ll TraOucD HWI\ a t WOOO· or~ Unu..-'''" •' S.00-.act.. Tu''"' •• E\laflC • •I •' l CO'ona Ofl ~, a• Nt•PO<• Haroor 4 lO COL1.'4GE -SoW,,....11 Cal C~ a l &Iola 7 >O Cllr•tf .. n Her1taoe at Cll"'' Coleoe lf"vlnt. 7 )() Lonv 8tacl\ 5•ett •t UCI 7 :lO Frkav Frkav HIGH SCHOOL -FountH\ Vellev a l Oceen View Mar~ el E<l•Mln, Wntminlltr at Hunt· .,,g1on &tacll. Tvtt•n at E\tenc,., Corona Otl ,.,., 11 ,,.__, HarCOt Uni,,...,.,.,, at Seddle· COMMUNITY COLLEGE -G004tn Wt \I a t Comolon 7'.JO, C1lrU\ el Oranve CoH t 7 :lO HIGH SCHOOL -U~rtv Cfy,,1,a11 "' Whotnt" a• Vet.-, Cnr1\tian. 6 )() Wre.tll.nl Saturuv TUHUV ~ L•GU'la 8eac1t •• CO\ta Mfte Woocs· broOl>t •• T reouco HI<\\ l••llW 11 Dana Hiii\ 8•\l»O Montgomery .. l!Nler 0.1. e• ., 7 lO, L11>tr-tv Cl\ro\loan V\ Wll<lnt'f a t ValleY Cnr1'· lien a COLLEGE -Frnno Pa<tf< et SoCe1 Coo ~ SJO. Cn~.,1 COlleot lrv•nt e t Cel Lut...,a n s 30 UC I e l S.1' Jo~ S•ett 7 lO HIGH SCHOOL -Esl~• a• Un.nn11v Thursdlv HIGH SCHOOL -Ocean V-el J:our>1a,ft Va llrt 1 IS Ma rina er Edl'on 7 15 HIGH SCHOO\. -0c-. \'-at Ma!lr.a l Eo \Of' •• WHtm.n\ler l; "'""•noton e .. a<11 •• Fou111a n V•'ln •JO COl'u,.. Otl Mar a• Sacl<l..0.C" Tu\l1n al Nt..-PQ<I Harl>O' ()r- at WOOOOt•09e Co\I• ~ "' L•Guna H ' l•••"f a t El To<o S.turdav COLLl!GE -New Me•iCO Slet~ al UCI, I Frnno Paclf< 11 Soullltf'll Cel C~ 1 lO Chr"t Colleot lr••nt a1 Ce1 Lvt"«•"· 7.lO COMMUNfTY COLLEGE -Comoton at Go4otfl Wnt, 7 lO. Otan99 Coa\t •' Cllru\, 7 JO HIGH SCHOOL -Mater 0.1 8 1 OCten View I Men '• .accer WedneMSIV Saturuv Wome.n '• ba•ketlMll Tu.Sdlv HIGH SCHOOL -Founta•n Vallfv e r OU•" .., .... Marina et ECIJM>I\, WMlm11t1lef ., Hunt 1no1on Btat n E'•81'C>a at S.Odifl>aco Un1ver· '''" •' CC>fona Ot1 Mar Tv"ln e r Ntwoon Her00<. C'"t• MtH et Orenve. woooori00« a t Leovnt 8tKll, Min ion V .. IO al lrvint. •" e l 3 HIGH SCHOOL -Un.ven u v 11 Cn•rrr Oa' '"" 1a11ona1 ,,.,,.. Ma••M. J'o..,.nt11n Valle¥ Oct•" v .. w Hlif'll"'9ton 8te<t• wn•m1n\I,.. •' CatWOf\ 1n.,tal10t1al. 10 a m s .. 1mml.tJ6 Fndlv S.turdav HIGH SCHOOL -E"ancle ti Tv111n. 3. COLLEGE -Pomone·P•llt< ., ucr •' Htrit•Ot Pero l'OOn ltnen • ll<I ... ont" COLLEGE -SoCat COl99e at AZV\A Pa· Newoor1 Harbor et Corona Of'! Mer. 3. S.ddle COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP ... From Bl Anzona hit 5 ot 6 free throws in the last 63 seconds . Anz.ona led at halftime 45.34 and increased its ad,antage to 56-41 with15:52 left when Elliott hita three· pointer. But the Bruins then went on a 25·9 run, including s1A points from Tre,or Wilson. six from Dave Immel and four from Craig Jackson Immel led UCLA with 19 points. 'l'hile Wilson added 16 and Walker 15 Tolben scored 19 points for Anzona. Cook added 18. 14 of them in the first half. Anzona 1mpro'ed 10 8..0 tn the Pac·IO. while UCLA fell to 3-4 in lhe conference and 7-10 overall. WaskhaJtoD ?$, Ore1oe 13: Eldndge Recasner sc.orcd a game-high 27 points to offset lhe 18-poinl firJt·half outburst of Anthony Taylor and lift 1he Huskies to a Pacific-I 0 victor) O\Cr lhe Ducks in Seattle. Six Recasner points were pan of an 18-5 run as Washington. 6-10 and 2·5 1n the Pac-10. overcame a 36-32 halftime deficit to take a 5042 advant.age with 15:06 remaining in the game. The Huskies lead the rest of the wa). increasing the marg.in to as much as 17 points at 67-50. Mike Haywa rd scored six ofhts 19 points inside the final four minutes for Washington. Hayward shot a perfect IO-for-10 from the free-throw line as lhe Huskies Wilander spoils Cash's plans MELBOURNE. Australia (Ai>) -Hometown hero Pat Cash was hoping to tum the Australian Open tennis championships into a national celebration. Bui Mars Wilander spo:lcd the pany. The 2l·}ear-old Swede downed Cash m a marathon five-St't final Sunday to win his third Australian Open. Wtlander 51id he has worked hard to improve his game since losing the French and U.S. Open finals to Ivan Lcndl last year. ··1 couldn't have won this match si.11 or SC\'en months .. o." be saed following his 6-3, 6-7 (3-7). 3-6, 6-1 , 8-6 victor)• an the ra1n-interrupt.cd ma\Ch. ..I feet 1 lot stroqrr, i-n1cularly with my serve.·· It was the fifth Grand Slam title for Wilandtr. who has also won two FrcMh Open1. And it was the fifth stra1pt lime & Swedt' has won the AustrallAn ()ptn. ••1t IS a lon1 ttme Stntt l'..-e f«d the top four J)taym 1n the •-ortd so intense to wio a tou~t." 11acl Wilander, who was lttdcd th11d. .. All four of us felt we could win II Ind that's why II feels IO~'° succud." Founh·tttded Cuh, who Iott to Siefan Edbera an last )UI'& final, was blcUd by I ... ocal CTOwd 15.0QO" It me nt'W N attOnal T enn11 Cmlef'. "I'm not srcatly di•PPPQtnted, aJ\hoaflb I obviously ' wanted to wtn." the 1987 Wimbledon CM.mpion said. "YOU cannot pU)' lhe bat ICIUUs of~ lift ~ day. There are only 1 few points between the lop pll1'ft in the wortd and OM da)' II will to Oftt "Y· UlOlhrr., lhe other." Wilandcr had Ioli bis pttV1out four Orud 5llm matches ap.11ut Cub_ shot 15 more free 1hrows than Oregon. 23-H o~gon IS g.7 and 3.3 1n the Pac-10. Nord! CaroU.aa 77, NorUCarollaaStat.! 73:J.R. Reid scored I 7 points as second-ranked f'c nh Carolina suf" 1' ed fo ul trouble and defeated 20tb.-rated Nonh Carolina Stale in Raleigh. The Tar Heels, 14.2, raised 1heir Atlantic Coast Conference record to 3. t with the help of I I st.raigh1 free throws in the second half. Nonh Carolina. also hit 70.6 ptrcent of its field goals m the second half a nd finished at 65.9 ptrccnt on 27--of-41 Vinn) Del Negro's thrtt·point bas.lcet with 6:25 remaining gave Nonh Carolina State a 62-62 tie. Nonh Carolina then hit six straight free throws. the last two by Reid. and aot a Kevin Madden l·ayup with 3:0 I remaining to open a 72-66 lead. Mldl1u 7!, l.Dd.laaa 10: Rumeal Ro binson scored Michigan's first 11 points of the second half. keying the ralt~ that lined 1he No. 7 Wolverines toa fhgTen win over Indiana. The win by the Wolverines. 16-2 O\ trail and S.I in lhc 81& Ten. snapped lndiana~s-29-pmc wmninastrcak at home. the se<:ond-lonacst in the nation be lund Kans.as' 55 pme5' Indiana dropped to 9·6 and 1-4. Robmson. a 6-2 sophomore guard. opened 1he S«ond half with a thrtt·pomtCf' that gave w WolvennC$ a 38-30 I~ lndtana·s Joe Hillman rou-ntercd with a layup. but then Robinson hit a pair of free throws. two layuJ>' and a fast-break stufT to put Mit'higan up 46-32 with I 5:20 left. ~...,.. ft, Syraeue 61: Charlie Smith htt an underhand la)'UP at tht' buzzer as No. IS Georgetown overcame a n1nc·point deficit tn the final seven mmutcs and beat the l 4th·ranked OrangEmen 1n a Bia East pmc at S)TKUJe CieorJCtOwn 112·3 in the conference •nd 12-4 ovtrall. wh ile Syracuse $lipped to 3-3 and 1) .• 5. Smith. who led the Hoyas with 13 points. took the ball the le"Jth of the coun lo tc0re after Sherman Doua&as pve the Oranennen a 68-67 lead wwth tninc seconds 1e(.\ on a runnina hook POL COAGRES' PICKS ••• Pram81 .... WCSTl~N ~lalllCI .. MMe OM.- W L Pd. 08 JO • ,.. n •• m ,.,, ,. •• '°° 1 ll 2• )51 , ..... 10 1' 26l 20 1 7t . .,. 'l2 MMfWMI OW... o ... , ts 11 6'• Hou\lon n 1' s.t •''> C>t11v•r n 11 5'4 •• .., Utell 17 10 ~ l '"l Sall Antonio 16 10 6U ' *""*"O I I 1' 7'1 14 '> IAITl•N CC*fl•IMCI eo1ton Pnliede!Oft•e wuN1191on N-Yor~ Newww1 Attente o.tfOtl Cll<H O Mllweui<ee rn0le11e ci.v.i.nc1 AllMll< OM.-M II •• • • IS 11 ll ,, I )0 C....81 DMWM 7t II 11 I) 73 IS It Ii 19 " " 20 ~.,..SC.ff L.allen 11•, Sffllle IOt WH ll•ll91on Il l P,,,1ed14PNe " Atlente 111 New Jen ev Ill lt'diafte 17'. Pl>ofonl• '°' Portlencl I It C>ttro;t 111 111 .. 411 lll 211 T""""' GMMt Pl\•leo.tohte e I W eSlll~IOfl, • lO II m Ci.velel>CI el Ulell, 6JO D m M•lweui.ee e1 GolcMn S1e1e 7 lO D m TllftdeY'I G-. Ut•" et ~--. 7.JO om oi...n •1 HOUtlon s )0 D m ~w Jll'"¥ et N-Von. 430 om Boston e l Atie111e 4 lO D m Cll•G•llO et lnclJ•M S D m Sen AnlOrl•O •I Dell8' SlO D m ulren 11', SvSIWSenlu °' t 11 ., IS " , . , s I • 10 s .. 11 .... S.Crenwn10 7,30 p m~ MUweui.N et Porllencl. 1 lO D m LAKl•S 11161 -Grfffl 3·1 l·l 1, wor1"v 10· It 4·S 14 AbCIUI JeDOer I · 14 ·2 ti E JQM\on t· lt I•· It 3' Scott I · IS ·2 It M T!WnoMin l·I l ·l f Mell!Wwl 2·7 1•2 S. Rerno.t H H 0 To1111 ., .... 1'·lS "' S~ATTLI ( ,.,, -C11emoeo 12-21 1·• n McDen.-. 16·ts 3·4 lS l.•tltr 2·4 1·2 S E••• S·?l ?·• " Mc/IN n l·S 0·0 ?. C ~ ?·l 0-0 • McKt Y l·• 0-0 6 Polv11oee CH 0-0 0 Wll••arrtl 7·2 0·0 4 YOUl'e 1·• 0·0 S ~ 0·0 H 0 V-t 1·1 00 1 Total\ ... 91 ll·" "'' kaire ttv ~ 1..8'«"1 n 21 )1 l~ll· S..tt~ " ,. 21 ll-109 Tllfte·DO•nt 110e•1-E•·1 2 Scott Cllemtl9fl Youn9 Foui.d out-HoM ll~e•tr1 SS CWOr!llv 121. S.ellle 17 (C-1 IOI Awil•-t.•1>.tn 21 tWorlfll' 11 S..me 1' CMcM•llen Ill Total '°"1-t..euu IS SQ11.e 21 Ttc""'tet1-t.e,..-1 ..... , Of!-l.e"t<'I Coecll ._,..., GrHn Cllemoer1 A11t"Cle nc-u nt c ..... Korn WEST Nt nde·L•• V-ou St. Temott SI We.,,11191on 7S 0rf90ll '3 llOCJUIS Ar•rone M UC I.A 14 SOUTHWEST Hou1t0" 67 Tun A~M 6J MM>WIST Mtell oen n tnchene 60 SOUTH Nortll Cerot•"8 11. Nortll CerOl ne Sr 1l IAST O~own •• Svrecuw 6" We.r Viro•" • '1 C.eor" WH ll•"91on SI How toe> 20 fared How •r.e A u oc .. '-<I Pr tu Toe 20 c Olleoe be'llfibe IU'°'' 18'ect •rt I W-I AtrrOfte Ill II !>eel USC '1·• t:>eet UCL.A M·74 l Horr" Cer,,..n. 14· 1 IO\• •o Ho t Ouk• 70·" 0..1 No 20 N0<t1• Cerotone s1e1e n-n l Temoi. 14 I bee f P-srere ~-... .,.., Metwcf\IJ""' 11 ~, ICKI Ip No I Ne· tede·l.H V"u St SI • lte!'t..C"• I ll·,I IO\I 10 FIOt-51-§6. Offl LSU 7• 6 t s P\ifou.e 11 I t>e•I Mlcll-n s ret• 71·'7 tle9t l.Dll•\W >« f l U 6 Poll'°"'O" Ill 1> IO'' lo No II Okie· "Clme M ·IJ 1 Mo<ll.O•" 16 2l IOI• to Ofllo Stele 70-6" l>ffl WllCOM ,. •S s. lle•I lnO ene n-..o I Htvede I.el '11198\ ( 17 11 !>eel UtePI Stet• 17·13 beet Se" J:>W Stele tS•ll oeet Ho l T~ St SI t Ouat l 11 1l OH i No 1 Nor•ll (erOl•M 70-'9 Ou t w.,. ForH t IO'l-70 10 tow• Sl•lt c 14· l l OH i Ne1>r• ... a 114· 14 IO\I 10 Mll\O<ill I It t ') . 11 Ot.tell<lme ll•·?J tiote r Colorl OO 9'·76 bH I No 6 Poll\OUrvtl N-43 12 8 YU ( 14·0) OH i No .. Tu H ·EI PH O " 11 OH i New M .. ICO .. ..., ll '"I"°'' , , •• ., IOI! IO No 1t low• '1·7' .,.., NortllwnlWn. 7'·• " S'l'f'KY~ f ll·Sl Offl '°''on C~ f0-60. toll ro No 1S c;.o.oe1own, .,.61 IS c.-oe•own ( 11·0 IDll 10 SJ JON'l'I 6S•51, OH i Ho I• SY18CUW ... 61 16 Ke~1 ll?·SJ IO\I to Notre De me lo-1' 11 WVom-no lll·4J OH i Htwe~. ll·•t IO\t 10 CotorldO Ste•t ~·'9 11 re, .. Er Pet0 l 16 >1 ICKt ro No 12 8 YU 11·11 t:>eet Ul-1\ S.·U 1' IOwt IU·SJ oeet ND I) ltlinO ~ '3·1' ~et Dertmouill 102 11 20 Norin C••ol'N Stele 11"-•I '°'' IO W•U Fore\• 11 ·'1 '°" 10 Ho 1 Norlfl C¥olofte n -n COMMUNITY COLLECiE '1' ANDtMc;J Seu1tl C..•t c .... Mee Ca la-OWrlil T""' W L W L Et C•m •no S I 21 l Ceffl!O\ • 1 IS I F"*en on 4 1 14 I Com111on l l 14 7 PHeoene 1 • 14 1 Lono lkK ll 2 • U 10 Golden WH I 1 4 12 10 Mt Sen Anron.o 2 • I 11 w.-....,..~ GOCO.n Wfll 81 Fulltf"lon C.rrllo1 et Ml S.n Al'ltonoo Pe..oene er El Cemlno Lone &eecll 11 Comoton ~Y'' G-. (on'C>lon II Golden WHI Fulle'rlon et Ctf'rllot Et Cemino 11 l.Ol\9 hec1I Ml Sen An'9nlo et Pt..otne Oranee E,,,..,. Cen"••'Ce c....,_. o-111 T-W L W L CYIWtll ) 0 JO ' ~" 11-"0 Sent~ > 0 IS t 2 l 11 • ( 1 It I) 0 l I) 11 lllvt nldt Or.._ COtil (llrui 0 ) s i. ---~· ...... R!WnlOe et Orente Coell C•tnA et ltel'Ct\o Sentieeo S1UUMdl II C'(4M'fll ~ .. ,._ Orente Coe11 •' O tnA c ...-1 et lll•enlOt ~ ., ·~ '-"""" Al ""'"~et 7.Jt HteiH KffOO\. STANOtNGS ................. LA99R W L ·~ Ame1 • 0 MeWOtl J I II~ > I $1 krwct I J w vne 1 l ..... Monl90mW'V 0 • ........ "._. O\lwlll W L lt I 12 s u , 17 • II 6 • 10 s.nn. •• Mlttr Dtl •• ,.__ c ..... lltlloo Mo:Ul ... lltl ¥ ti II. lerWd l llllOe Amel al St ~ ,....., .... l llMO ,.,.....,,,,,.,.,., e t Mater OM Sen/lie et II ~ W-AINI et SI ..,._.. hcllc c::.11 &.IMllillt ~ W L • • • • ' ' , 2 • • 0 • ...... ,., ...... WoodtlridM e r Lffune lffCfl Or•nee .. c..te Mew U 9\.IM H1lll &I TreDYC• Hiii• ~ ........ ~ l.eOVM .. .ell el C.o"e MHe WOOOOflct9e &l TrNY<O Hills Lt~ Hilh •' ()f'e1199 5N View LMwe L ...... f 111rln ~· E11111ele Corone Oel ,.,.., NewDOfl HerbOt Ulllvtf''1JV w ~ 0 I 1 3 ) t ) W~Y'• G-. ~<' al E"•l'IC•• Cor-dtt ""4f et Un•VCl )llV H.-_.1 Hert!o< 11 T111ti" -frWllY'I G-Tll\lin e t E1t~ °""91 W L I ' 11 • II I II 7 J u ) I) ~ .. W L 16 ) IS ' 11 I 10 I ll 7 9 10 Coron. oe• MM e1 Ne .. oort He<tior Ull•Vtfl Iv et ~O•CIL s.uth Cout LHtue L.N .. w I. C..11°11reno V•"•• 4 o e 1 Toro l I Dene H· 'I 1 1 Mlu ion v e.o 1 1 lrvtne I ) Se!' c~........ 0 • W~Y'I Getnft Miu .on v .. .o •' '"• N Dene H 1H\ •• E l TOl'o Sen Cltfnfll•t er Cao.1tr1no Vet<ev Ff'Mte't'1 G- lrv ,,. •• Dane H1M1 Overel w l ... 1) • • 9 • 9 I 11 1 I) E1 Toro v\ C11111lrano Veti.v e r Seel<llet>eC' Colle9t Miu .on v .. .o •• Sen Clemente Sun~• LHtu• L .. _. w I. C .N 4 I F-t••" Yelltv l 1 Mart"• l 2 E <ll'°" 2 l WMtm n\lt r 2 ) H ""l!llOIOn S.ecrt I • I" riM Y'I Gllftft FOU11te n Vertev er CX~ell Vt«"' Merine •' Eo '°" Wt\1'1'1,flller et Hulllo"tllOll 8H C" ~ w I. 9 1 ,, . I• s 11 I 10 9 1 I) A• oemn er 7 30 11 m.. un1in1 1ncl<.etect NHL C~alU. COWl•EMCE "'"""" ~ WLT"" 2t ,. • 47 17 1' I t i 1011 • .. 17 29 s J9 It 11 1 lt gp; QA ll1 17'1 ?It 167 171 111 IU 7U , .... [)ttrO;f !It 1..0U•I Cll•C•OO M.......Wl8 Toronto NWf'll DWIMen 14 " 6 ~ '" 10 1l S aS ISS 11 7S l .s 174 IS 11 I JI 1'3 14 11 7 lS 11S WAL.ES COHl"l•ENCE Pn teoelO"t• NY t1tenOt<\ WU"•"lllOI' P1t\Durllfl ~-Jf"~ NY fle"Ot'\ ,. •frldl OMMell 1S II 6 n 1t s n 11 • 20 10 • 11 73 s II 2S 6 S6 110 SI 111 ~ , .. " ... 47 .. , 41 '" 15' , .. 100 '°' "' in 110 •St 1'• Ill I .. Monlrff llo\ton 9utlt l0 Ha•t4or<I OueoK Aclem1 OMsMol 26 " 10 2t 11 S n •• I 61 1'4 IS7 •I 191 IU U 16' llS 11 20 1 10 1l l " "' 151 " ... 17• S......'f's k..,... 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's Y a"O ,, .. ,,, ... ~ .. , ............ . :~ ..... ,, r:. :·<•~= ~· ~· .. """• :, .... '.°"of'C ... -· .. ..... ' r • .... ..,. •• , :a-""t SE tt. , ••• <>"• llCl>e''\ •• •1 100 ,, " 10 I 0 0 1 L l"CI. • 733 • 13) • 713 s ..., . .,. ! S1' • soo t OI ' •O 111 ~ .~ ~ • . ' l ll 17' 2'1 1'1 ?'it m ·~ 'Anita standings (~~) JOCKE YS ~ '" ::, •.•• , in n !' :'.'f'41• n4 ·• 141 '' s ..... fllt .,. 1 .. ~ '1 p ....... !.A. '')O ll Yt a A &··~ ~ S.>' • •fH>Al n s--.t•t· .l :., •• "'O"' T.-- D 1..,,.., y. S•.•t c. J~ J : ·~ 14 ,. l , . • , tt 1e • ntAllfERS ~ 111 (J t • l :k I lf I 35 11'd Jr'd ""' M1C. 1~ " • " 1' 20 ~ .. iq 14 JS 1• 1 J ,.. 6 lS lS )I -( '2 4t 11 1 ,. n ~lrd _M, f ' ;• ~ 0 ') )4 ~ n s. • u I SI '-'~'Cl • ·• "9 ~Cf"leQll Y ... -. ~ H'CIP"''-o< ·~ r ••• --· , _, , --. ,_ ' 1,,. ~· ~ ... = ,, ..... ~ -. - e INSPECT COOLING SYSTEM e FlUSM COOLING SYSTEM e CllECI MOSES AND Ill TS e RESTORE WITH UP TD 1 Gll. AllTIFREEZl 8ls1Uieo.I DAILY PILOT/ Monday, Jenuery 26, 1911 FROM NORTH ORANGE M0-1220 FROM SOUTH ORANGE 496-8800 COLD Well BANl(eRO 7S9-9100 ---~---GrubbGEllis .. . . . .. '... .. ... let U1 Htl' Y •• Sell Y 01r Property! Pri .. 0..aeroill Lit l44-llOO L~~:~:,cs c~':,,P~~9•P~:~ ________ 1 Can't seem to get to all those plans tor 4500 sq. tt. ot-*.IASlll• DIER* repair jobs around the house? Let C111 C1111ifit~, 642-5678 11ce. Pis can 645-179 1 2er. '*'· gmblt, ocean the classified service directory view. upgrade. sec. pool. 4Bdrm 28a $1800/mo 3Bdrm 3'~8a $2 150/mo 2Bdrm 2Ba $1525/mol tennis ens. S385.ooo. help you find reliable help. Agt, 646-1044 Agt 673-5354 NEW & ·USED c·ARS & TRUCKS Ready for Immediate Delivery SERVING OUR COMMUNITY SINCE 1921 Modern Sale~. Service Parts Body Paint & ! ·e Oeo::; Cornpet1tive Rates On lease & Daily Rentals 2010 llarltir llY4., C.sta 1111 o ~< >tttl~ (~< J1t1nt)·--®-'J Thank You For Msklng Us :t1 In America. Come In and See Why Pdr!' OC"'" M Si'il a 5 30 Sa1 9 .: c m Ser .. n1..t' m.f, i 30 6 pm 18711 BEACH Bl VO HUNTINGTON BEACH 714/ 842-2000 ':'-(; 142-0010 Of 540-1211 Bf4C'" t---------------------------------------4 ~--o SADDLEBACK Sales Leasing 0 Service Parts IRVINE AUTO CENTER 1-800-831 -3377 714-380-1200 THE BEST BUYS IN ORANGE CO.UNTY ARE ON THIS PAGE CALL ONE NOW! '1/, 1 : ~A BEH"". ~TE RLING SALES PARTS SERVICE BODY SHOP LEAS ING :160tl Harhnr Rhd .. t o:-ta '.\ft"-a 540-9100 , .o ~L ES~Y.Ilt& $ I NEW LOCATION! ' I • SANTA ANA AUTO MALL 1500 Auto Mell Dr., Santa Ana 835-3171 Newport/SS Frwy. at Edinger Sates Dept open 7 days Service Hours: Mon.-Frl 7am-10pm Ster/ing0J!!JW 'SALES • SERVICE -LUSlll -. PARTS -OVERSEAS DELIVERY SPECIALISTS • PACIFIC OCEAN SALES SERVICE LEASING PARTS ' 1140 .1111111H 111u, llWPNT IUOI CALL ONE OF THESE t.._ ..... ,,..... i.a..4) 140•1444., IOO/l 24·•334 DEALERS FOR THE BEST BUYS hteffff StnMt ... rt! , ..... ,., ••• ....,..,,.., G) JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS NEW & USED CARS & TRUCKS l'~IYER rrr SALE . & 'ER\'ICE OLDSMOBILE, GMC TR UC KS 2850 HARBOR BL\·O., Co ta ~esa 540-9640 HO~D.-\ ~IOTOR C.\R S 2860 H . .\RBOR BL\'O .. Costa Mesa 540-0'il!i 3 block o. of 405 fwy. 0 BOB LONGPRE Orange County' Oldest & Uir9eu PontrJtC Oealers"•P lit kllCl'I 81vd & tne G.trfttl Gro~ Fttew1r1 1714 19Z·Mlt f7t4J 61 .. ZIOO We ~rform "" PontlAC w•rranty work reg.trdleu of where you ong tn.111)' purtNtsecl your c111 Ol'9ll WDAY WDllW "'"11. .... P.M . ....... .-.. & Git,... &owe..., . .........,.c.Hfwftla Each"'"''"-"' iJ 25 ~ 7Sc P H Send IO ORAHGE COAST DAILT PILOT Ile-I.I.tot Oep 017', 8o• GJO ""'" Ml •9120-4000 • * •EASTSIDE loY9fy total remodeled 3Br 1 'ABa ~ detached rm. w/d hkup. Lg yd. No pets. N/smk/dmk. Refs. $1475 + MC. Incl watet & gmdr. 722-16&1 Of 548-7745 Advertise on This Page Clll lor 0111111 714/642-5878 0 :\.-\BER~ (it~~ CADILLAC ~~· 20 YEARS SERVICE I\ ORAi\GE COCNTY SALES SER\'ICE LEASING ALL ~tAKES PARTS BODYSHOP 2600 Harbor BIYd .. Costa Me~a 540-9100 0 HOl'SE of l~IPOR TS fl'\ MERCEDES-BENZ \::I 213-714 ECEDES 714/523·7250 . 714/750·7201 213/921·8511 full Service Santa Ana freeway at Beacn Blvd G CONNELL CHEVROLET 2121 l1rMr lfy4,, Cesta 1111 Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sales • Service • Leasing 54'-1200 Special Parts Line 546-94ff MONDAY-FRIDAY 8 30 AM -9 00 PM SATURDAY 8 30 AM -6 00 PM SUNDAY 10 00 AM -5 00 PM ct) ORANGE COAST JEEP /EAGLE = J 11 Th lftJt For #1• JH, Salls For I Yurs r~ ~eQ~~~: ~m~~ ~ 54g:i()23 • ACCESSORIES DEPT 4D tE CAMPBELL NISSAN /.....,.._...,~ !E"CH • low Price~ • No G1mm1ch • Greot Selection • Friendly P•ople • ~-c•llt!nt Service 1 883~ S.oth 9oulevord Hunto.ngton lkoch 1714J u2.1111 r2 I 3J 592-1463 THE BEST BUYS IN ORANGE COUNTY ARE ON THIS PAGE CALL ONE NOWI • I ..... Orange Coat OAILV PILOT/Monday, January 25, 1988 • ; Send a personalized meaaage to the ones you love! Write your own message. Eight different hearts to choose from, two sizes. Large heart-$40 Small heart-$20 In column messages also avaitable -6 Imes for $3.00 (4 words per line) Call 642-5678 . or come in person to pick out your ad. The Daily Pilot. 330 W Bay St . Costa Mesa Ca 92627 ( 1 block Nest of l\e~oort 81110 blwn 19th 6 Victorta SI 1 Office Hours -M onday -Fnday 8 to_S Oeadhne •s Tnru'°a) F~orua•v , 1 Al aos must be pre-p1>0 NAME PHONE ADDRESS CITY STATE ZIP AMOUNT ENCLOSED$ MasterCard/Visa = Expiration Date Message IN COLUMtJ LARGE HEART SMALL HEART . - t In 111 ... hi 'llM •H .... a&a•••lt IMI ·~···e MOT& ~ •••• ,. ~-I ™•11 ft I I ... aaN KITTENI ~ 1 --.... :• ----oeeCAU"llO ~ ....... ._ H•• .,__ ·l•llaly __..1. •1 w.111....,.. 1.-. ,_...._..'-.... -:J •• , • ;'left?-..-Al ........ ,.., PIT & ,,T, ............... -. l'er ... .._, oMoe. .._,,...._a..... per Wk. MedlH>et~. too4bo~.,; ......, Mele&,.,,...1326· ._ ... ,., _...,_ No Mii 1z:a ,.. • •I • , ,r. w.;... •· MOIM0teu.Mll ._,.;-~ Hvv....._~19"· R•wa1dfftt Hd di· 9'der11Ma.t1H .MCM•-Mi.21ss ::iwF:ir .;.-:IT •11 ... L•RllY ..... ICled: .... 111111 ~p:)'J..;:~ ~~*'or· ~J.~2=~::..-;::u.-o!NTI &our pup ....... :;;·,~* 111a>.-;:.:r.Apla.'£::tT11.::, •OSt•IT The~~•• · .. .,., IEllPTilllST ~YP/t :::..~·.=~,:: ~~f~ !I'll _.................. l • II .-no. nPESETTll ~i... -~o ~ .. u. 11111 ,~IT for.....,.,. .... ft• r~ -.. c M~t ottoman 150. Aman•. =-.-........---11 II•• PurclVcoord of blcft __ _.,. ...--· • --tew ftnn.. Eap .._ or..-.. · · T~ redar ,.,. YOftl.le ~c ~--NIT Tm... I 11nn·· l'Mlnt Min bn purcNil-.. our oe.tnc:t...,...,.. Uigune MM:tl oftlot.. ,..,, ~. u -211• ehop. Lou of • ISO. + ~UNA. lempe ' ..... 2 ._.... 1 ,.,., I .. Ing exp'd . tt.H 10 .._ type 10 WJlft\ and 3 ~ cMlnO the..-. time day cet"t heilp PLUI ~ fteda Mlhr. etc. t7'-t50I* a'llnl ~· a ..U flU tmP111ll1 o.c. COl'ftPM't Ml s poe-S1UMw. ANIDltiooa: hew ••t1•1 .. Ol••wnw ... ende and~ ... oftlm ~ --_.~··••111m •131-4303• 2 ~ ..,.. lft .... "' S900-S$C)Otio.eeos MllltylOtaeclraetlOn ltlone. Earn 17 PLUS/Hr NEWPORT C!NT£R llnd IP9llnO .... ~ mu9t hew,.. end9. etc Mon ttwV Fri ,..,,.llrM. Hrl ... 4-llliiiii:iiiiiiiiill -VJ ll'llC)aratM.Npt/81rl>Ort Panttma.MS.5790 BAAHCH.IMIAN Uab6a Qr With velld CA r · Hre/Oy. pennenent ,,_.1 9"/lllllBPB blu./grey. •'ll!ll con· IU jl571Mtcf1. comer Quell. ,... _.E....,., ,..... Na &....au In -· dr....,_ llcenM. tvoof of ... -__.1_ ltlon. Mew-nrt Cent• FIT Immediate~ for dttlon M75. lo~ ... , aa119 AllltorUncSaorOw119 AutomoeM "'c:;'(7';4,~~,71 · ,.......~,-.... ·· • lnaurenc• and OMV -AtM.Ce1N0.:1soo10.2 raeldantlal Reel E9tate S75.t75-41e5 :=,... 75&-MOI Of 494-5901 ·-.. --• ptlnt-out. Sttirtlng pay la Property MW\afel. e.-•. RUST IOOLD CREWEL CONN OMlAN ~ Immediate opening Votvo ....... Aleltt/:3 1tt #1 ~.... $7.00 pet hour~ gu RI 3 11 h•ft patt.nced. pereonat>te. SOFA & MATCHINO Strommet 304-31• S500 1..,TillllT Toyota. Shop. Guer. Front ok. Exp. d. erW(l1~)1U-l441 a11owence. • • • S I M~ura ,_.,,io.., Of. mature attitude. Mlf· CHAI~ BRASS ~ OBO. Excellent con· PIT ttemoone~ Mtaty.tuttCo.beneftte. Newpot11Mclh 21 utltlter.... Come ln toapptyet. ReMM/CMfVaNur'M ·-A.aelstantfotHome-atartar, patient, In· tat>te mi.c:.642.9772 dltlon.Call84S-55Meve. a • Pf'Oftt lhallng LVI P/T OWMt9 Aleoc. In N.B. tetllgent, motivated. ' 631·0185 morn. skltla. AWIY In per.on to mlllll N.11 DISTRICT Gen Ofe H.8 manufK · Mon.-Frl. 1-$. s.&aty nag. CompUter •llP w/WO<d Antq oek dining tble, complete~Bei -· turer 11 looklng for lallM Pff_, FOf medlc:edona & trMt· Aootvl-1,0f2-5at:24f4 proceaalng & book· mahog ·~. loWt>oy 4 ;;1;19'= ... ~==='iiMiiiiiil Mr. Fuent-. n. -·-11a••&ERS plMMnt maturelndlvld· 'I WI ment.W ... 1tldladl0bed VlttaOalOro,Newptkb kaepjng,pteu1ngV04Ce& drawet aide Ible, maple • -w1111am FfOef & Aaeoc. 781-2910 contec:t 8111 Bob .....,. ual fOf PIT omc. work " s NF ""9'Y: P"RT TIME phone lklna. command dining tb6e, 557-4329 14725 Al1on Patkway, W . . . V '.a A-" f E 11 I INlfle CA 92718 Boollkeeper Matute PIT The Oranea COU1 o.lty Phone. typing. flllng. Ill "'.., ••. lesa ., ..... , * * * * 0 ng lh anguag•. BEAUTIFUL mah,ony * * * · :: .. ~r== PJtotttv1sMlook1ng '~ ::::t'::~w~ ~-=f'~t~~ 111011terltl.I $7/H(l ~T::'Jior~~ =.2t.00.:;..1Z! SOIWlll lCCOUITll& appty. 642.()350 before ~wont .:.rmaNQlna ~In. 8' 1~ Or call Beth at M2-4321 •5"&-5585• -~~t ts:~ ~n-t ~~ "="c:11b. Alt Is, ••• noon. Salary DOE. youth wwJ adutt cenfari. Gen Ofc N.ll. Medtcal Arm U1 205 Nuralng * Non-smoker. IJ75-'912 "' """"'· ~ 'liktl .. Iii FIT bc>Okkeeper to assist Boollkeeperml Pf!...~!! We on.r an excellent looking fOf a bt1aht f*· 1,, ... __ , .,._-£ ~ 12pm 't!.ti Leave Mea•• Boy's twin bed, dr...er & OH•ttlel I.__ bllsh-office/ad n . .-.. JI ,..,..... bate saJary p1ue O'll9f 90ft to Ul\lme fntar-of---r•-• &--,.,_. · end table Oft wht 00 fl I* bumycontro .... iT~pls CAii Alicia's Flowers S300.001nbonu.Maa'V811-flcedutaLM.mtolnter-.......... 11-•-w••Meu5'1-fi19 SECURITY OFFICERS .• delk 11 1'11 Ing co~~y AIR A/~ 833-1813 Uk f0< Allcia able 9VerY month. Cl«'-eet In a prof atmoephefe PIT person Mededl .. /lWls L •t~tet 885-5082 NEEDED: Huntington :r::e:a::.' ~~iss 14l-l1M 141-Jf 12 ~{1 G:!:, typing' skills Cafeteria erous gas and phone .,._ Pay S5-Stlhr. George FllWE HSllll aguna ~ 582-3647 Beach area. Excell pay. 0<gin1Hllonll skills and ICI CAIPIS IOW&nC* and the op-955-2289 Full/Part time. •s.s-gs85* 1111 PAY Regional CoOfdlnatM Un If or m It r •In I ng CRYSTAL chandelier * * * computer exp'd req'd. Dlnlnn .,_......,. _ ___.,Part portu,nlty '°' advano. GIRL FAIOAY PIT. IOIM Jan .. ~ •·a1e~emale Part Very epeclal parson provided. Part-time/full-SSOO. queen II n,.c;d~n ··• .,...,......, ,....., men ......... ... ,,. • GuatantMd No aought to OYefMe local time avall. 768-1331 bed S200. IQ walnut n Clrculatlon. custom~r 11me 10·2. Full Ume Should ou Join our team HleS •XP'd helpful. brief Time evenings. Monday-Cenc.!latlon Shifts coordinators In placing Sec'y Comm R.E. De-rm $200. 122-6328* --------wvloe. oo11aet1::;n I elll) d Cashiers a Sandwich of Dist~ Managers you rMUme & photo to 85 Sea Friday Irvine Newport • Monthly Scheduling and aupervtslng foreign veloper In N B. Mak• or· HMvy whit• wash wk*• -.----,..--....-:----:-~=~~g :~:! ~ N:; prep Connie 856-5727 will be eligible l0t: • Island, C~ e.ech area J20.9759 8 Worlc lncentMea exchanQe atudent1. Or-ganlzed detail orientated couch. 10x tO corner, 87 U~a Viva ~fr1 port Beach /Fuhlon C&IPfl'Ttl&lflm. "FuttMedtcalCowrage JOINOURHAPPYCREWI ~erralBonuMe ganlzecf.,.,getlcperaon sec'y.A.£ &eomalegal peach overatull•d W /B 8cnt.S 320e Island Cheri 720-9870 Must be career minded. ·Dental Plan llllYIUI Bfid•I a Tux shop SIJes.. with • MnM of humor wftl exp • ptua. Exp In word pillows.. $800. Gl&N oc-b r • n d n • w · CALL ~-6«9 ·er(El~Vnuty;::• 90daya) P/T., FIT. 142-111• Management potential ComejOlnoufleam. Be have the tlexlblllty to proc/comp & dlctph, tagonal coffH table. 721-t808 U •ira-••••ST•mT C ftSHIER FIT~ PIT ........ "" .,1"" K• ""·-ID •II! FfT °' PIT 722-90'4 with the beall For further WM1t rrom home In Ihle pteuant n-smo«e ofc. 5'x2'A, peec:h b .... $200. BIANCHI Nuova AllOro 21 " -,_ --• .. ... ,.._ ...., ... _, 1n1ormatlon ptaese call: ct\alenglng Polltlon. Feb Lauria 759-9531 Matt>le like P4NICh cube, 12 spd. 8f9r.d new only Tl'le Orange COU1 Dally or Female. Salary + ban· (Eligibility aft• 1yr) WISCAH 15 thuf Aug 31 (more hrs 2'b2'~ S130 Med-lg 40 ml. M25 080. NiecMe Pilot Is currently loolting eflts 2590 Newport Blvd-So if you think you've oot litls ff11lh , ••• , SIPllYISlll IULTI UIE required dur1ng summer smm UfTS wood/glaas framed art 642-7074 m9g/MM170 for an u.slstantin the Ad Del Mar. Costa Mae what rt talc•. call Beth at Thompaon ·Blueprint Mature eap'd bl-lingual ST&Ffml I months). Ute typing and IY WI woril $125-S375. New S.rvlces Department. Cllluui 6'2-4321 ut. 205. Or needs otfloe helpl Will person IOI Garden Apt (7l.) 1 •• 11•• car required. Call or Mnd 5•9 Mon-Fri Set 9•1pM & king size foam bed lprtlat .... ..S Responslbllltles Include -send resume to: 1 672 MeG 1 1 ~ .... -I letter and resume to· ' w/solld oak wall unit & -overseeing Ad flow, 15• FIT Admln Clerk. Typing tr• n. 1 aw, rv ne Complex In Npt Bch. F/T. · S C · also wknd hrs avall. S 760 8271 Ul.LY lJPllYILI slsting in newspaper 30-35wpm. Some publlc ••Hy Pillt HIRING! Goverment Jobs-644-1526 AM sonly. Equal Oppty Employer ~~l~~e As:E s~ r::,,~ Salary. No Mlllng. Call armolr 1500' •. 1yMfold.S1000. m.ake-up and much conll ct /phones . IHI your area. 1 15,000-LoanOlflcersNoexpnec clsco . c 'a 94 115. Ms Paulsonte2-1os. N.B.REOEC 9pcdlnrm cal1Eves873-t&32 m0te C1dldate must be $1 225/mo Contact Carol $68,000. Call (8021 Learn how to make big IMMEDIATE OPENINGS 800-323-HOST SlllPPlll/IEllMll :';,~;.>:':!',=: = iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9 eictremely ~xh•~ 6"·7333 EOE IHW.laylt. 838-3885ext.398. $$.We train Mr. Rob-Full Of Part Tlme spilt RESTAURANT TRAINEE _.. shelves+llte. ctir,, w0<k well w.t .,....,.,...... Ctass•l•ed sagreat place 10 ,__,..1 --. •• U IH!I ~aftAmH ••• -ertson Mission Viejo stufls WO(t(. one day on ....... •••••o P/T Dependable. wll•g to typewr1r/stand 6'5-951S IW PH11se contact Mary aoveruseyoorllorMbuSI--•• ---. .._,,___. Homeloans855-9191 up to seven day$. One _ .. _ learnS.9--03~ Carter It 6'2-4321 nest attas....... MGMT training. Xlnt com· hour up to eight hours CMUID BP P/T NEW-DESIGNER COUN·1 01 OUID CIRCLE K FOOO STORES NOWIWtQ SALES CLERKS INTERVIEWS ON WEDNESDAY NIGHTS FROM 7 -9 PM at: --Crown v...., ,.,..., South lagUM llMch For more information call ( 714) 4 7 4-6109 Equel Opportuntty Employer "}.~· ~ty& ~ Lill PROCESSOR Drivtr/Waittr Location CdM. Joann T-r'ark~ ~ .~ TRYFRENCHaquateend C P Appllcatlts must have r• e 1 s. or FHA Tltle 1 Progtam. Ex· d 1y1/e7 5 -3 6 9 o 1 It da ly • "',., _.~ tabte. t>1eecM oalC $250 IOW llable car, proof of In-wk. PIT also. 760-0801 perience required In pro-ll:'ncti and dinner d• 6pm/wknda 7Ss.-6660 weekly Harbor Ar .. Yel-6'0-20l7 surance, OMV print-out --MmlS cesslng. underwriting & hvenes Cash Ups dally low Pages 75'--6977 --------With eX1rul l200 obo and valid ca111orn11 Drlv-... ,/ funding of real estate PLUS base Restaurants nLEl&•lfTlll ~:i:,:a:-o!:,,~~='1 •1•2-llll• ers l1cense FfTC>aya&PITeves loans Xtnt sallt>enelits Ttltphlltl •HOSTESS/CASHIER n goodcondltlonS215 • WllTD/ESS n 1PT E o.e. 111•1 ·s13-0s81 O•eraten •c~~r~~ ~~:~~ SlllVEYOll s.8.,.189 •••~l/IESlllEI Appty In ~· asl( for Und1 or Dla.na P N _,__ s 1 .. __ ...,. '" COCl's R11i1ura1t Posllons av1ll1bl• both e:r;1enoec1 o s..,_. • ary + """'us QUEEN SIZE MATTRESS Full time Orafle</Oeslgner 2131 Westcllff, N.B. LUNCH SERVERS shifts. Call Dive Of Dottle •BU BOY exp'd Cal1J~yat 432·9t~ be-& BOX. QUILTED. --.-,.-.,,.. .... -ft---- .nth 10 yrs ex.penence In lll llAlll'S tween • l lam °' pm BRANO NEWI S 155.' ~~-~~~=~;:; mecti•nlsm design r• HOTEL 720-900• Restaurant Arr:~:::npefSOf\. Tues thru ICISI Piii UU.YI Call 84&-'293 • ..,.rt .. .,. 1 quired by Irvine based SALIS ClllMUTH MAINTENANCE TRAINEE IEllllWIYS Pl'IOne Sales-Fund Rais.-SOFA. loYeMat. ot\alr and Mostly new clolhea. St medical oeviced manu-ex typing. detall 0<lented. Jiii TIE .a•-tu1 Express · Ing-Taps Avl No HP nee:, ottoman Never used. John's knits. Fila. Ann lecturer Send resume to I heavy client contact --11 .IESTllWT but pros welcome. S295 Eat'thtona. (71') Kleln. Alan Austin, Lil Mr Brown. P 0 Box Hotel exp a plus. Send Fecittty&equtpment ~ 111-1172 24'1 E. PCH. CdM 9am-9pm $50-S 100 261-9502 (71•) 680-0210 Claibourne Ski weer to 111os.1rv1ne 92713 I resume to Surf & Sand ==:nr~= RETAIL Comm Call Walt In • tennta a evening. u 2-8 Draftsman. Medical Oen-Hotel. Attn GVP, 1S55 S record req'd. F0< Int•· PlllTlll! Laguna Beach •97"'6S53 •1sull .... aa Betts axotlc handbag.a. tat offioe plann+ng Work·1 Coast Hwy. Laguna view call Lloyd Cotten • ORVILLE TUYEL llm ANfiOUE oak Buffett6 .noes. bOOts. sz 9-10 ing drawings. elevations Beach. CA 92651 .. (71•) 5•6-5570 PROllCTlll Some Hllnd1-0n alrlln• din. ctlrs. K~ pstchwk 760-8271 720-1623 leeve message HOTEL Barden's Pest Control WAITS JOU' computet experlenee de-comfortertdus ar/plllows DRIVERS NEEDED 1 • E.O.E. PennySaver Production In ' sired.Call(71')968·9•e5 8' print drapes. recHnr. Traaaper!ltita For Fund Raiser. Must NEWPORTER Manlourlst Nell Salon In L1gun1 Niguel Is looking Between 8am-8:30am 10112 wool rug 550-108 Pn11 "JNl1 fill know South County. N...,,.ort Be--'-""-1utl lor qualltted individuals looking '°'friendly, Ind• Birch dining rm 1et .... ....,......,....., ____ ~ ft Cash p Id Dally RESORT --.. """ ""' · pendent people to work Ymlll&IY llUftll w/6ctlalrs a hutch. 9" ZlllU 10' I /I 10 l /P c':t1•Walt •97"'6~53 . I fully redeeorated needs· for the followtng u ci.,ks at our snack lo-Be a part of • sp«lal team! Delta t>u lders uw. flle St 100. 675-0740 days llllHCllllST positions: c1 11on at Newport lnourmodemVetHospl· cabinet 845--1'10 ~.-~-....,.,,.---&An lllll F /T A 26-acre b8yside reson Rental SPll<l9 1vall. Call ,.-•raara Fasn1on Island If you are tallboardlng faclll1y Cur-h,.fDtcb/SttHft has the following P<>6-Tina 71'-6'.s-3'16 I -~ interested. 111slt us st tt"'I rent opening•'°' Recep-Booll• • 22 9Chol Hb a Pb 70U F0< private community In iuons open Wiii proof di!91ay ectvert1s-IRVINE RANCH FARM t II A 1 al All d t S 1000: Steer skull large -------- Laguna Beach Grave-•FRONT OFC AGENT MEDICAL ASST Ing X'lnt spelling r• ERS MARKET ln th~ ~:i~~lfls~ ~rs ,,:S, ~ 175. 6.19-221·7170 Oufy 30135• 5lPI avail neer yard shift Call 494-8571 •COCKTAIL SERVER I quired Day & Qtaveyard Atrium Court, Of call I 11eJuble •551--0304111' 150 Shark Island Yacht CIYb Ask for Kate 8atn-Spm •D FOOD SERVERS Par1 time lam11y ptllCtloe, st11f1s available (71•) .,.,.. t l02 S 10 2S fl Membersti1ps ay lront & back offlcle. Lake 11:-; ir we will train you on the DINETTE S UIO New rnal-alto aval. Ask for Don GET PAID for readlng1 •BUS PERSONS FOlestlEI Toro. 770-1950 p••n-IP allTI-,..._ ADVANTAGE 111 (com· tress $70 5" TV radio •8M·2600* books• 5100 00 per lltle •LINE COOKS -_, .. , IHIEUUCIEIJS puter graphles) If you are $50. 19" TV S80 Dlthea. ------- Wnte ACE· 259g. 16 1 S. •NIGHT CLEANERS ' MEllCAL Oetall-orlentedf dwltlgh &• lllllln N-•111 I last 70wpm aocurate flatware, comforter. 10' lt1t SU, lHil Uncotnwey. N Aur0ta IL •BARBACK IF/T Front & Back office good sense o es n r-typist exceii.nt spelling tools, clothes 850-•170 2111188 $800/mo New-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~60~S.;2~=======:::;-Please apply in person ~~!1'l~ntitc:.'nio~11~7e~: ~~::i~~ct\~n~lg~ll~~ E~~~~F requ1~ed P1r1 time .and JOHN WAYNE TENNIS po<18each 8!3·8535 -; Mon-Fri 9-2. Personnel oppty '°' medical exp"d to train hlghly motivated full hme openings. 2nd CLUB Membership POWER BOAT sllp 25' to Dept.. 1107 Jamboree, person •Owpm typing indhndu•I Rn&JL SILES Olllll and 3rd shifts $ 5 0 O M • r 0 • r • t • 30'. Newpoo $22S mo Motor Routes available in Costa Mesa Huntington Beach Fountain Valley NO COLLECTING NO SOLICITING Deliver One Day a Week - Must have dependable car and proof of insurance. Call 842-1444 Ask for Joanne Craney Rd.. Newport Beach Call 760-6907 Full time S5 hr Appty In " •97 -5•S.IW •97 -S317 IH * .... lOll * 2~ 1 •·-Ir person Mon-Fr1 9-1 I We have immediate open-Ref/ Housekeep ing Ex . MED LAB COURIER -M-F --1 ·-= au..-t.· Costa.Mesa Stationers . ings for experienced UIVI~ ·'~ .. m.itr SIDE TIE AVAILABLE ~tenced preferred 101m-3pm Own car Ste .. .,_._.......,. 270 E 17th Costa Mesa PASTE UP ARTIST Al:>lll· ,,...,.,, ~ ..,,.., SO a 20-25' Seffboal no Hve Sir-.JFF .. nl 54/hr -21C/ml. Fountain tr 0111 (71•)112-1441 . . ty to wor1t In last paced S75, !>!'1~..1~!bls2ons aboard $9 per ft ~" Valley area 964-2581 •01 ..__. SAILING INSTR UC· production art depart· wl'lls .-.. <;.a .. 1..,-* 77~58* 1661 So Coast H~. td & fWf llfe TOR/YACHT MAINT ment required. 2nd and All 080 6'6--0992 LagunaBeacJi494'-971 llllElSftlP&IJS ReoeptforAr1Gatlery.exp FI T 0t PIT tor Nwpt Bell 3rdsh1f1s t• It I 50l Side-Tie llttle Balboa HOUSEKEEPING SER· If you are I model 4 would With phones, people4fol-Sailing Club Gd benefits f! ! ISiand S360 min 12 loot VICE. Exp'd 8 must, fast, like to upgrade your low up Pleasant 'PMk· a HeJC hrs 673-7763 Excellent benefit• IOt full $99 DoNTH Rent an IBM beam mu No t111e th0<ovgh $7 hr. hrs 9-2 status 0< want to become Ing. Pf'Of appearance with time including medical, PC Clone. IMOK duel •boatd 873--07~ w -F. CM/NB. own car. one & start from top, call growing company. Cell ULU dental •no Ille insurance drive. graphics. free train-• • spkEng.Oayn16'2·926' (211)271-H.O 261·7656between 10-4 Do your llke people? Apply In person Ing a sortw#• Rent to K11c. ,, ... ,er•••• CUSTOMER SERVICE REP 2 positions available in our customer service dept. Must have pleasant phone per- sonality; typing a plus. Learn valuable office skills and earn $4.50 to start Hours are Mon.-Fri. 8 A.M . - 5 P.M. and 11 :30 A.M . - 7 P.M. Call 642-4321 ext. 201 to schedule an appointment. Ask for Guy or Patt. Friendly. positive person own I (71') 281·2• 18 needed for Full time Apply In f*SOO. F t y • Aircralt I reader ad sales Monday-21CM 1 C.,. I rff • H 11 Fndey Apply •t the Pen-St ... 1 1:.:._. FREE. SMALL BROWN nysaver 1660 Plaoentla I • ....... •-• FEMALE DOG TO Ave Cost• Mesa er C1U (71•) 112· 1~ 1 GOOD. LOVING HOME lltfl Lite Air Craft Sales ed 20l fer htfe M 5"6-0033 ........ triec ..... 112·HIO FREE to good home. 2 yr ...t ...trek. C.,IU lllH STME old Blue o.ne COiie. w111 "Ci ft llln ~ SILIS POSIU •erc~aa•itt traln•d95g'_~;~: k lc:t• tt .. :· t-clHI Olll FIT. PIT must have min Ltis•n All Jtwtlry/hra/Art ....... " ....... 2yrs retail exp'd New· Antlque French D.R. Mt. HIS ftr H• M wHI port Beach area. finest Crved wln(lltd griffin legs. trMe fer U'U drug st0<a. Call M-F. 9-5. ornate ctlr1, 2 .sldebds Must Setlt blm£"*. UTU'S l1tlde4 Mr.Welle, 760-0111 $25 (&19)221-7170 aid ring. S.. In lrg 18kt .. 7 71 •• 1_.1 •112 n _. • •• .._. gold Mttlng. BEAUTI--• -~ •• Sil •r.M" -1 r.• • FULi Cost $4800 Wiii Sell ------- For Gourmet Cookwate ArrhHcn Hiii $18002•1-940• 4 fttel Drin/J'tlj Shop AWIY II Kltcheri DLUXE WESTERN HOLL y ' • t -Things, Carrousei exu. stove 4 bufMt • grUle 2 th laiaala •• South Coast Plan, bfOllers. A-1 condition CHINESEShaf Pel.a:amp EAGLf ·13 2 b oor S.S-9975 tor Interview. S6S &7S-1358 lines. mlf, fawn. Stud evl Fastbadl. •le. am/Im, • BUSINESS IS BOOMING! Wrinkles! 1750 3&4-~20 9'>d. great ski catl '3•00 Sales PIT. No run f'IOse. SEARS KENMORE 16 831-7212 Mu•t Miii (714)62'-312• Nat5•1500co.~5001ngtorlead-cubled'tlontt r.t,~•t0<. gd lfyouc:an~t>eit,you Jeep ·as CJ 7. ReQo. era -... comm. oon • · t87. cen probably Mlllt with a $7500 OBO Call S. Stotl .. ______________________ _. work from home S.e..821 • CALL 75Sl-8l tS dUalfled ad al Am interstate Banll r.======-=======i::=-:::::1=-------=---=z========a. for m0<e lnfo 840-5100 BOYS Be GIRLS E:o!U\ Mo~ -STARTNOW- 11 to 15 Ye•r• Old WORK EVENINGS AND SATURDAY YOU CAN AVERAGE PER WEEK s7500 OR MORE CONTACT Mr. Phillips PHONE (714) 892-1449 ALL TAANSPORTA TION PROVIDED BY AN ADULT SUPERVISOR $ $ EXTRA CASH$ $ Delivering the Daily approximately 1:30 P day to Friday, and I AN~ & Sunday. Reftable of insurance and print-out re- quired . Call 642-4821 ext. 202 for ap- pointment or apptv person at The Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay St., Coste Mesa. llily • If you're 10 or older. a job as a newspaper carrier might be just your size Just send In this coupon or call: 642-4333. Routes are av;iUable now! •• Sl•tt.MJ .••• Dlily Plltt carrier! ro;;7;;;;~;=.~;~~;;~~:,, Ing a Daily Pilot carrier. I Name I I Address city llP I I Phone I S... Ta: 1'e Wt Net I utW.llJSl _J L----~ ~.!.,..?!---- • ' ARE "YOO" A SEU STMTO Afll L()(UG FCM A 0 CAltlll 7 CCII( .. 00 C~CJ( US OOT! 1tt "' >"'..: I U!lW Sl.rU'11$0I$ b •" • 1~ MAS _., ~ •''1 -<n• ... ..,, ~ Hf N4(l tot.SI 04tt V l'l 01 fo. '"•11 flt ·~ l>'I' <•tt t ·~ ~ W r fl.~ # , • !• _,. ~ Cr t'IJllO\llM ~... .., to ntS 1$ fl>T A PMf.Tll 8 . • MC LOOKIC FOi ..,.GlWIT '9SOlll. • - HHOOORI ROBINS FOJHI .. (' .. ,.., .. ' CREVIER BMW ,,. ....... ........ ..... ~ .. ... l mr WINS If ........... , BE l'OUR OW l Ora~ Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 25, 1988 87 PACIAC VIEW lllEMOfUAlPAM Cemet~ • MOflu.Jr• Cl'I~ • CremalO"' 3SOO Pac''" ~ D •t> "-t"v>OO<' Be.JC"' b•4'-2 ~0C "9CEMOTMEM IEUMOADWAY Monuary • Cl'llC* 110 Bro.O-Way Cos1a Mesa 6'2-9 150 Father Time was kind to Larry Holmes Larry Holmes did what aJJ aging champio ns dream of doing Friday ni~t. He turned back life·s clock and for a fe\\ seconds basked in the greatness that was once b 1s. It didn't last long, but in his hean H olmes probably knew it wouldn't. Holmes 1sn•t a fool. Despite all the bravo and prcfight banter. he never had a chance of becomjng the oldest hea' >"eight boxing champion in history. Age and experience can overcome ~outh and stamina in some endeavors. but not m boxing. But there he was at the beginning of the third round. Holmes danced out of his comer. The aging champion was o n his toes. and the stinging j ab that had defeated other challengers 1n better days was flicked at a new target. H9lmes "as tempung fate. and the 16,300 people in the Atlanttc Cit~ Convention Center -plus millions of others watching T\' or listening to the fight on radio -loved 1t. In the business of prizefighting, Holmes' show in the third round didn't matter. Before the fourth round was over Holmes was on his back. the victim. of crushing blows dispatched b) a champion l 7 years his junior. The sports.,.,mers said later "Father Time and (Mike) Tyson caught him." Professional bo>.ing 1s not a sport for the squeamish. and 1l has a cruel "'a~ of disposing of its old champions. Tyson softened the brutal realit} of Fnday night when he said of Holmes ... If he "'as at his best. I don't stand a chance. A.this best. he" as the greatest of his ttme." The) ""ere gracious \\Ords that ma} or may not comfort H olmes. but the} 're no substttute for those brief minutes an the o pening of the third round. Holmes took home $2.8 mtlhon for the night's work. and after the fight he said he "ould be laughing alt the wa~ to the bank. But he has more than than a good pa~da) to smile about. The cheers of the crowd and electnctt) of those fleeung seconds in the third round dissolved reaht) into echoes from the da~s when Holmes was the undisputed champion. Fate and Ti son "ere closing in fast. but Father Time was kind and ga'e Holmes a taste of better days before the ine\'ltabk occurred. The \\h1spers of the past didn't last long. But the cheers didn't come dunng a testimonial dinner or a prefight mtroductton of ~estef)ear's greats. They were spontaneous. a net the onl~ bnght spot during the folly of an aging champion t~ ing to hang onto the thing that set his ltfe apart from others. Trade wars Prime Minister Noboru Takeshna·s '1stt to Washington last "eek demonstrated how difficult trade relations remain bet"'een the \\Orld's two largest economic po\\ers. He came offenng fnendl) "'ords and conc1ltator: gestures. But some C.S. officials remain appropnatel) skeptical about whether Japanese acuons will match Takesh1ta's conc1 ltato~ \\ ords. .\t ISSUe IS .\mencan access lO partJCtpatton in Japanese publtc "orks projects. the subject of a long-standmg dispute. L'S. constructton firms have complained that the' ha'e been blocked from part1c1patton. and last week Takeshlla proposed to change his go' emment's contracting rules to allo"' foreign competttton. ,· ' The V. ash1ngton meetings 1nd1cated there could be conunumg fncuon in the tense trade dtS<"ussions bet.,.,een the L n1tcd ta1es and Japan. despite Takeshtta's statesmanlike "ords Yet these tensions are counterproductl\e 10 a comple \ "Orld l'lonom~ "here the linkages bet"'een these l\li O countnes ha'e bc:come so mtncate. Baltlmor~ San. Defense costs -\mcncan tawayers are getting tired of pa) mg for the defense LOS ts of so-called allies around the world. The) ·re ttred of maintaining some 40.000 U.S. troops in oulh l\.urca since the earl} 1950s . .\nd the~ can't figure out \\ h~ ""e should be pa) ing West German) for the pnv1lege of maintaining more than 200.000 troops in that countr). \\ e think foreign countnes depending on .\menca for their m1ltta~ secunt) should start pa) 1 ng for the stationing of l . personnel and equipment overseas .\s .\mencans are co:ifronted "llh a mulutnllton-dollar na11onal debt. "'e doubt that man\ ta\pa,ers would resent the remO\ al ofl .. troops from an~ COUntr: 'not" tlltng to pa) for their presence Farmiagtoa (N.M.J Dail}' Tlm~s. Double standard En' 1ronment_al act1' 1s:s in the L' .S. H ouse of Repre~n tau, es are going alter a double standard which permits federal insta.llattons to create hazardous \\aste problems proh1b11ed at pn,ate fac1ltues More po"cr to them. It should be no surpnse that some go,emmcnt ·"lt emplo}ees feel a double standard may apply. Bur there arc no such double standards. nor sh ould there be. In fact. the federal government should be exemplal") m tts observance of federal sratutes. When it isn't. its offenvs become glanng. ORANGE COAST ..., .... BeekJey f W.Va.) Rqlster·Ben.Jd li.f..., City c ... l•Cll-. llllwsC... Cnlr .. s.erts [Mr ..... ~ ............ t.t .. ~Ow.a. o::r..-=... .., ... e.rc....o.w CIT*' ...... ""'-ssMICI ...... f ... ··callfomla Is not Just Reagan country: It must~ classified as generally a Repub//can sta{e. · · Kennedy and Murdoch: An odd couple hook up In 1975. the fear of monopol; opinion broke out into a fresh regulauon. The F~eral Communica· uons Comm1ss1on ruled Lhat no one who owned a newspaper m an Amencan cit) could proettd to buy a television station in that cit'. The tdea was to protect young Ebenezer from being indoctnnated in a single point of vie" b) th~ media lords. It was an honest 1de~ but not verv thouihtful. To begin with. most tele' ISIOn stations thal touch on pubhc affairs tend to be members of "hat Joe Sobran calls The Hive: 1.e .. the) mo .. e together. parceling out the target areas and munching away at the enem' contentedh It 1s hard 10 thinl o( an) maJor· consc~ atl"I· e poh11cal figure or obJcctl'e lhat escapes more or less uniform harass- ment \foreo .. er. most newspapers ha' e got the habtt of an op-ed page "'here \OU find the raC\ heresies of e\ ei: one "ho d1sagrtts V.1th Jack K.ilpatnd ... George Will. me. and the .\rk of the Co' enam. But what "as coming ''Cl) soon. on top of 11.all. v.as the cable revoluuon. Where I lt '"e. )OU can pick up 60 channels. and although most of the cultural stuff that comes in is or- thodoA in tts heterodox\ ("hen last. tn a SllCOm or movie Or pla). was adultel) treated other than as good or bad strateg) -never mind the moral point'>). It can hard!) be said we were all being made to listen to Radio Gulag. But the regulation JUSt sat around there and was enforced. as good and bad rcgulauons tend to be. Enter Rupert Murdoch. who bought a paper in ~e" York Cll) m 1916 and a paper m Boston in 198:! In 19 6. he bought a telev1s1on st.au on in Boston and another tn Ne" York Ctt) In doing so. he ran into the ban againsl cross-ownership. and it "·as accepted that he v.ould unload the t"o ne.,.,spapers. EspcClally cnt1cal for him was the unloading of the New York Post. because the television stauon he had bought in New York was designated as the anchor Statton to his projected new network. \turdoch 1sa man of tenacious tum of mind. not least ab~ut hts holdings. Last Thursda) he reported that the Ne" York Post lost S 17 million last '"ear From 1h1s we can conclude two ihings. the fim of them that anybody "ho v.ants to hang on to a paper losing that kind ofmone) must have a 'Cf) speClal, extra-pecuniary interest 1n the asset. Owning your own d.atl}·m Ne" York can be a lot of fun. and we must assume Mr. Murdoch ts getting such fun out of his. as of cou~ his more than half-mtllton readers are ob' 1ousl) get11ng. be<.'ausc lhe) want ll But n isn't eas) 10 find someone else v.1lhng or able to lose S 17 m1lhon for the fun of running a datl) .\ccordingl~. the FCC kept extending its deadline. at "htch point ... ENTER TEDDY KEN:-.IEDY' Sen. Kenned). who has a relaxed idea of legal rectuude. decided to tiptoe inlo the big con~1onal arch I\ e where the) were bu1ld1ng the huge annual S600 billion resoluuon. and sltd into one of 11s crevices a d1rect1ve forbidding the FCC to C\tend or lo waive the deadline to Murdoch. The onl) motive con- ce1,able for this concern for FCC regulations that an) one has come up "'th 1s that Murdoch's Boston paper. the Bosron HeraJd. ts a thorn in the side of the long Boston courtship of Kenned). When what Kenned\ did came oul. there v.-as "1desprcad resentment. But T~d) stuck to h1sgunsand came up "Ith the charge that Murdoch was WILLIAM F. Bue KLEY manipulating the. FCC: 1.e . b) pretending to find 1t hard to locate a bu .. er when that was not rcalh the caie. .\sked hov. he could be· con· 'inced that Murdoch was ma.king a sincere effort to gc1 nd of the Post. Kenned) uu ered a sentence that suggests he had rccon' en~ his Chap- paqu1dd1ck bram-trusters 10 coin ll for him. "I think being able to detect and determine a good-faith purchase and the desire for a Jood·fallh sale would be obvious on its face .. What that means 1s that Kenned' hasn't the remotest idea what he's· sa) mg. II v.ould ha-.r bttn different 1f. for instance. he had wd. "I happen to kno" that Warner Bros.. has offered S.W m1lhon for the Post. and Murdoch has turned 11 down " Conclusions: Murdoch's lawsuit should qu1ckJ) be heard. A rnpon- stble court would slnke o ut the Kennedy provision as a clear bill of attainder. The Constitution does not permit generic-sound ms bills that arc actuaJI) aim~ at a single v1ct1m. The FCC should then either repeal 1ts ant1<ross-ownership rcgulatto n as a verrmform appendix. or elSt' rt· asscrt 1t. spcctf) a deadline for Murdoch to sell either the pape-r or the TV Statton -and get on with tht' rule of law. WlllWn F. Bfldl~y Is• 1yNJalH col1UJ211is1. For Democrats, the road back is steep and slippery On the eve of the first caucuses and As matters no" stand, however. pnmanes 10 this alread y o~erl> lo ng Democrattc pres1dcnt1al nominees prcs1denttal campaign, the Demo-will find the going much tougher after era ts find their ho pes for November 1990 census further shifts the balance '11:tol) d1 m 101sh1ngas the shon-term of po"cr to~ards states in the West economic outlook 1mpro,es. Im-and South "here \Olers prefer to see pro,ements tn the balance of foreign Republicans in the \.\ h1te Hou~. lrade. a slowdown in the tnf1a11on rate Cahfom1a ~n es as the most and increased act1vit) in the nation's dramatic e\ampk-The next census factones. mines and utilities seem will !J'e 11 ai leasl four more -more h~el) to persuade mort and voters hkcl). fi, e more -pres1dent1al that last Octoba's stodt martcet crash eleetors. starting "llh the 199:? elcc- was an aberrauon and not a good tton. That "ould be 51 or 52 electors. bellwether o f 1h1ngs to come. more than an) other state has ever .\s that happens.. the odds increase had. ncarl) I 0 percent of the nat1on- 1hat Repubhcans will ~t.atn the "Ide lei.al of 538 Whtte House. Vice PrnKknt George C allfom1a ts no1 JUSt Reagan coun- Bush's communications director. try It must be classified as generally a PeterTecley. was nor engag.ing m idle Republican state. at least as far as boasting when he declared the trend pres1dent1al electtons are concerned. '"leaves the Democrats in a vulner-Onl~ once since the 1948 cleajon of able positio n because most people Hart) Truman. have a maJont)' of \Ole their pocketbooks tn a pres1den-C'altfom1ans \Ot~ for a Democnt. tlaJ election. M That "as in 1964. one of the leas1 But the aood-~""s-1s-bad-news o n t)ptcal prts1denual elections of this the economic front is not the wont of cc-ntuT). L)ndon Johnson buried tt for Democrats. The loni-tcnn 8arT) Goldwater 1n a l.andsHdt thllt outlook for the party r«aptunng the ~ear. the Republican nominee carried Whitt Houte appun C"\'Cn mott onl> his home st.ate of Arizona and di.smal. Con1inuins population pins five states of the Deep South, which 1n California and other Sun Belt v."'as sttll racked by the civil nabts states. which will be reflected m rt\ olut1on. reallocation of prn1dcnual Electoral Ca.l1fomi.a·s Rcpubbc:an leuanp Col&eae votes after the 1990 census. gobackalonfwa). TMsi.tchlls.,ne dim Oemoaauc prospeas for recap-Repubhan 1n 15 ornidc'nual ctec.- Htrint lbe presidency in any rontcsl t1ons sta.rt.1na wat.h f90C}. Dcmocrauc dwint the rat ohhe 20lb century. oommtts for the Whitt HOUR bl~ Thal couJd chante suddenl) de-captured the suite ODJY seva times lpiK the ancreaRd EJ«ioral Colkfe du.nna this ttntuty. That couna lbc m&dC'le of the Rcpubhcan-leanins 1964 ctcruon and II fivt ew DeU- rqion. If the Democnu so~how F1.1rDealclccltons betwcn 19l2and att able 10 do ~hat SOmt of their 1948. natM>Oal kackn advoca&e and re.. The onJyotha tune the Democnts onmt the l*1>' to appeal ~ to took Cahfornt.a in IM tt8tVf')' -u 1n m1ddk4t~ vocen. or 1( an _.1916.wh.Khwaunolherdce11ondin «onomic catutropbc dmupts was tQmdhina of a ftlikc. Woodrow Ammcan soacty and •ts pohtaa the Wilson, tcrluna trit lfCOftd ttrm. Yt-3)-the Great Deprns~ did narl) narroY.1)' tnumpbed 1n Cahb'nia 60 )'tan llQ. an bets are on: on1) beaiU1C 1u ltcpubhcatl 90v- MARTY Samt emor. Hiram Johnson. was •narY at his party"s prcsidt-ntial nominee. Charles Evans Huahes. and refused to give him cnthu.si.astic support . But CaJtfomia is not a.lone in p ining l\CW clout in White House elections. Other Sun Belt states that 1n reC'Cnt yea.rs have shown a.n 1ncreu- ing tendcnC)' to favor Republicans also wiU be IJVCD edd.itional Pf'CSickn- tia.I eJec10f'I. Ronda. whech pined four more after the 1980 ttnsu.s, •i ll pin another three afkr 1990. Tens. which pined three after 1980. w11l pin another three a..f\er 1990. A nu.rnbcrof othcrSun Bdt and Fa.r W~ st.ates each W1ll be awarded oet more d«tor af\a the nclll cemus. AllQF\her. the rqions will be ~inina •t ~· I s or 16 me>fe electors. Tbc')'11 be taken from st.at~ wtuch ~It)' have been fnmdlia to Onnocnuc prnidcnttal cand.adatn. Mechipn. ew Vort. Otiio and ~ns)'lv1.n11 a~ cxptttcd to IOliC two .ats CKh Amona the states loslna one ac.h are Illinois.. Masac.hutrtll and Wnt Virasnaa. Dtmocrau won't find it 1mpos$lbk •owin back the Wb11t Houtc1nyume soon. bur the roed up tun consun* ICU 11«per and more slippery fcii lhem. &MAU 10 tbe CCNtta t'lti~ vocen oflhe Goackn State and the rm of tht SQG Bel ...... .s.ltt ,. • ., ... cw .. N I I .... I LET HR ~ • llAJlTIJll UllTB Colw••W- Initiative foes: Too little and too late To the Edttor: I greall) apprcc1a1ro your ell- tens1ve co'"erage of the attempt by Orange Count) go .. emment to. o nce again. deceive the public. I am rtfemng. of course. to the ill- conce1' ed plot b) the Board of Supen 1sors and e.x-Su~n·1sor Bruce Nestande, to terminate the ve'}.' popular "Slo" Growth Initiative · "h1ch ts steamrolling its wa) through Orange Count). Their auempts are too liule. too late. Where ~ere these ··well mean- ing" officials for the past several years "ht::n 1rrespons1ble planning and runawa) de,elopment contnbuted to the present overcrowding of our roads and h1ghv.a)s? .\II recent suf\eys clearly indicate that the public's number one concern 1s 1raffic. When "'II these county and Cit} officials stan pa) 1ng attcn11on to the v.1shes of the public, rather than the demanru of developers. The sponsors of the Slo"' Growth In· 1t1at1' e arc to be congratulated for sta)1ng v.1th their 1nit1al goals. h 1s becoming more and more difficult for the publtc to determine who the well· meaning officials are Your coverage reftrr~ frcquenll) to quotes from John Erskine. mayor of Huntington Beach (also executive director of the Building lndu.stT) Assoc1at1on). One must wonder ~here his alleit.tances he. who pays his campaign bills. and bow he can remain 1mpanial rca-ud1ng develop- ment m Hunungton Bcacb. The ci•ilens dtscf\'e a round of applause for dnving this one ho~ \\'ecan begin to exert someconrrol on our qualtt~ ofltfe. SAMANTHA CESTONI Huntington Beach Heather has right idea To 1he Ed nor Hoora) for Jackie Heather' It"~ about ttme th.at someone in the polt ucal "h1rl sent ettt a good: sohd. po$tlJ' e accolade for our ~1dent Reaian -10 &J'e him a little credn for his due I am full\ a"are lhat tt 1s most difficult 10 ·accomplish an) thing in office toda~ "11hout st1mng up a lot of negatt\ ism from all sides. But. at lca!ot. the C S. is sttll letttng f~om nn1 and has stay~ ou1 of declared "ar dunng his terms of office. Pres1d1:n1 Reagan has shown us great fa ith in God and 1n his count!) through man} good acromphsh- ments dunng his sc~ing. Than l s again. Jackie' ROGER RID~K Newport h ' TODAY IN HISTORY --.... - Toda) 1s Monda). Jan. 25. Toda> ·s h1ghltght tn h1stor): Ftft) )eats ago. on Jan. 25. 1938. the pla) "Our Town,.. Thom ton Wilder"s Pulitzer Pnze-wtnning c' ocauon of 4maJJ-town life in Grover's (omen. N.H .. ~-as per- formed pubhcl) for the first time. at the McC'arter Theater m Pnn~ton, N.J. On thtS date: In 1788. the English romantic pocl Lord Byron "as born. In 1881. an ancient Egypuan ot>- eltsk was Crt'Ct~ in New York's Central Park: ii 1s known as Oeopatra's Needle. Jn 190 I , an era ended in England Wlth the death of Queen Victoria at aae 82 . In 1905, thou.sands of demonstrat· •n& Russian workers were fired on by imperial arm) troops in St. Perersburi. The incident became known as "Red Sunday .. or .. Bloody Sund.a :· In J~l 7, President Wilson pleaded foranend to the ~rin Eury>pc. sayina there musr be peace wnhout vic- tory:· By April. hoWC\Cf, America was also at wr. lo I 9SS. the Pcn~n annouDOed a ~m to develop 1nien:ontinent.al m issiles armed with nuclear weapons. In 1970, the firsr comrnettial night of the Boeina 747 bcpn in ew y ort and ended in London some 6Vt hours later. 111 1973. lbt U.S. Supreme Cou.n lcultud abon1ons aat.ionwidc. 1 n 1973. fomttt President Lyndon B. Johuon died at Ins Tea.as ranch at aee64. Today's but.bda~ Actreu Piper Laurie &$ S6. Autbor JOlrDb Wam-.,.. is SI. Ac\Of Joh H&an as q, Boxer Georlt Fomnu it 40. H!deY Nr Mtb aa.y 11 ) I. Aaral Laacta Blair ii 29. no.pt .fol Today. ..... To lpllld andwa11t1J1De•.._,_ .... ---;~T• .. ...,.•dile =ar•lllf U" 1-.or -·~----·-.....,. Cl__,, )'CMI ._... 10 .. bilCt ti; Ill !ltMDI 1 f " 1 ": From the dt"'1fCl o(""OwT"9.. .. by Thorieoe Wale-( 1197-1975). •111itA.nn£11 I""- " .. ~ SPORTS MONDAY, JANUAR Y 25, 1988 25 CE TS Huge theater envi.sioned for HB City cqn.sidering 5-~tory, domed tour ist attraction for downtown renewal area By ROBERT BARKER Of .. 0.-, ........ Cat) offi cials are trytQg to PfOJCC't -.hcthcr a giant theater five-stones high and tosting about S7 m1lhon should be built an downtown Hunt· 1ng1on Beach. California Sally Kirkland and Michael Douglas win best dramatic acting honors in the Golden Globe Awards./A4 Nation The Democratic race la a dead heat in Iowa./ M World The Sandinistas down a rebel supply plane./ AS Sports Area hip eoheel Md community college foot- ball coaches tab Denver to ~in Super Bowl next Sunday./81 The huge theater. which 1s en- v1s1oned to show films about surfing and the c11~ 's 011 hmory. 1s ~ma pushed b' downtown business leaders as a ma1o r feature to attract rede' elopment to their pan of the Cit) Eatery th at fell in sea mou rned by former employees BJ PAVL AllClllPLEY ... ..., .... _ Doze111 or ti'nk balloODI ~ I.lat Sa.-AM WU. .-.iled~,o ....... Sunday. ach beariam a ...-.. ory abotal a &Den "lindmart, lbe&deak .. Tbc balloons --btuncNd by about a hundred 6iends aad former tmployea o( John OaAafsoa. who ..... opaaled the PGOUlat eaaay .. the nd o( tbc lf un•insloft .._. Pier for IOyean. Tht laUACblftlcapped a .. ed. ebration" of die lnClllOI in carriedbysu~1tnoflhecafe , thlit opened an 1933 .. A fien:r Pllcific storm *- stroyed the tnd or the pier and tk ca~ on Jan. 17. jusa oYer ~ !:!!!_~ • 11 a llJI• _, ·~·~ 1o .... ....,. llr tJ111edy ilt' 1913. Sunwnaed Dy his wife and childrm. Gus&afson said that dcspi~ w desuuctioo. ··ufe today is tbe best i1°s ewr bca. and the belt is )ct to COlfte. .. Tht evmt was orpnlzed by several former ~ who ~II the C'afc. .. It's an interesting concept.'' Ma)'Or John Erslonesa10Fnda)'. ''bu& n has a long 11.a~ to go - Officials e'-pla1ned that the pr<>· cess. designed b~ the IM .\X Systems Corp of Toronto. f~tures proJ«- uons from high-qualm 70..mall- emeter film onto the ~r~n that ism the top ot thr multi-story dome build mg _ "It would be an outstanding attrac- tio n:· said "'a1al1e Kotsch. a down- !:-. ... n business operator. ··tcs largu than hfe -1:\c1t1ng and dramatic It -.ould male s.cnst" to ha' e 11 in connec tion "11h a '>urling museum and hall of fame · Although she said she'd ··dearh IO\C 11:· Kotsch said II appears the atvac11on 1s strit th a long sho1 fo r fifst phase com1 ruct1on in the do~n to-.n .redc' elopment area at Mam Strttt and Pau lil ( oa\t Hrl}l~a' he harbor'> hopes though. that 11 can eH~ntualh tx· built 1n later stages Counc1l11>omJn G race '-' 1nchell "hu P:f!n1cipa1ed m talks last -..eek -.uh IM.\X represtntatl\CS. said the plan sounds lt l e ··a nice expcnment ·· But she said 11 ma~ ha' e. perhaps. less than a 50 percent chance ofeetung ofl the ground because of the cost of the building and financial comm11ment.s to the compan) for use of m equipment and fi lms lt"s e>.pected that the theater v.ould ha' e about 350 seats and 11.o uld offer about ~S sho-.angs a 11>ct'l ~l ake .\dams. the city's pnnc1{>&1 retie' elopm~t planner, said the 1n- 1tal mct'ttng sparked interest for more meetings 6etwttn IMAX and Cit) officials .\dams said that. if a~ pro' ed. officials m1Jht dnis.n lhe first tv.o sto nes of the thcas.er 5tructure underground The nearest IMAX tbcatcrJS at the Los .\ngele~ Museum of Scicntt and lndust~ although othCT cities re- ponedl) arc conStdcnng the attrac- 11on Fetus killed . inHB shooting Teen-age mother in serious condition: boyfriend a rrested By PAUL ARCBJPLEY Ol .. 0.-, ....... A Hunungton Beach tttn-ager remained 1n scnous condiuon Sun- da) after sufTmng bullet wounds that killed her unborn child Saturday. Melod) M-OntgomCT'). 18. Was rushed tG surger) at Founta10 Valle) Regional Hospnal after her boyfncnd allegcdl) ~hot her m the buttocks at lhe couple's apanment at 24 11 Dcla- v.otre St. Booked into Huntington Beach 1a1l was Craig lav.'ttnce Osteen. 23. He 11.as ~1ng held on susp1C1on of murder. assault v.1th a deadh v.eapon. pos.scssion of a sawed-off shot.gun and posscss1on of narcoucs.. satd Lt Chuck Poe. Hunungton Beach polttt wcrt called to the couple's home just aftct-2 p.m folio" ml a rtpOn ofa sbooU~ Pot said Officcn found the mJured Mont· gomer) 1nsuk the apan~t and called paramedics (Pleue eee RI OS /A.2) Jay Haas scores two-shot victory in Bob Hope Golf Classic./81 Index Karl may have contributed $30,000 lllegally Advice and Games A9 Births A4 Bulletin Board A3 Business A6-7 Classified B4-6 Comics A10 Entertainment A8 Opinion 88 Public notices B7 Sports 81-3 Weather A2 Weddings AS By Tk A.uod•tH Prn1 Dcmocrauc prcs1den1LaJ candidate Ga~ Han and t-..o congressional candidates alleged!) recc1veti O\<Cr S30.000 in p0ssibl) 11lcpl campaign .... donauons from an Newpon Beach businessman. a ne-.spaper reported The allegauons tn\ olv1ng home· \'1deo marketer Stuan Karl "ere reponed Sunda~ b~ the Orange County Register m a ropynght stof) etllng a re' 1e11. of campaign-finance repon~ umdcnufied sourttS and Laguna man sees ~roWing demand f or.plan:tclones By BOB VAN EYXEN ... ..., ....... Allen Hard1ton•s family bas been putting seeds an the around for lhrte generations. Hard1s0n still constden himself a farmer. altho~ he has found am°"' u~to-<bte "ay to make pl.a.nu IJ'OW. His fields are a collectton of tin) plastic Jars and petrie d ishes in a dimtnutl\e laboratory overtook.i .. Pacific Coast Hi&hway in l.quna ~ch. Hardison. JS. makes his liv1na chopp1n1 plants into little ueny bits. and &1'0W11l4 the frlamcnts into men or less idcnucal donn of the ori&inal. This may ~m li\c an unna.ns- arily labonous way of proPl'l!llina plants. compared to. say.Just pla.ntina Boa v11 Eru1 PEOPLf IN THE N E~S a bunch of seeds. But tt has some d1st1nct ach-aft» taars. accord1na to Hardison. ""ho calls hi1 six·)Ur-old busincs.s All Aa Inc. ..You tet plants that att true to type. and )OU &C1 dean plants." said (Pl1111 .. oaowmo/A2) former emplO)ct'S of Karl. Sources said the 34-yC2r-old Karl u~d cmplo)ces to hide campaign donattons an excess of the S 1.000 fede;.al jµn1t an 1nd1v1dual can dcmate 103 campa1an. the nc~per said. Former Karl c_mployees said the~ ~ere pressured into making dona- uo ns for which they were retmbursed b) Karl Karl. ofNewpon Beach. could not be reached for comment Sunda' at the telephone num~r for Karl· Lonmar Home Video Co. in Inane There was no 1ts11 ng for his residence The con1ntiu11uns. listed in repons tiled -.1th th~ Federal Elecuon Com- m1ss1on. "~re made to Han·s IQ ~ and 198 campaign ' and to the uns4cccssful IQ b congress1onal clec- 11on cffons of "athleen Kenned~ To~nscnd of Baltimore and Orange County upenor Coun Judge Da'e Caner .\ccordang 10 campaign records. Han rcce1,ed a total of Sl6.750 for has IQ .i and IQ campaigns from ~O Karl-Lon mar -..ort.ers or their rela· I '"es. Caner rett•'C'd S 10.000. and To-.nsend S5 . .i80 for their 1986 congressional campaigns from Kari- Lon__mar "emplo~ttS.. µte rt"COrds shov. _ .. E,er)thmg \l~td was lllep.J as ·hell and Stuan lne..-. 11. ·· wd llama White ~11ddel to..a rr s fonMr ex- C1:"Ull' e aide at the K.ar1-Lonmar Home Video \.1 1ddel v.ou rt"Sponsibfc for sol1C1- t1ng some of the rontnbuuons and rt-pa)1ng emplo'~ •1th cash she C -a•n) aolf. foo1baJI strll dom1Mted COft\ Cf'YUOM. Al Jol\ntoft. a ~uaY of Ohio Staie l,;nJ\"'tf'Slf', aot into a ,.eritec:t and unpnn&abk ddc: .--.;th ~ ot.btt peuons on die ..en Ud sans Of lht la.tt w }: ~ Ht abo pl'O\ ldtd I n.u.artt)' and mnpidrd '~ tbat tbc "'lltdlkins ., f"'&I' Sund&) -a field pl.\lld -t.lt .,u be do~ tht .... -... ~/Al) -..uhdrev. from K.a.rfs bank account. t~ Register said "Just about all those contnbuuons are bogus. Of the mo~ sohetteti from emplo)ces for electlons.. 95 perccn t -v.'&S paid bad to them 1 n cash b' Karl." M1d<kf'sald. · · M 1ddcl has satd ~v1ousJ~ that Karl told her on many ocx:astons to -. u hdra" cash from bis personal bank aCC"Ount. to repa) WOJ'kers •'ho had IJ'Cn to the Clt1\p&tlJU. She said Kari and othcn tok1 her that cash (PllHI WllAJU./A.2) Private planes in tailspin at~irport .... .. ·~· TEMPLE OTY (~) -Tht hiiaed mnaias of a small aircra.f\ daat pl'8,.cl i9'&o a yard after a m&O. aar C'OlllliOft Widt anot~ plant weft mnoved S.nday as federal in· vu1ila1on _...aued a probe of the IC'cicfem IMt kilttd two people. , Piloa 1t*ft H. ~. 44, of Miuion ~~ and h11 I S-year..okl- son, ToM, dilid Saturday afternoon when their 11n&)e-engine Cessna I S2 plunaed out of control after its tail was sheared off. tatton Sa~ty Boeld. MCIMIH left Sunday were not 1mmcdiMtly re-- t""'e4. K.aprice's p6ane lllnded iB dic hrit yard Of a home owned by • ~n Wah Ditoey cartoon ani•tor. The tai1 s.ectfon was found a MJf~mile away and dt'brit was scattlftd ov~ 9e~ral blocks. No one on the Jf'OUnd was iqjured. "The plane has been removed from tht ~~.. LOi5 Anaelcs Coul\l)' Shtrilrs Deputy Gary Griffith said Sunday. 1'bc area has been deared and we·w had ftO tails or complaiMI of'lootie-loos' at all." lcMh aircraft ~ flyina under visual Oi1Ju Nlnand ncilheraee wa 111 cona.n w1Lb IM Ffderal AYiation Administration when the 8Cddent occumd shon!y af\cr 2 p.rp. Satur- day. A twi~ne Cessna • 11 and its pilot maneuvered IS miles to Burbanf(• Al~ and landed safely about stvcn minutes •fter the col- lision. desofte severe damaie to the plane's ~f\ t>ropeller. The collision occurrcd dunng clear. sunn~ weather. Willlamsglves HBO a lift in ACE Awards M • • ., ,. : ........................ .....;... ........................ ------------------~ : callf. Temps Surf Forecast LQS.AliilGELES (AP) -Comic Robin WLUia.ms helped make Home·&x Office t~big winner at Sunday's 9th Annu•I ACE Awards for cable telcviS1on cxC'Cllcnce. but top acting trophies went to stars of the Arts & Entertainment Cable Network movie "Time Af\er Time." HBO won I 5ofthe 3SawardspreKnted Sunday. while A&EcarMd five to finish second 1n the cable nctwo~ sweepstakes. Showume had three awards. and SuperStat1on TBS and the Dtmcy Channel had two apiece. • • .. .. .. • • .. • 1SACtt AMA llllf M ~ ............... ,p ... ....., Llle~Cltf !'! !! .. • • .... .. .. a...e.OOUNtr -• q;.;.... II • a.Ollfo~ W 11 •......... • ._ &o..,_,..--.. M U Authonties would not d1vulgt' the name of the pilot and referred all questions to the Nauomil Transpor· ... " .. n 11 It ..... 11 It ... .,..._...._~-~ 41 .... n • mr:_..... n ,s-i_.c-- 11 ~ • .. '1 Tlmlillr . .... . . ------------------,. ,_ 1111 GROWING DEMAND FOR PLANT CLONES ••. • • '1 • • 17 5 ~· 5 !Tid es II II • _., • ...... • 41~.. ~ .... ... 7 .......... ... .... • :· • ., 11 .. ...... ~p.Jll 5 I 1.2 JO 11 Jl'romAl Hardison .. ..\nd "' can multipl) them faster than through traditional methods.·· Getting plants thal are "true to type" has important advantages tn agricuhurc. Reproductng plants through seed is a hit-or-mLSs process. Plants. hke other livioi creatures. arc genetically diverse. Cross a m:ilc and a female plant and }OU ma) get some tall offspring. or some short ones. You may act some that arc resistant to pests and some that arc not. But find a good des1rabk plant. and then clone it. and 1n a relau,ch short while )Ou can get thousands o( plants with the same desirable charac- tcnst1cs as the onimaJ. Despite its high tech 'eneer. this biotechnologica l operation 1s done cnt1rcl) by hand. The muluphcat1on stans out slov.- 1). Hardison said From the onginal plant Hardison said he can generaJI) clone fi,c nearl} 1dent1cal copies during the first month. From each of 1hc five ne"' md1' 1d- ual plants. fi,e more can be grown. giving 25 at the end of the second month. So the process g~. from 25. to 125. to 61 5. to 3.125 and so on Docsn·t 1t iet tedious'> conditions in a laboratol') wnh mech· anically cleaned air. All instruments arc sterilized before they arc used and technicians wash thcir hands and a('ms in a disinfectant similar to that used b) surgeons. And the process gencrall> ~ns with tissue from the plants apical menstcm, or center of growth. "There 1s no circulatory 11ssue there. so d1sca~ organisms have no "a~ of reachmg that part of the plant:· he said. So a farmer or nurser) operator could. theoretical!). get a "hole field full of ideal plants. Bui the rub. from the grower's point of' 1e". 1s the cost. Clomng C'an cost from about 35 cents to S2 or more per pla nt. depending on ho" difficult Lhe species is to worl with It might not be feasible. therefore. for a strawbern or tomato farmer to oerdcr 50.000 i)crfcctl~ cloned plants. "But a nurscr)man could get a cenain numer of cloned plants and 1hen reproduce them h1m~lf. 'usmg runners:· he said. ") ou JUSt take a c utting and plant the runner m the groimd. "h1ch gives ) ou another plant. .. Another method "o uld be for a farmer 10 obtain a few hundred or a fe" thousand tloncd plants. to allow them to produce seeds. and then use ~ tlfgh quaht} seeds to plant a crop. Hardison said. Hard ison said he has clients all o'er Cali fornia. but onl) one so far in Orange Count) people used to the idea that you csn ~ 15.000 disease-free ficus plants with no berries. and you can get them very quickJ)... I No berries? "fkus is an ornamental." he said. "You don't want the berries. They make a big mess. .. Hard1son's permanent workforce consists of himself and his wife. Terry. although he said he has had up to six assistants at times. For the time being. he said. he is content to remain a relatively small operation. "~c·rc not interested in making a big killing:· he said ... We just want to pro' 1de a premium product at a compet1t1\e pnce:· .. • • • a .. ,.. .. .. 17 32 11 a n 42 17 .. It 0 17 • • • 11 II a 4' ........ HIJA • -....n ....,,_ 10 .. • ~ 10.. ,,_., II 0... 1'I •1 ,,.,..... ttla.a • ......... • .. ,.,.. ... ,..., Liii • ......... • ... ......... 5.11,.,... • .... -...,. • 12 Rrtt... "'._,. u OI 21 z• • ,.....Cltf 11 n • II .... 41 • n._,._.._, .. t:N-. ..... ,. .._.. •• -•J-••· lO ... _._ II • T1'9 -,._ ..... • ,...U a"' II .... 11 41 --t---•ftM&"'-10 ._...,, • ..,. n 41 . ........ . .. : ::: ~. ~ : Eztended ~ ....... . .. u ..,....,_.. n 11 It......... ,. . ............. 11• ,. ....._ . . II T-.e.,..., 11 U a T-7' 41 rt .,_,..~ Ma But his plans arc grandiose in other "~~~1otechnolog). I thank. 1sgoing to GENERAL AVIATION INT AILSPIN .•• be a tremendous benefit to agricul-From A 1 tu re ... he said. 'Td cventuall) like to "Compare toda) to 1979," he said. airport." said Barron. "That's been a manager of the airport. said the do something w11h food crops that .. In 1979 thcrt• "'ere 19.000 new hght total disaster. No"' everyone is crou-decline 1n small aircraft nights at helps miuc.'~ "o rld hunger. The aircraft sold m this count!'). Last )Car. in& over e\ erybody else's runway." John Wa)ne reflected a national technolog) 1s there to reproduce "'hat was it. about 800. ~ lqal Barron said. however. that he had trend. hard). disease resistant plants that arc , hab1ht) 1s such that insurance not noticed a decline in interest m "It could be the cost offucl. or the going to increase crop yields." premiums have gone sky high. And small-scale a\ iat1on. cost of the aircraft. but all o'er the ..\ nall\C of Ventura County. where the) ·,e JUSl about killed the market." ··r\•e seen a drop-off this month. countr) traffic fiaurcs for general his fam1I ) farms. Hardison wound up He said airspace regulatio ns. which but that's a usual thing for after a' 1at1on ha\'e been going down." he 1n Orange Count) quite b) accident. fa, or airlines at the expense of small Chnstmas," he said. "People have said. "It 1s a little surprising. to see Hardison. a graduate of UC River-planes. had discouraged people from spent all their money over the such a larae decline hctt in Orange side's school of agriculture. met his learning to 0). • holidays... Count). w c·vc often bucked the ~ 1fe, an Orange County resident. ..People sec that 1t's geuina ti&hter Another pilot also ~id he had oot n~uonal trend and had increaSQI. while taking summer courses at UCI. and lighter and the) say, 'to hell with noticed an) dedine in general a via-when other parts of 1be area . wcrC ..\ftcr earning his master's dcgrtt m 11. "hi should I spend all, this tion. cxpencncmg dcclancs." business administration at Pep-monc). " Nagy said. ··Thcrc·s no indication that our He said declining activity at John perdine U "'' crs1t~. Hardison re-b cn the airlines" 111suffer1ffcwcr operations have dccrcascd." said Wa) ne's Otaht schools might account turned to Oranac Count) to work for people go 10 pm ate 01ght schools. he Wa\nc Tuomala. owner of Manin for pan of the decline. ··Well. it 1s a ton of work." said Hardison. .. ..\ single person can usuall) do about 800 to 1.000 plants a da) lf"c needto."c'll run:?4hoursa da\ to scne a client We ha,en·1 had to d o that. but "e ha' c had w mc 18 and 20.hour da~ s ·· The In ine Co ·s agric ultural said. A\"ia11on. which IS located at John .. It's a .Jot cheaper to team ton) at d 1\ls1on. "Who's going 10 ny those bag Wa)nc .\irport. "I don't know ho"' smaller airports that arc geared to .. In lime "'e "111 hhe more His stint with The ln me Co. was airliners 1f nob<xh lams to Oy? .. he ,ou'dexplain the figures the y've been general a' 1at1on." he said . ..\nother ad,antage 1s that clonmg business m Orange Count)." he said. follo"cd b) sc'cral ~cars of pnvate said ... It used to ix that most palot.s &cuing.. General &\ 1at1on accounts for 8(} ~ults m d1seasc-frtt plants. ~1d ··(l_~kes_~ "h1k. Farming 1s nsk) consultmg. In 1982. he and his wife came from the m1ht.ary. But not any · ""'rctnt of all n ights at John wa~ne HardilP -!!! uiilessiia jj eimne,.. '"1rew. ~ ...._d a ll tg ._ • 'IP.~ ~ 10 ~nt o{... OJbcr ~ however. SI) they ~r\ ' CIQJll!!L,!S done under ster~ se~ti'.~ ... l>C~· You .~10...Jt!.,. -AfldJag~ach tumc:d..gt.UJP be @1g c"Omc frMn cwihan tn1R'l'i. "haft> tl'oti?lllP"ln uhfa orable ciYrfl't I 16ia1'1~f( bPd-a\Jons at Johf t nc perncttflacc to loca tc. lie sl'ftl. ..,.~--..---.:. -:;,.; ,.:: .,;;;;_ ;fo P v,..r 3;5 ~ ~ Wa) rft" ·~~t't" dO'w'l'i"' 1"' T perct'Ct t# FETUS KILLED ... From A l Montgomer) was taken ,to the hosp11al am.I rushed into su rger) where docto rs discovered the 5- month-old fetus she was carrym$ was dead of gunshot wounds. Poe said. Offi cers starched O steen and found some "' hue powder behe' cd to ~ narC'ot1es m one of his pockets. He "as arrested and taken to the cit) 1a1I. Officers also nxo' ered a :?0-gaugc sawt.'d--Off shotgun behc'ed to ha\C bee n used in the shooting. Poe said. Police did not re' cal whether the) belie' ed t~ shooun~ "as accidental or intentional Ne11her did the' re' eal what preceded the shooting · "One ·o my professors at Pep-'\t John \\-ayne. the pohttcs and ··t kno"' r\c not bttn Oy1n1 as December 1987 compared to the perd1ne o" ns the building. and he let C"l:Onomics of building a new tenninal much," said Severi) Allen. a member same month in 1986. me kno" about 1he 'acanc)." he said. ha' e made hfc more difficult for of The 99·s. a nationwide "omen's The paU(nger count for last ~- Hardison spends m uch of his non-operators of small aircraft. accord mg fl) ins club ... It's gotten so expensive. ccmber was also dov. n. b) 4. 9 percent, "Orl mg time helping look after his 3-to Chns Barron. a pilot and instructor o\nd 1t'sjus1 not asconvenicntatJohn compared to December 1986. }ea,r-old daughter. Stcphante. "Ith Westar <\\iation. Wa)ne A1rpon since they moved It MS the first time since the ..\nd "ht'n he's not raising plants or general a' iation to the west side. You recession of 198:? that there had been link girls. he de.,otes his lime to .. To make room for the ne" get the impression that )ou·rc in the a decline 1n the number ofpas~ngers look mg after the interests of local terminal. all general &\latson has wa) ." 0) 1ng 1n and out of John .way~ agncuhure. as president of the Or-been movrd to the west side of the Alan Mu~. amstant ameraJ Awport. M urpby sa~ : a nge Count) Farm Bureau. : The Hard1sons. live in Laguna Beach END CAFE'S DEMISE MOURNED ••• From Al FOOTBAL~ ADDICTS SUFFER THROUGH ... Juhe Kotsch said they also wt"rt making plans 10 bcgm a fund-raiser for Gustafson to rebuild tlte cafe. Neither the buildmg owned by the cit~ nor the contents owned by G ustafson "as insured. message on a surplus meal check from the cafe. put the mcssaac into a st) rofoam End Cafe coffee cup ad attach it to a helium-filled ball°"9!. "People ha\C bttn \Cr) sup- portivt', .. she said. ''When )OU fed }'romAl J('ason finall) ends" .. , hate it. but I'll watch basketball:· Johnson said Stc'e Gllfo1I. an admmcd football fanauc. J USt returned 10 his Costa Mesa home from Ha v.a11 "here he tuned into L n1,crsll' of Ha"at1 gn diron games · .\ football po"cr. 1t"s not. But offenng..i dclenS{' for "atch1ng their games tha1 "'ould make the Honolulu .Chamber of ( ommerce cringe. .G1lfo1l said "It "as c;omethmg to do." .\I perr~ also of Costa Mesa. reeled off a hst of possib1ht1cs to kttp o nc·s Sunda) ahcmoolfs occupied d unng the dreary months to come .. You "ash \our car for the first ume in four months. You talk 10 vour old lad~. Y6u S8\'C mo ne) and· pa) )Our taxes instead of betung It all on football.-pe!T) suggested Ph11osoph1caJ about the season finale. Spe!T) said ... It's kind of a rchef. rean~. The Supet Bowl 1s an appropriate e~. --i. .. If the)' ran 1t all )'tar hke basket· ball 'i1.d get boring." Cathennc Hanle) of Fulleno n. "ho ha~"' ed football " tth the best of \hem since September. claimed she "as no1 go ing th rough football "1thdra"als Sunda'. .. But I think 1t "ould be nice 1ftherc "as something besides golf on TV :· she said Pondcnng hov. to spend her free af\emoon. she came up with an 1dc:a that has long kept footbaJI Y.'ldows from commtttmg felonies against tlmr aging)OCk husbands. "I think I might go shopping." she said KARL MAY HAYE GIVEN $30,000 ••• From Al should be Ust>d b«ause it could nolbe ~i<1 Mid~I rcpatd her 1n cash on all traced three occasions. M1ddel said she. herself. made a Bernie Schneider. scneral counsel S250 contnbuuon to TownK'nd d'6r-foe the H.art acapaian. said Saturda) mg a fu nd-ra1S1 ng evtnt at Kaa's that .n t of tk contnbuuons fOf' house "lucb Karl.allcecdly mmbuncd his It was also rcponcd that another cniplO)ccs were made dunng the former Karl-Lon mar .emplo)ee 1984 campaign. 'donated UOO to the 1988 Han CampaJgn.. records show that campaign and said she felt pressured S l::! . .?50 v.-as-contnbuted b\ Karl· b} Kart. Lonmar cmplo)ccs for the 1984 "I felt hkc I v.as doing something clTon. t~ ~per reported V.rong. but I needed the JOb. You "With regard to the 1988 campa11n "couldn'\ 10 apinst tuart. He 1s SUC'h contnbuttons. the pos1t1on "' have ~d)nam1cptT10nahty.1rs hard tosa} taken is that. if there is a hint of no." said the employee. wbo was impro~t)'. ~arc iou\I to send the 1hcn 1non)m1t~ monq back ... Scbne1der said. r The ttnplo)cc said she also pvc .. TM 1988 campaian is lqall) a 1100 each.to 'he Caner and ToWAS-scparateorpnlz:ation. We'll look into ~nd ampe.agns at Kari's request. She it (the 198'4 campei&Jl). but arc not responsible tor what at <h<1. • Fonner K.arl-Lorimar cmplo~ccs said 1hey had contributed S•.soo to Han·s 1988 ampaian. but Hart said Fnday that has staff found only l~ donations &otalm& S l.SOO and that refunds v.erc mack lo lhe two c:m· plO)'eCS. Hoth Townst.nd and Caner said the) Y.OUld cont.act all contnbuton conn«tcd to Karl's business lO ut if they had bttn ttimbuned. Townstnd 6aJd ~would refund all such donauons to Karl. Can.er said be •ould .eek advitt from tM Fcdcrll El«tion Com- m1ss1on con«mina tM disposition of an) such funds. ..\nd 1fthc Cit) decided 1t would not rebuild the dcstro)ed ponaon of the pier. Kotsch ~1d the group might make that a fund-ra1s1ng endca' or as well. Ironically. the balloons were lefi- O\'ers followins the l 983 stonn that lcfi the cafc hanging off the end of the pier. A mcssaae pnnted on them stated ... , helped save the End Cafe ... Participants were mv1ted to wrile a ·-rm go1ns to put my favorite memory of the End Cafe on mine ... Gustafson said. "Nobod) will know "hat it was unless they find the cup." Just a week earher. Gustafson said he was "numb" and didn't know "hether he was prepared to ti') yet again to open the eatery. His ebulcnt mood on Sunday provided a sharp contrast. • H.11 dau&hter Chnstine said tM support o r f ricnds made all the difference. .I ~l'~i lk~ 1t alone it TM tra&Cd) a lso pulled the famdy l~thcr. ~ said .. We'd JUSt gotten 10 where v.e thou&ht we v.erc O K.'' she said of th~ business. "Now ,.,·re back to square one. we·rc gonna have to get real crcati · . • Chnsunt Gustafson said the fam1l) held a pow-v.ov. 0' er the v.cckcnd to discuss lht1r options . ··our bigcst asset 1s if we hana t<>sttl\er ~·u be OK." she said '~~------~...,.,.. .......... _..._.. __________ ,._ ______ --..... ________ .._ ____ ......,~r-.._----~~.~--------~--~~ ...... ~--------:!~~~------------~--------... ---------~----------~ ...... --~ .... .__ ...... __ __ ......,~_..-.1 ·~ ,