HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-01-25 - Orange Coast PilotI
for Vldlrils'
famlHes
. .
THE ORANGE COAST
c n
dlesat49
of AIDS
In Laguna
OBIT ARY/ 2
Newvport Be ch
says, 'I had no Idea he
would keep \Yec:ldl~
rings for 40 years.'
EIGHBORHOOD FOC
25 CENT
. . .
NB slaying suspect arrested
9y..SYOKOf
°'-~ .... ...,,
A suspect in the Newport Beach slayina of an eye
doctor was captured 1n Hollywood on Tue3day after beana
sponed dnv1n1 around an the v1ct1m's Me rcedes-Benz
con¥en1ble. police-reported.
The suspect. Allen Lindsey. 23. confessed to the
alayina but told pohct 1l was 1n self-defense. according to
Newport Pohce spokesman Bob Oakley.
-li~y as ~ charaed wt th the murder of Boonk1rd
ChulaPittrcheeviRy 45. who was found stabbed to death
last Thursday 1n his beachfront home at 2314 W. Ocean
Front.
Lindsey, an unemployed transient who pohce say
hves in Hollywood motels. WIS brought to Newpon
Beach CliJair after beana arrested by Los Angeles police Nea bors rc~rtcd hcarina Chulapatrcheev1n's
while crcedes 560-SI convertible beina dnven away
from the ophthalmoloSJst's duplex the night before he was
found. Los Angcles pohcc officers on patrol an Holly ..... ood
Charges in NB
drug-smuggling
seizure dismissed
9y tRIS YOKOI or .. ~,......,,
A mumc1pal court Judie Tuesday
dismissed drua-smuahna charscs
qainst a Santa Cruz man, marluna
tl\e third time charaes have bttn
thrown out of court in connection
•with the laraest drua seizure an
Newport Beach history.
Bruce Patnck Malley, 32, sur·
rendered last month and pleaded
innocent to charges he helped smua-sJe more than sut tons of manJuana
into the Uh1tcd States aboard a 45-
foot saiJboat.
other Santa Cruz men arrested 1n the
record drug seizure who were ex-
pected to tcs.r1fy ap1nst Malley
One of the omccrs who made the
dru& bust was fired by the department
months after the seizure and ..... as
arrested when he later dechned to
testify.
Boms said no furtht'r attempts
would be made to bnns cbaraes in the
manJuana seizure, which occurred in
1985.
Malley's attorney. Robert
Wembera, could no1 be reached for
comment. But late last week. the
defense attorney rrcd•cted the latest
charies v.ould f11 JUSt as they had 1n
two earlier auempts.
around 2:30 a.m. Tuesday spotted lhc sedan pulled over
on the side of lhe road. The driver was talking lo another
man standing on the curb. Newport Beach Police Lt. Tam
Newman saia.
The officers did nol 1mmcd1attl)' knov. the Mercedes
wulhc Newport Beach doetOt''S:, bul for-some rnson they
felt the two subjects' activity was susp1c1ous. Newman
said.
They ran a check of the ltetnS( plait. learned the vehicle WI$ involved 1n ·a murder mvest1pt1on and
subsequently slopped the car as It pulled av.ay from the
curb.
The officer~ amsted Lindsey without incident for
1nvest1gat1on of murder and also took the pedcstnan into
custody for qucstaonana. gt. Mike Jackson and DelCC11ve
Jim Coe of the Newport Beach Pohcc traveled to Los
Angeles and arrested Lindsey for murder after inter·
v1cw1n1 both men.
While 1nvcs11sators appear to ha\ie 'ouen closer to
findana out why Cnulapatrchccvin v.as killed. fnends of
the doctor wondered why lhe devout and generous
Buddhist was killed.
The doctor was active 1n Buddhist orpnizations 1n
the United States and in his nati ve Thailand and donated
"a lot of money" over the last six or seven ~ears to the
BuddhlSI Temple of Amenca in Ontano. said a temple
member and fMnd wlttt W1 hcd to be1dcnuftcd-only by
has first name. Paul. •
The unmamed doctor also donated money to the
Tba1 Temple in Los Anaclcs and paid for hospital beds 1n
Ttwland, Paut said .. He-was a kind, kmd pcnon," Paul
said. "(His hfc was) nothma but ~orlc and home and
temple."
· He was a "very respected person" ln the Southern
Cahfomta Thai community, Paul said. Hundreds of
people ha\ie attended the first three nl&)lts of wcck-lo"I
prayer ceremonies held in hJS memory at the Los Af\ldc's
temple and a laraer number arc expected durinc the last
few nllhts of the services. which will be held until Friday
at the Ontano temple. Paul said ·
··1 don't think he would So around and cauic an)'
trouble," Paul saad . f~olM '"SUSNCT I A2t
He appeartd in Harbor Municipal Coun on Tucsda)' for a prehm1nary
hearing. but Judgc Frances Munoz
dtsmassed the charges because pros-
ecutors were not prepared to proceed
With their CIK
Victor Luc1ni. Richard Nelson and
David Choy were arrested the evc-
nina of Jan. 21. 198S. after a passing patrolman spotted their boat moored
to the small M Street dock near 1he
end of the BaJboa Peninsula
Just winging It
A squadron of birds J•U acr o11 the mudflats of th• 8ofNI The wetlands offer • retuee for die Muftttl.HI• of Mlpatoty
Chica ecol09kal reserve In Huntlntton Beach on• 9ra1 d•J· birch that flodl tt.re 4urfng ttte wlntertlfwe.
"We were unable to proceed due to
the lack of a w11ncss' av11lab1hty,"
said Deputy D1stnct Attorney Tom
Boms.
The watne was not ftC'CC$sanly
nccdcd for the preliminary hC'lnna.
but the prosecutor said he learned the ~person """ould never be ava1l1ble to
,us."
Minus the Wltncss, Boms said •th~ would have bctn some d1fficul·
ty wtnn1n1 the ca.sc.
Borns would not e1tpla1n who the
witness •as or why he was not
available. He did say the wuness in
quntion was not one of the thrtt
The officer was suspicious because
the boat was nd1naso low an the water
and because 11 had bttn tied to the
dock for nearly an hour. 1n excess of
the <1tfs 20.minule moonna hm1t
Ofli~rs ""ho later boarded the boat
found the manJuana, v.nppcd 1n
burlap
Malky. suspeclcd to be the fourth
person ndmg the boat. was not
capcurtd at the time
The case apinst Lucina. Nelson
and Choy wa thrown out by Harbor
Court Judae Ruucll Bostrom. ~ho
,,... ... MC DtNG/ A2f
C'O\ J:H s ·1·0K \ I .... \'l'I·
s~-1-M settle1ne
hearings to start
In mortuary suit
Ir IOe VAN IYUN ..............
Sb )ftr'I llO Tunday, two widows
ftled tuit .... nst Costa Mal's Harbor Lawn Mount Olivt Monuary and M .. orial Part 1lleai111 that thrir lowd oec1• cremaied uha Md bttn
1111 •Med in an almott unt0ah~
P F If. 1111 dlll action SUit alleled IMI. oww a feriod ol at 1N111even yean, =1-llClftDkMaoftn ~ ...._ in t'ht cmu1ary at
-lilm. «milled, tp11kd and
I lb • •mped paniOftl of their ~ ..... . •• ~ ........ Mftlllo
filed 1n l 91l 1P1nst the monuary, Ill
owncn and other 1nsututaons coo-
nec:1ed weth Harbor Lawn. rnultiat
in eta,... pe~t.s 1n the hundreds
of thou•nds Of dollars
The tune appear1 to be fast ap-
proechi"" ~vcr, for the .tctde-
IM'ftt 10 end all IC1~ll ln the
arillY catt • On Monday. final hearinp well ..... an Slilta AM Oft a Sl 1 maUioa
....._, .. Meftt involv~ 1llM I ............. I ' ....._. Latra. and..,.... ol ll. ....... ..,.., ..... ..., .........
"1111 .. ...,_.,.,All
Robbers assault computer-chip plant
1y GREG KLERKX
Of ... 0...., ..... SUllt
Three machine gun·to11na men
dressed in camouflaae clothing
stormed an lrvtnt' c1rcu1t·board
manufacturer's warehouse Monda)
cvenana. beating up one sccunty
guard and steahng an unknown
amount of computer chaps
The break·tn at AST Research
warehouse. located at 16700 Aston.
occurred shortJy before 10 p.m . said
Irvine Police Lt. Mike White The
company produC'CS computer hard-ware. such as chips and cu·cu1t
boards
Two unanned ~unty auards from
Amencan Protecuon Services • .,...h1ch
contracts with A T for sccunt)
services, v.ere on dut) It the v.11rt·
house when the heard a knock on the
._ ............. .....
...... , L8wll • .. :an" ................ cr1m1111 ..
............... 4•12111 ... la.
GOOD MORNING
CD rhd ........•.•.....•..•..•..••. M-1
............................... AIO ........................... ..,.,.
~ .............................. ;-.
door. White said
One of the auards. Frank Rutlcdac.
68, of Fountain Valle~. opened the
door and WIS attacked by three men.
believed to be Vietnamese. wcanng
camouflaac ciothma and black m1h·
taf) "watchcaps" and carT)1n1 what
appeared to be automauc weapons..
Rutlcdac was knocked to the
ground by the suspects and k1d.ed
se"eral tunn. Wh ite said The second
auard. Patnck 'WaJdron, 28, of Foun-
tain Valley. was brouaht into the
room and both he and RutJcdat were
tied up and blindfolded
The suspects wt"rc 1n the warehouse
for about 45 minutes. White said
Pol1tt first behcved they lcf\ with
onl> Rullcdac's wallet and keys. but While said some computer chips wrc
probabl) stolen as v.~11
(l'teaw lft "°98E.S/A2J
Gorbachev out oils
president in county
l y GftfG KLERKX
OflM~ .... i.-
~ su~e) that hows So\:aet leader
M1kha1l Gorblchev 1s more popular
10 Repubhcan-<iomanatcd Orange
County than President Geo~ Bush
left wme GOP leaders laughina and
others bnsthna on Tunday.
Tbc ul'l)f"lsina result ot the poll.
undertaken by a UCI profnsor and
sponsottd by The LosAnaclt Tames.
came 1n tbt count)' that ll"t Bu h
and former Prttldcnt Ronald R~n
their lartnt maf11n of victory of any
county 1n the United tatcs.
Gorblmcv. ~ has wlllCd an
1ntm11vc publte rc~t1ons cams-11n
10 woo JUppon 1n the n1tcd tatcs.
~1ved 1 70 ptrttnt favorabk
rat1111-wtulc 6 7 percnt said tM)'
havta f'av~tOn oftht ~ly 1na.,a9td t. ·
Tiit suncy ol 600 Oraner ount)'
adults al rc'ealed that 47 pert't'nt
think th( C'old War bet-un the
upcrpov..ers 1 com1na to a_n end. The
poll has a 4 percent ma~n of cnor.
The poll was taken Jan 13 \0 17 by
the If\ me-baJCd firm of Mark
Baldassare & Associates. ~
1 also a_n a 1stant professor ohocial
cc:oloay at UCI
Tom Fuentes.. chamnan o( the
Repubhcan Party of 0ra,. County,
tambestcd the poll as a .. paid. liberal·
anted" undcrtakJnt that could no«
be counted on for much attut'llC'y.
"I don·i think tbcrc's much tn.th to
this;· Fucntn sald.
Fuentes also tAammed JM Loi
Ansel~ Tunes.. 11y1na 11 • Ml a
reputation amonia con1rnat1vw •
beint "Pravda We-11" and a.IMM IM
poU -lhe dcfhuteve ~ or IM
k't'UfKY of \hat pcTttptioft ...
Statt n Marian let1tl06. •· fPJ'•-.. fllGL\/ All
M .Glr.1C.-DM.YN.OTl..., 11dlf,Jlrwyal. ..
sa considering an incr a--
8JfWVMPICDI ..............
Tiiie muJta of 1 stud} receivtid by dllC COiia Meu City Council could
lftlke life more expensive for mi·
*8ts wbo '* the caty•s servitts.
la ~ati• tht study at a council
l&udy ICtlion on Monday. Irvine.
hued (Ofttuhant Bttty Annwona
laid thttt wctt a number of IC'n'ices.
such as animal control and the annt of suspec1ed drunk.en driv~ for
which tht city could charae h11htr rm than it now does.
lacnati11 dly fen coMt ..,u.ny r»1U1. wlaa1. COl1a Maa ., dillCIGr ol
finUce. Robcn Omaia. prediaa will
bt I S6 million ~ ddiri1 b)' 1993.
''Thttt is quite a bit of room fO.. incRUina your fee reven~:· saad
Arm1trona of the firm Venex Cost Syatcms Inc. "Diffettnt cities around
the counuy •tt tumina to fees as • ptnial an1Wtt to a.Mir financial
pt0bkm1."
The review of city fees. which has ~n aoina on for some months.
come1 II 1 tune when official• an
,...tiai11 a trVtrc financial mancit
18 tt.r --·~ brcaute I •tt"o= impaled i• limit ettvtnll
COlll Mesa usina all or the ta. rcYCDUa~ted ~bus•~ and proprny 1n the city.
TM se><allecl Gann limit prevcnt1
the aty's tax revtnues from arowi• 11 1 tale fUKr than about 611? pefttnt
a year. Evetyth1n1 eltc mu1t be ~urned to the .. ._Plyert unlds city
ttiidcnts approft an exemption
Fen, however. are not covered by
Companion of Laguna Beach
mayor succumbs at 49 to AIDS
ly UWCf IGNON
... JO'la IODLOVfCH or .. ..._... ....
· An exhausted Laguna .Beach
Mayor' Robert Gentry reorganized
the City Council's aaenda Tuesday to
return homea.nd mourn the lossofhis lonatime companion who died of a
suspected case of AIDS on Monday.
Gentry's voice broke when he
announced at Tuesday's mectina that 4~year-old Michael Gary Burdick
had lost his fight aaainst the disease.
Gentry turned the gavel over to
Mayor Pro Tern Lida Lenney at 8 p.m. to return to the hilltop home he
had shared with Burdick.
Gentry .. a member of the .city's
AIDS Education Task Force and the county•s only openly gay elected
official, said he has yet to be tested for the disease.
"With Gary being sick I could not
handle knowin& my own antibody statusand I did not want him 10 know my antibody status.·· Gentry said in
an interview at his house following aoina on that was AIDS-~latcd." he
the.council meetina. said. "It would have truly devastated
him and he needed me to be strong to
take cart of him," he.said.
As a leading member of the PY community, Gentry ·said the ex-~ricnce has reinforced his convic-
tion of the need to warn others of the deadly disease.
Gentty1 SO, and the Corona dcl Mar hairdresser. had been companions for
the last 13 yean. Burdick bad been in
the Hoq Memorial Hospital in Gentry said when he met Burdick
Newport Beach since Friday. in 197S. Burdick's greatcsl fear was
. Gentry said d~tors at Hoaa be-death. Butasthecenaintyofh1sdea1h
heved tha~ Burdick succumbed .to became apparent, Burdick.accepted 11
tuberculosis, ~ne of the many dis-. with dipny. cases that can infect a person after the . . AIDS virus has weakened the im-"He ask.~ me to ~ke .. h1s hfe (on munc system. Satu~y) •. Gentry said. To me that
B · k ed was his ultimate and final acceptance Qe!'uy added that ur~1c . test . of the process oflivin&. l was able to
positive for AIDS an.t1bod1es ID SlOJLLllumbcr o( tnts that wctt No~bef.. Gentry -utd:-ftc first planned for him and several real~ that Burdick m_1ght have procedures so that he could be a!t AIDS 1n March 1988 whtle he was ~ bl "bl •• watching a slide show that depicted romiorta c as possi e.
the worsenina staacs of the disease. Gentry was instrumental in Laauna
"I symbolically saw Gary in that Beach becomina the first city in
slide. r sajd to myself subconsciously. Oran_ge County to approve 1 law
that's my Gary. In my deepest g~t I prohibitina discrimination apinsl
probably knew there was somethin& people with AIDS.
die ~II luaat ud many cilia.
Co.aa Mesa iAduded. clo 1101 ~
alt die)' could for \be 1ttV1Ce1 dlC1
proMvidt. . . . in.-~=..a· Oil cities, 1n ·-~. au-•• ltt'\'ittl. l1ICh as intptttions aad
buildi• plait approvm_ under the phi~)' that thew lft'Vtca should
bt Offtted at the lowni ~bit cost.
In Costa Mta. ~Mid. the city now rtt0vm. 1n fen about 61
~nt of the eott of its aervi«I.
tor some Pt'.otnms. such as ron·
ll'IC1 d'ttkina. COit rm>very ii .. hi&h
. Gentry helped drat\ the ordinance
1n May 1988. The law prohibits discrimination by landlords, em-
plorers, medical and dent.al pro-
fess1onal.s and public accommo-
dations. such as restaurants and
hotels. It also applies to city services
and faciht1cs and prohibits man-datory AIDS testing.
.
Many cities also dlais drunken
driven for lhe police and other COllS
1ncumd when tMlt dri¥tn cautt
acadrftt1 or when they •~ atTtStcd.
sbellid.
HEARINGS ,.,..,.,,
Hll'bor Lawn rttards, is the number
of fiamiJies Who mipt have been 1&Cted by the improper activities."
laid .. ,Y McMullen, the Tustin
attorney who filed the oriainal class
action-suit on behaJf of Eileen Ann
Heffley and Jean M. Schneider.
In addition to Harbor Lawn. the
· suit named abs Nephanr Socldy.
McCormick Mortuary in West-
minster. Dilday Brothers Huntinaton
Valley Mortull)'., The Omep So-
ciety. Peak Family Colonaal Funeral
Home. Chapel of lhe Dunes. Inter·
national funeral Services and othen
"They were oriainally brouaht into
the suit because they did their
cremations at Harbor Lawn. ahhouah there were also some individual aJl~tions of abuses at these facili-
ties.' McMullen said.
The settlement follows years of
hcarinas that included testimony and dcpositio.01.from former emplo}cu
of Harbor Lawn.
William Dufresne. manaacr of the
mortuary until 1982, testified that he
cremated up to 600 bodies 1n groups
of two or more.
Other former employees testified
that bodies were stored in un·
refri.acrated conditions and that ashes
were haphazardly stored and peck-ascd in funeral urns.
Oranac County Supttiot Coun J~ ·John L A>nn reltalCd the
rem11n1na $3.S million en ~ovcmber
1987. Much of the $3.S m1thon WI$
distnbutcd to a aroup of or•11nal
plamtifTs as an advance settlttMnt
The settJcment fu nd increated to $21 m1lhon la1c last year with tt\t
add1t1on to 1hc acttlmcnt of nu~ more
defendants. But final d1stnbUtion ofthe 1tt1Je-ment fundJ will probably .ot bes.in
unul next year. McMul!tn sa.id.
.. When hearmp bt&ln neJlt MoQ;.
day. the first t~ina that hat to bt dotk is the class will )\ave to bt cerur.ect.
and then thecoun wall have to make a
deterrninat1on that thcseulmient his
bttn made in aood faith, .. •td
McMullen ... Then the special mu~r can bqln procnsina the claims.··
An y one who had a relative's bod)'
cremated at Harbor Lawn between
July I. 1978. and Aug. I. 191$, IS
eJigible to act part of the senlcment,
she said. ·~ effon wi.llhe-made. to find
out who these people are throuaJi
records," she said. "But or COUrJC
because of the lcnath of time in-volved 'lllny peopJe will have
movcd'an$11t may be difficull to trade
everybody down."
Pe()_ple who know thet are among
the affected class of people may wntc
to the special master. attorney Russell
Behrens. at 1800 N. Broadway. 1wte
200. Santa Ana. 92706. and request a
claim form. Trade group seeks
more ·taxes to close
bankrupt U.S . thrifts
Fugitive OC inmate
found in canyon attic
In 1986, a Supe"rior Counjudsc ID
Santa Ana consolidated hundreds of
'tascs that were ~ndin& against
Harbor Lawn and the other defen-
d.ants.. pavin& the way for the sinaJe,
lal'JC settlement aareement. In 1987, the mortuary's insurers agreed to set up a S 14 mil hon fund for
eventual payment to clients whose
relatives' remains were allegedly m1s-
How much 1s awa~cd to each
individual pl11nt1ff will de~nd on
how many file claims durina Uie
approximately four monlhs the coun
1s expected to allow for fihn&. To some extent. payment will also
depend on 1nd1v1dual circumstances.
such as the closcncu of the plaintiffs
relationship to the deceased ~non whose remains were mishandrcd.
WASHINGTON (AP) -The sav-
inp and loan industry's lal'JCSt trade
aroup on Tuesday recommended
tapping the U.S. Treasury to close
insolvent institutions while slashing
the amount contributed by healthy
s.lLs. The proposal by the U.S. League of
Savinp Institutions, If adopted.
woukl have the effect of shiftint ~II of the burden for solvin& the problems
of the federal Savinp and Loan
lnauraoce Corp. onto taxpayers and
frccina the industry from funher
responsibility.
The arouptwhich plans to PteSCnl its proposal · hursday at a heanna of
the House Budaet Committee, wants
to create a Resolution Corporation as
a new, independent.federal qcnq.
The Resolution Corporation
would be responsible for Uquidatina
or aellina the mo~ than 3SO insol·
vent, but still open, s.lLs as well as
any institutions that lapse into in-solvency in 1he next three years.
It also would take over all of the
obliptions the FSLIC has acquired in
rescuing institutions in the past For
instance, the FSLIC "resolved" the casesof20S insolvent institutions last
year, largely by issuina p~omissory
notes and guaranttts against loss.
These obliptions would be trans-
ferred to 1he Resolution Corporation.
The Resolution Corporation
would raise money by issufoa notes.
which would be suarantced by the
Treasury. Any money the Resolution
Coiyoration JCt5 from selling failed
s.lls to new investors or from scllina
the assets would go toward payin& ofT the notes. However. the Treasury
ROBBERS
FromA1
White said invcstiptors believed
the suspects may also be involved in a
series of similar robberies throughout
Orange. San Diqo. and Los Aniclcs
counties over the past few mon1hs. In
most of the cases. contracted secunty pl'ds-wutbealcn or lie<rup y The
assajlants and computer chips were
the tarict of the robbery.
About Thanksgivina a similar rob-
Dru a
FromAf"
cooduded police conducted an ill~I
tearch. The judae funhcr called for a
Grand Jury investiption of pouiblc
police misconduct. The Grand Jury cleared police, but was subsequently alked by the diltrict
attorney's office to review t.he d~
aeizurt. The Grand Jury did and
would have to pay most of the bill.
Jn the meantime, a new. industry-
funded FSLIC would be created to
insure the deposits of hcallhy S&Ls.
which would pay an insurance
premium no higher than the
premiums paid by commercial banks
to their fund, the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp.
Banks currently pay 8 cents ~r
$100 in deposits. Since l98S. S&Ls
have been ~ying a hi&her fee. 21
cents perSIOO in aeposits.
Barney R. Beeksma, chairman of
the U.S. Leaaue. araued th11 S&Ls
already have paid S.S billion in extra
assessments and can't afford to pa(
more if 1hcy are to build their cap1i. •
a key reform advocated by the Lea.gue and private 1nalysls.
Capital represents the amount of
money put up by an institution's
owners as backina for public deposits.
The more capital there is, the arcater
the cushion against failure and the more incentive the owners have to
operate the S&L safely.
"We've paid all that we can pay and
what we're concerned with now 1s
creating a viable insuranoe fund for
the future," Beeksma said in a
telephone interview. "Somebody has
to decide whether they want us to pay
the bill for the FSLrC or build our
capital to make sure this doesn't
happen apin. We can't do both."
He said tappina taxpayer's funds
"is a price for the mistakes that were
made in the past by the Congress, the
regulators and the few in our business
that shouldn't have been let in.:•
bery occurred at the Holt Corp. in
Irvine. Security auards were tied up
and $200,000 wonh of computer
chips were stolen.
White said computer chips are
becoming hot commodities on the
black market.
"There are some rcnaad com-
panies that buy them for fialf or one
quarter of the price," White said. "It's
easy to sell them because everybody
has computers now."
' indicted the thru Santa C'Nz men,
rcvivina the cue.
However, Superior Coun J~
Grancilco 8ritenO weed with &c»-trom and threw out the cha.l)es.
Malley 1ppe.muly surrtndlmld re-
cently under the belief be could ftOW
clear his name lince the charan
lll•MI bis c0Ua1ua had been drop-~. .
Just ca ll 642-6086
Wba1 do you like about the Daily Piloc? What doa't yo11 like? Call the number 1~e and _yovr = wHI be recorded. tnnecribed and de-. IO 1111111p....-ldi10r.
'hi-J~---.... .-v1Cll.., ... .................. '° ........ -Mf topic. CMll.blorl IO OS l.etlln Claluln• m• mctil*
............. DM ...... l!w~
Td111Wha1·1011~--
An inmate who walked away from a minimum security branch coun1y
jail in El Toro lasl week was d1~
covered hidina Tuesday in the attic of a home owned by his f ncnd. who also
StJSPECT
FromA1
However, he said lnends have
thou&ht of several motives for his
mwder.
Altbouah Paul would not
elaborate, he hinted that one connec-
tion diJcuued bad to do with the
many properties the wealthy doctor
owned or bad an interest in.
Accordina to Paul, the doctor
owned a home in Costa Mesa in addition to his Newport Beach du~xi:..~an owner or pan owner of
10 AJllDCim sboppina center and had
RCeftlly purcbued a 200-unit com-
plex in an unknown location. How-ever, the doctor ran into legal troubles
with this most recent purchaJc. Paul
said.
Members of the Buddhist Temple
of America in Ontario, to which 1hc wealthy doctor rqularly donated
money, meanwhile, continued their
~rayer ceremonies for
0.ulapttrcheevin and wondered why
the dedicated Buddhist was murdered.
Lindsey is in Newpon Beach jail
beina held without bail. The un-
named pedestrian has voluntanly
placed himself in lempocary custody
of Newport Beach for questionina.
Oakley said.
M an throw n
from car still
hospitalized
A J~year-old Silverado Can~on
man ttmaincd in serious condition
Tuesday after beina thrown from a
car in a crash Saturday niaht.
Chns 00eric1'tri was a peucn· acr in a 1976 Porsche dnven by Joy >.sde. 33 ofNewpon Beach whtn tht
car skidded out of control on Silvet-
ado Canyon Road near Santiaao
Canyon Road, acwrdina to Cali·
fomaa Hishway Patrol reports.
The car spun off the road and into 1
ditch. Ooericht.Klidt wu thrown
from the vehicle aad was t.Uen br bel~ to Million Hoepilal ho
sional Medical Center.
A.ltJe au&red modinte il\iuries
and ...... '° Seddlebect Ciom-
mllllity H°"""'" Ille Wll n-lr rllf
OYef ........... No dllllB ... brouittt--Allll fOrdll •ddlM.
.,.. .. ,._.,,~ ,,...., ..... .....
10 ............ .. .......... o..c.. ...-...c...., • ........... __ .. , . ......,. __ __
...... ,..., Clf.-.C*' ,....
was arrested.
Michael Thomas K.ing, 26, of
Newpon Beach was discovered miss-
ing from his bunk at Uie James A Musick facility in El Toro late Thursday night sheriffs spokesman
Lt Dick Olson said.
Sheriffs f ua11ive mvcs11ga1ors
armed with an arrest wamnt found
King about noon in a home al 28331 Modjeska Canyon Dnvc. an unjn-
corporated county area, Olson said.
The homeowner, Cart Richard
Taylor, 62. was arrested on susp1c1on
of a1din& and abettm& a felon. He was beina held at the Oranac County Jail
in lieu ofS 10.000 bail.
King. now considered a secumy
risk, was returned to the Oran&e
County Jail and will face felony
csca~ charaes. Olson said.
Kina had been housed at the branch
Jail since Dec. 23 for a probation
violation and was scheduled to be
released in April. He was on proba-
tion for possession of a hypodcnn1 c
syringe, Olson said.
Faulty missiles found
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Air Force removed the I ().warhead pay.
load from fi ve MX missiles late lut
year. several months after an a«1dcn1
in which a missile came loose and fell
in us underaround silo. a pubHshcd
rcpon says.
The service is still tryins to dtt1dc
how to repair the five missiles. which
account ror I 0 pcrttnt of the nation's
MX force, The Wuhinaton Post
reported today.
Despite takin& the warheads ofT
five mtssiles, the x:rvke sull claim~
last month that the MX had re.ached
"full operational capability" on Dec.
30.
hand.Jed. ' But in Jul y 1987. Harbor Lawn
filed for bankruptcy. castina doub1
over the settlement. The issue was
whether the monuary's insurance
funds were frozen under the terms of
the bankruptcy.
U.S. Bankruptcy Coun Judie
James Barr released most of 1hc
insurance funds later Uiat summer.
POLL
From Al
Newpon Beach. said T~sday that
'he wasn't aware of the survey, but
laughed when told about the results.
"Well, he's ccnamly not more
popular 1n my ho~hold," 8c11t50n
quipped.
.. It might be a c.ase of companna
apples and oranacs." she added "More populu compared to ~ho.,
Khrushchev'! II def?Cnds on who
you're lalkina about. •
British Pnmc Minis1er Margaret
Thalcher earned 1hc h1,hest
favorable rauna amona intcrnauonal
fiauru. wnh 79 perttnt. Rcapn
followed with 76 ~rccnt. hrach Primt Mintstcr Yuzhak Shamir re-
ceived 1 21 percent favorable rauna.
Some Republicans pointed to the
poll as an example of Rcqan's
success 1n thawu11 the Cold War.
'1"hc mcssaac 11 that Oran,t Coun-ty 1s more in the mainstream or
American Ui1nkm1 than the per·
cepuon," said lona11mc R~n ad·
v1ser Stu Spenser ... Th1nk1na on the
Cold War undoubtedly is cltanaina
due to Ronald R~n·1 pohcici.
Fony~five perctnt sald they think.
the Cold War 11 ne1nna its end. •h1le 31 pment saed the Thjrd World
pmenaed tht areatat threat to ·~
"Spouses. for example. will rctt1ve
more than more distant rclauvcs,"
McMullen said. rn any case. all claims will have lo
be p~ befort any final pay-
ments art made.
McMullen said she expccltd 1hc
final hcanngs 10 take about six weeks
fulurc of the Un11cd States.
"SQ · a conscrvauve leadtt's ac-
comphshmenu ha"c affccttd con-
servauves 11 home." Spenser said.
The poll also found that morr
~oplc sec Japan and the Third Worfd
as a threat to the Unutd Statts than
the Soviet Union and Ouna. Just 17
percent said the So viet Union prts·
ents the &reatest threal, while 6
~rcent felt China was the &reatest
threat.
A maJonty, S3 ~rccnt. s.a1d U.S
m1htary forces should remain at
present levels. wh1lt onl) 12 ~rccnl
said m1htal) forces should be in· creased
On the touchy 1nue1 of abortion. AIDS educauon and porn<>lflpby,
Oranic County residents qa1n shov.
ed a sof\en1na of pcrcc1v~ hard-hnc
conservative tendencies.
Sixty ~rceni opposed a upttmc
Court ban on abort.Jons and S6
percent oppoKd a ban on the rcnQI of
X·rated films at local video stort
Rcprdina acquired immune dcfi·
c1cncy syndrome, 82 percent favorttt
teach1na you~ten in public hool
about the use of condoms as a mean)
of controlhn.a the spread of the dead I) AIDS \'INS
-TM AIMda&H Prnt ete· .,.. .... w.nten.
&..-. llllrtl.. .................................................. WS.OC> to 1130.CX> ............ -........... II I--a... I rlfrra. ..... -.................................. s.o.oo .. Slt0.00.--.............. &.lll ..
.... ~ .................................. S.0.00 .. '10.00 ....................... ""' ... ...
.... A11r•r 111.-................................... US.GO,. 1125.00 ........................... II ..
Ill I I I I 1 \ lrt• \Uh
Norman eousins
to help physicians'
communicating skill
Norman Cousins, editor of tht Saturday
Review for JS ~ears and author of 2~ books, Wlll
lpeak Qn phys1c1ans' roles in commun1cat1n1 at
l l:lOa.m. Tutiday.Jan 31 .at UCI MedicaJCenttr.
lOI The Caty Dnvc South, Oranac. in th( Buitdin1
Sl auditorium The forum 1 frtt and open to tM
publlc.
Coullns 1s known for his account in "Anatomy
of an Illness" of his successful battle qainst a
t.cnnioaJ illnc s afTtttinJ the ner'lous S)'lt.cm.
Cousins currently 1s an adjunct profcHOr at UCLA
School of Medicine
For informauon. call 9S7-SS3S. .. ""
Abus~d chl/dr~n's suppon
Supporters of Ohve Crest Treatment Centers for Abused Ot11dren, will hold a general mccung at
.S:30p.m. Feb.lat ttfc Red Lion Inn. 3050 BristofSt~
an Costa Meta. . Olive Crest is a nonprofit orgaJUUt1on with 26
sroup hornet in Southland counties and provides
Iona-term care for more than 400 abused. aban-
doned and nqJccted children )'ta.rl).
For information. call 777 .. 999.
Art cl!nsorshlp l!Xamlnt!d
A panel discussion on "Censorship ond Selct·
tivity in the Art World" will be held at the Ir\ inc
Fine AruCentcr. 14321 Yale Ave .. at 1 pm 'Feb 2.
The 10flucnca of pubhc 1ewcn. Pol~acal
leaders. &ender. race and other factors on an
selection and censorship wall be the focus of the
program.
Guests mclude Josinc lanco-Starrels. Long Beach Mustum of Art curator ..-nd Georae He-rm .
whose sculpture has been cxh1b11cd at the Los
Anicles Louver Gallcty. Newport Horbor An
Museum, and Kent Fine Art 1n New York.
Students and seniors wall be admitted forS4 and
the general public for SS. For information. call
.552-1018.
Focus on llft!-savlng busln~ss
The president of a leading manufacturer of
medical emergency equipment will talk about the
business of saving lives at 6 p.m. today at the
University Club at UCI. ·
Robert A. Hovcc, president of Lafe uppon
Product1ons Inc., will speak at the UCl/Orange
County Venture Forum about the success of the 6-
ycar-old company. which expects 1989 sales of SI 0
mil hon.
Experts in emergency services will comment on
Hovce's lecture an a pane\ discussion af\cr the
presentation. Panelists include Dr Franklin Pratt.
Los Angeles County medical director for Emcrgcnc}
Medical Services. Fred Haney. president of 31
Ventures. and Bob Prosek. a markeuna and sales
executive with Medtronic Card10 Pulmonary Prod-
ucts Inc.
The program costs S25 For 1nforma11on. call
855-9250
Library films Intriguing
Insights into Chinese culture and children's
lessons are featured at the Newport Beach Public
Library, Manll(rs Branch. 2005 Do"cr Om e. 1n us
February film schedule .. The Chinese Way ol Life." a film dep1c11ng
modern and ancient Chinese culture . and "Perfect
Harmony," which follo"s the Yale Glee Club on a
tour throuah the Asian countl)', will be shown al 7
pm. Feb 15
In a Saturday afternoon matinee "The Lora,,"
Dr. Seuss· pcrccpll\e lesson about en"1ronmcn1al
devadatton. and "Dr Seuss on the Loose."
featuring three hon stones. will be prc~ntcd
The programs arc free
For information. call 644-3 t .is.
YRs to honor Bergt!son
State Sen Manan Bcricson ( R-cwpon Beach)
will be honored as the Orange Count} Young
Republican's Republican of the Year 1988 at the
poup's lnauaural Ball at the Red Lion Inn. 3050
Bnstol t .. Costa Mesa. at 6 30 p.m. Saturda)'
Bcricson. a hfe-long Rcpubhcan. was selected
for suppomng )'Outh invol\cmcnt 1n the party and
financially backing R~pubhcan rcgis1ra11on drhcs
and get-out-the·\ Ole efforts
For inrorma11on. call 640-1137
Senior business minds tapp~d
A meeting to orsanarc a con:i.uh1n1 firm of
seniors with bu~ines c'pcnenct will be held at the
Red won lnn. 3050 Bmtol St . Co 11 Mc~. at 7;30
pm. Tutsda)
Irvine re 1dcnt J 8 Moms \\>Ill run the mcctina
to orpn11c n1ors With Amu1n1 T1lent
For 1n(ormatton. call SS2..0 03.
c· \l.t :'\D ·\H
ed11e ilay.'Jan. 25
• 7 30 p m Foulala Valley PlH1l11 Com·
ml11l•. council chambers 10200 later \f,
Thursday~ Jan. 26
No mcctinp tchcduled.
1'01. IC ·1·: I.Of,
...
Orenge Coaet DAILY PtLOTIW~. J8nuefy 21, ._ Al
arklng meters In HB studied
lly llOePT llAMCU or-..._ ..........
· Huntinaton Beach city officials are
11'.cjy1nc proposals to install park"''
mewrut tbt hbrary, Central Park and City
Hall as wa)s to ra1~ money to ofTset what
they say are itaaatnna capital improve-
ment COits.
Officials also have d«idtd to open
beach concessions and busuM:ss contracts '° compctit1H b1ddu'lo 1ncludina the
lucrall\C trash ~ment with tht Rain-
bow Disposal company. ~bteh has bttn
coJlcctina rubbish uclusavely in the city
for more than 20 ycan.
Caty offiClals al50 propose to tet out of
the trash busj ness ah•thtr and let the
disposal compan)'. which is e•peclCd to
te«lvc S3.8 mllhon for rt1idcnttal trash
pickups in 1989. deal dirttt!Y with home·
owners.
·Expansion··
sought for
litter-free
-plaAiRNB
ly KATY BOUCHER
Of -o.-,, "°' ,,.,.
In an effort 10 make Newport Beach as
spart..hng as the ocean 1t fronts. city
officials are ~long to c"pand an cx-
pcnmental program that lransformed one
of the city's oldesl neighborhoods into a
"litter-free zone."
The erojcet. coordinated by city police
and a City Council ad\ •SOI) comm1nee.
tressed the importance of kccp1n3 str~ts
clean. especially dunng the spnng and
summer months when the beach town 1s
. flooded with visitors.
The advisor) committee kicked off the
program br targeting the Newport Pier
commema distract -known as Mcfad-
den SQuarc -last summer.
Bnght red si gns were posted. extra
manpower wa$ brou'ght an. and roughly 60
tickets were 1ssl..'cd lo those not obe) 1ng
litter laws.
Soon. the area had a .. Disneyland look."
according to C..rci Armstrong. a police
officer who spcc1allzcs an cn" 1r'onmental
matters. And not only was the the area kept clean.
but the city picked up an award from the
Cahfom1a Litter Educauon and .\cuon
Network.
nd because the) feel the program was
so successful, Cit) officials arc nesot1atmg
approval for two add1uonal "lmer-frec
Lones" for this summer
The desagnaled areas \\>Ould be the
stretch from the Balboa Pier to the &lbo:i
Pav1hon and a threc-bloct.. area on Manne
Avenue on Balboa Island McFadden
Square would contin ue as a "litter-free
zone ..
Armstrong said that because the trash
had become such a problem -cspcc1all)
dunng the tounst $USOn 1n Ncwpon ~ach -all 14 mcmbe~ of the cit) ·s
Environmental Quahty .\fTairs Commit·
Tbc aty, which iml)OICd a U a montti
trull fee per houtdM>ld lut ~mber.
also woWCt d1sonrinue subs1d1n 11 cur·
rently peys lO the company. The suM1d1cs
Its.sen the burden on bo~wners.
Pendina Cott 1ncrea1e1 by the company
and a .po151bk Cit) decuion not to
subs1diu rcsadtntaal btlls could doub~
homeowner traih bills, official5 1a1d.
Proposals to consadcr installina the
park1na mctrn and openinJ bus1ncss
~ments to competitive b1ddin& ur-
faced at a retreat ataendtd by cu)' official Jut Wttkend an l.quna Beach.
Mayor Wes Bannister has Iona bttn an
advocate o( perkina meters tt the library
and other public placn for non-residents
He said Tuesday, thouah, that he'd resist
the meters 1f local ttsidents had to pay lo
use them.
Huntinaton Beach rn.adcnts ab~~dy pay
more than thtir share for services that non-
residents utit. 8annmer said
Community Services Dtrtctor Mu
Bo"Nman said his office will deliver
finaocia.I rePorts to the ctty an 30 days.
Bov.man said the city currently earns
about $494,000 a year from us l,400
meters in businesses areas and at the
beach. Park mg at beach meters cost St an
hour.
Pohce Ch1cf 81ll Payne told officials that
h1v1n1 people pay to use the park i" some
form probably 'AOuld dttrusc . rowd)'
behavior. Those who cau1e problems 11
parks won't ao where lhcy have to pay, one
pohce officer s~ud.
On the trash collection matter, a I 0-) car
contract bet\\>CCn tht city and Rainbow
Disposal 1s cndmc in June 1990. ind
Public Works D1rtttor Loui Sandoval
said Tuesday he believes ''thcl'C's a
number of contractors who would be
·~"-....... ~~
Sl9n w•rn1 Newport tourln1 •nd residents •Ille• that lttterlnt In th•
Mc,adden Square •r•• simply won•t be toler•ted.
tee developed the no-lmer1plan
Armstrong and David Niederhaus. the
Cll) 's general services director. were ap-
pointed as haasons 10 the comm1uec
Niederhaus took care of findinc the
manpower by hinng a grou p of college
football pla)crs
The cost of the project "3~ S 16.540
Armstrong said the city was loot..ang for
people who wert "1ll1ng to "ort.. ouldoors
dunng summer and "e~ responsible
without rcquanng direct supcn 1s1on Tht)
found college students fit the requirement~
nicely.
So last summer. a six-man crew -later
narrowed to four-worked sometimes as
man) as SC\en da)~ a \\.CC~ t..ccp1ng the
streets clean
Local merchants Joined 1n and d1spla)ed
"hucr-frce" ~1gn:i.. "hale pohcc officers
walked beats 1n tht' area to keep a h1ah
police profile
The ad"ISOt) commiucc kept tab\ on
the project and pvc frequent rtP.Of1sOfthe
program's uetti.s to the council
"We even did a ·man on \he strttl' t)pe
mtcrvacwand ukcd people 1f\he am pro\ e-
ment chafllN thctr behavior." rm tron,
said. ··"-e were pleased CHl)'one nouctd
1hes1gns and thou_,,t this YtlS the onl) area
)OU couldn't lmer 1n Actuall) that "as the
rcspon~ v.e were lookanJ for:·
Armstron1 said that pro"ed ahcir con-
cept wortc~ He cxJ>rc~scd hope the
council would agrtt to fund an eApans1on
of this prOJCCt ~ 1cderhaus said the proposed figure for
next summer arc S 12.SOO for Mcfadden
SQuare, $21,500 for Balboa and S6.700 for
Manne A venue.
Judge rules MacDonald gets only
SS0,000 in book contract dispute
A judlt Tuesday said convicted luller JefTrcy MacDonald
may keep only $50.000 of the S32S,OOO scttJemeot he received in
a federal coun dlspute over a book contract.
Superior Court Judae Edward _.-:-.--~~
Rou took the ttmaininaS27S,000
away from the former Hunlinaton
Harbour ~tdcnt and physician.
but deducted $92,000 to cover
attorneys fees stemmana from
MacDonald's lawsutt 1p1nst
··Fatal V111on"author Joe Mc01n-
n1ss.
k.1flcr tO &am hlS confiden~ for 8 hook. t'\CR though the author
never ber1cved in his subject'" innocence
"Falal V1s1on" C'Oncludcd that \1acDonald killed h1~ wife
Colene and their dauat11crs t-..1mberh. 5 and J>....n un. 2. at their
Fon Brau apartment in 19"0
Ro ~ said \.1cG1nni detraudcd t~ former C1rttn ~rel
ph) 1c1an. wh o 1s ..en ing thrtt life ~ntt'ntM for his I Q.,q
COn\.'ICUOn. ·
''I'll hold that MacDonald hnd a \ 1able claim ag;unst
McOmniss and thal \\11.S proper!\ h1!> O\\n propcn) and a portion
of the settlement " R said
He called the author "a con man" and \aid \lcG10n1s al o
defrauded Ka sab by "'nuna a 1980 lener that m1srcprescnted
M1cDonaJd's share of the rontrac1·~ pl'\.X'ttdS 1n order to pin her
coopera tion
"I don't think Mr \kC 110nl\'I l'I a \Cr) hone t fcllo"" ... the
JUd&C Slld \1~'(,1nnt who alrt:ld~ hu paid tht' S324i 000 scnkmcnt
The remam1n1 S 183.000 will be placed tn a lru.Sl. and the
bendiCllriet will be detemuned
later dunoa 1 tce0tu:l1.D&l phase.. .................. ~--UU.O~Jud1c1alc5erov.~unl 1 no Ion eradt'lcndantmtMca .
Ro wd 1t is too late to rcco"cr some $90.000 that
Ma Donald prev1ou I) rttCl\cd under the contract Attotne1s for Mildred
IC.au.ab, MacDonald's mother·in·
law, arpcd that mte law btn a
cnm1nal from profitana from bis
cnmc. They 1a1d allowtna Mac·
Donatd to kttp the tettkment ----money~ouldcontravcnethatlaw. MacDONALD
The tcttl«nent ended a batter federal la-suit 1n which
Mac.Donald claimed that McOmnm bad hed '° the convactcd
"That mone> 's gone lf!i bttn pent." he said
MacDonaldara~ Tu~\ that h<' needed the mone> to pa)
for h1 elderly mother's mtd1cal cart and to a 1 t his disabled
brother and s1nak-parcn1 ~mer
He also 111d he nttdcd tht' monc\ • for the cont1nuat1on of
lqal eApcn5e$ for (t.n) ongoing ln\.C upt1on 1n "hich ne"
ev1denrc (about the !Ila) m~) 1s bcina disco\ cttd."
dehahted to submit (compctina>
proPOSaJs."
He alto raised qucitjons ~hethtr the cit~
may be 1n danFr of local and f*ral
ant1tn.1st rqulataons if 1t doesn't have
compelltl\ie biddina.
"As far as l know, Rainbow providct an
outstandanf. service and 11 a supenor
contractor, • Sandoval 51jd,
Bannister said he behe\/ts compet1t1on
for the trash hauhn1 job m1aht rorce
Rainbow "to sharpen 1li pencil" and
become more efficient.
A Rainbow official said he was unaware
of the City Council's decison to open
b1ddin& and wouldn't comment.
Officials said other grecmcnts that
would be opened to compcmors include
the beach and parlc concession operation • Maxwell's Rcst.aµrant and the cquestnan
tenter.
Cosgrove
won't quit
his Irvine
-etJncil seat
ly JOE IEL BRUNO
Of-~ """' $Y!ff
De-spate the threat of possible lepl
action, Irvine Councilman Cameron Cos·
&ro"e announced dunng Tuesday n\&ht's
mccuna he has no intention of a.>\/1ni up
h1swntested two.-year scat.
Last wee!.., lhe 350-member Irvine Pride
rccc1ved pcmuss1on from the state at·
tomey aencral's office to .. challenac Cos.
lfO"t s n1ht to the council scat. The
conservative poht1cal action JTOUP bc-
hcvcs that the scat Cosarove was ap-
pointed to in last June's elccuon should be
voted on m a pcc1aJ No"embercl«t1on
.. This lS not a fig.ht qa1M1 Cameron
Co5&1'0\.e, but a fight qamst not fol!OWlng
ell) law," said Howard J. KJe1n, an
attorney who is president of Irvine Pride.
"There as one legal muc here -dad he
ha"e a nd\t for that sc11 w1lh<>ut be1na
dirtttl)' erected., I and man~ other Irvine
cit12cns do not think he did ·
Cosgrove was appointed to lht City
Cuunc1l lastJunc to fill the remaining two
) cars of the term of Lar:ry A.,..n. who was
elected to the mayor's po 1 Cosarove, the
third h1ghc l \.Ote-JCttcr '" that elecuon. v.as appointed to the scat under ell)'
charter
It was dunn, the same tlccl1on that
Irvine voters approved Mea ure D. v.hteh
v.ould allow for the challcnac of a Cit) Council appointment an a pcc1al election.
· I hear thnr complaint ap1n 1 me
The) •t1gh hta\') upon m) consc1entt.
and 1 do gaH them v.c1&ht )' cons1dcr-
auon." M11d the 31-)ear..-old C'O'llo"O"t'. who
fim:i.hedJuSt 106 \.Oles i..h.> ofa a four-)Hr
term an the June election
''The 1nomc) acntral has ll\Cft pcr-
m1ss1on to ao baclt to roun But I al
under..tand be did no\ ask me to step
do\\>n I also understand he did not SA)
there hould be 1n clccuon or that 11 should
go bad. 10 court I am prepared to ride this
to v.hcrc"cr 1t will t.ake me ..
Tbe Cstv Council ma1nta1ns that
Mc-asure Dcannot be applied rc1roact1\.CI)
to Cosgro"e and talc-s efTCC'l in tht next
el('('t1on
"i.\s far as I am concerned. we h&\C abided b't the lav. as v.c understood 1t for
that election." said Councll v.oman Paula
\\ emer .. I beht' ed ttat Mea urc D v.ould
go into effect $lanina with the nut
clectton l hope that ln1ne f>nde does not
engage an a buter. long and ume-consum-
1n1 la1i1osu1t ..
lrvall( Pnde v.111 w•at for an official
reaction b) Cosaro\c before tilling suit 1n
upenor C'oun KJein said his aroup could f.
file suit within a week 1f the council 1~
"unresponsive ··
"We're hoping ht''ll rcs1an and ehminalc
the need fo r a lay.,suu but \\.-C ha"en't J!ven
him am lmd of uh1malum ·· said Klein
"We're prepaf'C'd to go fo~ard with th1
la\\> Ult "
But Cosgro\ c said he ha\ no intention ot
re 1gn101and"111 fighl thr aroup'StfTort to
oust him "What needs 10 bt' understood \.,Cr)
ckarh 1s I follo\\>cd a proccs and 1 follo~cd 11 to the kttu That-prett koJ
me to an ap~intmcnt for two )Cars on tht'
<. 1l) (. ounc11:· Cosaro\c said
"Wht'thcr this pohucal action commit·
tee de 1rc lo take this to coun 1 out of m>
hands complctel> I v.111 conttnue to sen-c
l he ctt > of I" me ., best I can and w1 II
ob' aou h lollow the procns through to conclu~1on. \\hether that be exp1rauon of
my term or into the courtroom."
A woman l<»t S 1.300 •onh or putthatn. 1nclud1na thrte ltathcr
,adtts and a aold bracelet. *hen he
attidtntally left Mr blP in a
mtroom at Robiruon's department '°" 1n Fuluon bland. When, she rcahmt the had left her baiJ, she
Wft't Md 10 the rntroom. but the>
~eonc.
Jl(kttll the pon Man. 74)) Ed1nltf'
Ave. • • • A man~~ an armload of 1can1
\alucd at S224 at Mttv)n's. 9811
dams .\ "e and fled an a brown 1971
Volan or Omcp. acron:hna to 1t1t·
nc:un.
Early Monday mom1na a bur&lar
cntcml Steel Fab Co.. 18060 Mt.
Wuh1naton t . and stok SJ.44S
worth of equipment from the storqc
a.rea
Monday, enlcred the rcs1<.kf\\:t and
tole JC•clT}_lnd money Wlth a total
va.luc of$200. The break-in occumd bct~ccn 8 4S a.m and I pm
•••
c~~J "'uh SIOO in cai.h trom the
Pa)lc: hoe to~. 2221 Harbor
8hd . at 5·10 pm unday. The
SU\pcct IS dncnbcd IS I male Latino.
25 to 30 )earl old, 6 feet tall and 170
pound ~1th a moustache and
• •
•
H• ..... •.ela f~tain Valley
~_......... A f'tmalt motonst Parked in the
The ~at MtUVQllJU I Rn-9000blocko(WamttA'cnuua1dll tawut. 20 lc«h Bhd. com-.... ....... .. _t on htr pllined tbat IOmtOM's been tam~r-. 8 Pm. unu-y a man u. • ..,.. .. , .. whJa IM haurftcy oft~ ~ktr car v.1ndow. and whtn the refused to
It &Ilic clrift.ihna ·window. Tht o.,cn the door he pulled h11 pent
ipH'llll' ~Atly pll.Yt •-'"" ••th down and CA~ h!mKtf. ,_•HI i.-d of •• lheir Someone cut eieht ~ hncs and °'*"-OM dl&I commuftaoon hne at
• P • • QeMnl Te~ Eltanc. 1010 AWl!lmH lli9lMtl ,....Hlbts .. lt W•-A'°C' at 2 J7 a.m Sunday -~-Mr ill tk part~ ICM .. ·-· ·• • • • • • r.: .:z i IM oe lllCta A vcrt1i1 d•;zj•mnt ifttick the ,.. ..._...._.._ .. ...._ ftii:' Va IOWI. 17110 SkN' 1 .... lllti..at.tt.il... ,_......_~ .. ~~-.. ·::·.=.:
•••
• • • A tool bo 'alucd at S42S v.as
ttmo'cd froma 1984C1'evrold truck
car1y Monda~ _m9min1 while 11 was
part.Cd 1n the 9000blod of Geranium
\CR~.
SomtoM .sml!Md the front v.in-·
dow .o( Milltr's Printt'f'), 11215 S&atcr
vc .. t1rt)' Monda) mom1na and StO~ $4() worth o( ptOptrt).
CoataM
rson 11 tiutptele'd in a lire that
cbtro,.cda 1979 TO)Ota round It the
bottom oftht bluffs 1n the 1200 block
of VICU>N Uttt on Mondi). The
fare wu ~ 1t IO:U p.m. Cuy fi~ put the blaK OUt and lbttt
""" ao 19'1unn.. Pola« aay the c.r
... t\'idnrilr_pUIMd olrthc ditr after britllltetoan .... • • • , bUIWkK'Ud •• •.-.doorin M 3400 ,._. o(: Vnetiaa·~Mt Oft
l
o lo sin •ere reported 1n another buralal'). alto in the l@ bl ~ of
Vencu1n. Thcpraacdoorwa.k1C"ked
in to pin entry tomt tame bctv.ccn
:30 a.m. and J:4S pm. • ••• "offict window at~ Red Hin
\enue ,,.., hot out, apP!rcn1ly wtth
1 88 aun between 7 p.m. unda) and
11 a m. Monday 1 he incident cauK'd
SSOOd•m• • • • A car ~ \Alucd It s 1.2 9.'a
itolcn at South OH\ P111a on
Monday betMH 6:JO ud 6 4~ p.m.
Tht burllat biroU out the peurnacr
$Mk winaow tor•n tfttt). • • ~Ulpmeftt VMuld at S4tO
st<*n from 1 IMd 1t Euro u10
ONth... JOJ7 Hatt.of •vd . be--
twen .S p.m.~llllid,·U._m M--'-. '"_, ...
A robber lrlMd wtt8' a 9-dpn
houldcr lcn11h blatk hair.
lrvin~
A aray 19 Honda ccOf'd was
stok'n from the 170 b&oc of ~Id
bctv.ttn noon and 8p m. Monda). • • mconc pMd open lht rear
indow of a homC' 1n lht 3UO block of Hem1np-a) Way· on Moedly IDd
tole a video CUKtlt r!COtdet. catD·
CfU ind J('"eral items of jtwetry. ••• '6SO bracdtt Wilt •*" ..,. I ~wiry tlOft in tht llOOO blOc' ol
Sky Part laukvW bass_ I_ 4
pm MoMly. • ••• An •--a.. COlll-lft
rroaa a ~ .. 111 r.-'''°'' .... VOii "-'-AW... 09 --al\a...._ •
..
Qr-.. Comt OAM..V PILOT/ Wedi~. Janu1tv 25. 1989
ush promises own budget next month
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pmi· den& Bush~ Tuesday tosubnut
detailed revisions to Ronald Re-
lllU''S ~t next month and sua·
te1ted hi -level neaotiallons be-
tween the h1te Hou~ and Conarcss
to Pf'()du« an early ..,-cement
~ White House acknowledaed
Bush had not kept his promise 101end
his team of budact negotiators to Con~ on the first day of his .pres1d~ncy. likewise it appeared
unlikely Bush would follow throu&h
o n his promise to personally lead the
budget talks.
Amid a aJow ofb1panisan Sood will
o n the founh day of his presidency,
Bush met at the White House with
Democratic and Republican con-
gressional leaders to seek cooperation
on the budget and foreign policy.
"Generally there is a very hopeful
sense that we are soing to be able to
find bipanisansh1p almost every-
where,"' the speaker of the House,
Rep. Jim Wnght, 0-Texas, said after
two hours of talks with Bush.
.. It was all sweetness and light,"
said. the House Republican whip,
Rep. Richard ChenCJ. of Wyoming.
acknowledgi na that d 1 fTerences on the
budget and other problems are in-
evitable eventually. "The honey-
moon's still on -two more days.
three more days - enjoy it while it
lasts." •
Re~ublicans and Democrats alike
said Bush p.ve no clue about his
budget pnorities, but said his
proposals would include steps to deal
with the nation's savings and loan
crisis.
Bush will address a joint session of
Congress on Feb. 9 to reveal
proposa!!IS for revising Reagan's S 1.15
trillion budget for fiscal 1990.
Wright and other Democratic
leaders ttttrved jud&Jnent on Bush''
formula for budet• talks. "We'd like
to wait until we tee a buda,tJ. until we
stt where the areas ohareement and
disaarttment would be. before we
consult," Wriaht uid.
White House press secretary
Marlin FitzWater said the admin1•
tration sugested tha1 Conaress, in 1
break with tradition, try to speed up
work on tM budttt by holdina weekly
meetinas attended by top House and
Senate leaders, u well as the chair·
men of vanous committ~ with
jurisdiction onr the budget and tH·
writint legislation.
Fitzwater said Darman and
Treasury Secretary Nicholas F. Brady
would join the talks. "I don•t \h1nk
the president would be involved on a
continuinJ basis but he probably
could be involved at any point." the
spokesman said.
Of the plan for Wttkly meeunas.
the House Rcrublican leader, Rep.
Robert Miehe of lllino1s. told re-porters;
"It would be to our advantJlle to
have the leadership meet in an
informal son of way from time to
time, movin~ the process a:ons. (so)
that 1l doesn t get to I-a and drq."
He said the aoal would be "to
telescope the process" and said
Wri&ht had promised Bush his budget
woulfi be on "a f.ast track."
Wright presented Bush with a
bottle of hot pepper sau« and a jar of
pork rinds -his favorite snack -at
the outset of the White House
meeting. "We want to aive a verx
warm welcome to the president, •
Wright joked.
Emerging from the talks. the con-
gressional lea"ders gave Bush h1&h
praise for makina nis first formal
contact with Conarcss a bipartisan
President 8ullt Mids •bottle of hot sauce presented to ftlnt
bJ Hout• Spe.tcer JIM' Wr191tt fleftl during a meetlnt of bl·
partisan conere11lonal leaders In the White House.
one.
"It was a cordial meeting. There 1s
(a) good atmosphere.·· said the Senate
Democrauc leader, George Mitchell
of Maine.
Bush promised the leaders he
would submit a major rewrite of
Reagan's budget. not JUSt minor
mod1ficat1ons.
"The president aareed to submit a
full and concise budget by m1d-
February," Wnsht said.
Mitchell said. "I don't th1ok ~e
ant1c1pate a complete budget
proposal of the depth and detail that
Prcs1dent Reagan submitted,"
F clmilies of Bundy victims feel relief
SEATTLE (A P) -Ted Bundy's
execution Tuesday ended an ordeal
for some families of his victims. while
others found 11 hard to comprehend
that a moment the~ had sought for
years had finally amved.
"Good," sighed Vivian Rancoun.
mother of Bundy victim Susan Ran-
coun. when reached at her LaConner
home and told of Bundy:s early-
morning executfon at Starke. Fla.
"The only thing I can say is. thank
God. it's finally over."
Eleanore Rose, whose daughter.
~nise Naslund. was slain by Bundy,
Serial killer
executed
in Florida
STARKE. Fla. (AP)-Ted Bundy,
a charming law school dropout who
ended years of denials that he was a
killer with emotional confessions to
the gruesome slayings of 20 women in
four states, was electrocuted Tuesday
for murdering a 12-ycar-old girl.
Bundy's last words, before a black-
hooded executioner p_uJled a switch at
7:06 a.m . sending 2.000 volts through
his body, were to his lawyer and a
minister. "Give my love to my family
and friends."
More than I 00 proponents of the
death penalty waiting in a field across
from the Flonda State Pnson
cheered, lit sparklers and set ofT
firecrackers at the signal that 42-year·
old Theodore Robcr1 Bundy had
finally been put to death for a crime
committed almost I I years aao.
Three earlier executjon dates were
St)'!Died by appeals.
Only about two dozen people
oppoicd to the death penalty turned
up to keep a vigil in the field.
was taken aback.
"I feel kind of numb in a way. My
daughter's murderer was taken care
of. Ac paid for what he did." she said.
"It secrns like I was sentenced to a
lifetime of waiting, Now there's really
nothing to wait for.··
In Grand Junction.· Colo.. the
father of a woman believed to have
been murdered by Bundy said he was
relieved, although investigators said
Bundy did not confess to the slaying.
··We're just happy he's been ex-
ecuted because it should have hap-
pened a long time ago," said Robcn
Ted Bundy
··The people of Flonda today
administered justi«." Gov. Bob
Martinez said I 'h hours af\er the
execution. "If there's ever been
anyone on Flonda's death row that
deserved the elcctnc chair. Ted
Bundy was that ind1v1dual."
Bundy had been qu1ck-w1tted.
known for his cockiness and ar-
ropnce. a handsome, blue-eyed
charmer.
Argentine army quells
civilian attack on base
BUENOS AIRES. Araentina (AP) civilians were wounded.
--Armcd~ivilians SUJTUt<krtd Jo..ibt_ _AL..dus.Lapproa.cbed, ,small .futt
army Tuesday af\er a one-day assault still smoldered in auued brick bu1ld-
on an infantry base m which at least ings. Half a dozen buikhnas were in
22 people were killed and scores ruins, their windows blown out and
wounded, the government said. tile roofs coJlapsed or burned away.
Officials said troopers had tracked Helicopter aunships clattered over
down snipers and searched bunkers at the base and a ICCd~ sprawl of pro,JCCt
the 3rd Infantry RqJment camp at La houses across the h1,hway.
Tablada on the capital's outskirts. Military and aovemmcnt officials
which the armed sroup attacked said the attackers were leftistJ wbo
Monday momina. apparently intended to mat weapons
Captured weapons included soph· from the camp armory. Praicknt
1sticaled machine auns from the Raul Alfonsin 1lto has hid 1~ ~
Soviet Union and China, military with three 1nsurrect1ons by riahust
officials 111d. army officers in the pest 21 month
Government spokesmen said 15 to Gunfire diminished to sporadic •
20 commandos were killed and pvc exchlnaes by late momina and the
estimates of the number taken pns--base was considered teeure enouati
oner that ranacd up to 23. They 11ad for a visit by Alfons1n. Shots were
1even soldien and Policemen were fired nearby, but nol at the prntdcnl killed and 61 wounded. and four or hiJ helicopter.
Nicholson. fa ther of ~nisc Oli-
verson.
"It's been a nightmare for 14 years
and he's devastated too many fa mil-
ies and manipulated the jusuce
system into a three-ring circus."
Nicholson said.
In his final hours. Bundy. 42. called
his mother. Louise Bundy. twice at
her Tacoma home.
"He kept saying how sorry he was.
that •there was another pan of me that
people didn't know,"' she said after-
ward, adding that he sounded "ver)
much at peace with himself."
At the conclusion of the second
call. she told him. "You'll alwa)'s be
my precious son."
l n the days before his death, Bundy
ended years of proclaiming his inno-
cence and admmed finally to 20
deaths in Western states. including I I
1n Washington.
He did not own up to the cnme he
was killed for. the 1978 rape and
murder of a 12-year-old Lake City.
Ra .. girl. nor to the bludgeoning
deaths that year of two Flonda State
University soront)' sisters. for which
he also was convicted.
ExecutiOn atmosphere
like a macabre carnival
STARKE. Fla. (A P)-A carnival
atmosphere prevailed outside the
prison where Ted Bundy was e>.·
ccuted Tuesday. as capital punish-
ment supponers hawked elcctnc
chair pins, sang macabre songs and
hahted sparklers.
Nearly 100 death penalty sup-
Poners milled about a pasture at the
Florida State Prison. some even
dancinj over the demise of one of the
nation s most notonous killers.
Corrections ~partment spokc!>-
man Bob Macmaster said the pre-
dawn crowd including some 30
opponents of the death penalty and
more· than 100 JOurnahsts. was laraer
than he had ever seen at an execution.
The fnvolity offended foes of
capital punishment and even some
who tho ught Bundy should die.
··1 lh1nk it's fair to execute him I
JUSt don't think It's fair ever)onc I~
danc1n1 around. having fun." said
Bndgcllc Br.swell of Gainesville.
··1 am shocked," said Annc·Mane
Diller, also of Gainesv1ll. who held a
votive candle to protest the execu-
uon "I thank people came here hke
the)' were going to the fair rm
shocked that people could reJOice
ovt"r someone's death. even 1f he 1s
guilty"
The "Old Sparky" lapel pin~ first
sold for $3 but later were upped to S.S
as the ei1ecut1on approached.
··rm here to suppon the death
penally. The pins arc only a s1de-
hght," said the vendor. who wore a
straw hat adorned Wlth an Amencan
flag. He said his name was Richard
and that he worked in law enforce·
ment and did not want to 11ve his last
name for fear of repnsals at work.
Nearb)" a man weanna a Ronald
Reaaan mask and a T-sh1n that read
"Toast Ted" earned ~n effiay of
Bundy 1n a noose.
Asked to upla1n 1he JO)aus mood.
death ~nalty supponer Jerry Jack·
son said: "A lot of people want to
ha ve a aood time tO litl It past them
It's been real heavy on a lot of people.
especially on commun111e1 in
flonda."
~ ................... .,.... ....... , ................ ... ........... .,...,.r11•••n•••· ,
Governor submits new prison.work plan
C \flt OU 1lt\t1iif,
Rusd~ expected to lncre~ In 1989
9Y TM AllGdifiM ......
SACRAMENTO -Call&t rustlers Jtolt more tun 'J.."1J animalt ~onh more than SI m1lhon in 1981.and sta1tand industo offic11IH•~• rut1hn110
incttate this year wnh tht pncc of bttf. · •
About 2SO Cahfomia ca11le ope,.ton re~11~ "oltn or mas"'"-an1mab
in 1911. a«ordana 10 1tati1ucs kept by the California Oes-rtment of Food 1;nd Aanculuare. And an investiptor with the department'' new h\tstock rusthna
division estimated that an equal number of thefts 10 unrcporttd or arc not
reported to the state by county wrifT offic6 • . .
ActlVlst' s suit against Hustler dismissed
SAN FRANCISCO-Anti·pomoanphy ac11v1st Andrea Dworkan's hbct
suu ap1D11 Hustler ml@Zine forcancatunn1her 1n crude sexual PoSt~rH was
rrjec;ted Tuesday by a fcdtral appeals court. which 511d the mapz1nc wu
~lyexpreu1naan opimon. ~ . .. "S~h may not be suppressed simply bccau"SC 1t 1s ofTen$1ve. 'lld the
9th U.S. Circuit Coun of Appeals, which has d1sm1 d t~o s1m1lar suits b>
other activists apinst Hustler 1n recent months ;
Pair plead Innocent to abuse charges
SAN DIEGO -A mother and son paid t!> shelttt abused children arc
under investigation for allqcdly bca11na and traumatllln& )Oungsten placed ·
in thetr foster home. authont1es said. · -·
Henri· Mathis Dyson. 4 1, and her son. Harold Alexander 0)-son. 24.
pleaded innocent Monday before Mun1c1pal Court Judse Charle~ L. Patncl'
and face a Feb. 6 preliminary heanna. .
Dyson is charsed with four felony counts of 1n01ct1ng co~ral
punishment on a chird and two counts of child endangerment, one of which 1s
a misdemeanor. Her son is charged with thrtt felony counts of inn1ct1na
corporaJ punishment and one misdemeanor count of child endangerment.
Mlnkow holding Bible study In jall
LOS ANGELES -Baff)' Minkow, the youthful con anist convicted of
committing fraud through his 'ZZZZ Best ru& shampooing.outfit. has been
running a Bible study class for other federal pnsoncrs while awaiting
sentencing. a prosecutor said, .
Jailers at the Metropolitan Dctenuon Center refer to the sroup of up to 10
inmates-who meet nightly as "Barry's boys:· Assistant U.S. Anorney Gordon
Grcenbera s.a1d after a coun heanng Monday.
"He has the inmates hstenina to a sermon and Bible study." he said.
Mink.ow, 22. was convicted on S7 counts of fraud last month.
'\ .\ 1'10'\ \I. HHlt:t ·s
Reputed crime boss free on ball
NEW YORK -John Gott•. the r~puted boss of the nation's most
powerful cnme family, was frttd on SIOO,OOOba1I Tuesday. less 1han 24 hours
after an army of pohce arrested him .
Mobbed by reporters and c"8mera cre...,,s. a smiling Goll• emcrJCd from the
colinhouse about I :30 p.m. and chm bed into the back of a ...,,a1ung Lincoln
Earher, \he allcaed leader oft he Gambino cnme organization ple.aded innocent
to charges he had orchestrated the shooting of a car,pcnter·~ union official.
Charges won't calm blacks In Miami
MIAMI -Manslau&hter cha~es against the officer accused ofktlhng a
motorcyclist, touchina off last week s racial violence, will not calm the black
community, leaders and residents said Tuesday
Meanwhile, defenders of Officer Wilham Lozano cnt1c1zed the characs.
sa) ina t'hey were rushed w11hout J.Ud1c1al review because of racial tensions
Lozano, 29. w~s free on S 10,000 bond after 1urning himself in Monday at
the Dade County J~1I to face tv.o count\ of manslaughter in the deaths of
Clement Llo)d. 13. and AJlan Blanchard 24
First female Eplscopal bishop named
BOSTON-Ep1sco~l_offic1al'ITucsday appro,ed theclc<'11on of the fil"\t
...,,oman bishop in the 2,000-ycar trad111on of apo tohc succn ion a line of
bishops datin& to Chnst and his a~tlcs.
The approval of the election o( Episcopal 81shop-clttt Barbara Hams
brou&ht a woman into that Iona hnc ma1nt.ained by Ani)1c-an1sm, mclud1n11he
U.S. Episcopal Church. and Roman Cathohmm and Eastern Orthodox). Both
the Catholic Church and Eastern OnhodoA churt"hes bar women from the
clergy.
Ex-vlcel>resldent breaks hip In fall
RANCHO MIRAGE-Former vtce president p1ro T "&new brol..e h1\
hip and several ribs 1n a fall from his bicycle. but doctor~ reported Tue~a\ he
was 1n aood cond1t1on. ~new, 70, was taken by ambulance Sunday 10 1he emtracnq room at
Eisenhower Medical Center honJy after the accident near his home atro s the
strttt from the hospital, said spok~man Mike McFadden
..He's 1n aood cond1t1on.' Aid Mcfadden
German firm accused of helping Ubya
BONN, We t Germany (AP)-A draf\sman for a chemtC31 company told
. invest1ptors his firm tuppcd chemicals 10 Libya and that emplO)ttS helped
build a chemical weapons plant. Wes1 German telcv1s1on rtponed Tuc~y
ntaht.
The newsmapztne tcm also reported that a West Cicr'nan ao,emment-
owncd company knew blue9nnts that v.crt supposcd to be 1h1ppcd to Hon1 Kon~ to build a pharmattut1c.als plant had endtd up an ~bya.
ThcARDtelev1s1on network said 1n an evenina nev. broadcan that Klaus
Hess. a technical draf\sman with lmhauscn-C hcm1e, 1old \\-C1t German
investiptors the company had a key rote 1n the Libyan complex 1n Rab11. 60
miles so~tb of Tnpoli.
Tadzhlk mountain villagers bury dead
MOSCOW -~untain villqien in "Cndlns" funeral procns1on Tuesday buned their dead from the Tadth1k1 tan canhquake that lulled up to
1.000. And rttcuers slQlltd throuah muddy rubble in a cksperak search for
su~avon.
NewwarninpWeRissued formortpou1ble llndshdcscaU$Cd by thlwint
IDOW in lbc Central Asian repubhc I ,IOO m1ks IOUth of Moscow \bat was b1t by
Monday's predawn eanbquake.
In nonbwatem ~ia. whteh *IS devastated by 1 Dec. 7 qua.kc that
killed 2,,000 ~. a Powerful af\trshOCk 'WIS ~ntd TUctday. Af\
A.nneniu ofticial said lhe poputat1on hid been warned and no ta$ualties v.ocn ~. lt..aien ~ly ·band one 1urv1"or from the Tldzh1kistan quake. lhboulla an oft1CiaJ ~ dtn at
0r8nge COMt OAtLY PILOT/Wedneedey, Jenu9ly 25, ,...
Days to be partly cloudy, but warmer and windy
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SI 1• II M •S )4 0 11
0 u SJ JI SI U ,. lJ
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Calif. temp
~,fM>Cll'O
S...JoM
~AN ~---· s.nt•Ct\.11
ColOfado~ o-..i fl~°''" 0aylOA O~OMIUtl'I
~ en-..-.
°"'°"
1S 11 n n ., "' 11 II
ft t :D Ol'\GS
•:'\GAGE,.E'.\TS
DeREVERE-IALOONI
Mr. and Mrs Dell H De Revere of
Ncwpon Beach ha\e announced the
tnp,ement of their dauahtct. Jen-
nifer Lynn. to David Jonathan
8aldon1 He 1s the son of Ncv.pon
Beach ~1den1s Dr and Mn
Rudolph Baldon•
The couple art alumni of ( oron:a
del Mar H1ah hool and <al talc
Fullenon
A Jul y IS wedding 1s planned in
Lake Hills C'ommun1t) Church in
Laauna Hills
PALMOUIST-McVEY
Mr. and Mn Donald Palmqu1 1 of
c~pon Beach ha\e announced the
crtp1tmcnt of their dauah1er. Oc\ on
Jtan Palmqu1 1. to klTrc) ott
McVey, son of Mr. and Mrs. url')'
McVcy of L11tkton , olo
The bride-elect 1ntt.1ua1cd from
c.,..-pon Harbor H1ah hool and
UC Santa Barbara and aucnded the
tbonnc.
Her fiancc J111dua1td from the
COk>fado nidcmy and 1ht n1\cr·
si1y of Dcnnr.
They arc pt1nn1~ 10 man')' pe
JO in 1. Jamn ("llun:h. cwport
Btath.
How to submit
your nuptial news
s....u.o..,_.
S..•¥M~ \#w.-""°"". Sto<lltori ,_\/_.,
Jor•-r
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Ttw tolOW'log list ol Or~ C~st rt.II
~latt tr.Wtrs. WhlCh tne:~s the~ ot the bUytr, addrtss ¥td ttw prlct ~•d
fOl UK" pr~. w.s compl~d from
county records ¥td tscrow c~mts by
~rs MMktt1og ~rvicts
C~ Offt<I~ Uy ttlt llSt tNy havt
., en or fKtor ot 7 percent dUriog • yut' s
t11M t>tcaust bt specul.luon t>uyiog .11n<1
t tron Ttw list rs pvblts~ tor tl'lt tnfOftNllONI
ust ot our re~rs ~ rs prottcctd by
copyright to Homtowntrs M•rktttn<J
~rvt<tS
l~Nt~ Bono D Cha. 2sos2 s~,,a St
S209,000
Mr & Mrs. RIC'twd 8 ~rnstt1n. 25083 Sanor~ St. s 190,000
Mr & Mrs ~1nrich J Abel'k. 2S087
Sanori. St SI 7 7 ,000
Sttphtn J ~ro, 2S09S »norta St
SIS6.000
Mr & Mrs Paul F G.a...gher 25096
Sanor .. St 5206.000
CNnottt c Ltt. 25112 S.lnorla St
5187.000
Richard I Moort. 25 114 S•norta St
$190.000
JMltt F -Okon. 25126 Sanorta St
5174.000
Mr. & Mrs Mohammad K Al•m1· 2 5 I 31
s.nor .. St. S203.000
Dennis W F~tchtr, 14 Stabr1d9t Rd
S338,000 Carole A. Mauerhan, 17 Stabrid~ Rd
S330.000
~· .. s• 11 SI U
llfllot l0tt "*"' .....
S• J' ~ ,.
., 1'
·10 so 0 ll
Mr & Mrs TtlofNs J i\madlo. 18
~~·~Rd $348,000
Mr & Mrs N r Meutrschmtdt, 2 2
suortdQt Rd n 19 ,000
Mr. l Mrs. l.fsJJt R Crowd•r. 24
St.c>ttdge Rd SJ 17 .000
Robert C Afmjtrong. 34 I 20 Stl\/a Rd
28 I s I 40,()()()Mr & Mrs Gtorge S
M•suc:la. 28232 Sorrtnto 82 s 125.000
Stnmlog Pon, 8 St JOhn S275,000
EdWard l Gq. 20 St John S268.000
Mr & Mrs Jttfr•y l SobttraJ. 24 St
V•nctnt 5285,000
Mt & Mrs Gtorge Boytr 1480 I
St~~te Ln 5290,000
ltu E D~. 24821 St~gatt Ln
5286.000
Mr & Mrs ~rMd Pnsco 14855
St~tt Ln S28S.OOO
OonMd Chou. I Tyr¥tO S254,000
M¥tln Caputo. 29087 Via CtflltO
5295,000
IC~thlttn M l.Mlkhe1m. 291 OS Via
Ct rrtto S42.000
Ml & Mrs TholNs A Ntrhus. 2825 I
Via FtttrO 5147.000
Mr & Mrs Guy ll Garct.t. 30585 Vta
ltndos.J 5326.000
Dawnt M Prtct. 30342 Vta Rtat•
SI 77.000
Mr & Mrs J~s J Jostph. t.b Vts Dtl
Sol S297 .000
Mr & Mrs Da11tl M Swtnson. 24 181
Vista Doro 5330.000
80D1 R WhtttnQ. 8 Wtsl(llf'f S466.000
Mr & Mrs Oo<I C Battman. 12
Wtstcl1N S4 IO,OOO
MIChelt Sroolts. 22 Wtstchf'f \471.000
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY· lllC.
... , .... c.....~
ltU ..... IUI~ CISTA •SA-SU.1151
CoME SEE THE LARGEST
FAMILY FITNESS CLUB
IN THE WEST ...
RIGHT IN YOUR OWN
BACKYARD!
.on~nk'ndy local~ in fountain
v.aaey. im <:abialkn» potti vua.
t6n f'lW ramlly an op~nlty ti()
~a.I. rdo. and play,.-.....
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a DAY M the fknn. c:a. that
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Mr & Mrs Guy G Carlson, 26 Wtstci1tf
5493.000
Mr & Mrs Sanford Z 8t1kow111 30
Wtstchtf $440.000
John R Mlchatlls. 87 Woodhavtn Dr
S41S.OOO
'"''"• Franke Chaog.22i\90mno S231 .000
C•r~ C Gu9f1tlm1no. 67 A90mno
$218.000
Mr & Mrs JtNrty I Strkowou I S
Aldtrbrook $325.000
R~ l~l I 56 Aim.dof SI 6S 000
Shtllty M Wtston 188 Alm.ldOf
S213.000
Mr & Mn Thach lt 3861 Banyan St
S308.000
Hut Tr.,,, 23 BtkMllO S380.000
Mr & Mrs D Kum.1 Ramistctt. 25
BtlcM\tO S383.000
Mr & Mn M~ R Shama1 4421
Btrmud.t Cr sios.ooo
Mr & Mn M1ngch1h Pan 28 BIUt J•y
S28S.OOO
RONld D Wtston, 6 Catt•tl s 168.000
~io.. 120pm
lconcl Ngll I I 5$ P m
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ll'OI•"' ,.,,,.
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Thuf.o.ty .i • Sl •"' -ltO at S 17
P"I
Mr & Mrs Ce5411 8 HtrNndt1. 3981
Cedron S28S,OOO
Mr & Mrs. You 8 YanQ 4461
Charlev1U. Ctr. 5220.000
Waynt F. loughrty, 6 Dtnvtr
Sl65,000
Mr & Mrs Mkhatl P R.iston. 42 E•9ft
Point Sl25,000 ,,
Mr & Mrs Hldttaic. Yanwnoto. 8
Elmwood S349 ,000
M1~ J Stuart.. 462 Falltngst•r s 172.000
Mr & Mn Andrtw A Tr¥!, 4 191
f11tstdt C11 S253.000
Esther l St1ombt19 I I I Golatrv~
Sl64.000
Mr & Mrs Anton P DOid. 10
Grttnfltld S 139.000
Sttphan J Mn~. 26 Grttnft~
Sl80.~
Mr & Mrs Cart A Carlson, 1489 I
Mayttn Av Sl 10 000
DcJVtd l Tsoong 17 R~'ISt.lf S420.000
Mr & Mn KanQyou Yoo 14861 R•ttan
~t S218.000
Mr. & Mrs Na1n Ts.I. 7 Salerno
5493.000
Mr &.Mrs Tim T1nQ I Wtt, 3 Sltl~r
s5os.ooo Mf & Mrs Vtctor 01t90. 4331 Skylark
$265.000
T~ord A Walker. 17744 S~rk Cir
100 52,853.000
Antnony Azavtdo. 18021 Sltypark Cr
SIS.COO
Tuan A Pham. 78 Summerst~
SI I 2.000
R~rt W kuehn. 5 I 5 I Wetnut 40
5160.000
Mr & Mrs ~~n 8 P1uu. 4
WtndJ<tmmet Sl62,000
Mr & Mn Mu Warren 203 WY.Mr
l~ 4 S250.000
Mr & Mrs AH!• Wong 5 162 Yeatting
Av SI0.000
Mr A J Sh•lt• I 4 Ncott Ct S 105.000
TMrNs P Aolin, 7 AleJO S390.000
Mr & Mrs JatMS 0 Vogkr. 39 AllNdor
S214 000
D•rltnt R Htrm.tn I Altair SJ6S.OOO
ORIENTAL ••AL CUllC T Traditional Accupuncture & Herbs · .
-oal1 cl..,._.l aeedl• Med -
"You Don't Hav to Live With It"
• Nt'C'k & Back Pain • lop Smoking
• Wc-t~hl Los., • 51~" /lit'adach<' • F't-male/M le Dlsordt-rs
Dr. Louie Lu. O.M.D .• C.A .
19012 l\utll Bird 23)61 Cl loro lld
·C'"LL 962_7905 S.tt C tat Gtltie6dl S.!t 101 ~ ., ,_,,. ..._.,,,. .. H.n~oo 8adl Cl lor. .__,......... ... c..
Do lTAl oGEr2YEARS Fi R 1. ANn PAY OTHl~G FOR 30 DAYS.
1.L.'1 ~'\\ 'htt' ~ou pn mbtod l<l make l'hl· BJ~
Push m )Jnl1Jr) 1'ht11 pt h l•tm ·to sllll\"
~Yw 1b Juuiary Ag:tin l :int go thnJUgh
inother ~ w o guilt~ pnrm.: \\lx•n ~ <K.1can1oin •
thl' m~ 111.n•n1lf1sl•'i.l hdlth d\lh 111 \Jnt'OC'3 and
get l\ 2rS t >r tl • pn«' or l Anti not hl\ 'hH~
up ~1th :a nk'kd for ~w ~
lry :i ~t".ll' ol S\\ unm~ runnulR-r.tt,"Kthill,
:.1t.-nx 1 ~ Tit1un~ <tO tht· mn\l :.tID·ano,,1 maduno
in t•\i'>t ~lt''· i\ 'r:tr of ""ult,, 11\.li~ ·kl of Mllor~
l n) thji ~oun<l prcm1b111~>
P.k.1htb ma\ \'al'\ ld .,..., ~"lkm
llflJlf' , • f ~ Mi\ II iilll\ ~ toda · Jr a he
...... f' ••
• r; lh1oor SPA fuALrn Cum ~J: \ 1\M
A.a OrMge Coast DAILY PILOT I Wedneeday. January 25. 1989 '
AIDS victim retains sanity by helping otherpatients
DEAR ANN LANDERS: l am a
34-year-<>ld male. I tested positive for
the HIV virus in November of 1985.
These past three years. I have
remained tn fairly aood health. due to
exercise. proper nutrition and rcauJar
sAeep1na habits. I neither smoke nor
drink. Recently my T -cell count has
declined, so I ha ve started on a
PfOIJ'lm of immunomodulators.
Although my physical condition is
&ood. emotionally I'm a wreck. The
Iona-term effects of living with this
disease arc indescribable. Some days
m_y hands shake so bad. I'm sure some
of my co-workers think I'm having
withdrawal symptoms from dru15 or
alcohol. ·
NASHVILLE. Tenn. -Count!)
music entertainer Lynn Anderson has
agreed to wnte a letter of apolog)' 1f a
waitress drops malicious mischief
ctiargesshe filed against the singer last
fall. authonues said.
The charges stemmed from an
incident Oct. 19 at the home of M 1ss
Anderson's former boyfriend. song-
wnter Mentor Williams.
Miss Ande1 !>vn . 4 i. count I)
music's Female Vocalist of the Year
in 1971 . left the General Sessions
Counroom on Monday when her attorney, Wilham T. Ramsey. an-
noun~ed that Linda Gail Bowers had
agreed to drop the charges in ex-
change for a leuer of apology.
Bowers obtained the warrant
against Miss Anderson after the
singer came to Willia ms" home in
suburban West Meade. allegedly
broke mto Bowers' car. took some of
her belongings and made threats
Every couah. necu-. ache or pain
ha ~omc 1 cau~ for panic I fed B)
1f I'm hv1n1 with a lime bomt>. nt'-Cr
knowins when 11 ~111 go off.
This 1s my 1h1rd year of crhbac~.
My hcan cncs out for closenc • bul I
don'tdare take 1hechanceof infecting
anyone. Total abstinence 1s a must for me. Three good fnends haH· c>.-
petiencrd terrible deaths from this
disease 1h1s past year. M) best friend
is now dying. AIDS has taken overm)
entire existence. l dream about 1t
almost every night. All my spare lime
goes into volunteer work with thc
AIDS suppon group. Help1n1 others
1n pain and sorrow has saved me from
against her
"These charges have absolu1el) no
ment.'' Anderson said 1n a sta1emen1
at the time.
Attorne) Tom Kittrell Jr said his
chent chose to drop the charges
"rather than make everybod) ~o
throu.sh a protraue<i legal process:
DURHAM. N.C -For actress
Jensen Buchanan. a tnp to school
seemed hkc a vacation.
She and other cast members of
"One Life To Li ve" arc at Duke Un1 vers1 1~ thi s week . filming
episode!> of the .\BC -TV soap opera
to be broadcast next montl\,
'Tm tr>·1ng to look al 11 hkc a vacation.' Buchanan said. ··There's a
lot of pomp and circumstance for a
httle bit of acuon."
In one episode. a gargoyle topples
from a clock tov.er. narrowly m1ss1n1
Bo and Sarah. pla)cd by Buthanan.
Was the gargoyle intended for Bo or
Sarah or for both?
Buchanan said she though! the
gargoyle was intended for Bo. pla)ed
~--------------------· 1 Termites Are Now Swarming I Bugs Flying Around Your Home?
FLEAS? ANTS? I I I FREE ESTIMATES
t I I SAVI s s s Utk l I W ith This
I AD I
I I
T•rmit• I
C, Pest Control, lftc. I
Licensed Contractor -#PR534 I
Serving The Orange Coast I
Since 19J4, Wholesale Fumigation PRICES! I
SPECIAL DISCOUNT WITH THIS AD I
CALL THI BISI! &•8-1377 I ----------···-----------~~~~~~~~v:r~~~~~
~ i ~ ptmttacly t ttl g
! ~
in your neighborhood! ~ I Residential/Commercial ~
' Interior Plantscaping I
Atriums/Patios
Outdoor Color
Ma intenance/In tallation
Free E 1imate ! ! (7 14)722-6664 i
Akfor~
going to PIC«S
I'm hornfied when I hc:ar of the
1rrcspons1ble sexual conduct that is
still rampant m many gay circles.
These people must be insane Don'1
they reahLe that one reckless en-
Gr e tche n Carlson
by Bob Woods ... The) haven't told us
yet. but I thmk 11's his hfc. In the stor)
line. about a week before this. there
was a car explosion that he narrowly
e aped OW a Ja'lO)'tc, II gives )OU
the idea something 1s up:·
ST. PAUL. Minn. -When she "as
crowned Miss Amcnca four months
ago. Gretchen Carlson said her sclec-
11on sho~cd that the pageant 1s
interested m brains and talent. not
JUSI looks.
"It shows that I'm not a bimbo. thal
I do have 1ntelhgence and that I do
represent what every ~oman wants 10
be in this society, which 1s a career
woman. and be respected for her
mtelhgence:· said Carlson. a Stan-
ford Un1vcrs1t) Junior from Anoka.
Carlson appeared at a school 1n
Minnetonka and the €'h1ldrcns Hos-
pital of t. Paul on Monda). When
she met Marcus Jackson. 15. at lhe
hospital. he looked at her hands and
said. "Miss America with no finger-
nails'!'"
"I know. 1sn·1 that rcfrcshmg""
HHIDfil·:
By CHARLES GOREN
A CALCULATED RISK
East-West vulnerable. South
deals.
WEST • "1 Q K 4 l
NORTH
• Q 4 2
Q A I 6
<> AK Q
• KI 10 4
EAST
• A9165 Q Vold
0 I 10 9 I 3
• 9. 5
0 7 6 41
• Q 6 3 l
SOUTH
• I 10 3
Q Q 10 9. 7 5 3
<> 5 •A 1
The biddina:
Sotitla Wnt Norfll Euc
3 Q Pua 4 Q P .. ,.. , ..
Open1na lead: Kina of •
If you open any be11nne:n Orfc!ic
book, you'll find it contains a table
of openin1 leads. lbae standard
leads will keep you on the riabt
track most of the tJme , but alaviahJy
f ollowina them can prove eottly-u
this band proves.
At botb tables in a team match
die floaJ contract wu four heeru,
rw.bed in an ldaitical manner.
countrr can be u dtath sentence-?
lfmylcncrcansaH:ju t one pe™>n
from this tcmblt s1ckneu. my misc?
will nol have been m \l1n. Thaf\j.
you. Ann Landen.. for the 1reat
scrv1cr y_ou provide -F.R .. TAL-
LAHA SEE. FLA.
DEAR F.R.: It Is YM WM lua
,,..vwe4 tk servltt teday u4 I daau Y"' G.od llld ... GM ~Int.
• • •
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was
especially 1n terested in t~ Jetter
signed ··Perplexed Parents in Kan-
sas." (They cau1h1 Betty and Rick
"rcsung" in bed t<>acther.) Sance I
LONDON (AP) -Te<:totalil'lg
Pnnct.ss Diana on Tuesday blamed
soap operas featuring alcohol for
influencing people to drink.
Diana also told a former alcoholic
at a rehab1hta11on center that people
find It strange that she does not dnnk
oc1ally.
"She said that when she sw11ches
on EastEnders or Coronauon Street
the whole scene around those soap
operas 1s drmlung and pubs and of
course that 1s an influence:· said
Mike Abell. a former resident at the
center who now ru ns has own pro-
gram to help alcohohC's.
Diana. the center's patron. was
refemng to t"o popular British soap
operas. both of ~h1ch feature scenes
m pubs.
NEW YORK <AP) -DJ Jazn
JefT and Fresh Pnncr have sold :? )
million copies of lhcir latest album.
and the hot rap duo can be heard all
O'-er the radio and telcv1S1on air·
waves
That's not enough for some fans.
who have been calling a 900 tele-
phone number for da1I) record«;!
messages from the popular pair
The promo11onal g1mm1ck helps
~II more cccords, and' the phone
rn}'alt1e!) alone give the nch rappers
e>.tra income "v.ell into the SI\
figures.'' said M1c-ahel L. Omansk).
an RCA markc tina executive "ho
came up w11h the idea.
The number -900-909-5333 -
has betn called more than :? nulhon
times since 11wasstartcd1n Junr. Th1: av~ragc cost 1s S2.45 -S2 for the first
minute and 45 C'ents for each ad·
d111onal minute
Note that, despite bis 19 hip-card
poinu. North did not even think of
slam opposite b1a putncr'1 pre..
empe. He knew biJ side wu off at
least one ace, a.dd there had to be
another loaer somewhere.
At one table West made the dar·
in& openia.a lead of the kin& of
spades. That did not fiaurc to coat.
If either oppouent held the ace, it
fiaured to be North. The lead would
blow a trick only lo the event that
North held the ace, Eut the jack
and South tm queen. And it stood
to reap a buae dividend if Eaai bdd
the ace.
When the kins won, it wu a aim·
pie matter for Wat to cocu.l.aue with
a apack to But'a ace. and rutr the
continuation. He then ailed with
the four of hearu. Declarer 1w-ed at
that card 1uspicioualy, but flnally
elected to 10 with the pcrcentqe
play of a l-1 break by rili.nt with
the ace-down one.
At the other table West made the
"safe" lead of the jeck or dia·
n1ond1. i>edarer-WOft aM-CMhed
the remainin1 diamond wloocn for
two 1ptldc discards. He returned to
band with the ace of cJubl ud ran
the ten of hearts. Na.l came a heut
to the jack, the klnj of dubt lad
tbea the Jack. Since k would not
lilelp to cover with dM ca-. BMt
played low. Declarer d6lcarded hit
rena.lnlq tpede. ud IO ... all
dae tricks!
have had fi"'1hand opencnc~ w11h
th11 M>f1 of thing. I fttl q1.ahfied to
11ve them tome adv1~.
When I wa t 7 I .. rested" in bed
with my boyfncnd. too. Of cou'1t. we
ended updoin.ath1npwehad no right
to do After a few "naps" I discovered
that I was prqnant. I was 17. My baby
wu born when I was a senior an high
school.
My "Rick," who always §lld he'd
S\ICk with me 1f anything went wrong.
.decided he was too you~& for fatherhood so I was lefl with the
rcspons1b1hty of raisma our son
alone. It was a terrific truglc. but
with the help of God and m ) parents I
If there's a picture of me with this
column, take a good look at 11. Docs 1t
look like a woman who couldn't goon
breath Ml& without a salad shooter"> Or
a home nunurcr who could never find
real happiness without a greens
span ner that takes the moi sture out of
her lettuce? Can )Ou imagine giving
this person a cre,re maker when she
doesn't even sew.
Every ume somoone gives me: a
gift, 11's for the kitchen. Just once I'd
like to receive something that doesn't
come with a warranty. In spite of the
fact that 1ns1de this mdustnal·
strength body is a shallow. matenal·
istic airhead. I have rcC'e1vcd·enough
small appliances and gadgets to open
my own store. These little timc·save~ take more
time than )OU 1hink. Unless )OU wear
all the appliances dangling from )Our
waist on a uuhty belt. you have to get
a ladder and get them off the top shelf
somewhere. Then you ha\e to ""ash
the dust off and. finall). rummage
through a drawer for the instruction
booklet. .
Under great prl'ssurc from m)
husband. I took m> new salad shooter
ou1 of the box )esterday and brought
out all the ammunition from the
refrigerator I couJd muster. The first
\Olle) was fired tn ~conds hall went
so fast. I kept loading and reloading
until finaUy I had shot out enough
salad to cater a wedding recepuon for
200. When my husband walked mto
the kitchen. I surrendered m) salad
shooter and begged.·· top me before I
klll ap1n."
··11 great to sec you using some-
thina. .. fie smiled ··You nrver dtd u~
the pa\ta maker I bouaht )Ou ·
(Shows you what he knows. Th1:
drying raC'k 1s m my bathroom with
hnlc knee-high stockmg.s drymg on
It )
Year after )car my moth~r p:iuent-
.H,.• BOl'D
made 11.
P1easc tell Betty and Rick to think '""'ct btfort "rn1m1" 1 n bed ... her.
NothtnJ ..... 11 ure out a tttn-attr faster
than ra1s1n1aduld. S11" me -BEEN THERE AND KNOW THE SCENE
IN DENVER
DEAit DENVEll Deever. 8ead·
fel. Y•'ve ttvea d9e Bettyu-4 tud• of Ge worli IHM ._.,,,... •te..
Let'• ..... dw)' uv• ..... eeeeP ..
take ll. • • • My La•P l•r tk O.y: I aow • ....... pvt ........... 4rtM.iq.
tell aM rid f.-4. He WU ~r.
rldll .. 10 Ute time M tllle4 Mm.el .
(T.U.yCatM8)
ly requests a 11fi that 1s en·
danJ..C!edJhas to be msured/has
10 000 fewer miles on 1t than she
does. Tough b1scu1ts Her kitchen 1s a
romp through a domestic Toy\ R Us
for her b1nhday she got an auto-
matic bread maker. When I vmted
recently, my dad. who 1s retired. was
seated near the counter with his C)CS
glued to the httle hght on 1hc
machme.
"He's been there for three and a hall
hours," said m) mother. "Remmdi.
me of a dog we used to ha"e "ho put
his nose 1n the crack of the back door
JUSt 1n case someone opened 11 ..
We watched him 1n silence lk-
t~ecn Mother and me. we haH· a
wortd<lass coUccuon of dectnc
knives. bagel sllcrrs, steamers. slo~
cookers. popcorn poppers. egg
poaC'hers. wine kits. )ogurt makers.
thermostat spoons. blenders. m1xcn
ovens. cand) molds. dctp ff)crs
wok.5. taC'o warmers and sandwich
grills
··1 go1 something ror )OU" I said
he bnghtcncd Together. "e re
moved a pa&c from a magazin<'
advert1s1ng Passion perfume We
both ho' ercd over the flap unul I
lifted 11. rele:ssmg an c:xotK scent
Hurnedl), ~e rubbed 11 on our wnsh
before It d1sapptared
Mv dad sniffed. "Mmmm \mdl
that )east'>'"
It's not goana to gel an) bettrr.
Picnic fare considered
a perfect combination
What makes up ··a perfect meal""
One comb1na11on of comesttbles ha\
been ~ declared at least twice .
accord1n1 to files 1t hand First
during the rc11n of Queen Ehubeth I
Second. an the earl> I 9S0s It's bread .
chttsc and beer
You don't find man) ~orcb hke
"usher .. -with four personal pre>-
nouns an succcs\lon Us. he. he. her.
Q. How'd New York C 1ty come 10
be called The Bia Apple?
A. This hnc wu 1n lhe jau
vernacular Kveral aenerauons aao
''Lots of apPI~ 1n the tree " Me1n1n1
opponun1hes wert plentiful For
work. romance. whatever To get a h1~lyde:s1rable11gin New York City. said a few. was to pla) "the b1a apple ..
To drum up b~1ncu. convention
sellers later publtc1 lcd the b11.apple
nickname.
(1overnmrnt $.C\ en yean of rescarc h
to d1spro"c that. hen then . 11 found
tomatoes only fit for c111le Think of
that' Manlund matured w11hout
BLT
0 Wc don't sa) "Tl\c C h1cago" or
.. Tfle ~tro1t." ~ wh> do we alwayi
sa) "The Bronl •• mstcad of JU St "Bron~~ ·
.\ ~d to be the propeny of Jonu
Bronck People lied 11 the Bron k'
Also amona the Tcxa~ heron who
defended the lamo v.ere Juan
Abam11lo Tonb10 D Losoya ind
Grqono Espana urtl> )ou'"c
heard of them. But 1f not wh} not~
Tile han&)\11 Light lndustf) Col
lqc 1n China has come up with a
dnnk that supposed!) nds people or
km wnnkles. Made from d1s111ltJ
eanhworms
If you and ~our matnmon11I mate
1sf\Ht k>t. cov'l4 ~}OW ompci . ....,llUU.--Di.UU.ll..bu)C.CS _Q lkLJnl h \ie
be pan1cularly creative. Or so ~pon their ficllonal Betty Crocker. too,
t"'o C1nc1nnat1 holars In computer only her name 1 Mar) Baker.
runs of data from files of mamqc
counselors and other sources. they NauveJUgfers have been obsencd
found the most embattled couple 1n so many ~rate places on nnh
a.lso were the .. rents of the mcxt that scholars have come to believe
&Jf\ed children Juaal•na 1s 1n 1jnc11~e. -Tomatoes do no1 cause leprosy. Anothd thins the meat p.ckm
But mote than a century qo. e lot of taftly mention 1s tOmt beevct blvt
people uNI they did.Took t~ British .0.fOot laSJC""Om'll
1•
Ne~port man finally gets his girl
Wedding ring
put to good use
40 years later
ly KATY IOUCHIR
Of .. o.l!t' ..... SUfr
St.an Sk'warclc remembers picking
out the perfect weddina nna for his faancee, Mary, an l 948. The two
were 1n love and a weddinj date was
seL But 50mehow things JUSt didn't
work out and the mamaae was
called off.
For some reason, Skwarek
couldn't bear to pan with the rana.
and kept at sa~ly tucked away. L ittJe
did he know" there was a good •
reason. •
Fony years iatet, he was rcuruted
with has first and only sweethcan
and they were marned Jan. 6. ·
"I wore those nngs for 21/J years
and gave them back when we broke
up," Mary Skwarek said. "I had no
idea Ile would keep them -es-
pecially after all those y~rs."
Stan .. now 70, of Newport Beach
remembers meetinJ Mary, now 61 .
throuih mutual fnends when they
both laved an a httle town in Jlhnois,
··1 was looking for a pretty girl and
there she was," he said. "Althouah
we broke up, I never could find
anyone wfio could quite measure
up, so I never mamed."
Stan and Mary Slrw•r•k· were en1"9•d In
1M8 but c•ll•d off th• weddlnt untll this
o.-, .............. ~ lf.M7---
month. 'ortun•t•fy, the ·Newport Beach
m•n held on to th• wedding ring.
Mary took a diffcr-ent path. She Ark .. I was in Heber Springs at the
married and had three children. but · same tame checking on some of my
sadly her husband died. She man-"investments," he said. "I d1dn·t
aged to get on with her hfe and met know she laved there and the towns
someone new -husband No. 2. are only 20 males apan."
Although she kept an touch with Still unaware of future events that
Stan's family. sh~ never really would bnng them together for life,
thought much about her first fiance fate took another tragic step and
because it was so long ago and so Mary's second husband died.
much had transpired and changed She said tt had been a rough time
through the years. she said. for her and her children. and sheju!>t'
She began a new hfe w11h her couldn't bear to stay in .\rkansas
second husband ·and moved to an y longer.
Arkansas. "My children and I had to get
But as fate would have at. St.an had away after he died. so we decided to
investments an Arkansas and vis-move to Florida." she said. ited frequently. He said he will By this tame. Stan heard the news
never forget how geographically about the death of Mary's scc-ond
close they were at one potn\ an time. husband.
"When Mary lived in Cave City. "When I found out she was a
Chief of police finds
Fountain·Valley life
congenial, casual
1y JOYCE IODLOVICH
)I tfW Diiiy ,_ Su"'
It is hard to 1maa1ne Fountain I Valle)' Police Chief Elvin Ma1i1 ,
iresscd an a gold and black rah-rah
.aniform ca' ortang around a football
field.
But the towenng Math indeed was
t cheerleader dunng the mad 1960s at
Don .Bosco High School in Rose-
mead. And the dccason to grab a mqaphone and shout into the
olcachers was not prompted b>
tehool spant
Math went through the Pasadena
Police Academy and then joined the
San Gabnel Police Department m
t967. He worked his way up the ranks
achieving the title of captain. .
The opportunity to become Foun-
tain Valley's pohce chief arose in
1986. He competed with more than
100 candidates to wan ihc post.
Madi as the father of a 9-}car-old
daughter and I }-year-old son. The
promotion to police chief encouraged
ham to rdocate from Temple City to
f ount.am Valley.
"I believe it is important for the
chief of Pohce to live within the city
he serves," Maah said. "It gi ves yo u
the same feel for the communal) as
other~ple."
widow apan, I told her to stop all
this foolishness and let's get mar-
ried," he said.
That was last Ma>-The) laughed
as they talked about their long-
distance romance from Florida to
Newport Beach and all those ex-
pensive telephone balls.
So Stan decided to v1s1t her fo r
Thanksgivtng. and she came to
NewpQrt Beach forChnstmas. The)
knew then and there they-couldn't
wait any longer.
"It was a shotgun wedding. you
know." Stan JOked.
So ju$t a few fnmalf and fnends
gathered at a loca church m
Newport Beach and the happy
couple fianll y exchanged vows.
Mary couldn't help but keep
admmng the wedding nngs that had
been saved (or her after all tho!>e
)cars.
"He even bought me a watch to
match: it's absolutcl) beautiful."
she 51\id.
Stan smiled and s.111d their h\es have Just been full of coincidences.
"In 1949. we stood up for Ol)
sister 1n her wedding," he said.
"Fort) )ears later. they stood up for
us." ... And there arc some advantage!> to
ltvang a full lt fe an different states
Neither one of them have an)
intention 1n gi ving up their homes.
"We ha ve the best of both
""orlds," she said. "We'll s~nd
winters an St. Petersbufl, and sum-
mers an Newpon Beach. ·
s Wedneeday, Jenuary 2$. ,... A7
Newport woman's
passion for law, art
began at early age
9y KA TY IOUCHER
Of~~NeckMf •
From the time Katherine Dclsack
was S years old. she knew what she
wanted in life. She wanted a pro-
fession.
She entertained the idea of be1n11
psychiatnst, but after watching her
mother locked in her bedroom,
buned under medical books as she
studied to be a 'doctor. Delsack
realized that was not the job for her.
Unlike'most littJe girls at that ~ae.
she was bound and determined to m•kc law her commitment. .
And she succeeded. She completed
law school and graduate ¥.Ork to
become a corporate laW}'er:
Delsack, 34 of Corona del Mar 1s an attorney for SheJ>pard. ~ulhn.
Richter &. Hampton of Newport
Beach. She also teaches a graduate
class an buSJncss management and a
paralegal class at UCI.
And when Delsack is not wnung afternoons," she said. ''There were
law-related ankles and books. she's big elegant glass chandeliers and red
busy working with the Newport velvet carpeting. The children were 1 Beach Caty Art CQmm1ss1on. dressed an their velvet dresses and wc
Some might thank n strange that a listened ti) this wonderful music. like car~r-onentt>d corporate lawyer Peter and the Wolf.
""ould be in volved an art. but once she A "I can remember developing such a
told of her background. it made a lot passion for the ballet, I laterally did
of sense. hops and pirouettes all the way back
··1,rew up an Manhattan." Del sack to my grandmother's after leaving the
said. 'When you have the opportuni-the.ater," she said.
ty toseetheMctroPohtanMuseumof Dclsack said she had the op-
An. Museum of Modem An and the portumty at age 11 to audition for the Guggenheim Museum, it becomes an American Ballet Theater. and
intrcgal part of you·r life." although she didn't make it, she was
Beeause most schools an New York proud to have been a part of it. She
offered youngste rs field traps to these knew she wanted a professsion and
establishments Delsack said it was didn't have the long ·legs they were
somcthtn:& she '\oved and learned a looking for as a ballerina -and she
great deaf about. New exh1b1ts were sull was determined to bC an attorney.
const.antl) being brought in and she Because Dclsack was teachina,
was exposed to all of them th roughout practtcing law, and doing mostly
her childhood career-related things.. she decJd(d to Not only were museum~ a big pan apply for the arts comm1ss1on.
of her life. New Yorl Cat) Openrand "I thought I could bnng a per-
the New York Cit) Ballet had 00-ome spccta vc of soph1s11ca11on 10 enhance
her passion . the ans for t~e general put>lic," she
"f remember my grandmother took said ... An has a sort of snob aspect to
me to Leonard Bernstein's S)m· at. It really needs to be accessible and
phon) for Ch1ldrtn on Saturda) people should feel comfortable.
..., ..... .,_..,~ ...........
H .B business
owner named
to arts board
By JOYCE IOOL.OVICH
Huntington Beach business owner
Mary Ehubeth hebell has ~n
named to the city's nine-member
Alhed ;\rts Board.
The Allied Arts Board 1s under the
d1rcct1on of the HunttnftOn Beach
Caty Council The board s respQnsi-
baht) 1s to guide the de\elopment of
the visual and perform mg arts 1n the
Cit ). The board's ammC'dlate m1s~1on as the creation of the MuntCtpal An Center an the do"ntown redev·elop-
ment area scheduled to open in
Januan 1990.
het)c.11. the owner of hebcll
De 1gn. studied at the Art Center jn
Pasadena. he earned a master's
degree an graphic design from the
Cahfom1a Institute of the Arts in
Valencia
.. Our school was all bo)s, and th is
was a WI}. to meet aarls." he said. ··we
looked sharp. Of <'OU~ we didn't
have a lot ofvicton parties-we onl}
won one pme an (our years -but we
had sreat team !.pint.
··1 truoyed high hool." Ma alt said
'I used to cruise an a I 9SS grttn
C'hevy."
Maali recognizes the differences
between the city he formerly scr'ed
and the bedroom community he now
runs.
Polle• Chief lfvln M•UI finds poflc• are apprecl•t•d In 'ountaln Valley. hebcll. whose firm recently re--
located from herman Oaks, spcciaJ-
1ze11 1n thrcc-d1mcns1onal graphic
cd up. he thought I would ~nd design work in pacu1in&. billboards,
someone an my place But wh} would arch1tec1 ural and cxh1btt1on graphics.
l'.' The '"' 1ta1ton was to me We cu~ntl). s.he IS Mork"'' on the talked about drugs. par11~. parents etrcular entf)way for the Conrad
and the La" I rcall) <'nJO)ed the time Hilton Rc~rch building at the City
The stnct rqimcn at the Cathohc
tugh school also tau&Jlt Maah. 43, a
'trona work ethic. "We went to school from 8 a.m to S p.m.:· he said. "The momina we had
our collqc pttp courses and 1n the
tftemoon was tht-technical classes.
"We had no elccuves and at was
mandatory to team Laun. l uscd that
a lot,'' he said, lau1h1ns.
After a stint in the Anny, Ma1h
enrolled at Pasadena Ctt> Colic~ as a business m-.ior. It was dunng a
routine poll~ science course that he
dcaded he wantC'd to become a pohcc
"I w15 the fiDt one in m) famil) to
So into law enforcement." he 1d
I' I IU -..POil.IGlfl
"fountain Valley as not as cul-
turally diverse u San Gabriel." he said. "We don't have the constant
gang problems here. Orange Count)
dosen't Sttm to tlave the hustle and
bustle of Los Angeles cat her. Here we
arc appreciated by the cnazens and
they are n<?~ afraid to come fo""ard
and say so.
In the last two )cars cnme has
decreased an Fountain Valle). Ma1h
said Commencal buraJanes art'
down 25 percent and residential
burglanes down 20 percent.
"Cnme is down because ""e ha'e
n o t there husthn " he said.
•· ur response umc l5 t rec minutes
We have apprcht'nded a lot of
burglars."
Math sa)s hf 1SJ>roud ofh1s men -
and women -officers. "We ha ve six w'Omcn officers. I
don't have a problem with at. Women
fo through the same teM1ng toquahf>
f they can handle the JOb that as fi nc:
wtth me. We are all police office rs ...
Maah's gool for the cny as to
improve quahty service for 1he
citizens.
"We have done welt but we ~tall
want to ampro,e." he satd, "We havc·
drug prevention programs no" but
we want t<> bnng in more for the kids.
Drugs ha-..cn't been a ma1or problem
at our two ha h ~hoots.. but it as a
pro cm
"It seems lad~ arc s~artin,g to
recogni ze the dangers JUSt b~ Stttng
what happens to their f nends l\.1ds
are not tu pad.··
Ma1li has a special feeling for )Oung
people. While wllh thr San Gatlncl
Police. he taughc an "1ntroduct1on to
law" course to high school and Junmr
college students.
.. , had a syllabus and a te't book.
but wc spent most of the tame talking
about a range of'subJtcts. It turned
into a well-<lcveloped d1alogur. I hke
that." he said. Recently. the chief wa s a~k~ b) an
8th grndc student an one of the local
schools to speak about law enforce-ment to her class.. He ladl aet'C' ted
t e 1nv1uataon
"The teacher was supnsed I sho"'·
Kids ask good questions." of Hope.
Though ever") parent dreads the She as also an director for vanous
call from a poltcc station to "come get a~unts such as Rick Pallack, an
)our kid." Math pondered whether e'cluSt\.C men's store that outfit!> Sen.
the call would be worse for a chief of Edward Kenned y. Syh estcr Stallont'
pohcc. and several TV game show hosts.
"I don't thanl so." he said "E'cl) Shebeli bves an Huntington Har-
parent womes .ibout their lo.ad t bour with her husband, Merle ~ould alwa) s hope 10 be there for m) McCormack. he 1s acuve in local
kadsand not worn about m~ c-apacll ) rommunat) organazattons hke the
a a cop. Hunungton Beach Chamber of Com-.. da' I wall rct1rc from law mcrcc and Madame 8uucrfb G ua)d en orccme n t. but w ill ne-',"'"c""r""rc:.....;.:;t 1:..;.re;......A&o...,f ..&Jt ... he_...O~ra....,n""'gl&>e "'"cllJo""u"'-n ... t .... y....,...~""rfi,,,,_o~rm....,..i nLMa'----
from being a father .. rts Center.
.OC Bar honors retired judge for contributions to court system
A b11 90naratulat10M &c>r$ out to rtllred ,.,,. Ge.r1e Fruds. v.ho
~ '-'"'· for ~'""'' the Or-!111' Co~nt) 8.u A 1()('1at1on·s
FnRkhn G. \\est .\v.Jtrd for
oumand1n\Kr" 1tt Francis. 7, whq 1s best kno"n a
• lhe"honorar> pre idinfJUdtt" of the C>nmle Count)' upcnor Court. rc-~v,Ct tht honor at tht Lt Mcnd1an
Ho~ 1n Ne-port Bnch
Retired tn 1977 Franc• continue
IO 9'old forth an 1 San1a Ana eounroom -Mrt h<' hindles ~ttlt'·
IMftt conftrcnccs to help ht1.,nl ,_,.w thcird1ffcrtncn \\1thout nctd
t batnal. Aftirmcnthln.O\Urnsa1udac
qaott )tan 11\cr rct1ttment ·ftlll:tt.S he has prtt~ O\ er
... 6.000 ttttlcmcn1s. S1\'1na .... *" l0.000 ('OUn-da that ._.. lliawe cost ta"Pl>'tt$ more than
I =.millioet 1f thf ta•UUlt! had IOM tO
,.. FtaatliD (j WC1l 4wtrd lS ia~Of'on<'ofthccount)'"s 1i.Wi;WIM>;;;..:~~non1fiect 1ht ~t
II , ti'Ot" Ill Juctlt
llnJUI hed SCI"\ ICC IUJUdgcor laW)er
tit.her for an outst1nd1n1 contnbu·
uon to the ampro\tmcnt of the coun S)stcm. or a conunuina ded1ca.uon
and commitment to impro" ana the
1dm1.strat10n o( JUSllCC, lh1lt has
earned the re pect o(thctr pttrs
Born in n Fran<:1fl0 1n 1901 , he
earned has la1Jr dcaree from Boah Hall an 192.S. v.ent into pnvate practice for
the nc\t thrct )ear,u11t1I he •tnt lO
ln)o ount) to •or~th the da mc1
attomc).
• He bttamc 1n)o County'J dt tnct
1ttome) tn 1934. a ~lion he held
until he IJrlS 1s>p01nted as a upenor
Coun JUdtc in 1943 an tp1ne
Count). " He WIS IS'•&~ IS JUdtc for the
Lot Anatlo uptnor Coun 1n 19.S I.
smina 1n tona Beach.
Whfn he rtllred 26 )cars liter. he
continued to Kf\C a a \olunteer Judfe. Ind lilt .. rttltt<f," WI a.-~iancd 10 the <>ranee Count)' Suprr1or
Coun 1n 19n.
TM tntlnnmt C'Oft~ 1de-a •as
authofittd t>Y, &bc-Caffba .. Judie.al COOTteif m 19S1 _. t.tnme 1
mandatory prftrW cmtl.
Franns has lho bftn c1NM4"
mudt n •Y9fte for bri•• •bou•
the mandatof) settlement conference
because of h1 heraldC'd suctt!ls at
settlements. • • • The TeacMrs Maaa1emnt aa4
t.vntmna CorporaU.. of New Pon
Beach presented !>pec1al cash av.ard-.
toi.lltna S27.000 dur1111 pec1al ccr-
cmonac'i at the Jan l 3 tatc Board of
Educ-auon mecttnJ.
TMI. one of the nation·~ olde l raw
land !l)l1d1catol'\, was founded 21
)Cal') ago to pro' 1de. educ11ors an
opponunlt) lO tn\.ttt 1n real estate.
· To dat~. more than S0.000 proplc
ha'e becoml' in~~•o~ a!'ld 1 Ml bas ra15Cd mort than $600 m1lhon 1n 84
panncnh1ps.
.. The ca.sh awards were init111ed
last ,>t'ar b) TMI as a v.a)' of ~1z1na lhe 1mpon.ant hn~ be-
tween the compan) and its deep roots
1n thccommuntt) of cd~'ltor :·\ltd
Jim Manin. TMI pttS1dcnt
The T Ml 1.-ards •m t'lptndcJ
th1' )t'ar to total Sl 1.000. ' 1\wards include SIS.000 to the
Tt'tChtf of aht Year, S•.OOO to tkh
final&it. and t l.000 lU CllC'h ut the f(lUf
~m1·fiMhstL
fl.cTdChtf o(1hc Vear Pf(llram 1
cond""1td ~ the C 1hfomaa Otp1n·
ment ot education. • • • Freil OwH1, J1«tor of bu!>1nei.
SCf\ tees for Golden \\ c t Colleie was
cltttcd chairman of Orange C'ount)'
Chapter of th e March of D1mcs Foundation He has been a oluntccr
for more than 16 ) ears Fttd JOaned the e\ccuta'e board in
1972 and has ~~cd a chapter chairman. He 1s currently ch11rman
of Walk America. the larat t annual
fund-rai in& c'ent for the chapter • • • Interested in undcrstand1na }Our
personaht)'., " pcrsonaht)' profile ~or1'shop wall be oOered from (>.3010
9 .lO p.m Jan. 31 ot OranJt" C'oast C'ol~. Wor~shop lectu rer Walt
S.Ulvu has pent more than IS )cars
1n the field of d"ert1s1na and sale\
promouon He rcaularl)' condu t
seminars ror 00•1n~sts on sales
1ra1n1n1 and ttmc manaatmcnt .
.\.ttcnckn "1iU take a penonal
profilt' cum produC'td b~ Pcrformu
\y1tcm' tnttmahonl. The t t helps
to tdtnt1f) work anJ behavioral
tlln The test \hows one ho~. to
m•n•tnttt · ~tie! tonR~ts ~nh·
othcn ..
Rqi traiton ftt 1\ $30. For jnfor-
m.tton, call 431· .
• • • lk sure to stop b' the Goldu WHt
Colltae Flu Arts GaUery and '1cw
the Vactonan Era tl;h1b1t ho"'"I
unul Feb 3 Dust) rose wall are the
ba kdrop for the \'1cton11n mk
fumt1urc. clothing. drcoratl\ t' par~'
and an work
uratcd b art faruh) member.,
Briu Coalty, Darrell Ebtrt aacl Al
Jaasoa. the hov.-"'" c).plore the fine and pplaed ans of the romanttc
penod. The e'\h1b1t ¥.Ill htghltght
unique design quaht1ec;
The pllery 1son the Gothard \trttt side of campu!I and is open 10 a.m. to
2 p.m Monda) throuah fnda) and t>
to p.m. T~sda> and Wedntida).
For 1nform1tion. call 95-835 . • • • n. H•U.S&ea kadl ~kr of
O..~ •~ now Sttl1nt noni1·
nations for the 1q Out 11nd1ft&
Catttcn •"•rd The auadthnc : the ttetptcnt mu t h\C or wortt in
Hunt•"lton Beach. the srn 1et to the
community ma mrtuc:k IC't of
hero1'm, human1tanan1sm arid other
out llftd1n1 srr'\1 · ~r~K'C\ mull
be vnl\tntary:-mtntC)c ~ ~te."C \"811
bf w1th1n a pan of )UB 'hroueh
191'8. nonunattont nn come from lftd!~ iduat\ Of' Oflll"IJltlM
Nom inations mu t be submitted to
the Hunttngton Beach Chamber of
C'ommertt office no later than p.m.
Feb. 28. Forms are a\ailable at the
chamber offict. 231 Main "t.
• • • Alllso1 Laura llr1ue, dauJhtcr of
.'-tr. and Mrs. Richard Krause of Hunungton Bea h. ha been aclttted
to com~te 1n the ninth annual
California's "mcnca·s Homttomint
Ovccn to be held an February •t tht
Mamou Hotel in Anaheim .
Alhton is Manna Hish hOof' hom~m1na quetn ·he will vte tO;
ca h scholarships and the opportn•-
t) to rompctc 1n the national CON·
pcttuon an in Hawau. Thtt oreaniza.
tton 1s a non-profit arouP. • • • •
• EN M OAtL Y PILOT I Wlldneedey. January ~5. 1919
HI \II \\
Herper ~n ..... lllf Hutton In ....... Not ••PINIPOrt •••
HI-:\ II·:\\
Lagµna' s engaging' Rappaport'
~TITUS ~,...c.r...,_...
The sidtwalks of New York ha\c
bttn trod~ any numberofcccc=ntncs
in Hetb Gardner's wh1ms1cal P.lays
from "A Thou.and Clowns· to
"'ThacvC$" and "'The Goodbye Pcop~."
Jn his laiest scnocomac s.p. 'Tm
Not RaPJ!eport," Gardner offers a
itimpsc of what thtse enaaama 1ndi-
Ytduahsts m1&ht be hkc in the twilight
of their hvf'$. There are elements of all
of them in Nat, a dcnuen of Central
Parle who as a consummate BS artist
and an incorrigible, bow-tied Don
Quixo1e.
The eloquent Nat h<11d'I coun daily
on a bench \hared by a fello"'
oc1oenanan. a black. nearly bl10d
apanmcnt uperintendent named
Madac who "'shes his unwanted visitor would find another ear to
bend. Nevertheless. he becomes
cauaht up -to hi~ rqrct -m Nat's campaigns 10 nah1 the societal
wronas of the worla.
The Laauna _Playho"'sc '' ofrcran& an e~aina proOucaion of .. Rap.
PIPort • in ils Oranat County
prtmaert under &he inC1s1ve d1rtet1on
of Jim Ryanand~anst the backdrop
of Jacqutt' Moffcu s s'lpcrbly rcahstic
park-bnd1ucu1nJ-onc of the more 1mpress1vc scenic ~sign~ for a
theater sp«ialmna in art1st1c uccl-
lcnce.
Jn a show where the set virtually
upstaics the <'IS\ and the role of Nat is
nearly an impossible reach for any
actor this side or Jason Robards.
Laauna's Harper Roasman (who may
actually be too old fortt)&ive~ the part an incredibl) irvprc s1ve efTon. His
occasional fa hcnng cannot neutralize
the brilliant shadmgs of character
with which he endows his assign·
men I. ·
Ro1sman 's Nat is a feisty left-
·1·\· l ,ISTI '\GS
winatr whole mand has tharptned u
his body h11 withettd. FIC'Cd wuh the
prosp«t of surttndcrina hi• 1ndepen-
dcncc, he creates plausible fiction
w11h instantaneous credibility 1n a
performance whach, while iechnically
erratic, is ncvcnhelcss steeped 1n
character and charm.
As the reluctant M1dait. pro-
fessional actor R1f Hunon renders a
vital and involv1n1 charactcnzation
of an aging fiahttr refusma. like Nat.
to acknowledJC the personal ravages
of time. His 1s a reahsllc v1ewpo1n1. however, and Hutton plays 1t in
s1rona countcrpoin& to Nat's Oam·
bo)'ant crusader.
Myrna Rya n also 1nJec1~ a har~h
note otreaht) into the piece as Nat·~
Jons-s ufTcnnf daus}iter. a onenmc
radical who s .. sold out,. to the
establishment an her middle )cars.
Ryan maxes strength of outraacd
character with a daughter's vulner·
ability and love 1n 1 commendable
pt"rform1nce. The frinaes of Na l's world are well
represented by the street touahs and
v1ct1msofthe('1ty-Oav1dCarrasan
lnsh punk. Cheryl HuMJnusa prtU)
younadruaadd1ct an<fBryan 8urns
the v1c1ous pusher she't in debt co
Donald ( linebell contributes• splen·
dldl) re1hst1c portrayal as a yuppie
home assoc1auon official who must
give Hu11on his walkina P.'pers .. I'm Nol Rappaport ' (the title
comes from a vaudcv1llc rouune
favored by Roisman's character) is nch an comedy and character. beauti-
fully balanced between rom1nt1c
whimsy and harsh reality. Like other
Herb Gardner comedic . 1t 1s both
1p~t1210g and sausf)tl\J.
Performances continue Tuesda)S
throuih Saturdays at 8 p.m. and
Sunday at 2:30 until Feb. 12 at 1hc
Laguna Pla)'housc. 606 Laauna Ca-
n)'on Road. Laauna Stach C11J
494-0743 for uckct information
Portuguese pianist Maria Joao Pires
soars with LA Chamber Orchestra
D
D
0
6:00 6:30 ..... CH ..... ..... NIC ....
"'-Olllilll. ,.L
7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 ,,. ... ' Gollt lV 101 TM~r
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(llletU!ft. USA Untol\IM .., .. .., .. ""'1t Coult
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let c.wi
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Iona Brown conducts
orchestra through
nearly flawless night
By MICHAEL RYOlYNSKI o..,. ,_ c .... ~
The exquisite anistl) of Mana
Joao Pires enriched an already
sumptuous Los Angeles Chamber
Orchestra concen Monday cven10g.
Besides featunng Ptres 1n her
county debut. the Orange County
Philharmonic Socaet} presentauon
also sported Arthur Foote's Suite an E
Major for Strings. Op. 63 -the first
American orchestral work to appear at the Orange Counl y Performing
Arts ('enter that wasn't wnlten b)
Gershwin, Bernstein or Copland.
Pires' 101erpretat1on ot Morart°!>
Piano Concerto No. 21 in C MaJor. K
467. was nothing shon of exemplary
She was clean. precise and bus1nt:S'>· hke in he r approach yet tlc,1ble
enough to permit much expression
M•rl• Joao Pl~es
Bustling w1lh exuberance. the Por-
tugal native exh1b1ted power co upled
with moderate restraint 1n bod)
motions -a surpns1ng feat. con-
sidering her dlmanuuve size
moderate!) (and 1astefull)) shon
first-movement cadenza almost mat·
ter-of-faclly scfued into \he closing
tutti {orchestra ) sccuon
The slow. "Elvira Madigan" move-
ment (so-called after l\s u~ rn a 197~
fifm by that name) revealed Pirc!>'
more lyrical quahucs. Her sofit>r
tonal quality was nonetheless under-
lined w11h a firml y rcsolule stren,gth.
Her every phrase was pla)ed ~ith a
distinct touch and pressure. produc·
ing lines frauJht with heartfelt yet
thoughtfully prepared meaning.
Her fluid and fac1lt' arm motions
resulted 1n phrases that no~ed
smoothly, especially allowing for
transuions to connect to che next
themauc group seamlessl y. Even her The entire 3S-paece orchcs'\ra.
u ,. 1 • ' " 7 .. ,. "
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Ourotw ..... L.1. ,...,,, lht Cl•t , . .,.. men directed b\ Iona Brown trom her
usual seated concenm1s1ress pos·
ition. supported Pares' efTons with
spantcd play10g. Pirc~. who looked
out to the pla)t:rs frequently, and
orchestra ~ere in nearl) flawless
synchron1zat1 on throughout the
work.
® CBS Newt ... Elll"'-tv 101 TME~r Wl119u1 ""' ,.., s..-
The 1909 SullC b) Foote
(1853-19'7) proved a real eye-and-
ear-opener. A vet) European-m-
nuenccd composauon that someho~
manased lO exh1bll a few o\mencan
quahues. the Suite ~1"cd a top-
flight treatment al the hands ofBrown
and Co. A stately opening movement that could serve as a textbook
example of a Western European
Romantic opener. a Tcha1kov k>-
hke p1zt1cato scherio framing a
slower. Germanic·1mbued middle
secuon. and a Bach-hke fugue for a
finale were all pla)'ed an a II\ cl>
manner and w11h the utmost atten-
uon to detail normall) paid onl) to
great masterworks. Brown and 1he Los Angeles
Chamber should be h1ghl~ com-
mended. not only for re v1V1ng 1h1s
un1ustl)' neglected gem but also for presenting 1t in a most respected and
enthusiastic wa) and not mercl) as a
cu no.
....... MIOUIN Tonia hi
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Co"nect'" or OflW
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CT:'\ HBC IUSA Wheel ol Jeoparoy• Unt01..a ~Jltf " ~ Nt"'t To<la foflune
ft:\ JICtt111tCll f.J«• Vtn • Pralff Ille loid
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Tt. rate ol IN Foml S,q 01¥11
This time conducung and playing
while standana up an front of the
ensemble, Brown directed a highly
animated account of Mozan's S)rn·
phony No. 39 in E-Oat MaJor. K 543
( 1788) to conclude the concen The
performance was dommated h) a
quick pace and an emphatic. alrno\I
awess1vc approach that continued
virtually throughout. the mosll) sedate second movement notw11h-
standing. Complet• t•vtalon U1tlng1 In Sunday'• TV Piiot
IT'S
-EV-E&~BO~~.__~~~
BUSINESS
WHAT IS BEING DONE NOW IN ORANGE
COUNTY TO HELP SOLVE CHILD CARE
PROBLEMS?
For More Information Watch KOCE 50 on
January 25 at 8:00 p.m. and can (714) 895-5050
for Your,,,. Booklets .
Orange County has the second largest child
population in calif ornla A recent survey shows
that the Issue of atf ordable and quallrt child care
is one ot the top thflf concerns ot the Orange
County commumty. see what local government.
businesses and educatiOnal institutions are
doing to address growing chMd cat'e needs In
Orange County .
•
Guest Panelists:
NIHJ taut.. Orange County Dept of Ed.
lrtla ......,,, Raneho Santa Margarita
BuSiness Pint
8IM v...-. 0 C Board of Supervisors
Uta CllJ••r VlllNI, Cttildren's Home
Society of CA
Salvador Dall:·
A surreal Hf e
S750,000 promise
to help center
pay for NYC:O
l
..
'
•
IUllOHl\I
Taxpayers sure
to help the city
solve its pro~lem
City officials an Costa Mesa have an enviable problem.
They have more money than they can spend.
Now the average Mr. or Mn. Oran&e Coast deals with·a
problem like that -if at can be classified as a problem -by
buying more stuff. Pretty soon, they have lots more stuff and
not enough money. Problem solved, thangsqu1cUyget back to
normal.
' But depletina the etiy's checkbOok is a bit more
comphcatcd because of state laws that go"em mun1ci~
spending prccs. ,
Spcc1ficall~. the Gann spcndmg limit regulates how
much city spending can increase every year. What u doesn't
really address is how much tax money the city receive
annually. That's another state law and perhap ·another
ed1tonal topic
But the end result of the Gann limit 1s that nch c1t1cs like
Costa Mesa wind up with more money than they can legally
spend or place in reserve.
Costa Mesa. which 1s blessed with not only South Coast
Plaza to generate tax money but also a a host of car dealers, has
been down this too-rich road before. Its coffers appear to
runncth over regularly.
In November 1987, Costa Mesa voters who would ha ve
been entitled to a rebate of about $70 per household, anst~ad .
opted to have lbc city spend the $2.1 million surplus on street
and sidewalk improvements. A little vote for the greater good.
The Gann law lets voters give the OK to overspending.
much hkc one spouse to another. But the offi cial version of
"here's the checkbook. have fun" might not be echoed this
November should city officials seek similar approval. .
The ~ason. like the problem, 1s money.
There's too much of it for voters to Ignore. The uy·
finance director csumates the surplus will reach $38.3 million
by the 1992-93 fiscal yea r.
That 1s a heck of a lot of widened streets and repaired
sidewalks. Perhaps too many crack s.
for the owner of a $200,000 fixer-upper, it would mean
gjving up close to $1 .000 in a propeny tax rebate.
The c1~y's voters were altruistic enough to say no to $70.
Our guess 1s Mr. and Mrs. Average woufd rather M>lve this
problem on their own.
Now. how soon can we expect the S 1.000 check? There i
stuff to be bough t.
Opinions expresMd in thlt sp.ce are thOM of IM Dally Pttot Other
YteW1 •llP'.-.d on th11 page .,e 1hoM of theif authors and ari1sis Reade<• comment•.,. ww1ted and may be Mnt to The o..iy PLIOI. P o Box 15e0
C0eU M ... 92828
Hiii Hi IOHIClll
Your representatives
U.S. SENATORS
Cn.astoa, Alan (0 ), 5757 W. Ce ntuf) Blvd . uate 515.
Los Angele . 90045. (213)215-2186.
WU1on. P ete {R). 840 Newport Center Dr. uite '.io. Newpon Beach. 92660. 720-1474.
· Maal ma) be addressed to U.S. Senate:. Washing on
D.C' .. 20510. .
U.S. REPRESENTATIVES Co~/.. Ctlrl1 ( 40lb Dlat.-R) 180 Newport Center Om c
Suite 240. Ncwpon Beach, 92660. 644-4040. ·
Duaemeyer..l William {3t&ll Dlat-R) 1235 N Harbor
Bl vd .. Fullcnon. ~2632. 992-01 41 . Donaan, Rober& (31t~ Dlst.·R) 1238 7 Lewis St . uatc
203. Garden Grove. 92640, 971-9292
Packard, Roa (43rd Dlat.-R). 629 Camino de los Marc ...
u1te 204. San Clemente. 92627 . 496-2343. R~rabad1er, Dua (4tnd Dlst.-R) 2733 Pacific ( oast
Highway , te 306. Torrance, 90505. (213)325-8888.
Maal be addre scd to House Office Butldang.. Washing-
ton. D C 205 I 5 STATE SENATORS
8er1e OD, Marlo (37" Olst.-R) 140 Nev. pon Ccntc:r
Dn,c. uite 120, cwpon Beach. 92660. 640.1137
Campbell, WUUam (311t Dlat.·D>. 23161 Lake Center
Dr .. El Toro. 92630. 770.5533. Green,CttU (33rd Dist.-0)1 263 1 E. lmpenal Highway.
nta Fe pnngs. 90670. (213)670-7196.
R•rce, Edward 8. (3114 Dlat.·D> 1661 N Ra> mond Ave .•
Suite 2 1, Anaheim. 92801, 871..0270
Seymo.rJ Job (35tJa Dls&.-R). 21 SO Towne Centre Place.
Anaheim, 92806. 385-1700.
Dunng sessions. mail ma ) be addressed 10 tatc Capitol.
cramcnto. 9 5814 ~~~ ~ST~A~T~E...-.ASS~·~E-M.._.B_LY-~-EN
• AJ len, Dorl• (7111 Dl1t.-R> 591 l Ccrmos 'c:. ()pre .
90630. 821 -l soo. Bro••, De.ult (Sit' Dlst.·R> 1945 Palo Verde 1\' c ..
Long Bea h. 90814, (213)493-5514
Jl'er191oe, GU (7t" Dlst.·R) 4667 MacArthur Bhd ,
uite JOS. Newport Beach. 92660. 756-0665 Frtnellt, NolaD (I.._ Dlat.-Rl. 17195 Nev.hope.
Fountain V lley. 92708. 662-SSOJ J-..., RHI (14dt Disl.·R>. I SOI N Harbor Bhd ..
Fullerton, 263S. 7 8-S8Sl.
Lewh, Job R. (17dt Dt1t.·R>. 1940 Tus11n ve .. Oranae. 92667. 998-09 . Dunna scu1on m11I may be add re scd to tate C pitol.
cramcn10. 9581 ...
• BOAllD OF SUPERVISORS
WI ... , a.,.er -I I 01 trict, 834-311 0
WleMr, Harriett -2nd Di trict. 834-3220 V~a. G94Nl H. -3rd D1stnct. 8l4-3330 ~. Dea -4th Di met, IU4-3440 .
lllleJ, TMmat F . -Sth OtsmcL 834-3SSO
ddrcss: 10 C1v1c enter P1aza, nta na 9270l. .
.. ,.
(.rtr ...... ..... .....
fll9' l ..
.. .....
~ ...... .. .... .......... ......., :::: .. ....... c...... .... c.-.. ....
-
lllllH'
Pets need
public as
.watchdog
. ~·
Graying, fatter image perfect
camouflage for Elvis Presley
"You've heard that old sa)tn&; ·1r you can't whip 'em.Joan 'cm.' ha,en'1
)OU?
Well, I've decided to JOtn them:·
It was my fnend, Bernie Smith.
calhn& on the phone. Bernie lt\CS a
few blocks from me and he. too.
wntes a weekly column for a local
newspaper.
"Who or what are )OU JOtntng?", I
asked.
"I'm JOining lhose airheads who
believe that Elvis Presley is alive ..
I didn't hang up on Bcr,n1c. He hi\\
an impressive background 1n show
business. He has been a wnter and
producer for many radio and TV
shows, both nataon:il and an Sou them
Cahforn1a, mcludmg "You Bet Your
Life" stamng Groucho Marx When
Bcrn1r math talks show business I
hsten
"Well -uh -"'ell. what made )OU change )our mind., .. I asked
Bernie said ll was a romb1natton of
things There as no Eh 1s Pre lq
postaac stamp mcone that famou"
"'ould ha'e a tamp 1f he "ere reall~
dead
Rudolph Valenttno's fans 14Crt a\
devoted as Presle) 's E\.Cr) ~t"ar on
the ann1,ersary of his death fans
pthered at his gra' e '\fter 62 )elm
there art still one or t140 mourners
showing up, probably ch1ldn:n of h1~
fans "But," said Bernie. "none of hi\
fans e\ier reported Sl'Ctng him after he
died. Elvis 1s spotled evCl) where -
at supermarket opcningo;. \'~ ap
mt"Ct . motorc)ck races -)OU name
1t, he is seen b) someone:·
He added. ··1 think he 1~ not onh
ahve. but 1s li'-tnS here in L.1guna
Nagurl "
My eyes were bcg1nn1ngto roll hack
an my ht"ad. but I man.i&ed to hold on
to the phone and keep takin' note~
"Ha .. c you ~n him in the nc1&h·
borhood""
"No That's what con' in1..cd mr
hc·s hvang here We''e httd supt"r·
m rket opening.\ here. lire140rl>.'> 1n
thr park. opening of the nc"' librar).
but no one reported !.Ccing him"
Bernie' 1hro11 is that lh 1s trul\
had had ll wllh show bu'>tne\s and
wantrd to rcttr(' He c:ho~ Lagun:i
Niguel a 1hc las1 plaH~ an,onc 140uld
looJr. tor him 'ho14 bustne'> 1s a ''iru\.
Bernie Cll;pla1ncJ ~hen 11 g(){·:\ into
rcm1 s1on. actor'> usualh retire EHr
o often 11 flare up titµ1n and tht' onl~
trcatmrnt 1s ell;posurr to the publu.
··Look at the C\ 1Jrn1..c · he Yid
Bob tfopc Luc1lk BJll C1corgc Burn'>
-none of them hJ'-C to "'ork
an) more, but 1hc., l-an·t shake oil 1hat
\lrU~ ••
No"' hl· hJd ml hooked \\c tX'gan
to spc( ulatc how Ch t'i rnuld "' c herc
unrelogn11cd and \till makr lX-
c-as1onal .ippcoram:eo; all oHr the
countr)
We am\.cd at the~ conclusions
first. he had a w11 made patterned
after his usu11I hair \t)'k Then he cut
his hair -ht'·~ turning gra) by now
30)Wa) He quit weanna his girdlr
and kts 1t all hang out lie doc n't
"'car tlaih> clothrs an)more Prob-
abl) tn "''mirobc consl\ts of Jeans
and T-sh1ns. or Poht"Sttr ~l:u:ks and
'>P<>n!i !lhlrtS lk Jnvcs a 1%4 Chl''' (no
pcr\OnahLed hcensc plate\) and ha5
gotten nd ot the cntourJge 1ha\
followed him e"er) where he "cnt
When the ur~c to bc ~cn h)' his
pubhc hits him. lw puts \ln his 141g.
wiggles into ht) garJk Jnd show)
clothes again anJ t:il>.e'> off for
whatever C\.Cnt I\ bt1n& \lJit'd 30)
"here in \he countn -as Iona as 111~
not in Laguna Niguel
Then he come\ bad. ilnd '>cttk'
do"' n "'1th the lJblo1ds and read\
about another \lglH1n1 ot him b) hi\
ta1thtul tan'>
The more "e thou ht about 1t. th('
more con"1n1..t'J \,\(' "'crt \h;at he "
h('rC and 14C h.a'c ~n him. but didn't
rC'Cogn1Lt' him !Xrn1c thin!.;\ ht' ma)
ha'r '>C.'t•n ham :tt J~'\ barbl·r \hop
and at the hard"'arc stort'
I hche\c l''c \t'Cn him at 1hc
lthraf) I lnol4 , tha1's th(' la\t pl ''
you'd ~\Ile\ l to find E-1' 1\, hul lhat"'
pan ol his )tr:ueg~ Th(' man I \al4
1hcrr \\JS loulhcJ dd""n 1n one of the
big cha1rr; hold10g a cop) of th' ~all
\tn.-ct Journal \\hen I 14alkeJ b' him
though. I not1lcJ the Journal "'J'
camoutfage for a t:om1c hoo~
Like I \J1d "hC'n lkrn1e tell~'> shu"
b11 I h'>ten ~'I. too bclit."' c that Lh"
" ah \C and '" ing 1n l .iauna "-1auC'I ·\nd l:.h 1~. 11 irou'rc rc:Jd1ng thl\ Jon·t
\14Cat 11 &rn1c and I "on't bill" \our
CO\ t"r
ColuauJlst A-.o Wtll /hr I•
l.AtttU f\'lprl
Two tax boards corruption
scandals waiting to happen
\.\\R 4.M(l'\TO -( ahtorn1a\ ~r' ice. 10 ullle t \late IJ\C' anJ a
ao"crnmental supcr'ilructurc. bolh ne~ U\ court tu handle appeal' !rum
ta tr and loal. 1s cur\Cd with count· taXP3'-t"" on c,pn:1tic matte~ lcs 1nanit1es and anachronisms ~\ kopp notl'd. ··~1n1..e I~~ there
Go"crnmental aienc1es and bodtl'S ha' e bttn I 7 ~l')aratc rcpono; that
arc c.rca1ed and remain intact dC\:adei. ha'c rl'.'CommcnJcd aholl\hmenl t1f
af\cr their utility. 1f an), has J1s:ip. the Bu:srd ut t-quahiation or wo·
pcartd. fierctly protected from J1s· M>hdaung the t140 aien1..1e\"
solu11on b) those who 0<.'Cup) their While wattt"ll 101 the taracr reform
operauonal p<>\1t1on t1f--J!!!!ilm._.~~~~!AA~ -which ma~ neH!r happen -Kopp 1cm-of thnc--go~mcnttl'Httn ---.Li1'-">~w.1ruum prOjl0\31 lor rt form'
numcranc) arc rclall'-Cl) harm kn JUd&e to pmadc O\Cr a c1, 1t ca~ after that woulJ requ1n-ta\ bllard mcm · c~'ept for the monc)' the} consume a~puna t"ampa11n contnbuuon\ or bcrs to d1wuahl} thcm~h rs from
A kw ho~c"er. an: not onh supcrt1u-other payment from one ot the ~1tt1na on lU<'s th;at IO\Ol\e b1,
ou but danicrous panic 10 the case But th t ob'-tOus {t1mpJ11n lOntnhutor\ and pro,1de
Chief amona them 1~ the tatc conflict 1s an C"Vef)da\' occurrence on more pubh\: J1~do urcs about ta'
Board of Equahtatton. a 19th century the tu board t:D'>t' dcci\1on"
cnC) created to O'-entt propert) h's a problem. morco"t'r. that ha I he abohuon ot the N.xnd' ma'
tu adm1nimat1on and later IJ'en wol'$(ncd markcdl> 1n l't'CCnt \CU nt,cr happen ~.tu~ the uthc·r
adm1n1strat1on of the ~lei. ta,, bttautc the bcxlrd ha'e bc'<'omc the members 14111 ust allot 1he1rcons1der-
Thc onrmal reasons for creat1n1 province of pohuctan ~1th 0 ,cn able ()(lht1'.1I mu\4.:k to blocl the
the Board of uahuuon re lost 1n amb1t1onund boundles capac1t) tor to.opp mcuurc 1n the Lcg1\lature and
the mists of time. But for more than ;1 pumna thc arm on corporate 1ntt'rt'~t thcrt'·s 1 dmntcrnt amon& ll-JJ lato~
halt«ntuf)l inJcpcndcnt t'aluato~ which haH b1 bucl.;s tu ~·a ~ in u~u1ng the tatu quu of thelr
ha"e called ror its abohtaon. prndin fra1rmal rollea1ur
evcnhcku. the bo~rd h:s\ Thr state·~ nc~'papcn ha\C cntd &nnetl's fcllo"' mem~"' wall 10-
surv1'-cd. enc a1\rrcast of\u h 1n~1anc-n 'It t that thr Bo3rd of Eq_uahrat1on
lt con l\t of four d1r<"Ctl) rlcctcJ fhe 1u,1apo 1uon of pcndina u1, and thr Franchi tn Board art
mcmbcn ~hote d1m1 t con111n ca aniJ pa\-mcnl\ to ,., board bul~ar ~ of pro1cct1on f9( the little
some 7 m1lhon const1lut'nts ca{h, members ha'I bcc'omc so ob' 1ou that IU) pt Mt the btJ. baJ ta\ colic: tor\.
plu a fif\h at OC'tup1cd b the me ICdcral 1uthont1cs, a pan of 1he1r But the bul...,ark~ arc JU \ bullbkep.
rontroUcr. la~r tn\iC\t11At10n of pohh< :st cor-The Board of &:auahzatton and the
h handles apprals on ptopen) "' ruptton 1n 1lifum11. arc cxam1nina Franchise Ta' Board arc corruption
d1spu1a on11na1ma in count1rs ad· thr1r amons cl ly. SC'Andals wa1una to happen
m1n1 &en &he roll«tion of saltt ta\n 1 he ont e\ccptton to the .,.ab-with· And there ' reason to bche'<'C that
by rMtthants and hcan appeal of both-hand arcC"d e"1Jent ~ln the tatc the.} ·,e altt.aJ)' hapexntd ~tc and pcnonaJ 11M."C>mc la\ tu. board 1 .. pdOy Wilham Rennell. Du W•Jf~ & a 1y9'kit1.il
catn from the Frinch1sc Tu BoarJ, a veteran BNrd of Equal11.1tton ~•""'· aoot.Mraovttn~tal anahron• m mcm~r ~hu rc:fust1 to t.akr cam-
To the Edi to • Pct owners arc far too trusttna ~hen 1t comes to the mechcaf,
aroom1ngand boardin1nc.cdsofthc1r
pets One should never ltavc their pct
any place unless first 1nspecttnl the
entire facihr).
Having w11ncsscd filthy and/or
unsan1tar)' cond1t10DS IO 1fOOm1n&
far1ht1cs. boarchn1 and brttdlna ken-
nels and even some vctenury liospi·
t.als, I feel the maJon_ty of animal
fac1ht1es appear clean up front.
· Howe\.Cr, the stench and filth are
not witnessed by pct owners unleu -
the) inspect the bad. area. Please
don't accept cxc-uscs for not mspcct-
1n1 the enure fac1hty.
Your pets' health and/or life may
be at nsk. The county inspectors are
understaffed so don't expect them to
enforce san11ary cond1t1ons, nenher
do they have 1unsd1ction over veter-
inary hospitals. Since domesttc
animals arc o dependent on humans
for protccnon, surely we can·t ron·
unue to 1gnort inhumane or un-
sanataf) eond1uons. Should )'Ou wat-
ne s ub-standard conditions at pet
stores, groomers or kennels. 11.andly
call 834-70 S To file a complaJttt ag:unsl a
'etennanan ora humane society that
provided vctennar) services plea~
II 523-0980, Southern Cahf0m1a
\etennary Medical Assoc1at1on.
Ironical!). this board is composed of
four \.Ctennanans and only two
members of the pubhc.
Some feel that vetennanans tn·
'-CSltptma their peers 1s a good
eumplc of the foit auardma the hen
house It 1s qucsttonablc that this
pohc> 1 1n the ~t interest of pets or
con umers
HAZEL MORTENSEN.
Chau-pe rson
Un ited Humanitanans
ofOranie County
Don't ban guns;
we may need them
To thl' Editor hould ( ahfom1ans kl the Lcais·
laturt ban <oem1-automat1c nOcs 1n
rr ponsc to the terrtble tragcd)' ohhc
shoollnp in tocll.ton., nhkc state
4,ttomcy ucncral John Van d
~mp. I don't think so.
The attome icn~t presumes to
1ell U\ that as a people we don't need
what he terms ~capon~ of ~•r 'ct
our toundin& fathers created the ~ond ._mcndmc.-nt to the Con t1tu·
11on to guaranter that "\mencan can
alwa' form a m1l111a to defend our
trced'om . 11 nC"CCs ry
Jamt"~ 1ad1son had this 10 sav on
the ubJCCl ·· v.ell rqulatrd
m1ht1a. compo)CJ ot the bod) of the
people. 1ra111cd to arm • 1s the 001
and most natural defense of a free
country " fhoma JclTc~on said. ..The
'itronaest rca\On for thr people to
reu11n the nght to kttp and bear amu
1 . as a last re rt. to protect them·
sch e apin 1 t~ rann~ 1 n So' t'rn·
mc.-nt ··
If called upon b)' wmr cmcracn .
ho"' cant :1lilorn1ans e'pect to cfTec-
ll\ ch fulfill tht"tr lcpll) mandated
nght to suppon a mil1t1a 1f the st.ate
ll\.cs av.-a) tho fircamn most S\.lltcd
to that purposc., And how doc~
.\nomc) General \an de amp
1ust1f, scttinaas1dcourcon t1tuuonal
n&ht to \.cep and ~r such arms., Has
.\ttomc) (,corral \.:sn de Kamp
\Uddenh become a greater c'pert on
v.hat 1s ood for 4,menca than our
lound1n fathers.,
I Jon·t think so
LOREN \\'ERNER
San Juan Cap1~tr1no
TOD\ l I'\ HISTORl
f oda 1s Wc<1nC1day. Jan lS. the
2 th da)' of 1989 There arc 340 day kn 1n the car
Ti 4\ s ,, I t an IS Or)
On Jan 2~. 17 7, ha)'~· Rdxlhon
\Uffercd a sctbac\. whtn drbt-ndJcn
tarmcr' led b' < apta1n Daniel ha''
tailed to c-apturt an arsenal at pnn
fil'ld. Ma\\ ( ha) . ~ho escaped. v.ac,
laterc-ondcmncd to death bu1 e"entu·
alh pardoned >
n this date
In I S.H. Enatand's k.1n1 Hcnq
111 ma med Anne Bolt.> n
In I S79. the Treat~ of trecht wu
tancd mirk1n1 the t>cg1nn1n1 of thl:
Dutch Republic.
In 1%1 J>lnidcnt John F Ken-ned~ held the first prctJdcnual nc"'
conference to be tclc"~ lt'-C.
In 19 71, C harks Manson and thttt
)Oung -omen follov.-crs were con·
\IC'ttd 1n lo >\ngell'J of the 1969
Tatc·La81ana munkn. In 1978, Muncl Humph~)' v.a
appointed to fill the U .• Scnav It'll
left aunt b>' t~ ckath of her hu\band, Hubert H. Humphrey of~
Minn~ ta. a,-~ A#emMI l"reu
11\c FratKhatc Tu Board, -hu.:h pa1an con1ributt~nsand rails pubhch
ldm1n111cn >&ale ancomc ta\et. con-about h1 coltcaa~ to tllcirconst.an"t
M1Uof'tbecontr0Utt. thcrhA1rmanof d1tromfon . Reader 's comments welcome
tlac brd Of E.QUal1z.at1on 1nJ the .. From ptnontJc,Ptmn«. l knove
llltC finantt director. 111 mnt \Q lhln the ta\ \)Jkm 1n
Wllat mtkei IM lolfd of ~ual· C ahtorma.·· Bennett \81d the other
iJ8tiOD -and au endin:a Mtblidaao. da). suppon1n1 a nc• I •~•tt'c
die FrwtUle Tas laiMd -~-~I -to abohth tht t-o "'
om • tMI ~ are settt .. an boanii = Jat1NI ,....W o-tu C8tn. The ~I 11 the hlfM11 rl or
• .._. ..... ,_ .. , ... te.rir Scft. Qtintt•• KD,p. I ~raM''
~':' ll•f1l11icah91nda1o,t 1hr KOOP woukl cta1tt a ~ Male °'PanrMnt o( 9't"\tnw. analQeoul
h WiOlilll • • ..,_.. Oil ttt.id for 1 to tht ftdtnll lntt'mal lt,·vrn•
...
"I got an F
in Sex!"
~ .
bon ·stA\ ~ccessori es
-
.llAltllADUKE by Brad Anderson DEl'fNIS THE llBNACE
0
"He Isn't exactly a pet. He's more like the
family's chief executive officer."
PltAJlfUTS
SO WMO WANTS TO WIN
AM .. U6LY D06" CONTEST ?
._. --
GARl'IELD
GEE. A Nf.W COF~£E wrn-4 TWICE 1'M£ CAFFEINE
6E510E5, SHE 60T T~E
TROPl-4V .•• AMD W~AT
DID I 6ET ?
;,._,...,,._ . .,,..,.,,......
J
~~-llllllll.;.!;.11~'..Jlll:.. .__~~~~~...:.::.:·~~~~;..;.;....~! ....... ~~~::::::::~
TUllBLEWEEDS
DaAllBLE
· by Hank Ketcham
1·'1.S I
I I
I I
by Charles M. Schulz
T~E U5E OF nus
SONE F~ A VEAR !
by Jim Davis
by Jimmy Johnuon
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
by Tom Batluk
DOOIUSBURY by Garry Trudeau
Oilers
Gap tu re
crown
·Huntington Beach
edges Eaison, 2-1,
·for hockey title ..
Huntington Beach,.Hi~·s Oilers1 ·by.vinue of a pair of aoaJs by Jer)nJ
Walker and some standout JOll-
keepina by Lynn O'Connell, claimed
the Sun~ Leaaue field hockey cham-
r.ionship Tu~y afternoon, dispps.-
n1_of host Edison, 2-1.
The Oilers improved to 7.().1 in
leaaue play wath the decision,,
K.ariQuinlan'sOilcrs moved into a
1-0 haJf\1me lead and were constantly
forcing the issue, forcing Edison
goalie Ka1hleen Phillips to rttord 17
saves in the net
O'Connell, meanwhile, had just
five saves recorded with her field
players keeping Edison away from the
net for the most part
Counney Evens was the onlr. Cnaricr able to solve O'Connel •
scoring once for Edison.
In prep girls soccer: , .
C.rou dt l Mar S, Tastla I:
Counney Augustine scored her sec-
ond goal of the game with I 0 minutes
remaining to lead the visitina Tillers
into a deadlock with the Sea Kings.
It was the fif\h strai~t time the two 1 tei"ms have tied. Tustin retained its Sea View lead with a 4-0-1 mark.
while CdM is 3-1-1. good for second
place, and 11-5-3 overall.
The Sea Kings took a 1-0 lead three
minutes into the match on a goal by
Tracy Schriber. then went in front.
2-t, 20 minutes into the match when
Kristen Borland scored. The game
was tied at halftime. 2-2.
Susie Peters gave CdM its third
lead at 3-2 early in the second half
before Auaustinc tallied the equal-
izer. CdM outshot the Tillers, I S-6.
Ne•rt Ht rbor $, Saclcllt back t :
The Sailors did aJI their scoring an the
first half on two goals apiece from
Heather Webb and Dawn Baird and a
sin&Je pl from Danielle Tomasick.
~ewpon improved to 2-2·1 in
league play.
UlllvenltJ l, Estucla 0: Shana
(f'tene see ROUNDUP /12J
Julle Carlson l1ot of ad11on fllhts off Hunt-
tneton ••.ch*• Tiffany Delp after ......
•
............ ~ ........
hooked In the leg dut'.lne Tuesdays m•tch
_. adllon won bf the OUers, 2· 1.
Arguments vs.
Proposition 42:
don't wash
My last thoughts on the an famous
Proposition 42:
It will be rescinded at the next
NC AA Convchtion. Too many
i>eoplc think 1t discaminatcs against
minorities and as a-result. it as unfair. I do not agree, because I feel that
many oft.hesc players art being
CXP.loated because of their athletic·
ab1lit1rs.
Some people say that partiaJ quah·
ficrs prove that the tests arc dis-
ciminatory because after sittang out
the year, the vast ma1ority of the
players do the classwork and are
ehg1 ble the next season. I do not
believe that argument.
What classesarc they taking and
who arc their teachers?' Finis!
0
We packed up two wins last week -
they may tra vc been semi-ugly, but I
will take them. I used to worn about
bow we looked when we won -I
havt gotten past that point.
Now, three more on the road ...
Thursday night in beautiful Las
Crut'es, N.M .. then at Long Beach
State Saturday and Cal State Full-
cnon ncxt Thutsda)r. Weare then
home for seven of our last ni nc games.
beginning wnha .. pats)." UNLV. on
Fcb.6.
Lootinsahcnd-weopcnVV'lth
Stanford 1n the Bren E\.entsCcnter
nt'xt season.
0
TCU as leading the Southwest ·
Conference at 6-0 and ~c defeated the
Homed f r0&5. 83· 75. 1n November.
LoyolaofChicagobeat ~Paul last
Saturday night . .Everybod)' thou~•
we were awful when we lost to them
by fi ve last month, espccaally m)
Chicago relata\.CS
0
UCLA has been losing some rC<'ent
a.ames because its front line ts not
very physical and teams arc banging
the ball inside on the Bruins.
0
Mike Doktorcz)'k. our senior center, was 12 of 12 from the free-
throw hnc at nJoscStatcand 12of
12 from the floor against Pacific last
Saturday. Those arc prctt) good
numben.
He is also founh in the countfy on
J.point field goal pcrcentaac and he is
6-foot-9. His brother. Rob, 1s really
amprovangand he isalso 6-9.
0
San Jose State cannot fire head
coach B1ll Berry. lfthcadminis-
trat10n allows that to happen, every
school in thccQuntry wm have
players walkoutand blame the coach
1f they arc losing.
Why did the players in hjJ prev!ous
nine )'Cars not walkout?Ttteywcrc
wanning more than losing, that's wily! ·
0
In the WCAC: Loyola Marymount,
PcppcrdincandSt. Mary•sarc4-0. No
one else in the league l)_as more than
oncwin ..
0
Tennessee is first in the
Southeastern Conference and just a
year ago, they were 1oln1 to fire head
roach Don De Voe, then decided to
gave htmanotherchance.
In the same conference. Kentucky
as9-9overall. Yes. mi&hty Kentucky.
down with the peons.
0
SyracuSt'. which was No. 2 in the
country a few weeksaao. is 1n ca&htb
place 1n the BiJ East. They recruit
heavily in California. They m1&ht
want to do better than fini1h ei&hlh. a
Is the homccou_n advant.aac for
real? l would ha vc to say yes. Utah
tatc looked an vincible a week aao
and tht'n they came lo Southern
Cata fom1a and lost to Cal State
Fullerton.
. 0
De Paul as I ()..9 and advertises itself
as" Amt'rica 's Team.·· Kand ofhkc
the Dallas Cowboys. ,,....,...,. MULUGAN/82t
Ciaielli gets boost into Edison head coachingjob
Chargers' weight coach taking over track team for Marquez this year
There's a new head coach at Edison
H1'1'-it'sTonyCiarclli. who is
tak1n1 me reins of the track and field squad fora ~ear whale Fred Marquez
steps aside for the role ofan assistant
· What's wrong with Marquez? Nota
thing.
He's takin& the backseat for a yt'ar
tosivcCiarcllia boost. and at couldn't
be more appropnatc.
Ciarelh.a product ofHunungton
eo,·s R~SKETB41,I.
Beach H1gh('72).hasbccng1ving
others a boost for years at Edison with
his expertise in the weight events.
Kaleaph Carter. the state's No. I
shotputter as a senior last season, as
the best example wath a personal best
of 64-0'h. but the figures that still
remain uppcrmostare the"5-50s"
when Caner was a sophomore at
Edison.
Ciarelli had fuic athletes pushing
the ball 50 feet or more. an achieve-
ment wh1chccrtaanlycomputesout to
having fi ve sub-4:20malcrs, or five
runnanJ backs wath 4.6 speed an 1he
40. or five basketball players wnh
doublc-dagJt SCOOnj. every emc OUI.
Press ham about 1tand he lladm1t
at, ht' 1s stall orctty proud of that group.
Cant'rwas to goon to bag things.
but at wast hat No. 3, 4 and 5
shotputtcrwhogot anto the 50s that
GIRLS B.\SKt:TB..\l,I,
Trojans
stunned
by Eagles
Estancia hands Uni
~·----~,.._......_...___,,-~_,__.._<"'+~~ ... 1 -fir.stSea Viewdefeat;
Warriors 5-0 in PCL
Univcn1ty High's a.iris baskt'tball
team was unbeaten and Nnaway
leadt'rs 1 n the Sea v 1ew Leaaue
champ1onsh1p race a.oana anto Tues-
day's pmc at Estancia Ha.ah. but
someone apparently foraot to inform
the hosts.
Estancia 's ~aJes Jumped all over
the Trojans with a 17-6 run 1n the first
quarter. then dad it qain sn &he thtrd
stanza with a J()...4 advan&qe to s~rhcad a 46-3 1 UJ*l victory. The wan improves Estanc11'1 rt·
cord to 14-6 O\'trall. 3-2 1n teaaue play. "1hale Un1venaty. ranked No. 4 1• Clf 4-AA 0.va~on circles.. falls to as.s. 4-1 Shannori Suzuki hit 9 of 10 at the
lint and fintsh~ wtth l 7 poinu. and
Pauice Lumpkin. dnpite solid de--
femive ~ure from Univenny't
Dtnite Gandl~ droPPed in l 4
ClOUDltn.
Zoftia OOma. in her fint-enr ..a. hed riaht rebounds and three
-.... leldina her teamma&a 1n both
~~t 'W1th I 1-)..l lOftt and ~ dcfcw. 111 wdl • a full-
CPI". .. pas," Mid Elcancia °*" Lita McNa~ ""Oflelllivety wr j• wnt at &Mm. ne ... couple al ..... we~ve
.... wt ..... , .. lftCll1aly
illlJ•~ Wt ..... , ~ out Md
................. "did
l flll:e::..., ,..,..-.& .. .. -"~--...... "
•
really made has day.
The following )'Car he had four
ranging from 54-8 to 63-0.
Nothing rcall) changes-Marquez
will continue wath the runners. Rick
Foster hopcf ull~ with ahc pole vauh
and1umpsandC1arclh with the
weight events.
Ciarclh isa pretty good C1.ample of
the relative factor.
As a prep he managed a best of 59-1 .
but that was on I) good for No 3 in tht'
Sunset League.
That's because Newport Harbor's
TcfT) AlbnttonandJ1m Netdhardt
wt' re the hca vywc1ghts m lcquc.
And, when ttcamctoCIF. thcl'(was
anotht'r fcUow by the name of Randy
CrossofCrcspa H1ah in Encino.
Albritton wonClFwith a 67-4 toss
1n '72. Cross upset ham at state at
65-1\~. Ncadharot finished third at
Cl Fan ·12. and -won 1t' 1n ·73 with a
\ossof67-3 •.
Ctarelh? Ht' was fourth at CIF with
a tossof58-6, a mark which would
have won 1t28of29 times in the years
pnor to 1952.
(Pleaw SH CAJtLSON/12t
Dalf7 "'-' ~ ~ ..._ p.,,..
lstancla's Robin Cordrey
f4St shoots over three on-
lookers durlnt l .. les• 46·J1
upset victory Tuesday. At
left, Unlverstty•s Jull• Slay
IJJJ •nd Kim ltld•out f4JJ
battle for possession.
aelow, Shannon Suzuki of
•st•ncla lool&a for openlnt.
'POH I' HHI \h.
Strawberc r.y, Davis now partoecs. __ .___,;...._
in business, but st if I not on field •
From The Allodated l're11
LOS ANGELES -Outfidders Da!:fYI '-. • e 1 Strawbe~ of the New York Meis and Eric · ..,,...
Divis of Cincinnati still dream of playing on ·• the same team 10me day, but Tuesday 1hey
1ok1 ~rs they'll be business panne·rs in the
meantime.
.. Riaht now1 I'm still a Cincinnati Red and Darryl's a
New Yoik Met.' said Davis, whose company. Eric Davis
EnterpriteS. will co-promote a chanty softball aame at
UC Rivcnade Saturday with Strawberry's company,
Strawberry Pro Spons.
··But someday. we hope to plax
t<>sether, thouah I can't say where.·
Divis added. "Who knows? We
miJht even wind up in Japan."
Strawberry made similar state-
ments in October. but indicated he
would like to play with Davis. has
boyhood fric"nd, in their hometown
of Los Angeles. The rcmarb drew
the attention ofl>ascball owncn and
Davts Commissioner Peter Ueberroth.
who cautioned Strawberry against
what owners would perceive as a form of collusion.
"What I said about playing in Los Angeles was blown
Lakers suffer first home loss
INGL.EWOOD -Patrick Ew1n~25 ~ points plus a tight New York defense down • the stretch led the Knicks 10 a 122-117 r
victory over Los Angeles in a battle of NBA ----
division leaders Tuesday night and handed the Lakers
their first setback in 18 home pmcs 1his season.
The Knicks never led unul Ewing's two free throws
with 3:56 remaining put them ahead, 114-113. Ewing was
fouled by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. whose sixth personal
made him the first Later to foul out of a game all season.
A Jump shot by Ewing with 3; 19 left put the Knacks
ahead to stay, 116-115. and Mark Jackson's two free
throws with 2:46 10 go made 11 118-11 5 and proved 10 be
the decisive points.
The Lakers' Magic Johnson. who recorded his ninth
tnplc-doublc of the season and second apanst the Kn icks.
brouaht Los Angeles within 118-117 with 2:25 to go.
But Gerald Wilk.ins' dnving shot 18 seconds later
made it 12~1l 7.Aficr Johnson missed 3-point shots with
18 and five seconds left. New York's Charles Oaklc)'
made two free throws.
Capitals rally to tie Kings
Scett Stevna and Dave Orlatlu scored
in the final 49 seconds of regulation time as • the WashinJton Capitals overcame a three-_.,. '-..:,,
goal deficit an the final 6:38 for a 4-4 tie with
the Los An,clcs Kings Tuesday night in Landover, Md.
With Washinston behind 4-3, Larry Ma,,,.y stopped a
clcarins pass by Kin.as goalie Gleu Healy behind the Los Angeles goal and centered the puck to Christian. who put
a wrist shot just inside the right posl with five seconds
remainina for the tic. Washington had puJlcd within one
on a power-play goal by Stevens. who fired a slapshot that
Healy slowed but could not stop. The puck rolled into the comer of the net w11h 49 seconds remaining. Los Angeles
had taken a 4-1 lead on soals by Mike lt,..layski, L•c
tt.bttailk and Jotui Toaetu in a 2:46 span in the second
period ... Elsewhere in the NHL: Bftll4.u s-.ua.an
scored at I: l S of the third penod as New Je~y came back
from a~rly tw?-Joal deficit to 11e the New York
Islanders, ·2. an Uniondale. N. Y. The Devils' franchise
is now t-3 at the Nassau Coliseum since its in~ption
astheK.ansasCityScoutsin 1974 ... Jn Vancouver. Troy
Marray broke a 1-1 tie by scoring on a break-away late in
the second period. and newly acquired goaltender AlaJa
.Qevrier played a strong pme as Chicago beat the
Canucks, 4-2. The victory was only the sixth for Chicago
,tn 27 road pmcs this season ... Meanwhile, Vancouver
acquired right winger Jose ~rbonaeH from Montreal
·in exchange for center Du WoodJey in a swap of former
first-round draft picks.
Ql'OTE ot· THF. D.\ 1·
KarHm AIHlll-Jabbar, La.kers center: .. If I
make the All-Star team. something 1s wrong. I
haven't played well enough to make 1t. I don't
deserve to be on the All-Star team."
~·Syracuse halts skid, 72-60
Sltermu 0..1taa scored 19 points as ~
14th-ranked Syracuse snapped a three-game •
Big East losana strealc Tuesday ni&ht by r
defeating Boston College. 72-60. Syracuse ----
improved to 16-4 with only its second conference win m
six tries this season. The victory elevated Syracuse out of
the conference cellar. a spot now owned solely by the
Ea&Jes, 8-8 and 1-5. It was the fourth straight loss for Boston Collqe ... In other college basketball: Byroa lrvla
scored a dozen of his 28 points durina a t 9-S second-half
run that brou&ht ft Rh-ranked Missouri from behind for a
87-73 victory over Maryland. Irvin totaled 20 points 1n
the second half to lead Missouri, 17-3. to its ei&h1h
straiaht victory. Maryland has lost ei&ht straight. falling to
6-11 ... Carllea Screea scored 27 points and keyed an
carly~halfturge to lead No. 20 Provide~<>
a 106-91 victory over Miami. 10-8. The fnarsalso had 23
points by Marty Coaloa and IS by Mau Pala11J.
Giants, Orioles deal catchers
The San Franci$CO Giants swapped '-. • •,, staninacatchers with Baltimore on TucSday. y
acquinna Teny ~J from the Orioles an •
W' excha'sefora..Me .. IL ThetradeJivesSan
Francisco another ten-handed h11ter a.nd added ex-
• penenc::e behind the plate while Baltimo~ sheds
Kennedy' a $8.S0.000 salary for a younaer catcher known
for his defensive sJulls . . . Pitcher CWb Jeeet 1nd
infielden Jeee VllcaJM and Deve ......_ have siancd
one-year contl"Kts with the Loi A•les DodFrs. With
the saaninp, the Dodaers have reacl'ed asrecmcnls with 20 of 1hc 39 ptayen on their roster ... l'Alwa,.. L.
OaJ ..... 'I 1ttempl to purchase mljonly interest in the
Tcus Raneen was rejected Tuesday by the Amcncan J..aauc, Ra.rs owner l'Mle CMlet said. Gaylord own1
about one-thtrd of the RaMCn' 11ock and •ants to buy ~n
additional '8_pertent ... aw LAMtal, a left~ha.ndcr who =pen or the 1911 teat0n with the ChitllO. Cuba. a f~nl contrK1Tuttday and wuadded •o the rp Piraca· ~man f'Ollet. The Pirates also
.....,.. dMir lila ol Dollible arbitration can IO five by
lip1111 left-bander•&....., to a ont'-)'ftf contract.
.
all out of proporuon." Sltawbem 11id ... I 11id tht
remarks tl> a reporter threc WttU ~r~ tht pla~ and
he broke the story nah• wMri ~ ~ playins tht ~"'
in the p1arofl'1. "AU really meant to sa)' Vtas that it would be a lot of
fun to play wnh Eric. and if it happens to be 1n our
hometown. that would bt pat. We'd love to play side-
by-s1dc. You're talkin& about some instant offense riaht
there."
Davis. who made $929.000 last year. is sttkina S 1.65 milhon next season throuah 1rb1tra11on. while the Reds
arc offennaSl.15 m111ion.ltc is eli&iblc to become a frtt
qcnt aner the t 990 ICllOn.
Strawbtrry has one year rcmainin1 on a fi ve-)ear. $7
million contract with the Mets, plus an option year in
1990. He's 1ttk1ng to rtnea<>tiate the option year and
beyond.a contract that hasqenuayswould mate him the
highest-paid pla)er 1n baseball.
It as conce1vabk that both players will be in the free
agent madct by 1991 1nd· 1oin1 for the same bi1
contracts. perhaps on the same bi& tearri. Both players arc
represented by the same .. nl. Enc Goldschmidt.
-1 don't discuss Eric's business with Darryl, or
Darryl's business with Eric," Gold$Chm1dt said. ··1 deal
with cac.h player as an individual."
But Davis and Strawberry arc discussina other
business 1n the meantime.
~
•• f · d
I
J
Q --
·' "I did It, I did it ! A once-in-a-lifetime hole in
one! And thank goodness you're here as a
witness, Bob!!"
\Xlllklns' 41 paces Hawks
DomlaJq•e WI.Wat scored 41 points.. . ~
equaling his sea on high. and hit a key 3-•
point goal an the founh penod m powering r
the Atlanta Hawks to a 121-105 victory over ---
the Cleveland Cavaliers on Tuesday night at the Omni
The victory was AtJanta's fourth an a row and snapped a
five-game W1nn1ng struk b)' the Cavahers. who have the
best record tn 1he NBA at 3().8 ... Elsewhere in the NBA.
Bltdl WIJJlama scored a season-high 27 points and New
Jersey held off a late Denver spun to hand the v1sJt1ng
Nuatts their founh straight loss, 117-115. Denver guard
Mldlael Adam a. who scored ei&ht points. missed all six of
his 3-point shots. endina hi s NBA record of 79
consecutive pmcs with a 3-poant basket ... Derrick
Mcltey scored 13 of his carccr-h11h 34 point~ in the final
period to lead Seattle to lls founh straight victory.
103-100. over Ponland. Clyde Druler scored 25 points
for the Blazers. who have lost four games 1n a row.
includi rti thtec straitht at home ... Michel Jordan
scored nine of his 24 points in the fourth quaner af\er
siuina out seven minutes wuh a knee bruise as Chacaao
handed Oallas1ts IOth stra1ght road defeat. 109-91 ... Olis Tlterpe $COr~ six pointsand P1rvl18'orthad five during
a 19-4 second-half run that powered Houston over
vis1ttn& Miami. 118-93. and lifted the Rockets within
onc-half pmeoffirst·placc Utah in the Midwest D1vmon
... Jn Phoenix. &Idle J ...... scored 11 of his 31 points
in the fourth period and the Suns withstood a late
Charlotte comeback to beat the expansion Hornets.
106-103 ... Lury Kry•*••ld scored four of has 21
pomu 1n the final 39 seconds as M1lwaulttt beat host
Sacramento, 114-110. forit112th 11ra11ht v1ctoryovcrthe
Kmgs. Terry Cammmo kd M1lwauicc with 31 points
and IUdy Pierce had 11 as the Bucks won for the 13th
time in their last 16 aames ... The Phoenix game at
M1am1, postponed by not1n1 1n the ci ty's Ovcnown
section on Jan. 17, has been rctehedulcd 10 April 19. the
NBA said.
Leonard-Heams rematch set
h,pr Ray Leoalr4 and n.maa Hearn,
who met ci&ht years aao in a classic * weltcrweaaht mle fiJht, will fia'1t June 12 at
Caesars P'"alacc an 1 rematch for Leonard's ----
168.pound 111lc, promoter BM Anm &aid Tuesday niJht.
Arum said he reached ..,eemcnt late Tuesday on the fl&ht
w11h Cacsats Palace. wh1c:h he said will pay S8 million to
lunnhe bout. ihe promoters:mt tco11a1d"s attorney-;
M*• Trallle.r. had not s11ned a contract for the fiaht but
had "qrccd m pnnaplc to C\leryth1na." ... Vanderbilt
baskett>all coach C.Af. Ntwc. was telected as athletic
director at the Uni"ers1ty of Kent~ky. retumina 10 his
alma mater and a basketbell proanm that 1s under siqc.
Newton. a letterman on Kentucky's t9Sl champtonlh1p
team, takes over April I. Newton. who COIChed bis SOO.h
career victory Saturday, wilt replace Cllft ....... the
1thle11c director for l l ~ bdore resianins Nov. 15 •••
Olympian T..W ,....., made his pr0fet110MI bollnl
debut a successful one 1n his hometown of GfQt Falls. MonL u be scored a ICCond·round icchnal knockout
over Cllrtl Anar.M of Pbocn1• bdore a crowd of 4,200.
In the main event on lhe sax-bout card, fonncr USBA and
IBF m1dcUeweip1 champion FrMll Tate of Houston
pounded out a methodlC'al but uninlpired l~round
deciJIOft ovtt JI••' IW. of Vallejo ... Walter H._....._ the father of Houston Oilen (ullblck Aleltu a....--, haa iltftd to terms on a five-year contf'Jci 10
beComc Tcus SOuthcm's ne•t football COICh. sources
&old 1elcvi1ion ICa&ioa KRIV 1n HOUllon ••. Golfer G..,.. &.•••, who a. ... once dctcribed as
hav1na tht IWtt1n1 1wi111 oa the POA Tour, died
Turiday after I loftl tllede Mtb caacn. He WU SI.
111 f \ l'-10°\-H \ ltlU
...., ...... ~
T~ Ca.eHI Ml4 his No. I prcNlludloft. ltMe cfMllllP lllet pun ... .c.featplt c.ter.
CARLSON
•From II
Albritton went on to become of the
all-time shot puui~arcats; Cross has
bccnoneofthemajoTchipsat
offensiveauard for the San Francisco
49ers Wlth Pro Bowl status; and Neidhard11 well, that's Jim "The
Anvil" Neidhardt ofWor1d Wrcsthna
Federauon fame.
Ciarelh has remained in the rela-
tive back&roundofan assistant coach.
and theChargersarc hoping that the
extra l>USh witl gave him a boost ill his
coaching future.
0
Some observations:
•If you think nothina an hfe 1s free.
trythts:
TheCalifomiaBascbatlCoachn
Association issponsorinaa free clinic
for all bucbaJI coaches. on any level.
Saturday mom1nsa1 Cal State Los An~lcs.startinaat 8:30.
Amons the speakm-An1cls' pitcher &rt Blylcven. as well as
former Diamond Bar Hiah Coach
Dennis Paul, San Bernardino Valley
Coach Stan Sanchn. The Master's
Colleac Coach Pat Harrison and Peppcrdine Umvers11yCoach Andy
Lopt'l.
Blyleven w111 speak on pitch int
mechanics; Paul on practtceOfllntza-
tion; Sancheion orpnizina a pro-gram~ Harrison on hntina; and Lopez
on inueld play.
•When BruccKeuntn&. the ClF
Southern Section President, ad-
dressed thcre~scntativesofSO.
some-odd leaauesofthc secuon last
week. his most pointed c.ommcnt
came an thurea of coachesand the
possibility of them pullin1 lheir
teams from the f~ld of play
"We'veao1 some th1nasao1ng
(Santa Clara·, puUout at the Coast
ChnJtma_s Ctass1ci~ Occcmber)and
"'e look. upon thisasa most 1tnous
-MULLIGAN
From81
0
Georaia talc as 8-8 and when the)
played us an late November. the)'
looked hkean NCAA tournament
team.
0 Oral Roberts 1s 2-14. Poor Oral. he
wants a winner so bad and 1s hav1"g
problemsJCtt1na 11 done. He rch1rc<J a
coach he fired years ago fo racnanaa
D.U.I
0
GIRLS
From81
overall, ~ an leque play an a key
showdown It T.rabuc:o Hills. pulhn11t
out do\fn the stretch as they over-
came the host MustanJS dtspite a
se1ac of flu. Lcshe Rathbun led Woodbndae
with 20 points. but wu well off her
normal rate. Also bothered with 1
virus;. she could net JUSt 7 of 20 from
the 11eld. well off her SO percent
reputation.
lfclpm1 to pick up the slack were
Tami Williams (c1aht points) ind
Oma Krouse ( 10 rebounds).
WoodbndfC was down 40-32 early
1n the founh ciuaner, then went on an
18·3 run to put 11 away. Trabuco was
down 50-43 before puthna to w11h1n
four points at the buncr on a ).
pointer.
..Dede Sampson_ CUl and_Marta
81ckert (t 7) led Trabuco Halls, which
falls to 12-6, 4-I .
Cella ,.. ... M La.-~ CS:
The M 1atanp ralfacd rrom a 2.._.. first
half deficit as Co.ch Jim W~ks
shelved his ideas of doublc·team1na
l.aluna Beach a&artd Liz S&al and
Trans Nau~ ud Kim Good 1umcd it oa in tb"t second half to pece lhe
ralty.
WU.hJUlt three minutes left 1n the
fin• half, U,una kach. with Stal ~~in nine of her 26 points. was
''We ~ try1na to dou'*-team
t.aJ ·• said Mesa Co.ch Jim Weeks.
··But au of a 1e.Mlden we KOttd the last
seven potnts of the half and we just
carnt out 1n the third quarter and ~nt to a f\all<e>un, man-1o;man
prnundpvc upont he double aam.
~
off cnse. Please. do not arbit11rily pull
your team fromacontest."he
pleaded.
•Two new sehools fiaur:e in the
1990-92 re&eaauinJ for Oranet Coun-
ty-Century li11h ofSan11 Ana and
the already ofl'-and.rurfn ins 5anta Marprita. a Parochial school from
thcCotodeCazaarea.
Santa Marpnta wants placement
withinOranteCoun1y-not with the
wider scope of an "An,clus Leaaue."
which includes schools from
Anaheim (Servile). Mater De1 (Sanla
Ana). St. Paul (Sant.a Fe Spnn15) ..
BishopMonaaomery(Tomncc)and
BishoPAmat(La PUcnle) .
If the EaJiesactthcirwax.and I
sus_pect they will sintt 11 will be the
CIFd1ctatin1such if Oran~ County
pnnc1pals balk at the 1dca.1t means S8
schools to deal with for the rclea1u1n1
process . J • •Twopomtsona umn111mn.
(I )If you win thepme. it's nota
win r~ryour record. coach. (2)TheCIF isn't too thnlled wtth
tbt alumni pme. c11htt. Not because
of the confusion of winsand losses.
but bccauseoflephlles.
Seems that if someone 1s scnously
benjed up an a pme compcttnl
ap.instsome 22-ycar-olds ... well. the
thoU&ht comtj in terms oflawsuit
possibihtiH. Sooner or latcr.1l'll
happen. •Eve~oneisao1n1tohavca f1Rh
official for foo1b9ll pmcs ncx t
season. TheMwbackjudle's pnmary
rcsponsibihties will be to detect 1llcaal
cnck-back blocksand chppin1-
•Speak1n1 of officials ... they wall
each ~t thccquivalcntof about a aix·
paclc a ycarmorc(that'sa cheap,S2
51Jt-pack.) forthe next thru ye.rs.
That's three cheap six-packs, or about
2 pounds per annum. That's-the
proposal. and my money's on the ref: .
•TheClf 1srev1cwin1a proposal
from Westminster Hi&h Principal
More tea mu re pla)inaswitch1ng
man-to-man dcfensesano match-up
1ones Whatever happened IOJU5t
man defen5t'sand zonedefcn~s·>
Also, more teamsarc prns1n1 than
1n the past. Must be the influen e of
Oklahoma. Lo)'ola Mar) mount and
UNLV.
0
Nonhwc\lem lured 8111 Foster as
head coach thr~eycarsago He had
wonu Rutacrs, Utah. Duke and
South Carolina, but he'' an la~t place. as usual. w11h the Wildcats
Tough place 10 win and a tou&h
·• tal scored nine po1nu 1n the first
half and she 5eored 17 an the second
half and we won "
Nau)'en h11 a pair of J-po1ntcn in
the third quancr and 1n the founh
penod, Good scored e1Jht of her t I
points. 1nclud.i"1 a 3-p01ntcr. Good
had $ix usast.s. s1x ttbounds and 10
steals. lilr'ith acvcn of those thefts
com1na in the 5ttond half.
Robert Both me-to rntorc the abili·
11csoffootball teams to travel outside
the s&.ate once every thm: years.
Such oumandinJ tn~ &.akcn by
Wes1mins1er(V1!Jln1a), El Toro
(Pcnn.sylvan1a), F.d1sonand Manna
(Hawa11)1nd man~othefl. were stopped because of an apparent case
of paranoia from Esptranza.
The Aztecs were a~nlly wom·
ed that other non-lca11.1e foes were
aetu na some son of edit api nst them '
w1thanearlys1.anand manalcd to
gum up a well-workjng machmc.
Hopefully it'll function ap1n.
•Mission Viejo High 1sreponedly
looking fora fift.h non·lcaauepmc
next ~ason 1n football. So. I hear. as
Scrv1te, but Mission Viejo can't find a
taker. What gives? •Concerned about enrollment?
Try LosAng.clesRooscveh High. The
Rou&h Riders, we're 1old. have an
enrollment of6.000.
•On \he Southern Section levd.
Fontana (4,24 7) is followed by
Redlands(3.992), Lon18each Poly
(3,692). Lona Beach Wilson (3.621),
Lik.cwood (3.306). Alhambra (3.298)
San Gabnel (3.208). Long Beach Millikan (3,042). Rub1dou~ (3 ,079)
and Corona (3.046).
Foun&.ain Valley? A mere 2,959.
Manna?Onccover4,000. the V1k.C1
arcdowntol,301 Ed1son1sa12.180.
•Oneofs1x rcetp1entsofNational
Fcdcra11on Cita11onsrccen1ly was
one Bill Boswell. the director of
athletics for the Huntington Beach
Dtstnct.
Boswell. a former head football
coach with years of service and
wanninas. rccc1vcd hasawa.rd m Las
Vcputthc 19th annual National
ConfercceofHigh School Directors
of Athlcttcs. •South Coast League football
coachesa~sttk1n112-m1nu1equar
tcr5 for their frnhman football pla)'"
. ers Well. ~hy not?
conkrcncc to~in an.asc"1denttd b)'
No I llhno1und all the others
0
Amaz1n1 how w~ look at the
rccordiofall 1he NCAA teams in action 1n late January. All have
played 17-19pmesandallwcloolul
1s the v.-on·lost record.
Noone ever asks. "Whod1d they
play 1n the pttSCason'"' Some pubf1·
cati ons ratcstrcng1h ofschedule. but
you have to look fi:ird to find at
0
How was your week? You could be
coachinaat Young.stown tatc They
are 1-16
Highlights
of sailing
scheduled
M«1 1mr.rovcs to 2-J 1n lcaauc, 6-12 overal . Lquna Beach dropt lO 91 ALMON LOCKAMY
1-4 an Jcaauc. Oml!J' .... .....,~
In lhe Academy Lcaaut: Oary Jobson's ••wide World or ...,._., a.uu.. U , CaJ IAIMna Sa1hna ... a 90-minutc multi-media
14! Sharon Crouch scored 17 pcnou. = ••1 f toe• 1 h .h .... d 17 rebou-.._ and dished out 10 n .. ion ° ,,_ 511 ans i., •• ,.. '""~ aJns wdl be held at the South Coast
assists for her suth tnpfe-double'" Community Church Thatn" St20 the 12 pmes she's played an kad1n1 Bo · c On I C' Liberty to its fiOh lcque win without nita anyon \'C. rv1ne, .-eb. 3
•-· ll 7:l0 p.m • "1M· Detpite foul trouble 1hroupou1. The event 1s co-spon.sottd b)'
Heal.Mt Cielnicky added 16 points BaJbol Yacht Club and West Manne
and 14 rcboundsJo b(O)'• -4..._LlJ.liuKU..and...will .bcJoblOn'.J .only
S-0. Cal Lutheran fell to S·S • .l-. Southern Califonaia ~ppcaranee this
In colkaic pmcs· }'at. He wilt show Video tcenes or
BW. 71, airtsc C.I~ lnllle ct: otymp1c sa1hna competmon in
Mary Beth Nelson uJCdncr 6-foot·l Pu11n. Korea: the 12·mc1er cham·
he1pt to $(()fC 3S point dropp1ns pt<>nlhip an SWedtn· lhe 1911
host CCI to~ 13 overall in the NAIA Kenwood Cup in Hc;;;lulu. the 19"
O.suict 111 pme. America's CUp contest bctwmt Sen ~ ~ £1sks. with Just fi"e Dieao Yacht Club's 60-foot Dia~,, on the squad sui~ up. 1lrCft catamaran ud N~ Zealud's l)().
led by S.foot-5 auard Michelle Fems. fool moeobuU.
who was I 0 foi 2l from lhr f.rad in sconna 26 points. '°"'°" '1 c:ommen&s win i.ctudt hit
A.-. PMMk .. w:.J Cell -. ........ '"°"' the lure of. the Aml :a11tt ~ l 1 poeftt::' ~ AMcrica't Cup-from race count to
the y c~ 12.1. 3-2. '°I.ht coun room.
Ooldca SU• Adaletic Confmnec Ticbla are $10 or S5 for lhldea11 v~ over lbe holl V~ wi9 ID. They can be_._. hm
SCC. 4-1 S. CM. was pMild by Ga.ii W• Mlirine Products ....,. in
Brown with a1ne DOI• and Noni Nli•PD!' lad, LOlll aw. l9d Melakea wttb 10 ,.-.... IAd eieh• DiM Pohat, or ~ cilliM ....
poill11. Yld&CIUla.(714)6"73-JSlf:'
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21 '1 Sil S\'t
21 • 1216 '
" • 297 •• '° 21 1Q " ...............
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D 16 '9 II
20 20
11 77
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21 II
II 20
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13 23
10 JO c..er.. ~
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2S 12
2• 13
2S 1•
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Hitw York 172, Ullen H1
Hitw W MY 117 Otn-llS
AllMla 121, CltWleftO lO:S .... 11). Porlleftd 100 CfllCaeO .... o ... , ..
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Clllceeo a1 ~. •'.llO o m GolOIMI Stitt •I Defroll, 0 0 om '°"°" at llldlttll. •:JO P m Utefl at Sell M!Olllo, S::lO om ~·o-t ~ •• Houston, U O o m S.Crtmento 01 ....., .WwY, 4.lO am ~ ot WatllollltOll, 4JO om o.n-al Miami. u• p m CNnotlo al Utoll, 6:30 o m ~-al Pwllend. 7.lO om
Kftldl• 122. uhn • 17
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4-4 It, TuO.• •·7 1·1 I), I! WlllllM 0•2 0-0
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0-1 H L Toll a -to 20-20 122
LAXIRS -AC Groen 6•f t -11 11, Wortftv 12·111·31', AAldul-~ 7-1> .... I•. JoMion 10-17 6-f 2'. Scoll S-15 0-0 10, .~ S·I
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HIGH SCHOOL G•U
Cesta Mesa .SO, LHuftl a..ctt u
(hdk Cent"'""' LHIMe IMO C..-Mfto ...... .. .....
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Motr14 I I 4 )
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Huvtlft 0 0 I 0
Tot•h '' ) 11 )I Toll" IS u I) ~ k•• w Quortln UnoYen llv E"tne•• )-001n1 "°" None TecM.cob None
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New Yortr"s P.vlcll aw1119
tries to dow down J ... es WontlJ of Ille L.Men ._.,.
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St Loul1 11 n 7 41 15' 1'1
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Totonto " 21 • 3' , .. .200
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NY Raneen 77 15 1 '1 l9t 171 Pitt~ 7' 17 • S6 211 '" W•U\ineton 14 II I S6 112 16' ~ladMDnl• 2s n 3 SJ '" m New J«MY II 2• I .. In 206
NY lslandefs 15 2t 3 33 ISO ltl
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Hartford
QuebeC
A41wM OM'*'
33 11 ' n 196 1so
21 l l ' 41 174 114 11 21 10 .. 163 16A
20 24 3 Q 171 161
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w .. es Cenf9rene.t tNm
Tiit w~ Contel'tK• M Star Team tor ,,..
NHL Al Star Gt mt to 11!1 olov.o TutMSov, Feo
1 "' 111e Nor 1111ono1 CO' \eum .n E dmontOil h
llOrlel'\1
GMIH a St•n 8urtr.t Nt"' JtrMY Re.eon Len>el•n,
Bo\ ton Ott~
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Bo•lon. ScOll SttYen\, WeV!lftOIOn, Pntl HOUI
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lnr.on. Moftlr ttl Ctftttn
H rshl ernam
Male Athlete
of Yearby AP
d
Dodgers pitcher .
easily outfinishes
field in voting
·NEW YORK (AP) Orel
Hersb1scr, a picture of perfection o n
and off the field. w1s named The
Associated Press Male Athlete of the
Year on Tuesday. fin1sh1ng far ahead
of his Olympu.· cQmpeut1on
The Los Angeles Dod&ers pitcher
became the first non-Olympian to
win the ~onor in an Ol)'mp1c )e&r
since Denny Mel.am in •96 .
Herstuser. who set a record with 59
consccuu"e shutout 1nn1nis. is the
22nd baseball pla)'tr to win 1n the SS·
year history of the award and the first
since Dw1gJ'lt Gooden an 1985.
Hersh1ser got nearly •~•cc as many
votes as his World Series nval, Jose
Canseco: 6 7 first-place ballots anJ
465 points. "1th Canseco -the first
player \O h11 40 home runs and sttal
40 bases in a scason -&etting 30 first·
place votes and 233.
He1sman Trophy wanner Barry
Sanders. who set all-ume college
records for rushing ~ards and touch·
downs. was third w1tb 207, followed
b)' Ol)'mp1c swimmer Matt B1o nd1
with I 52. BA star Michael Jordan
with 91 and Olympic d1 .. er (,reg
Loug.anis at 59.
Young wa done by pons wnter
and broadcasters on a 5-3-1 bam The
A P's Female Athlete of the Y~r "''"
be announced Thursda)
'"This caps a )'Car of fantasrn:
awards." Hersh1Str said "It 1s a
tremendous honor to be recognized
with an award "'h1ch ('Over"!> all
sports."
Hersh1scr s~nt tht' I 9 ts sc• n
setti ng record~ and collcc11n1
trophies. H t) "'holcsomeness nd has
h)mn· aniing earned him adulation
among children and adults. Hersh1~r's record trtak. 23-.8
record and 2.26-earned run a'crage
made him the unanimous N:rnonal
League C) Youn' winner
His record 24·'1 inning , 1ma11na
~"e and shutout 1n Game 7 g:un t
Orel Hersh lser
the New York Mets made ham Most
Valuable Player in the NL playoffs.
Ha thrcc·htt shutout 1n Game 2
and a four-hitter in G ame S apinst
Oakland made him MVP or the
Dodgers' World Scncs v ictory.
By th~ ume 1t all ended. helped by a
How To Pitch card he carried in his
un1fonn back pocket, Hershiser had
allo"'ed JUSt five earned runs an hls
final 101 ir.nings. He also won his first
Gold Glo"e award and became the
first p11cher to get thrtt hns in a
World ne game since 1924.
Dunn& the shutout streak, which
broke Don Orysdale's hallo"'cd
marl.. Hersb1ser celebrated ~o other
c' ent . O n Sept IS. hts second son
"a.sbom. the not night. be turned 30.
>\mazani. And It kept goina.
He dined at the Whttc House "11th
Pre 1dt'nl Reagan. He J01ncd Johnn)'
C rwn on "The To ni&ht Show" and
rcpnsed his dugout h)mn-s-amnJ-
of cou~. Hersh1ser had perfect pitch
"From now on. my carttr ~·II be
d•' 1dcd into t"-O parts -bcf.rt 1988
and after I 988:· he said.
Hcrsh1ser's t 989 1s beina taken up,
o far. b. d1fficuh contract nego-
uauons
•·Mort0 \.lt'fltOU• P1111ouro11. M ._, lt>CS-tv
We)h>ftQlon 8000Y Sm1111 Montrn • W.•f Poo· . -----------------------------Oullnv 0.-0.C Ptl 1.eFO"ltel!'O, ~w Vor'tr. Austr.a.n OMft
(It~)
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l uro n Lori McNe U S ' l 6 l
c..... "*'
HON·CONrtE"ENCE
UCLA '• UCI l ~ Garrow CUCLAI Gei kr-moM . I·• 6·)
6 1 8r>001 CUCll 04tl Go•IY••I" 6 t l 6 6 1
Koololl IUCll O.f 8tllra<ll ,., 1 ' Pan\
IUCL AI Ciel Lu~. 6 4 6 • Nelltr UCLA!
OOI KMVo.i. 6 7. 6 1 NeMnv IU(LAI def
c;ao19•.,, ' l l • • 2 Del*tl Ci• br• lll·Gorrow IUCLAJ def 8n 991·
llr_...nn, • • • 1 ltuten·Lvbnef UCO o.«
Neller·N•llirn" 4 ' ' > 6·1 14111<1",·Pnh
CUCLAI Ciel Cao N n·IC•nrotl • l •·1
hlencltf\
Uft w• •·"""!\ NHIUnO, Molltrotl l rie'I ~
New Vor~ lt•'1941rt ...... w.,...
\•Com MttlY &o\ton •oti Brown. Pt· t~bul"vtl. "'"'"' o.-Horttoro •<to, Toce,.., ~. JoM """<LM". Nlw WMY
1·111 U llOC kl\
Hittl KM9t
SUNS5T LIAGU• H~ IMdl l, E•Mll I HI 1<or11•0 W1·11.er 1 Goo• I
0 Connet ~
E d<ton KOf"'9 E •If" I Goal .. PhtlPs 17
Helft.me HuntoftOIOO'I a.oc11 l·O
let GrM• ,...._ MIN.)
LIC'.HTWft(',HTS -TOOO F"oster tGr .. t
F t 11 Mont l ICO'ICI ..Concl tOl,lftO TKO OVt<'
C11r1' Al•ereoo 1'"'-"••I CF"oittr '' I 0
AIVaf.00 11 13 SI
MIDOl.EWEl<iHTS -F re1>' Tett HoullO<ll
'*Cl" IO· tOUl'IO OK t ion o•el' Jimmv 8 I Vo•·
IOI Chle Ii 74 I I • • 11 f •I
FOOTBAtl. (3>
~erd
• 0 soo
I 0 soo • 0 7SO
~ 0 .. , • 0 l1S ,, 0 •10
U UIACTA • • -~ llttJll ... , .. •AC• I t ~.-1..,.1 u • •• •• ,_ C...t Oil< .. , ....
...... ,,,. • J_ •• · -,., u tilt.Cl • • u -•Ill• U OAA.T ft~I I)• t .... -·
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... ....... 1•.-1 •• , •
-h•-... ' '" ,..,.. JG I
\1 •&ACTa I) l M4 Ut • ·-· '"~ ...._..,. ....... J)lt lV
sec struggles to victory;
CCI beat~n by Westmont
36J'C)tnH 1n the pmC'.
Poor lh<><>tu'I by • I 6-l • .S-0. allo~ the ( oupn a \:hl"':t an tht ~ half ... t\ntr con,tn1n1 ~7
percent from tM flOut 1n the-fint half.
the Vanpatd1 d1pprd t() 31!h ptl't'Cnl
In 1nochtf'G c .. IM: ......... IN, C'llftll Oillele
In• 11: T~ offirial1 -~,
Wftt I hn le lOUChy -btc'aUlr fl VC
ttthndl fOUh ifunrw lM II""
hctptd cttalC "'°" ""'"''>' ""-Ute *' Kvtn W1mon fl'Olft WtllmOftt
'lW\"tt IO rttOfd dout*-'-'"" ta tht
.ronn1 rolumn to 1mprort to t0.9
ovmn.
Steelers pair, Shell,
Wood named to Hall
Bradshaw, Blount
selected in first
year of eligibility
\Al\oTON Ohio (.\P) -P11·
tsburgh teamma1es Terr) Br.tdsha~
and Mel Blount 1n their first )'Car uf
chg1bil11y. "-Crc ..cl<"Cted Tucsda)' to
the Pro Football Hall of f-ame .ilong
wuh An hell of Oakl:ind and \.\ 1ll1l'
Wood of Green Ba)
"It's hke 'tl.1nnmg a upcr Bo"'I."
Bradsha". 40. \:ltd of tus scle<"t1on
"That's because I kno"' th1" 1s the last
a"'ard and the last ho nor that I'll l'\l'r
gc1 a .. a pla)er
"'Now Blount and Brad ha"' arc in
and .\n Roonc) Uhc late ~tcl'ICI'\
o"'ner) 1s 1n he.a,cn tool.mg do"'"·
~)1ng. '\1~ boH' \h bo~!i' I 1old \Ou
)ou'd make 11 ' ..
BlounlJO•M t"'o other ml'mbcl"t of
Pittsburgh's ·· tC"CI Cuna1n" dcfen
m the hall Tac Ii.le JOt' (.rc~cnc "'a
en hnned t"'o }CU\ ago ;and
hncba kcr Jacl. Ham last H'ar. both
1n their tirst \Carol chg1b1lit)
hell pla)rd ofTen , .. e tackle tor the
Raiders from I Y6 ·I ~ 2 and f)3rt1c1·
pated 1n eight >\FL or <.\of( title game\
and t"-O uper Bo""ls
He remembered that he had "alkcd
through l~ Hall of Fame a dcxadt•
ago pnor to a Raiders e>.h1b1t10n
game at Canton
"I haJ no idea I'd e'er be 1n thC'T\'.
he said ··You ne'er thin~ 1n tcm1\
hkc that I "as in a"c "'al~ing through
1tiai bu1ldrng and rcadm& abom .1h
people cnshnned h •~ hallo"C'd
ground fo "-Ilk throu h 11 "a'
cnouah. but to be included 1n 11 1\
almost too m\Kh to behc .. e ··
\\-ood pent I 2 ~• n\ ... a
dcfens1\C back \\.&th the Pa ~er "ho
"'on fi-.e FL utles and the fir'\t '"'o
upcr Bo"'I . in 196 7 and I ~o .
"I "as ~lectcd as a finalist a couple
of )ear-s ago. but I "asn't chosen
then." \\-ood said "I ~tarted 1hinli.1na
thAt so man) Grccn Ba) Pickers had
aone an. ma~~ the~ might ha .. c used
up their quota ..
hellt\\ood 8lot1nt and Brad haw
v.111 ~inducted Au S
Bradshaw, a quarterback. and
Blount, o comcrback.each pen: their
I 4 profess•onal seasons "1th the
tcclers. hdp1n& the dub to an
unpr«cdentcd four uper Bowl
champion hap .
"This is a part1cularl) good fcchng
t>et·au~ Tern and I came m together,
v.e retired tQ1Cther and no" v.c go
into the Hall of Fame together." said
Blount. . the director of pla)'er
relations for the FL "The onl)
thin& I nttd no"' 1s to ma~C' the
mone\ that Tem 's malting. ..
.\ araduatC' of uthcm U ni\ e~m
Blount ma~ onl) game 1n h1'>
carctr He led the ?"II Fl m intt'r
ccpt1ons m I 1:PS with I I and had ..
for his carttr -~'enth all-tame -
for 91 I >•rd~ He also rcco'ered 13
fumbles. returning tv.o for tou h·
dov.n The third-round draft p1cl.
pla)cd 1n SI\ "FC title pmc . four
Super Bo"'I~ and fht Pro Bo"'ls
Brad!lh•"· "'ho pla)cd for Lo u1s1-
ana Trch. "a 1ht first pla~cr cho n
1n the 1970 FL draft He completed
.2 0.:!S of\ 901 passes for 21.q 9 yards
and 212 touchdowns and al~ rushed
for 32 touchdo" n an his career
Brad haw. MVP 1n the teeters· I 979
and 19 0 champ1onsh1ps. hold ~~Bev.-~5 h-QJ~ )i rd
pa~sina and nine touchdo"n pa
He pla)cd 1n Sl' AFC cham-
pion hip g.ame and four u~r
Bo-.t 10 add1uon to \v.o Pro Bo"'l~
Brad ha" the 1nduc1ccs "-'n'C "rtp.
rc'ICntat1' et of the best team of the
'OOs and '7
5chottenheimer new
coach at Kansas City
fl..'\ ~ CITY. Mo t r\P) -
Ma n ) houenhc1mc r. the 111r1n·
nlll.&e t coach 1n the Amencan foot
batr Confercn« the pa t thr«
Stason . wa named head roach of the
Kanw City Chief, Tucidl)
"Our aoel for 1919 11 to~ o me th< chlmpeon ot the N1u_pn1I ootbttl
Lc11uc.'' Yid h\)Utnht1mn. "'ho mipcd a1 coech of the Clt\cland ~'"at the end oftht tnton tn a da~tc Yt1th owntt n Moddl.
Schoucnht'imtr, .o. took t~
&ro-M to the pta)'Ofti "' cach of"" four f.all Kl*'' ll C'Oe('h. His '2· I .S
tt1.aa.r tratOft rttOnl t~ pett thrtt
yan tt-unma\Cbcd 1n the ~R· •ftd
traot only mr ChlCllO lean and Sett
Franntt0 49tf'J ·~ al F\. teams.
Ha ~ ..... '°" ffOM IN • ..,.. was.,.= hll m"911 IO Mt+ ...
o&naw MW.•'*'* flHt1'1-
Mbd 1fhc would hW ••all•_.•
toordiMIOf' Wlt9' tM ("Me6.
..
°""'ii COe11 DAILY PILOT/ W~. ~ 25, 1Mt
l -
Formal fraud charges filed against investm nt giant
NEW YORK (AP) -Tht aovcrn-
ment filed formal fraud characs
Tuesday ap1nst Drexel Burnham
Lambert Inc .. the investment &iant
thal aarced to plt~d 1u11ty 10 the ac:cuu1ion1 and pay a tte<>rd S6SO
milhon in fines and rntituhon.
The procedure at Manhau.an feder-
al roun marked the first time sin«
the plea-barpin scn~ment was
reached last month that specific
de&.ails of tht six felon1es we~
disclosed. But other key details of the
seulcment spelling out what Drexel must do ~rcn't made public at
Dreul's reques1.
U.S. Attorney Rudolph Giuliani
told a news ronfercn« he believed
('Ht:D11· I .I'\•:
·Younkin
the public had a naht 10 know detail
of the ~ment and he would ask 1
federal Judtr to unseal more details of
the scnlcment today.
The aovcmment characd Drc~cl
with panicipatiog in a htany of
criminal acts ranaing from insider
trading to stock manipulallon 1n
some of the bigcst U.S. takeover
targets of the 1980s.
Someofthechargcs1lso •mr.licatcd a senior employee of Drcxe • ident-
ified only as ••John Doc." People
famahar with the case concluded tht employee was Michael Milken. the
senior Drexel h11h-y1eld bond
financier who 1s expected to be
indicted shonly on fraud and
Younkin takes new post at
Mission Viejo Co. division
Jobn Yoaakln has been named senior vice president of land
acqu1S1t1on for Mission Viejo Co. -C.alifomia Division. Harvey Stearn.
company president, said Younkin will be responsible for nego1iaung the
acquisition ofland ~reels suitable for mid-to long-term development of
master planned neighborhoods and communities. mostly an Cahfomaa
and neighboring states. Younkin joined Mission Viejo Co. an 1974 as
director of commercial development. • • • Steven E. Caudill, executive vice president of Manson Properties 1n
Fountain Valley. has announced the appointment of J . Mlcllaael Foley a~
vice president of investor relations. The Costa Mesa resident will be
responsible for raising moner for the firm ·s various limited partnerships as
well as all investor communications. • • • Joyce Gorman of Irvine is now area manager of the Temporary
Placement Division for the Brea office of Abigail Abbott Personnel
Companies IDc. Previously she was senior client development representa-
tive for the Tustin divisional office. • • • Costa Mesa resident EUubeda A. Engelbert, conference planning
manager for Pacific FlDuclal CompaaJes, has been elected to the board of
directors of the Insurance Conference Planners Assoc1at1on. Hll\· ing
JOaned the firm m 1983, she is responsible forthc success of20 meetings.
seminars and conferences each year in the United tatcs and foreign
countries. The ICPA was formed m the late 1950s and now has more than
JOO members from companies across the United States and Canada.
Pacific Mutual. the flagship of Pacific Financial Companie . is one of
America's largest life insurance comoanics. • • • Also at Pacific Financial Companies. Josepb L. Cannava of Lake
Forest has been awarded a Cenificate in Personal Financial PlanninJ by
the Amencan College, Bryn Mawr, Pa .. for completing five examinati ons
in the Chancred Financial Consultant (CHFC) professional designation
program. Cannava has been active an the financial services field since
1978. • • • D1rec1ors of the National Council on Alcobolism In Orange County
have named Willl1m R. Rlaodes as executive director af\er a nauonal
search. Rhodes has an extensive background in the field of chemical
dependency. most recently as program manager with the Orange Count)
Drug Abuse Dcpartmer1l. He replaces David M. Lar on ~ho 1 rctanng
after I 0 years. • • • Don Miller. senior vice president and regional sales manager with
Coldwell Buker, has announced lhe appointment of Jerry Wolfe.dale to
manager of the East Huntington Beach office. Wolfcndalc stancd his real
estate career in 1977 and joined the Coldwell Banker team earlier this yea r
as the assistant manager of the Mission Viejo office. He resides an Irvine. • • • Acticom Inc., which last month opened ils doors 1n Laguna Hills as a
scrv1cc-bascd vcndorofcommunicationsandcomputersystemSc. has filled
three key management positions, according to John Fallou. chairman.
Jou W. H•l9eso• was named vice presidcntfsalcs and markc1in1:
Jayetee Ca1trois now service manager and Pamela Heake 1s district
support manager for the firm's Los An1tcles distncl. .. ~
Huntington Beach resident C.rtls Lofsrea has been named food and
beverage director for Los Caballeros Sport VlUa1e's new $2.2 m1lhon
Players Club Bar & Restaurant, announced Kevin Bove. general manager
of the family fitness and social center in Fountain Valley. Lofgren will
oversee operation of the restaurant. sports bar, banquet. meeting and
conference facihues and catering, all of which are open 10 members and
non-members. He has 15 years experience in the food service industry. the
last four with Specially Restaurants. For the last three Christmases, he has
helped the Salvation Army provide free food to the homele . In
conjunction with Ports of Call. Lofgren and other volunteers served 1.500
persons in three hours.
Richard Rupp. chairman of Eanlaquke M•tual l•Hruee Co. in
Costa Mesa, has announced the election of two new officers. David L.
Morris 1s now vice prcsident/marketmgand Sall4ra D. R•ffner 1 as i tant
corporate secretary and assistant vice president of the firm which e1pec1~
to began ofTerma residential earthquake insurance coverage early this }car • • • Office SpeclaJl1b in Santa Ana, which provides secret.anal. clcncal.
accounttng and light industrial help. has honored two Fountain Valley
residents. Peter Davit was named Outstanding Temporary Emplo)'CC of
the Year and Sally Frull1 was named Outstanding Temporary Employee
for December. • • • Joe Coltello has been elected president of the Direct Market1n1
AtMclaU.. of Oru1e Couty for 1989. Coslello hu been acuve m sales
and marketin& for more than 30 years and 1s currently senior account
elecutive with Hane-Hanks Direct Marketing. Also scrv1n1 on the
OMAOC board are vice president Bnce Merpa, Amencan Computer
Group; se<:n:tary Dlue Melatyre, Database Publishina. and treHurer
R*rt Gr .. a. a direct marketina consultant. The orpnization is
dedicated to c<iucatina the business communitr_1n 1&ate-of·theo.an dir«t
marketina techniques and meets on the second Tuesday of uch month.
raC'kttttnna t•harac
fl\le of the ch~ mirrored iac·
cu11t1ons lc\.clcd qain" the firm and
Milken in September b~ the Sec~mtiei. and Eachingc Comm1i.~ion.
which said they schemed wnh Ivan F.
Boesty. the now-imprisoned inside
trader who has snitched on many
prommcnt securities figures in ex-
chanat for lcntent treatment.
The sixth charac involved a trans-
action that allegedly dcf rauded a
Drexel client.
The char)t$ were contained in a 24-
page information. a legal document
used 1n cases where a defendant
waives the riaht to indictment and aarccs to pl~d guilty.
.. Drtxel mani.,ulated •um1n
pricft. en~ in insider tnMtina and
unlawfully fai:1htatcd IMfltr and
acqu111tion activities.'' said a 11atc-· mcn1 from Oiuhani's offi~.
Drexel's 1u1hy pleas to the characs
arc an estential pen of the aarrement
tKat capped an unprecedented probe
into the inner llW'Ork1np of one of lhe
nauon's most powerful investment
firms.
Under that deal. Drexel must
cooperate 1n the 1overnment's crimi-nal protCCutton of Milken and other
1nd1v1duals ensnared by a federal
crackdown on Will Street corruption
that bctan more than 2'h years qo.
"Today's fihna of an information
charaint Dttacl Burnham Lambtn 1~
in accordance wuh tht prehmuuuy
~rtt~t reached wl\h lJw United
S&ates Attorney on Ott. 21 . 1988.'0
Dread •id 1n .a statcmcn1. ..Wt
behcvc that this scultmcnt is in the
btst internu of our firm, iu tm-
ployen and thtnts."
Tht s&atcment also satd '*" ttlllc· ment, when final. "will prot«t Drtlcl
from funhcr prosecution relatint to
the matlCfS which arc pan of'thc U.S.
anorney's offi«'s continuina in· vestipt1on. ~
Under kdcral criminal procedure.
Ottlel attorney Thomas Cumin
entered picas of "not tuih)"' before
U.S. Maaistratc Nina Gtnhon. Tht
pleas wdl bt sw11chfd to "1u1l1y••
befott a fcdtral district J~ wtWn
Dttltl and tht SEC scule their relattd
c1v1l htaption.
Tht ctwtes accultd Otti.;el of mall
fraud and .ecuntiH fraud m conn«·
uon wi th takeovcr·relaicd trans-
actions that included aarttts F1 ..
chbech Corp.. M(:A. Inc.. Harris
Graphics Corp., PtultiP' Petroleum
Co. and Stone Containt'r Corp.
The firm also was acc:uled off raud
in conntttion wnb a tranaaction in which it conspercd wath a nowddunct
investment pertMnhip; PrinMOn
Ntw1>0n Pannm. to cheat a Ortxcl
chcnt. C.O M.B Co. UI ,,.. ...... onuL/
Growth stock coAference buil.ds
r. -1 4~ Traditionally. institutional in-
vestors have believed there was linle
reason to flock to Orange County -
or even Southern California -for a
first-hand look at local investment
opponunities. ·
That was the common perception. particu larl y among the
preponderance of East Coast institu-
tional investors.
But as 1989 unfolds. perceptions
arc changing. Public companies in
Southern California -particularly
those in boom1n: Orange County -
arc being taken more scnousJy. So
seriously that .l conference on Feb. 9
and I 0 in Newpon Be!!'h 1s attracung
senous interest from insutut1onaJ
investors throughout the country.
Attendees at the first-time event
will discover some of the region's
largest. most promising public com-
panies. Leading the wa) 1s Orange
County. representing about 60 per-cent of the showcased companies who
will make 10-minute prcsentauons to
portfolio managers.
The change of attuudc has been
triggered partly by Cruttenden & Co . the largest independent investment
banking firm in Orange Count).
Newport Beach-based Cruttenden
has organ iz.ed a variety of con f ercnces
that showcase regional companies -both in the emerging growth sector
and the larger growth stock arena.
Each event has brought well-descf\.ed
attention to both the region and its
companies, the firm's officials said. The upcoming tvent, Southern
California Growth S1ocks Con-
ference. also has anracted eager co-
sponsors: Brobeck. Phleger and Har-nson, a San Franc~based law firm
with offices in Newport ~ch, Palo
Aho. Los Angeles and San Oaqo.and
Arthur Andersen & Co .• the largest
accountin& firm in the na11on. Both co-sponsors view the con-
ference as a positive sign that Orange
County -as well as its neighbors to
the nonh and south -1s moving into
a position of national rccogn111on.
And that suits them just fine. Both
companies have had the fores1Jht to
~lace a major emphasis on Orange
County. .
Richard A. Fink. manaaingpartn~r
of Brobeck's I-year-old Newpon
Doueta1Jacob1
Public companies to be showcased
The tentative lipeup for the Southern California Growth tock
Conference 1s as follows:
American Health Services. Medical lmaiing Centers of America.
MMI Medical, Countrywide Credit Industries. F1dcht)' Nauonal
Financial, J.M. Peters, Kaufman & Broad Homes. California Commrrcial
Banksharcs. Eldorado BancolJ>. Lincoln 83ncorp, FHP lntcmat1onal
Max1carc Health Plans. PacifiCare Health Systems, Safoguard Health
Enterpnscs and Western Dig1lal.
Also •• Applied Data Commun1cat1ons. Armot All Products. DH
Technology, Newport Corp .. Noram Envaronmenlal Solutions. Patlex
Corp .. Datum. Monitor Technologies. Tcchnolog) Markctina.. T)lan
Corp .. Gish B1omcd1cal. M>cogen Corp .. PSICOR. ~hC'k Health Care,
Archive Corp., CMS Enhancements. Emulex Corp .. GalC"-1) Com-
mun1ca11ons, File ct Corp .. C'arl Karcher Enterpnscs and lntcrmar~· T1uin Group.
lnform.i11on on the.conference can bt obtained by phoning. 852-9000
Beach otlice. explained that the
county has been tarictcd by the firm
for 1rcmcndous growth -s1m1lar 10
tha1 experienced in its Silicon Valle} office
"In 1980, WC addressed the lfOW1ng
business opportun1t1es in the S1hcon
Valley by opening an office 1n Palo
Alto and focusins our corporate
pracuce on emerging arowth com-
panics:· Fink ~1d
"As a result of those etloru. ""e
have become quite pr<>m1nent 1n the
venture capital and investment bank-
ing commun1t1cs which in tum has
led to a tronJ client base of successful
and prom1S1ng 1rowth companies
Th ose firms often turn into the type of
company that will be represented in
the Cruttenden conference.
"Quite simply we saw ~nae
County as a logiciJ place to be to extend our growth company prac-
tice."
The firm ts Newport Beach office is
staffed with attorneys who specialize an public and private company rcp-
rcsentataon. public and private ~nancmgs and meraer and acquisi-
uon work.
"We've gotten to know the Crul·
tenden people very well s1nce we've
been btrt and fccJ 1bey've effectively
promoted lhe emergina srowth Stt-tor," Fink added. "A numbtr of our
chent.s have been involved in their
previous confercocn and wm very
pleased."
Anhur Andersen &. Co. 1s hardly a
stranacr to Oranae County. Directed
by Mana&ina Panner Doualas Jacobs
durina the past I 0 ycllrs, lhe office is
20 )Cars old and boast.s a s&.afT of 220.
Statistically. the firm 1s 1mon1 the
Top 2 in Orange County. That aoes
aJona with the firm 's No I status
nationwide and No. 2 status world-
wtde.
Ac:cordina to Jacobs, involvement
in the Cruttenden conference was a
natural because emerging arowth
companies arc ''the heart of our
practice" an tsoth Oranac and Los
An&eles counties.
"We spcc1ahze 1n emcrginggrow1h
companies and those are the cnuues
that develop into the irowth stock
companies to be represented at this
conference. We functioned as busi-
ness advisers to many of the com-
panies on the prOlflm, and s1m1lar
enuucs., when they wcrt smaller and
on the WI) up." said Jacobs
"It makes a great deal of sense 10
hold such a conference here 1n Oran1t County,·· he added "We ha ve 1 fine
cadre of gt'9wth stock companies on
the West Coast and the conference
will 11ve some of them add1t1onal
v1 1b1l11y among mstatuuonal in-
vestors from ell o'er the country.
"lt'sa vtry pos1t1\C Sl&n lO have the
conference here -not only for the participants. but also for those not
part1c1pat1n~ The businw com-
munity 1t~rf will achieve addmonal
v1s1b1hty toa vcl") important 1roupof
mv~to~ ...
Eclectic shop otters
fine slices of Engl,anc;J
ly KA TY BOUCHER
Of -0.., ,._SU#
One thina Laury Lcmkin hate~ 1
that typical .. Cahforn1a look "
So he ckc1ded to bn!ll a hnle bn of
the old country 10 ahfomia with the open1na an edectic antique and fine lu~n store in orona dcl Mar.
Lemk1n, 29. and her mother. Joy
Lcmk1n, own the qu11nt linlc hop,
Elizabeth Bcncficlds
"Ehiabeth Benefield wa m)
~ndmother," said Laury Lemk1n.
'She ltvcd an Enaland and I re-
member visauna tfic shoppina d1t-
tne1s. Thty had thinas hke we are
Klli~ chintz fabrics, noral fabriei. anuqun, nttdlepo1nt pillows and
linens mMk ftom 100 ~rtcnt Ea>P-
tian cotton.''
Joy l.Cmkin said he used tell her
da.ter talcs of her arandmother's
life in EnaJand. Whtn thev ~ould
vatation in Europt. no matter what
oth r countf) they v1\1tcd. EnaJand alw1)s felt Jake home.
Laury Lemk1n wd she has a dctttt
1n fine a.ru from U • and 1
bacqround 1n d1 play and dccorat-ina. .. My mo1hcr is very creative and
talented," she said "We Just \Ori of
bounttl<.kuofTeach othcrand ~er
know what will become of at." So mother and dauthter combined
knowlt<Sac and &alent1 and o~ned
their store "' Stptember "We didn't wanl th15 store to look
like California -sor1 or white and
airy wath overstuffed futn1turc and
pastels -al all," ht 1111d . "I think
~·re aotna·1n•o• trad1tt0na~eletant
look wnh-lots of lHStl • foot tools. and antiques ..
Laury Lcmlun said he feels malls -
arc on their wa)' out and thtn:'•IOU'I
to bC 1 trend beck to the small shop,
Ahhoup Jo)' Lemkin hves 1n
1PfN19 ... l.NGUSH/atl
Micco D, Ingram Industries execute merger-agreement
NASHVILLE. Tenn. -Micro D
Int'. of Sant.a Ana and lnaram
Jndu11n6 Inc. announc:cd Tusday
that an aptemcnt of meracr has been
enttftd anto purM11nt to wh1eh In· ~m has 1ncrated the price to bt peid in ill previou~ly announced tenckr Offer ftOm S 12. !ICHo S 14. 7 ~ per
share 1n cash.
The C?f'ftt is not conditioned upon any minimum number of sham
bc1na tmdcrcd and usc"piration date
has ken c•tended to Feb. 6.
The ~ lllf'l'Cmmt provides that as soon 11 pncticabat after the
consummation of tht ttnckr offer. a
MCf1tf would be dkcted 'so that each
theft ouutand1na share of M1ero o common stod; would bt convCflcd 1nao the fiaht to receive $14.75 1n
c.11. In connection wnh lbt 8'Mackd
tfftdtr otkr and the mn,rr ~men~ MKTO D remved • raiinest
,Geneva C::os. says divestitures-to stimulate increa ed mergers
J
tel,,,,,,, •• ,,"
Three firms report ............. ~~ M"t U1CW of"Sl2.7 m1U1o;S,44
pCT ...... for dw leCOGd fitcal quantt ended DK. 3 I, a S2 ptrttn1 1nettaSt"
from SI.) milhon, or S.30 Ptt share,
1n 1huc<ondquntroffisa.l 19 I for
the lrvuw Orm.
Income from _0_9Cration1 totaled Sl9.7 mtlhon. a 90 prrcc•u in~tst
from Sl0.4 million in the )car ~rlicr pctlc>d. Revenue totaled S2S8.4
m1lhon. 61 ~rcen1 hiahtt than rev-
enue ofSl60.7 m11Uon 1n the second
quantroffisal 1988.
Net inceme for the fint six month
of fial 1989 roK 10 a record S2S.S
m1U1on or S.89 ~r share, a 2S ~rcent
incrttit from S20.S million, or S.73 ~r s.haaT, 1n the first half of fiscal
1988. •
Rt\'CftUH for tM fim 1x months of
fiscal 1989 1ncrused to a record
SSOS.4 million. 68 pcrcen1 h1pcr
than revenue ofS300.8 m11J1on 1n the
fint half o(fiscaJ 1988. · .
.. We are pktitd to report sequen·
11all} hither reve.nut1 and stabl.t cron
profit marains 1n a pcnod charac·
tenzcd by mixed rtsuhs 1n the
microcomputer 1ndu try 'Wh ile rev.
cnuc~ are arowina at a slower rate
than we are accustomed. demand for
ENGLISH
Froml4 Ncwpon Beach. UUI) Lemll.in com·
mutes from San Diego Both decided
to be able to su«ccd in the endeavor.
1hey wouldn't settle tor an)' loca11on
1hat was some1hina lcl. than perfect.
They picked { orona del Mar
"f love Ou~ community.-Ulul)
Lcmk1n satd ... h's an old town jnd
estabh hed. The communny 15 ~on·
derful and ~pie rcall) shop their
town and suppon their bu\ine55es ..
Besides Laury Lcmkan's talents for
d1spla) . she mak~ dried llo"'-cr
amnaements she claims are different
from anythin& on the market me
she calls the Enahsh Garden look. and
others art called J>3'cund resemble a
1ewclr') semni.
.. I lo'c toamnac an)lhang-from
nowen 10 bedroom ,"she smiled.
"I'll go into people's home~ and
help them decorate. and make Ooral
arrangements for 1hrm "
\ l s1: I PS A DOft\S
M II \ I ' \ '1: DI D
NEW VOtltK CAP> Jan 2•
'\\'I 11 \UI "'
Wrsatm Diailal'1 lliper prrfonnance
products remaias.-IUOftland the
COlftp&ay COMIDUel IO apalld Ill
matktt .shaft J)C)elttOll in video COG·
trollen. LAN tdllllOR, inaepaaed
dn\'es, and hi&h ~ "~
controUcrs." said Roter W • .Johnt0n.
chairman.i.. president and chief u ·
ttuuvo omc:tr. .
.. While wt remain vtf)' ~im1.aic
•bout lhc Iona •erm srowth prospects
for the microcomputer indu.stry, ~'C
remain cauuously optimi,t1c about
OE.M demand Jcvel1 1n the Mar term
As ~v1ousl)' announced, we han
taken actions to reduce OJ)trltin&
~ts and improve manufktunn&
effiacneie11n lbi5 environment."
Thne actions wtll result 1n a
nonm:umn1 chaf1C apinst carninp
ll\ the third fiscal qua~r of approx.
1m11ely SI .0 to SI .S m1lhon.
Wester Dtanal. with fl ilittci
v.orldw1dc, 1s1 lcad1n1 manufacturer
of a broad range of storqc manaac·
ment. intelliacnt · and disk ctrhc,
communiaoons. im-a.ina. core 1<>11e
and integrated syilcms produ ts fQr
both OEM and rcsclkr markets
• • • Armor All Pro411e:1.1 C.rp., the
world's leading supphcr of auto-
Laury Ltmkin also said he plan
ncu month to bcaJn ~llina dried
flowers b)' the piece. so ~pie may
pick as many - or as few -fl ower
as they want for an arrangement That
W"a). people will know just how much
the) arc spending.
She said an)'one can bnna 1n their
own fabnc to match th.cir arranac·
ment, or may pick 50meth1 na out
from the store. And 1f someone wants
somcthang they don't ha,c, they'll
find It
"Most of our bu:r1na 1 done from
Europe;· Laul) Ltmkin said. "Some·
tames people will rcqu~t a certain
linen or piece of fum1turt I'll find 11.
take a picture. and 1f the)' like at. I'll
get 11 for 1hem ··
Mother and <bu&hter arc .ilrcad}
thanking ahead, ano thinking btg.
'Td love to have a chain ot lh(~ ...
laul) umkin said ... My next would
be in Beverly Hill~ and tht'n San
Francisco.··
Ol'f l'PS \\0 DOM\S
\ 'I I ' I I \ D I H '
'''ll\Q'' ""'"'
C.OIUf'Hlf I'
u rterly income
IDObYe appearance prod*1a.. fe-
poncd 1 21 pcrun• 1~ in rewaua IOd an 11 pttc:Cftl 1ncrcac
aa _. ancotM for the third fiscal
quanrr tDdtd Dec. ll. accordina to 1~ M. Sherman. president and
Chitf t"C"CUllVC OfTICtf.
Both are nt'W hiahs for the Irv•~· buodfirm ..
Revenues ror t~ quar\C'r were
$18. 770,000. up 21 ptrtent from the
$32,082.000 reported for the same quner l111 y_e~r. I nc:ome before taxes
was SIO ~.000 compared to
$9,964,000. an improvement of S
per:teftl. Net income r01C 11 pcrcen1
to $6,304.000 from SS.680.000. Earn· anss prr share also 1nc:rea.sed 11
perc:cnt, 10 30 cents from 27 cent
Armor All's efTCC'll"e tax rate
dechned to 40 perc:tnt for the QUIJ'\tr
fro'" 43 pcrttn1 a yea.r.aao as a resuh
of the dttrcatr tn the federal tax natc
under the Tax Reform Act of 1986
For the nine-monlh .. pcnod. rtv·
enutS ~ere SI00,770,000. a 27 per·
cent increase from S79,386.000 for
the comparable penod last year. Net
income and earn1nas per hare each
1ncrca5N 24 perctnl for the n1n"'
mon1h period.
DREXEL
From84
Drexel 1s the fifth-largest Wall
trtet firm and one of the most
profitable investment concerns 1n the
country. It as a leader in the SI 7S
b1ll1on market for "junk bond"
Stturtt1cs, often used to finance
tak~ovcrs and the arowth of small 10
medium sized companies
The firm and Milken "ere 1m·
phcated tn cxtens1"c wrongdoing by
B<>tsk> after he turned state's
evidence in l:ue I Q86 Both denied
wrongdoing up until Octtmbcr.
when Drexel began ncgot1a11ng a pica
deal ~11h G1ulian1's office an order to
avoid cnpphng charge~ of rade1cer-
ing
Milken has conunuC'd 3\Sfning hi\
innocence and 1s clpcctcd to quit the
firm when he 1s 1nd1c1cd
Nd income wasS17,l l 7,000,tom·
pared to Sll.119.000 and •nuap
per lhare 1ncreued to &2 caaaa from
66 «nla. Income beM Ill vras
$28. Sll 000 compared to
$24,244,000. an improvement of 18
percent. Sherman uid that tbas quaner 1s
1he first rcs>0nina penod that an· cludn results of 11\e Rain 0.ncc(R)
1nd Rally hnct(R) of car waxts and
wishes. Shortly t>tfore the end of the
second quaner. Armor All acquired
theCarCare Oiv"1onof8ordcn Inc .
which marketed thcte and other
automotive brands.
''Whtie 1h11 stra1qic 1cqu1 111on
will have a po$lttvc anflutncc on
fu1ure profitab1hty. 1n the shon-tcrm we art 1ntepat1n1 and reah&n1na
lhcst ~ell known brands into our
markeuna ind d1stnbution s)stems
and. as anticipated, the impact on
caminas was liahtJy diluuve for the
third quarter." he said • • • • frv1ne·based Gra.ko y1tem1 loc.
has rcponcd results for the nine
monthund 1herd quar1crend1ng Oec.
31 .
Revenues for the nine month
~nod increased by 36 ~rcent • to
$86.267,000, from $63,330.0001n the
pnor yc•r's mnt·mont~ pcnod.
Nine month net caminas increased
by 53 percent to $4.,378,000. to 69
cents per share compared to
$2,869,000. 48 cents per share. in 1he
prior year.
Earnings btfort income Ul\CS for
nine months jumped 64 percent to
SS. 720.000 from $},491 ,000 last year
Included in the nine-month earn·
1n.&S per share was an uttaord1nary
item from 1hc uuhzataon of tu loss
carryforwards totaltna 10 cents per
share compared to 8 cents per share
last )Car
Re\ienues for the thr« month
~nod increased b} 22 ~n;cnt to
i l0.381 000. from S24,844 000 1n the
pnor >car's comparable penod -....
ct carnin.u for the quaricr totaled
SI .SS0.000. !4 cent'> per hare, com·
p3rcd to S 1.340,000, 2 I cents per
share last )tar
Earn1n15 before income tu.es for
three months increa\Cd by 24 percent
10 S2.0S2,000. from SI .bS0.000 in the
pnoqear
Oi•'ll C.... DAILY N.OTJ\1¥..,11 fny, .-.-Y 2'. 119 •
Pro cutor ready,
quallfled to probe
Chicago exchanges
CHICAGO (AP) -In Anton R.
Valuk.ti' four years as U.S. attorney,
he has presided Olfer an office that h11
tndic&cd more than 270 public of·
ficials, aovcmment cmplo)'ccs and
othen on corrupcion charses.
Valuk.as. 4S, is qain in the spot·
hght for has role an the recent market·
fraud invcsuaa11on of the leading
U.S. commodittn exchan~ .
Observers '8Y no one an Ch1caao 1s
bcncr prepared to tackle 1t.
U.S. law enforcemcn1 offict1ls are
1nv~tiaatanaallcpuons that as many
as 100 brokers and traders ~ystcm·
atte&ll)' cheated customers out of
milbons of dollars on the Ch1caso
Mercanulc Exchange and tht Ch1caao
Board of Trade. No indictments have
been announttd and Valulas ha~
dechncd comment.
Valukas has a vast knowledge of
commodiues tl"ldin&. but 11 wasn't
butlt solely as a prosecutor.
He learned much by defending
traders.
Asa private attorney 11 the Ch1ca10
law firm Jenner & Block, Valull.a
represented brokers in cnminal cases
and in d1 sc1phnary proc:ecdinas
bcfott the Commodity Futures
Trading Comm1ss1on, the agency that
oversees futures tradina.
Eugene Wcdoff. a U.S. banll.ruptcy
ludge who worked with Valukas at
Jenner & Bloc!... recalled t least one
1n$tancc 1n which Valukas 5ucccss-
fully defended a Board of Trade
broker acc\lsed of brcakini com-
modtties la~s
.. 8) 1he umc he left Jenner & Block,
he probabl) knew a much about
commod1t1~ law as an)Ooc 1n the
cit,," Wcdoff said
Oucaao attorney John Troelstrup
agrttd Tuesday. "When he came to
1he U S. auome) ·s office. VaJukas
was probabl) onr of the most knowl·
cdpblc and expcnenrcd 1n terms
of commod1ucs expenenct." s:ud
Troelstrup. ""ho 1 rcprcs.enttn& at
leu1 one Df those subpoenaed in th<"
commod1ttcs probt.
When Valukas. a C'haca&o nauvc
whose fitherwa. •Judie. Wll~ U.S. attorney for the nonhttn ditmct
ofllhnoas in M1y I 98S, he p6odpd to
make prOS«uttna whiie-<oUar tor·
ruptaon a pnont)'. .
"Corrupuon 1s an cpickm1c·
proportion problem an Chi~.~
Valuk.al saKl "It ~ou"1 be hard 'for
me to amaaanc a city in wbach there
WIS more corruption."
He joined the U. . attorney's office
as an assistant prosccu•or in 1970. Ht
joined Jenner & Block an I 977 but
returned to pubhc service in 1981
when Gov James R. Thompson
appointed ham to head the Metro-
poh tan F11r and Expos1t1or
Authont)
Valukas served as an anome) ot
Thompson·s ~~ICC11on campa1p tr
1982. and tn l 98S. ,1hc governo
lobbied heavily to make ham U.S
auome)" . Tacucs used in the commod111e
probe -.. Wl~" FBI qenl$ posin1
as traders 1n the exchanacs' trad1n(
pat seuctly taping allcaed wrons
doan,a -arc familiar to V"alukas.
His office has orchcstratcc
elaborate sting opcrattons wit~
underco"er agents payina oft' crookcc
police officcrs.Judacsand p0liucians
and taping tt all on hidden recorders
When he uccccdcd U.S. Attome)
Dan Webb ~n 1985, Valukas tool.
over one Of the most pubhc1lec1
1nvcs11aauons. Operauon Greylord. I!
e.robc of corruption m the Cook
Count)' coun system.
A key player an the probe was •
southern llhno1s judge brought to
Ch1caao The jud.ge hid a tape!
recorder 1n has cowbo¥ boot and a
microphone 1n his JUd1nal robes to
document wronado1ng.
So fa.r, 90judacs, lav.)ersand o ther
court emplo}ees ha"c bctn indicted
m the Grc~ lord probe and 70 ha' c
bttn convicted. Several ca~ arc
pend1ni.
Operation Incubator. developed b)
Valuk.as and tus au1~tants. un· covertd 1nnucnce-peddhng at Cha-
cago's Cuy Hall. The key figure WIS
Dow Jones passes October '87 mark
Inc in ~t Louis
··vou t\pcncnccd a mini bu)ang
p3n1c." Goldm n s:ud "'I ou could
almost sense inst1tu11on \totth luge
s1dehncca,,hsa)'tng. 'Ohm> gosh. rm
going to mass the boat ...
The catal)St for the la1es1 se saon's
gains ~asconan-ss1onal 1cst1mon) b)
Federal Rcscn.e Board l haarman
Alan Green pan
Jack 83rb3nel an analyst w11h
Gruntal Co .. said the tinanc1:il
marlets were rca sured b' statements
b) Grttnspan tha1 1nd1ca1cd he v.u
satisfied with Fed pohn on 1nte~t
rates The markeb believed 1ha1
meant there would not be furth<'r
tightening of credit. Barbancl ~1d.
The dollar and Trcasul) bonds
moved higher 1n rcspon~ to Gf'(Cn·
sp3n's ttsttmon). with the stock
market follo~ina suit
Goldman said urttn J>3n's rt·
marb could be interpreted a r11her
p0 1t1\.e or ntgaU\ie, .. But since the
bond marlet ralhcd, 1t points out at
this moment. market l)3M1c1p.int'i
ha"c a bullish mind ~1 ··
'\ l ·s•: ('O'tlPOSll·J: l 'H .\ '\S .\('TIO'\S
The Trcasul) 'sclosc:l)-watched 30.
lcarbond was up more than S SO per
i 1.000 1n face amount b late after·
noon
Analysts txpttt«S the Wall trttt
rail~ to conunue
"The market 1\ gct1in1 frothy but 1t
s11ll ha~ upwud poten11al." (Joldman
said
d' anc1 ng 1\sut"soutnumbcrcd de
chners b' better than l to I 1n
nat1onw1de tradin& of ev. York
tock fachangc•hstc:-d ~tocks., with
t 009 issues up. 477 do~n and 4Q
unchanged
Volume on the Ooor ol the 811
Board ('amc to 1 IJ9 b.2 million hares
up from I 41 64 m1ll1on in the
prc,.1ous ~s ion
Nat1onw1de. ~nwhd:ll('d "olumc
in NY E·llSl<"d issues. including
trades 1n tho'IC stoc ks on f'C'gJOnal
c\changes and 1n the O\CMht·
<'OUntcr mar~et. totaled 222 Q
million shares
The most act1 .. el)-tnadcd 1s uc o n
the 'IV E v.a'i . uni~ P;mtic up '
to 37
Merck ro I'• to 61 after pos11na
a ~1t1vc fourth.quaner eam1n
rt'pon
GAF rose 11 •to SO'" The com pan)
scheduled a Feb 22annu.al mttunaat
v.h1ch ha.rcholders wall \Ott on the pro~ SSl-1~ hare cash and cuntt~ U)out led b) Sam~I J.
HC\m1n. the firm"s chainnan and
("h1a eACCUll\.C
mona 01hcr p inc"-I BM rose I • ..
to I ~4 '• and General ._1otors ro~ I 1
to 891• 's measu~ b) \\ 11!.turt A)-
soc1ate•; 1nJc~ of mort than 5 --000
act1 .. eh traded stocks. the marll.r1
ros.t S1Q Q)I billion. or I 07 percent.
1n 'alue
The N't "E'scompo~ll<' inde~ of all
m listed common i.tod.i. rose I 6 10
161 QQ
Standard&. Poor·s andustnal 1ndo
rose 4 43 to HJ 26. and P's SOO.
tock compoi.1tc 1ndc was up 3 9Q to
28~ 49
The NA DAQcompo itcindcdbr •
the O\.CT·thc-<"Ountcr market rose 2.00
to 391 ~ o\t the .t\mcncan toe •
fachan . the market 'a.luc 1ndc' closed at 31 . 74, up 0. 71
MERGER
Froml4
In addatton. a spteaal comm11t~ of
the Miao Dd1rectorsdct<"rm1ned the
offer and meflff 10 be fair and in the
bnt 1ntcrtsts of the pubh hare~
holden and Miao D ha filed a
tatcmcnt \tollh the Secunhc and
Exchange omm1 ion recommend·
in& that all holders of hares tender
their ha~ pul"$ua:u to the otrcr
E Bronson lnaram. president of
Ina.ram lndustncs Inc. staled. "Wt
arc pleast'd that afttr ex.tcns•"e J1 •
ions ""llh M •C"t'O D and the ~~~1a,,,._1 __ comm1t1~ of au board we were 16 e
•to reach a nego11atcd qrttment. We
bche\c that the tender off~r. and ,
mc~r arc not onl) fi1r to the public
sh3rcholdcrs of M1CT'O D but also
provide an ucauna opponun1t~ for
the employtts and manaacmcn1 of
Macro 0 and lnaram.
"Our aoal no• 1s 10 con ummate •
the transaction as quidl) as ~blc •
and to continue 1.he OO)lnct1 of Ma<TO
O and ln&ram ComputCT 1n a mannn
· that a urt m1n1mum di.srupuon to
their cu aomcn and $Uppl ic .. In·
aram added ·
Linwood A, Lit)' Jr .. chairman and
chief o~uthc offic:tr of MlCTO D. •
Ytd ··1 ~uh to lute all Macro 0
emplO)ttS for their accomolishtMnt •
mbu1ld101ourcomp&n) lobetht-No
I mtcrol"Omputcr produas des·
mbutor in the wt four cars.
"I believe that \bt mcf'IC" will
Pf'O' idt fot au of"' ~tef' chal~ and oppc>nunmes fOr prohaioMI
aro-th. To au our an10mftl net ~ ~ "*a CORbnut"I commnmcnt to providt them witi 1.bt bat wnu ... uppon en lM
lftdUllf) ...
Pcnont With• .. '° .......
JMM should do to IO die dip 11i•,.. nc llM: of YOft. "1<1SJIW
•Ill a "'1rf of • ••iarl '11it
amended ~vi•••• tlllia • .... 211 IO.,.,, l'f ......
WhhlM "' • ··-• pwtblR.
~
I
Or ... co.et DAil Y PILOT I WMneldey. Jenuwy 25, 1911
_\
642-5678 From NOiltt Or ... County
From Soudt Or~ Comtty
540-IJJO .... ..,
642-5678
FROM NORTH ORANGE COUNTY 540-1220 • FROM SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY 491.-00
..
...... ,.._.., ,,,,
~I-.~ •ns -••lo -IUt '-'•Im ••
°"'Of c. ,,_ '"' CM Of .._ "'-IUO ...... ,._,0.-,,,, ..... ,.._.., ·-r-......... '"° •ti..._ ...
ti -lt1S
I ',,
~
HOUlll/CONOOS
0-.... )ICn ........... )10.
--Jlfl7 c.,,...._-, ••• c-.,_ 11n c:--,.,.
a..-c...,.._ .......... .... -"""'"' ..... c-_ .... ._ ,_
APAITMINTS
a-.. ......... ..... -... c.--.... c-.. _
c..---111 ...
._~ ................ ...................... -._ ...... ..__ ._ ...... ia.•--v.. ...._. ......
*~
.. .... ....
. '. ...
HOUlll/CONDOS a-... 1002 ............. '°°' ..... _ 1007
~-1011 c:..-.,_ •an c--. IO'M --1• lit.,. • Ion ,_~-IOU .................. ·'°"° ..................... 100
-10.. :::::::-" :c ~....... 1052 l ... ._ IOSS
-"""'" 1°'7 .............. llltf
,,,.
tllO ,, .. ,. .. ,, .
"'°
,..,,
ltllt Hlf11 ,. ..
1621
ltl• ,.,. ,.,, ,.,. ,_
hot2 ,... -J~ ,.,,
2W
ut1 , ... ,.,.
t1ll
1111 ,,, . ,,,. .
Jl-0 vu
11 ..
"°° ~
J.a.
11'09 ,..,
"" ,. .. ,.,, .....
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3011 -1100 • 110$ ,_
uos SJIO
UlO
'"° uu
.. ........ .. ,. . I J
0.... ......... ---c-.. _
c..-0.,, ...... ,_\I ... ._....... .....
~-._ ...... ..__ ._ ...... _..,. ............ ..... ._ ,__...,..
••OJ ••Ge ••07 ••» . .,. ..,. ..,. ••-O ••d .... • •• •ISO ..,, ... , . ... .... .I.,
-,_ ,.,. --c.--,.,. c_,,_ ... a--107• --~ 107' tt•-,.,, _ ... ...,, ,,,.
~-1140 ..........,_ ,,., -· ,. ..
.... _ ................. ..... '--· ..... ._ ,_
......... ,.., ................... . .. s......c--10'6
..... l_ ·-
,.., , ... , ... , ...
J..O
c_,_.. ft•,., ...
i.-,.1""'1 ... .....,._
1'10 _.._., ,...... IOIO l--,, .. ·-~""...,. ...... ., '-''-.......... ms Oii.co, '-•· & f--.__. JIJO l..,_......., ,.,, ta.,__ 2US _,,_.... ,.., __....... ,, .. s..c-,,,.
MISC. llNTALS
C-/T_..._
~ -MISC. I .I .
..... .__. 1100 ...._ 112' ...... ~ '--"'t I ISO
1101
1100
2106
,_, ____
~'-, .....
o.i..c--.....
lOOJ ..... , ... _ .. _ .. _
)01) -·°'-JOI• tq.clot
JO•• ~a-. JOll fV a....1-.
ADVERTISING RATE SPECIAi.Sr Caill for deulls DEADLINES
PUBLICATION DEADLINE
THE DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS
Tetepl'lone Service
CHECK YOUR AD THE FIRST DAY
The Oalty Pilot strives fOf' eHlciency and ec;curacy
However. occastonally er1ors do occur P\19ue llslen when your ad 1s read back and check your
ad daily. Report errors Immediately to 842-5878
D•e1-A-Une1
Hint "'1wllum -3 ~ys. 20( per ~ne
• SJ 00 (ptepaid, pnntt PlflY,
111t1chandlse only ads No items owe1
SISO) a-... s. •••
4 ltne Minimum. I J days. $4 80
Prt.8teP~llate11
4 liMs. 7 ~ys. S 11 20 (pmate Plfl1 Ollly, no rut
!SUie. cometoal, automot1Jt or help wanted)
Move ·.,. Outr
4 Days. I 0 words. S7 99 1 days I 0 words S 11 99
(auto. bolts and moto1cyclts p11yatt pany only)
Monday .......... Sat. 11:30 AM
Tuesday ......... Mon. 5:30 PM
Wednesday .. Tues. 5:30 PM
Thursday ........ Wed 5:30 PM
Frlday ........... Thurs. S·30 PM
Saturday .......... Fri S·30 PM
Sunday ............ Sat. 11.30 PM
Mon -Thurs 7.30 AM·8 PM
Fri 7 30 AM-5 30 PM
Saturday 8 AM· 11 30 AM
Bustness Counter
Monday-Friday
8.00 AM-5.00 PM
842·5178
The Daily Pilot ~ts no llablllly 10< any error In
an advertisement 10< wnk:h II may be responsible
except for the cost of the space actually occ;upled
by the en or Credit can only be allowed for the flrat
Insertion
· ..... Merrill Lynch Realty
Let .... ,.
Sel y. '"'"'" w 011111n.•.
Mt-1671
for tnformatton
& surprlllngly
low coat.
Tllil IDfllhl..,. ...... , ...,, .....
"9clll .. Iii - -jlll ..... .................. , ........
..... man 'll•u'M ._ 11 .....
IOAfl
0-.. -....
~--....... _,,....,../"'"""'
"""'°""*''--
MISC. __.
C:-.fl\l/1---,..,s.-.
AUTOMOTIVI -l-..... '""""'''-_ w_ ·--IH.-IM\• ... _ ..,.._,o-a -·----._ 0.---·-
"°" .101J
101•
1016
1011
1029
1011
.,.
IOI•
'°''
OIRECTORIEI
Sef,.et 011ect0ty
Ol1111t Coast Cir C.ode
A.Ito Ptlot
Re.al Estate T lbbd
Ope11 Hor-in
-oa.tr Monday ',~,
--··---.. ·• f riday Satllfdlf
SatOfhf ' Svlldiy
Any 1"1CM111I not ~ withill 30 ~Y' ts reciv-• d
bt 1.11tiiec1 to. bit nol ted to ,.,.., dlafaes
COlllllOVttd It 11;'\ ot Ille unpeid bllanct ptf l!Ofttll.
all collectlOll costs and any rtlSOftatlle attOlflfy s
Im
2
NEWSPAPER
DELIVERY
Eua·I) m orning 1no1o r rout~~ a\•aila b le
\1 u~I lun t' dt~pendab lt> \ ehide nd liabilit)
ABO
in uran<·c.
7 da~ pu week.
2:00 •.01 .-5:30 a.m.
EA VERAGE EAR INGS
~:.11; l l-O l2-IJ33 bt-t\\f't'n Q 00 a.m.-o:OO p.m. (~t.f)
REA V ILABLE:
Hundnl(ton Beaeh
Co ·ta Mesa~ Fount•ln Valley
'e•·port Beaeh
Motor Routes
available in
Westminster
Huntincton leach
fount1in Y1lley
·No COLLECTING
NO SOLICITING
Deliver One Day a Week -
Must have dependable car
and proof of insurance.
Call 842-1444
Ask for Joanne Craney
TODAY'S
C1tOSSWORD PUZZLE
60 Tr• """'' 6 1 Fate• llft•I
62 a. tof'\Dill
'3 neno
DOWN
........
t() MU9tvOOl'll
4 ' ( ~ ,..,.,,,.
4 2 Oeitt 9' '"° u ew~
~ C"°9d 4t Ma Pc»l et
Carr
•1~d9"Cll
48AadM11on
•• Out..,..
!>1 Foe Of
~
S2 Uk"-Sl ,,.,, ....
S-M• f•'* ~ Sol't Of ""'
13
• e>r,,.. CoMt DAILY PtLOT I w.dnelday, ~ 25, 1919
642-5678 ,,.. Ncwll• 0r.,.. c~
Frm1 Saudi Or•• Caunty
540-1220
4'6·6IOO
642-5678
FROM NORTH ORANGE COUNTY 50-1220 • FROM SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY 4ll-llOO
.. , .... ...
~ ' ~,. ...
HOUllS/CONDOS
0.-.. 1002
--1-..... ....__ 1001 c..-r--101• c-•-1012 c--lei. 0...-,.,.
llf-IOH _ ... ..,. lo:M
.-.--16.o ........,...._ 10.2
"-IOU ._..... lo.I
·--• IOJO ._....... '°" ....,.,_ IOU _ .,,.. loe.7
~-IOtf ... o.--111'1•
... -c..,.._ 1019 --,.,
--......... IOl<I S...-C--. ICIM
-·-IOll ,_ ·-
MISC. I.I.
......,_ 1100 .. ._ ''" e.-. & c---. I 130
117$ .,,.
IUt
Id uu 1.UO IJ7t IJIO
'* 1.00 161t
HOUll'/CONDOS .
o...i ''°' ............ ''°' ..... ._.... 1107 c...,_-.. tlll c-.. _ 11n c--1114 0..-111• ti,_ 11»
,_.,,...., 11)4
...........,_ Jl.0 ........... -,,.,
-' 11 ... ._ -J ...
'-""' t lJO
'-........ JIU ._,_ JIU
-~ ,,., ~-,, .. s..~ 117•
ADVaRTISING RATa SPKIAl:S: Call for detall1
.,...._s·A-Uner Prfwat• l'Mty .... .,
....... c ....... ----.-... -c---'-,_
APAITMINTI
0.-. ............ ..... .__...
c.---c-.. _
c----u•-._ ... ..., .................. ..._.,..._ ··-'--'--._ ....... .... ,_ _ .......
~ ....... s..c-... -~ s.... .... --......... a.....c--. -'-'""'"
MISC. llNTALS
~fl-o..io-._
1111
"'° ,. ..
11 .. ,, ..
''"
Jten ,...
Jt01 ,. .. ,.,,
,.1. ,.,.
,.,2 1.,..
1...0 ,..1 ,.... ,...
1~ ,.,1
i.» , .. ,
1-1.,.
2671 ,..,
1 .... ,...
1 ..
2tt0
rnn
"°" 1~
__ .,, __ _
-.-r • ..._. --0-_,.. ....
~
" .... ' ~-'St.
I ~ ' ~"
........... [!J " W.O &f-....--. ._._._
w...i.&-,_
o.wc-
0.........o
DEADLINES ·
PUBLICATION DEADLINE
111• 1711 ,,,. ,,,.
'7.0
1741
11 ..
-
,......,._.,._.... ,_ ,,........ ... ....__ -..,
Cloflc.i a-... . ·-/f-w.. a.I..__ a...w ,........._
..._ ............ ... _ ,_. -C-&1-~ ,,.. , ... .__
,._..,,~, .... ........ -__,,
Oltn,'-&1-,_,,._ ---_,<>_
li<)ot ... .-.c-.
TV --lloc•-•
,. ......
• . I J
0-.. ............ ..... __
C-•-c..-0...-,_......, .-....-.-.....--. ._ .....
'--.._ ......
-~ ....,..._ ----.....
5 line Mintmum -3 days. 2Qc per ~nt
• SJ 00 (Pfti>ald. pnyate party,
mercllalldlSe ontr ads No 1ttms om S150)
4 lintS, 1 u ,s. S 11.20 { pnvatt l)afly only no rut
estate. comertlal. automot1wt or help wJ11ttd)
Monday ........... Sat. 11:30 AM
Tuesday ....... Mon. 5:30 PM
THE DAJLY PILOT
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS
T etephone Servioe
Mon • Thurs 7'.30 AM·8 PM
Fri 7·30 AM·S'.30 PM
Satur~y 8 AM· 11 30 AM
CHECK YOUR AD THE FIRST DAY
The D .. ly Pilot strives for efficiency and.accuracy
However. occasionally •rron do occur Pleate
listen when your ad ts r•ad bacie and ci'l9cit your
ed dally Aepor1 errors immediately to 642-5678
Gar ... Sate:
4 lint Mln1111um. I 3 days. S4 80
f<Pullll ...
t ~.. 1.•
COLDWC!U.
BANl(eRO
. .
Meve '.,..OUll
4 DIY'. 10 words. S7 99 1 cbys, 10 -ords. SI I 99
(auto bNll and 1110torcyc1ts. private party onto
, ,,,. Merrill Lynch Realtv
ltt ..... , •
... v-''""'" e. G11111n1 •·
Ml-1671
for information
& eurprtelngly
loW t.
Wednesday ... Tues. 5:30 PM
Thursday ....... Wed. 5:30 PM
Friday ........... Thurs. 5.30 PM
Saturday .......... Fri. 5:30 PM
Sunday ............ Sat. 11 ·30 PM
Bualness Countef
Monday-Friday
8:00 AM-5 00 PM
842·5871
Ttlit Dally Poot acceplS no kat>thty fOf eny error In
an advet-tlsament for which It may be responsible
exc.pt for the cost of the spec. actually occupi.d
by the etror Credit can only be allowed for the flrat
1nw11on
aOATI
~ 1'011 ,.._ 1'0U ... ,., .
.._.!Mi ,., .. _., ,. .. .....,., ..... ,........,. 1'0)0 .... ,o...,...._ '°".
·MtSC.
"""""' 9010
~, .... ,_ ...
_,_,~ '°"
AUTOMOnVI ·-'-tOIO ...... ~ ..... tOlt •-W-""° ,........,.,....,_ .. ,_
IO)J .. _ t040 ...,.._,a.-. too -tOtO ..._.........., tlOO --.. -·-.,..,
D.,_CTO.I
SflY1Ct 0.tfClOIJ
Oral!Ct Cont ~' Cllldt A..,to l'ilol
Rtal hllle I atilold
()pe11 Ho~
Anr ~""°"111 11e11 ~ ••111!11 30 uys as reqwtd _.
bf '41111«1 •o llot not •1111ttd to hnantt cNtSH
COflllltlllltd at '"' ol tbt ulljllld ~•I* 190C!tll. d coll«ttO!I c~ti •nd Miy 1USOlllble lttorlltf s
lft\
.. : • •
THE i
NEW Si
NEWSPAPER
DELIVERY
Early morning motor routes available
~1 u-,t ha' t' dep~ndabl e \'eh id~ and liabilit)
tn!,Urant·e .
7 doy p er "eek,
2:00 a.m.-5:30 a.m .
ABOVE A VERA GE EARNINGS
(Jll 7 1 1-6I:?-1333 bc•f\H•en 9:00 a.m.-b·OO p.m. (M-F)
AREA VAILABLE:
Hun•lnl(ton Beaeh
Costa M s•~ t "oun•aln alley
Ne•·port Bea~h
Motor Routes
available in
W11t11i11t1r ·
Huntincton Beach
fount1in Y1llflJ
NO COLLECTING
NO SOLICITING
Deliver One Day a Week -
Must have dependable car
and proof of insurance.
Call 842-1444
Ask for Joanne Craney
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
60 T '" lrv•I fl I F OtCe unol a2 oe ~1>e1
fl3 l'\end
DOWN
7
39~ 40 Mutnroom
4 1 hlen-
.. 2 0.«y O' ind
44 Cweuot
•S OVOed
4' Mt. Potl or
C.,r
• 1 C°'1tl deinat
• t
•I ~w11un
.. , Oulhl)s
S1 Foe Of
c~ S2 u-; ,,_
53~·--~Mt F.W
Sott Of 9'1"
11 12 13
''
' I
UI \111,0IUI
EATON
VICI'OR V. J:AroN J-1 away January 22. 1989 in Newport
a.ch. Mr. !'Aton la
IW'Vlved by hla wife
STARTING A NEW BUSINESS??
The Legal Department at the
Deily Pilot Is pleaHd to an-
nounce a new Mrv1ce now avall·
a~ to ~ buslneuea.
We wlll now SEARCH the
name tor you at no ••tra charge.
and save you the time and the
trip to the Court House In Santa
Ana. Then, ot courM. after the
... ,ch 11 comP'eted -. will fll•
your llCtlllou• butineee name
atatement with ttte CoUnty Clerk.
publtlh once a ..-for four
..-. u required by leW and
then fll• your proof of publl·
ceUon With the County ci.rk.
PIMM •loP by 10 .... your
flct1tlou1 butlneu statement It
the Daily Piiot Legal Depart-
ment. 330 W"t Bay, Cotta
Mesa, Callf0tnla If you can not
stop by. p ..... call us
at (714) 642-4321, Extension
315 or 316 end we "Mii make
arrano-ments fOf' you to handle
this procedure by mall .
If you lhouto have any further
quettlON. pteeM calt u• and we
wtlt tie more than glad to a111st you
Good luek 1n your
new bu11ne111!
TU~TIN
~ITSUBl'ihl
~ 4.& 7 B 1.1(;