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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-02-04 - Orange Coast Pilotl , t TOMORROW: I I . . FORECAITI ON A2 fEWPORT BEACH Mfl NOA Y ~I llHUAH '( i l'•K Laguna ponders p.tiffilig.in p~blie City Council will take up the fiery issue of smokfug ordinance in the workplace trade assoc11tion. will convCT)t on the beachsidc community of 19.000 residents to lobby for and apin1t a proposed city ordinanct controllin1 where people may 1moke. Councilman Neil Fitzpatrick 11id. Fitzpetnck. a nonsmoler who in· troduced the proposed ordinance, uid the idea or rqulatina smokina in offices and pubtic places has bttn on his m ind for about two years but he "didn't know 1f there would be enough suppon to act (ari ordinance) pas~ ... ~ 1moki na rqulataon.s fOr busanntea. Pauerncd after ordinance. in Pasadena. Los Anatln and S.n Francateo. Laauna Beach's propolCd rqulattons would require bu11ne~ to protecl thcar no,nsmokin1 cm· ployccs from the tar, nicotine and carbon .monoxide produced by smokers' c1preues by ado{>ttna poh- c1cs that prohibit smok1n11n pans of the workplace. " It .-ould•lto "rcwce rncauruu wiOt wau,.formorethat1 SOcutOftlftlto tr'tasidc at lcall • fourth o( its Ult.Ad for nontmoken. mok.1n1 in bank aod retail llOR wa1t1n1 hnHwould alto be probibiltd allhouah people could take a puff in othu areas otthe butldinp. By LISA MAHONEY Of ... D.-, ......... Laauna Beach will be the battle· aro.und .Tuesday for friends a nd foes of public smoking rqulations as the An Co lony becomes the first city in Coaet" Applicants are stlll being sought for Orange Coun- ty Grand Jury./A3 Appointment of a new dean Is flrs.t step In ex- pansion of UC lrvlne engl- neering_department./ AS California A 'dead' San Diego man will make It after brutal stabbing./ A5 Natio n Storms keeping nation's midsection locked up in the icebox./ A5 Three stories outline Re- agan 's budget proposal, Including reactlo'\from both parties./ A5 Wor ld Pope John Paul II urges Peruvian rebels to lay down their arms./ A4 Athens police seeking bomber who set off ex- plosive that Injured 80 In a Greek bar./A5 Featurea Slenderness can be deadly as shown In a drama to be presented by UC Irvine's Eating Dis- orders Program./ A7 Sports It's the game of the season In Sea View League basketball with Estancia and Newport Harbor going head-to- head ./8 1 UC Irvine's baseball team \s loaded this season, but pitching Is a big question mark./81 Sharon Lyon Is big reason Woodbridge is unbeaten.In Sea View League girls basketball. /83 Entertainment 'Consenting Adult' offers good acting on homosex- ual problems./ Al Bu•lneu New, high-tech pacemakers wtll some- day diagnose and atop a variety of Irregular heart- beat• and dlapense druga./81 INDE X Bridge A10 Bunetln Board A3 Butfn... 85-8 ClaNlfted 8~9 Comic• A10 Crouw0td 89 Duttl Notlc.. 87 Featur.. A7-8 Horoacope . 88 Ann Landtt• A8 Opinion A8 Poftc• Log A3 Public Notleel C1 Sport• 81_. T etevlllon ./ A8 Theeteu AS.9 . W•tMr A2 Oranie County to Jf8PJ>le with the The council meets at 6 p.m. in City fiery issue of 1mok1n1 m the work· Council Chambers. S0.5 Forest Ave. place. Representatives of the American LunJ Association and The Tobacco Institute. the tobacco manufacturers' The rcsulations. des11ned to P.rotect no nsmokers from the possible 111 effects of smo ke from bumma ciprettcs. arc Ion& qvcrduc. City He decided this was the year Lo raise the issue after leaminJ.lhat more than 30 California . cities have Theaters. hospitals and o ty IOV· emmcnt bu11danp would alto be subject to ~lauon. (.._ ._ LAOU1'A/A2) .. Council mum onJWA lawsuit Newportmayorsa s no decision made yet on ai~rt fltg!:!f hmJts , ·, By ROBERT HYNDMAN ._...,........ - The Ne"'pon Beach City Council huddled with attorneys th11 momma but announced no decision whether it W'lll sue to block an incrcaJe 1n ~ number of flights o ut of John Wayne Airport. .................... Ul9 Look.lni a bit like the 'White Rabbit,' Ed the llailman tinora •ICn on lut round ha Newport netcJaborlaoocl~ "There's no decision yet." Mayor Phil Mau1tr s.aid followt"I the two- hour mtttmg behind closed doon. .. Wc'...,c asked our attorneys to look at several quesl1ons and report back to us." Be's been around the block a few times The increase in 01&1tt approved last week by the Oranac County Board of upcrv1sors. would boost daily commercial departures from 41 to 55. bqJnnm&Apnl I. h ahoallows for futu~ me~ of up to 73 fltahll. By TONY SAAVEDRA Ot-.ci..,.......... . Edwin Pickens was m a hurry. Makina his rounds for the last time Fri<by. the Newport Beach mailman scampered from house 1 to house. looking more like the "White Rabbit" in "Alice in Wonderland" than a man about to retire. No sir. Pickens had not lost has enthusiasm afler 16 rears of dchver- ma mail to homes 1n the Westcliff residential tract. S1ftinR through letters in the front seat of a white U.S. Post 'Office Jccp. Pickens explained he had an 1mpon · ant date with the city postmaster later in lhc afternoon and he didn't want to be late. But he could spare maybe rive minutt1 for a quick inttrv1cw. Pickens. who ~ve hisage as ··m m y 60s. let's leave It at that.'' has teen gencrat1ons come and go along his route through the s1yhsh Westchff neighborhoods. "l'vc seen kids grow into teen· a1crs. they weren't even born when I stancd." said the longtime postman. his white hair c ut into short bnstles. .. I've seen man} dogs and un- fonunately a lot of deaths." When you've been around the block as many t1mei as Pickens hu. )'OU become more than a m:ulman. you become pan of the many fa milies that depend on yo u for that letter from Aunt Thelma m Idaho or that Chnstmas card from grandma. And re<>1dents in a pomon of Pickens' route along Oxford. fk-rksh1re and Essc" lanes lefi pres- ents and gr~11n1 cards for "Ed, o ur trusty mailman· 1n their curbside mailboxes. which had been decoratcd wtth red nbbons and bows . ··1 fiaurcd 1 was liked but I dadn't realize that much. It's too b9d tbctt aren't more people hkc them;· ht said. blushing slJahtly. Some people also came out to shake his hand and wish him well "That's what kept me here for 16 vears ... said Pickens · This was a·ctually the second change of seasons for Picken!.. who 1omed thc post o ffice afterrcunngas a mastcr sergeant for thc Army recru11- (Pleue eee ltD/A2) While the Newport Beach City Council has long sou&ht auarantcn that a .... H -fltght hm1t would not be e:«cedcd. counnl mcmben u--. bttn t11h1-lipped about a pe>sstble h1wi.u1t following 1hc Boord of upcr. nsors· dcc1s1on ( o unc1l member E'cl)n Han rc- fem."d qut"Sl1o ns to Maurer and wud. "We'rr all being vcl) quiet about It tt Maurer \aid attorney~ for thc cat> will be re' 1c....,ing thc supervisors' d«1s1o n as well as the en' 1ronmcntal (Pleue eee COUNCIL/A2) Ex-Pilot · controller Schulman diesat56 County mum over charges against skipper in cr~sh Bernard Schulman. the man who directed all Daily Pilot accounung functio ns for 22 years in his posiuon as the newspaper's conlrollcr. has died after a lenathy illness. Mr. Schulman. S6, died Saturday at the acute care center at the Western Medical Center in Santa Ana from comphcat1ons of leukemia. family members said. He was taken ill in 1979 but co ntinued workina until 1982. -He was lhe most acntlc man I've known in my life," said Pat Step- henson. personnel administrator and secretary to the publisher. "His entire life a nd outlook on life rcnccted that, .. said Stephenson. who (Plcuo ace EX·1:_1LOT / A2) Bernard Sclualman Wayne ~s widow · seeking divorce By IEnY PORTEil .._ ..... c... 4 •1 Citin-"1rreconc1lablc d1f· fe rencn. • Pilar Wayne tcwan 1n· nounccd today that she 1nd her husband of four months are divotc· 1na. M n . tewart 11 the widow of K\Ot John Wayne who died of cancer June 11, 1979. He Wll 71 . "We have n~ for divorcc," M rs. ttwan 11id 1Qtlk1n1 for her h.,.._ bend. tcphcn C. Stewan. " tephcn is a ao<>d man. we have rdpttt for each other and .,.c expect toremam1ood fncnd "Mrs. •ewan 111d. • ( o unt> prosecuto rs ha'c again delayed anno uncma whethe r they will file cnmmal charges a$Almst Seal Beach res1dcn1 Vari Earles m connec· 11on with an October boating accident that claimed live li ves Earles. 29. was the pilot of a ~().foot speedboat thlt crashed into a sttt!I and concrete moonng boo)' at the entrance 10 Anahc1m Bay near Hunt· 1ngton Harbour Oct. 28. Five people were killed and four Coast man hurt in balcony fall a t rock concert The Stew1n1 ~re married in a pnvatC' ttttmony at Pilat's home • "La Roca.·· 1 n Nc-oort Beach oa Od • • .. , ........ rrLAa/A2J sa-~ ._... ..... PUar ••rn• atewart. ................ . y m1ured. mclud1na Earles. The acc1· dent 1s thou~t to be lhe wo rst pnvatc boauna accident 1n Oranac Count)' and one of the worst m state hmor) The Orange Count)' D1stnct <\t· to rney's offices has debated for SC\· cral months whether 10 charg~· Earks 1n the accident. Earlt"!!. ""as d n nking pnor 10 the accident but said he "as nol drun~ '\ test admm1ste~ nftcr the crash 'iho"'ed Earles had a blood-alcoho l reading ofO 11 -shghtl) more than the level at which a motonst 1s presumed intoiocatcd. Ho....,cvcr. boating laws. unlike the state 'chicle code. do not pccafy a hlood-alcohol le vel for dc1ermm1n& 1n1o·"ca11o n Earles said he did not sec thc buoy. ""h1c h 1s no t lighted He has filed a SS million claim against the ( 11y of Seal Beach. the Depanment of the Na' y. (Pleaee eee CHAROU/ A2) A 41-year-old LagUN 8-ct'I bteck .ye.~ a ..... min, lntured Wherl he fetl from a tpOk~. The~ b*ony and lan<Md on hla head la ~ bu1 9Uftertng from a during a rode conoert In Long concualon, ahe Mtd. Beach, WU Mated In fair condition GMgrMt ... • ... n.---~Mlt•-,g-tM today at St. Mary Medical Center Deep Purple concert at the Long In Long 9eectt. Beech Ar9na on s.turd9y ~ Robert GHorest fetl about 18 ~ the eccldent happened, Long feet, sufferlng head lnjurlea and a Beach paramedlca Mid. Hassle on growth in Mesa moves to pl_anning·panel l>tfl"cre0«1 o"rr ho" < osui Mc~ -.hould lfO"-' 11n1t~ the f'C\'C'nt ( 1ty < oun 11 election. turnina It mto a ~nOC'k-.doYrn drq-ou1 liaht \\-Ith neither 1dc ahk to claim a fu ll \ IC'tOI) Opponent., cn11cal of the rouoctl'\ pro-gm"th lll1tudr arabbtd l'AO o f the-thrtt a...,11labk ~at~. o u tm& n 1ncumhtn1 1n lhc-prOl.'C'\ But th( \UC'tt\s hu pro"en \omcwhat hollo"' \lnct the council ront&nuc to ap. Pf"O\.t <ontrO\.Cf'\111 h1&h-dcn~1t) rtSI• dcnt11I and romm ~ial proJccts. 1f dnl) b)' pl1t \Ot With a thrt ·mcmbcr ma,ont • ( ti Mna'\ i.;ouncal 1 11111 H f) much aru.,.th oincnted a 1hc ht-II '<tund\on RouAd1 v.o of lhel<lml·u hout [\ctPt lh1 lttnt the rou •n'1 held 1n th pohll I 1rrna "llh "oten. malu na lhr d«1\1t)n . TONY SAAVEDRA NlWS P ERSPECTl~E The C'nun 11, d1"tdcd o~tr the tututT ot Jcvclopmcnt IA the Clty. 11 prcpanna to lill thrtt Plann1na U>m ml\'>1on poll for mcm rs ,., term C\Ptrt cb l Com ma ocn 1ark ~loate.Jor 0. arloanJ l\arlts ~1ar\el hlH' all i11d th<")' ,.,tll ~k rtappiointment to four·\ r ttrm\ In man -"t"i, th rnmm1 \1un 1 an ad\ 1 ntl I r lhe c u 11 - ....-... no1n1A2J , , Lawyer quits fireworks mogul's case LOS NCiEL lAP) -( it1n1 a "I can't rcprcknt this man at tnal," Helkr withdrew 12 da)s tx-fore the :re~r:n of01eaal ethics. 1n 1nomey H~ller. of c~~tmto. told U.S. scheduled stan or triol fur Monany .. 1na ranae • ounty firtworu D1stnct Jud.ac Wilham Rea. and Liss Vegas pmblina flaure Frank m~tc W. Palrick Monany on .. Butthl11sa mauertbauhoWd not Sa.nsonc. They ore nct"uscd of con.spir-f." comapt1~n charaes w1t.hdn;.w be d1~loscd 1n public." ~ said. 1na to obtain a gambhna license for rom the~ Fnday and the tnal wa Monany said h.c was puzzled by the Ca llfom14 Commerce Club 1n the PMI~~ ,or two~. Heller• comment and denied there Cityl4)f Commerce by 11ving hidden uvomu Hd~r. who has re~ "•an ethic.I 9roblem. ownmhip hares in the club to four 1 rtwnted M~n)', smcc the bus1· "Opcrutin& from here toSacnmcn-former Commcr<·c city officials. 1 MUman was 11\dictcd Nov. I on to is a tremendous lotisucal problem ftdcrah I rac ketttrint and mail ffaud and he ()idler) has an enormous : c ·~ wou~ not detail his rtaton cast d.'' said Moriarty, who1e for w1thdnwi~ 11yina; .. I'm cauaht Anaheim company rrutnufacturcs • between the rock anCi l.b.e bard place." Red De\ 11 firtworks. Rcu indicated he wu initially rtluctant to ar:tfll Heller's request bccouse he did no1 know the arounds for 11. He was in r ush to catch the bus • suspected burJlar who allegedly tried to slip out of Newpon Beach on an OCTD bus. got more than he barp1ncd for when the bus made an unscheduled stop in Santa Ana. Newpon Beach police. alerted to the Saturday afternoon burglary on 32nd Street. stancd caJhng all OCTD bus drivers..-, were in Newport or had just let\ the beach city. "They Onally got a driver who said he had a customer matching the Week starts out in d a rk for 2 , 100 East bluff h omes Gu nman flees w it h cash from Costa M esa Inn descnpt1on ol the burglar," C"-Plained Officer Tom Little. Tht' bu" dmer pulled over near thr intcr .. ~·ct1on of Bnstol treet and unnowcr A venue. telling riders that the bus had d'·vcloped engine prob- lems. ~ad Little. The suspeet. later 1den11fied as Ron nu: Green. 2 I. of anta Ana. rcportedl} made a run for it at the unscheduled stop. A Newpon police dog later collared ~he.man at a nearby Monda) got ofTto a bum start in the EastblufT Community of Newpon Beach. About 2.100 homes lost power and traffic signals on Jamboree Road were knocked out. snarling morning cofl'}muter traffic. Mo!>! customers went w11hout clec· tnCI) for more than an hour and A gunman grabbed about $300 from a Costa Mesa hotel clerk Saturday before escaping on foot through the parking lot. Lt. Tom Durham said the robtx-r walked into the Costa Mesa I nn,f205 Harbor Blvd.. around noon. d1i.· played a small-caliber revolver and demanded money. construction sate. Green was treated at Hoag Mem- orial Hospital for dog b11es and booked at the ci1y jail. Police said Green allegedly broke into a residence on the 300 block of 32nd Street and grabbed a purse and a set of car keys. The suspect reportedly tried to steal a car in rhe neighborhood before giv1n1upandjumpingthc ntaAna- bound bus. several hundreds were sull tn the dark late this m omina. Southern Cali· fomi.a Edison spokesman Bill Com- pton said. Power at Corona dcl Mar High School was restored b)' the time dasscs started this morning. Compton said Edison workers have not isolated the problem. The lone clerk put the loot in a paper bag and handed it to the assailant. described as a white man. 5 feet 8 inches tall. I SO pounds, in his mid 205. wearing a brown j~cket and gloves. The robber was last seen running south through the hotel parking lot. LAGUNA PONDERS PUFFERS ••• From A l "We're 1au~1 1t'sall right to assault director. Ron Saldana. said. somebody with smoke. but it's im-lngolio says the three.quarters of polite to complain about at.'' the adult population who don't Fitzpatrick said. Having rcgulatfons smoke need protection from the prohibit mg smoking 1n certain places minority who do. Although studies "gives people some definite guide-have yet to prove that secondary lines to live within." he said. smoke 1s harmful to those who inhale Smokers wall have a place 10 go 11. "11's not unreasonable to expect where they needn't worry about that the ingredients could cause offending an yone and nonsmoker-; dtSl.'asc ·· will be able to escape the annoying But "ialdana '>ays there's no proof and possibl> unhealthful effects of that scrnndan smoke is ha.tardous 10 cagarenes. he said. an~one's heaith and Laguna Beach's 1 he American Lung A .,.,0<·ia1ton proposed regula11ons are really a will send a spokesman to speak in "proh1b1t1on ordinance .. that segre- support of ihe Laguna Beach gates '>mokcrs•from nonsmokers. propo!>al. J 1mm I ngoho. director of"' ~aldana !>3}S The Tobacco I nstllute commun1ca11ons for the Orange I'> not againM \mok1ng regulauoni.. ( ount) chapter. said. Bui he 'M"11d it '>hould be up to the The Tobacco lns11tutc will n> an a 1ndt\ 1dual businc'>S owner v.hat rc- rcpresenLat1ve from Anzona to pres· stnct1on">-1fan' -there should be. ent an opposing \IC\\-. llS regional "It's much more practical for businesses to decide what's best for themselves ... he said. "To us, it becomes more ofa rights issue than nonsmoking per sc," aldana said. Fitzpatrick agreed the proposed ordi nance raises the question of rights. but to him it's an issue of nonsmokers' rights. Regulating the issue will make it a, matter of 1aw. not one of smokers agamM nonsmo .. ers. he said. CHARGES ... From Al the ( oast Guard and the Arm) ( orps of Engineers. Thl' da1ms arc forcrunne~ to a lav.su1t. according to Dana Denton. Earles· a11orne). COUNCIL MUM ON LAWSUIT •.. From Al report prepared for the airport ter- minal. which will be expanded to accommodate the add111onal flight s. The environmental impact report 1s scheduled to be certified b> the Board of Super\> asors on Feb. 19. While not ruling out a lawsuit. Maurer s;.11d the city will also consider cooperating with count> and airport official'> in an effort to hm11 flighis. 'Wh1k the city 1s considering legal action. the i.\irpon Working Group ha'\ alrcad) announced 11s 1ntcnt1on to fi k a lav. ">Ult as \C>On as the El R 1s n~rtified .. The Board of~upen isors offerl·d us no relief and we now have to protect ourselves," Barbara I 1chman '31d in announcing the plans Friday. L1ehman as execuuve director of the ..\irport Working Group whi ch rep- resenls Sl'vcral communll) <1rgan11a- 11on., opposed 10 airport c.xpans1on Joining the Airport V.ork1ng Group an lhe lawsuit is Stop Pollu11ng Our Nt"wport. a Newport Beach en,1ronmental group Jean Watt. president ofSPON. said lhl.' ut~ \help v.ould greatly help the legal t halknge. "II°' a matter of money when you v.ant to car~ on a full-fledged lawsu11." Wan ..aad. L1lhrnan said Friday that a lawsuit could cost 11~ su pporters from s 75.ooo 10 s1 CXJ.ooo Both the Ai port Working Group and SPON are sup· ported by donations from Its mem- berc;. ··~omrthing ha'> to be done b> <iOml·hod\ " Watt <,aid "We're not r<.'ad~ to roll O\Cr and pla) dt•ad )Cl •· ED THE MAILMAN RETIRES ... Fro m Al 1ng center 1n Santa .\na With two rettrl'ffil'nt'> tx·hinJ t11m Pickens said. 'T m not gonna la~ down now and detenoratl.' I'm gonna· dust off mv golf club<, and ba'iacall~ do wh at I lecl like doing:· He apolog11cd. Sl!}tng 1hat he normallv has a few moments 10 chat w11h J)fopk along hi s route. but he reall} had to get gm ng nov. ··you can usuall ) find a couple of minute'>. which I don't have ... said P1ek<'m. glancing nervousl y at ht'i watch and putting the Jeep in gear. EX-PILOT CONTROLLER DIES ... From Al was hired an 1%1 b) Mr \chulman and former Daily Pilot Publisher Walter Burrough\ "There's no qucs11011 .about 11 fkrn1e wac, was one of the bc~t employee\ I ever had," forme r pub· lisher Bu rroughs said toda) "He was the bc'it controller v.c had h) far and h<.' was n vef"). vc.>r; fine man." Mr Schulman I'> 'iur.,,1ved by hi'i w1k Helen ol In inc. and daughll.'f) ..\ltssa. a supervisor 1n th e Dail} Pilot rnmpos1ng room <itephan1c. who v.orks an the l 'C In 1nl' athletic department and attend\ dasse<, at Saddlcback College. and Shana. I '.2. a student at Vista Verde S<:hool in I n ine 'ier,1ccs were \(.'hcdukJ tc>da) at I p.m. at Pacific V1ev. M<.'monal Park and Mortuary an Newport Reach. ~I r ~thulman was the yo ungest in a famil> of four children. His parents v.cn· born 1n Russia and t·ame to the l n11cd ~tates 1n the earl) 1900s. .\ nal1\.C: of Connecticut. he ob- tained a bat•helor''i of sc ience degree at the n1verstty of Bridgeport an Bndgeport. Conn. He earned school letters on the university baseball and basketball teams and was a member of the accounting fraternity. PILAR WAYNE SEEKS DIVORCE ..• From Al h. 1984 An clahoratc rc<:cpt1on for :!00 famil y member~ and fr1tnds followed and the couple hone}· mooned in Pan'> I\ former Harbor Mun1c1 pal Court Judge. Stewart ha'\ a law practice 1n Dally Piiot Dettvery te Guaranteed MQftOlly f '"• ti , •• """ -(!JUI µ"!,... by , JO e>"' u• o.•oo• 1 o" _, 'f<"ll Ctl('Y ,_n1 0. ,,.........., ( osta Melia. Pilar Wa) nc' C\tl·wan rnmbincs c:areero~ as author ("Pilar Wayne·~ Fa,ontc and Fabulous Renpcs") and lecturer and columnist for the Daily Pilot. Tu~tin News and . lammer ORANGE: COAST Daily Pilat H.L. Schwertz Ill Publisher mngaLa nc. Mrs. Stewart ha~ three childr~n - .\1ssa Wayne Kuhle and Mans:s and. Ethan Wayne tcwan is the father o( two children by a previous marriage -Andrea. 13. and M:mhew, 11. Clrculatton 71•1M2-4m Cla..m.ct edvertlelng 71•1142-911 All othet' depertmente M2...Q21 MAIN OFFICE ) !fl WHI 8ilt !ol c:.i.i. ..... C.A """ •·l?r'o'I II•• 1~ Co.1• M4'M CA ~ i trt•'\jt I 11l111 ()I~ COit'll ~'II ~ WI ~ .. , ''"'• _ .... .,,,. fO<l(lr• _, ... Of *'-1""' '"''" .... ,.... f ""' ·~ ~l'(!UI ~ '* s .. ,~1'A,. '""' ";""'" .. ., ,. "°'' C)tJ 'Wl°t ~~ 1JlA C""1' by 1 4 .., t •I Ml•)!• Fre nk Zlnl Managing Editor Karen Wittmer Advertising Director -"'c t''1'' ~·- •0 .. m •"'2 rrNI tOO't ,..,.. 0. °""' ... .., ctrcueeefon T1l1p:.oMI Rotemery Churchman Controller Robert L. Centr•u Production Manager ' Donald L. Wllllam1 Clrculatlon Manager ' I sacs cc ........ o •••• '~"'1111" p.d .. Cofll Mf..a c.~._ IJf'S IU 8001 $v0.C•~1•U tr. Cffl ... IA 75 lftOl\INy lh _.. $6 "° """'•It, VOL 71, NO. OU ( • a m Wl A ltU R I..._ -----~·-- Clear and c old climate continu es Ttw contlnU.O flow ot cold .ir from the Arctle will kttP t1ei.s ctear and cold In Souchern Callt0tnla through Tu.day, with frost expected In the sut>vrbs tonight, the N•tlon•I w .. ther Sefvtc. M.ldtoday. · Aoeo1dlno to foreca11ets, at Jet alrc:latt 1eve11 the •retie air tile" only a day and • halt to rtaeh Southern California. Howevet, at IOwtr levelt It may 1akt up to• week, wnk:n alloon time for some warming. T~ low temperature In Lot Ang9te1 tonight will be between 37' to ... 2 degrees It wlll be colder In the San Ferna(ldO. San Gabriel and San e.tnardlno vaHeya. with loW9 of 28 to 38 degr ... 9nd breezy wlndt of 18 to 25 mph ~ ~ Along the Or•• Cout, the forec:ut caltt tor ctearlng and colder tonight except In locllly windy area• belOw the p .... 1 north of Los Angeles. Partly ctoudy and cool Tueaday with lllQht chanceota1ho~ln9C>Utherncountles. Hlgh1TuNday52to82. Ar .. 1 ol frost tonight wtth Iowa In 30. and lower 401 except upper 20. In coldeat valleyt. Tempe 11'111\. .lo'# lot 24 l!Quf• ""°"'II •• ' t m IOClay "" 2• 1• 41 24 24 12 20 07 27 14 re n HI Lo ,, •o.t 33 21 3• 19 3~ 211 42 32 J2 21 32 JI 32 .. 2$ 20 14 ·01 Ot 111 24 ,. 41 36 30 17 74 67 21 14 41 40 19 ..()$ 24 .()I 36 20 H 10 39 24 aa 22 34 24 22 11 74 112 30 17 32 30 13 73 10 -01 35 21 30 21 ,. ·11 Calif. Temps ~5 ~ 13 ... 1t 13 " oe 00 ·111 M 37 u 07 42 30 17 ·13 19 -07 .. Bttatow 8MOj) SIYl,,. C.ltlin~ long S.llCh Monrl>"I• Monl.,ey MIW-M>tl ~·._., p..,,.~ Pt1NC191\8 Al-llM s ... 8tt"81'dln0 S1111Gabr..i S.nJoM Sant• An• sen .. C•u1 Te/loe Val..., YoHmlltVly Tides 411 20 40 " SI 33 511 43 511 a• 00 33 51 40 39 20 511 39 49 SS !>5 32 61 40 53 at 511 32 55 :u SI 39 eo u 32 01 33 ,. " ..01 10 00 15 ..(13 15 -oe 20 ·10 30 27 15 -oe 13 ..02 10 07 .. .()4 24 20 ~----------------~ TOOA'f 308 p"' t33pm 13 40 ~ .,. 60 S4 31 n .. ,. 2• 20 31 ,. Surf~eport Im '" .... 1·3 ~ TUllOA'I' •• ee -oe ·11 23 13 11 -oe 02 ·11 25 ..02 OS ·21 11 71 3t 34 18 .()4 Extended 1·3 ,.., 1·3 lair 2 ltlem 832em J 38pm IO<Mle>m 14 .. 3 I) , ... •·3 ,.., •·2 POOi •·2 po()< S<.f> Mii IOCley •I S 2$ P m rltM luetdey al 6 41 a m ...0 Mii again al !>'7pm Moon,,_ today •• • 33 p.m ... ,. •• 6 25 • m arldr'-egaln•t 6 4Spm FIGHT OVER GROWTH CONTINUES ... ~Mm Al . screenang development projects and variousaspectsofland use in the city. However. the five-member com- mission is empowered to.grant or deny such things as permits to operate certain businesses, building additions and signs. It is a commission that has come under fire by homeowner groups protesting large-scale developments that would be built near residential neighborhoods. C'omm1 ssmner!> hoping to retain their three scats, a ma3or11) bloc. ma) find '>Orne oppo!.1tion from freshman lOuncil ncv.<:omcrs Da' 1d Whcekr and Mar) Hornbuckll'. v.ho were clccll.'d O) disgruntled homeowners oppo..ed to devclopmcnl. :vt a}or Norma llc:n1og 'ia1d thi!> '~eek 1ha1 application\ for the com- m1ss1on seat'i and 1esumes wall be accepted until frb. 15. Applicants v.1 11 Ix· 'lcrecncd and l hosen for a publil· 1ntcn 1rw at a !>pcc1al council meeting Feb. :w. Depending on the number of applirant! .. the appointments t·ould be made at the same [leet111&. J:ic.clLog '>aid. The v.ould -bc c;omm1ss1oners are hc1ng a'i._cd to 'iubm1t letters stating 1heir ph1losoph) on land use in Costa "1C'>a. After lillang an unexpired term for 111! years. Commissioner Sloatc was reappointed. v.hilc Markel and Di(arlo were added to the panel an 1983 fhc three were given two-year term\. Sloatc. a 55-year-old enainecr with Rock\\cll International . said he ha s taken his l'UC from the council an ''otang for or against development prOJCl't\ "I th1nl. I wall conunue to abide by "hatnl.'r policy 1s set b} the council as a mJJunt)." he said. "If the council tends to tl·mper !>Ome of the growth ... Just Call 642-6086 then I thank the Plannin' Com- mission will go along with it. • Sloate added that tic personally bas tried to "maintain consistent growth throughout the city and balance it for the benefit of all the people. not j ust an individual aroup.' DiCarlo. 42, said that he has been mo~ attuned to the homeowners' picas to limit growth that may have enviromental effects on residential commun111es. "I've always been one who voted for the homeowners' rights. Anytime 11 come<. to residential housing against commercial (development). I'\\.' alwa} s been Hr}. very stringent," said Di Carlo. a manager with JD Property Management in C'o!>ta Mesa "I wa nl to sec the property being improved. but not to the detnmcnt of\ the: homl·owncrs." he added. · Mar .. el. who finished sixth out of 11 candidates an the recent council race. may face the most opposition. Rc~idents supporting Wheeler and Hornbuckle lambasted Markers vot- mg-rererd during the elcc11ons. point- ing an accusatory fin~er toward the developers and business interests contributing to his campaign. Rut 1hc 45-ycar-old cement con· tractor 1s undaunted. 'T vc tried to put the campaign behind me. I'm just 1ry1ng to do my JOb now." said Markel. "If thtre are more competent people an the com- mun1t). I hope they come forward." So docs Councilman Wheeler. "I ha ve no faith in the currrnt Planning Commission. I will be extremely disappointed 1f new com- missioners arcn 't appointed," he sa id "They have a definite ·rah-rah' pro-growth attitude. And that's dangerous.·· Hornbuc:klc 1s also looking for ...omc changes. "I ll'el \Onll'llmes it's a good idea to ha'c nc:v. pcopk w11h fre'ih ideas. II kcl'P" the JU1Ce'I flowing." she said. Hut. as Wheeler conct'ded. Hornbuckle is pan of a two-member manont}. And at least one of the maJOrtl} membe~ wouldn't mind lea,ang the commission as 1t 1!>. "I thank we have an l'Xcellent Planning Commission and as far as I'm ronccmed I would ltki'.. 'to reap- point all our present commi\s1on1."rs." Councilman Donn Hall !>aid. Ma~or Hcrllog said shl' would re' 1cv. the applicants. looking for people who could vote independently of council opinions or !>pecial interest group!>. ··1 "ant soml'bod' who will look at overall Cit} needs and keep the city 1n balante. I'm not looking for a rubber stamp. but someone who c:an demon- strate good Judgment:· ~he said. Coun cilwoman Arlcnl· Schater. who tould not Ix· reached for com- mcn1 on her Planning ( om1ss1on choll"e!>. ha\ l!I\ on:d de' elopment an the pa .. t. Laguna cham her hears eco-trends Craig t ialbra1th of thl' ti( Irvine Graduate School of Management wall speak about trends 1n south Orange C'"ount) economic development at the monthl) La'guna Beach Chamber of Commerce breakfast meeting at 8 a.m Tucsda} at the Hotel Laguna. Rc'icn ataons are required b} call· ang the chamber office. 4l>4-l 018. '\dnll\\IOn I\ $5. Wha t do you like about the Dally Pilot'? What don't you like'? Call the n11mber at left and your meuage will be recorded, transcribed and delivered to tlle appropriate editor. ' The same 24-bour answering service may be used to record letters to tlae editor on HY topic. Contributors to our Letters column must Include their na me and telepboae number for verification. No circulation eal11, please. Tell us what's on your mlnd. HUTTERSCUS • Designed, Finished Installed 31 Years Experience Manufacturing Qual ity Shutters FIN,.:ST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY ••. AT FACTORY . DIRECT PRICES! Call (714) 54MS841 or548-1717 • (. ... . ----< .. ' f . - I • ' " 0tanoi Cout OAtl Y PILOT I ...... ,_.,_,, ..... * --.-...-------..-------.--------------.--~iiiii'--- London, Paris tour orientation at OCC Oranac Coa$t Colltat' will present a acneral infor· mat1on mcctina ror its travel adventure "Easter Week in London and Paris" Tucsdar. at 7 p.m. in Room 108 of the school's administration bu1ldma. ·shouldPlannedPare11thOOd be allowed to advertise In high school n ewspapers In r9rc! to a recent controversy In Nevada?' OCC art pro.fessor on~ travel 'uidc Don Jcnninas will conduct the session, ofl'cnna detail of the 12-<Say sojourn to be held Apnl 3-14. The cost of the trip Is S 1 S2$ per person and more information is available at 432-'5880. bJventon plan meetln6 The International Inventors' Wor,shop will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. on the second floor of the Glendale Federal Savings building, 24221 Calle de la Louisa. Laauna Hill~. ~ speaker 1s scheduled and the meeting is open to the pubhQ. Call 66 I ·0184 for additional information. Child-rai•lng •emlnar Rt \ lc .. r Caralelia Cetta Mesa lrvlM city ,aauer ao clllldree Klma.M~ SuCleeetlle tec:llalcal wrlcer "Ra1s1 ng Children for Fun and Profit," a five-week workshop focusing on promotmg both the child's and the parent's feelings 'Of self-esteem. begins Tuesday i Newport Beach. The seminar is sponsored by the Newport Beach Parks. Beaches and Recreation Department and will be conduc1ed by Andrea Evans. The cost is S2S per person or $45 per couple and registration information is available at 644-31 s I. ··1 think tt's the rcspons1- bihty or society and local agtnc1cs to provide that service of btnh control:· "Yes. I do. becau1e I thmk they should have lepl and iood advice rather than no advice or bad advice." Africa famine discuued A program examining the current famtnc in A.fnca will be held Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the community room of the Laguna Beach branch of the Orange County Public Library. 363 Gelnneyre St. Dr. Allan Schoenherr. a professor of ecology at UC ITVine. will discuss the ecological consequences of overpopulation on a continent where the people are starving. There ts no charge for the program. J Irvine Ebell• to bowl The Ek11 Club of Irvine will hold a short business meeting to be followed by a bowling party Tuesday. startmg at 7:30 p.m. at Southern California Savings. Those in1erested in JOtning the Ebell Cl ub, a philanthropic and community service organiza tion for women 18 and over, should call Gana Totten at 835-1080. They're off to Puerto Vallarta Sallboata ln tbe Marina del Rey to Puerto Vallarta race take off Saturday. After tbe flnt day. ::,r:chta were .,.t.nc tor tbe lead. Ford • .ee Sporta, Paee 82. UCIEn ineers' School oosted with new dean ' Cl. Smgnano said. "The qualtty of Mille Nunziata Dana Point janltorlal services no clllldren GayeP•rmu lrvlH m1~t atte1Mlut modterof oee ... Story tlme at Valley library Children from 3 to S years of age are invited to a series of story times at the Fountatn Valley Branch Library. beginning Tuesday and continuing Tuesdays and Wednesdays 1hrough May I. W:illtam A-:Strtgna n o sees need for growth =controlled growth· By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of tM OellJ ,._. etilff the e\lstlng faculty here 1s very htgh, and we arc 1n a very dynamic area as far as high technolo'y as concerned. ··The s1tutat1on (in the UCI engi- neenng school) 1s that we must have growth. but planned growth." "I agree v.ath that 100 percent Girls and fam1ltes art' goang crazy having kids. Ttart'e out of 10 have them for tax wnte offs." .. I would prefer sex educatton. They should re- inforce respons1btJ1ty as well as sensitivit} 1n an area such as thta. •• The 30.minute programs ,will feature stories. songs. puppets. finger plays. crafts and ac11v11cs. The Tuesday sessions begin at 10:30 a.m. and Wednesday's are scheduled for I p.m Call 962-1324 for details. Couples seminar set at OCC A Valentine's seminar for couples. designed to help 1hcm grow closer together and become more loving. will be offered TueM!ay in the Facult) House of Orange Coast College in C osta Mesa. Mani Maltcrrc. an OCC instructor and mamage. family and child therapist. will co11duc1 the seminar. scheduled from 7 to 9 p.m. The cost 1s S 15 per couple and further informauon as available at 432-5880. HB Art League to convene The appointment of a new dean of UC Irvine's School of Engineenng 1s the first step 1n the pl anned maJOr expansion of the campus' engineering program. which will include emphasis on image engmcering and the biochemical field. university of- fic1alc; u1c1 The school's new dean. Wilham A. Sirignano. was introduced recently by UCI Chancellor Jack Peltason during a meeting w11h reporters. Pcltason said Cl '" in a rei1on wath a strong demand for skilled engineers but said tht' campus pro- gram '" the field has occ~ restncted lx·causc of Ii m 11cd re sou recs. The engineenng school now has about 1.000 students but receives man) more appltcations than tt can accommodate. campus officials said. C'onstruc11on of new campus bu1ld- 1ngs in the coming years is expected to allow the enrollment to grow. The school 1s now divided into programs for mechanical. c1v1l and electrical engineering: Nt'w areas of stud) an the UCI school include im age engineering, involving the science of visual image. The campus also ma) begin devoting additional attention 10 biochemical engineenng, which could focus on food processing. energf,ystems and waste treatment. Wllllam A. Slrt&nano U . space program Morc reccntl). he has focused on gas turbine. ramJt'I and mtemal combustion engmt's Hc has authored more than 170 publt- cat1ons. Tim Abbott The Huntington Beach Art League will hold 1ts monthly mce1ing Wcdnesda) at 7:30 p.m. at the Edison Community Center. ~1377 Magnolia St. Hun11ng1on &ach. ··Now .,.,r·re taking thr "hold' olT." Peltason said. Although UCl's enganeenng school 1s likel) to remain small compared to c;omc other institutions. campus of- lic1als said cooperative rt'scarch with other un1vers11y sc1ehcc departments and w11h local industry 1s t'~pectt'd 10 enhance the program. <imgnano was recently invited to JOIO the Nauonal Acronauttc'i and Space .\dmin1strat1on adv1so11 com- mittee on science apphcattons 1n !>pact" Costa Mna advertl1la1 mua1er "I 1h1nk the' should he allo.,.,.cd 10 adven1sc I Just think 11's rcaht) Thc more education Oft the subJ<.'Ct thc bcttcr off the) art .. K im Grilam Dua Pot.at retail sales DO cldldr~I Fem S1ro1!>. known for her Wes1ern paintings. will be the demons1ra11ng art1~1. The meeting 1s open to the public. Hospital offers CPR course A two-part card10-pulmonary resuscitation (CPR) course will be held Wednesday evening and Feb. 27 at South Coast Medical ('en1er. 31872 South Coast Highway. South Laguna. Rc~en at1 ons and a SS fee are required. C'all 499-131 I or 495-5191. ext. 2740, for add111onal informattOJ\. Martial arts class at OCC A new beginning class in 1a1 <:h1 chuan will be offered at Orange Coast College for 12 weeks beginning Monda). The martial ans le~~ns will be presented from 3 to 5 p.m. Mondays. For reg1stra11on 1nformat1on. contact thr college ( ommun1ty Services omce at 432-5880. Describing his fim 1mpress1ons of Handicapped educational plan studied ( ons1dera11on will be g1 \en to pro' iding an appropriate educational l'O' aronment for SC\crl) handi- capped pupils during a public hearing Frb. 13 sponsored by the Orange Count)' Board of Education. The hearing will be held an the board room of the Orange County Board of Education. 200 Kalmus Dnvc. Costa Mc~. ocg1nn1ng at 7:30 p.m. Siatc law l'nt1tlt'~ handicapped children 10 a "free appropnatc publtc educa tion .. Singnano. the school's new dean. f()rmer!.> served as George Tallman Ladd Profc~sor and head of the -department of mechanical engineer- ing at Carnegie-Mellon Un1vers1t) in P111Sburgh He 1s a spcc1alts1 in combustion S)Stcms and did early research on roc kr1 propulsion as applied to the The nc.,., dean earned a bachelor's degree in aeronautical engineenng from Rensselaer Pol} tech nil' In- stitute in Nev. \'orl and a dcx:toratc from Princcton L1n1\ersll) 1n 1964 Ht' served on the Pnnceton faculty unltl 1979· before mo' 1ng ltl Camrg1e-Mellon Sirignano '"es 10 I nine. Fewer seek positions on Grand Jury this year \.\1th the Frti. 15 deadline fast approaching. only 79 Orange County c1111ens ha "t' applied for pos111ons on the 1985-86 Grand Jury. according to co.wt officials .. I'm for 11. I think that ~1d" nvcd to be more rducatt'd on the subJC'Ct." Ralel&'-Wllsoa Halla,._ Bead retail ules ao c~ldre11 Monday, Feb. 4 No meeting• scheduled The hearing v.111 focu'i on ho.,.,. handicapped pupils can be educated with 1n re~ular classrooms. wh ile rrieeting their needs and tho~e of non- hand1capped students The responsc this )Car l'i far below last year's rc\ponse dunng the same pcnod, Su1XnOr C'oun Judge Fran- ui;co Bnsrno said. Proplt' interested in serving on the: .,.,1dr-ranging go,emment watchdog panel are encouraged to pick up applications at the Grand Juf') com- m1ss1oner's office.'. 700 C" 1c Center Dn,e. anta .\na or b~ sending a stamped. self-addressed business size en, elope 10· Grand Juf') .\ppltcauon. c/o .\Ian Slater Juf') Commissioner Orangr Count~ < ourthou~ . P 0 Bo:\ 1994. San ta Ana. C .\ l) 2 702 The 1985-86 Grand Jui> .... 111 he seated Jul~ I for a one-~car term Ruth Tbom Irvine bousrwifr parent of thrrt "'o I ligun· thJt if the~ ha\l' Se\ edulatlon cla~<;eS lhl'\ \h11uld he aware of l'' l'f\ 1hint1 J' ailahlc .. "Yeah. I thank 1t should oc allowed. JUSt to protect them in the future ·· Poucf Loe San Clemente man falls to death from Dana cliff A 39-year-old San Clemente man fell to his death from the cliffs above Dana Point Harbor Sunday after- noon. an Orange County Sheriffs spokesman reported. Frank Allan Celis was found on the rocks below a cliff by some friends at Huntl]leton Beach Th1r,cs drovt' a 1985 Ford Van through the rear wmdow at Wilson Ford. 18255 Beach Blvd .. and stole $1 00 in cash and a three-inch telc· vision ~t • • • Quiet hurglar siolc S300 in cash and S 1.1001nJcwelrywh1le the v1ct1m lept 1n the bedroom 1n the 17000 block of Pacific Coast H11hway. .... A blonde woman believed 10 be in her 20s 'tole a 12--paclt of beer worth S6.SO frt>m the C'irdr K market. 19490 Beach Blvd. • • • Someone tole SI 5 1n quaners after u 1na 11 kry to l.lnlock a ... cndina machine at f)chnc liquor. 126 Main t. .... Thieve 'tole four hubcaps valued at $800 from a 1978 blue Merccde, Bcn1 parktJ tn the front )&rd 1n the 3000 bl k of Ventur~. ••• mconc wal~l'tf on t'On"l'rttblc IOP of u IV79 Fl.it \ptdcr QI about 4:30 p.m., said Lt. Dick Olson. He said it appeared the man fell about 150 feet. Celis, wandering around the bluf- ftop decided 10 remain behind when his friends bepn climbina down the treacherous cliff to the beach below, Meadowlark Airport and broke the top and mirrors. • • • Two men were taken into custody for alleaedly stca1ing two pairs of pants at J.C. Pcnncys. 7777 Edingt'r. • • • Thieves broke into a 1984 Pl)mouth Voyaacr minivan at Pa· <'•fi e C'oa t Hi&hway and Hununaton and stoic a S3SO nna and 1 SSO radio. • • • A SI 0.000 black 1984 Ford Escrow with a Navy Weapons decal affixed to a corner of a wa ndsh 1eld was stolen in the 8000 block of Valenda. • • • A burglar5tolea $750 tool bo' from an open aaraac 1n the 1000 block of H1llv1cw. • • • fh1c vcs tole a two-ton noorjack.a lantern and a lenuner brcaluna 1ntoa locked storaac cab1nct 1n lhc carpon a1 655 I Warner A\.c, • • • • mconc-thrcw a i1n throuah. the 1 u cc.to • hip at 18$20 Beach tthd. l ossc'l ha\.e not bctn de1cmuncd. .. .. • • • said Olson. "Hts fnends found him a little later." Olson said. The death is tentauvcly ruled an acc1dt'nt thou'h an autops) 1s sched- uled to pinpoint the cause of death. according to Olson. veh1ck smashed into the rear gate tll Garfield's N1te 1pot on Maanolta tr~t south of Garfield Avenue and north of Yorktown Avenue. • • • Someone entered a residence in the 200 block of C'h1caao 1hrouah an unlocked door and stole a tckv1s1on !>C'l and 1 Nav)' blue London Foa w1ndb~1kcr jacket Foantaln Valley t'( airts reponcd that their bicycle v.crc tolen Sunday aftcmoon from a shopp1n1 center at Talbcn A ... cnue ond MaJnoha trcct. Four wcrt "olen out idc thf Toy ily ttore. whale twowerttakcn from out 1dc lhf Thnfi)' Drua tort Thcba~le ~re 11pparcntl) uni kcd. The total I v.a e 11mucd 11 SS-40 • • • \ fittfiah1er reported unda)' that wmeonc bural3n1cd hrs .. hue I 984 l c1 ot 4'\4 p1clup true\>. parlcJ hchmd the firt talion at I 77l7 t Rushard St The los'> indudl.'d 'ill'fcu equipment worths no • • • Thi.' manager of the Milkr'" Out- post store at 161 XS Brookhur'it St rcportrd Fnda) that three shoplifter' took men·hand1sc from the store Thl' manager said one person kept a cler~ distracted w11h questions .,.,h1lc lhl' other two remo ... cd sccunt' sensor~ and Oed with clothing. 'rhr lo~' included 17 p:ms of Le\l·s Jean\ "'Orth $305.83. • • • Someone pned open a door w burglan1e a gra~ 1980 MaTda R \., parked over the w«kcnd on thl· 17600 block of Oak Street • • • .\ resident of the 16000 blod ot 'hasta rtponcd turda' that '>omc· one had entered his aaraae then pncd open a door 10 his home "h1le he""" awa} on a business tnp The lo'>'>. estimated at SJO I. included a re- ' olvcr and an eight·P•~·t' ~11' Cl'\\lll't' SCI. • • • Pf)ina open a w1ndwing to enter. someont' buralanzed o blue IQ 76 ('adtllac Coupe de Ville parked over the wttkcnd on the 9400 blod. of El Blanco. Tht' loss included n portable tele' 14'1on ~t v.orth SI ~o • • • " '\an\I na v.oman rcponed _ turday that someone broke into her aold 1972 Ford Councr p1clup truck v.h1lt 11 wa parked 1n Foununn Valle) on Edinger 'tnut near Lo Oato, trttt he said tht thief took her purse. conta1n1n1 SI .loo . . " ... me nt> pncd open a front door fndl} 10 buralamc home on the r~IOObl(l( or )IV n Rhtr Thelo" included Jcv.clr) of undctcrm1nC'd 'aluc ,. Irvin e \ 1,.JI hurglar l'nt.!.·n•d .1 l ulon1al \m•l·t homl' p'ernaght \aaurda\ 1al - 1ng .1 tdn 1~11rn and '1lll'11 1..a\\C'ttl' rl·rnrdl•r \Jlued at Sl .55ll. • • • \ P1m·,1tl1\c trcct man "hll kit a s~ .ioo Jl<.lfl3hle 1clephnn1..· tn ht\ unlod .. etl H'h1de rt'Pllrt<.'J the item m""ng \Jturda\ ' . . \handgun. rifl e. tc~le' 1 .. mn ~t and 'iOITH' wat,·he'i .,.,ere talt'n trom an Chai Koad res1dent.'t' \:iturdn' The lll'm'> .,.,er~ 'alucd at SI ~lO · • • • .\ t onllnt'ntal Vending t o 'an .... as burglan1ed of S 1.-vv 1n coins Fnda~ Poli e arc looking for a Mc:\1can teenager seen in tht Dupont Dm c :m·a where the 'an w s parkcd • • • \ 1h1ct police ha'e dubhed 1he pell\ cash burglar pnC'd the doof't 10 'I<'' eral bu~ine\SC'\ at :?6~ I Rllhter .\ ,.c O\ er Thu~da) and Fnda ... night taking a<1 ltttle a\ SI 30 and us mu1..·h J'I S 700 an pctl'. 1...t'lh Coetalilaa front k11cl'lcn wmdo" 10 a homt 1n the 2200 blod of Pamela Lane v.as broken sometime hctwttn 4 p m f nda) and 10 a.m Saturda}. hut no entr) was made • • • \ '\00 car 1t'rw wu rcponcd 1olen from a cu parlt'd at South tout P1ua ~meta mt' bct\\.ccn I~ 5 p m. and 4 30 p m turd4) nm ""._ made b p171n1 the nJht front v.;ana window ••• \ b11: de \th~ at S ,SO, "a rtported h'len from an n raat in tn ~no 1lf \. lff u"'n'e~I C m.:lc '<lnh'hffil' ~·1wttn 'pm and ~ '' pm \unda' . . . ... ., -•I' ,. • .... -.. -.. ~ -"' Je.,.,,.11) wonh S 1.190 was reponed \tolen lrom a home in the 300 block of Buclnell Road somctimt' betv.cen 7 pm Thursday and '. 0 p .m. Saturday. Fnlr'\ was made by forc1na open a v.1ndov. to the soart' bedroom. i • • .\ cassette stereo and a power tiomtcr. both "alucd at $700, were rrponed stolen fronJ a car parted at a residence tn the 800 block of Baker Strt'l't sometime between m1tlni1ht and , 30 a.m. unday. Entry was made ti~ fomna open the passenger <,1dc .,.,1ndo...., La&una Beach \ man .,., ho handcuffed h1m1elf by accident Fnday evcnana rt'QUired police help to have the sJuacklc:s remo ... ed. • • • Police responded 10 rcpons unda} altcmoon of several Juveniles at- tempting to hreak mto a veh1 le 1n the Rancho Laauna area But the suspects -...ere gonc pnor to the officer's 1mH1l • • • \ v.oman rtponed th<' thef\ of her pun(! ilnd tl~ content toetthcr ~onh SI ~O. undn) momma on uth ( o3,t Haah wa) ••• J~ell') and "her toatthn wonh '600 v.erc rcponed st~n from a av1ew _ trttl h me turday morn· ma ••• Pohcc arrc te\J John Douala "aacr. Jl. on uspiaon of dnv•na under the lnfl~ntt ofakoh9I Vqcr ~a 100Ptd f nday af\cmoon on '8(\m\ s·uttt at Orth OH\ Htah· -•> -~-~~~~-----~· .. 4 TV ~t \'l.luC'd a\ S2 wa ~ from a h me on )hnt Drhc, ti\( '1d1m toh.1 poh e Friday ~~nlt f • • Pravd _Space a~msban a 'must' Editorial ts latest In heavy Soviet Union media blitz on talks MOSCOW (AP) -The Com- munist Party daily Pravda published a front-paae editorial today repeating th.at the Kremlin will not acocpt an arms control Bllttment without a ban on space weapons. Undcrthe bcadline··Peacc to Earth and outer space." Pravda said: "It is at present impossible to limit. and moreover. to reduce nuclear arms without adopting effective measures that 'would preclude the mili· tarization of outer space ... Much of the wording in the editorial was almost identical to that used in weekend articles in Pravda and other Soviet newspapers callina for a ban on space weapons. Soviet and U.S. negotiators arc . scheduled to begin new talks on space weapons, medium-range missiles and strategic nuclear forces March 12 in Geneva. Pravda again emphasized the Sov- iet si.ance that space weapons and earin;..based nuclear am1s must be linked in the forthcoming talks. Doubleim•ge Baker, Regan swap jobs in rather routine fashion IJ die Aaeoelaletl Preti WASHINGTON -Donald T. Repn was to be on the job t~ U ~idqat Rcapn's new chief of sta.fT, and James A. ~ker IU was to ,be na the reins at the Treasury Department to complete their JOb ~wap, White House officials said. The two had been tchedulcd to be swom 1n durana stp1raie. private oe~onies in thtir homes on Sunday but neilher White Hou~ nor Treesury oftlcials would confirm the ceremon/es had take~ place and ~d no format announcement was planned. ''They will be o~ the JO~ Monday, said White Hou.e spokesman Bill Hatt. "TbJs was their decl~1on to keep U.e ceremonies private." But another sweanng-m ceremo,ny is .~heduled for Friday in the Oval Office, with members of the two mens famihes scheduled to attend, White House deputy press secretary Larry Speakes said. Gala%7 aJrlbJer •arviver •accamm LAS VEGAS, Nev. -One of two survivors of last month's crash ~fa "gambler's special" airliner died before dawn today at a Las Veaas hosp1.t11. Roben Mif1ins. 45. of Plymouth. M.in"n., .had been in extremely cnhcal condition smcc the Jan. 21 crash, sufTenng third-degree bums over 90 percent of bis body. A total of70 people died in the crash. . • The "miracle survivor" of the crash. George Lamson Jr., r:ctumed to his home in Minnesota last week. His father, George Lamson Sr .. died on Jan. 29. Ocorae Jr., 17. was treated for minor hand burns and a head cut. TV movie· Jrk• Atlantan• ATLANTA -Ci ty officials should ~orry a~ut th.e issues rath~r .than damage to Atlanta's imaae from a TV movie .arguing t~at Wayne B. W1lh~ms was wronaJy convicted after a 22-month stnng of child mur<1;ers, the wnter says. City and business rcerescntatives were 10 meet today with !homas f. Leahy. executive vice president of the CBS broadca~t aro.up. t~ d1scuss tJ.~rr request for free time to ,respond to the five-hour. movie which >Vtll be sho~ tn two parts on Feb. IO and Feb. 12, said CBS spokesman JefT De Ro.me. Offic!als claim the movie, which they were shown by the local C~ affiliate, unfl1.rly portrays the city. police and courts. Williams was convicted of murdenna Nathaniel Cater and Jimmy Ray Payne, two of29 y~ung bl~cks, .m•ny of them children, whose deaths during a 22-month pe!'lod e~d1~g an 1981 were invcstiga&ed by a special police task force:-After his convtctton, the task fo~ was disbanded and authorities blamed Williams for-but never charged h1m with -22 other murders . .. This 1s an organic inter- relationship. and it was clearly re- corded in the joint Soviet-Amencan statement" outlining the format for the negotiations. Pravda stated. The.e two aebru at tlae Oklahoma Zoo present a c hilly doable apoeare u aab- freestnc temperaturea &ripped the city and nearly an the-nation•• mJ~tlon. &rban CotnUl dead at 56 Today's Pravda editonal was the latest in a vigorous Soviet media campaign denouncing U.S. research on a space-based missile defense system. also known as the .. tar Wars" plan. The Reagan adm1n1 s- tration has agreed to discuss space weapons in Gen~va, but has insisted the U.S. will continue the research. In a separate Pravda anacle toda}. Liz Taylor claims.drugs, booze nearly killed her . Soviet writer Ching.iz A1tma1ov sounded a ha j her criuc1sm of the plan. Acid spill prompts evacuation NEW YORK (AP) -When actress Eliza- beth Taylor entered a drug treatment pro- gram at the end of 1983. she wrote an a 1ournal. "It's probabl} the firs t time since i.. was 9 that no- bod' 's wanted to e'ploit me:· TAYLOR Miss Taylor. 52. spent seven weeks an the Betty Ford (enter. a drug and alcohol re hab1ll ta11on fac1ht~ where actresses Liza Minnelli, Mary Tyler Moore and country singer Johnny Cash also have gone. The center in Rancho Mirage. near Palms Springs, was named for the former first lady, who has undergone similar treatment and played a major role in foundi ng the center. In an interview published Monday in The New York Times. Miss Taylor called the center "the great leveler." "All kinds of people go there. including street junkies." she said. She went through ''terrific wi thdrawals" her first week there. but it was also durin~ that week that she made the entry an her joumaJ that read: "Nobo<i} wants anything from anyo ne else. excei:>t to share and help. It's probably the first tame since I was 9 that nobody's wanted to exploit me." She said she made the decision to enter the program at the center after members of her famil) and actor Rodd y McDowall ''•Sited her in a hospital. "Then they sat down and each read from papers they had prepared. each saying they loved me. each describing incidents thev'd witnessed of my debilitation. and each saying that if I kept on the way I was with drugs. I "ould die." she said. ELKHA.RT. Ind. (AP) -.\ punc- tured chemical tank car leaked hydroOuonc acid that formed a large. slow-moving clolld of acid fumes early today. and residents of a two-w t I d e t m~:1~e;..i~l.e area were evacuted. of-.es more an JUry ge S ~ However. no one was injured 1n the incident o n the ctty's southwest side I e e ~k~~~t.ec!~~~at.d~Ld~~yg:>famae~ unusua preview ID case "Ifs fairl y dangerous but the -~ evacuation has worked out so well I NEW YORK (AP) -The Jury Westmoreland maintains that no endorsed that view earlier in the trial. don't believe anybody is in danger:· probably wall be$m deliberating re-info rmation was suppressed and that His libel suit is based on the he said. The acid can be harmful to tired Gen. Wilham C. West-the CBS witnesses were simply on the premise that the broadcast falsely the skin and fatal when inhaled. moreland·~ li bel suit against CBS late losing side in an honest disagreement portrayed him as a military man who The leak was capped b} a hazard· this month. but the) ha\C already among experts. His own witnesses -dishonored himself by misleadine his ous materials team from the South go tten a preview of the fi nal argu-an assortment of former high-ranking superiors. To win. he must convince Bend Fire Depan ment some three men ts both sides arc like!\ to make. officers and top Washington officials. jurors that the broadcast defamed hours after 1he cvacuattons began .\s the trial entered its I 7th week such as former Defense Secretary him. was false , and that CBS broad- • around 7:30 a.m .. saad Don Mockler, toda>. CBS la wyers were in the midst Roben McNamara and National cast the false charges knowinaJy or director of civil defense emergency of defe nding the 1982 documentary Security Ad viser Wall Rostow -recklessl y. managemenl for Elkhan County. "The l lncounted En<.'m): A Vietnam "The) 're ~tani ng to dilute the Deception" a~1nst Wc'ltmoreland's chemical on the ground," Mockler claim he was hbcleci said. adding that residents were warned not to return to their homes un til at least noon "The fume\ are going nonh. but ha,en't been mo\lng much. We have n·t had much wind. which kept the fumes low:· he said. adding that "the weather forecast 1s am winds we The-documcntal") charged that Westmoreland. who commanded U.S. force~ 1n Vietnam from 1964 to 1968. !.uppresscd evidence showing larger-than·expccted enemy strength in an dfon to maintain politacat support for the ~ar Pope asks rebels to lay down arms get wall carry the fumes· from the In the past two weeks. the network A YACUCHO. Peru (AP) -Pope extra soldiers. banned the weanng of cent er of the caty ·· has summoned \C\<en present or John Paul II has urged leftist rebels in ponchos or hats, used by people in the The spill was reponed b) a< onra1I former CIA analy'lts who supported the hean of Peru's $Uemlla war zone region to ward off the mountain cold. worker at the Robcn Youn g Rail road the broadcast'<; ma in charge: that th e to lay down their weapons and Security authorities claimed ter- Yards at around 6:4.S a m., military. at the direction of West- conven "to lhe cause of reconc1ll-rorists might try to smuggle arms and authon11cs said. The cau'ic of the more land. refused to let a 196 7 at ion and peace:· explosives under their garments or puncture was not immediatel) de-l'Sll mate ol communist manpower The pope Vt'illed the milita ry-hats. . termined. l'xceed JOO <XJO. des pite ev idence co ntrolled city of Ayacucho. The pontiff returned to Lima on The cloud wa<i abou1 one-quarter-po1nt1ng to~ard a figu re nearly twice b1nhplace of the leftist rebel group Sunday. and was scheduled to travel mile square and hovered aro und tree-that known as the Shining Path. on to two northern cities today. the third top le'el. Cit} ch1efofdetec11ves Nick CBS a11or°')S 'Mt) they wi ll '°°n Sunday and pleaded for an end 10 day of a Peruvian journey. He is to .\mbrose said o;tan presen 11ng testimony from one-fighting 1n the Andes Mountain deliver an afternoon Mass at the Perron .-.aid he had stood w1th1n 20 11 me members of Westmoreland'\ region that has claimed 4,000 dead an agricultural and industrial city of feet downwind of the cloud and did rnmmand who are expected to say four years Trujillo. The area boasts prc-lncan not have any discomfort breat hin~. much the same thinJl,. The army, buttressed bv 5.000 ruinsandtheremainsofanadobecity ---------=-------------------..---------------. built by the Ctli mu Indians. wh o were moon worshippers. RUFFELL'S IPHUTDY: llC. f• n._ RntOf Yw lh lt22 *MOR awi . COSTA llllSA -Mt-115' The Pros· Since 1951 He also plans to visit Piura, the first South American city founded by Spanish conqueror Francisco Pizar· ro. in I 532. The area just below the border with Ecuador was devastated by heavy rains two years ago which caused widespread damage and dis- ease. , . On Sunday, the pope told checnna crowds at the heavily guarded, sand· ~ IMIITT •SIUICl bayed airt><>rt at Ayacucho:"I ask v, you then, in the name of God. to · ~. Non·smoktr change your road, convert yoursc.lves . l' ~ Rates to the cause of reconc1hat1on and acc." la1-n40 pc"You still have time," he said. TEMPE. Ariz. -Barbara C. Cowsill, one of the members of the 19695 soft-rock band the Cowsills, has died after a long illness. She wa~ S~. Cowsall teamed up with her daughter and five of her sons to form the s1n1rn1 aro.up while the family was living in Middletown. R.I. Between 1967· 70, the Cows1lls recorded several bit songs including "The Rain. the Park and Other Thin'5:· ··1ndian Lake." "We Can Ay," plus the title song for the rock musical "Haar." Re.earclJer Oppenlldmer dJa SAUSALITO -Dr. Frank Oppcn~imer, a landmark researcher. in nuclear and cosmic ray physics and a member of the Manhattan ProJe<:t, died Sunday after a two-month battle with lung cancer. He was 72. Oppenheimer helped plan and conduct the first test of the atomic bomb. di rected by his brother. J. Robert Oppenheimer. Frank Oppenheimer later became a staunch opponent of nuclear weapons following World War II. He founded San Frandsco's Exploratorium. an internationally known science museum. Cr8n•ton bla•t. Reagan pollcle .. LOS ANGELES -Sen. Alan Cranston, decrying the indictment of 16 church workers for allegedly safeguarding undocumented Central American refugees. says President Reagan's policies have "made law-breakers out of Amencan clergy and nuns." The third-term California Democrat accused the administration of turning its back on Salvadorans and Guatemalans who seek political asylum. The administration has ta.ken that stance because to grant such asylum "would be tantamount to admitting that death squads and terrorism ex 1st there ...... Cranston said ... The administration. for foreig.n policy reasons. won't admit that fact." Her trl•h: Help otlJen SAN DIEGO-A wish has come true for a teen-ager facing death from brain cancer, but she won't meet a celebrity or go to an amusement park or travel. Instead. she'll be a "guinea pig" for science. Theresa Fousel, 16, hopes her wish for admission to an experimental research and treatment prosram leads to medical advancements 10 help other people like herself. "What she told me was that she was willing to be a guinea pig if it would help to keep just one other person from the suffering she's gone through," said Jamie Tucker. president of the San Diego chapter of the Make-A·Wish Foundation. a national volunteer program that attempts to grant wishes for dying youngsters. TJny quake •hdett San Diego coa•t SAN DIEGO-A minor eanhqua.ke centered off the coast of San Diego may have shaken up some fish. but it didn't appear to ruffle residents on shore. The quake hit Sunday at 7:09 p.m. and was centered 28 miles southwt1t of San Diego in the ocean. said Dennis Meredith, a spokesman at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, which monitors earthqua.lce activity. Meredith said the quake was felt as far away as La Jolla in non hem San Dieao. Police said. however. that they did not recc1 ve any calls from worried residents. Tot dln after mom'• •alcJde try SANTA MONICA-A 6-month-old girt died during the weekend after · her mother had carried her and her 4-ycar-old brother, who also died, into the ocean last week in-what police descnbcd as a suicide attempt. The mother, Fumiko Kimura. 32, remained hospitalized Sunday in the Jail ward of Los Angeles Count y-USC Medical Center where she was listed in satisfactory condition, said a deputy shenfT who didn't wish to be identified. Her son Kazutaka died last Tuesday when his mother walked into the surf nort~tbe Santa Monica Pier. clutching the boy under one arm and his baby sister under the other. / RTD rate JJlke •park• prote.t LOS ANGELES -Hundreds of commuters showed up to protest proposed fare increases at a weekend hearing, some scuffling with stcurity guards or threatening to boycott Rapid Transit District buses. Under the RTD staff plan. the basic SO-cent fare could increase by 50 percent to 75 cents as early as July I. while a regular monthly pass would soar by 70 pcrc.ent to $34. The RTD. whose directors are to vote on the proposals later this month says fare hikes arc needed because of a projected S53 million loss of funds 1n the next fiscal year. "-. WoRlD ' r - War llalted for nccJnn I I . COR~l: V,IEJO, El Salvador-~ebcls and sovemment forces have put asa4C the c.1v1I war f~r a day to let legions of medical workers brina the battle qa.191t childhood discuc to hamlets that rarely 1tt a doctor. About 3,200 med1ca~ teams sprc~ acron the country Sunday in a one-day effort to 1mmun1zc 400,000 children under the age of5 aaa1nst polio whoopint ~ tetanus, dipt~eri~ and measles. "~st r.ear •. morechjldren (i~ Et SaJvador) dred fror:n. not bcint 1m.mu~.'~ ~1ns1 SIX d1~scs than in all the fiahllna an~ political as.sa11anat1ons an this country's c1v1I war. said the executive director of UNICEF, James Grant, who came to Coral Viejo for'lhe camp1ian. 441 Old Newpoi.1 ... "Many tean of innocent victims VJeg aear rebel oa~i. .... ,.... ....., Ce. awl.it your res nse... •yv- -- t::====::;;;;;;;;:::;;:;:;;;;;;;;::=::=:=:=::::;====~ ARANYAPRA THET, Thail~nd -About 8.oqc> Vietnamese troops have ~.'•fry ••-d 0' •nn' er pushed past Khmer Rouse '-uemlla ou1pos1s to within two miln of, ~or &4 • 4 &•II 1 ·~ guemlla s~ronahold in the hills of sout.hwestem Cambodia. Thai mllitaru ~ r officers M11d to<lay. Col. Chettha ThannaJaro. deputy commander of the ThAl •p•C'•••• I.~ a5 east~ fo~. said the Vietnamese may be waitina for more suooliea •J •••• V• 71 ·ammunition •. and possibly ~nks bcfor~ launching a full-Jelle attack on Rhmc; Rouac bates 1n the Khao Din mountains. Prime Rib or Fresh Fish C""f*tt otlttw With choke o1 $OCIP ors.ad and l#UBt 4 to 6 'M IUIJ.WUHl'1l l ..,. 1 w.-1 •1-t U&.D-~13-71~6 , . Eatluoaed BJOop Tata attach •,,.,.U.eld JOHANN BURG. Sooth Af,-Q -Nobel Pace Pritt lauralC Ot mond Tutu has been entroncd as the first black Anahca.n bishop of Joh~n~es~ra. brushina aside. dolth threats and defiantly attack1na SoUth Afnc.a s rat111 aeptratlon pohc1C1. Tutu. S3. w11 Installed in a lefVice ofaaatd R"eformat1on rite and joyous African h)'mns in the candle.lit C.thcdral of SL Mary the V1r1.n on SU.nday., From tht. pulp1tJ. he uked bis ov~ con11:tt1tion of2 000 wtincund blacks: ''WhoJD~&hA!ia A04 tMett --- willina 10 citchanee ola«t *Ith bla(k1 even for a day?" He called SOuth Afnca·s S\' tcm of rac11f1t1ttt1uon "evil and un hnsoan." .. Reagan challenges Cong~e $978. 7 billion Looking At. The oetlcJt · ·toadeptb . . P1•oposal "-••med The A•,QM ~ hopN to c:u ttie .a 1 I-"-.& . ditd wtlh Monc:My'a File* Yw 1 eee budget P'oSXl ... Both parti~s see some prolilems in Reagan pnoposal austere package In laont Of Oofltt WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi- dept Reaaan today 11ked Conaress to exhibit "politicaJ cou~" and adopt • low-ttowth S973. 7 bimon budfet for next ~ear that would freeu, tnm or eliminate scores of familiar domestic proarams. At the same time, the prosram Reapn ponrayed as austere would fail J.o meet his own earlier target of halv1n1 the federal deficit by .1988. The budget proposes a SJO billion Increase in defense spending - auara.nteed to provoke conaress1onal criticism -while cboppina domestic spendlna by nearly S40 billion. It recommends sharp reductions in mass transit. housina and student aid; an end to the re venue-sbarina pro- gram that turns federal tax dollars back to state and local aovernments without strings; termination of the federal subsidy of -the Amtrak rail- passenacr system, and a S percent pay cut for all federal civilian workers. If adop~ed by Conarcss in anything approaching us current form an unlikely prospect in view of con- gressional performance in the past - lhe budget would amount to a virtual het freeze on all aovernment spend- ina. It calls for a growth over this year's $959. I billion budJet of a bare 1.5 percent. representing payment of Interest on the national debt alone. It would be the smallest increase in federal spending in m ore than two decades. Reagan sa·id his budget would tcduce deficits, now soaring over S200 billion. to S 144 billion for 1988 -missin& his earlier target of a reduction to S 100 billion by that year. The projected 1986 deficit would be S 180 billion, down from an estimated $222.2 billion in the cur- rent year. The budget docs not call for tax Increases or reductions. although it repeats Reagan's earlier proposal for Congress to enact a tuition tax credit for ptrcnts of students in private &chools. Rcapn said he would submit a tax simphcation plan later in the year. Not all programs would be trimmed. Social Security benefits for 65 million Americans would be left untouched, although the budget would cancel cost-of-living increases built Into a number of other federal Proarims. Reagan said earlier he would consider freezing Social Secur- ity benefits only if Conpcss insisted. The administration 1s projecting a 4.1 percent cost-of-living increase this year. which would raise benefits by that percentage next January. The budget would eliminate popu- Stabbing recovery 'miracle' SANDIEGO(AP)-A 19-year- old 9tabbin$ victim who was ··dead" when he amved at the hospital is so far making what doctors descnbe as a miraculous recovery. Christopher Va Iva was brought to Mercy Hospital's trauma center about midnight Friday after suffering a stab wound. The cut was small but deep, puncturin&his hean. lungand aorta, the main artery from the heart. "Hccame indead."sa1d Dr. Euiene Rumsey Jr., who operated o n Yaiva immediatly after the young man was brought to the hospital.:· His entire blood volume was in his left chest and his heart had stopped pumping." After surgery. Rumsey gave Valva's mother. Irene Ferguson· Malt man, a frank prognosis: "Your son is probably going to die. Wounds like your son's arc usually fatal,·• the mother quoted the doctor assaying. Today, Yaiva was reported in critical condition with stable vital sians. said hospital spokesman Nor- man Greene. Sunday night, he began responding for the first fime since the stabbing, squeezing his mother's hand, blink- inahiseycson commandand cryina when she whispered ... You 're goina to make it. baby," Ferguson-Maltman said. It's not known how much. ifany, neurological damaae occurred when Valva's heart sto~pcd. Valva's parent saredivorced and his mother has re"91rried, but his father flew in from New York Sunday when he learned of the stabbina. John Yaiva said doctorsare rcfcrrinJ to his son's survival as a "medical miracle." Rumsey credited Valva's survival to hts rapid deli very to a hospital where he could be o perated on lnstal\tly. a Iona with his youth "a'hd theara«ofGod." The events lcadi na up tot he stabblna be&an as Valva and a co- worker. Tom Bowman. wtredrivina home from workinaa niaht shin at a pnnuhop. Across thcstrcet from Valva's n O.qo home. they nooc,ect three youths who appeared to be on IM verpof1tcahn1tomecarsp1rkcd m the nttshborhood. Accord1nato Bowman. Yaiva 1sood in the front yard and houted "Hey -hat arc you doinar' and then told ~youths to11:toutofthc n~borhood. Orie of the youths strolled up to Valva and 111d. "Brothtr~youjualbce libbed.'' btfore olunaanaa knife into Yaiva 's rhest. 8owman 1a1d. lar protrams of three plat pre11dents: Richard M. Nixon's aeneraJ revenue sharins, Lyndon B. Johnson's $60().. million·a-year Job Corps to train disadvantqed yo11th111 pen ofa war on poveny. and Jimmy Caner's Urban Development Action Grants to restore depressed urban areas. It would also halt the Caner prosram to stockpile crude oil in a Strategic Petroleum Reserve as in- surance apinst another Mideast 011 cmbarao. The budaet wouJd also increate the civilian space budaet by S42S million, tb $7 billion -includina· S230 million in desilft funds for a 1990s space station. • Ettimatt SOI.I/Ct Olflct or Manegt mtnt " 1 111d Budo•I WASHINGTON CAP) -Ro- publican as well as Democntic ~ sressionaJ ltadert are deliverina a united verdict to President Reapn: His $974 biJlion budtei cootains too larJC an increue in ckfmse ~int to be politically acttptablc on Capitol Hill. · Senate Majority Leada Robert Dole, R-Kan.. sugesttd tht Re-publican~ontrollcd Senate may wind up paring back the president's proposed defense spend1n1 increast of $31 billion by rouJhly half. "The president. I must say, 1s m a fairly comfortable posi1ion. He says. ·Don't touch Social Security. Don't touch defcn~. Don't raise tues. And Bzidget proposal fulfills some promi_ses . By EVANS WJ'M' ..... , 11 C"- WASHINGTON (AP).:_ What a difference 54~4 million votes make. Last year. President Reapn spoke of excellence in education and proposed a SI 00 million election-year hike in education spending for 1985. With his landslide re-clecllon in 1he history books. Reagan's post-election budget wouldcbop$2 billion from the Department o fEducation 's bot· tom line for 1986. ina bluepnnt suaaested o nly an S8. 9 billion cut in domesti c programs. This year. the administration wants about $39 billion slashed from domestic spend in~ Reagan's 1986 budget. sent to Congress today. gjves the voters a first look at the priorities they supported by gjvmg him a ~cond four-year term. There aren't many surpnscs. With the president's las1 clecuon behind him. the careful effon in 1984 During the dcction campaign. 10 craft a budget with one eye on Reagan dedicated a Buffalo senior keeping voters happy has been dis- citizcnsapartmcnt house built carded. partially with fed~I money u!ldcra This first spending blueprint after a program called Sect10f! 202. His 1986 landslide re-election victory isgener- bud_get would all but WlJ>C out that ... ·ally a rerun of the script~a1d out in the program. Reagan budgets of 1981, 1982 and The president's pre-election spend· 1983: cuts in domestic spending, Storms locking much of nation . in arctic icebox By tile Associated Pre11 A nppling wave of storms d umped snow today from Arizona to the Ohio Valley while a huge chunk of the nation remained locked in an arctic icebox that sent the mercury skidding below zero from the Rockies to the Appa~achians. At least 41 deaths have been blamed on the latest cold snap~ Bitter cold and ice-slicked roads kept schools and businesses closed today in Alabama, Tennessee, West Virginia and Louisiana. officials said. Snow was falling toda_y from Ari- zona and Utah to the OffiO Valley in what Pete Rn nolds of the Na1ional Severe Storms Forecast Center said was a "series of short waves of storms" that swept out of the Nonh- west from Canada. · Flagstaff. Ariz .. has 2S inches of snow on the ground after 7 inches fell Sunday. Reynolds said. Up to 3 i nchcs of snow was I 1 kely today across pans of Kansas, Missouri. Oklahoma and Nebraska. "It's really going to be quite a widespread snow from northern Utah across the Plains to the Ohio Valley," he said. Meanwhile, bitter cold chilled much of the North early today. with sub-zero readings across the upper O hio and Mississippi valleys and the nonhc,rn Appalachians. The' weather service reported read- ings early today in the 20 below zero range across Mo ntana, nonhem Colorado and Nonh Dakota. It was 25 below in Bismarck, N.D .. and an 86-year-old record was shattered in Boise. Idaho, where it.was I 0 below. It was 4 below in Columbus, Ohio. zero in Pittsburgh. 4 above an Columbia, Mo .. and a record-setting 8 in New- ark. N.J. Records were tied or bro ken Sun- day in Illinois. O hio. Colorado. Michigan, Arkansas. Indiana, Ken- 1ucky and Wyoming. The 2 degrees at Fort Smith, Ark., broke a record of 7 that had stood since 1886. Mean- while. Miami had a record-brcakin& alternoon lcmperature of 85. Temperatures across the nation early today ranged from 34 degrees below zero at Butte, Mont., to 75 degrees at Key West. Fla. . Meteorolog.im planned to fly to Peter Sinks .. Utah. in a helicopter today to check an automated gauge that turned in a minus 69.9 reading Friday that could be the coldest ever in 1hc 48 contiguous states. The previous record was 69. 7 degrees 1n Rogers Pass. Mont .. in 1954 .. O nly emergency traffic was allowed on lnterslate 20 in Richland and Madison parishes in Louisiana today and Mississippi troopers threatened to arrest anyone trying to cross the 1-20and U.S. 80 bndges to Vicksburg. Miss. "I don't sec any real relief from the icy road conditions... forecaster Roger Mc Neil said Sunday. "Hopefully. we will have warmed up some before the brunt of th .. next system arrives." More than 600 motorists were stranded Saturday night in armories and other shelters along 1-65 1n northern Alabama between the Cul- lman-Blount County hnc. accorchng to state troopers. At Huntsville. Ala .. ice and snow had broken power lines serving 60,000 homes Friday. and 5.000 to 7,000 were still without electricity Sunday. utilities reported. Scattered flurries remained Sunda) 1n West Virginia after a ~eekend storm dumped up to a foot of snow. Fifteen inches of snow fell in moun- tainous Preston County, where an earlier storm left thousands snow- bound for up to a week along roads cloged with deep drifts. Since Wednesday, at least 21 pcoj>le have died in weather-related traffic accidents 10 California. Kan- sas. Missouri. Arkansas. Alabama. Connecticut. Pennsylyania, WC$.! Virainia and Texas: Michipn. Louisiana. Mississippi. increases in defense spending. hopefu l tal k ofbalanccd budgets and huge federal deficits. "We said ·no' frequently m 1981 ... but we did not accomplish enough," Reagan said in his budget message. "We have no choice but to renew our efTons with redoubled vigor." lfh1s budget seems a change from some things Reagan said and did 1n 1984, 1t cena10lydocs fulfill some of h1scampa1gn promises and deal with areas where the cam pa1gn showed vul nerab1ht1es. Social Sccun ty benefits arc un- touched.Just as Reagan promised after Democratic challenger Walter F. Mondale began pummeling the Re- publican incumbent on the issue dunng the fall campaign. Reagan pledged repeatedly during the campaign to stand fast against tax hikes. He said he would allow them only as-a "last resort" tocut federal deficits. echoing his 1985 budget document that declared , ··To those who say we must raise taxes. I say waiL" This year. Reagan used a campaign thcr:n~ to declare his continued 01>- pos1llon. ..lfwc fail to reduce excessive federal benefits to special 1 ntercst groups. we will be saddled either wnb largerbudgctdefic1ts orw1th higher taxes-e1ther ofwh1ch would be of greater harm to lhc Amencan econ- omy and people." he said. EDITOR 'S NOTE -Evans Wm is a Was~ington-based polirica/ writer who has been covenng federal budgetssince 1976. ., .......... Chrlattne Gulotta taka four band.led and warm pre-ecbool cbaraa on carrtace ride ln South Deerfield , Mue. Tennessee. Oklahoma and t he !'la' J · JO reserva11on m ..\nrona cal h rl'· poncd a death fro m frcc11 ng ..\l!>o a M1ssoun man. a Lou1s1ana man. t\\O M1ss1ss1pp1 children and a Tennessee woman and her four Jrandch1ld~n died in fires authonttes said \\ere caused by space heaters. and an Alabama woman was electrocuted at her outdoor fuse bo\ altl'r her home lost po"er (. T \\O )OUng girl\ 1n T n as died '\aturda~ after falling through the 1ct on a tock pond and a \.1 1ch1gan bo) .... as ~ .... cpt to h1" death after falling through 1ccon a n\('r In "-ansasC'it). Kan .. a man died :ificr -.lipping on an IC) sidewalk and fractunng his skull you can•t &ouch in1tte11 oe lhe. (national) debt.' Thai doeso•1 lcave a lfal deal ••• Dole Said. ··ThOIC or us 1n lbe Conpesa have to ma)'bc look bt)'ond some of tbe prclldcnt's prom1tet or the c:am- p1ian:· he added. lnteTV~ Sunday on the ABC-TV ptottam "This Weck with 0.vld Brinkley," Dole said the Senate maabt slice 1he ptntdeat's defense proposal from lhc S. 9 pereen1 increase bis budaet seeks -after inflation -is subtracted -to a level of around 3 pcrccriL That would reduce the overall budaet by SJ 8 btllion to $20 billion. 'he said. House Majonty wder J im WriJhl, [). Tcu.s. inierv1ewcd on the same proeram. wd tbc proposed budatt shows "a blind spot on the part of Mr. Reapn and also Mr. (Defense Secretary Caspar) Wc1nberaer. When they ~ of spendina. they don't mean military spending. When they speak of shrink- ing government. they don't think of the Pcnt.aaon as a part of aovem- ment." ··This (bud,ct) doesn't lead us out of the wilderness." said Sen. Lawton ChilC!,.P.f Florida. the scnior Demo- crat ctt the Sen.ate Buc:faet Com mince. 1 "If he can go to the countryside, and he ICtS CVCl)'dllng that's ID this, we•tt stm in bad. bad shape:· Chiles was expected to rclcuc a Democratic analysis of the prest- dent's budget later toda). He said thcadm1rustrauon'sdai ms that defense reductions have already been made is based on -sta.rtin& from their wish list. not from what they aot" and that the prcs.idcnt's ove:rall budget., wt th i LS proposed $313. 7 billion defense component.. .. doesn't make econom ic sense." The propo!ltd budaet for the fiscal year that begins Oct. I calls for $973. 7 billion in spcndin• and projects a S 180 billion deficit -1f all the spendana c~s Reapn wants are approved. This years ddicit is ex- pected to run $222.2 billfon. It recommends domestic spending cuts of around $39 billion -indud- ma cutbacks in Medicare. farm pnoe supports. student loans, housmg aid and mass transit . .lt also calls for a termination of general revenue shar- tng and for an end to the federal subsidy of the Amtrak rail passcngier system. .. It 1s not a frenc (when) ~ou increase Pcn~on spending" by SJ I b1lhon. S&Jd Wilham Gray fU, 0-P~. chamnan of the HoUK Bud&ct Com- m met ··The president walked awa\ from the dtficn 1ssut' and 1s lea' mg it m the hands of the Senate and tbt' HouSt', and that's bad ~ws for <\menca:· said Gra). 1D tt'rv1t'wed on CBS. TV's ··fact' tht' Nauon." Greek cops seek man lnbarblast ..\THENS. Grttee (AP) -Police launched a nauonwidc hunt today for a man m connecuo n with a bomb blast at a ,bu_ in which 80 people. including 119 '\mencan military per- sonnel and their dependents. wett Injured Pollet said the man was Sttn entcnng Bobby's Bar m the suburb of Glyfada before the Saturday nl&bt explosion and was described by witnesses as bc1na about 25 to 30 years old. dark-skinned and carryina an au.ache case. C ustoms officials at Athens Airport, pons and border points ~ alerted 1n the event the man tried to leave the country. Most of the 80 people injured were released after receiving emergency first aid treatment at the nearby U.S. Air Foree's Hellenlnn Air BaJC adja· ccnt to Athens airport. Th1nccn U.S. SCrvlccmen and de- pendents. amon& the 69 Amencans wounded when the bomb eitplodcd. wttta1rhfted unday toa U.S. base in West G ermany for treatment. U.S. and G rttk officials said. G rttk. pohcc said seven Greeks., a West German and an Ethiopian also WCrt' rt'portcd •ruured when the time bomb ~nt off unckr one of the iab&cs at Bobb\ 's --- Real progress seen in battle to understand AIDS · ... • I • PfGgrlll In under9t~ t"- ~ of the Wue and the gilinjttc code of the WUi li proceedtng *Y rllP'dlY :• In recent _.., theM ad· wnc. haw~ nll>Orted: •A cMrnk* UMd In meny ..-lftldde ~ Md Gell on N"*9c9t CM kll the AIDS Wul In "" '9boretory. ,.. 'I eeconcs. rib9Vtrfn. are acheduted to begin W!IY 900n. • Theentn complement of the Af08 W\19'• Qef* ha 6-rl ---Md~ end can now be produCed tn latge quen- tm. for *ldY. t --- -T -........ ' ---.------.;...... -'1P'" ---.-... . ') • . I L .. J thedepartment's ''Fort he pure sport of attacking s mono1po ;{· system Jn the world antitrust division disrupted the best te cp one /e .. simply because It was bl!(. efficient andprofltab e. Rate reduction is - an example for good government ·" , 1 .. .. Ni.net.ycentsmaynot seemlikealotofmoney,butinlrvine. ~Stf)V 1 -• Jt 1s a significant amount of money. . . • ,"'!' .. ~ftl.~~ Ninety cents is the amount by which the average fam•!Y s ~~. rf1 ~ sewer bill is expected to decl~ne as a result of a ~at~ reductton ~~\ 1 i:·a approved last week by the Irvine Ranch Water D1stnct. In days ~~ -4'~ when we consider it an economic victory to have slowed the pace r·· · • ~ 1~\ \ ~I ~ \ ~ I ~ I~ I ' I (\,· of inflation, deflationary pricing of anything-even a bunch of l: sewage -is a noteworthy victory for consumers and ~~----- government. · In the case of this particular utility. praise may actually be in order. The rate cut is the third the Irvine Ranch Water District has granted its cust~mers. (23.4 78 residential an~ 600 commercial customers m Irvine. Newport Beach, Tustin and Santa Ana) in the past 18 months. These savings have been m~de possible .. the IRWD says, by personnel cutbacks. e nergy saving measures and modifications in the waste water process. Those savings add up to a monument to good management and responsible public policy. If all our public agencies were guided by the principle that they will provide the best service at lowest cost. the great national debate over guns or butter might not be raging toda}'.· In. this land of plenty, we should be able to construct a respo nsible social network and a strong defense. L.M. Bovo Any port in a storm turns out to be bad dining advice One wife's poison. • • Most American women can·1 im- agine ho"' one wife among se'eral mamed to the same man in a polygamous count!) can be happ) Man} wi ves 1n polygamous countne'> can·t imagine how an) man's one and only wife. saddled with enough work for several. can be happ} F1m pla>t'r 111 the.· modern ma1or leagues of baseball wa!> a Latino named Louis ( astro. a ftCOnd baseman for the Ph1ladelph1a .\·., 1n 1902. He wai. born in Colombia. Muppet creator Jim Hcnwn '>C:'· eral >ears ago slight!~ remodeled tht· physical apP<,'aran ce of Miss Pigg~ He changed the corners of her mouth To gi'e her 1he smug self-sat1'>fietl smirk that her lines had earned for her. Q. Pure gold 1s 24 karat. right'' A. Almost. Gold at 24 karat 1s 9ll ' percent pure I( 11 weren't allo)cd .1 little. }OU could mold 11 with )our fingerna1l5" Most gold Jewell) sn the U nned States 1s 14 karat -58 . .:n percent. In Europe. most is l!S l..arat In Cairo. 21 karat. In West Bengal. 22 karat In the trade. the goldsm1thi. of We)t Bengal arc ~aid to be the .,.,,or1d·, best () ~hat \ the average <>boc: s11e ot ·\mentan .,.,omen'1 .\ C) I l<m 1.·ome 1c.ebcrg' arc wh1tl" 1 n\ll'.lll ol l kar ltke some ice cubes'> \ An-.1 u\l' the an·umulauon ot \Oo\\ IJ\l"r\ pack little IC<." buhbk\ into the hcrg' ~ hcn 1he men of tnbal ..\Inca gu h> the mine'> for work. the}' havt• to be trained to handle p1c.k5 and shovl'I<, rhn ma~ !..now hu'W to run. hut the\ haJn"1 learned how to do hard ph\ <,1cal labor Where the} grew up. thl· \\omen did all that. II the a\erage world.,., 1dt• temperature were to drop onl) 6 degr1.·c' F. )ou could exP<,'ct anothl'r ICl' agl' 'ou t..no" all thow \\1ld hurro'> do.,.,n around thl' (1rand Can~on"' Their ancc'>tor\ go1 here aboard panl\h ~hip' .\nd thl· ancc,tors ol the anq·-;tor'> 'tarll•d dut 1n northeast .\fnca ··",1n1a ( lau' ha\ thl· nght 1c..lt·J · 'a1J V1nor Bmgl· .. V1s11 p<:onk onn· a ~t·ar < )nl\ bird v.1th II'> no\tnl-. al thl• t1p of 11\ hill I\ th1.· K l\\I Q HO\\ did the Ozarl..-. gl·t that name" A.. Arkansa\ Indians h'cd there. ~o the French called 11 .. au' .\rcanas ... <\ngl os cut 11 to .. au\ .\res·· It Just kept gelling tightened up. finall) into Ozarks. Mcd1co'i who SP<,'C1al11e in ml'Olal mattl'rs uc;e tests to spot 'c.·,ere depression in their patient\ But the test~ ev1dentl>. .,.,ere de' 1c,ed tor young people. The~ don't work on the elderl) I gather the creatorc; of these tests \imply weren·1 experienced cnouE!,h to grasp .,., hat mah·<t old peopk '>ad "1a11,es of Madagasc.ar !)er· 1odirall> dig up. wash. and re.,., rap the bonei. of thei r ancei.tor\. which the' coni.uh from time to time for ap- pro, al and guidance L.M. Boyd Is a syadicated columaist. WASHINGTON MERRY -GO-ROUND Lessons in buying drinks can become rather expensive I .... a~ talking to an old friend tht· other da}. and he related an C\· pcne.nl·e to ml'. What happened to him and his "ilc is sort of 1ncrcd1bk. and I added 11 to m} t'3H'at emptor file. Ma\ ht' \OU should do the !klmc. The} wcrc Silting around home. and dcc1dcd to go out to brunch. L • pon lurthl·r d1scuc;s1on. the) de- uded to gn to a new hotel on the beach r hq 'd heard the brunch there .,.,a, JU'>I ,1 ht1le shun of Hea' en and. though n11\ mdhonaire\. the~ liked to go to '>llllll' ut thl· mort• posh places from 11ml' to llml· ·\s m~ lncnd put'> 11 1(, ··.,on of the opposite of '>lumm1ng ·· \m.,.,a~. thq went. \.\ ht·n the' arn\'l·d at the hutl'I. 1he' karnc:d ·the l'lrunl h mu~t be all 1hai 1t was reportt:d to Ix· bccaUM' )OU h~1d to haH' a rc'>ena1wn. and thl'\ "'l're bool..l·d up tor -.eH·ral .,.,rel..<> · fhl'\ \\l'fl" )Ome"hat d1<,ap- Pllllltl·d. a'> I \\ould ha'c: been. but tht·' \\l'rl' told thl'} could get a light me<JI 1n the: lounge Thl· loungc turned 11ut lo tx· a p.irt o f lhl· luhh} Thq lknc..lt•tl that ra1hcr than "'a!>tC the 1np. tht'\ \I cat 1n thl' lounge \lkr finding .i tabk and "11t11ng c.Jo.,.,n. the~ "erl' tuld thl' lounge woulc..ln'1be~en1ng food fur about 4 5 minutco,. What the hctk. the' c..leudcd to order a dnnl.. and \\tllt ~h lnend ordcrl'd .1 lOd.t:ol Hi' \\lfr ·1., from E:.ngland . and afll·1 looking thl' s11u- atmn O' a. nut111l! that the detor was , ... er~ much 111..l" ;in F-ngll\h librar). dcl'ldl·d on a gla" of port ~he c..loesn ·1 normull) dnnt.. port but thl· at- moi.nhat• <,e1.•nwd to 1..all for port. l hcrl· "'a' no "inc list. but there "a~a \Ori of tountcr \\1th a van<.'t\ of "IOl' holllc'> on 1t. and the wa1tl'r a'ked hn to ttll mer to the rounwr BILL HARVEY ,1nd p1t·k OUl what she wanted. he J1c..I I he dnnl..-. tJmt•. and thr' "'l"rl' \ltt1ng tht·rl" sipping and absorbing the :tmbu:nre. pcrhap~ dreaming ol "" n1ng I 1.·ar JC!\ and homts un the Rl\1aa . .\II 1n all. a 'el) pleasani npcncnce Thl· "a11er brought th1.~ hill for thl' dnnk'>. all dont' up in .1 b1thl·r fnl<.lcr. \'t·r~ plu-;h M ~ frn:nd\ ,qfe had JU'\t rnm- ml"nll"d upon ho.,., good tht• port wa<> "hen m \ lnl•nd \Ort ol abo,t·nt· m1ndcc..ll\. upcnl·d the: plu\h katht·1 tol<.k r arid looked at th1.· hill. i.w XI' f Ort\ dollar\ JOc1 e1ghl} one t1.'lll\01 Thn t·allcd thl· wa11er o'er anJ a-.kcd him 1f1he bill could poss1bl} tx· nsht He .,.,andercd ofT. and returned \\Ith a "inc list. Lci"s 'ee no ..... On1.· l:Jlood~ Mar}. $3.50. ofl_C 2 uunll" glass of pon. $15.00. iia'. $2 'I. mumble. mumble. )ep. $40 RI One gla~<.. of nort. $35.()(J" Y1.'p. There 11 was. right 1n the w1nl" 11.,l "'lo\\. r\c kno\\n m\ fr1t•nd for,, long time. I know ihat he \\3\ undoubtedly a lot more cool and polished about the" hole thing than I \\OUld ha\e been. I'm ~ure that hl askl·d a few <.jUl'S t1on'i the wattl'r nwldn't an'iwcr. \O the managerrnml· O\.Cr to the table lit• made mention oft he latt that ht• and his wife had wmc 1n for a meal. and bec:au'>l' thl' ho~I wouldn't bl: ~·r' 1ng meals for a short time derided to ha'e a casual dnnk. Hl' <Jlso mentioned that his wife and he '"ere nnt na11onall} known "'lnl' lOOnOl'i\eUr'i \\hll had lr~l\ckd thou.-.ands ot miles in order to JUdge the 'arioui. facets of this particular port. As a matter of fact. the cho1Cl' had been \Ort of eenie. meen1e. mine}. m.P A son of brunch-hopper's roulette. I k had ll·arned bv now that he had been comparattvei} lucky. There "Nl·re t\\<O othl·r "'ines on the llSI. one tor S55 a glass. and one for S 100. Wh~. he inquired. if the hotel wac; going to haH' Sul·h ('"<P<,'nSl\i.' \\in(.'S m1xt·d in with all of the regular ones. J1c..ln ·1 thq ha' c prices on th«i: bottle~'? .. 1 ad..~ ·· repllt•d the manager. B~ no.,., a )Oung touple seated at thl· next tabk were more o r le'is aware of' what "'as going on. Bracing h1mM'lf. thl· man. with mulh bra"el). opened h•'> o.,., n leather bill fol der. A tlel'P sigh of relief. ll wa'> tinall} dended m} friend .,., uu Id be g1' en a ~cond gJass of pon \Ohl· rnulc..I at lca~t taste what he was pa} 1ng for. Wh1k the} were waiti ng. thl') tall..l·d to the }Oungcouplc at the ne\t tabk It was the: wife\ h1nhda\. ,rnc..l thq had come in to ha ... c a glass of.,.,1nt· 111 rekbra11on Had I been th(' }Oung man. I'd have ordered another glasc; of \\<1ne in celebration of the foc t that tht' fiN o ne hadn't cost $35 When t hl" second glass (re all}. <ihout halt a glass) of.,., ine came. 1t .,.,as u·rcmon1ousl} passed 10 the couple at thl· other ta ble, and everybody had a <tmall '>IP fhe) all agreed thal 11 was. intked. good pon. but in the words of thl· ~oung man ... You wouldn·1 .,.,.ant 1u wok with it." \her thl" in111al i.urprise had worn t•tl n a~ hod~ had a good lime. and m) tncnlf, \\1fr even slated that they had had fa r more than S40 worth uf laugh<t out of the e'pcnence. It'\ m} gUl"\). 100. 1hat we nc' er reall) stop pa) ing for education. I for example. ha'e learned that 1fl \Uddenl~ haH~ this O\erpowering urge to treal L\nn 10 brunch and a glass of wine. I'm going to Alpha Beta. Columajst BJ/I Harvey lives Jo Huatlagton Beach. Bell system breakup blunder beyond repair After causing confusion, government now avoids responsibility for guidance dendl' which 'i~'f\ it e 111 lOmh1nat1on of services ii. be'it for th~·m . 8U\. a phone'? l eJ't II from lhc JACK ANDERSON ~ \~lllMrTON -Few \mrn tan~ need to be told that the Ju,t•lt· Department"• l'lreakup of thl· Bl'll '""Jcm was a blumkr that "c.mt1ng a~erage con .. umcr<t hoth mnne .. und tonven1encc Rate\ hd\l' gunl· up month!~ hill' an· .llmm1 1n decipherable telephone com pan~., Pa~ Ma Bell a,_ ••••••••••••• monthly fee for maintenance or take a F-or the pun· '>pon ut att;1ct..1ng ,1 monopol~. the department"; ant1tru\I d" 1s1on d1.,rupted the bee;\ ll·kphonc '>ystctn 1n the world \lmpl) tx·c.au'l' 11. was big. etlic1cnt and profitable President Reagan with his unerring feel for thl' pul\e of, .\mt·rica. 1..·,. pressed the con~umer'-; bewilderment succinctly.,., hen he wa'i briefed on th1.• dive tnurcordcr Hcac;kcd "It 1t l\n°1 broken. wh> art" we fixing 11°,.. The s1tuat1on now unfortuna1C"h 1s beyond repair l.1kc Humpl\ Oumpty·s \ad ca\C. there"• no wa> thl· Bell $)',tCm can be pt1I b:ick togrthl•r again It's now the formidable 1. hme of ind1\ 1dual telcphont· CU\IClmt'r' 10 ORANGE COA~T D1ilyPilai t'ham.e that nothing .... 111 hreak or wear out., 'lick \\1th thl' wmpan) ·,.long- d1stance sen 1n· or opt for one of the competitor~ 1hal like \mcrican f clc- phone & Telegraph. make their slick p1 tchcs on teln 1!'1on'1 "-hom do you believe -Burt I ancastcr'! Chfl Robcn 'iOn'l ·\nd> <1nfli th., What do the) know'> I have another qunt1on: When: ,., the government no .... that we need 11'1 Having cau,ed the problem. the Just1c~· CXpartmt>nf') 1rrespon 1hle tru~tbustcr~ have offl·red con~umc" :1bsolutcl) no htlp 1n solving it ;\ go,emment that 1nsttucts 1t'i c1111cn'I on everything from burping a baby to hUJldinj a hack ~rch ~omchow ha!ln•t found the time or the cneray to gl\ c telephone uc;cr' proper !'Utdam.c H. L Schwartz Ill r r Frank Z6nl .., •. •.; 1 l 1' ' .. ,,, .. INoO ..... 11111• tltw , •• 4' U ,11,..q-y, I Tom Tall tr I ,., ,. e .,_... '" fr• I l 10 "' • I fk> ~ ··~ .... ,.. Crelf Sheff ~ t l ltf "' on dealing with thl' .\ T &. r breakup .. There 'h11uld h.H\' tx·en the lar~c:\t ton~u11H·r in tor 111.it1on cam- paign 1n the hl\tllf} of tl\c rnuntr) to go along "1th the hH·;1kup of the largest con'>UOll.'1 'er' 11 l' 111 th<' coun· try :· Sam Simon l'\l'\lltl\C director of TRAC th1. Telccommun1rat1on'1 Rc:~arlh and \l11t1n < rntl·r. told m) rcporn·1 \<.·011 HJrrc11 Loni-d111iantl' 'it'n itc: "hol)t'k,c;I) tonfu<;1ng P1t \ the poor c on,umer who tncs to lhetk out thl' 'anou\ pc>\S1h1li11c~. In thrc<· u111., to ~l''>lern I niun fon·,amplc, TR \<"~ll~i''en 1hrl·t different an'i~er., to a fa1rl\ simple and important quc 11ori: "What ,., the number of c111c\ f1om wh1C'h) our sen ice crin ht'. u\Cd., .. The anc;wer'i r RA( got ..... ere "lO:· .. 269" and .. I.lit" It thl· pr0\.1der!I of .a \crvrcc don·t lo.no.,.,. what the\ 're ofTcnn& ho.,.,. t·un the pour t·on,umcr mai...,· a )COS1ble deCl\IOn'l Thl' ronfus 1o n over lona-d1stan\c op11ons 1s probahl> hardest on the cldtrl) Not onl> do 1hev aenerall)' ha"c less monc)' to 1hrow around. but tl'ley grew up 10 nn era \.\hen the E nalt\h l:inauagc \\ac; more stnuaht· forwJrd th.ln the obfu'>rntnn p..eudtMt 1l•nt1fic Jargon fo \t)rcd b) tilt' rtmnc rnmnan1l•1,' hut'k'il\'f'i toda) lro'°ht <tll ). tht• confu\10n has bc{'n to the <Jdqmlage oftht• Big Bad Wolf the Ju-.uce Department !>Ct out to defani. According to the Anwrican .\ssociauon of Retired Persons. the perplexing options have hclP<,'d con- v1n<'e more than nine out of I 0 cldcrl ) phone CU'itomrs to give up the que<;t fu r an ol1crna11 ve and tick with AT & T's long-distance $erv1cc. The chaos 1n the marketplace 1'> bc1 ne exacerbated h) the Reagan admmist rat ion's anti-regulatory ph1\o\oph) .\C'cording to ,ources. the compcungcompanies are bankina on lax or non-ex1Stcn1 enfo rcement of the ta ..... by the Federal Communica· t10ns Comm1s~1on. rhl\ confidence IS not nu~placcd. Whcp 17 '>Cnatof'5 signed a leucr to the FCC ai.k1na 11 to develop a ~tandard t.h..closurc form for long- d1!!>tance companies. rnmm1i.s1on Chairman Mark Fowler rtphed with a lecture on "the concept of a compc11t1vc. unrcaul:ucd market- place " fhe attitude ot the Ju tice Dcpan- mcnt -the original i.ource of all the trouble -1s equally ln1ssc1-fa1rc. "We want to make this as non- rcaul:Hor) a\ pou1ble," 1d Rick Ruic a top antitrust offic1JI. u11111g nctaon to word the 5tafTthat handles compl:iint about the d1 ve'it1ture has been cut from about 12 to thre-c in tcccnl monthi.. The rc'\ult' or th1~ rd xat1on of enfon:cmcnt efforts arc prt"d1ttabtc· The customer will be lcfl prcll)' mu~ h dcfcn!.Ckl!\ One 1llu'itrotmn of thl\ tn\oolvcd \llnl'l. tht• lounh largest long-d1s- tann· compan} 111 the country. For '>l"\ aal month\ la\t vear 11 main- tained a doul'llc hilling S)Stcm for its bu<>iness and re!>1dt•n tial customers. Duri ng the pcnod. business cus- tomers 'ot a new. lower rate while re,.1den11al customer'! paid the old rate The company in\1!ited there was no d15crim1nation. because res1den- t1al <:ustomer!> could have 'witched 'i1mpl} b)' calling 1hc compan). The ruh I!> that the compnny d1dn't tell 1ts ex1c;ting rt.·~1den1inl cuMomcrs about thl· bargain rute until ~veral month'i aOer 1t took dTcct for business customer~ Whether t\llnct was 10 v1olnt1on of the Federal C'ommun1ca11ons Act, ~h1ch require$ rates lo be "Ju!it, fair and not unduly d1i.<:r1 m1na1 ory." ma y never be determined. Thou1h a con5oumer group plans to file a coniplu1n1 with the F( C this month o"c' the incident. the agency's 11- l1tutk hardl) en ouraaes any hope th:n 11 will pursue the case with viaor. Fo01notc. The one discernible ef- fort tht' aovcrnmcnt has made to cope with the problem 11 unlen,hcd with the Bell breakup is a mode t booklet cnt1ted "A <on umers Guide to Telephone Sen• e.. It ~as put tOlCthcr by Bell Atlanuc for d1str1bu· t1on tn it area. Sell official said c:ind1dl> that somcth1na hkc that "u u "1y ha'> more crtd1b1hty" with the 1overnmcnt's backana. "Other· w1S(. people ~>-u·, self-~rvin,a and not obJrcl1 ve." ht' 1d J•<"t A11d~non I• • •todk•t.d l'4l•m•lll • JACK AND&R801' colaJDDlat R1cU1D Co1u Myth is· ruling force in caiJital WASHI NGTON -If. as Alex- am.kr Pope said. the proper study of mankind is man. then the proper stud) of Ronald R.eagan-'s Washing- ton 1s Salem at the ume of the '<#itches. Probably not since then has one town been so obsessed with the mythical. the undefinable and the downright fictional. In Washington. policy goes bump 1n the night. Congress, for instance. recently forbade the use of federal funds to teach "stytilar hull_lanis~" -what- ever. that is. Neither 1t nor the Dcpanment of Education has defined the term. although 1f you stt 11. p~t a burlap bag over it and call Wa~h~ng­ ton -collect. Like herpes, soc1ahsm and Kc} oes1an economics. it might ha' c something to do with evolution. At the same time, an emerging cornerstone of national defen~ pol- 1q is the so-called .. Star Wars" program which does not -and f!l&Y never -ex ist. The president praises 11. the Cabinet defends it and artists e\Cn draw 11. It looks like a secular humanism. Not until you come to the subject of the federal budget. though. is reality trul) left behind. The first example of that 1s the president's insistence on a cons11tut1onal amendment that .... ould require a balanced budget - 1h1~ from a man whose own budget 1s more than $200 billion in the red. Probably not since Spiro Agnew toured the count!) preaching proprie- t) and morality has the county seen anything quite like this performance. As often as the president asks for h1~ stop-me-before-I-spend-again amendment. he also ci tes the so- called Grace Commission repon. named after J. Peter Grace, the head of W.R. Grace & Co. Grace (the commission. the report and the man) claims that JUSt by following 2.478 simple recommendations. the gov- ernment could eliminate (trumpets, please) S424 billion in waste. . If there·s one place that claim 1s taken seriously, it's the White HouS<' where the president cites it every chance he gets. Along with a stupen- dous growth an the economy and the clim1nat1on of certain (many?) nondcfense programs. Grace is the third leg of Reagan's tripanite plan to eradicate the deficit. If that's the case. he docs not have a 19 to stand on. That's the finding of Steven Kelman, an associate professor at Harvard's Kennedy School. publish- ed in The Public Interest. a neoconservauve journal not known for questioning Reagan adminis- tration orthodoxy. AOer reviewing what the Grace Commission called "Ten Rctndom faamplcs of Bureau- cratic Absurdity." Kelman found the examples themselves absurd. Un- fortunately. among the myths de- molished by Kelman is the $91 screw. the S 110 diode and the S9,609 Allen wrench -handy tools with which to dismantle the bloated Pentagon budget. He discovered that these price\ were mere concoctions -an accountant's way of assigning over- head Kelman ll'arned that what was true for the famous but mythical Al~en wrench wa\ true for the other nine "random examples of bureaucratic absurdny .. : They either did not exist or were v:istly ei<aggerated. The comm1ss1on. 1t turned out. was com- paring the vaunted private sector with the much-malianed public sec- tor when the two do different things. lt'i. true. for instance. that private enterprise can construct a nursing home a lot cheaper than the govern- ment can. But then private enterprise doc\n't have to meet government quality standards. doesn't have to take minority participation into ac- count. and doesn't have to build its nursing homes 10 cramped spaces next to government hosp11.als. These arc policy. not bureaucratic, require- ments. In other words. it's what the people, through 1he1r elected rcp- re~nt.atives. wan1. Kelman docs not ~y that there's no aovemment waste (there IS) Of that the Grace Comm1s ion is alwa}'S wrona (11's not), but rather that 1u propo~ ~v1nas are not economics at all. but radical changes in policy Unless the political consensus chanies dramatically. instead of just at the mafJ,ins. Grace's $424 billion remains yet another example of the Washington myth. St11l. thii bcina Wash1naton 1n The Time ofRcaP.n. )OU can bet that lhe Kelman article will be put on the pre 1den1ial index and no rcfcttncc wall be made 10 at. Instead. t~ chief alchemist will use myth, w1ih and error to tum the deficit into a surplus. If that doesn't work.a secular human· 1st will be hanacd. Rlt'Mrd ColNe b • •TflllkatH Cfll.a,.J1r. ---_____ _,... _____ _ . -....... -------' ......,.._ ·----··-....-... • as a a a·a a a a one n a n a -. Or. I -------------------. .. _______ _ COAST It#..,.... Daughter Kriatlna listens as amnesia victim Teri Williama talks of events surrounding incident that al moat Jdlled her. She's a survivor of cold, attack Amnesic mus icia n can 't recall events that a lmost killed he r POKll \\.D. Orc f\PJ -Ten W1ll1am' \\l'nl out tor a pal'k of ngan·lll'' I k l 2.'. \hl· "llkl' up I J da~~ IJtl·r in J ho'>pt1JI hnl. lul'k\ 10 he al" l' · Thl' 40-\car-old ntU\ll tJn can't rl'ml·mtx·r what hapix:ncd to ha. and doctor' '>a~ 'hl' probabl~ neH·r wtll. Pol1ct• found Wilham' nint· hour., a ltcr 'ht• kit the a part ml·n 1 'hl· 'hare~ "Ith om· of her t"o llJughlt'r\. Shl· \\a\ \IUll1fX'd UOl'llO'>l IOU\ .1ga1n<,t a power pok ahow a mill' a"a~. un.,hcltanl lrom the numh1ng cold. ~he '>llfkrcd from ~even· hypo1h1.:rmta and internal tnJunes. but .. did nut ha'c a ~ingk l'\temal mark on her hod~ ... \a1d Dr Gal) Mund~. dlrl'l tor of t•mergenq medi- cal -.en ll'l'\ .it Mount Hood Medical Center. Thl' 1ntcrnal 1n1une' "l'rc eons1~- 1cn1 ''llh ;i prcetsc tx:at1ng \\llh a blunt ob1l't t most lil..t•h a fr,1. hl' said. ··11·, 1u'1 1ncrt•d1bk 1ha1 she \Ur' 1\l·d .. ~1und) '><lid .. , crta1nl) there h<l\l' hl'l'n peopk rl'\l\l'd with l'Oldcr bod) ll'mperalurl',, hut there 1s noh<><l\ 1n \nwnrnn mnlical l11cra- 1un· th.at u1ld "1th <,o man~ in1unes "ho h,I\ \Ur\ I\ ed ... 'lunl'l' ,h.,· did \lier three oper- Jlt0n' \.\. 1ll1am'i 1c; no"' rt•rupcratmg PAPARAZZI al home. chccrlul and conlident "hllc tr) ing to figure ho"' pa) ho~p11al hill., that mounted to more than$ ·o.ooo Poltcccan'te\pla1n what hapix·nl·d to her \.lund~ wa\ IRl' lir.,t ph)\IUJn to trcJt W1!11am' after par:Jml'dK'> brought hl'r to the ho.,.p1tJI un· ron\c1ous and \\'lthou1 a pul\c lkr blood had t.oolcd to a wn.· temperature of 72 degrees and into a ··.,1udgc." \paring her from u:rta1n death from internal hkedmg. hl' '>aid '' \.\iilltam,· bod) ll'mJ'X'rature gradual!) mcn.'a'>l'd and her pulse !.4<11nl·d '>lrcng1h . dOl·tor<i d1'>l<IH'rl'd \hl· "as bll:cd1ng tntl'rnJll) Imm a rupturl·d splt't·n IJn'ratcd ll\l'r Jnd bru1\l·d '>mall hl>" el \' \oon a\ her lt'ffiPt'raturl· real hed lx't\\ccn XO and K5 degree~. '>hl' wa\ takt•n 1ntu !>urger). Her spleen "'a' rcmo,ed:- \ '-'l'Ck latl'r. damagl' from h) potherm1a forCl'd another oper- auon 10 rl·moH· ha pantreas and adrt•nal gland~ That <.urger) made Wtlltams a d1ahc11r and .,.hl' "'111 haH' 10 rd) on rnsultn JOJl'l"tton\ tor thl' rest of her ltll' .\ 1h1rd opcr.1t1un "as nl'l't'S~~ \\hl'n Williams -.ufTerl'd a high le .. cr Jnd rapid heartbeat. Dortors rnuld not find a 'pcc11ic rausc. but 1reat- ml'n1 \\1th '\lt.'n>td' 1rnml'd1ntl'" 1m- proH·d her lOnd111on Thirteen da" alter shl' "all.l'd out her front door r en W11l1am\ "ol..c (Please aee SURVlVOR/ AS) 0 ~-· I , Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Monday. Fet>rurt 4', 1 .. 5 A 7 ANN LANDERS Al ENTIAT AINMENT Al COMIC8A10 .Actress interprets plea: 'I starve, therefore.I azn' By SUSAN MONAHAN o.lly,.... c .... ., ....... Ellen West would probabl) tx· pleased to know that she 1s the central -in fan the onl) -character in a pla> Sht• wanted recogn111on 111 her lifcttml-. but a., a woman born at the turn of the n·ntur). '>hc 6entuall\ concedl'd 1ha1 thl\ was not going to happen Shl' finall) madl· slendcrne~' her amb111on and e\prl·ssed hcr~cll th rough anore~1a ntrvosa and bultm1a. "Anor<.'\la <.rcatc'> an an1ficial 1den11t\ .. npla1ncd Lisa Bnll during an tntl'n 1c" tn hl·r Vl'n1cc apan- ment .. , stan e. thl.'reforl· I am .. Bnll decided to wrnc a pla} abou1 Wl'\I Jfll'r reading uhout her 111 Kim C'hcrn1n .. , txJUk. "I hl' Obses:11on ..... 1 JU'>I Im t'd the ix:r,on and 1 had an inumatl' l'mpalh) tor her." ~he rl'-callcd Rn11 '-'Ill gnl' hl•r pre,entat1on ot "Elkn We'.>t. Portrait of an Obsession on f'mla~ at ~addlcbalk Collegl''s South < dmpu\ and on Saturda) a1 Orange < oa'>t < ollcge Both per- lormann•<, ht-gin Jt 7 pm Tickets($ 1 for 'illldl·nt\ S' lor general ad- nH'>'>lon ) can tx· nrdt·rl·d through the UC In tnl' Eating f)"ordl·r<; Program (811 -M> II). "h1l h " 'ponc;unng thl' prl'-.cn1.it1on. It "ould ht-trn1 p.11 to claim that Lisa Hn II 1s Flkn \.\ l'\t. hut there 1s Ollt' Oh\ IOU'i "mtlJrll\ Bntl tS \Cr) thin -100 thin ''I'm JU\I ge111ngoH~r a rclap<,c (anon·et1c Bntt 1s not bulim1cJ .. she \:J"> mattl'r-of-lactl\ 5hl' doesn't \Cl'm (1verl} con- cerned l''pla1n1ng that 1h1s episode . \\3<, leS') \ 1olt'nt lhJn pre\ IOU'I Onl'S .. I don't 'ilanc m~'clf an) more." \hl' adtkd. ''I'm '"r) h}perac11vc. \O I don·1 ha-...l· to eat IC\'> ll> lo'it' ""eight and I "a" '>mart enough to get help .. Rrt11 doe<;n't regard anorn1a J<, .i foru· that,., tx·\ond rontrol ··1t\ rcalh t.3.,, to 'it'e \Our<,ell as a , 1rnm ur anore\1a:· '>he said ... .\nu "'h lie II\ not so met h 1 ng} ou l.:"hOO\t.' )OU hJ'e the ultimate rc.,pons1b1ht~ for t.'llhl'r "'tarting or stopping wh:it "'u·rl· doing .. .\II hough the pld\ rn oh l''> around lhl' long "'~cir \.\ e\l fought "'1th ht.'r appt.·111e and condudes \\tlh hl'r \u1n dc at agl' 11. the 80-m1nu1e dram.t 1'> also an affirmatton of11lt .. I open tht.· pla~ b~ 'a} 1ng. '\It~ name 1\ Elkn \\l·s1 and I dll'd but th1sdoc.,,n·1 haH· to happen 1c1 )OU··· Britt 29. dl'rnvcrcd JU'il ho"' alluring anorc,1a can be" hen sh..-\\J\ 10 or 11 and '>ltghtl} 11\t'~e1gh1 During ,1 lamtl) 'ara11on 'he denlkd to do \Oml'lhtng about 11 ··1 had 1h1<. 1magl' of being 1n J cocmin Jnd l'merg111g a\ ;1 bullcrll) :· Lisa Britt portraying Ellen Weat. she recalled. It's an apt dc~cnpuon of a cond111on "h1ch Bnll l>che,e\ t\ essent1all) narc1ss1stte ·· 11 becomes a' e~ 1sola11 ng thing ... \he said ··You kind ol '"addle \Our<;elf 1n muon "ool and 1..eep thl' fC\I of the \\Orld OUI ... Her l'fTorts were re\\ardcd. and after thrt'l' months or dtctt ng. ·· 1 "a\ indeed a butterfh.'. But she becaml' ill. fo<,t more "e1gh1 and real11ed that tf felt 'Cf) good 10 be thinner 1han e'en onl' l'l~e. E\ l'ntuall\ sht.' hl'came \o emanated that she "'as hmp11ahLl'd and .. fattened up This wa' 1967 and at th~ ttme. no one rcall) l.ne" "hat 11 was There "'as more d1e11ng. then more trl'atmcnt. Bn1t balanced on th" treacherous sec-saw unul she staned high school where she began to act. ··1 had an 1den1m .'· she said Yet the problem did recur" hen he c,1arted college .\nd eH•n no". she ,a,<., that \\tthout work. "m\ sense of m\\elf "'atlk' and d1ss1pa 1~s .. Aul. of wur~ Bntt doc'> ha'e l rl'Jll\e oulkl' 1ha1 v.ert' dosed to \\ l'\I \lthnugh she"' rote poet~ and '-'J ilted 10 lhange the "orld. she was con~tantl~ exhom·d 10 be a good wife. a good daughter. a good girl .. ~s she &" n up ont' opuon after another. the progression of hl·r disease becomes \tron~er ·· Rntt points out The pla' '-'JS "nuen three ~ears Jgo \1uch l'I thl' information ramc frl)m .in account Llf \.\.est ·., d1'>order wrmen by Dr. Ludwig 81nswanier. one of many psych1atnsts who treated her. Although West ahcmatel) starved herself and went through.the bulimic binge/purge cycle. 81nswanger thought that she was troubled b) an ex1sten11al dilemma It wa'> also Bmswanger who ga'e her the pseudonym ··Etten West." ber real name 1s unknown Still. Btnswanger's treatise in- cluded excerpts from West's dtane~. and these are the basis of the pla) "Where there were holes. I interp- olated ... said Bntt "Some people ar,.k me what percentage-of the pla\ t\ West's "ords and how much t\ m1nl' I reall) don't know.at th1'>po1n111 ha~ all run together.'' Britt. then l~ving tn Nonhem C ahfom1a. wrote the pla~ "tn a frem) ·· th~n reallied she didn't want to perform 11-"It was too §("31). too close to me." But fnends convinced her that 11 was an 1mponant work.. and he opened at Circus a la Mode an Berkele). From there she "ent to San Francisco and Oakland. performing not only in the-atc-r but also in high schools. When she mo' ed to <iouthern (altfom1a. she ga'e "ell-re,1ewed presentations at the Theatc.-r of N.O.T E. in Los o\n$eles and Power- house in Santa Monica ~nd after evc.-ry performance. women would seek Bnll out for advice or s1mpl~ to confidl' 10 her No"' these d1scuss1on5 are pan of the program becau~ ··11·., ea~1er than ha' 1ng e"el")ont' backstage ·· Bntt admm that these se'>s1ons arc often painful and include 100 mam personal que<,Uon'>. but she feel\ obliged to lend her '>uppon to 01he1 v.omen ''\\-hen c;ometh1ng has been \uch J hombk part of \Our hfe )Ou don't want an~one el~ to ha'e to gu through 11 ." 1.he npl;nned (Professors LuQ Cas"ell-Pap1llon (f nda~) and Barton J Bhndn l ~atur­ da'.>') will be lead1n@. po'il·Sho" di\· cus<.1on!> I BntL "ho 1\ rnrrenth hue;, v.1th other project<, at thl· \1Jrl.. ·Taper Forum lnpro' 15.dtwnal The'atcr 1n Lo~ ..\ngelec; seem., caut1ou'h op- t1m1sl1t about hl·r o" n n.· .. lH l'I'' ·· 11 will ell" a~ s ht· J potl·n113f pm hlem l11r me M) task 1s to find wa~s 111,oprng "hl'n thrngs gt.•t rough -hc.·cau,l· tnl'' 1tabl\. the:' v.11! .. llo"' mul h ionga "111 shl· p.1nrJ ' \.\ l~I" Hl·r 1n1t·n11on ' l• '1Jl· •IJpt' ,1 per1ormancl' and nul.l· II J\ J tlahlt' I• the publ1l "Thal "'a' I'll hJ 'l' donl m~ dot' 10 ( 1o<l and Ill l lkn \\ t'\I · -~ IWlr ..... ~bf...,.,.._.. Chlldbelpers: Tova Borgnlne, honoree Efrem Zlmballat Jr., Eileen Saul, Flo Anhood, Diana Enaley. Cindy Armetrong, Beverly WUgerotb and Barbara F reundt. ForecastofHayesdelightsfashionshowguests Childhelp presents Efrem Zimbali st Jr. award fo r gen erosity By BETTY PORTER Delly l'llot Comt...-1 Bard) home from Wa~hington's .. bltuard" of inaugural galas. Child· help t 'c;;'\ founder Sara O'Meara droppl'd b~ the Ritz Carlton Hotel h> \..llute thl' chant) ·s Nev. port Reach t. hapter and honor an old f ncnd -actor Efrem Zlmballs t, Jr. "Efrem 1 deeply involved with Chtldhclpand he has never said 'no' to us." ~uJ O'Meara in presenting him with "The Children\ F-nend .\ward" fur his significant contnbu- t1onrnn behalf of the home for battered children in Beaumont. Co-founder Yvonne Fedderson (who went to Washington. too) pr:uc.cd the till-handsome actor for h1'I "'ork on their national ad' 1sol) hoard numerous public rcla11ons apf)Carnncc'I (including lO·hosttngJ nat1onal tcll-thon ''Child \huse: Will We He::u Their C f) "").and for ass1!ltan1.c in lorm1nga new au\· 1haf) in I fou\ton. Tcxa\ Ol the awi:mt (a brun1c \<.'ulpture nt two children b't Blalr Buswell wllu attended the lun<'hcnn ). 71m balm aid "C h1ltlrl·n·, \'illatw l I\.\ l\:l JllOC'\'Of hll""-' 111 h.l\l ,- I Caroline Mitc hell rontnbutcd an)'thing to the~ chtl· drcn. my rrwnrd 1~ 1n their now· rnnfidcnt face~ with uplifted chins .. Im mcd1ntC'I aftcrthc prc\t'n- t tton ()'Meara left 1oaga1n tln•"c Wa\h1ngton·\ w1nterar.d at1t'nd Prcr,.1dcn1 RcaJI-''"." Pra~er Brcn~­ lil\t thl· following morning [nJm in~a warmcrd1m:uc. mt'ln· 1h.111 h!MI < h1ldh,·ln mcmhel'\and \ friends turned out for the fourth annual lunchton and fa b1on\ b) their Darhngofthc De 11nc" Davtd Hayti Two WI\ emf former IQ('tball pro ca pa bl) produced thec"c·nt and rompctcd w11h thc-modehas fn<.hinnplatc\tn n-d 1 hey ~ere chapter pt't'\1dcnt DDle Olin 1~1th hu,hand Phlll11nd P.trt' cha irman Elleeta Sa•l(w1th hus- band Ric~). "The th1na tba1 cii:Clte.s me mo\t 1-; th tall (lunchron)co •~ w.ert unckr- wnttcn ~all oft hr monc~ goc\ 10 f'hildrtn'~ V11lngc l I. \." ~1d Olsen •• "C'1 thmgchc~t.·d." '31d \aul. "l'msoprnudofu')all " "\\ (' l\'turnl'd :!SO rNuf~t' for TYonne l'eddenoa t1d.ct~. ··\aid pubhctty chairman KattaVo s."~c~ldoutoncv.ttk after In\ 11a11on w.err mail~ .. 1 he happ~ o' crflow.1nacrov.d llnll'l lot forthe-1r S40 pc-r. 1ncludina J ch1dC'n lun1. h (undcNnttcn b\ Wlckl and Lloyd McDonald}at the \\'r\ up.(own R1t1-<:ar1ton. 1her napltn nn~ tahk f,,, of"l(donau:d b' Oelor•~ .1nJ Emit Ou.ncaa to mar~ ----\ .(.h1klhl'lp'<. 25th anntH•r..a n 1 pcr- fumt• and l and\( \a~i. F1fth \\- enue I fre~h flo"-cr antcrp1ccc'I( HelHSmitb and Barbie Walktr). and door pn~es including a natural blue fo' 1acket (Re" 1llon rur\. F \I. not one-hut tv.o r>.n td Ha,ec; su11s and a weekend tor tv.o 1n\an FranrtM.'O( tanlordl o un and ·\1rt. al I '-'On b~ Evelyn Lowell. In add'ttton to 71mhaltst Jnd Ha, cs. honorl'd gu<'sts 1ndudcd Rams quartcrhack Jeff Kemp and his prrtt~ .. lad' ·10·"-:ut1nf' S'-tcy (1n turquo1~ r,1lk )whocalmh announced that her dnctnr ...aid ht.•r child v.as "c'flC°C'lcd am minute." actrC''i\ (and pac,1prc"dt•n 1 of I n<, ..\ngcler,.'( h1dhl'lptor1hrt.•c,l'.ar-.1 lo' cl\ June Haver'"" h11 \Jlthht.• J n,t her husband Fre-d M1cM11rra) v. 111 cru1~ through the Panama< .inal etc. aboard a 'ih1p ~ h11.. h \\ 111 tenturr the couple's mo' tl"\I T\ rrn<luc<'r Dea Ft44en.oD,\ll\ffil'tll l\\llOn Teva (wife ofat tur Eru~-.t 1 Bor ptae, Bob Up~rt t{11fl'l tor Ch1ld~n·s \ 11lapr l \ .\ 1 l h1ldhC'lp "angel" Mkbul 8raun.Suuo\v..1k o fMerllalOI fD .lnlll>oll lv.tlrul AMy) Graaattlll Wdln~ thl' (lOltlllal u•khnllC\ wa~EmmaJaot>Rllf' (\\11\'nl ''h Dl'ilnl t \11 1"-r' 1<tor Tom flllt" ) 1n dcpnt l'llal I. "hilt.' :.1nd rt'\l r harm- m1Sataron Tu<'ktr le \t'l 11t1' l. U\\l'i• t:int hlllarndl \\lf'dtr1.1 n1.t 0 H (Pleut see BEN PIT J A 8 ) .t I I ~ I a s s ~,. ' .A8 ~ .... CO.t DAILY PILOT/Monday, February 4, ·1985 He weekend stayinmotel cools boyfriend's mother TV LIS TINGS ~ -=a l !f,:S UFESTYL,EI OF THE Alai AHO FAMOUS W LATEHtG~T AMEAICA a;) 700CLUB H MOVIE •• * 48 HRS (1983) Nt< k None E <l<l•f Mui pny -11·50-c MOVIE DEAR ANN LANDERS: My boyfriend iulmo 1 19. t am 17.Scveral days ago we went on a weekend trip and spent two night$ together in a motel. 1 know it sound hkc a fib. but all we •• lMDEIS did w.a~ki$s. Wedo not plan 1ogoall the way until wege1 marned. · Dick's mother has been very cool to me. Actuall} she never was what l would call fnendly, but ever since she found the receipt for the motel in Dick'scoat ~ket. she has been like ice. I nrcd someadv1ceon how to get along w11h her. Ann. PleascgJvc mesomesuggest1onsnghtaway. I am- OESPERATE IND RHAM DEAR DES: One way you might get Dick's motJler 10 tlaaw oat It to stop golag to motels wltb lier 18·year·old son. SlDce you and Dick do not plu to go any furtber tban • t.111 utll yoa are married, yoa will Dot be needb1g ovenllglat lodfl11g. No more weekeDdlng, Toots. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Wh} 1s 11 that so many of life's lessons must be learned over and over again -even by the most intelligent people? All of us need to remember that 1fwe tell one person something 11 is no longer a secret. I had a problem I didn't want known. When a friend asked why I seemed blue, I compulsively blurted out all the details that had been suppressed for weeks. I swore her to secrecy, {'Onfidcnt ~he wouldn't betra)' me. I was mistaken Mn ybC' ~he onl> 1old one persoo. but tha1 was one too man)' Mutual friends art now phoning to ask quc tions. S1m·e I told only one person I know she passed 1t on. I suit hkc her. bu tour ft1C'ndsh1pwill never be the same. The lesson I huvc ll'tlrned as this: If something happens in your hfe tha l you don't want the whole town to talk about. keep 11 toyoursclf. -C'LA TIER-TRAP IN MIC HIGAN DEAR MICH: I am reminded of tlaat old SpanJsb proverb, "Tbree people can keep a secret -If two of them are dead." • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a transvestite who would like to ofTcr some suggestions to the parents of the 13-year-old transvcsutc Don't encourage \-our son' croswiress1ng. but don't prohibit it either. Tl") 1ng to make him stop wall force him to do 11 secret I) This rould produce anxiet)' and resentmen1. lf11 bothers )OU. suggest that he dress up when )OU aren't at home Plca-;e Ix' a\\are that there are mil hons oftransvest11es 1n America and the maJorll) of them arc heterosexual. The reasons for cross-dress1ngare many. Although one ma) ~top cx-cas1onally. ho w1 II usually start again whether he has had counseling or not E·q>ens says this 1s an OK way to release 1ens1on. It certainly has been for me. I harm no one and am a good husband. father and pracucing auorney. - ANONYMOUS IN CHICAGO DEAR ANON: Thank& for a letter &bat sbould calm some fears. My consultants say you are rlgbt on. THl&'S COMPANY STARTAEK llUllHE88 AEPORT AMEJllCAH OOVEflHM£NT C88NEWS NICNEWI HOT.THO~( MOVIE, 7 • *"* t "\4111ftfwlllian An<*An" 11952) Oen'~y Ktye, Jeanmalre -U0- 1 =~ llENJAMIH 11 MACNEIL I LEHRER NEWSHOUR Ii> FACES Of CULTURE NEWS 0 BARNEY Mil~ ~WHEEL. Of FORTUNE '1'LANCEA -7:00-11 CBS NEWS I $100,000 NAME THAT TUNE LOVE BOAT I ABCHEWS Q DAUAS HEWS I THREE'S COMPANY WHEEL Of FORTUNE 3-2·1 COHTACT(R)Q ()) P.M. MAGAZINE 9) ENTERT AIHMENT TONIGHT !BJEOPARDV (0)MOVIE • • • "WarGames" (19831 Matthew Broderick. Dabney Coleman Raul Julla recel•e• lnatructJon (rom .. above" ln the aclence fic - tion/romance/adventure ·~overdrawn at the Memory Bank" tonight at 8:30 on Channel 50 and at 9 p.m., Channel 28. «I) MOVIE • • • 'WhlCll Way Is Up? ( 1977) Rlcilard Pryor, Lonette McKee fll) WONOERWORKS '1'MOVIE • * "The Hot Line" ( 1969) Rober I T !Ylor. Charles Boyer (CJ MOVIE '1' DICK VAN DYKE -10.00- 1 ()) CAGNEY & LACEY G)«l)HEWS RICH MAN, POOR MAN: BOOK I FROM THE AMERICAN FILM INSTITUTE '1' CALLING All SPORTS (C1MOVIE * • Cur1a1ns f 19831 John Vl!fnon saman111a Eggar -12:00-u TWILIGHT ZONE Q EYE ON HOLLYWOOO OMOVIE • •', • Wanted The Sundant!e woman" ( 1976) Kalharine Ross. Hector Ehzondo INDEPENDENT NEWS (fj) CHARLIE'S ANGELS -12:10- $!MOVIE • Jaws 01 Satan ( 198 ll frtt1 Weaver Gretchen Corbett -12:30-0 ~ttNIGHTWITl-!OAVlD LffiERMAN 0 ALFRED HITC~OCK PRESENTS U MRS. COLUMBO (!:, ZANE GREY «D MOVIE • • Deadly Game 19771 Andy Gnlhlh Dan 0 He<hlly Cl) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE tI!) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN BEHAVIOR -12"40- fJ rl MCMILLAN & WIFE -1:00- OMOVIE • • • Ironside t 19671 Raymond Burr Geraldine Brooks <~J MOVIE Are you turning right? l $)FAERIE TALE THEATRE -7:.30-• 2 ON THE TOWN l at)FAMILYFEUO EYE ON LA. **'""Lassiter" ( 19~1 Tom Selleck Jane Seymoor. (H)MOVIE * * * "WarGames" ( 1983) Matthew BroderlCk, Dabney Coleman (S)MOVIE • * * * "The Big Chill' ( 19831 Kevin Kime. Glenn Close !HJDAVTODAVAFFAIRS -10:15-.. SJ MOVIE • * • The Omen t 1976) Greqor.,. Pe<.k, Lee Remt<:k • * Wes1waro Ho f 19351 John W.Jyne Sheila Mannors 4!) HOW TO MAKE IT IN AMERICA ~®ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT m NATIONAL SUPERSTARS • This is the thmJ in a TRAFFIC Quiz senes on nght turns. Due 1 o =;~~~;;~ hea'~ traffit • congestion in iiii~~ '\l e "p o rl Beach it 1<; be- coming more commo n 10 find inter·••••••••••••• secuon~ \'llh more 1h::an one manda1or} turn lane. One such 1nterscctton 1 ~ at ( oast H1ghwa} and Jamboree Road There are two "R1gh1 Turn Onl} .. lanes for southbound Jamboree 10 westbound Coast High- way. You will note that ne11herturn lane is protect<.'d from the intersection b> a raised d1\'lder and both mus1 merge in10 through traffic. Both lanes must stop on a red Hg.ht (A). >\ft er slo pping. the curb lane (I) may 1mmed1ately turn nght. utilizing the accelcrat~on lane to match the traffic speed before merging 1010 traffic ( 8 ). The next nght lane (:!) ma) also turn ngh1 against a red but only into the next to nght through lane and onl} 1f1t will no11nterferc with westbound DAILY DINNER SPECIALS Monday (Served 3 to 10 p.m.) trafic on Paci tic ( oast Highway .(C'). There as no "acceleration lane" for (2). Remember, "hen turning o n a red light you must yield the ngh1.of-way to through-traffic regardless of which lane you might be in. Proper use of these turn lanes will help expedite traffic and ease congestion. Information on right turns prepared by the Newport Beacb Police Department. m WKRP tH ClHCIHHA Tl I JEOPARDY Wlt.D, Wtt.D WORt.D OF ANIMAl..s ~WONOERWORKS SAH DIEGO AT LARGE 9'1 PEOPLE'S COURT (tO =J~AANtTA ZJMOVIE • • •,, Ealing Raoul (19821 Paul Bartel. Mary Woronov -8:00- • SCARECROW AHO MRS. KJHG 0 18 TVS BLOOPERS AHO PRACTICAL JOKES 8 MOVIE • • "Damnation Alley · ( 19771 George Peward. Jan.Michael Vin· cent D ({§) HAROCASTLE & ~RMICK I JOKEA'S WILD WKRP IN CINCIHNA Tl ENTERT AINMEHT TONIGHT 13 Rlc:tlard Pryor Mini Fest of Comedy • 3 nlghtal Tonight It'• 'WHICH WAY IS UP?' l(C<)P Adv I SURVIVOR SPEAKS •.. FromA7 up • ••..; "SuP«man Ill' (1983) Ch11sto· phe< Reeve. RICllar d Pryor -8:30-u TIC TAC DOUGH (]) LOVE BOAT G) RITUALS ~AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE -9:00-IJ ()) KA TE & AWE D QIMOVIE "The Otrty Dozen The Next MIS· sion' (Prernte<e) Lee MafVfn Ernesl Borgnine D ®J MOVIE Consenting Adull (Premiere! Marlo Tl\Omas. Martin Sheen O NEWS ID MERV GRIF:AN · fll) AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE (0)MOVIE * *' * ''l "The Bride Wore Black ( 1967) Jeanne Moreau. Jean·Claude B11aly 1Z)MOVIE ••'It 'The Border ( 1981) Jae~ Ni· cl'lolson. Va1e11e Pemne -9:30- • (J) NEWHART MOVIE • • • "Rally Round The Flag Boys ( 1959) Paul Newman Joanne Wood· ward -10:30-·m tNDEP~NDENT NEWS ID SATELLITES LOST ANO FOUND ~ JIM COOPER'S ORANGE COUNTY -111>0- • DD ([ (f6)~NEWS BTAXI BURNS ANO ALLEN «D JEITTRSONS «I) PEOPLE'S COURT &;) MONTY PVT.HON'S FL YING CIRCUS m SERGEANT BILKO H 1 NOT NECESSARILY THE NEWS O,MOVIE • • Toogh Enoogh 119831 Ot-nn1s Quaid Carlene Watkins 'Z MOVIE • • * •, We All Loved Each Omer So Much I 1977) Nino Mdnfred• V11 tono Gassman -11;30-IJ ()) SIMON & SIMON 0 3 BEST OF CARSON 8 000 COUPLE D @) ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE G SCTV Q) VEGAS «I) ROCKFORD FILES 0 MOVIE • • Chrl'Ch II Chong s 51111 Smok· in 119831 Richard Ma11n Tomm) Chong -1.10- H MOVIE • • Me1a1s1o•m Tn~ Oes11uc11on 01 Jdled Syn 1983 Jeffrey Byron 'n ThOmPr~n -1.25-c UKEL Y STORIES -1:30-0 GREAfRECOROALBUM COLLECTION D HOLL '!'WOOD CLOSEUP 1I9)NEWS Z MOVIE • • • Easy L1vu•q 119371 Jean Arinur Edward Arnold -1 •5-• S MOVIE * * The Keep 119831 Scott Glenn Jurgen Prochnow . -2:00-fJ (f CBS NEWS NIGHTWATCH D NEWS 4!)MOVIE • • • Ballhng Bellriop ( 19361 Bene Davis Edward G Rob1oson ED FATHER KNOWS BEST Fried Chicken ··1 d1dn·1 real11c I had three oper· a11om unlll 11 was all over and the) told me." she said last week. ~he rl·mcmbers bits and pieces of her hospital sla} but nolhtng else after she left 1he apart men I. "I had a 101 ofhal11.1cina11onsdunng <.urge!). like these terrible images of b::tltling demons. but I guess 11 was JU\! from fighting to stay ahve." W1 Ilia ms said. time: drummer most of her hie. along "-tth occasional wanress Jobs. and had been singing Jazz and blues at Ponland n1gh1clubs at the lime of her lnJUI). ''I'' c go1 a lot of friends:· she said. But now she needs more than friends. (half a chi~) People all along the Orange Coast rely on the Tender chunks of beet delicately ma11nated and served on a skewer with onion and green pepper Com plete with hOmemade soup. cnsp green salad. delicious nee pilaf roll and butter and desserll Daily Pil~ 642-4321 .. lf)po1hnm1a "ts far and away the mo'lt hkch rau'>c: of her amnesia." \a id Mund.}. lnH''>t1ga1o r'I have no suspect nor a n ~ mo11ve that might have prompt· l'd an attack on W1lhams. ~aid Grc:~ham police Sgt. Kent Leary. She could "easily have become a hom1c1de v1c11m.'' he said. .. You can't kill me off that easy." Wtlhams said. "I love life and I've got a lot ofhvmg 10 do yet." She said \he doesn'1 know of anybod) who 1.1.ould II) 10 harm her. 5he ha~ "-Orkcd a'i a singer and part- LAKEWOOD c;l Center South ~ SIUlllM trGI 11~ H O 1010 llf ~l lrG-IJ) l 10 ~ 00 111 conOll cu• et> IN 00l 8V Sllll(O 1001!0600 8 1~ 1100 Her 11em1Led hospital bill. not including phys1c1ans' and para- medics· fees. came to $51.512.96. She said she has no insurance. and the Mate Aduh and Family Services Division will pay only for medical expenses incurred after her hospital release. She ha., been selling hl·r few possession~ and surviving w11h friends' help. "It will turn out all right m the end." she said. As for the cigarelles she went out to buy on Dec. 23? Williams said she had planned to give up smoking as a New Year's resolution. Now she has. "It's a hard way 10 quit smokmg," she said. KOY llll.I COP (II lft~, Stt1to flt Oftlr I 00 ) I~ ~JO 10 JO ,,,...,. 100 I 00. 3 U ~.JO I 00 10 JO La MIR ADA r;l ------- II( fl.-CO lG ll'S-111 I 00 I'\ I 10 I I~ 1000 S.• IWy I 00 • /J ' •O oO 00' .,.,. \ 00 'O.,lf'I'. ,, .. ,. °" \.lit (M,i~ a 'USMI 10 NllA "'I ....... (""" ...... ' ... , .. , 114• ~ 1<11 Sllow ""'•I Ill' I )(: I JO "''""' I t tt'S ()o S.... 0..0, !If fliCOll MD Ill .,_,. (I} 1 Ill l 10 ~ )0 UO II 00 ""'""' Id., ()o ~ 0..r 111•1tM UOO•l• Moot• liloll l• lt!>11 .. Al Rewc1101 AWJUS Miil (I} IHS lSO HS 100 9~ 11 00 Ad""'" llf~ °"Wt°"" IOIQUHI (I} 1110 1)1) 0 0 u o tJO 10)0 ..,_, TltNU Oo Sall Dlilt m f llllS COP 1'1 "lnlT~O 11)0 JOO UO 100 10)0 ... ~ 1-. °" s. °"" cm IOI (PC} i.. 0.., SI•• l I~ t~ Sol Ooly JI~ CUI ~ IJJ "-OlilOr Slff• 11 .JO. S 10 10 OBat Ooly 11.lO .,..., !cuts Do Sall Diiiy "1ICl&l9lf (I) ll JO 1 JO 00 6)0 • JO 10 )0 .,._, '""" °" Wt °"" ,. *PACIFIC DRIVE·IN THEATRES* * CINE·FI SOUND! At th11t symbols ••t IOUll-"'"t toy .. , AM Clf * radio. If no 11dio wi1h 1ccmory ,osltion, -;,, your own AM ptnlblt. OPOI wmoos 6 oo N. ou. Y i:JO"' · STMT 1:00·,. Childr9"Unc* 12 ALWAYS FREE IJ:M:ijtt113l'i:~.!~·.~~ t.:-t~) !~~~Sf+iit+i~M • • suPER swAP MEETS Ewttv SAT. • Sun•v• • 1mr1rr;c_, •.... I K..n w111r~:·::z11~Nlmmm;•=::, 1111:ni1w* * --~ru1 * ~~ 1 ~ PlllDI. 00 II-IN) 11YCHO I (I) J CITT IOI (N) * HIWAY39 ~) Of U lllll "1.DI II) P\14 111--(I) 111• H I JHJ'W•otl•"*"fl t..cJi S OI ,., ... G•-'"' ll •J •ti~@•21111•1 tMt>e1 °'""° ) • 'A -·--_IN• AM ':X 6 h1t ca. • • sun" SWAP MUTS htry SAT'. leMly •• I ~IJY IA... IPll,I ' " • •' '4 ~ 14 Cl'.'I Lo HABRA .. ~~u :11 . . . . MISSION ,,,....., ..,.,, fa ' sm· lllat• (I) l\UI ...... (1) - Delly ~lot photo bJ 8«ry llollM Who•• more delighted? Efrem ZlmbaUat Jr., underwriter Wlckl McDonald or Cblldhelp co-founder Sara o ·Meara? BENEFIT LUNCHEON ••• FromA7 Wilson and Janie Arnold, rep- resenting State Sens. John Seymour and Marian Bergeaon. Taking top b1lltng was the grl·gan- ous Hayes who was thrilled that c;o m~ny.guests turned out wearing h1., suits. including Haver( pink and black). artist Joanne Mix (in red) and Fedderson (w~ose blue and black suit is identical to one Ha\ l'~ sold First Lady Nancy Reagan): H ayes' commentary 1c;a running dialogue with hisaudicnc:e. thc models and himself. He 1s the show There was no hopping. dancing and roll ing about the stage h} models who walked lad ylikc(alb1.·11 sans slips) hard I} batunga beau11 l11l eye when the playful Hayes referred to them as "too skinny" and asked "Where are your hips?" and added "Let's take a collcct1on and bu> these girls some food-the} 're starving to death!" 'Tm proudestofm) new garden collection" said Ha)es.1ntrodul 1ng agroupofhandpaanted noral dresses(some of them Ion ) an \ilk See the hmlest l1B'I ii Anwtca, ii the #1 movie ii Anwtca agaill 131:\llEl~l~f 1-111.1~c; R;• -~~."'..!!f ~I~ • NOW PLAYING • llllA -1-WM&.ll -........ ,_._ "' t• ~ ......... ....... ,. . .... ·~ , ... ~ . .,_ .,.. ... ·-~-" ·-1111.A ~-,;:.-·-,I~ -·-·... ·-"~'t.'r..1 ... ~ •fl Nllll-"'"' Mt .... '-"• I ~ ,. llll't llZID!"C. ... • c. ..... ••• "'J"9llmll ~...,,,.w.,111 .,..., .. ~Ml . ·=2··~ He: had l'' t·r~ right to be pro ull ol the cnun.· ,ho". 1nd ud1ng red. black. blU l' '1ok1 and }'ello w (often 'plashed a~a1 n'>l a white back- ~round )'>u1I\(\\11h lung and short Jackels ) and drt <.'>cs (made es- pecially tor lhl' >iiho-w) fealuring long ~lre vcc;and a tk cp "V" in bad.. Alc;oa11cnd1ng were: Patty Spie lman (1n "'t111e mink). Polly Holmberg, Helen Cirkle wi th daughter Lynn Liden, Fran Owens. lletty Tbarln. Rosalee Ingle, Marie Rellley. Ruth Driscoll (who has plan<, lo move to North Carolina). Carol Feeley, Mary Boyce, Barbara Cook, Anne Vivian, Melva Glavas, Janet Angelo (former M 1c;c; Cali- fornia). Virginia Thrasb,JoAnn Klauer. Ann Howarth.Jan Wilson, Donna Hix with daughter Debbie, Marty Bosak, Marney Pbllllps, Lucy Hoppe, Theta Armistead, Mac Anstoc k a nd'" ins(drcc;c;ed 1den1· Kall ~ 1n black a nd red ) J oy Lee Raslc Jnd Joan Dee Ratigan . J>aparr.J//t "edited h\ Da1h f'J/01 St de F<.11wr \ 1da f),·an · 'AN EXTRAORDINARY MOVIE1·· lHEKILLING (IELDS ..... oe,.. __ _ . .._. --...-. -... .._.._. ·------- MU ~ l'P1 Jl'j MMfH flRf A r1 ALA cem 1m l['ft•l'! I ~ llillU 'I tfH4 u r• I ClWUU <.Am 1 IW I ... I\ •IJUm ' l l\ ...... ~llf ii ,, lo'll l)b'• •or•sm1 llWIARD' rMW M lfil1'1\ 1tsr•m1 PA<tfk ..WAY J. tlllw n11m ' R f~1fv. IL---~~ f 'NlghtHeat·' stays asde wlth the cops aad~uslierS By FRED ROTHENBERG ,.,,.......,....,.. NEW YORK -The sun never nscs beneath the new CBS llle-ni&ht senes "Niaht Heal" That's because it's about a pair of undercover detectives w~o work the other 9-to-S. the after-hours shift that the drug dealer work. "These auys go 10 sleep when the drug pushers go to slce~:· said Sonny Grosso, the shows executive producer. Grosso should know. He worked 22 years on the New York police force. and is best known as Eddie Egan's pa!'ncr on the famous French Connecuon drug case. Grosso think~ late-ni$ht TV view- ers hav~ a spcc1aJ ~ffin1ty for police and action shows since they've been watching reruns such as "Kojak," "Police Story" and "Magnum, P.l." for years. Now. Grosso is giving that audience CBS' first original late-night drama. Based on last Thursday's first episode. Grosso and co-executive producer Larry Jacobson ha ve suc- ceeded by doing what other cop shows don't do: male.in~ it real istic. What about 'Hall Street Blues." you might ask? Well. ''Hill Street" is terrific tele- v1s1on. but it afso is highly theatrical and personal. It has an authentic quality about the emotions and the gnt. but it's too oflbeat to be considered reallr real. , "Miami Vice' also is terrific, but as Grosso says, "I don't know too many detectives who dress like they do." In "Night Heat," the two detec· tives, played by Scott Hylands and JefT W1ncott, wear sports Jackets and trcnchcoats. The program pays less attention to the fashion. Jand dra· matics . and stresses th'e pohte lqwork, while capturina the mood and rhythms of~ noctumal<Cily., It bu the ~I of an u~ "Draanet, '' .rilbt down to tlie nam.- tion. lfowever, t~ verbal track isn't from the ~tcdiVt (Jack Webb was the ~int of vitw in "Dra&net''), but the Crime reporter (AJlan Royal) who wntes about the crime cases an his newspaper column "Niaht Heat." Royal's character\ Tom Kirkwood, serves as the conSCtencc of the city. "What's the logic when cops arc dyin,a?" he ~ks in the narration. K1rlcwood's character could give journalism a good name. after the numerous TV depictions treating newsmen like irresponsible vuhul'CS. "The integrity of the investigative reponer has been maintained, and . that was very important to me," said Grosso, who added that the pilot for "Night Heat" was written by Don Flynn, a reporter for the New York Daily News. The integrity of the police work also was essential, and the six pro- grams. which will run on Thursday nights from 11 :30 to 12:30. wen based on some of Grosso's cases. Grosso said he constantly fiahts the network to keep the stories credible. Another recurring battle is how graphic they can be. His position is that late-night audiences expect and accept more visual reality. "There's no set standard since there's never been an original drama for late-night," Grosso said. ··rm making up the rules as I go along, but everybody knows that CBS is . the most prudish of the three networks. Did you know that CBS won't permit any vicletatt until theditecto(scredit comes on tbe ~n? "In the funa~' I want lhis \o be more e•plicit ~" prime time, but at can't be 'Midnipt Blue' (a pomo- araphic cable-TV show).'' The future of "N"1\t Heat" de· pends on i ts ._tfop ..,inst NBC's leading ''Toniaht' show. Grosso knows this is a financiaJ risk sinct reNns of "Maanum" and th~ ot!;cn cost about SS0,000 an episode, he said. By filming at night an Toronto, where production rulet and expenses arc softer than the United States. and ~y strikin& a prime.time deal with Canadian TV Grosso was able to produce the piiot for sianificantly less than typical prime-time fare of more than SI million. Grosso turned in his badge a decade ago, when an injury on the job hastened his departure from the force. He wound up serving as consultant on "Kojak" and "Barct- ta." He also worked on "The fren\:h Connection," in which Roy Scheider played him and Gene Hackman played Egan, who is now an actor. Grosso has cast Egan in his TV -movie on the woman-killer known as the Son of Sam. These days. it seems everybody's an actor or has an opinion on acting. When Grosso was work.in& on ''The French Connection," one of the men Grosso had locked up from the case had just been released from jail. He came to the seL "He heard I was doing a movie about The French Connection," said Grosso, "and he wanted to be assured that Burt Lancaster would play his part.'' 'Consenting Adult' offers first-rate performances mother strugghng to keep her family together is a direct h11. Miss Thomas has no children of ABC Theater presentation tontght deals with homosexual son's conflicts with family her own -she's stepmother to belief. Tess takes a fiHt approach and husband Phil Donahue's fi ve kids - finds a psychiatrist who believes but. an a strikingly honest per· homoscxualn) is an illness and formance. she accurately captures the claims that 25 percent of his rollercoaster ride of ch1ldra1S1n11,. . By FRED ROTHENBERG NEW YORK -The 111lc. "Con- senting Adult.'' refers to the homosexual son who as old enough 10 lead his own life. But ABC's movie might well be called ··constricting Adults." because of how his parents withhold their love to try to mold his behavior. Either wa}'. tonight's "ABC' Theater" presentation of "Consent· ing Adult," starring Marlo Thomas and Martin Sheen as the parents and Barry Tubb as the collegiate son. is a moving. understated portrayal of a famil) in turmoil. Based on Laura Z. Hobson's novel, "Consenting Adult" focuses on the reactions of Ken and Tess Lynd. Loving. supportive parents when their expectations are being met by their pre-med. athletic son, JcfT. they abandon him and feel alienated when I doesn't meet their standards. JcfTis afraid to tell his father. who as covering from a stroke. But he does form his mother face to face . mmonang up the courage to sar, si\Ti ply: ''Mom. I'm a homosexual.· He says he wishes he, didn't have the feelings. but they're there. After her initial shock and dis· homosexual patients have become For many years. the actress had hcterosex uak. been typecast by her bubbly portrayal Next. Tess attaches blame. "Why of Ann Marie. the character who has it happened? What dad we do? broke TV ground 1n the 1960s What didn't we do~ He's so close to comedy, "That Girl." by choosing his father. he was never a momma's career and single life over the safe. boy. But I must have done something mamed course. ... coddled him .. overprotected With ··conscnt1ni Adult" and her him.'' previous TV-movie. "The Lost Later. she takes a harder line and Honor of Katherine Beck." Thomas becomes repulsed by her son's life· has broadened herself and proven to style. which. incidentally. is ncit be one of the most evocative actresses shown in an} graphic way. Once JcfT on the big or small screen. accepts hi mself and drops the burden Tubbs. who played an alcoholic of 1tv1ng a he. he's less tortured and pucher in NBC's ··ea}' Cit) Blues:· 1s seems much happier. ' convincing as .a man sea.red to death Ken a car deaJef" who hiqcs his of his awakei:tan~ sc~uah t~. but who emoti~ns behind Jokes, finds 'out never loses his d1gn11y while coming about JefTfrom :fess. He only kr\Qw 10~· P \"'11h h~preference. . homose~ualiJyf through stercotypq-.~ 0 e' seen he takes out a girl and his rca~tion is 10 reject: "I think /wh 1~1 id f." sh on h1_m for years about AIDS and how it's killing all 31\~\ " .~~c!ue about ha~ homosex- thesc young men. I thin k about the ua.l,it • is d1sc<?mfort with the d1s- k1ds Jeffs never gonna haH· .. my hQt'\.u yd his concern for her grandchildren ... the end of our far)'l1ly fcclin an: so an ten~ tf'.l'al viewe rs .. will eel a sympathetic pain. name. Sheen comes across as a tad Saying homosexualtt) 1s ~nnatt~r~I theatrical. but he does convey an and perverted. Ken closes h1ms~lf dfT achin dimension 10 the brooding to Jeff. He removes Jeffs p1 ctlire Ken. ~heen has come full circle in his from his offic~. He says being open· de ic11on having once played a ~anded on th.1.s issue 1s altan to being ho~oscx~al in the 1972 film. "That soft-headed. At the-same ti me. Ken r rta S mmer •· Sl ier Pedd'v Lee Withdraws further from Tess. '-e an u . n 6t!!IJ The only family 'iUppor1 comes "C'on~nung Adult" IS the 50th • Un etgoes Surgery from Jeffs sister and brother-in-law. presentation of "ABC Theater:· Marge (Talia Balsam) says 1he famil y whose distingu1_$hed honor roll in· LOS ANGELES (AP) -Singer doesn't have to understand Jeff to eludes "Missiles of October:· Peggy Lee is resting at home 1n accept and love him. "Friendly Fire,'' ··Somethin' About excl usive Bel-Air following su rgery to The acting in this drama 1s first· .\meha" and "Hcartsounds.' open constricted aneries but is rate. particularly that of Miss Like many of the. pre' 1ous pro- ··champang at the bit" 10 get bat k to Thomas. Since emotions and feelings duc11ons. ··Consenting Adult.'' with work. her publicist says. rather than plot carr) this story. its extremely affecting ending. leaves The 63-year>old pop and Jazz artist director Gilbert Cates constantly viewers with a heart-felt message that underwent the surgery Jan. 23 at St. moves the camera in for close·Ul?S. has universal meaning: some things John's Hospital in Santa Monica and None 1s more ex pressive than Mass arc too 1mponant to throw away for went home Saturday. pub I icist Gano ,_T_h_o_m_a_s_, _w_h_o_se_ .. po_rt_ra...;y_a_l _o_f_th_e __ o_t_he_r_1_h_i n .. g;;..s_t_h_a_t _ca_n_'_t _be_ch_a_n_g_e_d_. -1 Empry said Tuesda). The coronary angJoplasty oper· ataon. an which inflatable catheters were used to open narrowed arteries, made heart bypass surgery unncccss· ary, he said by telephone from Toronto. The singer suffered chest pains Jan. 21 and checked into the hospital the next day. Empry said. • ALL SEATS s2.00 Sche~ 2010 ~ fifi:H • SAT/SUN 12:15, 4:10. 1:2S THE TERMINATOR [.!] FJI ';H, l•JS - SAT 2-Jt lt:• D NGEON MASTER (R ) ,. 100 10.0 SAi/Si.ii J 2o I «I 104~ "'' ""(I) THCIUCIT (I) ,. t1f SAl'Si.11 1 0 '10. ' 1{ "She's resting at home. but she s champ1n1at the bit because she wants to get back to work," he satd . ., Lee is scheduled to resume her engagements Feb. S in Dalla~. Canceled appearances an Atlantic Chy and St. Louis will be rescheduled soon, said Em pry. J ,~r.~t~~~~,. NOW PLAYING COSTA MESA Edwards Sourh Coast Plaza (714) ,46-27~ 1 llll5TOL AT UNFLOWlll MOlll THI" 'Ull41t9 IHlll 9 U ONJ.Y \AT 1100 J" • '4\•'i '' \\I'll 1100.J I\ •'Cl ~ 00 9 I' . ' .... , .. . . . - ~~!:~~~ ~Tfl,,_[)fl[)I :ta.':tti S t11ihU•I•J11Il6l 04 nu'-aici:r ) llULL.Nlle PISUMI ... , ........ , , ... ••>l 7 1JO. 10118 STA--. .. ) 10MM 10o111r1t•H• U 140 l 1H •111 1 :00 & 101IO &.YMll..La SHOW AT l 1Jl •• f. 1:IO • to1H ~""'°"' OWIAT ,, .. ,,,, . Dt'tVI 1111 CWllrw .... U PllH Ultlll ..... ,.,_ I .. , STAOIUm a .. ..,.... ... ,. """ ATtefl'tte ~11( of New Vortl (") .,.. C.M.U.O. lR} ......... I Newest honoree Actor Ted KnlCht, •tar of the teleTi•lon .erlea "Too Cloee for Comfort." reacta u hi• •tar on the Hollywood Walk of Fame 18 un•elled darlnC ceremonlea lut week. At left 18 KnlCht'• wife, Dorothy. ''HIAVINU IOOllS" (a ) MOH-TttURS 7 10 9 10 EXClUSIVE EM ENT "THI 0001 MUST 81 CJIAl'f" (PO) 1-00 t IS 10 20 SAM WATERSTON "THI IULUNO P•LOI" (I ) MOH· THURS 7 IS, 10'00 • TAACI( OOl BY STEREO EOOIE MUfll'tlY ·'81V1aL'f Ht&.U CM" (t) 1-00. I IS, 10 15 DIANE KEA TOH • MEL GIBSON "MIS. SOfPIL" IP~UI MON-THURS 1 00 9 • S "STAaMAN" (PO) MOff-™URS I 00 10 1S ' ~""' conoN CLU•" <•> ) ...._ ________ ,....._10.._~~~~- edw1rds BllllSTOl .. • fl40·1444 . .• ... •, 120 "MKlll A MAUDI" (P~ U ) I IS, 10 10 "AVINOINO ANGIL" t•l MON·THUAS 1 10 I 10 •'OUHOfON MUTH'• (P~ l)) 600 100 84$ • 'A ANOll" (I) MOH-THOM I IS t 15 1000 "'HIAVINU M>Otll"(I) 700, t«I 'PIOTO<Ol" CPO) i..t()H. T14URS 6 10 10 10 ''TMI conON C:LUI" (ti) 1105 1•w1M11 CINEMA WUT " .. •, \ ...... .. .. .. 8111135 4 Tl\ACK DOI.BY STEAtO EOOIEM~Y "•IVHL 'f Hk.U COf'" la l t.olON THURS 6 1$ t 1$ •O IS ~-1til:i6THY HUfi6fi OOLBV ''Tlft PAlCON AND j fERfO TMI SNOWMAN'" (a ) I ~ ••),! 1~ SAM WATEAS10N ~ ''THI IULLINO PllLDS" (I ) "___:N fHVAS 1 00 10 00 ; ,--::..AVIM.T I OOtlS" (t) ' 1.fOH. THURS 1 1$ t OS ';AmerlcS' . leads · daytime ratings '' ran llO'l'll£NB&aG • -·........--NEW YORK -Afttt t.baMa tht to~spot With NBCs~oda)'; for OM ~k. ABC"~··Qood MominaA..-eri-ca•• was aptn alone in first placie iD tbc ratinas race amon1 the netwotb' momina ncws-&Ad·illformation Pf'O" aram . In addmon. the .. BS Momin& News." with Phyllts GcorF co- anchor for hcr second week. inCteued 1ts-aud1cncc for the tbard consecutive week and bad its hi&hest ratina in nearly a year. aceordina to fi1urn rcleated Thursday by the A.C. Nielsen Co. For the week of Jan. 21-2S, "Good Momms America" led with a S.l rating and a 22 shue of the audience, followed closely by "TOO.y," with a 4.9 rating. 21 share. The .. cas ~Momin& News" had a 4.0 rauns, 17 share. A rafrns rquals OJle pcrceTJt of w nataon's S4.9 milbon TV homes. A bare measures the percent.ate of homes. with their sets on. that arc tuned to a particulaf broadcast. Including the one tie, ··Good MomingAmerica .. basbcenNo. I for 156 consecutive weeks. For the week of Jan. 14-lf. ··Today" tied ··Good Mornaoa Amenca" for the first lime since Feb. I. 1982. Each hada 5.3 ratingancia 22 $hare. The .. CBS Morning News." which introduced Miss Georse. a new set and more spcc1ahzed segments Jan. 14. had a 3.9 rating and a 16 5harc. The numbers for a year ago were "Good Morning Amenca,'" S.5, 25: "Today," 4.3. 19, and the ''CBS Morning News.'' 3.7. 17. Mike Eiscnberi. CBS' director of audience measurement, notcdthat the total audience 1n the morning had decreased in the most recently measured week. So far. It appeared that George had not brought new viewers to the momani. JUSt changed shght1) the ~ular audience's normal v1cwtng hab1ts .. he said. ( • TAACM: OOUJY aT£MO tDOIE MUNOWY ''91VDL 'f tall COf"' (I) 100,115 IO 15 --··•a• 1 uiilf• (H:1~ , ., ''HOfOCOt .. (PO) .......... ~ ~o~F(i',--~ 13$ "'TOllCHUOHT' (I) • 4S, 1030 ''MIAVINt.'f 800tll '• (I ) 130 170 10 00 '"TCMCMUGHT'' (I) M~THUR$ I 10 I 00 I U ''OUNOeO.. MASTtl"( .... U ) MON-THURS 1 30 t lO SAM WA TEASTO.. ' ''THI •ILLINO PllLOS'" (I ) 1 I!> 10~$ I 15 l 30 1'00 I '5 ,0 t0 . .,.... JlllA..-O •r ,..._,a> 100 >OO $CO fl0,100 ''AvaNGtNe ANOll "(a) ' 0 , 4$ • •• , 4$ • •!> -..... '""'' iou l M COii l l I C:UIU 411 / 1 / 1 l ..... , - L by Bii Keane "Birds like to make a sterisks." llARllADUKE by Brad Anderson "Pleeae give me just five minutes more ... three? ... two? ... " GORDO GARFIELD MOON MULLINS SPtuiNG 1'H& BEANS ... JUDGE PARKltR AFTER RETVRNING DR. BALDWIN S CAL L.. AeBEY TEL.LS Tt-E BOYS THAT TH:IR AUNT et!TH IS IN EMERGENCY SURGERY • , by Tom Batluk DOONUBURY by Gary Trudeau ~/1#%,/llW NM#lll MhlS GAUJN6 1D )QI 1*1¥,'KQ. 7a¥f'tr BIG GltOROE . by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) "I had my nose flocked for the wlhter." DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham u . . ,_, A ) ~ 'l.· .... .. ..\ i l I l •1 CAN REMEMBER WHEN 1HE P0NER NEEUED TO ~RATE Ut5 CMf. F~KISS, tCT' ~TTERIES ... by Gus Arriola by Jim Davis by Ferd & Tom Johnson SPA~H~TTI ... MASHED R:'.:>TAToES ... GRAVY ... CHll 1. .. by Har~ld Le Ooux I I by Jeff MacNally I PEANUTS by Charles M . Schulz FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston ·-~t-E:soor MRy'eE. HE.MIS.SES HIS MoMt"'ly'. MA'{BE HE.'S Gaf f\N U~lD~ MAYBE. 1T's A Tcx:m1 10GETMEH CoM1NG IN .... TUMBLEWEEDS AU-f(l6tt'f ! 9TDf" MAAING- FON OF MV HORSE!! 8RIOG[ Q.I -Both vulnerable, aa South with 60 on score on you hold: +94 ~KQ1095 o K107e +Q6 The bidding has proceeded: North Eaal SoutJa Weal I • Pa11 I ~ 1 + Obie Pua ? Wh at action do you take'! A. -A close decision. Obviously. you have enough strength in the combined hands to rulri.IJ a partial and, thereby close out the rubber- thal could be accomplished easily by bidd ing one no trump. With a competent defender as partner. however. we would opt to pass and play for penalties, which might be sizable. However, it tor a moment we thought that our opponents were the stronger pair !does any bridge player ever'/I, we would choose to complete tht> rubber. Q.2 -As South, vulnerable. you hold: +764 ~AQJI03 OKQ8 +AQ The bidding hu pr~etded: S•al.Ai W .. t Nerta. Eaat I ~ Puit 2 0 Pua a • Paee 3 ~ P ... '0 ,... '<::> , ... 1 What action do you take'/ A.-You have ahown a atrong hand with alam lntereat, and thu• far you have denied a 1pa.de control. Part ner hu ahown no lntoreat beyond 1ame, to probably he doea not have •padt control either. You could bid five heart• to Invite •lam ahould he have eeond l'O\lnd apadt control, but that r\IDI the ri.tk or your Ide k>ain1 thr" apa.de trit'ka. Trual partner and pa '• ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ Q.3-Bot.h vulnerable. as South you hold: ~Je52 OAQ762 •Jl053 Partner opens the biddiag with one spade. Whal do you respond'/ A. -You do not have the values for a lwo-0ver one response: you cannot count 3 points for lhe void in part· ner's suit. However, you do have enough to act. and the only bid you can make is one no trump. OMAR SHUIFF Q.~ -As Sout.h, vulnerable, you hold: •KJ• ~AJl005 0 7 +ASH The bidding hu procHded: N ertei Eaet S..tei W •et I• P... 2 c;:::> PaM a 0 Pua ? What do you bid now'/ Q.5-As South, vulnerable with 'O on score, you hold: +JS ~AQJ 0 AQ62 +A987 Partner open• the bidding with three spades. What action do you take'! A. -At this score. p'artner's preempt might be made on a hand slightly stronger than usual. Therefore. you should make some CHARLES GOREN move toward alam, and hie obvious choice 11 a ralH to four 11padea. That upreuea your slam lnterHt without geUing your aide over· board should partner have no more than the seven tricks he promised. Q.t-Neither vulnerable, u South you hold: •Kum <:i All7o +112 A. -Arter partner'• "high reverse; Your right hand opponent o~na the you are In lhe tltm ione. Il'a •imply blddlnr with one diamond. What do a quHtlon of how to pr~eed. What you bid now? are 7our cbolcet? You could jump Lo A.-Aa a pntral rule, Lwo aulttd rour 1pade1, but partner mlsht pau, hand• do not lend themeelvta to a rearlns club IOHn. Or 7ou could takeout double. h la much aounder cue·bld the ace of elubt before rai1 to ahow both )lour ault.a, 10 1tarl by Ing 1pade1. which runt the rfak that overcalling one epade, lntendlnf to partner ml1ht never lmashM 1uch bid heart• at your next turn. Th~ aplendld trump •upport. We •us-troubl with a takeoul double 11 pal a third opUon-bld thrff that you would be awkwardly plac 1padta now and cv•bid the ace of ed 1hould the bidding come back to clube at your n at Lum. Now part· you after your I ft hand opponent ner will ho• that yO\I have rood ha1 mad a p,..emptav rat. In •pad 1 and are lnttre ted lo t.l.tJn. diamond and partner hH puffd. .. NotreD8fM hMUCLA'e numbertht. time. Ill. Magic fired up by -'T' .Showdown·: It's old hat to E~gl¢s Johnson ignites Lakers to victory over Indiana INGLEWOOD (AP) -What ap- peared to be an inadvenent blow. unfonunately for the Indiana Pacers, woke up the Los Angeles Lakcrs. The Lakers rallied after an incident involving Bill Garnett of the Pacers and Earvin "MaJic" Johnson mid- way though the third quarter to post a 122-100 National Basketball Associa- tion victory over the Pacers Sunday at the Forum. Garnett. trying for an offensive rebound, accidently hit Laker guard Earvin "Magic" Johnson in the head· ~ith a forearm. Johnson took excep- tion to the play and had to be restrained. He wa~ hit with a technical that was aimed at ending the issue right then and there. , Johnson, however. had other ideas. Af\er Indiana's free throw brought them to within four poif\tS of the Lakers. Johnson went on to score sc~cn in a Lakcrs' streak of 11 straight points that gave Los Angeles an 84-69 advantage with 3: 12 left in the period. The game was never close after that. . Indiana Coach George Irvine said the play aroused the Lakers. "It maybe got the Lakers more inspired, but we're not JOing to back down j ust because MagJc Johnson or anyone else has a few for us," he said. Los Angeles Coach Pat Riley said the incident sparked Johnson in pan1cular. "Indiana's game plan was to run many different guys at Magic," said Riley. "They hammered at Magic all nif!!t. 'Magic can play very well angry. He jult went an from that point on and lif\ed us. Johnson agreed that the play was a boost for him. "I tend to play better when I'm angry and the techni cal foul JUSt kept me in the game, .. Johnson said. Garnett said he didn't know what happened. ToplO Orange County higti school basketball Dally Pilot Mleetlona Estancia ls in f amtllar situation · . against Harbor .., .......... "......._~ Newport Harbor HICb'• Rob llue (left) and Eetancla'• Eric Van Doren await tontcht'• head-to-bead cluh UCI has it all . .. • Irvine has offense, defense ... but p~tchlngts_ke~ - By CURTSEEDEN OftMl>ellrN9tlWI UC Irvine baseball coach Make Gerakos says there is no question has team is going to knock the ball aroond this season. The Anteaters boast a veteran lineup which hat nght around the .300 mark as a group last year. "I know we're going to swing the bat,'' says Gcrakos. whose Anteaters opc:n the season Tuesday against visiting Cal Poly Pomona." I have all the confidence in the worJd that these guys can do the job." Nope. lac k of offense as not a problem at UCI this season. And, Gerakos. insists. the defense 1s going to be vastly improved. too. "Defensively. we've made some adjustments an terms of moving people to new pos1t1ons and that has made us a sohd defensive team," Gerakos says. So. the Anteaters can hit the ball and they can apparently catch the ball. the extent of the Anteater patching situation which means Gerakos is in the same situation he was last year. "Our P.i tching faltered last year. but we didn t have a good offense and we didn't have good defense either," Gerakos says. By ROGER CARLSON OfllleDmllJ ......... Considerina what's already tran- spired it•s becoming almost com- monpface, but Estancia H1gh 's basketball team finds itselfin another n<>K-to-nose skirmish with a lot at stake ~onight (7:30) as the Eqlcs invade Newport Jhrbor High for the Sea View Lequc's first pfacc show- down. It's nothini new -the Ea&Jcs went for the titles (and won) at the lapna Beach and Irvine inv1tationaJs. they put a IG-0 record up apinst a IG-0 Mater Dei quintet in the Oranae Holiday Classic, they've been up apinst Harbor in the first round and they've taken two one-point de- cisions from Corona del Mar. The result: Coach Joe Reid's Eagles arc 20.2 and despite a lopsided 61-49 loss to Harbor in the first round, enter on even terms with an 8-1 league record. And. aronacally the Ea&Jcs are ranked No. 3 in Orah~ County, two notches ahead of Harbor because of the latter's 15-point loss at Corona del Mar last week. Each stall must deal with Saddle· back. but with just four games lc'f\ after tonight, it appears obvious the inside track is there for the takini. Newpon could loK one of the next four and still be the No. I seed from the league in the upc-0ming CIF 4-A playoffs (by vinue of two victories over Estancia). except to our prwam 10 be very pro- ductive," the fifth-year coach says. referring mainly to his new pitching staff. Kent. who did a little btt of everything for the Anteaters last year (sax wins and seven saves) will be GeraJcos· No. l shon man in the bullpen. and Linton. who performed well during the summer in the Jayhawk league in Kansas. is a sure starter. Gerakos figures to go with junior Dave Trussell. a transfer from Saa. mento City College. as another and freshman Craig Brink (Agoura High) as a third staner. The rest of the so-called unproven staff consists of left-hander Robbie Johnson. a freshman from Santa Ana who may even see action as a designated hatter: Lanny DeRosc. the fOrmer Golden West College patcher who has transferred from Nevada- Reno: Kevi n Kandalaft. a freshman from La Serna High; returnee Damon Carr and newcomer Brett Manin. Youth and ancxpenencc among the pitchers aside. Gerakos still feds he has a team which will chaJlengc for the PCAA title th is season. "I'm sure Jerry (DeBusk) will have them sky hia.h." says Read. ..My bigest probfcm as getuns Scott (Clements) under control and ready." Clements was ejected from Estan- cia's game with Corona del Mar in a burst of temper, almost a trademark of an extremely aggressive quintet. "I'm thinking man (defense). and we're workinJ hard on our zone offense," continues Reid. Harbor. however. showed re- markable ability to match the Ea&lcs physicaJly in the first round. and llad the beef inside to withstand Estan- cia's assault on the antcnor and the playmalcer (Chuck McGavran) to cope wtth the Eagle press. "There arc three ke ys to winnin&." Joe Reid says DeBusk. who has guided the Sailors to a t 7-3 record ".W~ have to'"have a good shot selection. Sood board play at both ends and rcal sound dcfente. "I'm sure they'U spread the coun with a 4-0 lead nght awal and.they'll press fuU cou.n. And ~ re ready for both. "The last ume tt was more of a threc-quaner press but they11 try to pick us up aU the way. To be honest we've been workina apinst 1t for a k .. Wtt . Estancia was never able to'° to one of its favorite weapons. the four- corners. the first time around because the Eagles WC1'C an a catch-up situation (Pl-..e ... &AGLlt8{831 .., .......... " ................ As for pitching. wt'll. the Anteaters have Bo Kent back and they ha ve five-pme winner Doug Linton re- turning. But. expencncc-wasc. that's The UCI coach isn't saying two out of three will be good enough to challenge the likes of defending NC AA champion Cal State Fullenon. though. .. We're looking for the new people ..Las\ year, we had the potent1al but we didn't produce. This year. we have the potcntiaJ again." Gerakos says. "This may be the best club I've had here." The UCI lineup will find ex- (Pleue eee UCl/83) UC Imne •horbtop Adam Glna (left) la one of etcJat returntnc ~ for Co.ch 111.ie Oerakoe tbJa MIUOD • O'Mearaproves 1984 was no fluke PEBBLE BEACH (AP) -Mark O'Meara said there was a special value an his victory an the Bing Crosby NataonaJ Pro-Am golf tournament. "It shows that last year was not a freak of nature:· O'Mcara said Sunday after winn1n1 the event. Last season O'Meara, a Mission VieJo High graduate who now resides in Laguna Niguel. was universally regarded as the most improved player on the PGA tour. After playing three seasons wuhout pan1cu- lar distinction. he put tascther one of the more enviable records in Che game. He won once. was second fi ve times. finished in the top I 0 an 15 events. led the tour m birdies and was second only to Tom Watson an money-winnings with $465.873. With an early-season tnurrrph to his credit this season. the sturdy 28-ycar-old appeared poised to make another run at the top rank of golrs leading performers. "I'm becomangaaood player." he said. "But there's a 101 of room for improvement. "I'm going to keep on grinding. keep on working on my game. keep on trying to improve. .. I want to be a good player, maybe a very good player. I want to see how far I can go." ff Meara had a chance to win this title a year ago. He had an 8-foot .eagle putt on the 18th hole that would have won at. But the youna man. 1n a position to wan for the first time, J.-putted and eventually fini hed third. Thi\ t1me1t dad not escape. And 11 was has pressure putting on bumpy greens that turned the trick. Leading by one and under a three-man attack. O'Meaq had to drop a 6-foot putt to save par on the I Stfi. He missed tht ~n and apin faced a 6-footer for par on the 16th. On the tough 17th. a par-3 Jutting into Carmel Ba}. he buried ha~ tee sho1 in a bunkt'r and came out long. I 0-12 feet from the cup He nredt.>d that pun to save par and the lead. "Tht' grttns were bump).·· he said ·· t said to m) self. ·wt'll , Just g1vt' 1t the ~t stroke you can . That's all vou can do'." A broad smile crossed h•s face and he began moving his hand 1n a wa venng motion. back and fonh. as he continued: "It bounced up a httlc. then hll a bump and went nght.and hat a bump and went kft.and back to the nght. then left apin and naht 1n the cup. "h was the greatest." .\ routine 2-putt p.ir on the final hole fina hed oil the round of73. one over par on the rain-dampened Pebble Btach Linb. Tht' 2111 total S-under. "'as &ood for $90.000 · Affiato turns the tables on Ormsby and wins NHRA title 81 JOSEPH DUDEVOIR ..., .... c. ...... ,, , , POMONA -By Wlnnina the National Hot Rod Anociat1on's 2Sth annual Wintcr- nationals unday. Joe Amato took the first step m try ina to accomplish what no other top fuel draasterdriver has ever done -win back· 1~beck N HRA World Championships. Btforc a sellout crowd of •l.SOO, the ~ year-old Old Forse. Pa. native won the NHRA 's first major event of the year and also pined a mcasu~ of rtvenlf by turn1n1 the &ables on defendina champ Oary Orm~y. who defeated Amato In last year's ullc Nn. But th11 time 1l wu Amato who found the winner's circle 11 he covered th( quaner mile 1n S SS sttonds at 261.17 m1ki per hour to rdae by Otmsby's S.M at lS•.38 in tht nnal . Amato also notched top speed of the m~t honon with a thundenna 264.23 mile per hour charac that set a Winttmationals record that is second only to his 1ll-t1me rcrord 264. 70 Kt at EnsJi1htown. N.J. last ye.tr. Low elaPtCd time went to urry MJnor who ran a S.43. ._ In lhc semifinal • ma to put crowd favorite "Bis Daddy'• Don Oartiu on the tra11tr in a dramuc duel that saw Garlits Jump out to an carty lead while Amato smokrd the urc and then went into • wheel stand at mid track. Oarhll looked to be the easy winner unul he blew h1 motor at the 1.000.foot mark. By thi time Ama10 aot h1 racer undt'r control afier almost driftina aero the center hnc (which would ha'e mrant d1~uahliauon) and saalcd by u coasuna Garlits. "Whtn I went 1n10 1he whttlst.tnd I didn't want 10 let off:· said Amato ... , JUSl blclt- pcddlcd a little until It came baclr do1ron. By •hat time he (Oarlit~) wa out 10 front. R'lht before the hahts I aw has motor throw moke and dro"c around tum " It •aucostlyWln for Amato as he launched the upercharscr ofT his motor and had to thra " to rady '"' na fot the final "We had a 10-man thrl h ao1n1 to ttt the t1r rudy." said mato. .. And t~n ih~ou1dn 't &an nlht bffore tht final But l'nHt Mt~"cr In fact. I 11t Mlt to Ouli&a in church thU momull-The cnaiM wa JUI& hnte cold and u finally s&amd •• Otfcndina Funny Car champton I n1 fired much ~tcr1n hrn1ttt ~ a hr manalf'd to wade throuah a 1ou1h field to r tum lhe tnck for thf second year 1n a row ~na dro"e Joe J>111no's Dodi' Daytona past Dale Puldt and has Pontiac Maller Htah Lafe Wamor 1n the fi nals .• S 7 at 227 .96 to a runner-up effon of 6.02. 233.Sl Both ends of the all-omc rttord for Funn) Cari fell a Los A~tes· Rick John'W)n, dn"'"' Roland Lrona' .. Hawa11an Punch" Dodp: unk>lded a bhstenna S.st at 263 62 tn a QuaMcrlinel "'"over Km"y 8n'ltc1n John LombardoofO.Uuc~mc ••'I)" •ttb a new n11ional t'tC'Or'd ofS 66. bkkina 1t up •1th a S.61 to meet the HR 's one ~nt standard. Bob tddcn dro'e h1'> • f d Thundcr- '61ro toa ltnnaof • .. ontl"-.. > t •"tet<M) an Pro l k • Laver scores clean sweep in Niguel Aod Lawr .-pt thrOuQh .... day'• Foeter't Leger Tennl8 Ctwft. ~ at TM Attz.c.rtton tn LIQUM N9* by grabbing w1M In both tM ling* and doubt11 ..... tt ·wu the ftrst Of bw 9'ac::ft tourMmentato be~~ oot the country. L.awr. wt\o now ,..,_In New- port 8Mcf\, d ...... d Au*d•'• Fled Stolle In the =• ......._ 1.a.(wto.'*'9 ._... er 1s.:11~ ...... and 6-3. He thin ~r.-: .. 0.. Scott. ... .., u .. -- con\petlttQ In ... "" .. -... NY~ 8tM1ed frtday, to ·• tMted Mel Anderton (~ ~ .... 1o-a. In the ..... met~. • The tour, ~ d11lgoed tor -Aulltr.... ...,... '*' In Soon8dale, Artz •• "*'~'° New~(Com.)b8'of'e ... ln8MD6ego. "I do sMY In the Qrand U•t I tour, .. Mid aoon .............. ~rtt 1topf111Jonet..._. """'* i. '!'I tint .,_,. on tM fta11a1·a .... I BOSTON -h took five drtfi$, but Doua Autic has aarced to terms of a contract with the New Jersey Gentnl$ of the United Stales footbalJ l..eq1lC and may 1i1n toniaht. "Today we're hcadina to New York to take a final look at the contractand it'sa possibiUty of sianina." the Hcisman Tfopby winner said lOdar, on lhc television pr()ll'lm ••Good Momina America.· "It look.I prcuy good to me.'' said his attorney, Bob Woolf. ''Ho~fully we'll finish 11 this evening." • Woolf said in an interview this weekend that he. Autie, and Autie'' father:Richard. had aone over the 40-to SO..pagc document for four hours and "everything seemed to be all right." He said that the three men had discussed between I SO and nade 200 aspects of the contract before reaching agreement. While Woolf has refused to rcl~1se any details. the contract re~rtedly is worth some S7 mil hon over five years. making Autie among the highest-paid football players 1n either the USFL or the National Football League. The contract covers everything from inJuries to a possible merger between the USFL and the NFL, Woolf said. "We're in pretty good shape," he said. "Every provision has-been covered as to every eventualit y." ~ate of the-clay ,._ca.en. women's basketball Coaci'I at Matne, aftw • 115-57 toss to Virginia: ''I think the whole tame hinged on one call -th• one I i:nade ._, Aprlf echedutlng the game." Laker•' Wilkes faces surgery LOS ANGELES -Jamaal Wilkes of II the Los Angeles Lakers will undergo arthroscopic surgery on his left knee today. Wilkes, the 6-7 forward, suffered a sprained lefi knee in the first half of the Lakers' game Friday night with the New York Kn1cks. The f I-year veteran sat out Saturday night's game against the C'hppers and was examined pnor to Sunday's game against the Indiana Pacers. Team doctors say they will have a better ide~ how long Wilkes. who has never had kn>e problems in the past. will be sidehned following the surgery scheduled to be performed at Centinela Hospnal in Inglewood . Wilkes. 31 , began the season as a staner but had been used sparingly as a reserve recently He scored a season-high 24 points Tuesday nt«,ht 111 the Lakers' 122-I 06 victory over the Portland "frail Blazers. Sabree make lt four •tr&llht BufTaJo ten wina OU Perrea•lt scored [ii one1oat and set up two others to Ind the ' Buffalo Sabres to a 6-1 victory over the Calpry t-1ames. The win was the Sabres' founh ii\ a row and moved them into a 11c with Montreal for first place in the Adams Division ... Elsewhere around the NHL, Mlke Knuel1y1kl continutd t\is torrid scorina. scorina two .aoal to lead Edmonton to a 6-3 victory over Hartford. upp1n1 the Oilers' mark 10 38-9-6. the best in the NHL ... T•Y Tull scored two aoals as the Vancouver Canucb equaled their lonaest wirtnina itrcak of the season when they defealcd the New York Ran~ers. 4-1. for their third straiaht victory .•. Breat Alll ... continued to brtak away from his defensive role for the Quebec Nordiques by scoring three goals againsl his former Minnesota North Stars team- mates in a 5-1 victory ... Mike Perreault McEwea had two goals and two auists and Mike Gartner added a pair of goals. to lead Washington to a 6-2 victory over Winnipeg ... New Jersey Devils defensema~ Da.ve Pichette ~ored lat.e in the third period for a 5-S ue with the Detroit Red Wings CenterO.q Wiekeabelser uncorked a long slap shot two minutes into the final period to hft Sl. Louis to a 6-4 ,·u:tol) O\.Cr Chicago. Davia return• to apafk Suns Maurice Lucas scored 19 points. m Alvan Adami and James Edward• 18 each and Walter Davis scored 11 in his first game of the season Sunday night as the Phoeni>. Suns held on to beat the Seattle SuperSonics. 120..109 1n National Basketball Assoc1at10~ action. Davis. sidelined since tearing three ligament~ in his left knee· in an Oct. 9 preseason game. put. Ph oenix ah~ad to stay at 34-31 on a three-point play with 8:58 left in the first half ... ln other NBA action. Sam Perkins scored 18 points and grabbed 16 rebounds as Dallas took control of a close game in the founh quarter to take a 114-106 win over the visiting Dt:nver Nuggets. Foyt team wins at Daytona / DAYTONA BEACH -It was the m worst nightmare of the endurance racer. The sleek Porsche 962 of Al Holbert. Derek Bell and Al Unser Jr. was running smoothly toward what appeared to be an easy victory Sunday in the Daytona SunBank 24-Hours sports car endurance race -a triumph that was l~ss than two hours away. But. when the checkered nag fell at Da)'tOna lntcmat1onal Speedwa)' after a grueling around-thc- clock run in the International Motor Sports Assoc1a11on Camel GT series opener, It was the 962 of Frenchman Bob Wollek. A.J . Foyt. Al Unser and Belgian Th1ert) Boutsen that was 17 laps ahead. The winning car had trailed the Bell-Holben- Unser Jr. entry by as much as 13 laps late Saturda)' night, and there was still a seven-lap margin when only 120 minutes of racing remained. "It's hke a storybook." Foyt later told the dejected Bell. "Evt'ryth1ng was going good (for you). then everything went tO hell." Skippers jockey for the lead Puerto Vallarta- race:-lt's a wide open affair ---By ALMON LOCK.ABEY o.-y .............. ,.., Del Rey Yacht Club's Manna del Rey to Pueno Vallarta race had all the earmarks of a horse race rather a )'acht race Sunday w1th over a half dozen yachts swapping the boat-for- boat lead after 23 hours of sailing. What was even more unusual was that II of the )'achts in lOR-A and PHRF-A had logged more than 200 miles. At noon Sunday the leaders were bunched off San Quintin on the Baja Cahfornta peninsula. The race <;tarted Saturday at 1 p.m. off Marina dcl Re~ Buckinghams sail to win The Buckingham brothers of Newport Harbor Ya cht \lub ran awa )' with the Harry Mann l{egat- ta for Lehman-I ~ d1ngh1cs Sun- da ... taking the top two places 1n the fi"e-racc senc'> sailed out of Newpon Harbor ( lub. Bill But kmgham wa s the w1n- na and his brother Jim was runncr·up Third was Mar)' Men· ningcr. al'>o of NllYC. Fourteen boatc; turned out for tht> event. Leading the 28 boat fleet were the 84-foot Chnstme. skippered by Fred Preiss.Pacific Mariners Yacht Club. and Joss. a MacGregor-65 with Dick Daniels. Long Beach Yacht Club. at the helm. Chnstine was claiming the elapsed time lead w1th 258 miles logged from the stan. Joss was showing 259 miles. but was considerably fanher offshore from the rhumbline. Cheval. a MacGregor..Q5 skippered by Harold Ward. C'ahforn1a Yacht Club. was showing 238 miles from the stan, and Anthem . skippered by Lido Isle Yacht Club skipper Roger MacGregor. the designer-builder of the MacGregor-65s. was 235 miles out. The other MacGregor-65-s. Lean Machine. ski ppered by Thomas O'Keefe. Capistrano Bay YC, and Shenanigan. John Grindley. Capo BYC. had all logged more than 200 miles. Repons from the fleet indicated that nonhwest winds of 12-20 knots had kept most of the yachts moving at near hull speeds Saturda)' night and Sunda). Spinnakers were holSled soon after the nan of the race and the crews were ablcto carry the big voluminous sails all night long. Several Santa Cruz.sos were also making remarkable showings. The Class A handicap leader was Elusive, Reuben Vollmer's SC'·50 from King Harbor Yacht Club with 233 miles logged from the stan. Other handicap leaders were Monte Livingston's Checkmate (ex- Bullfrog) in Class B. and Tom Armstrong's Insatiable. California YC, Class C. PHRF handicap leaders were the Santa C'ruz-50 Rocket in Class A. and the Hobie-33 in Class B. BYC concludes Sunkist Balboa Yacht Club wound up its four-month-old Sunkist Senes Satur- day and Sunda)' with an average of 50 boats competing in the popular winter series. FloaJ 1eries result• Inside cla11es SA BOT A & B-1. Enc Proul , BYC': 2. Carolyn Ulander. BYC'. SABOT C'-1. Fred ( utler. Bahia Corinthian YC. ADULT SABOT-I. Betty An- drews. BYC. DEFENDER-12-1 . Lance Green- leaf, Capistrano Bay YC. LASER-I. Jim Otis. Alamitos Bay YC; 2. Jonathon Duarte. BYC. LID0-14A-I. Craig Fletcher. BYC; 2. Tim Mul va ney. BCYC'. LID0-14B-l. Dan Vordale. BYC: 2. Dons Karst. BYC. THISTLE-I. Bob Ball. BYC. Oat•lde cla11es SOLING-I. Cris Jones. Wind- jammers YC. PHRF·A-1. Roller, Steve Franta. BYC: 2. Mischief. Carolyn Nelson. BYC; 3. Bolero. Tim Stephens. Voy- agers YC. PHRF-B-1. Contention. Rod Graham. BYC: 2. Big Bad Wolfe. James DeWolfe. BCYC; 3. Flying Circus. Nick Tolman. BYC. r.===============:::::;r '85 CHEVY SPRINT OUR PRICES ARE RIGHTI I ' , Stallworth aaye he ma1 retire Edberg adds PIITSBURGH. _ Wide rectlVtr EiJ N h to list . John ta11wo11h ys he m~y "'t'"' ri:om ~e •II• 08 P1ttsburah teeters despite ~nJoy1na hts finestpro football eason in l 984. "I may have played my la t pme for the leelers." tallworth ~1d Sunday before bcina honored as the Pittsburah Post-Gazette Dapper Dan Club's man of the year for l 984. . He made th e announcement rrom his Huntsv11le, la .• home because weather conditions p~evented him from attending the annual sports award dinner. Stallwonh. 32. recovered from a pair of ir\jury· filled seasons .to catch 80 pa sea for I ,39S yards and I l touchdowns durina the National Footb•ll ~aai.ae season and was named to the American Conference Pro Bowl team. Black Hawk• fire Tealer CHICAGO -Orval Tessier's shon [ii but stormy reign-as head coa,ch of the ' Chicago Black Hawks ended today when General Manager Bob Pulford took over as 1ntenm head coach for a second time. . A double loss over the weekend to the fi rst7placc St. Louis Blues and a 12-13-1 record at home this season were among the reasons Te sier was dismissed. The end came less than two years after Tessier was awarded the Adams Trophy as the National Hockey League's "Coach of the Year" for the 1982-83 season when the Hawks finished first in the Norris Division and reached the semifinals in the Stanley Cup playoffs. Tessier was hired after the 1981-82 season which ended w1th Pulford as interim coach afier the general manager had replaced Keith Magnuson as head coach. Pulford's first ac-1100 after taking over was to schedule a meeting with reporters following a team practice. He as expected to complete the season behind the bench before naming a new coach. Roger Neilson will remain as asslSlant coach. La Jolla man win• marathon LONG BEACH -Timothy Varley of m La Jolla turned in the first of three course record-breaking performances when he crossed the finish line first at the Long Beach Marathon on Sunday. Course records were set in the men's, women's and wheelchair divisions as a record number of entrants - J,4 70 -competed in the 26-mile endurance race. V arley's course record of 2: 14:54 bettered second place finisher Martti Kiilholma by nearly 5 minutes. C'hns Schallert came in third with a time of 2:20:48. Schallert was followed by Joseph League. Luis Pinon Jr .. Ron Cornell. David Smith, David Menosky. Dave White and lenth place finisher Jim Kelley. Televt.ion, radio TELEV18tON No event• scheduled. MDtO . 7:30 p.m. -CO' l IGa 8AIKETaAU.: USC at Oregon State, KNX (1070). · 7:30 p.m. -COU.IQE 8AIKETaALL: Fresno State at C8' State FuUerton, KEZY (1190). 7:30 p.m. -PRO 8A8KETaALL: Indiana at Clippers, KHJ (930). Irvine standout honored It takes Swede 54 minutes to capture indoor crow.!!_ MEMPHI (AP) -weden's Stefan Ed~ra. who upset top-~e:dJimmyConnorsand No.3 Yann1ck Noah on his way to a S4S.OOO w1nner'5 paycheck at the ~.S. National Indoor Tennis Chomp1onsh1p, 1s q~1cky mak1na 11 dash to)Ylrd the upper echelon ortht mens tour. lhe t9~y~r-old Edberg. winner of $201.802 on the pro tour latt year, took care of the Connors. ranked second an the world, Saturday in the stfT!lfina!s of the 1oumament, then devastated Noah for the winner share S1,1nday. . And he knocked olT two of the top three Sttds m straiaht sets -bouncing Connors 6· I, 6-4, before trouhcin.a Noah 6-1. 6-0. . . He was. Edberg said afterward. playing the best ten ms of his career. . Noah agreed, saying that even had he ~ot been play1na on a sore ankle, and even if his preg~ant wife had not gone to the hospital Sunday. Edberg was JUSt too good. "I lost 6-1 . 6-love. you know. so there's no~ much to ~Y about what happened ... Noah said. "He w~s JU5t m~ch bellertoday ... J don't think there was any part1cul.ar point. or panicular moment where I lost the match. I think I lost the match from the first point. He was a muc~ better player.'' Noah said. : . Edberg. who is ranked 19t h among the ':"'Orld s tourina tennis pros. took just 54 minutes to dem~hsh Noah. who was ranked 14th coming into the Memphis !Ournament. He made iu t three unforced errors du~ng the ~atch and he served five aces. He allowed Noah to tie at I-I 1n tt-• .: first set but it was never close after that. "I don't think I ever played so well." Edberg said. "I played great today." • . No:ih. who SJ>rained an ankle in his quarterfinal match with Israels Shahar Perkiss. had no eitcuses for whaLhappened Sunday. UCI tennis team 6-0 after beating USD UC Irvi ne's men's tennis tennis had no trouble with highly regarded University of San Diego Sunday in a non- conference match. defeating the Toreros 7-1 at UCI. The win was UCl's sixth without a loss this season while UC San Diego is now 6-1. "And it turned out the chop suey was still good without the soy sauce." said U('l Coach Greg P~tton. referring'to the absence of his top player, Bruce Man Son H mg. who was out With the flu . J uhan Barham. who has an infectectfoot. also missed the ac tion. . The Toreros' lone winner of the day was Chns Smith in singles. Winning 1n singles for UC'I were Stephen Amston, Brad Ackerman. Ken Derr. Darren Yates and ~n Hernandei. And victonous m doubles action for Irvine werethe tandems of An1ston and Hernande7. Yates and ~ckerman and Rob Hinkel and Chris Ewing. UCI takes on Chapman. the No. 2 team in NC' AA D1' 1s1on II Tuesda) at 2. UCL I ·O in PC' AA play. 1sranked 14th in D1vts1on I U.S. polo team falls . to Aussies MELBOURNE -The Un1ted States national water polo team. coached by Newport Harbor High'~ Bill Barnett. picked up th e silver medal here unday at the Australian Games, losing to Australia. 9-6. in the finals. China. which knocked off New Zealand earlier in the day. 15-8. to claim the bronze. finished third. Doug . Kimbell. a former Long Beach State standout. scored two of the U.S.'s six goals. while Australia's C'hns Wybrow drilled 1n three goals and teammate Andrew Kerr netted two. Barnett. in his fir')t tournament ever after being named head coach of the U.S. team . fielded JUSt one Olympian in Peter Campbell. Mean· while. the Australians used eight of 1hc1r 13 Los Anfeles Olymr1c team poloists. Barnell s team wil take its next tnp m May ( 12-19). tounng Duisburg. Germany. while compet- ing 1n the FINA Cup. Fonner lnlne H~ etar Kim Oden, now a junior at Stanford Unlveral , waa recently honored on the 12- member RUNell A etlc All-America women'• •olleyball team. Pre.entlnc a plaque to Oden le Frank Hall, RaMell Athletic prealdent. Among area products playtng for the U.S. team arc Mike Evans, a former UC Irvine standout who still plays for the Newport Water Polo Foundation. a high school and UCI c;ummer team: John Vargas. Corona del Mar High's water polo coach and also a member of the summer team; and Campbell. an assistant coach at UC'l and captain of the Irvine-based summer team. Despite pulled muscle, Carner w!Jlps golf .field NO RTH MIAMI BEACH. Fla. (A P) -JoAnne Carner. after getting rubdowns. ultrasound treatment and pain-killerit. showed why she's among the most feared golfers on the LPGA tour by whipping the competition one-armed. Despite a pulled muscle 1n her left shoulder. Carner fired a 2-under-par 70 in the final round Sunday and coasted to a six-stroke victory in the Eh1abeth Arden Classic women's aolf tournament. bumping defending champion Patty Sheehan and Jane Blalock. who took second place. Carner. with a rccord·tying total of eaaht-undcr 280. picked up the win- ner's purse of $30.000. The 45.year- old Lake Worth, Fla .. resident pulled "Good~~. e~· •"""6 pr~- Thats State Fann irJ.turance ... Al CMTtl llSIUICl ACHCY, llC. """ ..... A 546·9222 2'00 lrttttf St., A·l01 Ctlt• Mtu ..... the muscle Saturday. when she tned to hit a three-iron out of a fairwa y bunker. That made her hit an in- credible 41 on the back nine in the th ird round. "Playin• with pain 1s no fun ," Carner said. "I feel like I played I 00 holes today. It's tough to get old.'' Sheehan's S-under 67 was the low score for the final round, while Blalock had a I ·under 71 on the 6.092-ynrd Tumbcrry lsk rouf"5C. Carner held a five-stroke lead 3S play began under balmy conditions. but wasn'tcomfonableeven with that advantage because of the inJury. She winced on every swina; she massaacd her shoulder after every pass at the ,ball; sP.c needed ix T)'lcnols to get throuah the round. "I thought it was ~oina to feel better today. but 1t didn t," SAid Carner. "It's the first umc I hurt my shoulder that bad. There were times out there when I'd really have to flinch because of the pain." Carner, whose earnings on the Ladies ProfeHaonal Oolf Associauon tour ore more than S 1.8 million. said she wo~ned tht anJury tw1et before the final round bcpn. ·t pulled 11 muTCkun the pr.mk'inl lt't.· la"lt niaht and a~1n th1' momina. l :irncr \Gld • The tnunC'r a.ave me an •r.1\0und trca1mcn1 and mo"lsagrd 11 : Mike Howell. an ex-Newpon Harbor H 1gh star and now a junior at USC. David lmbernino. a former C'liM standout now at Sta1'ford. and James Bergeson. a Newpon and S1anford grad. also play on Barnett's U.S. team. Michael Grier (Newport Harbor) is als0 a member of the national team. Gamble named Eagles' new GM PHI LADELPHIA (AP) -Ha!")' Gamble, a veteran oflO ycan of high school. colle&e and pro coachina, was introduced tod1y 11 the ,aencral manager of the Philadelphia Eagles. sayina his aim was for consistency in the team's man:a&emenl. "I think my No. I responsibility will he to convince the people of Ph1lndelph1a thll th1, 1s a viable organization that 1s 101n1 _ to be competitive in the National Football Lcaaue.'' Gamble said at a news conrerence. "There's nothina that would please me more than to play • contributina role in the development oh football team th:at all the fans would be proud of." Oamblc Wll$ introd\Ke:d by Eafct' owner Leonard To!iC, who pra1ttd Gambtc· "football knowlcdac. ~ld­er,h1p and loyalty:· Oamblc. S4. had been the ~s' dlrrctor of rootball •dnun11trat1on JJc WU-rcspoA .Me f<W' ()\CI Rfl iii t budget tn area rclntin~ 10 footblll and O\Ctall admin1mut1on cost • ______ :. --~-.. -'• . . . . - -G1R LS BASKl r BALL . SCoring the Lyon's share Woodbridge sen tor center has turned her team into Sea View League power By DENNIS BROSTERHOUS "It doesn't bother me at all," satd 011"-o ... y ,.._. 1i.1t the Warriors' senior center. "It gives Sharon Lyon. the leading scoreJ.on some of the juniors a chance and the Woodbridge High girls' basketball they'll be the key to the team next tcam fuces what one might consider year." an unusual dilemma Lyon insists that her unselfishness Wuh her team bcaung It) Sea View toward playi ng lime is Just pan of the opponents by an average of more close-knit attitude of the team. than 40 points per game this season·. "We're like a famil y," she says. "We she often plays JUSt a little more than all pull for each other and help each one half each night other on the coun." But )hl· doe!>n't <>ee that as a bag (..yon joined Woodbridge an the problem. early stages of last season. trans- femng from El Dorado Ht&h 1n Placcnua. She also attended Villa Park last season. After playing on the varsity level her sophomore year at El Dorado. Lyon had to prove herself all over again when she came 10 Woodbrid&e. ··w e rotated her at first 1n the starting lineup," said Wamors' Coach Eric Bangs. "Even thou'h Sharon didn't play full-time, she still led the team in sconng at 15.4 points a game. "She really came on and on until she became comfonable here ... And this year, Lyon continues to lead the 1eam 1n the 1mponant categories -scon ng ( 19. I ppg). rebounding (10.6 average) and blocked shots (4.6 average). Lyo n's point production is all the more 1mpress1ve because. as Bangs indicates. ''sh~ takes onl) about 14 or 15 shots per game... I She has made the most o f those shots, convening 65 percent from the floor this season. Bui. at 1s far from a one-player team. as Bangs points out. Wood- bndge has five ~iris averaging in double figures. With the balance. the Wamors (9-0 in league. 18-3 overall) have made a shambles of 1he Sea View League 1h1s season. scon ng 100 points 1n a recenl game. The closest margin this season in league play was 23 points (65-42 over Newpon Harbor), while Woodbndge put away second-place Corona del Mar early an a 65-32 v1c1ory. Thus. it's easy to look ahead to the playoffs. where the chance to play Riverside Poly or Brea-Olinda may await. Woodbridge lost to Brea, which has been nauonall y ranked by one publi- cauon. by 12 points in a non-league game earlier . "We'd lake to pla) them again," Lyon SB)S, "becau')e I know we can beat them." Sharon isn't the onl y member of the Lyon famtl) playing varsity basketball at Woodbndge. as brother Mark. a sophomore. 1s starting for the boys' team. Mark. and father John. ha ve had a positive influence on her pla). Sharon contends. Orange Co .. t OAIL Y PILOT /~onday, F.t>ruary ~., 1915 • DMly Nol ........ ..,......_. ........ Girls bid· for playoff positions Heavy schedule set thf s week fur cage teams -----With the playo{T picture shapm1 up an both the Sunset and Sea View leagues. the top three teams will be 1ockcy1ng for pos111on for post~IOn play this week 1n high school &iris basketbaJI. . The Sea View Lcaauc will have a tnple.-Oost of &,am~ this ~k. begin- ning this evening. Third place Costa Mesa. with a two-game edge of Newport Harbor. wtll get its sccood shot at pace-setting Woodbndge to- n1&hL while runner-up Corona del Mar visits U niver$1l~. On Wednesday. CdM and Mesa swap opponents wtth the Sea Kings hosung Woodbndge. and the Mus- tangs trave ling to UnivcrsJty. The Su nsct League resumes Tues-~ day. with third place Edison tqtinJ to get back 1n the title picture against host Ocean View, which 1s ued for first with Fountain Valley. a game ahead of the Chargers. Fountain Vallt'y has a road test at Manna. >\II games have 7 p.m. scheduled npofTs Tht' week's schedule: SEA VIEW L• AGUE T ....... Coron• Ciel Mer <I· II el Un!vw•ltv (l·I ) C°'le ~ 17-71 •t Woooonooe (H ) NewPOt1 Herbor IS·41 •t Es1enci. l4•SI U9~ a..c11 10-91 et ~ 11·11 W.-.Mey WOOCIOflOCM •t Corona 04ll Mer Coste Mau •• Unlvt<sltv Esl•nc•• •t L•-h•Cfl s.odi.c>IKi. •• NewPOl'I H•rbOf "'*" Cos•• Mn• •• Cor0<>a del Mar Est•nc•• 11 ~ci. L•11un1 8.-cfl •• NewPOrt H•rbOf Un•vennv 11 WOOOl>f'•OO- SUNSET L•AGUE TueMity F'OU11l•on V•llev IS· II et Maroftl (1·41 £0<\0tl • 11 11 0c. .. n V-IS-11 Hun11n111oro l!leacn 12·4) •• wn1m1ns•t4' 10-6> n.und9'f E O•M>n •I Hun11n111on 8HCll Oc.u n 111ev. e• Merine Westminster •' F'oun1e1n V11tev SOUTH COAST LE AGUE T""9y 0•"1 Molls •• Irvine Sharon Lyon, a aenlor, ha• a 19.1 .coring average, deaplte playing over just a half of each game. .. , used to kno"' more than Mark about basketball. but now 11's the other way around." she says. "He goes to every one of my games and ad\1SCS me." Woodbridge High center Sharon Lyon (52) lead• her team In .coring, rebounding and blocked ahota. ANGELUS LEAGUE TwMieY Poul X 11 Meler 0.. TIMlnd9'f Mete< Oe1 11 St Jo~ EAGLES. • • From Bl lrom thl' UUL'>Ct '-"hen thl·~ haH· 1hc upper hand the f agk' h.1 \l' a repu ILi lion fo r ~prcad- 1 ng the lnun. l·Spel 1all) agatn\l n 1one dt'li.·n'l' 1hen pcd.ing a"'a) at the ha sch nl' "'hl·n thl' defen-.c O\.er- n tt•nd' 1 t "'" .\ lx•h111d-lhl'·\l'l'nl''i IS\Ul" l'i tht• ollk1a11n~ .\nritha pair o f ollinals "a~ ong- 1nJll\ \l hcdulcd. but the 'iatlors asked for and reportedh recel\ cd pt·rml\\lon IO U'>l' .\I Hack.nc' fo r th~ game "hllh "a' dcndcd pnor to Fnda' ·, ~nme'> llnl i.. Ol") on le It arbor\ head ha'>kl·lhall coach anJ a veteran 1n the Orange ( oun l~ Officials Association. ''J' tht· otlic1al "ho ejected Clemen ls I nda' 111ght. Read S3)S-he doesn't ''Jnl ILttknc' hecau')c ofa pos<;1blc t arrH1' l'r Ddlu'>k tn\tst~ Hacknev 1s lhl' right man, to ma1nta1n order . ..\'Im the mall hup -11's da\s1c an 1crm' 111,ontra'>l\ I l.1 rhrn " h1g ( t hl' ~a tlo(~ l"3 n go h-., " ,, u ml o-6 up frun t ). fast 1 'll( •J' ran out-dnbhled a 1ra1hng \dJm l tll.k"t>od last time) and fluid ffi·4 l<oh Ma-;<'). rnn be vcr) ph)sical ( 't 11...l' Hl'l'dl and J<w} James '>tarl and are h.i\tlalh unmoq1ble. but don't u~uall' \Ulr~· a lot l rht• [ agk~ .ire muC'h \mailer. gcnanlh 4u1llo.cr and haH a pcm.:h.tnt for tlrl\ 1ng the lane .and hJ'l'ltrll' \nd. there as that lour- 1.111 nrr' .1 v.eapon De Busk surel) 1.1. otdd pr da to ·''Old r hn1.hrre ton1gh1. also at 7.30. < ·oron.1 dd M:ir (h· ''hosts lln1ver- "'' 10·1/l. 'indJkhad (6-3) as al L c1gun,1 Hl·arh (4-~) nnd \\ oodbndge 12-7)1\atC O'>ta Mc,.i (2-7). UCI ... From Bl Fountain Valle) ll1gh and OCC star lddll' < larlo. lcad1ng off at ~cond base and tl'ntn-licldcr Uradv Anderson. a 145 h11tl'r last )car> hatting <;ccond. The hcnrt nfthc UCI order fea1urcs <;cn1or nght-fil'ldl·r Paul Hammond "h11\e t·arccr a .. erngt• as .300. des1g· natcd h111cr Donnie Davis. a ,.cn1 or who h11 '>t.'vcn home runs last yea r: and '>homtop \dam Ging. an academic .\ll-i.\mu1can last season .... ho h11 140 and tied Davis for the tC'am honu· run lead with 'IC\Cn. (alt hrr -;te\C Morgan will bat \l\lh alll'r hitting 275 w11h five hnml'r\ lt1"1 \ea<.ton Senior Bob Perry (C\·IP 1ne I l1gh. C\·Suddleba k C'ol- lcgcl "111 hat !.C\Cnth nnd has been 'i"' lt<'hctl IO flr\t hn'iC I <>m nu inc, o 1unaor red-shin from l IC L.\ who prcppcd a1 Mater De1. will h.it l'lghth nnd pin} lcfl field and 'ome fir\! ha\C I h1rd ha<>eman Mtke ~ugar. a \ophomore who haued 275 la I year. rnund\ 0111 the 'tar11nf lineup. C •l'1,1l11' \3)' hl' w1 I alw 1n!>er1 C'<· ( 111ldl·n \\.c\t star Doug In inc an the hnrup 31 lime~ In inc htl .34'8 an conference Inst )COr. ll< I I\ C'Omtng on a sixth-place lint'lh tn thr ~CBA B year aao The .\nlcl\tCr'i v.crt' 2 l·.:?4· I last ~ason' < 1crt1ku\ fiaurt\ 10 improve on that nnfi k \\ 1T" 1'lghl tl•n1rmnk ~fnt'Tr~ tn the hlll'llP I COLLEGE BASKETBALL --- 'A tough weekend' Shot at the buzzer misses a nd UCLA topped by Iri sh from AP dispatches LOS ANGELES -Thl' narro.,.,c!>l of margins ha~ tx·en an awful encm)' 10 1hc I 1CLA Bruins la tel}. Dropping a 53-52 heanbrcaker 10 Notre Dame an a nat1onalh televised non-conferenn· bash•tball game Sunda}. ihe Bruins came up one point \hon for thl· third time 1n two wcek'i. 1 •CLA lost to US(. 77-7(l 1n double overtime Frida) night. and had been beaten 51-52 b\ Ar11ona on Jan. 19. In bct.,.,cen the l 'SC and .\r11ona dcicat<,. l 0C'LA had casil) defeated California and Stanford. .\fter Frida} night.,; defeat at the hands of1hc TroJans knocked 1he Bruins from atop the Panfic-1 0 Conference .. 1and1 ngs. the lo'>'; to Notrl· Dame dropped UCLA bac~ to 500 at 9-9. "It was a tough "'eelo.cnd." said Bruin head coach \\alt Ha11ard ... I'll bc better for 11 and the program will he better li1r 11. It's not like we got killed." .\ga 1ns1 Notre Dame. UCLA had its chance:. -three of them -1n thl· final minute Nigel Miguel put the team within onl' point of the Irish \\Ith a three-point pla) Rut Reggie Miller. who led the Bruin., ""1th 14 points. missed with a Jumper and a shot off ol an inbound lob pass from Montcl Hatcher with one \Ccond left. "Reggll' Miller u<>uall) makes that shot at the end of the game." 'ia1d Hauard .. The) "ere gl\ 1ng 11 to ham . Sometimes weeks gob)' .... 11hout him m1'isang that shot." Notre Dame Coach Dagger Phelps said the victor} was JU'>l "hat the lmh needed "I fel t 1h1'> team needed a big" In on thl' road ·· said Phelps. "ho 1old has team 1he Bruins "'ould not kl down after losing to <;outhern ( al "We had confidence. I told kids 1f wc shot 50 Pl'trent. we would wan the game:· . Phelp<;' r>la~ers caml' do'e l'nough. h1tt1ng 2 I ol 4.7 lrom the: lloor for 48 9 pncent. and raised Notre Dames rec:ord to 12-5. "I 1hou11.ht l ICL.\ ha'i pla\ed .... ~ ... Phelps said. "The~ ·re a .. astl~ 1mpro,c:d team. That's a credit to coach Ha11ard." Da\ld Rl\crs kd Notn.· Dame with 11$ potnl'i': 12 ol them coming 111 the first half Hl• ;1l<;o \:ink thl· shot that ga'e Notre Dame the lead for !:lXx.I. 46-45 "1th 7· 17 remaining. and 'rared thl· lnsh's tin.ii point~ that pro' 1ded the margin of' 1ctol') In other rnlkgl· bnslo.~thall ac11on '\unda) Georgetown 56, Arkansas 39: .\ t Lando\ er. Md .. Patrick E\o\ ing ..cored IM points and ~e~ed a tenacious dc:fens1' c effort that helped second-ranlo.ed (,eorgetO\o\ n snap 11s two-gaml· losing <>treak. The Ho} as scored the first SL\ points of the game and never trailed thereafter 1n 1mpro\ 1n$ their record to 19-2 Da\ld Wingate contributed 14 points and grabbed I~ rebounds for the defending NCA .\ thamp1on~. "ho had .... on 29 straight game'i unul losang b~ a point 10 St John's Jan 2o SM U 68, R ice 52: .\t Dalla\. lenter Jon Koncak scored 22 points. collected nine rdlound~ and hlock.ed ti'e shots \unda~ to musde founh-ranlo.l•d Southl'rn ~lethod1st to a '\outhwest (. onti:rcnn· '1c1or.. SMLi. "'h1ch 1ncrl·a .. ed 11., l1,erall record to 1 M-2. 1mpro' ed 11~ SWC marl.. 10 M-1. The 0 .... 1..,. "'ho lost their <,e,enth con ecut1\e gaml'. fell to 8-11 .ind 1-8 Illinois 77 , Houston 76: .\t Hou,ton . .\nthom Welch collected 26 points and reserve &011 Mecnts sc:ored IM of h1<, 22 po1n1c; 1n the '>l'l·ond half as lifth-ranked llhno1~ O\ercame Hou'>ton·s prc.,~ure defen..c lor the' 1ctof! Welch h11 I I of 16 .,hot'> from the lil•ld. including eight an a rov. in thl' firo;t half \.\hen the lllin-1 hu1lt a 22-6 lead. Teamma1c Doug .\ltenbergcr also con nected on all ''-' of h1-; '>hot\ in the lir~t half 3) I II mot'> tool.. a 411-32 lead at the 1nll•rm1<.'i1on Syracuse 71. Marquette 53: In ~) racu..c. Rom <ie1 kal~ and Rafael .\dd1son '>Cored 19 point'> earh a\ :"<o. 'I ')' racuSl' 1ram pied Marquette · The Orangcmen expllx.led lrom a .\fl.J2 haltt1me Jctiut hch1nd the nl'v. -fou nd !.l'onng pro.,.,c\s ol \ca lo.a h J ti-111 trc:shman center"' ho 'i<'t a career marl... and .\dd1'>on. en route to 1he1r 15th triumph an 1 l< '>tan'). Marquclll' dropped to 11-7 for the 'i<'ason . 0.-, ..... "*·by__...~ Eight is enough .~ No leH than elgbt Unlvenlty and WoodbrldCe Hlgh play- ers battle for ball durina recent aame. The team• meet Friday nlght at Unlvenlty. Tough week forareaJCs Baum on beam for Crosby tourney A very difficult week ls In store tor Orange Coast, Golden West and Saddleback colleges In South Coast Conference basketball ac- tion. Orange Coast, which has lost Its last four games, plays host to Fullerton Wednesday night, and the Hornets are coming off • big double-overtime victory over previously unbeaten Cerritos. · Saddleback, meanwhile, must travel to Cerritos where the Falcons wtll be waiting. And wtnlna Golden West must travel to Watnu1 to tlke on con- ferenceco-leader Mt. San Antonio. All gal'Mt are It 7:30. OCC dropped an eight-point dectaton to Cypreu Saturday to fall to 4-5 In SCC play. WedneedaJ'a Gemee Fullerton at Or•• Cout Gold«\ W•t at Mt. San Antonio Saddlebeck at Ce<rltot Santi Ana at Compton ~·· ca.tMe Orange Coat It Saddlebeck Cerrttot at Oofden Watt ~--Fvffefton Mt. San Antonio at Santa An• Procurement chairman forced to wait until final minute to line up the players Gene Baum 1son the beam earl} th•~ >ear and he'shapp) to be there Baum 1<; pla)er procurement chair- man forthcC'rosb) outhern In•.ita· uonal golf 1ournament that takes place at Inane Coast Cou ntr) Cluh this Saturda) and unda~ In the pre\. 1ous I 0 )'Car-; the tournament has been run b\ thl' 5 52 Club. contributions of more than $600.000 ha \.C bten made to Hoag Hospital ac; thr ch1cfbcncfic1al) • Baum has had to wait until the la!lt m1nuteeoch oft he previous l 0 )Car\ befor~ he knew which )'Oung pros would be pla)tng here If the tournament fell opposite the ~an D1caoOpcn. the Los .\ngdc Open or one oft he other PGA event\ 1n tht'>area. hr had to wall until Thu~a> night. be on hand a1 the tournament and s11n up pla)ers at that tame This }ear hr already ha'lcomm1t1 · men ts from at least 74 players(thc ma"mum firld)and 1se,en tum1n1 thC'~;:J as far as the pros arc L.OD . ··I h1'11'la Jrcat l('chnf 10 he." ahk to hnt• thl·m 111Hht'-r.irh · Rn um -.:1" "I than k we ha' ea' t'IJ rcpre't'ntall' e tie Id and we alw a\ s look fof'\\ c&rd tu watl h1ng the c }Oung pla}er' "'hC'n the\ leave here. We have had '>t'\ eral .... ho ha'c "on toumamentHm the PCi ~tour the same) <"ar thr' pla~ rd here Th1sg1,cs us all a great 1.kal of samlacuon for the amount ol t1mc and t'ITon we put in running 1h1' t0urnamc:nt .. l hd rosb' luthern1<,at.,.,l1.JJ' atlair o'er \bholes with each pn> pam·d w 1th an amateur partncr tur the tv.o rounds The amatcul"> pa\ tor their \pQt or ha .. e a sponsor One ,lfthc 'oung pro.,"' tll be e\trcmch fortunate th1~ \t'U Ir' inc t oa~t ( (member( ath .. · \1oc~ctt ~111 bepla)1ng 1n the tC\umamc\lt a., an am3tt'ur. She won thr atwnal J un1or <. 11rls champ1on')h1p la~t ,um· mer ;ind pla..\.inionbcr home coun.( \houlli &1' c ht'r<'' en grcatercon- fidtnl't' Rcforc ched1na out some of the pl1\cl'\cntc~ an th<"e,ent Baum 1s C'\trcmtl) proud ohome rcphe' he NI' re«t"t'Jfi m Q~ttonnettt1 M- \Cnt nu1 l.11l• la\t \C"ar ·1 h,1\l'.l lc.·th•r tn'm \rnnl,t P;1hlH't Howuo HUDY GOLF l'\prc\\ingh1Hcgrets" Ba um "3)' pr11udl' · 1 h.H e rccc1' rd r<'phc\ lr<lm Roh R1l\hurg. Hal \utton R1lh { a'J'l'r Tomm\ Jaco~and Peter C)\l\tt•rhu1\ amtrn~ othcl" J her('" a \l'ntor tournament th1\ ~l'~end h<l\l,C\ \'f .. \\ h1k thn·m11ha~1 1\on the 'oung('r pla' l'r\ .... ho" Ill he." amon~ thc P< • \ wur leader'\ ol the future there nrt \OOlt' oldcrt·ntrant\ 3'> "ell ..\Ian l flJlll'1ll L agunn 1' 1gucl hu l'ntcred th!\ H"at •Iona v.11h { hul:~ c ounM' ~me Dokle 1\3~ Hl\kM \t1~e Rcawr and "1e\a \ crJH'C pr<' .\n h1lhng Dcfendinsd1amp1on 811l 8n11on ~111 he-on hand a Iona~ 11h I Qtn ""1nnt"r \11lc C 10\ e hptt>pb«"<lmnht'tilur ror .l numtx·r ol '1.11, l'lo:h1H' n·uri nJ to I .1~un.1 "•~Ill I t oun nr' 'if'('nt I~' ears on the tour and 1\ a former"' inner He 1!1 nov. at i{Jnlho ~an ta Fe Do~ka 1scurrC'ntl\ Jt ~nnJuan H 11\'iC'(and•u · 'at1onal Public Lin l s champion tn I <lf15 31> well a!I a tv.o-11me .\II· .\mem.inat Los Angeles tatc He \.\On the l~.,IQut"Cn Mar. tour namrnt tn Long ~ach and "I' outhern <. ahfom1n PG 6-Pla,erof the' 1'3r 1n I Qt\:? H1'\kC'' has .... on three tourC',ent' .... h11C' Rea\or has v.on o'er halt a m1llton on tht' 1our and ha~ h d thr~ top~lin1\ht'' ~h1lhngwutht· l~~n \<luthl'rn l ahtnmin P(, .\ 'itrO~C' pl:n l ham pion Deknd1ngchnmp1on Bntton·, hc."\t lin1~h on tht: tour\.\&' a second place 1n thC' I Qx~ ~all D1'in('' \\ orld (. 13\\ll I It' I\ I r(''i1dcnt of Flonda and .,.,3, nat1onalJun11.ll collc1(' l hamp1on an l'P\ Cio'e wasa 1h rC'C·l1mc 4.11 >\men- uin JI\\ rhc."r . tatt• .tnd W8\ ll I en~ ml"ml:lrrnt the L ~ \\ alkct Cup team H 1<> he-t fani;;h wn founh 1n the I ~XO P('n cola 0Jl(n 8111 C1la,-.on. the leading ton• dn\.cronthetourla t }ear proved the old ~\'n!!~ \Oudn'e for\hov. a.nd puut'or iuhll tn \MIH-:--- '-" hale ht'l\CfilgC'd ~76 ~}a rd\ per dr1,r in morr than ~O round' ht J1dn'1 h"'I' h1'>C'0>rd - I L~ .... -(__ > . N8A Wlf'F•RN CONl'lltUKI ll'Klfk 01\11.ien W L II'~. GB LA l.tller. :U 16 ..0 Pnoen••. 7l 2S 479 10 ~·'"' 11 2t 419 ., .. ., Pott1e11CS 20 21 417 ll LA Cl4eoet• It 29 39' I• GOiden $1ole 11 35 .Zl9 21 ~.,, Olvltlln Oanvor 30 19 612 HOU\IOn 21 20 S74 1 Delle\ ?S n S21 • • Sen Antonio 13 1• 419 • Uleh 7? 26 •st 1 , Kansn Cllv IS 37 319 I• IASTSltN CONl'IEltlENCE A .. ntlc OMllM eo,•on 39 9 113 Pftllldell)tlof 37 10 78T 1 I Wa\hinglon '7 n SS I I? • New Jersev tt 26 •SI 11 New Vorlt 17 37 347 72' > c-r .. Olvl\len M1lwau•H 3• I• 109 04!frOtl 79 11 6JO 4 Cnocaoo 74 13 S II 9 > Atlanta 10 11 •16 IJ , lnaiane I& J2 333 II Clevelend 1• 31 304 19 suncsev•, ScorH Lehn 177. lndlena 100 Pnotll• • 120. S.allle 109 Dalla\ I 1• Otftver 106 T onitflt'\ ~"'" Indian• el CllDPtn Atlanta •r Pllllad.tP"•• C1eve1ana at WHhlnoton • Dttro1t II Molwaull.ff Co10tn S1a1e al Sen Anl01110 Tueldllv'' ~met L•llen 111 Housion New Jenev a t Oe1ro11 Bolton • 1 C hocago !.an Ar>tonlo a• Kansas Cfl~ Dallas "' Allanla e t New Orleans Denver at Pnoenu1 U••" at Porlle nd New Yori. at S.altlt Laktrs 122, Pacers 100 IN DIANA 1100) -itellOQg 4· I 1 1 I 9, w1111am' 6 l7 O· 1 17 St1Panov1cn 7 15 6·1 10 8rown 9 11 3· J 71 S•C"l1ng 4· 10 I I 9 Garntll 3 1 7-1 I Tl'\Omes 6· 12 0·0 17, Stan,t>urv 1·9 S·6 9 Grev 0·1O·O0 W•1ttr\ O·O O·O 0 Totall 41· 100 11·?7 100 l.A. LAKERS (lnl -Ramt>I\ 8· 10 I· I II Wortnv 8· l S 7·7 18, Al>dul· Jabbar 8· 13 I 2 11 E JOM\On o·ll S I lh~I •·9 ) • Ii ·CooPer • S 1·2 10 KuPCnak 4·1 4·6 17, !ll'cCee 1 lJ 0·0 I• Soroggs I·• I·• 3 Le\11!"' I 1 0 0 1 TO/all SI 9S 11·79 127 Scon 11¥ 0Ua1'111's lno.ana JI 2J 2J 23-100 La~er\ J4 25 32 31-172 Tnree Point 0001s-Sco11 Cooper Fouled oul-None Ret>ound\-lndoene 41 Garnett 91 LO\ Anoe1e' 10 IRamt>•s ISi AU•lt,-1no1a na l9 St•nlt>urv 61. Los A"ot'te~ 3S E JOM\On 171 Total IOUl\- ln01a no 18 LO\ Angeles lS Tec"n•C•ll- E JOM\On Allt'noanc~ -IJ,370 Colleee Korn Notte Dame SJ UC LA 51 Gearoe1own S6, Arll.an\e~ 39 Svr ac .... .e 71, MerQue1te Sl ll!lno•\ 17 Hou\fon 16 SMU 68 Rlct> S2 Ida"<> 9S lda no s, 69 c~am nao e 81 NOlrt Oe..,. Coll 4~ How AP IOI> 20 fared No I \1 Jo"n' 117 II beet Providence II 60 001 Connecrocur 97 64 No 1 C..ur11e tow" 19·71 •O\I to Svr acust ~~ Ill oea• Arkan\a\ ~-39 No Me'"'"'' Stare 17 1 Deal C•ncon ,,at 8° 61 bf"o' l/oru noa Teen 91·8? No 4 ~Ml> 18·?1 t>P"I Hous-...S}-18 0~01 ~•< t' 68 S? Nu S 11 •n<> \ 18 ~ 10\• 1C1 Puraue S4 l• "4?4' ~· o.1\94,.. 11 76 Nt. 6 D,r p IS] oea• >Na>e Fo•t\I /lo 10 OT No 1 O• anoma 11 4 oea1 Co10••00 ~ 11 11ea1 O• 1af\oma State 83·81 No 8 Ceor91a T rcn 1 lo • 1 loSI to Nonn Carotona Stale 61 ·Sl t>ea• Mervlano 12·60 No 9 Svracuw 1 IS·J oea1 Georgetown 65 6J oea• llottanova 91 19 Deal Maroue11e 11 Sl No 10 M•Cn•oan 16 JI oea1 Nortn .vp\tern 16 S7 t>eal W1\COR\1n 94·8 I No l I Nor•n Ca rolina l l6·S) IOsl 10 (1em\on S7 SO Deal Cllaoer 8J·61 bee t Furma" 11 SS No 17 T •••• ll·l t>eat Ora•t 61·66 Q\I •o 1no·•"• Sta re 100 9• No ll OePaul I 14 SI oe•• Princeton S6 4? •OSI IO LOUl\Volle 11 1) No 14 O•eoon Staie 16·3J 1os1 10 Cal1torn•a 42 16 beat Stenforo 83·73 No IS l.ou1\1ane Teen 117·21 Deel A,..,,,.,, c;1,.1p 80·73 al Norll'leaSI Lou"' .itna .._•M \nt),tt N I~ "4P•ctda·L&\ VeQaS 17 21 t>el• ,.,, Jo\e ~1.,1p 70·S6. oea• uta n !>1&1e 101 a 1 ''"' II M11r~1end 117 61 t>eat Vor111n111 I '18 o\• •o Geor111a Tecf\ 7?·60 "' •8 ~ a"o•a t I• SI t>ea• P,flst>uron I~ I) (1\1 • Sv•acu\f! 91 19 ~ 'I • ar\a\ 17 •1 l:HMll Kansas Slall! 1 t•~• NPr;,ra\ka 91·80 N• }~ A 11r:.am 11 8 •rmononam 119-SJ IO\I 0 ,. CJ'""'''' n S9 S8 t>eet Souln Ala t>ema 8 I I l)l COMMUNITY COLLEGE Th1$ week's sch.oute WEDNESDAY South (NU Conterenc• • "'''"" a' 0"'""9e C06\' ~aJtJ tt>ac• a• Ce"•IO\ Go o•n Wt\' a• Ml San An•on10 \.,~,~ Af\a a• Comoton Pa<iltc C.N\I Conterence Pa1omar ,,1 Gronmon• Sll• D•f"Qfl at l\l\"11Co•la Sar D•f"OO Mesa a t Soui,.,western MOun,u1 V• .. lf CCWM<ence /V~\,t L A o .... A "a t'v Jo \n .10 Nf'\' a• A,. tp100P V&ll•v ~ V \'·'->r ~· (itrV()I"\\ Metroppjtl•n ConltrMce .,",,,~ "'/Of'l.·ffJ .,. LA H4''ti0,. •A P ,. .. ,. "' Ba1it ~,.\,,,, '-"4'\lt#'jf' d t' E C am1r cv Bl'O r "' LO\ i>•ot·n (( lnl1nd V •Mey Conttr.n<e f" r at••v ar Of!'\!lrl ( •r \ '' \~"' 6Prn11rd1no i:;;t r H )ndo at G!l!'~dd ' v.~ ,,,r. ,;b ,.., at R "'''·ttft Eb' l AnQtC!\ a •(,..,,. (O\O THURSDAY Wt~tern St•tt Conference """'" B 1rr1nr• e• Hancoc• Mr ·'O•V• '' r .,~\'& Jr• "" ,, r " .. FRIDAY lnl•nd \1111tv CIWlflr.n<• )ft\Prl ~· ,..,,,~ t f')\ AnQete\ \a"' 9_.,.,11vo 1,,.r, at (n~ff•v (1 '1' tfA"' ~· C '' .;\ ., ,,,,,, \ •1fl t' ~ < >-iOl'l(Jti ,.,. .. r nv ,,, M ' S•"' •er .~ro Mountlll'I lltleY C~MK• a ·•~·uu .. .//\ION al W•\I LO\ Angffl"\ A I./'"'''' _,, LOI "nQf'll!\ Vall~V SATURDAY Soulfl Coeu c~ence Ora~?" r '"'' •' ~dd tbe<k Cer• ,.,, " C.01aen WHI Mt 5an An•Of"I) at Santa A~e r ""'"" a1 F ulierlon WtUffft Sllte C..,._,enct V•n• ore 11• r,.,nta Ba•t>a•• r "'' "' O• aro l .1M•• et Hencoc~ MtuMtln II~ CCWM<eMt LA fr.,llt T11'" 111 C•n•On\ Peclllc CNll C~Met C.rfJ\\mOI\' 11 \•• (> •110 lf'T\ottr • ~"l~V "' -,,,,,,,.,.N'e\t•t,.. •J ra(o\I• •' Pe ""a' Soufh Coast C.om.ronce Confff tMI W L ov., .. •rr•IO\ t I 1\111 S." Alltl)noo t I ~ uirttton l CYPl'tU 4 <X1nw '°*•' • ' ~.ooi.oec "-4 s Comc>IOll I 6 Sen!• .Ane ? 6 Golden W•tt 0 t w .... .-.-. Gemes 17'101 Fullerton 11 Or•ll9t Coe\• Goldtfl Wttl '" Ml Se" Antonio Seddtetltc• 11 Cerr11ot S."te AM et ComotOI' WL 17 • 'I I II 10 I I I) 10 ... • 12 • 12 1 IS . " ~Mbv ~--Arn (et.-.... ... ctll 213 Me•' 0 '/llleer•. st0,000 .. L•rrv Roni..tt, '37,m KlkUO Ar•i, '37.lll Curlis St••tliHI. 137.lll -.s lttlt Caldwell, I 19,000 Pnne Sltw•rt, s lt,000 .. 8..-nn.ra L•not. &l),YJ Tom W•t\Oll, l IS.Sil Greg Nottnan, '1S.Yl 111 Oouo TtwtH, 111,SOO Corn Pi vin, 111.soo JC>Mnv Miiier, s l l.SOO L•Mv W•alo.1n,, Sl 1 S00 Gaor~ Arc~. 111.soo -J•v Hea,, U ,SOO S•nav Lvi.. U .SOO Jae' Nlcl\leu,, sa SOO IH O Aoki, l6,S10 Oen POlll '6,S10 W•vne Levi S6.S10 Ma ri.. Lv•. S4,Sl0 T C Cn.n, J6,S10 Ken Brown, SS,000 Ladv Mire ss.ooo ,.. ?ti Larr'/ Nll•on, U .900 JOM ~lleftev, '3.900 Oevod ()Qrin, '3,900 0 A Wtlt>rlng, 13,900 Wllllt WOO<I. 13.900 2t2 Mike Nocotelle, SJ,Qll Tim Norn•, U OJI Huo.rt Green, Sl,038 Tom Kitt, 13.038 M ll(e Rtld, 13.03• Jom Tlloroe, SJ.038 ?fl Oen Helldor\On, 12.JSS Skeele< HH tn, 12,35S 8rad Fuon, S2,3SS A1>dv 8tan. S1,3SS Pel er Oe1~rnu1s. 12 ,3SS 194 Oavod Gra nam, I l,7SO Ga rv McCoro. s USO 8111 Kretrert ll,1SO Hale Ir won. s l,7SO Craig S1ea1er, s USO I Joev Renell, ll.1SO Oannv Eawerch, l1,7SO Lee Eia.r \1,290 Jeff Hert, \I 190 Jom Simons, Sl,?90 LH Trevino, Sl,190 ?tS ,,, Roger Mallt>•e. s I, 177 Retpn Lertdrum, s 1.172 Joe Inmon. I 1.177 Tom Jen•uns. Sl 177 1'1 Gr~ Po wers, s 1, 130 Lon Honll.le, s I, 130 Jom Neiford s l 130 ,.. George Arct>er. s I 100 WOOdv B·llCkburn SI 100 I ,IT' SomP\On 11 100 ,,, Bob Ee,lwOO<I, Sl.090 JOI David Frost Sl,070 TEAM m H Grff1> 0 Spano\ 14 SOO 1'4 J Nell.ls J Nckl\, Jr . SJ,267 O Ecn11)rgr P Eramn. Sl,762 us C. McCoro·R \/au~ S1,•1S J Oe1s11>0 J Vof\nn S2.•7S .' T"orP C. Grdtcll. S2 4H u. D T l'well J Owen,, S1 160 167 F COuole• B Run1 S7 070 1'1 W Wooa J Zo1oer \I 9)S H lrw n J Pure.ell I I 93S 16' W 81Cl\brn·M Hmohrv\. Sl.110 M Reod T Cu111oan. Sl.710 M Brnt>lt! C Mrr\ 11,110 770 W Levo J LPe Sl,00 c ArC1'er. T Street 'I •40 G Cadlt·W Far!ln. Sl.•40 171 J f'ougnt D Clark, SI, 170 J Haa' A Fan1ul. SI 170 C Strno P Spnglr Jr '1, 110 V1 M Noeoteue·C aLmr 1990 I( Brown·( 0 Cnnll, S990 L Grel\am·R Gero s990 17) MO'Meera·J PD\l S900 174 L Wadk•n\ J (f\ew, \110 A Megee J Broa,. 1110 vs D C.r anm BM Rnan. 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Cv•••u 60 6' Legune Hill' 6S Minion lllelO 5' EOl\On S6 SI UlllYtl'lltV SO SO 90 Et Toro· loll 91> SO SI San C1tmtt11t• 4J 77 San Cltmentt• 13 Dane Hill'• S9 11 C•oo llelltv' 98 SS S6 Dane Hllll' 68 98 lrvlnf' 11 41 Mlu lon \ll110' •1 '' MllllOn Vlelo• •S L•guna Hllll • 61 El Toto' S4 6J L•llun• Mlltl • 7• 4" 6S El Toro• 11 91 S.11 C1tme111e· 63 01ne Hllll' "' S7 San ci.me111e• "4 67 61 Ceoo 1111i.v• 16 10 F.,_o,,._ Hllll' 76 Irvine• F.,_Miulon Vleio• Fl-Le.11un1 Hlllt' Fl$--EI Toro' 61 Fil-et Mlu lOI\ V1t10• F 1$--al Laguna Hl11•· DANA HILLS 114· s. •·JI EL TotlO 110· "· s-o 40 Temol• Cllv .i 60 Cor del Mer n ,. w"''"'""" 'II Lol Amlgol S3 71 LOl Alam1fo\ S9 48 61 Co"a MeH 4S SS Sen•• Maro• s 1 s:> Foo1,,111 58 S7 Foo1n111 Boi.1 71 Santa Bert>ere •S Marina SJ 6t Rancho Alam S8 ~ S9 \/ilia Peri. 46 ., 69 Saoaleoaci. 79 SI Trov 44 46 Minion \11el0 11 31 Senta Clar• SI 66 Carson Cllv SS 10 Mira Mn• 49 43 Btllarm1ne S6 63 Minion Bov Sl M1u 1on 111e10· SS Caoo llellev· S6 El Toro· 47 SS Edllon 61 S8 96 Irvine• (ol) 90 73 6S Leouna Hill\• S? •6 4" De na Htll\ • S6 61 lrvme• S7 San Clemente' S6 Laguna Hiii' • •O M1u1on lllelo' 10 Caoo v11i.v• 7• EtToro• S6 4 MIU•Ol'I \lle10• SO Sl 7S San c1emen1e• S4 SJ 69 CaPO Vallev• 08 66 8? Irvine' 6S 63 S9 Leouna H1lll • 6J 67 62 D•na Hills• 14 F.-ai lr•ont' Ft-~an Ci.mtn1e· F l~aoun• HIH" LAGUNA HILLS (11·10, l ·Sl 69 Pac11oca SS 66 El Dorado loll 17 SO Loera 3T ., Cor del Mer 0 6? Corona S? 61 Don Lugo •9 .0 Estancia •? S6 Caoo llallev 66 S7 Foorr.111 S4 SS Fountain llalfev 7S S3 Lllt.ewOO<I •S SI E \tancoa S8 60 Rancno Alam S7 S? El Toro• 6S •7 Mou oon V1t10• S9 44 San C1emen1e· SJ 4" Caoo Va11ev· 4S SJ Dana H•lls • S6 14 lr•1ne• 63 63 El Toro• S9 u M1n1on llle10· 6• F6-San C'!emen1t• Ft-a• Caoo V•llev• Fil-at Dana Holl,. F IS-lr•.ne· MISSION \/IE )0 (11-4, 1-1) '9 Ocean \loew d So Marone 45 6S SA Vallev 49 S6 SaodleOec• 45 •1 Sa,,1a Ana H 6S S.sn1a .llna 40 SI Sonora O S4 Co\!& MeH 67 12 E Toro 46 SO Caoo ./alle• 65 SS Pomon• Oii S4 68 Fullerton S9 39 H H W1l\On 49 SS Brea ·Oflnc:la S2 SI Oana Hiii\. SI 59 LeOul'la Hill\• 42 S4 Caoo "" ._v. o l SO E Toro' •8 41 lrvone• 'I •9 !.an C lemenll! • 41 66 Dana Hills· 40 6A Laoune Hou,· 44 Ftr-111 Caoo llallev· Fl-at E Toro' F IJ-trvone' FIS-a• !.en C•emef\11• NHL Fl-M1u 10n V•eto' F 13-San Clemente• F 1~11 Caoo V1111v• SAN CLEMENTE 17· II, l ·S) .U Senh•oo 39 64 Warren 11 SO C11aow1C1< 11 " 1.aoune Beech 6J SO Needle\ •2 61 LB WHl on 6S >6 La Hat>r a S4 44 Los .Amooos 21 S9 M1u1on Bav o7 59 Mora Mtta o2 S9 Ceoo llellev' n 63 Ir vine• SI SJ Laguna Hill\· u 51-Dana Hiii\ • S2 S4 E1 Toro• IS •I M1n 1on lloeto• •9 67 Caoo Valtev• 98 1>4 Irvine· SJ F6-al Laguna HoH\' F8-et Dana Hiii\' F 13-at E1 Toro• F 1 S-Mou ion Vie to' ANGELUS LEAGUE MATER OEt (11-0, 6·0) 69 Oo~ Pu•blo\ 76 1S Le Hat>r a 40 93 Aancno .A1arn S7 80 EOo\On 40 46 Cruoo 43 55 Compton 42 6J Santa Ctere 60 51 Ocean ll1ew S1 1l l/ert>um De S6 S4 Sant• Clara 4J S6 E\lanc1a SI 68 OranoC! SJ 61 El Mooena l7 S6 St Bernaro S2 63 LB Poiv 48 10 S• Pau•· 53 'IO Bl\f\00 Mont • 41 S. p,.,, y• JS 86 Serv11e· S 1 II BoshllP Amat· 41 85 St Pau1 · JS F S-B snoo Mont • Fl -e l P1u\ )(' F 13-B•l"<>C> ~al' F l6-Servl1e• CAMPBELL CONFERENCE !>mV!tlt Olvl\lon W L T Pis GF Edmonton caioarv Wonnooeg 1(1nQl Vancouver 38 9 6 ., 7TO 16 ?0 I S9 :>« 11 n ~ S9 2J2 77 71 9 SJ 234 1 s J2 1 31 184 ,1 lov1\ (n1cago M~nne\O'O Oeirn1 forCH'''' Norrh 01vtl1on 2l 19 Q n n 1 16 7& 10 1• 10 e II lJ SS 195 41 105 41 18 I 10 193 19 IS9 WALES C:ONf<ERENCE Wt)\,.. n\1'('1'' Pn tt0,1tJt iJ NV l\lano~r\ NY Rarger\ P1•l\burrJ• N'""' JPf"\ .. Y B .110 Mon1,.~a 01J't1f'r P•triCk O"'•Mon 17 IJ S 79 IS 6 n n l II 76 8 18 ?6 5 16 ?9 6 Adam, 0 1v1\lon 1' IS 11 i6 Iii 10 1~ 1 I I 11 1? I If 1/ Sunel•V'\ \.tort\ \t L \ 6 ("•C<'lllO 4 Ot-•• • ' New Jer~ev S B•1•l1>10 6 (<tlljf!r v 1 W&V11~1J•n,, 6 W1n~10.o 1 0 1PnP1 'i M no~'"'" I f 0"" ,,. ,.. b ttarHoro J n 121 l>4 210 ~1 73S •7 177 .. 119 18 11S 67 19) 1>2 703 )7 201 SS 194 19 '6S V&'lCv .• ,., 4 N""' v,,,. Q11nger\ Ton1ohl'~ Games "''' \11',,.. "'\ \( h@'fh,,jlfl'd TuH<leV'\ <Olmel N,.,. ~ ,,. Ranger\ e1 K~\ t v•'. '' Mor•'t" Pr oil'"' A .,, Ntw 'f'O" 1,1anON\ l'l•'t"' ... 'J. ot f 1tl')ntt) U.S. Neftonel Indoor (., Mtmtltlh) Stnelel I' lnel GA 111 ?08 1)1 119 279 194 ?OS 111 1•• 726 lS6 ISJ ~ 108 n• 711 ISO 170 188 184 11S \•e•an Eabf'ro !Swtdt1"1 dtl Yennock N<>a• Frar>r!' • I 6 O E dbtrg Nill\ '" 000 ,:o"or•s Ln•r Ttnnls Ch•ml>fonttllps (t i LI~ Nleuel) Sltlttet II In.al 1100 Laver IAu"rallal O'f Frtd Slotlt Au\irattal 7 6 Ill 11 1 • l •) o.wi., l'llltl Lt•tf C.tr1 XOfl I u ~ I d(ll Mal Aflll•f\On r Au'''"""' Stoll, 10 8 c ..... UC lrvllle 7, USO 1 Slfttlle• Alll\IOft IU(ll 09' Mc NemM, • I • , ACkOft'llen <UCO Otl ~•mo• • • t ,, Ot rr tUCll Ot1 Ve ner 6 I 6 0 Ytlll\ IUCll Otl L uttr \ 6 I 1 • $/f\tln I USO l de! Al'llM 4 1 1 • Mernende1 IUC• aet D•dle n 7 ~ .. , Oewtl6e\ ""'•ton Mtfntno.t IU(ll lltO Luter, Mt Nal'!let .• 3. ' 1 ) ) Y•t•• AClo.tf""•n !UCll def Remot ·Sm1111 6 4 • I H•ll-.el 1!!.w~ IUCll 04tf Oed1t11 l•edltv • 1 4·4 SEA Vll!W L•AGU• C<>4'0NA OSL MAit NIWf'OltT HAltM>lt 114•6, l •l l (IP•), l ·I) 67 Rubldoul< ., S9 HH Wiiton •1 60 Tutlln 42 S6 Lt H•brl SO 61 L•11un11 6•acn SS 4S C100 Ve li.v St 57 E\lenel11 6t II ~v.ne .. 77 El Toro 60 to e1 Cemlno S4 41 L•vune '1111• 4t S1 Powtv 11 S7 f'oo1n111 60 71 Sen 01eoullo 4A 68 Mor•no V'elltv 40 61 Torrev Pinet •• 65 Arltil• 46 14 OouOll& INtv l U 92 Unlvtrnlv 60 46 £dl\On 43 S4 Norco S? S1 Bellermlnt 4 SO N•woorl' 73 13 Cor Ott M•r• SO •O E\tencle' 41 11 u111veollv· ff 46 Unlvenilv' 40 61 E \lencla' ff SS Wooabrldoe· 43 87 Saddlet>ac11. • 6t ., CO"• MeH' ... ... Laguna 8t•Ch' S6 41 Seddlfl>ecll. • •S S9 Costa Mts•' S8 6' Ltoun• 8cn• S4 11 WOO<lbr1dQe' '8 •I ""' Hor~· '2 l? Cor dtl Mllr' 47 19 E\la11c1a• 40 o? Un1vefl1tv· 47 F 4-UnlYtrSlh. F4-Estencl1' F.,_at W00<1t>r1doe· F6-al S.ddi.o.ei.• Fl-II Colle M•H' Ft-el Leguf\11 Bell' F 13-Seddlet>aca • F ll-CO\!.I Mn•• F IS-Laoune Beacn• F IS-WOO<ll>l'ldOI' 'denotes le•lllV• oame SUNSET LEAGUE EDISON f<OUNTAIN VALLIEY COST.A MESA (7· 12, 2·11 P LB Wll\On 42 >I 4S El Toro &2 79 70 Laoune Beacll 60 SS 43 Tu"1n l I S8 LAGUNA BEAC:H 17· ll, 4·S) c anlornlo •7 Los Amloos 6' Cor de! Mer 61 Werren 62 lll·6. S·ll (11-1, l ·l) 59 E \Per •ni• 43 64 S.rv1te S7 69 Irvine S1 63 S.n Ctementt 4t Foothill S9 So Vat~nc1a llo!) S4 71 Lovola •S S6 M1uoon V•eto S4 57 49 61 Seddlfback 75 60 Colt• Mt\e 10 •O Maler Oe1 80 6S Servne 61 LO\ AllOS IOI) S1 49 Oceen \loew SO 60 Foolnlil 68 46 Kennedv 56 C.eroen Grove S9 S8 C v11reu SS S4 San111 Monica SS S2 Fountoln \lallev 62 SS SJ 6 t Foo1n111 oa 11 Woodbrlage' 60 S1 SA 11a11ev 40 44 St 8ern11ra 11 Pomor>a 7S 37 Comolon 36 SJ Saddlebeck • ~ SS COSIO Mt\4 • SJ S.ddlebeClo.' 6S 6' Hin BHcn 69 62 Co"11 Mna S1 SJ L1guna Beacn• SS 4' E••encla' •9 SO SP•rk~ INev I •1 1S Laguna Hill\ SS 6S WOOdbrl09e' S8 44 S9 SO un1ven11v• •9 SO Not HarbOr' 64 ~ NP! Hart>or '6 S4 El Modena 61 E l Toro SS 74 Oranoe SS 44 Cor dtl Mar' 41 18 Un1ver\llV' 67 Corona dtl Mar• SO Capo Vallev S9 60 P1nadono 47 S8 Np1 Hart>or• S9 S4 &8 49 6S JO LB W1l\On !id 11 Muir • 15 •1 E \lane.la' S9 • 1 Wooat>naoe· S9 We\tmin\ler • SJ S4 Ocean view• 65 6S Seddlfbect. • 13 89 Costa MeH• SO OcH ll V>ew' S1 59 Marina· •1 Hin Be•c"' •l IS We\lm•nster' 49 65 Laguna BHcn· 19 S4 F4-WOO<lt>rlOQe• F 4-S.ddlet>aClo' F6-el E'tenc111• Fl-NPI Hart>or' FlJ-Unlve"llV. Fl$--a1 Cor ae1 Mar' o1 Ftn V111ev· ol 61 Edllon• o7 F6-Unlveflltv• 52 MATIN' ll 73 Hin B .. cn• 11 Wfl\lmonller• S4 38 Ocean \llew· S1 FJ-CQ<Olle def Mar• SO F 13-111 NPI Hort>or• F6-at Ocean View• F6-al Marina· F8-al Hin Beach' 1'8-Wtstmln,ler• F 13-Founlaon Vallev' F 13-al Edison' F 1$--al Marine• F 1$--Hln Beecn• HUNTINGTON BCH (T-10, 2·4) ST Caoo 111111ev 70 60 Compton 52 SO Mlttokan 60 S8 W1t\I Torronce S6 SI Et Mooena S1 69 Edo\On 68 SI Blair 60 64 SA \lalleV 57 SO L 8 Wol\Ol'l 42 30 G1ena111t sa SI Molloken 61 •I Marino· 40 S4 we,1m1n\ler • 5 I 43 Edo\on• 47 J9 Ocean View• ol SJ Fin llallev' 7J S9 Marine• 60 F .-ar We\lmon\ler • FI-Edison• F 13--0cean \loew· F 1S-at Fin ll1111tv• MARINA no-11, 1-•1 JS M1n1on 11,.o0 S4 S6 t1v1nt 1011 SO 43 La.,ewooo tot/ 41 J1 S• Jotton 39 SJ Santo vner toll SI l7 Santa Mario 57 SS Moreno Valltv •I lS FOO'""' 67 6S Bol\a Grande •o SO Dor Lu110 l I •1 Savanna S8 48 Oana H•lll H 18 Oranor SO •• E \lenc·a 61 37 Sonor11 ls AO Hin Beac .,. 11 49 Fir Ila •t v• S9 •I Ocean \11ew· 11 54 Wes•m•n\ter • •9 18 Edo\On' S2 60 "'" BHCf\' 59 F 6-Fou.,ta n 11 .. 1 ev' Fl-Ocea" 11 ,..,. F 1)-at Wf\•mon\!er· F 1$--Ed•son• OCEAN lllEW ( 11·3, 6·0) 49 Mlulon 1111110 •9 S1 ComPIO'I S4 SO CePO V•ti.v S4 SO Founta in llalle v •9 61 LA Banning 47 73 LB Poly 60 n Oomlnouei 63 S2 Maler D•• S7 13 lnotewooa o? .,. E IPa\OROt>lts •2 IOI Cenvon ICCI 12 67 R1gne!I• •7 73 Lakewood S4 69 LB Potv 71 6S Ftn Velltv' M S7 Edoson· SO JI Marine• 41 61 Hin Buen· 19 &S W!t\!mon\fer • 58 SO Fin llallev• 18 F6-Ed•son• F8-111 Marona· F 1J a• Hin Beecn• Fl S-We\lmon\ler • WESTMINSTER ll· 14, 0·6) 59 Bo1•a Grande 7J SJ Cldni1 Holl\ 18 11 MdgnQ11e 3T A8 Saaateoac • 59 69 SA \11111ev SS 6J P4t •1ca SS 60 '>an Marco' 10 S6 Ml Carme11sD1 6S SO L.akewood 80 S 1 '>11oa1e1>acl\. IS SS La Ou1r11a 6J SJ E O•\Or>' S9 Sl Hin Beac"' S4 S• F1n v.,11e•' 75 49 Marona• S4 S8 Ouan Voew· 6S S4 E d•\on· 71 F& Ht" Bt>ac,,· r 8 at l'!n Vo'"•' F 13-Marona' F 1$--at Ocran \11ew· Santa Anl1a SUNDAY'S RE SUL TS O hl Oi " dev lfloroueN>red meeting) FIRST RACE & luroOl>Qs F em11v Fo• OlhOunve 10 80 9 00 4 00 COO<lbveJ V IE\tr&dlll 820 3to Arflf1cer I H11wle111 2 80 Al'o raced Upoer Ru11.,11. Henasome Package S~c:l Soy MenderH, CrY\ltl Star One Eved Romeo A11eQed Power WO•IO A..,1rr T rntl' I 10 I S SECOND RACE 6 I 1 lurtonos L•gnt w m IOl)m:"oue1 IS 80 6 60 410 Cne 1p,,,c11v1 • 40 l 70 E •uDere nl Devol Mcllf!•Out'I 6 60 Al\O •aced A·r P0<t.e1 Hon10 Engetnarl Hano•e• e' r1v1no 1r11nman Tome I IS 7 S S2 DAILY DOUBLE S II oa1d \ 187.70 THIRD AACE & I 7 lurlono\ R•\•OO Cnu,,.. Dom "Oul'll 6l 80 2110 I 70 lntantrvma n \la lel'IZJl'llll 1 JO 4 •O Polt\lont \un 'Ha""'"V S 80 Al\O rat~O S1.sll C~11\mn In HOu\I Ku no Mr '>"ns&1or,na1 Ooublc Otl'flCll Ttmt I 17 I ~ FOURTH RACE I I I~ m•IH Celtic 11er11ure •Ponca, J 60 • 60 J to Oogga Dee l\1111ero1,,e1h • l 80 J 00 Nonno I DelanouHave 1 4 20 Also ra<ed Aot>er\k v F abulou\ Mem orv Hall Co1umt>u\ Tea T1uter Eterno Tome I •2 1 ~ f<lf<TH RACE. 6 I I 11or1ong, l uCIP.v 8 uccnee1 tV1nz•Jla 1 ~ 00 3 to 310 V11a11 40hvareJI 11 00 17 60 Midtord IDom,nguPll 9 90 Al\O raced Doria ' Detognt Stluttle Jet Mucn F •ne Gold Ac11aem1c-Touon E nvov Oue ntum LUP 1<01~11~11 Ot>\er•atorv Hiii Mu~dl Tomi! I U 3) SJ EXACT A IA I 1 u111d \296 SO SIXTH RAC:IE. Ont mol411 A.mer1c1n Stndrd • Pncv • 60 S 70 l to My Htl)llOnv IMCHaroue 4 60 3 40 Lord Prot11<tor (Toro) S 20 Al'o raced renneuet Qote B11t\I ()I eoin. Par Iv Leeder, !>om .. 1n1nowonoerlul Time I JS 3 S SIVIENTH It.ACE. I I 4 mite\ Swoon <Snoem•k•ri f 00 S 10 • 60 lvron ILOtOv•) II 60 11 60 Tet>uk (M<Cerron) I 00 Al\O rettd Chamolon Piiot Kev11e .Allltd Command•' 8tn R~med Doubi. Strenotn Sotll<ll' Promontor' Wooat•lld Wtv f1me 2 01 t ) U IEXACTA 14·61 O••CI \lk SO llGHTH ltACi, I I • mlltt\ Prec1,1on1,1 <M<:Ce rronl 410 7 IO Greonton lsnotmelo.er) l .0 Gait Oen< ff t Ptnc•v> , 10 110 210 Al\O '•<tO H11IO F0tk\ Time 100 I } h urr1m1 Stew IS IEXACTA ()·41 ll•ld o•oo 0 11'1(1( MJt IS l 4 l • i i Pfld t26 •n to wllh 10 w1nn1110 flOt•l '"• f'IO<tM) '1 PICIC; StX <llfl,Olation POOi Ot·O s427 to w11n 615 winning 11c1t,ttl tllvt "Of'Slltl NINl'H •ACI I I 16 m11t11 Oecon1ro1 I Ptc1ro1•I 13 IO •to • 60 ltillfll On lttd IOelel'IOuutvt I ) 60 190 Item T•o (Lotovel 3 '° Al.O rtcH P\;IMlt lttcord C•t(h M.tt9!' Cew•ton llldl•n Tr•ll I..• C•d tote! l11ter Uo ltoval Trouotr Tlmt I 4.1 4 S U I ltAC'TA. U SI 11110 \IJt 00 Alltnatnce SI~- F I $--a l E \lencle • ESTANCIA 10·1. 1-lJ 93 Metoclvland •6 SS Cnoaw1c11. S3 87 Warran SI 69 Cor ael Mor 57 I I LOl AmlllOl 46 S1 Trov 11 41 Laoune Hiii\ AO 13 Foo1n111 61 SS Saddlet>ack ~ 68 \/Ille Park 3S S 1 Mater Del S6 68 Marine 44 S8 La9unt Hiii' SI 51 Unovtflllv' • t 41 Cor del Mar' .0 49 NP! Hart>or• 6 I 49 Laguna Bch' .,. 6J Saddltbac.k • 61 19 Woodbrldoe· 61 S9 Costa /llleH' •1 o9 Un1vtfl11v· S6 40 Cor del Mar' 39 F4-el NPI Harl>Or• F6-Leouna Beac11· F8-Seddle1>ack • F 13-111 WOOdDroc:lge' F 15-<olla Ml!\a• WOODBRIDGE (4·12, 1·11 49 Loera S. •7 Cn1no 36 S7 Fullerton SS 40 \1111a Par~ 4 oJ Rancho A1am 71 Sl Lo Hal><a 66 o Pec1t1co SI 60 La ouna Beacn· 18 SJ Sa oalet>•ck • 6T S8 Cos la Me\e' 6S 43 Cor del Mer• SS 10 Unovtrs11v· ~ 61 E\1anc1a· 79 48 Not Heroor· 11 49 Laouno Beocn• 41 55 Saddlet>ack • o9 F4-01 Co"a Me\.,. F6--Co•Ol'la oe1 Mar• F8-a1 Unover\llY' F 13-E 11anc1e• F 1$--ol NPI Hart>or' UNIVERSITY l· IS, O·tl SS Arte\le S6 •I Cypreu S8 62 Don Lu110 U 61 Corona S7 •I We\lern ~ 60 Cor ael Mar 97 61 Cenvon n 64 L 0\ Amigo\ SI S6 ir""'4! se 41 E11anc10• 51 49 NP! HarDOr' 7 I 40 Cor dtl Mt r' ~ 49 C 011 • Mua • SO S4 WOOdl>!'ldge' 10 67 Lagun• e .. cn• 78 62 Sa oa1e1>ack • 7 • SO Ella ncle' 69 41 NPI Hert>or• 61 F,..._.l Cor Gel Mer• F6-el Co"e MtH' Fl-Wooat>r•dge• F 13-et Laguna Ben• F 1 S-e t Saddlebac1.- SADDLE BACK 113-7, •·ll S9 Wellm•1>\ler d 4 S M1u 1on v '''° S6 11 Botsa Grande 49 Tl Norco 66 67 C1nvon SI 19 El Toro 69 JS CoS!a Me\e 61 S4 E SI anc1a SS SI £1 Modena 61 IS Westmtnlttr SI 61 Foo1hlll 7• S4 COS!• Mesa. SJ 61 Woo<H>t ldOt' SJ 6S Laguna 8eacn• 48 68 NDI. Hart>Or. 87 61 Es1anc111• 63 4S Corona Gel Mar• •I 14 u r11ve"1IY' 6? 8J Coste Mesa• 65 69 WOO<lt>rodge • SS F4-at L•oune 8ch• F6-Not Hart>or' F 13-al Cor def Mer• Fl$--Unlver•lfv• ~;. -· Dreg r1clnv NHRA WINTERNATIONALS tal Pomona) Top Fue• Sem11tna1 Rouno -Joe Ama10. O•a Fo•ge Pe , S 61 \Kon<I\ 111 H8 76 mP" def Don Carll!\ Ocala. F la • & O? at 16S 7S m Pn, Garv Drmst>v, RoHvllle, Calll S SI al 2ST 28 mPn aet Larrv Minor. Sari Jee onto C alol 1 36 at 127 79 mPh F•nal\ Amato SSS a1 261 17 mon def Ormst>v 6 6A al 154 l8 moh F'uMy Car Sem1hne1 Round -Oa•e Pulde Granade Holl\ 13 19 al 43 9S mpn df't Ed McCulloch Sanger toul. Al Seor1n1 S E1nton. Mau S 19 111 2SJ.09 mpn oet Rick John\on For I Worin, Toes S 92 al 2•9 S8 mpn Fooel\ ~groni, S II al 11196 mo'I o•I Pu1<1e 6 07 al 2J3 S7 mpn Pro Stoc~ ~m.•.nal Round -8 01> C.11aaen. WnotPlana 1na 1 59 a • 171 SS tnPn 04!'f Ktn Donaero Balt>oa ISiand, 1 72 al IT6 40 mPI\, Werre., Jonnson, Duluth, Ge • 113 at 179 28 mph del Butch Leef Black· h~k Onoo foul Fine!\ Glidden 7 S8 at 184 04 d"' JOM\on 7 /1 e I 179 :>I mon ~ F111a11 Too Alrohol Or agSfpr -Dave Ha11e 8ellllower, 12 17 at 64 64 def 8111 Bernev. Rosev1llt C1111f, fou1 Top AICohOI Funnv c.,r Brao AllOt"on Covone 6 SS "' 119 19 mpn oef Sr1tve McGee L••t CXwego Ore II 9S 111 7S 71 mpn Rem111n1no •0011\man cateoor1f\ wert to oe comoierea 1oc1ov Water Polo AU$TltALIAN GAMES (.' Ml4beul'llt) I ttm ruulll I Au,lr•ll• ? Unlltd !>tato J Chin• 4 Ntw ZtalenO GOid Medel Aulfrt lla t , Unli.cl Slllte' 6 S<ert llv Oll•rttr\ Unlled Stele\ 1 O ? l-t Au\trall• 2 • 1 2-9 U S w;or1no -IC omt>efl 1, P C1m~1 I J Camoo.tt I, Evan\ I Sof(er 1 lronu ~ Ctllfte IS, Ntw l.Nltnd I WMhftct "'-"WcftOftt l'OOT'ULL ,..._..,.....,..LHeue N0tANAP0LIS COi.. T$ t l'M<I TQn\ Lovet •u1"1n1 "''d coecll all<I line 'Ot cll ST l OVIS C.Al'OINALS-Sloneo Jim Hanll•n l\teci co.ell. lo t two vH r con fft (I twtenl lon A~MO to tttm\ .... 1111 * 81>stoc ,.,.fd •"0 Kur• A...,men . I "toeO« on • """ of °"' "er con ''•<'' HOCICSY N•tleMf Ht<lrr+' U.tw WINNIPEO JrTS Tradta Morr1, lull.Owl(ll ltfl wino 10 H'le 8<KIO<I lr1.11n' for Jim Iii roof\! .,,,,. Extra special victory That's McCarron's view of his win aboard Pr-eclslontst .\RC'M)JA (AP) -C hns Mt{' t• ron haf> won man y imporuint race 11 Santi.I Anita. but he stud ht!> latest vKtory tthoard Prccis1oni st was extni spcl'lal. "Tht'i t'i the must prcst1g1ou!> rat'c: l°H' eH'r won here," the JOCkC) ~1d Sunday af\er Prcc1s1on1st captured the $324,300 Charle H. Strub Sta~e~ for 4-)'l'llr-olds at Sanµi Anita, giving the colt a sweep of the threc-ract Struh Series. ··1t's ntl'C to win a Cirade I raet'. anyt1ml'. but this 1s especially ntCC bet·au!>l' I've never won the Strub before." added MrCarroh. who topped the nation's Jockeys in earn- ings with over S 12 m1lhon 1n purse~ lron1cally, McCarron and a lot of others 1hought Prec1st0nist had fin - ished second a taut stretch battle with ( 1rl·inton. .. \<'tuall). I thought Shoe (8111 '-;hocm;iker aboard Grein ton) had tl1c won the race in the last jump," said MrCarron. "When we got off our ho~cs. I went over and congratulated him. He accepted the congratula- tions. so I'm sure he had thought ht had won too." Shoemaker said. "I thought I won. hut looking at the photo. I see he sm me in the last head bob." The photo of the fini sh showed that Precis1on1st had nipped Grclnton b~ a nose. with Gate Danca third b> another half-length The other two horse~ 1n the 11·•· m1k race. Halo Folks and Tsunami Slew. finished far behind. with Halo f-olks 16 lcngths back of Gate Dancer · and Tsunami Slew another seven hchtnd. Sent ofT the wngcnng favorite by th1.· Santa Anita crowd of 5 I .63R, Prec1s1on1'it p:11d $4.20. $2.80 and S.2.10. Gmnton returned $3.60 and S.2 10 and the 'ihow pa)ofT on Gate Danrer was $2.10. The '1ctory put Prcc1s1onist in some exalted racing company Onl) four other hor~s -Round Table (IYS) Hillsdale (1959). Ancient Title ( 1974). Spectacular Bid ( 19801 -pre' 1ouSI> had swept the Struh 'iencs for 4-} car-old\ Prcc1<,1un1st. who rnmed I 25 pounds. was clocked in .2.00 1-5 C1rt·1n1on carr11:d C'tgh1 pounds less. while I C>IS4 Preaknl'!>!. winner Gate Dancer, who had Lal)i1 Pinca) Jr aboard for the \truh. rnmed h1gh- \.\oe1ght of 1.26 ··This was as game a race as he'<; 1.•\ er run." said Mccarron. who also. ro<lc the colt to v1rtonc!I in the fir'>t • t~o leg\ of the .Strub Series. the MJllhu ~takes and the '>an Fernando ~take'> "He wa\ challenged b) other hones and maintained his cool and went on and won Hl· u«"d to stop when other horses ran w11h . him This horse alwa~s ama1es me " Warriors finally get win Golden State was c losing in on NBA record By Tbe Associated Press 'Winning. a 101 of p<:ople \a~. 1'\ rnn1ag1ou<1. So 15 lo!>ing Ask thl' plagued (ioldcn State Wamor!i "Wl•'rc not as bad 3'> our record," \aid Pun·l'i \hon. tht• lop pla~cr on the Natrona I Basketball A'lsoc1a11on·, worst team. "We JU!.t can't \ecrn to win .. ( 1ning into the wed.end. the War· fllll '>were wtnlc\'\ 1n I 985. 0-for-15. f hq had loc;t 16 straight gamC\ mcr<.1 11. and were eight shon or tht• league rl.'cord r,ct hy the d1lap1da1ed Cleveland C a11allcrs over the cour\C of 1 wo seasonc; And. for the moment. the Warrior~ were one loss shy of matching the team mark !>Ct 20 year~ ago. That wa' what the Wamor were thinking ;Jbout entcnng a Saturday night game at h9mc ag11inst the New York Kn1cks. "Nohod)' wanted to he rc- mt·mbcrcd for tying th<.• record for number of losses." Shon c;md, "We didn't want 10 be rcmemhercd for ~ometh1ng like that."· Shorfr, ft•ars of going into the Golden State books with "Mor,1 Consecutive Lo!>SC'i, 20 .. did not matcnali1c. Thl· Warriors beat th1• Knick'I I 14.QS. "At lca~t the mon~ey's off our backs now," he said. "We didn't want to be remembered for tying the club record. ~o everybody had 1t on their mind coming 1n." Sooner or later. th<' streak wa'i bound to end. l\ssummg that on an) given :1turda) night any NB•\ team can heat unothcr, ond if that mitlrc~ any team's chances of w1nn1nJ an) pme s~so. the odds on 3 team losing 17 c;1ra1ght game\ would be 121.072- to· I 'o. the Warriors beet the odd\ Son nf "f'wn thing' come 10 my mind." 0olden tote roach John Bach ~·d aftC'r v.atch1n1 his team tmpro"e 10 11 • H thtHCMOn. "f-fow fast those 16 lo!i~'i came and thr d1sbcliev1na that II could go on "Whl"n V.(' jOI to four or fivC', ~<' rnuldn't,btl1cH• 1t would go 10 JO," h<' );lid ".\ndv.h\·nttgot to 10 ·· ... ' Ottnge Coat OAILY PILOT~.~ J COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN8ACTION9, • Higb.-tech _pacem·akers should hit market in about 3years By LEE SIEGEL ,., ........ ,..., MONTEREY Pacemaker5 so"'.'cday will diagnose and stop a vanct) of irrc,ular heanbeats and perhap5 even dispense drugs, saving t~e lives of thousands of people who die because existing devices cannot correct rapid or uncontrolled heart rates, a researcher says. One of the new. high-technology p~cemakers should be available for widespread use wathin two or three ¥ears. said Dr. Dou1das P. Z1oes. l - -- Under protection adding, "We're at a Sla$C where ah of th as 1s highly anvcst1gat1onal." L1pes, who directs cardiovascular research at the Indiana U niversity School of Mcdicane. displayed one of the experimental pacemakers Mon- day at an Am erican Heart Associa- tion forum for science writers. U p to 400.000 Amencans die each year because of irregular heart beats. Zipes said. But only about 10 percent of those deaths arc caused by the type of slow heanbeat that can be cor- .. _ _) Motorola'• S2-blt mlcroproceaaor wa• amonl(h the fint .emlconductor chJpa to be re•l•tered wltli the U.S. Copy-rUht Office in Wuhln.ton under the new .. Seml- conclactor Chip Protection Act.•• The reil•tratlon protect• chi{> mailer• aiainat unauthorized reproduction of the deaacn for 10 year• and allow• damaie• of up to &350.000. MUTUAL F UNOS . - f • rccted b) pacemakers that were developed 25 years ago and arc w14ely used. He said most of the remaanin& deaths are caused b) rapid heanbcat. called tachycardia. or by uncon- trolled. irregular heart contracuons known as fibrillation. Pacemakers are battery-operated devices implanted under the skan of the chest whale the patient is under local anesthcuc. A wire connected to the hean sends a shock to restore a lethal!} slow heanbeat back to nor- mal. Existing models cannot corrC'C t rapid heanbeats or fibnllation. Scien- tists so far have been unable to find a drug that can rehabl}' prevent such ailments in all the patients at risk of death. and "surgery has been effecu ve for very small groups of patients," Ztpes said. In the 1970s. Michel Mirowsk1 at Johns Hopkins University developed an implantable dn 1cc that would shock the heart to stop fibnllauon. But Zipes said the device was rather large. weighing about I 0 ounces. So. with funding from the Krannen Institute of Card1olog) in Jn- daanapohs and Medtronic. a Min· neapolis pacemaker manufacturer, Zapes deve loped the three-ounce device. In the past 18 months. 1t has been used experimentally an 19 elderly patie nts whose clogged anen- es make them prone to irregular heart rhythms. The e'pcnmental pacemaker. tested w11h approval from the Food and Drug l\dmin1stration. can dis- 11ngu1sh betv.een slov. and rapid heartbeats -many patients suffer both -then apply the appropnate shock to restore a normal heart rate. For rapid heartbeats. at acts much hlct the electric paddles applied to the chest of patients brought to emeri- ency rooms. One of the 19 patients died after a }ear wath the pacemaker. but Z1pes said It was 1mposs1ble to tell 1f 1he device workt-d properl} or fatal!~ accelerated the heartbeat T heexpcnmental pacemaker Zapes developed 1s implanted under the skin but outside the ribs.Just hke the type now on the market. For the average case of rapid heartbeat. the patient feels a shock much like a large hiccup. If the hean fails to respond. Z1pes said the de' ice transmits a larger shock. which feel5 hke a bloY. to the chest. By December. another generation of pacemaker. able to detect and stop fibrillation. wall be read} for testing. Z1pes said. Future models may incorporate a drug dispenser that wall automaucall} release a dose of hean drug to aid in correcting irregular heanbeat!>. he added. Z1pes' pacemaker costs about S 15.000 for the device. including doctor and hospital charges -about $3.000 more than current models. But he said even the more expensive future models will be cost-effective because the) will allow patients to leave the hospnal 1n about five da)s. an stead of remaining in mtensnc care for v.ci:ks. Lawless Co. has new contract The Lawless Company ha announced that the) Y.ould be handling the marketing and adven1s1ng of"Thc Pav1hon at Lantern Ba) ... The architectural ti rm of Brown Leary designed the 49.86.:! ~uarc-foot net leasable commercial/retail shopping cenu.·r which 1s due to open June. 19~5 Architecture of the center 1s reminiscent ofturn-of-the-centuf) dance pa' 1hon!> which ha' e dotted the New England sealoast an the past. Artel chief resigns to form non-competing firm WORC ESTLR. Mass. -\rtd Comrnun1ca 11on' Corp. announn:d late last ''l·cl.. that Richard A. C:crn'. ch:urman nf the board of director~. has res1gnl·d a\Chairman of the board and a'i an a,·11vc employee of the compan) rn order to \tart a non· .... competing bu'l10l'S!>. Ccrn'r rl·ma1n .. a director ol the com pan) and" 111 provide rnnsulting \Cf\ ll'eS" in thl· future radcusz ~ 11kov.1c1. prcs1dl•n1 ofthl' mm pan) and l'hicf eACC'UllH' oflicl·r 'ilOCC .\pnl. \\ 111 conunul' 1n those l·apac1· tics and has been eln tl'd rh;urman of the board ( l'rn~ ... ml. "I ha\\: l'\l'f} lon· ficknce thot o\ncl will cont1nul' to prosper under thl' same ablr ll·ader- ~h1p 1ha1 1 .id has pro' 1dl·d O\l'r thl· la'' ~ l'3r and I am pka'>cd to tx· able 10 leaH· thl' rnmpan~ 1n \Ul'h <.J pahk hand" .. CcrO\ .rn<l \.\ 1tl..11\\lll arl· c:o- lou ndl·i-<i ol .\ rtd and l'3l h O\\ n' apprm1matl'I~ 22 rx·rll·nt ut \rtcr .. out~tand1ng common .,tl)("I... Foundl·d in I 9M I. .\rtcl < om- mun1ca11um <. urp. "a leading m.tnu· tacturl'r uf titx·r o plll '' '\tl'ln' lor '1dco. audio and datJ transm1\\1on Thl' l"ll01pa0\ ·, .. ~Stl'nl\ ..irl' u\nl in ( .\()( -\MC,.\[ applKalHln!I. pnKl'!>~ control nwn11onng. m1htar~ l"Onl· mand lOntrol rommun1cat1on,. tor- porate tl'll·rnnferem1ng and \atl'll1tl' l'anh station dmnbut1on UPs AND DowNs NEW YORK (AP) -The lollow1no "'' shows lhe 01ter 1ne · Counter stocks anc:t warrants lhal have oone up lhe moSI anc:I Clown lh4t mosl basec:t on r>ercenl of change tor Fr 1c:tav No seCl.l(illti trading below \1 or 1000 sneres are lntluc1ec:t Ne• and percentage chan~' are 111e difference belw~n lhe PrtviOus clos•OQ bid once anc:I Fr1c:t11v's lest b1c:I Pr•ce Name GrnwPh HaritEn Syn~r wllS Wn(,aJS ~risP s cTao r0dl11v SFlmE 11 GnSv wlB ~vSu A UPS Las I Cho n + ·! Ml• t12>~ J •• + '• 3 • '• I 1 J + 1 111 t }!I 14 • .. 1•. UPPCl!O 8 Up 00 Uo SO UP 4 ~ ~~ 111 UP 00 UP 00 Uo 18 8 uo 118 OvER THE CouNTER Don McCrlnimori la new eoftware develop1nentd.lreetoratPohlt4 Doo McCrlmmoe ha~ ~n selected director of software development for Irvine-based Polot 4 r>11a Corp, with rcsponiibility for developmrnt o( all future software proJCCtS and for enhancement. maintenaftCC and support of current products. Mc('nmmon bnn.p 16 years of cxpenence in ~ms software and data base management svstems to his new post. . ~ . Leo V. Benlle11 ha~ been appointed vice presadent of product 1Muranceat AST Researd, lac .• ofll"1nc. a manufacturcrofcomputeudd-on KCeSIOntS. Leauhcu had ~en suvanaAST asd1f'CC'lorofquahty prosram1. In bis new pol\. he wall in\ure product standards b) directana activities of quality enafoetrina McCRIMMON BEAULIEU 01tEEFE and quaht~ control groups. which govern inside and out11de standards. Another group to be established, product assurance. will work with customCf' representatives 10 assure that products meet user needs. • • • C. Jay Allen has b«n appointed v1~ president of enjinttnna for Saffell A McAdam, lnc, of In inc. a general contractor spcc1aliz1ng in construction of commercial. industrial. medical and financial facaliues. Allen joins Saffell It McAdam from S.m1ung CoHtractloa Co., based in Seoul. Korea. In his new post. he"' 111 be respon\1ble for pre-construction activities. Allen serves on the ad' 1so11 board of the -\rch1tecture Cenafacauon Protram at UC Irvine and has taughts c1\il l'ng1ncenng courses at Cal State Fullcnon and Cal State Lon.a Beach. • • • Laguna '\1guel resident Tlmo~y O'lteefe has JOIOCd PCM/J .... lewa American ot El Toro as chief accountant, with pnmary responsibility for homeoy.ner''> assoc1a11on accounts. O'KOC'fe comes to PCM/Johnsto wn from Dllllng.bam Ticket Co. of Los Angeles. PCM/Johnstown 1s a wholly-owned subs1d1al) of Johnstown American Compu.les, a pubhcl) owned real estate sen aces organ11at1on ~adquartered in Atlanta. Ga. • • • Cathryn Tennille of the Newport Beach office of Georse Elkia1 Co. and mother of entertainer Toni TeulUe clo~d the largest recorded sale of res1dent1al propert) 1n Newport Beach on New Year's Eve, The $S.2 million ~le of the landmark Harbor Island mansion known as .. The lighthouse" qualified Mr'\. Tennille for a gold key award. Tennille. in her fouttb year with the firm. ha'i been a full-time real estate agent in Newport sinCt' 1970 and spcc1alill''> an v.aterfront propen) he was honored last }C&T fl top co- producn 1n the Newport Beach office. She 1s acuve an the Newport Hart»or Junior League, the Newport Beads Hlstorlu.I Society and the CoacU for Creative Alternatives. v.h1ch v.orks wnh )Oungdrugabusers. John MacNab of \.iacNab Realt' repn:~nted the bu)ers in the real estate transaction. The nme- bcdroom. 11 ·~l'ar-old estate 1s one of 36 homesconstruc\cd on Newport's most C\Clus1\e pn,ate island. • • • Chuck Conner has been promoted to vice prcs1d~nt of construction llpcra11on-; for Kitchell Contractors of Newpon Beach. Conner has been with t-.11chdl '>•nee I %6. most recent I) as Washangton dastnct manager. He bongs TENNILLE CONNER FICCADENTI CROWHURST \5 \l'ars nl lonstrut t1on e\pertence to his ne" post 1nclud1ng v.orl.. 1n health <.·arl· hosp11Jl1t~ edulal1on and rt.'ta1l projects. • • • Hun11ng1on lkarh rl'Stdl·nt Mary Crowburst ha~ been promoted to \JCt' prl''1dcn1 and rl·gmnJI operation') ~upen 1<tor of the operation\ admm1strat1on dl'PJrtnll'nl lorCit) National Bank, Y.hll.h LS based 1n ee ... erh Hill In ~r O("A poq t ro''hur\I "''" hdp ll\l'N .. 'e ope~11om 1n I~ rl·g1onal otlices She ha' tx·l'n \.\Ith< II\ .\iat111nal Ba ni.. 'inn· JQ8~ • • • Seb. J. f'iccadeoti. J '>lruttur::tl eng1nel'r. has been named director of thl' 'l'"' port lkJch ofli,l' 1ll Robert Enclekirk ConsaltU.1 Struetual Ea1U.een. lnr I k Lonw' tn Rohl•rt I ngld..1rl.. from a post as branch manager ofVSL Corp. 1n \,rnt..i \n,1 In h" nl'\' pml. FKcadrn11 is supen'lsang St''eral prOJC<'ts. 1ndud1ng lhl· Four St!asons Hotel under construction at Nev. port Center and thl' f1\l'-ll'\l'I \\ arm·r ( l'nta Pal1a parl..1ng structure an Woodland Hills • • • William W. Lasseuer JI ha., been namt>d regional manager of office prepcrtl\'!> mllrke11ng tor \),luthern Cahtorn1a and Southwest regions of Coldwell Banker Commercial Real Estate Services. Y.1th respons1b1ht) for lOMd1nat1ng the dlon'i of -.ale' and lea<;1ng specialists in 13 offices throughout Orang,· I o' \ngt'ln Rl\l'rsadc ~crn and Ventura counues II 12 1J 14 15 l' 18 19 n 73 n '16 I 1 J Sat'ar.s j • lvrgT" ] '. a1 (pt ) .. lf'trvsn 2 .,. Tuc~Or S•· Rf>l"m l •• •OL09 6 Laure 1 MartzM 7 F Nl~a •• CM vn 6 • Am COi 10'• CardT w• P• Hadson '1 • MARC ir; St11IGl'l"e DOWNS Name La,1 Afdv \ T,.,.,,,I \ .... ar• "" 7~ 1 15'4 1Hlll>c!Vf\ ll'e 12 H«"99 ,-, S H.,...CIF n .. n. ~,, 19 ... ,. .. ._ .... 10 • 10 ' ....... 14 14 " H•Ot IC U'• ll1 IMSIM , .. , .. 15( 12 • ., ... ·-~ II o 11-'•"" I l It I • "'"'" 4 • '1 l ) ' • , t S· 16 . . • 7 16 I I' I . • • t 1 t . t 7"a ... + • t 1 • + . Ch~ -.. UD ". • Tecv11e ~~ -1 lP UD IS 8 s Wtelf.:Jn , uo IS • t g•w ~~ •• UD 'P Odnl wt . UD l 0 ndla ~ ~ 1 l UP 149 Lfidle ~ p 1 UP 14 ~ l~ N nvCt UP 14 T?»'IAil 4 • 181 UP l4j--a g I Sv J : • uo ill lfNuc 4 lf uo 14 MtnrEn ; . , UD IS bCom ·~ I .. Uo ll I' arfl• 2 13-16 -S-16 Uo NV tsl J : • UP lt ProlCOI • lJ! uo ~!\CO 4~ , ll ooenol ~~ ~ d~Om ~ 'i Pu Md CA ·n , g:: S2 ' d AmLt!I J,. g l 16 ~K•S V 1~~ • :~ "'' .. ) •Of'tCO -1. ·-·-- • On th e ----~-=--------~-----..~ ..... ---.. ............. _ , • . f .. I 10111rs CLOSllC Pmm NEW VORIC (AP) F~1, y 4 ,, Adv~nceo 0¥~~ otel lu uu ~tw l\101\i Ntw low• AM£X LEADERS NEW YOltK !AP) -S.ln, ~ orlc• •nd net cl\e of tht TO mo1 ac vt Amtrl~n Stock r.'cht luue,, tr 1"19 natlonallv 11 more '] . AM Intl '"" -1 OomePtrl ~f 2\lt _,J~ W•noLabB ~· 2~ + IZ Htl r , 1'\ Gu~~en 11 • 1 ~ + ~ Am~hl , '• " herm , I k,lc herm • 1 e~1~~ 1.f: n 1 ~ NASDAQ SUMMA ~\ GoLo Quo TES MrTALs QuoTEs That's an apt description of both business and business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of wI:iere companies are gotn~ and which people are hel~lng them get there.just watch Credit Line' -every aay In the Business sectlOn of your new -1'11111 ~­• .. LOOK . OUT FOR THIS KILLER. It's armed and dan- .gerous. And it's ready to strike again. Already it's taken more I ives and caused more destruction than any that's gone before. The killer is fire. Last year alone, it destroyed an esti- mated 3 Qlillion acres of land. Please, arrest t.his killer before it destroys more. Remember, only you can prevent forest fires. 6 4 2 • 5 6· 7· 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F E D aALTZM,.._ftON 8llm4 • nm.u. ftlTCUff CHAN L 427 E. 17th St eo.ta Meu 6'6-9371 .. Telephone Service: Monday-Friday 8:00 A.M.·5:30 P.M . Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturda y Sunday Thurs. Fri. Fri. ( .11111·c·llutio11 ... u11d 1·orrt•l'ti1111 -. Illa \ lw 11rndc· 1111 -.ilrtlt'1.lt-adlint·!I> "" 16h11\ .~. Plt•lht' a .. k for a 1·il11c·t'lla t1n11 numhc•r "h .. 11 1·111.n·llinJ! ~our tul. ERROR : DEADLINE: . - COLDWCLl. BAM~C?R ~; ......... ........ ------~t vtew. 5BR. snaAll ~ eq fl pp 4t4.()033 58R, Sbe, fMI rm. bonue •..-t ..... llit rm. pool Uta.000 i•-•-~"""'!'~-- Owner wtll '*" ftnenoe •9'.D• LA VERA BURNS 38' 2941 & 28r 2k 4 cer lM-1• gw. 7 Y' *· 1 blc to bdl 1341< dn to .-um ioer. lllflllllll •ll•T SUCCESS RE. '50-1711 ,.._ l0¥ely W•Cllf'I ioc.tlon Ent-1elnlng hOfM with l ... _______________ i flowtng ftoor pt.,, & eoptl- t Oreet W•tdift VALUE Aemod'I 4 ptOftt 2 lrpl. bMrN. ~ rm owe 2nd 3br ~ 12'5.toO Agt IS1~2IO OPEN SUN 1CM 1300 Sumea. lltlcated CU<b ~ 3 Bdrma. 2 ''bathe With 1p.clou. temlly room ocienlng to &erge pool end d.cll 13$0,000 Cell MARILYN Hill ~ '• . ~ ~ .. , UTIYCR I' I I' I I 3toO eq ft, AA 4ba, .,_ tiowe. vtlW. l405".000, 122.000 dOwf\ ..... , ... .. ... I .. .. Oilll DM.V fttl.OTIMonday, Februaty 4, 1985 Ud/M:mOd: s;;;c. kh. beth. ofc, rm edd, patio COV/de*t , bay wndw. Lie. 44&4&5. Si.w 5-47-8078 HOROSCOPE SYDNEY 0MARR A. B. ·- c. I o. I \ J NAME ____ _ CITY ___ _ Your own personal 3 line message will appear Thursday, February 14, 1985. This is a memorable way to remember your sweetheart, husband, wife, parents, grandparents, or friends. Your message will appear with the illustration of your choice. An ad like the one below will cost $12.00. Add1t1onol menage lines .:on be purchased for S 1 00. .~:: ' . . Jo..• After 25 Y<'llM, you art• sulJ my lovr and i.trt•nl(th Jan Print your message in the following blanks: ~ _I I Choose your 1llvstrotion· A l 81 (( 0( E( f ( ADDRESS STATE ZIP \ I G( H( PHONE _ 2 2 G. ·~~ • • • : I •• • ..... -• H. .. CJelom QphOI. wall •. celllngt, JUfnlture, boet1, RV'I 714/351·82" Riv Wla•tw Cltaalal Happy Valentine peolil Belboa Window Wbhlno 603 Balboa 81. 873-3135 Live wtiere you have *Spectacular aptl • 1 & 28r, 1 & 281 IYltH •Spaelou1 townhou ... •Fireplaces *Private balconlet or Garden ,patios WIYllTf •3 llohled tennis court• •2 Swimming pools •Streems & P<>fld• •Sorry. no pell *Furnishing• av ell WHY NOT CALL ..... , .. SUWlll YILUIE 15555 Huntlng1on Vlllege Lene, from San Diego Freeway, north of S..ch to McFadden. we.t on McFadden. Ocean vtew • Lrg 1 br w / veranda, kitchen. rafrtg. gar 1 Blk to bctl. seoo Imo Call Kathy 9e0-8e7 t PARI NEWPORT APARTMENTS IN NEWPORT BEACH A great place to live on the Upper Bay. Private clubhouse• & hHlth apu, 8 tennl• court1, 7 pools. clote to bullnnt. OC Airport. Fuhlon ltland, convenient 1hop1 on 91ght. Sing ... 1 & 2 Bdrm Apart· ment• & Townhou1H from 1720. (A1k about furnished apta, complete with TV, linen• & uten1111, maybe rented for 9h0ft term or longer) On Jam- bor" Rd. at San Joequln Hlll1 Rd . • 144-1100 ·~·· .. , R-.p FIT work'g Fem lhr 3 ·bdrm Irv condo w/eame. Non-1mkr, 1v111 now $350 mo + 1191 mo rent 786-9701 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACRC>al &5 Atlln prince 57~ 68 Windblown eo \"-r1ed 11 Englilh artlal John -12 Popler 130ne'ap.o 14~ 06 Mitt...-Sp. MPreeentmo 17 We>nl unlta DOWN 1 Wlnaton--, N.C. 2 Spenllh city 3 Melt~ 4 Algfltty 5 NoYa8cotla ClllM e ,,,.tum 7 Allege • Coml011&f 9 Pteyptirt 10 Pldled out 11 T..,._d'- 12 Of. perlOd 13 Vllley 22 , ec:llltlted 25 Uptoet 27 lndlclta OK 2t F f9ftCh city 30 Plc1ure 31 Arll 32 LooMwrep 33Crv9t~ )4 Venlda 35 LandlnQ 38 lteltan petrtot 31 -eystem 40 Ul\lreQuented 42~ 43 Ncwtt1 ol USA 45 NWT natl\le "'Command .. Grouci- 49 ~ 50 Cek•llY9f 51 Abendona s2ea-eoea 43 lmt* IONltlOfl 54£.nt~ 5t 8lign up st~ NeMpapet KIDS-EARN GREAT TRfS AND PRIZES! (114) 541-7058 12 Honda .000 ,._. • 1000 oe.o. °' ..... ...... , ~71 nda Tr 110. '7S ~ '500 Met Teco mw bit!• S2'00 ue ...... -------- THEOOORf ROBINS FORD • '.J' H Altr,J•,-· (••\TA Mf ).6 1,.4. ,, I STllU•ln •12• 4 IC)d. l'Mtlllic ~ V9'Y low ml'-(Stk • 22221 '11 lni lmmaeulete Hard to find - ~· Aed(llk •2201) 'llllh Low m1Je1 8eAtc ~ Loeci.dl ($'1 I 2207) 'llUW.._ &Mutlful. IOw ..... WM Beige (2221) '111111 9-ltitUI .... °"lea . Mtnc Stll In e.c:tew) =-~'""' (21~ '11UW ... ~..,. ..... , .... ... mM\Ulint0(2tt1) 11111.m-'MOJam-. NI Ad_.,,t to Flll\ieln ltlanO •••••• '112411 ' Pnce ifldUdel one ,...,. leMce contrlC't (P4008) 112,IOO .11•a1111a l ... TS 76 MGB. gd rUrmlng cond, ce11 stereo $2200 PP Dy 847-56&8, Ev SJ&-3008 79 MGB Low ml rblt 9flO ~ 962-2730 Persch tlst 87112. 5 IPd. ,_ 9llO I tran1miulon. alloys, etc 13500 ObO 64~224 Bill YATES VW-PORSCHf 8 J 7 48 ~ G 4 Cf J _. 'J I 67 Cem.o gr•t c:oncs. must Mll·moWIO' $1700 0 80 960-71531536-1995 79 CAMERO-XLNT CONO 52K miles' S.-800 CALL (71 41 759-1155 8<>C1t1tton, 6 cyt, 4 dr, hltd'I. air, <:i'ulte. wife cer $2700 675-~1 LidO .... 82 Malibu c1uiiie. sedan to ml. lilte ,_ Ownr /Olf 497-5255 etter 6 PM 1• '83. 1\111 l)OW9f 9tus IOPS. st\lrl) PY1 pty $17.500 71'1730-M98 dys °' 4~71 tN IEWCUl&US- ISEICUULD WINY CUAICAIS 79 MUST ANG Ghie 3 dr IUtO. VI. elf. C1'Ul9I 12 Terge ""41e tronli. 250 low ml 873--&726 reer. spo11ert, iww P7. Sil pottsti.d rims. low ml. iiifi,_."'"'"_,._'""'!!'!~~.p tmmac $26 .500. 875-1938"" 157-0818 83 944 5 IP.ed red. ... ,her Int 1mmacul•t• s 19,000 080 494-6459 "" BMutlful '74 TARGA Too fiii•;:;;;:;:;;:;:;;:;;::;:;;:;;;; many ue>grlldes to ~ tton A steel It S 14.150/obo Mon-Fri eeo-.730;S/S 176-9972 CHICM IVElllJON P'OtllSC'Ht AUDI CH(VltOLFl H'-hnt Q ... tuv C..ln & ~r"lc:e f I .. eueNA PARK 9t FWY. a GARDEN GROVE 0 CHICK IVERSON Chevrolet ' Porache • Audi '41 E .. least hy., le.,.rt ..... lll-OllO Highest Quality Sales & Service 0 NABERS CADILLAC ~ 2100 011011 ILYI., OOITI IEU (l14) 140-1100 (213) lll-1211 • Best Prices • Convenient Location • Great Location • Super Service • Courteous & Kn owledgeable Sales People FOUNTAIN ...J 0 .... Ch ir Ill EDINGER ~ VALLEY :c WARNER ~ a:> 0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales. Sernce, Parts. Body, Paint & Tire Depts. Competitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals 2111 larMr lhtl., Onta l11a M2-0010 tr U0-1211 0 HOUSE Of IMPORTS INC. • LONG TERM LEASES • COMP'fTITIVf r\JICHASE P'llCES • HUGE INVEHTOIY dial MERCEDES 213/714 837 -2333 Next to Santa Ana Fwy ( 5) on Manchester /Beach Blvd. 22 FRWY • LAGUNA HILLS 0 CONNELL CHEVR.OLET 2121 larMr lhtl., Int• •n• Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sales • Servtce • Leasing 546-1280 S,.Ul P.U Lilt 541-MH MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30.AM -9:00 PM SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM SUNDAY tO:OO AM -:00 PM WE'llE IEW WE'IE IULlll & ~L~~~~Jl~E~ ~~.:!! & • o•AN.£E,.cMv .. l~J'•ENAuLr 0 SAUS·~u~.ITS IR fllfl }ffl Salls llf I YIMI Overseas Delivery Speclallsts "Where Professions/ Attitude Prevails" Spec:i.Hzlng In luropean O.llYery. Exc.llent htectlon of New •nd caref'ulty prepeted UMd llMW• always In stock 835-3171 208 W. 1at St., Senta Ana Corner of Broadway & 1st St. Close<! Sundays PARTI D"AltTMINT ~N fl o~n~e. sALEs •ATUROAY MORNING• • r a t. SERVICE BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 0 • LEASING 1540 Jamboree Rd. . ~i~D • ACCESSORIES DEPT Newport Beach 840-8444 GJIM SLEMONS IMPORTS 0 COllllOllWIAL!H 1301 Ou•ll 81. -INw C•r LOC11llon 1001 Ou•ll 81. -ReN,. Dlfll•lon VWM MISSION Vl~11 MIS$ION VIEJO SAN b JUAN CAPISTRANO J J alcV~Yf l./dQTscaAs Complete Automotive NMdl SALES • SERVtCE • LEASING Fine Setecilon of Quality u..d VeNc:6M # 1 BUICK DEALER IN ORANGE COUNTY 2125 HARBOR BL VD. --~ COSTA MESA 171-2500 0 BILL YATES YILllWllll • ,.. ... • PlllllT SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE 12112 Y• lea4, IM -.. ..,..., .. 41M111 lll-4111 8 UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE HONDA 2880 Harbor Blvd. Costa M••• 540-0713 3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy. b (1\ World's Largest Selection of IT\ 'CJ Mercedes Benz \C;J 833-9300 "FAMILY SINCE '83" Sales • Service -Leaainq • MaHrettJ • AHa Roineo 888 DOVE ST • ~Rf BEACH 848 DOVE ST NEWPOl('f BEACH Utt . I.ta"'« . '"'' . Stnlce . ..., '- • SAW WSllC 7 BRJSroL AT !DINGER IH-0110 IN SANTA ANA 714 833-1300 714 752-0900 . ' -r- 1 ' FORICA8T8 ON A2 ~, "' . ~ . . . : ,; . . ... Irvine teachers strike ·Tuesday 8_9 percent of instructors plan to join one-day walkout; schoo s to stay open to tcnd their children to clams as usual. Superintendent A. tanley Corty said today that unarmed securit y auards will be stationed at each school to maintain order. Contrary to rumors. rqular school lunches will be served. he said. called illcpl, will not cause district officials to retreat from their barpin- ing position. Strikmg district teachers will each forfeit o ne day's pay. which c.an ranac from SI 03 to Sr 95. district officials said. 10 take pan in the ont-day ttri.ke. The teachers plan retum to clules Wednesday. In a vote lut month, SOS tacben favored Lhe one.day suik.e whik 149 indicated they pttfemd to~ the distnct's so-called "last and best" contract offer. .. But if. in fact, they're .._ IO CrOM lhe ti.net. tbtte '1 AOlhiftl peiyli- cal that •tll be done to them ... M ..W. Reprdant the paards to be .. tion~ at each campus.. Salht1 asked. .. If the d1Jtrict'has no utra funds (for tekMr' pay ra1tct), where the devil are they aettina the 1CCUn1y funds?" By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of .. o.IJ ......... Organizers expect more than 80 percent of the teachers in the Irvine Unified School Oistrica to walk picket lines outside their schools Tuesday. Coast Applicants are stlll being sought for Orange Coun- ty Grand Jury./ A3 Appointment of a new dean Is first step In ex.- panslon of UC Irvine engi- neering department./ A3 California A 'dead' San Diego man wlll make It after brutal stabbing./ AS Nation Storms keeping nation's midsection locked up In the Icebox./ A5 Three stories outline Re- agan 's budget proposal, Including reaction from both parties./ A5 World Pope John Paul II urges Peruvian rebels to lay down their arms./ A4 Athens pollce seeking bomber who set off ex- pJoslve that Injured 80 In a Greek bar./A5 Features Slenderness can be deadly as shown In a drama to be presented by UC Irvine's Eating Dis- orders Program./ A7 Sporta It's the game of the season In Sea View League basketball with Estancia and Newport Harbor going head-to- head./81 UC Irvine's baseball team Is loaded this season, but pitching Is a big question mark./81 Sharon Lyon is big reason Woodbridge Is unbeaten In Sea View League girls basketball. /83 Entertainment 'Consenting Adult' offers good acting on homosex- ual problems./ Al Buineu New, high-tech pacemakers will some- day diagnose and stop a variety of lrr,gular heart- beats and dispense drugs./85 IKDEX 'Bridge A10 Bultetln Board A3 Busfneu BM Clualfled 97-9 Cornlea A10 Crouword 89 Death Notice• • 87 FMtur• . A7-a HorOtcX>Pe 88 Ann Lander• A8 Opinion A8 Pottc. Log A3 Pubttc Notlcet C ~ Sportt 91~ Teeevtllon A8 The one-day protest strike is prompted by deadlocked contract talks. officials said. Meanwhile. district oflkials vowed to keep all schools open with substitutes. Principals at each school mailed letters to parents, uraina them "It's go ing to be cause for a great amount of difficulty for everyone involved." Corey said. But he added that the one-day strike. which he Dan Saling. executive d ircc1or of South Orange Coun1y Educators. an umbrella organ1ut1on for four teachers unions. said he upects 600 to 6SOof1he distnct's 7SO instructors Salina said strikers will walk picket lines outside their schools and try to ~rsuadc substitutn and non-strikJna teachers not to cross the lines. Superfnten<knt Corey II.id the distnct has not altered the "laA ud best .. financ1al offer made to laChm (Pl.ue ... TS~/A2) Charges not yet filed on boater October crash near bay entrance leaves five passengers dead County pr<>KCUtors have ap.in delayed announcing whether they will (ile criminal cha,.n &ftinst Seal Beach resjdent Vin Earles 1n conoec; · t ion wilh an October boa ti na accident· that claimed five lives. Earles. 29. was the pilot ofa 20-foot speedboat that crashed into a s1.ed and concrete moonng t>uoy 11 the entrance to Ananeim Bat-near Hunt- ingto n Harbour on Oct. 28. Five peopk were ki11cd a.nO four 1n1urcd. 1nd udin1 Earles. The acti- dent is thou~t to be the worst private boating accident 1n Oranse County and one of the worSt in state history. ...................... u,111 Lookln& a bit like the "White Rabbit,' Ed the Mailman tanorea •tan on IUt round In Newport neiCJaborh.ood. The Orange County District At· tomcy's offices has debated for sev- eral months whether to charat Earles 1n the accident. He's been around the block a few times Earles was dnnkmg pnor to lhe accident but said he was not drunk. A test administered after the crash showed Earles had a blood-a.kohol reading of0.11 -slightly more than the level at which a motorist is presumed mtoxtcated. · By TONY SAAVEDRA Ot•Wr ........ Edwin Pickens was in a hurry. Making his rounds for the last time Friday. the Newport Beach mailman scampered from house to house. looking more like the "White Rabbit" in "Alice in Wonderland" than a man about to retire. No sir. Pickens had not lost his enthusiasm after 16 years of deliver- ing mail 10 homes in the Westcliff residential tract. Sifting through letters 1n the front Ex-Pilot controller Schulman diesat56 Bernard Schulman. the man who directed all Daily Pilot accounting functions for 22 years in his position as the newspaper's controller. has died after a lengthy illness. Mr. Schulman. 56, died Saturday at the acute care center at the Western Medical Center in Sant.a Ana from complications of leukemia, family members said. He was taken ill in 1979 but continued workin1 until 1982. "He was the m ost gentle man I've known in my life ," said Pat Step- henM>n. personnel administrator and secretary to the publisher. "His entire hfe and outlook o n life reflected that." said Stephenson. who seat ofa white U .S. Post Office Jeep. Pickens explained he had an import· ant date with the city postmaster later in the afternoon and he didn't want to be late. But he could spare maybe five minutes for a quick interview. Pickens. who ~ve his age as "1n my 60s. let's leave 11 at that," has seen generations come and go along his route through the stylish Westcl1fT neighborhoods. "I've seen kids grow into teen- agers. they weren't even born when I started." said the longtime postman. (Pl--... U·PILOT / A2) Bernard Scbal•an Wayne's Widow se"eking divorce By BITl'Y POl\TBI\ .,,.., .... Olil •• ..,. Citln~ "irreconcilable d1f- fcrcnq:s, ' Pilar Wayne tewart a n· nounccd today that she and her husband of four months arc d1vort- ina. . f M rs. Stewan i1 the widow o actor John Wayne who died of cancer June 11 . & 9j9. tk Wiii 71. .. We hive RKd for d ivorce." Mn. tewan ..iid seeakina for her hut- bind. tcphcn C. Seewln. " tcpMn it a .. man,-wt have tetptel for uch other and we expect to rtmain aood friends." Mrs. aewan said. t his whne hair cut into short bristles. ''I've seen many d<>I$ and un- fortunately a lot of de2ths." When you've been around the block as ma nv times as Pickens has. you become more than a mailman: you become part of the ma ny families that depend o n yo11 for that letter from Aunt Thelma in Idaho or that C hristmas card from grandma. And residents in a portion of Pickens· route along Ox ford , Berkshire and Essex lanes left pres- ent!il and grttting cards for ··Ed. our trusty mailman·· in their curbside mailboxes. which had been decorated with red ribbons and bows. ··1 fiaurcd 1 was hked but I didn't realize that m.ach. It's too b9d there arcii't more people like them." he said. blushins slaahtly. SomepeopleaJsocameout to shake his hand and wish him "'ell. "That's what kept mt' here fof 16 )'ears ... said Pickens. This was actually the SC<'ond change of seasons for Pickens. who Joined the post o ffice after retinngas a mastt'r sergeant for the Army recruit· (Pleue eee ED/A.2) However. boat1n& laws. unlike the state vehicle code. do not ll>Ccify a blood~alcohol level for dctcrminmg 1ntoxjca11pn. Earles said he did not see the buoy. which 1s not lighted. He has filed a $5 million da1m against lb(' City ofScaJ Beach. lh<' Oepanment of the Navy. the Coast Guard and the .\rmy Corps of Engineers. Th(' claims arc forerunners to a lawsuit. according to Dana Denton, Earles' auorney. New clubhouse proposed for big hole in the ground The Huntington Valley Boys and Girls Club would lease McCallen~Park site for $1 a year ~tween 16 000 and :20.000 square feet would include a game room. teen center. locker room. educatto n center. community rooms and of· Ii~. A multipurpose gymnasium and sw1mm1ng pool are envisioned for the future. By ROBERT BARKER Ot_Delly,... ..... The Huntington Valley Boys and Girls Club hopes to construct a new clubhouse at a proposed park s11c that now features a I-acre. 20..foot deep hole. Bo)'S and G irls ( tub officials will ask the Huntington Beach City Coun· ci l tonight 10 lease them part of Mc{'allt'n Park for SI a year for 49 )'ears In return, they sa~ they'll maintain the entire 5-acrc site and cut the grass. But officials first will have to de"ISt' ways to fill the hole. The city also will be responsible for instalhngan under· 1tround drainage pipe to channel runoff wa..1ers into the main storm control svstem The I -acre hole at the s11e an the oldtown art'a bct\\-cen ~la\\'are and Hunungton strttts and south of Yorktown Avenue also serves as a water retention basin. But that u!IC will~ pre~mptt'd b} the new storm channel Huntington Beach C11y Council mem~rs will take up the park issue. and others. at th<' meeting that stans at 7· 30 p.m. at Cit)' Council Cham~rs. 2000 Main I Mark Cho"'. the ex«uli\e d1r«tor oftht' cl ub. said )Ouths ages 6 thro ugh 17 would v1s11 the proposed fac1ht} about 40.000 limes a }'Car He said a proooscd fac1ht) of Programs would include youth spons. a latdtkey program for c h1I· dren left unattended dunng the day. tc.-en programs. )'Outh e mployment. al·adem1c tutonng. child and family counseling. soc1Jll rccrcat1on. outdoor education and youth lt'adersh1p cl ubs. ( ho~ ..aid that the present faCl hues at the \ orltown .\venue branch are inadequate and that the old building 'lhO~ signs of dctenurat10n The club also operates fac1hties at tht' former Bu hard School at Educa- tion Lane Hassle on growth in Mesa moves to planning panel 011lt~nttj over ho~ Co ta Mesa should &fC?W i&n1ted thr rc«nt C'tt) CounC11 el«t1o n. 1um1n1 It mto a knock-do"-'n. Jrq-out fight "'Ith neither s1Je able to cl:um a full VICtOI). , Opponent rnllUI ofthe council's pm-arov.th attitude . .,,.~ two or the thrte avt11labk "ital ou t1n1 an 1n umbcn& 1n the pn.>et But the su hu pro"c-n somtv.bat hollow, since the rount'll ronunucs to ap- pro"c rontroven.111 h1fh.&ns1ty ~ i· cknual and mmmc~aal Pf'OJCCts. if onl)' b) 'J)tt1 vot~. TONY SAAVEDRA The rounCll, d1vtdcd OVff \ht futurt or dncl~nt '" the cny, is Pf""Panl"l lO fill thm: Plann11'1 om. m1 ion po t~ for members whole tcnns c-.pm: Feb l ommi saoncn Mark SI le. Joe Oteat\oknd Clw1es Markel ha"e 111 .atd they ~,n llft .. Theatert A8·9 WMtNr A2 The tcwattt ~rt married 1n a privaw CCftmony .at Pilar'• home. "l.dlon." '" NtwPOf18'M.'h on Oct.=="--= With a thrtt-mcmbcr ma,onty. < o ta Mesa·~ counal 1' shlf "~ much an>wth on T\led a.s tht bell und on Round Tv.-oofthc la™'·u~ bout putw UA lD& rouad ·,he ruppo1ntme .:_nlltift~o:-lt,u~r't·;,cam,r.ttttftll.hliiil'"11"---tl '" Mattt ~ IPl1w ... PILil/AI) Ea-...... 8teplla and Ptlar WaJ"M Stewart. held in 'he poltt1cal al'C1'13 ~nh \.Olen mak1na tht dtt1'\1o n an aJ" 1 f)· pend the couna& - (PleMe .. t'IOB'l'/AS) \ • I .. " . . .. • .. -: • .. . ... • • ... '5' """ .. ,. Firew rkS .. ·mogul'slawyer drops from corruption case LOS ANOEL£$ (AP) -itini a problem of lepl ctbic:s. ao attorney aertndina C>taJlec County fireworks ml&ftlk W. PAtnck Moriarty on public corruption ctwaes withdrew fro• I.he case Friday ud the trial was postpo1'Cd for two weeks. Donald Heller. who has rep.- resented Moriany liner the busi-• nessman wa indicted Nov. 8 on federal racketeering and mail fraud cha~ would not detail his reasons for withdrawing, saying; "r'm caught between the roclc and the hard p~." ··1 can't represent this man at trial," Heller, of Sacramento, told U.S. District Judge William Rea. "But this isa matter that should not be disdosed in public," he said. "Because of attorney-client privilege, I would have problems even telling a judF in chamben." Moriarty said be was puzzled by Heller's comments and denied there was an ethical problem. "Operating from here' to Sacra men· to is a tremendous logistical problem and he (Heller) has an enormous caseload," said Moriarty, wh~ Anaheim company manufactures Red Devil fireworks. HelleT withdrew 12 days before the scheduled start of trial for Moriarty and las Vegas gambling figure Frank Sansone. They are accused of conspir- ing to obtain a gambling license for the California Commerce Club in the City of Commerce by aivina hidden oWMrship shares in the club to four former Comm~ city officials. Rea tr\<llcated he was injtially reluctant to arant Heller's request because be clad not know the around for iL "Any auomey may be met with the same problem," Rea said. "It could conceivably affect every attornry who takes your place." But after being assured that the substitutjon of a new attorney would not de.lay Moriarty's trial substantial- ly, Rea agreed and approved attorney Jan Lawrence Hand%1ik of Los An- geles, a former federal prosecutor. as Heller's replacement. "I don't expttt to have any ethical problems representing Mr. Moriar- ty," Handzlik sa14 ... As for Heller's withdrawal. the accurate speculation might be that there were two different views on how to conduct the case and that Heller and Moriarty disaareed." Rea set a new trial date of F"eb. 26. Chief ASJistant U.S. Attorney Richard Orooyan said the aovem- mcnt feared the switch of lawyers could lead to postponements of the tnal. "We have a continuing investiga- tion of Mr. Moriarty and others," Drooyan said. "We do not want to generate adverse publicit)' that would affect the defendant's right to a fair trial in this case." Tl\e U.S. attorney's office and the Oran,e County district attorney's office arc checkin' aUttations of money launderin1 in contributions by Monarty to California political fiaures. Former Mori.any associates have said he pvc 32 officeholders and candidates laundered political con- tributions durina 1981 and 1982 as he lobbied for legallutioo of"safe-and- sane" fireworks in areas where they were banned. Meanwhile, the San Jose Mercury News reported Friday that two state lawmakers who voted for the fire· works legislation -Assemblyman Frank Viccncia, D-Bellflower, and Sen. Daniel Boatwright, D-Concord -later bad dealings involving com- panies in which Moriarty had an interest. An insurance firm two-thirds owned by Viccncia got .in insurance contract in 1983 with the California Commerce Club. the newspaper re- -ported. Boatwright said he received about S 14.000 for lepJ scTVices provided to R.E. Wolfe Enterprises of California, which is half-owned b)' Moriarty. Boatwright said he didn't know of Moriarty's interest in the company and both lawmakers denied any connection between their votes on the fireworks bill and the. business deals. Suspects readied for trial in Chinese writer's niurder TAIPEI. Taiwan (A P) -Justice Ministry investigators have turned over to prosecutors two reputed gangsters suspected in conoectjon with the killing last October of a Chinese-American writer at his Cali- fornia home. the government said. preliminary charies had been filed, but an information office spokesman said when asked for clarification that no charJes had been filed. arrested an November. • 1 he writer, Henry Liu. 52. a critic : of the Taiwan government, was shot • to death Oct. 15-m Daly City. Calif. ' The Government Information Of- ' fice said in a bnef statement that ~ Justice Ministry investiga1ors turned The mformation office also said three Defense Ministry intelliaence officials have had their cases referred to military prosecutors to determine whether they were involved in the killing. .. . Taiwanese authorities have said Chen and Wu cannot be extradited to California to stand trial because there is no extraditfon treaty between Taiwan and the Unjtcd Stat~. Taiwan maintains it has the right to try its nationals for crimes commjtled abroad. _ Chen and Wu were arTCSted last November 1n an anti<rime Jweep here unrelated to Liu's slayina. over to the prosecutors Chen Chi-Ii. : 39. and Wu Tun. 34. reputed mem- ; bers of Taiwan's largest underworld • organization. The statemen t ong- 1 1nally was taken to mean that Chen and.Wu have been named an San Mateo County murder warrants in Liu's slaying. Police there said they believe another suspected gang mem- ber. Tung Kuei-sen. was also in- volved but said they lacked evidence to obtain an arrest warrant. A San Garb1el businessman. David Yu. was FBI agents and a Daly City police officer came to Taiwan last month to question them. Local press reports said Chen and Wu implicated three officials of the mil itary antelltgcnce bureau in L1u's killing. . • I . • i l "' >\ former Fountain VaJley ac.coun- tant accused of setting a fire that caused $2.2 million in damage to his employer's offices has been ordered to stand tnal for arson March 18 . Dilauro was convicted of embezzlement and was sentenced to state pnson. He was set to be released from prison m November but was arrested on the arson charge the day he was to gain his freedom . . • . • ' Accountant faces arson char~e in $2 million vlaze .\nthOQ} Dilauro. 44, 1s alleged to have started the June 19. 1983 blaze at the John Treiber Co. to cover up an embezzlement of about $53.000 from the company. The former accountant is being held at Orange County Jail on $75.000 bail. A bail reduction hearing 1s set for March 8 in Superior Court in Westminster. TEACHERS TO PICKET SCH(>OLS ••• From Al in Dece mber. The district offered a 3 percent pa y raise retroacti ve to July I, 1984, and provided a formula for giving teachers an additional raise dunng the 1985-86 school yea r. Teachers asked for a 2 percent raise retroactive to July and another 2 percent increase this spring. The union has disagreed on the formula for compuung next year's raise. Other non-financial issues also remain unsettled. including teacher grievance procedu res and an "agency shop" provision that would require all teachers to Join the union or pay an equivalent fee. Corey claims Irvine teachers' salanes range between second and sixth place 1n Orange County's 12 unified school d1stn cts. depending on their education and years of service. He said the district's proposal. 1f accepted. would move Irvine teachers up to between first and thi rd place. I he superintendent said the dis- trict has received some calls from parents who are concerned about how their children will be affected by th e sight of their teachers walking picket Imes. Teachers association spokesman aling. bn the other hands. said most of his calls from parents have been expressions of support. Students will team about "getting involved" and taking independent action to effect change. Saling said. ED THE MAILMAN RETIRES •.• From Al 1ng center in Santa i\na With two rctirt'mcnt~ behind him. Pickens said. "I'm not gon na la}' down now and dctenorate. I'm gonna· dust off m~ gol f clubs and basicall y do what I feel like doing.'' He apologized. saying that he normally has a few moments to chat "11h people along his route. but he reall y had to get going now. "You can usually find a couple of minutes. which I don't ha ve." said Picken s. glancing nervously at his watch ancf putting the Jeep in gear. EX-PILOT CONTROLLER DIES ... ·· From Al "as hired in 1961 h) Mr. Schulman and former Dail}' Pilot Pu blisher Waller Burroughs "There's no question about 11. Bcf!l•e was was one of the best cmr>loyees I ever had.·· former pub- lisher Burroughs said today. "He was the best controller "c had b' far and he was a 'en, 'en linl' .. .. . .. man Mr Schulman 1., \Un 1ved b) h1\ "1le Helen of In me: and daughters Alissa. a supervisor 1n the Daily Pilot composing room: Stephanie. who works m the UC Irvine athletic department and attends classes at Saddleback College. and Shana. 12. a 'ltudent at Vista Verde School in In me. <,er .. ices "'ere scheduled toda}' at I pm. at Pacific View Memonal Park and Mortuary in Newport Beach. Mr. ~hulman was the youngest 1n a fam il ) of fo ur children. Has parents were born m Russia and came to the Unned States 1n the earlr 1900s. A native of Connecucut. he ob- tained a bachelor's of science degree at the University of Bridgepun in Bridgeport. Conn. He earned school letters on the university baseball and basketball teams and was a member of the accounting fraternity; PILAR WAYNE SEEKS DIVORCE .•• From Al 6. 1984. An elaborate reception tor 200 family members and friends followed and th e couple hone}'- mooned 1n Pan s. A form er Harbor Mun1c1pal Court Judge, Stewart has a law practice 1n OetfJ Piiot DelMry te Querenteed ~y Friday II )'OU 00 flOI ,,_ y(Nr CMI09f ))y ~J()plll '41•~tw•ll>"1 •"" ~ COl)y *"' De ....... *' Costa Mesa. Pilar Wayne Stewart combines carel'r'> as author ("Pilar Wayne's 1-avonte and Fabulous Recipes") and lecturer and columnist for the C>a1ly Pilot. Tustin News and Sl immer ORANGf COAST hilyPillt H.L. 8chwert1 tu Publisher magatane. Mrs. Stewart has three children - A1ssa Wayne Kuhle and Marisa and Ethan Wayne. Stewart is the father o( 1wo children by a previous marriaat -Andrea. 13, •nd Matthew, 11 . Cl~7WM2-4m Cll!Mlfled......,.....,.714/ta-ten AH otMr d1p11t119Nte ~ MA .. °"9CI 330 WHI 81t St Col11 Mell CA M_,. tlOOl•M Oo• t6t() Col11 ...... C.r. ~ "9•·-· *'Cl Sun.~y ,, """" ,,., 'IOC •«-' -· •wv °" 7 •"' , ... Def"'• tO 1,m llNJ '°"' ttvt •" tie ... ., Frenk Zlnl Managing Editor Keren Wittmer Advertising Director Cocly•IQ"I •tel ()tty COMf ~ C.0...,.,,., Hori -tt(lf ... .,.,,,,_ ~ ~°' '°""I ... "-· ,...._ .... , De ... ~~ ...... ,,., """'°" O! COP'r'll"' -- Clrcue.tlon Tile~•· ~ o.-.Cout>!y "''-~ AoHmery Churchman Controller Robert L. Centrell Production Manager Donald l . wutlama Clrcutsttcm Manager • r I . . . " Clear~and-cOld climate continues The continued now Of cold w trom tM Atctic .Ill-.,•• c6Nr and cold In Souttwn Celtfotnla ttvough T~, wtth frott expected In the 1Uburb1 tonight. the N•tloMI Wtethet tMtvlCe Niki tod•y. Acc0tCllng to f0tec:aatar1, •t Je1 llrcratt iev.11 the llCtto .ir t•• onty • day and a h.n to rMCtl Southetn calHomla. Howewt, at lower level• It may take up to • week. whlcft llllOWI time f0t some wermlng. TM low ternp9r1t\lfe In Loe Ange+ff tonight wlU be between 37 to 42 deQr .... tt w111 be colder In the Stn Femendo. San Gebttet and San lemar~vllleyt, wtth loWt of 21to31 CleOI .... and t>remy wW* of 15 to 25 mph below.,...... Along the Orange Cout, the forec•t cllllt for ctMtlng and COider tonight exoept In 1oce1ty wtndy .... below the ~ north of Loe Angelel. Partly cloudy and cool T~ with allght chM<leof' '"°"'In aootherncounlles. High• T 1y52 tol2. Ar ... of frost tonight wtth Iowa In 301 and loftf 40t ex~t upper 20a In C<>l<Mtt vahys. Tempe tflgll, low kw 24 llOur'I 9"4lllO " • • '"' lOCley .. Le 2t 2t 24 14 41 u 24 12 20 07 27 , .. It .()4 33 2 1 a4 ,. 7• 12 14 .01 01 ·If 24 ,. Calif. Temps •• ao 40 ,, 51 33 M 43 MM 35 2t •2 32 12 21 32 31 32 " 2t 20 -OS .33 13 -11 2t 13 "' oe 00 _,. 51 37 2t 07 .., ao 11 ·13 11 .07 tt 00 15 -o3 IS -GI 20 .,. to 27 15 -oe IS -02 It 07 " ..(M .OS -11 50 34 81 2' 41 3f )0 17 14 57 2t 14 .. ~ ,, 45 24 -09 35 20 25 10 3t 114 3' 22 34 24 22 11 74 12 )0 17 " '° 13 73 10 .01 35 21 30 " ,. -11 111 .07 24 20 ... M 28 20 ,, " Surf report am aHAN 1-3 - Tides TOOAY 30lpm 1133pfft TUl'.IOAY 2111a m eo " 61 40 3t to " 3t 4t " a& 32 51 40 53 ,. " 32 55 32 51 3t eo " 32 01 33 ,, 13 40 •-te 2' 13 It -GI 02 ·11 25 .02 06 ·21 7' 71 31 34 ,.., ,.., 1·3 ,.,. EZtended •32•"' 3:Mplll 1006pm " •• 14 43 1·3 fair •·3 talr 1·2 l>OOf 1·2 pQOf " ..(M Sun NII today at 5 2• p m , r._ r....oay ate •7 am end M11 again at 5 27 pm, Moon rlMa todey at 4:33 p m , .... at • 25 • m end r._ again al 5 45 p m FIGHT OVER GROWTH CONTINUES .•. From Al screenin,g development projects and variousaspcctsofland use in the city. However. the five-member com- mission is empowered to grant or deny s uch things as permits to operate .certain buMnesscs, building ad<foions and signs. It is a commission that has come under fire by homeowner groups protesting large-scale developments that would be built near residential neighborhoods. Commissioners hoping" 10 retain their th ree seats. a maJont~ bloc. ma} find some opposition from freshman council newcomers Da vid Wheeler and Mary Hornbuckle. who were elected by disgruntled homeowners ,.opposed to development. Ma yor Norma Hertzog said this week that applications for the com- mission seats and resum es wi ll be accepted unttl Feb. 15. Applicants will be screened and chosen for a public interview at a special counci l meeting Feb. 20. Depending • on the number of applicants. the appointments could be made at the same meeting. Hertzog said. The would-be commissioners are being asked to submit letters staung their philosophy on land use in Costa Mesa. After filling an unexpired term for 11/J years, Commissioner Sloate was reappointed. while Markel and DiCarlo were added to the panel in 1983. The three were gj ven two-year tcnns. Sloate. a 55-year-old engjnecr with Rockwell International. said he has taken his cue from the council in voting for or against development projects. "I think I will continue to abide by whatev~r pol!~Y is set by the counc!I as a maJonty. he said. "If the council tends to temper some of the growth ... Just Call 642-6086 Designed, Finished Installed then I thtnk the Pla_nn~nf. Com- mission will go along with 1t. Sloatc added that he personally has tried to ··maintain consistent growUr throughout the city and balance it. for the-benefit of all the-people, not JUst an individual group." DiC.arlo. 42. said that he has been more attuned to the homeowners' pleas to limit growth that may have ehviromental effects on ~idential communities. ''I've always been one who voted for the homeowners' rights. Anytime 11 comes to residential housing against commercial (development), I've always been very, very stringent," said DiCarlo, a manag~r with JD Property Management 1n Costa Mesa. "I want to see the property being improved. but not to the detriment of the homeowners," he added. Markel. who finished sixth out of 11 candidates in the recent council race. may f.ace the most opposition. Residents supporting Wheeler and Hornbuckle lambasted Markel's vot- ing record during the elections, point- ing an accusatory finier toward the developers and business interests contributing to his campaign. But the 45-ycar-old cement con- tractor is undaunted. "I've tried to put the campaign behind me, rm just trying to do my job now." said Markel. "If there arc more competent people in the com- munity. I hope they come forward." So does Councilman Wheeler. "I have no faith in the current Planning Commission. I will be extremely disappointed if new com- missioners a'ren't appointed," he said. "They have a definite 'rah-rah' pro-growth attitude. And that's dangerous." Hornbuckle 1s also looking for some changes. ·· 1 feel sometimes it's a good idea to have new people with fresh ideas. It keeps the JU lees Oow1ng," she &aid. Bu t. as Wheeler conceded, Hombud.le 1s part of a two-member m1nonty. And at least one of the majont}' members wouldn't mind leaving the commis~ion as 1t is. "I th ink we have an excellent Planning Co mmission and as far as I'm concerned I would hke to reap- point all our present comm1ss1oners:· Councilman Donn Hall said. Mayor HertLog said she would review the applicants. looking for people who could vote independently of council opinions or special interest groups. "I want c;omebody who will look at overall city needs and keep the city in balance. I'm not looking for a rubber stamp. but someone who can demon- strate good Judgme,." sh<' said. Councilwoman Arlene Schafer, who could not be reached for com- ment on her Planning Com1ss1on choices. has fa vored development in the past. Laguna chamber hears eco-trends C'ra1g Galbratth of the UC Irvi ne Graduate School of Management will speak about ,trends in south Orange County economic development at the monthly Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce breakfast meeting at 8 a.m. Tuesday at the Hotel Laguna. Reservations a~ required by call- ing the chamber office. 494-1018. Admission 1s $5. Wbat do you Uh about tlae Dally Pilot? Wbat don't you like? Call tJae namber at left and your me11age will be recorded, transcribed and delivered to Ule appropriate editor. Tbe same %4-llo.r aa1werln11ervlce may be 111ed to rttord letters to lllle editor on uy topic. Contributors to oar Letters column mast lacl•de tbelr name and telepboae number for verification. No circulation call1, ple11e. Tell 111 wllat's on your mlacl. 31 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters FINEST QUALITY SHU 11 ERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY ••• AT FACTORY DIRllCT PRICBSI C•ll (714) 148-8841 or 548-1717 ( ' TOMORROW: it Applicants are still being sought for Orange Coun- ty Grand Jury.I A3 Appointment of a new dean is first step In ex- pansion of UC Irvine engi- neering department./ A3 I California A 'dead ' San Diego man will make It after brutal stabbing./ A5 Nation Storms keeping nation's midsection locked up In the icebox./ AS Three stories outline Ae- agan 's budget proposal, Including reaction from both parties.I AS World Pope John Paul II urges Peruvian rebels to lay down their arms./ A4 A thens pollce seeking born ber who set off ex- plosive that Injured 80 in a Greek bar./ AS Featur e• Slenderness can be deadly as shown in a drama to be presented by UC lrvlne's Eating Dis- orders Program./ A7 Sports It's the game of the season in Sea View League basketball with Estancia and Newport Harbor going head-to- head./8 1 UC Irvine's baseball team Is loaded this season, but p itching Is a big question mark./81 Sharon Lyon Is big reason Woodbridge is unbeaten In Sea View League girls basketball. /83 Entertainment 'Consenting AduJt' offers good acting on homosex- ual problems./ Al Buaineu New, hJgh-tech pacemakers will some- day diagnose and stop a variety Irregular heart- beats and dispense drugs./85 INDEX Bridge A10 Bulletin Board A3 Business 85-6 Cla~fled 87-9 Comics A10 Crossword 89 Death Notices 87 Features A7-8 tjOtOICQPe 88 Ann Landera A8 Opinion A6 Police Log A3 Public Notices C1 Sports e1-.. Tefevlslon A8 Theaters A8·9 WMthef A2 • em . e e ID IC Laguna to take up issue of smoking in the workplace BJ LISA MA.BONEY Of_...., ....... Laguna Beach will be the banle- ground .Tuesct.y for frie~ and foes of·pubhc smokin& rqulauons u the Art Colony becomes the fint city in Oranv County to P'8PJ>le with the fiery issue of smokina m the work- place. Representatives of the American LunJ Association and ~ T~ lnstatute will conveflC on this beachsidc city of 19.000 at 6 p.m. (Pleue w PUPP1Jt0/A2) Man dies in fall from cliffs .............. .., ........ ~ Lookln& a bit like the 'White Rabbit,• Ed the Mailman tanores •ten o n lut round ln Newport net&Jlborhood. A 39-year-old San Oemente man fell to his death from the cliffs above Dana Poin1 Harbor Sunday aftff- noon. an Ora.nae County Sheriffs spokesman reponed. • He's been around the block a few times By TONY SAAVEDRA OllMo.llr .......... Edwin Pickens was in a hurry. Making his rounds for tbe last time Friday. the Nev!J)Ort Beach mailman scampered from house 10 house. looking more like the "While Rabbit" in "Alice in Wonderland" 1han a man about to retire. No sir. Pickens had no1 lost his enthusiasm af\er 16 years of deliver- ing mail to homes in the Westcliff residenrial tract. Sifting throudl letters in 1he front Ex-Pilot controller • Schulman diesat56 . Bernard Schulman. the man who d irected all Dail y Pilot accounting func1ions for 22 years in his position as the newspaper's controller. has died af\er a lengthy illness. Mr. Schulman, 56, died Saturday at the acute care center at the Santa Ana Medical Center from complicatio ns of leukemia. family members said. He was taken ill in 1979 but continued working until 1982. "He was the most gentle man I've known in my life:· said Pat Step- henson. personnel administrator and secreJary to the publisher. "His entire life and o utlook on life renCGted that." said Stephenson, who seat of a white U.S. Post Office Jeep. Pickens explained he had an impon- ant date with the city postmaster later in the afternoon and he didn't want to be late. . put J\e could spare maybe five m(Tlutesfor a quick interview. Pickens. who gave his age as ··an my 60s. let's le;ive it a1 that." has seen generauons come and go a long his route through the stylish Westcliff neighborhoods. .. r ve seen kids grow i1Ho 1ccn- agers. they weren't even born when I staned. •· said the longllme pos1man. (Pleaee eee &X-PILOT / A2) Bernard Schulman Wayne's Widow s~ei:ing divorce By BETl'Y PORTER ...,,...°"' .... 1 Ci t in~ "irrreconcilablc d if- ferences.. • Pilar Wayne Stewart an- nounced today that she and her husbertd of four mo nths are d ivorc- lna. Mrs. tewan is the widow ofactor John Wayne who died of cancer June II, 1979. He was 71. "We have fited for divorce." Mrs. tcwan said speakina for her hus. band. Stephen C. ~ tewan. ''Stephtn 1s a aood man, we have MPtCt for each other and we expea to remain aood friends," Mrs. Stewart said. The tcwans were mamed 111 a privatt ~ttmOny at Pilar's home. "la Roca," 10 NcWOOt1 Bc11Ch on L (PlaR-PU.Alt/AS) his white hair cut into shon bristles. .. I've seen many dogs and un- fonunately a lot of deaths." When you've been around the block as many times as Pickens has, you ~ mcwa tbao a mailman, you become part oithe manr f!mil.ies that deptnd on you for 1ruq letter from Aunt Thelma in Idaho or that Christmas card from grandm4 And residents in a po~n of Pickens' route along ford. Berkshire and Essex lanes 1e pres- ents and grcetin§ cards for ··E<f. our trus1y mailman · in 1heir curbside mailboxes, which bad been decorated with red ribbons and bows. ··1 figured I was liked but I dldn·1 realize that m uch. Ifs too bad thcrt aren•t more ~le like them;· he said. blushly sli&htly. Some peop~ also came o ut 10 shake his hand and wish him well. ''That's what kepi me here for 16 years." said Pickens. . This was actually the second change of seasons for Pickens. who joined 1he pos1 office after rc1inngas1 mas1er scrgean1for1he Army rccru1t- (Pl eue .ee ED/A2) F~nk Allan Celis was found on the rocks bcloW a cliff by some friends at about 4:30 p.m .• said Lt. Dick Olson. He said it appea~man fell about 150 feet. Cehs. wandcrina the bluf- ftop.t ~ed to remain behi.cl when his rricnds ~n chm bing down the treacherous cliff to the beach below. said Olson. "His fnends found him a lin~ la1er." Olson said. The death as 1entauvely ruled an accident thoufh an autopsy as sched- uled to p10po1nt the cause of death. according 10 O lson Irvine School District girds for one-day teacher strike BO percent of instructors to picket Tuesday: schools to staf op~n with s~bstitute teachers \.\.ednesday. In a 'ote last month. 505 teachers fa,ored 1he one-da) stnke whale 149 indicated 1he) prefcrrtd to accept the d1stnct's so-called "last and best" contract offer. By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of IM Delly Not ltelf Organizers expect more 1han 80 percen1 of 1he teachers an the In 1ne Unified School District to walk p1cke1 lines outside their schools Tuesday. The one-day protest strike 1s prompted b} deadlocked contract talks. officials saJd. Meanwhile. d1stnct officials vowed to keep all schools open w11h substitutes. Prmc1pals a t each school mailed le1tcrs to parents. urging them to send their children to classes as usual. Superintendent A. tanle} Core} said today that unarmed secunt} guards wall be stationed at each school to maintain order. C'ontran to rumors. regular school lunches will be ~erved. he said. ··1t's going to be cause fo r a great amoun1 of difficult)' for e\eryone 1n,ohed."' Core) said But he added that the one-da)' stnke. which he called illegal. will not cause d1stnc1 officials to retreat from their bargain- ing pos1t1on S1rikmg d1stnc1 teachers ~111 each forfeit one da)' 'spay. which ca ange from S 103 to SI 95. d1stnct o 1c1 s 'iald Dan ahng. e'\('('UllH' director ol outh Orange ( ount~ Educators. an umbrella organization for four teachers unions. said he expects 600 to 650 of tht> d1'itncl's 750 ms1ructorc; to take pan 1n tht> one-da) s1nke The aeachcrs plan return to classes Saling <;a1d sinkers wtll walk picket lanes outside their schools and try to persuade subs11tutes and non-stnlung teachers not to cross the Imes. ··e u1 1f. in fact, they're going to cross the lines.. there's nothing physi- cal 1ha1 will be done to them.·· he said. Regarding the guards to be sta- tioned a1 each am pus.. Sahng asked. ··1fthe d1stnct has no extra funds (for teacher pay raises). where the devil re they getting 1he sccunty funds?" upcnntenden1 Core} said the _ d1'itnct has no1 altered the "fast and tx-s1" financial offer made to teachers in December. The district offered a 3 t')('rcen1 pa\ ra1St" rc1roact1ve 10 Julv 1. (Pleue aee TEACR&RS/ A2) Hassle on growth in Mesa moves to planning panel D1ffertOC'CS o'er hov. osu Mesa ~hould grow 11n1t~ the re<'Cnt C'tf) Council et«t1on. turning tt into a lnock-down. draa-out fight with neither s.dc able to claim a full '1ctory. Opponents cntrcal 2f the counCll's pro-growth an1tude grabbed two of the three available St"ats.. ousung an incumbent in the procc But the su~ ha proven somewhat hollow. 1ncc the counc-11 continues to ap- prove controversial h1 h-dcnsny m11- den11al and commert"1al Pf'OJects.. 1f only _by pht votes. Wnb a chrtt~mbtf m&Jont , o u1 Mesa's council 1 stall 'cry much arowth oncntcd a the bell ~und on Round T~oof the lan<S-u bout. '~pt th1 ume tht round v.on't be bcld 10 the pohucal rcna ~1th v 1 n. mn~1n1 th( dcc1 inn TONY SAAVEDRA The rouna l. dwaded over the future of development 1n the city. as prcpenn1 to fill thrtt P\ann1ft1 Com· m1 ion posts for members whole term cxp1tt Feb. 2 . C.omm1 1ontn Mark loatc. J~ Di arloand Charles Matkel have all ta.id they w1U tea "'1ppomtmcnt tO four-year ttrm In man)' c.a the comlllluaoo • an ad\ittof'Y J"lnel for the council - IPleue ... nGBT/Aa) l f CMi11t rMILY "9LOT/Uonday, February 4, 1985 Fireworks mogul's lawyer drops.from-coriuption case -=~-............ --. LOS ANOELES (AP) -Citina a l problem el lell1 ethks, an anC>f"M)' dcfetidina Qranit County fireworu IMIM1t W. ~k Moriarty Oft tublit cOJNpt1on charaes withdrew tom the <l8.le Friday and the trial was postponed for two weeka. Donald Heller, who has rep- resented Moriany since the bust-. saessman was Indicted Nov. 8 o.n federal rackcteerina and mail fraud charaes. would not detail his reasons for witbdrawina. saying: "I'• cau&ht between the rock and the hara place." ••1 can't represent this man at trial," HcJler, of Sacramento, told U.S. Otstnct Judae William Rea. ·;But this isa matter that should not be disclosed in public," he said. "Because of attorney-client privilege, I would haYe")K'oblems even telling a j udae in chambers." Moriarty said he was puzzled by Heller's comments and denied there was an ethical J>roblem. "Operatina from here to Sacramen- to is a tremendous loaistical problem and he (Heller) has an enormous ta.scload," said Moriarty, whose Anaheim company manufactures Red Devil fireworks. Heller withdrew 12 days before the scheduled start of trial for Moriarty and las Vegas gambling figure Frank Sansone. They arc accused of conspir- ing to obtain a gambling license for the California Commerce Club in the City of Commerce by &IVll\I h1ddcn ownenhip sh.arc m the club to four formerColJlmCNe o1ty officials. Rea indicated he was initially rtluctant to aram Heller's request because he did not know the &rounds for it. "Any anomex may be met with the same problem. • Rea said. "It could concc1 vably affect every attornry wbo takes your p lace." But aft~r beana assured that the substitution of a new attorney would not delay Moriany's trial substantial- ly, Rta agreed and approved attorney Jan Lawrence Handzlik of Los An- geles, a former federal pt"osecutor, as Heller's replacement. "I don't expect to have any ethical problems representina Mr. Moriar- ty," Handzlik said. "As for Heller's withdrawal, the accurate speculation might be that therc were two different views on how to conduct the case and that Heller and Moriarty disaarccd." Rea set a new trial date Of Feb. 26. Chief Assistant U.S. Anorney Richard Drooyan said the aovern- ment feared the switch of lawyers could lead to postponements of the trial. "We have a continuing investiga- tion of Mr. Moriarty and others," Orooyan said. "We do not want to generate adverse publicity that would ~ffect tfie defendant's right to a fair trial in this case:• The U.S, attorney's office and the Orange County district attorney's pilicc arc checkin-' alleptions of money laundenn1 an contributions by Monarty to Cahfom1a political fiaurcs. Former Moriany associates have said he pve 32 officeholders and candidates laundered political con- tri&utions durina 1981 and 1982 as he lobbied for lqafization of "safe~and­ sane" fireworks in areas where they were banned. Meanwhile, the San Jose Mercury Newi r~ported Friday that two state lawmakers who voted for the fire- works l~islat1on -Assemblyman Frank V1cencia. D-lkllflower. and Sen. Daniel Boatwn,ht. [).Concord -later had dealings involvina com- panies in which Moriarty had an interest. An in urance firm two-thirds owned by Viccnc1a got an insurance con1rac1 in 1983 with the CaJifomia Commerce Club, the newspaper ce- portcd. Boatwnght said he recei ved about S 14.000 for legal services provided 10 R.E. Wolfe Enterprises of California. which is half-owned by Moriarty. Boetwright said he didn't know of Moriarty's interest in the company and both lawmakers denied any connection between their votes on the firrworks bill and the business deals. , I Suspects readied for trial in Chinese writer's mtirder TAIPEI. Taiwan (AP) -Justice 39, and Wu Tun, 34. reputed mem· Ministry investigators have turned bers of Taiwan's laraest underworld over to prosecutors two reputed organization. The statement. orig· g.:rngsfcrs suspected in connection inally was taken to mean that with the killing last October of a preliminary charaes had been filed. C'hinese-Ame~can writer at his Cali· but an information ofr1tt spokesman fomia home. the government said. said when asked for clarification that The wntcr, Henry Liu. 52. a critic no chlltJCS had been filed . of the Taiwan government. was shot The information office also said to death Oct. I 5 in Daly City, Calif. three Defense Ministry intelligence i The Government Information Qf. officials have had their cases referred , ficc . said .in. a b.ricf s~tement that to military prosecutors to determine ~ Justice Ministry 1nvest1gators turned •whether they were involved in the , over to the prosecutors Chen Chi-It. killing. i f ·PUFFING IN PUBLIC ••• t . FromAl : Tuesday when the C11y Council will smokers· cigarettes. • hear the public's comments on a It would also force restaurants to .. proposw ordinance controlling provid e separate seating for smokers > where a business' customers and and nonsmokers and proh1bn smok- .. _ employees ma)" take a puff on their 1ng in banks· and retail stores' wa111ng • cigarettes. lines • Pa11erned after ordinances 1n Smoking is regulated 1n Orange Pasadena. Los Angeles and San Count> government buildings and - Francisco. Laguna Beach's proposed JUSI recently -in Westminster regula11ons would r~u1re businesses go .. ernment ofliccs. But untt l now. no to pro1ec1 their nonsmokrng cm· Orange County mun1c1pal11y has ployecs from the tar. nicotine and tried 10 impose no-smoking rules on carbon monoxide produced by pnvate business or in other public Chen and Wu have been named 1n San Mateo County murder warrants in Liu's slaying. Police there said they believe another suspected gang mem- ber. Tung Kue1-scn. was also in· volved but said they lacked evidence to obtain an arrest warrant. A San Garbiel businessman. David Yu. was arrcsted in November but was re- leased for insufficient evidence. Taiwanese authorities have said Chen and Wu cannot be extradited to California to stand trial. places. Undrr 1he proposed ordinance. an employee (·ould designate his or her work area a no-smoking zone. In caSt' of conflicts. nonsmokers· nghts would be paramount. 'iupporters of smoking regulauons '>3} secondal) smoke fro m the burn· ing end of a c1gare11e may be more harmful than smoke 1hat 1s inhaled. They believe nonsmokers should be protected from the possible health risks of secondary smoke. Clear and cold climate ·conttnu.es The continued now of cotct w ftont the Arctic wlll ll.tlP lklM clMr end cold In Southern Cellfotnle llWOUQI\ T~. Wlltl ftoet •xpetMd In the tubUrbt tOftlOht, t"-Nettonel W...,_ lerVlce Mid today. AccOl'dlng to fOl'ecatt••, at jet llrcraft ...,.._the lfdlc w tak• only a day and a half to reecn Southttn c.lforn6L Howewr. at IOMr...,... It may take~ to • wte6t, ~ allowe time f« torM warming. The low tetnJ*'•ture In Loe Angelte tonight wtfl bt between 37 to '42 OeQr .... It Win be colder In the San F«nandO, hn Gabri.I and San Bemarc*lo vali.ys. With lowt of 28 to 38 degr ... end breaz:y winds of 15 to 25 mph below peMM, AIOna '"-Orenge Coat, the torecaat Ulll for clMtlng and ~old., toi;lgtlt ••cept In tocally windy .,... below the ,,_.. north of Loe~-Partly cloudy and COOi T"=l. wtttl lllQht chance of a ahower In aouttlern countlte. High• T ay 52 to ta. Ar ... of troat tonight with lowt In 301 and lower 40e •x~t upper 20• In eold"t vall~•· ""'-2t " 1(-Clty 24 14 Showe1• Tempe IMVIJ8M 41 24 ,...llOlllol w .. ..., s.n.c• lfOAA U I Oto& Cl c-o l.ltllt lllOCll 24 12 ::To· IOw '°' 24 ._. ...olllO •• • ~ 20 07 • m OdlY ,..,,,,. 27 14 ...... ....,,.,._, J 71 u NIHlll1 1t -04 ......... 14 -01 Calif. Tem1>9 .., .. _ .. M :=ciue a3 21 ....,....., .... 01 ·11 8'lfloCI 40 1• ... 11 ...... 24 " ~=--SI u NICIVN• as " .... ~ ., M M "' Allenta 42 32 HIQll. low '°' :M ,_,. -*" ... .... Ycwtl 30 17 Long*-'t M M AllenllC Cit) 12 ti ::.=., .-U.lln u 31 OrlMdo 74 57 '3 '° Mollro-le eo S3 ..,,.,,_ 32 " ,,,,,Ull~Na H 14 Eur•• -&1 ,. Mcoll~ 51 40 lif~ 2t 20 ..._... •• 40 F-52 a2 Ml W1ltoll ,. 20 lllfNl"dl .()& ~ ==r ... 1t .()6 ~ •1 ,, ~--. M ,. ... 'l3 ·II 2• .QI LoeA ..... 51 •• ...... 8"'lflOI •• S3 ---2t 1S l'Of1IMO,Or N 20 OMIMil 52 41 l'lllllllMN " 32 ""'"° ,. °' ,,..,.. ..... 2$ 10 ,_Aotll9t 11 " ,,._..,. 51 40 c...,., 00 ·11 :_w: ,. 24 ~...,.. .. Sii s.. lenlMdlno A N °'*1Mlon a o 51 37 ,. 22 ,_.__,Cltt 57 40 s..~ 51 :u Ollr!eetonWV " 07 ----... 2• a-....o 57 40 S..JoM " ll2 Ctl«lolle.HC 42 30 St LOUii 22 11 ..... 52 35 &enllAN 51 3t =~ 17 ·13 ........ , .... .,. u =~II ff 51 Sent1Ctw eo )I HI ..07 SlllUl&e<*y IO 17 67 •S T lhOI Vlllty 32 01 Clnc:WllU 1J 00 ..~ 82 30 ....... 51 31 y_,, .. ~ 33 11 Sen"'*'·'·"-13 73 Clew!-11 .o3 ··--&<I 31 81htMll'le 10 ..01 Columbue.Oll 15 ..()I a..ttle H 21 ... low. ~ tot 24 "°"'' Conco<'Cl,NH 20 .,, -*'tlellp.m SlwWYtPOtt 30 It Tide9 DlllM-Fl Wool\ 30 27 Spoil-,. ·11 !Myton 15 ..01 IY"--19 .()7 o.n ... 13 -02 Topeka 24 20 TODAY 0..M°"* 19 07 • SecondlOw u ,_ .. 31 a:oep.m. o.!rOll " ..()4 TulU " ao Surf report Second Noll 8:S3pm 40 !Multl -OS .,. WMflll>OIOll St 1• llP-80 ... TUHDAY ,...,.,_. 31 23 LOCATtoll em ettAN "lrll IOw t:1e .. ,,,. , , FatOO .oe _,, ~lwtl 1.a poor ::~:::rlow 1 a2 .. m .. l'!eigt18" H 13 Eztended ..._ .Newpott 1·3 .... 33'pm 1.4 Orll'ICIRepicN , • .oe 40lfl l"-1. Newpott 14 ,.., Second hlQl'I 10-0t pm <l.J ONetF• 02 .,, t211d ,,,..., Newpott 1-3 ,.., Hll'1IOl'CI H .()2 MOllly """" wlttl ""' d8yt -,.., .._Wedge 1·3 ,.., ~ -. todly et S'.H p,m • riM9 Hl6IN 05 ·2' nlgl\11 ""° l*IOdt ol ply = Laei-a.cl\ ,., poor Tueadey M 8·47 a.m and-• IQelrl M ~ 71 7t ""'"°'" H19N lfl .. """*' 508 end a..a.-. 1·2 l)OOt 5 27p ,,,, Houlloll M )4 COldlt 111 .. llllMd ~ wlllllowe Ill w .... ...,.M MOOfl ..... loeley .. •·33 p.m .• -.. lndlerl•lll• 11 -04 .. ...,.,., '°' lblO tlle _. .... dlNoelon: -I 211 a.m. llld r1eM IQelrl et S·45 p•m. FIGHT OVER GROWTH4 CONTINUES ••• F~mAl r screening development projects and various aspects ofland use in the city. However. the live-member com· mission is empowered to arant or deny such things as permits to operate ccnain businesses. building additions and signs. . II is a commissi'1n .that has come under fire by homeowner lf'Oups protesung large-scale developments that would be built near residential neighborhoods. Co mmissioners hoping to retain their three scats. a maJOnty bloc, may lind some oppoMtaon from freshman co uncil newcomers David Wheeler a nd Mary Hornbuckle, who were elected b> disgruntled homeowners opposed to development. Mayor Norma HenLog said this "eek that appl1 ca11ons for the com- miss ion scats and resumes will be accepted un11I Feb 15. Applicants will be scree ned and chosen for a public interview at a special council meeting Feb. 20. Depending on the number of applicant~. the appointments cou ld be made at the <1ame meeung, Henzog said. then I think the Plannin4 Com- mission will go alona with it. ' Sloatc added that he personally has tried to "maintain consistent arowth throughout the city and belance it for the benefit of all the people, not jusl an individual sroup." DiCarlo. 42, said that he has been more attuned to the homeownen' picas to limit growth that may have enviromental effects on residential communities. ·Tvc always been one who voted for the homeowners' rights. Anytime it comes to residential housing apinst co mmercial (development), I vc always been very, very stringent," said DiCarlo. a manaacr with JD Property Management in Costa Mesa. .. I want 10 see the property being improved. but not to the detriment of the homeowners," he added. "I feel sometimes it's a good idea to have new people with fresh ideas. ft keeps the juices flowi ng." she said. But. as Wheeler conceded, Hornbuckle is part of a two-member minority. And at least one of the majority members wouldn't mind leaving the commission as it is. .. I think we have an excellent Planning Commission and as far as I'm concerned I would like to reap- point all our present commissioners," Councilman Donn Hall said. Mayo r Hertzog said she would review the applicants. looking for people who coutd vote independently of council opinions or special interest groups. ··1 want somebody who will look at overall city needs and keep the city in ba lance. I'm not looking for a rubber stamp. but someone who can drmon- stratc good Judgment,·· she said. Councilwoman Arlene Schafer. who could nbt be reached for com- ment on her Planning Comission choices. has favored development in thr past. r • • • TEACHERS TO PICKET SCHOOLS •.. F rom Al The would-be commissioners are being asked to submit letters stating • their philosophy on land use 1n Costa Mesa. Markel. who finished sixth out of 11 candidates in the recent council race. may face the most opposition. Residents supporting Wheeler and Hornbuckle lambasted Markel's vot- ing record during the electiorts, point- ing an accusatory finJCr toward the developers and ·business interests contributing to his campaign. But the 45-ycar-old cement con- tractor is undaunted . ' • ' ' • i I J 1984. and J>rovided a formula for g1 v1ng teachers an add111onal raisr dun ng the 1985-86 school year. Teachers asked for a 2 percent raise re1roact1 ve to July and another 2 percent increase th is spring. The union has disagreed on the formula for computing next year's raise. Other non-financial issues also remain unsettled. including teacher grie.,,ance procedures and an .. agency 'hop .. pro"1s1on that would require all teachers to Jo in the union or pay an equivalent fee. Corey claims Irvine teachers' sa laries range between second and sixth place in Orange County's 12 unified school districts. depending on their education and yea~ of service. He said thr d1stnct's proposal, 1f accepted, wou1d move Irvine teachers up 10 between fi rst and third place. The superintendent <>aid 1he dis- tnct has recei ved some calls fro m parents wh o are concerned about how their children will be affected by the sight of their teachers walking picket hnes. Teachers assoc1at1on spokesman Saling. on the other hands. said most of ha s calls from parents have been expressions of suppon. Students wi ll learn about .. getting in"olved" and taking independent action to effect change. ahng said. ED THE MAILMAN RETIRES .•. From Al mg center in 'ian1a Ana With two re11remcnts behind him. Pickens sa id. 'T m not gonna la y down now and de teriorate. rm gonna' dust off my golf clubs and basically do what I feel like doing:· He apologized. saying that he normally has a few moments to chat wi1h people along his route, but he really had to get going now. ··You can usually find a couple of minutes. whi ch I don·1 ha ve." said Pickens. glancing nervously at his watcn and putting the Jeep in gear. EX-PILOT CONTROLLER DIES ... Fro m A l wa'i hired 1n I Wll b> Mr Schulman and former Darl y Pilot Publisher Walter Burrough., ··There"~ no question about 1t. Rcrn1e was was one of the best employees I ever had.·· former pub- l1'ihcr Burroughs said today. ··He was the best controller we had b} far and he was a very. very fine man·· Mr Schulman 1s <1urv1vea by hi s wife Helen ot Irvine: and daughters Alissa, a supervisor in the Dai ly Pilot composing room; Stephanie. who works in the UC Irvine athletic depanment and attends classes at Saddleback College. and Shana. 12. a student at Vista Verde School 1n Irvine Services were scheduled toda~ at I p.m at Pacifi c View Memorial Park and Monuary in Newport Beach. Mr. ">c.h ulman was the youngest in a fam1l yoffourch1ldren. His parents were born in Russia and came to the n1ted tates in the early 1900s. A na11ve of Connecticut. he ob- tained a bachelor's of science degree at the Uni versity of Bridgepun 1n Bndgepon. Conn. He earned school letters on the uni versity baseball and basketball teams and was a member of the accounting fraternity. \.._ PILAR WAYNE SEEKS DIVORCE ••• From Al 6. 1984. An elaborate rect'pt1on for 200 famil y memben and rncnds foll owed and the couple honey· mooned in Pans. ( osta Mesa. magaLinc. ~ A former Harbor Mun1c1pal Coun Pilar Wayne Stewan combines <.·areers as author ( .. Pilar Wayne's Fa vonte and Fabulous Recipes") and lecturer and columnist for the Daily Pilot. Tustin News and Slimmrr Mrs. Stewan has three children - A1ssa Wayne Kuhle and Marisa and Ethan Wayne. Stewan is tht' father of two children by a previous mania&e -Andrea. 13. and Matthew, 11 . Ju dge, tewan has a law practice 1n Mot'Oly ,_y It 't'O'I On OOC ~'fO'tl'~l>I' 5 30P"' c .. Ollut• 1Pm flfl4I 'f'J'll COOi' " 0. ~ .. .a .... o., .,.., ,.,,., ~ ,-ov»--Y""' COC>f i.p 1 • "' U1 oe40t• 10 •"' ..0'1"~~·· -~ • ORANGF COAST Daily Pilat H.L. Schwartz Ill Publlsher Frank Zlnl Managing Editor Karen Wittmer Advertising Director AoMmary Churchman Controller Robert L. Cantrell Dona.Id L. W1fflam1~ Production Clrculallon Manager Manager Clrculetlon 714/142-4333 c 1 .. Hled ..twertlelng 1141ea.1111 AN otMr ~ment• ea..-1 MAIN OfFtcl I \JO ........ ea, !.• Colle MeM C4 """' ..,_._ "°'' IMO Cot!• Wf'MI CA ·~ Cc~ l"'O"' •tel Chy C--~ ~ No _, \•Ol'ft _, .... _ .otot.at -"· .. _,_ ,....., ............... , Of 'fO'~ .. fl>(M --... -of c°""''fl'' - VOL. 71, NO. OM After fil ling an unexpired term for 11/i yea rs. Commissioner Sloate was reappointed, while Markel· and DiCarlo were added to the. panel in 1983. The three were given two-year terms. Sloate, a 55-year--old engineer with Rockwell International. said he has taken his cue from the council in voting for or against development projects. .. I think I will conunue to abide bY. whatever policy is set by the council as a majonty." he sajd. "If the council tends to temper some of the growth ... Just Call 642-6086 Designed, Finished Installed "I've tried to put the campaign behind me. I'm j ust trying to do my job now ... said Markel. .. If there are more competent people in the com- munity. I hope they come forward." So does Councilman Wheeler. "I have no faith in the current Planninf Commission. I will be extreme y disappointed if new com- missioners aren't appointed," he said. "They have a definite ·rah-rah' pro-growth attitude. And that's dangerous." Hornbuckle 1s also looking for some changes Laguna chamber hears eco-trends Craig Galbraith of the UC Irvine Graduate School of Management will speak about trends in south Oranae County economic development at the monthly Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce breakfast meeting at 8 a.m. Tuesday at the Hotel La&una. Reservations arc required by call- ing the chamber office. 494-1018. Adm1ss1on 1s SS. What do yoe Hile abo•t Utt Dally Pilot? What don't yoe like? Call tile number at left end yo•r meenae wlll be recorded, tru1cribed ud deUvere4 to tlae appropriate editor. The same Z4·lloar u1weria1 service may be used lo record letters to tile editor on aay topic. Coatrlb•lon to oar Letters col•ma m••t lacllNle Uielr name aad teleplaoae aamber for n riflcalloa. No clrculalion calls, please. Tell us wut'1 oe Y"r mlad. 31 Years Ex~rlence Manufacturing Quality Shutters FINEST QUALITY SHU I I ERS AVAILABLE ~ ON =tHE MARKEF TODAY~ •• AT-FAGOR¥~-­ DIRmCT PRICDI c.11~>141-1141 or 548-1717 l