HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-02-02 - Orange Coast Pilot•
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TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1988 25 CE
Death knen:sounds. for--Meadowlark
Huntington councilapproves plans for
hom~s, shopping c nter at 65-acre site
By ROBERt BARKER °' ..............
fvteadowlark Aarpon apparently
received a dc<1th sentence Monday
when Huntiniton Beach City Council
members approved construcuon of
homes. apanments and a shopping
center at the 65-as:~ site.
Nation
Attorney General Meese
says he can't recall read-,
ing about payoff plan In
m emo./A4
.coast ·
Costa Mesa allows beer
sales' at gas station-mini
markets./ A2
Californi~
State Supreme Court al-
lows use of Miranda-ex-
cluded confessions
against suspects who
take witness stand./ AS
Entertainment
·'Marry Me a Little'· is a
tasty but unfilllng musical
appetizer at South Coast
Repertory./ A 11
Index
Approval of a zoning change.
which will phase out the longttme
haven for weekend pilotsand turn the
la nd over to as many as 600 homes
and apartments and a 15-acre shop-
pintccnter. came on a straight "pany
line vote.
Pro-grov.t h ad vocates J o hn
Erskine. Jack Kelly. Wes Bannister
Activists.
say dogs
atUCI
abused
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY °' .................
An anonymous caller cla1m1ng to
represent animal ngh1s ac11 v1sts who
stoic I J. beag.les from a UCI research
laboratol) ~1d Monda)' that a 'eter-
inal) checkup sho"ed the dogs had ·
been.m1st!eated
Campus oflic1als. ho"-e\t~r. denied
the charge and announced that a
S5.000 rev.a rd v.as ofTc.-red 1n connec-
11on w11h the return of the animals. A
uni H.:rSJt) spokeswoman ~1d Dr.
Roben Phalen. who O\ crsav. the dog
npenments, ofTereJ the monc.-) from
~1s own poc-ket
B1ll 8rov.nell. n e-1..ull\e director of
thl' Wc.--Ttp cnmc.--lighttng organiza-
tion. said an add1t1onal S23500 1s
a\atlable to an~one v.ho provides
mfo.rmalJon lending 10 an arr~t 1n the
ca\e Thnnone~. he said. is pan ofa
statc.-v. 1de fund put up b~ the gov-
C'rnor's oflice and other sources· to
hl'lp light arson-related cnl]les and
'andaltsm of 1h1s nature
\'Cl spokc~woman Ltnda Grancll
said authOrttte\ at lhl' schoof were.-
ha\ mg lmlc lu<lc 1n finding the
beagles. which the anonymous caller
told the. Oatl> Pilot were . placed in
homes Monda) after being stokn
0 ' c.-r the v.cc.-1>.end
· ·rhe callcr .... 1a1med 10 repre~n1 1hc:
.\n1mal L1ber:111o n Front -1he
group that took l red11 for aturda~ s
thc.-fl -and said a 'etennanan
checked each of the dngs and found
them to be 1n ooor condition
(Pleue .ee BEAGLES/A2)
and Tum Ma)S \Otcd for the project.
It "3)al\al ked b) rrs1dents. howe ver.
"ho fear 11 will bnng traflic conges-
tion and burden 1he-Jtrca's sewer
S)stcm
·Grace Winchell . Peter Green and
Ruth Ftnlc) -'•C"-t'd as the coun-
cil's c.-n' ironml'ntal faction -voted
aga1m1 the propo\al
The airpon . which has served
pilots of )mall airplanes ~nee 1949,
has ta~rn Oak o' c.-r the years from
rcs1dcnts v.ho mo,ed into homes
built on the outsk1ns of the runv.ay.
But II has been staunch!) supported
b) pilots who sa) the} now "'111 ha' e
10 go out of Orange ( ount) to ba~
their plant.s
Officials stipulated \fonda) that
the aarpon will close 60 da~s after the
first building permits are approved
Dick Neno. a spoke\man for the
famll > that has ownrd the a1rpon at
Warner A\enue and Bolsu Chica
Street sine<.' 1952. said he e)(pec-ts 10
take plans to the ctl\ later 1h1~ 'ear for
the shopping center' which 1\ slatcd to
be butll first
Raindrops keep fall i n' .,
Laura Cable of Coeta Mesa doean 't need to call anyone for a
•e.ather forecut. 111e-ratn falltq on ber at Oran1e Coaat
Colle&e thl• momt.nc wt•pert of a etorm that dropped about
one·tlltrd of an inch of rain o•emtcht. with another one-half
lncb expected today. The forecut call• for thandenbowen
a• the atorm movea Inland.
Chct}le Brov.n1ng. an ad,ocate for
retatntn& lo" dem11~ toning for lhl·
propeny. clai med there: ha\ bttn d
"S))temat1c change lor higher and
h1gherdc:ns1I)" in the e ll\
··.\re: thc: dollar '>1gn'> 1n )Our e\tS so
la rge lhat the) cc1n·1 '>t'C' tl'tt c1i11l'.'n\
that )ou're \{'f\ 1ng., ... Bro"ru.ng.
as~cd.
"How man\ dl'Cl\loo' not in la, or of. thr di'.'' c:h>per> hii' l' )OU madl· latch ., ..
Gen On ega 'it~· prn1den1 "' tht·
H unllngton fkal h T omurru" l'O·
'1runmenta l organ11a11on . said today
1ha1 the: proJC:CI "-Ill mean "n1aht-
mc111\h0 w nd 111on'> for rEs1dents.
··rh • ., v.J~ 1he1r <(it) Council)
l hanlt 10 pro' e that the) art for
'untrulltd grov.1h 's pro-.growih
.\nd not 1111c: of them gave a aood
. rl'd'>on w Jvubk.Jhc.-denstt~ ... satd
( >1 tl'g;i. "h11 ~1d she· fa vors rt'111nifti
'urrt"nl 1on1ng I hat v.ould allow 350
~•nglt fJmal ~ n:\1dcncc's
C 11unulmJn l\ifa)s said today the
11101nl! l h.snge re0cC1ed ··a aood
JPlea9e ett AIRPORT/A2)
Sexual assault
suspect linked
to·f ourth victim ·
FV businessma n
facing 14 countsof
attacks on women
By JOl"'ATHA~ VOL.Z KE
OfliiitO.., ........
..\ Fountain \'alle\ hu'>tnC''>\ma,,
fating 1-1 ~\ual J\\4Ult l harge' m,I\
ha'C' auad..ed a v.oman v.ho .tppltl'<l
to v.or~ for him a) carh a) IQ <, and
authon11cs ..aid Munda' the' ""'ould
be \urpn~J" 11 .sddt1111nal \ ll't1 m'
fa 1kd tu COml' fof""ard
Thomas J Pantt ha'> 'I '' dt·cuS<'~
of a1t.lt l..1ni thrct." "omen 1n June
:-..o,ember and JJnual"\ ...a1J h1un-
1a in \ alk~ Poltle gt l.Hn
Gns"old
.\her dt~ 1,1ss1ng IX-''"•hk oh'> lur
lh~ "lYm~rrat hl'> lCf1trlar tt'ltp n('.
tompan' PanithJ\ alit-gtdh .11-
la\.l..ed 1v.o 0 1 the v.omen JI h1'>
bUSll)C'>'> \\ estC'rn ( llmrll'\Jnll'lll •n\
O..·\l·lupmt·nt ( 11rp .ind J thmhn an
I n inc motl'I room
I he ( n\l.1 ~lc'>J man v.a~ ,1rTL..,tt'J
at his h11mt• J.tn :r. "1thou1 tn\ldC'nt
b} 1n\csttga10r\ .arm('(! v.1th a v.ar-
rant thC' sc-rgcJnl s.a1d
(1m 1A.old Yid l'J~h ol thl' .tlleged
'll llm\ -'"" I ·H·ar-<1ld'> J nd J ::.
\\'Jr .. ilJ -rcpun,·J th' nl1Jcnh l<•
,iu:hm t1" l'>ul •I,. l IJ' fr m •hr
0 1\l01d .\llornt'\' ,1ff1lC r1111.il'
dn. rnn.l 111 fik l h.1rgl'i. Jga tn~t Pan
ll h.1' Thl'' l ltcd J lal ~of e\ 1denll'.' J\
the n:a,un f"r thrir Jt'\ ,,..,,n a deput'
1n thr vllill' \.ltd
In 1nr Pt1l lt tn\t"Sttgator Larry
\fontguma) -..i1J c1 uthont1es havt'
rC.-\.l't'ed 1n lurma11on about a po~-
1hk I •un i· all't.'"ged rape v1ct1m. but
the 111ilt'r dn lincd 10 release detatls
111 lht .n,1Jl·nt
\t •ntpomc:f' and' Deput\ Dt tnct
.\I •Intl \t.;r;.1n \lern \LRO IS pros-
eC f.JllO~ th( l d-.C \.ltd the' e11pect
JJJ11111n;11 '•t lt m\ It.I come t'o rv.ard
·1 "'ould tlc.-.1b\4.1lu1eh surpn scd 11
thnt· JIC nol more \ 1ct1ms " \lt onl·
gomt·n w ad Hr .tppears to ha ' e
hl'.'-t.•n pr( 11 • J, 1 't lor more than a
't.Jr Jnd P<•"1bf\ Nd. w I "l'5. ·
ll ll•0\1,1nJ 111 Jll ll l thr charge~.
PJnll hJ' ~· t:Jld rnr1,·r ii ma\tmum
'><'ntcn\.c ul t-'C'3'1 tn pn\On
( •r \\l.ulJ \JIJ
RJ 1l ...... , inll1Jtl• ·'<l at S2tlUJOO
a'1er PJn '''J' .trrc,1 but thr bo}'ld ~ "'J' nll'-J\lJ 1 s:-;, )OO he't"aus.e
Pan , hJ' "'J\ _.r pr >hillto n tor p&SI
tr:tu<h ti'! "'"'~ ••\ltt-r ~AC-\~ tn
v.!':11• h ht ... J' ,, 1hn1 Jt.tordtng \O
.. 11un •1·~ u'l t .,,,
In I "tit l'.sr '' h.s'> pJeaded guilt' to
t11n11 .id1n~ • •n'>t.ill telephone and
\Jtl 'lrtr 1, t\l\ton \\\!Cm\ 1n a (US·
1 1m ~u1l1 '~~ pon-Bc1tch · homt
.\lth11u~h ht .n.tcpted S l CX)() and
bc.'gan thl.' .. r~ thl' Jl'b'allegedh wu
n .. 1 fin1 \hed He al\(1 dtd not ha-..e a
,or1·.1, 11n~ 1,cn\C" .it thr tame ac-
orJinl 11 , ur d >l umenl'>
l'Jnh hJ' "'J' rdr•i.-d to rrpa' the
'll tim' and rla <"J .in thfl:'t' ''a"
rr11liJll in Im ti-it'' 111lat1on~ In \ll'o~
hl' "'41\ r la,t•J n •nc }<"a~· proli3tll>O
tw ".rtt ng J SI :tW' ched.. "'llh
ti\' 1tft,,·n1lunJ'>1n 1hc bani..
(Pleue ett SEX /A~)
Advice and Games
Bullettn Board
Business
Clas.sifted
A 12
A3
A8-10 CM hits builders with 'increased fees
Comics
Death notice
Opinion
Police log
Public notices
Sports
84-6
88
86
87
A3
85-6
81-3
By JENNIFER WEBER °' ... ...,_,... .....
Developers plannUlg 10 build on
Costa Mc.-sa's nonh \1dr v.111 ha'r rn
pa) S97 5 mtllton for traffic 1mprovc.--
ml'nts 10 hc.-lp ea<.c the.-eongest1o'n
thc.-1r prOJCCts arc e'<pccted to bring to
the area.
"'°
T hr < 11\ < ounnl 'oted unan1-
mou~h \1onda\ night to mcrt>a~
onl'·l1mc "trip end .. Ice.-~ to nonh \1de
de' l'lo~r-. w S6M The increased
fee-, \\at' ba-.t•d on a prOJCCtt'd figure.-
of 145,<1!!0 rar tnps a da~ surrounding
the north \ldt' proJl'\'ts fhe fees "-Crt•
1nnt'J\l'J from S95
fhc 1raffit 1nipro,emrnt' planned
for thl' north pan of tht· Ctl\ 1ndudc
bridge\ •arcel 1A.1den1ng\ on and off
ramp., h> lht.' '>a n Dtt•go 1-rtt"a' and
traffo "gnc1l\
Somrone ha~ to pa' lor that and
ahc ul\ I\ turning to lhl' four maior
dt·' cloix·r\ ~ Sal m l a farms .\mC'I
N ·ew traffic initiative proposed
Supervisor Vasquez annouces plan just
I week before deadline of riva l m easu(e
111.111\l\ "'"ulJ Jl\O rl·qu1re trallil
1mpro' eml·nt' twforc.-deHlopment
and "'ould rt•qu1 rl' rounty official' 111
t.'nfurfl• l'\l\llOll road capac1t) \tan-
By BOB VAN £YKEN °' ................
One week before the quahf)tng
deadline for the coun1yw1de growth
and traffic control ballot in111a11 ve.
count) uperv1sor Gadd1 Vasquez
announced he has . asked. county
planning staff to prepare an alterna-
tive 1n1tiat1v<.' that would deal with
traffic co ngestion.
The new proposal. which VasqueL
revealed. M onday_would. rrpon¢<ll>
guarantet' that new roads and other
tnanspor:tJt1on 1morovements are
dJnh f
built-.before res1dcn11al and m m-.. I hl' main d1tkrrnte bcl"-cen tht• nt'" in1t1Jlt\l· and the other onr as 11 merctal development . has a hu1IHn funding mtthanism ..
··And 11's broader tn 1b comp<>-said Emtc 'K hnc.-1der director of the
nc.-nts than tht cxasllnJ an1t1at1 ve." count) En ' 1ronmt ntal Management ~1d Vasquci, "ln that 11 would deal ~genq . v.h1t h is prrpanng the
~1th otherissues as well. such as parks altcrnat1, C' 1ni11all' e
and recrea11on." • hnc1der said the altematt\t' w:n
But Vasquez Satd he could not · modeled after the.-F.oothtll C1rcula-
d1scuss hts rro I 1n detail. tton Phn\tng Plan. a S235 m1llton
"It's stil 1n1 work('d on and program 1n south Orange ( ount5
relined," he 1d. v.h1ch requires de, d opers to pledge
The _measure eady tK1J!J road constru 11on ,monc before the~-
c1rculated. the so-<allcd Sensible rr«1ve pcrmm for rrsadenual and
Growth and Traffic Control In-commt'rcial prOJ«ts
\ J~ut·1\ announct"mt•n1 hrnught
1mmt•d1atc.-{ n t1etl.m trom c;pon'M" ol
lhl' grov. th 1n1t1a11 \ e "ht)\ hargl·i,I rhe
altcmatl\e proposal "a' an attempt
10 drr.11t tht· pc1111on t·ampa1gn
"I JU'>I think 11''> rrmarlahle that
th1' '" tomtng up a ~et·~ bC'fort" v.e
tklt,cr our 1n1ttat1\e ltl thr ~g1.,1r.1r ·
\dtd Ru~s Burl cllC'. to-author ot the
grov.thanJtrafficcontrolmea,ure ·I
1h1nl.. the deep darl.. ~ret '' that th<'
dt•, elopers did th1c; ··
.\'asquo. hov.e,er ha\ dc.-n1ed 1ha1
dt·,clopcrs had Jm th1ng 10 J,, v.1lh
h1'i propo~I.
"Jt wa~ done ndu'"eh at m'
d1m :t1on:· ~td \ a!.queL · o\n' board
mem l>C'r has tbt' nght to as 'taO to do
fCSC'UClt an(f prepare a pr\)poyl for
(PleMe eee TRAFFIC/ A2)
nt•' l'l,ipmcnt t t• t J ,, a';r 11 ~
~on'> anJ TrJn\PJl 111 -'' h· hJ ,
pl.to' !Ill thl• Ol1r1h 'Id
I ht SM•l'l lct• hir l' ·" t :•r •ll'd\'J tr. r
tnln JnJ out ol tht dt'' t' • •f'llll'nl' ,,
In~ than thl S' '•' 11n~1nJ lh
propo"t'd O..•t.iu'' 1• ''Jtlrr~ four tl
an l'rror 1n the l"n'.i1tJ· 'rroor.
GaddfVuqaea
In Jppru' rntt tht tntrc~d lcC'\. the
'""ri,11 J'" ,rratuj .i rommuntt\
1;.i, I '"'' 1 ,,.,l, nunh oi thl \an
l>1qi • I 'l "J' hc'tv.r('n Harbor
Rouln.1r,• J; ,} lh" ....,t."r>on frt"('"a'
ThJt , 11ul,l "t 'randrd later 10 Ra~l'I
'lln'I 1h1 ,·, 11 \.ltd
(Ple&K aec BUILDERS/Al)
2 -masked
men hold
teacher,
30pupils
I I \< .\ l < w "" .\ .\la I -'\. f>) -T "'"0
gunml·n "l':Jt n~ <.l ma<,~<; tool.. o'er
J pn' JI<' "h1 ••I tiutld1ng toda' and
hl'IJ .t lt'Jl h,•r ;ird ahout 60 chlldren
h11,1:i~c "h1k inf nl tht' men detailed
a '<'rtl' l1I ,, n1 J)la1nts ap1n<;t the
gt1\ ernm<"nt ,1 1hont1c' \81d
1 he ta~1·· '1 1 ,11 the "-'e" End
t hn ,t1Jn .._, h· hc-gan a bout 4(1
-a-m and 1h4 tiiunmcn demanded a
m« ling "' th \b~or .\I DuP1)nt.,
rt"lltl' \f)(ll cvnJn lli' 1d Hantn \ltd
P ul'l1nt dtinnl"\l .1 hullct-prnof \-('\!
FV'sgoalat3Q: Keeping ·up~ppearance t1nJ met "'1th thl' ni '"' •l't'
Du Pont 1t1IJ 111hcr, 11\ ofli u al\ that
llnl l•f thC' men "''' .1 \ 1etnam War
\C.-tt·ran .,..h1.1 ha~ ·a l('nerah1t'd
nm-.::trn .... tth 1hl.' ~o-..emmcnt He fch
h(' h d not bcrn in-aird fa1rl..,,. land
1h. ti tht' go,rmment I' rorrupt "
:h '\ M\l1n 10 \Ian (1oodv. 1n d1rtt'\Of
111 tht' n1·uh' Indian R1,rr'\ \/tent.al
l lt Ith ( C"nlC'r
::-:---=-------, __ City o ertng rants, low-interest loans sttond )Cir
to help older rest ences keep tn sfiapc-
The mone)'. finanC'td through a
&rant to the Ctl) from the federal
dcpanmerit of Hou '~I and Urban
Dc"clopment, c-an be used for pa1nt-
Fountain Valley -known as "TM
Cit)' Where Prc)ircs.s hows'" -
wants to tum lO without lettana tts
ycarubow. ' :
Wheft incorporated 1n 19S7, Foun·
tain alfey'1 ()OP'alltton wai S79: it
now tops SS, 100. Once spencly built, ¥1fh'. all of the ci tf 1 9 1quare ma!H
ve.rallcd wi~ buJtneun or
the sprftt1 .. Mite ~ PartK. foun'81n.Nal~ bat trown up,~~.
city offiaals wut ao kttp 1t rrom .. '""""old. -"Wt~~ at a••~ prcvn11tivc maintenan« 11 the le~
lO kttPeli the ~bofhoods f'tom
~ . . . -... --..,,-,-
dctcnorat1nJ." said Cu M•n•r in• or re~ac1nc -.alls and ~•hnas.
Jud)' Ket~). "The hOu$CS are acttin1 rcpa1nn1 or ~pla(in& t00f. piuml).
to be 20 or .30 )can okL -' 1ni. elcc1n al or he.a ttn' 1mpro"C·
. De$1Hk the tonttrnJ. f ountatn mcnt . Jtnd ttrm11r «mtrol
Valley it still without a re«ve~ ''Ourp>el be~ 1s to rthabtht.ate the
mcnt area 1n a ru1dentJaJ neiah-• homes: •"' Orq Lewin. a cit
borhood. Rc<k vck>pment areas are hous1n1 aide. '"That keeps t~ Pf1)P"
rommonly uKd by c1tin 1n bhahted cny 'alues up and makes for a mo~
rommun1ucs...1llow1na tht kx'af aov-1t-41bk cn"u·oamdn."
ernrnen' 10 "'"'n a poruon oC the l.c•1n said' rnl<kn•• •PIM for a ara's propcn)' lilts for rtnovauna loan orannt throut}l l~Clt)'. and r11 t~ napborhood offi"1a1' ch«k the fam•ty•s tn<'Omt
lMMed, Cka&)" as rel 't'-9 OCLloan.I Ad home bdote .Mii\ t~ chtt~
and .,ants 10 low-tn<'OCM m.drnts to The purpow of l.M k>ln mu be
encouneie homto••~ IO kttp tMir Cllpl&ined on ~ apphcauOft. ~
hou• an 1hape The P'Rlflrri 1s in its addtd.
..
Jou111111 .. Val.Hf
Jlae '°9M 0 M ttpatd 11 j11ttt'eft l
antcmt and n M fa.-a m~h H
$:?0. . The m1n1mum .snnt a~atl-
abk lJ S5.i Lt"~tn Kl t..uJ car,. the (lt) handN out ~1
loin ·to about a third ort'h.t PIM•·
canll.-~nd 30 v.nts
Tlu !tar. the em lw S 140.000 fw
L
' •
8f8nl ana s.itd >t for lt\an\ l ("\!, 10
\31d La" )Car. a tot.al ,,fS l 4tl.t\lll "'"'
dcd1~tcd to the program
Tht' cmpha111\ '" on thr gr:anl\
b«.1u'( the frn-mt,ne) " a1mcJ at
Sc.'naor caunn'.I. i nd otht'r (i,c-J 1n
ro~ ~dent -. ho ~'t' tn tht tt1} '
tv.o mobile home·~rk\ u~1n \atd
lkcaust of the ge neral amueott ()f
the nca•hh<lrhood\ 1n F"oun~n \3J
le~. man) of the ho me<'wncn d not
mttt the 1nrome ~ualtticataon for
the: loan mt'an•na add111onal m0nc'
all ~ 10 that ram .. QUJd
unuwd. Lev.in Yid
"If mdM.xh " able to bu' a COO. hom~· ,n Fountain Valk\.
th<'} bh mali.t mort than srr. • tar and n affi rd lO kttl')
II U4>."' ~In taid 1"°h( broo4t
{f'lllK -~Al.UY /AS) I
Hamn -..; 1d a rtlat1"e of one of lhc
c "pto~"ll~' l-nlertd fM bu1ld1na. bu1
t.hc aunmt.'n\ tdenttt~ -..ercn•t
d1' ul ed Poh~ t h1l'I Jcm ulln and .\m•
tant <"hiri t\.t'11 ~windd weft tttn
out 1dr 1 ~h>e.)r attemptu• to \alll t.k
IV.U tUnml'n 1nto \Ui leudenftl, T)w
lawmtn C"Ould bc 'ttn openana and·
cl '"' the d(lOt they Wked w1\ne ~ 1d ------"""" T~ 1unm<n alto requelled _..
"'' ion t"O' tf'ICt R~ Daa c.a._
ofWBR 0 T\ tn Btrmt ......... •
1'Utk't ~vnt--~,a;w.-~ h rad ~ttt lbc .,....... if
-(Pl1111 -WTAG•IAI) .
•
•
1st'· child star•-.
Heather O'Rourke, dies n. ~ 1· ~ ANGELES (AP) -Heather . o•aOUJte. wbo played the aqrhc-
.fl looki"S chikt kidnapped by an~
spirits in the movie "Poltcrgcist. '
" died following what was thought to be ~.bout with the nu. her mana,ger said
today. She was 12.
Tbc child actress. a familiar charac·
r on tcl~vision's "Happy Days.."
-Webster" and ''Still the Beaver:·
icd Monday, said he r manager.
ike Meyer.
Heather "always looked like "Alice
Wonderland' and could memorize 60-pqe script in about an hour, .. rersaid. .
.. 'm not clear on tbt cause of
th. I was told it was related to
'ckness she suffered d uring ActreMBeatherO"llom'keJn
ohergeist Ill.'" he said. ··sunday 1981 pabllclty photOlftpb.
..,...,~ thoupt she had the nu ...
eatheflis the second actress from
c "Pohe,.eist" movies to die unex-
tedly. Dominique Dunne. who
ycd a teen-age daughter in the
· · nal. was strangled in Octobt'r
2.
Dunne, then 22. had tncd to brcall
ff her relationship with her
yfriend, Los Angeles chef J ohn
wecney. Sweeney was convicted of
oluntary m a nsl aughter and
ntenced in November 1983 to the
maximum 6112 yea rs in prison by ·a
judge who chided the j ury for not
returning a murder verchct.
; Heather died as she was being taken
to a hospit~I. but Me er said he was
uns ure what h os p i tal. A
spokeswoman at MGM. where the
"Poltergeist" films were produced.
said a statement -.i.ould be issued later
toda).
In the original ··Poltergeist."'
Heather was known for uttennJ the
ke) line "'hen the evil spirits amved,
declaring ··They're heececrt! .. In the
sequel. she said, "They're baaaaack! ..
The child star. bom in San Diego
on Dec. 27. 1975. fi nished filming
"Poltergeist Jll"'" late June. starring
as Carol Ann for the third time.
Meyer said : ·
The; ori~nal "Poltergeist'" was a
Stevetl Spielberg production and he
was ntdittd for tind1n1 Heather. w.r... ~
Hp~ was only S when she was
sinina an tht' MG M (OmmissaT)' with
her lister. Tammy. he sajd. Spielberg
saw her. alked if he could tajk to her
and was to&d by her that she didn "t
talk to strangers.
But she got permission. Meyer said,
and ihar talk led to her role in
"Poltergeist.··
HOSTAGES ••..
Jl'romAl
needed.
C'atcs was given a list of questions
from one of the men man . with
romplaints against the government.
G oodwin said the list bad 6S ques-
tion$ "that indicated a dis~tisfaction
with the government."
Hartin said at least a few of the
hostage children were aJlowed to
leave by their ca ptors. but he d idn't
know how many. He said at least 60
children were in the buiJdinJ.
Police who spoke on condition the)'
no t be named said grades one,. three.
four and fi ve in the elem entary
division were being held, while chiJ-
dren in grade two escaped through an
outside door in their classroom when
the JU nmen commandeered the
building. ,, .......................................................................... ~~
Rain erids tonlght, moves inland
A Peollo llCWIR brougM rein to IN loulNm C .. Dll, ..
AowlendeendanowtolNlftCIUMaNtod-r • ..._., .. "' """"'°"' trafftc acaldlll1a. •
TM torec.t c:alted tor thunderlftower1 In eome.,... M lhe
1t0f'm mov.d lnlwtd today, end the rain WM expect9d to end
tonight. gNtng W8Y to pertly doudy lttlee Wednledey . AJona tM Or8f199 C0Mt t'*9 wll be a d'8nCe of lhowet9
ton19ht. ffartty doUdV tonight and w~. 0--nlQht 1ows
43 to 53. Hlgha WedMlday In tM"Upper 50I end lower 80a.
U .S. Temps
Albuquefque
Anctlot•
AtlanUI
"tlentlc; Cttf'
Au9tln
lleltlmot•
91rmlnghem
lolM loe1on eun.io
c.w-ton.SC
Ctletlellon. W Ve
CNnotte.N C
CNcaQo
Clnclnnell
~
Columt>ua.ONo
~Ft Worth
Deyton
Det!vet
O..M<>lnft
o.trOlt
~
EIPMO
Erle
felrt>enh Aegsl•"
Orend ".,io. Honolulu
Houston
~ Jed(eon,MIM
JadleonvtMe
""'-~City u.veo-
Smog J:teport ......-..... ....
. 51-100 ---.... -___ _,.,_...,_
.... iwww ............. .................... ............
9-dl IO lillmcN1IM .... _ a.42
•••• 7 • Ylllr--·-··-·· ... ._,...........,._, __ . __ 41
-~ Mrpof\..-.... _, 11-42
~.,
l :l111u11..
10;IOp.111. ...... .,
2:61&.111.
·-~ .... .........
10'.2'Pdll.
0.7 4,0
1.t .. u
4.1 uttte AOCI<
Loulevlle
Memphis
Mlaml BMth ...........
Mpl9-$1 Peul
NMtNlle : Mesa _ apprbves alcohol sales .
'at~s-sfuti~-m~i~~~e~~~~.~-.~~~~~~~.
•
By PAUL ARCBIPLEV to dendeappro,alsona case·b)-Case near .schools o r the Pac ific Mesa considers proiect limits
_ aM JENNIFER WEB ER basis. th~) said. A!llph1thcatrt' prot?ably would not :J
't !Of ............. Councilman Peter Buffa. who wm approval. he said. amendment being considered at the
same time the city's general plan is
being revised .
.~?
·'' Customers will be allowed to gas up
.. strong]) opposed" the measure. cast Sull. some listeners agr~ w11h
thl" lone dJssenting 'ote. Buffa that the ordinance should be
.,
and buy alcoholtc be,·erag~ at Some
combinatton gas stat1on-min1 mar-
kets under a measure approved
• M onday b> the Costa Mesa City
Council.
By a 4-1 vote. the counc1l approve'd
the issuance of cond1t1onal use per-
m its tMome operators wishing to sell
gasoline and alcoholic be\erages at
the same site.
The counc1rs decision re,ersed a
1986 cit) proh1b111on o n concurrent
~les. Such proh1b111ons v..ere over~
•rufed 6~ a nev. state law that forb'tds
blank.et bans.
The dec1s1on 10 require' apph·
cauons for cond111onal use permm
will give Cit} officials the opponun1t~
'"It 1s perhaps one of the dumbesl rejected.
-v.c flex our muscles o n drunk Franklin Cole told the council he
dn' ing and then turn around and was concerned about the city's liab-
allow the concurrent ~les of alcohol 1ltty in lawsuits for contributory
and.gasoline ... Buffa argued. negligence.
··w e have to dra)'' the line some-··1 cannot and do not have an)'
"'here." JUStification in m) m ind for why we
Buffa also .. strongl> resented" the can sell alcoboJ and gasoline at the
state imposing 11s "'1shes on local $3me place," Cole said.
go,ernments. Evm those businesses that do wm
Planning Comm1ss1 on Chairman approval will be required to adhere to
Ju.: Enckson said earlier after the sm ct conditions. including a ban on
comm1~1~rcco(llmended apj)(O' al • ~lltng beverage~ outside or in an ice
of !he orainance that thev 'NOUld tub. • ~ru11n1ze each apphca11orr io ensure Donald Lamm. development ser-
the business v.as compa11ble with the 'ices dutttor. said the city wanted to
surrounding an-a discourage sales of individuaJ cans.or
Ser. ice station con' t'nience store!> bottles.
BUILDERS' FEES BOOSTED IN MESA ...
From Al .
. Once the dastnct 1s established. thC' district starts selling bonds 10 finance
developers v..ould ha't' a choice o f the traffic iroproH·ments.
paying the flat fee or ha' mg d1stnc1
\1ost of the pro1ects that builders
current!) ha' e on the Cable are for
offi ces o r commercial developments.
so homeowners v. ould not be affected
b~ the increase. B~t if ;r develo~r
v.ere to build housing on nonh side
propen,, the higher rates probably
v.o uld be passed on to t~e home-
ov. ncr.
taxes spread O\i~r a 30-~car penod On elopers s'rc balking a1 the cost.
Settingupad1stnct northofthe an but lit~ ~tafTers sa} the~ 113"e to SC'l
Diego Freeway doe not auto mat1· tht• ft'es a1 tht· highest IC''el 1he) thinl-.
cally mean th(' de"elopers v.111 be lhl·~-1.qJI need . The~ can reduce the
taxed. Cit ) ManagN .\llan R.oeder .. figure in the future. but v..on't be able
said. That 11.ould happen after Jhe to ra1M' 11, cit~ offi\.1als said.
VALLEY HOPES TO AGE GRA:CEFULL Y •.•
From Al
q uahfymg for the lodn!> arc usuall)
single parents. or 1n a s1tuat1on v.hc:re
the) ha'"" a lot ofi..11.h ··
The income quahlicat1ons are set
b) tbt" fc:deral 'go' ernment. he said .\
three-member fam 1h can eam no
more tharrs~-.000 a· ~~r t<H tualtf'.-'
fore he loan v. hlle a fam1I~ ofe1ght o r
more can mai..c up to $3~.000
T ht" monc~ repaid on the loan!> goes
back to the c11~ to i..eep the pr~am
afloat. Lev. in said add1r.g that the
cit} doesn't mal-.<: an~ pro fit
··w c·n: losing 11 1f v.c count
1nnat1on a nd look at what v.e could
make through other inve'>tmC'n ts.'' he
TRAFFIC .•.
From Al
dealing w11h a problem ...
I nit1atn e propont"nts ha\ t" been
gathenng signa tures since October
Petitioners need at least 60.000 \altd
signatures 1n order to quahf~ their
measure.
Sponsors of the measure an-
nounced last v.ed that the\ v.ere still
at least 15.000 signatures shon of
their goal and v.ere launching a last·
ditch effon to gather the needed
suppon. The deadline 1 Feb Q
Vasquez said his m easure v.ould be
ready for public d1scuss1on ··in a fev..
days:·
He said the hew traffi c ·proposal
might be subm itted to the board for
immediate adoptio n. or board mem-
bers might elect to place the measure
on an electton ballot this )ear
ORANGE .... 1111.f
COAST .... ,r•I
MAIN °''tcE
said: homes "'ere-set on larger par~ets-. --t's
Lev. in said ncarl> all of the Orange pro'pcrt) 'alucs tn the city increased.
( oa'it n 11es ha' e the lov.-interest loan propcrl) 0 "' ners renovated the area
prugram for housing improvements. on their ov. n. Kelse' said.
but mQ'i.I also ha\c res1dent1al re-··1nthelas1fi,nears.we've seenso
de' elopmcnt areas. too man) of the houses out their rebu11t:·
_··our CH) 1s an prcm_g_ood s=ha=.c=.._s_hc .... • .;,..sa~•-d
but the loans make a dcfin11e 1m-e omoineaeffi>rts appear ro be
pro,cmenl to the home. e\lenor and 11.orl-.1ng.
intl'nor .. Le"''" said. Fro m Jul> to December in 198 7.
t\.cl!>t.'' said she"s also seen e\ldcnce the latest figures a 'a1lable. the c1t)._Of
in Fo uoiain Valle> ofa neighborhood Fountain alle~ issued 220 permits
rebuilding 11selfv.11h no help from the for add1t1ons or ahera11ons to ex1s11ng
ell\ single-family homes. compared to
.~t one time. she said, the Colon111 JUSt 35 permm for new homes.
J uarcz section of the cit) was rampant according to the ci t~ building depan-
v.1th ganss and crime. One of the men1.
older !>CCt1ons ot' Fountain Valle). the '"We're doing O K." Lewm said.
SEX ASSAULT CHARGES .•.
l"romA ~
\\'hen charged 'A-Ith the sexual
assault charges. the bails 1n the
pre' 1oos cases -S50.000 and
S:!5.000-v..ere automatically added
to the-S:!00,000 figure. court offio als
said
But the documcnt'i 1n the new case
also contained several errors.
authonue sa1d .... l n~tead of fombk
oral St"\ charges. child molcstauon
charges v.ere inadvcnentl) filed
against the man. Montgomery said
\fontgom<:r) said the misfiled
charge\. which he said were t)ping
errors. would be cOrrc<:.tcd when
Pan1chas is .arraigned Feb. 11 in
Nc"-'P<>rt Bt-ach.
II more "1c11m~ come forward. the
add111onal charges also could be filed
at that lime. wb1ch will be Pan1ch~s·
first court appearance on the molesta· 1
uon charges. authorities said.
Pan1chas allegedly met his v1ct1ms
dunngJOb tnterv1ev..s. Griswold said. I
.\f\cr talking w11 h the girls. he
"'ould offer t<>-.Show them around the j
Harbor BoDlevard fac1hty and attack
them. the scrgcan\ alleged.
He alleg~ly raped both 18-ycar-
old "'omen a nd forced each to
perform othe r SCll acts at the business.
He also a lleged!) assaulted the 22-
year-old. a Las Yeps woman who
had nown to Irvine fora job interview
w1th the ~uspect. Griswold said.
----------! Justcall 642-608.6
What dO)OU hke about the Dail) Pdoe? What
don't ')OU 1t~e? Call the numbtr abo\le Hd )Our
a;:.A1.1"21!~~~~4..1111~iat-.AJlll tit .r«ordtd, 1ran~bfd aftd de·-+..m...-..;::a;....;.
"' e tQ the appropnate editor ~ ,,-~--=:--=:~~=::==:;::::::::;:;:::::;-:-::-::-I The same l~hour answmng St"rvt« ml) ht
used to record lcucrs to' the cdJLor oo an) topic
ContnbutOt'$ to our Letters column muJt include
their name and 1elepl1one number fOf "cnftca11on
TcOsJi ~hat"\ on \Our mind.
In a vote that could clear the way
for constructton to resume on the
embattled One South Coast Place
project. the Costa Mesa CH) Council
will consider a general J?lan amend-
ment Wednesday setttn~ square-
footagc limits on the proposed Home
Ra nch development.
The counc1r s 'ote follows a unani-
mous Planning Commission rec-
ommendation of the measure. 1
The proposed amendment would:
• Cap square footage at 3.1
million. a 10 percent reductton of an
earher hm11. o n the 94-acre site.
• Limit bulldirfglmghts from fi ve
stones near ancnal streets and neigh-
borhoods to 20 stones 1n the center of
the propen).
• Force the de' eloper. C J
Segcrstrom & Sons. to build tmprove-
m~nts on nearb) streets and guaran-
tee an acceptable traffic level. If traffic
does not no" smoothl}. the cit) could
refuse to issue an occupanq permit
for One outh Coast Place or could
block construcuon on other Ho me
Ranch pro1ccts.
Traflic -spec11icall y the esu-
mated 46. 700 car trips the develop-
. ment could ultimate!¥ generate -is
the source of great concern with nonh
side residents opposed to the project.
Opponents also object to the
The meeung is scheduled to ~n • ·
at 6:30 p.m Wed nesday at the C tty
Council Chambers. 77 Fair Drive.
AIRPORT TO CLOSE .•.
From Al
compromise:· noting tha t the Nerio promise.
fam1l} initial!} requested zoning for Erskme said he is disappointed,
as man) as 1.200 homes and apart-though, that there are no plans for a
ments. .• park in the area. "And sanitation is
Mays sau} th'e project will be built gomg to be a problem ... he said.
mphaseso,erfi\corstx)ears,easing Pilot Don Dodge. wti o battled to
the strain on traffic and sewers that keep the airpon o pen, said flien now
are 9.Y.S:.,lQ ~ rt'des1gned. ma~ h.ave to go as far as Banning to get
The councilman also said he favors lie-down spaces for small planes.
a formula in the arc:i that permits Fulle~on ha~ Lhe only o!1fr mu-
onh about 517 homes -mstead of n1c1pal airport 'tn Orange Cou nty a nd-606 -1f np · denstt> bonuses are 1t"s operating at capacity. Oodae said.
granted. Finley. thou~ voting aga.insl the
Ma)or Erskme also said he be-zone change, said she didn't want the
heved the Planning Com m1ss1on, a1rpon to continue because of other
v. h1ch appro' ed an 1den11cal plan last dC\ elopments that have been allowed
fall. had worked out a fa ir com-to encroach on the fatility. ·
BEAGLES MISTREATED, CALLER SA Ys.:.
From Al
The tx~gles had • sores on their
heads a nd bod1t"s. rotted teeth. tn·
fcqcd gums. collapsed \Ctns and v.ere
st<lned. the l'allcr claimed.
The dogs had neither food nor
water v.hen the) ·'A-ere "liberated'"
fro m an outdoor pen at c r s nonh
~ampµs air polfuJ1on research labora-
ton. the caller said
tio \\e, er. Cl spokeswoman
Kath~ Jones said the dogs were fed
h1gh-quaht) food. and their coats.
teeth and ears were cleaned regularly.
.\fter the beagles ,.ere inspected
and treated b) the \Cl{'d nanan each
v.as placed ma home. S81d the Animal
L1bcrat1on Front spokesman
l'CI has a' ctennarian on campus.
"h1t h conform to pohc) estahhshed
b} the Southern Caltforn1a Veterin-
arian Medical As oc1at1on.
The assoc1at1on approves o f l'e·
spons1ble rescar h on ant mats as long
f
\
as 11 1s within the framl·work of the ve terinarians 1n Sou1hem California
Animal Welfare Act of 1966 which set who work surteptitiously with the
dov.n guidelines r.equmng humane group.
treatment. said executive director ··out 1t brings up a legal point. .. he
Richard Holden. said . '"If I'm examining animals I
OfficiaJs saJd the um versity labora-know att stolen propcny a nd don't
tor) had passed inspection a week ago repon it to the police, I could be an
b~ the_ campus Animal R~rch accessory to grand theft.
Committee and b) the Food and
D d I ··t thtn k any veten nanan who cares rug.\ ministration ast year. about his licenSC' would be reluctant.
Dr. Joel Pasco. treasurer of the lt"s an unusual group for sure ...
asS0C1at1on and a Costa Mesa veterin-Law enforcement officials blame
anan. shad he doubted whett\er many th~ ~ni!l'al L1bt~tion Front for S4
,·et en na nans wo uld be ~ym1J2iUht1iJ. L..µ1Ullon.lll.J'1.a.lrnage...uu:lo:l~.s..otb~.k....----JL
lo the acu' 1sts' cause. .. ins across the country, but the
"'eekend tht!\ was the first at UCt. "The Antmal L1bera11o n Front lost
the ve1crinaf) community"s re~pect
\\hen the} set part of the vetennaf)
school (at UC Qav1s) on firt'." Pasco
said. '"It wasn't even a research lab. It
was a d1agnost1c lab."'
Pasco said there may be a couple of
University researchers were ex-
amining the effects of sm6g o n the
lungs of t~ beagles and why some
tracheotomies are accompanied by
ad\'el"S( effects in the $900,000.per-
year study. •
OF NEW ENGLAND
Alden int roduces
its classic
· full strap penny and
tasse l slip-ons.
Elega nt and triml y
proportioned
in th e finest imported
a nil ine calfskins.
' ,
·-
.....
" Or.,,ge Coat DAILY PILOTIT~y. February 2, 1988
College offering
. national forum,
HB-V~lley Boys, Girls Clo~ for sale
I • career courses ..
SaddJebKk Collqe will offer threr counet in its
Busincss and Careen propam this week, as well as a
forum on national issues.
., ao9DT 8Alt1D Huntinaton Beach.
... .._....... H=on Valley Boys and G1fls
Pflkialt have put up a for sale sip on .. Cha~ nt Jay Stout 111d offic1al1 a~
the old two-.iory blue stucco Boyt and &litU\I S~.000 for lM COn ~encd tWO-
G irls Club. which has served younptrn story m1htary barracks build1na .fnd
from Huntinaton &each and Fountain proptny on the 120 foot by 2'00 foot lot at
Valley for more than 20 years. 319 Yorktown Ave. .
The club will build new quarters _ Tht sales pncc. aJona wnh money on
includina a gymnuium _ It the new hand, will fi!Wl« const~uon of the new
McCallcn Pa le a..-: de 1 ......t 48,()()()..squart foot faethty at McCallen r ~1n1 ve Ot"u ~t Parle, Stout said. .
Yorktown Avenue and Otlawarc Street 1n Tht Boys and Girls Club will maintain •
the part in ~turn for aetun1 the land to
build i new facility, he said. i
Co ruction 1s slated to btlin 1n
xpkmbt and completion " cipected
earl~ neat ear. Stout saud.
OtMr s and airls club fa(1ht1es arc
located at uca t1on Lane 1n Hununaton
BcKh at t-4arpcr School 1n Founw n
Valley. Conwuction had been expected to
stan by Jan. 30 on new fac1hues at Mile
Square Park, Stout said. but the organiu-
uon had faikd to ra15( enouah money to
qualify for tedenil money. A fund-ra.s1n1
dri' r 1s on10 1ng. hr said
bou1 1.800 ~ounp~n a rc membc"'
o f the ~)'s and 0 1r1s Club. wtuch has an
annual operatint budaet o f $48S,OOO. All
but .'7.000. "'h1ch is received from the
United \\a ). comes from fund·ra1s1n1
efforts. tou1 said
Chns h nctder. a rrs1~nt ofFoun&fan
Valle). 1s the e>.ccuuve d irector for the
o rgan1zauon Ht' was appointed Jan. I,
Stout said.
The careen classes arc "What Do You Really
Love 10 Do." Wednesday at 7 p.m. in Emeritus
Community Center 2, "How to St.an a Bed and
Breakfast Inn" Saturday. at 9 a.in. in Emeritus
Center I. and "St.artina a Business" Saturday at 9
1.m. in Science/Math 313.
The National Issues forum will continue
Wednesday wilh "The Trade Gap: Rcpinina the
Competitive Ectac" at 7'p.m. in Emeritlll Center I.
moderated by Profe~r Kenneth WoodW.rd. Call
582-4650 for more information on all pr()l1'ams.
Oil, He Ch HeiChy ·-·--·-·-·--
La• school program .et
An informational mcctina and admissions fair
on law school will be presented Thursday at 6 p.m. in
the Amba.ssador Room of the Embassy Suites, 2120
Main St,,, Irvine.
The event is free and is being sponsored by a
variety of California law schools.
-
Eatlng dl~rden viewed
Several Local mental health professionals. in
cooperation with the UCI Eating Disorders Pro-
a.ram. arc staning a $Clf·help program for eating
disorders, beginnina Thursday at the South County
Psychotherapy and Counseling Center. 321 S8
Cam ino Capistrano, Suitce 211. · in San Juan
Capistrano.
The group will provide information and
support to anorexid . bulimics and their families.
Call G race Nelson at 831 -6631 for funher infor-
matio n.
Arthrltls coarse ln HB
A new six-week anhntis self-help course for
men and women will bea.in Thursday at Humana
Hospital in Huntington &ach. sponsored by the
hospital and the Southern California chapter of the
Arthritis Foundation.
Jcnnje Lewis and Judy Bcrendsen will lead the
two-hour class. which begins at 6 p.m. Enrollment is
limited to 20 a<!,ults and a physician's approval is rcqu~sted. The rec is S25. and registration rnay be
made by calling the hospital at 843-S047.
Scuba class ln Mesa
The Costa Mesa Leisure Services Department
will o ffera scubacla ssat the Downtown Communit)
Center. 1860 Anahr 1m Avr .. beginning Friday at
6:30 p.m.
The class will run for eight weeks at a cost of ·
S tOO. Rt"gistration information is available at
64 5-2797.
Heart dlsea•e lecture
promoted by Hodel
in ~speech at Irvine
By BOB VAN EHEN " ..............
Secretary of the lntenor Donald Hodel
told Orange County rrs1drnts Mo ndi)
that he drr ams of rcstonng to its natural
condition a valley that John Muir called
"one of naturr"s rarrst and most precious
mountain temples."
After making his patch for restoratio n of
Nonhern California's Hetch Hetch y Val-
ley. Hodel s.aid he also supports plan5 to
alte r another natural landscape, the Cah-
'forn1a coast.
Hodt'I satd fo llowing a luncheon a t
l rvinr's Rcgistr) Ho trl that the proposed
sale o f leases for 011 exploration off
California's coast "'ould not spell disaster
for the coastal r n' 1ronmr n1 or seaside
tourism.
In fact. Hodel s.a1d . bolstenng .. 011
reserves "ith petroleum from Cahfom1a
waters could preve nt economic harm from
co ming to the st~ coastal rcson s.
"The gasoline shortage in the 1970s had•
a tre mendous negative d Tect on toun sm . ··
he said ... If. b} companson. )OU look at the
Santa Barbara 011 spa.II. people b!cked off
from there for about SIX mOflths or a ~ear.
and then thr effects disappeared."'
And there 1s no ev1dencr . he said. tha t
the mere prescncr of 011 demcks dis-
courages tounsm
··That argument s1mpl) does not hold
walt'r." he said.
But Hodel spent most of h~ time
Monda~ talking about his Hetch Hetch)
proposal
Hr began his spc«h to members and
guests of the Southern Cahforn1a Water
Com mittee" 1th a discussion of thr natural
beaul} of the Hetch Hetch) Valle).
The only problem with .the valley,
located 13 miles from Yosem ite National
Pari.... 1s 1hat it's fu ll of water. and plugged
up b~ the 360-foot O'Shaughnessy Dam.
1nce 192.l. whrn the dam was com -
pleted. Hetch H~tch) Reservoir has been a
source of "ater and electric1t) for the city·
of 'an Francisco.
That detail can be take n care of 1fstudies
sho" 1t 1s cconom1cally feas1bl~to tear
do" n l hc dam and drain thr rvo1r.
Hodel said. •
Hodel acknowkdged th-at the idea has
bee n ridiculed in thr press. panicular1y in
the San Francisco area. .
But he said the cm 1c1sm 1s based o n the
aroncous no11on that remov1ng·the dam
"ould dl.'pmc San Francisco ofa neccss-
al) ~ourcc of water and power. .
"l behe\e II IS important to point o ut
that an Franc1so uses onl) about one
th ird of1 he water. and sells thr remainder
to 01hcr commun111es:· he said. "The
Hetch Hetch) has bt'come a m onr) m alcrr
for San Franciso rather tha n an t'S5Cn t1a l
sourer of \!o ater and powrr ...
The "ater no1.1. trapped b~ the
0' haughneSS) Dam would not bC lost 1f
the dam "ere removed . but would flow
.... .,'--......
Seeretary ()f tbe Interior Donald Hodel epeelr• with o..a....e C08aty~. _ _.
Sape"18or Barrl,U Wieder after a~ the Soathen California
Water ~om.mlttee'• meett.ac llonclay ln l.nlDe.
down the Tuolom nr R1vr r through thrtt
9 thrr dam a~d reservoir S)Stems and m to
the Sancramrntcr.San Joaquin Rn er
Delta. Hodel"sa1d.
PTehmmal) studies also )ho" that
much. 1f not all of the po~r ienerated at o· haughness~ could be recaptured at
other locattons. Hodel sa1d.
Dr. Mark Miller. -1ncomina president of the
Orange Couniy chapter o f the American He,an
Association. will speak on cardiovascular disease
Thursda> at 1he Carmt'I Retirfment Village 1n
Fountain Valle}.
Michelle DufT). ''I~ president of the count)
chapter. will discuss financial planning for chan -
t.able contribuuons. The plrt>hc 1s invited to a ttend.
court-martial recommended
in Marine copter tampering
Educator .
EmestCrain
of-NB dies
Mayors' dlnner ln NB
The seve nth annual mayors' dinner sponsored
by Speak Up. Newpon will be ht'ld Friday at the
Newport Beach Mamou Ho tel. focusing on the year
2006 -Newport's 100\h anniversary.
A panel of civic leaders. including Mayor John
Cox. Ray Watson. Herb Sutton. Les Steffensen and
. former mavor Don Mcinnis will discuss the future of
thr city. T ickets are SJO and reservations ma> be
made by calling Doroth) Hardeastlc..,at 67).. 7975 or
Mary Rr uland at 542-4226.
Taesday,Feb.2
• 6 p.m. Lapaa Bead City CeacU. council
e,hambers. ro5 Fo rest Ave .. Laguna Beach.
By~ Auoclated Press
A. hea ring offi cer recommended a
special coun-manial fot a hrhcopter ere~
c hief at the Tustin Mann~ Corps .\1r
Station ~ho all~edly tampcrcd \lo 1th
s~ itches to prove pilots 1gnorr instrument
readings 3nd fl) helicopters that shou1d be
gro unded.
C pl. KHk Hill adm1ttrd dun ng a
m1 lital) hearing last month that he
tampered with s"1tches on a C H-S3D Sea
StaHion befon-an Oct. 26 night flight to
sho w pilots would 11 even though they
km:" the aircraft "as unsnfc.
T he hean ng officer. Manne Capt.
t.Thomas Scull ). rccommrnded that El
Toro Marinr Corps .\1r tat1o n command -
ing officers order a special coun-mart1al
for Hill. the corporal'("'' 1llan a ttorne~.
Kc' in Mc Dermott. said Monda\.
!f ined and con\1cted under proH r.1on.s
of a special coun·mamal. Hill faces a
ma\1mum se ntence of si x months in Jail
Had the relOmmcndallon b«n a morC'
se' en: general court·ma n1al. the pc-nalt~
could haH ~n 10 )C'ars 1n pnson
··w e·rr hoping the command tal..es 11 to
hean . but thr' ·re not bound b' 11 \\ e thin!..
1i's a ma1or 'ictol) ... said McDerm ott.
Hill faces charges ol willful dirrllcuo n of
dul). 1ntcn11onall} tf")1ng 10 damage a
. helicopter iand attempting to dC$tro> thf
nauo nal defense. Other pefld•nJ charges
include using manJuana a nd d1sobe) mg
orders b~ placing a foreign substance.into a
urine snmple bottle dunng a ~uadron
drug s~~p
Hill onginall~ "as charged "'th rn-
dangering an able vesscl~an aged manta me
la~ predall ng the ..\mencan Re' olu11on
~h 1ch l-ames "1th 11 tht' death pcnalt) The
charge "'as dro pped ~uSt' 1t applred onl~
to '~~Is that noat. McDermott s:ud
( 3pt Bradle) " Garber prosecutor in
the ca se. refused comment
Testtmon) at ~r earlier heanng '""-
' r aled that Hill apparent I\ s" nched the
plugs go' erning pans of 1hr helicopter's
auto m;,11l ll1g)tt controls~ stem. The cross
conncn:0n did n't endanger the copter or
Crc\\.
-\lthough p1lcts" mon11onng instru-
mC'nts dct<."Cted the cross<Onn«tton dur-
ing a prc-ll1gh1 chcc l... lh.c pilot testified
that the ere~ bchr ,c,1 thr am:raft "ould
fl~ and the malfunc\1on "asn't .reponed
u ntil after a ~5-minutr ll1gh1
.
Ernest Crain. a 45-}ear rn1dent of
'-'e~ pon Beach and nauonall~ -rccognm"d
educator died ThuNia' at his ho mt' He
'1'3S .i .
Cram "as born 1n I Q04 1n Lawton. 0 1..la
-\tter !~aching -at public SC"hook and
collC'g~ in l..lahoma.. he sen•ed a' 3
,;ipta1 n in tbe -\rm~ -\tr Corps dunng
\\ orld \\ ar II. g~ mg pre-night instruction
to p ilot at anta -\na .\rm' -\ir Base
He mo' ed to the '\e"' port 'Hart'OT' area
IO I o.i2 and spent mo'"" than n )C31"\
t.t-achtng at RanC"hp Sanuago Cotlrgt"
!ormerh a.nta -\na Colk gr .While at th<'
colkgl• hc ~e1'-Cd nat1o nal rtt'ogn1t1on
from tht' f rec<I'Oin Forindataon at Valle'
Forge PJ for ~1' effons to create pubh\
a"an.·nes\ of the 'alu~ of the l
Cnnstatuuon and in part1\·u1ar the 8111 of
Rights
• 7_p.m_ Newport Beac• Parb, BeacHI ud
RecreatiN Commlni.e, c<foncil chambers. 3100
Ncwpon Blvd., Newport Beach. ·
• 8 p.m. FoataJ• Valley City Coucll, council
chambers. 10200 Slater Ave .. Founta in Valley.
Felando won't run for Lungren' s ~eat
..\ spe-c1al plaque at the coll~e rttogniz~
( ra.n·.._ \·ontnbu11ons in 'teaching th('
pnnupk~ l'I th~ .\mrncan ·s~stC'lll ot
gl" c:rnmt·nt
\\1th h1' late v.1fe Minnie. Crain
foundfd thc: F1n.t Baptist Church and tht'
Harbor Tnnit' Baptm Church m ( ost.a
\ks.a, and "3~ '°'ohcd in church :a
ll' 1t1~ un11I hJ) death
Sf\C RAMENTO CAP)-Asscmblyman kme11an Lungren s111l must lX' confirmed
Gerald Felando said Monda~ he has b~ the Legislature to replace the late Jesse
the lo" er house since I q'"'
----=:..:....:=:....:::::r,=::..=;...;:;..;:=-.-_.!...::;._::~.:.._:=-----+~r-i·idein-.-A&l-11&--1f\ffi-for-Rep.-Da.rueL l n 01h __ _
Lungrl.'n's co ngressio nal scat this )ear. Felando anno unced last fall that t' • 9:30 a.m . Oraqe C..ty Board of S.~r·
vlaon, board hea ring room. Hall of Administration.
1'0 ctvil' CtnttrPtai:r.S.mr Ana:-
• 6:30 p.m. Celsa Mesa City Coud.I, council
chambers. 77 Fair Dnve. ·
"I feel 'rl) strong)) that to st'nr in "ould scel Lunsren's .i2nd Congressional
Congn:u no"-would put a tremt!nde us. DtStnct scat He strppcd do"'n as Re·
strain on m~ fam 1I). hfr." Fdando. R-San public.in caucus chair and "'as replaced b~
Pedro. said at a Cap11ol n~ws col\frrencc. Assembl~ ma n Drnnis Bro " n . R·
"I fed that 11's almo~t 1mp1.1~"hk to be a
con ressman from ( ahfom1J and not
mo ' e ~our amt ~ to asl11n~1on D C:·
and ~et his fam1I~ 11 ._c~ 11' 1ni an ( al1iom1a.
he said .
In Was hington ~mlxrat\ Jre 1n "the
ma1ont) and ar" hl eh "' remain so. he
$aid. ~,-.,1r .. "" 1Rr pubh\Jn<.l are cloSt' to
becom ing a maJOnt' 10 the .\s<.em bl} a nd I
think JI "ould be 'C'n n"e 10 be around
"hen that hapix·n). ·· h" )31d
Crain is SUP t' ed h' h is son Gene 1f
Laguna Bea h Jau£,hier. Carol \\ ood .11
JJl'.'l~n \\ '0 fi, e grandchildren and one
great-grand h1ld
• 6:30 p.m . C"tli Mesa Traffic Comml11loa,
first floor conference room. 77 Fair Drive.
Lungrrn. a Lo ng Beach Republican Ro!>smoor. 1.1.ho had cens1dcrcd Sttking
whose district includes most of Hunt· Lungrcn·s stat but J ec1ded against 1t.
1ngton Beach. was named state treasurer Fel3ndo. 53. said he will run again for his
last J'\ovembcr b~ Go\. Geo rge Deu-51 st .\~mbl) D1stnct srat. Hr has been m ..
,...
Costa.Mesa d~g p~obe nets
1 O suspects, kilo.of co Caine · . -
Hma~n Beacb
"-man cla1mC'd that .someone stok a s: coll~ tabk ...,h1lc he was 1n the
prottSSofmo,1na11 aromok:11 1n ~6400
blot'lt ofWa~r A "«lilt'.~ man SA.Id he
...,as unload1 na btlon11nas from an
cl<'' ator and ...,hen ht rrtumcd to ~ thud
Ooor. he found his rofftt table
• • •
BJ JENNIFER WEBER ...............
Cost.a Mesa police confiscated
mo re than a kilo of cocaine and
arrested 10 peopie in a series of raids
that culminated two weeks of in-
vcstiption. it was rcponed Monday.
Thie'~ u.K'd a Pf) tool 10 enter
. lrivesti,pton came up with enough ma11c m ushrooms. LSD. t odeine Clothworld, q()q:? -'dams -\.vc... and uo}e
1nform1lt0n to &rt I~ -warnnt table ts, hash ish Oil. meth· SJ.OJ 1n cash pluschcd:s
and to link t~ al~ fk>•'of drup amphetamine and percodan from • • •
from the Cost.a Meu k>cations to tht Elden A. H nue rrs1dencr . Thr · ~'cral boyHold rMICknts 1n the POOO
Sant.a Ana home. Boylan said. na~t1cs had a total rst1mated strttt bk>d or tciper C'ird e tl\at t~ had bttn
I fs I 000 beattn 1t Hope V1CYo School b) Jll't n1ln
With the auistantt ot Santa· Ana , .• ue o · · 1llqtdl amwd .... 1th btll ctvbl and u"'
Police. officcn arrested a mot~ and At the two Costa Mesa locauons. irons.
Funeral St'n l\C'S )'Ill be held at 2 p rr
\\ t'dnrsda\ 3t Harbor Tnnll~ Bapt1'1
Chur,h. I~ \l Balrr t . Costa \ky
lntcrmrnt "Ill 10110~ al Panfil \I<''-'
Memonal f>ar 1n 'e"pon Beach
· .. -·-..
Coeta Mesa
" Pftl"'lcr "'u rc punC'd 11 ~ :1 am
Monda' 1n th<' 1 No.·l. of Sanuq o
Road . . . R~1dt'nU 1n the I block of M1ss10n
Om c l'Ti'l'nC\1 , 1 t'lurglan at I a m
Monda' . . .
"pttp1n1 tom "''U ~ponC'd shortl~ aftt'r
noon Monda\ 1n th<'~ tloc1. of\"t'laSC'o l..\nc '
tmne
TblC\f'S -....uh 1 peon ti1n1for1u1omob1 k
t·topsdeanC'd up \tofl<b, ~n ll"'1nt'. ""hnT
I 0 Sl"paratc 1n<'ldt'nu o( H oi> theft ~
rql0(1C'd acrord•na 10 poli« l'Tpom TM
\arJtl of man) oflhc thcft.s •'as lhe O.uun
-·
~ OZ\ 'r'<'rts ~•r T ·tops art wo., h
1ppro\1m11t'h SI 'O''ra.-h Poli« bt'l11 •c
the theft~ arr cunnC'('IC'd
Armed man
quietly robs
Irvine bank
/.
Sat. Tom Boylan cstimaled the
cocaine seized Friday niaht It a Santa
A 01 home w..s worth more than
$200.000 on tbe streets.
her mn whom Boylan dc9cribcd as a pohC't a.msled C'osta Mesa rn1dents "fairly hip. rriict-«'=el dealer" in Jo) Lynn Johnsto n. 3 1. on susp1eton ______________________ 111111111 __ _
Sant.a Ana. . of selltna cocaine. Matthr w E. Hen·
.\ man armed 1Jo1th a pisaol qu1cH)
robbed an In LM bank Monday
at trmoon. CSCIPl !'4 "'1th an unk:no•"ll
amountof c,ash wh1kbankcustomet1
and rmploycesronducted buunesu
u ual.
The invcstiption bcpn with tips
that kd ofticen to a home in the 2300
block of'Eden A veaue in Costa Mesa.
wheft the residents were ~ly
deali .. ~·The Pf'* t0 a teeond Costa Mna residence in the
200 block of Monte Viau ~ and
thm to a resideoce in the 2200 block
of Wat Wibbft A venttt in Sant.a
Ana.
., .
Police found mort than 1 tilo of dric~s.. ~6. o n.susp1c1on of possns1ng
cocaint. five auns _ indudi an cocaine. Thomas R .. Hendncks. 30.
nsault riflt .:.... and mort th8n s?rm on s~sp1c1on ofbein11n a plact -.here
· sh t the San •---.A.a.. • • cocaine was uS('(i: Stanle ~-in ca • ta nnm .....as. it Houpton. 34. 6n"'susp1Cton of selhng
was rcponed. cocatne: and Sfcvcn H _ Vanderpool.
Luis Hcmandcz.. 26. and his ?6, on suspK1on of possns1na ~
mother. Maria 0 . Hemandez. 40. cain~.
wm boOted on ~ of Pot-Thrte othtt ~ armled ~ IC'Ssi".'J cocaine fof 9*. noc ldtfttifitd. 8orlan sa.td. A susp«1
Polecc said they allo coa6tcaticd idtn&ilkd as Juan Frutos Hema'*2.
S2.l00 cash ind smlll amouats of 47. bas aot bttn aPPft.hcnckd.
Man booked after allegedly
returning to scene of crime . .
KnOUS v. hen sht' sav. 4 kntfe and 1un.
but \ht 12:40 a.m robbtf> S111\ fai~
and tht man fled. Jo hnson satd
When Gama ~turned to the cofftt
~ Mondal.. C'\'mln&. the v.-oman
l"CC.'Olftlttd him and ttl po •<"e.
Jobmon l&ld. I
The maa -as ia, ana u offken
amvcct 11 abOu.l UO. p.m_ JO tbie)'
~~ h~m to .tht 1ntenec1t0Ct of
Ha,rt,or bk\'ard lftd 8ikCT SrTftt.
~W)~bUll o'-n
lftJldt lu car pohtt bind \.ht \naft
and pm raa aJk:ledJ utied 1n ihr
S.tur*y robbtt ~ anatlpt JollMoll
said .
honl~ after 3 p.m .• a man waited
up to a teller at' Sccu~k
Nauonal Bllnk. 18622 ur
Bhd. aCld demanded mc>My. ecicord-
1ng m '"''ne pohce rq90ftl. e tM •
same umc. the man palled.__ bis
J&cket and a llclcdly Q,poaed lft
~ut matte' "' toi tucked • IUt WMM· band . ..
The teUef p ve the mu • -.
detmn1ntd amount of Calla .._ 1111
~.Mdtht"*-...
0
·-OU\ of the ban No OM .. .._.
dun "I tht. 1nadeo&. llM ... ....._
tdkn or CUMomert Wlft .... lif'llill
r<Albc•>' unttl the "Y1Ctm tells w
nouacat that w := ._. ,....... ............... ~.--.
nc Jil!ll9ICt " • 11 • • • • • ••• --.-27~,_......... '70-
.... widl ...... cWty :Mir .... -.. -. . ..._ .......... ... bhlt_;e-MMI._. ..... ...._
e.cae recalls Iraqi memo,
"denies.knowledg~ Of brltie
WASHINGTON (AP)-Attomey The 1977 fORip Comapt Pmc· proposed pipeline.
Ocncra1 Edwin Mttte Ill ac.knowl-ticn Act trnerally forbids companies "No one said an offer was made or Idles lhat ~ lonatime friend wrqte and individuals from makhw pay-carried out." Peres said. "There's no him about a proPQSed SI billion Iraqi men ts to foreip aovmunedt olneials basis to the reports that anythina was
pipeline. but sayi"tle doesn't recall a to 1eeurc help in obtainina or tttain· done." •
section of the memo dcscribina a in& business. Under that law. the Meese said that durina his contacts
payoff p&aD to protect it from Israeli attorney. ~ral j~ ~hie for with t~ Israeli official, "I ca.n say !hat
bombina. -prosecutrna Amencarr cmzens or ·at no lime-was-there 1ny-dt9Cuss1on.
' Meete said Mqnday that he re--rom~ies that try to bribe fOttip hint. or implication oh payment."
ce1w:d. but docs not recall rcadi~ offacials. · However, two liberal senators and
lbe leCtion of the memo from bas WallKh, a lawyer who was rep-frtquent Meese critics -Patrick
·loqtimc friend E. Robert Wallach in rewntina one of the project's part-Leahy. D-Vt .. and Howard Metzen·
micft.198' which refen to a payoff ncn, came to him lookina for advice baum, D-Ohio -called for M~'s
plan involvina the Israeli Labor Party in May I 98S. Meese said. resignation. Meesc's repeated appear-
of F~ Minister Sbjmon Peres. Meese cliscloeed that in the fall of ances before Jflnd juries a.nd the
formerly prirrrc minister. . that yea(, be bad two contacts about several investtptions targeting the
Meesc's involvcmen(in the pipe.: -'tlie pipeline with an Israeli official. attorney general arc .. a source of
line project is the subject ofl criminal whom sources familiar with the embarrassment to all Americans,''
jnvestiaation by independent counsel .~minaJ probe of M~ have ident· Mettenbaum said. .
James McKay. • • 1fied as Pcm. The proJCCt'S backers Meese refused to answer questions
Meese-read a five-page statemenuo wanted Israeli assurances that that after read inf his statement and
rtporters Mondfy complaining that nation wouldn't bomb \be pipeline. walked out o the room Ha reporter
hehasbcentbev1ctimof"acascadeof whic)\ was to be built by San asked bfrn whether he would remain
misinformation." Francisco-based Bechtel Corp. as attorney general.
He insisted that his invol vement in Peres, speakina on Israel army President Reagan . returning from a
the pipeline project "was cxtremelr, radio Monday, said he never was speech to ~ group of rcligi_ous broad·
limited. I did not initiate.or promote' offertd a bribe in return fora promise casters. said "I'm not going to talk
ii. that Israel· wouJd not bomb the about" Meesc's situation.
• Ihdians free paper's hostages
• What shadow?
Mecham to·
te•tlfyon·
ownterins
PHOENIX ('AP) ... -Gov. Ev~
Mecham is apin promisina to testify
before a House panel thlll i1 conaider·
ina whether he should be im~ched,
and this time it apparently wall be on
his terms. • ·
The Republican aovemor claim.eel victory-in~ ll&Ddoff MQnday wath
House leaders who backed down on
their insistence that he answer ques-
tions from their attorneys as .well' u
from lawmakecs on the select com-
mittee.
Mecham had wanted to answer
questions only from lawmakers, and
House lcad~rs aarce<f .to let him testify
under those tcrms.Wcdne9day.
But House leaders weren't happy
about the apcement. "Speaker Joe
Lane. a Republ.ican, warned that if Mecham balksapin Wednesday. "he
can sure kiss the Hpuse &oodbye."
Committee Chairman Jim Skelly
said he wanted to subpoena Mecham
but he w.as outvoted by fellow
Republicans. • Before the tua-of-war began. the
JOvcrnor made an opening statement
in whfch he denied wrongdoing .in
failing to report a S3SO,OOO campaign
loan·and borrowing $80.000 for his
auto dealership from the govcrno·r·s
protocol fund.
LJ.JMBERTON. N.C. (AP)-Two Hatcher and Jacobs threw out two Hatcher and Jacobs just before they
armed American Indians who took a shotguns and a .38-caliber revolver ·surrendered. It i:;alls for a re view pf
newspaper staff hostage freed their andrclcasedthelastsevenbostageSof the Indians' allegations. to be-con-
caplives after the govcr;nor a~ ~o 17 . ~ople tttey had _held in the . ducted t>} Kfrk: J_im Trotter. general
invtstipte charges of corruption 1n build1ns-counsel to Martm; and Joe Dean.
local law enforcement agencies. ..T.heir prime concern was that state sccretarv of crime control and
Phil. the weather-forecu~ around hot of Pmu-
eutawney. Pa .• le lnterriewecl 6"y Jim Ileane. praldent of
the Pun.uutawney Ground Bot Club, tbla momma. PhU
didn't eee bl• ehadow. which meana a qalck end to Winter.
The governor did not• directly
address an accusation that he tried to
thwart a state investigation of an
alleged death threat. instead saying he
had not been fully informed about the
alleged threat ·
6ddie Hatcher, 30. and Timothy 'somebody would shoot them," said public.safety.'
Jacbbs. 19. members of the Tuscarora l>aul°Daly. FBlspes:ial agent in charge The agreement calls for investlga-
facCion of-ihe Lumbtt Indians. sur· for Nonh-Carolma ... They wanted-to tion oft.he Robeson County shcrifrs
renliered to FBI agents Monday be taken into custody in another department. district attorney and
na&fit. 10 hours after invading the JUnsdiction." . • · local and district offices of the State
Banks lower prlzne rate to 8.5·percent
off'ibcs of the Robcson1an. a dail) Gov: Jim. Manto s chief of s~a: Bureau of lnvest1gat1on. It also calls
ne-.hpaper in Lumberton.----Phil Kirk, signed an agr«mcnt Wlth fot a· thorough investigation of the
NEW YORK (AP) -Several major ~nks l~wcrcd
their prime lending rates a quancr percentage point to 8.5
percent toda). reflecting a ,recent overall decline in
interest rates.
Chase Manhatiin Btnk, Citibank. Manufacturers
Hanover Trust Co. and Bankers Trust Co.
------------------...;.' -----------. death of a black jail inmate and for the
transferofTtomber-tndian ftorn the
Robeson jail to one in another
county.
The reductions were the major banks' first changes in
the key lending rate this year and the $CCond cut since
early November. when the prime was lowe~ to 8.7S
percent from 9 ,,ercent. The reduction placed the prime at
its lowest since July 1986.
. •
. . .. • • ~ I , . • • • I
I • • • • • • I
i :
• • • ~ • • .. •
• . • , . • s
"fhe-euts-;-eff eet1 vdy-i m mediately. were an nou need
b) Morgan Guaranty Trust Co .. Chemical Bank. Chicago-
based Continental Illinois National Bank .& Trust Co ..
'
Reagan in last-ditch
plea for Contra aid;
opponeqtsconfident
concerns about rclcasang the military
ponion of the aid package.-. · WASl:llNGTON tAPJ -Con-
gressional Democrats are voicing
confidence that th ey will defeat
-----------------:..-:..":..":..":..":..":..":..":..":..":..":..":..":..":..":..":..":..":..":..":..~_. President Reagan's request for S36.2 But House Majority Leader
Thomas Folc). D-Wash .. predicted
l
' A New, Free Servie~ ...
Qualified 'Ihldespeople Just A Phone Call ~way!
•IT'S FREE! • IT'S CONVENIENT! • IT'S PERSONALIZED! • IT'S PROFESSIONt\L!
t ~ -~
Ta ke the guesswork out of finding com~tent, reliable
trades~ople to repair, remodel. decorate or clean .
w~.-••HOME •''~•i' IMPROVEMENT :••· Ii REFERRALS IN~. (714) 631-7200
• knO\ate propt>rt) for sak or ttntal
•~model or add on .to e-cis1in• slructutt
• Brin• buildln•s up to code ror cit) lnsptttlons
• Satisfy home if15pt'Clion ttqultt':"ents for doff or~ .
• fulfill on1toin1t malnlt'naoce nttch
• Enhantt or UpJtrade )OUr oomtt or lncome-propt'rt)
, AU mt'mMn •~
Dianne Felton·
• Ucensed agf'nl/memher NHCM
Board of Rea.Ito~ II )"2~
.• Member Newport llarbor Area
Chamber of Commerce
• Member o c. Chamber of Commerce
• Property management 13 )"1~
• Local 0 C. resident 20 yean
• LICENSED • BONDED • PERSOMLD' INfERVIEWED • JOB REFERENCES CllECKED
\pphJnc1 Rquir
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mill ion in new aid to the Nicaraguan
Contra rebels, despite last-minute
personal lobbyang by the president
and today's plea for support b)
Secretary of State George P. Shultz.
"Continued progress toward
democr(\,cy in Nicaragua and peace in
Central America depends critically
on U.S: suppon for the Nicaraguan
resistance ... Shultz told the House
Foreign .\fTairs Committee.
He said if Congress turns the
administration down. "We can be
certa in that no meanangful progress in
the direction of moderation and
democracy will occur ...
Reagan was meeting with about 20
House members today and making a
televised sales pitch tonight to press
his case. Cable News Network said ll
would carry the 5 p.m. PST speech:
PBS said the address would be offered
to its affiliates: NBC. CBS and ABC
all said they would not televise it.
As Reagan kept up his lobbying
drive. Fitzwater said administration
officials continued to seek "some new
formula" to address congressional
· R_cagan ·s job would be a tough one.
"The president has his greatest
influence when he speaks in behalf of
a posiuon supponed by the Amcncan
people." Fok)' said. "The prcsidcnt is
not SP,Caking for the American
people · on Contra aid.
··11 is my very firm belief that when
the House acts on Wednesday. 1t will
reJeCt the president's pr9pos.al." he
said.
And some Republican backers of
the S36.2 million aid request were less
than sanguine Monday as they looked
ahead to Wednesday's showdown on
the House floor. whctt .-:it fitces its
severest test. The White House con-
tinued to search for a sweetener that
would attract a few· more needed
'otes.
If the House approves the aid
package. which incl udes $3.6 millidn
for weapons and ammunition. it
would go lo the Senate for a vote on
Thursday. Both chambers must ap-
prove the package for it to become
law.
~ ,· Woznan kept znate ·~body
8 years, held la forgery
GALESBURG. Ill. (AP) -A
woman who pleaded ,guilty to con-
ceal ing her husband's death for eight
years. tending his corpse as if it were
alive. faces forgery charges along with
her panner in the deception,
authorities said. I Carole Ste vens. 42. of rvral Knox-
vi lle and Richard G. Kunce: 56. a
fo rmer ·Chicago-area dentist de-
scribed as Mrs. Stevens' house guest.
pleaded guilty Monday in Knox
County Court to charaes of failing to
repon the.May 1979 death of Carl L.
Stevens.
After the hearing. lX>th were bdok·
ed into the Knox County Jail on
forgery charges. said Sheriff Mark
Shearer.
Stevens' mummified remains, re·
dlm1! ro-wrinkled, leeiMry.tkin and
bones, were fo und Friday in the
family's home abou( 10 miles east of
Galesburg. A relative who had be-
come suspicious helped authorities
aain entrance to his home. Shearer
said.
Authorities believe Stevens died
nearly nine years aao. but his body
was prncrved throu&h a natural
dehydration process, Sliea~r s:•nd.
"His skin dried like shoe leather.
and he just· shriveled up," Shearer
said. Authorities belic:ve t.hc body was
kept for a lon&-period on a basement
lounge chair. •
• ~·A1thou&h it was obvious he'd-been
dead ci&ht years. the family sinccrcl)'
thot.1&ht h"C was fine. the way he was
being tr~ated. ' Shearer said ... They
changed his clothes and beddina just
like he was sick. Thcrc'salsoevidence
they moved him around the house, to ·
difTcrcnuooms ancicbaitl • .:_ ... \
Results of an autopsy arc expccte<r-' \
by mid~cc~. Shearer said.
FBI facing ~earings .Pver.,.
~pying 9n Contra f o~s
WASHINGTON (AP)-The F,81 low1ns release la.st we.etc of· FBl
evickntJy "abandoned" aovmunmt documtnts obtained under the Free.
lines fOt cond~illJ domntic dom ofl nformauon Act bythe Cmtn
surveillance when it spied on Ameri· for Constitutional Riahts, a New
cans oppoted to the R~n adminls.. York-based civil liberties aroup. The
tratiotf'1 Central Amma policin. documents ~valed the QiStelK'e of
say& tht head of a conpenional th~J,u~u·~ surveillance cam~ip.
pentl. The pnncipal \ll'ltt was the Com·
Rep. Don Edwards. chainna" of mmee In Solidarity with the Peoplf
lhc HOUtt Judiciary aval ........ of EJ Salvador, ot CISPES. but the
subcomminct. •id Monday that he FBI documct'ltl indtc.tect that the
flans IO bold puMic bearinp on the survcillantt tventually_ u .. nded to
F8r1 conduct in ebou• .-., Wlekt.. include more ~ 100 poupa ud
~'
In addition. the Se.,.tc lntellilmcc indi"iduah · oPPOted IO ldm1ft1•
Commiuec wu &o receive a cloled· tration ~ fn Central America.
~ ~~ftna today ~ die. FIL Edwards Mid that under JUl&icc '"""'•*' ~ thC-.. .... ftt. ~t suidetiMl"Ol lalll..at--=--IOf, Willia~ 5asaoM. . l«UntY, ~tioas. the •FBI 9-10
, The ~I scond~ llCOllU~under tftd an 1nvnt911Uon wheft 111fi .....
1ncta11nt ~ ~v fol. mmu\al coniluct ..
. .
• r I ..
Orange Coalt DAILY PILOT/Tunday. February 2. 1988 * M .~
. DevefOplil~ntcited·in Court r~les H~gh court ni-es _illegally
~~;~~10~~-~:.::~~~~~i ~?aa;1r~~~~ ~~!~!~~~ .~~1:':~~~~~~~~~ .. ~~~i~
western Utah show saans of starva· Michael Coffttn. a non.game RI VERS IDE upremf Court\ ruhng that 11lcplly C'h1ef Jusuce Malcolm Lucas an the Constltuuon an 1971. •• )
tion. according to a study by an b1·01~1·st fior the Utah Division of (AP) -The count} obtained confessions can be u~ in ma1ont) oparnon !. Arizona veterinarian. .d J h , coroner was again bloeked from coun 15 a "•llory for proponents of . .. But the state court, which had The finding comcsamid concern in Wild 1fc Resources~ sa1 arc ow s defrosting and conducting an autopsy Proposauon 8. the I 98l ballo t in· Mondays 4-3 vote b) the new 'oted to recon ader tht" issue after
California that the expansion of sti.Jd Y is ·~the most important tortoise on the head of a woman whose son itaatl\'e proj>erly known as the Vic· coo~n atJve court OH'rruled a maJor Chief J usuce Rose Bird and tWO • ~
desert cities is contributing to a report in recent years ... We now have believes Cf}On1c suspension ma)' tims' Ball of.Rights. decision ~f the former coun of ex-colleagues were voted o ut of offacie in 'l
decline of up t0-so percent in the a Jllai11 ~ey to th~ pu~zlt about whx someday allo\\ her to be brough back chief JL1s11ce Rose E Bird and said 1986. said Mo nd2y that the pro-,,.
tonoisc's numbers m the western we're losing torto1scJ. to life. · fht-court rul!n~ Monday that CVldcnet"'of a defendant's incn91inat· prosecution federal standards ~ 4
Moja ve Desert o f California and The dcscn tortoises in Utah were "This v.as to protect m> mother ~rapped Callfo~1a s ban on 1llegall> mg statements. taken 1n violation of reauan:d an all cases· by Proposition 8 . .,; 'J,
Nevada. Lfist week an environmental placed on the fcderial list of en-and th~ others from au tops)." said obtained confessions said tough fed-has nght to see a lav. \Cr could be used The ruling upheld the 19-year *'1•
group announced a plan to raise $2 . .S dangered species in 1980 after Saul Kent. whose deceased mother eral standards . fa\onng the pros~ against him if he iook the "'atness prison sentence of Michael Dennis , ,:
mllll.on to t"pand a ~ederal pr-·rv• b. 1 . d d 1 1 has been the focus of a R1, erside «utaon in cnmanal casts •re required stand .. 1 d f _ " " .. .-.. 10 og1sts· ocumente a ong-erm C . n r-31 fio ""'"auc .. of th• n t at .. •"' a' .. con' 1cte o raping one wornan .. 1" for the tortoises outside California decline m their numbers. Th1ny-five ount) coroners anquu1 since her 1 '-1 rnia IK".. .... .. 1 1 1 "'" Justice St<yllc' Mosl author of the and assaulting another. an Santa 1.lq
City an Kern County. square miles of land in southwestern death · de ca P 1t 311 0 n and That measure included a prO\ISIOn 1976 ruling that v.as o' enurnt~d Barbara an Februaf} 1983. 'u
··1.t 1s .my opi.nion th~t a J?!Olo~ged Utah has been dCs1inatcd as critical "suspension .. an liquid nitrogen last rcquinng state co~ns to admit .. all Monda". said an dissent that the "
declane 1t1 nutnent ava1lab1laty, Since habitat for the tortoises. month. relc' ante' 1dcnce. '-'1th a fev. spcca-maJont\ decision misinterprets Ma' v.as con\lcted ofrobbang and .
(studies in the' 1940s). is a major • Reasons for the decline in tortoise Supcnor( ounJudgc Victor Maceh fie 1."xccpt1ons. The coun had ruled an Proposition 8 and "pracucall)' in' ites raping :i woman at gunpoint 1n a '"''
cause.. of recent ~rt-tortoise 1-numbers have been debated for years. 0~ Monda) upheld a temporal) 19 5 that 5.tate courts must follov. unlawful conduct .. an cases'" which an ta Barbara condo minium and " de~ths in the Beaver Dam Slope. Some experts have blamed over-'"Junction mued Jan. 14 barring the federa l '>tandard~ an allov.ang the police belie'e thr\ can obtain the assaulung another woman 1n her car , ·l A~1dzona researcHer James L. Jarchow grazing by cattle, whil~_,.,others have ~our~~enr ~e~om~1nd·1stau1rb11hn .. g ~hlecofrroLLel"~ l'\ 111.knlClffrom m~laacl·conseaar~~ .. l'.S. but C\. ldence tht") ~ck onl~ h~ \ 1ola11ng 10 Februal) 1983. • ... fb.
sa1 recently. pointed to radioactive f•ilout. collec-" ~ ' "" 1'-no 1n se -1nt.n an 1 c ~ . the Jav. ·· .\her he v.as arrested and"°"" o 11 ,1 The Beaver Dam Slope as a desert tao n of tortoises for pets, disease and Ex1ens1on Foundation. including the ··11 !>t'ems \.Cl) lakel) that Prop-• nght to remain sJlent and t\ave a ~
area which straddles 1he Utah-An-predation b)' coyotes and foxes. head of Dora Kent · os111or. 8 "as crafted for the 'Cl) The state coun ruled such state-la"" )Cr prt·senl. Ma~ said ... Before I ..
M1cd1 ~1d tha'>'1ng the se'en purpose. among others. of abrog.a11ng men ts 1nadm1ss1ble under the C ah-ansv.er a thing I v.ant an att~y
heads and bod> '" the care of Alcor cac;es v.h1ch had elevated the fom1a Consfatullon an 1976 and here ··But v.11hout callins a lawyer .• ~
v.ould be a .. , 1ola11on of the conc,111u-pr<Xcdliral nghts of the criminal reaffirmed the d~1s1on 1n 19 5 and poliu~ began questioning ham. and he 111
11onal rights of lhe decedents .. tu defl·ndant abo'e 1he level required b) 1987. The U.S. upreme C oun allo'>'-mad!' 1ncnm1na11ng statements. d1spo~orthe1rrema1nsas1he) v.1sh ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rose Bird agrees to take
commentator job at KABC Coroner Ra) Camilo had been I refused permission b) A.l\or to exam-
ine t'hc head of Mrs Kent. the 8'-
year-old woman "ho died last month
at the facaht). two da}s after she was
transferred from a Buena Park con-
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ousted
California Chief Justice Rose i ird
has tentatively agreed to become a
news commentator for Los Angeles
television station KABC'. the Herald
faam1ner repon ed today.
The station ·s general manager.
John Sc'enno. refused to confirm
that Bird is the one referred to in fou r
advertisements run during the Super
Bov. I on Sunda) that said. ..Th as
week. the most controversial woman
an Californ ia joi• 'Eyewitness
Nev.s.' ··
The paper. quoun& anonym ous
sources close to th: negotia~aons. said
Bird is that-worr an. and that the
negotiat ions are nurty comp)ete.
C'u rnmentancs earned on KABC
also ai :-a'ailat.le to sister stauon
KGO a n~~ Frc.nc1sco
Bird. 51. was removed from the
high coun along with. two o ther
justices in 1986 by voters unhapp}
with the coun's consiste nt reJeCtion
of the death penalty and with rulings
criticize.d as anti-business.
' ale5.eent home
Because the v.oman·~ dfath
cenificate indicated she had died
from pneumonia an the absence of a
do<.tor. the count~ ·s health depan-
ment called an the coroner's office to
determine the cause of death.
aul Kent. 48. said his mother
v.anted to be froLen or cr.on1calh
suc,pcndcd 1n thl.' hopes that one da;
ml·d1cal technolog) v.ould be able to
bring her back to life. I
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Israelis shoot Arab demonStrcltor sunken irantan gunboat
JERUSALEM <AP) -,.,..,;· Th<sources.speakinaonconc1i1io• • yieldsU.S.-mademiMile
so&dien c~ with protnten in a ofanon)'mity. uid·ttt:tarmy'Ol'dcred A b · ' ··1 u s l'/neAIMdalMPrea 1
West Bank valla.tc today and a 21-the settlers out and filed a complaint ra S assa1· veto year:old ,ea1es~1nian was shot in the apinst thelnfWith police. · • • WASHINGTON -U.S. Navy froamen have recovered an Iranian
pelvis, accord1.ng to A~rab. news re-Qnc of the Ptrtici ... nts. whf' spoke • t • • f 1 1 aunboat sunk durinf a Persian Gulf confrontation last October and at least one
ports ana host>atal omc1alt _._. lo' on cr1 IC I Sm 0 s~ae _;Americ1n·l1\ldc St1•r m issile along with it, Pen~n sources say._ The
.. ~e A~b-<>wned Palestine ~s ~~:.o~i~~tle~rd:::Cn~O~n ~!~ A... • · sources, who si>oke only on condition ofanonymity.111d at least one ~unger
Service saad the ~ ~urrcd an Anabta honkin• their horns to show missile and at least one Stinser launcher had been~overed intact dunna the Tulkarem. 40 miles northeast of h · • iCe ... d h 1 ft . . divina operation, removini any doubt about Iran's acquisition of the ~tent Jerusalem. Officials at al lttihad t cir prescn an t en e · UNITED NA i:ioNS (AP)-The ~ntted ~~~~lost Arab.aood wd! when weapon. Pentqon officials had said for months that rran miaht have obtained
Hospital in nearby Nablus identified The settlers said they were protest-it vet~d a. ~unty Co~ncil resoTuuon cnhcllln& Israel s handhn& of a small number of Sti•rs inadvertently when a· shipment mean~ for
the wou nded man as Said Yassin. ina. a car fire~~~ina Sunday in ·· P~lest1niannoJingand callrngfor U.N.-sponsoredpeacet1lks,_theAnbl..eque Afahantstan resistance flghten went astray along the.lran-Af&ban-Pakistan
The army said it was checking the which an lsraeh c1v1han was severely said. . border. The recovery of a missile from the 1ulrs bottom will now •llow U.S. repon. burned. Tl'ley denied smashing wind-After the I~ I vote Monday. ~viet A~bassador Ale~sa~er _Belonoa<?v authorities to trace the missiles conclusively. the sources said. The Pent.aaon
Also today one Jewish settler was shields. rebuk~ the United Stat~ for bl~kmg th~ will of the cou~a( maJonty. He said refused to make any official comment on whether a Stinser missile had been
hurt bY' broken glass when Arabs The army said soldiers turned back th~ Unned States was aoang a.gamst the tad~ of world C?P1nton. found on the recovered patrol boat. It acknowledged. however. that the so-
stoned his car and shattered the a second gro up of armed civilians as U.~. Ambassador He~t>ert Ok~n said the u.ntted. States vetoed the called Boghammar boat had been raised in early January. windshield outside the Dheishc refu-they tried to enter the Arab village of resolution to ~eep the Secunty Council from 1ntcrfenna with a U.S. attempt to Be hi h h E b d bnng about direct t,alks between Israel and her Arab foes. gsaeeidca mp near t e em. t e army in Ya ru · lsrael and the United St.ates reJect a U.N.-sponsored peace conference as a . Leaders of the Gush Em1Jn1m b · fi d" lk be I I d h A b · · The latest clashes camef after nearly settlement movement announced su sutute ?r irect ta . s tween srae an er ra enemies.
eight weelt~ of violence in the tem· they formed a special reaction team to ~rab _diplomats said the veto c~uld backfire. . . . tories Israel captured from ~ypt and respond to Palestinians nots. The'-It_ will furt_her ~rode the effectiveness of th~ United States in the pursuit
Jordan in the 1967 Middle &St war. warned they mi&ht not be able t~ -. and its contnbuuon to -peace. We.regret this dcvelop~ent _a areat deal."
AccordinJ to United Nations figures. restrain their fullowers if Arabs said Cl?v1s Maksoud. the Arab ~agues SJX?kesman. He S;ald duce~ talk~ arc
41 Palestinians have-been killed-by attacks on settlers continued. 1ml>C?.ss1ble and called lhe veto a low point 1n Ara!>-Amenca~ relauons.
Israeli gunfire since the violence The army closed all West Bank It wfll erode a . great d~al of the .. good .will the United States has
erupted Dec. 8. schools and four universities today. accumulated recently m the Middle East. he said. ~
Two Arabs were killed Monday one day after violent clashes in voh -
after a convoy of lsraclj soldiers and 1ng !:Jdents. The one-day closure Reagan accelerates Mideast truce overtures
civilians was trapped in the West affected about 280.000 students who
Bank town of Anabta by stone-had returned to classes Monday after
throwingprotestcrs. lsraelisgotoutof a two-week break.
their vehicles and opened fire. The Among institutjons ordered closed
arm) said it was invcstigatina was Vat1can-sP<?nsored BethJehem
whether soldiers or civilians fired the Uni versity. which reopened Monday
fatal shots. followi ng a three-month closurel m·
The deaths were the first from posed after violent demonstrations.
gunfire since Jan. 15. The army also imposed curfews on
Monday night Jewish settlers viol-the West Bank city ofNablus. and six
ated a curfew, drove their cars into the villages and refugee camps. in the
center of Anabta and smashed a West Bank and occupied Gaza Strip.
number of windows of Palestinian which Israel seized in the 196 7
cars. military sources said toda). Middle East. War.
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Reagan administration is stepping up
contacts wtth Israel. Jordan and Palestinian Arabs to see if they can agree on a
formula for Middle East peace negotiations. Presidential envoy Philip" C.
Habib returned" Monday from talks in Jordan with Ktng Hussein. and the
White House said his secret mission did not produce a breakthrough. Habib
reponed to Secretary of State George P. ShuJtz. who 1s in the midst of
evaluating a proposal by Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir to hold Arab-
lsraeh negotiations on Palestinian autonomy. The goal would be to provide the
1.5 mill ion Palest1n1an Arabs who.live o" the Jsraen-held West Bank and Gaza
with self-rule under the 1978 Camp Da,•1d agreements but not control over
security and foreign affairs. two baSic attnbutes of statehood. Another U.S. diplomat. Wat Clu ve rius JV . moves between Israel and Jordan. keeping in
touch on day-to-day problems in beginning negotiations.
Gunman slay Frenchman ln Belrut
BEIRUT. Let>tanon -Gunmen ina speeding car killed a.Fr:enchman a~ he
drove his automobile in a residential neghborhood of Chnst1an east Beirut
today, police said. A police spokesman identified the victim as Jacques Moran.
27. He said Moran died "from thrtt bullet wounds in the neck. chest and
abdomen." The spokesman. who could not be identified 1n line ~th
regulations, said police did riot know Moran's hometown nor occupation.
However, the Voice of Lebanon, a radio station based in east Beirut an~ run ~Y
the Christian militiamen who control the streets 1n that sector of the ctty. said
he worked for the "French (embassy) security" apparatus.
Tome splll evacµates 2,000 Russlans
MOSCOW -A train carrying a poisonous and flammable liquid derailed
m the Volga nver city of Yaroslavl. forcing the e' acuat1on of 2.000 people
living nearby and injuring 12 rescue workers, Soviet media said today. Reporu
by the Sovictskaya Rossiya newspaper and the official Tass news agency gave
a more detailed picture of the Monday morningacc1dept than the acc~unt !ass provid~ Monday. Seven rail cars, three of them ,carrying the unidentified
toxic chemical. left the tracks 150 yards from a bridge acr~ss the Volga.
So vietskaya Rossiya said. One of the tank cars fell on its side and broke open
on imi)act. a'nd the volatile liquid started flowing from a ruptured hatch. the
paP.<!r said. It said 2.000 people were evacuated from homes and other
buildings within a third ofa mile of the accident site.
SPRING APPAREL & ACCESSOHlES
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LOW ER ED TAR & NICOTINE
,.
Orange Coast DAIL~ PILOT/Tuad1y, February 2. 1988 A.7
•
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•
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.... ., .... -. .. ..
New
Marlboro Li2bts
Menthol.
Great refreshment in the Flip!lbp box.
SURGEON GE NE RAL' S WARNING : Smoking
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1.
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COMPLETE.:NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN8~CTION8, A10
T I ., , .l . . Geneva ·ranKsNo. linmeigers
ne GncH CM., a Costa Mesa-
headquanercd. international me'ler
and acquisition services firm. in-
itiated and closed the most mergers.
acquisitions and d ivestitures in 1987.
accordin& · to Corporate Financing
Weck.
deals advenised as initiated durio&
1987. Drexel Burnham Lambert 'fin-
ished 1987 in founh place with 26
initiated deals and Kidder Peabody
rounded out the top fi ve firms with 21
initiated merger and acqu1sitton
transactto ns in the 12 months of
1987.
protCS$1Qn~ls an4 . SlJ..PPOrt • lllff
thro ughout the world dedicated to
evaluations. merters. acquisitions
and div(stitures of m iddle market
businesses."
j" ~ll tmnets,,,. l'r:QYidJna .. ~\rQpa,
momentum f'or IYl8.
In Monday's issue of the weekly
financial industr} newsleller tha t
tracks merger and 1lCQUiSltLOn act1vi-
t), The Geneva Cos. were credited
wittr50inrt1at.cd transac11ons in 1981-
to lead all firms.
Anhur D. Perrone. Jr .. president of
Geneva Business Scn,ces. said.
.. This rccogmuon as a fimng con-
clusion-to l981. ~hich was another
r~ord )ear for Geneva and the
annivenary of the company's 10th
year serving the middle market.
•••• In Newpon Beach Spectl'allMMl 18c.
reports record sales for its founh
quarter ended Dec. 3 1, 1987.
Fourth qu~rter sales of $1-9.9
million were S1t. I million higher than
the same J>('r od in 1986. and S 1.4
m1lllon higher than the third quancr
of t987
Aplin furtha' said that fourth
quarter earninp were 13 cents ee! rl.~..,. up from 1 cents in the third
c.uarter. before the non-recurrina
charte of $3.2 million for the manu-
facturins consolidation that was an-
no unced by the company in Novem-
ber.
Run ne r s-up "ere Henr y
Ansbacher w11h 36 anauated trans-
actions and PaineWebbcr w11h 33
President Rd. Aplin said that
founh quaner performance was good
Spcetramcd's full year results for
1987 showed sales of S7S.3 million
and a net loss ofSJ. 7 million. The net
loss was due primarily to the manu-
facturing consolidation expense m en-
"It's a great tnbute to our .350 (PI-.. ... COllPA1'Y / A9)
' Fewer can afford home as prices rise
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Rising house prices a home, which would require a minimum income
lastycarmore than offsct adecline an interest rates. ofS26,10 1 to make payme nts ofS6S3 a month. Prices Of lJomes lJSted
making it more difficult fo r home buyers to qualify Meantime, the trade group's study showed .
for loans. the California Assoc1a11on of Realtors that housing an Orange County movectfrom the--· LOS ANGELES (AP) -The California
said Monday. second-costliest 10 the most cos1I~ an the state. Association of Realtors said Monday that only 31
As ofDccembcr. only 31 percent of California dropping 1he an Francisco Bay Area to No. 2 spot. percent-uf California families could afford to
families could affl)rd to qualify fo r a loan to buy a The a vs: rage home pnce in Orange Count) qualify for a loan to buy a median-pnced. S 144.392
med ian-priced. S 1.i4.392 home. the trade group rose 15.5 J>('rccnt 10 S177. 900 for the yea r. but 26 home.
'said. A famil)' would need.a minimum income of percent of 1he families earned more than the The following chan shows the na11onw1de.
\44,654 and would face payments of S 1.116 a minimum S55.017 a year required 10 quallf) for a California and larger couruy median home pnces.
month, presuming a 20 percent down payment mortgaae. the monthly pa) ment and minimum income 10
A year earlier. 33 percent of the population_ Prices an the San Francisco region rose OJlly qualify for a home loan on such properties. and the
could have qualified for a loan to buy a median-4.4 percent fo r the year 10 S I 75.064, but onl) 11 percent of-rammcs who qualify.
pnced home for S 130.565. necdir1g a minimum percent of the families earned the minimum Place Median Monthly Min. P'cnt
income of$41.596 to make the S 1.040 an month I) S 54. I 40 needed to qualify for a mortgage. ' Price Payment Income Q'lfd
pa)ments. The Los .\ngeles area remained the third LosAng. $144.829 Sl.120 S44.6S4 28
The ~1a1cw1de median homt.' pnce rose' I 0 6 costliest in thntate. with an average house pnce of Oruge $177,Ht $1,375 $$S,017 H
percent for the )Car. more than off~ning the S 144.829. followed b~ San Diego at S-133.833. R 'vrs1de SI 02,093 S 789 $31.573 44
benefits of lo" er mongage interest rates:. The ~iverside-San Bernardino at S 102.Q93 and Sacra-Sac'to S 89.0S8 S 689 S27.S42 s 1
combined a'c.·rage for fi'<ed and adjustable mentoat S89.058. S.Dieso SUS.US $1,135 SU,31t %t
mortgages fell to 9 25 percent from 9.65 petcent. In Sacramento. 51 percent of the families San Fran. S 17~.064 S l.3S3 SS4. I 40 17
Nauonw1dc. the a'erage home pnce rose .i.7 could afford 1oquahf) fora home mongagc. m ore Calif.. $144.392 Sl .11 6 S44.6S4 31
percent forthnearto S84.400 from S80.600. Fifi) than an~"herl' else an the sune) A. m1n1mum U.S A'g. S 84.400 S 653 $26.10 1 50
percent ofthena11on'sfam1lacscouldqualaf~ to bu~ income-of $27.5~2 "as needed ·
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Rates as of Feb. I, 1988
Minimum inveslmcnt: $10.000
Buk1
C.WIOUI. ....
American Savinas
California Federal
Century Federal
Cel•mbla Savln11
DowneyS&L
First lnterstale
Great American
Heme Federal
Lincoln Savings
Prudential-Bache Sec.
Security Pacific
Wells Fargo
MM/UaUd
ClaecU.1 • Moat• ... Ra&.e .• .Rase S.2S 7.40
5.2S 7.60
5.1.S 7.30
5.U 7.51
S.2S 7.60
4.07 6.50
5.25 7.SI
5.11 7.50
5.25 7.40
6.77 7.00
4.00 6.65
4.00 6.50
1 Year
Rate 7.65 .
7.65
7.90
7.ff
7.80
6.60
7.60
7.M
7.50
7.60
6.85
6.6~
•
6 Year
Rate : . 1:60 ~·
7.70
1.9S • ••• 8.60
7.40
7.87
7.t7
8.05
8.20
1.15
8.00
Rates courtesy of John M. Valenzuela. CFP. Prudential-llache
Security, Long Beach Marina. For information o n o ther rates. call
(714) 827-0813.
women cut wage gap
t .o .70% of men's pay .-
WASHINGTON (AP) -Women
cracked the 70 percent barrier in 1987
fM the-first-time on record in
narrowing a pay gap between them-
seh es and men. the government
re pons.
data on the wage d11Te renccs by sex
and when women earned 62.5 percent
of what men made.
The median wctkl) earninp of
men workin\ full time rose SI! -
from $42~10 445-between the end
of 1986 and the end oflast year, while
those of women climbed S 13 -from
S296 to S309, the Labor Department
The median amount ~the point at
which o ne-half of the population
group made more and half made less.
For the entire population of full -
time "'o rkers. median earnings rose
by SI S per week -from S366 to S38 I
-in 1987.
\_ _Jlut afier taking into acc~unt ll. 4.4
J'Cfeent nse in consumer pnces. their
actual bu)ing power declined by $2 a
week. That represents a sharp re-
veN!I of 1986. when workers'
purchasing power increased by $7 a
week as a result of only I . I percent
anOata on in consumer pnces.
said Monda). .
In pcrccntagi: terms and averaged
O\ er the )Car. the median weekly
earnings for women working full ti~
in 198 7 were 70 percent of those
cn1oycd b) men. up from 69.2 J>('rcert
in 1986.
The gap has been steadll) na.-row-
ing since I 979. when the Bureau of
Labor Stat1sucs first began collecung
Blacks also edged' up. from 77
pcr<Ynt to 78 J>('rrenl. in what they
make "h~n compared w11h whites.
(l!lea11e ee;e PAY/ A9)
ll ~:E:m
OF ART ANO DESIGN
rt•••sts , • ., ,rese101 11 • ., ,,..1111111'1 ft
I lllJ Hoiffl& dlW If rtOllf Wl,.I lty
BONNY
n.,. •• ,, , ... ,..,, 11, 1111 t.oo,. •• 10:00,.
Oedtalh ••4 IMn .4'""''' , •• , ...... Ir• ..... ..
.... , ...... will ......... ,.., .. f11tr11ry
~ Con~ary. Sootllweel Orlglnels. limited Edftlon,
___ J -Unique A~ Olremica, Scutptur•. ·"
• UNle Otwgory, -
i..,..., 722-1830 artne.a.c .... .... ~to-Tr-
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~~~Quite possibly. the most ~•-ir--r.~~'2"4ff, bea uTtf u I co eel 1011 o
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100 Doon On Diaplaf
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INSTALLATIONS
(714) 581-0854
MOll·Frl 8-1
Sat. Su 10.6
22722 L,mbt>rt St Suite 1701
1':1 Toro, CA 92ft30
1
Orange Couc DAILY PILOT/Tueldey. F~ 2. 1888
.. ~ ............................................................................................................ ~ ....... -.. lll!ll ... -.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-~.-.-.-.-.-.-~·.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.--... -----111!11111111~ ......... • ........ ..
~-eollPANYRBPORT8RECORD SALES •••
PnmA8
purchued btt"-ttn Nov. 20 and Jan.
27 at pncn ranJ1n1 from SS.1660 to
$6 SO a sharr
PAY GAP NARROWED •••
tioned above. &o the hi&h intcmc
npmtn the comP1ny hacf in the fint
half of the year pnor to 1t1 initial
pubhc ofrmna. and to t~ S 1.2
milhon e•traordinary cbaflt related
to its financial rtstructunna rttorded
in the sttond quancr of 1987. • • • An investor aroup led by the
Bcltbera brothers of Vancpuver, Can·
I
OTC UPS & DOWNS
Ida. hu acqu1ttd a 6.6 percent uakc
inC1 1r1wl6tenM&..._.,...l9C.
and ma) 1ttk toacQuiRrontrol o(the
company. attOrdins to • filint "kh
the StturititS and Exchantc Com·
mission.
The foup mentioned the pon1·
b1licy o a mef'ltr deal wuh Coun·
trywide Credu. and said that in the
meantime 1t may Sttk board rep.
NYSE UP s & DowNs
-.. ..
Pro.AS
rc1entat1on.
The Belz.t>era aroup acQu1red us
stake H an tn\C$lmtnt, which it
de5Cnbed 1n tf'le 1ilin1 as ·•auract1ve-
in liaht of the ~urrtnt market pncc of
Countryw1dc's stock ccordinft to
thefihna.thc,roupowns l.OSmi ion
Countryw1dt' common shMes. purcha~d for a total of $6. 7 m1lhon.
The Bebbera itOUP 11 led by Wilham lklzber:a, chairman. prn1·
dent and CEO of Pu W•t Flu8daJ
Cerp., a U vsnp and loan hold in&
compen)' based in Newport lkach.
Far Wtst Savn\as hu aiiet5 of Sl 7
b1lhon and operates 2S branchti 1n
Callfomia. Amcncan is involved in
In\ est men ts and re.al estatr lo.ans.
"(he mcdt~ aros• peychecks for
blatb before wand Social Secunty
deduc11onJ rOK S l la week to Sl061n
1987. The median increase for full ·
ume whue worten wasS 11 a Wttk, to
$391.
· .Black women received the b1ucs1
ra1~s 1n acutal dollan·tn 1987. w11h
their ~cekl) earninascllmbma b> S 18
Pa)chtcks ro~ b)' S 11 a Wttk 10
S I Hor white "Omen. b) S 14 LO Sll4
for black mu and by S 17 to ~l for
wh11c men
For H 11panics -.orluna full-ume,
pa)check1 amona the men rote SIS to
U 16 a ~eek. But Hispa1uc women u
a 1roup suffered pay cuts with their
median cam a~ dropp1na from S2SS
11 -.~k :it 1hc end of 1986 to S2S3 About I million oftht' shares were to S283 ·
•
When You
Make More,
Yoµ Expect More
If you·~ like mn~t of toJay·~
wealth maker ..... vou \·c earned the
pri,·ilege ·of dealing \\'ith a hank
that will mah· vour mom~\· wo"rk
as hard a you J o. A bank that
•
\viii not ju r fulfill vou r e~pect:acions hut e~cL·cJ rhcm.
At Thl· Private Bank ac Bankers Tru ... c, \\C h,mJlc l'nh prt\<ltl' ~h ·
.. encs. So vou 'II n.'Ceivc c he kind of per-0n,1I mtt·nttl m· ,.l 'U Jt·.....:n c. ~or tl'
mention a level of expern~ that'... highlv n.1!'1rJcJ am('ng man\·"'' coda\\.
mo t demanJing monev maker ..
Like m > ... t pht~ricared hank~ wt· pn.)\'tJc .11..Pmpktl' ran)?c nf -.er·
vices. Bue at the Pn\-atc Bank.\'( u'll ha,·c Jtrt'l..'.t ~~t l' ... h ' rn.lft,,tnnul~
who cover ~a(h four rvice~. )(.'U rvcn h~v~ <l~"l~" tll mcrdunt bank-
ing as well a all the ocher sen•ict.~ c ( Bankl'T' Tru~t .
consider The Pn\'arc Bank at &nkcr ... Tru'r . &'....-:au'l' when tt
come co making vour mon(.;y work a!> hard a' vou l''fX't. wc'n·
relent!
If you have invc table fu nds of .. 1 million l )f ml 1n.· .. lnJ woulJ like
additional information and our 'G uide ro "n·kc..~~ wnt<.· l 'r Lall:
Mr. ·oavid P. U ttrdl, Oirt."Cto r, Bankers Trust C mpnnv l f ( aliforni:r;
.A., uth Grand Avenue, Los Angd(.; . ;thfr rnia "~\ 71.
Tel. .. I ~162 · 2
~THE Private Bank ~nkers .~Mt.
\\'£ MAKE tONE\' FOR PEOPLE \\'HO MAKE MO
i; •• ' •• :· :·
Market advance modest
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
posted a ,modest ad va nce Tuesday as a late-
aftemoon burst of buying lifted pncts that had
drifted at lower levels for mos t of the ~sion.
Trading activ iJy was moderate.
The market was caught in a cross-current of
economic news, as the government reported some
new signs of econo mic weakness and several major
banks reduced their prime lending rates.
Before the market opened. the Commerce
Department reported its chief economic fo rc-
casti nggaugc fell in Dec.ember for the third straight
month.
Some analysts say the three-month dechnc in
the le:tding indicators may signal a recession or an
impending slowdown in economic growth that
cou.ld dim the outlook for corporate profits.
But other analysts say a slowdown could pave
the way for lower interest rates. making r~tums on
stocks more competitive with those on bonds.
WH AT AMEX DID WH AT NYSE DID
NEW YORK tAPl Feb 2
Tu•ldlr Advanced 27 Declined 299 Uncnanoed 2S8 Total issue\ 931 New '1igns 3
New lows S
AME X LEADER S
PreY.
'ol 239 229 876 • 7
NEW YORK (AP) Feb. 2
Advanced Declined uircnanoed Total Issues New nlohs New lows
NYSE LEADER ~
, Dow JoNE S AvERAGES
NASDAQ SUMMARY
Resession~ared-as
economy ~lips.again
-~--~----~---~-=---·------- -
housing-of\cn is-1hc frrs1 SCC'Tor of tlfe
ttono!"'y. to .tu'J" down befort 1 ~•oi:t bq1ns. he believed the ~ad1na indt:x was ~ndina a correct
s1anal of an 1mpend1n1 downturn.
. ..The lea~ina index is • pretty
1mponant sian. h has tot to aive
i>eoPll' l)luse for thoupt, k saicJ.
But on four "OCC&Sion1, the indu
has flllcn for th~ consecutivt
months and no outriaht ~ion
<><'Curred. Economic ~wth how·
ever. did slow subtcanhafly. '
In fact, the last lime the inckx tell
for thrtt months was from June
lbf'OUlh Auaust in I 914. No rectllion foll~ ba1 ~IL SIQwed aipiR~ antJy u lr.S: manuOK'tUftft came
under i!'~DIC pretlUtt fi'Om foftip
CO!ftpttalJOn.
F.tonomista .mo are predicUna 1 ....._ ttttlllon in 1918 COftlnld tblt tht .
lhodl IO consumer coddeecir from
w0tLl9ol-.rin1'0cillliclawas
IO Wftft that I df'oo ift c.'Ol!IDitt
....... will topple .... "' into lft'CCW.
Marc optimiaic ecGMm• .. IWve IMI COllUnued ............... hi U.S. nporb will be ftMMlli 10 oAlt
tM dlcfma in COMUmer IPlldi ..
'
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTITuesdey, Febru.ary 2. 1988 Al I
'MarzyMe a L2ttle 'a musical fantasy.appet~zer at SCR
Tired of all those romantic m.ssi·
cals where the young lovers meet.
overcome various and sundry prob-
tems and li ve happily ever after'!
South Coast Repertory has the anti-
dote.
It's calkd .. Marry Me a Little.'' a
two-character show from the trunk of
Craia Lucas and Norman Rene. in
which the lovers not only don't end
up arm in arm (they do wind up in
1 bed. but not 1n the conve nuonal
sense)-: they don't even meet.
· Confused? Welcome back to the
world. of Lucas (whose surrealistic
r~ r: •~ r: t "'-'
11-<f \~t:L f\.~t•.
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aing • n>rows • n .. ow P-. • T•tlle LI,_•• r.,..... • e.111 Ac~ etc
2612 E. Cost Hwy , Corona del Mar
(1 Blk S. of MacArthur) 640-2929
(714)'644-8808
Fine European
and Domestic
Clothing
fo r
Women and Children
"Prelude to a Kiss" is pJayina on
SCR's main stqt) and Rene. his
frequent collaborator. And. not in·
cidcntally, to the realm o( Stephen
Sondheim, whose sonp comprise tnc
only sounds in this 75-minute. inter-
mi$.Sionless foray into the world of
musiqll fanlasy.
Lucas. the Rod Scrl ina of romantic .
comedy. and Rene 'bave fashioned a
string of Sondheim's sonas into their
own story of two single people in a
Brooklyn apartment building. He
lives one noor above her. but on stage
Toi
TITUS
they share the space as though each
were alone.
:rhey connect onl) 1n their im·
ag1na11o n. using each other 1n roman·
p
tac fantas1e~. while commun1cat1ng
only in Sondheim's score. composed
of song$ wr1t1C!l for vanous Broad·
wa)' showJ, It's a fascinalioa idea and,
under ttfc 1maginl)t1 ve direction of
J uks Aaron. 1t very nearly.works.
GI\ en the situation. and the
gro uhd ruks. there 1s hule q uarrel
"1th the unconsummated outcome.
Whl're ··Marr) Me a Lmk" leaves the
track 1s at abou t m1d-po1n1 in the
:>ho" after "e have accepted the
cirt umsl3nces and desire more infor-
mation about lls charatters. Lillie 14l
)
forthcoming.
This 1~ hardl) the f~h of per·
former~ Robcn Yacko and Sarah
T auersall, both of whom tum in
splendid portrayals w11h1n thC'
s ketetal framt'wo rlt o f the
Lucas/Rene plot COO\t rucuon The~
are attraciivc, personable a nd
prhumabl) "ould gel along
fa mous!) $hould 1he1r paths L"' er
cross. Their fan tas) <;eenes together ~usfy the n~d for vane~· in thC'
prcknta11on. but do httlC' to alle' iatt.<
the gaul~ charat•ter CO\ en ng 0\ l'f
each .
Musical director Diane K•ng erh
nchcs the sho" wi th J1ano accom-
paniment JUSt bchin o.· Man~n
Dookwaller"s '>Cnm wall se't11ng whert'
~he occas1onalh ·can be ~en busily at "01 ~ .
"Mat'T} Mc a Lntle"' 1\ a tasty hors
d'ocuvrr of a musical. pleasing 10
n1bbk on but hardh sustai ning. It
conunues Tut<Mia"ii through Fndays
at 8 30. aturda)S at 3 and 8:30 and
Sunda)s at 3 and 8 pm until Feb. 28
on the Second Stage of SC'R. 655 To~' n (enter On''l'. Costa Me~. ("all
9~ ~-4m 1 lor 11r'\..et information.
· t>elic_ate balance missed in Seattle ~mphony concert
By CHRISTOPHER PALMER
0.., .... c-..... ..... «:"*
b) the Sea1tlc S)m phun~. under the
sponsorsh ip of the Orange Count ~
Philharmonic Soc1el\. Mixing paint can be a challenge. '\.
httlc too much yellow in the blender
and yo ur gold leaf starµ IQ 'look lik.e
an overripe banana. But much can be
said for gold. and most would agree
that it 1s wonh the trouble lo get 11
right.
The un usual program 1ncludl·d '
P,rokofie, ·s ··Romeo and Juliet:··
wh ic h was followed b} Hanson'\
S)mphon) !'io. 2. After intcrm1Ss1on.
we heard what 1 w1IJ call a Wagner
symphon): 1n st.<qul.'ncs.-. orche!>tral
excerpts from .. Tannhaeuse(' and
-ore MeisTersingcr von ."'iurnbcrg." Balancing the sound ofan orcbestra
dl'mands similar vigilance. Given
JUSt enough of each instrument"s
respecti ve noise, the .. eolden" prod-
uct resonates. with our inner sense of
balance and proportion.
Last week at the Orange Count)
Pcrformmg Ans Center. Gerard·
Schwarz. fo rmerly music director of
th e Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra.
offered an example of fine balance in
»mptionic music. 1n a performance
It pro ba bl) v.as appropriate for 1h1s
o rchestra -"hich 1s clearl) 1n the
forefront of modern s~mphon ) or·
chestras 1n Its capacll) 10 produce a
balanced sound w11h1n and between
sections -10 pla ) a .. Wagner
symphon).'' give n WJlgner's repu -
tation as a master of orchestral.color
To some extent 1l worked. Com·
.plex te.lltures were mterwoven with
skill. and with great anen11on 10
-llLD DEPRESSIOll?
The Paychopharmaeok>gy Reaearch Institute needs volunteers with
mlld depresak>n. If you feel depf'esaed but are uncertain If It is serious
en~h to be oonsi<l«ed for a study, please caJI. Our research staff
will perfQrm at~ screening to let you know If your sym&ms
are troublesdme enough to qualify for a visit to one of our cl n .
Symptoms of clinical depression Include some. or all of the following:
0 Loss of Interest or pleaSure In usually rewarding acttvities
0 Feeling depresaed, sad, blue. or hopeless.
0 Changes In appetite. recent sign~t ~ht loss or weight gain.
0 Excessive fatigue or feeling very slowed down, no enefgy.
0 Olfflculty getting to sleep or staying asleep, or sleeping too much.
0 Feellng gulJty. worthless or useless.
0 lndecilk>n, poor memory, or poor concentration.
D !ncreued phY*al problems.
To qualify. you must be at least 18 years old. experiencing de-
pression for a minimum of one mont._ and be lri good general
phyaical oonditton. ;
Qualified vol.unteers will reoeive a brief physical exam. EKG .labora-
tory tests and ..-1y visit s with a professional-AU. FREE Of
CHARGE.
Coples of au medical test results wUI be provided lo you or your
doctor, upon your request. Your participation mey lead to the use of
·a safe and effective medication •or the treatment of depression.
For more Information." or an appointment, ptease call:
(714) 1&2-lllO Of (213) &~&-0801 ·-........ ~ (818) 981-2100 ....., .. -,,..., ........ , ... ___ ,M-tnl
PSYCHOPHARMACOLOG.Y RESEARCH INSTITUTE
LAKEWOOD
C.1tnte•
lllll\11 UIO f Kwh x S C•.-'-•
70MM Mll n.&<K
DOI.If Sntt01!09'" W1UIAMS
GClOO MOIHING VllTNAM «•1 "'!I:• J"9 S:lt .... ~ U~, ..
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MOONSTIIUCK 1,.1
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·access1b1li t' of harmonic: mo,emcnt
and shapeliness of phrast> Ho"e'er.
the b1tarre la,out of 1tie orchestra
caused the sound of the ~o nd "olin
section to be ' 1s1ble -··1ook at those
l·ould sec tht'. sn:ne~ going ti' al high
speed. but couldn·1 fc:el an~ thing
unrelated tu the musical Cl\pt."nenC>t'
"'ell -shaped phra~s b<."g.a n and rt.<·
turned 10 no" here thnlling fur the
moment and d1sappt."anng
It ·· .\~ thl· Sl".tttle c;, mphon~ 's phrase
l'nding!> lh!iapix.·arcd tn lo nowhert'.
the loudc'>t sound ont' ('OU Id hear wa!>
the ~t.<gt·rstrom Hall (llr rnnd1t1 oning
\\~tern ··
bows go" -but not audible.
In Sl.'allk. this la}out must be
efTectn e. or such ah orchestra as this
\.\Ould not tr. 1t. But each ha ll 1s
different. and.11 doesn't "ork at lht>
l'l·n tt<r°'> <;egl'm rom Hall. The prob-·
k m hes 1n plau:mt·nt 1 f~ou place the
'>1.'Cond '1ohm to the nght of the
' ~s se' era I oft hi.' ml'' ementHndcd
"1th a "'h1spt."r I "a' rern1ndl·d of
anothl·r autumob1k Jd\ cn1~ment
this one for Roll' Ro} ct' "at M1 mph
the· loudest sdund \uu'll hear 1s the:
tic king of the clod.· .. I "ould rc"ntl"
· Thh concen "'els a· surprise for It\
qu.:.ili 1~ Tht.< program' ming v._as bra'('
Jnd 1nll·rl'Sting d'> "ell though 1t
"'ould ha'e been n•l·e to hear tht~
IHl hntra in 11~ local u('.hu 1 perform at
ll·a.,t (JOI." v. ork mort· familiar and v. nh
a mnr,l' al-Cl"S!li1 blr internal structure.
conduc tor. their instruments then ~· ~=~=~~=:~:'~~~~~~:i~~~-r-====:==~=~ fan· the front \.\31l not the audience. I ~..:;:"l':;,ce":" •sJ 25 ~:-5!·::-'::~::-!:::::::~=
In some h.tllst the l'Cho off the wan s.-o .. A-tolo T1<ho "'°" ·~ ,, ... Ott-th g,_, .. mu'>I be a n1Ce l'fTect. but not 1n C"osta
~tna.
The opening works "ere dazzling
fo r their restraint. exqu1s1te intona-
ti on: and the earher-menuoned bai-
ancrs. I retailed an ad for BMW -I
'VltTMAlll ,., 70~
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12 50 2 SS 5 .0S 7 ·109·2S
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1210 225 4 55
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DEADLY ILLUSION 111
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THE LAST EMP£ROi'.
11 4~ t IS 7 lt 10 )0 lf'G1>)
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Best adviee for parent$
DEAR READERS: The National
Institute of Mental Health asked the
following questlon -0f SO parents wbo
had raised their children to becorfic
well-adjusted, productive adults:
Based o n your personal ex-
periences. what is the best advict you
can · give new pa~nts about raising·
children? ·
Their responses were. in my
opinion. the most thoughtful and
succinct guidelines I have seen in a
long time. Here they are:
1. Love abuhdantlv. The most
important l8sk is to love and reall1
care about your child. This gives him
or her a se nse of security, belonging
and support. It smoothes out the
rough edges of society. -
2. Discipline constructively. Give
clear directio n and enforce the limits
on your child's behavior. Emphasize
"Do this," instead of" Don't do that."
3. Whenever possible. spend time
with your children. Play with them.
talk to ")lem. teach them to develop a
family ~int and give them a sense of
belo ngiflg.
4. Give the needs of your mate
'' · prionty. Ont> parent put it this wav:
...
lM1us.
apologize when you ·are wrong. Chi!-
.. dren who arc treated with rt"spect will
then know how to tre..t you and ~thers rtspectfuJly.
_ 7. Listen. ReJUy listen. This means
giving your children undivided atten-
tion, putting aside your beliefs and
feeli ngs1 and trying to understand
your children's p(>int of view. ··
8. Offer guidance. Be brief . .P<>n't
give speeches. And don't fo rce your
"A husband and wife are apt to be opinions on your children.
successful parents when they put their 9. Foster independenct:....O radually
marriagt first. Don't worry about the allow children more ~om and
children getting "second best: Child-control over their lives. One pareot
centered households produ\..'t' neither said. "Once yo~r children are old
happy man:iages nor happy chil-enaugh. phase yourself out of the
drcn... pictur~. but always be near when they
5. Teach your children right from need..y.ou~
wrong. They need to be taught basic 10. Be reahsuc, expect to make
values and manners so .that they will mistakes. Be aware that outside
get along well in society. Insist that influences such as peer pressure will
they treat others with kindness. increase as children mature. One
respect and honesty. Set personal . parent said. "Don't exJ?<:Cl th!ngs to
exam ples of moral courage and go well all the time. Child reanng has
integrity. · · never been eas~. It has its sorrows and
6. Develop mutual resJ)ect. Act in a hean aches. but it also has its rewards
respectful way toward your children., -and··j<r5·s. This is what makes it all
Say "'please" and "'thank you." and worthwhile.'"
. -
• Wedaesclayj Februry 3 ARIES (~ 21-April 19): Papers wi ll be signed.
bevond the immediate. emphasize fashion. style. design.·
and mingle humor with criticism. What had been lost can
now be recovered. Gemini. Sagittarius prominenL views will be veri--------------tied. member of op-
posite sex will pJay
instrumental .role. SYDNEY Young person be:
comes vigorous ally.
C h e c k m a 1 I": o
messages. calls. MARR
book reviews. Virgo •••••••••••••• is in volved.
• TA URUS (April 20-May 20): Go slow. play waiting
game. highlight d1 ploma11c appro~ch. You learn more
about ·propen1 yalues. }OU coula acquire an obJt'Ct.
Family member talks about plans that incl ude love.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Share knowledge, learn b~
teaching. strive for rapprochement with fa mi ly member.
Gourmet dining on tap tonight - enjoy, but remember
resolutions concerning diet. nutn uon.
SCOJlPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): You may be saying.
"This is deja vu~" It will seem as if you've been here
before, old flame returns, scene is "very familiar ...
SAGITTARIUS (No ... :!2-Dec. 21 ): What had been
missing will be rew med. Stress humor. versatilit).
•ntellectual cunosit).
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You'll have greater
freed ocn of thought, action. Mone) comes from surprise
source. You could win contest.
,,.----.,.,.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Obiain hint from Taurus
message. Secret meeting involves possibili ty of shon trip.
S-Omeone wants to tell you somethi ng and probably 1s
family member. Aries. Pisces.'V1rgo prominent.
AQ UARIUS(Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Unonhedox approach
brings desired results. incl uding reunion wsth lovt.>d one:-
Focus on marital status. public re l;ltions. Complete listings in tile TV Piiot
CANCER (June 21 -Jul} 22): You'll face challenge of
more responsibiitf}. pressure of.1;kadline and request for
.. defi nite commitment."
. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Your "psychtc" ab1ll11es
surge to fore front. Others cannot fool· you. but you could .1
fall victim to self-deception. Be aware. protect self in
emotional clinches. Another Pisces plays paramount role.
IF FEBRUARY 3 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY. current LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You'll stn ke chord of
universal appeal. People respond to your message. }Our
talenJs are apprenated -and rewarded.--
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Displa~ ve~tihty, reach
T his ·could include manta! status. renovaflon in
connection wnh residence.
C}Cle highligh ts signifkaot domestic chaUenge. change. Comi·e str.1·p f4an' s harid tio ty:pe
----------------------..---------------------~-----Party animal in hibernatioq You can't sa} "'the son of peopk
whv rl'ad com ic-strips." There 1s no
onl' sort. e' 1dent l}. Consider two of
the sharpest political minds of this
ccntun -Eleanor Roosc,elt and
WoodrO\\ Wil~on. Mrs. Rocsrvelt
claimed she'd nn t•r lookl·d through a ·
comic strip in her life. President
Wiison. Ph.D .. said he never once
missed an episode of the old s!np
"'Kr'az~ Kat."
l·fs no secn.·t. the older a man gets.
the kss of a social a01mal he become~
· There is a bncf penod after ) ou are
mamed when be "111 w1lhngly climo
into a suit and a lie and accompan>
)OU to eH·nts "here he will be quite
ci .. 11. This cond1t1on ··peaks" in about
t"o "eeks. and then it's a struggle all
the \.\1} to get him out of the house.
E .. :entualh \Our social life will be
somewhere 1'0 the nght ofa lighthouse
keeper.
At our house. going out for a-n
eveni ng an} more has all the drama of
a Phil Donahue sho" I stt at the table
and m' husband roams through the
· k11chen shooung questions at me.
"Who's going to be at this pan~., ..
"I don't kno" ··
"You don't kno" , .. he admon1\hes.
h1se~es w1den tng ... You don·1know1f
1t"s a fe" coupler, 1Jr a mob""
"!"o ..
"Is there a plan:' 10 s11 do" n and
ta!K or do •H' stand around. "-Btching
Duane·5 Ol!ie "'\onh haircut gm" out., ..
"There·, no need to be \3rcast1l
These arl' 1uq ntCe pe<1 ple ..
·''.;ice pt.·upk ' Ho" "ell do "e
kno" them rt:alh' We don't e\t·n
knO'-' 1f "~'re going to· ha\t· a good
time or not -1.nd "h::it about the food"
Is th1!. J dinner m one of those thing!>
v.here \~l'l'Jt ha11 nffrrackers for three
hours""
.. What d10t•rl·nrt• docs 11 make''
~ c'll Sl't' \umt· Pl.'Oplc "-l' knov. and .. ·
'".\ha' I thought )OU 1us1 said \OU
ERMA
Bo11Ec1
didn't kno" "ho was going 10
there ..
be
"I don't. but the odds are 1n our
fa, or ·· ·
"What time are "e coming home""
he asks.
"What kind of a ques11on is that.,
~e ha,en't e'en gone yet and )OU
"'ant to knov. "hen we are coming
home." <I
"I suppose eH'T)one will be in hard
shoes ..
.. E' eryone except Prof Irwin
Cnn:) :· I <.a~ dry I~
-1.ll of 1h1s 1s a preamble. }OU
understand. Once he gets to a gather-
ing. ) ou wou Id have thought 11 was all
h1!> 1dt•a Old Hats and Horns comes
ah' e and greases from group to group
giving hi s poltt1cal \'lews. his insights
into "-Orld affairs and regales them
v.1th his stor) of the duck in the bar
who ordered two man101s.
~hen I mention leaving, he turns
to the group and says. "'I'd better take
Mo ther home. She requrres 18 hours
of sleep a night. you know. Aller the
hors d'oeuvres. she fades fasr."
I find 1t ra ther ironic· that men
deH·lop a .. nest 1 ng" 1 nst in ct in the1 r
matunt' . .\fter vears 1n the market-
place. the~ lust. af1:_cr a chair with
cushio ns that shape to their contour. a
nice light that illuminates the news-
paper draped over 1he1r chest. a
teln 1s1on tuner that bnngs 10 sound
to CO\ er their deep breathing.
.f·x get the hean ti .... home is where
J hc husQ.ar:~1s.
East-West
....deals.
vulnerable.
WEST
+ A 10 2
NORTW
+Q9864
\: A 7
-: K .l
• K 4 3 2 EAST
+ K J 7 S
I 10 9 4 2
South
Bears "alk Oat on the soles of their
feet You r assignment. 1f}OU wish lo·
accept 11. 1s 10 name the other animals
CHARLES
GOREN
S' KQJ8 3
Q 10 6 s • 9 2 bidding.
• 8 • 9 7 S After the lead of the king of
SOUTH hearts, the more simple-minded + 3 souls won. drew three rounds of
., 6 S trumps and then tried to set up dia-
A J 8 7 4 monds with a single ruff-a line that
• A Q J 10 6 was distinctly against the odds.
The bidding: They ended up losing a trick in each
South Wes& North .East plajn suit for down one.
I 0 I 9 I + Pass v The better technicians realized
2 + Pass 4 • Pass tl\at they might need two ruffs to set
S • Pass Pass Pass up diamonds. So they drew only two
Opening lead: King of vi rounds of trumps, then tried to ruff _ -~~!!!!~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~H lc..in.QW .aJo.LOLpla}'.C.CS who. go a diamond lqw. Uiifortunately. East
shuffling through the streets bare-overt rumped, so t1lls line also result-(714)
581-6 111
Full Service
Reriremenr Living
.from-IJ~50-H
~----------------------------, 1 \ t ,1 \.Ht llt .1 ,
I .J ,,. ........ ,i. \ '''"'' I I I l.1!1•J11.r ti I ( ·"'""1\1.t '·' ' I
I Pit ....... ~ "' .. ' ~ .,,,,, ' • ,. '"' ' \ 11 •• \,tlt•f;( .... I
I ,,,rr ,. I
I I I \oJtln··· l
I C.111 • lop Phone I I 0, I
~--------------------~-----~--
r-~~----~--~~----i ,
I T · '~' "0
"
0
"' ·I
. I ~ ~ Buv .~m:~: .. ! ••••• I
11521 BrootJhur•t
(llfcahurlt a Elts)
Fountain Veley
cup of y09urt and recetve I
anoth.r of equal or IHHr
ya lue abt olutcly
FllEEI I
Ont per cuatomtr
T opptn9• not Included
Ll..ttSl .11
Explr• 2-8-88
8915 B Atlanta
fAtlente & MegflOfJe)
Huntington Beach
........................................................ , ...... i.-. ... ,... .,
" \ . •• ' ' . ~
foot becau se of the fact that they ed in down one.
did not draw trump!. However, Only one declarer made 'his con-
tb.ere ace j uS,t as man)'_ who go_ tract, and the defenders could do
around unshod as a result of draw-nothing to thwart him. He won the
ing trumps too soon. ace of hearts, cashed the king-ace of
While minor suits tend to be ne-diamonds and led a third round of
glected, several pairs in a duplicate the suit. Instead of ruffing in dum-
pair event managed to avoid the my, however, he.discarded a heart.
poor three no trump contract in fa-Now there was no way that the de-
vor of the good five cl ub game. fenders could stop him from ruffing
Nort~ensibte-detisiorrto-j~heart-low-and a-<fjamond-h:igh.
four clubs was the prime impetus to That loser-on-loser play allowed
that contract. All that remained was him to concede only one spade trick
for South to justify his partner's and one diamond.
7.Deevee '7eie11d.1
Country Gifts & Collectibles
I •
Ths ·~(~''you'll SpeCiaf'
• ''[114. ~ ob you."
11I ~e. 'PJ" ... rj.lle a
Clbt~ tit ~.
. ,
1884 Harbor Blvd.(acrom from Courtya.rda) 6&0·8636
that "alk that wa}.
Rum was the sea ra11on of 1851.
But according to the h1stoncal foot-
notes. some sailors preferred milk.
Never met one of those. An) how.
that's said to be wh) the first Holstein
·co"' "as brought to this count~ that
}t·ar.
What does your mother-in-law
ha"c to ~} about the wa} you're
bringing up your young~ers7 If you
don·1 kno" what·she has to sa}. 1hat's
good. Experts contend the mother-in-
la'·'·«; remarks on this one sub1ect are
more ltkcl) tha n anything else to
create that rnnd1t1on called in-law
trouble:
People spend the most money
nat1onv.1de '"on food. construction
and travel." This is reported in a letter
from the '' 1fe of a man who pushes
about t"o-thtrds of each paycheck
across a !a'~·rn har "H t· says he can
afford 1t." ~he "-rites. "because he
doesn't rnn~trut·t an~ thing and he
doesn't tra,cl ..
-fMH--~------
ACROSS
1 Not up - -
6 Dull sounds
11 Snow runner
14 Virtue
1S Girt In a
song
16 Family
17 Dumbbell
18 Shrink
20 Vocalize
22 Stearln. e.g.
23 Fine fabric
2S Wild
28 Spanish
artist
2'.9 --big way
30 Bind (a
fracture)
32 Danton's amt
34 Set free
39 Engrave
42 Military man
43 Will maker
4S Bikini, e.g.
46 Quarry yield
49 A Stooge
-50 Stupid oJles
S4 Carnival
SS Educator
Horace -
S6 At rlgh1
angles: naut
S8 -de corps
60 Get atound
63 Garlic's kin
2 3
14
29
32
,
66 Oevoured
67 Suit makmgs
68 Coffee
69 Vi~alize
70 Charger
71 lncendlarism
DOWN
1 --o' -shanter
2 Avila gold
3 Seed vessels
4 Recompense
S Rupture 6 Shaping tool
7 Grid pass
8 Ump's call
9 Before: pref .
10 Levelheaded
11 Cheap-
12 Bad-eneck
writer
13 Lethargic
l9 Marine inlts.
21 Frequently
23 Constrict
24 "What's in --?"
26 --In a poke
27 Grease job
30 Strength
3 1 Punitive
33 Finesse
35 Soak hemp
36 Perlumes
37 Claw
38 Ms. Terry
40 Actuate
5 7
"EYIQUS.PUZZL£ SOL.'lED _
4 1 So4f"d unit
44 Counterblow
47 Took 11 easy
48 High peak
SO Eddas
S1 Dwindle
52. Lake Ene
island 53 ··My Gal -··
SS Small try •
8 9 10
57 Ignore
59 Colosseum
site
61 'Old pro
62 Exist
64 Exclamation
6S Thailand
river
12 13
..
* llllly Nit-TUESDAY. FEBRlJARY 2. 1988
·" Dltka, thrH others gain football Hall of Fame. 82.
El Toro High football star Bret Johnson picks UCLA. 82.
Sunset race
heating up.: ov at-Marina
°'"" .... --., --........ BW Riddell •uffen throa.ab the Mme peril• u any other coach, with encouragement (left), atrategy and anguiah.
Te Winkle coach hits daily dou bJe
Riddell's seventh, eighth
grade team~go un ~eat~ii-
By J EFF SMITH
DllllJ .... C.11 ' •• 1
The names aren't familiar. the crowds aren't
quite as large and the school's basketball P.rowess is
largel) unknown .
But 8111 Riddell and his Costa Mesa-based
TeW inkle Junior High basketball teams have once
again made 11 clear that in this win-at-all-;eost
soc1et~. winning requires a pnce but 1t docsn·1 have
to pro 'e costl}.
TeW1nkle sent three teams to the Newpon-
Mcsa School District tournament last wet'k. and
two teams -the seventh grade and eighth grade
5-4-and-under ~uad - came away with cham-
pionships.
And Riddell. 31. coached the teams to a
co mbined record of 16-0. But more remarkable
than that was the winning attitude.
.. It "as the tirst time I had two teams t~ethcr
at pracucc:· Riddell said . ·:w e usuall} ha'e three
coaches Trlc Y.Ork ethic of those kids at that age 1s
great.
"I was practicing with 'em e\cr)da) and 10
take t'l'O team s 1s d1fficu!t witho ut the cooperation
of the lods. The) all listened 1n1entl) They did
what Junior ~1ghers ;ire supposed to not do."
T he 5-4-and-under eighth grade team rolled
through its seas.on. defeating opponents b)' an
\lvcrage m;-rg1n of 10 points. The~ capped 1t off
Y.1th a 33-24 Y.ln O'er Costa Mesa Junior High
(former!) Da' 1s ).
T he ~venth grade squad knocked off Corona
del Mar Junior High 39-36 in the d1stnct
champ1o nsh1p. v.h1k the eighth grade team.
coached by Vice Principal Bob Miller. advanced 10
the semifinals before losing 10 Corona del Mar
"They helix-d each other The~ didn't rag o n
each o ther:· R1dddl said. "So me of the e1gh<h·
graders understood that for the good of the group
the) "ould help thl' othas . .\t that agt'. that doesn ·1
happen o ften ..
I\ couple Qf those leaders from the 5-4-and-
under team "'ere Fred Pa1an10 and Sco11 Bell The
re)t of Riddell') !>Quad. which he labeled "deep".
consisted o f R4A,Sell King . .\nd~ Rothman. Jon
King. Kevin "'estman. Re\ South .... 1ck. Jose
Montano. Jason Fenat1 and Paul Hinkle
R1ddelJ. an In 1ne resident. IS 1n his founh \Car
at the school and teaches Ph}s1cal Education.· He
ca ml· to TeW1nkle afta heading up the Opponuni-
t) Program at C'osta \lfesa. High. a program that
OO"Cr\ 3 last chanCl' tO <.tudents before COntlnUallon
school
.\s "1th eH'f) 1eam. there are those ~ho nde
the bench. But the kids ha' e prett) much taken care
o f that problem
"We tr) and make the gu)s that don't pla) as
mu..-h as the starters feel Just as 1n1ponan1:· Riddell
said "E' ef) bod> pulls for o ne another There 1sn ·1
backb111 ng like with soml' of the other teams. E' Cf)
single )Car there's been a se'enth-grader .... ho
doesn't stan. "ho becoml's a Sta n er as an eighth·
grader.. •
TeWinkle-feeds into Estancia High. "here
·first·) ear Eagles Coach T im O'Bnt"n has alread)
benefittcd from R1ddell's coaching. Mike Cunis.
"'ho leads Estancia in scoring "'llh 16 I point" per'
game. pla)ed on the Te~ 1nkl e d1s1nct champion
"B" tl'am three )ears ago
"He (('un1sj came to some of our practtce.., I
go to a) man) Estancia games a~ possible .. Riddell
said .. To ha'e M ike Cunis come bad: after thn:e
}ears and see us prac11cc 1s neat ··
Riddell called his SC\ enih grade ~uad a group
of o,erachic't~rs. aid Riddell "We pla)l'd teams
much b igger Three of our stancrs v.ere o n the
'olle) ball team that beat< orona del ~1a r "h1eh 1.,
unheard of on o ur side of the tracks ·· .
te'e u1uk1 Jim Faul~ncr and Thuc Do
pla)ed 'olle)ball 11i add111on to '>tarting for ·tht•
SC\enth-graders Rand) hado .... en and \lat!
Juhner also started. "-hlle Jorge \1anine1 Enr
Marsh. (had t-..inne'. Tom El<.ton and t-..n 1n
Lahan rounded out the .,quad
Sea hawks seek
2-ga rri e lead with
win Wednesday.
By ROGER CARI.SOI'\
Of .. D1111J NM .._
Thret" gamt''> .... 111 \till remain but
for all 1n1cn1 and purpo .. t .. tht· \un\t'I
League ba'>l etbilll 1.hJmp1on~h1p ,.,
on tht· l11~: \\ n1ne'><la~ n1gh1 JI
\1ann.i High "'hl·re o,t'Jn \ tl'"''
n:surgent ·:ihJ"k\ n'adl'
lt'\ 5-1 Ou~an \ l'" Jg.11ns1
\1anna·s ~·2 \ 1k1ng' .; fi'l'·gamt
v. inning '>!real.. going Jg.11n .. 1 J t11u1-
g.iml' Y.1nn1ng •.trlJl .t\ "'l'll a\ the
resumption 111 onl 11! th<' lt-Jgut·'
mo)l heatl·J r1' alrit·,
Jim Harn .. · ~JhJ"' ".irt , im·nl!
off an nplos1' l' arJ t'\l'· ·ix·nin~
~~-5 non-leagu(' roi..t •>f 1n1.t· "' 1n-
ubk \later De1 ~aturda~ r ght and
although his plJ~rrs .... ere read' tor
.\1ater ()\:1 Hams admits thi: ta1.1 h1)
tt'am ta1.ed \,lanna in JU'>I a fe.,..
night\ hdd ht\ Jlh.'nl10n
"'The' v.i:rt· mure read' lor \1ater
IA·11han I .... J \ .. '>J1d Harr' about his
plJ\l."f\ ·· .\lkI the Fountain \ allt"~
g;imt• tlJ'>t Fnda'' Iv.as think ing and
tail ing about \lanna and the' had to
1ntt•rrupt mt· \3~1ng ·coach "'hat
about \latl'r lx:1 ''
..I t"~ JUSl thJI \l,mna m('Jn\ '>ll
fllUl h ..
.\ n ()cc.-a n \ •<'" 'll tOf\ send~ the ~ahav. ks 1ntu a \Omma.nding t'l'O-
g;ime edge v.11h ust (hree games
rt·ma1ning .\ \IJrina "''n pu" th<'
\1l ing.., 1ntt• J llt' '••r the lead "Ith
th rl'l' Ill go
But 11 gOt"s mul h Jeeper
\lanna ( oach tt'' e Pot>O' 1ch v.a!>
Wedn~,.·· .clledale
W•HT ~t:AGUI O~H" V l'• IS I at Maror1a (4·21
Eo1~ 7 • '' wn1m•"•'.,. f1 41 ""'ll BHC" 7 0 ., FC>Un1a111 Vallev ll ·JI
SEA VIEW UA~UE
Sa OO l'O.C• ~ I •' (O'Olla ~ Ma,• (J·J E~••.,. • 7 4 11 "'""DO" 1>1a r00f I !·SI
T·.n.,.. •• 0 a1 Ul\o•f'~11V l·S
~ACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
CO\•• ~~ 7 •l •' WOOdO<'<OOe C.·01
Lag._,.,, Bl'•C" •·21 •• L•Ourla Hihl 14·1
'T'l'eOu<O H•• l ?·• 11 0-a"Gl' 10•6)
SOUTH COAST LEAGUE
Ceo '''•"O v.111ev •·a •' lr••!\e l ·) O•"• .. \ ~ • • ,, M U •O" lfietO ') ) !>.tr C • ......,.,. O·• e• E Toro u ?
A ~'"n 1 1 1 JO O -
and 1s an out\p<.llt"n crttu: ol Ocean
\IC" ·s program. ont" "h1C'h in the
p..1s1 hJ~ rd1cd on transfers for it~
bread ·n butler toY.ard success
Ul h J Situation no longer e:\.1Sts
and neither .oath sa's much about 11
nQ" bul II \then:·_: on both Sides
··1 thin!.. v.e·re read~ to pla) ... said
Poptl' ll h "'ho 1s hopeful his team
tan reH~~ a first-round 6 "\-60 loss.
..\\'e'H· pla,ed "di the last four
gamn·
Ckean \ 1t'" had four in do uble1
rigures in 11~ homecoun .... in 0' er
\1.mna v. h1lc te 'e Guild (~0) and
Da\ld '..1ma1e 11 :1 "ere the onl~
Vikings to "°" e ~an Vie~ ·s dc-
fl'nse 1n lermlo or double figure ..
\farina I 15-5) v.as staggered t"tee
111 k agur tx·fore ngh11ng the ship
· \\hen ~ou n: 0-2 ~ou dig \Ourself a
hok ··said Popo' 1C'h. "'hose tt"am has
~n in J bad-to-thc.---".UI s1tuat1on
e'er \inle and \\Ill are
\1arinJ ·._ la!>t thr~ stan ha'e
resuh('d •n '1dof\ margins of ~U 15
and I ~
Ocean\ 1l'v. on the other hand. hai.
(Pleue eee StnfSET/82 )
Sitting at th~ crossroads, count on Sliwinski is 3-2
A ·s offer a n ew lease
for former OCC s lugge r
tFlrst of two puts I
By RICHARD DUNN
o.lf ,... C4l1 I 0 a I
The lease ran o ut w11h the Toronto Blue
Ja) s. so Ke' in 11 .... insk1 1s looking to bu)
Time has becom e an 1mponant factor no v..
in h1s chmb up th.e minor league ladder. and the
convenience ofa gOO<l realtor is getting harder
to find. It's baseball now. and time for Sli,....1nski
to make an investment pa} off. . •
O K. O K . so the Super Bov.I i rabsall thc
headlines and C\ef) bod) 'stalking football. Bu t
baseball season. belie'e 11 or not. 1s here.
J.ocal_college b~se-~I~ ha! alrcad,_ sta.ned __
regular-season pla~. mt.>an1ng spring training
for the pros 1s n ght around the comer
That's.where 1i..-.insk1. alwaH the hitter.
ah' a~'> the battler al"'a~s the · competitor
comes in. pnng training lS all hw10sk1 has on
his mind these da)s
'He'll be pla~1ng with a 'engeanC'e this
spnn&..Out to pro•.i: him elfonct.>again. tugging
a long «1th him a fl\ l'·~l·ar mino r league career
that's a1 a crossroads
.\tv.a)S the prospt>ct in tht.> e)es o f big
kague outs. this .... ,11 be his first spnng
tra1n1ng v.11h the Oakland .\·s. the team "h1ch
acquired him du·nng the December "inter
mce11ngs. This v.111 be Sh .... .nsk1's best o p-
ponunll) to ascend o ut of the v.oods ot
Double-.\ anQ.1nto the Tnple-A rankings
More rmportantl~. It could be his final.
one-la t ll'g111ma1e craC'k at malmg 11 .
It. of course. being the big leagues. where
hv.1n!>k1. J former <itandout at Orange Coast
C'ollcge. ha) drt'amed o l pla~1ng et er since hl'
kne" v.hal holding a bat .... a.,
T he ne .... -ll'ase-of-life part bl.'gms "hen\ ou
rnns1dl'r "hat has happened to \li .... in'>l..1 tht'
past three '>t'a\ons \fore specilicall~ la\t ~('ar
,. k v..-hill nickname v.h11e ar OC( m
19 I and I %2 "'hen \hke \la' nt"<i Pirate\
captured ~outh (oa~t C'onkn·nte cham-
pionships. became blue last ~ear.
He'd prOH'n htm~·lfin 19 5 h1~ lir~t 'ear
at lJouble--\ J\.no,,tlk and again tn 14 r-H 1\
mind "as St'l on lx-mg promolt'd to Tnpk-.\
~ratusc once dunng -;pnng 1rJ1n1ng ,,. JQ r-
but the d1sappo1n1men1 of tieing wnt back to
Knox' ilk happened again IJ\l '>pnng for J
third term
He slumped to 256 la'' \t•ar. hut had
career highs 1n home run" t 2 'I I lnd RBI t 901
Doubk-.\ tasthalls are not. ii an\ at all much
d11Teren1 than h1g league" ia~tbails .\dd a fe.,..
more ''eel..s to the scheduk hkt• the maJM
lt·Jgue~. and "ho kno"s v.hat those alrt"ad'·
1mpre'>'>l't.' numbl.'r~ 'ould ha'e bet-n
.. Th1Hound hl c an e\l·use:· the t...' l 4).
PtlunJ tir.,1-oa«man outfielder said ""h\, '
t''Pt'nmen11ng \.\1th third ba« ··s u1 I had nl'
IO'("('ntl\~ l:i-st '~ f t\tJISt rn:tv~ lth~av .. ~td
·11 'Ou \an pla~ m Double-.\ \Ou can ·~la~ 1n
tht• h1g ka~ues:
.. ,1~ hrst )eJr 11n Double--\ I I ">tru~led
anJ hll 2 ~ and in I" 61 had to pn•'<' 11 tl'
m,~·lt anJ I hit '1 12 Then last 'car I h.td
nt.tth1ng k11 t • prll\(' I didn't· ha't" the
1n1.en11,e t>t-1.au'>t' I ...... :isn't going an~"here 11n
lhl' Toronll orµn1Lat1onl ··
In pmte""'l'nal baS<"ball 11·s raft" for J
p(a\t'r lo Spt>nJ t0ur \('ars in Douhk-.\ Three
h1'1t1rtcalh. I'> atxiut the most ~li"1ns~1. 2 • has a Double--\ H unts' 1lle
tl'ntra1. t 1n the ~mt' \outhem League he hai.
plJ' l'd in ltn the last th rte 'ears accordin2 to
(Ple ... e eee SLIWlJlfSKJ/82)
• • v K£V1N SUW1HSKI ·18
Surfers. Can 'Skins repeat? One step· at a tiµie Williams
eye Katin c ·b-b-. l soaretheCard1nals" no shock • l S O n y con cern Thl' :"FC has "On the last tour_ b k h
P A i s with own divis ion: uix-r Bov.ls b~ 3 composite score ol ac ome ro-. m 165-56 Y.llh I ~ of those 56 points
481eams will vie at
Huntington Beach
f ors 1 7 .500 purse
The I 2th Annual Katin "Mcmonal
Pro-Am. the longest running pro-
fessional urling event in Cahfom1a ,
will take place al the Hunungton
Beach Pier Thursda) th rough Sun-
da}.
A total of 48 fo ur-man professional
and amateur teams will gun for <tM
team ·qown: wo n las\ year by the
G o tcha Dominators. a Costa Mes.a:
based team. The Body Glove Future
Stars of Hermosa Beach wo n the
amateur title.
Gotcha will fc:ature Martin Potter
of Great Bri tain. Michael a nd Derek
Ho of Hawa11 and Brad Gerlach o f
Encinitas. e world's No. 5 surfer.
Po tter is a two-time Katin champion.
last winning in 1986. Michael Ho. a
10-timc finisher in the world's1op 16.
captured the 1981 ,.Katin, while
Gerlach. who went to high school in
Huntingto n Beach .... was 1.he 1987
IUtin runner-up to two-time world
cham,eion T o m C umn.
A Huntingtorl' Beach-based team,
Alceda Wetsuits. also brinas a rich
tradition into the event. Alttda 's lead
man. intcmalional standout Dave
Parmenter of Ca) ucos. Calif .. fin-
i*d l«Ond to Pottef" two~ llO-AJonpi~ Parmenter •~ 1986 V.S
Pro T o ur c hampion Mike
C ruickshank of Dana Point and
Huntinaton Buch's Craia Comcn.
who wu third on the 1987 U.S. Pro
Tour. Florida nckt Mau Ktthelc
rounds out the team. , l Vua~t Frafttt. fatunna the duo
of M ike Llmbttsa and Jim H .. n. lhouJa a so c.la.alltntt ror the ht~.
l.ambm;i and Hopn finished 1-2 on
the l 987 U.S. Pro Tour. Bit·•a"c
itandout Chris Burke of LI Jolla and
C"hril Adanu of Cartlb94 compktc
t~tam.
This year's punt as $17.SOO. WJth CPI••• ... ..,.,...,_,
But c h a n ces unlike l y corning on founh-quaner touch-• z h Jo1Ansas1hcNFCtcam was cru1~ing Jn ac ary
·\.\1th a big lead. In fact. the fc ,....est
points b~ an) NFC 'upeT Bo"l 1eam
o'er that ix· nod .,.. as the 38 scor<.'d b~
an Franc1~·0 1n its 38-16 \ICIOf\
AN DIEGO ( i\P) -Super Bo v..I
"'inm·rs don't repeat. So. after the
~ ashington Redslins lost to Nev.
York 1n the National Football Con-
ference title game a vear ago. Charle
Mann was rooting for -the Giants in
the Super Bo" I. That wa}. the
Redskins would ha'e a C'hance this
year.
Mann's do uble wish came true
unda\ when
the Redskins
went on a re-
cord-bre-a k1 ng
binge that in-
cluded 35 St,,'C·
o nd-quarter
points 10 rout
thr D en,er
Broncos 41-10
Sunda'. bl'·
com in·g the
fourth strat&h t
N FC-team to capture a lopsided
Super Bowl victorv.
That led RcdskinsCoachJocG1bbs
to face the inc' 1table q uestions Mon-
da) about the difficult> of repeating
as NFL champion. No team this
decadt' has won t .. o straight Super
Bowls.
Gibbs. response: ··1 just want to get
through our divisio n first.''
The last t"-O upcr Bowl winners.
the Giants and R~skins.. came from
the FC East. and Gibb5 said he
believes 1t's the \ou&hcst d1V1Sion 1n
football.
"I thouaht that 1f an}' tutn around
could repeat it,..., t~ Giants bcalusc
they ~~rt solid at every positio n ... he
said oflast ytar's champtons. ~ho ftll
''tCtim to a temble stnke team.
injuries and post-Super Bowl
malaise. fini h1na last 1n the dl\'ision
•1th a 6-9 rtcord.
That IJ"CS tht Giants an eas) laSl·
placi Khcdulc ncu scason. The)' JCt
topla)' Octro1t t-.ttand K.ansasC'uy.
while tht" Rc4sk16urt farina the likes
of Chicqo and Otvdand.
··1 think tht ow .. a att mad about
•bat ~ncd tlus )Ur and will com< roanns beet." Gibbs •Ml .. ,
tb1nk P'uladtlot\_aa 11 conm11 on. and
'
O\ er \1iam1 1n I q • ·
Gibbs refused to aclno,....ledge rnn-
fcren\.·e dom1na11on
.. Each of those games are totall~
separate.'' he ~1d. ··1 don't set• 11 as
AFC--:"\FC' Each of those teams got
ho t for a da' ~hat takes o'er and
contributes io a lopsided game 1s
difficult to understand ··
Offen l\C tackle \lark ~ta\ said
after unda~ 's game tht" Re'dslo..ins
were abk to outmuscle the Broncos
-~s the Giants did -b«ausc the)
arc used to ph)s1cal games ~tthtn tne-+--..,..
di\ ISIOA.
Gibb said the same thing ~tonda'
"When \OU lOm(' o ut of our
dl\ISIOn. 1i' a ph)Sical dl\ISIOn
E'en team in there 1s a ph}s1cal
football tea m, .. he said ··\\hen )OU
pla) Philadelphia. the~ art knod1ng
you around. The G iants beat \OU up
and the the Cardinals and Dallas can
hurt \Ou.'·
T hat. of rou~. 1s one hurdle for
Washington
Therc also 1s e>.pecti!d 10 bt some
conten11on for the quanerbad. pot
be\v..C!'Cn .26-}ear-old Ja) hroodcr.
the incumbent e ntt'nng this S('ason.
and 32-ycar-old Doug W illiam "'ho
thrc"' for a l"C'Cord 340 yards and four
touchdov.ns to be nam~ the,g.ame's
M ost \'aluablc Player. T~ 3 'ards.
,)06 of lbcm ll\ lM. Ml baJ (. V--.S Ont'
of I 0 Suptr Bo"' I records .SCI b' lb~
Rtdskms.
Gibbs said ht" be he'"~ there .... as a
lot to be s.1nd for.tntrateam romPft1·
tion, the samt lind ht will ha'c at
rvnnina t.ck with' ~Tit RoStf'S,
Keh·in Br)-ant and Timm) m1th
mith. a urpn~ Staner an Rott"n'
pbtt. t1t1 anotMr rtee>rd •1th 204 •
~-anb rust.i"lo )"'ft tol~ust a lWfl 'Ote
for MVP 10 ~ alhams 10'~.
Smith'' rushu-a and W1lha ms'
pa$1l"I con1ribu1td to )~t ano ther
rm>rd -602 loW yards offt1a11t. •hidl1lto1nd~ l~))vd:sftttt\·
...
• -
Z.\CH.\R'I La C ~PI -Dc.'US
\\ 1lham" might ha' c.-bet"n a tale ntC'd
~-ctmd-tnng ~uanerbal'k hl \Orne
but Zachaf\ rt's1dc.-n1 s who 'ital! di.,.
pla' mallt-i<1,t·~ dcntt"d d unng his
l)r.l\tl.:T da~" .,.."t'Tt' not surpnSc."'d t'I'
his four-wu..-hdClv.n assault on '-upcr
fk'"' rel"\'rd t'i<xtl~
·· ~ me l>I them had " nttcn him off
'ea~ agt' .. Y id Jnhn Troth a~"' 1Ct"
s1-:1on man.igC'r .,.. ho -v;as one of
man~ C\amplc.-" that unda' ·s
enthusiasm haJ nCll bttn lo~t in
\1onda' ·-; '-ll'rm' that drench<'d the to~n "l'm g.l.id he-.; sho"n tht'm ·· =~----:._ William~ "'ht' won-mosl ,aJUlb1t
-~·--·
pla' er honor. .,.. h lie leading I he
\\a hington Rl·dsl ins to a ~2-10 wm
o 'er the Den' er Broncos on unda}.
also performed a therapcuuc effect on
th1) communtt' ofQ.000 ~pie s.a1d
1m McCehe~: a rt~Gluranr a1nrM'r
ov..'ner
Man) of lac~~' rt'\1dents lost
their JOM 1n r«'<'nt ~~rs follo-.•in•
cutbacks 1n <;tatr go,emment offi~
and chemical plant 1n ncarb' Bato n
Rouge
..It ga,·c.-f'('llple something to talk -
abo ut be"•d<'' the econom :·
McGehtt "41d
"E'ef)'bod' "a upfor1t l:the
game.-and no "' e' er\'bod still
talkmg abou\ 1t.'' said lxn lon.
another~~ ~Kk-nt •
In l to" n v. her'( the tradmona.J
foottlan fa\oonte~ art the e~ Or-
leans Saint.\, "'ho enckd a 20.)car
playoff drou&ht this ~aton. and ~ular powcr'houK Loua 11.na tate.
W illiam bt'oU&ht out Redskin chttrs
and xnt DCn'-cr rootcn u~
around. resadcnt sald.
"The Rcdst1n art probabt> o . I
~ be.av of Ooura... aed Kam
LI ttl. a dttsl shop maN111tt.
•ns b) Ria ndm. anoth(r m.-ont
b} another non-MVP 0.., WWla•e .... belleftn ol maay la kper .... wia.
W\Jha.ms• fllher. Robm Wtlbams
Sr.. •ho spent m<*. ol Senday
lhannt ht• hame wtth a...,. of
local rnidNts wt~ a&D
but) anSWttlnt _.. t.....,_ Moft.
di .
I ~ ·--
~
I
~ L
..
/
1
S B -.-
Ice melt., •or.:blem,. Dltka, 3 others in Hall of Fame
but SIS ••..o gar e Coach Mike D1tka and three NW S1and· • · =t CANTON, Ohio -Ch Bears •
leave8 •tadlam crew outsoflhe 1970s-fred Biktnikofr.Jack ·-Ham and Alan ~ -were wkatd today
SD .. _ •. •tate of turmoil IS 1988 inductca •.nto the Pro Foocball Hall 9f Fa~e. AU The new class 1ncludet three Pennsylvania natives
SAN DIEGO --As football afi-
cionados recount the triumphs and
trqed.ies of Sunday's game at Jack Murphy
Stadium, their Slomacbs and pocketbooks
may only just be recovering from what stadium officials
described as an onslauaht of appetites.
Rcd!k.ln 'lnd Bronco fans excused1ht'mseNcs from
the intense action on the field to purchase 1.000 pounds
orbcef (in the form of 60,000 hot dots). 18,000 &al Ions
of beer ( 110.000 20-oun~ cups). and 11 .000 gallons of
various sodas (60,000 individual cups).
Coolina down the fans was no easy task. either. The
job took approximately 3S tons of ice. supplied by the
Union Ice Co .. a Los Angeles-based firm.
"With 7S,OOO fans iq,attcndancc. ice consumption
avcraaed about I pound per stadium visitor," said Scott
Cernansky, manufacturing manager for Union Ice.
"Rain or shmc. that's a lot of ice."
According to Cernansky. U nion Ice has supplied
Jack Murphy Stadium with packqed ict' for more than
I 5 years. The ice supplier to tne Rose Bowl. the
company also provided ice for last year's Super Bowl
pmt'. In addition. Union let' supplies all ice to Dodger
Stadium.
And, as fa ns left the stadium Sunday with either
fond or foul memories of the super event. they left 1he
residue of their afternoon fccdjng fTcnzy in the form of
trash. According to Jim Love. stadjum custodial site
Supl'rv1sor. there were appoximately 35 tons of Super
Bowl leftovt'rs.
"You can only describe it as a mind-boggling
amount of garbage." he emphasized. "But. it's wonh
the clean-up effon 10 play host to the Super Bowl i.n
'America's Finest City.'"
Quote of the day
"As I watched that ballgamt' }CSterfuly. I had
to think that a guy hkt' that might havt' made a
ft'~ po1ntsd1fft'rcnct' ... Texas T ech football coach
J erry Moore. whose team wt'nt 4-7 and 1-5
during a span when Super Bowl ht'ro Timm)
Smith was constantll s1dt'lined with anjuncs.
UCLA lands Bret J ohnson
LOS ANGELES-Bret Johnson. ~ho Ell
ledEIToro H1 hSchoolto twostraightCIF t t
Southern Con,erence prep championships. II
passing for 6.538 }ards and 63 touch-
dov. ns. announced Monda, .. he will attend UCLA this
fall. --.
Ht' plans to redsh1n his frt'shman season 10 JO&n
senior quarterbacks Troy Aikman a11d Brendan
McCracken and thrt'e top sophomo re Bruin quar-
terbacks.
The 6-1 . 17 5-pound Johnson made recruiting tnps
to Notre Dame. Southern Cal. Penn State and L1CLA
"' Johnson's fatherand El Toro'sCoach Bob Johnson
v.as a trainer at UCLA Coach Tcrrv Donahue's summer
camp when Bret Johnson was' a ju01or. '
"There was no o ne pan1cular reason.·· said his dad.
"it v.as a tough choice. . .
"Has mother. Debbie. and m}selfwould havt' felt
good about an~ of the final four. but we're extreme!~
ha pp~ It' an e'cellent cho1ct' Rt'all~. ht' couldn't ha"e
gone ~ rong w1 th any of them
"But "'e ct'naml~ suppon him 100 percent ··
He'll maJOr an communica11ons
Brumfield wins Woolf award .
ARC ADI'\-Don Brumfield. known ~
as the "Kingo f Churchill Downs." has
been c.ho~n as the 1988 rt'C'1p1en1 of the
George Woolf Memo rial Jocke} '\ward. 11
was announced 01oer the Wt't'kend.
Brumfield. 49. will rt'Ct'1ve the award at Santa
Anita on aturda). Ft'b. 20 in ceremonies in the
paddock walking ring. The track has presented the
award annuall~ since 1950. and Brumfield is the 39th
rec1p1ent.
· Brum tie Id was selected b' members of the Jocke' s'
Guild across the nation from a list of five no m inees
named b) the oruniz.at1on ·s reiuonal managers.
and one who will be inducted in his hometown of.
Canton.
Ditka is the first Putt ti&ht end ever elttted to the
Hall. Bilctnikoff. a widt rcceiver, is the fifth flaider to
be inducted. Ham. a linebacker. was the second player
from the Pattsburah Steelers' '"Steel Cuna in" years to be
honored. following "Mean Joe'' Grttne. ~. a long-
time defensive tackle for MinntSOta. btcame the
second Viking to m•ke the Hall. joining quarterback
Fran Tarkenton.
-Qitka. 48, was tht' No. I draft pick of the Bears in
1961 oul of the naversaty of Pittsburah. He was named
NFL rookie of the year aftt'r catching 56 pas~s1or t.076
yards and 12 touchdowns. ~hrtt years latt'r, he had 75
catches. a record for ti~t ends that stood for 16 years.
B1 letn1koff. who will tum 45 later this month. Spl'nt
14 ~ears catching paSSC$ for the Oakland Raidcrs.,Tht'
6-1 . 190-pound flanker caught 589 pas~s -seventh
best all-tame -for 8.974 yards and 76 touchdowns.
Petry signs Angel contract
Right.hander Dan Pctl') signed a
contract Monda) to play with the .\ngels in
1988 for an undisclosed amount.
The 29-year-old pitcht'r. acquired by
the Angels 1n t'Xchange for outficldt'r Gary Petlls last
Dec. 5. compiled a 9-7 record and 5.61 ERA for the
Detroit Tigers last year in 30 outings. nine in relief.
Catcher Jack F1mple and pitchers Shane Young
and Vann· Lo\'elace also agreed 10 undisclosed terms
for lhc 1988 season. said general manager Mike Pon:
Petr). who undt'.rwent surgel')' June 10. 1986. to
remo' e three bone chips 1n his elbow. bctµin last season
a) a staner and moved to middle rehevt'r in m1d-
<\ugus1. He \.\3S 4.5 w11h a 4.96 ERA before the injuf')
and 1·5 ~1th a 4.26 ER<\ after recupl'ration.
He posted his I OOth victory on May.20. 1987. w11h
a 6-4 dec1s1on at Te\as. ti•s best year was 1n 1984 "hen
hC'logged an I -record and 3.24 ERA in 35stans"1th
thr Tigers.
Young. 26. was acquired from the Ne" York Mets
as pan of the John Candelaria 1radc. He staned in 27
games las1 season for Jackson in the Texas League.
pos11 ng a 9-10 record
.....
White beats Collier at Irvine
Mike White of Long Beach. Cahf.. SI
"on a unanimous I :!-round dec1s1on o'er
c.kfcnding 1a1c champion Dec Collier of
-Lo .\ngclcl> an their scht'duled California
hc:i' ~"eight champ1onsh1p bout Monda} night at the
In inc Mamou Hotel.
\\hate. a 7-foot tall. :!90-pounder. was undaunted
h' (oilier. who at 6-3 and 226 pounds was unable to c\po~r White to an~ power punches. White was able to
trap the former champion into the corner with
combana11ons 10 the bo<h and the head.
In the sc,cnth round". Collier was given a o nr point
deduction for a low blow. howev<.'r. White was nol
affc<.·tcd and sull "on 1hc round.
Judges Rud} Jordan scored 11 117·1~ f Child;
Hassett 117-110.andJohnThomas II -109.
\\hilt' boosts his rt'<'Ord to 20:6. 11 b' knock.out.
C. ollu:r is no~ 1..i,..i. v.11h fi,c knoc~outs. ·
Television, radio
TELEVISI01'
.J 30 p.m -COLLEGE BASKETBALL
l\lan land at :--:otrc Dame. WG:"
·5 pm -PRO HOCKEY· '."e" Yorl
Rangl'r'> at i\c" 'I ork Islanders. E P'.'i.
5.05 p.m -P RO BASKETBALL: Washing·
ton at ;-..;l'" York. TBS .
-.30 p.m -PRO BASKETBALL: Chicago
at Laker!>. Pnrric T1cl e1. SelecTV.
Q p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL. Tulsa
at IH'L' (dclaH·JJ. l r ..\. · .. RADIO
... 30 pm -PRO BASKETBALL: Chicago
at Lalers. KL..\( (570).
7. 30 pm. -PRO HOCKEY: Kings at
\'anrnuH·r. 1\.(,1 L ( 1260). KMNY ( 1600).
I 0 p m. -PRO SOCCER: Lazers at Sockcrs
(dcla~cd ). lo\.MNY ( 160Q).
SLIWINSKI AT THE CROSSROADS ...
From Bl
O akland ..cou11ng dart'ctor Dick
Bogan. But "hen the bats and balls
beg1" to go a1 11 in .\nzona a .. u,s
.start balllingea<:h other for JOb°!: nOrre
of the red taoc matters
He "as tradrd to Oakland for
p11chef D oug Scherer. a !6-~ear-old
right -ha ndcr
.. (The 1rndc11\ the greatest 1hing 1n
the world for him'." Mavne said of
Sli"1nsk1 . "'ho'll "Ork out at occ
when he arn'l'S 1n to"n from hie;
Kno\' 1lle homr in a few weeks before
heading to spnng training.
··1 feel like 11·, a new beg1nn1ng.''
Sh"insk1 ~aid "I do n·1 think the)
<Oakland) ha''e any preconceived
ideas about me They ha''t' an idea of
~hat I can do. but I ca-n go Lo spring
training and change their minds. It's a
fresh start and I ha'e to pro'e lhat I
can pla) It's time to lay 11 on tht" hnt'
and~ what ha ppl'ns
.. It g1\C me ne~ hfc. ""1th the Blue
J a)S. m} care<.'r was ob' 1ousl~ going
no~herc Just felling a chanCt' w11h
ano1ber team. 1 the) 're sincert about
le tting me pla~ 1n Triple-A. 1ha1•11 t
can ask··
After two )ears 1n Class-I'\ ball.
Sliw1nsk1 h11 18 home runs with 68
RBI an his first )'Car at Knox' ilk. Has
improved batting average U 12) 1n
19ft6 included a lift 1n home run~(21)
and RBI (89). a~ well.
-'ccord1ng to Bogan. the A's ac-
q uired Sliwinski for thal (hilting)
alone.
"That's what we acquired him for.
we needed somcbod) who could hn ...
said Bogan. "He'll be gJvcn every
opport~nill' to make an) ball club we
have ftt11 either be 1n-~IN~ or
Tnp~-A. depending upon what kind
of spnna he ftas ..
ho me run 16:!) and RBI (247) records
at Kno'' 11lt'. feels he ~as given the
shon end of a point) suck last ~ear
"Tht') It'll mt' JUSt before spnng
training. not fi 1o·t' months befort' so I
could have done n. that aerobics
would ha'c helped mt' aro und fir-st
base:· said Shwmsk1. whose apparent
lack of quickness and speed was the
liabil1t} the Blue Jays used against
him (Hl not promoting him to
S} racuse). "The) sho uld have told
me this in the off-season. Why didn't
the' tell me after the 1986 season.
rather than v.a11 until spnng training·
of 1987 ··
A loyal. dcd1ca1t'd company man.
Sliwinski felt bctra)ed.
··1f T oronto "'ould have told me.
'You need lo d o this.' It would ha\e
been done." he said ... I work m) butt
off. Not onl} did thq not do things to
promote me. but JUSt helping me
along as a pla}er. I nt'ver heard an)
complaints until last spnng training.
.. And that was after the) told me I
was going to Tnpk--\. The) said 1 was
going to T riple-A (last spnng). The}
SURFERS •••
From81
~•d. ·0on·t ~orT).J USt get in shapl'."
"If the' had wanted me to do
something, 11 ~ould have been do ne
The} knO\.\•that.·Thc) know I would
ha' c done something. The) JU St
didn't pro mote me."
But Sliwinski. who may or may not
ha' c learned toq late about the special
off-season exercises that Toronto was
plugging into his head. is invoJvcd i.n
a rigorous train in$ program. one that
includes an exercise to help increa~
h1 !1 speed and qultkncu.
Speed. or at least trying to develop
more of 1t. 1s something Sliwins'ki
worked on this winter.
"I'm into some scnous training
nght no~:· Sliwinski said. "From
"hat (Toronto) told me. spttd is my
biggest drawback. I need more Spl't'd
and I'll do anything to help my t1mt' to
fir~t base.
'Tm going to be ready for spnng
training-more ready than any other
spnng training."
Ma) nc......a. mentor of Shwinski's
sinct' he began a.s a freshman in the
autumn of 1980. also feels that
Slv.lnsk1 dt'scrvcs a cleaner shake.
"I think. without soundina bitter.
that pro baseball has done him no
fa vors:· said Mayne. "He has done
absolutely evcrythin.g that a pc'r$0n is
the team champion receivina $4.000. capable of doing. And he's been
or S 1.000 per rider. while the individ· absolutely denied an opponunity
ual utlist will earn $3.000. with the organization he's bttn with.
The individual competition will "lfl had to pick a team ofall-stan
run through Saturday, Feb. 6. with in all the years I've been he~ at OCC
team points bcin.g tallied based on (he's cntenlig his 12th season), he'd
heat pcrforman~s. On Sunday. the ht the first guy_l'd pk~-for reasons
focus wiU swatch to the lOp eiahl far ~yond abihty. I'd stan the be»
teams. wllose surfers wifJ o.betUe each club with him. lfc"d be the number
other two-on-tv.o one fUY. over all the players I've bad.
Other 1nd1vJduals to watch art t ic' as in man) •-ays my favoritt'
Mark Orch1lupo of Au1traha. ShuJi plljt'r." hwmsk1. ob' aously. hopes to be
pla) ans at Tnplc-A Tacoma f Pac1 fic
C'oa'' L.caaue) this yUr " pin. 1t ~unds hke an C"\Cusc.
bu1 11 s ltkc any JOb." hw1nsk1 said of
not be1n1 promoted last spnng by
'Toron&O. "If you do wcU and )Ou·rc
&ht'rc &o ,rt promoted and )OU don't
Fl promo1t'd. ~'Clf ...
t "'The•a)' I fttl. J Mid up my pan of
barp1n. I had beater yt'an than
) 1housht f would The')' didn'I do
an ttuns with me ...
Kuuya of Japan and OP Pro n1nner· Shwanska. who owns a house 1n
up Sunn) Garcia of Hawau. Top _Knoxville. ""o rksat a health spa an the
Cahfom1ans 1ndudc Cost.a Mcsa·s ofT-scason. He ~ct has wtfe. Lisa.
Richie Collins and a tno of Hunt-"'hale playing 1n the Florida lnstruc--
ington Beach surfers -Bud U.mas. u o nal Lcaauc a few years aao.
Scott Famswonh and Gary Clisby The type of o~n51ve Dla)er he 1 'it
Collins won the O'Nf1ll oktwater ~ould be safe to M) \hat Shwinsk1
C'lassic 1n Santa Cruz on Sunday, ~mblcs Jadt Clark -the former
do-wn1n1 Man) Tho mu of Hawaii 1n . Giant and Cardinal who sianed th1j
the final. • v.11n1.CL.Witb.U...YankttS.
On Sunday. a se~es or exhibition ··That's the kind of plai-t:r rm 1oina
heats amona surfers of the.-1960s and to bt." hv.-mski said ... , rrt not aoina
1970s will be also be held. to lcal a IOI ofbl~ That's a fact." hw1nskl. -who holds the carttr
J,
•
" .
SUNSET SHOWDOWN •••
"'-8 1
been even more impteSSive. bliuina
its lasl five O{>PC>ncr"s (includina tM non-kq~ victory ova Makr Dti)
by marlins of 24, 19. -22. 11 and 21
points.
It's site eanna) vs. quicknas (Ocean View and it's the latter wbkb
has carried n View (11·7) into
the No. 6 slot on the Oranee County
top 10 list. Marina is No. 8.
"They're quick and they can shoot
well." continued Popovich. a veteran
of 13 seasons.
''Todd Norman is a real stabilizina
force and the)' have the three-point_
capabilities. Theout5ideshootin1can
really neutralize a hciaht advantqe."
Marina cnlen lNith a front line of
6-9 freshman Cherokee Parks. 6-7
Dan Floyd and the 6-6 Guild. aJona
with Yamate (6-3) and Jim Campbell
(6-0).
Should the Vikings need to adjust
wilh more quickness tht'y have 6-3
Brian Richardson. 6-S Duane
Cameron and backup point guard Alf
Bayramoglu. ·
Both squads have shown defensive
capabilities.
Manna has allowed its last four
v1cums an average of 46.5 pl'r game.
while Ocean View's last four Sunset
opponents have averaged Just 44.2.
Each has a number of offensive
assets -bu.t a capsulized look sees it.
as Ocean View's 1-2 punch of Mike
Frohn and Norman ~gainst Marina's
Guild. an All·CIF choice a year ago
when he was a junior.
"Frohn and Norman have been our
Mr. Inside and Mr. Outside:· said
Hams. Ocean View's only toach in a
I 0-year history.
"But we've also got Greg Evans and
he"s been incredible on defense. Ht''s
held e' cry opponen1 to Jess than his
seasonal average. although Guild got
20 the last lime."
Guild will be Evans' ass1gnmt'nt
again. Guild's present seasonal a't'r·
age. 19.0.
"Guild can score and you're not
going to stop him:· said Hams. "but
~e·d hke to at least contain him:·
There \\as no containing Frohn on
Saturda' when Oct'an V1t'~ blistered
Mater Oe1.
.. He was on fire ... admill Harrit.
Frohn IC'Ottd a career•hilh 33 poinll.
A junior. Frohn has held the key to
Ocean View's sucttM. He ir\jured his
ankle in the first pme at the
Tournament of Champions and
wound up miuina three 11mes and
scorina just 18 in two other pmes
whilt tryina to play thf'OUlh the
iajury.
Al for conlainina Frohn. Norman.
Evans. Craia Rice and the rest of the
Seahawb. Popovich said, .. We just
ha vt to take care of ounelves. •• ln ott:Kr Sunset 11meos Wednetdly.
Huntinftton Beach (2 ... ) is at Foun-
Lain Va ey and Edison (2-4) travels to
Westminster (2-4).
In the Sea View Lcaaue:
·Corona del Mar (3-3) holds a onc-
pmc cdac over Estancia (2-4) in the
race for third place and a berthjn the en=· 3-A playoffs, but must colhend
with S-1 Saddleback on the CdM
floor.
Mcanwhil~ Estancia (2-4) can stay
in tht' hunt if it can solve Newport
Harbor's homecourt advantaae.
Aarbor is 1-5 in leagut' plJy. Estancia
deal.L Nt'wpon a 41-33 loss in the fim
round. lrt the other game. Tustin (6-0)
is at Univt'rsity ( 1-S).
In the Pacific Coast Lcagut':
There's four games left. but the
Warriors ofWoodbridae figure to put
another title in the bank. With a two-
game edge over Laguna Beach and
Laguna Hills. the only question is can
anyone knock Laguna Beach and
Laguna Hills out of the playoffs? ·
fn Wednesday's games. Costa
Mcsa.(2-4) is at Woodbridge (6-0):
Laguna Beach (4-2) travels to Laguna
Hills 4-2) and Trabuco Hills (2-4) is at
Orange (0-6). "The Laguna Beach-
Laguna Hills winner appears to be a
shOo-11'1 for t'he 2-A playoffs.
In tht' South Coast Lcagut':
Irvine's 3-3 Vaqueros host Orange
County's top-rated team -18-4
Capistrano Valky. Should Capo Val-le~ win. and Mission ~t'JO (3·3)
defeat nsi11ng Dana Hills (2-4). as
t'xpected. ~ ma} well still t'volvc into
a third-place showdown for Irvine
with M 1ss1on V 1ejo Feb. I 0.
TbplO
.~eCounty
~echool
bUketblill
. DallJ PUot eeleedou
1. capo Valley (18-4)
/
2 . Santa Ana (19-S) ,
S. Woodbrld&e (14-5)
4 . Tuatin ll8-S)
5.Sad~leback(18·4 i _,...
6 . Ocean View (11-7)
7. Mater Del (14-6)
8. llarlna (15 -5 )
9 . Sunny HUia (17-2)
10. El Toro (15-~)
Trojaris e ·dge Huskies
USC's Pendleton s uspe nded ;
Georgetown, Bra dley l:lpset
1hen 11eld 'on IQ upset I 3th-ranked Georgetown in a Big
East Conference game. ·
Mark Flan sky scort'd 14 points and Gal)' Massey and
Ken Wilson had I 0 each for Villanova. which boosted its
record to.15-6 overall and 7-3 in the Big East.
F rom Tiie Associated P ress
Freshman Ronnie Coleman scored 14 of his 20
points an the second half. including a slam dunk with 16
scronds left. 10 g1v(' use a 6 7-65 viccory 0\ ('f \ 1si11ng
Washington in a Pacifi c-I 0 confcr<.'nCt' basketball game
Monda~ n1gh1.
Mark Tillmon had 24 points and Charlie Smith 15
fo r Georaetown. 14-5 and 4-4.
Dake 101,Clemsoa ll: In Durham. N. C.. sophomort'
Phil Henderson scored 18 points as No. 4 Dukt' beal
Clemson to remain atop the Atlantic Coast Conft'rt'nce
standings.
The Huski~ led 65-64 when Coleman took an
,inbound~ pas~ from Da\C Wiltz and scored to g1,e the
TroJaM. 5-13 0' era II and 3·6·rn conference. their second
consecutnt' ~•n. ·
Wlcll1Ju SU\e 111, Bradley t!: In W1ch1ta. JUOIOr
D"'a}ne Pra)IO~ scored a career-high 24 poinls as
W1ch11a State upset I 8th-ranked Bradle} in a Missoun
olt'man added a free throw "'•th dnc second left to
cinch the' 1cton over the Husk ies.~ ho are 6-12 and~-7
Valle' Conft'rence gamt'. -
The game ·"as knottt'd 60-60 wath 2:23 left ~hen
Coleman hat a Jumper Chris Moore follo~ed ~Ith a slam
dunk to g1"c outhcrn Cal a 64-60 lead with 1:47
rrma1nmg.
College basketball scores
WEST •n11•on /)
Off the coun. so phomore reserve guard .\nthon)
Pendleton. Southern Cars third-leading scorer. has been
handed a thrt'c-game suspension for breaking an
und1sclo~d team rule. USC "Coach George Raveling
announced Monda\.
use 67 WH l\11\\)IQn &S NW Lou S••n• 91 Nt(f'Olfs S• 6S
Sen D·~O S• S9 11 .... , SI Nfw Ortu ns 6i, Sa mloro •7
ROCKIES · Snull\ Al•Deme 11 Soul'1 F10t1CS.
Ntw Mo .co 60 Cotoreoo s1 l l 11
S U1•'1 86 Nolrt O•me, C•I S9 VM I 61, Tn ·C'1•1t•noo11e 61
EAST V r11•111e n J.c~sonv111t S?
Fora,,.,,., 83 Merou•Hf 6J MIDWEST
"Plain and simple. Anthony broke a standard team
rule," Raveling said. "We have discussed the matter and
have agreed that this suspension as appropnatt'. I'm vef')
concerned that this 1s not interpreted as something it isn·1.
111\enacnu""\ 60 St Bon•ven· Au\!1n PH Y· 78, Youngstown SI
Mt ~ 61
M1em1. Fte 79, Mer"' 76 toll Clnc1n11e1t II. N Illinois 60
Nevv 63 D11l•ware 60 Cltvtleno SI 7• W•s ·GrH n Bev
V11tenov• ~. G-i!elOwn SI 61
SOUTH Cre111Mon 60. Mo ·KanlH C•lv •S
like something drug-relalcd." · Oul.t 1oi Clemson 63 Dt ••o•• 6S S• Lou!\ S9
Fur men 90 Oe v10\0n eo lovole Ill tll E venw illt ,. Elsewhere in college basketball Monday: Gtor11t M;ison 61 Ve Com· Mocn111an S• 16. O'uo S• ~
monwtelt'1 60 Ve1oere1so 63 E 1Uino1\ S9
Vlllaaova 14 , Geor1etowa SB: In Ph1ladelph1a. Jet~M>"'""' S1 I S Ttnn -Merlin W ,01t1e SI 11&. Breoitv 91
V1llano,a's 7-2 Tom Greis scort'd 21 points as the
Wildcats built a 16-point lead earl~· in the se<:ond half.
6• SOUTHWEST
LOUoh •IMt 107 V1r111n1• Te<'1 " P1~ Am~rica11 1• 0-al ~o~rts
N C c ... r>Ollt IS N C ·W H..,. n
PRo HocKEY
Blues capture New Jersey puts end
6th straig ht -~
NHL vic tory to 26-game Streak
From Tbe AssCK'laled Pre11
St. Louis goals by Mark Hunter.
Todd Ewen dnd Doug Gilmour in a
6:48 burst early in the scc·ond pl'nod
broke a tic and the Blues held on"to
defeat the host Toronto Maple Leafs
5-4 Monda) night for a clul;>-rccord
si-..1h consecutive National Hocke}
League ,·1ctory . _
Cliff Ronning and Gaston Gingras
also scored for St. Louis. which has
won eight of llS last nine games to
1mprO\ e 10 24-23-5 and move with an
1hree points of first-pla~ Dctro11 1n
From Tlte Associated Press
· Buck Williams scored 23 points
and Ne" Jersey rallied from an 11 -
poi nt deficit 1n the third quant'r to
sna~ a 26-game road losing streak
daung back to last season.
Ne~ Jt rsey. which lost its first I g
road games this season and hadn·t
won away from home since March 18.
1987, at Dctroit .. g(>t a triple..<fouble
performance from guard John Buley
who had 19 poin1s. I 0 assists and I 0
rebounds. Mark A1u1m: led host
Dallas wi th 32 points.
The Mavcncks. -who lead second-1he Norns D11o 1s1on. . place Den er b) four pmt's in the Wt'ndel Clark sco~ twice and Al Midwest Di mon and whose 28-13
St'to rd and Greg Temon onct' eac.h . record is the best 1n franchise history.
for T oronto. last an tht' Noms had won 10 of their previous 12
D" 1s1on at 15·:9·9. The M~ple Lc.afs gamt'S and 15 of 11 at home. ha \i~ 1.1.orr onl) nnl.' o r their Im t9 Dillas tooi an I I-point lead in the
games. third quant'r when Aauirre hit six
The . previous longest wanning strailht shots. But the Nets outscored
streak 1n the 21-year history of the the Mavericks J 3-1 over the ne•t
Blues was five games. They did lh?t 3:36. ~w1ce -in Februal')· 1969 and ap1n Elsewhere an the NBA Monday: 1n January 1972.
Elsewhere Monday: Kla11 t7, Balls H : In Sacramento.
Qevll1 ~. F lames •~ In Calgary. Chicaao·s Michael Jordan scored 37
Mark Johnson scored twice 10 hf\ tht' polnl!i but Sacramento's LaSalle
New Jersey Devils over the leaauc-
leadina CalJ.ary Flames. ·
Thompson blockt'd his layup with
two seconds lefi to preserve the
Kings· victor).
Reggie Theus led Sacramento with
28 points. including a 17-footjumper
with eight seconds left that broke a
95.95 tic. Afier Theus' shot. Jordan
attempted 10 tie tht' score again by
dn"''ing down the lefi lane but his shot
was blockt'<i by Thom~on. Sacra-
menlo's center.
Ja11 lH, S.perSoalcs lft: In Salt
lakt' City. Thur! Bailey scored 32
points and Karl Malont' added 25 to
lt'ad Utah. Tbe Jazz. tr:ailca' 52-49 at
halfi1mt' but Bailey and John Stock-
ton ke)cd a 17-6 run that $Ive Utah a
66-58 lead with 6:58 left an tht' third
quancr.
Pacers N, WarrtoH H : In In-
dia naf>OI is ... die-1 ndiana.P-ac~rs blew a
16-poant third·Pt'riod kad but ht'l~on
for a victOI')' over the Golden State
Warriors when Vern Flemin1 m
two free throws with six Sttonds ft .
Pl1teu H , Pl1tee1 U :.lnAichfield.
Ohio. Ron Harper 1eored 23 points
and the Cleveland Cavaliers made
thcar last 11 points from the free
throw line to beat the Drtroit Pistons.
The ()e, 1ls' victory was their first
at the Saddlcdomc since .1981. a
period an which tM)' had lost eiaht
pmn and tied one. Hermstacl gains:h onOr s ·
_ 8rwlll1 $, l a.aM•b S: In Oi-
caao. lcf\ •ina Randy Bumc:tae had
1wo aoals and two assists to lead the
Boston Bruin~ over tht' Ch1caao
Black hawks.
c...41eet $, Wuaen 4: In Mon-
treal. R)an Wahcrscottd a kc> &Oil at
7:S6 of the third period. aeadi"I the
Montreal Canadaens toa v1ctoryo\cr
the Hanford WhaJen.
The 1oal b) WaJttt -his 11th -came afttf Bobb) Smttb slt.ppcd h1m
a pau on a 2-on• I lnak. h provided
the Canad1cns wtth a S-3 mara1n •nd
thc:ir c\t'ntual w1nn1n1 pl.
·Tom Hcrmstad Jr .. a former Gold·
en WMt Collcae All-American wau~r
polo pla)cr. ""•II be honored 11 a
banquet WcdnC$da)' ht'lpina C
lkrkt'tcy to tht , dram-
p1onship.
The banquet honors ath~ttt from
hi&h schools. coll~ and dub!. for
prCKnt and pHt peiiormancn.
Hcrm5tad helped Lona Jkach
Wilson H~ to a 1tm1final bcrlh an
the CIF l}Offs his wnaor yc-ar '"
l98J ""h1 e umma Pft'P ~II-America
mcniton and th1rd-tc-am C'IF honon
He continued h" cam:r at Golden
West under his father and current
Golckn West Athletic Dirtttor Tom
Hermstad Sf. He helped the Rustlen
to the 1984 state championship and
n undtfeattd seuon while eam1n.g
.\ll&uth Coast and All-menca
honors.
At ~rkde) lh1s )~ar, ht--•s
Kltttt'd All-Plc-10. K"C'Ond team"'"· mmca. All-Tournament Sttond
team 1"4 the 1987 UC Bcr\ck)
quatl<'"SC'ho&er Ath~. ~ tt ftfttth.-
1n1 tus major in ~·nahropoloS)' and
Er\1)1~ and pt.ani to enter ar-duate . M'hool,
..
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1no1a na al lloalon. • 30 o m
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Secremenro al u ren 6 JO o rn
NBA IMden
SCottMG
Jorden. t 111(.eoo
lllrd. llo\lon
W1Mll11a, Alle111a
lltfl<ieY, F'ftlltdtlP<t
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McOa 11lel Seellle
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ASSISTS
Jefw!Mft, Ltlttn
SIDClll()fl, Utan
Porter. Portland
JaC.k\On, New Voro.
RIY•"· Atlt nle Tl\omt,, Ot 1ro11
H.,otr Ot llH
Cheek•. PT111a0t1Pf'1t
FIOvd, HOullon
MCMIRe n. S.tll1t
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31 »• .. eo 34S 86
41 l44 ••
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4) lSO t I
llecwd "" ,..,,
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1 Ntv•O•·LH Vega, It· I lot• •
l llrrona rn Voun9 I IS 0 1009 1
4 Dulle 13·1 1006 S
S T ""°" 16· I "9 6 6 Pur-ovt IM 906 1
1 Ol<ltl'IOm• 11· 1 Ill 10 I Norlll Ct ro"nt IS·l 171 l
t F'111Wu1gll IS·2 767 II
10 KenluC'v 14 l 611 9
II Mlcl\loan 17·) st? I
17 SY<ICVH IS·S SJ2 17
ll lowe IS·S 3t4 16
14 Georoetown 14 • • 361 IS
IS Vt not<0.11 1)·4 19~
16 lowe Stare 16·S0 211 It
17 l"ll'Ol1 14·6 1'3 13
11 llrt~v 13·2 17•
19 Ftorlot IS·S 161 14
20SI.~ 14·3 I ..
Ot11tfs r tctlvl"O YOltl KenH' S111e lClt,
Tut\·EI Puo 9S, Mlu our. 11. Wvomloo SI.
So.i"1trn Mlu lu lool u , New Me•iCP 31, Ar·
llt ll\H 30, 1.ovOle Cahf JO. Vl"enove 21.
lncltln~ 10; Norlll Ca roline Slele 17 ao1 .. Slttt
16, SOulll CeroHna 16, R!lodt Isla nd 10.
Evenw1t1e I, Georol• Tee.II ~. DtF'eul 6, Norrt
O•mt • Vir9inl• Ttcn J, Ar-•MH·Lllllt ltocl>.
7 Au1>urn 2, Mtmotll' Sta l• 2 Wnl Virginia
I
MAIA TOf' 10
I SI T Aoulll\ NV 1141
1 Ot vd Lo,cmo, T11 1•1
l A VO • Molltoorntrv I 11
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ltecwd "" ""' 2S· I 611 I
S William JtwtM, M I 31
6 Wav,,.l11vr9 F't
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17 Cnt rlflton, S C ll Ft Ht vs SI Kan
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IS Whc:ons>11·Ee"' C1t11e 16 Hewel1·H1lo
11 Ort90n Ttcn
11 Emoon t SI Ken
19 Ca meron, oi.ia
20 Wl'eonlln·Pleltt vllle
COLLEGE MEN
UCI U ·4, 10·1)
21·1 S'3 1
11·1 561 )
U ·l SlS l
11·0 S2S S
20-1 '62 1
11·1 •SI I
12·1 317 ' ••·1 319 9 19-l 316 I)
2S·• 796 14 14·) 21' 10
14·3 217 II
71·) , .. 17
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17·• IS9 It
10·4 ISi 17
IS·• 12' 16
IS·J " 20 14·3 n -
~ Nmv 61
" Mtnht llt n '3
.. "'--dil'lt " 1' Jectllonvil1t 76
tt towe 17• '° F'enn " t) ...... Orteens ti
100 UCLA 116
lit llrl(Jltv 1~
7t UC ·San•• a.~,.· II
ti Cal Stett Fullerton• 73
61 Ntvtda ·l.tl VHH" 103
17 u1111 S111t• 11
" s.11 JoM s1a1e· n
17 a l Pectflc' tO 61 11 Frfll!O s1111• 11
to Loni! lffcll Sltle" 100
" Hew Mt~lco s1111· ., Thun. F.ti 4 -UNI. v· lllOmtl
Sal F.O 6 -Cal Slt lt F~ton' (heln'W)
$11 F.O lJ -er Utall Siert• Cl )0)
1\1\of! Feo 1S -e t San JoM Sra re•
T~', F.O 11 -Fr•'no Slt le' (~I
$at . F.0 10 -1 Kiflc" (home) •
Tllun F.O 2S • a l New Me•ico St11t•
C6.l0l ..s.r.; .. eo-t7 -at L-hecfl Stefe.~
Sat . ""-'<" S -11 UC S.nl• a.r11era•
W9d •Sat. Mer f.11 -PCAA Tournaf'Nllf
ti !tie Forum
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Htne A~ ""'" lllffln 11 7.30 om . Uflfft1 llO!ed
SeCal c ..... (4-2. 9·111
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73 Polflt Loma Narar-· n So<Jrf'ltfn Cal Con.et'
.. WtSll'l'IOllr
6.S Ctirl•ll111 Htr'lt191
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" 111 ..
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Tut$. Feo 9 -Fr•MM> Pacific• CllOmtJ
Set , FtO 13 -SOutf'ltfn Cal (Ofte9t•
Cl\Omtl T~. F.O " -., F'oint Lome .... ,.,._.
Sat., Feo 10 -We•lmonr• lllOmel
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Stl , FtO 27 -et Aiult·Pac:lllc"
'dtAOln Golden Stell Atl'llllk COflltrefKt
Gtme
COLLEGE WOMEN UCI (5-4, 7-10)
61 SI JoM'\
64 COioreOo
60 Tues T K " ~ Ttff\Olt
64 .Montelle
.. Nortllwt\ll'fn
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61 NtYt dt 't.H VH ... 41 Cal s1e1t Futler1on• _ ._ __ _
4S S.n 01tQO S1a1e•
41 P•elfk ' 12 Hewe;!'
60 UC Sa1111 ll•t Dert' 41 FrHnO S111t•
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Tnur1 . Feo 2S -Sao Jolt S1a1e• lnomtl
Stl . FtO 27 -Frell'O S1111• (l'IOmt)
Thurs Maren l -t i NevlOt·ln V"9H •
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ntmtfll ,, Tne Forum (TllAI
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game
COMMUNITY COLLEG.£
<>ranee CNsf C2·J, 1 s-f'l>
SS Soulnwtll ... n 60 Mire (Olll
St F'1tom er
6'( • Mt San Ja<•n•o
69 Mora Colla
6'Mt s.in A111ont0 n S.n Olt90 ~• lit Eu r I.A
11 lm ot'>t l Val'tv
70 Ml San AnlO<hO
II Ca nto•
61 S.n Jo~
Sl Skvllnt
SJ Et Camino
90 Eu r LA
1• Wu~ LA
·~ LA Traot Tt<l1 16 S•" Ooeoo
Sl Soulnwu1ern
70 lmotr1at Val"'v
67 X OllSOt ll' I Ariz I
60 Soul"wt '*trn Sl (yor•u•
•t lftn<"O S.n1tago•
41 StO<lltoa<•<'
72 Rkl tr,1oe• n (•lru\•
S•• Ft o 6 -•I Cvoren'
S9
S2 so ..
•9 so so n ,,
47
66
" 64 n
" 101) n ..
97
SI ,.
SJ
S2
~
SI 61 s.
w.o Fto 10 -1• Rancno S.111 aoo•
Sal FtO I) -StooitOtC•. lt\Omtl
weo Feo 11 -a1 R1vtn10t•
Sat F.o 10 -C•lru\" lnomtl
S.• -weo ·Sal FM> 27 Ma(c71•1 Merell
-Soullle•ll Ct l-lorn11 R"9 one!' I TllA
Tllur' ·S.I MtrCll 1Cr 11 -!>•••• Tour
ntmtlll •' Sanft Ci.rt TBAI
.,,_..,,.""'•• '°:>f'•f'"9C E mo ·c co~'C'C ... tC o•m•
171
99
12
10?
61
9(, ,,
16
II
11
II
100
II
IOS
91
IOS
11
1• " 69
" 76 .,
II
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Fur LA
GWC Alymn1
S." O·~ Mesa
Pomor1a·P11zer JV
F'elomt r
Anreto~ Va!1tv
COlltoe of Stouo•H
Cilru\ "
Cvortt'
Como1on
coneoe 01 '"• Stouo•H Wt\I H1!11
Por1erv1ne
Co•lt04!. of ,,.. 0.s•"
Lower COlumOlt
Snow (Ult lll
Comoton• •
Ctrr110, •
Er c • ..-.,...,·
Pt\<10.N'
Ml San An1onio•
Lono Btacn •
Furi.r1on•
Comoto"·
·Weo Feb l -Cer"'°'' lllOfllt)
Sal J:t0 S -t i E Ct m.tlO"
Weo Feo 10 -ar Pauoena·
..
1• ,.
61
70
IS
IS to
ti
IS
IS
61 100 ,,
IOI
IOS
'3
91
79 .. ..
1S
1S
91 n
S.1 Feo fl -M l S.11 Anr-· lr.omt
Wf'd . FtO 11 -t i 1.0llQ lleec11'
S.t Ft0 10 -FuJ!erfOf'' C-l
"OtnolH Souln COH I COMtr-e o•mt
A 1 o•"'fl 0t9:n t i 1 30 om un1t1s noieo
MFt. draft W11tr
The order of ltl«tlofl for the """ •ouno ol !tie 1911 Netionel FootO.N I.Hout drt fl to t>t
ne!O ill Aorf1 24·2S In New Yor-
i A1r.n1a. 2 Dttroll, 3 K1nlt1 c 11v. •
Tamoa 81Y. S Cinc1M t ll, t. lteieln; 1 Grltfl
Bev I NY Jtt\, 9 Hous1or1 !from Ramil. 10 1't"-G1.ta1s
'I Ot ff•s. It SI I.OU••. ll Pllilede!Olllt 14.
llems <trom lluffalol, IS S.n 0'"9, 16 Mttml
11 New Enolafld. 11 P11!11>U1'9'I, 19 MIMflolt
10 ~·S.elllt
11. •am• llrom 1noltna001l1>. n Hou"on·
21 c1e .. tttno. 14 c111e.aoo. 2s Hew °''""' 1• San F r111C1.co. 27 0...Yer, 1t We"""'9ton
•·used I f'\l·rOUfld IHCll tfl ,..,..Dll"ten'al drt lt
lor Br1tt1 llo•wor111. llneelec1I~
o... ........
DAVEY'S LOCK•• (...._,, 9-dll -4 ooars •7 •neter• 57 llOllito, ue roe11 coci. J.J cellc.o t>tu. tot Mncl bau, > llflt eotld, 1
Ce0e10fl, 10 "'"""80. 4 teu191f\
.. EWf'OttT LA ...... -1 DMI. 11 ~
13 ltnd be». •1 Calleo NO. 6 llOflllo. 1 llelillut,
' lC\llOlll, 1 ~
....
C~ILL CCMW••11eca
Catu.ry
Eomon1C1<1
Winn P4t9 ""-Vt ncouvt r
~OM.w L T 3' IS 6
,. 17 1 n 12 1
11 ll s
16 '° 1
'"'"' DMtltll 0t1ro11
SI Lou"
C111caoo
M'-'ole Toronto
1• 19 • ~ 101 tn
?• 2l 5 SJ ltl 17' n 11 l 47 111 21•
16 ·•. • .ti) "' 724 IS 2t 9 Jt 1'6 l?l
WALES COH,EllEHCI
PlloltOtlPf"t W11n11191on
NY lllt llCll'f\
Ntw Jtoav
P1lhOurg11
NY ltanoer1
MofltrH I
&o"on
6ulf tlo
Ht rlforo
Outo.c
,,_lrld! OMtleft
16 10 6
2• 11 6
74 21 s
'1' 24 5
21 t) t
10 1S 6
AOtml OM"9ll
2t IS 10
lO 19 ~ n n 9
11 13 1
21 2S ) ~.,., ktrtt
Monlrtel S Kt rll0<d •
SI I.Du 1 S f~on10 •
a o"on s C11.ca90 l
N-Jt <HY s Ct 'llt fY •
TeflltM'1 CO.met
SI 116 ~ 17'
SJ 19S
SJ 113
SI 106 " I"
61 m 6S 101
SS 116 SI 160
4S 17S
K .... , Vt ncOtJYer 1 JS p m
WHll1ngtC1<1 t i F'lll\Durgn 4 l~ o m
6 uHelO •' QueOtc 4 lS o m
'" 162 Ito
197
212
It)
J!
161
llS
Ntw Vora. Rt"°'" 11 New Vorlt. llltnoe.-\
SOS om
-w....-r •G-v ancouvt r •' Klntl, 7 .lS o m
Montrtal t i Heriford, •.lS o m
OelrO'I ., Cn1ea90, s )S 0 m
SI Louis et Minnt lOlt . S.lS o m
Ca101r" al W1nnloeo, S.JS o m.
N•w Je"ev •I Edmonlon. 6 3S om
ltll LPGA scMdult
Fto 4·1 -Maroa C111s•c. Boe• Re1on. Flt
F•O 11· 14 -StralOlt 0.UIC S.rt Mllt
F1a
Feo 15·17 -><•••·••n Ltoit\ Ootn 0t11u. .... .,.
Maren )·6 -lt""1~t Ootfl Kt l.lt • Htwe"
Mt•c~ 11 10 -T...c1on Ootfl
Marc" 24 11' -Turouoolt Clts!>l<. "'-""
Marc" ll·Ao-1 J -Nt l><KO O>nan Snort
M•U IC)lt H.11, CC llanc"O Mirage
Aor 1 10 -Sin 0 ~ lnemor• Clt"IC
Slortl'R·oot CC
.t.or IS 11 -Ct~•·~• a Clau ic Rt N:llO
Par• C.C 1.01 ""Gt n
A.or, 21·7• S ... ncoasl OH '>< St P•lt•\Ourg Fie
Aor•• 19·Ml\I 1 -S1<a Lff Cle n lC NHll·
viii• Tenn ••
Mev 6·1 -Crt••t r Ctn,1<. Por"mou111 Va
Ma • I) IS -Cl'lrv\1tr·P1ymou11'1 Cles\11:
M dOltlO w n N J
May 19 n -1.F'C.A C11a..-.o.onsn1p, K1ng1
l\Jano Ot1·0
M•• 16 n --Cor11ir1g Cta n •c Corning, N v
Junt 2 s -To<too Clan<. T01e0o. On10
Junt · 9· 12 -ltocnultr lnlt•nt llOlltl, P ol·
1\loro N v ·
Ju11t 17 19 l adv it~,,~ ao...
Htr,11t • Pe
Junt 13 26 -M<Oon•·<n Cnemo>On'"'D
W1lm•n111on Oti
Jurt 30-Julv ) -Ou 111\tu• .. r C1anic
Coou•llt m Canaoa
Jul• 1 10 -Mavttower Ct•n oe lnoitnaPOll\
Ju•v U 17 -8o1•011;: •• CltU<.; Oanvttl
Man
Ju•v 11·'1• -US Wo,,,_..,' Oot'I Bel• mort
A..,g • 7 -Pa• Brao~• '"'t<'"t hone M•o"
Po.nl N C
Aug 11· 14 -Mt•ltrCaro lnltrnt hOllt
Wll•tt F'lt•lt\ N Y
AVO 19 21 -At ani.c C·•• C"n< Some<'
Po"' N J
AuO 1S· 1t -Ne"'t worro C11a m"'°"'" o
Ltlo.e l t ntt' i\taro\ C.t
Sto• l S -Rt ("'•' •• C en-c SDf•"111 tlO
'" Seo• 9· ll -Cfl'<J'a r Or>t ·P1"11 C.olf ("I"'·
o onv 110 F'0<tte'IO Or•
~01 IS 18 -Sa •tco C•an c Stt ltlf
Sfol 71·2S -!>an•a Ber1>1re ~"
Sto• JO Oc1 2 -S.n Jow Cltnoe
OcT 71 30 -N°<111re1 Lto'•\ Cu0 U S ·Ja oa11
Teem C11a mo-sn10 ''" TBA
Nov •·6 -Jt Dt ll (l•n lC, '"' Tl!IA Dec I 4 -JC Pe<v>tv Clt.ulc Lacoo Flt
.....
(el lnr-MMTi.tt H .... I
HEAVYWEIGHTS -M1lo.t WM e ll.Cl'IO
6HCl'll Ot'C OH COii• ... IL~ ""9tlell U
rouno unt r"mo"' OK•l•on for SltJe !Ille W"''"
' ...,,. ?O 6 COii tr 1 14·41
Mondav's tnn.uction1
&ASE SALL
AmtrtCt lll.M-
ANGE'l.S-S 911eo Oa~ Pt••v P••Cne• 10 •
Of'lt ., •• , CO,.,ff'ttC' A;rffO •o term\ -If\ J•C'
F mp t C.9'C"t ' ~"0 S"e nt Young enc Va"Ct
l.O•tltc• 0 '<"•" '" one· .... , CCl'llrt C" TEXAS R4NGEll~-Ag•tto •o ••rm,· w.I~
Jett Jlu\\~i o tc .. •r o,.,. a Ofl'• v-~•r con1r1ct
Nt~ll.H
OOOGElltS-S10"t0 .. ·-C.•O\Ofl ou•l•t!Otr
to e thrff vtar C~'"'•C'
PITT SBURC.11 PllltATES-S•gneo TO"•
Cllt "<• oull•t >ot • 10 • Qllt·v•ar cor,,,.c1 SAN FltANCISCO C.tANTS-.t.grtto 10
term • w•'" ·Jost U•Jlt '""'"'too. on • one v•ar contract ·
8ASt!.E TllAl.L
Nt"-1 Suit .... AsM<letiaft
llOS TON C El T tCS-Wi vtO Crl'Q
ce<>I••
,,
INOIANA P 4CE RS-Ac• ••'tO Scoff S' 11'\
ouero FOOTaAl.I.
......... , ....... l.Mtut
PtTTS8UltG>< SfEEl.ERS--Fe leO 10 °"er t
C<lf'l<tel 10 ll•v ~. Off"..,,"" lat:~ i'iil't
•1'9 ,.,.m • ftff 4ff~' -
ST I.OU•!> C A!fO•NAl.S-Nt~ De<>"''
Tf\urma11 °''""' •t \t<O"Ot'• co.<" HOCKIY
CANADIAN OL VMP•C TEAM-Aooeo r .....
w .11.,s °''"'"'"''" t no Merl•" Mt no .. ". !Ofwaro •o ltlt •o,•er
--...~t...-
NEW VOit~ it•NGE RS--lttct-.0 R<I"
OU9\le Y forwero Ito<"' COIO<too o• •lie 1 ... ier·
nthOflt l Hoc"' l ta9..t soc cu
Mefaf'......, s.cc:er I.Miii'
WICHITA WINGS-Named ff"rv N'C"Oi'
l'letO COtCI> cou.1G1
SOUTH CAltOl.INA-NtmtO A• G•O" t \1 \
11111 football C'OIC"
Orange Coast DAtLY PILOT /Tu.day, Febroary't;-1"8 + -
.
Prep ~asketball log ............ _
Ca.cMIA DI L MAii 112·9'
74 SM °"'*"I )t
NUWT-.TOll M ACM •I Ly-OOCI
Cl•IJI
SS MAT'I• HI C .... ,
SI Ne•-' HertlO< 19
2• .,
TilAeUCO ~ lll•t,
• $o C.afli0t1W C~1ll .. 11 to C P1em1Mldt 6' Hllflllll9!0ft ~ H n S.n11 .Al\e v ... ., '° S7 0.1\1 H•llt SS
1t '°''' Mftt " n I.CK A~ 61
5' £dl'°" 61 S.S \.._. M11t1 SI SO $olw)re »
60 LO\. Ar.f'flttO\ SI
Ii CorClfta di! ,,,.,
11 ,.., "'•"° .........
6.7 T1nhn
"El ~·
" Lt Qutn1e n TIA!lll
.71 El Toro
67 Lono 8etCll W1tton
10 Lo1 Alemlto. '
61 Softor•
" n to
1t
1t .. ..
11 .,
ll Le Qwtla JV
,, Lt °""'" SI Sedi9Mlac1'
70 TllOultllCI Oau 11 • 11 .... n. St. a.-tv Hilfl
41 Pt lt\tdt\
1' LO\ Alt tnllot
63 Mt<>O<'I. OfllO ' '3 Allen11< (11y. N ~
tl Of) SJ
4~ ..
SJ
6S
SI so
62 0-•flllt Lutl\lfan
• Hollvweod 17 Loi At\'1•90\
SS S.1111 Ant
'2 Mis~ V-
76 S.nle AM V•lle¥
tO Pomona 5' ,.,_
12 Volle Parll. '° l Ofl9 atem Jor oan SS
49 Edi'°" SO
SI """" 47
" c°''e ~ 6S EsltllC.te
~
7•
S4 ..
to
.. S• Nicl\olu T C)jt llllllt N Y
13 ll100P MoltlllOmetV"
so
SI
S4
S7
6S 60l11 Gr •ndt
)6 E ...... anu
'6 WOOd°''°" 64 4S Newoort Harw• 41
6 1 StddltOec k • Tl .ll E \tencJa• c
6S Glendale
" MJlli~&I\ fl Wfltmln,ter• so Fou111a1n v e1rev•
.. Ocffl\ V.lt•. '° 11
SS Cao1,1re.no V••ie"'
t6 SI Berna10•
M S1 P•ul'
S6 B1\l'IOP Am•!'
4J !lef VJl.9'
.. n
70
'3
'3 Dant Hilts
t.1 woooor.ooe·
67 Orange•
76 '°''• Melt"
SJ Marina' '
6l EOlton"
41 Tu,tln• 43
S6 un1 ..... ,"v' Sol 49 Newoor1 Her~· 43
n
Tl ., 61 ll•\llOP Montoorner • • ..
SI Ocean V•t.,
'1 LAUUOI &Q.CJ'I'
61 1.egune H'"'~
SO WoodO••d9t'
Feo >-•• Ore.not" F.O :>-s.oo110tc11 1-
FtO S-t t E"anc .. •
Feo IO-a1 Tu•11n•
Feo l2-Unlver,11v· ll'IOme1
'° Wt\lmltl11er·
Fto )-91 F°""lt '" VeJMv•
FtO S-tl Octal\ V•-·
F.O 10-M.arlnt' 1-)
Fto 11-Eoison• 1-1
•VNeE ( ll· 111
43 "O\emttd
SI Feo >-.1 S• ll••naro•
F fl) S--S1 Peut• 1 PIOmt I
Feo .-at Octe11 v ....
Feo 11)-e• ll1\f100 Ame•·
Fto 12-•t W• 1e·.
Feo s-<osra Mtu• <~>
Ft O 10-1.eGunt 8ee<:ll" (toomel
F "' It-a 1 1.tllUllt Hllls'
TUSTIN I ll·ll
" l.tGunt 6ttC11 GOUA MISA 0 ·14)
1• Ella"llOWtr
5' Meter Del JV
6) S.1111100
61 Coron• Ml Mer " '"" .... S1 ICtflMOv 5' Man na
6S Eooewooo
.. Ot N H1N'
St Vt ""<ll
9' El Mooen1 so Mertnt
" UntYtf1tlV
SS Co"• Mn•
61 Wt\ltrn ~ Long 8ttell w \O'I n S.•tnl\I
.. w.trM
NEW~T H~R904t
79 Ma•er De
6 1 ~II Mer(O\ '° G....,... et Melt< 0t J./
.. v • "'" 56 E Y40tf>• 5' EKOll0-00 '° s.11 c-·•t .. !>a" o.~ .. •o
S7 LU "tot\
Cll·fl
SI :n -.. u
SS
'1
I t IC.elt~• s• we """ eo Hullt 1191<><' e.ecn
6) !>ti" Fr t nc>KD \.JllCC)lrl
S1 lttlelle
.. Hvl\l111QIOI' Be.ell se Foom.
'I ~•"<"<> A••""'o'
$1 I.• St•"t
11 °"' • l'lO
14 Hunt1119ton lleac11
62 l.tOunt Kl~' eo E 11111<1t 4' Newoort Hari:,..,
SJ L._• lleacr·
60 WOOdl>r 100t •
41' Eo.'°"
SS Cvo-en
S9 l.O\ Alt..-.•IOS
J 4'
ll
IOI! 61
61
SI
3'
11
.0
l •
le
d
t0 S..f'\ ~'•"""' K -.i Y. A'ttr
S6 EH • &••••s•e~
o• .0
43
4.J ..
S7
4~
•7 ~tlfl
10 I.• F'...., ••
6S V·lt Par.
•1 Foo1n.1
6' Trt Ou<O H1I"'
60 1.ag.una H•U\"
6S OrtllUt"
SS l.aguna BH<"'
Fto :>-.1 WoodO-•ooe·
Feo S-1• Trellu<o K•lts•
FeD l~eoune H•t1••
Feo 11-a 1 Oran~·
EDISON I ll·tl
SI 1.ono 8Hcn F'o•~
JS l.tllt wood
6S Str,,11e
71 l.01 Altm••Ol '1 C or or\I Otl M,ar
)7 o ..... "4111\'
61 Sall Cttmentt•
)7 Ceo.llrtno Ve11tv•
67 61 Toro•
)9 M n lOn Vteto'
SS 0 1nt Hi•s•
SI APC>t ve h
d LO\ >-,.... Q s
• Ort " •
5' (0\'6 Y•~ •I CorO"t :a ,.,..,. n e, •• ,,, •.
$' ~" "'t f'\ ,,...
SA S•oot!>I<•'
Fto >-Ct e><•l•eno v a11ev·
F•O S-t l $tA Ciemen1e•
Feo 10--•• MtnlO<I v~io·
~ 11 T ""'' ~· • U C:otona o. Mt•·
FtO 12-EI Toro• (l'IOtntl
LAGUNA aEACH 11-111
SO Tuslin
l'eo l-E•'•" ••' •·ome F@o > •t Un ,,.,,,1,"•
F eo '0-t• S..oc•eoac • •
76 '" ee 11-T ~\I "" 'IOMt
11
lS
)9 ..
4S
" i1
6S
l7
4t
.. E• '<•t'
~ Un•Ytr\11¥"
6t ~·· '3 C0<0t1• ~ Ma r•
31 Newoori Ht rooi"
•1 E1••nc1••
Fto )-ti un vtr\••~·
F eo S--S.OOltO.C•. I llOmf I
SJ ,,
Sl • ;;,
F et> IC>-Corona -Mar• (llOmtl Feo 11-1• Nt..,oorf Ht f"OOr'
UNIVEllSITY (t · 11)
63 M.rt lfl•t
6' Mlltlo.en
40 Fou111a in v aoe v
5'
76
63
S7 ..
SI
~
64 w nmler
S6 OeN Hiiis
~ LvnwOOCI
s.
SI St ., OCEAH VIEW 111·71 ~) S•• Lw•\ Oo \OQ n
d
)9
'2 ...
11 n .. .. .. eo
10
eCI ~ .,
•1 Lt Ou•ntt n 1..a Ou•nta J
1S 1.0~ ll1<11•>tlO\ S7 Ct oillr ano v •lltv
•1 Coron. del Mar
74 Ct oi"rano Valley
SJ S.nlt A,,.
60 Ktnlll'OY
SO E ''•l'<•t 4' l(YtM
SS Long 8t1cn W••M>n
41 S.vanna
64 C10.11rano Val,.. (M•sllt n n Mtonot1• 37 Santa Bt<Otr a
'3 Carolfl1t1"•
13
5'
" 16
6S C•tto
SS 6urtOJQ"\
.0 "Ote•OOC
.. LO\ A e m •O\
69 Nt\tC"t\tt•
71 L0"9 6HC" "~ • .., ,.,. ,. "•
64 Laguna Holl\
•1 if'"W•~
S7 P1r1moun1
S6 "''"'°" v-Sf Laouna H• 11
S6 M.e•tnt
n Miu .on Y1t.o
SO Corona ~ Mar
IOI) n
61
S9
41
41 ..
" so
u S.11 Marc°'
'1 Saooltoec•
SI Ctn'f<l'I
37
II .. ..
SJ
5'
SI .,
S7 II• 0..11"'0' R •~-O" "' C 16 Ouo• ~'(I' 01
IC! I. . 6tt<r Po ,
... c "81'dlt1 A• l I CtnYO" ()el Oro Tu<M>n
6~ T-Ariz 4' l.OllQ lleKll W1IM1n
SO MarlN'
64 WHlm1n,1er'
~ Foun1a •n Va• .. •'
41 0cH ll V tw•
69 Hunl•nQICl'I IHt <f'"
66 ~r1na•
F.o >-•• wntm.n,,.,.
·o
70
" " .. ...
.. Col.It Mell'
.. LIOU"I H l'l"
61 Ot'•"Ot'
SO Traouco H "' • s2 woooo-:~·
~ co,•• Mew"
Fto l-t • Lag~ .. \'
Fto s-<>rtt>Qe" ...,...,.
7•
SS
... ~1>$'1 . 1/6 ,.,.
6J ,.., ••••• n ....... , no•or S..t ••
61 EolD<'" tJ ,,y,,,.., .,,., •.
S7 FO-."'• • lie t •"
" Yltft" De "'° >-•· ...........
" ..
SI
... Sant• AN Valre'f'
~ F'OOll1•
S7 Stoo_c.,•
) Tu,1 !'"
~z ,_.e•oor1 Haf"OOt •
SO Es""< a· • ~ CMona oe Mt,. .. ~. Feo ~ou1111m Vt lltY" l'IO<'llt)
Feo ro-oc"" v.... 1-1 Fto 11)-at Trao...co ,... 111.•
Fto 12-at woocsor-·
LAGUNA HILLS ( ll·tl
Ft o s--.. .,,., ~IO" &«ac,.·
l'to :>-Tusl ll"· _,
~ t o 5---Newoort H t f'bO< • llOn'lt I
i:eo 10-.• E1te11C•t " F to 17-11 Hunl1'1QIOI' 6ttCP."
ESTANCIA 112·10)
.. Mtvit lF
Sl LO\ Alt rnrlO\
.. !.tocnao.CJI.
10 ao.11 Gr t llM S. l4 )t FuatrtO" 60
49 71 C.t rlltf' G•o•t • t
Sf 6S Un • .,, '• ...
J:to 11>-t • Eo '°""
F.o 17-a• w'Vtt'"'"''t"" "'•o i-.1 Corona dti Mar'
WESTIWNSTEll < ll· 10)
Sl M~r, S••.,. o. ~. (forltlll 2
10 Ntt11tPO.,.~ (,.,.,. \t 6n • 0 E Moora lorlt1•) 1
" 64 Gar tv 62
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WU>HaSOAY'S INT'llllS
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117
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16 0 11teren1 Peet F'eoroza I Ill
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4 "'"' olO\ & uD (<41•"' ng o• Cl' SJ1 000 ti 000
I Nord•Cu\ ~Jt llS
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10 Go_.-6Hw G•vOt' ? • 107
11 S."900 0. t "OU\llvt! llS
12 Miu 'Ae40C' II IC., i \
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7 Tao vour Toes P.1>C1v• 116 I Pe•~ ~ P.oor•u 1Grvoarl llt
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Los Alamitos harness racing en tries1
The
Dally
Piiot
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COLDWeLL
BANl(eRO
759-9100
---~ -. . . .
IHlllWIPIMIT1 We'll give you 1h41 down In
exchg for a share of own-
ership You make tl"le
mtl'lly pymts & we share
apprec You receive
100% tax 1>enef1ts Mvs1
nave cleal'l credit Agt
497 -875 7 Dys Ev Wknds
12111: Oulci< to
crochet cozy afgh~
1n shefl and rib
Stitches. Use three
eotofW ~ we.ght
tor afghan about
59x67'.ltmalilela
gfMtgift •
Off-~R 0000 lliAU I> JUNE JO. ,.
It , Eed't ,-nll.25 ..
• 1100 PIH ..... ............ ..... Clllll .___ c..
PMt N9n'9 AOdrea
le> Sile Paftlfn Hurn-
-(NYJUJ11111-.-
...... fM)
let U1 Ilea, YH
Sell Y.. Pr.,.,tyl
C• Cla1111W,
'42-5671
tor information
& surprisingly
low cost.
•
FROM NORTH ORANGE
FROM SOUTH ORANGE
H••rt
Ad(llU\
C•IY
St4't~
~ ARRIC ANO LEA THER FRAMES
•UllO i11111c f1a111ii""'"S4 "S m page calal()Q SJ~
1P•ct111'"0 700 wooowo1~1no
illll'I l'lanO•Cftlft OIOtKISI
{
--4 lines 7 days-
Prw••• ~ °"" No AMI • I 0 8 I E••···· eomn.rcw. Auto-
• motive, eo.tinO, 0( ~
Wented.
associated ... ·. .. .. ., .
.. p ''"'·. />;
associated
"" ,,t, ~· .. ,. '4 t' r)o(
.. ,'\ t-'-1lfJiu..•. -
......
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. •
as5 ociated
'-... .. ,
lu Cltatalt 2'71
XttfUcTIVE. ciMn large
2Br. 28a. new cpt1, laun·
dry, enci gar S750-Sn5
*'92·1699•
Orange Coa1t OAILV PllOTITUl!ldl)'. FebNMY z , .. .. ., ...
f
--····· ........ ..-............................... , ... .. ..... -. .................. JI? MIPIJMlll ......... *1111J,......toe.-.•t1.1
•ti .. •1 Jll • Ct9 81 ._._el CFFI -.... L IS DU ..... DllWtal No. ae ol .. INfte --_ .,,_.. ............................... "°"" ............. _ .. Qllrtat .,..,,11111•1 ' ..
........ =1•?1#11 ...... ol .. lnlprOUPIFlllllrtdln ........ ol ........ ...
......... • .... ..,.. ....... lft .. praplllMb•••-........ In .. ,.......,_ ............ _... "°"' 111 I Aeftll IO ........... ool9Ctlcl ~ thielr uPon .. .....,. ..
........... oe.tct. ; ,,. ........... .,...,... ... ,...Of , ... not to.oeectW.-.percant (12%)Pet entun .... ~
!llW°',..._11eobe ~111 nwledupon .,. ......... .
,,. .......... tM .-:tlon "*' be In ... torM pceactfMd by ~ 3510I of thew ... Coda of
IN S... of CelfoMla.
en u. e.aoc. to be uaed et tt1e .e.ctlon, In addition to 8"Y °"* ,,_._. ~ by teuu ttwe lhel be
ptlnted aubetan~ the follOwllig; ' I
Ol'PICtAL UUOT
WVWT •TNCT MO ... OF .W. UNCH WATD DteTNCT
INCIAL llOND SUCTION
lllARCM1, -
..
To vote, ttemP a ~oeie (+)In the~ equare 9fter the word "YES" OI efter the WOtd "NO". All mat't(t
oUlenMe made .,.. forbidden. All «*tlngulaNng "'*"' ere forbidden end "*t• the beMot '<I06d.
"the uutong1y ~. tMf, or deface um bellot, return It to the Aeglltrer of Voter• end obtaif'l lln<>thar.
BOND PAOPOSmON: SNlt the !Mrw"-'dt Waterf>ls1rlct Incur en
lndebtedneea end l.aue generel obllgetlon bonds tor lmprowment
Dt9trlct No. 2&4 theree>f In the amount of $92,580.000 et• madmum
lnter•t rate of twelve ~· (12%) per ennum, to acquire end
conatruct work• end fecllltlee tor the colectlon, t,...trnent end dtspoeal
of .._. end' the atorage end distribution of redWned weter,
lndudlnQ cMma. reeervolrl, ltorage tenb, treetment tecllfU... plpee,
pumpng equipment end llll•leCUlry ~I end property !her•
tor, ecqUlrlng funds to futftll eontrectuel comtNtment• to eerry out the
~ end pufl)OMe of the t>lttrlct contelned In contrecta. lndudlng
convects wtth other egetldee. 1111 In ecc:otdance with t.he Plan of W()(t(a
tor lmprO¥ement Olatric:t No. 2&4?
YES
NO
I
.
a.Iota muet t>e received by 5 00 p.m .. on ~Ion dey, either et the Office of the Registrar of Orenge
County, 1300 Souttl Grand Avenue. Sent• Ana. Celltornla. or et P 0 . Bo11 11298, Santa Ana. Calllornl•.
92711. .
Seid Improvement Oiatrlct atieJI oonatltut• • single ei.ctlon precinct for the purPQM of holding the
llleetlOn. .
To be ~lfled u a voter end to be entitled to vo .. et the el«:tlon, a pereon musl be a holder of title,
.. deftned In SectlOn 3402e of the Weter Cade of the St.et• of C.llfornla. to lend in t~ lmpr~t
Olatrlct. Eec:ti voter Shall neve one ( 1) vote for MCt'I dollw'1 worth ot lend to wf'llCtl he or she holds 1111e. The
lelt equelcad -..rnenl ~ ol lhe 011trtct Is conduel¥9 ~of ownership and of the velue of the
land eo owned •xcec>t that In the event en u11 1re11t tor the Otstrk:1 an.II not have bMf'I mede and leVled
tor the yw In wNch the elee11on II held, the lut ~lelnd .....ament roll of the County of Orenge IS
conduatv9 aY!cMI~ ot ~ end ol the veiue of lend so owned. Every _,,er, or tus legal
1'9C)reMnlettve, mey .vote el1her n peraon or by a per-son dJty appointed u his pro11y. "Legel
repteeentat!w" muns en otftclel of • corporetlon owning i.nd, and ~• • guerdian, e11eeutor or
edmlnitpretor of the •t•te of the holcMr of lltl• to lend wtlo: (a) la appointed under lhe lews of ttll1 State.
(bl la entl\ted to pouesalon ot the •tete'1 lend; end (c) 11 euttlotized by the eppclntlng court to Hetclse
the partleuler right, privilege or Immunity which he ..-s to exerclae. Before a legal representellve may
vote et the ei.ctlon. he must preeent to lhe Board of Election• certified copy ol said authonly. whlCh shell
be kepi end flied within the r9tuma of the election.
-' No aippointment of a pro11y thell be velld. ecc:epted, or• vote ellowed thereon unless 1t meets ell of the to11owin9 requil'ementa; (•) It la In wrttlng; (b) 11 ls execvted by the person or tegeJ representative of the
~ wtlo, In eceordence with the pr.DY1alon1 of Section 35003 or 35003 1 of the Weter Code of the Stete
of Caifornia. la entitled to the vot• for wtlich the proJCY Is given. (c) II is ecilnowiedged or oert1f~ 1n
eocordelloe With Section 2015.5 ol the Code of Civil Pr~ure of the State of Cal1lomie: (d) II specifies the
llleetlOn et wtllct\ It Is 10 be UMd and Is UMd only et the election spec1fl9d. and (e) rt shell be on a form es
epeclfled by the County CleB rnMtlng the abOve requlrementa.
Evwy appointment of a proxy la a revoceble at the pleasure of lhe person executint 11 al any ftme before
the person eppclnted u proxy ahell heve ce1t • bellot representing lhe votes for wtuch the appointment
••given.
If two-thirds {213) of the votei cut et tl'ie elect Ion fevor the Issuance of th,e herein desert bed bonds, said
bond• ltl.il be laued and eold tor the purpoae set forth herein ..
. Exe.pt• otherwiM prOVided In the Callfornla Water Oiltrle1 Law. OMslon 13 of lhe Water Code of the
Stet• of Callfornle. the election Shell be called. held and conducted 1n the manner provided 1n the Uniform
06atrlct EJection L.-w ol the Stele ol Celltornle
Thia notice It given pur1tient to e resolution of the Board of Directors ot Irvine Ranch Water 0.sUJCt
lld09ted on January 25. 1988
NOTICI e HIM9Y 9IWN .... •-llllllan ._ ._....,.,.. .. M 111111 °" .. t11 -o1 --. .._..,. ...... .,...._1n•m1PnJ--..111111anwtu .. 1f......,to.._,1Mt1.1
ol ... m.allOM Code ol .. IW fl C!ITI -......... 0....., Dll1rtll No. ..... nine ......
•-DllWtal far .. .....,... ol ....,.•to .. vollra Of tM ••wil llalrlal "9 pr1111•1n ol ....._.,,.....,..111•11111n .... ., .. 1n1pro....., D111rt1111t .......... t1.t01.a..,..._ ......... ...., ... ._..,._.....,1n .. pra11n•1 ,.., • .,.. ... ..., ........ ....., ..... ...... .... ,_ ,_..... "°"' ft II I n•:la to be ........ C fllleo'9d ~upon IMde.....,. ..
.......... Dellrtat .
\ n. belr:dl--............ ,... Of,.. not to 9leieed..,,. perceM (1~) per"""""· .... actual *'*of.,..,.,... .. to bed••• --upon ..........
n.....,.. YMd .... .-:tton --be In the torm pi~ by Section 3610I ol tM w .. Code ol
........ of CelfornAa. •
On._ bel1ote 10be1-.d M the electtoft, In addlUon to af1Y °"* metter'a required by i. there etwl be
printed aubetendally lhe fotlowli 19!
~WJT •TNCT MO. -OP lltw. MNCH WA'8 •TllCT
... cw. llOND .. cno.
~1.-
To vo .. , aternp e c:roee (+)In the voting equare...., the word "YES"°' 9fter tfle WO<d "NO", AM menta °"* .... made .,. tortMdden. All dlltlnguWl!ng "'*"' .. fOtbldden end "'*'• the beloC '<I06d.
K the wront;/ ~.teer,°' defece ttll8 bal!Qt. return It to the Aegletrer of Vot ... end obteln enother.
BONOPAOPOSITION: SMll the lfw. RWldl Wet• Olttrlct 1nc:ur tn-
inc*>tedneu end IMUe gener .. obligation ~ tor Improvement
• Olttrlct No. 212 ttiereot In the emount of $51, 101,000 et • maximum
Int• ... r••• of ~ percent ( 1~> per annum, to acquire and
oonatruct worka end facllttlee tor the cotlectlOn, tf'Mtment end diepoul
of eewege end the atMage end d191rlbutlon of redelmed water,
lnctudtng dama, reeervon. atorage taM•. tteatment 1ec11t•. p1pee,
putnpng equipment end ell MC 111 I ry equipment end property that•
tor. acqulf1ng funda to futM eontracw.I comrnftm.nta to e.ry out the
powers end ~ of the bt.tr1c:t eontelned In contrec:ts, lndudtng
contrecta with other agendee . .i 1n accordence with the ,..,.. of WOftla
tor lmpfCJYement District No. 212'7
YES
NO
-
'
Bellott muet be recelYed by 5:00 p.m .. on -.C:tlon <Sey, •ttw at the Offloe of the Aegietrer of Orange
County, 1300 Souttl Grand Avenue, Sante Ana, Calltomla, ot et P.O. Box 11298, Senta Ane. Celifornie,
92711. . .
Said Improvement Olatrle1 ahell c:onetltute a tingle .-C:tlon precinct for the purpoee of holding the
.-C:tlon.
To be quellfled • • yoter end tq be entitled to vote et the llleetlon, •person mutt be• tl<*Mr of title,
• defined In Section 34Q2f of the Wal• Code of the Stete Qf Celttomla, to land In tn, lmc>fO'fefMnl
Olatrk:1. Each voter atlall hM one(1)vot• tor MCt'I doller'1 worth of lend towtMch he or the h<Mde tltte. Th9
lut equellad WTent bOok of the '*tric:t la eondual"9 evldela of owneraNp end of the velue of the
lend ao owned except ltlet In the ewnt en 111111 rrent tor the Otltrlct .,.... not have beerl m6de end levied
for the yeer In which the llleetlon le l'ietd, the lat ~ •1111 •••• rotl of the County of Orenge la
conciuaive ~ of OWfWWWp end of the v.iu. of lend eo owned. Every voter, "' Ml 6egel
rept.-nletiW. m.-, vote either In pereon or by a pereon duty llC)pC)inteci, .. Ml proxy. "legal
repreeentetlve" meena en oftlcW of • eorporetlon owning lend, end means l guerdien. executor or
lldmlnlstretor of the •t•I• of the holcMr of title to land wtlo: (•I le appointed under the I.a ot thla St•t•:
(b) Is erttltled to po....aion of the ... ate'a lend; end (c) la euthorlled by the' appointing court to exerclM
the pertlcular right, prlvllege or Immunity wtilett he ..-e to e1eerclM. Before • legel repr-.ntettve mey
vote at the fleetlon. he muat_pr-.nt to the Boerd of Election• certified copy of Mid euthorlty, wtilett ltlell
be kepi end flied within the return• of the llleetlOn. a
No eppolntment ol e proxy ltlell be valkl, eccepted, or• vote allowed thereon unleu It meet• ell of the
following requlrementa: (•) It la In' writing; (b) It la exeooted by the person or legal rept...,..tellve of lhe
person Who, In ~d•nce with the provisions of Sectlon-35003 or 35003. t of the Weter Code Of the StJt•
of Cellfornl&, 11 erttltled to the vol• for wf'llCtl the proxy la given; (c) It la dnowl1dged or 0«11fted In .
eccordenc• with Section 2015.5 of the Code of CMI Procedure of the Stat• of Celtfpmla; (d) It tpecfflee the
election at wtlictl II ls to be uMd end la UMd only et the election apedfled; end(•) It lhell be on• form u
specified by the Cou.nty CleB meeting the ebove requirement•.
Evwy eppolntment of• proxy II• revoceb6e et the ~r• ol the person executing It et eny lime before
the PlfSOO appointed u proxy Shell heve cut• batlOt repreaentlng the v.otea tor wtlk:ll.the appointment
was given
If two-th1rds (213 ) otthe vot• cat at the ektct'°" favor the luuaince ot fhe twtiehi' deKTit>ed ~d1, N6d
bonds shell be tssueo and sold lor the purpose Mt forth hef'ein.
Except u otherWIM provided In the Cellfornle Wetet Olatrlct Lew. Olvll'°'1 13 of the Weter Code of the
Stet• of California. the eeectlon ltlall be Called, held end conducted In the menner provtcted In tt)e tl,nltorm
Oistrk:1 Election Lew of the Stet• ol Calffornla.
This notice Is given pursuant to a rnolullon -of the Board of OirectOf'S ~f Irvine Rench WatefDiStrlct
edopted on JenU9ry 25. 1988
•. .. ........... . ---~ ,. "' .. ·= It' ra: .. =.:.:mr--...=. .. -=:::.. ~ .. ....... _..... ... Dllll-811,,.,,,..., '· •• .., ....................
...... UNllr ... """ WTllO .... Gii w.rtlllr I ,....._, ___ _... ____ _
.. ., .. , Laa Alloft......... __ ,,,. ~
~CA: ... ,• T .. 1-~r--.;;m;;;m,,.i!!!I"'!~~~~ "°9d. II fOfO, CA: .,... a..-a ..-
M"7 C.... ......_,DIM IMEIR IW
ftoMC. CA.,,_. llrutzell --.....,.._ • Gii... "ANOWWCSCWT~ ....., ao. "'1 ~ .......... CITY Of MUNTINGTOH
--. JolWI H. Mwtlllr ~ A ..... THI .,... o.y 0. n... ,_. ON llACM MU-
IM tole ~ to Ml MCWAL COOE IY AMIHO-
pel1Nltllp ...... ~ ... INGllCTIONU4,• AHO .................... tlw ADDING MC1lON UdlO per;w.,lfttp, oollct ... ,. MLAllNO TO PUkJC U-cewe•~,.,......IO BA.ARY --CHNIAAL ............. perform •• ~ ..
lltlnQ eoftelecta. .,... eol In IYWM: Ofdtnenc•
f//ff'/ INIWt9f MCI 111 >; to No. 2t2I lfMIMll tM Hunt•
wlr.s Mii ...... of IN lntlOfl lellCfl .. Uftlclpel
pet11•1fttp. Code ..... to ... u-~ 0nnee C.. brery 9oetd to -llftno II Into
o.ly Piiot FebNlfv 2. 1... COl'lformeno• wMI the olty
TON CfMd •Mi Plhell 099'el-1---------Int Po"°Y '°' ecttteory MUC ll)TIC( I lroups -... fofttl In .2. 100.0IO .. ... Hunt-
" ~ lnttOfl IMCll Munlclpel II ID I 0.. <:Ode. Seid ordlnelice ,. -tcnAaall ilUlllCIA&.) move• ttl• prevloua
NOTICE TO-OEflNOANT: ~ llloWlftg Ubr8'Y (A-Mo e Acueedol CARLOS d ....,..., ..itll tM
S A N 0 0 V A L , C I A City Councll't coneent, IO PROOtJCE, ANO' DOES I llt"9 en Qnll'nMd ~
ltWOUQh lt. lnduetwe of terme.
YOO ARE BEINO SUED THE FUlL TEXT Of THE
BY PlAJNTlff: (A Ud. le•• ON>IHANCE IS AVAILABLI!
dlmendendol AVA RUHA IN THI! CITY CLEM'S Of·
CORPORATION. dbe FICE MOTHER'S MARKET I AOOPTl!O ~ ttle City
KITCHIN Counc1 ol tN Qty ol turt-
Y•..,. • CAUM>Nt lngton 8Mdl •en r9QUlar
DA'n -----•1 • ~MICIMonder,,,.,_,.. ......... ,.. ..... ety11 ..... byttle~
tJpOoull .... 111' 1111 .. roll celtvoee: ... ...,._ AYES: CouncllrMn; Kelly, A....,•,._. ..... Orffn, Flni.y, .Erallln•. _. ....... ,._ ,._ .,.._ Meys. Wlncl'lell, 8ennlMer ....._,.,,I,_ ........ NOES:~None
In ,,..., ..... .._ W ,.. ABSENT: Councilmen: ................. ,..None
-. CITY 0. HUN'TltclT091
W ,_ .. _. .. ,._II.ACM, Allele II.
'11, lllM -...... ,.. .............. CllJ Clerti .... ... ..... ... ,.. PublleNd Orenge Coell
...... ...., ... ,,. Deily Plot Februery 2, 1MI ..,.., • ...._..... T04t ,_.., ..... ...... .. ----~--~--..... n.r. .......... ,. •u••tl v • ..,.-:.:::: =-=~= CRAIN ,,__, ... _.. NEST CRAIN. age
....,_,,...,.. ..,,,... er 84. passed away at his • ..... * ..._ (IMM "' residence at Newport -:,r.:::. "::'~ ... _. Beach. January 28, =-: ............ tit-1 1988. Mr. Crain was ••=c~: born January 1, 1904.
,.,. ~r•e•"'., .,.. Lawton, Oklahoma.
,. ,, u ut. ...,... • ... After teaching at pub-
.-.• .... oerte. be 9Chools and col-
11:';'9 .::'9 ,.! ':-== leges in Oklah~. he
,,. sin all n; • n '" nit served as a CaAirpt.aCoJn an
...-• .....-. ........ the Army rp.
c••111Hr ._.. IH ••r· during W .W lL giving
••11.••••e ••t•l•e pre-fliaht instruc-...,,,,,,11 • _......,. •. o ...
... le oette ....-. w tions to the pilou at
..... Santa Ana Army Air
11 _... M ,,_.. w Base. Mr. Crain a rup1111t• ........ ,.... . . ,..., ....... , .. ,_..,. res1den,t o.r Newp<>rt ...., .. ......,w...,. Harbor area· since
r ••1•• ••e•• • e• 1942, relJred after a
llf1•11 ••• 9"' ..._ .._ leach ing career of .... ,.,,... ...........
1--l ... _._,..._~ 1 rt r rJl9re than 33 years
........ ,.... ... ...., Crom Ranch o San
....,......., • .,...._. Joaqutn CoUeae (for-11 "'1.................... " ece • .,. _. a••• ,_.. merly Santa Ana Col-lhttJ "-Wheelef, S.C:retarr 9-ttf J. Wheelef, hc.fftarJ ....., e.,...,...; •ref-lege) in 1966. Whjle at
Publltn.d Or•,.,.. Cout Delly Piiot February 2. 9, 16,. 23. 1988 . T054 PubU-.._,. Or•nna Cout Delly Piiot Febfuery 2. 9, 16. 23. 1988 TOS3 .,...... • '* 1 •1 •11 • • the cottege he re--...-....... -...-_.. ........ _,.... ...... ed . I ----------------..,....----------------.,.-----------------....---~------------+-----------.;;...----..-....;...--------...;...----+-----------------+-----------------c.,.. ~ ..,._..,.. lefe.-ce1v nalJona recog-P\BJC NOTICE P\B.IC NOTICE P\B.IC NOTICE P\B.tC NOTICE • NI.IC NOTICE P\8.IC NOTICE NI.IC NOTICE PlllJC NOTICE ...._,. nation from the Free-----------------1--------------------------------i C...Ne. dom Foundation of
NOTICE Of.ELECTION
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN theta ~el election has t>eeri called end wtll be held on the 1st day ot
Merch 1988 wtiictl electlon anaH be en ellsmelled tMlllof electlOn conducted pursuent to Section 23511 t
of the Ei.ctiOns Code of the Stet• of Celllornla. within 1mP<oYemetlt District No t82 of the Irvine Rench
Weter Disttk:1 lor the purpoee of SYbmlttlng to the votets of the Improvement 0111r1ct the propos1tt0n of
uun.ttw or not generel obllgetlon bond• ol lhe Improvement Oiltrk:1 In the amount of $74,653.000 shell be
euthortud end !Aued,"for the purpoM tteted in the ·propotition hereinetter _. fOtttl In this notice. which
bonds ahell be peyeble from a.....,-nents to be lev.ied a'nd collected e11etuslvely upcn lands within the
lmproYerTMtnt District.
The bonds thall beef lnt4'1'est et a rete or retes not to exceed twelve percent ( 12¥.1 per annurn. the ectu11
U'™9a of payment to be determined upon the sate thereof
The ballota uMd at the election Shall be In the form prescribed by Section 35106 ol the Water Code ot
the Stete of Celitornia. '
On the ballots to be uMd et the e1ec11on. in eddltJon to any other matters r1<1u1red by law there shall be
printed sub1tentielly the follOwlng
OffflCIAL aAUOT
tMPttOW•NT DtSTMCT N0.112 Off
IRV .. "ANCH WATE" DtSTNCT
8"CIAL aONO fLECTION
M•RCH 1, 1-
To vote. atemp • croM (·I In the voting square after the 'llWOfd "YES" or etter the word "NO" Att rnarks
otherw!M rnede are forbidden. All dl1tlngulsh1ng rnerks are forbidden and make the ballot void
K the wrongly mar1t. tear, or defac. thll bellOt. return 1t to the Reglatrer of Voters and obtain another
BOHO PROPOSITION. Shall the Irvine R.anc:h Water District 1ncu~ en
Indebtedness end •sM generel obllgetlon bonds tor lmpr~t
otetrlct No 182 thereof In the amount of $7'.653,000 et a maximum
Int« ... ret• ol twelve perC41f'tl (1~1.) per ennum. to ecqulre end
c:onatruet works .net tecillllet for the ec:qu1S1tton, collect~atorege
end dlatrlbutlon of weter end weter rights, to .,,able the lrvlne Rench
Weter Oittrlct 10 utilize •water supp~ furnished under lhe St91• Weier
Reeourcee Development System (commonly known u the "Stele
Weter Projeet"l, Including dema. reeervotrs. storege tenka, trMtment
fecllltlet. pipes, pumping equipment and ell neceuery equipment end
properly therefor. ecquirlng fund• to fulfill contrectu•I commltmenta to
c.rry out the P<>W9fS and purposes of the Distrk:1 cont•lned In
contrecte. lnciudlng contract• with other egenclee. ell In eccordenc:e . wttn the Plan of Works for Improvement Olttrlcl No 182?
-
NO
Bellot• mutt be ~ved by 5 00 p m . qn election dey, either at the Office of the Reg1atr1r of Orenge
County, t300 South Grand Avenue, Sent1"'1e, California. or at P 0 Bo11 11298. Senta Ana. Cellfornie,
92711
Seid lmpr~t Olltrlct 5!1•11 conatltut• • llngte ei.ctloti precinct for the purPOSe ol holding the elee:tlon. ..,
To be queltfled •a voter end to be entltlec1 to vote et the -.ctlon. a pereon must be a holder of title,
• defined In s.ctlon 3-4028 of the Weter Code of the Stete of Celltomle, to lend In the lmprovemerit
Dte1rlct. Eec:h voter ltlall have one (I) vote tor MCf'I dotler'• worth of lend to wf'llCtl he or the holds 11\le. The
!Mt ~ 111111 mecil b<><* of the Olttrk:1 la condualve ~a qf ownerehlp end of the value of the
terid eo owned except that In the .vent en 111111,....,t for the Olttrtet ahefl not neve beetl mede 8nd leVled tor lt'9 ~In which the .eectlon 11 held, the lat equaltad 111111 neut rotl of the County of Ortinge la
corrtrtvie .,._iee of ownertNp end of 1M • ..,. of1tln<S-so ~ £"very vOter. or his legel
1ep-1tatM, mey ,)l'Ofe etther In peraon °' by • pereon duly appointed u hli proxy "Legal
~ .. tneelW en~ of• corporation owning land, end meena • '1UWdlen. executor or
edtftll...,, .. or of the ..Cet9 of lfte tlotder of tltte to land WhO: (al 11 llC>POinted under the i... of 11"9 State;
,~, .. .,,......, to pc 1111 II on of the ..C.t•'. land: end (C) .. authOflled by the appotntlng coun to •xerCIM
.. ..,....., ttoht. PffAlt;.oe or Immunity wNdl he ..-11ooeretee. a.for• a~ repreeentatlYe mey
..,,._ .. die -.ctJon. he muet preeent to the eo.rd of Electton a c.rtlfted oopy of Mid auttlOrlty. wNch .,....
be llept end ftted wttNn the return• of the llleetlon
..._,•II as *"-"' of• pto.y i. • r~ 9t tfle ....,,_of the peraon •ecutinO It llC ""fY time befole
.. ,.,.., .,....., • ptOltY ...... hevit ~ "b.-ot ,.. ..... 11ng tM vot• for wNdl the eppolfltmettf _.....,
1 .. • •CJntof .. V°"9 C1811Mthe~9evor lfte INlllnoe of lhe hWtlln dleet'lbed bondl. MIO
..................... tor the~ ... for1tl hWtlln
NOTICE OF ELECTION Then..:::' eddr ... of Valley . Forge. ~enn-
• the c:oun le; (El nombr• 'I sylvanaa for his ef-
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ttlet • speciel electlon hu bMf'I celled end wtll be held on the 111 dey of dltecclon de le oort• es) SU-forts to creaU' pubhc
Merch, 1988, whieh .-C:tlon Shell be en 811-melled betlOt ei.cilOn conducted pursuent to SectlOn 2351 t.1 PEAIOR COURT Of CALI-awarenes$ of the
of the Elections Code ol the Stete of Cehfoml•. within Improvement Oiltrlct No. 1&4 of the Irvine R.netl FORNIA: COUNTY OF OR-values of the U S
W Di I ...._ I I i ANGE. 700 CMc C«ller · ••er strict or 1 .... purpo141 o SYbm tt ng 10 the voters ol the Improvement Otstrk:1 the propo91tlon of Or1Ye Weet. p 0 eo11 138• Consutul.Jon and m
whether or not gen«al obligation bonds of lhe lmproYemet'tt District In the •mount of $79,065.000 anell be Senta Ane, <:A 92702~ particular the Bill of
authorized and Issued. lor the l)Url>OM stated In triepropoaltlon hereinafter set forttl In lhls notic.. which Tl'le eddr... end f
bOnds shell be peyable from •.....,,,.,,ts to be levied and oolected e11cluslvely upon lends within 'the t~r:n-rUnt-of -Rights. In 987 a
Improvement District. tiff• ettomey °' p1e1n11n mo nu men t c e I -
.-llhoot .,, ett'om.y. le: (El ebrating the Bill of nombl'•. le.dlfecclon yel nu-R1ghts was dedicated
mero d• telefono d•I on the college cam-
The bonds ltl•ll beer lntet•I et• rete or retes not to e11eeed twef\19 percent ( 1~/e) P1f annum, the ectual
times of peyment to be detetmlned upon the sele thereof. ·
The bellots uMd et the election ahefl be In ~ form prescribed by Section 35106 of the Wetet Code of
the Stete of Cellfornle.
On the bellots ta be uled et the election. In edditlon to eny other metter1 required by 1aw there anell be
printed substant1etly the fotlowlng·
Of'FICIAl aAU.OT
IWROvu.MT DISTRICT NO. 1M OF
9'tV1'tE flANCH WA'RR DtSTNCT
UECIAL 90M> ELECTION
MARCH 1, 1•
To vote, stamp• cross(+) In the voting square erter the word "YES" or etter the word "NO". All marka
otherwise made ere forbidden All ~lltlngulahlng merka •r• forbidden and meke-lhe bellot void.
II the 'llfrOnlJky mark, tNr. or defece ttlls bellot, re1urn It to the Registrar of Voters end obteln enother.
BONO PROPOSITION· Shd lhe lrvlne Ranefl Weter Oiltrlct Incur e.n
Indebtedness and issue Q«Wel obtlgetlon bonds tor 1mp1 ovement
District No 184 thereof In the emount of 179,065,000 et • maximum
interest rate of twetve percent ( 12%) per ennum. to ec:qulr• end
construct worka end fecilltlee for the acquisition,. collectlon. 1torege
•n4 dlstr!DutlOn()f"wefer and weter rights. to ert•ble the lrvlM Ranell
Water Distrk:1 to utlltze • weter auppty fufnlahed under th9 Stet• Weter
Resources ~etopment Syatern (commonly known u the "Stet•
Weier Project"), Including dema, rnervolra, atorege tenka. trMtment
fecillllet, pipes, pumping equipment end ell nec.aaery equlpmer11 end
praperty therefor, acquiring funds to fulfHI contrectual oomrt1llrnenta to
c,rry out the pc>wers end purpoeee of the Olttrk:1 contained In
oontrects, including conlrecta with other egericlel, ell In llOCOfd•nce
With the Plen of Work• for Improvement District No. 1&4?
YES
NO
..
.
BeKota mutt be received by S:OO p.m .. on ei.ction dey, either et the Offloe of the Reglatrer of Or11n99
Coonty. 1300 South Grend Avenue. Senta Ane. C.ittomle, or at P 0 . Box t 1291. s-.,ta Ana. Celllomla,
9271,
Seid Improvement Otttrlct ah.it conatltute a Single ei.ctlon precinct for the purpoee of tlOtdtng the
eleetlonc
To be quellfled u ~voter end to be entitled to vote et the .-C:tlon, • peraon must be• h<*Mr of tltle.
u defined In Section 3-4028 of the Weter Code of the Slete of Cellfornie, to lend In the lmc>fe>vemenl
District. Eech vot« ahell heve one ( 1) vole for eeeh doler'• worth of land to whlctl he or the ho6Cla tltle. The
lut equellLed .... aament book of the District la condU9Ne ~of ownerehlP Md Of the value of the
lend'ao owned e11cept ltlet In the e¥Mt an 111111 1••• tor the DlltrtcrW\91 not hevit been made and levied
for the~ In whictl the elect.Ion II~. ~ --~ 111111w.nt rotl Of the Coun Of Of'.,,. It ~~ of O'IUMlltllp end of lhe _,. °' land to owned. Ewry voe., ot hie leg9I
rep-1tative~ vote 91tMr In pet:90f\ or by e PW.oft d4Jky llC)pC)inted • Ille P101CY "~
,.-_,t9tlw" meens en offtdal of• corporetlon owning i.ncs. end....,.• ou-d*I. ueciu1or °'
edmlntetr9tor of the ..... Of the tlo6der of tftte to lend wt:o: ,., .. aippointed undlr ........ of .. a .... :
(b) II entitled to po11•1'0t1 of the_....., land; end (c) II euctlorll9d bJ the ..,.,_,1109 court to ea.a.a
I.he pel'tieu6er right, pr~« Immunity~ he _.. 10 eurdla. &lfor• a legll ~ m9Y
wte at the llleetlon. he muet ~to tfle loerd Of Electton a certtfted copy of MIO eutftority, -"Id\ INI
be "• end fMed wtltlln .... ,.um1 Of the -.ctlon.
Ho epc>olntm.nl of a proxy ltlall be vltld, acoept9d, or & "* alowed thereon unlee& It meeta .. of the
•OlolulnO reQUltementa: (•) It le In writing.: (b) It la edCUNICI· by the per90fl or Ilg.a ~ of the
per'IOft WhO, In eQCOfclenelt wtth tt:9 prcwie6one of s.etton S5003 Of 3SOOG, 1oftheWaterCodac1'IN8._
Of~ le enmted to the voe. for -"Id\ IN pre»cy le...-.: (ct It le adlr.owladged or cer-..1n
ICCOl4'1•-----J01U*tMCodeol CMl.PrOC9dur9 of JN ..... Of Celfomle;Jdl II IP«••• the ...... •""'*"It .. '° be Uled end .. Uled Ol"1at ... 41teetlon apec:Med; end (•I lt4Nil" on atom;. IP-.cl tiY !'he COunt; a.ti ....... tM .. ~
~ '"*''"•••1 Of e prowy le a r~ ae "'9 .--.. ol IM perw encutlng It ae MY ttme befole
"'9 per90n 9PP0ilted M PfOX'f .... hevit celC a bellOC •llPl-lllng tM 'fOMa b wNdl "'9 ~II ...... .
"~(2/J ................... ~--IN-.... Ofllt.1*fin_~~ ~ ........ ...,., end~ tor ... pUfPQee ... for1tl ..,..,_
hcepl. °"* ... Pf0\l1dtd In ... Celfel .... w ... C*trtct ..... ~ 13 of thew ... Code ol ..
ebogedo del denlandente. o . del demendent• que no pus. A special plaque
tlence el>OQedo, •): RICH-re "c o g n i z e d M r
ARO 8. MACOURN. At-Cram's contributions torney et Law 10t5 Che9tnu1 A--. Suit. E.3. m teaching the princ1-
Cer1abad. CA 92008 1819) pals of the American
729-7182. system of govern-
1e:TE; (FecN) NOV 13 ment. With his late
Gery L. QuWiu ... Cleftl, wife Minnie. Crain
., ...... y ........ ~ rounded the hrst
IJ PublWled OrMge COMt Baptist Church and
Deity Piiot Jenuery 1~. 19. the Harbor Triruty
28. Fet>Nwy 2, 1988 Baptist Church in
rta.IC NOTICE
T04e Cost.a Mesa. He was a
member of numerous
relJred teachers or -
ganizalJons and aer-
ved his rommunaty
and h lS church with
dlsuncuon until h1s
death. H e as survived
by !bn. Gene Crain of
Laguna B each.
daughter Ca.rol Wood
of Jackson. W yoming:
5 grandchildren and I
great grandchild. Fu-
neral servi~ will be
held at Harb6r Trini-
ty Baptist Church,
1230 Baker St., Costa
Mesa, -Wednesday,
F ebruary 3, 1988, 2:00
P.M w ith interment
to CoUow at Pacific
View M emorial Park,
New-port ~a t"h .
P1erc~ros Bell
Broadway M ortuary,
Direct s. Costa
Mesa. 42-19~
~""C•tl:""YIEW
MHIC>fttAL 'AM(
Cemetery • Mortuary
Chapel • Crematory
3500 PacattC V~<N Otav~
NewPOrl Beac
b'4·2700
HA"8CM lAWN-
MT. OUVI
Mor1ui11r~ • Cemeter~
Cre~torv
t625 G1S1e1 Av~
~Meu ~·o 555'
PIDCl IROTMIM llU .aADWAY ~
Mortutry • ChiJ*
t 10 Broadway
c:ott.tHM
142-91$0
.... • ,.., t11 ,,...1*49 In IN ca.lfotnl& w ... Ofltrlct law. Ofvlelofl ,3 of tri. w.-Code of the
..... 1110 n • .. .,...,. _.. beceled, 1'91d end conc:M1ed In tri. ~ ~ 1n .._ Unttorm ...... =--=-···· ........... Celfomla. . • et.trict l'9cdon .... of ... Celtomea.. •
St• of CaMotnle.. tfle ::r. ._ ..... fl9ld and oonductJld In the,,,....., ptOYllded In die~
HAVI---=
nia ..-11 .... ,_.... to a "**"'°" of 1M lkMtd of Dnc1on Of lNlne Rind! W,,,_ Olltriet
&J JllFM.....,11. ,.._
,
..
TNI notice II tMrt ,.,,....,. a ....,..,...,,. of the eo.rd Of Dlrec1ora ol lntne ~ W..., Olllncl
..,...on~n.1 ..
..
A NllD?
..
..
Dog libera~ors'
tactics hurting
their ·credibil~ty
"Fhe Animal Liberation Frorit made its first raid on the
Orange Coast last weekend: .
· > • ·The front. according to people who kee p up w~th these
thin$s, isa loosely knit group opposed to the use of animals for
medical rescar-ch. T hey demonstrattd that opposition at UCI
on Saturday morning by stealing 13 beagles used in a
$900,000-a-year study on the effects of smog on the lungs and
wh y some tracheotomies ~re accompanied by adv~rse effects.
After the locks to the kennel at the school's air pollution
research laboratory were cut, the front's raiders took the dogs
and found homes for them th.rough a world-wide "under-
ground railroad."
At least that's wha\ th,e press relea* claims ....
Controversy over research on .live animals is n~ to
Orange County. Several groups here have staged prol~~t~ ~nd
rallies. They also $rind out a barrage of. press releases. a
"letters to the editor" campaign and a. lobbying effort
expected from any group <!tlempti'ng to get something
changed.
· But the Animal Liberation Froni's style doesn't include·
protest marches at research centers or writing letters. They're
dedicated to the smash-and-grab doctrine.
. ' Animal ri$hts advQCates told reponers that after the front
s~nkes. the animals are.checked by a veterinarian and then
g1ven to people who want a pet.·
. The front recently gained some notoriety after the release
o~ a videotape that they claimed was made during a raid at the
City of Hope Cancer Research Center in LQs Angeles:· The
tape showed dead animals and others with festering sores.
A spc)kesp(rson for the group claimed on Monday that
the dogs stolen from UCI also had open sores. had not been
fed properly and had been mistreated.
. It's too bad they didn't produce one of the dogs and a
veterinarian at a press conference to verify the charges.. Had
that been the case. the group would ha,•e earned some
credibility. and UCI officials would have had to face the heat.
Some people think the Animal Liberation Front
~embers ar~ heroes bent upon righting an injustice forced on
innocent animals.
UCI officials described the group as "misguided" peopk
trying to correct something they see as a problem. but actuallv
causing harm and confusion. ·
It's difficult to fault the members of the Animal
Liberation Front for their beliefs. but it's equally difficult to
condone their methods.
· Their tactics are lik e plots you read about in novels. and
the connection between their so-called underground ra ilroad
and the network that helped free slaves before and during the
Civil War invokes a se1'1Se of drama.
But the fact remains. their actions are ·illegal. Instead of
standing up for their bel iefs thev skulk about in the darkness
of night. ·
The Animal liberation Front's members ma\ be hcrocs
for th eir dediciltion to their beliefs. but vou ha\l:· to wo'nd~r
atx?ut people who don't. have enough ·convicti on in their
beliefs to make their protest in the light ·of day.
Democrati~ hopefuls
It may look bleak for Democrats in the 1988 pres 1dent1al
ele-Gt-i&A. but the party's acti vists ate rallying around tbeir
candidate.
All that remains now is for· the standard-b(arer to get into
the race. What will Mario Cuomo do?:.. ·
Campaign activists in Maine ·amt elsewhere. still
optimistic in forecasting their chances of putting up a
challenge for the presidency in 1988. ha ve turned to
resurrecting a theory that seemed to have already outli ved its
usefulness: New York Gov. Mario Cuomo. unable to ·
withstand th~ pleas of an adoring public. will swoop down
from the high ground of'potitical non-commt.tment and steal
the show in an outpouring of ecstatic welcome ....
As for Jesse Jackson's observation that a candidate who
dtd not play in spring train1ng, the-regular seaso~ er the
playo ffs would be an unlikely candidate for the Super Bowl:
Pany planners ha ve conceded. in recent private admissions.
that in an anything-can-happen cam~ign. anything can
happen.... , ·
So maybe the theme this year is that it's never too late to
get in late. ./
Bngor <M•loeJ D•ily News
School censorship
By allowing censorship of high'school newspapers. the
U.S. Supreme Co~n did wh~Jjt ~ad to do. ·
PrincipaJs have a right to deciae what goes. into a
new$J>aper -publiWd w~lh-scllool-funds.-But principals
should use this power wisely.
The danger is that the coun decision will be used to purge
newspapers of inconvenient truths or pictures of the hi.ah
school world that don•t square with what school oflicals
would like to believe.
The school comm unit needs a truthful discussion of real
problems as much as any ot er community:-1md a new spa
1s one of the best ways to achieve that goal.
But the decision on whether a high school will be served
by a re-al ne"'spaper or a servile puff sheet has to rat with the
principal. ·
OR ANGE COAST
--~-
heR~,H~,N.J
C.t'-AdWf~Oir ,., ....
Ci.mi,. °""* .. ,.,..
C..Clliet• OlrttlOI • er,. .....
'-'mOftict ......
p
Orange COMt DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, February 2. 1988 87
··Well. If Campbell offered to l et someone see the po/Ice report he had '"
changed his mind by the time I called'' ·
I ..
Lungren nomination rhetoric ~ .
becoming weirder and wilder
.Back-up no!nfiiee l\~n-Maddy walking
a round Capitol with a ·smile on-his face W1wAi
EltlCOTT SACR>\MENTO The o-.:er-
heated rheton<: ovc.-r Gov. George
DeukmeJ1an"• nominatio n of Re·
publican Dan Lungren lo be state
treasurer 1!. gctt\ng weirder and
"'c:1rdcr
Sen. Barr) Keene. D· Vallejo. who
has taken 11 upon h1rnsclf to lead the
charge against Lungren·s confirma·
uon b~ the Democrat-controlled
Legislature. has kept up a stead)
barrage of press releases o'er the p~st
few "eeks indicating the d11'e conse-
qurnces that art• apt to befall Cah-
forn1a if Lungren 1s rnnfirmed.
But ht• t:hecl cd 10 last Thursda)
"'1th some n~all~ rnn .. ulatcd reason·
ing.
"Lungren is the go' cmor's pa~ otT
to the ultra-nght of his pan~:· said
Keene .. DeukmCJlan IS using the
appointment lo l'rcatl', an heir ap-
pan:nt 10 the go' ernor"s office e' cn
furthc:r to the right than h1mse!C'
In the ne\t stroke of the pen.
ho"e .. a . Keene said the Long &ach
congressman's"narro" v1e"s would
prevent him from being elected to
sta tewide office b~' the pubhc a1 I ... a~~ whlC"h 1s Lungren - a future
go\ ernor or a lame duck treasurer
fro m the moment he takes office.
. assuming he ever doef'
A C} n1c might ask 11.-h~. 1f the
Dt·mocrats th ink Lungren doesn't
ha' e statewide elertab1ht\, arc the'
arc so up in arms o'er ·his nomi-
nation.
' . known as a poht1cal launching pad.
Even as asute a poht1c1an as the late
Jesse Unruh was unabk to uSl' 1t that
wa'. Jn facL all th ls fuss.. rs over an
o ffice nobod) e"er paid much atten-
tion to until Unruh. a Democrat.
turned 11 into a· fund·ra1S1ng gold SouthertrCahiorn1a leg1sla11,e races
mine Lungren has been ·an thr Cap1lol
.\nd perhaps that's the a nswer lobb~ 1ng on his own ht-half .\ncl tht'
Democratic legislators. ltk.e all go,emor's ollic-e has been conducting
poht1c1ans. are sclf-prescnat1001sts. a stepl)t'd-up-pubhc rclauons bhu for
so the' ma' be more concerned about him. "'h1ch· 10 nself suggests Dt'u-
how ill that cash potential might tx kme1un smeltnroubte -
u!.ed against them in future legJslatl'· e .\ndlher batch of lt'ltt"~ endor\tng
raccs than the~ are about Lungren"; Lungren was d1stnb.ule'-d b' the
011. n pohucal future. govt'rnor'<t prcss office la~t wed
It 1s euher that. or rht'tonc aside. The~ included ind1,1Cl uals and
the' real!\ do fear he would be a sroups ran~ng from Los .\ngel~
form1dabk gubernatonal cand1date Pohce Ch1et Dar. I G ates 10 thc South
"hen DeukmejiaQ decides to SIC{! Ba~ C'hmesc .\m.encan .\ssoc1a11on.
aside. .\nd Lungren held a Cap11ol press
G1,co the part1sansh1p that exists conference. to prt'ss his CClst'.
in the leg1sla1ure. 11 1s doubtful that "Lool. 11 the~ ltht' t:Xmocr.itsl an~ DeuimeJ1an appointee would took t"o months to figure out I'm a
ha'c an eas~ 11me of '1t. but the consenallH Republican 1n the mold
momentum dclin11el) appears 10 tx-.of Ronald Rl·agan or Georgr Deu·
sh1f1ing again~t Lungren. kmeJian. l could ha\ es.a' ed tht'm l"'O
II had qeen assumed all along that months ... he told reportt'~ ·· 4.11 tht'~
hrwould11.1n '\ssembtvapprovaland had to do "as a~r.. me I'd plead
ult1ma1el\ "in over the Snlatt'. but -gn11ty." -1
not "11hou1 a fight Now. howt"''er. He also ms1s1ed that the~ are no
the Senate 1s looking more and mort' behind-the-scenes deals m the 11.orks
doubtft1l and the anti-Lungren ,·otes to assure his confirmallon 11.h1ch
arc starting 10 stack up m 1he ma} e'ptain "h~ Sen Ken '.vtadd~ R·
.\sscmbh Fr~no. rc~nedl~ Deul.meJ1an·s S('('·
Pohucal 1ns1ders also sa' 1ha1 o nd choice for treasurer. 11.a!> "ail ing
.\ssembl) GOP leader Palrid;.Nolan around Thursda~ "uh a smile on his
of Glendale 1s not all that t'namoured face.
11.1th Lungren. ha\ ing had a sharp WlllJam EIHliC'Ott is• S.rru11a10
Legal ethics
need boost
To the Eduo~.
I en1o}'ed )Our ed nonal regarding
the "holes" 1n the governm ent ad-
m101strat1on of Hu01ing1o]l Beach.
~dJ). this situation threatens to
per.vade all communities.
There is something tembl) wrong
v.1th a legal system that dt'pends on
economics rather than ethics to
d1spen!tt' JUSllCC, y ·et. th.al lS pteetscl)'
"'hat •~ happening all over this land.
Suits· arc filed over lht' slightest
pro' ocal1Qn, lawyers,askmg o utlan-
dish sum~. The' know these cases will
never get to C\lUr1. Tht'~ can carefull~
cakulate 11. hat the defending bod~
"111 settle for before the case: goes to
tnal. -'.n) d1s1nct auome~ 1n Orange Count~ "Ill tell )OU thaL ~here art'
hundreds of law~ers making an
e~cellent II\ ing handling these cases
Some ofttlese la~e~ ha'e probabl~
ne\ er bccn inside a courtroom to Ir) a
ca~
ls this JUSt1ce being dispensed? h
sounds more li ke a crap shoot.
If JUstu.:c: 1n c1viJ cases 1s h.andlcd
this wa'. wh\ no1 cnmmal cases too?
\\ h}' si)end ·10 m illion dollars pros--
t'Cuting a Rand~ Kraft or a Richard
Ramirez" Wh) not plea be.rpm tht'm aw a~. S<t) 10 ~cars probatton and a
promise to be good boys? Ridiculous,
ng.ht" Ho""cver. the principle is the
same J usuce gives way to economics.
The s1tuatJon 1s not going to
1mpro'e until se"eral things happC'n .
la"' si:hools are turning out
thou!>ands oflaw~ers yearly. t'ach one
of them t)as to cam a h'•tng. lcgls-latur~. compnSl'd maml~ of lawyers,
are ti) mg their bt'st to providt' thel]l a
Ii' mg b~ chum mg out thousands of
la11. sat each session. each of which 1s a
potential sour« of hugauon h docs
not appear to bt' enough. hoWt'ver.
despite their strenuous effo rts
T~ resuh oi that 1s that lawvt'rs·
fee.,. must C'scalatc so that each ta~t'r
~'!n carn:1.J1:mg b~ handling fewer ca~s IR orditr to 'spread· the \A.Ork
aroumt
The ans"ers arc .clear ~ e need ro
hm1t the number of lawvers gradu-
atoo 'earh 10 no more than tho~ lost
to the pr0fes&.1M b~ auntt0n A.d.-
d111onall~ "C' must clean up the
~stem of Judi 1al adm1n1strauon b}
making It morr etTit1~n1 and tess
costh Thi> can be done 1f ~e fol\ov.
thl' precept of E.nghsb common law
that calls for prompt and speed)
tnals Good law,ers expen in thetr
tradt'can do th" not the hac'k la'W"lers
being 1umcd uut in droves b~ ·1a"
~hoots 1oda'
. Lastl), ~e must k~p leg1sl~1ures
b3lanC't'd "'11h a health~ pro pon1on of
pt'Ople lrom othrr profe-ss1ons and
art'as of e\per11sc
There a an old Jt'w1'"h 53\tng. "If
there 1 o ne la"~ er 1 n town. ht' 1s poor.
1f lhett...a,rc t~ o. the) are both nch ..
h there a ta\pa~er among ~ou who
1s not ur«I of ~1ng our mone'
"3St«I" It 1s ume for an of us to spear.
out for an cffic1en1 and logicals~ stem
of JUrtsprudc.-nce ··"·here JUSllC't' de·
Pl'nds on -qu-es11ons o ngnt ·and
"rong. not economic.-. J.\\ REID
Costa \1esa
Sanctions
NB'spolicechiefpltches a hurt more
curveo:aBillyMarti:a report ~~:.:~help
It h.:u rt'.Ccnth bet'n reported that
some mcmlx'rs of Congress 11.111 h<-
1ntrodlh'.'1rig mon-pun1t1,·c \anctton~
against the regime an South .\fnca It'
indme the gen emmt"nt to institute
The treasuer's officc has never bt-en dispute or two w 1th him 0 ' er some 1ylldic•tttl C"0~11.
Baseball's brawle r cried foul over
m e ntion of arres~ tn ~e~c!_tngstory
"I didn't punch no dogg1e!"
Right. Bill~. And 1 suppose George
Steinbrenner nc' er gave you tht' ax or
t at yo\l!iever 1~-:r ft-w-W1th
M ickc) Mantle and showed up at the
ballpark the nt't da) a little worse for
.the wef}r.
As an.,one who has paid the
shghtcs1 bit of anenuon to baS(ball rmws-. Bill~ Manin h3S a rtputroon.
Why elSl' would he make his famous
"I didn't punch no dogg"" com ·
merc1al after he was accuk'd of
punching out a mafshmallo"' sales·
man· in a Minne3polis bar.,
Martin--is on~ ef ba~ball's ~.olorful.
characters. He ·has brawkd. he ha.s
ytlled. he has been fired. he has been
hired, ht' has won and ht' has lost. '.\nd
throu.gh it all he ha.s rematnt'd o nt' o(
tl\c gamt''s cndcinng figurtt.
So 1t was hard!) surprising that
Bill>'s name showed up on the
manager of the Ne11.. York Yankecs
for the foorth 11me
8111) a lso gbt mamed . J USt last
v..e~k..-The .ceremon) took plact' in a
B:n area encla'e lrno'.lm asUanvtlk
T he bnde was a Newpon Bcactt
woman named Jill Gwver. the same
11.oman who v.as arguin' with Bttly
tht' night of his a~t in Newport
Beach
That link fact. 1t turns out. wis
ml.'nt1oned Y.1th some prom1nt'n~ m
a Oan\llk area nev.spaper o n Bill) 's
.,_,cddmg da~. I know that bt-C"ause o ne or the paper's reponcrs asked me for
details of the arttst.
Well. B1IG appartntl) hit t~
l.'Cthng when he saw the tot). H('
demanded an apolog) and a ro~·
11on. So d id B1lh 's law)tt . ..\C'COrchng
to the paper's· .t'd11or. the la~er
prcparrd a fh·t'·pagt' list o( alktcd
inaC'C'UrKICS 10 tht' SlOr).
Th(' editor. whost name 1s Bob
STEVE
MAR BU
later he called had. to sa' the chief
"ould not kt us c;cc thc-rei>ort
Oakk) said he'd bttn told 10 tell u
o nl) what he "l<'gally" had to."' h1c-h I
dllC'O'--nt°d wa•rn't vn\ much 1..qall~. 1 found o ui that 8111~ .... as
anat«i and 1a1led I fo1.md ouJ,.Aht'
charaies. the plaC'C of the arTe'>l. the
datC' and the time And tha\ ...,as tl.
Unfortunate!). that didn't help w )-Unc-Of-hl.$..$\¢la. spapcs-The dc.wl
that Bill) claimed ~ inac:rurate
W('f'C massJl'lg. Wbo had 81lh ar-
rt'Strd'? Who bailed him o ut of 1a11'"'
What •'1.S l'te do1ni at the um~ ofb1s
arttst"' " here wa he when he wai. a~ecr. 4 bunch of QUt'~t1on.s in
search of an ans"'er
ltrn:trerTCfot m:s: Strong opp<incntt-of.
apartheid ha' t' argu«I. however. that
san uon' and d1s1n,t'S1mt'nl might
ha'e an ad'Cr\l' dft'C't on the h"eh·
hood n(blal \... ~outh .\fncans Recent
op1nwn poll\ of South 4-fncan~
confirm thc~ su~p1c1ons.
John "-ane-!krman of the uth
Afncan ln.,t1tute of Ra~ Relauon\
rt'ported la~t month that in 12 of 14
pol\s ronductt'd oHr the last year.
mott--hlad South .\fri cans weft'.
oppo!it'd to s.ancuons t-han 1n favor of
them •
L1le,•.i<.e. a 'u"e~ b' Germ¥ ·s
'\(ncan r ounda11on found that two-
th1rds ot th<' black caal mmers m
South .\(n,·a d<.' not want sanc-t10M
u~lht'' ear sanCCions .... ,tr cosl
th('m tht'1r J0~ The fact ts. sanctions
have alrt'ad' C9S\ man)· South <\fncan~ not onl~ 1ht'1r JOM. but tht
opponur'lll~ for . ad,an~ment 1n a
SOC>tl) that 1s mo' int slo.,.1~ but .
surl'I) to"ard Jesqrcpt1on and full
democr:u1zauon
'\
ing in 1984. He had bttn a~ll'd on ~ nne. .Nf>wpol'.t 8c.ach..
suspicion of drunkcnt'Ss and dis-Poh~Ch1cf .\rb("ampbtll 1ofind out
orderly conduct. 8a1 I v.-as St 00. whether he ov. cd Brtty an apolCJCY and
~o-. aU•thts ma} sound hl.c small cha,._ ,&J\d some. ~ ma} ~"tll think a M'\\ paper has no bu~-;-;1n:;;t'':;s.s;------------l..U~ ....... ---.:.1
kno<wlna thas son of tufTan}''a' But
The .arrua wtma.nted • mall a cort'C'C11on -ank~•f-Of'tly bKauw-tl wu Bill . It Campbell. who a~rently attend·
didn't matter if 11 was lC'U filhna or eetllr "'-ed<ling. CJ«hntd to hel~ the
tasted great. Bill)' was ht-hind bars echtor. The ch1t'f said 1f "rnne
and th-twas MW!. ...,antl'd 10 S« the 1984 police rcpon
But Billy beat the rap. A N~ hl' should S(nd t0ml'One do-.n to
Bea.chjudat ruled the ctwte ~ired N('wpon Beach. .\t· last that's
thl.t Billv 6e.a1' a ()!lbhc iMtt. Ht also \\\nM'sacxountof'thecon'-'Crs&tlon.
nalcd that t~ front yard or hl I olkrcd 10 help WynM. It wt'med
11rlfnend's house wasn't a pubh s1mplHnouah Lootanhc~JOt plact down the deU1ls of Martin s annt.
WdJ. the yean went. n. K.aftys ' and kt W) nM know ·~ has
City R~~ the .,...._, lM'-~pn-itood wtth 8'11)
year. the New Yon Mets.,. 1t t.bt Wen. 1f Campbtll o&rtd 10 kt
MAI and the Mlttlla04a 1WtllS the tomeOnC 5tt tbt Pohce ""°" he had ~rafter. Jd CWl hit a aio-run dwwed '"'mind b) taie ttwne I caned.
Off lbc .Dodilm.hm....... _;Ofticu Bob OlkkJ~ lk ~ ~~~~ =-H~ ~~_:'=·~~ Famt. And Bdt Mantn ....... ff'ft. ftqUCM. A COill* o(bcMm •
...
~, •terae't~"' . At the 11mc of 8ilf\1's arrnt. the-st
ckt.a1h ~ pt()\l~ r remt'mbC't
bttautt I •rote the stol' But now
•itll a man' reputation 'on the liM
and an atfom.() \ltmn1 up the •'lter.
dltpolitt •ant to •iath w ar hancbof
lhe •tUlllOn' TM ont conduSIOn I draw &om an
of this is s.mpt) that * 1 ~ potK-e bu treats a .-.. pct bllf a
SUM A'Wll Ibo.at lM .,_ .. 1t ttta I
nci:"''' !" ~~., _.._.-
Bill) l\'8 ap.tft put on v .. ~·
P'nstnecs,. and the bea.at) of the lllM wlll~u•t~don. Left...,.
Oft. .... ....... ,,, -----....... ...., ......
CO niihenli
welcomed
..
~
FAIQLY
CIRC'18 •
by Bii Keane
"Oh,· PJ ! You're a real bottle
of laughs!"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"'Wfl found out where or Br'er Rabbit lives ...
,.ight smack in the middle of the briar patch ...
PEANUTS
GARFIELD
WHEN HE WAS
TI1ROU6H ~EV 6AVE ~iM1
A STANDING INVITATI~ ~
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IN 'l'llE BLEACHERS by Steve Moore
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DENNIS THE MENACE
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by Charles M . Schulz
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by Jim Dayis
I KNOW.
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LAOGMIN('s
by Tom K, Ryan
by Kevin Fagan
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BLOOll COUNTY
JUDGE PARKER
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fl.¥f PRES/PENT
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FUNKY WINKERBEAN
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YEARBOOKS
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DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau
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TUF.SDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1988 25 CENTS
NB mall Curbs .petition. drive
Traffic initiative workers kept isolated
at Fashion Island. advocates complain
approval to circulate petitions there
af\er company officials relented late
last week on insurance requirements.
When they arrived Saturday, how-
ever. petitioners found that they were
to be located in a ~maH glass booth. o~t of the stream of shopping traffic.
said Tom Rogers. an initiative
By BOB VAN EYIEN
Of .. O.., ........
Officials at Fashion Island kept
petitioner$ for the cou·ntywide growth
and traffic coptrol initiative in an
isolated sectio n of Fashion Island
over the weekend. effectively
Attorney General M-.
says he can· t recall read-
ing about payoff plan In
memo./A4
California
State Supreme Court al-.
lows use of Miranda-ex-
cluded confessions
against suspects who
take witness stand.LAS
World
:
preventing them from gathering
many signatures, an initiative SP9krs-
man charaed Monday.
After tusslin$ for weeks with Th~
Irvine Co .• which o wns the upscale
Newport Beach center. petitioners for
the initiative ·finally were given
Lifeguard row
spo~csman. -
.. We were 1n the booth were the
security guards hang out," said
Rogers. "Of the few people who
A row of llfecaant atadona tower o•er a lone blcycllat u •he
peddlea_a!ona-tbe Hantmcton Beach coutllne on a winter
wandered in there. most didn't even
speak Engh sh."
Rogers said he gathered 25 s1gna-.
tures during the weekend. including a
few from center employees.
' A Fashion Island official said.
however, that he believed the infor-
mation booth was a good location.
"It's right out!>ide our No. I
department store.·· said l>aul Coulter.
operations manager for the cen~r.
.. We thought we were doing them a
favor having them 1ns1de. We're an November ballot.
outside center and the weather wasn't Sponsors of the measure a n·
that great over the weekend." nounccd last week that they were far
Coulter saad 1nataativc petitioners short of their aoaJ and in..need ofa bl&
would be free to set up outside the boQst from supporten.
anfonnation booth next weekend. Rogers said pctitionen were pet.
The booth is-located near Robinson's. m ittcd to have• placard on their table·
.. If that's wh<tt lhcy want. we don't-' tn the &lus·frQO.ted..booth. -
have any problem.'' he said. "But you couldn't sec ii from
Petitt0 ners must have 60.000 vahd outside,'' he sa.r~.
signatures by Feb. 9 in order to He saad pctmoncrs were not per-t
qualify their measure for the June or (Pie98e w PS111 llOR/A2)
.
UCidogs
claimed
in poor
health
Unidentified caller
says beagles stolen
from la b given homes
B.y PAUL AllCRIPLEY ..............
An anonymous caller claimin& to.
represent animal nahts activists who
stole 13 bcaaln from a UCI research
laboratory said Monda.)' that a veter· .,nary checkup showed thc-aop had
been m mrca led. •
The d0&5 also were pbiccd in homes
Mondav after be1na stolen over the
weekend. the' caller told the Daily
Pilot.
day. lncreulDClJ cloady · •ldee wll1 brinC a 60 perceat
chance of rain to the <>ranee Cout today and WedDeeday.
The caller cla1med to rcprcscnt the
Animal Liberation Front that took
credit for Saturday's theft and said a
~tcri:narian cficcied eacll of the dop
and found them to be in poor
condallon.
No rejections yet for
Middle East peace plan
advanced by the U.S./AI
. Angolan rebels close in
on strategic town./ Al
.J.
Meadowlark Airport's fate sealed
The bca&les had sores on their
beads and bodaCS". rotted teeth. in-
fected 1ums., collapsed veins and wen,.
mrvcd. the caller claimed .
The dogs had neither food nor
water when they were ~liberated"
from an outd oor pen at UCl's nortb
campus aar pollution ~h labora-
tory. the caller said.
Index
Advice and Games
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics .
Entertainment
Optnlon
Police log
Public notices
Sports
-Weather
A 12
A3
AB-10
84-6
88
A 11
B7
A3
86
81-3
A2
Huntington councilacfopts zone change
for 600 homes. shopping cen~er a5 sire-
By ROBERT BARK.ER
Of .. O.., ........
The Huntington Beach City Couri·
cil on Monday approved construc-
tion of 600 hom·es and a 1,500-acre
shopping center at Meadowlark Air·
port. •
Pro-growthers John Erskine. Jack
Kelly. Wes Bannister a nd Tom Mays
voted for the development plan at the
65-acre ·airport near Warner A venue
and Bolsa Chica Street
Grace Winchell, Peter Green and
lwlh Filrrey voted against the plan.
The zone change m-arks the begin-
ning o f the end for the airpon that has
served pilots of small airplanes since
1949.
The airpQrt. which has taken a lot
of flak from residents who moved an
aro und it but has ~n staunchly
defended by a cadre of pilots., will
close 60 days after initial building
permits are appro,ed. has been a "s)stematac chanac for
Dick Neno. a spokesman for the higher and h1gherdens1ty" in the c1t).
Nerio fam 1I~ that's owned the airpon ··.\re the dollar sagos in your eyes so
since 1952. said he expe<"ts plans to large that the) can't Stt the citizens
come to the Cit) later th as year for the that )ou're serving?" Browning
shopping center which 1s slated to be asked.
butlt first "How many deas1ons not 1n fa.vor
Residents claimed 1n a stormy of the ,de,elopers have you made
public heanng Monda) that the latel) ;·
de"elopment -alo ng with other . ErskJne saad that he believed the
pr_oJects planned 1n the nonhwest Planning Comm1ss1on. which ap-
pan of the cat) -wtll make traffic pro'ed an 1dentacal plan last fall. had
congestion intolerable and will over-\\Orked out a fair compromise.
tax se~r and water S("rvittS Tht Nerios ongmally wanted to
Chel)le Browning. an advocate for -build 1.000 homes in the area.
retaining the current low density ErskrTle saad he i.s disappointed..
zoning for the area. claimed that there (Pl--Me BOllSS/ A2)
However. UCI spokeswoman
Kath) Jones said the dop wett fed
htgh.quality food. and their coats, t~th and cars were d caried rcsularty.
After the bcqles were inspected
and treated by the veterinarian . .eacb
was placed in a home. said the Animal
Liberation Front spokesman:
UCI has a veterinarian on campus.
which conforms to policy cstabhshed
b) the Southern California Veterin-
anan Medical Assoctatioo.
The assoaation approves of ~
s-ponsibk research on animals as k>na
as it as within the framework of the
Animal Welfare Act ofl 966 wtuch set
(Pleue ... CALL&R/ A2)
Valley hoping to age gracefully Jourw Alcohol,
ing or replacing walls and ceahngs: VoLZIE g.as sales · City off eringgrants, low-interest loans
to help maturing houses stay tn shape
ment area 1n a residential neigh-
borhood. Redevelopment areas are
commonly used by Cities in bh&hted
communities. allowing the locaf gov-
ernment to retain a portion .of the
Fountain Valley -known as "The
City Where . Progress Shows" -
wants to tum JO without letting its
years show. .
When incorporated in 1957. Foun·
tain Valley's population was 5 79. The
population now tops SS, I 00. Once
sparsely built, nearly all of the city's 9
square miles are filled with homes.
bu incsses or the_~rawJing_ Mile
Square Par .
Fountain Val_ley has grown up, but area's property taxes for renovating
city officials want to k~p it from the neighborhood. growin~ old. Instead. the t it) as relyrng on loans
"We re really at a staJe where and grants to lo"'·ancome residents to
preventative maintenance 1s the key encourage homeowners to keep their
to keepinJ the nci&hborhoods from hol£ses an shape. The program is in its
deteriorating." said City ManaJCr second year.
Judy Kelsey. "The houses arc getting T he mone). financed Jhrough a
to be 20 or 30 yean old." • grant to the city from the federal
ikspi Fountain-dcpartmc.nLQLHousina and Urban
Valley is still witho a ~velop-°'velopment. can be used or paint·
-Cas~ainst suspect iJ;1 rap
of job applicants maywideri
repainng Of-replacing roofs: plumb-
ing. electncal or heating improve--ban 11· -'1ted ments: and termite co ntrol. 1 t
"Our goal here 1s to rehabilitate the
homes." said Greg Lewtn. a city .., • M
housing aade. "That keeps the pro~ 1n esa
en) values up' and makes for a mort Tbc loans can be repaid at 3 pe~nt
livable environment." interest and can be for u much as
Lewin said residents apply for a $20.000. Tbc minimilm pot 1va1l-By PAUL AJ\CJllPLEY
loan or grant through the city. and c1ty abk is $5.000. ~n said. Ulll JENNIFER WEBEll
offi cials check the family's income Last year. the aty haniit.d out Ca&ht
and home befo re signing. the check. loans to about a third of the appli-The purpose of the loan must be lO .
explained . on the application. h_e_can_lS -and pants.
adde<J. -----\PliMe iii TAU.ST I A2)
Reduced Charges
·urged in Marine
copter taaJperlng
•
., .. YANSYUN ........... · Seca's:t ol ~ Interior DonaJd Hodel OnMe County residents
Monday tbat he dreams of resaorina
IO ila natural conditi9n a valley that
John Muir called "one of nature's
rarest end moet precious mo-antain temp1a.•• ·
Af\cr rnMina bis pitch for .resto-
ration ofnonhem California's Hetcb
Hctcby Valley. Hodel said he also
suppons plans to alter another natu·
raJ landlca~, the California coast.
Hodel said followina a luncheon at
Irvine's RqisU"y Ho&el that the
proposed sale of leases for oil explo-
fation off California's cout would
not spell disaster for the coastal
environment or seaside tourism.
In fact. Hodel said. bolsterina U.S.
oll rncrves with petroleum from
-California waters could prevent econ-
omic harm from comina to the state's
coastal resorts.
.. The pte>line ihOf1ale in the 1970s
bad a tremendous neptive effect 011
tourism," bc'said. "If. by comparison,
you look at the Santa Barbara oil spill.
people backed off from there for
about silt months or a year, and then
the drccts disappeared."
And theft is no evidence, he said.
that the mett presence of oil derricks
discourqts tourism.
'
..
.
"That ~ument simply does nol remainder to ocher communities." he
hold water. he said. said. "'The Hetch Hetchy bas become
But Hodel apcnt mott of his time a moac)' maker for San Franciso
Monday lalkint about his Hetch rather than an essential sourtt of
Hetchy propc>MI. water and power."
He bepn his ~h to members The water now trapped by the
and aucsts of U.C Southern California O'Shauabncssy Dam would not be
Water Committee with a ditcussion lost if ihc dam were removed, but
of the natural beauty of the Hetch would now down the Tuolomne
Hetchy Valley. River throu&h thtef other dam 1nd
The onl¥ prob&em with the valley, reservoir systems and into the Sane·
located I J miles from Yosemite ramento-San Joaquin River Delta,
National Park, is that it's full of water. Hodel said.
and plua.ed up by the 360-foot Preliminary stU(t~es also show th'at
O'Shauaflncssy Dam. much. if not all of the power
Since 1923. when the dam was acnerated at O'Shau&hnessy could be
completed, Hctch Hctchy Rese rvoir recaptured at other Tocations, Hodel
has been a source of water and said.
electricity for the city of San Fran-"Plus. California's power surplus
ci"sco. -now estimated at more t~an-1.400
ThatCktail can be taken care of. 1f mcpwatts -could easily replace the
studies show it 1s economically 120 mcpwatts San Francisco would
feasible t<rtcar-down the dam and Jose if ~ removed O'Shaughnessy
drain the rescn-oir, Hodel said. Dam." he said. .
Hodel acknowled&ed that the idea Hodel repeated several times. bow-
bas been ridiculed in the press. ever. that nothing would be done to
particularly in the San Francisco area. tha dam or the reservoir unless
But he said the criticism is based on detailed studies showed it could be
the erroneous notion that removing · done "ithout damaging California's
thcdaln woulddeprive S'an Francisco water and powersupply.
of a necessary source of water and "The major prec9ndition is that
power. there must be an economically
··1 believe it is importnt to point feasible war of restoring the water -
out that San Franciso uses only about and power,' he said. "I believe we can
one third of the water. and sells the find a way."
Market craS.b. began earlier -The SEC study is also CllpecJed to
deal with IM circumstancn sur-
roundin& the SOS-point drop in the
Dow• Jones Industrial Avera,e on
Oct. 19. and the market iostability
thl t bas folk>wcd.
lat ion of the 'futures market.
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10 ... WASHINGTON (AP) -Octo-
ber's stock market colla~ was
trigacred by an "unprecedented
change in investors' perceptions" and
not by technical trading stratqics
that went awry. government reau-
lators said Monday.
The staff of the Commodity Fu-
tures Trading Commission. in a final
report. said it could find no evidence
to suppon the "persistent ancnion ..
that proarain trading strattfies. in-
cluding speculation m stock indexes.
was at fault for the stock plunge Oct.
19.
Both studies add to a arowina
numbcrofaovernment reponson the
stock market collapse. includina an
analysis by a commission headed by
former Sen. Nicholas Brady. R-N.J ..
that ·caued for a sinalc agency
possibly the Federal Reserve -to
oversee financial markets.
"Current futures market
surveillencc is sound," the report
said. However. it said that improved
data collection would be desirable. as
would "better sharing of accurate.
timely information" among the vari-
ous markets. PETITION DRIVE CURBED AT MALL •••
In fact, the repon SUBJCSted. the
market crash was the culmination of a
drop in stock prices that had begun
months before.
The study by commodities reau-
lators. however. recommended no
major structural changes in reau-
Monday's report said that the
CFTC staff supports "the belief that
the massi ve wave of selling that
engulfed both the stock and futures
markets on Oct. 19 was precipitated
by an unprecedented change in irr-
vestors' perceptions and• was not
initiated by technical trading
strategics ..
"The bull market .,, stocks th.at
started tcveral years ago bepn to AL. COBOL BAN LIFTED trend down in late August and the -• • •
downward trend was accentuated 1n FromAl
early October." Service station convenience stores the panel. which regulates futurc-s nc~r sc}lools or the Pacific
markets like the Chicago Mercantile .\mphatheatre probabl} would not
Eltchanse and the Chicago Boa rd of "in approval. he said.
Trade. issued its rcpon on the eve of Stall, some listeners agreed with
the release of stud) b) Its sister · Buffa that the ordi nance should be
•nq . the Securities and Exchange reJCCted.
Commission. Franklin Cole tol d the council he
.HOMES •••
From Al
was concerned about the cit y's hab-
1lit) an lawsuits for contnbutOf)
m:~gJigencc.
··1 cannot and do not have any
justification an my mind for why we
can sell alcohol and gasoline at the
same place,'' Cole said . •
E'en thoSt' businesses that do win
approval win be required 10 adhere 10
stnct conditions. including a ban on
selling be verages outside. or in an ace
tub.
Donald Lamm. development ser-
' ices director. said the cit) wanted 10
discourage sales of 1nd1vidual cans or
bottles.
From Al
mitted to signal to people or to leave
the booth to approach shoppers to ask
them to sign.
Petitione rs were finally all owed to
emerse from the booth and set up a
table late Sunday, but by that time
there \\'I S so little traffi c at the center
that few signatures were obtained.
Rogers said.
The results at Fashion Island were
panicularly meager when compared
to those at other shopping C'entcrs
where pet1t1oners have worked. said
R1.1ss Burkette. co-author of the
in1t1at1~c.
.. It was a waste of umc:· ~•d
Burkette. "We·,e gotten anywhere
from 1.000 to 1.500 signatures at
other shopping centers. o\t Hunt-
ington Center "e got 2.500 an two
da~s. To h:l\e gotte(l 25 an an entire
"eckend is not ve~ good.''
Burkette was not wi th Rogers over
the "cekend at Fashion Island.
··If I had been there. I would have
refused to "ork." he said. ..The
Fashion Island people told me on
Friday that we were goina to have a
gttat locatfon. that we were aoina to
be really visible. I didn't realize he
meant we were going to be visibile but
that we weren't going to be able to talk
to any.one.··
The proposed ballot measurc,
known ~s the Sensible Gro.,vtt\ and
Traffic Control Initiative. could limit
development in areas that have
serious traffic congestion.
Developers. though their trade
organization. the Buildina Industry
Associaition. arc mountina a cam-
pa1gn--0t-OPJ)(>Sit1on to the measure .
Stall. officials at several dcvcloper-
o~ ned malls. such as South Coast
Pl~za tn Costa Mesa. have permitted
in1t1attve petitioners into their
centers to gather signaturts.
Some. however. have put up bar·
ners. such as hcav> insurance rc-
qu1rements which are designed to
keep the petitioners out. proponents
of the dm'e claim.
Until last ·Friday's announ«ment
by Fashion Island officials. initiative
backcn had counted the Newport
~ach mall amona the centers where
such barriers had been put in the way.
Coulter said Friday that it was
~tandard company policy to require a
SI million inusrancc certificate from
outside groups wishing to use the
center.
"But this time the company made a
decision to let them come in without
insurance.'' he said.
Burkette said he was anacred at The
Irvi ne Co. 's apparent duplicity in
allowins petitioners in, but then
preventing them fro m operatina ef-
fi ll\cly.
.. Underthe la"1wc'rc allowed equal
access.'' he said. "They didn't give us
equal access... •
Despite last wcc'kcnd's meaaer
hlrvest of Signatures. Roaers said he
was prepared to return to Fashion
Island ncllt weekend.
"I hate to give up after arguina wuh
them for so long.·· he said.
though. that there are no plans for a
park an the area.
"And sanitation 1s going to be a
problem." he said.
CALLER •••
FromAi-VALLEY HOPES TO AGE GRACEFULLY.-••
Pilot Don Dodge. who battled to
keep the airpon open. said fliers now
may have to go as far as Banning to get
tic-down spaces for small planes.
F~llerton has the only other mu-
nicipal airpon in Orange County and
it's operating at capacity. Dodge said.
Councilwoman Finley. though vot-
ing again$t the zone change. said she
qidn't want the airport to continue
because of other developments that
have been allowed to encroach on the
fac.ihty.
Previous zoning had allowed the
Ncrios to build 350 single famal}
homes on their propeny
down guidelines requiring humane
treatment. said executive director
Richard Holden.
And Dr. Joel Pasco. treasurer of the
assoc1at1o n and a Costa Mesa·vetcnn-
anan. sai d he doubted whether man'
veterinanans would be:. S)'mpathct1c
to the acll\ISlS' cause.
"The Animal L1berat1on Front lost
the 'etennary community's respect
when the} set part of the veterinaf)
school (at UC Da'is) on fire." Pasco
said. ··1t wasn't even a research lab. It
was a d1agnost1c lab ...
Pasco said thett ma) be a couple of
vctennanans an Southern Cahfornaa
who work surrept1t iousl) with the
group.
"But 1t bnngs up a legal point,'' he
said.' "If I'm examining animals I
kno" are stolen property and don·t
repon 11 to the polJCe I could be an
acccssof) to grand theft. -
•· 1 thank any veterinarian who cares
about his license would be reluctant.
It's an unusual group fo r sure ...
Un1vers1t} research~ ~rc ex-
amining the effects of smog on the
lungs of the beagles and w.hY. some
tracheotomies are accompanied by
adverse effects an the S900.()()().per-
yea r study.
From Al
This )Car. the c1tv ha s S 140.000 for
grants and S46.oo0 for loans. Lewin
said. Last year. a total ofS 146.000 was
dedicated to the program.
The emphasis is on the grants,
because the free mone y is aimed at
sen1~ citizens and other fi xed-an-
comc~dents who ltvc tn the City's
t~o mobile home-parks. Lewin said.
Because of the general affiucncc of
the neighborhoods an Fountain Val-
le). man) of tht" hom('()wners do not
meet the income qualificati ons for
the loans. meaning add1t1onal mone)
allocated to that program would go
unusc.-d. Lc~1n said
SPECIAL COURT MARTIAL URGED ...
.. If somebod) is able t0 buy a
S200.000 home 1n Fountain Valley.
thq probably make more tha n
S2 I .OOO a year and can afford to keep From Al 11 UP..'' Lewa n said. ..The people
trol S) stem. The cross connection quahf} ing for the loans arc usuall)
did n't endanger the copter or crew. single parents. or an a situation where
. . . thq have a lot ofkads."
The income quahficauons arc set
b> the federal government. he said. A
three-member famil y can earn no
more than $27.000 a year to qualify
for the loan. while a famil y of eight or
more can make up to S38.000.
The money repaid on the loans goes
back to the city to keep the program
afl oaL Lcwui saidt addi.J'IJ that the
city doesn't make a~y profit.
"We·re losing· it if we count
inflatton and look at what we could
make through other investments." he
said.
Lewin said nearly all of the Orange
Coast cities have the low-interest loan
program for housing improvements ..
but most also have residential re-
de' elopment areas. too.
.. Our city is an pretty good shape.
but the loans make a definite im-
provement to the home. eittcrior and
anterior." Lewin said.
Kcl5cy sajd sbe'salso seen evidence
in Fountain Valley of a nei&hborhood
rebuilding it5clf with no help from the
city.
At one time, she said. the Colonia
J uarcz so;tion oft he city was rampant
with pnss and crime. One of the
older sections of Fountain Valley. the
homes were set on larger parcels. As
property values in the ci{y increased,
propcny owne-~novatcd the area
on their own. Kelsey said.
"In the last fi ve years. we've seen so.
many of the houses out their rebuilt."
she said. ·
The combined efforts appear to be
workina.
From July to Dectmber' an 1987,
the latest fiaurcs available. the city of
Fountain Valley issued 220 permits
for additions or alterations to cxistina
single-family homes. compared to
just 3S permits for new homes,
according to the city building depan-
ment.
"We're doina OK.'' Lewin said.
to damage a heli copter and attempt·
in& to destroy the national defense
Other pending charges include usi ng
marijuana and disobeying orders by
placing a foreign substance into a
urine s.ample bottle during a
squadron drug swee p.
Revolution which carries with 1t the
death penalty. The charge was drop-
ped because at applied only to vessels
that fl oat. McDermott said.
Capt. Bradley N. Garber. pros-
ecutor in the case. refused comment.
Altho\Jgh pilots monstonng 1nstru-mcnts de1tc1td the cro~<onnttt~n I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Hill was onginall) charged w11h
endangenng an able vessel. an aged
maritime law predat1n1 the American
Tt'stamon) at the earlier hearing
re vealed that Hall a pparently
s" itched the plugs governing parts of
the hehC'opter's automatic fl1aht con-
during a preflight check. tbe pilot
testified that the crew believed the
aircraft would fl y and the malfunc-
tion wasn't reponed until aner a 45-
minute flight.
·RAPE CASE EXPECTED TO WIDEN •••
Prom Al
oroba11on for the "1olations. In 1985. oral sex charges. cha Id molestation
he was placed on one year's probation charges were 1nadvcrtattl y filed
for w'4in& a S 1.200 check with against the man, Mont&Qmery said.
insuff.cent funds an the bank. Moni&omery said the misfiled
When charsed with the sexual cha{leS1 which he uid-wuc.. t.ypina
assaUTf cliaraes. the baiTs in the errors. would be corTtCted when ~vious cases -·sso.ooo and Panichas is arraianed on Feb. 11 in
$25,000 -were automatically added Newport Beach.
to the $200.000 figure. court officials • If more victhns come forward. the
aaid. addiitonar charan could also be filed
But the documents "' the new case at that time, whk h will be Panichas'
also contained several errors. first coun appearance on the molcsta·
authorities said. Instead of forcibk tiCln cha~. authorities said.
ORANOI! __, ....
COAST ..... ..
llMIOl'l'ICI no-.. a.v s, CG111 ....., c"
Panachas allcgcdl}' met his v1cttms
dunnaJob 1ntcrv1ews. Griswold said.
Afier talkana with the girls. he
would offer to show them around the
Harbor Bou~rd fadlitµnd..aiyack.
1hcm. the 1erseant al~,
He allcerdly raped both 18-year-
old ·women and f~ each to
perform oJher sell acts at the business.
He also alleledly assaulted the 22-
ycar-.old. a us Yeps woman who
had flown to Irvine fora job interview
with the suspect, Gnswold said.
...,. .---.,. •MO c.-• Mel C" i~ c.......-WM71-&~64i'•~' Ju•tcall 642-8086
1 I , t It •
""'~~ .. ·-~ ., S°300lfl U o.;-.••e -·~ ~ ... °"""""° What do you hkc abou.t I.be 0.al)' Pdot? Whit
don't you like? Call tM numbtr above and your
l'!1ftlllt wall be tteorded. tran.ttnbcd and de-
livered to the approprwW tthtor.
Tlw l9IM 24-hour 1n1wcri~ 1UV1re may bt
~ to ...... letMrJ IO &he .. IOr "°" H l 10flC. Contnbuton to our uum column muit include
their narM and ~ltphone nu•btr for vmft?t•on.
TeUt ut.wha~Oft ~ow .....S.
•
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