HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-03-06 - Orange Coast PilotI •
~ l
-THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1986 .
Drunk check set in Hunti~gton
Roa dbloc k planned on s tretch of road
that's pr oduced many cr ash es, a rrests
By ROBE RT BARltER
Of ... O.,,... .....
The CaJifornia Highway Patrol and
the Huntinaton Beach Police Depart-
ment will stop driven at a sobriety
checkpoint Saturday night.
Geta new poet
Anatoly Dobrynln, •one-
time 8oYlet ambueador
to Waablniton. la named to party eecretartat. A5.
Coas t
High school teachers In
Irvine will soon get class
time to grade students'
ess~ys./A3
I
Callfo?la
Lear jets collide near San
Clemente Island In Navy
training exercise./ A7
Na tion
Ta~force recommends
est llshlng death pen-
alty or t~e murder of
American hostages any-
where In the world./ A8
The roadblock pr~ -which
has sparked a leaal challenge as well as
strong public support, according to
the CHP -wiU operate on a stretch
of road that's had a high rate of dli ving-under-the-influence arrests
and accidents, according to CHP's
Hunt for
aircraft
in ocean
resumes
Hopes t h at pla n e
foun~ fizzle ; hooks
hlt unders ea cliff
By S'JM\TE'lfytARBLE
Of .... 0.-, .... ~..,,
A saJvage company resumed its
underwater search early today for an
airplane that crashed in the ocean off
Newport Beach Last Sunday and
slipped out of sight in deep ocean
waters.
Three men were aboard the plane
when it hit the water and sank about a
mile off the Newport Pier. The men
are presumed dead.
Champion Air Salvage crew mem-
bers thought for a time they had
snagged the fuselage of the plane, onJy
to find their grappling hooks had
caught on the edge of an underwater
cliff Wednesday.
The Coast Guard suspended its
search Monday but the salvage firm
was hired by an insurance company
to continue searching tbe waters with
sonar and grappling hooks that are
dragged alone the ocean floor.
Crew members were certain they
(Pleue eee SEARCH/ A2)
Kevin Oouabeny.
Laguna beach police have an-
nounced they'll ~t up a similar
checkpoint in thet'"r city Friday nighL
Douaberty, who declined to pin-
point t6e location of Saturday night's
checkpoint to not tjp off drivers. said
Hunllnaton Beach officers have been
chosen to assist "because of their
prollimity (to the checkpoint) and
interest)
HuntingtOn Beach Police Lt. John
Foster confirmed that the cbc::ckpoaol
will be set up within Huntinaton
Beach's boundaries. He said four
members of the city's special mobile
alcohol detection (MAD) team arc
scheduled to observe the activities of
the nine CHP officen at the check-
point.
Douaherty said officers will stop
perhaps every third or fifth car and
ask driven if they have been drinhna.
He said if they exhibit telltale signs
of drivina under lhe influence, driv-
ers will be pulled off to the side of the
road and be f.ven field sobriety tesu.
If they fail, 'they'U be taken off to
jail, .. be said.
Despite a lepl controversy. the
CHP operated a numbeT of check-
points over the Christmas holiday
season throuahout the stale,. includ-
ing one in tfie"Mission Viejo area in
southern Orange County.
Dougherty said that the state
JACaDa 8-.cla Lawa Bowlhla Clab on
Wtid.ae1clay. Canadian bcnrlen ]ot.ned clab
memben for tbe IOclal toanaament .
appeals court is stud~· a lower
court rulina boldina th.at c . . tt
operated by the Anaheim
Depart.ment violated drlvert' r;,btt
of reasonable ICl1Ch. But Douaha!Y
said the Anaheim eate doesn't afrec:t
the CHP. crackdown. •
Motorists who were ~aously sto~ at ~hcckpoJnt.1 a_nd filkd out
quesllonna.trCS have pven ·ltrOal
support to the Proctam. acx:.ordina IO
(P1eue Me D•UR/A.2)
Bruce
opts to
switch,
not fight
Su pervlsor to run
for state secretary
job over No. 2 post
By LISA MAHONEY
Of .. O.,,... .....
Blaming Orange County's tough
disclosure rules on campaign con-
tributions. 3rd District Supervisor
Bruce Nestandc announced today he
wiU back away from the battle for
lieutenant governor and seek instead
to defeat Secretary of State Man:h
Fong Eu.
With suff competition for the
Republican nomtnation for heuten-
ant governor. Nestande said be was
forocd to drop out of the race because
the county's TTN CUP campaign
djsclosure ordinance has d iJCOuraged
contributors.
"We can fund a S2 mtllion primary,
but 1t would be most difficult to come
back and finance a multimillion
dollar general election." Nestande
said in a press release lSSued this
morning.
Boating
Two major commercial
sponsors wlll be Involved
In Congressional Cup
races that start Monday.
/81
Gentry takes oil f-ght to Congress
Ncscande, a former state as-
semblym&JJ wbo was elected to the
Orange County Board of Supervisors
1n 1981, was stacked up apinst
former Lt. Gov. Mike Curb and state
Sen. H.L Richard.son. R-Arcadia. in
seeking the Republican nomination.
Both a.re long·ume California poli-
oc1ans with substanual name rccog-
n1 llon.
Sports
UC Irvine's basketball
team opens PCAA Tour-
ament agaJnst CaJ State
Fullerton tonlght./C1
Angel shortstop Rick
Burleson pleased with his
progress In camp./C1
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Of ... O., ..... ...,,
Congress' inability to agree on an
offshore otl drilling plan for C.ali-
forn1a will leave the door open for
Interior Secretary Donald Hodel to
implement his own plan, a Laguna
Beach City Council man warned
Wednesday m Washingon, D.C.
Councilman Roben entry,alead-
ing opponent of offshore dnlling
along the Orange Coast, testified
before a Congressional panel
Wedncsd~y that drilling here could
hurt tounsm and harm the environ-
ment.
He testified before an 18-member
<{Ongrcssional. n~otiating team that
was formed to develop a new, lonJ-
term agreement for the California
coastline.
Representatives from California
were invited to testify at the infor-
mation-gathering session. Gentry
was the only ICprcscntaUvc.. from
Southern Cahfom1a.
"I think we were able to show that
Orange County won't tolerate any
more air poHuuon or any threat of an
INDEX
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D i fferent c u r f ews for
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By LAURA MERK
Of IN DellJ Nee IWfl
The Laguna Beach City Council
unanimously approved a staggered
curfew ordinance this week. replacing
ns 23-year-old curfew of 10 p.m. for
all teen-agers.
Praising Police Chief Neil Purcell
for his efforts in prepanng the new
ord inance, the council agreed that 17-
year-olds should not be subject to the
same curfew as 12-year-olds.
Under the new curfew, children 14
years old or younger must be off the
streets by 10 p.m. Teens IS-16 years
old would be violating the law after 11
Mesa cops writing
a west side story
New subs ta tion In Hi s pa n ic sectfon
bridges cUitura l gap In pcillce service
There arc no "Neighborhood
Watch" s•gns to discouraae criminals
in areas of southwest Costa Mesa,
where Spanish ls the only language
spoken and understoOd.
No orpmzed crime prevention
program has been formed among the
H1span1c residents. many of them
1llcpl immigrants who work on a
day-to-day basis and depend heavily
on free clinics and food giveaway
programs
But the m1nonty rcSldents make 1t
a practice to look after each other. and
they depend on Costa Mesa police
officer Chnno C'amanllo to keep an
eye on the neiJht>orhood.
"You m1Jht \aY we do have a
'Ne1ahborhood Wat< h,' ~JU t don't
have the meetings," said Camanllo,
who has spent I 0 of his W years as an
officer patrolling the .low-income.
predominately H1spa01c areas of
Costa Mesa.
"They all know me. They make 1t a
point to know me," he continued.
"They know I'll be there 1f they need
me."
Thai relat1onsh1p was strenathcncd
on Valentine's Day when police
opened a new west side subslation
that will serve as hcadquaners for
Camarillo and two Spanish-speak ma
aides.
With a lot of paint and even more
repair work, the wcather·beatcn
house at 1878 Placentia Ave. was
tmMfnrmcd into a pohet offtct. 1n
p.m. and 17-ycar-olds must be home
by m1dnighL ·
lkcause of several suits challenging cu~w laws in other cities, Purcell
said the ordinance has not been
enforced on a regular basis. "For the
most part these legal challenges have
been based upon the argument that
the curfew laws deprive minors of
certain constitutionally protected
rights, such as rights of travel and free
association," he said.
Purcell Sflid many residents have
complained about parties where teen-
agers have easy access to alcohol and
(PlMM Me CURFEW I A2)
TONY
SAAVEDRA
Focus ON THE NEws
hopes of cnoouraaina more Mexican
imm1vanu to report crimes.
While scrvma the entire west C'oiua
Mesa area the substation is intended
mainly to help bridae the cultural pp
between the Hispanic communiucs
and their EnaJish-spealring neiahbon.
But before C•marillo can tackle the
social 1 sues. he has a smaller. but
nonetheless annoyina. problem: Not
many people know the substation 1s
open.
Others have trouble findma the
small offiet near the intersection of
P\accnua Avenue and 19th Street -
sandWlchcd between an animal ho~
p1tal and a liquor store.
Camanllo ha spent much of his
time canvassil'\I the neiahborhoods..
fPleue ._ POLIC&/ A2)
oil spill which damages our beaches.
nor wouJd it tolerate the production
of a new industry that would dam~e
our tourism industry,'' Gentry said 10
a phone interview from Washington.
"If we were dealing with this
question onshore, like m Yosemite. 1t
would never Oy. We host 3 million
tourists a year in La~una: the same as
Yosemite and a million more than
.... ft ... ..L"-"'W· --Gentry said the negotiating team
inclydes 'ccingressmen and scna-
torswho favor oil development off of
California as well as opponents. and
he fears they'll be stalemated trying to
develop a plan that's acceptable to
both factions.
"It looks like Mr. Hodel will get his
way because the committee wiU
probably not reach a consensus," he
said.
"It will gi ve him a lot of power.
He'll say, 'J'll have to proceed with
my current five~year plan including
two lease saJes off Orange Count)' and
the southern Cahfom1a coast. --
"He'll do that, frankly, because this
1s a case where the federaJ govcrn-
(Pleue 1ee COUllCILllAlf I A2)
Democratic incumbent Leo
McCanby formally announced
Wednesday that he will seek re-
elect1on.
Nestande's announcement comes
on the heels of speculation that he
·would "drop down" from the lieuten-
ant governor's race and seek a less
contested elective office.
Nestande campa'"tgn....-•spo""""'•..._.'""....---•
Ron Rogers said there appears to be
no other contenders for Fong Eu's
(Pleue eee IUSTA.PfDE/A2)
. ,
Agency-kicks Niguel service
district issue off June ballot
By USA MAHONEY
Of ... 0.-, ........
The Local Agency Formation
Commission will reconsider its
Feb. S recommendation that
Laguna Niguel form its own
services district.
Acting on the request of some
members of the Laguna Niguel
Community Council, LAFCO
voted to rehear a proposed
transfer of county street. park
and slope maintenance
responsib1lit1es to Laguna
Niguel. A May 7 heanng was
scheduled.
The rccons1dcrauon means -
Laguna Niguel residents will _
not vote on the services district ,_
question June 3. But the
measure. 1f approved in May.
could be placed on the Novem-
ber ballot.
LAFCO comm1ss1oners. who
include Orange Count-, super-
visors Ralph Clark, Bruce
Nestande and Thomas Rile) aJf'CCd to take another look at
.................... -....
Lt. Lee Barrt.oa uad ofBoer' CMDo Caaartllo. ~t. man • eo.ta 11 .. police atadoa tlaat opened Valenti.De •Day.
'
the transfer after some Laguna
Niguel residents nused ques-
tions about how the ~TV1CCS
d1stnct might obtain insurance
at a time when getting habihty
coverage 1s difficult and costly
Also, assoc1at1ons rcp-
re~ntmg residents hvmg adja-
cent to Laguna Ntguel who were
to be lumped into the new
service area complained they
weren't notified of the possible
change.
(Pleue eee SERVICE /A.2)
Bad ham
suppor t s
Reagan on
Contras
87 PHlL SNEIOERMAN
Of ... 0.-, "94 .....
The Hou~ Armed Scrv1ocs Co m·
m1tttt. on which Newport Beach
( onaressman Roben &dham 9ervCS,
P' e President Reagan his first vote
of congres 1onal ~uppon today 1n the
dispute over a proposed SI 00 m1ll1on
allocation to l' S -backed auemllas
who arc batthna the leftist aovcm-
ment of Nicaragua.
Tht armeJ "-'f' 1ctt commmee.
controlled b\ Democrats. pve vo•ce
vott approval to the ~ucst wtthoul
dtblte. t C('ording to Assoetattd Press
rcpon
That e~prtSS1on of support, bow-
ever followed three other con -
(P1 .... -. BADBAll/A2)
.U * 0renge Coe.t DAILY P1LOT/ Thunday, M¥Ch e, 1H8
Marcosjlinked to $11 million
worth of California property
LOSANGELES(AP)-CaJj(orrua oflhe money in U.S. real CS&ale from
real es&ale wonh more than S 1 l , Lona Island, N. Y .. to Hawaii.
million twoonncct1ons '°Ferdinand Fonner Philippine Sen. Jovito
E. Marcos. the ousted president of the Salonp. bead of an official Philippine
Philippines, state Sen. Paul Carpenter commission assigned to find ways to ~ys recover any wealth Marcos may have
And Los Anaeles Count:r_ Assessor stolen, est1matcs the toial assets of
Alexander Pope said today SS milUon Marcos, his family and associates
worth of property alone are f'elistered between SS bilJfon at)d $ l Q ~ill ion.
here to Marcos' youngest sister and TIMr Philippirr~ governlJ\,Cot it
his alleged former girlfriend. already trying to claim S3SO m1llton
Carpenter. 0-Norwalk.. assisned worth of property Marcos allegedly
members of his Senate Select Com-holds in New York.
m1ttcc on· the Pacific Rim to in· Marcos fled the PbiliJ>(>ines on Feb
vestigate parttls ofland "which have 26 and flew to Hawaii wuh members
apparently been hidden behind aJI of bis family and associates. State
sorts of front names to conceal the Department officials said Wednesday
true nature of the ousted dictator's they will give the new Philippine
holdings," he said in a release. JOvernment a list of most of the cash,
More than I 00 parcels of land arc; Jewels and documents taken by
being invest1.~ued, including a MatCQS from Manila in 300 crates.
Pasadena mansion a~d a "huge block Pope today released a hst of
ofland" in the Carlsbad area near San propeny he saJd is owned by Fortuna
Diego. Carpenter said. Marcos Barba, the dcppsed presi-
The new government of Philippine dent's sister, and Dovie Beams V1l-
President Corazon Aquino says lagran, who "says she's a former
Marcos looted the Philippines girlfriend."
treasury of b1lhons of dollars during "I understand she wrote a book 1n
his ZO }Cars in office, investing much which she makes that claim," Pope
said.
"We checked wnh the House
subcommittee and Mr. (Rep. Steven)
Solarz and wnh the FBI and with the
Custom Service. and none of them
have an) mvcstipt1on currently
pending with respect to either of1hHC
women." Pope said.
The property, he sajd, is "all O\lcr
the coun!)'.." "Ms. V1llagrans' property 1s largely
in Beverly f hlls. but she also has
property 10 Pasadena, Alhambra.
Hansen Heights. Sunland ... and West
Los Angeles." Pope said. "The sister's
property 1s in West Covtna, ~s
Angeles' near west side and tn
Lancaster. The Lancaster parcel is
vacant."
He said the sister's real estate Is
valued at about $250,000. and the
Villagrans property at$7.7 m1lhon -
some of 1t held jOtntly by V1llagrans
and her husband, Sergio Villagrans,
and some held under the name Dovie
Beams.
He said the women's property was
registered "openly in their own
names" with "no effort to cone.cal 1t."
Why isn't Cape Cod stucco studiv
compatible in HB neighborhood?
By ROBERT BARKER
Of!MO.., ..........
Paul Thom~on want~ to build a
two-story, wooden. Cape Cod-style
photography studio on a vacant lot tn
Huntington Beach near Beach
Boulevard and Warner A venue
He was surpnsed, he said, when the
Planning Commission told him he'd
have to put a stu cco extenor on the
2.400 square-foot building, alkgcdly
to be compatible w1th the surround·
ing buildings. Thompson appealed
the decision to the City Council
Monday mght
Officials extended their sym-
pathies and then ordered Thompson
tO comply With a Staff rccommen·
dauon on the design of the building
that Thompson said represents small
improvement at best.
.. It's now more than 90 percent
stucco and less than 10 percent wood.
This defies logJc and reason. I beheve
the Planning Commission did 1t on a
whim."
As gauch as he dislikes it, Thomp-
son said he sees no alternative but to
put up the building to tfie city's
spccificatJons.
But he found sympathetic cars in
City Council members Don
MacAllister, Jack Kelly and Ruth
Finley.
"I think it's wrong," MacAlhster
said Tuesday. "As long as he meets
the building codes, he should be able
to use any material he wants to."
MacAllister and KeUy also agreed
with Thompson that lhe Cape Cod
wooden ex tenor would not be incom-
patible wtth architectural designs in
the area.
In other action. the City Council:
•Directed further studies that may
result 10 a revival of plans to build a
$25 m1l11on. 192-unit Palm Court
senior citizen complex at Lake Street
and Atlanta Avenue.
•Approved plans to convert a 31/2-
acrc, c1ty-0wned dirt parlung lot at
Beach Boulevard and Pacific Coast
Highway to a campground for rec-
reation vehicles.
•Studied . a request by Mayor
Roben Mandie toenhst residents' aid
in reporting illegal dumping of toxic
and hazardous materials into the
city's storm drains and sewers.
•Approved the sale of a c1 t y-owned
site to the M1lco Development. Inc.
for S 1,525.000. The five-acre 1ndus-
tnaJ site 1s 1n the Talben-Beach
Redevelopment Project area near the
Emerald Cove senior c1t1zen housing
complex .
Controller Cory won't run again
SACRAMENTO (AP) -~tale
Controller Ken Cory. the keeper of
California's $35 billion annual check·
book. announced today he will not
seek re-election to a fourth term as a
campaign foe accused Cory of .. cnm1-
na I perj uf) . "
.. Mr. Cory has made a determina-
tion he will not -;eek re-election," said
Pe1er Pelkofer. the Democratic con-
troller's spokesman. "He was basical-
ly tired of the need to be such a public
figure. He's interested in leading a
more pnvate lifestyle ... he informed
members ofh1s staff at various 11mes
) esterday "
Cory was not personally available
for comment. Pelkofer said only that
Cory was "on his to New York on
controller's business" and would be
out of the st.ate until Saturday.
State Sen. Daniel Boatwright of
Concord 1mmed1ately announced he
would seek the Democratic nom1-
nat1on for Cory's post, and two other
Democrats.· Assembl yman Gray
Davis and state Sen. An Torres, both
of Los Angeles. were also cons1denng
the race as Cory's I I th-hour decision
threw Democrats into a scramble
.. I'm filing my (candidacy) paper!.
1h1s afternoon," Boatwnght told re·
porters on the Senate Ooor .. My main
opponent 1s Gray Davis," he said
Candidates ha ve until 5 pm
Fnday to file their official notices of
NEST ANDE SWITCHES ...
From A l
pos1t1on A Democrat, she 1s expected
toseek..re,.ekct10.n lo the post she has
held for 12 years. he said.
Rogers said Nestande's fund-ra1s-
1ng ab1ht1es have been senously
hampered b)' the TIP CUP ordinance
""hich he unsuccessfull)' challenged 1n
court last year. No other candidate for
statewide office is sub1ect to the
ordinance.
First passed 1n 1978, the ordinance
requires campaign contributors to
make extrns1 vc d1scloc;urc'> concern-
ing their personal and busin<'SS ties 1f
they donate more than~ 1.534 to any
member<>r cand1datc for lhe Board of
Supervisor\ dunng an y 48-month
pc nod
~upeni~ors rcce1v1ng more than
SI ,534 dunnga four-year penod mu 'it
al.s.o..disq1.1ahfy them!l:tlves from vol·
ing on any matters effecting the
donors.
Under those rules. Nestande could
not accept a ma1ordonation from any
local firms and ind1v1uals doing
bus~ness with the county. Rogerssa1d
To demonstrate the impact of the
ordinance, he pointed to the Irvine
Co., the county's largest landholder.
Company officials routinely con·
tnbute SI 0.000 and $20,000 to state·
wide campaigns, Rogers said.
But Nestande could not accept
such a contnbut1on. 1f offered. be·
cause he would be forced to abstain
from vot1ngon mattersofimponancc
1n his d1stnct. he said.
cand1dacy for the June 3 pnmacy.
Ooe of Cory's two Republican
opponents. former Fair Ppl111cal
Practices Commission Chairman
Dan Stanford. took credit for Cor. 'i;
withdrawal. da1m1ng that Cof) I!.
quittmg pohuc!. "because he has no
truthful ansv.ers'" to Stanlord's al·
legations Feb. I >S that ( ory had
"pocketed for his personal u"'~· more
than $300.000 in campaign con-
tributors· money ..
At tha1 time. Stanford a~kcd the
FPPC and Sacramento d1s1nct at·
tomey to investigate ( ory's cam-
paign expcnd1t1,1rc repon'I
Cory refu~d to rc,pund lo ~tan.
ford's QUCSllOO'i
TIN C l P. which means Time I~
!Suw_Clcan Up...E<ll+~. a~so caused
Nestandc to lose out on contnhut1ons
from those who are reluctant to
publiCI) disclose afl their bus1ne\S
rclat1onsh1ps, Rogers said. "The)'
don't want 10 be under an} more
disclosure than they ha\e (under the
state's Po1Jt1cal Refonn Act).'' Rogers
said.
Nest.ande raised S350,000 dunng
1985 and another $1 20,000 10 Janu-
ary of this year He started with a
reserve ofS87,000.
If elected se<:retary of ~tale,
Nest.ande ~1d he would take on the
issues of elec11on refonn. reappor·
t1onment and econom1t growth
within the Pac1fk Basin.
COUNCILMAN FIGHTS OFFSHORE OIL ...
From Al
mcn1 1<, 10 the hip pocket ot the Oii
1ndu'it f), and the state is 10 the hip
pocket of the federal government "
The 011 lobby 1s 50 well-entrenched
in Washmgton that opponents will
have d1 fliculty bloclu ng offshore pro-
duction locally. he said
Gentry said local congrec,<,men
have received large contnbuuon.,
from th<' oil interests.l. including·
Wilham Danncmeycr (>10,00<)), R·
Fullenon; Robert Dornan ($9.()()fJJ,
R-Garden Grove, and Robert
Badham ($2 000), R-Ncwport
Beach.Dannemcyer 1s on the n<"go-
t1at1ng team.
Questions put to him dunng
Wednesday's ~moo suggested the
deck already 1o; stacked, Gentry
charged.
For example, one congressman
asked Gentry 1fhe would be wilhng to
accept only two 011 rigs off the Orange
Coast 1f they guaranteed everybody
else would have two ngs and prom·
1scd no more would be permitted
"That's hke me saying to my
constituents in Laguna Beach that
every neighborhood had to have a gas
station and hotel." he said.
"Instead we hould be lookmg at
the coast and decidmg which area
~hould be protected."
Gentry said Big Sur aod Montercr.
are among nine "sub-area deferral '
zones that will be orotectcd from
drilhng. "I asked thal we be; No JO,"
he said.
Citizen input will be needed to get
Congress movmg. Gentry said.
"It 1s so poh11cal. so highly charged
with 011 interests, if people don't
speak. we'll sec 011 ngs off the <'range
County coast 10 a few yearc;.
"Those of us who arc elected
officials and participate 10 hearings
all the time are kind of worn down -
hke the fact that I was the only one
from Sou them California here today.
.. It's hard on short nottcctosct here
-I learned &bout lhc heanng last
week -whereas the oil industry has
lobbyists here on the Hill every day ...
he said.
SEARCH RESUMES FOR PLANE AT SEA ...
From Al
had found the wreckage of the ~1ng.le·
engine Ptpcr Archer early WednesdAy
and sent a diver to confirm they had
hooked 1t with their grapphna hooks.
The diver reported he couldn't tell
what the object was bccau~ of murky
water condiuon.s. "It turned out '° be the edle of a
ledge," said Russ Klein, director of
Vessel Assistance and coonndator of
the search. "The a~ they were
scarchin.s rinaed from 60 feet to 160
feet. and they hooked onto the top of
the chfT "They snagged 1 couple of th1np
atain after that but 1t 1ust rumcd out
•
to be the edic •10. ·
Klein said he is not sure how much
longer the search will continue.
The airplane crashed about 11 ·1 S
p.m. Sun~y when a 01Jllt instructor,
Ph1hp Terney of lrvme, and two
students. Barry K.tng of Newport
Stach and Bcmgno Villa of Costa
Mesa, were on a m&ht tra1nin1 Oight.
Witnesses told National Tr1nspor-
tatJon Safety Board investiptor Don
Llorente the plane was flyina so low
over the water off Newport Pier 11
appeared to be on a "m'lfina run ••
The plane banked to the ng.hl and
1U wins dipped into the ... a1er
I
causing the plane to cartwheel SC\eral
um es across the surface of the ocean.
Uoren1e estimated the ajrcraf\ wa5
travelinaloexce sofJOOmphwhenit
crashed. He based the estimate on
damqe to the landing pr, which
was arnons the debns searchers
recovcn:d on the s1.1rface about a third
of a mile from Ncwpon Beach.
The investiptor from the federal
safety board'• Los Anaeles office SJiid
1t was unlikdy anyone could survive
the crash, and 1nvestiptot1 believe all
three v1ctJms may have bttn eJCCted
from the plane u it whirled over
thewater before s1nkJna.
I WEATHER
A. moi.t. onlhot9 elr ftow puet'9d more fog end low aloud•
Into c:oattl communlU.. end the Intend v.uey9 todey, end the
morning and evening han wu •lCPllCted to r.tum Fnday.
MMnwt\lle. an upper-tevet high PfMIUl'e •Ytferl'I Wiit meen
teJr weether ov« Southern C.llfomla mountain• end de!Mrt1.
and hazy afternoon 8UnthlM In .,... afteo1td by the fog.
9CCOtdlng to the ,...,tonal w .. ther s.vtoe Local wind• eoufd
guat up to 25 mptt In the deeerte.
A.IOng the Orange Cout ther9W Ill be night and motnlng low
C!Ou4• lf\d IOc:aJ denM tog wtth hazy afternoon ~l\lhlM thfough
Friday. Hight renglng ffom the low to mid eo. at the beecMe to
the mid to upper 10. Jn the Inland ~i.y.. Lows mostly In the 509.
From Point Conception to the Mexican Border -Inner
watwe: Llaht variable wlnclt through Friday except eouthweet to
west a to le knot• In the aftwnoont and evening•. w .. t twefl 1
to 3 feet. Low cioudl!lMI through Friday. Local denN tog night l-~------~-..!'T=-------.::1u...---1
end morning hours.
U .S •. T emps
• 53 70 ., ., 56
51 ti
10 eo 71 40
BADHAM BACKS REAGAN ON CONTRAS ...
From Al
grcssional votes today and Wednes-
day. all opposing the plan to aid the
Contras. Reagan's proposal calls for
an allocation of $70 million that
could be u$.Cd for military purposes
and $30 million for non-military
needs.
The armed serviees committee has
some responsibili ty for the
N1cauraguan funding, particularly its
military use.
Badham was among the committee
members who supported the funding
in today's voice vote. according to his
aide Wilham Schreiber
"He 1s a strong supporter of the
president's ~sture m Nicaragua."
Schreiber said.
The Republican congressman be·
llcves the Nicarauguan government
"1scon~ohdat1ngor may already have
consolidated a totalitanan, Marxist,
Leninist state in Central Amcnca.
which is a very real threat to the
security of that region and to the
security of the United States,"
Schneber said.
The Nicaraguan funding package
faces a vote by the full House later this
month, but Schreiber said the out·
come "1s 1us1 100 close to call. The
comm111ce votes may not be a good
indicator of the final vote."
Some cnucs have suggested that
the Nicaraguan conJl1ct generates
little interest among average Amcn-
cans. who are more concerned with
domestic issues.
But Badham's aide said the con·
gressman's Newpon Beach offices
have received a sigoi1icanr number of
letters and some visits by groups
representing both sides of the conflict.
"The m111onty of mail is from 1
people who do not trust the Sand·
inista eovt'rnmcnt to ncgollate 10.
good faith," Schreiber said.
President Reagan has launched his
own lobbying blitz, saying the money I
1s needed for the Contra guerrillas "so
we will never have to send our own
Amcncan boys" to fight the Sand-
inista government that he says is a
menace to democracy in Latio
Amenca.
But House Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neill Jr .. D-Mass .. disagreed. say·
ing at a news conference that U.S.
help isn't what the outnumbered
Contra fighters need. He predicted
that Americans evcntuaUy will be
drawn into the conflict.
SERVICE DISTRICT PROPOSAL STALLED •••
From A l
Because takmg on responsibility
tor ccna1n community services 1s
often a step toward incorporation. the
question of whether Laguna Niguel
should ha vc control of street, park
and slope maintenance money now
administered by the county is a
volatile one
The impetus to form separate
services d1stncts comes from the
count)' Board of Supervisors which
decided last year thatsome tax money
-called augmentation funds -
would not be returned to each
co mmunity but spent instead on
countyw1de Oood and fire protection
project~
tstablish1ng 1he1r own services
d1stnct rctumc; the augmentation
dollars 10 the community. It also adds
another layer of government. one
which must be insured.
Jim Krembas, president of the
Laguna Niguel Community Council
says formation of a services district
would mean an additional SI million
to the community.
But council member Paul Chns·
llanscn 1s worried the gain would be
offset by necessary insurance pay-
ments,
A st.ate ballot 101t1ativc to be
considered by voters in June could
resolve some of the msurance prob-
lems mun1c1palities and services dis-
tricts have experienced, he said.
Putting off the services distnct
question until af\erthe initiative vote
will srive Laguna Ni~uel residents a
clea~r picture of the obstacles the
district would face. he said.
Reheann$ the matter will also be
fairer' to residents of Emerald Ridge.
Monarch Bay and Laguna Sur who,
until recently. were oblivious to their
possible inclusion in the new services
distnct. Comm1ss1oncr Riley said.
"The thing that has created the
greatest host1hty has been public
awareness. Nobody knew what was
going on," Riley said.
LAFCO Director Richard Turner
said the commission ran a legal notice
about formation of the services
distnct in a local newspaper. But no
commun1t1es other than Laguna
Niguel were specifically named for
inclusion.
POLICE SET UP MESA SUBSTATION ...
From A l
passmg out flier.. and g.iv1ng d1rec-
t1onc; to the substation.
Wt11le grateful for the coverage in
local n<'wpapers, he is contacting
Spanish publications that arc more
llkt'ly to reach the Hispanic populace.
"After all. if they can't speak
English. they probably can't read 1t
ctther:· Camarillo said, shalung his
head with a chuckle ... I thou~\ we
could Just come out, hang a shield on
the door and people would know we
were here."
In dealing with the immigrants.
Camanllo is as much a teacher as an
enforcer.
"A lot of them didn't feel or rcaliu
they were doing anything wrong," he
explained. "The key 1s getting to
know the culture, and most of the
younger officers are ,oina to learn it
real quick out there.'
For instance, many Hispanic resi-
dents gather tn the alleys behind their
homes or 10 their front yards, drink-
ing beer late into the ni&ht while
radios blare rancheras and comdas
from an all-Spanish station.
°tc~~~E Daily Pilat
MAIN OFFICE
lY ..,.,, e.. "' C<i.t• -CA
lt'c; a common sight 10 East Los
Angeles or other Hispanic nctgh·
borhoods. where the tolerance from
adjacent residents is a little higher
than in Costa Mesa.
"Herc, partying in front of your
home past 10 o'clock is beyond
reason,· Camarillo said, "although
we don't have ncarlr, the problem
we've had years back. •
Lt. Les Harrison, who oversees
patrols in the west side area, con-
curred that relations between
Spanish-speaking residents and
police have become less strained.
"They arc more responsive to us
aod don't 11ve us as bad a time as they
used to." Hamson said.
Although the substation is open,
renovation work is continuinl on the
form.er five--room house.
The sinefl of fresh paint wafts
throuJb the facility, while a small
electnc heater sits in front of the unlit
stone fireplace.
"We still haven'tgotten aJI the buas
out," Camanllo said.
The substation 1s open weekdays
from 10 am. to 7:30 p.m .. with
Camanllo coming on duty in the
afternoon. Police aides now take
crime rcpons at the new office and
will ~ventually be doing fingerprints
and licensing bicycles, Harrison said.
DRUNK •.. From Al
the CHP.
Eighty-five percent of 2,450 motor·
1sts who filled out questionnaires
approved of the program.
CURFEW •••
Prom Al
drop. "Today parents need au the
help they can aet," Pu rt.ell said.
Jn addition, he said many run·
aways make their way to Laauna
Beach only to "hang out at the hquor
sto~s and outside ban."
Delly Piiot
Deft"'Y
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~~ V•0•''9"' •!Ml1 Otl~ Coe$! '""°"''"''9 C.Ofl'IPl"Y NO ,.,...,. "°',.. ""'''"'°"' -010t>e1 men .. 0t 10..•ttM ,,_,. 'WI< .. , mey DI •eQ<OOUC.O '* '"°"' tO«·•I p.,
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t» ..,. ST OC "'Of' • ,
VOL. 71, NO. 15
What do you like about the D111ly Ptlot? What
don't you like? Call the number above and your
messaae wtll be recorded, transcribed and de-
livered to the appropriate editor
The same 24-hour answerina service Ol.JY be
uted to rtcord letten to the editor on any 1op1c.
Contributon to our Letten column must include
thctr name aod telephone number for verification.
Tells us what's on your mind.
S11\;r01y ono Sllndty t1
y(l\I 00 11(,4 II(-'f°"
COPY OJ' 7 I "-CAii M!Ott
!I) • m ""° fO'll ~ .,. DI c»._ec:J
Ctrculatton
Telephonee
'
-
Horse fair slated
at Orange Coast
A one-day fair for hol'$C lovers, designed for
younasters above age 9 and their parents, will be
hosted by Orange Coast College Satu.rda)' from 9
a.m. to 4 P:m. !n .lhe college's Agncuhure Center.
The fatr will.1ncludc a swap meet faturing horse· relat~ items, slide shows, pnzcs, a hjppol?I)' test
and rune one-hour wofksbop sessions. Admission as
SI and funhcr mforma1ion 1s available at 432-5032.
Newport Bay tour Saturday
T~c Fnend~ of Ncwpon Bay will conduct their last au1ded walking tour of the Upper Bay Ecological
Reserve Saturday from 910 10:30a.in. st.aningat the
comerof East Bluff Drive and Back Bay Road
Small groups will leave every IS minutes ~long
a paved r<nile. Chjldren arc welcome and a camera
and binoculars are advisable. The nell.t sencs of
monthly tours will be&an in October.
Small busJnes• talk slated .
Saddlcback College business professors Joe
Ryan and Lee Eckers will present " seminar on
saning and improving a sr:nall business Saturday
from 8:4S a.m. to 4:30 p.m. m Science/Math Room
313 of the Mission Vicio school.
The fee is SSS and S45 for the second member of
the same family or business. Call 582-4646 for
funher information or registration.
Newsletter workshops set
lrvine Valley College will present two work-
shops on creating effective newsletters Saturday in
Room A401 oft.he school. Both Wlll be taught by Lee
Ann Taylor.
The first, for begrnning and expenenced wri1ers
will be held from 9 a.m. lo noon, while the second:
focusing on design and layout. is planned from I to 4
p.m. The fees are $20 and S25, respectively. or $40
for both. Call S59-3333 for more information.
Investment semlnar slated
A free seminar focusing on investment in m1ni-
warchousc and business parks will be held Saturday
at 9 a.m. al the Irvine Marrion hotel under the
sponsorship of Public Storage Propenies.
Reservations arc required and may be made
through Gordon Fems at the Laguna Hills office of
Dean Witter Reynolds. 58 1-1550.
Personnel course to meet
Makang the nght personnel dec1s1ons will be the
topic of a workshop called "Hanng and Firing"
Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. 1n Room BC-4 of
Saddleback College in M1ss1on V1e;o.
The fee 1s $45 and further information and
registration may be obtained by calling the
Community Services Office of the college at
582-4646.
Growth workshop sch_eduled
OrangeCout OAJLV PILOT~ ......... 11 1 ... *Al
Jurors quizzed in Big Bear slayin
Suspect, once conv icted of murde r , faces
the death penalty if gullty of killing Mesan
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. 0.-, .........
Jury selection opened thu week 10 the
murder trial of Danny Aoyd Wilhamson.
a convicted murderer wbo is ac.cuscd of
shootina and killina a Costa Mesa m,an last
July near Big Bear Lake.
Williamson, 38, faces lhe death penalty.
PotentiaJjurors are bema interviewed at
tbe Oranaeshow Faararounds in San
Bernardino because no courtroom at the
county Superiof G:ourt would accommo-
date lhc large number of jurors under
consideration.
In ~catb penalty cases, potential Jurors
a.re intervitwcd by attorneys on a one-to-
Top police employees
one bas1s rather than in groups. The latter
procedure iJ used in non-capital cases.
The selection process is takioa place in a
llJlC audhorium at the county fafr.
grounds, located about a mile from the
counhouse.
A spokeswoman for lhc San Bernardino
County District Attomcy•s office said such
a procedure is uncommon but not unheard
o an San Bernardino.
Williamson is chaf'ICd WJth the July 26,
1985. slayina of Ross F. Howe of Cost.a
Mesa. Howe. 31, was vacationing with
friends when be was shot outside a Big
Bear liquor store.
According to accusations, Howe had
purchased a six-pack of beer and wa.s
walk.ma to his vehicle when Williamson
coofton\ed him. demandina money.
Howe allepdly ipored Williamson and
contindcd to his truck. County sheriffs
deputies wd Williamson aimed a &\lo
tbrouJh lhe truck's wind.shield al\d shot
Howe in the head.
The Cost.a Mesa man was pronounced
dead at lhe scene.
Prosecutor Raymond HaJabt trl sa>d be
is seek.in.a lhe death penalty because
Williamson bas previously been convicted
of murder and on a belief th.at he went to
the liquor stott with the intent to kill
someone.
Alan Spears. ihe pubhc defender rep-
resent1na Williamson. has not revealed hts
trial strategy but said his client was
intoxicated at the time of lhe shootina.
"He dropped bis guo at one point," said Spears.
Williamson also is charged with threat-
enina. beatina and shoouna at four other
The Exch.anCe Club of Newport Beach hu
honored membera of the ctty•• Police Department
for achle•ement beyond the call of duty. Former
Newport Beach Mayor Da•e Rycoff presented
awarda to (from left) lllke Byama, officer of the
year; Jean Barris, reee"e omcer of the year;
Karen Wetcand, police clYlllan of the year: and
Tim Riley, auperTillor of the year.
peo~ in a milli<rime aptee (olJOwhc lbe
slapnt ouuidt the hquor ltOR. SbenJfs deputies clwed and eventually
captured WilliamJon, aocotdina to ,.
pons.
At the time oft.be incident. W111ianuoa
was a fua;idv!t havina failed to repon ao W. probation on1oer in San DiCIO for.iitmty ~en months. accorcUna to rec:ordl blM
by the at.ate Deoertmcnt of Comictiom.
Williamson has previously been coo-
vic\ed of murder. robbery and bu1*'Y
and has spent much of his ad uh life belili>CI
bars, coun ~rds show.
1 ury selCC'tion in the death penalty ceJe ii
expected to take a month or lo~-
"rhe eelectJon procesa also 11 11owa'
because many potential jurors have Itron&
(ecliop on the death penalty and are
eliminated as jurol"S for that reaaon.
The first jury pool called in the
Williamson case cons11ts of I SO people, a
court officer said.
.Teachers
get time
to grade
essays
By G. JEANETTE A VENT
Ot_O.-, .... ....,
Irvine's high school English teachers
will soon ge1 some time ofT from tcachioa
to a:rade tbcfr students' essays.
ihe Irvine Board of Education voted
unarumously this week to hire a substitute
teacher for eacb of the three high schools to
rcUeve En$}ish teachers while they grade
papers dunna the school day.
The pilot program, which will be tested
this scme5tcr, is expected to cost SI 5,555,
according to a staff report.
Jn the report, Tammi Montgomery,
Doris Blake and Karin Mayer, chair·
women of English departments at Irvine.
Woodbndgc and Univenity high schools.
said. ~we believe that a long-t.erm,
credenttaled English substitute at each
high school site will provide minimum
relief to the presently unmanageable paper
overload .... " -. ·
More than 30 English teachers showed
up at a school board meeting Feb. 4 seek.ins
relief from 68-hour work weeks and large
classes. The board responded by askinJ the
teachers to come back wtlh a wnnen
proposal trustees could act on.
At that time. Maxer said ... We want to
~ the National Council ofTeachers.''
A Coastline Community College workshop on
self-growth and 1mpro' ement will be conducted
Saturday from 9 a m to 4 p.m. at the Hudtington
Beach Center. 20661 Farnsworth Lane, Huntington
Beach.
Psychiatric nurse Maredale Anderson wall
conduct the session, which is priced at $25. Call the
college at 241-6186 for furthermformauon.
Foµnder Of.Fam1· 1y Week. ly ~=~::~E~~~?~3~~e~
---811tltttatd, "lt'sfl&l~mmial-to.t1K-,.;.,)~~--•
An Invitation:
Wl• 1-11· am Marr1· o.tt de_ad at 77 ;:m:~~~r~·~t~ft~r t~~~rc~n~ J~~ "the number doesn't come down much
fan her."
publish a special section promotmg the
new communiry.
Attention organ1ut1on president• and MC-
retatie.: We want 10 help maka your upcoming
9\'9ntl, meeting•. Mmlnara end tundralMrl SUC·
ceatul. s.nd brief announoementa lnciudlng llrM.
p4.c.. cott (If any) and . 1 phone numbet tor
eddltlonal Information to· Bulletin Board, Dally
Piiot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa M .... 92826 .•
Vet e ran journa lis t
sta rted a c ha in of
Sunday s upplem ents
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Of IM Delly ""°' II.it
A vaned career in the publishing
industry followed . Marriott worked for
Booth Publishing Company. Ridder Bros ..
Scnpps-Howard Newspapers. the Cinci n-
nati Enquirer. New York Herald Tnbune,
Washington Times Herald. Amencan
Weekly, Parade and Esquire Magazme.
untal he founded Family Weekly in New
York City.
He also published New Worlds maga-
zine and started a series of rotogravure
Sunday supplement ma~nes that con-
tfouc under bis family, 1nclud1ng This Is
Orange County, This ls San Diego County,
This Is Southern California and This Is the
Bay Area. This Is the Inland Empire will be
introduced this year.
make sa1d-aJI essays arc read but it may
take six to eight weeks before lhey are
returned. She said. "We have an obligation
to be prepared for each class. We have tj me
lo teach ll. but we do not have time to
correct (students' work.)"
Ma yer said EogJ1sh teachers at Univer·
s1ty High School had a substitute last year
because of increased enrollment, ahd the
substitute worked out well. ~ of your club Of organlutlon'a ac11vitlea
-Ilk• community HNI<» projects or ~ion or
otnoers -should ti. directed to tt\9 Community
News Editor at tt\9 same eddrns Non-returnable
black and wttite ph0tograph1 are wefcome.
Wilham H. Mamou. the founder of
Family Weekly magazine and a leading
Orange County publisher. died Wcdnes.
day of cancer at Saddleback Hospnal in
Mission Viejo. He was 77.
After five years. his wife Phyllis decided
their first son should be born m San
Francisco and the family left New York.
When Mamou sold Family Weekly to
Cuneo Press. the magazine boasted
m1lhons of readers. A controlling interest
an the publication was purchased by
Freedom Newspapers in the 1970s and
later sold to the Gannett newspaper chain.
In 1985. USA "today bought the magazine
-which 1s inserted m the Daily Pilot each
Sunday --and changed the name and
format.
"My father was very act.Ive in publish-
ing." said his son. W1llaam H. Mamou Jr.
"He was cons\antly callqt on by leaders of
the industry for advice.
Don Chadd. prt"S1dent of the Irvine
Teachers· Assoc1auon. said middle school
Enghsh teachers ma) soon make a similar
proposal.
CALENDAR
Thursday, March 6
Marriott launched the magazine Sept.
13, 1953, after 36 years 1n the newspaper
and maga2me industry It 1s the third
largest magazine in the world. with a
weekly circulation exceedang 12 million.
.. He never retired. lhe pubhsh1ng
busaness to him was a way of life."
Memorial services will be held al 2 p.m.
Sunday at St. Andrews Ep1scopaJ Church.
4400 Barranca Parkway. lrvane.
Helen Cameron. president of the school
board. expressed ·concern. about the re-
percussions of the pilot program because -
of Chadd's remarks.
• 6:30 p.m., Laguna Beach Board of Adj ust·
meat. Council Chambers, 505 Forest ;\ve.
• 7:30 p.m .. lrvl.ne Plu .nlng Commission. C'1ly
Council Chambers, 17200 Jamboree Blvd.
Marriott was born Sept. 23. 1909. m
Jackson,.Mich. When he was 8 years old he
went to work for his father, Frederick
Mamott. who published the \1111cn
Patnot newspaper m Jackson. H1SJOb was
to pour lead anto lhe llnotype machines
Mamott quickly advanced: he was
advenising director of the paper while a
teen-ager.
When Mamot\ amvcd 1n San Frc1n-
c1sco. he began pubhshmg the Dall)'
Commercial News. a business newspaper
for the sli!.ppmg 1ndustl)
His remains will be cremated and
scattered at sea near his Lagun'a Beach
home, his family said.
Mamou is survived b) his wtfe Phyllis
and five children; David Mamott of New
York. Phillip Marriott of Austraha. Tom
Garland of New Hampshire. Wilham
Mamott Jr. and Patnck Mamott. both of
Orange County.
Responding to Cameron's concern
about scttmg a precedent for more re-
quests. Stanley Corey. the district's super-
intendent. said. .. fhe class size an the
d1stnct in tot.aJ 1s not good. The~ is an
endless st.ream of perceived needs lo which
~ou'll have to sa)' 'no.' ..
Board member. Gord.on Getchel said.
PoucE Loe
The Mamotts moved to Orange County
an I %8 when the Irvine Co. asked him to
.Spurned lover sought in
Coast acid-burning case
Huntington Beach
>\ freckled. tctn-age bandit with
shouldrr-length light brown hair re-
ported!) held up a Beach Boulevard
Circle·K market and escaped wnh
$298 m cash Wednesday afternoon.
Pohce <;a1d he 'i1mulated a gun .
grabbed the cash and fled on foot.
nonh on Beach He was funhcr
descn~ as a 5-foot. 9-mch "hue
male we1gh1ng 150 p<>unds
A San Oemente businessman who
was seriously burned in an acid anack
this week may have been the victim of
revenge by a spumed lover who
•followed the man half way around the
globe, police investigators said today.
Helmut Biller. a German-born
importer. suffered first and sccond-
dearee bums on his face, neck and
shoulders Monday when someone
doused him with sulfuric acid. said
Lt. Al Ehlow.
Biller. 44. as being treated at the
UCI Medical Center bum ward an
OranJe. Though listed an st.able
condition today. police said they were
told Biller faces e1ttCnsive plastic
surgery and may lose the sight an his
right eye.
The spumed lover. 1denufied only
Coetalleea
Sixteen item~ of Jewelry valued a1
$4,SOO were rcponed !>lolcn Wednes
day from a home an the I 00 block of
We~twar-d Lane. • • • Thieve! rcportctlly \tole I 70 boxes
of furniture pads, worth about S 12.,000. from a Pion«r Packing
storace unil on f>ullman Strttt Tue'i·
day n1&ht. • • • A resident m the 1100 block of
South Cout l>twc rt"portcd thot
while \hr wa\ tryina to sell her home
la t v.ottk. 1 prospective buyer entered
the hou~ with a rcaltor and 'tol<' '2
as a woman named "Tim" and
believed to be Thailand native.
reportedly met Biller five years ago
during a business trip he made to the
Far East. said Ehlow.
"He was liVlng 1n Atlanta at the
time and she eventually showed up
there to be with him." said Ehlow.
"He moved to San Clemente a ycat or
so ago."
The woman reportedly howed up
at BilJcr's San Clemente home Sun·
day while he and his present girlfriend
were pre~rina to go out for dmncr,
Ehlow said.
"I guess he secs her stannJ 1n a
window and gets her to come m and
talk," said the investigator. "He tells
her it's all over."
Eh low said 81Uer and Tam eventu·
1ttm~ Of Jewelry worth $6,460 • • • S C.00 v1deoca settc recorder. a
SI 00 camera and S 1.000 m Jewelry
were reported stolen from an 18th
Street home last weekend Also on
18th Street a thief recently '.ltole four ssoo Flintlock nfles. • • • .\ S 200 v1dC()(tuette recorder wa\
reported stolen ftom a home an lhe
lOOO t>lock of Fillmore Tuesdt) • • • \ roof vent was the point of entry
for a thief who reportedly tole S2 7 5
1n ca~h from Crown <.:leaner\. 2750
H.irbor Olvd . Monday n1 ht • • •
ally got in10 an argument when he
asked her to leave.
"She bates him, he slaps her," ~1d
Eh low.
Biller told police he went out to
dinner later with his girlfncnd bul
found Tim s1t\Jng on the curb m fronl
of has house when he returned. The
man told poljce the woman sat on the
curb until early Monday morning
when she finally left.
Late Monday night. Baller
answered the doorbell and wa'i
splashed 1n the face with acid The
suspect was dcscnbed as an Asian
male.
"Maybe 1t was a relative or a fnend
of this woman," Mid Ehlow "It's
lond of sketchy but it's all we ha' e
n&ht now."
Roof tarring equipment valued nt
$8.000 was recently reported!) stokn
from 1n front of a home m the I 00
block of Paul an no • • • Someone reportedly stoic SI , 740 in
Jewelry frQm a West 20th Strttt home
Saturday. .... , • • • A thief reported!) stole S I 000
from the offices of Harbor T owt °'on
19th treet unday n11ht . \ . A SSOO vadeocauettc f'C'('()fder, a
SIOO camera. and Sl.000 an nn~
were l'('p<>rted stolen from a homr in
the bOO hlock of 18th trttt Monda)'
••• .\fter 'imashmg onc of the window'!,
th1e' e'i reportedly stole a $600 car
~tern> from a 1981 Volkswagen
parked m front of a home an the 5300
block of Meadowlark Wednesday ....
A resident an the 16900 block of
Edgewater rcponNS that thieves stole
the hubcaps ofT hts beige Mercedes
28 l parkt"d an the" lot of a Conroy's
flo"'er 'ihop at the comt'r of Warner
.\"enut' and Realh Bouk\ard
~edne~a) ••• .\ ~sadent 1n the 8300 block ot l ~
2 Jn Hallow een
sh ooti ng h eld
LO. .\NC1l:.l fl\ ( i\PI --PohC'c
\aid toda)' tht')' ha'e arrested t.,,,.o
more men in the H. llowttn \hooun&
of a poh~ det~:t1ve v.ho authonue,
SI) wa, killed b«au~ of his le$U·
mon)' at a robber) tnal.
David William Bentley. 12. of
lt.adena, and RC«Y < lcm Cooper,
31. of Lo\ Anael~. both pleaded
1nnO<"tnt late Wtdn~a> to a charse
of con 'pinng to murder lo!> naclc
pohct Ot-tcct1vt Thomas Wilham'
Tl\e1r Ol'Tt'1h. made quietly th1
v.ttk. hnng to st\ the number of men
charted 1n 1he ca-.c
"Every quesfaon asked tonight cannot be
answered without p1loung the program."
Conte reported that ht'i hlack
Schwinn five-speed b1C\cle was
stolen from In rront of (keanv1e"
High School Wedncsda' fhc bile
was valued at S 190 75 • • • A S6.000 diamond nng "'as re-
ported stolen from a home an thl' 4800
hlock of Heil A' enue ~ ednt"sda'
Fountain Valley
Someone rcp<>rtedl~ <+tole an St\00
car stereo from a white t<Hn TO\ota
C-ehca p~irked m the lot of ·1n
Sc1enufic. 18249 Euclid ~t .. Wedncs·
da) Pohce said the thief pm·d one ol
the "1ndows to gam entr. to tht'
\Chicle ••• Entenng through an unlod..cd rrt11
sliding glass door. a th1ct reponcdl)
~lole a f 700 diamond nng. a fur C''lXU
and two pa1~ of silk pant \Ult from
an El Grteo C'1rdc home \fonda\
The v1ct1m told pohcC' thl \ lothin&
wa\ valued at S '\. ~45
lrrine
..\ hl1cl. ~h"inn h1ndr '"lul'd at
between $200 and S400 was reported
stolen from m front ofa restaurant at
4~00 Barranca Parkway Wednesda) • • • .\ burglar reported!~ broke anto an
Fa~t Yale Loop homt' Fnday and
'ttolt' a loaded handgun . . . ,
I h1eves reported!)' stole S 1,500 in
cash from the offict' of the Casa Mana
Rt'staurant. 18512 ~1ac <\rthur Blvd . ·unday • • • .\Iler breaking a "1ndow. a thief
reportedly stoic an clrctric typewnter
from an office building at 2062
Bu"ness Center Dn\t· Wednc~y
Newport Beach
Aller smashing the front window
wt th 11 \JreJack. a th1ct reportedly stoic
SWO 1n ca h from the pro \hop of the
'lewpon ~nch Countr; Club. I 000
Ea~t \on'tt H1e,hwa~ WMne~I)' • • • Somrone r~ponqt~ stoic SI C.O
lrom a horn(" 1n the -5()() block or
8a\<,hMr' <+omrtame \tn~ last Fn-
da\
Copter in crash landing
.\ hchC'optcr <:ra .. h-tanded n<.'ar
Sanuago Prak on th(' Orangt-Rl\t'r
\1dc count' hne Wtdne~a' aflC.'t
noon, ,h&hth anJunng one ·of two
people aboard . Orange (. ount\
herifl's depuues ~'ltd
Lt 8111 Miller dC'iCnbcd 1t u a
"hard 1and1n1" 1hout 2 pm 1n the
Ngcd Santa 4na Mounta1n!I c.'wcr
looktDI south Onange C ounty •
Ptlot C'harlc~ Reid.a '~ nf R«Jc)n
do Beach t ·af)(d 1n1uf) and dC"Chn('(I
mf'd1cal trc"atment Rut fl""o,tnter
Terrv .\dam~. '\\ of L cm &-ach
,ufftrt•d cut\ and hru1\t's. M1llrr \: 1d
lhC.' two-~at hellu,ptc.-r owncd b~
<\inc r \I'\ H('hC\lptCI"\ had JU t hfi td
oil fr\lm oc:irh\ S1rrra Peal. and Yr'IS
appm chintt anllRgO Pca.k when 1t
lost power Stld med to M:t 1t down. ·
hut the cnfl mllcd o'er on thC' \lope.
Miller \111J
Thr tv.o men ab< rd ,,.ett PftPlt· ma to ~t\ l\t'. n1enn1-. on tht peak.
\I S Fort'tlf\ ~"ice wc>rkc~ rc-
\pondC'd lel .m.tke 'Un' \Piiied fuel
\hdn 1 ~u•n a fur
')
-L-
' l
•
.. •
Death urged for hostage slayers
WASHINGTON (AP) -Prut· )u.r, wd the poup oo.ntloun to den~ Reap.n's Tuk Foroc on Com-5Upport the concept of puipe>1ot
bew.at ferronsm said~ strih:s to tt't&Li.ate tp.lM1 &erronsu
death penally abouJd be • but would oppoec ""Wa.oton destruc-
for the mwda of Amcncan boall" tion of bum.an bfe an order to show
anywhere io the world and caUed on tome mu.tele" an \M wakt of tenonst
LDte1hleocc 1Fnaet to increate thcu . attacks.
''There mft arty wnple ao~ to
lb.at ooc:. We reJl.CtllC the polw:y of bona will1nt to ~tt. buc wc'tt
001 SolJtl to Ju.st wantonly desttoy
human life in order to show that
'ft'vc done somelhinf."
A decla.sSlfied vemon of thr t..ask
f orcc rcpon. which was sjven to
Reapn as a (Jamfied document six
"ub qo. recommends closina lepl
loopbolet that now permit terrorisu
to escape U.S. law enforcement and
the in~ use of soies.
.. U.S. aot.clliacnccplhered by tee~
n1caJ means is adeQuate and punucd
appropnately.'' ~report concluded
.. At the same ume, lhen u clear n~
for certain lDfonn.auoo that can on])
be pined by mdlviduals. An tn~
lD human intellitt'nce ptbenna is
eueotW co peoeuate terrorist groups
and their support JY$\ems."
uic o1 ~ to penevate tcnorut Asked ho~ the United Statn
OfPAUIUOns. should rtSPODd in sc:ekina rctributton
. for the mW'der of America~ such as
J"V1ce President Geotlle Bu$h. who in lhe Rome airport raid ju.st aft.tr
ctwrcd the Cabtnn·lcvd panel that Christma.s. but can't idenufy lbo5c
srew out of the TWA hlJachna last responsible. Bu"1 wd:
The t.ut force reviewed 11 separate
terrorist incidents abroad last yar in
which 2 3 Americans were k.ilJed and
160 were wounded.
MOVE probe recommends crimlnal charges
PHllADELPJ:flA (AP) ~ The 1nvcsupt1on was the harshest of the be anvC1Upted" by a grand JUry, the
speaaJ comm1ssaon 1nvesupung the 31 findings and condu.s1ons reached comm1ssJoo said. However, the re·
v1olen1 MOVE confrontauon today by the I H nemberpanelappointed by pon did not specify any mdlviduaJs
unanimously recommended that a the mayor. The .70-page repon re-for possible investigation.
m1uioner and the fire com·
n\1ssioner," sa1d commiSSJon mem·
ben. calling the action "~klcss, iU-
concelved and hastily approved."
grand jury be empaneled to consider leased today was substantially the Only two MOVE memt>Crr, a
cnminaJ charges, and condemned same as a draft that was leaked to the woman and a boy, escaped and
Mayor W. Wilson Goode and hts top media la.st weekend. dozens of other homes were damaged
aides fortheir handling oft.ht tragedy. Goode and former Managing DI-the conflagration that began w6en
Tbe report accuses Goode and rector Leo Brooks, former Pohce pohoe dropped a bomb on the
other offictals of grou neghgenoe 1n Commm1oner Gregore Sambor and fon1fied MOVE townhouse. The ftrc
the May 13 siege of the radical group's fire Comm1ss1 oner Wtlham Rieb· already bas cost the city more th.an
headquarters which left 11 people mond were accused of bemg "grossly S 15 million as It rebuilds the houses
dead and sparked a ftre that raced neghgeot," particularly m regard to and pays for losses of property.
·District Attorney Ronald Cf.stille,
whose office would prosecute, has
said be wants to study the repon
before taking any actJon about a
grand jury.
through the west Ph1ladelphta neigh· the deaths of five children of MOVE "Dropping a bomb on an occupied
borhood. S1xty-0ne houses were de-mcmben. rowhouse should have been rejected
.. Dropping the bomb was <lis-
cussed, rehearsed and planned, there-
fore, it was an intenuonal act," wrote
commission member Charles Bowser
in bis analysis. "A homicide caused
by an intentional act cannot be
excused as accidental even if death
wa.s not intended." moycd. The ch.ildren 's deaths "appcarto be out of hand by the mayor, the
The request for a grand Jury unJusttfied hom1c1des which should managjng director. the POlice com-
""'-. -
BALLY
-.
Aden
Super soft comfon
1n this suede high
top casual in
~
nch tan buck with
crepe sole.
\ ---------
--------------
NOTICE TO ALL
Real Estate Managers and Brokers
The Department of Housing and Urban Development, ~ Civic
Center Plaza, Box 12850, Santa Ana. CA 92712·2850, Is seeking
applications from qualified real estate managers and brokers
who wish to recefve Invitations for Bids for Area Management
Brokers to manage HUD·acqulred/owned properties In San
Bernardino County. Applicants must be licensed by the Division
of Real Estate, State of California, as brokers.
Applications may be obtained by writing to the U.S. Depart·
ment of Housing and Urban Development, 34 Civic Center Plaza.
Box 12850. Santa Ana. CA 92712-2850. or by calling the
Property Disposition Section at (714) 836-2446.
A Pre-bid Conference will be conducted on Wednesday,
March 19, 1986 at 10:00 A.M. In the conference room, San
Bernadina County Board of Realtors, 1798 N. "D" St., San
Bernandlno .
Specific geographic areas will be outlined at the Pre-bid
Conference.
Deadline for return of bids Is 9:00 A.M., March 28. 1986.
Completed bid packages must be sent to.
~1-'~"'lo,. +o~ U.S. DeparlJnent of ltousinc nt i.1>111 Oenq1ment • ~ * * i 34 CMc Centet rtaza ! : ftdefMIUclnc ~ 1 : Bo• 12•so
FOR MEN~
~~~SHOES 99 Fashion Island
Newport Beach • 759-9551 • .. o,~AIO _. ... <:-Santi Anl, CA 92712-2850
Bids will be opened at 10:00 A.M., March 31, 1986, In Room m-:rJ. I Federal Building, 34 Civic center aza. an a na.
California .
•
FRIDAJI
SATURDAY •
Something
S p ecial
f eminiae f asbioas
For all your needs, from lu.xury to
Je111ure; carrying 111zes 4 to 18. Our
fMhion jewelry 1s out'ltanding!
Bagels, Etc.
T a.ste 18 flt1vors of bagels and 18
different spreads, Nova Los, tuna &
ere~ salad, herring & Dr. Brown
drinks A landmark in the harbor
area
Red Bobbin
fabrics, notions, fabrics
50°'( Off msny ft1br ica. We
specialize in cotton11 and SERVICE!
Check out our cl8.118es (bean.beg.
eewinlf·Quilting)
DeFalco's
bome of tbe all you care
to eat aatlpa•to bar/
Oelica~n Catering f'iu.a t.o
10. F'ulJ lunch &. dinner menua.
FREE beverage with any lunch
Mar. 7 & 8 .
'•
Cape Cod
Connection
Save 20°, Lo 70"'{ on traditional
clothing for women-sizes 4 to 14.
Alto aave on girls, aizes 7 to 14 and
boya sizes 8 Lo 14.
Treds & Threads
sporting goods
AMort.ed athletic 1hoe11 starting
at $6.00. Softball uniform• (Bike) &
Soccer & goalie jeraeya half orr.
Buketballt, football.a, soccer & vol·
leyballa half orr. Many more fant.aA
tic clothing buys.
Coastline Health
Foods
FrM "Sett.er Nutrition" mags
zine. 13"' (any kind> Vitanuns die·
count.a with thlt ad!
2nd Season
family resale
Winter c108e0ut! 103 to 50"(
OFF on ladies', men's, children's,
infant's and maternity clothes; new
~nd gently used. Great selection or
1ewelry.
Supercuts
G et your hair cut at Coeta Mesa
Supercute on March 7-9 and receive
a complimentary card good for a
free 1hampoo or blow dry on your
nut vilit. Detaila inside!
Con signment
Gallery
S ave on trea.aurea from private
Jewelry colJectiona, blue & white
chfoa, Pottery, dollt & porcelain,
hnen, p1cture1, k.nick-lrnacb, ailver,
CfY9tal & real period antique
furniture!
250-270-298 E. 17th. Coeta Meea
•
Missi:fi pieces critical
to ~ol ng shuttle blast
By t.H Asffdate4 Prttt
CAPE.CANAVERAL. Fla -Jnvesuaators may not be able to learn wby
Challenger exploded unless they recover cnllcal paru of the shuttle's riahc
booster rocket from the ~n floor. a sou~ close to lhc U\Qu1ry rcporU. The
source, who spoke on condluon ofanonymaty, said NASA's own tnvestlptioo
and that of a pmidentta.I comm1ss1on ue studying more than half a doun
pos.s1ble accident caust'S. He said he saw httk ~ns of progress m o.a.m>W'lnl
down the hst
Veteran-salclde study raps draft
BOSTON -A study suggesllnJ 1hat Vietnam-era vc1eran.s are more likel}'
to comm11 su1c1de than those who <lidn 't serve means autbonue-s should weip
all the costs 1nvo1' cd in military conscnpuon, the author says. "The casuaJues
of forced m1htary service may not be hm11ed to those that arc counted on the
battlefield," researchers wrote in a study published today ID tbe New EnJ)and
JoutnJI of Medmne It concludes that Vietnam-era veterans were 86 J)Cf'CCnt
more likel) than non-veterans to die of su1c1de in the yean after the war, and
were 53 percent more hkely to die 1n traffic accidents.
Medla cJUded In baby f ooil-glass ca•e11
The prospect of appearing on tclev1s1on or fihng a lucrative lawsuit may
have enticed pcopk to report finding g1aM in Gerber baby food Jan. a federal
offioal says. and the chairman of Gerber Products Co. blames the newi media
forexaagcraungthe reports ... Unfortunately. (there have been) some suspected
ca.SH 10 which the tnc1den1 may have occurred an the home," Bill Gnu. a
spokesman for the U.S. Food and Drug Adm1nistrat100 in Washington, said
Wednesday. "h 's hard to believe. but that can happen. enher 10 hopes of being
able to sue somebody or for other publicity reasons." Glass has been reported
an baby food, from aJI ma1or manufacturers. in 30 states and the Otstrict of
Columbia since Feb I I . Grigg said.
Study says eierclse reduces risk of death
BOSTON -Regular exerc1sc that bums up 2,000 caloncs a week appcan
to s•gn1ficantly reduce people's nsk of death, a new study concludes. The
research, based on a 16-ycar foUowup of Harvard men. found that thox who
exercised ofT2.000 caJones week.I}' had a 28 percent lower death rate th.an d1d
less active men. "There is widespread and longstand1n~ popular belief that
adequate physical ex.erC1sc is necessary to preserve hfe and us desirable
qualities into old age,'' the researchers wrote ... The present study adds new
evidence to suppon this view."
Your feet need a doctor of their own!
Phone for important /
information. / ~
714 -635 -5680
'. 4"1l" l t .. , ... ,, ,,. . .
•
I. Runnml{
2 l>tabt'te"
3. Athli-tf'" fu.c
I. Hunl'•n'
.';. l••m-.. l.Alllu-..t--..
6. llt'alth and aginl(
7. lnKT• 111. n 1uenail-..
8. ~t11lt'~
9. Plantar"" an
10 . lh1ldr1tn\ frt•t
t J. ll;immnt'<t''
12. Fla1 fe-1·1
t
2 held; tieto Palme case in doubt
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) -
Two men -in~udJng one from Los
Antelet -were detained lo Den.
mark today lD the a.ssauinatioo or
Prime Minister Olof Palme, but
Swedish officials later said they
believed the detainees were not
involved in the killina.
Danish authorities took the men
into custody •fter Swedish police tent
an advi10ry about two men drivina a
West Gmnan-!Clistered Poncbcand
"suspected or beina behind the
murder of Olo( Palme," tbe Swedish
news agency Tidninpmas Tele·
grambyra said.
The men were detained after cross-
ing a narrow sound by ferry from
Hclsinabora. Sweden, to Helainaor, Denmark.
Tbe Swedish news qency said t.be
detainees were YuaosJavs. one livina
in Hambura, West Germany, and the
other in Lot Anaelcs. The aaency &a.id
one man was 37 and the other 33.
Swedish ndio,_quoti~actlna Hels-iOfbora Police Chief Roald Onsoe,
l&ld authorities in the Swedish port
doubted it\er an initial invcstiption
that the two men were involved.
Stia Hadenius, spokesman at the
Swedish Embassy io Wubinaton,
also said Swedish authorities do not
believe the two men were involved in
Palme's killing.
A police spokesman in Hetsinaor
Kid be could not confinn or deny the radio report.
Hcl5inaor Police Comnusstoncr
JoeTJCn Nielsen earlier told The
Allociated Press the men were de.-
Wood this afternoon after a Swedish
border official thouaht one of them
clotely resembled a comP.datte pic-
ture of Palme'• killer. ·
No Corm.al charaes were immodi-
atelJ IQdaed against the two men and
tbeJJ' names were not disclosed..
Kun Baonerhof, a Danish detec-
tive inspector, wd the men were
unarmed but carried a check for
70,000 Swedish kronor, equivalent to
about $9,800.
Nielsen was quoted by the Swedish
news agency u aayina the two men
did not say a word after their arrest
but appea.red to understand £nal,ish.
Poliee believe at least one a<>
complice to the assassin was waitina
with a aetaway car Friday niaht When
Palme was gunned down on a snowy
downtown Stockholm street. They
say there have been teveral claims of
responsibility on behalf of the Red
Army Faction and the HoltF Meins
Commando, related lef\·wt111 West
Gcnnan terrorist voups.
Stockholm Pohcc Commissioner
Hans Holmer, appearing in a na-
tionally televised news conference
today, said be couJd not comment on
reports of the detentions.
Go~bachev elevates Dobrynin to party post
Or1nge COMt DAILY PILOT~, .... I • ._ •Ila
4A . 7.9 1,;
SA ......... . 7-10
2.A .......... 611'1 -10
?MnJl~
Nel ...
A ctre.1 lliDI plwap lD
whlta with -.upe, red. °'
uvy cW 1£p ud.....,
.i..o bone C8lf .-ilh
bWk pNl1l .
tlp and
Mdae
... .. . . . . .... ~"'i~~
99 Fashion Island • Newport Beach • 759-9551
. .
MOSCOW (AP) -MikhaiJ S. general secretary whose polietcs were Shcberbitsky, 68, and the party chlef busador to Washington since 1961 ,
Gorbachev added another full mem-heartily endorsed by the congress, has in Kazakhstan. Dinmukhamed A. first served as a counselor. then as a
ber to the ruHna Politburo today and named five new Politburo memben Kunaev, 74, had been thought in ministeT-counselor at the Soviet Em-
namod Anatoly Dobrynin, the Soviet since be took over party leadership a some danatr of losing their seats on bassy in Washinaton from I 9S2-SS,
Union's long-servina ambassador to year ago. the policy-malcing body, but were and bas been assistant minisler of
Washington, to the party secretariat The Soviet leader also eliminated a retained. foreign affain. a U.N. unde~
Announcina the changes at the pair of candidate members of the There was no word what secretary-general and the head of the 1-------------------------close of the 27th Communist Party Politburo who were appointed by responsibilities Dobrynin would as--American department of the Soviet
Congress, Gorbachev said Lev N. former President Leonid I. Brezhnev sume on the Sccrctariat. which Foreign Ministry.
Zaikov, 62, the former Leningrad -81-year~ld Boris N. Pooomarev b.indles day-to-<iay Soviet affairs.
party boss who was made a member and 8S-year~ld Vasily Kuznetsov. However, his long experience in the A U.S. diplomat who commented
of the ~Y Central Committee's Two other boldoven from the United States can now be tapped by on condition of anonymity said the
Secretanat in July, was elevated to Brezhnev era kept their ~sitions as Gorbachev in Moscow to help for-U.S. Embassy had not been infonnod ..._-..._
K t•t>p up with news of r 1ty and
l'<>Unt) gon•rnment and their spend -
ing plans.for) our tax dollars ·
full PoUtburo membership. full members of the PoUtburo. The mutate policy toward Washington. of any change in the Soviet reprcscn-.... , ral
vorbacbev, the Lommunist Party ,...U~kra~irua~·~n~pa'.:rt~y~bo~ss~, _:Vl~adi~·~m~ir'.......:V..:... __ Tb~e~66-~y~ear~~~ld~di~·~p::_::lo::ma=:;t.:.._:a~m~--ta=:ti:.on::....:in:...W.:..:...:as=h::in&to::::;::.;n.:::._ ____ __..! _________________ ._ .... _· ---...,..----
.-
Terrorists
say French
hostage slain
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Police
patrols searched throughout Bciruit
today but found no trace of the
French researcher a pro-lranian
Shiite Moslem faction claimed it bad
k.iUod, the police chief said.
"So we cannot confirm that he was
killed," said chief Maj. Gen. Osman
Osman.
Osman told the Associated Press
.1lice searched "aJI areas we suspect
Lhat the body might bt dumped at.
We arc continuing the search today."
Islamic J ihad, or Islamic Holy
War, which has said it held six
American and four French hostages,
claimed Wednesday evening it had
killed .Seurat in rcvenee for France's
extradition of two lraman-aJliod Iraqi
activists to Baghdad.
The claim came in a statement
delivered to a Western news agency
and newspapers in Beirut aJong with a
Cl>IOr plmlogra"}1tro . ·. . -
ty. There was no way to detcnmne
whether the statement was true.
Seurat, 37, a researcher with the
French Center for Studies and Re-
search of the Contemporary Middle
East. was kidnapped on Beirut'~
a1rpon highway May 22.
Avalanche deaths
cancel maneuvers
OSLO, Norway (AP) -The deaths
of at least 12 Norwegian soldiers in an
avalanche during NATO maneuvers
nas forced cancellation of the war
games involving 20,000 troops from
eight nations, a Norwegian army
official said today.
"We cannot possibly shoulder the
rcsponsibiJity for holding personnel
m area with such e~treme risks of
more avalanches, and where Jives
have aJready been lost," said Lt. Geo.
Ulf Berg, the Supre~e Comman~cr
for Nonh Norway, m announcing
cancellation of the Arctic Express
exercises.
Four soldiers remained missing
today after a waJI of snow crashed
down on 31 members of a Norwegian
slo patrol Wednesday at Vassda.len
near Narvik in northern Norway.
Fifteen soldiers were iniurod.
Fire guts office
of Mandela group
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
(AP) -A fire destroyed the bcad-
quarten of a group working for the
release of jailed black lctller Nelson
Mandela today. The grldp's leader
blamed security police, but
authorities termed the charge "ludi-
crous."
Elsewhere, four blacks were re-
ported killed in unrest around the
country, includina a bus driver who
was stoned to death in the black
township of Soweto on Wednesday
ni&ht when a mob attacked his bus.
Spokesman Pat Roaen said this
momfoa the Putco bus comp&o>' had
suspended indefinitely au service to
the community of I .S m illion located
near Johannesbura.
Aubrey Mokocna, publicity ~
retary of the Release Mandela Com-
mittee, said a bomb went off at 4 a.m.
in the two-room office in central
Jobanncsbura, setting a fire that
demolished furniture, tiles, stacks of
T-shins and PoSters.
RUFFELL'S
lJ>ttOLSTERY INC .
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In 9 colors, plus white.
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Manager's chol~; setec:don wfll
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A8 Orange Cout OAIL V PILOT I Thurlday. March 6, 1986
EonoRIAL
Truancy case
thr eate n s fi g ht
a gain st crime
The California Supre me Coun is reviewing a
Ne~ort Beach case that may ha ve far-reaching
implications in the fight against neighborhood crime.
Specifically, the court is being asked to overturn two
lower courts that ruled the police had no right to stop and
search a young man who was fo und to be carrying an
illegal drug.
We are protected from unreasonable police searches
by the 4th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The
court must determine whether it was reasonable fo r the
police to stop a person whose youthful appearance led
them to suspect him of truancy.
If the Supreme Court agrees with the lower courts, a·
constitutional guarantee will be spared a threat tha t may
be spurious and local police will lose a valu able tool in
their fi~t against crime.
It ts a sad fact, but a fact nonetheless. that many
daylight burglaries are committed by teen-agers who
should be in school.·
It is also a fact that most criminals are young men.
Neither of these facts, however. leads to the
conclusion that any young man on the streets during
school hours is looking for a house to break into.
But, educati on is compulsory a nd a trua n·t is
breaking the law. Certainly, there is ample le$al
precedent for picking up truants. Schools used to hire
truant officers expressly for that purpose.
The court will rule on the strict legaJ merits of the
case. But, practicall y, if a police crackqown on.,truants
discourages teen-age boys from committing that first
crime, it may keep them on the straight-and .. narrow unti l
they are mature eno ugh to see the advantages of Ii fe on
the straight-and-narrow.
Opinions expressed In this space are those ot the Daily Pilot Other views
expressed on thla page are those of their authors and artists Reader
comment ls invited. The Daily Piiot. PO Box 1560. Costa Mesa. 92626 Phont
642-6086.
LETTERS
Legislators IDount attack
--·on our-initiative process
To the Ed1tur o l s1gnaturec; required. and the
l h1mera of "puhhc heanngs" -
pnme opponun1t) for leg1~la1ur\ lo
•>hluscate and craflll} cnpplr a
measure's intent. Supporter'> of thl''>l'
sin1\ter measures h) llart claim th1 \
\.\CJuld help eliminate ··error!>" and
make mtt1at1ves le!>'> \ ulncrahk 10
rnu rt lhallenge.
Our chenshcd 1n1t1at1\C prc>CC\'> I'>
under strong attack b~ lcg1'>lJtor'
once again. Voters and ta>.pa~t·r ...
regardless of part). mu\t u111h' to
block SC A 24 and SB 1200 I both h)
Hart) and SB 1073 (Lock}'cr)
The Lockyer bill. a sill y harn,.,mcnt
effort. Wv\Jld require 1nn1at1' r <,pon-
sors to give each pe111ion '>1gncr a
separate sheet with the pettt10n's tltlc
and summary, require signer to attest
receipt and to retain the sheet -
clearly a gross waste of paper and
unneeded red tape.
Far more '>101ster. SCA 24 and SB
1200 seek to lrlpple th e people's
101t1at1vc power h)' letting the Legis-
lature into the middle of the proce<,\
through the so-called "indirect 1n-
itiat1 ve:" After sponsors collected
part ( 80 percent) of the required
signatures. legislators cou ld interpose
with publtc hearings and appro\(\
change or d1sappro\I~ th: people's
measure.
If sponsors d1c;agrccd wnh the
legislature's acton. the) would ha\C.'.
to collect the remaining required
s1gnaturcc; to overridt• 1t
Thuc; the pnKe!>'> would be
<,tretched out over many ' more
months. sponsors' work would be
doubled 1f they opted to recirculate
the petition. '>1gners would be turned
ofT at being solicited twice. month\
apan. on the same issue. and man)'
would doubtless be double--s1gner ...
thus in validating their signature\.
because they wouldn't remember
having c;1gned previous!)'.
Thr "ha1t" to c;uckcr the puhlJC 1<.
che 1n1t1al lcc;~cr numl'x'r !XO pcrct•nt I
By the Associated Press
Ma\lx' But the real reason tor the
··ind1rclt 1n111at1vc" is that legislator'
\t.'l' 11 "' a way tu curb the people'~
power. undermining ourab1ht} l't:> use
tht· 1n1t1;it1ve-which after all is our
ultimate recourse when intransigent.
1ncumpe1en1. indlfkrcnc or self·
seP 1ng poltuuan~ fail to n·,pond to
our Lries for help, fail to do their JOb.
fat I to dn our will.
If lcg1slator'> trul y cared thcv
alreach hti\e the <>tatutory po"e' to
comxi reuign11cd ills. BEFORE the
people in desperation turn to thr
in1t1at1ve process. Because they \11
frequent!) tail to do the JOb for which
thn werr elected . WE the PEOPI f
often must use our 1n1t1at1ve right
For that real.on. we DA RE NOT let
rhcm tamper w11h 1t' So let your
legislators know .,.,c will not tolerate
•\:--.Y tampering~ I IMI 11.i l;)HORT~
Sl .\ 24 1c; on the· Senate tloor: SB 1200
and SB I 07 ~arc both in thl' •\sscrnbly
Electton' and Kcapportt onment
l omm11tc~ -all thrt.•r awa111ng vote~
that ha\e not vet been <.chcdulcd
\ddrc~~ for all 'icnator' and As-
<>e-mhh mernher'> ,.,. ">tatt:' < ap1tul,
'°lalramrnto 95814 Wl<ITE THFM
\i()W'
r 11 1 rn~<, c;RE.\ vF.s
I <lltor \11{ I \' Tax r-..t'W\"
San R11facl
Today 1s Thursda]'. March 6, thC' 6Sth da\ 01 l'1Xti. fhrrl.' ;irr lC><ld:t)'S left
in thr year.
Today's highlight 1n history
On March 6. 183~ -1 SO years ago -the \lamo 1n Sitn ·\ntunto f Cl\:tS.
fell to Mexican forces afler a IJ-day siege. All 187 defender~ c1f1he m1s:m>r1
compound were killed. 1nclud1ng Davy Crcx.krn and Jame' AO\~u.·
On this date·
In 1806, poet Eh1,abcth Barrell Browning was born 1n Durham, England
In 1834, the city of York 1n Upper Canada wa~ 1ncorpora1cd a~ Toronto.
In 1853. Verdi's opera "La Traviata" made m dehut 1n Vcn1tc Ital y
Orte year ago: Auth1>r1t1c~ 1n Mexico found the bod) of k1dnapJ>Cd ll \
drug agent Er\nque ( amarena ~ala1ar and a Mexi can pilot at a ranl'h about Ml
miles east ofGuadalapHa
Today's b1rthda)'s. IV pcnonaltty Ed McMahon 1\ 63. < onductor Sarah
('aldwell 1s 62. FBI dtrt.·t tor Wilham WchMrr 1q 62 Thl' first woman in c;pntc.
Soviet cosmonaut Valt·ntma I crc'>hko\.a, 1!°149. Actor Ben Murph\" 44. i\t1or
Rob Reiner 1s 41 .
Though t for todtt-r "lo have doubted onl··~ own firc;t pnnnplcs 1s the
mark of a c1v1hzed man:· -Oliver Wendell Holmc'i Jr .. n.•t1rl·d 'iuprcmc
Court Justice ( 1841 -19,Sl
ORANGE CO AST
D1ilyPilDi
ICar.n Wlttmet
P111>Mhflr
fr9"11 lint
£'1<1•.
Tom Tait
M11na11111g ( cfllor
Doft'MleJ City Editor
TontC~
NflW r<l•tl)f
Crlllt IMft
"!Po'lt f l'lllO!
"-'nary Churchman C.0011011•• "°'*' l . Cencr-41 PrCXIUCltllf• M•n8UI'•
T en-y lleftdM
C1rculetlOl'I Man11ot•
How•rd~
t.A11rktttno ()rtK:tO'
,...,.~
t1u~1T1M Drecro.
·'The stepp ed-up request President Reagan has rnade forovertmtlftary
assistance to Contra forces fighting the Nlcar~an government has
made many Orange County residents fearful.·
. -. .,.-: ...
....
c:;
.r •
-_--=:;:;::. -----....:-_.;.-
OC group makes a Pledge
to oppose Contra support
Deter-mined to obstruct what it views
as Vi etnamization of Central America
perceived as a real one. the logical
consequence of the economic escala-
uon currently under way.)
Of course this signer hopes never to
have to make good on her promise.
She has never before been in trouble
with the law. and would rather not
have to start out now. But her
considered feelings on the issue are so
powerful that she has already taken a
workshop in the passive resistance
tacti cs of civil disobedience; and she
expresses her readiness. fears and all.
for the worst.
By STEPHEN COOPER
On the nig_hl that uur nation for the
first ume oflinalh· marked the birth-
da\ of Manin Luiher King Jr .• some
20· people gathered in the heart of
Orange.County to discuss what King
considered the moral dutr of every
iustice-1.oving c1t1zen: resistance to
un1us1 government policies.
These people had in fact signed a
document called the Pledge of Re-
waance. a document whic h 1s now
gaining both national attention and
~uppon Over a potluck dinner of
lasagna and salad the) got together 10
brainstorm grassroots responses to
U.S. ( entral American policy, and
speofically 10 the current adm101!>·
1rat1~n·s mounting campaign agai nst
Nicaragua.
The night'" outcome: renewed
commnmenl to resist that campaign.
and contingency plans to enact con-
crete acts ol resistance. 1f and when
the time come) to do so.
Certainly Orange Count y 1s not
known as a hotbed of polt11cal
radicalism. nor would the group hk e
to characterize itself as subversive.
But the stepped-up request Presiden t
Reagan has made for overt military
assistance 10 Contra forces fighting
the Nicaraguan government has
made manv Orange County residents
fearful.
The) sec 1t as an early and possibl}
irrevocable step in the Viet·
nam1zation of Central America; and
they are determined not to allow that
to happen.
Oft he P!Mge signers present at this
particular potluck. several spoke of
having ~uns of. or approactung, draft
age. One spoke oflosmg a brother in
Vietnam. While a 9-monlh old baby
crawled the carJ>et making frie'nds,
the adults shared their grown-up
concerns.
T hese concerns, voiced among
others by a grade school teacher, a
college professor, an office worker, a
student, a homemaker, a grand-
mother, and a partner in an executive
search firm, add up to one overriding
concern: namely, not a new war for a
new generation. In order to resist such
a terrifying development, most have
signed the first, relatively undemand-
ing part of the Pledge of Resistance,
promising lo stage peaceful -and
legal -protest~ against any and all
escalation.
If congressional representatives
around the country would only
realize that there are thousands of
others equally so prepared. perhaps
they would star:id.up to the upcoming
presidential strong-arming and avoid·
the spectacle of !heir own consti-
tuents being arrested in district of-
fices. There is still time for Congres
to listen to the people.
In a vote on the location where such group demonstrations could achieve While it is easy _;all too easy -to
ma..,imum visibility, South Coast take a day off from work in order to
Plaza edged Fashion Island. The "commemorate" the birth of Martin
wi nn ing argument was that people Luther King. mere commemoration
ltke to honk th eir support as they. is not enough. We must continue to
drive by! Everyone laughed at th is remind ourselves that 'Dr. King
hapless recognition of the cars' im-gained his place 10 our national
portance here in Orange County. But pantheon of heroes by actively
then th e second, more demanding chall.eng1 i:ig inj ustice as he fo und it i!1
part of the Pledge came up, and the his life's Journey throughou~ Am en-
laughter gave way to a respectful ca .. Today there a.re Amencans __.
quiet. 1>senou.s, h!lrd:workmg ix,:opl~ - who
"My heart starts to pound when f ~ee tnJusuce 1n the making in Wash-
thtnk of what J've promised to do," ington.
says one middle-aged mother who has
signed the second part of the Pledge of
Resistance.
What she has promised to do -
and what properly fnghtens her -is
to commit civil disobedience in the
event of actual U.S. troop engage-
ment in Nicaragua. (While this may
seem a remote possibility from
today's perspective. it is nevertheless
Here in Orange County. and in
communities across the country,
these people are taking a stand against
the export of that injustice.
Resistance is ahve and well 10
Orange County. Honk if you support
the Pledge!
Stepbea Cooper is 11 UC lrvlae
wrltbJg counselor.
GQrbachev brings reality
in to disarmament picture
Europe has a wakened to theTacttfiat
conventional arms-capable of killing --
We c;hould .Ill tee I ohhgcd to Soviet
leader M1kh:i1I (iorhac-hev for having
dune mcm· than any_pcace commit-
tee. comh1na11on of Christian
churches, or -even -presidential
speechwnter to detoxify nucl~r
arsenals. --
What has happened dunng the past
I Udays is that the Western communi-
ty in Europe has awakened to the fact
that one can feel most awfully and
defin itively dead under the per-
suasive power of conventional arms.
In war talk. people tend to use round
figures. fair enough, They talk about
I 00 mtlhon dead in Europe in the
event that the Soviet Union decided 1t
wished to resume its military 1m-
penalic;m westward.
The overwhelming predominance
of the Soviet army, not only an
manpower but 1n tanks and other
mobile machinery, in fighter craft and
anillery. ~uddenly rcrninded Eurp.
pean leadrrs of what the al\cmat1ve
at·tually 1s to doing away with thei r
the<tlcr weapons. The alternative as to
rcnml conventionally. .
Now. it is one thing to '" com-fonably in a ~mmar on war and
peace at A~pcn, or Harriman House,
or Brookinas. and say that. really,
moral hyaiene requires thar we a ban·
don our nuclear weapons and eJt·
change them for convcnt1onaJ arms,
quite another. in democratic ex·
changes. to put such counsel into
efTrc1
If the French and the West Ger·
mans, the Italians and the Low
Countries. were to build conven-
tional forces sufficient to deter exist-
ing Soviet forces, they would need to
enact a) universal conscription,
Swiss-style; .and b) increase their
military budgets by (depending on the
nation in question) something on the
order of 100 percent to 200 percent.
The fact of the matter is that they are
unwilling to do this.
And suddenly they rcah2c that
summitcering over their heads,
Washington and Moscow are talking
abo ut arran gements whose
hypothetic.al impact on Europe would
be exactly that. assuming that Europe
didn't have the power to make its own
decisions on the matter of theater
nuclear weapons.
Well. Francois Mitterrand in
Fra nce has, throuah a spokesman,
made his position perfectly~clear. The
United States, he says in dfcct, hasn't
the power to disarm France. And, he
goe on. we don't care what the Soviet
Union does with iu SS~20s. ft can
burn every one of them up ~n the
presence of the World Council of
Churches. we're still not aoina to
pltdgc a) to do a war with our atomic
arsenal; b) to promise not to cnlarac
It, or c) to promise not to modernize
it.
If we wish to see a crisis in the
WestemPaJliancc, dweJI on tbc PoSSi·
bility ofOorbachev and Reapn tero-
optionin~ in Washjnaton this sum-
mer. leav111f. the Europeans with their
Ford Mode -T theater missiles.
WILLIAM F.
BUCKLEY
This is unJikely to happen, because
Mr. Reagan is who he is. and in the
last analysis he will not let our allies
down. But the pressures are building:
It does sound dreamy, does it not, the
removal of all nuclear theater
weapons!
What k.ind of luck would Mr.
Reagan have if be attempted to talk
the Soviet Union into conventional
disarmament? Herc he would run
into exttaideological Soviet lobbies.
The Soviet Union needs a large heavy
army to keep its citizens employed,
and also to keep its citizens, and those
others it dominates, subdued. The
specter of a great Soviet army is
necessary to the total picture of the
Great Power.
For that reHon the Soviet Union
would never disarm it, any more than
the Soviet Union would consent to
pare down its nuclear strateitC force
to the point of findina itself at less
than parity with the ne:<t largest
nuclear power in the world.
But meanwhile, we must be arate-
ful f6r the reintroduction of reality
into the pic1ure. That reality is that
nuclear weapons have ~rved the
cause of peace
Wllll•m B11ctl~y I• • 1TOdlnte4
col•mnl1L
•
STEPHEN COOPBR
UC ln1.De
Jac1
ANDERSON
and JOSEPH SPEAR
F ires a
danger
at nuke
plants
NRC plagued by
widespread fire
violations for years
WASHINGTON -Several nu-
clear power plants in the United.
States probably could not be shut
down in case of a bad fire. because
their control rooms are not adequate-
ly protected, federal safety inspectors
have reported. This means, in ·effect,
that a nuclear"bomb" could go off in
somebody's back yard in case of a
serious fire.
The danger of fire at nuclear plants
1s no Nervous Nelly's nightmare. Jn
1975, a fire at the Browns Ferry
nuclear power facility in Alabama
almost caused a meltdown. And,
since then. more than 100 potentially
disastrous fires have occurred at
other nuclear plants.
"Many of these fires affected sys-
tems and components important to
safety," one Nuclear Regulatory
Comm1ss1on inspector wrote in a
report we've seen. The "safety" he
referred lo was the elaborate system
of precautions that make sure nuclear
power planrs will not spew deadly
radiation into the atmosphere. Based
on the record of fires so far. the
inspector concluded that "the threat
of fire damage to systems and
components important to safety 1s
significant ...
Yet the safeguards against fire are
neither uniform nor adequate in the
nation's nuclear plants; in a few, fire
precauJ1ons are practicall y non-e xis-
tent, aecor"Cl-i-ngtosourees at t he NRC
and agency documents obtained by
our associate Corky Johnson.'
For example, a recent, un-
publicized fire at the Dresden nuclear
plant in Illinois burned without being
detected for four hours after toxi c
polyurethane foam was ignited. For-
tunately, the plant was not in oper-
ation at the time. but nuclear agency
sources said the fire could have been
catastrophic if the reactors had been
running.
Widespread fire safety violations
have plagued the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission for years. A 1984 memo
from NRC reactor safery director
Richard Spessard noted at least 738
.. fire protection deficiencies'' in the
previous several years, in three of
four regions across the country.
Most appallin~ of all the "deficien-
cies" was the failure of several plant
operators to provide adequate protec-
tion against fire in the control room.
Spessard's memo pointed out that
this meant .. the plant could not be
brought to and maintained in a safe
shutdown condition."
The oversights in many cases were
basic. "licensees failed to properly
install, test and maintajo fire sup-
pression systems in accordance with
established codes," one NRC sum-
mary stated. Several dozen agency
reports indicated that certain plants
hadn 't even bothered to coordinate
wi th local fire departments.
In Michigan, federal inspectors
found so many fire safety violations
at the D.C. Cook nuclear plant that
they found it pointless to proceed. A
grand jury is investigating the mat1er.
In Massachusetts, Robert
Fer~uson. a former fire protection
section chief for the NRC. filed an
objection to the granting of an
exemption to the Haddam Neck
nuclear plant, which wanted to be
excused from installing a separate
control facility in case the main
control room was crippled.
Despite the safety expert's objec-
tion, the exemption request was
granted by the NRC. Haddam Neck
has the dubious distinction of being
the only nuclear plant in the country
without a backup control room to
shut down the reactors in case of
emergency.
Footnote: Richard Volmer, the
NRC's deputy director of inspection
and cnforc,cment, insisu the nation's
nuclear power plants arc safe. He said
he has found the plants' fire protec-
tion "far above" that of other indus-
tries.
DOLLAR DIPLOMACY -What
docs 1t ~ost to fly a dethroned dict.a~or
into exile? Well, Baby Doc Duvalier
'and his retinue were relattvely cheap.
As near as our Air Foiu and State
Department expens could estimate.
it cost $47.41 0 to fly Duvalier and his
family from Haiti to France in asinale
C-141 jct. Ferdinand Marcosand 6is
extended family required a C· 141 and
a smaller jet over a longer stretch of
territory. Estimated cost: SI S 1.l 80,
not ineludina the expcnse.9f the four
belioopten that plucked him ftom his
ealace for the SO.mile trip to Oatk Air
Force Base. All things considered.
we'd say both trips were dirt chHp.
J•d Aodtl'SOll u4 Jouplf S,Or
an •YfHIJCAted col•m•I•••·
..
t DAILY PILOT~.~ 1,.1. * A'I
TWo Civilian jets collide in
tra!ning exercise; four die
~~~~fr)@~l<U
SAN CLEMENTE ISLAND (AP) They Dy around and the radar
-The Navy is investiptina the fatal operators say, 'There they arc• "
crash of two civilian jets that collided Kramer said. '
in the air over tbe Pacific Ocean while The jets were owned by A.iaht
participati!'• in Navy exercises. International, a Carlsbad Ca. COJll·
The colhs1on Wednesday near San 1 pany that contracts with ihe Na~ to
Qemente Island killed the planes' help in ··military exercises. Ataht
four civilian crew members, the International manager Gary Tabbert
National Transportation Safety said the crash was the fint in the
Board said. The Learjets were making company's six-year contract with the
a simulated attack on the Navy's Navy.'
guided missile cruiser USS Gridley Tabbert said the pilots' identities
during radar training. said Petty would be released today. He said
Offi~ Rex K;ramer, a Navy spokes.. ~of them were f~~er military
man U\ San Dieao. pilots and one was a avil1an aviator.
"They (the planes) are the blips. According to Tabbert, the jets were
not Oyina cl0te tQIC1.ber and were
t.ravelin& at less than half the planes'
top speed of 542 mph. He said there
should have been no visibility prob-
lemt because the jets were flying
above a cloud cdver at the time of the
accident.
"It's befuddling." be said. "The
Gridley directed the jets to positions,
but it 11 tbe pilots' responsibility to
arrive at tbe positions safely."
Tabbert said bis company bas
asked the Navy for tapes and re-
corded information so it can re-
construct the accidenL
Judge closes Night Stalker hearing.
, SOUTH COAST PLAZA STORE ONLY
FINAL4DAYS
'·
EVERYTHING MUST GO
Sale Starts Today, Wednesday, March 8th
20°/o to 80°/o off
EVERYTHING IN STOCK
By~ Aaloclate4 Press Space proba •tady comet
LOS ANGELES -The preliminary bearing of LOS G Th fin · · "Night Stalker" defendant Richard Ramite2 was abruptly AN ELES - , e t m a fleet ~f fiv~ SP!'"
closed to the public Wednesday as the judge ordered a probes swept past Halley •??met ~y. showingsaentists
secret bearing on evidence. Municipal Court Judge James 1n Moscow ~d U.S. televu1on V1ewcn ~~tap~ to
Nelson ordered closed testimony on an issue involving be tbe first pictures e~er taken o~a comets 1cy CC?TC· What
eyewitnesses' police-lineup identifications of Ramirez, happened 10 or 29 mmutes aao 1s that the (Soviet Vega I)
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LOS ANGELES-State officials closed a Southern ,.. I J 600 U ·" California plant which makes Mexican-style cheese .1 ez8CO C 09etl , 0 treuS
similar to the kind linked to an epidemic ofbacteriaJ illness LOS ANGELES -Texaco says it has closed 1,500 oil
that killed 39 people last year. Acting on reports that three wells in California's huge Kem River field because
people in Tucson, Ariz., became ill after consumption of plunging crude oil prices have made them unprofitable. As
the cheese, California health officials ordered a recall of the price of crude oil in world markets bas plummeted
cheese made by Rodeo Industries Inc. Wednesday. They from the $32-per-barrel range in late November to as low
also ordered a suspension of operations at the plant in the as $12, the posted price for Kem River crude in rcceet days
We will be closed for 5 weeks.
Watch for our GRAND RE-OPENING A pril 18th
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'
Robnsons
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1
s
Lagiina Art Museum presents mountain landScape e.rhlbltlon
The Lquna Art Museum at South Coast Plaza wtll pre:senl "Reaching the
Summit: Mountain Lan~pes tn CaJifomia 1900-1986," from March 21
until Apnl 27.
The exhibit, co-sponsored by the S8ddlebadc College Art Gallery. will be:'
shown in two parts at both locations.
Art historian L¥!ln Gamwel and western art researcher Phil Kovin1ck are
eo<uratina this exhibition of approximately 80 works by 40 artists wh o have
depicted the California mountam ranges from Yosemite in the north to the
Chocolate Mountains near the Mexican border.
The curators will offer a lecture at 7 p.m. on Apnl 16 in the McKinney
Theatre at Saddleback College. Admission ts free. ·
Educadonal channel slates auctlon
An educational telev1s1on cha nnel serving the schools and home!> an
Huntin.gton Beach. Fountain Valley, Westminster and Stanton will hold an
-_;
·,
)
auct1on-<irawmtt Apnl 6 at the Huntington Beach (.'1v1c Center, 2000 Mam St.
JCEi officials (Joint Council for Educ.auonal Technology) say donauons
arc n.ceded both m new products and scrvtces. Donors are uracd to call JCET
officials at 847-6015 to have someone pick up donated gifts.
Local•}oln Planned Parenthood board
Marla Bird and Landa Lyle of Newport Beach were among I 0 new
memben of lheboard of directors of Planned Parenthood/Orange County
elected at the health agency's annual meeting in Costa Mesa.
Planned Parenthood/Orange County is a nonprofit health agency
specializing in women's health care and providing family Qlanning and
gynecological services, counseling and education at medical offices in Costa
Mesa. Santa Ana, Mission Viejo and Stanton.
Son1a H. Rhodes of Santa Ana was re-elected as president of the board at
the dinner meeting in the Center· Club. Other officers include Mrs. Andrew
Carlson and Ott Thompson 11, both of Laguna Beach, vice presidents: Mrs. D.
FREE
D. Muir JU and Michele KJe1n, both of Newport ~ch, sccrctanes. and
Michael Milch of Corona del Mar. treasurer. Other new members of the board arc Henry G. Eager and Terry S.
Petracca Irvine· Flo Hinchett. Costa Mesa; Janice M . Johnson of Laguna
Beach; Ronald johnston and John York of Oranae; Jan C. Perk.ins of Santa
Ana; and Alicia F. Spears of Stanton.
Comml .. loner •ought for arts panel
ApplfoalltS arc beinj souJht for a vacancy on the N,ewpon Beach Arts
Commission followin.g the resignation of Robert M. Allen.
The Arts Commissioo meets in the City Hall Council Chambers
Conference Room, 3300 Newport Bl vd., on the second Thurs~y of each
month at 8 a.m. City residents may obtain applications from the Clly Clerk's
office. They will be accepted until 4:30 p.m. March 21 . The City Council expects to nomi nate appointees during its April 14
meeting.
OBITUARIE S
Former Mesan
MonaSlbert
Prtva1e funeral services are
planned for Mona L. Sibert, a former
Costa Mesa resident, who dtcd Friday
in Oxnard at the age of94.
Mrs. Sibert, who was a self-
employod practical nu rse, was born tn
Washington. She is survived by a son,
William Sibert of Camarillo, and a
daughter, Ruth Cunningham of
Watertown. S.D., as well as seven
grandchiJdren and six great-grand-
children.
Interment is scheduled for Harbor l..Jwn Memorial Park in Costa Mesa
under the direction of Pierce Brothers
Bell Broadwa y Mortuary.
IN THE SERVICE
Sergeant
honored
for efforts
Staff Sgt. Justin Dahlgren, son of
Ernest Dahlgren of San Juan
Capistrano . has been named
outstanding non-commissioned of-
fi cer of the month for the 405th
Equipment Maintenance Squadron
at Luke Air Force Base. Ariz.
Dahlgren. an aircraft maintenance
spec1altst. is a 1979 graduate of
Newport Harbor Hicm School. •• 'i"
Staff Sgt. Frank L . Custer, son of
Andrew and Donna Marie Lockerb1e
of Hunttngton Beach, has amved for
duty wt th the 91 sl Missile Secunty
Sq uadron at Minot Atr Force Base.
N:O. Custer, a sccurit)' 5pee1ahst;Wtt
previously stationed at Clear Arr
Force Statton. Alaska . • • • Edward E. Salaur. so n of Ignacio
and Amy Salazar of San Juan
Capistrano. has been promoted to
sergeant tn the Atr Force. Salazar ts a
pavement · matntenanc.e speciahst
wuh the 4392nd. Civil Eng.ineenng
Squadron at Vandenberg Air Force
Base. Calif. ••• PFC John R. Westersten, son of
Susan P. Rice of San Clemente, ha s
completed Army basic trainin$ at
Fort Bliss. Texas. Westersten 1s a
1985 graduate of Orange Coast Col-
lege. • • • Airman Allan M. Nlggebragge, son
$499<):; l<>\Tl\ ~ eat
when you purcha. eon .. of
th<'s<' $699 % . ofr1 sleep r
of Frans and Wilcmina Niggebrugge
of Fountain VaJley. has been assigned
10 Fon Benjamin Harrison. Ind., after
completing basic training at Lackland
Atr Forc.e Base, Texas. Niggebrugge. a
1984 graduate of Mater De1 High
Shcool, wall .receive spcc1altzed m-
structton in the pubhc affairs career
field. • • • Airman Troy 8 . Williams, son of
Carolyn Williams of Irvi ne, has
graduated from basic trammg at
Lackland Air Force Base, Texas.
Williams 1s remainmgat Lackland for
specialized lraining 1n the voice
processing field.
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• • • Airman 1st Class Ttmotby N.
Gilbert, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Gilbert of Fountai n Valley, was an
hon or graduate in the Air Force
aircraft maintenance course at Shep-
pard Air Force Base, Texas. Gilbert, a
1981 graduate of Fountain VaJley
High School. will serve with the 4th
Tactical Fighter Wing at Seymour
Johnson Air Force Base. N.C. • • • Pvt. Robert L. Conte Jr., son of
Marie Dees of Huntington Beach. has
completed Army basic training at
Fort Jackson. S.C. • • • Airman Nlcbola1 J. Y1la1, son of
Jess and Margaret Yslas of San Juan
Capistrano, has arrived for dury with
the 52od Tactical Fighter Wmg m
West Germany. Ysfas 1s a fire
protection specialist. • • • Sgt. Jeffrey A. Layfield, son of
Warren Layfield oflrvtne, has gradu-
ated from the Au Force automatic
flight control systems course at
Chanute Air Force Base, 111. Layfield
is serving with the 35th Component
Repair Squadron at George Air For«
Base, Cahf. • • • Senior Airman Michael C. Staacll,
son of Karen Winstanely ofNcwpon
Beach, bas been chosen air traffic
controller of the quarter at VanC6Air
Foroc Base, Okla. • • • Sgt. JeffreJ P. Sl•mpff, son of John
3 TOUGH GUARANTEES • • r .inv "'il5 , , , r• n 1 rJ mnv w•tn vour lurnrtwr· when vou get 11 home -Ne will takP 11 b1'Ck w1lh1n seven days II you lind the
W. Slumpff of San Juan Capistrano
has participated in Display De.'.
termination 85, a short term dcploy-
ment ofU .S. units to Turkey. lumpff
1s an infantryman with the 325th
Infantry at Fort Brag. N 'C
.10<.1< e1c;.-wh ... r.-"'n "" 5Pvl'n <1.1y5 lor fP<;S we Wiii retuncJ fhe d1flerenc.c We will give you a ltve·year limited warranty
1Q.; r ,1 I 1 rv (J(lf1•cls 1n wort1mansh1p anr! c.on~trul"l1on Details available 1n our storPS
4 WAYS TO CHARGE r ,, cnnvrnienr Wickes RPvofvtng Charge Am ri1:.,1n Eipreas Card Mes1erCard or Visa
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--AN AH EI M San la Artt F rwv and Maqnrilia Phonr it 4 8:> I 8550 VAN NUYS San Diego Frwy and Sepulvroa Blvd ootw!.' n Burbal'lk and Victory Phone 818-780-2244
WEST COVINA San 8Nn(trll1"fl ~ IW'y 11nd V1nrrnl PhonP A 18 q 19 1971 COSTA MESA. San 01990 rrwy OM H.-rhQr Blvd Phone 71 4 540 84>'44>
011t>r1 Mflnttrly ttmi r rit111v I 0 9 Sntur<1~ 10 6 Sunday 12 6
-·
• • • tevea C. Martt.a. son of Ron
Martin or San Juan Capistrano, has
been promoted to the rank of scraeant
tn the Air Force. Martin, a 1969
araduatc or San Clemente H1Jh
School, is an ammunition ~pcc1all't
with the 82nd Airborne Division at
Fon Bragg. N.C' .
.. ~ .. ---~·-
lllllJ. Plat
• I
•
THURSDAY. MARCH 8, 198e
.
COMICllM
BUlllE ... . .
The famed Congressional Cup has gone· commercial
Like a lot of other major yachting
events -including the America's
Cup -Lona Beach Yacht Oub's
famed Congressional Cup has gone
commercial.
Two major commercial sponsors
wiU be involved in the upcoming
Congressional Cup mat.ch racing
series which gets under way Monday
and continues through Saturday,
March 15.
With the help of staff commodore
Tom Shadden, the 11ewest sponsor
this year will be Heuer Timing and
Electronics, which will provide com-
plete sets of equipment on the start
and ftnish boats as well as having
interval timers on the stake boats
where mark rounding time differen-
tials arc recorded.
Heuer wlil also assist in sponsoring
the trophy dinner and a brand new
watch will be given to each member of
the winning crew.
Another sponsor of this year's
series is Mount Oay Rum, which will
host a re<lCption WedneSday niaht
complete with hors d'ouvrcs and
music.
Although hard head-to-head racing
does not get under way until Wednes.
day, there will be plenty of activity
Monday and Tuesday.
Activity will lead off Monday with
a skippers meeting at JO a.m .
followed by a drawina for boats and
wJs. Sailing practice will be from
11:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. A no host ladies lunch~n will be held from noon to 2
p.m. and the commodore's reception
will be fro m 6:30 to 8:30 p.m
The media will have a chance to $Cl
in o n the action Tuesday with
skippers and crews available for
interviews and photographs at 9 a.m.
Sailors will hit the course for more
practice from 11 a.m . to 4 p.m.; the
Judges will get their heads together at
3 p.m., and the crews will come
ashore at 4:30 for another skippers
America's Cup poster unveiling ·
Artist Keith Reynolds, who designed the official America's Cup poster for
1983, will be unvcilin~ his newly published official poster for the current Cup
campaign at the Man time Show and Exhibit at the BaJboa Bay Oub Sunday
from 12 to 4 p.m.
Reynolds wiU among three artists featured by the Whitman Galleries,
3545 E. Coast Highway. The others are John Stoban, acclaimed as America's
leadma marine artist, and Randy Puckett, Salinas, Calif. who is noted for
carving whaJes.
The pubhc is in vited to attend the reception. RSVPs can be made by
calling Ann Anderson. 675-2478.
Navigation course starting
"lntroduct1on to Navigatton" is the title of a nine week course being
offered this spring by the Orange Coast College Marine Activities Department.
Registration will be held on Monday(March IO)and Thursday{March 13)
1n the college's Admission Building.
Registration appointments arc not needed. The office is open from 8 a.m.
to 1 p.m.
OCC's nine-week mid-semester classes begin Monday, March 17. The
semester ends on May 29.
Two sections of the course. listed as Marine Activities 119 in the OCC
schedulcarc on the spring age nda. One meets Monday evenings from 5 to 1
p.m .. and the other meets o n Wednesdays at the same times.
The course looks at charts, compass correction. time-speed-distance
problems, deviation tables, plotting and navigational aids. rules of the road
and safety procedures.
For registration information call432-5772.
meetin• Social activities bea.in at 6 p.m. with a cocktail pany (or sk.ip-
7 p.m. at which skippers and crews
will be introduced, followed by the
Tbe eoacre-tonal Cap trophy
pers, crews and guests. Jonah Jones Jr. and Arthur Knapp
A get acquainted dinner will start at awards.
. E~le watch to be sold
Scveno Montrcs, Ltd., manufacturer and producer of Gucci watches, has
. announced the creation of speciaJ watch to commemorate the Eagle Challenge
in its bid to become the challenger in the 1987 America's Cup.
The Eagle watch, which will be available this month at jewelry and
department stores, features the Eagle Syndicate's red and white logo set in a
dark gray face. The outer casing and wnst band will be a lighter gray.
The watch is available in men's and ladies' styles and is expected to retail
forS200.
"This adds an important aspect to our merchandising effort," said Gary
Thomson, president of the Eagle Syndicate. "It's got the quality of a Gucci and
that's very special. It brings designer quality to our organization."
A percent.age of the watch sales wilJ be directed toward the Ea&Je
Challenge:, w,hich must !'i~ $8. 5 million in its quest to become a challenger ror
the Amenca s Cup begmrung next fail off the coast of Frcmantle, Australia.
Youth Salling Championships
The United States Yacht Racing Union will sponsor the 1986 Youth
Sailina Championship in Darien, Conn., June 2 t-27. ·
Application forms arc available from USYRU (P.O. Box 2091 Newport,
R.I. 02840), and must be postmarked no later than April I. To quahfy, a saHor
must not tum 20 in 1986 and must be a U .S. citizen, an amateur and a current
USYRU member.
. The ch_ampionsbip will be sailed in Laser lls (double-handed) and
Mistrals (sailboard) -with heavy and lightweight board sailors competing
together. but r~iving prizes in ea ch division.
Dave Perry, the chairman of the Youth Champ1o nsh1p Committee. calls
this "the premier event for youth racers in the U.S."
.
It's down to scnous business
Wednesday with another skippers
mecti~ a~ 9 a.m. Competitors and
committee boats will leave the docks
at 10 a.m. and the first sianaJ 1s
expected to be hoisted at 11 a.m. -
provided there arc no post-
ponements.
At101
loCWEY
Under the Congressional Cup for-
mat, three sets of two-boat races will
be held daily, ma.k:ina 1 S races each
day and a total of 45 for the four days.
• radio report) from the COutlC al>d
post the po 1t1ons or each pair cl
racers and their time plits from matk
to marlc.
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
will be' about the same IChedulc with
cocktail parties and dinners sched-
uled-each evening.
One Of Jhe popuJar features of the
Congressional Cup is that video tape1
with full commentary arc made of
each race and played in the clubhouse
during and after the races. The videos
are for yachting fans who arc not able
to get out on the water and eyeball the
races first hand.
Another feature for shorebound
followers is the big board, "manned"
by women of the club who listen to
This year'• CongessionaJ Cup will
be closcJy watched as the:rc will be six
skippers and crews from throuahout
the world wbo will be bonin& lbei.t
slalls fQr the America's Cup trials
startmg 1n Perth. Australia. neitt
October.
But tt will be a far cry from the
Catahna-38s over a 5-miJe windward·
leeward course to the Amenca's Cup
12-mctcrs which will be racing over a
23-milc triangle (Olympic type)
course in Australia.
Montego Bay race set
MONTEGO BAY, Jamaica, W.I. -T he 14th sa1hng of the Miami
• to Montego Bay yachl race. sponsored by Jo hnnie Walker Scotch
whiskey, gets under way March 14 with several West Coast boau
expected to make the 811-miJc passage.
Known as "the greatest test of ocean raa ng." the e vent is one of the
premier trials for oavigaton, offenng the challenge of the open seas in
Caribbean waters.
This year the newly~es1gncd Windward Passage ChalJenge Cup
will be awarded to the yacht brealong the Montego Bay race best
elapsed time of 3 days, 3 hours. 40 mmutes and 7 seconds. set by
Windward Passage in 1971.
FOr the second year, the Storm Trysa1I Club. renowned ocean
racing fraternity, is assisting in organizing the race.
Twenty.five top sailing craft from aU over the world are expected
to enter this year's race. Several wtll use the race for some competition
on their way to their borne ports on the West Coast.
The course is a classic beat-reach-run. ideal for both International
Offshore RuJe and Performance Handicap Racing Fleet ratings. which
run simultaneously.
It follows the northern tips of Great Isaac and Eleuthera islands.
then goes south through the Crooked Island Passage and around the
eastern tip of Cuba.
NaVJgating these unlit isJands wtll test the most slolled racers. The
1984 race drew natio nal attentio n when two of the compeutors were
detained by Cuban authorities for sailing too close to Cuba. 1nd it 1s
expected that a number of navipton will test their skJlls this year to
find the fastest line in international w?ters.
Ange Iman Series begins this weekend off Newport Beach
Bahia Con nth tan Yacht Club kicks
off us 1986 Angelm an Scn es Satur-
day with a race around the buoys off
Newport Beach fo r the Performance
Handicap Raci ng Fleet.
The Angelman Series honors the
late Hugh Angel man, one of the all-
time great yacht designers o f
Southern California.
Balboa Yacht Club members will
travel en masse to Sa n Diego Satur-
day to cheer Dave Ullman and his
crew in their effort to bring the Balboa
Challenge Cup back to its home club.
'
The race will be sailed in Etchells-22
sloops.
Ullman's crewme n are Craig
'fletcher and Keith Kilpatrick.
Defending for San Diego. Yacht
Club will be skipper Bill Munster and
crewmen Jim Moxhan and Andy
Ladow. . . In other Southern Ca hfom1a
Lido Isle Yacht Club will host its Yachting Association areas:
monthly regatta Sunday for small . Los A111eles -Long Beac• boa~s racing inside the bay, and Los Angeles Yacht Club -Buo)' Capistran~ Bay Yacht Club, ~a race (Whitney Series. !OR.IMS).
Point, wll! c~nduct a one-design (Times Series PHRF). (Little Whit-
regatta for 1un1ors on Sunday. ney Series. MORC).
o\lam1tos Ba) Yacht Club -
Trurnbuckle Tightener. Saturday,
Sunda)
Santa Monica Bay
Del Rey Yacht Club -C.-atahna
Island race (Berger Sene!>). Saturday.
National Charity League goes to the hop
By CAROL HUMPHREYS
Oelly .... c-.,.,..,, 0
There wasn't a jeweled gown or
tuxedo 1n sight. The 250 guests had
dressed in the sprnt o f the
'50s ... poodle skins. blue jeans.
crinolines. cheerlcad1ng outfits.
leather jackets. angora and letter
sweaters
Kicking off the sock hop fund-
raiser presented by the National
Chanty League Juniors. Newport
Chapter. guests met at the Balboa Bay
Racquet Club for a car rally. As
official starte r. preside nt Cbrt1
McRJnJey gave participants pages
and pages of ·50s inspired clues to
help them find the secret party
destinatio n. As each car, van or
motorhome sped off, Chris p ve a bit
of advice. "Make everyone 1n the car
do some o f the work ... slay within the
speed limit ... don't fight with your
husband ... and if you get lost there is a
. phone number to call."
Arrivina in a '56 Pontiac con-
vertible (they have nine vintage
Pontiacs), Dick and Julee Plastiao
were amODJ those to follow such clues
as "tum nghl on the street named
after the bif Boy Scout pow-wow in
1958" ... or ·at Heliotrope you'll find
some steps leadmg to the beach (Love
Letters m the Sand). "How many
steps arc there?" (ov er a
100 ... puff ... puffi.
The Balboa Bay Oub gymnasium
was the secret destination selected for
Chrt• McKinley la IOI &arb.
~ ........... -,TIM De,,..
Kathy Schwarts crutatnc with Arleen Slmbro.
the $25 per person Fabulous '50s
affair. Songs like Hernando's Hide~
away. Chances Arc, Rock Around the
Oock, and Splish Splash spilled from
the gym decorated with crepe paper,
baJloons. pom-poms, megaphones
and old 45 records.
··1 did a lot of research," said
decorations chairman Steplaute
Lewis. "l visited severaJ prop houses
and asked everyone what the ·~ was
really like. We think we've made the
deoor: very authentic."
Arlea Slmllln was aJso too youna ·
to really experience the '50s, but she
was one of seven children and
remembered what her older siblings
were like. She had no problem getting
into the 'SOs spirit and enjoyed
chainng the event. She said. ','The
BBC never allows anyone to use the
1Ym• We arc thrilled with the arranae-
ment. They arc serving their famous
Bcacbburscrs for dinner and Haagcn-
Dazs has donated the ice cream
sundaes. Depcodina on the silent
auction bids, we hope to make ten
thousand dollan (they did) to benefit
High Hopes.
High Ho pes 10 Costa Mesa is a non-
profit suppon and educational fa-
cility for persons who have suffered
maJor brain trauma. This year over
400.000 ~ople will survive a head
injury wi th some degree of impair-
ment.
Jobule Jobo1on arrived in her '55
Chevy with Jery Wall, Dou IUclcle,
Diane Osborne, Caren McDoaaJd,
Carol Hoppe. and Juice Stone.
breaker. "We're all stag tonight ... said
Johnhie. "All our husbands arc on an
Indian G u1de's campout with our
sons. We came anyway and arc
having a great time."
Cindy Cbrlste1on wore a wn st
corsage w11h her lace prom dress.
Marllyn .Ptrclval and Cbry1 Vollmer
were 1n poodle ~k1rts and Ginny Ponti
wore an onginal.
"I really wore this skirt in the '50s. l
bought 1t at the Ho use of Nine and
have saved 1t all these ycars ... 1t's good
wool." said Ginny.
O thers seen twisting the night away
were car rally winners Crl11 and Vlkkl
Street, Barbara and Job Eagllu ,
Betsy, J .R., Bev and Bob Mosler,
Katby and Ku Swam, ltattD and
Geor1e TU1ard, Mary Jo and Joe
Wlnlilelmu, J8dy We11•tmu with
Carter Ford, Mane and Scott ScHck,
artist No ey Swu and Celeste and
B-' DeunllH.
Paparaul 11 edited Illy DaUy PUet
Style edl .. r Vta Dea.
Doc ud Donna Clark dance.
I r ....
Terry Miller and Bobbi
Fel80t.
OellJ "°'~-by ~._..,_
Poster girl Noelle Bird turn•
model.
Guild takes aim
at Cystic Fibrosis
By CAROL HUMPHREYS
~ ..... c.. ••• , •• 1
It wasaday to "Celebrate Fashion," but the till rncm~·rrnl 1hd \'itl('
Fibrosis Guild of Orange Count) had another purpo'l' IO m1nJ" hen 1hev
invited fricndsand acquaintance~ to the NC'*!)On \1.1m1111tor3 fa'ih1on
brunch. ·
According todistn butt'd brochurt"s. ever. dJ\ r\l'n fl\(' hour.. a C'h1ld 1s
born with CF.
Chairman Bohbl Ftltot said. "We planned th1't"' c nl 11n .i \undayso wt'
could include the husbands. They. too. arc vcr. '°'"" l'J "1th r F. Many of
them became interested through Ram's pla yer Nolau Cromwt ll (he and wife
Mary attended). Nolan ts vel') active with CF and I' lln thl' lound.1t1on's
honorary board Toda} 1~n't reall) a fund-nu~r. hut" llh the opponuntt}
prizes. we sho uld make wme monc) Our big fund ra"' n~ l \ rnt 1\ our Ball 1 n
Oc1ober."
The insptr'IUon .. CF Prtl Ttrry Mlllersa1d. ''l'"t· '>JX nulmosl l\\O )Cars
asa fulJ time volunteer for CF. Last yur our iu1ld prt~n 1C'd them wtth
S 145.000. We'realmost number one 1n the countt"\ 1n fund·nmini ( F
rcx.arch hurecently madc t"o nev. brt. kthrou$f'\'> \\ouldn't 1t hcgrt4t1fl
were soon outofa1ob''"
IJUylAllMofthe Irvine Co concluded thttlllt*rnoon wtth a ltvelysprina
fashion presentatJon hlt}lhpt1naall the fa h1on l\l3nd \tcllt'\ Mak model\
included 0.Ye Beek. Ra.,. Ma .. with dau&hter Cara. :md Ron Ftltof. C'F
postcr11rt NMI BU..Jand ~lie GUm.u al" \hov.'t'd ch1ld rt'n ·., wrar
Studenu from Dlua Mc~'• Dan~ tud10 prm 1dC'd enten.ainment
JadMand BWU1J1.N..wte W~ICKr, AaMne H•rwaU.lklu Job_ ....
h rn Oree. Juel Ku ... , Xavter, JoAut Ktuoe, S.U..Ut ~\'Ua, Eva '
Mau, J1141X Ar'l)'r91, Sou Barlow. 1-oundcr 8ar1>ara Y •ar and Mary
SalNllaUO~'tT'C lmon thO<;t"JOtntn&thC'ft ht aQIO\t( \'ttt r 1h ro'it\
f or more informauon on (1u1ld mtm n.h10 r•rn \ 111 \"II '~t-7 1
Paparaul ts f'dltf'd by Dally Pilot ''Ir duor VtcL& Ono
I
-'
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WHATS HAmNIGn
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JEOPAN:JY
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FILM scatE
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OAEAT M0M00S WITH
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ePETEAOUNH
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COMEDY RAK
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EPISODES
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{f)) IHOEPEHOEHT NEWS
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~ RACING FROM SANT A ANrT A 00 NOT NfassARIL. Y THE HEWS
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MOVIE
· 11=8MOH t1I THE COUJYS .~. Mt Out To The Ball
G1mt" (19'9) Frw Sinatta. Gene
Kelly
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• • • • 00 9 QtNEWS e CAASOH'S COMEDY Cl.ASSICS I LOVE~
8AAHEY MIU.ER
GD ART UNKLETTER'
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(C)MOVIE
• • t "Tiie Yeat Ot l.Jv1nq Dln-
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GOLDl~HAWN By L YNOA HIRSCH
~ ~.,,,-~ ...• ~· -:.i
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COLBYS: Frankie and Jason realue
Jason 1s Jeffs father Sable does not
beheve Jason's contenuon that he and
Franlue only made love once 27 years agv
before he even me1 Sable. Sable falls for
Zack's offer of fnendsh1p. Bhss surpnscd
when Sable says she no longer 1s against
her rela11onsh1p with Scan nor docs she
consider Zack evil. Zack tells Jason that
perhaps Miles was responsible for the
murder of the captain of 1he ship. Miles,
having lost his wife. his say-so m 1hc
company and his place as heir to Jeff.
sneaks into Fallon's room while she 1s
sleeping and leaves note saying he'll never
let her go. Wayne tells Monica unless she
changes her mind abou1 lc111ng him go on
tour he's out of her hfc and 1hc com pan>.
l\t beach house Miles confronts Jeff A\
Fallon looks on begging lhc 1wo to stop. a
railing gives way and Jeff tails do"'n thL'
ch ff
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EDWMOS SAfnEBACll EDWMDS BRISTOi. • • • Sll·SUO S.C0-7"4 DALLAS; Pam returns from Colombia
IHlll ITll'TM
after bu) 1ne out ( hffs holdings in the
t'mcrald mine Grace :ind Jack·s rela-
uonsh1p soursaflerhe teams he·scllpcctcJ
to impersonate D1m11n Pam agrees with
Mark that she really docs not "'ant to be
IO"Ol"ed in 1he 011 bu"ncssand decides 10
sell her share~ 1n the company In
Man1niquc, AIC''t con11nuC's her plan to
dc~trCI\ both Jack and J R Ray ta .. es an
interest in Anthon}, a dt'af child 111
Donna\ school ')ue Ellen bcg1nn1ng tu
rcah1e Jel'T) wan!\ more than fnc.>ndsh1p
Jenna's emouonal ou1bursts and 1nab1lll\
EDWARDS WOOOllUl(,t EDWMOS VUAGC
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lUXURY THEATRES
l 2. 7 ) I ,, 2 Mot• Wu kcUy o * WALK· INS * Ht M•t Oftly S•I Su"."
Holld1f • u"''" No lld Ql1Ui,;jjOMJ1\lj; 4 m:,~~~L~~.1"1 ... J
HOUSE (A ) SHOWS A T
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DOWN AND OUT IN KYElltL Y HILLS (R)
SHOWS AT I 10 3:2S
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SHOWS AT 12 ol5
3 55 7 00 & 10 10
IN 70MM
QUIC KSILVER (PG)
SH OWS AT
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THIE HITCHElt (R)
SHOWS AT
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SHOWS AT 1 00 l IS S2S7 4 5 .. I005
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IDI OALMATION S (G) c h!IO Pricet Cl\H 9eO * ORIVf INS o, .. 6 JO IO chy1/I 00 Wkut1 Ufttll 11 ,,., Uftltu Nold •,
s
****** ······-• * * BARGAIN MATINEES MONDAY THRU FRIDAY tST 3 PfRFORMANr.ES * * SATURDAY Isl '1 PERFORMANCES *
to face ruht} con~lnoc to~ trouhh: hC'r
tncnds • • • DYNASTY: .\manda tells Blake she
loves Dex Amanda then wams Dex Wt l\le't1~ 1s a piranha. After Blake t~lls
K.ryslle about Alexis' attcmpl to seduce
him, Krystle silently vows 10 stop Ale1os m
her tracks. When Alcids make, dcni-
$!1ll10g comments about Blake while
Krystle 1s malong speech at pubhc func·
tion, the duo get 1n10 a mudfight Ban
comes out of clo~t for Steven Ben,
Blake·s black·,hccp brother. 1~ broug.h1 to
Denver from Austraha by Alexis, 1hcn
l)'IOgJ) tell~ Alcm he didn't kn1)w that his
father was dead. Blake tell\ a tearful
Samm) Jo not to leave Denver and 10 stay
at the Camng1on mansion. Alexis con·
t1nues to be concerned abou1 her sister
Care)s' presence 1n ~nver
• • •
FALCON CREST: \\'hen papen are to
be sef'cd to o\ngela tor ~teahng Richard
and Chase's wine. thry learn Angt'la and
Peter have eloped Later Peter relums and
tells Lancr that o\ngt'la 1s SU) 1ng out of lhe
i.:ountf) and that Peter now has power of
attorney Lance wonder~ 1f his grand·
mother has mcl with fool pla~ Peter 1~
pnmmg h1\ handsome \On fnc to take
O\ cr cumpdm. Ten has pn' JIC e)'c folio"'
Jordan at the midnight hour Rohm b1th
goodb)e to the Tuscan;, Valle). taking
hab} Hope" 1th her Shaltt'rcd l:iecau<;(' his
mamagc •SO\l'r Cole move~ back v.11h h1\
part'nt~
HILL STREET BLUES: Jue real11n
-uJ~ ~~~~!.!!.~ ~ ... --NOW PLAYING
1110 -•WGll wt(..0 win-srui Ur " .. .. •• . . .
" .., """'\J\ '°'"" '1111• I• ... -4 •I .,.. • II( W!'Olll ""'" ,. '" + ~ .. ,.1 OllA.lllil •toSIUll~ •.-..v ) .. .. ,., .. ..... "' _. ,. ~ .
~ ~ .. o.' •OIWICI l-'-'t-•(\ "' •"••OIW' •l.A04.lllJ "4llS ... ~ "'' l,M) '"• ,. . •llAJll(lll wuri1111m1~ •Qt.,,, ... V• 11-. • ..,. .... , . . .. ... ..,.,. It},.,
"' N1, "911 ,• •Vlll~J I " t"'M ,,, ... ¥11 ,•PtU_,.,,.01"'00--• 91J,.,..._...,.M..,.•t•o-• ... t......._ .... ,
Luey pa} in~ Fab1an's mother to keep tum
instead of filins for guardianship. Joe
makes Lucy rtahze her worth as a person
and helps her file. Norman, tr)'.i~g to help
his nephew Lester on a tdev1s1on coun
show. helps him lose 1he ~ when b!
starts talking about "unnatural sex acts
being prac11ced by the defendant and then
refusing 10 keep quiet when the JUdgc tells
him to· do. Bobby Hill shaves his
mustache. Belkcr, go ing undercover at
pawn shop, has his sung ruined by an
elderly lady who wants her toaster oven
back and usts a gun to get her way. While
going for c1gan. Joe spots a robbery m
progress and 1s shot to dcalh
• • •
KNOTS LANDING: Prc~mpted.
• • •
ST. ELSEWHERE: Fiscus drums of
l alifornia fun at a medical convention
while Elhot wants to attend every bonng
seminar The tables are 1umtd when Elliot
becomes smlllcn with 1he La·La Land
hfest)'le while Fiscus masses griuy Boston.
Tht' tnp 1s cut shon by an earthquake
"h1ch engulfs tht' duo while touring the
Holl)"'ood Wa~ Museum. EUcn Craig
finding the raising of her granddaughter
\ltllh httlc help from Mark too much to
bear Jae .. final!) returns Pete to daycare.
An :ithlcte usin.g steroids to .stay on a
football team shares a room with a 10.
>Car-old l.11tle League star who faces anr
ampu1auon to bone cancer. A former SI
Elsc\ltherc nur5C 1umtd medical student
meets with cnt1c1sm from staff and
pa11cn1s ahkc.
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AlllE8,CMareh21 -April 19): What appears to be a speculative venture i&
actually soltd. Know it, prooced with confidenoe. You'll gain allies alon• the
way. Focus also oo !'t'J>Onsibility. deadlines, intensified love relationship.
Privacy passion ·
leaves casualties
. TAURUS (Apnl ~0-M~y 20): You'll rc~ch more people, you'U be in
dri ~cr's ~t. sense of d1rcct1on and purpose wall be restored. Promotion duef you~ gain added re<:Otnition and financial picture will brighten. Love wit not ~a stranger. ·
GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Good lunar aspect highlights reading.
writing, pub~shing. communacataon,
new pers~1vc. You'll know where
you a~ aomg, and sense of direction will
be h~aghtcned. Leo, Aquarius figure
prominently.
SYDNEY
0MARR
. CANCE~ (June 2 1-July 22): Be
discreet, don t tell all you know. Family mcm~r .is pcnu.asive, tests your loyal-
ty. ~div1dual who taught you in past is
again on scene. Don't permit pride to
prevent you from seeking cooperation. LE~ (Jutx 23-Aug. 22): Favorable publicity couJd accompany efforts.
Emphasis on diversity, travel. popularity, clements of timing and luck. Break
from past procedures is featured. You'll become more aware of appearance,
body image.
. ~Go (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): It may be necessary to revise program, to
adJust time schedule. Emphasis on sharing with others, attracting people who
work toward same goal. Individual you helped in past is ready to return favor.
. UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Emphasis on chansma, variety of experiences, ~xCJt~mcnt of discovery, physic.al attraction. Accent creative endeavors.
impnnt your own style. You'll be dealing with dynamic, restless individuals.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21}: Major adjustment in domestic area is
featured. You'll receive gift which represents genuine token of affection. Pu~cbasc of an object or luxury item could be on agenda. Taurus. Libra
natives play paramount roles.
SAGl'M' ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Check i ostructions, directions, be
aware of ultimate goal. Relative is sincere but could be misinformed. Know
it., rely upon your own intuition and j udgment. Short trhp may be necessary.
Vargo plays r,olc.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Emphasis on ~rsonal possessions.
special collections, financial potential. Res1,><msib1lity increases, your
chances for rewards multiply. Love relations hrp grows stronger. you'll be
more confident as result.
AQUARIUS(Jan. 2~Feb. 18): Cycle continues high -timing.judgment,
intuition will be on target. You'll fimsh project. more people will be aware of
your efforts, taJents. Yo u'll strike chord of universal appeal. Love plays role.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Focus on enlightenment, spiritual values,
location of needed materials. You'll get to heart of matters; clandestine
meeting arranged in "romantic" fashion is featured. Leo, Aquarius figure
prominently.
IF MARCH 7 IS YOUR BIRTBDA Y you are spiritual, perceptive,
~ychic. can be moody. Many find you attrac1ive, challenging and
'impossible." You are romantic. mystenous. glamorous, and adore secrets.
Pisces. Virgo play important roles in lour life. ft is not easy for others to fool
you, but you can fall victim to sci -Oeception. You'll make new start in
M!lrch; you are goin~ to perfect techniques and get nd of superfluous ma ten al
this year. October WJll be me morable for you in 1986. ·
Creeping privacy perano1a.
Sounds like something out of the
spring nursery catalogue, doesn't it?
Actually, it's a name r made up for a
trend that has already hh the cities
and may eventually invade the coun-
tryside.
It's a concentrated effort to seek
privacy from the rest of the world. I'm
not sure when it startc<l, but the front
porch was one of its first victims.
Remember front porches? They
had a swing tha~ squcilked and metal
chain that rusted and·aJWays needed
painting. Everybody in the . neigh-
borhood used to sit out there after
dinner and sometimes they talked
back and forth to one another.
Nothing important. The weather.
How the grass would have to be cut
before the weekefl4l. How the next one
up could get the lemonade.
And then the front yards got
smaller and smaller and the front
porch was phased out to a pot of dead
flowers and a doorbell you couldn't
bear in thtback yard. The back yard
became Disneyland with a barbecue,
jungle gym, patio, lounges, sandbox
and vegetable 'garden. It was only a
matter of time before the clotheshne
marred the scene and had to go. And
with it went a part of Americana that
will never b~ve such an impact on
American families.
The clothesline was a meeting place
of women. They caught up on the
events of the day, shared, dumped on
one another and clung t~ether. The
clothesline was the orig.maJ news-
paper of the community.
By reading the clothes you could
tell who was toilet trained, who was
not, who came home on leave, who
had guests. who got something new,
who cleaned house. who did not. who
had sick children, who was out of
work, who was going on vacation,
who was entertaining. who overslept
E111
BlllECI
To round out this extra "room,"
fences and walls were built so they
·could "live" in privacy. There didn't ·
seem to be anything from neighbors
they needed anymore. L.uJc freezers
in the garage and pentnes in the
houses held a storehouse of food
supplies that you might have "bor-
towed" in earlier times.
Unlifted phone numbers protected
you from bothersome calls, and when
you went outside to cut the grass or
talcc a walk, there were headphones to
isolate you from "hellos."
Creeping privacy paranoia got a
toehold in society when we no longer
needed huma·ns to run our elevators.
get our groceries, take us to a fitting
room, assist ws With our withdrawals
at the bank. sell us a newspaper or get
change for a soft drink.
I'm as much a carrier of creeping
privacy paranoia as anyone else. I've
traded communication for bumper
stickers, sociability for technology
and accessibility for "Wheel of For-
tune."
What brought all this on was the
other Sunday I was walking through
the neighborhood and realized be-
hind every walJ were lounge chairs
with no one lounging in them,
barbecue grills with nothing cooking
on them and locks on gates where no
one wanted in.
I used to }.Ilk to myself. I don't even
do that anyn\ore. Maybe we're be-
coming too private
Bathroom , not bed
real premarital tes t
Different recipes
for different folks
"Premarital bed-shanng proves
nothin& about the compatiQility of a
couple," say~ one-Love and War-
specialist, not our own. "The real test
is in premarital bathroom-sharing. If
two people can survive use of one
bathroom for a few weeks. marriage
might be possible."
There's no such animal as a clean-
sha ven bum. So says a man who
claims once to have been a bum. Find
a place to shave off your stubble, says
he, and you'll walk tall until the
whiskers grow out again. It's a morale
matter. he says. When a man JUSI
can't bring himself to shave. he's sort
of sick in his heart.
The jail isn't crowded in Mulege.
Baja California. All prisoners are let
out at 6 a.m. to go 10 work. They
return for evening check, go free again
for dinner, a movie, whatever. and
come bade at bedtime. Murderers,
robbers, rapists. All of them.
The woman who experiences that
phenomenon known as "hot flashes··
1 can rid herself of said affiictJon.
according to a Florida medical
specialist, by drinking cabbage juice
or licorice tea. But where. pray, do
you get same?
Q. Is there such a person as a .. shy
extrovert"?
A. That there is, research reveals.
Some psychology scholars saycenain
individuals crave the company of
others and enjoy that company im-
mensely, even though they're a bit
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please
add the following to your file on
cooking up a bener life. It has a more
-positive approach than the cy01cal
l appeared recenlly_=-
T WHO LIKES MEN.
E FOR A BE'M'ER LIFE L.M.
Bovo
l 2 cup healthy anger
..... I cup sclf~nfidence
\ ~ I tablespoon savvy
.._. Dash of detennination
••••••••••••• Pinch of purpose Ounce of optimism fearful and self-conscious in groups. let anger brew to the simmering
point. Remove from heat before it
comes to a boil. Combine with self-
confidence. Add savvy, determina-
tion and purpose and mix energetical-
ly with optimism till well blended . Be
careful not to crush. beat or whip into
a frenzy or mixture will turn sour.
Top off with a generous helping of the
sweetness of life. Shalce yourself
vigorously. then let settle. Serves
anyone .willing to sample it. -H.M.
lNQUEBEC.
No Spanish newspaper, now or
ever, directly quotes the King of
Spain.
Q. ls there any group of people
anywhere who have been free of
cancer?
A. Only one -the Hounzas in the
Himalayas north of Kashmir. They
only eat fresh food they grow them-
selves.
Fried cicadas don't taste like
chicken, either. They taste like
shnmp. But it's all relative. If you've
been eating cicadas all your life and
take a bite of shrimp. you'll say it
tastes like cicadas.
Don't use your great great grand-
dad's compass to find your way across
the world, young fellow. It may not be
reliable now. The magnetic North
Pole moves as much as 700 miles a
century.
Cirrhosis isn't reversible.
L.M. Boyd J1 a
col•maJ111.
1yadlca1ed
DEAR H.M.: Tbanu for a rttlpe
that belongs lD everyone'• file box.
Tiie next letter mlgbt be of interest to
yoo bat I doubt that yoo'll want to clip u. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: l read
your recent column that contained a
recipe from the "New Haven Femin-
ist.' Typically, the embittered
woman left out a few in&J'edients. I am
submitting my oWn recif>e for "Fem-
inist ~ide-Down Cake.'' Since you
arc QllviouslY-biased agains1 men. I
do not expect to see it printed.
FEMINIST UPSIDE·DOWN CAKE
I cup crocodile tears
I tablespoon cheap shots
I tcasP<>On reverse chauvinism
LANDERS
I weU~beaten path to court to take
advantage of bias toward males
1 teaspoon hypocrisy
I alibi
I dash from the women's center in
heavy traffic to make sure the kids
don't have a chance to be with their
father.
Mix ingredients and stir con-
temptuously .. Cook until the family
unit has broken down and then add
one last drop of pure venom. Serves
nobod y. NEW H A VEN
MASCULINIST.
DEAR N.H.; Your recipe sounds
poisonous to me. Tllrow It oat. ••• DEAR ANN LANDERS: M y hus-
band and I have been married six
months. We usually agree on most
things and rarely argue. Last night we
got into a heavy discussion. It ended
when he slapped my face and stormed
out of the house.
When he returned I told him how
shocked l was that he would hit me.
He said, "f didn't hit you. J slapped
you. There's a big difference." Is he
right?-STILL REELING IN IND.
DEAR S.R.: A bit and a slap arc
botb forms of physical violence.
Neither ls acceptable behavior. Your
husband needs coanacliDg on bow to
deal with bis anger. I bope be gitts It.
Ppp Hall of Fame inducts musicians
8y tile A11oelated Preu
NEW YORK -Hard-driving
rock 'n' roll led the ceremonies at
the Songwriters Hall of Fame, but
the evening was wrapped up with
a tuneful rendition of "Stardust"
by ~ls lyricist, now in a whccl-
cbatr.
The National Academy of
Popular Music inducted rock 'o'
roU pioneers CllK'k Berry and
B•ddy Holly, pop composers
J im my. Webb and Marvin
'8a m U1cll and Felice and
BoMJeau: Bryant into their Hall
of fame.
Lyricist MUcbeU Parl1b, 85.
who penned the words to ffoalY
Carmid1aet'1 "Stardust," re-
ceived the Johnny Mercer Nt.'ard
and composer Jtle Styae, 80, best
known for "Funny Girl" a nd
"0)1>!y;· was a}ven the Board or
Directors Award.
Francia In care
NEWARK, N.J. -Singer Con-
Die Fruc11, who is.hospitaliud
in a psychiatric clinic. has been
put under the care of a lonatime
family friend after beina found
unable to manaae her affairs.
Superior Court Judge Murray
G. Simon appointed aocountant
Anthony Cnnoo1i Jqal guardaan
.~
Chuck Berry
for Francis. who was transferred
to the Carrirr Foundation in Belle
Mead from the Miami Mental
Health Center Feb. 12.
Franc1s.47. washospit.ali1cd 1n
January after a disturbance at the
G rand Bay Hotel 1n Miami's
Co~o nut Oro~ sec tio~.
authorities said. A JUdAe in Dade
County. Fla. later dC<:larcd the
SI nacr incompetent to manaae her
3fTa irs.
Royal• to Japan
LONDON -Pnnce CUrl~s
and Princess DI.au wdl '>'1~11
Japan Ma)' 8-13. Buckingham
Palace ha'\ announced.
Pnnoe hatlet vi itcd Jap&n sn
Apnl t 970, when he visited Expo
'10 1n Osaka, but it Wlll be the
pnncess' first ttip to Ja pan.
Queen Elittbelh II and Prince
Ph1hp made a state visit to Japan
1n 1975 as guests of Emperor
Hirohito and his empress.
Jerry teeing o ff
MILWAUKEE -Entertainer
Jerry Lewis will participate 1n the
Greater Milwauk~ Open Pro-
m golf tournament 1n Sep1cm·
ber. officials said.
Proceeds from the toumamen1
will ~ donated to the Muscular
Dystrophy Association. i.a1d
Gordon Kress, toumamtnt presi-
dent.
~Wls 1s the national chairman
of the Muscular O)stroph} ·\~·
soc1a11on
Patron c ited
PARIS -Lo Angelc-s bu'1·
ncssman and an collector Fmtr·
let R. W~lsmu ha'I received the
city of Paris' hiah~1 award foT h's
contnbutaons to the visual aru.
"All of Pans can admire you a~
a patron of tht" arts:· SI.Id [)(puty
Mayor F~w de P~ in
prescnung the Vemml Meda.I to
Weisman, whose contcm pornry
an collCC11on 1s bcnlJ cxh1b1tcd an
P'"ns for the fint time
J .
TAKE TIME TO PLAN ,j
Both vulnerable. South deals
NORTH
WEST
•983
,J972
K42
+53 2
• J 10 5'
~ '3
Q 109
+AJ 97
t:AST
•KQ76
1086
7653
+K8
SOUTH
+A2
AKQ5
· "AJ8
+Q 106'
Tht bidding:
South West
l Pa1111
2 NT Pa1111
Pasa Pa1111
North East
1 t Pus
3 NT Pass
Orx-ning lead· Nine M +
Just because a play looks natural
doesn't mean that it is right. Before
you play to the first tnck, make
sure you have drawn up a wi nning
strategy
The auction was straightfor-
w ard. South described a balanced
hand of 19-20 points. and \;orth
had enough to raise to game but 11(1
more.
West struck it lucky when he
elected to lead a top-of-nothing
spade rather than from his shabby
four-card suit. The hand looked
easy. o declarer wasted no time in
covering with the ten of spades. He
captured East's queen with the ace
and took a losing club finesse Back
came a heart Declarer still had
only eight tricks. so he won the
heart, cashed his club tricks ending
1n the dummy and tried the dia-
CHARLES
GOREN
OMAR
.SHARIFF. ~
mood finesse. ~
That. too. lost. West reverted U.
spades. and the defenders netteit
three spade tricks and the t~
minor·suit kings for a one-trick se~
"Unlucky," muttered South. ::
OnJ y part1y true. While it wa
unfortunate to have both kingii o~
side, declarer had only himself fg
blame for failing to make the cl
tra<'t See what would happen if
darer plays low from dummy
the first trick and wins the ace.:=
When the diamond Onesse t<>SEI ~:ast cannot tackle spades ~ithoij
giving deC'larer his ninth trick. A~
-;u me he returns a heart. Declarff
wins. crosses to dummy with a cl~
and loses the diamond finesel!
Now when West returns a spa~
declarer covers with one ~
dummy's honors. The defende~
can take only t wo spade tricks ad
the contract is safe. :~
For information about Chari~
Goren's new newsletter r.r
bridge players. write Go~
Bridge V.tter, P.O. Box 4428, ~·
lando, Fla. 32802-4426. ;
·:
'::~~~' $@ \\.~1"\-"ttr~· WOH ....
------Hite4 "'1 CLAT I . ,Ou.Alli
0 lt110rronoe '-"•rs of the
four >erambl~ word• be·
low 10 '°'"' four S•mPle wo•ds
.---
I R K N ~"1 I '
I 13 I t . 1
\ \
! My niee• Wa&-a-Gfltlcal-IMCll
K 0 l A_C_ --.. ,--· seat dnvel'.. One day wtule .9be. 5 \ \ I' I ~ wu dnv1ng. she became lost. . 'Quick," said her mom. ··rou·n
I B A Z A L E I ~n~ better rt you get In IM -
17 I I I Ii O Compl.,1e lh• Cl\u<k • quo•.d
. . . _ • by I llmg "' 111., m•umg wo<ds .....__.___.._...__ ........ _..._ you O.velop from It*!> No J !>.low
8 ~:;~f11t~~8Ici~~RES I' 11 I' i~ 15 1· !' 1· l
f) ~~~~teM&lE F01tj I I I -J J J J
. -
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Fragment
6 Seaweed
10 Unfruitful
14 Fabnc
15 Flavoring
plant
16 D111orce c11y
17 Inaugurate
18 Arab chrels
19 Mr. Tunney
20 81llbug
22 Motel
24 Covetous
26 Ettacers
27 Nailed down
31 Acquire
32 Performed
33 Mushroom
35 Pointer
38 Stomped on
39 Balloted
40 Surrounding
pref
4 1 Farm an1ma1
42 S1rob1te-
snaped ':
43 l:ooks roward
44 'Whal sup _,.
45 Witty writer
47 I'll take the
51 Not any
52 Signed up
54 Confined
58 It we1gns --" . 59 Image
61 Metnc unit
62 ifa1m type
63 Soft dnnk.
64 NCO
informal
65 Rustled
66 C11y in New
Vork. state
67 Gar11rv
DOWN
1 Menu .1em
2 Whet
3 Sacrament
4 Raised
5 Deduced
6 Ell:Clama11on
7 Under
p1rin1ngs
8 FurnacE> part
9 Soal>.ed up
10 Rich suppl..,
l • M;~g1stra1e
1. Cr.ncealeo
I 1 Active tolk s
· 111ano
PREVIOUS PVZZU SOLVED
23 Aposlle
25 Arctlf1enel
27 Some toods
28 Height pret
29 Put away
30 Lewes overly
34 For1111ca11on
35 Tenth pref
36 Raw minerals :n Meaning
19 Singer
40 0 1 motners
and falhers
42 WPatner
word
43 Subtlety
44 Hummed
46 Ma1umum
47 Condvcts
48 Ready to
serve
49 Inked
50 Room tayouf
53 01mw1t
55 Durallon ,
56 Wheedle
57 Gape
60 Negativ ,
~
f
'
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/ Thurlday. March 8, 1986
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane
"Tuck me out again, Mommy. I hofto go
to the bathroom."
MARMADUKE
PEANUTS
GARFIELD
TUMBLEWEEDS
50CK1,-10
'E:M,YOLJ
WA~IORS !
DRABBLE
ROSE IS ROSE
; •
by Brad Anderson
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
" ... but why can't we buy a REAL remote
control?"
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham
•• 11s JUST RUFF, MR. WILSON HE GETS
Soi(/IYIYY WHEN HE.'S WET . I
--------by Charles M. Schulz
WE ALL HAVE
ou=~ERENT Tl-l~ESl-IOLOS
OF PAIN ~
by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan
by Kevin Fagan
by Pat Brady
BLOOM COUNTY
~l'.Y Ur£!
·1M t«Jf JJQ'11Hb..I ttr1
CRtlltOfMTtN{, ~ '·
tiJJi.
MOON MULLINS
I
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
J"OHN, I CM'I FIND
THE RESIN Krf I ~E.L..AX , PH1L-'/oo'RE
INGCOD
SHOE
JUDGE PARKER
HANDS
t\Ef(.e.
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
WHAi 'fOOK 4 0U GOOS
~ LONG ~
DOONESBURY
11'5 BEEN ALMOSf AN
HOUR .SINCE 1 CALI..ED .'
by Berke Breathed
by Lynn Johnston
1 s rr N~ TO-TMe.
COLA ORTtEO\EESE
Sf\NDWICHE.S
?II
by Jeff MacNally
by Harold Le Doux
by Tom Batluk
WE.LL ' ~Al'~ snu... QUICKER.
IHAN l.100 [)£LIVER 4'00R
Pl ZZA5 10 US !
by Gary Trudeau
..
'
-~------~__._
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TllAN8Acn0Nt. • ;
Company decisions 'flawed' too
Corporations review
same dtfflcultles that
led to shuttle disaster
By JOHN CUNNIFF ,.,..._....,...
NEW YORK -If there was a flaw
1n NASA's decision-making process
1n launching the ill-fated Shuttle
Challenger, then a areat many corpor-
a.lions arc similarly flawed, accordina
to an aut.bority on business practices.
American business, says Prof.
Eugene Jennings, has long been
.. befuddled and bewttched" by dif·
ficultics similar to those that may
have led to the destruction of the
Shuttle Challenger on Jan. 28.
William Rogers, chairman of the
presidential commission mvestipt-
ang the disaster, has upressed con-
cern that key National Aeronautics
and Spaoe Administration executives
didn't know about dissent among
engineers regarding the decision to
launch Challenger.
Jennings said business' difficulties
include a failure to {>revent hierarchy
from interfering with the gathering
and P.tOClessing ofintelliaence. and an
inability to assign the proper weight
to technical eJtpcnisc.
He btlieves the publicity auendinJ
the shuttle disaster educated Amen·
cans to the vulnerability not only of
NASA. but of Apterican business and
other institutioni.
Already, he said, some c.orpor-
ations are re-examining their de-
cision-making processes after bei.ng
shocked into the realization that
similar disasters could threaten their
very existence.
To undentand the proccu. said
Jennings, professor of mana&ement
and lcad~hip at Michiga)\ State
University and adviser to corporate
cltiefs and public officials, one must
distinquish between problems and
condiuons.
The distinction 1s this:
A problem, such as pneumonia,
lends it.self to a solution. Good
management doesn't let problems
linger, it solves them. NASA has
solved millions of problems.
A condition, such as mortality, is
something you can only seek to cope
with. NASA was dealing with con-
ditions, and whelhcr it dealt with
them properly is now the subject of an
official inquiry.
"Every organization must cope
with conditions vigorously and end·
lessly, because they'll oever go away
entirely." the professor states. He lists
four common conditions that arc
relevant to the Challenger disaster.
•I . The interfertnoe by hierarchy
with the now ofin(ormat1on.
Among other thmgs. managerial
intelliaeoce is obtaining informatioll'
for early identification of!roblcms.
Failure in this area can lea to crises.
in which decisions m).lst be made
without proper lead time.
The function of hierarchy, which is
an asccndmgdcgrce of authority, and
a division oflabor, which 1s the Oow
or decisions and work downward, is
to efficiently achive goals.
Unfonunately, says Jennings, hiu-
archy tends to determine not just
work flow but information Oow too.
Information fails to ascend because
hierarchy is too hi~ and complex.
And what information ascends may
be distorted.
To avoid such a situation, in which
those with authority to ma.kc de-
cisions do not possess relevant infor-
mation, Jennings feels there must be
alternate channels that bypass hier-
arcby.
To make th.ls possible, some Of·
pnlz.atlons estabUsh hot lines allow-
1na enainecrs and otben to bypass
hierarchy with immunity. However,
he adds. few companies have re·
50lvcd the condition of hierarchy
ampedina communications.
• 2. The proper wca&htina of tccbn1-
cal expertise in the cfccision-makina
matrix.
Too of\cn. says Jenninp, technical
expertise is heavily wciabted in the
early stqes of a ~~ But with
SUCC:CSI it ii downJftded. The void IS
fill6d. unehallenJCC!, by politics,
finance and other variables.
• 3. Typically. enainecn have
analytical minds, and · such -minds
require data for judgment.
In an analysis.-intensivc culture, a
premium is plaoed upon precise,
logical action. There is little room for
intuition. By inclination and en·
vironment. engincen do not ta.kc
strong positions without supporting
databases.
•4. Jncorporating the wont-case
scenario into the decisio n-making
process. · . , \j
"It is cxtrcmel'{ difficult when JOU '·r
have a succ:essfu program to behevc
in the worst-case scenario," says
Jennings.
He maintains that after many
triumphs NASA bad so downgraded
its worst-Case scenario that it was left
with no contingency for dccision-
malcing when cold weather inter-
vened.
.. In a high-risk manlfCmcnt mili-
eu." be says, "the inerua of succ:css
sometimes obviates the common
sense rule, which is: If you cannot asssess the risk. don't take it.~
lo a dozen cases over 30 years in
which he has investigated
catastrophes on behalf of corporation
boards, Jennings said such conditions
as he listed •·invariably represented
the non-specific causes behind mis-
takes."
OTC UPS & DOWNS
VINCENTJ LUIBDT
Vincentijoins ·
Wilsey& Ham:
Ra7mood 0 . Vlaeeatl has jomed the Irvine office of the
consultmgenginecrinJand planoina finn ofWU1e1 6 Ram as project
manager. Vincenti bnngs 34 years of experience in land acquisition
and planning. real estate financing. civil engineering and consttuc-
tion management to his new post. • • • Peter 8. Lambert, a certified financial planner, has joined the
Irvine offices of CIGNA bdM4ul Flaudal Senicel Co. Lambert
, has taught financial planning at UC Irvine and conducted numerous
seminars. He is completinJ an MBA in financial plannina. Tht lrvinc
resident was formerly with the Newport Beach office o( O.a,lda
SecarlUtt. • • • • Laguna Nisuel resident Paal Ruemaa has been named group
counsel for H•pes Aircraft Co.'1 ground systems group in Fullerton.
He ~places Jaclt Stridler, who retires after 30 years with H~cs.
Haseman. a trustee of the Caplttra.M Ual.fied SdlMI Dlttriet, has
been with Hughes for tbrcc yea.rs as assistant group counsel. • • • L.W. (8111) Barter has been appointed sales director for Bear
Brand Ranch in Laguna Niguel. Barker brinp 20 years of experience
to the sales post. • • • A.J. (Bert) Meyer ha5 been appointed vice president of finance
and chief financial officer of West.era Dlptal C... in Irvine. He
formerly was president and chief executive officer ofEM.usys. IK.,
a soflwarc supplier and consulting firm. Western Digital designi and
supphcs storage mana&ement and communication controllers. ••• Bonnie Trott has been promoted to vice president and director of
Coldwell Buker S..tkra Callforala Rnl4eetla.I llW Estate
Services and Barbara Boeptolt has been promoted to oorporatc
public relations assistanL Trost, formerly relocation properties
manager, succeeds Tom S-U. recently promoted to assistant director
of national relocation services. Boughton had been regional
advertising assistant for the firm, where she has worked since 1984. • • • Laguna Niguel resident Gloria Caleprl has been appointed
controlfer of Commercial Broken, lac. ot El Toro. Calegari most
recently .vas associated with ~idoa, where she man.aged the
accounting department
DIVIDE DS DECLARED
Tht• Board nf D1recror'i \If CummerceBanlc declared a 5°., stock
Jivid~nd to ~toci...h<,ldcr> of record on Fcbrual) f\. 1986.
A ~) 10 ca~h d1' 1dcnd w he paid t11 ~hareholdcr.. of record on Fet.-
ruaf') h.14Xtl has ;il-.ci been dcclarro h~ the Bank'~ &iard of Directors.
The ca\h dividend. 1oge1her w11h the s1ock dividend will he dis
rrihuteJ 10 'han:hnldl·rs \ln ur ab.1u1 March'· l~X6.
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NEW YORK (AP) -Stock pnccs turned
upward Thursday, aided by new signs of down-
ward pressure on mtcrest rates.
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--------~-- ----
THURSDAY, MARCH 6. 1988
9.-
Chargers end semis-~weet season
. . .
Edison falls short
of CIF finals with
6 1-57 loss to Serra
By ROGER CARUON
Of .. O.., ..........
LOS ANGELES -Edison High's
Chargers made their run, and when it '
was over the applause was there for a
job well done -but it was a task not
quitt finished.
The Chargen of Coach Jon
Borchert, who stunned Verbum Dei
and Long Beach Poly on their way to
the CIF S-A semifinals here at the
Sports Arena, fell short of their
ultimate goal ofa finals berth, losing a
61-57 decision to quick and talented
Serra Wednesday night before 4,393.
"I congratulated them and told
them we had a fine year. Only two
teams went farther than us," Borchert
revealed of bis post-game session
with bis 17-10 Chargers:
It was a mild aftermath for what
could have been one wild finish bad
the breaks gone right for Edison. But
as it was from the onset, the call -or
non-call -went against the-Sunset
League representatives.
The final blow came in the fading
moments when Doug Katona caused
a turnover and the Chargers pen-
etrated Serra paint, only to sec Mike
Hen,derson stripped from the ball by
two Serra defenders in very tight
quarters.
The official said "no contact'' and
Serra got the ball back with just
seconds left and a 59-57 lead intact.
Two free throws in the final six
seconds pushed Serra's winning
margin to four points.
"That was with 14 seconds left and
we bad no timeouts left," said
Borchert. "but we knew what we
wanted. We bad a chance to tie with
two free throws and we would have
been in good shape."
But there was no trek to th~ line, a
common procedure in a pme which
saw Serra (23-4) outshoot Edison at
the line, 2 1-7, getting 36 attempts, as
opposed to Edison's 15 attempts
despite the heavy double-teaming on
the press.
Edlaon'a Do~ Katona (54) and Cbrla Cole (45) &an& up a&atnat a,~ player for rebound Wed.neaday night. But even 15 anempts was enough
to satisfy Borchert. It was just that of
pleased
with stint
Shortstop fl awless
in field in Angels'
intra-squad game
From AP dJspatcbes
MESA. Ariz. -Rick Burleson, the
fonner shortstop trying to revive his
career at a new position, was en-
couraged by a seven-inning stint at
second base in an intra-squad game
Wednesday at the Angels' spring
training camp.
Burleson, who sat out the entire
1985 season and has appeared in only
40 games since tearing his rotator cuff
on Apr. 11 .1982, handled every play
flawlessly, including being the middle
man on two double P.lays.
··1t was only significant inasmuch
as I'm trying to learn a new position,"
said Burleson." But J felt 'ood and I'll
be back in there (today).'
The Angels will have one more
scrimmage P.rior to their Cactus
League exrubition opener Friday
against the Padres in Yuma.
"We won't know about Burleson
for quite a while. But I do know hecan
play second for me if he doesn't get
hurt." said Manager Gene Mauch.
Burleson is competing with other
veterans Bobby Grich and Rob
Wilfong for the second base job.
Right-handers Kirk McC.aslUll,
Ron Romanick, Carl Willis, Mike
Cook and Todd Fischer and lefties
Len Whitehouse and Sherman Cor-
bett took two-inning turns on the
mound in Wednesday's non-scoring
game.
Valen.ueJa tuna up
VERO BEACH -Outfielders
. Terry Whitfield and Alonzo Tellez
drove in runs in the sixth inning to
lead a team managed by Coach Joe
Amalfitano to a 3-1 victory over the
squad of instructor Kevin Kennedy
in the Los Angeles Dodgers' final
intra-squad game of the spring.
Left-handed Fernando Valenzuela
pitched two innings for the winners,
allowi~g two hits and one run with
one stnkeout
"He looked like a tyPical Fernando
in spring training," sa1d Valenzuela's
catcher, Mike Scioscia. "He's trying
to get his timing down and fine-tune
his control. Fernando looked good for
the first time out "
Right-banded Bobby Castillo
pitched two scoreless innings for the
Amalfitano squad. while Alejandro
Pena and Tom Niedenfucr pitched
one perfect inning each.
Third baseman Bill Madlock drove
in the only run for Kennedy's team
with a double.
Se¢ond·Y.ear reli ef pitcher Dennis
Powell suffercd a cut above his ten
eye -which required siA stjtchcs to
close -in a minor traffic mishap
early Wednesday momina ond was
excused from the day's work.
•
INGLEWOOD -In a season in which the
UC Irvine basketball team has won twice against
nationally-ranked Ne11ada-Las Vegas, the Ant-
eaters hafe yet to find a way to beat Cal State
Fullerton.
Today's schedule
2 1>.m. -S.n JMe State vs. PKlflc
• 1>.m. -N-Mexico Stale vs" Utah Stare
UCI will have to find the answer to beating the
Titans tonight (9 o'clock at the Forum) if the
Anteaters hope to continue in the PCAA Tour-
nament.
1 1>.m. -Nevada-Las 1teo11s ~. Fresno Steir
9 1>.m. -UC Irvine vs. Cer Slate Fvtlerion
Fullerton beat UCI three times last year. with
the last setback coming in the PCAA Tournament.
The UCl-Fullerron game is the final of four ·
first-round match ups today, with the semifinals set
for Friday at 7 and 9 and the championship game at
"I don't see how they can beat us three times
again," UCI forward Johnny Roiers commented.
To avoid a second straight sweep. the
Anteaters wilt probably need big games from
leading scorers Rogers (20.6 scoring average) and
Tod Murphy (20.7).
2 o'clock Saturday. ,
The Titans have wo n the last five meetings
a$llinst UC Irvine and nine of the last 11 . The two
v1ctories this season have come by scores of 66-54
in Fullerton and 78-68 at Crawford Hall last
Saturday night.
The Titans ( 15-15 overall) needed the victory
over the Anteaters Saturday to qualify for the
tournament.
However, Murphy. the Anteaters· 6-9 center
and all-time leading scorer. has been fighting a bout
with the flu fo r the past few days. Though he is
likely to play. his effectiveness 1s a big question
mark.
"Tod has been really sick and hasn't practiced
Lasorda says he
won't associate
with DeCarlis
Magazin e claims
Rams' S h aw bet
on NFL games
NEW YORK (AP) -Tommy
Lasorda, the gregarious manager of
the Los Angeles Dodgers, says he'll
have nothing more to do with Peter
DeCarlis, a Los Angeles entertain~
ment agent and night club manager
who Sporttlllustrated says allegedly
has ties to organized critne.
"I'll not see him anymore," said
Lasorda, who acknowledged
Wednesday to reporters at the team's
training base at Vero Beach Fla. that
he knows DeCarlis, also known as Joe
DcCarlo.
"I first met him at a restaurant he
managed in LA, and we became
friends. I didn't know his back-
ground," Lasorda said.
"Tommy bas a lot of friends," satd
Dodgers owner Peter O'Malley.
"He's like Will Rogers: htbat s
Tommy. When he meets someone,
it's like it's an old friend ... I have no
problem with Tommy's deportment
or lifestyle. And this ts not aimed at
Mr. DeCarlo, but if somebody is in
our clubhouse who shouldn't be. then
he won't be there anymore." ·
St, in a special report on gamblina
that touched on several as.~iations
between sports figures and pmblers.
said DcC.a.rlis had been a frequent
visitor to l.asorda's offi<% at Dodger
Stadium and was li sted as a friend by
the Dodaers manager in his auto-
bloaraphy, ''The Artful Dodger."
hearing of the New Jersey Casino
Control Commission as having as-
sociated with reputed bookmakers
and provided prostitutes for or-
ganized crime.
Baseball's security director. Harry
Gibbs, informed of the association by
the magazine, said he would look into
it. "Sure it bothers me if it's true,"
Gibbs said.
DcCarlis. who the magazine said
served a prison term for a 1948 mai I
theft conviction. acknowledged to SI
that he had socialized with Cohen.
but denied any involvement in prosti-
tution.
DeCarlis told the Dally News of
Los An$eles that he and Lasorda are
"just friends, that's all. I met him
through other J>COt>le and struck up a
friendshif. I like h1m. He's a wonder-
ful man. know his family and we're
friends. We have no other associa-
tion."
On another matter, SI said that
John Shaw. vice-president for finance
of tbe NFL's Los An$eles Rams, has
bet on NFL games, mcludin$ some
involving the Rams. Quo~mg an
unnamed source, the magazrne says
that Shaw U)Cd the name "Mayfield"
in placing bets ~th Alyn Brannon.
convicted for bookmaking 10 Orange
County in 1979 and 1981 .
But Shaw and the Rams v~
hemently denied it.
"The allegattons in the art1cle arc so
outrnJe<>US and unfounded that 1 will
not dlgnify 1hcm with a response." he
said.
P layoff bound
for the past couple days," said UCI Coach Bill
Mulligan. "I don't know what kind of shape he'll be
in for the game.
Rogers, a 6-10 senior from Fountain Valley
who made a stop at· Stanford before UCI. has
scored 136 points in his last five games and bas
scored in double figures in 50 straight contests. He
ranks No. 8 in career scoring at Irvine.
Tonight will mark UCl's eighth trip to the
PCAA Tournament where it is 2-7 overall. UCI
was ousted in the first round last year. 79-68. by Cal
State Fullerton and the Anteaters· last tourney was
was 77-65 over Long Beach State in the first round
of the 1984 event.
lfUCI can build any kind oflead (something it
has been unable to do against Fullerton this year).
it has one advantage -its free-throw shooting.
The Anteaters are among the nation's top-rated
teams in that department with a . 783 percentage.
They were ranked third in last week's NCAA
statistics.
The mapzine identified DcCarlis
as a "rceuted associate" of the late
Mickey Cohen, a Los Angeles book-
maker and orpniied crime figure. It
also said he had been named in a
security file introduced at a 1982
The Rams issued a statement m
whicb they said:-"T he allcpt1ons
about John Shaw contained in the
March 10 issue of Sports tllustratcd
arc without foundation and have
absolutely no b3sis in fact. We stand
behind John Shaw and are conV1nccd
that he has been C"iftacd in no
improper at t1v1tie!"
ltdJaon BJ.i)l '• Joy Blefeld and the re9t of the Cb&l'l(en are
beaded ln£o the playoff• l'rlday nla[bt at 6 wt.en t.6ey will
meet lliNlon Viejo foT the CD' 4 -A cmampion•bip. £dlaon la
a.nbeaten on the year and top Meded In the cUYialon.
JloJJM'CM la ftn•,.
trltll s2-1JB nctorr
LOS ANGELES -Mater Oei
Hi&h's Monarchs a.re OM step
away from a second coDJeCutive
unbeaten season. followin&
Wednesday's 6l-S8 conquest ~
St Beniard at the Sports Arena.
The victory, their 28th tbiJ
season and 57th stf'aiabt over two
seasons, _ Jemds · Coach .Gary,.
McKnight's Monarchs into Sat-
urday night's finals against the
No. 2 seed, ~ino Real Leque
champion Serra .
Mater Oci never trailed. gttting
22 points from LeRon Ellis and
eight points from four o'1\ers in
the attack.
St. Bernard pulled to within
53-51 with 2:42 to go, but Mater
Dei responded with a 16-footer
from Tom Peabody and a 10-
footer from Stuart Thomas to
make rt 57-51, then salted it away
behind Ellis.
those I 5, only seven found their way,
with the Chargers missing 6of10 in
the final quarter.
The Chargers bad a 29-27 balftime
lead despite the fact their No. I scorer,
Ken Amma.nn, was scoreless from the fiel~ making just two free throws in
the first two periods.. .
Serra., however, put together a
strong third-quarter press and man-
aged to cause seven Edison turnovers
(four consecutive in one stretch),
without being caught fouling by the.
officials.
Borchert did not quarrel with the
foul ratio, but said "l.n this arena the
officials can't bear you anyway. And.
I didn't want to get a T, we bad
worked so bard for our points."
Edison had a 35-31 lead with 6:Q7
left in the third quarter and Borchert
said ''I felt real good about our
chances at that point."
But Serra's press suddenly took its
toll and the Cavaliers ran off a 17-2
spurt, moving into a 48-37 lead with
2:27 left on Keith Malone's three-
point play.
The Cavaliers led by 11 on two
(Pleue eee ltDISOff/C2)
Former UC Irvine standout
Ben McDonald, who signed a 10-
day contract with the aeveland
Cavaliers of the NBA earlier this
week. scored nine points Wednes-
day night to help the C.avs to a
115~ 100 win over Phoenix.
McDonald (6-9, 230) was a
four-year starter for the Anteaters
from 1980-84, aod bad been
playing for Huesca. Spain in a
European League for the last two
seasons.
He was originally drafted in the
third round by Oeveland two
years ago.
McDonald is the third leading
scorer in UCI history with 1,512
points in a record 114 games.
Lake rs
in tune,
rip Jazz
INGLEWOOD(AP)-Still feeling
the effect.,. of a tough loss the night
before. the Utah Jazz were easy prey
for a hungry Los Angeles Lakers
team.
The Lakers cruised to a 130-84
NBA v1ctory over the Jazz Wednes-
day night at the Forum.
The Jazz were coming off a bard-
fought 94-92 loss Tuesday ~t in
Sacramento against the Kings. The
Lakers were off.
"Tonight we caught them in the
n~t spot." wd Laker Coach Pat
Riley. "We were fresh and they
played a tough game last night in
Sacramento.
Utah Coach Frank Layden said his
team had yet to shake off the pme
from the n•&ht before.
•·we had a tough night last nilht
against Sacramento." he said. "We
lost by a couple of points. I think our
key peopk extended themselves in
that game and we were capable of
losing tomght."
No matter what effect tht calendar(
had. 1t was the scoreboard tha
impress Riley.
"This was a good win for us," be
said. "We've been grinding out games
the last few w('Cks. so no matter if 1t
was a blowout or not. it was a keY,
victory for us to get started on 1 rolL •
Af\er taking a 32-21· first~uaner
lead, t~ Lakers connected on IS-
of-18 shots from the field in the
second quarter to expand the margin
to 65-41
The La\cers then tcorcd the first
c\aht points of the third penod to lead
H -41 with 9:24 left in the quancr
They led 99--59.by quarter's end.
The l.akers may have run up 130
point but It wa their defense that
aot llu~ aoina. "1 th1nlt the defensive intcns1tY,
played a b1a rote in tomaht's pme. '
~1d ~ a.uard Mike Mc:Oce. who
led the Laken with 20 points,
C2 * Oranoe Coatl DAILY PILOT/ Thursday, March 6, 1986
I SPORT S BREAK
Man intercepted
as he tries to pass
for Joe Montana
From AP dilpatchea
LEXINGTON, Ky. -Pamela Jones'
plans for a honeymoon in }-Jawaii were
shattered by a telephone call from an
official of the San Francisco 49ers.
[!]
He explained that her groom, Joseph Charles
Montana, wasn't the club's quarterback, as he had
claimed, and that the real Montana already was married
and visiting Indonesia.
Miss Jones received the call Tuesday, one day after
the ceremony at Southern Hills United Methodist
Church.
The Rev. Bob Nelson, who officiated, said the
groom told him. "I wouldn't want you to be
embarrassed later, preacher. I am Joe Montana, the
football player. The San Francisco 49ers' quarterback."
Nelson said he didn't believe the man at first. "He
d1dn 't IQok big enough to play in the NFL. But he was so
sincere: And be looked a little like Montana." he said.
Nelson said telephone calls to the real Montana's
hometown of Monongahela, Pa .• and to the 49ers' ofijcc
in Redwood City showed that the "Montana" here was
a phony. ·
Th~ minister said he called the couple and told
them he wouldn't sign t~e marriage certificate -and
therefqre. that they weren't legally married -until
some 9,uestions were answered.
Miss Jones remained unconvinced until Jerry
Walker. the 49ers' director of public relations, called
her long distance Tuesday.
Walker said Miss Jones kept telhng him. 'But he
told me he was Joe, and he had the NFL jacket.'
The groom disappeared early Tuesday after
prom1S1ng Miss Jones he would "go downtown and get
all this straightened out. ..
He left his Super Bowl jacket behind.
Quote of the day
Bob Cousy, former Boston Celtics standout,
after plavrng in the National Basketball Associa-
uon Legends game at the All-Star game in Dallas:
"The fun 1s rehvinga bunch of old lies we tell each
other. It's not fun running up and down the court
all da}." -··-
Indiana takes over Big 10 lead
Junior guard Steve Alford scored JI m
points and freshman Ricky Calloway
added 19 Wednesday night to lead 16th·
ranked Indiana over No. 17 M1cb1ganSt.ate
in East Lansmg. 97-79. and· give the Hoosiers sole
possession of first place in the Big Ten Conference
basketball race Despite a game-high 33 points by
Spanan guard Scott Skiles, who became Michigan
State·s all-time leading scorer in the first half. Indiana
led most of the way and ran m conference record to
13-4. a half-game ahead of idle Michigan ... In the finals
of the M1ssoun Valley Conference Tournament.
fof\\.ards Brian Rahi19' and David Moss sc9red -22
points apiece to lead-tiost Tulsa past No. 9 Bradle}.
74-58. snapping the Braves· winning ~'treak at 22 games.
The.\ lcio.cy.gi \'CS T uls.a...ll· B. an:.a u tomauc. beah.ln..1h.e..
:-.ICAA Tournament. Brad le). with a 31-2 record. also 1s
expected to receive a tournament bid ... In Malibu.
guard Dwayne Polee scored 24 points and keyed a
decisive six-point spurt in the final 21/2 mtnutes to lead
Pepperd1ne to an 87-82 victory over Loyola Mary-
mount 1n a West Coast Athletic Conference finale for
both schools.
North Carolina gets Reid
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. -J.R. Reid. m
regarded by most scouts as the top college
basketball prospect now in high school.
says he has decided to attend the Un1ver-
s1ty of North Carolina because of its academic and
basketball programs.
.. They've got a great program. a lot of great players
and their commun1cat1ons program 1s one of the tops in
the country:· Reid said Tuesday night after his
Kempsville High School team defeated Maury 58-46 in
the first round of the Eastern Region playoffs.
The 6-10. 240-pound Reid chose North Carolina
o'er its Atlantic Coast Conference rivals Virginia and
Ma ryland. He also had considered Iowa and UCLA.
J.R. Read was selected a first-team All-Amencan
b) Parade MagaZtnl' and was the first Junior chosen to
the squad.
Atlanta 4 -0 vs. Phlladelphia
DomiDiqH WUklat scored 37 points,, m
1ncludina seven in overtime, as Atlanta
defeated Philadelphia, 122-1 14, Wednes-
day night for their second National
Basketball Association victory over the 76ers in two
nights and their fourth this season. The Hawks and
Lakers arc the only teams to remain undefeated against
the 76ers this season ... In other NBA games, Ricky
Plerce, starting in place of inj ured AU-Star Sluey
Moncrief, scored a carc:cr-high 32 points as Milwaukee
posted its 12th victory in J 3 games, a l l 9-106 decision
over New Jersey ... Larry Bird scored IS of his 26
poinis in a 29-8 spurt that beg.an with 7:29 left in the
second quarter and continued into the third as Boston
stretched its winning streak to seven games with a
I 08-97 victory over Chicago ... Roy Hta100 scored nine
ofhis 22 points in the fourth period while World 8. Free
added eight of his 23 in the same quarter as Cleveland
beat Phoenix. 115-100 ... Waymu Tisdale soorcd 31
points and CllDt Rlchardsoa and Ron Aadenon each
added 21 as Indiana defeated Seattle, 120-112.
Oilers skate past Kings. 6-3 .
EDMONTON -· Wayne Gretzky u continued his assault.on another 200-poiot -'
season with two goals and a patr Df assists
Wednesday nighr, leading the Edmonton
Oilers to a 6-3 National Hockey League victory over the
Los Angeles Kings.
-Gretzky is the only player to ever produce 200
points in an NHL season. having done the feat twice,
and holds the NHL record with 212. The four points
gave the brilliant center 181 forthe season, including47
goals and 134 assists, one short of the league record of
135 he set last year.
The Edmonton center assisted on Jari Kurri's 51 st
goal as the Oilers took a 3-2 lead after one period before
scoritli the only goal of the second stanza.
yretiky continued his hot hand in the third period,
scorin~ his 47th goal and assisting on Mark Mcssier's
28th, an empty-netter.
Glenn Anderson and Craig MacTavish Messier got
the other Edmonton goals as the Smythe Division
leaders improved their NHL-best record to 46-14-6.
The Kings. 0-5-2 against the Oilers this season, got
two goals from Morris Lukowich and one from Bernie
Nicholls.
Jets stop slumping Rangers
Winnipeg's Brian Mallen, Ray Nea-~
feld and Dale Hawerchak scored in a span '
of 73 seconds dunng a fi ve-minute power
play in the opening period Wednesday
night and the Jets went on toa4-l NHL victoryoverthe
slumping New York Rangers ... Elsewhere in the NHL,
Sylva.ID Turgeon registered his 11th two-goal game of
the season. leading Hartford past Buffalo, 5-1 , in the
opener of a home-and-home senes ... Dino Ciccarelli
led a three-goal Minnesota burst in the second period
and goaltender Don Beaupre stopped 31 shots for his
I 0th straight victory as Minnesota held offToronto. 5-3
... Petr Klima, collecting his first career bat trick,
triggered a five-goal second period to help Detroit end
an eigh t-game losing streak against Chi cago with an 8-3
victory over the Blackhawks.
Wichita State fires Smithson
WICHITA -Head basketball coach m Gene Smithson was fired Wednesda) by
W1ch1ta State University. accordini to a
WSl 1 ath letic ,dcpanment source, m the .
wake. of lus w.ruil season. s.in.ce. com mg. to Lhe..sc.hooLUl
1978
The Shockers finished 14-14 tt11s 'tear, ending the
season with a 78-70 loss Monday to lllt.no1s State in the
first round of the Missouri Valley Conference
postseason tournament in Tulsa.
Television, radio
TELEVISION
7:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Lakers at
Golden State, Channel 9.
10 p.m. -WRESTLING: Channel 56.
RADIO
7:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Lakers at
Golden State. KLAC (570).
7:30 p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL.
UCLA at Oregon St.ate, KM PC (710).
7:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Dallas at
Clippers, KRTH (930).
8 p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: USC
at Oregon. KNX (I 070).
9 p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: UC
lrvtne vs. Cal State Fullerton. KPZE ( 1190).
KWRW (l370).
Edleon Coach Jon Borchert Crleht) •um• up
the feeling of hJa team. lnclacllng Danny
o.ttJ NM llMtO ll>J '-,..,_
Hanan (35) and Rich Holdaway (4S) u
~rra eliminated Chargen in ee~al•.
EDISON FALLS IN CIF SEMIFINALS ...
From Cl
more occasions in the third quarter
before the Chargers began to cut away
at the deficit.
With 7:34 left Ammann fouled out,
but the Chargers. who had relied on
the scoring of Rich Smith ( 19) and
Chris Cole (I 5) for the most l?art;
alon~ with Katona's eight points.
conllnued to pressure Serra with
Smith and Katona alternately sting-
ing the Cavaliers until finally it was
back to 55-53 with still 3:42 to go.
The Chargers pulled to 57-55 on
Katona's tip with 2:05 left. and to
59-57 on Cole's offensive rebound
and an eight-foot bank shot with 52
seconds remaining.
Edison got a break as Serra blew a
one-and-one at the line with Cole
rebounding. but his free throw with
latter a 6-6 sophomore, began to find
the range.
· Malone finished with a game-high
28 points and Moses scored 21
despite missing the last 3: 13 of the
first half because of four fouls.
He was the only Serra player in foul
trouble, as opposed to multiple
problems for Edison.
"The pace was perfect," said
Borchert. "Everything was ri$ht. ex-
cept for that brief period with the
press and with the free throws -we
didn't make ours."
Serra moves on to Saturday's S-A
finals against unbeaten, No. I seeded
and defending champion Mater Dei.
Edison exits following its best-ever
finish.
Serra finished the game with a 45.1
shooting percentage from the field ( 21
of 53), far below their normal.
And altho ugh Serra could hit just
58 percent of thei r shots at the line,
the fact the Cavaliers had 36 chances
made an obvious difference.
Edison shot 50 percent through
three periods (20 of 40). then in the
final hectic stanza ma intained that
average wi th 5 of 10.
In the final analysis there -were a lot
of areas where the Chargers missed
their chances. but a turnover ratio of
21-1 4 in favor of Serra, combined
with a 21-7 advantage in points at the
line. proved the most decisive.
17 seconds missed and again Serra
hadtheball. Mets, w·J 'h ·t ..When they went up by 11 the> 1 son 1 ~ kicked our tails on the boards." said ·
Borchert ... It was1us1a bnefrun when tl welost our concen.~t~ra~t~1o~n~.'~·~~~~--'1f-'1~.---t11.~~~~~~~3F-~--l~.,_~~:!llt,it:l~~r.r~ It was a tough loss to accept
inasmuch as the underdog Chargers
indeed had their chances to pull it out.
Ammann finished wllh just 10
poin ts. the lowest he had scored since
the Cabnllo Tournament in Decem-
ber. and as a team .. the Chargers· 7-
for-15 performance at the line con-
01cted w11h a 75 percent reputation
for free throws.
They were beating Serra to the
punch early on breakaways and the
Chargers proved in the second quar-
ter they were in the hunt. chargi ng
back from a 21-17 deficit to go up by a
27-22 count before settling for the
29-27 halftime lead.
Even in the first quarter they were
letting big points get away. losing
possession with seven seconds left
and seeing Serra connect on a three-
point play with no time left to pull to
15~ 13 after trailing, 15-10.
Smith. whose 19 1s just one shy of a
personal high of 20 against Marina.
was the leading factor.
But the Cavaliers, who entered
with one of the playoffs' best 1-2
punches 1n Malone and Moses. the
Outfielder expected
to be on sidelines for
at least three weeks
From AP dispatches
New York Mets center fielder
Mookie Wilson was hospitalized after
being hit in the nght eye by a baseball
Wednesday.
Wilson. 30, was hit by a ball lhrown
by shortstop Rafael Santana during
baserunning drills at St. Petersburg .
Fla.
Dr. John Ohchney of the Mets'
medical stalT said glasses worn by
Wilson shattered and that Wilson
suffered lacerations above the right
eye and an accumulation of blood
behind the eyeball.
Olichney said that because of the
blood in the eye he was unable to
determine the extent of the damage or
how badly and how long W1lson·s
vision would be impaired and that it
would take three or four weeks for the
blood to clear out. Wilson WJll be
unable to resume spring-tra1n1 ng
activity for at least three weeks.
and that Hoyd underwent a second
test which showed "a little change m
· the liver:· He said Boy<J "feels weak
and we want to deal with this right
now."
He 1s t~ second major-league
pitcher lo ex perience an unexplained
weight loss. Atlee Hammaker of the
San Francisco Giants was hospital·
1zed for tests last week.
Boyd. I S-13 with a 3. 70 earned-run
average last year. is to check into the
University of Massachusetts Medical
Center 1n Worcester, Mass., to begin
tests today.
Atlanta
Jn a trade of catchers. the Mil-
waukee Brewers sent Ted Simmons
t.o the Braves for Rick C crone and twq
mmor leaguers.
Simmons. eight times an All-Star.
1s a sw1tch-h11ter and a part-time first
baseman and designated htttcr. Last
year he caught IS games and pl ayed
28 at first base. In 143 games he batted
.273 with 12 homers and 76 RBI.
Cerone, acquired last yea r from the
New York Yankees. batted .216 for
Atlanta 10 1985 Also traded by the
Braves were pitcher David Clay and
shortstop Flav10 1-\lfaro.
Edison advances to tourney semis
"If they said it will take three
weeks,'' Mets Manager Davey John-
son said, ''it will take three more for
him to physically come around.
We're looking at six weeks." The
Mets open the season Apnl 8 in
Pittsburgh.
Philadelphia
At Clearwater, Fla .. Ph1ll1es Man·
ager John Felske said J 14-gamc-
winner Steve Carlton, trying to come
back from a strained rotator cuff that-r
wrecked his 1985 season. will pitch, 1
two. innings of an intrasquad gam~
today.
Chargers clobber Westm-inster. 9-4: plete the scon ng for the Chargers
(S-1 ).
Laguna holds on for w!n; Uni beaten Kent pitched three hitless in nings
to collect the victory, bis first decision
of the season. Steve Gulley hit a solo
homer m the fourth for the Lions, but
but that lime. the Chargers already
were in front, 7-0.
Edison High moved into thecham-
p1on~h1p semifinals of the El Segundo
Tournament. while Laguna Beach
won and University and ~rina fell
agarn'>t South Coast League o ppo-
nents in non-tourney high school
baseball play Wednesda)
in the Loara Tournament, knocked
off another Su nset League foe in
Westminster to advance m the El
Segundo tourney against Hart High.
Here's a look:
Edison 9, Westminster 4: The
Charger\. who met Ocean View today
Edison put the game away early.
scorin~ a single run in the first and s1 x
more 1n the second. Jeff Kent (two-
run triple) and Joe A versa (two-run
smgje) had the key hits in the second.
E<hson's Bernie Colaccbio added a
two-run homer m the sixth to com-
Lagua Beach S, Dana Hilla 4: The
Dolphins chipped away at the Artists'
5-0 lead. but couldn't get their runner
past second base in the bottom of the
seventh as Laguna won at Dana Hills.
Three sophomores led the Artists'
offense -Danny Lane. Ted Savage
UCLA baffled by Anteaters
UC Irvine. wins fourth in row:
SoCal College belts Whittier
t.;C Irvine's ba~ball team, which dtd not record a
shutout all last year, earned its second this season by
blanking UCLA Wednesday af\ernoon.
Meanwhile, Southern California College also posted
a victory on the road over Whi ttler
Here's what happened:
UC Jrvlae-J, UCLA 0: At Jackie Robin50n Stadium in
Los Angeles. Bo Kent and Doug Linton combined on a
five-hit shutout as the Anteaters won their founh ,tra1ght
game UCI (9-6-1 )did not ~1r1ng together four wins 1n a row
all last K..'lSOn. Kent worked S'1'1 1nn1ngs. allowing th ree hst<i, while
,trskingout three and walking fou r. His b1ggest)am was in
O'le fou rth inning when th.c Bruins { 12· 7) loaded the ba'iCs
with one out. Bot Kem mduccd orngmitcd h1tter 03ry
Berman to hit into a S-4-3 double play to ~pe the
troubk . Linton CB me on in the s1.uh wuh two on and two outs
and sot Berman to fly to center. Linton went the final 31/1
innings. yield1na two hits and one walk.
The Anteaters opened the sconna Wlth a run in the
hrst and Tom Haine 5tarted a third-inning rally with a
\
double to extend his hitting streak to 11 games. Gene
Roum1mper and Devan Shockley each walked to load the
bases.
Doug Kline's grounder to shortstop was then booted
for an error to allow one run to score. Mike fay's bases-
!oaded walk completed the scoring.
UCI will play an exhibition game against Keio
Umversity of Japan on Friday before talcina on
Washington State Saturday. Both games are at UCI
beginnjng at 2:30.
SoCa1 CoUe1e '1, Wlllltu CoUe1e t : The V anguan:L'I
took a tw~run fcad by the second inning and gave the
Poets only two unearned runs in handling Whittier on the
Poets' field.
Kevin Kasper put SCC on the board with a sinJle,
two stolen bases and a trip ho me on a fielder's choice in
the first inn.ins. In the second snmng. Howard Wellema
hit a home run to lef\ to make it 2..0.
In the fburth. Lou McCullom was hit hy a pitch. stoic
s:econ~. went to third on 11 fietder's choice and scoTtd on
an error at second.
Brian Sulhvan earned the win wtth six innin~ o<
work. He pvc up two hits, one wal.k and ~~ruck out. four.
Kevin \hava pitched the 01nth, rcunna the s1de 1n
order.
Kasper hRd two hns, drove sn a run and scored twice
The freshman ,hormop al$0 had four stolen ba5CS
and Bntt Yamamoto. In the second
inning. Lane took first on an errorand
Savage's double moved him to third.
Yamamoto sent both home with a
single to make it 2-0.
Gary Scott stepped up and singled
in Yamamoto and Todd Rose's
grounder sent Scott in for a 4-0
advantage.
· Scott got on by a fielder's choice in
the fou nh inning and Rose doubled
him home for the eventual game-
winner.
Capistrano V~lley 11, University 7:
The Trojans were guilty of 10 errors
and walked eight Cougar batters in
the loss at University.
As a result of the errors, only two of
the Capo Valley runs were camc:d.
After falling behind 4-0 in the first
inning. the Trojans rallied for three
runs in the second as senior shortstop
Al Contrera blasted a three-run
homer to center field .
Then, with the Cougars leading 7-3
in the founh, University (1-1) came
back again to deadlock the game with
a four-run inning. The key hit came
from first basem.tn Bart Silberman,
who lashed a two-run $ingle to right
center to tic the game.
However. Capo Valley (.S·I)
mounted another four-run innina in
the top of the seventh to cam the
victory.
Uni versity returns to aC1ion Friday
with a non·leaaue contest against
another So uth C'oast League oppo-
nent. Mission Viejo. on the Diablos'
field.
Mtntoe· Vtejct-~. M•rte• a: f M Vikin~ dropped to 2-4 with the
sctbaclc at Mission VieJO, despite a
three-run homer by Rick VaoduR1et
in the sixth inning.
The Vi kin~ play next 1n the Loara
Tournament Friday l\gainst Hunt·
1naton Beach.
In other baseball news:
Boston
Red Sox pitcher Dennis "Oil Can"
Boyd was ordered to undergo medical
tes~ after experiencing an unex-
plained weight loss.
At Winter Haven. Fla., Red Sox
General Manager Lou Gorman said
Boyd had "lost I 0 to 12 pounds." The
6-4 Boyd is listed in the 1986 program
as 144 pounds. what he weighed in
1985. A year ago he was listed at 155.
but said he never weighed even 150.
Gorman sa·id the Red Sox became
concerned over Boyd's loss of weight
during last week's annual physical
'T m vcf) ~nll'lficd w11h him so
far." Felske said.
San Francisco
In Scottsdale. ArJZ., Alan Cockrell
hit a two-run homer in the second
inning, when his team tagged Atlee
Hammaker for fi ve runs. to star 1n a
Giants' intrasquad game
New York Mets
Keath Hernandez. the most promt•
nent of the J I players conditionally
suspended for past drug use hy
Commissioner Peter Ueberrotb, now
says he will play this season.
Uni, Estancia, Newport,
Barons earn tennis wins
University High used a strong
effort in s1nglcs to tum back Edison.
while Estancia won a close match
from Et' Toro. Newpon Harbor
breezed past Irvine, and Fountain
Valley knocked off Long Beach
Wilson in high school boys tennis
Wednesday.
UC Irvine's women won a college
match asainst visiting Western Mich-
igan despite being shon-handed.
Herc's how it went:
U1tlver1lty 11, EdlaoD 7: The Tro-
jans pla yed the Chargers even in
doubles, but took the edge 1n smgles as they im{>roved to 1-1 with the win
at Uni versity.
. The"11~th-rankcd TTOJ111s ~
stro03 performances from John
P1n•;hess (6-3, 6-2, 6-1) and Carsten
Hoffmann (6-4. 6-0. 6-4) in sinaJes,
and Paul Corkery and Mike Hin 1n
doubles (6-4, 6-.l, 6-1 victory).
E1tucla 10, El Tor• I: The Eagles
won 11 in doubles. winning eight of
' nine p0ints in that department 10
claim the win over the visi11ng
Chargers.
Posting sweep!I in doubles were the
tandems of C J. V mce~Clcte Otoshi
and Mike Studebaker-Rich Quirk.
while Manin Dill captured two of
three sets in sinaJes.
EMancia returns to action with a
match against Mater Dci Fnday.
Newport Harbor 1%, lrvtoe I: Chns
Rabbilt and Jack Banks breezed to
sweeps in SJO$lcS to lead the Sailors to
their fourth victory without a loss this
$CISOn.
Fountain Valley 13, LB Wllaon 5:
ErTol Askoy swept at first s1n&lcs, and
Tmln N(OYC111ll\d Mike Melt~~
No. I doubles to lead the Barons to
the win at Long Beach Wilson.
In a college women's match:
UC lnlae •. Wtttens Mlcktgu a:
Despite the Ion of four naners to
illness. the Anteate"' managed to earn
the win at lJCI.
j
FoR THf R£coRo
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M9f'C9d .... Sen JOIQUln 0..111 64
HtGH ,SCHOOL
Sen'• "· •cfteft 51 (Cllf S·A lemlllMb)
Wrl (61) • ...., ($1)
.. ........ .. ftpff'P
MoSM I S 4 21 Ammann 3 • S 10
J1Ckson o o 2 o Ml/QUllff 1 o 4 · 2
Tel• 0 1 2 I KelON • 0 l I
N-m•n 2 1 l S Smith t 1 4 19
Melone 10 I 1 21 COit 7 1 S lS
Goutf'ller O 1 1 1 Hndenon 1 1 • 3
Flouret 0 1 0 1 Prince 0 0 1 0
Hunt O 1 1 I Hen1n o o o O
To1111 11 19 14 61 To1111 25 1 24 57
Sc«'I w OUlrtln Serre 13 14 2S ,..._.1
Edison IS U U 1-sf
IMtw Del 62, St. lemard,SI
CCII' S·A ~)
st • ..,,_. ue; Meter o.i en> ......... .. ......
Howll1111 2 I 3 S Dwver • O 1 I
Whllmor• 7 4 2 II PffbodY 3 2 1 I
D1nlel1 J 7 1 13 Ella t 4 4 2'2
~ 0 0 1 0 TllOmea J 2 • I
Merr9f'o 3 I 3 7 Pinon I O 1 2
Huchon 6 3 3 IS Mounce 3 2 4 I
Dunn 0 0 2 0 R.mt>ert 3 O O 6 Totela 21 16 IS SI To1111 2S 10 16 62
k-by Qull'tlln
SI 89f'ne rd S 11 IS ?0-SI MAier D•I 1• 12 10 1,,_.2
OTHIR SCC>ttU
Cl f 4 ·A Semllllllfl
Muir SI, Oomltlouei S6
Cllf l · A SemltlNfl
Ganesh• 9S, BrH·Ollnde n
~ f I . . " ..
c..... ...... -.(lOMl•alMC• UClrWlel, UCLAt
UC !NIM 102 000 000-0 7 1
UCLA 000 000 ooo-G S 3
IClftl, L.lnlon <•> Mid ICHnt; Conine, $towel (4), ltltcllnho-(7), Wtnrlcll (t )
end i-., ~Ille (UCI), $uter (UCI), sec. c..... 7, ..., c-.. 2
SoCll Co!Met 110 100 no-:;-7 , 2
Whitter 000 100 OIC>--2 3 4 SU!llv•n, Fortueno (7), Dttuallenl (II,
c111ve1 (9) end Nelton, ~r•v. Ow«I• (7), AlllOY C•> W LMMUlfl. W-suetlv911, 2· l.
L-Murl'IY. 2&-Juetel (W), Lo~ (W).
HR-Wellel'N ($), Nellon (S).
HlllllcMltlM .....
•L S84M*DO TOUltNNWIMT • .._t,We""* I 4
Wnlmlnster 000 110 t-4 6 t
Edison 160 002 ir-1 12 1
Klttllo, T lll'lltl' ()), P.... (6) end
VllleoM; ICCftt, TlloOe (4), Vklelet (6) ~ T_.., JoMton (S). w-KCl!f, 1-0.
L-t<lltwo. l~te !E l. »-te.1111 ' IEJ. Hlt-ColeCclllo CE), Gulrt CW).
NON·LaAGU•
• C ' I W V..., H , UMti• 8'IY 1
Ceplatr-Vlllev ~ 1~11 .. l Unlvenlty 030 ..,_. 7 1 10
St1'1l, KtnlHr (4), AUllUSI (4) l l'd
Pierce; S.wk:al, Foremen Cl), Krueoer (6)
•I'd 8eker. W-Aueuit. L~oremen. 0-1.
2&-eeller CU). Hllt-<:ontrera (Ul.
~ 8eedl s, DeM .... ~ 9Mdl 0.0 100 ~ 6 ,
DIM Hiia 000 202 ~2 4 4
Fortune, ltwnlrn (6) •nd Trfftf; Jef!·
nine•. E11an (5) encl Reith. ~ortune,
1-1. L-Jennlnoa. 2&-lloee CL>, S.Yeoe
IL), Erkluon (0 ), Gundenoft COi. HR-Lather (0 ). ,
.... "-•• Mlortll8 J
MerlM 000 003 ~l 6 3 Minion Vlelo 010 011 l-4 I ,
GuedM. Wiiks (6) ind H11t1bluoh;
&1llev end Roberson. W-..lllY. L-Wlllu,
0-1. HR-VMd«Rlel (M).
NHL
CAWaRLL CON .. alleMC•
Smt111eDMlllll
a· Edmonton
CllHrv ~ Winnipeg
Venc:ouve<'
x·Chla9o
x·Mll'VlftOll
a·St. Louis
Toronro
Oetroll
W L T P'ti 0" OA
46 14 ' ,. ,... 2SI J3 2S 7 73 216 2'7
·20 ,. 6 46 m no
20 41 6 46 236 315
11 J6 ' 45 219 263 NwN DMlllll 33 2S • 14 2'4 ?13
30 77 9 " 774 151 JO 26 • 61 2SI 140
20 J9 6 46 261 314
14 46 s J3 m 340
WALH CON .. a.aNCa
Pllllldek>tll•
WHhl119lon
NY lsltlndln
Plttll>ufoll
NY R1noers New J9f'seY'
... Md! DM"9ll
41 20 4 16 271 201
40 19 S IS 247 217
JI 23 10 n 2'2 234 31 ,, 7 " 2'3 234
JO JO • 64 224 no 20 40 3 «3 23S 297
Adema DM'*'
Mon1r111 ls 24 6 76 2n no QueOec :u 21 • n ,., 244
aotton 31 27 1 69 259 231 8uff1lo ' 31 29 6 61 2S 1 740
Herttord JO 33 2 •2 256 2S4 x~lnchtd Playoff l:llrlh ....... .,.. Sc9r'n
EOmonton '· KilllS l Hertford s. 8uffelo 1
Wlnnloeo 4, New Yortt Renoera I
~t• S, Toronto 3
0.troh I. Chkffo) T ....... 1~
'°"9111 V1ncouver
Qi .... II 8os,!M
SI. L.oull et MonlrMI
0erro11 11 New Jeraav Toronto 11 Ptllll<MIPhle
N•w Yor11 lltenoera et C.to1ry
OIWs '· Klnlil 3 Seen bV ,..,,..
Kl11111 2 0 1-3 Edmonton l I ,..._.
lftnt ...... 1. Edmonton. Andeoon 45 (Coffey,
Tikkanen), 6:15 (PP), 2. LOI Anoeln,
L.ukowkh t (Dionne, Wiiia), 1:33, 3 Ed·
monton, Kurrl 51 (Gr•tzky, Coffev), 13:55
(pp); 4. Edmonton, MecTevllh II
(SemenkO, Nepler), 14;12; 5. Loa Anoeln,
Nkllollt JI (Fo11), 1S:S9 (PO). P-1·
lln-Stnllh, Edm (lnterlerencel, l:~.
Pet ... son, LA (hOldlll9), 5:41; Nlcholts. LA
(ho4<11nol. 12.-07; Lowe, Edm (hOldl119),
IS:ll; McCl!llnd, Edm (rOUllhlnol. 17:02.
s.c.nd ......
6.. Edmonton, Greukv 46 (Coffey, Gr9911), 16:19. PIMlllM-Fooonn, Edm
(rouohl119), :JS; Lukowlcll. LA (94tlowl1111), :JS; Erickson, LA (holdfllQ), 14:37; Grettkv,
Edm (trtpplno). 11:71.
Tlllnll ......
7 Edmonton, Gretzky 47 (Fooollt1), 1:19,
I Los Anoeles, Lultowlcll 10 (DlonM,
Ledyerd), 9'A; 9 Edmonton, Meuler 21
CGrettkY, Gr9911), 19:16 lenl. Pe!\11-
tlll-Tlkllenen, Eom <rOUllhlno>. l:Sf.
Erlcltson, I.A Crouohl119), 1:59.
Sholl on -~OI AJIOllft lS-4·1.-XJ Edmonton 9·13·..-31
Power·Pll'f OPPOrlunlllff-t.01 Anoelel
I of l; Edmonton l of l
Go.1111-L.ot An;ela, Melanson <>O
a/lols·2S MIVI\). Edmonton, Funr (33·30)
Attendlnce--11,226. Refef'-Andv Ven
Hellemonci Lfnftml!t-Jlm CMlallaon,
Swede KllOX.
0.. ... tllNN
DAVaY'S LOCKall (.....,..,, a.di)
-39 111111era. 1 SO c.llco bl.u , 11
sl'INOWld, 30 roekflsh, 17S bli)e oereh.
u.s.w....,. ......
( .............. ...,,.,
leCllM .... ......
H.iia Mlllclllkove (Cncllotlovllkll ) Oclf. $~ Henllle CW..1 ~y), 6·3, 6-2,
Nvde Mou1t011 cu"·' -.. . ..,_,. Pon.r !U.S.), 6•), t-6, 6-3; He11111 54.rkcw•
(Ctedlollovekle) def, EllM lurOln (U.S.),
6-l, .. ,I Kettry Jordln (U.S.) def. Pe.nut
Louie (U.$.)1 .. l , .. 11 Terry Pt1iaW>s (U.S.)
def. AnN Whlll (U.S.), 6-), 6-2.
Htth acMif
~11 ....... 1 ......
Ermert ( U > lotl lo Goltldlll, 3·6, def. D.
Moon, 6-4, Iott to On, 2-6, Plndlft (U) won, 6-3, •·2, 6-1: HoffmeM (U) won. 6·4,
6-0, ....
Ooubln
IC.lter•Flnlly (U) lent lo ArnotH)tlull,
'"'· Iott lo Coora·KelTMll, 4•6, def. Pf.tt-G. INl«e, H ; Le--lohen CU> IOlt. S-7. 3-6,
.... ; C.Of'klrY•Hlr1 (U) won, ... 4 ... l, 6-1.
•.-.c:e.1t,ET-I ......
Hlsllnol (El) IMI to Houlton, J·6, def.
Vinton, H, IOI! to Ad'wlk, •-6; Obi (EJ)
Iott, 2·6, won, ... 1. 6·1, ~ (Ea>. IOI!,' e>-• ... ,. 1·.. ' . "
0......
Vlnce-Ototlll CE•> def. c. ... r•r·HudSon, •·2, dff L;Scieetler, 6-2, def. Vo-0.1111,
•·1; Studeblller-Qulnl <Ea) won, ... 3 ......
•·3; lurlcl·Fenltv <E•> lost, •·7, 2-6, won, .....
........ H ....... 12. lrw.6 ......
R.oolll (NH) def. Clleno·Ho·L .. , ... 2,
def. let, 6-1, def. J•rnet, H ; Sinks INH )
won. •·4, 6-0, 6-2; ... , (NH) IOSt, 0-6, won, 6-2, IOll, S-7.
~ Marlln·M. Hardin (NH) Iott to SOl·D•lv •
4·6, Iott to Moffell·ICUI*', S-7, def. II·
tu1tr11·Amolu, 7·•; GrMltv·J. Hardin
(NM> won. 6·1, 6·2. lost, 4-6; 8eker·
W1rmlntlon !NH) won, 6·1, 6·3. loll, •·7.
........ v.., 13, L&W...S
~ AklOY (F) cMf. MenclllH , 7-6, ,def,
Pldllle, ... ,, def. Mc:Quern, 6-3; A. Lie
(F)IOSI 1··· won •·2, 6-1; J LM (F) lalt O-•. won 6-l. IOll 4•6.
'**"-Neuven ·Mell (F ) def. IC.et· Whelen, 6-0,
def. L.lm<-Y. 6·1, def. ubonoe-
Ker110Ut1n, 6·4; Y-M. HIMNW• (F ) won
6·3, •-O. 6-4; Klm-R. HIMOI-(FV) lost
S-7, won 6-6, lost 1•6. c-....,,.
UC lnW '• W...,_ ~ J Sllllllel Rhorer (UCI) cMf. Wtllttleld, 6-J, 7·6; L
Trenwllh (UCI) def Weloend, 4-6, 6'-0, 6-1,
Gen.llMll (WM) def. Pillon <UCll, 6-2. 4·6.
7·S, l lrndorl IWMl def Serine, 6·3, 6· 1; Allhtu (UCI)
Nortfvuo (UCI) def. Sdlultt, 6-o, 7·S.
DeWllt Whllfleld·W9'oel'd (WM) def L
Trenwllll·Petton, 6-3, 6-4; Rhorer·°"9ot
(UCU def. COlllns·81rndorf, 6-4, 4·6, 6• I,
Shloeklw•·RIO IUCI) def G•rMlnell·
$d\Ullt, 7·S. 4·•. 6·3.
~ . . " .
C.mmullltV c.-... .....
NON-COMl'RllllKI ,. • ...._ s, Of'8lllll C.sl 4
Or111111 COlat IJO 000 o--4 I 2
P1Mldenl Oil' 000 1-S I 3
Htrrer1 end SmytM: ~odrloun. Ver-
Dtcll 14) ,.1nd Schneider. W-Verbeek.
L-..rrere, 0-3. 3&-P\91fool COCCI.
Ctr'-(OCC)
~ West I , ~a.di CC 1
LOno eeecn cc • * oeo ~' 1 1 • G040en Wnl 120 203 x~ S 2
WDb end 8uten. 8rldV •nd RusMtt w-tlrldV, 6-0. L-wllllt .
Hltlh ldtMI .......
NON·LaAGUE
,__. V..., 4, Tustin t
Tustin 000 000 0--0 l 4
Founllln Vellty 110 011 11-4 I 0
Enoeltller •lld Fuller; Biik• end
AIVtrtr. w-Bllk•. 3-0. L-Enoetetter. HR-Merdon (FV)
llellCM.,.,,,.,.. 1,......,.. He,_, 4
Newport Harbor 210 000 l-4 13 S
R•ncho Allmlloa 000 700 x-7 7 l
Downer •nd YM; 89911 Ind Gorne'l. w-eeoo. L-Oowner, 0-1. 28-Hemr>ton
(N)
"""'' 11 ... wt*I COMMUNITY COLLEGE
SWiii CMst C. .... en«
Golden Wl't def LI Verne, 15-t. IS-S,
IH
HIGH SCMOOL ...... .....,.
Merine dtf L.agune HINa, IS·6, IS-7,
IS-13
Hlllt ldtMI ....
""'"'1ltV 1'3, L" A.m19es m
(It ll8MM SM JM4MI\. ' Mees I. J1COC>aan (U), 3S; 2. Hin (U), 36; 3.
Perk CUI, 37; 4. Brey (L), 41; S. (lit)
JOhnson (U) end Knrnev. 42.
KDCM
JOINS THE
"EAGLE CHALLENGE"
IN THEIR EFFORTS TO
BRING THE
AMERICA'S CUP
TO NEWPORT BEACH
0r.noe eo.t DAILY PILOT1'Thur9cMr, ~I, 1881 * Cl
Hor~e ra.cing res-ults
..... Miiia •..wnt at.e•. '"" fut"'-en ""' ,.,.... llAC& One ........ .... 19 waDNllOAY'S ••1Ut.n Hlddlft 1....11N C~I lM uo 2M Cal ........ (AIAMll) 6A
(AN ............ & M .._..) Serl'• Hwolfte (Sob) , .. uo o.-1 loft (Gn.llW¥l Ut UI
T~C......(~) uo Teti.n-(It-) "" "llUTllACI.•~ Time-MA 411. Time ,., 2/l
°""(Ori ... ) uo , .. 1.60 NeffTM llACL l II 16 l'lllie. I) •XACTA l>-4) .... 06.A
Solrllecl IMclMTI (Velel\l\IN) uo uo Croeeo COll11-> )A uo uo IOCTM aACt. One fftle -Seerdl FOf Hee-!Solla) uo Pio« Johll (~errOfl) uo , .... Ola' lteYfftOfld ("'*"'°") I.AO Ut UI Time: 1:10 4/S
U aXACTA 15-7> oeld 122 40 Nordlcut (Mnel uo On Tour (~) ... 111
Time. 1:41 415. l"llmtoll (~erl n•
MCONO ••c•. 4 IUtlofltt. U •XACTA (1-)) Hid '41 OQ Time: l:tl )/I. J
SHr Around (Solla) '20 HO )00 s2 fl'tCk SIX (3·2+2·10-1) Nici a214M with U •XACTA <t~4) MW $$7A
Aaem (Velln&uele) ,., 2.40 «30 w!lwllf'll tlO.eta (tlx l'!Of'Mt), U Pkt! Six ltlVaNTM llACa. One mtle HCe. Ml Tutcan I( nlofll Oi1wtev I s.20 ~lion Peld U'UO to S, I.... wlnnlno lldleta Mlltllle Mol'Nflt (Sflemlft I ...,., IUt
Time: 1:10 2/l (llvt ho!'Ma) MldlMI )OIWI (~) Ml ....
$l f'tC1( ...... (~l-l-)·24·, 10-1) H id ~ ~ (Pllllo) lM THtllD llACI. 6 furlonot 15'.l•.to lo ,,..,.., wllllllno tlc:keta (nlM llor-) Time: I :9f. Olatent COl'l'llNllCI (OllllY) '20 J.40 uo Allendence: 7JA6 U eXACTA (~I) M'4t 1152.JQ. arooic" Ptl (Ollver111 1000 SAO •1GHTM uca. 0ne m111 Hee. Northern 1"8 (Toro) 420 u.~ Sometlltne Sexy I SIMl1! I IMO SJll UI Time: 1;11 )IS. WIDNHDAY'S ltHUL TS Polltlytfy •owdV IR-l MO UI u PAK.Y ooue~• 11-21 Mid w 140 (1 1111 .. SS-... ...,.,........,..) KOiie (0.-l 1AI "CMMTM RAC•. 6 turtonoa. ir•ST llACe. One mllt 119c:a. Tltn9-1J9 Frlendlv Net•lle (Solla) 1000 4.60 l.00 &rldtJYry 1<.i VMler> 4.40 uo uo aJ &XACTA CM ) NIO SHA.fa. ~ COeiehousMn) • 4 20 uo Mll1I It ltV1n Cs.tll I no J.20 '"""" RAC&. One mllt ..ce. Crectr.er1 CMerQUll) J.40 Plfltft .._., (Wlltlema) uo HINV lc»tt (V~) SA lit Ut Time: 2:0:2 3/ s Time· 1:11 llS 11 IXACTA (2·» H id 111.IO I.Md ... (Alldlnon) ... ut
Plfl'TN llACa. 1 1116 ml.IM. saCOND ••ca. One rn11e trot Derb¥ Geme (Aubin) IA
Wiid ..,.._. (V-*'1U91e) 720 4.00 2.IO Uttlt .._ (Wllk4) uo uo 400 Time: 2• t/S.
Sir Sier (Sl9VWO\) HO l.AO U IXACTA (4-6) 119!0 s.tU0. Tlleddow (l(bl) 1120 940 , Sovert4en EllCl\lnee (Ftrnendtd S-00 Prl!Qlv Melt"(Ac:kermen) uo ri "9CIC IUt (t-3·2+~4) Nici .,,..... ,. 11 Time: I ;.Q ,, s.
U ax.ACTA (2-t) pelcl JM.00 Tlmr 2:03 2/S. wlnnlne tlc:Utl lflv. ._...).~!loot
went ••c•. 6 ful1onoa
S2 RXACTA (t-4) NICI SllS..20 ..,..,ot4..n
THlllD ••c•. One ma. OKI '"'"" uca, o.. ,,,.. .-.. Contlll (Mell) uo 5.20 340 uo Vlewflekl Lau (l(uefller) 210 ,40 220 Orwwerk Cllerlea (Pleno) SM Cour909 ltuler (VeltnJU91el 12 00 S.00 Olmer Al Elehl <CrOOlllll) S.40 HO Primo (AUblnl uo N1llonel E""9Y !Siev-) 320 l..0\1911 t..Yltv (l.Onlo) Time: 1 :09 11 s. SMld o cri.rw CP•l"kerl uo $2 aXACTA (6-4) Hkl 111.10. Time. l:St 41S s•v•MTH MC .. 6 turlono• U RXACTA (1·6) Pltd 124.30 u..av•lfnl It.AC•. °"' m1e -. • Roti.•s K.T. (V91enr\IN) )40 uo uo
Mucl'I Fine Gotd (Meal 4 40 2.40 l'OUltTM ••ca. One ml)9 trot Malibu a..c:ll <T~l 30.00 17-60
Me one MevtMm c Piere•> 4.00 Putv l.Mdel" (Stevens> 2.20 Hl;ft Grider (Aekermenl Time: 1!09 1/5, Chip Of Jlde !SIMlhl S.S eXACTA (2·4) Hid Lll.00. Time: 2:CJ.
2.60 2'0 uo uo
''°
Nu.11e> MM9le (Todd fl) 12.AO
-.Aa.lmlll CCrewford)
U •XACTA (S-1) Nici ~
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Willard named
SeaViewMVP
M1ebeUe WilJard, who led Corona
del Mar Hiah's airls ba kctball team
to a Sea '\'1ew Lcaaue eo·dtam-
pionsh1p, has been named the
league's Most Valuable Player.
Willard, a 6-.1 senior, avcrqed I S.6
points and a CIF·high 19.6 rebounds
per pme. One other Sea King, S-7
senior K.C. Jones, was named first
team.
The balance of the first team
includes 0 1lly Powell. a S-11 1unior
forward from Woodbridge: Kathy
tyhllat, a sophomore forward from
Woodbridge; Felicia Chalmers, a S-8
guard from Laguna Beach. and Leslie
Self. a 5-10 center from Estancw.
The second team cons1stsofWood-
bndge's Diana Zilko, a 5-10 senior
center: Nina Hansen, a 5-8 Junior
guard from Woodbndgc; Valene
Palmer, a S-4 senior guard from Costa
Mesa, and C'athy Sm1rl, a 5-9 Junior
forward from Corona del Mar. Other
second-team sclcc11ons include S-10
forward Sarah Andru from Newport
Harbor and S-10 guard An rue Fole}'
of Estancia. Honorable mentions were Costa
Mesa's Kathy Benedict. Carol Long,
Meg Mitchell and frnn1fer Boyett;
Estanc1a's Dana Nasby, CdM's
Natalie Basmac1yan. Laguna Beach's
Bridget Dittman. Newport Harbor's
Lara Asper and Un1vers1ty's Noelle
Sase and Jennifer Stewart.
GWC, Barons remain undefeated
Golden West Coll~e and Fountam
Valley H1ah rcma1nincd unbeaten,
Newport Harbor had fi eldina prob-
lems and Orange Coa t lost a hean-
brealcer.
That was the scenario in area
sof\baJI action Wednesday. 1 lerc's a
closer look:
In high school play:
Fooataia Valley 4, Tu1 thl 0: Jacki
Blake allowed one hit -to the-first
batter she faced -as the Barons
1mprovecj to 4-0 with the win over the
v1SJting Tillers.
Shelley Ma rd on 's first-Inn rng
homer gave Blake aJI the support she
needed, while center fielder Dara
Pnce went 2 for 3 and Theresa White
drove 1n two runs with a sacnficc fl y
and ground out. •
The Barons hos1 unny Hills m a dou'bleh~der Monday.
Ra.Debo · Alamlto1 ? , Newport
Harbor 4: The visiting Sailors saw a
3-0 lead evaporate as the Vaqueros
scored all seven runs m the founh
inning on thret htts. four walks and
five Harbor errors.
Nicole Hampton led the way for the
Sailors with a 3 for 4 performance at
the plate, and Tammy Lawrence went
2 for 4 and was credited w1lh two
outstanding catches in center field.
In community coUeae action:
Goldea Wett I, Loe1 Beaci. Ctty J!
The Vikings scored their run in the
first inning. but the host Rustlet'l were
stingy the rest of the way in remaining
undefeated.
Lisa Brady took control, pitching 3
one-hiller through seven. striking out
eiaht and walkin, ooJy four Sile a.lso
was Golden We t's lcadina hitter,
going 2 for 2 with 3 RBI and scoring
three limes.
The Rustlers put their record on the
line aaain Friday in a doubleheader
with UC Riverside and Long Beach
State beainning at Sat GWC.
Pa11deaa i, Or111ge Coast 4: The
Pirates went ahead 4-0 after the first
two innings, but the Lancers ucd it up
with a fouMun third and brouaht
home the game.winner in the bottom
of the seventh as Pasadena.
With one out in the seventh, Val
Doualas walked, stoic second, took
third'" on a bunt and scored on a
choppy grounder to second base.
Dana Carlson led the way for Coast
(0-3) with a triple and an RBI.
High school swimming results
r
IOYS
S.. V~ LM~
Cw-dlll MM 10f, Wlllllr1det .. 200 "*''-v rei.v-1 C:0tone dtl Mer, I 42 St
2 WoodbrlcXle, 1 4 62 100 lr..-1 For<! (C), 1:4390, l Hundebv
(W), I 4' 1. 3 OIM>n (C), 1 S.. e
200 lndo-1 T~'°" CC), l:OU, ,2 Mtrvmolo <Cl. nO.J; 3. Tetter (W), 2:204
50 tr-1 Llkln• CC). n 1. 2 WeitfeM IWl.
23 01, l Aonrtr CC), 23..34
100 fly-I WeUl•ll (W), 1-00 56, 2 Kterln CC)
I 01 I 3 Harmon (Cl. 1-0U9 100 tr-I H•rvev tCl. S0.2S, 2 Vlnit (Cl
SI 25, l HOCNd .. C Cl. 53.3.
500 tr..-1 Hundabv (W), 4 Sl.6. 2 OvndH
(C), S 12.73, 3 Edmunds (Cl. S:lU I. 100 t>Kk-1 Ford CCI. S116, 2 Seelv (Cl
SI I, 3 Llkln• (Cl, 1:07.3. 100 brtut-1 Zvbrln tC>. 1-07 I; 2 8en11tv (Cl. HIUI, 3 Sora9ut CW>, I 10 29
400 lrff retsv-1 Corona <!ti Mer, J 34.S
New"'1 H•'11W '7, ••i.ncM SI 200 rM<lltv ,. ... .,._1 E•t•ncl•, l.AS.)9, 2. NtwPOrl H.,bor • 1•4 74.
200 fr-1 J O.vore IE), 1 .. So.t. 2 Jewell CNHI, I S3 St. 3 CunnmlM (NH). 1.57 3
200 lndo-1 ~ (E ). ~.S\,, 2 MINlko
(NH I, 2 1591, l. ~ (NH), 2:17.'6
SO lrte-1 St-•rt (NH), 22.t'I, 2. Nidlols (NH) 23 SI, 3 It. O...ort tE), 2'3.tt.
100 tty-I CO-• Uh. SU. 2 J-tM (NHI,
S9 9S. 3 ElltOrKlll (El, 1'0311. , 100 lr-1 Sttwerl (NH), 5111. 2 A Devore
IEI, S2 4; 3 Putmen INHI. SJ.IS
SOO Ire-I Curmmln• (NH). 5:13 98, 2 NIChOll (NH), S 22 '9, 3 Moole (NH), S:2t 4 .
100 t>tck-1, J O.vor• (El. 5916; 2 &rven CNHI, I 01 49, 3. 8N!lffr tNHI. l:CW 33
100 brH•t-1. Ml"-1110 CNHI, 1:07.42; 2
Stewart INHI, 1:07 45; 3. Con n tEI, 1:01.63.
400 frff relev--1 Newoort Harbor, 3:42.27, 2 E111ncle, N30
~LI
Cerw dlll Mar "• Wu•,.,_. t1 ~ rtt.v--t. Wooelbrld9e, 2':02. 1, 2. C0t
one Clef M¥, 2:o7 .l
200 tr..-1. Smith (Cl, 2.IU, 2. Pau!Mn CCI, 2:2U; 3 9erlM (C). Ut.7.
200 lndo-1. Smith (Cl, :Ul.4, 2 SNllV (W),
2:34.I; 3. Carbon (WI, 2:36 0.
SO frw-1. ~n (C), 2U, 2 LOWTY (Cl.
lt.4, 31 Looflloufrow (Cl, 21_1 100 nv--1. Brown (W ), I 11.3. 2. S.r (W ), H U . 3. Smith tCI, 1:13.l.
100 rr..-1. Smith (C), 1:00.7. , Snellv CW).
1:017, 3. l•nY•ruk (C), 1:04.l
SOO tr..-1. Alwc> (W), 6·12.S, 2 l •lffkl (C),
U l.1, 3. T0trH (C), 6:42.t
100 t>Ktl-1. V•n<MfUCk (C), 1:12 9, 2 ~
IW), 1:14.3; 3 P.rtln (Cl, 1:111 100 br"•t-1. SllllllY (WI, nl, 2 Gelb tCI,
Smith tCI. 17.6.
400 '"" r .. •-1. Coron• cMI Mar, nt. 2. WOOO!Yld9e, nl.
......_. He'11W t i, ··~ '4
as --I
GWC, Vikes
earn victories
Golden West Collete and Manna Hi&h remained unbeaten in vol·
lcyball Wednesday with convincana
victories.
Herc's what took plaoe:
GoJdea West a, Le Ven1e t : The
Rustlers ovcrp0wered the Leo and
gave up only one point in tbe final
pme to Cl1m the I S.9, 1 S-5, t S-1
South Coast Conference-opcnina vic-
tory at Golden West.
The Rustlers improved to ~
overall.
Two sophomore outside hitters,
both Estancia High products, led
Golden West. Soott Garmon came up
with 13 kills and five blocked shots
and Dave Ross had 16 kills and ei&bt
blocks.
The Rustlers host Mt. San Antonio
Friday at 7 in conference play.
Mullaa S, Lapu Hilb t: Tbe
Vikings weren't tested in the first two
games, and came back from a 13-10
deficit in the third game to defeat the
Hawks, I S-61 I 5·1. 15-13, in a match
at Laguna Hills.
Junior middle blocker Ben Lafran-
cois turned in 10 kills and junior
outside hitter Ron Smith added eiaht
to le:td Marina (2-0).
The Vilcinas play at Santa Barbara
High Friday njght and compete in the
Dos Pueblos Invitational Saturday at
UC Santa Barbara.
CALL 642-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE
IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE
THE ART OF SELLING IS
MADE EASY IN THE
DAILY PILOT'S
CLASSIFIED PAGES.
C..tral 1111 l!!f!!! ltac• lOH Ctrou ••l llar 2122 Costa ••u ZH9 Cetta •111 MM Cetta llesa MM Cetta Jina ========;1 HlllTS OUllR 4BR h e.A hM com. POOi. SEAVIEW 3BR 2'nBA + SH.ARP daraen Apt. 29R. tBr up1tre wlgarage. Refs ••EASTSIOE lowly new
·-· .. ----·-Large 2 bdrm houee with tennis. Vu, DR l=R, $2200 me&liBJIU 11m rm. Great view. Pool. 11ove/relrig. no pet1 req'd. No pet• $495/mo. 2Br 28a. Ol w, wl d, bale,
fireplace, 2 car garage, mo.Bkr/own640-4152 tenni s , security . $520/mo 54~1377 352 Vlctorl• 6-'5-8161 gar $900 + S900 MC COLDWeu
BANl(eRO hardwood floors end .Appeal'n CdM w/glll $625 TIWl ... H $2200/mo 2131430-3629 llOO IFF Av1ll Aprl! tat. Avall 3/3. 631-3&46
loads of charm. Cell lor OH PCH 2bdrm 11111 S800's 0.Dffl Ftr Rttf SEAVIEW 3B~'nBA + MOVE IN COST 2/bd, t'Mba. no pets
Ylewing appointment Brand new 2br 2ba $925 Frpic. 1111ulted celllngs, dbl fem rm. Great view. POOi, Lge Collage Type 28R no g111g, $675
Asking $219,000. Exec 3br 3ba hse S 1400 gar, pool & 5')a. No pet1.. ten n I s . sec u r I t y .. 1BA. pvt patio, w/d hkup, 275 A Cebrlllo
2Br Upper, garage. patio.
3003 Jeffrey, $700/mo.
Agt 640-3161 ILIFFI 539-6191 Agent cost tBdrm $750 $2200/mo terms (213) no pets $e75/mo. 676-7450/730-1286
Traditiona l ELEGANT 2BR Den 666 w t&th 430•3629 TSL MGMT &42·HI03 2/bd, 2/be, quiet-upstairs,
"S" Pla~1~'?!°1and. 3 Realty Patio, gar. part1urn. Avali 845-2739 964-4163 Take a look 2br 2ba over· 1 lllTl HH IEIT moat utilltles paid. ....._81iBRIJ
BR's, split level. Across now. $1475, 640-4255 SPECIAL OFFERS tooka Nwpt mod kl1 & gar iBR et $535/mo 2BR $725/mo. 622 Hamilton ~ ~
f th ool d cl 631-7370 JASMINE CRK 3BR ige Free rentl Cozy bungalow $700 no last 53Mt9t S5g5/mo All bulll Ins St, CM, Ron 548-0477. t~o~op:. ~wo ~ ose lamliy rm, vi~. wd' nra. child fine exchange for Agent cost lndry rm.'nr bch & lhopa'. 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, IEW APUTllllTS
assumable loans are HVH·S242,500 Must see top cond, lovely patio Ille duties detalls el Upper Unl1 Dplx 2Br 2Ba, 735-741 W. 16th St. carport Large yard. No Featuring beautiful 1•"4·
another plus! to apprec. Highly up· $2300/mo. 760· 1634 •Ht .. 1IO* gar Ocean vu. blk to beh TSL MGMT &42· 1803 peta $e75/Month. 2625 =._._!~OsG, pool/spa .
• •• .-0 graded 3br 2ba Carmel. Newly orptd 5 rm houM $1000 ._ utiis 675-8339 Elden, Apt #F. fS..46...6519 at 0 ........... aragea Of ,.,..._ 1963 P()('I Weybridge. Large 3+2 +gar St too ~1 erage & shady yrd or (8181359_..539 1Bdrm Ap1 wtbaicony, 28< lBa Clean 28 18 carports HHt paid.
S Must see 2+2+bttns $925 , 11 pool. No pets $495/mo. · r •. Sony. no pe11 .. OPEN AT/SUN 1•5 Cute/coly 1 +1 + gar$625 . I many others eva VILLA BALBOA tBR tba 646-3618 garage. w/d hkups $650 Bach S5 5
REAL ESTATE HELPLINE Owner/.Agl 759-te7o ee TELERENT ·675-8360 539•6190 Best Alty lee view, $1050/mo 2BR VIiia Rentals 675-49t2 1Bdrm $590-$6~0
Forectosor&-R E Problems IEWPIRT IEtlm Cetta llllHI 2124 Baat. ltac~ 14 2be $1250/mo. 962-"557 •:ire:~~f:~~·dSq= 2BJ3 JBA ~n. or unturn. 2Bdrm 2Ba $795
Fr.-relerencet 855• 7292 $210.000 Must Selll 3Br 2Ba. tam rm wl retrlQ. Villa Balboa 2Br 2Ba, lam· cells No pell 990-2970 ·~~~i,~e ~~~4g M 825 Center St. 6"2• 1424
Ctrna•elllllar f012 CourtesytoBkr642·7190 2mw2~~~~~r,~81~1~ crpts, drps, ger St200 11yrm.S11oo vi11aRentals tBr w/nflW crpt & beam ,. 1 · · · •PAOIF1IATWllll
BEAUT 2 u NifbuhEX IEWPMTm.SPEC condo. at e, frplc, w/d _c anPete,Bkr 751•3191 675-49t 2 0R 75"·1792 cells toe on cul-c»-MC. 2:0. 8:osp~~~tr~-Spacious clHn quiet
syrsold. xlnt rentil prcip . setting on a giant tot, 2 -rr1cap 'MS1r BR. ltv rm. At>Out u cioee to ocean u VILLA BAL~k Exec-'tBr l g patto $530. 751-3531 54&.8"06 Ask for Marcel. Jmmac..28t: ..1'A8a 2 atry
toe. 500 blk o1 N11rc1uus bdrms & den, huge llv rm pa110 OV9flooking pool you c an get $420 +Oen. Incl frplc. w/d, ale Garden Ap1. Pvt pet>o,
to many amenttlet 10.1ts1 w/frplc. dln'g area & $950/mo. yrty. 998-0082 bung 1 i o w b •si c & olher upgrede8. POOi. 2~ 1e,a. Cfdtl". d~ ... oar00. · 28drm i595 pool. carport, lndry fee,
Great 1n11est opponunl· much, much more In mdl , bltlnstdecor mull aee 5')a. sec bldg & sub-0 pe 1 " 1 p .. ,. .70< 3Bdrm $685 No pets S7251mo 268 E
ly. favorable financing cond Owner MUST sell, 2g:,d01 1r:Acarsp;~::;,~ 539-6191 Agt lee prkng ger Great toe • Lee. Avl now 543-7234 POOi. No peta &45-9665 16th. Curt ii 631·1288
avall ~75.000 Laure has already porehued fenced back •HS no Vllill Pacific TownhouM Walk to beh. $1050/mo.
760-9146/E 756--0129/0 Price reduced Cent.121 pets $750/mo. T8s.3324 2BR 2BA. avail 61 t. &40-2939 Ev/645-6836 ..
CORONA DEL MAR Berg 962·889 1 *CIECI Tiii* $900/mo 962· 1182 aft 6 3/bd, 2/ba, WESTCLIFF,
New homes lor sale. 3/bd, PllllSIU Niil · 1-. -144 1,rge yard. nreptace. new
2'•.tba lrom $260K, Oversized lot Must eeOI 1 ~ l + lrplc, pe1s ok, lncd mat carpet, lrldg, S 1450.
645-1056 $318 000 1nciu<1es plans yrd E-slde, $500 Fee 2M 2BA, yd, gar, pool, 646-3100 °' 752· '1963.
_H_l_IO_l_l_I Hll,000 PASH
0
PROPS 720-9422 nLHEIT lll-lllO ~~~~si:.J\"'900~~~\v~ft '" MIOYI IT
112-IH .IASlllE WYIEW *HITIC NllE* now 546-7234 GATED VILLAGE COM-
Reduced to sacrifice of 3BR 2·~BA + lam rm. 4 •2 + lrplc, gar, yard MUNITY. 2Bdrm, 2 'n8a.
$315,000 Each New Grell view Pool tennis OnlyStOOO. Fee **REITAl.S** 1600 SQ. ft. of PURE
2200 Sq Ft each. security. 'Reduced to TllEllHT lll-1110 CALL us REGARDING LUXURY. Garage. SPA in
3Bdrm. 3'h Bath, formal s 3 6 o o o o 18 rm s IRVINE RENTALS ma1ter suites. Dining
dining. walk to beach. 2'13_.30.3629 · •SHARP Westside 2Br '"'" O.ist ltalters room. woodburning fir• shops & b 1Ba Duplex Tile floors, place. microwave oven, OPI wt1 t'su /HI,. crpts, drps, w/d hkup, lH-llOO private patio. ELEGANT Stat• WfUI lOll garage $600 •sec Must •ORAN GETREE tBr LIVING only 15 mlnulea
Open Hiuee Set /Sun stand credi1 v . No pe1s. Condo. Patio, on stream. to So. Co. Plaza, Jul1 east
••al E1t1tt Ftr Sale 1 "-) 1002 '(~ ( J / /1 12·5 Charming 2Br 2a.l 770-5629 J\ pool. Jae. tennis, ate of Nepwort Blvd & south "' -•era ,,, 1111a1• '1r111 houae lac sauna Near$675 Cute2Br IS.gray S655 Nopets854-1141 of San Diego freeway.
I 1> .Ji ~. 9 S ' 2473 ORANGE AVE
8 ••••• /c •••• I
llR&AJIS -J>"r.' • 11711'/fll .J th t Beach Ocean w/wht shutters. wood WOODBRIDGE. 3er l 'nba 631•5439 By appt ly _ ,..,. 111ew 31891 9th St firs. crpt, blinds. Garage condo close to pool ten-on
I Bank Repos FOf'eclowres fJj./-'{'11 $253.000. Bkr 547.5375 I Sml yrd Grdnr. No pets ni• s9ootmo ..soC , .. lu ....... I
Geatral 1002 A~ij~~e;& ~~~~~~~~~ 3407 C. Cont Hwy., CM Moltilt Boats 2218 Placentia &45-2566 paid, avl 4113 857-8058 2186. 218X. w/panoramlC
Agef'll 85"·2460 RE.-EI -ICE For kit 1100 College Park area, 3BR Woodbridge. de111chad ocn vu. spa & patio, lo yd
•BLUFFS BE~~ -...iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim l .wv f"" 2BA home w/lrpic & fem house Beautitui 2br, den, m1int, Luctlte, 498-0500.
BUDGET BU ~ HJFRllT IOIE DUSPo-LoEXl·P·2CBHr tSb2a"~.900h IRlllLW p••1 rm. 2 car gar. trg fnced 2ba. new carpet. paint, 2BR 1'nBA end unit Cnarmlng. smeller 3 ---yd, lush landscape, flp, comm pool, tennis ·
Bedroom 2 Beth 1 Story SAlllY IUCI 521 Carnation By owne< Very nkle FLEETWOOD. wtr/gdnr incl N-crpts, Sl200 mo Jud 646-7t7t Marblehead Condo, wet
End Unll Adult home Parllelly remodeled 3 1 673--024 1 or 673· 1541 highly upgraded Large new paint Close t o Y __ bar micro, ftp, w/d hkup,
S 165.000 • (Incl Land) Bd h i C • o•u llvlng. dining, kitchen schools & Shops S 1100 2 car ger/w apnr. comm. Mastf111 I Ct. ca[i~n :'a~ '~ti!'' ~t! nta tu l "" area w/klng size master t st. lest & dep. 754-776 i I.qua ltac• 2141 pool, apa $895/mo. 1141
HO-HIO un11Et entrance Prlva1e pier ,.. uu" IWIH bdrm and bath ask f()( Bob Cavanaugh i5CMn v141W 3Br 288. 281 995-8642 2131596-3833
and float Sandy beach, Upgraded 3Br 2Be. 2 Coiy Nwpt Hghts 3BR Wave St s13g51mo. IM. ka Jau
VILLA llLIOI
RESALES
huge lot St.395.000 lrplcs, 6' wet bar den. LlllU llLLS 2BA. 1 car ger. spe. lndry Frpic. n-w/w, Open Sat CaJiiltraat 2171
used brick p111io Hot tut> A bHutlfui GOLDEN tac $1000/mo 1140-«54 t2-4pm. 818/2114-5285 (714)673-4400 t ml to ocean Assum WEST. fight Interior · 3BR BA Condo, 1ttach
loans. S189.950. 412 E home 20x80 ft 2 bdrm. Eastslde 2Br. beam cell· *llESTlllU* gar .. Mission Poln1 area
t91h. Bkr 831-4919 large kitchen/dining and lngs Sharp & clean. Pet Studio, utlis Incl, ocean of Sen Juan Cap. Rec.
Security guard gate, living area corner 101 ok $795/mo. 760·8862 view, secluded $350. Fee lee. wlpool $815/mo.
beautllul community pool HIE OIL-ll·SAO LOT Small pet OK. young EASTSIDE Broadway 38r TILIRllT 111-lllO Call Pam 833-2400
and spa. secured perk· IEU YHIE adults welcome. flreplaoe. grdnr Incl $82S lfat• L!fHI 2iU
Ing, air conditioned New on lhe market Sharp AGT. 5-40.5937 No pets 646-3177 OUTSTANDING VIEW.~
• 1 Bdrm.covered deck. 3Br T·Plan Asking N\\w 3BR2BA spaoerent 2brl 2bamobllehomeon *OC NFRONT•
mini blinds. track lights. S 145.000 Cell Pam Of S 130, peta, oeean breeze. LlllRY OllH'S the bluffs on Treu. 1111. 3er 28• home. Lg deck,
pastel-beige tonee Linda 546·5860 HerHage In Costa Mesa 645-6456 Brand MW 3br 2'~b• ftp, pvt beh, poot, sec. gate JCtra roog f0< office. N~ s 123.950 CM 19tn S1 c-1 L t lnvestmenta --tnc yd, dbl gar, pet ok, pk s 1600 yr, .. 499-2704 iy ~rn. t1; ~~ 'tfr· d
.. 2 Bdrm Gorgeous 60x 180 WI Plans for 2 ~ -•• 'IALIFYIH O.t of Ctaaty COIOf s 1095· 642"9686 g;~2g14 Of 385-137~ 0
.
ocean and bay 11iews 1 sq 11 Cape Cod Office ,93 000 HA In 4BR Jba Prorrtz lSZS MESA VEROE-3/bd, 2/ba. L11u1 lilatl 21SZ A * P9f'llhouse 2~r1!·':.1 ~~~~o!~g5~,~~rllrm co~do, 2 car gar' On flLLIROOI ~~~~;~·~l::iar'· New 38r 2 a Condo In par!!tatl mel DI R end family room _ greenbelt Only S 108.00o beach CIOM Beecon Hiii.
1mmacul11e1 $235.000 IWPT IOI COi Cell Judy Of Jake now Beautlful, forever 360" Mesa Verde 3BR 2BA, EnJoY tennis. pools & lalMa * 2 Bdrm 2 be formal H 546-2313 Agl vi-3.000', 3BR 3BA super clean. beaut Y8'd. 1pas Indoor walher & lalad 2'M
DIR huge patio OC4Mln Large V81'9allle plan 4 With ICW I om Lllm Ranch Home. 3 car gar & s' 100/mo, 111, fut, $250 d r y. r $ 9 1 5 I m 0 . eXYFRONT \er xa1t .. NO .,....., 1 178 000 a dramatic ilvtng room. 2 ec AVOS FA AC dep 54~35 alt 5pm 640.1341 E~ 55M170 .-.. ,,.. ..,...,,.. ·s.u·11:.i · flreplece family 1oom & 'bdrm, 2 bath fixer High L ' • TO ___........-~ ...,mo, (714) 673 4400 den GoOd view one 01 on a t>luf1 ~o ooo dn s~gt P•~w poot MESA VERDE 3 or• Ba, I It • 2llt Yrty, u111s incl 673-M40
• lhe largest un>ts In VIiie S 132,000 602·f 45-1411 s24~ 000N Call .;,.•~2~0 den. spa, dbl gar., va-l!?prt IC 2BR 18.A. ~lo. Chal9t.
Bott>oa Assumable 1-:....i-04 tod1 ' to Ml cent, gardener & water H~TiT,;ba, appr• 1080 Near South Bay Yrty
I,
II n a n c ' n g 0 w n er mat 1 4 Y_ paid. No pet•. St 100 & elf, 1/2 blk beh. Utll pd. $975 Incl utllL e1i.34sa
anxious $182 ooo 11,000 MWI I $1350. Agt 646-3627 Oerage. $950/mo
MARIA BERCOVITZ Lease opllon 2 story tat1J1 MESA VERDE . '4BR, ~ 980·5844 Sae Set t().2, Small tbf apt for 1 quiet
LINDA T AGL IANETTI lwnhm Many amenities ly new dee:J(, spaclout. No 5-403 Riv« Ave. edult, no pets M2S/mo.
759·9100
--------•t ~ . ~ • • • •, ; •••
Sell Y • ., Pr.,.nrl
Call Clu1tfW,
642-5671
for information
& surprisingly
low cost.
• .
$135,000 786-6644 Bt11H/C..•11 pets S1205. 75t~38ge •WILi Tl II.Ill* Incl. utll. 6?5-2075
FOR SALE BY OWNER 11_ J ZlOZ Mutt rent prefd .,. .. 2bf 3 + 2 + ger, lrplc, patio, l1J•11 ft1l•nh
TURTLE ROCK .. aora hm w/gar lelaure patio yrty S 1100 FM 87$-4 2117
Unobstructed vi... 3BR NB 39R 2BX. upper und, $650 kld1 ok 539..e191 TILDllT 111-IHo n m / , yea ,
2BA twnhm, air, lrpl, up· atepa to bch, amall oc.en Agent:"Coat A d 11000 t . garg avall .Apr t
grades, 7 Relnt>ow Ridge. view S 1150, yrty -Siii !~nf 3 ... 2b ~tba t~ Se75tmo ~5882. Open HOUM Set/Sun 1·5 HB 'BLK to bch, 2BR 1BA •••• ...... Uf • y .. , y .... ....---·-......... ----.1
$175,000 .. apt wtendedt & gar $e75 3BR 29.A hM, pool, den, ocean lrplc garagH ••I 1
854-t77918$4-8e<l7 .l&Olll IUL n dbl ga~ t ~~=· Only 539·6191 Agt cott 2er 21.. #PIO. s;icon;.
wowu PRIP IAHll•IT 2094 Balmor11 HARBOR VIEW 509'~ Femteal. Vac.nt
S2.425 dn • St.900 clot-ll./llM1l• TSL MGMT &42-1803 2 + den or 3BR. oorner SOSO/mo 720-9422 Ing Cotti Mo pmta of • 1ocatlon lnclud .. gdnr &
$180 11 9W'~ llxed Int Lola for ie.t 3br 3ba bltinl M V Execu11Ye 4 BR 3ba.. PoOI Avall 411188. Call EXTRA lg tBR w/2 lg 1Nd'-
2BR twnhrn. ger $84.900 & gar klde/pets ok $775 lamlly rm, redwe>od IP• LOia 873-7544 ~ ~i lg ~~7=
Peg/egt 559-0400 nr lh<>pa/lrwya 53Mt9t $1400/mo 546-9950 """"' mo 2
Agent Cott M V Execut!Ye hm. 48R Split i.vel 2Br w/d«I, ov.r·
3be. !amity rm, redwOOd iootllng IMng roqn & fir-. lal... 'Pt. gardtler lflCld piece. plu111 car~et.
11p. eov ci.ctc1p1t1o S349t< Palmsala • zt-s t400. 546-9950 IOnllT .at ~.~n• ~Ol'110•,.,·,w 31 la
(t..) ownr 8181810-5917 •• e ......... -3•-2•L•· -.. " " ~ PLUSH CONDOS wl fall1 -.., ,._., ·--Bathe, patio, cSec*. 2 cw lllfft *"'"Tl Ull* 11,..,,1. Oar w/oPflf crpt. wl d, refrlg Im· 9 nc10 u d g., • g •
38r 281. COMPARfl 2 + t +.}"', new deCOr. w/d htlup. MW deOOf Avl m=--:,,t!!~,_..im wl1t0fl09 & laundry rm
COMP.AREi • 169 000 Yrty s7-FM now 2bt 2be S9501mo, Pey only etectr1c. 5 btk9
fM TM Propetty Man TILllDT Ill-.... lbf 1750 tit mo • '500 NB DUPLEX Huge up.-10 bMct'I Open HOUM
640-tott Almoet OCMI\ front 2bf MC 6'9-24'7 OoMl'I VIN, 48A 2~ba. Sun 1-4. 435 Goldenrod.
a--...__ 1
1
___.. lbOde enlttlc decor 1 1rp1e, s 1500/mo 875434e or 990-6331 ~""Mll~;;buyl-;. mull IJ9per 1700't utUa fin fe 00WNSTAIA8 Oc;eel\ OnN1tclteu1·28R28A 2
58R 4ba, 4000 ef. bey a ~ esH,tt AGt ... ~~,;!!R 2ba. frplc, Ar f1W • E lndty wttb
Ill" vu M25K 831-"fM OoMnfront hm for IM Dlauffle4 60I E. Oceen Front W/d • 10 /rno i.a...
S1500/mo 2BR 1'n8A, 8J12•&878 Both UllfUm Rent untK 6"4-72tt gt
S.1 thlng11 1111 with 0.U) newly dee. Stow/frig '"" • June 30 Cell Den IN JI/ti• cell cion 11 a11 ti the
Piiot Want Ad• eluded 876-8<465 851·1114 9-6pm Ctlfl"ltOClnaln.d .
'
Enter Now
And Be Eligi~le
to Win $ 20000
of Home Decorating
Supplies f tom
CATEGORIES
I
Best use of water in house or garden-do
you hove ceram ic mermaids in your spa? Or
do you hove a ko1 pond in your garden or
foun tains in your foyer? Enter your displa y
. today.
Best children's play area-Hos your child's
sandbox gone chic? Mom & Dad, this
category is for you to show us how creative
you hove become to amuse your child.
Best use of art in decorating-Art takes many
forms, but we'll be the judge of that. Enter
your best use of art in decorating today.
Best overall kitchen-ls your kitchen country?
Or is it an "80' s" gourmet type. This
category is wide open or "space saving" 1r
rhot' s your type.
CONTEST RULES
'"'' CO"'•" " cHt ~ 19 •9(.,•• ,._..., "°"' ""V l'K<UOIW of o horto., <O'ldo QCIOt•-
mob-le "°"'9 °' ~..obclurd VOt"' No (~(iclj -... fl) .... -..,... tlte .... y '°'"'Gt.a "'°""* o i>llOIOOre>PI oi ,..,. ""''Y ff19 .,.,Y fllon• be occ~ by o _,.,,..,., ol 1119 ..,.,.,. lh ..
OllO!ogr~ ti.c-. P'OIWIY of rht 0oo4y 'JO/t1wrt>gt011 l\eocll ~~ Ol'CI t-bot
f9'1Jf•.0 f•tt ... """' be fi)Otln!Qf\11(1 by W.,,.....,, A.pt• ,, 1986 Of Ollt ... .O 10 IM 0..4y
'olol/HuntlflV'°" lleoch ~idefM t/O l "''llO Sc>oc .. COll! .. t, 330 W 8oy $rr._i, Ccn•o M*"'
Co f'.2626 by s 00 II"' Ttv\Ooy AO'~ 3, l986 w-1 ...... be ._ ... ., llOrofl o"'1
Qllologroeiltt Ill •119 1••"'11 Sc>oc•t" M<•IO<l IO be l)Olbi.11..o A.pt~ 11, 1986 Oool\-Ptlol/Hunt"'Q'.,..
8eacll l~ldeo• ~y.., ore""' elg>ble (mron"-' be 18 y .. ,,. old or~ ONI...,.. •••o<lft
'" !he 0ofy 'tlol/H""'onot°" lleoth I~ ctrc..lo!oun ,,,.o Dolly Polot/Mllm"'O'Ofl lleoth
~.,..,.~I pllotosjtaplletl w1I p/loloOfodl IM WIMHIQ ....... for IJilbloca!o' ., 11\a 'l..,nQ
Sc>ocet" M<•l(Jtl CO'l•e'1oio11 "'Or ""'"' "'°'' tt>tn Otl9 t0t-oory olt~ll Ollly on. ..,.,, ,,... (Of~y '"'' ba Cont.,..,11<1 O!.. .. ,,,_ O"' COltOQff ,. .. bot Cht)\M :
LIVING SPACES ENTRY FORM
INTaANT'S NAMls
ADDalSSs
DAY PHONI NUMIHs
IVININO PHONI NUMIHa
CATIOOaYs
SIND
INTlllS
TO
LIVING SPACE CONTEST
c/o DAILY PILOT/
HUNTINGTON IUCH INDEPENDENT
330 W. BAY ST.
COSl A MlSA, CA 92626
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c.ta... •a. ....,.., ..... .._ rfl•~•rtti11ri•~•ii·~~.;.~re~iiii•Vl•;.'i1mE:itliiili;;;-._~~~-~~~liii~i1a=m
' 28t Gtdn Apt&. POOi drywt'*uca, 119Uo. oer. no '"'" 11oeo.atseo .,. wooc..-w ~~~P"P.!..,~..-1'!! ... AUCAl&.ElV.lO ,., 8fwp llA, 1~ ....... i: ~ s & • ., a.. ,,.... roam W/pwl ITM n111 !"'"!II!!!(!!!!!~!!!
S!l2Ml21. 11ow 11ttt s>et•NSO,.....,_, Alrlta111l7J.10tl. · ~ s.na.w.ce,n Na. Ml""""'°* aw. OUilC "'° . 11.acmlM<>r.,.C...W I &Whit .., u. _.."' ; 1 1 a nanam111,a.. frOfl\ l:IWll\ d9n ._ tt ·.-.0 ..,,. • • .,,.. ..-. ....._..:. ~a....&......_ ...,.i:,.._..,..., ........... -..-.. •lfflWYw 111Wll Clt!Nwtl2M tlA,petto. Pvtl'OOll'lw/ftlryfllc.~ ~mo l5CMl7'3 '4awGdP1rt9"2·S01d •.,..,... ~IOr Df.C-.....111-i141 ...,.._....., ,,T. GoM ............ .
3Hu+ !,.! gw.5bfUNOt~~· 2~ •,lflll, OfP\I. ~ ldMI tot .......... ,.,.... H~.8. nr bdl~,=. •lldllc N/"'*1 .... 16+ *Mr kMNilfWOC ~ 1 or 119 IUfll\tO P• ---~OC ._ .,,... #b , ... _~-'ll .. ,.see . ·-.. .-• """'" noctyrd•f::etlo. Nopete.......aot .r . ,.,..,.. ,._,,,,__ .a-,._ 2 .....____,...._ln_oP'~ ..... ~ FOt • & -• Good reootd ,. 'II&=.-. _._..., 11Mlll 2431 .. 1r·0r 1• ,_,.. __ .... ....,.....,, ._, --· .,.__ " ...... .<l-.... llllL' ,.__, ~120cTet1'.5PM Co .. y Studio w/wood • ._ 1310+~ut1&42-Ml7Ev MOO-tlOOJper mo, ,._ ""'"'Cll l«1'Y ,.._.. ..a 40 f'llllE 'I·•" Sl11Pll_.,. clecot. atepe to OCWI. Qulauwwn,Npt.ldl..Wll NwpU•S..P'Oftamn-~llilt.tulll:lrWy,n. IO•ll502or7eo.7'H6 ..... ,_,... ,...,_.,.,.._,
2Bdrm tie httalde •AVAIL.ASL& HOW• $450 + 1ta, ... I W l rm tot M/St w/pf'I, lmlV-W ~ S8d rwn ~ OOfl'IPUW, ~ ~ MW CtwtMIM ~ ~ ndl ........ ...
Quiet arH No SMtti ~OAMw/oatp0rtM20 ....._(213~2039 ltreKpttv.no.-'l:tbe., rwbdlw/WW5/mo m9d\lne, prot .. .11nar, • fftONY ;:;:.,.~~· c.rt= ~~f 11') ~-........... ,,.~
831.et&S QU .. ET/PMt~,J!'M50 Deluxe 3bt 2'Mle f\rt\. carpcw18$50 IU Ml-0793,&Q •. 3700 friendly atmotpller, TO ... 1,0.000"-no ,._,. ... A..... •-._.,..-,..._ -II' --T,pe..,,.....,.,ape, AoomlnNo LAQi.Nl3H ~perdlamtor10C9. ·-.,_ __ .,,._ -·• t ,_.. att ..... ,,
M35/mo 2BR 28.A. fJptc, NO PET8 54t.2447 "di:'"=·· no~ M MO+ .,.,._ • t .,_ trom Prot M/F tlW 28R Nwpt 855-2622. 9uMf'I =::1=.,, ~·rs~ ......,. •I.ft Zlnc:tl DI U ? I U la'8 ::;,,.. ._. .... :::;:
enc:1 gar, a11 bltna, ,..., WI.,,.. .. _ :!! _, · :!:· ~ bell a downtown. AWll acn l'IOfna.. Pvt beth. • .,--. ._... ._.. • .._. 1 ...,.. ~ ---. .... • th<>P91no ceinter • ,. ..... ...,. • ..... _.._ ,. Wiik to beedt. Gat. -.. ..-........ -.. en 11 ..=;-: ot lfO Cent• Wenta~lon Of gNet patloe, 11250. 122·1087 now,..,_ 4v4 606t M75+.,....14&-8158 Fula.Mci98uldlfle. fr .. 11•1 II .. J*t•m · ...._to H ••n-._
IMng? W• OM ofter My.. ...... i\i:A:L ftll Comer Of W--& IMna l'Mdll* IM. A ... !.' 7 II ,_I -ft Tll ~ M2· 1MI thing trom 1 amM apt to DuplHlturn, 2br 1ba, ~ PAOF. to w 3bf SM 5M Sq Ft. VtEW SUfTI! NI 1111 /..... ClalW Cal •ti IOw I.IP·=-fOOd a.Id,._ ID: '° ._
..... ••• •-• 4 bdrm houM. If look· frptc:, WIO. oer. ltecle to ...-.. condo, 2 tty. fUly tum.. •-•111 Aaedar.,...""'-"161d ~ti! &-good 2MO, ......,. ...-.
.,.._ _ _.,. Ing In CM NB or HB ti.ch.3-11fol-2t.Sl50 s·· daJer*'O tedy, Npt -l60-2'7M0..831-*4 WfWira-banaMa.Cll Tf2.4 CA .... MM:T ...
1Br & 28r, frlO, range, think of uttlrtt'ror that mo. 1350 latt 112 w . ..,.. "· M50. calf Clot 0oa.nv.2otcw/MO' -AMllllt My"°"'* 3 ~. P11m I --II II J. laundiy,pool,earport.No cnoiceOf ldMI llvlng mo.+1200 dep Unda. kJy rtnta Low ret• D 642,1012 !/14&-1715 retarlal ec>ace & aeoreoe * _ .... * tome~,_.. n1 ia
pet1.S560&1650/mo. TSl.MOMT 842.1803 AMI or aft 7 ev1 S1~ & Up~ty. Cdor RMMTErllt 3 8ACondo lt150mo.Felhlonla6and ~Rael,,_ & '*l'd.14ll043 $~~. ~:.~~1 .. 11wT 11PU1 ......
931 W 10th St. 54-0482 860-2012 TV, m9'd MMoe. tr.a .....,. 1_. C M • .....,. • (7 t4) M0-4756 ......_a.me-~ -W97 .,_ ._.._ • brtglle ,._.. ~ 90 cOffee. heated Po01 & """"' r-• · · .-v/mo evtM. RESUME WORKS BA8YSITT£A HEEDED Colla MW ._... .._-... ....._ UU •Ill Dua Put -JIJI Enjoy the Luxury ol ttie ~ to ooaM. IOtcft'• + ~ utll. 722-7842 PRESTIGIOUS N.8 ofb. 1-. JIM 3 ct.ye per •· ,.. l'llQ. CIKI-It! non eMkr •• _, tw a.
AU UTILTIES PAID OAFOAA Opatra 2£ 2L: bemlltf\Jll• .:::::::""""" o1 av.I. 915 N. COMt Hwy. Rmmte wenMd M/F 28R Qu9I St. l.Ol 2 ""· IG'rt & l.AIQUna ldt ..,._,.,, _ _ sUi a.lary' •••--•ml;'
Compaf• ~you rent Den, frplc. lg balcony, dbl _,_ UIT Ulguna 8-d'I, 4.._5294 condo, ~ Mn, NB eltty. 1870 mo to mo or .... • CHtU>CAA£needad In * .. P«*'" l •U"'6N.
Newty clecotatecl ~om gar No peta sns1mo In • IPadout 1Mr'm, 18a PM• 11111. StlOO/mo. 54&.o»4 ...... 833-33411 • UAdt www; ..... Verda h0m9. ~ .... mm IU-»43 tot ..... ~=~~~t;,-:o.~=: ~~Chelt:,:.'·~~ !~:~~:.; Wldy rn-. now wall .AOOMONBtACH ......... Loatl Black l tllver tc:wtmo beby.~ Oynamk: A.E .... ~lftiliimlii9[7fiiljiiii'--
rounded with plu9h tend~ Appt Call 240-1191 or guarded 011... W/d 11~.50 M & up. 2274 Ml1r Bt, pyt ba. M/F 1·2 E. 17th St, co.ta.._ ~~cat. Co6-Htttpr/Chdcr, .,,..days, mentllnYMtl"Mflt ftrm
tcaplng.Nopeta. ee14208 ~upe.CAU.~ Nwpt8MS,CM141-7445 l*i .. kilo, furn apt, 8Q0..1200aqft.S1.10per ~ 753 ,~.._. c a r req. 2 ·1P"'· MedeFIOflltoewown-~-""l!!I~
18drm&28drmFurnlahed NR..--.•UdQ•-..... ...... LIME ~dap S13e.TomS. tqftgroae.AWlllnwned. 1-1 /8 • 7~10e&H8 tanttok-.>Plt'nNnNp
385 WEST WILSON -.... • 1-o d ... .._ ~ 833-0llOIW 873-$229/~ Call for appt to ... & oorpor• bOC*e & ,... MJ.1111 IHt ..... ~ 2141 J /8142 ~ f-9 '~--:5 3026W.PadfteCoeatHwy lntala W ... IHI 8 :30-5 :30 , Craig ..... da Jell cordl, Ml'9t heoe ~.
-."==-==-"',,,,,_ _____ ;;co 2£ 2L'. N to · ~-!..~ 1 Newporthadl.fW11QTV ta 831-12te fnllllft IM Jotl coet a~
EASTSIDE 28'. yard, Qal· bet\. Patio. Gar 1775 No s 14vou--.--sea I 12s+ Wlc egl, no clepCa«. dOOd = = na; :c uunu Nl'1 Companion/Homemaker ~ & ,,,.,.. be
•o• Kl61/Pet1 okl e>et• 7eo.1713,857•1na Newport PeNneuaa 2Br I 1 l t L dloOfbect\lnCOMorN .. a AR£ fRH Tor Sr C«lple. Own = to be Mndl on $885/mo. 1787 Weat-1'-t8a. g.,_ 10 bMcfl 11 I I I •Ari up to $450. 733-0321. tran1portet1on 4-8 .0... ttw\i tlMnclel
mlntt•. /IA. 720-1M22 111.m 2 •1211 garage, )'ftr s 1000/mo: ZTM 3:3G-9pml $41-8500, ext Hn/Oy M..f. 876-1790 ~ Exoal oam-l---------
Eaalalde delwl• 28R 18A, Mii• to beactl, encl a-. V-llla ~US-4912 38R28ltmc:onao;;i;:v, 1036,Udd. c..Mldll ,....,,. Cal: IHWI R munlc.tlon eltlfl. non
1 ....... oedll deck, frptc:, ~;::3o~OO. &Mr.It furn w.1t lO ocn 1300 Prof, n·tmkr, A911red ~. Balboa ma Ml•llll L19ht :U:;;c:r;~ 4 1Wt e = ~or:: w11oa1k-1n1d~~ .... d·~~· : 14 1bf-N762tw..sn16 poo1 951.2121 U1ttorMn a.yciu ..... bme:'~ciuwWI-1358 ..... fi sfnnrrDIWT cs.y,3 csay..-. wenc;;;'tt.o .. eo.1 Aon~-:'.T
r . w ,,.......,_,_ u.· mTIUllfmST tPa.amelittiaa722-412:2 142~ ~ Hghtt •to ,.,..7 b -. "'~"""'' Newportew:t\.87~ Upper ~ Plaa.1-t-iiiii·--·iii.--1:k ~; :·J~~~~;· Bwltltul & Par1c lb FOR SPAC10US 380AM 28A wallt to water. lhopa 1~ ~ :t~· ~· ~~~ FOUND bird"' Hwt>c:w & Sitter for EJderiy am-Newport Sch 75.2-0700 I ....... THE DISCRIMINATING /Mw Next to bct1 a.,. 842·"22164~5175 "(818) 340-5434 ' witeon, CM ab0u1 9 ctye bUlataty femala s.tur-.. For~ tllm-1 yr•« l ·~i~~\:· PROFESSIONAL age Yrty 11250 AV911 Actl\oelady56+wfonv.'1 .... n .llTU. ago.~129pm d9Y9 10am.eom.Nr15th 2)"991q>lnllil09nNm. ~y :· One & Two 8-'room no• VIiia Rentals lie Fr .. P.m Bth board WANTED: Hou. alt or FREE ~TANOING & Placentia. 673--7378 FfTlme Tuea ttwv Set. Wll. Vein. AW'flnper90n _[_ ___ , UtlHt ... Free S7S-4912 Of 764-1782 ~ 1 · 842 9!132 Room 10 rent on the Beh. Lrg Show Room & omc:. Found brown M/Doxie 8-rt. wortctno en¥lton-et CT flm. ·n20 8outtl
LA QUINTA HERMOSA · • nt.pay -Upto$350.87S.5tot ComerofWattc:tlff&lrvlne old«Y1c. W•tmlntter& ~ L......~ ment. Type 4SWPM. BJrdl, SaMa AM lafn.
LAAGE LUXURY 3BR 28A 18211 Parkllde Ln, HB ....... "' BALBOA PEN. M/F prol Sign apeoe 1-.t on Wattctm Magnoll•. 8N.e171 n•••-. Gtn'I Offtoa ~ pref. Noon.
lam rm. frplc, dbl gar. Ml·M41 1 mite to beadl. 642-2357 nonltl'lkrtolhr3bf, 1 blk Ulfll IH llt 141-1111 Found: Exotic Blfd. Hall & M•i1l1t11 SIM S51hr. """*" In per.on .. .-.f/T
S950/mo. 845-1188 trorn.bch S350-+ John 1741 Ectwerc:t. H 8 .,._ Cell MAftA(D TuaettwuSet. '*'9 Point -•
E'SIDE 18R Mitt/no.-. IUWI• Yll 1111 Y'lllM LD 5'8-7498/E 549-7165/E End ~ ear w . y .... PalTIMlllUl&Tm to !dent~. ~1 ~~?>~!.~ ... ~ lmf9. ._... twve UPS ..--28R 28A. trptc din rm --, ~ "1 .,. ...... ......... ........ k nowl•do• & ••P•r pool. lndry, $445/mo 1 & 28r k.utUfY Api. Ir\ 14 Arnanlt* S885'eu 72.52 Bwlt NB pyt hm. Empl '9, c:leen, ry. etac, ht'*'· Nr "-tlll/..,.,_ apace. 1881 FOUND German Short • · w/f!itop too& 211..-e 646-3334 iv mag Plana Poole, tennl•. • a-A now S275 Cell Sunny 0C Falt S90 751-3531 @ S2.00 Ml· ft. On comer l\Wed Po6nter Buahard tmmedlet• Opening fOr tul GEHEAAL. OFFlC£-~ M for appt
E/8'de 28R ........, .. ~ watettan..pond9!Gaef0t WESTCUFF 1/bd condo, H6'5-9515W831-7305 Sa-"t• Of Mac:Atttlur & Cout &Hamilton HB.~1914 tlmeoi.tr1c1Manaiger. Keypunch, phoMI. r--====~iiiiii • ·--·1 ...... eooklng a '*tlno plid 1#11'.m adufta. ~ . -!I! •1 • Highway -Prime IC)Ot In • ~.no-.pnsc,.,..., patio, oar. $890/mo. From San Diego Frw/ 18751~ 87~ • COM ar .. 1 home for"'*'· 2& 1(( Ft OfG Xl!o Landmark location. 2411 FOUND Giant Whit• Rab-Must entoy wortllna with ofc In CM, Crown I IWI f&/
Avatl Mar 16. 546-1709 norlh on Beach to · alt ementlea. '550 Call Storage 12x24 & 12x2a E.. Cout Highway, Sult• bit In my front Yfd, East· chlldran, Eaperlence H•d'Mlr• 845-l'Tn. N111•11111T Exl~lrg 28R 28A. patio, McFadden, WHl on "'lllllft" &40-4256 Fl. 780-2548 #200, Corona Del M•. tide CM M24C33 helpf\ll
Ir Anci gar. No pell. MdFadden 15555 Hunt· GATED VIL.LAGE COM-F lh•• qt.net back bey ., ....... ~ (714)e7S-4900 FOUND LO Feml6e blk Weoffereneitoallentben-Cr9dlt~ln~,_ Immediate opeNno for
$850, at & tut, $300 lnglon Vlhage Ln. MUNITY 28drm. 2 'he&. condo, pool, tennis, Jae:, ••~ dog Garfteld & euStwd eflt program plid ye. lmmeclete for ~· C)i)HJtlet. Mule
sec 6424433evee IH-1111 ~t':uR~·G" Of s~~ $350 1mm.occ.MS..5123 StOl'ageSpecee Avallable ld••trlal nu Sunday,9e2~518. e.ttloN&hol~,bonua two part-t~I have have marll·UP
lllT&IT II Waterfront Apt. Furn. 2BR t . :age. DI I L.ady/gey 'Pl MCtuded De Anza 8ay9lde VIit~ \QI IQ. ft nr & XJrPOrt. F d S 1 Do program and dentel In-poaltlont lndMcMil must Gpefu pett.-up beat·
2BR 2b •• v ... lt_..__.1 ... _t 2ba, s 12oo/mo yrlv. ':!ie<~.!~~no troplc:al, prv 'ba lrplc 300E..CoutHwy.N. · Small otc wtwaratiouM ~: Em..,..!1le0rtype. turance. Salary plua be _.·organQiad wtttl groundl'lafplUl.>Ont~ -..,...,. .... , ~~· _._ _ ..... ,. r• .._._ ··~"" 54s,.1104 ' 873-1331 Mon.-Frt. Mpm S792/mo. 632-4190 "'°"'"· · ~· anoe. mlieeg. ralm~t. oood enendon lO o.tel t11ts lndUdln; madlolf & buy In town. only $650, 633·9181or531-9524 ...-........ owe .... own . ..,_,.., ......,, · ~ CM 846-2380 Poaltlon requir. • dentll lneuranca con-
'50 o~o-:,e~st Ima• 4 ~So.~Co~~~ ~.~oc!.e~~=; lllalt/lnt huae Pu;emlt F~D12~aco • .}_~.!,utanp. =~mu.t~~~ ~~~=.~ ci-~_.t~ TSL MGM'T 642-1603 NOW LEASING to .. _Justwt ... 2 -...... ~ .... "--W t B t Cot ... ...,_, ·--1 -1 Of ~ Blvd a aouth ..., 5~ utll. 850-9311 c:o!W, bacil bey. FOUND .. ay ., '1 a Of taalct. ~In Pet'80n c.
LARGE·11bd. 781 Joenn, *HARVARD COURT • ol San Diego lr...,,ey. Mate/ahr 1g 3BR COM hM luiws/Office Int SPARKUNO I unit EMt· fem Pit Bull. ten & wtlt, ~ ~ P~ at ~ &.aoue Of •' H..., $535/mo. appt only, 24730RANGEAVE w/2hlma.Mutwbdrm& fttt bluff. 72K orota. Aaklng !Nth COiiet, E. 17th St, ~~·Dept) · · Orange ~'Y Credit
549-0433 Of 650-3673. Brand ,,..,, apartmentt 631•5438 By ac>Pt only carport, 1va11 now. M25 . set5,000. Bllr 853-1220 CM. 541-37!M · · Union; 15901 "-dhltt, m,y PILl1'
ldNJly located In lrvlne. . 759-5838 Of 780-2833 •3000. 13Q, 545 & 453 . FOUND wtttte mate angora MARKETING suite 101; Tuttln. 330 W. ley S1rWt Wl!!itf9._._. 1 & 2 Bedroom noor p1ana Su Cl•tatt 21'11 M/F 1&-25 atv tum dP'X ~'a!! 1l.c ~-~~~:f' luha•• I fiaucial Cat. nr 1lth1Cr•tmont. e;-o'"C:,.,,~ .... ~~ ... II •m• eo.c. ~~192827
R::R.11 Pool & Spa 2eR Iba., quiet roomy 38r 2Ba at 52nd & River Coata MeM 642·21<42 °' w ""',..,,_, ----
ll••f1Em · w/vlflw. Uldry/gar. no NB 2 bft(a bch 931.a522• 525 •q ft. $425/mo. I i --LOST·. Gold H"""" ~ • .:...... lncrne. Pr9f exi> In can-Co. wlll train tnthualMtlc~~~~~~~~~ -Walk Ing dlatanc:e to: pet.I $600/mo, 493-2710 . Balboe Penln. Pvt entry & u .... 1 ~,.. -... ._ VU, quality & anef)'ze, To peraon for X.Ox ClOf>Y'-I:: Uk• brand new! All utllltlet . M/F 25+ (Meaa Verde)CM bath. cie.n 790-9782 S•t 3/1 Swap meet.Bat. promote al on•o• & Ing. Nino & ~le f9q'd. Lill 1111
paid. Poot, gar, no peta. *Shopping la1t1 lat Rm+olc, pvt ba. ahr Penln? Reward 8'&-2652 ~le adv In target Newport Phermac:ialtlc:M l....,...,, ____ lllllliiiiii-..
18drm S590 * Theetrea w/fem owner. Gar, WID. BAYFRONT BLDG b or ' LOST OR FOUND A PET? mk1a. 831·2499. 187 W. 19th St. H.B. ·~ ..... 28drm 1 Ba $695 * Restaurants ~ 2Bdrm· 2 Bath. Near cable M50 very stable EXECUTIVE SUITES operator•. rand new 142· 7511 Fine 9lCn teaklna ralable 301 Avocado 642·9850 * Petlca/Tennls Courts outh Coa11 Pl aza. only. S50-1l·59 S1.35' & UP 842-4644. equip 17th St.. C.M. FUii "'2._~. lowM~c:o:'.t~9!.30re-P/1 --./&ll'f ..._ ~ pft Mon.-
$595/mo. 551·1313 pnc. s10.ooo CUh... ·-·-· ... .-..-. -· . For Out P.tlent eoun.. GEN OFFICe·PIT .... "'· w.o.F11 Some~
LARGE sharp 1 bedroom. Se I e ct e d u n 1 ts M/F, Lag 8eh 38R hM, NEWPORT BCH Otc, aprx IOI' John 21~7461. Animal Aa.tltt. League Ing C«'ller. Ught~ VW1ed dutlae, llte typing. Light~ 541440$
MW pelnt, new drapee, w/C.thedral Ceilings. lliJC. lntab Jae. ocean vtew $350/mo &43 IQ It,.,,._. Nr P.C.H Alt 8pnl 21~ 1120. HELP LINE 978-PETS. organtutlon. eftlc:lenc:y, $3.50/ttwt. 567-3200.
new floor tile, abSOIUtely + '!J utlls. 497-7204 & Poat offk:e 641-29-47 .. Peneula confldentlatty reqund ::Oe::'~C,:=~~ ~~~Er:~~ONS FOR .... Z'IM M/F lhr 38' 38a hm. Pvt WIALEUU• ::~~~~Mgc:P= TAlllHITUT.ul ~.!~.f:~· 1-5: G~fr~ur~:.1 D:1~-~r~~n~ MIAll 1&11111•1 1 111' age pant like grounds MAY OCCUPANCY For I Rm/Ba, Laguna ocn cyn NEWPORT CENTER through Chaper 11 M8CGf'agof Yac:hta,. t831 -nlfi--•nl
S5e0 No Peta. 54M279' directions and Info &ming W"1ctiR fum view M50/mo 497-5800 Full aervtce private offtcel. Proceedings. Deadline Cl11) lll-n.tl IHlllT• ,,,,,.. Piac9ntla Aw. CM. ......, for AutomotMI &
854-;1942 &'<>O-S 30 PM n/amkr Quiet Pet• etc! 150-250 9Cl ft .ach. 3118188. Mlnimun bid Mt \2.0<f +toll If any. Nationwide Co BIO Sii G .. Reel Estate Cl...ifled 2Br 1Ba upatra. 571 '. . . $395 1nCt tit .722·7288 M/F lhr lge 2BR hm llO NEWPORT CNTRDR atS8157.31 Slngleauc-. lnL FRIDAY-Typing, Ad¥at1J91ng S.-at a
. Joenn. Mu 2 ~No OAANGETREE lBR,-AIC. u I . Tl homt....!:ibe oloe turn. (111)1114111 c .. elul blddef-to be trYlHt to r1ght pereon. 250-0912 f'OP1, PCI AT ai>r helpful ~ ~ toc:a1
pet• S535 Agt 550-1015 refrlo. $625/mo. Poot F/M lg rm w/ba i360. lat. 2_ulet. Want prof'*'°" awarded all UMta on JIM Relief Manager for COat• ~TWCf.1Sgl glrtofe,Od on ~· Aggi_..,
1ennla/no pett . 559-1322 Ill. utll Incl. Prlvlla. ..,50/mo, 98M 143 meg CdM dlx SultM. A/C, tenna of cash within 10 A'iin •••ns MeN Sett Stort09, 2+ ptlOl• lnllde ..... Exd 'Mlf-dt9c::iplloed lndMd-lm SUJ 631-4369, 659-4014 arnplepkg,utlls& lanltOI'. daye of acceptance. ......_. ___ ....__ ~per M , pr ... ,. e>pprt. $m1 Of~CO. N-"*"\SY WTI •ollant
2BR 1 BA. upper unit, 1-ert ltacla LIDO ISLE quiet pvt 2855 E est Hwy 875--6900 Call 1-8()()-442·5285." 841-5827 tired mate. 650-1212. amkr Pff °""' 7111 incom. (Mlary + c:icm-
dlllwr, balcony, vleW 2m5m 1 28X $7001mo. MSTR STE Bt~~oan-PIMMnt per.an needed to INlaton). beNltta. end
220I Pacific Refrtg, dlhwahr. ltO~ Hall Furn/unfum Mat wont In NB lne agency. ad\wicement oPPOf1'ri-
TSL MGMT 642-1603 inCI No Peta 545-4855 N/S: ~ grdn ~tr. NO Flllng. llgflt typtng end Cy. S.-end/or~ .._ 11HM acc:.a t1ae Wetb• frig phone reepoMtbllltlel. Ing iliCpeltaa halpfl,ll. ~ * 1 llll .. SUI* an bd sip.bey 's7sci Hrs are nu. FIT or PIT Send r-.me to: Fumilhed Apt. Garage, Rettig. dishwasher & atow Ind ut+dep 87s.e"852 N-amkr 780-1255 bet t-4 P. 8l9W1I
'-undr;. GOOd location Incl NO PETS 545-4855 ·~...:-.. ··~ ......__ ..... "'~ I c·~U-.... -...-$500/mo ~968 MESA VERDE-Muter ==::=J tel =r:tl7 ~ :::P __.,. PRIVATE P. 0 . • 0 C AK· _,
-----....,2=-_...,.e-2 & 3 Bdrm untum. yrty. bdr prv patio ent' ba Docn-Aepa1r-AAer•tton1 Entry I Franch ooo;; Hwa t 111-1• port .,.., pt t. ~n. lllLY Pl.IT ~· Hit• d9f !8 1,! 2 r! summer· winter· Cannery n·s,.,; k r. 1325/ m o-S200 $2.40 per day Cablnet .. Panel·Lock ... tc By Norman Tii. Doofmen 'IHeetlng done r1ght9 ard Sinor. us yn of llexltMe hrs, 756-MO&. P.O. Box 1580
$8250 +·MC & cte'!n1no Rentals,lnc.87~ aecs.il>-3812 35yraexp.Jerry6"'2-0587 Oak&Ar.857-000R CUatorMrl. Uc. 2 . PITPOSITION-Appfx25/ CoataMeaa.CA.82e29
dep. No pets s.a-«97 2Br unlurn Dplx. 122 25th I •-··L That's All you pay IOI' ,.~ 1,.___ ~ lanmt Ttl Tilank·Youl ~114 hrs .-. am req, 18/llf',
Sl. Nwpt Beh S800. 'h blk !WJ!ft -• 21H 3 Hnes. 30 dey minimum --nt "91Klltl FRANK MUSSELMAN RAINBOW PAINTING Cult Setv exp req'd, liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii PUI 11T1111 W/YllW to ocean 213/697·1505 In the &tvew1yt, petlOI. paths, ~YWXLL TAPING • 30 yrs. Al Tu Coneuttant Quality la our~ 50wptJ'\ dale Input. hMV'f AiftlJW 2~~ ~;,;,:~io:'~: :e!.9~8:;:.nu.,:~~r!:. YOU SERVICE ~1!..~~. ~~1· ~r~!~~~n~m~ :~-~~-~~· M&-
7128 =.!.1~~:0Uc1nt1Ext ~=P~~ N~~~~~&i ~'!?!1 1
lac. bltlna. No peta patio $900 No pet• Lie DESERVE M..lu "·~ llectriuJ wl..-1 awl 11111 A....-w.... Salea It 855-0MS01'831-8107pm 760-1713 85't-117s ,, ... \IUW I Lancut LOWEST poaible price. .._,.. ' •• ,.;;;y-~lno ~
POOL PATIO. FIREPLACE or • THE BEST' DIRECTORY ct:mr. In my co;,. • ...... WITlll 10 Step Servtc:e. 882-3235 PIT. ~. metiKe ·---NEWPORT MARINA APTS • Meaa home. Full or part au.-. wortt fr ISHIKAWA LANDSCAPE D N S L YER PAJNTNG person for property ,..,_'IPllP9' .._ ..... X·Lg 1Br 1615 & 2Br $695. Beautltul 28' 2ea. mk:ro. lme ..,~.., """"" ~255"'131 • ~ • .-•7t~,.1 Sod. C1Nn-up1. Ma.Int A A rngmt cow/~ phoMa. Mlf-d1acipllned lndlvld· Eutalde 557·28"1 CALL TOOAYll t ·any age.,.._...,....., ... ......-"" Spfinkler1. etc. 8~147 Uc •<425924 ~""''*a ... 8·30-1. '*9 may eem exoalant lrplc. encl oar PrV1 ·Fitness Centers •SI Fii Liii Call AnY11me 914-2017 ~.,, PM I Br, lrplc, pool, patio, b6~h. boat allp available l S • Fr~ meelt & RESID/COMM'L/IND 28 Clean UOt•Tree Topptng M-F. Must be abte to wortc Income (laWy + com.
gar. No peta. 399 w. Bay S 1395/mo. Sorry. no Fennis. dw imming YOU< ~c' .. !~-~ntry eom.B yra. Do my own wortt. Lie. Shaplng-Removtno·Haul . GLASGOW PAINTING Sat 9-4. Good ~ ~~~ St $815 650-6357 petl. 780-0919 Btwn &-5 • urn1she I SeMoeDlractaty ort rmu .... re. lie Lag . #278041. Al &4M126 Mll(E ~283 Int/Ext 30 yrs exper., menneramu9t.142·1__, Salee ---·-~
F*!ec. 2br, gar. fence 3BR 3BA WATERFRONT Unfurnished Aepreeentetlve preachool prep 494-elOI DON'S ELECTRIC ref's. 642•5214 U•Til•IT ~ -=~
patio. yd. no peta. 2 Frplc,aonrf,boatsllpav1, • Month·to-Month 142-4121 tit.IOI F~ot B1111W's.Wkd•cYI· <498-9871 Servlcecalle, TREES 0 HOMEOWNER EXPERTS Muat type 50wpm, ftllng, 5-ld resumeto:
people $850. 722-0812 walk to Lido vmaga. eve• on Y Chlldeere. all dryer oullets etc. bonded. Topped/removed. lean-Int/Ext. Acoua. c.lllnga. heeV'f pnonee & othef ~· Tf\aelkwy
388 w. Bay St E/llde 2bf s 1800 mo. yeatly Models open daily, 9·6 Cul M MMI ~~ 6pm. NEW/REPAIR. Qualify. No up, MW lewn1. 751-3476 Uc#288597 831·9295 clerical otflce dutl... W .sf
1'hba $875. 271 Cat>rlllo 673-2747 or 875-0149 Soriv no pets •--,...Ju-Ill ___,,.,ce jobt to arnall. reuonable. Tree/Trim/Cleanup compl PAINTER NEEDS woRKI Musi enJoy working IAl.f Pl.IT --•tic•l -.u11fl Roe s c[EXNING Free 911 .. He'd. 631-2345 gardening. Competitive Int/Ext ceilings. renn cab w/lots of people. Salwy 330 w Bay St C..ta .... 2124 C.1t1 .... 2124 Newport Beach No MODERN XcoO§Tlcs. SERVICE: • throoughly r i prices. Chuc* 642·2873 (261 yrS exp. wof1( guar DOE. Call 852-<>233 .... Coat• Meea, CA. 92f27
WOODLAND YILLAGI
APARTMlllTI
880 hv1ne Avenue NEW & OLD CEILINGS dean houee. S40--0857 nc •L -Mm -Davia Painting 984-3137 for Mwy.
SPRAYED. 527-2589 FENCE ~air. New & old '"" -•---------.-,------------fal 16thl THE SILENT PARTNER Wood, Chain llnk, patio's. Lawrt-Tra.Slmlb lrutall. PAINTING lnt/Ex1. repairs. __ ,
645-1104 ExquleUe Acouatlcl ~ Comm. & Reeld, 15yra exp ,, .. •t Greg 986-0111 Tree Trim and Removal. cab. reflnl9hed. papering For ~t Co In Paopte .t10 need P90Pe aprayed Of' remove. Ory-own equip, tatls. guer. · • Lawn Main & AototllUng 25yr local l'9f1 979--5294 0C Alfl>ott .,... TYP'rlO lhOUld alwS'f'I cftedc the
Lum~ & en101 our g.irdtn ~lylf apls Quiel tomlor!Jtll, ltv1ni .
• lov 1 ''"'-•ays & So Coa\I Plaia ._hilt on11 minute In lht
llf~l n G.r a1te~ .iv.i1lat)je NO' PHS Pl l ASl
Newporl Beach So wwall Repairs. 647-7901 M6-1133before8,after4. fi,.,,... Sprinkler lnatall, Repair. UNIQUE PAINT atcllb. flt~ Uf:I req'cf SeMc:e Dlrectr6 '"lhe
l700 l&th Streel REBLOWN OR PAINTED HOUSECLEANING FJREWOOO 179.sol/% COfd Free E•llmatea 54a..eo65 10 yra In the Harbor Aree. s1100-S1 751-8003 DAILY PIL T
lal Dover) Allo Int/Ext Painting No nonMnM, exp., belt & Wlnl41f Special. Qual. mh1. l<.C TREE SERVICE Free eat. 854-2732 Pnf..a...1 PrthuMaaJ/
642·5nJ Uc.t288597 831-9295 retlable S10 hr. 675-0MO Dellv .. Jim, 636-8581 Top. trim. removal. Quality Pagri; Auaiabtra"" Slll M•i•istratlft SIM l"U.act RESID'UCOMMERCIAL 11. a]•---' service. Free Eat. -El 646-325-i .. Hr .wJTICll Days/Ewa 53&-8698 FA T NG INTERIORS uait•11 ,, .. -;~1.~22.8055 wetoiNo sERv1cE8 ---· HANG1NG1sTR1PP1NG
NIU • SPAS • UllHY RH•S
IAOllLlll lto0·15JI
I IHllHM 11 .... Sl 10 APPLIXNCE SERVICE Reaa rat•. Open wtcnds. L=~ ~~~~ VISA-MC 873-1512
Apartments Aefrlg'a, waaheri. dryers. IM.-S UI I -Shop Serv at rNr Of .,.. T ::n MS-5124 Expert Waltc:OYerlng In.
ranget. D/W, A/C. All We ~e In Spring & 1878 Orange Ave. C.M. --y 1tallatlon1. RMI Consult·
2 lllllllllS ..... 1111
US. llUT I lltT WaTH llOL.
UIPAIUI .. R& 6 Man•tg("<I Pr ope< ties Community Appllanc•. Detailed deaning. CaH for Portable aerv. 646-4831 Complete cteen-up. gen ·1 enl Aulgnmt 581-1590
7199 Aster Clrc:le. B Pt!. aervtce now. 548-0757 •·-~ malnt, tree trlmlng. frM --------TSL IUUlllH?T lU..Olll IU-1IOI 'i jl,, 10 '11\1 "'"''"
nn 6 I!. 1/ monlh lt'.!\I''>
IT18 Al EASY Al PIE TO ADVERTISE IN
THE DAILY PILOT'S CLASSIFIED PAGES
PRIVATE PARTY RA rr (NO Cancellellon)
3 Im., 5Jll]1! minim.Im
I 60 P"f yp. E1'•m/W 3 bnn. 5 days S9 00
• rn.u ,,,., Ol'1'y •PPIY to items adVet't'-<J for• pnct of S 1000 00 or i.u
• Pr1e» mu1I 0. lttcluc»d in •d ... • ~t• cJo.a not apply ro ~ accounts or Riit Esi't•
• NO CANCELLA TtONS OR CHANG£S one. the ed ha run Cutom.r is
r~bM tor tfW lvl afMUflt
FOR MORE DETAILS
CALL 142"15171 Daily Pilat
'
240-0717 Of 522·2323 T llert Weahed & Rlneed --~ est Mauro. 982-9973 MUii '111 llTt"
r• Wlndowt lnduded XD@RICXiJ HANbVMAN •LAWN & GARDEN• DEPENDABLE QUALITY Aa=t S 1 wide ... 51Dt>I •H Carpentry, lenc:lng. win-Fr .. at r ... prices Wor11mantl'llp 642-8813 no .... -doWI plUmblng martlt• . • • --p ng ArM Repefrt & Lloyd 873-7218 aft 59m tub inct. etc. And YM 9 yr• axp 645-5133 Wegalsahd hang together Returfecl~. Roofl'l & VACANCIES VACANCIES Jeeua ls LOl'd 833-1402 ..... ry Hang/atnp A<Mce to the
Wtterproo ng• 831 199 Special Pre Spring Alt• FENCES-GATES TrM trim llJ0.,_.I.. Cl'U'f. 83~730
Aaphalt~r-prtdng loll W• do It aJl! 857..0742 Dump runa. c .M./N.B. * aw•• Pl11ttr/Dryw1ll
apt, complP.«heavy toller. We wffl.dean -w hoU9e ereL"lm Whyte 642-7208 EST 675-3175 REFS. ------Joe 845-4289 7am·Opm ,~. ' ' -lnt.lbt. e>etch ~. apt-conde>sofc. tr .. •t. •GEN. HOME REPAIRS Speclall1t· block, r.no.-cuatom texturing. qualify
RMI. Glorla 831.eset Ptlnt Drywall. Carpentry Cflmenl. ptantere. restucco wof1( Pr004em .. No Prot>-luiwl ltnicta CJitW!i ~ etc. Gary &45--5277 PTL repairs, etc 24hr 545-0729 1am11 #328814 554-763,
ogo. ~ ~tONS HANDYMAN LARGE and ST\JOCO MA80NRY-TlLE
o.lgrl setv. BtoehUr... Newpott/Coeta .,._. .,.. tmell I DO IT ALLI No Job to small. All ~. fJ..W., =~1,·7~~~1CS Nannette 831~10 531·5578 Pal or ""8 mag Free •t Lie. 131·23-45 •2•.-., ......... -, .. --1·--
w d p tllden YOU BUY • I INSTALL l!e!i!t ~jobldonengh~ ~. VI or roceeelnQ, Garage openera. ~
Typeeettl;,. RUSH JOB! M4'11t It .. la•• ala. Lt Elec. Cablne1s •&-1 --· OAAINS CLEAR From S 15
OUR S EC IALITY. Commfteald: 4!!1·2345 Cloaetl WL s.tl-649'4 CLEAN& EXPERT F~I ,.!;.7DtapoallP•R 72•2~9!· GRAPHICS NEWPORT Over 25 r-rt ~petience ,.. ...,.., • .......,
, 720-9191 8.1. WILSON 6 SONS lt.U.J Lie r .118.421 730-1353 Dnalntcle&redOl'repalrad
Buame. FOl'mt, all typee, RB'~th~d~i..~7 ~~~. LT AXOLINd ·MOVING H ABC MOVINGH All plumbing repelr1 Low
Copy .Mecntne Suppllaa. 30 yrs exp. 846-1740 Garage a Yard Clnupa Qulcil a Caretul T138048 rat...,... POO 831,3187
Low Rat•. 641-4000 UCT ON Jon 646-8 192 LO RATES 552-0410
LOTUS 1·2..S. PAYROll ~=~ HAULING • CLEAP+-UP n ..... lll.Ull
Pk*up & daltwry, too ucMM514 ins. 5~2-0428 Yard. garage. trutl. mllC 11-11 _ M. Gene. 97~65 1 Lawn ..-.. hedge trtme -_.,_
WAfTING-EDITINQ FOR • 54S-07S5 °* si=r~ ~ =M. ~: OA ,J =.i or;:#;ii HAU~~: L~ftN·UP ~T~2;=.,:~=
--~ In Cot'M't'I Call M e 846-1514 Caqea~ and Aeeld'I. Free •t Hauling ~Clean-ltYll•llll ~try rm S4t-et23 138382<4 UPI 7 o.ye. Loweat rtt .. ~~
Repaif·Aemod't.Addltlona TRACTOR RENT AL Bani Call Bany, 722-8873 By hr /or ptace 141-3M5 ~c. ~HO or operated or•dlng · .~ ~ BUILD 0A REPAIR-demo. heulino. rHt • RELIABLE HAULING 6 an ft
Walll, "*'· doOrl. IOdla, ret•. Mend eervtce St YARD Cl.!A~UP Call C X R '6 R 'I 0 0 R r~ moldlngt a trttn. CWr eon.t. ~ 1 _!....,. t3 I t 132 PARENTS Priva1e hOrne.
PW cie Boa Paycnlc
Reader by ac>PI only
4M-5717 mtg, Q4-2100
::n!fRoOJ A!PXIA
CAN BEAT ANY 810 8'r
~ 722-7537
Tilt
1471108 Don M4-5t4t ...... , aty NB Manlyn 640-7020/E
CABINETS & CAAPl!N• fttwl Boetdlc.r. tor the Etderty Wli ... "'
TAY Smell jot>e. repM1 HOUIDITTINO ~Ired in ~IV Lllg 8Ch hofM LET THE SUNSHINE IN ,,._ .um.• 145--2003 Palm SPflnoa couple DANCE LESSONS Soc:lal. 1n01v attention, warm a 1 Suntfl1ne ~ OIMnlnQ "°'*' •to~ &/Of HIQMclUb,...,oom. Latin fl'tandly en~t ltct Call {71 4) 846-SMO ~Mn-dog.t it In Laguna or 7 l..WC>N UC> e&o-3048 11u 4t4-1241
dowl, ~,. patloa, H kf'I ,.,... 1 mo OI lend • H1tC19Y AO to •n. AA ~ht WlndOWt
llddl1tona, quallty WOftc mOf9 during 1ummer ~0V1ohheoot-4AIV HaVll 101Mth1ng to "''' Cia.nt~ ~ ~ un448 P9UI ~ bceil,.,. IS11132...02H doldrumt ·°""'*' adl dO It .... 8'8-();i. 91$-l>«t
$ $
SALES
MANAGEMENT
OPPORTUNITY
Crew Supervisors are
needed to work in a
fessional management
it Ion.
now
pr~
pos-
We now have openings for
mature adutts to . supervise
newspaper sales crews.
Responsibilities wUI Include
hiring. training, and motivating
teens In obtaining new cus-
tomers for one of the area's
leading newspapers.
For an excellent opportunity
and earnings of $500-700 per
wk.
Call TC
A1k for Aon
642-4333
Restaurant
ts now accepting air
pltcallons at it's new
IRVINE location for
the following pos·
1t1ons:
• hostess • servers
* bartenders
* line cooks
* prep cooks • dishwashers
Apply rn person at
the operation ott1ce,
5401 University Dr.,
Irvine, Ca.
MOTOR ROUTE
Available In Irvine area.
$300 to $600. No collect-
ing. 3-4 hours a day. Mon.
thru Friday afternoon. Sat.
& Sun. morning. Call
642-4333, ask for Kirk.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
330 W. Bay St.
Costa Mesa. CA
-II , .. .,. 11tt..11a1tic ••4 •••t te • ........... ,
WE WANT YOU!
.. ""' ........... .,,. Wt wlH .... ,.. .......... ~ .. ............... ,.,., .... ..... ;., ....... •••14.
O.Tearl
M '" T.C. (7 t4) 642-4JJJ
Openings Now Available
CAR ROUTES
Earn Extra Ca•h
For De/Ivery Of Thi• Paper
HUNTINGTON BEACH
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
INDEPENDENT
Deliver 1 day a week No
collecting, no solicit ing.
Must have dependable car,
truck or station wagon and
insurance
CALL 842 -1444
Ask for JoAnne Craney c
-·----l
Los Anceles' Only
Authorized Clenet
Dealer
WILWllLL
IUllllll
llllUIF
Fiii ElllPWI
OAll
IPIOW.IZlll
II
lllllHllllZ
lll-.0.0
A.81< ,OR J IM, JR
• • • • • • • through the
DAILY PILOT
Cluslfled Pages
Turn unw1nted
Items Into
money today/
Call8'2·5t71
Sun Roof, Cassette,
5·Sp . Tiit
Lie 112C24478
'5995
'M '°"1'1AC
1000
Auto. Atr . Cassette. Till
Lie • I JNS938
Auto.CrulN.
Air. Sttfto
lie #455WOT
Air, Auto
Lie 112A 13606
'6995
'13TOYOTA
TERCB.5 OR
Automatic. Air,
Stereo
Lie " 1 L WP 17 I
Auto, P/Wlnoows.
Air, Leather
l~ '092TJO
'2995
'
J
Orln09 C.oMt DAILY PILOT~. M8'Gh I. 1MI --;,..iiii':.JCr.-...,;w;~;;u:c--r--:i,_::~1e:":..,=m=--.,.-~....c~~..,=m==--r-~MtJ~~1e~~.,~11Cl~....,.-':!',.~1e~..,~m~--i ..... 9!,..'!'!!~c'!"'•!!!'!'!!!!':ra~....--,.-.--ec-1D-,a-...... -.. ,. ... c11m1•~•!1!!1m-..~
NOTI (( UNITI N) SEALED llOS
• co-60•
I L.e9-.~-.-.: ..._. 11 1 • mm ..,..., . MC1101•1 r IH'L c •• , ••• , ...... ,,. ... ,.;, .... ........... ....., p I Ii
111•1• ....., ,....._ o. -own 1 ; _ ....... ..,... .. 1'1119 1119111!11•
Motte• Is ~ey gin" tl'Wtt tl'9 Clfy Co.mcl I of tl'9 Cl~ of HuntlftgtOft IMctl, C.,I lforftle
wl I I r•c•lv• ••eled bld1 for tfte coft1tructlon of Ed Meftnfftg Pa,.. In the Ctty of
HuntlftgtOft leectl, O.llfcrt1le I" eceot'denee with tNPaw 911e11pec17i'C;t1on1 M4 ..-cf•I
provlslOM °" t I le lfl tl'Wt office of the 01,.ector of Pub lie WOt'U. Docu.efttl wl 11 M
evef lebl• Oft Eehruar~ 18 , ·~ A c:f\wge of s30,00, flat ,..fu11debl•, •111 be rwqulr•
for eedl Ht of 1pec If ct IOM end •cC0111Peny Ing drew I "8.. .
;
--'
1. Moblllzetlon
DIRECTOR ,2!. PUaL. IC ,!!9!!!. £ST IMATE
2. Cl .. rlng and Grubbing <See Section 9)
'· E.rfhwe>Mt <S•• S9Ctlon tO>
4. StONI Or•ln 18" RCP
'· Stont11 Ore In 18" R<P Cov.,. Ov.,. R•ln.forcetNnt
6. Stor11 Oreln 8" PVC
1. Stont1 Or•ln C.Urb Inlet C.tch Besln
8. Stor-Dnalft Junction Structure ~YP• A
9. Stoni Orefn 2•x211 C.tefl Besln with Steel ,,. ...
tO. Storw Or•ln 12•x12• C.tch B-.ln Bolted In Concrete
11. Storw Drain Juncture Structure Type C
12. StV'fl O,..Jn Concrete Pip• Col Ir
ll. Stor11 Dre In Concrete Pipe Anchor
14. Stot"M 0,..ln V-Oltc:fl
15. Chncret• Welk at Rlsws
16. Concrete RI Hrs
17. Chncret• Monollthlc Welk & C.Urb et Play Area Seating
18. Concrete fletw~ at Scenic 0Yef"look ArM
19. Chncrete Welk and fletwork (fncluslve of •elk elong Str..-t)
20. Concrete Basketbel I Court
21. Cbncrete Mo.strip
22. Concrete 6" C.Urb (et toe ot slope)
2:5. Cbncrete Curb end Gutter
24. Concrete Ped et ~rb Out I et
25. Ptey ArM Curb
26. Ptey Ar•• Su~•
27 . PJey Ar .. Send/Soll Tr .. ""'9nt
28. Wheelc:flelr R~
29 . Besketbel I Court Striping '°· Bol lerd1
'1· E19Ctrlcel Syst ..
l2. Perk I dent It I cation SI gn
ll. Fretatendlng Hendrell
l4. Hendr'el J with Wei I & Risers
''· Steel Cast lrOfl Tubing et Curb Ou1 l•t
l6. Picnic Tebles/S.nch•
l7. Stationery Benches
le. Doub I• L ltter C.n Holden ~ • Besketbe I I Beckboerds
40. lrrlgstlol\ Syst9111 -Turf Areas
4 1. lrrfgetlOf'I Syst .. -Slope Areos
42. w .. o Abet .. nt end Sol I Preparat Ion -Turf Areas
4l. ...ed Abet ... nt -Slope Areas
••. Hydroseeded Turf
45. l+(drm•ed•d -Slopes Areos
46. Rooted Ground Cov.--Slope Are•
47 . 5 Gel Ion Shrube
48. 5 Gel Ion Tr••
•9 . 15 Ge I I on T ,.._
50. 24" Box Tr• ..
51 . lO Clllender Dey Plant Esteblfs,._nt Period
52. 60 C.lender Dey Pogt-lnstelletlon Period
Al TERHATE BIO
Apswotlll9'te
9'a!ptlty
L""'P Sum
L-p Sum
2.915 CY
405 LF
ll LF
65 LF
u.p Su.
L.-p Su.
Lump Su.
L .. p~
Lump Si.
"2 EA
l~ SUll
l08 LF
150 SF
1 tO LF
240 SF
190 SF
6,585 Sf
5.620 SF
225 LF
190 Lf
llO LF
L-p Su•
190 Sf
2 EA
100 Cf
L-p Suta
LUllP Su.
8 EA
Lu.p s..,.
L"9iP Su•
120 LF
100 lf
lUIJ) Su.
l EA
5 EA
2 EA
2 EA
76 ,425 Sf
t9.130Sf
76.425 SF
19.1'0 Sf
76,425 Sf
19, UO 'Sf
19,llO SF
176 EA
11 EA
8' EA
11 EA
LUlllP SU9
l1111p SU9
..... CFMt.,.._ •-.J .... __..._ ... .. .· ..
ntta&iW8UU ~ QWiiit Ciillir" MOnca 1e HeM'rf -'IWC> a; 9CTWWI Ill, -.-a'i•ii~~Miil"'""•~-
YOU Ml IN DIPAUU ~,.. ~ ao. rr. caNIN ............ If -...,, ... La ......... Clldll, ..... I
UHOVU DUD CW TNJIT Matdl I. 1t11 ._.....,.Ct ' 1'n CA -1 ........ I•
OATID OllO'lt1 UNl.IM ~ .. ._.. e ~._.,.lilt 0..... '· ..... 1010 .._. v.111.-C.-t
YOU TAKI ACTt0H TO .. ec...11~ ... 9'orv._..,U.....,.,CA TJllll h '-Ill ee. "'°T~T Y~ "'°"• •-,,,. -HuntiftO'Oll 9Mdl CMc toa1 ._, t.a;d. Sf' d env, IT MAY.'°"'° AT ~ ..,,_ c... aooo ... ....... TNI ~ .. ... ..,.
A PUeUO IAlL tl1 YOU Ti-... ~ 9Mdl, c.16-.....,~.,....... r...-11• -... HEED AN ~TION ._ '°"*'Oft .. .__.... I. fTllAlf ...... COllllil1 a.ti fl~
Of THI NAT\lfll M THI ... _.1 .,_~...._to,._ r...-11111 .. It -........ Coul"1 • ~ ~~~~~~A= ::: • .:.:.. =~~...=.-= =-~~.: 11.del ,_,
TAt:/f A L.AWVEI', lll01'Ca OI ..... to bl "-d ,..._ to 1111 ., t I ? ... Orlftll 0.-
0n 03/13/M .. 10·00 YOU~IN ~ ... T .. a,pau11o11 dHCJfbld ,_,. ~ Noe ...... ta,. to. A . M . 8 K 0 • , E 0 ",_ ..,.......,.. blllow. ~ ~ CC*l 21, t•
MOATAOAOI COAPPA· UH0P A DlEO OfTAUIT OATllTIMI: ....,_ 11, ~ Not F*'*Y 21, n.af , ~=-w::,~~ ~i'°T1~!k~ ·er~~ NUMKlt M#cft t , ti. :IO, 1tM""411 --------'° Oeec1 Of Tt\llt, ::::: ltfK>TECT YOUR PAOP· ()ode AIMftdmelll No. *1 , f9IC llJlll
on ot/11/81•OoGurMnt1~1...f!MAYKSOU>AT APP&.ICAHT:~otHuftt., __ .,. .._ P'ICTmGUI• I I no. 20tol Boott 1•222 hGI A l'Ultl.IC SALE. IF YOU fn1ton e..cti ~ ..,,_ .... lfA~ 40t Of Offtclel AecotOt W. HftO AH EXPlA!ltATIOH .. M.OU£8t1 To,....•-the offtoe of 1M "9oc>nls of Of THE NATURE Of THI 19tino ~ t11. 920 and fllCTmOUa • ..... The ....... ,.,_. ..
Orlnf9 County C11fom1e PAOCEEOINOS AOAIHIT 123 and ldd MW AtlOle *Im STA~ clC*ICI ..,._ -
uacuted by: HEH"Y YOU, YOU SHOUlO C()H.. 112, r•1ted to , ionlnt The tolOM"9 pereorw.. N(WPOAT MOaJLI
8UCKHAHH 111 e a1na11 TACT A LAWYER. PtO'IWone tor .. ft2 ..a **'8 .....,_ • Jwll MANHe, llOO "* .._
min. & CHA1ALE8 M, On 3/t3/M et t0-.00 A.M. end M '*""*...,...; IN ~ler\4ot, '97'1 ~ ...... CA Ill!!!.,.
AUSSELI., &, COU.!E.N w. FOMCLC>eUAECONaUl..T· CttyofHuntlnCllOft...._ lueMtd 11., HuntinftO" ~ L .... -
AU8Slll, hulbendendwtfll ANTS, INC. •the dully II>' f NV I A 0 t. MI HT Al ....... CA tH4I ,._.Aw. .......,,. 8Md\.
WILL SELL AT PUBLIC pointed Trueeee undlt and STATUS:Thept'llPIIldptO--'-'LuclleMmdn. 19711 CAtattJ
AUCTIOHlOTHEHIC»GT ~to Deed of T,_, jeet II ceua~ W'Pt ~It., Hunt 8atl, CA Thie ~ }!_.'*"°
BIDDER FO.. CASH (pely-"9corded on Mt4/ta. • trom the ptcMllOM of IN M4I duetld tlYo en Ir.cit·--&..... t time of ... fri .__.,. Oocumen1 no. 82·24161• Of C I I ,,. TNI ~ le oon-t.llOH.Aa L ML.L.8' ~ of the United s;;j OflkMI Aloordi In the ofllce al for~ "'"WOll!Nf't•I dudl9d ~ en ~ . r...-"*" '*ie .....
11 ~ AV9. en4Jltl09 of the Aecofdlr of Oringl ~ m£i A GOP¥ of .._ ""-' L MMofl wttll tf'9 ~ Cln d Of..
to CMc Center luldlng 300 ~. ~ .-cuted prOC)Oled la on Ill In tll9 o. Tllla .....,,_. ... tied "'99 Courq °" ~
E. ~ A¥9. Ortinge. by: STUART OUAHE = of 0.:11ac1t wtttttNCountya.tlof()(.. 10.1•
CA .a tnte end lntefW HALBERT A. H 0 L 018 2000 ......,. M09 C°""'Y on F*'*Y 7, 111= ' WENCH HALISERT HUS--· ' 11M PutlliMd Or9"ll ••coi,,_m .. Oe1 ... ~""' to end now held ......... "HO~ .. .; ~ ~. .on on BMctl, Cell• ,_ n.a.. Plot Metdl I. ta 20 by " under lllld Oeecl of --"".. .... .................. ' fomll 12tMt. lor "~· . ~ . • • Truet In the ptopeny lfN. TENANTS WILL SEl.l AT by the public. ~ Orenoe COMll 27, 1MI -. -....
at9d In lllld County, C... PU8UC AUCTIOH TO THE ALL IHTEAUTEO PfA-09ltf Piiot F*'-1 21, ,._
tom1a. dlletlblllQ ~ lfllld HIOHE8T BIDDER FOA 80N8 .,1 lmllted '° ~ Matdl t. 13, 20, 11M --------lhltWI: CASH, (peyllble et time of Mid heMng and ~ ~7e
EXHIBIT "A" Mia In liwflJI money of the opllllone or 1Ubm1t ~ _.....;;.;;;=;..;.;;;;.;,;=.--
ALL THAT CERTAIN United St•t••> It THE lorono••the~ "8JC NOllC( LEASHOU> ESTATE SITU-FRONT ENTRANCE TO •outlined libCIW. If ttw. -~.;;;=..;.;;;~;.;;.--
A TEO IN TH! ST A TE Of 8 U I TE 20 5 ( 8 ECON 0 .,, W'tf fUt1her ....... pteTmOUI W• TN f010W1ng pnone eH
CALIFORNIA, COUNTY Of FLOOR) 17802 IRVINE l)leMecallJaflAbrllllCMtlZ. um1TA1-T .,.,......,.__
ORANGE, CITY Of COSTA ~LEVAR~ TUSTIN, ,E.~ A11l11ent Plennlf 1t n.. folowlng par90n9.,. F£11tARAA IMPORTI.
MESA, DESCRIBED AS HVVV ......... tltll .... 531-627t. dolf'CI bi'111'911 el: 2425 ...............
FOLLOWS: lnteNlt com.~ to end ....._ W • ...._ .... N0ATHSTAR PART· port.._,,,CAt:MIO
PARCEL 1: now Mid by" under Mid ,...., ttWl .... IR ...... NEAS, LTD., 810 ~ Qlw1ee Fi'dlln Com·.
A SUBLEASEHOLO IN DwlofTNltln,.~!"°~ ~Cr I It c.nter DrNe. 811119 n47, 1tock Ill, UH Vlet1 ANO TO UNIT 55 ON LOT 1 al1uated In Mid ......... ty, ..._. -P\j~ ~ Coeet Hewpoft 8-:.ltl, ~ t2teO Hot111a, .......,,. a.di, '
OF TRACT 10525, AS toma, o.ctlblng the lend Deity Piiot Matdl f. t9M Humer P.,,,.,...., ltd., CA tateo
SHOWN AHO DESCRIBED ttllrlln: . · ~110 A CellfotT)le Limited hit· Yir..wt ,._ 1702 ~
IN THE CONDOMINIUM PANITACEL ~;.,s 0...... 0 neral'ilp, 110 Newport cc*\ A.,., 8eme AN. ~
PL.AH • ("PLAN"~ WHICH u 13, ~ H ""AN "8JC NOTICE cent• OrM, SUfte i147, 92702 PLAN WAS REC0N>£D OH OESCRl8EO IN THE C()H.. Hewpoft 8eldl CA t1ttO ThAa .,.,..,,... 11 oon-
SEPTE.MBER 17, tNO, IN OOMINIUM PLAN RE· ~ Ae1pt1 E. ,._;,.,,,Jr., 810 duCted by:~
BOOK 13157, PAOE 1057, CORDED OH OCT09£R 14, ITA~ Of Nawoor1 Centar Dnvie. 9'llte CHUCK f . ~OCK ,
ET SEQ. Of OFFICIAL~-1M11N800K 14258.PAGE MMmCtn•rTCW 1141, Hewpoft Bwlh, CA Thia....._,. .. IIed
CORDS OF ORANGE 45 ANO AMENDED FmRU-Ula Of "1Chit0Ue t2ee0 wtlh the County a.ti of()(.
COUNTY, • OR AS MAY 8E ARY 4, 1M2 8Y IHSTAU-......... um Hun* Ellergy Corpof-.. County on F*'-Y
RE·R.ECORDED. MENT NO. 82-042729. The lottowl}'t penona ition, e Celfornle corpor· 13, 19M
PAACEI. 2: BOTH OF OFFlCIAL RE· ha'#9 ltlet'ldotied the~ of ldon. ltO Hewpoft c.ntar ,_
AN UNDIVIDED ONE CORDS OF SAID COUHTY. the Fletltlove Bueln .. 1 OrM, !k"9 1147, Hewpoft Publatled ~ CoelC
FIFTY-FIFTH ( 1155th) PARCEL 2: Name: STUSTIN VN:;UVM 8-:i'i CA t2t10 D.ily Plot Mercfl I, 11, 20,
INTEREST AS A~ IN AH UNDIVIDED 1152NO ANO SEWING CENTER. Thia• buatneM le con-27. ttM
COMMON IN A SUB· INTEREST AS A TENANT IN 14586 Aldhla. TUltln Cellf. ducWd by: e llmlled pertner-Th-.et2
LEASEHOLD ESTATE IN COMMON IN THE FEE t2e80 ahlp
ANO TO ALL Of' THE REA&. INTEREST IN ANO TO THE The AcOOoua 1ue1M1e Ae1pt1 E. Pt*er\, Jr .. 0..-
PROPERTY, INCLUDING COMMON Of' LOT I Of' Herne~ to llbo'#9-..i Plttnlrlhlp
WITHOUT LIMITATION THE TRACT 104M, AS PER MAP tied In Ofenoe County on Thll 1taMment -flied COMMON AREA AS DE· FILED IN BOOK 4$3, PAGES Augutt 12 1M6 FILE NO. .itti tne County Clef'll of Of.
FINED IN THE 0£l.CARA· 35 TO 37 INCLUSIVE. Of F283640 • enoe County on FebNaty 7
TION OF COVENANTS, MISCELLANEOUS MAPS, Cwt Bat•. 526 W•t tMI ' TM=~ ..
CONDITIONS, ANO AE· RECORDS OF SAID C0UN-Monterey, Pomona, Cellf. ,_ dolf'CI bu1 ..: STRICTIONS ("OECLAR· TY, AS SUCH TERM 18 0& 91718 y.._, ..... ,,, a TAAOE SHOW ATT'RAC-
A TION") RECORDED ON FINE.O IN THE ARTICLE EN-Thia ~ -con--.... ........,.· el U. TIOHS, 1133 E ~.
9117180 IN BOOK 13747, TmEO "OEANITIONS" OF oucted by a an lndMdlMI -...,. ... etreet: eo.te ....... CA t2'1M PAGE t545ET8EQ.OFOF· TH! DECLARATION OF Thia etetlfl'l9M -ftlad ............ u.. CA Ken F. Sandi, 4101
FICIAL RECORDS OF OR· COVENANTS, CONDITIONS .itti the County a.ti of Or· tmtt ~It Or, LMl.wo:s· CA ANOE COUNTY. ON I.OT t ANO RESTRICTIONS RE-.. Counfy on FebNlry 5, PublllNd Orenoe Coeet bullneM eon? OF TRACT 10525 IN THE CORDED IN BOOK 14095, 1Me Oilly Piiot Febn.1aty 21, duGted by: en lndMdlMil
CITY OF COSTA MESA AS PAGE5110FOf!'.ICIAl RE· Publllhad ()(9ng9 Coeet M•dl 8. t3, 20, 19M Thia ~ti.cl
SHOWN ON A MAP RE· CORDS, (THE OECLAR· Deity Piiot Fe0Nety 13, 20, Th-184x wltt'I ttle ,. _ _,a.ti of()(
CORDED IN BOOK 412 AT I 0 H"), AND ANY 27. Mardi I . 19M ,.~'7 ,.._,,__:
PAGES 48, 49 ANO 50 oF AMENDMENTS AHO SUP· TH~ "'99 ...,.....,.7 on ·--•
MISCELLANEOUS MAPS, PLEMENTS THERETO. "8JO ll)TIC( 13, 19M ,_,
IN THE OFACE OF THE EXCEPTING ALL OIL. OIL rtaJC M)TIC( ACTmOUI _.. Publlll'led ~ C09lt
COUNTY RECORDER OF RIGHTS, MINERALS, MIN-.... .--·-,.--.. Plot M•dl 13, 20, SAID ORANGE COUNTY, ERAL RIGHTS, NATURAL ' -., .. ,_, .,_.,
OR AS THEY MAY BE GAS. RIGHTS ANO OTHER STA~ CJll The foll1Mng Pl'90n9.,. 21, 19M
AMENDED OR RE-RE· HYOROCARBONS BY MMlllCltn•rT CW do6nQ ~ •
CORDED WHATSOEVER NAME Ula Of "1C1ni0Ue I N~~ANT GARDENS. ---------
~101
EXCEPTING THERE· KNOWN, GEOTHERMAL alll•U um 2215 Pof1 Ceftl6a. ~ "8.JC M>11Cl
lu.c> Su. FROM, UNITS t THROUGH STEAM AHO ALL PROO-~at!,~~~; Baedt. CA t2MO '""----------~~~--=:::~:.:::_~f66;:if.~USl¥~.Of,.~~~UClts....DE~~L,,-l~~-~~.:' Vletor1e JMll ............ I. T~onry f encing
In e ccordence •Ith th• proYlslons of Section 177' of th• L ebor Code, the Stet• of
Cal lfornfe, Dir~~ ot ttle D9Pert-nt of lndustrlet R•letlons shel 1 deteniln• ttl•
~nera 1 preve I I Ing rete of •eg•. app 11 cab I• to the work to be done; cop I• of the I et•t
g•nerel ••99 ,..,. de1en11lnetfons ere on fl I• et th• ottlc• of ttl• Clfy Cl•" end th•
office of the Dl,.ectcr of Publ•c Works of th• City of Huntington Beech, C.lffot"nle.
~
Piens end specifications, together with propmel foni, Ny be c~tefned et the offtce ot
the Director ot Public Works, Clt"y Hall,.Huntlngton Beech, C.llfO'"nle.
Ho bid •II I be received unl•s It Is Nd• one blenk toni furnlsl'Wld by the 01,.ect~ of
Pub I le Works. The speclel attention of prospective bidders Is cal led to the propose I
requlr9111ents, 1et forth In the specifications, for fut I directions ~ to the bidding.
The ebov• quentltl• ere epproxl .. t• only, being given es • bests for tl'Wt cOfllperlson of
bids, and the City of Huntington S.ec:h ooes not express or by l11pllcatlons •9"" th•t the
actue J IMIOU nt of work •I I I correspond t h.,.ew ltt\ M reserves the r I 9t1t to I ncreese or
decrease th• 81110unt of eny c I es s or port I on of th• work, es My be deemed necessary or
exped I ent by the 0 I rector of Pub 11 c Works.
Al I bids •I I I be cQ111Pared on the besls o f th• Director of Public Works •tlNt • of the
Quent It I• of work t o be dOne.
The substltvtlon ot securities tor eny 1110ney withheld by th• City, to •Mur• perforwience,
shel I be PeMllltted In eccordenc:e •fff\ th• proYlslons of th• C.l lfornle Gov~rn ... nt Code,
S9Ct Ion 4590 .
\
Eect1 bid shal I be Nd• out one tor. to obt•l"ed et the oftlce of the Director of Publlc
'k>rks, Dev e lop111ent Wing, 2000 Main Street, Huntington S.ectl, C.lltornle; shal 1 be s .. Jed
•11d ff led with the City Clerk at the Civic Center, Second Floor Adllilnlstretlon Bui I ding,
2000 Mein Street, Huntington S.adl, Celffornle, on or before 2:00pm of March 18 , 1~ end she I I be opened by e COIMlltt•• ca.posed of the Cl ty Cl .,.tt, th• Cl fy Attorney
end Directer ot Public Works or their euthorlzed representative end the result• of seld
bidding wfl I be r11ported to the C•ty Councll of ••Id Cl~ of Huntington Beech et thel,.
regular 1111etfng to be held on Monday, th•Ltti ot Aor11 , 1911§ et th• hour of
7:10 Piii In the Clfy C.Ouncf I 0,e..C.n In the Civic C.nt•r of Mid Cl~ of Huntington
Beech, end shel J be e c ted upon by seld City Council et th• reguler 111eetlng of April 7 , 1986
The City of Huntington Beech, C.llfornla reservH the right to reject 91\y or el I bids end
to eccept the bid d••M•d for th• b est Interest of the City of Huntington Beech,
Coe 11 fornf •·
By order ot the City Councl I of th• C ity ot Huntington Beech, C.l ltornla this 1 9 of Augus) 1~5.
ATTEST:
All e le Wentwe>r'th
City Clerk
OF SAID TRACT 10525, AS FROM, WITHOUT, HOW· Nern« ~PtCAL ART 412 MAim STA~
SHOWN OH SAID C()H.. EVER, THE RIGHT TO N Coeet Hwy S. Wf't Bledl.T ...... ~.~ II coo-The to11oMnO ~ .. OOMINIUM PLAN. OR1LL MINE. STORE. EX-• ··Cell t2t6 ' ,_ .,..__ 001ng ~ •
EXCEPTING FURTHER PLOR! ANO 0,EftAT! ~ ~ ~ dlac1ed by: en lndMdlMll BAOOEfttCK'S LAND• THEREF~OM. ALL IM· THROUGH THE SURFACE ...--... __..,to.....___ VICTORIA J. THOMAS 8CAPtNG 311 W Wlaon, 0.. THE UPPER 500 FEET ,_,,.,_,_ ....,.,... Thie....,,_,, -lied ;._ ...;._., ,. .. PROVEMENTS ANO AP· flled In ~ Col#lty on wfttl IN ,. __ ... C1erf11 of Of. ~ .. 714, .._ -._ PURTENANCES LOCATED Of THE SUBSURfACI: Of "--"~ 288. ftl ..... FILE NO .,.,.,..,, -
OR TO BE LOCATED OH SAID LANO, AS RESERVE> Fm, ' ....., =County°" '*'-Ye. Scott Thofnm BIOOW'lm.
SAID LOT t Of' TRACT IN THE DEED FROM THE Rldwd S Brown 32132 ,_ 311 W. WllOn, Apt 14, 10525 lfMNE COMPANY, A MfCH.. · ' COMa ...... CA 9*7 EXCEPTING FURTHER IGAN CORPORATION. RE· Vii Vtante, San Juan PubllMd 0renoe Co.1 Thie ~ II eott-
THEREFROM. EXCLUSllVE CORDED MAY 29, 198t IN '1::=· =7500f'-Deity Plot ~ I. 13• 20, duc:'9d by: en llldMdl"'
EASEMENTS IN ANO TO BOOK 14079, PAGE 13" ducted..., 1 e glMl'll pert· 27. 19M Th-eH SC01'T T. 8AODENCK
ALL THOSE RESTRICTED OF OFFICIAL RECOAOS. VJ Thia ........,.,. -..,
COMMON AREAS AS ALSO EXCEPTING ALL '*= llatemant -ftlad •-,,,. llftftH' .itti the County C11rt1 of Or· SHOWN ON SAID cOK-w A T E R R t G H T S , .itti the County Clerfll of Or· ~ "'""4 enoe County on ~ OOMINIUM Pl.AN. WHETHER SUCH WATER County J 211 24, 19M RESERVING THERE· RIOHTS SHA LL BE MOI on anuery · ~Ot' "'179I FROM EASEMENTS FOR RIPARIAN, OVERLYING, 1986 MCHMWWO•UllA fTY Publlehed Orenge Coest
ACCESS INGRESS APPROPRIATIVE, PER·"'"'~~~~ 1~ --Not~~Qlvennotttt~ Deily Plot Marcfl I, 13. 20, EGRESS ' ENCROACH: COLATINO. PERSCRIPTIVE ..,..., ,_...,, ...,._, ' • .... uno•=w:..., wltl ,_ 27. 19M
MENT SUPPORT REPAIR 0 R CONTRACT u AL, 21· Maren 1· ttee r...,oneltite for llt't debt• or Th-a6
REPLACEMENT, MAINTE.....: WITHOUT, HOWEVER. THE TH~ ~-~ b'i ~ ---------AN C E AN O OT H E R RIGHT OF ENTRY FOR THE .,.,_ than "'7-" on or•·-"8JC ll)TIC(
PURPOSES ALL AS EXCERCISE OF SUCH rtaJC M)llCE lttlladate. SHOWN ON . THE CON-RIGHTS, AS RESERVED IN Oet9d !Ne 3'd drt of ACTmoue .,_ ..
OOMINIUM Pl.AN OR AS DEED FROM THE IRVINE ACTinOUe WU , March, ltee. um STAW
OEFlNEO IN THE OECLAR-COMPANY, A MICHIGAN NAm STA,._,. I 1Cet9'J CaM9Mtl Ike The foll1Mng per10f18 -ATION CORPORATION, RE· Tha~penone.,. K..,IC....,,zilvtaO... dOlng~-
PARCEL3· CORDED MAY 29. tM1 IN dolng~ee:Scorplon !....,.,. ...... CA_, FMNClSCA'S, 1173 "8 "
NON-EXCLUSIVE EASE· BOOt< 14079, PAOE 13" Tr11teu. 3HO Waatatly' o.::~ M~ ~ lnMI A111, Coate ...... CA
MENTS FOR ACCESS, tN-OF OFFICIAL RECORDS. P1eca, Suite 240, Hewpoft j 1tee · · • tae27
GRESS ENCROACHMENT PARCEL 3: 9eectl. CA 92ee0 Petti a.tllng. 283 E. 22nCI
SUPPORT AND FOR EASEMENTS AS SET Anton llOfl Wlltteh, 22 W~25 Str9et, Coa1• Mee&. CA
OTI-IER PURPOSES ALL FORTH IN THE SECTION ~ Tree Lana. !Nine, 92127
AS SHOWN tN THE' CON-ENTITLED "CERTAIN CA 92715 f'talC M)TIC( Thie bulllneas I• con·
OOMINIUM PLAN AND AS EASEMENTS FOR OWN-Herman van Nllhr\, 22 K nm dueMd by. an lnclMduel
DEANED tN THE DECLAR-ERS" ANO "SUPPORT, 0ypt.-Tree ~. IMne, MOnc:a OP PATTI BARTLING
ATION SETTLEMENT ANO EN· CA 92715 A#Uc:Anoet TO Thll at...,_,. -ftled PAACEL 4· CROACHMENT" OF THE Thia bullneM 11 con· 9IU N.COMOUC wfttl the County Clel'll of Or·
EXCLUSIVE EASEMENTS ARTICLE ENTITLED "EASE· ducted by: a generll pen. IPIM•t 8llOI County on FetlNer)
IN AND TO THOSE POR· MENTS" OF THE OECLAR-nenhlp .... 19, 1MI
TIONS OF LOT 1 OF SAID A TION A. von WMllet'I ,_,_,
TRACT 10525 SHOWN ANO PARCEL 4· Thil ttatament -lllad To Whom It M8Y ~: PubMltlld 0renaa Coeet DEFINED AS RESTAICTED EASEMENTS AS SET with ttle County Cler1t of Or· CtilAH. CNllo Houno a Delly P11o1 M•dl a, 13, 20,
COMMON AREAS WHICH FORTH IN THE SECTIONS M01 County on F*uery Yl·Hlll are ~ to IN 27 19M
ARE ADJACENT WITH AND ENTITLED "CERTAIN 14. 1918 ="-="Jon~:ol A,;~1~ ' APPURTENANTS TO SAID EASEMENTSTOOWNERS" '111111 ..,.. 1---------
PARCELS 1 2 3 AND 5 DE· ANO "SUPPORT, SETTLE-Pubt+IMd Orange Coee1 On Sate Beer I Wine (Pub. rtaJC M)TIC[
SCRIBED HEREiN. MENT AND ENCROACH· Deity Piiot Fat>Nary 27. Ell. Pl.) to Mii elcoholc1-----------
PARCEL 5: MENT" OF THE ARTICLE M11dl I . 13, 20, 1981 beYeregel It 512 W 19th IC_,
AN UNDIVIDED ONE ENTITLED "EASEMENTS" Th-4172 St · Cotti Meae 92927 ...._ .. TIMI
FIFTY-FIFTH (1155TH) FEE OF THE DECLARATION Of' Pub411hed Or~ Com! Md,._. ..
SIMPLE INTEREST IN AND COVENANTS. CONDITIONS "8JC ll)TlC( Dilly Piiot Mardi I . 1Ne ~ .... ot
TO THE IMPROVEMENTS AND RESTRICTIONS, AE-PrnTM>US Wll Th 704 C I I ..
AND APPURTENANCES ON CORDED IN BOOK 14092, ,.. (Sec. 9504. Subd. 3.
LOT t Of' TRACT 10525 PAGE 1797 OF Of'flCIAL um ITAT'lmWT rtaJC M)TIC( U.C.C.)
("IMPROVEMENTS") SUB-RECORDS (THE "MAST£R Thi tollOW!f1Q per9001 -NotlOe 11 heretly ~ b';
JECT TO THE TERMS AND DECLARATION") AHO ANY doing~ at· . ACTmOUe-U tN undoerlioNd thet 1 pub-
CONOITIONS Of' THE MAS-AMENDMENTS ANO SUP-HE'LP-U-SELL ~COSTA MAim 8TAT'lmWT lie Mia of 11-to1owtr'9 O.
TER LEASE RECORDED PLEMENTS THERETO. MESA. 1'35 0 N.-#port The lolowlng pereona .,. ec:tibed coleterel _. be
81 l0/59 IN BOOK 4933 The atr•1 ltddreee Ind Btvd, Su"• 268, eo.11 MIM. dOlng ~ • Amer1een Mid It tM hour of 1CH>O PAGE 274 ET SEO OF OF~ ot:h« aommon deaignatlon. CA 92927 Softwwe Dynamlc:a.. SUM o·~ A.M. on the 1ettl d.-,
FlCIAL RECORDS If any. of lhe,.... ~ SouthCoeet 8'oken. Inc., Yallowl1one Ortw Coeta of Men:h. 1981, It 581 San
I
Thi llrMI eddr ... Ind duerlbed 1bov1 11 I Callfornt1 COl'POfatlon. Meae. CA 92921 NIColU Of., s-. 308,,......
01hef common dealgnatlon pu<portlld 10 be: 47 OX· t835 0 Hewpoft BMS. Suh• s~ 0 Terlnl. 3UM pOf18d\. County of Ofenoe.
If tny of the r•l Pfopeny f'Ojlt() •13 t"VIHE. CA 268. Coet9 ....._ CA 92127 YaloWWtone, Cotta Mlle. State of Celtoml&.
duc'rlbed above la 92715 Thie butlMea I• oon· CalHomla 92929 19" PorlCM VIN •
purported IO be 403 BtY900 Thi undenlgnad Tn.wt. ducted by • ~ton Peter s Sandhu, 550 457•90. Uc " 1'3FVZ
Sprlnga dlldelm• eny llabllty for W'tf ~ V Gondlel. Jr.. PIUllr1no, Colt• Mlle. C.-L...... John t~raon
55 Coat• Mau CA incorr.c:tnea of the _... PYaaldent fofnle 92628 a.on Tlte. 22105 Oat Oro
92827 ' ldd,.. end other common Thll ste*"lftt -llled Thia bullneet 11 con-Ad., ~ v~. ~ 92307
The ~tlgnld frvetee dea6gnltion, If in'f, ltMIWn wtttl ttle County Clerfll of Or· ~by' This notlct II"*' Ir\ C ·
dledillnl any 11ab111ty fOf 1ny _. "'99 County Otl F*'*°Y ~ 0 Taranl cordlnQI Wlttl the ptO'WlilloO•
Publ lshed Orange CO"'S l Daily h lnc:onWCtna. ot lhe ttreet UdMla .. bemede.but 13, 11M Thia~ wee flied ofSectton 9504.~
L u T -6 6 6 adOr9le end other common without ~t °' _. ~ wfttl the County Clerlc ot Or· (3~ ot n... unitorm Cotn-
p 110 t Feb 27 M Ch 6 1986 dlalQtletlon "any ll'IOWfl '=tE·~ortmplad,,.. Publlllhed Ortinge COreM enoe County on FebNlry merclel0odeofttle8'9'90f -------·-_r_u~a_r_Y ___ ,~~a_r_~--·---~~-~--------~-~~----~~ ' . ~p11111 11-°'~P~F~21,~1... ~ IMIDI •c IW\TIC[ IMIDIJC IW\TICC IMIDllC IW\Tll'r IMIDI .,. IW\Tirr •-.,. llftTM'C Satd..,,. w11bl"*'9.11u1 ancum • to PllJ the Merdl I . t3, 20, t... ,_ OAT!O. Fe1>ruary 28 r~ nu 1 __ .. _"'1'--'--""----__ ,. ___ ~----""---'~---~'"...;..;;~.-.._nu_...1• ....... ~---~r...;;.;;;UUU\f.=~""~';.;;.:;;1'4;...._ w!lllOut conwnanl Of ..,. nimailnlng pMclpel tum ol Th-MO Publllhed OrlnOI Coeet l!IM
-FlC-TmOU---.-.U-IM--1-1-,,_., AMmep at U., FlCTrTIOUI ~·· IMbel Aw • Cotta MIU, 19f8 rll\ty ·~Of lmt>iled ,.. the ncM• MCUNd by Mid •-"" llftnH' Oltty Pilot FebNary 27, C ....... C ........ h ·
NAU. ITATIMI... ... "°'"' Metn •tr.... NAMI ITATnltlNT Cetlf 92121 ,_ gardk,g tltll. poeuulon, 9' Deed of TNlll, with In.... .._ l'IUll\4 Manih 8. t3. 20. l!IM ........ Vlurft1 IJ ii -"' 8en A CA T I t I P blllhed Or Coul eneun'lbfanoet. to P>IY tile 1hereori, u P'OYlded In Mid ~73 Publllhld Ofenoe Coell Tne le>ltowlng perton1 •r• ~ 1000, ta ne. The IOltowlng patton I• h • bu• n111 • con· " lnOI -a>..uw. ............... IUfn of not... ldvincee, n any. PltCTmOUe 1U•••• Delly Pllol M~ I . 19M dOI"" bull""•.. t27CH OOlrlg bullneet •• OUClld by an lndlYldu11t Dally Piiot February t3, 20. ,.,,_ .. ft"V "'"...._ .. a-.,.._ t ~IN......__. ..... STA,...., I Tll-70& oi~YMPIC PARTNERS. Publllhed Or•• Coe1t COAST CUSTOM CABI W•ttar E Oultt 21. M1rctl 8. tMI ~no~-~~~ :~..: ;fr~:°': ~Oii "';;j The fOllowlng pereona -f'talC fl)TIC[ I. TO , 110 Newport Center D•lly Piiot Febru1ry 27. NE1S, 359 Ramona Way, Thi• statement waa fllild TH·&« thlf90tl 11 _;....,,_.In Mid ·~of 1111 Tl'Ultea end OOlng ~ •: I P\RJC ll)llC(
Ortw, Suite t 147. Newport M&rCh 8, 13, 20. 108e Coal• M .... C.tlf 92127 wtth tne County Clttli of Or· •-.,. llftTll't not 1 •~If .,.. Of the tl'lllCI Ct'Mted by Mid liot!XICAN VOYAOER8 '1CTmOUI eu.-u
Beeeh. CA 92800 Th·l83X R Crtlo Newcomb. 359 ·=County on Jtnuary 28• ~ ""'~ ~~"'"""'Of Ille~ Dead of Truat. to wit: CLU8 . "' 8111 Mtouet' MAim ITATPmWf fte~ _._ ..
Hunter P•nnere·O, Ltd . A Remona Way. Cosll Mee&. 19 ,_.,. l'tC11nOU9 .......... of Trull ..... cMrOll end S ,28.W 19 0rM. Suite 300, Hewpoft TM~~ lr'I MMlm ITA.,._,.y
Calllomle Ltmtt9d P1rtner-Ml.IC M)T1C£ C.llf 92827 umaTAftmMT e~oftheTNll•and TM~underMld e.ctl.Cet2te0 OOlllO~at ThefotlowlngpertOMart
ehtp 110 N1wPOf1 Center Thia buttn .. 1 t1 con-Publllhed Orange Cout Thi to1ow4ng P«90M we Of the trwta Cf'Mted by M6d Deed Of T~ lief~•... E~ 8eMol Pro-OACO. 15512 OrliNm St, doing bu11NM • 0r1¥i Sutt1 t 147 "-POfl ftCTfTIOUI .U ... 11 due1ed by tn lndt~ Olli Piiot Februery 13, 20, dolf'CI bulllt*1 Deed of Trutt. to-wit eciuted llftd ~ to t"9 tJel'I, Inc., • CIMtwNa cor· Hu11tln9ton e .. ch CA WEST ~N!. 3 lriOf\10" Baeeh. CA 92ee0 • NA• STATWMUn' R Craig N9weomb 2T. well I . lMe T.....a THl CAPE. -;'ooo Soult! 1111t6t07 • utidlel"91ed • ~ ~ porallOn, * sen Mlguel. t2t<lt P\ece, UIGUM N9"' 'Cell
R11pt1 E Phelan Jf , e 10 The f011ow1no peraona a,. Thit ltatamtnt wet ftled Coeet OrM, Colli MaM. Th9 beMflc;laty under M6d lerltlOn 'Of OflflUft end 0.. S-. 300, ~ ~. Jamel J ColllN. tH4 t 1?017
Newpon .c.ntet 0riv.. $\Itta doing bulllllM u 1M1h 111e County Clar1I ot Or· "8.IC M>TICE Cellf t2t2t Deed of TNM ,... ..... manes tots.. and• Minari CA t2tlt loftwlnd. Suiintn'IMd CA """""Gio-. a 9r1g11ton
t "'· ~ Beach. CA (A) BS 8A8Y SAFE (8) enoe Counly on Femuwy 3, Amel Meneoem-•t Com-ecut9d end~ to v. Notloa of °""""' end (*> TJlll bual-.. oon• 12318 ....... ~ Hleull· Cell
92'MO BABY SAFE, 33292 MIMI. 19te ,.tCnnoue _._.. P41f!Y, • ~ Cofl)Of· utiderllooed. Mf1terl ~ tiofltoW n..utidliillpiecl dud'ld by. corpou1t1o11 AlcNt'd I..~,.. m71
Huntet Energy C~Pot· OM• POlnt. CAt2929 '*"'I um ITAT'lmNT ltlOn. sos Hor1fl Tuttln A.,. lerltlon of Oaf8Ult end 0. C*IMd M6d Notb of 0. Mw'llWI I ~ Al· ~ ar.,,,.. CA 9*7 David s Thomt:;. ••ton a Cllllform. COfPOf· M. r 11 Lyn Ku I I ck Publltt!ed Orenge C09lt The ~ pereon II enue. Suite 150 Santa Ana. mend '°' a.. end • wmterl flult end eeetion to ... to tomay .. I.aw ..... ~ t431 I! '8'1"32 "" Paletlno.
1uon. 810 Newport Canter AbtemtOll. 33292 AetOtle. Delly Pttot ~ 13, 20, OOlllO bualneM • e.nt '2706 ' NotlOa of ~ #Id be ~ In the ot/Alfttt Thia 9'Mement -Med Quincy. Oranee. CA t2'M1 c.lf t271& Orlll9. Suit• 1'47, N.wport o.MPolnt.CA92t29 27 Marcll 8, 1Me I wt IT IE a T Tll+e bvtltleM II e~ ttontos.1 TMUhdeltll\jllilCI ..... Ille ,. Pf°""Y le wftttO.Oclumyaart.ofOI'· Tiiie buelW II con-T'tllll butiMeit .. con
8-etl. CA 02te0 Thll butllllll II eon· TH-443 ACCT'INOIT AX S!AVIC!. dllc:t9d by I corpotltlOn ~ llkl NoCIOe of 0. IOCated .... County Ofl '*'*Y duat9d b'; ...... S*t· OUC1ed bt • ~ 1*1·
Thia bul lnHI I• COfl· dUct9d by en lt'ldl~ I eo Tlmblr Aun, IMM. Cellf Georve L ~ CN9lf """' end ~ 10 ... to OATI. 21t4/M "· f... ,.,..,. nenHp c:tucled b'; 1 llrnlted Ptf'lrll'• MAAIA L K ABRAMSON l't8.IC M>TlCE 92714 EJc9Clllllvie Offtoet be recorded In tfte oovntY ..... 111 ur• c............. ""'" ......... J c.. DIMd s norupaon
lhlp Thll 1tetam.nt ... flied I L . w,. n O• Dou 0 I•. TNI ltlWrl*" .... Mid "'*-"" ...... ~ .. ...... 9'! 0..... •. Or· ......... "-"'-a.. TNt ~· .... fled Thia ... .,... ..... Ille!
AalClfl C Phalen. Jf • Oen-wnh the County Cler1t of Or· ncnnoua 1UtNN1N Eetdund, eo Tilr\tler fMI, -""the OouMy Ctn of Or-IOC4ltad -... WM '' ujjaat, ......... -......... wmi tN County ca.ti of Or· """'the County C.-of Or·
.,.. Pan,,.,.n1p lnOI County on FIClNllYl NAMI ITA,.._..,y ~!Mne. CeM 9'714 enoeOountyon Jenu«y 2t, o.te 02/1$/11 n. .,..... ......, .... DfM.. .... • ...,_. enve Count')' on '*'*Y ange CountyonJMuety It Thia llltarTMll\t ... ftlad to. 1911 The fOIOWWIO pareon la Thlt bUlinMI II con-,... -, .... CA-. en-, ....... c ......... 11, 1• • , ...
Wtth the County C*1l Of Or· ,._ dOlnG bullM9I .. dUcted by an ~ ..-n ••o-nD llOftTQAQI ,,,... ...., ,.,., ,_... =County on F~f. De~°"= ~zeor,~ 11~!::.: =-M~~i ~~--Med ~~1~ ~~£=".:n= ~~~ ~M=r~ ~ ~co;r. o:~~lr:
,_ M1rc;11 I t3. 20, tM& Matl C4111f 9Ht1 .-itl'I the Oounly 0..-of Or· 27. M..dl e. 1ttl TMMT Mlltvtel, Mwdl t . ,... 27, 1NI ~ t. ti.~ 1tll 1 u M...aPI t. t•
Y•tea. •ICM, '" a Tn-ae w.iter e Outtt • ..!JOlant• anoeC<iun11on.1anuery n fH~ "°-....,....._ ... """"' Ttt-169 ~ • _~1. TH-Mt
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C8 Orange Coul OAILY ~LOT/ ThUtld8J~ March 81 1988
MUC fl>TU "8.IC fl>TlCE "8JC fl>TICf Ml.IC NOTU PtaJC flJTICE NOTIC[
YOU AM M DUMA. T NOnc. TO 0..Wel It~ to the N011C9 cw NOflC8 Of1 ~ NOnca OI' APPELLANTS Richard Tr_....... ~ l~llT~tedtt;; ~ I f AT • II • N T 0 '
UllDmltADaDOl'l'IUIT, .... • !'!"~':b\=~:c::oo: IUIUCMRAMta "*'CMUMIO' PUW.JCNUMfO Aoweoc'OArTeoelON~~21 M I .... INJ.'J 1130"'!.97 ru.a. • __ wrnlDllA, m~ ••• OATDMARCH•tlM NOTICE JS Hl!AEBY"~,.,. CONDmOMALUM ,,.CMPUH ..,._ALTO L : .., an lllaltr•I09! No'..,AtthelQhedU!ellme ,._All_. ...... YOU TAH AC· GlV!N ttlatthe Founteln Val-ne. of the OlfectOt of Pllbllc ...... HIO •n OI' ITMIT ,. UH•tQ 5,, .. , (llOtt"-81 OOtMf of lll-tl1IMl7'0 te: . WW ONllA,.. UlmD
1'0M--.,O "90ftCT YOUR lilySctloo! ow1r1ctot0f_,. ~ AoomAtt., n Fllk (Cett-..0.... AUGIT•fl!T NO.~ con•nlllOM'I Main Street and Tenlh NOTtCa cw of ~9t.M71 ~bid ~cTmOUI •UllNIH
MOfUl"t, IT UY • ~nty, California. .atlng by Drive, Cotta Mesa. Caflf· Gae...._. NOTICE 18 H!Al8Y DIMA&. QI' StfMf) TMllTll'I IALa .,_ ..,.., 'lS. -MAim
eGlO AT A ~ IA&.&. ena through Ill OOYetnlng lornla. ':": -~~~-= .. Mini ....... u QIVl!N that Ille lillntlnoton COltOt'T'tONAL. ZONE: ~ (M.ctk.lm o.n• YOU .>RE IN OEFAUL T The~ undet Mid I The following pet.on 1\111
• YOU MOD Ml IV'U• loafd, hattlnlft• ,.,.,..~ ~ O.i2oow111 NOTICI! IS HcREBY 8MchClfyCouncllwfflliokl nC•PTIOMNO. tyAeeklentlal) UNDER"'AOE:EDOFTRUST o..dOITMtheretofoteell· wlthdrawnaugeneretpett-lllATIOM "' THI MA"S\IM to .. Ille "Otttrlct" will "" ~~~en.,~~ ....... ~· _ .... , OIVfN thl1 the Huntington a publlci hearing In the Coun· ti.a REOUl;ST To malntlln D~TED 11t2178. UNLESS ecut~ and dellll«~ '0 the ner from the penntdNC> c»-0, THI '"OCllDINO Oii ' but not ... ., ............ ,_,.._, .. _.. 8MchPI ""'CommlMI ell On bet t"-H NOTICE 18 HEREBY exllltl~ garage with ZAWO YOU TAKE ACTION TO uncWllgMd. written Dec>-«•ting uncMr the flctfUoue
0 ve up o, (PhOM (714) 754-7 for Mn .. ,. on am II uni· GIVEN lh1t I"'-Huntl:l!:on fool (0 aid• uard Mtbadl on PR. OTECT YOUR PROP· laratlOn of o.t111.11t and 0. ... ··'-~ n-.o. OI u1eoA&< AOAINIT YOU, Y U than 10:00 o'clOclc A.M. of Chutng lnlormatlOn) wlll hc)jd a puDilc: llMrlng In lngton BMcih CMo Cent.,, ... ' d 1 8 le and a written ....__ ..... "'9'V" IHOULD CONTACT A the211tc11yol Maroh,IN8, pu~acnbldlha"IMmadeon tlleCounctfChambefaHhl 2000 Main Street, Munl· BMchCllyCOUnc:llwlll thuouthtldeandtnr .. fOOI ERTY ITMAYBESOLDAT man Of a . QUEST •• tsea Ham#ton
LAWYIR. -.led blda lor the IWfold of the Propollll form .,_.., Huntington 8•11Ch Civic lng1on 8Meh, California, on 1 publle hMrlng In the Coun-(3') aide yard Mtback on the A PUBLIC SAL£. IF YOU ri:i: ~ "ft!U::n::'.:::; Ave., Suite 241, HuntlngtOtl NO~ OP a conttact for purOh ... or p.1 thrnunh p.8 Pf'Ol/ld9d In Center, 2000 Main Street, the d1t• and 1t the time In-ell Chamber 11 the Hunl· l\Of'th tide In lleu Of the r• NEED AN EXPLANATION N Ice f 09-Budl, c.JM, ~
TMllTl•I aALa l111e with option to the conf:act documentt Huntington 8eacn, Call· dlc1ted be10w to receive and lngton 8"ch Civic Center quired 6 IHI. OF THE NATURE OF THE cauMd NICI ot ~I The lletltloul bualMH
NO. -1 puroh1M, computer pro· and lhell be aooompani.d lornla, on tl)e date and 11 lhl eontldtf the tlalement• of 2000 Main StrMt Hunt~ E N V I R 0 N M E N T A l PROCEEDINGS AGAINST ::II and:.':°!~~ coun~ name 1ta1ement lor the~-On MARCH 31, 1988, al <*tlno wvic... or oom-1tflld caatlie('I time lndlcat~ belOw tor• all PlflOOI Who Wllh to be lngton Beaeh, CalllOrnla, on STATUS: Categorleally ••• YOU, YOU SHOULD CON' recor -.. II n«ahlp w .. llled Otl Al.lgult
10:00 A.M .. at THE REAR puter hardware, 1y111m1 ~II o:'lth or°! bid l>Ond celveand~tlle1tet• heard relative 10 1111 apptt-the dell and a1 the time In-empt under Section 1S301, TACT A LAWYER. wtl«• the real pr.....,..., 30, 1te4 In the County of
ENlAANCE LOBBY ON 5TH 10ltware and utltltlet from f t l4IM than IO% of the ment1 of all '*90fl1 who c.llon dMCrlb«I below. c:Holt.cl below to recetve and Exl1tlng Faoflltlel of Iha CIJI.. On 3113/88 at 10:00 A.M. located.. . Orange, flLE NO. F254266
STREET OF CHICAGO lnter .. lec:t vendora herein· a~c:,t of the bid m.CS. wllhtotMllMfdrelatlv•to OATE:Monday,Manltlt7, oQnllder the at1tement101 lornlaEnvlronmentalOuallty FORECLOSURECQNSULT-. OATE.~/11/H ... FulfNameandA~of
TITLE INSURANCE COM· alter .~etei:~ed to •!. "Bid· payable to the Coeta M ... the ~l<:atlon deecrl.,., 1988 • ell '*'°"' who With 10 be Act. ANTS, INC_ u the duty .,,. fonoloe;:,;..~()f-tl\e Parton Withdrawing:
PANY, LOCATED AT 501 N. der(1) or Leuertsl . Sanitary Dlltrlot. No below. TIME. 7:30 P_M. heard relatlve to the appll. ON FILE: A copy o~ tile point.cl Truat .. und« and lftc.,J'f! Vice ,,...i.tent 1.Arry Malakoff, M22 Chevy
MAIN STREET, In the City ol Swch bid• ahlJ.,. received propoMI• 111 .. 1 be con-DATE/TIME: Mitch 18, I DE N T I F I c A T I 0 N cation ~bed bek>w. propoNd appeal II on .. In pur9'1&nl lo Deed ol Truat, ~,:. ·, '" lfyd. ,..: Ch HI Or.. Huntington
Santa Ana, County of Or· In the olflol of the Purchu-lldered unleh llCCOmPMlecl t986 • 7:00 p.m NUMBER· PreclM Pl1n of DATE! Monday. Match t7, Iha ~t ~~op-Recorded on 2/2e/70 u T tlft "cA nteO (7'•) Be.ch. Callf. 8,2648 ange, Stat.e ol California. Ing A~t. Buelneu Ser-ul'tler' Meck APPLICATION NUMBER: StrMt Allgnrnent No 85·2 1986 ment • &In Document no. 28802 Book ut • StgMd: Larry Malakoff CA l IF 0 RN I A RE · vie .. Dept of Mid District ~ ~bld~er·a ~ ' Conditional UM Permit No_ LOCA,flQN· ,Gothard TIME· 7·30 PM Street, Huntington Beach, 1~47 Page 12 Of Otflclal nt.-a . Publlthed Ora~ Coett
CONVEYANCE COMPANY, located 11 172 tO E>all StrMI, No bid shell be conildered 85-22 Street be._ McFadden APPLICATION NUMBER: CaJllornla 92648, tor lnapec-Reoordt In the olfloe of the Publl.n.d Orange <:o;;t Dally Piiot Febtu.ty 13, 20,
• C•'"omla Corporation, as Fountain Valley. California, uni.s 1111 madeon1 blank APPLICANT. At11nt1c Aven~ and Center Drive Appeal to Plannlng Com-lion by the publlc. Record11 of Orange ~nty. Dally Piiot Febf\lary 20• ' 27. March 8. t98e
duly appointed Tru11 .. 92708, and lhall be opened form turnlahed by the Cost• Rlchlleld Company PROPOSAL· A request by mission'• denial ol Con· All INTERESTED PER· Celllornla, executed by: M1tch 8, t988 Th-666 TH>-830
undef that certain Deed o1 and publicly reed aloud at Mesa Sanitary Olltrlct and 11 l 0 CAT I 0 N: 2 14 5 2 the City of Huntington Beech dlllonal Exception No. 85-93 SONS are Invited to attend TAAVIS WATTS HONEY·
Trull eicecuted by JULIE H the abOve 111ted time and made lnaccOfdance wlth the Broollhural Stre~tt. Hunt· to move the center tine ol Or~v~~~~N~1::2~1 t:::~: :11~10i;::rnfub~~ .:= ~g~il~~D ~~~~~t~N
LOOWl,.RY, A MARRIED pl1oe I provisions of the Propoaal lngtonBeac:C h,Calllornl1 Gothard Street e11tward Drive, west of Buah1rd foror~alnlttheal>t>ll<:atlon WILL SELL AT PUBLIC W MAN, u tru1tor, re-Each bid muat con orm ulrementi ZONE: '4 ~o•lmatety 250 leet tor corct.d on April 13, 1884. IS and j:>e reaponalve to thitl In· ~IOh bidder mull be REQUEST: Con"9f1 an •X· the portion ol Gothatd wflleti Street aa oull ned above. If there AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST -
Instrument No. M-153195, vltatlon, the lnf0fm1tlon ror llc4!oN<I 19 required by 1_ lttlng g11 1tatlon 10 an AM-•xtends flOO feet aouth of PROPOSAL: to permit an aie any lvrthlf ~ueatlon• BIDDER FOR CASH, (pay-... ii.I
ot Otflolal Record• ot Or· Bidders. the apeelllcatlons. The Board of Olreotors oi PM mini marttet McFadden Avenue. 1cldlllon to a ·•Ingle t1m11y please call Scott "'· Al-able at time of 11.le In lawful 11
ange County, State 01 Call· and all other dOCumenta the Coat• M"8 Sanitary ON FILE: A copy of toe EN v 1 AON M ENT A L resldonoe which encroaches •lallnt Planner at 638-5271. money of the Unit.ct Statea) ALLEMAN LEDER
lornla, under the power ol comprising th• pertinent Otatrlctr...,..,ettherlghtto ptol)OMd condltlonel UM STATOS. Negative Declar.-flvereet(5')1ntotherequlred Jemet W. t-alln, Sec· at l11EfRONT £NTAANCE FRED F. ALLEMAN. C'"RISTIA.N , 79.
Nie therein con1aln«l. wlll contract documenll-Coples reject any or 10 bids. permit t.• on Ille In the De-111on No. 85-72 wlll lllO be ten foot (10') rear yard aet· ~'?,' Tt1nt:::O., -..Ctl lO SUITE 205 (SECOND n
Mii at publlc auction to the of the contract document• The 'contrictot •h•ll p1rtment ol Development clonlk:l!"ed In conjunction beck " ~omm FLOOR) 11802 IRVINE of Laguna Niguel, pa.seed away March 4,
hlghett bidder for cesn, or are on Ille and may be ob· comply with the provlalons Services, 2000 Main Street, with PreclM Plan of 1tree1 ENVIRONMENTAL Publls Orange Coast BOULEVARD. TUSTIN. CA died Saturday, March 1986, a resident of
checll u deacribed below. talned in tile oHlce of said of Section 1770 10 1780 In-Hunt1ng1on Beach. Call-allonment No. 85-2 STATUS C1tegorlc1lly EJt. Dally Piiot March 8, t986 92880 all rlghl. lllle and l , 1986, following an Newport Beach, CA.'
payable a1 the time of aele In boatd al the above addrest elusive of the Calllornla lornla 92648. for lnapectlon ON FILE. The proposed empt Th· 707 lnl111St conveyed to and
l.wfut money of the United The Olatrle:t r~ the L bOr 'cod the prevalllng by the publlc. plan and 1 legal deacrlptlon ON FILE-The copy cl the ~IC NOTICE now held by II under nlct extended illness. Mr. H e is survived by his
StatH of America, without right to rajec11.ny or all bid•. , a e,1 01 w es-All INTERESTED PER-Is on Ille With the Depart· propoHd Condltlonal EJt. Deed ol Trult In the property Alleman, founder of beloved wife Marion :
Wllftlllty expreH or lmplled 10 waive any lrregularltiet or 1:~~1:: ~t~ ~~"8 SONS are Invited 10 attend ment ol Development Ser· caption No. 85-93 and a NOTICE OF altuat.ct In aald County, Call· Alleman-Riis, was a son, Stan Leder of
as to tltle, UH, possesalon, 1nrorm111111s In Ille bide or In Sanitary District Whleh are aald hearing and ••press vices. 2000 Main Street, legal description 11 on Ille PUltLIC HE~ING fornl1, dMCflblng the land manufacturers' rep-Costa Mesa. M em-°' encumbrances, all right, the bidding, and to award a fifed with the Anletent Sec-opinions or aubmlt evldenoe Huntington Beach, Call-with the Department ol D&-CONDITIONAL USE thereln:
tltle anc1 Interest now held by contract ot contrects for the retary 01 aald Olstrlct end lor or agalnet the 1pplle1t1on forn11 92648-velopment Servlees. 2000 PERMIT NO. ll-20 Thoae portion• of Tract r esentative for 43 orial services will be
II u llUOh Trustee In and to furnrsning of one or more shall forfeit penaltles as oulllned above. It there ALL INTERESTED PER-Main Street, Huntington (Annuef Review no. 8612, In the City of lrvlne years_ He was born in held Saturday, March
the followlng described Items ol the property ~ preacrlbed therefore for are any lurther questions SONS are Invited to attend Beactl, C1fllornl1 92648 of Otd World u per map fllecl In Book 358, Detroit, Michigan and 8, at 2:00 p .M. at pro~y allulled In the scribed above noncompliance of the said pteue call Gale O'Brien, A~ said heating and eicpreaa ALL INTERESTED PER· Oktobeffell) Paoes 13 and 14 of Ml ..
eforasald County and State. No bidde< may withdraw Code slstan~ Planner at 53fH271. opinions or aubmlt evidence SONS are Invited to attend NOTICE IS HEREBY cellaneous Maps In the O!· graduated from the C hrist Church B y
to Wit: llis bid lor 6 P9flod or ninety Dated March 5 t986 JarNe W. Palln, he· fOf or against the appncallon aeld hellflng and expr111 GIVEN that the Huntington flee of the County Reco<der University of M ich-The Sea, Balboa, CA.
LOT 2. BLOCK 638 OF (901 days atter the date aet BY ORDER 'oF THE retlfY, H11nllngton Beec:h as outllned abOve All appll-opinions or aubmll evldonoe Beach Pfenning Commission of aeld county described u · g Al ng time r esi
CORONA DEL MAR TRACT, lor lhe opening of bids BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF Plennlng Comm!M6on cations, eichlblts, and de-for or against the appllcatlon will hold a publkl hearing In fotlows: 1 an. ~ • REES
IN THE CITY OF NEWPORT fOftM 0o¥9mlng 9oerd, THE COSTA MESA SANI· Publlshed Orange Cout acrlptlons of Ihle prop<>MI as outlined above All appll-the Counoll Chamber at the PARCEL 1: Unit number 4 dent of "fornia, he LORI ANN PAULINE
BEACH. AS PER MAP RE· Jeen c. Murpflr. PurehH· lARY DISTRICT Daily Pilot March 6. 1966 are on Tile with the Office of cations, e><hlblts. and de-Huntington Beach Civic u shown ano described In m~ved to Laguna REES. ol Costa Mesa,
CORDED IN BOOK 3. Ing Agent PubllSlled Orange Coast Th-709 the City Cler'll. 2000 Main ser!pllon• of this propoaal Center, 2000 MaJn Street. the condominium plan re-Niguel 15 years ago. ~~-....i away M""""h 4•
PAGES 41 AND 42 OF MIS· Approved· Jack Mahnken. Daily Piiot March 8 13 1986 ntm•ic NOTICE Streat Huntington Beach, are on Ille with the Office ol Huntington Beach Call-corded In book 11416, page H th board ~ ....... CELLANEOUS MAPS. EX· Ed D . Aulstant Super-' T·h_711 ruut. Callfornla, for ln5')1Ctlon by the City Clerk, 2000 Main fornla onthedatea~datthe 1781 of Olflclal Records. e was o n e -1986. Survived by
CEPT THC" NORTH -lntendenl Admlnlstrallve FICTITIOUSBUIUNEIS thepublle Street, Huntington Beaoh. lime l~dlcated below 10 re-PARCEL 2:.An undivided of Trustees OUf .the mother, Bonnie Rees
W ESTERLY 64 FE'ET Services • P\llllC NOTICE NAME ITATEMENT HUNJINQ.J,,ON ~ACH Calllornla, for Inspection by celveandconslde< lheatite-1/52nd Interest u •tenant Laguna Beach ruted 0 f Costa Mesa.·
THEREOF Published Orange Coasi The lollOW1n persons are CrTY COUNCIL. ~ta the publl<:. ments 01 all persons who In common In the lee lnte<"l Ml?thodist Church
Thi IOlll amount ot the Dally Pilot February 27. K 2'175 dotn buslnet: as: M. Wentworth, City Cleftl, HUNTINGTON BEACH wish to be heard relative 10 In and to the common area . ' brother Donald Lot-
unpaid principal balance. March 6 1986 NOTICE Of' N~TWORKS UNLIMITED PhoM (714) Q8-.M05 CITY COUNCIL, ly: Alkla the applicallon described ot Lot t of Tract No. 8612 a1
0
w1asthpassede Foundpr3esti.0
1dnen3 tt ton of Seattle, Wash-lntereat thereon. together Th-689 APPllCATION TO · Daled March 3, 1986 M. Wentworth, City Clerk, below such term la defined In the ~ grandf th
with rusonably estimated SELL ALCOHOUC 1401 Dove St. Suite 300· Publlahed Orange Cout ~ (714) 53&-5405 DATE/TIME· March 18 article lntllled "dellnlllona' the Sou th Coast n: a er,
costs, expenses and ad-~UC NOTICE IEVEAAOES N:p~rtJ~~ CAJ~2~~.,., Dally Piiot March 6, 1986 Dated: Marcil 3, 1986 1986 _ 1:oo PM · of the Decl1rat1on of Cove-Medical Center and 0 . . Bright; Uncles,
vances at the lime of the In-Febfu.ty a . 1-Rub A~enue. Baf'boa island. I Th· 712 Publlahed Orange Coast APPLICATION NUMBER: nanta, Condltlona and R&-W"r 8 member 0• f the Robert ~right an~ ltlal publlcatlon of this No-NOTICE To Whom It May Con-CA l2662 I Dally Pilot March 6, 1966 Condlllonal use Permit No strlctlon1 recorded In book aa V B ht Lo tlce •re $166,955 97 INVITING IJDS e«n: Th-71MS 83•20 11588. pege 1318 Official Laguna Beach Ma-ern ng · n
Currently dat.ed CUhle<! NOTICE IS HEREBY Lo8AllO, Fran..,L le~ d T~ bbueln~s~I:; fon-Ml.IC NOTICE n111n•1C NO:TICE APPLICANT West Coast Record• and any amend· sonic Lodge and Al Ann ~ad~ted from Checks or Ce111fled Check5 G 1 v EN th 11 •ea I e d ptylnt to tn. Depertment of uc Y an n v ua l"UU\. , 1 SOCGe Lea ue ments thereto Malaikah Shrime. H e F..Btancla High School,
payable to the Trustee or proposals for furnllhlng all Alcohoflclew«ae-Control ThM. N. toe CAMP, J:led K2n07 NOTICE OF LodAnot 7561 Center Parcel 3: Non-eacclullve IS-SUfVl-ved by his' and was a member o f bldde< are acceptable to labor, materlsls, equipment, tor "41" On ..,. a-a 11 sla ement was STATEMENT OF PUBLIC HEARING Avenue . Old world VIiia easements for utllltlee, ac-
lrustee provldad proper transp~llon and such Other Wine (Pub. Eat. Pl) to MCI with the County Clerk ol Or· ABANDONMENT OF APPEAL TO THE ZONE· North Hunlln ro'n oess, Ingress. egress. en-w i f e Eve Ii n • of Futun; Farmers. of
ldentltlcallon 11 avallable faclhties as may be required a6cohok bneragee at 1100 ~~g~9~5ounty on Feburary USE OF FICTTTIOUS PLANNING COMMIS810N Cel!ter Speclllc Plan g croachment. drainage, 1up-Laguna Niguel. His A!'11eraca_ Sen~tces
From tnformetlon whlct> lor the CONSTRUCTION OF Adami An., Coale MeM, · F30Cllll IUllNE8S NAME OF IOAAD OF ZONING REQUEST Annual review port and for other purpol161 stepson and daugh-will be held, Friday,
the Trustee deems rel11ble THE FOLLOWING PAO· CA12129 The following pettons ADJUSTMENT'S AP· ol the Oktoberfest Event at alludefinedlntheerticieof March 7 10 AM
but for whl<:h Trustee m1k~ JECT NEWPORT BEACH Publ'9tlect Orange Coe1t 0 ~lub~~~M Or~nge 1i0;~' I heve abandoned the uH or PAOVAL OF Old World VIiiage (approi1· the delcaratlon entitled ter-in -law, Paul and •at · ·at no representation or .,...,_ GOLF COURSE ACCESS Dally l'hl Mlfctl f , 1... 2; ~9860 arc . . , the Fictitious Bualnesa CONDmONAL 1ma1ely September 19th "'easements" Sh a r o n Riis o f Harbor Lawn Cem-
ranty, the street address or' ROAD -PROJECT NO Th 703 • Th-JOO Neme FOTO EXPRESS & EXCEPTION 1&-4 through November 9th., APll 934-290-04 Missjon Vie in. Two etery. ~arbor Lawn
othet common deslgn1110n 1112100·91 VISUAL ENTERPRISE co., (Vartanc. to SIM 19861 The street addresa and . r Mt. Olive Mortuary,
of the above described, Bids will be received by P\8.IC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICE 1500 Adams Ave . Cott• Yard S.tbecb ON FILE A copy ot the other common deslQnallon, grandchildren. Steve Directors_ 540_5554 property 15 600 11 :;,>I the Costa Mesa SanlllfY Mesa. Call!_ 92626 fOf an Exl1Ung proposed condlllonal uae II any, or lhe real property and Debbie and one
LARKSPURAVENUE,COR-01str1c1. at lhe office of tile FICTfTIOUSIUllNE88 I FICTITIOUSIUllNESS The Flctllioos Buslneu O.raee) permit ls on Ille In lhe D&-described above la ~ t grandda ghter
ONA DEL MAR. CA 92625 City Clerk. 77 Fair Drive, NAME STATEMENT NAME STATEMENT Name referred to above was NOTICE IS HEREBY partment of Development purported to be: 8 l.>\RGQ , , ea -u .
Said property 11 betng Costa Mesa, Callfornta unlll The foOowlng persons are I The followlng persons are tiled 1n Orange County on GIVEN that Ille Huntington Servlees. 2000 Main Street, SUD. IRVINE, CA 92715. ~ will be greatly
SOid for the purpose 01 pay· the hour of 11 OO am · Tues· doing buslnen n : I doing business u : July 8, 1982 FILE NO Beach Planning Commission Hunflnglon Beech Call-The un<lerslgned Trustee missed. Rev. Thomas
Ing the obliQalions secured dey Apill 1· 1986 8' ....nlch ARCHITECTURAL HARD-TIDEWATER FINANCE. F192998 wlll hold a put)Mc,heerlng In rornla 92646. tor 1n~pect1on <llsclalmsanytlebllltyforany Warmer will officiate
bysaldDeedotTrust•nclud· lime they will be opened WARE & DOOR. 315 COf·19871 Wtndso' it.venue, Kuo Tsang Huang, 1105 theCouncllChamt>erallhe bylhepubllc lncorrectneu of the atreet
Ing lees and expenses or tne publicly and read aloud In onado SI. Balboa. CA 92661 jWestmlnster, CA 92683 Debra Dr. Coats Mesa. Huntington Beach Civic All INTERESTED PER· add_ress and other common at a private service
ftustee and of Sale the council Chambefs Seal-Charles lee HOiiand, 315 Russell Alllson 9871 Costa Me&e, Callf 92626 Center. 2000 Main Streat, SONS are invited 10 attend d9S1gnatlon. If any. ahown with arr angements
Dated FEBRUARY 7 ~ P'0f°~1~ shakH be~r the Coronado ~I. Balboa. CA1Wln<1sor Avenue. West· Oeher Jeng, 1105 Debra Huntington Beach Call-said hearing and express herein made by the Neptune i986 Ille 0 t • .., wor a the 92661 mlnster,CA92683 Or .. Coeta Meaa. Call! 1orn1a.onthedateandat1he opln1onsorsubmltevldence Saldsalewtllbemade,but SocJ
C AL 1FOAN1 A A E -name 01 the bidder but no This business Is con-I ThlS bus1ne11 Is con· 92626 time Indicated below to re-ror or agalnSI 1~ appllcatlon without convenant or war· ___ e_ty_. _____ _
CONVEYANCE COMPANY, other disttnouiShlng mark ducted by: an lndlvldual ;ducted by: an 1ndivldual This buSlnes& was con-cetveandconSlderlhestate-as outlined abOve II there ranty,e><preasorlmplled.re-
ei M6d tr111tM, BJ luunne Any bid . received atter the CHARLES LEE HOLLAND RUSSELL ALLISON ducted by a a general part· ments of all persons who are any rurther question& gardlng !Ille, po9191alon, °' 1 , 11., I ,,111,, f'tl"I HAllUIOR LAWM·
KeUr. Exeeutl¥e Vice Pr .. I-scheduled closing time 1°' TIM statement was filed This statement wu llled nerShlp wish to J:>e heard retallve 10 please call MlchMI Strange encumbrances. to pay lhe llT. OUVI
deftt, 9451 C011:1fn Aweo~. the receipt ol bids shall be wt\11 the County Clerk of Or·, with the County Clerk of Or· This statement """ tlfed the appllCBlion described A 551 st ant Pl 8 n ner . a i remaining prlnclpal sum of ~ ·' ,1 I<• 1111 ,,, '11 1 Mortuery • C«D191-..
Northrldge . Callfornl returned to the bidder un-ange County on February ange County on February with the Courlly Clerk ol or-below 536•5271 the notN aecured by a.Id Crem.-""' -·'
11321 T No. 111 opened II Shlll be lhe 501<!1 Ea.IMb.--M<~-~t--l~Pfte<~'lf-;--f>llffft;-iM<~~~~~·~~~~~tt-~-:-:-:-:-::-:-:~----tttf--,,rron-l!"'P.!11:r::;,-...i-' '.....---+-
• reap0nsi Y 0 er F300812 . FJOOllM 1986 1986 . 7 00 PM "'1'11 ' '' "11r 99-
Publlstled Orange Coast lo see that hlS bid II received Published Orange Coast PubllShed Orange Coast Publlstied Orange Coast APPLICATION NUMBER: -.1i.·• 1.111' Coate Meea
Dally Piiot February 20, 27 In proper tfrne Dally Piiot February 27. Dally Pilot March 6. 13; 20; Daily Pilot February 13. 20, Conditional Exception 86-6 S.0-55S<l
March 6, l986 A Ml of Plans, Special March 6, 13, lO, 1986 27, 1986 27. March 6. 1986 APPLICANT David P 1 .ill tol~ ·~.;>1 '''1 rr1
Th-657 PrOVlslons, and addlllons to Tll-679 Th-702 TH-634 Oddo
0 CHICK IVERSON
Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi
445 E. C11st llwy., low,ort leach
113-0100
Highest Quallty Sales & Service
0 HUNTINGTON CHRYSLER/PLYMOUTH
0 CREVIER BMW
SALES • SERVICE • LEASING
"Where Professional Attitude Prevails''
8JMCl•llzlng In European D•llwery. Exceli.nt S•*tlon of
,..., and c:.erefully prep•r9d UMd IMW'1 always In stock
835-3171
208 W. 1•t St., Santa Ana
Corner ol Broadwll)' 4 1st St Closed Sundays
GSTERLING SAUS -SEIYIC£ -WSIMC -,AITS
Overseas Delivery Specrallsts
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
BMW -ROLLS ROYCE
1540 Jamboree Rd.
Newport Beach.. 840-~iW
eJIM ILEMONS IMPORTS
1101 Quall St. -New C•t Location
1001 Ou•ll St. -R ... 1. Dlvl•lon
® world's Largest Selection of fi\
Mt1rCtJdes Benz ~
833-9300
s.t . U11i11 • Pw · Stnke · 1t4J s..,
1
O &;~iih C .. ounty-&-ruJ-
voLKswAaeN11suzu
C ALIF'S ;: 1 & LARGEST VOLKSWAGEN DEALER
NEED WE SAY MORE?
Parls Open M -Sa1 8 · 5 30 Sat 9 -4 pm
Ser111ce m-Fri 7:30 -6 pm
18711 BEACH BLVD HUNTINGTON BEACH
714/ 842-2000 .
0 NABERS CADILLAC
2800 HARIGR ILYD., COSTA MESA
(114) 140-9100 (213) &ll-8286
PACIFIC
OCEAN
COAOHA
CIEL. MAfl
o COMMONWEAL TH
VOLKSWAGEN
~":~~:: .s~~I·: -
BIHSTOL AT EDINGER· Ml·OllO JN SANTA ANA
0 THEODORE ROBINS
FORD
U:S.A. 's # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer
Modern Sales. Service, Parts. Body, Paint & Tire Oepts.
Compet1t1ve Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals
2010 Har~tr llw4., Costa losa
142~0010 or 140-1211
0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS
• Ease ol Ownership 1erms
• Lease convenlence-12-72 mo
• Selecl from 100 + new and pre-owned
• Delivery m Europe option
dlal Mercedea
714/213 837-2333
Santa Ana (5) Freeway a.
Beach In Buena Park
/ -
~ ..... ' ..
7/J
Ml!'.$1(1N
VIEJO ;
I
0 808 LONCIPR•
Or~nge County s Oldest a urgest Poml~c Oe~tershtp
itt 8H<h 8!\ld. & th• G.lrd•n Grow F~y
f7t4 892·MSt f714l 6 ... 2aOO
We ~rform all Ponrlltc w~m1ncywork, ~rcttess of
where you orlglNlly pur<Nlsed yo.Jr car.
OltD llONDAY SVDHIMI ........_ .... P.M.
a.adt Btwf. & Garden Grow ,,_,.
Westmlme.r 6 C.t#omla
JAGUAR ISUZU
the PROFESSIONAL APPROACH
0
71 4-979-2500
2925 Harbor Boulevard
• Costa Mesa, CA•
~mcqul a rnarJ10n
SUBARU
•
•
PONTIAC
TRANS AM
FIRf.BIRO
~ooo sn
We Sell £Jcltt•tlt
SLASHES
e PRICES! e
LIQUIDATING
1985 MODELS
UHOCR AHY CHICUMST~ES
W£ Will
NOT BE UNDERSOLD! • a rnarJ10n
PONTIAC SUBARU . . ~ , . ' I
24'0 .... lhd. 24'0 .... Blvd. Costa Miii Newpori Beach
714/549-4300 Costa Mesi Nlwport BtKh
714/549-4300
8 OUICE COAST JEEP /IElitlULT
# 1 /1 TH W11t For ,,. 1,,, SM.1 ,,, ' ,,,,
·'. oe:n~e • SALES
-1\U MA~~lVD t : ~~~~:~~ · ,4;:m • ACCESSORIES OEPt
• UNIVERSITY OLDIMO•ILE
HONDA
2880 Harbor Blvd.
Coatll Meu 540-0713
3 Block• So. Of 405 Fwy.
..
. ·-
-
THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1986
U.S. officials mum on report Yurchenko
executed by Soviets after re-defection
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
State Department declined to com-
ment Wednesday on a broadcast
repon_ that the Soviets had executed
Contra aid
Deeplte lobbytn& by De-
fen.e Secretary Cuper
Welnberaer and other
admlnlatration fl&u.ree,
two Houae panel• •ote
agaln•t ald for the Con-
~u. A5.
Coast
Laguna Beach becom-
es the first city In the state
to help non-management
employees finance their
homes./A3
Lear jets collide near San
Clemente Island In Navy
training exercise./ A.7
Nation
Reagan reportedly to
seek bllllons for a new
shuttle fmd rockets to
launch communications
satellites./ A.5
Sports
UC Irvine's basketball
team opens PCAA Tour-
nament against Cal State
Fullerton tonlght./C1
Angel shortstop Rick
Burleson pleased with his
progress In camp.IC 1
INDEX
Advice and Games 83
Boating 81
Bulletin Board A3
Business BS
Classified C4-6
Comics B4
Death Notices C8
Entertainment 82
Horoscope B3
Opinion A6
Paparazzi B 1
Police Log A3
Public Notices C7-8
Sports C1-4
Television 82
Weather A2
V1taly Yurchcnko, a former KGB
agent who re-defected to the Soviet
Union in November after giving
Soviet secrets to the United Stales.
Court
may bar
truancy
checks
State Supreme Court
to review arrest in
Newportofyouth. 17
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Ol IM Dellr,... lwt
In a case stemroing from the arrest
of a 17-year-old saudent in Newport
Beach, state Supreme Coun justices
arc deciding whet!'ler police officers
can legally stop young people they
suspect of being truants.
The court heard oral arguments
Tuesday in Sacramento in which
defense lawyers for the student con-
tended that police should have a
better reason for stopping a young
person than youthful appearance.
They added that officers may even
need specific descriptions of truants
before they can legally stop school-age
children. ,
But Orange County Deputy Dis-
tnct Attorney Witham Bedsworth,
w 01sscckingreversa oianappellate
coun ruling, said it is more imporunt
to keep young people in school.
"There is a transcendent state
interest in this," Bedsworth said this
morning. "The minor inconvenience
to the individual 1s vastly outweighed
by our interest in educating our
youth."
Bedsworth also presented friend-
of-the<ourt briefs from state schools
Superintendent Bill Honig and state
AttorneyGeneraJ John Van de Kamp
suppontng his position. '
In his report, Van de Kamp cited a
West Covina study showing that
burglanes, car theft. shoplif\ing and
other daytime crime dropped by
more than half when a tough anta -
truancy program was instituted.
A representative of Superintendent
Honig.Taylor Carey, said that in a big
(Pleaee eee TRUAl'fCY / A2)
Laguna Hills
magazine
founder dies
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Ol IM ,,..., Not ,...,
William H. Mamou, the fo under
of Family Weekly magazine and a
leading Orange County publisher,
died Wednesday of cancer at Saddlc-
back Hospital in Mission Viejo.
Mamou launched the ma"1zine
Sept. 13. 1953, after 36 years in the
newspaper and magazine industry. It
1s the third largest magazine 1n the
world. Wlth a weekly circulation
ell~eding 12 million.
Marriott was born Sept. 23, 1909,
in Jackson, M1ch1gan. When he was 8
years old he went to work for his
(Pleue eee P'OU1fDER/ Ai)
Police keep watch
on Mesa's westside
Substation in Hispanic neighborhood
opens, but fewknow of its whereabouts
There arc no "Neighborhood
Watch" signs to dt ourage criminals
an arca.'I of southwc t Costa Mesa,
where Spantsh as the only languaac
spoken and understood.
No organized cnme prevention
program has been formed among the
Haspan\C re 1dcnt'I, many of them
1llepl 1mm1arant'I who work on a
day-to-day bam and depend heavily
on free thntc~ and food a.iveaway
pr<>srams
But the m1nonty re,.dcnts make 1t
a practice to look after each other, and
thf;.Y depend on \osta MC\a pohce
officer Chano C'amanllo to ktcp an
eye on the ne1ahborhood.
"You m1S}lt 'IY we do have a
'Neighborhood Watch.' WCJUSl don't
have the mectinas." said Camanllo.
who has spent I 0 of his 20 years as an
officer patrolhna the low-income.
predominately H1 panic areas of
Costa Mesa.
"They all know me. They make 111
~int to know me," he continued
'They know I'll be there 1 f they need
me "
Thar rclat1onah1p WilS strenathened
on Valcnttnc's Day when pohce
opened a new we't 1dt substation
that will serve a, hcadquancrs for
C'amanllo and two Spah1\h-spcaldn1
aide
With a lot of paint and even more
repair work. the weather-beaten
..
National Public Radio quoted an
unidentified Reagan administration
source as saying that he bad received
two uoconfinned reports that Soviet
authorities executed Yurchenko
before a firina squad
Asked about the ntws report. State
Dcpanment spokesman Bernard
Bowling on the green
Kalb said "I don't have anythin& on
that."
At the White House, deputy press
secretary Edward OjereJian said, "We
A State ~tofrlciaL ~· in' on coodiuon he not be identified.
s&td there was no information to
corroborate the report.
have no independent con~tion · Hecautionedthat. "evcnifit'auue,
that Yurcbenko was executed an the there's no way of ever confirmina
Soviet t)nion.". He aa.id ~R's report such a thins unleu T .. publilbes a
was hued on lDformabon that was death announcement. and that isn't
several weeks old. aoina to happen."
........ r.-.,'-....
I
Lawn bowlln& bcnn no boa.Ddarlee u
Uaeee putlclpaata demonatrate darblC
A.mertcan-C.n•dlan Prln41eblp Day at the
~ Beula Lawn BcnrllnC Clab OD
Wedneeday. Ca!Mdl•n bowlen)olned clab
memben for tM eoetal ~t.
Yurchcnto. a Soviet iaeen'rce
operative form~ thaD two 49c1 w.
defected to the United S... ...
Aupnt and spent three moem~ detiriefed by CIA officialL lie .
away from bis pwds in ..ty
Ve1ll ber and resurfllCICld •• dn d
news conference beld at tbe Scmll
Embuay to announce bis dec:ilioe IO return to the Soviet Unioa. ·
Offshore ·
drilliilg
seen as
likely
Laguna official says
lawmaker dissension
gtves Hodel leeway
By PAUL ABCIOPLEY
,Of .............
Congress's inability to~ on an
offshore oil drillina plan for Cali-
fornia will leave the door opea for
Interior Secretary Donald Hode:bo
implement his own plan. an Oranee
Cout councilman warned Wedna-
day.
· Robert Gentry, city councilman in
Lquna Beach and a lead.in& oppo-
nent of offshore drillin& aJoaa 0natie
County waten, testfficd befOft a
Conpessional panel in Washinaioo.
D.C., Wednesday that drilliJll ~
could hurt tounsm and harm tbe
environment.
He testified. bcf ore an l l-melllbe:r
Conpessional ncgori.atina team that
was formed to develop a oew1 Soaf-
tenn ect-eemen for-the-Califomia coastline.-...
Representatives from California
were invited to testify at the infor-
mation pt.berin& session. Gentry wu
~-~/A2J
Plane wreckage searchers snag cliff
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Ol IM,,..., ..... aWt
A salvage company thought for at
time it had snagged the fuselage of a
single-engine plane that crashed off
Newport Beach, only to find their
grappling hooks had caught on the
edge of a cliff on the ocean floor
Wednesday.
Three men were aboard the plane
when it bit the water and sunk Sunday
night. The men are presumed dead.
Champion Air Salvage developed
engine problems Wednesday af\er-
noon and suspended its search, sajd
Russ KJein, director of Vessel As-
sistance Association of Amenc.a lnc.
Vessel Assistance ofNewpon Harbor
and Champion Air Salvage of
Laguna staggers
curfew for teens
By LAURA MERK
OltlieO.-, ........
The Laguna Beach City Council unanimously approved a
staggered curfew ordinance Tuesday night, replacing its 23-year-old
curfew of I 0 p.m. for all teen-agers.
Praising Police Chief Neil Purcell for his effons in prepanng the
new ordinance, the council agreed that 17-year-olds should not be
subject to the same curfew as 12-year-olds.
U ndcr the new curfew, cbifdren 14 years old or younger must be off
the streets by I 0 p.m. Teens l 5-16 years old would be v1olat1ng the law
after 11 p.m. and 17-year-olds must be home by m1dnighL
Because of several suits challenging curfew laws in other cities,
Purcell said the ordinance has not been enforced on a regular basis.
Purcell said many residents have complained about pan1es where
teen-agers have easy access to alcohol and drugs. "Today parents need
all the help they can get, .. Purcell said.
In addition, be said many runaways maJce their wa y to Laguna
Beach only to "hang out at the liquor stores and outside bars."
TONY
SAAVEDRA
Fo cus ON THE NEw s
house at 1878 Placentia Ave. was
transfonned into a police office, in
hopes of encOuf'llln& more Mexican
immigrants to repon cnmes.
While scrvin& the entire west Costa
Mesa area, the substation 1s intended
mainly to help bridac the cultural pp
between the Hispanic communitie
and their Enahsh-spcak1n1 ncia)tbon.
But before he ~ns to tackle the
social 1 ues. Cam3nllo has a smaUer.
but nonetheless annoyin&, problem:
Not many people know the subtta-
t1on 1s open.
Carlsbad were hired by the plane's
insurer.
Crew members were certain they
had found the wreckage of the Piper
Archer Wednesday morning and sent
a diver to confinn they had hooked it
while dragging grapphng hooks along
the ocean floor.
The diver reported he couldn't tell
what the object was because ofmurlcy
conditions.
"It turned out to be the edge of a
ledge," KJcin said ... The area they
were searching ranged from 60 feet to
160 feet. and they hooked onto the
top of the cliff'.
"They snagged a couple of thinp
again after that. but it just turned out
to be the ed&e apin."
(Pleue eee PLAllfS/A2)
Huntington teacher
pays mandatory union
dues, but vows fight
By ROBERT BARK.ER
Of ... 0.-, ........
Ocean View High School teacher
William Waxman vowed Tuesday to
fight on after school djstrict officials
-over hts vehement protests -
deducted $34.20 for union fees from
his March 3 paycheck.
Waxman1 35. an English and fine
arts instructor. said he beheves his
rights as an agnostic (a person.
according to the d1ct1onary. who
believes that the human mind cannot
lcnow whether there 1s a God) are
bein& overlooked 1n the battle.
He arso is planning to consult Wlth
.........................
Amencan Cavil Liberties Union at-
torneys in his dispute with the local
Distnct Educators Association over
union fee$.
"Every time l walk into the
classroom now. I rca1ue I am no
longer working for myself. I'm won-
ing for the union," be said.
"I cannot help but wonder why the
union would want a member opposed
to them to the ell tent that I am, unless.,
of course. It 1s simply the money
tssue.
"I do not intend to let this die until
(Pleue Me 1'&ACBSR/A2)
Helicopter
crash lands
near peak
A helicopter was forced to land
near Sanuago Peak on the Oraue-
R1 ven1de county line Wednelcfay
afternoon, shghtly in;urinaoneoftwO
peopk aboard. Oransc County
shenffs deputies said.
Lt. 8111 Miller described it u a
"hard land1na" about 2 p,m. in the
Nued Santa Ana Mounwn1 ov~
look1na south Oranae County.
Pilot Charles Beld&. 32, of Reclcm-
do Beach escaped tl\JW'Y and dedfoed
medical trcstment. B\lt ~
Terry Adams. JS. of Lona 8elicb
1uffired cuts and bnatlCS, Mtlk:r aid.
The two-teai hclacoP'ef owoed ~
Others have trouble find1na the
small office near the 1ntcncct.ton of
Placentia A venue and J ~h Street -
undwichcd between an animal h~
p11al and a hquor store.
(Pl ...... orncsa1 A2)
Lt. Lee Hanteon aad otncer Claano 0twier111o. ~t. ... a
Coeta 11 .. pollce 8tadoa tlaat opened VaJnttD• • DaJ.
1ne-cc Hehcopicn ~ juta liftea
of'f from nearby Siem hat and wu
approach1na Sant..,o Ptek wtia 11
lost rotor power. Bdda tried to ICl ''
down. but the en.ft rolled Ova'°" the
slope, Miller said.
The two men abollril_~~·
(Pl----~A2)
• -• __ ._...._._ ___ t _______ ....._ ____ _
~
\
- -----L-
A2 OrW9' COMt OA!LY PiLOTI Thursday, March 8, 1988 ... --
Select ion
of jury
begins in
death case
By STEVE MARBLE
OftMo.11) ........
Jul) selection opened this week in
the murder trial of Danny Floyd
W1 lhamson. a convkted murderer
ho 1!> accused of shooting and killing
:i Costa Mesa man last July near Big
Hear Lake
W1l.JJ!lmson, JS. faces the death
penaltfi'
Potenual jurors are bcmg inter-
\ 1ewed at the Orangcshow Fair-
grounds in San 8emardino because
no courtroom at the county Supenor
t ourt would accommodate the large ~
number ti'f jurors under conSlder-
111un
In death pe nalty cases, potential
1ururs are interviewed by attorneys
'" a one-to-one basis rather than m
t•ruups The latter procedure 1s used
111 non-capital cases.
I h~· selection process is taking
plad.' 1n a large auditorium at the
l(IUOt) fairgrounds, located about a
111k lrom the courthouse.
.\ spokeswoman for the San
ll.·rnardmo County District At·
"" ne) ·~office said such a procedure
,, uncommon but not unheard of m
"·'" Bernardino. \.\'tl hamson IS charged With the
I ul\ 26 1985, slay10g of Ross F
llu"'e ofCosta Mesa. Howe, 31. was
~1lJt1onmg with fnends when he was
1101 out'i1de a Big Bear liquor store
\lcord1ng to accusations. Howe
11Jd purchased a six-pack of beer and
"as walking to his vehicle when
\\ 1lhamson confronted him. de-
11and1ng money.
Howe allegedly ignored Wil-
1Jm'>on and continued to his truck
ount\o '>hen ffs deputies said W1J-
llJm!>on aimed a gun through the
1rmk·s "'1ndshield and shot Howe in
1he head
The Costa Mesa man was pr~
iounced dead at the scene.
Prosecutor Raymond Haight Ill
,,ud he 1~ seeking the death pe nalty
Ot'lause Williamson has previously
hccn convicted of murder and on a
lt'llet that he went to the liquor store
'11h the intent to kill svmeone.
\Ian Spears. the public defender
1t·p1l•,ent10g W1lhamson. has not
n ca led his tnal strategy but said his
lirn1 was into.ucated a1 the lime of
tltl' 'hooting ·
· 11r dropped h1~ gun at one po101."
J1d "lpears
\\ ilhamson also 1s Lharged w11h
I rtatening beating and shooun~ at
' •ur other ycoplc 10 a m101-cnme
rrn.· folfo'-' Ing the Sfa) 1ngouts1de the
•qlll>r SIOrl·
'-.hl•n lTc, deput1e' <ha'>ed and
r\entualh Lap1ured \\ 1lhamson, ac-
ording to report~
\t the time of the mudcnt. W1l-
ltam .. on "'a'> a fug111vc. hav10g failed
to repon to his probation officer m
'-.Jn Diego for nearl} seven months,
t1lCord1ng to records kept by the state
lkpartment ofrorrections.
Williamson has previously been
l1>nv1cted of murder. robbery and
hurglaf) and has spent much of his
ildult Ii fl-behind bars. court rcwrds
'i how
-
-
Greeter statue erected
Sculptor Guy Wllaon and hi• 9-foot K ulpture of the late
Eiler Lanen -the Laguna Beach gr eeter -u the atatue
took its place lo downtown Laguna Tuesday at the Greeter'•
Com er Restaurant.
Chees~ plant closed
a fter illness _reponed
LOS ANGELES< <\Pl -A report
of hstenos1s s1cknc~s 1n An1ona
pro mpted Cali fornia healt h officials
to close a Southern C ahforn1a plant
Wednesda) that makes "oft Mc\lcan-
stylc chee..c lilo.c the lo.ind hnkl·d tu a
fatal ep1dcm1c la!>t ~c.u
State hl·alth offit 1al!> ordered
Rodeo l ndu!.tnc~ in the C II\ of
lndu\tr\ 10 rc:calt thc:ir t hce\c pro<l-
ucl\ anti n·a~c: produu1un Wcdnes-
d :t \. Sjld l:in Wc:\\cll. a
<;f)()h·s"'11man lor thl· < ah lom1;.i De-
partmcnt of Food and Agncullure 1n
~acramcnto.
The shutdown of the plant was
ordered because two women and a
premature bab)' 10 Tucson, Anz ..
became Il l after consumption of the
cheese. Anzona state health offi cials
ordered a rec~ll of the Califom ta·
manufactured cheese on Wednesday.
The recall was precautionary 1n
C ahforma. wh ere no illnesses have
been linked to 1hc Rodeo cheese. Ms.
Wessell said.
PLANE SEARCHERS HIT SNAG ...
trromAl
Depending on their ab1hl) to get
ng10e parts toda} the searcher!> ma~
rl '>umc al m1d-da" tc.x.la} or pmtponc
•hl· "t'arch until tomorrnv. Klein
•• 111.1
1 ht airplane t.ra .. hcd about 11 15
rm ',unda} "'hen a ll1gh1 instructor
111d two ">tudent\ wert on a night
11 11n1ng l11gh1
\\ 11ncs\C<; told '\iauonal Trampor-
L1t1on "iafct" Board 1nHst1gator Oon
I l11rcn1e 1hc plane wac, fh10g '><>low
"\Cr the ~ater oO Newpon pier 1t
appeared to be on a "strating run "
The plane hanked 10 the nght and
llS \\IOg dipped into tht.• \\Jtcr
t·ausing the plane to can wheel '>CH'ral
timt"'> across the surface
Llorente c~11matcd the a1rualt was
tra" cling 10 C\tt.'SS ol IC)(J mph"' hen 11
crashed He bao,ed the estimate on
damage to the landing gear which
wa~ among the dehn-, .,._.an.her\
reco.,.cred on the -,urtace about a third
of a mile from '\icv. pon Beach
The in' e .. t1gator from the ft.:dcr JI
satet} board's Los Angeles office said
1t was unh kel) anyone could surv1Ve
the crash. and m vestigators believe all
three v1cums may ha ve been ejected
from the plane as tt whirled over
the water before sinking.
The men presumed lulled were
Philip Teffiey of Irvine, a night
mc;tructor employed by Aero A1te
C enter at John Wayne Airport: Barry
Kang of Newport Beach: and Benigno
Villa ofCoc;ta Mesa.
FOUNDER OFF AMIL Y WEEKLY DIES ...
From Al
lather. Fredcm:k Marnolt. who puh-
hc;hcd the ( 11 11cn Patriot newspaper
in Jalk\on l ll'iJ<>b was to pour lead
in to the hnotvpc malh1nc'>
'v1 arnott quu.:klv adva nced. he wa<>
1dH'rl1'>mg director of the paper
\~ h1k a teen-ager
\ "ancd career 1n the puhh'ih1ng
mdu•.tr\ follov.ed Mamon worked
lor Aooth Publishing C ompan)' Rid-
der Bro'>. ' npps-Howard Nev.s-
paper\ the ( 1nc1nnau Enquirer New
Yor~ Herald Tnbune. 'Washington
I 1mes Herald. Amencan Weeki ),
l'arade and Esq uire Magai10e, until
he founded Family Weeki)' 1n New
York C 1t}'. Af\t'r fi ve )'Car~ his wife Phyll1\
decided their fim ~n should be horn
rn an Francisco and the fam ily left
Nev. ) ork
Mamott lx·g.tn puhh,h1ng the \Jn
-fTanc1sco Dail} C ommcrual Nev..., a
bus10es-:. new .. papcr tor the \h1pp1ng
1nduc;tr.
1 he 0'v1 a1Tioll' mn\l'd to Orangl'
( ount\ 10 1968 \,\hen thl (r\IOl' ("
asked him to pubh'>h a ~peual '>Cl'l111n
promoung the new rnmmun•I>
He also pubh5hcd "Jev. World'
magazine and 'tarted a '>eflC\ ol
rotogra\ure ">unda' 'uppkmen t
magaz1ncc; that continue under h1\
fa m1l). including Thi~ Is Oran&e
Count). This Is San l>1C$O ( ount y.
This ls"Sou1hcrn (ah forn1a and This
ls 1hc na> Area Thi\ I\ the Inland
Empire will be 1ntroduu~d ttm \.ear
The mag:wnes. each wuh a m1n1-
mum circulatmn of 500 000 M'C
inserted 1n the Daily Pilot and other
metropoli tan newspapers.
"My father was very active in
publishing:· said his son. William H.
Mamou Jr "He was constantly
rail ed on b) leaders of the industry for
advice.
"He ne,cr retired. The publishing
busines~ to him was a way of life."
Memorial services wi ll be held at 2
p m unday at St. Andrews
Episcopal Church. 4400 Barranca
Parkwa)'. Irvi ne.
Mam on 1s survived by his wife
Phyllis and five cltildren; David
Mamou of New York, Phillip Mar-
nott of Australia. Toni Garland of
New Hampshire, William Marriott
Jr. and Patrick Marriott, both of
Orange County.
TRUANCY CHECKS UNDER REVIEW ••.
From A l
city. it would be particul:1rlv difficult
to identify specifi c truant~
"Our purpose 1s not to undert'ut thr
Fo urth Amendment protec:11011
against unreasonable ~an ht~. We
arc interested 1n making sure tha1 k1th
remain 1n school," Care) ~•d
"J'm cncoura&ed b:r the argu·
CRASH ••.
From A l
1na to tcrv1oc antennas located op the
peak U. Fore u·y Service worker\ ar
nvcd 11 the scene soon af\er the
acc1cknt 1n case spilled fuel presented
a fire hazard
•
mcnts .. lkd\worth 'k11d "I th1nli.
thmgs went V<'f) well and I don't
alwa\., \a\ that."
Bcdsworth ..aid a ~upremc Court
dcc1c;1on ma)' not be deli vered for
~\eral v.eck~ while JUSt1les mull the
1rn.1c But 1n dcc1d1na to review the
l3~. the ruhns or the 4th D15tnct
Court of Appeals was vacated, allow-
ing police depanmen1s to contin ue
their truancy-enfortement proaram~
The ca~ rtv1ewed by the upreme
< ourt involves the 1983 arrctl ofa 17·
year-old Fullerton Colleje student
Newport Beach police offic.trs, who
\atd the youth looked to be I S or 16.
s1opped him and a\kcd him to
produce 1denuficat1on. l he \tudcnl,
however. had no dn"cr'1 hC'cnSt" or
student f f) C3fd And whik he was
being questioned forther by poljcc,
officers discovered an envelope con·
u11n1ng LSD.
"It wa~ a specific $Cl of c1rcum·
stances that wouldn't normally
occur," Bcdsworth said ... Jf he had
been carrying identification, it
wouldn't have ,one any farther."
A juvenile court thm v the case out,
y1na the police had no reason to
M"arch the youth. The 4th District
C:oun of Appeals upheld the c:kemon
and said o ffi cers have no
authon 1.1t1on to stop ch1klrcn unless
they have knowJedac of truancy.
But Bedswonh. Van de Kamp,
Homa and others prcued the u-
premc Court to review the case and
allow pohcc to continue makina
truancy stop
I WLllHIR
---
More haze and fog inf ore cast
Night end morning low oloude ~ loclll fO(I today Wld Friday
wlll burn Off to NIZ:Y aneirnoon euntNne In the arano. eoa.t, the National WNther S.W. ..ad. "-Y-.
High• wlll ranee from the low 80a at the beac:het to the mid
70. Inland.
Lowa tonight wtll be In the low and mid 50t.
Along the Tnner coutal weteta, ltgtlt ~~wines. wlll blow through tonight except IOUthW911 to west wtnd• 8 to 18 knot• thl•
attetnoon and evening. The weetttty .._.., la 1 to 3 t .. t.
Extentiv. tow ctoudl,,._ and fog Wiii only partially c1ear thl• afternoon.
In the outer ooat., wattrt from Pt. Conception to Santa
Rosa ltland, nonhw..t wind• wtll blow 12 to 22 knots through tonight.
Calif. Tempa ·-~~ ~TS:
H~ l9W9 tl"0\111110 P m Tho.nCley w.,m_c~ .. \,e ...... 61 34 AllMtrly 41 A .....,,...., 71 Ml snow~• Rein F\lrt-Snow Oc~ .... SteeiOnlfY.._ =QW 10 H M1dlnd-OdllM IO 43 -We.-S.-• NOAA US o.ol Of eon-<• ... 41 M 27 ......... AllCltO<• " 01 ..... OrtMM 17 40 Atlenla 58 21 60 " ,_Yewtl AIWttlc: City 41 2i Not10ll,lla 51 u Calif. Temp• llldmot• 41 2t ()l(Wlorfle City 17 43 ~ M N 41 u 0..-t2 2$ OMnOo .. ao ::·!owe ttvougll 5 p"' ~ T.,_11~ 6a 21 ..._. .. " 30 ~ 47 2t -~ 11 51 TOIBll09 70 50 ... 17 ,. PfloenlJI 17 u ..,..._ .. &3 Y~V,., 71 40 ·
eo..on 50 ,, :::='.l'0r se 2S ....,_I ... ... ..,,.., 37 2t ., 37
_ ... 83 27 c:.., 58 2t "~ llO 24 llWIOCI 71 S6 awt.ton.S C 52 43 ~ 54 a3 llly'lhe IO 56 Surf Report °'*'-ton,W\I 41 '2 &4 H Celallne 12 M ClllceOO 40 24 71 M Cut¥WClly 71 51 ~ 47 23 Aldw'llOtld 49 33 Eur•• " IO lOCA"°" lllZI Diil
~ 41 2t 81 l.oull 83 a3 Fr9n0 71 62 ZUIMIMcll 24 w
~SC 51 ,, Sell&..-•Clly 12 35 LanC:Mlet ... 43 a.1'a Mor1ICe 1-2 w
Colulft«lua.OI\ 42 2t Sen Antonio 71 41 ~ .. M HewpOt1 IMdl 1·2 w
~.N.H 44 2' 8en JuM,P R. .. .. 71 IO Ian DleOO County 1·2 w
o.llM-A Worlll u 41 s.ttte 52 43 71 50 Outlooll IOt Fncs.y. Uttle ct>enge. == 44 2t == T1 35 Monro'fle 12 M eo 15 32 21 Montebello 71 M
O..MoWMll 42 as 89ok-ao 25 Monterey 62 52 Tides OllerOlt at 21 8~ N 31 Mt WlllOn 71 12
!IP-15 S4 Topea 52 40 ,.._.... 90 55
'*"'*• 11 -27 Tuceon 83 49 Newpof1 8MGll 61 55 TODAY
Fergo 23 13 TlllM 67 42 091llend 17 63 Flre1hlgll S:52 a.m. 5 7 ,,.......,. 25 ... ="'°" 47 $0 Ontttlo 91 •• FlmlOw 1:12 p.m. .1 0
01..iF• 5' 30 12 341 Plllm 99MQt .. 81 8-lclr.lgl'I 7:62p.m. 4 0
Ql-llDolo,N.C 52 2' W1111..e-. 40 a1 P!Medene 91 51
HMtford 41 :ze PMOl'loOIM eo .. FlUOAY
Helene 5' a& ,.,..,.,.,. 92 49 F°fl1 IOw l:t.43 Lm. 2.0
HonCIMll 16 71 Red Bluff 76 51 =:f._ ··45Lm 59
Houleon 75 65 Eztended ~Olly .. &3 1:49p.m ·12 ind191...,. ... :ze .__,o 1• ao 5eooncl Ngn 1-<>lpm 4.0
.lacbon.Me 71 ,, SenlaAne 73 M
"""-' 11 )0 Col ...... ~ dUrlng Ille Sarne Betbtta eo 62 ~City .. 40 ....,,.., llW0\11111 Moncley period SantaCNI " 53 ~ t'-IOOty ti 6 16 Lm and llelA
LMV-e-13 53 HllN lllkdey In the mid'°" and 70. Sarita Mana 70 51 :z::e1 &·53p.m
LJIUe Roe* 14 SI Cooing ""° ltla IOe lly Moncley lOwt SantaMona 61 " ,.... loday at 4·06 a..m and-.
~ 53 2t In IN fNcl 40ll and 50L s 1oe1<1on 75 50 ....... 1:64p.m.
OFFSHORE DRILLING SEEN AS LIKELY ••.
From Al
the only representat1 ve from
Southern California.
"I th ink we were able to show that
Orange County won't tolerate any
more air pollutJon or any threat of an
011 spill which damages our beaches,
nor would it tolerate the production
of a new industry that would dam~e
our tourism industry," Gentry said m
a phone interview from Washington.
"If we were dealing with this
question onshore, like in Yosemite, it
would never fly. We · host three
million tourists a year in LaJUna. the
same as Yosemite and a milhon more
than Maui," he said.
· Gentry said the negotiating team
includes congressmen and sena-
to,.,,.,.ho fa vor 011 development off of
~ornia as well as opponents, and
he iears they'll be stalemated trying to
develop a plan that's acceptable to
both factions.
"It looks like Mr. Hodel will get his
way because the committee will
probably not reach a consensus," he
said.
"It will gi ve him a lot of power.
He'll say, 'I'll have to proceed with
my current fi ve-year plan including
two lease sales off Orange County and
the Southern Cal ifornia coast:
"He'll do that: frankly, because this
is a case where the f edcral govern-
ment is in the hip pocket of the oil
industry, and the state is in the hip
pocket of the federal government,"
Gentry said.
The oil lobby is so well -entrenched
in Washjngton that opponents will
have difficulty blocking offshore pro-
duction locally, he said.
Gentry ·said local congressmen
have received large contributions
from the oil interests;. including:
William Dannemeyer (> l 0,000), R·
Fullerton; Robert Doman ($9,000),
R·Garden Grove. and Robert
Badham ($2,000). R-Newport
Beach.Dannemeyer ts on the nego-
tiating team.
__ Questions put tolum during Thurs~
day's session suqcsJJd. the~ deck
already is stacked, ~ntry charged.
For examele, one congressman
asked Gentry ifhe'Would be willing to
accept ooly two oil rigs off-the Orange
Coast if they guaranteed everybody
else would ·have two rigs and prom-
ised no more wouJd be permitted.
"That's like me saying lo my
constituents in Laguna 8each that
every neighborhood had to have a ga s
station and hotel,·· he said.
"Instead we should be looking at
the coast aod deciding which areas
should be protected."
Gentry said Big Sur and Monterex
are among nine "subarca deferral '
zones that will be protected from
drilling. "I asked that we be number
10," he said.
Citizen input will be needed to get
Congress moving, Gentry said.
"It is so political, so highly charged
wi th oil interests. if people don't
speak we'll see oil rigs off the Orange
County coast in a few years.
"Those of us who are elected
officials and participate in bearings
all the time are kiod of worn down -
hkc the fact that I was the only one
from Southern California here today.
"l f s hµd on short.not.ice to Ft.here
-1.Jcatn.ed aboUL tllc..lliaring last
week -·whereas the oil industry has
lobbyists here on the bill every day,"
he said.
bt>cal residents will have an op-
portunity to express their views
during a public hearing today in
Newport Beach.
The meeting in-the counci l
chambers at Newport Beach City HaJI
will be open to public comments from
I lo 4 p.m.
TEACHER VOWS FIGHT ON DUES •..
From Al
I have exhausted every poss;b1hty."
Setting the stage for the union fee
clash was the victory the union won
last fall that requires all teachers to
pay union dues unless they can prove
they have religious tenets objecting lo
joining or financially supponmg em-
ployee organizatJons.
The names of teachers who oppose
voluntary deductions arc turned over
to d1stnct personnel officials for
payroll deductions.
As ironclad as the contract
laniuage seems to be, Waxman
claims that 1t fails to take into account
the possibility that agnostics and
atheists have the same rights as
religious groups and may have con-
victions against un ion dues.
Waxman said he wants to gi ve his
union dues. $372 a year. to the local
Dollars for Scholars scholarship pr~
gram.
Wax.man previously claimed that
the deduction offees is a "fundamen-
tal injustice and an appallinf infringe--
ment" of his rights. He said he was
encouraged to participate in work
activities sponsored by the union but
not allowed lo vote on the contract.
Only 31 of the district's 711 fulJ.
time teachers declined to join the
union. officials said. and Waxman
apparently was the only one to protest
paying the union dues.
Bill Bianchi, executi ve d irector of
the West Orange County United
Teachers, an umbrella o rganization
of west county school teachers. de-
fended the new contract.
He said union dues go to cover the
costs onocat, state and federal teacher
associations. None of the money is
used 1n local political campaigns, he
said
He said that be<:~usc of teacher
union efforts, Wax man's recent pay
10creases tnple the amount of union
fee deductions.
Biancho said Wax man has ben-
efited from union ctTon s over the
years without paying union fees. "I
think he's just whining." he said.
OFFICER KEEPS WATCH ON COMMUNITY •••
From Al
Camanllo has spent much of his
time canvassing the neighborhoods,
pass10g out fliers and giving direc-
tions lo the substation.
While grateful for th e coverage in
local newpapers, be is contacting
Spanish publications that are more
likely to reach the Hispanic populace.
"After all, if they can't speak
English, they probably can't ~d4t •
either," Camarillo said, shaking his
head wi th a chuckle. "I thou~t we
could Just come out. hang a shield on
the door and people would know we
were hen:."
In dealing with the immigrants.
Camarillo is as much a teacher as an
enforcer.
"A lot of them didn't feel or realize
they were doing anything wrong," he
eitplained. "The key is aetting to
~iA,.~~E Daily Pilat
MAIN OFFICE
3.1<' Wftl 8•• 51 C °''' lol1M CA loll •OO<~\ lo• IS6() CO.le Meu CA 91616
know the culture, and most of the
younger officers arc going to learn it
real quick out there."
For instance, many Hispanic resi-
dents gather io the alleys behind their
homes or in their front yards, drink-
ing beer late into the night while
radios blare ranche,.,s and corridas
f:rom an all-Spanish station.
n'Sa common si&ht in East Los
Anaeles or other Hispanic neiah·
borhoods, where the tolerance from
adjacent residents is a little higher
than in Cost.a Mesa.
"Here. partying in fron' of your
home ~t lO o'clock '' beyond rcaso~ • Camarillo said, "although
we don't have nearlr, the problem
we've had years back. '
Lt. Les Harrison, who oversees
patrols in the westside area. con·
curred that relations between
Spanish-speaking residents and
police have become less strained.
"TheX arc more responsive to us
and don l give us as bad a ti me as they
used to," Harrison said.
Although the substation is open,·
renovation work is continuing on the
former fi ve-room house.
The smell of fresh paint wafts
throuJh the facility, while a small
elcctnc heater sits in front of the unhl
stone fireplace.
"We still haven't gotten all the bug.<1
out," Camanllo said.
The substation is open weekdays
from 10 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.1 with
Camtrillo coming on duty m the
af\emoon. Police aides now take
crime r,eports at the new office and
will eventually be doing fingerprints
and licensing bicycles, Harrison said.
Dally Piiot
o.ttvery
I• QuerentHd
o-•eotot e.ti !167' -& tdtt0tle! e.t2 •32• Ju1tcall 642-6086
MQl10Af 'r!Cllly II you 00
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0.-IP'.I Cop,•'9"' •NJ ()fe"Qt Coafl Plllll'"""V c-ny No -"or... ,_..,.,_. .o.10t• -11 .. °' ·-" ..
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., "'61 l1 00 .-.w,
VOL 71, NO. 15
-.
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