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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-05-17 - Orange Coast PilotLOW51 ClllT 110111 1 t lURSOAV MA V 1 I 1C)84 OHAN C.E C OUN TY C ALl f (JH N IA . 2~ Ll N T':J San Onofre fined $250,000 NRC evies fine or 13-ay shutdown response. . Jim Hanchett l&ld from Walnu1 The NRC said in a statement that "If tbe syltem is aot au~matic:ally The NRC said two spray valves Creek. workers should have detected shut-available, it't a dc:p'ldat.aon of the of safety equipment during March tests in~id~ the plant's Unit 3 react.or Tbe beavy fine, wbi~b if paid would down of the system on two occasions. system/' Hanchett ldded. bu1ldmg, were closed f.rom March 4 to ~the ~t ever levied by the NRC If a nuclear ~dent ha4 occurred, Oavtd ~n. • apokaman for March 17 because of improper valve 10 Califorrua, was propoted ~uae another conwnment ooolma system Edison ~onty owner of tbe ~ atianments. of the duration of the violation and -similartoagiantairconditioner-rcactor'?.ant near San Clemente, said By ANDREA ADELSON Of .... o.llr ,... • ..,, The Nuclear Rtiulatory Com- m1ssjon bas proposed itJ largest fine ever in Cahforn1a, $1/4 million, apjnst the operators of the San O nofre nuclear power plant for shutting down safety equipment used in the A Newport Beach couple Is Irked by city's theater sign that violates New- port's own sign ordl- nance./ A3 :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:~:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:~:::::·: Callfomla Comic Andy Kaufman, who never smoked, died of lung cancer at the age of 36. /A7 Nation President Reagan wlll get his MX missiles, but only half of what he wanted - and with strings at- tached./ A& World . · Soviet Jews hold a dem- onstration at a theater as health of dissident Sakharov deteriorates. /A7 The notion of U.S. air support over Persian Gulf has been discussed, but not acted upon./ A7 Living Jan Taylor's handicap , lsn 't her only distinction; now she's a Phi Beta Kappa grad./81 What precautions do health professionals take when they treat AIDS victims? /81 New treatments and de- vices help high-risk preg- nancies and premature bables./82 ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· Sports It's been an overall team effort that has helped the Edison High baseball team. which opens CIF action Friday./C1. The Angels are st If led by Baltimore's Mike Bod- dicker In losing, 5-0./C1. ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!·!·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· Entertainment The student-faculty musi- cal ''Audition'' opens to- night at Orange Coast College./83 :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· Bualneaa Transierra Exploration Corp., of Newport Beach, has filed for bankruptcy. /85 INDEX Erma Bombeck 82 Bridge B4 Bulletin Board A3 Business B5-6 Callfornla News A4 Clasalfled C6-6 Comics 84 Cronword CS Death Notlcet C4 Feetur.. 82 Living 81 Horoacope C7 Ann Lander• 82 Mutual Fundt 86 Netlonel Newt A4 Opinion AS Ponce Log A3 Publlc Notlefl C4·5 Sport• C1-3 Stock Marketa Be Ttfev!tlon 82 Theater• B3 Weather A'J Wor1d Newt A4 event of a nuclear accident NRC staffers recommended a $250,000 fine apinst Southern Cali- fornia Edison Co. for leaving the safety system shut for 13 days during testing of the nuclear plant in March. The NRC in Washin,ton will decide the tine after receiving Edison's The system, similar to a giant because a sim ilar violation occurred could have been activated, Hanchett the utilit:i' 1 .. disappoi.oled and shower bead, ~s l~tcd in the roof of at the lant in ~ 983, said Hanchett, of said. surprised the amount tbe of tbe the reactor building. lo the event of a the Nies regional headquarters. "The back~p would have been fine. We be · ve it's excessive." nuclear accident, the system spurts .. Their corrective action that adcQuaa, but that doesn't relieve Barron said the March iocide1u water to wash o ut and reduce concen-they've tried to develop, new them of their responsibility to make stemmed from the plant beiQ& tratioos of radioactive iodine from procedurcs to prevent this, haven't safety systems operable as required started ta.ken off'lineaod then 1W1eC1 the atmosphere. NRC sp0kcsman been effective," Hanchett said. by their license," he satd. (PleUe Me 8AJf Olf0n&/A2) Disaster practice A Mewport Beach llfe&uard helpe out eome of the •'victims'' durlDC a mock diautu th19 mornln& in the Back Bay area of Protopappas trial defense testimony begins iiext week Prosecution rests after testimony from dental expert By JEFF ADLER Of IM 0..,, .... IUiff The prosecutton in Dr. T on)' Protopappas' murder 1nal resled Wednesday after a dental anesthesia expert 1est1fied thal he has never encountered cases in which patients were given the number or high doses ofancstheuc drugs that were adminis- tered at Protopappas· high-volume Costa Mesa clinic. Dr. Frank McCarthy told the Orange County Supcnor Court Jury weighing second-degree murder charges against tbe 38-year-old den- tist that he has been involve~cb4"""""' treating 100.000 patients but "never" has seen the amounts o r number of drugs gi ven to dental patients Kim Andreassen. Patricia Craven or Ca thryn Jones. The prosecution alleges that the improper and negligent admm1s- trat1on of general anesthesia caused the deaths of Andreassen. a 23-year- old Huntington Beach woman. 13- year-old Craven and Jones. a 31-year- old Costa Mesa resident. (Pleue .ee DENTIST I A2) Youngsters warned about four in hearse By KAREN E. KLEIN Of ... Daly...,. ..... A woman with long. dark hair and three men 1n a maroon hearse have reportedly attempted to lure two Wilson Elementary School students into their car on two separate oc- casions in the past month and a half. Costa Mesa pohce reported A I ()..year-old bo) and a 9-year-old boy questioned by pohce said the woman tn the car offered them candy and asked them to come closer so she could show them something. The first incident occurred April 7 when one of the boys was walktng near the intersection of Placentia A venue and Victoria Street, accord· ing to a police rcoort. The child ran away from thc hearse-style car after checking the license plate. which was covered b) black paper. the report ~td. The second incident occurrt'd on May 10 near the 1ntersectton of National A\enue and Congress Stret't, the younger bo) told police. He was walktng along the street when the hearse pulled up and the woman offered him cand). He was able to gJ vc poltcc the car's license number before he ran away. poltce said. Poltce traced the number without success. Wilson Pnnc1pal Dick Clarke satd he belteve'i the boys. "Knowing the boy who came to (Ple&ee .ee YOUNGSTERS/ A2) 13LB arsons alarm police Latest intentionally set blaze discovered In two vacant lots By DA vID BISHOP o.llr,...C..e 4 P 1 City officials have stepped up their investigation of 13 suspected anons set in Laguna Beach sinoc March 30, including tbrtic this week. The latest tire broke out at 3:57 p.m. Wednesday in Arch Beach Heights. The fire consumed the brush in two vacant lots on Quivera Street near Capistrano A venue. Newport Beach. The diauter drill, llimulatlnC a plane cruh, wu one of three conducted lo the county today. A suspect was questioned in con- nection With the blaze but in- vestigators beheve the youth is not connected to any of the previous blazes. Witnesses described a youth seen leaving the scene soon after the fi~ began and investigators have 1denufied a Quivera Street youth as a suspect. A pack of matches and a balf- burned punk (used lO ltght fireworks) were picked up as evidence where the fm is bcbevcd to have been started. Jack Peltaeon Peltason: 'will help to shape UCI' By ANDREA ADE~N Of!Mo.llJ .......... UC Irvine C'hancellor-des1gnate Jack Peltason said he ts giving up the hfe of a Washington, D.C.-bascd education lobbyist to have a hand tn helping shape "a good uni vers1t) rnto a great one.·· Peltason, v1s1ttng Caltfomta for a week to meet with faculty. students and to attend a UC Regents meeting in San Francisco. said Wednesday the UC system is poised at an important crossroads in its history. bolstered for the first time rn years with groWJng state support. "I wouldn't come JUSt to preside." (Pleue eee PELT ASON I A.2) The blaze m the densely packed btlh.op neighborhood was a "clole. caJI." accordJng to Laguna Beach poLicc officer Don Coleman. When Coleman amved. five neighbors were spraying the fire with garden hoses, be said. ,.. "The whole lot was to na~ ... Coleman said. but the voluntccn successfully kept the fire from reach- ing several houses on adjacent lots. .. It's a darn good thing the neigh- bors got out there as quick as they did.'' be added. Firefi.ghten amved and the firc was declared under control. F1rt Marshal Herb Jewell said this morning that Wednesday's fi~ is an isolated incident in the stnng of arson fu-es . The arcumstances don't lead to any pattern that would impLicate the youth in the other fires. Jewell sa.id. Police depanment investigator Toni Place and fire Capt. Harve) Boclts arc now working full-lime on the arson invesugation, with as- sistance from Jewell and the state fire (Pleue eee OP'11CIALS/ A.2) 1 Stairs are main ·U.S. downfall 'W.\SHINC1TON (.\Pl -i.\ flt~t ofstatrs ts more hkeh. to \end Americans to the hospital emergency room than an\thing else the:. encounter tn an average day, according to a nev. government stud\. fhc stat1st1c<i collected in 198~ b\. the National Electron•< ln1u~ ~une1llancc ~stem· reported 531 tnJUne'i on \lairs. ramps and landings for every 100,000 .\mencan\ .\It hough \tair'i ar<' the mosth ltl..el) cause of tnJury. the mo'it SC\ err 1nJuncs 'item from accidents with cigarette hghtcf"i. the stud\ ~·d Oper.ltl'CI tn the ( onsumer Product Safety Com- ml'i'iton th<' tnJUr) mtormat1on service collects repons trom hospital emergenn room' an an etTon to track down dangerous produl·ts ThC' \\'item asscs<1ed both the number and scvenry of lnJUnes and concluded that cigarette lighters and fuel are a'lsoctated "1th the most SC\ ere lOJUnes for Amcncans. Thc'iC product\ rt."CCt'C'd a sevent~ raun~ of209 On a sliding ~alc that ranged dov.n to a low point of 13 for lnjunc'i 3\'iOC'1atc-d With \Ollevball. Wh1lc the ltghtcf"i produced the worst tnJunes. the (Pleue eee 8TAIR8/A2) Alleged drug czar once seen as 'unremarkable' .. FBI says C ar es Mobley vaulted to the top in underworld of coke, money, danger -- ( harlcs Alan Mobley. Fullerton High School. Oa of '78 Q uiet Unremarkable. Stayed away from drugs. Went out for water polo. G raduated. Drifted away Six years pass. Mobley 11 ltvmg 1n Hununaton ~ch. drivina a black Corvette, tra vcling to Euro~ to purcha~ citot1c cars three and four at a ttme llnd JCttina off to South Amenc~. The brown-hatr'Cd 24-ycar-old -a guv who 1s hardly remembered by h11 old classmates -1~ ~usp«ted of w mchow vaultma himself to the top of the <'ocame world where he control, staagcnna sums of money and bark' out orders ltke some ~n of '"n' "l should kill ham." Mobley arowh when talion& about an associate he 'iU ~t' of mc,s1ng up an ass1an- ment The later dt'finiuon '' offered not by old classmates but by the FBI. which spent nearly IS months watch- 101 Mobley. hts fnends and relative~ before pouncing Moble). a suppo!ot<.I leader in Orange Count>·~ largest cocame nng. was arrtsted Monday evening v.hen he. his WJfe and his sister returned from a weekend tnp to Pucno Vallarta The :?4 year-(>ld reported!) w& unaware: that v.htlt' he was awa), the dru empire 1n which he tiaured ~ prominently w8' hrouaht down b)' federal, '.ltltt' and l'Ounty drug agents with help from '1nually even poh<'t dcpanmcnt 1n Orange ( ount)'. FBI -sen" rtpon Dunn& ht\ rt'1um 01aht to Lo Anat'lt\, Motllt'\ rerortcdh opened STEVE MARBLE NEWSMAKERS up a nt'v.,papcr and read that ~I p<-r~cm~ had been :\rTMtcd $" l () 000 1n cuh confislated. 41 \Chtl lc\ tmpoundC'd and 20 V.l'BP<•n' '1(11t-d In thC' nc-....,ra~r J(u)unt. ha' n.imc wa' hnl..f~i w nil "f 1t The dru& nna wu the laricst in the count' \..nown to law enforccmeot officials and was ft'spons1bk for smuu.11na more than a ton o(coc:ainc 1nto-~uthem C'ahfomta in the past year al'C'ord1na to the FBI Whtn M\1blcy got ofTthe MCll1can.& flight laJit Monday. he was met by FBI aitnt'i who grttted him wath an am:st warrant and a pair of handcuffs HIS bit! V.I\ ~t It • wbopp1na $I 0 m1llton Mohle' ·, v.1fe u well as his older "\ter al~ v.rrt a""'ted Moblc\ bepn dabbhl'\& to t~ c0<11ne hu,ine"" M long 11s four yran a,o uH·otd1na to polt~ One m- (Plcue He DRUG/A.2) • --------------...... ..-----~~~~~~~~------ manhal's oflloe. aocordin, to City Manqcr Ken Frank. · Frank met with local police and fire department officials Tuetday after- noon to set up the arson in vestiption team after the 11th and 12th fires were set. "We really don't have very much to go on." Frank sajd. "The fires bepn up in Arch Beach Heights on week- ends but that's no lonJ«:r the pattern. We had surveillance 10 the area but now it doesn't make mucp sense." Jewell said that generally calm weather has hefped firefiJhters' ef- forts but that unusually dry wildland brush for this time of year has caused COOQfm. TuCldafs ftret oocurred early in the momma. Fireft&bten were called to lhe 600 block of Sleepy Hollow Lane 1hon1y before 3 a.m. for a amall brush fire in a vacant lot between two homes. No structures were involved and firc- f~ten had the blue under control wtthin seven minutes, said Jewell. While still at that scene, firefiahten well! then called to the 1300 block of Morningside Drive at 3:SO a.m. where a se<:ond fire burned about a quarter-acre of bruth and was de· clared under control within five minutes. No structures were damaa· odor th(eatened and no il\iuries were reported IJl either of the firct. One of the worst of the 1U1pcctcd anon fires occurred oo May 8, when a lato-cvenina blaze broke out on Park Avenue and threatened homes on Temple Hills Drive, Buena Vista Way, Canyon View Drive and Tbunton Drive. Aboul three acres of brush burned before the fire was extiniuisbed as firefif)ltcrs battled the blue from balconies and patios while homeowners kept their roofs wet with prden hoses. Only four of the suspected arson cases involved a structure. STAIRS MAJOR DOWNFALL •.• From A l freq uency was only 8.7 per 100,000 persons during tbe year. Stan-s, the most common hazard. rated only 37 on the severity scale. The report showed 25l bicycle related injuries per 100,000 ,-\mericans, .. with an average severity ratina of 35. The severity scale 1s computed by avcrafing the damage in the reported cases. The most minor injury 1s rated at I 0 points, next at 12, then 16.8 and so forth up to 2.S l 6 points when the incident re'suJts in death. While the scveri_ty ratings of stairs and bicycles were s1m1lar, the people affected were quite different. Stairs far outdistanced other categories as the most likely way for people to be hurt in this country, more than double the injury rate of bacvcles in second place. Persons aJed under 4 and over 65 were most ljkely }O be hurt on stairs with a rate of 1,286 injuries per 100,000 for the toddlers and 756 for the elderly. For bicycles the 5 to 14 age group predominated at 1,0 18 iajuries per 100,000. SAN ONOFRE FINED BY NRC ••• From Al up again. ''It was during that sequence when we neglected to open those two valves." Barron said. The utility spokesman rebuffed criticism by the NRC. which said in a May 16 letter that the most recent violations, along with two other fines last year for similar breaches in procedure. indicate that the company hasn't adequately improved its man- agement controls. "Generally. we don't believe it's a management problem," Barron said. "We've had other fines at San Onofre and each one we believe is unique, and doesn't indicate a pattern." Last year's fines were $40,000 each. The Unjt 3 reactor started operat- ing at full power on April I. Edison has 30 days to pay the fine or to submit a formal protest Barron said the utility has not decided how it will respond to the charges, but bas in the past talc.en a full month before making its decision. Also due within a month, accord- ing to Hanchett, is a report on the findings of an NRC inspector looking into whether San Onofre plant oper- ators were lax in reporting a leak of radioactive gas earlier this month. The plant bas had several radio- active leaks recently, though aU have been described as minor and not harmful to nearby l'C$idents. PELT ASON TO HELP SHAPE UCI ••• From Al said the 60-year-old president of the Amencan Council on Education. "J want to be a part of the exciung growth.·· Peltason said he sees m UCl's future. A former UCl administrator, Peltason was named chancellor in March by the UC Board of R~ents aftt;.r a five-month search to find a successor to founding Chancellor Daniel Aldrich. Aldrich is stepping down this summer after 22 years at UCl's helm. Since then. Peltason has remained silent over has plans when he takes over beginning Sept. I. "We st ill have a vigorous chancellor tn charge of that," said the fo rmer chance llor of the University of lllino1s. Urbana-Champaign. Peltason did say Wednesday that University House, the home ofUCl's chancellor, is to be relocated on campus wtthtn two years. Aldnch has • lived since 1962 in a un1vers1ty-bu11t home on Galaxy Dn ve in the ex- clusive Dover Shores neighborhood . which border\ upper Newport Bay. One real estate agent made a SI million offer for it recently, campus spokeswoman Linda Granell said. Preferring to keeping mum on his agenda, the political scientist and author instead described for news reporters his view of the national education scene and shared some of his experiences as head of the pres- tigious educators' lobbying group. "I've written about political sci· ence all my life. h's been fun living it," he said. Peltason said the Reagan admims- tration was surprised at public outcry over a plan to trim student aid. That sentiment is growing, he said. "There is in this country increasing awareness that education is part of the solution." Peltason said. For the first time 1n U.S. history. the educator said a college education can be obtained by anyone, regardless or race or sex. "Not too many countries can sax that,,. he said. While the higher education system ma} now be more o~n than before, Peltason said it "needs repair" to counter abuses in financial aid, aQtiquated equipment and shrinking research funds. "If we arc going to com~te an the global market," Peltason warned that post-secondary schools cannot fall victim to declines documented in last year's highly critical report of the nation's high schools. "It's hard to explain that to the public," he admitted. "It's hard to persuade them you need more money to get better." Cutbacks at a university library are~'t immediatcJy apparent, he said, as an example. "It's hard to docu- ment. The decline in quality 1s subtle." But the ''short rations" the nation's universities and colleges ha ve subsisted on since 1972 "are pulling down intellectual capital," Peltason said. "When you find out about it, it's I 0 years too late." California, Peltason pointed out "is beginning to point the way." The governor has proposed giving the I!- campus UC system 30 percent more money tn 1984-85. ~ DRUG CZAR 'UNREMARKABLE' ••• From Al vesttgator described him as a small-ally was hired by Mobley to ume drug dealer who kept a low "launder" the drug profits so that the profile and managed to stay out of sums of money -$100,000 here, trouble with the law $200,000 there -could be discreetly About two years ago, Mobley tucked away in various savings and mamed a woman named Aleyda and checking accounts. FBI agents said. began a metamorphom that turned An unidentified witness -one of him into a virtual drug czar, accord-five who agreed to cooperate with ing to the FBI. . authorities -told the FBI that His new father-in-law was Mobley pulled together about Heriberto Machado-Velasqua . a $400,000 each week to make his Colombian national who owned a cocaine purchases. small cheese factory an ht!> native land Drug agents claimed Mobley and rented an opulent home an bought a kilo of cocaine for as little as Orange. But FBI agents !>uspect that S2 l ,OOO and then sold it for as much Machado-Velasquez' real husiness as $53,000. It is alleged Mobley would was cocaine purchase as much as 50 kilograms at a Machad o-Vclasqut1 1~ being time. ~ought by fed eral agent\. The wire tap also indicated that According to court documents, Mobley. who purportedly used a code Machado Velasquez and oth ers lan~uage to describe drug trans- would arrange to smu~le millions of actions over the telephone, had a dollar'> worth of cocaine from ( ol· ce rtain hard-nosed flair for doing omb1a into M1am1 and New Jersey business. and funnrled huge quant1t1cs of the In one cooversatton, he threatened drug to Mohlcy. • to have one of his alleged dealers, A tran'lmpt ofa wue tap placed on Ronald "Turbo" Ting, k.idnapped Mobley\ ttlcphoncs by the FBI until he agreed to pay off a debt of portray., the Huntington Beach rc<J1-nearly S 100,000 to Mobley. dent as a man who began to make so Ting was cnucally wounded by a much money that he wa!> having shotgun blast to the chest m the drug thfficulty h1d1ng 11 ;tway crackdown last weekend. In one n:cordcd conversation, Another recorded conversauon Mobley allegedly discussed purchas-quotes Mohlcy as suggesting that 1ng three \475,000 waterfront lots 1n Kaplan should be killed because of Huntington Harbour for cash. The thepoorjobhcwasallegedlydoing1n transcript :11.-.o quotes Mobley a' handltng the drug profits, FBI agenh ..aymg he'' purcha'>Cd 75 percent 'latd . interest in th t• S520.000 apanment Kaplan was arrested in last Satur- hu tlding tll' and ht\ wife.-lived 1n , Hr day's drug sweep. ~11d he alc;o owned a lot near Big Bear Although there 1s no evidence that Lake Mobley ever harmed anyone. 11 wai. In ~1111 another conversation. the murder of one of his alleged Mobley allegedly revealed he was pu<ihcrs that first attracted police to trn veltng to We.,t ( 1ermany to Mobley, pohcc investigators claim. purLha'i<' th ree tar'> tor more than Barclay Hodges, one of at least 10 S 130,000., It wall only one of two car-people who narcotics agents assert buying tnp~ Mobley made dunng the distributed cocaine for Mobley. was FRI anvei.t1gat1on shot todc.ath at a Jotfn Wayne Airport A 24-ycar -old Ncwpon Beach man restaurant 1n mid-1982. named Michael Alan Kaplan cvt'ntu At the time. Hodges owed Mobley about $350,000, drug agents said. Hodges' cousin Kelly Daniels was arrested for the murder, but the gun used in the k.illing was registered to a Newport Beach man named Clifford Casey. FBI agents claim Casey was one of Mobley's top-level drug deal- ers. Casey, 29, was arrested at has Oakwood Garden apartment in New- port in last week's drug raid. Investigators point to two inci- dents as examples of the quantity of cocaine that allegedly figured 1n the drug rinf. Last anuary. a vehicle carrying 900 kilograms of cocaine was stopped and searched by troopers tn New York. Drug agents claim some of the cocaine was headed toward Mobley in Orange County. The same month, Huntington Beach police towed a rented Lincoln to the police station where SO pQunds of cocaine was found in a suitcase in the car's trunk. Mobley's wife had attempted to prevent offi cers from towing the car, FBI transcripts state. Despite the busts and other close calls, there is no evidence in the recorded conversations that Moble y ever worried that the law was watch- ing him. At one point dunng the FBI invcsttgatton. one of Mobley's as- socia1es noticed a suspicious van parked 11'1 the neighborhood and wondered aloud whether it bclonaed to narcotics investigators. The van belonged to the FBI . During one recorded conversation, an associate who was arrested on drug charges but later released is quoted 8'5 asking Mohlcy whether th e bust miaht have something to do with Moblcy's telephone. "Impossible," Mobley responds. In another recording. Mobley's telephone hne goes dead and he jokinaly asks, "Is this the FBIT It WM tAAtlGE COA.S l Clrculetlon 714/842~ Delly Piiot Dell very I• Gu1r1nte.cl I •• • Clrculetlon Ttlephon•• Daily Pilat H. L. Schwertz Ill P11blt5t)f!I Chezy Dowellby Ao.emery Churchman 1 ! 1 .tr '1 A ,c,1s1,111t Controlif'I ! '"" r uh ltsht'r ... , 4).Jl -Stephen f Cararo Donald L. Wllllama .. -- • ~ I M.J&..J1 t1 'A'• '"'-'"'' I Ht ut"f •If """'"•Uf" CIH tlfled advertl1ln9 7141842·5171 All other department• 842-'321 MAIN OFFICE ) JI! ""°"'' !\a, ' I _.IA M•u I A Ma """''" ' h· • • '\Nj t ,_,. 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Oeyton 82 42 o.n-eo 41 O..MOlllM 13 154 Oe11on 83 H Oulutti 62 46 EIP-78 M E...,......lle 70 44 FlllrO.W.1 ff 43 l'ergo . 85 13 "'-1•'*" ff 32 Grend Reolde ... 46 a1 .. 1F'11111a 57 41 Gr~o.MC .. 4i Hertl0<d 62 38 Helena 50 35 Honolulu 85 74 Houeton ... 27 lncS•~· 89 42 JM*eon.Ma 80 411 ~ S••llOne<v ..... t:-n:-18 t1 !\.,id Cl1Y 16 40 • 43 """° .. n Llibbocll II IO Alctvnond 13 H ~ 11 61 a.aremen10 71 66 Mleml .._,,. 16 76 St 1.0u11 70 ... Mkllnd-00-67 u Sl ,...._TMIPll .. 87 MllweulcM 09 ... Seit I.Me Cl1Y ., ... M~IPllUI ... 67 SenMIOlllO 12 .. MMhYllle 10 46 ..,, OlegO 72 82 ..... ~ ... .. Sen Fr..-00 .. 50 Nft YCIB 06 43 StSteMllM 13 u Mottoll(.Ve eo 48 S.ttle tO .. North Pleil• 83 12 snr:= 11 80 °"lehome Otty 83 81 siou. ..,. ., ... Ometl• 78 83 SpcMI-M )9 OtleMO ... 59 8yr-50 33 ~· 68 4() Top91\e 13 eo Pno9ni• " 73 T-llO 13 Pm= 68 84 Tu!M 71 Ill Port .Me S3 ., WMhlngton .. .. , Portltind. Or ... 61 WICIM• 78 r.e Sun Mt• IOCl•Y et 1 49 p m , fltM Frldey a1 6:411 • m W>CI ""' egell\ el 7:60pm. JM*.onvllle J-KMIMa Cny lMV~M SURF REPORT 111 50 511 47 78 68 ... eo Ullle Aoc:ll 78 115 am Moon"-•• t0·63 pm tooey, Mt• el7:48Lm lll>d1l-1Q41111111l 40a m Frtcley Extended 1-2 2 2 2 Temperatures 1·2 ' 1·2 ....... direction. Sou~ Discussion of school sale faces likely postponment A proposal to sell Aliso School m South Laguna for construction of a low-cost senior citizen housing pro- ject will likel y be postponed tonight until a special meetine next week. said Billy J. Barnes. supcnntendent of the Laguna Beach Umfied School Dis- trict. The board had scheduled dis- cussion for tonight's regular meeting, but Barnes wifl ask for the post- ponement to g1ve board members and representatives of the group interested in buying the site more t1 mt' to discuss the proposal. Barnes said several other items on tonight's agenda may take considerable time. which would limit discussion of Aliso School. The board, however, is expected to receive an appraisal report tontght, listing the worth of the 6. 7-acre Aliso school site at $1 . 9 million. Proposed plans to sell the former elementary school have drawn strong criticism from residents who claim the school may be needed agam and from those who say its current use is meeting community needs. Housing proponents. led by St. Mary's Episcopal Church of Laguna Beach and the National Church Residence, have obtained a federal Housing and Urban Development grant of $2.9 million to purchase the property and construct 71 subsidized, low-cost rental units for semor citizens. Other matters being discussed to- nt'11t are the findings of a Math and Sc1enc.c Advisory Task Force and an evaliJation of the alternative school program. The meeting begjns at 7:30 p.m. at district headquarters, 550 Blumont St. Barnes said the time and date of the special meeting is expected to be set tonight. ~5itMl~Naj~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ DENTIST PROSECUTION RESTS ••• From Al Testifying fo r a third day, McCarthy. a profc!>sor of dental anesthesia at the Uni versity of Southern Cali fornia School of Den· ttstry . told jurors the li ves of Craven and Jones could have been saved. "If proper CPR (cardio-pulmonary resuscitation) had been started earlier. 11 probably could have saved her (Jones') life," he said in answer to a question from Dcpucy Dastnct Attorney James Clonineer. Asked what he believes caused Jones' death. McCarthy replied, "J feel a massive drug overdose caused respiratory depression. respiratory arrest, cardiac arrest and death." Turning to Craven's death. McCarthy said he believes the 13- ycar-old died as a result of "the combination of multiple drugs m high dose" coupled with inflamed tonsils and a gauze pack that lodged 1n her throat partially blocking her airway. Had \raven been kept at the dental clinic unul she recovered from the anesihct1c, rather than being released. Just Call 642-6086 she woo Id have survived. he testtfied. The prost'cut1 on presented about two dozen witnesses dunng six weeks of trial. Witnesses who worked for ProJopappas testified as did the emergency med ical personnel wh o treated the three women, close rela- 11 ves and McCarthy, perhaps the prosecution's most import.ant expert wi tness. Defense attorney Hollis Oyer said the defense expects to present six or seven witnesses, possibly including Protopappas, when it, begins its case next week. Judge Luis Cardenas scheduled an opening statement from defense attorneys for Wednesday. Oyer said he expects the prcscn- tatron will last about a w~k. YOUNGSTERS WARNED.~.·. From Al me, I don't think this is something that's come out of their imagina- tions,'' Clarke said. Administrators and teachers are "keep1.ng thei~ .eyes out" for any SUSPICIOUS acti vity and police have been alerted, Clarke said. He sajd he planned to send a nottcc home with students today to encourage parents to warn their children about street safety. He dtd not issue a warning carlter, he said, because he did not want to unduly alarm parents. "The ctuldren arc continually cau- tioned (about being wary of strangers) from about the first day they start school." Clarke said. He added that the two boys' responses to the incident showed they had been educated about the possible dangers of talk.ing to strangers or accepting ndcs or candy from them. What do you like about tbe Dally Pilot~ What don't you llke? Call the number at left and your message w111 be recorded, transcrlbtd and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24·hour ttn5werlng service may bt' und to record letters to thl' l'ditor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters column must Include their name and telephone number for verification. No circulation c11l1, please. Tell us what's on your mind. CROWN & DUCANE t·:x1 ·pptionally fin<' l>1w<trw ga~ Barl>e<lU<'~ from your fa vor1 te plac<' to shop . Crown Hardwarf'. porta hl('. ava ilabl<· in natura l gas or LP, has a scpara t<' raised rear burner. incluues igniter. rotisserie. porcelain grills an<l more>. l'ric1·s be gin at s l ()<)91.1 with oth r•r moucls ranging thru 43<199 fo r the lop of lhr Jim•# 2002 which 1s Coroa:a del Mar WttttUtt II Rlotlu '-o. 17th at lr\olnr nt Mn rthur 1021& lr .. lnl' \r 3107 t. <.out Hw .. 7141M2 I 133 I I l 1 <• n 2ROO • Harbor Vie" Ano•• fro1n Rovr• f ,ardrn• 1614 ~•n Mlsurl Ur. 7l l tb-42 1133 • Wh at's more, the price is les& than else where. You'll lovr our service. srl<'rtion and our prices. Crown Hardware Good Thtngs, Gadgets & Stuff Anilelm HJU. Lon.1Bew lmvrrlal llwy IM Aho• ., 91 .. """ l\hop.t:n• Ctr 51120 en11 An• 2154 unown Canyon Hd Dtvd 7 I 4/998·S282 714 1841 ·~584 • CIJJU cookolf eve.at set at L1oa Country The 2nd AnnuaJ Oreat Ortqe County Chili Cookoft' to benefit United Cerebral Patsy will be held Saturday at Fruier Park in Uon Country Safari. While team• from throqhout Southern Californla cook their chili, periticipentl can enjoy country·Weltem entenainment u well u a variety of non-1iop races., pmea and conte1t1 plaaned for cblldRn. For adults there will be t.be Ualy Hat contest, the Wildcat Tarzan and Jane contest and a p1e-eatlna contest. A panel of chUI expen1, 1poru celcbrilie1 and TV ~nonalitles -toncludana ventriloquist Jay fohnlOn of 'Soap" fame· 11&r1 from "The Young and t.be Restleu" and the L.A. bpreas cbeerleaden -will jud&e the bowla ofbubblina brew. Admiuion ii $6 per adults and S3 per child. The cookoffissponlOred by theCruy Horse Restauran'4 KJK- FM Radio. Miller Beer and Yaao Sant'aria. CIJeae to be dJ•trlbated . Federal surplus cheese, powdered milk and honey wdl be distributed Friday to eliaible HuntinJton Beach senior citizens at the ne'Wty remodeled Michael E. Rodgers Senior Center at 17th and Oranse streets. Recipients must be able to prove they arc residents of the city. The distribution. on a first-come, fint-served basis, is scheduled from 8-11 a.m. Jade, Ivory dl•played A d isplay of jade and ivory from the largest private collection of carved oriental an 10 the United States will be on view at Earth's Treasures, I S40 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach Friday throuah Sunday . ~A seminar will be held each day at 2 p.m. on the "Wisdom of Jade and Ivory as collect1bles." Pet -.ency fand-nJRr Rt The Animal Assistance Leaaue will hold its sprina luncheon at 11 :30 a.m. Friday at Mercury Savinas and Loan Bank. I 09S Irvine Blvd., Tustin. Tickets arc SS. Proceeds will support the agency's spay/neuter projects. Fo r more infonnatfon or reservations, call the lcag\le at 978-PETS. Cldld aba.e RmJnar Rt Prcventina the scxuaJ abuse of children will be the theme of a s~posium scheduled Saturday at Golden West College m Huntinaton Beach. The event, described as a "Child Assault Prevention Proaram," runs from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the college center. It is designed to infonn parents about the steps they can take to protect their cbjldren. Top ics will include child porn~hy and patholoaical profiles of sexual offenders. S en will incl~de pohce officen and counselors who hav~ worked witll sex offenders and victims of sex crimes. Program fee is $3 per pcnon or SS per couple. for more information, call 89 l-3991. Women, wealtlJ to be topJc "Women and wealth," a one-day seminar slated for Saturday in Costa Mesa. is geared toward making women more aware of what they arc doillj with their assets. The class, by the USC College of Continuing Education, will be held from 9 a.m . to 12:30 p.m. at the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel. The fee is $35. featured during the seminar wall be a panel of women who have achieved wealth, round-table discussions. and an analysis of part1c1pants' wealth-seeking and wealth- maintaaninJ profile. For 1nformat1on. call the USC Orange County Center. 752-SSOS. Body laJJ.6Ua6e taugllt PartiClpants can learn how to read and communicate throuah body and face language during a three-hour scmmar at Orange Coast College Friday from 7-10 p.m. The work.shop wall be held m room 111 of OCC"s Counseling and Admmions Building. The fee is S IS and tickets will be sold at the door. The seminar will be conducted by Jeffrey Figler, an instructor at San Diego State Uni versity's College of Business Administration. Olymp1c• •tyle •how slated "Get in the Spirit of the Olympics" with a luncheon and style show Saturday sponsored by the Court Blessed Sacrament 2024 in Westminster. The event will be held at noon at Pecks Famly Terrac,c Room, 7601 Bolsa Ave. m Westminster. Donation 1s $8. For anfonnation or tickets, contact coordinator Pauhne R,avera, 893-1478. or ticket chairman Ann Bodkin, 837-0889. CALENDAR Thunday. May 17 • 7:30 p.m., Foul.Ila Valley Scllool District Board of Tna1tee., Education Center. I 7210 Oak St. PoucE Loe .... ................ u.- Newport Beach clty omclala adm.lt tbe IJCbted marquee at tbe Newport Theatre Arta Center .. .la 9lolatloD ., ..... .... ordlna.acee. Residents say city marquee violates NB sign ordinance City officials a dmit theater sign does not conform to zoning laws By JERRY mRSCH ordinance except the CityofNcwpon °' .. Mir,......,, Beach. Barbara and Wmston Winston At issue is a lighted marquee at the can't understand why everyone baa to Newpon Theatre Aru Cenier on Qiff obey the City of Newport Bcach'ssi&n Dri~c. The marquee shines into the Fighting over Prop. A escalates Sierra Club, s heriff s quare off as June 5 election a pproaches By JEFF ADLER °' .. ~,._. • ..., Whale the Sierra Club's Angeles Chapter has urged Orange County voters reJCCt Proposition A, county Sheriff Brad Gates has called for passage of the peony transponation sal" tax mcrcase. saying 1t will save lives and improve rublic safety. The Sierra Club s Orange County conservation commlllcc urged voters 10 tum down the tu increase because at wall make "transportation prob- lems catastrophic where they're now only intolerable," club spokesman Stanley Hart said. Echom1a theme voiced by the anti· tax Citizens Against Unfair Ta.uuon, Han said the transportation peck.Age appearing on the June S ballot would be detrimental tQ. the public interest. "The beneficillnes would be pri- vate land development firms." Hart said. The freeways to be constructed wi th Proposiuon A monies would add 300,000 new households to south Orange County and 600,000 cars increasing freeway congestion, he added. However, the spokesman said the club supports the transit component of the plan, especially the proposed 38-mile. Costa Mesa-to-Fullerton light rail line. In endorsing the plan, Sheriff Gates, represent1 ng the Orange Coun- ty Chiefs of Police and Shenfrs Association, said Proposition A would reduce the time it takes for law enforcement officers to respond to medical eme_r:aenc1cs or cnmc calls. The sheriff said the tax 1s a small amount of money when weighed against the public safety improve- ments that would be realized if congestion is reduced. . "At stake here, in our opinion, are lives1" Gates said. Joining Gates in the endonement wa.s Orange Co\lhty Fire Department Battalion Chief Jerry Lopn, presi- dent of the Oranac County Fire Department Chief's Association, who agreed congestion is hamper'Wa emergency response time. '\.. Meanwhile, charsina that tax ad- vocates have virtually unlimited campaign funds at their disposal, Citizens Against Unfair Taxation spokesman Tom Roaers unveiled an anti-tax television spot and acknowl-cd&ed the organization had won the right toairthcspot for free on selected local television stataona under provisions of the federal Fairness Doctrine. The doctnne dictates that tele- vision stations must provide equal time to groups with opposina view· points1· even if the time has to be proviaed for free. ~ Ro$en said the anti-tu group has supphed local stations with financiaJ statements proving its inability to pay for the expensive air time. He said ht expected that between $75,000 and $100.000 wonh of air time would be provided by the stations by election day. "We arc reaJly havin& trouble raising funds," added Rogers, who said Citizens Against Unfair Taxa- tion has raised a total ofS75,000 u of Tuesday, far lcu than tax advocates. The antH.a.x advcrtisemenu will run during ~rime-time proarammina in slots similar to th05C purchased by tax proponents. The spot previewed for report.en slaps at county dcvelopen, who will profit if Proposition A is passed. the commercial and tax opponents con· tend. Winston home at lSOl Cliff' Dr.1 directly acro11 from tbe chy-ownea community cmter and theaacr. Not only does tbe sip' 1 liabt ab.ine into the Winlton borne but it mo violate1 tbe city'• aisn ordinance for raidential areu -t0methina the city freely admiu. ''Tbe 'iln is in violation of the city'• sip> code for a residential area. However, tbe city ii exempt by atatc law for tb.ia and muy o~nina codes," wrote Palb. : and Recreation Director llooald Whitley in an April 3 memo to the Pub Commiuion. "The city is just like (fonncr President) Nixon -we don't need rules and we ca.o do what we want," Barbara Winston laid. The only aipa allowed in a residcn· tial area. accordina to city law, a.re for sellin&. leuina or rentina a residence. And ilie aips must be less than three lq\llft feet. But the tbeaier sip advenilet upcomin& shows and i1 4'1> feet by 6 feet -27 square feet. ·- Winaton, who bu lived on Oiff' Drive since 1978, aaid abe bu complained to Che city about the sian and traffic problems stemmina from the theater for years and that the city is just setting around at lookina at the problem. Winston claims the nei&hborbood suppons ber. But Whitley said the Win1ton1 arc the only boutebold complainina about the theaier and .. tbey have been difficult to work wit.b." However, the city iJ cooaiderina acvcral alternatives wb.icb Whitley believes will solve the problems. Fint, the city is buildina a stairway from the hillside theater to a public parkina lot below. "That should help with the traffic," Whitley aaid. Second, the city is considerina tumina the sian sideways so it ca.o be seen by pusina cars. This would also reduce the li&ht ab.inina into the Winstons' home, Whitley said. The theater, formerly a church. wu purchased by the city in 1972 and convened into a community t.bcater in 1975. The park commission 11 .cbeduJed to decide what to do with the sip at iu mectina 7 p.m . June S at the Newport Beach City Hall. 3300 Newpoi:t Blvd. It's likely1 ~~ to Whitley, the comnuwon will decide to keep the sip essentially u it is -a latJe, commericial-style mar- quee in a raidential neiabborbood and that is apinst city law. "If that were a private business it would be in violation of the Sl&D code," Whitley said. NB woman held in JW A coke bust A Newport Beach woman alJcaedly ca.nyiDt Sl0,000 worth of cocaine in her punc wu arrested at John Wayne A.i.rpon by lherift'a deputies who bad been alerted to expect the woman's amval. Doreen Lynn Morris. 20, wu aperebcnded at t J p.m. Tuetday after dott trained to uiff' out narcotict led deputies lo four ounces of cocaine tucted m the woman·s punc, aa:ording to 0ranac County Sberift"s Lt. Richard Olton. Morris. an employee of an exatic car company an Cotta Mesa., wu arrnt.cd on suspicion of polletlion of oocainc for the eurpose of sales. Olt0n aid 1ovestipton bad received a call earlier in the day from authorities in Contra Cotta County 11~n1 Morris would be flyina into John Wayne Airpon W1th a much u halfa pound of cocaine. Rape suspect held A 24-ycar-0ld Chapman Collete student from Kuwait wu llTeSted at bit Newport 8c:acb apartmeot on auspiaon of rape aft.er a 32·ycar-01d woman identified him u the penon who attacked bcr, police aid Wcd.netday. Tbc woman told police she met Fl.JCal Dawoud AJ- Sabeb at a Costa Mesa bu catty Tuesday monriaa and then returned to his Oakwood Garden apenment wbert she aid she was raped. Offioen said the woman ran half-naked from th,r man's apartment and sou&)tt out a security officer whl> called police. Al·Sabah, arrested at hisapenmcnt. remains in jail on $25,000 bail. Cycle rider loses control, :• is killed in fall from bike-----'I thet\ ofS2SO in cash early Wednesday momin& prior to the restaurant's opcnina. • • • Tax Lease, 4600 Campus. reported the theft of an IBM computer vaJued at SS.SSO. • • • A Newport Beach man reported the thef\ of ltis 1983 Cadillac Seville valued '" $22,000 from his home 10 the 2100 block of Serrano Wednes- day. 1972 International van parked estimated at $370. Wednesday on the 7700 block of • • • Ronald Road. • • • Two femalejuventles were arrcsted Wednesday afternoon at the Skaggs drua store, 7S•2 Edin1er Ave .. on suspicion of shopldlina. Recovc~ were cosmeucs worth $30. • • • A maroon 1978 Dodac van wu burglarized while parked on the 6100 block of G lenwood Drive. a re11dent reported Wednesday. The loss in- d uded a CB radio worth SI 70. Coeta lleea A San Juan Capistrano man was kWcd late Wednesday when he lost control of the motorcycle he was n d1ng southbo und on Camino ·: 1 Capistrano and was thrown into a li&ht standard, officers said. Sammy R. Pierson. 37. was pro- Irnne Residents of a home on Prov- incetown A venue reported that two men who said they were police officers knocked on their door and pulled out a aun before leavina without incident about 9:30 p.m. -' Wednesday. The men asked for a · I resident of the house who was not at home. Irvine pohcc say they had no officers in the area. . I .. . . • I . :~ f : I ·~ t . . . . ••• Potato chips and beer worth S' were ta,ken from an apanmcnt on Bearpaw durina dayh&ht hours Wcdnelday Entry w11 m1de by breakina 1n throuah a kitchen wm- do..-. • • • A man who left his car In the Parter Hannifan lot ovcm1a,ht Tuesday re· turned Wcdnc1day to find SS40 worth of valuables taken. Tht theft includes a car stc~. tport1 cqu1~ ment and cath. • • • Two 14-ytaN)lds were arrested on auspicion of burtl•ry at their rrspec· tive junior hiah schools Wcdnelday Nett)1t>on apparently linked the youths to a bre1k-1n at a home 1n nounccd dead on amval llt M1ss1on Community Hospital in M1ss100 Viejo, ac-eordmg to Orange County sheritl's Lt. Richard Olson. Thomas Hart, a passenger on the motorcycle, suffered mmor 1nJune11 m the accident. < 'ul verdale last month. Both teens were released to their parents' custody. • • • More than $600 wonh of tools was taken from the truck of a cab parked durinaa lunch break at a construction site at Timberpte. A brown Toyota pickup was seen leavina the area. • • • Tires and wheels valued at about $300 were discovered mi11in1 Wednesday from a construction trailer at East Yale Loop and Grccn- moor, a vehicle owned by the Bren Construct1on Co L&pnaBeacb Three people reportedly threatened someone with a-knife in lhc 500 bloCk of Soulh Coast Ht&hway shortly before midniaht on W<dnetday. Police were unable to locate the sus~a. who fled southbound on foot. The victim was treated at the scene for minor 1n1unes • I • A lquno Beach motorcycle officer rrportcd that while he was at lunch someone ripped the antennae off h11 motol'('ycle in thr b3ck of the police "There's no evidence that the dnvcr was traveling at an unsafe.· spc~ or anything of that sort," said Olson. who noted that Pierson "'as weanng a helmet "He JUSl lost contr?I of his bake." station Wednesday about ~ p.m. • • • Camera equipment wort~ S l 035 ~as reported stolen in a burglary 6-0m a house in the 400 block of Cypress Drive Wednesday morning. • • • A commercial buraJary at 332 Forest Ave. sometime durina the n1aht Tuesday resulted in the loss of an un~nown amount of jewelry, the pro pryetor reported Wednesday mom1na. • • • Thomas Roll in Cook. 22, waa characd with malicious m1sch1er for brea!Una two w10dows w1lh his fistsat the White House Restaurant after he wu asked to le.ave for beina intox· 1cated. Newport a.ob Security Padflc Bank. 4 Civte Plau, reponcd the then or a vicko ca tte rt'COrckr frvm the blnk•t office dunna buain h<>un WcdnQ- day. Someone apparently walked off with the machine. • • • The Ou1et Woman ~t.auraot, l 224 E. Coast Hi1thw•'V. rt"POntd the P'oU.Dtain Valley Someone stole S 17 .SSS an cash and took documents and office c:qu.i~ ment over the weekend from Auto Express Lcas1na Inc., 181l9 Brookhurst St. • • • Two youn1 men are suspected of defraud1na an innkeeper after they orde~ meals at the Claim Jumper restaunant It l 80SO Brook.hunt St. and fled without payiq. • • • A victim reponed to police thtl week that hia wallet, containina S 17 cash, waa stolen frvm his locker at Fountatn Valley Hi&h school last November. Bu.nu..,toa a.eta An 11 -ycar-old boy livina on the 17600 block of Jacquelyn Lane told police Wedneada)' that his unk>cbd MWTly lO-iocb racina t:ric:ycJe WU 1tokn from OU VltW Cefttet The Joa wu estimated at SI 3S. • • • Eotcnna thf'Ouah a rear bedroom window, tomconc burslanud a home Wed~) afternoon oo the 19700 block ofOamnont l..ane.. The I included a S200 cable syaiem ~. • • • 4'omronc at~t a S 70 blttcry from a A resident of the 17200 block of Apel Lane told pohcc Wednesda~ that someone stole her red 1982 Schwinn cruitcT bicycle. The loss was estimated at $200. ••• A woman reported Wedncsda}' that someone stole all four wheels and tires from bcr white l 983 Toyot.a. parked OD the 3400 block of Edu\&eT A venue. The car wu left resun.a on milk crates. The lou wu estimated at Sl,000. • • • Someone broke into 1 home Wednelday afternoon on the 21600 block of lmpalaLane, enterina throuah an unlocked rear. window. The loss mcludcd MO in caah. • • • A red 1971 Dauun pickup was bUflAl.nu<J wtuic parked un lhc JOU bloCk ofHuntinston StftJCt. the owner reported WednClday. The loll an· eluded tools worth S l SO. • • • Someone bul'IWUcd a home on the 19800blocko(Ocean BlufTCude by entmna tbrouah an unlocked Pf'lllC door. The lou included a $600 video recordicr • • • A resident of llte 200 block of Nubville Avenue reponcd Wedo~ day that someone ltole a 11lvCT Schwinn 1()-speed t>.cycle from bis doeed Pl"IF· ~ k>a wat estimated at $300. • • • Somf!Onc entered an unlocked pr- qc on the U700 block of Dundall laM and stoic a tool bOl, 1 tttlden' repe>ncd Wcdnaday. T'hf Ion wu Three women are SUSJ>CC1cd of ,ieahng $I S.000 worth of oectlaoes and bracelets from t.be F1oky'1jew- elry counter m South Cout Pl&u earlier this month. The tno. ~ as a team. distracted the jewelry and opened an unlocked dilPlay drawer. police said. Finley's is 1 New York-based 1ewelry company that leases a counter in the May Co. • •• Two Costa Mna men~ anatcd ttus week for di1turbina the pea« after the own« of an auto rq>&Jr buaincsss complained to police the)' werr twusina hia customct1. Rich- ard and Oak Smith, brothers who live in the Aloha Palma Trailer Park. were taken into custody after they atJ~y 1ereamed oblcenitia at ems)loyccs and customcra of the Pomona Auto Body abop at 16'6 Superior Ave. Correction In I Daily Ptlot lf\JC~ Wcdnada}. 1t wu suted that S•97,000 wu nevtr recovered at\er 1 bank robbery '' the Secun1y Pacifk Bank_i~ Corona Ckl Mar last Novembtt Tl* amount or ~ stolen was IC\uaUy S·UlCn . 1na to tht FOi ~ Daily Pdot t~Fll tht m'OI , OrengeCout DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, May 17, 18&4 Spring Sal• In Pr~re•• May 5111 -May 21•1 S~ECIALS ON CARPETING - FfAPERIES -VINYL FLOORS - Cold air slows Snowmelt, flooding . · Personal income up By SM A.IMdt.., Prest sand bias alona makeshift canals to si~hon off water &om WOOD PARQUET A bunt of oold Canadian air &lowed the soowrpclt in ~e m~fdna ~ IDO"".l*k, and ruidCOlS dua out from and spendin d too the Rockies today~ brinainJ cemporary relief fn?m mudsbda that damaaed dozens of homes. ' -9 floodina and mud1Ude1 that have caused exten11ve l , ~DE N'S-.... ,,. d&m.qe in the Rockiet. Cooler temperatures slowed the mehina with By &M Aueda ... p,.. . lfut waiJt-ddtp floodwater kept the 400 residenu of temperatures dippint into the 30s and '40s over much of w ASHINGTON _ Americana' ~oal ancome Bqp, wr.o .. wJ off ftom their bomea and offida.lJ said the Rocky Mountain rqioo and even a few teens and 20s l"OIC o.s percent in April while their speodina went up an they wont be able to return before Sunday. lo Idaho. postecJ in 10mo i10latcd locations, said Nolan Duke of the even faster l. l percent. the aovemment repo~ today, workm raced apiost time to channel wato-&om a Nation.al Severe Stonna Forecast Center in Kansas City, gjvina further evidence that the economy rqaincd ~°jJ '-• • "'t IO '•* ,....,. * ... , ........................ . Lie No. 230422 c1rptl sales • instll1tKNI • custom ttap11ifs 1113 PUClllTIA an. CISTI •SA• 141~131 brimmina reservoir away from a town of 700 people. Mo. But he said lhc merco.ry would jump back into the 80s momentum last month. Tbe Commerce Department In COlondo and Utah. hundreds of vol':J_Dlelen piled this weekend. triuerina a new round of ra id meltina. the consumer spendina increuc of I. I ~nt followed 'T New ~ Weight Reduction Prograni • Have you tried other methods and failed? 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Platinum Primrose and Coral Blush Each set includes 1 flat 1 titted sheet and 2 pillowcases (except twm t p11iowcac;P Twin extra tong and dual ktng ava1larte 1n se'ected colors Queen Set King Set ............... Comp at Strouds 38 00 18.99 23.99 28.99 SAVE 112 & MORE SPRINGMAID SHEET SETS Twin 16.99 Compare at 25.00 A pattern for everyone. Choose "Bona1r" (as pictured), a spnngt1me floral or "Four ~quares ... a bold geometric or "Paradise.' a stylish Onental print. All of Spnngma1d·s Tranquiltty are easy care. no-iron. 80% Kodel polyester, 20% cotton, 160 threads per sq tn Set includes 1 flat. 1 fitted sheet . and 2 pillowcases (e>ecept twin 1 pillowcase) Full Set Queen Set King Set .... Comp. at 38.00 58.00 64.00 Strouds 25.99 33.99 41 .99 ' r • '\ I ' ' SAVE 1h Waterbed Sheet Set s. 29.99 Compare at 60 00 Queen and Ktng sizes Coordinated and matched sets in assorted styles SAVE 1/2 Wamsutta Comforters. Twin 29.99 Compare at 60 00 Assorted patterns Large selections SAVE 1h Siik Look Bedspreads. Twin 59.99 Compare at 125 oo Cascade qu11t1ng patterns in a choice ot 61 fashion colors Other sizes 69.99 to 79.99 Compare at 140 oo to 170 00 SAVE 56%-63% Quallofll Bed Piiiows. Std 10.99 Compare at 25 00 Filled by P1llowtex with Dupont Dacron polyester processed to feel ltke down Hypo allergenic machine washable Queen 12.99. King 14.99 Compare 30 00 to 40 00 SAVE 1/2 North Star Mattress Pads. Twin 8.99 If perlect 20 00 Polyester felt with fitted corners Sltght 1mperlect1ons won·t a Hect perlormance Other sizes 10.99 to 15.99. If perfect 23 00 to 36 00 SAVE V2 Solid Color Bath Sheets. 8.99 Compare at 18 00 Large 36 x 70 fu ll loop terry 9 assorted colors SAVE 1h "Soft" Toilet Seats. 7.99 Compare at 16 00 14 solid colors to choose from SAVE 'h "four Seasons" Shag Rugs. 21 x 36 10.99 Compare at 23 00 Available tn 9 lashion colors Other sizes 7.99 to 17.99 Compare at 16 00 to 38 00 SAVE 'h Cannon Destiny Towels. Bath 7.99 Compare at 16 00 Generous size extra heavy bath towels 1n 100°0 cotton terry. assorted colors Hand 5.99 Compare at 12 00 Wash 2.24 Compare al 4 50 SA VE 'h & MORE Kitchen Accessories .. 99 to 1.59 Compare 2 50 to 4 00 Choose from soltd and print Kitchen Towels Mitts Potholderc:; and Or~hcloths SAVE 55% Plocemot ond Napkin Sets 2.99 Compare 01 6 75 Quilted Plocemots with morch1nq Noplms 1n 16 solid colors SAVINGS SERVICE SELECTION SATISFACTION Huntington Beach 18672 ·aeach Blvd. 24321 Ave. de la Carlota, Laguna Hills Between Edinger and Warner m Marshalls Shopping Ctr, 842:_4112 In Oakbrook Village, South of Laguna Hills Mall, 855 -9995 OoitltJ • Hu.t1•ato• l11e• • L1a111 Mills . LI Jtlll . llktwt0d . Lu h&H . IHIO ,Irk . IHtcl11r . Nort•rid11 P11d111 • Puente Hiiis • llttni4e • St•dio City • S11HyY1le · Torruct · W. Los bttltS MO~DAY·FRIOAY 10 9, SATURDAY 10·6, SUNDAY 10-6 .. two months of substantially_ weake! a~vaty. Jn Match, personal conlwnption spendma, which includes nsential- ly everything eltc.ept interest paymen~ on debt, was up only 0.4 percent. In FebQ!ary, spending had dropped a sharp I.I percent. Bellhopa held In Kennedy death PALM BEACH, Aa. -I?avid K;enoedy as~ed two bellhops at a posh hotel to sell him cocame, complimeo~ them on its "good quality" and aP.peared to be un!1cr us influence in the days before be died of a drug mixture, authorities say. Kennedy, 28, son of the.late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. was found dead April 25 in blS room _at the posh Braz.ilian Court Hotel, a few miles from the winter estate of his grandmother, Rose Kennedy. The ~llbops, Peter A. Man:hant, 24, of Warwtck, R.1., and Davtd L ~rr, 301 of West Yarmouth, Mass .. have been charged with selling cocaine to Kennedy and conspiring to sell the substance. QE2 anchored, powerlea NEW YORK -The luxury liner Queen Elizabeth 2, halfway through a I 0-day Olribbean crwse, bas lost power and 1s anchored off St. John in the Virgin Island, a Cunard Lines official said today. The vesscJ departed from Philadelphia last Sunday and was due back Monday. It has made stops in Bermuda, St. Thomas and St. Martin. Vegas tourl•m takes plunge LAS VEGAS, Nev. -Tourism plunged for ~e sixth weekend of the strike by hotel worke~. bols~ the contentions of union leaders that the stnke bas senously hurt the city's main industry. Accordinf to figures released by the Las Vegas Conventlon Authonty oo Wodnetday, 82,334 tourists visi ted Las Vegas last weekend, a 19.S percent drop from the same weekend a year ago. He Freely changes name AUSTIN, Minn. -Despite a warning that be mi&ht have trouble cashing checks, a 39-year-0ld man 6as changed his name to Welcome Pleasure Freely. Mower County District Judge William Nierengarten . pve pennission Wednesday to the former Rex Rc:>bcrt i=:rink of Austin to make the name change. Freely said the adea to change his name came to him in a dream three yean ago. CALIFORNIA Bradley won't go to Moscow LOS ANGELES -Mayor Tom BradJey said be will not go to the Soviet Union nor meet with Olympic officials to try to persuade the Russians to end their boycon of the Summer Olympics. The mayor told a news conference Wednesday that he hoped to go to Moscow on a "people- to-people, person-to-person" basis. but "I'm convinced now that that's not go ing to happen ." Bouvla galnlng weight RIVERSIDE -Ehzabeth Bouvia, the cerebral palsy v1cttm who battled unsucccssfull) to be allowed to starve to death tn a hospital. 1s eating 'Junk food" and pining weight, friends say. Bouvia moved in with lzzo and his wife. Della, in Hemet after leaving a hospital in Tijuana. Mexico. on Apnl 29. Boy faces murder counts INGLEWOOD -A l6-year-0ld boy may be tried as an adult for the beating deaths of two l l-year-0ld girls who ltved near him tn affiuent Rancho Palos Verdes. The teen- ager entered no pleas to two counts of murder and two co unts of rape by instrumentality during arraiJllment Wednesday before Municipal Court Comnussioner Michael Price. LA metro plan• reduced LOS ANGELES -Funding setbacks in Washington may force the first leg of the proposed Metro Rail to be cut down from 8.8 miles to just four, planners said. Nick A. Patsouras. board chairman of the Southern California Rapid Transit Distnct, said Wednesday that officials have vi rtually given up hope of the basic construction exceedinJ 5.5 miles, and may settle for four miles. The S3.3 billion, 18-mlle subway would run from Union Station downtown to Nonh Hollywood in the San Fernando Valley. WORLD Sovlet Unlon loan approved FRANKFURT, West Germany -A consortium of 31 Western banks, none American, has granted a $250 million loan to the Soviet Union in the first major Western credit to Moscow since the 1979 Soviet mvasion of AfghanisLtn. Banks from 17 countries took part in the deal which was signed Wednesday at Dresdner Bank's office in Luxembourg, a statement from the West German bank said Vlets free American BANGKOK. Thailand -An American adventurer, captured by the Vietnamese while searching for buried pirate treasure. amved m Banglcok today after beina released from an I I-month captivity in Vietnam. Fredenck Graham Jr .. of Belmont, CaJif .. said be was well- trcated by the V1e.tnamese and felt "great." Afghan vUlage bombarded KHYBER PASS. Pakistan -Soviet MiGt and helicopter gunships bombed an Afghan village near Pakistan's M1chni Candao border post today, 90 minutes before Vice President George Bush was due to inspect the border post. The attack by two Soviet MiGt and two helicopter. sunships occurred at the village of Lalpura, inside Afghanistan and seven miles west of Machru Candao, where Bush was visiting. NATO leaden till~ weaponry BRUSSELS. Bel11um -NATO defense ministers today pledged to use new t.echnolQlies in buildina conventJonal weapons for the 1990s, but the qrcement was overshadowed by criticism of Dutch indeciaon on new missile deployments. WrappiDf up a two-day 1prina stratqy session. the 14 defense mmisten of the North Atlantic Treaty Orgamutton also aa;reed to increase 1pend1na 1n the nut st~ yean on 1upport f.actlitJes. Duarte "1n no• officlal SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador -President-elect Jose Napoleon Duarte received h11 official ocrtificatc of election and made plans to v1su three Central American heads of state before meetint President Reapn in Washinaton. Duarte and his runnin_i mate. Rodolfo Castillo C'taramount. received their official c:en.afication WedneJday from the Central Election Council durina a ceremony at the National Theater. i ( I ,/ I I I AD STARTS THURSDAJ GOOD TRRU MAY 23 ~ring the whole herd of little ones down to these s tores. on Satu,rday, May 19th to see SHORTY & C HEt\P CHICKEN SOUTH GATE/DOWIEY 9:30 to 12 BELLFLOWER 2 to 4:30 NEW!ARROW 7'x4' YARD SAVER 77 Save t h e yard fr·om t ool clutter. 6Yz' pea k height storage center fits up a gainst existing structu re. Sturdy u nit with hot dipped galvanized s t eel frame part s. You assemble. DURALITE CYPRUS SERIES ~WEBBED FURNITURE 6z~z~BS 8~~ 7;1~~ 15~~6 These patio sitters have vanilla / brown striped erlra wiiiiiide webs and folding frames of l" furniture grade aluminum tubing. GLIDDEN SPIED BOUSE PAINT 9?! We've chopped the price on Glidden's best erlerior latez house paint. We'd be glad to miz up a custom color for you. MURRAY MEN'S 27" 01 LADIES' 26" 12 SPEED ~ 11' X-12 BIKE I ~ ... ~ ·c ._ ) YOUR CHOICE , ·-~ 94a8 a.w #6286 OR ~~~l..t •6585 Speedy Gloss Black bikes with Chrome Ma.es Bend 15 / 16" handlebar with black foam grips, stem mounted shifter, front and rear caliper brakes and more. GENIE 1/• BP TRAC DRIVE GARAGE DOOR OPENER WITH FREE TRANSMITTER >114.!~so The deal is on their quiet Trac Drive model. Buy one now and get the FREE eztra transmitter. NORMAL INSTALLATION 58 00 OF OUR UNIT • ~.LOJC ~ Goot> V l86S ATIHE. 'R\'-UT ~tc.J5 · PVC IAll MASTEi GUTTER 2 88 10· LENGTH , Thia qutter system anape toqether and it won't dent, ruat, leak or Kratch. Chooae between brown and white. ALLTIADE HEAVY DUTY PVC CUTTER ·588 •940-Pl Sharp little quy with t•mpe,..d blade that can alao munch through water hOM and pipn made from synthetic resin. SUllEDI GllLLUSTEI DUAL IUUEI GAS BADECUE 97.~ SHORTY CLUB LLUS:r.R One of their amall•r unit., but lot. ol good stuff like Lite -A -Mat{c ignitor, lava rock, 20 lb. tank and a p proa. 225 sq. in. grill. 24.000 BTU'• INSIDE PEEL BAMBOO FENCE 3 77 6'x l2' M ount it to an eaiatino fen ce for a different look . (Thia ia both National Transportation WMk and Police w .. k. They always come taoether, especially when my wile drivH. ) BINDERS TWINE 2 79 APPROX. S LBS. I'm really in a bind trying to think of a pun for thia stuff. But I won't string you along any more, let'• move on to the nerl item ... ELECTRONIC MVP REMOTE FONE 39~~~ Compatible with touch button or rotary system•. hu 700 rr. rang• from ha.. unit and last number redial. OuantitiH are limited, so No Rain Check.a. PIESTONE SUPEI FLUSH OR PIESTONE SUPER SEALER SALE PRICE 1sJ_ LESS MFG. 1 50 MAIL-IN REBATE- YOUR NET COST 0 1 AM'ER REBATE e 22 oa. Fluah or 14.S OL S..ler. two good on .. for the radiator. Can't beat that Rebate deal. I STAILEY SO FT. POWEIWINDER TAPE i1r.i:11ol 097 -.....-#34-150 One of the hand}'l't\an·s best friends. (Uncle Herky couldn't afford the treatment, so for a small fM hia doctor touched -up the X -rays. ) FENCllG 9/ll"x4" DOC EAIED 1.EDWOOD GIT. 59c 3x4 IOUCI llDWOOD 277 • I 8 FT. Get more privacy for the bad1yard with the daogie ear.cl or rough and reddy redwood. SCBLAGE BELL ENTRY LOCISET S HORTY CLUB LOC • YBH 9!? Like most of iu species, it h .. a Bright Brau finish. One of the better brands of lock.a that you can buy. ALL CROWN V AMITIES WITH CULTURED MAULE TOPS We've got quite a few to see, from your basic pullman to the big riby models. TheH deals don't com• around every day. so qet moving. In -store models only. HEFTY 33 GALLON Hefty STEEl·SAK STEEL SAi TIASB BAGS ~~J] 139 10 COUNT #940 Strong bags that won't aplit on you halfway to the curb. Compare that price. we don't mind. WllDSONG 48" CEILING FAN 2a•• Revenible 3 speed fan hu brown finish wood blades. Limited quantiti ... (Don't inatall it too low. or the Wind.song will really stay on you,r mind.) STP CAI CARE PRODUCTS H HEAVY DUTY ~~G 69C FLUID 12 OZ. HEAVY DUTY 97c ENGINE DEGREASER 16 OZ. =~TMENT I ~~z. CARB SPRAY 12• 13 oz. Good stuff to aeep the bugqy on th• ~d. 51/z'' COLOR Pica a Petunia, Palud.osu.m Da.i.8y, Dahliu or M.arigolda. Th.-lat e bloomers don't mind the sununer weather. (I hope nower Children come back in style. r" got. cloeet full of bell bot tom.a. lOTe beada and Earth Shoes.) IATIOIAL LUDD •ODIL SO I. e<. GAUACE DISPOSER 6699 ;,, SALE PRICE ~ 700 -LESS MAIL-IN RESAT&- YOUI m COST AFTEI IEIATE 5999. 12 HP 'apc>Mr is backed up by a 5 yr. warranty. (Oops. Don't aay "backed up" when talking about drains.) GAS EIDCY SAVO WATEI IEATDS 30 GALLON 114••: 40 GALLON 12488 They're built to save you mon•y by uai.ng 1 ... gu. ( Didja hear that. you landlords?) 5 year tank warranty. SIMPLE GREEN 2 97 24 oz. I don't know what'• in it, but it cleans juat about rNrythin9, from toola to carpets to leather and wooclwork. Biodegradable. O'SULLIVAI STUDEIT DESI 89~!6 SHORTY CLUB HOSS <~BCN Bartonwood finish desk hu solid wood drawer pulle that can handle the ina and ouu of schoolwork. E..-y enough for the k.id to a.uemble. ARMSTRONG PLACE 'N PRESS VIOL FLOOR TILE 33!. 12"'al2" til .. go in N.O. thanks to the •lf · stJcldn9 back. Mor. patterns tha.n r .. 9ot room to u.t . .o come on down and tab the tlle tour younelf. (PL ..... don't f..d the Chicken. ) CLUB PRICES ARE THE LOWEST! Join the SHORTY & CHEAP CHICKEN CLUB now and find out ju.at how low prlcM can go. Y O\l also get the Club outfit. enterlahunent di.count•. and the Club Nnnletter. Detail.a i n all National Lwnber storM. ----------------..------------·------------------------- Or1ng9 Cout DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 17, 188A Reagan gets lils MX missiles-but not as many as he wanted w ASHJNQTON (AP) -Prnidtnt Reqan will act HOUJe approval late Wednetday after eeven boun of includint pbone calll from Vice Pretldent Qeo,. Buah. then ~~l1if the Soviets don't return by nellt April I to the .._,. tbAa balt the MX nuclear weapons be wants aod debete. Minucet before AJpin•a deal wu approvedWednes-arma they walked out of wt ya.r. . •• ~ ta.o. miaiJn will be tied to reocwcd U.S • ..S0yie1 Today Houee Speaker Tbomu P. O'Neill Jr. .(). day Diabt, MX opponents failed by only Ii.a votes. That {)1'9vito it inten&d ··u • c:unnto the SoVle11, ll'IDt \alb under a compr0milC approved by the.House Mus., p;dicud there would be another vote on tbe MX, 211-212, to kill the weapon Reapa lw made the Alpio explained ... If they're u afraid of tbc ~ u tbeX l\lpponed reluctantly by the l{eqan adminiatration. which tie wants to ecuttle. ' centerpiece ofbla record Peotqon buildup. 1ay, theyc.omum tothotaluand trytoberpio atawaY,. "'Tbe White Houee aupportcd u.s only after they uw o ·Neill llid oppooenu initially bad enouab vptet to Reqan touabt 40 MX weapona in the filCal l 98S Reqan wu ukcd about the comDf()mile today-;~ they could.n't win the whore thina," llid Rep. Les Aspin, kill the weapon~ but lost 12 votet Uley tbolllht were firm bu<Jaiet. But the vote by the Democrat~ntrollcd Houae awaitina the amval at the White Houae of Mwcah ... o._9' .... ia...._cbief'=' ;;.;;...;;archi==-tect=.....;o:..;.f...;tb;;;;.e;....z;..lan......;....;...;w_hi_._ch_w_o_n_2_2_9-_1_99 __ •_ft_cr_"_tre_m_en_d_o_ut_.;;p_rcu_ure_. _·_· _fro_m_tbe __ Whi __ ·ie_H_o_u_.ae....:.'...,. autborh.et only IS of the &iant I ().warhead weapona, and President M' :ucl de la Madrid. ~;r 1 WEEK .~·; ONLY GO FOR THE GOLD AT \ Spa(J)Lady ' r, Juat I '4311* E ARE CELEBRATING THE OLYMPICS WITH A I { 1 ~ • nar year \ .!..-, '\ ,..... ·~' \'~, ~'~" ,,·. per person 2 FOR 1 SPECIAL s--, ~'-. t'i with this AO .. -·~ ...... ~ ....,,.. . •'' -,.._ ....... -TWO 2 year Memberships for the Price of One for you and a ....;-... ~, friend OR Double your Membership Time and get 4 Years! ..:-'. I • Thi FNlt In Facltill ..... Eldl • .,.,, tor Liiia \ \,\--• Atrulcs • "*"" / I' I • Joffr• wrcise E .. 1,..tt • s..a ~ • lld1Yi.11ll11d lastrKtlH • Prtntl """" & Dfmi11 ... * •Ptua Reglatratlon Fee • •rtrltloul G1i.11e1 • life Cycles Rob1 · 5 GREAT LOCATIONS q.Hftt • en a ~ 1il'~-/r, :..~..: .. -:;-..::':.. A SALUTE TO SU MMER '84 SEND THEIR TEMPERATURES SOARING IN LA BLANCA'S SURPLICE TANK. J. 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I m/.1-y, t/,q IH .it } {WI ..z11d m BEVERLY I Ill I\ \.1111.,.d.1) \f,1) /'I .11 1 p •11 lhc<t shrr.i."> will ..zlso bt .ittended 11) rtrn •t •ll.W•1 • /m111 /,111t1t'tJ, (nit n/ ( uli/11rru.1, Ld Bl.mc.1, OS<.u dt l.z Rtt1t.1, lll-..·11 \1f'J'I ,,.,.,,/ y,,, \t l.11m·r11 \u1111uv:«1 A n11111/wshw11 f'rt •t11r.1111111 ··ill .tlv• l>t J11 Id n•urnl.n, \f.z\ 17 111 ~A\ TA MO.V/CJf • 111• ( /.111.11.1 A'.i•t.111 of I .1 8/,111c.1 .11 7 p.m ..... ' ( ' ... A ROBINSON'S CHARGE? IT'S EA Y! , \ ON SALE NOW LIST 395°0 SALE 19905 See a demonstration at: 2750 Ha rbor Blvd. Costa Mesa • (7 14 ) 549-5056 At Harbor & Adams, next to Coco's Tues·f'ri' Sat: Sun: 10:1.'i 7:00 10:00·6:00 12:()().1):00 Des.igns in Frosting May 17-20 Sweet Art\ of Orang~ Count) prc..ent a t·ake dernrating c'h1b1t ion ~ n1mpc11tio n at Hun tington Center. I I I IHI (,)lf<t\l\l \\1\) jl\l J'}f{~l'\.\ll) l'Kf\l'\l YOl 'K\'l\A.\1 1\\'TIR<ARD,DINI R'"I ,pc1un.(AR'TT BIAN<llI ORAMFRICAN l Xl'Rl\\(A fU)Al\iDlf> !()UNI 0 1 ()lR \ \11..,l'I H~ l'\\ \'\I>\\ I 'I I (>Pl;-.... A';\, A<< ( >L'Nl YOl " <A';\. L'\l 1~1~11 l >JAI In (\LI RJH T JO< RH>11 APPRUVA\t 1111 I \\lf\J \\\) 1'!111'\.f I\ 1<111 IKll IX()(l4 11 ·P·J1 IK<l\.t 7 :\\1 101'\1 \r'\l>l>l 'R<>PIK •\l(li{"l\\111 IAl\f Y<>LKAPPll<AllO'\l;\il<IH\1\lll>'\ Rebels ~'·kind ' i ,,claim couple COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) -The kidnappers of an American couple arilled the pair repeatedly about the CIA, but were kind and never threatened to kill or harm them, the couple said today. "Ther. kept sayina they wouldn t harm us, that we would be well provided for, well taken care of and that we were secure," Marr. .,Uen said of the 11 Tamai separatists who held her ~~ her husband, Stanley ~en, captive for five days an northern Sri Lanka. The Columbus, Ohio, couple were released Tues- day night at the home of a Roman Catholic bishop an the northern city of Jaffna. The kidnappers had threat· ened earlier to kill the Allens unless the Sri Lankan government paid them $2 million in gold and released 20 Tamil pris- oners. They decided to release the couple after the government rej~cted the demands. ·: "They told us from the very beginning that they would not harm us," Mrs. Allen said at a news con- ference. "They were very kind to us. and yet distant. "I never never did feel angry with them," said Mrs. Allen, 29. Her hus- band, 36, was in JafTna working on a water supply project for the Ruhhng Corp. of Akron, Ohio. "Their biggest qucsuon was 'arc you CIA?' " said Allen. "To me this 1s kind of humorous because we have never had any dealing with the State Department or CIA." He said the kidnappers called each other "com- rade" and claimed they did not know each other's real names. He said three of them regularly "gnlled" him and his wife about the CIA. "They seemed to be very educated people. very lcn owled$eable about world affairs." he said. They were blindfolded whenever they were taken outside to the toilet or shower. They were given cigarettes. boiled veg· etablcs, fresh fruit. soft drinks and tea ./ Photog f unnles Newapape r photoarapher Bernie eo.ton clowna around u Preeldent Rea&an and White Hou.ae New. Pho~raphera Aa- •oct atlon. Preafdent Ken ,, ...... ~ ... .Blayloc:k &et ready to prment an award darlnC the lfOUP'• ban- qaet lD Wuhlnaton. Reacan .tuck b.la flDCera lD ht. ean dartn& lut year'• ceremonlee. Irwin Shaw dead at 71 KL OS TERS , Switzerland (AP) - American author Irwin Shaw, whose 1948 best-seller "The Young Lions" was one of the most ac- claimed novels to emerge from World War fl, died ofa heart ailment. He was 71. The Brooklyn- born author, who also wrote scores of SHAW shon stories and plays, died Wednesday at a hospital in Davos, near Klosters in the Swiss ~'fl"· LOS ANGELES (AP)-Andy Katf. man. the wecky con* whOM anb propelled Nm from chlldhood ptaya and New Yortt cof- t.. hOU8M to tn. Emmy Awar~ nlng TV Mtl•• "TaxJ," hu died of lung c&neef' at 8Q4t 38. KAWMAN Kaufman WU perhaps belt known for ht. portrayaJ of tn. zany Immigrant a*> mechanic In ''Taxi," Whlch ran on MC f« four yeere. Kaufman'• vatted echticka -EMI "The Young Lions," which told the stories of two American soldiers and one German soldier on the battlefields of World War II, was Shaw's best-known work and was made into a highly successful movie. Major television miniseries were made from other novels written by Shaw, including "Two Weeks in Another Town" and "Rich Man, Poor Man." Shaw had completed about half of a new novel when he became ill, said his son, adding. "He worlced until the end. He d idn't really want to die here. He wanted to go home" to Brooklyn, N.Y., where he was born Feb. 27, 1913. Notion of Persian Gulf protectlon discussed. but no takers to date W ASHINOTON (AP) -Tbe Ullhed States bu ditcuuc:d with Saudi Arabia and it.I neilhbon the possibility of providina air cover for oil Wlhn in the Penian Gulf, but the counuiet have not requested the help, a Reapn administration official aid today. Air cover wu dilCUllCCI within a ••ranae of pouibilitiea., f'or im,pro~ ICCW'it)'. apinst auacb on tan.ken as they cany oil from tbe palf. 1M official aaid.. .. We've talbd to them about ~t we can do, but tbert baa been ·oo specific offer to ao in and provide air covC!t .. said the official, who declined to be identified. U>untriea aeekina American air protection would have to offer use of their ~ be said. He also doubted the countries would be interested because of their concern that U.S. auppon miabt provoke further att.ICks. The United Staie. maintains a carrier Wk force with jet planes in the Arabian Sea. But the official said the distance was too ~t to provide effective air cover from there for tankers ID the IUlf. Another administration official, who also requested anonymity, said it was unlikely a security deal could be worked out under the present CtrCumstances. "Tumifta over buet IO AJDeri SP '° -... ,.., PQPUlat domaUcaUy." ai4 dUi olkill ~ • relUCWlt to do IO." He said tM llMW ...... he coDcern for tbeirtoven:ipry, IO &M ..... G(IDOOUllliml attacbi to uabappinett over U.S . ..,.,.., for lsML Meanwbile, tbe Slate ~ .ad. operlllOn ol American merchant veMtlt have been edviled ""to exercise extreme caution" while in the Peniaa Gull. The U.S. offer to &Milt tbe p.lf uliom witla e1ir ICCUrity needl ii not new. President Jh::Zt Carter m8dc similar offen and drew up pla.fts for•. ~ ~t force to be eent to the ftllO!l to deal With e1emcnlDlfl?llCi•-•••-Lh'i11 But the latett offer tAkel on~ Mpiftc-Ce ...._ of the recen1 attacu on lbippina -appemitly by boCh Iraqi and Iranian warplanes-which are an outpOWda of the lran-lnq war. Even before the latest auacu on ahippina. the oflid&l aaid the adminiJtratioo bad tent 0 1 leria of miaiou" 10 the Penian Gulf to dilcuJS potential thrall to tbe rqiOG from Iran. Vice President Georae Bulb will be in <>mu witbin the next few days oo an official viJit and I.be leCUrity ~ is likely to be raised with Omani ~ the officW said. "We have been talk:ina to t.bcm about eecurity, equipment needs, gjvina them our ...menu of die situation, the lrantan capability and daJllen of pouible escalauon," he added. Soviet Jews protest reat loans. LONDON (AP) - Angry theatergoers scuffie4 with demonstrators who disrupted a Moscow Oassi- caJ Ballet perf ormancc to protest the treatment of Soviet Jews and restric- tions imposed on Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov and his wife. The fist fights brolcc out Wednesday night at the Dominion Theater when the protest began during the first act of a ballet called "The Creation of the World." Outraged members of · the audience punched and kiclced a score of demon- strators as they shouted slogans in front of the orchestra pit. One protester jumped on to the stage and demanded the lifting of restrictions on Sakharov aod his wife, Yalena Bon- ner. Sakharov, winner of the 1975 Nobel Peace prize, and his wife arc on a hunger strilcc to demand that she be allowed to go to Moscow and leave the country for treatment of a heart ail- ment. The couple arc restncted to Gorky, an mdustrial Clty 250 miles cast of Moscow, where the 62-year-old Sakharov was sent by Sov- iet authonues on mtemal exile in January 1980. Great rates. Home Improvement Loans fo r Great American Living! Add on, put in a pool or spa, modernize your kitchen ... or whatenr. At a great, low Home Improvement loan rate. "' 'Annu1I Perc~t.ige Rate fir\t ve<ir A PR only Rate ~ubfe<l to< h<ingl' .95°/o A.P.R. * Apply today. Call for the office nearest you. 644-1634 Call collect Orange County Great American G:t Federal SaYin~ Bank iT11m • - PERFECTLY SUITED FOR SUMMER. 0 These go·anywhere, do·anything swim trunks from ust for the Off Shore are a m summer months ahead. Ma~e of a comfortable. quick drying cotton/polyester/nylon ble~d, the y're perfect for every~htng from swimming to jogging, to Just plain running around. What's more, they fool< great, no matter what you're up to. def/aqua or b/acl<tgrey In faven . es s·m-J-xl ; 22.00. strip I • south Coast Plaza only. in MEN 'S ACTIVE SPORTSWEAR. d Wl.ndsurler Meet top-ranl<e -19 Crai Vester, Saturday. May ' g 3·00 South Coast Plaza , 12:00· . . in Men's Active Sportswear. nor Ostrom \ Editor (comma) often (comma) 'hard' to please Forthe past month I've been trying to get the manuscnpt ofa book read) for the publisher so he can have at in print next fall in time forChnstmas The book is written. but there are hundreds oflattle questaon~ of gram- mar, punctuation and usagt.> that ha' e to be rcsolvt.>d. Rereading something }'OU wrotl' last year or even last week can be a humblingexpenenct" Something that seemed clever at the tame can fall flat when you reread 1t. l invanably sa~ a lot of things I wish I'd never said. too, and they come back to haunt me at a time like th as. It alwa} s makes me wonderifl'll feel that wa} next wt"ek about the things I'm wnting this week. The pubh~her has cop) ed11ors who are experts 10 matters of grammar and punctuatton. but I don't always agree with them.e'en when thetre nght and I'm wrong. Examples. ANDY ROONEY necessary. bu1 I hated both those lltles. The second was the worst lltk and, wouldn't you kn ow ll, !>old the most. Neil Nyren. theedtto r. wanted my name in the tttle of1h1s book. too. but I put my foot down. It was Nl.'11 who came up with a name for 1t tha1 I like. It will be called " Pieces ofM ) Mind." That seems about ngh t. bu1 I'm going to be embarrassed 1f no ont buys It. Andy Roon~y ls a syadicated columDist. ---......, _________ _.,. _________________ _ "Equal access, pro~st the crlUcs. would open up the high schools In America to proselytizing by every sect and cult; aJuts Fariakhan would have the run of the place. " PATRICK BUCHANAN colamnlat RICHARD COHEN Redford cuts a ballpark · figure 'The Natural' brings memories of happier plays Jn my manuscnpt, a copy edttor put in acommacvef) ttme I used the word "but" or"and." It as trad1t1onal to use a comma before those words. but it's not necessaf). 11 docsn 't make sense and I don ·1do1 t. In the sentence." Laura lakes spinach but Richard doesn't," there 1s no reason at all to put a comma before the word "but." Copter crisis cited in-early t~sts WASH INGTON--Justonce I hit a home run. It wasn'ta real home run. For that you need a ballpark or a stadium and some sort offence. Thi was an empty lot home run. but it was a good shot anyway. I swung and knew the mst.ance the bat hit the ball that tt was gone. It was the feel of the thing, the sensation ofit. When I looked up the baJl wassailing over the lot and into the street. This was something for me since I alwa) s closed my e)CS when I swung the bat. It's hard to hll a home run that way. 1 spent a lot ofllme taking commas outofmybook. I don't accept rules for commas. A comma should be used to make a sentence easier to read and understand. If at docsn 't do that, there's no reason to use one. Commas givegroupsofwordsa pace and rhythm. They separate ideas th at might otherwise run together 1n a confusing wa y. There 1s no ru1e in an~ grammar book that can help a \\nter withcommas. ltmakes11 ver) difficult fora teacher Thereareat least IO thangsl regularly run into trouble with when I wnte. For instance when I refer to ··ourCountry." I alwavs use a capital "C "This 1s to ditTerentaatc "our Countn" from "I arm lOUntn "I also cap1t.ahze the word "natto•·· when 11 refers to The l n11ed \)talc!. and that all ustratesathardargument I ha'c with editors When 1 use the amcle "The," cap11alazed. 1n front of"Thc United States." the' 1n,anabl\. rt'- move the ca pa ta I "T .. Wh) do ·the) do that?Th.e name ofth1s < ountf") " c-"The United St.ltl'!. ·· 111s not thl' "United State'> .. I he single mo~t dallilult problem fora wnterthl'Sl'day!.i'I 1n thl· mattl'r of the third J)l'rson singular It''> no longer comadcrl'd an·cptablc b~ .,un11.· people to let the mai,culane pronoun st.and for e1.cryonc You (3nnot ~~. "A wntcr should be lart'ful w 1th Im English'' You mus1 c.a~ ·· .\ \Hlll'r should be tardul "1th ha<. or hl·r English" Not ha' inga word tor th<: 1h1rd person sangularthat doc-. not !.pccih gender makes 11 'en clums} es- peciall y when )OU haq~ 10 keep repeating "his or her" sc"eral tames in a paragraph Somet1mc., I 1gnure 11 and Just sa) "he" when I mean men and women There arc thousands of things that worn me. and I kn o" thq wun"t JI! be corrected an thl· book 1 am reluctant to use thl' word "harlt' when I mcand111itult lurc·«.ampk but "difficult·· '>t1met1ml''> !>Cem'> a little preten11nu' fherc·., nothing wrong with U\1ng · hard," anvwJ\ I don't u\t: thl' '-UbJu nc111. t' H'f") often and cdatorHlon't likl' that I u!>uall\' \8) "II I was~oing to Ru'>!.1<1 .,"not,"ltl"l'regoingto Rus.,1a " It'' wrong. but I 1u't don't lakl' the 'IUhJUnl'll\l' OlUl h It \(.'l'm\ pn\<,\ Ill ml· f hl· 4Ul',t lllfl o1 w h.t t to na ml' t hl' hook "ac. mmt di 11it ult (or "hard- est" l Thr 1.1<,t t "n hook' I'' c "nttt:n had m" n.aml in thl'lr \Ille' -·· \I c" Minute<\ W11h .\nlh R11om'' ·;ind .. .\nd "1url' h' \nd\ Roonn ·· I m nn morl' m1x.ic.:\t than I\ Internal 'eyes only· documents show problem s hould h a ve been no Surpris_~ WASHINGTON -I've rncd evidence in the past that the Arm~ would rather spend money on fancy new hardware than on making their ex1stingequ1pment safe. So hundreds of Gls have died in accidents that mag.ht havt> been prevented. A case an point as the Army's workhorse hehcopter. the venerable OH-58. M) associate Do nald Gold- berg has seen the o\rmy's internal o;afety records on the chopper. and they are disturbing. Whale the brass hats bicker o"er what to do about the OH-58. accidents keep happening, and the' ·re often fatal .\ccording to the Arm~ 's o~n ex pens, the problem w 1th the helicop- ter 1s that 1t bas an alarming tendenq to lose power in the t.aal rotor while operating at low speeds and low altitudes. This 1s most lakelv to happen dunng takeoffs and land.mgs When the tail rotor'' power goes. the OH-58 sptns out of control and nashes. Thrs fatal drawback should have been no surpnse to lhe Army "The marginal effecti veness of the OH-58 tail rotor was documented through development.al testing pnor to accep- tance of the helicopter by the Army :· one internal document statl·s. But apparent!) no one regarded this ao; a senou-; problem at the ume From 1980 through 1982. the .\rm) 's OH-58 choppers were in- ' olved in 47 accidents. resulting in fou r deaths and 11 maJOr 1n1unes. Of the 47 accidents. 34 began at altitudes • lower than I 00 feet. and :!5 of these were due to either tall rotor or engine problems. But the brass m)stenousl}' delayed spending the several hundred million dollars that would have corrected the problem. Safety experts. an an "eyes only·· cable. expressed their d1sma) "~uch a delay would unneccssanl) cnntrnue to expose our aar crews and aircraft to a proven safety ha1ard." Thrs warning brought an "eyes only" response that cleared up the mvstery. 1f no1 the problem. Allocat- ing funds to make the O H-58 safe. the cable explained. wou ld be "contrary 10 the a"1at1on c:ommunity'' con- \llOUs decision to bu) new as5.ets at thl' expense of product-1mpro"1ng 11ur current fleet." l n oth1.·r ~ords. the "a" 1ation u1mmun11"" would ra ther buy ne" hclirnptcr<; than make the old OH-58s safe It 1hc .\rmv stalled long l'nou11.h. ma' be ( ongress would g1' e ll money for new ones. Understandably. thjs candid ad- mission was not supposed to be spread around. The cable warned: "No reference should be made to this message in other ... channels." Evidently an hopes of justifying the delay in making the helicopters safe to operate. the cable continued: "A careful review of O H-58 accidents ... shows that pilot error was the primary cause 78 percent of the tame. Admn- tedlY. loss of tail rotor effecti veness was a contnbutangcausc 10 38 percent of the accidents " Blamillg the pilot was easy enough. since the A.rm' admits that there as little or no margin for error an the O H-58 Anythtng shon of perfewon could lead to disaster. But the Pentagon Poll)annas suggested that su1.h -.uperhuman pilot performance was simply "a matter of training. d1sr1pline and leadership." So 1nstruct1ons were wared to all commands using the OH-58 that 11 ~hould not be flown at less than 35 knots when at altitudes below 500 feet unless absolute!) necessary. As sev- era l commands were quick ID point out. pilots v.cre already painfully aware of thas Footnote: Belatedh, the Armv has embarked on a S2 ball ion effort to give the aging OH-58s new engines. rotor systems and electronic gear. The program will be completed in I 989: the aging O H-58 will be phased out by the "car :!000 FAST FOR LIFE: I've reported before on the dubious evidence used to convict Amencan Indian Move- ment leader Leonard Peltter for murder an the deaths of two FBI a~ents dunng a 1975 shooto ut on the Pane Ridge reservat10n 1n South Dakota Affidavits by an Indian woman were self<ontrad1ctOf)', and the FBI allegedly doctored ball1st1cs evidence. The Ind ian leader recently won an ev1de ntaary hcann~ to determine whether a new tnal 1s warranted because of the challenged ballistics evidence. But 1t may come too late for Peltier In mad-Apnl. Peltier and two other pmoners beg.an a hunger strike at the federal pen an Marion. Jll.. where Peltier wa\ sent to serve two con- 'ierul1\ e life sentences. They com- plained that pnson authonties had conli!>cated and destroyed their re- lig1ou<, artifacts. and 1hey were no longer abk to practice their tra- -' ditaonal Indian beliefs. So they re- fused to eat until they were allowed to practtce their religion. "They have taken away the only aspect of our II ves that kept us spintually ahve and human," Peltier said, so the hunger slrike is lhe only rehgious expression left to them. That's why they call 11 a "fast for life." Two weeks ago. the three prisoners were moved to a prison hospital at Springfield. Ill.. where attempts were made to force-feed them. They got a court order forbidding the force- feeding. EXECUTIVE MEMO: In- vestigators for the Energy Depan- ment's inspector general got this practice-what-you-preach warning in a recent memo "We have a very important m1ss1on to perform forth1s office. the department and lhe public an general We canno t complete that , L.M. Bovo l ---- JACK ANDERSON mission by .spendi~e an !nordinate amount oft1me v1S1 tang Wlth our co- workers. making personal telephone calls. reading the newspaper and eating breakfast at our desks dunng duty hours. etc. These practices have been observed and this memoran- dum should be considered as nottfica- tion that the above descnbed ac- tivities will not be condoned " Jad AJJdersoa is a syadlcat~d colum.nlst. Best educated in Antarctica a cold fact The phyak;9I *9 of a ctty once WU Umlted by how long tt tOOk to walk to work. The unct.ted city· llmlt WM that ring IWOUnd town beyond which wu too ,., to hike downtown ln a reaonabte time. Wu reported that the continent wtth the best-educated population 11 Anwctiaa. But can you name the Clnlldlan temtOf)' With the belt- educated population? It's the Yukon. Feet thet the Otts Etevetor Com- pany keep1 tta WuhlnQton, o.c .. offlce In • OM-4tory bulldlng II of no llgnlflcance whatl<>eY«. Approxlmately 32,000 U.S. reaf-ct.ma .,.. over age 100. About 24,000 are women. Q.Hu any American preeident fftlfK written a book about another American preefdent? A. One onty. Herbert Hoover wrote The Ordeel of WOOdrow Wbon. Q. Whal'e the dtffereoce b9- tween an ool8k end an <)08COP9? A. An oollk IS an Eut tnc:t&an tN9I' boat. An ooeoope ts a d9Ykle to vtew the tnlkte of an egg. Thought ewwybody knew that. a. Utt t1'4I anlmala that can trentmlt rabies. A. Too long a llat. Any warm- blooded animal can do eo. In the hltla wtthln North Central ttaty ts a natkm on a. equare mtlM. It h8a an omc.t narM onty ~rt of whtch ~·w fN9l hMrd. t D bet Moet a..ne Res>ubHc or San Memo. tt hM 18,320 people, about helf &t many .. woric ,,, .the 11o.ctory twin towwa of New Y Mk Clty't Worid Trade Cent.. L IL ~ le • e,ndlcated aa ....... The feigned neutrality of the ACLU? \.\-i\~HI M1rO'\, lt,1h1gh,~honl permal'i a 'ilu<.knt l luh to \llld\ tht' teaching'> nt ~;111 \itan 11 l.'annot proh1 b1t a \llHknt l luh Imm \IUlh ang the teaching' of Jr\\I\ ( hfl\t That mo<lt•,t ro11tT'"nr1 111 1·~ual time. and the A me nrnn I ll'n tag<.". may soon ht· wrtlll'n lRtu kdcrdl law Under tht· l·qu.il .\<.le<\'> Law. headed for Hou'>{· Ooor dfhatr Jn} sccondar. St hnol '" h1d1 gC'nC'rall~ allows group\ whtl h .ire an1 t1at1.·d h\ and compo~d of \t1.11knt' to meet dun ng non-1 n't r uu 111na I pt'nod'i ·· may not "d1~ nm mate on the h;1\1~ ol the reltg.iou' rnntcnl ot the 'J'X'l'l'h at such met·tintt' I 1· 11 \11\1 h.1vr a French duli 'l1Hh '"JC \1oline \Ou onMJ ,r A r Daily Pilat . " .. PAT BUCHANAN t"annot proh1b1t the Bable cl uh from ~tudvtn(l St Paul Sounds fair. docs ti not'l F-"'en Bamev Franl... with ha~ <:rol\ de Guerre from Amencan!> for l.)cmo- cratac '\rtaon. ha\ urged fellow thhc,men not to ~o into 1hcar ntual- 1'11l war dance on th1\ one "I 1beral') H. l. Schwertz Ill Chezy Oowellby ~. . " . f I I f Frenk Zlnl ,, ,,, t' Tom Tell • ~' f I can get in a reflexive position where they JUSt ~) no to anythsng ... I don't understand why anyone would want to tell high school students that they can't meet and pra) ~fore school.'' Barney, say hello to Barry Lynn. minister of the llnated Church of Chnst. point man for the ADA. To hear R<'" I ynn trll II, af this law pas~s. you can put a steeple on every public '>Chool an Amem.·a, and. come rt'C'CSS. the Hol}' Rollers wrll be work.mg out m the aisles. Equal access. protest the cntacs. would open up the high schools 1n AmcnC'a to proselyt 111 ng by every !.eel and <Uh. Louis Farrakhan would hJve the run of the plact. But thii 1' ~lf-inductd hvsteno l nd('r 1hc term\ of "Equal Access," the onl.,. ~x-rm1\\1hlC' me('tangs would he \tudcnt-organ1Led dunng clns~ hour\ and \ nluntan I he children an Jllendanrt would · no morC' be a capt1H nudal'nrc than the) arl· on ~0111rday af\rmoon an a thl'atcr wutthang "Jlashdanu."' and "R1\ky Ru'i1nr'i\" cclrbratang olht•r \.alul'\ tfo w w1lh <.On\aStenn . UIO the .\mcman C I\ II I 1tx-rtll'\ l mnn rr11111. h 1nto 11111r1 ii\ 11dad1n Y1rg1nH\ to 1ns1st that U.~ Nazis have a const1tut1onal nght to use school buildinJS o n a aturday night to indoctnnate their Hatler Youth, and then deny equal nght of access on Monday momtng to the 14-year-olds of the Sophomore Lutheran Club? Pcrm1tt10g even voluntary separ- auon ofkids on the basis of religious 1nchnat1on or interest, Rev. Lynn told this wnter. vaolatc the "melting pot" ideal, s1m1lant1es. not d1f- fcren~s shpuld be emphas1Tcd an public schools. This. mind you, from the spokesman for an organization that has fought to defend one male student's ng.ht to wear his hair hke Olona Steinem. another male tu- dent's nghl to hnn' his homosexual ola\<mat(' to ~(' senior prom .\nothcr cnt1 c ~ad \tudenu would tl( unable to rC'mt "peer pre sure." and ma) go hear rchg1ous· speakers and "dm~prd th<'1r own rchg1ou5 behC'fS" lnterc~ting argument. But when p3rent~ hnve vchcmC'nlly dC'manded that 1he1r children not be ellposcd. an n•quirfd rr:uhng, It) filthy words and \lllnr1<1u~ na~\a~r11 tn modern l11cra· ture. the ACLU and kindred spints have stndently defended the teachers' n~t to expose children to "fresh viewpoints" and "new ideas." Ap- parently, 1t ts accept.able to force hag!) school kids to face the "new ideas" of Kurt Vonnegut and Studs Terkel. but illegitimate to all ow them a voluntary peek at the old ideas of Sinai and the Sermon on the Mount. If one defines religion as a belief system. the ACLU as not anti· rdigion: indeed. 1t protects and promotes ats own belief system an the public school\ -among the tenets of which 1s that netther earth nor man were created, that the former 15 a con'iC(luence of the Giant Fire- cracker. the latter a descendant of the Great Ape What the ACLU '' rcflexabl) hostile to on constant suard agam~l. 1s transl·e ndentl\I rehg1on, Chns- t1anity in particular Why? Panly bccau~ au own belief sy tern cannot survive free and f11r compct1t1on Not only docs M:Culansm fail to mttt the frlt need of mankind, intellt'l· tunlly 1t 1s stcntt nnd unper,ua•uvc. 'ill11m.11ch it " bonn11 I don't think many women know that feel mg-at least not a lot of the women of my generation. Many don't know. either. what 1t feels like to see the ball go swish an basketball or, in boxing, land an uppercut with such precision that your opponent has no choice but to crumple. I know those feelings. Most men know those feel - ings. Most women don't. That's why I think there Wlll be great arguments in thascountry about the movu: ... The Natural." Women will want to see 11 because it stars Roben Redford v. ho pla) s a baseball player-an over-age one at that. It as. I think. his best performance ye t. bu1 he 1s1 ust a supporting actor as far as I'm concerned The star oft he mo' ae 1s thegame of baseball. I would be l)mgafl said I wasstall a fan. In m} )OUth.ane\ll man named WalterO'Malle) moved the Brook]} n Dodgers to Los Angeles and I have been a baseball widow ever smce. Lake some spa nster school teacher who as said to remain true to a lover lost an the war. I sttll pane for th<.' Dodgc.-r!.. I mass the park, Ebbets Field. the neigh borhood 11 was in, Flatbush. and the taste of a hot dog as 11 was seasoned b) the man> hands that passed at along. My father took me to th e games and there have been glonousdays since. bul none as glonousas sitting next to my dad. eating a hot dog. dnnlongarrother- wisc taboo Cokeand watch10gJack1e Robinson dance ofTthird and feint towards home. "The Natural'' is about that son of game It as about the game ofbaseball before free agents and lawyers who negotiate on behalfof 19-year-olds. It takes place before teams moved around lake deadbeats flee1 ng cred1- tors. before pla}'ers smoked dope and had affairs with the WI\ es of team- mates-before Howard Cosell and hts tncessan t now of malapropisms made baseball sound lake a real~state clos1 ng. I had a most pn v1leged you th I listened to Vince Scull). Mel Allen and Red Barber. You can not do betterthan that On Friday mornings 1 lasten to Barber on National Public Radio from ha s retirement home an Tal- lahassee. Often he talks abou1 nothing, and that''iJUSt fine with me It's the voice that counts. Once. duringaspaceshot. NPR patched him in with Ch uck Yeager and I sat down whaledressmg. one sock on and the other sort of dangling. hsteningas two of the great Amencan voices chatted with each. J can't recall anything they said. I can not. how- ever. fo11et the moment There 1s sometha ng about "The Natural" that captures all of that. There 1s plent} wrong with the film - theconfus1ngd1recting. for mstance. But 1t 1s inescapably about baseball. old-lime. virtually mythological baseball a1 that. and so at can not go wrong. My wife loved at. hut other women who have seen at came away thinking 11 was1ustokay. The.>'. are en titled to their opinion. But 1f they've never hit a hornl' run. never dreamed of play mg the majors and being "a natural;' what can they know? A s I grow older, baseball sort of pulls me back I find m yself going to Balltmorc now. where the nearest ma.ior league team 1s. and I like at vet) much The stadium 1s small and antiquated. which is •vonderful, and 11's ~1tuatcd in a rn-1dcnt1al ne1gh- horhood I 1 kc the old Dodgers. the Onole!I complain about their park I have heard that one bt-forc and so I can not fully comm at. I wall not have m' heart broken agam I have alwa>S liked Robert Red - ford. hul never en' 1ed him. I It.now he as fabulou\I) nch and I c4\n '\CC he 1!> fabulou\ly good-looking -nice. but no cause for 1cnlousy But in .. The Natural," t.ome1h1na hnppcns that change' all that Redford gC't•d'll~ picture on a hawh:ill <"ar<t '-'wect. \Wl"t't heavC'n Rl<"bard Cobt1111 • -yndlr•ted rolumnl•t. Limbless graduate undaunted C LAREMONT (AP) -Jacqueline Ann Taylor couldn't walk on stage to receive her college diploma because she has no legs. She couldn't bold it in her hands because she bas no arms. But chalJenges have never daunted the 22-year-old Oklahoman, who donned cap and gown and mounted a specially constructed ramp Sunday to join 124 others in graduahng from Scnpps College. Her handicap was not her only distinction. She graduated with honors -a 3.6 grade point average out of a possible 4 in international relations. She wrote her senior thesis on "Bilingualism in North Africa," was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and nominated br to "Who's Who in American Universities and ColJeges.' "When I'm frustrated, usually I sit and figure out a way to do whatever it is," Taylor said. She credits her family for fostering a can-do attitude. The fourth and youngest child of John and Ann Taylor·of the Nichols Hills, OkJa., Taylor -who goes by the nickname Jan -was born handicapped. No one has ever figured out why. But she believes her mother set her future course when she refused to send her to an Oklahoma City school for the handicapped. "My mother went to look at the school and found it the most depressing place she had ever seen," said Taylor. who discusses her handicap matter-of-factly and with occasional flashes of humor. So she stayed at home, where her family tried to let her do as much as she could on her own -"They were there to catch me when I fell," She chose Scripps because college officials were willing to accommodate her handicap, building ramps. paving pathways and arranging her classes on ground-floor rooms. Taylor admits she is lucky in that her family had the money to pay the $28,000 a year for the special help she needed at college. Her chief helper. Carolyn Kramer, worked six hours a Fine and Dandy ., ....... , .. Jan Taylor•• handicap t.n•t her only d.ladnc- don: DOW 8be•• a Pbl Beta Kappa &radaate. day, ti ve days a week, helpmg her get ready in the morning. accompanying her to class or performing housekeeping chores. Other students took Taylor to dmner and helped her prepare for bed. and a weekend aide was with her from 5 p.m. Friday through 5 p.m. Sunday. She even spent last year studying m Paris. climbing on her bottom up 'ftnlr flights of stairs to her classes -and losing 10 pounds in the process. "I could eat all the baguettes I wanted:· she ouippcd. Taylor has already held a job as a consultant on upgradmg handicapped accessibility at an Oklahoma City bank. She plans to return home to spend a year working. either at a law firm or as a teacher, and then attend law school. HERE ·.. IR4 \HIS ne.w OR.~-EX COLO mEOICATIOn. IT SA~5 HERE "· '' 1'HE S'fROOGE5T 0€COOGESlAnT AVAILABLE WllHOUI A PRf.SCR\ Pr1on • ., Leaguers like magic on hot side Then HB chapter serves tea for past presidents Some hked 1t hot -including members of the Huntington Beach Assistance League when it came time for their spring luncheon and fashion show. The "May Magic" program at the Red Onion at Peter's Landing last week included spicy Mexican dishes, and proceeds from the fund-raising event went toward the chapter's philanthropies: an SAT seminar to help familiar- ize high school students with the Scholastic Ap- titude Test; Operation School Bell, which provides clothes for needy schoolchildren; and a speech therapy center for children and adults. Harriet Deer, ways and means chairman, was assisted in planning the event by Maralla Jotm1toa and her daughter, Tua, Jady Watt, J•ll• Gamble, Sally McGlaa, Olive McCallomp and Bettiaa SALi DAVIDSON Sar1eaat. Others on the guest list were Carol B .... eaer. Nucy Bloomfield. Jou Meebu, Sall Fox na.w ... , Carel Hood, Mar1aret Cad more, Amelia Arroyo, Alma Buu, Betty Miller, Pllyll11 Herrel, Sbrl Deta, \AU LeBanl. &aria Dumu, Emmallae Va14ae1 anffrma OU•er. A busy, busy chapter also recently pve a ''Mad Hatters Tea Party" honoring past presidents and sustainin& members. Ila Dabaey, the first president ofthearoup, received a red rose as dad current president Marpret Carltoa. Other past prosidents at the tea were a mother-and· dauahter team, Eva Beem and Betty Cro.eti, and Bela ValeatiDe. Loli LeBarcl, Doro1'y TelTJ, Mareelllae Lapthne, Mary Ladwl1 and A.an Cllrl1teaaoa. immedi- ate put president. 0.-, ............ by lAe...,.... Tani Jobn•ton and Kerry McGlnn were at the Aulatance Leape lancbeon-fa•blon •bow. Joann Haner and Sara Goetttu aot a C(loee- up new of the lateet warm-w•iher wear. Today's Paparau1 1s wntten by D11ly P>lot Style Corky Hoffman. Jean Lockwood and Ban1et Editor Melinda Huddleston. Tard cbat durtnc meetiQC at the Red Onion. I Who's.treating AIDS victiins? Dentists and other health workers are extra cautious By SUSAN MONAH.AN ~ ..... c.. •• ,. , •• AIDS (Acquired Immune Defi· caency Syndrome) is as notorious for the panic it has generated as for the deaths it has caused. Fear of contract- ing it has made even some health professionals reluctant to come in-· contact with AIDS victims. While precautions arc indicated, this avoidance isn't necessary, ac- cording to Francina Lazada-Nur, a professor in the School of Dentistry at UC San Francisco. Lazada-Nur, who is also director of the dental arm of the AIDS clinic at UCSF, said in a phone interview, "You can work: with AJDS patients; you just have to be careful." She emphasized the fact that AIDS docs not seem to be transmitted by casual contact. "There's not one case of AIDS among the medical people who deal with AIDS patJents," she said. It 's important that the dental community learns how to treat the AIDS patient, she said, which is why she recently participated in the scien- tific session of the California Dental AsSOCtation in Anaheim. "The precautions you take with an AIDS patient arc the same as for By Katy Brooks 5PHUT1 patients with hepatitis," she said. "You wear f.oves and masks ... you wear gowns.' It's al.so im~nant to quikJy clean up any spilled blood and to scrupulously sterilize instruments, she added. At the San Franciaco clinic, they take the added precaution. of trca ting AIJ?S pa ti en ls in a separate room. There arc some signs that a dent1sJ should be aware of when conducting an oral cum, but Lazada-N ur stressed that even when these arc present, the dentist should not auto- matically conclude that the patient has AIDS. AIDS victims arc very susceptible to Kaposi's Sarcoma, a tumor that usually invades the oral cavity. So a dentist should be alert for any cbangeS in the palate, especially red or purplish discolorations or a bump in that region. Far more dangerous than the AIDS patients, said I.azada-Nur, are the undiagnosed carrien. Since they have no symptoms, they might honestly answer "no" if asked whether they have the illness. Which makes the need for precau- tions that much greater. ''lo the school of dentistry, students arc going to start wearing gloves when dealing with any patient," she said. David Blende, chairman of the Scientific Afrain anad Racarcb .COuncil of the CDA, alto wat oe tbc panel. He practices dcntiJt.ry in Su FranciJco, and says be bas oo qualms .about asking a patient if be ii homosexual. • Because 6f the larae gay oooulalioo in that city, ••more people MD tdJ me they're pY than they woald in, say, Fresno, said Blende in an interview. Nor LS anyone insulted when ukcd whether he bas AIDS. 1bey're relieved ... because they're very con- cerned." Blende explained that the d.iscuc has a six month "doublina time," which means that every &i~ months the number of AIDS victims doubles. "There were 700 cues of AIDS in California last December and by June we ex~ l,400," he said. Besides homosexuals, the people affected by AIDS have been in the Haitian population or among those who have been infected via blood transfusions. Dentists have been known to catch hepatitis from patients, said Bleode, and "we conceivably could catch AIDS, so we have to protect ourselves." · But be repeated Lazada-N ur's U. surance that so far, health pro- fessionals have not bceo infected by their patient.a. .. We're trying to quell that panic," he said Achievers give credit to compatibility skills Only 33 percent claim money ls motivation behind career NEW YORK -Contrary to the stereotype of the hard-chargingexecutjve clawing his way to the top, young achievers feel that their ability to work well with others 1s a personal quality critical to their success. according to a new survey. The 150 achievers between 22 and JS years of age who were polled were selected from regional ed1t1ons of Marquis' "Whos's Who." They were asked about the factors contributing to their success, their goals and accomplishments, and their habits and lifestyles. Good interpersonal skills was mentioned b} 69 percent of the respondents as the mos\ important personal quality behind their achievements. It 1s also the quaht) they feel has most contnbuted to the success ot other young achievers aid one 35-year-old management consultant about her professional acumen. "Intellectual ab1ht1es are important. but effective communicauon v.1th people 1s more s1gn1ficant to me " And a retail execuuve. 32. described the reasons for the success of an organizauon president this way: "You always feel that if you give him a reason why you can't do something. he not gomg to jump down your back. But. because of his easiness. he al was gets people to volunteer for things." Being organized was import.ant to these young achievers. St~ty-five per~nt called themselves very orpnized. with many sitting down daily with their morning cofTtt to plan out their schedule. Many of the respondents said that breakfast was not always a part of their momma routme. but 68 percent said they dnnk coffee datly to relax. to increase alenness. to socialize or dunn.g meals Physical activity also was vlaued by most of the achievers. Eight-one percent said they participate at lest weekly. wtth 25 ~nt exercusng daily. Despite the once held belief that Amencan workers arc not concerned with quality. the survey found that 95 percent of the respondents said they were very dedicated to hiah quahty m their work "Htah quahty workmanship and perfectionism" were cnucal to one 36-year-old photoarapber's succe "If you don't have the de ire to bt perfect. you won't act anywhert." wd a J2-year--0ld sptteb pathol<>11st Mo t of the youna achievers mtervtcwcd did not have prtparttory school! and pnvate tuton tn their backgrounds Fully ,.25 percent s~ud the) came from famihea that ctther were not 5<l well of or wcrc quue poor, with only 15 pcr~nt cla1m1na thctr p3rt-nt~ were well off noc play 1 m810f' role In their achievement 81% ·~tts of 1 wrwy of tSO achi.vers ages 22-35 c:onduc1*1 lor ~ N.flON/ Coffee Assooabon And monty was not an 1mponant mottvaung factor to 22 pcrctnt of th~ ach1tvers. lht 'lurve) found "f1nanc1al succe 1s '°mewhat important Be1na happy With m y JOb 1s more important," said one achiever Onlv 3 3 percent termed mone. a mlJor motrvauna factor behind ~e1r carttr goals Jn ;dd1t1on to interpcf10nal k.Jlls and a concern for quality. the Nauonal Cofftt M~llOn--$J)OtUOred surve} found han1 work. pcncvcnn<'e and upon from family and fttends u the main factors contn~utina to th~ suett~' of tht ach1evtrs - -----------------·-------\ ()ranee COMt DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, May 17, 198 .. High risk pregnancies require special care Health of mother-to-be and baby need sateguards Quescfoa1 about~ risk obstetrics and aeonarolof)' an: answered by Dr. Feiul Wa~ associate J)t'OfesJor of DCCl.iatrics at ua Collcwe of Medicine and cUrector of tbe Neon•r.l lntea.sive Ct.rt unit at UCI Medical Center. • • • Q. I'm H, pl'eM &o Mp blood •~•ue, ud preput for CH flnt dme. 0. I Deed a •pedal doctor? A. Yts. h's quite possible that you do. Since you're hypertensive and about to be a first.time mother at JS. you fall into two high risk catqories. You miabt need a special doctor to help safeguard yow-own heaf th as well u the health of your baby. If your obstetrician feels he can't pro~de pr~per care for you. he'll probably refer you to a pennatOIOIJSL Using uJt.rasound and other tcchruques, a per- inatolQllst can watch for abnonnalitJes in the arowina baby. Hcallolooklforaiplofaprematuredelivery. Jfyou do Jive biJ"lb early, another apecialiat c:aJJcd a neonalOIOlist may take over. A oeonalOl<>siat caret for hiah riak bebics. AJtbou&b a nconatoloais~ may auiat with~ beby's delivery, luajob aenerally bcsins when the baby 11 born. The nconaaol91i1t watches over newborn babies until their d.iJicbarte frOm the hospital. • • • Q. Cu a doctor pndiet .-...,, w .. , 111 pv. ._..,.... prematarely or wliledaer my JftPUCJ ...W Ille HnD&JT Cu H cUace CM u taral CGVH el nea&l't A. No one knows why certain "blbica are born prematurely, but some women run a biaher ri&k of premature delivery than other women. Women who have diabetea.. a prior history of prc~ahlt'C births, bl~ durina presnanq,, ~yper­ tcnSJon, or repeated aboruons, all fall into b.ip risk category for premature labor. Since a baby's cha.nee o! survival inaeuet witb the lenath of pf'CID&Dcy, a perinatolQlilt may try to Pf"vent or delay prematuie birth. for every week he Pft)loop the prqnancy, the survival rate of the baby aoes up. Also b.i&b riJk mothers oft.en have special problem• durina PTeP&ncy. If you have diabetCS; for example, your prqnancy creates a baiic chanae in yout metaboUam. Your insulin rTquiremenu will vary subttantially and ~ou mar lote control o( your blood suaar at a critical tame dunna your baby's development. With the baby's orpns still fonni~ proper care may mean the difference between a normal child and one with conae11tial defecu. • • • Q. S...Slq I atve lttnl C..matueJJ .. ·"'-•an tlile ebacet Get ., .,..., will be "' ... •rmal't A. While the smallest prematu.re babies may be healthy and normal for their siz.e, if they don't have tbc matunty or the survival mecbaniams of an infant born at nine months, they'll need help to 11ay alive. Toda)' whb proper care, ne&rty 95 pergeot of all bebies ~~between 3and5pouocts1umve. Witb our current .ta'toC>rtnowledae, expertile and tec:hnoloty. tbe survival rate for bebia under 3 pounds b.u risen lO over 70 lO 80 percenL Fifteen yean aao, let.I than SO percent of all t.bies weiahina betMen 3 and 5 pound.I survived. Tbo survival rate of babies under 3 pound.I was under 20 peroenL lf a baby weiahed leu than a kilas:ram, or 21/• poundl, doctors couldn't save them at all. A. late as 1974, premature infanu often died becaute their lunp weren't well developed enouab for them to breathe io the out.aide world. Now, however, bn:atb.in& machines, called respirators, can breathe for infanu until their lunp mature. These days, when ~tu.re in~u die, they pnerally do IO ft-om other comphcatioDJ besidet immature lunp. Childless couple can c;ount blessings Today, even the smallest inf.anti have excellent chances of survival in °Level Three" NconataJ IntcnSive Care facilities, such IS the new NJClJ at UCI Medical Center. Since lhe doctors. nunes and therapists at tbete special units are confronted with the u.me problems time and time ~ they are well.qualified to help hiab riak infants. In addition1 at UClMC, both hiah risk mothers and their hiP.1 risk oabies may recicve care in the aame hospital, Wlth the same team of perinatoloaists and nconatol<>sists workina tOICther. DEARANN LANDERS: You ha vc printed several letters from couples who desperately want a child and can't get pregnant. They sign their letters "Empty Arms," "Lonely Nursery," "Unblessed" and so on. ANN LANDERS While I feel sad for these disappointed couples, I have had it with theirwell·advertiscd "failures." The foUowing is for them: Please spare us the agonwng details of your attempts to conceive. I don't want to hear any more about how you got your tube1 blown, your husband's sperm counted., the oujsaoceofa basal thermometer, and how many times you tried tlus month to "make a baby." Your detailed reports arc tiresome and embarrassing. My husband and l arc childless by choice and aren't ashamed to admit it. We've decided that children arc not the cod-all and be-all or even necessary to marital fulfillment. ru shut up 1fyou will. -LIKE lTTHIS WAY IN HARTFORD DEAR BART: nan. for uo&kr polat of vtew. Yoa're e11tUJed. Read oa. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Re: Childless in New York: What drivel! The measure of man's intellilenceis his abmty to adjust to his present circumstances. Thank goodness "Childless in New York" cannot propagate the race. What kind of snivclingoffsprinawould hc(she)sire? The world docsn 't need any more self-pity types. -LONG TIME G RIPE FROM DALLAS DEAR GRIPE: Tlaere are more people omt dlere wlao avee wlG yoa tbD yoa reall1e. I wa1 aupriled at &k aamber of letters from ~dlea1 co•plea wllo are fed., wldl llearta1 aboat die woes of tile lafertlle. 'l"Makt for wrttl.D1. • • • DEAR ANN: I don't know the origin of this seven-line lesson on living, but someone passed it around the office. It certainly says a lot in a few words. Thanks, Ann. -EMILY IN ELMHU RST DEAR EM: It ru la my colama -muy years qo. I like It. too. Here It 11 qala: ASHORTCOURSEINHUMANRELATlONS The six most important words in the En&lish language are:IWASWRONG-PLEASEFORGIVEME. Coloring Contest l 1 _J~· ltS A Horse Of A Different Color Orange County fairgrounds • Costa Mesa • July 6-15 \\ l:\"'EHS! Onf• winnn in f'Rr h ag.-group wi ll be t hosen. Ead1 winner will receive t tic·kf't!. to tlw Onu1f4t' County Faier. Winnin~ p irturt-" will be:-posted in the fine \rt.., r1hibit nt th<> fairgrounds. '\ '\11· \DURESS \< ... c.HOt P HI I I ""~ ttl <.I I \ flO'\.., PHONE D 6-8 "'"· \II 1·nlrtl"" mu .. 1 ltr 111mpll'lr1I ti~ "c·h111i 1n Allf' l(toup• hattd 0 '>·I I )r11. :.? 'li-rirl l'nlm'" 111 ( olurlnir ( o nlf"•I. I' 0 Ho\ 1')6'1, ( OAla \tNa. C:A '->2626 .J \II r•n trir<1 "'""' ,,... fl'I f"Ord h~ J11tH' I 5th The five most imponant words: YOU DID A GOOD JOB. The four most important words: WHAT IS YOUR OPINIO N? Tbe three most important words: CAN I HELP? The two most important words: THANK YOU. The one most important word: YOU. The least important word: 1. • • • DEARANN: Isit not deceitful to use the title Or. before one's name when that title wu confcrrcd by means of an honorary dcgrcc?-INQUlRlNG MICH-· I GANDER DEAR GANDER: A penoa oa wlaom u llHorary devee Ml hen COllferred Mt die rtpt to ue &k title lf lie (or Ille) daoosea. la my oplaloa, S.Owever , Uh mhlea~ ud ahpld. No oae IJ fooled e:1cep' die one wllo trlea to 4o dlefooU.,. • • • Discover how to be date bait without falling book., line and sinker. Ann Landers' booklet. "Darifll Do'und Don 'ts," will help you be more poised and sure ofyo~Jf on dates. Send 50~nts alofll with 1 loll8, stamped. self- 1ddres.sed en ve/ope with your request to Ann landers, P. 0 . Bo~ 11995Chica,o,111. 606 l l . J • • Q. How IOllC doea a prematve baby b ve to 1tay la &k boapl&al? After Uvlq la u lanbator u4 breaDJa1 , .. ....,. mac~, ai.w will Jae react ta p1q Mine! A. Hiah risk babies who weiah 3 pounds at birth often stay in the bospital for about 6 weeks. A beby wcifb.ing less than three pounds at birth and having complicatJons may remain as Iona as 16 weeks. When inf&nu have beeo in an artificial environment for an extended period of time, they need extra help adjustina to life at home. To cue the transition. we recommend that parentl visit their infants u much IS possible while they're still in the hospital. The sooner parcnu and infants set to know each other, the sooner the process ofbondina and attacbmcot can becin. The ultimate outcome for a prematu.re baby depends as much on parental attention IS good medical care. The healillJ process for bebics who have been throu&h intenSJve care docs not end when they leave the bospitaJ. They continue to heal and convalesce Iona after they ao home. More than anythina ebc, premature babies need exra love and attention fn:im thcl.J' parents, to pow into healthy, normal, happy children. Her stjlish pursuit in arrears I know all of •. . pain in the seat... (And just bought a pair of jeans. you can't be ex-,-_ that's not to mention the Get us 200 research mice, a pectcd to re-pain in the assets of jeans.-treadmill, an'd 200 mice member every E ~ makers everywhere.) designer JcaDS with a quar- earth·sha.king fact RIA r • . I'm not surprised. If I ter-incb waist, two inches you bear, so I will watched "Wizard of Oz" in len&th. with room for a refresh you r BOMBECK outofseason,thenextday tail.We'vegotworktodo." memory. h was someone would discover It happens all the time. exactly one week that it causes blurred vision Evcrytime I take a new ago today that I and lower-back pa.i ns. product or increase my announced 1n this column fashion pressure. My only amazement is consumption of a food or that I broke down and Yesterday, a doctor in how fast they got the re-beverage, rnearchcrs dis. bought my first pan of Swiu.crtand, issued a state· search 10 gear. They must cover it's bad for you. Jeans, possibly making mt ment saying, "Tight Jeans have telexed lhe column to It's like they don't want the last woman 1n North can be hazardous to your Luctmc where a poup of me to have a good time. Amenca to cave tn to health and result in a real doctors satd, "Bombeck Maybe if they would ov ----------------------. cas1onally zero in on some- thina I bated, I'd have more respect for their findinp. 'Ill ' I/\ 6 I IC> '" (, ., I .1n1 '~'" dl't.111 lit) th1' l11H h ht.i.th hl·1 I 11p.·n h ~· pump lllJl lo. 11r bo1i. , .111 11 -t• V' ~ t~~ SHOES ----- ... FOR YOUR I NFORMATION ... [~;:,::... ·~ ~·::i::'::::::~=~:r1r---------¥ ::~f:?:/:;.:::: .... Oo you h ow lhf' 0.11~ Pilot bu i3'> junior menh&alt and th•lt ••t'fWSt' av .. 12 , .. ", .; .... ;.;.;.•:·:·""""·" Junior m,,l'fient• •tart t11lln11na 110 1lif' I Sth of H t b maolb .ad ahould bf' flaltbf'd lty thf' 21\th ol t•• h mnnllt r Urlt'n •orll 7 d•r• • .. ,,..11 10 •rn11 11111 wo11'1 you h•lp hy h••101 •1•ur P••m,.ol rud~ whrn t out r•rtlrr rorn" b•' Like how come they never find a lethal agent irr squash? I bate squash. And I've been waitina for ycan to have them declare pantyhose a life-threaten· mg piece of apparel that caulCS disorientation and surliness. And you'd think they could s;ive me a l~t­ imate reason for not buying a bathing suit witb lcp up to the armpit, like mirror gross out. It's not like wearingjcans will shorten your life. It's just that if you wear them tight enough. it puts press- u.re on the cutaneous nerve, wbicb runs from the lower spinal cord to the thiah, and leads to inflammation and extreme pain. The doctor wbo con- ducted the researtb said one of his patients was a tccn..age girl who refused to talce off her jeans for the treatment because she fear- ed she wouldn't be ab~e to put them on again. Ridiculous? Who is to say'? All I know is I can only assume Brooke Shields has a cutaneous nerve some- where in her~)' and that her jeans are tight enough to briDj about discomfort and inflammation. I think I've been looking for that kind of pain all my life. Computer alct. fabric d-'ln• NEW YORK (AP) -A computer graphics system 1s bcinf developed for in- dustria designers that wiU simulate pattems in Scot· tish tweeds and other woven teittiles, rcporu MIS Weck. Acc:ording to the man· agement infonnation sys- tems journal. the project will enable a desianer to co nstru c t a two · dimensional image of a desian on a terminal 1n from five to I 0 minutes. Pauems arc built by specifyina yam colors and other fcaturn and then addinJ thra.ds toacther se- quenliall)' in a simulation of the way the cloth would be woven fh>m individual colored yams on the loom. The system 11 1 JOint project of the aovemment· funded British TeeltnolOIY aroup and Brit.a.an'• ta.rsest produoet"ofwool textiles It 1s bein,a developed at the Scottish Collese of Tutile1 in 01la11h1cla.. Scotland ToNIGHi s TV -l:00- 1 (J) MAONUlil, P.l 8 ... AWAK fllOYI( t U "Ctt Wash" (19761 Rk:tllrd ir'a°:CMiin ttt11' "From AuUI With LCM" ( 19&41 Selr1 Connery, Dllliell Blan- Cfll. G THE WT OONYERTa.E • ENTERTAIMNT TONIQHT .MOYIE tt t "A Bridge Too F11" (Piii 1 of 2K 1977) JllMI Cun, Selll Comery e MMINO Of MANKH> !~CHAOHICl.EB t • * "Cttoutef ' ( 1956) GOfdon MICRll, $lw1ty Jones CID MOYIE t t •.; "WJcl H<wte Hri (19791 Lin- di Bllir. Ric:Nrd CreMI YOU CAN'T TAKE rT WJTH YOU -1:*>- D a! FAMILY TQ (!) LOVE IOA T • p .M. MAGAZINE ID MAK PREVIEWS -t:oo- • ()) .-& USA PAGEANT 11..va:.. ... , .. ERTi I~~ TOOAY (%)MOYIE t t t "Tiger Bly" (1959) Hayley Milla, Horst BucMoll -t'.ao-D al THE DUCK FN:TOffT (!)MOYIE t t t "The Pttlor* Of Zend1" ( 1979) Peter Sellers, Lynne Freder- dl QDP!TBIGUNH 00 VIDEO JU<B0X -10:00- 0 al~ STET Bl.UES •••• NEWS 8 920120 • LNltO Wll.D ID MTIJEFCTI I~ • t •n "A l1m1 To Ole" (1983) Edwlld Alben. Rex H.,rllon Child's wish is suited toaT COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (AP) -"A·Tcam" television ~tar Mr. T vis· at id a hospital to fulfill the wish of a terminally ill youngster, but he lef'\ most of hi s well·known bluster at home. The actor was all gentle- ness during the hour·long visit at Jennie Edmundson Hospital. He came an response to a petition signed by 4,000 school children involved in B-MAD-Bodyand Mind Against Drugs -and to meet David Craf'\ Jr .. JI, a terminally ill boy who has lost a tea and hand to cane.er. In costume and wearing what he said was 31 pounds of jewelry, Mr. T greeted David in a room filled W1th about 30 children. their parents and hospital work en. The actor moved around the room on his lcnces to visit with the chaldren. l)Oaed for p1ctum and col· lccted drawmas and other &if\s from the younasten One boy presented ham with a card readina. ••1 tove you, Mr. T. You are so strona." "Yet, I am," the 1<:Jor responded w11h mock ferocity. MOYll t • ~ "Viet Squad" ( 19'2) 8-ofl Hut>lt'J, Gary~. -1:to- CH)MOYll * • * "And Now For Something Complelely Different" ( 1972) GreNrri Chlj)ITIMI, JoM ClleM. -2:00- 1 (J) Cle NlWI MOHTWATCH 8NEW8 -~-1: • • "Thr .. WIN Foolt" ( 194e) Mii· Olf91 O'Brien, Lewis Stone -S:OO- 8MOYIE * * •.; "C<oallfe' I 1975} J1mee Farentino. Ramon 8ier1 Robert 8"Jdiord beau the all ... tar cut of .. A Brldfe Too Far," to be abcnrn tonl&ht and Frldiy at 8 o'clock OD KCO.P, Cbannel 13. ~=NllJ THE MAH * * 1'r "Electrl Ghcle In Slue" ( 1973) Robert Bllke. Belly Green 8uah fi ~OH THEAIA •'n "The Seduc:uon" (19821 MorOlfl Flirctlild, Mrctlael Satrazln -10:15- <C)MOYIE t t "The Big 8'1W1" ( 1980) J1cloe Ch1n. Joee Ferrer. -10'.ao- • IHD9EHOENT NEWS -11:00- I D •(J) Oa!NEWS TAXI JOKER'S WILD I M•A•a•H HAWMFM-0 • FALL NII) Al8E Of AEGINA1.D PfMH G DCK VAH DYKE (D)MOYIE "Showe Of Temp111rons" (No Otte) (%)MOVIE u v, "Some Kind Of Hero" (1982) Rlchard Pryflf M1rgot Kidder -11:JO- l ~=JOHN.M.D. If TUN)AY NIGHT 9 AK NEW8 NIGKTUNE 11CT~DOUOH AIOttE IUNl<ER'S PLACE I LA TENIOHT Nl/E1llt:,A 100Cl.U8 ®NOT NECESSAAll Y THE NEWS -11:!0- <C)MOY1£ *••'""The lnnooent" ( 1976) G1an- Cll'lo G11rulin( LIUr I AntonelM -12::00- • FfE OH HOU YWOOO G M>WAH I MARTlfS LAUGH-IN Cl) INOEPENDENT NEWS m THtCQ Of THE NIGHT •HAMTO 9 MOVIE **''°' 'SPIMh Alf11< (19581 Rrcti- lrd Kilty, Clrmen SeYilla MOVIE • t 'Ir "Twilight Zone ·• Tiie Movie" 11943) Jotln LrU1gow. Vre Moaow -12:15- 0')MOVIE Island Women (No Dllel -12:30-0 Q! LATE HIGHT wm4 DAVID L.ETTEAMAH 8 lWIUOHT ZONE I L.A TOOAY IH 8E.AACH Of ... (!) PDWAH I MARTlfS ~ 9 OAOW1HG YEARS • -12:40-IJ Cl) MOVIE • •'Ii The S5 20-An-Hour Dream" ( 19801 Linda Lavtn. R!Ctiard Jaeckel -1:00- 8 MOVIE t t 'A "S10ec1r Racers" (19751 Ben ~~ter Graves • • • "Snowbeasl (1977) Bo Sven- son. Yvelte Mimieu• fJ MOVIE *'Ir "VllenltnO (1951) Eleanor Par· ktr. AnU1ony Dexter Cl) MOVIE t * * ' The Madel And Tile Mamage Broker ( 19521 Jeanne Cram Scoll 8'1dy 41> MOVIE t t •..; "Por1! ChOp H~I" ( 19591 Gr&- gory Pede. Hatr't GUlfdrno C) GENE SCOTT MOVIE • t t •; "Local He<O I 1983) Peter Fl RESTARTER IMA llOl'f&lllll& WWsheh•~ the power ••. to sun4w7 ~ .~':'~:fll,,~~~ ~ «». ...... ~ OIWlll U&Mo.-( .. .,,,. '°'"" c..t< f"'*"llOIV•lw sa-On.t .. -4(1ll 7$1 ..... QO.MO a:iuno llU(U,Allll UllMM 04WIGf ~ "°"' ....... ,.,. AllC.•-liewlt ~ f_Ciot ... -°""' IO 12 I 4070 .,OU) 634~ .,~ TIMOTHY Ir~ HVTTOH J.'-. Wed ·Thurs 615. 10 C) ''HAROBOOIES" IRI Wed ·Thurs. 8·45 RaeM1 w.,d . '"" •ndt" "AGAINST ALL OODS' l"I RICK SPRlroflHO "HMO 10 HOLD" (PG) Wed.·Thurs. 7:00. 10:25 Wed -Thurs. 8.10 lllEA ~ Bou' .. !>J9 ~I I •COSTA MIU ,,,,,,..,. {~ .. "I ')oil> "117 COSTAlllUA 1A(.lnf-r.,. !>40059' M1SS1011 VIUO ! '• ,.,, 1 • ., • Eo .. ~~ I.I' 1ll' ~ e.o !.4 ~ y ... '~ 6211) • "UNTillGlOll lutM •OAANGI (1"•'1 H t .f ""«>""' •'"'"° 1111' F,}ol ~~) lllYINI u1 ... ·a ~. IQllbll(IQI' • ' ~· 06SS •WUTMINSTUI £ 0"•'0\ r of'"" Wt\! 991 l'JJS BREA COSTA MESA FOUNTAIN VAU.£Y ORAHOE O nedOme UA M<Ma f.dwards a nema center ~rd$ Fount.tin v11i.y 99()..402.2 Sr79--4141 839· 1500 COSTA MESA El. TOAO IRVINE Edwarm Town Cenwr Edward$ Slddleback Edwards Woodt>f1dge 751 4184 581-5880 S51-065S WESTMINST6" Paclftc s Hl·way 39 Drtve In 891 3693 634 2553 OfWK)£ Stadlum Orl'lle·ln 839.mO \ ••Audifion -A Musical Revw." u oriainal ~ Collete 1tudcn1/faculty production, open.a 10QIPt and repeats Friday at 8 p.m. iA OCC's Rohen Moore Thea~. The collqe't final stqe production of the 19t3-U KUOn combinet music. dance and comedy. '"Thi• production bas been a marvelout aod exciuna effon," •YI OCC music profeuor Howard Judkiot, the show's producer. 'Tm extremely pr~ of the way our studenu and 1tatr have jolned tOlitber to ro-cmate the realities of a Wpical audition. "The cut demon1uate1 the uavails and preuum of an audition, which are probebly more a.nxiety·produci!ll than ID actual perfonnance in front of ao audience. "Mucb of the material in the show is drawn &om the ellperienect of our 1tudenu. However. we alto uJed a bit of artistic lic.ense.•• The script incorporates the taJenu of several existina . wt.. you'N on o ""' wllt Ive mMloft dolara, ,,...-e oon twow you o« the ...... Hnders l{eepers -c--.... ._. .... -. ...,.o ••--•C~•no-<c....M• ...... _.._ _ ........ .__ STAATS FRIDAY AfW£M 879·9850 ~ tUflltGTON BEACH 848·0388 Pac1hc Anaheim Or.·ln Edwards Huntington ,..,,.Al l- COSTA EA 979·4141 Edwards Cinema Center ..,._,_ LA HABRA (213 ) 691 ·0633 AMC fashion Square ...,..,....,. LAGlN t9..lS 768-6611 Edwards Sanborn L..-1411111111 RIJFFELL•s UPHOLSTERY ,.INC. fer tM lut tf Y• Ult 1122 UllM llYI. COSTA IW -54'-l l.St An '"'•1m•Ace\ I.tore ~ 00 '1ljl C(a ~ ( ..... mtftt\ •Mehl IQM\16112::-J LA IJl!f\AQA AT ROSfCRA!lf "atmTOllE M llGIJll r. TMZAll LOllD r. Of' Ar£$" (PG) 11JO )~ \40 111l 10!!0 • "rOOTLOOSl" ('6) 1no OS 140 "HMO TO HOLD" (ltS) H O •O IO'IO "RC*MCIC Tll STM" (PG) 1110 1JS 440 6!!0 900 II~ "tl>SCOW OM Tit: IUISOff' (R) 1130 )00 510 100 IOJO "BIEMlf " ('6} fl 00.fl STtlllO 11 lO ,,.. •11l 615 1101010 "lll NAT\llAL" (PG) 11 IO l~ 545 I JO 11,10 .......... -. .... ,1 .. C.ANGE 634-2553 SYUFY City Center l'OI Mftr ..... SANTA ANA 540-7444 Edwards Bristol ........ ~ WESTWCSTER 89 l ·3693 Pacific Hiway 39 Or-In ......... So°'"'"' "FllESTMTtl" (I ) 11 lO l ~ s tO • 11l 10 ~~ "fOOllOOSl" (PG) lllO JOO SJO 100 IOlO ..... Of 5 laa.111'1 MIMlS ''TDMS Of £.JUMllllJ(T" ('6) 11 JO l ~ 545 • 20 10!!0 "SIXTtDI CAll>US" {'6) lll01l0 4JOBO l lO IOlO 'AGAICST AU <DIS" (R) no "SWlli Stlfl'' (PG) 11 JO soo ---==- "llHCl'l OI tll .astr (I) 1 -,c, J 00 5 JO '00 10 JO * PACIFIC DRIVE -IN THEATRES * * CINE·FI SOUND ~ u '"' "" o• r•nt , ... 0.1 * llAUllfUI t••I " sou.a Ol•IC• IO •Ou• .. cu 0010• ........ .._.. ..... _,_ ..... •-o-•111•..- BIG FAMILY DIM-IN BARGAIN NIGHT EVERY THURSDAY 2 ADULTS ~~: PRICE OF 1 & .. &H(IM OI VfAV Al & Su-.OAY I 'OM /•fft J.- 1 o• ff'lto C.•1 I 19 llll "HMDBOOU" CJ) PIUS "FU>AY M 13111 Tll flW. CtWTtl (It) "Ga£YSTOllC lll LCGOI> r. TWM l<MO r. 1ll MD" (PG) P\US "MDWI" (PS) '1Cl.1Cl ACADOn" (It) l'\llS "TtlfllS r. CJllUmJIT" f'G) ''111lt1Je CMIUS' <'Cl ""' "fOOnoOSl'.' (PS) "~IC( ACADOIT"' (l ) l'l.US "fll>A T M 1 lll. '\IWl1f1 CB> l'l.US ''\fMCllIJ" {l) "WM!lf' r• (PC) l'\US "HOT DOC. 111. fllM'" (a) = t"D•tauuwllt "=:t' IMllY ormcn. Tbe on:batn V by --i I II Alan Jlemj • One 01.'t: (euUred ll'OUP' it occs ~ JJroadway Cut." an orpoizatioa dial fealllNI 11-.. and dancen, plm muical black-up. Tbe ~ .,... rea~_y petfonm on and otr campus wader me, of OCC music iftllNC1.ot ~ kaunt. Will several latte production nwnben. Muy ttudenu will be partnyias the= I•• fictional cbanctm in the lhow arc played by..__. OCC faculty members. K.encwd ~l'I die _... diRctor, ()ecqette; Remin,tOG it mmical director M&HI Rubato and Judkins play• Oliver Jay, a ~time produw. Ticket• wjll be sold for $$ at the a6ot' « IUJ. ~. ~n:hated for S4 from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Friday i1I die OOC Ticket OFfioe in the Student C.enter oD I.be COICa Meil campus at 2701 Fairview ROML LUXURY THEATRES 1st 2 Mlttntt ShGwlnp Only 12. 75 Uni.. Neted S .3M4·1•111ll6l6J~ '2S5J/~~,) FOR FUOI EXCtTEtnEnTI V~tOur ••. ARCAOE of GAMES• :·. A:'~.· At,., .. 2 :40 l t JO t :H~ 1t:.0 111;1ij1Uu1.1&.I§ 6 )619 e1101~~) FIRESTARTER ~ Mosccw .:!':t'.Z~: Ll'U. ~r'\llt.1 LOYed Alto Slaytrou nd <"I nt I UJ~'I B women ( "J AcN~Sl ALL UlJIJS II Also Sllowlnt Hot Dot I") Alto The Bount\' (~Q) -~' Also ,:: Showlft9 -.. OOtlOOM ,,,, ID 1~0> Orl••lns Open 7:JO weekends / 1:00 WHknlthh Ch1td•en Unde• 12 FRff Unle\~ No1erl SANTA ANA .. _. .. ...,. ~0 7W ......,,.......,..,.. _______ CQ_l'-S-,tl-10 BllSJOI. '1!90 ..,. 1 ..... 100 1010 S" l ... lllln .-~ 111 IMIT" "'' ::-:_ 'lO ~ ~ !>40 7W ---------BllSfC)l DCUYSll•O .-mClll. M Ulll9 01 IM/Jlr' ,...,..~I ,..,, /IS 'IS 7SI •IU .... '""'' 110 ,.s '"' EL TORO TOWft cnma 1lllWI ~ <"ii SAOOUBACll .._.... 111) , ... , .... ,. ··~ •' ,._ ..,., ... ,100 10CI I'•••• .,.,..,,,JO 110 IOIS m •1u s11 sno • -,o-w-N-c .... t .... Hl ..... £ .... R ___ 'ICOMlr __ (_"'_), SAOOUBACll: 1\M.( IUITS-Ill ~'-'°" hW 1-C '(I '•• '' ··~ fi '"II.Cl ACMIOl'f" (11 I '• •• .......,... II> m •1u '!la ion ~1 ~"" 11s 10 ,s TOMI CENTER .~::.~~~ SAOOl.CBACK ·wnroq 111 ' 0 I.. . lUD• d fMlMI"' "l ...... ~ !>4• 7111 SOUTH COAST ...... -" !>46 2711 SOUTH COASI OCUl SlltllO Tit IOlllfr (PC) 1 Ot' • )( JOll' ST!lllO ....... n1 STOlll !PCI .... lllor\ /IS t ."' ICMSl llU .,., .... '""''. 5 1CIOTlOOll" !PC .., '"'" 'is 1or.. I I•· It ~II ~110 -1 • ...,. ~ 1~00 SAOOUBACll I fti I •t ~· t .. ,, m~ SAOOHBACll t f ••• I '• It s11 ~o f!Oll(f' If Oli*I Ill 111 l\IUI fPC I ~I 11U CJllll <II . ,., '1001\ 00.-(PC) '10 114' l AGUNA Hill S ~~--------tAGlllA HLLS MALL 0 ... So '1lllOJI tlm.D ~ ....... l)o (•l•e•• f• 00 }'>Q ... M St~'~":' 1616'11 ~tQ ata un1 ~•-:-iit:r.ia:-i=.---=OOl-:1:-:, ,::-::,1'::'.'111-:-n LA6lN HllS MAU oo.rr \lUlO -~ *" \0 ••• le ----rn J'l-01 M£SA Al• "'-'' HI 6~ '>Ol~ I' CMMA CTR -· 1.-.1 I). lo,.,,'' Ill S'RIS lfl&'\ flloo ,,.., 00 iOC fOOflOOSl' C1Cl 8 ·~ 1W10 10 IQ.O' '"' 'f()lQ •CJOOl'I (I) ... 1...,., 'JO 10 Xl "ICOlllllf (PC I .,.,. ,..,. '"> P\&Jlf '"'' M.w ... "" • ·• lllSCOW Oii II( IUl:Mll .. ,... ' ' . ... 'I ., ... ~ •N- t•SIMTtJ I 111 su• <Ni I 4' '\(i 0 (111 ' ' :>< .. ,~~ Tll IOlllTT' "') ·~ • '!' 'C)U H\ 7616'11 10 11) \7'1 7 JO UO LAGUNA HllS MAU \0 ,., \ii i)il [I l•t •• ,,. 6611 9'1i!ll!IWll~lll!W ...... "--'•. 00 ,. FOUNTAIN VALLEY flft VAU(Y atln11Clll Ill If .. Of ltalr iP') 11\ t~ W[STMtNSTER CllfMA WlSI •••""""""'• _ ..... Cll(MA wrst ., M..-rr f'll -, ..... '00 .,. t'O.I' SllllO -111 llOlo.l "' .. nail.. "" m l'1~ '~ •~ -------Cll«MA wrsr ..... ~ ""1 .. ,,..._ .... _... " '" 1~)., CHM• wm _ ........ --"' 1'JS tlJNTINGTON BUCH .,.... ... \ Jm I I\ 0 GAR[)(N GROV£ -..... \)t UOI -------_;..;... wnt•iXi .. !fl""' I f\ t ... ~ ... ........ ~'10 \)II H OI ----------·-· -----... _......._..__. ' ·-----·-----:-------- GARFIELD AA£N'1 VOO GOING TO JOIN ME FOP. t-"INNER C1AR~1ElO ? A 01ET'' ~w LONG ~AVE VOLJ &E.EN ON A Ptf.1? THE t 'A,.IL\' C'IRC'US by Bil Keane BIG GEORGE by Gus Arriola by Jim Davis by Virgil Partch (VIP) "Ooddy doesn't hit the boll over the net much , but he grunts just like Jimmy Connon.'' "No, I am NOT tht gentlemen who ordered the poult 1u pot." MARMt\Dl'K E by Brad Anderson '·------ . 1 ~ I 0 I • I I 0 'o..t; I "The vitamins are for Marmaduke The tranquilizers are for you " l!OO' lll 'LI.I '\S PEA'\l'TS '(ES MA.AM I ) ... 'LL ~A\E C~~L~60ARC' f ERASERS ON MY ~EET ( fl -· ; TUMBLEWf.EDS BUT DON T WORR.lr V..AAM I WON "" WEAR T~EM TO TME SE~IOR PROM -l. "™~MIS 1S or \ \. AN1 IQUI T •. -\( . .. Hank Ketcham -·' by Ferd & Tom Johnson by Charles M Schulz by Tom K Ryan BRIDG[ ttolh vuln~rublc Norlh deal111. NORTH t 9U "'1090 o K tU .,. WEST tAST • A4 • Q 1088 ?QU ~7 OJ 72 OQU •J9853 •KQIOU OUTH + KJ72 '?AK 863 ? A 104 +A Tht lndding: North t:11t South Wt1& P ... Pate I / PH• J NT PaH 2 • Pa .. 3 ' P111 4 ;i Pa .. PH• PaH Clpen1n~ lud f1, e of + Whn1· Jrt' .111 lht• vounic p1·ople who \hould h1• pla,v•nl( hr1dg1· ., l.t'l \ makt-I \1'14 a SHOE BRABBLE 'L.1Ai! L.IAR! PANT~ ON ~11Z~ II " 1"Af~ WMAT 1 ~·ve.~10 ! ye or w hcl't' l'llCh or US will icet two of our fr1cndl lo lake up this wonderful r1u1'1t1. Jr you Art! lookln1 for a book lo recommend Lo some one who wants lo learn lhe icamti, you t'ould hardly do brltt'r lhan "Winning Con lrart llridge" by Bridge World tditor ~:d1ear Kaplan. ll>o~l·r Hooks, U6 pp., paper hark. S6 95. A v1il1ble post fr~f' from Br1dgt World. 39 Wl'11l 94th 8l.. Ntw York. N. Y 10025.1 It is a rt pubhl'lllOn o( I CllUil' lhll hu been too long oul ur prinl. Tht book i, comprthen11 vt .ind t'OYtrs both hidd ini and play. ll 1s lund. rradahle and, .1hMf all. aHordablr. Hook On•· lt' rhi>'I rundamrnta l1. Book Two tht' r1ni>r poml1 Sn l h1' 1s more thnn a bttg1nnn·~ ll'Xl 1l will 1mprovt> Lht' ~ll( I~ fltl'H (Ji.AO£, ~OMf.1(10 CAU.£.0 ~A ~'~°" t i w•~ !>£> ~{ 1 DION'i (NOW kMAi to~" 1e11mc or bolh lhe lnu perlenced and the more ea pen.~ player. Kaplan held lhf' Soulh c11rd1 lit a tourn11menl tome years ago and rearhed tour hrarl• whl'n hiJ partner rt11pondrd on 11 hand lhal. even by thl• book'• 1lan dards. was somtwhnl under strcnglh. Wtsl led 11 rlub and declarer did nol like his chances. eaperially when, aher wlnnlnl{ the ill'f or clubs. he rashed lhe are king or hearts only lo lt-arn thal Wt'll had a trump tmk. Wr t w" fCIVen his lrump. and hl' rnnt1nut>d with tht lhrf'I.' or rlub'I. r>t>C'larf'r rurr t'd Jnd ~aw a ray or hjThl. Jr Wr .. t had slilrled w1lh only '" o ~parle:., 1nrlud1n1e t hi' • u:t. t ht' rontrarl rould ~ mndtt. llr t•illt•d with a low 1p:1d1• &.o lhc nlnl' and •:ut'• lt•n. •:1t1l rt•lurnf'd 11 1pod1" d1•clnrcr durkt•d and Wetl w11• nol only fom•d lo win thl' arc. ht' was rnd playrd u wfll Sint't' a club would preunl decbrtir with ti rurt·sluH. Weil r1t1lt'd with the jack of diamonds. ~dal'f'r won on lht' table. fineued lht' 10 or diamond• and. wht'n thal held. hr wu homt. Hew .S. 1• c~ die be1t opealq lead? CMIS.a Goree Ilea ~ aaawer. Fw a ffP1 •f "W .... ()pea'-1 Lude ," aHd tl.95 to "Ceren·Leade." care ef lM• at•e,.per. P.O. BH llt. Norwoecl, N.J. 07648. Na.lie t het k• ,.yal.le t. New• pa.,.rboek1 . by Jeff MacNelly Kevin Fagan (,1-J~ Mf. 1f.N ~~~. ANO 1 CAM ~M..L.~ 'f "lpij( ~ A 0£11A~~11M£, COMfMlK! FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE Wtfrr RRE. Yoo DOINGINTue C~Sf'f\CE, LOOKING-FOR SIDff lo $ELL AT THE. ~? DR .S~OCK F 1 v e ">"eARS J>...GO, ;!. wout..c::>N'-f' HAve GtVeN 'YOU 'f"HE: 'ftMe OF PA.Y ... s 11 .I UDGt: PARKER YARD SALE. I CNfT ! ff/.; &l> WIU. BE HERE IN A C.OOPL.E Of Ml~E.& ! eu'f A cs1R1.-i..oweRs HeR SIGH'f"S AS SH~ APPROACH65 'T"HIR'f"Y .' by Tom Batluk ~ PRO&EM ... CJOO'U.. ~ rr WrTM 1lME m 5PARE ! .t.'Ve GO'f MY OWN WA"T'CH, 'T"HANKS by George Lemont by Pat Brady • Congress ~Ke interest-free loan contracts (Editor's note: This 11 one ofa ierits ferie1 on • major new tax law now l»ln1 considered by • 101nt Hou~ Senate conference.) Under the nc:w LU law. the aovem- ment has included some restncttons on mtcrest-frce loanf to employees. But it well may be that while the 'overnment htU won a tax battle (interest-f rec loans will be treated aa taxable transactions), corporate em- ployees JUSt may have won the tax war. ln the arcat bulk of uansactions, employees wind up not one LU dollar out of pocket. The corporations Involved will. more often than not. come out even. And for corporations, there is even some risk a deduction may be lost. Keep in mind that these provisions already have been passed by the House and Senate -with some variations, which will be ironed out at the House-Senate conference table. One point 1s sure: This will become law. Let's assume that under the coming tax law rules, Bob-Ell Corp. lends Sarah, a key C.ltCCUllVe, SS0,000 to help ber pay for a home she is buying. Prentice-Hall gives this as an illustra- tion. The loan 1s interest free. This means Sarah will save a bundle on internt. Under the new law. the loan beams by being treated as a regular interest- bearing loan. "Wait a minute," you may break in right here. "( thought the whole point was that the loan was interest free." Wait; that's the way it will tum out. It starts as an interest-bearing loan. Then the company, Bob-Ell Corp., is treated as if it paid Sarah compensa- tion in the same amount as the interest on the loan. This "phantom'' payment to Sarah isaccept.ed by Sarah as compensation and she takes it into income. lt is. of course, deductible by the corpor- ation. The next "phantom" transaction occurs when the company employee. Sarah, gets a deduction for an interest payment from her to the company in the same amount. The net result: O n these facts, it's vtrtually the same as 1fthere had been no interest charged to begin with. The company charges interest. The com- pany is deemed to have paid com- pensation to the employee in the amount of interest. The employee takes compensation into income. And finally, the employee deducts that precise amount as interest. Remember "Ring around the rosic"? But that may not be all there is to it. Watch out for this trap:· lf,the loan SYLVIA PoaTEt is made to a shareholder, the interest the company is deemed to have paid may be-treated as a dividend. In that event. the shareholder will take the phantom interest "payment" into income and then deduct it as intemt. So far, so good. However, if it is treated as a dividend. the company will not be able to deduct it. (Dividends are not deductible by corporations.) So the net rcault will be one-sided: Bob-Ell Corp. wtll "re- ceive" and be cbar&cd with the interest income but will not have an offsettin& deduction for it. There are two acts of effective dates, one for the House, one for the Senate. The conference will com- promise. Effective dates: House: Term loanJ (with a specific maturity date) made after March I, 1984, and amountJ outJtanding on demand loans after March I. Tax break: a demand loan is exempt from the new law ifit is repaid within 60 days after date of en.act· ment. Senate: Term loans made after Feb. I, 1984. Amounts oumandina on demand loans after the date of enactment arc subject to new rates. Typical ex.ample: Dan Green bor- rows SS0,000 from his employer for a year when the goina interest rate is l 0 percent. He avoids payina SS,000 mtemt that a bank would charge - and beca.ase of the offscu. pays no income tax on it The "payment" 1s, however, subject to Social Security and unemployment taxes. Important exception: The Senate bill says that a no-interest (or below- market-intcrcst) loan made to an employee is disregarded for tax purposes 1f the total of all loans outstanding between the company and the borrower is S 10,000 or less. That could be a special break 1f an employee needs a brid.&e loan -say, a down p&YfY!ent on a house. ("Sylvia Porter's New Money Book for the 80s," 1,328 pages of down-to- carth advice on personal money management, 1s now available through her column. Send $9. 9S plus SI for mailing and handli~o "Sylvia Porter's New Money for the 80s," in care of this newspaper 4400 Johnson Drive, Fairway, Kai 66205. Make checks payabl~ t~ 1- versal Presf Syndicate.) \ .l, Ma1netlc heacla ln•entor Gib Sprua,er of Fem Corp. in P'remoiat lupecta aa en1ara ec1 •enlon of bla dee.ten tor a re•ohationary macnettc record.I.DC bead. Handreda of tlny m&Cnetic head.a, the •lse of a need.le tlp, Ml"'t'e u the bula for new computer perlpberal•. . .... Dlvorce·fiind Irvine ~ensors Corp. talk May 2& reports $382, 000 loss Irvine Sensors Corp m Costa Mesa reported operating results for the second fiscal quarter and 26 weeks ended April I. For the second quarter, Irvine realized a net loss ofS382,700, or 14 cents a share, compared with a net loss ofS 1,3 70,000. or SS cents a share, in the corresponding prior-year period. Contract revenues were $405,800 during the current period versus $449,400 last year. from this year's first fiscal quarter. Aleuou commented that revenue growth was expected to conunue 1n the third and fourth quarters. We anticipate being at or near quarterly profit.ability by year-end, he wd. Alexiou stated that the results of this year's flnt 26 weeks reflect internal investments made to main- tain the technical and marketing momentum of Irvine's Hym oss de- velo pment program. Talks fall to s top oilflrm's collapse Translerra can't pay a 15 million loan, . files for bankruptcy BJ JEUY llJUCll °' .. ..., ....... A Newport Beach oil and ps exploration firm filed for buknapecy Tuelday foUowina tbeeod ofwb to restructure S l ' million in loen1 the firm defaulted on in February. Tranaiem Exploration Corp. an- nounced Tue.day that nqotiatioo• with r111t lntentale Bank. its ma.in lender. to resuuctu.re ill debt have been terminated. The bank, and a Teua bank, notified the Tramierra of their inten- tion to foreclose on the lol.Ds and take control of company pc~. Conlc- qucntly, the company fileffor protec- tion and ~on under Chapler 11 of the Federal Banlavptcy Code, accordio1 to Trao11erra spokesman John T. Clark. Clark said be would dilc:usa the details ofTramierra's ~ncial ~ lema. A Chapter 11 fili.na allows 1 company to continue in businetl d . reorpnization. 'fr:1ebruary Clark said Trauiem bad an~~ loan t.tance of $13.S million p(ua interat colllidered in defaulL TEC of Texu Inc. a subsidiary, wu in default on a Sl.7 million loan plus interat. "Oeclinina oil pricea ia the main reuon. but we have not bad u much success in drillina u we bad hoped durina the last year. I guess that is th~ oil pme "Clark said. A worldwide oil &lut is reapon.aibk for the declinina oif prices and added to T ransierra ca.ah crunch. . The company's auditon, Arthur Andenon & Co. bad inserted a "aoi.DJ cpncern" clause in the company's annual report last year wanuna mvcston that the company wai id senous financial trouble . Transicrra bas a history of aa: grcssivcly seeking acquisitions and bas traded its stock for control in four other small oil exploration com· panics durina the last two years. · The aoquistions, however, did noa play a part in the default. accordina to aart. becaUJe they were completect Wlth stock rather than cash. Transjcrra, which ia traded u u over-the--counter stock. reported a net loss for the year ended Oct. 31, 198) of SI. 7 million compared to a lou of $2.8 million for the previous year. Transierra's stock last traded a about SO cents a share. Increase in interest rates should come as no surprise James Alexiou. president, at· tributcd the reduced losses to d i· vers1ficat1on of Irvine's contract backlog. Last ye~r dunng the second quarter, we had to establish a maJOr reserve for loss when our sole contract was interrupted by a stop-work order. In this year·, second quarter. we had twice the backlog spread over eight d1ffertnt customers, be said. Irvine's funded co ntract backlog re- cently reached a new high, accordlna to Alexiou, wi th the award of the S4 million R&.D contract from Prutech Research and Development Partner- ship, announced last week. With the onset of the Prutech project which was one of the pnmary objectives of our 1984 investment plan. our use of internal financa.al resources will start to decline. AJex- 1ou said. lrvtne Sensors. headquartered m Costa Mesa, 1s pn manly engaged an the development of in rared focal plaoC1 which wtll have d apph- cauons in strategic and ta cal m1h- taty systems. MCI seeks expansion in California By JOHN CUNNIFF ,, ....... ~ NEW YORK -Announcement of the rise m the prime interest rate to 12.S percent seemed as much a surprise to the Reagan admini~ tration as the Russian decision to refrain fro m O lympic Game competi- tion. lt shouldn't have been. Everyone associated wtth finance bad known that the Federal Reserve decided in March 10 tighten credit. They knew also that the federal government was in the midst qf major financing, and that business also was seeking more credit. Thcf knew in add111on that the federa funds rate -the rate at which banks lend to eac h other -has risen to double d1g1ts, and they knew the feeling was widespread that the 8.3 percent first-quarter expansion was unsustainable. They knew the Federal Reserve "tsclf, and the fears of Paul Volcker, its chairman. who less than three years ago had taken the economy to the brink in order to reduce inflauon, oo matter wb.at level of interest 1t took to do so. And they knew that many econom- ists more conservative than those the president listens to. were spreading the word that the Fed shouldn't wait until industrial capacity reached its limit and wages began to nsc sharply. Surprise? N ot at all. The stock market, which used to get hysterical over prime rate changes, rose in the face of what otherwise would be considered bad news. It knew. The matter of surpnsc, however, is entirely removed from the issue of corrtctness -that as, over whether the Federal Reserve's policy of rc- stncting the money supply 1s ex- cessive. and whe ther its fears are also. That argument remains. So long as there are economists. 1t never will end. T here are those. for eumple, who insist that the Federal Reserve Board has very little control over interest rates, and that its best efforts arc merely reactions to what already has occurTCd. And there are cconorllists who argue that the Fed has an excessive amount of power. that 1t has too little accountability. and that it has a propensity to view any economic ~xpa~s1on as merely the forerunner of 1nflat1on. Contra<.:t revenues 1n the current second quarter were up S I 00.400 Hymoss 1s the company's trade na me for a focal plane module which utilizes a unique technology for assembling and packqing infrared detectors and associated electronics. MCI Telccommun1cat.1ons Corp. in Irvine 1s offcnng 1t.s customers low. cost tel~hooe lttVlce between I 0 geographical areas Wlthin California known as LAT As, at a savings of up to 30 percent over current AT&T rates.. 1t was announced Wednesday by C'uol J. Krane, duutor for MCI's western region. No matter which econom ic view 1s adhered to. however. it 1s dbvious to all that the importance of the Fed has grown over the years, and that its decisions can have immediate inter- national rather than just domestic consequences. Charter service opens "We are pleased to provide in- trastate scrvacc to our Califonua customers,·· sai~ Krane. "We arc also hopeful the Pubbc Utahucs Comm1u1on wiU soon allow service w1thm the dcsianated areas so the consumer can realize the true benefits of competition." she said. The goals of young couples scckmg a home could be' affected by a tight Federal Reserve policy. So could efforts of the Reagan admimstrat1on to rem am in offi ce So could efTon s 10 reduce the budget deficit. And. of couiY, the efforts of Latin countnei. to repay their loans. Nobody knows w11h any certainty where interest rates wtll go over the next few months. but they know the existing d 1rcct1on. Earher this )'Car 1ht pnmc rate was at 11 percent. but rose 1n March. Apn l and May. Newport Beach businesswoman Janel Winterholdcr has opened a cha rter consulung service called "Adventure al Sea .. l~ted at 3355 Vi a Lido m Newpon lk.lch. The company spccanhzes in yacht rentals for cocktail parties. wcddmgs. cruises and corporate conference . More than 15 ships arc a'a1lablc for groups from t'-"<> to 100 The compam al'o .... 111 au as the: chan er agent for thl· I 00 1001 'IChooner. "P1lgnm ol Ncwpon." hand-built h' Nc .... pon Beach ship- wught l)cnnis Holland For more information call 6765-2410 Correction Tuc-sda) 's ed1 11on o f The Dail y Pi lot gave an incorrect location for the 1984 Rental Hous1na Expo planned Ma) 11hnd 20 Thccxpow11l be held 1n the ca~t concoul"S( at Anaheim \1ad1um AJd1t1onal 1ntor- mat1on ,., a"a1lahlr b) calling 638·5550 Previously, MCI was authorized for out of state calls only. Thia new authont~ allowt calls betwec-n Cttta.ln California cities destanated by the PUC'. A number of calhng areas wtthtn the st.ate were excluded by the PUC' dcc1S1on O ther natC$ 1n which MCI 1s offc n ng 1t\ low cost mtcntate ICrvt~ arc New York. Flonda. Maryland, Ohio. Texas and PcnnsylvaD1a. D yes. I want to lock in your current high yield on a 6 month Investor Account right now. s! 6MONTHTERM MlM8lR FSLIC FJ fedllll S-.s I lAn __.... C., 11.25°10 10.70°10 Savings Insured to SlOO.IDJ Current Yield* Current Rate •t uu•-nr \fWt•t ,hinittn o h~u ft"'" nuntP'f"h1,,, •h , .. "' '\, o • ••hf ,,. • ..... ""' w• ''ll"' '" J.• tw" 1 ·-'It..-•..,,,.,,,.,,,,. n. •• .-~ • 1u1 •' f~t 1 u1u•t\I ••••"t• ''H...1t-,1" t ''' 'h.anti:• ''l"m ,,.., ••. ~ .. '-'•''"""'" b.11•"" r \I U fl•t I u n 'iii?' -., .. , h1 "'tU\lti.;'4 41 • l1•tt• I'°' t• hA"' 1 11 ft•" J'" t••tt • t •t.ttl • h ... II'' , I hfkt,.-11 ' r h •"' IN •\f '• lnh t1;t t4h•-.uhlf'•f f111 h•n•f"•'•''' H11ntlnaton htcll rountaln Yllty lalboa ~ ....... a.lbo1 lllaM ""'*' lkKll Woodbrid1• LAturwi Buch MolWlfth l ty LICUN N11ut1 51" Jiitn Ctpl\tt •M Capl1tr1no ... ,h ~'" Cl•~nt• Q f or moftl infonTl..ltion or to open your 4i< <. ount, c .all ttw toll·frl'(' Finan<. i.il Li~ now: (800) 272-CH>OO. Or vi~it an~ Cr<'.it A~ri< an offi<<' toda~. I I ·---~----~------~--------------------·---·-------------------' OrMge Cout OAILV PILOT/Thul'lday. May 17, 1984 ewpon Beach firm wins combat training contract 23 mtllton. 2-year pact provides Uode:r a S23 million 24-month contract, ~t Systems. Inc. (FSI) of !'!_ewpott Bc8ch, subsidiary of'rracor, ~ ••. bu been selected by the Elcc- lrOQicF Systems Division, U.S. Air ~ Huscomb Air Force Base, Ma&. to P")duoe the Comfy Sword &round-based Command Control Communications Countermeasures (CJCM) Trainina System. This contract repTCtenU a major involvement by Tracor m the elec; trooic combat trainint market, said Frank W. McBee, Jr., Traeor chair- man and ptaide.o&.. S. C. Warrick. president of flisht ~stems. aaid the Comfy Sword CJCM system ia detianed to improve the combat readiness of U.S. Air Foroe &itetewa, commu.nicatori, and battle manqers by lJ"&in1na them to operate effeaively io hostile elf» tronic combat aian&J eovi.ronmcnu.. Installation of the system is plaruied at Nellis Air Foroe Base, Nev., and at NEW YOlllK CAPI Month ' .. 10 15 Tx Fr• • n t.11 MH TF MdlGVI '·'° NI,. 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IH MS& Fo IU S NL HYMu 13 1•02 Am Incl )1) NL c:Nr111 mav •PC>ly 10<~) and 111ore off IBM typewriters, supplies, selected personal computer printers and so are. ( .111111 · !1\ tlw IB\1 Prrn lt11'1 ( .1~1lc ·r 1111\\ nrnl pi .. k 11p a fn't' ( :n111>c11 1 Hrn 1k ~11od 1111 1(Y,4 111 111011 · i11 ..... , i11g-.. 1111 <ill I B\11\ pt '\'¥ritc·r .... ( )11r ( .111qH•ll H1111k ,,jll (il ... 11 ... ;l\c ' \t1ll 1110111 ·\ ot1 ... c·l1Tlc '<I pt·r ... wwl c·ompulc·r pr i11tc·r ......... 11fl\\dl"C'. d, ... ,.i.,, ..... f1 1111 il t111' wic l .... 11pp lic · .... 1li i:-. :-.l lllllllt'I'. (~111111 · l\11•'\\1itc·1t ·o1 q11111:-.1·\piw \){" 1<>. l'>B J-... o d 1111'1 ''ai l.~ <:01ne in no"' fOryour free Coupon Book. .. C ,. .. 1n \11• .. 11 { 1.!0 Bn .. 1111 ...,, I 1 I l1 t.t12-1717 \I 1 111.1,, I Ii It 1.H "'·' Ill other U.S. Air foroe ttai.Alnealtbuea in the United Statel and oveneu. Fli_Pt Sntemt O'll'llland-0pentet a number or mllitary·type aircraft and provides com~naivc testina. lir- craf\ modification, and apcdal ser- vic:el for a broed ranp of aovemmcot and commercial customers. The company wu acquired by Tracor in 1981 and openta within the Tracor Aerospace Oroue. Tracor, toe., 11 an international tecbnoJO&iaJ products and services company with bcadQuan.era in. AUl- lini Teas. The company ii a ~or ttebn.ical contnctor in eonar a.nd com.municat1on1 propama, 1 ac.der in the development and production of pHaivc electronic counter· measum systems and miliwy tele- commun.icatioos terminals, and a m.;or manufacturer of tcieotiflc in- struments aod electrical and elec-- tromcchanical components. The system is e.xtremely oott effec. tive, compriecd of reoeivt.na ua.lio.n&i a central control station. and un- manned multi-b&nd jamm~ sta- tions located throUlf\out an cl~ trorue combat ranee. Electronic emluioos arc detected and cluaified by fCCleivin& stations which aUow the in,rmina aircraft 1.0 be located. Realistic hiah-~ radJo, oava.ld, and radar jammina •i&nal• arc uans.- mitted from the jammlna stations by remote control from the central control station, Warrick e~pla.ined. McDonalds 's offers dividend Production of the •)'atem will be at fliaht Systems facilltsca in Newpon Bcaeb and Irvine under the direction of William J. Weiss, viQC president of Electronic Systems. The Comlv Sword pf9P'l.m is an outaro"wtb o( previous FSI-produced electronic combat t.ra.inina equip- ment used in USAF train ins exercises at Nellis Air Force Base and installed in FSrs Countermeasures Jct (CMJ) aircraft. Aight S~tems recently de- livered several Dynamic Scenario Threat Generators for laboratory and fli&ht-line ~sting of the B-1 B aircraft ALQ-161 Defensive Avionics Sys· tem. FSl's jammers and threat gener- ators, which incorporate embedded microprocessors and micro- computers, represent significant tech- nological advancements. OAK BROOK. 111. -McDonald's Corp. announced Wednesday an increase in the quarterly cash dividend to 29 cents per ~ or $1.16 per sh.arc on an aruiu.iiud besis1 at its annual sbarchofdcrs' mcetJni. The board of directors declared a quancrly cash dividend of 29 cents per share of common stock, an mcrcase of 16 percent over the dividend announced at last year's annual meeting. The dividend is payable on June 12 to shareholders of record on May 30. Fred L Turner, chairman and chief executive officer. said, .. This is the ninth dividend tncrcasc the company bas announced since the first dividend was paid in 1976." Turner also announced the ap- pointment of three officers as 1984 advieory directors. Each will serve a ono-year term with the elected board of directors. They arc Louis S. Berman, vice president: Robert J. Doran, senior vice president and zone manager, and Den Fujita. president and managing director-McDonald's of Japan. This was the first annual share- holders· meeting held at the new McDonald's Hamburger University in Oak Brook. The presentation was telecast from the main auditorium to six separate classrooms enabling 750 shareholders and employees to view the meeting and experience the state of the art capabilities of the training facility. McDonald's Corp. has nearly 7, 900 restaurants in 33 countries. Gd Taco ~~c net PS un bH•k un si•cNec A~lco1 ~~n tmuno ~=~g ~~~~n u tor alrkt Aull CusCr w t lnAcovs lntctvn ~--------------------------------- U 'Ai n 1o11 Olvtooo n n 0ocu0t 111'1 1\4 OolrGn s S'-6'"° OovtOe 1•141 ,,_ OrllfCn 611) ·-Our*O ~ ""' Ourlron 6 6141 EttVn ' l ' • 4~ EconU> 12\'J 12" EIPet 2911) 31 E!Olf"e ~ 6 EleHvci 15'1• 16 EtMoO 1011) II>" Emcor It lt't. 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'"• OhFerro llo 13·l1 011rTP '°"' 20~ PCA Int 2"-2"' Pab1t8 l 10.66° 10.0°10 Annudl) wlJ You o.,l'I the term : 32-180 J.1yc,. 181 days will get you ll.23% 10.5<Yo Annu.11 Y1dtl D.u lv R.1tt> )ou ')t•t the term . ll:H -Jo4 t.lay-. 365 days will get you ll.790/o ll.0% With our Mini Jumbo Jetount you Ciln -.et your own term, tmm 32 days tn om.' year. $20,ooo• minimum deposit. Interest compounded daily. Account insured up to $100,000 by thtt FSLIC. Come <.ee Huntington Savin.85 about a high intere<.t Mini Jumbo account today. Now you know why your neighbor banks at CD HUNTINGTON SAVINGS ~~ON ''''" l ounlaln \allr\ ll11n.h 1 ... \1 !lf,.,.Lh""' ''"''"" \•I~\ I ..,_, r<\\I IN,.,.t, ... f( ~!•1 R.•nt h I" ·~ ~ ... t. H.f,,J """''""'.., f\,,. I fl ,.., •\\! """ 1111 ... ,,...,. \\ '""" I\·• ""'~"'"'""I'-• h • I Al '~ 'I •!!Alt •I \u• !lt!Mo lrlln l<"M"°"' ... t-.1Annat 19'1Ult\ '"'•all\ "'"hJr-•l ' Carter Hawley sales up By tbe A1aoclated Presa Carter Hawley Hale Stores. Inc. today reported sharply higher sales, oper· ating income and net eam- ings for the first fiscal quarter. Sales from continuing operations for the q uan er ended April 28, 1984, were $775,793,000. 21.6 percent higher that comparable safes of$63 7, 743,000 in the 1983 first quarter. Continuing operations exclude results of the Waldcnbooks subsidiary, which is the subject of a su- mo nth purchasee option granted during the quarter by Carter Hawley Hale to General Cinema Corp. Earnings from conttnu· 1ng o pe rations were $7.314,000, a 46 percent i n crease o ver th e $5.005.000 comparable fig- ure for the 1983 first quar- ter. Net earnings including earnings of discontinued o perations were $8,539.000. compared with $6,205,000 reported for the corresponding ycar-arlier quaner. Primary net cam- inas per sh.arc were 21 cents. comoa.red Wtth 18 cents in the 1983 first quarter. This is the sixth con- secutive Quarter of arowth in sales, operati.na income. and net income for Caner Hawley Hale, said Phihp M. Hawley, ch1irman and chief executive officer. These results further con- firm our view that our carefully structured im- provement procram will continue to benefit our company's shareholders. Net canUllJS per sha.tt on a fully diluted basis includ-iDJ discontinued oper- auons were 21 ccnu com- pared with 18 cent! in the correspondina 1983 pmod. C.anu Hawley Hale was the subject or a hostile tend.u ofTer by The Um- ucd, Inc .• initiated durina theQuar1er - -. # f .. .., .. They want the freedom to control their own Account. which ac tually gives you the frt·l'dom to financial future. They're no longer willing tn lct other-; determine the size, term and rate of your in\'L'Stmcnt. make the critical decisions for them. . California inve stors have rc"pond ed rn~iti\'cly ., .. S<_, call nr ,.i..,it ;1nv ~)t uur 122 American Savings ( ,tfi(c~ thrnu1.,!hnut Calitnrni.1 Arm\'( llJr"-t'lt 111 vnur fight tc.)r fma ncial freedom . At American Savings we fully understand the hy depositing over $4 billion in our inrH)\'i'lti,·c ... needs of these new investors. beca use we're n hrand Money Matrix just since October. . ...-.. new kind of financial institution . ~ It s this ingenuity that's hl'lped u~ tn ht•n m1c \ AMERICAN SAVINGS We're pioneering new products that arc sin111le. the nation's largest s~l\'ings <lnJ loan .1-..~nri.H 1nn . flexibl e and smart. Like the Mo ney Matrix CD with O\'Cr $27 billion in asse ts ANO LOAN A A SERVICE OF Fl NCIAL l.ORPORA TION OF AMERICA . I ~=~~­.. • -·-. 'JJJl(i~· ITTIKESll lllElllTY . ".,..----------------------------.. -------....... --~-,---"~-='--"'.""------------.---~ On the , • - • WH AT NYSE Orn Due to late transmlufon today's listing wlll not ap- pear In the Dally Piiot. WHAT AMEX Orn NEW VORK (AP) Mn 17 l anced '*' ncha~ otel IUUfl New"'"'" New IOWI AMEX LEADERS m NASDAQ SUMM ARY Gu Lo QuoTE S Mc TALS QuoTE s That's an apt description of both business and business people along the Orange Coast. To keep trac k of wherecompaniesaregotngand which people are helping them get there,Just watc h 'Credit Line' -everyday in the Bu s iness section of you r new DlilJ Pllal ,, -l Angels feeling stranded Eight men left ----in scoring position as Orioles win, 5-0 BAJ!TIMORE (AP) -Mike Bod- dicker may have struggled, but he was perfect when 1t mattered the most. The Baltimore right-hander hurled a six-hitter. stranding eight Angel runners in scoring position. as the Orioles posted a S-0 victory, Wednes- ·_g.ay night, their 15th victory in 19 starts. "That was a struggle," Bodd1cker said. "It seemed like They had guys on second and third all night." Boddicker. who led the American League with five shutouts last year, hurled his second of the season while lowering his earned run average to 2.13. "The ball felt slick and I didn't feel comfortable wnh the curvcball until the last three innings," Boddicker said. "Sometimes you don't have it. But Rabbit (pitching coach Ray Miller) always says you have to keep showing It, and maybe it will come around later." Baltimore Manager Joe Altobelli said ofBodd1cker. "lt didn't look lake he struggled to me. I think he was Just being modest." Three of the Orioles' runs came in the fifth, when they loaded the bases on a single by Al Bumbry, a walk to Jim Dwyer and another single by Cal Ripken )r. Bumbry scored on Eddie Murray's force and after Wayne Gross drew a two-out walk to reloaded the bases. rookie M ike Young singled o n an 0-2 pitch from Mike Witt. 4-3. Baltimore's other runs came in the seventh on an RBI single by Rich Dauer and in the e11hth. when John Lowenstein's sacnl'ict' fly scored Dwyer. Bodd1cker. 4-3. won his fourth in a row. waJking three and stnking out six and constantly wiggling out of trouble. He fanned Bnan Downing with runners on second and third 1n the first. The Angels left runners at thtrd in the second and fourth. then posed their most senous threat in the sixth. Rod Carew led off the inning w11h a single and moved to third on a single by tred Lynn. Carew held third and Lynn ad- vanced as Reggie Jackson bounced out. b ut Carew was then cut down trying to score on Down ing's grounder to third baseman Gross. Ron Jackson then grounded out. In the ninth. Downing walked and Ron Jackson singled before Bod- d1ckcr retired Rob Wilfong and Bob Boone. The Angels arc idle tomsl\t before wrapping up this road tnp wtth a three gmc set with the New York Yankees. Friday's game, which be- gins at 5 p.m., and Sunday's ~me. which starts at 11 a.m ., will be televised on Channel S. The Angels return to Anaheim Stadium Tuesday. openm$ a three game set with the Detroit l'igcrs. followed by the Orioles and Yankees. M9rln•, B•one relNlr for eoftbtall pl•roff8 •t home Frld9y.C2. THURSDAY, MAV 17, l&M ' A take-charge group I ... These Chargers have a !·~2 earn~ run averaae ror the year, stnlcina out Just 23 batters. done What it takes But he gets the job done. "He wants the baJI when people are on base," aay1 t g t th J b d laRufTa. "That's when be excells." 0 e e 0 One Tberc1sn'ta .400hiu.eramon1thebuncb (also a blessing of sorts when you'd prefer to concentrate on winnin&). but it's an 1mpress1ve lineup which consists of first baseman Andy Sinclair (.380), shortstop Dave Solorzano (.350), Damato (.360 and at second base wheQ he's not pitehing), catcher Paul Ellison (.320) desipllted hitter Scott Hefner(.325), outfielden Todd Nash (.31 S), Ron Chock (.330) and Pat Walker (.325). By ROGER CARLSON OllleO..,Pllel .... Edison High baseball coach Ron LaRuf- fa has been around long enough to know when you play Russian roulette, sooner or later ... The first potential bullet comes from Arcadia Hi~'s Apaches Fnday afternoon ( 3: IS) at Mile Square Park. Nevertheless. the Chargers' coach takes his team into the C IF 4-A baseball playoffs as the Sunset League champion with some good feelings about this ed1t1on, which enters with a 22-5 record and the No. 4 ranl~.ing in the 4-A poll, eight players battmg over .300 and a couple of pitchers who seem to know how to get the job done. "We've hit well enough to beat people, played weU under pressure and won a lot of one-run games," says LaRuffa, who has watched his teams compile a I 04-30 record the past five years. Probably the best way to sum this team up 1s to take a good look at two individuals -pitcher Chip Damato and third baseman Eric Conant. Delly .... ,,.....~ MllMN ll ..... Damato has racked up an 8-1 record as a right-hander. but doesn't come on until the middle innings, usually in relief. because as LaRuffa puts it, "If he was playrng basketball you'd want him taking the last shot." Edlaon rleht-bander Chip Damato bu com piled an 8 -1 record . moetly In relief. Damato. a 5-10. 165-pound Junior wnh more savvy than sheer speed. has recorded Woodbridge joins CIF baseball party Warriors qualify for playoffs after 1-0 wild-card win By HUG H SILER 1.-eW lo ... OeltJ ,...,. The Woodbndge High ba~ball team has been trying all year to gain some respect. Making their first-ever Cl F playoff appearance Wednesday. the un- heralded Wamors held on to defeat a stubborn Saddleback squad, 1-0. in a CIF 2-A wild-card game. ''We've been caught up in the Rodney Dangerfield syndrome all year," said Woodbndge Coach Dave Cowen. "People arc always calling U!I 'Woodbird' or even 'Woodch1p' High." fhe win moved the Warriors into a first-round encounter at second-seed- ed Santa Fe on Friday. Woodbridge starting pitcher Randy Cook upped his season record to 9.3 after recording the shutout. "Cook has been overshadowed all year long in our league. He's JUSt a smart. scrappy kid who's not over· powenng," an elated Cowen added. year. and we've won seven of them." The surprise of the day came when Saddleback Coach Bobb)' Mangram decided to start sophomore riiht- hander Jeff Rowe. Mangram was confident that his young hurler would come up with a strong performance which would allow ace pitcher Leonard Damian to be rested for a po\Cnllal game Fnday. • Rowe responded wtth his third consecutive 1mpress1ve outing and ended the season with five successful innings of pitching without allowing an earned run "Rowe had a great performance for U!I today." Mangran said. "He's pitched 17 1nn1ngs for us this year and has only allowed one earned run. He worked himself out of some tough Jams and he should have been out of that inning m which they scored." Woodbridge scored the only run 11 needed in the fifth. With two outs, Darin Daniels reached first on an infield error and proceeded to steal second base Cook then dnlled a single to center to bnng him home. "Thal kid got the base hit when the)' needed 1t." a disappointed Mangram explained "We'll be back next year .. What's left is Conant, who seems to be the glue which holds everything together with his .280 batting average. "He's really our unsung hero," says LaRuffa. "Those words were made for him because of his clutch defense. You don't hear two words from him lll practice, but he's always there, coming up with the sacrifice or the diving stop. He doesn't show up a lot in the statistics, but he is as import.ant a cog in our machinery as we have." Basically. what LaRuffa is describing 1s a dream team -but be k.nows too well how quickly 20-win seasons can be shattered in the playoffs. "This isn't a 32-tcam tournament," says LaRuffa. "It's fi ve one-game tournaments, and 1f you lose once, you're not mv1ted back." Lance Emma. another jumor right- hander, 1s Edison's usual starter. He bas also recorded an 8-1 record on the mound. AJI of this. of course, hasn't been entirely uncounted on. The Chargers bad a lot of Friday'• Gamee •·A. 1:15 , ... Arcadia vs. UiNa at Mile Sq~ Park Fou&aJa Valle7 at NotR Dame Oceu VleW at St. John 8otco Rowland al Mater Del Z·A, 3:U p.m. Diamond Bar at 1"IM \VoMltriq e al Slµ)ta Fe · Lapa HDb at El 1'-. Small sa..1s, a:u , .... Chadwick vs. New,er1 Orildu at Southern Ctlifornia CoUqe returning start.en in the first place, but there were question marks, especially on the mound. "It was just a mafter if our pitching would come together," says LaRu1fa. "We figured we'd be Jood ... But the best item has simply been the blend -LaRufTa calls it ••chemistry." And, in addition to able pitchina and sound hitting, defense and speed bu been abundant. Solanano bas teamed with Damato, Ellison and Nash to give the Cbarsien one of the best middles in the school's history -perhaps the best. A j unio r, Solanano bas already broken the assist record for the team and Jt.1aue, has stolen a school record 20 bases and scored 18 runs in league play. Other pitching help includes Todd Bridenball (1.47 ERA), Greg Martin (1.7S ERA) and Paul Wright (1-1), and like Damato and Emma, they're all jun.ion. "We've battled all year long. and 11 seems that this team JUSt doesn't get down. we just come back. We've been involved in 11 one-run games this Added Cowen: "We'll be traveling on Fnda;. but we'll goafter'em. They may be ~cond-seeded but we played the top-seed (Capistrano Valley) tough all )'Car .. Woodbridge second baseman Mike Fo11: appUea tag to Joey Mendoza of Saddle- 0.., ,... ,.... _, ~...,,. back while W arrlor Darin Daniel• bacb up the play. Woodbridge won, 1-0. Carlton sweeps up , slams door shut on Dodge rs FV:'s IVeaJ LOS ANGELES (AP) -Veteran "We haven't been worrying about said Philadelphia Manager Paul outscored Los Angeles 22-5 and nght field bleachers and one to domJt:aate:fl left-hander Steve Carlton had gone Carlton.'' said Philadelphia pitching Owens. "Just to win a senes 1s tough. outhit them 33-20. They abo hit four second base to blow a double pla) Cf. dJ ~ore than sev~n weeks wnhout a coach Claude Osteen. "We were These tnps to the West are tough on home runs to one by thr Dodgers. the chanct' 'w:I' ll/llflUll victory .before his most recent outing. makmgerrors, now we're not, and the us Eastern boys." only homer h) the club in its last 11 "That was the whole game the r ~ You might say he took matters into "".ms will start coming. It's t~.c same The Phi ls proved to be tough on the games. double pla-y," lamented Lasorda' his own hands. kind of start he had last year. Dodgers. who have lost three straisl\t "We're not \Conng. c;o we can't be · Carlton. 39. recorded his first The victory was the sixth in a row for the ..first 11me since the open mg giving up man' run'I... c;<ud Los The Dodgers took a 1-0 lcad in the tnumph since opentng day Wednes-for the Phillies and moved them to week of the !;Cason Los Angeles has i\ngeles Manager Tom 1...a .. orda "W e bottom of the third inn mg on a day night as the Ph1ladclph1a Phillies within l'/i games of first place 1n the loc,t of1t'i last 'illl games and 10 of its can score more than we have with double b".>' R.J Rt>~nolds and a t""o- wh1ppcd the Los Angeles Dodgers National League East. It was also last 14. "hat we're putting out there" out. R Bl smgle b) Bob Bailor 7-2. Philadelphia's first sweep of a three-Yet. the Dodge~ remain JO first Fernando ValenTUl'la. Vi. the lo<.-"He's a good fastball hitter." Os- The big blow of the game was game series in Los Angeles since place 1n the NL West. The) kad mg pitcher, ma~e tv.o bad throv.s teen said of ( arlton ""ho has h11 I:! C.arlton's first career grand slam September of 1963. \mcinnat1 b)' one game against the Ph1ll1e<. Wednrsda\ mght. homers JO h1-; big league career homer in the fourth JOntng. "I knew 1t had been a long time." In the three games. the Ph11l1es one to Carlto n which ended up in the "Fernando 1ust got one up a little .. Olympic Torch lOk more thanjust a run Food Fair. Olympic demonstrations also - featured this Sunday The Olympic Torch I Ok and Food Fair. a mlJor fund-raising effort to support Amenca's amateur athletes, will be held Sunday at Fa h1on Island in Newpon Beach. The 6.2-milc run will feature a course through the streets of Newport Center and Fashion Island. The Jntemat1onal Food Fair will consist of specialty foods from over SO of Oranac County's finest restaurants. But. there will be more for the ,pcctators Olympic dcmonstrat1on11 wtll in- clude gymnastics. wresthna. fencing, Judo. we1aht-ltf\ma and soccer Honorary chairman Merlin Ol~n will be on hand for spcctal an- nouncements and to make prc~n· tation1 to the winners Snoopy and am the Olympic EaaJe will JOIO pa"lt and preo;cnt Olympic nthletc, for autographs and pictures. But. the race itself will he the highli ght. Last year, over 4,300 athletes panicipated, raising $35,000. Many of the world-class runners took part. including UC Irvine product Steve Scott. who captured first place in a time of 28:58. Nancy CX1l2, the women's winner. won wtth a time of 34:26 This year. the field 1s expected to be 1n theneiJhborhood of 10.000and the starting time will be 8 30 a.m sharp Smee the race 1s being run through- out the Fashion Island area. all roads leadina into Newport Center Wtll be blocked off at 8: IS and will remain closed until 10 am. lJnhkc athletes from other coun- tnes where government ass1sance 11 available, Olympic part1c1pant~ rcp-rc~nting the United States must rdy entirely uport pnvatc fundina. The USOC. throua}l volunteer cffons such H the Olympic Torch !Ok and Food Fair, provide lht' mQJont)' of this \Upport BILLBOARD TONIGHT FRIDAY ..... UCIM9 n.11£' .. ........ ,._ ,..._, __ Ill MOTORCYCLU s.eectw•v radftt c.. .. Meta "•.,..,._.. ,..,f llNll I -...,.umee euu••• ......... ...... ., ...... TV·AAPIO· See C2. SoCal track finals lure area JC stars Cerritos plays host to athletes hoping to qualify for state ByCURTSEEOEN Of ... .,..,,...., ... NOR WALK -l ht· 'uuthrm Cahfom1a commun1t) cnllegt' track and field finals unveil herc al C'cmtos College Fnday. but two of the best all- around athletes in the state -both from area colleges -v.on't he dmn& what thC')' do bc'it Orange ( oa\t ( ollcg<'·, \heldon Olockhuracr and SaddlehJck' Mark Hafl1gcr havt' alrtild) qualitic:-d for the stntc ml'Ct nc\I ""t'<'k 10 &kersfield with 1mpf'l'ss1-.(' Jl('r· fonnancec; in the 1ruchn1 dl:'("athlon Hat111cr ha'I ~ti c'lpcc1all)' 1m- rrt'\'uve. l'ql~tcnna the ~rmnal bc'\t' at the c.;o< al prthms and dcfcat1na JC'lrnd1na ~to te chamP.1on Dou a 1-cmande roll ona jkach ( ( 1 n the prOl't'\\, HotiinRt'r rnmfK'tt·d m 'll\ t·-.rnl\ scored in fi,c of them and recorded a 6-101/• In the high JUmp Blockburger. a self-St}lcd deca- thlete. set school records in the long 1ump and tnplc 1ump at the prchms. g01ng 24-611> in tht' long Jump and 4Q-31t• in th<' tnplc While Hafling<'r and Bl<X lhurgt'r ha-.e alread} qualified for stat(. S(veral of their teammates and ath· letcs from Gold<'n We t College Wlll be: out for qualifyrng mar\.~ Fnda" Compcutton bcginc; with wo men's field events at 2. 30 p m and lhc fl~t running ('VC'nt IS al 4 OCC's Todd Andf't'~ will com~tt 1n hoth 1he 110 h1&h hurdles and 400 mt<'nned1ate~. while the P1ratd Mark Gue't (I S l 58 in th<' 800) and Mark McMa'1er <' H I~) Wlll also be on hand ()('(' 1'> v.ell-rrpre~nt('d 1n the d1st.a0<."C ""e"" Wlth G&I) ln1I) rom~trng m the \.~ 'ltccpltthut (Q 26 R at the prt"hms) and l 11)"\t'I 1 cm"Quti lq 4~ 2 \ 1n the ~mt event) ()( C ·., C 1u' Qumonc1 ha' alreaih ,1ua'1firt1 fnr 'tatc in tht I 0.000 " ~~-----------~----~-· ---~ . OrangeCout OAJLY PILOT/Thul'lday. May 17. 1884 I . -'Rebuilding'-Barons Marin a, Irvine, Estancia a lso ready for first-round tests - Ooean View (Jackie Oakley) -but has a sound defense and has been aided by timely hitting. .. We have a vcryy,ouna tum, and we're in the middle of a rebuilding year. ' Baker said , "but we really came tosether when leque swtcd. I think we djd very well" Marina hostina Los Amigos, Westminatcr at Villa Park., and Torrance at Mater Oei. All have 3: IS starts. Marina, seeded No. 4 with a 22-S mark., has the pitching (Larsen and Kim Kierstead), but has lacked' the offense. The team's leading bitter. Lori Krouse, is banina only .270. and. she hits fourth in the Vikinas' lineup with four RBI . ·~----"------------------------------~ BJ RJCB..U\D DUNN .......... .,.., ..... As Fountain Valley High prepares to host West Torrance Friday afternoon m the first round of the CIF 4- A sirls' softball playoffs. Baron Coach Cary Baker seems a bit skeptical about b.is team's chances to advance to the second round. The Barons are led by two-time all.Sunset t..e.gue catcher Therese Puchalski, first-team selections Dana Ramos, who led the club in homers with three, and Lea Young. a sopbomoie who wu named the league's co- Player of the Year. Meanwhile, West Torrance counters with senior Rhonda Nelson, who not only hit .543, but posted an impressive 1 J-3 record and a 0.37 ERA on the mound. West Torrance finished scoond in the Bay League with a "She's a good clutch hitter," Marina Coach Suaie Calderon said, "and she's good defensively -she's made only one error this year at first base." I 2-2 record. Other area 3-A games Saturday find Estancia at top. seeded Millikan, South Coast Lca&ue runner-up Wood- bridge hosting El Rancho. and Sea \Tiew League runner-up El Toro playing host to Sonora. Fountain Valley, which finished second in the Sunset I League to champion Marina, doesn't have the quality pitcher to dominate -unlike Marina (Julie Lanen) and Other 4-A games involviog Newport Christian, the small schools' No. l seed. area teams include draws Pilgrim High in its opener Friday. .. :i AM/FM Stereo Cassette/Receiver Slashed 32% scR-3000 by Rea11stice 20 watts per channel, mlntmum rm• Into 8 ohm• from 20-20,000 Hz, with no more than 0.1~ THO Save . A uorescent Frequency D1ap1ay •120 • Dolby*B Noise Reduction Two of the most popular comi» nents in one! Receiver features 25995 Auto-Magi~ FM fine-tuning. Re- cording deck has dual 5-LED Reg. audkHevel meters and metal/ AS LOW AS 379.95 CrO/normal tape selectors. • '26 PER #31-1996 __ MQNTii ·TM Dolby Labo<atorln Lic9n1lng Corp Complete Stereo System Cut 35% By Realistic •3Soaove80 s559 Reg. 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Dual 5-LED peak meters. Mute button lets you edit unwanted material while recording. Pushbuttons for metal/CrO,Jnormal tape. #'14-641 CB With Channel 9/19 Priority Save •so 6995 Reg. TRC-414 by Realistic Poland follows Soviets Poland today joined the Soviet Union-led boycott of the Summer Olympics. increasing to l 0 the number of nations that have declared they will not participate at the Games in Los Angeles. Following a meeting of the 45-member Olympic Committee in Warsaw. "it was decided that Polish representation will not be entered for competition in ·i the 23rd Olympic Gam es in Los Angeles in connec- tion with the situation sur- :~· rounding the Games," the official news agency PAP reported. Poland's pullout from the Olmypics had been expected ever since the Soviet Union announced its withdrawal May 8. The Polish state-run media had echoed the Soviet com- plaints rc-garding the safety of athletes in Los Angeles. Hungary, Czechoslo- vakia, East Germany, Bul- garia. Laos, Vietnam, Mongolia and Afghanistan h.ad followed the Soviet lead in joining the boycott. Romania is now the only Soviet bloc nation that has not Joined the pullout. Romania, the most inde- pendent of the Soviet bloc countries. has indicated it will send a team lo the Games. Polish Olympic teams have not been as strong recently as in past years, but the fencing. wrestling. boxing and weightlifting teams were expected to win ·' medals in Los Angeles. As the number of Eastern bloc countries ~ycotting the Olympics continues to rise, the top security official ., for the Gan'les in Los An~eles says the issue on which they are basing the pullout is a phony one. Holnies looking for way LAS VEGAS (AP) - Larry Holmes says he'll take a pay cut and might even tum promoter if necessary to salvage his scheduled June 8 fight with World Boiling Association hc;avyweight champion Gerrie Coctzee. Meanwhile, Coetzee, in a reP?rt published today, said he has pulled out of the fight -but will reconsider ifoffered S 1 million more. Holmes said Wednesday he has aJready taken a $2 million purse cut and ii willing to have his original S 12.3 million purse cut , further to pull off the jeopardized bout. "If only one half comes in for me. I'll be happy," .<. said Holmes. "I reduced my check S2 million already and I'm willing to ., reduce 1t even more." :;: In Johannesburg, the daily Ci tizen quoted Coetzee. from South ;, Afnca, as saying. "l pulled out of the fight on Tuesday night after a meeting with all involved . "I had been training half- heartedly over the past fortnight (two weeks) be· cause of problems sur- roundin~ the fight." No-show 'record' of 45,517 unused tickets for Twins From AP dJapatcltet MINNEAPOLIS -An unofficial Iii major lcaaue baseball record for no-shows was set Wednesday in Minneapolis, where _. 45,517 Metrodome tickets were pun:hued but not used. A crowd of 6,346 fans watched the Blue Jays rally past Minnesota, 8-7. But the paid attendance was S 1,863 -second highest in the club's 24-year history. A grout> of Twins Cities business leaden bouaht the 4S,S 17 tickets as part of a $6 million ticket drive. They hope to prevent the Twins fro~ _jumping cities by boosting attendance over the 2.4 million mark this season. That would bind Twins President Calvin Griffith tQ his Metrodome lease through 1988. EventuaUy , the group plans to distribute abou.t a million tickets to needy people, the elderly and scouting groups in a five-state area of Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa and the Dakotas. But until a distribution plan is developed within JO days, the tickets will remain unused. Twins spokesman Tom Mee said no records arc kept of the most no-shows in baseball, "but this had to be it." Mee said that thousands of tickets are available for each game to the paying customers because the group writes a check for all unsold seats around the seventh inning. "This is some way to do business," said Griffith, 73. who opposed the massive ticket buyout because it may lower the price tag of his team. Quote of tile clay .......... ...,.director of opt18ti0rll tor .. Untted 8taWI FootlMlll LllQU9, on ttl9 pt ... neof =tootbml tntht~: UWe're kJndof atwily -we have to hoPe for OOod .,...., tn Meich Ind Apr9 Md bed n 111Mr 6R May end June.," Seattle can't s low down Tl.gen Alan Trammell'• triple keyed a fi ve-Iii run first inning and red-hot Detroit went on to a 10-1 victory over Seattle Wednes- day to run the Tigers' record to 29-5. Milt Wilcox, 5-Q, scattered four hits ~v~r six in~ings.,.walking two and striking out fi ve, while improving bis career record against the Mariners to 10-2 ... lo other American League activity, pinch-hitter Rlck Leadl'• bases-loaded triple in the eighth inning sparked a six- run rally that propelled Toronto to an 8-7 victory over Minnesota. gi ving the Blue Jays a two-game sweep of the Twins ... DeDD.lt Eckenley and Bob Stuley combtned on a five-hitter and Wade Bou• had four singles and three RBI as Boston defeated O~veland, 5-2 ... Jim Sudberg and Jim Gumer drove 10 two runs apiece in a five-run second inning to power Milwaukee to a 5-1 victory over Texas ... Dave Winfield smasbed a two-run homer in the bottom· of the I 0th to rally the New York Yankees to a 7-6 victory over Oakland. The A·s had gone ahead 6-5 in the top of the 10th when Andre Robertson threw Mike Heatb'• two-out ground ball past second, allowing Joe Mor1u, who had walked. to score ... Leon Roberts drove in the tie-brcakin' run wllh a tnpk in the seventh inning to lead Kansas City to an uphill 7-6 victory that ended a three-game Chicago winning streak. Cuba take over lead in East Leon Ourbam, Jody Davia and Roa Iii Cey slugged home runs Wednesday ni111t as the Chicago Cubs overpowered C10- nc10ati. I 0-4. to climb into first place in the National League East. Durham drilled a two-run homer as the Cubs scored three times in the first innmg, and followed with an RBI single in a three-run second inning to send the Reds to their third straight defeat ... Elsewhere in the National league, Nolu Ryu pitched a five-hitter to outduel Job.o Candelaria, and Pkll Garner'• double drove in the only run as Houston edged Pittsburgh, 1-0. Ryan. who hasn't lost to the Pirates in 13 years, was nearly Oawless after the third inning in pitching his 52nd career shutout ... Third baseman Hable Brooks' error on Jeff Leoaud'• grolfnder permitted pinch-runner Joe Pittman lO score, climaxing a three-run rally with two outs in the ninth inning that lifted San Francisco to a 4-3 victory over New York ... Tommy Herr singled three times, scored twice and drove in one run, leading St. Louis to a 4-2 triumph over Atlanta behind the combined five-bitter of Dave LaPoiDt and Bruee Satter. LaPoint, 5-4, gave up all fi ve Atlanta hits, struck out six and walked four in eight innings' work. while Sutter earned his ninth save . .. Terry Francona, the major league's leading hitter, had three hits and scored twtce, and Pete Rote drove in two runs as Montreal handed San Diego its seventh straight loss. 3-2. Dantley wins c omeback honor SALT LAK.ECrTY -Adrian Dantley m of the Utah Jazz, named Wednesday the National Basketball Association's Come- back Player of the Year. says he put a lot of pressure on himself tQ prove he wasn't washed up from a serious wrist injury. Not only did Dantley rebound from tom ligaments in his shooting wrist, but he also became the NBA's scoring champion. learned a new position and led his team to its first winning season in franchise history. Redskin Peters reinstated WASHINGTON -All-Pro safety [!] Tony Peters of the Washington Rcdskfos, •II• who was suspendt'd last year by the National Football League following his arrest and conviction on drug trafficking charges, was reinstated Wednesday by NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle. In a statem\nt from his New York office. Rozelle said. "We met recently with Tony Peters and reviewed all the fac tors in his case. Peters has missed a full NFL season. The actions that necessitated bis suspension were not those of a drug user. nor were they motivated by personal gain. "Tony fully appreciates the dam~e his actions cost his team and the entire NFL. as well as himself." Reg. Reg. 15.95 19.95 119.95 Large LED Channel Readout • Mount• Under Daah No License Required • No Age Limit to Use "At this stage, the possi· bility that r will fight Holmes is very remote. I doubt if the fight will ever come off," Coetzee told the Citizen in a telephone in· tcrview from Los Angeles, wherchc1stnu~n1~·n~~:__----~~~~~~~~~~~lllllllllllllllr---l Take it anywhere! Shde- rule tuning dial, 21/•" speaker. earphone and wrist strap #'12-634 Battery eirtra Rare-earth magnets pro- vide w.ide response. Only 21'2 oz 1/e" plug, 61/,..ft. cord. #33-979 Don't drive "alone"! Priori~ switch gives Instant access to Emergency Ch. 9 and Highway Ch. 19. LED modula- tion indicator and signal strength/RF power meter. In- cludes plug-in mike #21-1508 Check Your Phone Book for the llad18 lllaek Store or Dealer Nearest You A DIVISION OF lANOY CO~PORATION TUNE:.UP SPECIAL Reg. 125 NOW •17.95 GOOD UNTIL JUNE 1. 1984 751-4882 Cott• M•u Vikings win Tht Marina Hiah bad· minton team captured the CJ F 4-A championship Wednesday afternoon at Westminster High. bcatina Estancia, 16-13. Michelle Flores, Rene Robatelli and Julie Patton sparkled in women's s1naJed and Vince Am· brosio won aU three of h11 matchei 1n boys' sinaks co pace thr unbcattn VilunRJ t t I t I I ! I .. , r I !I! •' 11 \ Idea~ Gon.ditions for salt wateranglei;s GOOd catches of yellowtail. bOnito. calico bass reported at catalina recently Salt water ftabina off the IOUth coutline continues to improve u weather condition1 are ideal for eood •w1tce act.ion both alona shoreline water and at the outer i.alandl. Phil Ten.er, at Davey's Locktt in Balboa, ~ru \hat tome aood catches ofyellowtail have been made at Catalina recently and \hat puaeo- ser loads are on tbe liabt aide for week day trips. In addition to the yell~ there are alto tome nice catches of calico but and bonito beina made. rewardina aQ&lcn with uca full of rock cod and bottom fiab. for thole wbo ~ fish for tbc table more I.ban for tpOf1.. Even tbovab both landln,. oow operatina out of Balboa are ctuu»aina over to summer ND tcbedulet tome half-day trips are atilt fiabin& the deeDer reeti. At the San l>ieao lancUnp. there tw been a bot and cold bite on 'rellowtail u well. For a few daya. the fiab really como to life and feed on the turface, especially when the CUtrenll are nmnina in the riabt direction. Thi• put week this outdoor writ.er, joined by hit son Brook. spent a day fishina the Coronado laJand.a on the sportfi~ "Searcher'' operatina out Bait conditioot are excellent and the water temperatute ll ideal for a continued aood bit 1w1ace ~l'I. There are a1IO tomo trips that are ~ • • MAJOlt LIAGUI STANDINGS A"*1cen LM9Ue WUTDfVdlOM W L ~. •• 20 " .m 11 11 .500 ..., It If .500 ..., 11 20 .A74 1\-'J It 20 ,'74 1\-'J ll 20 .Jt4 4 12 24 .m 6Ya •AIT DfV1SIOM " s .as.> Oe!F"oll Tor-onto 8altlmor• Mllw!IUUe New Yon c~ lotltfl 21 ., "" • 20 17 .S41 10\llJ 17 16 .SIS 11Ya 1' lf A57 m'> 13 11 .~If """ IS 11 A11 1S Wt• 11•Y'• ~ 8alt11Mr• s ....... 0 Toronto I , ~·• 1 1otton s. c~ 2 Oetroll 10, Seeltte 1 New Yortl 7, <>ekland 6 (10 lnnlnln) Mllw~ S, Tuat I Kenut City 7, OlbtO 6 T ........ 10-eo.ron (Hunt 4'-4) er Cle\leland (Btytewn 4·21 OlbtO IHovt l-41 et Toronto (LMI 4-01 T•M• <T-3-4) •I Mllweukee (HHI 2·2) ,,..,., 0... ...... et New York, (n) o.klend et Detroit, lnl Clllc:etO et Toronto, In) Seellle el a.ttlmor-e. (nl Texe1 el KenMI City, <n> lotton et MlflMM>t•, <n> Clevelend et MHweullee, (n) N ...... LAetue W•IT DCVtSIOM W L ~. Ga ~ 22 II .S50 Cllldnnetl " 11 .sn Attente II 17 .514 s.n oi..o 11 " .soo Houlton 15 21 '17 Sen Frendaa> 14 22 .lit a AST DfvtSION Chlc.e90 20 U NewYorti If 14 ~.. " " MontrMI It 17 $1. Louis II It PlttaourOfl I 2 10 Wea I •Y'1 $alr9' PttlledelP'lle 7. ~, Sen F~anc!ICIO 4, New York 3 Houlton 1. Pltttbur9'1 o Chlc.e90 10, Cloc:lnnatl 4 St. Louil 4, Atlante 2 Monl,_t l , Sen Oleoo 1 T .. Y'I 0- Sii S76 .so S'lt ... .37S I l'lt 2 s • "'» l'h 2 3'h 1 Chlceeo (Rulllven 2-4) et Clnclnnetl (.Soto S.-11 Allant• (Peret 2-0) •I St Loul• (Cox 2·4) MontrMI (Roeer1 2·2) at Sen OleeO (Hewtllnt 3-1) ,,..,.. o.ne. Montr•I at ~. (nl HoYaton at Chlceoo Atlante I I Pltllburtf'I, (fl) Clnclnnell at St. Loult, (n) New YOf'k et San Oleoo. (ft) Pfl~ et San Fr1nclaco. Cnl AM•llttcAN L•AGU• on.ees 5, ~ 0 CAU'°"MIA aAL TIMOtt• Pettis cf Cerew lb Lvnn rf lteJkandll Oownlnel" lt.Jdltn lt> Wltfone 2b eoonec Plcc:toto • ' T .... •rlllll •,-11111 4 000 9umDNcf 5130 l010 Owverrf 3200 • 0 2 0 RllMten H • 0 3 0 4 0 I 0 EIW.Xrv lb 2 1 0 l 2000 Lwnstndtl 400 I 4 O 1 O Grou lb 4 1 1 O • 0 0 0 MKYne lb 3 0 2 2 4010 D1uer 2b 4011 3000 '*'-vc •OOO n t 6 t T.... JI S It S s-.w--.. c...... ----· .... we -.. lla-S Geme Wlnnlne Riii -e~r•Y (7). E_,...11,, LaCe><te. OP-Callfomle 1. L09o-<lllfwnle I, 9ettlmore 13. 2t-8umelrv. ,....._. sa-eumin m SF-OWVtr. CaMwftle Witt L,4·) LACorte .... ..,. ~ H lllalll aa so • 2-3 ' 11-3 1 • I ) 0 Boddldltr W,4·3 f 6 0 0 3 7 WP-Witt, Boddldter. T-2:29. A-12.941 NATIONAL LEAGUE 1, o.-n 2 PMIL LOS ANCHLIS 11111 ellrlllll Samuel 1 0 Sex ~ 3 0 I 0 MeOdoJt cf 4 0 1 1 9allor H 4 0 2 I Sdlmdl 3C1 5 1 I 0 Landi'• cf 4 0 0 0 Lerc.lftO rf 3 0 0 O Gutrrer 30 4 0 2 I OWlltOn" 4 110 Mldndo" 3000 INtsrk lb 4 0 1 0 Whllflld rf I 0 0 0 VlrOft c l 1 1 0 YMOtr c 2 0 0 0 o..i.wu• 3 1 o 1 Zadlry P o o o o Canton P J 2 2 4 LnottY P'I 1 o o o Cempt)el o 0 0 0 0 Stul>Ot lb 3 0 I 0 Coran p11 1 0 1 0 Morell oh 1 0 0 0 Holland p 0 0 0 0 Raooldl rf ' I 1 0 V11ef11ll o 2 0 0 0 FlmcNlc 1 1 I 0 , .... » 1 11 1 T.-. JI 1 a 1 Saf'e!W ..... ,......... -M2 __ , Lei...... Ill M tlt-I G-.me Wlftfllftt RBI -Certton m. E-Valenluele. OP-fl'tlli.delotlle 1, LOI Al'IOltta 2, L~l~le S, Lot Art• ..... 6. ~ev'*«h, Metua1e11, kmuet, Ou.rrwo. Hlt-Cerlton ( 1) 59-S.mutl (22) • H lll•lll aa SO 6 1 1 I 6 2 I I 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 7 1 2 , 7 7 ) 0 0 1 I (bV Vllen1uelll I. T-2:70. TRIP\,.£$: RL.aw, CNQeo, S; Owen, seem.. 4; 1 .,.. tied with 3. HOME lllUNS: Klnemafl, OHlaftd, 11; ""*-"· 8altlmore, 10, AO.vis, Seattle, t , .vmu, ao.ion, a; UPllleW, Toromo. I. STOLEN IASH: tutlet, ~. 16; Gerde, TorOflto, 16; a.mazwd, ~. 14; ......_ Me*. 111 MoMOY. Toronto, 10; ltHendlnOll, OaklMd, 10. PITC"ING (4 ded•lonll: LMI, Toronto, 4-0, U4; l.4"1, O.trott, .-0, 1Al; Stewart, 8ettlmore, 4-0. U •; SlllD, Toronto, S-0, 2.15; Wlk:o•, Detroit, H , ).of. STRIKEOUTS:. 8tyteyen, ClevellftCI, 41; Slleb, Toronto. 4$; Wiii, Me*. t41 Moala, Oetroll. 42; Nlekro, New V01'11, 41; Smlll'llon, Ml.-t•, 41. SAVES: Qultenberry, K-City, 10; Fltleen, Mll'#eUkee, 7; RO.via, MIMltotl, 1; SlartteY, loston, 7; C.udll, Olklend, 6. b ........ "--9A TTING (70 et llell): Fninc:one, Mon- treel, "7; GWYM, San otwo, 366; 9renlY, s.n ,randtco, ~; Clat'll, San Frendtclo, .336; it.Ines, Montr .... .1)6. •UNS: lte!Ms, MiontN91, 2'; W1991M. SM Oteeo. 11; Semuel, Pf'h llillfl'lle. '11, Schmldl. ,.., •• ~. f1; SU, ~ .. lt8 1: GCMter, Montr..i, J2; Schmldl, Phllt f ' Na, 31; Clat'tl, San Frandtal, 21; Watllln9ton, Attante. f1; Davia.~. 2'. HITS: GWYIWI, s.n otwo, ff; Francona. Mofttrael. •; ltalNI, MontrMI, 4'; Samuel. PNlld*tlle· 46; $end0ert. ClllceeO, 45; s..,o...n.45. DOUBLES: F~. MontrMI, 11; Certw, Mon"-', 11; Davis, Sell Francttco, 10; .... o...n. ltl TI!ompeon, Ptt- llOw'tltl, t ; Sendll«t, ~. t; Straw- berTY. New Yoni, t . T•IPLES: sendber'9. Olkaeo. S; McGee, St.L.ouh, 4; Samull, PT1•1JeG"'-. 4; FoMY. C~ll. ); O.ttr, Clnclmatl, l ; Wyme, Pttttbur9'1. >. HOME RUNS: Sdwnldt, ~. 11; ~.Atlante, t ; _,...,LAI........_ " W•lfllneton. Altanle, I; 4 .,.. tied With 7. STOLEN LUES: Semuel, ~. 22; WleelM. San OleeO, 1'1 ltadut, Clndn· netl, 17; Mlfn«. Clndnnell, ll; Relflft, Montr•I, 13. PITCHING (4 dedtlont): Lvndl, New Yortl, 4·0, Uf; ~ ~ S·l, l.lt1 Soto, Ctndtwletl, 5-1. U•; Sandwtort, Chlca9o, 4·1, 2.J.e; HewtllM, San Oteto, 3-1. U3; L ... Monlraal, 6'-2, 1 02, Orow:o, N- York, 3-1, 1.50. STRIKEOUTS: Rven, Houlton, '5; ..,......_, ~ Ml Soto, Ctnclnnetl, S7; Gooden, New Yn. SI; Centon, Pfllla- d9telhle, •. SAVES: eo.'909, San Olello, 9, Sutler, Sl.Loufl, •; Hollaftd. ~. 1, ~S­ mith, Chlceoo, 6; tla ... ._., ~. 61 Orotc.0, flMw VCIB, 6, lfeerdOrl, Monlraat, • COLL&GE SCBA ,,.., L...-w LT CS F~ton UNLV 22 6 0 17 10 I IS 11 2 16 12 0 O¥wal WLT 55 11 0 ., ,. 1 UC Santa 81rbare P..-rdlne Lono 8each St. UC lrvlne loYOle U. Sen Oleoo 13 IS Cl 11 17 0 10 " 0 6 21 I Hitt! Kf*I C., WILD CARD Oil.Mal , ...... .,. . ._.., 4·A RolllrlG Hiiis 4, Redondo 3 J.A Nori• VIII• 12. Alt• Lome 11 2·A ... Gerdetl$ 7. INrk KICIHI 6 Rubidoux S, El Cantro 4 Woodbrldol 1, SaddleOldl 0 """ ScMlll Feith hPtlst 7, Cal Lutllef'en • Moleve 7. Sliver V1tlev 6 .. 21 > 3t 21 0 32 )4 • 23,. I n • o 20 3' 2 Woodcrnt Christian 16, Twin Pinn 6 Whitney 7, Anton 3 c.1e 2. e1 Peso de RoOlel 1 II !Mines> O\adwldt 16. INMCSI 0 Cl' 2-A W11a -W. I, SI 'I t1dl I S.OdleMdt 000 000 0--0 4 4 Woodbrldee 000 010 x-1 S 1 Rowe, Demien (6) end Cemac:tlO; COOk Incl Mc:N•. W-COOk, f-l. L-ftowe. 2&-JOf'dlfl (S). U.S. OtvmPk "1M1 ~ MAY 12·2S Yeclltln9, 11 Lone 9"ctl. ll·Jvtv 11 women·1 Rowlne, et Lone a .. c11 16·June ti Men's Rowlne, et Lono 8ffdl 16-JUfle 12 Women'• Rowing, et Prince· ton, N.J 11·20 Eoue1trlen Tri•••. 11 L .. lnelon, Kv 1'-22 fWod«n PentathlOfl, et Fl S.m Houtton, TexH 20 Equestrlen sriow Jumr>tne. et Norin Selem, N.Y U Men's MAretllOn. et 8vff11c>, N Y 11-June, Men'• Ind Women'• TeMll, 11 N-York 2'-June 11 Yee.Mine. et Lone leacfl JUN• 1-2 E-trlln Oreueee, et 9urblnll 1-l Men'• eno Women's Gvmoe111c:t, 11 Jacuonvme. Fie. l -4 ECW11trlen Orftle99. 11 Gtedstone. IU. 4-f Ardlet'Y. •• Oxford, Otlto 6· 10 eoxtne, 11 Fort worth, T1u1 t -16 Fenclne (Netlon•I ChemotoMtllP), II Clllee90 10-Jutv 17 Women'• 1towlr19, et Henover, NH, 10-n Sflootlnel, et Chino 1'•72 Yadllln9, al LOftll 9ffch 16·1• Men't and Women'• TrlCll and Fleld, at Loa Al'IOltta 16· 17 llthyttlmk GymnHJla. II Attentk Cltv, N.J 17 e-trlen $flow Jumcilne •• , Derlert, Conn. 11·23 P,....rvtt end Gnco-ltoman W,_th, 11 Grand ltaoiOI, Mkh. 1 .. 21 ltMd CYdtnt. at SMllene, Welt! ts-30 Men's and WOt'Nft't Swlmmlne, et ·~· ,,_Jutv I EQl.lltlrlen, et Hemlltvn, Meu ,,._July 1 E-trlen OtM ..... at Hem· '"°"· MeU ,,_Julv 1 Mtn'• •owlrlt (Pw wttriout couW91n, ,.., wfftl con..in. '°" wlttl co111-1n. ltOIAlle end~ 111•>. If ~.NJ ,,.. Wemefl'I Rowlrte <'-Ir wlfllOUI couwelnl, et ~IOI\, N J JULY 1 l!:queatrlen Sllow J""'91ne, It ~• ~Id. N Y ••• Ollllrlt. I I lndlenuollt 6 Flnal 9oxoff, et L.et V ... t 6•1 CVCffne, et C~.oo Sclfll\tt, Colo offiMcn:Du'1 ~ Ema tbou1b Uae wa Off were able IO come bome wi five nice ~ all iD the l $-pou.od data. &Dd thete were caupt 00 I slow day. All the yellowtail llCtioG ~ place at tbe Coronado lal&ndl it ooe Uve sreen macterd and upr. have to be paticot in .oeki.. tbe snenia to entice a bite frOm the bteezUla yeUowt. There are a1IO tome NDalJ bu- nicuda beina brouabt to al between the yeUowtalJ action., but ror the most part the berries are Aetl than lc:pl 1iu and hive to be returned to ocean waten to pow a few iochet. For those Daily Pilot readen wbo own 1portfitben, there are tome ydlowtail beioa booked under the kelppattieaoft'l&e beach. One private boat reported eeeina a school of tome 200 yellows under a patty jutt a mile Let~ W•DMUOAY'1 RUULn (1 ... ft ................ .,...., ,.IT ltACll. 440 vara Pemct ltecaueat (Gift) lUO 6.00 UO Autumn LM (Creaewl ~ UO Unolo lloV (WWdl 3.00 .Alto rK!ld: Wevton Awev. Riv• Fern !tut, Cro aer Moon, Orv Patdl, St 8tadl, 1eM Miio. Tlmr. 12. lf. U •XACTA CHI Mid WUO. MCOM> uca. >50 vwcts. ..,.., ..,., (Het1) lUO .... uo 1M The VIM CTr..-.> f.AO UO ~ Here To Win (Frydrf) UO AM r8Cld: I Gott• !tut. Tex Pleft, R-For HeUll, GlntlNm N Gold, Love ~Alive, SI'-Streakw. Time: It.If. r.-o RAC:a. )50 vara ~ °"'* (1..8ckrf) 7.20 uo uo Tl'\ldlle ,.., (~) 42M lUO 96onde R ... t (l.utaft) ... AIM> raced: Attentlvetv. Smoottl 9oolie. Cll6C Mollo, Oltco Kitty, Ctie11111 ltetl, Olal Arrow, 0... Flt\'. Tlmr. ll.02. .-ouaTM RACa. 400 yerdL Feat Six Oanclf (Trv l 13.00 7 AO 6.00 Tflllot Prince (Plllenton) •.20 IJ.00 Ofl The RIM (~) YO .Alto r8Cld: .. Sure TorTY, Ima E1v Gel. Et .., ltero, Jonny Sava 1t1111. Rew Deck, Ulltl Hullle, Hl9fllllnd L YTUL Time: 20.n. IJ •XACTA (1-5) oeld '301.20. """ llACL 350 Ylrdl. snewne Netlve <Garde) uo 4.00 100 Vllllne C.V IFrvdaYl UO UO Klotvt Saint (Oelombe) UO ""° raced: Roman ErTIPlre, JoMnv Charter, Frei.., Country Plttol, Chk:ado lt9', ~ ~. CllOtlertlne Rell. Tlmr. 17.k • p •XACTA 16'-IOI oeld sn.oo. llXTH RAC•. 350 vercb. A1ure COO'f' (Hartl uo uo uo ltldl ,...,_. (Traesure> UO uo BoorteChlrNIPN!nel 1.20 AIM rac.d: lternCltlne SC.I. T1ft'f F .. • 1ure, TM Wlndolvn. 8lec:k Mernl)a, OecJlem Saint, Mc:StrlOW, VIP L..ovtr Time: 11.21. MWNTM uca. 350 vercn. Racine Ruman (CrM91f') 5..lO UO 3.10 Softly Into SumtMr-(Ftorn> 10.40 S.40 HuO Mv ltk:hM (Zufttt) 7.20 Allo r9Qld: Go AJYAI, AtwU Moon Dence, A llMI .._, T1nv PalMNI. Move Gertttv, Elldlfts Lover. 9lnwYt .._.., Time· 11.ll. loJ aXACTA (2·11 oeld SfOO •IOHTH uca. >50 yardl. Solld ....... (PWlfte) 65.20 16.00 1.20 Toutll Guvs ICr'....,) YO :uo Hev You Guv1 (Zufelt} S.20 AllO reced: ScOOPlf GIM&. Eetem, EelllY Gold, Diamond Delbert, UM«ier Doll, Prtvell Pentlort, W?llll F eleon. 'flrM: 11.00. U PICK SiX (4·1-6+2-fl oald 11'1.60 with H wlnnlno tldleh (five llOrlft). CerrvO'ter llOOI: 111,402..ll. NINTH lllACa. 170 yards. Come Watdl Me FIY (Hrn) UO UO l.00 SWIH lenllef' (Zufelt) 5.IO 3..20 Nnhvllle Newt (Piikenton) 4.IO AllO raced: Tetco Tom, Benoln Request, Come On Old Blue, 81centenrtlll ear. Seems True. Time: 46.71. U UtACTA (2·61 paid UUO Anendllnee· 6.»o- HtlYW...S hr11 WSDNISDAY'S lllHULTS (1Mllef'7-411Y ... A ... WI,,_..) ,.IT uc•. 6 ~ c.rtllle (Mc:Cen'onl I.AO UO 4.00 Nelle'• Stln9W (Hawtev> UC> UO Marea (81ackl 7.20 Alto rac.d: Pvramld Hiott. Fallllon Knowledoe, Oreued In 811.'9, Rlslnt Yullon. Panodle, Aa lmPreulve. Not • Strew. "-'9 Velvet, llM09m Sol9ndour. Time: 1:11 lfS. HCOND lllAC•. 6"'1 funotm. CecNeua (Hllwtevl 2UO lUO UO LI Lia (Ollel!Ouuevel 22.20 13.20 Juat For 811.'9 <Ol'teoel 7.00 AllO F"eced: Conc:eltlel Keren, Onloner Label. A Ster Arl&ft, Glad to P•H. ... utlfvl a.rto, Wll N Glen'• Dolt. Frlvol· ous Return, Mer1tlbef't, Kyrl• .... Time: 1:11 11$. 52 DAILY DOUaL• (4-12) paid 1369.00 TH•D RAC•. 1 1/16 miles on turf. Prlnc9 True (McCarronl 4-00 2.20 2.10 M. Ooul* M. (Plnc:ey) 2.20 2.10 Coocien HI" (Fell) 2.10 Alto recacl: Jullet'I Pride. Known '°' SIVll, Crv•l•I Court. Time: 1:41. JS •XACTA ll-5l e>ekl 516.SO. '°""TH lllACa. I 1116 mitts. In 1 Meuaoe CMcCarronl S.IO 4.00 3.40 Snowc:ree41 (LICINml UO •.IO Rev Prlddv CSlblllel '40 AllO reced. Run the Gellxv. Meetlro Mlo, SOio Or1>1t, Mullet, Gatlleo, Reac!Y 10 SOio, INlnlY'I WI•. Fatlk, Scor-etioerd Time: 1·45. u aXACTA (f-S) oald S1'7.00 """ lllACa. OM mile. Hot n s.nctv (Plncevl UO uo 3 40 OM o.'1 Oollv (Olloadlltol 11 IO S.00 Mountain /Nici ISll:lllle) 2.60 AJtO reced: SodetY Riva, Lnlle'• 0.0. Ma AlllCI, PrlmeN Act, R~ CllOru• Tlme: 1:11 11s.. U •XACTA 14·3) paid Slfl.50. llXTM RACa. 7 fur1ort9t U.S. St .... (Ol'lnl l.IO 2.tO 160 Felluleull Prlfa (Gerdel UO l.00 Ftvlnt lrllllman (Guerr.> l 60 AllO r-acecs: Fltialleft. SCledll lnventorv. Clear Cmtat, Wlllte CIOud, TllN: 1:t2 l/S.. IS aXACTA (1•61 Mid Ml.SO. aavaNTM RAC•. 6 f\Jrtonol. Clrculw l~l UO 2.60 220 llltO T-rt ~l l .00 2.IO Oreel'n , .. Iller (Oelahouswvel •OO Alto rK*I: Hot Al Foolftll, Bunny Luv. ~ ..... Timl-1-. IS •XACTA Ct·5l Nld US.SO. '2 ~ SfJl (lt->-t+Ml Hid '2,f'IJ.IO wttll 41 ........,.. ttdtett i,.IJt ,_...,, '2 ftktl Six COMOlllllOll N'4 MUO wttll 1.717 wllWne ttcMta (five ,_,.., ........... UCL One mlle °" ""1. ~-llMlll 62.lt 11 • 1100 Meldl WllWler l~l I.JO ••• o..rtlll (Mell) 11 IO AIM~ Mou-Fernt-TYCH, ~ °"""'9r, Valela, ltOYal CellftW, ~. Tel AMII\ TlrM: l:IS 41l al &JIACTA 16'-Sl Hid Sl,071 JO. ....,,. RAC•. One mlt T• "*""'or TV ILMnl ~-UO ,~(aledll ... I.AO uo UI llldlM o <Garde) AIM ,_. Cotumet. 'Sane ,....., ""' ,..,., ...... -..... flfWtlftt Time 1~ .. •XACTA (• .. )Mid t)7UO. A,......ICS' to.GI J11 1 .. c off Dana Point Uus put week. TrolJina a father put the kelp or cutina a iii to the patty ii a awe way to fiod I filh willina to bite. * * * The tee0pd annual Shoouna and Huotin& Sporu Fair will take pbicle thit wee'keod at Ruhaqe'1 Pheuant Hu11tifta Oub in Norco. Tbe two-day fair ia open to the aeoerat public and will brio& toatther all the manufac. turen o(buntina equipment in the United States. lndYSOI..._ Tiie terttellve oartlel "'-» tor Ille ,,,.Y 27 lndllneCIOll• 500 baMd Oft the ,,,., weekend of quallflcelloM, lltllne drlvtr, .... !Mlmetown. c.er nurNler. dlaHll IMlne and four-IN aver ... iOMCI In mcill (Mora quellflcatlolll Seturd9Y lftd SUrtday I. R-oenote rootile: .... 1. Tom SM\la, 35, ParadlM v attev, Arti., Ho. I, Merctl-Cotworttl, 210.0'lf. 2 HowdY Holmn, 34, AM~. Midi .. No. 41, Mardl-CO.wor111, 201.m . 3. Rick Meer•. 32, hkeriflald. Ho. 6, Merdl·COIWor1fl, 2117.J47. lllew2 4-R-Mk:llMI Artdrettl, 21, N11eretti. P1 .. No. ft, Mardl·Cosworttl, 205.717. S. Gordon JoMCodl. C, Cotdw1ter, Midi .. No, 20, Mardl-CO&wor111, 201.545. 6. Mat1o Andr-ettl, 44, Nauretti, Pa., No ), Lole-C0twor1ll, 201M7 lllewJ 7. lt-ltOCIWto ~o. 25, COlomOll. Ho '· Mardl-Cotwortfl, 204.611. a. Geofl er-etinam. 32, Sert Clemente, No 11, Marctt-Coawor1t1, 20t.n1. t Herm .JohMon, >I, Eau Clelre, Wit.. Ho. n . Mardl-C0twortt1, 20011 .... 10. Al Untar, 44, ~. NM.. Ho. 2, Mardl-Col•or1h, 204..441 11. 01111111 Oneel•, (1, Sente ""-· No. u. Mardl-Cotwortrt, 203.'71. 12. JU. Fovt, 49, Houlton, No. 14, Meref'l-Cotworth. 203.MO.. ... s ll. R-Tom Gk>Y, ». Lat1yette, c:.tlf .• Ho. 11, Merct1·C01worttl, 20l.751. 14. Tao Febl, 21, 1111¥, No. XJ, Mar-c:l!- Colworth, 20UOO. IS. Al UnMr Jr .. 2'2, All)Uquerque, N.M,, Ho. 7, Merdl-CotwOf'I~. 20U04. lllew6 "· ll-AI Ho!Oefl, l7, W1F"rlneton, P• .• No 21, MArdl-COlworth, 203.016. 17 Tonv a.tteMeuMn. 32. lndlenePOlls, No 16, Mardl·Cotworth, 20'2 113. II. 9o«IOv Rella!, 31, Oublln, Olllo, No. S, MArdl·C0twortll, 20'2.230 ... 7 tf. Dick Simon, 50, Sen Juan CaP1ttr1no, No. 22. INrdl-COIWOrftl. 101.0.. 20 ~Carter, 33, er-m0ur1. INS . No 10, MarCll·C0tworlll, 201.920. 21 Ciiio Genaul. 26, PllttOurOf\, No '°· Mardl·Cotworlll, 201.612 .... 22. R-Emwson Flttlllaldl, J7, Swltaer· 1enc1. No. c , Meret1-to1wort11, 201 m. 2l. Palrlo. Bedard,.,,...._ Yon., No 3~. Mardl·CO.wortfl, 200.tlS 14. JOMle Garn, 2S. Mexico, Ho 55, MA!C'll-C0t-1h. 20U1S ... , 7S Solke GelllNUMll, 1t, lndlenaoolll. Ho. S7, Merdl-Coawortll, 200 471 26. R-Jecoun VIiieneuve, 21, C.naoe. No 76. Mardl·Cotworttl, 200 Oil 11. Chris Krteifel, 23, Rlverwoodl, Ill, No. n, P\'lmul-COIWOf'lfl. lft 131 It-11 21. O•MV Sulllvan, 34, Loulsvllle, KY .. No. 30, OSlt·C0tworth, lff.04', NaA IUveftl CON,.lll•NC• 'INAU (a-1 ef _.., WHT•lllN CON'•1taMCa ~n.L.Men ,,..,., 0- LallW'I et '"'-'1• (~ken IMd Mf'lft, 2-0) '-*Y'• GefM L.Men>•t,.._..., w ....... .,.,o.m. ~a •• Letier1, " ~ .. rv ,,.y, Mey 2S L.Men e t ~11. "nec:euerv ,.._y, Mey 11 • Meft*Y, Me¥ 21 '"'-!hr 11 Uken. H necHMrv IA.STUN CON,IR•NC• ............... T ........ 10- Mltweuk• et &Olton ceosron IM6I Mf"ln. 1·0) ~Y'•Gafftl 9oston et Mllw1ull• MeftdeY't OWN &oslon e t Mllw•ull• ......... Geme Mllw1uk• 1t 8otton, It n«:flterY ,11111 •• Me• 2S llOllon et Mllw•.W.•. H necn .. ,.v ~y,MeyTJ Mllweuk• 11 BOiton, H nec:euarv c .... NCAA INDtVIDUAL CHAMr'IONStOll'S (II A lfMM. Ge.) ,.....,.~~ Rkil Redaert CCltmlOll) oef a ruc.e Man Son Hint (UC trvlMI, 6·2. 6-t ~--"*' NCAA QUAU,YlMG MA TCHH (et Lei,.,_.,.,..... NIMY Mec:Tl9"rl CMlct'li9enl de4 CourtNY Atten (Pl'lnclola. Ill I. ... l. 6·2. Marla Llrtehtrom (HorlllM•t Loulllenal def Elllebettl Ce.lender (Soutl'ltrn ltllnolt). 6·1. 7·5 ~ Ell111:1ett1 E vam-ltoC>111 eon (H1n11F"d) def. Pem Yai .. ·LOf'I l\MsMllMlt (Ten- ntt1 .. ·Cllllleft00ff I. 6-l, I ·6, 7 • 5, ,.,,.,y eouor...,,11·RobVTI Lemb 10.te!IOIN St.) def. C-tnav Allen·S4Jrv Vef'meul (P\"ln· clPla, HI.I, 6•2, 6· I, Slier! Notrlt -Carol COHl'anli (Mtton• SU de! M Mc<:ullodl--Crwlstlne Plctler ( T emn.Me Cf\ett1110C1119>. 4•6, •·4, 7·5 NHL •"9fl STAM.•Y CUP ,...AU T ....... ,._ HY I..,,_. 11 l~fOll (f~ llMch -"'· ,. ti ...... .,. ......... NY~ll!.,_. ,........,._ EOl'f*"toft et NY l\landlln (If fleCtt.w.NI """"*·· ,_, ,. lctmOftlOll 11 NY1111'*'1 ("~'-""I In addition to the ,.n displays, there will decoys carvtas. vanrut &Dd duck callina conteaU, plu1 apecial lhootina demonstration by tome of the world'• finest ltlootcn. 'The fair iJ co-spontoted by Budweiter with the paes ooenina at 9 a.m. Admission ia S4 for adult.a and childero uodet" 12 are free. There ia ample me parttina for the full day of entertainment for any buntin&-()rieo- tatcd family. US~L WHTUN t.oNffUtateea hdlc w l T ~. ,, ll'A Denver 7 5 0 .sea U1 2'1 LA • ..,..., s 1 0 .A17 2CM 254 Arhone 5 1 0 .A17 2tO 20'l Oaklend 3 t 0 .150 ID 251 ~ Houtlon 7 s 0 .m m )lf Mldlleart 7 s 0 .m -"' Oklahoma 6 6 0 JOO tfl m Chtcaeo 4 • 0 .m m >to SM Alllonlo 4 • 0 ..m 172 m •ASTa.lllN COM,.•UtiM:ll A..-C PfllledllPflll 11 I 0 tl7 Jll ''° ...... ..., ' ) 0 .750 )OS 20) Pllllburtlll 2 10 0 .167 m ,.. WUlllftlton 2 10 0 .167 1• m ........ 81rmlnthlm 10 2 0 .133 ,.. m Tampe 9ey ' J 0 .1• m m NewC>rlMN • • 0 M1 1A2 ta IMl'rlDNs s 7 0 ..417 ,. 274 JacbonVtle • • 0 .m 23' 11S "'*Y'• Glf'M 8lrn'llnllflMI I I CflklleO, fl ........ o.n- MenlPtlll 11 Oaktend, ft JedltOlw .. et ~." Denver •t ...,.~. " ....... . .._ Mld\IMfl et LA ·--OkllllOme st ~Ion Sen Antonio a t WuNntton .,.._ Ol'llaM at T....-a.v MIM9Y'•O... Plltl0ur9" 11 flMw JlrMY, n a.xine let La• v .... > Crul..rwelthlt -Antl\OftY 0..,,11 (U\ Veve•> won unanlmoui 12-round dtclslon over Jene Bumefl (LOI ~I IO cep• l\ll'I IM Nor1TI Arn«lcan 8oxlne Federation title 0.... ... ""*"' NllW~T LANDING (New"'1 a.di) -6 91191erL 3' c.etlco beu, 1 .. no IMIU, S ~. l .. ,to 011.vay·s Loa<•R ,,...._, llladll -l2 1neter\ 24 c.etlco ba11, 21 .. nd be11, 22 blUI _.di, XJ ~. • rocti 11111 WedneldaY"• traftMC1Mnt aAJaaALL A"*1CMI LeatW BAL Tl~E ~tO\.ES--Antoned Or ianoo Sanclltl catcllef to Rocllftter of Ille lnter1111tlonal L~ KANSAS CtT V ROY ALS--ActlvetlO Wl•te Wlbon. oul11e!Otr Sold OrlendO Sane Ml, cetdler. to 111e &11tlmore Orlo!H T~ONTO &LUE JAV~tloNO Ke41Y Gr~. Infield« IO SvracuM ot "" lnt•nat~ LHVUe Na1'eMI L.eawt NEW YOtlK METS--•c11v1teo Wf'Y Martin. ou~ Ootlonecl Rou Jann lnfletoer 10 Tldtwete< ot the 1n1ernatlonal Laeeue PfTTS9URGM Ptlt A TES-Placed Brien Har_., outflelder, Oii Ille tS'deY Cli .. ble<I llSI. ~Md lht COlltfllCI of a.nnv Oltlel-. outfl910e< from Hewell ot lfll Peclflc Coest LM9Ut t'OOTaALL tM"9MI ,. ..... L...- ATLANTA FALCOHS-Sfgned It~ Mc:Sweln, oefen\lve bee)., H••rttt DIXO'l 111, runnlne bee)., •NS Deen e1e1uccl, kidl• DENVER 8ROHCOS-SIOMCI ltulon Jonet, Otfemlve end 10 • \ef'i.t of - -contract\ · GREEN 9AY PACKERS--Sitl*l Hellr't' Cllfla. tltlfll encl ' NEW VOltK JE TS-Stened Jon Enetllll 111.111'1~. G.,..., Scttof\eld. Qull'tef'M("' OteM '""""'· ~9'111dl. 8ruce lucNI _..,__.., ..,."' Ceveonero Nc9 llldlef, Jemlll u8elle runnlntt ~ Oefl nls UMft. rvWnt i.e.. DIM 0.- MfltY, to.,_..,..... contract• ST LOUIS CAltOINAU-S19nect ltlCll wd ~. lllM .-... Clw1' hOlnl, '*'* _.. •1et1ar~ Ot1e. wide,...._ SEATTLE St:AHAWK5--Sleneel Oarvt T~.-* ~ to a_._ elf - ...., COftfnCtl UllMlll .... , ..... u..- JACKSOHVILL~ IULU-A~ "" r.19Mlloft of ..., Cetf\, ~ ll"tTTSIUltGH MAUL[,_~ .... _, Tift\' ... Nee lllCUr S.... Ertc ~~eiece -.!(ii.., MOCkaY ........ Medle'I~ aUfl,ALO SAHCS.-~~ fM ,.. .. ,Ion elf ~ "lted ..,._,, •ul\lanr C'Olefl. ,. eccw1 ""' ,_. coatNnt toe> ., ..,. U!llYH'\lt• ., Ml(fllMfl CIF tennis survivors hit road Arca high school tennis teams scored convi ncing victories on home courts in their CIF team playoff openers. with lhe exception o(E.sun- c1a which whipped host Redlands, 25-3, Tuesday. And the Eqles arc the only team among areas survivon at home for Friday's second-round action, while University, Corona del Mar, Hunt· ington Beach and Laguna Beach tut the road. All matches are at 3 p.m. The Eagles, by upsetting the Citrus Belt League champions Tuesday. play host to Westlake, the No. l entry from the Maramootc League. Meanwhile, Universtty travels to Fullerton. a 2()..8 winner over Edi.Ion; CdM travels to Beverly Hills, a 24-4 vtctor over Arcadia; Huntinaton Beach ventures to Rolling Hills. wtuch knocked off Long Beach Wilson. 2()..8: and Laguna Beach travels to Downey to meet the San Gabriel Valley league's No. I entry. The Vikings defeated Damian, 18-10, Tuesday. Corona del Mar will be lookina for its 49th straight victory at Beverly Hills. The Sea Kings have captured eight ClF 4-A championships over the past I 0 years, . Laguna Beach. the South Cout League champion, puts its No. 2 seeding tn 3-A action on lbe line against host Downey. P,almer given his release BAL TIMORE(AP)-J\J!' Palmer, a thrtt·tlme winner of the C)' YOW\& .4.ward . .....,11 be given bis ~leuc by t.bc Baltimore On oles today. eodinaa 19- ycar pitching career with the Ame:rt- can League club. The dccasion was ironed ou1 after Wednesday 01gbt's game at a mectina amons Palmer, his .,ent Ron Shaj)iro and Onolcs General Ma.o.qier Hank Peters. It was to be formalia with an announcement tb1s mornina. A sourtt close to the n~otiations between Palmer and the Orio&et l&ld pnor to the meetina that none of tbc option5 made available to the pi9Cbcr urher included stayina with the dub as an active pt.ycr. Golden West will reinstate tennis Men'$ ind womcn'a tcunil -t.-o sports hed from the budaitt at Golden West Colle,aic a year llO -~.,u be mns\atcd for the I 9SS aeaon. Golden West Ath lct>c Dlniclot Lou Ann T~~ •Id both Gttte>fY 0 h IQI and C'bcrir Kay .... bo coecbcd the the men'• a.nd women's team i rnpttt 1' cl'y. wtU rtt um to their ~Juna posu neit ae.uon. Both~ on onc-~f sabbaticals thit . • Really Cook-lng W oodbrldge lflCh 'e Randy Cook UDCOU. OD the way to a 1-0 triumph o•er Sadclleback Wedneeday lD a CIF 2-A wild card Tictory, eencl.lDI the Warrlon to Santa Fe Friday. BuLLETIN BoARD Strim Meet of CbampJoa• Teo current world-record holden will be on hand at the Swim Meet of Champio ns. beginning today at the Mtss1o n V1e10 Inter- national Swtm Complex. and running thro ugh Sunday. Amo ng the standout swimmers set to comp(te will be Tracy Caulluns. the 21-ycar-0ld pbenom from Nashv ille. and Rick C.arcy. who was chosen the 1983 U .S Swimmer o f the Y car by Swimmmg World Mapzme. Ca utions and Ca~y wtll be challenged b> ar proxamatel> 600 top comp(tators from the l .S. Canada.. Brual. New Zealand. France and Mexico. Sanctioned by the U nited States Swtmmang Inc and sponsored by Specdo and DuPo nt. the meet consists of 34 events. 17 each for m en and women, including relays. The race fi nals begin at 4:30 p.m . da1ly. wl\h prchmanane\ at 8:30 a.m .. except for today Today's race <.'vents -the women's 800 meter freest~k and the men's J .500 freestyle -will be at 2 pm For more infonna 11on. phone 837-6050. Seml-pro ba.ebaJJ tryouts Add111onal West Coast League baseball tryouts will be hcld aturda). Q 30a m .. a t Buena Park High School The tlrst tryouts were held May 5. and four teams were selected to compete an the Orange C'ounbt) N BC "Al\" e1ght·tcam d1vmon. The four teams arc based an Fullerton-Brea. Foun- uu n Valle). l rvmc and Anaheim This da v1s100 1s for players 17 -years of agt' and older -h igh school grad.uates and communtl) college players scckmg sum mer e1.pcnencc. Interested players should be at the field at 9 a.m. for team as51gnmcn1~ Business ma nagers. coaches and field man · agers arc also needed. Interested men should amve at the field at 9 a m Saturda' Buena Park H igh 1s located one block north of the 91 Frecwa)' on Magnolia For more 10fonna11on. phone 558-1777 Jet Ski National• The Western Jct lik1 Na1111nals. a sport combining tht' speed of m o torcron the balance of surfing and the flnc'>SC ol wa1e~k11ng, will be \taged Saturda) and ~unday Ma' 2(>.27 at Long Reach Manne !:>tadaum H osted bv the V.l'\I Lo ng Beach Lion\ C luh proceeds fro m the t"'o-da)' event will go to area , hant1cs The rau: \:lnc..taOnl'<l hv 1hr International Jet C\ka Boating l\ssoc1atton. feature\ 1hree t)pc\ ol kt ~ka compe11tton do~d cou~ an "'htLh nde~ speed through a tw1\ttng buu\-marked couro1<:· slalom. which pits ract'rs aga1os1 tht' dod ;" thc\ "'l'avc through buo~ gates. and freest> IC'. an auohattl Cl)mpetttton which allows rider. two m1nutt'\ 111 1mprC\\ a panel of JUd(te~ with tnck\ and \II.IOI\ Jhoard 1hcrr speeding hod!\ <)ual1f\ ing 1alo.c ' plau~ \aturd;l\ Ma\ .!ti lxgann1ngat JO am v.1th llnJl\un \unda\ Ma\ !1 \t.artang JI noon There 1> a S2 'i() ~pc'( t:1tm kc lur adults and S I for 'hrldrcn under 14 with J S '\ pc-r carload parlung charie Lon& Beath Mann<" ~tad•um 1\ located hctwccn Pacific C oas1 H1ghwa~ and 5«ond Street 1n Long Beach For funhc:t 1nforma11on. phone' 540· '\521 G.l"Nt Paclnc Wave ClauJc World-cha~\ amatC'ur\ .lnd iirofC'"IMunah v.111 br on hand this Frida> th rou&h -..und•> at the S«ond Annual < 1rl'at f>at:1Tic O pen Wave <18\.\IC from I I a m to l p m at T ourmalane %rftn~ rar1. IO '\:in OtCftO \ponwr«I h) lrrC'at 1'11t 1111 Hotel~ and Wtnd\pon-San l>1cgo, the ~nnd .rnnual (1rea1 P;ic1frc Op(n v.111ft'i.1urt11 .. cr S2 ~ 000 rn ca\h awarch and pnres for the v.•a'<' cnntc"ll w1nneM Amateur 1nah for the men\ Jnd "'omC'n·, "'avr events will bca.an F-nda)' with Jmateur finals nn ~turday Pro tt1ah wall ~n \aturda\' aftrr- noon ~•th linal C'nmpt11t1ons nn \uni.la\ for further 1nform1tron phone Wtnthport· \an Dieao at (6191 488-061 Z ..cnnoua •••II fllOnnaul •'11•11 M ••aa ~ .. ,_ M0'1C8 Ofl,...,... MU NMmlTAZN rr NM91TA1WWFJ Ol ..... 8TAftOI ....... nOfl ,.., ____ ... TM~..._. ... dofr\IO The....,,. penon 11 ootng CM.PCZE~'flOltTMa 1''Fll~A,.._ ..WMlf TO tlumnw • "'*'-• Co.Mn Ofl CMllUFll MOftCll TO~ CA08 art 0--. MTTP IAO. 1411 Donoee* 1N1n.UMINT DHIGH COH· .... ctltlc..e.Dr. •.O...JMV.I YOUMll .. _,AULTU..A Dr.,Hunllf'8tone.cl\,CA. ..... 8ULTAHT•. 110 The,._,.. Qr. .....~CA. ..... ptCllQllfr flor lfle ~ ... OflTRUeTDATm~ o.wt G. Budtnem, .... , ()on.. de, Coaea ~CA. taU7 l!llllle• of HOWAN> •• MOWRY Ill.a ..... on h ..... enlttlO: -....... YOU TAU 4*ler Dr .. ~ lwih, CA. WMllMIA.len-.110 HOWAM> lltOWIW ellAI H, P. ITATI OF CAtlONM; Q6. TO fiMT9CT YOW.,....,.._._,,.,,, 92Me ..,.. cw., Cott.a...... ttta7 MOWRY. Dell r 111 ,A,.TMIHT OP TMN8'0"· rf .aAY • IOU) AT A ~ Mn ~ 111 .. INf'on THI~ 11~ by. In llO. A--TATION; ~ "-AHi '°" UUL •YOU -AN DPU-l.n. ~9-dl.CA.tlMI lndMdual llOTDOfllNTWTIC* OONITMJOTIOHOH8TATIHIGH-llATIGllCIP1MlllAWOfl1MI ~~ 111 .. lfw'on WWWnA.lilntt9y TOl&LMIR•ITIAL WAY IN OAAHCll C0UHTV 1H NOC_. A.,..._T YOU, l.n., ~.._,,,CA. tat4I Thie lleMment Ml ftl9d wttt1 tt1e LIH•aou» AT PIWAT'l IALI OOITA~HNt 8TMST YOU 8MCM.U CC*TACT A LAW• Thie ~le oondUGted by. a County Clerll 01 °'*'Oii County on ~ II HUIDY GNIH ._ _. be M h ~ 'ID. oen-11 ~. ~ 1a. 1914 on 0t llW Mtiy a. 1M4, • ltle ._ ,,_,.of Tr~. 120 '°""' On June I, 1M4, M 10:00 A.M., ~Cl. ludtnMI ,__, of"°9 of KeeM .,.-Okin. A~ ~ ....... "'°°"' 1000, Loe Ah-ITATIWK>e DUD 8lAVIC! COR-TNe 1UtenW1t .. Ned "'"91 IN P\ltJllhed Or.nae Coe1t Delly et Law, »Sa Welt CO..~. glMa, c..womi. I0011. umll 2 ~MTft>N u duty ~tM County~ Of Ottn0e County on Piiot Aof'll 2t, Mey'· 10, 11, t914 8IM 401. ~ IM!"~ eel-o'dodt p.m. on Mey 24, 1.:-'~ T,,... under Ind puraient '° ~ 26, 1..,. 22a44 ~ the undeu11911ed, ,.._ '· wf*" tN ~ _. be Deed of Trwt '900fded NY 13, ....., -----------1 Mowrf, .. becutOt of the Wiii of °'**'Ind,. In"°°"' t tit Mid 1113, • inewment No. 13-nteo2. Pub!Wlecl Oranoe COMt DM1Y IN~ deoedent, wtlt ... eddtW. of OMdal "9oot'de In the otl'lc» of Ptlot Mey 10. 11, 24, 31, 1914 "8.IC NOT1CE tit Sl(lvet•..,. to ltle hlQheet and. Genetal wottl dee«tptlon; Ttllfllc ttie County Aeoorderw of Ofenge 2494-14 l'ICTmOUe .,...... beet net bidder. ..Ojecf to oon: ..,.. and Nghwey llOhtlnO to be County, Stew of o.llfomla IX· MAMI ITATlmMf f'lrmetlon by Mid~~ ... lne1alled. ~ by. JtlOk T. Lkd1 Jr., I ----------1 l'IQM, oo., In..._. enc1 --. of """ profeot ,_ • aoei of a per. IMtl1ed men .. hit tole ena eeper· rtaJC NOTICE The lollowlng ~ le doing Mid decedent •t fie ltme of hie oent dlwlv8ntfl09d ~ per. •t. P'°'*1Y· WILL IELL .\T Pl& ~ et: death, encl .. rtght, tltte. Ind tlolpMlon and a OOa1 of 0 ~ UC AUCTION TO HtGHUT INC). '9Cnnou9 .__... A8$0CIATE8 IN MAAl<ITING, lntereet the ....... hel aoqund by woman OWfled bC.telMM .. ~ DI!"~ OASH ~et t11M of MAMI ITATWT S 189 IA Alfwey A¥&, Coeta MeM. operetlon OI lew °' odlei ..... «** ~. .. In l.wtul ~ of tM Unfted The tolowlng perton la doing ~~ w Feldman lltH then or In addition to INlt of Mid No ~b'd ~ le .aftedullld ltat•) at The front enltMOe of the ~:=BOAT WORKS 1818"' Motonoo. Fount.in vai..y, CA. ~~::. =:;: -T= ~ 18 8\J9JKT TO ~ ~~ =: W OoMr1 Front ~· 9-:lf\ 92708 pon IMctl. County of 0...... T H E ' • 8 UY A M I A IC A ' ' ...,_ Aoed, 8..i e-atl. CA .. cA. 92M3 • • ~ bueltlMI le conducted by: en Stete of Callfomle. deeCr1t>ed .. fill.. '"°VISIONS Of n41 IUAFACE r1Qht, title and In--~ to Step.n M. Ra.di, 1911~ W Oevtd _; FeldtMn iow.: TRANSPORTATION A8818TAHOE Ind now t*<I by" under Mid oMd OoMrl Front, Newport Beectl. CA Thll ataiement WU ftled wtth the lAMM'• In*-' In L .... det.d ACT Of 1982. 04 T~ In 'fie Pf°'*1Y llCueted In 92M3 Januwy 10, 1913 by end betWMfl 8ld9 .. required tot the entire MldCountyendState~ .. : TI*~ i. conducted by. 1111 County Clerk of Orange County on the IMNI ~y. a Weet Virginie wott1 deecr'lbed ,_..,,, Parcel 1: Lot 20 of Tf90t 7W, u )ndMduel. Aprll i8. l8a. ,..... cotPC>f•tlon. u Leeeor. and Meoco Thll contrec1 le eublec1 10 et•I• per mac> recotded In bootc 30t, 8 .M. A4luoh Publllhed 0r:r. Cout Delly Corporation, • Neved• Cofpof-gontr.ct nondlecrlmlnatlon -"d PllQM 1 to 9 of Mllc*lelleOUI Thie atatement wu tiled with the Piiot ..... 11 ~ May 10 17 1..... atlon, end Harbol' ln~tnent Co .. • aomflllance 1'9QU!rementa pul'9Uel"lt Mape, In the offtoe of 'fie Courity County Oertt ot Orange COunty on ........ v. • • • •-CC>rl>O'•tlon, recorded on FebNety 10 GoYernment Code. Sec11on Recorder 04 Mid county. AtHK 24, 1984 225044 13, 1983 In 8ool( MSC>. Pt09 72t, 04 12"0. EX,CEPT THEREFROM ell olt, OU. f'MGM -----------1 Ofllclal Rec«dl of Orenge County, Plana, apeoltlcetlona, and mlner9ll and other hydrocarbon Pubbhed Oranoe Cout Delly rta.IC NOTICE Celttomla: wt11ctt tmereet .. ... EoPOeal tonna tor b6ddlng Ihle ~ 1UbltanOM 1yt11g below • ctec>th of Piiot May 3. 10. 11. 24, 1984 liOMd to Mller..s..n. Conll.ruo-can only De obtalnad et IN 500 *' wtthout any rtgM to enw 2384-M ...ennoue ...... non Co. by en lel6gnment deled ertment of Tranaponauon. upon tM eurteoe 0t the eubeUrlaoe MAMI eTATUmJfT Marctl 22. 1M5, ~ Aprll I , P\ana and 8kt Docutnenta. Room of Mid lend abow I depth of 500 The 1o1owtng ~ le do4ng 1985 In 8ool( 7475, Pt09 3ea. of 38, Trwieportetlon Bulldlng, 1120 N *'· u ptovtded In in.trumenta of butlneM u : OfflcMll Aecorda of Mid County: end Street, P .0. Box 1499, Sac:nmento, rwoord. PtllJC NOTIC( CALIFORNIA MARINE SEA· wtllc:h lnt-..t wM ~ to Calltornla 95107 (phone Parcel 2: Non exc:IU....,. llPC>U'1• F1C-·· ---.. VICES. 20e P«tland Ave. I 1, Hunt· Howerd F. Mowry end Merie v. 81~25). and may ti.I .... at nant ....-nenta '°' lngreet and • • •..... --lngton Beach. CA. 92a.a Mowry, huaOend and wtt., by en the •t>oYe offtce and tit the of9'oM 04 ~ ~ pttvat• 1tr..i1. u Mt NAm ITATl•HT Jamee CMatopher RuMell. 20e aNlgnment elated Oc1ober 20, the oi.trtc:t Directors of Trenepot· forth In thOee c:.rtlllfl Declaration of The foltowtng pet'lon 11 doing Portland A"•· 11, Huntington 198!. recorded FebNaty 4, 1tee In tetlon at Loa Angelee, Sen Fran-COvenenta, condltlonl end r•trto-t>u~~ 1:busTRIES, 818 w. 17th Beach. CA. 9264e Boo« 7131, Page 220. of Offtc6el cllco, and the dlatrtc:t In wNoh the Ilona recorded Ap!'H 8, 1971, In Thi. t>ullnea 11 conducted by. .,, Reco<d• of Mid County; and wtlldl work i. 111ueled. bOOk 9598, P1J09 902 of OfftdW Re- St . • M..., CA. 8262t tndhlldual. L .... le of ,_, prOC*1Y In tN Ctty The 1uoc.eatu1 bidder 1hlll oorda, end recorded Nowmbef 25. Ptlytlla Veronica Ratti, 10237 Jamee c. Ru...n of Newpott Beldl. County of Or· fumlah • peyment bOnd and a per-1012. In 8ool( 10427, Page 480 o Cardinal A..,.., Fountain Velley. CA. Thie •t•tement WU ftled wfth the enge. Stat• of Cellfomla. deecr'lbed IOtmtll'IOe bOnd. Offtclel Record•. end Amendment• 82708 County Oertt of Orange County on • Lot 254 of Trec:t No. 4224, • The ~t of Trenepot· thereto. Thia~ la conducted by:.,, Ai>fN fa. 1ea. etiown on• Mep recorded 1n Book tetlon her'90y notm.. .. ~ The ..,... ~ and other ~1e"v•on"'-.,_1 ~ 157. Peoea 1 to 14 lnduetve of.,.... that It wflt attlrmettwty in.n that 1n oommon deelgnetton, " any, 04 the Thla -....... P\lbllahed Orenoe Cout Delly Ollleneoul ~. Aecorda of Or· any comrec:t entwed Into punuen1 ,_, property deecribed •t>ow le atatement ~lee!Counwlth the Piiot Apnl 26, May 3, 10, 17, 1984 enge County, Celffoml&. to WI edYerttMrnent, ~ purported to b« 20 Ctlerry Hiiia County a.rte of...,.__ 'Yon 22~ The PfOC*1Y le a a1f9e famlly Wlged ~and women owned Newpott Beectl, Callfofnla April 18. 1984 -----------I .. ,_._...,.....,ice-. end " le commonfy bullr'9lle ent«prtw wflt be af· The uroOerllgMd Truet .. die-- ......... .._.. Or~ "--~ .. _.,. 1111'\TV'C known• 1441 Geluy Driw, New-IOtded NII~ to 9'bnlt dalmlanylebllltytotanylnoOtTec:1 .................. ~· .,_, r-UUU\I nu•~ port Beach, Celltomta. bid• In ,...,on• to tNe lmlttetion neee of tt1e 1tl'99t llddrue and other Piiot May 10. 17, 2 , 31, 19&4 The IM la 1Ub~ to oun'9nt and wHI not be dl9Crlmlnated common ~Ion. n any, lhown 2493--14 Aennout .U..U w-. cownanta.. condlttone. ,.... 11Qe1n1t on the groundl of reoa, herein. The ,:=ang~ d--.. 1trtctlon1, ruervatlona, right•. oolof, or nattonal origin In oonalder· 8.id .-will De mad41, ~ ACTITlOUI ..,._ .. NAmeTA~ The tottowtng perton " doing butlneeeu· W~RNER BOAT SALES SOUTH, 2211 NewpOft Btvd.. Colta Mela. CA 92627 Thom• E. or EIMnor H. Frink, 23021 Cecelia. Ml9alon Viejo, CA. 92691 Thi. bu91,_ 11 conducted by: an lndMdull. Thotnu E. Frank Thia atatement wu fllect wt1h the County Clef1( of Orange County on Apnt 20, 10M ~ P\lb41.ned Orange Coat Delly Piiot May 3. 10. 17. 24, 1984 2343-84 bullneu u : ..--· -.,, rights of wey, and auament. of,.. atton '°'en ewwd. without CO'o/9Nlnt °' warranty, ex FA.NIT A RANCHO INVEST. c:ord. Minimum wage rat• tor thll pr~ pr ... or ~. regarding Utle MENTS, 1178 SE Main Stt•. llA. Bide°' offer9 1te lnYll9d for Mid ~ M predetermined by 1M Sec-pc111111on. °' encumbranoee. to-lrvtne, CA 92714 property and rnuat De In Wl'ftlng end retery of Labor .. Mt forth onty In duding teee, chergea and expenue .,........, H. McHamee. 1178 SE may be ~ to the eucutof ttle .,.all prOYlalonl of the aartaly of the Truatee and of tM trueta rn•.,... per90Nly °' to the office of hie numbered boOb IMued tor bidding creeled by Mid Deed of TNllt, to Mein S,,..., #A, Irvine. CA. 92714 attorneys. l(eene and Okin, ~ pwpoeea and entttleel "Special pay the rem.lnlng ptlnclpel IUml of Mk:t\Mt R. Mu~. l&53 Oehu w.., Coat Hlgtlwey, &llte 401, PrcMalona. Nottoe to Connc1cn. the ncM(•} MQKed by Mid Deed of ~·~~=AMI Newpott Beach. Callfornla. or may Pr(l90UI. end Contrec:t," end In Truat. to wtt $498,411.12 wfth and Chat> Twlcnell Truet, 19084 De llled In the offtoe of the a.rte of Q09lea of Mid bod! thet may be lntereet thereon from October 1 the°SYpenot Court at any time an. ~ at the ..,,,. ~ • 1914 @ 14.5~ per annum • Brookhurat Str .. t, Huntington the flrlt publlcetlon of thlll nota deecr'lbed herein befON wtlet9 the P'o'ltded In Mid note(•) plus oost• 8Mch, CA. 92M6 and before the meklng of the .-. plane. apec:lf'lcatlona, end Pf'OPOMI and any adYlll'lcu of SO with Thia bualneea la conducted by: • The terma and condttlona of ..,.: rorm1 may be ....... Addende to lnt•Mt. general partnet9hip. c:aah or part CMh and part Cfedtt. modify Fed«el minimum wage The beneflclery under Mid Deed PhHlp H. McNernee the terme of IUCh c:tedlt to be ec-rat• wltl be IMUed only to ~ of Truet hef'etofOf• execu1ed and Thia atatement wa Ned wtth the oeptable to the undenlgned and to of the abow ,.,_.,ICled bod!•. If deliwred lo 'fie underllgned • writ County Clef1( of Orange County on the Superior Court; ten per oent there II a dtfter91'1Ce ~ the ten Oedaratlon of defautt and 09: April 8. 19a. ( 10%1 of the amoun1 bid to aooom-m I n I m u m w • g • r • t • • mend tor s .... and • wrttten Notice PubNthed Or-Cout ""'f*Oll pany the ott.. end IN~ to sndetermlned by the s.cr.tery of of o.tautt and Electlon to Sell. The -..,... .i l>elty be paid upon conflrmetlon of ..,. labor end the ptWelllng wage ratel u11der1lg11ed cauMd Mid Notice of Piiot Apf'll 2e, May 3, 10, 17. 1984 by the 5upe0or eoun. Taxu,,.,.., determined by the Stete tot a1rn11er Del.ult end a.ctlon to Sett to be 22e2_.. OJ*•llng and malntenenoe ... cteulftcattoneoft.oor. theContrao-recorded In the county wtw• the penM1, end ~"" on tnannoe '°' and his aubcontractors "'811 P9Y reel P'OC*1Y ta located. NlllC *>TICE FICTmOUI au ... u ,.._HATla.HT .ocaptable to the purc:NMr. atlel noc .... ttlan the hlot* wage rate. Dete: Mey 7, 1ta. be prortlted .. of the date of reoorcS-Pvr'IUanl to Sect1on 1n3 of the STA TEWIOE DEED SERVICE COR- lng ot oonYe)'lll'IOe. Said Nie .. be Labor Code. the general pt9YetltnQ PORA TION ma<M upon tM UIUal ..crow terma. rate of W9QM In the county In wNcl\ u Mid Trutt .. PlB.JC fl)TlC[ The lolloWtng perton II OOlng -------------1 buah·-u : The pr~ i. to be told on 11n the wor1I le to De done hat be«'I 1011 Nonh Azusa A-...nue "u la" butt. •itOICJt •to title, end defennlned by the Director of the Covina. CA. 91122 ACTmOUe au1Me1 JANET CALVERT & ASSOC., 504 NAm eTAnmNT Oon St .• Laguna Beactl. CA. 82851 The lollowtng per90nl .,.. dOlng Janet C•IYert, so. Goff St .. bull,_ u : Laguna 8Mch, CA. 92851 J J.M. IMPORT/EXPORT. 501 fhlt bualneel 19.conducted by an A~lda LOfel'IZO, Newport BMctl. lndMdual Ca. 92660 Janet M. CalYert J erry Blenlakl, 501 Avanlda This atatement wu flleCI wfth the Lorenzo. Newport Beach. Ca. 82660 County Clerk of Orange County on Marelt Upowal(I, 310 C 5th St , April 24, 1914 Huntington 8Mch. Ca. 82848 ,,.._ I ™• bu.inea ta conducted by·• Publlll'led Orange Cout Daly general partnership. PllOI May 3. 10, 17. 24, 19M Jfltri 8Jaltilld 2348-M Thi• at•tement WU niect with the the und«llgned ,...,...,.. the rlght Department of lnduatrlal Reletlona. (213) 915-8735 to re~ any and Ill bide. TheM wage rat• appeer In the 09: By. Jim Cook, Prealdent Dated: May 7, 1914. partment of Tran.ponetton pybll-Publllhed Orange Dell/ Piiot com Reh• F. Mowry, cation ent"lect General Prevelllng blned with The Newport Herbor ExecutOf of the Wiii of !If• Rat•. dated Man:. 19a.. Fu-Neww PreH, Mey 10. 17, 24, 108-4 Howard F. Mowry aka llQ effect!Ye wage ret• wNc::h heW 2482~ How•d Mowry ... H F Mowry been pt9deterrnined and ... on Ille KMM aftd Dtof'I wfth the Oepertmen1 of lndultriat ----------- A"°""97' et t.w Aelallooa •• refei•ICled ~ not PtllJC NOTlCE Im W. Coeet ....... ., • .,.._ <I01 pr1nted In Mid publca1ton __ __..;..;;.;;;.=;;.;;_;.;.;.;.;.;;.;;.. __ _ N9wport ~CA. ..a DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPOR· NOTICI llM'T1NO llDI Tlt1phoM: (114).......... TATION Notice II hereby gt\t9l'I that the A...,_,. for l•ecvtor ~ty Dl<ec:1or Boerd of Trust ... of the Cout P\lbllthed Orange Cout Delly Piiot Oeled Apnl 23. 1984. Community Colege Oletrtc:t of Or· Mey 10, 11, 17, 1984 PublWled Qrenoe Coeat Delly Ptlot ange County, Calffomla. wHI receiYe I Coonty Clerk of Oranoe County on April 24, 1914 fM4al1 Publlanect Orange Cout Dally Piiot May 3. 10. 17, 24. 1984 24~ Mey 10, 17, 19a. Miiied b'da up to~ no lat• then •-te N()nl'r -----------_________ 2...,1e...,1._.-t1Ll 11:00 a.m .. Fr1day. June 8, 1ea. 11 l"UUI. I~ the Purdlallng Department of Mid __ FIC_.;..TmOU=;;.;....•;.;.au;;..;.;. ... ;;.;;;..._•_• __ 1 "8.JC fl>TIC( PtllJC NOTICE oo1tege d111rtc:t located 11 1370 Adamt A.,.,,.,., Cotta MeM. Call-NAm eTATDmNT FICTmOUe ....... NOTICI llM'T1NO _,, fomla tit wt11ct1 time Mid bide wtll be The lottowlng per90n It doing NAm eTATl..wT Notice 19 hereby given that the pubkly opened end reed fOf: 2349-84 bullneel •: The followtng !*'ION .,.. doing eo.rd of Trust... of the C0Mt PU AC HASE 0 F MIC R 0 · AID Of ALL TRADES, 2138 bualnlM u : Community College Oletrtc:t of Of• COMPUTER EQUIPMENT AND Thurln. Colta Meaa. CA. 92827 18th STREET WEST. 745 Weet enge County. Cellfom6&. .. r.-w SOfTWARE: COASTLINE COM· Melody M .. ~and. 2138 18th Str•. Coeta MeN.. Ce. 92627 Miiied bids UC> to but no laW th8n MUNITY COLLEGE DEATH NOTICES Thur1n. Coate~ CA. 92e27 George A. and Joie D. Menln, 21 10:00 a.m. Thuraday, May 24, 1964, AM tMoe are to be In eccordanca TI* bua1r1M1 II conducted by. en Starfleh Ct.. Newpott BMcl'I, C.. at the P\KCha8lng ~t of wtth the 8kt Document• wt16ct1 ere lndlvtdual. 92ee3 Mid coltege dlatrtct located at 1370 now In Ille end may be UCUf'ed In ~.~ntec:twtththe lnd~~laconductedby.en ~t~~..:C,=--~ =~~~~ ·-- WATKINS ROSE KATVENELEN· BOGEN WATKINS, age 64, o f Huntington Beach, died of cancer May 12. 1984. S h e loved life and wa.s an in· County Clef1( of Orange County on GEORGE A. MARTIN publlely opened and reed for: bct1 ....._..... . AfHH 24, 19M Thie atatement -llleCI with the TWO (2) YEAR LEASE Of 0 BOND bid • ':r-":"' c:c.~ :;.~ PMa:ll County Cler1I of Orenge County on COPIER WITH OPTION TO EXTEND cf'leck °' bfdder'a bOnd ma<M pay- PubtlaneO Orange Cout Delly J1111uery 31' 1984 FOR THREE ADDITIONAL YEARS able to the Ofdel' of the Cout Com- Piiot May 3, 10, 11, 24, 18M '211111 All bid• are to be In llOCOtdanoe muntty Conege Dtltriot Board of 2347_.. PubUahed Orange Cout Deity with the 8kt Oocumentt wtllctt.,.. Trus~ In 1111 emount not i.. than spiral.ion to all who knew----------- her. She is survived by her NII.IC NOTlC[ husband. Albert Wat.lci.ns of FICTmOUe IUIMee Huntmgton Beach; her aon, ...-eTATlmJt'T Howard Wat.kina of Fresno, The tottowtng pet'lon It doing C If · d bual,_u: a I o rnia; two gran • BLUE CORAL POOL AND SPA child.rel:): a sister and several SEAVICE. 1 Thunder Trell. trvtne, nieces and nephews. A Ca. 92714 m e morial service eel · Thomu Holleman. 7 Thunder ebrattnn her life will be held Trell, lr'llne, C.. 92714 ... '6 Thia buslrleu la oonducted by: 1111 Saturday May 19. 1984 at lndlYldual. 1:30 PM at Westminster Thornu H01tem1111 Memorial Park Mortuary Thia atatement w• niect with the . County Clerk of Orange County on Chapel. In lieu of flowers, April 24. 1914 donations may be made to F>Mm Town & C-ountry Hospice Publlthed Orange Cout Dally Program, 714-89l-0Hl Piiot May3. 10.11. 24, 198;38$-84 Westminster MemonaJ Park M ortuary, 893-2421 HARBOR LAW--·MT OLIVE Mo<iuarr • Cemet11ry Crematory 1625 Gisler A v~ Cos1a Mesa ~(l SS<,4 PIERCE BROTHERS BELL BAOAOWAV MORTUARY 110 Broa<l wa, Cosia M t\cl 6•;> q 1<,Q BUTZ 8 EHCt:,.Oh ~MIT H 6 TUTHILL WE STCLIF'f CHAPEL ..1 J ' ., , ,. 'I ~·"~1 ' !• J •• PAC IFIC Vt(W MEMORIAi. PARK • T\f,. r f • ~11f llJ t r• 'h41 tot' • l ,..,f?\ •C I. r •• ,,,, v,, " r ~ .... • •• A ( ,, I ,_. I •• .. McCORM ICK MORT UARY '·q~ • •o •"• r •r ,o" Po l l 'Ju"• H• 1 .. ~ ,,,. I •<;' •4 • .,, K·11• FtCTTTlOU• auu.11 NAMI ITA Tl•NT The tollowtng peraona are doing t...l~neuu: -1$u~E WOOD PRODUCTS. 820 Baker Street, Cotta M.... CA 92828 Hydro-Spa, In<: .. Celltomla, 3741 E T:t=~· Plo.t, CA 93040 Thlt la conducted by • torPC>f atlon. Robert C Klnget9y. Preeldent Thia atat..,,.,.t wu filed wtth the County Clef1( of ~ -oe County on May1, 19a. ,,,... Publlahed Orange Cout Deily Piiot May 10, 17, 2 ... 31. 19a. 248M 4 FICTTTlOUI llUIMU NAflm ITATI..,,,. The lollowlng P9f'IOM .,. dOfng ~-HEAL THPAAK A880CIA Tl!81 27215 · LM Aambtu. Sulla 200, M~ Vteto. CA. 92681 Horaten Aaeoolet•. • Cetlfoml• llMllM partnertl'llp, 27215 LH Aamblal, Suite 200. MIMlol'I Viejo, CA. 92"1 a OOfedo c.pl1trano v.,tlQ, • Clltl0tnll 1<*1t venture, MO Golden Clfcle OtM. Sutt• 107, Santa Ana, CA 92705 Thie bulineea le conduoted by I general penrw9Np RlcNrd A Si.nton n• 11a1ement ... Neel w1t11 the County ~ of o..anoe County on Aprtt fe. 1914 ....... ~lafled Orange Cout Deity PllOt Ap!'tt 2t. May ), 10, t7, 1914 2264-34 Piiot Fet>uery 5, 12. 18, 28, 1984 now In Ille end may be aecured In llw percent (5%) of the aum bid• 1 784-84 the offtce of IN Otrec:1or of Purch... guarent .. that tt1e bidder wttt ent• Ing of Mid OOllage di.trtc:t Into the ptopoeed Contrec:t If the E.cn bidder ~ 11Ubmlt with hie ..,,,. ta awarded to him. In the ....,.,,t bid • cunw • Chedl, oer1J1led of fallurw to ent• Into MICll contract. ACTITIOUa ....... NAMI IT AT'llmN'T The foMowtng penon .. doing bu91-•= ck**. "' bidder'• bond made pay· the ptoc.d• of the ck** wt• be able to the order of the COMt Com-forfeited,°' 1n the c:ue ot • bod, the muntty College Oletrtc:t Board of tu11 IUl'I\ thereof wtt1 be lof'fetted to Truat ... In en amount not .... then Mid eo1ege dt9tt1c1 llw percent (5%) of the eum bid•• No bldd. may Wtthdrew hit bid guar11111 .. that the bidder wtll ent• tor 1 period tor rorty.ftw (45) d8Y9 rnto the propoeed Contrec1 ti the after the d•t• ... '°' the Qpenlng Mme la -arded to him. In the e¥W\1 tt1ereof. FALCON PROPERTIES, 502 AY9nlda Lucia, NewpOft e..c:tl. CA. 928e0 Thomae Deni<* Mercurio, 502 Avenlda Lucia, Newport 8Mch. CA. 92660 Thia bull,,... II conducted by. 1111 lndlYldual. ol l•llur• to entlf Into lllOh oontraict. The Board of TnnteM r...,..,.. the proceedt of the chedt wt1t be the pf'Nelaoe, of rejec11ng eny end all forfeited, Of In the cue of• bod, the bide°' to wllve 1111y lrregularttlM or lull 1Um thereof Witt be forfeited to tnlonnalltlea 1n 1111y bid °' 1n the Mid ~ dl9trtct. bidding Thomae Oerrldl Mereut1o Thia ltatement wa med wtth the County a.rte ol Oranoe County on April 11. 1984 I No......,... 1may wt~-1.!"'1 dbld CORR!LLAN J . THOMPSON °' I ..-~ °' for1y·•~ '"" 8Y9 Exec. Vice Chenoetlor 8uaineu Al· •ft• the d•t• ... f()( the opening fan • ,...., PubHlhed Oranoe Cou1 Deity Piiot Apnl U , Mey 3, 10. 17, 19a. 2H7·14 theteof. COMt Community Col'age Olttrtc:t The Boetd of Truat ... r...-... Publlehed Orange COMt Delly Piiot the prt\t9lage of rejecting any end all Mey 17 24 1984 bid• °'to watw any ~tlM °' ' · 2636-64 lntormallttee In eny bid Of In ttle . ---------bidding. NII.IC fl)TIC( CORRELLAN J. THOMPSON ____ --..._..._ ..... ___ I Exec. Vice Chancellor.~ Af, l'ICTIT10U9 .,..... '•"' MAMI eTA,,_...., Cout Community COl'age Olatrlc1 The IOllowtng penont .,.. dOlng P\lblllhed Orange Cout Deity PllOt buatneaa u : May 10. 17. 19a. BURKHART ELECTRIC. 2532 2527-64 Alder Lane. Cotta Mela. CA. 92e27 •-ir 1111'\nl't Chfllt(lpheJ Rinehart 2532 AJOer ___ ,._-_._..._""---.1..-'°"'"--.-- Llll'le, Cotta Mee&. CA. 92127 l'ICTmOUe .,._ .. St..,.,, Mltc:NI lkne. 178 Del MAMI eTATlmNT Mar AY'9., Coate MeN.. CA. 92127 The fOllowlng per90n ta dOfng Thia bullr'9lle la ~ed by. e bullr'9lle ee; genetat pennenhlp. KUMU<O'S HAIA FASHIONS S1.....,. M. lkne ............ ,._ .,__ • Thll atatement -111ect 1llftttl the "'""" .._.,t. ArVA AY'9., ,_,,,, Ana.. County Clertl of Orenge County on CA. 92707 Aptll 23, 19a. Tlf\lko Sato, ~2 N. VkOff A.,. fllMttt enue1 loa Angelee, CA. 90004 Pub119hed 0r-COMt """..., T'h11 butlneea hi conducted by. en -..... _, lndlYldual. Piiot Mey 3, 10, 17, 24, tN4 Tan.rko Sato 2344-M TN9 1tatement wee filed wtttJ the -----------County a.rte of 0ranoe County on NlJC NOTICE Mey 3, tta. ~ PICTTnOUe Miii•• Pubbhed Oranoe C09l1 Deify NI.JC NOTICE NOTICI Of AVA• AMITY Of ANNUAi. M'°"' Pursuent to Section 8104(d) Of the Internal Revenue Code. notice i. ~ tflat the annuel r-c>ort tor the Calendlf ~ 1983 of IRIGGS·CUNNINGHAM AUTO· MOTIVE MUSEUM. a prlYate foun- dation. le ~ at the foun- dation • • pt1nclpet offtce for tnepec- tlon during r.., ~ ~ from 8 a.m to 5 p m by eny Cftl:nn ~~It Within l80 ~aft• the date of lhll publlcetlon. The tounclatJon'• Pf·lncle* offtce II tocet.d et 280 E. laker. Coata Meea,C..tHH The pnnolpel meneget of the foundation I• BrlOG• 8 . Cun· ntnoham Gary SwetQ. Acoountant 3()11 4th,.,..,. Sen oe.oo. Ca. 92103 PuC>llNd Orenge Coeet Deity Piiot May 17, 1914 MAim 8TATWT Ptlot Mey 10, 17, 2~. 31, 1N4 The lolowtnO pet'ION.,. 6olng 247..... • ~------------CAMP8£LL • REDHILL. 279 '1 Le fUIJC llJTU "8JC fl)llC( ::n ""-d. l..aouna Niguel, CA. ...Cnnout ..,,..... Aennout ....... Btrtc::.tw Peoeftc II, 27111 Le Pu MAm ITATW NAm ITAft....,. Roed, L.llQUM N6guet. CA. t2t77 ~~ pet90n le doing The followtng perton ta doing 9'ober1 M. ~. 2 Moffo •HE .. WOO " •• ~ N : Bay, Cori>N del Mer. CA t2t25 '" "' D .. NTERPRt,.,., (1) HOWARD ROSI £QUITIE8 (2) fhll bua1NM le oondue'9d by. e ~2:2~';.°'° AY9 • founteln V~. ELAINE 8HELOOH. 920 Ei.wntfl QefWal pen..... HwOICI Shelwooo Hll. 10l21 II St • Humtngton ltMOtl, CA. tH4I Aotlef1 M. Camc>bell T ... ~...,.. ,.,.. Ptllllp 9. -~. t20 ~h Thia ~ .,.. !led wtttl the oro "119 • ~,...,, V...,, -.. 8 Huntington Beed\. CA. '2141 County can of Of*'Oll County on t2i: ~ • OOl'ldlYG'9CI by. 1n Thtl bulf,.. 11 ~ed try 1n ~ tt, 1984 ...... lndMdUlil . • ~1. 8lmmOnl Y0ee • COO. H 8 Hll TNe .....,,.,. waa !led wttrl the ,_ ....... °"" ... -""" ~ -!led wftJ\ tM County C6el1I of 0....,. County °" ,,_ Ofllee ._ wn County an of Or-. ~ on May 2. 1964 ......... CA..,,, ~ 14. 1"4 ...... Publlltled Ofenge eo.e Deify PubtltMd Ofenge eo.t "--= l'Utl!lllNO °'** eo.t Delly ~Mey S. 10, t7, 24, tlM ZM:)..8.4 Pilo4 Mey 3• 10, l7, t•. t"4 P1tot May 10, 17 2:1 :t1. ''::r&-14 ~ ----------- T.-1 MOTUOf~UU • •• .., II YOUAM ..... AULT= lmD CIP TRU9T DA'Tm ..... W1. Ul&al9 y T AOTIOl9 TO MOTICT YM now •n.rrllA'f •IOI.It AT A l'\a.IC UL& • YOU -• Dll\.AMAT'IOM Ofl THI llA,_ 0# 1MI MOa--MiAMT YOU, YOU IMOU'.D COWTACT A LAWYD. On the lttl dtrf of Nie. , ..... t.00 a..rn.. at .... 8ouel hnt .. ttenoe to the Orenge Counb CoutthCMe tocelecl In the IOO IMOdC of tM Weet Sen\I AM ri' (IOfmettY Weet 8th 11fMe) ' Ana.~. lltuaMd In h 04 Sant• Ana. Col.lnlY of 0renoe. Stalt 04 c.llfotnia. CONTINaHTAL AUXILIARY COMPANY, a cellflornle Corporatton, • Truat .. \lndet o..ct of 1rua1 dated Oecembef as. 11t1 exeouted by WllllM\ Mtohalll Hllttel and Blllle June Hattt91, .no.,."'*. rtad to eedl other. end reoorded on Decembef S1 1981 .. fnttNl'Nn1 NYmbef 371~. In Boole 14142,... 1973, Offldtl Aaoordl. County Of Orange, Celfomla. QMfl to MCUt9 11n lndebtedneel In fawr of a.nil of Arnet1Ca NaUoNI Truat encl laWIOI Aaeoo'atton. • nettonel banklnO • ~ton. by reeeon of the bfwaotl of the obllgatlON MOUred thertlby, notice of wNch wee '900fded on Januery 30. 19M M lnetrument Numbef M-042272 of Offtclal ,-.. CO(d• of Mid Oranoe ~'Y. and more than thr.. mon1"9 have el.peed 11nce IUCf'I reoord= ... at publlc auct.lon 10 the bidder fOt caefl or "1 • Ct** drawn on • ettt• or netklnat bent<, a stat• or federal oredll Urllon "' • lt•t• "' federal uYlnQI and loan MIOdet10n domldted 1n ""' ltat•". ~ •1 time of .... In lawful~ of the United 8tat• Of America) wtltlout coY9Ml'tt Ot ..,. r1nty, expr ... °' lmplted, •to title, po 111111on °' encumbrtlneee. ltMt lnt8fetlt oonW)'ed to and now t*<I by the Mid T ruat .. unde( Mid Deed of Truat. In and to the lottowtng ct. llCl'lbed property lltuated In the County of Orange. 81tlt• of oar.. romta. to wit: PARCEL 1: Lot '4 of Tract No. 10503. In the City of lrvtne. County ot Qrenoe, State of Cellfomla. .. per map recotded In Boole 412. PllQM 13, t4 mild 15 of ...._ celleneoua M.. reootda of Of. ·"l:~~;~, ..... ment '°' UM end enioymem o... the common ....... being L.ot9 e 1, A, C, D and E of Mid "lract No. 10503 u Mt forth In the Decleratlon of COvenenta. Condttlone end ,.._ 1trtctton1 recotded In Book 1SIOt, P-O-1241 of Offtclal Rec:ordt end any emendtnenll 1heretO . The addr... or other common deelgnatlon, "l!r'/. of the,....~ erty 6Mcr1bed aboYe .. purpottad to be 14 Atherton, lt'Ytne, CA. 92714: the underalgneO Truat .. clJt.. dalml any ltabtllty for any ~­ neu of the lddreu or oUl9r oom- mon dellgnatlon. tt any etiown ....,.. In. If tne 1for9Uld P'OC*1Y hllil no atr• edd,.... or other common deelgnatlon, dlrec:11ooa • to "°" to local• 9'ICt1 ptoperfy may be ob- tained from the Beneftclery und« Mid Deed of Truet, at wtlOM r. queat the .... 11 to be oonduCMd. purauent to • wntten requelt eub- mltted. wtthln ten days from tM ftrtt publlcatlon ol thl• Notice. to MICll Beneftcilll)' •• the k>llowtn9 ed· dr ... : BANK OF AMERICA NA· TIONAL TRUST AND SAVINGS AS- SOCIATION, LOAN ADJUSTMENT DEPARTMENT #4321, FORE· CLOSURE SECTION, 45 SOOTH HUDSON AVENUE, PASADINA. CALIFORNIA 81101. The total amoun1 of the unpaid balance ot the note(•I MCMed by Mid Deed of Truat wltfl lnt..at ther9on, u prOY\ded In Mid note(•). edYlll'ICM tt lll'ly, under the termt of laid Deed of Truat. lnoludlng ..... charg" and expen... ot the TN91 ... u of the date of the lnfti.I pybllcatlon of the Notice of Siie la s 132.748.31 Nema. Str .. t Addr-and T .... phone Nurnbef of Truet .. Of~ oonduetlng Ule 11. Dated Mey 2, t984. CONTINENTAL AUXILIARY COM· PANY 45 South Hudton A~ Paaadena. CA. 81101 By Barbara Heytett Ex Oftldo Agent (811) 576-«>10 Publlahed Orenoe eo..t Deity Piiot May 10. 17, 24, 1914 NOTICI llM'T1NQ ..,. Notice i. hereby ~ that 'fie Boetd of Tnm ... of the Huntlngtori Beach UnlOn High Sctlool Dtltttct wtll recalYe IMled bide '°' ~­Ing PHOTO TYPE SETTER me9tlng or equal to the l99Clflcatlona °" nte In the otnoe of Mid Dtatrtct. Bid• lhall be CIMrly mettled PHOTO TYPE SETIER Bid #M2 addr....O to: Allyn E RoMty, Purc:tlaalng Man~. Huntington 8Mc:f'I Union H 1gt1 ScfW>OI Oletrtc:t, 10251 Yortttown Avenue, Hunt· lng1on Beectl, CA 9264e and ~ celY9d et °' before 2:00 p.m ... FRI· DAY. June 1. 19a.. at wNctt time end piece bid• wtll be publldy ~ ed and reed In Bldg. C, Rm.'311. Each bid lhall i'9l'l'l&ln valid for • petlod of 60 dey9 en• the elate apecffled '°' the receipt of bid-. The Board Of Tniet ... ~ be the IOll judge of the quatlty of equipment off«ed and r...,...,.. the right to reject any or alt bid• end to walYe an=lattty therein. Allyn E. P\lrCl'IUlng M1111~ Dated: May 18, 11>&4 Publllhed Orange Cout Deity Pt4ot May 17. 24, 19a. 2931-8-4 PllllC NOTlCf F1CTmOUleueM•• NAME ITATDmNT The followtng peraona are doing buatneaa u : SUNSHINE • JANITORIAL & BUILDING MAINTl!NANCE. 822 Hatnllton I 10. Coate Mela, CA 92t27 We11• E Tan. 822Harntlton"10. Cotta Mee&. CA 92827 Ketht Jo Sdr#ob, 170 Mot(nlgnt M7,~8eectl.CA.92t&1 This butltieM .. condUC1ed by • oenwtt pennerwNp Wafter E. Taft Thia atalement -fMed wltfl the County Oerk of Orange County on May 3, 1984 ~ Publlthed Oranoa CoM1 o.tty Piiot May 10, 17. 2~. 31, 1814 24M..&4 NOTICI TO CM.DITOM Of' MAJ( TMNll'U 1s.c.. e101..e101 u.c.c.1 Nottce la tw.oy fJIWtt to the c:ndttora of STYLE CMFT PRINT - ING. INC. Tr.,.,.or. wtM>ee home eddf'911la2911 w~• Pteoe, City of (;()eta Meu. County of Or· .nge, State of Cllllfornle thet I bufk tr.,,... 11 about to be made to BROOKS SHADOlE CHILDS Tran. r... wtW>M home 9ddnlel II 5831 Rich Hiii Way City of Yorbe LJnde. County of Qrainoe. State of C..... foml&. TM property to be traMferred II delct1bed In gen.-91 •: All ltc>c* In tree», tlxt\nl, equipment and good .. of that Pr1nt and Adwrtlllng Graphic• bualneH known 11 "STYLE CRAFT PRINTING" and located It 1682 Plttlway LOOC>, City of TU9tln, County of Or9nge, Stat. of~ The butk tranaMr wtll be~ l'Mted on cw an. the tt1'1 oay of June, 1914 et tO:OO A.M. et AC'flON ESCAOW, tNC. ATTN: Marilyn WMtrnoraland. wtlOM ~ la MON. Tustin Av...~ t01, s.nt1 Me. c.ltfom41 92705. nm the tut det• tor 1111ng delme In tM ..crow '9fwrred to herein 19 June 5, 1914. So tar• le known to the Tr.,.. ,.,..., ... ~ MIM9 and 8d- d,..... ueed by the Treneteror for the put thr• ~.,..:SAME. Thia buttl tl'9nlf.-II tub)IC1 to CallfOfnta UntlOfm Comm«clal Code s.ctlon 8108. Detect: "1>fll 10, 19M BROOKS SHADDLE CHILO! TraMW• Pub119hed Or.nge Coeat Deity PUot MIY 17, ttM NlJC *>TICE NOTICI Of' DIMOl.UTIOll AND LACK Oil AUTMONT'Y A. OUtNTEC LEASING, a Cell- f0fnl1 llmtted p1rtn«1tltp with OUtNTEC tNOUSTRtES 11 Oenerel Pll'tnef. and ~ oarr1ed on it. bullnell 11 3178 Atrwrf Avenue, ooet.a MeM. CalltorNa t2t28 .... dtMOIWd ~ 5:00 p.m. on Qo.. tow 20. 1"3. a. After ttwt date, no pe11n1r In the pet1ner'lhlp hell Mid IU1tlOf1ty to bind the partnerttlle>. •oapt tor OUIHTEC INOUSTAIU, w9'o l\M IMl1hOrtty onty to wind "" the part· ner'lhtP effllrl. QUIN1EC LEASINO 1y OUINTfC INOU8TR1£8. I ~ corporetlon oan.td. M. Alldtem~t PubllMd Or-. Dally P1IOt MIY t7, 1914 MUC NOTICE MOTIC« OF APPLICA TIOtf TO llLL ALCOHOLIC uv.RAGIRI 5-1 ........ To Whom II Mey Conce rn· CAMPELLONE. Edward A It *WIY· Ing 10 the o.partment of Alcoholic ~ Control for "41" ON SALE SEER & WINE ( PUB. EAT. PL.) to Mii alcoholic ~llOM at 9430 WllMI A11e., Unltl, Fountain Valley, CA. 92708 Pub41ehed Orange Cout o.lly Piiot May 17, 196'~ Ml.IC NOTICE ,.._ Publlhed Orenoe C099t o.ly Pteot May 10, 17, 2~. 31, 1114 147 .... "1CTm0Ua .,... •• MAMI ITAT'UElfT The following per90l1 le doing butlneeeu: PACIFIC TECHNICAL SERVICE. 2n5 M..a Verde Of. Eut P-203, Coeta Meaa, CA. 92828 08'e Eclwatd Giibert, 2775 M..a Verde Of. EU1 P-203, Coeta Meaa, CA. 92828 Thia bual.,.. la conduc1ed by: an ln<IMdual. Dale E. Giibert Thl9 atatement wu flled wtth tfle County a.11 of Orange County on May3, 196' ~ Publllned Orange Cou1 o.lly PtlOt May 10, 17, 24, 31. 19&4 2483-14 Ml.IC NOTIC£ '1Cnnou9 .,_ .. ~ITAT.-.n The folo'#lng perton la doing ~-ROBERT onKE ASSoaATES, 1000 Quell Street, &Ille , 190, New- pott BMctt. CA. 92te0 Robert C. Ottke. 2939 Pena. N9WPQrt BMctt, CA. 928e0 Thi• bu91neu It conducted by: an lndtvl®el. Rober1 C. Ottke Thi• statement WU ftled with the County CleR of Orange County on Mty 3, 196' nu.1 Publllhed Orange Cou1 Deity Piiot May 10, 17. 24, 31, 196' 2480-M Nl.IC NOTICE MIOLUTIOM MO. 14-41 A MaOLUTIOM °'THI cm COUMCL °'THE CfTY °' ~ IEACff D«CLAMtO THAT WUD9 AND OTHO ........C NUISANCH Ul8T u.-oN aTM2'TI, AU.eYa, U>EWAUt9. ,AMWAY9 AND MVATE ""°""" ~ THE cm. D«CL.ANNQ THAT •AID WH.DI AND ..ueLtc NUISANCll MUIT • UATED, KTT1NO THI ,._ AND "-A~ '°" A "'9&.JC HEANNG AT WHICH THE cm COUMCL W1U. COttSIOP l'ROTHTS FROM KRSOM9 C»aCTING TO THI l'ROPOMD D«ITRUCTIOM CM MllOYAL OF SUCM ~ NUtSANCll SY THI cm AND DNCTIMG 1ltl FIRE Ct9Ef TO QIW NOTICE CW THI ,AllAQI Of THl9 MaOLUTIOM AND Of THI "'9&.JC HeANNQ. WHEREAS. It hu come to the attention of the City Council that Iha following condloona ult1 upon ltreett, 811ey9, lldewalkt. parkways and private property within the City u shown. cs.albed and dellneeted on the ......,., mape ot the propertlea In Iha City which are recorded In the offioe of the County Record« for the County of Orange: (A) Weeda are growing wfllch wt.i mature bear wtngy or down Medi, which will attain IUdl a large grOW1h u to become a fire menaoe wtien dry, or wfllch are othenlriM no1dou1 or dafl98l'OUS; (Bl Ory gran, ltubble, brVltl. garden r9fuea, llttw or other flammable matanal wtilch conatltutea a tire hazard or wfllch, wnen dry, wtll In reuonab+e probabUlty cooatltute • tire hazard; (Cl Polson <>ell and poison Ivy which aonatltute •menace to the publlc health; (D) Rubbish. reluM and dirt upon parkways and al0ewatk1, and rubbish and reluM upon private property; and WHEREAS, In the Judgment of the City Couoc::ll Mid condttlona constitute a public nulaanoe and ahould be abated u IUCh puratant to the provll'ont of CNipter 10.,8 of the Newport e..cn Munldqal Code; NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED· llC'TION 1. The City Coundl heteby detennl..-and declef• that the weell• and othet condition• deectibed aboYe wtllCh exist upon the ltreeta, a1'9yl, aldewalkl, parkways and private property wtthln the City we a public nulaanoe. llC'TION 2. S8'd publlc nulsancea muet be abated by the destrvc11on or removal thereof. end all ownw9 Of property on wtlictl auc:tl public: nul~ exist or which aouta public street• or llOewalll• on wtllch eud'I public nulunoea Plat lhall wtth<>ut delay deettoy or nwnow all auc:tl public nulMncea or IUCh ~ wffl be dooe by the City. In which caae the cc.t of IUCh woni wlll be -Md upon the larlda from wtllch, and/or In the front and ,_ of which, auc:tl nulMnoea ahall ha""' ~ deetr<>y9d or remoYed llCTIOtf S. The City Couocil does hereby Mt the day of May 29. 198'. at 7.30 p.m , U lhe time and the Council Chernbera In the City Hall of the City of Newport BMct1 u the plaoe, for '-'Ing objec11ont and proteeta to the propoeed ebatement of IUCfl nulunc:ea. llC'TION 4. The Are Ctilet It hereby dlrecied to give notlee to the pauage of thlt reao!Ytlon of the Council'• direction that IUCfl publlc nulMOCee mutt be abated by the deetructlon or removal thereof, and of lhe lime and plaoe Mt lor the public hearing 10 coolld« prol•t•. In the following manner By malling, al .... t ten ( 10) days prior to the time fixed by the City Council for hearing objeetlona. a poatcard giving notice of the llme, place and purpoae of the hearing 10 contlder proteet•. to all ownera of ree\ property aubjec1 to .....ament for the abatement WOftl, directed to the ad<lr .. of Mid owner-a u atlown on the lat•t County tax roll. ADOPTED thl• day of Mey "· 198.4 AnEST l a/ Wanda E Andet"Mn City Clerk Publlahed Orenoe Cout Dally Piiot May 17. 198• l a/ Evelyn R Harl Mayor P\8.IC NOTICE NlUC f«>TICE OMHNANCE NO.M-14 ,... CMOINANCI Of cm °' THI cm °' ~ MACH A .. NOtNO H CTIONI 14. 12..0eO AND 14.12.0IO Of THI ~ MACH MUMClf'AI. COOi MOA.N>tMQ l'ROCIOURES FCM llTA8-I U..-0 WATl9' 9'ATll ANO CHUQll a.ctlon 1. Section t4 1? 040 of the N9WPQrt ea.ch Munldpel Code la heteby amended to rNd u followl "14. 12JMO ..._.._ to ._.,.. ChergM. There atlaN be cnarg9d and collected a l>lmonthly reedlnea. to llN'W charge from ellCh cuttorn.r for eec:h '"*''"' on lhe bula of Iha foflowtng echedule ' For ~·-Inch meter or leN •.OO For 1-lncn meter 5 00 For 1 ·~-lnctl meter e 00 For 2-lnch meter 10 00 For 2'.+-lnc meter 18.00 For 3·1nch mel« 20.00 For •·IOch mettlf .. 30 00 For &-Inch me1« 40 00 For 8-lnch met• 60.00 For 10-1ncn !Mt., . ...... . . . . eo.oo ~1,_ to eerv. charges lh•ll not be aublect to r.rund or proretlon II ~ 10 eny coet<>fTMlf 11 terminated during any l)lmonthly period S.000ft2. Section 14 12 090 of the Newport ee.cn Munlclpel Code II heret>y ~ to r..o u followt "1'.1UIO Q_,tttJ ClwqM. (e) In addition to t,,. ~I~ to ......,. margea let for1h In lhl• ChaiPt•. the rate for wat• ~to~ ttlrougfl e meter, other then pureuant to• WYltlen contract approwd by the City Councll, lhall be to 90 Pl" 100 aubtl: tMI, Pl" month, cw met•. (b) Ctty"-t• rat• thall be ladjuated to r9ftec1 M9tropolten Waler Oletrlct rate ctlengea (c) Should lhe ~omatk: edju.tment reQUlre a wa1er rete lnc:f ..... the amount of the 1ncr .... lhall be e6o.d to Iha quat1tlty d\argee ltld lhall be equal to the Metr<>C>Olltan W•ter Dtltrlc1 lr!Cf' .... raleed 10 the ne111 t11gt1ee1 whote penny tor MCfl 100 cubic t..c uMd · l.ctloftS. This ordlnan& .,,.It be publl..-i once In the offlclal ~ of the City, and Iha Mme lhall be eff«ttve thirty (301 dayt ef\er ltl8 0.t• ol ltl *'«>tlOn fNt ()f~ WM lntrOduced al • reigulM meeting of IN City Counctt Qll the City Of Newport 9-ctl held Ot1IN 23rd CS=.;of Aptll, 19"4. and WM 9dopt.CS on '"* 14th day of May, teM by the f ~.- AVES. COUNCllMEMBFF\8 Mart. Meur.t, Heethet, trauee. Ptummer, Co11, AOM NOES. COUNCILM!M8fA8 None ABSCN'T COUNCllMEMBERS None t1JE~ R H9rt, M8)'0f 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 7 8 THE DA ILY PILOT CLASSIFIED OFFICE HO RS T e lephone Service: Monday-Friday 8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M. Bu iness Counter: Monday-Friday 8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M. DEADLINE l'l BUCATIO" OEADLI '\E \lu11du' Sut. 11 ::m u.rn . rut>,<ftt\ \1on. a::m I'·"'· \\ c·d11c•,4lu' I uc•, l::w p.m. l'hur,chl\ \\ c·d . l::m 11.111. Fridt" rtrnr .... l::m p.m. "'ul urrta\ Frida\ :~:00 p .111. "'untf a, Fri. :\:00 p .m. CA'.\CELLATIO~ & CORRECTIO'.\S: Ca11n·ll a ticrn!>~a-.Hd t•orrc·c·tiom, 11\tl\ ht-madt· 0 11 .. a 11w dt·ndli11c·~ ai. ahO\ 1:. Plt-a~t· a!-)k for a 1·ur1n•lla t ion numbt'r ~ h1·11 t·a111·1·llin~ ~our a <i . ERROR : 642-5678 bl 111!1!..!!!U!!!l..-_I.,_ IP lelt .._.. •• !!w!!._=~~-~!!1•!!!1~=m!!!J~Wl!!!rijiiiili,_......,....,.~1iiiii~IP'!!iiij~p;p. H£?~1P:' tuv SBr, Jt7.!. ,,,..,, FRw9*tobWltl&poota. hofM With no.....,.,,.,,, DOI. o. wlla.,+ a Ir. 11" , • .., Wlloon-11eao1mo.AQt"4CM20I ·~~/~ _:.; .=!'~· You lhOpl•V. CMh. c.. :rs· NOW IV OWNIRll ... trllde. '40-1131 Eieovttw condo on baY 646-M02Or11$-UOO . Ralph tor Info. 179-1650 S3 a.ooo. 11M011 -• W.., d .. ltn•r ooml:~~ 1,,_........--,,_..,..,..,......_,___ * YITlllll• cenu w L llB a ... Sbl. PAN< UoO: furn, S1tffmo. 3000 eq " w--hfne. . F1Npleoe .... ~ 4Br 4~ pooVepe. .... e 0 DOWN LWWly In Otde COM1.... ,,..,. ~ Pool A ,..; '"" rm. din '"'· .,... •NO ESCROW FHS 3Br 3tMI NM. R-<1 lot. = _. 1· 12 .. 1·..,. 1 gat. *2000/mo. 7N-dln • 0 PAYMENT to Dayt 13MK. &4C)o.4254 •• ... ...,. m-• NOSALdMAN ~ pa11 111lao. BAYSHOR!S: 28A & den, c.n = 17M550 c.ta,... J IM .., ....... .... N&WPOftT I led. condo, r,=-c~::'~.; 24 OUM *BY OWNER 9-ut. 21bt ... 7111 1tY V11W. Comm. pool. ~ 1 1750/Mo yrty • lllM TWnhM. 8Mmed C9K-11098yrty.131-1400. AVllll .Jib 1. 148 4C$f or --• -·-inoa • .,., frp6o, IG yd,* 111111111.T 151-1153 ,.._.,_ .... ,... ttalra, Myttle I more. I ... Tiii Wt..... Ir •--------Thia cozy, Mm'I, 4 Br 3 Ba ~to 1121,000. ~ .... ....., ...... Baylhol• (Pvt, 24 IW get• ::':, 0::-C: :i = "°:*-d*tym. &4Mnuu22 ~°":"~ =:: 8111 1•1• "-.... =. '::~:.-=.:. atr•• In tNa oountry ..... br......-.y. leet locatlon, .. um ...... -11500/mo, yrty ... club oommuntty. 09nny OotQ90U8 2 8r 2 Ba condo at• pa to p 1 ~-..... llW ll....... &4M219, 646-0100 B lb b .~,000 . :sc~r~~= ~...r· 1359, ................. 8AYSHOAES:Aem0d28r 10.60% :;,;aao& Only 111 nlllll • Mn. 111-1• ~ ~ :-.... l'\:! 110.000,,r~ aeoo t::: lll-1111 ., lll-llll(llllM) noo,r a 17501~ "IY· ~ lalt. Cell Petrldc Jll-111l Aval! 711 14Mae., Tenore 7eo-t702 a.ut. New T'#l'lhee: i bf, 1/: Macnab · Irvine • SELECT llUlfa.tl•,111 2~ .,_, trptc. Jee, P'Of 3+ lbt hofM or 2/2 duplex. dee. No pett. a.ct. OK. UTDT.a'I PROPERTIES e.t t>wh. 51ot a.a-seso1mo. 873-4431 -... B _ .. ___ , ehote. Open dally 2~. & ..... 5 y owner, ... _ .. "ng 4 Br. Ownr 545-2141875-2348 BLUFFS a BR/2 -- Remodeled Npt Hgt1 1~ be I'll lot, 90 x 110. 1 leWC.:. newt-; dee, ltg home with poof & ape. eov.r« petlO, t ...... MW petlo. •1500. 144-2t07 Lrg country kitchen, ftr• roof, new ptumblng. ~ Walk to W8veel Mint 3 Br 2 Cemeo Hfghlende 4u 2~ pleOt end more. Mltlng S115,000.17S-77M Exoelent corner tocatlon ea trpto, epeoe ege kttch .,_,pvt beech prM••oee. only 1235,000. Ateume -iaL• .. ..._ for ctuptu on R2 lot, •notld g ar at 11000 11500,mo 1 yr~ exl9tlng loan. ..,.. _____ ... ,._. 50x68. Goro-ow eun-53M190 BEST fM • IDllD Tl 1111,111 ..ca, ierae front patio. 3 for Pet Caraon Agt. Traditional Realty 631-7370 TNa aummet enter1eln on bdrme, f betN. SUBMIT Cerna HJ ... UU 84-4-9080 luah COWt9d deck. Just ON PRICE AND TERMS. Attn a:ncno;a;:p;Qi, t:dY .,..,HA--R80=A~v""'1ew,,.,...,.....,,..3-br-,,..,..2....,..,.,- mfnute • from beach Aa61fng 1750,000. need• 2 or 3 8r olde CdM fem rm, nu pnt/dtpe, .,..... Cell 142-7729 for L.91 IUl.n leau. Excell. ref a. Ordnr. 11296. 6"-t2t5 Chec·k ~ou r aci dail~ a nd rt>porl errors immt'diateh . Tht> l>AIL) PILOT as~ume~ liabilit~ for the fir!>l appointment now. IJI-.,. 7 U -82 7 3 • v H or HAABOA V1EW HOMES inc·orr~l'I imertion o nl v. lllftl _ _. 4N-eN2, Diena. Pelermo: 4 bf, him. rm, CLA IF.ED 64.2 5678 MEI WUTll __ ....__ Off OCH ltylletl 2 Bdrm 2 bMut. S1700. 87M511 ~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~!Jim.tment co. Meda 15 3BA•:;-;::::lntodey Super aharp Cuatom 8Afrptc~ftetet$875 LIDOISLEIAYFAONT ...:; home9 In So. °'*'09 Co. Stentno it 1149 000 ~ TowMc>fM. 2 8r 2~ ba. 53M190 ST fM lOYllfy 8 8r pool/ep.. I I lal • PllY"MflU behind OK. W• IUm8bJe nnan. ev..: Cell wi den. O't'llttool(_fng a.g SPECTACULAR VIEW! ~ ...t.wi Yrty .... HHI •r t IH1n tr lalt pay coet1. 714 837-5287 John eoc at 831_7054 =' tGotf•~ooo·,.. Sholllcltft• 2 Br. den, 2'A 17~7173 ltaeral llOJ It al 1002 ° -'"'· + BA din rm '2400/mo -;:•i;;iiimiim;;;;;Ji:;;•;";;;;;;;;;;;;~I llllU-l ut ..... , IMI terme. 8Y Owner. Open NC>P.ta. 7eo:o715 · Nwpt Temice: 2 bf, 2 be. .<11 111.,.•IEI S.t/Sun 1-5. 34 $ea petk>, ger.. new etpt. , .. NEW LARGE CUSTOM. 1 1 1 e n d . N B C.ta .... UM 1750, 1.vaec • ...,_?'Ha MS10£HllAA. llfAl (STAlt SUIVICIS Liii lllE 11,210,GOI Incredible expansive 10 room h ome on tip of Lido! Located on 3 full lots! Exposed beam ceilings, library, rec- reation room w/fireplace, & ex- pansive glass opens to lush gardens & p<>n~. let U1 Hel~ Y H Sell Y 01r Propertrl The Daly Piot otters you this euct sizt ad on cu "Pich.re Pace" weekends for juat S25 '* day, or 2 days for $45. ..... I pictw1, or we1 photocraph it for ,. ... ..._..ctwce. c. Clu1ifW 642-5678 Attent ion Businesses A Fictitious BualneH N•me St•tement flied with the County Clerk 11 valid for five ye1r1 •fter which time continuing bu1lne11e1 must refile . Publlcatlon la neceHery only If there are ch•ngea. C•ll the Leg•I Oep1rtment et the DAILY PILOT for lnform•tlon •nd n.ce•Hry forrris. 646-4321 • ::,~·:.; "~'''0 r r r r r 1· 1· r r 1 6 ~~rv:,~~· I ro•j I I I I I I I I I SOUll-UT1 &nnn la OllUffltatltl IHI L J\.1 Ho.l.Jd zn I onn s 111 th e DailyPHa1 Very nice ctwt & de-3Br. 2Ba.Cath. Cell-(Ford /Jamb o r e •) alrable Pll1< preiterebty tna/F11m rm. 2 mr. Beech. 182· 1873 2 Bdrm he>uee, 1700/mo. Ocllenfron1 detuu ~om for adutta "* 50 ~ Sf39,000. 549-2330 -cit 1980 Anaheim, #A. 3 Br, famly rm tton'tll on of age 1 bedr.oom cue--Tm IL... 545-3229 Mndy beech. 93300/mo. tomco9ctiextr.rnetyWllll ... llT/IR 12-1 4PLal 2 BR 2~ bath. 350 l45-07f881t1340-1214 priced at 118,000. \8t:s ~~2:°° eq. Light and fky & bnght. Avocado St. 000, PENIN8ULA-3Br 2be, 2 ChMp« than rent. don't EM-hafi, ~ Brookhurat N.. w/w carJ)9tlng and 547-2888 or~ cer gw, bet the OCMl'I & mlu out on thtt greet ~ """' · pelnt. Prime end unh with bey 11200/mo. F...,aon portunltyl at AtlantL 1.4 ml to love ly VIEW acro11 2 Br. No pet•. Off the l Hahn R.E. 142-1fl3 beech. back• to pn. greenbett Even h• air • t r • • t . I 5 O O I mo . THE REAL ESTATERS Xlnt cond. Many extru. cond1tlon1ng1 Only 548-0401 .. 1•11tl11Y~ ..... Don, Bkr. 974-2190 '215.000. 759-1501 3Br2Bafrptc,bttln1,yerd, A\'1111 now. 1·5 ldnnl, tnl81 1144 HIWL.11--no pell. 11t i' MC. 1700-12500. 142-1183 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiml~;;~;;:n::;:f.~ -_,..._ s1151mo. 121-B c.nw F-vuaon a Hllhn f\. e. ..,111'/lnr/htl EIOEPTIOllL w;:,t~~/~ St. 497-e287 Stepe to beech: 3 lbt, 2.,., Owner 19 very motivated to Cermeno In the Vlffae. 1 ea, 218 Bel 81 173.2943 Almost ~ chOIOe 3 2 lty, trptc, d~ get. ... and wttt con8'der 0 • bdrm, 1·~ ba + LOFT. Br tncd 4 ram et $875 11100/mo ..... /option cttente for home In Long Doul* etteched gar11ge. WESTCLIFf 3 Br. & Den, Hurry 53M190 BEST fM eval1. 5-4~28 a.ach area A really profellalonally decoreted, lrg eunny room1, ape. Brend 2 Br 2 Ba Sunwonhlpera bloca to pleeMnt, totaily ooordl-too many extru '° list. '279,500 ONR 541-9518 tom C::, W 18th St~ OClllll'I M 8r hM 2 full be nated 2 bed. & den + rem-Thie 11 • muat ... bef«e w--1.aa-1"8 ml ....___.. ,..,,., *7"'5 · newer kitchen 1975 lly room r~. Ap-deciding on anything ....,____ .._..,, -· • • · peeling exterl« & lge ..... 1149,900. Nlllft m1 Sl•tr• Mgmtl41-1324 53M190 BEST Any,.. pool l dectl .,.._ Euy to ~ _ 3 bdrm 1¥. be houM In BRAND NEW &Ide 2bf WANTED: HARBOR VIEW .... '245,000 lnclude9 'liiSOrl good cOnd .... 11 .. 5831 1~be, 1700+ leat mo. & HOMES.,.. for lllMe or the land. 831-1400. I Abfahem. inherttm tax $400 clMn dep ~71 option. Far'Nfy. 5......a9 - \A.Alt HI HO"'IT ealfy 1 appralael 195,000. Cal Cherry 28r 28a 4 fam .hm Westcllff 2 8r 2 S. ~ HOMI., hoc. Jam6e Joeeph, Ad"""'9-crpta bttna &-1 ~ dahwlr ==I 25 REAL ESTATE 786-1172 trator CTA. 142-"&85. S535. . . ftet 53M1 T,.. 111-1.00 m ... " u• . :""111-1111* n111111nm .-------•I S300 I paye rent & utUa GATED V1LLAOE COM· 1984 FUQUA: 2 br, 1 ba. cute 1 Br w/bttlna petlo MUNITY _ 2 Bdrm 2'At ba. lllLllll IPl 3380 MlchMOrl Drive 139,IOO. In edult perk, 53M190 BEST Alty fM 1800 9q f1 of• PURE &Jperb 4 Bdf 3 Ba with frvlne = ~:o.~ !°r:i CONDOS: 2 or 3 bf, new. LUXURY. Oerege, IPA In many cuatom f .. tur• In-tra<M. 83~ choloe of crptg, att. 2 e»1 mHter 1ulte. dining eluding 1 v«y privet• 8'>e gar., btt tna. From $875. room, wood burning off thf maater aulte. The Wll.9T .. /11¥111 Ullll 11' PAii 142-9558 frplC, mlerowave oven con11hic11on 11 Of ltucco TWt •11 11~ M Trtp6e wide 30'x90' Large end private patio. wood and cedar lhu~ . ' IMng rm & dining/kitchen Condo SC ptze 2Br 1ba, all ELEGANT LIVING only and the mood la one Of 111 ... flLL PllOI area 3 Bdrm• & 3 bathe amenttlee. M50 Incl uUll. 15 min from Faahton elegance. The NII price la A neerciiMn C unit In an both. ltght & dal'lcer tn.= "6-6479 or 831-«>89 lalend. 7 min to So. Cout 1219,000 with very excellent fnalde location. teri<n.Next to rec. rm & Economy 2 Br 1 450 Plata.~ eMt of New- favorable financ ing. Vacant and avatleble. pool.,. ... Agt 540-5937 cNld/cat fine otherl et port Blvd & IOUth of the 751-3191 Cellfor detab. ~ llU 53M190 BEST R1ty fM San Diego Fwy. 2473 Or-C: SELECT 9"-1211 Elekte 2 br ...,.,.. frplc enoe Ave. 831-5431. by .... PROPERTIES ~ '.VieW Of c;;;on pvt yard carport.~+ appt ont:y. s . , Lek•. "45.000 terma. aec. AQt.831-7900 luta &aa UM IPllTllll UI ~ ~s4t~~=.,,!'oo1<· Elalde s bf, 1 t>e. gar .. 1rg XDOtt COUPld i ttry At~ tr~ paredlae. 8 L!pu 1111• IMI Agent 879-1975 ywd, neiwty '**· $845 condo, lmmac. 2br. Br 1, 4+ hofM buftt on _ 20 ac good f land mo Incl. u1fla. 831-9255 11,tba. pool, So. S.A. 3 ......_one hlll In Erner-UIRl llUI S erm saooO PEHTRIOOE COVE 1575, 540-0074 ::.0.8:-Each~!: .... .... ~~· 3043 2 8r 2 Ba eplt iev.I, trplc, Tnl\N 3Br, 2'M>a. get, , .. Med In Orange Couo-Qoee to bwtl. lhopplng, "~tt I_..._ pool, apa, 2 C# gar with pool, w/w, MC. S750 11t ty Magaz:lne. Price In-9choola, 2 Br. 1 Ba, MP Mm "'..... opener. W5. 556-9200 mo free. 821·"35 cfud .. all lurnlehlnga. dining rm, u1llfty .,.., 1111 CryJtt IW S herp houN 2Br 1Ba , ......... $2,500,000. For prtvat• appflancea. drapee & 2 pk)t:J=ctKC vi;; Wor1h ended gar crpta & drapee . 1howlng ca ll David ~,cal~ral~I~ t1800 LNve m.Hl&Qll fncd petlo w/d rm no ,........,. eu ~!~701er20orNancyShor1. ;f1u,rm,1:.~io loft . 751-5183 pet1. IMOmo + MC ........... ~ I ,. . Muet ltend cndtt Chedt. 2Br 21.LDA eumable IOan. Owner can _ up, ger, "1>'c, $880 II• I ILUI 240,000 w,.1 K u-=~ Jlll 5-48-5-442• no-6'29 -.... di•, wld '*· ForrMffy Lingo R.E. carry eome. 145 Anita. . .1375, ftutala H.B. 982·1719/M0-1193 UIY lT Ml 49~ 1 Nor1h Llguna with 4 reefd. Yal!tt Wt ijUt! 11 fU1liiW NIAii l!!J!!!IMc• lllt ~=·~ SBM:O::, 2 Ga. r;IC. _._._-.• ..... ....,..., ....... 2+ acr. estete with cor-M6 PIDID 837-«>30 bultt-ln•. oerpeta, drapea, lut. ..... 1141 rala, pool, ape, fantU11c 8 H fenced yard, 11t/1ut + view; plua 4 Br 31~ Ba, 2 eat Newport bull F llLllllE MC. dep. $895. 786-7521 Jiii OWi flrepfllCM, and every-G~. bright 4 • Newer trtplex In Coata thing eiae '**M'Y for ~al dln7'~~p~\!:;; M ... Af>pr. at 1290,000. l ut. ..... 1141 ODUITIJ =~~uz,;:..":' all IOf onl '2°59,500. Air ~ ~;~·1 :~· ... Tl 11111 ESTATE • · eu~ 200K 11t " 9¥• · · at 9802 Ctiev'f Ch .. Dr. FIXEDll Thia la e BEAUTY ltll ... Ttw 4.17 II (N/Hemllton, E/BYahafd) a..utlful & perk llke , thet won't a..t. You own 148 u';/ apt complex 4 & ram11y, 1 lt'f, quiet 11. v Privet• Patloe the land end 11't IMMEOI-Excel ahape Bargal~ Vac. 811 . Drtw by, then vCoYw9c1 Parking GE 159.9100 ------.. ' . ·. ATELY evllllal*. To ... priceS25000.12yr9old cahgt(819)726-9185. -'SpecloulApt1 Ill" Tl ..... call PATRICK TENORE Owniir v9ry 'mo1tv11ed: e ... ,., anordable 3 Br VOlning Ar .. ..,_ 7904702 C&ll 844-7424. 2 Ba Iota for 1ee1 S850 -'Walk-I~ 1111,0001 UNION INVSTMNT FUND 53M 190 BEST Rlty fM vr::~:::ron& You'll fall In IOve with thla 3 Seek• Income commerdel Here tt tat IOda/pet.1 ok Frwv-. =~baih:wri:1--------=~::i~: .. ~ z5ydrm~~~~ munnflll place. 1kyllghl. high ... IDI eubmlt ptcga to· tnve.1-eest Rlty,.. 1 Bdrmtum .... FromMOO beemed cefltno1 and Spe Sh0f1 _.,. to the beech ment 8roker 2 Bdrm untum .. FromS880 In backyard. C>nry 1tepe from Ihle 3 bf. 2"' ba Metal Woftln of Amerlce HOME FOR RENT ownhOmetum .. FtC>r'l\leOO to pool, tennl1 & petttl A Towne HorM w/mlnf 1412 ~· Cotofedo Blvd Huntington Beech 3 Bdrm. LA QUINTA HERMOSA value packed com-oceen VIEWI Well mein.-P..edene. CA 91105 2 Ba. 1775. Fenced ywd 18211 Pwttllde t..n, 1 lortablll home you~ tefned eurroundlnOI with 818-793-2754 Mr Schaub & gerage.. IOd1 & pett bloctl weet of~. 3 .......... 7171 tennfaoourte.poo{.ec>el ........ ---.-----welcome. 1183-0'755 bloc*aoofEdlnflr. THE REAL ESTATERS 11••• ,,.rt• ., .. , .. ,.,, •u .a. F et ('laMjf'lfd Ad ACTlON C..D A DAIL T rtLOT Ao.WISOI MJ·W11 ctubftoutll. Lender NYI at / rt Agent. no *· MJ-1441 "SELL ITI". Onlvy •----1 .. 11 • S _....... "I ..., ... .._ r-::a== ..... , .... '°. 1• 1501 am OR TRADE; 80' 1 BR On thla preetlg~ Br 2 ..-n--••t ' •111111-Former model with NII goH mObllll home on B+g Beer Ba hM ~ 1700'• ..... al Lake. 117,900 tK trede 539~190 BE.ST Atty fM ITU for boat 0( cat. 875-0581 VACANT 2 Br. fncd yard, BEACH e/W OU -'AU;:. e n ara1 kid• ok, 1575. H2-"'471 28r • 1470/mo, EZ terme lr..ft 1171 or MMe53 NII Wiima 141 ... fM Wo rking QuarterhorH ll'flM IU4 ~ Ranch. 2'-' aor.. In il Bdr cln upper unit ala nn tOUthweet ~de Co. condo,CIA.,1750mo/mo. 4fiN \t GiOdt t;;n m . 118.500. Bier 879-1975 Agt. Inga. 7M-7• yMrly, M25. Ft9ahll &ii ua ,...,,s;no ~incl new._ °'1::8 l. OOUl"M vtew. Pool, tennll, epa. $220,00Q"'" ~. 7&'4 a..umable tlnanotng 8V911. Cd Bkr 144-7424 l llttl Pa rah ••• ________ .................. , ntne ~ a.lboa Btvd, &P' .. ,,,.,,,,,. -.nm _ :-") Ing &P' Fr1 511a ..,.......,,.,. t I so r Sal &/ 11 .. ,,,, 12pm I WON'T LA8T LONG ealt y 2 er. 1i.. be. ,..,,y. l l1Ulmo, AYlll ~ 11 7 86-J l 72 115 Uth It. 7'M7'7 A vArled menu dally et ""''f Pl'l•tabltt pr!CH \ Sn op c1 a 11111ed 8-4~· Sll711 7. Uftr!W91a .. $2.17 per day Tt\at't AU you pey tor 3 ha, 30deya In the DAlY Pl.OT SERVICE DllECTORY ~the IAVINE MIMOA and the HUNTINGTON HACHCOMBER~ W~at noex1re~ CALL TOOA'ill UIFllL.111 Your Deity Pitot 8efvtoe onctory Rept-1tattve Ml-4111ut.• I Apde!att, Val. ltttla,!tttla ltM lnta11 ...... Dll lauuceanta Jin 4IM IN...... 11• .... ...... 11• lut ..... 2f41 auu111111. srCittZen,worMnwtthem PILll-PIYWIUlll PlllYITE 110 Bl-LINGUAL Tour <kAktee ...... / ... = HOROSCOPE SYDNEY 0MARR a..-·_.___ 1B"" ....___ to Wkly rent• "°"' avall. ~Income• room wdeeper/ .. lt_.. ~ Put, Pf..-it.tuture ..m.d wry ..,..... e.... ....... .. ~h"'-:~251"' ....,..Call S119/wk & up. Cok>r TV, " "'' .,. ••. edvt90f. 15 yra. ap. Pen8ion Fund t.e l 'e to 17.50 hr. 18 & : ~.req • .._.-2• .,.... · -~70 phonee In room.. &45-SMG 871-5120 213/"4-3259 lolln on MCUf'e 1.C T.0'1. (213)326-364(" Ap:r.-DESK CLERK wanted Andy 2274 Newport Blvd.C.M. Went to i.u. lrg 4 er Celt"°" Bkr 151""'7 caUone to be • ., by 1PM-4AM lblft. ... to ~..,. ~ ~1445 . qualtty home ~ mld-SCRAM-LETS ...., w..... w s119114 et ....,CUIY aw-etatt. .. "*· a.unc 2b:t0'5'f: :::: CUit..... Bi9 ~r~~:O ~~. f.J~ INSKDS Jr.;T'iU.666 Return ~~ ::::r. Av., ~to ~446 ~ •••1111111!!111!!!1!!!!11!!1!!!!!1!!11• saoo.+oep. 497-3173 · ., ... ...,. w..w 114"-§s-2525 " nU\ ~~ooo~ =· MAT........._ 1-------24Hr Care L--..lc:ieMe L: •--,....Batch ' ml'flfllll/11 .. f Friday, May 18 Ltg Studio w/MI klteh, hom9. (714) 91;:5.ee wulftl wr p.,_ _ &:.nty A.a k>t Mike. 67~2115 Went stu:-"~ round. ARIES (Ma.rch2l-A(>nl l9):Stress1nit1at1ve,courage.wiUingness = =5~9P•utl::1.... Int . 2112 SCRATCHES ........ , :::XMon. tt1n.1 'r&::.S:.:::-=':...: tobrcakfrompast.Supenorrecognizes ability,couldofferpromotion. Avail '6115 H01el Cel~ lntala 2tM Went~ At. 17th i Nt:~t~,.·~·,:n~alt~ T.t.'I ... Celwttctye714356M461. PG"~ RI!. Ofloa. Focus also on romance, new contacts, willingness to get to heart of fomta 494-2797 -Ir-Me. N. ~ cer ltve p&an9 raking on .: : 11-Pm petty J;;: c;c; 10 W.._,. 873-0082 .._. r.. -.eel. tW*10 matters. Leo. Aquarius natives figure in scenario. CdM 2Br tum, pool, tennll atorage. 8M. s.-7914 twwy It'• , P., tti.t 1o11n on Reel Eata1il up to MAT NllTm and dlcetllpMne 11c111 TAUR US (Apnl 20-May 20): Keep recent resolutions concerning IOW YIEW =Sept sa;o~ Office Latah HH * · Reed« & Ad-s 100.ooo. Bltr e31-4M>11 tor lhlpJWd Expert91ad 7hpmtW*'O. Word pro. diet and care of possible digestive problem. Focus also o n travel, o~ mlnutM ~ . ie17 We.tdiff or NB ~dvlce In "' '"-WANTED: People needing Olttf. s-rY open. ApPy 10tWlltt;-.per. hlilpM. education, communication andt dissemination of information. OOMn =r::, ~ Furn 2Br condo 611&-9l1 11.30 eq tt.' · · mattn; iow. memaoe. ~ TD SU s 10.oao up. In per.on~ 21.c eont.::tL --.aoo ~ndivi.d_uaJ who aided fto~ in past makes special appearance and again Point'• moet MCluded ~~1{~1~2~Ad Agent 541-5032 bullneee, NB. 831-9397 No credtt ....... no~. St .. N9wport · ' ._ 1s av0a1EhaMblNle 1fo(rMcons 2 u taJuon. 20 ) . di b l, tcef\B 1c bluff. Uk• new 2 w•-$330/up crpt• drepee ale Leet I ,.... HM o.NeonW AW>C73n Ill llffd -UPI & ay 1-une : Look beyond the 1mme ate, c CCIL r w/d«t, JCtre t.rge Ptlo---•• 17301 e.ectl. Huntington ltlt ut.. II• Coeta Mw Reel &late 830-4• or ao •• financial resources of o ne who makes numerous claims. Spotlight on v. t • pat I 0 •. c • 11 umma Bw:h .... 2-2834 8:: .! ~ ~ = 16 MECHANIC DewtoC>fT*\t compeny 'liii9niiiiiil diversification, versatility, intellectual curiosity and possible in-~!tt:'c.!~:.!>' SUMMERAEHTALS Balboe !Mnd. em111 of· ~ 54~ With Sm~ ln•~ore ~ ftrlt a:-~I "J!!'l&r,.UI ?eritance. More demands will be made upon your time as popularity I ..... • "It. AV flcH. 1250 l up. F ndS/13. 1 F UoenM. 5~ oays. Good s~~cie,..~~." ::P::~ &FABAICOUTTER increases. ..,.,. •• 752-2641 « 673--537• :' /blk/wh ap.::cy,sr:.; Pay. Newport BHch ~ educ:don and Wll tr91n rlaht pereone. CANCER (June 2 I-July 22): Maintain steady pace, stress 1 lkfrm:2 L . rw PCH I BulY Npt Blvd C.M. neiwer ml~ CM/N~. &42-3701 .,._ 644-7t51 =~·requirement• Cel6'6-14G modcration ,strivetoimprovepubticrclations.Getyourstoryacrossin 50thSt,trplc,bak:ony,no retalt/ofb ale. a.10 - ' *lllTIL&ll"f* 11ong wttt1 career ob~ onv.r needed """',__ methodical manner. Avoid sensationalism. Be aware of fine print, ~ =· MOO. "400 1595/mo. 645-9628 Pteeunt C.M. qen'I omo. tlYH to: Link le tter doled true* 0, van, mu.c check legal rights and permissions. Aquarius, Taurus. Scorpio persons •· t no tee ee3-0755 Pentn oceanrront hrM, EXECUTIVE SUITE fnl 1111\ ans nee:c" ~· (1Yr min.) ~~~ e::;:i. know Oranee & LA. play key roles. •VeraaHlee luxury Juntor Jn/Ju/Aug, remod cw-Newport Cntr 1550/$775 UUl1U NI ... t w/X-Rey lie. OutQO-Counttee. llrlvnld. ~ L~O (July 23-Aug. 22): Folio;-" through on _fi~t impress~ons. _Be ~~j,=.'·:t;;: gete. K':"P~ er. S5000~~9eae 64G-547o IDE FREE ::. ~or 4~v! Ml HIPll ~ ~~1~ ": analyt1caJ, discern motives. realize relat1o nsh1p 1s becoming .. m -E.lcecuttw autt ... Newport M Sel9fY. DOE. Xlnt .,.,,.. Full c=; Newport Matty votved." Spotlight on wnting, travel, new outlets for creative talents. CLIFFHAVEN. 2 BR 1be. Y1e1tiea Center, full Hrvlce. Cal•, Ing c:ond. 831-1420 e.ectl 752-o27"'f'· "i-.- Gcmani, Virgo, Sagittarius persons play significant rotes. frret~.:..g~~-ldeelno ror, latala 211'1 644-6800 , ,_ VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Domestic adjustment 1s necessary, Av~';"":.~73pet . e;JSO: iil:nd, iO:;;ty 2 • LOii M2-llTI A~~~':th1n~~~::.''~::;;. f'IFBI WllTB dudel dee*.:.~.!: could include remodeling. purchase of an object o r luxury item. "CLIFFHAVEN" 2BR lb Bdrm.2Bathl'IOml.2ear Pra.tlglou9otc.benkbldg. req'd. Alway• Alert a.t,L& .. uWJtlf a-2.. ~ Surprise call could mean special trip. long-term assignme nt which ,.AO t tlo ..,!· encisd garage. Totally pr1me C.M. loc. malnt. Alarml,661-1111 L.A..,....._:-.= ..... oert.&OMVprtntout. I bl. h' · T L Seo · 1 k qu .... • ~. pe • t""•'· furnl9hed. Avail by the MC From $160 &42-7150 Celt,.,._ 752 7M3 me udes pu ts ang project. aurus. 1bra, rpto persons P a y ey adult•, no pet•. S575 per wtt or d9i1y. 5·11w 115 · Found: Pup, Malmut• mix. UllWIW mW• -.11 1 U.L ...... - roles. mo. e 181335-9710 c 111 613 -4 8 1 3 or omc. ~Euc:. Sul1• w..iminist• & Old .._. T~ ()perat« DNV£RS x COUN1W't' LIB RA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Spotlight on individual turf, real estate, LEASE s 1soo: 2 muter 64G-2«e In Cotta M... ArM. Port Bl H.B. ~5314 Afternoon SNft/Top Pay U-c.. lie. req'd. unusual terms that encourage you to reali1e potential. Emphasis also b,.., 2 bathl, MCUrtty •1501450· Cell 831"°141 Found· ,._, bfonde Coater 382 3rd St. LAQuna 8aAch Crown H•dWar•. 1024 McGREGOR YACHTS on family, secunty. safety, greater em otional stability. Avoid self-875-7670~673-Hee E~~ ..... lnuttn ...... Span, Harbor/Adam• ..... ..,.,....,.,..., 1Ntne.N.B.142-ll33 1S31Plec9n1l8.C.M. deception. see others as they actually exist. Lrg 3Br 2Be wlfrplc prfvacy-retclc>Mtop6er: D+rectly ICl'Oll from 0C ownertgd hm 5'4S-06&4 All thlfte. Full/time. Uml am'JAIJ/1111. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): What had been confusion will be S&OOmo. Xlnt loc. 2Br July only 53600 Ind. maid airport. LOWEST RATES Found: White dog wtth l.D. part/time. Min. typing Futl time, lndudel ...ic-Experienced Exec"Uve transformed into genuine excitement. You'll be given more autho nty. 2Ba. gar S875mo. Agt & gardener. Refs. r• In town. 5'4e-14eo Newport BMctl Animal sldtlsrequlred. Paid wMe endl.. good pey, bentlfttl. ~ for miagGlne relationship intensifies commitment is made and you have c hance to 833-1355, 499-1731 qu"ad. OWn« 87~72 Prof. ofc autte. wtndowa Shetter. 644 3658 leeml~. EOE. 557-7011, ::rll Metro C. WMl'I publlsher. Muat have grab brass ring. Reach beyond current limitation s. You're going places! COM, 4 Br, 2 ba, Mly turn ~th Av. 2/>_:\,~'c:;s x1;: Found: women·• watch. 557 - 7n . 7 54-0404 H.Slrbor Blvd. CM. = = ~ SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Finish what you start, realize hme. TV. phone, petlo. 2 'r, r~ 494-1474 1 · P.O.on Wt11on,C.M. &llTIAI.., 1rv1ne. Celt 752-e.474 you arc on trail of"somcthing big." Concentrate on universal theme, btkatot>eech.AvallJu,,. per • 752-1461 to Identify Immediate. muet hev• Ollll/IYPllT articulate feelings o n 1ove, money and health. Cycle high, you'll make ~i~t~ r+.~· *hH.tltl a.ltlt* LARGE . REWARD Lo•t I :!~r r:_n =~~1~ Need reeponelble per.on ~d~h~ ~::W successful investment. Aries, Libra persons figure prominently. . IN NEW,,ORT BEACH 673-8349 · Wt~o r:;e =T run :'~ :C::: ~~ wknd•. Newport eun.., with etr:l, ~ •111 548-5-493 CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. I 9): You need no longer be satisfied A grMt piece to Hw on the Int 1 t Mrv .ult .. 881 Dover Dr M1tguertt• & E Coat On Jaml>orM. bet PCH & to -*' AdwrtlllnCI llmAI .,. with mediocrity. Select quality. shake off status quo. make new start Upper Bey. Privet• 1 .. ~~ 1 wa Sult• 14 N.B. 831-lMt Hwy. May 11 . 1984. The Newporter Inn. ~~t. =.;:~Part ~boOkJceeplng and highlight independence. creativity. J udgment, intuition arc on clubhou111 & hHlth 119f• • ..._ ' 64G-2858 875-3880 Appty In penon. ~d k~ and~ ~ Int....., target. You'll get to heart of matters in connectjon with special project, =s.~n:: ~ 2 Br. 1 be. "' m In •• ... ·'·~··· .... ,. u.t 5-10-&4, silver gf9'( AITI .,... Full time.~~ ~.Set ,·Sun. Dtxle romance. OC Airport FHhlon Nwpt. Pk~ on etreet. aal •• tiger P«llan cat f, vie. Stew'• o.talllng la IOOk· Send ,..,,,,. «left• of 581-2121 °' 380-en1 AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. I 8): What seemed to be a loss will now llland, eon~lent Wipe ~~;;,: 8~:,:.·1~ llWHIT Ptll UU Rogera Gar<Mn1. Ing k>t reap. & motmt9d appllc:atlon to: GEH. OFACE: Metureper- boomcrang in your favor. Focus o n confidential data, behind-scenes on eight. STORE or OFFICE SPACE REWARD 760-11 12 lndMduall tor euto ~ Metlnda Thedtery eon. tome knowtedge of acJivities, association with special-interest p-oup. organization or SI ... 1 & 2 Bdrm A.pert-~ ~ lhr 2 ~ 2 Ba Avall. now. 873-M'O Lott tern Seal Pt s..,,,... ':.~· Awtr ~ ~· et...m.cs ~Mgr bkltpg, 10 key. :i: hospital. C landesune meeting 1s transformed into rom antic tryst. ~nt• & TownhouH1 ~-'475~ ~cm'~.: Wantad Interior Oellgn« ;:~,~,!~,/~~ Newport • · lllLJ PH.IT :;t° k~d;• .. = PISCES(Feb.19-March20):Acccnto npowersofpersuas1on,sales from seec>. (Alk •bout 760-1966.67~ to lhar• otfloe IPeol In · AITllLllTl*ll 330W.Bey P.O.Box15e0 tra~afer helpfu l ability. Moon positio n highlights fnends. hopes. wishes. speculation tumi.hed apte. complete F t lh Ice 3BR condo Newport. Linda 9-11 . Lott: Slameae 1 yr F. cat, Must be exper'd In all Cocta MeM., CA 92e2e 545-1060 °' 545-4050 and romance You'll be more popular you 'll travel you'll become with TV, linens & utensl~. cemMo 1~ S350t mo 657-4343 vie. Pacific & Wiiton. CM. ~of euto ~ &42~21 ext.302 . .. · ,. G · · ti' ' ll may be rented for lhor1 · w .........,. • •124 Reward 831-3506 eystems. Main dutlea; wtr-HAIR OOESSER tor Mind-m ore aware of body image. emm1 1gures prominen y. term or longer). On Jam-Call 9YM 4324'58 tidal · · Ing new manufactured Py HB ..ion. comm. or 1>orM Rd. at SanJoequln HOUSEMATES lntall 2111 Loet: White gold wat~ Llmoe. Hrs 7AM.,.PM. COOlc PfT Appty aft 2pm rent. Halr-A·Medlc1 •E=~~~ ... .JAtutatatl, Oat. AJUta1at1, OaJ. Hiiia Rd. UNLIMITED 180l0 Rar()()(. F.V. :'!:i::'c~:9J 1 · Call Larry 751-1116 at NWp Harbor Bk• Ldg. fHI0.-7837 C..t1.... nit But...... ntt 144· 1100 WILL LOOKFORYOUI 1240 eq ft. He>19. Rftatd 1~":'f AUTO MECHANIC ~ V\a O'Porto. HB ------~"'!"!!"!"!"9....., ... l "Gain comfortable rent & Agent 541-5032 For vw·a. E.Jlpertencad Hlllll~ 1 Br. 1 Ba. $500/mo. Large 1 Br. Apt. crpte. 2 ILIOll Fiii WITH 1 ILi the nice feeling of finding Loet Wht T-Cup Poodle only need ap9fY Comm. l&Tl llTIT I • S500 depoelt ~· pool .... 1~/ecapedN IUOI 3 Br 2'h Ba. gar, lndry •NnewEWPfrlen<IORT'&'I TUSTIN F~~~!~~-:'l Bl5/ue10 RColEWl~RNDr 6Nwp7"' .. ~~ eernlnga. 581~7 lllllDlll TUmll Outgoing. entllullutlc: all utlla lncfd. &42-3099 ........., area. .....,., mo. o 1re1, 500 36th St v""' · "' ~~ for CPA firm OBnge Co adutt. • pert/time ~ lBR 1BA duplex w/ttlar.d pet1. &46-3818att 3:30 Dellghttul ocean breane. 'S1050mo yrty 644-7289 832 .. 134 ~::'o.x~i8~~1~~I~ ftrMUll 3112 Ba10~-~mor :~ ': Alrpor1 .,...: 752-0274 . Inga. You mu9t enjOy d .-. recfecoreted 4-plex, all F 3B med · ....... .,.,,, 1Y working with youth and yar • garage. no ,....._, Lrg t Br 1 Ba. $410; Poot. new pluah carpet• & fll MlllYI m M/ lhr rapt. Im · le0-11771 U YM' Old man, youthfUI, yours. 78&-2647. Untv. Pk ...... Tiii• be a poetttw mot1Yat0t. avall &-l. 1476· ns-2199 Pret.r cpl to be UI t mgr. drapee, dlewuhere. Iota GATED VILLAGE COM· Irvine $300. After 5 PM Coat a lean. flt. Stunned vtctlm .,.... call for an lnteM9W: 2,k H~B&.patlo&gar-Reducedrent.873-0884 of CIOMta, privet• gar-MUNITY -2l3drm,2~be. cau 552-1018 N~~~:~t ~~~dci aqlft of Calif. llfestyle. H~ 8:=~·~--~ •lllWIM•• 141-1121 •_._ t!Qe, no pet1. MOO/mo. Ltg 3 Br. 2 bl. frplc;, patio, age, laundry facllltlee. 1600 eq ft of PURE M/F to lh. 3 Br.2 Be on S750/mo Re11onomlc1 1111 love. 1hatt1red & meture. Laguna Bch. Immediate Openings •....- SA&-1377 encl gar, loww. Avall eome prtvete patio.. LUXURY. Gerage. SPA In Bel. Pen. Avall 8/ 1. Corp. 875-6700 Mike dreams & h«pel. Can't ASAP 497-5742 ORDER DESK POSITION 2 Br 2 Ba newer twnhM 5122. $750/mo yeer• 3Bdrm.2~8&. muter eulle, dining $245.+ utll. 67M529 R . beat the thought of dat-Bankl"" Meture.energettc& no ~ 1916 Walla !MM req. 54&-1tl6 2 Bdrm. 2 Be. room. wood burning M/F wanted to lh 2Br 1~ ent or M1••1M. 1comm 1 Ing 11ound. How can you • .., peraonable person. Sal· 2. 0 · 15 1 Bdrm. 1 8&. trplo, mlorowaw oven. · · property, • zon ng, un-hold aomeone you don't Ont•tr hnlff llJ ery bonus & beMflte. 1 10 ·Open. 76· UTlll YllW 221 lltll If prlveta patio. ELEGANT Be C~ Townhouae llmlted mfg. Lagune even know? Wondering If Succes1tul lndee>endent DECORATING SALES l•I Con do etyle ap t ' LIVINGonly15mlnfrom s225.+ ~utll.~8-4 e..ch.786-7043 the re 's • youthful, bank hu Immediate Peraonwtthexpenenoe& w tide 111 MW 1•~ Ba w/cath9dral oelllng. 1 Br 110·1111 Fahlon lslend, 7 min to Newport Crest. bMUt 3 Br lnlll/ ... DIOIA&. slender, Laguna ladywno ()9enlng In our Newport management potential. P.tk>t O/W 'no pet•' wlloft, enclsd garage. So. Cout Plaza. )ult ... 1 condo, nr beech. $275 + S 89 ,, 900-1400 11 looklng for • friend IOf Beech omoe IOf Cw-Call Ok* 89 1-67~ kid• OK. a~all lmmed'. baleony, laundry, bltln1, ol N9wpor1 Blvd & aouth utll1. Tennll. pool. etc. 'mo!:':: ti downtO::, someone to be kind tomer Serw:. RepleMo-;~;;;-;;-;;;;u ,..,....--------=-~ 1876/mo. ~ no pets, seoo. 831-6107 2 Br. 2 chlldren. no~·· of the San Diego Fwy. Mu1t ba nHt. Frenk Eutelde cOet• M... s~ to care. Meybe tatlve Handle telephC>nl llU MULIU PllSll Kennel he lp, P I T or855--0669SPMC. S425 plua depoalt. 2 473 Orange Ave. 642-2114, 859-3750, wtt iae-20-40 you II thlnll thll wey ts tr.,,.,.,., credit ratlnga. [)eye, part/time Start Im-8A~1PM. Mwtbe 18 & 3 Br. 1 Br. Cottage. E.ut-STUNNING 1 1 B & 2 Br 8-42-7052 831-6439, by appt only. 730--0162, ext 303 foolleh Mey be not r""rch on c:ustomer1 mediately Experience have own tnna. F« ~l lldeC.M.sea&/mo.2625 rg ' •CdMdlxeult .. AC ampl Maybe you're terrified statements, heevy tet. hel9ful S..Duaneat495 call557~20 Eden apt B. 831-1755 2 Ba garden apt. pool •MOO/up. Bech. 1 Br. ltant• 7 Non-atralght M/F prof to prkg from $200 2e55 E too. T T . PO Boll 1222. phonel, etc Excellent E 17th St . c M I-·-1<44!5 & $5&5. 710 W 18th pool, ape. 18992 Aortda. 2 Br. clo.. to bMch lhr Laguna vtew home. Co.it Hwy. 67M900 Laguna. 92852 t>enefltL Celt PersonMI ...,~ 41• I U.,111 TWNHSE APT: 2 br. 1'~ 842-2834, 8-42-3172 S500/mo Pvt Ba. $400/mo. lat & 851-9900 EOE M/FN/H OelMry of LA. Tlmee to S5 hf. 18 & OWi. ~ 1 Br. 1 be (Trt-ptex) New b&. crpte, drpe. S535/mo. 2711 223 La Plloma. 637-7918 ~t:P~~.:;·11:~14353 l•••1tri1I UlllTI lllUY O.•••rttlaa• ~ fo~M!:J' ~~·'pr now! 644-6921, Newport paint, ~ & Ylnyt NO &42· 7404, 5-45-1678 1 · lea tall zt20 Call Jann Blow 786-68 t• 6-'~ I ~. t 131 8adl Bay pete.$49 lmo.549-2042 WEOFFERA CHOICE ntalattlr 7 Profe .. lonal to ahare tiOOalf.w/emiOfG.5& Furn1sn your new aparl· mo Dr Npt8c:h S-496/mo, lrg 1 Br, 1 b&. Want 1 Ml«tlon of gr .. t 1 I 2 BR, 1'X 6' S:W Large 3 BR hOme In p/f 3 pt!Me. Rand()lph WI UI 111J. IPll ment with rurnoture round llUYlll/PlllUP --..,-Ll,...,,O_UO_,...,.R-C,,...L"""E=R_,K-- frplc. up9talra unlt over IMng?Wecan otterany-MW & ~. cath. COM. Noamokera.$5l0 St,CM.54&-1853 Andrunnlng7AM-9:30PM t nrouon class1l1ed & LT CARPENTRY Own PfT & FfT. No ap nee carport. All bullt1n1, thing from 1 eml ttPt to a cells, In email comptex... and S525tmo. 760-2537 4000 1 day 7 daye a w.-6•2-5678 tl'\ld( Rerlll &42-9787 Wtlnm Ind 675-aa&4 t>Mutltul emell compMX. 48r hM. If IOOklng In CM CIOM to SO Fry $550 to or IY9 meg 937-541 1 2000, 2000 & eq ft Preaent thll ad and ,.._ jjiiiiiil•iiiiil-'iiiiiiiiil•••iliiiil••••••llr 388 Avocado. NB HB think Of U1 flret for 1575. Call 714/&4&-11794 PrOf. M/F non amkr, lhr S 3975 Birch, NB. oelve 1 two muugee tor N_... • ...,. TIL_., 141·1411 thatchololofldMlllVlng 1 tum. 3br 2'Aba (E.Bluff) .50eqft.Agt 541-5032 thepr1ce0fone _ .. _ _,,. Md cond f TSL MGMT 842-1803 S800 mo + dep. evall 611 Af>9rox 3000 eq ft. lnddlng Olllll IF UllAll KIDS EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZ£Sf ':ent. 4 '::te evall~ ne': N 8 REALTY 675-1&42 ~~r. ~t30o~1:~~~ W/64G-13eo'H/7fJ0.9417 ~06n. ~~to~ ~-=: l1I L IHlll • . project nr SC Plu.a. 2 & 3 WlllUll YILUll L-cJ 8ch nr Bch 499-.2266 Rmte wantad. S..Ut So S1500tmo. 644-7269 FIUD11I Bdrm• w/2 car prkg In 1 l 2 lk. tiptl a"911. pool, Laguna hm. Pvt ant. lg ..------....... ....-. H C"rlty1 gar. From epa, llr, petlo/bel. No ~~~~~~~~~Eb. L~na N~uel. 1186 Incl. rooml440. 499-5894 Au1uc•tat1 llM1U =~Mc:~1v:~: T~·J;,~:!ooe1 or All UTlllllES ~1::0':1 ~~r-: lnt1l1 ...... not sPifdf OXC MEXbiNdS ESCllTS/lllllLI °' oome by 110 Bak• St &42-1803 PAID. HEALTH Room a beth In loY9fy prl-Want9d fumWled t.ou .. A=::u ~":!1~=· Outcall ONL v 835-9199 COiY 2bf 1b&. dtw, st~ ha Nat ft CLUBS TENNIS. vet•homew/poolnrS.A. f0t 3_. _., starting Aleo coun ... lno. 1115 IUllll UIPA l'IO .-, $525+MOO MC. SWIMMIW plu• Country Club 1295 In-81171.... Must haw 5 So. El Cerntno RMI, Sen l!A•U!M MMl52 , g upper v . , ctudlng utll 546--6740 eeparate bada. C.M. ornr Clem llc'd •92·7296 ---9' 2 be, 2 belCI dUPllX much more! S.or~ Santa Ana Atwf' ,._ 4320 Cwnpue Offle, auft• E.telde 1 a 2r. S4ao & ..00 .. ~ 5;1&-ai2<i no ptts Model~ Room. IN beth. woman ss apona1b6e nrm w111 pay llllUTa.AYWJ 190. Nwpt 9clh ~224!0 $540. 1M1 Meea Offle 33111 eot.g6o, open daily 9 to 6 :~· Ne'#port84~ well. Contacl Franll gm TOP No~ 546-NeO M . o.n. Point.~ ~ °'Y<*I· (116) 79M797 You made IU YOY.,.. now ~pref MOdetl and hetakM 3 •• 2'~ Ba. 21..ao SEA & SUN LODGE Wentad unfutn -s>I by a Boy Scout Eaoott• (213)88&-1"4 TQWl'IMuee. 2 F/Pla, 2 Bu t ..... , .. a 105 wit/up. Cok>r TV meture. erTipt ledy p,.. L0\19, Mom petloe. 2C# Attctl. Ger lbiil A rt1M ts 3026 w COMt Hwy. Hpt em lllndlady dOel nouc>· lulafli ~~ 11\, IU1 I Sec. Ho ~ ~ n WESTCLIFF Mn. room, l)Ndel.e my 6 YI" of Wll UIJ..,.. coc:r Uo:;e;g ~-mo 318 A Santa YILUll Newport 8Hd\ So. 1275. tor de9n enipt. M. qutetnw. ,.,._ l'lrtt yrty ~ Production Co H!Qtl Qf'09I. xint a.Abel CM es1..e2l3 Hew 1 a 2 Bdrm luxury )700 16th Strff1 642.-.. Fri ..... Of Se1 wtthOUt ·-of~ ... Ing 4 IC1,...., .. tatlon laa llablll1y fotCM HA 2 be ttPt• in 14 ptMI. 1 Bdrm, ( 1 0 ) plumblng. or ..,..gerq danoer9 tor map fMt1.n ..,. NeQollm t.-ma . .,. La-.,. 2 ldrm and TowMOIT* ' owr l•"WljLJ!!! malntenenoe & moMNy fllm Muet be ettr.cttw, t1&-211S twntime ... amenn ... + • poote. taMla, .. ,.. 642-5113 [II 111.--peyment• on time ~greet~ a per-..---------= 1r,.:,>~~=--r.nt. pondl. Ou l*d. Ntwport Buch No. 751-5113. Iv mag enytlme eonanty Age r:nv 1&o29 ftttaat p6(5( frplio pm pauo From Sin ~rwy 880 I"'"" Avenut llTll • IT you kn<>w wn11 you want ~~:'~ ~ JnntultMI 4111 OltlWW X-IQ 1 lk on ~=.:, WM1 C: (at 16th) Wkly rema. 1125 l up 10 edvet11M but don I 729 wy lSth Stl'Mt. at• AHT1'U.688 Return t.'*91631 557-2841 McFadden to a..wtnd 64S 1104 Color TV. fNe coffM, know how to Uy It tit ul 2A C M (714) ... 2-30$0 118,000 12 mopey~. -VIII (714\A9)-5191 -heet9d POOi a ... to llelp W9'1·wtltten CllSSI· Fr1 May ttth 2 5f)m Of 250% MCUrad ~ ....... tt 11 wtll berlc, neigh Of .. , 80'· ,.. QOMn. Kltot1'1 avell. fled 1d1 wlll put vou 1n S•t Mey 19111 1~2P"I Asll tor Mite• 875°2885 hay. you c•n buy It Of Mii Want AO Help? UI things tpl with Dally 985 N Coat Hwy touch with th• 11gh1 11 In e1a11med 842-5678 642·5111 Piiot Want Ad• LllQUna BNctl, 41M-~ Ptoe>le 6•2-5678 C1e1s111e<1 Adi A(E 11-14 EARN lP TO $75.00 PER WEEK Wt 110W Nwt I~~ lo!~ Ul'fl bta"ftf\ to*'" rtlltln tor Tlw Or..-C4aS! 0aity Not 0..r (lttn start I t ) lQ P II Md , "°'' lfflU t lO P .. ~f\. Ort Saturda, wt i"°" a ... "'Ofl "°4ln Yo. .. Wll N"1 ~ lftd p!llft "°" •UI u rll!fll f°" O lllOftfT ' !Nft 11 ftO ~~ Of ~l!Ofl ""°'9'1111 " '°" l!t 111t~nt• plust tall • ( tf1 (714) 548-7058 ' • C8 Orange Coast DAILY PiLOT/Thuraday, May 17, 1984 ·~ ., ltlt Wu... 9111 Ian 1111, ...... tit, ..... --------- TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE Ill.II SOFA: beaut. -. MW Lancet ~·. bit '11, full iD tm T~ Hit Crown H•dwwe, 3101 e. e· royal bl.ue. Pd r.oe. Oltm ttll rfG, ttPO· •79 BMW 320!, Xlnl tt\ape •72'88fioNi m . 4 elf. Cat HWy. CdM. 113--2900 llELOCAT•ILE IUILDlllS 800 e mot ego. Alklno AV«Y 541·&728 alt 8. a/o, snr1. tm/fln tt....O euto. 1 owner. J(Jnt oono. a /obo Jotm 650-t4tl 1..l<Jo 14 w/boet OOll9f, C&M, CHla. owner. S7800/ 11479. 769-0222 =·~que!'l~p·2 FOR SILE On tofabtd 1150. ()Ilk lllf> avail. w/tnlller. ofr. 55&-l>353/867.e154 '73 4 door, ,.... u,., Ref'i. FfT. 790--9333 tbl9/chra, $200. &Mui. S750. 813-2362 clutch, good brak ... ACROSS 53 Addison s 1 Pigeon partner PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED sa... =:"-;~~:" .. ~1cJ:rn~ Marla• l!#t· Tiii ':J':~ ~~~~=·gf ~~:a ..UJ S&OOlobO. lllLI' em•..... lltwport •••• Clbll 5 pc oek BR Nt, :r HP ~ry.r.r ! hta. Liil llAll .. •Noexi>et neceeaaty $400. All •Int. ~2241 $350/obo. Ml-6215 VOLUMESAl.£8 ·~ftt: ~~c.LJ:.~ 'mi 6 Cheese 10 Summon 14 "-Din" 15 Assistant 16 Mountain pref 17 Ocean •movements 18 On the prowl 20 Gobs' mail drop 2 1 M ilt 23 Lubncant 24 Tender 25 Pay heed 26 AirQort area 30 Religious 56 Ship lie-up 57 Joined 60 Rancher 62 Suppose 64 Can prov 65 Warning word 66 Beauty shop 67 Miserly 68 Tosspots 69 Uncommonly DOWN 1 NCOs 2 Funny remark •Fun Job,..,, panty hOM Unifl1tl Sohool District Caraie laln t alat. seRvice& LEASING oonc1. tn54. ~114 ~°:etc ~u~r:..:th money I ltnlct 7120 3870 N. Cherry Ave. V• •AV9r.S1504200da11y Cetta Ina 1114 a;;, Q&int. lnt/90me ext. ( LOC~EAJ~o&) lftii~?~~~~:"'i' •P•lddally (714) 668-3217 758su.uki,2ble .. ws,c.-In eiteh•noe ror Ftllvtf!9 No. ·-·,• radtate.'cl:t~)'/~nt •Start today rMnt mixer, wheelbatfow aboard your boat In N.8. ~11•) 111-lllO & lnte<. St500, 973-t789 Call Jan. 971 ... 803 & mite. Fri & Sat 9_.. x-reta (d 19) E/440--0198 O~a~:J~t,1rom S8* ~====:::::::::i~~~~~ 2107 Pomona 548-7263 '98 Bug, n.w ~ $1000. ~ OD IOIEY • EST ATE SALE Type ltema: ua.11¥111 786-93 wO Furn· china· clothea· we ci..n your boat bot-STERLlll llW '70 Conv, vetY clean, rebtt 11200 11fM rugs' flte cablMte· tools' tom and repiace links at eng eee to appreciate . .. ,wn::=:.... DATA SAFE FOR SILE hardware; spo~te i. your•llP 84&-0792 IRUl-1-WIYI S39Soobo72M742 • SO..S3% commT..ion, on· DIEBOLD marine equtp~tB and SU~ I Dtck1 70U Where elae can J.ou '11 fa.-a-much more. 2....., akw. ..,_., going reelduet1 each CM Fri/Sat 8-4pm 25 t. Boat Sllp. C«lle< puroh ... or ..... • EW Orig ownr, nu 81'19· ex.It month. Good future, fast · Tie. Watw, Elec, Storege, 1i84 BMW & receive a cond. $2775. 840...()800, growing company. Room Fire Refill 3 hHn l ID 1 ft Garage Sale Fri/Sat. 378 $250. mo. Call 640-5335 1rtp for 2 all for tile """' 553-0380 eves tor e d van cement . JI. ' 0 ' ' Avocado St. In tile baolt. •• price? Tour N•P• Valley's I==-:::---==:--:==-= Im mediate opening•. Bike•. booka, clothe•. l1UM1r•1 70.. flneat vineyard '72 Super Beetle, •m/fm groups 34 In a circle 35 Rall units 37 Illuminated 38 Military act 39 Degree 3 Take apart 4 Space - 5 Woodw1ncl 6 Less onerous 7 Mortbund 25 Hair locale 26 Antilles native 45 Sherry type 47 Canea native 49 Does artwork S 1 Lacks CaJt Mr. Ray at 9'11-4803. l1wport l1s1 dllh•. Vk'1rOla, etc. Board w/ 2 Sails Maat i -STERLING VINEYARDS -caas. ens, g°:'. ·~i~ Sates Unified Sohool District NBPD Aux.tllsl•ry 12th An-Dager. $250. 650-4~86 a~<!.,~ F!m~~J~ obo. 2~1~r TELEllARIETlll nuat Sale. at. S-4. You li~cltt IOl2 Hoose all FREE when you • vw POP TOP name II we've got Ill 73 -one 27 Speak bom· Survey proapectlve cue-Bargain, prices. 1194 UliJanl Super Serapll 10 buy or leUe a new BWM Look• good. runa. $1500 bast1cally 28 Racket 53 Con game 54 F1ct1on tomers for largest an-(l 14) 568 3217 Boise way (N of FalrvleW apd mint cond. 23--24", from us. PLUSI Alk u• or beat offer. 845-5175 &We<lng service In Or-• ) 5 ,. "292 ap~a1·-.. $900+ $550 about'Our FREE premium l==-::::-:-:-:-:---:-::77;;:.-;;-:::-::- 41 Speck 42 Possessive 43•Leak out 44 Calm down 46 Tree B Dentists gp 9 Join lorces 10 Stick 11 Cantata song 12 Telephoto. 29 Flower stalk 31 Fabric 55 Ms Kett 56 K1n<l ot suit 57 Uncontrolle<l 58 Chemical ange County. Full time/ & Pautartno · 4...-v Ev;~ ~96l 1. ' · with every test drive. '77 Rabbit, AM/FM CAN, part time positions avalt· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Baat leack 140 Some reetrlctlons do snrl, very clean, 4-apd, able. Salary + com--:• Schwinn 10 apd, xtnt. apply on BMW Break-a-$2550. 546-3595 mlsstcm. Located by Or-Help Waatt4 5100 "-1 5510 Clothlng.glrlscanopybed, $79.95. 842-9333 Way. Promotion expires . W eff"' 48 Burial place 50 Torn place 52 In a frenzy eg 13 Odeon box 19 Stupid 22 Walk wearily 24 Move swiftly 32 Tenth part 33 Beet source 36 Summary 40 T ranqu1llty 41 Taunt end mg 59 Turn down 61 Farm sound 63 Cushion _ _.________ .,"II upright piano, misc. 83'42 5-31 84 79 V camper van, r ... =~ri. ~:~~~~~~·For SEC'Y/OFFICE llllR Pomeranian pup, ma with Alvarado. Sat only 8·4 Ntttr liktt 1016 -llG ~~~10~1J;~55i;"· Trainee position open, papers. S350. 675-159" Huge Garage Sate, Puch moped M-K II Sprt, STERLI SANDWICH SHOP Irvine. somebookkeeplngexper Poodle Pups.T/cup,Toy & 18-19·20th. Moving. exttcondS27554&-8898 80 Rabbit. Luxl D.Cuat p/llme. Counter help, call needed High school Min. $250.& up 546-2848 everything goes, antique II t I / IJMW$ In/ext. SIR. Nu eng. Ell 43 Outer cover 955-1247 & 971•1739 graduate Send resume clocks & other antiques, 0 orcyc ti cond. $3900. 558-i780 SICRnHY/P/T to: Sancon Engineering, SOhCALIF~~TRAt~l~G 40 yr collectlon.112 8th kMttn 1011 _ .81 RABBIT CONVER1 2 3 4 5 7 8 9 11 12 13 14 17 20 38 42 46 60 64 67 18410 Bandltler Circle. tn ome 0 ence .ran· St Hunt Be a c h · '77 YAMAHA RD 400. Overaeu Oellvery Auto. )(Int oond. $8100. 1~1~ml ~~ec!tln~/seal+est:~~ Ftn Valley CA 92708 ~~~· Rea~j,[~':;~3~58~ OH 536·3932 Total rblt eng. Great cond. Speclatlsts 380-0233 Et Toro s mon I It L 11 $750 OBO 97~8208 1540 Jamboree Road NB mosphere. Typing, flllng. SEG'Y /llEOErT. L' L 5530 t~rt IC• Adjacentto Fashion · 82 Black Sclrocco. must be organized Publlahlng group In Irvine lYtltOCa 1861Port Margate. Sat '79 H/Oavldson Spartster. Island/Newport Center $6500/flrm. Orto ownet, mature n-smkr 645·3633 seeks bright. energetic For lease, Welsh pany, only 8:30AM. Many LO ml, xlnt, orig onr ..0-IW sunroof, clean 846-3823 SUllSTllESS sell-starter. Requires $45/mo. Boarded In SA household Items. $2800/obO 6'46-3823 60·70wpm typing, prof. Hghls. 675-7651 aft 6PM .81 HONDA 250 E.xper tor drapery workrm appearance. strong com-•-i I O MOVING SALE. Our Loss THREE WHEELER Costa Mesa 650-2800 munlcaJlon skllls, short· Alll f.ltl Your Gain. Q/sz sofa, 650_.593 hand a plus. Salary oom-191 dlatlonaJ Cash Regis-love aeat, chrome rock· SOllSTIESS l /F mensurate w/exper. Ell-ter. alee. br841. rebll, Ing chr. oak din. table, 8 ""'83..,....X..,.,R2~00.,,.R=--r1'""d:-:d-•n--=-5....,.h-rs-. Exper In canvas products c e It en t be nett Is mint cond, hu stand. chrs, amok/glass chrome Lie. for street. S 1900 ln-nec MILLER MARINE, 660·1396 Best offer. 759-0608 din. table. W/Dryr. BBQ. vested, take $1300 631·2931 (8·4:30) T/bed, stero, etc. Wiii 646--6791 EClln&RY s•ACI llR auw FIOTTll presale S1 ·S150 Sal. ~---=----ar.;;a s Racquet Ball World In 646-3896 19th 8-3 2000 Port Noter a.... 10 2·3 years secretarial ex-Fountain Valley haa a 28 Oak dining table, 4'x4', to Ramsgate 760-1428 MOTOR HOME WANTED perlence (all phuea) r&-hour a week position 1o· $'450 6 Oak chairs Boattkol• Prtvate party pays calh. quired. Director 01 0.. avallable Muat be 18 $125. 1913 player piano ,. __ ,a ll.212 7l'4/761-9350 sign & Construction & years. Flexible schedule. $5000 968-4182 .... , • A St i / Equipment & Design De-Mrs. Hayes: 962-1374 Leaving Country must seUt llO rY CH partment of restaurant iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliJ AHliHCH &011 All contents, appllances Parts 9015 ~;~~~~~:h~~~~~~t~r STUDENTS Amana, SIS, lcemkr, gold, & furn_ Cash only. 2 Dodge van seats, btk. Restaurant construction nu comp. $550. 650-7452 494-1298 $20 ea. '63 TR4 dra. ellperlence helptuL Exoet-In YOIR 0 s 1 Jntlrw 214 hoods & convert top; '68 affer/ at er gu range, :i Ford auto trans & HSS lent medical/dental Sllllllll .1011 IOWll dbl oven, harvest gold. 1/4 ct, very tine quallty. torque conv, fits 1800 pacl~~!IE DOlm We have openings for Sear's best gas range. Retell prloe $810, sell for eng, b9th rebll. $50- .... boys & gtrls between brown. atatniess steel $400 Allen 650-6996 $1SO. 848-7942 llHT&IHIT SEllYICH 12·16 years otd working hood. Both exit cond, --------....,... 260t Daimler St. evenings & Saturdays $100 ea. 646-4281 20 Cts of assorted rough '71 VEGA AUTO PARTS(lt · EMERALDS.ONLY S 100, ) S5 •500 548 "'•25 Santa Ana 250-5750 Earn money, tripe & GE Refrlg. whl, tO cu tt . Call 640-8688 runs .... ..,.. · bonuses. Call s75. COM. 673•7 .. 29 316 Magnolia, C.M. Secretary Mr Rountree ~Et MAN Bar Scene. CAMPER SHELL * 3 28 ONLY 5000 Ml, LIKE NEWI All pawer. cruise. T top, plallnum ext. Unde< war- ranty. S16,000. 662-0tJ75 '84 new 300ZX 2'1\ wlT- tops & every option. No -"---::::== dwn. take over monthly payments 499-1604 ••••• 1125 175 dlVic: gOOd cond, am/fm C81198tte ste<eo. $t500. 6"2-9612 '81 CIVIC 1500DX: 5 spd, ate, '43K,' JC1nt cond, ortg. owner $5000. 646--5379 11111 •un&'S SOUTH COUITY YOLllWllEI .. WEWILLllT IE lllElllOLI" BtlJ Waatt4 5100 BelJ Waale4 lOGTI PlYUU IEO'Y IU· 1011 I Ill lPPLWICU .-ooTS SHORE'1/artl1t Datsun King Cab. llke new ----------il----------+---------:1 Aggresstve Newport Mon.-Frl. lOam...Jpm LES 957-8133 proof retell $7700+ $200. 846--0681 5100 BelJ Waatei 5100 ::~;~,e~~~~o~c=: Refrlg, 17' froat·free $175. OFFER. Eves 675-9837 Aattl Wulff 9020 lllE loltll&'S SOUTH COUITY ISUZU "WEWIUMT IEHIHSIU Volume Sales, Service And Leasing 18711 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach Loving Christian Mom to models babysit two children. E IOT IUS Costa Mesa 895-3484 Modflls needed. male evea, 993·601 1 pref' d tor past card com· pany. 213-592-3113 IHllllH .... , ,,., ... Call btwn 8 & 4:30. NANNY wanted: Brit. or 631-1770. Costa Mesa. lrlati trained for girts ages MAIDS & LNDRY PER· _4_&_6_. _1n_q_u_1re_75_2_-_o_7oo_ SONNEL, apply In per. son Best Western Marina tnn, 34902 Del Obispo. Dana Point IWmUICE NEWPORT DUNES Between the Newponer Inn & Pacific Coast Hwy, on Jamboree Typists. Groc-ery Store Clerk. General Office, Liie· guards. Security. Boat Rental Stand, Gate Ten· RECEPTIONIST, front Payable Secretary. using Switchboard Operators. Apt si. $140_ 650-7452 ROLEX PRESIDENT. bark -----"""""""""..,...-- desk Phones & cterlcal 10 key. dlctaphone. Full & PIT positions: Exp. Single door refrig. Great finish, 2 xlra lengths. S DASI TlllY S work. CM area. Apply In strong typing skllls. Call helpful will train right h 585 6'46-1743 $8700 retall, make oner. tor vehicle. 551 -8285 person. Auto Lines Leas· Rich· 975-0299 person'. &42·3013 5 ape. · Eves 675-9837 Ing. 2927 S. Bristol. CM. Used Retrlg's S 100-$400 Jli 11 ll.21 966-5252 SEC'Y /IHHHPH TUCllEll'l AllE All stzes Also buy refrlg ICt UMll • RECEPTIO•IST 3 years experlenoe re-trvtne pre--school, full time Anderson Appl. 841 West 3 lrg plate glass windows quired Secretariat. Call 786-7494. weekdays 19th St C M 646-5538 S50. 494-8351 lor executive suites. Very glamourous pasltlon. Ex- cellent starting salary. No pt\Ones. tight book · TELHOIE SALES P/T Westinghouse side by AMWA.Y PRODUCTS kee~l~~;~1~i'b~~· Newport Beach Real Es-side, auto lce-mkr. white. 35-50% ott, flnal month. typing required Please --------- apply In person 8 30·5 at SEGRnARY (EXEC.) Callfornla Executive Office of the President Center. 19762 MacArthur Corp. headquarters tor Blvd Irvine (In Center R.E. Investment firm has Pointe. corner ot Mac-an xlnl career oppty In an Arthur & Jamboree) extremely last-paced en- tate Development firm $350/obo, 673-8530 Ask tor Bob 979-7619 has opening tor enthus· Caatrll l lastlc motivated lndlvld· r.. · t 6016 LLADRO Private Collec· ual for telephone can-~aap•t• tlon. below retaJI. F01 vass1ng 4 hrs per day •CAIEU SWAP IEn appl Mon-Sat 836--0105 Mon-Fri $5 hr· Bonus SUN MAY 20 10am-3pm --------• Contact Leslie 975-0299 ADMISSiON S2 Mary Kay consultant, WEllY CLEA• CARS &ID TlllOll CO...MELL CHEVROLET !)Oo; 11.trhor Bl\ d 1 ·, "'T .\ \1 t:s ' 546-1200 WEiil Volume Salea. Service And Leasing 18711 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach (l 14) 142-2000 lerct4n lta1 145 (l 14) 142-2000 Super clean. Super Beatie '71. New Int, ext & clutch, strong eng. totally stock 760-8511 WE CARE ....... ~ BILL YATES vw.PORSCHE ..... 111.lu,in I ·'I"'' r ·'"" 837·4800493·4S11 172 25oc. dark brown Vtlft tl 75 w/sn/rl, ~ clean. 55K ortg ml. $6500 llrm. ·67 VOLVO STATION Supervision, mu11 be high- ly exper'd. salary nego- 11 able, must speak Spanish. Send resume with salary history to: oer. Maintenance Apply RECEPTIOllST at NEWPORT DUNES Country Club In Newport vironment. with diversity & challenge Musi pos- sess top notch SH, typlng & organlzatlonal skills Non/smoker Send re- sume to TMI. 6 Upper Newpan Plaza, Newport Beach. CA 92660. attn· Karin Shurson No calls. please. TEUPllOIE SlLU Brookhurst Center, 2271 going out of business for MA.DD Benefit Show W Crescent. Anaheim. 40-50'1. off Sat 10-3PM USED CARS & TRUCKS COME IN OR CALL FOR 805-965-&412 WAGON. GD CONO .. $1000, can 759-1803 PO Box 5318 Newpart Bea.ch. CA 92662 Nursing CHT. HllSEI lJIES llAIHH Positions open. full & part THE DAILY PILOT is now lime N~~~~~~ VILLA, accepting ap~lcattons _______ _ tor OistrlCI Manage<s to OFFICE MANAGER Beach seel<s lull time re- cep 11 on I st Must be articulate, cheerful and professional Ability to handle switchboard and excel typing skllls are es· sentlal. Call 644-5404 supervise newspaper tor 2 person advertising iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil carrier$. Must have van. sales office. Typing 50 RECEPT./SEC'Y SEGllnUY /WO. wagop or pick-up. Good wpm, organized, self salary, mileage allow· motivated Call between Immediate opening lor el!-to wQlk tor non-profit or· ance, company benefits 9-12 PM, 955-0300 perlenoed, well-groomed ganfMllon Must have ex· and bOnus oppartunlty. Aak for Laura & personable reception-cellent}skllls. Good ben- Appty In person at Dally SALES tst In yacht sates office. ef111. working conditions. Piiot Clrculallon Ottloe Olympic Challenge ,84 Let Musi type accurately, office rioura. 979-7900 330 West Bay, Costa th 1 1 eii Be have good references. ---------Meaa Monday thru Fri· e spec ace n a Non/smoker. Hours. Secretary office manager d N. h call sales rep for U. Olym· Tu•• Sat 9 5 30 Catt It NB ffloe ay. op one s. pie Comm 541-5453 or .,.,,..-. -I/lime, sma o , E.O.E. 554-7881 Mr Crockel1 DeAnn Burke. 642-5735. typing. llllng, records. good phone skills & or- ganization. 95 7 -3046 Mechanic Supervisor PART TIME. On call per- Martne engine shop. NB son tor clerlcel sales pos- locetlon Experience re· llton In CdM $5/hour. quired Apply In person. Cherie 760-1822 2431 W. Coaat Hwy NB. , ••••••••• .EOUllC Wl.'E. PART-TIME, Varied hovrs to Include early A M REST&UR&IT Accepting apptlcatlons tor all types of personnel: EL RANCHtTO. 409 28th St .. Newport Beach RESTAURANT F/p time. counter & kitchen Must speak engllsh start $3 75 George 432·0677 SECRETARY /OFFC MGR FIT tor San Clemente Church into 492-3401 SECRETARY On perm. PI T basts. 50wpm typing, gen·1 Of· lice duties In nice C M location Joe 556-0070 C.M location $4 & up (So 01 #5 Fwy at 531 Pierpont, C.M Brookhurst off ramp). Part/time day, evening INFO· 786-6644 NEIMAN Bar Scene. No experience nee 'TOOTS SHORE's/arust 754-1941 Co•11ttn 6011 proof retall $7700+ TELEPHOIE WOH APP[E Ire COMPUTE A OFFER Eves 675-9837 Up to $10 hour Appl. set· SYSTEM 128K, 2 drives, New birch din tbt w/4 arm ters tor sales crew. Salary CP/M. monitor, Internal chrs/ciJSIWenS $250 New + bonus. 957-30'46 modem. Okldata printer apt trig $75 Used Ille flx- TRUCI DRIVER $1985 662·3661 tures $25 ea. Teak con F y 6022 tbl $25 BookcaM $25. Familiar with L.A Area rff lo ta Vacuum $10 '72 MBZ 250 Call 549· 1157 1 yr old dog, male. EXoel· make offer 675-5182 lent w/chlldren. nds 1---------,--nPIST larger yard. 786-3822 One Way Plane Ticket for sale. From John Wayne FllH lPPUIUL Cormler·DeLlllo CIEYHLn 18211 BEACH BL VD HUNTINGTON BEACH 1•1 -101111•1-aaa1 WE WAIT Yllll DLUI 1111 DAiii Ronald Dace Position lmmedtately Fluffy blk 2 yr old cat alrPort to Boston. Mass. available in a market re-needs home. Spayed July 13. $275. 898-5660 l.lilliiiiillllilllliliWlliii.W~liill search firm Typing re-Caroline 675-1871 quired 60 wpm. Call Mar-Quality + gray carpet, S,.rt1, lace, Jorie Adams for appt FREE KITIENS to gOOd almost new. 34 sq yds, IHI 9025 546•3814 hOme Long hair. Two $100 6"4-6952 673-8559 •75 CAN A•• 250 Tabbys 720-5330 Chris m WAITRESS/WAITER will Trash compactor $100. RUNS GOOD train P/ltme-days, over M 1 yr Siberian Husky Obie bed $75 King az 650-4593 18 Call 2-5pm, 548-7948 Needs big yard & lovtng bed $75. 548-3043 lamlly 960-7197 4 W\ffl DriTtl 90 Warehouseperson driving United Air 'it fare coupon, truck & forklltt Mfg war&-SHERRY'S POODLES good thru 5131 S 100 '72 CJS 4 wheeldrlve V6. house. Carbon Industry Poodle free to a good Male only 673-9339 tow bar, no chains, Santa Ana 55.8-3921 , home. 546-2848 WANTED Baby's wicker $2700. 646-6791 call PM Cheryl Farailart 025 changing t able and ·74 Toyota Landcrulser Outboard repair shop. Re-weekends Muat have d&- palr Evlnrude. Johnson. pendable vehicle \small Yamaha motors Must truck. van. station have yrs exper . In fteld wagon) to aaslst news- Appty at Schock Boats paper dealer tn Irvine 2900 Lafayette St. NB area. Musi be depen- restaurants Bartenders, FIT & PIT Short order cook tor lunches Apply In person. 1670 Old Newport Rd, CM, ask for Cecelia WDP/TYPIST·Ad Agency Antique 4§11 md oak tbl/4 mother's wooden rocking Rebll Chevy 327 engine, HCRn&RY /HCEPT. seeks WOP operator chrs $400 646•3508 chair. not upholstered $2500. 675-8186 for a public waste water w/excellent slolla for fast · Fair condition on both T k 9035 Medlcal dabte Contact Greg •••aST/SrcRnARY Hyde Monday thru Friday ... 11; between 9 30 snd 10.30 N B office. Reedy July I a.m. only 642-4321 Temp. FIT, 4 daystweek llil••••lll••••• Front office sl<llls a must Exp only Send resume· PEllSO• FRIDAY agency located In Dana pace copy desk Con-Beaut. shellback sofa & 241-0685 atl 6PM RC I Point Excellent typing & sider training uper toveseat, earthlones, xlnt fli r . I '68 Ford pickup wlaheli, clerical skills required typist w/70· wpm skllla cond. $'425. 998-9338 ct araalart Runs great. S 1400 obo. Knowledge of purchase Call 250-4100. after 2pm. Estate Settlement. Lo 8'aipatal 6226 642·2814 order procedures Start-- -Retall Ing salary s12051mo -WOlll PROCESSOR prices on sofas, cot tbl, Sharp Copier 2 yrs old. lk llllT TUllEES 496-1786 EOE Position lmmedtately lamps, dishes & small new for rent or sett $650 '72 280SE 4.5: btkl blk, -=----:::----:----sunroof, pollsh alloys, Allot, Dtatttic S8000/obo. 675-0921 ·77 450SL. 1 ownr. brown. lllC 9305 mint, 67K ml, S25,000. '69 Rambler, xlnt cond . Days 645-4159 $750/obO. 759-1803 '78 450SEL. eunrool. al· :---:-, -:------r:.-r:;;; 1oys. leather, lo ml. laack I 7 s18.500 obo. 542.1866 'll lllZ ao sn '78 MB 450SL Orig ownr 42,000 MILES. all extratl 31 ,000 ml. LOADED. Beat Otter over $20K MINT CONDITION (714) 496-2336 _67_3_-2_4_44_or_9_79_-0_11_0 __ '60 SKYLARK 2 dr eport 'll llZ .ao IEL 42,000 MILES, all aJCtraat Best Offer over $20K (714)496-2336 coupe, V6, auto, ale $4200. 493-7430 Cuillac 1309 'll C4Y 12111/tlM Good cond. 548-3043 '79 MBZ 300D: wl'llte, blue Int, sunrl. 45K ml, mint cond PI P 673-5613 • -=7-:-6-:C=-pe-d...,..e--:-:V""lll-e.-6=c1""K,...-m7"1, '81 360S°LC· snrl alloys sharp aa a tack. $2975, champagn~ w/p~I. leath2 Newport II. 842-0795, er S3S.SOO 642•7866 eves 548-8823 'IDELHUH Fully loaded, leahter up. hols, orig ownr, lo ml. ---@--=,....-----'78 Sevllle. IM, Jtlnl cond, lo ml. fully equp'd, lthr, $8100/obo. 786-2359 WORLDS LARGEST MERCEDES BENZ DEALER '84 MERCEDES BENZ Excellent Selectton JtMSLEMONS IMPORTS 1301 Ou ell St Npt Bch 833-9300 $12,000. 831-9968 '8 1 El Dorado. beaut. Dove gry thruout, xlnl cond., 45K mt, $12,950. No trades. Call 760-8702 Ad 11124, Dally Pilot. Bo>e Part/time. 3 dayi/wk 1560, c M 92626 1_4pm c M 550.1110 Sllrs OlrRIS avallable In a market re-Items 646-7394 N Danlord 556-9210 11; 11; Secretary Seek ing -TOP SSS PAID Retail record. tape, & motivate<J indlvlduat with search firm tor a pro-H U.D.D.L.E children's PilDOI Or IDI '76 Ford Ranchero. good shape, auto, ale, new eng & trans. stereo. pa, pb $3500 obo. 8'42-62&4 NABERS CADILLAC~ \lldeo sales Full & part )(int typing skills. heavy ductlon typist S. coordl· lurnllure, 2 sets. Bed.1 .... --.11o-..., ___ 1"'1"!'2 '82 Toyota longbed, great F P pared IEllCll OOLUCTIOll PlllRlllCY GURl time Advancement PO· phones, contact with nator Experience neces-dresser, desk. l)ull ano FR~~ti8 8 ro~ t shape, must sell. $4950 llERoOr EalmES IEIZ LARGEST SELECTION PIT. tor larg~ NB practice Full/time, 10, Costa Mesa I tent lat Wiil trs1n Apply In Contractors 549•2988 sary In the operation of board. chr $550 bOth or mo. essons ren · 786-9330 of late model, tow mileage Exper req d Send re-pharmacy Should 1'18ve person. word processing equip-$300 ea set 673-5361 Call tor details 960· l 155 VIII Top Merced" Prleet Paid Cadlllaca In Southern sume to Dally Piiot, Ad several years ex"""r1en'8 llUSIC PLUS SECRETARY ment Typmg required 65 TV ldio Oall P,..1r/R1l Callforntal See us today! #824, PO Box 1560 "'v wpm & ability lo handle 1 llY FIHJTlllE J. 1 1§86 f ord ¢350 1 Ton. •• 1.410 1880 Costa Mesa CA 92626 Please call lor appt 2407S Brtstot.Santa Ana I strict production sched-LES 957-8133 lltrH 6232 35 1 VS Automatic DIAL2t31714MERC DES • • _M_ed_I_ I . 546-8770 Mr Herring I 13932 Goldenweat. West The Costa Meso ottloe ol 1 ule Medical benefits Call K lnszd Water bed ,9 .. SYLVANIA TV 63 1-0401 HOUSE OF IMPORTS. tnc 2800 Harbor Blvd. ca OAIOC very e)lp retiree n&J .-alr_S_ Great Western Savings la Maqorie Adams tor appt pa3oed rails heavv duty Very sllghlly used $150 Ptnckt 157 COSTA MESA Front & Back Ottlce e•-ok On-call insp In your R L-11; : currently seeking a Sec· 546 381 4 I ., 650 4646 '83 GMC Jimmy, 11K ml. ""ft~~""~~~~~ perlenced FtT 997•4961 area Resume lntertek, Experienced f /T & PIT retary tor general office • pedestalSl60 960-2780 • all opts, tan, llke nu. '72farga911 .robltmotor, Cktntllt I l Models Male/Female 930 Indian Park Rolling For perm&°'"' positions duties typing corres· Xtnl opportunity for llve-lnl I f .--, S I Power Boatl 7012 $11,000 Dys 645-41 59 new Urea. bra, car cover, 172Vega,runsg00d.ifi!5 Hiiis. CA 90274 with the HUDDLE team pondence. report• & con· hou;i~:pe; ~It~ l~m:~y Ill 1'°11"1"1' I I 1,: Bos1on whaler •1t1' .. t1, eotor green, muoh more. 642-9035 WE NEED NEW FACES I Apply In person or call lor tracts procentng In-on a a s 8'1 e s • 2500 HP Johnson " Hl 855-0276 Wl841-5629 --------- For placement In modellngl Hll HT&TE LIOHSH more Info 556• 7770 v 01 Ge' answer t n g ; 1 eq 11 673-8104 _ SSOS Save soy. & T~~e on new 52250 673_4728 Cl111lc1 9045 .74 Porche 9l l xlnt cond .. 7'X9tVn•t tconWhd,redMuln,tt.~~l.ded jobs In Orange County Fascinating and special· South Coast Vltl•ge phones and distributing " top quallly ..,..... sets all 1 t ...., •rwYllllWHT 1zed profession Full or SALES mall ~~""--!'!~'!'"--'I'-'!"'!"' fullyguar.Nol 2ndao;re-11· BOSTON WHALER 11HZIUllllLHI teavtno for ecnoo2mua $10K651-7358/556-97t0 n• part l ime Training 1 HlmalayanKlttens·lovable builts Twin aet. Juel w/lraller $1500 1957 IPtllrT tell$9950. 759-80 5 j T1lt1tl1HIJ provided Whitworth 1811 over (2 13)325-3386 The qualified candidate ballof lur.Sealpolnt,CFA $69 95. All sizes avall SOUTH COAST, good Only16,000actualml,..& '799118CTarga,34M mt, Q~ltr I lS l•l·llll Hotel/Motel Brok era. Sales should be able to type 55 reg. 8 wks Males $200 FrM (lettvery 534·5080 cond $4500. 645-6559 Mint Condition. Optlonl very cleen, $23.000. Oya 187Fmpertaf le Baron lln. -3026 w Coast Hwy NB wpm, 60 wpm shorthand. Females $250 646-8132 - -Include. Recaro aeate & 863-1652. evea 840--01&3 68K ml, orig palnttlntr. Want Aels C.all 642-_5678 1 92663 714-6-45·3962 It Yt1r hi 11111 and know 10 key D SSlO Oueen Size sofa sleeper 18' Sunray 1978, 115 H.P. Bt kt St MUST Can be collector'a Item l OJI SSO 5'48·7985 Johnson, refurbished S;~ftu'39."9?cau Mr. '00 924 turbo. red, fully S 1475, Newporter 11: Daily Pilot .PART TIME 'lotor Hou t•· \,nilnhlt• '··~port fl4•arh n r•·a. lhrN• hour ... p1·r tlu\ .... c.i ru uppro\. ... hOO p..r month. c <.t ll I I ~00 to i :OO P\1 . \.,.k for BnH't' t-.m ... f1•\. c. ·1 H< ·u 1 .1\ rrc >N OFJ 1T EOE 0 RAN C:. ( I (It'\ S T 0 All Y f' ll 0 I " ,., .f farmers Ina Group wtll furnish 1rs1n1ng & the op- portunity to earn Income 8 gain axper In the Ins bus r>elore leaving your preMnt job Outstanding 1 oppty tor people looklnQ lo lhe Mure F" ARMERS INS GROUP 963-45t8 SALIS Carpet and DrePtWY 81(· penenoe neoeasary tn Oesign Center 8nd Retell Sales Salary t llboral commtHlon Santa Ana 558·3i21 MIChelle It you have at le&ll 2 years secretMlal e1Cper1ence with the ablllty to com- mun1c11to orally and In writing. then we can offe< you the t>eneflts •nd r• ward• from an Industry Jeadtt 111<e Gr&et weet- ern Ple11M call Richard at (lU) lH·•lH 3?00 Partt CMter 0t1v@ Suite :>70 Co4ta Mesa. CA 92626 QllE&T WESTERN SAVlllS SALES CIOaera 150.000 • • Comm1111on In hom9 !'Xpftr • PIUI gO<>d work habtta. no competition Equ1tl Oppty Employer • 1 company 1n 11etd MlrH~ I Ou•llfl'ld lttacls drew I training 385 1>35 K1•f'I• lhl' '"'"' .. f1rtl'I t11Ht1 I I '"<l 11.,-; wontM f 11! V"U' /I II ... 1 '' r,,., r• • ur.-' 11""'' .. it '"'";' t v ltmlo. I 1 ,,,,,.,, itdllil I '°',..II t•I '" J ,,,.,f1rirJ 'I"'~"' 1t11f'\Q r.o17 •,i, 'A r, 1 ~ r ·p Y I Pit Bull T~r•-· $4750 WHt trade tor Lido equipped, xlnt cond .. lo ... 2-o7n 5 --., ... 8•23 ... mer can "'""· W3tnu1 dining rm table, 14 •cash 675-3l56 Ktrk •t 714-~5828 ml. Bank of Newport -• .... _._,.. 0 1 yr PIP8f'S AKC $300 48' round. expands to -L t C e n I e r ....... t ff 673 2423 '7 2 B •attl l•p!rt ea 1 7n '1 "' . II .,_ o er -96" oblong. compt w/4 oaton Wha l er " _ 60-8000 1.;;.;~-~~~~~~~ .. ustratl•n Shep fe pup, 12' 1 .. v.1 & tull table Outrage w/4 whl trlr, 135 NtJ 11111 •NIT warm, loving protecUon pads $250 Kg ll Bdr set, vlnrude. VH radio, ..,, ,_.. ,..,.,., ,._, "' ... E F Aa•l 11 .. ~l~1~1 ~l 2 d•r. ~-.. 10. ----. -----. Guar S200 752 7150 7 pea, hdbrd. 2 nlte depth gage, exit cond 178 5600. Sunroof. Xii 6 .l'iadow.t no denta. Runs good eu11'lds 76" 9·d•r $10,000. 673·7161 afl5 tras Xlnt Condition. cond, bledtlaitv9r. low HOO. 7l4-At-6670 Cocker Spaniel pups, dreuer. two 22)(48" mlr----------..... 000 842.e48' AKC. beaut 6 W'< olds. rors & 36"x75" high HISll 11 Eltttrlo 631-0401 ml..,..,, · 1a It $200 984·2804 menurmolre 11500 Obi Loaded w/extras Aaktno '81 4000. Blk. Loaded •I • n 11 7 172 eUTCXss: dAi!Xt u b4td w/bran hdbrd. $9500. call 645·68l2 Extra•. Xtnt Cond. Mu-1 13 a.a WGN. a ;a. idk SHAPE $1400 °' be9t Pit Bull pupa PR l'iJOll - tered UKC S 100 S 150 t-r~5~27" i USE THE DAIL y PILOT I ''FAST RESULT" SERVICE DIRECTORY ~ ••r 1(1 •-..ull ~ I \ I• 1 • I .1 l I mattre11. box aprng, bed Wel-lcratt 248 Sp0<11man See $&900 ob 536-3994 ml. 6yrunllmltedml war-otr. 082-07371M$-3~t fr11me 1111 S 150 52" row hra. ready 10 flahi 1-l ranty pet'I oond. Mu11 p t w&lnut dr1111er & 957062011ve1 & wlendt ,.,. .. .-."._ ______ HU i1b00 &'42·7214 '"iliniiiiiiiiiolt...p...,...,.~,...-- 4 1 "1129" matchtno mtr ··~~ w.!lll~~~~nr:ri:z:"" ''77 Poni Ventura v8 ror. both S 100 Glau.cof-ltata, Sail 7014 2 door ope, full eqp\. , .. table 48"x24" ob 1 t'7" kite 20· mut 1mrnu 44k mt l2tOO tong, 1,1,' thick gtaaa. gOld great starter boe1 Seo() ' SaJM.~Lealng BARGAIN II 720-0295 baN $300 Parson .table 650-4"' .. 6 ._.a.I=• &o"K 18". blue, 26" hi, ""' ....,. only S50 2 111~rn hang· 'ieo fr RangtH Out· 11,..,.11 fJ Ing tamp1 10 ae 2 bOard 3 Salls Muet Se41 E1tcellent s.i.ctlon or New ceramic lamps 44', S7499pp846·i148 andCa,..fullyptepeTed blu/wl'lt S40 u Btg Ce· Hobi. 14 with cu1t01T1 2-UMCI BMW-1 al'Ml}'9 In nyon Country Club ar_.. boat traJlet l(fnl cond Stodl r.,.11 5-40-t828 Sl>OOlobo 240·8093 111·1111 Wenr "a t-1elP" r.,.;i "t61" luer ·10 oooa cono S700 87:'·5381 208 w 1st. Sant• An11 CloMd Sundey Tn l'L11·1· \ 11u1 ...... t th' .. 1111 ~C'n 11 ,, P 1r••1 l••n ail (' tll '\ow 642-56 78 "' 714·38S-1919 s. .... ~ ....... tlo1f.t Sheo en ""•l'l'llM• \ caum 1111111 THURSDAY . MA Y 11 1fl84 OHAN(1f C OUN l Y C A I IF OHNIA ;', t,f r-~ T' San On of re hit with $1A M fine NRC levies fine for 13-day shut down response. The NRC said two spray valves inside the plant's Unit 3 reactor building. were closed from March 4 to March 17 because of improper valve aHgnments. of safety equipment during March tests __ By ANDREA ADELSON OftheO.-, ........ The Nuclear Regulatory Com- mission has proposed iu largest fine ever in California,$•/• million, against the operators of the San Onofre ouclear power plant for shutting down safety equipment used in the Coast A Newport Beach couple Is Irked by city's theater sign that vlolates New- port's own sign ordi- nance./ Al :-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·: California Comic Andy Kaufman, who never smoked, died of lung cancer at the age of36./A7 :::::::::::::::::::.:=:·:=:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· Nation President Reagan will get his MX missiles, but only half of what he wanted - and with strings at- tached./ A& World Soviet Jews hold a dem- onstration at a theater as health of dissident Sakharov deteriorates. /A7 The notion of U.S. air support over Persian Gulf has been discussed, but not acted upon./ A7 Living Jan Taylor's handicap Isn't her only distinction; now she's a Phi Beta Kappa grad ./81 What precautions do health professionals take when they treat AIDS vlctims?/81 New treatments and de- vices help high-risk preg- nancies and premature babies./82 ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· Sports It's been an overall team effort that has helped the Edison High baseball team, which opens CIF action Friday./C1. The Angels are stifled by Baltimore's Mike Bod- d icker In losing, 5-0./C1. ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· Entertainment The student-faculty musi- cal" Audition" opens to- night at Orange Coast College./83 :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· Business Transierra Exploration Corp., of Newport Beach, has flled for bankruptcy. /85 ::::::::::::::::::.:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-: INDEX Erma Bombeck 82 Bridge 84 Bulletln Board A3 event of a nuclear accident. NRC staffers recommended a $250,000 fine against Southern Cali- fornia Edison Co. for leaving the safety system shut for 13 days during testing of the nuclear plant in March. The NRC in Washington will decide the fine ;after receiving Edison's Disaster practice The system, similar to a giant shower head, is located in the roof of the reactor building.. In the event of a nuclear accident. the system spurts water to wash out and reduce concen- trations of radioactive iodine from the atmosphere. NRC SPOkesman A Newport Beach llf eguar d helpa out aome of the ''Ylctima'' during a mock cllaaater th.la morntna In the Back Bay area of 'Lifeordeath' item decided by council Council OKs funds to fix City Hall air conditioner By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of !tie Dtolly "°' ti.fl It sounded ltke a life-or-death matter facing the Fountain Valley City Council. The ominous official agenda stated council members were cons1denng a resolution "declann~ that the public interest and necesslt) demand the 1mmed1ate expenditure of public funds to safeguard ltfe. health and property." Public lnterest...nccces1t} de- mand ... safeguard life and health. It sounded serious. What was the cns1s requinng the em ergency $21 .000 allocation? The money 1s needed to fix the air condition in~ system at City Hall. City officials said the melodram- a tic language in the resolution was a legal requirement 1fthe city wishes to get the air conditioning fixed without the time-consuming process of com- pellti ve bidding. Normally. com petitive bidding is required when the council wants to spend more than $5,000 on a public project. But City Attorney Alan Bums said state law permits a city to spend the funds immediately 1f a "great pubhc calamity" is involved and at least four-fif\hs of the council approves. Broken a1rconditiomng may not be in the same class as a flood or fire. but Fountain Valley officials say the breakdown has made hfe quite un- comfortable for the people who work at C'1ty Hall. Last week's heat wave turned the building into a hot box, they say. A report presented to the council explained the design of City Hall does not allow for the o pening of doors and windows to permit natural ventila- ttOn. As a result. temperatures in some offices have been hotter than 90 degrees. city officials said. (Please aee LIFE/ A2) 41-year-old woman raped in her HB home Police arc ~arching for two men suspected of raping a 41 -)ear-old woman in her home 10 the nonhwest part of Huntington Beach Huntington Beach police Sg1 Ed McErlain said the two men apparent- ly entered through an unlocked window about 7·30 p.m. Tucsda) The woman was home alone and had fallen asleep while watching tl'le- vis1on. McErlain said. McErlain said the two intruders tied up the woman and put a pillowcase O\ er her head so she could not see them The woman told pohcl' both men raped her. The men ransacked the house before lea' ing but apparently did not take anything. McErlain said. The men lef\ af\er about two hours. Later. the woman was able to work free of her bonds and summon help. She was given a rape examination at Humana Hospital Huntinston Beach but did not require hospitalization. poltre said. Jim Hanchett said from WaJnut Creek. The heavy fine, which if paid wouJd be the laraest ever levied by the NRC in CaJifomia, was proposed bccauae of the duration of the violation and because a similar violation occurred at the plant in 1983, said Hanchett, of the NRC's regionaJ headquarters. .. Their corrective action that they've tried to develop, new procedures to prevent this, haven't been effective," Hanchett said. The NRC said in a statement Wt worlccrs should have detected shut- down of the system on two occasions. If a nuclear accident bad occurred, another containment cooling system -similar to a pant air cooditioocr- could have been activated., Hanchett said. 0 Tbe back-up wouJd have been adequate, but that doesn't relieve them of their responsibility to make safety systems operable as rcquucd by their license," he said. ''If the system is not automatically available, it's a dep'adation of the system,•• Hanchett added. Da Vld Barron. I IPoUtman for Edison, majority owner of t.be t.bteo- rcactor J?lant near San Oemente. said the utility is "disappointed and surprised by the amount tbc of tbc fine. We believe it's aoeaivc ... Barron a.aid the Match incident stemmed from the &:>Lant beina started, taken ofTline and then started (Pleue ._ 8Alf Oft0Plt.S/A2) Dentist defense set to begin Prosecution rests after testimony from dental expert By JEFF ADLER Of ... 0.-, ......... The prosccuuon in Dr. Tony Protopappas' murder trial rested Wednesday after a dental anesthesia expert testified that be has never encountered cases in which petienu were given the number o r high doses of anesthetic drugs that were adminis- tered at Protopappas• high-volume Costa Mesa clinic. Newport Beach. The cllaaater drill. almulatmc a plane cruh, wu one of three conducted In the county today. Dr. Frank McCarthy told the Orange County Superior Court jury weighing second-degree murder charges against the 38-year-old den- tist that he has been tnvolved in treating I 00,000 patients but .. never" has seen the amounts or number of drugs gJven to dcntaJ patients Kim Andreassen. Patncia Craven or Cathryn Jones. The prosecuuon alleges that the improper and negligent adminis.- 1..rataon of general anesthesia caused the deaths of Andreassen. a 23-ycar- old Huntington Beach woman. 13- year-old Craven and Jones, a 3 J-year- old Costa Mesa resident Jack Peltuon Peltason: 'will help to shape UCI ' By ANDREA ADELSON Of 1M 0.-, ...... ..,. UC Irvine Chancellor-designate Jade Peltason said he 1s g.1V1ng up the life of a Washington. D.C.-based education lobbyist to have a hand in helping shape "a good umverstt) into a great one." Peltason, v1s1t1ng California for a week to meet with facult). students and to attend a UC Regents mceung in San Francisco. said Wednesday the UC system 1s poised at an important crossroads in Its h1stof). bolstered for the first t1 me 1n years "tth growing state support. "I wouldn·t come just to preside." (Pleue .ee PELTASOPl/A2) Test1fy10g for a third day, McCarthy, a professor of denlal anesthesia at the University of Southern c~Jifomia School of Den- tistry, told jurors the lives of Craven and Jones could have been saved. "If proper CPR (cardio-pulmonary rcsusc1tat1o n) had been started earlier. 1t probably couJd have saved her (Jones') Life,·· he said 10 answer to a question from Deputy District Attorney James Oonin3er. .\sked what he behcves caused Jones' death. McCarth) rcphed, "I feel a massive drug overdose caused respiratory depression, respirator; arrest. cardiac arrest and death.·· Turning to Cravcn's death, McCanh) said he believes the 13- ycar-old died as a result of "the combination of multiple drugs in high dose" coupled wtth lJlflamcd tonsils and a gauze pack that lodged m (Pleue .ee DENTIST/ A2) 1 Stairs are main I U.S. downfall ~..\~HIN(1TON (·\Pl-..\ n 1~1 of stairs 1s more ltkcl) to end .<\mencans to the hospital emergency room than an".> thing el!>e the) encounter 1n an average day, actording to a nl'" go' emmenl stud' The 'ital•'>lll''i collected in IQ~~ b' the National Elrctronu: lnJur> ~ul'e11lance S)stem. reported 531 1nJunl'" on 'ita1r<. ramp" and landing~ for e'en 100.000 ·\mcncan~ .\It hough \la1~ arc the mosth hkeh cause of tnJUf)' the mmt ~ ... en.• tnJune" stem trom accidents With cigarette hghte~ the stud' ..aid Operated h\ the <. onsuma Produt't Safet) Com- m1""llln tht· injun ·1nlorma11on .;en ice collC<'ts reports from ho..,p1tal emergenn HlOm" in an dTort to track down dangerou~ product' The S\'item a'i'lCSscd both the number and scvent) of 1n1une'i and concluded that ngarelle hghters and fuel an- as<.<.X-1a1cd wtth the mo t St'' crc 1n1uncs for .\mencans. The~ products recc1Hd .i 't<'' cnt~ ratsn~ of 209 on a \hding scale that ranged down to a lo'>' point of 13 for 101unes assoc1:ttl-d with 'ollc~ball Whtie th<' ltghtcr1 rmx1ut~d the '>'Orsi tnJunes. the (Pleue .ee 8TAIR8/A2} Business 85-6 Callfornla News A4 Classified CS-8 Comics 84 Alleged drug czar once seen as 'unremarkable' Crossword CB Death Notices C4 Features 82 LMng 81 Horoecope C7 Ann Landers 8 2 Mutual Funds 86 National Newt A4 Opinion A8 Police Log A3 Publlc Notion C4·5 Sports C1-3 Stock Markets 08 T olevltlon 82 Theaters 83 Weather A'J World News A4 FBI says Charles Mobley vaulted to the top in underworld of cok e. money, danger -- < 'harles Alan Mobley Fullerton High School Class of '7R Quiet. tJnrcmarkablt' t.ayed awa} from drugs Went out for water polo Gradual~ Dnftt'd awn) Six years pa~s Mohlc) 1~ h' ing in t I unttngton Stach. dnv1n1 a hlack C orvcttc. trnvdsng to Europe to pun ha~ c'ollc cnr1 thrC<' and fo~d a time and jetting off to Sout~Amenra Tht brown-hturcd 24' yl'nr-old -a i\U\ who 1s hardlv rcmcmh1.•l't'd tw h1 old classmates -1s suspec-ted of someho\\ vaulting himself to the top of the cocaine world where he control' ~taggcnng sums of mone) and barks out orde~ hke ~me '°rt of king "1 ~hould '4.ll him." Mobley growls when talking nhout an as~1nte he ~u'>pcch of mc~s•ni up an a~s1an­ mcnt Tht later d('fi01t1on t!i otTert'd not by old classmates but by the FBI, which s~nt nt'arly 15 months watch 1ng Mobley. hJS fnends and rclatJves bcfort pouncing. Mobley. a supposed leader in Orange County's largest cocaine nng.. was arrested Monday e'lrcnang when he. h14' wtfe and his 1ster returned from a weekend tnp to Puerto Vallarta Thf 24-year-old reportedly was unaware that while he was awa). the drug empire 1n which he figured so prominently was brouaht down by federal. state and county dru& agcnt'i with help from virtually evcrv pohct dcpanmC"nt 1n Orange Count\'. FBI agent~ rcpon Ounna his rttum f11[lht to l (>S An1tCIC". Mohl<'\' rtportt"dly Opc"n<"<l STEVE MAR BU NEWSMAKERS up a ne~pa~r nd rtad th. 1 ~I persons had hc-t-n am-,tC'd. St1I0 000 in cuh confiscated. .i I "eh1dc"1 impounded and 20 w<'OllOM ~11n1 In the ne"'P."flC'r :m:ount ht' nanw wao; l1nke<l 10 all nf It ' The drug nng "u the largCSl m &.be lOUnl\ lno"'ll to la"' enforcement offic1al'i and wao; l"C'Spons1blc for smuggling mort lhan a ton of cocaJne into -~uthem Cahfom1a m the past VC'lr aC'l·ord1ng 10 lhC' FBI \\hen "ioble\ sot oO the Mc\lca.na fl1aht last Monda\ hC' wa met b\ FBI aatnt'i who srttted tum with an llTC'it warrant :\nd a pair of handcuffs H15 bail "'1'' ~tat a •hoppin1SI0 m1lhon Mohlc\ ·, "''le as -.~II a hi\ older ,1,tC'r al'o WC'rt' arrntC'd Mohle't ~n dabbhna 1n the <'°'~unt hu.,.1nc5'i •' lo"J a four vea" a11.o 1H·M,hn~ to f"OI•~ One 11'· (Pleue ec-e DRUG/ A2) ' ! -----------·-·~--·------------- ST AIRS MAJOR DOWNFALL ••• Prom Al G frequency was only 8.7 per 100,000 persons duri the The report showed 2S3 bicycle related ilijuriet per year. Sta.Lrs, the mos1 common bazatd, rated only 7 on 100,000 Americana. with an averaae severity rating of3S. the severity scale. The severity scale is computed by avef'af,in& the damage in the reported cases. Tbe most minor uuury 1s rated at l 0 points, next at 12, then 16.8 and so forth up to 2,516 points when the incident results in death. Wbile the severi~y ratinp of stairs and bicycles were similar, the people affected wete Quite different. Persons IJcd under 4 and over 65 were most likely to be hurt on suurs with a rate of 1,286 injuries per I 00.000 for the tod:dlers and 756 for the elderly. Staus far outdistanced other catcaories as the most likely way for people lO be hurt in this country, more than double the injury rate of bicycles in seoond olaoe. F~r. b1~ycles the 5 to 14 a1e group pttldomina"4 at 1,018 uyunes per 100,000. SAN ONOFRE FINED BY NRC ... Prom A l up again ... It was during that sequence when we neglected lo open those two valves," Barron said. The utility spokesman rebuffed criticism by the NRC, which said in a May 16 letter that the most recent violations, along with two other fines last year for similar breaches in procedure, indicate that the company hasn't adequately improved its man- agement controls. "Generally, we don't believe n's a management problem.'' Barron said. "We've had other fines at San Onofre and each one we believe is unique, and doesn't indicate a pattern." Last year's fines were $40,000 each. The Unit 3 re.actor stancd operal· ing at fuU power on Apnl I. Edison has 30 days to pay the fine or to submit a formal protest. Barron said the utility has not decided how it will respond to the charges, but has in the ~t taken a full month before making its decisi'bn. Also due within a month. accord- ing to Hanchett, 1s a rcp<>n on the r,..,,.; ... ~., nf P" NRr in~nrf'tnr looking mto whether San Onofre plant oper- ators were lax in reporting a lealc of radioactive gas earlier this month. The plant has had several radio- active leaks recently, though au have been described as minor and not harmful to nearby residents. DENTIST PROSECUTION ... From A l her throat partially blockmg her airway. Had Craven been kept at the dental chmc until she recovered from the anesthetic, rather than bemg released. she would have survived, he testified. The prosecution presented about two dozen witnesses during six weeks of tnal. Witnesses who worked for Protopappas testified as did the emergency medical personnel who treated the three women, close rela- u vcs and McCarthy, LIFE OR DEATH IN FV ... From A l The heat 1s not only unhealthful for employees, but it could also damage sens1t1ve word processing equip- ment, city officials said. In addition to City Hall, the air condiuonmg breakdown has affected the adjoining City Council chambers buiJdjng. As a result, recent public meetings have been conducted there with the doors oocn. reQuiring city officials to. speak above the street noise entering along with the frc5h air. At Tuesday's meeting. Coun- cilwoman Barbara Brown said she had visited the now-stuffy City Hall complex during the day and sym- pathized wtth the employees. "l f l'd been working there, I'd have been sick." she said. The council unanimously ap- proved the $21 ,000 emergency ex- penditure -without heated debate. so to speak. Even so. city employees cannot expect immediate relief. City Planner Don Contraman said the broken air conditioning part must be specially manufactured, and the supplier has said that will take up to six weeks. PELT ASON TO HELP SHAPE UCI .•. F r om A l said the 60-year-old president of the American Council on Education. "l want to be a part of the cxc1tmg growth," Peltason said he sees in ucrs future. A former UCI adm1mstrator. Peltason was named chancellor in March b_y the UC Board of Regents after a five-month search to find a successor to founding Chancellor Daniel Aldnch. Aldnch 1s stepping down this summer after 22 years at UCl's helm. Since then, Peltason has remained silent over his plans when he takes over beginnmg Sept. I. .. We sull have a vigorous chancell or 1n charge of that." said the formc.-r chancellor of the University of lllinois. Urbana-Champaign. Peltason did say Wednesday that u n1vers1ty House. the home ofUCl's chancellor. 1s to be relocated on campus within two years. Aldnch has lived since 1962 ma un1versity-bu11t home on Galaxy Drive 10 the ex- clusive Dover Shores neighborhood, which borders upper Newport Bay One real estate agent made a SI mtllion offer for it recently, campus spokeswoman Linda GraneU said. Prefemng to keeping mum on his agenda, the political scientist and author instead described for news reporters his view of the national education scene and shared some of his experiences as head of the pres- tigious educators' lobbying group. "I've wrmen about pohucaJ SCl· encc all my life. It's been fun living It," he said. Peltason said the Reagan adminis- tration was surpnsed at public outcry over a plan to tnm student aid. That sentiment 1s growing. he said . "There ism this country mcreasmg awareness that education is pan of the solution." Peltason said. For the first time m U.S. history. the educator said a college education can be obtained by anyone. regardless or race or sex. "Not too many countn<.>s can say that,·· he said. While the higher education system may now be more open than before, Peltason said 11 "needs repair" to counter abuses m financial aid, antJquated equipment and shnnkang research funds. "If we are going to compete m the global market," Peltason warned that post-secondary schools cannot fall victim to declines documented 10 last year's highly critical report of the nation's high schools. "It's hard to explain th.at to the public." he admitted. "It's hard to persuade them you need more money to gel better." Cutbacks at a university library aren't immediately apparent, he said. as an example. ··1t's hard to docu- ment. The decline 1n qual11y 1s subtle." But the "short rations" the nation ·s universities and colleges have subsisted on since 1972 "are pulling down intellectual capital," Peltason said "When you find out about ll, it's 10 years too late." California. Pcltason pointed out. "1s beg.inning to point the way." The governor has proposed giving the 11 • campus UC system 30 percent more mone) in 1984-85 DRUG CZAR 'UNREMARKABLE' ... F rom Al vesugator descnbed him as a small- time drug dealer who kept a low profile and managed to stay out of trouble with the law. About two years ago. Mobley mamed a woman named Aleyda and began a metamorphosis that turned him into a virtual drug czar. accord- ing to the FBI. His new father-in-law was Heriberto Machado-Velasquez. a Colombian national who owned a small cheese factory in his native land and rented an opulent home m Orange. But FBI agents suspect that Machado-Velasquez' real busrness was cocaine. Machado-Velasquez 1-; being sought by federal agents According to coun documents, Machado Velasquez and others would arrange to smu~e millions of dollars wonh of cocame fro m Col· omb1a into Miami and New Jersey and funneled huge quantities of the drug lo Moble> A. transcnpt ofa wire tap placed on Mobley"s telephones by the FBI ponrays the Huntmgton Beach resi- dent as a man who began to make so much money that he was ha' ing difficult} h1d1ng 1t awa}. In one recorded conversation. Moble) alleged!) discussed purchas- ing three $475.000 watcrt"ront lots in Hunt1ng1on Harbour for cash. The transcnpt also quotes Mobley as sa)mg he's purchased 75 percent 1n1erest in tbe S5W.OOO apanmenl budding he and his wife lived in. He said he also owned a 101 near Big Bear Lake. In still another conversation. Moble} allegedl) re\ ea led he was traveltng to We-;1 C.erman} to purchase three cars for more than S 130.000 lt was only one of two car- huymg tnps Mobley made dunng the FRI 1nvest1gatwn \ 24 }car-old NewPon Beach man named Michael Alan Kaplan e\entU· ---.._/ '-.rry Piiot Dell very le Gu.renteed ,,, ....... ally was hired by Mobley to "launder" the drug profits so that the sums of money -SI 00.000 here, $200,000 there -could be discreetly tucked away in various savings and checking accounts, FBI agents said. An u01dent1fied wttness -one of five who agreed to cooperate with authont1cs -told the FBI that Mobley . pulled together about $400.000 each week to make his cocaine purchases. Drug agents claimed Mobley bought a k.Jlo of cocaine for as littJe as S2 I ,OOO and then sold 1t for as much as S53,000. It 1s alleged Mobley would purchase as much as 50 k.Jlograms at a time The wire tap also indic.ated that Mobley. who purportedly used a code lan$uage to descnbe drug trans- actions over the telephone, had a ccnain hard-nosed flair for doing business In one conversation. he threatened to have one of his alleged dealers. Ronald "Turbo .. Ting. k.Jdnapped until he agreed lo pay off a debt of nearly SI 00,000 to Mobley. Ting was critically wounded by a shotgun blast to the chest in the drug crackdown last weekend Another recorded conversation quotes Mobley as suggesung that Kaplan should be killed because of the poor JOb he was allegedly doing in handlfog the drug profits, FBI agents said. Kaplan was arrested 1n last Satur- da) ·s drug sweep. Although there 1s no evidence that Mobley ever h~ed anyone. 11 was the murder of one of his alleged pushers that first attracted police to Mobley. police investigators claim. Barclay Hodges. one of at least I 0 people who narcotics agents assen distnbuted cocaine for Mobley, was shot to death at a John Wayne Airport restaurant in mid-1982 At the time. Hodges owed Mobley about $350,000, drug agents said. Hodges' cousin Kelly Damels was arrested for the murder, but the gun used in the kiUing was registered to a Newport Beach man named Clifford Casey. FBI agents claim Casey was one of Moblcy's top-level drug deal- ers. Casey, 29, was arrested at his Oakwood Garden apanment in New- port in last week's drug raid. Investigators point to two 10c1- dcnts as examples of the quantity of cocaine that allegedly figured m the drug nng. Last January, a vehicle carrying 900 kilograms of cocaine was stopped and searched by troopers in New York. Drug agents claim some of the cocaine was headed toward Mobley in Orange County. The same month, Huntmgton Beach police towed a rented L10coln to the pohce station where 50 pounds of coaune was found in a suncase in the car's trunk. Mobley's wife had attempted to prevent officers from towing the car. FBI transcnpts ~tale. Despite the busts and other close calls. there is no evidence in the recorded conversations that M obley ever womed that the law was watch- 1ng h1m A.t one point during the FBI 1nvest1gat1on. one of Mobley's as· sociates noticed a suspicious van parked in the neighborhood and wondered aloud whether 11 belonged to narcotics 10vcst1gators. The van belonged to the FBI During one recorded co11versat1on. an as oclatc who was arrested on drug charges bul later released is quoted as asking Mobley whether the bust might have somethmg lo do with Mobley's telephone. "Impossible," Mobley ~sponds. In another recording, Mohlcy's telephone line goes dead and he Jokingly asks. "Is this the FBP" ft was OJIANLE LOAS T Clrculetlon 714/942-4333 Daily Pilat H. L. Schwart z Ill Put>11shflr CIH1lfled edvert11lng 714/$42-5871 All other dep1rtment1 &42-4321 MAIN OFFICE Chti)' Oow1llby Fu•· ir 11 Ac.s1'>l<1rt AoHmery Churchmen ( ••111' ,,, )'°;_...., Clrcul1tlon Tel•phon .. ... ..., • 1 1'1P P1.tihst1er ll•pl'l•n f" Cerezo ,, M' IUr' OOf\eld L WNllem1 ' ~· l.l.v l\ll'' VOL. n , NO. 138 •• Sunny, pleasant weather ahead Coutal Tl des ·1 1 :u 23 SI --0. 33 27 6.3 Mwtlo MdlcnGe ~ AIMftla ' Au.ntlo Cfty Au9llll llllllmort .... ~ ... eo.ton ._..... ...,,,. lllul1lnQton. VI Cupet OllAtlMlon,l.C. ClwlMlon.w I/ Chenone.NC ~ 0-00 Clndnnatl ~ ~SC Colutnbue. Oii. 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S..111e IO North Plell• 113 12 = II 0..lehoma City 113 81 11 Omana ,, 13 SOQll-68 on.ncso .. 58 s~ 50 """~ 58 40 Top9ka 13 Phoenla " 13 T_. 80 ~ 58 S4 TulM 18 p ,Me. 53 41 WMfllnOton IS P0t11an<1.~. ... 51 Wichita 78 40 62 34 5$ .. 17 44 81 62 50 43 .. eo ... 38 )3 IO 63 58 41 ~ Sun Ml• IOdey at 7 49 p m , ·-Fl1d•y II 5.411 I Ill end Mtt eoeitl 11 7 50pm Jui-. 1(-Clty Lu Vegaa SURF REPORT so 47 79 58 .. IO Moon"-11 10 63 pm IOday. -at 7 441 .. m MCI -~at 1.40 .. m Frleley Utile AOCll 78 S5 ICD Eztended h2 2 2 2 Temperatures "' a.. 411 35 711 SI 1·2 1 1·2 s-Cllt~lon Soutl!..c V ,.11ey trustees expected to pick a peer at meeting On e of five a pplicants could get seat. becomes a voung board member 30 days after being appointed. but voters can call for election if dissatisfi ed Five applicants for Woest's scat were interviewed by the remaining trustees earlier this month: Mary Lou Crossett, a former teacher and past PT A president who has a child at Talbert School; Stephen Einstein, rabbi and religion educator wbp has three children in Fountain Valley schools; J 1m Knapp, a telephone company executive who has chaired several district committees and now heads a district budget committee; Bill Manes. who has served on many district committees mcluding one revtewtng school closures~ and Jay Stout. who has a financial manage- ment and aud1tmg background and experience with school and Little League groups. Fountain Valley School Dlstnct trustees are expected to appoint a new school board member tonight from among five people who have applied for the open seat. The public meeting begins at 7:30 p.m. in the Education Center, I 7210 Oal St.. Fountain Valley The vacancy was crc.-ated when Board President James Woest re· signed because a JOb promotion required him to mo' e to Puerto Rico. The remaming four board members chose to appoint a district res1den1 tu Woest's seat. rather than hold a special election. The new trustee wiU serve the remainder of Woest's term, which expires in November 1985. If a new board member is selected tonight, he or she will not be formally seated for 30 days. During that period. any d1ssatjsfied community members can petition the board for a special election. To cause such an election. petitions must be submitted with the names of 1.5 percent of the school distnct's registered voters who cast ballots tn the most recent regular school board election. If such petitions are not received by the Orange County Registrar of Voters. the new trustee HB eighth graders rekindle ancient Yosemite bakery By ROBERT BARKER Of IN 0.-, ,.... It.It Eighth grade pupils at Circle V1ew1 School in Hunungton Beach plan to rekindle a bit of 19th century Amcn- can history next week during their annual spring environmental study excursion lo Yosemite NatJonal Park. Three years ago, students dis- covered an old bakery at the park's Pioneer History Museum and Village and they set about to make it work again. Workmg w1th rangers. the students offered to donate $1 ,000 1f the Park Service would come up with a like amount. The Yosemite Natural His- Just Call 642-6086 tory Association met the challenge and the stage has been set for a history-making occasion. Rangers plan to hght fires to the 011- buroing oven that hasn't been ex- posed to flame or heat in more than 80 years. The aromatic smells of baking bread haven't drifted from the oven since the late 1800s. When it was apparent that the bakery would be restored, last year's eighth graders installed a plaque and dedicated the site. Next week. this year's eight-graders will be on hand when the ovens are fired up. The youngsters raised money by selliOJt products from the school's recycling center. They also raised all the money needed for their four-Oay stay at the park that exposes them to the "wilderness experience" and brings topics taught in the classroom into focus. according to teacher Rod Collier. Collier. who's been making the annual spring trips with students over the years, said the old bakery was operated in Yosemite Valley 10 the 1880s and 1890s by the pioneer Degnan family. It was moved in recent years to the Pioneer Center of the park and was used as a storage facihty until the Circle View youni - stcrs came across it. The rest 1s history. What do you like. about tbe Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call tbe number at left and your message will be recorded, tran11cribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24·hour answering service may be used to record letters to tbe editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters column must Include their name and telephone number for verification. No circulation calls. please. Tell us what's on your mind. CROWN & DUCANE l·~\c ept1onalh· tine Ducane gas Barbequr~ from you r favorite place to shop . Crown Hardware. Prices begin at SI 69'N with other models ranging thr u 4399Q for the top of thl' line# 2002 which is Corona del Mar Wtstclltt b lilor._~ '°lo l i 1b at Ir' lnr of \11rAr1hur l024 l~anf' \\,. l I Iii £ Co••• It•' 7I4/'i12· 1133 i l-l 67l-2800 Barbor View ArroH frnm Rogtr'• Gardl'na l614 San '11&utl Or. iJ t M2·1 t33 portable. available in natural gas or LP, has a separate rai sed rear burnt>r, in cludes igniter. rotisserie. porcelain grills and more. What's more, the price is less than elsewhere. 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Crown Hardware Good Things, Gadgets & Stuff AnahelmHUll LongBuch lmptrlal H•> Lela Aho• et 91 t·rw,. hoppin1 C.1r S620 Sa.ata Ana 21$4 ~llOower <'Anyoo Rd Bhd. 714 '9~fH282 7)41841 5584 r I HIGH74 LOW58 THURS DAY MAY 1,. 19H·1 e WI Coast A Newport Beach couple Is Irked by city's theater sign that violates New- port's own sign ordl- nance./ A3 :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:!:::·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·::::::::::::: California Comic Andy Kaufman, who never smoked, died of lung cancer at the age of36./A7 :::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:·:~:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· Nation President Reagan will get his MX missiles, but only half of what he wanted - and with strings at- tached./ A& :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· World Soviet Jews hold a dem- onstration at a theater as health of dissident Sakharov deteriorates. /A7 The notion of U.S. air support over Persian Gulf has been discussed, but not acted upon./ A7 : : : : : : : : : : : : . : : : : : : ::: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :: : : : : :: ~:.: :: : : . : . : • : . : ~= ~:. :·: Living Jan Taylor's handicap , isn't her only distinction; now she's a Phi Beta Kappa grad./81 What precautions do health professionals take when they treat AIDS victims? /81 New treatments and de- vices help high-risk preg- nancies and premature bables./82 ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· Sports It's been an overall team effort that has helped the Edison High baseball team, which opens CIF action Friday./C1. The Angels are stifled by Baltimore's Mike Bod- dicker in losing, 5-0./C1. Entertainment The student-faculty musi- cal "Audition" opens to- night at Orange Coast . College.183 :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::.:-:·:·:::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· Busineu Translerra Exploration Corp., of Newport Beach, has filed for bankruptcy. /85 INDEX Erma Bombeck 82 Bridge B4 ' ·~ Winning Warrior WoodbrldCe Blgb•• Jordan Frank fire9 to first durln& Wedne8day•a 1-0 CIF Wild Card iame victory oYer Saddleback W.h. catapulting hia team into Friday•• first roand of the ell' 2 -A pfayoffa. For the etory. See C 1. 'Lifeordeath' item decided by council By PHIL SNEIOERMAN Of tM Dlllly Not ..... It sounded like a life-or-death matter facing the Fountain Valley City Council. The ominous official agenda stated council members were considering a resolution "declann$ that the public interest and necessity demand the immediate expenditure of public funds to safeguard life. health and Protopappas prosecution rests case By JEFF ADLER Of tM Delly~ II.ti The prosecution in Dr Ton} Protopappas· murder 1nal rested Wednesday afier a dental anesthesia expert testified that he h.as ne,cr cncountere.d cases 1n which patients were given the number or high doses of anesthetic drugs that were adminis- tered at Protopappas· high-volume Costa Mesa clinic. Dr. Frank McCarthy told the Orange County Superior Court Jury weighing second-degree murder charges against the 38-year-old den- tist that he has been involved in treating 100,000 patients but .. never" has seen the amounts or number of (Pleue Hie DENTIST/ A2) property." Public lnterest...neccesity de- mand ... safeguard life and health. It sounded serious. What was the cnsis requinng the emergency $21.000 allocation? The money is needed to fix the air condiuoning system at City Hall. City officials said the melodram- atic language in the resolution was a legal requirement 1f the city wishes to get the air cond1t1001ng fixed without the ume-consummg process of com- petitive bidding. Normally. competitive b1dd1ng 1s required when the council wants to spend more than SS.000 on a public project. But City Attorney Alan Bums said state law permits a Cit)'. to spend the funds immediately 1f a "great public calamity•· 1s involved and at least four-fifths of the council approves. Broken aircond1tionmg may not be m the same class as a flood or fire. but Fountain Valle} officials 53) the breakdown has made life quite un- comfortable for the people who work at City Hall. Last week's heat wave turned the building into a hot box. they 53) •\ report presented to the council explained the design of City Hall does not allow fort he opening of doors and windows to permit natural ventila- tion As a result. temperatures in some offices have been hotter than 90 degrees. cit) officials said. Th.cheat 1s not only unhealthful for (Pleaae eee LIFE/ A2) f 1111 111111 0 HAN C ~ f C < 1 UN T Y 1 At ! I ( 1 H N I A . ·, ' f ,.~ 1 '·. Safety system left shut for 13 days during March tests By ANDREA ADELSON Of ... 0.-,,... ..... The Nuclear Regulatory Com- mission has proposed its largest fine ever in California, $1/• million, against e operators ·of the San Onofre nuclear power plant for shutting down safety equipment used in the event of a nuclear accident. NRC staffers recommended a $250,000 fine against Southern Cali- fornia Edison Co. for leaving the safety system shut for 13 days during testing of the nuclear plant in March. The NRC in Washington will decide e 1ne the fi~e after receivina Edison's the NRCs regional headquarten- response. , .. Their corrective action that The NRC said two spray valves they've tried to devefop, new inside the plant's Unit 3 reactor procedures to P!!.vcnt this. haven't building, were closed from March 4 to been effective.' Hanchen said. March J 1 because of improper valve The NRC said in a statement that altgnmenu. workers should have deu:cted lhut- The system, similar to a giant down of the system on two oc:caaiom.. shower head, is located in the roof of If a nuclear accident bad oc:cumd, the reactor building. In the event of a 'another containment coolina system nuclear accident, the system spurts -simil'artoagjantairoonditioner- water to wash out and reduce conccn-could have been activated, Hanchett trations of radioactive iodine from said. the atmosphere, NRC spokesman '"The back-up would have been Jim Hanchett said from Walnut adequate, but that dOCUl't relieve Creek.. them of their responsibility to make The heavy fine, which ifpajd would safety systems operable as RQu.ired be the largest ever levied by the NRC by their license," be said. io California, was proposed because "If the system is not automatically of the duration of the violation and available, it's a degradation of the because a similar violation occurred system," Hanchett added at the plant in 1983. said Hanchett, of (Pleue aee SAllf 011108&/ A2) Officials step up probe of 13 fires Latest fire burned 2 LB vacant lots early Wednesday By DA VlD BISHOP D.., l'llot COfl I 111 I ndeftl City officials have stepped up their investigation of 13 suspected arson fires which have been set in Laguna Beach since March 30. including three this week. The latest fire broke out at 3:57 p.m. Wednesday in Arch Beach. Heights. The fire consumed the brush in two vacant Iota on Quivera Street near Capistrano A venue. A suspect was qucsuoned in con- nection with the blaze but in- vestigators believe the youth is not connected to any of the previous blazes. Witnesses described a youth seen leaving the scene soon after the fire began and investigators have identified a Q uivera Street youth as a suspect. A pack of matches and a half- burned punk (used to light fireworks) were picked up as evidence where the fire is believed to have been started. The blaze in the densely packed hilltop neighborhood was a "close call,'' according to Laguna Beach police officer Don Coleman. When Coleman arrived. five neighbors were spraying the fire with garden hoses, he said. "The whole lot was in flames," Coleman said. but the volunteers successfully kep\ the fire from reach- ing several houses on adjacent lots. "lt's a dam good thing the neigh- bors got out there as quick as they did." he added. Firefighters amved and the fire was declared under control. Fire Marshal Herb Jewell said this morning that Wednesday's fire is an isolated inetdent in the string of arson fires. The circumstances don't lead to any pattern that would implicate the youth in the other fires, J ewell said. Police department investigator Toni .Place and fire Capt. Harvey Boelts art now working full-time on the arson investigation, with as- sistance from Jewell and the state fire marshal's office, according to City Manager Ken Frank. Frank met with local police and fire department officials Tuesday after- noon to set up lhe arson 1ovesuptioo team after the I I th and 1 2~ fires were set. "We really d on't have very much to go on." Frank said. "The fires began up in Arch Beach Heights on week- ends but that's no loriJer the pattern. We had surveillance in the area but now it doesn·t make much sense." Jewell said that generaJly calm weather has helped firefighters' ef- forts but that unusually dry wildland brush for this time of year has caused concern. Tuesday's fires occurred early 1n the morning. Firefighters were called to the 600 block o(Slccpy Hollow Lane shortly before 3 a.m. for a small brush fire in a vacant lot between two homes. No structures were involved and fitt- fi~ters had the blaze under control within seven minutes. said Jewell. While still at that scene. firefighters were then called to the 1300 block of Morningside Drive at 3:50 a_m. (Pleue eee OFFICIALS/ A.2) Jack Peltuon Peltason: 'will help to shape UCI' By ANDREA ADELSON Of!M0.,"94 ..... UC Irvine Chancellor-designate Jack Peltason said be is giving up the life of a Washington, D.C.-based education lobb)'lst to have a band in helping shape "a good university into a great one." Peltason. V1siting California for a week to meet with faculty, students and to attend a UC Regents meeting 10 San Franetsco. said Wednesday the (Pleue eee PELTAS-01'/ A2) Stairs are main U.S. downfall WASHINGTON (.\P) -A fl1~t of stairs is more hkel) to send Amencans to the hospital emergency room than anything else the~ encounter 10 an average day, according to a new go\emment stud\. The statistics collected in 1982 by the National Ele-ctronac lnJUT') Sun e1llance System reported 531 1nJunes on stairs. ramps and landings for every 100.000 Amencans. Although sta1"' are the most!~ hkel} cause of IOJury, the most se"ere 1nJunes stem from accidents with etp.rctte lighters. the stud) said. Operated b) the Consumer Product Safety Com- m1ss1on. the inJUf) mfonnauon service collects repons from hospital emergency rooms man efTon to track down dangerous product'i The system assessed both the number and sevent} of UlJUnes and concluded that ctgarettc lighters and fuel are assoc1ated with the most severe inJunes for Amencans. These products received a seventy ratlf\$ of209 on a sliding scale that ranged down to a low point of 13 for m1unes associated with volleyball. While the hghters oroduced the worst inJunes. the (Pleue eee 8TAD..8/A2J Bulletin Board A3 Business 85-6 California News A4 Classified C&-8 Com lea 84 Alleged drug czar once seen as 'unremarkable' Crossword C8 Death Notices C4 Features 82 Living B1 Horoscope C7 Ann Lander• 82 Mutual Fund• B6 National News A4 Opinion AB Polloe Log A3 Public Notloes C4-5 Sport• C1·3 Stock Marketa 88 T ... vlslon B2 Theetera 83 Weather A.'2 world News A4 F I says Charles Mobley vaulted to the top_ ln underworld of coke. money. danger Charles Alan Mobley. Fullerton H•ah School. Class of '18. Quiet Unremarkable. Stayed away from. druas. Went out for water polo Gradu1\ted. Dnfted away ix years pass Mobley 1s livina in Huntington Beach, drivina a black Corvette. traveling to Europe to purcha~ exottc cars thrtt and four at a time and Jetting off to South Amenca The brown-haJred 24-year-old -a guy who is hardly remembered by his old classmates -is suspected of somehow vaulting himself to the top of the cocame world where he controls staggenna sums of mone) and barks out orden like some ~rt of king. "l should kill him," Mobley growls when talking about an a'110e1ate he 'luspect~ of mcs'lmg up an nnign- ment The later dcfinauon l'I oftercd not h) old classmat~ but b) the FBI. which spent nearly I 'Cf month) watch· ing Mobley. his friends and rclauves before pouncing. Mobley. a supposed leader in Orange County's largest cocaine nng. was arrested Monday evening when he. his Wlfe and his sister returned from a wtckend trip to Puerto Vallarta The 24-vear-old reported! was unaware that while he was away. the drug empire in which he figured so prominently was brought down by federal. state and county drug qents wtth help from Virtually every pohcc department 1n Orange Count)', FBI agents rtport. Dunna his rt'tum fl1aht to Lo An1telc'I. Mobl<'~ rt'ponedlv opened STEVE MARIL£ NEW SMAKER S up a newspaper and ~ad that 21 persons had bttn atTC1tcd. $610.000 1n cash confiscated 41 vch1cltt 1mpoundcd and 10 weapons c;e11cd In the newspaper account. h\5 nam~ was linked to all of 1t I ' The drug nng was the llJ'IC't 10 the county kM>wn lo law enforce~• offictals and was responsible for smual10i more lhan a ton of cocaine into -Southern C.altfonua in tM put year, according to the FBI When Mobley a<>t off the Meiucana fl1aht last Monday, he was met by FBI •nts who ptttcd him wtlh an atTeSt wamlnt and a pair of handcuffs. His bail was stt at a whoppana $10 m1lhon Mobley·, Wife u well as h11 oidcr 'll'ltcr also were 1m:sted. Moblev bepn dabbha& 1n the cocaine bus1nes u looa u fbu.r ycan . accord•na to po One 1n- (Pl-... ... DaOO/A2) ' ' [ PELTASON TO HELP SHAPE UCI ••• Prom A l UC system is poised at an ampon.&nt croww.ds in its history, bolstered for the first time in years with arowina state suppon. .. J wouldn't com~just lo preside," said the 60-year-old president of the American Council on Education. .. , want to be a part of the exciting growth.l" Peltason said he secs an UCl's ruture. A former UCl administrator, Pellason was named chancellor an March b_y the UC Board of Regents after a five-month search to find a successor to founding Chancellor Daniel Aldnch. Aldrich is stepping down this summer after 22 years at UCl's helm. Since then, Peltason has remained stlent over has plans when he takes over beginning Sept. I. "We still have a vigorous chancellor in charge of that," said the former chancellor of the University of 1llinois, Urbana-Champaign. Peltason did say Wednesday that University House, the'home ofUCl's chancetlor. is to be relocated on campus within two years. Aldrich has hved since 1962 in a university-built home on Galaxy Dnve in the ex- clusive Dover ShoTCs neighborhood, which borders upper Newpon Bay. One real estate aaent made a $I million offer for it rec:entlyi campus spokeswoman Lind& Orane l said. Prcfcrrina to keepini mum on his agenda, the political scientist and author instead described for news reporters tus view of I.be nauonal education scene and shared some of his expenenccs as bead of the pres- tigious educators· lobbying Jl:'OUp. .. I've wntten about political set- ence all my hfe. It's been fun laving it.'' he said. Peluison said the Reagan adminis.. tration was surpnscd at public outcry over a plan to trim student aid. That sentiment as growing, be said. ··There is in this country increasing awareness that education is pan of the solution," Peluison said. For the first Jlme in U.S. history, the educator said a cotlege ~ucation can be obuimed by anyone, regardless or race or sex. "Not too many countrieS' can sax that, .. he said While the higher education sy-;tem may now be more open than before, OFFICIALS PROBE ARSONS •.. From Al where a second lire burned about a quarter-acre of brush and was de- clared under control wuhin five minutes. No structures were damag- ed or threatened and no inJunes were reported in eat her of the fires. One of the worst of the suspected arson fires occurred on May 8. when a late-evening blaze broke out on Parle Avenue and threatened homes on Temple Hills Drive, Buena Vista Way, Canyon View Dnve and Thurston Drive. About three acres of brush burned before the fire was extinguished as firefi'11ters battled the blaze from balconies and patios while homeowners kept their roofs wet with garden hoses. Only four of the suspected arson cases involved a structure. The worst, in April, caused $30,000 in damage to an attorney's office under construc- tion on St. Ann's Drive. Other structure fires have involved garages or sheds. No homes have been lost. "That (St. Ann's) fire was clearly arson," Frank said, "but it doesn't fit whatever pattern there is so far. We're Pelwon said it ''needs re{>Air" to counter abu1e1 in financial aid. antiquated equipment and shrinking rcseatCb funds. "Jf we are aoini to compete in the globaJ market," Peltason warned that post-secondary schools c.annot fall victim to declines documented in last year's hiahly critical repon of the nauon's high schools. ''It's hard to explain tha t to the public," he admitted. ''It's hard to persuade them you need more money to get better." Cutbacks at a uD1vtrslly library aren't immediately apparent, he said, as an example. "h 's hard to docu- ment. The decline in quaJity 1s subtle." But the "short rations" the nation's universities and colleges have subsisted on since 1972 "are pulling down intellectual cap1uil," Peluison satd. ''When you fmd out about 1t, it's I 0 years too late." California, Peltason pointed out, "1s beginning to point the way." The governor has proposed giving the 11- campus UC system 30 percent mon· money in 1984-85. JUSt going to go back through all the fires and try to piece something together." Frank said Capt. Boelts would be taken off his regular sh1ft to Join the arson investigation team, necessi- tating the release ofS3.000 in the fire department budget that Frank had previously frozen due to rec.ent emergency expenditures to repair landslide damage. "The fire department bas now used up all of its available funds in this fiscal year's budget," Frank said. DENTIST PROSECUTION RESTS .•. From Al drugs given to dental patients Kim Andreassen. Patnc1a Craven or Cathryn Jones. The prosecution alleges that the improper and negligent adminis- tration of general anesthesia caused the deaths of Andreassen, a 23-year- old Huntington Beach woman. 13- )ear-old Craven and Jones, a 31-year- old Costa Mesa resident. Testifying for a third da~. McCarth}. a professor of dental anesthesia at the University of Southern Cahforn1a School of Den- tistry, told Jurors the lives of Craven and Jones could have been saved. "lf proper CPR (cardio-pulmonary resuscitation) had been started earlier. 1t probably could have saved her{Jones') life:· he said in answer to a quesuon from Deputy Distnct Attorney James Clonin$er. Asked what he believes caused Jones· death, McCarthy replied, "I feel a massive drug overdose caused respiratory depression. respiratory arrest. cardiac arrest and death.·· Turning to Craven's death. McCarthy said be believes the 13- ycar-old died as a result of .. the combination of multiple drugs in high dose" coupled with inflamed tonsils and a gauze pack that lodged in her throat part1aJly bloclung her airway. Had Craven been kept at the dental clinic until she recovered from the anesthetic, rather than being released, she would have survived, he testified. The prosccutJon presented about two dozen witnesses dunng six weeks of trial. STAIRS MAJOR DOWNFALL ... From Al frequency was only IS 7 per 100,000 persons dunng the year. St.airs. the most common hazard, rated onl~ 37 on the severity scale. The report showed 253 bicycle related tnJunes per I 00.000 Amencans. wllh an average sevent> rattng of 35 The severity scale is computed by avera~ing the damage in the reponed ca~s. The most minor tnJUf) 1s rated at I 0 points, next at 12. then 16.8 and so fonh up to 2. '\ 16 points when the incident results in death. tairs far outdistanced other categones as the most ltkel} wa~ for people to be hurt in this coClntry more than double the inJun.-rate ofb1cvcles 1n second olace. While the seventy ratings of stair.; and bicycles were similar. the people affected were quite different. Persons a~ed under 4 and over 65 were most likel} to be hun on stairs wt th a rate of 1.286 in;unes per l 00.000 for the toddlers and 756 for the elderh· For bicycles the 5 to 14 age group predominated at 1.018 injunes per 100.000 DRUG CZAR 'UNREMARKABLE' ... From Al vest1gator descnbed him as a small- time drug dealer who kept a lov. profile and managed to stay out of trouble with the law. About two years ago. Moble> mamed a woman named Aleyda and began a metamorphosis that turned him into a vmual drug cz.ar. accord- ing to the FBl. His new father-1n-lav. was Henberto Machado-Velasquez. a Colombian national who owned a small cheese factory in his native land and rented an opulent home in Orange But FBI agents suspect tha! Machado-Velasquez' real business was cocaine. Machado-Velasqu~1 is being 'iOUght by federal agcnb .&.ccord1ng to coun documents. \1achado Velasquez and others '-"OUld arrange to imug&le millions of dollars wonh of cocaine· from Col- ombia into Miami and New Jersey and funneled huge quant1t1es of the drug to Moble> A transcript of a wire tap placed on Mobley·s telephones by the FBI portra)S the Hunungton Beach resi- dent a'> a man who began to make so much mone) that he ""a" having diffic ulty h1d1ng ll awa~ In one recorded com er~t1on. Mobley allc~edly discussed purchas- ing three S4 7 5,000 waterfront lots 10 Hun11ngton Harbour lo r cash The rranscnpt also quote\ Moble:.-a& saying. he's purchased 75 percent interest in the $5:'0 ()(JO apartment building he and his v.1fr lt'ed 1n lie said he also ov.ned a lot near Rig Bear l alee In suit another rnn vcrsat1on, Mobley allegcctl-. re-.calcd he was tra-.chng to West C1crmam to purchase three car; for more than S l 30.000. It was o nl) one of two car- buying mps Mobley made dunng the r Bl investigation o.\ 24-H•ar-old "'lc""pon Reach man named M1ehael .\Ian "-aolan cventu Dally Piiot Delivery I• Guaranteed ally was hired b> Mobley to "launder" the drug profits so that the sums of money -$100,000 here. $200.000 there -could be discreet!) tucked away in vanous savings and checking accounts. FBI agents said. An unidentified witness -one of five who agreed to cooperate with authorities -told the FBI that Mobley pulled together about $400,000 each week to make his cocaine purchases. Drug agents claimed Mobley bought a kilo of cocaine for as lntle as $21 .000 and then sold it for as much as S 5 3.000 1 t is aJleged Mobley would purchase all much as 50 kilograms at a ume. The wire tap also indicated that Moble). who purponedly used a code laniuage to descnbe drug trans- actions over the telephone. had a certain hard-nosed flair for doing business In one con\Crsauon. he threatened 10 have one of his alleged dealers, Ronald ''Turbo" Ting.. kidnapped until he agreed to pay ofT a debt of nearly SI 00.000 to Mobley Ting was cntJC3lly wounded by a shotgun blast to the chest in the drug crackdown last weekend. Another recorded conversation quotes Mobley as suggesung that Kaplan should be k1lle<I because of the poor JOb he was allegedly domg in handling the drug profits, FBI agents said Kaplan was arrested in last Satur- da) ·s drug sweep Although there 1s no e"1dencc 1hat Mobley e'er harmed anyone, 11 '-"BS the murder of one of his alleged pushers that first attracted police 10 Mobley. police investigators claim Barcia) Hodges. one of at least 10 people who narcotics agents assert distnbuted cocaine for Mobley, was shot to death at a John Wayne A1rpon restaurant in mid-1982 A.t the ume. Hodaes owed Mohk) about $350,000. drug agents said. Hodges' cousin Kelly Daniels was arrested for the murder, but the gun used in the kJ1ling was registered to a Newport Beach man named Clifford Casey. FBI agents claim Casey was one of Mobley's top-level drug deal- ers. Casey, 29. was arrested at has Oakwood Garden apanment in New- port in last week's drug raid. Investigators point to two inci- dents as examples of the quanuty of cocaine that allegedly figured in the drug nng. Last January. a vehicle carrying 900 kilograms of cocame was stopped and searched by troopers in New York. Drug agents claim some of the cocaine was headed toward Mobley in Orange County. The same month, Huntington Beach police towed a rented Lincoln to the police station where 50 pounds of coc.aine was found m a suitcase 1n the car's trunk. Moblev's wife had attempted to prevent officers from towing the car. FBI transcnpts state. Despite the busts and other close calls. there 1s no evidence 1n the recorded con,ersations that Moblc~ ever womed that the law was watch- ing him. At one point dunng the FBI investigauon. one of Mobley's as· soc1ates noticed a susp1c1ous van parked 1n the neighborhood and wondered aloud whether 1t belonged to narcotics investigators The van belonged to the f-Bl. Dunng one recorded con' ersauon. an associate who was arrested on drug charges bur later released 1s quoted as asking Mobley wheth<>r the bust might have something to do with Moble) 's telephone. ··1mposs1ble," Mobley responds In another recording, Mobley\ telephone lane goes Mad and he JOkingl)' ask'i, ··ts this the FBI"" ltwu ORANG[ ( 1A ')T Circulation 7141842 .. 333 Daily Pilai H. L. Schwartz Ill Put1l•<.her Cleulfl9d adv.rtlelng 7141842-5678 All other department• M2-4321 MAIN OFFICE Chazy Oo11ullby RoHmary Churchman Clrculallon TelaphonH ' r ' • ( ii ,. A'>!>•Slt\1 I (, )I trollP.1 ' II r; !'OltShf•r Stephen F Ceraro Oonakj L Wllll•m• .... Ml'"'•I' VOL. n. NO. 131 .. Sunny, pleasant weather ahead Coaatal AmwtMo u lit AldtOlllQ9 ea ., ~ "' .. ~ ........ ..... 74 51 • ..,.,uo Clly eo 0 A4llUl1 a 17 ......_ to ., ~ 10 ~ 77 51 lltmetell .. 61 80IM 67 ~ llOelOn 66 43 -~ ff 71 ~ S4 ., 9ultnglon. 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""° IOw-eot San Clemente Wllet lemc> M 1.2 I 1·2 S_. CIW~: &out'-' ; Surprise settlement ends $25 million Fiberite trial By tbe Associated Press An unexpected settlement has ended the $25 million F1berite chemical spill tnal. which had been expected to con11nue for at least two more months. A surpnsed JUr)' heard the an- nouncement Wednesday afternoon when court reconvened after a two- day recess. Orange County Supenor Coun Judge Ted Mallard had told the Jury Monday that a recess was needed because of wnness scheduling prob- lems. CONTINUED STORIES Instead. attorneys met an the courtroom of Superior Court Judge Jerrold Oliver to negouate the settle- ment, which was approved by Oliver on Wednesday. Fiberite West Coast Corp. admitted no guilt in the settlement. ··The plaintiffs had made several overtures in the past few weeks," said defense attorney Norman J. Watkins. ··11 (the selllement) ends a very long tnal. It rcpresenlS a subsuintial com- promise on both sides." The suit involved the California State Worker!. Compensation Board and 27 plaintiffs who claimed injuries when a steamy cloud of chemicals spread over the area surround.inJ the Fiberite plant in Orange followtng a boil-over on June I, 1979. The area around the plant includes Richland High School and the Killefer Child Development Center. People in the area experienced naus- ea, burning eyes, coughing and diar- rhea. Among the plaintiffs was Ray- mond Morales, whose pregnant mother was at the child development center at the time of the spill. SAN ONOFRE FINED BY NRC •.. From Al David Barro n. a ~pokesman for Edison. maJont) owner of the three- reacto r plant near an Clemente. said the uuht) 1s .. disappointed and surpnsed b~ the amount the of the fine. We believe 11 's c\cess1ve" Barro n said th1: March incident 'ltemmcd from the plant being !.tarted, taken ofThne and then slarted up ag.a1n . "It was during that sequence when we neglected to open those two 'ahes," Barro n said The ut1laty spokesman rebuffed cnticism by the NRC. which said in a May 16 letter that the most recent v1olat1ons. along wtth two other fines last year for similar breaches an procedure, indicate that the company hasn't adequately improved Its man- agement controls. "Generali)" we don·t believe at'~ a management problem." Barron said "We've had other lines at San O no Ire and each one we believe 1s unique. and doesn't indicate a pattern." Last year's fines were $40.000 each The Unit 3 reactor started o pcrat- Just Call 642-6086 1ng at full pov.cr on April I Edison has 30 da)'s lo pa) the fine or to submit a formal protest. Barron said the ut1ltt} has not decided how ll will respond to the charges. but has in the past taken a full mo nth before ma Icing ns decision. Also due within a month. accord- 1ng to Hanchett, 1s a report on the findings of an NRC inspector looking into whether San Onofre plant oper- ators were lax m reporting a leak of radioactive gas earlier this month. The plant has had several radio- active leaks recently. though aJI have been described as minor and not harmful to nearby residents. LIFE OR DEATH IN FV ..• From Al employees. but it could also damage sensitive word processing equip- ment, city officials said. In addition to City Hall. the air conditioning breakdown has affected the adjoining City Council chambers building. As a resuJt, recent public meeungs have been conducted there Wllh the doors open. requiring cuy officials to speak above the street noise eatenng along with the fresh air. At Tuesday's meeting, Coun- cilwoman Barbara Brown said she had v1s1ted the now-stuffy City Hall complex dunng the day and sym- pathized with the employees. "IH'd been working there, I'd have been sick,·· she said. The council unanjmously ap- proved the $21.000 emergency ex- penditure -without heated debate, so to speak. Even so. city employees cannot expect immedja1e relief. City Planner Don Contraman said I.be broken air conditioning pan must be specially manufactured, and the supplier has said that will take up to six weeks. What do ) ou like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number at left and )'our message will be recorded, transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24-boor answering service may be used to record letters to tbe editor on any topic. Co ntrlbucors to our Letters column must Include their name and telephone number for verification. No circulation calls please. Tell us what's on your mind. ' CROWN & DUCANE fxcPf•l 111r1Jlh lrrw I >twa11f> ga!:l Barl1equ< ... , froni vo ur ta vontf> pla('f• to !-.hop. CrmHl llardwar<>. portable, available in natural gas or LP, has a separate raised rear burner. includes igniter , rotisserie, porcelain grills and more. Prrn·~ th-gm at s l ()()<"' Mlh other rnodels ranging 1hru ·13')"" for thf> top nf th <' linf' # 2002 \o\hirh j-. C'orona dtl Mar w~tcurr () Rlol'lu "o 17111 ti lr\tnl' nl \lar \rt hut 1112' Ir• 111' \\I• \1 07 t ( ODii ft,., 71 • ,, •l I I 3l i I ' o:J 28t•' Harbor \'lew \nou from Ro~rr'• Gudl'n• 16 l l ~•n Mt~url Or i'l41M2·1133 What's more. the price is less than elsewhere. You 'II love our service, selertion and our prices. Crown Hardware Good Thlngs, Gadgets & Stuff AA&.bdm ff Ult Loq Bac)I lmpi>rlal ff.,., l.-01 A hoe e1<>1 r, .. ,. !'ihoppln" Cir. 5020 anta ~na 21 ~4 ~Unowrr Clln)OI) Rd Blvd 1141998·5282 714/841-5.534