HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-02-01 - Orange Coast Pilot..
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MONDAY, FEBRUARY I, 1988 25 (,E 'T
Petitioners curtailed at NB mall •
Growth-and-traffic-initiative backe rs
criticize th Ir location at Fashion Island ' .
IJ 801 V AN.,~YltEN ..............
Officials It Fashion lslind kept
petitioners for the countywide growth
and traffic control init iative in an
isola ted 5tttlon-of Fashion Island
over t he weekend. effectively
pn:venting them from pthering
many signalw:cs, an inuiauve spokes-
man charged today.
After tussling for weeks with The
Irvine Co .• which owns the upscale
Newpon Beach center. petitioners for
the inltlative finally were given
approval to circulate petitions thert
after company officials relented late
last week o n insuranct requirements.
When they amved Saturday'. how-
ever. pct1t1oncr~ found that the) were
lP be located in a small glass booth.
out of the stream of shopping traffic.
said Tom Rogers. an 1n11iativc
spokesman.
.. We were an the booth were the
sttunt) guards hang out.·· 5a1d
Rogers. ..Of the few people who
wandered in there. most didn't even
speak Engh sh ...
Rogers said he gathered 25 signa-
tures dunng the we~kend. including a
fewJro m center e mployees.
.\ .Fashion Island official said.
however, that he believed the anfor-
mation booth was a good location
"It's nght o utside our No I
department stol"e," said Paul Coulter
operations manager for the center.
"We thought -.e were d~in& them a •
faior having them ill.Sid~. We·re an
outstdt' center and the weal her "'asn ·1
that great over the v.cekend ."
Coulter said 1n1t1a11vc -pc1111oners
v.o uld be free to set up oua1d e the
information boQJh next v.cckend.
The booth 1s located nearRobmson·s.
"If that's what they want. we do n't
ha'e an} problem:· he said. ·
Pt'11t1o ners must have 60.000 ~·ahd
signatures b) Feb. 9 an o rder to
qu"ahf) their measure for the June or
!\o,em~r ballot
Sponsors of the measure an-
nounced last wtt'k that the\ were far
short of Cheir-goal and m neCd o( a bag
boost from supponets.
Roeers said pet111oners v.crc per-
. milted to have a placard on their tablt
1n the glass-fronted booth
"But )Ou couldn't Stt 11 from out~1de ... he said
He said pet1t1ont"rs wcrt not pcr-
m111cd ~signal to peopk or to leave
the booth 10 approach shoppcn to ask
them to sign
Peuuo~rs v.erc finall) allowed to
emerge from the booth and ~t up a
table lue Sunday. but by that tame
thtrc was so httlc traffic at the cenicr
that fev. signatures were obtained •
Rogers said .
The rcsultS at Fashio n Island were
panacularl} meager when co mpared
to tho~ at o ther sho pping ~nters
"'here peuuoners have worked. said
Russ Burkette. co-al!thor of thef
in1t1atl\C •
(Pleue eee PETJnONER8/ A.2)
Nation Irvine mappingfutu,re of its.last op~n space
James Denby says his
release from a
Nicaraguan prison did
not come In return for a
promise t o oppose aid to
Contra rebels./ A4
World
0 Israelis open fire on
Palestinians who blocked
a road an·d stoned their
_b_us in the West Bank
today, killing two Arabs
and wqundlng seven./ A5 .~
.Index
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After m ore· tha11 two years of
ncgo11a11ons and fonaficd b) 2.100
pages of en vironmental repon s.
Irvine is.on the bnnk of deciding what
It wants to be when-it grows up.
~t stake arc the grass¥ hills that
gently roll from the San Diego
Freeway to the Pacific Ocean. At
sake arc spacio us w1ldhfe habitats
that attract mlvating_ birds and
naturalist~. And 1n one mstance. the
cit) 's onl)' cemetery is at stake.
The dilemma the city now faces 1s
decidang how much of the remaining
open space in the city should be
dev~loped arid how much should be
m~intamed in Its pnsunc cond1t1on.
To some extent. the debate pits
residents against The Irvine Co ..
which o v.ns most of the u~ched
land. ·
Under cons1derat1on 1s the open
space. the land use dcs1gnat1ons and
the traffic c1rculat1on of approximate-
USUE
EARNEST
I) 76 squar~ miles ofland. either nov.
v.11hin the CH). or considered hkd) for
an~exat1on.1..hanges in the future o f
the land would be made br rev1s1ng
the gcntral plan.
A recent series of hcanngs rep-
resented an opponun11~ for residents
to eApress their opinions regarding
land use opfio ns grov.ing out of
cont1nu1nf negottauons bet\1.-ttn the
cit). The "ine Co. and the count).
said cit) offic11tls
In addition to rcv1tw1ng the tx1st·
mg general plan. the Cit~ \ounc1l 1s
stud}1ng 1"0 optio ns that could be
considered bluepnnts for future de-
velopment of the city. Bo th plans
'-'OUld increase the amount of open
space v.11hm the cit) 's general pl~n.
(Pl~ eee IRVDIE/A~}
The.fate of Quall lllll off the San Diego Freeway in lntne la
on the barga!nlnC table. The atretcb of hill• ls part of the
. ~ .
miaration path fOJ' CaJlad.l&D &Nee and may be pre9en'ed
unaer • gene~l plan reTlalon m lhi.ne.
Newport wary of Irvine land use changes
By GREG KLERKX
Of .. ~ ........ ,--
A. bold · land -planning re' 1S1on
under rcv1c"' m In me ma' mean
clogged roads and angi; re,1dcn1s an
Nt"'pon Beach. according 10 Nev.-
port Beach cit) officLals-\I.ho claim
In inc o fficials are "t ll a"'an: of the
potential problem,, ~et are pushing
ahead
Ncwpon Beach o fficials are close!\
mon11onng a proposed general plan
amendment current!) gOll'I$ through
the public hcanng process m Jr\ inc.
said Pat Tempfc. a Newport Beac h
planner In me offi cials ha' e been
negot1a11ng \\llh The In me Co. for
more than l\l.O \Cars over the fate of
16 squ.:rc mile'> vf l.tnd. some oi 11
near "!cv. pon Bcal.'h
Ncgo11a11ons ha \t '"'oh ed offer·
mg The In inc (I.). ~1ghcr dens11'
deHlopmcnt nght'I 1n w me areas in
e\changc for a n agreement nm 10
de,ell)p o ther area that ha'e open
spare ix11en11al. said In ine ( n'
Councilman Ra' Catalano
Onl.' of the areas proposed for J
dc,clopmcnt trade 1s Village 25. an
area adJJl."cnt to the m1ersc('t1on o f
\tac.\nhur Boule,ard and Ford
Road near the boundan of !"ewport
Ekach It 1s this area that has .caught
thee~ l'S of '1ic" pon Beach planne~
L'nder the proposed gtneral plan
amendment.\ 1llage 25 v.ould gain an
add111onal 2 -l)o ho mes .i I 0.()(
squ.ue le-t"t 01 retail deH iopment and doubling of traffic going in and out of
I 5 million ~uare fe-t"1 of office that an-a ..
qc,dopmenl. ~ppro"<1ma1cly foul'-~~l"nTrplc said II"\ int planners are
million ~uare lct't '-'f ~arch and a"'are of the po1en11al 1ncreaSt' 1n
de' cll.)pricnt '-• ndustnal spaC't 'c"' l)lln Beach traffo .• and 1ncludC'd
"'ould 'x-1.kk1LJ lrum the area tha• ac no "'led ement an t~ tralli<. .ic1.:ord 1n~ 10 an Ir' inC' sufT repon anah ~1~ section of thl" huge 2 I llO-
Thc add1ti.1nal rc<,1dcn11aJ. retail pagt' rcpon on the prol'Q~I But the
and o·liu~ 1.k''-''l'P~ld al publal 'hcanng PfOl:t''S l'.'Onfnut' in
mean Jn tnl.n.·aSt' 1n trat1ic o~ In inc and the oper ,pace pla" could
tnps per da' <n er tht C''\ISllng gentral be appro' C'd b' the In int ( ''
plan bringing tht' 101al tnps perda' 1n Council as soon a~ \larch
the a~cJ ..ip h ' -2 IO That rigure 1s .. \\ e thinl. th<tt ~hat th" " llTia-
l.,nh to ·~ !""'P'JX'rda,k<.sthantht tt'C"OUlddo.fi~l1'J "''u_.,,.,...'
amount 1•1 trJt1ic gen('f'Jled b\ the IOCrease t raffiC' or \ta, \r H
entire 'c.-"pon ( t'nter compte,· Boule\ard be)ond v.hJt ~t helic: ' I 1
'"It LoulJ hun us a ll'l .. \aid be 11sca paci1~ .. said Trmple ·· -\r ... t
Templt · -\ ,f'Jntzl" r ·he land u~s "'ould .ilso in f't'a~ ·ram~ ~ tte
"'ould result n .in appro~1mate (P lea.e eee JlfEWPORT I Al)
UCI's lab·dogsfreed b)r
underground network
K_ln9 tor a day Officials
can'tID
man killed
in chase Animilictivists claim respon.sibility
fo fbreak-in, ktdnappingOfT3 beagles_
By JONATHAN VOLD.E
... 0.., ........
An animaJ nghts aro up ttlat
claimed rcsponsibiluy for stealing 13 bca&les used in medical research at
UCl is a loose-knit aroup that frees
the animals throuah an .. under1
around railroad" around the world .
local activists said S unday.
Early Saturday. two locks were cut
and 13 beqJes .. liberated" from an
outdoor pen at UCl's north campus
air pollutio n research laboratory. said
univuuty .spclk.ttwoman Ka~
Jo nes.
The dop were part of a S900.000-a-
~a't study that bad been under way
ainct I 97S. Jonn said. The testina
eumined tM effects \If smoa on the
lunp and wby some lr'ICheolOmies
arc 1CCOmpan~ by actveoc dlecu.
UCI spokawoman Linda Granell
said this mOt"Din& that campus police
ofticen a nd invatipton will m«t
today to discuss possible cbanaes .ao
ttturity ma$Wft at the lrvinc cam~
pus.
"There may be aome cbaftlH. but no decisions bave yet been .....
••• id.
T.he tv.o dogs involved in the
tracheo tomy studies had undergo ne
the operation and also had electrodes
imbcded in their skulls to rela)
infonnatton from thefr trachea. she
said.
But that process was "no more
painful than gettina your ears
~."Jones said. and was the on I)
·medical operation that any of the
dogs had.
Nevertheless. an ano nym ous
courier from a aroup calling 1txlf the
"Anima l Liberation Front'" left a
letterand picture of o ne the Im -
pla nted beqlcs at the Daily Pilot and
other r.<wspapcrs to claim responsi-
bility for the thefts.
.. This liberation wa\ to protest
UCrs IJ'OWina USC Of animals IO
fraudulent medical ~rch. ~arch n~in&. ~II co~ of e~ttpt s-in a nd m1~· to humans and non-humans
alike; the letter said. "UCI has used
m illions of animals and wastes ap-
proaimately 20 ft'ullioft WS-)~r
doUan per ynr ...
The half-~ letter was typed on
~ •llite paper. with tM word$
Animal Ll berabOn Front .. typed in
upper case at the end of the page
.\ttempts to contact the group
through SC'cral Los .\ngele and
Orange count} animal act1' 1st group
were unsuccessful
Jud~ tncker. president of the
Costa \lcsa-bascd "Soc1et} ~gain~•
1' 1sec11on:· calltd the group that
comm111ed the thtft .. an under-
ground front
"Nobod> kno"'s "ho the} are .. but
the) work all 0' er the v.orld, and the)
are heroes as far as I am con~med ··
Stricker said turday 's 1nc1dent
was the first hberauon she rt'·
members on the Orange Coast that
v.-as connected to Animal L1be?t1on
Front. Jones sat<S>1t "'as the first such
break-an at l 'CI. although there ha' e
been protests at the school an th'c past
Rcgin• Eshrlm"ln. a mt"mbtt--of
Pasadena-based "Last C~anco for
Animals.." said the hberauon front
has no set membctsh1p. but mstl"ad 1s
a loose-knit group of act1v1sts that u~
the n.tme when .. their beliefs take
them to a ~na1n e"<tcnt ..
''°TM) 're not an organized group
Wlth a membership." sht said. •· :\n
acuvists from Northern California to
back East to an)~herc m the world
arc frft to US< that name ...
E~man sa.1d b(forr the group
acu. however. at has a nrtwork of
act1v•sts v.a1tm1 to claim the
( ......... DOQ8/A3)
B·1 JONATRAS \;Ol.ZXE
r'/ .. O..,~ ....
The 1den111' of a suspc'\. tC'd .-a-ttbd'
~11lcd in a Jl\..mph 'hao;c o n the
<\anta ~na Frt't'"'3' in Ir. me ~
ma1 nt"J a m' 'it•n to Juthon ues tooa'
l ahfom1a H1ghv..n Patrol Offic:u
Paul Cald"'ell desmbt"d the man u
"'h11e and in h1~ 20.. He died undliy
about , a m "hen the pov.erful sports·
car he v.as d n\lng 'itru ~a curb at the
Sand (. an}on Road t1 fT ramp at a·
spttd of 100 m ph. flt-.,., into the air
and tumbled o;c, en umes
Death ca mt minutes after the man
-v.ho was car'('\1ng llhno1s 1~t1fi;
1."alten-bt~found to bt"-stotcn ~
stopped ti' a \HP o fftet"r on. the
frccv.a\ near Lll..t Forest Dnvc.
ahout thrtt milt'" from the 8CC1dml
seen<'. Caldv.(11 s.a1d
The• man v.a\ pulled over for
dm ma Q(l mph and ...... ,. su .pecvd o(
bc.'tng under th<' 1nnuenct or alcohol.
tht' offiC'C'r Yid
But 'the offi~r h.1'1 to rc1um to has
patrol car to an""n a radio call.
· p\-iftl the man the opponurut) to
JUmp back 1n10 tht Niuan J(X)ZX
and spttd off ·
WMn the c~r lkv. into lhe an and
Fli:e11ghtet8 .dodge bull~t~ ~n Laguna Hills
rolled, the dn\t>r v.as thf"C>W1l from \be
\ChKX into I barbcd~wi~ fmtt. Ca1d·~n said Tv.o CHP ofticcn on
thl l('Cn(' "'•than moments of the
"'rttk admin1 tertd C'P1t-but •ht
man was pronou~ deed at a .
nc&tb h ptta.l. autbo(naes laid.
rontralkd ~ S4 a m . said RanF
M<ft tban lt) ftttfllh-itn ~ k"C1
to fieht tbt b&att
· kamr oflht buak:hna's con truc-
bOa.. tt uuahket) that an ofthn>tMT'
..... '"" Rtltftlt 0 ..._. nailMtn ~ 1\a1tabk for ·--um\. -. cP1 11-aAD/Ul
'
COCOMr' onlclab _. dllit -·a
ro~....,....,.. ..
uxchnt ut u •1•1i6ca•iea
cffon aldwtll wd._... .......
tdcnuficauon '*"ft .... ii 1lllt -· butnone~''' -~--man -
wdl laid ... ,"-.. ~poned .eon ilt T-... ~ • Ott 2
,.
•
" W=l°N (Al') --Lu .. ~ -Ii•-to ha .. a tbe,.Po"said. bu1elrec:1ivesc.....u.ii Clmllr bll 10 tbe biabest rate in ·~or 1mpect on the fmeraJ 1tati1tic$. protnms are not beina followed' bi' ~. lualc:uccrunqsnen The number ora•-tancer •tbs in· enoqh women to affect the death
· ... to ibe lowest rate this 198S totaled l22.39S. about 90,191 rates. ~. in, to a new federal more-dnths than would ~ ~icted "Thi lack of a la._ decline i.n ~ by an uttn&ion of '11< t9SO rates. lhe mortality . (from bn:a~1 cancer). •• ~ciompiled by the Na-report said. • · strona evade nee that httle eff'ecuve tioMI r lnsutute, shows that "Without luna cancer, the total · screenina is takinj place," the repon cancer continues to be the cancer deaths in t98S would hive said, because .chnical trials h~ve · cause of cancer death amona been below that ex~ from ~ <demonstrated that early detection &nd sugests that early 1950rat~by44,SOO. thereponsa1~. lnd appropriate treatment "can re-. diMn«*• throuah screcnina bas not 1t aunbuted a downward trend an duce the mortality rate .... by over 30
~ monafaty "to the extent tuna cancer amona males to a reduc-percent." . · ~ble •• . tion since I 96S in cipret(e smokina. Breast cancer rates among Ameri-Luna ~ whilestilltheleadi_na•-which the report called .. the major can women is betwc,en 104 and 107 cautt .Qf canm deaths, decreas'ed cause oflu.na cancer." per 100,000, "the highest incidence amona males in 1985. the latest year For whale m~es, there were 80 rates ever recorded," the rePort said.
ill tile study,. but continues to increase cases of luna can~r f>er I 00,QOO The rate_int(eascd by 17 percent frorp in women. --. ~ popu at10.n in-"!98 , compa~to-:a 19~te>+98$. ---
The statialics used in the report arc ~te of 84 m 1984. The report said this The report sai'd thnates ilicrcase
from the yean 1950 to l 98S and ~ere is the IQwest rate since 1977. . very steeply in 'post-menopausal
ciompiled by the NCI from a variet~ of For black maJes, the rate declined women. For women under 50. the
studies to present what the agency from 135.S per 100,000 in 198~ to rate is 32.8 per 100,000, while for
called "a very gene~ picture" of 124. 7 in 1985. "the lowest rate sancc those over 50, the rate is 335.
cancer incidence, mortality and 1981 for black males." Other findings include:
survival over 31h decades in America. A~opg females. lung cancer rates •Stomach cancer incidences· and
Cancer deaths. in general, .the ~ave ·~~sed generally, but the rate deaths have decreased sharply in the
report said. are declinina fbr most lfe 1s dcchna.na amona women under &JC last 35 years, but the decline in rate arouJSs, thouah there arc increases an 45. Over the ·decade 1975-85, t])e has flattened somewhat in recent
death and incidence in specific types number of lung cancer cases among years. The NCt estimates 24,600 new
of cancer. . females increased at ~he rat~ o~ about cases in 1987, with 14,200 deaths.
''The cancer mortality rates among 4. 7 pe.rcent a Y,~r. wath an anc1dence •Colon and rectal cancer: mortality
Americans under the aac of 55 have rate an l 98S of about 36.3 per-is declinin..a, despite an increase in
been dccreasina during the · time 100,000. cases. indicative of earlier detection
period .... 1950 to 198.S (and) for aJI age . Lung cancer death among females and more effe<;tive treatment.
• .poups.J.tp to the qc of 8.S when lung increased about 5 perce_nt a year over . •Prostate cancer. which has risen
cancer, a la~ly prcven~t?le disea~. the measured d~cade and reached sfeadily in recent years, is 'Showing is excluded,' the report said. '26.8 per 100,000 an 1985. -f bT · b t · th
Can-r amon• the youn• under The report said increased screening si~ns 0 sta 1 mng. u remeans c ...... ·-.. tharo leading cause of cancer death l8C IS, has shown the most amprove-activities are leadina to the discovery among males.
ment in mortality rates in recent of more previously undetected ca~ •
' yoan; the report said. Cancer death of breast cancer, but that the effon as •Cervical can~r strikes about
am<>!luhe young was at about 3.3 per not as successful as it .sho~ld be. 12.800 women a year and kills 4.500
100 000 population in 198S, a de-Systematic and regular screenang can annually. But the incidence and crease of about 33 percent over 3S lead to early dttection, which can monality have fallen more than 70
years, accordina to ·the repo_rt. significantly enhance survival rates. _percent in the last 35 years.
U.S. Temps
TUllDAY
2:2241."'-
•'11 A.I'll.
3'37 P·"'· 10:20P-"'
... u
1.1 u 1.1 4,0
-IRVINE-PONDERSOPEN SPACE PLAN ••. Evangelical_church yollth study
From Al ' .
Ta.king into account open -space
within ttie city limit and within its
sphere of influence. Plan A would
aJlow 13, l 70 acres of open.space and
Plan B would offec 16.00 I acres. The
current aeneral plan allocates 11,062
acres of open S{>ICC.
When the city is built out. Plans A
and B would reserve 27.I and 32.9
percent of the land as open space.
respectively. The city's current plan
allows for 22. 7' percent of the land to
be preserved for open space.
As a trade-off. Irvine Co. represen-
tatives say either land not previously
allowed for developm.ent would have
to made available. or increased
d~nsity would have to be considered
fQr areas already slated to be de-
veloped.
Mike LcBlanc. senior director of
resou~ entidt.plcnt for The Irvine
Co., called Plans A and B "'an
effective pla'fl'nin,g _tool:· but said
neither is curreftlff'acc.eptable.
"We do not believe that either
alternative is an appropriate plan for
, the city or for ourselves:· said
LeBlanc ..
In fact. city officials say the two
plans arc being considered as ex-
tremes from which a plan could
eventually be selected. In effect. Plan
A and Plan B represent what Cit)
officials consider the maximum and
minimum possibilities fo r develop-
ment, iccording to Brent Cooper, an
associate planner for the city.
Not surprisingly. most residents at
OflC recent 'public he~ring favo~ed Pfan--U:-wn!Ch, frr addtt+on to allouni_
the most acreage for open space.
would allo~ no development at all on
Quail Hill long a symbol of open
space interests within the city. Quail
. Hill actually is a stretch of hills near
Jeffrey Road and· the San. Di~o
Freeway tjlat arc pan of the m1grataon
path for Canadian geese that forage in
the grassy slopes each winter.
"We feel that we can suppon B. but
I do have some reservations in my
mind." said Sandra McFadden. presi-
dent of the Colony Homeowners
Association'. ·
McFadden included within her
concerns the loss of the city's only
cemetery, located near her home.
"You can be born and you can live.
(in Irvine)," McFadden said. "But to
die; you have to go someplace else." / Irvine Mayor Larry.. Agran re-
sponded with philosophical humor:
"Eternal life. pan of the gencfal
plan."
Other residents lamented the
potential loss of a*ricultural land.
The Irvine Co. considers agriculture
use to be an ··interim use." according
to Cooper. _
An area of panicular concern to
city planners is an unobstructed
stretch of land from the city to the
ocean. known in bureaucratic circles
as the Jeffrey Open Space Spine.
According to Cooper, each plan calls
for at least a portion of this land to be
preserved .
LcBlanc said that one area being
considered for a potential increase in
development density is the land near
Jeffrey Road between the Santa Ana
and San Diego freeways.
The-council could ~<>nEe.}vably
reject the id~ ofa plan falling within
.
the boundaries of Plans A and' 8.
However. if it did. the massive
environmental impact repon : which
Agran said makes "Gone With The
Wind" look skinny, would be tossed
out and dty planners would have to
stan over.
Another option, according to
Irvine senior planner Steve Hauben.
would be for" the city and The Irvine
Co. to reach no agreement at all. In
that case, Hauben said, Irvine would
continue to attempt to control land
use through regu'lation as they have
done in the past. •
But LeBlanc said Irvine Co. nego-
tiators_ are still hopmg to reach an
agreement with the city.
A negotiated agreement. which
would ultimately transfer the land in
question from private to public
ownership, would benefit all pames
involved, according to Hauben. It
would free Irvi ne officials from the
piecemeal approach to. city planning
and would allow the staff to make
long range projections. fn addition. a
homeowner could buy propen y an
Irvine with a more realistic vision of
wllat development will occur around
that propeny, and The Irvine Co.
could concentrate on building and
construction rather than public hear-
ings. Hauben said.
Councilman Ray Catalano said it is
unlikely that any decision will be
made o n a final plan without a vote of
the people. In order to qualify for the
June ballot. a resolution would have
to be approv~d by the City Council by
March 11.
Public1tearingsw111 continut"Feb. 9
at 4 p.m. I
NEWPORT WARY OF IRVINE CHANGES •..
From Al
. ~
finds 40 percent had sex byl8
WASHINGTON (AP) -More
than 40 percent of teen-agers who
attend conservative churches have
had sexual intercourse by the age of
J 8. while one-third·ded ine to brand
stx outside marriakc as morally
urtacceptablc. according to a study
-released today.
The '.'Teen Sex Survey in the
Evangelical Church" found that 43·
pert:ent of the "churched vouth" who
responded to a confide'ntial. four-
page questionnaire had sexual inter-
course by their 18th binhday.
Thiny-five percent of the 17-year-
olds said they had engaged in sexual ·
intercourse. while 26 percent of the
16-year-olds said they had had inter-
course.
The questionnaire was given to
1.438 young people. aied 12 to 18. last
June and August Eight evangelical
denominations conducted the survey
of the churched youths. who they
describe as teen-agers who are regular
attenders.
By comparison. a ~uis Harris and
Associates poll in ~ber 1986-
found th~r.S7 percent of the nation's
I 7-year-olds a re-sexually ex-
perienced. while 46 percent of the 16-
ycar-olds and 29 percent of the 15-
year-olds said the} had' had sexual
an tercourse. .
The poll. which was conducted in·
personal interviews with a national
sample of 1.000 teen-agers. had a
margin of error of three percentage
points.
Sixty-five percent · of those
surveyed said intercourse by unmar-
cied couples was never morally accep-
table, the study reponed.
Eight percent of the respondents
said intercourse was always morally
acceptable between unm<trried but
willing people, while 17 percent said it
was sometimes acceptable and 11
percent were not sure. .
Forty-two percent of the teen·agcrs
said thev had fondled the breasts of a
member of the opposite sex. while 33
percent said they had fondled a
partner's genitals.
Thiny-cight percent of the survey
~roup said they obtain most of their
tnfonnation about sex from their
friends, while 27 percent listed mov-
ies as their main source and 23
perccn1 said ,parents and scbools
classes provided much of their in(or-
mation about sex.
Seventy-three percent said they got
little or no information abOut sell.
from their church.
The teen.agers in the survey were
-pr"tdomanantly-white, from stable
home environments and describved
themselves as A or 8 students:
Fony-four percent were from the
central states and 27 pen:cnt from the
South.
Eighty-three percent of the teen~
agers said they are weekly
churchgoers. while 82 percent said
they know Jesus Chnst as their
personal savior.
PETITIONERS UPSET AT N~ MALL •••
FromA2
"It ·was a wa.ste of time," said serious traffic congestion. S 1 miLnon anusrancc ccnificatc from
Burkette. "We've gotten anywhere Developers. though their trade outside groups wishing to use the
from 1,000 to 1,500 signatures at organization. the Building Industry center.
other shopping centers. At . Hu.nt-Associaition. are mounting a cam-.. . .
ington Center we got 2.500 in two paign of opposition to tire measure. .B~t this time the coml)':ny rt:lade a
daµ.Jo haYe..gotten..2.5J.n-an..enti.re --SlffJ.. ... offa.cia4 aweveia! develGpe-F--..:...dec1s1j)nJ..c:~.,Ic1.th~m come-an wathout
weekend is not very good.·· owned malls, such as South Coast insurance. he said.
Burkette was not with Rogers over Plaza in Costa Mesa. have permitted Burkette said hcwasangeredat The
the weekend at Fashion Island. initiative petiti~~ers into their Irvine Co.'s apparent duplicity rn
··tf I had been there, I would have centers to gather signatures. allowin& petitioners in, but then
refu:.ed to· work," he said. "The Some. however, hav~ put up bar-pre~entang th.em from operating ef-Fashion Island people told~ ne...o.cL-J~:s.-.sw;.Q..u..-lle~µllSIJLWice..re....._,._..w"*"_:__:_ ______ ;__ __ _,t--
F rida y that "'c were going to have a quirements which are designed to
great locati_on. that we were going to keep the petitioners out. proponents "Underthc law we·rc allowed equal
proposed San Joaquin Hills Trans-
portation Corridor. which would, for
us. significantl} d1m1nish the benefits
of the corridor.·· ' .
ti1:· >a1d Han. "It seems 10 be a rather
aggressive move for a Ci ty Council
whose majority is generally slow
growth. It seems to be contrary to
their philosophy.''
be really visible. I didn't realize he of the drive claim. access," he said. "They didn't aive us
··Right now. it's JUSt at the public meant we were going to be visibile but Until last Friday's announcement equal access."
review and comment level," said that we weren't going to be able to talk by Fashion Island officials. initiative Dcsrjte last weekend's meager
Haubert. "Those concems. which are to anyone." backers had counted the Newpon harvcs.f,of signatures. Rogers said he
natural, will be coming up.'" The proposed ballot measure. Beach' mall among the centers where was prepared to .return to Fashion
Newport Beach Cit> Coun-
cilwoman Evelyn Hart said the coun-
cil is "really concern~ about the
de\eloprnent proposal for Village ~5.
from both a traffic and density
Steve Haubert, Irvine senior plan-
ner. said city staff has not yet given
dctaiied scrutiny to Newport Beach"s
concerns. Hua1d his depanmcnt did
receive a formal letter from Newpon
Beach Planning Director James
Hewicker.
Temple said she didn't want to known as the Sensible Growth and such barriers had been put in the way. Island next weekend.
speculate on what action the city Traffic Control Initiative, could limit Coulter said Friday that it was ··1 hate to gi ve up after arguing with
might take if Irvine proceeds with Its development in areas that have ~tandard company policy to require a the.m for so long." he said.
plaosforYillage25.butshewouldnot ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ rule out legal action. II
.. We"ll cross that bridge when we
get to it." she-said. ' -. standpotnt. .
.. I just don't know h()w 1t"s going to
Lotto prize could hit $9 mil/ion
The lr"ine City-Council has been
J?resented with two extreme
proposals for the city's remaining
open space, and a final plan will li~cly
be a compromise between the two.
Plan A would reserve 13. 178 acres of
open space. while Plan B includes
16.009 acres. The existing general
plan reserves I 1,062 acr~s of open
SACRAMENTO (Al?) -Leno._ -Shasta. Oakland. Santa Ana and.San
players could be shooting for a Diego. . , · . .
jackpot of about $9 million Wednes-There were 1'87 tickets with JUSt space. ·
day.-§tatc lottery officials say, _ five num6ers. winning $4.002 each:
Nobody guessed the first · six 9.624 tacktis with four numbers,
numbers drawn ~turday. That paying S7~ and 170.778 tickets with BLAZE ' __ means !hat the unclaimed $5.240.~l . three...-D.UJnbcts:-..each _~ lbc._ _ _ • t t.
firs,t ~nzc wllfbe a~d'cd fo lhc ri\1d-fi i1.cd SS prize in the bottom category. rom Al week jackpot. ea , ... . . . .
Winning lotto numbers picked Sales from W _ ntsday night to Pohce do not yet know the cause of
Saturday ni&ht were 7, 22. 46, 47. 48. Sa_tu_rday's dr.aw1n1 ~ere S 13.6 the fire. and an investigation is in
49, and the hon.us number 42. m1U100. The total of pnzes awaroed pr~~ss. said Range. T~crc wer~ no
Four tickets had fi ve of t~e first six was $3, 728.S28. in1uncs.
numbers and the bonus number a nd Meanwhile, a Chula Vista woman. The business complei1. ls located off
att worth $363.146 apiece. Those Mary Lee Stutiman. 63. won SI Lake Fottst Drive ne-ar the San Diego
tickets were purch~scd at ~ount million Saturday Or\ the "Bia Spin." Frctway.
ORANGE .......
• COAST --· r'ml
.... OFflCa
J)O.WMI 111, 'ii CMM-M~"" C• -...... *<JO.,.• ~ • .>~ C,001! M.,... A > •;o
c:-i.olOJ &t2·5e7' ""-. 90't"• ~.' •l2•
Coot• ,;, 'lo~, VA~ <. ·~ 1 ~~·"' !.. ._. ,. •;
,,...,...,, \'""~"' "'trat 'I"~ tt:)• #.t t • •J\''' • ....... .-.. -"""'bf •e.c:Jt ""f'O "*" '..... c.•·
l'ftdl&O-' c-..-"°"'' c~
Ju.tcaU 642~6086
What do you lake about the Daily Pilot? What
don't you like? Call the number above and your
mcs.YF will be rccorocd, transcribed and de-
liv~ to the appropriate ¢itor. ·
TM same 24-hour answerina service may w
uwd to rttOrd· letters to the editor on an~ topil".
Corttriboton to our utters column must 1nclu<k
their name and ttlephone number for venfkatton.
Tells U.s what's on your mind .
•
M ~V ,,..;M., ' t "" .>
"Cl( ~ .. '°"' ll-· ~I \ le> o m o 1><>• ·~ ~ r
6nd' ""' -coo. .. -.0
S.1111"41· • l i.. '
..., t •r. •• , , .,,
cec,. ... 1 & ... t•• °"' ... -~ ....... ,1'. .Cit't • ..... ~.--
CtredalleR
Te .. phoMe
Wing-Tips
from
Great Tradition
only gets better
. --· 1
..
OG panel seeking
s~nior ombudsmen
-for nursing homes
_,,.../.
A limited number of applic.ations are beirta
accepted for adults interested in joining the Onngc
County Council on Alina·• Iona-term care om-
budsman services, investipting and resolving
complaints on behalf of patients in nursing homes.
Volunteers will participate in a 36.-hour •
orientation and training progr1lm Tuesdays an,d
Thursdays from 12: 30 to 3:30 p.m ., stanina l uesday
at Coastline Community College. 13521 Edwards
St., Westminster.
The fee is Ste and additional information is
available at 972-26 76.
New college courses
Saddleback Collcat wjll be offering over 140
fee-based. non-<:rcdit, short-term courses. semi1llrs
and eve~ts for an ages, starting next we~. .
Spnng brochures have been mailed to area
residents. Funher tnformation ma}' be obtained by
calling'the Community Services office at ~82-4646.
C/Jarlty fasblon show ·
. A benefit fashion show entitled .. New Views in
Wardrobe and Finance for Men and Women·· will
be held Wednesday from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. o n the
third Ooor of Nordstrom·s in South Coa~ Plaza.
Costa Mesa.
Proceeds from the event. to be preceded by a
wine and cheese ta~ting pany. will go to the Santa
Ana YWCA's/hotel for homeless women: The
donation is SI 5 and more information is available'
fro m Glenna Sweeney at 4'26-2929.
.Audubon group to meet
The South Coast Audubon Society will holtl its
m onthly meeting Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the Dana
Point Marine Institute. 24200 Dana Point Harbor
Drive.
Sylvia and Jim Gallagher will present a program
on birds of the San Bernardino Mountains. The
program wall be preceded by a bird ident·ificat ion
· program at 7 p.m. and the public is invite'd.
• ~1
Orange Coal DAILY PtLOT/Monday. February 14 1938 * A.S
~ . -. ·Mor~ eligi~le. for .. new·AIDS d.~ug
Br 801 VAN EYif!N ...............
State officials have doubled the income
limits for those Sttkina assistance 1n
paying for the the dru& AZT. a new and
upcn\ive medicine used in fiahtinaAIDS.
AZT. short for azidothym idine. was put
on the market last year by the Burroughs-
Wellcome Co. after t~ts st\o wed it could
prolong the lives and improve the health of
AIDS patients.
The drug has one major drawback.
however -its cost. which can be more!
1hao $9.000 a year for a standard dose.
'noos ...
From Al
Since Jan. 11. financial help has bttn
available to ·people with AIDS in Orange
County throu&h the county Health Care
Agency's AZT Assistance Prog.raql.
The program. &signed to help people
without health iosurance. or whose in-
suranc-c d~s not pa_y for AZT. enables
patients to obtain AZT .trcatmt'nt free of
charge. provided they meet federal povert)
guidelines.
Dunna Jaunary. the annual income
limit has been SI I ,COO for a single i*rson.
S 14,000 for a family of two. and S 18.000
fora family of three.
liberated animals. The anJmals usually are ch«:ked by a veterinanan and
then given o ut to hQmcs. she-said. · · : ·
."It's our form of an under_ground railroad.'' Eshelman said. rcfenng
to a pre-Civil War chain of acttvists who helped free slaves.
The Animal liberation Front gained notonety several years ago by
releasing a videotape of dead animals and other$ with festering wounds
that the group claimed were found during a nighttime break-in at the City
of Hope cancer research center in Los Angeles C6unty, Stncker said.
But Jones described the group a.s "misguided:· ·
"They are .ti) 1ng to correct something they see as a problem. but the
are reaU) causing. more harm and confusion than the) arc correcting.''
Jones said.
She said the animals ta'ken from the UCI laboratory were hkt'ly to be
treated worse by any home than they were at t~e university. She said the
beagles we re fed high-quality food. and their coats. teeth and ears wt>re
regular!) cleaned.
i:he experi_ment~ in which the dogs were used large!} involved
e..)l.erc1se o n a treadmill. Two dogs had been gJven harmless doses·ofa low.,
level 1'adiant that would allow researchers to track how smog impai~ the·
lungs· ability to cleanse themselves. she said. but none were the subject of
experimental surgeries.
'"The dogs part1c1pate.,\ as long as they wanted to partici pate. When
the dogs decide that's something they do n't want to do.'the) are adopted
o~t to good homes:· Jones sa!d. She said the fate of the dogs implanted ·
with the electcodes was undecided because the study was not finished.
Dr. Robert Phalen. who headed the team of four sc1e nt1sts using the
beagles for their research. said he was unable to estimate-the amount lost
with the dogs implanted with the electrodes. but set the loss for the other
Wllh the announced changes. ho~t'vtr.
ind1 v1duals who have income!> of up to
S22.000 a )ear ma)'· qualify for tht'
asmtanCt' programs. For fa milies of-two.
the nt'w com bi Md income hm1t 1s S'.!9.600
and for fam1hes of three the hm1t on
annuaJ income is S36.000.
"That should allow a lot mo re peo ple to
get onio tht' •program, .. said Catht'rfne
Re}es .. public health program suPP,Ort
manager for the county.
Re) es said that. so far. only eight people
are on the assistance program.
Applicants to the pr~m ar.e scrttned
1hrough a finan<'iaJ ehg1bility 1nterv1e~
during which they must produce a picture ·
1den11ficat1on card and a copy of a recent
income tax form.
Eli&Jbilit) is renewed ta~ month.
although applicants need not go lhro\l&h
new interviews. A declaration that tnc
apphcant's income has not changed is
sufficient. accordJng to count~ health
off~cial_>.
Anyone w1sh1ng to )Che'duk an elisibili-
t) 1ntervie~ ma} call 834-8406. Jnfor·
mat1on about the AZT As~stance Pro-
gram ma} be obtained by calling 834-3802,
Calif ornianLJ
si)lit,ov·er
candidates . _
SA~ FR .\NC1SC'O (AP) -California's
'rue~ art'-e' t'nl) divided between Demo-
crats .ind Republicans. a nd more un-
registered' oters identify with the elephant
than the dpnk.e). accordina to a survey
relea~d Monda}. •
·The findings in the latest California Poll
are among several that contrad ict accepted
political v.1sdom. s.a1d tbe Field Institute.
v.hich ronducts the sun·e).
But the GOP's gain in suppon after
>ears uf trailing thC' De~ocrau ~OC'S not
necessanl) meari a permanent shift awa)'
from the pan). said pollster Mervin Field.
Instead. the fi ndings reOcct a blurring of
d1s1inct1on among voters bctween·the two
.ma1or parties. he said. ,
But other ~ 1def\ beld beliefs about
'oters. including the so-called gender pp.
~ere" borne out b) the S'iJl'Ve}. which
a nahzed more than 10.000 mterviews.
. dogs at S20.000.
Bella vlor support group u ni vers1ty offic1a1s disputed the a11egat1ons of huge financ1a1 wast~
More of the state·s votC'rs att registered
as Democrats. butt.he Field lnstitute's own
estimate -"stnppcd of voter deadwood
and duplication" -gives the part) an
eight-point pluraht) rathC'r than the 13-
point marg1n in the official rolls. A compulsi ve behavior support gro up will meet that ~ere in<;luded 1n the letter left at area newspapers. Jones said UCI
for eight wee.ks. .bcginiii~R-W~saay;-a-1~-r-w··• edu::al.-researGtl-tea-ms recei-~ abottt $50 million annµall} in gran .\ccQ(ding to the Freid Poll. 49 percent
Affili ated Counseling and Leaming Center .. 2850 ~hik the university receives an additional S20 million in donations
Mesa Verde Drive East. Suite 8. in Costa Me~. ded icated to medicine.
· Tb.la pbot~. left at the Dally Pilot. ahoW9
one of 13 doge freed from UCI.
· of 'Ott'"~ a~ rcg.tstercd DemocratS.. 4-1
percent are Republicans 41 and I 0 pcrccn t
belong to other parties. The programs will be held from 7:30 to 9 p.m.
Call 979-4098 for addnional information.
Seaf~d cooklng taught
A class 1n seafood cooking. including salmon.
crab. clams. mu5scls and other delicacies. will begin
Wednesday at the 'Dana Point Youth and Group
Facility. 34451 Ensenada Place. Dana Point.
. All new recipes are ta54ie tested at each class
meebng. The program 1s schCdule'd We'dnesdays
from 7:15 to 8:30 p.m. through March 9. Call.
661 ·7122 for details. .
Drug testing workshop
The Starting Point Community Advisory
Committee has announced a free educational
workshop on drug testing in the workplace to be held
Wednesday from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Mercantile
Building in South Coast Village, Costa Mesa.
Dr. Andrew J. Berner, director of clinical
sen ices for the National Council on Alcohohsm of
Orange County. will present the program. Call Brad
w thers at 642-3505 for further information.
Monday, 'Feb. l
• 6:30 p.m . Costa Mesa City Coucil, council
chambers. 77 Fair Drive.
• 6:30 p.m . Cetta Mesa Plaaaia1 CommJ11ioe
Study Setsioa, City Hall. fi rst Ooorconference room.
77 Fair Drive ..
• 7 p.m. ~Huttaltoa Beacll City Coucil,
council chambers. 2()()(J Main St.
• :30 a.m . ·Newjort lieacll Geaeral Plu
· 0..1reacb Program, Oasis Senior Center. Ne1oVport
Beach.
Tuesday, Feb. 2
• : a.m. 1e oea y oar o •rr·
vison, board hearing room. Hall of Administration.
10 Civic Center Plaza. Santa Ana.
• 1:30 p.m . Oraqe Cpaty PlauiD& Com-
mlssJoa, board meetina room. Han of Adminis-
tration. 10 Civic Center Plaza. Santa Ana.
• 7 p.m. Newport Bue• Parks, Beaclltes ud
RecreaUoa Commi11loa, council chambers. 3300
Newpon Bl vd .. Ncwpon Beach.
.
N~ weighs non -profit btisiness plari,
---City could set up purchasing corporation to
save fax dollars~tit other problems inherent
By GREG KLERKX sale of an) item<; b~ the corporation v.ould °' ... ....,,........ go to the Cit).
"'The cll' would not be in'olve'd in am Newpon Beach 1s cons1denng setung up v.a~ 1n discounting items or pro' 1ding the
1t.s own corporauon to bring add1t1onal tax ci t) with deals." said 1 urner ... We're
dollars to cit} coffers. but the value of the merel) putting the p(lint ofs.ale v.1thin the
profits could be outv.eighed b) problems cit\ ...
with hab1lit) for shoddy goods and unpaid ~ccord1ng to ctt~ staff. the corporation
balances. offi cials said. -.. ould require little n tra staff or resources.
The C1t) Counci l recent!) directed City Offi cers 1n the corporation would be staff
..\Horne.~ Ro bert Burnham to proceed with mt'mbers including 1he Cit) manager.
studies of a c11~-controlled. non-profit finance di~ctor and Cit\ clerk . .\double
purchasing corporation which ~ould sen e set of purchase orders wo ul<l be prepared. a
to direct add1t1onal sales ta"< funds to the separate checking account would be re-·
ci t~. said Ken Dt-hno. the cit~ 's assistant quired and some additional reporting a nd
c11' manager. .. accounting ~ould be necessaf)
the proposal was conceived b) Coun-The monetaT) return 10 the cit~ v.ould
cilman Clarence Turner and 1ntroduct>d to amo unt to I percen1 of all purchases.
the council a1 a Nov. 16 study session. arcording to a Cit~ staff report. Dunng the
In its simplest form. the corporation I 986-87 fiscal year. the cit~ paid appro,.
would purchase and re-sell items to the Cit} 1matel) $2. J m1ll1on 10 vendors out.side
in order to establish a point of sale within the Cit) for taxable Jtems. and about S 1.6
cit) boundaries. Beca~se the corporation million in 1985-86.
1s the '"seller .. -actually the cit) -and 1s The report note'd that 1fthose purchases
w1th1n cit) boundaries. the tax from the ~ere funneled through the corporation.
. .
the: c11~ ~ould ha'e gained an add1uonal
sales U\ alloca tion ofS:!0.000 each 'ear
The on)\ Other Cit\ in the count\ 10
Sul'n:ssiull; OPt'rate a similar Cll~..Con
trolled corporation 1.s .\nahe1rn . "'h1ch
earns an ;l\erage of SS0.000 annuall~
through the S)Stem. according tc: c11~
officials there.
There are potenual problems ~1th the"
c11,-controlled corporation incc the cor-
poration IA-ould. in effect be ·the 1m med•·
ate 'endor to the Cit\. tt also v.ould be
responsible for backing up product v. a~·
ran11rs and ans"'cring for delinquent
~~men ts L1ab1ht~ troubles could surfac-e
1f item<> are dclt-c-ll' e or balan..-C"s are not
paid
ihe repon notes that separate contracts
v.ould need to bl: negotiated to pro' 1de1he
<:ll~ v.1th ··ad~uate safeguard.s" against
these potenual problems ~fan~ c111es '4 llh
non·protit purchasing ..-orporallons ha'e
attC'm pted to t o\ er them sch es. but m·
surance companies are rel uctant and other
r111c:s ha'e t-hus fJr be-en unsuccesstut in
obtaining adequatl' protc-rt1on. th<' r~n
s.a1d.
OthC'r agC"nc1es. such as the" school
district and local bu~1nt>s~s. might oc able
to mall' purchas.c's through the corpor·
auon and reap a pon1on ofthC' ta'< benefits
Cii) officials al59 are cons1denng requir-
ing publtc ~orL.s contractors to pure~
their niatenals through the corporation
T urner said a contractor ~ould negouate a
contract for goods ~1th a panicular
com pan~. and then ag1'C"C' that the com pan~
v. ould St"ll tht' goods 10 thC' corporauon.
~h1ch ~ould in turn sell the goods to the
contractor and place the point of sale in
'-iev. pon Bach.
It 1s C'Sllmate'd that appro x1matel} S3
million 10 s.i million of add1uonal
purchases lOuld be den~ through pubhc
~orb contracts. v nerating an add1uonal
S JO.oc~1 w S~.000 per )'ear for the cm
( ll' off1c1als esumated ttiat 11 ~ould .
co~t SI 000 to SS.000 ·to set up the
cor;:xxa11on The add 1t1onal wo rk n'ught
requm.· tht' hmng of a half-um~clt'rl at an
annual rnst of appro·<imatt'I) S 10.000
.\!though the non-profit pun:has1ng
corpor.mon 1s full~ legal. the c11~ ·s
proposal ~111 be fol"\.l.arded to the Statc-
Board of Equahz.auon for ati"op1n1on
Turner s~11d the-corporation rould be
OPt'r.ttmg as soon a.s 90 da)'s after the-Cit)
rece1\eS an opinion from the Board of
Equahzat1on The proposal ~ould also
n·qu1re Cit~ Council appro,al
$14 billion would only keep traffic status quo
congested free.wa) s are here to sta}. sa~
state officials who predict lift' in the fast
lane ma) now be as good as 11 1s ever going
to get.
.. We have 1dentilied S 14 billion wonh of
projects which w11l·s1m pl) keep us 1n a
situation where things wo n't get worse.
that is. keep us where we are today." said
Bill Baf)e). the ~alifom•f Transportation
Comm1ss1on chairman.
the state's transportation S)Stem v.1th
vote~ hkel) being asked to decide 1v.o
ballot in1t1ativesdesitoed to pump bi I hons
of dollars into the highwa) system.
E'en that ma} only maintrun the status
quo. however. ~1th gndlockJUSt a fender-
bender awa).
"'There are no magic answers.·· Bagle~
said. ··1f I had a magJc wand. rd wave tt ··
Travel on state highwa)s rose from ~2
1n I Q85. and state otTi.-1als sa' •n-e,,a,
congestion 1s · in..-reasing faster 1h.rn the
population 1s gro~ mg. t'' en fa~ter than
nc~ cars and trudcs are Jppcanng on the
frtt~'3\~
State planners figurr thJt thC're ~111 rot-
s•' million more l·ars Jnd :rul ls on thC'
h1gh~a~s in California ti' thC' 'ear 2000
··\\ e are at the sta.ge n~'"' v. hC're tt is
bas1call~ 1mposs1ble to build ''urst'lves out
de"put~ dH'e(tor of the California Depan,.
ment of T ranspona•1on .. sa1d dunna a
recent 1nten 1e~ "If \OU take into accout
JU'\t the dolla rs alone I{ IS almost
1moo<>s1t'lle
··But 11 also t.al c-s a v.h1k to build a
fr('('v.a~ or expand o ne: B~ the time )OU
finish doing It, thC' demand ha~ rcacheddac
tx.llnt whC're ifs pracu calh fille'd agaia.•
Two Irvine men will face
r~al estate fraud· charges
Irvine last ml>nth
A video cassette-~ordt'r. camera Costa Mesa
and gold bracdet ~ere stolen from a
home tnthe3900block ofBlackthom .\ car 'stereo 'alut"d at Sl50 ~a\
S1reet sometime betw-ttn noon and stolen in the parlong lot at South
midnight Saturda~. The hurglar Coast Plaza on Thul"'oda) ThC' theft
C'ntered the home b~ smas.h1ng the oo:-urre'd bctwttn I a nd 5 p,m
.kuchen window. • • •
Thursda' The-innd<-nt OC'.CUITed
honl) after ~ p m
• • • I
Someone br(i~e into a ca r and stok
Hems valut'd at S5.4t-O on Friday.
~1 1ssang are a Ptr-.1an rug. a leather
slq n and 1hc rar·\ ~C'reo.
By ROBERT HYNDMAN 1ome) W11ham Faher. investors lost
... ...,........ about $7 million through Equity ~un"t1es..lnc. ofNewp()rt Bc.ach. the Two Irvine men have betn charged firm opcrate'd by Anderson and
with fhod-tn connection wit~l-Shanc. - ----
estate investment scheme whieh was Equity Securities opcrate'd as an
active in Oranac County from 1983 .investment broker offering second
throuih July 1986-. trust deeds to investors. who w.ctt
James R. Anderson. 41. and Rich-offered high rates of return o n
ard Shant, 40. are to be amianed in delinquent trust dced.s. TM trust
U.S. District Court in Los Anacin dttds. alle~ly purchased from vari-
feb. 8. If convicted. the two could ous vendors. were to be secured by
fk'C xntenccs of up to 2.5 years sif\&le family rnidenccs in U>s An·
imprisonment, fines of $5.000 and aic1cs and Oranac Counties. Fahey
1'Tdm Clf rmitadon. · .tct. . ~in1 to .Aui.stant U.S. At· AndeFSOn and Shant allqedty told
• • • .\n attc-mptC'd auto burgla~ ~as
potential. IO\"e.\_lQf} that Equity ~-.\ 20-year-old m.lln was arrcste'd repolltt"d Thursda~ IO the n block
cutit1t's ha4 purchased tMt. lkcds Saturday e\cntt1pn.the 180()()..b.locl. -Of Bear lrtt~ 1'.M ~-m w.as
during for~losure or collect1on ac-of ~itchell South for possessing rei>prtC'dl) intt'rruptc-J 'thch anotht'"r
tions. narcotiCs.. car enten-d the 'KIOll\ ·
-But .. ma1ontr ott~dttd~ sold ·· b , •s • b • • • ·
Thousands of_:_
abalone tilled
to investors were ne,:er tc-corde'd and. .\ lack ~6-1nch tarcru1~r ·~~·ck .\Costa Mesa-woma'T\ rcponed lnat
therefore. were not secured or were ~as stolen from a prage 1n the 3600 a c;hot was fired into her ear in the AN LL'I O BISPO (;\P) -Va.n-
fraudukntry prepared in order to lurt' block of Re'dwood U'tt't someti.me I QC)() bloc\: of -'.nahC"1tn ~venue o n dais apparent I~ dumped poason itno inv~stors. Fahe) said. tanks at Pac1ti Gas & Electric
The investigation. which 1s con-Compan) ·s manne b10loC) lab. kiQ.
tinu1ng. 1s a J01nt effort of U.S. 1"1 thousands of com~m.al ~
Attomt'"}' Rober\ Bonner. the .s. Man allegedly stabbed by :u~~~tl~~~. than $177,000. Postal lnsprttaon Servi~. the MaJOr TL.... I!
f'raud U nat oftheCalifomia Depart· hl'S ex-Wi:&'e's boyfn'end Unti';1~~11(~~.~1<c,~~= mem of Just1cc and the Newport 1 1
• '-firm that 15 ~annana to build a bija
Bt-ach Pohtt ~partment. • ~mmcmal a~lonc farm nonh ol
------------~-----------~------------~--~~ ~ll·tt~~~~~~~~ ·~~~~~~~~~~ t~~ta~m Ri~a~1~ • • • • • • • was ~n('(! 1n senous condauon th as ado .~ Oonrakz ~n argu1f\3. miles nonhwnt of Los An,des.
Foantaln'Valley
Nsrty S 19.000 worth or cquiP: m~at was stolen f'rom Herb's Black
Forest Bakery ovemiaht Saturday.
The owner said someone tw-ked 1
tNdt up to the ftont doon of'thuhop
at 11225 Bfookhum St., pned open \k front dc>ot. and ac.ped witb iM
IC)Ods. •••
A lktd' ID' a mood pri« oe I 1.97S
Fatdpictapa.ctdiiat .... ..nited
ror Ille -111c sao1e ''· ne net. uhled aa Sl.'°°9 was llkn\ 'r dly hm 1 m.-tt ai 11105 TiltoG
'Ciide.
Thieves u.~ a dtnt1)U.lkl' to break., ~ vandal smas~ tt'IC •1ndow of a mom in& after he !''5 al!clcdl) then fiahuna. and Gonulei.allqtdl) "The e Mtcncx poiats to a ck-
opcn the lock on a In.d's carnpn wbnc_ 1978 Cfl(l11lac A«twood $tat*d by hJ:t e~·•ift t' bo)friend at S)WM!d• lntt~-.nd slabbed..Guerdado-:-i1btntc. act.... md ~ s.atDn.
shell parked at 11919 Vert.ena Coun. · perked Saturday_ on East ~lboa her Huntancton Beaci\ ho rM Sunda.l once 1n \M abdomnl G uardado pm~nt of ~be1one Unlirruted.. Thcy~\)Cd•ithSl.96Sintoe>tund Boukv-an:l. caus1na an n t1matcd n\lht,pohttsa1d, m•:rcd a~-. from the home. and Tht inadern is bri111 unr•-..ud
stcrcocquapmentdurina the Saturday St 2S damaee. • • • Shonly afttt ~ p1m •• John Guard· GoiUala t\N. as felon) 'andalism. MICOf'di111 to LL
thefts. Casi\ and ch«ts totalhn& S800 ~o Jr. UTlYe'd at the 1208 Hunt· n.t c~-.,,~ tclq>honcd pohtt and Tom Gam~-. ~ ~cd stolen late last Wttk lft&.lOn Strhoml' oftnse,·Wl~. ~hote perwnedJCS. MotratedGuanl8doat S\aton' finn kilt 121.000 a'Mllm, -. Dn __._ D&tM was not tt'lt.attd. ~ ao thew ud *-uutPonedJtan. to '..i..ect brt~cn "'S cn11-.t IO cm11
JJVom I ~."tlGtrttt. Huacilll'OI' lkach poWt repom.. UCI MedteaJ Center an Ora._ He eeCb. PGA.£ •Ito'-w 1hl•1
SU Los ~tel Later basatetball Quardado was R"J>O!\tdl>' asked by -as reponaS an scnous but "8bk S... md.. ' ~~won.bSt0$,wtrtao.t iJs·u-Mfr to aea\c the hol.M, "'1acfl condirioft tbilmom~ .A.......,,~iecalt '" 1•1•• or S10len "him a bomc oa Elc~ M did afttr a bnd° arp.mnt. accord-Qorua)a ._ ca t bl pohC( a 11C9t ~le k dllll ...._ • CCM'l. 'Re ml"' lltd 11r 1r1 llw •10 .ri1neurs. ~ short ~ ftom mme .ar _.,...._ ~~.pm-
tdcb a1 lk bOmt ota had~ G_,.. •~s fOlWMd 1n10 the aod boobd lnto Hunt1.atton ._. 61 IMM .,.al; n f11J ..._ ~--
din· IM) -~ bttft dwowa "8Wa) 6'08.t YMI bY DI\ t6Gouala.._ 29. • Cil) Jail oa ~ of anem.oced .. w, f'MY _,. a... iiiil Mirick~. "8n1Pio)ed S&udc9l from °'111111 1kW*r. His t..I..., tt\ 11 Sll0.000: .... ~
~ , ... \ .. ~ -
-.
.·
0:1• Oilil•DM.Y N.OT/ MoncMy, Febtualy 1, 1MI
· ese plaaDing r~sponse
on piPellDe·teYelations
W ASHINOTON (AP)-Anomey
General Edwin· Meese Ill was plan·
nina to respond publicly today to
revelations of his involvement in a n
aborted Iraqi pipeline project that
included planned.payoffs to :i hiah
Israeli oflida11 a Justace Department
spokesman saad.
Meese huddled with his personal
la~en this momina at the Justice
Department, facing a week that
includes 1 courtroom a~rance in
the Wcdtecb scandal and 1 pand lury
appearance in the Iran.Contra affair.
said administratiOn souroes who
spoke on condition ofanonymity.
Justice Department spokesman
Terry Eastland said Meese would
read a statement on his involvement
in the pipeline project to reeoners,
but would not answer questab ns on
the matter, which is under criminal
invcstiption.
At the White H ouse, President
Reapn's spokesman said the presi-
dent hasn't spoken with Meese about
the crilJ).inaJ investigation into his
role 1n the pipeline project because it
is "not appropriate." ·
"We don't want to interfere·wi th
the independent counsel's wo rk."
41 % of pregnant
sailors are single
WASHINGTO (~P) -A stud~
b)' a . Na'> nurse suggests a re-
markabl} high percentage of the
sailors '.'ho become pre$nant are
unmarned. raising scns1ttve ques.-
tions about th~ !>~r' ice's assimilatton
of women.
The stud). conducted b} Cmdr.
Jud} J Glenn. a nurse m the
ohlli'tncs and g)n.c.colog) depart-
ment of the an Diego Na, al Hospi-
tal. found that ~I percC'nt of the
enlisted "omen "'ho became preg-
nant dunng a recent I 0-month penod
IA.ere s1ngk at the ume
The stud) focused on 789 acu \ e-
d\Jt) women who soug.ht prenatal
care 1lt the an Diego rac1ht~ from
Jul) 1986to \.fa~ 1987 Ofthattotal.
' 323 said the' we're not ma med
.\ccor.dmg to the l C eni.us
Bureau. 17 percent ot .\mencan
women gt' 1ng binh dunng tht' ~ear
endmg 1n June 1986 ""ere unmamcd
said White House s~man Marlin WaJlach, had a financial interest in
Fitzwater. the Iraqi project and sent theauomey
In respo~sc to questions whether ~neral • memo citina a plan 10 pay
anyofReapn's topaideshadadvised off a top Israeli offid al in retum fora
Reapn that MceseP1ould stop down. guarantee that Israel would not bomb
the spokesman said there has been thl) pipeline. sources close to &he "absolut~ly none." invcstiaation have confirmed.
Top White House -aides were t he J 977 foreian Col'T\.lpt Prac-
briefed o.n Mecsc's role by indepen-tic~ Act aenerally forbids companies ·
dent counsel James C. Mc Kay last and individuals from making pay-.
week. ments to foreian aovemment officials
Finwater also ¥clincd to say to secure help in obtaining or retain-. ~het~er R~n had approved the in& business. Under that act. the P•P,C!1n~ project, . . attorney general 1s resPQnsible for l.m.~ust ~t &P•na to act an&o any prosecuting American citizens or detail~. he said. . c-om~nies that ry to bribe foreign Whne House ch1efof stafTHO'Wlrd officials ·
Baker said Sunday that Reqan is -·
concerned about a crimina.,.investiga-James R<><;ap. an attorney for
t1on of Mttse's role in the project. but Meese, has ~·~ th~ attorney l cneral
added that the president isn't about to had o n!y a hm1.~~ involvement wnh
throw his longtime friend "to the thf P~JCCt a!'d d1.d not approach a ny lions... t~rae!1 official Y."llh ~spect to the
"He contln~ to have full con-ptpehne ma tter,
fidence in his attorney general.'' But today's New York T imes
Baker said. ··1 sec no ~son on earth quotes i n unide ntified source who
for the pttSident to take any actiori said Meese wrote a letter in 1985 to
unless and until it's made to appear Shimo n Peres. who was prime minis·
that Mr. M~ has done something ter of Imel. afler he had written to
wrong." , Meese expressing Israeli suppoct for
A close friend of Meese. E. Robert construc tion of the pipeline.
Sessions: Groups not
iQ.filtrated for politic~
SAN ANTONIO. Texas (AP) -
FBI Director Wilham Ses.s1ons de-
nied that the bureau fnvesti~tes
dissident groups because of politics.
despite complaints from groups op-
posed to Reagan administration poli-
cies in Central Amenca.
Sessions said Saturdav that at-
tome)' gei'leral's lUtdeltne·s were fol-
lo"ed during an 1n,est1ga11on of a
coaliuon of organ1za11ons called the
Committee m Sohdant} with -the
People of El Sahador (CISPESI.
The allegations of f131 excesses
were raised last week b' the Center for
Constituttonal Rights: a ci vii rights
organization that used the Freed om
of Information .\ct to obtain more
than 1.000 pages of FBI d~uments.
The FBI has ackno"' !edged that 1n
IQ I tt began the im est1itatJon of .
CISPts. but neither the agency nor
Sessions said what crimes had been
alleged.
O ne FBI document, however. said
the investigation was aimed at find-
ing out the eJC.tent ofCISPES support
of tcrron sm 1n El Salvador and the
potenttal ofcomm1tt1ng terronst acis
m the Unttcd tates.
Sessions. a former federal Judge
who became f131 director last )car.
said he had not read the entire report
about to-: 1n,esttgat1o n but assumed
the guidelines were followed ahd that
the agency did not '1olatc anyone·~
cavil ripm.
Session~. who said he anticipated
no f131 poltc) changes in !tuch
1nvest1gauons. denied the group was
in' esttgated JU!it becau!tC of its polttt·
cal leanings.
Jam•Denby
Denby calls
prison release
unconditional
WASHINGTON (AP) -James
Denby said tod.a} he will tell m em-
bers of Congr.css he SOJ>ports peace in
Central America but insisted his
release from a N icara&uan prison d id
not come in return for a promise to
oppose aid to Contra rebels.
· ''I'm not lo bbying here." the Illi-
nois farmer said after arriving in the
nation's capital two days after bemg
freed by the Sandin1stas.
But he said he would return a favor
to Bill Press. a Democrat running for
the U.S. Senate in California. and
oth'rs who helped negot iate his
release by relaying their opinions to
·Ho use members voting Wedpesday
on Contra aid.
lo ~a 's top_pap~r
.'endOrsing Dole,
s1ngles out Simon .
BJ ne AIMdllte4 Preti nat ional GOP delqaies. Jn I.he end, it
was 37 for Bush, 32 (or K~p and
Vice President deorse Bush said ciaht for Robenson, who rct\ased to
today the Iran-Contra issue cominues accept the results.
to dot him because "h.'s politic~! Robenson baeke~ also have been
season." Bush lost the endo rsement tryina to make pans In Kansas..
of Iowa's laracst ne wspaper to GOP Dole"s home turf. The . state'• Re-
presidential rival Bob Dole because pu~lican delqate..selectJon process
of the arms-for-hostages affair. ~ns today with county cauaateS.
The Des Moines Register also ·wh ich continue throuah the week. .
sin&)ed out Sen. Paul Simon of The Super Bowl figured in the pme
Jllinois as its favorite Democrat, as pl~ns of several contendns. Fonner
Bruce Babbitt criticized the.. Demo-Cdlorado Sen. Gary ~~n stay~
cra tic field for being "part of the home to watch on telev1s1on as has
problem." . hometown Denver Broncos. were
A week before Iowa's precmct crushed .42-10 by the Walhanaton
caucuses. Bush said he's answered Redskins. Kemp, a former PR? foot-
questions over and over about the ball player, was in the stands if! San
Tran-Contra issue. "I think the prob-Diego. .
lem is. some people don't like the All the Democrats were camp&l&n·
answers," Bush said on the NBC ing in Iowa today except Tennessee
"Today" show. Sen. Alben Gott< Jr., who abeodoned
"It's political season." be said. the sta te to concentrate on the South.
"People are goini to want to conti~ue The Des Moines Register. Iowa's
10. raise some~h1n~ that they think largest-circulation ncwspeeer. o n
might be n~gat1ve . ., . Sunday endorsed Bush's chief GOP
.Meanwhile. prayer an~ poht1cs rival, ·0o1e. speakina approvinaly.of
mmjled as !esse Jackson s Def!lo-the senator's "tradiuonal "Mad·
crattc ~mpa1gn passed the coll~uon western Republicanism." The paper
plate . m about 500 c~urches na-faulted Bush for supporting the secret fion~1de, a nd a procession of GOP arms sales to Iran.
candidates sought the support of the .
nation's ~lig'°us broadcasters. Bush told The New York Times
Bush was basking in a weekend over the wttken~. in response to
victory in Michigan .. where sup-written questions. that he has "no
porters of Pat Robertson. m tempor-precise recollcct1 on" of whe!" he
al) alliance }Nith Rep. Jack Kemp. learned of the Iran antis sal~. but that
had threatened to embarrass the vi~ he did not oppose the pohcy wtren
president as the state ·picked the first told of 1t.
"These guys are interested in the 1 t
peace process.''hesaid."They'revery Contra a1· d p an' s VO e much against giving any more aid to
the Contras. An) body who will do .. A, ~~~}~e:n~i~:~1·~c~.i.wanttohelp considered inJ· eopa-Ftty'
Denb} said he ~ould be spending
the next da} or so.visiting aides to __ .
House members who worked behtnd WASHINGTON (AP) -A Re·
the scenes lo wtn his freedom and publican sena1or who supports ~s1-
"' tth indi\.lcJUif members or Cori-dent Reagan's $36.2 million aid
grcss. package for the N1caraJuan Contra!?!_
Interviewed earlier tn the day on said toda} the pro posal is jeopardized)
C BS-TV's "This Morning" program. because lhc administratio n failed to
Denb) said he was grateful to Press. gt\ e Congress a sa) in whether a
bul 1nd1ca1ed the Sandin1stas· aware-m1htal) aid componen1 is released to
ness of the House vote on Contra aid the rebels.
ma' also ha\C had some1h1ng to do "M\ vie" 1s that 1he chances for
"'11h his release. passage are d1m1 n1shed." said Sen.
John McCain. R-.\nz .. tn an inter·
Reagan~ package includes S3.6
m1lhon for ammunition and anu-
aircrafi m1ss1les. which would be
placed 1n escrow and released after
March 31 1f he ·decades that the·
regional peace process has not suc-
ceeded. The remaintnf S32 malhon
so-called "norf·lethal' aid c-overs
ever) thing from food and clothing to
money to lease aircrilfl and buy
commun1cat1ons gear for troops an
the field.
NY 'criticized for giving needles to slow spread of AIDS
'1e w "'tth a group of reporters.
Dunng a Wh11e House meettng
"11h Reagan and his top strateg.i~LS
last \.\eek, McCain said he asked
""hcthcr anyone m the room believed
the adm1n1stra t1on had the votes to
wm. "There was a silence." McCain
said. before one official spoke up a nd
said Reagan had "a fighting chance."
If the package goes down to defeat,
McCain said. 11 ts likely that ttle
Managua go' ernment will revoke
concessions 11 has made in recent
weeks, such as permitting opposition
newspapers and radio stations Co
operate. and the United Stales will be
faced with ao even more Nmplex
foreign policy dilemma. .
ALBA ~Y.N.Y l .\P)-Thestate's
apparcnll) unprecedented dectston
fo combat .\ID b) allo"'1og Nev.
York C11' to d1stnbute clean
h) podcrm1c needles will encourage
drug abuse. sa~s that cit)·., special
prosecutor for narcotics.
Stale Health Comm1ss1oner Dr.
Da' 1d .\ \elrod approved 1he e\pen-
mcnt. bclte\ e.d to be the fir\t of tis
kind in the l'ntted tates. according
lo has spokesman. Peter Slocum
.\\el rod had o pposed such a pro·
gram. but chan&ed his mind because
the proposal had been modified to ,•
re4uire addict!> receiving the free
nt•edles 10 cntt'r druj treatment
programs. Slocum said Sunda~.
The program de' eloped by l"<e"'
'I or!.. ( 11~ Health Department of-
fi cials \.\l,>Uld "use lhe offer of a free.
ckan nrcdk as a carrot" te lure
addicts into treatment programs. he
said
"It would 001 be JUSI walk tn the
door. get )Our needle and tum
around." Slocum said. The addic1
1A.Ould recct' c the needle dunng a
drug treatment session and could
exchange ll for a clean one at a
subscquenl session. he said.
The proposal has been opposed b)
la" enforcement officials
"It sends out the message that tt 1s
all right 10 'ihool drugs.'' said terhng
Johnson Jr the cm ·s special pros-
erutor for narcotics. "h ma\ be well·
meaning but I think 11 1s a ·,.el) bad
mistake.''
· '•nv)ar programs ha'c been suc-
ccssfuf 1n .\msterdam and England.
Healrh officials became 1ncrcas1ng·
1' alarmed aboul .\IDS after a state
s·tud} found that ·o ne of ('\Cr) 60
"omen "ho g,aH' birth in Ne" York
C11' 1n December earned antibodies
to the '1r~ that causes acquired
immune defic1en~ s~ ndrome
McCa in said he argued fo r giving
Congress a chance at the end of March
lo hold a second ote on whether the
('en1ral '\mencan peace process as
making sufficient progress to
withhold release of S3 6 million tn
"'eapons aid to the rebels. but was ·
turned down.
As the Wed nesday showdown vote
1n the House ap proached, Reagan was
making a last-dttch lobbying dnve
that included a speech scheduled
toda) before the National Relt-..ous
Broadcasters and was to t'ulminatc:
W1th a televised pitch to the nation
Tuesday mght.
Oiie killed, 13 hurtafter·grating SD officer dies: shot by suspect
18-day-old boy critical
after receiving new heart collapses-at Super-Bowl 1 OK run po?.~:'on?:.~~o~~:.d d•~•h':i::k1j By Tl9e Associated Preu
REOONDO BEACH ( .\P)-One th•' \('aside rnmmun1t,. said race
person was killed and I ~ other~ puhliu\I Deke Houlgate:
in1ured. o ne c nt1t.all~. "'hen a par kt ng Rohl.' rt .\rthur Bode. 36. of
''ructurc \Cnt1la11on grate the~ v.1.·re suburban TuJunga d ied at South Ba)·
· Ila sed alkr a ~upcr .\~11 Hm paral in Torrance Ha ulgate
Rowl I K run. authon11c\ ..aid ~id
Those dropped 35-fect to d 1.on· Fire Banalton Chief Pat ~ust '>31d
• ·1c slab "ere all bel1ned to tx-Bode "J'> probabl) the first to h111he
Nrt1c1pants 1n 5unda) \rate 1hrough 1.onu1.·te and that ht' apparent!) broke
----. the fall of the others.
ABBITT INSURANC
FOR
Eight people "ere ~nt to hospitals
for treatment and fi,e other!> "ere
30 YEARS! I tr.cated at the scene
'ittll hosp11altied were Jim Chen. I 40 . of Palos Verdes Estates. 1n cn11cal
rond1t10n "1th a collapsed lung. Jacki
C 'hen 3k. 1n senous cond111on wttb a
broken le.ft arm and kg: Jo hn La Fa no.
J " of Fullenon.1n fa1rcond111on "'1th
:Z.1 11' ... ~ ~ -E:lf!lil'll-Auto ~ U1·7740 1.f. .. , Old ........ '1wd.
8Mch Ca.
tut\ and a broken clbo"'. Denni~
H1.·1tJ..Jmp. 34. of Redondo Reach 1n
"<'nnu' co nd111on \.\tth a possible
llLD ·DEPRESSIOI?
The~ A ... •crt ........... ,,._.~wrtri
mMd dep a•on. M you ,... depfesMd but•• uncortetn If It la ..,IOua
enough 10 be cooeldered tor a 11udy. ~ call. Our ,_..di staff
wffl perform a teilephone 1Ctoonl~ to let you llnow If Vo"! eymptoms at• trou~ onougti to quollfy fOf o visit to one of our ~
Symc>tom1 of d6nlcal deprouion lndudo eome. Of aA of tho folkM4nQ
O Lou of in..-Of ptoeeuro In u.u.lty rewerdlng ac:tMtloo
0 Feofing .. JI IQ\ Nd, t>MI, Of tloSi II 111.
O C"8ngea In mppetlto, rooent ~t W9igtlt looo or weight Q81n. o EJioaaetve ,....,_Of '9ellng .,,,,.., ltOwed down, no °'*VY·
O OlfflctAty gotttno to OiMP or 1teytng ...ioep, or lleaping too rwucft.
0 Feottng gultty, WOf1hlelt or UMleM.
O lndedolon. Po« memor.y, or poor cohcontrotlOn.
0 lncneaod. ~ PfObloml
To ~· J'O'I ~ bo at leMt 18 yMrl old. PpettlSllCitig ._
,,,...,,, for a ~ of one '"°"'" ...o be In good ~ ~condltiOn
Ouotlfted ~-tit rece!Ye o btW ~ pam, EKG. lebcw•
toty ,_. ...0 WMfiely Yleita wtth • protWIONll-ALL PW Oii
CtW!M.
copi. of ., mecllC9 ..-,_,... • be pro*9d to JOU or JOU"
doet«, upon JOU'~· \'OQt pert~,,-,._. to t"9 '*Of
..... end~~ for .............. "' daprwlaf'.
F0t more lf~1. or an IPPOl"llMnt. ,.._. oel: ~14)-112-7111 Of (211)111·1111-----·--·--·--------(111) lll-21N ....... ,...., ..... ,.. ....
MYCHOellAAIMCOLOGY -
brokcnJa". Ke\tn .\datr. 29. a nd his. da)s after being ~hot 1n the hea~ b) a
\.\tfc. Ctnd). 29. of Carlsbad. in manhewaschasingdownac1tptrcet
Sl'.rtous but ~table condition wnh has died. fracture~. and Hector G uuerrez. 36. Officer Jery Hanlcss. 24. died
of lnglc"ood. 1n ~nous but stable Sunda) morning at the UC an Diego
condition v..ith -purntle fi actmcs to-' Medical Center without e'er regain·
both legs. '"~?sn~r~.u~~~~n Dec. had recmed
, ~tore than In 000 people ran in the lcuers of encouragement fro m across
I O-l..1lome1er race o'er a looping the countn dunng her bedside '1gil.
cour\C near the ocean. race officials Some colieagues patrolling at the
s:ud \.lost ofthc runners had finished uper Bo" I wore stnps o f black tape
"'hl·n the accident occurred. o n their badges 10 mourning.
Th~"1 nncrswereTerryCotton.31 ~ "JerT).d1ed after a valiant effort
oflake'11de. who led the men in a time against insurmo untable odds. Hts
of 29 minutes. 11 seconds. and S}lvta effort and SP.intual. mength demon-
Mo<,queda. 21. of Los Angeles. who st rated by wife. family a~~ fnends are
hc<,tcd the wom1.·n 1n 33:46. an insp~ra11on to us all. said Police Chief 8 111 Kolender. who had v1s1ted
1-fartless often. "I hope that his
m urderer as brought before the bar of
JU.,1tce sw1ftl)' and ts accountable for
i11s h~inous act. ..
.\l!lo part1c1pa11ng were Orlando
P111olato of Ital). a 1wo-11mc winner
of the '-:c"' York Marathon. and
Ol)'l'npte runner Ruth W)soch
r
LOMA U N bA-An 18-dar-old Los .\ngeles bo) born with a lethal hean
defect was in cn11cnl but stable cond11ton after recc1\'lng a new heart during the
"'eekend. a hosp1~~ffic1al said. The infant. 1den11fied only as Bab) Renny.
underwent th~~~our transplant operation on Saturday at Loma Linda
Un1vcrs!!y M~d1cal Center .... ~spil:als.pokcsman Dick Scb_aefer. The infa nt
was the r 2th baby 10 undergo human heart transplant suracry at the medical
cent~r. The operation was performed by Dr. Leonard Bailey. who starred
medical controvers) 1n 1984 when he transplanted a baboon's heart into Bab)
Fae in an effort to save the newborn's hfe. The baby died 20 days after the
transplant. The bo) was born with hypoplast1c left-heart s' ndrome. a lethal
underdevelopment of the heart's left side. Schaefer said
Callfornla Club gets flrst black member
LOS ANGELES-Dr Joseph L. Aleundersa1d he applied to become the
first black member of ·the I 0 I -year-old California Club because he wants to
enJO) life and extend friendships. not because he wants to integrate tht
membership. The 58-)'ear-oJd surgeon and former Army colonel was
scheduled to sign the cl ub's register and make his memben hip official today.
Alellander said he and his wife. Phyllis, are look in~ forward to par11c1pat1on 1n
the exclu.s1'c downtown club and arc prepared 10 cope with any awkwa rd
sttuations that ma~ anse.
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Malenkov,
ex-Soviet
chief,dead
MOSCOW (AP) -Geora1 M.
Malenkov. the right-hand man to
Stalin during the puraes of the 1930s
who w~s pushed aside by Nikita S.
Khrushchev in a Kremlin power
strua&Je. has died at age 86. the
government said today.
f oreian Ministry spokesman ue-n-
nady I. Oerasimov said Malenkov
died a few da)'s ago. Geras1mov p ve
no specifi cs, and no fun her details o n
Malcnkov's death were available
immediately.
Malenkov had bneOy appeared to
be Stah n ·shear appare nt. He served ~s
pre.micr for two years after· Stalin's
death in 1953. but lost out to
Khrushchev.
Malcnkov was removed from his
top posts as premier and first sec-
retary of the Communist Party Cen-
tral Committee in 1955. publicly
confessing to ha ving followed the
wrong pohc1es.
In 1957, hew.as thrown out of the -ruli~ Politburo and off the Central
Committee. and there were frequent
rum<Jrrthat ht' had been shot. He
ap~rently ended his career as a
,. .... " .. . ~
manager of a hydroclcctn c station in
a small town 1n east Kazakhstan.
Soviet histonar;i · Roy Med vedev
reported in 1984 1n has book ··All
Stalin's Men·· that he had spotted
Malenkov sitting ':Vith his wi fe an a
hospital for old Bolsheviks an Mos-
cow. The writer saad Malcnkov had
an apartment an Moscow but spent
most of his tame at has daugh ter's
dacha outside the capital.
Schultz: Shevar~~~dze
to h~ld pre-.su111-01it talks
MOSCOW (AP)-U.S. Secretary
of State Geo~e P. Shultz and Soviet
Foreign Minister Eduard A.
Shevardnadze will meet an Moscow
Feb. 21-23 to prepare for a fourth
superpower summit and help d raft a
treat) on strategic weapons cuts. Tass
saad toda}.
The official Soviet news agenq
cited Gennad) I. Geras1mov, the
F_gre1gn Manmn spolcsmaIL as the
source of Its repon.
Shevardnadze and "hultz met sci.-
era! limes an 1987 to set up the
December meeting an Washington
between President Reagan and Com-
munist Party general-secrctar)
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
REGIONAL HOSPITAL
Juury I
Sheri) and Thomas Mears. Hunt·
1ng1on Beach. boy
JH uryl
Gana and Kenneth Kang. Huntington
Bcach.bo} .
Mal) and John Minar. Ne"'pon
Beach. bo)
Caro l\ n Knic kerbocker and
Konstantine Nanopoulo-.. Hunt-
angton Beach. garl
luaary 4
Jo)e and Daniel Russo. Costa Mesa.
girl . ,
Laurie and Daniel Jonge"'ard. Costa
Mesa. bo)
Juaary 5 \ .
Shawn Larke) and Edward Da~on .
Costa Mesa: bo}
Deora Fernandez a nd Paul Jackson.
Huntington Beach. bo}
Ju u ry7
Shem and Dwayne Adkison. Hunt-
ington Beach, bo>
Juuryt
L) nn<.'tte and Joseph Naughton.
Huntington Beach. girl
All )son and Michael Jacobs. ln ,1ne.
~rt .
Robin and Daniel W1~. Newpon
Beach. bo)
Juu ry 10
Angela James a_J\d George
Laauna N1guel./6o)
RUFF£ll'S
UPHOLSTERY IMC •
..,, Y• hlll' c..trs k t!
'hler.
ltu UIHt tUI .. CISTA •SA-541-llH
Mikhail S. Gorbachev.
At that summ it. the superpower
leaderr sitned a treaty to ban 1nter-
med1ate-range nuclear m1ss1les.
whi ch can hit targets between 300 and
3.000 miles awa)
Reagan and Gorb!lchev also agreed
to m~l 1n M9SCO'A dunng the first
half of 1988. and said they would seek
an accord to cut both sades' long-
F&nge nuclear-weapons by S() percent
Geras1mo' ·said Shultz 11nd
She' ardnadze 'A 111 "conduct the
necessar) prepara1100 of the draft
treat} on 50 percent reductio n of the
strategic offens1 .. e arms ..
Anna and John Peters. Hun11ngton
Beach,bo) .
Jan ary 1%
Amber and Larr) Hams. Costa Me~.
girl
Mand)' and 0a .. 1d .\brams. (osta
Mesa. bo)
Kathletn and Russell m11h. 10 me.
garl
Juury U
Ton)a DeSha~ and Ste,en math
Fountain Valle}. girl
Juaary 14
Kimberl > and Denn1'i Beebe Hunt -
ington Beach. bo)
Juury 15
Chau Thi :"Jgu)en and Phuong True
Pham. Costa Mesa. girl
Lon and Hcnr) Spencer. Fountain
Valle}. bo> . · •
SAINT JOSEPH HOSPITAL
Juury it
Francisca and· Dan1d Robles. Santa
.\na. boy
.JHury.24
Tamara and JelTrq Ward. Lagu na
Niguel. girl
HOAG MEMORI AL HOSPITAL
Juury I t
Mr. ana Mrs. Anhur Heiser Jr .. Costa
Mesa. bo>
J aaeary 14
Mr and Mr!> Ga~ Cox. Ncwpon
Beach. girl
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Basile. Costa
Mesa. bo}
GEJCO has bttn Q\'l~ aood dnvers
nu'lt) on quality car UlSOnln saner
1 l9J6 fn fart. 3 l'fCt'OI nabOnal Sll'\'ey f't
~GilCOa0tu,olv~ ~
an avtr.11gt annual sa~ of $186' •
GEICO •l9o gnu~:
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Orange Coast OAILY.PILOl /Mond ay, February 1, 1988 • A5
TWo .Palestinians ·killecf by ltaelis
JERUSALEM (AP) -hraehs
oncncd fire on Palesunaans who
blocked a road and stoned their t>us an
the Wnt Bank today. and SQld1ers
used lave ammunition to quell
protest.s elsewhere, the ,am)y said
Two Arabs were killed al)d seven
wounded by aunfire.
The upsur1e of violence tauscd the
fi rst deaths from gunfire $Ince Jan. 15
and brou&ht to 41 tl\t confirmed
numt>er of Arabs to d~ from lsraeh
fire since noting bepn ln the oc-
cupied tcmtones Oct. 8. h came as
the United States '°"as making new
ex ploratory moves 11'1 an efTon to stan
a Middle East peace process.
The arm) imposed curfews on
seven refugee camps and t'-'O tov.ns.
and Defensr M1n1ster Y1t1 hak Rabin
said Israel 'A Ould continue to u'ioe.'
force and collective punashm~nt to
stop unrest.
"The main aam 1s ach1eH: calm b)
taking the an111at1 \.e against the par-
11c1pants and the ms11ga1ors of' aoknt
acts," he said on Israel radio aftcr·a
debate on the issue in a parliament
committee.
The Palestine Press Service. an
Arab-run news agenq. \31d l'-'O
Palcst1n1ans were killed b) lsrach
soldiers toda\ durlnll a demon-
Waldheim disputes
incriminating wire
V1E1'N ~ . .\u\traa I .\Pl -Pre'>I·
denf "Kurt Waldhcam "as quoted
toda) as sa)'ang he does not feel
ancram1nated b~ a published telegram
that claims he "as in' oh ed in
deporting Cl\ 11lans 10 :".a11 concen-
trataon camps 1n Yugosla' 1a
.\ccording to the \.\ e\t Gnman
nc'AS magaz ine Dt-r 'ip1egel the
telcgrJm .... as fo und h' Yugo<>la'
m il1tan h1stonan Dusa n Plerica. "'h,> ~Id unda\ that he has SC\eral
documents that "~nou~~cau:.:·
Waldht"am in '-=az1 a1roc111es
.\fter It ''-'3S tC'IC\l'd 10 nelAS
agencies Fnda~ night b' Der 5p1cgel.
Waldheim's spokesman Gerold
C hnr;11an d 1sm1s~d th\.' tt'kgram as a
l1 kcl\ fake '
Mr and Mr'> Oan1d Farmer < n\la
\1e'l3. girl
Jaauary 1~
\tr and Mrs • tC\~n hroeder '>an
Juan C ap1strano. bo~
Mr and Mrs D1arm1d Flat!<.'' ( 0\13
~ksa garl
Mr and Mn Bren Grcg.r Costa
~k\3. ho\ Mr and ·~1r'> tcphcn ( za1!..01Ask.1
f ountain \ alle~. bo~
January 16 -
strat11>n an i\nabta. a '1lla1c 60 miles
nonh'At<)t of Jeru\alem The arm)
$1tid ll )l.QS 1n,cst1gat1ng and would
not confirm that soldiers were rc-
spon<11ble
The pres\ se rvice identified the '"'o
dead men as Moua)) ad -'\I Shaar 21.
and Morad ;\I Hamdallah. 17 It said
four people 1nt'lud1ng a woman "ho
was shot an the: head. "ere wounded
The arm) \J1d th ree pcopk ...,ert·
IA O~nd\.'d
hrael radio $-aid the deaths cx.-cu~d v. hen hundreds of protesters an
.\nabta blod .. ed th( main h1gh"'a'
and thrt·-.. \tone) at I rae11 -vcl:aacl~
andudang J hu\ carf}1 ng \Old1ers ll
~ad thl· \old1er<. bpened fire 'A hen
thn ft"lt their h'e'> ...,ere thrcatent"d
TheJrm' ho'-'<.''t"r. s.a1d 11 had not
•been dt·term1ntd ~ether the lsra<'hs
1n,oht·d '-'t'rt• 'old1<.'r'> or Cl\ 1hans .\
>pokcsmJn \.lid 1f '>old1er\ 'A<'fe
1n' oh t'd thl'\ "'ere not on a ~hedukd pa trol ·
Tht· rn1lltaf) JI"'' report<'d that
"1ld1cr\ \hill and"' 11undt•d four .\r JO'>
1n 1hc \.\n1 Banlo.. to"'m ol Jenin Jnd
Bani ':iim nt·Jr l kbron and thrl·e
WhJll'r\ IAl'rC lnj urc..d Jltc:r thc:~ V.Cfl'
h 1 t h' \t11nc~
ln 'ablu\ thc IJrgt'\t l ll\ 10 tht•
V. t'\t Rank "'1th I 110.000 re"dcnts.
Israel backs U.S. peace proposal
JER SALEM ( A.P) -Prime M1n1ster Y1t1hak hamar announced· that
Israel 1s read) for M1ddlt-East peare I.ilks w11h1n the framewort.. of a L'
m.:d1ated plan he said 1s nov. bt-1ns "'orli..ed out 1n \.\ ashangton
H1: compared the ne"' plan "'1th tht 1979 ~amp [)avid autonom)' plan.
"'h1ch propoSC'd fi,c )ears ofhrn1ted self-rule tor Palestanatns 1n th( occupied
West Bank and Cua Stnp. af\er which a final '>ettkment would be pursued.
··w e·1alk about an 1ntenm arraneement and ot cour~ tht issue today 1s
~meho'A d1fferc:nt from the (al.ltunom) I formula ""e negouated several )Cars
ago." Shamir said unda)' on Israel Tele"1s1on''> Arab1c-language broadcast.
"The 1nten11on. as far as '-'C understand as to shonenithC' ttme span. Then
(an 19791 we.!>i>ole ofautonom) as an mtenm stage that will last five years .
toda) ""C mean something less .. \ham1r said de\ 1a11ng from has t'arhcr
adherence to the Ca mp Da' 1d autonum~ plan
The tclc\ 1s1on ~ad Sh.-mir aslo..l·J \ecreta~ of tate George P Shultz to
con'~ to Jordan" King Hus\Cin 1b,11 1ht· ··1srach po!>1t1on 1s not !><l)lnl that
{ O<:cup1cdt l{eas are not subJet t to nl'g<•t1at1ons ·· But an aide to l)hamar denied
the tele' 1s1on rt'pon .. hamir did n111J\I..10 ton\C~ an~ thing to Hussein:· the
aide tc?ld the .\''>o<."•atcd Pre)\ on lund1t1on of anon) m11~
troops mu' cd into 1hc: do" ntu'-' n
central marl..t·t drea 0' a nag.h t Jnd
arrt'stcd,l1~1/\'m ,f PJle.,tanaan<. Jlll'r
t"o da'' 1n 1Ah1lh protntrf\ '1•1
trokd lh<' ~.trt(I\
't outh!> bl~ l..cd the main !>huppin~
~treeJ 1n .\rah t'a\I kru'41l'm v. h<"rl .1
~.-ommerual "tnkl' hd' ~en 1n l'lk, 1
for more than thrn v.relo..'I Pulill'
fired tear ga> It> d14>pene the
pr •lt''1tr~ -'.n arm\ spokesman annbuted
,, •'lll 11 thl:v, est Bank nolence to the
rc:turn ut 2 <J.000 students to schools
aftt'r J t'-'O-"'eek mid-term break.
In l 1aL.l. a l 'n1ted Nauons offietal
\a1d '>".1ld1ers beat l\rabs wa1ung
uu hi.k .:1 food d1stnbutaon !center at
1h1 rdugcc lamp in Rafah on the
border 'A lth Eg)pt
Weinberger to be knighted in Britain
LO.:-. [X)~ -f-ormcr L' .~ L>ckn~ Se retar: < d)par
\\ \\ c1nbagcr hJ'> ix'l"n a"'ardcd .i Bnllsh kn1ghthoo<l
thl· Forc:1gn, Ollil c: said toda) <.)ueen Ehz.aheth 11
apprmcd thl' J'-'drd un the rC'\omml"ndat1on of Foreign
~nn:tdr. \1r ( 1c:utfre} Ho.,.e 1n r«-ogn111on ol
\\ t·anbt.·rgl'r ' 11u1\tand1r.g and in' aluable"' contnbut1lln
to defcn'>t' toopc.-ra11on ~v.een Bnta1n and the l "nttl·J
\IJll'S thc: I 11rc1gn Ollice ~1d \\ einberger 1s to rece1' l
1hc l..n1ght h1111d 1rum the quet"n at Butlo..angham Pala ... l
~1tht•r Fch 2~ or ~' The honor cnllllcts V.e1nberger tu
plJlc: thl· 1n111JI'> C1 Rf ·· tur (,rand ( rl)\\ Bnt1sh Empm·
Jr°ln h1\\urnJmc ~u• ht'" 111 not Ix· allo .... ed to call h1msdt
"\1r ( J'>pJr I >nh Ar•t1 <.h subJt't't'>. Jre JllO"'l'd to u-.e tht
~ l1t"ugrr;mnn
Brown helping AIDS victims
C .\ l C t 'TI.\ India -For"\er < dltt11rn1a < ,, " Jern
Hrov. n "'ho hJ.S bc:cn doantt 'oluntC'l'f '-'Or Jt \tother
I l'"T\"\J., tlom\· ror 1h 1ng p.tt1l'n f\ sa' s fie plans to help the
'·•1'11.·I Pl'Jll' Pn1t'-"'1nnrr llnd .t v.a' to '-'Ork ...,1th pJtlt'f'!l\d\1 0~ 1t .\ll>~1nthd "n11c:d tales
Election runoff set l n Ecuador
1)1 I fl> I uJdnr -1 ~o opooo;111on pres1den11al
lanJ1dJ ' 'l'rn r11l·d 1r11m a tit>ld ot 111 and .trc headed for
J run tl r >nt , nv., 1o 'th1tt Ecuador ~lant from
\Or'>l' J'' t•ilt·tt ,: thcntherprom1~tota~1hench10
lclJ ·h t'l> 1r .\t \t.t c '"the le-adenh1p of a nation that
hJJ t-t·, 1m\ \\ a .. hingi11n \ dO'>C\t alh 1n ~uth .\mcnca
hu: rnJ' ex ,hdng1n~ •t\ 10colog1cal onentauon e
IJ •rld Rudngu BorJJ J ~:'-)ear-old center-left la'-')Cr
'-'h • hc;u:h th\ lxmnu.it1l Left Pan~. gamt'red about .:'0
pu,lnt 11 thl' ' •IC in \unda~ ·~ elec11on. far <,bon ot the
nlJJ11ri1 ' nn-dtl} t•) J\ 01d J run~IT \ia~ In the.-runoff h<'
v.ill IJ,t' .\hdJltJ Bu~Jram '\' pop1,.1hst v.ho
January IS
lrrm: Jnd \1art1n Prado an Juan
l JPl\trdnv hm
t-..1m anJ lknn1' V. J\ ne ')Jn
CLOSING
''THE STORE''
C kmcnit· girl
Jaauar ) 10
\tanJ .inJ f-ranll~u \kndoLa ~a n
JuJn C ap1'>tran o garl
January It
Ja n1: El11atx-1h E,.1.1\ and \1<.t11r
\1anuc:l Tu' Jr "i.:1n l kmentl" girl
\1 r and \1r'\ W1lll.t m V. h1tc Laguna.
Hill'> girl
Mr and \1rs Harold Barlov. :"e'-'·
port Beach. garl
Jaauary 13
kJnnt· .\nnt• Jnd 'il holas (hark'
E'Jnl h1~ \an Juan ( ap1strano. 00'
Jennifer l l'a JnJ fnl Dv. 1gh1 Ohl\en
l\a n < kmrnt<.'. hm
E vE&YTBING
R EDt:CED
Mr and Mrs Dougla~ Pn,¢11 . N<'v.-
POrt Reach. ho~
Jll.DUr) 18
Mr and ~1rs M1chad E'aos. Costa
Mesa. girl
Mr. and Mrs V.-a) ne ~hlc~nrn. Costa
~k\3. girl
January !O
Mr and ~frs Ismail i...iramac1. Hu nt·
mgton Bcacti'. girl
SAN CLEMENTE HOSPrT AL
Dec~m~r U
BonnH: f:a1th and John Lero'
Encmn. n Clement\.", ho}
Jaaaary7
Michelle Rene Huse and John Rich-
ard Roc,e. Laguna Hill<. girl
January 16
Jud' .\nn .\rJuio andDunt:an V.<'slc\
~le Ian,· IX!ha Po1n1 oo'
January 17
C e1. ll:i Jfld 8Jrdom1ano Ruiz <;an
J uan ( ap1.,tranu garl
January 1
(Jm L'nn JnJ Tran lee \.krnam
\an ( lcmcn•l' hm ·
.\na \1aria < 1omc1 and < armen
.\kJandro \4u1rrl.'. )an < kmentl'
00\
January 19
1m1n and \t1,hamm.:1d (1h;n'>('m1.
. an JuJn ( Jpt\trJno ho\
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FREE I FREE . FH £ SPtNAl EXAMlNAT N
THl MC>fCTH LY
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Witlening fetleral crackdown jolting Wall Street
t .
"Jail senten£Cs seem particularly
appropriate when professionals are
ttderal the tul_prits," said SEC Chairman
authorities· re promisina more David Rtlder. whose sentiments.were
cractdowns n Wall Street, but their echOed by other authorities.
touah talk tesadisruptiveclimate But some deftnse lawyen warned
of tear, say ·tics. that excessive rhetoric might do the
· ics conference in San • stock marlcet more harm than good.
Diqo las week, proSC'Cutors and New York attorney. ..J(enne1h
defense la n traded some friendly BiaJkin noted increasing alarm on
and not friendly j;i~s about WalJ Street "that laws once handled
zealous nforcement Of KCurities within the rtgulatory machinery are
laws. turnina into criminal proscc .. tions."
In a EC of discussionssponsored Bia I kin repeatedly emphasized he
by UC n Diego. top officials of the had no sympathy for .. crooks or
Securif and Eitcha"SC Com-manipulators," but he said the coop-
missio and federal prosecutors erative spirit between reputable
· vowed o commit more, resources to traders and the SEC was jeopardized
cases ih 1988. by overzealous prosecutors.
"First, you no lonaerknow the level
of cooperation you should give to the
SEC." said Bialkin. "There was a time
when you went in, you answered their
questions fully and discussed the
matter. But today. those same dis.-
cussions establish a r«ord that may
be put before a arand jury ....
"If defense lawyers arc wary about
cooperation. i1 makes the SEC's Jot-
much more difficult ...
Bi.alkin predicted thll 1f such
cooperation breaks down, the 'SEC
will face severe budget and personnel
problems and the market itself could
be affected.
"The point is that not every
infraction is a hanging offense, but 1f
that becomes the case. the public loses
Ollar ~ost averaging takes
_aClvantage bf fluctuations
One sure thing in the stock marlcct
is.that pri~ will fluctuate. One tried-
and-true investment technique that
can help long-term investors protect
against. and even take advaniaac of.
shon-term price voljltility is dollar
cost a veragmg. .
With dollar cost averaging. you
invest equal sums of money regularly
m the same stock or mutual fund.
whether the price is rising or falling.
That means you will buy more ~hares when the price 1s low and fewer
shares when the pnce is high. Over
the long run. )Our average cost per
share wtll be less than the average
price per share you would have paid if
you had bouatht an equal number of
shares each time.
Support you decide to invest S 100 a
month in a stock that 1s selling at $25
a share. You would receive four
shares for your SI 00 investment in
the first month. If the stock's price
drops to $20 a share in the next
month. )our SIOO would bu) five
shares. Jn the third month. 1fthe pnce
climbs back to $25 a share. you would
purchase fou r shares.
~At this point. }OU 1.1.ould have
ID' estcd $300 10 13 shares wonh S25
each. which means the stock would be
wonh more than )OU paid for 1t. Your
average cost per share would only be
S23.08 ($300 di vided by 13) versus an
average pnce per share over the three
months ofS13.33 ($70 di vided b) 3).
Of course. if the s(gck had con-
11nucd to decline in the third month.
)'Our pos111on would show a loss.
Dollar cost averaging doesn·t
guarantee a profit -that will depend
on how your investments perform. II
simply assures that )Our average cost
per share O\ er a certain penod will be
more favorable than the average price
per share for the same period.
It also reduces risk because you will
be buying sha res at various pnccs. So
there 1s less chance that \OU will
invest a large amount Of mOOC) when
pnces are al a top
Now ma) be a par11cularly advan·
tageous 11me to bcgJO a program of
dollar cost a' eragtng "11h care full)
sdected quaht) stocks or mutual
fu nds beca use prices have fallerf from
1hc1r 198 7 peaks. If the investments
\OU choose rail\ over the long term.
\ou will have a profit on the larger
nu mber of shares you accumulated at
1111
RUDIE
a lowu_price.
The key is to pick investments with
good tong-tenn growth prospects. It
abo takes COUfa4e and the financial
ability-lo stick wuh )Our program in
good and bad markets.
That's.the only way that dollar cost
averaging will work 10 even out the
f>!aks and valleys m prices. Of course.
1f the investment suffers a serious
re,·ersal and its growth po1cn11al
dims. you should cut your losses.
There are man) wa~s that you can
achieve the benefits of dollar cost
averaging. One poss1b1hty 1s 10 par-
t1c1pa te in a compan)·Sponsored
Sa\ 1ngs plan. such as an employee
stock purchase plan or a 401 lkl plan
that offers a chmce of stock and
mutual fund '"'cstments. 1f,ou can.
This also gives ~ ou the ad' a·ntage of
making regular '"'est men ts b~ auto-
matic payroll deducuons.
With man) mutual funds. )OU can
~rrange to have the same amount of
mone) automatically withdrawn
month I) or quartcrl) from your bank
account and in' estcd in fund shar~s.
Or }Ou can make regular fund
m' estments on )our own.
Minimum 1n"estment rt>qu1re-
ments 'an. but man' fu nds allow
Small purchases, and SQme fu'ndS IA ill
even 101.1.er their minimums for
invt"s tors "ho 1.1.ant to begin a dollar
cost averaging program.
Another alternat1"e 1s to mvesl 1n
companies. that let shareholdt>rs re·
1n ' est quarterl) di\ 1cknds m more
shares of stock at little or no charge.
Man)' of these d1vidend-retn\ICSt-
men1 plans also allo1.1. ~ou to tn\es1
e\tra mone) 1n compan~ sh:ires t>ach
quarter within certain limns.
some brokerage firms have special
programs that let ) ou mvest 1n stocks.
mutual funds and precious metals b)
the dollar. rnstead of b) the share or
ouncc.. These programs also offer low
purchase m1n1mums and reduced
transactions fees.
-l1H1iiliiijili!iifJI-------
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·~0ur1y N~lly'•"
OPEN FOR LUNCH & DINNER
Monday thru f ridav
1 l-AM to 9 PM
Dollar cost averaging can bt an
eff«tive method of getting into the
market at a favorable cost and of
benefiting from mevittble pnce fluc-
tuations. provided the value of the
investments you ~lcct increases over
the duration of your program. Your
brokerage firm financial consultant
can help you choose investments with
solid long-term growth potential that
suit }Our personal needs and-&oals.
M•ry J. RfHlw '' vltt pmidat ad
mu•iu. rooHmer lllform•U.. 1er-
"Jces. •I Merrill Lyad, Pierce,
Feuer & Smi,. Ille.
NYSE UPs & OowNs
NEW YO~I<: !.lltPl -The followfno 11s1 sMws the New York Stock Exchanoe s1ocks and warrants that have oone uP the mos1 and down 1he most based on percenl of cha11oe reoardless of volume for Fr,idav No securities trading below s2 are incl· ·ud~ Net and o.rceniaoe chanoes are lhe ditteref'lCe between the previous clOstno price and Frodav's :i _pm Price. .
I.JPS Name Last CIMI Pct. 1 W1nner\(P ) > + f , UP 27 3
2 Fruhl o(A 11 > + 1-" UP 136 3 Rovall111 121-t t l • UP 11 2
4 Paradvrie • • + 1 UP 9 7 S Anacomo 71-+ ~.. UP 9 J 6 UnvMrchbox 6 + > Uo 9 1 7 Fruehl!u'S J 1 + • Uo 8 1 8 Reon1Fnc1 n 6 , + , Uo 8 3 9 C.enRad 6' • + > uo 7.e 10 Roper 17111 + 1' • Uo 7 8 11 TollBros s 671 + > UP 7 8 12 C.enOevt 12 > + 'e uo 7 S 13 F1nSrBar 5 > + ~ Uo 7 3 14 Tttom Inc 19 l + I • UP 6 8 15 Beverlv 6 + lot Uo 6 7 16 Navsrr wtA 2 + 1 Uo 61 17 SuaveSn~ 9 1 + 1 Up 66
18 K.alv Ind 141-t + '• uo 6 S 19 v1Amfesco 2 • + • UP 6 3 20 Rvland 16>, t I Uo 6 3 21 GoldWsrF1n 32 • + I'• UP 6 2
22 C J Inc · 11 1 + '"• Uo 6 O 23 E·ll HIO n 131, + >, UP 58 24 SpraoueTc 11 9 1 + 1 UP SI · 15 Dellona Co 4~ + '• Up S.7 26 Orevfus 28 + 1 > Up S 7 17 KaulBdHm 9 • + > Uo S 7 DOWNS H•~ Last Cho Pct. l v;eSNH 3 25Plf'.'. 3 1 -1 Ott 22 2
2v1PSNH J15ol0 •'·-l· Off liO 3 v1PSNH 281pl 3, -1 Off 1 S
4 FalrCom •'• -, Off 3
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16 NwmrirMn11. s 32 -2' • Off 6 6 17 ManhaflNll 5 , -1-Off 6 4 18 P1acer09me o ,, 11~'11 -> .. Off 6.1 19 FslUnRE\1 21, -1~ Off 60
20 FiriCoA fll of 6 1' Off i.9 21 HectaMng 11'1 ->, Off .9 22 Mesabi Tr 2 • Off 9
23 viPSNH J 86ofE • -Off H9 24-R~Kni!Bal 2 1)1L 25 CentrriCo 7 e -e Off
OTC UPs & DowNs
because the public depends on coop:
eration between in~tor and reau·
lator.'' Bialkin told a reporter .•
Bialkin upressed concern· about
"fear and foreboding that Is unwar-
ranted." A~ federal prosecutor said there
were valid motives for .emphasizing
criminal charges. .. A determination
was made that there was a major
µroblem: that the iotegrity of the
marketplace was at stake unless
something more than civil sanctions
were used." said Howard Wilson. top
criminal prosecutor for tl\e New York
office that bagged Ivan Boesky.
"We like to think the people that we
have been catching ... arc sophisti·
cated risk-calculators ... said Wilson.
"They undel"ltand that there is a lot of
money to be made. but they also
know how to evaluate the consc·
quences if it ddcsn't work.
"The more successful we are. the
less lik.ely lou of people will take the
rins."
Wilson's contenti on was
cbalk~d b~ Ricbafd Phlllit>s. a
Washington. D.C.. attorney. "How-
ard. you talk tough .... but with onl y
nine assistant prosccut0t$, how do
you pro~~ t~ do it all?" Phillips
asked with a gnn.
Wilson responded 1hat federal
prosecutors would use their resources
"efficiently" with the help of SEC
authorities.
One specific example in the debate
.. . ..
involved "parkina" - a P.fiCtice of
transfen'inJ pa~r ownenh1p of stock
while mainta1nin1 actual control.
Parking may illeplly carnoufl•
takeover attempts 1n 50mc cases ..
"Critics (of prosecution ofparlc•.n•>
say it is trivial -that it's a c1v1t
matter." said Wilson. "That's not
what we think it i$. The focus is not on
parking as such. it's the thinas that ao
along with it." . 81aJk1n said there were · instant'tt
where parking was clearly illegal, but argue~ that criminal liability should
11ot be attached to every case. ":rhe~
arc a variety of arrangements in the
sccuri11cs field which may be lawful
or unlawful. and they move back and
forth acr95.\ that line." he said.
I
,
.-.
,
' Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday. February 1, 19U* •A?
NY SE COMPO SITE TRANSACTION S
MONDA Y'S CL:OSING PRICES
I
I Market holds steady
WH AT AMEx Orn 1 W HAT NYSE Orn
NEW YOllK AP I Fet> I
~y m m au. 4
1
AMEX LEADERS NYSE LEADERS
Dow JoNES AVE RAGE
NASDAQ SuMMA ~ ·
Brokaw dissects 'News'
NEW YORK (..\P)-NBC news-
man Tom Broka"' says the all-style.
no-substance net"'ork anchorman
portrayed b) Wilham Hurt 1n-t~h1t
movie ··Broadcast News"' wouldn't
last in the real "'orld.
.. People "'111 not "'atch me or Peter
enmngs u rL:>an-Rather for our
charm or our·personaht) or o ur wink
or o ur sweater unless the' believe that
the} 're being well info rmed ... he said
........
GOOD MORNING VIETitAM
(fl)
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national. a group devoted to the
release of political and other. "pris-
oners of conscience."
"What I plan to do." says Nielsen.
.. is to give a brief histor.y of our
orpnization: how and why it got
started and what the purpose for its
existence is ... By doing so. he ho~ to
provide ari "alternative for peo~le
who feel they need to get involvc0 in
some worthwhile activity."
Following Amnesty's prescnta•on,
Dr. David Gjestland. professor are'al
State Fullerton. will speak on the
conflict in South Africa. Rounding
out the morning'sactivities. there will
be represcnuuives from several more
peace groups, the Alliance for
Survival and ~ond War.
e A riance. which has been
active in Southern California since
the mid-'70s, focuses the majority of
its attention on opposition to the
arms race and on the dangers arising
from its continuation.
.. We'll be addressing the issue of
non-violence for social change,"
states Marion Pack. who as executive
director of the Oran$e County branch
of the group. will be its representative
on the Golden West campus. "Our
ClNTURY THE ATRE 0
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presentation will involve a look at
how social change has taken place
throughout history .and. how . much
time. effort and ded1catton has been
involved in bringing it about."
Following Pack's talk. the arms
buildup will again be addressed by
Scott Lipton. college coordinator for
the Palo Alto-based Beyon~ War
organizarion:"Our group 1s .d1fTercn1
from other peace groups." he ex·
plains. "in that w~·re act~ally .a.n
educational foundation. We re trying
to reach peace through a change i!l our
wa) of thinking. realmng that 1f the
human species keeps resorting to
violence as a problem-solving tech·
nique. then "'e "on'1 survive as a
race."
In addition to examining rhe-basic
tenets of the organiza1ion. Lipton ~II
also describe Its college prOJCC'l. whi~h
seeks to pro\•1de. students with an
alternative 10 ROTC by having them
create and then execute community
de' elopment prQgrams .
At noon there will be a musical
break in the speech-making witt. the
appearance on the qu,ad of the Peace
Child Honor Choir. an ethnicall)
di ve,rse collection of Los Angeles and
Orange Count} youngsters who will
perform a musical expressing their
desire for peace and brotherhood.
(The group has toured natwnall) and
·intcmationall), with a recent appear-
ance in 1he Soviet nion).
Also performing will b) Ehza
Gilk)son. a Los Angeles singer·
songwriter who appeared 1n the anti·
nuclear documentarv "8 Minutes to
Midnight'' and recently released an
album titled "P1lgnrris."
As Global A "'areness Da\ con-
tinues into the afternoon hours. the
speaker \I. Ill be Jeanelle Norton.
coordinator of the local chapter of
WAND (Women's ..\ctron for Nu-
clear Disarmamcnl). Norton will
address "our nucl~ar rcalit) and what
you can do to change 11. .. She also will
present an Oscar-winning documen-
tary video ... Women For A.menca.
For the World."
There also will ~ .a reception
honoring former Gol'1en West Col-
lege journalism advisor and news-
woman Liz McGuinness. McGu1n -
ness recent I) published "People Wag-
ing Peace." a group of ston es based on
interviews conducted with leading
pcaccactn istslhrougbou1the United
States.
In add111on to the -scheduled
speakers. there will be a special menu
of African food available in the
sc.hool'scafetena. The campus libraf)
Wlll also be gelling involved as 1t
features a book display highlighting
histOI).
For m ore informauon. con1act
Caroline Sobelman in the Golden
West Student Act1 v111es Office.
895-8781.
'Broadcast
NeWs'top
Oscar pick
/
LAS VEGAS. (AP) -An od·
.dsma'kcr has picked "Broadc~l .~ew~.:.··HettricaHoott'lltTVJo'Umal-• -~,,.,
ism. as the fa"onte to dominate this
year's Academy Awards• nomi-
nations. .
Len.ny Del Gcn10. manager of the
Frontier Hotel rac~ and spons book
has posted an earl) line that rank~
"Broadcast News" at the top in five of
the six maJOr Oscar categories.
The hnc -1s for--cnter1arnmrnt
purposes o nly and will not be posted
in Nevada spons books. The books
lrt allowed by. state law to take bets
only on sporting even\$.
Oscar nominations will be an-
nounctd Feb. 17. with •he awards
ceremony ~• for April 11.
Oe( Gcnio picked "Broadcast ~cws" at even money to finish as best'
picture of the year. The film's lead
actor and actress. William Hun and
HoUy Hunt~. •tt ~ed. by Otl
Gen10 to wan Oscars. 1lona with
Alben Brooks H mi suPPonina ~tor ind Jamts Brooks 11 btlt
dlrec10f. ~
A'!'!lJCa Huston, featured 1n "The De.Id. is picktd to like top honors as best suppon CKt~.
Glassy Autos
Advertised
in the ._ ...
•
'.
. ...
.. }VPDl.en~'s gal~~ are real
DEAR 'ANN LANDERS: There whiners an ourcoun1ry. mouvated by 1:00 '1:30 10:00 10:30 11 :00 11:
has been a lot of talk and a g.rta t deal the absurd Standards St't by feminine-
' wrinen about how women have oriented magazine$ and fem1n1st •
_ improved their stalus in the work-a.. • groups.
plact. Bul have they really made any 11111 Some women complain that their
J ubstanlivt prOIJCss? . husbands.are dull. dull. dull. Perhaps
I don't know of any big companies l ..... l£1S the) are ng_ht but weren't they prctt) .
lhal arc run by or hire an impressive LAI dull themselves not 10 notice lhis
number of females. Most businesses whtl(' eouning?
do no more than isrequircd lo stay on Most of the men I have known
the sunny side of the law: employ lhe • anempt lo do the bes1 they can with
minimum number of women so they Last year U1e revea11e .was Sl.3 '-'hat the~ have. To illustrate: Several
won'l be chaf&Cd wilh discriminalion blllloa. (ftat'a a lot ef eJe *-dow.) >l~ars a$o I a11cnded the viewing of a>
on the basis of sex. _ Next Is ttle Wat.._,._ Post CG., male friend. I mumbled a few words
ith-to-many-top schools tummr-tect-ttrttana:rtae Grailam,--Mtlt-f,l:.1 of condolence to his widow~ She Looi.
out lar'&e numbers of female MBAs blllloe. • _ m~ hand and said. "John worked
you'd think that women CEOs would la ta.In place la tlle atlverti1ta1 hard ever) da> of his life to put food
be all over. the place. bot they aren't. I firm WeUs, Rlcla, Gree11, w~dl laad on hts fam1h ·s table. I admired and
find this not only strange bul unfair. t H 5 mllUoa la reveaH last year. respc.·cted him for that." What a
Please speak to this in your column. Mary Wells i..wreace 11 die CEO. · testimonial to a dead husband~ Talk
..... .. ....
• ......
• ....
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a UC ...... • Tine'•
• •
.... ....
....
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....... , .. ,..,..,
• l,mffaflS r ~ -..;. SKEPTICAL IN ROCHESTER. Saa FruclKe't Esprit de C.rp., It about being damned b y faint praise.
fo•rta., wltll Sasle Tom;kta at tile I hkc women. An n. but in my
DEAR ROCH: A.ad ai.w ar e t~aga
la Sleepy Hollow? Gootl p1ef! How
cu YH "°' bow tllat tlle aamber of
wome. "'9 lilead b111Desaes aacl alt
• C9rporate beans ua. skyrocketed
ID tlile last It yean?
laelm. op1n1on the> are ruining it for
Cllrlatlu Dior 11 flfttl, lileaded by thcm~ches b> being self<entered. • F' ..... ll 831 ••
~ Burs >.''t'"lel ~·1
GD It T... TM Olae
ne follo-.1 taformatloa comes
~ from Sany ma1a1lae:
'he lar1eat b .. iaeates . la tk
Ullijed Si.tea. na by .womea: lia first place for ttle fo•rG 1traJ11tt
year 11 Estee La•der cosmetics
compuy, eame4 for lti cu lrwomu.
Colombe NlcHlat . too demanding. too critic-al and loo
ID alxG place It Copley P re11 la Sae aggre!>m e. What •.hey perceive as
Dle10, ruby Helea Copfey. , J?ro~ess can St't them back 50 years. -C.T.J .. GARLAND. TEXAS.
DEAR ANN LA NDE RS: I am_;3. DEAR TEXAS: Yo. say yoe Hile
M) wifr died 18 )ear~ago I haH· been women~ lsawnoevideeceof it la tut
concerned about a pa11em that shows four.fanged diatribe you j•st de-
up in a great man~ ktters !rom the livered. • ·
married women who wntc to \OU. I'm sur e your letter will prod•ee
I txlte' e we are w11ncs\1.ng the some slull11g rebuttals. 111 prlet'tlile
onset of a c:ult of. 01~ mp1c-clas\ best one. "
~y.Febnaryt
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19): Full moon occupies
out stops. broaden honzons. en1oy relataonshtp that ts
. "very sensual." .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 12): Get to hcan of matters.
imprint ~tyle. utilize ability to persuade and win your way.
Focus on sensualtt}. charisma. style. dcsian. frt'sh stan in
new direction wher.e romance 1s c-onceme4..---
sector of cban rclat-------------
ing to speculation,
creativity. impulse,
~·~·~~~--~~---strong love rt'la-
lionship. The "No
Exit" sign is re·
moved -door to
"freedom" is open-••••••••••••• ed.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 2 1 ): Lunar ~sition con-
unues to accent career. achievement, prestige. You'll be
reunited Wtth loved OJle. altentlOn will etnter aro und
securit)'. hfcst}le. residence.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You'll be more
flex ible. burden is removed. debt ts pard; popularity
zooms upwards. You'll receive gift representing add1tton
lo wardrobe. Open lines of communication.
T
TAURUS(April 20-May 20): Study Ariesmcs~efor
valuable hint.· Spotlifht o n change. travel. vanet).
charisma. sex appea . Imprint style. accept social
invitalion. Get thoughts on paper.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Rclauves-fulfill prom·
ises. some seek rapprochement and actually apologize for
past errors. Domestic adjustment takes place. inc~l.fdcs
beautifying surroundings. You could acquire luxuf) ttem.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Inquiry is answered.
financial dilemma will be resolved as result. Missing
document$ are located. you'll be on more soltd emot1onal-
financ1al gro und. Scorpio native helps you gain alhes.
AQUARfUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Dialogue $tarts with
one "'hose .., 1ews are opposite your own. Check source
matenal. be posin'e in connection with l~I rights and
permissions. Clash of ideas proves st1mulaung.
She let fingers do the working
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Look beyond the
immediate, perceive potential. be discrttt in connection
walh clandestine meeting. Full moon pos1t1on accents
money. paym~nts. secret agreement. .
LEO (July 23-.\ug. 22): Stress new stan. tndepen-
dence. realize that "broken hean" will quicklS mend. Fllll
moon in your sign emphasizes charisma. circumstances
that-swing suddenly in your favor. This is your power da)
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Study Leo m('ssage. pull
P ISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):~ Utilize process of
"net~orktng. .. Give and take. be compensated for etTon s.
re1ect individual who seeks something for nothing.
IF FEBRUARY t IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you a~
mood~. sensitive. emo tional. have abthty to perceive
events about to occur. You have special suec'CSS 1n dealing
'-'tlh '-'omen. with public tn general. ·
It'sthe thought that counts
I've been home from vacatto n for
over a week now. and theqiningroom
table is still li1tered with souvenirs.
for myself and decided to gi ve each·of
them a pair of chopsticks."
··My sister as a gOQd teactier of
foreign language." wntes' a chent.
"She reured from th(' uni,·ersuy, Sot
bored, gave some 1ndiv1dual lns0ns.
then devt'lopcd trouble wilh her legs.
so finally relied on the telephone to
answer occasional questions, But the
phone calls multiplied. She was
forced to charge for her time. It made
no difference. The demand ~..,.
No'-' an retirement she mak~ about
as much mone) teaching foreasn
langu~e on thr phone as.she made at
the uni,ers1ty"
Did you kno'-' aluminum heals
nself after it's scratched? Alumtnum
ox tde grows sideways lo fitl the gouge
Keeps on growing until the scratch 1s
co' ered and sealed.
LM.
Bon
Indian tn bcs hunted side b~ side. but
not in each o ther's tcmtones. i\ red
stick marked the boundaf) bet...,.ttn
th('1r hunting grounds. Frt'nch for
"r<'d stick" is .. Baton Rouge."
Can vou define "trme~· 'iot so eas~. v.hat" t .\ugusttnt said. "If
nobod) asks me. I kno~ the meaning
oft1mt lfsometx><h asksm('. I don't
knO'-' .. .
Q Where 1s f('bruan ~nd l t'I·
ebraled as ~ev. Y~r'!> Da'.,
.\.In most onental rountnes.
It's betv.ttn m1dmght and a.m
mosth that 'our bod)· S«"retes a
subsance 10' fi ght cold '1ruses
~n·t turn out muc h of 11 hetv.ittn
noon and 6 pm This leads rt'·
st"arc hcrs at the L'ni, ('fSI\\ of (alt-
fom1a School of M('dtC'tn(' io behc'<'
that afternoons art' '-'ht'n 'ou'rt' most
liJ..d, to catch colds
Q What w~ the fi~t l' ~Jr 10
~pon tail fins"
.\ The 194 Cadillac
Call me an old sofiie. but I alwavs
like to brin! back some little memen-
to from a coun rv I have visited for
those back home· who might not get
there.
~ E1u ~ ,.,,
BOllECI ~L
"Sman idea. They're good ones
and they were expensive."
"On the other hand. I m ight have a
dinner pan) with a theme some night.
Maybe_ I'll give them a Chnstmas
ornament and a brochure o n the
histOf) of the silkworm."
o\n i\mencan named Memll --Moore wrote more than 100.000 -l'N;JIJ~ .__ __________ _
sonnets. Mostly. in his psych1atnst's ~ill •• ·~
office. His own office. I mean. He >Aas
"Did you give the silk kimono to
your mother }Ct?" asked my hus·
band.
"I'm not givmg her the silk
kimono.'' I said. "I told you that. I got
lo thinking about how she gets
dressed the moment she rolls o ut of
"You're right. She'll love the avor)
necklace." he said.
··vou really think so? I don't think
M
AUTO FACTS
~
beef. Besicfes. 1t·s m y color. -SO tin
keeping it.''
"That's nght." he said. ")OU
bought the-te'a sct'for her."
"l did and I didn't. I don't have a
nice tea set and besides. I heard her
S<l ) once that tea upsets her stomach. ._ . ~ .
on a tra\ next to the toaster in our
kitchen'>'' I "So. you're going '-'Ith the "ood
block pnnt." .
"I wa$ unttl I got to thinking ~ou
had to have been there to appreciate
all the \\Ork that goes tnto wood
blocks. Besides. r ,·e go t JUSt the spot
for it in the hvtng room."
Mother has the chest for 1t. I thou.Jht
I'd keep that for m yself. rm leaning
toward.a T-shin." ·
. "The}'.'llk-'112.lced_yp.'~ _ __
"What kind of a crack ts that'. On
seco nd thought. I'll k('Cp all the T-
shtrts and Jive Mother a fan ...
"I thought you were gi ving the fans
to the nice lady who walered your
plants and the neighbor who bro ught
·an the mall."
the psychiatrist.
Q. How much 1n a "Jigger"?
~. Ttr1"e"eubkspoons:tectmrcail~--
The Supreme Coun of the L'nned
States has a police force. too. Of 65
officers. Their Junsd1ct1on 1s that one
square block where the coun bu1ldtng
stands. If )Ou toured Washington.
D.C.. it's ~td .. Y<?U .could .cross and
ACROSS
; Afncsl land
5 Complain!
9 Wtndef
1•M~
15 Sax type
18 l ofty •!>Ode
17 Merti.t -
18 Vinegery ,
19 Smalt b,..d
.
60 Male animal
_ 61 ~""*'l
62 lnaect staoe
63 Bone: Pf•f
~ French gtr1
65 Known as
66 Stud'f ~7 Munter s prey
DOWN
from the hotel. Look. it's not how ragmen
much something costs -it.'s the 21 Spotters 2 Singer Lena 23 Conclosk>ns 3 On the move thought that counts." Faslest gro wing animal tissue 1s in 2• Or-bit pomt ' Loathed
"So, )ou·re still looktng at the fan deer antlers 26 ConYerM 5 Slnger'S
for your mother'?" 28 Trouble call 6 Wed Quietly
I took the fan out of the box and Q. A wC'ddmg ~puon taggt'd 29 IM pads 7 Reticule's
opened 1f. It would j ust fit 1nlo my "CPNM" -what's that? 33 Ovoersturted k111
purse and )OU never k-new when 11 A . "Cake. Punch. Nuts. Mints.'' 36 Idler : ~~"'tar
would get stuffy and I'd use it. I sa~ • 37 Trim 10 Late _.
m) husband looking at me. The firefighter. if typ1al. can cat 38 Mild 09'" Him.Im "Is that the '--st you can do ror a f fi I h 39 W•tern city 11
VI:" '' two out o ever} ave m<'a s wit out .o El111m1ne 12 Ol9CICN9'Y
woman who has gi ven you life. raised interruption. • 1 Stumble 13 ~ )04nts
....
'
vw
lf11l1l1t.
"I tho ught you bought those for
)our aunts:·
"We never see them so I kep! three
you and stood by you during the Jood •2 fussy one 22 Gaw ight
timesand thebad timesofyourhfe?.. Argument conunuesl over how ~Sharpened 2'5Aresor Mari . ----~-·'"" •• ._-..-·-------~~-•
I threw in a panda bear key chain. Lou1siana'scap1tal got ats name: T~~--~~----a4'·9eecelldWTt' ,u• --~---~ -Piii Freoll .
•llTIP
If a car's engtne were to be attached
dmectly to the automobile frame. the
vibration tnd ride would resemble that
of a troQey car. Instead. car manufac·
turers U$e ene1ne mounts for eneme
attachrnem. ·These· fleiuble insulators
1rufftftheVibrifiOn befween fne en(lne
and tht mounttn& brackets. Most
tr1n~ver51lly·mounted (sideways) en·
11nn em!*>y a three·po111t mounltl\&
system. There 1s usually one mount at
each end of the engane. with a thard
1ttachment betwttn the side of the
-.ne Ind a bu~t·up portion of the
body. Other ena1nes have a mount1n1 .
1rrancement with .two mounts on each
5'de of the c1hndtr block, wtth a third
betwttn ti. tr llW'lllS$t0n extenSIOn
lM>11sinc and 1 frame crosa ·member
It '°' do 1 lot of drivu11 over rou&h roan, the v1bf1llon .ma1 Jos.stn your
tf1line mounts. CMc-· them OC·
ClllOM#y. Here 1t.Mf, we sote•lllle
in tervce and rtpltr on A.ud1 ind VW.
Wt'I do smlll fObl, such as oil
cMr1ps, Ind MMC mnnc IS wtfl IS
1n1f01 qtnt ovttl\IUls. We're ftU(by
at 2090 P'*enba. Opefl 8'6 for your
COftVllltfn l~&4«910. Appfowtd
by AM. lllfof cridlt c~ds welcotnf.
C-..... ·~ °' r1tttww
.., .. "' " I "°"' of loott '"""' .....
..
'
·---~--···---~ ----~-----.--------··-----....--•6 Motor part tuft 39 1~
.. ~···-· -··-·-···,....•·-·.,. ··--"'·~-._.-. •7 -HashaN 29 ~Mtwt)..CS .0 Con•t9<1 'I •8 Dance 30 Eagernesa '2 Expert
oen1erl)09Ce 31 ~ hue ~ MimAI tood
fhrud
5 1 Gl.eciel oc:tge
By CHARLES GOREN
u d OMAR SHARIF
Q .1-..\• 0111h. 'ulnerahle, )Oii
hold:
+J954 Q6 KJ IOI +KJ6
TI1e Ndding na~ proc~eded: -·
'orth East South Wn1
I • Pas' I P&..\.S
I Pa~l\ .
\\hat lh) ~OU bid OQ\\ 1
-\.-On 11111. auction. partner could
haH: lour 'pade a~ \\di. and ti ''
~our Jut) w probe for a possibk 4-
4 lll.lJOr lat. Hid one ~padc. At the
c111c lc:\el. the fourth <>uit i .. n:uurnl,
and an) ne'' 'Ult h~ re~ronder in an
11nl11nitcd <1u..:t1on '' a <1ne-round
forc-t.
Q.l -' outh. '''lner>lhle, ~ o u
hold;
+ 95 AJ6J J 102 + QJt
The hiddina ha\ procccd~:-
'ol1h ·r.a't So.th "tst
I Pa~' I P•'-~
I • Pau ,.
What do }OU bid no"?
A.-to en\c '<'"a\lln& nmt". You
ha'e no 4-·4 ml)or. m and, "''"' your balanctd o penina bid ,lJuos,
you W11lH to in-pme. tnC?' tht
unb1J suit is well to pped. )OU know
~here to pla .tht" hand. 8rtt lht:ttno
trump.
52 RiSJo;less !2 RUlhed 45 ExQvate
55 Hourty 33 ~ble .. ShOuted
Q.5-Neuhcr \uln(rJblc .. 1, llulh 57 Nyx's 3' Thick C#P9t 48 Medtterrat'lf>an ~ -rubbef
h Id d*9'1t• 35 lofty.. ... Q.3-Both 'lllnerable, a~ South you
52 Ptrouettfl
53 Cairo dano«
hold: + IU6 A 1065 KQ91
The bidding has proceC'ded:
'OU 0 . 58 Foo1$1ogS 3e Runien MC1 • •9 Veet,.,.,..t 56 Artmc. / + 7 J edherwlt 50 Strong cotton 59 Golt turtaco ,,,-"
~orth East Soath Wtst
·I -PW l -P ass
I • Pass ..
\\hat do you bid n()w'? •
A.-·You have the values for gam('
but \Ou can't be ~ure of your ~t
..:ontract. h might, be in diamond ...
no trump or e'en \pade~. For the
moment, jump to 1hree diamonds
I\ jump in opener's minor 1 fore·
ing. and will ghe ~nu time to find
)'Our best spot.
Q.4-
hold:
South, \Ulnerable, )OU
•IJ IU N.l AO +AIJ*-1
The btddint hu proettded:
So.cit •• .. .
\\ttl ••
What do )Ou bad no•'!
.-Thi 1 a matter Qf ""le It "'u
rla\ thlt t~O heart' I .. .amt fon.X'.
~nttd;Jo no mQre th.an. ti1J lhrtt
he•n~-ou •ant to ka'e .,, M\k.h
room • Po\~ fOt tA.tn t'pklt.1
lt<>n. Ho"C\ff, 1f pannt'r i~ alto~td
M pats lhrtt .._"· \'o.I M~f 10
1ump to amt "' ht ""'. "\ ..
+ 76 ~K8'74 95 + "lfM.l
The b1dd1ng ha!i. procet'dcd ·
So•lh Wt~t 'onh f'.-~1 ' p..... ' • ,.,,
l • , ... ~ 2 p._, ..
What J{') "ou bad no~ '
A .-\\ httht<r or not ~OU r l.t\
fourth-.. utt torc1ng 1~ 1mmatern1l
No trump '' the la<t thtnit ~ou ~ant
10 ttedarc-)ou d o not ha't a 'inple ten~ to pr"ot~t . \1mpl) rch1d '" o
hea.rts and ~e ~ t\at pa1 tnn ~ <t.nh t\'\
do
Q.6-:\s South, ,uJnerahle. \OU
hold :
• &.l Q9l ()1'72 ·~ The biddma ha~ proceeded
. .,... ...... Soett. ,."'
• ,. 2 ....
2 T Pm ~
What IChOn da \OU tah'!
A.-1( partner can 1 s.ut a tamt
v11a1ion. you ha'e •1'f Vtihift 10
CJ1P', Youf d .. mond wal t.s prll'h•IJ
fOOd (Of fi"t ln Ind OUf q9em
ol lllftrts 1• sur~ to~bf • r\u•.t· Bid
three no uump.
..
. .
by Bii LKeane 11' TBB BLBAcma BLOOll COU1'TY
zr lflC1111fT' rTM£ •.
--
"How do you know it's junk mail
before you open it?"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anders6n
2..·t C" , ... '"'""""' , .... .,. •• """*-•'• ~
"You're really lucky .. most doctors don't
even make hous. calls anymore!"
PEANUTS
()JR OVE7T -ooAv 5
A FAMOUS ACTRESS.
GARFIELD
S1-1E0S '4ERE TO TELL US
ABOUT ~ER FORMER
LIVES AND 1'0 ANSWER
ALL YOUR QUESTIONS ...
UARFIELP, YOU'RE NOT
STILL MArJ AT ME FO~
!K..~VINCt YOU THA'T'
-~088E.R f>tZ ZA LA5T
NIGH1 ARE. YOU?
TtillBLEWEEDS
~~fAtRE~f
~ SMOWS A P!SCIPE'7
cm~ i..1Mrr'7 l..IZAAA
--·------
DRABBLE
. .
t.
•
..
....
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham
~
---. 2 -1
M1tW1LSON JUST GOr A VCR'· I '&mR po
OVER AND 90f/ H\M ~ ~ USt fT ! "
1HlfT IE.tY SWtllfl. 71/rtE IN I! P£/t1()C(/IO' w
GAMIN AND PATCHES
11"6~[) TO
BELIEVE THERE
A'2E NOT~
StJOWFL-.AKES
EXACTLY ALIKE
0 -.O:oi:---__::::...t
b o 0 °0
:~~
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
by Charles ~. Schulz
~ERE15 W~AT WE DO ..
I GIVE '(OU T~E
TELEPMONE NUM8ER5
AND VOU ..
JUDGE PARKER
AFTER THE
UNEXPECTED.
LATE Nl(>HT
ARRIVAL OF DAVID OeLACORT; ~~~~
by Jim Davis A COUSIN ANO
ITINERANT
ARTIST. Aeeev
INVITES HiM TO
STAY ON AS A
HOUSE 6UEST I
FUNKY Wll'fKERBEAN
YEARBOOKS
WE'D LIKE ---~-yo ·s~--
DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau
NO, l'M
/W(AI()
IM/SS«)
fT. /?DN ... ,,,,,... ..
: .
by Berke Breathed
nor (1(1,0 <I 11151Nt56 ""5 A rl!llW/lllf()(I ~ di rH(
•COWlflHlN!JIVE MP /MN
711UTY• Miil f1f€ 6TK:XY Q(C-
11()N OF ~~IFICAflON -•
~/Hf'6
t: S1llJ,._ I fNltr.
)
by Lynn Johnston
by Jeff MacNelly
by Tom Batiuk
I 4 • _, • • •
StQn Oft • peme>tilel loldlng
mKll!ne ti • Pf\111'"9 ~
""-"-erM! ..,_ .. .,.
-!"
DUBONA I I I I I I' .
ODORE I~ I' I' I I .
F•CRT 1 · .. I I t I .
. ..
.. ···-· -
. ..
•
I
AM AGED ·_MyPilll MONbAY. FEBRUARY l 1988
Cancer patient enjoy• .Super '5owl. courteay of atranger. 82.
Paced by Seikaly, Syracuse hand I•• No. 8 Michigan, 89· 71 . 82.
·•ski~s low¢rlboom, bury.Bro.ncos·
M PWi
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Super Bowl 1 ~c hardest one to stop was
week ~longed to John Elway and his Williams. the first blad qual'terback
Thru Amiaos. The Super Bowl uself to play in a Super Bowl. His per· ~lonp to the-Washington Redskins formance came less than 24 hours
and three record-setters. aner emer.JCncy root canal on a molar
Doug Williams, Tammy Smith, and he len the game for two plays in
Ricky Sanders and the rest of the the first quaner with a minor knee
Washington Redskins scored JS injury.
points in an incredible sccondquaner "I didn't come here to be a black
to craw a I 0-0 deficit and routed the quanerback." he said. "J came here to
Denver Broncos. 42·10. Sunday. ~ quarterback of the Washington
The~ even broke the record for Redskins.
breaking records. "We don't have Three Amigos. but
W1lhams. the MVP, threw'for 340 we have a full team." he said.
yards -306 in the first half -to se t Smith. who gained more yards in
o ne record and had fo ur TD passes to the fi rst half. 131. than the 126 he had
tic another. Washington's 3S second-in the regular season. said· ''.AJI
quaner points broke the old single-season long. I've been having dreams
quaner mark b} 14. that one day I was gonna score on. J
Smith, a surprise stancr for George guess it happened today."
Rogers. se t another mark with 204 Sanders. who like Williams 1s a
yards rushing. Sanders caught niQe , refuge·c from the USFL. also said 1t
passes for a record 193 yards. includ-was a team effon. ·
ing an 80-yardcr from Williams on "Timmy was running the ball ~II
the firs t offensive play of the second and the offensi ve hne was giving
period after Denver had Lakt'n a I 0-0 Doug 11 me ... he said. "That opened 11
led. . up for; mt':·
Williams wa.sa1dcd by a defense led For Denver. 11 was an eerie repnse
by Al vin Walton. who had 21h of tht' for the Broncos. ".ho !Ost to the New
team's fivt' sacks of Elway. and Barry York Giants in last )ear's uper Bowl.
Wilburn. who hcRi two interceptions. a gamt' in wf11ch the) led at the half
They hamed Elway and shut him hut were outgaincd. 200-2. 1n the first
down after his 56-yard touchd own 20 minutes af\er intermission. ·
pass to Ricky Nattiel on Denver's Reeves said this week they were
first offensive pl ay of the game. ~auntcd all }-Car by that.
"It really was a team cfTon for us . .'." • If that was a haunting. this one was
said Washington Coach Joe G ibbs. a possession.
whose team set another record w11h "We had a lot of confidence going
602. y.ards. QR.lOJaJ offense. "It's no 1n and went out and scored nght off
o ne guy. I thmk Doug would ~ tho the bat.'' said El"'a). who went T4::--;i ......
first to tt'll you tha1." for-~8 for ~5 7 )ards. threw three ·
··w e JUSt coulon't 'ltop 'em:· Den-1ntercep11ons and "'as sacked fi."e
vt'r Coach Dan Reeves said of the times
second pcnod. when the Redskms "But some11me in the second
scored on five straight possessions. quacter. the~ turned 11 around and we
"All of a sudden they got turned didn't ans..,,cr the bell when the}
around and we couldn't turn 1t back scort"d."
..
~ l...ae•pt aC>
around . T he) hun our pride more (PJeaae 9ee WA SHINGTON/82) than anyone else ·· Waablngt•:>n'• Barry Wilburn lungea to try to atop Den•er'• R ick Na ttiel from getting lnto end zo ne on early TD p&'8.
Samesad Afterfirstplay, itWasalldownhillforDenver
Story. ~Or Whatawayro~tana upcrBo"'I A. fensecouldh.1,egone ou1look1ngfor .... h1 .. hbroL.c \\3rcu<..\lkn·~~u pcr \IJughtC'( .\<.alreC'~fC't~ ht'looked • ..l ~ touchdown the first llm<' )OU touch v.alletsand tLe~ "'ould ha"e found 50 ,,1 rl· .. ord h c ht' "'3' lrt'e n · the ball. . -, ., . some B . 1 had a rcJt hun'-h v. J\hin ton (11\C'n the ttw1.c tie~"~" \l. a<.h·. enver JohnElv.a}s:"o onhisJt'r\c~ Thc Rcd<,k 1ns'tillen.,cu~dl ENNY gt J th• l hc' on~ained 1ngton(11J'-hJX'(11bhsofDc-n,er\
looked more like an" .. a~ in pl:i~., and ~·4 , 10 <:.eorc fl\ e touch· ~t~5~~~gr~,n~:ng t~cir .. .,~, · dd<'O'>C Da n Rec' l''> I'll tdlc Gibbs ab1h1' to
Superman . do"ns That s thcballgame ..\t.110~ R v.11h\1ron \Jh:I\ \h m V.alton ma~cateam '-omefrom ~h1nd
Stunned Broncos
t raveled s imila r
pa th last season
SAN DIEGO (.\PT -Tv.o <;upcr
Bowl appt"arances in tv.o year~. two
blowout losses.
Determined to travel a different
path in this trip to the Supt"r Bowl. the
Denver Broncos tool a wrong turn
and found themselves tra .. ellngdov.n
a familiar torturous path.
After a dominating first quan t>r
that fcaturt'd cnsp e't'Cut1on and
1maginat1\t' pla~-calllng to product' a
10-0 lead. the Broncos St"lf-dt'struc·
ted. Washington scored a Supt"r
Bowl-record 35 points 1n the second
quarteron the wapo a 42-10 Y1ctory
Sunda).
Shell-shocked Broncos defenders
couldn't explain what transpired.
"I don't know what happened."
W1thonethro"to R1ck\Na111elfor amigm You cuuldha,eturned otl ICARDO gEI n'th·nhl 11,0., Fourt1mnthl\st'a~n.1hc 5b d d hd · J h m1rronng .,.a, .s u c 1 • ~ R , , h f "--h d ~ar san alO\Jl own.on ~ourT\'~trig,htthenandlel h eu\ ... 1m J\C\.ome roml.l'I; 1n to
El" a) 's name .... cn1into1he uper Volkswa~n 1nd Banks& Ja~m<'s im .,.. in -.tg.umt the C.1ants1dov.n I ·-0
Bo"l recordbookas 1hequ1ckest and all those ..>ther sponso~"'ho paid Thl'' madt'thl· r Jl''1n't'etn1h 1r 'ii£'•ir,1halfl aga '1<.ttheJet'
S B lh 0 1 sta'in-th1·irlan••,1 ·•nta1nE !v.J ' • -10 h L Slorein upcr 0" 1s1on n ~one morethdn St>1lO.OOOforaspot lt•t1tgo ' • u _..., · I Jga1n .. 11 ~ ion'> m1 nute. 57 seconds had e'p1red and 1i 1., ..... t·· The cor.,l·r' "'l''l' u:,1Jnd1ng "11h 1d '" n .:'.l-1 .l >and ao" inst tht' fkar.. 1n • ~ '" • Thcrccords fell b' tht' "'3\Slde in h e-..,,357.0. Den, er. Q 1ce, .. ·qn1•nollhl·•pcn1ng r la' •hcplJ,,,m 1do"'n 1 _ •
Then. after Rich Karlis kicked a.:!+ .\fterthc g;o me John Elwa> ..aid th1<,g:imc Riel~ .inders' I 3 'ards The o tTcn'1"~ hnl' ho~ed" thc ba I I N n'1" lhc na11nn·.,c3pnal po1.-> :ird field goal to make II lo.-0. th<' "\\ e d1dn 't a1 iw crthc bell (In &he in ren·pt1om ,., a \upc-r Bov. I ~cord and dec;tr1•\ cd th1· I >e n' rr de I en St' ~'''t°'lhl' tinr,1 pn'IC'\\1ron3J loot hall
Wash1n gtond··t:cnscputth-equ1 n.. secondljuart• •r)" thl\from.BlM.alled""lcab''rla~t'r I""\., r l II I'' l".JO n!h··.Anrld "11 '-"' El 1 .1 \!''h dd\\ h tkalc,ot1cdan :-.IFI rccord v.1•hthe ,,,,.n,cr ...ikl' um 1 'lOUu "' •r nll'ntman1n1o theballgame.The) ¥>a'"a\. """cu."" at 1 as -prohabh,ur1hc R C'd\~1MIMman-Ha1l tCllht·Redslin' changed all the cleats of the defense. ington .iakl' 3, •a~ from ~ou .. He lungnt rn ep11on of 0 ~ ards a rld h~
Out came the shon ones and in went replied. ··~t.. Jassmg game .. c,harrsthat rn·urd "''th Kcnr.' i(ingof
tt}clong ones El"'a> \81d Lhe L.e~ .... a·s th<' "'a' lhe thl· Raide~ * * * * * *
"1th b: I lt.-ft 1n the first quaner. corners v.crc h umping his rt'Ce•' er· at Doug\\ 1ll1am<,' U !l' ar<is pa'"'"lt
the Washington defense ~turned to thl· linc. knOl king them 01Tthe1r I'> J "'upcr Ao"' I record and his lour
the firld "'llh thosclongclc:a ts on and routes ..... h1ch made the pla)SLake TOs 111: him\\ Ith Tern Br.iJsha ...
Den' erne,er scored again. In the tongertode' ••lop and b~ then "I had f 1m m11h lhe rnol 1e. from T nas
sec:ond quaner. the Washinitton of-one of their b1 It fello" sin m) face .. . ,, h .ima\'>t'd 2(~ ~ ards rush mg
Sanders' TD catch
opened floodgates
I 80 d · bad.":irJ na "'a' 11'snotdt"s1gnt'd to I -yar scoring goJ,hnllpp..-d ontbesucl soruu.rf
t ik l 'tf Hl·,rumrledto thegroundforalO-S r e l U Se ,.ird 1,,.,., un the Redskins· 2 ¥.h1k
d R d k ihe lil·an' l'f " ash1ngton fans sanl Uil er e S i ns P1t•Den,t>rfan,hadbttn ha'1ng
lincbackcr-!im-R-¥an said "Ih .. ~ U-+,,,,...111!=--2:-..:.=.._...=.:~----= ----<t~b~· '-'· ~' aU..~me . cbecnng "'lld.&' fr •m'the momrnl of John Elwa' ·., ~t-
'.ird 111ul hdov.n pa!IS the first umr hc
he d tlie ha ll \\ ashington fa ns ..at
':lu1eth "'•th l111k to chttr th<" entire
llr\' ~u3nC'r
team got on a roll and we were
incapable of stopping them. That
happened to us 1n the second half of
last year's Super Bowl (a 39-20 loss to
the New York Giants) and 1n the
second half of the AFC champ1onsh1p
game this year (a 38-33 victory O\t'r
Cle,•eland).·· ____ • _ .::..n.ey. JU"~ k>t-of wtng phtys-
on U$," linebacker Karl Mecklenburg
said. "On several of their running
plays. instead of gaining seven or ·
ci&ht yards when they broke past the
line of scrimmage. tht'y got 30 or 40.
I'm very surpnscd. I didn't expect
then\ to move the ball the wa y they
did.
So\:-. DIEGO t .\Pi -I• "a" Doug
W1lliam.,· dream pa" R 1, i..' '\and<'r<..
fan ta ~ catch a pen<''-I ' thro"' n ball
caught 1n '>tndc J nd. "'rca~a"'a' run
for an '"' ar.J.lu.u. .. h.:.u\\n. • "' • -~
·· li',jmc'v. 11'1 """'' rt£. unt'\pc", te-d
<1uddcnnC''S · JU'I '• ,, ,~•nd<. 1n1u the
second 4uanc:r hut 11 ·'·'" thr opening
sah o in tht• mn't 1t·nx-H1u' 11n('-
pcnod atl<id 1 n \u IX'f RI.•" I ht'>IOr.
--4.ttt-ra~""" "'Tl'lrNTK'~Win1am" i"i
ur '' • h and JOggeJ oil to c;ho"' ht
--.3,n 1 \<.'nou<;h hun Ja\ . hroeder
.... ho t-Jdn't r la,ed in a month. camt'
in "1th the RC'J'~'"' facing ~ond
and ~t 0n thc11 :c;.,ard hne
'C
"We had our opponun1t1es early in
the pmc. We had them down and we
let them back up. That happened in
last year's Super Bowl. too."
Mecklenburg said he wasn'.t <Sur·
prised by the rushina performance of
Washington's Timmy Smith. who
~ · had 204 yards and two touchdowns.
Smith started and~ most of the
pme in place ofGcorae R<>sers.
"We knew comin• into the pme
that Smith was their top runner."
Mecklenburg said. "We JUSt weren't
aettina any pursuit from the back sadt'
when he got past the hne of scnm-
maac!' .
Waablncton nan~ t.ck Timmy Sm·I tla
Koota aroand Dea '• Jlm Jt7an for lo DC
run. durtq Super, Bowl Sallday. Smltlr
compiled f04 yarda raehln& and two TO..
"\\ r JU~t had a grrJt ~-ond
quaner." \\ 11l1am., Yid '-'·onng 3'-
poi nu 10 0 0(' rcn·id .tgain'il the
Den,cr Br"n'l'' n the "'urer Bt.'v.I
that's unt'ICl1<'' ahlt ·
If there ~as a <.rngk pla' a ~ingk
moment that prt'~ied \\a h1ng1on ' 4:!-10 \l(tOr). unda\ l)\er Ot'O\('r II
"'3 that ~1mple. clepnt pas'> from
W1l11ams to Sande" al a lime "'hen
the Red k1m "'"re struggling
"~ll )Car r'e ti«n drcamingat·•1.'ut
getting 10 the ~uper Bl.N I and ma~1 ng
a couplt' of big pla~\ tn help tht'
tcam," nder., s.uJ "It 1ust "l'
happen!> l madC' thC' pJa, that tumt'd
th<' game an.1und ·
Onl~ moment<. tx-forc \\ ash1ngtt'n
S('("mt'd d00mcd The RC"d'I ir1'
trailed IM anJ \\ 1ll1JTT1\ la' on the
turf clutching .i (l.linfull\ \traineJ le t
l nC'<'
He had gone ~ L. 10 pa's and
h'!X'rl1e"<N1 hi' L.ntt, hcnding 11
IX·n,rr ~n.'l·ted · hrocder "'Ith :i
hh11 and thr form er Pro Bo" I
-;uanrrt'l<K~ "cot dl'"'" 1 mmt'd1att'I~
from a ~ck h' ll..a r1 \1<'C'l lenburg
1 hr RedsL. M "'ere marchina
"'lad ..... ard v.11h Jlarming .-,Pt'Cd
It all changl'd though ¥.lthin a
\ •u plt' o f m1nutr<. .\ftn-an t\Chang<'
l•I puntc, "nsh1ngt0n tool over on
tht>1r .:'O \\ 1lham' rctumC'd to th<'
gaml' \\1 th a pla' that called for
Sandt'" to ~pnnt \tra1gh1 out down·
the ngh1 '\1deline again~ comerbacl
\far~ Ha' nC" "'ho was guard in@
\and<'~ On('-t'll''l·OO(' Gaf"\ nark ran-
f"lc -..lrh<' f\lttrrr. rntrd Ifadt< roott.
t•n the other s1Jc '"' the field
I 'e bttn hun tx-forc and 1''-t'
rta,ed hun rq.Jrdk'>.'> of tA-hat somr
J)C't)pk m11h1 thinl · \\ 1lhams utd
It ~ou'rt goin& 10 pl:i,-this p me
\OU'\(' &Ot 10 phl\ \\II!'! a ll llk pain It
(Pleue eee SAJlfD&RSJ.92) Ot:fensive end Rulon Jones said
the broncos were "high. We thouaht
we were dominatina. The momen-
tum was in our favor. Then they get •h~·~!:~·::kSw~i;.~!~~~st one S. CC. basebalJ team.optimistic after st_ rong·finish last year thing we did wfbna. but I won•t know • _
cfi~lacmsll.X what happened until I sec the 8·., JON--·outlAllJ ... , r c.n ~"' an :t suppon of <\thkt1c Dtrcc1or Ro11
Quartttbeck John Elwar endured 1 ... ...,,...... Pn :ttyman and Spons lnformauon O\m:tof
(rustratina pme, completing oftty 14 Southern C11ifomt1 Col •• , baKball Br an T ISM' .
o( 38 paUtS for 2S7 yards. wuh three team didn't do thanp the conventional WI) last Dcushane had bttn satuna out the ttason
intc:rtq)tions and five sacks. Elway Kason. but a mature aroup of pla~ shoM'd an rr hav1na uracry for a tom rotator cuff' He'
hit Racky Natticl 1n strick for a S6-~at character In risina past IOrM late tasbn ba1 :k ttus year as a senior naruna patcher.
yant touchdown on Denver's first ldvenct' to make 1 strona showina an the alt houah he •on·1 ~ stronafor ab®t a month
play fram Kfimm11t. and he man-NAIA yofT! , . Another face matins a mum ts Coach
tuveftld tbe 8roAcol inao po11lion. foe • W 1k their rcc.Of'd wu ont.r 22-33 ovcnll. D< •Uf .\damJ.. 9tho 1u1ckd lihe Vanpard to a
a fidd pl Oft the nrat terits. the Vanauards finttkd t).7 ur the Ooklen ns-10 rttord from 1cr I and makcs'-h11
But _ .... l-W·· .. ___ _..,.. State thlctic Conftftnc.'e, won the Diann Ill f'(t um tn the season opener T~y whtft
wnl"" -•·•'"""'. ---r"::..'..:.• p&a)offs and one llrM at the Ara I "IJC)t~I ho It C Rl\c.ntde
oe five JU'allht ~tons. '"" ..... y hem bo1rlJll. out of tM 4btblt d111uD1ttOft .. , think the really teamed a lot ~ ~~pltU--only._,o(fJ ..... toumalMftL tht• fOo4 and bed Jat JeelOft ... ~•id
iachldins.oac •Jt11nttP'•Oft. and was And they cttd 1t all tMrnbdy -1ta.out a ··1 "''team as rail> ~~that t.bc _... twa. _ ~. · ah noat don't lW!'d a coed\ -
"We '°' ow iaits k1tked tbday. Afta' Jottn tt.nll• le'ft tbe. proeram Wtu"lltmC'tCt thttcam' C~tt"-n) Ttwre's no quniioft about U..t." unc"~I). pelCMr MM °"9baM IOOk mud\, he bu btt O'a n phaao.ooe..n lO tn\C1']C'C1
Elway said. , ovc! the ~tu._ duU. wi• iM HTNnct ' "I th1nktheft•aulolof~.-.\dam•
said "1 .ant to tr"' to 1mpltmcnt 1ha1 th<' gu\ ~\tr). \"CT)' lllftSSl\e It can male up for .1101
of q_uahttn-~ don't hav~. lf •-c don't h•' e tht
patc'hcnor the pow-tr. we can ma.n up for n If
one of the thanp ~ woncd VCf) hard on dunni
tht (all and January " If• DNWnc and \he other Kn1ors -Jdf
Motikc. Mtke f'l'fl, Joe Hok:kn ar.6 Josh
Johnson -who kttp tht team loo5t' and •'tft
nxfttaal "' hoWtl'I 11 'Oll'her la t spnna v. hen
th1np roukl tllavc fain apan.
"They bavc rnponded to me 'C1'l .. ~11 ••
dams SA.Id. 1'l1 team has 1 tnnfi ~
sona&.t) 10 ''· n.n tet atotw wtll and hi' c good
fncnchll•P'-.tiiith Tm~ftnCtt"I unuwat 1 tokS
them I've •~ tKn a team ,rt •tons wtll as
t~ do, •1"Mft a.re tttuon <Mlt theft' that art
01,1t1tand1na aders . h's the ' oup of
$<Al~ l'\e C\t'r bttn lSSOC1atcd -.1th. a \Cf\
eta 'bunch ··
Wh1lt' t~ Van&'Gl.J'ds tost \MIT top two
petcl\cn -Mike lomt'h .,.ctated 10 1lllt
4.tlanta B~ves 01'1An1t.at1on and tcvt Ovtt-
ttm to tht Montrt'al Expos -the) ha~ tOtM
sohd rtturnttt on the fickS
Sophomort' catcher Cat\os Stlaur ( 17
homt Nn St lt81. 3'3) ac.d1 the -a)' after
ca.lhn&SOofthc,~m·s 'Ulmna 1 fmhlMI\. .. That's Jllft"Y phcnommal .. AdalM 1114
of $ala.r.u' ttmman campaip. -11•1 ~ IO
~ 1( that WU I CWft't' yW or JUI' ......
potcnuaJ.. c.toe II I Ar'Oftl_kMI." ~ 9i6.
.. , OU pvt I ..... 11111 ............... ·-----!! woct.He'1oaty 1 ~-·~ • • M C: ~ll Ra -.297..._)
returns •• .fim tme. '1!Pll•DR ~
. (ffl ...... ~,..l -. '. \
• •
~-...
Ceacer ~tleiat ba_•
claJ: to, remem~r
th&1:1k• to stranger
HOUSTON -A mysterious stra•r
banded over two Super Bowl tickets and a
wad of spcndina money to a Houston travel
•nt last week and had her make
~rvatlons at~ posh San oteao hotel. aJI to surprise a
younpkr. lhc heDCfactor never will meet.
The anonymous pcnon ha$ for the pest 11 years
do~tcd a weekend Super. Bowl travel package to
vanous youns c:afK'tr petaenu at M.D. Anderson
Hospital.
Selected by a hospiLll committee to watch the
DenverBroncos~theWuhinatQnRcdskinsSun<tay
was 17-ycar-old Vinttnt -8.ou.-.an.... eOCJ'llCl.ic and
outaoina Fon Wonh hiah tehool studtnt who has
Hod&kin's disease. .
R.oss said that a.f\cr ~is mother aot a call from M. D.
Andef'10n about his tnp. she had a bit of trouble
convincing him th'\t his dream of aoina to a Suixr Bowl
aamc wattbout to come true .
..
8ellrwl7 leacla S~ca.e, 89-71 .
Ceaaer a.u WU1J eq_ualed his •
tarttr hip with ~3 points u 17tb-ruked
S)'l'KUll toot eocnmand earh in the ,
l«'Ond half and bat No. I Mfchipn at
horM, 89-71 , S'w.day. Seikaly rnMched hit prevtous
carect ba&. wbicb he reecbcd in lllt se.son·s NCAA
p&ayoff' lllnC •nst f1orida. while Dentd c.le9u
collected 11 poua=u S rKute im~ved iu record to 1 s-s. Mkhipn 10 17-l Midlipn, aAer fall inf
behind S3-40with I :01 to play, closed the PJ> to 61-5
with 10:42 left. u o..., Grut scored nine of his team-
bi~ 22 points in thM span. But Syracuse responded
w1tb 11 suaiaht points and went· on to rout the
Wolverines ••• Res C..='I three-point play with
1:18 left aparted No. 9 tucky (14-3) to a 78-69
victory over Notre Dame (12-S) in Louisville. Notre
Dame, which bad trailed by tOpoints in the second half.
pulled to within 67-6.S on De.W IU•en' threc--point
field pl with I :SI to 10. Chapman coumered with his
three-poin\ play 3 I scconds later after tenin1 fouled by
GJfJ Ven on a lanciumper 10 aivc Kentuclty a 70-6S
a<lvantqe. Notre Dame could act no cl<>Kr than 72-69
on Rivers' two free throws With.J4 seconds remainina .
. In K.inpton. R.I., senior Tim Perry scored i'carttr·
hiah 27 pointsas sixth-ranked Temple ( 16-1) survived a
late Rhode Isl.and rally for a 77-70 victory in the
Atlantic 10. The loss snapped Rhode Island's 10-game
winning streak. The news finally sank in. and now Ross would love
to meet and th01nk his benefactor.
But travel aacnt Renee MJ,Jtz. who has made the Jaguar team win• at Daytona
arranaements for the annual Suixr Bowl trip for the
~st ~ecade. as the only ixrson who kno~ the donor's li>A YTONA BEA.CH. Fla . .:.... Jaguar ..
ide.nuty. She will onlr say that he or she is a Houston ended the I I-year dommation of Porsche
resident. as Raul Boesel of Brazil. John Nielsen of
"First. 1'.d give him a bia hua and tell him that he Denmark and Manin Brundle ofEnaJand
has made this young man very happy," Ross said. "I'm combined Sunday to win the Daytona 24-Houn.
• aoing to write him a letter (deliverable throuah Malu). · Thdaauar XJR-9 prototyix. one of three entered-. I fee( very luck)'." in the race by Scotsman Tom Walkinshaw. whbse team
Ross plays comerback and runnin1 back for his conquered European spons car racins in 19&7 held off
Southwest High School football team and runs the mile a late chalJenge from the Porsche 962 prototy~ of pole-
rda) and I 00-and 200-meter dash on the track team. winner Mauro Baldi ollJaly and two-time Daytopa
He appears in excellent health. but it was not winners Brian Redman of England and &b Wollelc of
al"a)s so. France.
He was first d iagnosed as asthmatic at 8. but a The German-built Porsche h"d won seven straiaht
Houston doctor dc1emined the real cause of his illness Daytona 24-Hour races and cars powered by Porsche
\\as Hodgkin's disease. a cancer that affects the lymph cnaines had won 11 in a row in America's premier
nod<.'s. ~ sponscarendurancecventand the season-opener in the
Quote of the ~ay
N.,. s ..... University of Florida ~ch.
.. when asked ifhc was bothered by Spon magazine
naming his Gators the preseason No. I basketball
team in the country: "Nobody wants to be told
• body wants to be told they're
aood-loo ina. ..
... Mesa'• Collins captures title
SANT A CRUZ -Costa Mesa's g Richie Collins. ranked only 39th in the
Association of Surfing Profnsionals Tour
entenng the event. completed a major
upwt b) winning the O'Neill Coldwater Classic n.eet
Sunday. downing Many Thomas of Hawaii in the final.
O"erall in the event. Collins surfed in nine rounds
and won eight. finishing second an the other. Among the
comixutors he defeated to reach Jhc final were Barton
L) nch (ranked No. l 11Tthc world). Tom Carroll (No. 4).
Mike Pa™>ns of Laguna Beach (No. 11 ) and Scott
Farns'4 orth of Huntington Beach
Wath the victor). Collins moved into 26th place 1n
the ASP rankings.
The previous top finish for Collins. 19. was third
plac~ last Jul) in a meet in Caixtown. South Africa. .
Capitals win defensive battle
toga"e Washinatona 1 -0 NHLvictory ov~ , lteJly Miller scored 3: 17 u1to ovcnamc ~
Philadelphia Su_nday 1n Landover. Md.
Miller skated behind the· Philadelphia net.
IMSA Camel GT series.
Rodriguez ·collects $300,000
HONOLULU -Chi Chi Rodri..auez, l!I the dominant pla~er on the senior aolttour.
also dominated the first Senior Skins
Game . that ended Sunday. w1onaoi..
$300.000 of the $360.000 total purse.
The 52-year-old Rodnguez won three holes and
$260.000 on the final day of the two-day event.
He concluded has lucrative payda) b) w1r<ning a
sixth pla )'ofT hole. wonh $90.000. 1n a sudden-death
showdown that dwindled down to him and Arnold
Palmer. .
Rodriguez also won another hole worth $90,{J()(J
Sunda y, as well as one wonh $80.000.
The $300.000 for two days 1s almost a th ird of what
Rodnguez ca.med 1n 26 years on the rt<gular PGA tour.
Lyle beats Couples in playoff
Wat~ FrH CMplH falltng v1ct1m to l!I watef) disaster. s..4y Lyle needed ool) a
bogc) on the third playoff hole Sunday 10
'4 1n the Phoenix Oixn GolfToumament at
Scottsdale. Ariz. In a bizarre finish. Couples. needing
only a par-4 on the 72 nd and last hole to win in
reaulauon. hooked into the water and gave Lyle a
chance in a playoff. After two extra holes were halved 1n
par. the) went to the 18th at the TPC at Scousdale for
.the third hokofsuddendeath. Lyle drove into a fairway
bunker. And Couples hooked his tee shot into the same
pond for the second time in less than an hour. After a
drop. he hat his third into a bunker. From the fa1rwa)
bunker. Lyle missed the green. Couples came out of the
green side bunker to the back of the grttn. some 30 feet
awa). He f!llSSCd the botey putt. Lyle chipped to about
10 feet. missed for par but tapixd 1n for the winning
bo•c} ... Gre1~ormu of ;\ustralia fi red a 2-under·par
70 an rail} 1 ng for a one-shot v1c1ory over Tateo Ozaki of
Japan tn the Palm Meado"s C'up Toumamen1 in Gold
Coast. Australia.
Wublaetoa'• Du:tcer llanley atalu Den-
Yer quarterback Jf obn Elway darln& MC·
o.nd qaarter of Sa per Bowl Sanday. &lway
wu fntercepted three tlmn la tlae aame.
W ASHINOJTON POUNDS DENVER, 42-10 •••
P'romBl · ·
The win was. Wa 5 h1ngton's second· Suixr Bowl
v1ctof)' 1n five years and pve the NFC ats founh straight
lopsided triumoh 1r the NFt.'s championship game.
'Thrlmtskmru~d--just -+3-(>lays-an4-S-;41-in 1~
second quaner to sec• re 35 potnts on five straight
possessions. fa iling onl) when Williams downed the ball
on the last pla> of the hal f. By rolling up 602 yards on total
offense. the) broke the rt:cord of 539 set by San Francisco
an 1985.
Sm ith's 204 yards o n 22 cames broke Marcus Ailcn's
n.-rord of I QI St't 1n the H aiders' 38-9 rout of the Retlskins
1n 1984
anders. who caugh t two of the four TD passes. had
131 ) ards on reception!. in the first half:
The 356 }ards ga1r 11:d by Washington an the second
quaner "as just 17 lcss I han its season-long average for a
fu ll game and its six tou c-hdowns S<'t a Suixr Bowl r«ord.
It d1dn 't stan that v~ay.
After scoring on their first offensi ve plaf the 56-
yardtr from Elway to l'lattiel. the; Broncos added three
more points on thcLr St 1:ond pd'ssessio n on Rich Karl is'
:?4·) ard field goal. .
But then camt the I >00m. an offensi ve noise louder
than the noise from the formation o( jets that flew over
Jack Murph) Stadium at the close of the national anthem.
It '4as eqll;llcd by a c lef~nsc that limited Elway to two
completions in 15 attetnots during that ixriod. sacked
ham fo ur times and pu:lced offttirce ofhi5 passes.
F1fiy-threc sceonds into the second quarter. Wil-
liams threw the 80-yarder pass to Sanden. l...css than folir
minutc.s.Jatcr-1.Lw:as a. 27-rudcr ill Gaa_Qark._followed
by a 58-yard TD run by Smith. his fint pro touchdown: a
50-)•arder to Sanders and an ciJht-yardcr to Clint Didier.
Now. 11 was Denver's turn to stall as Elway continued
on a streak of seven straight incomplete paS$CS. And
Washington came nght back to ao 64 yards in five plays to
take a 14-10 lead just 4:45 into tht second ixriod.
Nineteen of the yards came on a run by Smith. Then.
on third-and-one at 1h( 27. Clark slanted outside, beat
Steve Wilson and dove for ~al hams· pass at the 2 and slid
mto the end zone. Now at was time for another reprise of last year -
,Karlis massing from 43 yards out on a field aoal set up by
El" a) ·s 23-yard run aOer breaking what appeared to be a
sure sack by Dexter Manley.
Two plays later. Sm a th broke throuah a huae hole off
nght tackle and raC"ed by Tony I ill; on has 58-yard TD
romp. the first scor~ ofh1s pro career That made it 21-10
"ith 6:27 lcft in the half.
Then. 21h minutes later. at was Williams aptn to
Sanders. who went an motion to the left. cut diaaonally
across th<.' field. and caught the ball all alone at the fiv-: for
TD No. 4 .
No. 5. the ei&ht-yard pass to Didier. came after
. Wilburn picked off an Elway pass at his own 21.
Are.a sports calendar
Men '• ba•~etball 8eect> We''"''"''" at Menna e~ 11 Tu•Sdav Fountain Vallev. L"ul\e 8Hcn al Latuna H•Hl. Swfmmfnt
SeO<ll-0.clr. et Coron• oet Ml/Ir T u\lln et COLLEGE -Pl Loma at SoCal Co11a99 Unl"e"ltv ett et· J. Eltencle et NewPOrt 130 .t.1111e PecrtlC et ""''' C C•ll89e Ir vine, 7 JO Herl>of 4 lO HIGH SCHOOL -Liile r tv C11r1,11en 11 ...... ur· ... -v Htrt•etc 7 30 1 n ._ WednHdA HIGH SCHOOL -E41Wlft el Octen 'Voew
S.t\lrdev
COLLIGI -UCI •' Neve08·Les "'""· · noon f men •"a .. o,.,.,, I
faked one way and came around the left siae of the net.
He let go a backhand shot that caromed off the skate of
dcfenseman ltjeU S.m11e11 .. and past aoalie Rea
Be~&aJI for his sixth goal ... In another $3rM. rookie
Ray Skffllf4r• second pl of the game tied the score
with 2:20-remaining as Buffalo earned a 4-4 deadlock
with v1s1ti1!J _Win..n.ute.1. Sheppard's second goal. his
20th of the season. erased a 4-3 Jets' lead that Mark
lt•mpel provided at 12·46 of the third ixriod. 'r Hunti"Vton 8eecn et Marine, Fountain Vette; Tue'4Mv Television radio COMMUNITY C°'-LEGE -Ct<rito' et et Wttt..,lnlter ,....~ at L~·ne e-~
• c;.01o.n Wttt, 7 JO "" ...... u v ~" COLLfGl -UC ••v~.IOe et SoCe1 COll898 Le11une Hill' ,et Woodt>nOIJe NewPO<t Heroor 7 )0 Boston topples Sixers, 100-85 HIGH SCHOOL -HUfll l"tlOll 8eecll et et Un1verl•tv Corone Clel Mer er El••nc••. •-
TELEVISION l"oun11.n Veile•, Oceen Vi«w 11 Merine, Ec"'Oft et 3 W.._.Y et WtWn1n"er, Seooteoeo. e • (prgne oef Ml/Ir COLLIGI -UCt ~t U,.;venitv of !>en
BOSTO .._ Larry Bard scored 29 m 4:30 p.m. -COLLE~E BASKETBALL: I lu,lln •' UntVt<lllv, e,1er..1 .• el ....,.,_, ..,._tlffti* OoeQo 7 om
Geo?:etown at Villanova. ESPN. Hertior C~•• llM'8 •1 Wo.>Ol>l-14", L"une ..,,.,.... -. ,r\av points and grabbed 17 rebounds. leading
the BostortCeltacs JO a 100-85 Vlctory over
Ph1ladelph1a Sunda) as the 76crs hat an
Q Buen •' Le11une H1"l, Ceo I llreno Vellev ., Tu.MllV :J p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL. lrv11'!t Meter De• 11 ~ eer 11ere1. ell et 1..lO. HtG"-SCHOOL -OcHn View •' EOl\on, COLLllGI -UCI " Sen Olt'llo S1e11 S
Obio. State at Michigan State, ESPN . TiwrsdAv NtwOO<I Hert>or ., CorO"• Clel "6er =~ $oC.i c~ .... UC. $ante a.re-.. 1
NBA season low with 29 points in the first half. 7 p.m. -COLLEGE BASltETBAl.L: Wuh-COLLl'GI -Neveae·L•' v~., •' uc1. . Thur,dev COMMUNITY COLLlfl : °''"" CoH1 ington 3t use. Prime Ticket. 1 30 SoC•I Collellf ., Peclh·: Cllrllllen. 1 30 HIGH SCHOOL -S.CIOlel>eC-•• E\tencte. lit Coll-or 0Herl TO\lrna ...... , -With Philadelphia's hiah-sconng Charles Barkley
sidelined 1lh a twisted ankle. the me was a
masmatc rom t e outset as the e tics ro e to t car
65th con uuve regular sca10n victory over an Eastern
Conference m at.at Boston Garden
RADIO ., 1 unlvtrsilv 11 Tul!ln Ort"9t •' Co"• Mell, S.turdev Merine et Hunllneton 81ec11 Wutminlltr et ~-~~~~~~~G~e~·~~~-~~~~B~A~~~.~~N-~a~sh~-~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~n~~~~~v~ek~v.~7~~ COLLIGI -~ Mery'' If UC I, -
ington at use. KNX (1070). 810llll 7 30 MtGH SCHOOL ~ :O\l-l'll_•_ln-V-el_le_v _•'-'8~•°"r,11io!.......,.. .. ,.~-°" ... l&.lTl..-llClo'°u"~IL.l .... C1•111idlflllt) ~ Sen! COMMUNITY COLLEGE ··Golden We\! a• E..__-ood ln.itellonet l __.... I Y COLLEGE -Ot•"H CoHt
•
SANDERS LIT FUSE. • • From Bl
was hun1ng bu t 11 '4 asn'1 huning bad
cnouah not to pla\."
Sanders said Walhams "as never
goinJ to sit on the sideli ne.e'en 1fh1 s
arm 1s hanging off. Ht 'sgoing 10 t'ome
back Thlft's v.hat I ltke about him."
Williams took the snap. stepixd
back a fcv. paces and threw a hard
spiral that Sanders snared on the run
with outstretched hands on Washing-ton ·s 48.
From there. 11 was no more than a
foot race. Sanders vs. Haynes and frtt
safet y Tony Lilly. Sanders cut back
sligh tl)' toward the middle and blazed
mJo the end z..one untouched.
ande~ said he didn't thank Ha)-
nes and Lilly v.ould catch him.
thouah he admitted. "M> legs started
1uv1ng out at about the 20."
Wilhams said the whole team
suddenly felt renewed j>ower when
S..nden crossed the aoal line and put
them back in the ~me at 10-7.
"Ricky just ran a ireat routt and
ran by the guys and that's how sample
at was:· W1llial'hs said. "Really, it was
a short pass. but Haynes came up to
prt'Ss and Ricky JUSt ran by him."
Ha) nes wouldn"t talk about the
pla>. or anythana el~. s.aying o nl >-
"M} season's O\•er."
Lill} 1.1.cnt straight to the trainer's
table for treatment of a bruised h'ip
and sta)cd 1ns1dc nearly an hour aOe r
the game.
"It was defin1tcty the bag turning
poir:it." M~cklcnbura ~1d. "It was
also pan' of the whole momtnlum tn
thr game when they were able to &top
us from sronng wh~n.{-'c had aood·
fteld~on and o~untt~earfy
in the game.
"You've got to 11vc the Redskins
all kinds of credit ... he said. "The)
turned the momentum around tn the
Suixr 8o'4 I and that's very difficult to
d .. 0 . It was the ~nnina for the
. R('(!slcins. and the 1>c1innin1 of the
end for Denver,
._. ..... --... ._ -----·----·-
Redskin_s
have plenty
in reserve
SAN DIEGO <AP) -Timm\
Sm ith and Ricky Sanders. wh o
started the season as bench-warmers.
ended the Jear by burning ~n ver
'41th m:or ·setting piformanceo; an
the Super BQ~ _
·m1h ran fo r a Super Bowl-record
204 yards and San4ers had 193
reception yards Sunday in the Wash-
maton Redskins' 42-10 victory over
the Broncos. The pair accounlc4 for
)ar s tn the prnnat Tinl-fratf
when Washington took a 35-10 lead.
Sm 1th, a rookie runnmg back out of
Teus Tech. dad not know he was
aoing to start until Just before the
Rcd~kins· tint pla> from sc~maac.
He made the most of has first NFL
1tart by pacmna the Denver defense
earl). then helped Washin11on run
out t~ clock late in the pmc.
"t've been ready to stan all alonty. nr'l.~ .. e Col11e1•bo.••at a.-~ott ~;~ha~~c~·nh~r.tw~~d~Y.11e.:.s W £1.11.l , _. :a ~ii.I.I.I comfonablc 1n thcr• right from the
· besinn1ng."
Make .. The Giant" White wall meet ( 19-3) stopped Olcer Hotmaf'I 1n nve Sm11h's SI-yard touchdown run
Pee Coll.er of Los AJ\ICln for &ht rouncb at 1hc 5pN« Goote 1n Lona P'·e Washinaton • 21-10 tttond·
ali'°nua ha' )Weipt boiuna cl\am· Beach in November. quantt tad. ind htt four·)'ard run i1'
pioNh1p tonilhl at the lrvu\f Mat· In a sil·roul)d match 1on•aht. O.ve I.ht founh quaner tnablcd the non HOkl •im p~ltminary matches Yonlto (9__.) o( Lona Inch will bo• Rcdikins to k't a Suprr Bowl rttotd s~ninaat 7:30. , Don Coats (4-1) o(Sen JC*. w11h ''"touchdown•.
Al 7-foot. 21S pounds. White In other ftahtt: 8r1IU Pnnon of Senders. meanwhde. spent most of
daims to be professional bo•ina's l.osAn~lnmee110mickHudtonof tht )Cir Ha rtterve •ho was uttd
bi9cst 1nd he could have a shot 111 Sin Difao in an eiaht·round. 141· pnmanly Ha third wide rt«iver in
t1tltri&h1 w1 fl MiktT)M>ft n thtnl'll pound bout: Bm Lopez of Ontario ob\'.o..,._..dowu. He btamea > ~r. PfO"•dcd he can stop Collaer in ~awn off 1111nst Olc'lr Omdat of saantt 1n Dttrmber .whnt An Monk
the 12-round bout. City o( CommCTce in a bar·round. 901 in.Jurtd. aod allhoutb Monk toU~r(l 2·S·I ). who hasn't fouehl 116-pounCI bout, Allan Santana of retYmcd for &tit 5uPtt .,..., he WM
Et Cem1no 7 lO """'~ •' C~ o1 OtteN Tournament
MIGM IC.NOOL.~--~lotMlft ~ el. . ~rdev 5UtMll
0cH l'I View, Merine et Wttlr ntn\ter, EotlO<I el HIGH SCHOOL -Founteln Veflev et . Y.-FO\lnte1n Valltv. N-00tt He•· oor el Vnlver\1tv, Edffwood lnv.tetlonel. t em COMMUNITY COLLE GI -Otet\1" Coe" !>eCIC!le~• el Tul•on .. Coro>ne Cle! Mltr el •' Cotlt9e of Oewrt Tour~r
E ''•"<•• 0-•1'98 •• Letun. 1 heel! Letwn• H•ta ., WoodO<IOle C0\18 '~ •• Tr.OUCo Htll\ Irvine et !>en Ctemtt1 lo, Leffl"9wetl el Llti.rty Cllroll11n. •" et ] 30, 'I Peul "' Ml/II .. De• et Cneorn•" Col~. t
S.turdev COLLIGI -Cet Stele ''ultetton et UC t,
1 30. $oC 11 ColleQt •' Cal L 11tti.'"" 1 >O COMMUNITY' COLLI Gii -°''"" Coast •• c • ...-en 7 30
Women '• ballketboll T""48ev COLLIGI -Pl LOl'l'\8 tll SoCel Co!leot.
~ lO COMMUNITY (04.LIGI -Mlr.Co,1e el
()fa1>9e (OHi, 1 lO HIGH SCHOOl. -Liiie r Iv Cllrllllen et Her1te99 4 )0, OcNn Vie"" et ~Ina. • )0,
~IV"''"lltOll 81KP\ II Foun11111 V.-V, 1, EtllWI' el Wt.llrrti"'t~. ], C°''' ~·i.1 et Woodbtldte.
1 Le11111e '""' el La1u11e I eecl'I, 7, Cor-Otl Ml/Ir et Seclcllet>eck, 7, Un f wenltv et Tutti!\,
7, Newoort Herl>Or et Ellen•tle. 7. Ceolstreno Venn et ,,.,,,,. 7 w....-,,
COMMUNITY COl.LIO• •• GOIOPt W•I et
(JH llO\ 1 30
TI\wMey
COl.L•Gt -$811 0'"9 Stelt . et UCI. {
...... ICNOO\. -HVM I "910ft 8-:l'o et OtHll .,,....,,, MM-el Wflf INMI .. , FG;.llllelll
Vellfv el Edi.en, Leeuna f lHCll et °'"'"· W~tdee el ~ H • Tr'°"'e Hlllt et Co\fe Meu. \lntY91"\fly I I ,_.....,_, He~IMlr.
Tu\tol\ •• SaOdltl>ec-. E ll•"', e 11 COfllM Clll ~r $81'1 ( ...... !\If 11 IO•N I ell et 1
,, .... y
C°'-LIOE -C.n11st Collortie lfvlN el Cal 8tololl, S>O ' C~ CCM.LIOa ·-f l C8fl'IWI et ()~ ;; , lO CvPrtn •• t ()ten .. (08\1
7JO ...... SCHOOi. -Llffltlow .... , LIM<IY
'"'''''·"· ' S.twdeY Ckl.IOE -Cet Stele FtJ lllrrlOll et UC1. ~.
S.Cal c..-.. e1 ,., "'"'''* tAI s 11
. sec BASEBALL OUTLOOK. • • From Bl
Kaspar's desire'eamed him the stan-
ing second bait' job. junior Kevin
Kaspar (7 HRs. 18 RBI. .318, 18
stolen bases) is an intearal part of the
team at shortstop and John Rob-
enson will pla) th ird when Johnson is
pitchina.
dlayed second base last season. "has
had the ~bat.i.tr to {>•tch all alona, ..
Adams said. I vc said all along that if
ht's not one of the top five pitchers in
tht d1s1nct. rd cat my hat. He's that good."
Their success wall hinae on whether
the Vanauards merely make lhe top
four to qualif)· for the {>layoffs or
challenge for the G AC title against
the likes of ALuu-Pacific an<l Wnt·
mont.
"The infield 1~ prett) strong..''
Adams said. "Kevm Kaspar 1s the
catalyst of the team. He's one of the
finer ptaycrs tn the district. Kevin is a
great competitor. 1 good leadoff man
and-combines a little power with good s~. He's 1ot 1ttlt conficknc~ in his SeCe1 c""' ~ a 'l't'-.. Tuu. F•. 2 -UC ltl-\ldt ll'IOtntJ I I 1.... ~rl. Ftt> S -et UC Sentt 9¥0.rt. 2 11 m Hokkn(llhomcr..19RBli'31S). u 1 Feo ' -•• uc s.n'• • .,..,,, dl'I ~oft ldwin ndahoF~ action n ttrt ~UM Ftt> , :. e10te 1....,.,,., out tt • a te1 will !hart the TIV' Ftt> 11 -., uc •r-,i. dcsisna\~ hiller dutin. Frei doubln Fr• Feo 11 -us1u ,,...,,., as a relief nitchcr. but 1s rttoverin1 ~·1 · F" n -~ si • dl'I ,,..,..>. -To ....__[:: MOii Feo IS -C ..... of k1e1!o (~ 1rom a~" utjury. Tt¥,. F• ie -COiiett .. ..,.. 1....,..1 Th~ new fttts in the outfield art Mott Feo n -•• ore11e1 Cettnn. dl'I. ue
transfers. who accordin1 to Adams T"" Fe«> tJ -., Grand C9!1¥9ll, U• h t ,. .. ,, -.t.lumlll 1"'9nW'r, -arc "prett)' aoo<f' hitters and "good, W.O . Mere.II 1 -el Tiie MM•'• fast defensive o utfielders." $et llllerc11s -wtt1mo111•.•<..,_1,....,.
So h Mon.. N\er(.l'I 1 -" •io. P omore1 Stevt Milledet (full-T"". MetCll • -1t..i, ,,_,,., erton Collese~ handks left field s.1 . Metc.11 12 -et c1tr11 c ..... inr!ftt•. i':'~ior ~rry JK1nto (Allan Hancock) •\:::" Metc11 1s -A•.ne·~· 1...:,,., ts 1n natt1 and senior Eric Gasner Tl'IUf' Merc11 u -et~ Leme .,..,.,_.
(Lona leach tatt) holds down• s.1• Mett11 .. -e• -.,_.., "'· """ Tun Mel'<1I n -et c.__ center. • s.1 Mw<ll ,. -., c. ......,., •· _
TM key tot~ vancuarch' Ju«eu '"". "WCI " -.. ,.,,.~...,...,
.... , 1~1 1n the deve~t . ..1 ,...._ ,,.,;,::•·Merell 1• -'Wtlcc:••·--.....,
.• ··~ ........ .-;.. Ul ~ ' w.•4 •·r p11ching. · ~' . ...,, a -uc Mil oi.e. ._ t...,.1,
..... SC"°°'--Ceru 11e • ,,,., •' Two fttshmen. kft-handcr Gary r"". Mir• 1 -.. ce1 LlifNrt11•, -.. ._., Seodlfteo >. IJ!lh'ffll•v er ·r "''"'· > • ........,, Millon and rieht-handfr V•"tO'f '-' ... • -~ ·--·-.-. Heroor el (•~ .. J, C6ttll Meu et w.od· '..... ~ "' ._ ,.._ ' .., .,,.. >. 1.ewia .. ,.. .1 •.MuN '""'· >. Schwttt. join F~• in tht bullpen. '~.": ... ,, _a. ••vw·~Kllt'° :;: ::_:.~'tt.''~~~~~:-;,,T~'. Returnees Johnson (2-4. S.2-2 ERA w.. . ..,, u -,,. -.,.,., • ...,.. > 1s • in 19 pmn) and Robrn Mansfwtd ~ · ·~-i. -C:11 WMr~.,·. •· ''*"''· ''*•· (6-9,).671nl6.J1mn)areihe1ap1~ '""•AM• tt -.. ~ leme ....._.·
..... KMOOL -t111ow. • Mty •• ~ starttrs. -1th Drushlnc npientd In • ·
"-'Mf , f••f!IC • •• '" "" .., MM, 1. thttc 10 ~our ---'-="'" ......... -.. . •• ,. -.. uc1, ' .. l..MV!le ~ et °'"""· > ....,._ " --.s. ~ ••m· a.i 4-1 n -ciw c-.. .,,,.,.. ._
> ..,_ • Hwll....,. ._:11. J on.i v.w ~ 1roob (Oro.mont C '""· w • tt -c11 ._..... ..,..,
. -\)
'.
1na tollnt 1o.rc-ftd deed.oft to RfdoMo lstt fices Maa•I Apillr o-tnl'ldo..., W-lfw ror-UDitnl
White May 27 1n l~inr, acq•ured the in a (our-.round. 129-pound ftlln: and Statn Foiotbell l..alllllr IW.
1....-._., J. Tr-.U ..-.11 et c ... -... hander MJkf CtMJr juaiof ~Y ,...,,,., -' " ·
~~•*«t a i a.u..,.._._,.,, • ---le! Aer1 JI -,fl"UC Ila ......... 1 "' ,..,....... ~ .._, ..... ...,__.. bW1}ampirtrdlltmt11illllliuil;--;-J -:Tit ....,,":'lllliiil'' ...... '-"-"•
Mott of thnn lft mMrat petcMtl. ..... -., • -"' ~-. ........ . jUIC fteaV)'•tilht ltdt b)' dthlJftl Manin httz or Onaano ... 11 mftt -we "'~ qlri• • few .. YI°" llli1 ~ W1U1lasl year. AuaustiM J11Mntt 1n. fouf'roand. team from llw USFLWfM»hl .....
After the •in O\'tt oflltr, WJute 111-pou'nd bouL a btl contnbuU°" ... Seaden Mid. ' \ l ..._.,,, . .
·--· .... ,. • T ......
..... IC"80t. .-Otw ,,.,. ., """'"'"'"
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...
I
SUPS• 90WL XJCH ........ 1.~•·
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W •lllllleton O lS b'-1-41
Oellvfl' 10 0 0 C>-10 ,., .. ~
Ctn-Nell .. '4 "" irom E•wn IK.•rll\ 11,l(:ll), "57 Oflvt '4 Ytrel\. I P'ev ~ 1, .............
Oen-4'0 Kerl!\ 1•, S SI. Orlvt : 61 verel\ 7
NY\ Kr1 N vt . flWt v l2 i>eu to Ject.•on,
S.wtlf 2l O.b to Efwev D1Mii1r 10. W•..._. ..
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AlltnOanc-Tl,>02 • Ta.AM STATISTICS ...
Forti 0ow11t 2S
lllutll4tt·verot '<1·1t0
P1n tno 311
•eiurn Y ••O• II Comc>·~ll·Jnt 11·30 I
$e(ll,fd·Y1rdt Lo" 1·11
Pu111t ._. • •·37
Fumblt\·Lotl 1·0
P9'\ellitl Y erdt 6·6S
T lrnt of Pontn oon 3S IS
INDIVIDUAL ST A TISTICS
Deft
II 11·91 n o •• IS )9·l
s-~
1 :u
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S·16
l H S
lllUSHING-Wa11111•9ton T Sm1111, 22·,._ 11,,,.,,, l ·le. G C1e.r11 1·1S lllooeo s-11,
Gr1ttin. 1·2, WIMlemt . l·lor·m111ut 1, S•ndef\ I
tor·mlnut • Otn•er L•"ll S·JI Etwev, 3')1.
Wlndf<, 1·30 S.weM. H or·rnln1u 3 ..
PASStNG-Wulllng1on wnna m' 11 79 1
l tO. Scllroeo.r 0-I 0, 0 Otn••r Etwev I•· 3'·3. 7S7, ~wtll. I I 0, ?3
lllECE IVt Nc;-w .. 1111191on SenOtr\, 9· 191
Cterll. J-SS. Warrtn 7· IS. 111\onlo., l·tO llrvenl
1·10, T Smllll 1·9 D•d tr 1·1 Otn•tr J•c1<
~ •·1• Stwe• ' •I N•H•el 7·'9 Kev 1 JI W1notr 1·7' E1,.ev I 7l l.e"ll 1·1
MISSED F'IELO GOALS-Wa\/111191on Hau
Shtlllll 44 Otn•t r Kerll\ O
Supe;r 8ew1 re<ords
•ICOltOS SE"T
l!lll!YIW Mot t Po-nit Allfr T.~°"'~~l\00-,.-,.-~.-~ -
Ak HeM·Sllt "" We\l\•"!llon"'lorev•ou• rteoro S
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Smlll\ w ....... g•on !D<•••OU\ rtcoro
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~'•"•· Sen Frencl\co '"SI Motl ll~e1v1ng Yard\, C.a me -193 !llc~v
S.notn . ~e\l\lnoton IP•t v>Ou\ rteora 16•
L Yl'lll Swt M .P•lltoYrgn 1•741
Mott Comointo Yerdt Gemt -1lS R>ellO
Senatr\ WelolWnoton '"'""'°"' rtcoro )Of Ma•CU\ Allen LO• A~·" lbooert ltU 1
•aCOltDS TllO
Moil ToucP>OOwn\ Game -1 lt•c~ .. S•"O
et\ and Tim Sm111\ We\n•noton (ht'O r:i-. "'-"•
L_.., ComDlt''°" -to "''Ch Oouo Wlll•em\ 10 ltlc•v S•"de'' Wn l\1119100 1a1w D•
Jim Plun~tll 10 ltt nnv io;,ng. Oe~lano ll••Ot t\ • "'" . Mo\I T o.Kl\OOwn P•u t \ C,orT'lt • C>ouo
WWltm\ WUPllnQIO" I• \0 ov f t"v 8•a0\"4" '""•Dv•O'I .. ,.,
TNm
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Wnl\11191on 1nO IDt'e• Ou\ •tcord 11 S•"
F'rencl\CO l .. S a110 (PlteellO 19141
Mo\t Po•nh Ont Teem Heil -)S W•V>
tno•on. h t (Of'f V•OU\ record n Sen "••l><•\(0
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Motl Po.nl\. 8 011'1 l u mt Ha t -45 h"'"
1119ton JS Otll•tr 101 h t 1Df't "'0U\ •tlO•O U I ~ ~ranc~o ?t M·amt U + l .. S
Ye•O\ Ge•ntO lllut •""ll Ont Tu .., -190 Wun1119ton l1><ev1out rte0<0' 716 Wa\ll1ng•Of'
19131
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Wnn11>9I011 190 •nO o ..... , ,, D•t • OU\ •t<O•O Jn Wetlllnoton 17• •nd M••m• 9• '")I
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We\J11119lon l.o•t••OU\ •teord 5J1 S•" F're11
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•tcoro ISi Sen "'•"<\CO Sl7 al'IO Mramr1u
l .. SI
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Mo\t Con\tei.• vt Yu rt n LO\t•
Dtnvtr I• lO ti. Minnn ote 1914 191S
suoer Bowl c hamoton'
1'61-Grt'tn llav 1NF'L• )S Kantn (11v
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1970-ll:enwt C••• tAFll 2l MlMtM>I•
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197S-P1ll\Duro" IAl'Cl 16 Ml,,.,eto•• INl'CI
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IAFCI )I '
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l"6-C11>ce0t CNF'CI '4, Nfw f"llland
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tt1'-L•rrv C\OlllJ.AI, 1t•. Mleml
tt7S-Frenco Herrlt. lt8, PllltOUron ~76-1..vM Sw_,,.., Wit, p;1~911
lt77-F'rtd' ll11tln111gtt, Wit, Oe-IAlt>O
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19'?-Jot Montelle, 08, San Frenc•tco
ltt3-Jol\n lll1001n\, All, Wun.ngton
\ 1994-Marcu• Alltn, 11111, LA llleloert
l9IS-J0t Monlena , o•. Sen FrenCl\CO
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Port1e..O 1S IS •2S 1.,
Stalllt' ?S II Sii 9
Pnotn•• n 11 ns " ., ~ 10 31 .l~ 23
GOiden Stett 9 lO 731 71
Mlcl'tlfnl DM Men
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Otnv-. 1& 17 51S • J
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San AnlO<><O 17 n Q6 10 :J
Secra"""to 12 ?t lOO 16
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Mt Sen AntOfllo ar 1..one -..c11
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YOUTH SOCCER
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• ·-·-·-llOTICIOf llOTaOf &':lftt tMI HARO\.D .. ....... Mnnaul .. Ullll ~ Tillt ....,_ II ..,._ .... -=:-,.:,., .::'-!'· ...._., llLf!:"'.._ULI ..:':':";'n a ITl~l=•.: ~-"' -::=':...: .. "::iiaTl11 ~· ~_.;'U."""J."' =:If• ••••arm .-!l.A!'.fL.w ...._...., M90fNiihOW • ............. .... 11 .._ .-, .l'i......,_• · n.~,...... 11111 •·•· ,_ ... ~ ~-fZMif -.o;iWft'iiiii ..... WO WIBrtT• .... or .. --... ~IO...._J~ I T"l'i.NlUftJAL. dOIN..,._M: •Clwllra.tlof 11·• ALOClllOLIC ,._, roe ... , ...... ~ . m&Tl•A1t1411 Tha petttioft t9C111Mll or .. ClllOINe Oonlor· ENOIAVOM MAMITM INTlaNATIONAL-c.nty•~ •
....... UllBlll Nottoell..,_...,..,. 18TATl•Ate91t .-rOOIMlll Toll ..... lies~~ to_.. ... ._ atlont Code t"-t llat NITWON( 20331 lluffelcle HEAL'fH C.NTIR AND 1tm ~ •
!OMWllorlll.,OltSMlwlA O~ANO: urtuant to Sectlont Toll ........ • 1 ..... STERLING IAN· credlton .. 00fltlftt9nl _.... l#tdet ._ ~......, DuncM. Inc. lfld •117, Hufttll)etOft IMOtl. TRAVILIRI' .,.MIDICAAL _....__.. ""-"=
"' " • " 1101·11115 of ._ c.1-. a-. and OOlltlfttent OORPOAATIOH • dA//lf IP-......... lfld...,.,.. wtlO dint Mn•llltfatton of .. W9M1 V.'811ftofd, ,_. Clll..... CUHIC, 11tl0 """" ve. ~ --....
TITON CHALIT RH· tor111a ~ lfld Pro-ctee11ora. lfld ...,.. ""° =ed Tnai. \#tdet ltle .._. i. -. ... ltttelt•d taMt ~. , . '°"" Ooil'f ....,_ • Dale lchwartz, 20331 l~.1 'OUfttaln v~. Cllf. ~ Not ..,.,_., 11, 21,
TAURANTS.lllC.11 ..... .....,_Cocle,lectlOflntt 1MYbeoehllw1Nll••ttl:I OalctlMd dMl:I Of Mrlle .. MdlOI ..... Of! /l nwtna on ttW•C191itton ~,_. l#tdet tM fttm ....... '117 Huft""91on t2rw '*'*Y t ,I, 1• to Ille °"*1.,...lt ol AJ. OftMCelltomiaConwMllCllel In tM wt1 att4/or ..... ot: truat LULL.AT PUil.iC JOHN O. IMNER wlll be tietii on FU~RY NMe Of ounotft I 8ttlftord. leadl. Calif. tM Rudolph H. JoMton. M-1t7 ~~_.!....,oontrol to Code. Section $36 Of .,. MtCHM\. NAtOOGU Al<A AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST A ~ '* ~ llled 11. 1... .. 1:•s P,M, In .. "Oorpor•...... ..... TNI b\ltlMM It con· M.D,. 12'1 MofVta~.... --"" -
---~ .. ~ Pw\91 Code and ~All NtCK H00Ga au>OEA F°" CASH (In tM ~ MADILYN A. MMMER o.pt, No. 3 9t 700 0Mc Pott a.di. CA t2llO, -. dUCted by: an lndMduel Long 8Mdl, 0... ........, ""'~ -TOllWI C:.... Dr .. Ste. 1M pt(Mllons 'Of tM Cell· A petition ,_ bMf\ lled fotmt which .,. lawflll ..,,_ In._ Superior Court ol 8'· C«ltef Dri\oe Welt. santa IONetMlr pertnenNp, • °' Dei. SdMllrtz -Javier OaYlla, M.D,. 1)922 tto, ~ ....._ Ca. t2ett fotnl• ~uetlon LIOen.intl J»f NICHOLAS C. HOOGIS mr In IN United Saa.) and ange County reQUllttne tMl Ana. CA. ~ 13, tM7. by TNI ttet.,_,t wu flied Gertt\Ofl '*9. Sent• Ana. HCntlOUI !!!o!!,.•
wlttl 4T On s... Generll Act. tM undertigned will ... In tM Suc*IOt Court of Or· /or tM catnlef''t, oet1tfted or MADEL YH A .. ~ .,. If YOU OBJECT to .... muNal OCM*'IC ol .,.. pert· with.,.. County Ctetti ot Or· Ctillf. t27o& ... ITA·-·
(P\lb, Eat. Ptl "'*-= .... by~~ ... County requeetlna tMl °"* "**' epedtled In appointed • pertONI ,..,.. gr.ming of IN petition, ~ """and ........... Mid.. ... County on J.,_,y 19, John K. Loll. M.O.. "12 The loloM'I ,.,_,. .,. • ,Putllflhed °'*'09 COMI on "'-11th day. of NICHOLAS C. H00Ga be CMI Code Section 292'411 wtatlw to aclfNllltef ltle thollld eltMt appw at "'-IOluaon, no per90n lflell 1MI Alpln. L,ne. Huntington ~~ •
o.l!y Pl6ot Fetwuery 1. t• '*'*Y· 1MI, •t 11:00 ~ • 1*90na1 ,..,._ (P_,..,.. In f\111 at"'-time of "t•tt Of"'-~t heating and ..... '/flA/Jf ob-nave~ to Incur f//f¥ ,_ 8Mdl. Callf. t2M8 ( T~ON "'°-'ICT · M2M o'dock AM on tlle ~ ,...,......,_to edlnlnl8* tM Niel •all "911t. tmt ancl The petition requatt• jeotlona or Ille writt.n objec-~ont on beNlf ot t"41 P).lb4ltMd Or-nee eo.t This t>utlnMt I• • eon· (b)TOYON IUI..., 'AM
...,. uld ptOperty Ilea •t of the decedent. lnl•-' c:onwyed to and authority to edminll* IN tlonl Wl1tl tM court tMlb9 tonlw-tlnn. Delly Piiot J..-y 25. Feb-ducted by: • o--ai pert• M>UTH. 10H1 ....,,Awa.
fl\ltllC NOT~ =.:or:t.::c-:.; ~:!!~::~~ ~~~~~~ ~~··~~~~ ~~~-J=~ int:'.~·::: "*Y 1.8. 111, 1• M'21t ~oll)hH.JoMaon.M.D. :;:;FountlMY ... c.lt.
llllm 17 PomoneA"9nlleln"'-•t•te under the tndepen· elnaftefdelcrlbed: t•t .. Aet. youratt«ney. tloelewattM..m-addreu Thie •t•t«Mnt WM flled C.A.8 . Developmeftt ..cnnoue •••• °' Coet• Meaa, County detit A<tminl•tratlon of &.. TRUSTOA: WANDA L.. A hMttnQ 6n the petition IF YOU ARE A CREDIT°" and~""""*•• Ide P\IUC NOTICE w1tl1 tlle County Clef1I ot Or· C0tp., CellfOfnla, 10221
..,.._ 8TATllmlff . of Orange, Stat• of Gall-t•tM Act. KIPPER w111 be hetd on FEBRUARY °' • contlng9nt c:tedltot ot ptac:tltioner. .,. Coun1y on Jenu#Y 11, a.... Ave I no. founlllll
The lollowlng ,_.,,..ere fomia, thegoode,Cl\9tt .... or A hMttnQ on the petition BENEFICIARY: BENEFIT 17. 1M8 at 1:45 P.M. In tM ~.you mutt Ille DATtO: January 2t, ttea PICTmCMla--18 1N8 V~1 Cellf, ~,.!! u"~
doing tMlM'IW .a; 1*90Ni propetty dw:tlbed will be hetd on FEBA\.!ARY SAVINGS CORPORATION Dept. No. 3 et 700 Civic '/flA/Jf cleif'll with tM court or IMMCAll I ITAIPOM, IMlm aTATW PJl7m , ..,._, L .--.. ,,. ,,_ ,.._
wtSTPORT ·SUPER· below. In the INttert of: 24. 19,18 at 1:45 P.M. In recorded May 25. 198' .. c.nter Drive WMt, Sent• pt...,.t It to tM perlOMI WILUAll Y. ITAPPOllD, TM lollowlng penont.,. Publiehed OrMge CoMt «eel, e s.guncto, Celt.
FORMANCE. 1W4 Chane ~k:Mlle Cay JoMt, Sc>. A Dept. No. 3 et 700 Cllltc Instr. No. "'"'218135 of Of. Ane, CA. ,._.,,1etlw ~led by lllM. ITAllLIY DUNCM, bue1t1eU .a; Oelly Pilot JanuatY 18, 26, 902,43 ·
Street. Coete Meu, Cellf. 205-da. ctw1. mite b.U Center Oflw W•t. Sant• lielal RecOf'dl In the office ol IF YOU 08JECT to tM the court wtthlrdour montn. llC .. lllM.· ITANLIY DUlt-D LLAR DAMES IN· F.tltuary 1, I . 1911 l,H. Batl'lford. 12412
92927 hlhld get-. drw, mlec bu An .. CA. ~ Recorder of 0r9nge granting of the petltlon:you from ttle dat• of nr.t le-CAM. "cs1'snl VESTMENT GROUP, 29272 M· 193 Foeter Ao"-Loe Alamltot.
MLF HoldtnGI. Inc ... C•I-Timothy HodgM. Sp. A IF YOU OBJECT to the County; lhould either 9PPM' at tM tuance ol lett.,. .. prO'ltded • Publlttled. Orange Cout PK.\o, MiUlon Viejo. Calf. CaMf.
tomle corporetlon, 2950 »· 244-bed. QUltr. bedfl'IM grMtlng of tM petition, you Rid deed of tNlt de-tlMtlng and •l•t• yow ob-In Section 700 of th• Delly Piiot F*"8ty 1, 1M8 02t91 PllllJC NOTICE Thi• CK4inete It eon-
way Avenue. Unit A·S, Cott• George Noonan, Sc>. B lhould elthet ~ et tile tcrlbel the lollowlng: jeetlon1 or fMe written objee· Probtlte Code of Callfomla. M237 Kar•n _ Meyer. 2827 2 ducted by: join! v.iture
Mese. Caltt. 92829 201-2 cabnt•. mlec bu, i-r1ng and at•t• your ob-The Euterty 180 feet of t~• with .JM court before The time for flllng d9lml wlll P.cato~ Mletlon Viejo. c.111. ACTITIOU8 ..-u Terry W. Smith ........
This bualn... I• con-pctur1. Inn•. ct'!ra. dtk, flm Jeetlon• or flle written objec-!tie Euterly 380 feet of Lot ttie hMrmg. Your tjPPM'· not •JtPW• ptlor to fOUf · PllllJC NOTICE 92et1 NAm ITA,.....,. Ttlll ttatemen1 Wat ,_, duet!d by: • COfPOf•tlon reltt tlons with tlle court before 1008, Newport M-. Trect. ·.nee mey be In peqon•()( by montht trom the date or tM Kathy AnMlmO, 1237-'B' me followtng pertone .,. with ttle County Ctetti of Or· Geoffrey Hlrson. Vice Owner ,...,_ lM right tt1e ~ Your epput· In the City of Coete Meu. u your ettomay. · hMMQ notJQe above. •'1717'1 Balboe Blvd .. ~. C911f. doing butlneet-. Mfl9 County on J__., 8.
f>retldent to bid at lh41 tale, Purdluet .nee mey be In per90f1 or by 9'lowfl one rnap recorded In IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR YOU MAY EXAMINE ttle FIC"'10U8 .,_.. tff81 • Fll~ST PRIOAITV, 1833 E. 1N8
Thia 111tement wu filed mu11 be l"Mde with cath only your attOf'ney. Book 5, Pege 1, Ml•· Of' • contingent creditor of Ille kept by 11141 court. "you ..,.._ ITA,.....,. Pamela OIOterlOfl. 3000 Founh St. Suite 2114. Sant• n11111
--_with ll'le County Clerk of Or· and ~Id for ., ttle time of . IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR celleneou• M9PI. recot"dl of the decMMd. you mu•t .... ., •• petlOfl lnt .... ed In The lollowlng per90M .,.. So. Main •MC. Sent• An .. Ana. C911f. 92701 J Publlthed. OrMge Coett enoe County on Jenuary 5, purchHe. All purch•Md Of' • contingent creditOf' of .. Id Orenge County. your clelm with tM court or tM .. tete, you may Nl'W dolna bu91neae u : C911f. 92707 N 0 rm• n R 0 b • t Qlijly 'Pllot ~ 11. 25,
1981 ' good•.,. SOid ...... and lhe decuaed, you mull"'• YOU ARE IN DEFAULT~· It to' tM perlONI "90flt~••ecvtororedmln-TH E c AR p ET M•te Glbeon. &4e1 H•· l.let!ennM. 25183 <>.ii ea= Febn.wy 1.1.1•
,_, mutt be~ •t the time your clelm with tM court °' UNDER A DEED OF TRUST repreaentetlve llPPOlnted by lltretor, or upon the 11· MILLS?OESIGN GALLER¥ mony Circle, Huntington nyon Lene. Et TOf'o, Cllllf. M· 190
Pubilalled Orenge Coett ol sele. Sale tubject to prior .,,_,t It to the per:JC>nel DATED 5/21/84. UNLESS the court within four monthe tomay for the eJ!ec\llor Of' OF ~GUNA, 119' So. Beech. c.llf. 92713 92830 ----------
Delly Pilot JllOU#Y 1 I. 18. cancellatlon In the event of ,.,.....,..tatlve appo1n19d by YOU TAKE ACTION TO trom the date of first i. lldmlnlttrator. and file with Cout Hwy .. i...-Beectl. Rhond• H.nllon. 1050 ·c· Thlt bu11neu 11 con· -Plll.IC NOTICE
25. February 1. 1988 Mntement ~ Owner the court within four months PROTECT PROPERTY. IT tu•nceolletteraatprovlded the court with proof of I«· Callf. 9"51 C.brlllo pertc Or. #A, Sant• ducted by: an·lndlvl<tual
M-18' end otMlgeted patty. Oeted trom the d•t• ol first .... MAY BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC In Section 700 of th• vlQe, • Wfltten requetlll•I· Mwvln L. Reiter. 450 Nyet An9, Callf. 92701 Nonnen Llebermen Ksm•
---------this lat and 8th day of Feb-tu•neeoflettersasprovlded SALE IF YOU NEED AN EX· Prob••• Code of Ctillfornla. Ing that )'(Kl detlr• IP9C ... Plllee, Laguna Beectl. Cellf. Nancy M9rtln. 1n1 w.... Thi• st • ..,,.,, WU flied FICT1110U9 .,_ .. Nil.IC NOTICE ruery. 1988. Public Storage In Section 700 ol th• PJ. AN AT 10 N OF THE TM time fOf' filing clalm1 wlll notice ol t"41 tiling of .,, In· 9~1 mlMt• AY9. •C. Coat• with the County Clerk of Or· llAm aTA~
Manegement, Inc. Tel• Prob.ie Code of C.,lfornla, N AT U R E OF T H E not expl,. priOf to four "'110!Y end llPP'....,,.,..t ot L-.n Reiter, 450 N)'9I MeM. Callf. 92J27 · eoge County on Jenueiy 12. The followlng pertone.,.
'1CTI'TIOUa ....... phone (811) 2'4-8080, The time for filing clelms wlll PROCEEDING AGAINST months from the date of the utate UMtl or of the petl· Piece, Laguna Beech. Cllllf. Kattty Melonl. 82 ~ 1981 doing but1neM •:
N/lm ITAW . , Agent f()( OWner. not el(plre prior to four YOU, YOU SHOULD CON-Maring nota eboYe, tlonaorecc:ounttmantloned 92151 Road. Irvine. cart 92715 "'191 TtfE CHAL.ET BAVARIAN
ThelOllQwlngP9f10fll•• "Published OrMge Coast monthtlromthedeteol the TACTAL..AWYER YOU MAY EXAMINE the ins.ctlon1200endl200.5of This IMI~ la con· Tlils outlnen la con· Publllhed OrMge CoU\ RESTAURANT,1"9Hwt>of
_____ d;;.;Ol;,..ng buslnMt U : . De Pilot FebruMy l . 8, i-1ng notice ebove. • 928 W. 17th St., Coste flle kept by the court. If. )'(Kl tM Calltomle Probete Code. ducted by: l1UltMind end wU9 ducted by: e oen-.. pert· Deity PllOt J•nvll'Y .18. 25. Blvd .. Coate ~· Cllllf. . -:0-~~ Ot:t-MAV-eb\M+He-IM ~ Int-led In Hurwitz, ..... , I M.W. L......,. Mrtf\lp Febni•ry 1 8 1988 Y•mama Inc... A Cellfornle
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Ridge Route .f 179. E~ TOf'o: M232 file kept by tM oourt. II you "(II • street address °' the eat•te. you may _ · · M-187 Corpor•tlol), 29672 Ivy
Calif 92830 er• • perlOfl ln1-9$1ed In common deslgnetlon of upon the executor or edmln· ,...._..,, 1121 I . c...e with tM Countt Clerk of Or· Thia etatement wu flied -Ulifln"Or'IW\t'llgUna,.....,...._,.._, ----
Clark Wesley JOhnton. Pla.IC NOTICE the estate, you mey ..w property Is ShQWfl •bove, no l1trel0f', Of' upon lM at· .......,, ..... -. C.,_ Mfl9 County on JanuMY 11, with tM County Cleftl ol Or· Piil.iC NOTICE Caltt. 928n
23333 R~ Route • ~_1.9, El upon the eHC:UIOf' or admln· werrenty ls given es to Us torney '°' the executor or dlil -; CA -1988 · Mfl9 County on JMuary t4, Thi• t>utlneN 11 con·
Toro. Calll. 92830 • Ftennoua .,..... letretor, f?r upon the at· completeness o~ correct· •dmlnlttrator. and file with Publllbed Orange Cout ~ 1N8 ICS1111 ducted by:• corporstlo!'t
This buslnns Is con· NAME aTATIMafr torney for tlle'eHc\ltor oi nen)" The beneficlery the court with proof of a«· Deity Pilot Fet)fuary 1. 2. 8. Published 0r9nge Cout ,_,. FICTIT10U9 .,_a1 Huun Aouf. P~ _
du<:ted ~· •n tndivlduel The lollowlng '*'°"' .,. edmlnlltretOf'. end file wilh under .. Id Deed ol Trust, by vice. •-written request ltat-1988 . Delly PllOt JMUery 18, 25, Published Oreoge Cout NAm ITATlmNT This ttatament wet llled
Clerk Mlev Johnson doing buslneu u: the court wltf'I proof of ,.,.. reason of a bf'ellC'1 or defeult Ing th.i you dMlre spec.., MT231 February 1. 8. 1M8 O.lly Piiot Jenuery 25, Feb-The foltowlng peraons .,. wlttl Ille County Cter11 of Or·
Th11 satemenl wu filed s Ky v 1 E w A p A RT. llloe, • written r~t st•I· In the oblioetion• aecrured nct!loe QI the llltng ol WI In-DIDI IC NOTICE M-194 ruMy 1. 8, 15. 1988 doing bualnea u : eoge County on Januery 12,
wtth theCountyCletll of Or· MENTS 2082 Bu1lne11 Ing th•t you detlre specie! thereby. lieretolore ... ventdfyWldappr~tol r-. DI-IC NO:;IC( -M-208 CJ ·s PRODUCE l 1988
enge County on Januery 19. Center '0rive. Suite _200, notice of t"41 fiilng of an In· ec:uted and delivered to the estate auets Of' ol tM peti-ITATllllNT Of r-11 FLO.WERS. INC .. 282,5 New· , fll1ln
i!988 lrvlne. Clllll. 92715 ventory and eppreisement of undersigned t wrlti,n Dec:· tlons Of' .ccounts mentioned AaANDO•-..T Of ITAnmlff Of DI-IC NOTICE port BIYd , Newport 8Mcft. Publlshed Orenge Cou1
F-..o , Pan Americ.ti Propertlet. Ml•te -t• Of' of the petl· l•r•Uon ol Deleull and 0.-In Section 1200•nd1200.5 of UM Of FICT1T10US AaANDO•RllWT Of r-. Cell!. 92&83 o.i1y Piiot Jenu9'}' 18, 25.
Published Orenge Cout 2082 Butlness Center Or,, tlons or eccounts m,ntloned mend lor Sele. end written the Cellfornla Probate Code. auaMM ..,._ UM Of FIC"'10US '1CtrnOUa .,...,, Dwight Het.no. Celifornte, Fe.b<uery t, I , 1~ ~~,y~ll~t ~;"~25,Fet>-Sulte 200• Irvine, Cellf, lnSeetlonl2001indl200.5ofnoti<:eoldeleuttandolelec· _H_urwltz, Remer A The lotlowlng per1on• . ., ..... ..,... ..,._8TATIMDfT 23992 Dory Drive. Legun• M-198
ry ' • • M-222 92715 the CellfOf'nla Probete Code, !Ion 10 ceuse the under· Df•lltlCMle, A...,_,. '°' heve ebandoned the uM ol The following per1on1 The followlftg peraona ere Niguel, CelU. 92877
Roneld F. Nlcholl, Jr.. l'"9ft L Rottlfodl, laq., signed to Mii said property ........... ,, 1121 E..e c;wt the Flctltloua Bu1lneu have et>llndonecf the uM ol doing bualneM u: this buatnen la con-Nil.IC NOTICE
Ml.IC NOTICE 9901 COf'nwall Ave., West-~'*':;~ ~~dsa,t~ .. ~~ ~~lg~=~ :f::'·c~=-C--Name: SKY VIEW APART· the Flctltlou1 Bu1in•11 N£W ACTION MANAGE· dUC1ed t>y: a corporetlon
I _.:_ ___ ::;::;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:::_m~l;;nst;er;;.· ~C .. 11. 92683 · • -·-•-' C MENTS. 2082 Buslneia Neme: IVAN'S AUI0....S£8: MEKLUMITED. UU. ght Htteno, PrM!den • . al I leleu Nidl"ois;-908-Varr .P .. H .. fter' II# het-eauMCS-Mld noUc;e-OI ge oas ter DrTve. u e aoo. V E. 935 Herbor Blvd., Ave. 83. Coste Mete. C.111. This t leternent WM rued ..,.._ aTATnmJIT NAm ITATl..wl •Ness Court. Cost• Mele. Nutwood Avenue, lufte defau.11 and of election to be D•lly Pilot February 1. 2. 8, Irvine. Cell!. 92715 Cost• MMe. Cellf. 92827 92827 with the CQu11ty Clerk ot Or· The loltowlnO l*9onl.,.
The loll<>wing pw1on1 are'Calil. 92826. -=·ti'=-o~~!1'3c!a.1 r:rd: ~r.~2~1j9!,7 ~~ 1988 MT230 The F1CtltlOU1 Bullnetl The Flctltlout Bual,_. Petrick . LM McNemee. ange County on Januery 13, doing bulinett at: S3TAR8 dolnQ bu iness es· This business 11 con-.-· · Name ,.,erred to tbove wu Name ret.rred to et>ow waa 2Q7 ~·Street #2 Hunt-1988 · HOMES GUTTER. 11
VIOEO TO u, 1125 Suite 0 ducted by-a oener•1 par~-~~8 Piiot February l , 2' _I , ::i1 =~~::n ~~ o~:.! Nil.IC NOTICE filed In Orenge County on fl(ed In Orange County on lngton Beach. Ctlll. 92548 "f:: South Hell.clay. Sant• Ana.
V1Ctorl1 St .. Coste M .... nership MT233 Coonty; Octoti.r 12. 1987 FILE Deoember 11. 19M FILE J>eul Solomon Burke. PubllShed Otange I CA 92705 •
Ctlll. 92627 Helen Nichols · S Id Sele will be mede but NOTICE Of NO.F357912 NO.F263063 8537 KeMn Avenue, Cenoge Delly Piiot Januery 18. 2~ C#lyle D. Cotnweli, 113&
Teodoro S BHcon This statement was filed • . • r DIATH Of Roneld F. NldlOls. Jr .. I Edmundo 0 111. 3008 Park. Cellf. 91306 Februwy 1. 8. ·1988 Port Renick Place. Newport
27352 Les N...;.., Mluloo wttn ,,... County Clerk 01 Or-Nil.IC NOTICE ~:i';;u~x:r=~~:,~w~_: DOROTHY IUZABl'TH 9901 Cotnw.,I Ave ... West· FernhMth Ln .. eo.11 M.... Peter ws Schulter. 207 M·192 Beech, CA 92880.
Viejo, Cell!. 92991 enge County on Jenuery 14• ., 1• title ossess1on' or LOMNZ minster. Ctlll. 92843 c.i11. 92628 Ger>eve StrMt •2. Hunt· Lynell• Lee Todoron. t2t8
This business Is con-1988 KS7t13 ~~ranc~ 10 'the AND Of NT1TION Helen Nichols. 9901 Corn· S • r g Io O I ez. 3 0 O 8 lngton Buch. Celil. 92641 Nil.IC HOTICE Tatl.lrvtne. CA 92714
ducted 'W-an lndlvlduel "· ,_C 1~ '~~:A~:-.J• remaining p<lnelpal P:im Of' TO AD•llTIR Vlt•ll Ave . WHtmlnster. Fernt!Mth Ln .. Coat• M.... This buslnns II con-This bullnffa 11 con· Teod0ro s Bucon Publisned vrange out . ESTlTI NO. A1•1472 CeJll. 92683 Cell!. 92826 ducted by: • general pert-ICS77n ducted by: • generel pert. This stet..:nent wes filed Dally P.tlot January 25. Fat>-The lollowlng persons are the not~! MCUr~ ~y sel~ To*' heirs. beneficiaries.. Thlt t>Yllneaa wu con-Tliit t>utlneaa wu con-nerlhip '1CTITIOUa ., ..... -snip
with 111e County Clerk°' Or· ruary 1· 8. TS. 1988 . d"obi~~,~~ ''So u A RE ~ ~td :~~·p~o~ld~er:. creditors end contingent ducted by • husbend end ducted by• gener•I pertner· Pet McN.,,_ NA• 8TATl•WT Cerlyle O.,~nwell
ange County on Jenuary 19. M·205 y 11 an under· the creditors. and persons who wlle ltllp · Tbll stetement wu filed The lollowtng persons .•re This 1tetement wu llled
1998 ~LEA~~RSL 22~ b W ~~I~· ,:i;:;:'~t said ~ 01 Trust mey be othefwlse Interested Thia statement wu flied This stetement wu flied with the County Clerk ol Or· dOlng busineu u • with the County Clerk of Or·
-Fma11---------:6a 1 ' 8 a ra, lees charges and upep..i In tt\e will andJor estete ol: with the County Clerk of Or-with the County C erk of Or: enge Count'/ on Jenuery 12, SUNFLOWER TRAVEL • .,,fie County on Jenuery 19.
Pubhst>ed Orange Cout Ml.IC NOTICE Edi Ak 630 w 01 the Trustee and of the DOROTHY ELIZABETH •nge County on Jenuery 14, enge County on JenuMy 19, '1988 • • 1525 Mesa Verde Orlve Eut 1968 ·
Daily Piiot Januery 26 Feb-r n yur. Id Deed LORENZ 1981 1988 ,.,_ • 105. Coste Men, Call!. ,__ ruary 1, 8, t5. 1988 . Kl7IOO Rosslynri, Fullerton. Calll. tru~ts :ireated by u A pethlon hat be«\ filed Published Orehge Coast Put:>llal'led OrMge Cont Published Orenge Cout 92626 Publithed Orange Cout
M-215 '1CTJTIOU8 llU ... 18 92~2
1 Ak 630 w ol ~ sale win be held on· by HAROLD CHRISTIAN Delly Piiot Jenuary 25. Feb-Delly Pilot Jenuery 25. Feb· Delly Piiot Jenu'ery 18. 25. Frederick G.A. Addi, 15~ Dally Pilot Jenuery 25. Feb-
,_-------. NAME ITA~NT Ro~n F 1~~,, Calif Fet>ruery 23 19" et t·3ci LORENZ In the Superior ruery 1, 8. 15, 1918 ruery 1. I . 15. 1988 Febtuery 1. 8, 1988 Mele Verde Drive Eut •9F. ruary 1, 8, 15, 1981
The follow•ng~persons I!'• 92832 · u Pm In the loCby f9 the build-Court of Orenge County re-M·22A M-22~ M-119 Cost .. Mesa. C.,11. 92626 m209
doing butlness as: This business is con-ing loceted '' 601 South C 11111\.TICE D1m•1c NOTICE DI-IC NOTICE Dlm•ic NOTICE DIDLIC NOTICE D1111•1c NOTIC·E PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery • Morlua• 1 Ctiape1 • C:remator\
J!>OO Pac•l·C V•e"' Oriw
lliewport Beach-
b-t~-<'. 70(•
WESTAR CORONA AS· ducted by husb•nd eno wife Lewis Street. Orange, Cell· __ Plll._..;..;._l.;.._rt1U1 _______ ,.UUL __________ ,._UUL ______ , __ ,._UUL _______ __.r...;;.;uu;.;;;...;;.._.;;_.;..;..;; __ , ___ r_UUL _____ _
SOCIATES. 2925 South Erdln Akyvt lornl\92668 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HE G Bristol Street Costa Mesa. This ·statement was hied At he time of the 1nltlel · ARIN
Call! 92626 With the County Clerk of Or· P<Jbllc1t1on of this notice.
HARBOR LAWN·
MT. OLIVE
MOr!Ud~V •·Cemere•'
Crernat ~•.
102~ Gisler A,,
L.osto Mes,
PIEAC~ BAOTHEAS
BELL BROADWAY
Mortuary • Cf'apel
110 Broaowav
Costa Mesa
642-9 t:o
Robert T Best. 2925 ange County 0,, Januarv 20 the total amount of the un-South Bristol Street, Cost• 1988 · pald belence of the obll·
Mesa. Cell! 92628 ,.... gallon HCUred by the 1t>ove
• Peter J l<oefhng. 2925 Published Orange C<>NI deSCrlbed deed bf trust and
South Bristol Street, Costa Delly Piiot Jenuary 25, Feb-estimated costs. expenteS.
Men, Cell! 92626 ruary 1 8 15 1988 • n d a·4 v • n c e s 1 s
Rot>er1 .I< Brtz1us. 2925 ' ' ' M-228 S5•6,346 38
Souttl Bristol Sfreet. Costa · rt il possible that at the
Mesa, .Callf 92626 Nil.IC NOTICE 11me of sale the.o"lrllng bid This busl~ss is con· · may be less th1.1 the total
ducted by a geoeral Pert· FICTITIOOa .,..... due ~Ship T Best NAME ITATIMINT If a"911eble. the upeeted
ot>ert The 1 lllowing P9C'SON are opening bid may ti. ob·
ThlS statement was filed dQjng t:. •:.lneu as. ta1ned by calling the follow·
with the County Clerk of Qr. MILO SYSTEMS 2945 Ing telephone number on the ••"r Cou~ty on Januery 12· Randolph Ave , Cost~ Mesa, day before tt\e aale (7141 19 8 '117712 Calif .92626 385-4837 or (213) 627:.4865
l
PubllShed Orange Cout The Carburetor Shop, . TAC•ton741
Cl""Y f ilot January 18. 25, Inc . C1lllorn1e Date Janue1 ry 22. 1988
r 1 8 1988 Thi.I b.ut.!rutH_l.s_c.oJl· I T E R L N 0 9 A N • rW v~ry · · M-191 dueted by a corp()(atlon CON'OftATION';-ii N
) MlctlNI J. Riley, President Truetee. 9y T .D. llRVICE
Tl'll.s statement was flied COMPANY. eaerit 8y a.tty
with the Cpunty'Clerk ol Or· Jo MeDent11. Aatleteftt ~--91lQLCOU(lty on JllllU~ ~.~.J,1:!1'1• 1948 II., Otente. CA tall (714) ,..., .... ,.., .
Publllhecl Orenge Coest Published-Orange Coast
Dalty Pilot Jenuery 25. Feb-Daily Pilot Fet>ruary 1. 8. 15.
ruary 1, 8. 15. 1981 1988
M-223 M235
P\8.IC NOTICE MLIC NOTICE
.·
PAOPQSED ST ATE LEGISLATION SENATE BILL 1517 (BERGESON)
BOLSA BAY 6 HARBOR CONSERVATION DISTRICT
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Hunti~gton Beach City Courcit'will hold a public hearing in the Council Chamber
at the-Huntington Beach Civic Center, 2000 Main Street, Huntington Beach, California, on the date and at the time
Indicated below to receive and consider the statements of all persons who wish to be heard relative to Senate Bill 1517.
DATE: Thursday, February 11 , 1988
TIME: 7:00 P.M.
SUBJECT: Proposed piece of state legislation, Senate Bill 1517, carried by Senator Marian Bergeson and sponsored
-by-the Signal Landmark Land Development Company
LOCATION: SB 1517 pertains to the creation of a Bolsa Bay Harbor and Conservation District within the 1600 acres
of uo.i.nCQCp.o.rated t.erritor¥.Jll the Bolsa Chica which la completely surrounded by the-City Gf-H~ntingtoo Beach.. __ .:
PROPOSAL: Under SB 1517. the J:?roposed district would provide for implementation of a certified Boise Chica Local
} Coastal Program, construction of an ocean Qntrance and small craft harbor and related facilities and to financially
support and bring about the restoration. creation, enhancement and maintenance of the wetlands and environmental-
ly sensitive habitat areas within the Bolsa Chica study area, and provide for such public works as water and sewer
facilities. The bill also specifies the powers and duties of the distr:ict and provides for the management and financin 1====:;:::::::::::;::::::=:-=:.i=:-,te-:_~TI::::TI=ou=•""au~s ... ~u""•=l---tltHih8-,dis:trict operatto .
NAME ITATE•NT
NAMI l~ATIMINT The following persons are
The following persona ere doing business es.
doingt>UllneNas M ES A PRE M IU M
HARBOR UNOCAL. 2248 WHOLESALEflS. 2402
Herbor Blvd . Costa Meu, t-larbof' Suite F 108, Costa
Celtf. 92826 Mesa, Calif 92626
Stleton Jen Birchler. 1042 Su~n Amelie Marcellus.
St. Aegis P1ace. Senta Ane. 2402 Harbor Suite F 108.
Cellf 92705 Costa Mesa. Calif 92626
This business Is con-This business 11 con·
ducted by· 1n lr)dlv•dual ducted ey· an tndlvldu•I ~~~~~~;;;~~.:.._.!..JW-JS~h~eron Jan Birchler Susan A, Marcellus ·~ Is statement was filed , This statemenr was filed
with t el:Otimy-eler • h the County Clerk of Or·
ange County on January 5, ange 9 bityPilat
642-5878
1988 -1988 ,,...1 , ...
Pvbllsl\ed Orange Coast Publiahed Orenge Coast
Deily Pilot January 11. 18. Delly Piiot Januery 25. Feb·
2S, f:,ebruary I 1988 • ruary t. a, 15, 19&8
M-1~ M-220
STARTING A NEW BUSINESS??
The Legaf Department at th~
Dally Pilot is pleased to a"-
nounce a new service now avail·
able to new businesses.
We wlll now SEARCH the
name for you at no extra Charge.
and save you the time and the
trip ~o the Court House In Santa •
Ana. Then. of course. atter the •
search It completed we· will file
your ·fictitious business name
statement wtth the Coun~ Clerk.
p\,blisn once a week tar four
weef(s as required ,.by law and
tf\en flle your proof of publl-
catlon wtth the County Clerk
Please stop by to file your
fictitious business statement at
the Daily PUot Legal Depart-
ment. 330 West Bay. Costa
Mesa. California. If you can not
stop by. please call us
at (714) 642-4321, Extension
315 or 316 and we will make
arra.ngementa tor you to handle
this procedure by mail.
If you lhould have any further
.questions. please call us and we
wtft be more than glad to aasist
you.
Good tuck In your
/WIW buainess!!
ALL INTERESTED PERSONS are Invited to attend said hearing and express opinions concerning the proposed
Senate Bill. Copy of the most recently amended version of Senate Bill J 517 is on file in the Office of the City Clerk 2000
Main Street, Huntington Beach. California, for Inspection by the public. If there are any questions regarding this
hearing call James Palin, Deputy City Administrator at (714) 536-5275.
HU"'TINGTON BEACH CITY COUNCIL, Br: Allele M. Wentworth, City Clerk, Phone: (714) 536-5405
Dated 1 /26/88
Published Orange Coast Dally Pilot February 1, 1988 ---Anaheim Bay
-----
. j • •'. -. :;, r -J . ·r . lfi,1 • '·w.,.,. · iN·..,.
I
M238
:
...........
.·
.· . -
CALL 642-5678
,_..]
........ ,..
.,,. ~· fllOt ... ""'"''" )0 MYI I\ reeu.,-M •• M ~· !O... ........ I "'llW .. 1 °"" ,...,_ -.,,,, ...... _.., _, -,,_.~ , ... ,..,., '--"'' '·~ .,..., , .. ,CJf!.. • ... to''WV\ t .. \
WM~~
' . .
Orenge CoMt DAILY PILOT/Monday, February 1, 1988 ..
Send a personali zed
message to the ones you love!
Write your _o~n message
Eight different hearts to choose
from. two sizes
Large heart-$40
Small heart-$20
In column messages also available . 6 lines
._for $3 00 (4 word$ per 11ne1
).-
Call 642-5678
or come tn person to prck out yoltr ao ·
The Daily Pilot 330 W Bay St Costa Mesa Ca 926r
11 Olock wes1 01 Ne ... p0<1 B1vo 01 ... n 191,., ~ J•ctor a 5•
Office Hour~ -Mopday . Friday 8 10 5 Ol-AO•<>e \ ··r.sc.;. r.,c,. .a .
#
--------------------~---~----~----------NAME ______________ PHOf\IE
~---------------
CITY __________________ s·A E ___ z P _______ _
AMGlfNT ENCLOSED $ ____________ MasterCard \ sa
Exer•a• on Date ---------
Message IN COL U~ 'J -------
I
,
\
• I
-I
:---:-.... -
..Ill.\. .i!!P_.. ..:.='w ·,...::~ === · &"=~'~:>~ ...:=.:_.. "::=:ta~P ...,,,,..!!'.! 1 ,.: ~-:.:-....... AM~a19,. ..-ru... WR a.--. .. a.rs r ......., ... ~,.. NllTI•••• n.lolllllillfll,..... um'11Amt ,:.=.:a.A.,,.. O.c:-.~ ' ..... _ ••••11w. 111&&: ... _.., Mm•t!11•. ,_..._. ............... ~ .. --........ ~-1"9 ..... ,.,... .. --""' .. '!!!.'.!.!'&:.,~ "-• _. •-Kif -..... 19 .. -. • ...... °'._lllll1•1'1. """*"to ....... tal.t l!NTIU~INIUR!AL ~..,_---AU*'m"C .,._, •• . T&MO.ICW mTAft-MM11 TM petlUon r......-.... C .. 11 *' CGfpor· INDIAVOM ~ • UUl'tNATIOM -~Olt......,,11~ ..-...uc•••• Noelcell._...,....... ISTA .... W91'00DIK , .................... ~ .. ~ allone Coct. "'" .... NETWON< 20331...,..... HIALTH Cl!NTIR AND,.. TAoM~o".•,A ~IWANR:D' pura11ant to l'ectlOI\• To.................. s TI" LING • AN.*"°" -Wtlftlil"t ...... --.. ~ ~ Dunoin. Inc. Ind 1111. """'""'°" '"°"· T9'AVl!ll"I' MIDICAl --11· w "'--"C
•" •vn 11101-21715 OI .. C. ciedltOl1 anc1;.a....,t COfi'POMTION •~IP-....... Ind...,_. Who dent Adn*tllUMtofl of b-W19M1 v. awtotd ....... Cllf. t1t4t CUHIC, 111to W"'* A•. ,., .. r,_ --
TETON CHALET RH-..... ....... Ind "'°" ~ ~ ""° =TNatee llnCler ... ..., be ........ lntei .. ed t•• Act. • totor. dOlf'8 ...... -Date lcftweru. 20H1 nn. 'ountain v...,, Celt. ~ Plot ..,..,., 1•· ti.
TAUMNTS. INC."~ ......... Code. s.c.loft nit ~ ... oer.-........ d ctwttbed deed " "' .... .,., ....... Of: A "-'Ina on ,... oeetetor! pertwa unctar .... fWm .,,,.. ,, 1 t7, Hunttnpton tt108 '*'*Y t, •• -10 ... o.p..-...... a.-Iii-..... c~COIN'Nt-In h .. flltdl~ .... of: trwtWI LHLLATPUklC JOtWG.IWMl.A will be 1.-J on RllllUARY '*"9of Dllnclft& ..... d. 8Mdl.c.ilt.1"4t Ructolpft H. Jottn1on. ..,.,,,
.. cottolle~ ... Controlt'O Code, Section 536 of ttMt MICHA.fLN.HODGUAKA AUCTIONTOTHEHIGHllT A_....... Ml belr't Med f7. tNI at 1:•5"P.M.Inat14Corpor ... ,..._....,_ Thie buMMM 19 COit• M.D .. 12,t Monlla ,,,_.., __ .,...__
--..,..,.. et c.llt<Wnla penel Code end MICHAIL Nq< H00GU BIOOEA f"OA CASH (In ti. by MADEL VN A. MMMER Dept. No. 3 • 700 CMc pcwt llaed\, CA NllO. dllo-duCted by: en lndMdull Long e-ctt. Cellf. tol03 """"" ""'~ -TOMI c..r Or •• 119. t._ pt~~ Of the Cell-,A ~ 11aa be91 lied fOfml wtllCfl ere '""" ... In .. Superior Court of Or· Center OrM w..t. Santa 10M 1N1r pertNf"INp, M of 0.. ~ Je¥ler Devlle. M.D .. 1*2 ''°· Colla ...... ca. t2IH torn•• Auction ~no by NICHOlAS c. HOOOU dar In the Unl'9d ,,...., end --County ........... 1Nt AM. CA. .....,...., 1$, 1tt7. by Thie .....,.,.,, WM tlled Qerft>n Pleoe. Sant• ~
.... "41'.' On Stile Ganetel Act, tlleundar9ignecl Wiii iii In IN~'°' Court of Or· /or tlteCMlliet'•, cantlector MADELYN A. ...... ""' be ., YOU 08.JECT '° ,... ""** oonelWlt of,...., ...... ""County a.t1t of Or· Cellf. W108
(Pub. Eat. fl .. ) ..._ at public .... by compacl11Ye ange County raqueattng tNt ottlet cNc111 _...., In mppolm.CS • per9QNI ,..,._ granting of the pedtlon, you '*'-Ind INC,.,._, Mid*-ange County on Janua1Y tt. Jofln K. Loll, M,D.. 1412 The ......... ..... ••
Publltttad Orange Coaat b'dOlng on "" tlttl day of NICHOlAS C. ttOOGO be CM1 Code• Section 2924" r...,..tetlYe toadmloleear the "'°'*' altltar eppw It 1M llOIUtton, no par.an el'8ll tt18 Alp!M 1...-.. HuntlnttOf't ~.....,_ea;
Qeltv Piiot FetlNaly 1• ,... February. 1NI, 1t 11:00 apc>Olftted .. pertonal ..... (Peyeble in lull at ""time of •tate Of 1N deeedent. "'9ftno end .._ YQ111' ob--,_.,~ to !neut 11ri ,_ llMd\, Ca8f. 92141 ' TOYON llW>.ET
M231 o'dodl AM on tM ~ ~to adlTW.111* et. .... , 111 r!Qttt, tltte and The petition requnt• jec11oM or Ne written obfae· on bet'9ll of IN flubll.t*I Orllntl COMt TN• bUll'*lt I• con· (b)TO' ON llJI,.... PAN<
---------wtw9 Mid ~operty llM ..,.,. of tM decad9nt. lntereat conwyed 10-end euthority to aclmlnl9* "" tlon1 wilt\ tM COUit belote lrift. Dally Pllol Janurt 25. FM>-duCted by: • general '*1· &OUTH. '°"' ...., Awe. "8.IC ll)TIC( be9I ltored, end wtlldl are Tiie petition requHt• .now held by It under Mid •••ta ~ ,._ ~ ttle hMttnQ, Yow ICIQeW· M9I I~ Duncan. lncw ruaty J, I , t5. tNI nettNp 0 • 110i '°""lain V...,, Cellf.
locet9d " Public Storaoa auttiortty to edmlnllt• the. Deed of T r111t In Ille ptoperfy dint Admlnletratlon of Ea-an<le may be In peraon Or by ine..-10 oonttnua to Pf9C· M~21t Audolptl H. JoflMC)n, M. . N70I IU1m t7H Pomona A..,.,_,. In ttta e1tate under 1t1e lndlpen-hlfainatler deecrlbed: '""Act. • your anorMy. • 11oe ._at,... Mme..,._. Thie 1tatament •• filed C.A.I . Development ~.~-':"c:::.•s-=-of"C.2. :"~~!ration ot Ea-t<l~=~:TOR: WANDA L . .: ~:: ~i:B=~ or'~ Y~~~ ~=~o: :CS.J:::,"."""ber •a IOle NI.Jc NOTICE ::.·~c,::= r,: =·A~~~~·,~
TM IOlowlnt P9f90N -fOfnla, tM QOOdl. ctlattlll or A hlering on ttle peelbon BENEF~ARY: BENE AT 17, 1NI at 1:45 P.M. In tM r:lecuMd. you mu.I Ille DATIO: JettWIY:;,,: PICTmOUe Wll IHI _ V""-'/. c.ft!· ~..!! uA .._
doing llulin4l!M M : perlOMI pniperty delc:rlbed w111 be held on FE8RUARV SAVINGS CORPORATION Dept_ No. 3 It 700 CMc your clelm wl1tl the court or · DWICM & 8T , ..._IT~~ '-·-lettlara ... r., .. ,., ..-
w!S TPORT-SUPE R· beiow.lnttlematt.,..of: 2•. 1NI at 1:45 P.M. In recorded May25, 111'u Center Or1ve WMI, 8-lla preeent " to 1M per90NI -.&JAii Y. 8T~. TMfOllOWinopeteONlfe Publllhed Orange 0oMt et•, El ....... c.llf,
FORMANCE, 1974 Charle Mlchelle Cay JoMe, Sp. A Dept. No 3 at 700 Civic lnltr. No 84-218835 of Of~ Ana. CA. repr_,tlt"'8 ~tad by llAL ITMILSY DUNCAN, dolnCJ ~ea; 0tMy Pilot Januwy 18, 25. 802"3 ·
•Street. C0911 Mee&. Callf. 205-«lfa, ctn. rNlc bx1 Center OflY9 W•t. Santa llolal ~rd1 In Iha office of IF YOU •08JECT lo IN t._ couri ¥Wtttlln fOUf monthe ..C., llAL ITM&IY DUN-DOLLAR DAMES IN· Februery 1, 8, 1M8 1.H. latftford, 11412
92827 ,.__.., ftlhld gdl. drMr. mile bu Ana. CA. ttle R41corder of Otange g,antlng ot Ille pet"'°"· you from the dMe of l'll'lt II-CAii. "'ll'flflt VESTMENT OAOVP. 29272 • M·t93 FOii• Aoed, Loe AIMtlloa. MLF Holdlng9. lno ... __,.. Tlmottty Hod9M. .Sp. A IF YOU OBJECT to tile Counly; ltlould elthar ~ •• tile auanoe of teUer• .. provided Publahed Or11nt1 COMt Paceto. MIMlon Ylejo, Clllf. Clllf. lomla corporation, 2950 Nr~ 244-bed, guttr, beOfrme granting of the petition. you Mid OMd ol trutt <»-hMflng and ltate your ob-In S*ltlon 700 of the Deity Piiot Febtuaty 1. 1911 t2tt1 "8.IC NOTICE Thi• butlneet I• Con-
way Avenue, Unit A-5. Coet• George Noonan. Sp.. 8 lhoold ellher IPPM' et tile ecrlbel tile followtng: jeetlonl or file w..ltten obfec· Probe .. Code of c.lllomla. M~l Katen ·Meyer. 21272 ducted b't: joint -mK•
Mesa, Clllf. 92928 , 201-2 cabntl, miec bx1. heiring and ltlte your ob-The <£11terty 180 feet of tton1 with the court befote The time for tlllng c:lelml wtl PKato, MltelOn VlefO, Cllllf. PICTIT10U8 ....... TetrY W. Smlttt .........
Th11 bu1lneM I• con-pctura, trm., mr1, dlk, flm )ectlon• or file written ot>Jec;-the Euterty 3eO !Mt of lot ttle hearlnt. Your IC>PM'· not expire prior to ~ PtB.JC NOTtcE t2te t NAMI tTA,....r Thie 9'atemenl "' ,_,
ducted by: • CO<POfatlon . ,-of11 tlon1 with me court before 1008, N9wpor1 Meta Tract, ance may be In l*IOn Of by monthl trom ""date of the Kathy AnMlmo 1237 ·a· TM fo11ow1nt l*IOfll .,. wltfl tM County Cler1I of Or·
Geolfrey Hlrton. Vic, Owner reMnlel tile rlOflf tile ~· 'fOUI 8Q()eat· In tile City ol Coeta Mela. u your attomay. heat'"'° notloe abolle. Kln'N · Balboa &Mt .. ~. Clllf. doltlQ bualnell u; 11"1' County on ~ t.
President to bid et tile ..... PurcNMI "'°'may b'e ln l*IOn br by 8"own on. tnllC> racorjMd In IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR vou MAY EXAMINE ... ACTn'IOUe -·· 9298 t ' FIAST PRIORITY. 1933 E. 1Nt Thll 111temant w11 llled mutt bemadewlthcMtlonly your attOfney. -80011 5, Page 1, Ml1-Of a contingent cred"or of Ille kept by ttte coun. "you NAMl ITA,_..,. . p.,.,... Dldlerton 3000 FOUf1h St. Sutt• 264, Sant• ,_.,77
with the County Clarll ol Or-end SI.id tor at the time of IF YOU AAE A CREDITOR cellaneou• Mapl. recordl of Ille deceeMd, you"""' Ille .,. a petlOn lnt ... ted In The fOllowtog ~a.,. So. Main •MC. SMia Ana, An•. Callf. 92701 Publllhed Orante COMt
8flQ8 County on Januaty 5. purchaM All purch•Md or a contingent creditor of 18ld Orange County. your claim with tile court Of the •t•t•. you l'l\ay eerva ~~ •: c.llt. 92707 N 0 r m a n R 0 b e r t Dally Pltot .JM'NM'I 18, 25,
1988 goods are IOld u 11. end tile decetaed you rnUll tile YOU ARE IN OEFAULT ptetent It to tile'*'°"" uponttlee11ecvtor0fldmln• T E C AR f> ET Maria Olblor'I 14411 Her· Lieberman 25183 Oak Ca-Fet>fuery 1, I , 1M8 ~ mu1t be rem<>Yed at ttletlme ~Claim wtth Iha court Of UNDER A 0€EO OF TRUST repteMnlallve appointed by lltrator, Of 'upon the ··-MILL ?DESIGN OALLERV mony Circle. 'Huntington nyon Lane. er TOJO, Cllll M-190
Publlatled °'""" Coaet of ..... Sa!e IUb)ect to l)l'lor pr..,,t It to lhe pertOnal DATED 5121/a.. UNLESS the court within ic:iur "'°""" torney tor ttle executor Of OF lAOU~A. 119• So. BMch Callf t2713 92930
Daily Pilot January 11, 18, canc:elletlon In ttle event of repr..itatlve apPolnted by YOU TAKE ACTION TO from the dat• of fltlt Is-admlnl1tra1or. and tile with CoMt Hwy .. Laguna Beect\, ~. Hwrllon, 1050 ·c· Thia bu1lne11 11 con-"8.IC NOTICE
25, February I, 1988 Mttlement be'-! 0-. the court Within lour months l>ROTECT PROPERTY, IT 1Uan<:eollettar1uprO'l\ded the COUf't with proof of Mr· Calif. 92951 C~ pat1t Or. •A. Santa ducted by: en lndlvldual
M·18A and obligated l)M1y. 0.ted from Ille d•I• ol llrst II· MAY BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC In Section 700 of th• vice. •,wnttan requeet Ital· MaMn L. Reiter. 450 Nyea Ana Calif. 92101 • Norman Uebarman • '"""
---------1thlt 11t and 8th day of F.0-.Uanceoflettan al provided. SALE IF YOU NEED AN EX-PfObatl Code ol Calltornla. Ing that you 6Mlre lf)eClll "'-· Laguna 8Mc:tl, Calif. N9ncy Mll11n. 1778 W•I· Thll 1t1temant wu llled PICTITIOUl W .. fltalCN0Ttc£ ruary.1988.Puhllc:StOflOl ln Section 700 of thePLANATION OF THEThet1rnetortlllngctalm1wtllnotice oftlleftllngofan ln·92t51 mlnat• AY9. •C. Coeta.tthttleCountyClerilofOr· NAM18TA~
Management. Inc. Tele-Pr<.:!bate Code of California. NAT UR E 0 F T HE not explra ptlor lo lour ventoryend appralMmentof L.-.i Aelter, 450 N)'el Mau CalH 92827 ange County on January 12. The following pertonl ••
FICTTTIOUI ~· pho.ne, (818) 2'4~1080. The.lime tor fifing clalms will P~OCEEDING AGAINST monthl from ttle date of tile Mtl'9 aa.t1 OI of1M pell· ,._., Laguna BMch. C~.. Kathy M.lont. 112 Oval 1taa doing~•:
NAmlTA,._.,., Agantfor.OW-. not eitplre prior to lour VOU. YOU S"40ULD CON-heacl_ngnotloeabo'le,, tlonloraccioUnt11ne11tlo11ed t2t5,1 Road Irvine Cellf 92715 "'791 THE CHALET BAVARIAN
The tollowlng pet'IOf'll •• Publllhed °'""" Coast monthl frOIT' :""date ol lhe TACT A LAWYER vdu MA" EXAMINE tile In Section 1200and1200.5 of Thil bullneq II con· Thli bu1ine11' 11 con· Published Orange Coul RE.STAURANT, ttet Harbor
doing bullMN Cu: 233.,., Dally Pilot Feb.ruary 1, 11. heattng n<>+ ~ aboYe. 928 W 17th St.. Cosll Ille kept by tile court. " you IN Cllllfornla Probate Code. ducted by: hulband and wife ducted by· a general part· Deity PilOt J~ t8, 25, Blvd .. Coate Mela, Callt. C J.J. SERVI ES. ·~ 1988 ' VOIJ MA'( EXAMINE the Mesa. Callf are a l*IOn lnt••ted In Ht1rwlt1, 9'eMer A MaMn L Miter nerlhlp . Febluary 1 8. '988 Vamarna lne., A Clllfornla Aid~ Route •1711, El Toro, M232 fife kept by Ille eoun It you "(II a street address or the .. 111e. you l'l\ay ..,,,. DIV.1:eei-. A....,. .., Thie 1t1temant wu tiled Kwan Mayer • ' M-t87 Corpor•flon, tt572 Ivy
Callf 921130 are a l*IOn lnter•led in eomn:t1>n dHlgnatlon of upon the executor Of aclmln-........... J121 L Cwt with the County Clark of Ot· Thll 1tetament wu filed ()tann OrM. Laouna N!Quel.
Clark Welley Johnton. . PtalC NOTIC[ the Mtl11. you may MrW prope!'ty Is shown abo..,., no lltrator, Of upon the •t· ...... ., • ...._-. C-8flQ8 poutttr Ott January 1 t. h ttle Couflty Clertl of Of· Ml.IC NOTtCE Calif. 92877
23333 Ridge Roule • 178, El · upon the executor or admln· w1rranty is given u to Its torney for the executor or .i Mer, CA -1988 ange County on January 14, Thi• bu11ne11 11 con·
\pro. Calll. 92630 ACTTTIOUI .,...,, lstralor, Of upon tl)e at· completeness or correct· admlnlltrator. and file with Publillled Orange Coat f1lniM 1999 · · JtJ1'1ll ducted by:• COfPC)r-111on
This buslnffl la eon-NAMI aTATnmWT torney for Ille execulor or neu}" The btneflclery the coun with proof of.,. Delly Piiot FebNary 1. 2. 8. Publlstfed Orange Cout ,*011 ACTn10U8 ..,...11 ti•IMn "°"'· Prelldlnt
dueled by:'" lnc:livldual The followtng l*'90f\I are admlnlllralor. and fife with under uld Deed ol Trust, by vice.• wrtuen requeet 9'at-1HI Dally Piiot January 18, 25, Publllhed Ofange Cout .._ ITA,....,. Ttltl 1tatemanl w• ~
Clark Wetley Johneon doing bullneaa u: the court wtlb proof of ..,. reason ot e breach or default log that you dellf• 9'l9Clal MT231 February 1, 8. 1NI Dally Piiot January 2~ Feb-The 1o11ow1ng ~· .,. with the County Cter1C of Or·
Tllo• Stalernenl Wll llled SKY VIEW APART-vtce.awrtttenrequeetstat-In ttle'Obl'9atlonl MCtured notlceoftllellllntofMln-M-tlM ruaryl,8,15.1988 . dolngbwllneeau! angeCOUfttyon.lenuery12. wotll~County,Clerk olog· MENTS. 2082 Bueln•ll Ing that you dellr1I special thereby, haretotora Ill· ventoryandappralaement of Plllt.IC NOTtCE •-IC w.Ta.rc M-208 C.J ·s PRODUCE & t988 -;x; ounty on January 1 · Center Orlve. Suite 200. notlele of tile ftllng of an In· eouted and t the esllt• ....,, Of of the patio-ITAT'EmNT °' ,._ nu ~ FLOWERS. INC .. 2825 .._. •. _1,._'111111
1 Irvine Calif 927 l5 ventory and appraleement of underslg~ • wrltt Dee· lions or aecoun11 mentioned 5 NT Of W •-IC NOTICE P<>f1 8lvd .._port 8Moh Publiched Or .. ¥' Cout
· Of ~ Pa~ Am9r1can Properties Mtate -ts or of the pell-l11etlon of fault and 0.. In Section 1200 and 1200.5 ol ~T~~ A:i~•-NT°'OI' ,._ Calif 92963 ' Dally Piiot Januaty 18, 25,
D 7u~~ •no;5 ~~ 2082 &linen Center Dr.'. tlons or accounts mentioned mand for Sale, 111\d wrltlen lhe Celllornla Probate Code ., ..... NAm UM oi lllCTrnoua ,JCTTTIOUI ., ... 11 Dwight Hatano. Callfornia, February 1, 8, 1988
a ty 1 8 ;;n~;z8 . Suite 200, Irvine, Callt. lnS.C:tlonl200 andl2005of notloe oldefaultandolek!e· -~11rw_l11, "'"'" a The loll~ penon1 MJ-llNAMI -NAMllTATWMRNT 23992 OOfy Or1ve. Laguna M-1M
ruary · · · M-22 927 l5 the California Probate Code lion to caute the under-DtullOllAIO, A...._,. fer have •band the UM of The followln rsoni l'lle following IOlll .,. NloUel. Callf. 9~1577 --------~_.990R~Fa1 Nichol•w· Jr .. ...="'c'"='~ ~':i;tyo ~,.~~1'?!:::Z '-:':.!"~1~c;:: tile Flc1itlou1 Bu1lne11 h•ve ~ tt!9 uw ot dol.ng bulil-.:: thl• bullnea1 11 con-PlllltC NOTICE Ptll.IC NOTICE 1 ....,.nw 1 AY9.. •1• ~' ' 'V ':Y -·c..us -Name: SKY-VIEW APART· t a Flcffilou1-Bulfntn NEW ACTION-M'ANAO · dvetect-by-8-~tion-+--.;..;.__,_ ..... __ _
---------mlnstlf. Callf 92Ml a ~ A........,_ ._ and tii.eaft~-~ ~ 1 MENTS, 2082 ButlneH Name: IVAN'S AUTO SER· ME,.T LIMITED. 2447 Elden C>Wlghl Hatano. Preeldent ACTIT10U8 ...... ..
ACTITIOUI .,..... ~~~c Nichole•· 909Mvan :::~!::"A .. ~~ :~ ::.= ~~~ =.t:::.ti::: .= o!;;b ~~Zu~ 1 ~-: Center Drive, Sult• 200. VICE. 935 Harbor Blvd., Ave 83. Cott• M .... Callf -Jhll ·c••temenct WU fflOled ..... ITATlmJIJ NAm ITATE•NT ~ oun. osta .... ' 88 ' · ' lrvlne Call! 92715 eo.11 M .. Callf 92U7 92627 with the ounty lerk o r· The tollowlno perton1 are
The loMowing petsons 1re CalTI!. 926b26 I -:~~:="o~~~~t r:.~d: ~~~~~~1~9~.7 C:.~ 19 MT230 nie F1c11t10U1 Buslneu The FlctlilOUI . BullMN Patrick LH McNarnee. ange ~ounty on January 13. doing butlneMO TTE11R: S3TAR8 -doing busl""' 11· "'' u1•ne11 I con-. •w Name r.ierred to abo..,. was Name referred to above w11 207 Oenev1 Str ... 112 Hunt· 1988 HOMES U . 11
VIOEOTO u., 125 Suite 0 ducted by-• oener•l pan-~:~ Prlot February 1· 2· 8· ~I =~~~::n ~~ ~': 0' Pllll.IC NOTICE tiled In Ofange County on fifed In °'11"1' County on lnQtoa Beach. Calif 92648 "'7712 South Halladay. Santa Ana.
Victoria St .. Costa Mesa. nershlp . MT233 County Ott October 12, 1987 FILE Oeoemi>ef l1, 19114 FILE Paul Solomon Burki, Put>llshed Of1nge Cou5t CA 92705 Calif 921127 Heier! Nletlols ' NOTICa Of N0 .F357912 !'40 ~263083 8537 KeMn Avenue. Canoga Dally Pilot January 18. 2 . ·Carlyle 0. Cornwell, 18341
Teodoro s Bueon. This statement was !lied Said~ will be made. but DEATH Of RONHI F. Nlch011. Jr · 1 Edmundo Diaz, 3008 Park. Calif. 91306 February 1. 8. 1988 Port Ren!& Place, N9wpor1
27352 Las Nieves, Minion With 1he County Clerk of Of. Pllll.IC NOTICE wlt~OUI wovenant ~~war-DOROTHY ELIZAMTH 9901 COfnwall AY9 .. West-Fernfleeth Ln ' Colt• M-. Peter Lars Schuller, 2l>7 M· 192 8"ch, CA 92MO
Viejo. Calll. 92691 ~;;c County on Jlf\uary 1'· KJ7't1' ~:~~-~~=·~~on' r:; LORENZ minster. CaHf. 92683 Cali!. 926211 Geneva Str .. t •2. Hunt· Lyndia L .. Todoroff, 1288
Tiiis busloe11 11 eon--ftC1rnoul ., ... ,, encumbrances Lo ·,he A.NO Of NTTT10N Helen Nichols. 9901 COfn· Sergio Olu. 3008 lnQton Beec:tl. Callf. 92648 Plel.JC NOTl(J: left. Irvine, CA 92714
ducted by:· an lndlYldual P 0 ~I NA• ITATE•NT remaining prlnclpal P!rm or TO ~TElt wall Ave . We1tmln1tu. F.ernflellh Ln .. Costa M.... 1°hl1 bu1ln ... 11 ·con· Tllll bu11ne11 11 eon·
TeodOfo S BHGon D tyub~~~ rano;5 ~~ Tile following pe<sons i re the note(s) secured by Hid E .. Tllft MO; A14t472 Callt 921183 Cllllf. 928211 ducted by: e general pan-•S7771 dueled by: • general Pll1· Thl1 ttllefTlenl was tiled 81 01 anuary · a . : Deed 01 Trull. wlt" lf'lte<"t To all t*ra. benef\clwlet. Thia bull..-. WM con· Thll bu.U-. wu oon-netlhlp '1CTIT10UI MllMll ner'll'l!P wtththe CountyClerkof Or-ruBfY·-1<8 15· 1988 M-205 d~~slT~11sou A"AE u insaldnoteprovlded ad· creditors and contingent ducted by a llu1blnd 1nd dUC1edbyageneralpll1ner· PatMcNarnee NAmlTATWmNT CarlyleD.COfnwell
ange County on Januaty t9. CLEANERS 2230 w w,,11 vances 11 t ny under· ·the cred1tor1, and persons Who wife lhlp TIW1 tlat-1t w11 filed The lollOWlng persons ire Thll statement wu filed
1988 . • 'f Id o9.d I T IMY be olllefWIM lnt•elled Thll 1t11ement Wll flied This ltatement WU llled with the County Clerk of Or· doing bull""9 .. with the County Clerll of Or·
• ~ • ~~lvd · La Hetml, Calif ::sc~a~ ,end .~~':'i In the wlll lfld/or estate of. with the County Clark ot Or-wltfl the County Clarll of C>t~ ange County on January t2, SUNFLOWER TRAVEL . ange County on Jeau11Y 19.
Publlshed Orange Coat Ml.IC NOHCE -Erdin Ak 1 1130 w ol the Trustee· and of the OOROTH1Y ELIZABETH ange County on January 14, ange County on January t9. 1988 t525 M"a Verde onw Eut 1988
Deity Ptlot January 25, Feb-Rolllynn F~:'i.non Calit tr1,1sts created by said Deed t.ORENZ, -. 1988 1988 "'7• • 105, Costa Meee: Calif. ,_
ruary 1 8. 15. 1988 KJ7IOO 113 · · 01 Trust · A petlt.lori hal beerl flied Publlllled Ofange Coast Publilhed Orange Coaat Published Ofanoe Cout _92828 • Publlthed Orange Coul,
M-215 '1CTITtoUI llU..... 92y~ I Akyuz 630 w Said sale Wiii be held Ofl! by HAROLD CHRISTIAN Dally Piiot JlllUlfY 25. Feb: Daily Piiot January 25. Fet>-Dally Pilot January 18. 25, Frederlek G A. Addi, 1555 Dally Piiot January 25, Feb-
_________ NAME ITATE•NT Rosstynn. Fullerton. Ctlll F11bf\Jary 23, 1988. et 1~ LORENZ In the Superior rut ry 1, 8, 15, 1988· ruary 1. 8. 15. 1988 February 1. 8. 1988 M ... Verd• oflW East •9F. ru1ry I, 8. 15, 1988 m209
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Tile follOWtng persons tre 921132 pm, In the lobby 10 the build-Court ol Orenge County re-M·22• M-225 M· 189 Costa Meta. Callt 92626
dOlng t>IAJfness as: T 1 ted t 601 South WESTAR CORONA AS· hrs buStness 'II con· mg oca 8 · Ml.IC NOTICE • I Pllll.IC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICE P\lll.IC NOTICE NllC NOJtC[ SOCIAYES . 2925 S th ducted t>y husblf\d and wtl1 Lewis Street, Orange. Ca.If. ---------"-__ ;...;.;;;..;;..~..;..~--·l-----"-----
BnstOI Stre9t. Costa J'!.. ~~?~n s~!~t was flied •or;;• .!!~!e ot Lhe Initial N·OTICE Of PUBLIC HEARING Cemeter~ • Mortua•1
<..hctOt'I • Cremato r1
JS()(I P-tc ,I.( "'""' l)r ,,.
';t"wpCf1 Bea1.~
1)44 L •ol
Call! 92626 f Rooert T BHt, 2925 with the County Cle<k. of Or-publication o lhls nottce, o~ •• B 1 IOI St __. Cost ange CouAty on J1nuary 20 the total amount of tile un-""""1" r 9 r...... a t988 paid balance of the obll-Mesa. Calif 92826 _ ,..... getlor> secured by the et>ove
2} .. J Koetun,g. 2925 . Published Orange Coat delcrlbed deed of trust and
Sou -8rtstol Street. Cost• Dally Pilot January 25 Feb· estimated costs. expenMS.
HARBOR LAWN-M , . Calif 92626 ruary 1 8 15 19ee and adv 8 nee s , t
MT. OLIVE F\bbert I< Brlz1u1, 2925 . . . . M·228 $546.346 38
Mo• 11, .. ,, • C1>met ... r, Sooth BnSIOI Street. Cosll It 11 possible that et the I ~ Call! 92626 Pllll.IC NOTICE tome 01 sale tile openlno bid (.r~mdf r,
·102' U•Sl\"f A,~
L"Sto Mt'~ 1
.,.i : 'J"'
hos business 11 ton· may be less than the 10111
dj'.lcted by e Qenefal Part· FICTITIOUI llUSINlll S)ue rrer,:'~ T 8ett • N~-ITATl•NT If available, the e•pecled
1 •fl Tiie fOllowlng persona are opening bid mey be ob-1118 stetement was ~ d04ng t>UllnMS 11. telned by ealllng the totiow.
with 1he County Clerk of Or MllO SYSTEMS 2945 tno telephone number on Ille
PtERCE 8ROlHERS
BELL BROADWAY
Mortuary • Cha~'
( a1'l9' CO\lftty on January 12· RandOlph Ave . Cos!~ Meta. day t>elore the Nie (7 141
• 19~8• "'77U eai.r 92626 • 385-4837 or l2131627 -4865
. 1 tO Bro adway
Costa Mesa
642-9 150 I P\IPllst)eC Orange~oest The Ct rburetor Shop. TA,C•mlT• I Da•I~ Piiot January l8. 2~. Inc : C1lllom1a ~ Date January 22..: 1988 ~ +-a,...t98&-_ --.+A.1-bustnnr-tr con· ST I ft l I N 0 a A N •
lttt'Y • 1· 1 ducted by a COfpo<atlon COltfJOlllATION, ae uld
M· 9 Mlchael J. Alley. PrHldent T,....tee, 8J T.D. HltVICE _:~;;;:=====::::......,L...----;-------Thll ltaternent wat flied COMPANY, eeent er lletty with the County Clerk ol O•· Jo llcDanl•I, AHl1tent
----8f'l)I Cowlty.onJanuary 19, lecnUIJ,IQt 1owt1t Lewie
Daily Pilat
&.42-5618
.
. _1988 &.t-Quinea. CA ... (114)
.. ~1 -...100 .
Publllfled Ofange eo..1 Publlsnec:t Orange Coest
Dally Piiot January 25, Feb-Deity Piiot February 1. 8. 15.
1, 8, 15, 1988 1988
M-223 M235
P\111..IC NOTICE MllC NOTICE
K21al FICTITIOUI au.-11
"'1CTI:TIOU'"8UIMU NAME ITATWMRNT
N .. ITATE•NT Tile following pettons are
• The followlf'9 persona are doing buSI,_, as
dolngbulinenat ME S A PRE M IU M
HARBOR UNOCAL. 2248 WHOLESALERS. 2<102
Hltt'bof Blvd . Costa M .... HarbOf Suite F 108, Coste
c.Ht 921126 Mesa. Ce11t 9211211
Sharon Jan Btrehler. 1042 Susan Amelia MarcellUs.
St. Regll Piac;e. Seri11 Ant , 2<102 Hart>Or Suite F 108.
Calif 92705 Cott• Mesa, Calif 92626
Thi• butlneu It con· Th•• buslne11 11 con-.
ducted by 1n 1ndllfldueJ Ouc1ed by an lndMdual
Sharon Jen Birchler Susan A Marc.llut
Thit Slll~t was fried Hut 1tat1men1 .was filed
""'111 the County Cler'lt of Or-Wlth the County Clerk of Or·
nge County on January 5. anoe County on January 19
1988 1988 , ... , ,_.
Published Ofange Coast Publlllled Orange Ooes1
Daily Piiot January t I 18. Dilly Piiot J enuery 25, Feb-
25 F1bru1ry 1 1988 · rua,., 1 8, 15 1988
M~185 M-220
STARTING A NEW BUSINESS?? ' .
Th.e Legal .Oepa,tment at the
Daily Pilot is pleased to an-
nounce a new service novravall-
able to new businesses.
We will now SEARCH·. ihe
name for you at no extra charge.
and save you the time and the
trip to the Court House lr'I Santa
Ana. Then. of course .. after tt)f
Harch 11.e pletctd we will file
your rtetm 1 businetS name
statement h the County Clerk,
publlah a week for four
weeks .. ~ ulred by law and
then me . proof Of pubfl~
~Uon wit the C9unty Clerk.
Please stop by to file your
flctltlous. business statement at
the Daily Pilot Legal Depart-
ment. 330 West Bay. Costa
Mesa. California. If you can not
stop by. please caU us
'at (.714) 642-4321. Extension
315 ~ 316 and we wilt make
arrangements for you to handle
this procedure by mall
If ye>U should have any further
questlQns. please call us and we
wlll be more than glad to asalst
you.
Good luck in your
I'"' business!•
' '
PROPOSED STATE LEGISLATION SENATE BILL 1517 (BERGESON)
. BOLSA BAY a HARBOR CONSERVATION· DISTRICT
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Huntington Beach City Qouncil will hold a public hearing in the Council Chamber
at the Huntington Beach Civic. 'Center, 2000 Main Street, Huntington Beach. Callf9rnia. on the date and at the .time
indicated below to receive and consider the statements of all persons who wish to be heard rela1ive to Senate B)ll 1517.
DATE: Thursday, February 11 . 1988
TIME: 7:00 P.M.
· · · SUBJEC.J: Propo~ plece-ohtate-teglslatten, S-enate Biil 1517, carried by Senator Marian Bergeson and sponsored
by the Signal Landmark Land Development Company . · "
LOCATION: SB 1517 pe"r1ains to the creation.of a Bolsa Bay HarJ>or and Conservation District within the 1600 acres
of unincorporated territory of th~ Bolsa Chica which is completely surrounded by the .C.lty of Huntington Beach. -
PROPOSAL: Under SB 1517. the proposed district would provide for lmplementatlon of a certified Bolsa Chica Local
Coastal Program. construction of an ocean entrance and small craft harbor and related facilities and to financially
support and bring about the restoration, creation. enhancement and maintenance of the wetlands and environmental-•
ly sensitive habitat areas within the Bolsa Chica study area, and provide for such public works as water and sewer
·facilities. The bill also specifies the powers and duties of the district and provides for the management and financing
of the district operation. ···
All INTERESTED PERSONS are invited to attend said hearing and express opinions concerning the proposed
Senate Biii. Copy of.the most recently amended version of Sl"nate Bill 1517 is on file in the Office of the City Clerk 2000
Main Street. Huntington Beach. California. for inspection by .ltle •publlc. If there are any questions regarding this
hearing call James Palin, Deputy City Administrator at (714) 536-5275.
HUNTINGTON BEACH CITY COUNCIL, By: Allcl• M. Wentworth, City Clerk, Phone: (714) 531.5405
Dated 1/26/88
Published Orange Coast Dally Pilot February 1, 1988 M238
Anaheim' Bay
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and ptomoM( Int"' 11l Ol>l1>n
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C..c..t11or s P1omot~1l Sernus w l'l t11t tntnt r•o.,.,. t.i"'lllfl•
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TMt'I ALL you P8Y for
3 llnea. 30 day mlnlm11m
In fhe
SERVICE
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with Mey, cterlc*. light
ecctg lkllll. Non·.,,.,,
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C . t I Good benefits, peld v• Mefchendlse09portunlties Reod 1~e clou.fied p'Jge\ OS I 811 ~~c=~:~ 1nc1Wlfied·lik•brlng•ng and vou •ewe 10 rn • --er Mle lntownt~ Hunh~on ~.~--~~·~~~~~,~~~~~~~~~
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and proof of insura!'ce.
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and 11:30 A.M. - 7 P.M. Call
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appointment. Ask for Guy or Patt. Ask for Joanne Graney
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BEACH
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SERVING OUR COMMUNITY SINCE 192 1.
Modern Salt~ Ser vice P~rts Bodl:Pa1nt & ! ·e Dep:s ·
Compeltl1ve Rates On l-tase Daily Rtntais :
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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday. February 1, ttee 87
THI ODORE
ROBINS Hobbyists:
FORD find t~e equipment and supplies
you need in .classified. i ,f>( HAle-01 IHvD
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IN o ·RANGE COUNTY
ARE ON THIS PAGE
C.ALL ONE NOW!
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• FH~l'ldly P•opl• • E.c•ll•nt ~~rv1c.-~ '4-o • • ,,. , '1.,flt,"9ton a.CM
7HI Ul·7711
POW· ransom
is wrong, but
final sof ution
The frustrating quest to find out if American prisoners of
,,ar are being held in Southeast Asia is heating up again:
Six congressmen -including Rep. tloben Dornan. Rr
uarde n Grove . -and the American Defense ln6litute
launched a dn"c last wee k to solicit $2~ {>led~es from 4.0
million Americans . .\fter the goal of SI b1lhon in pledges is
reached. the money wi ll be offered as a reward for the releasc
of an) .\mencan POW still alive in Southeast Asia.
During a press conference in Washington. D.C.. former
!\.onh Carolina Congressman Billy Hendon said the group is
.. do mg e' crvthing we can to get the message on the streets of .\~i a ... Bring them out -you make them free, we make ~ou
rt Ch."' I
T he Amen~an Defense Institute. a private group that
contends U .. POWs are-sti11 in captivity in Southeast Asia. is
.sµonson ng 1 he d rl ve. fnstit ute oiftcia1s-s:ay 1he mo-ney ~ill not
be J unaled or used until a live POW is returned.
Hendon." ho worked as a consultant in the Pentagon on
the POW-~1 IA issue in the early 1980s. contends there are
·'\:ompell1ng .. l '.S. inte ll igence repon s. some as recent as
-\ugu't I %7. fro m .\sian sources oflive POWs held in Laos.
The POW-Ml .\ question has festered in the United
·hth.'~ inn: the enp of the Vietnam War and has spawned as
man ~ consp1rac} theories as the assassination of former
Prt'~ldl.'nt J ohn Kenned'. ~egouauons and coven missions into Southeast .\s1a
h:J\ e failed to produce an) thing· but mote rumors and
sixrulat1un. The mabillt) of government officials to la)'· the
"'-llJ~-s+•-ORi..aoo rumors t.o re..st-llas fr~u:ated those who cling to th~ sl1ghest hope that a son. a father or other loved one is still
.311 \e.
It'-; a sobenng realization that enough Ameri cans might
he " 1lling tu pa~ such a ransom. and disturbing that the~ have
to rl·~urt tu hnbmg a defector to find out once-and-for-all 1f-
.\ mcrH.·an ')l'r' icemen were dcsened in Southeast As ia.
.\s "wng as 1t 1s. a ra nsom may be the solution to putting
1111 ... painful and lmgenng contra\ ers) of the Vietnam War
hchrn d u~
· Ce11tral America
It's difficult to know what to make of (Nicaraguan
Pre.51dent) Daniel Onega and Ronald Reagan -aoQ Central
Amenc:a .
Given Ortega's propensity for showmanship over
substance. the Umtt.'d States. and e veryone efse. has good
reason 10 <ioubt the sincerity of his proposal. Lifting the statt?
of cmt"rgcnq would go a long way toward giving his offe r
so me crcd1b11ttv. ~teanwhile. the lJ nlled States might give its own effons
some cred1b1lit\ 1f 1t would be more supportive of... the other
Cent ral .\menran leaders who are trying to fo rge a peace
agreement.\\ c ha'e tended to act like the bully we accuse the
·o, 1cl\ ol hc1 ng.
· T he l 'n1tccl States should work with ... the others to put
pressure o n Ortega to live up to his promises. There is more
hope fur a l:.isung solution in that than in bullying. ·
Topetd (KIUIJ Capital-Journal
S chool n e wspa pers
The. Supreme. Coun rnltng that school officials are
entitled to censor high school newspapers. if wrongly
intt'rprctcd as an mstrucuon to school boards. could sharply
reduce the value o f studenljoumalism.
"The maJont~ opinion ... claimed that public schools have
broad latitude to censor student speech m newspapers and
other act1 " 1t1es that are sponsored and financed by the
schcmls. ---
The court fou nd that newspapers published as part of a
school cu m culum do not constitute a public forum. and thar
school offi cials may restnct such publications· contents to
non-contra' ers1al statements and to messages consistent with
the '>Chool's basic educational mission.... ·
The opinion ma~ appear to set legal limits for censorship.
but its ' ague "'Ording grants nearl) total d iscretion to schoo~
officials ....
This ruling ... has the potential of weakening both the
appeal and the challenge o f a journalism tourse, for students
as \.\t'll as teachers.
In fact. ·the ruling does not restrict school newspapers so
much as sttidents.
While 1t authorizes schools to act as censors. we.hope It
will not compel ad' 1sers and school offic ials to do so. In fact.
the\ ha\(~ been assigned a new responsibility of determining
whether students arr wonhy of fre·e speech. ·
Tbe Joilrnal:Amer/caa, Bel/nae, Wasb.
King 'holiday
. In Mav 1954. Manin. Luther King Jr .... ~ccepte.d a
pastorate at· the Dexter o\ve nue'Baptist Church in Montgom-
ery . .\la~ ...
Suddenly. the destiny o{ Manin Luther King J r. and the
destim of. the South and nation became as one.
What should we remember'?
First, we should rememberto give thanks. T he civil nghts
work of Kmg (and COUfltless others) liberated the South ... .
The second point to remembertoday: Much work remains .. ..
The problem is. hate never does seem quite finished. h
alwa) s has a few of us in its grip.
But thanks to the pastor ~ho in 1954 turned up at the
right time in 'the right place. its-grasp -Ts dramatically
d imm1shcd. • D~ A dug JOfll'Ul· Tr.. Adu&a CM1tll•lloo
----~~=------~~-.. ,.
l Floyd IUJ(Ued. lVlth perlect logic. that p~ wrestling has not hlng to do J
with athletic competition . " .,.. ........
COl•m•tat
\
··campa~gn
-funding
reforms
possible
Adults W.on ·.'tdohomework,
so neither shoiil·d .studen·ts
Parents, teachers shoUJ(fr_!_'t be allowed
to talk to each other , or swap ter rftori es
of course.
PETE
-DEXTE~
To the Editor: · Next June in California, we will
have the opponunity to solve one of
the most serious problems confro.nt-
ing our state, the overwhelming
influence of mont:y in ~tate l~slat!ve campaigns. Cahfom1a ltgtSlat1ve 1 campaign spending in 1986 broke all
' state and national records. Cam·
paigns for 100 legislative stats cost
SS7.{ million, an increase of 30
pera:nt over 1984. Estimates are that
by 1991. legislati ve campaigns will
cost more than $1 00 milli on. This
kind of fund-raisina effectively
prohibits challengers from waging a competitive campaign against tn·
--cumbents. Candidates. including i-o-
cumbents, telying on contributions
from special-interest groups who want somcthinJ. undermine the inte-
grity of the l91slative process. Hope
for change 1s at hand. A broad
coalition ofbusiness, labor and public
interest ~ups has recently qualified
a campaign reform initiative for the
1988 ballot. Their t>roposal is a
comprehensive one. Limit campaign
contributions and the expenditures
provided c.andidates with limited
matchin"g public funds and prohibat-
jna transfer of funds bttwcen can-
didates and all non-election year
fund-ra ising. The ca mt>aign SP,:Cnding
limits act will reshape California's
legislati ve politics and once again
push factors like issues. volunt~ers
and organiza tions into the forefront
ofour political lives. A vote next year
for the c .. mpalgn Spendi ng Reform
Act will be a strong vote for. a healthy
I guess I ought to begin toda} by
admitting I am against homework.
This 1s a country. after ~II. where
teachers strike for free ~aods to
grade papers. "here the standard
work week has been negotiated down
to 3 7") hours. "here busmesses are
changing to four-da~ st'hCC: ules. and
where anybody with an vum ·_of self-
respect wou ld rather spend tt. n1gh 1
deliveri ng breached baby pi~ than
put in an unpaid hour of overti .1e at
the office.
With that -0ff my chest. I will t<'ll
)OU that Wl'dnesda} m> daughter
came home from school.wtth a load of
work. She 1s 9 years old. and affer
dinner I sat down with her to see pov.
1t was going. She'd finished her
spelling and social studies, and was
staring at a chapter on sound in her
science book. How 11 ren~cts and
echoes and moves and is absorbed.
"That's not what thcy mean.~
·· 1t 1Nurks. Probably even
crowded room.·· a democraq.
SON DRA SCQTI Corona del Mar
I am not cnt1c1zing. that. of course.
It makes perfrct sense. But I would
point ou t that the samc adults who
live b) these rules still accept. as a principle of upbringing. the idea that
their children arc supposed to put in a
full da) of v.ork at school. and then
come home and i o to work again . You know, .. I had to do it, )OU have
lq do 11."
I knew thal was absurd when I was
a kid -the fmt time I heard about
homework. as a mailer of fact. I
thought 1t war. one of those stones
older kids made up to scare )OU -
and nothing bas happened since to
change m) mind.
Most ol you r purpose as a kid , if
}OU remember. 1s finding a little time
"hen nobody bigger is telling you \\hat to do. At school ifs a teacher. at
home it's )Our parents. And the way
}vu get through it 1s accepting what
}Ou have to. and dodging what you
can .\t the onset of homework.
ho\\ ever. 11 becomes a cross fire.
The wa-. I saw 11 when I was a kid.
parents and teachers shouldn'I be
allowed to talk to each other, much
less assume an)' junsd1ct1 on 1n each
others· temtol).
But nobod) e'er ask~d myop1n1on.
"I kno"' so rpeth1ng about noise." I
·-satd:-"let ~clp.'' • ....i She shd the book ac-ross. the table
·un til 1t \\as halfway between us. There
"'ere some questions she was sup-
posed to answer. a few of which I
Jhought were pretty interesting.
For ins1ance. the·tanner-tclls-a-
JOkc question. It seems that this particular farmer enjoys telling
peopk that instead of an alarm clock
he $houts ... Good morning. Farmer~"
at the mountain before he goes to bed.
and then in the morn ing. when he
hears the echo. he knows 1t_1S ttme to
get up.
Now. the quesuon thl' book asked
"as v. hat principle of sou nd the
farmer knew about to tell such a Joke
''The pnnc1pk hrrc:· I' said to my
daughter. "ts that 1f a farmer tells the
same JOke O\l'r and over. he ends up
talking to mountains··
.. No:· she said ... it's reflection."
"It's no t reflection unless you thmk
11'~ funny:· I said. "and if that
happens. r m pulling you out of the
school."
She wrote-"renecttqn" on a piece of
lined paper and moved to anothl'r
ques tion.
"How do you make a room
QUICtef':'"
.. Shoot the piano player ... I said.
She said ... It's not the kind of
answer the teacher likes 10 get."
.. Does th is teacher play the piano?"
.. How do you know there's even a
piano there? .. sh~ s~id, and then she
w.rotedow.n. "PuLCacpet on .the Ooor.
"How do you know there's not
alread) carpet on the noor?" I said.
So therc.
The one at the end killed inc. The
book asked my daughter to construct
her own musical instrument . It sug-
gested tapping on glasses filled with
different levels of water. She was supposed to draw the instrument.
sho"" what made the noise loud and
soft . and what changed the pitch. :rhe
book said sh~ might even bring the
instrument to class and demonstrate
1t for the other students. 'Tll tell \ ou what I'd of done. if
somebod} handed me that book 1n
fourth grade'. .. I said. ''I'd Qf drawn a
picture of a teacher with one of her
shoes off. I'd covered her with
castane1s. and then shown a hand
about to hit her in the foot with a
hammer."
The kid wouldn't do 1t. Shc thought
about it a wh~ -·1 co uld see the idea
had a cenain appeal -but she
\¥Ouldn't do it. •
She ta~es the homeworJc seriously.
making sure it's righL staying wit h jt
as long as it takes to fini sh.
I worry sometimes how she will
ever adJuSt to the real world.
Pde Dexter i1 • S.cramuto
syadic•ted colunudst .
Legislators have refined
gamesmanship to a fine art
Campaign con tribl:Jtions and·lobbyists
nurtu r~d with useless regulatory laws
School transfer
not a .big deal
To the Edi tor:
I do not understand why. there is
such a controversy over the transfer
of Danny O'Neil from Corona 'del
Mar High School to Mater Dci.
Dann) should be able to transfer
without any problem. Corona del
Mar is a public school and Mater Dci
is a private school and the O'Neils
should have the ri&ht to.deci de which
system is best fonhbrson. Maybe he
transferred because he wanted a
better educati<fn. or maybe he trans-
ferred because the·spons team s were
better. Who knows'' I do not see why
people are making such a fuss. I think
th ey should let him be and not
interfere with the O"Neifs decision.
There is no proof that Danny trans-
ferred because of the athletics and his
decision to swttch schools should
never have been questioned.
SHELLY PARSONS
Newport Beach
Princip a l swap
foes just want
1a good reas on
To the Editor:
I .recently read your "Letter to the
Editor" column and one letter struck
me. A Mrs. Meckler wrote that she
feels people in Newpon arc acting like
"crybaby brats... because of the
"principal switch." Well. I would just
like to say that we are not "all" brats.
We all believe that $0mething has
been unjustly. not to say also without
SACRAME~TO -Last year. "'11h athle tic c-o rnpc11t1on. that it's a
Go". George DcukmCJian proposed form of h1ghl) chorC'ographcd cnter-
to do away w11h California's system of tai nmcnt. If the s1a1c dO<'sn't regulat<.'
JOb-s1te health and safety inspections. the "a) 1n "'h1ch motion pictures. saying he wanted to turn the job over pla)~. ballels or rock concens are
reason. done. We are all fighting to
keep so mething we feel is "good."
When you have a '\ood thing for 17
years. you don't go changing it
without $ood . spoken reason. M"aybe
_ if Dr. Nicoll gave us all some jOOd
reasons. we could stop coming across
as "spoiled brats."
. CHRIST IE ROBERTS
to 1he federal government. presented. 1-lo)d contended. wh y But the Flo)(d bill didn't repeal the
DeukmeJian couched his effort in shou ld 11 concern itself with wrestl-law. It provided an exception to it so
terms of sa ving money and streamhn-ing. pro' 1dinga thin veneer of official that a Kansas liquor wholesaler could
1ng govern ment and has been cm-respectab1ltty to an activi ty which legally pu rchase fr/ Nonhem Cali -
t>roiled in ~ontroversy, both legal and dOt'sn't deserve lt'l · fornia Pina Hut out lets which sell
political, ever since. A few days ago. The Athletic Commission '1lself wine and beer at the retail level.
the state • upreme "loun agreed lo opposed Floy(f s bill bcCausc the ft V.'3sonc of countless exceptions
decide whether Dcukmej1an had the agency wou ld lose the revenue from written into tl'\e tied-house law by the
legal authortt} to ax the · program . license fees on wrestlers. although its Legislature over the years to accom-
\cnown as Cal-OSHA. without legis-d_~grCC' of regulation is almost nil. modatc individual business deals.
lat1 ve au thont). · But othcrw1sc.·fcw could argue with 1nclud1ng one about a decade a10 to
· The odd thing about the incident is the. logic of his argument. so the bill allow the transfer of the entire Pizza
that of the hundreds of regulalory cleared the Assembly on a 60-'7 vote. Hut chain from one corporation to
programs operated by the state gov-A few. minutes later, havina p°er-another.
ernment. C<\1-0SHA has been prob-formed thisactof rarecommon senSt'. Why wouldn't the Lqislaturc
abl)· one of the more valuable. both in the Aiscmbl) returned to more ~mply repeal the tied-house law,
human and financial terms. traditional form bywotinJ. 60-2 for since it serves little or no public
If the governor had wanted to do another Floyd-authored bi ll that. in purpose and requires a bureaucracy
av.ay with unnecessary red tape, his ph ilosophical terms, runs p~i~1y 1n the Oepanment of Alcohol
avowed goal. then his own budget the other dire lion.. Beverqc Control to administc~
contains coun1lm araets more · Thi11 measure deals wtth an area.ne · The Lcg1slaturt doesn't rtpeaJ the
wonhy of elimination -rcgulatol') state statute called the "tied·houst tied-house law~d dozens of-other prosrams-ttm either don't do any-law:· a tcno~rfrom the days wt.en useless rqul1.~1 laws ~aute ~
thina that benc-titS the public or serve the state, in the name of pttstrvina ma1nta inina their existence. law·
mostJy to protect co1y monopolies. publtc morality, tightly rqulated the makers also arc rcquirin& those who
And for all. of their rritic1sm of "'31C of hquor and c.ven its pncc. want exemptions. such as the Kansas
Deukmejian v1s+vi6 Cal-OSHA, Tht tied-house law prohibits t.hott-Jlquor~kr. toHk focthemon1 stat~ lt11slators have ~n unwilhna~ cniaaed 1n one revel of the liquor casc·b)<aSC bls1s, no pun Intended.
tb.cmich·cs to do away W1th superflu-trade from abo e.npaina in anolhrr. And that, an turn. 1tncrtltt 1 ttnain
ous aovcmmental qencies.. A brewer of beer, for insta~. would flow or campaian contributions and
A<ou,&eof-tvcnuon i~mt>J-y be barred frotn ako-triliftl that bttre1 finances the utsl~ of etttain
floor this week illustrate the paradox. the retail or wholt'\alc level. lobbyi1ts.
_ Assemblyman Richard Floyd. one It's really • form of saaiw.anc· The liquor trade and the horse
be: r q;4'a•urr'~ spirits · &toned JDOAOpol» ... .-mc<t at JJlr()t«\· nd~~°"' ~ CJPC-('1,lly ptone
l>rou,Jht fonh-i t>ilt 1Mt ~would 11'1 ccnaln liquor track 1n1'ml.I from to this kind of bec'k·KTlt!Slina · dim1n1te 1_. .-Alttlnk Corn. utrY.'anled C'01n0etidoa. fldler u. .. ~ latioa by thr Ltlilllturc. bit it
mission's ttaulaticMI al profcllional protttttor& for lk llftll8I pulllic. Tiie ta llllftY odlU-liMI ol
WttStlina. brd-boute law llicNld be re, 111ed. mdeavor •Ml.
Flo)od a~. widl ~ ... Jd IS stile rqulttloe ol ~ Jiii iJ!fla! a llin• If tfiat pro wmtllna"Tm"iiot1t•ftl"lo do wa1 repealed. • 11••-..... __ • .
CdM High School
Corona del Mar
M4~gutde9 calls
woes easy t o solve
To the Editor:
The pro bl rm the city of Costa Mesa
has with misguided telephone calls is
their ow n "doing:· •
In stead of ridiculing the calle~
wh) not .designate a central tnfot~
mat ion number hkc most city halls or hasn•t the city staff ever visi ted other Cit~ halls?
J. ECONO MAKOS
Costa Mesa
Com pa eat.
welcomed
,
r
-•
t ·
•
A
MONDAY, FEBRUARY I, 1988 25 CE TS . ~DOI .'liberators·' have iie.t"f.ork
13 es stolen from UCI lab destiried
for undergroun railroa , activist says
BJ JONATHAN VQLZU; ..............
An animal ri.ahts aroup that
claimed responsibility for stealina 13
bea&les used in medical research at
UCl is a loose-knit lroup that frees
the animals throuah an "unckr-
Nation
James Jordon Denby;
freed from a Nlcarliguan
jail, says the Sandinistas
urged him to oppose aid
for the Contras./ M
President Reagan ts
standing by Attorney
General Meese./M .
California
A parking structure's
ventlla~tetfve.s
wayundec.the_weig~tof a
crowd, kltung one and
injuring 13others./M
World :
The U.S. ls pre.lrtng for
a democratic solution to
Panama'sgrowtng lead-
ership crisis./ A5
Entertainment
Global Awareness Day
will offer a broad look at
around railrOad" around the ~orld.
local actjvists said Sunday,
Early Saturday, two locks were c ut
and 13 befl)cs "liberated" from an
outdoor pen at UCl's nonh campus
air pollution research laboratory. said
university spokeswoman Kathy
Jones. :
Suspect
·killed
fleeing
police
• BJ JONATHAN VOLZ&E ..............
A suspected car thief flec_ing
authorities·at speeds up to 100 mfj
was killed early Sunday when the
hiah-powercd sponscar he was driv-
ina struck the curb of an Irvine
frttway off ramp. flew into the air and
tumbled seven times, police said.
The death ~me minutes after a
California H iaJlway Patrol officer
stopped the man -unidentified by
coroner's officials late Sunday -on
the Santa Ana Frttwa)'. near Lake
Forest Drive. said CHP Officer R.
Brane. .
The man was• p\JUed over for
drivina 90 mpb and was suspected of
bCin& under the influence.of alcohol
when initially stopped. Brane said ..
But the officer had to return to his
patrol oar to answer a radja;.pll.
JlVin&-thrman ttic-opponumtrt<r
Jump back into the Nissan and spttd
ofT. Ali'houah Sand Canyon Road is--
just three miles north of lake Forest
Driv~. Brane said the cai was travel-
lin& 100 mph when the dri"'.er
attempted to nqotiate the off ramp.
When ~.car flew into the air and
rolled, tilt driver was thrown from lbt
vehicle. into a barbed-wire fence.
Bra.nc said. Two C Hf> officen on the
S«ne within moments of the wreck
adminrstettd C PR. but the man was
pronounced dead at a nearby hospi·
tal, authorities said .
(Pl_.. ... aU~/~)
The d<>ss were part ot a S900.000 a
year s1udy tha1 had been under way
since 19'l5, Jones sa1d. The tcstina
examined the cfTecu of smoa on the
tunas and wh) some tracheotomies
arc accompanied by adverse effects.
• The two dop involved in the
tracheotomy studies had undcraonc
the o peration and also had electrodes
imbcded 1n their skulls to relay
information fro m their traGhea. she
said.
But that process was .. no mor~
painful than gelling your cars
pierced." Jones sa'1d, and was the o nly
medical operations to which any of
the animals had been subjected.
Nevertheless. an anonymous
courier from a a;rp up calhng nsclf the
"Animal Liberation Fro nt" left a
letter and picture of one the im-
plan~ -beagles at the Daily Pilot to
claim responsibility for the thefts.
"This liberation was to protest
UCl's gro wing use-of animals in
fraudulent medical research. rtscllt'h
nothing will come of~xccpt pain and
misery to humans and no nhumans
alike," the letter sa)s .. UCI has usro
m1f1ons of animals and wastes ap-
proximately 20 million taxpa)ers
dollars per year .. ·
. The half-paic letter v.as typed on
pla1n wh1tt paper. ,.,1th the ~ord~
"Animal L1berat1on Front" 1yped 1n
upper case ane the end of the page
Attempts to contact the aroup
through several Los A.ngclcs and
Orange count) animal act1v1st groups
were unsuccessful. ·
"The) 're an undergro und front ··
said Judy Stricker. prt-s1dent of Costa
Redsldns wlk overBroact;Js
Mtsa-ba1>C:d "Soc1et) >\ga1nst V1v1-
sec-11on .. ·· "lobod) knows who the)'
arc. bu1 the) ""Ork all O\ er the workS.
and the' are heroes as far as I am
conc.erne<l ··
tnd.er said Saturday·s incident
...,as 1ht> first liberation she re-
member'> on the Orange Coast that
"'as conneued to Animal Li~ration r ront Jone!> said 11 was the fil'1t such
brea~-in at l 'Cl. although the school
has been subjected to protests in the
pas1 (Pleue .ee DOG/ A.2)
Ne~port
schemes
to snare.
revenue
Agency would $ell
goods retailt o city.
bring i~ sales.tax
By GREG KLERKX °' .. ...,,_ ...
1'1ewpon Beach is cons1denng St't·
ung up 11s o..., n corporation to bnng
add111onal ta\ dollars to cit~ cofTcl"'!i.
but the 'alur of the profits could be
out....,e1ghed b~ problems wnh hab-
1ht~ for shodd~ goods and unpaid
balances. offi~als said
The (11, ( ounc1I ~ntl\ d1rccted
Cit' .\ttome' Rohen Burnham to
proceed .... 1th studies of a c1t~
controlled non-profit purchasing
corporation ...,h1ch ...,ould ~"e to
d1r«t add1t1onal sales l.ll funds to the
cit~ -iw 1d Ken-r::>t-1mo. ttre oty's
aswnant ell~ manager
The proposal ...,u concc1"ed b~
Counnlman Clarence Turner and
introduced to the council at a No' 16
stud) ~ss1on
In 11~ simplest form. the corpor-
auon ..-.ould purcha~ and ~-St'll
items to the c-1t\ in ordCT to csubhlh.a
point of sal(' ..-.uhan cit~ bouncbne-s
BccauS<' the · corporauon 1s th<'
.. St'ller .. -actual!\ the cit' -and 1s
..-.1thin ul\ boundancs. tht' t.a\ from
tht• ~I<' of a n' items b' the corpor-
auun .... <_;>uld go to th<' cat~
(Pleue .e DWPORT I A2)
· our world at Golden West
College this week./ Al
Ind~
Advice and .Games A9
AS
A3
State picking ~p more of tab for AIDS drug
Births •
Bulletin Board
Business
Claasmed
Comics
Death notices
Entertainment
Opinion
Public notices
Sports
WNther
A6-7
85-7
A10
EM
A8'
88
~ ...
81-3
A2
BJ BOB VAN EYIEN ..............
State officials have doubled the
income ..limits for those seck1n1
assistance in payina for the the drug
AZT. a new and expensive medicine
used in fighting AIDS.
AZT. sho n for azidothym1djnc.
was put on the market last year by the
Burrouahs-Welkome Co. after tests
sho~ it could prolona the hvcs and
improve the health of AIDS patients.
The drua has one mlJOt drawback.
however - its cost. whicb can be
mort than $9.000 a year for a
standard dose.
Sintt Jan. 11 . financial help has
been available to people with AIDS in
Orange County throuah tht' county
Health Care Ascncy·s AZT AS..
sistancc Proaram.
The proaram. designed to help
people wtthout health ins!Jrancc. or
whoSt" insurance docs no t pay for
AZT. enables patients to obtain AZT
t~atment free of charac. provided
the)' meet federal povcny auldchncs. ·
DunngJaunarr. thc annual income
hmit has been SI 1.000 for a single
person. S+4.090 for a family of two.
and $1 8.000 for a family of three.
With the changes announced this
wcclc; however. 1ndp.•1duals who have
incomes of up to $22.000 a yQt may
qualify for the assistance propams.
For families of two. the new com-
bined income hmit 1s $29.600 and for
fam1hes of three the hmit on annl.Aa.I .....
income 1s $36.000
.. Tha t should allow a lot more
pco~ to set onto the Pf'<>gram ... said
Cat~nnc Re)~. pubhc health pro-
pn:u.uppon.manqcr for the. COu.n.t}
Reyes said that. so far only eight
people arc on the assistance provam
Apphcants to t~ assistance pro-
a;ram arc screened throuah a fina~
chgi_b1ht) mtcf'\ 1e..., at which t~~
must produce a picture 1dcnufica11o n
card and a cop) ofa ~t'nt income ta\
. . ... Irvine mapping plan for future open space
At\er m ort than two ye.an of
ne1otiat1ons and fonified by 2. 100
paaes of environmental rtpons.
Irvine is o n 'he brink of dccidina what
it wants to be when It pows up.
The city is in the procns of
rcvampin& it.s much-laud~ ,eneral
plan. the lona-ransc &>lann1na docu-
me nt that au ides the tuture develop-,
ment on approximately 76 square
.miles of land. either now 'Within the
city or considered likely for annex•-
l£SUE
EinEST
F () ( 11 \ 11 ~ • H. N' 1\
tion. •
The primary dilemma.the city now ms is dtticfina bow mudl Of the rema~ open spece lhould be . • de~ and how m&aeh .tM>ukt bt TM fa•GI~ BUI .... _ DI. hMW&J la lntM .. mainlalnediaiucwist~condi~. _._~....._ftleab'**OIM119'aepat-.f A remtt ltrin oflarinp provided
1 ~m for '"*"ta to ~xpmi.~ir • allow I l , 170 acrn.or opm spece 1nd slated (ordevelopMntJ>f the fllht to
opunom on Inc! t11e OIMIOM.P'OW'ftl P\ln B would oft'n 16,00 I acra TM build more h®slna uaau on land
out of eof!tlnu111 ~uons be-curmu arnnal plan allocata I r .062 delipat.cd fOr lower dcnsit ~ tween the aty. Tiit lrv1ne Co. and tbe Km ot opc.n ..-e. Milke ~Blanc. 1 tenior f rvint• Co.
county. When the city it. built out, Plaal A ~aai~ oftk~led P\lns A and I t;'c eitJ col~il lhlCb~ two and I would mene l7.I hit l2.9 u dktttt•ftn•..-~~ md
optton1..bom --woulcf•nue percent of the land a opra ·~ nallwr was cumntty ~~to
form
Ehgib1ht) is rcnev.ed each month
although appli«lnts need not go
through a ne..-. 1ntt'f'\ 1ev. each month
.\ ded arauon that the applicant's
ancomr has not changed 1s sufficient
a('('ord1ng to count' health official\
.\n~one ..-.1sh1ng to schedule a n
clig1b11it) 1n tC{' tt'" ma~ . call
~-406 Information about thl'
".ZT .\ss1stame Progra m ma' t'I<'
ohtained h' ~aili ng 14-J ~
'
Newport,
IrviDe
at odds .
over plan
~ unount ol open ll*lC wtdlin the rapectivd~ nc city's t'Unftt.•n tM CQlft .. n . ' ----·--·~~·-,..._ ..,.. b JZ7~ofU..._..1e ·we do 1'0t btbrte 1Mt e.1t.r : Tetill la10 trtuun1 opu ,,rri •: .. a;;alb.=r• ••• •----.. .... •·~"• .,,l'lf'••,... Ill' Wi111ia tie :&;:• ud .,.... •• Alandl o«. ne lmMCo..... IM ric)i• or lbt w11ha.. a ~ ol i• . Plea-A .-.S ,.._. '°.*~ lwl • ~ . u•nc.
,-. '
,&u.dor«AP)-~
who hM vOMd IO .Wft
to the left, apperen'1y won
1bt election Su.nday to rcpla« pro.
American .PrcsidcDt Leon Febrn
Cordero. But Borj.-failed to ~ive 1
...;ority and face a runoff.
With more than 80 peroent of lhe
vote counted. Bor:J• wu lcadina with
about 20 pcll:tOt. and appeared
headed fOr a runoff May 8 with
another opposition candidate, Ab-
dala Bucaram. the populist leader or
the Roklosista Pany.
Whh 2,907,908 ballots counted.
Borja, a S2-year-old lawyer and leader
of the Democratic lef\ Party, had
S92,233 votes. or 20.4 percent of the
total: according to official results.
SUSPECT •••
Prom Al
The man was not carrying any
identit'tcation. and coroner's officials
said a check of the state's• com-
puterized finaerpnnt system did not
match a name wnh the bod}.
Drane said a search of the poss1bl)
stolen Nissan af\er the wreck also
tum~ up add1t1o na l stolen propen).
but highway patrol officials declined
to elaborate on what ~as found.
> i
balloting in Ecu ~dor
Bucaram. 35, wbo bu bis power
bMe in G&aayaquil, Ec\&ador's mOlt
popblouJ cuy. received 449, 166
votes. or IS.• percent ofthe tally.
Sixto Duran, 66. the conservative
candidate or the aovemina Social
Chnstian Pany. had been favored to
make the runoff 1Pinst Borja. ·But
after leamina that he had l8l.19S
votes. or 13.1 percent. Duran con-
ceded defeat.
Two other candidates. former Gen.
Frank Varpa Pulos, nuanina on a
Nationalist leftist ticket. and Chris-
tian Democrat Jamil Mahuad. fell too
far behind the frontrunnen to have
any.,chance at the runoff. •
Both apparently finished with leu
than 12 percent. but the aovemment
did nQt issue exact fiaurcs for them
before closingfor the nit.ht.
Election offidals cafculatcd that
onl y about 3.5 million of Ecuador's
4.6 million registered voters had cast
ballots. Voters also '-ast ballots fo r the
71-seat unicamer.ar Conarcss and
1.400 provincial and mun1c1pal of-
ficials.
Febres Cordero. a 56-year-old
m11l1onairc businessman who 1s
barred by the consitution from run-
ning fbr a second consecuu ve term as
president. ends his four years in office
in August.
Pubhc opinion polls had indicated
no candidalt would recrive a ma-
jority tO win and a runoff' eleaion
would be required beUNeen the' two top vote--eetttn in May. Polls Mtt
open Sunday from 7 a.rn. until S P·'!'·
Volin& is ~uircd by.law, but 1n
past elections the abstention rate bas
been close to JO percent: Sixteen
eartil'S ranaina from far' riaht to
Communist were participatina in the
elections.
Political leaden and newspapers
described the campaian as the most
peaceful since democracy was re·
stored in 1979. This Colorado-sized
nation. wcdacd between Colombia
and Prru. was aoverncd by civilian
and military dictatorships from 1970
to 1979. There were only scattered
outbreaks of violence dunng the six·
month ~Jmpaign.
"The decision of the Ecuadorean
people will be .respected." Interio r
Minister Heinz Moeller said Sunday
1n Guayaquil. the C'OUJ\try's cony
mercial hub. on the Pacific roas.,.,.,S
miles southwest of Quito.
Moeller replaced Luis Robles on
Friday af\er Robles resigned the night
before under heavy pressure from
oppos1uon panics. which said his
presence in the lnte.rior Ministry cast
a s]ladow over the electoral process.
NEWPORT SCHEMES TO SNARE REVENUE ••
f'romAl
"The ci1y would nor be involved in
any way 1n d1scoun11ng Items or
providing the Cit)' with deal!>.'' said
Turner. "We're merel} pulling the
point of sale w11h1n the c11y ..
According to Cit) staff. the corpor-
ation would require Int It C\lra staff or
resources. Officers in the corporation
would be staffmembe~ including the
Cit) manager. finance director and
cit) clerk A double se t of purchast'
orders "'ould be prtpared. a ~parate
checking alcount '-'Ould be required
and some add111 onal repomng and
accounting '-'Ould be necessal)
The monetal) retum 10 the ell~
\\-Ould amount to I percent of all
purchaSC''i. according to a c11~ ~alt
repon During the I 986-8 tiscal ~ear.
the c11~ p.i1d appro'!matel~ S1 l
m1lhon 10 'endo" out\1dc: 1he Cll\ for
taubk 11c:m'i. and ahout SI 6 miiht>n
in 1985-86
The repon noted 1hat 11 thoS('
purchase "'ere funneled through the
corpora11on. the: ut~ would ha H
gained an add111onal sales 1a' all~a
tion ofS20.000 each \car
Theonl) 01herc11~-.n thelounl\ tu
successfull> upcralL; a s1m1lar (:ll~
controlled rnrpora11on 15 \nahe1m
which earns an average of S5Q.OOO corporation. Turner said a contractor ~nnu"ll.Y throufh 1he system, accord· would negotiate a contract forJoods
mg to city officials there. with a panicular company. an then
There arc potential problems with agree that the co mpany would sell the
the city-controlled corporation. Smee goods 10 the corporation. whic h
the corporaticm-.would. in effect. be "'ould 1n tum sell the goods to the
the immediate vendor to the ci ty. it contractor and place the point of sale
would also be responsible for backing 1n Newpon Beach.
up produet warranties and answenng It is estimated that approximately
for delinquent payments. Liability SJ million to S4 million ofadditionaJ
tro ubles could surface if uems are purcha~ co uld be derived throu&b
defective or balances arc not paid. pubhc works contracts. gencratina an
The repon notes thJt separate add1uonal $30.000 to $40.000 per
contracts would need to be neaouatcd year for the city. .
10 provide the city wilh "adequate City officials esumated that it
safeguards"' agatn1"t the!ie ~terflial would cost S 1.000 to SS.000 to set up
problems,. Man) cities Wlth non-the corporation. The additional work
profit porchasmg corporations have might require the htnng ofa halftime-
ancmpted to co"er themselves. but clerk at an annual cost of approx-
insurancc companies are rtluctant 1mately SI 0.000. •
and other m ies have thus far been Althouah the non-profit purchas-
unsuccessful in obtaining ~dequate inacorporation 1s fully legal. the city's
protec tion. the rcpon said. proposal w1 be forwarded to the
Other agencies. ,s"ch as the school State Boa of Equalization for an
.d1stnctandlocal bl'Jstnt"\ses, miaht be opinion.
able to make purchases lhrough the Tum said the corporation could
corporation and reap a portio f the be o tintt as soon as 90 days after
ta' benefits. "-• .__--.... ...... ~· y receives an opinion from the
City offictals-af.e. also considering Board of Eqwaliz'&tion. Th~ propo$al
rcqumng pubhc works contractors to would also require City Counci l
purchase 1heir mate~als through the approval.
PLAN DRAWING FIRE FROM NEWPORT •••
From Al
amendment \ 11ldgi.' .:'~"'nu Id g.un an
add1t1onal 2 ~,JU homi.''>. -i 11).(01
square fct:t ol retail dc\l·lnpmt'nt and
I 5 million ·'><1u.irt' k t:I or olTilL'
de\Clopmt>nt \ppro\lmalt'h -i
mi llion uf rcsedrl h .ind de' ~lopmen1
or 1ndu~1n.i l ~Pdl i.' "'"uld & deleli.'d
from 1he ari.'.i .i1..u1rd 1ng 10 an [r, inc
staff repon
The add1t1l1n.il re~1dt·n11al. retJil
and ofliu.· dt:' l'lupmL·nt "'o uld al\o
mean an 1ncrl·as.: 1n traffic of W ~00
tnps per tla\ "'er 1hc cw.11ng general
pla n. bringing the 1otal 1nps pcrda) 1n
the area up to x ~.21JU I tr.ii figure 1~
onl> 6.oou tnp~ pn da' Je..,, than 1hc
amount ol traffil ~encr Jll'd b' 1he
entire ~cwpon ( c:nler lnmpln
.. It collld hurl 11'1 .i l11 t .. \311.J
Temple .. \ l hJOi( 1n 1ht· IJnd u~'>
"'-Ould rc\ult 1n .1n Jppr l\1mate
dou bhngnftraff ~n1n~ in and out 111
that area ·
Temple \<11d In int· rl.inner.-. are
a""art 1,11 the potlnt1al 1ncreJ\t in
C'-' pon Bl'3l h r .i 1lil .i nc1 1 nC'I uded
that Jl n '" 11·dl{l'fl l'nt 1n the 1raffil
anal~,,.., 'l'lll •n 11 'he-hugt' .:' 100.
pa~iC()(·n on the propc '>JI Hut 1hc
publlC hl'Jr n~ pr ,...,, \Ollnues in
In IOl'. JnJ the of)I. ,p,11.1 plJn could
tx· appro,ed b) the lr'\'1nc l it} .
( ounc1l as soon as March
.. \\'e think that "'hat 1h1s ahema-
''' L' -.i.ould do. first of all. would be 10
1m re as<' traffic on MacArthur
Bouk' ard be'ond "'ha1 we belic'e to tx· m caparn~· ... said Temple "And 11
\loould also increase traffic on the
propo')Cd Sa11 JQ;tg u1n Hills lrans·
pona1loii C-omdor. "'him would, for
U\. ~1gn1ficantl} d.t.(n1n1sh the benefits
uf lhc corridor... '~
~e-.i. port Beach <..·11} lOun -
cll"'oman b cl)'n Han said the coun-
cil 1s "rcall) concerned" about the
de' elopmcn1 proposal for Village :!5.
from both a traffic and density
stanJpo1nt.
"I JU'>l don't k'f'low ho"' 1rs going 10
lit·· 5a1d Han "It seems 10 be a rather
agg r<.'\SI\ e mo' e for a City Council
who\e ma1onl) 1s generally slow
·gro"' th · II !ttms to be contral) 10
their ph1losoph). ··
te'e Hauben. In inc ~n1or plan-
ner <oa1d ctl} staff has not }Cl given
dc1a1kd scrulin) to Newport Beach's
concem1> He said his depanment 1:11d
ri.'cc1' e a formal lener from Ncwpon
Beach Pla nnmg D1rec1or James
He'-'IC er
"Right now. it's JUSt at the public
re' 1ew and comment level.'' said
Haubert. "Tho~ concerns. which are
natural. "''II be coming up.''
Tempi, said she didn't want to
speculate on what action the Cll)'
might take 1f:ln inc prOCt'cds with 11s
plans for Village 25. but she would not
rule out legal action.
"We'll cross that bndge when we
gt't 10 1t.'' she said.
The lnin(' (II) Council has been
presented w11h two extreme
proposali. fo r the cit) 's remaining
open space. and a final plan will hkel}
be a compromise be tween the two.
Plan >\would re~rve I 3.178 acres ol
open space. while Plan B includes
16.009 acres. The eius11ng general
plan rescr"e!> I 1.062 acres of open
spa c. .
The open space plan 1s scheduled
for a Sl\lh public hearing on Tuesday.
Feb 9. "'hen the issue wtll be heard
before the Irvine Cit) Council The
hearing will take place at 6:30 p.m. in
the council chambe rs at the
fr, 1ne< "1c Cc:nrcr. 17200 Jamboree
Bl'd
IRVINE MAPPING OUT OPEN SPACE ...
..
Partly ·c loudy skies exPected
U.S . Temps 11 N "'OlftS ,. .. .. .. .. ..
11 11 -------------------14 11 ~ !J Calif. Temps
11 n
11 5" HillN. '°"' ""°""' a) "' ~ .. ~--....... 71 ~ .. 11--61 41 ,, 16.......... 41 .0
11 16 ..... 17 H S1 17 llytfie U M ~ OI Cet-. M 4t .. M ~°'Y $1 41
11 12 f<nli• ~ ... $3 4 1 ,.,_ 61 ,.
M 41 ...._.., 10 41
20 11 Lone~ .. 47 13 4$ l.a. Moe1M 10 4t
30 17 ~ .. u
11 &1 MonfOWI' U 41
M 2t Mon~ M 4S M 41 .,..,_., S4 M
12.0.._... eo• S4 N ......,9-1 M 4t
J1 lJ 09lo i.nct M 41 fi2 17 °"'9rlo 51 ..
• 41 ,MO!~ 70 •2
07 01 ,....oen. t2 41
41 21 "-dwoOd City 57 :It
.. 40......,.,. 57 42
6t " Sect-10 ., .. ,, 23 ...._ 57 40
71 U Sen ..,.,.,c11no &a 41
I I 14 Seno-.t 57 41 40 2t Sen Ol9go 10 61 lS 34 a.., FrMCloco S1 43
75· U a.., Joe9 M M
14 os a-. Ana oo oo
25 OI Senl• ltlwtMw• 5t 41 a u s.nta er.a .. 41 IO 57 Santa M-M ~
... 31 Senl•Monica 11 ...
73 43 S1-10fl 51 U M f l Tahoe V.,., JI 21
II'-Torr-M ...
Surf Forecast
Tides
TODAY
113L"' .7.M L"'
l .11 p.lft. . .......
TUUDAY
2l22Ll!I. . ,, . "' 3-n 11"'
1°'°1 II"'
u 1 0 -Ge ,.
a. 1 t o -411
40
Tiie ....,_ .... toder .. 1'4t Lift. .... ...... s·n11."' rn.-.... toder ., 4:21 p.111. .... ••,,_..,at t.st •"'
Extended
DOG 'LIBERATORS' LOOSE-KNIT GROUP •••
f'almAl . .
Reg,ana Eshelman. a member ol
Pasadena-based "last Chance for
Animals ... said the liberation front
has no set membership. but instead 1s
a loose-knit group of activists that use
the name when "their beliefs take
them to a cenain extent. ..
"They're not an orpnizcd group
with a membership." she said. "Any
activists from Northern California to
back cast lo anywhere in the world .is
free to use that name."
Eshelman said before th~ group
acts. ho"'cver. ii has a network of
ac11' 1s1s waiting 10 claim the
liberated animals. The animals are
usuall) cht>cked b) a vcterinanan and
then fl ven out to homes. she said.
"It s Our form of an undergroun4
railroad ... _ Eshelman said. referi ng to
a pre-Civil War chain of acti vists"' ho
helped free slaves.
The Animal Ciberat1on Front
gained notonet) several }cars aso by
releasing a videotape of dead ammals
and olhers w11h festering wounds that
the group claimed ""ere found during
a n1ght·t1me break-in at 1he l it) of
Hope cancer research center 1n Los
.\ngcles Count). Stricker said.
But Jones descnbed the ·group as
lnffgu1dcd ...
"They arc 1ry1ng 10 correct some-
thing 1hcy sec as a problem."but the
are rea lly cavsing more harm and
confusion than the)' arc corrccung."
Jones said. . .
She sa id the animals taken from the .
l 'CI laboratory were likel> to be
treated worse by any home than they .
were at the un1vcrs1ty. She said the
beagles were fed h1gh-quahl) food.
and their coats, teeth and ears
rcgu larl) cleaned.
The upenmcnts 1n which 1he dogs
were used largel)' '"' olved exercise
on a treadmill Two doas had been
·g" en harmless doses of a low-level
radiant that ""ould allow researchers
to track ho"' smog impairs the lungs'
ab1hl} to cleanse themselves. she
said. but none "'ere the subject of
experimental \urgenes.
"The dogs pan1c1 pated as long as
the> wanted 10 part1c1pate, When the
dogs decide that's something the)
don't want 10 do. they are adopted out
10 good ho mes.'' Jones said She said
the fate of the dogs implanted w11h 1he
A pboto left at t be Delly Pilot b y animal rl&hta acd_..__wlao
•tole 13 ~lea from UCI ehow• one f>f doC• with an
electrode ettlf attached to lta bead.
electrodes "'as undc:c1dcd because 1he
stud) -.i.as not fi nished
Dr Robcn Phalen. "'ho headed the
team of four sc1enll\ls using th<·
beagles for their research. said he '4aS
unable to estimate the amount 10~1
'-'Ith the dogs implanted 11>1th the
eleL·trodes. but set the loss for the
other dogs al S20.000
Un1,ernt) onic1als disputed the
allega11ons of huge financial wastes
that ~ere included in the letter leO at
the Dail ) Pilot Jones said UCI
med1lal research tcams receive about
SSO million annually in grants. while
the un"ersit) receives an additional
SlO million in donations dedicated to
med1nne Prom Al
I do h.tH' 'on rnt·n;it•·1n<; 1n m'
mind.'0 \J1d "i;srdr.1 \ltf.1dJl·n pr~-.l
den1 11! thl' l nlnn' H11nwo"'ncr\
portion of1h1i. land to be preserved.
\tcording 10 LeBlanc.. one arta
hi.'ing lOns1ctered 'for a potential
increase 1n development density 1s
the land near JefTre)' Road between
the li.anta .\na and San Diego frce-
'-' 3) ~
"'Ould u!11matcl ) 1rans~r the land 1n ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
qucs11o n from. pm ate to public
O'-' ncrsh1p. would benefit all panics
'"'olved. according to Hauben. It
\lo OUld free Irvi ne officials from the
piecemeal approach· to cit} planning
anJ would allow lhe staff 10 make
Assoc1a t11H1
Mcr Jddcn 11hludi•d -'1th1n her
concern' thl' I"'' 111 tlw 11' ·, onh
ccmctt•n loc .lll'd nt"H hi·r hum\'
"\ uu ,Jn h<· ~,rn .rnd -. .. u ran ll\L'
... (in In inci. · \J, I a1ldl·n '>J1d ·Hut 10
die. ~OU hJ \ l' It\ ~u \(HTI( plJCC: el\t' .. .
ln 1ne \1.i,or Larn ~ttrJn re-
~pondcd '"'" ph1l o\orh1lJI humur
"E1c:rnJI h1l pJrt "' 1h,• llL'ncral plan·· ~
Other re\1dcnt\ IJm~·nti.'ll the
po1en11al los\ ot .1gm uhural land
The In inc: Co l 1n\1dn' .1g,m uhure
use to be an ·1ntn 1m U\C .iccording
-tO C()()fX'r
An area ot par11u 1lar t Onlcrn 10
city planner' I'> an unnh~truc red
slfetch of land lrum 1he c1I\ to the
ocean. kno"' n w u1~ planners a~ the
JcfTre)' Open pace Sp1M '-\Lrnrd1ng
to Cooper. each plan call\ for a1 least a
ORANGE Daily P1•11t \COAST .
MAIN OFFICE
I . '
"' The council could conce1vabl>
rc1cct the idea of a plan falling w1th1n
1hc boundaries of Plans A and 8
Ho'4e,er. the massive EIR would be
to scd out and city planners "'ould
ha'e to stan over.
• Another option. acrord1n1 to
Ir' me senior planner Steve Haubert.
would be for the Cit)' and The lrvme
Co. 10 reach no aarecment at all. In
that case. Hauben said. Irvine would
conttA~ LQ.all.C~ontro• land·
u~ through regulation as they have
done 1n the past.
But ~Alane s.aid lrvint Co. nqo-
ttaton are still· hopina to reach an
long range pro1ect1ons.
In add1t1on. a homeowncr could
bu) propcn)' 1n In inc w1th a more
rcalist1c v1s1on of what development ""'II occur around that propcny. and
The Irvine Co. could concentrate on
building and construction rather than
public heannp. Hauben )lid.
Councilman Ray Catalano said 1t is
""unlikely that any decision will be
made on a final plan without a vote of
the ~e. In o~ to qualiff or ilie
June baJloL a resolution would have
to ,be approved by the City Council by
Marth 11 .
aarttmenl with the ci ty. Public hcarinp will continue Feb. 9
A ne.a.c>tiatcd lp'tttntnt. wh1~h at 4 p.m.
Ju•t call 642.-6086
· What do )OlJ like about the Daily Ptlot? What
don't you hkt' Call the number above and )'01,1r
messqie wdJ bt recorded. transcnbcd and de·
hvercd to tbe appropnate editor •
Tt: .ame 24-hour ans~cnna xrv1ce ma)' be
used to rccOfd ltnm to the editor on an) topte
Contnbuion to our Ltnm column mu" 1nduck
1be1r natM and telephone numbtr for "enficauon.
Tells u what's on )Our mind
4 •
Wing-Tips
from
.. Gr~at T_!!di iop
bnly gets better
. .
' I I '
•.