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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-01-06 - Orange Coast PilotSporta Raider Lester Hayes• prayers prove futile as New England dashes his teams' hope of retu(nlng to Super Bowl./81 Entertainment The Muppets are turning 30 this month and their creator, Jim Henson, dis- cusses their comical ca- reer./ Aa B.uslnesa The U.S. economy has serious health problems that could become crip- pling ailments./ Al Coast Miniature traffic jams crop up on a vacant Costa M,sa lot as remote control cars cruise./ A3 California State legislators convene new session today, as Oeukmejlan, Brown get set to establish legislative priorities./ A7 Nation Assault teams storm a cellhouse at the Iowa State Penitentiary, free- ing seven corrections of- ficers who had been taken hostage by In- mates./ A4 World Colombia keeps 15,000 peasants out of harm's way as a second volcanic eruption Is feared./ A7 INDEX Bridge Bulletln Board Business Classified Comics Crossword Death Notices Entertainment Horoscope Ann Landers Opinion "' Pollce Log Public Notices Sports Televlslon Weather BS A3 B9-10 B6-8 BS B8 88 A8 B7 A7 A6 A3 84, 8 81-4 A7 A2 ** MONDAY, JANUARY 6, 1986 Jail inmate$· get· building$ Overflow prisoners from Musick Farm tents will be housed in modU lar f actlity from the main jail will be transferred Jan. 1 SIS the next m1les1one in the as necessary, he said. effort toaive inmates brcathmg·room. Oranae County is under a federal That's when the county will have to court order to reduce ovel'crowdod start limitiRf the number of prisoners cmrd itions in the men-S section offfie at The main JaH to I ,SOO. The Jail was main jail. U.S. Distnct Court Judac desianod to hold I, 191 inmates. William Gray found county super-Gray allowed the county to erect visors tn contempt of coun last tents for minimum secunty tnmates March for not taking his 1978 order . in June as atempQrary measure whtle reduce the jail's pQpulation to heart. the modular units were purchased early cold snap in November before the county installed rented heaters. The modular un1u should be an improvement over the ientt lioce thC)' feature individual cubicles aacl recrcatjon rooms for each modular unit The units arc rated for 409 inmates. By LISA MARONEY Of .. ~ ........ Minimum security inmates who have been rou~in& it in tents at the James A. Musick Honor Fann tn El Toro will start moving into modular buildings purchased to hold prisoner overflows from Orange County's Light sprinkle • rinses smog off But scattered ralnf all _...__ doesn't brtng boost for seasonal aver age_ By PAUL ARCHIPLEV and LAURA MERK Of ... Delly """ ..... Scatterea showers on Sunday help- ed wash away the unseasonably warm temperatures and Sfll<>j that accom- panied much of the holidays, but the light rains didn't go far toward meeting seasonal rainfall itverages. The mild storm. which developed when subtropical moisture combtned with a weak low pressure sxstem, stalled over Southern California longer than expected. Although the storm brought some needed moisture to the area. it wasn't much. Newport Beach repQrted .18 tnches of rain for the 24 hours ending at 4 p.m. Sunday. said Meteorologist Bill Hoffer. About .24 inches fell on Santa Ana. he said. The Orange County Environmen- tal Management Agency rcpQrted no more ratnfall af\er late Sunday. Dana Potnt's rainfall was negli- gible, said an Orange County Harbor Patrol spokeswoman. Hoffer. a Los Angeles Raiders football fan, said their Sunday loss dampened his sp1nts anyway 'T m gonna go out and bum my dnver's license. protest or some- thing, H he said. Sunday's showers didn't ~o far (Pleue eee LIGHT/ A2) main Jail in Santa Ana. Inmate transfers will bcgm Tues- day or Wednesday now that the modular units are ready, sajd Lt. ~.ichard Olson, Shenffs Department SPokesman. All prisoners housed tn the huge tents will be given a bed 1n the modular units. Low-nsk pnsoners As a result, supervisors are under and prepared for housing pnsoners the gun to meet ever more stringent More than 200 inmate\ sv.eltercd pQpulation hmits at the 1a1l or face through the summer w11hoU1 air PoSSible imprisonment themselves conditioning thrn shivered dunng an Supervtsors hope the additional beds wtll be the answer to keepina 11.1th1n Gray's p(jpulauon limju, said Paul Carn. an aide to Supervoori' ( ha1r1J1an Thomas Riley. ~ ,... ,..._., ""'De , ....... Khadafy almost launched War against U.S. Warns a n y onslaught will t;>e answered by attacks within U.S. TRIPOLI. L1b\a (.\Pl -Col Moammar Khadaf) said Lib)a 1s ma "state of war·· read} to repulse an)' attack from t.: S. warships in the MeditelTanean. and hamed that an onslaught would be an<;wered by attacks inside ..\menca. the Lib)an news agenC) repQned Khadaf)' also "'as quoted as refer- nng to President Reagan as an "Israeli dog." JANA. the state·owned news agen- cy. quoted Khadaf) as saytng Libya almost went to war Saturda)' \I.1th the U ruted States, which accuses Lib) a of abemng the Palesunian group 11 blames for the airport raids that killed (Pleue eee KHADM'T I A2) Yoammar Khadafy Diesel fuel spillage threatens Back Bay .\ large d1t:'sel fuel spill was dis- covered in an Diego (reek this morning and officials "'ere 1ry1ng to prevent the toxic matcnal from no\l.1ng downstream from Ir\ tne into Upper NewpQn Ba~. '>poke-;man Pat .\ntnm said a hazard- ouo; matmals team wa" 1nves11gating th<· cau~ of the ~spill that wa' d1~'0\ ered at al:lout I 0 a m "ThC\ Jre a1temp1ng to clean up thl· <,pill and find tht' ong.in," >\ntnm t.a1d A cycllat makea hie way along the Santa Ana R.l•er TraU near the San Die&o Freeway trying to a •old the paddlea from Sunday'• rafn. Orange Count' tire olfo.1al' were al the scene of the \pill m·ar < ampu'\ Dnve that wa~ threatening 10 con- tamtnate the eculogJcal n.-~nc of Upper Newpon Ba~ and poi;;o;1bl\ harm wildlife Orangt' Count\ Fire Department Thl· 'an Dit·gn < rC'Ck flow!I tnto th<' I ppcr '-ev. pnrt Ra~. homC' of the l 'pper ~c"pon Ba' E.colog.i~I Re· \t'r\l.' "'h1th lOntain~ a \anet} of \horc hird\ v.1IJ duc-l s and rare plant\ Some unbelted drivers getting tickets Two firms arraigned for water pollution By SUSAN HOWLETT Of ... .,..., .......... Some moton sts who have n~ect· ed to buckle up before dnving through the Orange Coast will be warned by pohcc officers, but others who are pulled over for a traffic violation will be issued a citation if they ha ve forgotten about Cali- fornia's new seat belt use law. Althollkh the state scat bell safety la w has been tn efTect smcc New Year's Day, Police say many peoplt' find 11 hard to remcmher to fasten their seat belt!i. Some law enforcement agencies already are wnt1ng uckets, but others are g1v1ng motorists a chance to get u~ to the law. "I thmk that most people are aware of the law.'' said lrvtne Police Lt. Sam Allevato, ··w e ~e that when they see a PohCC car. They remember and put on their seat belts. That tells me that people just necJ a reminder." Irvine does not offer a grace penod 1oacqua1nt people with the new safety regulat1dn, They began 1ssu1ng c1ta- t1ons Jan I . Allevato said. About 25 percent of the motonsts cited for traffic v1ola11ons 1n lrvtne since the law went into effect were also given tickets for not weanng theU. seat belts. Allevato said In NewPort Beach. you ha\e until the middle of this week to remember. according to NewpQn Beach Police SPokesman Trent Hams "We realize that 11 1s difficult for people to remember to put on their seat belts," Hams said. "But ~e arc aware of the need for the ..afet\ device. so we will be l'i'iu1ng the c11at1ons ·· Huntington Beach ha\ l l·pt 1n \ll'fl with the California H 1gh"'a~ Patrol in allowing bO day'i after the l.1"' "'l'nt into efTcct hefon-otlicer' there tx·l(•n 1ssu1ng c1tat1on~ tor unhud.kJ motonsts ·· 1t·s k1n°d of an educa11on penod ·· !>aid H unt1 ngton Beach <igt BrucC' Kell). CHP SPokcsman Paul C ald"'ell ..aid he ha~ seen mor(' lrt't"\1.3.\ dnH:~ opting to buckk up sine<.' the ia" "'ent into effect. "(think ptopk are ~om 1ng mort" aware:· C ald'-"ell said Officers on patrol ha'-1.· n011cc<.1 people rea htng for the b<'lt "'hC'n 1hc\ are being pulll'd ov<"r lor .1 traffic '1olat1on < Jld "'t."11 ~1J Bui atkr "'31lhtng pt·· rh If\ II• hide a can (If hccr under 1h1 'l'at \lr pass druit<. 1t1 JO l•ther pa,-.eneer thl' (Pleue eee Ul'fBELTEO/ A2) By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of .... ~ l'llo4 """ Two tiu\tnt''"C~ in Irvine and \anta .\na \1.-Cre ~heduled to lale Lhargt:'' tnda' tn Orange ( t)UOI\ \iun11.1pal ( oun as part or a ~tall: and l\IUO I\ crackdown jlml'd JI reducing water Pol· lut1 \1n prllhlt'm' in Upper NC\!.· pon Ba' and the Santa A.na R1\t:'r State budget top priority as Legislature reconvenes Pat \loon· a SPokcsman for the C al1lom1a Department of Fish and C.1amc. said Parkcr- Hann1fin < orp . an Irvine aero- spact' hrm and .\uto Master, Inc v.h1ch deans and rebuilds auiomoll\C equipment, have bc.'en ~ hargcd Wllh VIOlallng 'tale watt'r pollullon laws By JENNIFER U:RR • I ,,.,_ ..... SACRAMENTO -The Cali- fornia lq1slaturc opens its 1986 session today, returning to the Capitol for partisan prioriues. left- over lqislat1on and a budget of billions. Both Republican Gov. Georae Dcukmejian and Democratic As- sembly Speaker Willie Brown plan major speeches to lawmakers this week to outline what they wish to accomplish dunng this election year. DcukmcJian's speech. scheduled for Thursday, 1s the governor's an- nuaJ "State of the State" address. Brown. D-San Francisco. wants to u~tqe Dculcrnejian with a "1986 Assembly Ocmocrattc Agenda" speech Tuesday. Both speeches arc scheduled for 5 p.m. and both politicians want them carried live by radio and television stations around the st.ate. Legislators this week also will face their first hcarinas on bills left over from last )'car, will sec DcukmeJ1an's propo~d budget for the fiscal year that begms July I and will decide if Dcukmej1an's toxic agency should be audited. 8111~ introduced last year and still '!tuck tn their tint Policy comm1ttct mu'lt win that committee's approval b)'. Jan. 17 orthcy arc dead. Last year's bills mu'\t also be approved by their first hou~ by Jan. 30 to escape the ~me fate. In add111on, legislators will begjn introducing hundreds of new bills for fresh cons1dcrat1 on th1\ \car DcukmeJian must g1,c lhC' Lc-g.1<;- laturt his proposed nt\I. hudget b~ Friday. He 1<; expectl."d to hand lawmakers a $37 b1lhon proposal with increase!> for ~hool, JObs. tox1l''> and anll-cnmc program<; and po<ili1hlf freezes or cuto; tn other areas The ~1slatur~ then will 'lptml the next six months gotng over thr governor's bud$ct. 1tcm·hy-1tem anJ P1H1n1 its version in June Dcukme~1an asked the Joint L cg1'i- lauve Audit C'omm111ec 1n "'o"cm- b<'r to audit h1'i T11\11 \11~\IJn•t'' ( ontrol l>l\l'ilOn. '-"hit h " unJC'1 tnVt'51lgat1on b\ thC' F-Nkr;it Bureau ul lnvt'cillgallon It "a<. tht• tir't 11mt• ,1 governor has asl cd tor J lctu~lat1 \l' audit or one of h1!> agen\I('\ The commllltt plan' a hcann~ 'Wcdn~a\ to del 1dt' wht•thC'r 1n approvt' th<.' aud11 rt'qut'\t \omr comm1tttt memhcr<. Jrc cont<'m<'J about whether thr audit \h1111ld tall' place dunng th<' F-HI 1n'e'-llttat1nn into rontracung pnxt'durt'-tor tO\ll (Pleue eee LWISLATUU/ A2) Finding an antidote for post-holiday blues '\mugnment~ 1n the two cases were hcdult'd today 1n Santa ·\na \.toorc said the sing.le count against Parker·Hann1fin stems from a sp1ll la~t Jul} IQ, tn which ~o to t~l gallon!I of lubnatina (Pleue eee WATBR/A2) Letdown, d1sortentattollafter holidays Can hit children hardeSt. expert says- hohday 1 not onl} the Chnstmas ,;f'ts or the Hannukk:th gifts. but all the relatives th<'Y w who are no lonaer there to suppon them holtdays. and evt'ryone has 1 grt'll t1me." he said. Then, oner the kid have been put back on the plane home. dad tan to feel the los.s and wonden wh) th<'> shouktn't en.ioy that hohda)' \pin1 ye&N'Ound. Ociohcr and o"ember or 1n Marth when the ca'>t'<. n~ dram1u11:nll) L1kcw1~e Officer llo warJ E11enbcra of the l'lcwpon Beach Police Oepanmcn1 '11<l he uw no ua11st1 10 suppon the throf) that post·hohda' blue tnn\latcd intCI increased family '10len~ or ~u1c1de attempts .. Paut AICHIPUY PERSPlCTIV( The hohdays. fin~llyl are over. We can put tbc celebntina oeh1nd us. No more ru1b1na. catina. won)'1na. pa,r- tyina. Thank aoodne we can gcl beck into our normal routines and put our hvcs an ordot, ript? Hills psych1atnst ... By dcfin1tton it's out of the ordinary, and It's tome- tjmes hard to set beck to ordinary routines. "People's schedules are dis· onentcd, and of courte. there are a lot of bills to pay " "For oldc:r people. too. the reahty ha set in that the family 1~ no lon,er there. "And thcre'sa letdown bcc.tu!llC \be extra 1dmulat1on has ubsJ<kd, all the d«orallont and aJ1tter are aonc," he Mid. Font1Mtcly. ~t-hohda> blue don't tnnslate into an 1nC1'tast 1n cb.ikt abu.tt. S&Jd Nathan N1dumoto or tbe Oraftee Count) C'luld Abu R . Dunna tht hohda)'s, a lot of becb wert rmpty at the lJ('t MedJc:al < enter psych1atrk ~n-1cn d1v1110n. "'d Or Joe Huncu. clucf of ~­ ch1atnc tcrvt<'C'& o-~·YT ttt\1111 ready tol>'Ut up the no VK:anqr ._ .. It'\~ theft's a marted 1aa lllt I So why 1s 1t so many or u1 feel that dull, achina sadness, that nnptinesa commonly known 11 "post·hollda)' blucs'r' And what can we do about h? .. ft"t aJwa)'S'lld to end 1 holiday, .. .,d Dr Andrew S..·h~ a la&una Dr. Sc:hwaru aid pott~hollday blues can especialll hit duldren. beauee so much o the Chnsuna.t cclebral on ts for them. In f1C1, tbOIC famlly plhcnap ovu the holidays tnnslate into an 1ncreue in ctuld cuit~y c:atet o~ the hohdays arc ovn, Scbwaru Mid. ''Tbc lids come 1n from llltno1t to be trtlb fathc.r 1n 1lifom11 for tbe ="I county '"usu for the put., five ,..,... Nithunoto found lhcrc"a no •ncniuc. an ch~ abutt in JanlW')' over Dccicmber. and both monlhl show lower anodcntJ than 1n "Probabh around the 20\h of the month when the credit card cha,..n comt due dome llC' v1ok~ IOC$ up.'' E1tttnbtta JOkcd. "'but I don•t reall) know that •• ev~nbelc there a~ ~s that post-hohda)' blues art a real p~nomenon m the num~r ohdmmionuftcr 9M -~ hohda •• lhallcu II.Id. "'And a lot 0( "Ont of the annct1ons of the ~n••--&UD/Aa) =-~- .. . Admlnistrat lon 'onguard' against terrorist attacks LEGISLATURE RECONvENES TObAY .•. .._Al bdls puled by the l..qabtun bdore Mi.)C>Ul1>JDCDt an Sep\cmba but 'C'tOCd by ~ T-.o-thmh V-0\ft o( both bou:fu af'C oeeeuas)° lO ovC'fT'Wk any of tht vetoe&. Howt'vcr, Jlepubbaa lawmaken. parttcularl)' ltl the .Auem bly. have ref u.ied to wppon any override antmpu tn the lhret )tan ofDeukmejwi's ltrnl. The bilb lO be OOIUl&red by comm1n.ccs tb11 week tndudc a raft of propo5Cd tu cuu that f.aJled to wwn approval last year. Thotc are bcf OR the Antmbly Rtvcn~ and Tauuon Commanec today. They toclude two billi, b) M- tcmblymen Robert Naylor, R-Mmlo p~ and Gary Coad.It,~ that seek &o retUtD mo~ tc;> t.upeycn 1( the It.ate bas a budlt1 surpl tn. Condlfs bill. AB226, would Just require the Lqlllaturc &o f tgJJtt out bow to return any cx.c:ica LU collec-uom.. Nay1M1. AB271, would ~ qui.re the person.a) 1ocomc w ratt to dTop and deduet1on1 and crediu &o iJ'ICTellK an the eveJJt of a iurphu. Other bdh before the commin« wou.ld aempt I nd1V1dual Rrtiremeot A.cX:oun:t cootnbuuons from the st.ate tDCOme tu (IRA.I arc exempt from fec:kraJ wo. bqt oot stater. grant a w break for spaying or oeu1mJ1C a dos. and rcq~ commera.al ~ M)' lO be fl I ltcd for pi~ tue1 every 6 ve yean. Comm.in.ca this week art abo KbeduJed '° belt biJ.h th.at would: -Reqw.rc honey &o be labeled WJtb a warning that n .&ouJd not be fed CO 1 nfanu under a year old. The bill. S8866 b) Sen Manan BerltM>n. R • Sewport Beach. 11 before the Sen.alt lica.lth and Human Serv1CC1 Com- nuttet Wcdn~y. -1 oaeuc the aat for k.mdergamn admw>on from 4 ycan and 9 months ~ Sept. 1 &o S years by 1989-90. The bill. AB2S69 by Assemblyman Jack O'C.onntU, D-Sania Barbara, a bef~ the Aiscmbly Educauon sub- comminec for educauoo.aJ reform Tuesday. -lm~ ''duues" on~ web as oot lkiin& while drinJun& or using dnlp. IDd m&U violation an ~­tioo ~ to a SI 00 fine. The bill, ABJ 626 by Amcmblyman Norman wacn, D-Plymouth. is before the Anembly Judiciary Committee Tuesday. LIGHT RAINS RINSE ORANGE~ COAST •.. rromAl toward dcnuna January's rainfall aver-qt, either, which " 2.S6 1nchC1 1n Newport Beach, Hoffer said. The 1Ca10nal avenat along the Or.inJe Coast 11 JU\l over 11 mchC\, heu1d foe dunna the morning houn W111 bum off to mostJy clear sbes and wanner temperatures T ucsday Wlth local lUSty winds. T emperaturcs arc ex,pect.ed to reach the mid to upper 70. Tuttd.ay wah loW\ tonight 1n the mid-40s &o m&d-SO.. And despllc threatening sues and occasional light showers throughout the da ... local officiab ~rtcd no ram-related problems 1n the Orangr Coast Sund.a) "Can you believe It'? People arc learning how to drive," said a CaJ1fom1a Htghway Patrol dlJJ)atchcr about the dearth of accidents on local ----~-=--c=_ --~---.. Good comet'-vtewing s.kY tonight c • --....~---.... ..... ---"...._ ..... .__,_a ........ .. EST Tue __ .. S uC M ......... '*-.. .. ,, .... ......, ....,...... . C....-I JI ___ ,_..._ ... D .. .... 7QaT ......... L L I dl._ ....... eaa ......... .. ..... ..,..tlllill. MIMI .. Or-..C.. ••.___.,a--....... MO :~:..,'f."=.:~25=.:::..:s~ ---,.,..~~ ..... ,a ,..,_,_.._ --Ull"~ ................................. . -· 1tto-7to"bollt .. 1I02Aool...,_ ... ...,.. 9lld Tumd9> Som 111 _,.. 2 kt J tllirt......,. a.. ........,,.....,. u.s.'Tempe = ,, . • Z1 ......... ....__ .. ,....,.. ........... ....... • Sol .. a . .. ..... . ......... ... • .,,_ n•_... ..,... '' a .,...o.... , .. . . __ ,_ : : -----------..,.--0...------u-... - : ~Calif. Tempe :-;-::,. : : .... .. , ........... -c.. • I' 0..-.. Cl!t .,,_ ., u ,.a.-: : 11 "-r .. v.., : : ......,. CS Mamo. ., ••-.. ., n· ... .. tt - • 0 .... --•• !=:Vty ., ., ...... -~ ,. . .,_ ... ._ . ·==-..... ~·~ c:...-» v ~ 11 22...-... ,, D ~ ~........ 17 t i ,, -~ . " Surf 0.-~C. Ma....,,.... °"""' ·"" v v ..... • • .._--.. a • • • ._.... • u -MAN ~c. ... 12 "-"'0..-0...... u .. .... Cllfmp .. ....... c.-.a Ii M ·~ , ......... Ol\t 17 93 g. ..... l • •1 l•l ,. I -I poor 0 -~ • na.._r_ C-Oll. • M ... &AM 0., ~ : :-o.. ;: : ., P ._"'-a .,. • ,, ... ..._.. I I .. ' -1·t poer 1-l "* Olll9-A-..... ...... o.w-> ., n ._ .. ....... 16 54 • J1 t¥.--"" 2-• _.. """"' • $ p ... 0.-J t M ... I o.-.... .. al ......... a--11 • .,.._ 0..... 11 .f1 ,...,. 8"-16. ,_ "'--ZI 41 ,_ ,.... u ... . -~.. .. .. 1177...... 11 • . ,.. ~ ., ,, •&..... ~IM • .,..... 54 JI Q to& ._.,. n St • zs c:-i111 ~ S7 Tide. TOOA't 70lp"' II 71 P.lft ........ • zz--cw-.... 211 u ......... ca..~ ., • n Z1 ...,_ 16 S7 )t ZS_.., .. S6 Wll ....,_ i i •l T'UHOA't =-: : ---------..... ,, !13 ~~ ... S6 I 00 LM 12'pm 10.p.l'll 1.6 1 1 3 7 :-,. :: : Extended ~ .. S6 ._~ n 56 5'.n -loo., .. •MP"'· ,._ T...O., • 1-M ._,.. - -..... • • 5tpr11 --• 20 .._.. ... !i6 •• • a » 1.o.c-.._..,....__ -17 JI ___ __ ......,_ f1 54 -~ 16 S1 .c-c... • JI ____ ._.,. ... _ .. ~ Ul11'11111t •• _,__~ ... -..... ~ S..0-W • '1 .... ._ M ~ ""-' -I04e\' 81 I '22 P.1'11 • ,_ T~•4-ola.r11 Wld-llfl*IM 2:1)9 , ... ~,_. • n • ...,._ ,, u UNBELTED DRIVERS GETTING TICKETS .•. From Al off~ art tuned u:i to m.aoniven b) motonSU wbo sec the red lights bchmd t.hcm. 1bt offiom arc pretty used to people tryUJ& to \,nca.k a« off. - CaJd~U wd. He added that the 60- da>· ~c:ood.luorung penod" will be · utcd lO in.Ii*~ ofJ.bc law. But after that who buc:kk up after t.bC) arc a for anotbtt violauoo ~-in aitt a no scat belt ucket too Pohoe nwnLl.lD that yean of st.au.sues provt th.at ICCl<knt ''1CUm s who were oot ,_,unng scat belu suffer more Sienoiu in June!> and dozens who arc lulled 1n traffic ac:odtots sbouJd ba"·c IW"'lVed bad ~ bttn wcanng a seat belt CHP officuh $a} the cost has spread throuabout the nation by higher insurance premiums and medical costs. The ntw law rcqull'CS every dnvcr and pasenger of a pnvate car or truck to wear a seat belt at the nslc of a $20 c1tat1o n for the first offense and $50 for the second. However. police cannot stop a car or truck Just because a dnver or passenger is not buckled up. WATER POLLUTION CASES ST ART ..• From Al oLI v.crc dctcctcd m the Lane Flood Cont1ol Channel. wtuch Oows into the San Dieao Creek. The creek runs an to Upper Newport Bay. The Fish and Game spokesman wd constructJon Crt'W wo~ an tbe Oood oootrol channel noticed the ou bull<lioe up behind a temporal) earthen dam lbcy bad bwlL Moore said the oil c.u.scd the death of about SO crayfish. but did not reach Upper Newpon Bay itself becatHC of the dam. He wd m vesupaors be- lieve the 011 came from an incorrectly constructed Parker-Hannifin d1s- chat)t system. Chuck Fnedcndorf. a Paner-Han- nifin v1~ president.. today said he was unaware of the speclfits of the Fish and Game charge. But he said the spill aUepuoo apparently was tied to tbe company"s Bert.ca Control S}sttms plant on Von KMman Avenue. south of the San Olego Frttway. Fricdersdorf said that 2~vcar-old plant was shut down in August and ns opcrauons moved to a new building 111 East l.n aoc:. He said the older (aolity u scheduled for demohuon. "h had become obsoltte for o ur growth oce<h." he said. rub and Game sought two water polluuoo counts against Auto Master o( Santa Ana for aUtgedly releasing waste oil and another urudcnufied subst.aoc:c into a storm drain. Moore sa1d tbu oll could have flowed into the Santa Ana River and eventually the ocean 1f 1t had not bttn stopped. He said each misdemeanor count has a maximum ~n.alt) of a S2.000 fine and one )eat in Jail Moore said the charges ag;u ns t Parker-Hannifin and Auto Mllttr arc pan of a JOJOt effort b~ the Orange County Envu onmental Management A&cncy and state Fish and Game officials to step up enforoement of wattr polluuon laws. He said rela· t1 vely small corporatt polluuon prob- lems Ln the past havt usu.ally resulted in warnings. not coun charges. But Moore said th~ violators "don't seem to be t.akmg It senouslv. And all those httle (water polluuo n) incidents add up." He said state officialsare anJtious to preserve the water quality off Orange County's beaches and in its rare wetlands areas. Although the $2.000 fine for cadt water polJution count may be rela- tJ vcly low for M>mc companies, Moore noted, "If they don't clean it up. there's no limit to the amount of umes you can hit them with a fine." Pbonerateblkeseea DALLAS (AP)-Cnnsumers soon will have to pa) more for local telephone service becau!C now that the vario us Bell companies have been separatC'd from AT&T. the revenue brought 1n b> "artificially high" long- d1st.an~ rates is no lonaer available, a top Bell exccuuve says. Local telephone cons were avcr- aJ.C<i and kept artificially low befo re d1v~11urc Skies wlll continue to clear today, acGOmpenied by temperatures rang- ·ing from the m1d-60s &o 70. Forccastcn predict low cloud& and Surfen and <1W1mmer1 Wi ii find water tern pera tu res a ch1ll y S 7 degree\ along the beaches. wt t b surf a vcrag.a ng 2 lO 3 feet. freeways. r-------~--------------------------------~~----~~~~----------~ BLUES CAN FOLLOW THE HOLIDAYS ... From Al them are fcchn& dq>rcs11on. feeling blue." "Of course, there arc different And bow does one go about diagnoses, but depression " often a oombatting post-holiday blues'> component." Or. Schwanz suggtSted people ~t And the bluei many peo ple feel nght back into rciular schedules with dunna the holidays them\Clves may theu fam1J1es, and get in touch with li nger after it's all over. those who make them feel good Kathy Pfister, an administrative MDunng the holidays people are \ttrCUry at Phillips Medical System\ \pend1n&so much lime w11h rcla11-.t\ in J...aaurua Hills, said Chnstmas wa\ and others the) don"t normall) ')Ce such a bag disappointment, she still they don't have lime for fncnd\ who ha~n't recovered make them happy "The ~t wa~ out of their gloom" .. Ne ver in m y life have I been )() to 5CC those fnends," he ~1d gJad the holidays are over ... Pfister Or. Hullett su110,stcd peo ple in· \aid. "I had way too many expec.ta-I th I _... 11o ns. I felt liker was alone, not a part vo ve emsc ves in pro1ects that give them pleasure. thin~ that have of anyth101. "mean1nf. and p urpose like the "And New Year's wu temble On holidays.• New Year's Day, I didn't e ven get out "New Year's re~luuons. forexam- of bed " pie, continue the holiday-; 1n a sense ·· Pfister said Chnstmas used to be Hullett said. "They g.a ve you a ioch a b1& event, when the fa mily oonunuataon of the holiday spint drove around to look at decorations, "It's not the end of something, but when strangers came caroling at the the be&innjna." door. Some people have already take n Th11 year, her boy(nend was too action, such as travelers eager to get busy with work, h1,J own depression out of town. and "being a scrooge•· to help hft her " Mariryn Mitchell Qf Sundance 1pints. 1he said. Travel 1n Newpon Beach said bust· "ThlS year I was really looking for neu drops to a tnckJe around No- that oonuact w1lh the spint of vembcr when everyone winds up Christmas," Pfister said. "and It their holiday plans. didn't happen. "Then on the Monday after New ''I felt really let down. rm still Year's, all hell breab loose. People <>f'AHGE .... ..... COAIT --· ..... , .. OfllllCa ._. ...... c:... ...... CA ...,..,._ ... 1• C:... .._. CA 9'tH say, 'Ob my God, let's make plan&, ... Mitchell said. "I think it's the busiest day of the year, absolutely crazy, hkc every other Monday rolled tnto one.·· "People want to go skiing. lO Hawaii, on winltr cruises. ··1 get blue.Just thinking about It," she sa1d. O f ooursc, not everyone can afford to drop everything and Jump on an airplane to elsewhere. Anotheropuon to consider, hke the bwnpcr StJdcr uys, Mwhen the coing gets tough, the tou&h go shopping." "They do," said branch man.ager Sue Graham at South Coast Ptaz.a's Bullock's. "There arc so many more bargains after Christmas. and a lot of people got money this year, so they're down here spending It. "They have a different mentality. Before Chnstmas they were loolung for the right 11fi. but they're bargain lluntcl"I now. "And they were buytn& for some- body else before, but they're out for themselves now, too," Graham said. Sales are partJcularly brisk 1n the ladies apparel department. she wd. "It's a new year. new clothes, a new look. "Maybe that's the way to combat the blues." ~--.-n:---'..,,. .. ,...,,, Justcall 642-6086 __._., ,,.,., If , ... Ot ""' -'fOi' ~ .,, S )() 11 ,,. oe'<Jft 1 ~ "' t"O yGlll caoy .,. M What do you like about tbe Daily Pilot'> What don't you hke? Call the number above and your messaae will be recorded. transcribed and de- livered to the appropriate editor. The same 2""hou~answerina service may bt used to record letten \o the editor on any topic Contributots to our Letten column must include their namt and telephone number for verification Tells us what's on your mind. -..'° k'"'°'' -~, " ,0.. 40 "VI 'K-,_ COP!' Dy 1 I ,. C.-M'Olt •O • "' -'(OJA 'llPY • °'~'° Clrc•ltlltteft , ............ .... o.-.c:ou..t~ Al-..... l~ .... ,. ,_ 9BIE SPORTS LTD. f'ifewport's Best rrices on Ski Equipment AFTER CHRISTMAS ·SPECIAL "h ¥'* 0 PPJMA® Ski wear Men·s & Ladles· Parkas \ 2831 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar 675·9700 l • Parent se1ninar slated in Laguna A four-week seminar called "Parentin& Teen- aaers: Hope for lhe Present" begins Jan. IS at, the Lquna Presbyterian Church. The scuions will be conducted by a group of psychol<>Jists and rnaniaae and family counselors from K..a1ros Psychological Services on succeujve W:cdnesdays. Eact\ two-hour seminar w1ll conclude w!th an open forum, allowing time for interaction wuh other parents and seminar leaders. . Each ~minar is $20 per person and includes dinner, beginnan~ at 6 p.m. For more information call the Rev. Craig W1lltams at 494-7555 or register at the church, 41 S Forest Ave .. between 9 a. m. and 5 p.m. weekdays. Art League to convene Officers wi ll be installed for 1986 at Wednes- day's meeting of the Huntington Beach Art League, scheduled for 7:30 p.m. at the Edison Community Center, 21377 Magnolia St. I • OrMQe Cout DAILY PILOT/Mondey, January 8, 19M '* Al D.-, .... ,..._ .,n..... ......... I .. Helen Prothers, an art instructor at Orange ~oast and Coastline colleges. will be the demonstrat- ing artist for the mee11ng, which as open to the public. Members are encouraged to part1c1pate in the monthly show, for which pnu;_s will be awarded. Radio-controlled car fan• enjoy their •port on vacant lot in Coeta Me.a where racee are held the aecon d Sunday of eTery month. Garden club to meet "Proteas for Landscaping and Display" will be presented by Roger Bodaert, hort1cultunst and landscape designer, at Friday's meeting of the Laguna Beach Garden C'l ub. Traffic. is hectic even remotely Members wi ll meet an the Neighborhood Congregat ional Church Hall, 340 St. Ann's Dri~e. for an 11 a.m. workshop on starting ve~etables and bedding plants. Bodaen's program will fo llow at 1:30 a.m Seat belt progra_m set A sa fe ty pr!senta11on on seat belts, which are now mandatory for dn vers of Cahfomaa vehicles. will be conducted Fnday from 1·30 to 2:45 p.m. at the Irvine Senior C'enter, 3 andburg Way. To pics will include the effects and enforcement of the new law, films and demonstra1ons. Call the center at 733-1055 fo r more information. Student workshop set The L1v10g Success Center will offer a two- sess1o n workshop for all students. panacularly those planning to go to college, aturday and Jan. 18 at the Neighborhood Community Center. 1845 Park Ave .. Costa Mesa. The se minar "'II focus on 1mprovemen1 of stud} skills. note la king. papers. tests and tame management. T he fee 1s S48 and the workshops wall be held from 2 to Sp m. both days. C'all 64S-2964 for additional information. Back bay tours slated The next in a senes of free. guided na1ure walks in the Upper Newport Ba> Ecological Reserve will be held Saturday morning, sponsored by the Fnends ofNewpon Bay. Tour groups will ~tan e'er) 15 minutes from 9 to 10:30a.m. from thecomrrofEast BlufTDnveand Back Bay Road. The tour route as paved. bu1 comfortable shoes should be "'om. officials said. An Invitation: A1ten11on organization presidents and sec- retaries We want to help make your upcoming events, meetings. seminars and fundra1sers suc- cessful Send brief announcements including time. place. cost (1f anyl and a ptlone number tor add1ttona1 Information to Bullelln Board, Daily Pilot P 0 Box 1560 Costa Mesa. 92626 Reports of your club or organization's activ111es -like community service pro1ects or election of ottlcers -should be directed to the Community News Editor at the same address Non-returnable black and white photographs are weleome I Monday, Jan. 6 • 9 a.m .. lrvlae Cblld Care Project Board. Irvine Unified School D1stnct Admanmrat1on Building. SOSO Barranca Parkway. • 7:30 p.m .• lrvl11e Finance Commlulon. ( 1ty Council Chambers. 17200 Jamboree Blvd. Tuesday,Jan.7 Bill Allen, 13, of Irvine got car for Chrtatmae and la already adept at driving. • 6 p.m., Lagu.na Beacb City Council. Council Chambers. S05 Forest Ave. Electronic book-ope control ateerlng and mini ab'ock• help abaorb the bumpa. PoucE Loe Woman faces new trial in Huntington drug slaying By STEVE MARBLE Of IM Delly ~II.lift A 21-:rear-old woman who claimed she unknowingl y walked into a murder sce ne in Huntington Beach last :rear apix-ared in upenor Court 1n Westminster todayto face murder charges for a scCO,!ld time. Lisa Mondragon claimed \he was looking only to bu> manJuana and cocai ne when $he accompanied two men to a Huntington Beach apart- ment Feb. 6. 1985. But police said the Santa Ana woman and her companions stormed the apartment 1n search of dru&S and money and fa1ally stabbed W1H1am frank Cody. 30. with a butcher knife. 8oatla Coanty A $3,47 5 airless spray machine was reported stolen from an El Toro construction site at the comer of Pittsford and M1dcrcs1 sometime between last Tuesdal and Thursday. • • • CosmetJCS and mapiinn valued at SI O t..s9 were rcponed stolen from a Mits1on ViCJO CVS stort It 22000 Crown Valley Parkway la t Thurs- day. • • • A $4SO TV sct. a $260 video cauctte recorder and a SI SO terco One of the intruders "a" armed wtlh a -Sawed-off shotgun. I lunt- ington Beach pohce said. Clement Brown and Tutu1la Tuvalu, both 23-year-old \\ C\1- manster residents, were con' 1rtc-d ol first-degree murder Oct. 14 and sentenced tb 2'5-year pnson term'I. According to evidence introduced dunng the tnal, Brown. Tuvalu and Mondragon planned to rob Cod> and search his apartment for drugs the:r believed were stashed there. During the alleaed robbery. a fight broke out and Brown grabbed a knife and stabbed Cody in the head and chest. accord1n1 to Deputy O.stnct Attorney Rick Toohey. receiver were reported stolen last Wednesday from a Laguna Hill• home alona Hollyboclc while the vtcttm was on vacation. Coetalileea A .3S7-calibcr Mqnum 1 revolver wu reported stolen Saturday from a business at 3100Alrway; The Jun wa worth SJSO. pohce reports wd. • • • A punc contain1n1 e)'t&Jassn and S3S in cash wa reported stoltn from a blue Ford pickup truck parked.in the 2800 block of Royal Palm r>n "e • • .\II thrl'C ~'t'rt' l'h.Hged with murdl·r hc~au-.c 1hc~alkgcdl\ paruupatcJ in . a cnmc 1ha1 rc<.ultl'd tn death. But thl' ...imt• 1uror'> "ho con' 1cted Brn"n and f u\alu "l'rl' unablr to n.'al h a unanimou<i \ l'rd1c1 on \,fon- dragon. dl·adl11l l>.10j1. 11 -1 111 fa, or of guilt \.lon1lragllll thl' 11nl\ one of the three tl> talo.l' lhl' \' 1tnt'\\ ~tand. al'o reJClled an or)cr to pkad guilt~ to a redut.·ed l h.irgl' 111 <;{•cond-degr~e murder. "hirh came'> a ma'1mum IS-year pmon tcmt Mondragon·., attorrw'. C 1af) Proc - tor said h" l ht.·nt rl·1c<.·tcd the offer becau5e she .. didn't lrcl ,hl' "a" guilt\ of an) thing ·· Saturday. • • • Text books. a stereo. o "all h. hoes and sunaJaucs, worth SSSb SS . ~ere reported tolcn Fnday fcoman uffice 1n the social science building at 01'9nJe Coast Collqe, 2701 F111rv1tw Road. • • • A S39S car stereo and a S 13 9S ps cap were rtponed Jloka from a black 19M VolbWflltft Rabbo convt"rt1bte parked 1n the I JOO block of dams venue turday 4 • • OffiClal at occ1alty Poncbt. 19.o C ustomized cars zip along in the vicinity of I 9th, Po mona and Meyer streets in Costa Mesa- making good time. especially on weekends. But the1rdriversdon'1 have the frustration ofjocke~ 1ng thro ugh beach-bound traffic. T hese cars are radio-controlled I/ I 0 scale models with speeds determined b) elaborate electronic hookups that contro l the steenng mechan- isms and mo tors which power the vehicles. And the roadway isa course throu~ an empty dirt lot. Starting wnh similar chassis. the outer body design 1s left to the creat1 v1ty of the racers and can be as reahsttc or far o u las t hey hke. So tl)e fun. competitive gather- ings-and the more serious races on the second Sunday of every . month-are cotorful and excit- ing w1th a good share o faccidental flips that are quicker to turn right side up than to fut electronically. Bob Smith of Coeta Me.a. left, aeta aome polnten on body deelpa from Chrta Hardeety of"MlMton vtejo. Can. which are one-10th acale modela, can Alld Ju•t like Ufe -alu counterparta. they fly when jumping over the blger bum1>9 . c raah wh en u ncontrolled. lnaet. Placentia .\' e . reponcd that some- one bopped O\ er 1he fenced ) ard Thursda)' night and stole t"o "heel<t and ures off a ~orsche unc.kr repair Fountain Valley The o" ner 01 a T C\aco S<"f\ Ke sta11on at 8S10 \\ amer .1.' e reported that thieves tole elght car battene'> worth $248 from the e~tabhshment Saturday night. Police reports sa~ thc- intruders also smashed one ot the wrndows. doing $1)0 in damage • • • A $435 lll-.,peed b1qcle "'a re- ported stolen aturda) from 1he garage ofa home in the 16600 block ol Da1s:r • • • .!\ 37-:rear-old anta .\na re\1Jen1 reported that a thief stoic a S, 1-' \Jr ste~ from his orange I~ ' To~ ou Cehca parked along \\-amer .\'cnur between Euclid and Ward «rl'ets Saturday • • • The owner of the Gala Baker) 16581 Brookh unt t . reported that a thief broke into the Mtabhshment Fnda) ntaht and tole S585 an ruh from the rca.ister and a fihng cabinet • • • " 39-year-old resident 1n the 9.200 block of Honcys uck1e reported Fn - day that Lh1eves tole S ,220 10 ,cwelry and S 14,4'00 in sflver from her home. The Vlctim told poh~ that the 1ntruden en~rcd tt\e home through a dinina room window lrt1ae \ A W1nche ter nnc and four new M1chchn tun~ ~ned \tokn from a homealona Ralc1ah unda) b' a 1h1ef who cntet«l thtouah a rtar hd101door • • • ..\ purst> containing cred11 Jr,\\ t°'u1 no cash"" as rt"ported stolen tr •n J, ar parked an the 4100 blocl ••I Kt'' l'' Strttt unda) Pohce-re("m' ...i 1d tht· car {l.1ndo" had been kft 11pt•n • • • .\ grt>en Motobecant' , -'rn·J b1qcle "as reported sh,kn tr11m .1 parl at -'601 \\al nut .\\l. 'un.i.1' The· bike "'as reponeJh '' unh tx·- t"'-et"n S ~OO and S400 Newport Beach .1. g) m ba& containing a 4 '"' alitx-r au1omat1c ""as. reponN 'tulen \un- da' from a black 19 4 Po~ hl' oJ 11 <.. arera parked at tht' l o<>ta \k\3 Recreation (enter 1$4' Parl>. Lane Police repons "1•d thl' 111p \ .. a, J11" n "hen 1he tht"ll on um:d • • • \ ahum. Ta lluan and r 'km1l "11h ,odeinC' "ere rt'f!Ortt><l \lolC'n I n<l.i' trom a home 10 thr I ~oo t11ocl>. ot Pt .\lbano; Pohlt' re port<. -..i1d '" aquamanne wnNnl uni..no"n '.ilur ..-.ere al ~tolcn • • • Tv.o porcehne dolls' alued at S '4t wert' reported \tolt"n ThuNia\ from the OnC'e l pon a Chn~tmas \1on:-ut 1 I Fashion Island • • • .\ re 1dent in the I 1'\0CI hi<)( l ol Quail reponed that th1e"e!i stc)le all four tares and " h~I~ offh1 blue I ~X4 Merttdes 500 EC parked 1n rr?int ot h1 home Thursda) maht Pollet' e$11mated the lo 11 S4. ~00 Lepna&Mcb A white 196 VoUc~wqcn Bua ........ , tolen undA) 011 Montett) nd C')'prt s dn"e,, lht v1ct1m told pnhcc The \th1cle was last ~n at 6 pm ~tUrdt\ • • • • Firefighter<. e' 11ngu1shed a 'chicle lire unda' on "'orth Coast H1ghwa' • • • .\ 1uth (. oa t H1ghwa) rei.adent rcportt'd a hurglan Sunday with an es11matrd l1w1 ot SI SO • • • .\n C'Sllmatt>d S40ll "orth of 1ev.eln "a'i reported stolen from a L<ls Roble\ home ~turda~ • • • Police arrested two motonsts un- da-. o n susp1c1on of dn v1ng under the ml'luence of alcohol Rand\ Leon Ru sell :'.!.< "'a!i stopped at 11 'U a m on '(1nh Coast High..-. a~ at Ir' int• C. o' c Ronald ( urtts Dale , I ' wa' am~lt°'d at 12·45 a m also llO ...,,mh C oa'lt H 1ghwa~ at lf\1nr (1)\l' Huntin (ton Beac h .\ S '00 T\ set a SIU phone 4n,1 S ~JIOO 1n Jev.eln v.ere reported 1oltn trom .i home 10 the 16 "loo bloc!.. ut Ro"' 0' er the weekend The th1et entered through a \ldt' hathroom "'ndo" pohce reports said • • • .\ re\1dent 10 the ''00 t>lnck of Tem~ rrponed that a tool bo:l rnnto inmg tools i.nd Ii htng poles. \.\Orth S' 000. and a S:!OOcolor TV 'lt'l "ere \llllcn Imm h1\ boat <;unda\ • • •• \\'meunc rc-f)<1rtedl\ \h)lc.' S 'lX' in food twm the tutra r nf ,t h(1mt" in the 8XC'K) hl1xl ot Rur kre't \aturda:r night • • • Jev.cln 'aluC'd at S., 50 ~... re- po nC'd \tolen ~unda' from a home 1n tht> ~0"'00 blod of ~al.".h Boult'vard Tht 1h1et entertd tflrou&h a i 1dc n • po1l(c rtf)On 1a • • • ~ Sl.2.000 PoNht Qll was ~ pont'd \lokn from a lot I\ 400 Ed1narr °''~ unda) .. \ .Ra~oactive gas !leak attributed !to filling mistake • WEBBERSl\AU...S,Okla.(AP)- • A plume.of toAic ps that killed one 1 worker and hospitalized at least 30 othen drifted up to 18 miles from a nuclear fuels plant before d.ispersina, '"' beahb officials said its effect would be .. transient, very tempor- ary." l The corrosive Cloud of , hydroOuoric acid, so PQtent it can etch alus. was rclc:a.lcd Saturday : when 14 tons of sliP.tly radioactive 1 uranium hexaOuonde leaked from •i.be_ ~uotr;1h Fuels Corp. plant in ~ 0 oma, Dale McHard. , chief of the radiation and special 'hazards service of the state Depart· 1 ment of Health, said Sunday. He described the hydrofluoric acid as "an extremely corrosive chemical" 'but said its effect on people off the elant Jl'OUnds was expect~ to be 1 'transient. very temporary. Workers trymg to remove excess , uranium hexafluoride from a cylinder caused the leak, said Dick ~ director of the Division of Radiation Safety and Safeguards for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. 1 The workers had weighed the , vebicle-siud cylinder improperly and as a result filled it with 29.500 pounds of uranium hexafluoride, 2,000 more pounds than the con· tainer wu desianed to hold. When they realized their mistake, they souaJu to move some of the chemical beci to the plant, h~ said. · They thouaht that 'heating the cylinder would allow them to remove the excess uranium hexafluoride more easily. Instead. the cylinder ruptuttd. Banaan said. The New York Times quoted Sequoyah Fuels executive Robert Luke u sayina the tank was overfilled because ofa malfunction in the scales on which the cylinder was placed for weighing. None of those hospitalized was seriously ill and most had been treated and released by Sunday night, said Charles Wade, assistant admin- istrator at Sequoyah Memoriaf Hos- pital in Sallisaw. Four people re-, mained hospitalized today in stable and improvina condition, he said. and two more we~ ~n the same condition at Sparks Regional Medical Center in Fon Smith, Ark. Doctors examined 109 people, most of them plant workers, between Saturday and 11 p.m. Sunday, said Wade. AP' 09 111 Sequoyah hela Corp. employee ue. a 1e1Cer counter to teet a car tbat wu near plant where ... tall raptured. .......................................................................................................... I :Assault teai:ns snuff prison uprising FORT MADISON, Iowa (AP) - Five specially trained assault 1cams stormed a cellbouse at the Iowa State • Eenitentiary today, freeing seven ' corrections officers who had been · taken hostage by inmates an hour and a half earlier, officials said. Three inmates and one of the hOSla&CS were reponed to have been bun, but it was not known how, and none of the injuries was believed to be serious. "The institution is under control," prison spokesman Ron Welder said shonly after 9 am. "AJI the inmates arc accounted for." . Dalton Shield ads tell suit deadline WASHINGTON (AP) -An American company, which has already been deluged with thousands of lawsuits from women claiming illness from the Dalkon Shield con- traceptive, today began an advenis- inJ. campaign to encourage 4.5 million women to file claims before they lose their right to sue. The : .H. Robins Co. of Rich- mond, \a., and a Washington-based public relatiOQs firm mounted the campaign to inform women in 91 nations they have four months to gj ve notice of their claim. WANTED TO BUY Warden Crispus Nix immediately ordered inmates locked up as prison officials investigate the upnstng. Weldu said it was net known immediately what prompted the in- mates to take the hostages tn the maximum security prison. located in the southeast comer of the stale. "That is one thin& we'll be review- ing," he said. "We'll be interviewing people to sec what happened and debriefing inmates and officers." Corrections Director Hal Farrier said in Des Moines that last week's prison riot in West Virginia may have contributed to the uprising here. "Those kinds of things have a wa y of spreading across the country," be said. Farrier said he ordered the four- man assault teams into the prison at 8:05 a.m., an hour after the uprising staned. .. Time is of the essence." Farrier said. "fn riot situations, the lonaer inmates have to become organized, the more difficult it is for hostages." Farrier said no shots were fired and no tear gas was used, and that the inmates scattered when the assault teams unlocked doors and burst into the cellhouse. He said the inmates bad been in telephone contact with prison officials but that he received no demands from the inmates. Farrier ·said three inmates were injured. One of the released guards. Peter Hodgcrson, was ta.ken to the Fon Madison Community Hospital for treatment of a twisted knee. Welder said. Gov. Terry Branstad praised the action of the department in ending the uprising quickly. "I think it is a real credit to the department that we escaped major inJury to the hostages." he said. Armed off enders finish crimes WASHINGTON (AP) -Assailants carrying guns completed their crimes more often than unarmed offenders attempting the same acts, according to a Justice Department survey of crime victi ms from 1973 through 1982. The department's Bureau of Justice Statistics fou nd that offenders armed with guns completed 79 percent of all robberies attempted during the I 0-year period, COm(>Bied with a 57 percent completion rate by unarmed criminals. · - Offenders with gun s completed nearly half of the rapes attempted, it said, while the unarmed consum· mated only 28 percent of the rapes. Guns played a part in 13 percent of the estimated 65.3 miUion rapes, robberies and assaults that occ urred from 1973 through 1982. accordinR to the survey. released Sunday. Knives were used in 11 percent of the attacks, other weapons such as sticks and stones in 13 percent and unknown types of weapons in 2 percent. Among the conclusions drawn from an analyis of crime victimization statistics were: -Victims of offenders armed with guns were less likely to be injured than were the victims of offenders armed with other weapons. -Armed assailants were responsible for an esti- mated 24 million violent crimes during the period, amounting to about 37 percent of all victimizations. -Half of all the robberies, a third of all the assaults and a quarter of all the rapes that occurred or were attempted were committed by criminals carrying some kind of weapon. Old Toy Trains DEAD OR ALIVE Lionel, A.F., & Ives 644-6829 RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY IMC. Wlw\Yllir Dolar Cowers Merel 1922 ~VD., COSTA IEA-5Q.115' IIIl Pierce Brothers Bell Broadway Mortuary 1~'!:~~:s!y 642-9150 Tracking pending ~~~~~~~~-J-~~~~forunfit Bring your cigarettes, relax and light ·up. At a Smokender-; Free Meeting. you will learn how 10 quit -5moking easily. Forever. , doctors WASHINGTON (AP) -A letter from Sen. John Glenn to advice columnist Ann Landers is spurring interest in legislation designed to block doctors and other health<are professionals barred from practicing an one state from participating in federal health programs in another. "Doctors, pharmacists and other health-care practitioners who lose their state license to practice all too often simply move on to greener pastures -new states in which to set up practice," Glenn wrote in response to a letter that Landers had received from a woman who said she was sexually abused by a psychologist. "The problem is that there is no national tracking system for these 'bad' doctors." Glenn added. In the original letter, the woman questioned why asr:s chologist who was stripped of his ri t to practice in one state was allow to set up shop in another. Responding, Glenn said many practitioners obtained licenses in several states before they got into trouble and that states have no way of ~ easily checking into their back· • grounds when issuing licenses. - NeWbu~,etlaw will eli·m1Date def eilse growt~ . Reducing deficit will force $83 billion cut for mtlttary In 2 years WASHINGTON (AP) -A new balanced bud&et law will wipe out President Rtapn's defense buildup in two years, sending the United States "marching down the mountain we have been marching up," says the chairman of the House Armed Ser- vices Committee. Rep. Les Aspin, D-Wis., relcasc:d a study Sunday tn which be conten~d the balanced budget law approved by Congress and signed by Reagan last month will force deep cuts in miHtary spending. "Trus isn't just tinkering at the e<IJcs of the defense budget," As pin said. 0 1t means we arc reversing the defense buildup oftbe last few years. We arc marching down the mountain we have been marching up." He said the .deficit reduction law will force up to $83 billion in defense cuts in the next two years, resulting in a 20 percent reduction in Reagan's planned military spending for fiscal 1987. "(Defense Secretary) Caspar Weinberger, who has prided himself on presiding over the greatest defense buildup in P,Cacetimc history Is about to dresidc over t~e ~test !!efen~ cutback in peaceume history. Asptn said. . . be d Aspin said that proJectaons yon fiscal 1987 which ends on Sept. 30, 1987, arc "i1ffy," but the law is likelY. to continue to cause defense spending decreases. . Named for its principal sponsors, Republican Sens. Phil Gramm of Texas and Warren Rudman .of.N~w Hampshire, the law sets deficit limits for each fiscal year throu&h 1990 and requires that the federal budget be balanced by fiscal 1991 . The bill permits Congress to make the reductions through conventional legislation, but would impose auto- matic spending euts for each of the fiscal years through 1991 if Congress and the White House failed to agree on a reduction plan. The deficit for fi5cal 1985 was $211.9 billion. Aspin said his analysis shows that defense budget authority will .be cut by S percent to 6 percent an the - current fiscal year. In fiscal 1987, he said, defense outlays will drop to a.bout $24S billion and budget autbonty to about S260 billion. Congressionally ap- proved military spending for the currcot fiscal year stands at $297 billion when separate legislation for military construction is included. Trio arrested·f or art theft worth $18.5 million NEW YORK (AP) -Federal agents and police>say they are trying to track down other. members of an intemayonal art theft ring believed responftble fo• an attempt to steal $18.S million worth of antique art treasures from a warehouse. An antiques dealer and two other men have been charged with burglary after they were arrested Sunday at the warehouse by undercover in· vestigators who had been watching the trio for months. Deputy Inspector Ronald Fenrich said I 05 treasures were recovered by poli~. incl~ding . dozens of g_old Persian ant1que Jars, urns, coins, vases, sculptures and jewels, some dating to the 6th and 7th centuries B.C. He said the most expensive item recovered was believed to be a gold tureen, decorateu ·vi th bas rcliefbulls, which Fenrich said would sell whole- sale for about $3.5 million. Fenrich said the three men were arrested as they loaded two wooden crates into cars. He described the suspects as part of a "p-oup of people operating inter- nationally, who are involved in burglaries and robberies of Oriental rug stores, art dealers, insurance fraud , etc." The investigation, conducted joint· ly with help from U.S. Customs and FBI agents. was conunuing, Fenrich said. , Authonties said three men broke into Regency Worldwide Packing Co. using sledgehammers and crowbars. Undercover officers, who had re- cei ved a tip, were waiting outside. Police identified the suspects as Thomas May, 52; Daniel Kohl. 44, both of New York. and Nedjatollah Sakhai, 48. of Old Westbury. . Fenrich said Sakhai, who owns Eli's Antiques. also was charged with possession of a dangerous weapon. a loaded revolver found at his store after his arrest. Fa~lty fuel line scrubs Colu1nbia launch today By die A11oclatecl Pre11 CAPE CANA VERAL-A balky fuel line valve toda y forced a second last· minute postponement of the launch of Columbia. which is to take six astronauts and a Florida congressman on the first of three space shuttle missions to study Hally's comet. "We'll take another hard look a1 n overnight and come back tomorrow and do it right," launch director Gene Thomas told the astronauts, who had been in Columbia's cabin awaiting launch for nearly four ho~ .. "We unders!8n~.perf~tly, and we'll look forward to doing it with you a.gaJn m the morning. replied astrona1,1t Robert Gibson. the mission commander. Reagan sets news conference for Tuesday W ASHlNGTON -President Reagan will hold his first White House news c.onference in nearly four months on Tuesday, it was announced Monday. Presidential spokesman Larry Speakes said the half·hour question- and-answersession with reporters would be held in 1he East Room of the White House beginning at 5 p.m. PST. The-major rad io and television networks will carry t.he news conference live. It will be Reagan's 32nd formal White House news conference as president and his fifth since Speakes said a year ago that the president would bold monthly news conferences 1n his second term. Crash that killed Nel•on •till baffies DE KALB, Texas -There may be a thousand clues to the plane crash that killed si04Cr Rick Nelson and six others New Year's Eve, but federal officials say th~on't make much ~nse yet.. The on-site search for the cause of the crash an northeast Texas ts wmdtng down, and many of the federal ~nvestigators planned to leave the site today after much of the plane's wrcclcaae 1s moved to a Dallas-area sto_ragc ~m~ny. Meanwhile, services were schedul~ today for Nelson, 45, ·~ Cahfom1a. The only two survivors of the crash_. .P1lot Brad Ra!'1' and co-pilot Kenneth Fe~uson, are in improving cond1t1on, and invesuptors hope to be able to question them soon. Jarvik heart recipient a8ed llghter driver MINNEAPOLIS -A liJhter, more ponable driver h*' been used to run the artificial heart implanted into Mary Lund, and doctors sl·lshe has begun to spend short pes:iods in a ~hai.r. Despite the ~ppa~nt Pr<?Vtss. und, 40, the first woman to receive an arufictal heart, ~as hsted 1n cntJcal but stable condition Sunday at Abbott Northwestern Hospital ''Mri. Lund'sJarvik-7 total artificial bean was operated with a liahter, more ponable dnver for 2Y1 hours "5lid Dr Marc Pritzker of the Minneal>Ois Heart Institute. "She tolerated 'this qultt well .. " The device, called a He1mcs Driver, weiahs appro1imately 12 pounds and as about the size of a small camera bag. .Vould you quit if you could d11 it without scare tacti cs. shock treatments. "cold turkey" withdrawal, drugs. "cl imbing the walls:· gain· ing weight. embarrassment or willpower? You can keep on smoking while you learn to quit! We can help you . We've helped hundreds of thousand s of smokers since 1969. Even if you feel you ought to quit, but you don't really want 10. :itt end a free meeting. The Ohio Democrat is sponsoring legislation that would establish a national computer system to track unfit health-care providers and aive the Department of Health and Human Services new authority to prevent them' from participatina in Medicare and Medicaid. as well u Veterans Adminstration prosrams. Miami '•pend• not.1Un6' to h~a.e homeJeu A~ected would be those ~nvicted • MIAMI -Tltere are 81000 homeless people in Miami for whom the cit ATTE 0 OUR FIRST MEETI G FREE ... NO COST OR OBLIGATION B Fountain Valley Regional Hospital and Medical Center· 17100 Euclid Avenue at Warner (dirtttion to mtt"tlng room 11\"ailabft at front de k in main robb) l Wednesd,y, January 8th & Thursday~ January 9th 7:30 P.M. of cnmcs related to the d~livery. of andcounty1ovcn:unent11pendnothin1toshclterorfted,sayunat1onaJ 'I health care, the unlawful dlspensma that lobbies on behal~ of the homeless. The Nation•! Coehtion f:-03& of con troll~ substances. or ~ect or Homeless says me.arch to September found all 69S bed' at home Ins bel l abuse o(pauents. Thote ~nv1cted of Miami provided by private non-profi\ aaeneies or reli ous po s M ten n fra~. kickb9cks or submittlni false overflowina, the repon aayi. City and Dade County off.clals to.1'ibe ~:a~ clan!"~ al~ w:ould be batrcd from Herald that cuts in federal awstance already have tquCC1ed 1 J ial partmpeuns 1n the federal health welfare budaets dry. oca 10C • Pf'OIJ"lmS. Under the measure/ state licensina boards would be requ red to rtPort to HHS any sanctions impoted on practitioners in their jurildictions and all surrendcn oflicen1CS. Landen W)Cd readers to clip her column and tend it to their senators and rcprcsentativ~ ask.ins them to support lbc bill. WaJJace hoqltllllsed for arbJary.llJfectloa . Bl~lNOHA~ -Oov. Oeorac.C. W~ia<:e ~~~ined hosph1liad wnb 1uruwyUKt1Dllioo IOdiay, but an aide said the tllnew woold not 1~ Walllce's d«Uion on wbdber to .eek an u.nJ)ft()edentcd fifth ttnn. The 66- yur-old aovemorwu "ratina very weU" and spent most of'SUnday watchi televiaion and readina, Mid Preti teeretary Bdly Joe amp A. hotpi~ spokesman said Wallllce wu in "n() daQ&er at all'' and called hJ hospitalization .. an attempt to head ofhny serious probl~m•." 1 ' . LaWyerontrial'in '71 prisonescape · SAN RAFAEL (AP) -The final tional o~n were dead. officials who wanted tC? get nd ~f BiJ\abam •. 43, djscounts the welJht chapter ln~ear~ld sap of a In I 97S •. uunatet known as the San Jack.son, wbo had p.aned pubhc the prosecution places on Ws decision San Quentin S~te Prison ete:Jpe Quentit;' Sa.x were tried for their roln attention writin& about prison re-to 10 into hidina. attemet that left ~x people dead ~s iD the v1olc~. Three were acquitted, form. The lawyers have souaht classi-to •today with JUrytelection m two Were convicted of assault, and fied government documents in an .. Mycominaback voluntarily 1smy the ~al of Stephen Bi~ . one ~s convicted of mu~r. at.tempt to prove those claims, aod statement about my innocence," be Banah.am, the one-u~e ~t~l 1:he1r co-defe~dan~ B~pgham. ~-Bingham hasaccuscd state officials of said recently. "Obviously.I l never Berkerey lawyer who went tnto hidina m11ned the m1ssma link m the cham "stonewalling." would Mve come back'" tr J wasn't fC?r 13 yea~. is accu~ of 5lippina a of events. "I am very confident that if this full innocent." putol to pnt<?n revoluuonary George Th~n •. be emeracd from llis under-story gets out in front of a jury, and But Assistant Distric1 Attorney J~_k.son dunna an Aua. 21, 1?71 , gr:o~nd It(eonJufy9, l?84,dccla.ring they•re able to hear the whole tbinJi Terry Boren said Bingham returned' V11lt.Jaclcsonallqcdlyusedthep11tol his.1!1nocen~ and saying Amencan that I'll be acquitted," he said only because ''he got tired of wher-~o force auards to free 26 other poht1cal atu~ud~ had c~anged recently: "I'm co!1fident in any event, ever be was ... also realizin& the inmates. . eno~ so a fair tnal was po~s1blc. but I ~mk the difference rm talk.in& practicaldifficult1esoflrying to prove ~en the VJOl~nce ended, Jackson, His attorneys say they wdl argue about is perhaps us being able to show his auilt beyood a reasonable doubt two mmate trusties and three corrcc-Bmaham was set up by government what really happened on Aug. 21 ." 13 years later." Judge bars TV cameras from trial of Ramirez LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tele- vision cove~ of hearings for "Niaht Stalker • defendant Richard Ramirez was barred today by a judge who said publicity surrounding the murder case could hurt the defen- dant•s right to a fair hearing. ... have no doubt the level of attention to this case will continue.'' said Municipal Court Judge Candac.c Ceopq. Cooper sajd'sbe wanted to protect the riahts of the defendant and the dianity of the court. She also said Ramirez' courtroom behavior in front of television cameras was a factor in her ruling. "The visual image I keep 1n mind, the imaae of Mr. Ramirci with a r.;ntaanm on his palm and shouting Hail Satan.' ha~ <idded to my anxiety," she said. • After pleading innocent last Octo- ber, Ramirez kt\ court shoutmg the slopn and showina the palm of his hand. which had an mverted penta- gram drawn on it. The symbol Is often used in Satan worship. Ramirez, a 25-ycar-old drifter from El Paso, Texas. is accused of 14 murder and 54 other felony charges. Oil spillage mopped up atCabrillo LOS ANGELES (AP} -Cleanup crews using huge vacuum pumps worked to suck up 12,000 gallons of crude oil that leaked into Los Angeles HarboMnd spread goo on the sands of a popular beach. Containment booms confined the oil slick to a one-mile section near the the harbor's main channel, but some of the 011 oozed past the perimeter and coated Cabrillo Beach with a layer of goo. . A faulty dram valve on a pipe leading to storag~ tanks was bl~m~ for Saturday·s spill al the Mobil 011 Co. dock. Coast Guard Petty Officer James MacPherson said. While much of the spill remained confined to the main channel, a "li.sJ.lt sheen of oil" drified with the Ude Sunday between the breakwater and the beach. Coast Guard Ensign Bever- ly Carter said. Latest s laying similar to others /~ / Will inte~t ~ contin~ to fall? Or will they soon tum around and rise? No one knows for sure. That' why our 6-month CD is such a great investment. right now. If rates continue to fall (as some experts predict). you will have locked-in today's high rrue of interest for a full su months! If rates cum around in the spring (as others forecast). you won't have long to wait before Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT /Mond8Y, ~ I, 1111 * Al • Rapechargehartltoprove_ SAN DIEGO (AP) -More than ba1( of the,. c:me:a submined by IQCa.I ~Jic:e over the· put year were rejec1tJd by lhe county d.iaricl • attorney 1 of6cc u unproteCUtabie because of i......._t evidmcl. • Prosecut.on say a number of factors COlltributed 10 the hil(a ~ rejection rate, incJudina the unwiJliqness of some rape victims to tntifv after report.int the sexual as.saufl ; fn other inltancCJ. the crime cannot be proved. . "h 11 the DA',job to take cues to the jury that be can aeu.·· Deputy Oastnct Attorney Edward Cbeck.ert wet "lfhe doesn•t beHeve be can sell it, he's wastina the taxpayers' money." t • . Police in San Dieso County pcueoted 131 rape cuct tot.be dist.ria • attorney over the past year for review. Cbecken said eb.artei we:re flied in 61 cases while 70 were rejected, includina the aJletcd ~~rape of 1 San Dieao State UA1vers1ty ~ durina 1 fratemJty pArty 1ast 'November. After District Anomey Ed Maller cited insufficient evidence in his refusal to prosecute the umversny rape case, the motb'er oft.be alJcted ·victim wrote a letterto the campus newspaper pleadin& for witnesses to come forward. • • Why a Moneymarket Account too. Maybe you don't want to put all your eggs in one ba.\ket. So put moM of them in me 6-Month Investor Account. and a fe" in a Great American Moneymarket Accoum . Yoo L411 open ooc for as little as Sl. It pays you a high mone) marker rrue that ioc~ a.., your account balance i.ocrea....CS. It's al~ full y liqwd. so you can make deposi~ and withdrawal~ anytune. as often a\ you like. LOS ANGELES (AP) Authorities investigating the death of a young woman whose body was found in an alley over the weekend said here were similarities to a recent series of murders of prostitutes, but nothing conclusive. you can shift your funds into an investtrent that pays higher interest. A short-term strategy. you earn the hi~ pos.sible yield on your interest rate. So 1f rate\ perk up in a few month.s. you l.4fl pull !~orne of your funds from the Mone~ market Account and open anodler 6-Month lnv~tnr A ccount at the Ile'-' h1g.hl·r rate. "The body of Tammy Lynn Scretchmgs. 22. of Los Angeles. was found in an alley between 95th and 96th streets Saturday. · "There is a possibility that she may have been strangled. although a coroner's autopsy has yet to be conducted.'' Deputy Sam Jones ofthe Los Angeles County Sheriffs Depart- ment said Sunday. Pankera, devil eecta linked in new re~rt . SACRAMENTO (AP) -A report by aaovemor's task force lumps punL rockers, heavy metal music fans and satanic' sects together because the JfOUps holcS nothing sacred. accord- 1n1 to a newspaper. The San Francisco Chronicle said in today's edition it obtained a copy of the report by the State Task force on Youth Gang Violence that is to be released later today. "Nothina trad.iuonally held sacred is recosnizcd," said the S9--Ne report commissioned lnl"une by Gov. Oeultmejian. Bob bl Fiedler }om• CratJ•toa opponent. LOS ANGEL.ES (AP) -C.On· demnina Democratic U.S. Sen. Alan Cranston as "the last of the old-time bit spenders," Rep. Bobbi Fiedler became the 1evcnth declared can- didate for the Republic::an nomi- nation for Cranl10o's teat today. She said that althoup •>-very 1ubltantiaJ ditrcttncet in vaewa•• ~ ante her from aome of her Re- publican <>PP<*fttl. Ille reftated lO dte apeciftcl, M)'iftl \be priority WU (or all Republicans to focus on defeatina Cranston. .. Invest in our 6-Month Great American Investor Account. It's a super- lative strategic investment for these uncertain ~-You're guaranteed a high rate for the full 6-month lentJ. even if other interest rates should fall, And since it's only a short-term invest- ment, if rates rise in u month.s you're in a position to make the most of it. And roll over all the money you've earned with your 6-Month Investor Accoont into a new one. At higher rates. Invest more. Earn more. Our 6-Month Investor Account }Xlys interest at tiered rates. So the more you ~it. the more you make. Yet you can scart your 6-Morth Investor ACCQ!Ot for as little M $1.CXX>. ($500 for seniors.) And, the tr.crest in your 6-Momh Investor Accounl is oompourocd daily. So - - 1 Currcm Cur rem 6-Month CD YieJJ• Rate -. --$ I .CXX> to S 2 A'N 8.00% 7.70'lr 4 $ :!.500 to$ 9.999 8.27~ 7.95'1- SIO.CXX> to $24.999 8.49% 8.15% $25.CXX> to $49.999 8.54% 8.20% SSO.CXX> and over 8.60% I 8.25% Make the most of your interest. ~interest you earn m your 6-Month Investor Account can be deterred until your accoun1 matures. Or you can havt: It credited to you each month . If you chcn;e to have it credited nxnhly. you can fu.rtrer choc6e to have 1t mailed directly to you. added to your acoou.nt priocipll. or transfernd to your Great AJrerican Moneynmket Aca-.unt Great American \bur advantage bank- Why Great American. Your depo~1L' at Great American are automaticall~ m.~ral to $100,CXX) b~ the FSLIC. ptus voo ha\c the added ~"'t' of depOsi~ your mone:v ma financial -· iffitirution that\ kept ever) one of its C\.IStomen. '1fe ar-J secure over the last lOO yeaJ". Dunng that ttme. G~t American tw ~to be Cahfomi.a' largest sa\ mgs OOnk "ith more than .5 btll>00 ma"~ and 120 otfa'el 't.ateWldc. So \'1Sll l1fle 0f our otfk"eS tcxia) and find OU( mm: arout our 6-Month Investor Account Bec.lu.<.,e OCM ~ n<X the ume to take cMn.~ "1\h yoor mofle). oo that'~ f(~r ocrtun. °''-.. ~ .. ··~~· ..... ,......~., .... ~ .. ,..,"_,__ .• ,_'"' ·~\oo-· --.... ec.-;wre ..... ..._...,r-M..., .. .,_,.__.,. c......,.... • ._...=if _ .. _,_...,_~· ..... ---............. ...-~··'-' ._.no.-.-.. ......, ....... --............. Oil~~-----·---... . . .......,,...,,'"_..,...-...... ---~ ,_,.._l ..... ..., • • .·. I t .. ' .. • I ,. . ) 0Nnoe 0o.t DAILY PtLOTI ~. January a. 1811 lrvlne ·seeking freeway voice NB already has When the county Superior Court and a state appeals court agreed that freeway development is an issue of statewide con~m and cannot, therefore, be subject to the outcome of a single city's municipal processes, a shudder must have been felt across Newport Beach. In t 971, Newport Beach, with then-state Sen. Dennis Carpenter leading the final sortie, .won approvaJ of a charter amendment that granted the city's voters the uJtimate ~Y on any freeway routes through the city. It was the same kind of power the Irvine-based Committee 'I\ of Seven Thousand sought when it asked the courts to order the Irvine City Council to put its developer fee ordinance on the ballo!,._ The deyeloper fee is the funding mechanism by which proposed freeways in the San Joaquin, Eastern and Foothills transportation corridors would be built. Given the same kind of control over their destinies that their neighbors in Newport Beach have been granted, the voters oflrvine would be able to stop the San Joaquin Freeway before a-shovel of dirt couJd be turned. The freeway at issue in 1971 was the Pacific Coast Freeway, which would have cut through Corona del Mar. At the time, a stat~ Assembly Rules Committee attorney filed an opinion predicting that the charter change would be found to be11nconstitutionaJ if it were challefl$ed. Daily Pilot reporter L. Peter Kreig, writing from Sacramento on April 22, 1971, commented in his story, .. It is not known whether that legal test will ever come." If the Committee of Seven Thousand pursues its legal options to the state Supreme Court, as its spokesman William Spercs says it may, and if the high court agrees with the two lower courts that a municipal election is an imp roper forum for detemtining the course of freeway development, Newport Beach's charter amendment will be in jeopard~ If the charter . am.endment t:ver were invoked, any tcome would face senous quesuons. Opinions expresaed In thla space are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views expreaed on thla page are those of their authors and ar11sts. Reader comment la Invited. The Oa.lty Piiot, PO Box 1560. Costa Mesa. 92626. Phone 8.42-6086. Sanctuary effort chided overpoUdcalovertones To the Editor: Only a uny fraction of the churches in the United States have become part of the sanctuary movement. But these few -Jess than 300 -have illegally brought a small number of Salvadorans and GuatcmaJans here. aJJ of whom are supposedly tl~ing the oppression of governments that are friendly to ours. That the movement as a fra ud can be learned partially from ats lack of concern for Nacara&uan refugees who have fled communist oppression. (f that 1s not enough to show what a fake the >anctuanans arc. the move- ment's literature confirms that ats purpose is not reh~ous but political. E'en a self-descnbed sympath1ZCr, ~cw York-based JOurnaJist Rob Huesca. has pointed out that "onl y C'ndangered refugees and pohucal ac11v1sts are extended sanctuary." He also noted that those fleeing poverty Jre .. not ga ven aad," and that can- didates "have to voice opposition to American invol ve ment in theircoun- tnes ... and a willin~ess to relate their experiences on amvang in the United States." In other words. to qualify for help from the sanctuary movement, one has to be an anti-American political propagandist. It 1s also revealing to note that the movement will not permit any of its pawns to avail themselves oflegal means to enter our country. The real purpose of this movement 1s to use Central American refugees to overturn any anti-communist actions dlrccted by the U.S. government toward Central America. Which. of course, 1s wh y the communist press in our country provides glowing cov- erage. Sadly. the so-<:alled "straight" media m the U.S. has not told the true story about the danguous intentions of the sanctuary movement. O.C. PEARSON Newport Beach Moving muscles are musical Russian menttsts discovered a muscle makes a small noise when it moves ounds hke a musical note. 1f greatly amplified E.ach muscle makes ad1fTerent note fhc body ofa person. wired up like a porcupine. can be played by 1hat pcro;on JUSl ltke an organ No" the) ·re composmg special melod 1es. the playing of which wall gi ve extra C:\erctse to the muscles tbal need the work Q. How old is kissing·> A. First wn11cn t'' 1dence of a couple pressing lips together was recorded 1n India about 2000 BC The practice was not widespread. however. It was totall) unknown to the natives of North and South , Amcnca, Afnca and the South Sc.as. Explorers' logs 10dic.ate tt staned to go intemational at Just about the time Christopher Columbus wa~ making a name for himself. Q. Any chance the fictional lawyer Perry Muon wtll ever marry his ORANGE COAST DailyPilai secretary Della Street? A. Why not? The author. Erle St.1nley Gardner. at a1c 79 finall y rrlimcd bis executive secrcW')', Agnes Jean Bethell, after she'd worked for him for 40 years. She was the model for Della Street. Anxiety 1s weird. It tcan up some people so badly they'll do almost anything to get ndof1L Lik.cgctdruok and stay drunk. It enlivens other people so greatly they'll do almost anythinJ to generate it. Like gamble everything until evcrythmg is aonc. Both extremes respond to treatment. .\nd cunously, the treatment - group therapy -fo r both eittremcs is almost 1dcnt1cal. Q. How come the abbreviation for barrels 1s "bbls." -with two "b's•"? A. To d1st1ngu1sh 1t from "bis." - for bales. L.M. Boyd I• • •Y•'1c•le4 colrrmllltl 1(-wtftm« p •C:.·,,,.. Frenll Zlnl .. . ,_, ... ,_,~ ~Q 9 fa·• 0.... ,..., '1 f:J' ' T..,. Clefttt1 ~"''"'' f d•' 'W e, ... ...., WI f-:lt'• "--"-' c.i-......_ ContlOl!ef ...._.L~ i>.oouc1oot1~ 0...-.L.,__• -.... VfCIM'Jfl~ ~ .... ...., ~•h!'IO;;.._O..::.c..ec:..~lloif'== c~.:f'*'~°' J ''ActuaJly, Victoria (Street) lsn 'tall bad ... Jt would make a marvelous museum display. demonstrating how things were done 50 yearsaR0· CIG~~TIE? .... .) --- --·----....... ~-~---- Victoria Street's the spot if you. 're after excitement Arc you bored with your life? Docs your daily existence seem dull and stagnant? Is all of the zip gone? Do you crave high adventure and excite- ment? Do you go out of your way in search of thrills1? Friends. search no more. J'vc got the answer for you. AJI you must do is climb into your car and go to Victoria Street in Costa B1u HARVEY Mesa between the hours of 7 and 9 .._ racing along at the head-spinning a.m. or 4 and 6 p.m. You can start at speed of 5 to 15 mph. That is. of Brookhurst in Huntington Beach and course. when you're moving at all. go cast, or at Harbor in Costa Mesa Ah, but then comes t.he good part! and go west. When you arrive at Placentia. the Etthcr excursion is bound to make street Wldens out to two lanes! There's your heart beat faster and start your a traffic hght there, and it's red. but adrcnahn flowing. you see your chance to get ahead of all You sec, the story is that cast of of this slow traffic! Whip over into Harbor and west of Brookhurst, the that number two lane! As you're slrCCt io question is a nice. wide waiting for the light to change. note boulevard and traffic flows along as 1f that the new lane peters out about 1t were on greased ball beanngs. four car lengths on the other side of (Which, come to t.h1nk ofit. it is.) Placentia. It merges back into one Because Victoria is one of only lane. What the hell, you·re committed three streets -:-the other two arc now. might as well go for the gold. Adams and Pacific Coast Highwa y-The liitht changes to green! Stomp that connect Costa Mesa and Hunt-the pedal to the metal, and go for it! ington Beach. this is as it should be. There! You're across. remerged with The problem comes about when that the first lane. having missed the car in flow of traffic is forced to narrow the number one lane by millimeters down to one lane. Not just one lane. -and just ha ve time to see, out of the but one lane that's bumpy, has pot comer of your eye. a s1~n whipping holes, and deep dips that were our by. What did it say? It said "dip," but grandfat~ers' answer to ram control. no matter. You'll find that out as the Actually. Victoria isn't all bad. If undercarriage of yo ur car 1s turned considerable restoration were done. it into tinfoil, and your back bumper is ~ould make a maryelous mu~um all but ripped off. d1spla )'. demonstratmg bow thmgs Such minor thmgs, though, are were done 50 years ago. unimportant m hght of what you've If you should decide to ta.kc your accomplished. You've passed three life in yo ur bands and undertake a cars and managed to attain a speed of sojourn (l use that term advisedly. It 35 mph before you're forced to brake. means to "dwell in a place tcmpor-quite forcefull y. 10 order to avoid the anly") to Victoria. .do not be dis-cars that arc stopped for the nex t dip. mayed at what first appears to be the How. in an age where we have wrist order of things. You'U find yourself watches that talk. ca n such a street exist? I wondered about that, so I called the city of Costa Mesa. ApPar6ntly, the short number two lane 1s allowed to eitist because the engineers involved feel that 11 gets more traffic across the intersection. I disa$fee with that. If you ha ve a hose leading into a big drum tha1 camcs two gallons per minute. and another hose leading out that cames two gallons per minute. the flow 1s going to be 2 pllons pct' minute, regardless of the size of the drum. Of course. the guy I talked to has has engineering degree to back him up. All that I have is my experience. He did state I.hat V1ctona must hold "some kind of record" w11h regard to the volume of traffic 1t carries tn relation to the condition of the street. So? Wh y not do something about it? Like widening the street? Well. they're worktng on synchron- tzing the traffic ltghts. and we should see a marked im{>rovemc nt 1n the flow of traffic within a month. Great! That means that traffic will be moving much faster at Placentia. making the unmerge. remerge aance step far easier and safer. That was, by the wa y. six weeks ago, and I. driving the thing daily. haven't noticed a thing. ' So, why not widen the thing? Well there's the fact that they're going to build a bridge at 19th St. When was this decided? Ten years ago. By whom? By the three Cities involved. (Costa Mesa. Nnewport Beach. and Huntington Beach) Why hasn't that been done? Gee. I don't know. I've "only been here for six or seven years ... Col11mzd11 Blll Harvey live• ID Hullllgloa Bucb. _,. . ···-· State stands to GAJN·f rom its-new workfare prograrrt DAVID 8 . SWOAP California's historic." new welfare reform, Greater Avenues for Inde- pendence (GAIN), marks the brcaJc- tng up of a poliucal gridlock which has stymied successful welfare reform in the nation's most populous state for IS ycan. Ending the long-time polarization between "liberals.. and "con- servatives" about welfare, GAIN sytbC1izcs the divel'gcnt philosphies of both to achieve the goaJ which bas eluded us for nearly two decades: creating a welfare system that breeds not dependency, but self-sufficiency. Calil'omia led the nation in welfare srowtb in the 1960s, precipitating the last comprehensive. statcWldc re- form, launched by then-Gov. Rcaqn in 1971. In tbosedays.1n order m encourage a welfare recipient to find a JOb. a certain percentage of his or her income from outside employment would be ''diS!CfAtded" by adminis- trators detcnnioina the welfare grant. It sounded good. But, as a disgruntled Oov. Rcapn told Californians 10 J 978, this allowed cases such ls the welfare~nt who earned SS82 on a job. an )'Ct1 took home a welfare pnt o $3J9 (fi1Ut'C5 would be substanually higher today) -only $29 le" than that of someone who didO't work. S\ltce most of this mcomc was tax ftee, and free medical ca.re and a c:ena.in amount of free food were included. tbe value of lbe combined cash and non-cash income rivaled. and 10 some cases surpassed. the e<:0nom 1c value of an en try-level JOb. atura.JJy, n made no economic se11le 11 all for the recipient to act off welfare. The aovemor's reforms (many of which were implemented na11onally after he became president) solved much of this problem. But a key clement of the reform -workfare (work tn the community tn exchange for a IP'ant)-was full y implemented only ma small number ofCaltforn1a's counties. With I 0 percent of the country's population. Caltfom1a has been spending 22 per cent of the nation's welfare dollars Smee 1980. the number of welfare recipients has been growing twice as fast as the general population. The passage ofGAtN. achieved by strong b1panisan cooperation be- tween the Dcukmejian adminis- tration and the Legislature. and with almost unamanous endorsement of California's major newspapers. dem- onstrates a pivotal change in public thinking. Whtie still po~ularl y termed "workfare". GA IN. 1n rcahty, 1s a far cry from the old notion of workfare. In GAIN. workfare is stripped of most all the elements which caused official hcs1tat1on m the past: no longer will workfare entail what of\cn was viewed -ri&htly or wronaJ y - as mass conformity, 1n which aJI ehaible recipients arc herded into low-pay, makeworlc jobs to "punish" them for -usioa1 up 1.upayen ' re- sources. _,( The "workfare" of the '805. as delineated In GAIN. pays more (the same as the averaae Caltfom1a n&1'1;1 101 waac ofSS.10 an hour). It offers a senes of op11ons, ar· ranacd in uequence, de iped to help rcapients find work throuah new, cost~ffeclJ~e and proven me1hod.5 BEFOR any work 11 rcqui~ in the partnership between local bu incnes and othn-1ra1n1n1 orpniutions to assure that dollars arc spent wisely by signing contracts only with those organizations which will assure a permanent, private sector job at the end of the hnc. Counties will work Wlth local Job T ra1nmg Panncrsh1p Act offices. which already have successfully dem- onstrated that, even in the areas of hlgh unempl oyment, welfare recipi- ents can be placed into jobs. This 1s being accomplished by using special techniques to match skills to the demands of local tabor markets. As one California legislator remarked at a publ ic hearina on GAIN. "Going from Bakersfield to Modesto is like moving from one state to another." Now. these localities will be free to create their own innovations to find JObs m their own companies for their own citiicns. Under GAIN. small counties can rcponalizc to provide services. Already, some Cahfomia counties arc network.in-with plans to train wcl· fare reapacnts to become day-care providers so other welfare recipients can work. The reform, therefore, invdts hcavtly in doUars for day care and administration of education a.nd traininJ proerams: it also invests much faith in thepnvatestttorand in local aovcmmcnt. whotc active sup. pon and 1nnovattons will detcnninc GAIN's ultimate sucx:ctS. But C.ali- fomia is confident that this invest- ment will pay rich dividends. Ultimately. GAJN 1s aTI invest- ment in people. De~ a. s..., u ~,.,,el ... CaJllenM ,,_,. -"..,..Apa: q . ftll cMm9 ..., ,,.,,"4 •? ... N•,._, ,.,_ F...alltlfl. BILLHARVEY - columnist JACK AIDEISOI and DALE VAN ATTA .. Iran's JH Ill ', running · terrorist 'school' ; Accountsfor262" " American deaths in past three years 'I WASHINGTON -Iran is train-"' ing terrorists to hijack airliners and' 11 . I tt• kidnap hostages. w11h speeta ven- geance toward Americans. This underground warfare, directed by the ' Iranian foreign ministry. has ac- co unted for the deaths of at least 262 Americans si nce f983. Encouraged by the absence of an effective U.S. response. the Iranians not only remam un repentant but have made Americans their pnnc1pal .. targets. _ U.S. intelligence has pinpointeCS two hijacker-training centers in Iran:• one near Mehrabad airpon outsidCJ> Tehran, the other near the holy city oil) Qom. We've seen secret satellito)J photos, which clearly show com..J merc1al airliners parked at the train-1 ing camps: they are used by the11 recruits as "hands-on" instruction materiaJ in the methods of h i1acldn~ modem airliners. !j The traming courses mclude fam- iliarization with the instruments. fuel consumption and other features of Boeing 727s and 747s, as well a{ Airbus 300s. Some oft.he planes arc on loan from Mehrabad airpon dunng "down time" between intcr- nauonal flights. Pan of the traming is in the psychology of hijacking and hostage() treatment. The {ranian iostructorSlS teach a cymcaJ mix of techniques thadl alternate between brutality to Ameri.._ cans (to instill fear in the captive passengers) and occasional smal kindnesses (to prevent any desperate resistance by the hostage$]. The ClA has no clear idea how many potential hijackers are current- ly taking the deadly training. but a Saudi Arabian intelligence report. which the Ct'A believes to be credible. estimates that 55 student tcrronsts studied h11acking an Iran in late 1984 alone. They included Iranians, Iraqis. Tunisians. Moroccans and Egyptians -and at least one Saudi. The repon identified the chief instructor as a Palestinian guerrilla who had panic1- pated personally in airliner hijack~ 1ngs. At present. there are about haJf a dozen other terrorist training c.amps located in Iran. Several are reserved for foreigners recruited by t.he Ayatollah Khomeini's agents from among Moslem students and workers throughout the Middle East. Asia. Western Europe and even the United States. Students at the camps get three months' indoctnnatton tn Moslem fundamentalist ideology as well as an the nuts and bolts of terrorist oper~ at1ons, including construction and placement of sophisticated dcmo- ht1on devices. The CIA has also received detailed reports of an estimated 30 v.oups o.f '."'omen terrorists taking s1m1lar train- ing at segregated camps in Tehran. Qom. lsfahan and Behech11ch. One alumna reportedly effused to l)er fellow terrorists: "Our Imam Kho- meini has authorized us to part1c1pate m the holy war against the atheist enemies of the lslamic Republic. We are the lcamilcazcs of Islam. We will each die after killing a hundr ~nemics -where in the world is not important." The tctTonsts tnUned in Iran's "boot camps" share one trait: dcvo- tton to Khomeini. whose scowling image glares at Iranians from every wall poster and television set. The old ayatollah routinely refers to iM United States as "the Great Satan " and inspires his fellow fanatics wi ' this weird call to arms: "AJI Moslem must nse up and conquer their fear o death so that they can conquer th whole world!" A CASTRO CANKER: The lmmi gration and Naturalization Service i stl~l s~arting from the 1980 "in vaslon of Cuban refusees whc Fidel Castro emptied his jails to le supposed anti-com munists Oe Cuba. Nearly one-half of the agency' detention fUnds arc still beina s~o on Cuban rcfuaees deemed '\lo desirable." Internal memos revi that the eitpenditutts on the Cuba have left little money for other catet GREEK COMEDY: Tbe word aonc out in the international arms communJly: Beware of Orecks bear ina an antj·aircraft sun called Artemis-JO. Aside from the moon aoddetl's name, at 1eCtnS. the O~k: contributed precious little-to the weapon. West Omnans made the bue. the bums. the radar tnck.an o>1tem and the ammunition. The cmeu suJ'l)Ked the tires. put the toeethcf and painted lt. JKt .U*'-Utl Dale Vq Aru .,. ·~--,,..,...,...,, 15,000 routed bJ Colombian ·volcano threat BOOOTA. Colombia (AP) - Scientists u~ seism~phs and helicopters kept constan t watch on NeVldo del Ruiz, tryina to determine whether another major e~ption of the volcano that killed 2S1000 people in November wo uld follow new tremon and u b &bowers. The aovcmment said Sunday that it would keep about 1 S.000 peasants out of valleys near the volcano "until further instruction." Police using sirens roused the peasants Saturday andpve them blankets and food fora trek to bfgher ground. Tolima st.ate authonties said Sun- day many people had to be almost forcjbly evacuated and many were in a state of panic. Evacuees took with them only their most valuable pos- sessio ns, a nd thousands of evacuees huddled in m oun tain caves as torren- uaJ rains soaked the area. The 17, 700-foot volcano trembled for the second time in two days Sunday, a nd chunks of ice drifted down rivers. monitoring the Ne.v&do del Ruiz around the clock with seism ographs· and continuous helicopter flights over the mountain. The Nov. 13 eruption melted pan of the volcano's cone of ice and snow, ~ndina a I SO-foot-high wall of mud down the LaJunilla River. Fifteen feet of mud, and debris buried Armero, a coffee center IOS miles no n hwcst of Bogota. About 23,000 of Armoro's 28,000 residents were k.illed or disappeared. and 2,000 people died in Chinchina, 22 miles west of the volcano. The government put the area on maxim um alert Saturda¥ after the first sign of new activity. Victor Ricardo, president of the govern- ment's National Emergency Com- mittee. said Sunday that he would main tam the evaucation order "until fun her mstructaon." "The government is aware of the inconvenience this measure is caus- ing," said Ricardo."But it's necessary to protect people's lives." .. A bride for Andy? -, o,.,. coat DAILY PILOT /Monday, '*"-Y 8, 1Me * A7 Peres calls for sanction• against teriodat bac.era . WASHINGTON -Israeli Pnme Mintstcr Sbunoo ~res. appeanQ& for now to rule out military action apinst Lib)'11 as a rt"Sponse to Palesuruan attacks oo two Europc~n urports, called for a cooperallve effo n to 1mpo1e poUtical and economic sancttons on nations that support terrorim. ••1 do1n want to declare war apinst anybody, apinst any country. I don't think tt 1s neceuary. We are not t.aUuna about war or war declarauons." Peres aid Sunday. appeanng on ABC's 'This Week W1th David BnnJcley." "On the • . o ther hand I say clearly that we arc not ao1na lo guarantee the teeunty of any terrorist, no matter where ~e 1s," Peres said. He said Israel reserved the riaht to unilaterally act against tcrronst groups. U.S. offlclal• In Hanoi, .ee.t MIA• HANOI -The most senior U.S. delept1on to vtsll Vietnam since the war ended ~ore than a decade ago met wnh Hanoi officials today to press for an accounting of almost 1.800 Americans still listed as missing 10 action in Vietnam . The 10-mcmber team led by Assastant DcfenR Secretary Richard Armit.a&e was met at Hanoi's Noa BaJ lntemauonal Airport by A$SISt.ant Foreign Minister Nguyen Dt N1en The i\mencans flew 1n from Ban&kok, Thailand. aboard a small US go' emment aircraft. Details of the thrcc-hour- long private taJks were not dasdoscd. Aqalno denle. communl•t support MANILA -Opposition candtdate Corazon Aqumo called on President Ferdinand E. Marcos today to prove his allegattons she bas commurust suppon o r be silent, and said that 1f elected, she will not name communists to her Cabinet. Man ila business leaders gave Aquino three! standing ovations as she o utlined an electoral program she said would "undo the evils" of Marcos' 20- year tenure as the Philippines' head of state In other d evelopments. two leftist youth groups anno unced plan'> to lead a bo;cott of the Feb. 7 special elecuon. called by Marcos lo prove to cnucs at home and aboard that he still can ralJy popular support. Poll•h chauf/:eur defects In Norway About 70 ~iemists have kept watch o n the volcano since the Nov 13 disaster. Pa blo Medina Jaramillo, coordinator of the ~ientists' group, said Sunday that volcanic activit) fi rst noticed late Friday night .. con- tinues without change ... Medina Jaramillo said the state of maximum alert will probably last through today. He said scientists are The evacuation orders affects res1- den·ts of low-lyi ng areas along the Recio, Guali, Azufrado. Lagunilla and Chinchina rivers. Towns affected includ ed Mariquita . Honda. Guyabel. V11lamaria. and Am- balema. The area hes m a 30-mile radius around Nevado del Ruiz. About I 50,000 people live there. A top-batted Prince Andiew. 2 6'. the aecond eon of Britain;• Queen Elisabeth, acorta Sarah Ferguaon to the Royal A.cot race In London lut June. A London n ewapaper aald today that wedding bell• may be rin ging for the couple aoon . OSLO. Norway -The chauffeur for the Polish trade m1ss1on in Oslo has defected and asked for as' lum 1n !'.oNa' for himself. his wife and two children. a news agent') ..aid toda~ The o~egian news agenC} NTB quoted Justice Mm1stry State Seut:Ulr) Jon L)'ng as '>Cl~ mg Andrei Godlewski who had served as a chauffeur in '\oNa) for the past 18 months. reponed to Oslo police last Wednesda\ and asked for as)lum EVENHG -•;00-1 •• NEWS MATT HOUSTON POUCE STOAY I GAEATUT AMERICAN HERO THMFS COWAH'f DF'F'AEHT 8TAOKES BU8INES8 REPORT GD MAOIC Of PAINTING K£EPSN(£8 ())CISNEWS ltl AIC NEWS O al.CHEWS I LAVERNE TRIPP FAMtL Y HOT SEAT I HOTLINE MOVE *•~"Follow The Fleel' 11936J Fred Ast•e. Ginger Roglws MOVE tt'lr "The Tenoei WamOf (19711 Charles Lee Dan Haggerty MOV1E • • • "Irreconcilable Otlte<ences" ( 19M) Ryan O'Neal Shelley Long -8:30- l ~NEWS TOO CLOSE F~ COMFORT • ./f:.OPAl'IJ'( 9 MACNEIL / LEHRER NEWSHOVR 4Ii) PAINTING WITH EU<E SOMMER @)MEWS Qt WHEEL Of FORTI.n.E Ell) DOUG CLARK m BARETTA -7:00- l) C8S NEWS 8 @) ENTERT AJNMENT TONIGKT 8 TAXI • G ABCHEWS O D LOVE COHHECTION C!l HEWS tD THREE'S COMPANY m WHEEL Of FORTUNE m BUSINESS REPORT Cl). P.¥. MAGAZINE at HEAOUHE CHASERS Ell) PAAJSE THE LOAD L MOVIE • • • Romancing The Slone ( 1984) Mtehael Douglas Kathleen Turoer P INDEPENDENT NEWS l MOVIE • • • A 819 Hand Fo1 Tile ltltle Lad)' ( 19661 Henry Fonda Joanne Wooctward -7:30-IJ 2 ON THE TOWN I PRICE IS RIGHT WHAT'S HAPPENINGll 8 EYE ONLA. D MIU.IOH DOU.AR ~ANCE Of AUFETIME mw·A·s·H e MEWL YWED GAME 9 WILD. WILD WOR~O OF AHIMA.LS 8.1) MADElEIHE CO()l(S S.0. AT LARGE ®l PEOPLE'S COURT ~JEOPARDY m RACING FROM SANT A ANITA Hl FAAGGLE ROCK 'PJ NEWS -8·00-u SCARECROW ANO MRS KING D ~TVS BLOOPERS ANO PRACTICAL JOt<ES 8 MOVIE • •'\ "Capooe 11975) Ben Gaz- zara Susan Blakely G HARDCASTLE AND MCCORMIC!< G JOKER'S WILD I.!) WKRP IN CINCINNATI G)NEWS 8) MOVIE I * • Off The M1nneso1a Sf rip t 19801 >-tal >iolbrook M1cnae1 Learned m m GAEA T PERFOAMAHCES ®J GENERA TIOH IN WACti Of TIWTH Ell) PRAISE Tl1E LOAD m PETER GUNN C MOVIE * • t ' The Shm1ng t 19801 Jack NtChOtson Shel~ 0v~a11 H'MOVIE • • • Mass Appeal (19841 Jack Lemmon. Zet1ko lvanell £..,CARSON'S COMEDY CLASSICS ~MOVIE • * • Pilar Lap 119831 Tom &r· 1.nson l.Aarlon vaugnan -8:30-D TIC TAC DOUGH tJ) TRAPPER JOHN, M.O G) P.M.MAGAZ1HE mDRAGNET P HONEYMOONERS -8:35- 2 CHARLE.S CHAMPLIN ON THE FILM SCE.NE -9:00-IJ ([ KA TE & ALLIE D ~MOVIE • • • The EntOfc.ei 1<:i;5, Clint EastWOOd T 1ne Daty 8 ~MOVIE $ha11e1ed Sptr11s f Premieret Ma1- 11n Stieen Met111da Dillon G NEWS «D DYNASTY Ell) PRAISE THE LORD c;) ESPEClALL Y FOR YOU l MOVIE • • The Na•ed Face 1198•1 R()()er Moore Rod Slel<jer P STARTREK .LMOVJE * * * s ... ann In Love 119841 Jere- m~ Irons Omelia Mui -9:30- tl•T NEWHART •T •MOVIE *• • The Pm~ Jung1e 1968) James Garner E.,a Renzi -10-00-u (I; CAGNEY 8 LACEY Ga»Q)NEWS G THE SAINT Ell) BEHIND THE SCEHES mwRESTLING H'MOVIE • ••1 Mam s Lcwers" (19~1 Na$- tassia KlflSlu .Jotln Savage P COMEDY BREAK S MOVIE • • TrenctlGOBI (19831 Ma1901 Kidder Rober! Hays -10:15-m RELIGIOUS PAOGRAMMING -10-.30- Ell) CM WARD 'C F't4tL COLLINS P INDEPENDENT NEWS -11:00- tl DG I l®lQ!NEWS 8 CA~'S COMEDY CLASSICS CJ BIZARRE • WKRP IN CINCINNATI Q) BARNEY MIUER fD BERLIN Al.EXAHOERPL.A TZ m BUSINESS REPORT Ell) HERITAGE SINGEAS m NIGKT GALLERY C MOVIE • • P0tky s 11981 Dan Monanan Mai k Heme1 l MOVIE Writer hits new low in crassness DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am desperate. My good fnend has ter- minal cancer. Through the years I ha ve gJ ven her collector's plates for Christmas. Naturally they have in- creased in value. I don't know the best way to ask her for them. ANN WDERS good deal of pala and I suspect sbe bas ba d enougb already. Give tbc re lationship plenty of time before you make a final decis ion. l'r1te Steve to get some counsellng. • • • DEAR A.NN LANDERS: Your on "garette pad.ages. the surgeon general ""ho deSt·nes the credit ""ar. Luther T em. ""ho -;er' ed from I% I to 1%5 · Jn thl' 1ntere..,t llfaccurac\' and a~ a matter of fa1rne;-ss. please set the record straight. -CREED BLA( K. Publl<;hcr. Lexington Herald-Leader ~ 1...ountr~ Comf0t1 t 1981 GeotQ1· na Spel~IO Rllonda Jo Petty P MOVIE • • Jailbre~ 119621 Pet~ Rey llOIOS A~.ce Laooon l MOVIE * • • BroiOway Danny Rose • 19841 Woooy Atten Mia Farrow -11:30-u "J REMINGTON STU.LE D t3 BEST Of CARSON 8 000 COUPLE 8 @) ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE G PITFALL •VEGAS • HAWAII FIVE~ m ~MATURJTV 6i) PRA&SE THE LORD m NIGHT GAL.LE.RY "$'MOVIE • • Ntgh1 ()1 •ne Comet 1984 Cathe!•ne Mary Ste10an '<eo ,Maron- e-. -11:55- ... 1ST I TEN -12:00- " "! COMEDY BRW G EYE ON HOU. YWOOO D MOVIE • • • F ·~e ~OQl!fs 1952 James Mason Dantelle Darrieu~ fl) CITIES D' MORE REAL PEOPLE m 700ClU8 -12"25- H MOVIE ••• vo~· •.nc ~s· ·e1 .,,.,. .,.,.~, '°" 11l8C A1 M¥'l•a"' A or -1230- 0 J+ LATE MIGHTWffii DAVID LETTERMAN 0 RAT PATROL G T~THREE O e INDEPENDENT NEWS e MERV GAIFflN @) ENT!RTAltMHT TC>MGWT 8l) PRAISE THE LOAO L MOVIE • • • A9ains1 AH Ooos 19841 fU.. cnet Ward Jeff 8ro<>ges Z MO\llE * • * , Mepnesto 119811 Kl1Ui Maria Br andlvef ~ 'VS1Yn• Janda -12-40-IJ 'I MOVIE • • Lov.ng CouOleS 119801 Shorle¥ MacLame Jame5 Coburn ¢ MOVIE • * Endgame 119841 Al CllYel SoDtr. Rhodes -1-00- D MOVIE • • M&clllfll' Gun II.ell\-'958 CharleS Bronson Susan Caoot T MOVIE ; The Trail Beyono 1934 JO"• t\la~ne \ll!f'na Hillie e MOVIE • • COIOI i.te Dead '969 'T °"' T ')on Carotrn Jone$ 1Ji NEWS P EMERGENCY • -1:30- 0 HEWS . 8 AT THE MOVIES •LOVESOHGS ~AU IH THE FAMtL Y Ell) PAAISE TtiE LORD -2:00-. tJ f CBS NEWS NIGHTWATOi D RECORD GUIDE u ,-..,,,ews P UFE Of ~LEY Hurry your answer since she can't live m uch lo nger. -SINCERELY SENTIMENT AL DE AR S.S.: Sentimental? Yoa CCMIJ• b ve fooled me. Gift• beloag to die penoa to "lllom yoa gave tllcm. Yoe u ve ao rlp t to au tb t dtey be retaraed. To do so wo.ld be ln- cre4.lbly 1ros1. CoHider tile po11i- blUty tMt yo.r friend may bave prom.Jted iMae plate1 to a daapter or uudcllJld. 1"11 say oae tklag for yoa: Yoa came ap wt~ a problem I llad aever beard before la a1J lite yean of writing ~•• colama. I've ru lato all klad1 of people la ~11 1pece, bet fe" aa c.aJcalatln1, cra11 ud VW1l1ar a1 yoa. "expen .. gave you bum counsel 1n response to the question. ..Which surgeon general determined that cigarette smoking 1s hazardous t@ our health'! .. Her answer dealt wi th the warning DEAR CREED: Rigbt yoa are This goes to sbow you tllat 1ome "experts" arc more expert Utan otbers. about their relationship except 1hat she was m love with him and wanted to get m arried. Steve did no1 His parents are very close to the "oman. 1-----Newport 's Cannery Vil/age----- and arc helping her raise 1he1r grandchild. ,-~ bu~~~~o~ :::S~7.'rf1 ;;~ qd:e~~~t~~ (J"Af f I D 0 about the child or her mother he I becomes upset and says he doesn't want to talk about 11 Ir:===== ·Haupy New You Ann. I love the man. but this side of h1scharacterd1sturbsme.ltpamsme DI NNER N I GHTLY tosee himturningh1sbackonh1sown 6:00 P .M . to M idnigh t little girl. I cannot help but wonder • • • what kind of father he will be to our Mondays & Tuesds.vs: DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 22 years old end I have been f o ing with a 25-ycar-old man (who l'I call Steve) for eight months. He asked m e to marry h im. children. Two Dinne rs fo r $15 .95 ,I am trymg to decide 1f I shq uld go "'see the mother ofh1seh1ld Much as I "-''ednesda~·s: want to m arry Steve. I feel too many 6 Course Italian Dinne r $9.9 5 things are unresolved. Can ~ou help Steve 1s in telligent, generous and very attractive. I want very m uch to be His wife. me son this out? Call me - SHARON, NO CITY O R ST A. TE PLEASE The problem 1s this: Three years ago he fathered a child bra woman he went with in college. know little DEAR SHARON: I 1tt aot~iag to be 1alae4 by calllag oa ~e youg womaa. la fact, It mi1lllt cae1~ ber a ... DIPRISSID? ............... 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I • l .. 2900 Newpo_rt Boulevard • Newpo rt Beach • 6 75-2968 ~r:~~E IJ & 6<;CESSQRIES ~ "A special supplement to The Doily Pilot featuring the lo1est 1n Sp<mg fosh1on , occessor1es moke up ond hair ' Publishing Thursday. Jonuory 23rd, 1986 To reserve your space, coll 6'2"'321 Ext 250 The Orange Coast Doily Pilot 330 West Boy StrMt, COS1o Meso, C" \626 81 trt 'I~ I •d I\ 111· ..!•' 1111 ,, 11· \ 1 JI ! 1ood \ I 'I \\ I' 1 I lt11· .. 11.q11 ii,,• 1: I• I 11 jl ~· I ' \ \ 1 t I' :i \1H1!.!1' 1111•', llld .... ' I\ \\ p ' I ,, \I I I!. I I I \l I • I 111\1 t l1.1 1111\ft'\\\ot1 ( 7 1 4) 96 . ; 6 6 . 1 Q53 l Bear h Hh rl .. Hunt mµton Beach ( ... \\ . Cornrr of ) or~ town) i\l. o S<-rvin~ F ountam \ allev l714) 673-011 l .. 286S E. Coa!oit H"v ... "'uitt> 201. .orona d 1 Mar .. • I Orlngeeo.e DAILY PtLOT/ MoncM)', JMU9fYI, 1 ... Muppets mark three decades Creator Jim Henson looks back on an empire of entertainment in TV special •1UtE11.ft'GANG , ,,,.,........, NEW YORK -Want to feel old? Tbc show ran eiaht years. and won ao Emmy award in l 9S8. The rest, as they say, is Muppet history. . Guest spots followed on "The Ed Sutlivan Show,""Tbe Jimmy Dean Show" and other network prosrams. Then "Sesame Stttet" cam e -the educational program that · would catapult such names as "Bia Bird, ""Cookie Monster." "Follie Bear'' and "The· Count" into marionette immortality. Really old? Kermit the fros, the otjainal Muppet, i1tumibf30. Talk about humble beginnings. In 1955~'a youna colleae kid named Jim Henson created Kermit from his mothet's old pun cloth coat. Henson and Kennit fint appeared in a five-- minute spot on a local Washington show ca.Ued "Sam and Friends" that year. In 1976, He nson proved that "TWIC( "' • Uf£TIM£" (I) 1l0 HS m•momu0111 "IOCllY IY" (PC) UO I JO 10 IS 10 11111 ' raaca srwo "OllT Of AfllCA" 700. BO tP'CI 4 IHCll lnlT SICRlO "Tit( COLOI PUIPl[" (PC·ll) 100 HO 4 IUC-DOtll• SIUI O "EllEMY Miii(" '-I' I lO 10 10 (PC Ill I ... & IH(~ \llRIO "WlllTE lllCllTS" ~ lO I I~ 10 lS I" Ill edwarda BRISTOL S40-74U f!llllt1\f l.Jl AT M&(. A•fHU• ll&NT a ANA ClfVf CllAS( "SPIES LIKE US" -1n1 •,10 1'1"' ' •Al. T DISll'Y'S "101 DWUTIUS" 6:00. 7.50. t..40 IC) "YOUIC SllHlOCl IOUIES" (PC·ll) I.IS "IACll TO Tiil flltUI£" 6•10. 10·10 l!il IMDWll •• "CLur· (PC) 6't0,lto.IHO • fUCI IClllt l1mO "DllWTll Ml" (PC-U) ••• "21. ••.a edwards C INEMA C t:NTER 979-4141 H&fll•O" ., wo . &OAlll~ Mf \A VfllOf U N Jf " tOS•A Ml 9A OM AfUO'tD "SrtU UU US" i IS. I.IS IO·IS (K-IJ) "NW OFFICE" (PC0 ll) 700 900 IMOlUI Ulll "CLUE" (PC) uo •• 1000 "TWtC( ... UmwE" (I) 7:JS, t:4S "YOUK SMCILOCll MOLICS" trG) • IS "BACK TO FUTURE" 6 oo 10 10 t"I llllAOHH UHll "CLU£" (PC) uo 130 100~ "MUD OftlCE" • • aoo 10111' IPC Ill dO•~o~.w WHITE IUCMTS' • Ill'" 1 l 0. ""'\ l)UAIL £11£MY Miii( (PC I .ll llAl I OISHI • \ "111 NUIANIS" (C) 5-00, 7:50, t 4S "1111C( ... UFET19£" (I) l lO.t O "YlllC SIHLOCll ltlmS" (PC· 13) 7.U, tlO CHVY CUSI "S'1£S LIU US" i IS. UO. 10:2S IK I "A CIOIUS UIE" (PC·ll) 1'*. "1S 4 llACll DOllT SJlJll O "TMC COLOI PUIPU" 110 10 u IPC·ll> ' 11ac. DCUY srmo "A CltOIUS UIE" s O a IS. 10 20 IN ·IJ) 4 TUCll DClJT STCllCO "IOCMY IY" (PC) 100 ,00 1040 4 IUCI! OOllf STCM:O "Oil Of ARICA" rn. tt.tt<Nl • 1'MCI IGl.IT ~o "Dll W Tll ••• (PC) I ti. lclS, UI, 14S. t.-50 "UCI Tl Tl( I IS. 5 IS. t:IS IPll "1 ... ClllSTIU" J •• ,..,., "IUfiW•(Ht en fl"'• • , • 4 JUCll DCUT SllllO "TIE COlot PURPt.£" 7:JO. IO'IS (K·lll • THU DOLIT srllfo "EIEIT 111£'' (PC·ll) 6JO. a.&O. IOlO 4 TaACll DOllT Sl[l(O "A CIOIUS Liii[" S 0 I IS. 10 .lO I" Ill ' ruti OCUT Sl(Rl 0 "TIE nu Of TIE ltU" (PC) U~ l:lO. IOZS • raaca DOLIT SfDllO ... , llCDfO.O "OUT Of AfllCA" 7 1~.1000 l IO CK DOIB• rna11 'WMITl lllCMTS" I 00 It\'" Ill DU•~ QUAll1 1M GOSSl ll 11 EllEMY Miii('" (PC 1.ll ~ 10 a•\ ' I IU(~ DOl8f )!I'll OUT Of AFRICA' • 1n GI "' .. ~· '~· ' SPIES LIKE US 1 00. 9 IS l"I DAMY ocvno "llW OfflCE" (PC·ll) 5,1~ l:IS, IO:IS "UCll TO TIE FfTH(" HO, 10-00 IPCI "CLUE" (I ) au .... lltlJTOIS" (I) 140 "JACCH EICE" (I) 6~. ltlS edw11rd1 S AODlEBACK 581-!>880 fl T0 "0 •O Al AOC•flfl C1 fl TOllO •MI DISll'T'S "IOI Hl.IATIAIS" (C) 610. HG, 9·50 OClllT ocvn o "MEAD OfFICC" (PC-1 l) 640. 140, 1010 "TW1C( t• A UfETll E" (I) HS. 1-10. 10 15 IMIJ(l• 0111 "CLUE" (PC) 645 10. IOH CM:f"f C*Sl "S'1lS UAE US" (PC) 'IS &JO 1010 edwards M ISSIO N lllEJO MALL 4qr, 62:?0 \ (, I r/11 • ' ) (11111 ..... ". f 1 MWJTOIT-..c. "Nm IY" (N) lt O, H S. 4:4$ C·45. 145, 10 JG OM AftllCm "SNS lMl IS" 1·>0. >o.u• I 1', IUO CIU 'T CMJI "UIU UU IS'' (PC) '1$ •• 1010 -/ \ i Mu5weren•t Just kid stuff with to people that it was a combination o( the meully 1uccaaful .. Mu~ 'marionettes' and 'puppetl.' But thf( pet ."It became a status 1ymbol wu moatJy an answer \hat J m* up of the bJabeat order to be teen ao that people wbo needed an answer cavonina with Kermit and Mia would set an answer. But then I Pigy. Scores of oeJebritia clamored stopped tcllil\l lhi1 lie, and I'm beck aboard as_pest •tan. inctud.i.na Onon to the tnath: lt just came out of mid Wcllet, Diana Rosa. Geo~ Bums air. and Ray Cbatlet. Q: wua are '"' aa.,antteu for Several Muppet movies followed. Blc 8~, CookJt Moufer, Kermit or ..Labyrinth," swril\I David Bowie, ... Plgy? Dtd YM uve adUJ wiU be ~leased next summer. people la mlad? The la\est aeneration of TV mup-A: No, l don't believe we've ever petty incl\ldn ... FrauJe Rock." now desi,aned a character around a person. in itt third teaSOn on HBO, and UsuaJly, we 1tart out with a kind of "Muppet Bab~" a Siturday mom· personality. With Bia Bird we knew C ina ca.rt. oon e~dm.g its first year on we wanted to do a larie, a pat bia :BS character. He should repraent a child To commemorate all this, CBS is so he can make the kinds of mistakes broadcastina "Tbe Mupr,cts -A that kids make, and taJk about it and Celebration of 30 Y cars ' Jan. 21 . be out front about thaL So we wanted Kermit's creator shared some this large, kooky creature. llappeta• creator Jim BenMD ancl frteoda. thouabu on Muppet life after 30 in a Q: S. yoe rea.UJ G1M U..t were thin.kin& in terms of people like recent lntcrview: ...Utiff ralMr daaa lmJ&adac WJ,. Red Skelton and Milton Berle and we Q: WUt ma4e JH ume Y"r vlduJs. nere laa't .... ~ •t wanted a character who was terribly craU.. ....,.ti! ~ iffre wt Oteu 11 moMI .. alter! unsure ofb~mself. The personality of A: ln actuality, Muppcts was a A: No. No. Like Foz:zic Bear is Foz:ziejust padually arew. word we juat coined. It was merely to certainly an amalpm of all the Q: Ban uy ., yov ..._c&en or be the name of our act. ... I uaed to say comedians that were around. We propua1 ever takn a peUdcal r.:::::~~~~ .... ------------.;;.;.;~~~~~~~~~~--~~~., dlreedoa, er do yoe ever parody "THl-. BL~T PICTURE OF THE YEAR!" "A PERFECT TUii.,, poUdclau! . A: I avoid it. ... We parody greed. 1ntolcranoe, those sorts of large things. I don't think it's our function to take political stands. And t>Ccausc of our connectiop with things like 'Sesame Street,' I think it would be sliahlly unwise. Q: To die e:steat tlaat yoar TV Allllll u -proll'IJU are e4acatJoul, Wt U.ere l'ACl1C MWDI rM:IRC llATTIIAY are Dftrlytq mesaacea, wllat do ..... 79."50 W.1'11 ,.. llope clllfdrea ud adalt1 are ma ~ ._ leanta1 from diem? ua lllMD 4 mw-. so. COAST A: It's basically just a sort of "8-4121 LMUM 4t7-17ll positive approach: taking the altitude -NII -..,. that life is good and people arc good. I IM lllMD a OMMmS-.... VEJO try not to do loud, obvious 'message' ts2-4ttl MIU. 4tS-'220 sort of thine. .na mu -What we re doing is more like the mw..s CIDIA CllllCIE k:ind of attitude that you have when cono tn-.m IJ4.255J you're raising kids. What they learn IL,_ una 111 has more to do with attitude and mw..s SMlllUIAal ~ •TOl environment that is around them. 511-5111 ,,...,_ Q: A lot of people u.tu televl1loa 11 -Ni llB lla.rmfaJ fer kJds becHte it'• too e.TI ma W.Z711 EDW..s lllMlSITY f'AOIC ,.., 39 vtoleal' or a wa1te of &ime. Do yoa ~ D11I COAST PUZA 154-1111 • ..... 1.JUJ asree, ud Mw do yoct avoid tlae IL .,.. 511.,_ u 11111 ITllTll atdd1m1 yoenelf'! ~ n TCJIO MIC FASID ~ mwAmS WllMl A: Sure. I am certainly quite -'. "'• --14 a-n (lll) "1·"33 aJntl ltl-OW7 strongly against violence· on tele- DM..S 'at11mc0Ji"0 wu1wra • ua mwm IMLl vision. It is near criminal what the -IJ4..2SSJ ltl-OS41 networks arc doin$. There is some ~ sense of responsibility, but not nearly ~============:::L _____________ J cnouah. At the same time. as a producer and a director. I know that «Ol.JT ~THIS WORLn .. actiop and violence get the ratings, get the audience and make the stories a great deal more exciting. So one is in a great quandary on bow to propa.m. Q: Nell Pottmaa, a pnfetMr of commDleatlM ar1a at New Ytrk Ualvenlty, reeeatly wnte Git crld· dim •f 'Sesame S~t': 'lf we an co blame Sesame Street for u~ lt l• for me preteue wt It la aa ally of t.H eluaroom .... Al a televtANI IMw, aad a 10CM1 OM, Sesame Street does not eecoan1e c~ra te a.ve ~I or uytMa1 aboet ldMI. 11 eacoeracet iffm '° love televl1ioa .• Care co comment'! A: Well, it probably doesn't e~­ courage kids to love ~h~I. I don t think that was ever its intent. Jts intent was to get kids sta~ed. in the learning process, an<J I thank 1t docs do that. And it docs do it throL\&h television. I don't think.. it encouraacs them to love television. The trouble is kids love television anyhow .... Kids arc going to watch television anyhow. So why not put something on tele- vision that's aood for them .... It's aggravating when educators attack our show .... This thing is not supported by educational money anymore; it's scraping alon1 on its merchandising. Q: ne otller aide of you craft l1 a.e 1ertpt. Are dlere u y comedtaU JH partlc1llarly admire, or wllo uve illflaence4 you material'! A: Stan Freberg. and Walt Kelly who did Pogo. Q: How la KermU adJ11tta1 co life al st? Hai lae coaflded ~. luenDMt tllo•IJI•• lO yoa? A: No. But puppets have the same sort of graceful aging that cartoon characters have. Orphan Annie is not 50ycarsold. l'msureKcrmitwillstay young a lot longer than I will WINNER -S-Supponq Aoor- Klaus Maria Brandauer -0.W ShMot. "lliE TOOA Y SHOW". NllClV WINNER -8-Acrn-.- Meryl Streep There's one less vice in Miqmi these days -TGl4o -0-.a.do _._.al._ ..... ~-o-.­-8-0.mr-..4'1r- -Y...t.-0-a.do l.a~-0-- Qur~~ ~ .. CJt -·"" _. IXl.f&'!l/9 Al.~~~.~'! IAlA *OllANGE •WUTMINSTEll UA Movlff ~I *EL TOflO EOW1tds El TOJ'o 5'1·9500 *LA MlllAOA Pacmc:·a Ga1ewrt ~13·1611 CintOol'll 834-~~ (OW1tds Vol•• Cemt< ...._ ........ •-....O 89t.o567 I UENA '°AllK UAMov1u ~-4"3 * >1UNTINOTON MACH * MIUION VllJO OllANGI ..0 ••UU .CC£'1(0 , Of' '"" ( ..c:lAGCMf ,,., fdWlrds Huntin9tOfl TWln EOW.01 Vle!O T .. n Pacific I Orange 646-0388 a»eeeo 0r1 .... 111 f34.t341 BARGAIN MA TINEE S FIR <\ I ; Ptr1orm,ntts Mond'y Th1u Salurdav 1E •Cl'D' Hol1d''" & )pt c f nq,qtmtnls1 LAKEWOOD "' ' ,_, ... ·-~ .... , ..... l•'.w11ne UAllOlll lOCKY IV ,.,.1 tJ Je >U•••U tM ,,,. ...... ~ ...... MIC1'Aoll~ • OllllllS llll. I'll .,.. , ... • >1 -2_ :19 l MI It I I J It It eotu 1n .. o UWYIN ... ll .... fHI COl()lt 'Ul'L.' ,,. •>• -OAL IJllGAo.tM(ltT t tt •!I r • ••U . .,..,. ....... , .... ' TOUMI 119&()(1 ~ fO(o. • >1 . ,, .. , ....... . -. !!!_t1t Jt tllt f Uwttr It Ot ••• ClUI IPOI , ,,,o 2t2J 4'" ...S liOS I 0t00 WAI' Olt .. U' tOI DAl~TIANS ,,, , ... 2t1J 4-IO HftM1•1s ANAHEIM LA MIRADA INIM\' MINI '""•» ll >e > • I M t • lO >e eOUf tU .. O l'llfOtll UAU°"' •OC•Y IV J l'GI •>,.,,..,. .,. ... ,, .. •AeYtH ... •Ov MINO WHITI NIGHTS '"""'' I I M I lO I 10 t M H It Mt(N&ll OOVOVU tUI'"'" .. 1uo,..1 JIWll Of THI NIU """ I 11 l u ~ IS • I ) , •. u ,....,_ & ''• ,, .. ~ O.l•r •••·- '""'''" O ttlN IO ""''"'' '°""' Sltlt OU MOU!ll l , "" q 1111I ''I11J11 •t II _." .. ...,,,, -....... tUI" .. ClUI .. •I U J •I 111aU111 •t •I GATEWAY 0011T tllllO 110f090 ...... OUT 01 Afll(A ""' ' 0$ • , , • » •• )0 0 001•• 1n110 "'''""" oovoui.1 a (lt()IUl llNt f14t MOV1l !OG-ll• l JO) I )\•\ e 1t l t •l OOl•' tn•o ''TWKI IN A u•n•MI ••• I IJ ). ...... t » t•M t Jffin CMAat OA" AUOO•O 5'1U UKI US oo 11 .. I • I M I 11 •t 'I OOll'f H HIO HIAD 0"tCI ,,._111 tN I Ntt;» . " ,,,. ",. llUltf1tll MU\'-_.._ .... ..,..... t!t •:r >:< ·~ CLUI ,,,_. ..................... '"'"'' , ............... ,. TMI AHNtMILATOH 111 WMITI _,.IOMTI ••1 AGAINST All OOOS 111 ,:. 1"11 llKI UI .. 111.»\'&"~~., '"""' ,,.,~ ........... ,. '°""' '*'OCI ._. ... ,, HIAD OfFtCI r..a.•>1 Mee& TO THI •UNll .. VOlUHHHl 1f 1 loHA~A ·-· ,.., ~~ "JIWIL Of THl Ntll" "I\ ' JIWll Of nc NIU "' "COMllU..O" ,, "COMM.tHDO'' ••• .. • • • LOS ANGELES (AP) -Don Johnson, star of NBC's "'Miami Vice," has given his image a boost. Johnson hasstoppcd smoking. "He totally quit," said his publicist, Lili Ungar. "He had been smoking more .. BIGBLY RltCOMllEJVDltD." 9 1/a OUT OF 10 GAAV ~~ l'C8S IV NOW PLAYING I ~' • ---.... .,._.,c• -~ ...... -..... -·::;.~ l> 9UIJl .... • ...... ~ ... ~ .. " .... -.. & ....... 11'1\IJI ..... , ... ... -.,,, .... '°'""'~ '"" 1' ...... -IW•AWl f ..... lfllif""I¥"'•~ UI •!M -,. __ ~· -'°"' • .. """ ....... .#'\' ... -•u• ... .,,..,,_,,, ~ .... -:-~ -~-'·~ ....... "\:.. ... , .. .... """"'•· -~ "" -_O>-.. •ll•71'0 ·-CXJ-.-...· ...,_. --, .... ........._~ than a pack a day. He quit the first week of October and in the cu~nt shows he's no longer smoking.". Unpr said Johnson had wanted to keep 1t quiet so that an episode could be written about his quitting the habit. But the news leaked out and plans for the show were dropped. The American Cancer Society bad complained about Johnson smoking on the show. "We applaud him and we wish him good luck in continuing to go smokeless," said Susan Islam, ACS director ofbroadcast relations in New York. ._ Meanwhile. Johnson appears nude in a color layout with actress Melanie Griffith in the holiday issue of Playboy m~ne. Ungar said he had no reaction to the publication of the pictures, which were taken in 1976. At that time be was doing guest star work. ............... TURN THEM INTO MONEY , ...... llaulftt4 842-6878 Join the lunatics that run the world's most irrational multinational. .. MllA'Alll llTOMI •LA_... Uo\ *°"" (°"""-S-:. P..-C t 952•1 511 5elO ~' •CIPA... -m1a11 (°"""' 0.-ee..... f ... otts WGGGllr.oot CllWlll 9~1•1 c-N sa• oeM wc0r.,. - CIDITA ... I.IA°""'* ~ C6tt 637 0)40 C::,19 r-1 •. .ftlf ,, .... ,,. , , .. , ..... "-:11 • Str~ ~ •••• ~r.tt· -•11 , ...... _ ..ca•IVa ,,,.Ji••... . •• . ..... , ........ .............. l , .............. ·-- llOCltV rw no ~et C .. HJt- .... l•llja f"0·1 ,, ~-.nge Coeel DAILY PILOT /Monday. JMuWy 8. 19N A9 COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, A10 Economic.body parts ailing 11 JOHN CUNNlF, ,, ..... ...,.. NEW YORK (AP) -lo spite of a eo.o•n11&S forecast for COntinue4 expansion iD 1986, the U.S. economy us some se~o1&s health problems, eome of which could tum into erioolina ailments. there is widespread aarecmcnt on 1bjs thesis in the business communi- ty, with the major variauons being those of perspcct1 ve. Easterners, for example, aren't as "aware of farmer-banker problems as 1Midwcstemers are, and tend to regard 'stable food pri~s as healthy -while 'net f.arm income continues to fall and bankruptcies become commonplace. And, while many folks cheer de- tlines in oil ,prices, people in Texas worry that local producers can't •afford any more cuts without coming perilously close to going the same way as farmers. maybe taking their lenders with them. A aood many Amcncans who takt ~tisfaction in reports of continued luowth tend to overlook the im- .IMJanccd way in which 1t has oc- curred, with services booming and 'ft'lanufacturinJ. once the country's ltrcngth. trailing. Perhaps a like number seem to ac,cept the idea tti&t Con,srus bas· dis1>0sed of the bud&et-ddicit prob. lem by passing the <rramm-Rudman Act, which calls for an end to excess spending by 1991, five years from now. The iml?Jlanoe of international payments continues. which means American companies still have prob- lems sellina their goods abroad -or at least a much more difficult time seUina abroad than (orcianers have selling here. The decline in the iotematJonaJ trading value of the dollar was svpposed to have helped correct that Sit~tion, but SO (ar the results haven't shown up in the statistics, and It may be late in the year before proof comes. Meanwhile. the American con- sumer 1s beyond his rup pockets 1n debt -credit cards, car loans. home mortgages, appliances and even Christmas gifts -and may not be ablt;.-to pay for a lot of the goods business intends to sell him. In fact, some bankers speak omin- ously of the possibility that even if consumers want more money they mightn't find it as easy to come by later this year. With savings rates already low. that could mean doing without purchases. OveraU. the consensus is for the economy 10 arow about Sl.S trillion this year, with real disposable income -income after wes and with any inflation wrung out -growing at around 2 percent. After the rccurrina inflationary upheavals and plunges of the past 1 S yun or .so, oumben like those arc welcome news to alJ but those who thank the economy should rise swif\Jy and forever, without toleratina inter- missions. But good as the situauon is, the ecooonuc body shows wear and tear. aod bwnpt and bruucs. as well as lips of anbritis and maybe some hardenina of the artenes. When references are made to the health of the economy there 1s a miodtet that envuions the country as a vast bom0ttnous entity rather than a mass of aches and ailmenu aver· a.,ed out apJnst feelings ranain& upward to euphona. It tends to foract that problems exists in the farmbclt, in manufac- turina, in exporuna, tn the consumer ICCtor and, of co~. 10 Washan&tOn Promotions made at El Torito chain El Torito Restaurants Inc. bas announced the appointment of James W. Stryker as executive vice presi- dent and chief financial officer, and Robert D. Johnson as vice prcsident- financial planning and analysis. Stryker, 38, joined El Tonto in 1977 as director offinancial planning and analysis. In 1980 he was named vice president of planning and anaJysu and three years later vice president-finance, Prior to joining El Torito be held various management positions with Price Waterhouse. A natave of Redlands, Stryker graduated from UC Santa Barbara.. with a bachelor of arts 1n economics :-l1Mljll!llBm#ll1:l1--------------------· 119iri6:m~d Uf~~ J~s ::si~~· :~ -••••-•11--•11••••1 Laguna Hills with his wife. the formeT ... Kathryn Ann Low. and their three children. Johnson. 31. Joined El Tonto Restaurants an 1981 as a senior tinanciaJ analyst and was named director of financial planning and analysis an 1983. Prior to JOining El Torito he was employed by W.R. Grace & Co. as manager of financiaJ analysis for Grace's Restaurant Group. Splnnlng a web A natJve of Los Angeles, Johnson graduated from the UCLA 1n 1977 with a bachelor of arts 1n economics and received his M.B.A. from the. Uni versity of Southern California in 1979. He resides m lmne with his wife. the former Cynthia Marie Lally. A qaality control lnepector ezamlnee a web of microfibers ued in making lndutrlal rnplraton, capahle of trappm, m.lnate dmt and mi.et particle.. The deYicee are manufac- tured at a SM Corp. facility ln Aberdeen, S .D. NEW y~ <~~p -~L..wlng list snows IN~ V°'k StockExd\enge 1toca1 end warrants tri.1 hllve llOM uii the most end down rhe most 0-Md on P«C«lt of cnenoe rtMrdleu of vOU'M for Friday. No -.c;urlll .. rredlne be6ow 12 art 1nc1--uoecs. Net ancl C*'centeee c:f\enoeS are IN dlff9rtfq betw-.n IN onvlou1 downg orlce ancl Frldev's J/im. orlce. Name Last Cho Pct I =81C1Un pf 2 tell l EICtWUtd 4 1 I Basic s leCt A110C ' TJ>tlr wt I i 1verOak 9 HuelL.abs 10 Ptrllnv 11 MlctllbrY 2 Nal H~ 13 WlnmsEI 61'1 + 2~ 6l.. + ll..o 2 + , 4 , + ,, ·~ + , ~ + ~ 4 t "" 14~ + 1 4 2~ + • ... + ~ 4116 + ~ , ... + ., -m 11113:1 iM.faJ NEW vo'f!'l (~~r -~fo..owlno llsr •' snow1 the Over • the • Counlar stoekl anc:t warrants tri.t have oone uo the most a~dow~the mosr based on 'il oercent of noe Frlcsev. 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'1' ..... -LA .n, 't~ • I.*' ' ' ' • L-_., ·-· t:i;\' ~ ~ .11!" t~~: 1J1 1ii. ~: =·1t~Kt· -if§U _ ,I ll B~ ~~ -~ .. j t1 u .:-• wf1Gi ~ ~ .. ~ v ... n t • ~·:iR tt ~--: ,,...., If I •""" ii ~-I 10 -'" I ... , ....... Plllll Market has small loss NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market recorded a small loss in quiet trading Monday, showing little carryover from last Friday's rally. A monthly survey of corporate purchasirta executives found that economic growth slowed a bit in December. WHAT AMrx Orn NEW YORK (AP) Jen. 6 Prev. ~~ AMEX LEADER S GoLD Quo1E s Slllecled wottd gold pttcee t.lofldllr ........ "'°"*'9 fbdr'O Wl.IO, upSl.06 ........ .,._ fbdr'O 1328.00, up. 1.26 ,.,...,._ t32t.21, up 12.61 ,,........ ftaJne '3M.JO, up a ue ~ le!• .,._ bid 1321.26, up $1 75 $327 00 _.,, ....., • ...,_ 1321.00, up. 1.00 .,..._. Wl.40, up 11.25. .......,_........., '3'4.12. upSl.31 ...re-gold .,. month fr\ '321. 10, up • , 10 ME TAL S QuoTE S f amoo.s la beLs ... WHAT NYSE 010 NEW YORK (AP) Jen. 6 Prtv. l NYSE LEADER S NEW YORK (AP) -Sein, 4 p,m Pf'Q 1nd nel change of the #lflHn most 1cllv1 New York Stock Excnanoe lu ues, tr1dlng na llona ltv 1t more then '1 ~'!~rk felrs b Amer til ~ctp g P!Qtl ~rL i•re:;:~ =nds M v 2,~ • 2, I I: • : 1, I 1 , 1, , 1. • l: Dow JONE S AVERAGES NASDAQ SUMMARY Green sparks LakerS INOLEWOOO (AP) -Rookie A.C. Green of the Los Angeles Laken is taking his first year in the National Basketball Association one step at a time. In the Lakcrs' 118-88 dismantHna of the Washington Bullets, G reen exposed another side to his dcvclop- 01ent -an eye for the basket. It wasn't Green's nine rebounds or four blocked shots that caught Laker Coach Pat Riley's attention. It was a carcer-hiah 20 points. "Green had a good game," Riley said. "He's an unselfish player that's come from a program that stresses the hif!!-percentage shot. 'l get a little upset when he doesn't take the open shot. I look at him as a defensive and offensive rebounder. and a defensive player. But you can see he can score. Green. who has been impressive in has defensive contributions and his rebounds. said his adjustment fro m collqc is a slow. methodical process. "I've got to go through the year and maybe next year before I'm really used ~o the guys on the team and can adjust fully to NBA style o f play," G reen said. "Tonight I didn't hesi- tate. I took shots when I felt they were there. That 1s an area of the game l have to concentrate on " "The Lakers are just too good for us," said Washington Coach Gene Shue. "We thought we could control the game by slowinR the oace. and we did for a wh ik ." Raiden quarterback Marc WUaon manaaes to elude the graap of New England ae- ,.,..,..... fenaive end Garin Verla daring Sanday'• AFC playoff &a.me at the ColiaeUm. ,., m: Raiders turn one over to -. Pats, 27-20 LA mistakes prove to be difference for New England LOS ANGELES !A.PJ -\\ho arc these guys. these New England F'atri- ots? Tbe way thmgs have go ne the la'>I couple of weeks, the) have the look of a team of destin) O ne thtng's for sure. the Patnot\ arc o ne step a way from quahl)ang tor the Supcl' Bowl. And if the} managi.- such a fea t. they'll be the fim team ever to earn a Super Bo"I bt-rth h\ winning thr~ straight pla,ofT game\ o n the road. Among their heroes reten1h ha'l been Johnny Rembert and Jim Bowman. a couple of re-.t'ne'> un- known to JUSt about e"enune but tbeir fam ilies. Bowman fell on a fumhle rn the Lo' Angeles end zone for a touchdown Wlth 57 seconds rcma1n1ng in tht' third quan er Sunda> 10 snap a 20-20 ue and account for the final point'> 1n the Patriots' 27-20 '1c1un O\t'r the Ra1dcrs. The pla y occum:d on 't·v. Eng- land 's kickoff aftl'r Ton' Franl..l 1n·s second field ¥-Oal ol the game a 32 .. )arder trull ued the game c11 20-20 ()am ~ale muffed Franklin's k.tc koff at about tbt Ra1der 9-yard hnc, ~ooped 1t up, and th en fumbled ~hen hil by Mosi Tatupu. The ball rolled 1010 the end zone. where Bowman fell on 1t. "You go down there with the idea of tl)tng to stnp the ball o ut of his hands." said Bowman. a roc.loe '>afet ) "We'-.c scored stii: touchdowns JU!>t from trymg to stnp the ball this season " The tnumph b) the supposedJy playoff-sh} Patriots -who a week earlu:.r beat the New York Jets 26-14 1n the ..\mencan Football Conference wild-card game for their first post- ~awn Wln an 22 years-puts them an )unda} ·~ 4.FC Championship game against the M1am1 Dolphms In the tr \lctory o'er the Jets. Remben. a third-year linebacker. ran IS \ ards wnh a fumbled lockoff for a touchdown that gave the Patnots a :'3-.. advantage. Fumbled kicko ffs that tum mto touchdowns fC1r the kiclung team us uall) occur about o nce a )Car. The Patriots haH done 1t three tames in their last four games The "inner of the Patnots- Dolph1ns game at M1am1·~ Orange Bowl will advance to the Super Bowl on Jan 26 10 New Orleans. The opponent "'111 be the winner of (Ple&H eee RAIDltR/82) clippers· smith Patriots' road show a smashing success on injured list LOS ANGELES -Guard Derck Smith was placed o n injured reserve Sunday for the second time this season by the Los Angeles Clippers. Smith. who suffered torn canilage in his left knee almost eight weeks ago and subsequently underwent-anhroscopic surgery. is still experiencing soreness 1n the knee. He will miss a m inimum of fi ve games. The Clippers have also signed free-agent center Wallace Brya nt to a 10-day contract. The 7-foot, 245-pound Bryant. a third-year veteran o ut of the University of San Francisco. was waived by the Dallas Maveric ks in late November. Smith's first stint o n the injured list lasted 16 games before he was able to return on Dec. 18. But bigtestawayfrom home awaits in Miami L0 SANGELES (AP)-The New England Patriots are just one step away from a feat whic h has never been accomplished -reaching th~ Super Bowl by winning three straight road games. "We beat two playoff teams on the road," Patriots linebacker Steve Nelson said after his team had stunned the favored Los Angeles Raiders. 27-20. Sunday. "There's noth ing that we can't do as a team "I don't remember the last 11 }ears," added the 34-year-old. 12-year New England veteran. 'Tm a mem ber of the 1985 Patriots " The Patnot.s. who beat the New York Jets. 26-14, at the Meadowlands an the A.merican Football Conference wild-card gam e on Dec. 28. wi ll advance to Super Bowl XX 1f the} can beat the Dolphins at M1am1 neii:t Sunda~ in the l'\FC cham p1onsh1p game. The Patnots' playoff wins over the Jets and Raiders were their first post-season victories since 1963 and the Second and third playofl triumphs in their history. fhe1r neii:t c hore doesn't figure to be eas) - the Pa1nots haven't beaten the Dolphins 10 the Orange Bowl since 1966. losing 18 straight games. "We'd hke to play Miami.'' said running back Craig James. who gained 103 yards o n 24 cames against the Raiders. "That was our goal after our Monday ni~t loss. We'd hke to go down ~here and play.' .., The Oolphi'ns beat-the Patriots. 30-27. at Miami on Dec 16. When the AFC East rivals met an Foii:boro on Nov. 3. New EnglaJtd won. 17-13. "The last four weeks, we never planned ahead because we were playing good teams." :'-lelson said. "Now. it's back to Miami agam." Saad James: "Wha t we've done the last two weeks 1s really remarkable. "We ~ercn't nen the same ballclub 1n September when ~c pla)'ed the Raiders .. NFL playoff schedule SUNDAY NFC Cbampionsbip Rams al Chicago (Channel 2 at 9:30 a.m l AFC Champlonsblp !'le"' England at M1am1 (Channel 4 at J p.m.) SUPE R BOWL XX Sunday, Ju.ti fat New Orleans) AFC champion \S. NFC champ~on. 2 p.m. The Raiders whipped the Patnot'>. 35-21 on Sept. 29. handing "Je"' England its onl\ home-field loc;s 1n the pr<X·e<;'i Onl) two "'1ld-<:ard teams ha'c l''er reached the uper Bow I -the Dalla\< n"' h«1\., in 1975 and I.he Ra1def'i then pla\lnit 1n Oakland. in 19~0 There"' as onl)' onl" w1 ld-<:a rd team per conference m t 975. meaning the Cowboys needed to win two games to reach W Super Bo"'I The Raiders beat Houston at home in the 1980 A.FC wild-card game The (owbo)s lo'it to P1ttshurgh. 2.1-li in uper Bo"'I X ~hale the Raiders bcat-1he Philadelphia Eagles. 2."-1 0 in uper Bowt XV "I'd say the Patnots have a good chance.'' Raiders All-Pro defenSI\ e end Howie Long, "It the) run me ban tfie V.'3]1hcyd1 d todaS. make the big plays. get the good performance from their field goal locker the) ·11 beat 'em ··The Patnots are ~here they are becau~ the' deserve to be there .. Saad Ra iders noseguard 8111 P1ckel .. The) t?eat us 27 -20 and de~rvedl ) c;o If the) play the tootball the\ pla~ed toda'. they have a great chamc-10 l'lea1 the Dolphtn'I ·· The Raiders didn't pla .. their usual gamc- ll)mm1tt1ng \I\ tu miner-; and making -.e' eral nther m1s1ai..c:, ··v.e had npponun1t1e"s and let them slip through uur tinga\ P1del \81d Bears warin to the task, throttle Gian ts Rams next for Chicago after 2T-O triumph over New York CHICAGO (AP) -"Old-fashioned .. football is tht "'ay Coach Mike D1tka described h1o; Chicago Rear'i' :! I .fl '1ctof) Sunday over the "e"' 't ork (,1ants in another $tCp toward their ultimate goal, the ~uper Bowl Jim McM aho n, pass10$ "'11 h gloves on because oft he cold 1n which the w1nd<h11l factor dipped to 10 belo~ zero, teamed with Dennis McKinnon on touchdowns ot 23 and 20 yards and defem1,e end Richard Dent led a ferocious defense which sacked quanerback Phil Simm~ Sill times for 60 )ards in losse'> It was the first pla)Off gaml' 1n t 'h1cago since I%\ when the Bear.> beat the Giant\ t .t-1n. 1n the "Jauonal Football League champ111nsh1p game -a 'tetof\ Jl'o built o n defense 10 fng.ad \\and' < 11' ~cather "It wasn't 'Cl) cold ont ,. '11u [!Ct up on pcopk ·· 'jld D1tka. a tight e nd for thl' Bear' 1n thjt I %3 game ·1 \.Jn't sa) enough about Richard Dent and Jim McMahon 1'i a competitor. You ha'e to take 'our hat off to him .. "We were totalh preparl•d for the Giants ·· McMaho n satd "We ~pent all "'eclc prepanng for anythmg the) might do and "'e \hipped all of n .. . The victory over Ne"' York kl·cps the Bears at home for the National Confcrcnn· r hJmp1onsh1p gamt· nc\t Sunday against the Rams. w hl1 defeated the Dalla~ Cowboys. 20-0. Saturda) "The Rams are coming in w 1th a big ~in OH'r Dallas," McMahon said. "and the' hn'e an C'\cellent ballclub. They ha ve a defense that ha\ l.cpt lht'm in game' all year O ur defense will havt' to 'top Enl ()11.:l.cr.(ln a nd our offense will have to move the ball Our ~ori.. 1<> rut out for us.·· Dent rcg1 tered '11 sac~s ol \1mm'> and rarth allowed the New York offense to get u ntra kc-d "We put a lot o f pressurt on the quanerbad ... <;a1d Dent "Theyd1d a lot ofrolhng o ut hut 11 \Ou stop the run their bread-and-butter. 11 make 1t a lot ca<;1er · BHon \\ 1ll1an'' 1.1.,ard lo<><. •n hie; onh ru<,h · Dent hamml"red \.tom'I late an the llr<.t 4uarter and \.toms sa"' hllk Jrt1on after that ··v. hen '"u tal..e awa~ their running µmt.'. \UU t.no"' ~uu·rL un th~ nght trad ... ' Dent "81d The Bear' got d "ig hrcal.. in thl' t1r'1 t:111.1ncr ~hl'n ~an Landeta ~ra1ed the hall on J punt Jttempt Shaun Ga'k p1ckrd t up and ~t·nt ihl' \JrJ, tnr J tOUlhdo"'n - h1'> tir<;t TD ~IO<l' h1gt> ~hool -.ind J ~ .1 lead "Ith 5 \2 remaining In tht• tir\l rcnod Landcta "'ht' lati:r had f'unt'> 1)! '~ Jnd 6 ~ 'ard~ hlamed the gu,11ng. "' nd-. tor the near-mi"" .. , dropl)c:d thl' hall and '1.1nnl !1' '"'ir.g 1n10 11 Jnd 1t started w (Pleaae eee BEAJlS/82) 'Wild bunch 'I has reason to party ·But Bears mos tly play it s tra ight a fter playoff win over ew York < Ill! \(rt l -\Pl --\lone "'ar·"'hoop poured fonh trom tht' < hit Jtt11 Bc:ar-.· ~hn\\cr \unda~. a piercing rtmindt•r that 11 "'ould takl• mort' than a pla}offv1cton to turn f'r<"' footNll''i "'ild hunch into a \Oll('('t1on oftotalh ll' 1li1ed v.innrr; -\ltc-ra ~a.,on dunng "'h1ch the~ "'on I 5ofl 6g.am~. shuflkd in mu..ic \ 1d1·0, and bawled e"rrything from hamburger<. 10 wllc1 1'3per 11 was a strangeh <,ubdut"d group that Ct'lct'irated 1hc-~ 1-0 FC pla\ufftnumph o'e• the Ne"' York ( r1.1nt\ But all "'J'-nt'I '>eriousncs-. cblcaco defenatYe end IUclaard Dent ...U• a nyt.nc tackle io •ck New York ~k Phil Sim.ma da.riDC Ont qaar- ter of IQ'C playoff 1a.me won by the Bean . The Bears held the G1ant'i to l:! net ~ards rushing and Joe Morris. who gained 1.336 dunng the season and 14 1 llflinst San Franc1SC'O 10 the Giants' 17-3 f'lf( w1ld <ard victory last Sunday, was hmat~ to I:! rushC' and 32 yards. Tony Gatb~ath's Q-yard run "'as canceled o ut b~ Wh1k Rllhard l)cnt the def<.'ns1'e end ~hn IC'tl ( h1ca~o·s l hJf'lt' "a' ~mg mtcn 1ewC'd on nat1ona1 trle' 1 ion. teammate Otis Wilson composed u nd sanil th1~ li ttle dill\ to pra1"4.' Dent"• '' ~ sacl s and '11 tackle'I txlth team-h1&h" '\acl..man ·,com ing. name of Richard Dent "Quaril"rhat k's coming.. l'i &onna~et bent " .\nd \\.11\on doubled O\Tr in lau ter Robinsondulyimpressed with Bears' mauling .... Havina already watched a 20-0 shutout that be liked 1 lot, Rams Coach John Robinton saw a 21 -0 pme unday that he wasn't tttl CfUY about. ~They pTCtty much _put t<>aetber a perfect pmc." Robinson said after the Chicqo Bears mauled the New _ _,uu..._,,~·,..nts i cir Natio~ Football I e•aue playoff pmc an Ch1cqo. Robinson. who watched the pme on television at his home, told Bears Coach M ike Ditta on a phone hookup! "Mike.yourtcam P,l&Ytd~.,at~andit wa1srat fun 10 watch ... but a httle ftiptetuna. On Saturday, the Rams had advanced to the NFC title pme by blanktnt the Dallaa owboys. 20-0. at Ana.helm tadium Now the Ram•, one step away from thell' tttond ... upcr Bowl appearance, travel to Chicago to fa c the Bears nett Sunday. The winner will &Oto the 'upcr Bowl ••nst the Afi champion. Robinson, wh0tt club but the Cowboys Wl th ovc~wtrinadcfenscanda playoff record 248-yard. two- to•~~ N1bine ~ ~ Eiw.Otc~cnon YW the Bears whip the o.a:ntSWtth an overpowenna defense and the past1na of Jim McMahon. "I 9'U impttSkd w;lb tMlr a biht)' 10 MO\o'C Int rootball and tbrow apanst the wind, .. the Ram cuacb Mid. "They\vttt abk tot~ and cond'ol tM footb&I L" The NFC Cenual chams*>G Bean, now l ~I. are early Slh-pouu fa vontea over the Run • tM NFC We t rha mp.on no w 12-S. .. We're used to it. .. Robtnson 'lad "We were 10. \ point ul19erdop to the 49ets ln our second p mt." a 27-20 Rams victory an the 14th p me or the ~•son Robtnson tald tentauve plans call (or the Rams to remain an Southttn hfornia. where the tempcraturr wu in the low 70s, and fl)· Thursday n\lht to C1\1~fiO: \\hal ibc inDCl-dull r.ctor wu I 0 dqrrcs hcln\li• zcmor unday'a p.me. skcd about p&ayu" i.n the cold.. he said . "I think everybodyhau.nad,-ant1teat homeaftbear en\ 1ronment as uruqU(. wbd t.heu'S 11at thas ume of the year "It'll be cold. 1t"ll be a hostile env1ronment. ~ v.c- have 90me ral tballcap \M.re." • • Robin n said the p me rNtch~ two .. po'Wtr team It'll ccrta1ntv be a ph ,,cal con1eit from our pel"lpcctl\C. (P1--.. •oaut801'/1M) 't Cl the Bear wtnt to great nath\ lO unswtr que t10nsrarnc5tl). 'iWrnnn~ to a man the victor) w115 not as ca'i\ as 1t looled . "The G1ant'i ne'er g.l'-C up •· m 1ddle linebacker M lkC' m.alew; wd. "butt 1h1nk that th<' ftthns offru,trat1 n began weanng them down We-kept turning them bacl. and t\entuall that pla\ed on their mmd'i " ~cross the wav. the Glan111 h-..ked their wound~ but rtfu~ to admn to thtm "We dµa our own hole,·· ~1d e~ 'ork quancl'bad Ph al 1mm who endured SI\ bO )'l.rds. Ln.J~~---===' • ou -.a)\ h e more pus pr<>t('Chon. but I Citpttted 11 about hkc 1t 9.as toda) Wt' knew wha t to do mentaU~. bu1 pb)s1cally. we d1dn•t St111 done " ' Th<' htan) nf hun, tarted with . 1mm who beuled the Ou to pla , CAlC~ LO n,mnan& be k Joe Monu •.....:__----~·~ n v ' k~ Jim Sun. both o f whom uflt~ co~ and"'"'~ oc-.cr \M fa torl the G1antt nttded them ta 'They didn't h.a-.c an) u~ (ex us. .. Qiam C ch Sill Parotll\ ~•d. '"The) aot the best of u T'hrie•a na..bc.'at1n1 around the bush Tht oulf)lia~ -.. ·• Some Chl~o fans find attending game a bit un(bear)able ...... ,.. ..... ldm CHICAGO-While some Bears fans EE braved below-~ero wind-chills to watch • 9 • Chicaao shut out the New York Giants, 21-0, in Sunday'~ NFL playoff game, others viewed the pme at taverns on widescrcco television and sipped special drinks named "The Fridge" and .. Sweetness." "It's more fun to watch it here," said George Stemple, 421 of Crete. as be ordered another ~ at P.O.E.T.'s, a bar in the li.Yely Rusb St.rcct area. "I went toacoupleofgames this year, but it's better here," be said .. "I just moved here from Denver," chimed in Stemplc's friend. Karen Cheesman ofSchererville, Ind. ••1 can't think of a better way to be broken in as a Bears fan." The enthusiastic crowd of about I 00 alternately cheered. booed. stamped their feet and pounded the bar, depending on what was unfolding on the widcscreen before theh1. As the ~e ended, the fans spilled ontG the P.0 .E.T .'s dance fl oor to the sound of the Bear's theme song -"The Super Bowl Shuffle." "I feel better than after the first half." Stemple said. "They'll have no probJem with the Rams. ·•The Bears arc going to be at least 81/J-point favorites over the Rams. The Bears arc going to go all the way," said Bill Nichol of Crown Point, Ind., a patron of P.O.E.T . 's. "They're great, there isn't a problem they can't handle," said Princess Hill. as she toasted the Bears' victor)' with a beer at Shennanipn's on Rush Street. "We're going to go all the way this year." "The Bears are going to win -what can I say?" said Tamara Pi~~ 24, of Traverse City, Mich. "If you've got the con11dence, gd with it." During the game, P.O.E.T.S. bartender Mary Vuco served plentyofaspcd al rum drinkcalJed "Sweetness,'' the nickname of Bears running back Walter Payton. "It's a little bit smaller a crowd than we expected but they sure are loud," said Vuco. Quote of the day Tlm Laskar, OkJahoma place-kicker, who kicked an Orange Bowl-record four fietcrgoals: "Records are going to be broke sometime, but national championships can never be taken away." .. Yashgan takes 'Anita feature ARCADIA -Favored Yashgan, rid-~ den by Chris McCarron, rallied throu~ the stretch and drew off to a two-length victory in the San Gabriel Handicap for older horses Suaday at Santa Anita. Tights, ndden by Laffit Pi ncay, finished second three-quarters in front of Rivlia, ridden by Bill Shoemaker. A fi ve-year-<:>ld trained by John Sullivan, Yashgan defeated seven rivals and earned a $51 ,600 winner's purse in the race for four-year-<:>lds and up. The winner,was clocked in I :49 J/5 for 114 miles over a good turf course. Sent off the 9-5 favonte by a crowd of 32,81 O. Yashgan paid SS.60, $4 and $3.60. Tights returned $5.40 and $4.20 and Rivilia paid $4.20 to show. Becker sweeps past Wllander 'lERLIN -Teen-age Wimbledon ~ champion Boris Becker of West German upset Sweden's Mats Wilander, 6-1, 7~ 6-0. Sunday to win the Junior Masters tennis tournament. Becker. ranked sixth in the world, took the $30.000 first-place prize after breaking the third-ranked Wilander's service in the second game of the third set and overwhelming the Swede after that point. Becker, 18, broke Wilander's serve in the sixth game of the second set. forging a 3-3 tie. Becker lost his own serve at S-5. but came back to win the tiebreaker Chl~o tall• dlYlalon lead s .. vt Larmer and Dlma Sa~ ~ tc<>red 60 teeonds • .,.,, earl)' ln the flnaJ , period Sunday niabt to lift Cbicaao into sole possession offint place in tbe ~atiooal Hockey Leape's Norris Diviaion with a 6-2 lriwnpb over Minnesota. It was the 6ftla Anilbt win and ninth in the 1111 IO pmes for~ Bleck Hawu ... EJ1eWbete, aoaltender Du.lei ...... recorded his 26th career NHL shutout, and shabby defensive play. haunted Vancouver as Winni.pea skated to a 4..() victory. Bouchard had ljttlc trouble bandlitta 20 shots i11 his tint shutout sinoc tbe 1983-84 teaaon, when he played for Quebec ... Marty MderleJ scored on f.dmonton 's first shot of the pme, and W~ Grebky fiaured in three tint-period aoals for the Oilen, who handed CaJaary a club-record 10th straiaht lou in a 6-3 decision~ 'the Oilcn, 29-7-4, arc now the only team in the Smythe Division with a winning record . . . Oefenseman No,,.,... Rodtefert and left wins MJeMI GMlet started a run of five straiabt IQ&ls by scoring less then two minutes apart, and Quebec bung on to beat the New York Raqers, S-4 ... Petr Oma scored the winnina goal at 13:59 oftlm third period and added three assists as Detroit held on to edge Toronto. 6-S. Rain poetpones NBA game A National Basketball Association m game between Phoenix and Seattle was halted Sunday night because of a leaking roof at the Seattle Coliseum. NBA official Mlke MaWs ordered the gantc postponed because of dan.erously slippery conditions from water on the playing floor with one minute gone in the second quarter and Phoenix leading, 3S-24 ... In a game that was played, guard Jlm PUAM led a third-quarter comeback that sparked PMt.land to 86 second-hair points and a 136-120 victory over Golden State. Paxson. who scored 25 poYus, repined bis touch in the second half and fueled a l'ally that brought the Trail Blazers back from a nine-point deficit early in the third quaner to a 93-83 lcaj when the period ended. y • l . Norris tops Spalding golf field Tim Norris lost the tournament lead l!I briefly b taking consecutive s, then birdied three holes on Pebble ~·s back nine for a I-under-par 71 Sunday to win the Spalding Invitational. Du Fwamaa. who began the final round two strokes off the lead, closed with a 72 and tied for second Wilh Mart Brooks, the young Texan who had a 7-under 6S in the heavy mist which covered the course Sunday. They both had 12-undcr totals of 27S in the non-tour event which was played on three courses ... Elsewhere, veteran Bale lrwla compiled a S- under-par 67 and scored a run-away six-stroke victory in the new Bahamas Classic. His 269 total, a distant 19 strokes under par on the Paradise Island Golf Oub course, was wonh $72,000 from the total purse of $300,000. Doule Hammond, never really in the title chase, came on with a 66 and claimed second place, worth $42.000. with a 275 total. Reeves to coach Senior Bowl MOBILE. Ala. -Dan Reeves of the Denver Broncos and bis staff will coach the North squad in college football's 1986 Senior Bowl Jan. 18 at Ladd Memorial Stadium in Mobile. "Dan is widely recognized as one of the most successful offensive coaches in the NFL," said Senior Bowl Director Eric Tillman, making the announcment Saturday. · Tillman announced earlier that Leeman Bennett of Tampa Bay will coach the South in the all-star pme that will launch some of the seniors' professional careers. Television, radio TELEVISION No events scheduled. RADIO 7:30 p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Lo ng Beach State at UC Santa Barbara. K WOW ( 1.600). Kings win second straight on road, 3-2 BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)-Second- period goals by Crai$ Redmond, Dean Kenned y and Phil Sykes ga ve the Los Angeles Kings a 3-2 victory over the Buffalo Sabres Sunda} in the National Hockey League. The Kings, who beat Toronto 6-4 Saturday. have won the first two games of a fi ve-game road trip. T he Sabres. whose goals were scored by Lindy Ruff and Mike Foligno, lost their second in a row and I , their first at home tn the last six games. The Sabre~ got the first penod's only goal late in the penod when John Tucker's pass fo und Ruff at the edge of the crease. and Ruff stuffed the puck behind Kings goalte Bob Janccyk. The goal was the first for Buffalo in the last 103 minutes. 8 seconds. But Los Angeles rallied with three <;econd-penod goals before the Sabres closed out the scoring with a goal that came with only 12 seconds left in the second period. Redmond opened the Kinp' scor- ing with a power play goal from the top of the faceoff circle that bounced into the net off Buffalo goalie Jacques q putier at 4:20. •Two minutes later, Kennedy gave the Kings the lead for good .with a slapshot from j ust inside the blue line. and Sykes made it 3-1 · Garys January Shoe Sale Starts Wednesday January 8 At Garys & Company, our shoe department is not ju~t another shoe department. It is a special shoe store within a special clothing store. # We will be open at 9:00 am January 8 ,_, ~· Ca.rt llanll (80J:! tbe llalden l'e8tralna !few SDCJ•nd enl Man1:f Patrick 8alllftD after 9alllftD and der llatt lltllen (eabeme rtabt) eac1"'n1ect bloln ,,, .......... after 8a.aday'a aame. Between 8alllYan and lllllen la Patriot P'red 11.arlon. Salllft.D eald ~bt wu due to ''bad blood'' between Illa faJnlly and Raider owner Al Dam. RAIDER MIST A'KES co'siL Y-IN DEFEA r · ... From Bl Sunday's NFC Championship pme between the Rams and Chicago Bears. Speaking of the Orange Bowl, the Patriots haven't beaten the Dolphins there since 1966. That's 18 straight losses. But maybe that won1t matter. Just ask the Ra.iders, winners of three previous Super Bowls and veterans of many a playoff war. "l'd say the Patriots have a good chance.'' Raiders All-Pro defensive end Howie Long said. "If they run the ball the way they did today, make the big plays. get the good ~rfonnance from their field goal kicker, they'll· beat •cm. "The Patriots arc where they are because they deserve to be there." One reason the Patriots arc where they arc is because the Raiders committed six turnovers Sunday. "Our main objective in training camp this year was to increase the number of takeaways." Coach Ray- mond Berry said. "It's unbelievable to come out here in Raiders' territory and come away with a victory ... carries Sunday, lost onl y three fu mbles during the regular season. Three of the turnovers were inter- ceptions thrown by Los Angeles Quarterback Marc Wilson. one of which set up a New England field goal. Wilson completed onl y 11 of his 27 passes for iust I 3S yards. "I'm not taking anything away from the Patriots. because they arc a good football team, but you just oan't play in a game of this magrutudc and make the mistakes we made today," Coach Tom Flores of the Raiders said. "We fumbled the ball, we threw interceptions, and those arc the types of things that kill you." Another was the fumble by Scale. Another was a first-period fumble by Fulton Walker following a New England punt. Bowman fell on the loose ball at the Patriols 21-yard line and quarterback Tony Eason re- sponded with a 13-yard touchdown pass to Lin Dawson, gi ving the Patriots a 7-0 lead. ·The Raiders scored three tjmes lo tum New England's 7-0 lead into a 17-7 Los Angeles advantue. "I felt at was going to be a low- scoringgame but I didn'tcount on the turnovers." Long said. "But there's no excuse for the loss. They ran the ball down our throats." The ·sixth Raider turnover was perhaps the one that turned the game around. Los Angeles led 20-17 when NFL rushing champion Marcu~ Allen fumbled and New England safety Fred Marion recovered at the Patriots 32-yard line with 7:51 left in the third ~uarter. The Patriots drove for Frank- lin's game-tying field goaJ. A crowd of 88,936 watched the Patriots-Raiders game at the Col- iseum. The Patriots will bring a 13-S record against the Dolphins, who art 13-4 and have won their last eight games. The Raiders had a six-pmc winning streak snapped Sunday to fir.ish the season 12-S. Allen, the NFL's Most Valuable Player who gained 121 yards on 22 .,..,.... BEARS WIN, 21-0. From Bl • • move," he said. "We called a punt block," Gayle said. ··He barely brushed the ball. I caught it on the second bounce. I was thinking, 'Six points.· I wanted a touchdown for the special teams ... The closest the Giants came to scoring occurred on .their final play of the first half when Eric Schubcn's 19- yard cllip-shot field-goal attempt hit the left upright and bounced back -his sixth miss in his last scveyntttnipts of the season and playoffs. New York Coach Bill Parcells, asked why the G iants didn't try to run the ball in for a touchdown late in the first half when they reached the Chicago 2-yard line. replied: "We didn't have any timeouts left. There was no time to run. I did what I wanted to do. They played well. They didn't surpnsc us. The things we wanted to do didn't work." Sim ms completed 14 of35 passes/or 209 yards, most of that coming in the founh quaner, when the Bears had the game wrapped up and sat back, keeping New York out of their end zone. The G iants finished the game with 241 yards in offense. But in the thrrd quaner, when they might have stayed in contention, they fai led to convert a single third- down play and didn't &et a first down. Fans brave freezing weather C HICAGO (AP) -About 600 Chicago Bears fans lined up in freezing weather at Soldier Field this morning to buy tickets for Sunday's playoff game against the Rams. Many had camped overnight in the hope of being the first on ~and to buy some of the 7,500 tickets that were to go on sale at 9 a.m .. The temperature at Chicago's lakefront at 8 a.m. was 12 degrees. . . Police SgL William Harrington said the fans "behaved pretty well , cons1denng." Joe llonta of tbe Olanta ru.na for abort 1atn da.rlDC 8a.aday'• aame acatnat Bean. "But there was no way I was going to arrest these fine fans," he added. The tickets also were go ing on sale this morning at most Ticketron outlets. Ueberroth to begin inquisition Baseball chief planS" to meet with players linked with drug use NEW YORK (AP} -Baseball Commissioner Peter Ueberroth be- &ins his drug inquisition this week, planning to meet in January with as many as 24 playe?. whose nam·es have been linked with cocaine and otherdrup. While the commissioner has said suspensions and fines could ~suit from the meetinas, the players union says it ho pes the commissioner will remember his stated purpose: to help, not punish. January. Of the 24 players, seven testified last September at the Pit· tsburgh federal drug trial of fonner Phillies caterer Curtis Strong. 12 more were named in testimony and five others admitted drug use at o ther times. The seven who testified were Hernandez. Dale Berra, Dave Parker, Lonnie Smath, Jeff Leonard, Enos Cabell and John Milner, who has retired as a player and is under no obliption to meet with Uebcrroth. The 12 named in testimony were Joaquin Andujar. Rod Scurry Bill Madlock, Ga ry Matthews, Lee L;cy, Tim Ra1nc1. Al Holland, Dusty Baker, Lary Sorensen, Dcrrel Thoma,, Dickie Noles and Manny Sarmiento. Balboa YC opens '86 sea~~ Balboa Yacht O ub launched the 1986 yachting season in Orange County Saturday and Sunday with the third race of Its Sun.ki11 Series. SmaJI boat classes sailed two races inside the bey on Saturday and keel boat clutc1 sailed one r1oc over an ocean course on Sunday. Both days we~ marked with liaht winds and a threat of ta.in. Results of inside clautS: Elaine L1nholf, BY< . SABOT A & 8-Raoc I: I. Ocon .Becker. C1p1ttra.no Bay YC-2. S~ie Norman, BCYC: 3. usan 'Min n, Newpon Harbor YC. Ra<ic 2: I. Ca.rolyn Ulandtr.L BYC: 2. Susan Minton· l . OcofT necker. SABOT ('-Rae~ I: Chris Atencio. Balboa Island YC: Race 2: fonat Cutler, BCYC. Ouuade cl••1e PHRF·A-1. Rorlck-Pusoff. COLE · HAAN ~~r- ,. Most of the playm interviewed will ~ accompanied by lawyers, and Don fehr1 ac:ti"4 executive director of the union, said, "I e~peCt to be present at all or substantially all of the meetinas. The Clayen have fhe riaht as a matter-of aw, to be represented both by us and by thtir own lcpl countcf. if they_~ --#--111'+-'-..,,..':."'1~-rr:":erii&iideiOC ihe New York THISTLE-Races I and 2; Boh Yan'T Rjet~ BYC. LIDO-l4A-Races I and 2: Tom Mulvaney, Bahia Corinthian YC. BCYC: 2. Mi1etaJef, Carolyn Hardy. BCYC: 3. V01'1el., Bruc:ir TVrichen, Voyaaen YC. Vi .. • M•terC.a.rd • American Expr • Newport Center Cud 119 FMhion Island • Newport Beach • 759-1622 •Bullocks Wilshire Wing. Mets was expected to be among the first_playen to meet with UebtTTQth on Tunday. The meetina schedule likely will be Informal and flexible to aa:omodate playen' tflvel probtems. Uebmoth ltftt leiten to 24 plaY.tfS on Nov. 27, advisina them they would be called to meetina.t 1n LIDO-l•B-Raoc I: Manr. Lock· ney. LIYC, Coendina protest): Race 2: Doris Kint."'BYC. LASER-R~ l: Cbuck Holland. UCl Sailia& AstOCaalion: R&ClC 2: Lew Rowe BYC. ADULT SABOT-Races I and l : PKRF·B-1. Contention, Gordon Oraham BYC 2 F11tbrtak, Jim Kelly, BY : J . i~ ant, Jean Alben, VYC. PHRF ·<-I Bullet Didi Brown BCYC l Amoroua, rhuck Holland: BYC~ l Pu"ya&, Jc>hn ralay, VY But l l r 1~ BuARO lfewpon S.cll 1ou 1...au OolTleasons for the l)tainnina and intermed1- 1Le aolfer wall be offered It the Newport Beach Golf Cour1e, bqinnina Tuesday. The course continues throuah Man:h IS. Toatla ..,.,.,. tl'Yoam Tryouts wiU be heTd (or the lntcmat1on1J Youth Soccer "Hat-Trick" tour, which will l'eature five all-star teams from Southtnl C:.lifomia competinl_ an. tournaments in ~n­ ma.rk. Germany and Efl&la.nd. Cla~ will be offen!d TUC*!ay 11nd Wt<lnes- day even1_nas *!Id ~tutday mom1np." For rcaastrat1on 1oform1tion phone 644-31 SI . 8oy1and airiscan uyoutJan. 26at Corona del Mat Hlah with boys taltina w field from 10 a.m.-noon. and &iris tryma out from 2..4 p.m. Oiviaioos for boys are under 14, L6 and 18. while &iris will have under I 6 and 18 divisions. 'the tour will run July 17-Au&-11 and will be staffed by local coaches as well as top soccer players. Forum bort~JaJi. JS Brian Muller an Mathew Lewis wall meet in the Stroh's middlcweiaht KmifinaJ at the Forum Monday. Jan. 13 at 7 p.m. Gerry Ingram, a top Enahsh profcss1ona.I !)layer and former membcf of Lhe San Dtcao Soelten and C&bfom11 Surf, will bead the un<kr 18 boys. • For further information. phone World SPorts Conncclion at SS 7-4400 of S49-95S6. Muller. the middlewei&ht champion of Guyana, comes into the f'iaht with a 19-1-1 record, including 11 knockouts. Lewis. ranked No. 3 in Califom111 will enter the ring with a 9-2 record. including e1&ht knockouts. · The winner W\IJ Tac~ Lindell Holmes in the finals. Holmes woo a semifinal dcciSJon over Jack Padia. Tickets a.re av11lable at the Forum box office and all Ticketmaster locations. For more information phone (213) 480-3232 Jlartlal am coane A mamal aru course combining the vanous skills and tcchniqu~ of Ka.rate. KenPo and Kun& Fu will be offered Monday and Wednes- day evenan&S at Corona dcl Mar H1ah beginning tonight. Fortcg1n ration info rmation phone.644-3151 . n., Vacatloa, RV •ho• he 21st annual Anaheim SPorts. Vacation 'c RV show 1s now under wax at Anaheim S cnt1on Center. The show will run through u )' 'Tennl• trltb Le.ndl' •t 1V•.J'De TC show 1s fcatunng outdoors SPorting equ1 ent, travel information and S 15 m1lhon an R nd accessories. · 811 Brothers-Big Sisters of Oransc County arc sponsonna a fund raiser called "Tennis with Lcndl" on Thunday. Jan. 23 at the John Waytie Tennis Club, 1171 Jamboree Road. Newpon Am the show's daily features are kayalung ano g demonstrations. fishing chn1cs and ·Beach an mte uonal travel film festival. ta&e ws will also be offered, including a 11umbef)a how. and comedy fisherman Chns a mes. Lcndl will play tennis against prcv1ousl) chosen Orange County residents. The public is invited to watch the tennis exhib11ton and attend a reception that follows. Show h arc Saturday: noon 10 I 0 p.m . i~~~:2_~0 7 p.m.; and Monday tbrouah The exh1b1llon will be at 4 p.m. with the reception at 6.15. Tickets arc SI S for both the the exhjb1t1on and the rcccpuon or SS for just the exhib1t1on For uckets or mo re 1nformat1on wnte to Big Brothers-Bi1 Sisten of Orange County, 150 Yorba St .. Tustin. 92680 or phone 544-7773 Pnces arc 4. or adults. S2 for children 6-15 and children ~n sill arc free. For further tn ation phone 999-8900. OCC ope1's conference tonight Pirates challenge Cypress tObegi n- Sou th Coast s late The Orange oast College men's basketbarT team gets a belated start in the South Coast Conference tonight when the Pirates visit Cypress in a 7:30 contest. Orange Coast Wlll carry a 7-6 record into its conference opener against the Chargers. The rest of the SCC teams began league play on Saturday. with Cypress falling to conference favonte Cemtos. 96-94. 1n ovenime. Sunset tips off Friday The Sunset League boys basketball race lips off Fnday night. highlighted by the Ocean View at Fountain Valley clash. The Barons arc 9-S entenng th is week's play. while Ocean View re- turns home from the King Cotton Classic with a 10-3 mark. The Seahawks will play at Long Beach Poly Wednesday night in a finaJ tuneup. while Fountain VaJley wel- comes Muir tonight (7 o'clock). In other Sunset openers Friday. Manna visits Huntmgton Beach and Edison hosts Westminster. Three Sunset teams face Moore League foes Wednesday in final league tune-ups as Manna hosts Lakewood. Huntington Beach travels to Mtllik.an and Edison visits Long Beach Wilson .. Sea View League play resumes Wednesday night with a full slate of games after the opening round last Fndav Irvine, whi ch faces Rancho Alamitos in non-league action to- night. opens South Coast play Wednesday at Laguna Hills. The Vaqueros host El Toro Fnday night. * T__. NOM·L•AOUI Muir er Founraln Valltv, 7 ltancflO Aaamflo• 11 lrvlne Tundlv SOUTH COAST LIAGUI Capl"rano Vallev Vl El TMO al Saddl«IKk c-.. NOM -L.IAOUI Wellmlnlltr ti La Qulnlt "The openmg week 1s really going teams m years -and Cypress as a to be tou~ for us ... sa.Jd OCC Coach school that possesses a strong basket- Tandy Gillis. The Pirates host Full-ball heritage. And they play well an non Wednesday. then travel to their own gym." ~dJeback Saturday. "Orange Coast ha s an"all-time S-10 )range Coast has been4'playtng record against Cypress and have ~r recently. captunng three of never won in ihe Chargers' Thorpe the\ last four contests. if he Bucs won Fieldhouse in seven tries. I thc\first four games of the season. lndivtdually. Coast's 6-10 the""ent into a slum p and dropped sophomore center Joe Seager is five ~ight before their recent surge. hitting an impressive 70.9 percent of ··1 4nk we're finally ~nning to has shots from the floor this year and put t~gs together,' G1lhs said. '' averagmg 16.6 points per game this "We're shooting and rebounding year to lead the Bucs. well. an\we've managed to cut down Also a'veraging 1n double figures is our tum~ers a bit" Scott Clements ( 11 . 9) and Fred ;\bout press. Gillis noted. "They Backen ( 10.2). Seager 1s the team's top appear t have one of their better rebou nder with a 10.4 average ~~~1:11!1111!!11~~~~~~~~~ LeWis 'replacement lift$ Trojans, 75-60 Kimbal scores22 to h elp ~SC gain fi rst Pacific-I 0 win INGLEWOOD (AP) -Freshman guard Greg Kimble and forward Derrick Dowell scored 22 points apiece Sunday and the University of Southern Cahfuma basketball team pulle.d away late 1n a 75-60 victory ovet Oregon in a Pacific-I 0 Con- ference game at the forum. After the first half ended ued at 28. USC led 38-36 v.hen Kimble con- vened a three-poma play that put th e Trojans up by five with I "44 remain- ing. Dowell added another three-point play 11/2 minutes la ter and USC' v.as up 44-38. Oregon could not gel clo~r th.an four points after that. use led by as many as 17 points an the clos.ing minutes. The victory improved US(''s re- cord to 1-1 in the Pac-I 0. 6-S overall. Oregon fell to 0-2 tn conference. S-7 overall. Kimble, staning m place of the Trojans' leading scorer. frcsbman Tom ~wis, scored 14ofhis npoints in the SC'Oond half: Lewis missed the game due to 1 sprained ankle. Jerry Adams scored 14 points and grabbed ei&ht rebounds for Oregon. while Kenny Sprque and Anthony Taylor each added I 0 pomts. USC also got 1 S points from freshman Eric Gathers, who was perfect on seven field goal attempts. USC' Coach Stan Morrison said Dowell. who did not stan but played 32 minutes for the Trojans. ga ve his team an early hft. ... ' . . . .,. "Dowell came in and immediately sparked us." Morrison said ... He went 10 the boards, scored inside and passed effectively. "He missed two of the last four days of practice with the stomach flu. So that's why he didn't start." Momson said the iµime the Tro- 1ans' third good effort an a row. "The last three games we've been on an upward chart,'' he said. "But, hke a young team. we're probably due for a dip. "This was a crittcaJ game for us before we go on the road. There's lots of parity an the league, so it's critical to stay in the hunt." Orqon Coach Don Monson said USC"s 1ns1de game m the second half was the d1fTcrcnce. "We played them for a half,'' Monson said. "Then they k.cpt getting the ball '"side and their second shots hurt us. SC is bigger and stronger on th e boards. except for Jerry Adams. "I think we were mentally ready to play, but the guards didn't ,Play well. We were tentative offensively. We had to change too many shots." Michigan State holds off Indiana, 77-7 4 , tp Big Ten BLOOMINGTON. Ind. CAP) - Senior forward Larry Polee hit four free throws in the last 23 1CCOnd1 11 Miehipn State held off a rally by lSth-rankcd Indiana and beat the HOOSJcrs. 77· 74'. Sunday in a Bia Ten Confmooc basketball pme. The Spartans. up 39.37 at halftime, had built their 1~ to IS poi nu at 57-42 with 14:44 relnainn\I. 1ndiana 1tormcd beck in a 22-9 ~ t:prtt over the nelt 10 minute and ttcd ~ 1eore 70-70 on junior auard Steve Alford's thtte·point play with I :lS remain.inj. Sophomore forward Carlton Val· entine, who toP.Pfd tM .-nans wilh 21 Points. made two ftu thro'*I to gi ve Michigan Sute the advantqt. The part~ns then made fi ve of sill fttt thro~ in the last 23 5CCOnds, indud.ina the four by Polee and one by freshman auard Darryl Johnson. Alford led all scofl'n wtth 23 points. including 17 in the second half. Freshman auard Rick Calloway ldckd 20 for tM Hoo ier$. Senior auanS Scott Skiles had 20 for MacllitH St.ate and Polee fin11hcd *ltb 18. It wu Indiana's seventh ta.n· tecutivc Bia Ten defeat at home. ao1111 beet 10 least lat()I.\., and \be H6oilien DOW are 0-l in le.ecuc ~Y and M overall. Mkhlan State 11 1-1 tn the Bt1 Tm and 10.l ovn-all LAI IP.I ICllBDULE Wed., Jan. 8 -Porua.od; Fri. Ju 10 - lndioa;Sat,Jan 11-11Sc..t*J1a.,Jan. 14 -Pboen1it; Thlln., Ja.n. 16 -\.llppcn; Sun.. Ja.n. 119 -at Detroit: Mon.. Jan. 20 -at ClaiallOi Wed., Jan. 22-at&oAon; Fri .. Ju. 2A -at 01ppc.n; Sat., Jan. 2S -Denv~ T\acs., Ju. 28 -M.ihirauktt, Tbun.. Ju N -at Ponlaftd; Fn., Jan. 31 -Philadelphia.. Su.n., Feb, 2 -New York; T\ael., Feb. 4 - Dalla.a; Thun .• Feb. 6-at H~; Tua., Feb. 11 -at Goldeo State; Wed., l"CO. 12 -at Pboenu; Fn., Feb. 14-Atlanta; Sua .. Feb. 16 -Botton: Wed .. Feb. 19-at lodia.na. Fri., Feb. 21-at New Jersey. Sun . Feb. 2)-alAUanta: Wed., Feb. 26 -at Dallas; fn., Feb. 28 - .Phoenix. Sat.. March I -at Phoenix; Mon .. Ma.rd1) - Golden State: Wed .• March S-at Utah; Thun.., March 6 -at Golden State: Sat., March 8 - SacramenJo, Sun., March 9 -at Seat~ Tiaes .. March 11 -01ppcn; Thun., March 13 - Seattle; Sun .. March 16 -Houston; Tues., Mardi 18 -PonJud, Wed., March 19 -at Clippers; Fn., March 21 -at Saft AnCOOM>i..Sat., March 22 -at Sacramento: Mon... March ~• - Sao Antonio; Tues .. March 2S -at Dmver; Sat., March 29 -at Seanlc: Sun., Mardi 30 - Golden State Tues .. Apnl I -Seattle; Tbun .• April 3 - Sacramento; Sun .. Apnl 6 -at Houston; Sat., April 12 -at Sacramento; Sun., Apnl 13 - Dallu. CLIPPERS SCHEDULE Tues.. Jan. 7 -at Allan~ Wed., Jan. 8 -at PhJladclph11: Fn., Jan 10-at New Jervy~ Sat., Jan. 11 -at Oucqo; Mon., Jan. 13 -at Washinaton. Wed., Jan. IS -Sea.ttlc; Thurs.. Jan. 16-at Lak.ers: Sat .. Jan. 18-Utah; Tues .. Jan. 21 -at San Antonio; Wed .. Jan. 22 -at Dallas; Fri .. Jan. 24 -Lakers: Sat.. Jan. 2S -at Utah; Mon .. Jan. 27 -New Jcney: Wed.. Jan. 19 -Phoenix. . Sat.. Feb. I -at Ponland, Tbun .. at Phoen1Jt; Tues., Feb. 11 -Phoenix, Thun., Feb. 13 -- Portland; Sat .. Feb. I 5 -Houston; Mon .. Feb. 17 -Washington; Fn .. Feb.21 -Golden State. Sun., Feb 23 -at New Yo~ TUC$., Feb. 2S - at Milwaukee. Wed .. Feb 26-at Detroit: Fn .. Feb. 28 -at Boston Sun .. March 2 -Indiana; Tues .. March 4 - Oevcland; Thurs., March 6 -Dallas; Fn., March 7 -at San Antonio; Sun .. March 9 - Denver. Tues .. Marc:h 11 -at Lalters, Wed .. March 12 -Seattle; Fn .. March 14 - Sa<.nmcnto; Sat., March IS -at Houston; Tues .. March 18 -a1 Golden State; Wed., March 19 -l..akers: Fri.. March 21 -at ~over.Sal.. Marc:h 22-Detroit: Wed .. March 26-San Antonio: Fn .. March 28 -at Phoen.u.: Sat.. March 29 -at Sacramento. Tues., Apnl I -at Utah; Wt<! .. Apnl 2 - Utah. Sat .. April 5 -Golden State; Wed., Apnl 9 -~nver. Thurs .. April 10 -at Portland: Sat., Apnl 12 -Dallas: Sun.. Apnl t 3 -at Phoenix. Orange Cout DAIL y PfLOT /Mondtry, Jenuety I, lNe ·* - ... 70fltll --...U ~taon IS opm f'of \be youlh bukabail pnlp'lft'l I~ by CosQ MC*a'& Leu~ SC'rvica Otpa.rtmcnt. 8oy1 and aui• m the K.COnd th.ro• Qlbth .,ades ~ erJllble for the pc'"CllfU\ It I 0 focal ICbOOIS. Oamn will be played on Saturdays and tbc rtpStrltJon fee is S 18. For more anfonnauon phone 64S-498S or 7S4-S300 lrri.ae buketball lMIR• Apphaations a('C now bcaoa accq>tCd by ibe Irvine Community ServlCcs Dcpanment for women's and masters (men JS and older) su- team basketball l~gues. . The fee for each team 1s $330 for the leque~. ~t to begin an mid-February Games will be played onc ni&bt a week for a I 0.12 prne seuon. Rcgistrauon deadline" Thursday, Jan 16 at S p.m. For further information ohone ~3851 ' !nine r oatb •port. clJ..n.lc ~ four-""cek youth sPons leque as bean& spon~red b) the Cary of lrvmc Communat}' Sen ices at Deerfield Communll) Park The one-hour provam 1s desiped to give children an introduction to basic spons slc1lls. such as throwing and catching a football. The league 1s open 'to all boys and prls bct""cen the ages of S and 11. Rcpstrauoo fee u S 15 It will be held Or\ Tuesdays from 3'45-4 4S p.m. stanina Jan. 14 and cndmg Feb 4 The park 1s located at S5 Deerwood Wes1 an Irvine. • For funher informatton phone SS 1-8638 Free mission al Los a1nitos Doc Severinsen Night Monda~ January 6, 1986 "Come on oilt to Los Alamitos Monday N igh t , January 6and tell them 'Doc sent me' and you 'II receive admission to t he grandstand -FREE. I'll be there to play the Post Parade for the s 30,000 Doc Severlnsen Handicap.'' ~-'~II Exactas are stllljust s2:'-...... • Enjoy Diamond Vision EW , 1 OO • S2 Daily Double *N • • Super Pick Six PICK NINE • New Post time 7:30 P.M . • Quarter Horse Racing thru Jan. 14, 1986 • Nightly-Monday thru Saturd~y e Early Bird Betting 7:30 A.M. to 5 P.M. • Call for Dinner Reservation-All New Menu 4961 E. Katella Awinue. Los Alamitos. California 90720 For tnformatton call {213) 431-1 361 or (7141995-1234 A Substdiary or Quarter HOfsei Racing, Inc. .... .. MPL ....... S8COND llOUllD ~I ~---c~ 21, "'-Yortc ~. 0 ..... lftlllN 27, -~ 20 CC*fl8a•NC9 CMAMPte>NIH., ~---Mll'C a-t •I ClllcMO (Cha~ 2 •I •;)O •.m.) Al'C ,.... Enoland at Miami ICllal!MI 4 .. I ' p,m,) SUPll• 90WL XX ... \I, JM. i6 (MNew°"NM) AFC diam.ion vs. NFC cllamolon, 2 orn. AftC PLAYOftPS ..... '11, .....,.. 10 SC.. ~ °'*""' New IEnelano 1 10 10 C>-'27 ._.... 3 11 0 0-10 "Int Ouertw NIE-Daw~ 13 HU from Eu on (FrWlllWn k lcll;), 4:J.4 LA-f=G BalV n . 10.ll s.c.. Que"'9r LA-Hftlllf' 16 oau from WllSOft (8•11r kick). 4:21 LA-Allen 11 run ( B•l'lr lllCIC), 6:07 NE-<:. James 2 run IFrenl\lln l\k:lll. 11:22 NE-FG Fr.nlllln 4S, 13 IS 1.A-FG 891\r 32, l4;S.. TlllN~ NE-FG Fr.nkNn 32, 13· .. NIE-9owman fum4ll9 rtc0vtrv In tnCI ,_ IFranlllln kb). 141Xl All~,'36 TaAM STATISTICS NIE LA 11 21·163 124 36 I 1·27·3 Fir" Oowns IS ltu"-'·vards 49· 156 Paulno 9' It at urn Y •rds 23 ComP.All I· IS·O *ksbY 1·11 Punlt S·4S F umlllet • t.011 3·1 '"-tllet·Yarch 6·45 Time of Po.sestlon 36 S9 IMDfV10UAL STATISTICS J·?7 7·34 S·J Ml 1.J-01 ltUSHI~ Enol•nd C Jam.1o. 1.J· 104. Collins, 9· 18, WHlner\, 9· ll. Tat~. 4·17; Frvar. 1·3, Eu on. )·ICY · mlnut 4. ltaid9n: Allen. 17· 111 H•wklns 4·33, Wiison. 1·9. PASSING-New Enol•no Eu on. 1· U ·O. 117; C. J•mn. 1-1-0, I R•lo.<s WllM>n. 11-17·3, 13S. ltECEIVING-Hew Enol•no c J•mH. )-41; 0. Ramsey, 2·34. More>•n. 1·17, OewM>n, 1-13; Collins. l ·I R•l<Mrs Chrlttenwn. 4-71; Wllll•ms, 3·33, Anen, 3·8, Hesler, 1-16. MISSED FIELD GOALS-R•lden 8e11r. "· NFC P LA YOF,S BMn 21, GiMts 0 ~~~ New York Glenrs O O O o-o Cttl<.eCIO 7 o 14 0-21 '"'"'0.-W Clll-G•v'-S ounl retllf'n (8utl9< klClll, ~.32 T1llrd 0-rtw Clll-McKlnnon 23 HU from MCMlllOn '8uti.r klckl, 6:12 Clll-McKlnnon 10 OHS frOIT' McMel'lon (Bu1i.r kick), 14:23 Arreno•nce-62.076. TEAM STATISTICS NY Oii Flrsl OownJ 10 17 Ru""5·11erds 14·37 «-147 P•ulno 149 716 lteturn v.rds 9 27 Comt>-All 14·3S-O 11·2l·O ~IDY 0-0 6-60 Punll 9-31 6-37 FumOIH-IOl t 3-1 0-0 P.n.ltles·veros •·2S 2·10 Time of Ponnslon 22 46 37 14 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-New York Morris, 17·31, =>•ll>rHlll, 1·9, Wlllle ms, 1-for·mlnus 9 Clllcecio· Pev1on. 27·93, Sunev. 6·33. ~hon, S· 11. Tl'IOmls. 4· 11. McKinnon, 1-for·mlnus 7; G.nlry. I ·tor·mlnul I PASSING-N•w York. Simms, l4·3S·O, l09. Clllcacio. McMll'lon, I Hl·O, 216 RECE IVING-New York. B••ere>, 4·36, Ad•ms, 3·65, Ceroen1~. 3·24, Wl"l•ms. l·lJ, McConkev. 1·23, J011n11on. 1·17. G•I· Dl'Hlll, I· 11 Clllc•cio. G•ull. 3·61, McKln· -'• 3·S2, Su,,.v. 2·S. Wrlfllllmen, 1·46, ~rrv. 1·41, Pevton. I·• MISSED FIE LD GOAL5-<lltC•CIO Bui· er, 26. 49, 31. New York Sc11ut1er1 19 COLLEGE ..... ldMcMe SATURDAY'S G~S EHl·Wetf ~ Geme (., San "l'llllCltc•) Eu 1 vs \l\lflf ICl\ennel 9 el noon1 Huie a.wt !etHeMMu) Eesl vs WHI (Channel 4 el I om I JNeft .... (•t Yelr-.mt, Jepen) NOi 11'1 V\ Soutll, 6:JO P m SAT\JtlDAY, JAN, 11 5eNer 8.wl <•t Meble. "'9.) N0tll'I "' So..llh, 10 e m All !Imes PST -(. > . NBA WH~•N CONFEltlENCE l"'adfk DMllel\ W l l"'ct. GB uun 27 S 144 Porll•nc:l 17 16 S79 I s .. 11a. 13 10 394 14 ., Pnoen1.. 10 20 33J 16 °'"'" 11 13 314 17 G~n Sl•le 12 2S 314 17' > IWdwfll °""""" HOuSl•n 17 17 (>17 ~en Antonio 10 U S8I Denver 1t 14 S76 2''1 Oe1les IS IS SOO S Ulell 11 18 446 S > S.cramenlo 11 11 333 10 > EASTERN CONFUtENCE 80\lon Pnll•d•IPrlle New Jer11y Wulllne>IOI' New York Mllweutcte All•nl• Clevelend DtlrOll cnicn o lndl•n• A flentk Dlvtllefl 2S 7 10 13 21 " 16 17 11 13 C«!tl'et OM slell 24 12 11 IS IS 19 IS 19 14 17 10 22 SvncleY's ktfft L.Mlen 119. Westtlnglon " Porll•nd 136, Goloen St•lt 170 78 I 606 s ., 600 s 1 4'S 9 > 374 IS t67 S3 1 s ... , 8 4-41 8 319 10 31) 11 Pflo.nl>1 e l SHlllt, OO(I , IHklftG rOQI T tnltlllt' I GllMt Pnlll<leiOllie e r S.n Anlonlo WHlllnQ!on e l Secre m11110 T~\111 G•"'" c-..n I I ... 119nte lndl•n1 e t New VOii< 9o'9on at De1ro<1 New Jersev •I ClltCAQO Cleveteno •I Mllw•ukff Go!Oen S111e •• Housion OellH ., Denver Uteh •I Sffttlt LMW1111.a4*tlll WAIMtMOTON t•> -ltClblnW>ll S 12 )·• I,, ,_oundfleld 3·f 4·S 10, 1o1 2·• O•O •· Malone 6· lO 2·2 14, 0 Wlt11Mls M 0-0 t, Wl\elley 2•1 C>-0 4, MCMllltll •• 16 0-0 11, Jones 2•S M S, F WIMl•mi •· 12 2~4 14, 8fedlev w 0-0 a. o.w >-12 o-o " Tot.it: 31·101 12-17 ... LAKRS Clll ) -h ml>ls I·> H t. WortllY I· 12 2·2 11, Abdul·J•bMr S·f 2•2 12, JoMton 1-10 ••• 11. $(011 7-16 2·2 16. c-6· 11 O·O U. lt.Ut>Cf\eto. 3·t 0-0 6, Green t-12 2•) 20. McGM 4·12 0-0 t, W INS 0·2 0-0 0, l etUlf 2·4 0-0 4. Tol9'1 52· 100 12• I) 11• kw.~ QMf1en Wealllneton 77 17 I) 26-• L•kers le 2t 21 2-11• Thr ... oolnt ooets-<:OOller. M<:GN FOUied out-None. ltebounds-WHl'llnoton St (McMlli.tl l l, L•k•rs SI (Gr.en 10) AUISl.-WHl'llneton 20 (G. Wiiiiam•. Wll•I· lev S>. L•k~t 36 ( JOhn•on 17) T cit el lout1-WHlll119lon 12, Llkerl 1• Alltnd•~l7,SOS. C ..... seer•' use 1s. 0reoo,, 60 Mk:llle>en SI n. 1no1.,,. 14 Mer-tit 72. lovoi.. Ill 10 C•I Polv Pomone 79. H•"'•ll·Hllo SJ Assumc>llon 11, Hotv Crou .6S SATUaDAY'S LATE SCOltlES Alt Force 66, H•w•li 60 Biot. 61, 0UY91 N•iertne S9 H-No 20 ter9d How Ille Too rwenlv leami In Tne Ass.oc:lered PrHs' c0lle9e bHICtl~ll 0011 l•rld this WN!lend · I. Norlll Cerotlne I 14·01 oe1t Norlh Ctrotlne Stel9, 90·79 2 M k:nl11en ( 14·0) t>e•• 01110 SI•'•· 11-61. 3 Oult.t (12-0) l>e•I Mervl•nd, l 1·7S 4. Svrecuse I 10-0) DHt S.1on He ll 9t·1S. S l(enses 112·21 IOst 10 No 9 M4tml>his Stele. 13-IO lot) ' 6. Gtore>I• TKll (10· II DH ! l/trQ1n1e M·6 1. 7. Oklel'loml (13·01 Deel SoullleHI Loulsl•n•, 103·66 •. LSU (l3·01 btel MIUlsSIOOI Stele. .0-14. 9, Memotlll Stele (17·0) t>eel NO S K•nses. IJ·IO (OI) 10. St JOhn's (14· 1) beat PlllSDurcin, 71·7S (Of). 11 Georvetown ( 10·21 Diet Provioenu, 110-79. 12 Kenludly 110-I> beer llano~rDlll I0-71. 13 Nev•Cle·LH VtQH 111·21 DH ! S.n Jose Sl•I•. 106·IO 14. IHinols (l0-31 IOSI to Iowa 60·S9 I~ lnc:tlane 11·4) IOsl 10 Mien gen Slate 17·7' <Sundevl 16 Al•Dlme·Birmlnonem t IJ·21 t>eet Oto Dominion. 66-51 17 Noire Oeme 17·11 DHI 1..a Se1i.. 17·63 11 Loulsvllle (7·3) Deel Wvom1n11, 94·61 19 Teus·EI Puo (13·1) oeel Utah,• 67·S2 10 Vlrglnl• TKh I 10·7) t>eel wu1.rn Ken1uc11 v I S· 11. s.m Anna SUNDAY'S llUESULTS ( loetl ef lt•MY ~ mMtlnVJ FtltST ltACE. 6 lurlon11s t Bell's La dv (Velen1u•I•) 6 40 3 60 l 60 Sementhe Sue (Pinc•y) 3 40 3 00 Brl111'11 Blue Wellr (Bleck) 510 Time Ill Alw ,.n Jo a. BOid. I'm Gunn-oete•en. B•ue Eved Merv, Solorn1110, Romo.rouno. Ooul>le Anlmere. He's &Mn CllH flnQ, LtGl G•lort. LAw•nn• Scrllclled' C.011 ~. Esuv J SECOND ltACE. 6 turlonQs All Wins (K•tnel) 22 00 9 40 1 00 1r1i11 Cast (V•1tn1uel•) 1J 00 10 80 Femllv Fox (Bleck> 6.60 Time I 10 Also r•n Neutr•I Plever, Derk Sa uce. Shull le One, Ol•mo,,d Cu'.e<. Net Iona I EnerQY. G•llenl Soeclal, Kereka Led. Too Pore . Scretcllecl Bllllkln THIAO ltACE. 6 2 lurlOncis Junture l~li'l 1t 90 10 60 s ao v1ron 1s19v..,s> a ao s eo Skookumc:11uctt IV•i.Muetll 4 60 Time 1 16 '1 S Also '9n lc.e C•-Wood\ Le kt , R•lnbOw'l Cuo, Mestt r Greciorv, ClleDonCI•. F0t Himself. Prtorinl Scr•tcllecl Andr-'N Me U DAil Y DOUBLE ll·Sl oe td S1t7 40 FOURTH ltAC.. 6 lurioncis Ltte Al Tne Too (Pncvl 6 40 u o 310 Rl•M Cher (Hern•n<Mr> S.40 3.20 Chock ~ Two (V•lt r11uele1 7 60 Time· 1-10 11s Atw '9n Svmbolkallv Flor1mei. w"e' e Merv Knll}t!t, F•lrv Goomollltr. Cran!( 11 Uo. AOmel Scratctl90 Pr1nctn StnOllClv ~IFTH ltACE. I • m11es on turl Estoc IMcCarronl ?O 80 810 S 70 Roni Councillor (Sit>lllel 11 40 610 Fl11ln1J G-I Toro/ l 40 Time l·SI 21S Also r•n Hvdroslellc, Pe\kaneu Holly wood p.,rv. Mtlflllc Rooerio. Oe lov AllOw•nct , Otre You. RtMrvt. Amorou1o SCrertfled· Te•'' On. Tl'IOrnOown FeeslDllllv Slu<lv, Tt>e Well ot Swel '5 IEXACTA 111·101 P••O SS4~ SO SIXTH RACE. 6''> lur10n1a Qulo Sier IP.Orozel 10 20 S 60 • 60 Don Senders I Plnc.•v I S 80 UO Go Swllllv ICu19nonJ S 40 Time I 16 ?IS AIM> r.n Mas1tr Crofter Roor·ci~ Bernot L•llle Double 0 1sl>ln Dao \ Ovei1 Forsv•ne BOY La o Tes• Co"t Pe1u~ S.rci•enl Ger•rcl No scr 11cnes SEVENTH IACI!. I Met•l10 (Ofl••'HI AsceMoon (MeC•rronl B9'ten0 (Mta1 Time 143 16 mole\ 1>?0 400 120 soo l20 H O Al\O ran Le C10, Alltl Br11111n Mo1111 l(no•""" Scre tcnec:l Plenty Conscious. He lom U EXACT A 16·•l oe kl '1 I SO EIGHTH RACE. I • miles on turf YHllQ•n IMcC•rron1 S60 •00 360 Ti1111•s (P1neevl S 40 410 RMI• ISnotme•er 410 Time 149 3 S AISO '9n F eDO<a n Boom Town Clla r11e Oert>v Dawninci Fow:•rln1 Ceoture Him SCt'••eneo Oru,..,al•l Vulner1D1lllv NINTH RACE. I I 16 mtlfl Soruce He roor 10t1varo1 a 40 4 10 3 10 Esl>Of'teneo (Slt>olle l 4 00 •) 40 l"'OUISIYtl\I (SleVMSI 6 00 T1m1 I 43 4 S Also ran II'\ Nt•tr Oun Mu•tr NeYelo Gauani Minded Oenc:lnci i<ln. Hurricane Hee Mv Lvon Ettrno, One Evld Romeo Scr•tcl'l.O R1m0eu<1 100!, T•t>ol•r U EXACTA 16 71 pe1c1 '6150 S2 l"'ICK $IX IS 11-5-,+6) 1>9tCI '6.691 00 10 13 w1nn1ncil1oc1<ets '''" llO'SH) S1 Ptcll St) con\Ol91•on 0•10 snt 10 to 67S ..... 1n1nQ I Ck91s love P!ori•~> S l l"'ICK NINE 11 I S S· 11 · S·6·4·61 H id SI Ito 10 to 10 ,...,,,,,,.Cl 11ci..e11 I seven norsfll C4irrvo•tr 0004 U79 IS6 AtrtnO•nct 37 110 Calling all sports The Daily Pilot invites ali you regular sports. you weekend athletes and youth league competitors, you evening softball and basK.et- ball players, to send us your scores. Every Monday, our Community Scoreboard will publish league standtngs and a week's worth of results lrom the games that real people play. . Softball, golf. tennis, baseball, basketball. football, soccer, gymnastics, swimming, surf- ing, ftshtng. running, auto racing, motor- cycling. btcycltng-tfOrange Coast people play It, we'll publtsh it. League secretaries or tournament officials should send standings and results by Frtday at noon to: Commanlty Scoreboard Dally Pilot Sporta Department 330 W. Bay St. Coeta lie.., ca. 92826 NHL CAMl"'I Ell CONFEltENCIE Edmonton C•lflerv V•ncouv•r WIMlr>eQ Kina 5"'YtM DMtlen W l T l"'ts ,, 7 4 62 ,17 It ' 37 13 23 • lO 13 7S 4 30 1722 4 2t Hems DMMerl G' GA 212 IS6 161 146 143 169 154 1'6 133 119 Cn•C•CIO Sr LOUi\ MtnM\Ole T.,.-on10 Oetroll ,. 16 • l7 " 4 14 17 7 10 n s 9 2S S '° 170 173 31 Ill 131 3S IS7 ISO 2S 141 161 23 118 20S WALES GONFEltENCE' Plllleclelonoe Weshlne>lon NV hlend•ri NY R•nUtr\ PltlSDurQn New Jersev OueOK Montrt ll Boston Buff•IO Hertforo ~etrit* OMslen 19 11 0 SI Ill 113 24 10 4 S2 156 123 16 " 9 41 1$1 14' 17 11 1 36 147 139 " 19 36 149 "' 13 23 I 11 136 171 &dams Dlvlllefl 12 IS 2 '6 IS9 l2t 71 13 4 46 174 13' ll 14 1 43 ISi 135 " 11 4 40 14• 13' 19 18 1 39 151 1S1 ~V'Sk«fl IC"'91 3. Buff•lo 2 Ot1ro1t 6 Toronto S Queoec S, New VCYk R•nciers 4 Wlnnl090 4, V•ncouver O Eomonron 6, Ceiciery 3 ClllC•CIO 6, MinneM>I• 7 T.,....t't ~ St Louis 11 Molllreel N•w Jersev e t Plt1ioure111 Kina l , S.bres 2 Sc.,. bY 1"'"1ecls KlnCIS 0 3 0-3 Butt•IO I I 0-2 ""'' l"'.nod I Butt•IO. Rutt IS CTUCktr. Housle•l, II 41, Penelt'91-t.ukOWICll, LA (l'IOOlllllO) 1 oa. S.1l1no Buf 1111Qt\-1t1c1unoJ 1011 Enot>tom LA lrOU1111lncil. 13·23. An· c:1revc11uk. Buf lrouQlllnQ). 13.23, Weill, LA lnool11ncil, 13 57, Nlcnolli, LA (1'11e>h·sllt1t· ine) 1931 Secencl l"'WIM 2 Los Anoelts. Redmond 6 ITe ylor. Olonne l. 4:20 !Pol, 3 Los Anoelus, Kenn.ov I <Dionne, L.overo). 6·17, 4 Los An11tlH. Svkts 9 (Tn k>r, En11b1om1. 9 11, S Buffalo, Follcino 19 (Tucotr. VemMrvl. 19 4 Ptnel· lltt-Ofl•nOo, 8uf (llOolelnGl. l..37. Erlctuon LA (SIUlllnoJ. S7 Foll11no. But (\IH hlno). S 51, Kellv LA. mlM:Ondl.ICI, S-S7, Ruff, But misconduct, S S7, Dvkst"•· 8.ft (h•e>"·stkk 1n11), 7 17, Well\ LA (llClldlft11 ). 13 JS. H.,clv, LA (rO<JQlllnGl. II S7, Anorevcllut.. Bui trOUQflonol II S7 ~d Period None P1ne11v-01onne, LA 1no1<1111e11, 13 17 Slloh on CIO•l-LOl Ancielfl 4· 14· S..-23 Butt•lo. 9 l ·l-74 Power·orev oooorlunlllts-LO\ AnQtlH l ot 3, Buflalo O of S . Goallt\-Los Ancie•es, J•n«vk (74 \MOl\·12 HVt\I BuffelO, CIOuller (23·20). Artenc:1ene-1J,S90 lttfere-Terrv vrtQ\O" LonHmen-Gord Brosetter. Leon St1ck1t Kir. KhecMe J•n 1-•I PlrrSl>urQh Je n 10-.t Mlnne\Ole 10~ 11-•I St Louis Jen I §-New York Rellllt't\ Jen 11-1 V•nc.ouve< Jen 1.-v.ncouver J•n 21-s1 Louis J•n ?3-St Louil J•n 2S-e t Edmonton J&n 27-e r C11Qerv Ja n 29-Minnesoie Feb 1,.-et Wlnnf1>911 Feb ,_e l Wlnnle>e11 Feb 4-All·SI., Ga me FID t-91 C•l11erv FtD .-New York ISianders Feb J-<•IV•rv F eo 11-Cuel>« FeO IS-WHlll119lon Feo 11-.. Monlreel FtD 1.-.1 Quet>ec FtD 10-11 Pl'llledelpn,. \ Feo n-.1 New Jersev Ft D 24-Plflsl>ur,lll'I F10 77-Cl'lk.eCIO MerCll 1-MontrH I Mert n 7-CllC19'V March r-.1 Eomonlon ~rcn 6-•I Vancouver Mtrcn 9-Edmonton ,..,..rcn 17-0etroll Mert rl IS..-Bulf•IO Merell 11-el T0ton10 Mercn 11-•I WashinGlon M.,e11 20-91 Bo"on Mere,, 21-•t H•rfforc:l Merell n--.1 Buff•lo Mere,, 26-C•ICl•rv Me rcPI ,,_, V•nc.ouvt<' M"C" 1'-0vtOK Marc,, J l-Wlnn11>99 Ao•ll ,_Wlnn1o.ci Aor I S..-llencouvt<' DMP sN fttMnt DAVEY'$ LOCKE• (NHr-1 ... dll -S4 •"11'-'' 160 roc1t too. 41 t11<co Dus. u sne.osl'l .. O NIW"°"T LANDING -40 e ncii.rs 67 rock cO<I. 3' scutotn 14 1>9•\ t '"""""'ad 43 rocll. fllh Tim Norris. s40,000 275 Oen Foflma n, s10,000 Mtrk BrOOl<s. S20.000 271 Grev NCYmen, 59,U S GtorCll Arc"-, S9,17S t7t Anov NCYln, 14,SIO RO<I Curl, S-4.SIO Pe11r Oosttmuls, 14.S 10 Howuc1 Clarie. M,SlO 0on Pooltv. $4.SIO Mike Reid, S2,2SO O•nnv Eclweros. S2.2SO P•llY Shfftl•n, S2.2SO 2'1 Tim Slmo\On. SI.ISO Ltnnle Cle,,.,.,,ls, S 1.150 m Boo E•stwOO<I, s 1,600 Oen Halloonon. Sl,600 AllceMlli.r, Sl,600 a4 Je>Mnv Miiier, Sl,2SO V•I Sto.lnMf", S 1,250 Ron Ce<ruoo, s 1.1so Ronnie Blick, s 1,250 115 JOlln Mellatfe11, l I ,000 • 1N J•n S191>Mnson, S950 Buc:lc:l• Ga roner, s9SO Bobbv Cl•moelt, s950 2*7 Dick Loll, S9?S Nalhanoel CrosDv. s9?S -ROQlr MlllDle, '840 O•vlq Gienr. "40 Dave SIOCklon, "40 Al Gtlt11rC11<, "40 Rob 6oldt. '840 l(en GrHn. S78S Be111 Daniel. S78S Boo Lunn, sno Merk Ple il, S7SO S.ilv Llnle, S7S0 Oon 81u , S7SO Al Cll•ndler, $1?0 J1nt Bl•IOCk. S710 Geor111 Burns, S710 81rrv Jeec1t.et.S700 Rock RllOeds. '692 Cralci S19dltr '69? 2'3 1'S Bruce Summer,,evs. U..S 296 Clluck Molnt, '680 Boo Boldt, u n Jull Inkster, u n Lon HI,,. ... '652 M9rk Wt.be, 1452 Ken Towns, 1452 Loren Rc>o.rls, WS1 Boo Glldef". S640 297 l9t -W1ns10w woooerc:1, S43S •1 Jonn Bucie11 S430 Tlm B~ci.U2S Art Wllll•rM. S610 Jim Lene11tv '6 IS Jim Wltehen. S610 RoOtrt lrvlnci. MOS lOl 3CM lOS JOI lOt 310 69·6'·61·?1 65-70-61·72 71-70-69-65 71·'9·71·67 •S-11 ·74· .. 6Hl·7S·61 12·71·61·61 70-70-70·69 69-61-n -10 61·6'·13·74 61·70-72·70 61·70-70·72 61·69·75·61 71-71·72·61 71-70·69·77 71·61·71-73 69·67·71-76 69·6t·n ·61 71·70-73·'9 71-76·61·'9 67·74·'9·74 71·70·69·74 71 -,67· 71·69 6'·70-71·69 70-72·73·71 61·7S·70-7J 70·7HS·71 7S·69· 73· 70 73·12·73·70 70-70-76·72 7S·72·69·72 7l·1S·66·74 7S·61·70-7S 73·74·69·73 71·12·76·70 72·12·12·14 74·70·7S·71 73·69·72·n 66·n ·76-77 61·71-79·74 70·67·11·74 12·72·73·7S 11·11-JS·IS 70-74·76·74 74·61·11·74 7S· 73· 70· 77 17·11·7J·7S 12·71·72·7S 61·74·79·76 1'1·7S·7S-76 76·12·74·76 74·74·1'1·78 7S·61· 79· 7' 76·13·72-71 70-12·11·77 12· 74· lt· 76 74·71·12·7' 16·71·78·79 I0·70·1l·'2 IS·eG-70-13 71·7S·77·1S Boo Wvnn. S600 7S-n ·73·U S.Mnwis O.uk ( •t l"'M"edtse "'9tld) -l6t H•te Irwin. S72.000 70-61·6'·61 VS Oonnlt Hemmn0. 142.000 '9·67·73 66 276 Do ls Love Ill, S14.000 6~·61· 13· 70 w Scoll Hocl'I, s 16,000 67 61·67 7S 171 Jttt Sluman, s 13,000 69·61·69· n 17t JOOle Mu<kl, SIO,J7S 12·71·69·67 Boo T"'"'· SI0,37S 67·66·11·74 Eel Ft«YI. s8.12S Mlkt 0on.1e1. sa.11s GOL' •7·69·61·76 70-71·61·71 LAGUNA IEACH GOLF ASSOCIATION A ....... 6S-Cll9'1e' Hellmen, 67-R G R•Olollle; 69-Clluek Crow. ., ..... 61-Rant0m Wood; 69-JOM W•lllins. •9-lowlll Miiier, 71-f"reo St.,k C1'11tM .._Mel C.roenler, 71-Mekom H•i. 7,_J•mfl Klllv, n-em Groth 01'11tM '7-S.nrleQO Hernencter. 61-Emll A19•· •nder, 6t-Wevne Smltll ........ 66-Trevor Cut hm•n. 67-0 eene Oocls.on. 67--0eor111 W••1t.er. ..-Geor11t Bunn ~ • • o I . " •M9·1NI 61·11-10 n ....... , .. ,. 70-7l·70·6t 1•·•1-14·61 11·11 ·1'· .. •9·10-7.-70 72·61-70•7' .... 71-70-7' 71·71•7J..6t 61-10-76·70 n -69-12-10 n -10-ff-1'1 10...n~74·6' 73·71-10-71 ................. ~ Fri • Merell 1 -S.n Ole9o et Yum• Ser .• Merell • -S•n O(ffcl •I Yumt Sun., Merell t -S•ll Q(ffcl •• Yum• Mon., Merctl 10 -Sen Fr9nclsco •' Scolltelele Tues., M•rch 11 -MllweukM at Chen· oi.r Wed.. March 1'1 -ChlC•CIO CUDS •I Mes. Thur1., Mllrc.1'1 13 -0.1\lend •I Pl>oenll Fri., Marci\ 14 -S..111• •I T.moe Sel., MtrU! IS -Clevlend •I Tucsonon Sun , Merell 16 -SMttle •I Ttmoe Mon., M9'dl 17 -Oeklend el Plloenlx Tllft~ Me.rch II -Sen Frtnclsco •' Scolltelele Wed., Mardi 19 -Cl\k.900 •I Mesa Tllurl., Merell 20 -0.klencl •I Plloenl. Fri .• Merell 21 -Mllw•ultM t i P•lm Sttrlncis S.I , Mtrcll 17 -Mllw•UkM •I Pelm S1>rln11s sun., Mtreh 73 -Chlcecio Cubs er P.im Sorlno• Mon., M1rch 14 -Sen Frenclsco •I P•lm Sorlnos Tues., Mlrch 25 -San Frencl\Co •• P•lm Sorln11s Weo .• M.,c,, 26 -CleY•le'nd el P•lm Sttrlnos Thur\ .. Merell 27 -0.1>.1eno e t Pe1m Sorlnos Fri . Merell 1t -0.111eno •I P•lm Sc>rlnos S.t . Mtrcll 29 -S.•1119 11 P•lm SllflnGs Sun , Merer. lO -Sen OltQO •' P•lm Sorlnos Mon.. MMCll 31 -S•n Diego •I Palm Sorlnos Tues., Aorll I -S•n Diego •' Anf ,,.1m Sl•dlum, 1 35 o m Weo.. April 2 -Sen Oieoo al Jecle MllTl>hv Sledlum. 7:0S o.m Fri, Aorll 4 -OodCltrl at OOOQtr S19dlu"1, 7.3S 11 m S.t., AorM S -Oo0111rs el 00<1111r St•dlum, 1 05 P.m Sun., Aorll 6 -Oodotr\ e t Ane11elm Stadium, l:OS o m All 11•,,_ el I Om . unlftt lnd!c.tled MfSL WESTiRH DIVISION w l l"'ct. S.n Oll!QO 11 6 t.17 w iclllte 10 7 sea 51 LOUIS ~0 10 500 Kenses Cily 9 9 500 T•come 9 12 419 LA Lu.en 6 l2 .333 EASTE•N DIVISM>N MIMMOll 12 I GB 1 2'-'a ,,., 4 S' Ct.vet•no 10 I Belllmore 9 1 Plllsourgh ., I 9 De lles 9 12 ClllceQO 1 9 600 -SS. S79 t'll 411 1'"2 419 3'" 431 J SVfllMv•s Scwes No e>•mts sclltduleo T...._t'• Gemes No Cl• mes M:tledullcl TutWY't Ge!M Kenses City 91 Wlchlt• Men's toumaflllftt (II 8ef1111) Slfltlfl Flftl Boris Btel>.tr (West Ger11nv1 def. Meh Wll•n<Mr...(Sw~). 6•1. ;•. 6·0 !Beeker wlnl SJ0.0001 w..erenct trenwc1tons HOCKEY Nefl9nll Hedley \.N9'19 LOS ANGELES KINGt-lttulllcl Rome Melenson, -"•· from ,..w H9•ell ol Ille Amerla n Hoc1<•v LHCI~ Auklned Oar· r.n Ello!, -"•· lo Ntw H1,..n. NEW YORK ISLANDERs-ittall.o Rover Kortko. c..n1er, lrtin Sorll!Qfleld of Ille Amerleen Hoek•v LtlGUI COLLE~ GEORGIA TECH~l"ltCI Rio Scnerer off911Slv• ~dlnelor PITTS8UllGH-'11reo St••• Courv •no C.,I A~IO. es.,oal•nl cOICMs, O•ve DI· dlonb, aomlnls1ut1v1 eulst•nl. •nd Bu<I Relllff. rtcrullfftG coord n•ICY T EN~ES5EE ·C HAT T ANOOGA-Announcen the rnlQn•llon OI Jot Pare. deltnslve coorolnelor and Johnny Henderson, deten\lvt \teond.,v cotcll. lo etctol \lmllar ooslllo•I\ •I Norlh Ctrotlna ~, .. , YOUNGSTOWN ST ATE-N•med Kt" CMetser offensive coorcllnetor •no Jim ~4111slv• coordtne1or GYMHASTICS ~ S..,_ C~llliPI CLAU Ill (et ltNIMdt YMCA> TH m Ch•mplontllll>: 1. Southern Ct1l- tornl• Arco TH m (SCAT$), Hunllnciton 8HCI; 2. ltt<llendt YMCA; ) lrvlnt School of Gvmnesllet ClllNrtll' s DMtlen Lfllle Sluroeon !SCATS), 11\lro •II· .,ouno, seconcs unf\ltn IMlrs, L•urtn G•llc· le (SCATS). foutth •11·9'ounel, lourtll !Mii· •net DHm , 0.,. Llllerd (SC ATS). shrtll .rt~erouno. nr11 v•uH. Al'fson Y tit• (SCA TSI, nlnlll e"·trouno, ntll'I veult. II· H n• Soeno (SCA TSl, tlrsi Delenct bffm NfW DMtltfl Krli llne Vew t'ln !SCATS). 111111 •M· tround. tourtri unevtn IMlrs fifth t>el•nct bff"1 • PGAtour launches this week CARLSBAD (AP) -The Tour· nament of Champions.i:erves as the officiaJ ldck-ofT event this week. on a rearranaed. expanded and ennchcd PGA tour schedule. The 1986 schedule includes 46 official events -\htce more than lut year -plus seven ~bers that have approved but unoffic!al status. . The entire tour, wb1cb open~ Wllh lhc: unofficial Bahamas Classic last weekend. has at lea.st one tournament through Dec. 14, 1986 and has stops 1n at least four countries, not includ- ing the Bntisb Open. Although purses for all events have not been announced, the tour's total purse is ~x~ted to surpass the $2S millton d1stnbuted last year. • The Vantage Championship in San Antonio Tex .. and the new Inter· na11onat' tournament in Denver will help increase the 1986 total. &ch hlll a purse ofS t-million or more. as dltS the Las Yeps Invitational. In addition. there's more t1uO $3 m1llton from the unofficial tour· namenls and a new, $2 millio-bonus pool. The figures apply oro' to the men on the main PGA tou,i'lnd does not include the women'' tour ~d seniors circuit. . The seniors also ope;· their J!"OW· mg, prospering tour th' week Wltb a concurrent Toumambt of Cham ... pions at the La Cost.Country Ou.b. Thc: seniors T ofC ~rs S 190.0001n pnzc: money and ishe~ '" 11 l4>- tournamc:nt sch~.le. Wlth a total value of about S6 11lhon. Top ~thletes at sinkist . . . Thc: ·th ann ual Sunlmt lnv1~· uonal ~oor track and field m~t th1s year 111 feature several Ora.nae Coutr high school athletes. The mets to tx-held on Jan .. 17 int.he Los A ..:lcs Sports Arena. t e half-mile always rates as one of ti premier high school events. T~o ~al athletes scheduled to compete U\ 11s evc:nt are Jim Sorenson of Villa 'ark and David McMillcn of Irvine. ThC} enter the meet with pcrsonaJ bem of I :54.9 and I :55.5. respective- ly and will face Vincent Thompson of Locke High 1n Los Angeles. Thomp- son figures to 9e one of the favontcs wi th a best of I :52.63. The guls half-mile features Buffy Rabbitt of Newport Harbor as one of the favorites with a best of 2:13.5. She will face st1fTcompetition from Com· pton·s Kim Mulltgan, who has run a slightly faster 2:~ 3.28 .. Also scheduled to be in the race are K.nstm Harluns of La Quinta (2: 17 .18) and Karen Nance of Capistrano Valley (2: 18.64). In addi11on to the high school athletes, the Sunk1sl meet also show- cases the talents of many college and world class athletes. Some Olympic gold medalists such as pole vaulter , . .:rre Qui non of France wall also be competing. Sunset girls open Thursday The Sea View League resumes Wlth a full menu of games while Sunset League outfits ,..,11 open their sched- ule with three contests on tap Thurs- day night 1n high school 8Jrls basket- ball action this week. On the college level, UC lrvmc, coming ofT a runner-up finish in the anta Clara Tournament. has one game this week, hosting Peppcrdine on Fnday night. Herc's a look at the schedule: * COLLEGE Neft·c••MCt FltlDAY PtPl>efdlne 91 UC Irvine COMMUNITY COLLEGE SOUttl Ceut C•• •ice TONIGHT Golo.n WHI t i Compton Cvoreu 11 Or•r111t Co~ul WIDNHOAY Ml S•n Anlonlo ., GOiden WHI Or•no• Cou t •I Futleflon ~•IOAY Golclen Wtll •I C~rltos S.Cldleblek I I Ore1111t Cotsl HIGH SCHOOL See View LMtue TUHO~Y Woodt>rlclllt •I l ee>un• 8Hch Unlveollv ., E Sl•ncl• (OfON 0.1 M., ., Newoort H.,bor S•Cldl•Dltk •I Cosl• """' THURSOAV Corone d4ti Mir •' Esl1nCl1 S.Cldi.t>ecll e I WOOODf1dOt Coll• MeM •' l 111Une e..ch Newoor1 H•fDor •• Unl'ffftllV SUMet ~ THIMSOAY Merine el Hun1111Q1on a..cti Wtslmlnsttr II Edlton OcMn View •I FClul'lteln V•ll9v ........... TU8IOAY Lono Beech Wiiton •• Merine Hunllnoton le.ell •I 01ne Hilt' LOM lffCll PCllY .. Ocet11 vi.w J I ROBINSON IMPRESSED BY BEARS From Bl • • • rtalC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICE FICTfTlOUI IU ... ll 30, 11185 1nd Januery 6 ducted by an lndlvldUal Tran1lerot1. wt1oM bUti'*t Slit• ol Celtfornle Ml.IC NOTIC£ Ml.IC NOTIC( because we can't play any other "'a)' ·· He did say. however. that the Ramo; were gomf to hove to have \Orne success throwing the ball aga1Mt C. h1caao Rams quarterback Du.•ter Brock had a m1~rablc day aaa1nst the Cowboys. completing JU\l Sill of ~2 pas~~ for 50 yards. '"We felt like we had to ~ve the hall 10 Enc and we will conttnue to do that." Robinson said ... But yo1J've aot to thro<.v the ball against the Be:m or you're going to get stopped. , "I'm confident we can pa and that we can protect our passer " Oesplle their success this season. the Rams haven't been con1dcrcd one of the Nfl' bener teams by many omcrven .. Y<>uispend )Our hfe tryina to set into the b11 pmcs against the tx-st teams. and yo u wa nt to ~ tc!>tcd," Robinson said. "ff ~c· arc able to tx-at C'h1caso. which most people apec IS an txCCpllOnal team. f think It Wlll change people s pe rception of u' ·· Dickerson. attcr he obliterated the playoff record of 206 yards rushing set by San Diego's Keith Lincoln 1n the 1963 Amenc.an Football League champ1onsh1p game, said he didn't think the Ram were cx~pt1ona1tx aood his fi rst two years with the club, but added. "f feel hk.c ~can a.o all the way; we're as good as 1hc C'hic:a_ao BeaN and New York Giants." ' Dallas quarterback Danny White. sacked fi ve ume and interttpted three tame' by the Rt.ms' d.cfc:n~. sajd, "Maybe coming 1n, I didn't g,ivc hem c.nouah credit. They have a chance to beat anyone ' \ t . ' NAMI ITATWMINT 1086 Thll 'lllttment WO IH<I ..Od'"9 i. 2272 Mlcheleon, So ,., .. •no-n to ""· T,,. IOllOwln" ~ton· .,. M-8~ W1fll Ille County Clefll OI Or-!Nttle. County °' Orat191t. ran•I•... •II bll91" ... • 1 • COuftl on o.o.tnt>er St•t• o1 cantornte. 111411 • nemee 11nc1 lddr ..... a d0tng bu"nee' N Ccfonlat l'\llllC NCHtCC 9ng198.5 . Y tiu. * 1raneter 11 •t>ou• 10 be 1>y Tran.f«or '°' ,,. HouM A Calttomta a.n.11 ---------I UOOEl A£NT A a..--l'len P•rtner~. 2U Oltt Ofl¥e ITATWMIMT CW PubhJfled Orange Cout c:: 6~ SOUTHl"'N CALI· C~ c::· :!,. 'A;; A 6., L90una e.ecn. CA 112651 AaANOOf .. NT CW Oaity Ptlol o.c.mbef HI. 23· FOANIA, Trantl.,M. wl'IOM ~ ,_.,, A Trudi eno Paul COiien 274 Cllll Ull Ofl ...CTfTIOUI 30. IOH IM Jetl\l"'Y &. t>ullnel• eddf... It 150 hei1 ~I A Truell, Or"* Drive. ll)Qllna a..cl'I OA 8U ... ll NAMI tle6 M·Hl Soulll ()()Mfty, 1Mve11y Miiia. :1Unty Alfpot1. Callf 221t 112J6e5lln H•rririgton 2007 Ttie IOHOwlnQ pe rson1 County of lot AllQeln, M~ IMnt. Orengt llevt 10'1\doned Ille uM ol Stat• Of CttlilOfnla Cou~ty. Carlfornl• Hlgl'lland OrtYt Newport lht FICtlllOut Butlnu s . . THE 8lJLI( TAANSFE~ 18 Beacl'I. C A 1128&0 N•~ Eur09e1n Tourist In-f'tBJC NOTIC( . Tiie propeny to be lrlnt· NOT SUIJfCT TO arc.. fl\Jt ou•lneat " con-lormatlon , Ont Newp()(I '-tr~ 18 ioc.ted 11 2272 TION &toe CAW' UNlo- d"'led by I ~·1 IWl· 1'1.c., SUtte 400, Newpon • W Mtohe!tof\, IMM end Of· O"'M COM COO£ ~tt11p 8eaen CA NOTICI TO ~COunty Attport, County Dettd Dec:et11oer 27 Paul Col\er"I Tne flCllttOUt Bualnen CMDfTCMte °" Orenoe. 81811 ~ c.. "~ Tllft 1111ement was llt.d Heme referred 10 1b0Ye wet IUUC ~ Na llt !M4 •f: I UOOIT "'''" Ille County ~rll of Or· ftled lfl Orll'IQI. County on Cltoc:t •• _,_._, The bl* trlnfftf "'(Ill be I M T A C A" O ' l"9t Counly on 0.CllTlbef FIL£ NO F~2 U.C.C.t on or atttt IOUTMIM C~· ~ !HS ,_ Merk Ooodmt n 353 "'61.C. • hlrloy ~,Mt~ , .. Hr' .. d 10"? Mm 11J~~ I. KeM, Tr•.._w "' -Cypreu Drive l agun• tne Creo11ott 9f " ... • ,,... PvbWled Oranoit COf11t ~O"l!Md Of11199 eo.t .._,. CA 1.216 I ENlEAPAtSfa INC doe "9nl A Cw 2272 MiCtllltOn, Plot "'"'*J t '911 Delly Pilot Oeoembef 18, 23 trwa' ~ wu con· UOOCT "°"' A CAA CoutltY GI ~ 'u . ( , ltUl'fB:Y WINKERBEAN THE FAMILY CIRCUS "There he is! Somebody run upstair s ond stomp on the floor!" " MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "Jimmy Thompson says he's sorry he threw a snowball at Marmaduke and he'd llke to have his book bag back!" DRABBLE MA~f;£ ~E. U '1f.I\\.\ l<E~ut.lO M'f' 11-\AH Ai-l GARFIELD I FEEL GREAT TOCJNJ ! l FE EL LIKE COAINU A MAJOR OtSf A':>E., WRITINCt A BE!>T·SELLING BOOK ANP !>TOPPING POVE.RT"r'! , ... 86 \OC",OAOI LOOKOO'T . WORLPJ MER£ COME~ CiARFIE.LP! ---· ---- by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY /. Wl'TH 'TME ~M::W E't>e z. C.Umt 1EJ.E~ BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) l _~ ~--·_) i 1-r.. "I hate Mondays." DENNIS THE MENACE f . ~ ~ ! /' /' ) ' ·- by Hank Ketcham SHOE K!'TMEANS~~ ~.~ ~'(NO \OE.l ... ~ DO VOO LI KE ME ? /o b ,, Ofang9C0Mt0AILY PILOTl~.~8.1W • • by Gary Trudeau by Jeff MacNall) .. ~MERE 10U Jl:::*'T GET~ c.m?fT ~ "TOTAL. ~l'(. ~.....,.~....,..~~__,,.~~ • ~YM If 14.f PfPN T 11fMIUlE S<lff[~ X i.€ IAKJ(lJJNT I~ Q,,#(58~5 ~ {}{£, OfJXtNr1Y ~ 141fR _ /If\() Ml/5$ IMlf1£A U C I ETC/ ~-­ Av· ,-5 I I I by Charles M. Schulz F0~6€T IT ! I DO~fT WANT TO MEAR TME REST ~ by Berke Breathed )- FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston \\~?I! • 1 WAS MVING A GOOD ORE.AM AND YOU WOKE ME UP AND M.ADt. ~ LO$E Vi'< PLACE 1 • by Kevin Fagan by Jim Davis by Ferd & Tom Johnson TUMBLEWEEDS .. BRIDGE H?i\..F AN~I BUT'{OU ONL-'/ m.>ST GolHERE 1 ~\~ ., Q.1-As ~outh, vulnerablt' 11111 hold: ' ' \\hat action d11 111u l.ike ' A.-Parl nf'r dot>,n'1 h,nt' murh •ht- would ha \t' h10 t rt't>h •II 1•r t hrt•f' l'luh' on I hr ,ltl{hlt''t """"''' hut t hat dot'\n · mr ,1n 1uu 'h' ,111 '"' 11ut ltt lht· upp11n1•nl' I .am•·" ,1111 .-1 pv<;'i1b1ht~ f11r ~·nor 'ilrif' .1'1r1 vou 'houldn t r .. m .. to mut•h har'l• ir J -.pade part1.il !lid t hfr1' -.p.H1t•' +A62 9873 . ~J +~7 '3 The bidd1nl( has prl)('t>eded Weet Sorth EHt ~outh I + Obi• Pus " What do you bid nov. ·• QA-Both ' ulnt•rahle. a ~ :..1111t h '1111 hold +KJIO QJ106 Al07 +\J? BUT WE. ~VENTE.'Er4 SM\ED'i.J FQ{f ·:T on 4 l int•"-e to1t ''' 'p.tdt''> and could h ... l.111in"'n 1t h .. har. the 4ueen of ht',1rt• '' ...... 1 J .mp '11 f1 , t' ... pade'i tn ·h•"' .1 "' 111 •l : 1!'r1 'lam 10 to•r .. -t ""h • 111·'1' •I.' ' ftr,t round 'tlntro •. "I Ut 1111! Q.6 -A, 'nuth 1 .. nt'r .• nta "'•lh RO on <1core. 1 nu hu1d + K 107 .\Q6 •\J 105 + KQ9 Yo h,u 1<; '1111r 1lpt r ~ ~· hid !\ -\\ 11 hout t "" i.1 ~1.1 rt <.c·11rP 'nu . MOON MULLINS NTIR A r,AS~toN ... 1H.Ar ReMINDS ME ·· ALL ~~ARN' is .AN A .-A good. but .1v.kv.ard hj:ltt You have enough to 1nnlt· -.:.tn11· yet no bad 1s really '!at1sluct11r 1 ·\ cue bid in s pade in fl a le' t ht• 1 .i " or your hand: your 'iUtl I hardh ; ho sort you want for a Jump tu t hr .. 1· hearts; lo Jump t o three club, t1 nd' to deny a fou r-CArd maJOr "'u11 .ir11! you would lake a t>cond sloppt>r 111 Jump to t wo no t rump. All t h1nl{' considerf'd. the jump in no trurnp ., the least cl1sagTetable or tht• up lions. OMAR 0 SHARIFF .it- CHARLES GOREN ONE MoFle ~ H~ NE'v .£' t;'l • YEft.~, EMMA !J MY CLOT~!:S ,AR5 LAST UNDERSTAiEMENT Yf.pJi?.'S NoW I £ JVDO&PARUR by Harold Le Doux Q.2-N•ither vulnerablt>, ,,, :-1111t h you hold: •7 ~ AJ1052 " K6 +AQJ52 The bidding hu proceeded ••tit w .. t Nortlil u•t I <::1 PaN I + Pao 2 • PaH 3 • Pa11 1 What do you bid no w'? A.-S1nce parlMt could ha1-e pa1 ed two club with a m1n1mum rtspon..e. you should havf' f 1r chan~s for pme. We would not fault you for Jumping lo rivt cluh . but we have a di!llinct prefe~t'n<'t' for four dubs. That le&v• partner with t.h• option of takinr a Pl'ffer f!OCt" lo four Mat\.I w1\h somel~•n« bke K x or thrte lowv <'a.rd in tht auit... Q.J -Both vulnerabl , u ... outh you ~old: .. AQJt'7S • <:;t AQIM 0 A& • 7 The btddlq ha.a ~I ""' .u FAit s-t• I• P.. Pue I • I • Pue r.. t fhe b1ddtn1t hu proceected \\ ut 'iorth F.ut _,outh I P .. a 2 " \\hill ac l 1on do vou tAk1•' -'ou prnha hh h.a H t ht> he'it h,\Od at the ta hie but t hal d~'> not mean )'OU ~hould bid While pirtner ., \urt>l v 'hort 1n hc>art'I and ratfl'' to h11 ' r .-·lonit '""'' "h1C'h mu!lt mt''lh "1th "hat vou hold. t hat m11fht nol be l"nouirh for nin<' t ri<"k, Rt-Stde,, the> opponents m1ghl not bf' through h1dd1n1t P1w 1. and tM' happ~ to tol lt-<"l 100 or mort> 11f ~ ou Jtl"l to dou bit>• for f'ach d<>" n tmk Q.S-Rot h 1-ulnf'rahlt",a" South )OU hold: •AKQJ76 ;iKJ$l O •tz Tht> bJdd nlf hH prO<'t'~rci : ~ ""' :'lierda £ut l + Pa• 3 'IT Pu. ? What 1t'\1on do you lakf ' A. -Th11 it not a QUt''lllon of potnl.I but of t'Ontrol If partntr h•' two ·~ and t wo k1nr • you•~ at wor l c v.ould 1•pl"n nne diamond ""h t hf' 1nt.•nt111n 11f iump1nl{ 1n no trump 11\i'r ""' rr<.pon<.t' tn p11rt nrr >\l t hi' 'ror1• ho11q '\t>r v.r 'll•Ot't""l \OU ''Pf'"''"""" trump l'..rtn .. r "hould ,tlln" for 1 ht' fa<'t that. undt'r t h• cir r11m11Wln('tc. your no trump ranv could be .l ht tlf' f'la'lll<' ... .,. 1.1 ..... u.. a.'""9t c i..rte. Gor.•'•M• H•IMt~r t. ~ playe,... •rlt.-Gwea 8..W,. Leta.r. P.O. RH 4•H. 0r1Hcle, Fla. ltMt ..... 26 '• ' f • Oww!ll Cwt OA.ILV Pk.OT/ Mondlly, J..-Y e. 1W CALL 842-5878 IP CALLING MOii NORTH ORANGE IF CAWNQ PROM SOUTH ORANGE Tiii ART OF SELLlllO IS UH EASY Ill THE DAI Y PILOT'S CLASSIFIED PAGES. ,· ~ -. . --. .! r; .. ~ .. ,,.. ... ;..,-~ ,'& 'c' -t=-:· ·~-,,, .~ ·4~ 1...-t ..... lllt c.ta... lllt lfll!!!!tl ,.~t •111 1114 Int .... L _ .. , ._ ..... ,_,...... ftll la1laff1/otfltt a..t ,,.....JI ::;,;~-..._. ..... ........., ... 1•--....,,....., .... _..,.. ... l1I.........---P11 l1n ll .... 1 • • .... ...... -lflt MalabtratM II! NO DOWN boh duplx, ltep Time to rent "·' E-elde 1117 IUWlll YILUl-1 IU 11111 aaal o •••51 to tend, bit ·ao. LG.....,.,. 2BR frptc gar & men,· ~ . ..... ttto. & gwage -mo. M•NAGER $385K. Agt 759-5080 M50. 53M-tl1 aigt ooet **2br 2ba oompl, furn. ---=mL• ~ 302eW. PKlflcCoeltHwy 'Near Matlnel'I Squ.,t & ft S.ff Unfurn, Elllde 28A iBA • .:~·=::~~~~ Fm&.YAP&l1MQTI WIYllT! ~hach.FWrlgTV Coaat ~.N8&48-7&'41 A;t h Hi 1 lrg enclOMd )'cl w/patlo. Spattcllng cie.n terge apt1 Live where you have S wtugl, no~. NUTWl LIUTlll 17,:;:'J:~:~f:=.MI Newport g II 1715/mo, 11t, !Mt & MC BAYFRONT 'Br am pvt f()( fam1tlee with 1 Of' 2 •SP9CtlCUlat ap11 ...... •• ... Re4all/Ofe~. 18811/f, 2BA 2BA, appfl1nc.a. dep $300. Small doa & t boh/fabulou• vua 1 cat chlldteni NMr P*'k. HMt * 1 & 28' 1 & 2e. IUltae 2'114 COf'ner MCAr1hw & PCH. Mull enfoy wotklnO wttfl Only 132,500. 831-1788 Clflild Oii. c.l '46-5'1S apc/utll Incl $700/mo paid. N6 petl. •S~• townhouMe Prime epot In landmark children. Experlanoe Ula ~ 752-9511 28drm 28a 1720 •Areplacee 2br 2S: llPI, ~amkr, If Pl. loc. 2411 E. Cout ~· helpful. ____ ...., ______ 1IUL.... IHI Unfurn 1 Bf'.Apta i600 a 398 W. Wiiton 831-5583 •Prl'(ate balconl•• or pool/~a r.ap & neat Ste 200, CdM. 875-'4 ti.n- *IUllllTT•* MOO. No pete. Off ttraet AYllUILI.. Garden patloe $3 lO 1 utll. &48-1132 CM WATERFRONT BLOG. W.~ton;:;,a,:,c:-= v• .-..--------•11+ 1 Incl. util "500. F.-J)tt(g. Bite beh. 873--5198 2BR l 'ABA E/llde Twnhm. -ll'f! Avail lmmecl bMut new Executive aultr. 1350 1/ft. catlonS & hOlldavf. t>onut A--al z1a.. 1"IUlllT 1'11-1111 cereaa ••• ... HD S705/mo. Frplc, yard, ••• condo to lhr E·alde CM. 4th flOOf w/vu &42""8.« program and dental In-..... •• •3 Llgf'lted tennla court• M/F S'400/mo. + 'hutll Mon·Frl 0 to 5 surance. Salary plue = Luxury m rr°"t 1650 mo+ cted ctlrg renta 18R 1S: epec mtra gar,,.8oN~ ~~tlon. ·.~t=::,m,'~. 548-9150 -trtlal "''1a mlleege relmbuftemanl condo, 3BR 2'MtA. fot'· thl9 2 B~. 1~ ba In Suow apt. $'400 mo to mo. '415 TSL MGMT an a e:2• 1603 .,..,....., BEAUT Npt Ht do mal dining, dumb wetter. ,,.a Muet ... 1 547·2187 Poppy. Owner 875-0160 • *•SorryF .~ .. "!'pets Mttr br/ba, ni:•.::11: L Applicallt mutt papp1y3301n oak. wtllrlpool bath & 3 5 bit<• to oceen. 2BR. 2BR 1ba. Cloae to beaeh. •WlllUll Wl.Ull• urn-"nga avail ties n-amk 1625. 722·1222 1350 N STOREFRONT penoo •I Dally llot, decill Y..., $2200/mo 5 O S S $8 B 1" B .~ 1 ... VERDE Wast Bay St.. Cotti • "'' · 1 Ntnth I 725111/lut Yard. New paint 75. 2 r, h a,bltna,MtWepta WHY NOT CALL COM. GREAT RM FOR Xlnt..AES.. Mesa. Ca. Apply 9-11 Mllll IULn ,. 738-8077 wtmd/ew 759-7087 & 873--5354 & drpa, D/W, bltln• $825 na-1111 MAN. AVAIL NOW. $475 locatlon. 5'45-2143 a.m. ()( 2-4 p.m. (Clrcul•· ,_ ''''MWIT Charming g·hOuH off 2 BR 1 ba, furn. av1tl. Utll +$600. No pets ~4&4 IUWlll YIWIE + DEPOSIT. 84()...4255 •Combined Offloe/ShOp tlon Dept.). l14/IJM1lJ PCH $450 « blkl-OOMI\ l.ncld. Walk to bCh $775. UIU ml &PTI 825 sq. ft. reaa. C.M. ------==- ·llT11 -D~ 2BR w/~ seoo detalll +sec. avail 111 494--4292 tBr, frig, range, leundry, l5565 Huntington VIiiage DESPERATE '°' 1 female C-2. Nice area 5'48-72'49 T&l &COlllTUT -~--539-8191 agt ooet 2BR tba ""-an&I" A rx pool, carPort. No pets. Lana f San ni-,. rmte to ahr w/2 fem. 4BR 7 Full time Coat• M..._ NOT A LIST AGE y Nice 3 BR hm, chef9 kltctl, 1000./f ;j6 Pc,pj;y f~ $550/mo. FrMa;.":rt,, of ~ ~'.~': 1=e. ~~ luaatrial ~s-1s3e or 756-9105 ~n ~~R50 2mBuAat bl ... k• to oar. patio & more. $795 mo to mo Ownr 675-0160 931 W. 19th St. 5'48-0492 to McFadden, weet on FOi' •--.. 5000 sf lnouet . .....,.. .., · +cntd h 5447 2787 McFadden. Emptyd M/F 40+ to lhr -**IJl-11M** c rg • 2BR tba, near beaeh, no lllEllATI •n II furn2Br 1'Abaaptw/poot apace. ale ofc'a, lo yd Mt4ical/Dtatal SltS Low rent high value $895 3 lntat 1144 peta. n-amkr. Garage. 2BR 1BA, cottage type, La1au ltac• 2141 $350/mo, 111/ltt, utll pd apace. 11lnt loc. 2302 So. --~~-~~~~~ bdrm 2 bath nr Nwprt. VERY Rice HR + a:;; $820/mo. 673-8246 private patio, gar, w/d Xlmtt ocnfrt furo or uni xcpt ph., 5'48· 1200 Suaan. S.A. 6'48-7512 111111 AllllTUT 539-6190 Best Atty fae detached Turtleroek ~ 2Br 2Ba DupleJC. 2 cat gar. hkup. No pell. S675/mo. 2Br 1'hBa, pV1 bch, gar. F 2~35 to ahr attrac1. F~~1~7:i :,g~~~~ lalMI S 1250. 840--0515 newly decor. flp., frig. So. TSL MGMT &42• 1803 Perfect 4 lharlng S 1100 E'Coata Meaa hM. Furn laalan1 Fi111ci1l busy Newport Beach Of· •-1-···· 2107 * •••nALI* * Of PCH. $1150. 838-171'4 EASTSIDE. 2BR 1ba. gar-499-2704 Avail 1/15. 1Br/ba pV1 ent. No chll· flee. 648-4801 .... 2 BR patio catWt new age $650. 1BR 1 ba, gar. Oren or $400/mo. Utll T 1 ··-_14 ---------..... YI fll4tr a... CALL US REGARDING carPets nr bch no' pets $550. Adults pretMred l~rt ltaclt Ziii Incl. 5'48-8773 MH~ I --H DENTAL Brand new 3BR 3BA, IRVINE RENTALS S850. . e73-3852 2'4 l-8282 2ear;; 288 1760 Frlg, Fem n-amkr stir beaut. W106w fiu money fOf USISf /FlllT lf0 maid's qtrs. Spa/bath 2 lnlMleestle ....... l.ARGE ATTRACTIVE Eaatalde 2 BR tba, dahwshr. stove Included. pool home $350. mo. TD'a St0,000 up. No Temp. potltlon 2 mo·•. car gar. Furn II desired. 7•• 7111 BACHELOR.. Ful.I kite .. -beemed celling. frplc, NO PETS 545-4855 646-7591 213/'493-7274 credit"". no penalty. appr11. starting March 1, $2500/ ti bl -,....,, Oenlaon .Aaaoc. 873-7311 '4 Day wtl, no wknds 10< mo, nego • •· So of PCH Call 673 5156 gar 2 persona. no pets. 1Bdrm $600 Refrlg, dish· Fem wanted $450/mo, nr Gen'I Dentist. N B 873-2277 or 675-6173 38r 2ea. 2 oar~· No pet• · • • S700/mo. 111/lat, sec wuhe< & stove lnctUded. S.C Plaza. Metr Br/be. Aaa .. aceaHtl ~6-~91 Michelle C i t I •S1150LM(81 )888-5510 Nloe2Br28aupttra.1car $225 650-1798 NOPETS ~5-4855 Securlty.2'41-0e5t ., I ua• UC 0!'(818)~&-0440 gar.D/W.frplc.LMS950.•----------....,------------::""."=-"---...,.--:--== 2111 Golf course view, 2BR VIHa Rental• 675-7015 UITSlll OllTI 1111 1 Biie to Beach. De4u11a 3Br M/F, non-amkr. ahr 2BR Aa....,.•nh 2'21 ~279!60"""1"'t•B""L""UwFF.-top-d"'"u""iple"'"x-.1 San Joaquin condo U fur lee 2BR S.Ch, carport, frig, mlcf~ 2Ba, l/p, patio, gar, tu11. 2BA condo. Lao Niguel. SCRAM-LETS ocean v1ew 3br 2''°"t>a $1350/mo. ,651-5193 or fBAnA :f13 n$800/ wave, Incl utll. $'400/mo lower unit $1095/mo. $500/mo. 240.9038 ----------, _______ _. f/p, lg kite. o•r .. mat cpl: 818/~5 Agt 61~ 844-12~0· SM~!iiL s~g:i3-~~r0 Agt. 759'-S080 M/F non-amkr to lhr 2BR ANSWERS INJ latate Fer lalt "· l 1002 no-peta S1000mo tst +sec UNIVERSITY Park 2BR ,.~ •--U u . Nwpt Penn 3 & 4 Br 28a. 2BA, Back Bay area. ---------i.;--.;•-.11.,.1-.. _____ '493-8658 or 831-9220 2ba gar avail lmmed \OWla -.. ., ··~i~J\.? yrly rntla $1050-$1350. S300 +'A utlla. Steve S. Clttic1l/Otfict 5400 * lllHIT&IT * Staff potltlons with Newp Ctr. CPA firm Aovanc>e- ment & gd benefits Degree+ 3 yrs e11per. req. 759--0101 1e11iaat .;. MC S875/mo. 1215· 1BRipa1to refrlg no •• r W{: VIiia Rentals 675-7015. Dy 833-8680 ev 5'45·5169 -._ ..... __ 1c_._ .. __ .___ IWPT • •H,MO C.nu ••• Mar 2122 85'4-7977. 893~1460 . pet~. Carport. 724 J.m..tT Charming 2BR 1BA patio M/F ahr 2Br 2b• ant nr Nloe 2 bdrm, 2 bath m<>blle St #D 673·7787 • • · · ' ...,... . Warmth • Liiac Thyme· Leaked CHEATED Grandpa's definition ot a bargain. It's when two people think they have CHEA TED the othe<. A-eral IN2 home in nloe eatabllShed tBR 1BA deluxe Sand· WfUI ltaclt 14 · Eutalde lux. In a pine for-viii Raid. near Lido shops. S.C.Plz Tenn/pl. amok g _. park near Hoag Hospital castle Condo w/sml yd, _ tBA, beaml. gar, new ett, lge 1 BR, O/W, frig. No pets. $900/mo, yrly ok $350 546-8178 ev . * Ill. IEl'l lfO PIT lnSYrance ofc, airport iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9I Owner m<>tlvated trplc, wet bat. mirrored Furn 1BR condo. Laroe llv-crpt. paint. etc. $575/mo. Gas & Wtr paid Patio. 873-0343 M/F to ahr 3BR 2BA houN UYllllU wardrobel. microwave, Ing area. New1y remod. & 117-B Clearbrook Lane $565 mo. Adlts. No pets. DllOU m•ir* * on Balboa Penlnaula. area. 852-8573 ••YflllT trash compactor, ate. furn. 160 deg white water 675-3435 · Year lease. 5'48-039! .., 673--0727 -Traditional Avall now. S900t mo. VleW overt006clng Main 2Br+ gar. Only $600 Large single story home 863-1191 bet 9-Spm beaett. $1000/mo Incl. 1BR Garden .Apt. Beamed •EISIDE Delux Twnhouse tBR utll. Incl. $495 Ms Magnum. P.1.7 Shr old ""' ,.... 2t s ACCOUNTING Clerk, PIT, typing & 10 key skills Up to $6.50/hr. N-amkr. Call Patsy 760-6666 with 88 feet on the bay. 4 Re alty utilities. Call Al Guida, celllngs. Cable avall. Nr patio. 2br t'hba. S725 Studio, full kite. $375. Fee. Spanish Mansion NB Bdrmt + family room, 2 r 631•7370 2BR 2BA duplex, frplc, 1 (702) 732-9228 or Vlrgll Fairgrounds, S.C Plaza. & 25'48 Orange. 642-2520 TllEIEIT lll-IHO Backbay. Neat, quiet, $1000 REWARD flreplacet. room tor a oar. w/d, lrg yd. Quiet. Webb locally at (71-') Pacific Amphitheater. No hel f I R t7 673-6336 pool, prloed to aeule Pet ok. $1100. 780-1996 '497-~84 or 49•-7575 pets. 'Avail Jan 15. Lg view Apts nex1 to Park. E/BLUFF Townhouse, 2br Pu· en For return of cherm bracelet. S500 REWARD tor Information of return of charm bracelet AOOHm PAYOU S 380 000 C • 1. 1022 $530/-~ .,,..1-3078 Frplc, vaulted celllngs, lrg 1'Lba trplc:.J'aool $895 Prof clean non-amokar estate 1, • . •.r••• t II •Sltv1le or cozy cpl. Small , _ au l '-atl 152 """·.,.. spa. Prvt ba•~ony ,. · · · · · • ... e • "" 848 Amigos ay ~ 3Br furn Condo, mstr br (71 •) 673 •• ,.,,. DUPLEX-2Br 1ba ea. So-1br, frpl. no gar. utlls pd 28d 18a, cpta, drps, gar. Newly redecorated FULL OCEAN VIEW w/ba $340. 540-3492 ~5-2'444 Bank rec's, multiple sat of bOOks. Send resume to. Consumerhealth, Inc .. 1'401 Dove. Suite 290 . Nwpt Bch, CA 92660 .,. ~ of·PCH. $275,000. 521 $675. No pets. 722-8011 utlful new 2Br .2Ba No pets. Adlts pref $700 Chlld ok $795 No pats. Carnation By owner Around S800 rent/utlla Twnhmea. Pool, apa, ten· Lse. Avt 1/ 1 5'48-7234 •855--0665* Beach across street. 1 & 2 Prof/Fem 25+ non amkr, 673-02-' 1 or 673.1541 2BR h 11 PCH nls crt1, 011. patio, lndry Bdrms In Laguna Bch. If pref. oriental, shr pvt .,...._=----------'• ome o . hkup Micro, frplc, cable 28drm, crpts, drps Water 1Br 1Ba. 1922 Wallace. seeking etegan<:e you wlll home & pool. Backbay DUPLEX a real charmer. 539-6t91 agt cost TV. Several fir plant paid 636-•120 t-5PM Gar refng upstairs. No be impres9ed Npt. $350 5'46-a.'47 aft 5 only $239,000. Atlrac11Ye 2 st«y In Olde w/vlews. S875-S975. Cati 2566 Orange "B" .. $595 pets $510 Agt 550-tO 15 From $950. 49£-2265 Prof. Fem 30_..0 tO'Shr 6 UNITS 10 4 x gross. Un-COM. 3BR 2ba. No pets. Paul or Mllll Anna 2 Bdrm duplex, sgl garage. ·-•• llW LUXURY BAYFRONT lovely 2BR 2ba -+ den In believable loc. $750.000. Refs. $1350, •94-3082 495-6647 Alk about our ard ooo area $695 n ADVERTISING SECRETARY Puh Prop 720-9"22 Holiday Special! 'I · 0 5 5001 · $525/mo 1BR tBA, all 1500 sq tt. 2br. 2ba. fem. Turtlerock. Irv. $490/mo --------•I Charming cleen 2BR 1ba 5 ~ bltlns Laundry room, rm, loft, f/p, xtras, dbl • utll 85"-1679 meg ta .... l 24 houae. patio & garage. l..,.n luc• 2119 2BR 1 '~BAE/aide Twnhse. near t>eacti and shops. gar .. S 1350. 642-9666 Prof.IF seeking same !or fOlN) ADS ARE FREE Cal: Needed Ip assist ~•v newspaper Salel Depart· ment. Job duties lndude .. _ .... ___ If .... -UIUll $1000/mo Call 499-2101 $1795/mO. 4eR 2i~8A. 2 pvt patio. 276 Cabrlllo 735 W 18th St IEWPllT SlllES cute 2br 1ba. bOrder of EASTSIDE 3 br. beaut. re-LG '4Br 38a+ NP lam. frpls, gdnr, lrg yda. 2012 $675/mo 640-0839 TSl MGMT 642·1603 $925/mo. 3BR 2BA lower N.B.$285 mo:·5'48-7?M---------· 142-Mll anSWWtng--phonn. "T OOfd keeping, typing (60 wpm) and assistance In various projects. ~ resume or apply In per. son to: COLOWC!U BANl(eRO done, toe yrd. $7100. On. rm., trplc. South ol PCH. P 0.r t C • r O 111 • n r 2BR 1',.,Ba Twnhae. no llYf 11 llW unit, gar, laundry room, Prof M/F, apacious 3BR Found· Alaskan Melamute Open Sun. 2-5, 2308 Immediate occup $2000 MacArthur & FOl'd. Avail pets. no gar. Avail Jan 15. $625 _,., 2BA. 1BA. patio. ac ~e lrom "'-ach co•• h ..... b th I SI /N 1 d W-tmlnlster, 857-1031 _,., 509'~ ACACIA. 211 Ownr 759-8533 $565 • ... ., 7 o• ""' rv-""' . "" 18· .. .,, a · gar. ma e ater ew an • H ""' Im<>. ,..gt.,...,. " .. pool, laundry room East-210 Grant Close to bch $550 HB 8'4 t-6579 ----.. LG Attractive SBA 3BA 633-21 441· Days Only. 2BR 2'hBA condo w/gar 2BR lba pvt yard own aide loc., close to all TSL MGMT ~2-1603 873-0822 I P & ' ' 1-'9 E Ba Found Calleo cat, yellow Ill CAIYH Home. Convenient lo-New beautiful large 3BR ,,., m le to bch. ool spa. garage. New carpets & TSL ••our 1Y .,_ 1603 SPACIOUS APARTMENT Prof, reap person 10 shr lrg collar wlbell vie border of leli141 TIIHttry lr1qt 0.ut l1Hy Pllet UOW.l1yltrttt Cesta le11, Cl 12121 cation $159,500 Tenant 2BA. frplc, oar, w/d. S975/mo. 531-5575 paint. $530/mo. lmmed .., ..., 64"' 1 MILE FROM OCEAN dee NB home W/D. furn CM & NB 6•6·8771 1111~ occupied. 24 hr. notice 10 $1400/mo. 760-0909 *llTITllllll * occupancy. 851 -0'42'4 INewPort across the street. 642-2357 rm avail. $'450/mo, $100 Elegant 4 R. llbrary, show Marshal Plan Inc Nice cottage· 2BR 1ba 2BR 2ba on Victoria nrl (1) 28A 1'hBA. frpl $795 Westclltt 2BR 2BA. pool. cleaning. 631-3776 FOUNO:-Puppy on-ei 4'hBA home on large prl-Broker Linde or Claudla. lrplc 1 car gar Walk 10 Tll lllFFS Newport Bl. Squeaky 121 Lg bach 5475 utll Incl $ Camino Drive, Costa 11ate lot· with pool and (2 13) 450-0415 bctl ·s975/mo 673•1039 2200 sf Condo/Home clean w/freah paint.I (3)Sml bach 5400 utll tncl frplc Yr lee. 900/mo Resp F 25 seeks same F Mesa. 5'40-1496 spa. Pastoral view over · · 2 Mair BR's+ BR suite. 0 9 2 Call Jolene 646-6398 22·28. To find & rant apt -- golf course and lake. E11· HPfl FlllLY 11. 3B• F/P 0 -..oooks pool $595, no peta. 990-2962 1 ~sh Props 72 • •2 In NB or CM 675-72'49 Lost butterfly pin. red l1t1 lltn/ltlt& Ott. Panded and enriched. In· 1mmac. 3BA 2ba. hm. New Cetta •na 2124 2 ca"'r'gar. i'mmv~late wings.. diamond center. vu 2Br 1 '~Ba townhouse. I Nice 2Br 2Ba. bltna, d/w, Resp, prof fem to thr Irv Famlly helrloon eludes antique statuary, cptsl palnt Xtra lrg family 1 . lncida gr nr, Occupancy S 1800 per mo. Bltlns, garage, patio.I S625 No pets. N/smkrs lip.ii 111u' "nglt' Ont' home. Non-smkr s330 + REWARD. 983_0219 tor Newp<)rl Center CPA. hand carved hardwood room w/used brlcil fire-2 be Mesa VMde loc No pets. non-smokers $725 No pets 645-4837 642-7528 or 760·1'418 b-rwo bt>droom dph 'h utlls & dep. 6Sl--0503 floors, Greet fabrlca and place. $13'4.000. Avail. 1/20/86. Raia, (11.a) tl• .... I B 2 LOST Diamond Ring. Fine beneflta & advance· ment for a11prd relleble appllcant. 759--0101 other decorator Items. Agt.Pa1Cobb675-2013 1645 Labrador Dr, • • ~ •· ••• •2Br2BanrSCPtza,S.A.,NICE large 3 drm ba, Rmmt needed lor Matr Menssolltalre.REWARO. 144-IOIO ·~rt ltac• I Agl/Ownr 559-6221 *"' lllFFI* Patio. carpor1, pool, I encl Jar, ,no50peta. Mesa br/ba/gar In 3br 2ba hm 673-7704 IEPllTlllT en $700. No Pete 722-8011 I del ar 7 /mo. Avail btwn OCC/N B r In C M E11per. lndlvldual wlttl .-------•I* BUY l·n BIGCYN• 2BA 11,.,BA TwnhM unit. 1 SPACIOUS. exec .. bay lmmed. 364·6056 Iv msg ~.25 650· .,· •• ., .. Loat fem Aust. Shepttard, 0 l E II h kll •750 V:-.. etanant remod 2 Lg 2Br 1•LBa twnh ... •aty... ... mo. -~ goo n~ s a 11, car gar /mo "'"· -• • · ,. "'Pvt B f le 1 1 blk & wht wltan on Jan 1 UMllUOllllS '4Bdrm 2'h Ba.ss25.ooo 631-11690r 673-3117 BR qelreat SHOO.mo Apt w/patlo. yrd & gar 1 r, rp ,poo,pato, SC Plza $320/mo Incl all lnCM.957-6160 S1rong typngrand die; Four 2 bdrm condos In Open Sun Ag1 75&-3477 YOUNG FAM Ideal '4 BR. $695 No pets 5'46-5605 gar. No pets 399 w Bay * 'ln Isl year's rent utlls. Fem n-tmkr lhr taphone or shorthand super location Steps to •NPT HEIGHTS FIXER 2 BR 1 t>C: dbl gar, avail. 2•.; ba Townhome, avall St. S615 650-6357 w/aame 2BR 2BA '4-ple11 LOST male Gold Lab, helpful Apply In pereon community tennis & Low dn, asaum. 2Br, lg rot now. $725/mo No pets. at S 1350 mo. *WTllll* 11111 llOATilll FURNISHED or Must llke cats. 556-2269 HarbOI' & Wiison. CM on with ras~e to Mr beacha Sh0'1 walk to S 149 900. Agt. 759-5080 5'48 Bematd. &46-3627 lutl1a1I0.. ~~~,~~! 1!!~~~a~~ S756tmo 2BR 1 '/tBA UNFURNISHED Sep entr bdrm/bath. 12121 Reward. 646-~ 13 ~~!:· ~r~~t~ ~~ Lldo Vlllge. shops& r .. I 111••-MS1ttll 3BA2ba,frplc.newcrpt,2 640-1i560 hot water. Incl encl 8"· Townhouse Greenbelt. Balboa lsland,$367.Avt LOST . Male Poo -SOClates, 1'401 Quall St, 1aurants S 199.000 each -• car gar. 109 cov patio. no 3BR 2 2323 ELDEN. "'----1 ·5. laundry rm All b1tln1 flTll(SS 1115. Fem only. 675-6603 dle/Terrief ml11. No 10. Newport Beach. Ca CATHRYN TENNILLE Absolute bargain! Pres.-..a<a. $98.5 mo ~··9079 be duple•, upstairs. ..,..,..,, CE•TEIS Ttl .. $ W tclltt Ch I t ,..,.. --f 1 J ... ~k Be w 11 ., .. ,78.,~ 2078 Thurln , "' , --es area r a mu 833-0070 (8am-5pm) GE 159.9100 To plaoe your IM8lag9 befOI'• the reading public, phone Dally Piiot Cluslfied, 642-5678 tlgloua 3 bdrm, 2'"' bath rp c. ac. pvt ton...... tty a .......-""' TSL MGMT ~2• t603 Swt•-. ..i..5 Studenl to ahr 3BR eve Apricot color. Ae-exec twnhme. Pool, ape 3+ Bonus rm. garage and Bltins. 2 car parking """• -~ t Bctt / d ~6-3 77 --1--11-._--, .. ---~ tennis Try 10% down. much m0<a $625 .. cred W/D. 50 yrds 10 bch. •Lrg 1 & ,~Bdcoolrm, S530newty SHARP 2BR cptl & drps ~ ..,t! Strry, wp2-'51mttomeo. "~2~1!!':9 war 1 IHJ 81 Call Patrick r.•nore ci'lfg 5'47-2787 $1395/mo f,'li· Can redec.,qu..,,, -U9 dlshwutter' gara.na no 11 ,.ts ...... , s: .,.. .._ LoatSlameaewtit/blueyea Balboa Peninsula com. Deb .. ,_ 731 1"'8 k d & 1864 Monrovia. 5'48--0336 ' -•-· Want__. mature/.. non t II/ .... _ 32-.. pany desires mature 760-8702 or 63 -1288 Avail mid Jan S500's 2BR .,.... • ' w n • pets. $640/m<>. 5-'8-6279 optt '-ilJ I t1 I. "" ... gray • aara """ '"" energetic person f« ......_ 2B ... lndry hkups ba-•-aft 8 wtldya •STUNNING Lg 1 & 3Br d amkr to stir my ground fir N.B. REWARD 673-"968 I , __ , _.. "' """ 2Ba Garden Apt. Pool Spacious 3br 2ba trplc, ~ home nr Fashion Is. & era eter ..... dutlea. Hrs bltlns must see 539-6190 3BR 3ba condo. Bayrldna e carpet paint & 00 Reward $250. blkltan ..... w, .. ,_ •• 50 h S-'--•-$555 & $725. 710 W 18th n w • UCI. Room "flprtv. bath, .... ft"""'· ~. r. -agt eost Pin D. Highly upgraded drapes S895/mo. Chlf. TV, laundry, pool, Huna, Doberman.Injured back orientated co. 67S-5644 Cll ILIF,s $1600/mo. 830-0853 $360 1BR Oplx. 1 parson. dren welcome. 964-2087 Apartmenb kite prlv. S300/mo Incl. leg. Vic C. M 722·1812 llll••~ lfF.,.. lrll I e' -3BR 3BA POO Non-amok« ooty. w. l7th. tll 644 7097 -""' BLUFrF.-S 3 R 2 "'ba~t"h Lrg,2BR 1BA house w/gar , . I Near Whittler. 548-3629 TOP AREA MESA PINES Newport Buch So u . • REWARD. Siberian Husky COMPUTER Experience & yard. $750/mo. Ask for $1800/mo, gndr & pool , BACH w/carport $540 ltatall Waatt4 blk/Wht male brn/blue tor data proce 1 WM*J< ' · ..... . by owner. $210,000 Jlmt aot 83 t-7370 malnt Incl 160-1399 3BR 1'hBA dsh wahr, garb. 1BDAM w/garaoe 1640 1 7011 I 1'1h '-l1t•1·I eyes nda med. Bal. Pen Good typing. or,..'!i..~~ ~~~~====~-=:......:~C~a~ll~7~60~-~1~1~08~~ Compare! You'll rent 3BR SBA 3BA Somerset. Sea-dlsp. TwnhouM style. PATIO pool, spa. Quiet. 1,11 On\1•11 Compatible male writer 873-8017 or 494-3685 tlonal and phone ;'ika -wind Communlty pool. s725tmo. 9&4· 1-'442 No pets 5'49·2447 • 6'•1 '>11 l age 32· seeks a peaceful WHITE M/POODLE found must Room to grow with 2BA nr OCC S750 lncls room rental to llve/work ltt u ...... y .. Sell Y .. Prtpttt,! Cal ClantfW, 642-5678 for Information & surprisingly low cost. gar too• Kid 539-6191 view 759-0540 agt $550, MOVE-IN BONUS WE IFFEI I 011101 Nvwport B4'<Hh No In. Wiii pay rent &/or per-vie t7tti and orange C.M. company. For Info call agt cost lllO'S Jiil JIA 1Bdrm, AJC, pool. carport. Want • Mlectlon of greet 1\1\I' ""'"~ .\vo "U" form handyrn1n1t1ou:aes1t 650·8109 863-1901 ext 217 Eastslde clean 3BR lBA A tasteful decOI' w/frplc & No pets. Nr SC Plaza. llvlng7 We can otter any-duties Xlnt bac k-Sc•Mll Gen 01c Secre1arlal !>09- hse Dbl gar. No pets. gar 539-6191 agt fee (714JOe6-1138 thing from a small apt to 1111 lhll•I ground/refs. Call Jeff IOI' laatru .... -a 3112 ltlon In a busy ofc tor a 1795/mo. 5'48-6&80 a '4 bdrm hOUM. If 1006c· 645·1104 resume.(714)980-1'481 ... local pV1 homeownefa BIO CANYON Condo. Golf 1 I CM NB HB .,.,.. M u..1 Elalde 2BR, remodelecf. fmtge 2BR 2ba. pvt gar, ,,,,nk not us' flret' 1! that Ma1 prot fem nd• room • •P ~ ::C·a ~~~1~•: 1,;_~ beam cells, lg yd Chlld & pool/tennis S 1500/mo cholc. of 10.al llvlng ka CJ .. ntt 1171 w/pvt ba. Kit prlv No ON LAND ANO SEA well w/people. StartlnQ pet ok $795 780-8862 759-5597, 497-5471 TSL MGMT &42·1603 f BR near rn Hospt: ~:tw.~~.f!,;~~h~~· ..iit Ti1'1ili.u Mlary $1150/mo. A~ EXTRA pluatl 4 rm. tV. ba BLUFFS 3Br 2Ba. new tel View Patio. Stove. GO cations accepted 1~m pool hm, great area, Cf Pt. drpt, paint, O/W Cpt/drpa. S500/mo. Avail CU If ti fer •••• Enro41 now •1 LDEN ·F, •tarting Jan 8 $750 mo + sm ,...,. + S 200 7 Jan 21. 5'43-7375 -·· WESTC:,081.,.\E~~ Shores Com"""° cred chg 547.2181 1 No pets 59-0666 vu. Lndry hkups, 2 car •• •1 •<l"O<JVV ~ AllOC. 3365'4 Niguel G........ ""'" .... ,111,_ ••oo Fcu0r~d0datu211B•r oc2Be~n. vtewall gar. $750 mo avt lmmed lntll Ctllt ••trt 175 · Eaatelde Colla . ...,.... hor• Dr, Laguna Ntguet uvu __ ... .,, ..,. ... ,.., ...._~•ftU 498-7"478, 760-1313 u•• Meta, •Ingle. 278 _ .. lFI•• bch bungalOw nice E·llde amenities $1490/mo ~u-.,wv .... Cebnllo. 640-0839 _, address Utll• free Calf R e I s re q . 0 Dy I .... • 2t4I 28R 1(~8X Adu' conao S80 SI le -C•tw Can HH On• girt ottlc•. oood 539-6191agteoet 642-0860.avea631~4897 .... ,... fBR.'6i4'1troni.m.et1 WID,refrlg,a/e,dblgat: 1tou1ge~1y°!2s~m; cAilb CARE'™· Lt ~~7· gOOd ~ltl. lln I UDT LEASE Big Canyon condo Immaculate large Garden utll paid 207 Chicago. MC gate. pool. S850 m<>. Place C M M&-5137 hlt<kpg. Meu Vero.. 2 or apptm 756-1887 Westside 2 BR 1 ba BHutlful golf co~rae Apia. 8"utlfulfy land· Apt 4. $425. 985-"9S4 1tt/laat & MC. &45-0687 . . Qlrla. 2:30 to 8;30 pm. PIT RECEPTION! w/cerport Pvt tnco patio view. pvt oar. comm pool, scaped grounoa. poof{ 2 R 1'hBA T h N $800 lrg 3BR 2BA 2 car El slde Coat a Mau M·F, 548-1270 From 12:30-5·30 Mon-Fri t I Lind 720 1444 spa, patlo/deek. No pets. wn M ew • ' 110<,e, angle w/eteotrtc call 833-&48• . yard $815/mo 692-1700 enn 1 • • I Bdrm S595-M05 crpt1. drpe, bulltln1. trplo, oar w/lndry hkup Nr SC encl. 95. &46-0988 Child care Medad· my IN. u LARGE lBr. am yrd tor G!Qanttc 3 r 2Ba w/gar 28drm 11/•B• S70S..S7 10 en<:t oar w/alec opnr Plu 963-7055 hofM, S.-12 dayt p/mo, 1 -l 1iii111iiipiii1n1•1iiimie1iyr - pets quiet ar .. l"SS + Walk to bCh a L'do Via. 2250 Vanguard 640-H26 S700 Oulat 536-0921 ttr~t f & 2 vr olde 559-7477 PtT S*'IOnlble mMure ored'. chrg. 547-2787 S 1300/mo yrty 96£...89~ ----,-,.1725 2BA 2BA. gar. lndry. Nice •lac. a..tal1 STORAGE d XRXdes pereon f or property -•II 2Bdrm 1V•Ba 71..-4 plax Oulet 1traet 1 121120' & 12x21' dY mQmt eo W/buay PhOMI lllHY ... '1 -•rww• T 151E.2111 5'4S.-2408 mlle to beaCh No~...... Npt Bcti/Coata M ... area HOUSECl.~NING 1-5:30. Mon-Fri. Must ,.,.U~t' 0..11' ~ J\.,. ' -/) ~ ~C.• ... , Brand MW 3br 2'Aba f/p, Lrg 3BR 2'hBA, 2 car {Jar-1650. Cail JMn 831· 1288 I 24 Hr ac:ceu. Ml-3171 W~ ;::c'·~ ~ have good telerone .. ~"-l'CIU ~" "' ('.,<.r;;, .,.., fnc yd. dbl gar, pet ok, pk age, pool, tennis CIOM 'NE!.atflleld em n-smkr. k tc . p 1. If"""' ...,_.1 1111..;, • M"" maMert. &'42· 180 ------.., c~• • ~ -----ootor S 1095 642-Hee to beech. lt200/mo. .,, --C .. S C Pl S .,,. ._ • """' TSL MGMT &42-160G 1i'14'n;,2 0. M;~·,6:3 2 5. LI. .... ,... MM111 .._.. 1!!'111•11 ·~":' ... ~!..,:. :: M ... Verde 3BR 2BA. Vu, NEWPORT HEIGHTS-IPlll•ll -.. -r ...,.., W ~ ..,_,.•or•,_._,. -d• nu crpt, paint. St200 Cle !ti ~... Lrg room, lndry fee. leal ... a/llllee lat MT.a lkil!il a "'"at. F0< in..: gdnr Incl 640.1539 2b~~ prfr~.co~~~· 3N': Utce brand MW! A" utlll11ae Lrg 38R 2BA, c:tpta. $250/mo Raft raq'o. -1711l WOAKINO SUP!AVISOA ~ ca(liJen 752-tW I T R A M W H I MESA VERDE ExecYtlve emOllera. raft a credit paid. Pool, get, no peta. bulttlne, frplo. Obi gar, COit• Mesa. 5'48-1372 Al!.SfDIHTIAL CLIANfNO I I I I l'. •BR 3b1. A9ctwood apa. s10001mo + 1atllaat•"" 2Bdrm 1Be. IMO wtd hll\19 '900 Vwy ij'/FM~e 8 3000, 1ae,.t41& ll09Q. 19.50-M.ao!Tlt _...c1100 lllUl .. .-i. . _.._ 301 Avocedo '42·N50 quiet 536-09.21 iatr "'in N. · ·~ blk Ft 1817 WESTCLIFft, .... --•• ....._.__ 2 .... ........-= -.............. Garden!"" & ape_ .. _ g .. /elec &42·2515 to ~ti ...... •"83 .................. '""'"'"""'' , •• ........., -""'- ..__c_A_L ... L_t.....-tl ; ··~.. '1.:r.".:s:r.,~:: WOOOLAI• ft.LAGI ............ ~ ... -. ·'i!:::.~';"; .. · e; ~.:.:.:a; =.'=".a:= . f I I r r . l 1• 1•. bfl4M. "'" 1nc1 ~~.5n'lia~ DAllTMlllll 1ete111 .... 11 2111 b•"' aw 1eo.1m .,... ... .-. Mon a Spm.144-1114 '°' '"" l ~• S500 ... L.llml IUll . . Wed. &42-tl24 1-tliiliilUUii--- 1 M Y T H ' • TILJalT 171-1111 Sl'loutt v.iue 28R 28a t I tftfO't our ptdtll ,tytt lllb Qvitt, comloft.tllf hwlftl 1725 • 18 monthl MIO UfOl"tl hper'd ~ -• -I I . I r 01•~·. 0•111\lllOft OI • bltln• provtded ~rptt -M to lrttWlf'' So ~I 'Ill• ... ol!ly lllN!lltn It IM 11111 • ...... s..o aq fl. Aeoept. ,__ .... .,,. "' ....': H 11111"11111 . • • _ _ PLUSH CONDOS Over thru·out SHO Hurry ,._ ........... ""'.,ts •t•H Wltty rentala Low rat• .,. 2 *99 P¥t ofttoee. o.. ' .......,._°"" .. -------_,::r"'.,..,"r!.:=...~':' stream• & fella. Gar S3M19la4Jt'-btKll \HfiOU•-""'" '"\.~ S1~5 & Up/Wkly. Cotot 1ttftf,deluxtofftoebtd0 =.,.0tr,Cc,,,:!~~ llftl11jatc ope.q'a.a f O A l J [ C f w/09flr, mlc;ro. w/d hllup ...., ..... • ~.... TV, maid MNlce, ,,_ on IWdl. 0 C Alfpott tedlr ~ 142 .. 142 ,_,. ..,...,.... -.-. ._-,-,--..,--r....,1.,., '"'• c..-.._. ,..,..~,.........,, !Br 1750 & 28t $1100 VerMlflae 28R 21A. MC, coftee. hatted pool I .,.. =· o..el09 t Mcuratc 'YPt"O. fOOd . . . . _ . ..., '!i • .... -:'1-~ 28r wt a.c:luded vltw OCNn -Mw Avall lnwned. ........ '1epa to ooean . .otdl'a llPt., lll•lll1 ..,,..._ AfCY ptt°"9 "'*"*• cfe1111 '--...._~......__._ __ ..., ..._ ._ -,.. ..._.. SNO Avt now Me-2447 LT~~.;!. ~!1tl; a¥811 Ha N COtet Hwy, L ._. ortlnled. °'9Mt* a r r r r r I' I MITll. lllR•• L.agune leech,·~'* eqlft .... N;._~c Il l !! ~:c.~=~:: HOT A LllT AO!'NCY .. • ... AlrPOft. ...._ _, •Mii rffutM .. ,ti I I I I I I I "-dy mid month MOO't Wtlty ,..,,, ... ~ 11191. N to...._ 0..-. -.-, ~·to• YIP 2bf2baw/19"ndty.hlcupe "41·1• 1121.50 wtl: I ~· 227• iof 2 ..... Udo.-.. W11t•ldlw. NI llM 11'1 V.ort. at., 0... BEST Rentala S3t-flt1 Nwpt~. CM ...... 7~ au1mo. t7M1'0I """"*· .... 71~ ~CA tlU1 • t. . .. lllllTllY /....,, ~In. 3 ywa ...,_ lelM:it. Strong •Mtt. min. 18 per min. Adm.,.tratlw type, 1rtreatlW & pettC>nabte. 2t1-1044. "'"'"'-tor N.I . Tax LAwyw, toe> ulafY baNd on ~ Do rou •ant to ITllk• catlOM. Laur• &44-1512 ll'Mt moMy,h•~H<*· -11 lent benefltt Wld Ille ... ""-llM. -·I c:utlty of llWOtlllng 1n , A11llor Hekl SELF thflvinv lndu1try1 11 90 STARTER to manaoe comp111e 1ppt1c111on tmall offtoe. ~ r9-Ind IOMrltew II sume + ~ r~ 901 W 16t~ SI ment• to: The Delly Pltot. Mon. lws l Wed 3 ~ PM' Ad 11137, P.O. 8°" 15e0, l-' 0ppori,..,,, !lllOlort• Colta MeM, CA t262t ,.._-------J Tte /!rejfll ClaM/ltst1araat1 Siii SS20 ...... IUITY~~im:ifi~~-Ill YH Al lllllUL t d manl Rent Of comm Work tor the orlglni l '$ c Pim .... 557-223-4 Coco's! S~AVERS & · ' COOK S needed Apply In 11111911IH•IAL l*IOn 3-5pm, 2305 e. e~O(." c0. SM.ta Ana. entry C out H w y. c d M i..-trainee. Ho exp. MC. 873·ll053 5-45--1008 aft. 2pm. EOE IUZBI Need Experienced & Appl'entloe. 842·8237 Pllllllll ••••llUT lllLYPUT 330 W. Bey Street Colla Meaa.. Ca Of call 842-4321. UYSlll O&FE Located In the Balboa Fun Zone. Now accepting appl- tcatton1 lor 111 positions. Call lor Interview 64&-5591 \ . SIPWTI llllPUI DELIVERY DEPARTMENT McLAREN'S BMW M·F tin 9 S-S tlll 6 626 S Euchd St Fullerton CA 7 14-680 6300 213·691·6701 T • r--• •. ' ' . • 911. • PORSC.H£ AUDI (HfVllOUT Hlt 11•61 QualU11 S.ln " ~•vie:. CHIC" IVERSON •~ £ Coaal'Hw11 Newpon kid> 673-19 .. SUBARU ·~ GL Wagon 4 wl\I dr~ Auto PW. 26K rTu "' rac:to. & snow clla1ns S6900 646-4418 TOP SSS PAii F0< Pampered Mercedes Benz 1 .. llATI CUI I Top Mercedes Pnces Paia CALL PETER"or RAY MIU If •HTS llal•ICOU °' ,.. • 213 ()( 71' 637-2333 =-= TOY OT A 82 C0<-ot11s;c;d amtlm itlnt cond 1 yr warr pp S5000 643-5192 .......... TOYOTA 83 Corella SRS. 0 • N A · 1 bl · ..... · 10" SSP<l Diii dllc mdl em/tm pen1ngs ow va1 a e ,..., -..w. a c tot wnl, dnt ~ 371( ~ m1 S5900 848-5192 CAR ROUTES gMJi• •m ·:I;~~~-:; Earn Extra Ca•h , a:,;:-&'!/: portat:>le mini vacuum F D II Of Th/ p Learn abOYt leastng In or • very , I • .,,., QUf OlflGe near South HUNTINGTON BEACH FOUNTAIN VALLEY INDEPENDENT Deliver 1 day a week. No collecting. no soliciting. Must have dependable car. truck or station wagon and insurance. CALL 842-1444 Ask for JoAnne Craney 'DATSUN 81 2eovc CoastPlela ownr 10 m1 al'wayS gar· 1Aprit 1 nr I aged All •~tras t>eau1 AU.-UYllS LUii met red Buy f()( wflOI&. ll•t U2-1Hl sale 964-4~ Pvt pty VW 64 MICtob\4 25 Win· HONDA 8 1 Prelude clnt oow S6000 Senoua 1n- cono loaded Musi sell I vest°" only 497-3779 5'450 640· 7628 • vw 71 amttm 8~ JAGUAR eo XJ6 exit I stereo Micneltn tir•. cond green wlbtSCU1t 1n1 Od cond S 1575 673-6874 I lo rru Best otter FlNlnC· -------,..---1ng ava11 633-3660 VW 78 Rat>bll Fact tunr1, l'lfledS woA.. make ofter KARMANN GHIA 71 I 852-9300 days or 1 owner car canary ~-546-2336 eves Doug I low Fit as a Flddlel --~250 673·9247 llW 80 Vanag<>11 CemQer a1c. CNISie cntr1. am/Im MB 85 500 SEC Mtnt cond stet'eo S6000 642· 7190 9K m1 Lthr int LoedeO _ 5'4 91( ODO 720-0781 MBZ 76 S 10 000 10 80 PO RSCHE 912E 76 $16000 S48-1412 CtaHlfled Ads .,. tl'll 1n1wer to • 1ucceestu1 gatl!Q9 Of yard .-1 tt's • better -Y to tell tT\0(9 peo()tel P1iatiaf '"!OMEOWNE.R EXPERTS Int ElCt Acoos Ceiltng.s LIC=28859" 631·9295 INT EXI 20 Year-. E.Jlper Average Room S29- E•ter,or Stucco $130• -natenats 642-0442 PANTER NEEDS WORK! IN E.Yt C@<llng.I ret1n cab 1261 yrs exp wort! guer DIVIS Painting 964-3837 .. • * ~ C.. DAILY PILOT/~. JeNw)' e,. 1Ne 58 62 65 J D)\Y'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE PtllUC fl)TIC[ DOWN I Two-f0049d 2~ 3 """ .. • l"-Four -5 W.,,t~d e Plunder• 7 ~City a Tower Of l.Ofldofl wlfden t Pronoun tO Trouble tt AWW9 of t2 - -libOUl t3 Entnnced 22 0..tlned 25 ··-of thee" 'Z7 AllM. 2t TurblM 30 O.trlmentll 31 Window J*1 32J--. bell«. 33 Of Mrth 3" Tune 35 I.Ag 3e Put down 3e 0.CrMMe •O Cletgymen •2 HObo "3 V«ilde Pta.IC *>TICE tO •s Preferably •a Morter'• J*1ne< •8 Aft trentter 49 Under c:onlkler e 1lon 50 Fel>lie 51 Splurge 52 Smooth 53 Go by !rein 54 RubbefMClt 56 -tvll 59 Teke 1 stab II 11 t2 t3 rtBJC fl)TIC[ FICTITIOUS .USINEH FICTITIOUS IUllNESI FICTITIOUI BU ... 18 NA• ITAHMENT ..,... IT.An...,. NAME aun•NT The lollowing PetlOMS are The lollowlng persons ate The following penons ere SOtJTH COUNTY VOLKSWAGEN & ISUZU THAlll YOO F~2m IN U.S.A. Aft) TRYING HM[O TO BC ~ 1 • IALEI •SERVICE •PARTS ·LEASING ... - Ml.IC NOTICE M mJV Cl.EAN, P'ICmtOUI Mf!='· • _... ~ "'f:: I • C 911 " ·-LOW M" •&GE um nan.C ' ., ..... • ,.... ..,.. "... IUHW COUM' .......,. TM~_..... Ml .......... r ,.... Dl9TMCT COUln' 01 THI ITAT'f DOMl!STIC l IMPORT dOfflQ ~ ee; W... .... • .......... .,_. CIW11W.1)191'NCT OI CAUPC>MIA CAR81 TRUCKS I VANS. Collet 1r1tt1tt C.., 214' r etree e.... 4'• 111 Ofl C~ ,()19 nt1 COUNTY - ~~.:_Unlt,,Qoete ,.,, ... , .... ..._ ..._ CAM•'flll"1 i MOM.NOi ....... CA r~7 •:re:.............. CY .. -M{t(a) ' In tM metttt of tM AdOC>- • • • • Mw1ln ,r.,,. letr9'1. ..... ,.. ...... NaT AllllNDID ltlon PelttlOn of STEPH!N 2760 Sen CatlOa Lane ......... ,.. ... .... al.WDMI VON STOVALL. Ad()pllng eo.1a ...._CA t2at , ...,. ..... e •...... PA1!8TON GUILLORY, Stt(>p.,.,,1. eo....._ $40-0330 Thi• bu1IMH I• OOf\• lllM1«1t1•1ne..11 ....... Plaintiff I CAM MOt ADIMl1 •---------dl.IC1ed by. An~ .. • • 1a 11•1, ,_. vs. CITATION ANO Menln Frencll .. ,. ..... -...... • .... CITY OF ANAHEIM,. Mu·1 MOTICI °' Thie N*'*" ._Ned ...... • 1t1111•11 e e nlclpel C«porallOn; JIMMIE .. ANNO with IM Cfxlnty Clttlc of Of.. _. ...._ • .,_. ..... 0 . KENNEOV, lndMduelly I TO: STEVEN CHARLES enge County on 0.C 30, ("9~ ... ._.. ..... and In 1111 offlcill c.peclty .. ,SHEPARDSON. 1NS Jene. 1S, 20, ,.... ....... ' Olllef of Polloe: GEOAGE YOU ARE HEREBY OR· ,_ .... --BLAIR. lndlYlduelly. Ind In DE.RED to appeer °"Mon P\lt>IW!ed Orenoe COti9t Tl'le ~Ind lddf ... of hit otftdll ~ 11 elf.ti. 2•. 1Ne 11 i:30 a.111. In Delly PllOI Dec 30. ,N6. Jtln IM court ... (El nomtn y Polle• Ottloer; WILLIAM IOepertrMnl ta of the Su-e. t~. 20, 1Ne. dlreoo6on de It eorte •>: HOPKINS. lndlvldually, •nd1perlor Courl ol Orenge M~asa MUNICIPAL COURT OF In Illa offlclll ~lty .. ,County located It 700 Civic ---------CALIFORNIA, WEST 'OR-An1llelm City Attorney: Cef'ller D<lve W•I. Sant• =:-=-=-=--.;..,-,-.,.....,..-rtlllC fl)TIC( ANOE COUNTY JUDICIAL BR.AO OATES. lndMdullly, Ana. Celilornla. 10 allow ---------DISTRICT, a , .. 1 Thlr1eenth and In Illa otflciel capeclty •• C*IM why Ille Court enould '1C11TlOUI ~II StrMt, W•tmlntler, Ceff. Sherltf.cotoner of Orenoe nol mllke an ord« deelatlnO apolle whit, e cyt. Runt NAMI ITATWmWT tornle 928t3. County; CECIL HICKS. lndt. Derek Tllom11 Sl\epardton The tollowfnO per90n1 ere Tiie name. addreat, end vidullly and In hit official e&· to be ldOt>ted. •---------doing but!Me1 u; letlpt\One number of pllln· pectty u Dlttrlet Attorney In You haYtl • rlGlll to IPpelf FLOWERS. ETC , 8901 tllf't ettorney, or pllllntiff end ror Ille County ol Or· In l*IOrt end/or by counNI S1llport Or. Hunting ton without an 1ttorney. la: (El ange. THE COUNTY OF OR-"you with to be repreeentecl Beach, 928"6-28455 nombre, le c:tlrecci<>n yet nu-ANGE, RICHARD WILDER by 1n ettorney and Ille Court. Eaperanza l. Quinn, 8901 mero de telefono del aka RICHARD OROSS. lndl-detlfmlne• you c1nnot 1f· Sell port Or. Hunllnglon 1~0 del demlndente, o vldual!S' Ind In hla olflcill ca· rOfd 1n 1ttomey. one will be BMeh 928"6-28455 del clemendent• que no s>Klty 11 1111 agent lor tlle eppolnted tor you wltl\OUI Owy L Quinn, HOt $all.. Ilene:• 1bogedo. "): Orenge County Sllerilf's Of· c:halge port Or. Hunllngt<>n 8eecll ROGERS & Dl8, A Lew Cor· flee.; Ind DOES t through 11 you tllil to appetr'el the 926411-2e&5 por 1t1on, 17 11 t 8Hch t60, lnclullve. Oetendenta. time and piece eleted 1boll9. . Tllll bu1lne11 11 con· Boulevard, Suite t03, Hunt· TO THE A80VE·NAMED the Court mey go rorw1rd OLDS" '80 CUTLASS duc;ted by: hueblnd Ind lnQJon 8e1ch, C1lltornl1 DEFENDANTS, You are wllh the ld®llon 61 !toe e tt 2 d wife 92M7·.S9" hereby IUmmoned end r• minor c;Md roug lam r, very Etperenu L. Quinn DATE: (F'ectl1) AUO 22 quired to 11rve upon DATED: DEC 23 1985 ~ cond., '" new ur... This a11temen1 ... ftled 198• MICHAEL J. CISARIK, Pl1ln-GARY L GRANVILLE. 00. MS-5392 with the County Clerk of Or· fttoMrd J. Wecll, Ci.ti, llft't 111orney. whoH Id· Clerk of the Couri. J OLDS '81 Delta 88 Royale. ange'County on Dec. 3, 1915 by: Den1M AlerCM, Deputy dress la. 250 North Golden Carton. 0epu1y Fully eqpt • dr good nMOOO P\lbllshed Orange Cout Circle Drive. Suite 201. ~· ~. • mem· d S2s0o &40-'8' 17 Publtshed Or1nge Cout Diiiy Piiot o.c.mtier t8. 23, Santi Ana. CA 92705 an a-of ~. Moon a · ' D11ty Piiot Dec. 30, 1985. 30. t985, J1nuary a, t988 an-10 lhe complelnt HtnttcM. 15'6 a .. t 17th OLDS'83 <A.ltlass Ciera. Jen 6. 13, 20. t988 M-858 which Is herewith served at,..t, lune A, latlta AM, 091. V6. Loaded. Clean. M·888 upon you within 20 d1ya CA l2701 (11•) ..,._, $5000/olr. 63t·0288 ~ ---------1tter tervlC41 of thl1 sum-A1torney1 for '9"UoMr, Mark aft 8pm P\llllC fl)T1C[ P\RIC fl)TJC( mont upon you, exc1ut111t1 ot 1Tt"41N 90N ITOVAU. ------'-;;...;.;.~--the day ot MMc:e. If you 1111 Publitlled Ofange Cou1 IUMllONI FICTITlOUI .,._,, lo do to, )udgmenl by d• Dally Piiot Janu1ry 8. t3, 20. (CITACION JUDtCIAL) NA• ITATl-..r l1ult will be tllten 1Qalnst 27, 1986 NOTICE TO DEFENDANT· The following pert0n1 ere you ror the relief demanded M-889 · doing buSlneat u : VKV [)e.. In the complllnL Nil.IC NOTICE FtCTITIOUI ., ..... NAME ITA'TfMENT The following pertons ere buslneu as: Weal Cout Foreign Auto Electrlc. 21•8 Newport BIVd. Unit F la M .... CA 92627 Martin Fr•ncls Barrett. 2750 Sin C1rlos Lene, Coata.M .... CA 92627 -:----:---;=7 Thl1 business Is con- (Avlto 1 Acuaado) DAVID velopment Co t725 DATE MAY 16 1985 BARNES. 1nd DOES t • through s lnciullve Monrovia. C-•, Costa Men, LEONAN> A. MOINAH, YOU ARE BEING SUED CA 92627 CLE .. K , aY: DIVINA BY PLAINTIFF'(A Ud leesta Mlehael Vall, 306 s. Bly BOONYAPTIAK, Deputy · . Pt . Balboa lellnd. CA 928452 Clerk demendendo) ROGERS & Pellf -C Vall, 497 Cotti jSell) DIB. A Law Corporlllon. for-M .... CA 92627 Publlllled Orange COISI ~ ~~i:. :i~ROGERS. ~leheet M K~ 1682 D11ly Piiot January 6. 13. 20. You ha" 30 CALINO.Aa. Impala Ln , HUnlington 27. t986 • Beech. CA 92646 M·890 DAVI lfter thle -~ This buslnesa Is con- Ml.IC *>TICE 8UPllUOl9 COURT Of' CAUl'OMIA, COUNTY °' OAANGE I In the Matter or the Appll- cauon or HOVSEP D TASH-4 JIAN on betlllf or DIRAN HOVSEP KIAAl<OZ 1nd VEEKEN HOVSEP le~ on 1ou to ... a tf P"'rttlen '"'""'" at dueled by a joint venture tftle court Peter C V111 Pl&.IC fl)TICE A lettef.Of .,.._cell wlU Tllll statemenl wu filed,__ _______ _ not protect rou; ,_ ""' with the County Cieri! ol Or· K 22317 Wfltteft '"POllM ,,..., . be •nge County on Oecembef FtCmtOUa auw18 In Pfopef 1ege1 '°"" N ,_. 10, 1985 NAME ITAHMENT Weftt the coutt to Met JOW ,_ The following pettonS ere PubllShed Orange Cout doing bU$tllell as· DB AS· ...,_...,..., __ ...., ..... 1ducted by; An lndlvidu1I CAO ·79 seaan a; ViUe. Martin Francia Barrett fully equip, ••It cond Tiiis at1temen1 was filed S527S 631·6279 with the County Clerk or Or· -Inge County on ~ber CAD '82 CdV. blk. clasak: 27. t985 style, 26K ml Perlect F-.7 cond S 11 .000 675-6896 Publl9hed CWenge Com ---------Delly P110t Dec 30, t985 J1n c..:'· ou do not ,... Dally Pilot Oeeember 18. 23, soclates. t261 East Oyer M-887 ,~ on tlnM, ,_ = 30, t985 and January 8, Road, Santa Ana. C1llf0fnla •---------loN the -· Md JOW 1986 9V05 NABERS 6. •3. 20, t9a8 CADILLAC LARGEST SELECTION of late model. low mlleege Cadillacs In Or1nge County! See us today! 540-1810 Pl&.JC fl)TIC£ ...... _, end ,,.. M-aeo Damson Properties, Inc., ---------erty _, be .-.,. wnttout ~ M1dlson Avenue. New FICTI......... ........ ""''* ·---"'°"' tM York, New York too 17. I NAMESTAHMENT -i. -·~.. Pl&.IC fl)TICE Delaware corporetlon The lollowlng persons lie n.ete -othef ..... ,.. . SN AllOClllea. Lid ' a domg bu11nesa IS' Wood· ~ta. You_, went flCTITIOUl llUSINEll C111tom11 Mmtted partntf· w1td and Auoclatn 2t48 to C:.-en ett-r """t NAME STATEMENT ship. 126t East Oyer Ro.a. KIRAKOZ minors tor Change or Name No. A 131092 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME (Sec 6064) HOllSEP D TASHJIAN on be/'1111 of n1med mlnor1 DIRAN HOVSEP KIRAKOZ and llEEKEN HOVSEP KIRAKOZ has flled a petition In 1hls court IOf en Ofdef II· l()wjng petitioner to change lhelr nemes trom a) OIRAN HOVSEP KIRAKOZ; b) VEEKEN HOVSEP KIRAKOZ to at OIRAN HOVSEP TASH· JIAN. bl VEEKEN HOVSEP TASHJIAN .. Ml.IC llJTICl f!'!O' to IN day Of ... ,_,. ""bet.cs Dec 12 ttl5 HetttJ T. MHte, Jr., JIHfte •• .... 111,.,i.r c.wt Robert A Gerreteon, E.lq .. One NewpOt1 ~. 10lll floor. HewPOt1 8MOll, CA 12880 Pvblllhed 0ranoe COM• O.ity Piiot o.c.Mbet 18, t3, 30 1915, December 8. 1tM ' llM67 B~GltR RoberJ Jo1eph Belanpr. resident of C.oe1A Msa, puaed away January 2, 1986 at the age ol 56. Beloved fetber of Stephen J. BeW\cer. ThomU M. 8e1aJiCer; Robert F. Belanaer: John M. Bela,..er and Julie Marie Belanger. all of c.a.ta Mesa. Abo IW'Yived by a brother, Edward Belanier. Paramount, CA.; three ti1ter1, Irene McCullough, Anaheim, CA; $er'a Conover, Redondo Beach, CA; and Cecile Callantine, Parker Dam. Calif . Mr. BeJandger lived in the area aince 1965, was a member o1 SL John The Baptist CathoJlc C hurc h , C-Osta Mesa. He waa a life member of the Northrup Institute of Tech. Alumni ~. &sary will be recited on Monday Jan. 6, 7:00PM at St.. John The Baptist Catholic Church. Masa of Christian Burial on Tuseday Jan. 7 , 1 l:OOAM, Holy Croa Cemete r y Mausoleum Chapel. Loe Angeles. Inter- ment at Holy Cross C.etnetery. Viailation at Bell Broadway Mortuary, Cotta Mesa, Monday Jan. 6. 12 Noon to 5:00PM. Pierce Bro•. Be 11 Broadway Mortuary, Directors. 642·9150 doing bull,_, u Corl doing busiMA u Newport dOlng business as S P A . LIOyd Interior Design; eon. Dentel Plan. 1.-01 Dove 3SO W Bay Street. Costa Lid .. 73 Highl1nd View, StrHt, Suite •290. Newport Mesa. CA 92627 2600 Harbor Blvd. Irvine. CA 92715 Beach. CA 92680 Starting Point Alumni As-COSTA MESA Newport Blvd Unit F · Costl -If· w you do not 11_,_ TM tollowlng persons are Santi Ana. Clllfornla 92705 Mesa.CA92S27. · enettomer.YGU"'lfcatlen doing buslnet1 es: Kienle This business Is con- Al M W d d .tt--a--e1--....-_ EnlerPf'IMS, 929 W. Beker ducted by· 1 general Plf1· IT IS HEREBY ORDERED 11111 all persons lnlerested In lhe miller 1lon1Nld appear before this COUf1 In Oec>art· ment No 3 ., 700 Civic Cen1er D<lve west. Sen11 Ana. C1llfornl1. on Janu1ry 24, t986, •I 9· 15 o'clock A M ' Ind then and lhefe lt\OW c1uM. If any they have. why 111<1 petition fOf c:hange ol n1me should not be granted ' PACIFIC VIEW ME~IALPARK Cemetery • Mortuary Chapel • Cremetory 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Beach 6'4•·2700 t n Ill oo war • -·~• ....... -.--St • Cotti Mesa. CA 92628 ntfshlp 2124 RalelQh Ave. Cott• e ............. (lleled In Teddy D Bell 11192 Bia· BY BN .&llOciatet Ltd a Mesa CA 92627 the pltoM boc*). Cou G . den G . . Carllee Lloyd. 73 High-Consumerh11lth, Inc . soc1at1on, 350 W Bay ---.-.-----land View. lrvlne. CA 92715 1'0t Dove Street. Suite Street. Cost1 Mesa. CA CADILLAC 81 Sedan Sev· Thia bualneas 11 con· •290. Newpon 8"<:11. CA 92627 Ille diesel, cherry cond. ducted by 1n 1nchvidull 92660 This business la con· bought anottoer. will let R 0 A w d d ~ de que le en-cayne rt. II rove. CaltfOfnle llm11ed partner-u Y nn oo wer • CA 92681 · alllp By· Blrnauge Corpor· 2 t24 Raleloh Ave, Cotti t,..uen "t• cttaclon Ju· This business IS c:on. atlO~ 1 Cillfornla Cor""'-Mesa. CA 92627 dlc:Jal •ted tleM un ptuo d t-" b 1 di id a1 • ""' T I I • de 30 Dt.AI CALINOa--.1 uc""' Y an n v u Ilion, o.ener1I partner. Ceralel Uoyd Thia business 11 con· ducted by· an unln· go below wholesale! Tiiis 1111ernent was llted ducted by: 1 corporatton corporlled usocletlon 759·80•6 or 760-5090 with the County Clerk of Or· Dennis A Freu other than a partnef'lhlp ange County on oec.mi-Th&1 statement wu filed Yvonne McQuald-Nenldal WlllTAU•ES USED CARS & TRUCKS COME IN OR CALL FOR h s busmen I con ......., Teddy D Bell St•n'-' L I Sec etlry ducted by Husband and Plr• preeent1r 11n• This stiternent wu tiled -Th-... ' zeman. r fl'-" Wife reep11eda wrtta • ,.,... ... statement wu -. 9 t985 wtth the County Clet1t of Or· This 1t1tement w1s hied · nM.a ange County on December with the County Cieri! ot Or- Al M Wood <1 qvlN en eeta c:Oft9 with the County Clerk of Or· wtth the County Clerk ot Or· T,: slatemen~~as flied Una carta o une Nemadl ~;r;9~nty on December ~~ei~~mty on 0.0.mbef HAR80R LAWN- MT. OUYE Mortuary • Cemetery Crematory Publlthed Orange Cout 9. 1985 1nge County on December D111y Pll01 December 16, 23, F2M44tt 9. 1985 FllH lPPUISAl OellLLO with the County Cl«lt of Or· ,.....,._ no Je ._e · F2M740 · F2M011 Inge County on Dec 30. ptotec:don; ., r~ta Published Orange Cont Published Orange Coast IT IS FURTHER Ofdered that 1 c09y of tlll1 order to shOw CIU!le be publlshed ln the Ora~ Coast Delly Pllol, 1 11ew1paper of gener11 clrculetion, publlthed In this coun1y 11 leUt once 1 .,.... for lour cooMCUtlYe weet11 30. 1985 Ind January 6. Published Orange Cout . P'2M4S1 1986 D111y Pilot o.c.mtier 16. 23. Published Orange Cout ~ t821 1 BE.AC... BlVD. 1985 Jan 6, 13. 20, 1988 ~I......,. tteM .-e Deity Piiot December 18 23 Dally Piiot Oeoembet 23 30 F2llm c:umpllr con 111 for· 30 1985 d J • 6• · · 1825 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 5•0·5554 M-865 30. 1985 and Jenuary 6. D111y Pilot December 16. 23, t986 30. 1985 and Janu1ry 6. HUNTINGTON BEACH Published Orenge eo..t "'e 11 d •de• I e 1 aIe1 1 · en enuety · t985, January 6, 13, 1986 Da1ty PilOI Dec 30. 198S Jen ........ •I •ted ...... 986 M-859 M·873 M-864 t986 8 CHICK IVERSON Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi 441 E. hast hJ., h.,.rt leHll lll-lllO Highest Quality Sales & Service The Best Car Buys. In Orange County Are At The Dealers Listed On This Page "' CREVIER BMW ~ W SALES • SERVICE • LEASING \;;, "Where Professions/ Attitude Prevails" lpec:telUlng In luropun Dell..,,, E•oellent a.tectton Of New end c.....,.., pt....,ed UMd WW'• erways In stock 835-3171 208 W. 11t St., S•nl• An• Comer of BroadWay & 1st St. Closed Sundays e ERLING SALES -S£IY1C( -lWllC -PUTS Overseas Delivery Specialtsts BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 Jamboree Rd. Newport Beach 840·CM't141 9 JIM ILIMONI IMPORTS ' 1#1 ou.11 Bl. -INw C•r Loc•tlon 10ll1 OuMI Bl. -,. ... ,. Dlrl•lon World'• Lar11a1 Selection of 0 Mfll'C«Ja Benz ~ 133-9300 141 .... 1; .. 1-aia1 6. t3, 20 t98e que la corte wucfte eu · M-885 caeo. VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU CALIF'S :: 1 & LARGEST VOLKSWAGEN DEALER NEED WE SAY MORE? Perts Open M·Set 8 -5:30 Sat 9 • 4 p m Service m·Fri 7·30 -6 pm cl' t87tt HACH aLVD HUNTINGTON !tfACH 7141842-2000 0 NABERS eADILLAC @ 2100 HlRIOI ILYI., COSTA IES& (114) 140-1100 (213) 111-1211 e Best Prices • Convenient Location • Great Location • Super Service e Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales .People BUE"!A PARK PACIFIC OCEAN ff COMMOIWW.TB VOLKSWAGEN -&£.. 'FAMILY SToRE SINCE '53' ~ Sales • Service -L.uing Mt·O - e THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A. 's # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer -Modern .Sales. Service, Parts. Body, Paint & Tire Depts. Compet1(1ve Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals 2111 l•Mr lhtl., Cetta lffa 142-0010" 140-1211 0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS • LONG TERM LEASES • COMHTITIVE ,URCHASE PRICES * HUGE INVENTottY dial MERCEDES 213/714 837-2333 Next to Santa Ana Fwy (5) on Manchester/Beach Blvd. .,.,,, .. , "'" IOI LONGPlll Or•• COYnfYS Of*tt & Llrgnt Pond« O..lenNp at IN<h IMI. & IN Glrct.n Grow F~ ' f714 M2 16•1 f714J 61 .. 2-w~ perform •II Pontf.tc warranty work, ~rdletl ot where )IOU °"9ln11Hy purtNIMd yo41t CM. --llG-AY W'91Hll• U1n1L ....... ........................... the PROFESSIONAL APPROACH 71 4 -979-2500 2925 Harbor Boulevard • Costa M esa. CA • a. l1lOCJ01 a. l1lOCJ01 PONTIA·C SUBARU • TRANS AM SLASHES • rJRCBIRO • ~STE • p AA1SI£ NH[ e · PRICES! e • BOHNCV!lll • CRANO PRIX LIQUIDATING • SUN81RD COfMRH8l£ 1985 MODELS • 1-1000 • GRAMC> AM lH>l.R Nff Cll!Cl*ST AHCES •• Sell EJcttltltlt W[ WU a. mcv01 NOT BE UNOERSOLO! ) . • PONTIAC SUBARU FBlll 2480 ..... ~. Costa Mesi Nnpert Btldt 714/549-4300 2410ttart.N. Costa Mm Nnpert ltach 714/549-4tOO e OUICE COAST JEEP/IEUULI # 1 ,, ,... ,,., ,,, ... "" ,., ,,, ' ,,., .. OIJ1n2e. sALes coa~t • SERVICE - .-.J-tm 1t&11 ... 11l110 •LEASING COtTa•U& · 541 1123 • ACCESSORIES OEPt • UNIVDllTY OLD811091LI HONDA 2llO Htlrbor Blvd. 540-0713 \ • 25~ MONDAY, JANUARY 6, 1985 Volcano trembles; fear rises Colombian farmers fi nd high ground a s s cientist keep watch over mou n tain devastatina Nov. 13 eruption buried the town of t\nnero under mud and destroyed 13 ~llqes. That eruption melted part of the volcano's oone of ice and snow, sendina a l SO.foot-high wall of mud down the l..qunilla River. Mud and debris destroyed Armero, once a prosperous coffee-growing town about l 05 miles northwest of the capital of BOgota in the state of Tolima. • raidentJ were killed or missing, and 2,900 people died in O unchina, 22 miles west of the l 7. 700.foot-high Andean volcano. until furthennst.ruction." Red Cross Director Ramiro Lozano Neira said the state of maximum alen is a "}preventive measure that keeps motonsts away from lhe affected rone to enable speedy evacuation in event of an eruption. He said hospitals and the Red Cross were on standby and r'CSidents were ursed to keep tuned to the radio. RCCJo, Guali, Azufrado, I= andChinchina rivel"I. Towns inc luded Mariquita, Honda, Guyabel, Villamaria. and Am- baJema. BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) - Nevado del Ruiz volcano trembled apin Sunday and blocks ofice drifted down riven encirclina the Armero Valley, prQmptina the aovemment to keep a state of "maximum alert" for fear of another disaster. Thousands of people, mostly farm- , Sporta Raider Lester Hayes' prayers prove fut lie as New England dashes his teams' hope of returning to Super Bowt./81 The Chicago Bears ad- vance to meet the Rams next week In the NFC championship game.181 USC records 75-60 Pa- clftc-10 basketball vic- tory over Oregon./83 Callfomla State leglalators convene new session today, as Deukmejlan, Brown get set to establish teglslatlve priorities./ A7 Nation Prisoners forced guard to watch as Inmate Is 'carved up.' I A4 Balanced-bud1et measure threatens de- fense buildup, key legis- lator says./ M World Arab League vows to back Lybla In event of retaliation./ A5 Nicaragua denies suppl- ing Colombian guerrillas wtthguna./M Bualneu The U.S. economy has serious health problems that could become crip- pling ailments./ Al INDEX Bridge Bulletin Board Bullneee Cluaffled Comics Crouword Death Nottces Entertainment Horote0pe Ann Landers Opinion Potlce Log Publlc No tlcel Sport a Televtllon W•ther 8 5 A3 89-10 86-8 85 88 se · A8 87 . /t(f' A6 A3 64,8 e1-.. A7 A2 en, spent the niabt on biaber pound, huddled in mountain caves u torren- tial rains poured down the valley's ~·aovernment orde(Cd seulen to evacuate Saturday after the snow- capped volcano ratned sulfuric ~ at dawn for the tint time since a Light rafns rinse coast BJ PAUL ARCHIPLEY °' ....... ,... ..... Scattered showers on Sunday help- ed wash away the unseasonably warm temJ>C!&t\ll'CS and smog that accom- pamed much of the holidays, burthe Liafit rains didn't go far toward meeting seasonal rainfall averages. The mild storm, which developed when subtropical moisture combined with weak low pressure, stalled over Southern California longer than ex- pected. Forecasters said scattered local drizzle would continue through this morning when a high pressure buildup begins to clear the skies by this afternoon. Although the storm brought some needed moisture to the area, it wasn't much. Newport Beach reported .18 inches of rain for the 24-hour period ending at 4 p.m. Sunday, said Meteorologist Bill Hoffer. About .24 inches feU on Santa Ana, be said. · Dana Point's rainfall was nqli· gible, said an Oranae County Harbor Patrol spokeswoman. Hoffer, a Los Anacles Raiders football fan. said their Sunday loss dam~ncd lu1 spirits anyway. .. I m gonna 10 out and bum my driver's license, protest or some- thing." he said. Sunday's showers didn't go far toward denting January's rainfall average, either. which is 2.56 10~ in Newport Beach, Hoffer sajd, The seasonal average along the OranJe Coast is just over 11 inches, be said. Skies will continue to clear today. (Pl eue eee LIGHT I A2) Moemaar Kbaclafy About 23,000 of Armero's 28,000 On Saturday, police using sirens routed about l S,000 peasants. from six nver valleys and gave them blankets and food for their trek" to higher around. Victor RicaTdo, president of the 1overnment's Natjonal Emergency Committee. said Sunday the evacu- ation order "must be maintained ~,...,._..,""'De,.... A cycu.t makee h1a way atone the Santa Ana Ri•er Trail near the San Dleto Freeway t:rytnc to a•oid the paddle. from Sanctay•• ra.ID. The evacuation orders affects resi- dents of low-lying areas along the The area lies 1n a »mi&c radius around Nevado del Ruiz. About J S0,000 people Ii ve there, but aovem- ment officials.said only about I S,000 were ordered to evacuate Satwday. State authorities said Sunday many people had to be nearly forcibly (~ ... VOLCARO/A2) Radioactive gas leak attributed to overf tilttank 8 remain in hospital after poisonous gas cloud escapes plant WEBBERS FALLS. Okla (AP) - A chemical tank at a nuclear faClhty was too full when 1t cracked and leaked seven tons of radioactive gas. killing one man and hosp1taJizmg dozens who breathed potent acid fumes. authonucs said Sunday. Saturday's leak: at a plant that processes uranium fuel sent a cloud of poison gas as far as 18 mLles. More than I 00 people were treated for exposure to the gas. and Interstate 40 was closed for two hours as the cloud dissipated. On Sunday, six federal m- vestigator;s were at the Sequoyah Fuels Corp. plant, which· rcmatncd closed. Twenty-six people hosp1taJ- 1zed overnight were released while eight remained hospitalized 10 stable or good condition. All but rune of those admi.tted were plant workers. The leak of uranium hexafluQride apparently Ql:CUrred after a cylinder was accidently overloaded, said Dick Ba~. director of the DivisJOn of R.adi.auon Safct} and Safeguards for the Nuclear RcgulatOT} Co mmission ''For this kind offac1ht}. this 1s one of the most severe accidents tha1 the} can ha\c," he sa•d T he cyltndn designed to hold 17.5UO pounds of the m1ldl~ rad10- act1ve matcnal v.as filled" 11h ~9.500 pounds before employ~s realized they had improperly placed it on a scale. Bang.a.rt said at a nev. ~ con- ference in Muskogee. Workers heated the C) ltnder an an Oklahoma attempt to remove the excess ps. Banpn sa.id. The container then ruptured. The employee who di~ was on a platform above the cylinder and downwmd of the poison plume, Bang.art said. "It took btm such a lcngtb of lime (to escape the cloud) that be could not avoid (overexposure),'' he S4id. The gas bad a nauseatina odor and "your throat burned." said Bill Kass- mgeT, 38, an clectncian for a construc- tion company work.tog on an cx- pans1on at the plant. Sequoyah officials could not be rt'ached for comment despite rt'· pcatcd attempts A. sccrcu" said Donna McFarland. a spokeswoman for parent company Kerr McGtt Corp of Oklahoma City, was too bus) to ulk to reporters Sunday afternoon. Ms McFarland said Saturday the (Pleue eee CRJtlllCAL/ A2) Khadafy claims he nearly launched war against U.S. TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) -Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy said Sun- day that Libya bad nearly gone to war with the United States, and warned that if America· harms Palestinians living in Libya, "we wiU operate on the streets of America," the govern- ment news agency reported. "The U.S.A. mobilized yesterday no less than 40 warships in front of Libya and we have considered this a state of war and have announced the state of preparedness in the air and naval forces and air defense ... the news agency, JANA. quoted K.hada~ as saying. Pentagon officials denied this. "It would be physically 1mposs1ble for us to put 40 ships off of Lab~a ·· said a Navy source ID Washington who spoke on cond1uon ofanon)ma- ty. "There arc only about ~O ship<> 1n the 6th Fleet normal!). and th.at includes everything. There are onh. abont 15 combatant \h1p 1n the tMednerrancan)" According to JAN .\. t-..hadafy said unday: "'ActuaJI~. yesterday we were ready to fight. " He sa1d his forces had been placed on full aJert,. and that the alert would end onl .... when lht" .\mcncan and Z1on1st ihrtat 1s rt· moved.·· ·· .\menca I) pla) mg a Jan&erous game in the Medatt>rranean." (Plea.e eee JUIADAl"Y I Al) Peres dlscounts taklng mllitary action WASHINGTON (AP) -Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres, dis- oountina the possibility of military action qainst Libya for teJTOrist attacks OAt two European airports, called Sunday for "collective meuures" apinst nations that harbor terrorisu. "I don't want todcclarcwarapinst an.Ybody, apiost any country. I don't think it 1s ncoeuary. We are not talk:ina about war or war declar- ations.'' Peres said. "On the other hand 1 say clearly that we are not aoina to auarantcc the secunty of any terrorist. no matter where he is," Peres said. He said Israel reserved the ri&ht to unilaterally act apinst terrorist poups .. "I distinsuisb between state and terroristic orpnizations." he said. Appeanna o n ABC's "This Week With David Brinkley," Peres di~ cussed sanctions ap.inst countries that support terrorism. "I'm refenina fint and mainly to economic. poht1- caJ and other sanctions against these." sort of countries." He also st.rcssed the nC('d for countries to slcp up sccunt)' measure~ .. in the centers of transportation - airports. and airplanes." Peres added. "When 1t comt"S to terrorists.. at least Israel wlll never promise a terrorist safety." but said ID non-military responses. "we have to wod t~ther." "I think Europe.an countncs "Ill team soon enough that unle'is the\ w1ll do something to stop terror the)· ma~ ha'c to pa) rather hea"1h· for allowing It to grov. and move around .. Europe. hc-s:nd. "1'i It-am mg the hard wa> that somtth1ng must be done " "\\ e arc fa mg two different s11u- at1o ns," he said .. One 1'i a danger ot a "ar . and the other 1s cnmc v.1thin )Our own count() .. But tt'rron~m . he ~td. "1s neither war. nor cnme within (Pleue eee P&R&S/ A.2) Findingfln antidote for post-holiday blues Paul Ale1tPL£Y Tbc bolidays, fioally arc ovu~ We can p.at tbe celebratina b;hind us. No more nasbina, eatine. wonyine. per-· tyi111-Thank aooctDCM we can tet beck into our normal routina and put our lives in order, "Pt? So wby ii it IO many Of ut feel \bat dull. adlins ---. • .,.,. .. commonty known u "pott..a.oaiday bluar And what can we do about it? "In ahnys lld to end I botiday, .. ... Dr. ~ Sc:.bwuta. ....... holidays is not only the Christmas lifts or the Hannukkah sifts, but a1J the relatives they saw who are no loneer there to support them. .. For oader people, too, the reality bu aet in that the family is oo loneer theft. "And there's a letdown becaute tbe utra 1timuJation ._, subsided • .all the deconlions and aLhtcr are rooe." he -'d. •• r.a. w. &mily plherinp ~ dllie boaida11 uaf\S1ate into an iocr1111 iD dMJd CUllOdy caaes onot tbe botidol aft o~. Scbwaru laid. "'TIM tiaa come in ft-om Dlinois to o( the be widl .... in c..Ji~ ror die holidays. and cveryoM has a SM' time,'' be laid. Then, once the kids bavc ~n put beck on the plane ho me. dad 11arts to fttt the Joa and wondtta why they shouldn't CDJOY tbat bobday spint year-round. Fomanaaely, post·hohday blucs don't translate into an inaeasr in chikl abwlle, aid Nathan Nishimoto of the <>ranee County Cb.ikl AbuJc ~county statisbcs for the put five ~ N1thamoto found there'• DO 1ncreaae in ctuld abutr ID January o~ ()ec)m,btt. and both months lbow lowet lnadmts than ID Octotxr and NovcmbcT'. or in Mat'C'h when the cast's nit' dramatlcally L1kew1 e. Officer Howard Ei.cnbera of the Newpon 8caC'h Police Department said he saw no stall.sues to support the tbt«) lb.at post-hohday blues tran lattd into 1ncreucd fam1I)' violence or su1c1dc attempts. "Probably around the 20th of the month when the cndlt card ciwJe$ come due domcsoc Vlolencc socs UPti° E11tnbera JOk:cd., "but I don't rt111ltk.now tha L.. I N tttbdtsl. tbc:rc are that' l)C)St ,hohd.ay blue art a real pht'itomcno n \ Dunna tbe bohdays, a k>t of beda were empty at tbe UCl MedicaJ Center Pl)'Chlltnc lttVi<lea di~ said Dr. Joe HWlett. dud of PIY• ebtatnc lrr"VlCCI. ow t.bcy"~ ..... ttady to put up \k DO vec:acy .... .. h.s tNe tbae'a a swbd t..1a1 1n the nllmbcr of ed•bsi_ ..__ holidays. .. H\llletl ...... AIMS a tDI fJI (Pl •••--.... •L1 pr111 'l'lawda of ........... aleep ID teata. waltiat f• tlae I•._. tJar.t to pue. VOLCANO TREMBLES; FEAR RISES ••• From Al evacuated and many were in a state of River. Lou.no Neira said bu,e penic. chunks of ice from t.be volcano Those evacuated took with them floated down that river Sunday, only their most valuable possessions. raisina its level by one fool .. The aovernment is aware of the Mariquita was an01her town beina inconvenience this measure is cau~ carefully mo nitored, said Lor.ano in&." said Ricardo."But it's necessary -Neira. About 18,000 people live there to protect people's lives." and it also lies near the Ouali River. Lozano Neira said the most en-About 70 scientists have kept dangered town was Honda. where watch on the volcano since the 20,000 people live along the GuaJi November disaster. Pablo Medina Jaramillo, coordinator of the scien-ti•' poup, said Sunday the volcano Klivtty first noti<:ed laterFriday night .. continues without change." Medina Jaramillo said the state of maximum alert will probably last a.notber day. He aaid scientists are moaitorina the Nevado del Ruiz around the clock with seismosraphs and oontinuous helicopter flights over the mountain. KHADAFY: WARNEARL Y LAUNCHED ••• ~JromAl !'k,bada.fy continued. "An unlimited war that could have been a world kt." nearly bepd'Saturday. • On Friday, th.e aircraft carrier USS Coral Sea led a task force of seven Jhips out of Naples, Italy. into the :Mediterranean. Naval sources in J ashington said the ships merely re end.in& a holiday port leave and ftre still on routine patrol Sunday. K.badafy spoke at an impromptu news conference at an agricultural project outside Tripoli. JANA re- ported bis remarks in English, and the new •ncy. 's office in Rome said they .,.thouaJlt the news conference was conducted in English. American networks carried the news conference, but did not have Khadafy's comments about war. A JANA official in Rome had no explanation. JANA quoted Khadafy as saying, "If America commits agression apinst us, then we will commit aggression apinst it inside America itself. And if America or the Israelis do any harm to any Palestinian living in Libya, we will do harm to American and Israeli citizens in their own places. Earlier Sunday, ABC and NBC = K.badafy u denying that 'nian tenorists are beiq train- ed in bis North A6ic:an country, but Mid be would harbor anti-lsrael commandos if they needed training camps. .. If ~ are here it can't be mr, responsibility, but they are not here, ' the networks quoted him as sayina. "If they demand this I will live them (bales) becau1e they are freedom fi&bters., but they have no need to establish camps in Libya, which is far from their field ofblttle in Palestine." He also said Abu Nidal does not live in Libya. . ERES DISCOUNTS MILITARY ACTION ••• Al own country, but an int.er-Peres aJso said Abu Nidal, the Yusar Arafat, chairman of the nal crime." leader of a Palestinian dissident Palestine Liberation ~tion. : Appearina to rule out a military poup blamed for mastennioding the The Syrians ··a~ a little bit more ·yesponte for the moment, Peres uid: Dec. 27 attaclcs on the Rome and careful t.ba.n the Libyans. and recent- ·l'You must be very careful when you Vienna airports .. to the best of my ly, Spia became even more careful ~.bad&etheeff'ectivenessofevcrymove. knowled&e. is riabt now in Libya." LbunUled to be," Peres said. He also ~would rather prefer to start with Peres hinted that Syria bas backed c:ollfinned recent reports that Syria ·:~litical and economic sanctions away from its previous support for bad withdrawn reclCntly installed .~fore turning to arms directly." radical Palestintanaroupaopposed to miasile batteries from Lebanon. • • D~eary morning awaits sun U.S. Tempe H 65 -------------------ff 62 . : ~~ Calif. Tempe 21 55 tO 2t 06 24 27 51 41 IO ,.. 4S 41 ... 21 44 11 35 13 12 32 43 .. 17 :SI 37 " 44 25 33 at 41 04 2t •• 41 .. n 17 02 27 11 31 23 .. 11 17 41 41 22 45 32 47 ,. 37 21 TOOAY a:1aa.m. 12~p.m 7!09 P-"' I 1:27 P"'- TW•AY 16 ... 43 " .. 66 ., 41 t.O .0.4 1.4 u Extended 1:00 &.Jft 121pm l~P"' ... -1 I u CHEMICAL TANK WAS TOO FULL ••. P'romAl plant would not ~ume uranium processing until the NRC and other agencies, including Kerr-McGee, complete their investigation. Si.x NRC technicians were at the site Sunday, and an expen on struc- tural analysis was expected. Joseph Fouchard, spokesman for the NRC in Washington. D.C., said be did not know if it was the first death from the making of uranium reactor fuel . but said there bad been other deaths in the industry since it began in the 1940s with the Man- hattan Project. Wbeo released into the at- mosphere. uranium hexafluoride breaks down into hydrogen fluoride and sli&)uly radioactive uranyl fluor- ide particles, Ms. Mcfarland said Saturday. Toxic hydfoten fluoride combines with moisture in the air to form hydrofluoric acid, which is strona enouah lo etch &lass. "We have absolutefy no evidence of radioactive exposure," said Dr. Michael Herndon, an emCTgency room physician at Sequoyah Mcm- orial Hospital in Sallisaw. Uranium hexafluoride produced at the plant. 40 miles from the Arkansas border, sent to a facility operated by the Department of Energy where it is enriched by increasing the peroentaae of fissionable isotopes. The enriched gas is changed into ·solid uranium oxide to be made into reactor fuel clements for nuclear power plants, said Gary Sanborn of the NRC in Arlington, Texas. Authorities said the gas cloud dissipated in 20 mph wind about two hours after the 11 :45 a.m. lcait was reported. DaJc McHard, chief of the radi- ation and special hazards service of the state Depanment of Health. said soil and vegetation samples indicated the acid cloud may have traveled as far as 18 miles south of the pJant before it dispersed. He said effects were expected to be temporary. Only one person live, within a half mile of the l>lant and fewer than 20 homes are within two miles, McHard said . The gas breaks down so fast that "if you lived more than a half a mile away there was little danger," said Dr. Carl Bogardus, director of radiation therapy at the Univenity of Okla- homa and a consultant to Kerr- McGee. Ed Henshaw, who formerly worked at the plant, said he could see the cloud when he was about a quarter- mile away. "It looked like a cloudy, white hue on the ground," he said. He called the accident "a short- term accident - just one of the risks ofliving with one of these plants." "You know the plant is there, and you fear it, but you can't dwell on it," said Lorene Thomason, who lives with her husband about a mile from the plant. A spokeswoman at Sequoyah Hos- pital said I 02 people were treated in the emergency room for exposure to hydrofluoric acid. Exposure to the ps causes irritation to the eyes, skin and respiratory system, Herndon said. E!!R'G MILLIONA:J:RE BECOMES COMMON··· LIGHT RAINS RINSE THE COAST •.. ~ofessor who bu been watching Many millionaires don't see them-were in that catetory. Next arc the P'rom Al ptillionaires for more than a decade. selves as rich. Most retain their District of Columbia. with 17 per ac.companied by temperatures rang- ,. Nor does fortune always go with middle-class lifestyles, shunning con· 1,000. and Connecticut, with 16 per ing from the mid 60s to 70. 2 to 3 feet. the day, local officials reponed no rain-related problems in the Oranae Coast Sunday. &me, the report stated. Entertainers, spicuous oonsumption and thinking 1.000. the magazine reported. athletes, writ.en and the like make up twice before spending money -The avetaJC annual income of Under mostl).' clear skies tonight, ku than I percent of the millionaire including gjving to charity. the maga-millionaires 1s S 121,000, the mag.a-temperatures wall drop to the mid 30s. population. Eiabty ~nt of the elite zinc said zinc said, which the entrepreneur can sroupdid not inhent their wealth, but The highest concentration of stretch further by usc of perquisites came from middle or working~a.ss millionaires is found in flonda, like company-owned cars, expense .-Low clouds and fog during the momin& hours will b1.4m off to mostly clear skies and warmer temperatures Tuesday. ''Can you believe it? People are learning how to drive," said a California Highway Patrol dispatcher about the dearth of accidents on local freeways. bacqrounds, it said. where 19 out of 1,000 households accounts and pension provisions. BLUES CAN FOLLOW THE HOLIDAYS ••. Prom Al them are feeling depression. "Of course, there are different diagnoses, but depression is often a component." And the blues many people feel during the holidays themselves may linger after it's all over. Kathy Pfister, an administra~e secretary at Phillips Medical Systems in Laguna Hills, said Christmas was such a big disappointment, she still hasn't recovered. "Never in my life have I been so aJad the holidays are over," Pfister said. "I had way too many ex~ tions. l felt like I was alone, not a pan of anything. "And New Year's was terrible. On New Year's Day, I didn't even get out of bed." . Pfister said Christmas used to be such a big event. when the family drove around to look at-decorations, when strangen came carolinJ at the door. This year, her boyfriend was too busy with work, his own depression and ••tJein, a scrooge" to help lift her • spirits, she said. •1bis year I was really looking for tbat cqntact with the spirit of ~stmu," Pfister said. "and 1t P.W't happen. .. , felt really let down. rm sllll OMNGE llellll ...., COAST --· r•I llUIOfftc;I feeling blue." And bow does one go about combatting post-holiday blues? Dr. Schwanz suggested people $Cl right back into regular schedules with their families. and get in touch with those who make them feel good. "During the holidays people are spending so much time with relatives, and others they don't normally see, they don't have time for fnends who make them happy. "The best way out ofthe1r gloom is to sec those fnend!t," he said. Dr. Hullett ~ul!iested pcopk in- volve themselves 1n prOJCCts that give them pleasure. things that have ''meanin' and purpose. hke the holidays.· "New Y car's resolutions. for exam- ple, continue the holidays in a sense," Hullett said. "They give you a continuauon of the holida y spint. "h's not the end of something, but the beainnmg." Some people have already taken action, such as travelers eager to get out of town. Marilyn Mitchell or ~undancc Travel in Newpon Beach wd busi- ness drops to a tnckle around No- vember when everyone wmds up their holiday plans "Then on the Monday after New Year's. all hell breaks loose. People SI)', 'Ob my God, let's make plans,"' Mitchell said. "I think it's the busiest day of the year, absolutely crazy, like every other Monday rolled into one." .. People want lo go skiing, to Hawaii, on winter cruises. "I set blue just tbinlcina about it." she said. Of course, not everyone can afford to drop everything and jump-on an airplane to elsewhere. Aootheroption toconsider, like the bumper stick.er saytis "when the going gets touah, the tou ao shopping." "They do," sai branch manaaer Sue Graham at South Coast Plau's Bullock's. "There are so many more bargains after Christmu, and a lot of people sot mone'y this year, so they're down here spendin1 it. · "They have a different mentality. Before Christmas they were lookina for the r\aht gill but they're barpjn bunt.en now. "And they were buyina for some- body else before, bu t they're out ror themselves now. too," Orab.am said . Sales are pa.rt.iculatly brisk in the ladies apparel depertment, she said. "It's a new year, new clothes, a r\ew look. "Maybe that's the way to combat the blues." ~ .. o •• , ...... .... .., .. c.......,e,, .............. IMO, C:-.,._ CA ·~ ~ ... ~---' ecMofW .. 2-432 1 Justcall 642-6086 Moto0ey ''OCM~ " .,CU 00 r'OI ,_ "°"" """" Vy •JOom•~1om What do you like about the Daily P1lot? What don't you like'> C.JI the number above and your messaae W'lll be recorded, transcnbed and de· livered to the appropriate edjtor The same 24-hour answenn1 servjQt may be used to record ltttm ·to the editor on an¥ topic. Contributon to 0\4r Leners column must include their name and telephone number for verification. Tells us what's on your mind. llld .,... C09J "" .,. -...eo h Mdey lfld ._.., " .,w • ~ -.,..,, eopyo.,,7 1m UI~ 10 • "' .,., '°" CCIOt' ... ----'° Ctr1tdatlen , ... , ....... 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