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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-12-24 - Orange Coast PilotIt TOMORROW: NEWPORT BEACH ORANCf COUN iY C Al 1~ <>~<N 1A .·, ,f 14;. Area 's.paor face bleak Christmas Charity mission seeks more onatlons after its dtsappointtngThanksgtvlng By TONY SAAVEDRA Of"90..,ll'Motlllllf Santa may do well to check his list more than twice tonight to see if he can rustic up a spare turkey or two for the hungry horde that wdl flQCk to Coast Irvine Councilman David Baker Is once again presi- dent of the lrvlne Medical Center Board./ A3 Brother Michael of Costa Mesa for Christmas dinner. The poor will line up on Christmas morning. as they do nearly every morning. outside Mesa Bible Chapel, 1734 Orange Ave.. waiting for Brother Michael to hand them their dailr bread and some wilted vea- etables. Since it's Christmas, the 75-year- old missionary of sorts is hopina· to give the families more than their usual fare. Maybe even a turkey. But he is haunted by the Ghost-of· TU.Dk11Mq past, when he had only five ana 10.pound .bags of rice, and little more:, to offer the estimated 300 ·families who came to him Nov. 22. "Thanksaivins was pret~y bad. We had next to nothing to offer them," said ViJ'linia Murphy, a volunteer with Brother Michael's Christian Mission. Murphy said that donations have picked up substantially this Christmas Eve, but the mission's cup never runs over. No matter how much food is obtained, there are always more hun&rY people. Not transienu, but poo1' families with low-payinajobs or none at all. She also warned that the _poor will be at the chapel the day af\er Christmas and vinualJy every day thereafter. Hunaer is not limited to hoHdays, said Murphy. .. Most people th.ink that on Christmas, this is the thin& l() do. But people have to eat all year long." she said. This morruna. a te-w turkcYI ud canned goods were ba.Ddeid out - alonJ with the usual rice and beul- to some 400 families com.ial to the church. "We could very welt eod up with the same amount (of peop'e) on Chri1tma1," said Murphy. When donation• f.alw, Brother (Pl--_. CBal8TllA8/ A2J Verdict upsets victim's A Newport Beach woman has pleaded guilty In a Pennsylvania kickback scheme./ A3. :family .Callf omia · Gasoline prices are head- ed down again -below $1 a gallon -in Call- fornla./ A4 Nation President Reagan and British Prime M inister Thatcher have made some headway toward arms agreement./ AS Rescue worke.:s have been forced to abandon their search for Utah mine explosion victims./ A4 World Christians around the world prepare to obser\te Christmas./ AS The Soviet premier Is a "no show" atthe funeral of Russia's defense min- lster./ A4 Features Orange County once was rich In Christmas trees, the Dally Piiot's former publisher recalls./83 Sports The Rams' season ends with a 16-13 loss to the New York Glants.181 Mater Del Is the favorite for the Orange basketball tournament, beginning Wednesday ./81 Edison hosts some of Orange County's top g~ basketball teams In tour-- ney play Wednesday./82 Entertainment It was a banner year for community theater, and the top 10 productions are saluted today.JBS Chevy Chase la taking another ''Vacation'' -In Europe./ Bl INDEX Bridge A6 Bulletin Board A3 Business 87 Ctasslfled C 1-8 Com~• CS Crossword C7 Death Notices C6 Featuree 83-t Help Yourself M Horoacope C6 Ann Land.or• 8• Mutual FW'ld• 87 Opinion A6 Paparazzi 83 Potlce Log A3 Public Notice• C8 Sports 81·2 Stock Marketa 88 T ttevtlf<>n . 88 Theater• 85-8 W•ther A2 Too little, too late Rama runntnc bacl Erle Dlckenon (29) pleb up four yarda in the fourth quarter of Sunday'• NFL wild eard &ame at Anaheim Stadium u In Pankey (75.) clean a path. Dickerson talned 107 yarda, but the Rama came up on the ahort end of a 16-13 Kore and were bounced oat of the playoff• by the New York Olanta. Laura Bradbury's stocking hung by anxious parents Families of missing kids across the nation f acin a s pecial heartache at Christmas time By Tiie A11oclated Press Friends and neighbors have bought Patty Bradbury hunJ a Christmas presents for Laura. stocking for her miss1na J.-year-old "Ifs hard to cope with lookinf at daughter Laura, anti the act of holiday presents with her name on them,· he cheer nearly brok.e her hean. her said. "I haven't bought one yet. l just husband said. talk on the phone. talk to people "That was a breaking point," Mike about the search. and then I try to Bradbury said from the family's sleeJ? through the night. Ifs a slow- home in Huntington Beach. ··That motion nightmare." almost destroyed her:· Travis Dradbury, Laura's 8-year- Laura vanished Oct. 18 during a old brother who feels responsible for family camping tril) to ~oshua Tree her disappearance because he told her National Monumem, in the Mojave to leave him alone the night she Desert. Although San Bernardino vanished. has bouJ.ht presents for County sheriffs officersry they ptill everyone in the famtly. That includes gel about 35 new \ead each qay, Laura and his 6-month-old sister Laura's family hasn't n her for Em ily, who suffers from a heart more than two months. 1 defect. The. holidays. which ca~ The Bradburys are not alone in stressful for many, arc extremely their grief. on families with milSing childre I Laura is one of thousands of -n Patty dld1fuya Ch'rismas tr intr-children-stelen by strangers.. ev she did decorate it," Bradbury Sfid. year. Federal staustics estimate the ) I number at 20,000 to 50,000, but Gary Hewitt. president of The Center for Missing Children Inc. says the real number is substantially lower. . In San Francisco. Ann Collins is trying her best to cope with the fact that her I I-year-old. freckle-faced son Kevin will not be home for Christmas. Then she'll worry about what to do on his binhday in January. And what to do when Feb. 10. 1985 rolls around. He disappeared last Feb. I 0 from outside his elementary school in the Haight-Ashburydistnct. "We put up our stockmgs and cverythin~ the other day." Mrs. Collins said from the Kevin Collins Foundation, which she and her husband, David, founded to help people faced with a similar plight. "Kevin's is up and his presents arc in it and there will be presents under the tree for him," she said. Even some of his eight brothers and sisters -rana.inJ, in age from 6 to 20 -have gotten gifts for him. ~nc of bis brothers won some (P1eue Me PAUNTS]A2] Truste~b double their pay ·in troubled school district princi(>IJ and he d1dn•t even know about 1t." - d I': d db i i 'd b k t' The i tem was shrouded 1n so much eien e y rec p CO Sas rop in UC e -~ burtaumtesc that_.iJ. was vinualty indisttmtble to \he ll'11ecrson. money we're talking about isa drop in Here's how it was explained on the the bucket. And the combined in-11enda: "A-24-84/8S reference con-c~se wouldn't come close to payina s1dct11ion of annual review of Pohc~ for an additional teacher. Series 8000/9000. second tt.a4tM-_' Increase. hid This may be somethi tha~von Scroote would rail abou just f4 Christmasandall. Thefiv trus ~ the HuntiP&t.On ~ach Ca (eletncn· tary) Sclio0ll>i1tnct save m~l a pretty sood present the her da Without fanfare or co cnt~d with scant public notice, t 1rus unanimously awarded the tel a 100 percent pay raise. · They upped their pay fron\ S 1 lO to $240 a month. effective nex' mo1th. It's the mu1mum state I~ la,on allows -bated on student enl'ol· lment and the number of mon\bly achool board mcctinp. As one trustee say~. the amou~ of But the ire of the hike just docsn 'l Tbcrt was 11() backup tnattrtlt 1"9'P appar ttemly. Thc$C same Hunt· a,enda packet mailed by mt dutnct inston Beach tru1tttS MY that two to . aivc a clue that Policy series schools have to be closed "bealuse of 8000/9000 dealt with the pa) of dire financial strait " tru tees. The only person to 1pa1t apin't .. h (the pay rai ) wun't very the raise at the school board meeting pru<knt tim1na. ··PT leader Mosh1rt when the raise was approYed was sa.id ''They say the dtstnct t in dtrt Merle Mo hin. prajdent oft he Eader financial tratts. We'~ e1ttli(r in tbl Scbool PT A. t()IClher or we're not •• " nd 1 thin~ I was the onl person Bill 811ncht, the c'ccutm: d1rtttor to know abo~ tt," he ~1d somewhat of the Wtst Oranae ount T ht" 1ol1naJ "I d1 ulSCd tt with the ·ation. datmcd the pa-. raise "..\ ROBER~ 8111£1 N£ws P rRSP£CT1H <'•Sts doubts on the 1nccntyof clai.ms by tru ttt that the distnct J.S indeed in tol.tlb financial shape. "lf you'tt 10 that kind of po ture," he a kcd. "a 1uppropnate to sa>: th.at we need t\V\CC as much money? It's k1nd of hkc shoutina wolf.' Bum ht said that the pay raise. v,h1lc ct'r\amty not on the scale, 1 1milar to mem~ of the Unttcd A»to Worlcn n.on bcC'ontina anarv aner tab!'J pay cuu uid tbCa lcarn1na that bi ~ ttoetved u~mcndou bonu~'· . Gary Ncl n. lh~n1or ~btt of the school board. defends the 100 pctttnt 1nt'ttau- (Pleuc ... 8CBOOL/A2) Otherdrtverescapes with fine of 52 in fatal El Toro crash By STEVE MARBLE oc .. o.-, ...... BiU Kelly was no angel but bis parents believe that in death, be deserved better than be got. A d.arlc-haircd, handsome 22-ycar- old youth who was undecided about bis future, Kelly had piled up three drunken driving arrests in only a couple of ycan. Even though bis license had been suspended, be con- ti nucd to drive . .. I got on him, sure. But he was a 22- year-old," his mother now exelains. Last July 31. Kelly was riding a Honda ~50 motorcycle throuJb El Toro on his way to bis litlfriend's house. It was nighttime and he'd been drinking. "When be was leaving I said. ·come on, you're ao~ to set caught again;" his sister Jackie recalled. At tbecomerofR.idae Route Drive and Blueridge Road, a brown Ferrari made a left turn in front of Kelly, according to p0li~ reports. The motorcycle rider slammed into the Ferran, slid up over its hood and landed in the curb about 20 feet away. Kelly. who wasn't wearing a helmet., never ~ned conscious- ness. He died at Mission Community Hospital after three days on life- suppon machines. (Pleue eee VEJU>ICT/A2) Driver held after hitting parked car By '!'ON\' ~DllA °' .............. Four pcoptc were 1ajured euty unday when a car driven by 1 u$ptt\ed drunken driver veaecf off Plcific Coast Hl&hway and hit a parked Jaauar, knockina it 217 feet into another ~ tra~ in the opposa tc di rccuon. 1.dhe C'.at~nc Btutau, 29. ol Et Toro was arrested on ~ of felony dnvtna under the 1nftunce af\cr tbc cruh arouod l L.M on Pacific C at H~way near R;ver. ide venue in N~ ~ Bra.tcau was booked utto ~ County Jail wnb t.il ..n at SS.000. 8ra1c..u and the dlft'lC victim&. _.., we~ rid~ in the car bit by the / •••• -CllAfla/ Aa) A2 *Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday. Oeeember 2•. 19&4 Suave Peter Lawford dies after illness at age Of 61 LOS ANGELES (AP) -Peter Lawford1 who starred an teJevlS1oo·s .. The Thin Man" and was a fonner in· law to the Kennedy family, died today of a bean attack after slippina lnto a coma and being placed on a life- wppon system, a hospital officw 5ald. Lawford, 61, had slipped into a coma Wednesday. four days after he entered the hOS(>1taJ. He du~d at 8:45 a.m. with his third wife, Patnc1a. 26, at bis side. "It was 1 tcSult of complications fiom previous illnesses," said Ron Wisc. a spokesman at Cedars--Sinai Medical Center. "He died while on lift-suppon." The nature of Lawford's aliment was not disclosed at the request oftriii wife. Patncia. hospital officials $aid. Lawford. appeared in "The Thm Man" senes in the 1950s, became better known for his associates than fo r his roles. He was a frequent face in John F. Kennedy's White House, where he assumed "the role oflhe off- beat brother-in-law," and be was a prominent member of Frank Sin- atra's Hollywood "rat pack." Cops hold • man1ngun ripoff try . Police are sull trying to detemune the identity ofa "John Doe .. arrested Saturday after he allegedly broke into a locked display case at a Costa Mesa gun shop and attempted to steal a .44- caliber Magnum pistol. The suspect in1t1ally identified himself to pohce by using a false license and name, which were later traced to a Massachusetts man who 1s vacationing in Palm Spnngs. Police said the suspect allegedly took theS750commemorative Smith and Wesson gun from a display case at the Grant Boys. 1750 Newpon Blvd., around 5 15 p.m.Saturday. He apparently was working with an accomplice who distracted em- ployees by lunng them to another section of the store The suspect placed the gun in his waistband and tned to leave. but was stopped b) workers who demanded the unloaded weapon. The man pointed the gun at the manager. pulled the trigger and then retumed 1t. yelling threats as he walked out th..: door with his friend. Police. g.iven a detcnptton of the culpnts. detained ttie two men at Rochester Street and Orange A venue The alleged accomplice wa!> not taken into custody. CONTINUED STORIES His children -his one son and three dau&hters from his mamase to ex-wife Patr1c1a Kennedy: Christopher, 29: Sydney, 28: Victoria, 26, and Robin. 23 -had visited him within the past few days. "h's my understandma his chil- dren arc flyina in today from the east," Wise said "We've been fncnds for over 30 years," said Phylhs l(jrk, Lawford's co-sw in 'The Thin Man.' "He was a uruque, araoefuJly, aified. mteUiJent and bilariousl~ funny person. I'm &oin,g to miss him very much." Sen. l::dward M Kennedy, 0. Mus.. said io a statement "The death of Peter l..4wford 1s a special los.sto&ll ofu in the Kennedy tam1l). and my hc111 goes out to hi children, Chnstopher, Sydney. V1ctoh11. and Robin.' "We takccomfon from the fact that we know he will also be missed by aJI of the people who enjoyed his many roles in flf ms and on 1elevis1on. He was a dedicated and crcattve actol' :u well as a loving father and loyal friend to au ofus, especially in the challeng- ing days of the New Frontter," a reference to the Kennedy pre idency. "He was a very nice man," said comedian Joey OisJlop, a longtime Lawford friend and "rat pack" mcl'n· ~-"I never knew until I heard later that he drank. I never saw him dri'nk." Irvine firm opens its heart to the world's children By PHIL SNEIDERMAN OfhDMIJ .......... For many people, the Christmas season is a time to make donations to help less fortunate individuals. But for one Irvine business, charity 1s a year-round tradition. Adams-Streeter Civil Engineers makes donations each month to suppon needy children around the world through an Arizona-based or- ganization called Food for the Hungry. Jan Adams, one of the owners of the business, said he and his pan ner, Randy Streeter, decided several years ago to try sponsoring one needy child for every person employed by the finn. The company has 35 employees, but Adams and Streeter have passed their inmaJ goal. The company now sponsors 46 children. age 4 to 14, in countries such as India, Mexico, Guatemala, Boh v1a, Bangladesh. the Phillippines. Thailand. Peru, Kenya and El Salvador. The sponsorships cost $15 to $18 per month per child. The donations come from the company, not the emplo yees, Adams said. The firm regularly receives letters and pictu res from the )Oungsters 1t sponsors. Adams said he was reluctant to discuss the charity effon. saying he was doing so only because It might inspire others to be s1m1larly gen- erous. "I don'1 think we're doing this for recognition.'· he sn1d "We're onl~ doing this to help the kids. It's always been in my bean to help these kids.'' Wesley Bell, communications di- rector for Scottsdale-based Food for the Hungry, bad strong praise for Adaml-Strecter. .. They're unusual," he said in a telephone intecview. "But I think it's a great idea for a company. It gets the company together and helps morale. We're glad they're doing it." Bell said Food for the Hungry was founded in 1971 and began its child sponsorship program in 1979. He said children are frequently the ones who suffer most when insufficient food is available. But he said the sponsorship dona- tions are used for more than food. Clothing and education for children arc also pan of the aid provided by the group. Bell said the current outpouring of donations to help famine victims in Ethiopia is a shon-term relief effon. "Child sponsorship (over a number of years) 1s what's needed help the long-range problems," he said. Bell added. "I think the message today tSJUSt that Christmas 1s a umc for thinking aboul other people who arc less fonuna1c. This company (Adams-Streeter) says they ca re about hungry children " For co-owner Jan Adams, chanty doesn't end at the office. Adams, who lives in an unincorporated county area near Tustin. personally sponsors five add1t1onal needy children in other countnes. VERDICT UPSETS VICTIM'S FAMILY ... From Al .. His fnends were there the whole lime.'' said Rhoda Kell y. his mother. .. There so many the people at the hospital had to ask ~me of lhem to leave." The California H1ghwa) Patrol blamed the Ferran dnver tor the accident. Louis C 1amota. 41 . caused the accident b) turning 1n front of Kelly's oncoming motorcycle. according to the patrolman who made out the accident report Because of the lack of 1mmed1ate ""'tnesses and the fact that Kelly was intoxicated at the time of the acci- dent. officials 1n the South Orange ( ounty Court D1stnct Attorney's office did not file manslaughter t harges. "Th.ere JU\l wasn't s1gnifican1 enough 1nformat1on to warrant man- "laughter tharges:· said Dcput) D1s- tncl Attornc) James Branch fhc La\l' wound up before ( om- nm'i1oncr Ronald Steelman as a routi ne tratlit c1tatton for failing to y1dd the nght of way ~teelman recalls the C'zarnota's attorney Wilham Hulsy of Orange. telephoned him and inquired whether his client could enter a no contest plea to the 1nfract1on. even though the accident had involved a death. Even though C 7arnota could havr th'o1ded going to coun by pa)1ng a tine and admitting guilt. a no contest pica 1s significant because it can't be uc.cd as an adm1<;\1on of guilt 1n et Vt I cou n "I told him that would proballly be OK," Steelman said. But the commissioner changed his mind in coun Oc1. 18. when Dixon Wolcott, a South Laguna attorney representing Kelly's parents, ob- Jected. "The nghts of the victim are 1mponant which ts why I wouldn't accept 1he no contest pica," said teelman "The law recognizes those nghts are 1mponant.'' Steelman set a coun date for Nov 30 and instructed both sides to bring forward 1hcir witness on that date. But It never happened. Through a legal maneuver. Hulsy brought his <:!tent's case before Mu- nicipal Court Judge John Griffin almost a full two weeks before the coun tnal set by Steelman. Griffin. according to coun records. accepted the no contest plea and 1mpo~d a $52 fine Kellfs parent\. mean""h1le were prepanng for the mun tnal fhe1r younge~t daughll:r returned to a Lonven1cn(e store near the scene ol the accident to drum up witnesses for what 1he famtl)' a!>sumed would be their day 1n coun. "We thought we were going to be heard. We counted on that," said Mrs. Kelly. "I don't know, maybe the charges would have been elevated to manslaughter." Wolcott, the family's attorney. said he also was preparing for the court date. He said he intended to bnng "new information" and witnesses to the district attorney in hopes 1t would result in a manslaughter charge the day before 1he scheduled court tnal, the Kcllys found out the matter had been scttkd. They said lhcy were CHRISTMAS CHARITY •.. From A l M1 c:hacl and crew get much of their produce by salvaa.ina vegetable~ tx·1ng discarded by locaf market'I 'What we a.et 1s what we can . Our pcoplc get nu ff out of 1he tra'ih can~. htcrally.'· said volurltt'cr Susan ff owe Hrother Michael. born M1chorl Dwa1letbce. !atd he started ht m1u1on 15 years a~o. forsaking what he called a thnv1ng real estate business to follow the dictates of Jesus Chn t The Bible quotC'I C-hnsl ·a, telling h" followe~ to "hare their wcnlth With thdil><x>r -~ ... Anyone Wt'ihing to do so can reach the m1s~1on at 548-3491 dumbstruck "I felt ~•ck. I couldn'1 believe 1t." said the mo1her. ··Even 1fwc were Just thrown out of the courtroom, we should have at least bad that chance." Wolcott said he found what had happened JUSt days before the coun tnal date .. I went by the district attorney's onice with statemenls from witnesses and other information and was told that the r:asc was over:· sau.J Wolcott "We never had a chance to present our information ... Steelman said he was surpnscd b) the turn of even1s and wondeVi 1f Judge Unffin wa~ unaware that a coun tnal had been <;Ct. He said he ha~ no1 talked to Griffin about the matter. Griffin declined to discuss the case. Deputy D1stnct Atto1 ney Branch recalled that he a-;kcd (jnffin to reject the no contest pica and \atd hl' reminded the Judge that ~1eclman al read> had reJel'tcd th e ph:a and had set a coun tnal date "I menuoned that 1hrre ~a\ a death invohed in 1h1., ra\c and that was the reason 11 (the no con1c-.t plen) wasn·t accepted," said Branch. "l don't recall what was said next but Grillin did accept 1t" Rrnm·h ..aid 11 1c; the basic pohc) of the d1s1nct attorney·., office 10 reject no contc~t picas. I fc said the policy was es1abhshed '!Cvcral years ago by D1stnct Attorney ( cnl Hick. Husly declined to discuss his legal strategy 1n the t:ase but \aid he has come away feeling 1ha1 hie; client. who he claims 1s innocent of any wrong- doing 1n the al·c1dcn1 . i'I "the re.ii victim " "There were \cveral w1tncssc who were w1lhng to v1nd1cate my d 1ent.'' said Hul'>y "Bui on my lldv1sc he entered a no conlc'it plea to avoid 1hc uncena1 nty 'Of going to trial " Kelly'~ parent'> 'illtd they are at a loss to under$tand why they wcr<' denied their day in coun or why nobody bothered to inform them that It had been settled while they were busy look1n1 for w11ne 5e~ •."I really feel shortchanged.'' said "Mr5. K~lly "J don't under1tand how the coun work but m '°n'\ hfe ha~ lo be worth more than this " CRASH INJURES FOUR IN NEWPORT ..• P'romAl la~uar we~ treated at Hoag Mcm· (lnal tJo,p1tAl 1n Newpon Beach and releao,cd Police 1d the )U,pccfs cu wa~ htad1ng wt' t on Pacific Coast H1&h- w1y when 1t ran off tbc roadway end into the unoccuppicd Jaauar. rnm- m1ng u 217 feet into the eastbound lane' t ' fhe JRauar ~tru~k a 1%9 Volh- wagcn hu\ traveltna ca'it on the highway. 1nJunn1 dnver fhoma lr.ly, 32. and p;mengcrs ( aroltne harp. 2<J. and P.iul1 Claint Pat- teNOn. 29 II three arc from ( arlsb3d Rescue worker' nct'Jcd the Jaws of l 1fe to pr) Da~ from the vehicle u1d police All the v1<:11ms were treaLCd at the scene by par medics and tram ported to Hoag Memorial Hospital. Pohcc aid Oay suffered laccr- attOn\ on ht forehead and a bro~cn lea. Patterson rccc1vcd a scr1ou\ I ccr1t1on on her upper hp and h:irp \uffcrtd a minor concun1on. Bruuau also wa 1rcatcd for faci3l laccr.1l1on\ l :: We AT Hl R Cloud s, no rain for Christmas 10 A weak upper level dltturt>anc. developtng off the coul loday wlll remain w.11 offthcw•. gMng mott ot Sou1hem CalllornJa • cloudy but otl\trWIM m1rd Chr1ttma• Day with only the molt remote ehenoe ot rain. Tempetetur .. were eJCt~ COid •rly today atound the region, ranging from thr" ~r ... at>ove nro In the Antelope Valley community of Lanea1ter to a chllly 44 In downtown Lot Angeles ond 39 In Burbank . Los Angelet wlll dip Into the mld-401 tonight, wtrmlng to near 70 on Chrlatma1 Dey The vali.ye wlll lhlvw In th4 mld-30t to low 40s overnight, totlowec:t by a high In the 00•. Along the Orange Coalt, tti.re wtll be lnc:re••lng h~ cloud• tonight with conalderable high cloudlne .. Tueaday. H~lll &4 to 72. Low• 35 to •8 Tempe Al!Mtty ~~ AmellllO """"°'• AllMll AUMllc C:Hy ~In Bllillrnofe Bir~ 8-lardl 8olet ~= 4 Cu"8f Chet ... 1on.S C Cllal ... lon w v Cl\aflOtle.NC CheyenN Chicago Cindnnllll Cievelend Columi-.°'1 C-dNH Oellu-f1 Wotttt O.Ylon o.n-Oel Molnee Oelrol1 0..111111 ElPuo Ft11bll\ll1 FllfOO Flagtlalf Grend l'lllPIO• HattlOtd .....,.. ... i.. la SI 44 22 ., ,. 38 24 eo 44 49 40 83 et -49 24 81 ,, 01 .,, 2' 44 42 32 42 89 40 -OS 82 49 " 29 63 29 40 00 43 20 41 ae 44 )4 45 32 ,. 12 65 61 45 34 53 19 40 12 ., 33 02 ·II M $4 18 02 04 .09 50 01 40 23 42 27 ,. 13 ., 71'> Ca lif . Temp• High 10w. pttdC)lltflOtl IOI 2• l\oUI• endWIQ et 5 • M lodey llelierafleld 44 40 e........ 52 39 F,_ 42 40 LencMler ~ 03 ~~ ~;; PMO llooie. S3 30 fled 81ulf 4$ 35 ~Coy ~ Gt s--10 .a 38 s.itn.. se 38 Sen Diego 65 • 7 Sit> ,,llllCleCO S8 • I s.n1a a.tw• eo 35 6toalllon 42 38 High, IOW, ~llllon fO< 2• "°"'' Mdinel•t6pm Surf report LOCATIC* am'""" ..... ow 49 21~ Big.,.., 61 01 57 ,. Blythe '° 4$ CttalN LOll8 9Mcll 17 42 Monr~• 10 )7 Monterey 6' 32 Ml. Wlleoll 62 31 "'9wpol1 a-.1'1 el 42 OntMIO .. » Pelnl~ 12 ~7 P...o.M .. 37 ~::',,.,oino 17 44 17 ,, SenGebr~ 11 3e Sen.IOM 62 JO s.n .. Ma Ill 40 S11111a C1ut ., M T-Valtaoy 44 00 VONmlt• Vty 43 22 Tid es s.c.ono •ow TOOAY S03pm ., 0 S«lOnO "'Of! 11 52 p"" 31 ~SOAY HonoMi Houtton lndlanepolj• Jeclceon M• Jacl<eon- 84 12 47 30 eo s1 71 $4 3A 32 so 21 47 30 59 49 62 37 I llOOf 0..1 na1 ----------Hun11ng1on e.actl F11t110W 4 07 •"" 2• Fln~h 10 18am 51 Extended ~jelly, Newport 40th SlrNI. NewpOt1 22nd SttNI, Hawpot1 8alboe Wedge LlgUne DMc:fl 01 1161 0 , llel Sec IOw 5 48 PM ~8 """-Kan._Clly l..M'VAOH Uttle Roc:rlt LOUia...ille San Clemenl• Wal• 1emp· 61-57 SW! Olrectlon - 0-1 ftel 1 ~ I PO<>< !k.n Mlt lod.ty •• 4 49 p m . •'- 1...o.y a1 8 se • m end Ml• 91JM1 a1 4 SO pm MOO<\ Mii ti 7 08 p 11'1 l'1Me f~ 11 9 49 • m eno Nit 40111n 11 8 I I p m Student prays for murder acquittal By n e Au oclated Preu OfllleDMIJ ........ Friends and relattves of a Viet- namese refugee say they doubt he committed murder when he shot one of his college professors and the student says be 1s pfl\ying about his predicament from his Jail cell. "I am Buddhist, so I always pray to Buddha." Min h Van Lam said during an Orange County Jail interview. "But now I'm praying to Jesus Chris1 and anyone else I can think of." The newswpaper in1erview was published Sunday. The 21-year-old Lam 1s charged with the Oct. 13 murder of California State University at Fullenon physics professor Edward Lee Cooperman. CONTINUED STOR IES 48. The professor, one of the first Americans to -Jisit Hanoi after the Vietnam war. was shot to death in his sixth-floor office on the college cam- pus. Lam said the jail in Santa Ana, where he's being held in lieu of $200,000 bail, wasn't so bad because his cellmates have become friends and are helping him improve his English. Lam and his relatives escaped South Vietnam on a boat seven years ago to avoid a communist order to repon to a fann commune. Coopennan's family and fnends believe the professor was the v1ct1m of a political assasination. Lam's lawyer has said the young man 1sa staunch anti-communist. but the student has sworn the shooting was accidental. resulting from horsc- pla) with 3 gun 1n the professor's office Police ruled out political motives 1n the death, saying it was something "personal" between Lam and the professor. Diep Nguyen said he befnended Lam after meeting him 1n Cooperrnan's office a year ago Cooperman never discussed politics. Nguyen said. "He would help ui. with our studic\ and he was interested 10 us as students.'' Nguyen recalled "I doubt Lam even knew what < oopcrman\ polittcs were." PARENTS FACE HOLIDAY HEARTACHE ... From Al nbbons when he went to basketball lamp la't summer and he put 1hcm 1n Knin·s stocking. He's the one who wn!> du.,cst to Kevin. JUSt a year ~oungcr:· Mrs. Collins sa id. .. We'd be thnlled to death 1f he walked in the door Christma s Eve, but ifhedocsn't, we'll put the presents away and save them for when he does come home.'" Mrs. Collins said the famtl), which has endured I 0 months of agony, 1\ going through a good adjustment penod. 'Thnstmas Oay itself might be a little rough, but for little kids, the JOY of Christmas is always there," she said. noting that the youngest ch1l- dren are 6, IS and 9 years old. ··1 really think 1t helps us." But the ann1versanes -1hc b1nh· da> and the disappearance -lurk on 1he horizon. "I'm trying to let the kids have a good time at Christmas and fo~et what's coming next," Mrs. Collins said. Hewitt. a clinical social worker and family therapist who is director of the Rochester, N. Y .·based Center for M1ssinf Children. said a lack of soc1eta rules for handling the crisis of missing children makes it worse for the families involved. "When there's a death in this scx:1ct} we often havc: a mass during the holiday<,.'' tle""1tt said. "When there 1s a 'm1\'itng child. there·~ no final i1a11on." Bradbury s.ml he found somc: fnend'\ unable to mention Laura . "A lot of clo!>e f nends arc afraid to ask." Bradbury said. "They don't know what to say. So we kind of have to break the ice " For the Brad burys. 1alking about Laura 1s therapeutic "We find il's better to talk about It no matter when or who or what," he said. "Otherwise, we have to deal with the thoughts of where is she, who is sh..: w11h. It 'll destro) yo u if you dwell on 11." SCHOOL BOARD DOUBLES ITS SALARY ... Fr om Al "It sounds like a lot when you say IOOperccnt but not so much when 11\ SI 20a month. I don't feel guilty about It. "If yo u figure out all the amount of time. energy and out-of-pocket ex- penses the trustees put in. It (the pa~ raise) 1s a drop in the bucket "Fur the amount oft1mc I pul m, I probably get less 1han minimum pay You couldn't get a teacher or even a pan-lime teacher with the money (for 1he increase.) Maybe you could hire 11 teacher's aide. It's no big deal." Ncl!>On also suggested that the iru'itccs also haven't been gen in~ paid tor extra e;\pen<;es and for being in the "hot scat" on controversial issues, of which the thorny Question of school closures looms nc.'tt month. But a pec1al blue-nbbon commit- tee, made upoffivecitizen volunteers plus three 'IChool district cmptoyecs, have held eight meetings to make '[~ ~ E ~RE_ LI s TE NIN G Just Call 642-6086 D•lly Piiot o.ttvery I• Qu•r•ntMd ._.,....,., I '""'Y '' ' "' °' ""'.,. .. rwt ~"" f'Y !>~om c.a•~•lptr •no ,.,... -*' t .. .,.......,, recommendations of which schools to close. The meetings last long into the night and the volunteers take some heat from parents wanting to keep the schools open in their neighborhood. It should be noted that panel member!. don't receive a cent of compensation or anything for ex- penses. The '>pectal panel. incidentally, ·~ expected to recommend next month to trustees that Hawes and Gisler schools should be closed. The Huntington Beach district operates I 0 schools and has an en rollment of slightly less than 5,400. Fountain Valley School District trustees, meanwhile, collect $30 a meet1na and generally meet twice a month. There arc 13 schools in the Fountain Valley District with an enrollment of 6,SOO. Tru tees in the Ocean View School D1stnct receive SI 50 a month and are reponedly co ns1denng increases. "It's a thankless JOb," said one insider. "There's a feeling that 1f there's more of a stipend. 1t might improve the qualit y of trustees." Ocean View ha'i aboo1 Q,000 pupils at 13 schools. Tru<.tees al the l lunt1ngton Beach Union High School District recievc S200 and aren't cons1den ng raises, a spokeswoman said. The district number!> nearly 18.000 pupils in \even high schools in the cities of Huntington Beach. Fountain Valley and We\tminster Robert Reeves. director ofbusincu services for the Orange County De· partment of Education, said recent legjslation allowed trustee pay raises based on enrollment and nu mber of meetings. ''We cx~-ct1 lot of distri.cts to raise their pay. • he said. Wha l do you like aboul tbe Oally Pllol? What don't you like? Call tbe numbtr at left and your mt11age will be recorded, lranserlbed and dtllvert d to Ult appropriate editor. Tbt same U -bour answerlAI service may be used to record lelten to tbe editor on any topic. Contributon to our Letters column mast lncludt t~elr na me H d telephone number for vtrlflcatlon. No circulation «'Illa, pltlle. Ttll a wbat'1 on your mlad. ORANGE ¢0AST laily ~ilat H..L lchwart& m Publisher Ctrcutetton 7141142-4333 c a..11t1ec1 adwer1t11ng 7141142·1171 AH other department• 142....Q21 MAIN OFFICE ) IO "" I ll•r $1 eo.te ...... CA --·~ IOO>,.., flol< ,~ Colt• II'- ·~.,,., ..... , w , " '''"' t'. '"" 'f< ..,.._. ,~ (.!Jol'"I l'>y , • "' (.•• 1 .. ,, ... Fr•nk Zlnl K•ren Wittmer 10 I '< " 1 "'"' f.I•('; w• ......... ,., Clrcul•tlon Tea.phonft Managing Editor Advertising Director Ao••m•rr Churchman Controller ~«NIO CllU• Pftlll119" INI"] 11 Colla Mftl e,.a!ot l\Jf>S , .. 8001 s..-..~,-by t•"• ... u "' -.. ~ "'""""" ------ l · .... ,..'°II'-"' Robert C1ntrtll Produc11an Manag~r Don11d L Wllll•m• Circulellon Manag r ""' a..,. c .. °"'" ~ """' """"' " ,_ '°"'"'" ~-" """"""'" "1 "'* Or&f\Of C.o.v C.-j)jln'J Tlwf* fdol• ...... I'll~ WO"d9 f I !W!fy I .....,. '"O"'NI -·'°" 4 ~ I .,.., s-,.~ , ,,. '""" P.f'tilllnG Cliatt! , .. , ) 116,ll•tH! 1'0 ""'' t: •• ....,. ~._. VOL n, NO. 351 • 1 • ' l l 1 • Orange Coal\ OAl\.V PILOT/MOC"dey. Dee«nb« 24, 198' * il Wf A)Kcli -~---__ Clinics for smokers scheduled on Coast 'Do you think retail prlc arc higher this Christmas. And. have you spent more th1 year?' I ht' l\mcnt.'ft c Soc · 'IOP.\molt n ancer 1ely w11J couduct three lrd b) <'A·~::;• chn1cs alona &he Oranae Coast in January, for the cornn~kcrs trained by the society to conduct clinics \ Unit). be&in~icn SJlvcn7 of Coron;a del Mar will lead a clinic Beach cfi an. at Hoag Memonal Hospital in Newport to 9 p · ah'i~e~ will be held Mon. days and Fndays from 7 ym l rough Jan. 21. at Fau~'rc ~erduc of Huntington Beach will head a class 7.30 t 9 Ul cran Church Mondays and Thursdays from l'. d 0 Pm through Jan. 17. John Hall of Irvine will ~o"nhuct ..el \\ions from Jan I S-24 al Saddleback College in rv1nc. d All <:la\~'i require a SI 0 donauon. Call the socJety's aenducat1~on department at 752-8600 for pre-registration in ormat1 on. Noise level wUl lncrea•e . Pi~ots at the El Toro Manne Corps Air Station will be ~ohndh(t1ng field earner landing practice during January, It ma} cause an incrt'ac;c in the noise level. Ltrt Cktte Hutte,ioe Beach Retail muager "Not really. a httk bit. Laan Pttry Newpert Buck Hoaaewlte/ula ··1 can'1secth1tpncoare any h11her. rn fact. catol<>sue pnces look ~ auracuve thts Chn$tmU. 5 30 Th~ affected da)s are Jan. 7-11 , 14-15, 23 and 28 from to P m., Jan. 18 from 9 a.m. to noon, Jan. 29 from noon to 4 p.m. and Jan. 30 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Bas1cally. tht' same as last )Ur. I'll probabl:r spend about SI 000 I have a ba& fa.nnly." Stanford singles plan party An after-( hnstmas party 1s being planned by the ~lanlord Singles Club ofOranJC County Jan. 6 from 5 to 9 p.m at the hom~ of Da ve Sm 1th in Santa Ana. A buffet dinner an~ music for dancing will be featured. All single alumni fr.om. Stanford UniversitY, and USC and their friends are 1nv1ted. Call club president Andrew Hanley at 631-0434 for reservations and d1rec11ons. Chapman featured on TV Chapman College will be featured Saturday in a 30- mmutc "On Cam pus" program over KCET. Channel 28. The Chapman segment will be divided into three pans -"Since Vietnam. the War and Its Aftermath," a C~Jllect1on of an works at Chapman's Guggenheim Gallery; a v1s1t wuh Professor Robert Bassett, director of the Manon Kn oll Fil m and Muha-Image Center and ·:Artist With a Conscience: A Ponra1t of Paul Ro~n." lilmed h1ghhgh1s ofa one-man show by alumnus Mic Bell. Ru Chancller, owner of The Res restaurant ln Newport Beach, prepare. ea• benedict for one of the 80 cutomen wllo putlct- pated ln a apeclal benefit brunch Sanday to ral.e money for the Red Crou' Africa Relief Fund. Althoqh 80 turned oat for the meal•, many othen pa.rch•tted the $26 ticketa and did not attend. Nearly $3,000 wu raltted, Chandler ,Mld, and h.la 20 employee. who worked Sanday did .o for free and e•en donated their tipe. Alao, the firm• that aupplled The Res with the fralt, ea•. dalry producta, meat and cha.mpa&ne for the bnmch charled no fee. ..I jut decided about a montli aao that th.la would be a nice thin& to do," Cliandler Nld ... Bu the reepon.e wu juat more than I coul ha•e espected.'' Scott Barrett Newport Buck Restaarant ma..nager Yolucla Romen Costa Mesa TutUearthu The program will be aired at S p.m. Saturday and will he repeated Sunday at 10 30 a.m. Cbrlstmas tree bum planned The Orange County Fire Department 1s urging residents to bnng their discarded Christmas trees to a site in Irvine for burning following the holidays. Discarded trees 'lhould be taken to the northeast corner of Alton Parkway and East Yale Loop in Irvine lrom Jan. 5 to Jan. 7 when firefighters will bum the trees at 7 p.m. Baker elected medical center board chairman "I haven·t finished m} Chnstmas shopp1ni ~et Last year I shopped an San Diego. In companson costs are higher up here in Or- ange County than San Diego. I think it's based on clientele in the area." "I have nollced many department stores have had many sales this Chnstmas. I trunk they do thts to compete with dis- count stores I really don't do that much Cbnsunas \hoppina." The public 1s invited to watch the bonfire and attend a bnef fire safety talk. Economlst to appear on TV Dr. Jame~ Doll, director of the Chapman College Center for Econonic Research. will appear on "Jam Cooper's Orange County" Jan. 4 at 8:30 p.m. on KOCE. Channel 50. Doll will take pan in a panel d1scuss1on of Orange County's economic outlook. The Chapman center pubhshes the onl y economic forecast for the Orange County area and the ChapmanEconometric Model has won acclaim across the nation. The program wall t:>e repeated Jan. 7 at 10:30 p.m. Arts group change• meet1ng By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of Ille 0.., l'llot I i.fl Irvine City Councilman Dav1d Baker. co-founder of the community group that has worked to establish a hospital in Irvine. has been elected chairman of the board of the Irvine Medical Center. IMC. The non-profit corporation has secured approval to build a $64 malhon 171-bed acute-care hospital near Alton Parkway and Sand Ca- nyon Road. Earlier this year. Bakt'r stepped down from has post as IMC president when he was elected to the council. A vacancy was created when Dr. Arnold 0 . Beckman, foundinJ chair- man of the IMC board, decided to move from the key position. Al a meeting Thursday, Beckman was elected chairman emeritus of the board, and Baker was named board chairman -again, a unpaid ~st. Beckman, a Corona del Mar resident and founder of Beckman Instru- ments. plans to remain an active member of the board, an IMC spokesman said. Bakt'r said he hopes as chairman 10 follow through on the goals he set when he co-founded People for an Irvine Community Hospital with Sharon Ellis and Tim Park<'r. expected in June at the 15-acrt' site donated by the Irvine Co. The hospital will be part of a 320-acre b10- sc1ence complex planned b) the Irvine Co. Susan Abo.rnk Corona del Mar Medical 1alH rep J olul McAllister Midway City City employee Because of the New Year's holiday. Bowers Mu- ~um's Singles for the Ans group will meet a week later than usual. on Jan. The group will h!>ten to Ted Clark of the Pasadena Jet Propulsion Laboratory explain the astronomical hfe of Halley's Comet. Orange ( ounty av1a11on pioneer Eddie Manin, who witnessed the comet when he was 9 years old and hope-; to ~e 1t again in 1986 when he'll be 85, will be the honored guest. Bak.er said he resigned from the volunteer IMC pos111on because he feared he would not have enough lime to d1v1dc among the hospital demands. his work as an au orney, his City Council duties and his fdmal y respons1bi hues. But Baker said that ~1nce then. he hasn't been ablt' to let go of the project he's nurtured over the past five years. He's continued to work for the medical ce nter ('ven without a formal title. "It's in some respects been m) child. something I've struggled for, with a few others. for some time." Baker said. C oncern1ng the ume constraints. he said. "It's been busy. but both the council and the hospital are labors of love." The land donation 1s valut>d at SS mtlhon. and Beckman 1s donaung another SS million to the hospital The facil..c.y 1s backed b) Hoag Mcmcmal Hospital in Newport Beach. But Bal..er ~1d more extens1\e fund·ra1sing efforts "111 be launched 1n earl) I 98S "I spent more lh1s \ear than last \ear But. I don't noucc that thr pnccs are an\ h1ghrr Thi~ )Car I !>pent $500 "Do you knOY. [haven't done one bit of Chnstmas shopping this ~ear So l v.ouldn 't know. But. I'll c;pend about SSOO to S600." Dr. Gary Hanson of Chapman College will give the group information about his 1986 trip to the Galapagos Islands. Call the museum at 972-1900 for more information. Baker said 1985 promises to be even busier in connecuon with the new hospital. Groundbreaking 1s He also said announcements will be made shonl) concernmg formal tics between UC1 and the nev. hospital. DAR to meet In Laguna Woman admits kickback involvement The regular meeting of the Patience Wright Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution will be held Jan. 8 in tht' Capn Room of the Hotel Laguna in Laguna Beach. Dr Wiiham Quon, director of the Laguna Museum of Art, will speak on "Goals for Our Museum." Call 494-3260 or 499-1977 for further information. From staff and wire reports The president of a Newport Beach- based computer firm has pleaded ~uihy to racketeenngand papers filed m court last week indicate elected state officials in Penns:rlvannia "wtll obviously" be among unandacted c<>- conspirators in a continuing 1n- -------vesttgation into a .kickback scheme. Other charges were dropped 1n return for her cooperauon with the in- vest1$3tion. Eilts was one of five people named in an Oct. 22 grand JUI) in dictment alle'-mg "a large-scale organazed ef- fort · to bnbe Pennsylvann1a officials to wm a lucrative contract for CT A. He said latt'r he could not comment further about the names or a motion filed b) a third defendant. Wilham m11h a Hamsburg auome~ and former Repubhcan co-chairman of Dauphin Count} Trlsbl Burson Irvine Retail muager KaU1ryn VLD~nt Ml11lon Viejo StadHt/model Monday, Dec. 24 • 6:30 p.m., Costa Mesa PlunLD1 Comml11lon, City Council Chambers, Ci ty Hall, 77 Fair Drive. The statement was made 1n a document filed by assistant U.S. Attorney James Wt'st JUSt before a change-of-plea hcanng for Judy Ellis. president of Computt'r Technology Associates Inc. of Newport Beach. Ellis. 43. of Nt'wpon Beach. withdrew her innocent plea Fnday and pleaded guilty to a felony count of interstate travel to aid racketeering Another defendant, auorney Alan Stoneman of Orange, had asked the government for the names of unan- dacted c~onsp1rators to aid in preparation for his defense. West. in an answer filed 1n U.S. District Court in Williamsport. Pa .. on Fnday, said he was w1lhng 10 release the names to Stoneman as long as they were not made public mnh's auome~. John Rogers ( ar- roll of Ph1ladelph1a. asked that a fourth person named b> thr grand JUf), John TorQUalO Jr .. or Newport Beach not be pcrmllled to tt"St1f) at m1th's tnal Torquato. named b) thegrand;uf) a~ the ma<Jtcrm1nd behind the a1- tcmplcd hnbef) scheme. has alread~ pleaded guilt~ as pan of a plea agreement and 1~ cooperating "Ith prosecutor\ ·-rm spending a h<'\ I. 111 .1 lot less hecau'i(' r m hrol.l' 1h1" )Car I'll probabl} uni\ <;pend about S 'iO I plan tu makl· a Int nl u 1u l.11·\ .rn d thintt'" "I'd say I'm '>pendmg more I'm bu)ing the same amount of g1fh. bul. I'm 'pending mort mone} Pncc'I arc a httlc higher I plan to spend about SI :!S th1' l hn\tmas " Hookers collect $1 7 'tip' from fast-food customer Afic r buyina a snack from a fast- food restaurant, a 23-year-old Costa Mesa man was robbed aturday night b) two apparent prostitutes who offered to be dessert, police said. Carlos Soto Gonzalez has just oouiht some hamburgers and was ll'a,1ng the Jack-in·the-Box drive- through at 2:4S a.m. wncn two women opened hi!. unlocked pamn- ger side door and offered their favors. When he refused, they grabbed the S 17 -the change from the ham- burger purchase-that Gonzalez had thrown on the scat, police said. · The women ran to a nearby hotel, Cotta Meaa Newport Beacb rer\rnn rugs and Jewelry wonfi AS 1,000 stereo waneported stolen S! 1. no were stolen from a lrome in sometime between 6 p.m. and 7. 30 th l' 600 block of Darrell Street p.m. Sunday from a car parked at wmt·iinw t>ctwcen 2 p.tw: 11nd S:SO Fashion Island. Entry apparently was 11 rn "iaturduy Police said entry pined by smashina the rear pa SCft· ,1pp.m·ntl~ wos pined by forcing ger side wmdow• • • open a locked b th room window. The Cash and a radio, with a total loss of 1tHn1t room rcponedly had been $372. MS reported tolcn from "'n'\Ckcd • • • · Alataro's lntcmatJonal, 2918 E. \ u;arJ dog appartntly scared off Coast H1gbw~y. around l a.m un- thl' :uril.u who hroke into a locked day. Pohce said there wcrt no ~11ns of \3tu1 :imt g.iraae an tht 1700 block of forced entry • • • \ abradnr !>rave but dedined to enter Four Datsun 280 ZX at a car ihr hou'lf where the camnc was dealcnh1p received a cu tom paint o.arkin1 "-loth1n& wa~ reported stolen JOb Saturday around 6:30 p.m. by 10 thl' burglnr)' ~me11mc between 10 someone armed with a can of red ll m I hur\C.lay ~n~ ~ 10 p.m Fnday. ij>rty·paint. Newport Datsun, S 8 1 "0 wol ho:\C5 worth SSSO were Dove St. c'ltimated the dama e to be incd ~tolrn from an unlocked $2,000. rt~1pcr parked et 409 Bay trtcl ~mi·t1mc IX'twccn 4 pm and 10·4'S l "lne I\ m \.itunla~ Police m:'ted t•aht mc.nomt but could not be found by pelK:e-: They wcrt descnbcd as one white, 35 years old, S feet 5 inches tall, 100 pounds Wtlh brownish blonde hair, wearina blue jeans and a white top; and the other white, 25 yea.rs old. S feet 2 inches tall, 90 pounds, with brownish blonde hair. between aturday night and early Monday on suspicion of driving under the annuence or alcohol. •• A A red 11rl's l~s~ bicycle was reponcd stolen car)X Sunday from a home on Hid•l•o. , .. A yellow Chevrolet Nova was reported stolen Saturday afternoon rrom the dnveway of a Lockhaven Dnve bomc.. pollc:e • -• • • Colored C'hnsuna hahtt ~re re- ported stolen unday momma from a home on Sequoia Tree Cude:. pohC'C said. ln a scperatc incident, out 1de hahts and an outdoor outlet vJtre 1tolen early unday from a home on Royce Road. • • • A d11n1l delay electronic dcv1et valued at $300 v.-as reported tolen from a car perk.ed Saturday af\cmoon on Almond. • • • A b1cytlt wu stolen from a home on Sonny Circle. the '1cum mid pohce aturday af\crnoon • • • IBM typewnters were taken lrom a Muirland busine s by an un ~nov.n suspect aturda) morning Laeun• Beach Pohce arttsled three m<'n on sue.pi· caon of posse ing narcotics tor <;ale Arrested Saturday evenang on Brooke; Street v.ert PeterR-B:mch. 4S. Jame'> Scncrholm, 32, and Richard M [k:il. 28 • • • Thco"'ncrofa lad)' purse "alucd at $46 rcponed 1t stokn ·unda\ af\cmoon on South Coast Haghwo-. • • • Police amstl'd Kns Waltt'r Nofl\c. lO, on su p1c1on of possessing lcs\ than an ounce of ma11Juana and possession of paraphernalia. Nofllcc was arrested Sunday afltrnoon on Lc11on and Glcnneyre strttt In n separate incident. Mark i\nthony Delhoyo, 22, was orrc ted nn .. u!lp1- c1on of poucss1n1 le than n ounce of mln.JUlna Otlho)'o wu arrested turday evenina on the I 00 blod. of South oast Ht•hwa)' ' • r-·. woman leeping on a Clt O Dnvc park bench wa ..tnt oii htt wa Sunday momint • • " South Coast H1f,h~a~ ~1denC'C wa buf'l)anted 'unda~ mom1n1 lktv..ttn 1 1 SO and S200 1n c~'>h wac, rc:ponedl)' stolen • • • Gary M1 hatl Patapoff. l4 and Janntan Carol Judy, 33, v..ert am\trd earl) unday on su p1c1on l)I pos- 101 narcotics. The pair v..c~ '"'"Cd shortly at\cr l a. m alona the 900 block of omm1t Drwe • • • Canyon cm On't rt\111rnt , told pohl'.'e Satu1dJ} that .-.oml'llnl' ha~ been rcmm 1ng mail lrom her m:ulbox. opening the lOntent\ and to'lsing them about Fount.aln Valley Breaking a rear hedrl)()m "indov. 10 enter. <;0mconc hurglanl<'d and ransackcd a home O\ er th<' Wt"<' l end on the 17400 blocl of Oal '\treet Tht loS5 included Jewell) v.onh $'K'i() .and \1deocqu1pmcntwonh $700 • • • Someone remo~cd a dining room ~andow SCTttn to burglanzl'd a home unday on tht' Q400 bloc~ of ,._1w1 Circle The los . csumated a1 SI no. included vadro NlUlpmcnl. a gum ball machine and a slot machine ••• Someont' broke into a brown IQ J Honda C'1v1c parked in a l.llrport over the wctkt'nd on the I 7100 blocl of San Matto Street. The lo included ~terco equipment worth $300 and B gra.} <;u~eJ3Ckct wonh $100 • • • A re 1dent of the 16800 block of Backt)'t> Circle rtponed 'undav th.&\ someone stole h1 black 19 I Ford Bronco, whtch ha bct'n parled >n front of has home The lo v..a' tthmattd at St 2,000 a . . . ,. mconc bufllanz:ed a brown Dodgr van over the v.ttl.end on tht 10400 block of later o\ .. cnue. The lo 1ocluded tool 'rliOrth $460 HGDtlnfton Beach . ntc:rina thrnuah a slnhna ~room v..-indo.,., 'IOm«>ne bur· 1lan1td a horn<' \aturda} oo the t 0000 block ot \ allr' Foret° The lo 1nclodc:d Chmtma\ prt n1 wonh St20. • • • \ m n ""ll' am•Mt.I '''"\'•' after- m1on on ,u.,p1uon ol shophfhng at thl· \ponmart \tMc 743.3 Edinger \' c Rt'l O\ a cd v.crl' c;k1 &)o' cs won h S4t-• .. \ IQ, " ~nrd Escort had front and rl·ar tire' <,\a\hed unda} on the 8400 hind.; oflamaru a resident reponed The damag<' wa csumatt'd at S 150 • • • \ man \\JS arrc~tcd unda:r e .. e- m n& on uspacaon of hophfiin& at the l\.man ~on Mainola tJttt at Ci:1rfi-cld A "en~ Recovered ""ert c;h~wonhS.30 • • • o\ rt"Stdent of the 16400 block ofu \ilia reported . unday that someone '\lolt' ht'I dark gold Plvmouth Fuf) from the area ot .. 11onqu1n and oa .. enpon Th<' loss wa estimated at s I , I()() • • • \(Hneonc buf'l}amcd a white I 984 Voll.~wagcn Jetta parked Saturday on thC' ~0400 block of Evef'll11de . The lo" 1ndudt'd stc~ Nlu1pment wonh $100 • • • rt..aknt of the 7700 block of Commodore C1rtlt reported tur· da, t~at his )'ellow t 969 To)'Ota ( O«'lna wll'i tolcn The "'' C\t1m ted at S500 • • • rt\i<knt of the I 300 block of Pattc-non ~poned turd.a)' that somron~ bor&lanttd and ra.nsattcd ht\ home l'he l tnclwkd tv.-o handsuru worth S76S, plu a tool bo• and toob .. 'Orth $640. M Ormnoe eo.t DAILY PILOT/Monday. o.o.tnber 24. 1984 Mine rescuers forced to quit . ORANOEVU,.LE. Utah (AP) - Crews woruna tO seal a coal mane to cxtin.ulsh a relentless fire that killed 27 manel'1 were forced to evacuate when a meter regjstcttd a .. sk~ biah" rcadingo~volatile gas, fuelins fears of an cxplos1on. It may be two or thn:c days before the crews can &O back into the Wilbef'I Mine and resume efforts to seal it, Roben Henrie, spoke man for Emery Mining Corp .• said Sunday. T""enty-s1x men and a woman. working to break a one-day pro- ducuon record •. were trapped an the mine by the blaze that broke out WedneMiay night. By Sunday. two bod1e~ still had not been discovered, but officials said they were presumed dead "The first two, thrct or four days the lire could ha' e been extinJuished much more easily," Henne said Sunda) ''But our effon was to save 11 .. cs -not put out fires." Now, "we don't want to send a bunch of people up there where there's gomg to be threats or prob- lems. We simply want to let the fire get past the seals. secure the seals and then extinguish the fire,·• he said. Seven bodies were fou nd Friday, but officials still hoped some miners had retreated to a safe area. Rescuers fou nd late Saturday that none had. Auempts by some or the traPl'Cd miners toe~ a bamer had failed. It was the state's w9rst coal-mining disaster since 1924. when 172 miners died at a mine an ncarbl Castle Gate. It oJso was the nations worst mine disaster since Moy 1972. when 91 miners died in a fire in an Idaho mine. Jn March 1976, 26 people died in a Kentucky mine. On Sunday, the tire jeopardized crews trying to remove 25 bodies and find the other two, prompting of- ficials to order the mine scaled. Then a buildup of methane gas prompted an evacuation order for the 100 workers an the W1lberg and two adJac.ent manes. all o~rated by Emery for Utah Power & Light Co. The fire. about 1.100 feet 1ns1de the mine's main tunnel. had grown to 2.200 feet in length unday. Henne said. and was "sporadic, difficult and unpredictable." Crews had worked about SIX hours before a firefighter "put on his methane meter and It went ~ky high," Henrie said. Workers wcnl back into the adJa- cent mines late unday 10 monitor the methane levels. said henff Lamar Diamond.The possibility of an ex- plosion in the Wilberg mane re- mained. but the dan$cr was "re- moved" by the evacuation. he said. A'~o Th ick amolle poun from Wilbert m ine wbe.re 27 died . NATION ~ ---~ Weinberger: 'Star Wars' defense isn't negotiable By tbe A11oclated Prtl• WASH INGTON -()cf('llSC Secretary Ca par ~einbe~cr .f'AY the United States will not bargiun away deve.lopme.nt of a Star a.rs .~u,clcar mi~ile defense an exchange for rcdud1ons 1n Soviet nuclear ~capons. ~t s th~ only th1na thaJ ofTers any real hope to •.he world, a~~~e ;n ko~;b ~p,d Wcanbcraer said Sunday on the ABC program IS.. ee , 1 V1 R · kle "There's been no chanee 1n that plan. not at all. He dented a repon t:a~ thl'admnistrauon already as sc.aling b~ck its plan to have the dcfe~sc 5 stem blanket the entire United States, scttl~ng ans~ead for~ d~fense coven!'& Jn1 the nation's more than l ,000 nucl~ar m1ss1lc sites. f:ie msasted that whale such a hmitcd system might be un 1ntenm step. the goal 1s complete coveraae. carter r•P8 Reagan on h011taget1 M CAMI -The Reagan adm1n1 trauun has igno~ t~c ~li&ht. ~f four Americans who were kidnap~d 1n Lebanon. and the .v1cums. rim1hes are helpless w11hout While Hou~ suppon. former President Jimmy ~ner charged .. Apparently. our go' ernment isn't ma long any effon o~ a .sus~ne~ nature." Carter said unday tn cn11c111ng. the CUf'ent . admin1straU<?~ ~ handling of terronst acts "The Reagan adm1~1strat1on s policy bas been quite different from mine, .. he stud. referring to has approach to the 1979 host.age cnsas 10 Iran. "Baslcally, 11's to ignore any Amencan ~ostages that have been taken and to conceal the fact that they are being held. U.S. eyes Soviet Dotll la near Cuba MI AMI -Thl' US. Navy 1s mon11onng ~Sovie~ ~otilla that is st~ming toward Cuba and as expected to part1c1pate tn J01nt military exercises ~1th the Cuban navy. but its presence was no threat. a Navy SJ?O~esman said. Two guided m1!>silc frigates, a replenishm.ent oiler. a gu~ded m1ss1le destroyer and a Tango-claf>s diesel-powered submarine were heading Sunday ~oward Havana to take part 1n ceremonies to commemorate. the .26th anniversary of the commu1mt takeover there, said Lt. Gmdr. Craig Quigley. New York subway slayer hunted Terrorists blamed for rail tunne l blast NEW YORK -Hundreds of extra officers were ordered underground to reassure holiday travelers. while police searched for the gunman who shot fou1 )Oung men on a crov.ded '>ubway car. "We want to m~ke sure ~bat pe~ple do not fear to nde the 'iubways." Deputy Police Chief Richard .D1Jlon saad. The gunman entered a train Saturday and shot the men as panicked passengers scatt ered He helped t1>.0 women to their feet and spoke with a conduclorbefore Oeeing. authontae\ said Train Blast ITALY SAN BENEDETTO VAL DI SA M- BRO. Italy (AP)-In vestigators s~11d toda) they were almost cenain ter- ronsts set otT the blast that wrecked pan ofa hohday express tram head mg through a mountain tunnel. killing at kast 17 people and mJunng more than 100 Rescue workers said the death toll might rise because many of the lnJUred were taken to hospitals an cnt1cal cond1t1on. Authont1es said there were no foreigner~ among the dead, but there were at lea'it I I among the injured. including three Amen· cans. Officials tt•ntatt vely identified them as James Stephens of New York state, Gwen Bond, 24. of C'ahforn1a and Peter Lappin. 22. no home state given. Stephen~ was treated and released but the other two Amencans remained hospatahzed. authont1es e said. The e\ploswn ~unda) night , whale the Milan-bound tram sped through one of Europe's longest ra1lwa> tunnels. was the SC\ enth tn the stretch between Florence and Bologna m the past I 0 years. Firemen and railroad crews pulled the blood-splattered wreck.age of the train from the I 1.6-mile tunnel. As snow fell , bomb squad ex pens exam- ined the bent metaJ and burnt plastic seats for clues. Police officials direcung the 1n- vest1$ll tion told reponers they were convinced the explosive, presumably a time bomb, had gone off from a baggage rack over the passengers an the second-to-last car. The explosion tore off the roof and destroyed two-thirds of the car. Shock waves reverberating through the tun- nel. shattenng windows of the other cars. Many of the tnJured suffered cuts and bruises, rescue officials said Police said the Naples-to-Milan train was packed w11h 700 people heading tu family reunions and thl.' ski slopes of nonhem ftal y. The ewlosaon occurred nearl) four miles inside the tunnel through the Apennines mountain chain C laud10 Nun11aw. a mag1~trate of the state attome)' office of Bologna who was anvesttga11ng the case, said said he was "quite certain .. terrorists were behind the bombing In anonymous calls to newspapers and news agencies. the attack was claimed by several nght-wing ter- rorist group~. including thC' Armed Revolu11ona11 Nuclei. the Black Order and the New Order. Pae'IC Sera. a Rome daily news- paper. reported today that a man w11h a fore ign accent claimed the attack an the name oft he "Islamic Guemllas." "h C'edom for the Islamic people and for the Islamic pnsoners held in I tahan Jails," the ca ller was quoted as !><!\Ing Train der al lment blocks Oregon track• KL.\MAHI fAL . Ore -An esti mated 1,200 lravelcrs expecting to take Amtrak's Coa~t Swrhght took the bus after a Southern Pacific ~reight tram derailed. blocking the onf} nonh-sou'th rail hnk betw~n Washmgton and California. No anJunes were repon ed in Sunday's deraJlment. One Amtrak train wa~ headed north from Oak.land, Calif.. and a southbound train was \topped 1n Eugene. Both earned about 600 passengers. according to An Lloyd, Amtrak director ot corporate commun1cat1ons for the West. CALIFORNIA Four perish ln LA freeway crash LOS ANGELES -Four people were killed early today in the wreck of a car on the northbound Pasadena Freeway at the Marmion Way offramp. H1ghwa~ Patrol Officer Norm Spanur said. The accident, northeast of downtown in Montec1to Heights, did not appear to have involved any other veh icle. c;;p~nur .-.aid. The wreck was rcponed around 3 a.m. 'Average' family could pay more under tax reform plan Gas prices heading below$1 Partygoers save nelghJ?ors from fire SACRAMENTO -Members of a fralematy and their Christmas party guests rescued -.e'eral neighbors from an early-morning blaze that gutted a downtown duple.>. ne.>.t door. killing two elderly residents. The victims an the lire aturday were 1den11fied as John Raymond. 63, and Antoinctt~ Vandev.ark. 71 Ra ymond's r harred body was discovered in the rubble, while Miss Vandewark rnllapsed on the -;1dewalk an front of the building and later died. the rnrnncr'~ ollicc c,aad The cau~e of the blue was not known. W.\SHINGTON (.\Pl -If \OU consider your famil~ a l)pital one w11h moderate income, }OU might expect a tax cut of around 8 perctnt under the Treasury Department's plan for overhauling the federal income tax . Then again. your taxes might go up by perhaps 4 percent. It all depends on how you make your mone} and how )'OU spend at. If the Trea~11ry plan were to become la'-' 11 would bnng a tax reduction averaging 32. 5 percent 10 families w11h incomes under SI 0.(X)()· 12 I percent 10 those between S 15.000 and $20.000 and 7 4 percent for those hct1>.cen S50.000 and $100.000 ~ .. cnt)-eight percen t of all fam1l- 1es would get a tax cut or pa} the \3me as under present la.,... 1>.h1lc :!2 rx·rll'nt would pa) more In gcm·ral tht' more deduu1on'> claimed. tht· '-'Or\e a tJm1h would tare under the t hange I he ti4 pan·n1 1>.ho do nut 11cm11e dcdul'lion\ "trnl<l fare best "In ever)' income da\~ far more families will lx·nefit from the T reasul) Department\ propo'>als than wall lose." Treasury ~ys. Nevertheless. an average famil} with average deductions wuld pa} more because the plan would tay awa} SC\'Cral deduction.:, and ta\ "anou\ clements of income that now arc tax-lrcc Herc. for instance. 1\ how a la1rl) t~ p1cal S30.000-a-:.car famal} of four could end up with a higher tax hill -In 1986. the husband earn\ three-quarter\ of the famil) ·s income and the wife the remainder. the famal} pays home mortgage 1nu~rest of$4.000 a }Car. gives S800 to chant)'' pays S2.200 in state and local prop- ert). ~Its and income taxes. payc; \ '00 interest on a car loan and \400 an unlCln due'i. The daughter's S 1.800 hratc\ arc not covered by 1n\urancc. \lntc t urrl·nt la"' pcrmm dcductton 11! medical e'tpcn~c' that exceed 5 f)t'rttnt of adJu\tcd gro\c, income. nnl\-\ 10() could Oc wnucn uO. fh11\l' 1tl·m11l·d deduction\ tot.ii ~x ooo "iuhtral tang the standard dt•duc- 11nn which an 1986 as expected to bc \ 1 720 on a JOIOt return. leave\ an l'\LC\\ Of $4.280 I Jth personal cxempoon will be \I 11<.10 an 1986 the family get~ four. totdling S4.360. The fam1l} alw get'> thl· <,pec1al deduction for two-earner rnupk., in this case $750 ~uhtrttl l- 1ng ('\CC\'.> 11em11ed deducuum. tht: pcr.,onal excmptmn~ and 1he two- earner deduction lea"'es taxable in- come of S20.6 I 0. 1 he tax on that undercurrent law 1~ $2.465. -Under the Treasury proposal. the famil y would have to pay tax on cena1n employee fringe benefits that now arc tax-exempt. The husband's company pays Sl95 a month for his medical insurance: all above S 170 would be taxable. as would any employer-paid premium for group life insurance. The S200 a -~ear for group hfe msurance and the· taxable medical insurance boost the fam1h'~ S ~0.000 income to $30.500 • The $4.000 mongage interest and the S300 interest on the car would remain full) deductible. But only chantable contnbutions exceeding 2 percent of adjusted gross income could be deducted. meaning S 190 for this famil y. No deduction for state and local taxes would be allowed. A wnteofT for union dues and other miscellaneous dcduc11ons would be permitted only on the pon1on exceed- ing I percent of income. meaning a SQ5 deduc-tion for this family. Allowable deductions tor this fa m- il> would total S4.88S. which must be reduced by the higher. $3,800 stan- dard deduction. Subtracung the re- ma1 nmg S 1,085 and the higher. S2.000-per-person exemptions leaves a ta-<ablc income ofS21.4 I 5. The tax would be S2.642 -SI 77 or 7 2 percent abo"e current la" RUFFELL'$ UPllLSTEIY, llC. f • Tiie Rnt Of YN Litt 19?2 HMIOl M.WO , COSJA ll:SA !>41·1lS6 The Pros · Since 195 7 J" //i UllITT llSllAK£ ('t) ~ Non smoker .,'a" ~ Rates 1~f~ 131-n40 ... 1 Old ..... PGff..lf•d. Newpo'1 ~e. LOS ANGELES (AP) Gasoline prices are dipping below the $ 1 per gallo n mark at many s tatio ns for the first time since last summer, a n oil Indus try analyst sa id . Dan Lundbe rg said S unday that his twice-a-month su rve y of 17 ,500 s tations nationwide fou nd abo ut five pe rcent had prices of under $1 a gallon for regular leaded gasoline at setf-servloe outlets . Self-service s tations a c- count for Just under 75 percent of the nation's retail gasoline sales. ''The do llar prices a re showing up a ll over the country, but the trend seems to be strongest In the Southeast and Southwest." Lundberg said . The survey also s howed that the national average price for aJI g rades of gasollne a t b oth self- a nd full-service stations dropped d uring the week by 1.13 cents to $1 .172 per gallon, the lowest since March 1983, when the price was $1.119, Lundberg said . Wholesale prices also we re down to 81 . 1 cents per gallon before taxes. the lowest they have been since December 1979. Because wholesale prices have been falling faster than pump prices. dealers' profit margins were the b iggest In fi ve years, rea ching 13.55 cents per gallon. The margin was 13.95 cents In Jul)' 1979 d uring the Iranian revo ut~n and has droppeOTo as llttle as 7 .6 7 cents per gallon llnce then. Further declines In pump Body f ound aboar d USS Constellatlon SAN DI EGO -fhe body of a man wearing a Navy-issued dungaree uniform has been found in an elevator trunk aboard the USS Constellation, Navy officials said. The body was found by repair workers shortly before noon . Sunday, said LI. Rob Ramc. public 1nformat1on director for the ship. RaiFJc said the man may have been dead as little as two days or as Jong as thrtt weeks. An autopsy was scheduled at Balboa NavaJ Hospital to determine the cause of death and how long ago the man died. The Navy has begun an mvestigat1on into the death. Raine said LA pollce chlef blamed ln spylng llCIUJdal LOS ANGELES -Police Chief Daryl Gates and his top assistants bear respons1b1hty for impropnet1es of the defunct Public Disorder Intelligence 01\ 1s1on. according 10 a Poltce Commission repon sent to the City Council The commission voted to abolish the PDID in May 1983 because of a scandal involving spying on c1val1ans. 1nclud1neJudges. Police Commission members. poh11c1ans and numerous poh11cal act1v1S1 groups. The city settled a lawsuit alleging illegal pohcc spying fo r SI 8 m1lhon last February. Bulletproof vest saves pollcewoman SANT A MONICA -A policewoman's hfe was saved by the bulletproof' vest she was wearing when two men attacked her and one tried to plunge a knife into her chest. police said today. A manhunt by officers from Santa Monica, Lo~ Angele~ .md Culver Ca t). using a helicopter and police dogs, failed to turn up a sign of th<" attackers early today. Santa Monica Sgt. Richard Tapia said. The policewoman was knocked unconscious. but not before she tired four rounds at her allal'kCr\ during a struggle on a street comer about 11 p.m Sunda\. The officer's identity was not discloM!d. WORLD Bus crash kllls 27 ln Mmco APASEO. Mexico -A crowded bus blew a tire. careened off a highway overpass and plunged into a gorge. k1lhng 27 people and mJuring 43, according ta..pohce. !he bus crashed Sunday near the town of Apaseo, 143 mrl~ of Mexico C11y, about 4:30 a.m when the nght front tare of the bus blew out a.s it passed o~cr a 2~foot ovcrpas~ along the highway, causing the vehicle to go ofT the road an a spin. prtces m•y be In store aa dealers Chlna remlnd• Sovleta of •ob•tacle.' pass a lo ng lower wholesale costs. PEKJ NG -China has not forgotten past Soviet assistance but insists that ~-:::=;::;;:::=:~i:::~~~~;:::;:;::::::-r three m:uor obstacle\ be rtmovcd before normal relations arc restored, visitina 1 llLES• HGILEIT Soviet DcpuJy Premier fvan V. Arkh1pov was told today. Senior economist 1 Chen Yun, 79, one of ~ix st&nding com mittee members of the Chinese • Complete Carpet Repa11 & Rtttretchin& Communist Pany Poli tburo, greeted Arkhipov as an old friend after an • f10011n& and Sub floor Repair absence of 25 years. The "9bstacles" often r~ite'rylted by Peking are Soviet nNlfF.lt.~ .......... , ... .,... .... 141-1131 lie 31~700 troops massed along the \h1ncsc border. the Sovuet military intervention in Afghanistan, and Mosrow's be kina for the Vietnamese occupat1on of .. ~. . "' , • ___ _... _____ ;::=:=:=:=:=~:=::::=:=:=:=:=:=.=.,--J Mllllon• vottng In Indla '• ei,ctton r.,._~., •l•d o•nn~.r__ NEW ~El.H I -Malhons of Indians VC?ted tO<l~y 1n the first phue ofa 5~ •-•l-c 8•• 1 •i &' 1cneral el t1on expected to JI Ve Pnme M1nisttr~iijtV Gandhi a mandate to S ,. • I'~ as pursue the socialist and non;ahancd policies of bis uwsinated mother. At tht ~nee..... U• 7 1 end ofa relatively peaceful campaign in which the govcroi"I Congress Pan> r $tressed the need to uphold the herit14t of the late Indira Gandhi k -.Jh Prime Rib or Fresh Fish Co~t~ DlnMr wtth cholc~ of soup or ulMJ IJltd d~~rt -4 to 6 PM l llp I W ... I 801 E. 8Al.80A 673-7726 Gandhi sttmcd headed for a landslide victory. • Jllu1oaarlt!9 .eateaced In Greece A Ti t N -Three Prate tanl ml.!s1ona.ncs-an American, a Bnton and a vreek -were sentenced to )'It rears an J&il for proselytizing. ~use, they i.a1d. they hod befncndcd a lonely Grttk tcen-aaer and talked •b®t their faith Don tcphen . 39, o f Lo Anaeles and Alan Williams, SI, a Bn tish and N~ Zealand citizen, both employees of Lhe 1n1crdenominational orpnJz.alJon "Youth with a M1 saon," appealed the sentence is ucd und.ly and wn-c frctd pcndinJ o h1~CT ooun hcarina. Con•tantine Makris. 4S, piuidcnt of the Hellenic Mi 1onary Union. also wa!I rcka~ pendina the a~l hcarina. Orano-Coest DAILY PILOT /Monday, December 2 .. , 11HM Al "Thatcher 'bends' on space defense British leader backs missile research-. gains Reagan· s pledge on Soviet talks WA HJNGTON (AP) -Presi- dent Reagan, in talks wuh Bnt1 h Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher m~dc so!"e headway in his quest fo; alhed unity-but he did not pin her unquahfied approval of his con- troversial .. star wan" program The British leader endo~d the research phase of the proposed space defense system, while serving notice on Moscow that trying to divide the two countnes would be "a hopele1S m1ss1on." And yet, Thatcher emerged from h~r meeting with Reagan Saturday with his personal pledge in a four- po~nt agreement not to deploy futur- 1st1c m1ss1les without U.S.-SOviet negot1attons. Otherwise. the prime minister said, two treaties would be undercut The first. in 1967, banned n~clear weapons In outer space. The ~cond, m 1972. hm1tcd U .S and Soviet m i tic defenses. h 1s based on the theory -now under challcn1cw1thin the Reapnadm1n11-- 1rat1on -truu a weak defcnK helps deter nuclear war In a tactful gesture, Thatcher said af\er tht 31h-hour Camp David session Saturday that she was cert.am the president would not want to break an agreement even though "it 1s riaht to ao ahead wlth the research." The United talcs and the Soviet Union plan to talk about new arms neaotlations next month m Geneva, ., .......... and the admanutratton has sa.ld Jt ts . wtlhna to dlscuu the w w plan. known formally as the t11tqic defense 1n1ti1tive. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, appearina Sunday on A ·TV's .. This Weck With David Bnnldey," wd the star wars plan woul~ ~ot be traded away in the ncJOlLlhOn . He noted the president .. has said he will not g,vc up the stratqic defense initiative or the opportunity to de- velop 1t. ... It is the only lhina th•t offers any rca.J hope to the wotld. We Wlll certainly d1scuss it." Thatcher boosted th.c nuclear strategy that has 1uided the NA TO alliance since the 1960s, and is now beina questioned by the adminis- tration. "The fact is, we've had peace in Europe for. next year, 40 years," she said. The doctnne operates on the as- sumption that if the Ynited States and the Soviet Union. are able to devastate each other Wlth nuclear weapons, bolh would hesitate to strike the first blow. Star wan is being examined as a possible alternative to the policy of deterring Soviet agrcss1on through "mutual terror." • Weinberger has called the two- decadestrategy simplistic and flawed. Last week. be said relying ex- clusively on ofTensivo-missiles and bombers to respond to a nuclear attack "condem ns us to a future in which our safety is based only on the threat of avenging aggression.·· we tem Europe than an Amenca protected by an anti•mt ile haeld miJbt be less mtliocd to defend the al hes. The S26 billion star wars proaram tttks to spur l'f'seatth on laSC'rs and other futunsuc technolOI)'. The proararn grows out of the jud,ment that the Soviets have achieved llte lttel'\lth to wruk havoc on Amcncan m1 11c sllo a.nd have developed a sopb1su ted mi ile defense ofthc1r own. The senior U . officaaJ, who de- manded anonymity, said the Sov1eu h.avc 10,000 defensive m1udti and the exclusive capabahty to knock out satellites. "It's prudent to look at other altemat1vcs." he said. 1n defcncUna the star wan pr<>if3m. .. That much Thatcher was willing to concede. ··1 told Presiden1 Reagan of my firm conv1c\1on that the strat~c defense initJauve hould go n&ht ahead," she said. But. she stressed. "SDI-related deployment would. in view of treaty obhptaons. have to be a mailer for negotiations." ReaP-n ap-ccd. The 1972 Antt-BaJhs11c M1ss1le Treaty comes up for review 1n 1987. Many arms contro l analysis consider 1t the most important of all U.S.- Soviel nuclear accords. In ume. Thatcher's 19-hour visll may be recalled as pi votal in cxteod- ing its hfe. Reacan ta1b to reporten after Thatcher meett.na. Maraaret Thatcher. journaliata party aboard plane after meetlna with Prealdent Reagan. A senior U.S. official, briefing reporters after Thatcher left for home, acknowledged deterrence ''obviously has worked." But with Soviet power growing, he said, research into an antt-missile defense is "prudent and necessary." Behind the debate 1s concern 1n Northwest 'enjoys ' a white Christmas . By Tbc Auoclatcd Prcu Arctic air sent temperatures plung- ing from the Plains to the Great Lakes today as it headed east. and a weakening storm lefl snow piled nearly two feet deep in parts of the West. Northern winds blew cold arctic air mto the Plains. upper M1ssiss1pp1 Valley and upper Great Lakes. pushrng temperatures to below zero from Montana and northern Wyom- ing through much of Minnesota to upper Michigan. Wand chill factors were estimated as low as 60 degrees below zero in North Dakota today. A band of snow reached from Montana to M1ch1gan. As much as five inches fell early today in north- western W yoming. and travelers· warnings were postl'd for the snow area. Three people died in the crash of a light plane Sunday at Billings. Mont., as a winter storm barreled through the state, piling up nearly two feet o(snow in some areas. Officials wouldn't speculate whether the weather caused the crash, a few miles northwest of the city's airport shortly after takeoff in a snowstorm. Bu t officials said visib1h- l) was restricted At Broadus. 1n southeastern Mon- tana. 21 inches of snow was on the ground Sunday evening. Winds gusting up to 60 mph htt Wyoming and Colorado Sunda) Winds at Boulder. Colo., blew shmgles and solar panels off roofs, snapped tree hmbs and knocked doY.n fences. No inJunes W\!re re- ported. Mild weather prevailed across the south,entral and southeastern !.eC- tions ofthe natton, with temperaturt's in the 50s to 60s. Dense fog was widespread. and prompted travelers' adv1sones in the California valleys. In the Canbbean, tropical storm Lili was weakening, with winds of only 50 mph. Lili was expected to conunue to weaken today Today's forecast called for snow from the Great Lakes across northern New England and snow showers in the northern Rockies, northeast Montana and central Appalachians. Scattered rain was predicted from southwest Texas across the central Gulf states and southern Ap- palachians. Fair skies were predicted for the G reat Basin, central Rockies. North Dakota and nonhem Minnesota. H 1gh lemperatures today were fore- cast to remain below zero over much of North Dakota and Minnesota; the teens over the remainder of the M1ss1ss1pp1 Valley and upper M1ch- 1gan. 20s to 30s across the Rockies and central Plains to northern New England; 60s to 70s from the southern Paet fie coast across the dcsen South- west·to the southern Atlantic coast. Temperatures around the nation at 2 a.m. ranged from 21 dcgrccs below zero at lnternatlonal Falls, Minn .. \o 74 at Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Other reports: -East: Atlanta 46 cloudy; Boston 35 fair; Buffalo 41 cloudy; Charleston. S.C., 49 partly cloudy; Cincinnati 38 fair: Cleveland 35 fair: Detroit 34 cloudy: M1am1 69 partly cloudy; New York 36 fair, Philadel- phia 29 fair: Pittsburgh 33 fair. Portland 28 fair: Washington 34 fair. -Central: Bismarck 8 below zero fair: Chicago 30 hazy, Dalla~Fon Worth 58 panly cloudy: Denver 33 fair; Des Moines 17 cloudy: In- dianapolis 30 faJr; Kansas City 29 foggy; Nashville 40 partly cloudy: New Orleans 64 fogg). t. Louis 41 partly cloudy. World pauses for yule observance Llng-Llng not ao cuddly a e ebe looks. By Tbc Au oclatcd Pre11 Bntain'sstrikingcoal miners took a break from p1cke1ing today for the first time since they walked out last March and colored lights were hung o n trees in Korea'sdemilitamed zone as people around the world celebrated the coming of Christmas. Pope John Paul II visited hospital patients in Rome, four Bntish pris- oners in Libya gathered for a Christmas service, busloads ofChns- tian pilgrims poured into Bethlehem. and four Polish Solidarity activists began a four-day fast to protest the arrest of a colleaJue. For the first tame since the March 12 walkout, pickets at Britain's coal mines appeared to have left their posts.The state-run Na11onal Coal Board closed down its operations Friday night for a traditional I I-day vacation, leaving only maintenance 'itafTon duty .. The 60,000 miners who have worked 1n defiance of their union were cnjoy1ni holiday bonus pay Christmas will be leaner for the 120,000 stnkers without wages or strike pay for months. but funds and gifts for them have been raised by sympathizers in Britain and abroad Bethlehem. the town where Jesus was born. was decked for Chnstmas Eve with gaily colored streamers and lights that contrasted sharply with the olive-drab uniforms of lsraeh troops in charge ofsecunty. On roof\ops surrounding Manger Square, site of the Church of the Nat1v1ty. soldiers earned nfles and trained binoculars on the crowds below. Others, with explosive detec- tors. checked all those entering the square. A woman soldier passed a detector over the body of a Palestinian girl e ntering the square to part1c1pate in a scout procession. The 8-year-old girl. Minam Salah. laughed and said. "It tickled." Israel, which captured Bethlehem and the rest of the formerly Jordanian West Bank in the 1967 Mideast war. maintains ught secunt) 1n the town, fi ve miles south of Jerusalem. Bethlehem's population is mostly Chnst1an. but Moslcms li ve there too and dirC{:tly opposite the Church of the Nauv1t} stands a mosque. Christmas comet s e t ,, to light world 's sky ' LOS ANGELES (AP) -What scientists have dub~d "the year of the comets" gets a dramatic Christmas Day scndofTwhen the first man-made comet 1s created out of chemicals spewed from a West Ger- ~ man satellite. The artificial comet should be visible in the southern or southeastern sky from the Midwest to Hawaii and Tahiti, and from south- western Canada and most ofnonhcrn ' Mexico west of a line from Hudson's Bay to near Chicago throuah M61co City. It hould be visible ro the naked eye for up to I 0 minute • to people usina 7xSO binoculars for about 20 minutes and to astronome r u 1n1 telescopes J fot an hour ot more. However, viewers arc cauttoncd · not to expect too much. "lfyoucxpcct 1h1s to exceed Fourth of July firework • you'll be disap- pointed," said pby 1cist Moms Pon- arauofLosAlamo National Labora- tory, an New Mexico. Everybody who wants to sec 11 ~ lhould"tet well away from any city 'I l!Jhts and hould by all m.rani take a pair of binocula~" said Gerhard : Hacrtndel, a coordinator of the 1, ptOJ t and da~tor of the.' M111: , j Planck Institute for E"<lraterrcstnal Physics in West Germany. A real comet consists of a fro7en ball of dust and gas trailing a tail of loose a1oms and particles. The man- madc version 1s composed of a cloud of ban um - a metallic clement used in a nother form to make the digestive tract v1s1ble under X-ra~. The sun will enef'llZc the barium atoms ond make them radiate colored light. The chemicals will be launched at 4: 18 a.m., when the West German satclhte is 70.160 mile above the Paci~Ocean. T he comet is pan of o $78 m1lhon1. U .. -Brittsh-West Gcnnan study or how the solar wind interacts w1th Earth's mll&"etac field. The solar wind 1s the hot, elcctncaJly charged p or "pla~ma" lhal petds .-.vay from &he un at nearly I million mph. Its 1ntcract1on With the Eanh's maanettC field creates the Northern Lt&hts. icntim hope the study will provide 1nsi&ht into how space pla mas colhac with dust nd pscs to help form comets, planets and st&tS. how pla ma mtaht be contained to ha me f u ion cnclJY; how solar wind, dt rupt satellite and Eanh communicattons and PC>"-Cr hncs; and how they influence Earth's wcathrr Bethlehem was expecting up to 30.000 pilgrims for the holidays. Groups of v1s1tors from the Unned States. Europe and Asia mingled 1n the square with Bethlehem residents wearing Arab headdress and black- clad nuns amving for morning pra)ers. on them to la ve Chnstmas in "its authentic spirit." The four Bntons have been held in Libya for the past seven months. and only in the past month have two of them been charged. Bnt1sh reporters quoted Libyan leader Col. Moammar Khadafy as saying Saturday that the four could be exchanged for five Libyans held in Britain on charges of carrying out a bombing campaign aJ1.31nst Khadafy's opponents. Panda mauls keeper atWashington'szoo In Rome Sunday, the pontiff made his traditional visit to a hospital to pray for the sick. "I came here mostly for you, you who are 111:· John Paul. spealong in llalian. told a group of patients at St. Peter's Hospital. "You feel nostalgia for your homes and yet must patiently remain in hospital. even dunng fest1v1t1es." Earlier in the day, the pope wished a crowd of about 15,000 m St. Peter's Square a merry Christmas, and called Chine.e flre drill Watched by Libyan guards. the pnsoners and several reporters sang "O Come All Ye Faithful" at a service conducted by an t'nvoy of the Archbishop of Canterbury. the Most Rev. Robert Runcie. Film of the service was shown on Bnt1sh Broadcastmg Co programs. ' W o\SHINGTON C .\Pl -Ling- L1ng. a 245-pound giant panda "hose cuddly appearance belles an ag- gressive streak. 1s 1n a pnvate cage after mauling one of her ._eepers at the National Zoo. Zoo spokesman Dr Roben Hoage said Edwin R. Jacobs. 52, the handler. was admitted to George Washington Un1vt'rs1l) Hospital unda} v.1th lacerations and puncture Y..Ound m his back and le~s. The hosp11al descnbed his cond1t1on as good. Hoage. who said the anc1dcnt 1s A ClalJMM f\remaD na.u b9ck to Illa nctne u water pall• from a hole ln a ripped boee. LeU.lDC ho.ee and otlla problema taampered dforta to pat out. nre ln • ....u library ln tbe U.8 . Emb&•J compoaod Sanday. There were no ln)Qrlea. under in' c-.11ga11on. guessed that thC' lact'rations Y..ert' caused b} sw1~ from Ling-Lmg's claws and the punc- ture wounds wcrc anf11cted by bit~ frnm tht' anima l L 1ng· Lang v.as in her pubhc )a rd or in a chute l·onncctang her indoor and llutdoor l Jgc\ at I pm when the mauling. tOC.lk plale. at·cordmg to HoJgc \nother ._cepc:r helped the in1ured man escape, but. "we don't reall) ._no"\\ h~ this happened and wt' can't ti nd out until we tal._ H1 \.tr Jacobs." Hoa~l' said M1chal'I (1oldfean . .i v.1tness. said he was watching the panda from an l> .. l'Tht'ad halco"' v. hen he.-saw the 1.i-,car-old animal ralc tu a gall' rnnnectintt thl' 'ard dnd the panda house .. , heard .1 Ill! ,11 d am11r ul rnc.-tal and thl'O I ht•ard J "'rc.-am ul terror · o;a1d t1old kin adding he lOuld nOt \C'C' either Jacob<, or L mg-l ing. ~llc.-r the ::lltad. L1ng-L1ng ap- pcam.1 tu bl.' to talh normal. but she "a~ put 1n a pnvatC' (age. and the panda hou~ -the most popular attra1.:l1on at the 100 -was do~d temporanh to the publ1t as a prl"Cau- t1on. Hoagt' said Ling-Ling and her male countcr- pan, Hsmt-tl 1 were. &lf\s to the l1nned . I.ates b) the Pcoplc·s Re- pubhcof< h1na 1n I Q72 af\C"r rt'lat1on lxt"-ecn the t\\o countnl"S "-&rmt'd t'nough to C"nd more than two decades ofho\tiht) D t"'if'llC' the.' panda'i' 1.:ute apl)Car- anl'r the' art' "fa 1rl} aagrcssivc l n-atun-.. 'i31d Hoag<'. adding that tht' female.-" morc aggrc\~IVt' than the ma IC' "The) t'at a lot ofcoan<"·'e&ellt1on and havt pov.crful J:.tW\, .. he said .. Our ~eepcr. ha,·c lot of ~pc-ct for them · -\ \coar • I •ni·I ina tnt the hand of a 't'leonan n 1n a fri 1nodent while ~~ "' beinJ tmatcd for a ~nou K1 malfunction. H c;,a1d. .\ncsthct1c belna IJ"en to the animal ap~~ntl) had no t )t"t taken hoJJ -.l\en t 1 na.n -" {'I ~ has hand O"tr the arumal'i taC't .• C'COrd1n1 to H 1c. l 1na-L ins hu been the l"Cntcr of national aucntion in the roo· effortt to bfftd hc:J, r un ull). T•o till mcu t t ilnd one an JW\C &98~ were lb appart'nt '1Cttmsof10t llonsc:arritd 1n l 1n1·l.1na·~ bl 'trcam. 7...oo of-li\'1al~ arc lt pt Jhc •ilt make anothn' autmt>t at mothcrh in 19 s I I SaDta does exist as certainly as love, devotion do Jn J 897, a little girl named Vif8inia O'Hanlon wrote to the New York Sun to inquire abour Sant.a Claus. Assist.ant Editor Francis P. Church answered her Jetter by writi~ this inspired assurance. "Yes, VirgjJJia, there is a Sant.a Claus. • It is our pleasure to share his timeless message with you today. Dear f.ditor: Jam eight years old. Some of my little friends say there is no Santa Claus. Papa says, if you see it in the Sun. it's so. Please tell me the truth. Is -there a Santa Oaus? Virginia O'Hanlon Virginia, your little fri ends are wrong. They have been affected by the skepticism ofa skeptical age. They do not beHeve except what they see. They think that ootbinf can be which is not comprehensible by their little minds. Al minds, Virginia, whether they be men's or children ·s. are little. In this great universe of ours, man is a mere insect, an ant, in his intellect, as compared with the boundless world about him, as measured by the intemgence capable of grasping the whole of truth and knowledge. Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus. He exists as cenainly as love and generosity and devotion exist and you know that they abound and give your life its highest beauty and joy. Alas! How dreary would be the world if there were no Santa Claus! It wouJd be as dreary as if there were no Virginias. There would be no childlike faith then, no poetry, no romance to make tolerable this existence. We should have no enjoyment except in sense and sight. The external light with which childhood fills the external world would be extinguished. Not believe in Santa Claus! You might as well not believe in fairies! You might get your paper to hire men to watch in all th.e chimneys on Christmas Eve to catch Santa Oaus, but even 1f they did not see Santa Claus coming down, what would that prove? Nobody sees Santa Claus, but that is no sign there is no Santa Claus. The most real things in the w~rld are those that neither children nor men can see. Did you ever see fairies dancing on the lawn? Of course not. But that's no proof they are not there. Nobody can conceive or imagine all the wonders there are unseen and unseeable in the world. You tear apart the baby's rattle and see what makes the noise, but there is a veil coverin~ the unseen world which not the strongest man, nor even the united strength of aJl the strongest men that ever lived, could tear apart. Only faith. fancy, poetry. love, romance can push aside that cunain and view and picture the supernatural beauty and glory beyond. Ah, Virginia, in all this world there 1s nothing else real and abiding. -No Santa Claus! Thank God! He li ves, and he lives forever. .... A thousand years from now, Virginia, nay, 10 times 10,000 years fr om now, he will continue to make glad the heart of childhood. LB has lost spiritualism ln Christmas pallet choice To the Editor Re· Chnstmas Pallets I maintain a residence an Laguna for many reasons. Number one. perhaps. 1s to escape from the norm of Orange County While typical Orange County pnont1zes commerc1altsm dollar values and maienal goods. Laguna Beach has offered realism. a quality of ltfe. and an acknowledg- ment ot spmtual1sm. For ycan Laguna Beach has ma1nta1ncd " commitment to a preserved creation of an1s1tc talent and sp1ntual en- vironments So why was th1scomm1t· ment compromised when choosing this year's Ch.nstmas pallets? This year's choices an pallets rep- resent a mate!:_i_allst1c. typical Oranlle Count) version of Chnstmas - Santa Claus. commercial an, and foolishness. The concept of giving for what was given has been lost. Whale strolling down Coast Highway, I feel like I'm competing in South Coast Plaza. City of Laguna Beach. ha \C )Our values changed with impending de· velopmcnt or with the pleasing of the norm., Did you think abo ut and consider your c111zens who 'alue the spmtuahsm of the city-let alone the meaning of the holiday -when choosing our pallets? C'hmtmas rep- resents the binh of Chnst. SUSAN LINDQUIST Laguna Beach If JW A 's 4th busiest, which three beat it? Q. Says here that John Wayne Airport IS the founh busiest an the nation. Where are the first three? A. Ctucago. Long Beach and Atlan- ta. lnfenO_r.\ty complex Low ~If esteem. Poor ~rsonal image. What- ever you call 1t, it's not the oriauml brainstorm of the psychology p1on- oen, dearly. In Pakistan. an elderly KAlash tnbesman, who didn•t know ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat from f-reud. recently told a coc- rcspondenl. "If you ..tell somebody often enough he· s 1 nf erior, the belief as carved into his brain. a~ the carpenter carve5 on wood " Four out of five left·handed chal· drcn :trc horn to nght-handed. p:ircnts. L.M. Boyd Is • 11•dlc•ttd col•m11l1t. H. L. Schw1tt& Ill I it "'t•l'I! Frank Zlnl V• 9 "" '~-. ,,.,111 .... ,.. •••• ))() ""'"'' ,.., ., t;061a ...... A•lt"-(Cit<• ~-· t !).)• I ec.ta Metll CA 976.l't Tom Teft ly fdot°' ... "Nobod sees Santa Glau!>. but that Is no sign there I no Santa Claus. The moyt real thin~ In the world are those that neither children nor mencan ee. MASS GRAVE P. .. TO ME nus HOLE LOOKS LIKE A GOLD MINE ... !,. Christmas memories keep . spirit alive through years ~· Well, guys, it'll be back to normal soon. If your house is anything like ours, you'll be pretty happy when it is back to nonnal. I usually get all wrapped up m Chnstmas. I'm sure that there's some Gypsy blood in me somewhere. because I love bright colors and things that glitter. Christmas gjves me the perfect excuse to surround myself with colored lights and tinsel. I also pra:r a lot around Christmas, not necessanl) because I'm devoutly rehg1ous, but because that's when I find myself hanging over the edie of myroofwith I IOvollsofelectric1tyin m> hand. Christmas has changed a lot since I w~ a kid. I was born an Washington, D.C'. DecCec (as it's afTcctaonately known to the natives) 1s not necess- arily the frigid nonh. As a matter of fact. it's on a latitude that corrclat.es somewhat to Sacramento. but ll does sn-0w there. Ask anybody from tht" cast or the nonh. and they'll become all bleary eyed and tell you that there's nothing qu11c i;.o magical as a white < hn5tmas. I remember. as a child satung v. nh m) chin on a wandov. sill. watching great. fluffy puffs of snow fall from the sk> and change the scene from d1n:r grays and browns to a perfect, pnstine white. Occasionall y I'd touch my forehead to the window glass. as 1f to reassure m yself that it was nice and warm where I was. and very cold outside. Although I'd sat very quietl y and watch, enthralled wi th the trans· formation that was taking place outside, there was a very strong undercurrent of excitement inside. fomorrow would bnng man~ Ihm~' The mad search through the garage for the sled that my sister and I shared. Somehow. that sled didn't seem very 1mponant when we had put it away la!lt ~pring. Now. 1t was number one on our list of praontae~. B1LL HARVEY Then came the excursion through our rather hilly neighborhood, in search- of the very best places to use that sled. In our neighborhood. the kids weren't above hauling bucket after bucket of water to the best sledding !>ile\ 4n order to manufacture a frozen track that was guaranteed to scare the pants off any novice. After the th ing was propcrl) froten. dares and double dares and even the occasional triple dare were passed about until whoever happened to be the most foolhardy of us that parucu- lar day finally belly-Oopped onto his sled and flew do"n lhc hall. If he survi ved (he always did). then: wa\ a mad scramble to c;ee wh o would be second Snow JUSt before < hnstma\ was espcc1all> welrome The en- trepreneurs among us would &rah a o;hovel and go about cnnch1ng ourselves by sho"eltng the snow off neighborhood sidewalks. The resul- tant nches were hoarded and counted for a while. but almost mvanably went for Chnstmas pr:esenls for family members and fncnds. On the other hand, a C'hnstma'> without snow was very possible. and could be the most painful, aggravat· ing, frustratini. expenence a per on could endure, 1flhat person happened 10 get a brand new sled from Santa. I'm absolutely positive that. the day after a snowless Christmas. the hncs to Heaven were clogged with prayers for snow. From the kids. that is. The adults were almost perverse tn their non-appreciation of a good, deep snowfall. Chmtmas was a time for family. and especially friends. and anonymous gifts to the needy. I lived with m) grandfather and grand- mother as a child. My grandfather was a machinist, and made enough mone) to keep us together, but there was very llttle surplus. Still, when Christmas Eve arrived. I remember him pulling canned goods and <?ther food. a!t well as perhaps a pair of gloves and a woolen muffierand a few mexpens1ve toys, into a cardboard box and walking quietly out the door. If, when he returned empty-handed. I were curious enough to ask where he'd been. he'd say something about going out<i1de "to look at the sky ... I'd mark that one down as one of the man:,, unknowable 1d1osyncrasies of adults and get back to attempting to learn. perhaps through osmosis. what the packages under the tree con- tamcd. (hmtmas has chanied. The hype and the puffery and the hard seltbegin at Halloween now. Huge corpor- ations spend millions of dollars in an attempt to make their particular toy 1rres1s1tble to your child . Sometimes, v.ith all of the smoke ~recns and commcrual1sm that Christmas hao; hecome. tt's pretty hard to find the Sp1nt of Christmas. ll'c; stall there. though. You can see it in the eyes of nearly any 4-ycar-old. You can see ll in the face of the lad) m the depanment store. companng two nearly identical shins, trying to pick the one that's cxac:tl y right for someone that she loves. You can see it an the traffic cop who pulls you over fur ~me minor infraction. then decides to let you off with a warning. It's dcfinuely sull there. All you have to do as look. Merry Christmas. Happy Hanuk· kah. and a Joyous New Year. Co/umaist Bill Harvey lives ID Huatlagtoa Beacb. Rescue agency responds in Ethiopia, around globe WASHINGTON -It's not a Kong. lentral America and l:urope, pretty Chnstmas picture: thousands as well as the resettlement centers an of starving Eth1op1ans plodding mile this country. after mile. day after day, 1n 120-But then the agenda reachec; degree heat across the sun-parched Eth1op1a, and the rcpons are all the plains, trying desperately to make at same: It is a crisis of unimagmablc LO .a r(.fugee camp before they die o( woportions. starvation and exhaustion. Man y -The lRC has set up food distnbu· too many -dte even after they have tion and medical centers at six camps found help an the t·amps, their bodies an the Sudan, JUSt across l)lc Eth10- too ravaged to re!tpond to food and p1an border. Cherne said the IRC' medical care. chose to locate its relief outlets in the The horror ofEth1op1a was news to Sudan to avoid poltt1cally motivated a shocked American public, which io.terfCrence by the Marxist govern· was fil'$t made aware of the extent of ment ofEth1of1a. The committee can the disaster by a report on NBC-TV. be ~ure that al its food and med1c1ncs But to the volun,tecrs of the reafh v1 ct1ms of the famine, and art' lntetnattonal Rescue C'omm1tt~. not waylaid by corrupt officials or Eth1op1a's tragedy has been cause for withheld b«.ausc of political per· concern si nce 1980. The fRC was sua~aon. conceived 5 I years aao by Alben The r~fuiee ha"-c hcen amvmJ at Ein~tean to aid n:fu1cc~ from Na.ti the rate of 500 eac!Pday -and th1 1s Germany. onl~ a foreUl&te of worc;e to come The My ~50CllLC DaJr ~I\ Atta attend-Etheopmt ~nl e llm&ICS U11tt ed the IRCs annual IJlCCUn&Jn the ~6 million to 7,mallton people arc in New York ('1ty home ofo volunteer danger. A million of those in direct recently. Leo C heme. the commit· dime are le s than 4 years old: e1~ht tee's cbamnan for the la5t 3S ya~. out of every 10 who die of starvation had some JOO<h news 10 report. or related dLSCascs arc children. Adm1n1strat1ve ~osts s11ll tJke onb' ~ AJthouah medical care is as crucial cents of every dollar contributed. The as food, there is only one doctor for IRC remain? what n set out to be: a every 9.000 rcfuacc . The IRC ha ha&}lly mobile, non-sectar111n rcltef appealed for doctors who will volun- a1ency spccial111na 1n what Cherne teer to work in 1be tcmhlc he,3l and call' ••try1na to rcprd people as pnm1tJvc condition of the rcfu cc human." camps. The commmee has rccnutw ('heme t~ able to report \uccc,~ a do1cn volunteeR for medical tettm'> w11h the IRC rcltcf 5erv1ces 10 this month. but mort art needed. Thajland(forCambod1a,Laottan1nd At the mectina an New Yor~. VIC'1nam~ rcfu.sces), Pak1 lan (for Cherne )'tcldcd(1hc Ooor to a Iona· Afaha!' rcfu e\). l..cbanon. Hong umc board member, the Norwc 1an , JACK AIDEISOll actress Lav Ullmann. Tears welled up 1n her eyes arc as real as the refugees she has seen and helped on the Afncan desert. Readers who would hke to share the holiday ~pirit with the world's refugees can send donatidns to the IRC at 386 Parle Ave. South, New York, NY, 10016. STRICTLY PERSONAL: J just received a letter from Amnesty lnter- nataonal's communications director. Mary Daly. She was upset at my rt<'cnt report that 1hc State Dep&rt- mcnt's human riahts bureau had critici7.cd 1hc Nobel rri1e-winning orpnir.ation for devotina more space to the U judieiaJ system. than to Cube or Nonb Korea in it latest tepon on individual hbenacs. "The \u~estion that Amnesty lntematlonal s 1984 annual rcpOrt 1s unfair 10 the United tatc and panfoJ to Cuba 1 silly." she wrote ... One would hope that people 1n the State l'.Xpanmcnt human nahts buruu would rcad the report and not simply count the page . J•r* AMel'Nll & 1 ,yMJcalftl t"Ol1m•l11 • ' FRANCIS P. CHURCH New York Sun R1cwD CoHEI Lawyers exploit · injured in India U.S. attorneys aim for 30 percent from victims of gas leak WASHINGTON-You bavesccn the scene in "Gandhi." if not some other motjon picture: The sun is finally setting over the British Raj. The Oag of EnJland is coming down and that of India (or Burma or Kenya or most any other Third World country) is going up. There arc cheers. There are tears. The camera pans and then pauses on a face. It's Melvin Belli. Melvin Belli, the negligence law- yer'> Of course, he's in our picture because he has come to represent the Third World victims of First World technol~y. In the instant case, as the lawyers hke to say, it is the victims of the Union Carbide disaster in India. God knows precisely how many people died, how many were injured, blinded or burned. God may still bt totahng things up, but already the lawyers have filed their claims. They arc seekj ng a mere $20 billion. Belli and other lawyers are re· ponedly already on the setne. thrust- ing consent fo rms written in both English and Hindi at the injure-0 and the families of the dead. This is ambulance chasing on a global scale, a new type of colonialism. If only the Bmish had settled for a third of the profits. the sun might never have set on their empire. America has loosed its lawyers on the world and there wall be no hamlet, no villaJe. no shepherd high in any mountatn, that wilt be safe from its process scrversl me of the lawyers even talk lefiie j on. They arc out to battle the evil inational corpor- ations like, I am e, Union Carbide, for transferring -paying jobs out of 1he United S to Third-World countnes where meek employees work cheaply and no one has ever heard of the Environmental Protec- tion Agency. Some of these lawyers talk of the multinationals as if they were evil incarnate: "They are maiming and killing people all over the world." one of them said. There is something to this propos1t1 on. of course. But it would sound better if the speakers did not have a 30 percent interest in proving the truth of their argument. As a general rule, no revolution should work on a contingency basis. I suppose only a bleeding hean would think that the Third World should be spared the benefits of negligence law. We, after all. have laved with ll for so long that we hardly notice that it's the only form of socialism we countenance -and that's only because lawyers take their cut. Take an airplane crash, for instance. Almost anytime a plane goes down, you're bound to have negligence of some son. h would be cheaper JUSt to acknowledge that, reach an agreement and make the payments. But no siree. first the lawyers have to do their thing. They hike the payments, take their cut, and their clients are left w11h what they would have gotten without a lawyer -or less. It as the same in India. The lethal gas that smothered the c11y of Bhopal came from Union Carbide. The company admits that. The trick now 1s to see that the victims are com- pcn'!lted and that as much money as possible goes to them. To litigate an open-and-shut case and take 30 percent from l>COl>le-wtro have already been vic11miiet1 is merely another form of exploitation. It would just be ea ier for everyone to agree on what has to be done and do it. The irony for the Third World is that political independence did not end economic dependence. India for instance. suffers first from a disaster at the hands of an Arnencancompa_ny anti now will have justice done by Amencan lawyers in American courts. This is insult added 10 injury: An American corporation does dam-aae and then American lawyers come over to profit from it. All the fine rhetonc as1de the . ' motive ~ money. lt' the reason Union C.atbidc is in'fnda. lt'a the reason the streets of Bhopal arc now polluted with American ambulance chasers. The First World remain the ~u e m1dun1ofthcTh1rd.1 force that both creates •nd resolves the situation. So from the West. on winp of arcc<I. come the ncaJi.aencc lawyers. They will compfacatc the uo- romplicatcd. na.ht the wrona. ind take 30 pc~nt bade to Amcnca when they are fini bed. This is the movie you never saw. In thia one, the sun never tel• on ntahacnce law. llkMNI CNn 11 1 •rNJr.IH rel•m1l1t. ' . ·'=' MONDAY. DECEMBER 24. 1984 L:.I Flutl• get1 ••rlypreeent: Thief return• hie helmet. 82. Har_.ah: We shoul.4 ha~e stayecl in bed • • • Rams wake up way too late as Giants scor e 16-13 wild card playoff vtctocy By CURT SEEDEN --,..---=----------- NFL playoff• Of .. 0.-,... ..... The New York Giants bad been lhcrc before. It occurcd last Septem- ber when the Giants took on the Rams at Anaheim Stadium Back on SepL 30. the Rams beat the New. York Ga.ants 33-12. The Gia.nts could do no right, the Rams no wrong. There was talk of thts prne haunting the Gants -lhc talk coming mainly from the media. The Giants. on the other band, labeled their horrible effort a fluke. The Gi;mts were right. Unlike the Sept. 30 debacle. the Giants were not victims of an NFL record three safties. Unlike the Sept. 30 game, Giant receivers actually caught passes thrown directly at their numbers by quarterback Phil Simms. Not one goal post tipped over as it dtd Sept. 30. The only thing that tipptd over was the Rams. New York put its worst per- formance of the regular season out of its mind Sunday afternoon. The only thing on the Giants' mind was the NFL playoffs. The Giants had the right idea. New York defeated the Rams 16-13 and will meet San FranC1sco next week in San Francisco. The Rams wiU be home for Christmas ... and New Year's ... "h felt It ke one of those days when you wake up and you feel ltke you should have stayed ID bed because you knew something bad was going to happen."explained Ram guard Den- nis Harrah. Harrah pretty well summed up a frustrating afternoon for the Rams. WM.OCMllO ..... ,.......,.. . ._. S..11• 13 ......... 7 ~ . ._. New YGf"ll GIMa '6, ._ U COM'1••..a1 ...... u ~·--• S..tlle et Ml9fnl (Chlw!Mll ...... e.11\.) New Yor'll Glallls 411 S.... FrandMlt 1~2•1 I •m.I s.MIW'•~ ChoQH et w ......... IO!eMtl 2 111 ll uni PltlMIUrtlll .. Oen11W (~ ... , ' em) CC*~la•NCI CHAM ~ s.Mt¥ .... . TllMt ...... TaA AFC 5emifNI Wlnnlrt NFC Semlttn.f WW.. surt1• 90WL ........... (el~Ml9) AFC OMtncllon rt. NFC ~' IC~ 7 al J P.m.) The Giants beat the Rams.SU: wath the help of two Ali HaJi-S · field goals and a one· yard dive by Rod Carpenter. Normally, such an offensive thrust would not &ive the bms that much of a problem. But then, it wasn't a normal Ram pme. The Gia.nu kept the Rams in poor field position -quite literally. The Rams wanted to start quickly, but a mud hole ri&ht around the Ram 2(). yard I.Joe made it difficult for Dickerson to do what be bas bceo doing all season. "Obviously. we have to con- aratulatc lhe New York Giants, .. admitted Ram Coach John R~ 1oson. "They played one fine ~ fens1 ve ball pmc. • The Rama' Jim Colllna (left), JohnDle Johmon (top rtcht) and Carl ltkem combine to briDC down Kew York ttpt end 0.-........... .., ....... &..- Zeke Mowatt after Mowatt cautht a els-yard pue durtn& NFC wild card playoff &ame Sunday at Anaheim Stadium. "They shut duwn our runping attack," admitted Ram running back Eric Dickerson. "We came on late, but 1t was too late." A sellout crowd of 67,037 fans did ' not expect the Giants to beat the Rams. They were waiting for a couple plays to backftrt, a couple of sacu in the end zone, and even a couple of blocked punu. Kings treat tie with Jets like a win WINNIPEG. Manitoba (AP) Neither Los Angeles Coach Pat Quinn nor Barry Long. coach of the Winnipeg Jets, saw anything wrong with heading into the Christmas break off a tic game. Quinn. in fact, treated the come- from-behind 4-4 National Hockey League deadlock as something of a victory in light o( a 6-2 loss to the same Jets a night earlier. "Our$UYS bounced back from what was bas1cal!Y a devastating setback last night," Quinn said after Sunday's game. "Our team ha been doing that all year. "As .a coach, sometimn you have to sit and take satisfaction in per- formance," he said. ''I asked them for performance and they aave it to me." The climax of Los Anaeles' bounce- back performance came in the third petiod, durina which the ~nas outsbot the Jets 16-3. Brian Maclellan controlled his own rt· bound and slapped the tying aoal into the net at 18:25". "Hey, I'm not upscl," said Lona. "What a tremendous year so far-up to ChristmlJ time anyway ... Instead of securina its 20th victory in 34 games-the Jets need S2 p mcs to achieve that milestone last season -W.innJ~ settled (or a 19-14-1 worksheet. · "You 1uy1 are gcttina to the point where you ex~ us to win alt the tame," Lona added. It looked as if the Jets would indeed pull out a victory when Benat Lundholm'1 aoal pve W1nnipca14-3 lead with JU t I :46 remainana. But MacLcllan ~ponded only 11 sec- onds later. ~ Ron Wilson. Paul Mac:l..e•n and Thomas 1~n scored 1oal1 for Win· nipq wh1leJ1m Fox scored twice and Marul D1onne once for the Kinas. Dionne'• 22nd aoat of the season. on 1 power play, tied the pmc 3-3 early 1n 1hc third DCflnd. -' -· Big defensive p].ays saved Giants Martin, Taylor, Kinard come through with clutch plays to turn back Rams By CHRIS MONAHAN Dellrf'lleCC..111 ....... - The New York Giants' 16-13 win over the Rams in Sunday's NFC w1ld card game wasn't spectacular nor was it particularly exciting, but it was gratifying for a team that had been beaten 33-12 by the Rams 12 weeks ago. It was also good enough fora tnp to San Francisco for the next round of the playoffs, and that's just fine for the Giants, especially defensive lineman George Martin. "We're not in it (the playoffs) to prove anything about the New York Giants. We Just want to go to the Super Bowl.' he said. Martin was one of the field leaders of a Giants defense that made some key plays in the right spots. including cornerback Terry Kinard's touch- down-saving tackle of Eric Dickerson in the fourth Quaner with the Giants leadtng 16-10 and a sack of Jeff Kemp on fourth down to kill the Rams' final dnve with I :58 left. It was Martin, along with linebacker Lawrence Taylor. who got to Kemp and forced the fumble that ended the Rams' season. He said he and Taylor were looking to make the big play. "It was the biggest play of the season. If they complete the pass, it could have kept the dnve alive," Martin said. "I said to Lawrence TU meet you in the backfield,' and fortunately the prophecy came true." Martin was more than a little surprised that Kinard was able to catch Dickerson on his 24-yard romp ID the fourth quarter. "I didn't think anyone could catch Dickerson, but it Just shows you what a great athlete Terry is ... Martin said. Kinard, the man who may have preserved the Giants' season with the Slmm.9 Taylor tackle of Dickerson from behind. sa1d he thought he had a chance all along to catch Dickerson. "If I hadn't gotten him, he would have scored, he's too quick. Ifhe gets a step or two. you may not catch him. but I'm in good shape and I had good momentum and a good angle to cut him off." In add1t1on to stopping Dickerson on the play. the Giants did a good JOb of holding Dickerson. period. He got his usual 100-plus yards ( 107). but 11 took him 23 cam es. Last time the two teams played he gained 120. Meanwhile. the Giant offense. which had gamed eight yards rushing on its last tnp to Anaheim, went to a short-passmg. ball-control effensc. something they have not used all year, and made 11 work on the arm of quarterback Phil Simms (22-31 for I 79 )ards). "lt'sacredtt toourpla)crs that the) were able to adJUSt and maJce 11 work after only o ne week:· 1mms said .. We wanted to take the p~sure off me. the receivers and the offense line We decided to take the shon stuff and ll worked. "This 1s my most satisfying win. bu• they'll get more sausfymgas we go along in the playoffs ... Runmng back Rob Carpenter. who played an important role 1n the Giants" ball-control offenSt' with seven receptions. said the idea was to improve on the first game and to survive. "We wanted to shut down their blitz and not let them get to Phil (Simms)." he said. ··The last time we ~ere in here. that killed us It was a headache. It was nice to JUSt walk off the field with us ahead·· Strong field at Orange ToplO Oran•e ounty hlg&echool buketball DU.ly Pilot Mlectiona l.llatmDel(~) 2. Ooeall View (10-2) s. Setaacla (9-0) Six of top 10 teams in Orange County will compete i n tourney Wednesday By ROGER CARLSON 1ano,..1ch and kd b} the coach·s son Stacey. took Mater Dc1 (9-0) into The strongest field ever awatts the oven1mc before falling in the sem1- opening tip on Wednesday in the 20th finals of the Tournament of C'ham- Orange Holiday Classic at Chapman p1ons. 63-60. College. 8 showcase of who's who in .\nd. awa1t10g the winner of that Orange County high school basket- one. assumtng 1t can handle Villa I Park in its opener. 1s unbeaten bal · Estancia (9-0) Not every power is entered tn the The tournament continue through 16-te.am field. but when you consider the ""ed. wtth the champion hip there are six entries from the Daily billed for 8 o'clock turdav ntght Pilot's Oranie-Count.y Top 10. m-• cludin' No. I Mater Dci. No. 3 Other first-round h1ghhghts on Estancia, No. 4 Saddleback and No. 6 Wednescby: At 12·20 it's Foothill Fountain Valley, ifsascloseas you'll (7-1) against Laguna Hills (5-3). and come to an Orange County cham-at 2 o'clock ifs Fountain Valle\ (4-3) pionship. against Coo;ta Mesa (5-3) · Mater Dc1. featuring 6-7 All-Woodbndg~ High alM> returns to American Tom Lewis. 1s back to the tournament trail on Wedne'ida\ defend its crown, but the road for the wtth a 4:45 cla h with La Habra at the Monan:hs hasn't been made easy Brea-Olinda Hiah lnv1tat1onal. while with a first-round assignment agajnst Edison and Newport Harbor vie in perennial power Santa Clllnl. the Carson City lnvitataonal Thurs- Santa Oara, coached by Lou Cvi· day. And lrvtne and lJnivers1t) compete in the (an)on lnv1tat1onal. also Thursda) T oume~ pamngs. Ora'* Hcildn Qauk C•t CM~n C: ..... I WEDNESDAY 9 • m -Lell.ewOOCS "' WHlm1nite< lO~s.odleOeet. v1 El MoOene 11 »-Foottli• n L •9UN Hills 2'-Founleln V•llev n C:0$1e Mew l.30-0ene H•Ml vs Merine S IG-Ol'anoe "' T rov • ~sl•ncie n VIiie P.n. l.»-Malef' Oet v1 $8111• C:tere .,... .()lncM MYttatteMI (et SrM·<Mlrldil .._, W~ONIUOAY J--'NNtm n !>unnv Hiit\ • •~ Hebnl n Wooeltlrl009 • lO-ScflurT Vl El 0«9do I I~~ n. Plldflca. T"MV'tSOAY 11 lO-A,..,...,..,_~ H .. 1Mer vs Sc""'r • El Oof'-40 IOMr lcOMOlatlOll) I ls-Le Hebnl·WOOdbrlCIOe 10$41r "' er .. OI ncse·Pedfla IOI« leot1\06lllionl )-P'Omo<1e v~ MoHiOfl Vl9i0 • •S--HKlende ~'' Wlbon v' S.venne •~moncs 8¥ n F~ton l l~oer-a v\ ~· CanvenT~ letC......HWI> THUIUOAY >-1n11nt vs 9ol'9 Grande •.Jl>-Cvpreu vs Sante AM 6-E-lllta vs LO• Amloo\ 1.JO-UnlverMIV ~ Ce!WOn It d1dn'thappcn.but then the Rams didn't expect the same Gan.ts team which bumbled and fumbled its way to defeat back on Sept. 30. "We JUSt weren't very efficient." offered Harrah. ..We bad the op- ponun1t1cs thoua}L" (Pleue aee 1lAll8{82) * * * 49erscheer Giants' win overRanis REDWOOD CITY (AP) -The New York Giants' unexpected VlC· tory over the Los Angeles Rams drew cheers from about a dozen San Francisco 49ers who gathered at team headquarters to root for wb.at turned o ut to be their opponent in next Saturday's NFC divisional playoff. The Giants "played over their heads. and the Rams didn't expect them to play that bard." remarked comerback Eric Wright, who, alon& with hJS tea.moat.es. was delighted that New York eliminated Los An- geles with a 16-13 mistake--frce per- formance Sunday. In their last encounter, the 49e.rs pounded the Giants 31-10. and would rather face New York tlwl Cbi<:aJ<>. which banded them a I 3-3 beauna last year at Soldier Field Ant1opatJ ng a Rams win. the 49ers had ~ concentrating on lhe Bean' defense. Even though Chi~ won't be the 49crs opponent Saturday, the preparatJons "might come in bandy in another week" if both teams proceed through the playoffs. said tackle Keith Fahnhorst. Although they were readl for the &ars, "l don't think we'l miss a beat," said coach Bill Walsh. The G iants' defeat last October at the hands of the 49cn "was just one of those games whert the roof caved in on them," Fahnhorst said Ifs not going to have any bearing on this v.eek's pme. Look what the Rams did to them the first ume (LA won "-11) and they c:amt' baclc and beat them." ev. York's defensive scheme .. is a lot ca 1er than Chicago's. Chicago bhues a lot and ll"CS diffnrnt looks." said 49cT Roaer Craia. "It wouldn't be any problem for us to pick U\) the1r blitzes. but 1t would be a lot easier for US to SCt I pme plan for the Giants. .. Craia said. Walsh compltmctntcd tbe Giants' performance. "They have an outstanding defense and they playtd a grt'~t game. That's the best pme. I'm surt. that the Gtaots have played this ~r. With that an mind. we know what we're in for." Not eveiy stocking is filled with goodies 81 ttAL aoctt ,, ..... ,..., With $UM.:Cre apoloe1cs to acmcn1 Moore. On the day bcfort Chnstmas. The playoff! arc set, W1thtbcoutcomca ~rtam As• Ltona.rd Tote bt' Seattle u~ Doom an~ To hoodwink Runnana the blll OnaJmo tc•c:hplay .. \ He ru\hed for One T""cnt\ ~"· total quite mc~n. ( tdmnaall tt'l~n. He'd had Two f1f\ccn ThcSeahawls n111kd Ptunl..cu \\1th 11t painful k\. Theudefcnsc nc\'cr 11lov.m1 The Ra1<kn to rtlu l'\t thev play 1anno. Thcl ue·, MVP. Who thro.., to Dupcund C la\ton For iDaf\ertO. The Dolphtnsof hula F11Urt to be favored 8utthat' fincwith t* '( ausc ~ ""~tt the Raiden, ~nd '~al1ngoff1vontn )' ou cnn torgrt the Ram~. too Th<' nc \tr sot 10101 .\pan~t thr(11ant ""ho Dnlled lhrm "1th ddcnx nJ thrtt licld goal' b tht hnU\ For 16-1 'victor) That was thr1t "°l\4.ln ·,pea Taylor and Carson Kcp1 Kempon his toes "nJ .. hnl thcttwastroub'e Th<.' Giants arose To tum back the threat nd top nuchfre)d rbon. poilina ~day Forthcfa1thful who~l Enc thcGre9t Mi t l the call. Bu t in&otbccndzonc. And spike the baU (P.leMe ... 1'0C&DIQ,.., m • Ofenge Coat DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 24, 1884 ,: s p 0 R T s BREAK " lit,_~--=-=--------=-----~ Thief finds a way to niake it right, · puts hel1net l>ack From AP dlapel~taea BO 'TO't'-1 -Bo ton Colleac quar· tcrback Ooua Autie hu his fivontc helmet back in time for the Cotton Bowl. . "I'm in the Chri tma spirit so I'm Jivina at back," saad a man who dropped the helmet oO at The Boston Herald. "A lot of people . aad it wasn't riaht to taJc:e it But I'm &ivlna at back. "h 11 stealan~. but it's not lake breaking into someone' house,' added the man. who refused to a,ive has name. "Even thou&}l I dad something bad, l'm maktna up for it.·· · Flutie was not available for comment, but has father. Richard Fluue, said has son was anxious to get the helmet b:ick before the Cotton Bowl contest against H ouston on New Year's Day Rachnrd Fluuc said his son was worried the thef\ was n .. bad omen." .. You don't know how supcrstataous he as," he said. The thief. who told The Herald he was in his mad-20s and hved "near here." sa1d be slapped unnoticed into the Boston College locker room after watchmg practice on Thursday. "I was JUSI looking around the dressing room, going by the lockers. figurinf I'd pick up a souvenir." he ~1d "I "Saw the helmet and stuffed it under my jacket. .. I didn't know 1t was his. There was no name over (the locker) or on at. I figured I'd snag one and make it into a lamp or something." The man said he realized 11 was FlutJe's helmet when he got to his car. .. I saw the number 22 on at and f kinda said, 'I don't believe th as. This can't be his helmet.' When I got home. I stall couldn't believe it. It just looks like an ordinary helmet." The thief told The Herald he and a few friends posed for pictures with the helmet and then staned th1nlc1ng about g,avmg it back. "After all he's done for Boston fans. and J enjoyed him. I couldn't keep at," he said. ''That helmet bas been S<'en all over TV He won the Heasman m at." Quote of the day ...... M1n111. TCU wide reoelV., after 9COl'lng a touchdown on 1n NCM -recx>fd gg..yard PMe r.ceptlon: "Thia record la going to be hard to break.'' Clippers clipped, 107-97 SEATTLE -Popular guard Gus [il Walhams may be settang records wath the c II• Washington Bullets, but the Seattle Super- Sonics are beginning to get some pro- duction out of rookie forward Tom McCormick. "Thas was by far his best night,'' Seattle Coach Lenny Wilkens said Sunday niJthl after McC'onnick l!lCOred a career-high l 8 points an the Sonics' I 07-97 National Basketball Associauon victol') over the Los Angeles Clippers. The game was the only acuon 1n the NBA Sunday night. lcavang hoth teams with 1denucal 14-15 records. McCormick. the 12th player ~lected an thas sea~n·s draft and veteran guard Rack) Sobers were obtained from the Bullets for W1ll1ams. one of the league's flashiest performers. "Mc( ormack played smart:· Wilkens said after he used the 6-I I Mc( orm1ck 14 minutes m the first half when he scored I 2 points ... He blocked out ~·He did not get beat. He was patient an\1dc and went to the basket strong.·· Clapper( oachJam Lynam. who sa~ his team'ss1x- gaml.' wmnang streak end. said, "They hurt us ans1de. McCormick got a lot of points po~tang up ans1de along with Chambers." Kerr'• hat trick llfta Flyera ~ Tim Ke'1' sco~ three ao;:il~ and Marra)' Cravu addtd two as tbc Ph1ladel· ph1a fo1yen defeated lhe W:a hanaton Capitals. 7~ Sundly 1n N111ooal Hocke) Leaaue 1ct1on. The win nipped an e1gh1~gamc unbeaten 11reak for Wa h1ngton and put the two teams in 1 tic for first place an the Patnck Dmsaon. The A)e~ broke the aame open at I :06 of the ~cond pcnod when Dave Po.Ile lad a cross-ace pass to Kerr. who deflected the puck past Washanaton goohc Pat Riggi.A fromJust to the nght of the net for a J..l Ph1ladelpl1ia lead •.. In other NHL action. Keo Llatemu, set up by Terry O'Rellly, scored at 2: 15 m overtime. lifting the Roston Bruins to a 4-3 victory over the Minnesota North Stars .•. Center Dave Aadreyclullt scored on a rebound wath 7: 17 remaanina to lift the Buffalo Sabn:s past the St. Louis Blue~. 3·2. OU1e1 Hamel and Job Tucker also scored for the Sabres. Brtu Sutter and Joe Millien each \Jllhcd for the Blues ... Steve Patrick scored two g'oals and defenscman Barry Beek capped a third·pcnod rally for the New York Rangers who 11ed the Montreal Canadicns J..3 . Paul GIW1 net led a loose puck at 3:33 Of overtime lO climax 0 three-goal come~ck that pve the Quebec Nordaques a 3-2 victory over the Chicaao Black Hawks. Galli • fifth goal of the season rumed C'hacago's,bad tO win llS first ovcname 14me at home an almost 44 ,Yea". Lazer• outlas t Sockera, 6 -5 INGLEWOOD -Nathan Sack$ m scored has st'Cond goal of the pmc 45 seconds into overt a me ·unday night to hfi the Los Angeles laLers to a 6-5 MaJor Indoor Soccer League victory over the San Diego Sockers. • Sacks took a pass from Juan Cardenas to the lefi of the San Diego goal and scored from I 5 feet out. Los Angeles had forced the ovenime by tying the pme with 38 seconds remaining on Stewart lee's second goal of the contest. Scrupulearunaouto(badluck AN MATEO -Scrupulcs. victim of ~ some bad racing luck an recent outin~ finally got a perfect tnp and responded with a track-record victory an the $300.000 Bay - Meadows Handicap. .. He should have won two of his last three races," owner Edmund Gann said after Sunday's race. "He just had bad racing luck." Scrupulcs' luck changed when he overtook Raami and Both Ends Burning an the final 16th ofa mile to post a I 'h-lenJtth victory. He also established a new track record wath a tame of2: 17 1-5 for the l lf..miJe test. Oregon State contlnuea aearch CORVALLIS, Ore. -Oregon State Ci] continues the ~arch for a head football •II• coach and two new names have surfaccd- Nonhern Iowa's Darrell Mudra and Dave Kragthorpc. the athletic d irector at Utah State. Mudara, 56. has a 172-72-3 record with. seven colleges dating back to 1959. He was in Corvallis Fnday. Kragthorpc. 51. met Saturday wath Oregon State athlellc director Dec Andros That bnng!i the number of candidates to be interviewed to seven sancc Joe A '>cnano wasd1sm1sscd as the Oregon State coach Andros sa)s Los Angeles Raiders assistant 'am Boghosian as also back an the picture. Cal State fullenon ( ·oach Gene Murph) was an earlier candidate. but dropped from the picture after an antervacw and ~ill remain wath the Titans. Televialon, radio TELEVISION No events scheduled. RADIO No events scheduled. RAMS WAKE UP TOO LATE, LOSE, 16-18 e e e . Fro m Bl ''I'm embarrao;scd losang to the Giant\," admitted Dickerson. "but I'm not '><!)Ing they have a bad ball club We JUSl thought we could beat them.·· "It seem'> like we're a team that nobody cxpecb anything from,'' said G1anh Coach 8111 Parcells. whose club lo'>I its last two regular-season pme'i and finished wath a 9-7 record. "We kind ot had our backs to the wall • ~veral times dunng the season and cveryume we got them to the wall we JUSl ..ecmcd to be able to muster up enough energy to get 11 done." The Gaant'i. who were assured their playoff berth onl y when the Dallas Cowboy'i lost to M1am1 last Monday night. got 11 done through Simms' prcc1s1on "hon-range passing that kl'Pl them on the move and Ha11· "he1kh''> thrc..•t field goalo;. While the New York offense wa'> pla) ang almoc;t llawle'l'ily. nol com· matting :i -.inglc turnover, the <.kkml· led by hnehackcr!> l..ctwrence I aylor and Harr) C'ar-.on and lineman Leonard Marc;ha ll . kept Dickerson under control. fhey also turned the Rams awa) wath a field goal madwa) through the final quaner after ,1 fir'it down at the seven The Rams had threatened to move ahead midway through the final pc nod. drn 1 ng to a first down on the New York seven. But runs b> Dickerson and Dwayne Crutchfield and a pass from Kemp to Henry Ellard netted onl y two yards and the Rams had to scttlc for a 22-yard field goal by Mike Lansford that cut II to 16-IJ The Rams.~ ho fin ashed the regular ~asoo as runners~up to San F-ran· casco in the NFC West wath a 10-6 record. had domanated the Giants 1n their regular-season game. logging an NFL record three safeties and sack mg Simms five times. Although sacked four tames an the playoff game. Simms nevertheless usually had sufficient 11mc to get oITh1s short-range throws. Dickerson had run for 120 yards an that Ram victory. carrying only 22 tames an lhe one-sided affair. I he Giants dominated the field pos111on m the first half. bouhng up the Rams deep 1n their own terntory and holdmg Dackcrson to 37 yards an I 2 carries. The Rams also hurt thcm~lves an the first two quaner'> with seven penalties for 55 yard\, with a couple of the calls crasmg \ubstant1al. "We JUSt didn't play nght,'' said Rams offensive tackle Ball Raan. "I should'vt taken myself out, my ankle was really bothcnn' me and I think J let down my team.' STOCKING FILLED? e e • From Bl Nt•At for New York l\a date with the 'Nancr<i Who'll have Montana and C "lark FC'w battenes finer. 1 hear record th as season I<. fifteen and one, fhe best an tlw league And they may not he dom· Beating them wall h<.· A tallorderfor'iurl· Uut then so were the Ram\ And thcGaant'i found that cure The othertwo gamci, Match di\ 1\1on wmncr<i Girl cagers comp~te Four team\ all with t1tlrs. None of them beginners Ch1~g0atWasning1un l~theNFC tcst. A. 'itrong field will be partic1pa11ng an thc Manna-I dason flk\ girls ha'iketball tournament. wt to bctpn Wcdne~ay. with the varsity action i;lated for Edison I ltgh f ir.,t round painn'!> wall feature Fountaan Valley ~attlanl' Dana Hilb, at 8:30 a.m .. Marana aJ.ainst Espcran7a at noo n: Huntangton Beach v Loara M t ·4S p.m : Wood- bridge facina Long Beach Walson at 3-'lO. Mater T>ci taking on Cypress at S: 15: and F..da'°n aaa1nst Foothill at 7. Among the favorites an the tour· - ..... Good~~. ~ fOOd.~. irJod price· . Thats State Farm insurance.·· &1 CAITll llllUICI MllCf, llC. ~tm """ ue• 2tOO lrlae.I St . A-101 A c.t•Mtt.I ·-· ... --~ ••••aa•U ,~ ...... - .,..,.,...._ •• if"'I --.-.::: ----·-.... _.. j nament :He defending champion Footh11l, Sunset League champ Foun· tain Valley, Fmparc League power Loara and one of the tournament''> newer entne'I. Woodbndg<'. The tourne} run11 through Satur· day Meanwhile. Ocean View High wall be part1c1pat1ng an the Gahr C'hnNtmas 'Tournament. opening with Long Beach Jordan at I 2· lO Wedne5day and al'lO running through 53\urday. The first-round p:unna,· f Marlna·Edben Eltra ToumalMM (et _,1"9fl Hltll) WIO .. HOAY I lO • m Foun1e111 V•"-Y n Dene H'"' 1~1s -~ Mlf•CS. .,, 11 Toro ,.._, -~IM .,, E•P9t•lll• 1 '5 -H~t~911 lkecll n L.W• )JO -WOOdWldoe .,, LBW llOl'I SIS Mlllf' o.l v\ Cvllt'tU , -It 0011'1 • .,, ( °''°" t lO -S.v.-e o Gte Hltrbot, W•V (;aMT~ •• , ~ Hltlll W8DMISOAY I • m Pere~• vt Mlfe CIKI• tJQ -l • WN "'' Lot Af'ftl9" II -P-.,, Pl\lt )( '' >O -l OtlO -.atfl WdM .,, OcHn v-..w l -Sonot• "' IOrkMllld 4 lO -Ce1>1or11111 n Lone ke<J'I "°'"' 6 -t YK1y Hiii "' Safi GeDI'~ 1 JO -Cen1...,1e1 "' G•t>t Both teamc, playing Wath one week'c; re\t fhat should hC'lp R 1ggan' and Payton. [WO runner\ <iUpreme, Who'll tear up the turf In search ofa dream The FC matches l he Broncos and Steelcr • T ~o ~uix·r »owl longshot'i Say the l.1\ Vega·Hlcakrs Dotft count them out thou~h Doth team., arc tough. Thaspmc'\ no pushover. 1 he action w1 II be rou1h That complete'i thc menu For ne' t Wttken6'~ pla). When the pmes arc over We'll be :able to say, Who'll play fort he tttlcs r our qu1rfcn short Ofa tnpto the baa one. The champ1on~h1p oft he port. Unt1l lh('n, "WC wa11 The. upcr Bowl an ~iaht & paucnt. dear fan' nd l<l all. n tood n1Jht I FoR THE RECORD H~L SIMIVMb WIL.D CHO GAMH S.M•V'a Seen ketltt I), Ile..,_ 1 '41ndart SCMe New York Glenl• II. ll•"'' ll CON,.ll8NCI SU11\llllHAU Sltunllly't G•IMl ~•lltf ti Ml•ml (Cl'l•nn•I 4 el 10 •.m.l New VOfk OC.lllt •l S.11 f:rel\CIH.o (Cllenntl 2 el I Pm J SllllCMv'• Gem .. Clllt•llD el Wnlllnoto11 <Cn•nn411 2 el 10 • m.) ( Pllltl>\ifOll •• o.nver Cll•nlltl .. •• I pm> CON,.lll NCI CHAMPIONSHIPS SIH'dev. Jen. 6 Tl!Mt encl $ll9i TB A AFC Semlttnel Wlnnto NFC Semlllnel Wllllltt\ SUPlll BOWL Sllftday, J•n. 10 AtP ... ~ AFC CNMPIOll "' NF'C C~molon (Cn.nntl 1 •• 3 pm I Gllntl 16, R1m1 1J kw• bv Olla,.. New VOfk Cil•nts 10 O I O-t6 Rem• o J 1 3-13 f'lr"•I Period NY-FC. Hllll $1\le"l'I l7. 6 37 NY-<er1>11n1tr-I run (Ha1i·Snle~ll klcill. IJ SO SKend P.,.lod LA-FG L•nsfOf<I 3'. t4 00 Tlllrd P.,.lod NY-FC. H•IHlfllekll )9 S 10 LA-Olcktr\OI\ " run ILan•for<I klckl. e'3s NV-FC. Hell·Shlekh 34, 14.70 f'eurth Period LA-f=Ci LanatOf<I 21, 1 St A-67,037 TNm StlHatlca NY LA Flrtl <IOwnl "' 16 12 Rutllet·var<I• 17·40 26· 107 Penlno n•<ls • IS? 107 Return ver<I\ 7S 17 P•HU 77 31·0 11-lS·O S.ctu Bv 4 11 1· 2 Pl.ill!\ 4 )9 4· 38 Fumt>te\ IO'I 3 0 1·7 Peneni.1·nrd1 s II 10-1s Tl,.,,. ol Ponenloo J4 OJ 2S 57 kldlvk:tuel Stllhtk\ RUSHING-New Vo<k Mo<r1s 10-21 Ceroenier ll·?O, Simm\ 4 !minus I) Los Anoele•. Dlcke<ton 13· 107 Kema 1-1 Crvltllllel<I 2 (mlnu\ 11 PASSING-New YOfll. Simm\ n -ll·0-17t Los •~'-'· Kemo 11-IS-0-109 RECEIVING-Ntw Yori!., C•roenle< 1•n, Mowen 7 n , Men..ef 3-52. Grev 7·20, JoMM>ll 1·6, (ielt>< .. 111 1·3, Motrl\ 1-2 LOI A~. Brown 3·32. Berber 3·JI EIMlr<I 2·22. McOonel<I 2·11. HIN 1·6 13 20 14 ,, 33 28 28 ,. 0 16 19 6 34 3• 11 •• 13 24 18 11 JJ 13 18 23 44 It 6 14 17 11 4S 24 , 1 MISSEO FIELO GOALS-None NFL"LOGS Rims 00·71 O•llH Ctevt1en<1 Plthburoll Cincinnati NY Glanl\ Allonra New 0rr .. n• All•nl& Sen FranC;i\Co SI LDUI\ Chlcego C.rttn Bav Tama. Bav New OrlHn\ Housion S.n J'r•llCIKO Wld Card P\avoff NY C.1enl\ Raiden (11 -6) HC>Y\IOfl C.reen Bev Ken!HI\ (11¥ Sen D•llQO o.nver S.ellle M111Mi.ot1 Sen O•eoo O.nver c111cago S.a1ue Ken'" City ln<11•n•oo1i. M1em1 Ot'l•OU Pl!hbur11n W•o C••O Pl•voff S~11111e COlle99 boWIS IA• HIM\ PST) SATURDAY. OEC. 1S Callfornl• Bowl (•I"'"'"') Ntva<I• Lii\ Vege, 30, Totf<lo IJ lndttltlocMnc:e BoWI Cet SMev--1, L•.> Air FOfce 23. Vlrglnl• Tt<:ll 1 "lllDAY, DEC. 21 HllldllV 8•wt (et San Oi9ee) BYU 24 Mlcl\~n 11 SATU.OAY, DEC. 2' Flericle Cltnlt 8•WI (If~,,, .... (ieorg•a 17 FIOrtda Stete 17 S4HI Br#I (Ill El PHO) Merv1an<1 n TenneuN 21 °*"'Y B•W1 (el Detroit) Armv 10 Mkl\lga11 Slelt 6 TUESDAY 811tt·Gl"•Y Clenle (et Melit..,1...-v, Ala.) 20 11 74 14 11 30 10 10 3J IJ IJ )I ]J 21 16 19 16 " 1 ?O JO 16 14 70 )1 IOI) 'n 17 14 , 7 )4 l 13 lJ NOflll AN·SI.,, n Soutll All·Slar\ <Cnenne< 2 el tlO e m> WEDNESDAY l'rMdem 8oWI (et AM....,..,) Iowa 11 4 II n Tull\ 17·3 ll !Cllennel S •I SO m I THURSDAY LM!env Bo.wl 111 Memp1111> Ar•on10 17·J II v\ Auourn 18 •I !CflnM•I 11 ~1 10 30 om del111111<11 FRIDAY Getor Bewl <•t J•dlMlnV .. l !>Guin Carolina 110-1) vs Ot.lanome Slelt 19 ?> ICllenntl 1 •' S Pm ) SATUllDAY AleN .... let HtMMvl ~u 1t 1) v1 Norr• Deme (1·41 <Cn.n ~I S al S Pm I H .. et l'emee...t 111 BlnnlntNtm. Ala.I W1\Conl•n 17·3· II v1 Kentud v 11-ll cCn.nMI II •• 10 om OtMlvl<ll MONDAY, DIC. ll .. Mctt e... 1•1 A-.m.I Puroof (7-CtTI.. Vlr9iftle (7-2·1) (Cnen ntC 2 at noon> a.u ....... , .... let H9Ut'9n) TCU It 3) V\ Wt\I Vtrglnl• (1·4) (Cn•nn.i ll •1 s Pm ) TUESDAY, JAN, I e'""" '"' l•t Delul HOU\Con 11·4) VI 80\IOI\ Collegll 19·2) fCll•nnti 1 •' 10,)0 • m ) ''"" ..... • (11 Temtle, Al'tl.I UCLA <•·3) v1 Ml•ml, FIA, II 41, ICl\1111M1 4 el 10.JO a m ) ........ ,., ........ , Ohio Sl•I• lt·n "' USC (l·l) (Cl\111,,.1 4 •I 7 om> ""'' .... (It H.w °"99M) L.$U <•·2· ., v1 lt*•ill• Ct 71 re"-"'* 1 11 S 10 om I OtMllthwl (It MlemO 0-tel\Ome (t I I) "' WulllnolOft UO• I) IC"-llntf 4 t i Se m I o.._ ....... NIW,.MT LANOINO CN••-1 ~I 17 • .....,, JI •aAOln I lien, >O m«'~tl N&A WISTlllN CON,lll8NCI! Pulfk OM\lell W L Pct 01 L.A L.all1n It 10 6SS Pl'IOtlll~ II IJ n2 l L.A etilllNW• 14 IS 4tl S S.•1111 14 IS 4tl S Port1eno I) IS 414 Sil'! Golden Sl•lt f It 3lJ f ~ttt DIVl1ltrt Oenvtr ,., 11 .07 Hou\ton 17 11 .07 D•ll~n 13 14 .411 3~, $en Antonio 13 •• 441 4'1'J Ule'1 13 1• 441 4'1> K•n.n Cllv 10 II 3tS 6 IASTlllN CON,.ll8NCI eo"on Pnlle<ltlPhl• We"'lllOIOtl New Voris New JClf .. V MllwevkH O.aroH Cnoeeoo Allllllll 111<1'-"9 Caevttencs Alantlc~ n s 21 ' " ,, 12 II II 17 c ...... DWl\lelt 19 II IS 12 IS 14 II II 7 20 5 20 Suf*y'\ k-S.eltle 107, LA Oll'M" 91 Tentaht't G.me' No ge,.,,.\ KM<l!Md T1tt&ClllV'l Ga!Mt Phl'-Clell>hie •• O.aroH New -'-n•v at New York A.llanl• er Cttvelel\<I Colden Sl•lt at POflMln<I 633 SSI 7'' 517 3 ' 393 1 2St 10" 100 11 > SonkJ 107, Clippers 97 LA CLIPPEllS Ct1) -8rto11tmen 10 It 4·6 24, C•lll 3·6 2·• I. Wellon S·6 1 3 U, NIXOI\ t• 19 6·6 22, Smlllt 4· 10 3·4 11, JOflntOll 3·12 1·3 7, Don11dt.011 2·3 0-0 4, C•tel'lfllili 2·2 o-o 4, WerrlGk 2·2 0-0 S Totalt 39·78 1'·26 97 $1ATTLI 11011 -Cllemtiers 1·14 IS·lt 31. Vrenu 1·2 0-.0 2, Stir.me 1·14 6·1 n, Henderson 6·13 t·IO 20, Wood 3·15 1·2 1, McCormick S·IO 8·1 II, Sc>Oe<s 3·10 1·2 1, Brlckowskl 0·2 O·O O Tolal• 34·IO 39·47 107 Sc-bY OU&tW• LA Cllaaers 26 21 n 2t-97 su111e 26 n 19 30-101 fllrN·POlnl ooat-Warrlck Fouled out-Smlln Reboun<ls-Los Anoeles S4 <Ceoe 13), su11i. 47 ISli.me 10) Anl11l-los Angetes 23 (Nlaon 1) s .. ntt 27 (HenderSOI\ 16) Tola! IOUl\-LOS Anoeles ll. S.elltt 2S TKMicat-1..o\ Angele•. llleQet Oelense AllHl<lanct -8,014 Sunday's , ..... KO,., Oeover 69, H•well Loa 64 loll H•weh Pacific 94, Sffllle 63 Memlllll• sr 76. lone 62 w Kentuckv 60, Ml<IC!le Ttftll SO Canlllu\ 17. Ov<tut\no 74 Prowloence 71, 8rowl\ 67 How AP top 20 fartd No I. Gllorgetown Ct·OI be•I Morgan Stale 89·62, bHI New MCIXICO 6'·61 No 2, Oukt 11·0) bHI D•vloson 11·6S. t>e•I Norlllwe\lern 76· SS No 3, Memphis Saere (1·0) t1ta1 1<1111 Stale 74·S7, tltlel lone 76·62 No 4, llllnof\ 111·2> l>HI Clncl1111atl, 87 ·6S. 1()\1 lo LOYOia, Ill 63·62 No s. OltPeut 11·21 lost to Wetlern Michigan 6S·64; bHI NOflllwe\lern 61·5' No 6, Soulhern Melnodlll (9·0) t>eal Campbell 90·70, bee! Norrrr Ton Slaff 90·45; bHI Okl•llOm• IS-76. No. 1. WHllfnglon (S·ll beer BolH Sllle 19·S3 '°'' lo 8rlgll11m Young 14 75 No •. SI Jolln'I 16· IJ OHi UCLA t8 69 No 9, SvrecuH (6·01 b .. I UltC• 14-63 No 10, North Caroline 11 0) btal Wlcllll• s1a1e 90·69. be•• Amona Siert IS·66 No 11. Olllehoma 16·3) '°'' Sournern Me1110<11\t I S· 76 No 12. Loul\vllle (6·21 OHi Tempe 87-SS Deal Heweu HllO I0·7S IO\I lo Cl\llm1neOe 67·65 No 13, C.eorgle Tt<:ll 16 II OHi NOflh Carolina A&. T 11·4J bHI AUQulle C041t941 14·S3 No 14 N0<lh Carollna Slale 16 II beat Sr Frenc11 Pa 11·6' No IS. Kenses <t ll l>HI veoroe We'111"910fl 16· 10 No 16. 11><11111111 16·11 be•I Kensu Sr•tt 10·S8 No 11. VH'g1n1a Tech 17·11 0 .. 1 Ride• 107·74, OHi We\I Vlfglnl• 6S 63 No 11. M1chlg•n lt·OI beet Alcorn Stele 84·81, bHI Rutger\ 93·17 No 19, Louisiana Slate 16 II bfllll Ntw OrleaM 78 64, oear Norlh Carolina WHm 1ng1on 81·6S No 20. Loul\lena Tech (9 Ol OHi No•thwt\I Lou111ana 18·SO NHL CAMPHLL CONFIElltlEHCIE Sm'11M DMtltrt w L T Ph GF GA Eomon1on 23 1 3 49 161 102 w1nn1~ 19 I) • 42 ISO 135 Ce!Qarv 18 13 3 3' 110 136 I("* IS I) 6 36 151 137 \lencouver 8 24 3 19 106 191 Het't1' OMtltrt C'11UGO 16 IS 3 35 140 126 SI LOUt\ 14 13 s JJ 123 l?l Dttroi1 II II 4 16 ,,, ISi Mlnnosora 10 18 6 16 111 140 loronro • 23 s 11 108 160 WALES CONFUtEHC:E P etrlcll OM tlen PlllMl<lek>lll• 19 9 5 43 142 ,. we,hlll!llon " 10 7 0 141 111 NV ••••nclt!U 19 11 I J9 IS1 llO Plllsburgll 11 ,. 3 21 111 1)4 NY ReMen 11 11 s 21 ... 1)1 New Jenev II 17 .. 26 112 13S Adem\ OIVlslWI MonlrHI 19 9 6 .. 140 112 Quet>ec IS IS s lS 131 134 Buffelo 12 11 9 l3 116 IOI Bos Ion 14 lS s 33 177 116 Heriford 17 IS .. ,. 103 115 Sunct.v'1 Score\ l(lnQl 4, Wlnnlpl!Q i Bosion •. M1nne\Ole l (oil Bufleto 3. SI LOUI\ 7 Pnlla<1t11>hl• 7, Weanlngtoo 4 Monlrul 3, New VOfk Ranger\ 3 Quebec 3, Chlcaoo 2 toll CelQerv s. VancO\l\ler 4 Ttrtltflt'• G•m.• No oeme' stl'leduled TUHdev'1 Ga!Mt No ga,.,,., scl'ledl.ti.o WIOMMe'l"t <Mme\ Kln9\ et VllllCOUVClf New Jent¥ et Herllor<I T0ton10 et 8uff•IO New Yorto. l~encl«s II PlllSOVrQl'I New Yon. Renoen at O.lrou Pnlledelt>hle el W•'11ill!lt0tl Chka90 al SI Loult WT""'"9 91 "MlMetO!I EdMOlllOll •• CalQ•rv Klntt 4, ~ 4 ken bY Pwtech IC.ill(lt ' I 2 t>-4 Wlnnlt>e9 1 2 1 l>-4 .. HOllYWood ~-111 SUNDAY'S •CSULTI 1)6tlt el J1·•V llt«evtMtrH ,,_..,..) ,lllS'f ll ACI 6 turlOnO• Luckv All (Me1e) IUO UO 240 Pl.lnelleM (Sleventl 7 20 a.AO su1111n Of $Oll9 IH•wlev l UO Al\O rectcl' Ntml, o.I MOl'llcO, R•f'-An Ar'-'· Merktd, A<I IDeC. Tlmt 1 11 )/~ SICONO ltACI. 6 lutl01\9t v0un1J 8HU (Htwlt'l'l hO J20 hO Qullt lm0< .. tlve (Mfll) 11.10 I.to GCMJ• (()rreoaJ 4AO Al10 rectd. Sl'l.,P COlltrOI, V.illtt'• Pride. Sotcllto Ceo, e>r.e~. Doll't Sloe> Me Now, l•c.t Blue, AltlMl't, t AM Tn.nklul, L4tlntfer PJar.~•· Tlmt' I'll U DAii. Y DOU8LI U·•> ,,.kl "44 60 THlllD llACI. OM mlle 8 .. utor1 CMcH•r1ut) 1000 SOO UO L.o" Cr .. k (Sibille) UO UO Ctlflc Werrlor IOtlv.,e\l t 40 ""° reud Oflenl•I Wn. O••• (lr(lt, Cefro Plnlg. Court Ace - Timi l.S2 SS IXAC1A ( .. 3) Nl4 '86 SO f'<XMTH llACa. 6 ll.ll"IOnOl Ambra lltcloe IMot (Hn1nl 1 00 MO MO Lore Of Zorro (MutPl'lvl S.00 CM Soul Lltnl C Slbll1e) 6.60 AltO rece<I Merl• Vel<ltl, C~. Rtl?klen Miu. Rtl1Jnlll!I ~. lllf'1"-0ev. Cem1>enero CelCh our Snll .. Time 112 215 SS IXACTA ()·ti P•IO $'300, "l"H llACI. 6 lurlOl\QL Luckv BUCl<IY (MeH ) uo uo , 20 Gooelbn J v tEstra<I•) 10.20 S.60 Goklv'1 Commender ISlevtN) l.40 Al~ reced WOfkl Ruler, Juil Wt~•. Frtncll Melt.iv, Tres Don, CeHllno. Time· I 11 11 IX ACTA ( 1-3) ,,.10 $206.SO . SIXTH llACI. 1 fvrlonCl.t. ' OouOll o.flclt (Oliver .. ) lUO S.IO 4.40 Bov Short Drive (V•ltllluela) 3.00 2.60 Oondolefo CSltvenaJ 4.IO Also reced: GOid Kl\IOfll, Prol>ultlon, In HC>YH, Al\ender, HHIY Voyep, Overe0t Tl,.,,. 114 215 S,IVINTH llACI, 1 I/II mitts MeteSlk Shore IHewlev) SOO 400 260 L.or<I Of Tiie Wln<I IOllvtrts> •• co s 00 Refueled (McHergue) 2 40 Alto re«d Wis/I ll'l•O• MlllOll. Kevala, Satneler Time 1:44 llS SS IXACTA (J-6) NIO sm 00 U "9CK SIX (6-1-3-1-6·3/Sl Hi<I SJ.4'1 00 wllll u wlnnlno llci<tlJ (\lit l\of'6J S1 PICK SI)( contolellon ael<I l 163 20 wllll 940 winning tlckeh (live honesl- llGHTH RACE. One mite. OnlllP Tl'lemv•IC tl.J>l'lm) UO 3 00 ? 40 Perec:IC.. (Ollvarnl l .llO C.10 Fencv Wll\O\ (Hawaev> 2AO Alto r•ce<I Cleer A• Crv•••l, lrlnclV &rln<IY. Metl~. Clffr Tello.. O•nclno Time I SO 1/S. SS IXACTA (6· I) aekl i84.50. NINTH llACI. Ont mitt. IM!dei4' Lear (Llol'leml 13.60 UO 4 00 Unbeknown•! To /JM IH•wtevl J.00 2 40 BVrOI\ IL01oye) S.00 Alto r11ce<1 Sl'lullle Jel, Set FrH, F•llh Time· 1 :36 41 S 's IXACTA (6·3) aaid $90SO Alltnclance l1,2l0 Ski~ SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA GOLD Ml .. E -.. 0.Plll, It new. DOWder, 7 c.llelU Glll!EN VALL.IV -No r"'°'I MOU•TAIH HIGH -1'·24 del)ltl, J.-S new. llOWclClf•P9ckCHI POW<ler, .. en.in. MT. BALDY -12·14 ClePth, 11·2' ,......, POWdtf·PKXCHI POW<le<' ) cllelr• SKI SYNlllSE -24·41 <lt1>lh, 12-24 new. oowder , 3 chelrs SNOW fOllEST -CIO$e<I S"OW SUMMIT -24 Oeolh, 11·16 new. c>etke aowclClf 9 cl\el" SNOW VALLEY -60 M!>th, 60 new, POwdllf'-P•tked llOw<ler. 12 Ch•IU SllllltA·NEVAOA It.ANGIE LASSEN PARK -No now, t Hrich base, aowde• on<I P•tkecl aowder, one rrlple chair. 1wo •urfece lltrs 80llEAl -No new, 96·1nGlt but, oroorn.<I c>eckctd POwde<, llve cltalr1 dev, rwo •' n10111. DONNlll M<t llANCH -No new, 72·t4·1ncn bll•. oroomed Pecked POW<IClf. lour cNlrt. SODA SPtUNGS -WHkench onlv SUOAll BOWL -No new, IOI· ll?·lnch l>llM, groomed packed POwder. seveo ck>Ublt Cl'lel•'· oonclOI• •n<I chelr. TAHOE DONNER -No new. '8·71-lncl\ .,. ... groom.C Dlltkecl POW<lef, lwO cnef"· one •vrfete 1111 HOllTH STAR -No new. 36· .. ·lncll be... groomed Pecked aow<I~ encl OPfn POW<ler nine chairs Al.PINI MEADOWS -No new S9· I 11· 1nc11 bell, Packed aowci.r, rwo trlale cf\elrs. nine c!Oublt en.Ir\, O<lt 1urtact hit HOMEWOOD -No now, 36 U·lnct> bell, grOOf'neCI encs °'""1 aowci.r. lhrM en.Ira, ll'lrH surfKe llflt SQUAW VALLEY lt,100 ft.) -No new, '4·11\Cll l>e~. POW<le< I nd Ndled llOWdet', ut>te cer. oonoote •n<I 11 chelr\ SOOAW VALLEY (6,200 ft.) -NO new, 42-lnch best, llOWdet' •n<I PKllecl llOWW. five en.In . one 1urf•c• 1111 T AHOI SKI BOWL -No reaort. HIEAVENL y VALLEY -No new. 41·60·1ncll ball, aowder encl i:>ecke<I aow- Oer, irem, e1Q111 chain an<I thrH aurtec llfll SKI INCLINE -No new, 41·60-lnch baH. 1>•cked oowoer. \Ix chelrs MT. ROSE -No new, 60-U-lncll best, g1oomeo oowOer, lhree rrlawa cheln, one oout>te cnelr, on. 1u•l•t• lift ECHO SUIW\t\JT -No new, 6l Inell bate groomed pecke<I POw<ltf. two <loublt cn•lra, ono surlett llft. S181lllA SKI RANCH -No new, 60 111('1 baM. groomed Pecked p0wd«, .. ven double dttllr\, one trle>le Cll•lr KlttKWOOD -No new. 60-ff·ln<l'I l>eH, POw<ltf encl PKkctd llOWdtf, 10 Chelrt MT. lll8A -No new, 4 *4 lflch 1>11 ... c>ecke<I aowder, seven en.In 00001 lllOGIE -No new, 4'~60-11\Cft l>llM, ~i.t0 POwO.r. 11x c11a1,., tl'lt'H \urlece 1tt1s BAOGlll ,.ASS -One 1nctt new. 60- •nch bll ... aowoer encl l>Kke<I -def, two en.In , IWO ~u<lec. lffh MAMMOTH MOUN'fAIN -Tl"tce 01 ~. 1~1~h .,. .. , c>edle<I POw<lef, two 00/\Clola\, •laletrt Cl'l•lr,, lllfH wrfate Gf(\ JUHi MOUNTAIN -Six lnel'lft new, 64 lllCll l>e ... llOWW encl oedt.0 POwd9r, ll'ltM Cl\elr' SllllllA SUMMIT -SI~ lncnft new, >e SO·lncll l>eM, ooww encl Mdled -· dClf , IOUf C"-lrt, two wrt-Hll• Snow dti>tll In lnCMt re!Kt 10 unc>ee11.eo •now ti ml<l·tk>Oe N-\now rtt.,.. 10 "'°"" wltllln 11'11 lu t t4 '*"•· T trece. Ootll •meent oel"canltM OI lefrem - W9"" .... TfMUctleM UH9ALL. ~........,. C~l!'I ~AND fNOIAt'$-"9Md V«TI R""'-, D'letler, to 11 mntOr-lfftue CtMllrtc:I 0 t•Olf TIO lls-~ .. llff JOflil ~'""" ~. t• • .,...y .. , C*llfK1 TOllONTO•~UfJAYs-flvr<N!Mcttlle (Ofttrl(I OI Jett lurrOUIM, dn!9neted Mrw. •rom 1r. Ollklelld ,. .•. NOCKIY Me ...... Nedlnl.MWe IUf',ALO U.BllES-Announcecl 11181 wr~ ttore•. oe~n • ...,. rt1'°'"' ,. "" tllA) COLL8G8 ft!XAS A&.,.,._..ef'NCI Jot AvtHIM often11 .. 11119 t MUI COAST SEARCHLIGH T ----- County once rich in yule trees As you gather around your Chnstmas tree to exchange presents with yo ur children and your grand- children I'd like to ha\-e you do a hull· remembering with me The remcmbenng 1s about the time that \Orne of us oldsters thought that the name of Orange ( ount) might more proper!) be changed to "C'hmtmao; Tree County." Reason was that, after the bcg1n n1ng of "Quick Decline" on canyons and h11ls1des and flatland!l that really were not ideal for homes. a number of enterprising orchardist!> pulled out the dying orange trees and instead planted Christmas trees. II was quite a thriving industry for a while. I have told you before about Quick Decline. It wai. wiping out Valencia orchards by the hundred. The owners of some pro pen1es usually the young- er ones. wanted 10 continue 10 farm . Away in a manger WALTER BURROUGHS So they staned to raise C'hnstmas trees. This was done, not from ~ed. but from cuttings which were rooted and put into the good c;oil whl'rl' orange tree~ had prev iously flourished. To be sure the real estate moguls gobbled up every bit of orchard land which was used for sour root Valencia trees and whose trees showed evidence of Quick Decline. The youn~ !armers Just couldn't get used to the idea of being builders or promoters or any of tho<;e things becau~ once a dedicated farmer. always a dedicated farmer. And C'hnstmas trees seemed hke a happy compromise Result was that a few days before ('hristmas families would go out with · a saw and an ax and for a small pa)ment select a C'hnstmas tree nght out of a Christmas tree grove. Of course. they didn't get a chance to use their axes or their saws because the tree farmers insisted on doing their own cu tung.. But, even so. 1t was a real adventure to select a Ir ving ( hnstmas tree and people loved 11. All thi s, of course, was 40 to 50 years ago, but the last time I drove through C'oal Canyon there was still a flourishing Christmas tree farm . I was at a reunion of classmates of my undergraduate class of 1924. We were reminiscing about what vanous classmates had done. One of them panicularly. who had studied for- The front yard of Larry W. Brashear, 16439 Shadbuah St., Fountain Valley, reflecta the spirit of the Chrtatmaa sea·aon with a traditional and popular mixture. PAPARAZZI Party bears make merrier Christmas for CHOC kids There·s a Chnstmas tree on the second floor of the Ch1ldrens Hospi- tal of Orange County covered with little bears that have been pany1ng. They were at the BBC' Admiralty's third annual Chrs1tmas gala held at the South Coast Pla1a's Jewel Coun and attended hy 350 people "We asked the people attending to bring a Chnstma'i ornament with a hea r theme 10 carry out th e pany'" theme. A Beary-Beary Chnstmas," said pre'lidcnt Mark Wbltfleld. "Mary Pat Earl (pany chairman). Roger Keating and I took the orna- ments to CHOC and decorated the tree in the towers. It was very festi ve. An employees' pany wa s going on while we were tnmrtling. .. We'll be able to donate $3.500 to CHOC from the pany proceeds." added Whitfield. around ~CP's spectacular ( hnstma\ tree. "That $90,000 tree 1!1 un- believable." said the current presi- dent. (Before him there wac; Dave Colton and Tim Salye~. Among those enjoy ing the pany were Carol DI Stanlslao (Community relations for SCP who donated the facility and secunty). Doug Wood, (community relations for CHO('). and BBC Admiralty board member' Joyce CaminJtl, Robert Harrell, Ralph Yack, Keating, Sbleld1 Rich- ardson with wife Katby, Blake Wood- ward, Earl, Salyer, Wbltfleld with wife Sherri, Bill Allderson (with Dana) and Chris Pearce. Also seen were Linda and Steve Eulg and Joan and Tom Richardson (from the Balboa Bay Club). Lea and Rick Frencb, Marilyn Maaerban, Karen Pan.aler, Clleryl Quick, An- tonio Corarrvblas, Kim Strecker, Kathleen McDonald and Kathryn Cbam . a neat group doing their own thing and then bringrng in the mone).'' said Frances Stawicki, director of volun- teer scn1ces and guilds coordinator. • • • Members of the Orange County An Alliance nibbled hors d'oeuvrcs and \1pped w.inc at thl' Fine i\rt s Galic!) at lJCI during their holida)' cel- t•bra t1on "It 1<. pnmanly an op- portun1t) for membcn> to network in a '><>rn.11 atmo~phere," said Molly Lynch. admin1stra11vc director. Am ong those on the guest hst were Patti-Gene Sampson (prci.1dcnt ). Kaye and HaJ Pastorius. Beverly Reidling, Hetu Reuter. A.one N•U, Wayne Wedln, Mark Ketike. Dorothy Berry, Pete Lee and Georgia Connol- ly. Also James Dunning, Marilyn Lynch, Mary Catherine Kamlnsld, Jwdy-6offbl, Fred Sawyer, Joh Braader, E1tber and Nlx1on Bora• and 111a.a Sberman. estry, the) told me had made upwards of a million dollars grow1na Chnstmas trees on land in the f>}uallup Valley on old raspberT) land He had learned how to preserve his Chnstmas trees so they would appear fresh and green when shtpped 10 ( hnMmas tree lots all O\'er the country. Maybe that tree in your living room today 1s one of them. There's nothing quite so delightful as a Chmtmas trt:e and I hope you en~oy yours this year along with your children and your grandchildren or maybe your great-grandchildren. B) the way, where didJou get your Chnstmas tree? What d1 you pay for it'~ Ah, I thought so. So. 1f yo u are one of the new generation that hkes to figure a profit on everyth ing.just take the hei~t of }Our tree. divide what you paid for 11 by that number and then figure how many Chnstmas trees to the acre yo u could plant. You'll find 1t 1s a more profitable crop than raspbemes Or Valencia or- anges. for that matter Uncle Bnck Power was an addicted farmer. He and I. along with Joan Irvine. are credited wi th bnnging the Un1 ver<ill) of (ahfom1a to Irvine. And I guess we did Bnck wa a wonderful gu} to work w11h. but he neYer got o"er his craze for farming After we got thl' un1vers11y here.he tned to turn me into a farmer I bought a little place on Rancho Cahforn1a. but only after Brick had gone all over 11 tasting the soil. Ever sec one of the farmer addicts do that? Well. they do. Uncle Bnck finally settled on ra1s1ng almonds JUSt nonh of San Louis Obispo. Then. he achieved his amb111 on. He got me 10 buy 1wo 30- . acre tracts All I could be interested m was whether or not money could be made by reselling the land. Uncle Bnck was perfectly satisfied 10 build a small house and watch the beautiful tree!> grow I used to talk 10 Uncle Bnck about Chnstmai. trees .. Yes:· he would sa) "I passed that up I wa~n't figunng proper!} I didn't !>.now how much people w.ould pa) for ( hnstmas trees.·· • "-cir loll>.'>. l'"e gone far afidd \o go bacl>. and haH' a delightful) ulc:t1de \\.1th )Our mag1l·alh pre!>enl'd lrel' from P\uallup. I can·t thin !>. ot an) thing mul'h n1n~r (.,o. "vfrrn C hn,tma' and Happ' "'c" \ l'ar. Walter Burrou/(b" is tbf' Pilot's foundial( publisher Orartge Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, O.oembet 24, 19M 8S Daily Pilat ANN LANDERS 84 ENTERTAINMENT 85, I BU81NE8SB7 The sounds of Christmas ~ -Children from Coeta Meea ·, Co ege Park Elementary School choir, led by Donna Kelaen. entertain in the quad area of Faahion laland in Newport Beach near the 1bopptng center 's giant Chrlatmaa tree. Members paid $20 each to attend the semi-formal event that featured mu 1c by"Panut " for danang. "Pcanuts" 1sa group we heard playing at the Red Onion m Newpon Beach". said Whitfield. A la vish buffet was provideded by Jay's Catering. All of the partying was going on BBC 1s a three-year old organiLa- uon that was formed by )OUng Balboa Bay Club members. They chose CHOC as the recipient of the \IX fundruiscrs held each )car "They arc Pap:muz1 Is edited hy Vail:-Pilot tyle editor Vida Dean. 0.., ,...,..__,lee~ Sherri Whitfield (riCht) chata with Cheryl Quick and Antonio Covarrublu. Partytni at tbe BearJ·Beary Chrl•tmu nent are Khn Strecker, Katbleen Mcbonalcl and Kathryn Chamberlain. Marilyn Maaerban and Karen Pa.Diller eye crowd of more tba.n 300. Rick and Lea P're,nClh anlriDC at ICP'• Jewel Cout. \ .. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 24, 1984 Christmas reunion tradition of classmates .• Theiroupd~sn'thavca name, but u been "orpruted" ince 1947 wuh Christmas mceuoas held each year. "Members" are 1949 araduatcs of Huntinaton Park High School who live in the beach area and m Los An&eles. "We have never had a name for our arou~. but this year the invitation read Always Friends'. I thought it fit perfectly," said Sae Flieller about this year's get toaether at the Red Onion in Newport Beach. "Most of us have known each other since kindergarten and some even before. The first RUtY 3 7 years ago was given by Beverly Nel1oa in her parents' home. The friends gathered for their 30th class reunion at the Disneyland Hotel and another highlight in their lives was a trip to the-l>aJm Desert home of Marlene Moore where the 13 mem- bers celebrated their SOth birthdays -all at one time on a long weekend. Sylvia Baboff explained that vari- ous careers have taken classmates in a lot of directions -banking. reaJ est.ate, intenor design, teacbina and business in generaJ -and through a lot of family actjvities -Scoutmg, Uttle League and PT A. "But, we've remained friends and.kept in touch. I think it's pretty remarkable." Lon,time friend• Patty Sedgwick, Sharon Pepperell, Sue Flacher. Nancy Fortune and Sylvia Baboff at annual reu.nlon. .... A "just for fun" party is what Adoption Guild members called their Chrisunas sociaJ at the Pacific Club. • E. G. Cllamberlaln and Ollie RilJ arranged the event honoring new members and their husbands includ- ing Marclt and L. D. Cllristluo, Cindy and Jolla Galardi, Jeaue and Foretl Olaoa, Beverly and Jim Petert, Jou and Ralpb Bernard and Dawn and Bob Waaber. Among the others there were Erleee and Foster Garn, Nlclr.le and Paal Marx, Sanny and John Elliott, Bette Loa and Judge Mark Soden, Guild President Frltzle Wiiliams with Glean Bjorlr.land. Pany Wrap js edjted by Daily Pilot Style Editor Vida Dean. o.11r,... ,.._"' LM...,.,. J olnln& the Adoption Gutld '• "ju•t for fun party" at the Paclflc Club are OleDJl PecaGtancrecorto, Beverly Nelaonandl'fancySowerarecall thepartyof'47. Bjorklund, Frltzle William•, left, with Dawn and Bob Wu ber. TV LISTINGS EVENING -11:00- 11 D D ®J NEWS U MOVIE • • • "Gulhver's Travels 11939) Animated CiJ HART TO HART (!) UfESTYLES Of THE RICH AND FAMOUS m THf&'S COMPANY e ST AR TAB< C8SNEWS Q!NBCNEWS m HOT SEAT HOTLINE MOVIE • ••, ·Somewhere In Time 11980) Clmstopllef Reeve. J~ Seymour H THE NVTCRACl<ER: A FANTASY ON ICE '%JMOV1E • • Santa Claus ConQuers The Mar11ans 119641 John Gall Leonard H1tks -11:30- D H&CNEWS a»AUCE ll)~AOGERS NEWS l1J) THREE'S COMPANY (3 WHEEL Of FORTUNE m LANCER -7:00-11 THE CHRISTMAS TREE TRAIN D $100,000 NAME THAT TUNE G ABCNEWS_o CiJ DALI.AS NEWS e THREE'S COMPANY e WHEEl Of FOATVHE e TWEHTY-AFTH ANNUAL CHRISTMAS MUSIC PROGRAM 11) 3-2-1 CONT ACT (R) 0 P M. MAGAZINE EHT'EATAINMEHT TONIGHT .JE.()f)AROY (O)MOVIE • • • "WarGames' ( 1983) MattlleW 8'odettcit, Dabney Colemen ( FAERIE TALE THEA TAE -7;30- • THE IEAA WHO SLEPT THROUGH CHRISTMAS I , ... 'ffUO EYE OH L.A. YWJlfP If CINCINNA Tl 1=.=r TlCTACDOUOH I =-NAME THAT TUNE • • • • Megnlllcent Ob..ssfon 1935) lftnt Outlnt, AOblrt Taytor FMGOl.EAOO< MOY!( U "Airplantll The~ (19821 Aooer1 Hty1 • .11'4it HIQll'IY _,._ • 9CAll(CROW NllO ...... IQN8 ~=-«) • MOYll • .. • I Going My Way • (1M4) Botig Clotbv. Bafry Fitzgerald Her job search method a crime DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm 40 years old and haven't worked in a long time. DurinJ the last 18 months I have been mterv1ewcd by several people 1n hospitals and retail stores but no one would hire me. The store I would love to work an has three of my apphcat1ons. Several days ago I became desper- ate and wrote a letter to the manager. I told him I wanted to be a security guard. I explained that I had seen many people shoplift merchandise and knew all the tricks oft he \rade. In the letter I ex pla med that I wou Id shoplift m his store for a v.eek and after se' en days I would come to his office with the merchandise and tell him hov. I had done 1t I felt m} kno""- ho" v.ould he v.onh a Jut 10 him When I rece ived no response 10 m} letter I det:1dcd toio ahead with m) plan. I began by slipping several small objects from the noti6ns de panmcnt into my pockets and up my sleeves. I then walked outside to put all the stuff U 000 COOPlf D ®l ABC NEWS NIGHTUNE Q BUfNI AND ALLEN (!) CHRISTMAS CHOIRS Q)VEGAs m 100CLUB -12:00-11 (I) CHRISTMAS EVE AELIOIOUS SPECIAL D Qt CHRISTMAS: ROME 1914 8 TWILIGHT ZONE &MOVIE * * • •.; Bullerlhes Are Free ( 1972) Goich• Hawn Edward Afbefl Jr CiJ CUMIER AHO IVES CffAISTMAS 41) STREETS Of SAN FRANCISCO ®l DIRECTIONS ($)MOVIE • • • The Man Wtio Wasn't The<•' ( 1983) Sieve Gullenberg Jeffrey Tambof Mary Beth McDonough •tar• u Erin Walton and Morgan Steven• play• her fiance ln .. A WeddlDC On Walton• Mountain" tonight at 9 on Channel 4. -12:30- • ALFAED HITCHCOa( PAESEHTS m CHAISTMAS WORLD e TH£ 0000 NEIGHBORS CHRISTMAS SPECIAL D Ill) MOVIE • • • 1 S1arlllght The Plane That Couldn't Land' t 19831 Lee M&1Clfs Lauren Hutton - CiJ JOKER'S WILD WKRP IN CINCINNA Tl 4D RITUALS G> MOVIE it t it'> The Bells Of SI Mary s ( 19.4Sl Btng Crosby lngnd Befgman C SCTV· THE SECOND COMING H MOVIE • • •, ·s.vannll\ Smiles ( 191121 Mark Miller, Donovan SCoU ($) ROelN HOOO: THE CHILOAEH OflSAAEL -1:.30-a TIC TAC DOUGH JUOOlE.A Of HOTR.E DAME 8) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT G THE CHAISTMAS SONGS -t:OO- • KATE&ALU£ D MOVIE • t ; A Wtdd1ng On Wiiton 1 Mounttwl ( 11112) Mary Bt111 Mc()o. nw'S' W~ I LAWRENCE W£U( CHRiSTMAS 8P£CW. • KENNEDY CEHT~R TONIGHT (C)MOVll * • '" Superman Ill 11983) Clv1110- phtt RetYI . ~d Pryor 10 1MOVIE t t 'Nate And Haytt I 1983) Toni· rriy Lee Jorlel. J.fdlMI 0 Keele (S IAOTHPS ()fNSTMAS 8P£QAl CZ-MOW ._.,., High Road To Cllil\a ' 111831 f om It Armalrong -9:30-11 NEWHART THE VISITATION MYSTERY mMOVIE **'' 'Yes Sir. That's My Baby · I 1949) Donald 0 Connof Ctierln Coburn -10:00- 1) CAGNEY & LACEY em NEWS CiJ ISPY MIOHIOHT MASS 9 AMUUCAN PLAYHOUSE G SIN(J.tT ·YOURSELF MESSWi 'RJMOVIE t • • 't "Croas Creek · (1982) Mary S1eenburgen. Rip Torn <SJMOVIE t tt Tr1<11ng Piace. {1983) Eddlt M1Kphy Dan Ayllroyd eae 8 TAXI -10-.30- I~ • AOCKFON> FllE8 e THf CHAISTMA8 SONOI CO)MOVIE **'"' "Vt*ty Girt" (11183) Nicolla Clot. Deborah Foreman. rl)MOVIE • • t 'n't A Wonderful Utt 11947) Jernes Sttwlft Donna Reid -11:05- (C)MOVll t •'~ · Somtwfwt In Time ' jlNO) Ow loe>'* ~. JaneStymouf. -11:30- 1 kUSIHO °' THl CMCt4I CHNSTMAlwrTH ~ -12:35- rOJMOVIE • • • "WarGames' ( 1983) Matthew 8'odettek. Dabney Colemao- -12:50- < C THE RICHARD 8ELZEA SHOW -1:00- 1) MOVIE t t ''I Remember 119701 Vince Edwards Kattleme Crawford U AMEAK:A'8 TOP TEH CHNSTMAS SPECIAL (!) CHNSTMAS CHOIRS (OONT'O) eMOYll • • • '"' "Sunrlst At Campobello" ( 1960) Ralph Bellamy. Grw Garton. OJ) EHT'ERT AlfMNT TONIGHT QD DICK VAN DYKE MOYIE • • t ''I TM Caine MU1iny" I 19$4) Humphrey 8og.wl. Joie Ftfftr -1:20- <CJtitOYIE **'' Thal C~ Sea.ton" I 1982) Btuc. Dern. Stacy l<Metl -1:»- DGMAT~ALIUM OOUECTlON QITHfNATMTY G THATOIRt. MOVll • • "Santa CltuS ConQutr• Tiit .,.,,,.,,. { t914) Jofln Celi. Ltonlrd Hldlt -u•-( MOYie Ht The &capt Miii" (IN2) Gfllfin 0 ...... Ttn Gitt -2:00- 8MOYll ... 'The Gttett$1 Glh " (197'1 Glenn Ford, Jul H1mt A11 I.MOERS in my tote bag. The minute I got outside. a security guard grabbed me and said, "We are going 10 the manager's office." I explained about the letter I had written but he didn't believe me. The manager was not in h1soflice and his secretary d1dn•t kno..,. ·anything about ll Iv. a~ '>O a'>hamcd I tnnl to '>lrangk m~ self w11h the telephone rnrd but the security guard stopped me. The manager then appeared and I told him I was desperate for ii Job. He vcf) nicely said the matter wou ld he dropped but asked that I shop elsewhere in the future. lam writing you in case anyone else out there has the same idea. I want them to know it doesn't work. Thank ·you. -LUCKY TO BE FREE DEAR LUCKY: You 1oud as lf you could use some counseling. Contact the Family Service A11oclatlon. You might also dlscu11 tbls matter with your doctor and ask If be knows of u agency that can help you. • • • DEAR ANN LA NDERS: A lovely )'Oung woman who works in this office 1s home 111 because she can't keep any food down. She 1s 21'2 months pregnant. I feel tembly SOIT) for this lady because I believe her huc;band 1s the tausc ofher nausea. not the preg- nann The clod 1old her 1fshe has a ho) h·c "1ll·hu) herafur coat lfshe has a girl she gets nothing. Please print this letter and inform all the other ignoramuses out there that it is the male who determines the sex of the child. All fetuses are onganally temales and only become male with the introduction of the Y chromosome by the male. I hope every woman wh o has been made to feel mfcnor because she produces only daughters will read this and feel better. -l'VE GOT BOTH (TORONTO) DEAR TORONTO: I've bffn wait- ing a loa1 time for someone to write a letter Uke yours. It's amulag bow few people know tbis elementary fa ct of reproductive biology. All tbose husbands wlao are disappointed be- cause tlaelr wives didn't give tbem a boy sboald be told, "You didn't give me that Y cbromosome and I couldn't prod ace a boy wit boat It." • • • An-)Our parents 1oos1ric1? Haraw reach? Ann Landers' booklet. "Bugged 8} Paren ts? How 10 Get More Freedom." could help }OU bndgc thegcnerotiongap. Send 50 cents with your re-quest and a long. stamped, self-addressed envelope to Ann Landers. P.O. Box 11995. Chi· cago. Ill. 60611. Fear of doctors common DEAR DR. STEINCRO HN: I'm not afraid of man or beast -with one exception (if the man or woman happens to be a doctor). I thmk there arc many reasons wh y people put off a '1s1t to the doctor. I wonder if some are honest enough to admit they're ~imply scared of the doctor. You try to talk yourself out of 1t. but it's difficult. No matter how nice and kind the doctor is, you may sit there palpitating m fear. I know I need a checkup. and my wi fe has been after me for months to call him for an appointment. but I find \Orne reason to postpone the vis11. Am I alone m Hrn, or are there some other cowards out there. too? MR. T. DEAR MR. T: No, you're no! alone. "v1an) feel the same but won't admit they're scared . They ofTer vanous reasons for their procrast1nat1on. "It's too expensive; I haven•t got the 11me to be s1tung around a doctor's office for hours; I can't stand pain and am scared of the needle: I don't think I can take a bad verdict that some- PETER StEllCIOlll thang serious is wrong." But as you say, Mr. T .. not many will admit they're afraid of the doctor himself. I th ink you'll be interested in a study that indicates that iatrophobia (fear of doctors) is more common than people realize. Study- ing 48 d1fTcrcnt subjects. a team of ltahan investigators found that when the doctor amvcd at the patient's bedside, blood pressure rose. The systolic and diastolic values climbed as much as 27 mm of mercury. systolic and I 5 mm for the diastolic readings. Heart rate also increased about 16 per minute. Per- haps this study will help you, Mr. T. Be safe, cycle with traffic flow -When .ndang a bicycle on a ------------- highway, a person shall always J Q ride: RAFFIC Ull A1 On the right hand side of _ the highway with the flow of =;;;;;;;;;~ traffic. i B) On the left hand side of ~--·~~ the highway foc1Ag traffic. Answer: A) Right hand side of the highway. A common myth among b1cycltsts 1s that 111s safer to nde •••••••••Iii••• • bicycle easain t traffic because you sec the traffic COmina at you. The problem is drivers don·t sec you. Bu:ycle accident stall'ihcs hst "riding on the wrona sjde of the road" (a.. violstion of2 I 202a eve ..('~lifomia Vehicle Code} as one of the lcadina causes of bicycle accidents. The accidents are usually caused by motor vehicles turning right onto roadways. The attention of dn vcrs 1s with the now of traffic from their left When they tum nght, dnvcrs don't c"pect, or see, bicyclists ndtna ega1nst the flow of lrlffic and coth ions occur. Q.estlo• a-4 utwer 1.,,UH b)' th Ntwpert leac• Police Dtpartmnt . • You'll now v1s1t your doctor knowing you're not the only one who's a little scared. You'll feel like many a "normal" patient. • • • DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: Call us selfish -but my husband and I enjoy smoking and arc willing to take the consequences later on. But why should we feel guilty that our smokmg may harm our three children? Is there any sc1cnt1fic evidence that our smoking will actually harm them? MRS.J. DEAR MRS. J: In a report to the New England Journal of Med icine, l.B. Tager. M.D. and associates writt' that af\er a seven-year invcstiga11on. children of mothers who smoke develop decreased lung functi on. These results are independent of childrens' later smoking habits. The doctors concluded that "ma· temal smolong contributes to re· duccd development oflung function! and may be import.ant 10 evcntua development Qf chronic obstructive airway disease (emphysema) in adult life.'' Still feel "unselfish." Mrs. J? • • • DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: Why arc diabetic ~tients. cspe~ially warn- ed about gettmg an 1nfect1on of their feet? My d~tor keeps saying, ••Jfyou get the slightest infection on your frcet or legs I want to know about ll immediately:· MRS. V. DEAR MRS. V: Because of poor circulation in lheir feet they miy have ~edu~d sensat!o~ of dama&e due to infection of 1nJury. If this aoe1 untreated, the d1abetic patient may develop ulcers. These, in turn, may lea~ ~o pngrcne and amputation . Th1t9 1s the reason for _your 4octor's btremc caution, Mr$. "V. ~lz Montgomery cast as villain LOS ANGELES (AP) -Eh78beth Montaomery, in a switch from her past roles as a heroine, is the hca\'y In a CBS movie now being filmed oo location in Ojai. Kirk Dou&Ju also stars an .. Amos" asa form~ batcbeU coach confined to a nul'ltn.& home where Montaomtry 1t the head nurx. He d1 O\'era that th 11 the head of a monstrous con piracy qaln1t th tldcrly mid nf . 1 - ' INTERMI SS ION 'West Slde' best of a vintage year TllJI ,, lb~ tlltb la • 1erle1 o/ HVH rol11mo1 revJewla1 tbe year 1114 la IOC'•I ttHler. M usK-al theutt'r, ns notro 1 n the lint column ofth1s scnc • WU!o panacularly prevalent along the Oranae Coast dunna 1984, ond that factor 1s e~idcnccd in thas, our 20th ycarend analysis of community theater pro- ductions. Of the to~ 10 hows -among 37 non-professional offenn&s reviewed dunng the past year -fully half of them rcguarcd m usical accompani- ment Clearly. community play- house arc beginning to bate the bullt't on extra expense and are stn ving for maximum entertainment. Th as year's top I 0 last reflects an .tdmirablc balance among tht' vanous Lommunaty groups w11h eight daf- tcrent theaters represented in the cream of the crop. As has been the case since 1972, the Irvine Communi- ty Theater 1s automa11cally dis- qualified because of this corre!opon- dl'nt's personal rnvolvement In llS operauon. It was a part1cularl) good )ear for three direc tors -Robert Michael ( onrad. Eileen F1shbach and Don Laffoon -who each placed two Benatar·'s ready for 'changes' By Y ARDEN A ARAR ........ "'-•rtw LOS ANGELES -Pat Benatar, \Oon to become a rock ·n· roll mama in the hteraJ sense of the word, isn't sure how her first baby will affect her career. But if motherhood 1s anything ltlce her pregnanc). she hould have a lot of fun finding out .. I haven·1 always been hlce this:· ~1d Benatar. beaming constantly -when not gigghng outnght d unog an interview at a cafe near her San Fernando Valley home ... I'm JUSt really happy no)" Ifs really one of the greatest things ~ever dad. I swear.:· Weanng a gail) decoratt'd black heret and a loose. black tunic. the s11ll- pet11e Benatar was qu11e definite!) cuphonc -with 11 "'eeks left until her earl) March due date. 01 T1tus productions on tht' elite hst. account- ina for 60 percen1 of the ui>pcr bracket And Conrad's $ueerlat1ve sta&Jng of "West 1de Story· for the Huntington Beach Playhou~ earned the loudt'st applause from this comer. Here. then, are the top 10 com- munlt) shows for 1984. wub exerpts from their Dail) Pilot reviews: bl 1. ''WEST SIDE STORY," Hunt· ington Beach Pia) hou~. directed by Robert Michael Conrad ·· .. ranks w11h the finest local community theter shows of the past several seasons. The intense gang n vall) ... 1s a fierce. 1mpass1oned flame that burns v. hite hot throulhout .. 2. "TERRA NOVA," Laguna Moulton Pla;.hou~ d1rectt'd b) Douglas Ro...,,e. ·· an ancred1ble ach1e' emcnt for a comm unit) theter. e'en one ac; near-professional as the Moulton .. S. "JOSEPH AND THE AMAZING TECHNICOLOR DREAMCOAT," Ne~Pon Theater Art~ Center. directed bf Eileen Fashbacb. "' ... ~n outstand1n1 ensemble pro- ductaon ... enel"I)' runs biah thtouab· out." 4. "CHEXJIOV IN YALTA," New- pon Harbor Actors Theater. d irected by Don Laffoon. " ... a marvelous nudae an thenbso(lhep-eaund near- arcat...splend1dly directed .•• 5. "B~HOI' CRUM.MONO," La1una Moulton Playhoux, directed by John-David Keller ..... a fast and funous farce .•. amona t.be funniest shows of the year on an y theatrical level." f . "SUGAR," Costa Mesa CIVlc Playhouse, directed by Pata Tambelhn1. " ... one of the dandiest musicals qr the season on the com- munity c1rcu1t." 7. "ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST," Mission ViCJO Playhouse. directed by Robcn Michael Conrad ... As total theater. it's among the b1ggies ... some 1n- cred1bly rt'ahst1c performances an 1he supporting ranks.'· 8. "EXTREMmES,'' Stop-Gap theater company, directed by Don ~nd w11h all 1hat sm1hng. she was barely recognizable as the pouty. sultry Bena tar of stage and video. She seemed far from the guts) hoyden who has belted her wa) to four straight best female rock performance C1ramm) Awards with such hits as "Heanbreaker°' .. Hit Me" 1th Yo ur Pat Benatar looks forward to motherhood. Best Shot." .. Fire and Ice .. and .. Love Isa Battlefield:· !----------------------------, The hardened image 1s slowl) It's a funJUled famuy. And a wb.aJe ol u •c:tftatw•. changing. pan1) because of her preg-It'1 Dtsocy'a aD-tbne claulc -badr lM the holidays ... nanc) and partl~ under the influence WALT 11 her husband. "'c1I (,craldo. who 1s ~ also her lead guitarist and co-RlilSNErS h pr~~~e~hc cover of "Trop1co:· her _ 1 ..,-~e _ ilD new album. shows a different " , ~ -~ . , ........... Eknatar: a shadoW} woman clad in romantic pastel rutlles with a hunting •:md poised on her hand .. , wanted 10 do '>ometh1ng femt· nine ... she said ... ll's hard 10 feel bo)ash when you're pregnant." The music 1s also somewhat softer. LA MIRADA ORANGE SRO Gateway 523-1615 Stadium Oflve·tn the arra neements more complex. the BREA Mann COSTA MESA UA Cinema 540.0594 639-8770 'ocals display more of Bena tar's Brea Plaza 990-4022 LAGUNA HILLS opera-trained. threc-octaH' range. In FOUNTAIN VALLEY EowardSJSanbom ORANGE h I th BUENA PARK Family Foor Laguna Hills i.tall UA City Cinema fact. the album as a w o e as ano er UA Movies 990-4022 963-f307 7~6611 634-3911 step 1n the d1rec11on she and her band began taking with .. Battlefield." COSTA MESA IRVINE ORANGE WESTMINSTER .. That was when we consciously Edwatda Mesa ~gf~5Wooo1>odge ~~~nge Mall ~:J= Laffoon •· ... an e~hausllnJ proJcct. both for the IC10rs pbys1ally and the aud 1enceJ menwh·. •· I. ''BARNUM,'1 ewpot1 Theater .\rt.s Center. dtteeltd by Eiltto Fish· bach. " ... ha~·~ohaat entertain· ment... k.aleadoscope of color and commotion." 10." NOOP V," Wes&min.ster Com· mun1ty Theater, directed by Randy Cobb "Hu performers are )ouna. enerset1c and well tuned an on the special ecccntnotaes of th~ar ch.anc- ters .a first rate show which should appeal to au &ge'S ... Honorable mention to some otheT fine local productions -.. Death- trap" at both the Newport Theater Arts Center and the Laguna Moulton Playhou.se, "Cat on a I-tot Tan Roor · at the Mis.s1on V1e10 Playhouse, "Damn Yankees" at the Moulton and Golden West Colltje, "Stalag t 7 .. by Showcase Productions at G WC, ~The Fantasticks" by the new South Coast Mu"cal Theater and .. The Hot L Baltimore" by another new troupe . .:\ ( lus A.ct Pla}ers. Nut: ne ~•I llldlvldul per- lormuen of lte commuJty I.tutu 1e•1011. Entertainers pushing for Jack Benny stamp LO A.NGELES ( A.P) -The camp;\ign lo have the U.S. Postal Service· issue a Jack Benny com- memora t 1 H stamp 1s gajning momentum. Committee chairman Norm Crosb). along with George Bums and Irvan Fern. report that those who've agreed 10 serve on the honorary committee range from former Presi- dent Gerald Ford to Fred Astaire to Lucille Ball to Kenn R rs LO Frank --JO.,lref .. 4'''"''' ·-,. .... ;.-U. ..... " ;a. •cosu"""' -·--. -· . ... 'I: ... . .. • t01U ""SO --am ··. . - WT•'f-;/I( ·~-~~ 'IA-SJllOCJ ·-'IL,_ co-- C•ll 6U -5678. Put • tew words lo work for ou. Sinatra. Hu ndreds of peo ple have signed pct1t1ons asking tbt Postal Service to issue a stamp booon ng the late comcdwl. Crosby said. "Everybody loved Jack Benny because be made us laugh, be made us happy. and be was a genulDCly wonderful person." Crosby saJd he would mail the petition Wednesday. the 10th an- niversary of Benny's death. to the Citiz.eos Stamp Advisory Com mince 10 Wash.ingto o. T.HE KILLING EIELDS edwards TOWN CENTER .,.. I ' '151'.' LI"' "'751 4184 t Q !M ' P ll 'il'J, • COSTA MISA ----- I I~ II~ 11~ 10 l~ made the effort to change the sound.'" IL..-646-_502_5 ________________________ -.J ,he said. "For this record. all we 1-:~Drlrlrl~~~~~~~~~~!t~~!!~~~~i~:J;~l wanted to do was go tn and pretend we never made an album before ... and not be afraid to do stuff." •El TORO • ,...r 4'S-Ul 1110 I 1\ &ll .,!Um • l .. ""'l1l 210 ' \ ... ~ • IRM • "That's usually the problem .'' she continued. 'T m so paranoid and tense about changing thin~s. and Neal 1s bcaging me and begging me for )Cars and years to try this. and usu~lly rm so nuts when we go 1n (the studio). But this time -I gue~'I. because I was pregnant -I was really happy an~ ~cure and I said. 'All nght. I don I care . ..,;.e'll try anyth1n~.' So we did.'' The expenment seems to be work- ing out quite nicely. C:-ntacs hav.e pra ised the album almost unani- mously. The first si ngle. "We Belong." was already in the Top I 0 by December a nd "Trop1co" was not far behind. By now. Bcnatar would normally be tounna to support the album. but the u pccted baby cau~ her to considerably rcarranac her wo rkana achedule. When she learned she was expcctina last summer. 'lhc immedi- ately stopped recording to fin ish .•~rec vid eos before ,he hccamc v1s1bly preanant She 1hen completed "T rop1co" - she's convinced the baby's favorite cull are "We Belona" and "The Ooh Ooh Sona" -and has been divid ina her tame between doana pre chore:s, holiday sho ppina and rcmodelina her Encino home in what she described with more lauJhter as the traditional mo tbc.rhood ntual of "nestina.'' ··11 m akes me crur bccau~ cvery- 1h1n,1 IS such a chche.'' he said ruefullr . "You uy, 'I'm ~ot 1oin1 ~~ do this and then you dQ 11 anyway. Bcnatar, wtt o tum-. 3! on Jan. 10, said she and her husband plan 10 take natural childbirth cla .. , 1n't aonn1 be no hero. but I'll try." he said candid ly. be loves hve pcrformancl'1. and plan to 10 on the road with the beby. "We're goan1 to try to 10 out the nn1 of June, .. she S8td The idea has the supPort of Pretenders 1nacr C'hnu1c H yndc. who took her own daus}ltcr on the road at 1hrcc month i nd Eknatar's doctor But 'ht' may chan c her mltld about tounnJ atlcr she ai"'l"' h1nh. LaMIRAOA ~ lll~d~U) llC llS HO 1 4~.1000 N/fN<t llCllE 15 (Ill Siil( OM T 11W & IMID C"'Ul I 00 l ~.HO llS 1040 """° T(ll( IS Oii WJ Olol T Ztlt(Nl " ,. 1111 ' 111M:11 inrr rn•o llJO JOO SJO 100 IO» fl'ltllfCJ. JDllS Oii SMt • , llH•* 1• u ...... 11111 lo ...... ,._._ ... llllM -flN-IJ\ llSS tu HS '~ ass IBS ~ IDCTS Oii Siil( a.IT llOf .. U ClllP (I) II In tt STtllO I 00 )IS S lO I 00 10 lO ~"'-f l(•fl~ Oii W I DAl t fall&• lDll ft.IJ) 1 a JJI S~ I It 101'1 OMCI IQ{ Tl Oii SM ( Qill f *PACIFIC DRIVE-IN THEATRES• * CINE-Fl SOUND! At te.. sym._.. ~•t •11~~ diftct to yotir AM ar * re~o. If no r11io with ICCm!'Y ,otrtion, lilrt"I yow ""' AM ,....._ AU OPEN.-1•11• Stort ,.,. ~.,, 14~rnmtt131'1=.~:. t.!..-r-) lillli~-,IMl!!Jl9!~ • • St.,,H SWl',MlUS• lVU'I &SUN •• *_ m.i u * -(Pt.IJ) I , .... nc I.All mn1nu "! ORANGE ~ M-'8181) P\US -• llC1lll tll 111411>1 .......... .... ... , • lltt• Ctl • • SUPE" MAP MUTI (nry Ill Slf, • ....... llill ... ,~ ... l~Y I '••' 'I \I .'\~ ~-~~~-~~- MISSION .,..,, __ (PC..IJ) ... .,. "'ooaa ~ol'O 1-1JOl•S60Ct lS 10 10 U !I014 llX • SO. COAST PUZA • I OWN CE N TE• OCl 1o15M °"""'161 ........ "111~"1r ) • ..,.., 11 S 1 1~ It~ 10 I\ \l ~U U~W IOO IOWM mm• ·~' , •• ti>""•• U ~ tf t~ QJD\ I 100 • 11'1" ~ lU 11\ '00 110 IO .ll HAllBQll I ~._.4"11 ltC 11~ 1 ll Ito tlS 11 I\ 1151 11 )00 H&ll8Qll TW I lllllO Sl'tlh $1 ~ 111 (CCII ._..., IOC W11J1.f llLUccr' (11 "' Ill l~ '00 l lS •JO Ml ~• Ml' OISlll• 1,1 l JO l ll. •!'I '11 I t6 V W• 1 C Ml C '" *>«4 -.la • , ._,_r(PC..IJl lltS l ~4tS llS II' • ' • I It~ IHI• 100 " •n Ol1CJ1 Tll nJmm Ir ""'Ul I 1 ~ I \ IO !IO U WlllHIO • '""' ~" ) , .. u Ztlr ''" c "'' •11 "' l'l.9 • -cmract -\ ··" •• Jl1 ...... ~ 10~ mm• I ~ 00.fUllU •••··• ~""Ul •~.. It 100. l~ 9l6 I ll~ QWWJOO SOUIH COASl lllCMlll J.L•l1lll --...-r(PC..IJl I l \ ! •It\ U~• l OO BIUSH\ U ~ ...,,......,.-....,,,.O•~S~,----llCl-.,-s=~=•~o ~"" , LS 11 \I~ 16 It I\ IUt•I• I l.o S't•O ( ..,,., .... , ltiUlll'.: IA J•\ t•t.a. It , ..-1: IUCS IDOCAtr C JIC ' D • ' t 1' c ,~ ... !J ~ Oii tU:t --!ft) • ll • oc ~~ "'~ -~IJ\ : . . "'' i: 'JC toe .: ..... "T"'' .._ l'.>4Ull LM~DSllY -" .... .... l'.>4 U t. ..... t IUC1llC ...... '"' ' , I • I 10 Q\. "•CIC (Ul('~ "wtlll_..4"1-Ul ~"' • ~-0 s.: ..... ' lllYUSilT _,..., '1•' -o-o.-i-r~1> t "' 111 12' H S II\ t ,\ 11 • C \Cl111l• 1 IWll,ll llCl_. Slf•O -n.-- 1 I 't\HS llOO c .... ,. , 88 Orange Coa•t OAJLY PILOT/Monday. December 24, 19&4 Eur()pe won't be the same after Chevy's 'Vacation' Stonehenge laid to ruin in movie sequel to National Lampoon's first comedy hit By MATT WOLF ST. MARGARET'S, England - tonehenge is 1n rums. and the Griswalds are to blame. Or so goes the plot of "National Lampoon's European Vacation,'' stamng Chevy Chase and Beverly D'Angclo m a S 17 million film follow-up to the 1983 comedy hit, "NntJonaJ Lampoon's Vacation." In the sequel scheduled for release next summer, the inept Griswald family wreaks havoc with a mock-up of the Bronze Age monument Stone- henge -one of England's top toun.st anractjons, the Louvre Museum in Paris and the Piazza Navona in Rome. . "There's a pan of me that 1s v~ry amused by physical, destructive humor, especially when. it's not nasty- destructive," said director Am y Heckcrhng dunng a break m the last week of filming at West London's Twickenham Studios. "The GriswaJds accidentally knock over Stonehenge," she said. "They accidentaJly kill a dog in France. That stuff makes me laugh. I don't know if it's panicularly male or female. or !f it's1ust strangeness on my pan .• but It iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ just got to me when I was reading the script," said the Bronx·bof!l Heck~rl­ ing. a 31 -year-old Amencan Film -70MM~ Institute graduate, whose credJts tn· elude "Fast Times At Ridgcmont High" and "Johnny Dangcrousl>:." "When you see the _early silt:nt movies and all the homble, stupid, accidental th.inp that happen, they "'DUNE' TOWERS OVER MOST FUTURISTIC EPICS .. :' St• '"ACot (D].,....._J'P"ESENTATI~ BUENA 'NIK ilGOfa RW WI -EA>w•~ Stnoorn 9'2 499J ""l!Ul\I '4otS M ;o zn ·~ 768 661 • ·l.( t" ~· ··~ 4!1 •• '(\. .. ' COST A M CSA Ja:WiiOllT 8£lCR EDw ... o. 1(1Wt\h<t"' ..-.-oj ,.,..l>O" 751 ••&I ·-b-440760 W 4, ~ ' I A.. t • • 4• .. ~ ~ C ,_.. •• li;.t 2~S3 D U N IPG-1310; oa • • ""htCffO t .. r •••1 •iREA UAMo-~ 990 4022 • MISSION vi[]) l.OwarOt VllJO NI~· 495 6220 AUilllHISAl UUASl l'lll,IW4ll01WNIC11ySIM-.lw NOW PLAYING 'I 11'1 JO > • .. ,I.). t(, tr '•" . ,/' '~') , ... '1(11 BUtHA PAllK OltUi'l£ Pac'11< s Buf'l.l l'e<• SUO•um Or,.,. '" On.. In 82 I 4070 fd9 8770 .,.,,. •• A ,,. AU~• l'>A' F'OUN'T AIN VAUl'l "11"'' • '- Ld11.,111h Fount"., V••<"I • WESTMINSTUI 'v. o 6J!I 150() E.IJW•rOS Cwwm• flif>t 11 1 1 )4.. 8°"' MJS ,_ ••' . ~ ( . .. . .... ... .. .... 6 IR.00\ •CGl'IA-.JA •U ...... ,.,.,._.., tc_.., • "" A.fit ••,... •fl r '\ , . .,. ... an n '°"° • wtrr-11JI ,,. ... !.'-.~ ·~~ .. -"" .. ~ ... .,. -Mr'lllUrt MST~a f .............. ,...., ...... ,.w., • O; 06. .... *' •a.-m--.. .. .. ,,.__.._. -..... _, .......... '"FALLING IN LOVE ' IS A MOVIE TO TREASURE." G~ Sita NIK hf T~ tooa, S~• Falling in il\lE A fAAi\Mltll ., I ff ~ ---·-·------ ~~~-NOW PLAYING ~~~ IREA (l TORO IRVlNE '"n'W'J:~i SAHlA H SPRIHOS SRO Ld M~illl• O• ~t In 5?3 )()14 >.,f~"'\I" 8'~ ;> ~: ... '.>29m~ r, .... ,.c, 5,t\llno1 • SI! I S88ll E aw~1os Woodb<oOQe ~111.l --"'~ AHAHEllll COSTA MESA ' • ,,,. ll• t )40 '444 551~5 Par '< \ A~4•• " (} it I/I 879 9&50 Organized crime has never been this disorganized! , WA ~~04Ull UA MIMf~ 4 !Mii llW t!Wl •• OllAll(J '"' UN rMI( 9~7 49i3 UA MOVll.5 H fl IMf ftlfi!A ml,, MAii COSIA !EA ~46 1111 l,,~r~ ,_,,,,, COSIA IUA 97134141 CClWAROS CKMA CENl[R ~AIM)AMS Cl TOIO S81 ~00 lOWAROS ll IOllO ll IOllO 1111 ~ Pl:MS 'lm ~lilt<M ~304401 ·-8\4 8811 IOWAROS IM£RSIT1 CAMM llll C OI W.~, OUIG. 631 0340 NM:. Of!AHGl MAI I llJSlll so 01 lf!C()IN I OWAllOS SOU I H t0AS I '1. Al A [ OW4ROS WEST 8RQOI\ WfSlllllSll I I OI BllOOJ ...... OUfltil 6.J.t 19 ii UA CITY ClNUR _,..I•• A tHf'!l'WI' .. IMI cm ~ {!H•I' lllUTWISIU • UA WbfMfCSl[R MAll 89J ~46 C '"°'Al K\5.lo 1111 LAGUllA IUal • IOW~ SOOIH COAST LACUNA 4911/JI ~r~ ~I l'WY u ..... JADtl>•• "CITY HEAT IS DYNAMITE" ,,,. -qC 'v GOOCJ>.f()IHwUG.NMPfC.14 "I t~ mae IU<e o cheer1e0der than o tllm ct1tlc. but this m::Me Is dynamite" .,,.,.,, -Al1C TY GOOCHtOIH¥WGAAMllf(.- NOW 'tl TORO S81 9~ ·c.Ma 63A 1m Sl«>WllG £ OWAl!OS [l TORO OOMl fl IOllO II> TM! l'UI,\ "A/A ""''"'" u ,.,,, C.Mll 6\4 9361 •VII SSIOMS Wt AJMI Clll 493 4~S PACl'l: ORAHC( Oii ,. COWARDS W0008llW P ACtrt lilSSIOft Oii .. ~I l'fft Al SfAll C.0111g 9oUtW,1 '-"'I Of C\Al'll > D IWT al '-"'Sf -.a Sl95JJ9 9\.A 1W1RA (?.ill) 691 06H ~·-~1444 ~ 811fA PlAZA AMC r ASHION SQUARf l OWAM>S MIS lot ''"\I "'llM °""°' ........ llllJllll Al WICMllU UM rm 9'J? 499J 9lA mAOA m 1&11 WCSTWISlD HI m~ UA MOVlfS I SAO GATEWAY~ EOWAAOS CMMA wm ll llfU•HollAllll\ll SA m AT tAU(Y If W .. , U AT CO.DIJI •ST com EA 979 •1•1 mu Vl.X> mmo ~· EOWAROS CKMA CCNTCR EOWAROS MISS()N VII' JO MAU OOlll lllJ{O IWIOAI \J) ,., 10 CIOlllll ~ 11 T .. always crack me up," she 1d. "That'~ more what this lund of movie is about." Producer Matty Simmons secs the film's humor rooted in human truths. "The best things we do and the best humor that hap~ns is that which is based on reality, ·said Simmons. who started the popular National L..am- poon humor magazine in l 970 and has parlayed its success into radio. television and films. "National Lampoon's Animal House," the first film to use the magazine's name in its title, has grossed over $200 million. and has been followed by "National Lam- poon's Class Reunion" and now the two "Vacation" films. "I think the reason 'Animal House' and ·v:scat1on' were so successful 1s that people related to them." said Simmons. "They satd. 'I did that.' or ·1 knew that guy when I was in college,' or 'I went on that tnp cros~ country.· "I think the same thing will happen here," he said. "The millions of Amenc.ans and people from all over the world who have traveled will sec the many things that they have done. only of course we take it that extra couple of yards to where it becomes hopefully hilarious." Chevy Chaae and Beverly D' Aneelo meet the Britiah "royal family" -played by (from left) Peter Hugo, Jeannette Charle• and Julie Woolridge) -in a acene from "National Lampoon'• European Va- cation," being filmed in London. In the film , the Griswalds go on a TV game show and win a two-week European tour that takes them to Germany. Italy, France and England. It also 1s a JOumey through each nation's idiosyncrasies. Simmons said the British are lampooned for their excessive nice- ness. the French for their arrogance and the Griswalds for their general misfortune. Designer takes off-Broadway fansouttotheold ballgame "The Griswalds arc very typically Amencan." Simmons said, "Except that instead of having three to four problems arise during a two-week tnp to Europe, they have many prob- lems." Chase said his charactc\7J!ncounters the Bnt1sh most frcqueil'tly in traffic accidents, often with Eric Idle from the Monty ~hon comedy team. "The British arc very polite, the French ... by and large are rude," said Chase. who. rose to fame with the "Saturday Night Live" TV series and the films. "foul Play" and "Cad- dyshack." "Throughout the film." he added. "the Gri swaJds represent to these countries a typical. middle-class American family, and whatever comes of that can be savored by European audiences as almost a doubhr.Jl,·back." COSH llilf.SA ~-' ~ ·~· • r,. .....~.: ........ ..., , .. ....... OIWIGf ..,..,.~ ty11!1$$ IA llltfWIA r,,. ,,. fl •'J".f I I .. :JW) ..,..,. •• , WUT-.Slf• ~"If! H#'jtr \ ... .. t •• , ... ll IOflO • OOIA~CI . i'tQ' ,,.. > ..... ·-c:i-·-fOl/lllAlll VAU!Y tr , ~ ~- By MICllAEL KUCHWARA NfW YORK -When Ton}' Stra1gc\ was growing up in M1n- ersv11lc. a small commumt} nestled northwesl of Reading in east-central Pennsylvania. the best thing about a spnng or summer Fnda} night was baseball The high ~hool blind would pla). The crowd would '>It on wooden bleachers. You could smell the. sod and french fnes. And the fun , stnctl} amateur. was contagious. "It's something I've never for- gotten," says Stra1ges. 42. a shr. rumpled man. "I don't think there s any other sport that 1s such an American tradition." Now the Tony award-winning scenic de\1gncr and ~teadfast Ph1la- delph1a Phillies fan 1s trying to recapture that affectionate feeling for the sport with the setting he has created for "Diamonds." a new off- Broadway musical re' uc that eel- ~~ t~at American pastt1me. SPEND THE HOLIDAYS IN BEVERLY HILLS WITH THE #1 MOVIE OF THE SEASON! 131::\ll:l~l:f 1-111.1-'~ R n., l FAkiiM ii': I T !kt ,,_, ... -.... . NOW PLAYING . ' . ' .,; •V'M•'• , .... ,, 'D-· - • MISU>h ~•(JO v .. .. ' •OMNGI .. OMltC;f H~ #IST-lll• p ...... , ' , . ................... _,_... .... "THE BEST MOVIE ABOUT YOUNG PEOPLE SINCE 'AMERICAN GRAFFITI.' A funny. sensitive, beautifully written movie. " Q(U PAii 9~1 49'1 UA MOVl(S 8 ctm IUA 919-41~ E OW4ROS CM.ti!A a H'TfR etsra IUA ~~94 UA SOUIH COAST NOW SHOWING! ... 63'1110 Sl~OUI llAflll.A IUI '1DM llnmml •• Mt) ruie ,., " 111 • 9(A(il • ~ so "' cc fW'I CllJlllM97Ml'i (IMAMJS CK.MA a.IITTR ....... Jodt ~ USA !()()AV n "" ~a 1 ~880 CDWAllDS SAOOl [BAU fMT .. IAWY %.l l SOI fA*.V IOOQ .,. ~~·Ob~~ lDWAllOS W0008tlllGI IUllC( ~ J911 UA QT'f Cf.111111 IUT..SfCI 19J-0!>46 UA WlSTl•CSTtll MALI There's something funny going on in wa~hington. Goldie' about to become a diplomat. .. . PROTOCOL IAAU 1111 '"Ml I ..,..... KACI .... Olla I DWMOS SAMOlll lOIWOS IUfTllC fOll IACUllA .. LS llWI •O•llO Al -&ltll\ II M IMll Mil TO RMS -~~·~ -U.l!>~J lDWAllDS WOOCllfltt.I sYl#l QTY cum• "'!ft I IW a.Ill• ·~"· U l~ll '" OUJ UITI • '40-7444 MICf ~ l MSIOI OW>aMIW mT0t Al IWMnd a.-. ~ZJ 1'11 -IOIWfftltJM SAO ~f[WAY $ uuu :TU*lt U fW'I Al ~l(f VO .. """' "" Stra1gcs has placed the audience in a miniature baseball stadium. com· plete with real ba!>Cball stadium scab and a green carpet that looks a gn~at deal like Astroturf "I didn't know what th e set was going to be when I first started workrng on the sho"' bul the mos1 obvious thing to do "'as a baseball park." sa)s Stra1ges. "And the moc;t obvious thing 1s usually ngh t .. Some members of the show·i. production staff did research on stadiums at the Bascball llall off-ame in C oopcrstown. NY. S1ra1gec; went to the New York Public L1bral) and -.anous librancsat Yale lln1ver'>1ty to study photographs of old bac;cball parks. Then the show'\ produ<:Cr\ karned that Roosevelt "ita<l1um 1n Jer!.C} City. N.J .. wa'> slated for dl'mollt1on The 35.000-scat 'itad1um ""a'i built 1n 1936 and for man~ year<; wa<; 1hc home ot 1he "le\1.-Jer'>e) C11an1s a Clas'i A·\.'\ lntL·rnatwnal Lc<.1gue baseball team "When I d1<l thc final modl'I ot \\.'t the mo'>t important thing IC> me "'•" the seat'> .. <,a~c, Stra1ge'>. who "anted to u'it' thl' real thing in C m:le in thl' Square. Lhe theatcr ""hl'rc "Diamond'>" " pla) ing .. Theater seal!> arc hea' \ Thn ·rl' th1d .. and IJt Bac,eball \Cat' arc llghtn I W11h thl' coopcnlllon of Nl'W' or~ and '-c'' frr'>n authorit1l'\ .. Diamond'" tinall) got \!)() 'iC:JI'> from Ruo'n dt \1<1d1um \1ra1gc\ had 1hcm pa1ntnl 1n Lhe hnght rl'd' urangc~ hlul'' and H'llo-w\ ol 11>d,I\ .., ha\l'hall par~!> ' "Thl'll '~e hu11t a llttk· kntl' .iround tht• scal\. Afta 1ht1t wc 11u1 up llllll' h<>U~e.,, \O the \ct look\ like Com1'ikey Park or Wrigley Fic.·ld in Chicago or the old ( onn1c Mack Stadium in Philadelphia." he say'>. de!icnbmg the nc1ghbhorhood feel ot many old-time baseball '>tad1ums The 11.-.1 ot neator!. of" Diamonds" read~ llkc Broad"a>'s firsMtnng 1eam. fhe director 1~ Harold Pnnce. "hu has prodUl.ed or directed 'iuch I suu:C!>!>l'S as "Evita .. " "Fiddler on thc Roof' and "The Pajama C1ame .. More than 40 people. including 'cteran!i Belt\ ( om<lc n. Adolph (1recn John Kander. t-red t:.bb and c > Coleman. have "'ntten the '>ketches. music and lyncs In such cumpan>. 5tra1ges would be con- <;1dcrcd a rool..1e. bu1h1c;credenuals.1f no1 as length}. arc 1ust as gold-plated. He's de'i1gned for numerous re- gional theaters 1nclud1ng Washmg- 1on'!. Arena Stage. the American Rcpcrtorv Theater in C'ambndge. Ma!is. and Baltimore's Center Stage. His tim Broadwa) set design was in ll'l 78 for "T1mbuk1u.'' a la-.1sh re- mounting of the hit musical "K1)mc1." .. tamng Eartha Kilt. ~ince 1hcn . he's had his flop shows -"Copperfield," "A History of the American Film" and. "Harold and Maudc" -as well as h1~ successes, moi;t notably. the Stephen Sond~eim­ James Lap1 ne musi<"al "Sunday m the Par~ with George" For that musical. he turned Georges Seurat's painting ".\ \unda} Afternoon on the Island of l a Grande Jatte" into three <l1mcns1ons and won a Ton) for h1<., effort\ \lcord1ng to 'tra1ges. a sho-w 'c; 'K.npt and thl' theater's space de· termine a show's set. For "Sunday 1n the Park with GeorJe:· he had the Booth Theater. an intimate BroadT· "'a) house with a tradttiona proc;cenium '>tage. For "Diamonds," he ,., wor~ing at the Circle in the Square. a h1<,tonc ofT-Broadwa} thcatcr located 1n Cin·enw1ch Village \1ra1ge., call.., < 1rck in the Square "a h1g hlac.k ho\ 11·~ long and shaped lih· :i hor\e\hoc" ,..,ilh lh(' audience \1lllng on thrl'l' '>1dc' H1'> 1ntert'\t Ill ~tagel'fa lt began earl}. while he \\a<. a ~tudent .at St. l-ranc1s of Ass1s1 Ill M1ncrsv1lle. a town of mostly Lith uanian immi- grants. Rut he never thought of stage design as a career until he was 21 while working tor the government in Washington, D.C At night, he'd help build and paint scene!) for local communal) theater groups and e\cn helped start a puppet company c.aJlcd the Amencan Puppet Theater. Stra1gcse,entuallywound up at th e Yale School of Drama where he studied under Ming Cho Lee before tr)ing his luck 1n reg.1onal theater. flnt T~ .... ~. ONLY 12.7& UMeta Netti' ro• r1111 SJflr'I[)~[)( GAME v1sn ou~ rw ROOM • il;1 •]Lil11W6 I r AtUt 0111 s 113 r1!4•I•luil6) ~ ZHJ~Mci!, ) Ill llll/!!111111 !1111 St•m •RllAKIW I~ • s .. ·-·-.... "'"' "•OllOOH (flQ) Mk9(1 &MAUO. cPO-tlllHOWIAT 1100 l 120 '140 8 .01. 10120 •R&MtJW a ........ • I Ill CNt AT 1 :fO J :JO t rJO • 1130 & t JO ae1e .. 1 SHOWS AT l2 00 J 1lO I 00 1110 & 10100 70MM I HO '•Hit ITAMIAMCNt 10MM ' DolbySttreo t1 14 1•11 ll •H 1100. 10.20 .av ....... u.s COf' t•t SHOWS AT 1 I J 1U l •JI 1 to• 10 01 CfTVNSAT .. t IHOWI AT 1 rll l •ll •••• 7111 t ill NO"AHU , .. ftNOCcHtOte, '1111 SOiull <'O CllllO "rieea Cll8'ttll NOTOCOL.,_t '1vt Co P'Utvre ,ollee ""'-"'' (!ti ........ '110 Co Hft lt•O Dawn l"O 1 lf NOltAHU --------~-------- - Orange Coest DAILY PILOT /Mondey. o.c.nt>er 24, 1 S'1 COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN8A~TION8. 81 Mur uAL FuNos .. A N~W YORK (AP} -Ttie foltowlno ,,,t ,g ahows the Ov.,. • ttle • Counter 1l0cks and warrants that t1av1 oone UP J !tie mos!_..•Dwn 1~11 baMd on 1>«cent .,. noe tor rldav No s.ecur 1 • trading w s2 or 1000 i al\~res are I • 11 and siwcentaee challff' art ltie glfierence betw~.,.rne s>rtvlou• ctos ng I Id orlce and Fr~':f tut bid prJa l, , u~ le~ lf'Hj: t Hr1nAlr 4~ ~ UP n j EICatn ' 16 2 UD i~. J OvER THE CouNTER your bank leaves town, where does that leave you? ~~ 3VOM _1 .. . I n late i)e.:emb<r. Banl of Amf'ric.a plan~ to close ib BaJboa office here in :\e" port Beach. ~ow. thi-. rould cause problem~ for Bank of America t'U~tomer~. But there i .... a ..,olution. and it·~ right nearby. California Fi~t Bank. \'\'e're making our~lv~ available if you'd like to talk about opening an account . 'ou ran make ~n appoint- ment tn come in and !'.>tt u .... bc->fnrt• or after rt>gular l1Jnltnl! hnur ..... \\\;rf' offt•r· ing 200 free per"(mal ched.~ per ru:.tomer and 3 month .... without a regular monthly -.en ke charge. \\1e'll even ffer "nu a small safe depo~it bo'C: fr e for one vear. But that· .... onh the beginninf!:. As n California First ·u~tomer. vou 'll find our da~·to-day: peN>nal atten- tion tn 'our hanking need~ reall" mal~ a differenc-f'. Thi-.,..., the lind of-.ervict' that h~ attraetro and salt .... · tlt'<i our t•ustomer--for over om· hundred vear'. If' ou hn~e om· qu~- • tion:-.. (·aJl man~r Dou " 10<ld at 760-1001. r come ~· u t 1090 8a"V . idc Drh-r:. 'ou'll find w 're a bank thnt'-. he're to ~tny. r I On the .. , e • WHAT NYSE Orn NYSE LEADER S UP s AND DowN s WHAT AMEX Om NEW YORK (AP) 0.C.. 2• Adv•nced Otcllned Unchenoed To111 tn uu New highs CJI New IOWS Todav tt3 m l~ AMEX LEADERS ct. 11:~ 1 ·1 .4 .. ... ... .. 4. :. l~l .'4 • ... NASDAQ SuM rt .~PY NEW YORK (AP l -Most K11W ~tr· ·ll)t·counter •loeks suPOlled bv ~~D. !llarN Volu~ Bid ASki Cl • , 7112 7 -~andon l.I!l· i v, i -I/• g~d ~ 000 81 /'J = + ~ MlcrT~ , 271"8 '"' + 'h Appia<: , 27 7141 -:i. I lei , 27~ :l:POtoC S ,; 19'1• 'i'h ,-11/• Brw'fom , 3~ l'e + ~ Lotus • 22~ 2 -'I'> GoL o QuorE s M ETALS Qu orEs That's an a pt desert ptlon of ootti ousiness and business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of where companies are gotn~ and which people are helping them get there.just watch Credit Line' -every day in ttie Business section of your new llily Plllt 1 t . . . . . . . . . .. . . ._ __________________________ ...,. __________________ .._ ............... . . • • . . • . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . • 'ho ~ " . --(, , Otawe C... DAILY pt.OT/Mondtly, oeOembet 24, 1914 THE VERY Bfm' OF EVERYTHING TO EVERYONE! t I .. GLAD TIDINGS to al u friends, dents and associates. May the tide hml ycu ship in on the crest of 1915. Good wishes for the holday season and the ensam1 years It'• ... u .... tl•e _,, U..e ler •• t• ..,,... ••••Merr• C•r ... t• ... To Al Ow Good Friends Ind Customers DAVIS-BROWN CO. 411 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 646-1684 Moy the beauty of the season import its'wonder, peace and hope i~o your heart To all OOf volunteers and community $upport er s and those we hove ser ved """""""" &.eJ &.--.<!II.le 322 5" ~ "11 SM-llH wa~m wishes Haue a gli.steninf( holiday filled with olcJ.Joahioned good cheer! Toal ow good .,....._ & customers A·Doon Window a Screen C0111pan1 ... w ....... a. Newponlffdt 548·1~9r ... ~:f1"·+1 .~{iP :l' ' . · .. . . Ringing out our good wishes for the Christmas Season to our Wonderful Friends & Patients A Country Club 7 vF Conv•l•sc•nt Hosplt91 Hark! T he herald angel$ sing. Glory to the newborn King! Gr eetinf{!f To all our Friends and Customers Seacliff Motor Hotel 1661 So. Coast Hwy Laguna Beach 494-9717 ••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • * • .. "°" ... • • Just want to say we • • hope yow Ya* is • • the feterriest • • • • PETE BARRETT • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. • • • • • • : REALTY : • • •••••••••••••••••• -----.&...... f .... .. J I -~ •. L~t..ac::t~ May every holiday joy be yours! GEORGE ELKINS CO. 2 Corporate Plaza Newport Beach• 759-9100 JOY AND PEACE Flower Reminder )841 Birch St. Ntwport Beach 8~2-9155 Merry Christmas & Happy New year co all our Customers and friends TSL MANAGEMENT 188 I!. 17th St. To .,.. youne lllMI co .,.. Suite 1 A Youne .. ......_. ..erry. Cost• Meu MenyOW....._f 642•160J ~'*-~-~ cJEJY TB Abb " 'Tis the season to be jolly! We wish all our friends the best! Trans National Bank 2800 E. Pacific Coast Hwy Corona del Mar, Ca 92625 760-3000 • We with you a Merry Chriltmu and 1UCcat throustaout the year • <' Balboa Island Ferry 4 10 So. Boyf ront Bolboo, CA 92626 673 -1070 • . . Whbln6 you • •ale a11d joyou• boUday ••••011 LIDO REALTY 8877 Via Lido Newport Beach 878-7800 h'• ahoeyt • ,.._,. .... ,, otS.-'• INMI" Te AU 0-Frini4il A Pe.,_ Mr. •'• Q..-eake ••a W ..... 8t., C..&a Meu Ul·&l18 * ~~r!f~ anri~@JMa It t&~~eat ~~~- (714) M).1200 Wiahin1 all• boll· day aeuon lull of Ji/ea best. . . . .. . . -. .. ' .. . . . -. ------. -. ---.. -... A.Meelate4 areken 8ervtd: •INew .. rt .. ae• : JOZI W. Llbo. BJ,.cl. : Newport S..dJ 17J-JMJ : .............................................. Warmest greetings of t e season! COLE OF NEWPORT REAL TORS -.. .. -- ----. ---.. .. ---.. -------.. -.. ----. ---.. .. .. -2~ 1 ~ E. Coast Highway • Corona del Mar • 675-"ll ------------------------~ flta••ol••• o1,.... ....... . ··•--thld'·~ Jovftall IRVINE ut0 lenHca Park••v tm... CA 9171' l!:r M!·•nt I ·C09TAMUA 1111 Newport"'"· c.... ...... CAtlM? ""-Htl HUNTIN8TON BEACH LA8UNA HD La llUl ~It. ttltl A..-..... la c.teta ==-..... CA ft"6 =~-·CA 91611 ... IONVIUO • ••• c..... c..e.er ... ~ ...... CA9N77 .. •I •• •• ~· . ... -· -.. ... ... .. ' . , • • •• • • •• .. ... ... . .... .. J • ~ Here's hoping you an have a very merry Christmas I !t BAYSIDE ~ . CARD N' PARTY SHOP • ~ 1016 81yslde Dr., NB • ~ 760-0111 • ~?.~~o¢of otb•.¢"•ofJo-.q ~o .0. ~ -- • • .. --.. -.. ---• ----• • .. -----.. ---- ~tk ~ .... ~ ~ Loads * of. Cheer It's tim~or some revelry! Get in on the spirit of Christmas and have a won- derful holiday season. We wish you and yours all the best! WHISKY BILL'S 445 Newport Blvd Newport Beach, CA 645-8570 FELIZ NAVIDAD : Come By And Say ~~Hello" to Don Marciel, -: Owner For Last 18 Years. -E ~ EL MATADOR : 1768 Newport Blvd. ~~iiiiiiill .. •C•os•t•a •M•e•sa .. ·.6.485-•0•3•2•4mmiiliiiiiiifi'. . . . . ) . • • . • • • • • . . . Here' a . ~ ''ery special \Vi h for you at Chrl tn1a ! HARBOR AREA APPLIANCE 1240 Logan Avenue, Unit D ~~!ta-Mesa• 549.-.u .. ~--- ... ********* JOYOUS HOLIDAY Comins )'O'lr ,.., ..... belt.,.....,.. the~ TRADITIONAL REAL TY IOt E 11 .. St., #284 Ct.ta Meta 611 -7170 Sending holiday cheer your wayl Gary & the Crew at Ba y Auto Repair 2033 Newport Blvd Costa Mesa 63 1-1061 We 'c! Cikt to "express" our very 6est wi.sfits! To All Our Friends And Cutt~. AMllllCU ll9nLllt .. VICI 1059 Hafbof ""d .. C.O.to M.M S4a..3212 From All Of The Crew ... Catalina Passenger Service 400 M.ain St., Balboa • ~ 673-5245 Bob. Jim, Jo, Cuol•L)Oll. Trac7, Joi , Al, Toa • a--&....aa1i.r...a:UW1lelle. rt.. Mill"' Marine c... ... Produth 1779 'ft'hlttler A.,,e., Coet• taa ----c:...il-2931 O"l. Juan l Te wlall ,. .. tlle •peelalllfU•f lllrtat ... a Peaee, 6-M Will •••ill .... .......... . ....... , .. _,_,_......,,,,., ... Tr• IM llcmill Co~ 171 (. lltil St, Cestl Ina 141-3141 ·PEl\CB Th e Lord is com e! Hat·e a t•erv bles.sed and hap~; holiday. ..... LLOYD'S PEST CONTROL 564 E. Dyer Rd. Santa Ana, Ca. 979-6021 MELE UUKJIAU I A HAU'OU MAU Hiii MOU ALOHA llUI LOA Corou 411 Mar Properties (114) 673-14M JOY The atalf ol the CaNen Conn lee.c•nt Hoepltal wiahea the community a v•r1 Happy HoU4a1 s...on 494-~...._--l.ll retalc•I ~y your Chn.-.. .. ~.._...::i-~ filled WJth good wiU, abundance, and the tranquility of faith. Yellow Cab CGmpany 17300 Mt. Henman Fountain ¥alley S.-1311 ' Happy holidays! You've made our Christmas the best ever. Citisena Bank of C-ta Me.a 2970 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 979-4200 Just want to ~ I we hope youi i Yule's the. merriestf Co•Jlttr Syst•s 3822 Campus Dr. #205 Newport Beach, Ca. xa11m* c••sa .· Orange Coat DAILY PILOT /Monday, Oeoember 24', 1984' t t . : * . • 1 · • Tblaklag of ye• thl• C llrl•t•a• 9t!'a•o• aad llepe you are well aad happy . FOUITAll VALLft POLICE OFFICDS ASSOCIA TIOI ' Way th-e 12 days of Christmas be filled with jo~ for vou and your family. Costa-Mesa Stationers 270 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 642-4~63 Ray, Donna, Chuck, Cheryl & Dee wish you a Merry Christmas RAY'S EXTERMtNATtNG CO. • 1733 M onrovia, Costa Mesa 642;-8926 '. CONNELL CHEVROLET '"'-" 11.trl••r Ill\ l 11a:-,f\\H '>\ 54b-I 200 • • • • i A bright and happy holiday 1ea1on ro you and rounl MICEl HILEY l ASSOC 644·7211 CREETiNqs We're turning up some good wishes for the holidays! Season's best to our good friends ond customers from oll of u.; of ROSEY'S AUTO BODY 121 Industrial Way -Costa Mesa .-645=452Z-- .... Happy Holidays and Merry Christmas to all from the folk s at Macnab-Irvine Realty i«-000 • * .. '-.~f.~~ ·* • **. ~ cJEJY Sincerely wishing you •II the IOY• end bl ... - lngs of tht ChriatmH Setton. Newport Beach Firefighters Association JOY + + .+ csrc1t1nos + · : . oftlil t . Season · Dishing up good wl•hes to our wonderful friends and patrons, from the staff at NI CASA Mealcaa Reetaar .. t 296 E. 17th St., Coata Meaa 645-7626 THE STAFF AND S~ES PEOPLE AT NA.8Ell8 CADILLAC WISH ALL. OUR FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS A HAPPY HOLIDAY SEASON s-~w ct:ilouse to~ Merry Christmas The Frosting House 2384 New port Blvd. Costa Mesa 548-2253 May tftt spirit of 6rothuflooa prtvaiL Newport Harbor-Co•ta Mesa Board of Realtor• (714) 646-1671 t ' t Greetings to you and your1 ... mav your holiday• lH flll•d with g~ che.r, good health and good •ldlngl Sal• Sport Hau• • 1779 N•wport Blvd • Co•t• M•M • • 645-4310. • • Our best wishes for the very happiest of Holiday Seasons ! Many thanks for your friendship and patronage The Bay Department Sto re 303 Mam St. Balboa 673-5650 Th• H•lr G•ll•ry 1215 W. Baker Costa Mesa 556-7850 Carol, Dorl. M•la"· Glna. M.n•. Ir•"•· ._._.... "'4a.•v•.&~ 0 Tlte flnt •I .. ,'- av treelll••• •• n1ft"V••et BALBOA MARKET 608E.BALBOA.BALBOA 873-8310 .1985 Ring in the New Year with best wishes to all of our wonderful friends and patrons. Have a great 198~! BALBOA ISLAND REAL TY 673-8700 ----·..-.--- •• TH£STAFFOFGRUBBA ELLIS WI.SH YOU AND YOURS A VE.RY HAlPY.. A SAFE CHRl5TM.A.5J "4·7020 Gl4'd tidln to all .. .1~ the ~a.son 10 ~ good frlenckl WATl9"1tONT HOMIS nALTOllS Newpoft leach 611·1400 l.llboe ..,.,,.. 671-MOO • • I) FUNKY WINURBEAN THE FAMILY CIRCUS "Can we eat breakfast tonight so it won't get in the way tomorrow morning?" llARllADUKE by Brad Anderson ~1 "Marmaduke feels sorry for the reindeer out on a night like this." . GORDO GARFIELD MOON MULLINS SAUCE FOftlH& <iOOSE ··· Sl4E'S GcJT J'M CO<*ING EVEf°t7'THING 1~E CHRISTMAS .._ IN ~~~=:•·~ ~VERSE ... R~LA'XING· .. -.. ... Or8ngeCOMtOAJLYPILOT/~,~24, 1.... C9 • by Tom Batluk DOOJUSBURY BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) -~Gl'-1 ., '1 h , I 1- "The North Pole? Go down here to the first signal ... " DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham ~ 1?:1~ " I O®T AAVE ~y MONEY. MYSELF IS ALL 1 CAN GIVE YOO.' by Gus Arriola by Jim Davis CMRJSTMAS EVE IS Ml{ FAV~ITE DAV OF TME YEAR IT MAKES ME FEa 6000 A800T EVEMMIN6 I WISH I COULD PUT IT INTO WORDS ... DRABBLE by Kevin Fagan 1~ I I FOR BETTER OR.FOR WORSE Tl"\E:. KloS ARE. ASLEEP F\LREACI'{? -mATs AMF\"ZING J BR IDGE Q.1 -Both vulnerable, as South you hold: +QJ63 Q AJ87 0 J92 +QS The bidding has proceeded. Nortll Ea1t outh Wut l • P&11 l ~ Pa11 2 Q Pua 1 What do you bad now ' A. -You are worth a try fo r game. but should you invite by bidding two no trump or three hearts'! Weighing against no trump is you r lack of a sure diamond stopper. T he drawback of three hearts is that your values are all soft and you have only a four-card suit. All in all. we thi nk that two no trump 1s t he more descriptive rebid. Q.2 -As South, vulnerable. you bold: •AKJ 'V87 O AQ95! •J73 The bidding hu proceeded: Nordi Eaat .. t.11 WHt 'l ~ Pua t 0 Pue -? 'V Pua What do you bid now? A. -You have an awkward r-tbid. You certainly wanl to be in,1ame but you can't ralM partnel' and jumping to thne no &.rump with a suit un topped i~ unpl uant. That leav only two pad • Wtul wt wo"1d aoL Ult Ls._ ~mmend & steady di t of bib8in1 ft\ree-card sulu, this u dearl1 th bes.t way to g t partner to bid no trump if h bu • club stopper. Q.a-Aa South. vulnerablt. you hold: •K O JSS OIUM •AM12 Th~ bidding bu proe ded: ~ Eut S..tll w .. , I• P.. I • PaM t 0 ,... 1 What do you bid now? ___ , ____ ... - ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ A.-Agarn. we arrive al the solu tion by a prO<'ess of elimination. Our two-over one response promised a rebid, but 'A t> can't raise hearts with only three card support and a preference to spades is out. Equally unthinkable as rebidding our scragg ly club suit and we are not strong enough to force to game with three diamonds. That leaves only two no trump. 0111 SHOIFF Q.4 -NeithM vulnerable, as South you hold: •10'163 ~JSS OltJ3 •QM The bidding has proceeded: erU EOC W.-t I• P... 2 + P ... t NT P.. ? What ac:Uoo do you lake? A. -U partner can make pme op- pOliLer &.Ill! motJ•1 CQl!eetJon or "quacks" (queent and J&c~a). he 1hould have bid it hlrnHll. The onry que t.aon l9 whether you 1hould cor reel to lhree apade . lnct partner hu announted a Mtanced hand, he m ht find tlght. triw naler to com to than nint. pedall1 sine. btt won'\ be ablt> to nan anything in your hand. Q.5-Aa South. vulnl'rabl • you hold: • 1a <:nno ow •JIS The b1dd1n1 bu p~~ed: w .. , wt.la Eut Stied. 1 0 ow. 3 0 ? What. artion do you t.ab? A.-Euf JUmi to tllrH dWIRHS is preemptive. You have jusf enough to suggest. that, should you pass. partner might. find it difficult; to reopen. So. even t.bougb yov would like to have a little more i.. compete al this level. we suggetl you bid t hree spades lo take t he pressure off partner. Q.6-Both vulnerable. as South you hold: CHAI LES Go1£1 •6 \?Qt85! OQJ$U •SJ The bidding bas proceeded: No~ Eut 8"tla l " DWe ? What-do JOU hid AOW~ A. -This Is not. your hand. Aa a matter of (act.. your heart. lenf\h a severe defensive liability. For &11 you know. t.he opponent.a could hue a slam. Your job la lo make it at 4lf ficuh. as po lble f°'9.bem to att. togetlier. Make a barrage bid ef four hearta. ) ,._ NblllMd Orange eo.t ~ Piiot o.o.mw e. 1a. 2Q,-11. 1114 TH--511 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery • Mortuary Chapel • Crematory 500 Pacllic View Drive Newport Beach 6<44-2700 MoCOAMICK MORTUARY 1 1795 Leguna Canyon Ao ad Leguna Beach Ca 92651 •9•-9• 15 HA"90 .. LAWN- MT. OUW Mortuary • ~tery Cremptory 1625 019* Ave C0tta Mesa 540-555• PllACI •AOfiilAI ULLMOADWAY MOftTUAAY 110 Broadway Coit• M"a 842-9150 •AL TZ •IACMJION IMITH a TUTHILL WllTCLl,F CHAN\. 427 E 17th 81 Cotta ...... Me-9371 l .. PARK NEWPORT APllHMUTS ... __ ;::a_, __ .. ___ ._._11 r..t I, .... 1125. Double Gara;•, 18X18. 724 JIMM 8t. C.M. 873-n87 170. Storege onty. 9x18' 724 Jamee St, Coeta Meaa. e1a-n.11 E/llde C.M. 10x20 ttorage only l90 mo. + eecurtty, yrty ...... 845-7~ Offill lntlla Bif WES TCLlrF BLOG '41 WI'< Jfl l Al fl< H . UM1D1 Inlaid -Henna Cubit -WNVer BANANA Woman executMt 10 col- legue: I've rlMn quite far In the company, 1111 the wey from tomato to top BANANA. fOtll) ADS ARE FREE Cal: M2·1111 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROU 50Turblnee 52 Funny pett00 53 Conjunction 54 Mr. Temlroff 55,,..,.,.. 57 Co.9'comb 58 LIM•hUMd 5t Conlitruct eo Flaed point• lnllme 111 Gnoet: dl1l. 112 FIGtlont S3 8unQll DOWN 1 M\lm11 trlCk 2 "-Pllll 3 Snobbish 4 Hymenopttlf II Climbed ll~lon• 7 Oownltll I AWlll 9 Strlln• 10 Arcane 11 Edenl 12 Athlrlt 13 IMLlfgtntl 21 Kind of worm 23 Horal r.c. 25 "-Hereto lternily" " fllecolltd 28 Rescu9d 29 Nldu• 30 Obtain• 31 Delly 32 OtlOll 33 etgdog 3A OetlOlel 37 9oge 38 OllOfdet 40 Laget 41 LOlllnO "3 Qvlctl 44C..,. ... 8.alet 47 H1tOtn .. Soft cklnll• ,, PiOtalt 50 8cttool 11.1bj. 51 Gurnl>O 52 Sorority gel 5f Tllf": pref. 57 Foeof"-P, - ' - .. blll ....... !!btll!!!.!!!!!!!!~~· ...... > I !Pf !•!W!_ ___ l!JIL!l!ll! .. !!!'!'"!!•!..!lw!!,_,!l~H!!I •• 11• tlft .... .. .. .. . . . 714 -833-1 300 .. PORSCHE AUDI CREVROl.£T H19MetQ.attty s.i..a s.mc. CHICK IVEll90N ,,. "' .. Ool 1111"'" SOUTH COUNTY VOLKSWAGEN • 11 ICI 11 ti ••• ''''' u1c111 ""• u . ~ooc over-you and classified did ltl Relax, en1oy and share the Christmas spirit. ...... ...... ....... .. i1 bilYX A N6fXd I ctr. Al .. <** :Tc .... mentel (1HO on; ..... JdNoft & .. Uncoln Mercury, .. H•r~or lh1d, CNtt ...... (714.MOI•• lWG8 -·~ ~ .... CalJdln-i.. . i I BUENA PARK 11 FWY. GARDEN GROVE 22 FRWY WEST~INSTER •• EDINGER ·o WARNER ~ 0 CHICK IVER80N Chevrolet • Porache • Audi '41 I. Ot11f hJ., 11.,1rt lt11ll lll-0100 Highest Quality Sales & Service e NABER S CADILLAC e . 2100 IAlllOR ILYD., ODITA IEU (114) 140-1100 (211) 111-1211 • Best Prices • Convenient Location • Great Location • Super Service '•Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People 9 CREVIER BMW ~ SALES • SERVICE • LEASING \Jl1 "Where Professlonal Attitude Prevails " 8pecletl1l"fil In European o.ttvery. Excellent lelectlon of New and carefully prepared UMd 9MW'a always In atoci<. ~ 835-3171 208 W. 1 at St., Senta Ane Comer ol Broadway & lat St. Cloted Sunday• 9JIM 8LEMON8 IMPORTS 1301 Quall St. -IHw C•r Location 1001 Ou•ll St. -R ... ,. Dlvl•lon IT\ World 'a Largest Selection of IT\ \C;;I Mercedes Benz \C;J 833-9300 Silts · Lei•& • P'1rt1 • Stnlct • 114y no, " 8 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A. 'a # 1 Thunderbird Retall Dealer Modern Sales, Service, Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Depts. Competitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals 2010 liner llYtl., Otlf1 1111 142-0010., 140-1211 G HOUll OP IMPORTS INC. • LONG TUM LIASIS • COMHTITIVI f'URCHASE flltCES 0 • HUGE INVINTOIY A dial MERCEDES 213/714 837-2333 Next to Santa Ana Fwj (5) on Manchester/Beach Blvd. LAGUNA HILLS 8 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2111 letter lh•., Otst1 1111 Over 23 Yuri Serving Orange County Sale• • Service • Leulng 541·12H S,..W Pll'tl U.. 541-MH MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -t :OO PM SA TU RDA y 8:30 AM -e:oo PM SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM Wl'llE IEW Wl'lll IULlll MISSION Vl~~°!J % 0 MIUIOH VIEJO SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO . 0 BAU!R MOTORS BUICK -JAGUAR -llUZU ComptN AutomotM NMdl 8ALd • IMVICI • L!AllNG frlne a...ctlon of CMIMY Uled YeNolee # 1 IUICK DIALI" IN OAAHGI COUNTY 2121 HAR•OR Ill. VD. COITA MllA 17t-2IOO G BILL YAT!8 • ORANGE COAST JEEP/RENAULT & • STIRLING R -UNIVIR81TY OLDIMOBIL! # 1 /1 TH W11t For SAUi -SEIYtCI -WSllC -P'UTS /lert J11p Salls For I Yurs · Overseas Delivery Speclallsts /f 'ARTI Dl'ARTMINT ONN I 0[fln2e. SALES IATUN>AY llC>RMNGI -Loast • sERv1cE BMW -ROLLS Aovce UH"""-mo • LEASING 1540 Jamboree Ad. . ·,: ~ • ACCESSORIES DEPT Newport Beach 840-8444 ·--- HONDA 2880 Harbor Blvd. Coate MH8 540-0713 3 Block• So. of .05 Fwy. .,, ·1N THE ' Daily Pi let , • t __ ..,_ ______ ~ _____ _. __ ......... ........,~..,...-----------~-----------------------------,___..........., ______________ ~ ... HUNTINGTON BEACH FOUNTAIN Y ALLEY Mc lN(J/\v Dl<IMlllll.'l 1c18-l () H A N (, f ( () lJ N I "( I f1 I I ~ ( I I ' ~ ~ I A .. I ( f N I ' Area's Poor face bleak Christmas Charity mission seeks more donations after its disappointing Thanksgiving Brother Michael 10 hand them their daily bread and some wilted vq- etables. Since it's Christmas, the 75-year- old mjssional)'. of sorts is hopina to give the famtlies more than their u.sual fare. Maybe even a turkey. famjhes who came to rum Nov. 22. "Tbankscivina was pret!)' Md. We had neJlt to nolhina to offer them," said Virginia Murphy, a volunteer with Brother Michael's Christian Mission. alwa)'t more hunP')' people. No1 transients. but poor families with low-paying jobs or none at all. She also warned that the poor will be It the chapel the day after Chns&mas and vinually every day thereafter. Hun,er 1s not limited to holidays, said Murphy. By TONY SAAVEDRA OftlleO.., ........ Santa may do well to check his list more than twice tonight to see if he can rustle up a spare turkey or two for the hungry horde that wtll flock to Coast Irvine Councilman David Baker Is once again presi- dent of the Irvine Medical Center Board./ A3 A Newport Beach woman has pleaded gullty In a Pennsylvania kickback scheme./A3 Callfomla Gasoline prices are head- ed down again -below $1 a gallon -in Call- f ornia./ A4 Nation President Reagan and British Prime Minister Thatcher have made some headway toward arms agreement./ A5 Rescue workers have been forced to abandon their search for Utah mine e>sploslon victims./ A4 World Christians around the world prepare to observe Christmas./ AS The Soviet premier is a ··no show'' at the funeral of Russia's defense mln- lster./ A4 Features Orange County once was rich In Christmas trees, the Dally Piiot's former publisher recalls./83 Sports The Rams' season ends with a 16-13 loss to the New York Glants./81 Mater Del Is the favorite for the Orange basketball tournament, beginning Wednesday./81 Edison hosts some of Orange County's top glrls basketball teams In tour- ney play Wednesday ./82 Entertainment It was a banner year for community theater, and the top 10 productions are saluted today./85 Chevy Chase Is taking another "Vacation" -In Europe./81 INDEX Br1dge Bulletin Board Business Claaalfled Comics Crossword Death Notices Features Help Yourself Horoacope Ann Landers Mutual Funds Opinion Paparazzi Police Log Publlc Notice• Sports Stock Marketa Tetfttaton Theltert Weather A6 A3 87 C1-8 cs C7 C8 83-4 84 C8 84 87 A6 83 A3 . C6 81-2 88 ee BS.8 A2 Brother Michael of Costa Mesa for Christmas dinner. The poor win Ii ne up on Chris I mas momina. as they do nearly every morning, outside Mesa Bible Chapel, 1734 Orange Ave.. waiting for Too little, too late But he is haunted by Lhe Ghost-of- 'nuk1atva.1 past, when he had only five and 10.pouod baas of rice, and little more, to offer the estimated 300 Murphy sajd that donations have picked up substantially this Christmas Eve, but the mission's cup never runs over. No matter how much food is obuined, there are "Most people think that on Christmas. this is the thing to do. But people have to eat all year Iona," she Rama numlng back Eric Dlckenon (29) pleb up four yarda In the fourth quarter of Sunday'• NFL wild card aa.me at Anaheim Stadium •• In Pankey (75) clean a path. Dlckenon lained 107 yarda, but the Ram9 came up OD the •bort end of a 16-13 acore and were bounced oat of the playoff• by the New York Olanta. Laura Bradbury's stocking hung by anxious parents Famtlies of missing kids across the nation facin a special heartache at Christmas time By The Atsoclated Press Patty Bradbury hunl' a Christmas stocking for her missing 3-year-old daughter Laura, and the act of holiday cheer nearly broke her heart, her husband said. "That was a breaking point" Make Bradbury said from the family's home in Huntington Beach. "That almost destroyed her:• Laura vanished Oct. 18 dunng a family camping trip to Joshua Tree National Monument. in the Mojave Desert. Although San Bernardino County sheriff's officers say they still get about 35 new leads each day, laura's family hasn't seen her for more than two months. The holidays, which can be stressful for many, att extremely hard on families with missing children. "Patty did buy a Chrism as tree and she did decorate it," Bradbury said. Friends and neighbors have bough& presents for Laura. "It's hard to cope with look.inf al presents with her name on them,• he sajd, "I haven't bought one yet. I just talk on the phone, talk to people about the search. and then l try to sleep through the night. It's a slow- motion nightmare ... Travis Bradbury. Laura's 8-year· old brother who feels responsible for her disappearance because he told her to leave him alone the night she vanished, has bouJ.ht presents for everyone in the family. That includes Laura and his 6-month-old sister Emily, who suffers from a heart defect. The Bradburys arc not alone in their grief. Laura is one of thousand~ of children stolen by strangers every year. Federal statistics estimate the number at 20,000 to 50,000. but Gary Hewitt, president of The Center for Missing Children Inc. says the real number is substantially lower. In San Francisco. Ann Colhns is trying her bes1 to cope with the fact that her I I ·year-old, freckle-faced son Kevin will not be home for Christmas. Then she'U worry aboul what to do on his birthday in January. And what to do when Feb. I 0. 1985 rolls around. He disappeared las& Feb. 10 from outside his elementary school in the Ha1ght-Ashbury distnct. "We put up our stocktnp and everything the other day.' Mrs. Collins said from the Kevan Colhns Foundation. which she and her husband. David, founded to help people faced with a similar plight. "Kevin's is up and his presents arc in it and the.re will be presents under the tree for him." she said. Even some of his eight brothers and sisters -rangiDJ. in age from 6 to 20 -have gotten gJfts for him. "One of bis brothers won some (Pleue Me PAR.S!ITS/A2) Trustees double their pay ' . in troubled scllOol district-Ro1E1t lu1£1 IncreaBe.'htdden In bureaucratic Ian ua e. def ended by rec~ptents as ·drop In bucket' This may be someu\'ina that eyen Scroose would rail about ju t before Cbristmasand all. The five tru tea in the Huntinfton Beach City (elemen- tary) Schoo District pve themselves a prcttyaooc_j present theothcrday. Without fanfare or comment a_nd with scant public notice, the trustcts unanlmou 1ly awarded themselves a I 00 percent pay raise. They upped their pay from S 110 to $240 a month, effective next month. It's the muimum state lqislauon allows -bated on student enrol· lment and the number of monthly hool board m tinis. A one trustee Sl) ._the a_mount of money wc'tt talkina about isa drop 1n tbe bucket. And the combined ,in· crease 'ft'Oukln't come close to pay1na for an additional teacher. But the aze of the h1ktJUSt doesn't apptar sttmly. These same Hunt· 1naton Beach trustee 11y that two schools have to be closed "because of dare fin1nc:11I traits." The only person to peak apan t tht ra1 at the tehool board meeuna when the raite was approvtd was Merle Mo htri. sn ident of the Eader hool PTA. .. nd I think t wa tbt only person to know about at.. .. be said mewhal 1olnn&ly .. , di"" 1t wtth the princiea-l •nd he didn't evtn know about 1t. .. The item was hrouded in'° muc-h bureaueta\Cte that 1t was vtrtuatly 1ndi rruble to the lay ~- Here's how ii was explained on the •nda: "A·24--84/8S rcfcttnce con- sideration of annual review of Pohcx Striel 8000/9000. second tead1q. There was no beck.up matmal 1n the aacnda packet mailed by the d1stnct 10 give a clue that pohcy scnc 8000/9000 dealt ·with the pay of trustee . "It (the pay raise) wasn't vtry prudent umtnt." PTA leader Moshui Mid. ''TMy say Lbe di trK• 1 1n datt financial t1'iU We're cnhcr in this tose\ber or we're no•." Bal1 8.anch1, the executive d1tte1or of the Wnt Onnae Count) Tcachen 11t1on. c:la1mcd th~ pav ra1 casts doubts on the nncenty of c:l'-1 m by trustttS that the d istrict is indeed,. u"I touah 6nanaal 1h1pc. ''If you're an that kind of posture;· be atl:CCS. "1s 1t appropnak to sa y that we nttd tWI~ a much monef.' h's kind oflikc shouh"I wolt' 81ancbj said that the pay raite. whilt cttta.inl) not on the scale. is ~1m1l1r to membcfl of the U nited Auto Wortcfl Uni a· beC'omi"I an&r')' afkr takinJ pa cuts and then lcam1n& that ma rtttivcd trtmet1do bon ry Ncl n. tbt senior mcmbcT of the chool board. defends the: 100 prrttnt 1ncrca'K'. (Pl_.. eee 8CBOOL/ A.2, said. This momma, a Cew turkeys and canned ao<>dJ were banded out - alona with lbe usual rice and bcau- to some 400 families comina '° me church. "We could very well eod up with the same amount (of people) on Christmas," said Murphy. When donatiops falter, Brother (Pleue Me Clllll81'11AS/A2) Verdict upsets victim's family · Other driver escapes with fine of 52 In fatal El Toro crash By STEVE MARBLE Of .. ..., ........ BiU Kelly was no angel but hts parents believe that in death, be deserved better than he got. A dark-haired, handsome 22-year· old youth who was undecided about his future. Kelly had piled up three drunlt.eo driving arrests in only a couple of years. Even though bu license had been suspended. he con- tinued to drive. ~1 got on him, sure. But be was a 22· year-old," his mother now exvwns. last July 31 , Kelly was ridi.na a Honda 250 motorcycle thro~ El Toro on his way to his prlfriend's house. It was nighttime and he'd been drink.ins. "When he was leaving 1 said. 'Come on, you're goi~ to get cauaht again;" his sister Jaclc.ic recalled. At thccomerofRidtc Route Drive and Bluendee Road, a brown Ferran made a left tum in front of K.eJly, accordmg to police reports. The motorcycle ndcr slammed into the Ferrari. slid up over its hood and landed 1n the curb about 20fect awa) Kelly. who wasn't wcanng a helmet. n~r :~tncd conscious- ness. He died at Mtss1on Community Hospital after three days on life· support machines. (Pleue Me VERDICT I A2) Driver held after hitting parked c ..-=---- By TO A.A VED&A Of .. ..., ....... Four people wcrt tnJured early unda) when a car dnvcn by a suspected drunlen dnvcr veered off PaC'lfic C'oast Hl&)\qy and lut a parked Jquar. ~nock1na at 211 feet into another \iChicle lta\ichn.a in the OPJ)OSltC di~tion. Leslie Cathcnnc Braicau, 29. of El Toro was arrntcd on u ~ion of felony dnvtn,a under the tnO~n« af\cr the cruh around 2 Lm. on Paa6<' C'ont H~y neat Ri \ct· 1de ve,nue ift ~wpon Beach Brano.au ~ alto 0rantt Count Jail with bail ICt at SS.000. Brazeau a.net the three VlCt11M, 1Wbo ~ ridi~ in the car bit by the (--•11 .. CRA•/U) ' d *0rlln99 CoUt DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 2•. 198-4 Suave Peter Lawford dies after illness at age of 61 LOS ANGELES (AP) -Petef Lawford, who tarred in tdcv1.1ion's ''The Thin Man'' and wau former in· law to the Kennedy family, died tod:iy of a bean attadt after slippana an to a coma and bean& placed on a lifc- support system, a hospital official UJd. Lawford, 61, had slipped into a coma Wednesday, four days after be entered the hOS\)1tal. He died at 8:4S a.m. Wlth bis third wife, Patricia, 26. at has s1de. "lt was a result of complications from previous Illnesses," said Ron Wise, a spokesman at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. "He died w&ilc on life upport." The nature of Lawford's ailment was not disclosed at the request of his wife, Patncia, hosp1taJ officials said. Lawford, appeared in °The Thin Man" series 10 the 19S()s, became better known for his associates than for his roles. He was a frequent face in John F. Kennedy's White House, where he assumed "tile role of \he off- beat brother-in-law," and be was a prominent member of Frank Sin- atra's Hollywood ··rat pack." Cops hold • man1ngun ripoff try His cbHd1en -bu one son and three dau&btef1 from his mani• to ex-wife Patricia Kenned y: Christophert 29iSydney, 28; Victoria. 26, and Robin • .d -had vtSited b1m within the past few days. "h's my understanding his chil· dren are Oyin1 in today from the cast," WiK said. "We've been friends for over 30 years.," said Phyllis Kirk, Lawford's co-star in 'The Thin Man.' "He was a unique, gracefully, 11f\cd. intelliaent and hilariously funny person. rm going to miu him very much." Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D- Mus., said in a statement: "The .death of Peter Lawford is a special loss to all of us in the Kennedy family, and my heart aocs out to his childrct1, Ch.tUtopher, Sydney, Victoria, and Robin.' .. We take comfon from the fact that we know he will al o be missed by au of the people who enjoyed his many roles in film5 and on television. He was a dedicated and creative actor as well as a lovina father and loyal friend to all of us, cspeciaJly in the challeng- ing days of the New Frontier," a refc~nce to the Kennedy presidency. "He was a very nice man," said comedian Joey Bishop. a longtime Lawford fnendand "rat pack" mem. ber. "I never knew until l heard later that he drank. I ncvcrsawhimdrink." Irvine firm opens its heart to the world's children By PRU. SNEIDE.RMAN °' .. ~ ........ For many people. the Christmas season is a time to make donations to help less fortunate individuals. doing this to help the kids. It's always been io my heart to help these kids." Wesley Bell. communications di- rector for Scottsdale-based Food for \he Hungry, had strong praise for AdamS.-Strcctcr. "They're unusual," he said in a A wea upper .. vel dltturbenoe developl~ otf the co.st today Wiii fetnlln "I OffMOt•, QMng mott Of Southern California 1 cloudy bUt otherwlM mlfd CM1tma1 Day wtth only the moat rtmota cnance of rain. Tem,,.ratur .. ~• •xtrtmtty COid Mrty today around the region. ranglf\g trom thrtt dtgr ... abovt zero In the Antt6ofHt Valt.y community of Lancuter to a chilly 44 In downtown Lot Angetet and H In Burbank. Loa Ano.let will dip Into the mld"'401 tonight, warmlna to near 10 on Crirlatmu Oty The vaHtyt wlll lhlver In tht mld-30a to low 401 ov•nlght, followed by a hlah In the 60•. Along tnet>r•na• Cotlt, there wtff bt lncreulng high clOudt tonight with eQnaldtrable high cloudlntH Tuesday. Hight 84 to 72. Lowa 35 to•48 Temps .. Lo ~ IO 41 AIOel>y le 31 MIMl!e.«;n 11 71 ~que 44 22 ~ .. 37 .. AtMllllo &7 34 M1*-91 Pw 13 -01 ~. 31 14 NMIWllM $7 at "IJMll• eo 44 *-°''""" ShOwtta 10 &I """'I" Olly 49 40 "'-Y0111 46 Ml Calif. Temps """llt 43 ., NOrtoffl Va 54 J1 Ullmot• 4t 24 ()t(laholl'le C111 82 45 8irmlngh""' •1 .. Omehe 3.t 07 HJoh, low. pt~etM>n tot 24 llOurt ei.m.,ch 01 ·13 Otlllndo llO se ...otng •1 5 • !fl tOOty eoi .. 25 .. ~·· 49 24 llM••fielcl .. 40 Boe ton 42 32 '-• •• 41 E1119ila 62 ,. luft.io 42 39 ==r .... .. ,, ,,,_ 42 40 ea-4() -Of 39 24 ~-36 03 CIW!eeton.S C &2 48 POtJland, Ot II() 31 l.09 Angelel 72 .. Cltanellton.wv SS 211 Pt~ 42 24 Oak!Mil 63 37 Ctwloll•.NC 63 •29 ~n $1 24 PMOAoblee S3 30 CMyet1ne 40 00 Reno 43 13 Red 8lvfl 45 " Ch~o 43 20 RKnmooo &1 11& ~C1ty 54 39 Cltlc:IMeU 48 36 St lo.ils se 31 s-amanto 40 31 o ..... lltld 44 34 SI "-'• T ampe ., se 8allnaa se 38 CotlltnOu•. Oft 45 32 SM! Lelle Clly 36 ,. aanoi.oo 85 41 Oo!loord, N H 38 12 Sen NllonlO 113 511 San Fr8il>Oleco SI " =FtWO.lh M se SM JuM,P A 12 .. 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CeU!llne to 45 Lonea.dl tT 42 Montollle 70 31 ~.:.. 51 32 u 31 '"""*t 8eeGh 63 42 Ontwto .. 3$ Pllm IP"lnOI t2 37 l'MeClaM .. 37 IWet~ 17 .. San knetOltlo ., 37 SM Oabflal 71 3e San Joee &2 30 &Mt• Ana ee 40 Sanl• Ct\a 8 1 3f T-V~ 44 00 Yoeenvt•Vly 43 2' Tldea TODAY 8-.dlow 5·03p.m ·1.0 s.cono high 11.52pm 31 TUHOAY F1t1t low 4'07 • m u ~low · 10 ll•m 5t 5 48pm ..01 8"" Mii 100.,, •I 4 41 p m , t- T u..o.,, at I $f Lm. an4 Mia llQeln lit 4 60pm Moon Mia al 7'08 pm .. t-Tu..aay Police are suit tr}ing to detennine the identity ofa "John Doe" arrested Saturday after he allegedly broke into a locked display case at a Costa Mesa gun shop and attempted to steal a .44- calibCr Magnum pistol. But for one Irvine business, charity is a year-round tradition. Adams-Streeter Civil Engineers makes donations each month to support necgy children around the world through an Arizona-based or- ganization called Food for the Hungry. LoulMtle 52 37 W'ld 40I Swell dlt.ctlotl: _, 11I49• m e.ndM11~at1·11 pm telephone interview. "But I thtnk it's l .. •••••••••••••llllli••••••••••••••••••••••••••--_, a great idea for a company. It gets the The suspect initially identified himself to police by using a false license and name. which were later• traced to a Massachusetts man who 1s vacationing in Palm Springs. Police said the suspect allegedly took the S 7SO commemorative Smith and Wesson gun from a display case at the Grant Boys. I 7SO Newport Blvd .• around S: 15 p.m.Saturday. He apparently was worlung with an accomplice who distracted em- ployees by luring them to another scctton of the store. The suspect placed the gun 10 his waistband and tned to leave. but was stopped by workers who demanded the unloaded weapon. The man pointed the gun at the manager, pulled the tngger and then returned it. yelling threats as he walked out the door with his friend. Police. given a descnptton of the culprits. detained the two men at Rochester Street and Orange Avenue. The alleged accomplice was not taken into custody. CONTINUED STORIES Jan Adams, one of \he owners of the business, said he and his partner, Randy Streeter, decided several years ago to try sponsoring one needy child for every person employed by the finn. The company has JS employees, but Adams and Streeter have passed their initial goal. The company now sponsors 46 children, age 4 to 14, in countries such as India, Me~ico, Guatemala, Bolivia, Bangladesh, the Phillippines, Thailand. Peru, Kenya and El Salvador. The sponsorships cost SIS to S 18 per month per child. The donations come from the company, not the employees. Adams said. The firm regularly receives letters and pictures from the youngsters it sponsors. Adams said he was reluctant to discuss the charity effort. saying he was doing so only because 1t might inspire others lo be s1m1larly gen- erous. "l don't think we're doing this for recogn1t1on," hl' ~1d. "W<:'re onl~ company together and helps morale. We're glad they're doing it." Bell said Food for the Hungry was founded in I 971 and began its child sponsorship program in 1979. He said children are frequently \he ones who suffer most when insufficient food is available. But he said the sponsorship dona- tions are used for more than food . Oothing and education for children are also part of the aid provided by the group. Bell said the current outpouring of donations to help famine victims in Ethiopia is a short-term relief effort. "Child sponsonh1p (over a number of years) is what's needed help the long-range problems." he said. Bell added, "I think the message today is just that Chnstmas 1s a time for think1ng about other people who arc Jess fortunate. This company (Adams-Streete r) says they care about hungry children." For co-owner Jan Adame;, cha11ty doesn't end at the office. Adams. who lives in an unincorporated county area nearTu"ittn. pe1sonally sponsors Ii' e add1twnal needy children 1n other countric'> VERDICT UPSETS VICTIM'S FAMILY ... From Al "His fnends were there the whole tame," said Rhoda Kelly. his molher. "There so man} the people at the hospital had to ask some of them to leave." The Cahfomt:i Highway Patrol blamed the Ferran dnver for the accident. Louis Czarnota. 41, caused the accident by turning 1n front of Kelly's oncoming motorcycle. according to the patrolman who made o ut the accident report. Because of the lack of 1mmed1ate witnesses and the fact that Kelly was intoxicated at the time of the acci- dent, officials in the South Orange County Court District Attorney's office did not file manslaughter charges. "Th.ere JU'it wa5n't s1gn1fican1 enough information to warrant man- slaughter charges." said Deput) Dis- trict Attorney James Branch. The case wound up before ( om- m1ss1oner Ronald Steelman as a routine traffic c1tat1on for failing to yield the nght of way Steelman recalls the Czarnot.a's attorney. Wilham Hulsy of Orange, telephone d him and inquired whether his client could enter a no cont°'t pica to the infraction, even though the accident had involved a death. Even though Czarnota could have avoided going to court by paying a fine and admitting guilt, a no contest plea is significant because 1t can't be u~d as an adm1ss1on of guilt in civil court. "I told him that would probably be OK." Steelman said. Bui the comm1ss1oner changed his mind in court Oct. 18. when Duon Wolcott. a South Laguna attorney representing Kelly's parents, ob- 1ected. "The nghts of the victim are important which is why I wouldn't accept the no contest plea," said Steelman. "The law recognizes those nghts are 1mponant." Steelman set a court date for No" 30 and instructed both sides to bnng forward their witness on that date But It never happened. Through a legal maneuver. Hulsy brought his client"s case before Mu- nicipal Court Judge John Griffin almost a full two weeks before the court trial set by Steelman. Gnffin, according to coun records, accepted the no contest pica and imposed a S52 fine Kell\ 's parent!>. meanwhile, were preparing for the court tnal Their youngest daughter returned to a convenience store near the ~enc of the accident to drum up witnesses tor what the family assumed would be their day in court "We thought we were going to be heard. We counted on that," said Mrs. Kelly. "l don't know, maybe the charges would have been elevated lO manslaughter." Wolcott. the family's attorney. said he also was preparing for the coun date. He said he intended to bnng "new 1nfonnat1on" :ind witnesses to the distnct attorney 1n hopes it would result in a manslaughter charge. The day before the scheduled coun trial, the Kellys found out the matter had been settled. They said they were CHRISTMAS CHARITY ... From Al Michael and crew get much of their produce by salvag.a ng vegetables being d1~arded by local markets. "What we get 1s what we can ... Our people get 'ituff out of the trash cans.. literally," ~1d volunteer Susan Howe Rrother Michael. bom Michael r>wa1lccbcc. s:i1d he 5tarted his m ission IS years aJO. forsaking what he called a thnving real est.ate business to follow the dictates of Jesus Christ. The Bible quotes Christ as tcllant his followers to share their wealth with the poor Anyone wJShina to do so can reach the mission at S48-349 I dumbstruck "I felt sick. I couldn't believe 1t." said the mother "b en If we were JU\I thro" n out of the courtroom we should ha,eat least had that chance · Wolcott ..aid he found what had happened JUSt day'> before the coun tnal date. "I went by the dist net attorne}' ·., office with ~tatcmcn ts from witnesses and other 1nformat1on and wac; told that thl' caSl' was 0\ er." said Wolcott ··we ne\Cr had a chance tu present our informauon" Steelman said he was surpn~d by the tum of evcntc; and wonder'> tf Judge Griffin wa\ unaware that a court trial had been \Cl. I k said he has not talked to Griffin about the matter Gnffin declined to d1!>cuss the case. Deputy 01'itnct Attorney Branch recalled that he a\kcd Cinllin 10 re1ec1 the no rnnll''>I pica and said he reminded lhl' JUdgl' that ~teclman already had n'Jl'l'tl'd the pka and h:ld set a court tnal date "l nwnt1oncd that there wa'a 1.kath 1n' oh l'd in this cas<: and that wa'i the reason II (the no cuntl'<,t pll'a) wa'in't accept{'d." ..aid Branch "I don't recall "hat was said nc't but Gnffin did accept 11 " Branch said 11 l'i thl' ha'\1c polic)' of the dist n et attorn<'}' ·, ollicc to rCJl'cl no contest picas. I k <,:ud the polity was estabhiihed \('\era I year!> ago by D1stnct Attorney C cul l11ck Husly declined to d1\Cu'is ht!> legal '>trategy 1n the ca-.c hut stud he has come away reeling that his client, who he claims 1s innon~nt of any wrong- doing 1n the acc1dl·nt. 1s "the real v1Ct1m ." "There were M"vera l wttnC'J'iC'> who were willing to vindicate my client," said Hulsy "But on rny adv1'iC he entered a no rnnte~t plea 10 :wo1d the uncertainty of go1n~ 10 trial " Kelly's parenh said -UlC-¥ are at a loss to understand why they were denied their day in coun or wh y nobody bothered to inform them that 11 had been settled while they were busy looking for wi1ne't "l really kcl ~honchangcd," said Mr Kelly "I don't understand how the court~ work but fl'I) son'\ life ha'i 10 be worth more that14hl\" CRASH INJURES FOUR IN NEWPORT ••• From Al faJunr. were treated at Hoag Mem onal Ho\p1tal 1n Ncwpon Beach ind rclea~d Police w1d the suspcct's car was hcad1n1 west o n Pacific Coast Haah- wa) when ll ran otT'the roadway and into the unoccupP1Cd Jaauar, ram- mintt 11 21 7 IC<'t into the eastbound lane\ The Jaguar struck a 1969 Volki.~ watcn bu trtvehna east on the h1&J'lway, anJunng driver Thomas Day 32, and paucngers arohne harp. 29, and Paul• CJainc rat· tenon, 29. All three arc from Carl,bad. ReKUe wor .. cn needed the Jawt of I 1fc to pl') Day from the vehicle. ~1d • police. All the v1c:trm\ 'A-ere trtated at the scene by panimed1c!I and trans- ported to Hoag Memorial Hospital Pohc.c ad Day suffered lacer- ations on h1 forehead and a broken lei, Patterson received 1 scnoU\ laceration on her upper hp: and hnrp suffered a m1norcoocu,s1on. BraLcau also wa 1rtatcd for facial laceration Student prays for murder acquittal By Tile A11oclated Press Of ... 0.-, ...... ...., Fnends and relatives of a Viet- namese refugee say they doubt he committed murder when he shot one of his college professors and the student says he 1s praying about his \>redicament from his Jail cell. "I am Buddhist, i.o I always pray to Buddha." Minh Van Lam said during an Orange Counly Jail interview. "But now I'm praying to Jesus Chnst and anyone else I can think of." The ncwswpapcr interv1e" wa'i published Sunday. The 21-ycar-old um is charged with the Oct. 13 murder ofCahfOrnia State U01vcri.1ty at Futlenon phyo;1cs professor Edward Lee Cooperman. CONTINUED STORIES 48. The professor, one of the first Americans to visit Hanoi after the Vietnam war, was shot to dcaih in his siAth-floor office on the college cam- pus. , Lam said the jail in Santa Ana. where he's being held in heu of $200.000 bail, wasn't so bad because his cellmates have become friends and are helping him improve his English. Lam and his relatives escaped South Vietnam on a boat seven years ago to avoid a communist order lo report to a farm commune. Cooperman's family and fncnds believe the professor was the victim of a political assasination. Lam's lawyer has said thr young man 1s a staunch anti-communist, but the student has sworn the shootfog was accidental, resulting from honc- plav with a gun sn the professor's offi.ce. Police ruJed out political motives in the death, saying 1t was something "personal" between Lam and the professor. Diep Nguyen said he befriended Lam after meeting him in Cooperman's office a year ago. Cooperman never discussed politics. Nguyen s~ud "He v.ould help us with our studies and he was interested 1n us a!> students." Nguyen recalled. "I doubt Lam even knew what Cooperman's politics were." PARENTS FACE HOLIDAY HEARTACHE ... Fro m Al rihbon<; "hen hl" "ent to ba!>kctball l amp la\l \Unlnll·r .ind hl' put them in "e' in"• "tod..ing He'' lhl' onl' who , ... a') do\c <ot to l\l'' m. JU'it a }'l'ar \.Oungcr ·· Mrs ( olhn'> ~td. "We'd tx· thrilled to death if he walked 1n the door C 'hnslmas Eve, hut 1fhc: doesn't, we'll put the prc~ents awa) and "ia ve them for when he docs come home.'' Mrs. ( olhns sau.J 1hc famil). wh1(h has endured I 0 months of agon}'. 1s going through a good adjustment pc nod "('hmtmas Day itself might be a l1ttk rough, but for little kids, the JOY of ( hnstmas is always there," .. he s~ud. nottng that the youngest chil- dren are 6. Mand 9 years old "I rcall) think 11 helps us" But the anniversaries -the b1nh- da' and the disappearance -lurk on the hor11on. "I'm tr) ing to let the kids have a good time at Christmas and for~et what"s coming next,'' Mrs. Collins said. He" 11t. a clinical social worker and family therapist who is director of the Rochester, N. Y .-based Center for Missing Children, said a lack of "iOC1ctal rules for handling the crisis of missing children makes it worse for the families involved. "When there's a death in this soc1et), we often have a mass during the hohda} s:· Hewitt said "When there 1s a m1s!ling child. there's no final11at1on." Bradhuf) said he found some friend~ unable to mention Laura. ··A lot of close friends are afraid to ask," Bradbury said. "They don't know what to say. So we kjnd of have to break the ice." For the Bradburys. talking about Laura 1s therapeutic. "We find it's better to talk about 1t no matter when or who or what,'' he said. "Otherwise. we have to deal with the thoughts of where is she, who is she with. ft'll destroy you if you dwell on it." SCHOOL BOARD DOUBLES ITS SALARY ••. From A l "It sounds hke n lot when you say I 00 percent but not '>O much when it's $I 20a month. I don't feel guilty about It "If }'OU figure out all the amount of time. encrg}' and out--0f-podet c:<· pcnst:<, thC' truo;tcc\ put 1n. 1l (the pav ra1<,c) 1!> n drop 1n the bucket. "for the amount of time I put 10. I prohahl) get lc'i\ than m1n1mum pa) You rnuldn't ~cl a teacher or cH:n a pan-tune teacher with the money (for the increase ) Maybe) ou could hire a teacher's aide It's no big deal." Ncl!.on also suggested that the tru!>tcc!> also haven't been gettin~ paid for ex Ira expense' and for being m the "hot ~cat" on controversial issue!>, of which the thorny question of school closure~ loom next month. But a special blue-ribbon commit- tee. made upoffivc c1t1zcn volunteers plus three ~hool di'itrict employee . have held eight meetings to make WE 'RE LISTENING -- Just Call 642-6086 recommendations of which schools to close. The meetings last long into the night and the volunteers take some heat from parents wanting to keep the schools open in their neighborhood. It should be noted that panel members don·t receive a cent of compensation or anything for ex- pense'>. The special panel, incidentally, 1s cApcl·ted to recommend next month to trustees that Hawes and Gisler school!> should be closed. The Huntington Beach d1stnct operates I 0 schools and has an enrollment of slightly less than S.400. Fountain Valier. School District trustees, meanwhile, collect SJO a meeting and generally meet twice a month. There arc 13 schools in the Fountain Valley District with an enrollment of 6.SOO Trustees in the Ocean View School District receive $1 SO a month and arc reportedly considering increases. "h 's a thankless job," said one insider. "There's a feeling that if there's more of a stipend, 1t might improve the quality of trustees." Ocean View has about 9,000 pupils at 13 schoolc;. Trustees al the Huntington Beach Union High School District rec1cve S200 and aren't considcnng raises, a spokeswoman said. The district numbers nearly 18,000 pupils m seven high schools in the c1t1es of Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley and Westminster. Robert Reeves, director of business services for the Orange County De- partment of Education, said recent legislation allowed trustee pay raises based on enrollment and number of meetings. "We expect a lot of distncts lo raise their pay,'' he said. 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Frank Zlnl Ka,.n Wlttm.r Managing Editor Advertising Director RoHmMJ Churchman Controll r no Wt'll e.-, SI Cotta M.-CA MM ecklf-e.,. 11e() Coele W.. CA 0:1628 O pyt'9h1199 o..,.. 1 ~~y ........ ti()!.,. lllUalt•ltone arcl'1CW• nlillltlr OI .0...1 .. ,_, ,.._ may D9 '""~ .... "-' -• ow "'-01 CCJS¥.gN - v~· ()~Cc-·· -''t.t'\ eq~ ,~.,..,... ...... Aober1 C•ntrelt Produc11on Manag r Donald L. WHl1Mn1 C1rculatlon Ma nag VOLn,NO.• ' I ' l I t \ I I I ' - -.,. -·--~-~ - TOMORROW: FORl!CAITI ON A2 flRST EDITION , ·' • ' ." . i . • .-' ~ ; . 4 • • Four ul-tiDsmas e river .aces run • Coast lrvlne Councilman David Baker is once again presi- dent of the lrvlne Medical Center Board./ A3 A Newport Beach woman has pleaded guilty In a Pennsylvania kickback scheme./ A3 · California Gasoline prices are head- ed down again -below $1 a gallon -In Call- fornla./ A4 Nation President Reagan and British Prime Minister Thatcher have made some headway toward arms agreement./ AS Rescue workers have been forced to abandon their search for Utah mine explosion victim s./ A4 World Christians around the world prepare to observe Christmas./ A5 The Soviet premier Is a "no show" atthe funeral of Russia's defense mln- ister./ A4 Features Orange County once was rich In Christmas trees, the Dally Piiot's former publisher recalls./83 Sports The Rams' season ends with a 16-13 loss to the New York Giants./81 Mater Del Is the favorite for the Orange basketball tournament, beginning Wednesday./~ Edison hosts so~"l( Orange County's top-girls basketball teams In tour- ney play Wednesday ./82 Entertainment It was a banner year for community theater, and the top 10 productions are saluted today./85 Chevy Chase Is taking another "Vacation" -In Europe./81 INDEX Bridge Bulletin Board Buslneas Claaslfled Comics Crossword Death NotiCes Features Help "f&~Mlf Horoscope Ann Lander• Mutual Fund• Optnlon Paparazzi Portee Log Publlc Notices Sportl Stock Market• t elevt1lon Theaters WNther A6 A3 87 C 1-8 C5 C7 C6 83-.. e .. C6 B .. B7 A6 83 A3 B~i B8 88 85-8 A2 \ ~ . Too little, too late Ram• running back Erle Dlckeraon (29) pleb up four yarda In the fourth quarter of Sunday'• NFL wild card game at Anaheim Stadium .. Irv Panlley (75) Cle&r8 • path. Dlckenon &aJ.ned 107 yarda, but the Ram• came up on the •hort end of a 16-13 .core and were bounced out of the playoff• by the New York Giant.a. Laura Bradbury's stocking hung by anxious parents Families of missing kids across the nation facing a s pecial h eartache a t Chris tmas time By Tiie Auoc.lated Preu Patty Bradbury hunJ a Chnstmas stocking for her missing 3-year-old daughter Laura, and the act ofholiday cheer nearly broke her heart, her husband said. "'Thal was a breaking point," Mike Bradbury said from the family"s home in Huntington Beach. "That almost destroyed her." Laura vanished Oct. 18 during a family camping trip to Joshua Tree National Monument, in the Mojave Desert. Although San Bernardino County sheriffs officers say they stall get about 35 new leads each day, Laura's family hasn't seen her for more than two months. The holidays, which can be stressful for many, are extremely hard on families with missina children. "Patty did buy a Chrismas tree and she 4id decorate it," Bradbury said. Friends and neighbors have bought presents for Laura. "It's hard to cope with look.inf at presents with her name on them,' he said. "I haven't bought one yet. I just talk on the phone, talk to people about the search, and then I try to Sleep through the night. It's a slow- motion nightmare." Travis Bradbury, Laura's 8-year- old brother who feels responsible for her disappearance because he told her to leave him alone the night she vanished, has bouW1t presents for everyone in the family. That includes Laura and his 6-month-old sister Emily, who suffers from a heart defect. The Bradburys are not alone in their &Jief. laura is one of thousands of children stolen b.Y strangers every year. Federal statistics estimate the number at 20,000 to S0,000, but Gary Hewitt, president of The Center for Missing Children Inc. says the reaJ number is substantially lower. In San Francisco. Ann Collins 1s trying her best to cope Wllh the fact that her I I-year-old, freckle-faced son Kevin will not be home for Christmas. Then she'U worry about what to do on his birthday in January. And what to do when Feb. I 0. 1985 rolls around. He disappeared last Feb. 10 from outside his elementary school in the Haight-Ashbury d1stnc1. ''We put up our stockinp and everyth in$ the other day.' Mrs. Collins said from the Kevin Collins Foundation. which she and her husband, David, founded to help people faced with a s1m1lar plight. "Kevin's is up and his presents arc in 11 and there will be presents under the tree for him, .. she said. Even some of his eight brothers and sisters -ranainJ, in age from 6 to 20 -have gotten gifts for him. ··one of his brothers won some (Pleu eee PARltKTS/A~) Trustees double their pay in troubled school district Increase, hidden In bureaucratic.Jan· ~. de ended by recipients as ·drop in bucket' This may be somcthina that even moneywe'rctaJtunaaboutisadropin Saiooac would rail about j ust before the buckeL And the com bined in- Christmas an<f aJI. The five trU tees 1n crease wouldn't come close to payina the f-iuntinfton Beach City (elemen· for an additional teacher. tary) Schoo District pve themselves r But the 1ze of the hike just docsn 't a prc'ty aood present lhe other day. appear 1ttmly. These same Hunt· W1~t fanfare or com ment and in&ton Beach ll'\lltc:cs y th.at two with Scant public notice, tf\C truste« sthools have to be dosed .. because of unanimously awarded themselves a dire financial tra1t.s." JOO percent pay raise. The only person to pc.alt again t Thty upped their pay from S 120 to the ra1 at the sch I board mecuna Sl40 a month, effective next month. when the raise was approved was It's ~c maximum state lcai lation Mette Moshin, pruidcnt of'lhc Eader allowt -based on tudcnt enrol-• hool PT lment and the number of monthly " nd I thjnk I was the onl)' person school board mectin to know about it." he said somewhat one tru tee SI)' the amount of iokingly. 0 1 dj u.IKd u with the j \ princi{>ll and·he didn't even know about tt." T he item wa shrouded in so much burcaucratese that it was virtually iodisccmib1c to the lay person. Here's how 1t was ex.plained on the .. nda: "A-24-84/85 reference ~ s1deratJon of annual review of PohCr, ric 8000/9000 SCtOnd IP.'11n1. ·~ 'Pherc was no t;aup ma~I in the aecnda packet malled by t'hc di trict to 11ve a clue that p<>hcy scnes 8000/9000 dealt with the pay of trustee "It (the pay ra1 ) wun't very prudent tlm1na." PT A leader M<Xhin said. "~ y the di tnC'l \ in dire financial atra1ts We're either in thi, toscther or we're not " _ Biil 81anchi. the cxttut1vc d irector of the West On nae County Teachers ·iateon, claimed the pay ra1St ROBERT BARKER News PERSPE CTIVE casts doubts on the sinccnty of claim by trU tees that the distnct is indeed 1n tough financial hape. "If you're 1n that lJnd or po tutt: he uked. "u it appropnate to~) that wt need twice al JnUCh monct' h's kind of like shout1h1 wolf' 8t1nch1 said that the Pl>' raise. while ttrt.ainl not on the s(a)~ 1 1m1l1r to mcm~ r the ftl~ Auto Workers nson bttom1 •"'1)'. af\a taki!'J pa) ~t and then lcam1na that 1 bo\ rttt1vcd trcmcndou, bonu . GU) cl n. the Kn1or mcm of the choo\-board. de end the 100 percent inettast (Pleue Me 9CB00l./A.2) e ' Suspect'scarrams J aguar, forctngtt into another auto By TONY SAA VEDllA Of .. o.IJ ........ Four people were injured early Sunday when a car driven by a suspected drunken driver ~oil Pacific Coast Hiahway and lait • parked J quar, knockina it 2 t 7 feet into another vehicle travelial iD tbe opposite direction. • Leslie Catherine Brazeau. 29, o(fJ Toro was arrested on su~ ol felony driving under the influence after the crash around l a.m. OD Pacific Coast Highway near River- side Avenue in N~ ee.dl. Brazeau was booked mto Orale (Pleue ... C8A8B/d) Verdict upsets victim's family Other driver escapes with fine of 52 in fatal El Toro crash By STEVE MARBLE °' .. ~ ........ 8111 Kelly was no aJllCI but his parents believe that in death, be deserved better than be got. A dark·lwred. handlome 22-ycar- old youth who was undecided about his ·future, Kelly bad piled up three drunken dnving arrests in only a couple of years. Even though bis hc.cnse had been suspended, he con- tinued to drive. (Pleue Me VERDICT/A2) Copsho d man in gun ripoff try_ Polite arc sull tryina to determine the 1dent1ry ofa .. John Doe .. arrested Saturday after be all(aedly broke into a locked display case at a Costa Mesa 1\.Shop aNS attempted to lleal a ;.w. Ji" ca!ibcr Maanum pistol. The su pcct iruh.ally identified himself 10 pol.lee by usina a fa1tc hccnsc and name, which were later traced to a Massachuxns man wt.o is vacauonina in Palm Spri.np. -4'> Police S&Jd the uspttt alqedly too lhc $7S0commcmorative mith and W n sun from a dlS= at the rant Boys. I 7SO 81~d , al'OllM S.IS p.m.Satutday. He appartntly was worbas with an omol Who di tractcd c.m- (Plt•• ... OU11/d) r Indicted Moriarty associate warlts politiCal gifts returned LO ANGELES (AP) -A man 1t1d1c1Cd rot ta~ and bankruptcy fraud 4nd also involved in a ca.mpaip contributions probe ha& filed for corporate bankruptcy reorpniution wtnle 111k.1n1.~x politie1ans to ~turn nearly SS0.000 in donations, a news- paper reponcd. Rich rd Ra)'mond KcitJl. a close business associate offireworks manu- facturer W. Patnck Monarty. called the donnttons "all~cdly illepl'' m the bankruptcy petition filed Fnday 1n acramcnto "It has been alleged by (the Orange c.ounty) dii.tnc1 attorney that those l"Ontn&uUolll have been laundered," Ke11h ~1d Saturday. Keith. 47, declined to ~y who .ictually prov1dr:d the money but he did \&)' that none of the pohtic1ans ~new there was anything wrong with the donauons at the time they were it\en Federal and stale mvesllgat0f1 have been trymg to determine the \ource of $400.000 in 'polttical dona- 11ons made b} Ke11h. Monarity and their associates since 1980. Most of the donations were made in 1981 and I 982 while the legislature considered ;i bill backed by Moriarty, a La Mirada e~ecuuve who 1s president und chairman of Anaheim-based P> ro1ronics Corp., one of the nation's largest fireworks manufacturers. It 1s against the law in Californta to Holiday road deaths climb By Tb~ Associated Presa Snow in the Midwest and the West made highway cond111ons treacherous as tne Ion' Christmas weekend moved into Its finaJ two days, and the number of holiday traffic fatahttel> passed 270 th1s mom mg. The death toll at 6 a m. PST today totaled 278. The Nauonal Safety Council estimated that between 370 and 470 people could die m traffic accidents dunng the holiday period, which for countmg purposes began at 6 p.m . Friday and continues until midnight Tuesday. Council stat1st1 c1an11 said 430 traffic deaths could be expected during a non-holiday weekend of similar length at this ume of the year Last year. there were 238 highway deaths dunng the three- day Christmas weekend. diquise 'he true OUl'Qe of pohtacal donations. In 1981 and l 982, Keith COO• tributed $63,000 to more than a doz.en politicians under his own name and throuah three companies -Card Construction. Merit Enterprises and Condo Vest Inc. The donauons were reported by t be candidates. In his filing which seeks proteclion from creditors underChaper l 1 of the Federal Bankruptcy Act, Keith listed as "personal propeny" $49,SOO that h1 companies contnbuted to poh- tac ans since 19~ I. The hst included tho notation: •• :tiould be returned t>«au of bean~ aJleaedly 1llepl." Listed as rttlp1ents of campa1an funds from Keith's firms were: As. sem~ly_ peakcr Willie Drown, S26.000; As mbJr. Dcmocrat1c Ma· Jority LcAder Mike Roos of Los Anacles, $3,000; former As- semblyman Bruce Youna. D-Nor- walk1 S7.SOO; Sen. Art Torre: , D- Soutn Pasadena. $9,SOO; Sen. Ed Royce. R-Anaheim. S 1,000, and for- mer Santa Ana City Councilman AJ SerTato. $2.SOO. Irvine firm. opens its heart to the world's children By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of ... o.IJ,......., For many people, the Christmas SC8$0n is a time to make.donations to help less fortunate individuaJs. But for one Irvine business, charity is a year-round tradition. Adams-Streeter Civil Engineers makes donations each month to support needy children aroqnd the world through an Arizona-based or- ganization called Food for the Hungry. Jan Adams. one of the owners of the business. said he and his partner, Randy Streeter, dectded several years ago to try sponsonng one needy child for every person employed by the firm. The company has 35 employees, but Adams and Streeter have passed their initial goaJ. The company now sponsors 46 children, age 4 to 14, in countnes such as India. Mexico. Guatemala, Bolivia. Bangladesh. the Pbillippines, Thailand, Peru, Kenya and El Salvador. 'The spoosorshiP.S cost SIS to S 18 per month per child. The donations come from the company, not the employees, Adams said. The finn regularly receives letters and pictures from the youngsters it sponsors. Adams said he was reluctant to discuss the chanty effort, saying he was doing so onl> because it might anspsre o thers to be similarly gen- erous. "I don't thank we're doing th1c; for recognition," he !>aid. "We're only doing this to help the kids. It's always been an my heart to help 1hese kids." Wesley Bell. communicalions di- rector for Scottsdale-based Food for the Hungry. bad strong praise for Adams-Streeter. "They're unusual," he said in a telephone mterview. "But I think it's a great idea for a company. It gets the company together and helps morale. We're glad they're doing it." Bell.~id Food for the Hungry was founded m 1971 and began Its child sponsoribip program in 1979. He said children arc frequently the ones who suffer most when insufficient food is avajlable. But he said the sponsorship dona- tions are used for more than food. Oothing and education for children arc also part of the aid provided by the group. Bell said the current outpouring of donations to help famine victims in Ethiopia is a short-term relief effort. "Child sponsorship (over a number of years) 1s what's needed help the long-range problems," he said. Bell added, "I think the message today is just that Christmas is a time for thinking about other people who are less fortunate. This company (Adams-Streeter) says they care about hungry children." For co-owner Jan Adams. charity doesn't end at the office. Adams, who liv\!s lri an unincorporated county area near Tustin. personally sponsors five add1ttonal needy children tn other countries. GUN THEFT ATTEMPT THWARTED ..•. From Al ployecs by lunng them to another '>cct1o n of the store The suspect placed the gun 1n his waistband and tried to leave. but wai. 'itopped b}' workers "ho demanded the unloaded weapon fhe man pointed the gun at thl" manager. pulled the trigger and then returned 11, yelling threats as he walk<.'d out the door" 11h his fnend Police. given a de\<:r1p110n of thl' culpnts, detained the two men at Rochester Street and Orange A venue. The alleged accomplice was not taken into custody CRASH INJURES FOUR IN NEWPORT •.. From Al ( o unty Jail with bail set at $5,000. Brazeau and the three\ 1ctims, who were riding an the car hit by the Ja$uar, were treated at Hoag Mem- onal Hospital m ewport Beach and released. Police said the suspect's car was heading west on Pacific Coast High- wa> when 11 ran off the roadway and into the unoccuppied Jaguar. ram- ming it 217 feet 1n10 the eastbound lanes. The Jaguar struck a 1969 Volks- wagen bus tra velt ng east on the highway, tnJuring driver Thomas Day, 32, and passengers Caroline Sharp, 29, and Paula Claine Pat- terson. 29. All three are from Carlsbad. Rescue workers needed the Jaws of Life to pry Day from the vehicle. said pohce A.II the victims were treated at the scene by paramedics and trans· ported to Hoag Memorial Hospital. Police said Day suffered lacer- attons on his forehead and a broken leg. Patter'ion received a senous laceration on her upper lip; and Sharp suffered a minor concussion. Brazeau also was treated for facial lacerations. VERDICT UPSETS VICTIM'S FAMILY ... From Al ·· 1 got o n him. sure. But he was a 22- ~ea r-old," his mother now explains. Last July 31 , Kelly was nding a Honda 250 motorcycle throu~ El Toro on his way to his g1rlfnend's house It was nighttime and he·d been drinking "When he "a-; leaving ( said. ·1 ome on. you're going to get caught .1gain.' ··his sister Jackie recalled At the corner of Ridge Route Onve and Bluendge Road. a brown Ferran made a left turn 1n front o f Kell>, according to pt1hce reports. The motorcycle nder slammed into the Ferrari, shd up over tt'i hood and landed in the curb about 20 feet away. Kelly, who wasn't wearing a helmet. never regained conscious- ness. He died at M1ss1on Community llosp1tal after 1hree days oo life- \upport mach1ne<1 .. Hts fnend<; were there the whole time." said Rhoda Kelly. his mother. "There so many the people at the hospital had to ask some of the m to leave" The Callforn1a Htghwav Patrol blamed the Ferrnra dnver for the accident Louis C7arnota. 41 . caused the accident by tumang 1n front o f Kelly''i o ncoming motorc;yclc, according to 1hc patrolman who made out 1he accident report. Bt-cau~ of the lnck of 1mmed1ate w11ne\~ and the fact that Kelly wa\ 1ntoxKated at the ume of the acci- dent. official~ an the South Ornngl" County < ourt District Attorney's office did not file manslauJhter ,·hnrge, "There: JU\t wasn't 51gnaticant t>n<>ugh 1nforma11on to warrant man· \lauaflttr cbaracs." wud Deputy Dis· tmt Attorney Jahle'i Branch. The ca~ wo und up before Com- mm1oner Ronald 5teclman a\ a routmc traffic c1tat1on for faihna to yield the r1Jht of way. "teelmnn recall\ the C"l8mota' 11t1ornc:}. Wilham Hul'iy of Oran e, telephoned tum itnd inquired "'-hcthcr ht\ client could enter a no conte~t pica to the 1nfract1on. even though the accident had involved a ' death. thrown out ol thl' courtroom. we Even though Czarnota could have should have at least had that chance.'' avoided gomi to court by paying a Wolcott said he found what had fine and admntang guilt, a no contest happened Just days before the coun pica is significant because it can't be trial date. used as an admission of guilt in c1v1I "I went b~ the district attorney's coun. office with c;tatements from w11nesscs "I told him that would probabl} be and other 1nformat1on and was told OK." Steelman saad. that the case was ov1 r .. !.<ltd Wolcott But the comm1ss1oner changed has "We nc' er had a C'hancc to present mind 1n court Oct 18. when Dixon our 1nformat1on:· Wolcott. a South Laguna attorney S1eclman <,atd he v.as surpnsed b) represenung Kell) 's parents, ob-the tum of events and wonders ti jected . Judge GnOin wa<; unaware that a .. The rights of the victim are court trial had been set. He said he has important which is why I wouldn't nollalked toGnffin about the matter accept the no contest plea,'' saad Gnnin declined to discuss the case. Steelman. "The law recognizes those Deputy District Attorney Branch nghts arc important." lled h h k d G ffi Steelman set a court date for Nov. reca t at e as c n 10 to reJe<.:t the no contest plea and said he 30 and instruct~ both sades to bring' remanded the Judge that Steelman forward their witness on that date. already had rejected the plea and had But II never happened. set a coun tnal date . Through a 1.egal. maneuver. Hulsy "I mrn11o ned that thert' was a death brought has clients case before ~u-involved an this case and that was 1he mca pal Court Judge John Gnffin reason 1t (the no contest plea) wa,n·t almost .a full two weeks before the accepted," said Branch. "I don't court. tnal set by ~tec:lman. recall what was said next but Griffin Gnffin, according to court records. dad accept it." accepted the no cont~t pica and Branch said at 1s the basic policy of imposed a S52 fine. the dastnct attorney's office 10 rcJCCt Kelly's parents. meanwhile, were no contest pleas. He said the policy prepanng for the court inal. Their was establasllcd several years ago by youngest daughter returned to a Dtstnct Attorney Cectl Hick conven.ience store near the sciene of Husly declined to discuss h1i. lepl the an.,dent 10 drum up witnesses for strateay in the cast but said he ha what the family assumed would be come away feeling that his chent. who their day an court. he claims is innocent of any wrona- "Wc thought '\11/t wcrt aoan~. to t,>e doina 1o the accident, is ''the real heard. We counted on that, ~1d victim." Ml"i. Kelly "I don't know. maybe the "There wert several witnesses who charges would have been elevated to were willing to vindicate my client" mnn~laughter." s1ud Hulsy. "Bul on my adv1~ he Wolcott the fam1ly's 11ttorney, saad entered a no contest pldJll to avoid the he al,o wa~ prcpanna for the coun unctn:iinty of aoinf tb tri1l •. dntr Ht 58.id he intended to hnng Kelly's 1>3rcnts said they arc at a .. nc~ information" and w1tne se to lo s to understand why the} were t~e d1s tnct attorne> in tiopc 11 wo1Jld denied their day 1n ooun or why rc,ult in a manslauJhter charge. nobody bothered to inform them that I he day before the scheduled coun 1t had been settled while they were tnal. the Kelly~ found out tht matter busy look in& for w11ne IC had been \tttlcd They saad 1he} were "I rc•lly feel shortchanaed." said dumhc;truck. Mrs. Kelly ... , don't undersuand how .. , fell ~•ck. I couldn't believe it." the coun1 work but my son' life has ~1d 1he mo ther "[vcn af"'e wC'rt jutt to bf worth mo&T than tht\ ·• • A WMk uppw i.V9ll ~turbance devetoplng on the coat todmy wffl r.mllk'I well otftho<9. gMng moet of Sout!Mrn California a ct<>Wy but otherw!M mlfd Chrltlmu Day with only the mott ttmote chanc. of rain. TemperatuNe were utremety COid eerty today atound the region, ranging from thtM degr ... 1bow zero In the Antetoc>e Valley community or L.anca1ter to • chllly 44 In downtown Loa A~ and 39 In Burbank. Loa An~ WIH dip Into the mtd-401 ton~ht, warming to ,,.... 70 on Chrlstmu Dey. The valleyt will 1hlwr In the mld-30t to low 40t ov.rnlght, followed by a hlQh In the eo.. /Jong the Orange Co11t. there will be lncr..,lng l\lgh CIOUd• tonight With eon•lderable high ctoudlneu lwaday. High• 84 to 72. lowa 35 to 43. Tempe "'" ~ eo 4' AAMny ,. 31 ...._.._.., Tl 13 ==~ .. 22 Mheult• 37 14 91 3A M!*-SI Paul 11 ..()1 ,. 24 Nllt!Wle er ,. Sh0w•11 ~=· eo ~ .... Ota.-10 .. Calif. Tempe Allemlo CliY 4t 40 HftYOtll ,. M lert!IOW .. 21 Autllft 13 e1 HOtfOll;, Ve 54 S1 !Ilg..., 61 07 hlllmof• 49 24 Ollte11om• cny 12 45 ~~ 17 " .,~ 61 .. Omtllt S4 07 Hl(jll, low, pteiolplt•tlOn !Of 14 hOure eo .. 17 llllt!Wdl 01 ·13 OtlMdo IO 61 9'1C11nQ et I un 100.V LOftOIMdl 42 lo6" 26 44 ~ .. 24 8M•11191d .. 40 Monrowla 10 37 eo.ton 42 32 "'-"• 91 '' Elnll• 02 ,. ~ 51 32 B11nt1o 42 39 P11= 44 31 "~ 42 40 Mt Wll9on 12 ,. 0.., 40 ·00 PO<ll ,.... 39 24 l_.., .. 36 03 NewpOn ..... ., 42 CMl1eeton.S C 12 •• PonteMOr 50 31 t..oeMQe!M 72 .. Onlatlo " a& ~lbtt.WY " 2t Pr~ 4?' 24 OM.lend 13 ,, ,........,.,. 12 u Clwlo!M._,.c 63 29 Aelelgtl $1 24 ~Aol>i. " ao l>1IMdene .. 37 ~~ 40 00 "9rlo 43 13 Aed lllutl 41 36 ..._.. 17 44 43 20 AlCflmond 51 25 • AedWooCI City .. at ..,. 9emerCllnO 11 37 ~II 48 36 St loule se J7 a.c.-to 40 II SanO•btW 11 M Clewletld " 34 SIPM•Tempe 11 M 9.tllNI 541 N ..,. JoM u llO Colu!TINl.Otl 46 32 Seit LMI• City M 11 Sen Oleo«> 65 47 l11nt•,.,... .. 40 ~d,HH ,. 12 SM Antonie> 83 51 Sen '111ndec:O 61 41 S-.CNI e1 M Oolllu..,t W0ttll 15 Ill a.n Ju#l,P i. 82 .. ,.,,,. Settler• IO '5 44 00 45 34 SISteM.ne 18 10 Stoel( ton 42 31 43 22 hllc»V~ o.y,on Yotemlle o.n-53 19 &Miiie 47 01 High, low, pteQlpllatlon l0t 24 llOure O..Moit-. 40 12 StwWllPOt1 IS .. Dettoft 43 " ~ 36 OI endiftO 114 Ip m Dulu1h 02 ·11 Sy.-:II 37 Tldea Ell'-6A 34 TOl)tlke 51 27 ... Fllfbllnlc.e 18 02 y_, 59 37 f'trgo ()4 "°' Tuite 12 45 Fieoetall 50 07 WlillllngtOll 50 32 TOOAY Grand l'laptdt Surf report Seooncl low 8.03pm 10 4(1 23 WlcNta 50 '° Hart lord 42 27 W11t( ..... ..,,. 39 31 ~fllell 11Upm 31 Helefl4I 36 13 IUll ...... T\M.OAY HOf>Olulu 11 75 LOCATIOlt ~Ion 64 e2 Huntington .._,. 1 POOt ""'low 4<07am 21 0.1 lle4 10-11Lm 5t lncllenllpolt 47 llO .._ Jeotty, Newpol1 :=:::r1ow Jedi-. ...... llO 57 Enended 40th St,_, Newpol1 ().1 flet 6.4fpm. ..01 JllCll_,YI._ 741 5-4 22nc1 a1.-. HllwpOl'I 0.1 flet 0.1 ""' Sun NII 1oo.y at 4.49 p.m., ,_ ~ 34 32 llalboa Wedge ~City 50 28 Partly cloudy wtlll e "'-ol leguNI .... 1 poot Tueeda)I at I 541 • m MCI .... aolllfl II 4.60pm L.MVegee 47 30 ~ WedllMdef end Thureel:r. Senci.-t• 1 poot l1111e Aodt 61 41 HIQllt In the 80t l-In Ille mid w ... *'"Cl· 5&-57 Moon -et 7 oe pm. llaM Tu.dey l..o.ilevllle 52 37 -4°" SWll dlnctlOn. .. •••49•m llndeet•evetn•ll'11pm Student prays for murder acquittal By Tlte A11ocl1ted Prell Of .. Dellp .... lt.elt Friends and relauves of a Viet- namese refugee say they doubt he committed murder when he shot one of has college professors and the student says he is praying about has predic.ament from his Jail cell. "I am Buddhist, so I always pray to Buddha," Mtnh Van Lam saad during an Orange County Jail interview. .. But now J'm praying to Jesus Christ and anyone else I can thank of." The new wpaper interview was published Sunday. , . The 21-year-old Lam is charged wath the Oct. 13 murder ofCahfomia State University at Fullerton physics professor Edward Lee Cooperman. CONTINUED STORIES 48. The professor, one of the first Amencans to visit Hanoi after the Vietnam war J.-was shot to death in his sixth-Ooor omce on the college cam- pus. Lam saad the jail m Santa Ana. where he's being held in lieu of $200.000 bail, wasn't so bad because his cellmates have become friends and are helping him improve his Engh sh. Lam and his relatives escaped South Vietnam on a boat seven years ago to avoid a communist order to report to a farm commune. Cooperman's family and friends believe the professor was the victim ofa pohtacal assasinat1on. Lam's lawyer has said the young mun 1sa staunch anti-communist, but the student has sworn the shooting was accidental. resulting from horse- play with a gun m the professor's office. Police ruled out political motives in the death, saying it was something "personaJ" between Lam and the professor. Diep Nguyen said he befriended Lam after meeting him 1n Cooperman's office a year ago. Cooperman never discussed politics, Nguyen said. ··tte would help us with our studies and he was interested an us as students," Nguyen recalled. "I doubt Lam even knew what Cooperman's poh1ics were:· PARENTS FACE HOLIDAY HEARTACHE .•• From Al ribbon~ when he went to baske tball camp last summer and he put them an Kevin's stocking. He's. the one who was closest to Ke' an JUSt a year )Ounger:· Mrs Collins said. "We·d be thrilled to death 1f he walked in the door Christma\ E:.vc, but 1fhe doe'in't, we'll pu1 the presents awa} and save them for when he does come home." Mrs. Collins said the family. which has endured 10 months of agony, 1s going through a good adjustment penod. "Christmas Day 11sclf might be a httle rough. but for little kids. the joy of Chnstmas as always there." she said. noting that the youngest chil· dren are 6, 8 and 9 years old ... I really think 1t helps us." But the anniversaries -the b1rth- da} and the disappearance -lurk on the hon1on. 'Tm trying to let the kids have a good ume at Christmas and for~et what's coming next," Mrs. Colhns said. Hewitt, a clinical social worker and family therapist who is director of the Rochester, N. Y .-baS:Cd Center for Missing Children, said a lack of societal rules for handling the crisis of missing children makes at worse for the families involved. "When there's a death in this !.OC1ety, we often have a (J"lass during the holidays,'' Hewiu said. "When there 1s a missing child, there's no finalization." Bradbuf} said he found some fnends unable to menuon Laura. .. A lot of close fnends are afraid to ask," Bradbury said. "They don't know what to say. So we kind of have to break the ace." For the Bradburys. talking about Laura is therapeutic. "We find it's better to talk about it no matter when or who or what," he said. "Otherwise, we have to deal with the thoughts of where is she, who 1s she with. h'IJ destroy you if you dwell on at." SCHOOL BOARD DOUBLES ITS SALARY .•. From Al "It sounds hke a lot when you say 100 percent but not so much when it'!> SI 20a month. I don't feel guilty about JI. "If you figure out all the amount of \lme. energy and out-of-pocket ex- penses the trustees put in. 1t (the pay raise) is a drop an the bucket. "For the amount oft1me I put an, I probably get less than manamum pa) You couldn't get a teacher or even a part-time teacher with the money (for the increase.) Maybe you could hire a teacher's aide. It's no big deal .. Nelson also suggested that th.e trustees also haven't been gettine paad for extra expenses and for being an the "hot scat" on controversial issue~. of which the thorny question of school closures looms next month. But a special blue-ribbon commit- tee. made up of five citizen volunteers plus three school district employees. have held eight meetings to make Just Call 642-6086 01111 Piiot - Delivery la o ... r.ntMd ........ :l.t, I •'!Mlt " , .... °' ~ ~.... ,_ INIC>ef 111-~ J0 1 "'u1~,._1p .., •1'0 rO<" Cnc>Y w;ll be .,.. ... l>O recommendauons of which schools to close. The meetings last long into the night and the volunteers talce some heat from parents wanting to keep the schools open in their neighborhood. It should be noted that panel members don't receive a cent of compensation or anything for ex- penses. The special panel. mcadentally, 1s expected to recommend next month to trustees that Hawes and G isler c;chools should be closed. The Huntington Beach d15tnct operates I 0 schools and has an enrollment of slightly less than S,400. Fountain Valler. School 01stnct trustees, meanwhile, collect $30 a meeting and generally meet twice a month. There arc 13 schools 1n the Fountain Valley District with an enrollment of 6.SOO. Trustees in the Ocean View School Dastnct receive$ I SO a month and are reportedly considering increases. "It's a thankless job," said one insider. "There's a feelina that ,if there's more of a stipend, it might improve the quality of trustees." Ocean View has about 9,000 pupils at 13 schools. Trustees at the Huntington Beach Union High School District recieve $200 and aren't considenng raises, a spokeswoman said. The district numbers nearly 18,000 pupils in seven high schools in the cities of Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley and Westminster. Robert Reeves, director ofbusiness services for the Orange County De- partment of Education. said recent legislation allowed trustee pay raises based on enrollment and number of meetings. "We ex~t a lot of districts to raise their pay, • he said. Wbat do you like about tb~ Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call tlae number a t left and your me11a1e will b~ recorded, tran1crtbecl aad delivered to the appropriate editor. ~ Tbe same U ·bour anawerlag servlct may be used to record leuer-1 to tlte editor on any topic. Contrlbaton to our Letten colamn mull lnclade tbelr name ~nd teJepbooe nomber for veriflcttlon. No clrculatlon eaJl1, please. Tell u1 wbat't on your mind. ORANGE COAST ,D1ily Pilat H.L. 8ohwert1 Ill Publisher Clrcui.Uon 1141M2-4m c .... ,n.ct ectYerttemg 1141142.1171 All other cMpertmente Ma-az1 MAIN Of'PICR 330 WM! &.y 51 C.otia ..._. CA M11 e<»-9o• I~ Co.le.,._ C4 92826 S••~o., ""° s..r.ot1 " f:lli -.> •1'11 If(... 'fO'. CC!f)f l>y 1 • " ~ , .. ,.,,. •O • m •'Id .,_ <OJ•y *I ~°"'"•••O Fr•nk Zlnl Managing Editor K•ren Wittmer Advertising Director Copy,11,r11 !Ml 0.•"9" Co. • ~ ~ Ho _, MOIM&. ll!Ut!•lllCW!I edllOllAI man• OI •0-.1 .... ......... ,,....,, _,. lie •eprocivc.o """'°"' tpeOel •· ,.,._ OI COCl'f'\''111'11 0-.... ---:-=:~--~~~~---~ .. POel1i19 llltid ., c:o.t• w.. C-fort'N IUl'a 1•• IOOI l~ClliCln by t•11• ... 1& ,._,Ny Oy ....... ~ """''"'t ClrculeUon Te&ephonet RoHmary Churchman Controller Robert CentreH Producllon Manager Don•ld L WlllJame Ctrculatlon Manog r YOL77,NO.- I • , • (ii j