HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-03-10 - Orange Coast Pilot& ,
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'0MCA8TaOMAI * * 1 .... -.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-..-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-........ 1!1'•1 '
MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1986
'Inmate count.can't be.-cut'
Sheriff Gates refuses to release felons,
w111 go to jail for contempt if necessary
BJ STEVE MARBLE °' ..............
Orange County Sheriff Brad Oates
today predicted he soon will have to
decide whether to rel~ felons or
face a contempt of court citation for
· failing to reduce the~ail population.
"We may soon be 1ettm1 to the
point where we will have to choose
between turning a bW)lar or a robber
Marathon man llic--sf! of-Aabland, Ore. won the lnaacunJ
Lo9 elem Marathon
Sanday. Bl.
loose on society," said Oates, speak-
ing at a late morning press con-
ference. ·
Oates also chided the media for
spreadini what be called the mis-
conception that the county jail is .. full
of misdemeanor offenders and
drunks."
.. This m~ that our maximum
security jail 1J full of people who don't
Coast's
oceanic
nursery
in peril
Visitors advised
to see, not touch
tide pool creatures
Callf omla The Orange Coast's flat, sandy
A Navy enlisted man has beaches may be plnarounds to. sun
been arrested for In-bathers and surfers: •B\JJ the rock
veatlgatlon of selling outcroppings are hel1ie to pµJ-ple
claaslfled gove t spiny aninltii, black, prehitt'6!1't rnmen .• ,.loonni snails aQ~ a variety ofpf4Ut docum-.ta./.A3. · ~d animal l'fC'With colors that s6an
> Steven Spielberg WOQ. the." the spectrum.
Dlreclt>rs Guild of Amerl-Tourists flock to the sandy beaches to work on the "perfect tan," while ca~ s ,Prize for best-others discover tide pools to look for
belong there just isn't true," said
Gates.
Using last Friday's )ail population
as an example. be said of t.&e 1,438
inmates counted at midniaht all but
212 where beina held in connection
with felony crimes.
Of the 212 inmates beina held on
misdemeanors, be Kid I 3 bad violent
bacqround SS had medical prob-
lems. and five ~ deemed. to be
escape risks. The-mt were not
suitable for releue for other. reatODI,
be said.
Oates and county supervison were
found in contempt or court last
March by U.S. District Court J uctae
William Gray for failing to follow a
1978 court order to reduce crowding
at the county jail.
Presently, the mainjaiHssupposed
to boute no more than l ,SOO inmates.
On April I, the limit will drop to
1,400 inmates.
Gates said be~ used numerous
steps to reduce the.jail populatio,2:
including sbiftina inmates to an 1::.1
Toro honor farm and increasing work
furlouah procrams.
The sheriff received permission
Friday to besin releasina inmates five
days before their ICDtence is com-pleted. His deputment beun reJeu.
lDI them three da)'.I early Wt year to
help reduce the jail population.
But Gata inlisted be will IOOn be
faced with the pro1pcct of rdeasinc
potentially daneerous felons or fall.in&
lD contempt of Gray's order, wbic6
could result in a jail tentence for
Gates himself. ·
"PUttina fJ~lo k on the street just isn't the · t thing to db," said
Oates.
eee.JAIL/A2)
Carpool
lanes get
panel's
blesSing
Will stay on Mesa
Freeway 9 months
despite objections
By ROBERT HYNDMAN °' ..............
Car pool lanes on the Costa Mesa
Freeway will be kept in place for at
least rune more months following
action toda~ by the OranlC County
Transponatton Commission.
,. ~lrec~m of 1985 for
,, ''Tti~lor Purple." I A5 • r ,, _,..
Commissioners unan,imously a~
proved an ~nsion of the thrce-
month-old test program after bearina
reports that the lanes have reduced
traffic congestion even thoU&b more
motorists arc now osinc the &eeway. ortd ~
The running mate of
Ferdinand E. Marcos
claims the exited ruler I~
atm the legitimate presi-
dent of the Philippines.
/Al
Sports
UC Irvine's men's basket-
ball team has been In-
vited to participate In
post-season play In the
NIT Tournament./81
Chriata McAullffe
8earohen may ha•e
foa.nd the rematn• of
Mme of the Challen&er
a•tronaata, lncladfn&
po••lbly Chrl•ta
llcAallffe. A4
ltmEX
Advice and Games
BuUetln Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Death Notices
Entertainment
Opinion
Ponce Log
Public Notices
Sport a
Tetevfslon
Weather
A7
A3
A 10-11
BS-7
A8
87
A8-9
A12
A3 B•. 1-a
B1 -4
A9
A2
. ' LAuu
El
Focus u~ IHt Nrtn
the "~ect find,'' which includes
anything from a purple sea urchin to a
lobster.
But these tide pools are en-
dangered, according to the Depart-
ment of Fish and Game. In the past,
overzealous sightseers have taken
such a toll on these ocean aquariums
that some biologists estimate it may
take as long as 25 years for them to
return to their oriJioal state.
Animals living in the tide pools are
unique because they successfully
adapt to harsh changes in weather
conditions and yet are extremely
fragile when handled carelessly by
man.
Too many times enthusiastic vis-
itors have trampled and ~ched the
pools in an attempt to bwld a replica
of Mother Nature's artwork in a home
aquarium, scientists have said.
(Pleue 8ee Tmlt POO~/AS)
Purcell now
'super chief'
for Laguna
By LAURA MERK
Of .. o.lr ........
Laguna Beach has consolidated its
police chief and fire chief positions
and jfpointed Police Otief Neil
Purce as the new director of public
ultty. ·
Fire chiefRon Adams has been on a
medical leave of absence since August
when he suffered a serious heart
attack in his office. He has since filed
for permanent disability, City Man-
ager Ken frank said
During Adam's absence, Battalion
Chief Herb Jewell took over as acting
fire chief until he left the department
in December for a fire chiers position
in Corona.
Then Lt. Richard Dewberry toot
on the responsibilities of acting fire
chief, Frank. said.
By cutting the management pos.
(Pleue eee PUJtCSLL/ A.2)
o.lr ......... ..,.,.... ......
An advisory comnuttee for the
Route SS commuter lanes over-
whelmingly recommended continu-
ing the program. which designates
s])ecial lanes on lhe SS freeway
between the San Diego and Riverside
freeways..
But Drivers for Highway Safety, a
P"OUP opposing the car pool lanes,
said reported statistics showina in-
(Pleue ... CAil POOL/A2)
BB apartments
get rush repairs
By ROBERT BARKER
Of .. o.lr ........
A flurry of last-minute repall'S at
the crumbUng Commodore Circle
apartments in Huntington Bc:acb
may allow landlords to escape cnnu·
nal prosecution, City Attorney Gail
Hutton wd today.
R~er Healy (left). US, and Andy Telland,
14, Check tide pool9 for tiny eea creatarea.
They were -tcned to draw all the one.
they obeened.
Responding to a 15-0ay repair
deadline today, the majority of the
apartment owners have brought their
deteriorating buildings up to city
codes in recent days, officials said.
(Pleue Me RltPAJRIJ/A2)
Brad Pub, 198& U.8. Open W1aeelchalr Tennla champion,
ltpeab to madene. aboat OYercom.J.nt laandlcapa. Be wu one
ol a laoet of epeUen at Focu •88 at Lacuna Beacb BlCh. . .,
Laguna students
get straight talk
on drugs and life
Students hear the
peoplet eychose
for school's forum
By LAURA MER& °' .............
Doug Smith, a center for the Los
Angeles Rams. told of his struu.le to act to the bia leques while a t4=""ycar-
old airl spoke about dru&abusc on her
S3rd day without using dNgs.
A woman who had been !Cvcrely
beaten and shot 10 the head wb.tk
hitchhiking warned students of ttk
dangers of thumbing a nde. while
wheelchair tennis champion Brad
Parks talked about overcoming
handtc.aps
For the second ume 10 two years,
f ocus '86 attracted a number of
speakers to Laguna ~ch H!gh
School to speak on topics ranging
from skin c.arc to drug addiction. The
day-long event 1s~ponsored -by IM-
PACT. a parcn\s group formed two
years ago wuh the goal of altening
parents and students to the dangers of
d""I and alcohol abuse.
To som<' students. the scmmar was
lmlc more than a free day from class
work The were the ones who
(Pleue eee STUDE!fTS/A2)
Political foe calls Frizzelle invisible Raindrops keep
f alltng on coast
BJ PAUL ARCHIPLEY °' ................
CaJlinJ incumbent Nolan Frizzclle
"the invtsible legislator," Democratic
challenaer Jack Baldwin has launched
what he called .. an improbable but
not impo sible" campatan to unseat
the 69th District assemblyman.
Baldwin, runnina unopposed for
the Democratic nomination in the
June primary, said Frizzelle deserved
the nickname forcontributina little in
lc1.1slat1on since his election to the
AsKm bly ID I 980.
"Lot\ of people don't care for him
because he doesn't do anvthina, he
sort of takes up space," BaJdwin said.
"The less be docs the prouder be ii,
because he thinks he's keeping aov-
emment out of people's lives.••
Although he considers f rizzclle a
"decent, educated penon," Baldwin
said the U!Cmblyman "contributes
little to creative problc:m•solvina."
In fact, Baldwin sa.id his own
Democratic Patty is like the Re-
publicans in its failure to promote
visionary leaders rather than "aood
mechanics."
"The best people areo 't surf1C1na to
the top, and we AC' mcchan1es who
can play politics, he said. "They're
aood at undcrstand•n the structure
and bow to work with it. but they lack
virion to deal with soc1ety~s prob-
lems."
Undentandably, BaldWJn reserves
his stronaest criticism for the Rc--
publicanswho, he charaes, speak out
only when they're attackina someone
rather than offerin1 solutions.
"They Ute ft.at tactics rather than
vision. It makes problems worse, and
makes peo~ lea trustful of their
poli ticiatH, be aaJd.
"Traditional politics is a con-
tnbutor to the prob&mu. It's reK\JVC.
Fiftltf somebody u \he cu.lprit, such
u daimina Rote Bird ii the reuon for
more crime bcaute she doesn't
suppon the death penalt).'' Baldwtn
said.
"If pcoplt took the ume to hsten to
her ideas. tbey"d learn she's a 11ftcd.
visionary leader. the type of lcader-
sh•p Cahfom1a should have.··
Baldwtn beltcv.es the <kath penalty
isn't the solution to crime control, but
rather a reactionary answer <o the
problem He propo leaislators look
to the root of the problem and wor~
from that vantqe point
"Thesoluuon tom.me 1s to~.atc a
home and school environment of
suppon and trust. rather then 'u
venus them: .. ht said
He said the 1111e da\ i1tC'\ in
Cahfom1a. which ranks SOlh 1n
nimo11 In reacher-to-srudent nttos..
means that each student atlS llttk
personal attention from his teachers.
He proposes construction of new
.cbools to lower dass Slze to 2S
students. shutt1na down &ntiquatcd
schools. and boos11n1 teacher
salines.
"We've aot to set beck to the front
of the plCk. R<"ad,ju~t our state budget
pnont1es," he wd °™'ct Count)' should readJUSt tt
transportation pnont1e\, too.
Bald'Wln said
"The question of 1ransponallon
(Pleue tee 8Al.DW'l1'/ A2l
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of .. o.lr""" .....
A wmdy storm lashed the Orange
Coa t early today, while forecasters
advised that 1t may be a good idea to
k~p the umtmllas handy throuahout
the v.ult. Mo~ t loudy skle scat-
k~ 'howcrs and powerful austs arc
predicted throuah Fnday
The bulk of the downpour 1
expected today and T~y. with the
chance of thundttshowtn tont&h\.
. tan Ma ~)' of\ht attonal W tbcr
Service ta1d.
..-ttp1n& aero Southern C£_1t.
fom1a. t~ Pacifk tonn tw spurTCd
(Pl .... eeeUant8/A2t
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Al** Onlnge Coat DAIL y PILOT I Monday, Mareh io. 1986
HB planners want 50acres
added to Bolsg linear park
By ROBERT BARKER
CM .. 0.-, .... IWI
liununaton Beach Planning Com.
missioners want 10 put about SO
additional acres into the Bolsa Chica
linear park to ensure that it's large
enough to accommodate bikers and
riders on its scenic tr'ails fron1
Huntington Beach C'entral Park to
Bolsa Chica State Beach. ,
The planning comm1ss1on has ap-
proved a resolution calhng for 1he
park to contain 177 acres -as
oppo ed to the 120 to 130 proposed
by city and Orange County officials.
Planning Commissioner Grace
Winchell, who draf\ed the resolution
along with colleague Richard Rowe.
said the goal is to make sure there's
about 8.S acres 1n the park devoted
strictly to public use. ·
··Tht-staff couldn't give us figures
I hat we wuld ll'>l' 1• Winchell said. "so
we settled on what seemed rtason ·
able. We thought 85 actts would be
the minimum figure humans need."
Winchell and Rowe and others say
the) fe;ir tha1 011 dnllina opera11ons. a
Sou1hern C':1lifom1a Edison Co fa-
c1hty and the relocation of en·
vironmentaJly scns1t1vc habitats may
combine to crowd out people from
the park.
As a result of a compromise
agreement, landowner Stgnal Land·
mark must rcloca1e about SS acres of
wildlife hab1tat'i. Winchell and Rowe
fear that most of the hab1ta1s will be
moved to tht linear park.
The proposed relocation of much
of the habitat areas in10 tht linear
park also has been named as a
problem by the Huntington Beach
Co .. 1he pnncipal owner oflnnd in the
bluffiop area.
Officials of the land holding com-
pany have said they would like to
preserve the bluff propeny for rest·
dential use and not dedicate it for
park land or wildlife habitat.
William Q. Holman, a Huntinaton
Beach Co. offic1al, said the proposed
ex pa oded park ts not compa1iblc with
city needs. "They (plannina com-
missioners) are going far beyood
what's been envisioned for a linear
park," he said.
The state Coastal Commission.
after years of wrangling, has given
approval to a recreational and resi-
dential development on 1.600 acres
of marshlands south of Warner
A venue and adjacent to Pacific Coast
Highway in unincorporated Orange
County island surrounded by Hunt-
ington Beach.
The plan calls for the preservation
of9 l 5 acres of wetlands, construction
of up to 5, 700 homes, a 1,200-slip.
manna and a possible navigable
channel 10 the ocean.
REPAIRS RUSHED AT HB APARTMENTS ••.
From Al
But 1hc names of some who
allegedly have dragged their fee l o\Cr
the )Cars, have been turned over to
Hutton for prosecution. Whether
she'll prosecute depends on what city
in'if)('ctors find at the end of the day.
Hutton said
·-rm extrcmel> impressed "Ith thr:
progress made b) the maJon t > of the
o"'ners," Susan Tull). the c11y's
en vironmental officer, said "It's
been remarkable BuJ there's some
\\ho are not $Oing to make n ...
City officials ha ve been spamng
wi th owners for years to clean up the
group of 20 fourplex apartment
buildings that were constructed in the
I 960s. Owners have been ordered to
correct about 700 building and health
code violations. according 10 Tully.
The violations include weakened
cei lings, flooring, balconies and stair-
ways 1hat Tully termed "life-threat-
ening" in some instances.
The overcrowded apartments,
populated mostly by Hispanics and
Southeast Asian refugees, also have
spawned repons of backed-up toilets,
broken heaters, holes in floors, shod·
dy repairs and rodent infestations.
The apanments. according 10
Patrick Spencer. a city housing and
redevelopment project manager,
have had v1nually no maintenance
for the last dozen years. "h was down
to the sticks," he said.
Spencer said, however, that one of
the owners -attorney Richard Hart
-has made as "big attempt" to clean
up his apanments but that over-
crowding in some units bas created
problems.
One survey showed 24 adults Ii ving
in one three-bedroom apartment
during a peak ti me for migratory
workers. be said.
JAIL COUNT CAN'T BE CUT... Contaminated From A l
I k said he would rcc;1sl such a
move. c-' en tf 1l meant being tound in
rnntempt or going to Jail himself.
"Wh> should the public have to be ,
locked up in their homes." Gales
aJded
He also took exception w11h a
report that th1t Jail has violated the
1.500 1nma1e ca p three times this
}car. He said departmental inmate
mun ts show that the Jail fell below the
<.ap nn r:irh nfThoc;e date'i
Gates said the rnunty must find a
way to streamline the P.rocess of
finding a new county JaJl site. He
urged the pubhc to support a Jail bond
issue on the June ballot.
He said the earliest that a new
county J ail could be built would be
1990 Gates said experts who have
studied coun1y cri me fisures estimate
that there will be 9.164 inmates in Jail
b) the }Car 2000.
PURCELL 'SUPER CHIEF' ...
From Al
1t1on. the c11y wtll \avc $60.000 a year
I-rank said DewbcrT) will become
drnJJil fire chief while It Jim
"rreme) Wlll 1ake on the ttlle of
!~·puty police chief
"We have some good. relatively
~ oung, management people below the
adman1-;trat1on." Frank said. "It's a
ROod 1ra1111ng opportunlly for them.''
Purcell has no background in
lirefight1ng De"t'>cf'T) will take on all
ti e field-related rcspons1b1ltt1es
~rank sa1d
£he Cit~ ~1111 plans IO hire another
•·re hattahon chief to replace Jewell
"\.\. hal we're talk in$ about 1c; g1v1ng
thc·rn the admin1~trat1 vc <;upport they
ha" e not had 1 n the past... Purcell
.. aid "I "Ill be looking at the
Jcpanmcnl do<;eh and I would like
10 learn ruorc ahout the fire sen tee ..
e added Neil Purcell
irrigation
drains closed
MENDOTA (AP) -Pluaain& of
the drains that carry selenium-tainted
1mgat1on runoff to Kesterson Na'-
tional Wildlife Refuge began today.
The decision to quit using
Kesterson in western Merced County
as a ponding basin for the drain water
came after complaints of bird deaths
and dcfonn1ties from selenium which
was leached from western Fresno
County soil and cArried through the
dram. Selenium is an clement that is
needed by humans and animals in
minute quantities but which can be
toxic in larger amounts.
A construction crew installed the
first of 115 eaTthrnphrgs that will be
placed along I 08 miles of collector
pipelines and 32 miles of closed
pipelines near Mendota, said Liz
Hudson, spokeswoman fo r West-
lands water District.
The·pluggiog project will continue
for several weeks, with 48 plugs to be
tnstalled m the most heavtly drained
lines in the fitst phase. The second
and third phases will follow immedi-
ately after the first is completed.
Hudson said.
Cnticism that irrigation runoff
contaminates ponds used by wildfowl
at Kesterson caused Interior Sec-
retary Donald Hodel to order the San
Luis Dram shut down one year ago
next Saturday.
S TUDENTS HEAR ANTI-DRUG APPEALS •••
F rom Al
nd1scrc~tl~ 'to1.>d b} the door
gtanted around and then dashed to
treedom before the last speaker took
" c stage
But many o ther ~tudents tound the
'~minars cnhghten1ng.
"It's a great wa\-to teach u-; abou t
11 ug' w11hou1 teli'ing us not to do 11
I hl'\t' people are hert' becau~ the)'
.int to tell U\ something.'' !.atd 16-
ar old Todd Au\ltn
· \nd )OU hear 11 from people vou
'r\pel t. like pro football player~ ...
1ddl·d flrcnt Oulh'ibaum, 14
\tudt·nt\ were allowcc1 to ~C'lect the
\fw·1ke" tht•.,. "'ould hear 1n thrC('
hour long prc'>cn1at1ons 1n
la\\1rn1m' 1hroughou1 tht' campus
But \l111t \tar.,hall of ('oac;t View
l\kmorrnl H11<.p1\i1I 1n Long 8<."ach
wa<; 'iO popular :n h>t U'> '84. he. along
with l>oug ~rrnth. gave prescnta11ons
tn all the \tudrntc; 1n the gvmnas1um
'Who knov., ~omcone you believe
ha<i .1 pmhl<'m w11h alcohol or drugs'>"
J<;kcd Mar<;h,111
.\lmMt ever' \ludcnt 1n th~· gvm
n mum ra1'1cd a luind
"No one put~ 1n 1hc1r d1Jry 1n \1xth
grade that· 1 warn to grow Ufl and be a
drug addict.' " ~11d Mari.hall, a re-
covering alcoholic who 3Cl:Ompan1ed
,;i teen·ll~e patten! from the hospital
1 an ya. 14, wai. ne rvous when c;hc
stepped to the podium
"It wai. the summer between
SC' enth and eighth ~adc A fnend got
me some buds and 11 was totally rad, I
loved 11." she said of her first
cllpcnence wtth manJ uana. "But
when school started I wai. i.mokmg
eve!) da) after school.''
Tan}a )Oungcr than most ot the
students surrounding her. had aged
beyond her years Barely a teen-a~er.
'>hl' has tned to commit su1c1dc
.-.cvcral times, tned almost every drug
a .. a1lablc and now 1s entenng her
fourth month 1n a rehabtlitatt on
program
.\ fra1d !lhl' wa., preachrng to her
older peers. ranya ~•d. "I'm not
\3\ 1ng don't do anything, JUSt do 11 in
m0dcrat1on I u~d to he one of yo u
and no" I'm d10crt•n1. I went to the
extreme."
Ju'\t a kw hour'I earlier. fi ve 01her
vouth<i talked about their expcnences ~1th alcohol and drugs.
Soupy, 18 made his first talk in
public about hts rehabilitation.
He began smoking manJuana and
drinking 1n fifth ~ade. Trouble in
school landed him in North CarohfVl
to live with his father. Poor grades
there landed him in a military school
where he quickly learned he could
dnnk cough medicines to get h1~.
At 13 he ran away from lhe school
and hitchhiked with a fncnd to
California. Once he arrived in Los
Angeles, he abandoned his fncnd to
get home in time for his mother's
birthday. "I left my friend 3,000 miles
away from home. I just left him
there," he said as if apologizing for the
hundreth time.
Sou~ was in an out of juvenile hall
three times and had a crimi nal record
by the time he was 14. On his last
arrest. three m onths before
Christmas 1984, the judge sent him to
a rehabilitation center.
"I cried. That was humiliating and
a guy hugged me and told me be loved
me uncondiuonally. I didn't want to
be there. There were bomosexuaJs
there. Or at least, that's what I
thought. I never had anything uncon-
ditional in my life ," he said. "I didn't
understand 11. I thought they were
after my money."
After his release, Soupy said be so
afraid to be on his own that he
returned to the hospital during the
afternoons for first 14 days, going
home onl y to sleep. Today three ofhis
old friends arc sober, two died in car
accidents and two stm use drugs, be
said.
When asked what was his goal in
hfe, he said, "My goal is to stay sober
for the rest of the day."
BALDWIN CALLS FRIZZELLE INVISIBLE •••
f'romAl
aflcrts me bcrnu-.c: behind m\ homt·
in lrvanc:-are bc<lut1ful htll'> v.ht·ll lhl
Ir' inc 1ran.,ponat1on corndot "'""'d go:· he 'ICltd 'Td hate to '>t'<' tho'>t hill\
!.!•' .. r he ul11m111e \OIU1100 :.ind If\
now olmo" impo,,1hle. 1~ mol't' ma~'I
transit.
"People arc ~o onented toward the
automobile that to overcome that
~ould take enormous pobh1.al lead-
rr1h1p, and I don't thmk 1t ex1.,t~"
Raldw1n said pnvatc industry and
government should collabo~te on
r~arch and development PTOJccts to
develop new solutions to the South-
land's transpol'lltJon woes. He aJso lamented govemment
prt>~'lure to end Amtrak ~uh<11d1c\
f
Jfl~u111g. I than~ we should tntreasc
·\mtrak rather thl\n cltm1natc 11 Put
c;1at1o'tl'i 10 ln1ne and M1i.s1on VteJo.
keep the c;ta11on 1n an Juan
( ap1~trano. l\nd '13rt <1elhng people
on Amtrak
"If we're on the leading edgr of
technology why do we ha ve an
archaic tranr;portat1on S)''1cm? ll's
bccau\C wr have leaders like Fnnelle
who don't hl\VC the count c to b1tt the
hullet"
Baldwin al<;o said poht1C1aM have
to \top foot-dragging on Oranae
County's air transponat1on prob-
lem'
A new a1rpon needs to be built in
south Ora nae ( ounty or nonh C):\n
Oiego County he \atd
"We're going to have to make some
sacnfices, float some bond issues or
devise creative Cinancmg with heavy
inclusion of pnvate indu5try and she
pubhc sector that will benefit from an
:i.u;~rt " he said.
• Perhaps the public would accept a
sales laJl for an airpon even thouah
they rcJccted one for hiahways."
Baldwm has been married 16 years
and 1s the father of a IQ.month-old
boy. He has been active 1n the
Democratic Pany since moving to
Orange Counry 12 years ago. Hts
involvemen1 includes mcmbcnh1p
on the state Eitecutivc Board, the state
Central Committee and the Ptatforftl
Committee. He was the Democratic
nominee for state Ancmbty 1n the
74th d1nnct race in 1980.
c
Cloudy skies, more rain ahea d
LOS ANOEL£8 CAP) -A Pedfte etorm hftC)t llCl'OM
Southern Celltomle todey, dumping hMyV rain on ~one
hllllldee and buffeting mountain and deMf1 tr1V9!«1 with high
wind•. Sk,_ Wiii be pet11y doudy TUMdey, end m0t• wtt weather II In prQtPKt tot let• In the WMtc. llCCOtdlng to the National
WNthtt~. Sh0wtr9 Md I few thu~ Ihle ewnlng. Pertly
cloudy tonight Md Tue.day. SGl1tered ahowerl. mainly Tueaday afternoon. 8rMI)' at tJmea.. Hight In tM mid 50s to low 80a. LOWI
In the mid 408 to mtd 508.
From Point eooo.pdon to the Mex~ Border -lnnet wat••: Small etaft ldvtaory from Point COnceptlon to Point
\lle«1te. 'from Point Conception to Point Vloerlte w..t to
IOuthWM1 wind• 15 to 25 knot• through Tueaday.
U .S •• Tempe •A\.~.~ 11.-oNTI.
'q~~W1J1'1'1-Cold ....
SllOw•rt A_, FVrrtH SllOw Oecuoed..,. Sl1tionwv&y
-W•"* ~ NOM US Olol ot C:O--c•
T\JHOAY a nun 8.Ma.m ,345pm t $8 p.m
..Ot ••
Sun Mtl IOcl.., M 561 p m ., r-
T.-cl«)' 11 e:oe a.m Ind ..i1eot4n11
5·67 pm · Moan M11 1od1y 11 e. 1e p.m • r!M9
TueedeY at 8:5-4 II.II\ •• ...0 Mii ag.in •I
7•15pm
SERIES OF SHOWERS PREDICTED .•. From Al
flood watches, surf advisories and
small-<.:raft waminss in some areas.
Dangerously high winds gusting at
40 mph arc expected to buffet
mountain and desert areas, aocordfog
to the weather service.
Despite the rains, Orange County
freeways were relatively clear this
morning of the usual fender-benders
tha1 come with inclement weather,
Officer Paul Caldwell of the Cali-
fornia Highway Patrol said.
"Believe it or not, it's been a pretty
normal Monday," Caldwell said.
Overnight showers dumped . 70 of
an inch of rain in Costa Mesa by 8
a.m .. with .S9 in Huntington Beach,
. 43 in San Juan Capistrano and .46 in
Irvine.
The Southland enjoyed a brief
respite from the rains Sunday. follow-
ing a Saturday deluge that apparently
claimed the hfe of a 12-year-old boy
who fell into the rain-swollen Los
Angeles River.
Police planned to continue their
search today for Jose Grajeda, Los
Angeles police Lt. Gary Rei chl ing
told the Associated Press.
An air and ground search Sunday of
the river's concrete channel all the
way to the mouth at Long Beach
failed to tum up any sign of the boy.
Reich.ling sajd.
The Nauonal Weather Service
issued a heavy surf advisory, predic-
ting swells up to 13 feet high late today
at west-facing beaches .
A flash flood watch was activated
for eastern Santa Barbara County and
Western Ventura County. where
summer brushfi res ha ve stnppc~
hillsides of soil-anchoring vegetation
Small-crafl warnings were set for
waters from Point Conception south
to Point Vicente on the Palos Verdes
Peninsula.
Snow was expected in the moun-
tains above 5,500 feet
Gray skies will continue ton1gh'
and Tuesday. with highs in the mid
50s and low 60s for coastal rcg.aons.
The low tonight 1s expected in the
mid-40s to m1d-50s.
Considerable cloudancss 1s ex·
pccted Wednesday through Friday,
with scattered showers and gusty
winds. Highs in the coastal plane will
range from 58 to 68. wi th lows
between 42 and 52. the weather
service said.
Navy enlisted man arrested,
linked to selling secret paper
POINT MUGU NAVAL AJR STATION (AP) -A
Navy enlisted man has been arrested for investigation of
selling classified government documents, the FBI said
Monday.
Thard Oass Petty Officer Robert Dean Haguewood
was arrested March 4 by the Naval Investigative Service
after an undercover probe in which he allegedly was
observed selling part of a .confidential document, FBI
spokesman Fred Reagan said.
avoid detcct1on, and can carry conventional or nuclear
warheads.
Gary Comerford, NIS spokesman, refused to say if
the document was sold to undercover agents or if the)'
witnessed the sale.
"The incident appears to be isolated. It appears there
has been no contact with any foreign national, ..
Comcrf ord said
Information on Hagucwood's Navy secunty
clearance and his job tasks was not immcd~ately.available,
Point Mugu spokesman Ray Lucascy said. His age and
hometown also were unavailable.
"The suspect made known he wanted to sell some
information," he said.
The alleged sale took place at an undisclosed location
off the base, and Haguewood was arrested after he
returned to the air station 50 miles northwest of Los
Angeles. Authorities did not iJnmcdiately disclose whether
Haguewood was attached to the Navy's Pacific Missile
Test Center at Point Mugu, which in recent ~cars ha~ been
conducting tests of the new Tomahawkl.'hnse m1ss1lc.
The Navy has Launcbe<l the Tomahawk. from
submarines and surface ships in the 35,00Q.squarc-m1le
test range at land and sea targets.
Haguewood allegedly sold half of a document
marked "class1fred" to the undercover officers or 10
another person while the officers watched, Reagan said.
There are three categories of secret information. and
classjfied is the lowest ofa confidential nature, Comerford
said.
The cruise missile is a subsonic, jet-powered missile
with small wings. It is designed to fly close to the Surface to
Comerford would not say to whom Haguewood
allegedly wanted to sell the information.
CAR POOL LANES BACKED BY PANEL ...
From Al
creased highway use and less conges-
tion are inaccurate and misleading.
Don Coulson, a group spokesman,
said the lanes next to the center
divider -which arc reserved for cars
carrying two or more people-pose a
serious hazard to all motorists be-
cause of the high speed car poolers
travel at compared to those in
adjacent Janes.
'We have detennined that much of
the glowing optimism contained in
the draft report bas been based, as we
have always held, on data skewed to
reflect only the most positive aspects
of car pool USIJC," Coulson said.
Represcntauves from the Cali-
fornia Hiahway Patrol and the State
Dcpanmeot of Transportation, how-
ever, said the tta.ffic and safety
statistics reported to the Tnnspor-
tation Commi11ion were accunte.
The advtsory committee found:
•More people arc car poolina.
Since the commuter lanes went into
~~~~~E llily Pilat
MAIN OFFtCE
J)() Wtll 8.ty '' Cotta-...... CA .,... IM>..,. eo. 1S80 Cotta~ CA 92828
effect, the number of car pools has
increased by 43 percent in the
morning southbound commute and
by 28 percent traveling northbound
after work.
•Non-car poolcrs in the other lanes
arc experiencing less traffic congcs.-
tion. Stop-and-go congestion is only
half as common as it was before the
car pool lanes.
•Overall use of the freeway is up by
43 percent as congestion ·has been
reduced and motorists who were
using nearby surface streeu have
switched to the freeway.
•The number of accidents has
decrcucd slightly.
The committA:e also reported that
drivers usina the lane illqaUy com-
prise 9 peroent of the momini
commute traffic and 6 percent of the
cvcnina commute.
In approvina the committee's rec-
ommendation, the Tnnspon.ation
Commission also endorsed steopcd-
up enforcement of the lanes by the
CHP. fine-tuning improvements and
more vigorous promotion of car
pools and bus express routes .
John Boslet, the Irvine Co.'s direc-
tor o[ regional transportation, urged a
contmuat1on of the car pool Lanes
calling them "by and Large, very succe~sful...Don't give up on the
cxpenment."
Boslet also announced Irvine Co.
plans to m111ate a mini-bus service
between Anaheim and Newport
Center which would provide non-
stop scrvic.c for SI each way.
The 17-passcnger buses would
leave Anaheim each morninJ and
return from Newport Center 1n the
evening. using the Costa Mesa Free-
wa_y commuter lanes on its route.
The servi~ is expected to bqin
April 28, he said, a.nd Will be pan of a
90-day experiment paid for by the lrvinc Co.
ei.~ eot '42 sue o.-.. • ~"'-. 842 •i21 Justcall 642-6086
~,.t•dlr 11 ~ oo
"<>I "I"" YIN' ~ by \ 30 P I'll COi~ O!!IOll 7 p ••
M'IV y(/41' toi.>v ..ti 0t
0.-•0 C<loyttgM t!MJ Otanot Coltt ~ Coml>•"Y NO
...... "0""' '""'"'"Ont eo1or..i matMf OI ICIWnlM
..,.,.,, ,,...,,. .... , Ot •llCl'Odlic90 """"°"' -·· .,.. -'1lt()91''0fll-
VOL 11, NO.•
What do you like about the Dally Pilot? What
don't yoll like? C:a.JI the number above and your
messqe will be recorded. transcribed and de-
livertd to the appropriate editor.
The same 24-hour an1wcrin1 service may be
used to record Jetten to the editor on any topic.
Contnbuton to our Lctten column must include
their n.ame and telephone number for vcrifitatton
Tcll.s us what's on your mind.
'laruroar 1no ~Y "
~CM O<I -._ yCllJ< "'P'f D)' 1 I "' • tie•oi· 10 a "' 1"<1 ,_ CQOy *
,.. l;i...,...!IG
ClrculeOon
Tetephonn
M04ll
O>tnge C"· ..... , "' .... ~
~~~ ......
'
..
J
Orange Coat DAILY PtLOTIMondey, March 10, 18M * Aa
TIDE POOLS MAlflt FASCINATING VIEWING ON ORANGE COAST ••• homAl Business Women
seeking members
1:he Ora~ge Coast Charter Chapter of the
Amen.can Business Women's Association wiU bold
a •Pnna enrollment event Tuesday at C.oco's
Restaurant in Fountain Valley.
All women who arc employed are eli&iblc for
membership. Further information about ABWA
and the special event may be obtained by callina
Judy Blalock at 839-0280 or Denny Lucero 11 S36-064S.
Brea•t cancer semlnar 11et
"Options in Breast Reconstruction Following
Mastectomy" will be the topic of a free seminar
Tuesday from 7 to 9 p.m. an the audjtorium of
Fountam Valley Regional Hospital. prs. Eugene Elliott and Malcolm PauJ. both
plastic surgeons, and a volunteer from the American Ca~cer Society will conduct the program. Reser-
vations may be o\)tained by calling Sheila Holliday
at 966-8 l 74.
. Sales ez~s to convene
A "shirtsleeves seminar" will be' held Tuesday
from S to 6 p.m . at the Sheraton Newport for
members of the Sales and Marketing Executives
association and the geneTal public.
Representatives of Dcsjgned Graphics and
Oear Directions will share tips on making effective
sales presentations. CaU Georgie Nash at 499-5145
or Susi Kulda at 538~2510.
Development tali: planned
But they soon discover that somethina
so intric.te and eompUeated is not easily
reproduced. said John C\lnnioaham, a
marine biolOI)' teacher at Laauna Beach ri1ab School. Much of the plant and animal
life brouaJu borne quickly dies.
~en uplored rtsPC?Mibly, however,
the tide ~Is offeT visnors a promisina
&bow, wd CunniJl&ham.
Because so many marine arumals act
their stan an the tide pools, they arc offen ref~ to as the ocean's nurseries. ••"u ~e animals arc competina for
spate. It i• the most densely populated area
in the marine environment bccau1e of the
dJvenity of space," said Cunninaham.
A quack look in the pool seems only to
show a mass of rocks and plants. But the
animaJs move very slowly and must be
closely watched by a patient observer.
Hermit crabs, fish, worms, star fish and
lobsters can all be observed by the quiet
visitor. Once the animals bear the pound-
ing feet of an approachin& person, they
scamper Into caves and crevioes.
On a sunny aftCrnoon people can be seen
with camera and sketch pad scur:rying
about the slippery, moss-<:overed 'rocks
from Newport lo Dana Point.
On weekends, city workers stroU the
Newport Beach area to educate the
onlooken about the pools.
Several rules should be strictly adhCTCd
to before venturing off for the day, said
Cunningham.
•First check to sec if the pools are
protected, as are most tide pools in
California. ln state refuges people may
collect some.ofthe fish and shell creatures,
but only with a sportsfishing license. Jn
reserves, absolutely nothing may be col-
Robert Dunham, president of the Newport
Economics Group, will speak to the Investment
Division of the Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board
of Realtors Wednesday morning on land develop-
ment in Southern California.
lected.
The tide pools at Little Cocona have
been depleted by poachers, said Ray
Garver of the Newpon Beach Marine
Dcpanment. "I was there last week and it
was really bleak. It was very sad for me,"
said Garver, who would prefer that all tide
......................
Stacey Untamo and Keith WoldnCer. both of lrYtne, ecour tide poola for miniature marine life.
The meeting is scheduled for 8:30 a.m . in the
board office, 40 I N . Newport Blvd., Newport Beach.
Call 645-6269 for further information.
carrying along one of seve~ available like its name) shelters the kelp crab, a wt-paper~ck books lo help 1~ent1fy the.plant moving little critteT that tickles the band
and ammaJs. Check the Lide tables an the and has the feel of plastic.
Breast I eedlng tali: ln LB pools be protected from collectors.
water as soon as possible, said Cun-
nib.gham. The sumvaJ of many of the
marine animals found in the system is
dependent on their natural ability to retain
moisture because they spend much of the
day exposed to the sun. Prying shell
animals from rocks drains their water
surplus.
n~wspaper for the best time and day to The serpent star, a member of the star v1~1t, he s'!ggested. Look f~r minus tides, fish family, slithers like a snake. Its body is
saad Cunruogham -anything undCT ZCTo. · smaller than a peony and it has Iona, •Look at the animals and plant life, but
please don't disturb them, said Cun-•"And the cardinal rule is, don't tum skinny artJ'\S. "The womanly art of breast feeding and
overcomin$ difficulties'' is the topic for Wednes-
day's mectmg of the La l.eche League of Laguna
Beach.
The session will be held at 9:30 a.m. at l I 74
Noria St. in Laguna. Further information is
available at 494-I 434.
ningham.
Some of the animals can be handled, but
it is important to get them back in the
•Cunningham suggested explorers can
make the excursion more exciting by
your back on the ocean: The waves mal But it's in the low-tide zone that
sweep you off the rocks when you aren t explorers catch a &limpse of some or the l~kang. A!ways explore facing the ocean." finest "finds" o( the day, said Om-
sa1d Cunn.angham. . ningbarn. Pink and yellow sea anemones
Women's networks to meet
Two · Huntington Beach chapters of the
Women's Business Network of California will hold
their meetings this week with the1iuntington Beach
Nonh group scheduled for l I :30 a.m . at the Casa
Maria, 16060 Beach Blvd .. and the Huntington
Beach South unit convening Thursday at 7: 15 a.m.
at Coco's Restaurant, 18380 Brookhurst St..
Fountain Valley.
Donna Severn of Tri Mark Direct Mail Service
wtll conduct the Tuesday session, while Thursday's
meeting will be a round table discussion on
networkmg. Call 496-6627 for informauon on both
chapters.
Hazardous material talk
Capt. Axel Zanelli of the Newport Beach Fire
Department will speak on hazardous materials at
Wednesday's meeting of the League of Women
Voters of the Orange Coast. .
The session will be held at 9: 30 a.m. at the home
of Mary Butler, 1836 Santiago Drive, Newport
Beach. The meeting is open to the public and
information as available at 645-6333.
Free counseling set
Steve Rockman, a marriage and family counsel-
or, will offer free individual, marital and family
thera~y as well as counseling on drug and alcohol
abuse Wednesday from noon to I p.m. at the
AMI/Irvine Meical Center office, 4605 Barranca
Parkway, Suite 101, in Irvine.
t
•The high school teacher also reminds (they look more like plants), small fish
obscTvers to be patient -lots of move-
ment oo the surface wiU scare the critters
into cracks and crevices, out of view. Sit
quietJy and wait.
•Wear old clothes, tennis shoes and
expect to get wet, Cunningham advises
The Laguna Beach GTenn E. Vedder
Ecological Reserve, just up the coast from
Main Beach, is one spot where rock
outcroppings arc borne to an abundance of
life.
In the splash zone, an area of the rocks
least often touched by water, occupants arc
usually just small shelled animals such as
snails, limpets, cbitons and pcnwinkles.
The algae-feeding residents of this neigh-
borhood are able to store water-wrdl the
next showeT.
Salt water usually reaches the high-tide
zone only once a day, so water
temJ,>Cratures can reach the 80s. Filter-
feedang animals, such as barnacles and
mussels, sweep the nutrients from the
water. Their predator is the star fish, which Serpent •tar loob like an octo-
pries the shells open. pua and alltllen like a aake..
Plants and animals io the mid-tide zone
have less tolerance to dehydration. In thjs
communjty live the colorful animals most
people hope to sec.
Spiney purple sea urchins can be found
1n abundance in these pools. The
porcupine-lookalikes have calCJum spines
that a.re sharp and annoyingly painful if
they b:realc in your band, said Cun-
ningham. Large algae and seaweed provide
protection for this pool's inhabitants. The
dead man's finger (an algae that looks JU St
(woolly sculpins), red sea urchins. baby
lobsters, octopus, lined shore cn.b and
abalone all can be seen by the patient
viewer.
The sea hare. a black blob that looks
more lake a snail without a shell. may plant
her pink, spaghetti-like eggs on rocks
ha~g over the tide pools.
Viewed in her natural habitat, she looks
like a rock.
But look closer.
The program is part of a continuing senes
sponsored by People for an Irvine Community
Hospital. Call 857-6500 for more information.
GOP women to meet Irvine facing claims over death, athletic injuries
Anthony Rackauckas Jr.. a candidate for
Supenor Coun judge in Orange County, will spcalc
at Wednesday's meeting of the Balboa Bay
Republican Women, Federated, scheduled for 11
a.m. at the Huntington Beach Inn, 21112 Paific
Coast Highway, Huntington Beach.
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Ol IM Dellr,... .....
A fatal traffic accident and injuries
during athletic events triggered more than
$4. I million in damage claims against the
city of Irvine.
Drive and Orange Tree. According to
police, Craig Kevin Casey. 26, of Irvine
was turning left on has bicycle when he
collided with an auto.
negligent settin~ of time ... "
A second claim for $2 milhon was filed
by Ventura attorney Fredenck G. Wood,
representing Cynthia L. Casey. 1dcnt1fied
as Craig Casey's widow.
Park. The claim charges that the field was
neghgcntly "owned. operated. maintained
and controlled such as to create, cause and
allow a dangerous condition to ex 1st." The motorist did not stop, pahcc said.
Luncheon will be served at noon with
Rackauckas' talk slated for I p.m. followed by a
question and answer session. The cost is SI 0, and
further information is available at 673-5729 or
673-7263.
The claims arc scheduled to be con-
sidered Tuesday by the Irvine City
Council. The city staff has recommended
lhe council routinely deny the claims and
refer them to the city's insurance adjuster.
Casey died two days later.
Santa Ana attorney E. R. Danoff is
seeking SI million on behalf o f Casey's
heirs: Robert Casey, Liane Casey, Mary
Ann Walter, Cindy Casey and Ashley
Strong.
A SI m illion damage claim has been
filed agarnst the ctty and the Irvine Unified
School District by Orange attorney
Christopher B. Mears for client Heather
Powell.
A SI 00.000 claim was filed by attorneys
for Robert S. TrautlofT of Laguna Beach.
The clajm states that Trautloff was IDJUrcd
No" 4 whale playing volleyball in a city
program at Woodbridge Htgb School. The
claim alleges that TrautlotTtwisted has foot
when at came mto contact wtlh a sucky
substance on the floor, causing a fall, a
scnous sprain and tnJUf).
••••••••••••••····-__,, Two claims arc tied to a traffic accident that occurred last Oct. 19 at Irvine Center
The claim alleges that a caution light at
the interscct1o n "was an a dangerous
condition due to the malfunctions or
The claim alleges Powell was m1ured
Nov. 7 when she fell dunngan Irvine H1th
School socccrprac11cc at the c11y·s He ntage
Hearing set for four held
in NB bogus check schem~
By "e A11oclated Preti The Ventura County thrift was taken
over by federal regulators after It
became insolvent
A thief reportedly used a slimj1m to
break into a white 1982 Toyota Celica
and steal tht car's S 1.000 stereo
Sunday. • • • An unloc~ed front door was the
point of entry for a thief who stole a
$300 microwave, a $600 TV set. a
$300 videocassette recorder and a S 12
telephone from a home in the I 7300
block of Queens Sunday.
Poa.ntaln Valley
Police rcponed fi ve auto burglanes
over the weekend. They occurred m a
Von·s market lot on Harbor
Boulevard. m front of a Coco's
restaurant on Brookhurst Street. and
m front of ho mes alo ng Cinco de
Mayo. Humm1ngb1rd and Bra1r
Raver • • •
A S 149 bicycle was reported stolen
from the garage of a home m the
11900 block of Galena unday.
lrvtne
A car stereo was reported stolen
fro m a Toyota Celica parked an a lot at
16775 Von Karman Ave. Sunday. • • • Vandals reportedly put sugar 10 the
gas tanks and glue an the locks ofa car
parked an front of a business at 9300
Toledo Way Sunday. ••• A Dragonfly resident reponed that
one of has Friday evening guests stoic
more than $400 oflus property
A bail hearing is scheduled
Wednesday for four people arrested
by the FBI in Newport Beach Friday
for investigation of involvement in a
SI 0 million counterfeit check scheme
that was used to defraud banks.
The four. three of them
Guatemalans. were arraigned in fed-
eral court in Los Angeles foUowint
their arrests.
Oyde C. Lewis, 74, of Gardena was
released on his own recognizance. A
U.S. magistrate denied bail for
Naomi Jerez, 42; Juan Manuel, 26,
and Gerardo Carbajal. 40, all of
Guatemala. A bail hearing was set for
Wednesday.
Jerez is also bcina investigated in
connection with losses towina $22
million at Hacienda Feden.I Savinas
and Loan in Oxnard, the FBI said.
The arrests climued a su-month
investiption in which the group
allegedly dealt with an undercover
agent, FBI spokesman Jim Neilson
said. The aroup alleaedly caused
seven.I banks to lose up to SI 0 million
when they honored forged and
counterl'eit checks. Neilson said.
Judge refuses to order new trial
for convicted killer Geronimo Pratt
Newport Beach
A Balboa Boulevard resident re-
ported Saturday night that a man
carryina a si"·inch switchblade knife
broke into his home and tried to rob
him but fled after the victim jumped
through a window. Robcn Lewis
Gayle, 33, told police the robber
confronted him at about 10:30 p.m .•
demanded c:uh and ordcTcd ham to
lie on the floor. Gayle refused. He was
forced to jump through the wmdow
after the robbcT crabbed a neatby
seear ~n and threatened to shoot
ham wtth it. • • • Two lith6graphs valued at S 1.000
WCIT reported stolen from a home in
the 1600 block of West Ocean Front
Sunday • • • A $200 TV set and SSO an perwncl
1tem1 were rccentJy ~rted stolen
off' a 37-foot boat moored 1n the
Balboa Yacht 8asm.
Two radios and a five horsepower
engine were reported stolen off a 23.-
foot boat moored at Newport Dunes
Park Saturday. • • • A SSOO TV set was reported stolen
from a home in the 1800 block of Park
Newpon Sarurday. • • • A $450 videocassette rc<:<>nter was
reponcd stolen from a home in the
400 block of Flapbip Road Saturday.
Bantl.niton lteaah
Polioc in Westminster reported
Sunday tlut a ll-ycar-old woman
walked into the stalioo and said she
had bc'cn p ng raped In north Hunt·
mglon Buch Saturday night • • • A $200 car stereo was reported
tolen from a dark blue 1986 Volks-
wasen Golf parked in the Golden
West Collqe lot unday. • • • The owner pf a store on Center
Street reported Sunday that one of bas
empl()yees recently embezzled
$12.000. • • •
An employee of a Hallmark Card
shop, 7S86 Edinaer Ave., reported
that while abe wu as&istana • cus-
tomer, a man ooened the unattended
?Jh retttter and took about SI 00. He
was described u a S-foot l I. inch 2S.
year-old black male with a scar on the
side of his face. • • • A $350 TV set wu reported stolen
from a home in the 4900 block of Heal
Avenue by a thief who entered
throuba an unlocked slidina &Jass
door. • • • Two bicycles. 1 p&1r of sh"1 a
scwtn& machine, ind a typcwntCT
were reported stolen from a home an
the 1900 block of Huntanaton trttt
Sunday The stolen items were valued
II S8S0, pohc:c satd
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A federal
magJStrate bas refused to order a new
triaJ for fonncr Black Panther leader
Elmer"Geronimo'' Pratt. whocla1ms
he's imprisoned because of politics.
not the murder for which we was
convicted.
Althouah the decitton was com-
municated to attorneys for Pratt late
Fnday, the elert for Mqistrlte John
Kronenbers said toda)ljt was not yet
available for rtlcase to tbe public
In San Francisco. attorney Stuan
Hanlon, who represented Pratt. said
he had been informed that the
decision upholds all points of a
previous ruhna by the state appellate
coun in the 1968 Santa Monaca tennis
coun murder.
He cntietted Kroncnbera for hold-
•nt bac:k on a dcas1on for neuly one
year after hcannp wtT"C held 1n the
case.
"Ifs a V1CIOU wt) to handle at."
.·
sa1d Hanlon. "It's Just cruel. Wh)
wait so long if you arcn 't go1na to do
anythma'r'
He wd Pratt would continue to
pursue other avenues of appeal but
was not hopeful of wanning on the
appellate level
..Pohucally. he's not 1oan1 to win,"
Hanlon sa1d "The law as 1neffect1ve
rn ltru.tion1 hkc this. He' treated
differently "
Pratt. 38. former deputy de~nsc
minister of the Black Panther Pany.
wa C'OnV1ctcd I 5 ycan qo in the
murder of a 27-year-old
schoolteJtcher. Caroline Olsen. Her
husband. Kenneth. 33. also was shot
but ,urvaved He said they we~
attacked by two men who robbed
them JUSl after they amvcd at the
tennis coun and turned on the ll&ht
o serond person was evu charscd
Pratt S11d be wa, in tt.land 11 the
Black Panther Hcadquartcn It the
ume of the k1lhng. He also was
prosecuted 1n 1971 along with 11
other Black Panther Party members
on weapons conspiracy charge, stem·
ming from a gun battle between police
and Blac" Panthers in Los AOJtles.
He contended he was framed
~use of has connections to the
Panthers. and his lawym pracntcd
evidence lhat ao FBl informant who
had an filtrated the Black Panthcn was
the key watn~ -aainst him.
The. said nctther juron nor at-
torney knew . the witness was an
informant
Pratt's defentc team. which 1n·
cludtd former conareuman PauJ
McClo kc)'. also pve Kroocnbcra
rcc-ently uncovered FBt 'documents
showtna_t~t Pratt was a.wart of\be
FBl's rot NTELPRO mtellieeftce
opcrahon. a controvmaal under-
ro, er pror.ram an the late l960l l.Dd
early ·7~ ..... t11c:h aamcd to Uftdmn1oc
radtc l sroups
Shuttle cabin,
• crew remains
brought to port
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)-
Some remains of Cballenger's
utronau11 and ~ c.abm dcbns
have betn recovtttd from the ocean
Ooor. Spratt caner sources )A) but
NASA wd 1 II rnpect famll)
wiJ.he.s and oot comJMnt u.nul I.he
operation 1s completed.
That could take ~\·eral d.t)S.
officW.s wd tn announC'lng un~>
that the remains bad bttn found 1n
the shuttle wrecbgt I 00 fttl bclov.
the wrfacc of t..M AtJanuc Ocean
about 15 ntil~ nonhea.st of C. ape
Canavenl.
Some remains and pans of the
cabin v.erc brought into ncarb)' Pon
Canaveral on Saturda) night and
taken to a hospital a1 Patncli. Air
Force ~ 25 miles south of here. a
source. who s~ke on condl\lon of
anonymity, said toda)
The source said the Na') s.ah-as.e
s.tup USS Preserver camf into pon in
darkness and wtthout limning ltgh1s
and was met b) astronaut Dob
Overmyer. v.ho 1~ in'ohcd 1n the
in vesugauon. and other ~ at1onal
Aeronautics and Space .\dm1n1s·
trauon offiCJals
Penonnel from the .\nned Force'>
lnslllute of Patholog~ began attempt·
mg to 1dent1f) the remains toda)' the
source reponed
Fi ve men and two 1.1.omen died
when Challenger e>.ploded' ..,, ..cc·
onds after Launch on Jan ~b '.\ '>.\
said Sunda\ 's announcement ...-.as
withheld until families were noulied
but members of se' era I families said
they weren't told about the finding of
the remains.
Tony Smith. the younger brotherol
pilot Mike Smith, said his fam11)' had
been told Fnda) that ~archers had
found the crew cabin but he knev.
nothing about remains being found
lnantntet"'1t"11o-""uh \\('P .f\ 1n
Orlando. Bruce Jan 1s, father of
astr0n.a1.n Grcgof) Jarvis. said he v.as
rehe'ed that his son's rrmams had
bttn found but CAP~~ frustration
at ha\ mg lcamf'd of It from tele·
\ISIOO
..It's not going to bnng an)bod)
back," Manin Resnik. father of
astronaut Jud~ Resnik said unda\
.. Tht're's nothrng v.e can do about 1t
~s far as rm cono:med stn let'\ ha\t'
alrcad) bttn performed ··
·earl :-..c~a1r the tathcr of
astronaut Ronald Mc Nair told· CBS
~C\A.S he d1d not find Out about the
disco' C'1 until Sunda; e' enang.
Mark \\ eanberg. a spokesman for
the prcs1denual comm1ss1on in·
'esttgat1ng the shuttle disaster. said
he could not comment on the s1gn1li·
cane~ oftht' lind to thecomm1ss1on's
probe
.. I v.ould not "'ant lo charactmte
tts importance That'~ to be de·
termmed Clearl; all pieces ol
evidence are 1mponan1." he said
Meanwhile. astronaul<o 1nvol,ed 1n
the shullle program. including Sall;
Rade a mt'mber of the pres1denual
comm1ss1on sa' the' v.ant shunlt-
safet) IS'>UCS rewhcd .before the~ j)~
again
A !lharpl; cnllcal memo b~ ch1d
astronaut John ) oung. made publtc
O'er th e v.cdcnd. chargt'd that
~ .\ .\ ha-. allo"'cd .. launch r,chedule
pre"lsure· to out"'e1gh ..afet~ con·
s1derat1on\ 1n the '>huttle pr~m
The -..:a,, ..earch -.hip LC L 's sonar
ten ta ti\ el~ iocated the crev. com pan·
rnent late Fnda' and d1,ers from the
l.iSS Presel"\er on Saturda) poslli' el)
1den111ied companment debm and
crev. rema1nc, the "'a11onal ~ero·
naucs and ~pace .\dmin1stratwn
~tatemcnt said
Panel to probe astronaut safety
\.\ .\SHJNGTO (AP)-The prcs1dent1al comm1ss1on ln\C'Sllgaung the
C hallengerd1saster will studyblisteringcharges by NASA'sch1ef astronaut that
the space age"ncy has allowed "launch schedule pressure'' to outweigh safet)'
considerations 1n the shuttle program.
The comm1ss1on's decision to examine the accusauons comes as
published repons indicate that the ch1efastronaut. John W. Young.. had been
complaining for at least two years about shuttlt' safety hazards. ~1ark Weinberg.. a commission spokesman. said Sunday panel chairman
\.\-1lham P. Rogers was briefed by Young on a March 4 memo wntten by the
astronaut. which listed "awesome" safety problems dating to October 1984.
..The~ mtl previously and the concerns that were contained in the memos
v.ere raised:· Weinberg said. "They (Young's allegauons) "-111 be included as
pan of the 1mcsugat1on."
The panel has been holding pubhc heanngs and conducting pm ate
inter. 1ev.s in an effon to discover what caused the Jan. :!8 explosion of the
C hallenger 71 tn which all seven crew members were killed.
Supreme Court
ruling approves
police deception
\\ ASHI GTON (AP) -The Su-
preme Court ruled today that an some
cases po!Joe may tnck a lawyer in
order to QUC$tion a criminal suspect
without the attorney present.
lo a (>..) ruling. the coun also said
politt have no obhpuon to telJ a
susJ)CC't chat an attorney 1s trying to
contact the suspect 1f the attorney has btto .Ued 10 do so by someone else
or has taken the action on his own.
otbma tn the rubng permits
pohoe to ~ventadefenda.nt wbo has
himself asked to Stt a lawyer from
talk.in& to one.
Tbo ruling, 10 a murder case from
Providence. R.I .. sa\d the sus{>Ccrs
incriminating statements to pohcc 111
such cmumstances may -be used as
evade nee.
The coun said granting police such
lamude dOC$ not violate the suspcct's
constitutional rights to have a lawyer
present or to remain silent.
Justice Sandra 0a)' O'Connor.
wntmg for the court, said the 1ust1ce!I
"share (a) dJstaste for the deliberate
misleading" of an attorney.
But, she sa1d, onc.e a su ~pect has
been g.aven MKalled Miranda warn.
1ngs that he remain silent or have a
lawyer present, police have fulfilled
their duty not to coerce confessions.
"We do not question that on facts
more cgregjous than those presented
tie re." O'Connor said. "pohoe dec:cp-
11on might rise to a level of a
(constitutional) v1olauon."
"The purpose of the Miranda
warnings ... as to d1ss1pate the com-
pulsion inherent in custodial in-
terrodtaon," she said. "Oearly, a rule
that fOcuses on how the polioe treat an
attorney .... would 1piore both Miran-
da's mission and its only source of
leg111macy."
"Nor are we prepared to adopt a
rule requinng that police inform a
suspect of an attorney's efforts to
reach ham ," O'Connor said.
Fast-food chicken fried
in hi.gh-fat beef tallow
By ~~ Auoctaiecl Pre11
NEW YORK -Chicken and fish served at many fast food restaurants is
higher an cholesterol than man} health-consc1ous A.menca ns may think,
according to a magazine stud) Tests comm1sso ned by Science Digest
magazine 1nd1cated fast-food chicken. lish and french fnes are fried in beef
tallow. a fat high in anery-cl~ngcholes1erol. Dr. Frank Sacks. of th~ Harvard
Med1cat School. was commissioned by Science Di~est to anaJyze chicken. fish
and french fries served by McDonald's, Burger Kang. Howard Johnson's and
Kentucky Fned Chicken. He concluded that the "fatty-acid profiles" of
McDonald's Chicken McNuggets and F1lel-O-F1sh and Burger Krng's Chicken
SandWJch and Whaler resembled beef more than chicken or fish .
TWA cuts fares, restores flights
80,000 r a ll y in capital for abortion rights
Trans World Airlines announced fare cuts and restored some flights. wbik
us stnk1 ng flight attendants said machinists hononng their picket ltnes wouJd
hasten new taJks and settlement of the 4-0ay-old walkout. "We are just
absolutely delighted. This 1s a breakthrough," Jo)' Turkel. a Cbi~o
spokeswoman for the 6.0<X>-membcr Independent Federation of Flight
Attendants. said Sunday as machinists honored picket Imes nationwide.
WASHINGTON CAP)-Abonion
nghts acuvasts, who attracted ten~ of
thousands of supponers for a man .. h
through the capital. say the rall~ was
"a fantasuc success·· that shov.., the
potency of their side of the h1ghl~
charged issue.
Hundrt"ds of the acu,·1sts planned
to take their case to Cap11 ol Hi ll toda-.
to push for a r~peal of anu-abonion
legislauon
Pohce estimated that at least
80.000 abortion-rights actn l\t \
ioincd ~unda; 's mare h and rall;
prote'>llng Reagan admm1strat1on
pahc1cc, the\ contend arc under·
culling ""omen's nghts
The march also v.as dec,1gncd J'> a
sho"' of ~uppon for legal lll'd
abonion. a' oicc. organ11crs sa}. that
ha!> been drn"'ned out 1n rel.cot \car'I b~ v.ell·l1nanu:d an11-a burt1011
group'>
"It v.a\ a lanta'itll sur<:e'>'i.'. "<t1d
Eleanor <;meal . pre~1dcnt of the
1'.;a1ional Orµn1tat1on r or W0mcn
1.1.hllh sponsored the protest
"The numbers game 1s over,"
Smeal declared "The silent maJont)
"'ill be silent no longer."
In Janua~. ant1·abon1on groups
'>laged a demonstration 1n Washing-
ton. "'h1ch police said drew 37,000
people
Police esumated the crowd Sunda)
at betv.een lS0.000 and 85.000. ac-
cording to D1s1nct of Columbia
police officcr-Ste'e Langford.
But Molh Yard, poliucaJ director
Now you can indulge your taste for flavorful fish
and seafood without going overboard! Try our
Shrimp£, Fish Dinner and enjoy 3 golden shrimp, a crispy
fish fillet, fryes, fresh coleslaw and 2 hushpuppies..
LONG JOHN
SILVEl{S~
•
3095 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
(Across from Fedco)
'
for NOW, csumated the crowd at
I :!5.000. dedanng ll ''the largest
demonstration for women's nghts 1n
the history of the United States ...
uader5 on both sides of the
emotionally charged abortion issue
concede they are engaging 1n a
numbers game 1n which suppon 1s
measured by how large a crowd each
side can draw.
NOW organazt'rs said numerous
women's groups have Joined to
counter wha~ . they describe as a
Reagan admin1strat1on attempt to
reverse the 1973 Supreme C'oun
decision decnm1nahzing abon1on
The) also charge the admin1 strat1on
1s moving to undercut famil y plan-
ning programs which provide
abon1on and b111h control counseling
services.
Goode apologlzes to PhlladelplJla
PHILADELPHI A -Ma) or W Walson Goode. 1gnonng caJls to resign.
has ap<>logized to the people of Ph iladelphia for his handhng of the siege of the
MOVE stronghold last year 1n which 11 members of the radical cult died and
61 houses were destroyed. He said he does not expect to be indicted. In an
emotional "hearr-to-heart talk" Sunday night, he said be "accepted
respons1b1ht; for all the actions ofc1ty government -the good, the bad and the
tragic." and brusht'd aside charges that he "abdicated his responsibilities as a
leader" dunng the confrontation.
\
FBI lists federal phony-degree holders
WASHINGTON -The FBI says about 200 federal employees, includil!J
a former Whtte House staffer and a high-level aide to the Joint Chiefs ofStaJL
hold phony academic or medical degrtts. but the disclosure doesn't seem to be
creaung much of a sttr 1n government circles. A subcommittee of the House
Select Commntee on Aging. which reported the FBl'S'findings at a hcanng in
Dece mber. says that of the 18 federal agencies involved, only the U.S. Postal
Service has reponed taking dtsciphnary action agarnst such employees.
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'.Purple'
director
honored
by peers
Spielberg winner
of DGA award after
'snub' by academy
BEYERL Y HILLS (AP) -After
being passed over for an Oscar
nomination for best dirtttor this
year, Steven Spielberg was surprised
to win the Directors Guild of Ameri-
ca's priic for best-directed film of
1985 for "The Color Purple."
The naming of Spielberg, whose
film won 11 academy nominations
but none for his direction, brought
cheers from the industry audjence
that packed the Beverly Hilton
ballroom.
After the ceremony, wruch took
place simultaneously with a Directors
Guild dinner at New Yorlc's Plaza
Hotel. Spielberg refrained from criti-
cizing the Motion Picture Academy.
.. Everyone talks about how I was
supposedlX snubbed," he told a
reponer. • But I wtsh someone would
point out two facts: one that the
ac-ademy nominated me three tames
an five years; two that I may have lost
this year's nomination by one or two
votes."
Spielberg's academy nominations
were for "Close Encounters of the
Third J(jnd." 1977; "Raiders of the
Lost Ark," 1981 ; and "E.T : The
Extra-Terrestnal.'' 1982.
The academy nominations arc
voted by the 230 members of the
directors branch. while the DGA
awards arc voted by the almost 8,000
'I
. ....
Actreae Amy imn. conaratulate. huba.nd 8teYeD
Splelbera OD hU awara for .. The Color Purple ...
members of the guild, the majority in
televsion.
Other DGA nominees attending
the awards were Ron Howard. ''Co-
coon;" Sydney Pollack. "Out of
Africa;" and Peter Weir, "Witness."
The other nominee, John Huston,
"Prizzi's Honor," was acting in a
London film.
The academy nominated neither
Spielberg no r Howard, choosing in-
stead Alcira Kurosawa. for "Ran,"
and Hector Babenco for "Kiss of the
Spider Woman."
In his acceptance of the nomi-
nation earlier Saturday night,
Spielberg thanked his production cast
and crew -"the most amazing cast. I
.
think. that I've ever worked with 1n
one sittjng." ·
In New York, the guild named
winners an seven TV categories: Jay
Sandnch for the pilot of .. Golden
Girls." in the comedy category; Will
Mackenzie, "Moonlighting," night-
time drama; Craig Sandy Tung.
"Schoolbreak Special," daytime
drama; Don Ml&<;her>"Motown Re-
turns to the Apollo," musical-variety;
Andy J. Kindle. "CBS Spons Sun-
day." spons; Harry Rasky, "Homage
to Chagall: the Colors of Love,"
documentary-actuality; and John
Erman fo r "An Early Frost" 10
dramatic specials.
Shooting in church kills
one man, hurts 2 women
LA PUENTE (AP) -A man who
allegedly opened fire on a church
congregauo n during a Sunday service
nas been booked for invesllgauon of
murder. a shenffs spokesman said
today. One man was lulled and two
women wounded.
Carlos Thomas. 25, described as
d istraught over the breakup ot his
engagement to one v1cum 's sister and
the loss of his JOb, was arrested
without incident 81/J hours after the
shooting, said Los Angeles County
!>heriff s Deputy Stephen Lcc.
Thomas was booked for mvesuga-
tton of murder. Lee said.
Police. guided by an anonymous
tip, captured Thomas outside an
apanment building in Chino, about
15 miles from the small. stucco
Storms hit
northern
state again
8)' the A11octated Pre11
More ra,n and thunderstorms hit
Northern California today, forcing
flash flood watches in several coun -
ues saturated by storms last month in
some of the worst weather m the
state's history.
The National Weather Service secs
a brief break from the storm that
rolled in during the weekend. The
forecast calls for only a chance of
lingering showers tonigh.t. However.
another gusty storm 1s expected
Tuesday.
• Ri vers that nooded last month kept
wtthin their banks Sunday and the
state Office of Emergency Services in
Sacramento reported early today that
no new problems had developed.
The flash flood watch covered
several areas, including Monterey
County and the mountains of Santa
Cruz County and Shasta, Tehama.
Butte, Marin. Napa and Sonoma
counties.
Santa Barbara hit
by4.4earth a
SANTA B,t.RBARA (AP) -A
moderate earthquake shook build-
ings here today, prompting office
workers to run into the streets. but no
damage or injuries were reponed.
The 7:33 a.m. quake measured 4.4
on the Richter scale, which places a
moderate quake at 4, said Dennis
Meredith, a pokcsman for the seis-
mology labs at California Institute of
Technology in Pasadena. It was
centered offshore in the Santa
Barbara Channel, 10 miles southwest
of Santa Barbara, he said. .
Residents and office workers 1n
Santa Barbara pve varying accounts
of the quake. Some said 1t lasted I 0
seconds while others said its duration
was more than a.minute.
Peace troopa start
march acroa• desert
VICTORVILLE (AP) -The G reat
Petlce March broke camp early today
and headed aeron the windy and
rainy MoJave Desert in a croi.~
country qu"t to int.p1rc the world to
seek alobal nuclear disarmament.
The marchers. who numbered
about 1,200 when they 1cn Lo\
n cle'I March I. were c'1t1matrd at
about 600 t<ldll). \aid ( 1hfom1a
lliR.hwav Patrol Officer John ~vap.r
..
Church of Christ 1n La Puente, where
gunfire erupted about 11 :50 a.m.
"The service was JUSt about over
and the minister was praying. .. said
Nathaniel Butler. S 1. "I was praying
and (the gunman) JUSt started finng
wt Idly.
"I knew he had been nervous
because he'd been walking out during
the service." Butler added.
The 1unman. who was situng one
or two rows 1n front of his victims.
stood. turned, and fired several shots
from a large-caliber handgun. Lee
said.
Eugene Brown. 39. of West Covina,
died of a gunshot wound to the head
at I :35 p.m. at Queen of the Valley
Hospital in West Covina, said
shenff's Sgt. John Bro ussard.
SHOCKED!
. ... .. ~ . . ..
;l: fi' Ulltn IHWUKE
.~& Est 1957
"t -831-n40
-'4101d~9fYd.
Newpon IMc:h, Ca.
c
Newport Center
Fashion Island
is making shopping
more convenient.
Convenient Hours -hopping
ho ur .. hdve heen expanded and
we re now open M onday thru
Friday 10 a m -9 p m . Sd tur·
ddY' 10 d m -6 p m and
~undJY\ 12 -S pm.
Convenient, hsy hrldn1 -find
amplt> parktn!l nf'rlr yom favorltt'
~tmt~ or IN oor valet er"'"'
/ocatNJ .1t A.tmm1 Court p.ul..
your c Jr (01 you If avC' yol/I
car hand Wrl\h(•d v.h1fp you .,llop1
Conwnient On~Stop Shopplna -
V"1t lrv1nP R,mch Farmer~ Mar-
k('( for all vour gourmet and
.. ~ec•klv Rrc>Cer'r nPC'd., 'itort• \n11r
1o:ror f'flt'' in rlwlf convl:'n1t•nt
cold \tor.ts:<> foe kt•" wh1h• vo11
'hop ,md htl\.<' th<'m v.1l<'f<•d to
'tCWr < ,., "'hl'n H>U rf' don1• Hoth
"'" 1n'' ·"'' c ompl1nw11 r ,,,, '
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Mond9Y. Mardi 10, 1911 • Al
GOP candidates clash
in state donneybrooks
SANTA CLARA (AP) -Sluhint
each other in a wttltend of non ... top
conflict California Republican• all
but burled their so-called I Ith Com-
mandment -"Thou ahah •Peak no
ill bf a fellow Republk:an" -in a
bruisina state oonvention.
Tbe cootinuin• battle between
state Sen. Ed Davts and R~ .. Bobbi
Fiedler ovtr Devis' all.bons that
Fiedler made ••a felony bribe offer" to
aet him out of the U.S. Senate race set
the stage for an lnarY oonvention.
But before the weekend conf~nce
was over Sunday, a half-doun can-
didates in the Senate and other races
bad beoome involved in the mud-
slinaina battle. It was in short, much more like the
political free-for-alls· California
Democrats reautarly suffer throu~
than the gatfierings of Califom1a
Republicans at which themes of party
uruty and mutual respect usually
prevail -at least in public.
Although an indictment against
Fiedler based on Davis' allegations
was thrown out last month by a judge
for lack of evidence, Davis conhnued
to accuse her of bribery and con-
demned most of the other eight
Re;publicana an the Senate race of beina unfit for office because of their
criticism of l'liJ action.
.. We're the law .. nd-order party,
and we ou,aht to act like it " Dav11
-.,id Sunday. "I don't fee{ embar-
rassed about aoina to the district
anomey and reponina a SI00,000
bribe. 1 feel sorry for the ocoP&e who
think that's dishonorable. ·If you
would just call her up md say k.noelt it
ofT. then you aren't fit for office."
Fiedler limited her n:p~es to 11~n&
only that Davis "is nqt relevant,' but
added she would not supPon Davia
apinst Democratic incumbent Alan
Cranston if be woo the GOP nomi-
nation. Davis replied that .. someone
is liable to steal her broom" if Fiedler
doesn't suppon the party non:Unec.
Davis devoted his entire speech in
a candidates forum to recountina his
reasons for accusin$ Fiedler of at-
tempting to bribe him to withdraw
from the Senate race, saying the
action amounted to rape of Cali-
fornia's election laws.
Two other canrudates in the June 3
U.S. Senate primary, television com-
mentator Bruce Herscbensobn and
Los Angeles County Supervisor Mike
Antonovich, also atlleked F'aedler oe
an unrelated point, a ndio C09-
mercial her campaian bepn broM-culinJ trua week that both Aft>-
tonovacb and Herachensohn e&lled
deceptive. .
Two other fiaht• over commercial•
erupled between rivala for lieute111.ftt
governor H.L Richardson and Mike
Curb, and between Senate C:aodmtn
Bob Naylor and Ed Zschau.
Richardson, in a sarcasuc open
letter to Curb, complained that in
Curb's commercial announcina bia
candidacy to rq.ain the lieutenant
1ovcmor'1 j>Olt he held from 1979
throuah 1982, Curb listed amona b.ia
achievements 1ianin1 a t. rape
law while servina u act.in& aove:mor.
Richardson noted that be had
authored that bill and chided Curb,·· I
really think the process would be
better served if you ran on your own
accomplishments."
Naylor, as be has done repealedly
10 recent months, condemned Zscbau
as havina one of the bi&hest per-
cent.ages of votes against Jleqan of
congressional Republicans na-
tionwide.
Opposition shelves Nixon birthplace bill
WASHINGTON (AP)-Strong Democratic oppos1-
tjon in the House has forced the shelving oflegislation to
make a national historic site out of the Orange County
binbplace of Richard M. Nixon, who resigned the
presidency in 1974 during the Watergate scandal.
where Nixon, a Republican, was born in 1913 and lived
for nine years.
During testimony on the bill last Tuesday, no one
spoke against it.
But Vento said that by week's end, be had gouen
enough flak from Democrats to rea.liz.e that if he pushed
forward with the Nixon plan.i~~wc obviously would get
into a knock-down, drag-out ngnt."
"The memories arc too vivid and the feelings arc too
strong," says Rep. Bruce Vento, D-Minn .. cllairman of the
House Interior Committee's Nauonal Parks and Rec-
reauon Subcommittee. "I just ran into a stone wall." "We'll put them on the shelf and see what happens,"
said Vento. The Nixon measure, introduced by Rep. William
Dannemeyer, R-Fullcrton., and 29 other Cahfomta
lawmakers and endorsed by the Reagan administration,
would require the Interior Department to acquire and
preserve the 11/t·story frame bungalow in Yorba Linda.
He said the' opposition to the Nixon birthplace
proposal transcended questions of policy ... It's a special
problem with Nixon because he engenders strong
feelings," Vento said.
..
-NOTICE TO ALL
Rea l Estate Managers and Brokers
The Department of Housing and Urban Development, 34 CMc
Center Plaza, Box 12850, Santa Ana, CA 92712-2850, ta Melling
appllcatlons from qualified real estate managers and brokers
who wish to recefve Invitations for Bids for Area Management
Brokers to manage HUD-acquired/owned properties In San
Bernardino County. Applicants muat be llc:eneed by the DMsion
of Real Estate. State of California, as brokers.
Appllcatlona 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 caJtlng the
Property Disposition Section at (714) 836-244ft
A Pre-bid Conference will be conducted on Wednesday,
March 19, 1986 at 10:00 A.M. In the conterenoe room. San
Bernadlno County Board of Realtors, 1798 N. "O" St .• San
Bernandlno.
Specific geographic areas will be outllned at the Pre-bid
Conference.
Oeadllne for return of bids Is 9:00 A.M .. March 28. 1986.
Completed bid packages must be sent to:
~·•Jtt o,,. 'I• +\ U.S. Depnn.nt of ttousMc _. ~ Dtv......_,I '! * * • 34 CMc Ctnl• Plaz• :t ° Ftc1er11•..._ ~ . -· ~ : Boa 12150
• .. o, ...... •(:-$.ta Anl, CA 92712-2150 :fAIQ .,.
Bids wlll be opened at 10:00 A.M., March 31, 1986, In Room
720-721. Federal Bulldlng, 34 Civic Center Plaz.a, Santa Ana.
Callfornla.
Convenient Purch~sing -)hop
\\Ith ,uur ,l\Jpv.port Center
fa,h111n /,/and charge c,frd
Ir ' accepted at mcHt sture'
throughout the Center' Ento\.o
com enient ~' tt·g1 \Ing -g1\ e
a \t>jM)Orf C entt'r far;h1on 1'lc1nd
~trrn•r t1t1CJt£> -purchased
"1th the Cen ter., charge card
Convenient hck.lge Chttk-ln -
I 11r' 111 package'' Drop bv our
1~1tprm.1t1on Center for a compll-
1111•n '.If\ 'hopping bag or lt•t
1" 1 h1·< k tht•m tor you v..h1l1• .,.nu
1 c>nflfHlf' \t>tJr 'hopping
,, , I ,,, \l,111 11• Rt>hl0\00\ Tht• Ht'·"'
"" tfc •l\ .,, \\ 1/,l11rt• Buffum' .md
''' '"' I\ .. ~, h fdlnl>'t• \.f•rkf't C 1\ c • I I
11111• •I ""' n 1 I '' 1111 PJC''" ( • '''
H1,.:/l\,.'1\ '•c /\\ • 1•n \I fl \rlhllt ,1t•l1
1.ir•rl•• .,, , 11 , ol• \1·1•1>urr Rt'.-t• Ii
NEWPORT
CENTER
F SH I<) LA n
•
soviets'
Veg-. gets
close look
at comet
MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet
Union's Vega 2 space probe pve
scientists their closest look yet at
Halley's comet, but damaae from
comet dust increased conc::c1m for a
European probe that will pass within
a few hundred miles of the comet later
this week.
Vega 2 ~Sunday within about
S,12S miles of the comet, which
swings around the sun every 76 years.
About 100 of the world's top space
scientists gathered at the Soviet
Institute for Space Research to watch
Vega. l's electronically produced im-
ages as they arrived back on Earth.
The in\ages took nine min\ltes to
travel from spac;e to the Mosoow
complex.
American astronomer Carl Sagan,
who is among the U.S. observers here,
congratulated the Soviet scientists for
"a brilliant success wit.h this
mission."
Roald Sagdeyev, head of the in-
stitute and overseer of the Inter-
national Vega project, said minutes
after the images arrived that the
comet's nucleus appears to be "a solid
body levitated in a dust cocoon."
Record holders
He and other space scientists
agreed the diameter of the nucleus
appears to be about 3.75 miles and
that the core is ellipse-shaped. How-
ever, the exact measurements of the
solid core wtthin the traveling dust
cloud remairi unknown.
Vega 2's sister probe, Vega I,
transmitted pictures of the comet
Thursday as it passed about 5,SOO
miles away.
Albert Pernit.cb of Graz, Auatrta. believed to be the world'•
hea'rieet man at 875 pounda, and Gabriel Mon.Jane of
lloaamblqae, probably the tallest at 8 feet, 2 inch ea, meet
for the flnt time on a Japanese TV program. At right la
Shtaeo N&Cuhima, former manager of the Yomlrui Glanta
bueball team.
Office Support ...
Yau 're a Visit Away From a New Career/
Attend Our
Employment Evening
Monday, MBl'Ch 10th or Tuesday, March 11th
from 4PM to 7PM each day. ..
to discover your possibll1Ues with
Caremark Home Health Care of America
"9're a !!!_COjniud leader 1n 2rovid.in~Jjllized tbera ser-
vices to patients n e ome, tding on the d ifficiilf caM¥, and
rrualcing the quality of life that much better. Our concern for
quality ext11nds to our employees, as well. ~ recognize talent
and Iitwud succns with such advantages as:
• Exmll..a Salariel • Company-paid medicaJ/deata.l/life
• er.iii U.-• Educational reimbursement
• Naadlm equipment • A policy of promotion
flld1.ltiel from within
And monlll
Im.m«liatll lntsrvfBWs (as time permit3) with Department
Managers for:
Admlnillrative
Secntari•
l·J JNl'S •J>flrlence. excellent lkiU.. .t.able work bJ6tcrty and
word proceai~ required.
Collectiou
ltaDn11atatives Pnler 2 ~ college or
equlnJ.nt plu1 6 months-
1 ,_,. collections B1Cp8rience
and . .table work hiatOiy.
Clerk Typists •
Entry Level
Typing at 30 wpm, good orpnl-
utional skills, willingn8SS tD
learn variety of tasks.
Bil1ing
Specialist
Minimum 1 year office trXpe~
ience; bill.ins bacJcsiround, Jisbt
typing, 10..ksy skills and atten·
tion to detaJJ required.
S-a l1Lm on our company • have a cup. of coffee or tea -reAd
some of our limrature -iD'Jltll1ne you.tself working in our uplCS.le.
N6wporl Beacb Corporate olfices/
Me 818 locatlld at 4340 \.bn Karman Awnue · just off MacArthur
Blvd. -between Birch and MaCArtbur. next to KotD's Restaurant.
lf you cannot attend our Employmeqt Evenings. drop by to com-
plete an 1ppllcalion, send your resume to 4340 \bn Kannan
~ue. Attn: Human Resources Dept ., Newport Beach, CA
92860, or call for an 1p_pointment • 714/851-23U. Wt are 111
equal opportunity employer.
Seize the Best
Opportunity
Your Caner
Can Demand
with .•.
eu..ark!
Home Hrcllth Ca rr ot Ame rica
---
Mar~os' VP says exiled
ruler 'still president'
MANILA (AP) -The runnina
mate ofFerdiriand E. Man::os claimed today the eQJed ruler is stJU the
lepttmate president of the Philic>
pmes, and said Corazon Aquino's
government has the . potential to
become ''the worst kind of dio-
tatorship."
Arturo Tolentino, the vice preti-
dential candidate who claimed vie>
tory with Man:os in the Feb. 7
election told a Manila brcakfut
forum that Aquino's administration
should call a ~nstitutional conven-
tion to establish its legitimacy.
If it operates" without l._i limi-
tations, Tolentino said, Filipinos and
foreianers alike will not know what to
expect from it.
A revolutionary government., the
73-year-old Tolentino said, "is worse
than martial law and the wont kind of
dictatonhip, becaux everyone in
aovemment can be a little dictator."
Tolentino, who failed to abow up
for Feb. 2S inauauration of Marcoa
which took place hours before the
Philippine 'ruler fled the presidential
palace, said be mi&bt stiU be sworn in
as vice president, but that be 1eCS no
need to do it now.
"Mr. Man::os is leplly still presi-
dent of lbe Philippines, allbouab he is
not there exercisina his powers," said
Tolentino.
However, Luis Villafuerte, a mem~
bet of Aquino's Cabinet in charae of
1ovemment reorganization, told the
fonun no jutjsprudence in the world would rccosnl.ZC Marcos u president.,
since be had abandoned the power be
held for 20 years.
Villafuerte said the current aovem-
ment, in which Aquino's runnina
mate SaJvador H. Laurel, has been
procWmed her vice p~dent and
P.rime minister, is revoluttonary but
'unparalleled in the history of the
world." .
Aquino ass~med .~e presidency
after hiaJ>-rank.ina m1htary defect~rs
supported her as the reaJ election
winner an action that brouaht hun-
dreds of thousands of Filipinos into
Manila's s~ts around a military
camp and a television station oc-
cupied by the rebels.
Marcos, unable or unwilling lf>
attack. fled th~ COU!'try, . and. 1s
cucrently in eXJle wath his wife,
Imelda. and an entouraae of family
members and di~hard supporters in
Hawaii.
·Nine blacks reported ~illed in .
So.uth African tribal uprisings
JOHANNESBURG (AP)-Police
said today that nine black.s were killed
in tribal clashes near Durban, and
that two other blacks died in a Cape
province township tom by unrest.
Fighting among Ndlovu. Kwela,
and Mapfeni clans of the Zulu tribe
brolC-c out m the Umbumbulu disttict
south of Durban, an Indian Ocean
port, Sunday and was continuing
today, police said.
They reported that they had ar-
rested and later released 130 men. and
seized some homemade guns from
the tribatoups. The fi 1ting apparently stemmed
from a orccd m~e between a
Kwela wo111an and a_Mapgeni man,
police said. ·
Oan fi&hts invo~ving Zulus• and
other tribes occur frequently in Ule
Durban area. Disputes often involve
conflicting claims for land and jobs.
issues not directly related to anti-
apartbeid unrest in South Africa.
But sociol()Kists say the issues have
Rx For Consumers
From cars to calones. babies to budgets. )Obs .Consumer Information to 1ogg1ng, lhe latest Consumer Information
Catalog 1s the right prescription at the right Department Rx
. been intensified by pressures from the
apartheid system of lcgaJizcd segre-
gation.
The ~t~ Athcan Press Associa-
tion quGUp. police today as sayin a
white woman detaincain corfficct1on
~th bomb blasts at two Johan-
rtesburg police stations last week is 27
years old, and that she was taken into
custody in Johannesburg over the
weekend.
• Police have declined to identify the
woman.
Terrorists show
photo of victim
price for helpful information on issues that Pueblo, Colorado
affect your health and home and pocketbook 81 \J09 BEIRUT (AP) -Islamic Jihad
It l~ts more than 200 federal pubhcatt0ns and issued photographs today that it
1t"s yours free by w t g us Gtin .. ,. s.n.oc:es &_1"111,.,~ claimed depicted the body of Michel , _______ ri_•_n _-______________ ...... _ .. __ ~_·_, Seurat, the French hostage the under-
NOTICE
The Panasonic Dual Cossette Stereo advertised on Page 28
of yesterday's Target sole section may not be in stock
because it is no longer available from the manufacturer. We
will not be able to offer rain checks. However, as a
substitute, we ore offering a similar Sanyo Dual Cossette
Stereo (Model GXT140) with two additional features: h" h
speed du66tng and continuous p . The Sanyo model sells
at the everyday low price of $149.99.
We regret any inconvenience this may cause.
@TARGET
ground terrorist group claimed to
have killed last week.
The Shiite Moslem fundamen-
talists said the photographs, one
showing Seurat lying bare-chested
with his eyes half-closed and another
showing a blanket-wrapped body in a
coffin, were issued because of "scep-
ticism about the seriousness of our
earlier claim.··
A third photo showed a closed
coffin with a Christian cross on the
lid.
--H---IHle-OOot~mpanied b:·'ll-a--
printcd Arabio-tan&ua&e statement. It
was si~ed "the Islamic Jihad or-
ganizatton."
There was no indication of when or
where the photographs were taken.
Last Wednesday, the group issued a
statement claiming it bad killed the
37-year-old Seurat. There was no
independent confirmation of the
claim.
The view from South Coast
Easy Z-Z-Z-Z-Z's
Night after night you twist, toss and turn. Day after day you're tired and listless.
Perhaps you snore like a lion. Or maybe you're suddenly off to sleep when you
should be wide awake. That's why there's a new Sleep Disorders Program at South
Coast Medical C.Cntet
Treatment of any sleep disorder begins with the right diagnosis. So you start
with an eight-hour night in South Coast's Sleep Disorders C.Cnter. Here sleep
specialists use the latest polysomnogram technology to monitor your air flow,
muscle movements and a host of other functions. If narcolepsy (sudden falling
asleep during waking hours) happens to be your problem, -then tests are done
during the day.
With a complete and accurate diagnosis, you 're now ready for treatment. lc's
highly effective, often simple. And to make sure you gee rhe best, we'll ger you the
right specialist.
If you want ro discover easy z-z-z.z.z's night after night, call South Coast
Medical C.Cnter today.
155::5=::~-~~=====5:!1
South Coast M di al C n~ r
31872 Coast Highway
South Laguna, California 92677
(714) 499-1311
•
0nnoe Co.t DAILY PILOT~, Match 10, 1811 A7
T9HMJ. Ma.rd 11
• ' ,
•
AJUEI (March 21-April ,19); Cin:ums~c.:es Like sudden tum il'l your
favor. You.~.al~ost ev~ryU;tma you want, umu\I and judament are su~.
Accent on u:uuallve, ori&inality, creativity al'ld romaoce. Travel plans will be
It 's not the gift, it's
the thought, right? ANSWEl8 ro WBD'.LY 81..lDOE Qua
formulated. ·
. TAU1lUS (April 2().May .20): You aet pr0verbial second chance.
Mistakes arc correct~. accounttna e!"'ors are rectified. You were right -you
do have money comma to you. Financial picture improves, you'll have reason to celebrate. GE~ (May 2l:June 20): Emphasis on excellence, dni.an, music. chanae. vanety, physical attraction You receive plaudits and act credit loni------------
overdue. Member of opposite sex is
drawn LO you, says so.
CANCER (June 21.July 22): Home
surroundinp arc beautified -you
become mo~ confident. family mem-
ber 1upports your views. Major
domC$tiC adjustqicnt proves beneficial.
SYDNEY o ....
Gift features art object or luxury item. ·
:Taurus figures prominently. , -..
LE~ (July 23-Au1,-22): Protect previous privacy. Answers are found if
you n:iedi1.ate. EmJ?basis on Iona-range project., {>Ublishing, unique process of
learn.Joa. Terms will be defined, mfonnauon will be disseminated.
VIRGO (Aug. ~3-~pt. 22): q~ sailing follows initial confrontation wt~ very stubbo~ 1ndi_v1dual. l>os1t1~n. is strong, law is on your side, you a.re
going to emerge vtctonous. Money 1s tnvolved, and decision goes in your
favor.
µBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): B~ from past is imminent. Spotlight oo spec~I ~ments, cooperatlon wnb one whose ideas do not neeessarily co1nc~dC: wtlh your own. Focus on public relations. legal rights and
pcnmss1ons. Anes plays role.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): New approach to employment is necessary.
Pull away from.~osc w.h<? take without giving anything an return. Focus on
rof!lance, creauvuy, willingness to get to heart of ptattcrs. Avoid heavy
hftmg.
SA,S!ITl'..\f\IUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21 >: Emotions tend to dominate logk.
Kno.w•1t. ~tnve for ~lance, equanimity. Intuition rings true, especially in
deahngs wt~ the pubhc. Young person does have your best interests at heart.
Cancer natlvc plays role.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): What appeared to be a "closed
situation" will actually open, mucb to your advantage. What had been a
negative ~n~ will be transformed into something very positive. Future prospects will brighten.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 18): Dig deep for information reject
superficial respo~ses. Relative communicates, talks about apptarancc, w~ro~ a~d ~eight. Emphasis on celebration, social activity, popularity, possible 1nvttallon to travel.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Be ready for variety of experiences,
adventure, gain through written word, what had been "missing" will be
located. Cycle moves up, judgment and intuition will prove accurate.
Romance is not a stranger.
IF MARCH 11 IS YOUR BIRTBDA Y you are a natural teacher and
psychologist -you are sensitive to needs of others, you a.re intuitive, you rise
above petty annoyances and you have ability to perceive picture in its
entirety. Cancer, Capricorn, Aquarius play important roles in your life. You
learn by sharing information, you are psychic and generous, members of
opposite SCJt find you intrigufog, attracuve and a challenge. June will prove
outstanding for you in 1986. If single, you could marry.
Okay, all of you mothers out there
(and you '11 know who you are), line
up and pay attention.
How many of you have received
gifts from your children that you have
stored away and never Uled? E111
B1•EC1 I see the mother who rccei vcd a fros
playiq tlllill.batljo bas her band up.
And the mother wbose twins boqbt
bcr hoop ca.rrinp lit by betteries. And
what about the mother whose son A. larae chunk of wax tbai wei&hs
bouaht her a reli&i<>us picture made about 20 pounds came with a candJe..
out of bottle caps at a praae sale? mak.iaa lcit. Every time dwina the la.st
C mon. dear, up, up, up! 10 years when we open a cupboard
We've all 'been there. We like to door aod the chunk orwu falls out, .
think our image would be one that" 'my husband asks the same q~tion,
would be rewarded with taste and "What is this and wby are we lccepina
style. This is not usually the case. it?"
Q.1-Ae South, vulnerable, you
hold:
.. 'VJ ¢AQI •IU0'1t648Z
The blddina has proceeded:
We.t Nortl9 £ut Soatla
l NT t • Pue 1
W~at action do you take?
A.-lt ls hard not to bid an eight·
card suit, but thet le unquestiona-
bly the rlght act.k>n. Des9ite the
fact that he ia vulnerable, partner
entered the auction at the two-
level. It la ciutte llkely t.hat he ls
vokl in clubs: Certainly, with your
values there is every reason to be·
lleve that two spades wlll be as
good a contract,' probably better.
than three clubs. P&M.
Recently, I suffered an acute guilt Every year sinoe l received it, the
attack and brought out all the box of bilcini underwear h.u been
t r ca s u re s o f M o t b c r ' s tilt.en out of the box, thouaht about.
Day/Christmas/Birthday past and then returned LO the box. I keep spread them out bef~ me. thinking there is somethina I could Q.Z-As South, vulnerable, you
There was the "Inna" doll. It's use them for. Folded once, they hold:
about 10 inchC$ high and was wouldmakegreatcoastenford.rinlts, •9863 QQ1C>e2 ¢AU3 "
purchased by one of my children for but they're too slippery. A slim The bidding has proceeded:
me on a trip to Mexico. The story is possibility looms that perhaps one North Eut South West
it's, a replica of the dolls used by day they migbt fit a grandchild ... who 1 <;> r... 2 <;> PaH
prostitutes to put in a window so that is toilet-trained at three months. 3 • P... ? •
a prospective .. partner" can simply lbcre'sa oeed.lcpoint kitshowinga What do you bid now? point to the dofl of bis choice. This scene of two Pcnians fi&btina in one has black hair, pink cheeks and Bagbdad. h's a wonderful gift for A.-Partner t\as asked you to eval-
"IRMA" printed across the chest of someone who joins a rcli&ious order uate your club holding for game
her lavender underwear. He thought dedica~~~ LO prayer and needle-purposes, and you couldn't have
the coincidence was amusing. poinL I · ed one saber and my much better than a singleton. Jn ad-
• . vision was blurred for months. dltion, your four trumps, headed
Theres a g1cce of ta~loth ~t Why do I kceo this Pandora's box by two honors, and the ace of dla-m~ures 2~ Y. 16 feet. . use of its of memorabilia~ Why don't I just monds, will be a pleasant surprise
rescdhgious stgnificanlbce, 1t nlcannoaUt b:e pitch it and ,et on with my life? If you for partner. Bid four hearts u to ~alk o.o. e o Y w It have to ask, don't call yourself a · wq~ld fit 1s possibly the Orea~ Wall of mother. We're the original keepers of
China. It has been stored for SJ.X yean. baby teeth, bands that have been Q.3-Both vulnerable, as South
traeed and framed. cards made out of · you hold: The bright purple sweater with two
poodles dancmg with one'another is a
cardigan. The poodles have sequined
eyes and tails. One of my kids thought
it would bring back memories of the
'50s.
construction paper and little baskets •J83 \J7 ¢1096 •AXJ982 holdi~g I S-ycar..old jelly beans. Partner opens the bidding with one Besides, maybe I'll put the ., "IRMA" doll in the window and see heart. What do you rHpond.
what happens. you never know. A.-Despite the fact you have only
9 points In high cards and
shouldn't count anything for the
singleton ln partner's suit, the
Early talkers have right bid is two clubs. That is be-
. their say in letters
When man does less , DEAR READERS: A few weeks
cause you intend rebidding three
clubs at your next tum, to tell part-
ner you have a sub-minimum two-
over--0ne response with a good,
long club suit.
• •-'. -d 110 I prta'4!4 a letter from a mu"'° his w11e oesmore :::~~J:':!~!'(:e~:> ANN
UN DEIS
L.M.
Bo Yo
1tarte4 &o '8lk at 5 m•tU. Be said IM
Jllda'l bellett ll • ..__......, ....
asked me &o elleck.
My 11tltority, diet of~ Dlvbloll
of BeMvloraJ Pediatrics at NorUi-
westena'1 ScMol of MecUdlle, ...W it heard music that pleased rum be wu ••1mpreba .. le" becaHe ~ m-·-•·tue of dte m•g ud *-* smiled. (No, it wasn't gas..) He did not ~-like rock and roll Whenever be beard a. .. , nlfldatly H•e)ope4 at 5 · b 'ed Wb f:._,,, b mea~•:r..rmJta ... ••eof ...... to It e en . en we ,.,.. cavy ·-. metal he screamed At 'IJ months he
form .. w •· P~ .. se, die .-.C&or could say "Mama.." .. Daddv" and
uJd improbable, •t lmpoalble. "NO!" Our second son didn't sa a
Q.4--East-West vulnerable, as
South you hold:
•Vo ld QJ10H8 OAJUIH .. 3
The bidding has proceeded:
We.l Nortla Eut Soath
Z • TU8 2 NT 1
What action do you take?
A.-At this vulnerability, you
should prepare for a sacrifice. Bid
three no trump. That cannot be
natural-it must be a two-suited
CHARLES
GOREN
I
t
'
r.
take-out. Obvioualy, you lntod ,
correcting LO dlamond.I should
partntt bid clubs, thereby showing
a red two-suit.er.
Q.5--As South, vulnerable, you
hold:
•AQ853 </KH2 078 ...
The bidding hu proceeded:
Weet No~ Eut Soatla
l • Dble 3 ¢ 1
What action do you take?
A.-East's three diamond prttmpt
has made Ufe difficult, and to sim-
ply bid three spades does not do
your hand justice. We would be in-
clined to risk a major-suit game.
While we would not quibble with a
bid or four spades, the hand might
play better In hearts. The way to
find out what partner hold.a b to
cue-~id four diamonds, gjvlng him
the choice.
Q.&-Both vulnerable, L'J South
you hold:
•A87 </~ OQll ... 1711 i, Paitnero~ns the bidd~g with one •
no tntmp. What do you respond'?
A.-We have been known to ralse
to two no trump with 7 points and a
five<ard suit, but only if the suit·
quality is better than here. To
make game, we would have to find
.partner with a maximum no trump
and a good club fit. That is not a
combinltlon worth risking a sound
partsoore for.
Por lnforaatloa aboet Cllariee
Goren'• MW MW9letter for
brtd•e pla1en, wrtt.e Gorea
Brtd•e Letter, P.O. Bo.x '4M, ()ro.
laado, Pl.a. HIOS-44!a.
Ai-ovnd the house. everything a
man does less of, his wife does more
of. So conclude social researchers
after a study of people not affluent
enou'1t to hlfC full-llme palace help.
And the more successful the man, the
fewer home chores be tackJcs. It's a
mtsta.ke, they say, to th.ink a man
relieves bis wife of much housework
as he becomes more successful. He
relieves himself of home chores,
rather, and thereby burdens bis wife
with more.
If you could own either the An tare·
tic or the Arctic, which would you
take? Bear in mind, the Antarctic is a
body of land surrounded by water
while the Arctic is a body of water
surrounded by land.
How many actors who were ath-
letes first can you bring to mind? Start
with Fred Dryer and Ed Molinaro and
go all the way back to Tom Mix and
Douglas Fairbanks Sr.
A few .. Y• after daat eolDLI word until be was 11 months old. kis
appeared I w11 lllt witll • loed of first utterance was a full sentence:
letten from parat1 WH Md tklr ~·t go 'way." _ R.J., GAL.
own atorlea to tell. Here are aome--ESBURG ILL
=plea of WM& my week llu been DEAR 'ANN• LANDERS: At 8
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Before months .our daughter walked and
the husband starts to wave your potty-tramed h~lf. PD~ day, she
column in his mother-in-law's face, I stooda!t~ed~ran<iwd, Goodbye.
want to com.e to the defense of the Aunt L11l1an. -; <?·~··LAS VEGAS.
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE,_
Missionaries in 1831 set up a small
educational institution now re-
COID-ized as this nation's oldest school
west of the Rocky Mountains -the
Lahainaluna High School on the
island of Maui.
Information You Can Use: A polar
bear in summer gets overheated if it
runs too far without jumping into the
water now and then. So even when
you're afoot, if you chase it inland.
you can catch iL
Q. What's a typical monthly rent in
Cuba?
A. Six percent of the renter's wages.
Somebody making $300 a month
pays $18.
PEOPLE
Q. Who was the genera.I described
by Abe Lincoln as "the only man who
can snatch defeat from certain vic-
tory .. ?
A. Gen. Ambrose E. Burnside, the
fellow who popularized those
whiskers now known as sideburns.
Am told numerous dentists who
like to go camping in remote places
make a hobby out there of panning
the creek beds for gold. U ndcr-
standable. Gold buyers visit dentists'
offices routinely.
Q. Is it true one publisher puts out
an alcohol-proof Bible you can use as
a coaster for r.our whiskey &I.us?
A. It's not hk:c thaL Some Bibles put
in hotel rooms arc bound in liquor-
proof covers, that's all.
lady who claims her daughter talked DEAR ANN LANDERS: J was
at 5 month~. . . amazed that your expert did not
All the children m our fanuly talltcd believe a child of 5 months could
early. The youngest was my niece, pronounce words. Our daughter who
who said "Daddy," "bye bye," "bot-1s now 4 years old and readi~g at
tie" and "bath" at SYz months. It was second-grade level started to talk
considered no big deal in our family. when she was 41/1 ~onths old. Her
- D.M., AUBURN, CALIF. first word was "baby."
••• I bl . 'd DEAR ANN LANDERS: I don't was !1 psy~ o ogy miu.or an a
care what your authority from North-great believer an prenatal 100ueoce.
western Medical School says, my son, When I was p~ant ~ read aloud to
at1fC5 months, was sitting in bis high my unborn child, being careful to
ctw.r when my sister brought in a p~oi;iounce all words slowly and
bouquet of spring flowers .. He pointed disun<=!!Y· I often patt~ ~belly and
a finger at the bouquet and said as asked, A.re you hstenmg. After t~e
plain as day, "Pretty!" We were seventh month the baby ~ponded 10
dumbfounded. _ C.LD., CUN-the form of a hard k.ick. I am
TON MAINE. con~nccd l;hat m~thcrs can co~-, • • • municate with their unborn babies
L.M. Boyd 11 • 1yodlc•IH DEAR ANN LANDERS: Our and that a fetus can learn while in the
col•aulht. firstborn son showed signs of being womb. -S.L.P. IN CARTHAGE,
precocious at 3 months. When he MO.
EastwoOd tickled with comic spoof
By tM Attoclated Pre11
CARMEL. Calif. -CUat Eat&·
wMCI may have made Garry
Tr•MH'• day. He's not upset at au by t.he cartoonist's current
Doonesbury strips pokina fun at
bis bid for mayor.
.. Naw, t lhou&tlt they were
runny," said the steely star of
Westerns and the "Dirty Harry"
detective series. "They were
cute."
Eastwood, a Republican may-
oral candidate in Carmel, saw all
six panels before they started
appcarina last Monday.
•Barnum' foldloC
LONDON ._ Mica.tel Cr••••" has been walkina a hi&b Wlre, swin&ina on trapeus, jual-
lna and tuinblina for almost flVe
years, but in April he's bowlna
out and lhe curtain Wiii come
do;;n on the hit show "Barnum."
Producer llanW PleW.1 said
the show will clOK at London's
Victoria Palaee on April 26 after
1.210 performances.
Ficldina said the lenath of the
run bad always been detmnancd
by Crawfofd's wilhnanes.s to con-
. -
Cll.Dt SUtwoocl
tinue in the role of circus how--
man P.T. Barnum. The role
requires him to walk a hiah wire.
make an 80-foot slide down a
rope, SWtnl on trapttes, jug)e.
tumble and do trampoline stunts.
Andy debark.a
PLYMOUTH. En&Jand -His
shipmate formed a chorus hne
aod be wu liUt1\lded wuh "I'm
OIDa LoUobrtP1a
the Kina of the Swinscrs," as
Pnnce ~ ... ended a two-year
tour on a wanhap.
The prince, 26, a Royal Navy
lieutenant and a renowned cto0rt
for beautiful women, received lhe
surpnse JO()dbyc when he left the
f~le HMS Bruen. He was the
ship's helicopter pilot for two
years. and had served 1n the l qs2
Falklands war wi lh Af'lerl ti o.a.
She'll take naae
LOS ANGELES -Actress
MlcMel Leaned says she'll do a
television series for the mone1.
but if she can afford 1t, shed
rather be on st.aae. Lcamca. 46, who starred in the CBS acnes ··The Waltons." 1s
rchcarsina at the Ahmanson
Theater for "Picnic," the Wilham
l!lJC dnma that won a Puhtter
Prize in 19S3.
She bas done one television
series since "The Wahons:· rt·
ceivma her fourth Emmy Award
for "Nurse" (the other thrte ~re
for her role ofOliv11 Walton).
Ollaa retvnl.DC
MILAN. Italy-Italian KU"CSS
Glu ~rl,U. has been
quoted as announcina her retu.m
to feature films af\er a I 4-year
abtcnce.
··1 finally found Lbc nabt
cbaracte.r, and a beautiful story
dated around I 92S ... .I cannot iay
m~ about the movte at the
moment; I am supentahous," the
actrcU. .S8. told Mt~n·1 da1I}
n~ Corriere ddll Sera.
AC .. OH
1 French city
6 Ship's rtgglng
Item
10 Brewer's
need
14 Sequestered
15 Corn product
16 Steel beam
17 Rlata end
18 Behttle
20 Partly· pref
21 Church
compartment
22 Grades
23 Binary
25 Wiid asses
27 Most mo<Sern
30 Crown
31 French river
32 Contradict
33 Guido's note
36 Beclouds
3 7 St<>pOYef
38 Ostracize
39 Fell guy
40 Made known
41 Metric unit
42 Bank cutu•
.t4 Felt
45 Musical
movements
4 7 Italian city
48
58
48 Turnstiles
49 Collection
50 Disagree·
ment
54 Some errors
5 7 Theatrical
58 •pplaud
59 E11ped1tion
60 Troy beauty
6 1 Sottlern and
Landen
62 Groupings
63 Oetenorate
DOWN
1 Ridicules
2 Genus of
plants
3 Den, e.g
4 Knowing
ones
5 Catch on
6 E11emplary
7 a.neath
8 Make ..ams
9 Frelgl'lt unit
10 llluaion
1 l 01mlnutlona
12 Dock worke<
13 Curt
19 Sllgl'lt hill
21 Seasonable
24 Manlpulate
I
25 Lubricated
26 Foot part
27 Covef'S
28 Continent
29 •11uremen1
30 Olscourege
32 Dull ones
34 c.pttvate
35 In the NCI(
37 Ligl'lt Clrcie
38 Ominous .a Happy state
41 Shepherded
43 Ol8Ch&rget
44 Inebriate
45 Marl<etplac.
•6 Pythlu' loyal
friend
47 Speeks
imperfectly
49 Wrinkle
51 -Alto
52 Venerable
S3UK~ 55 .. _
Oek>vety''
56 Oenlsn coin
5 7 That P41f'80n
0 11 12 13
•
'·
A8 Orange Cout DAIL y PILOT I Monday, March 10, 1988
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane
"The more you hear the better
we sound."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"He wants. you 10 tluff hts p1llowt"
t>E"NUTS
GARFIELD
I TMINK I'LL WRti( A BOOK THt5
WE.EK .THE.Y 5 AY EVERYONE HA~ A GOO P BOOK IN THEM
TUMBLEWEEDS
DRABBLE
I 0
NOQM Tl.\£ POLECAT "X.IME.ONE. ~A".> BE.£.t-J
l.O()(;E. NE.E.Ob ~OUR 14U.P ~A.,')1N'-' VtTAl. ~E.CRE.T5
ROSE IS ROSE
Of ~I-IE. LOOGf.. 10 OUR
.\~C\.I RIVAL.':>
T~E. WE.A~L~ \
BIG GEORGE
.. 4
I.I ~ >-II)
:.'l ~ c .. l • z
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
.....
"So THAT'S what your double chest Is for
·· a sleeping shelf for Princess."
DENNIS THE MENACE .
~
' ,
I
('
I
by Hank Ketcham
<.;._;;(_~ 3 ()
-1 tm>N'T HEAR YOU CALLING Nf. l MUST
8f GETTING ~RECEPTION ."
by Charles M. Schulz
by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan
by Kevin Fagan
NO, 1 MC..l\N I T~ ~ARO
iO 0€..Uf.\JE. 1~£ Rx..f.CAi5
~\le. AN'i \lllAl. 6£.CReT5 ~
by Pat Brady
BLOOM COUNTY
HEU.O MRS WHliJ<U. . !~ 'it\« LAW~~ ~Tt~ ~U.tj ~ tra« "''f APl"ERRANU JM
AfFeRJN& FOfi AN /llllf~
HANbOV -!.'-HfA~He .
I
MOON MULLINS
'
NOW AR£ Y()V
Ur'IO'n(}NN.L.Y
m~ro
{;(} O~ THE ~nl/t.S AGAIN ~
I
OBVIOUSLY You'V€
ALWAYS WANTED TO IEl.L
M~ ~ow ,ADoRABL.E' )OLJ
T~INK I AM ··RJGWT?
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
by Berke Breathed
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
by Lynn Johnston
\ 'L.L 6€. OK. HD'tESf.
I'D RAlHSR BE.
JUDGE PARKER
P.l~. Cr-E'D 111. ... E•• f-_\'\A
ACCUSES H "' -i::-
ASSAl 1..'1'1~.;G \:'ARLENF.
H()f'<A( F ATTE-"MPT';:> Tl)
R1..1rJ -.)UT '.)F THE-
.0.PA.R1 MENT 81.. ~ l~
R[: $TRA1•~ED 61 r••l.
H "' NE 0 HB0R '
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
BE"IE.VE ME, FLJNl<l,.> ... 1
. l(N()(A) klSA ... AND ~E:.'5
~ 6£lf1N& 100 6ERl01Jb
ABoar ~ REL.AllON~I P !
DOONESBURY
THt /N'flJMtlll'5
()V? flWTA5T/C I
\
'
HEREA~E.
~
by Jeff MacNally
Itt>UST IT
by Harold Le Doux
by Tom Batiuk
by Gary Trudeau
BABY ooc
I ,-
·'
Or~ CoMt DAILY PILOT/Monday, Mercn lO, 198e ...
'Lennon' mixes drama, satire
By TOM TITOS
Ofllllehl!r ........
Pop culture is a Jlecuna commo<h·
ty. Yestcrdat s cause quickly ~om
es tomorrow scliche, and a play based
on a tragic event in our own decade
may turn as stercotypicaJ as "Waiting
for Lefty .. by the lime the ink is dry.
h•Jb school k.Jds and the jaded ina for the Soaps" will be offered
VLetnam veterans -all pthered Tuesday and March 18 from 7 to 10
across the street from the DUota p.m, in Room S07 of El Toro ffiab
apartment buildin.a on Dec. 9, 1980, School under the directaoa of Robert
to try and make some sente out or Connd .... ca11 the CommU!_li~y Stt·
what happened the niaht before. vices Office ofSaddleblck couese at
Director John Ferz.acx:a ebCJU S82'-4646 for more mformation ...
some promisina performanoei from
his student cast, and the blandness of CALLBOARO -Tryouts for the
thoplay's first act blossoms into some mu'1cal comedy "The Tbwanina of
convincina ·confrontations aftel' in· Baton Bolli&rcw" will be held next
termission. The players. for the most Monday at f p.m. at the Westminster
part. drop their conventional cloaks Community Theater', 7272 Maple St.,
and let their emotions reip. Wcstminster .... director Larry Blake
and 15 women frotn ~ 1 S l..brouO
15, and sbcet m&WC lbould &e
btouabt for vocal 1Ud.ilio6t .... call
99>'113 fordetailJ.... r
Readlnp for Golden West Col· l~e·s production of .. Aesop•s
Fables," adapt.eel and din:cud by ~tcr inttructor Charles Miachetl,
will be t\eld March t 8 at 7 p.m. in the
Playbox Theater .... five men and five
women for multiple roles ~ be•n&
souf.:bt and more information is The thread that ties them all wiU be seek:ina a latte cast o( I S men
together is Lennon and his sonp. As --"."",----,.,..~---------------------.,.one of the characten notes, it was
ava1lable at 89S-8 l 3-4 ...
ltea Perklna (rtcJlt) ~be , ap ltrtc ~ ba .. Tbe Day They
Shot Job.D .Lemion '' at orance Cout Collece.
PlaywriJ!tt James Mclure must
have reahzed this when he created
"The Day They Shot John Lennon,"
currently enjoying its Southern Cali-
fornia premiere at Orange Coast
College. His characters arc familiar
cross-.sections of humanity who
espouse the rcprcsen1ational party
lines of their respective back&rounds.
but with an important d.ilfercnce.
They're written -if not always
played -as put~ns, self-destructing
social satirizations wbo only grad-
ually develop into nesh and blood
figures.
They're all there -the women's
libber, the smooth and shallow
Madison A venue type, the old Jew.
the angry young Puerto Rican. the
"back&round music for our lives."
The former Bealle wrote "love is all
yo u need" and, at least bl the end of
the play, most ofMcLure s characters
arc touched by this realization.
The OCC cast members grapple
· with the shado"1 and substance of
their' characters and several of them
prevail. The most convincinaare Ken
PcrlOos as the war veteran whose
experiences put him on a level above
the others in his own mind and Eric
Scott as his shellshockcd buddy
whose dishrag character finally ex-
plodes in torment late in the play.
EVBINO
-1.'00-
D•NEWS MAnHOUSTON
POLICE STORY GAEATQT AMENCAN HERO
THAEFS CtNPAKf
Dff'MNT STROKES ... f90RT
OCEANUS
CISNEWS
AICNEWS Q
..CHEWS
~ LAWME TRff FAMILY
HOT SEAT I HOTUNE
IOXINO
-8:20-
• PlEDOE 8AEAJ(
-8:30-
1 ~~ F-OR COMFORT
JE.(Jp AFtJY
MACHB. I L.BtAEA
NEWSHOtJR
• NEW LITERACY: AN
INTAOOUCTION TO COMPUTERS
IE=8CWK
=ONES •*"'"Sixteen Cllndlel" ( 19S.) Mol-M=· Anthony MIOllHI Hall
* • •,; "Secrets" (1982) Helen Lind·
~·~ CtmpbelhJones.
... "Airplane!'' (1980) Roben
Heys. Jolie Hagerty
-7:00-
18:9 =AINMENT TONIGHT
TAXI
eABCNEWSO
mtamu m -4114
IDWMDS TOWN conB
IL n. 511-9500
IDWMDS n TCllO
I =CONNECT10N ~~ting Back" (1982) Tom ntAEFS COMPANY Skemtt Pam Lupone 8 WHEE. OF FOATIME MOVIE
BUSINESS AEPOAT u •; "The Flamingo Kid" (19&4)
-9:10-
• THE SPENCER TRACY LEGACY: A TMUTE BY KA TltAAIHE
HEP8URH
-9:30-
• CJ) NEWHART
(!)MOVIE
Dave ~cy as the ad executive
and Victona Roth-Moody as the
fem inist secretary cross swords ver-
bally throuf,hout the show without 1 either drawtng blood, and the resol-
ution of their conflict is unconvinc-
ing. Rick Jackson and Mimi Bisson as
the recently severed teen-age roman-
ucs spar on a more elementary level
while Mark Salamon as their nerdish
buddy steals most of their scenes.
I P.M. MAGAZINE Matt Dillon, Richard Crenna.
PRAISE THE LOAD CARSON'S COMEDY ClASSlCS
INOEPEHDEHT HEWS ROBIN HOOO
-7:30-MOVIE
12 OH THETOWN **.,,"The Leopatd" {1963) '8urt
PRICE IS RIGHT Lancute1, Claudia Cardinale.
WHATS HAPP£NINGtt -9:30-(_
* * "The Goldwyn Follies" (1938)
Adolphe Menjou, Ella Logan.
8J) FA THEA KNOWS BEST
-10:00-l i:V' LACEY 8 EYE ON LA. . • D VALERIE -·~ a 11,000.oocrc:t«HCE OF A • .._ a ~s W1t.O
UFET1ME __. (!) TMPP£R JOHN, M.O.
I M'A'S'H ~ • PM MAGAZINE
NEWl YWED GAME G DONNA REED
PAOF1l.E.S OF NATURE HOHEYMOONE~
G MADEl..EJNE COOKS -t:00-
(1) 8.0. AT LARGE I (I) KATE & AWE 9 P£0Pt.F8 COURT QI) DR£SS GRAY
G YOUR CHOICE FOR THE ALM
AWAPDS
-~ GD BEHIND THE SCENES
!~AY F1'0M ASCOT
H * "Airplanel" ( 1980) Roben
Ha , Julie Hagerty QI JEOP~AOY 8 aJ MOVIE
• RAOING FROM SANTA ANITA "Between Two Wom&n" (Premie!e) ~LE ROCK Fatrah Fawcett, Colleen Oewtwrs1.
KIDS IN CRISIS
COMEDY BREAK
The "Chico and the Man"-type
relauonship between John Merina as
the elderly New Yorker and Tony
Garc1a as the ghetto blaster-toting
would-be comedian is the mo,1t
derivative in the play. There are few
surprises. save for Merina's sudden
pica for Garcia's companionsh ip, and
both deli ver convincing, if predict-
able, performances. ""'"<I Cl NEWS -10:15-
8!) REUGIOU3 ~RAMMING -l:«J-
• CJ) SCARECROW ANO M~.
KING D QI YOU AGAIH Q
8 MOVlE * * * · Comes A Horseman" ( 1978)
Jane Fonda, James caan. 8 (II HARDCASTlE AND
MCOOAMIO(
Cl 1100,000 PYRAMID
CJ) WKRP IN CINCINNATI
1= * * "Exorcist II: The He<etk" ( 1977)
Richard Burton, l.Jnda Blu
• WClNOERWOfV<S Ii> FOR AUCTION: AN AMERICAN
H£AO
8i> PRAISE THE LORD C)DONHAAEEO
•MOYIE • * • "Brolcen Lance" 11954) Spen-
oer Tracy. Richard Wlclmat1!
-~ · FATHER KNOWS BEST MOVIE **'" "Oreamscape" (1984) Dennis
Quaid, Max Von Sydow
STAR TR£I(
MOVIE • • * 1,; "The Killing Fields" ( 1984)
Sam Waterston. Ha1ng S Ngor
-10:30-
, KENT AHO DAU AXTELl
IHOEP£HDENT NEWS
-11:00-
l • • • O QINEWS CARSON'S COMEDY ClASSICS e BARNEY MILLER
Ci) 8USlteS REPORT
CJ) THIS DAY
a!) aiRISTIAH LIFESTYLES
MAGAZINE G NIGHT GALlERY
'The Day They Shot Jobn Len-
non" is a w~U-choscn exercise for
student actors and OCCs inter-
pretation as quite watchable. Per-
fo rmances continue Thursday
through Saturday at 8 p.m. with a I
closing matinee Sunday at 3 p.m. in
the college's Drama Lab theater. Call
432-S527 for ticket information.
BACKSTAGE -Classes in "Act-
-CIN E·P'I GONl[-
Sl"EA K ERS A Ra 8ACK
Gt,) 111 ;W i pijJ,) 0; 4 Jffe.~s:v~: .. ~ .. ~
I 02 1171 Kt1ttl1 l!fw St•f"'"'
STADIUm 0
MOUSE (IU QIUICKMLV&R cPQ) IMNAH
AND HER
s SHOWS A 1' SHOWS AT
7 :00 a. t :05 6:)0 6 1 :40
Ac;;:~ N omlnHI llUR llOIU'llCE .... ,s, 6:40 .. 1 :55
THE HITCtCll (1t)
SHOWS AT 1 :50 &. l :SO
cEnTuAY c1neoome r:J 634 2SSl1Ch1pm1n
& S.nt.t l\n1 f wv
... STTY ... ML.DC.ATS flt) SHOWS AT I tS 3 :30
S:45l·OO&. 10·15
THE. HITCM«R (R)
Plull Nlthlm1re on
Ctm StrHt (RI
THIE NAKED CA8IE (It)
Plu1t Co·f<•atur• Chained Heat (RI
00"'9 AllO °'1T "' ~llLY .. LU (II) P1u1 Splnl'I (PC)
s
s
U-994-2400 rA~LAmADA S
..,., ... '44-0760
EDWMDS IOIP<aT
-·
-'37-0340
AMC caMG£ MM.I.
-'34-3911
UA C1Tl conB
ITllTll 191-0567
IDWMOS Vl.U6E COO£.R
.... K .... IS>
1:003:10 5:2o 7,3019:40
~AllDOUTlll ~·'-"' .. u.s (It) S HOWS AT t : tO 3:25
5:35 7:50 .. 10:00
··~..._..-OUT CW "'"ICA (90) SHOWS AT 1:104":20
6 7 :30/IN70MM
SH~~o'rl:u
5:2S 7:4 5 &. 10:05
11 AcMilmY Nomlnltions
COL.Oil PUllPUl (1t)
SHOWS AT
1:40 4:40 .. 7 :40
PtlETTYINPWIK nul':;!~11en ,
Tllb ls NOW (R)
9ACKTOTHE F'UT\111£ cPQ) P1u1I Delta Force (R)
OIUV( UIS o, .. l :JI WU•rtll .. Wh .. t/U .. ., u fflt U•leu •••••
•••••• • •••••• • * BARGAIN M ATINEES M ONOAV THRU FRIOAv tST 1 PfRF OR~ANf f "-*
+ SA TUROAv 1 ~I ;• Pf RF QRMANC ES * t t • ff'l H(lll[;A1\ 1. \'AR~f :) * ff A ' Mf' •
LAKEWOOD
e nter .Pr1u1u1 tsHlfKvlty s C••d'-'d
oouY m no MOUY ltHeWA&.D
NITTY IN PINK 1 .... n 1
121• bet 4lM .. u flOJ 1 hOS
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HK.-NOl TllNTTI MIDUJI
IOWN N OUT .. llV8!.T MIU (I)
I b4J Jt IS S!4.I •II I OtU * OOUY llllllO 11 ACMIMT NOMINATIOHI
111V1N ll'ICL9fll0'1
THI COlOll PUl'U c .... u 1 "" .... ,,,. '"" IMOMI NIC1 I tf MIOW °""'
9YI WllKI c11
U1• 2'M S1JO 7.U 10.1'
LAKEWO
C..m•r South
lllllU4 tUI F1nlly II Do! Amt
THI NAKID CAGI 111
12'JI »I 4"'° MS •H theo
DILTA fOKI 111
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LA MIRADA
c.-11l'Of'M11 LNlllllT
HIGHLANDll lll ltU >i4J .. u .... 11.00
OOUT IT1UO
Ntat NOlntlCTn MtOU•
DOWN AND OUT
IN llVHL Y HILLS (I)
121u >iu s1aJ "°' 10.•
OOU Y mlltO
l*>UT llNOWAl.O
,llTTY IN "NK (,._Ill
lttM t iao 41U .. u 1140 10:4S
11 AM.lllMT NOMlf'tAnota * ITIVIN ~NllO'I
THI COLOll PUl'LI 1,..111 ti• .. u ,,. , .. "
......... , .. 9"0W °""'
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Watch thf' Acad,my Awards Mar ch 74
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·.
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··-·
• AlO Otangie CoMt DAILY PILOT/ M~. M.,ch 10, 19H
' AirCal
to serve
Alaska
TWA adversaries tell what went wrong
A.1rCal has announced 1t will
begin ~rv1ce between Sc~1ttle
and Anchorage on May IS.
The Newpon Beach-based
airline will in1t1ally provide
rwo daily round·tnp flights,
and effective June I. W1 11
implement its full schedule of
four dat.ly round tnp fllghts. A
reduced sthcdule will operate
on Saturdays and Sundays.
Converuent co nnections 10
Orange County will be avail-
able through the Seattle
gateway.
MONEY SENSE
Flight attendants· union c hie~ cl~im~
'sexist view' prevents wage agreement
WASHINGTON (API -The
flight attendants' stnke against 1 ranl>
World Airlines was ~t in mouon
when th-ear union's leader broke apart
from other umons in negotiating
wage and productivity concession'i,
the company's chairman said Fnday.
"I believe very strongly that a deal
could have been made by the union
leandership 1n August," TWA Chair-
man Carl Icahn told reporters Friday
"At that time We could have had a
three.way deal. I could have got my
financing cheaper and things could
have worked out."
Victoria Frankovich. president of
thc 6.000-member Independent Fed·
erat1on of flight Attendants, said
Fnday that an agreement will never
be reached as long as Icahn holds a
.. sexist view" that the mostly female
members of her umon should take
la1"3er cuts than those imposed on the
primanly ~ale wot kforce of pilots
and machinlSls.
··1n conversation~ throughout the
pcnod ofour negotiations, he refers to
us as stewardesses and girls." she sajd.
.. He has used as an explanation for his
inl>ll>tence for demanding greater cuts
fro m us than from other groups that
we arc women, that we can afford the
cut and that we will give it."
Icahn, with the support of the flight
•attendants. the Airline Pilots Associa-
tion and the International Assoc1a-
t1on of Machinists. launched a ··whue
k.mght" takeover of the tinanc1ally
troubled canier last August, when the
unions feared that Texas Air Chair·
man Frank Lorenzo might talcc
control ofTWA.
As pan of what the unions viewed
as a rescue from Lorenzo -who has
waged anti-union campaigns at other
airlines -ALPA, the JFFA and the
IAM promised Icahn large con-
cessions on labor costs.
But from the beginning. Frank-
ovich ~id Fnday. Icahn has de-
mandcd that her union give back 44
percent of their wages and benefits.
compared with 34 percent givebacks
for TWA's 5,000 pilots an-d f S percent
givebacks for its 10.000 machinists.
The flight attendant said they were
willing to take a t S percent pay cut bul
would not agree to new work rule
that its leaders said would have
required flight attendants to be away
from home up to another 20 hours a
week .
In the final hours of bargaining
around midnidl\ Thursday. Frank·
ovich said, the Tlight auendants union
offered givepacks of 2.5 percent and
totaling $50 million com'pared with
the $30 million te1llng it had put on
concessions since August. and equal
1n dollars to the mach1n1s1s· con-
CCSSJOn~. Icahn said that 10 the final hOUT5
before the talks broke off. he had cut
llis demands for waae give~~u.~m 22 to 17 percent but was st1l~int1Jtang
on the work rule changes.
"What actually is going on is
featherbedding,·• he charged_. "We
atnnet exist when we arc paying our
night attendants close to $35(900 a
year. We have Imes of app •.cants
around the block who want the JOb at
$1 2.000 a year. This is what we have
to do to compete against the otbe:r
airlines.''
• Before the givebacks. TWA pilots
averaged incomes of$90.000 per year
and the machinists made an average
ofS38.000
Want $100,000 house? Consider shared equity
Shared-equ1t' arrangements benefit both owners. For ta;( purposes. the inve tor's losses net ~ut to agree to sell the property. All>o the oJiers agree to cover 1986 hold\
both good and bad
new<, for prospective
home owners. The
good news is that
mortgage interest
rates have plunged
to their lowest level
1n six years. The bad
news 1s that most
Herc's how a typical arrangement might be structured: $6.272 -which in the 50 percent tax bracket would gain equally all costs associated with the sale or refi nancing of
You want to buy a $120,000 house. Your salary, the investor $3.136 in tax relief. ln this instance. tqe tax the propert y. '
MARY
RUDIE
which puts you in the 30 percent tax bracket, can cover savings cover the investor's cos!. ~uwton'Lforge,J. the •The proceeds from the sale of the property arc
monthly mortgage payments but yoµ cannot afford the investor .,.,;n·also malce·money ff the house apprecia¢s, as allocated based on ownership intesrst after all other
$20.000 downa) ment So an 1n-.cstor hels you by making most arc bound to do over the long term. da1ms against the property have been1satisfied.
balfthe down payment Each of)ou now owns half of the A shared equity arrangement can be set up to ta vor •If an owner fails to R~~ ~r def•ults on his or h~r
house. • the owner/occupant or the owner/investor They usually share of ownership costs, t'hc. non-d~~lting 1)(U'tne~ is
Let SJ ump forward a y¢ar and see how you far~d neitt are best if the investor 15 in the 35 percent or higher tax e~tlc'1:1~ advanee paymenr1fbeha f ~f the defa.ulung
to a couple who bought an 1dent1cal house on th~1r own bracket and the resident is in the 30 percent or llS'Wcr.-: partttcr 1fffh~ of a loan tf e loa 1s not repaid, the h6'int pnces continue-to creep l'bihcir h1P1 est levels ever.
with the nat1onw1dr a\crage ho\enng JUSt above
$1 00.000
and on the same terms. Their yearly payments (interest bracket. agreement is breached. I . .
and pnnc1pal on an 11 percent SI00.000 mortgage) total Be f h d r 1 f h d d •Neither owner cal\ tralfsfer apy nght title or
Man) first-time home bu\C r'> manage to circumvent
that gnm six-figure stat1st1c b~ putting together novel
financing. One such arrangement 1s ~hared equity. Under
ll, fru strated house-hunter' g.t\C as.hare in their home to
an outside investor
$11 ,424. Propcn} ta);e"' come to S 1,000, insurance, $600. Fred 0 t ~ .ec 1 ~1~g va ~f ~ t ef the ucu3nst interest 1n any pom or1 "Ofth~·wopcn ytwithout 'the other Since interest payments and propeny taxes are deduc-pan1cu ar) eprec1at!o!'. It s us_ua y l>t ' c rest en o" ner's con~nl,,,,, '
tible. the after-tax costs of outnght ownership for buys ou_t the in~estor s .u:uerest ~n the fif\h or m:th year. · ~ . someone in the 30 percent tax bracket come to about The resident could d,o.,th1s thr9u&ll a second mortgage or For more"inf'Ormat1on on th~ ta x ~nd legal
$9,427 a year or $785 monthly. an entirely new on,~ .. :r. ·. _)·' ·"ll' · 1.mpl1cat1ons.of 'lhnred;qu1ly partnerships, you can wnte
Since you only own hall the house vou'rc only ..-B~ut prov1s1ons. 1.m;1odi9g those tnggercd b~ to l.R. · Pubhca11on 5.!7. Rental Property, Box 25866.
In man) case'I. ttie tn\CStOr'> an: the home buyer's
parents. who chool>C the arrangement O\er other means of
assistance.-such a!I outright gilt\ or loans -for the tax
incentives It offers. nol.llbl) dcprec1auon and interest
deducuon!i.
responsible for half the mortgage. 1nsuran~ and taxes. So d~ffi. d1S8bmt~ or failure }ll rota obli~s. as -well <1!> Richmond. VA. 23~60.
your after-tax bill equals $4, 713 In addition. your sha~.--'the d1vis1ory of ownershlp~s~~hould be spelled out ma Another 1nformauon source 1s the Family Backed
equity agreement calls for you to pay half the going ~J.e . shared equity agreement drilteo by "a1l ex~nenced. real Mortgage Assoc1a11on which 'lpcc1alizes in matching
rental homes in your neighborhood -$300 a mont 1 '(>r estattlawyer A standard agreement should 1ncluac these ~hared-equity bon"Owcrs with lenders. It takes its fee from
$3,600 annuall y The two figures. rent and ownerslf'jp. ···clause!: , •. the points you pay to a part1cipaung lender. You can write
costs. total $8.313 or $69 3 monthly a roughly 13 percent •The ow~u· upant is desisnatcd a~ the managing to th em for more 1nfonnation: Family Backed Mortgage In a t)'p1cal shared-equ1t~ transaction. a hou!le. co-op
or condominium 1s bought b' two or more pcr<>ons as
tenanl!>·in-common That means each has an agreed·
upon but undl\ 1deJ interest 1n tht· property O-wncr;h1p
can be sphL 50-50 or 40-60 fo r 1hat matter. but the house
itself can't be '>Ph i 1n half.
savings over complete ownership. owner and •. ~spensible for collect in~ the Organization. 2585 Ordway Bu1ld1ng, I K:uscr Pfaza.
The investor. as a landlord. benefits as well. AsaJomt owner/1nvesto s·s~f any payments and makrng full Oakland. 94612
owner: the _1{).YCfltOr 1s r~s~fl51ble (o11 ha~f of the pre-~x ~,pa me to the" ~aet< 1...nsurancc compan1e'l and ta~ Mary J . Rudie 1, vice preside.nt & maufer of cost of own1 ng tne'ltome. 81.Jt the 1 o ~estor s OUJ-Of-pocket • ' . ~ · · expenses (half mi mortgage, taxe6 aruf olS'\lr l -"'"' ·•.. • . , , consumer sector marketing services for Merrill )'11.Cb,
For the arrange ment to p3\\ mu'\tCf with the Internal
Re\ enu c Sen ice. 11 must meet the fo llowing pm·.ismns
laid do""n in Section :?MJA of the I R~ (ode The prol)t'rt)
m u~t he the pnnc1pal residence of one owner "'hale the
othe-r ow ncr mu\t trcat the propcrt) a~ an in \ estmcnt and,
lhC'retore, l'i nut en11tlcd lo hve there. Owner No I must
al'SO pa' a fair market rent on owner No 2·s share of the prol)<:rt~ In ctlcn. o\\ner No ~ become~ a IJndlord
Own er 'o I on tht• other hand. becomes both an o.-ier
and a te nant
partially offset by the rent lne qceup'im~paS'Sf so· ftlk~~!Ut Ot~ewcdortcrm1na1ed,thc11w11~1' Plerc~fe~ei:__&Smllbhc.
1n,estor 1s onl y S:!.'>1 2 lighter for'the ')ear. '
I OVER THE COUNTER
Add to.that a 1ax deduct1o'll m the tonn -0f a $3.360
deprcc1at1on allowance (1n th1<> tnl>tancc. the IRS 1s
allowing 7 percent ofS48.000. which i'i,80 percent of the
inve'ltor's ownership stake) which 15 altowed under the
Accelerated Co'it Recovery System. The amounl of
deprcc1at1on allowed, howe-.er, is dependent on when lhe
propcny 1o; placed 1n sen ice. so tt 1s important to check
with a ta~ ad' 1ser before making any prOJCCl1ons.
23 ... 14 1 Hcl>GB I 14 "1 h ._ MelRI 11 71 • HtnrdF 31 ll i.. MeulLP 19 19 • Hon n Ill! 1 '> MevPI 19 19' • HIOrln l 'I l>\ M&vnOI
13 .• 131"1 Horlzlh 3" • Mc Crm ·~ 9 Hvl>l'llC ll" 33.\/o McFort SS';, S6 ., IMS I 37h 31 " MeOCre 4~ 4' ISC IJ~ IJ • ~El '
16 1 "" lnloRK 1t ., 11'11. Ml<om 1• 15 lrtftrn 16 ., 17 • In· MO\aW 1 > 7\o train 1" • 1'-lnltl MldlB• 131.. 13... 15 > 2Sloo In Mlftle><
20 10 • trcE nr I I " -· 11 JO lnlgpti ' 31"1 31'• MOnlCI
S ., S "" 1w1SoU s.l'h S4 MonuC u • '4.\to JemWlr 2Slh 26 MoortP 19'? 1t:i.. JtfMt rl 6ih 6>.. Morfin
3'" 39"-Jerko • 19'19 19• ... MolClb " 99 ., JCH>lct>I l l\ 9 Mu.tier I ., t>.. J~Pll1n I ''> l 'I.. NarroC
'4 '4 > m tvn JO JO • N0111 11 • 17 '> l(elvar 1-. l'; p.jMoern 9 " 9 • l(eman J 23-. 2• Nlw~ S ' 41 ) 41 KlvS A. J 411? .501, v1NckOG 101 ... II•. Kemp ff'I') 97 Niki 8
121• ll''> Klm1>1I 31 31 IJ NO<<IW
ll'M II'• K.lnolnl lllo I ''> NCerG1 79~ 19" KtootG • 7" 7 IJ· 16 NwNG 10 20' • KnapeV 46''> '7.-0 Nw•IPS
SO SO • Kr-ll'" ll.\/o Noxell s I > l>.. Kulclte ;o; \l Ocea~
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... MeoeiPt "-"'•' ' 41' 4 1 1 II 16 1 IS 16 PeooE•
9 ' • Petrne n eo , PllllGI
2 ') 1" PionHI
• t• • Poul• • 39 39~ Pow•ll e , I~ Progrp S,,_ 6 POSNC
I 19·31 I'll Purl8n 17 • 17'., QMS
1 • 1S'lo °"6drt 431-'3 , QwkC11
!II S4 • Re~ 41''> '3 RIYmncl
31' • lJ Re<llCr 36 ~ Reeves
191 • 30 ReulrH n~ 21"' Roe<!Sv 16l~ 17 RobMvr n :i.. 1• Rouw • SI S? Se<!~ ,, . .., 1~ Seteco
111t l SIHIG<I 11 "t 11 SIPeut
J 12 ... Scllertr I~ IS"4 ScrloH ss• • ssv, Seavere 27"-1t'h SEEQ 201 ' ?O>lo S.nlOI' 18"' 19 SvcMer
lS\ol 36 ~m11 ' rMeO I>\ 111 16 llwml
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-(1} llllij:I u110$jr------------------
NEW YORK IAP) -Tl'le following llsl sl'lows ll'le Over • tl'le • Counter slocks and warrants ll'lat nave oone uo me most and down lhe most based on percent of change for Fridav No securities trading below $2 or 1000
snares are included Net and oercentage changes are lhe difference between the previous closing price and Frldav's In t or Old orice
Name I Powelllno 2 CellularPrd J ProvldAm 4 PlonrCm un 5 SAY fn<l
! AdvNMR wt lntrdv,,. h OotfmMfo wt Technooen
UPS
Last Cho ~ ; t .! j21~ 1 I ~
I l4 t 7 • ,, t I ·: i:~ t ~
Pel
Up 28~
UP ? 1 ~g ~l7:
Up J .7 UP 2 UP 0 Uo 21 4 uo 214
NYSE UPS & DOWNS
NEW YO~ (A~ -Tr.e toltwlno "'' j A1:v:nrn11 snows rn-e ew ork Stock xchanoe ~n et I SOPf stocks and warr1ntt lhat have oone uo IKI Anoe
the mo't ·~ down the most oa~ed on J tnl~,,.,. ro:rce~t of c anoe reoar<lleu of volume vlWhl llSll r rtd•y Sco11u1nc No secur lle1 lr1dlno below s'2 are Incl· ~ Nat ~m•' ·ytJ.ed· Net and percent1oe chi no!\ ere the lli'"' p d rerice belwHn the orevlous closln9 1 S Hom•
Pf'ICI 1nd Frld1v'' J/sm Pnce li Leh~1llnd I ~"" i ~me Lu i Che_ Per Iver k I vlG r C>f 3'12 + Up 217 4 Homf 001
19"'-~ 2'·
42"-1 s i:ii. "" ~ 1 \~~ + \,h it 11: '. " 1' t 1,
" .. 1 3~ t ''• 16~ 1
Visit "Durty Nelly's"
Pub & Oyster Bar,
for St. Patrick. 's Day
Open for Lunch & Dinner
Monday thru Friday
/JAM to 9 PM
. REDHIU.. C:O TA M A • 957·1951
UP Uo UP UP UP ~~ UP UP Up UP Up UP
(ff BJ«i /tlwf1' W /at~kto /frdAIJJ ~ ht•/ al 11 f'f#••1J '
J
16 J
!f 1
94 ll
ll9COrl'IO t
: MUTUAL FUNDS
--
··-
, "'
Otange Coat DAILY PILOT /Monday, March 10, 1-*°*AI I
NYSE Co MPOSITf T RANS ACT 1nN s
AMEX LEA DER S
GoLo Qu oTl S
METAL S QuoTrs
-~------····"·····
l
W H ~i NYSE 0 10
NEW YOttK tAP) Mw. 10 '~ Tl
NASDAQ S UMMAR Y
qu1t.¢ ~91bty thci
p:zrfcict. pck<lt., e
be!'u: 1n fZVfU"'J mon9
wordrobz. 90f't,
n:u n nzpcz 114.n t. ell
coil.on ~ll with
l 19ht'MZ'9ht
torU,n hn1~.
vqn uzd bock.
kn1tua:i cuffi>
and boUan. t.ha.
mo~t, populer
-wmd bfuokar
<ZW.r
~ bt.ol:l "!'\ tb'!lt11Cti ~loni, 1l•ttfi'\'1 5010
'Ml!IC.~ "'''°9L l<X)t ~bl~. 2\~203-~7~
p:t!li&.ilr'O ~ ~\h 10"4""" I 81&1 X>'t ~~~
man t.ti~fh \O i:.o9. ~lutdny t.o6 l ~noon to!)
•
•
Bond measure
needed to build
m ore schools
One need look no further than the Saddleback
Valley to know that construction of new schools in
growing-communities is a problem of rapidly expanding
proportions.
State Sen. Marian Bergeson is the author of a bill
that would deal with the problem head-on. If it is
approved by the Assembly and the sovemor, it would
appear on the November ballot as an mitiati ve. With the
support of the voters, it would provide $800 million for
school facifity construction and reconstruction.
According to the state Allocation Board, unfunded
applications for school constructi~n curre~tly ~otal m~re
than $1.5 billion. The board estunates 1t wdl receive
additional applications for assistance from school
districts over the next 18 months totalling another $1 . 7
billion.
According to Sen. Befleson, vice chairman of the-
Senate Education Committee, it is estimated that
450,000 new students will enter the state's public school
system by 1990.
"A bond measure is the most responsible means of
addressing the school construction need at this time
since it recognizes that our school buildings are a
statewide responsibility and significantly addresses the
construction need while the Legislature works toward
developing a long-term funding mechanism," she said.
Although the voters approved a bond act in the 1984
general election, it provided for only $450 mimon.
Accordin~ to a committee analysis, the need for school
construction funds is likely to exceed $4 billion within 10
years.
Substantial as it seems, the bill is not a guarantee
that the burden of school construction in new
communities in southern Orange County would be
ameliorated. Almost half the money-$360 million -
would be earmarked for reconstruction and mod-
ernization of existing facilities. Still, it would provide a
source of funds local school districts could compete for
with at least an improved chance of success.
The alternative could be expensive for developers
and homebuyers.
Opinions expressed In this apace are those ot the Dally Piiot. Other views
expressed on this page are those ot their authors ane1 artists. Reae1er
comment Is ln11lte<1 The Dally Pilot. PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa. 92626. Phone
~42-6086.
Airport was built before
ho1Des sprung up nearby
To the Editor:
I have been a resident of Costa
Mesa th1~ past 26 years and I read
yo ur Feb. 28 Op1n1on page, the
ed1tonal about the plane accident
What J do not agree with 1s that
they were talking abou1 a plane that
had crashed less than a mile from
John Wayne Airport, 'itallng "the
pilot was killed and wreckage was
sca ttered between th e office buildings
that because of the late hour," etc. and
.. John Wayne is not the only airport
1n that prccanous s1tuat1on ··
For the 26 years that I ha ve lived
here I have fo und that 1n that general
area. vss a vss. the Santa Ana Heights,
~facArthur Boulevard etc there was
nothing around there and being a
private pilot I think 1f1t wasn·t for the
airport, all those hualdings. busi-
nesses and othcrwt<;e and the so-
called million dollar homes that we're
seeing and restaurants around the
area would not be there.
The a1rport was there before the
homes. h 's hke the chicken and the
egg.. who came first. The airport was
there and it served a function for the
past 26 years that I know of and before
that because of the war effort. r really think that people and
developers and city councils see that
the airport 1~ foremost in develop-
ment of our immediate area. much
less Orange County. So I think we
should not build more homes there
but have the developers make
amends for what they have been
doing to our county and to our people
and to our industry by not havmg
homes bush so close to the airport.
JOSEPH KINYONE
Costa Mesa
Parents urged to speak out
To the E<l1to1.
The Board of Education of Ncw-
pon Mesa Uni fied School D1~tntt 1s
con'i1denng closing Davis Intermedi-
ate <;chool and makmg ( osta Mesa
High <ichool a 7-12 configuration
We ha ve been told I>)' hoard
Prc~1dent <ihcrry Loofbourrow that 1f
the community doc'> not 'iUpp<>n <;uch
a contcpt. the board will not vote for
It
f\ committee of Costa Mc'>a 1one
parents rrcscnted the board a 66-page
rcPort o the7-12configura11on1nour
.1one at its met:tmg on Feh 2 S
Numerous hours were '>pent wmpil-
1ng this information such a .. campus
tour.., cumculum and cost analys is.
S0C1al impact. staff and rac1l111cs
uuhzauon and community 1npu1
1nclud1ng pan:nt. student and staff
By tile A11ociated PreH
survey.
Our concl usion: We do not suppon
a 7-12 configuratjon at CMHS. How-
ever, following our presentation.
board members who SPoke SC'Cmcd in
favor of 7-12.
What 1s 11 that we have to do to
convince the board that we do not
want a 7-12 at CMHS'> The board has
not convinced me as a parent that this
1s the best educa11onal expencnce for
my children.
I urge all parents 1n our Costa Mesa
zone to attend the school board
meeting Tue'lday at 7.30 p.m. at
Harper Commun11y renter. 425 East
18th St.. Costa Mesa
Our voices need to be heard!
Numbers count! ·
NORMA YOCK.EL
Costa Mesa
Today 1s Monday Marc.h I 0, the 69th day of 1986 There arc 296 days lcfl
an the year
l oday·s highlight 1n ha\tory
_ On March 10. 187(1, 1n~cntor Alexander Graham Bell made the first
lelephone cml. "l!Utng h1~ iw,mant an an adjofnfng room in "Boston. "Mr.
Watson, oome here I want you "
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
I{ __ ...._
Publlthet ,,.,.ZIN
EdltOI
T..,.T81t
Man>ng EditOf Dell,..,
Ctty EdotOI
.........,, ChutctwRM
~110itet
.....,\..C....
P1oductl0n Meneoe; T_,,ll_..
ClrcullttlOn ~ ............ ..,.,
M~ttl!IO ()rector ....., ......
~Oilec1or
\.
"One of these days, when I'm rich ... I'm g'?.Jng to make It a polnt to eat
nearly anything that doesn't eat me nrsf.
' !
' c t z ... 6
... When \t abso\ute\y1 posit\ve.\y
has to be the.re overnight!
-Gourmet delights depend
on what you can stomach
Our qelicacies are
·abhorred in other
lands, theirs here
I saw a cartoon the other day that,
as well as being funny, started me
thinking.
Jn the cartoon. an __ obviously
aristocratic and wealthy lady is seated
at a table with a waiter at her side.
She has a menu in her hand, and
asks the waiter. "What are frog's legs
made of?"
That made me think of all of the
things that we cat, and what we're
supposed 10 eat 1f we happen to be a
httle wealthy, or 1fwe'rc celebra11ng a
special occasion.
Ann and I had occasion to celebrate
a few years ago, so we went out and ate
some snails.
These are the same snails that
wander around your back yard and
eat yourpan\ics. The ones that leave a
track on your sidewalk.
They are, by the way. not native to
the Unued States, but were imported
by 1mm1grants from Europe. When
you order them in a restaurant,
however. they are expensive and
called escargol. l suspect they have a
pedigree as well.
It was Ann 's first adventure with
the ingestion of snails, and my
second. I found mine to be agreeable:
BILL
HARVEY
in all aspects, but she said that hers
tasted like garlic-flavored rubber
bands. It occurred to me at the time:
that mine had tasted slightly like
garlic-flavored rubber ~ds as well,
but I was determined to enjoy them
because of the cost of the things.
I like to think that the adventurer in
me will try nearly anytbmg that can be
construed as food. and I've tried some
pretty strange thinis in my life. When
f was younger, I hved in the South,
and I ate brains and egs. Once.
I've also eaten stuffCd beer heart,
and that was pretty good.
One thing that's pretty popular that
I JUSt can't ta.lee is an oyster. We tned
them last summer in Canada, and
were assured that they were fresh out
of the water and would be absolutely
dehc1ous. We watched the other folk s
cover their oysters with lemon juice,
Tabasco sauce and shnmp sauce. We
watched them gobble the oysters up
with obvious rehsh. We tned them.
They tasted exactly like goo, cov-
ered with hot, lemony catsup.
We decided that we'd rather eat our
hot. lemony catsup without the goo.
Did you ever stop to thin.le about
the first man to eat an oyster?
Herc he is, wandering aJong. maybe
smgiog a little tune, when he stumbles
over something that looks like a rock.
What made b1m thmk there might be
something good to eat in that rock?
After be opened 1t up and discovered
the goo inside, what made him think
.. there might be something good to eat
in.that rock?
Another interesting aspect of this
food stuff is that what you eat is very
much determined by where you arc.
Things that people mother countries
love (thousand-year-old eg$s?
monkey brains?) we abhor. and VlCC
versa. One of our more popular foods
is considered a real stomach-turner in
Japan. They cannot understand how
a civilized person can take a glandular
secretion from an animal, allow it to
go bad. concentrate the material and
then eat it. What I've just described,
by the way, is cheese.
An~ay. one of these ~ys, .when
I'm nch (probably a long time in the
future) I'm going to make it a point to
cat nearly anything that doesn't eat
me first. I've already tried buffalo (so-
so) but I want to try hippopotamus (a
relative of the pig) and elephant.
I think I'll draw the line at eating a
dog (1 consider that to border on
cannibalism) but I will try chocolate-
covered ants, grasshoppers and bees.
But onl y 1fthey take the stingers out
of the bees.
Year-old hijacking affords
rare look at planning effort
Americans slain, other VIPS tortured
during l 984Kuwait Airlines piracy -------
the evcnin$ before and connect with
Ail.ht 22 1 in Dubai.
JACK
AllDEISOll
r~ .
lL.::.'
and DALE VAN A TT A
BILL llAllftY
col a•n lat
Reforms
can't halt
influence
peddling
Other ways will pe
found to pressu re
state lawmaker$
By DAN WALTERS
McCJatcby Newt Service
SACRAMENTO -Much bas
been made in recent years -and
rightfully so -about thc.domina~ce
of sP._CCial interest money in ~ancma
Cahfomia's political campaigns .
At its worst. the situation evolves
into an ill-disg_uised shakedown on
the part of money-hunjl'Y legislators.
The unfairness of the cumnt system
was underscored by a recent Com-
mon Cause re~rt noting that incum-
bent state legislators used their pos-
itions in 1985 -an off-year -to
raise more than S 17 ~ill ion.
Before this year is out., it's expected
that some SSO million will have been
spent on leglslativc campaigns alone.
Oearly, it's a system that bas gotten
out of hand.
There a.re sincere efforts to reform
the system, most notably a prop()sal
by a blue-ribbon private commission
that would pro111de candidates wi1:h
matching pu~hc. fun~ f<?r . their
campaigns wh1le 1mpos1ng hm1ts on
pnvate contributions, ban transfers
of funds among candidates and
prohibit off-year fund-raising.
The proposal 1s kiclcinJ around the
Legjslaturc, ostensibly with the back-
ing of legislative leaders such as
Assembly Spealcer Willie Brown. And
preliminary steps are being taken to
qualify it for the November ballot to
keep pressure on the Legislature.
The proposal probably would, as its
writers intend, reduce the influence of
campaign contributions on the legis-
lative process. It might make it easier
for honest l~slators who don't like
the game as st s now played to remain
in office.
But we also should recognize that
the reform proposal essentially treats
symptoms, rather than causes, and
could lead to even more insidious
forms oflegislative influence.
· The engine that propels the current
system is a basic fact of modem
political life: Governmental dccision-
mak.ing bas vast economic conse-
quences.
As government's regulatory powers
expand, so does the direct interest
that corporations, trade associations
and others have: in affecting the
process. Special interests want ex-
emptions from costly regulauons,
they want to protect themselves from
competitors, they want to influence
the appointment of persons to regu-
latory boards, etc. Most of what we
call "special interest legislation" is
desianed to somehow use or alter
rqulatory mechanisms of govern-
ment for private economic gain.
Business interests look upon cam-
paign contributions as an investment
that can earn huge bottom line
returns. Campaign contribution re·
form does not reduce that pressure
one whit and the coooomic stakes are
so huge that the pressure, it seems
likely, will manifest itself in other
ways.
We have seen. for ex.ample, a sharp
increase in the distribution of
"honoraria" -fees for making
specchci -to public officials in
recent years. WA SHI NGTON -Airplane hi-
Jackings make big headlines when
they occur. But by the very nature of
these terrorist operations, the plan-
ning that went into them is secret.
We can now provide a rare, behind-
the-scenes look at the preparations
for a h1Jaclong that occurred a little
more than a year ago. Two Americans
were murdered and two others tortur-
ed during the ordeal.
'Their weapQns -to be planted on
board at Dubai -were two .25-
caliber pistols (unhkely to pierce the
ajrplane's hull unless fired point-
blank) and a single band grenade.
Assembly Speaker Willie Brown,
for instance. received $48,SSO in
s~ng fees last year, according to
his report filed this week, while state
Treasurer Jesse Unruh, who earns
. . . . . / $42,500 a year, received more than U.S. aid officials. lnternauonal press-: that in speaking fees, most of them
Our sources at the CIA have helped
us piece together the nuts-and-bolts
planning that led to the airborne
piracy of Kuwait Airlines flight 221
in December 1984. Herc's how the
plotters did it:
On Nov. 22. 1984. the four princi-
pal terronsts got together 1n Baalbek,
t~ main city of the Bekaa Valley, in
~ynan-contr0lled eastern Lebanon.
The_y were the lransan cbarae
d'affatres in Lebanon Mahmoud
Nouraru; Sheik Sobhi tofailli, com-
mander of the military forces in
Baelbek for the tcrronst group
HczbolJab; Hassan Hashem, the pro-
1 ranian leader of Moslem militia
units that control Beirut's inter-
national airport: and Ali AJ Yafi, the
Lebanese Shiite Moslem who had
been chosen 10 lead the team of
hiJackers.
The tarseted plane was an A-310
A1rbul thaL..X.UwaiLAirlines flew to
Bar\akok w;th stops at Dubai aod
Kara.chi. Al Yafi briefed the three
othCf' members of his team -two
Shutes and a Palestinian -on the
confiJUrations of the Aubut: the
location of ih exits, galleys and
lavatories. Meanwhile, lranian spies
sn Kuwait wett swcel)ina airline
reservation co~puten (or names of
an}' Vl Ps on Aiaht 221.
The bijackm& was to OQCUr before
dawn on Nov. 27. Ai4ht 221 would
lave Kuwait the evcnanc before and
take off from Dubai shortly after
m1dnjp1. The terrorists~ to lea Ye
Beirvt 011 a Middle East Airlinet ni&}>t
By the morning of Nov. 26,
everything was set. Then the ter-
rorists learned that three Kuwaiti
diplomats and at least three Amen-
cans would be aboard the same flight
22 I a week later, Dec. .l-4. ihe
Americans' rcservatjons had been
made by the U.S. Embassy in Sanaa,
North Yemen.
This meant the hijackers would
have six VIPs to be swapped for the 17
terrorists imprisoned in Kuwait -
whose release was the point of the
hijacking. So the hijack.ina was post-
poned a week.
Alter prayers on the afternoon of
Dec. 3, the hijackers were driven to
Beirut ai~n to catch Middle East
Airlines flight 426 to Dubai. They had
no baggage, and wen: driven dim:tly
to the plane, avoiding examination of
their forted travel documents by
Lebanese officials.
Dunna the hour-long layover at
Dubai waitina for F1ijht 221, the
hijackers sat apart in the airport
lounae, avoidina even eye contact. Al Yafi Used tbe intef'Val to 1h1ve offhl1
beard. Theo the four hijackers quietly
minsJed with the other 14 puscnaen
who boarded Fli&}>t 221 at Dub&i.
Two were Iranians who later acted as
seiet for the terrorists. listenlna for
hints of resistance among the paasen-
~ after the hijacking.
The h~cktna occurred 40 minutes
out or Dubai. when two of the
terrorists overpowertd the lone secur-
ity auard· The)' used weapons from a brieblc that bad bten planted on
boaro in advance .
Tbe huacklna lasted ill da)'I and
led to the cold-blooded murder or two
ure eventually led Iran to stage a from financial institutions with
phony "i:t'Cue" as the plane sat at stakes in his inve1tment of billions of
Tehran airpon. dollars in state funds. Eveo garden-
varicty legislators receive thousands
of dollars in s~ng fees from
orpnizations di~y atrcctcd by
leaislation. Assemblyman Curtis
Tucker, chairman of the Assembly
Health Committee, for example,
cleans up on fees from medical
aroups.
CONFIDENTIAL FILE: In-
telligence analysts arc sometimes
bUnded by their employen' self·
importance. It's no secret that U.S.
policy-makers arc obsessed with the
fate of the two huge American
military facilities in the Philippines.
And 11 months ago, before the
sudden election was called, State
De"artment intelligence cables
dutifully proclaimed that "the most
contr0versia1 issue" in future elec-
tjons would be the two U.S. bues.
When the presidential campaian ac-
tually started, thouab. the cables
repon.cd -accurately -that the
bases "would not be a mltjor issue " e~plainina: "Most Filipinos simply
had other concerns."
MINI-E D ITORIAL: The
Nicaraguan contra leaden are their
own worst enemies.. Aocordina lO
recent reports, they have been Q •
ptainina tbtir lpect.ICUlar lack Of
military achievement on -a.re you
ready? -boots. They complain that.
while their tiacn arc apparently
armed to the tcetht they don't have
enouah boots capab1e or 1urvivina the
riaon of trainin1 and comblL We
know that otd"quartermatterful quote
that for want of a bail J.hc honeab()(
was lost, then the hone, theo the rider
and finally tbe battle. But we think the
contra commanders need mnindi?.f
too1 that there was DCVCf a 1uccesafu! acnera.I rucknamed .. Alibi Ike."
Jeet A.d1s"9 Mtl Dale Vu An.
are·~*_,,,..,.,.,
The pending reform proposal
would also put limits on such fees to
Lqislators. But the proliferation of
bonoraria demonstrates that when
there is intense economic prusure to
affect decis1on-makina, a way will be
found to do 1t
We have seen a marked increase in
recent years of private business
arra.naemcnts invotvina leaJstators
and those with stakes in public
decision-maldna.
Lqislator-lawycrs receive he~ re-
tainer fca, others set up .. consullln,··
firms and obtain lucrative contracts
from corporate intttuts and itiU
other& are cut inio aweet. ~loee 1deals on shopping centers and coodo
projecU, to name but some of the curTent technjqucs.
Tbe onaoina scandal revohina
about e•·fiiework.s tycooo W. Patrick
Moriarty is a cue study in beck.room
wheelina and de&Jina.
Refonninf. c:ampaiJD Anancina 11 a a p>a . But il will not atop
s • enterest influence peddlins.
. •1~u.1t lOO much money at •take
lD a.tfectJna aovern.mental action.a.
,,_ ,,ahi.n h I •ratllt»IM , .... ,, ..
'
JoynerhaschanCe
to·get to 'first base
Winter league MVP as a good shot at
replacing Carew in Angels' '86 ltneup
By CHRIS MONAHAN
~ ..... Cen ; ~IRI
MESA, Ariz. _.. When Ansel in-
fielder Wally Joyner arrived . for'
spring training last year, he was glad
to be in the same camp with Regie
Jackson, Doug DeCinces and Rod
Carew.
When be amved a week ago for thjs
year's camp, it was with the chance to ~··~ in the lineup with Jackson and DeCinces and replace Carew.
"The spring of 1985 was the most
exciting time in my life, bascball-
wise," said Jorner. "Playing major
league basebal is what I've always
wanted todo. lwasrubbinashouJders
with Jack,on, DeCinces and Carew. It
wna cir.tam come true. ·
"This spring I know I have a good
shot at the first base ~ob. I've
improved a lot in terms of hitting and
strenath. If I continue to be success.-
ful, I liave a good shot."
Continue is the operauve word.
After a slow start last season at
Edmonton (the Angels' Triple-A farm
club), be came on stronJ in the second
half of the season to fin11h with a .283
avcrase. He led the team in RBI (73),
hits (13S), total bases (2 10) and
doubles (29).
UCivs. UCLA
He followed with a tri~ crown-
winnina winter lcasuc. Playina with
the Mayaauez Indians of the Puerto
Rican Winter Lea&ue, all Joyner did
washit.3S6witb t4bomerunsand41
RBI in only S4 pmes, winning not
onJy the triple crown, but the league's
most valuable player as well.
"lt·was my fint winter league. I wu
ri&ht on the beach, with a Nautilus
facility just five minutes from my
place. It was picture perfect," be
dc;scribed. "It was au baseball; 84
games in 3'h months. It was what I
needed to do."
Those pmcs helped the AnFl•
make their decision not to retain fint
basemen Carew or the once bi&hJy-
regarded Daryl Sconiers. Althouah
there are many othen in camp w6o
can play first (Bobby Grich, Jerry
Narron, Doug Occinces and George
Hendrick), Joyner is the only true first
baseman among the aroup.
in NIT
"To some extent Wally's per-
formance did have an effect on our
moves with Rod and Daryl," said
General Manager Mike Port. Port
makes it clear that Joyner bas neither
tour.Dey ~~~~~~:~:~~J:Y:~=;
our most heralded prospect after that
winter -nd be will have every op-
portunity to make the club ...
A t -t----1-=-b-i-=d~ The Anteaters (16-12) were second "~e ~asn,'t .~~ told that (the n ea ers ga n in the PCAA this year while the position .!s has), wd Manager Gene
i t d ' di Bruins ( 15-13) ended up fourth in the Mauch. Last year when ~e came to aga nS e1en ng Pac-10. camp, ~e knew 1f he hit .450. he
UCLA, which won ~ven con-wouJdn t. make. the club. If he has a champion Bruins secutive NCAA basketball titles. wiU '~ s~nng this year, be knows be
--seek to become the first team in more 1sn t g~ing anywhere · · · except to
By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR
~NelC-........
Just after the news had reached
him, UC Irvine baskctbaU coach Bill
Mulligan was already thinking how to
stop Reggie Miller's 20-foot jumpers.
A far cry from just last Thursday
when he was thrown to the depths of
despondency by his Anteaters' early
exit from the Pacific Coast Athletic
· Association tourney.
After that very bitter defeat.
Mulligan thought his team's season
had gone up in smoke. But now the
Anteaters' fire has been hghted once
more.
Sunday night whcnJ.hcNIT invita-
tions were announced, Mulligan and
UCI received a berth to meet Miller
and UCLA (the defending NIT cham-
pion) tn the first round this Thursday
at Pauley Pavilion at 7:30.
When UCI lqst to Cal State
Fullerton in the PCAA Tournament,
Mulligan called ii one of the biggest
disappotntmentsofhis bfe. Now with
new life. there's a little bounce tn
Mulligan's step.
than 40 years to repeat as the Ar~~llClm. • .
champion of the National Invitation It hasn t been put to him, but he
Tournament, which begins Tuesday knows and he knows that I know.
with 8 32-team field. A!\cr the second half at. f.dmonto!l,
The tournament begins Tuesday wmter balJ and a good spn~g, that will
with a single game _ Texas Chris-be ple~ty good c~ough. Hes too good
tian, 21-8, at Montana, 21-9. for Tnpl~-A. bes way ~oo g~ for
On Wednesday, Dayton, 19-8, will ruerto ~co. The ~nJy thing thats left
be at McNecsc State, 20-1 O; Pit-is ~~e big leagues.
tsburgb, 15-13, wiU travel to South-When they m~de the first ,moves
west Missouri State, 22-7, and Provi-(Carew and Scom~rs): I ~n t sure.
dcnce 15-I 3 will play host to Boston but. when they d1dn t _re-sign Juan Univ~rsity, it-9. Beruquez, I began t<? thin~ I ~ lJ?e
Eleven more games will follow on chance to play tbts ~pnng. said
Thursday. Joyner. ".They have given me the
They pair George Mason I 9-1 I at oppo~umty a!'d I th~k lJ?em,.
La 18-11 T1.. A •·M' 20-1 1' "First base 1s not mine, 1t walJ go to mar~ .i. "~s ex. • • at an one who plays well. ?hat's the Wyom~ 2u--l l. Tc.xas. 18-1~ •. 81 oni'y fair tiling. Buf the oppOftunityls ~e"'. Meiuco, t 7-13;.Southcm M1ss1s-there." s~pp1, 17-11 , at Aonda, 16-12; Geor-With this much taJent, the op-
g1a. 16-12, . at . ! ennessec-Chat-portunity is also there for com-
tanooga. 21-9, ~u1stana Tech, 16-13. parisons _ and they•ve come in
at Northern Anzona, 19-10; .Loy~la bunches.
Marymount, .18-10, at Califo~a-Mauch has compared him to
Berkeley, 19-~. Southern Mcthodis~ Mickey Vernon, who played first base
18-10, at Bngbam Young, 16-I 3: for the Washington Senators during Drake~ I 9-I 0, at Marquette, 18-1 O. the 40s and early 50s. winning two
and M addle Tennessee State, 23-10, at batting titles in the process .. Others in
Clemson, 17-14. camp have compared him favorably
!he ~nal first-r:ound game o n to Rusty Staub and Keith Hernandez.
...
MONDAY. MARCH 10, 1988
·Rookie Roberts has
3 RBI as San Die o
es to 5-4 triumph
Prom AP ...,.lcMt
YUMA Ariz. -Rookie sec:ond baseman Lec>n "Bip0 Roberta 'Clrove
in three Nna and ICOred the willJlina
run u the San Oiqo PadteS heal tbe
Antela, s-4, Sunday in Cactus Leque
bueball action.
Roberts. who played in Oass AA 10
the Pinsburab orpnization lut year.
bad tone hitless in his fin1 two sprioa
pmes befcn triplina with the hues
loaded off Anecls starter and loser
. Mike Witt in the'ICOOnd iftnina:. · · · · · · ·
Witt walked the hues loaded and
bad a 3-2 count on Roberts when the
5-1 roolcie rut a baU beyond the reach
of Gary Pettis in center 6eJd. All the
runners scored before Roberts was
thrown out at home plate tryina to
stretch the hil into an·1nsido-~
home run.
Garry Templeton opened the fifth
innina with a sin&Je, Roberts followed
with a sin~e and Jerry Davis
doubled, sconng Templeton. Robcrts
then came home on a short sacrifice
Oy to ocni.er by Rusty Tillman.
Dave Dravecky was the winner.
The Aneels were encoUJ'&ICd by the
performances of Ken Forsch and
second bucman Riclc Burleson, two •
~eterans attempting to come b9ck
after years of in.Juries.
Forsch, who bas miued two
seasons. worked two inninp. gjving
up three hits. He'd been sidelined first
with a dislocated shoulder and then
elbow surgery for the removal ofbone
chips.
Burleson, a former Al~tar at
shortstop, has played only 40 games
since tearina bis rotator cuff early in
the 1982 season.
Dod6en poa11d MUO.
VERO BEACH -Third baseman
Bill Madlock cracked thn=c hits and
drove in a pair of runs to lead the Los
Angeles l>od&crs to a 6-1 exhibition
baseball victory over the Houston
Astros Sunday afternoon. ____ Madlock.'.! dfiLrts. which woe
despite the fact be had been sidelined
three days with a sore leg. sparked a
16-hit anack u the Dodgers avenged
a loss to the Astros a day earlier.
~ "",..., "' ...............
.. 1t•s always nice to ,et a hit, but I
really don '1 worry about that stuff at
this point in the spring... Madlock
said. ··1 just want to get my timing
down and get my work in.··
Madlock doubled in a run in the
first inning. singled in the third and
s~ed a three-run uprising m the
sixth with an RBI-single. "Yeah. it feels good getting another
chance to end the season differently."
he said. "And it'll be great to play
UCLA (the two teams have never
met). We'll sec what we can do with
our second chance."
Fn~ay ~IJ hayc Ohio State, I 4-14, at .. lfl could be anywhere near Staub.
Ohio University, 22-7. . Hernandez or Bill Buckner that The second-round games waU be at '
regional sites on March 16-1 7. (Pleue eee JOTN'ER/B2)
WallJ' Joyner, who tore up the winter teaaue, ta a leacU.nc
candidate for the ADCela' job at Ont bue thla MUOD.
At the same time. a quartet of Los
Angles pitchers held Houston lo five
hits.
Getting in this time also makes
ammends for the Anteaters being
overlooked two years ago when they
fintshed second m the PCAA with a
14-4 record but failed to land an
1nv1talJon to the NIT.
Duke, St. John's, Kansas, Kentuckytop-seeded
"I guess it makes up for it," he said.
"I really feel we got snubbed two years
ago. They sent Utah State, a fourth-
placc team that year. instead of us
because they had a bigger arena.
"But we get to play UCLA this year.
which 1s great. But it would have been
gJUt to play anybody, just as long as
we get to play."
The last time UCI reached the NIT
was in the Kevin Magee era. 1982.
The Anteaters defeated Sao Diego
State in the first round where Magee
was injured. UCl then bowed to
Oklahoma in round No. 2.
Now at the close of the Tod
Murphy-Johnny Rogers regime, UCI
wants to make hay while the sun is up.
NCAA invites 6 Big Ten,
ACC teams for playoffs
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -Duke. St.
John's, Kansas and Kentucky were given No. I
seeds Sunday when the NCAA announced its
64-tcam field for the men's college basketball
championship tournament.
Dulce, 32·2 and the No. I team in The
Associated Press Top 20, drew the top seed in
the East Regional, while second-ranked Kansas
was made No. I in the Midwest and third-
ranked Kentucky was No. I in the Southeast. St.
John's, ranked No. 5 behind North Carolina in
the Top 20, was shipped to the West Regional as
the No. I seed.
More-marathons man
wins LA 's first race
Sayre top men's
inisher; Ditz takes
women's event
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ric Sayre
of Ashland, Ore .• is adamant -the
more marathons. the better.
Sayre. who won the Lona Beach
Marathon a month ago, added a
victory Sunday in the the inauaural
Los Angeles Marathon.
"I tend to recover weU from
marathons," Sayre said. ··1 intend to
continue it. As long as there is a aoal
out there for me to achieve, I'll ao for
IL"
Sayre intends to conunue his
demandma schedule. saying he'll run
again in five weeks in a marathon at
Stamford. Conn.
On Sunday, he drew away from the
leaders midway tbrouah the race and
held on in convincina rashion.
.. , just went out and tried to feel
comfonable the first part of the rac<',"
Sayre said. "I just tried to run l!I even
a pace as I could."
, Uidamis Shahanga of Tanzania
was second in 2:13.27. with Rod
Dixon ofNew l.caland, winner of the
1983 New York Marathon. third in
2:14.48.
Nancy Ditz1 the favorite in the
women's division, was the first
woman to finish, with a time of
2:36.27. Christa Vahlensicck of West
Germany was second in 2:36.37.
Magda llands ofBel11um was third ac
2:3g.2s.
"It was a little warm for me today, I
was really nervous about the
temperature," Ditz said. "I don't run
well in the heat."
Ditz said she did not keep up her
early pace in the race's latter stagcS,
but was far cnou_J.h in fronf not to be
worried.
"I was on pace at the balfway
point." she said. ··1 started to slow,
but I was comfortably tn the lead, so I
wasn't worried."
Sayre. a winner of e1aht marathons.
took the lead at the 10-mile mark. He
had a 29-second lead at tht halfway
mark and built his advantaie to more
than I 'h mmutes wtth eiJbt miles left,
with Dixon taldna up the chaJc.
hahanp, winner or two mara-
thons in 1984. took over tce0nd place
after 20 miles. with Sayre st1ll 1n front
by more than a minute.
First-round games around the country will
be played Thursday and Friday, with second·
round action Saturday and Sunday.
The Atlantic Coast and Bt$ Ten con-
ferences each landed six teams m the field,
eJtpccted to have the richest payoff in NCAA
basketball history, with more than $800,000
going to the teams that make the Final Four in
Dallas on March 29. The title game will be in
March 31.
Top-ranked Dulce wilJ face Southwestern
Athletic Conference champion M1ssiss1ppi
Valley at Greensboro, N.C., on Thursday.
Kansas, on Thursday in Dayton. opens the
Midwest Regional against I 6th-seeded North
Carolina A&T.
At Long Beach in the West Regional, St.
John's faces 16th-seeded Montana State on
Friday.
In the Southeast Regional, Kentucky Wlll
meet No. 16 seed Davidson at Charlotte. N.C ..
on Friday.
Each rcgjonaJ was seeded I through 16 by
the nine-man Division I selection committee.
Notre Dame and DePaul, and Ocvcland State,
whose Mid-Continent Universities conference
docs not get an automatic bid but also was
selected.
Among the teams left out of the 64-team
field were Boston University, 21-9; Fairleigh
Dickinson. 22-8· Pan Amcncan. 20-8. and
former basketball titan UCLA, 15-13.
"We feel very good about our field," said
committee chairman Dick Schultz, ViflJnia's
athletic director. "It was not any easier this year
than 1t has been tn the past. We spent about
three or four hours on the first SS teams and the
rest of the ume on the final teams. There 1s a
tremendous amount of parity and you look at
fine, mmute points."
Schulu said that several teams got at-large
berths with impressive victories m the final
Wttk.
Twenty-nme bids went to autom atic
qualifiers as conference retular-scason or
postseason tournament champions. Among the
35 at-large entries were ..two independents.
..There were several teams with big wins
the last week of the season that we~ on the
fence." Schultz said. He specifically menlloned
DcPaul in this group.
Schultz predicted that parity would t»
come evident in the first-round games.
(Pleue eee 1'CAA/B2)
l#La;::AJS I
r ................................................. .
Lakers clinch title
in Pacific Division
Magic pllriips in 32
in l 08-106 victory
over SuperSonics
FremAPtlltpakkl
SEA TILE -The Los Angeles
L&ken, behind Earvm .. Magic" John-
son's 32 points, clinched their fifth
'1raight NBA Pacific D1v1S1on utle
with a 108-106 Victory over the
Seattle uperSon1cs unday night.
It was the third strata.ht 30-point
prne for the Johnson. wllo scored 30
polnts apinst the Golden S~te
Warnors on Thunda) ntJht and 33
qainst the Sacramento Kings on
Saturday It was the fifth stratJht Wln
for the La.leers.
The last time the Lalten failed to
wtn the Pac1fk Olv1Ston title was an
the t 980-81 season, when they fin·
1shed second to the Phoenix Suns
This season. Los Anactcs lead5 the
second-place Ponland Trail Blai~
by 16'h pmes
lead on a 12-foot Jumper b} Maunce
Lucas. and Johnson added a layup 30
seconds later
The Lakcrs. who also go t 20 points
from Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. could
not get their fast break on track. but were able to Wln with an e"tcellent
second half 1n wtuch they connected
on 11 of 33 field-goal attempts.
Los Angeles Coach Pat Riley
appreciated taking the lltk but said
the Lakers have a Iona way to go.
"We've c reated a situation where
we've taken tt for granted," h~ said
.. Our fO&I 1 to wan back-to-back
champ1onMup It's the only goal lef'I
for us."
The Lalccrs had to pla> without
Kun Rambls. who suffere-d a con-
tusion m his tc..
DelJYer •em by CHppen
LO ANGELES -Ale,. Enahsh
'IClOrc:d 36 points and reserve 1uard
Mike Evans scored t<4ofh1s 24 points
1n the final J)Cnod unday n1&ht as the
Denver N t o utJa.stcd the Lot
-'n&elC1 C'ltppers t 23-121 .
Sayre, 32, crossed the finish ltnc 1n
2 hours. 12 minutes. S9 second , a
clear winner over an estimated 8.200
nanntn the la~t first-year mara-
thon f1t lJ 1n United States history.
Sayre's final time was 1 personal
best. Hts previous best was 2: 13.ll Ric Sayre wlna tbe nm Loe Anael• llaratllon Smlday.
Seattle. now 0-10 1 n pm~ d«1ded
by three point or ll . took a 9Q.9g
lead wt th 4 23tO10 On two frtt thrOW'\
byTmChamben,whofin1 hedwtth
30 points to lead the n1
The La.ken came beck to ta.ke the
The Nugcu., who trailed *SS at
halftime despite 23 po.in ts by £aalish,
toolt an 9-82 lead in 10 the tO\lnb
quarter Led by Evan.s and vtn
Nan. who acored I I of his 24 points tn
the final penod. Dtnvcrranoffan 1-2
stnna to stretch Lhctr lead to ~7-14.
~ .. .
..
Or~ Coat DAILY PILOT/ Monday. March 10, 1988 'ti' -
COLLEGE 8 ASKl TB~L L --
Duke, Louisville
win tourrieys
No. 2Jayhawks
capture Big Eight
with 73.-71 victory
From AP dllpatcbes
GREENSBORO. N.C. -Top.
ranked Duke, led by Mark Alarie and
Johnny Dawkms. won i1s first Atlan·
tic Coast Conference baske1ball tour-
nament in six years Sunday with a
68·6 7 vtctory over sixth·ranked
Georgia Tech.
Dawkins. who sco~ 20 points.
clinched the victory for the Blue
De vils when he convened two free
throws wath seven seconds lef\. A
basket b)' Alane at the 44-sccond
mark had gl\en Duke a 66-65 edge in
a see-<;aw finish to the 33rd annual
tournament.
Alane 'icorcd 17 points for the Blue
Devils. wh o last won the league title
in 1980 by beating Maryland.
Duke. 32·2, led 37-34 at halftime.
The Blue Devils scored six quick
points at the outset of the second half.
four by Dawkins and two by Alarie.
That gave Duke its biggest lead at
43.34 with 16:46 lef\. But Georgia
Tech. :!5-6. staged a rally oft ts own to
set up the close fini sh.
In other college games:
Ellison added 21 points and 13
rebounds as No. I I Louisville de-
feated 10th-ranked Memphis State in
the championship game of the Metro
Conference basketball tournament.
round of the tournament, but had to
go to the wire to edge Florida State
73-71 on Saturday. Louisville re-
ceived a first-round bye. then man-
handled Cincinnati 86-65 Sa turday.
A 15-2 Louisville burst at the start
of the second halfopened a 55-37 lead
with 15:55 lef\. Memphis State twice
trimmed the Louisville advantage to
nine points, but the Tigers. plagued
by PQOr shooting, could come no
closer.
Wagner. a senior guard. was I 1 of
15 from the floor and nine of 10 from
the frtt-throw line. He also had seven
rebounds. ltuaas '13, Jow1 Sl. 71: In Kansas
City, Danny Manning scored 23
points and held Kansas together 1n
the final minute as the second-ranked
Jayhawks clipped Iowa State in the
final of the Big Eight postscason
tournament.
The Cyclones stoic the ball under
the Kansas basket with five seconds
left and swept downcourt. but of-
ficials called a traveling violation on
Sam Hill at the buzzer before the Iowa
State could put up a shot.
Hill fell to the floor in d1sbcltef.
Dreiling and Ron Kellogg each had
12 points and Hunter scored 11 for
' Dulle'• Johnny Dawkins waves as he's car-
ried by fans after the Blue Devils beat
Georgia Tech for the ACC champlon1blp.
Dawilne wu named the ACC MVP.
Loulsvlllt 88, Mempbls St. 79: In
Louis' ille. Milt Wagner scored 31
po ints and freshman center Pervis
the Jayhawks. .
Iowa State. 20..10, got 25 points
from Grayer. a 6-5 sophomore.
....
..
SPORTS BREAK
Dwayne Murphy
in the doghouse
with tea111111ates
From AP dispatches
PHOr NIX -Oakland \ ~ center
fielder DMt) ne M u1 ph) lt;i, gone to the
dog' ·\nd gone and g•Jne ,111d i(11nl.'
It 's got nothing tu do \\Ith age: or
inJum·~ Murph\ first\tartcJgotnghu\\ \\uwatagc 18.
when hl' wm JU'il a minor·k:igu<."r attending c;pnng
tra1n1ng 1n Phocn1'
It\ got 11othtng to do "'th hitting. l'llher ~urph\.
y,.cnt to the dog-. Ix-lure ht h11 ''home run' in I 9M4 and
''hl·n hchaued 142111 19'l\
\ 11d n1m hc \ \ll f <tr gnn1• t lta t hl' 1 Jn' t {tl'I JO\ ht !{I\
to (lll "''h htrn
< 1ro'' I
'\.h y,.111 Y.ouhin t k-1 ~ ~~ wtth tum · \UV'\
\1urpll\ '11ld hutl<I\ \1 I 11111\ < ard1nal\ catcher \1tk1•
~kath
·1 h· g1·1' l111tl'.,oml \.JH ldlu'' outfielder \1tke
l>a' ,., · Hut 1t\ c,o boring·
Boring ' 81111ng'1 Wl"re talk mg about the Brg Q and
rhr J\.qn I r1kua here Rig n<,k\ and btg pa~offs
Wc rl' tallong ah<1ut a night .tt Phoenix (1re~hound
l'ark "Ith th1· \ ·., ll'llnt rapt.11n
f111y,. I
"I ~w t'\l'" \ingh 111ght during 'Prtng training
e,1..cpt tor !\111ntht), lwn1u'e rite\ ·rt.' d1m·d .. c;a\'>
Mu1ph\ \\h11dt<.lO\e1cd1hcrau.·•;in 1974 "IJU\tgt•t\o
e\t 1tcd Y,.c\ll h1ng 1hn"4.' dog<. run around thu'>t' turnc, ..
Om· 111~ht la<.t 1>.1·ck \<turph) talkt·d Davi~ into
:lllompam 1nll IHm •HI 11111· of h1<\ n1ghtl~ 'l'>tl\ to the
lot.al tJ11~ tr:11 k 'v111rph\ al<;11 allm.,t·d a reporter to
pr O\ rdt' nll U\I \l' Ul\ erage. although he vvnuld not
,tllo'\ a photogr.1pht·r I•• \talk thr <olor) '°"'" p11 ture' "hr 'kl~'> firml~. v.ant1ng nc1thl·r the
d1\tral11 on n11r the e"Jl·ncc ".\nd remrmht.>r thl·rc\
onh I~ m1nutt'' hct \\Ct'n raccc; 1111 n1t· tn \ltt<h thr <ihC't"t
""don t ,1\k 11111 m.11l\ qut'<otmnc;
'11\\ thl\" not a<\ \enou<, :J\ tt \Ourtd\ '\l urpll\
1n<.1<,1<. h1· 1<. not .1 l hr .. n•l tx•ttor he gamhk<o onh during
.,pnng 1ra1nin11 .ind11n on th1.. do11c;
Quote of the day
\1ike T'tqoo. dl'<\(rthtng the rtght urix·rrnt
th<il hr, \.. 1lw ''""'' <11 k'>'C Fergu<\on 111 their
hl'il''""'l'tfhth11ut \\di lal"a~<.t~ tntht't'm'
ti<1t 1nto the ltp ot thl' 111\t' pu\htng the 11()1,t, hont•
11l10 thl' h1t11n \flt'I th<il I \..1111\\ tht'\ don't \\41"1
1t .111\ mort•'
Arias leads U.S . to Davis win
<ii \ '\ \!)I 11 f l 11.Jd,11r J1mm) ~
\r1a' "'1nn1ng. ;1 f>;1\t\ < ur m.ttch f111 1he
fir\t l1111l' 111 h1<. L,lfl'l'I . ~t\l' till' [ lttlt.'d
~tall.'\ ;1 '111111' 11' 1 I l 11:.tdor 1n thl' lif\t
round ot thl' "-orld < 1111u11 trnn1c; u1mf'l\·t111on
\nas ddl.'.lled Raul \ t\lf 11-\. f1 . f '1 ~ 111 lhl'
dl.'U'>IH' tilth m.tll h 111 <,1•rtd till \m1'rtl ·'"' llltll lhl'
quanertinal r11unt..l \\h1 lh "'II tx· pla\cd Jul~ tx.~11
1 hl' l nt1t·d 'itJtl'\ ..,. ,11 I.Ill' t'llhc..·r \fn1lo or thl'
Bon'i Ht' 1-n-lt·tl \.\.1'\I <re n "" 1n th1..· nnt round I hl'
fifth and tlt'l ld1ng rn.1rd1 Ill lh1..• \h, \l\.ll \\ C\I ( rl'lllliHl\
\\3<. h 1lll'd l"I' d.1r~m·c,c, 1n 1111 tilth \1•t \11nd.1' nt)!ltl .111d
\lrlll h< l•Hllpktnl tml.I\
\\\1'dl'n \n·J..1ng 11' 1t111d lt1n\t't 1i11\ 1· l>a\" < up
tllk l'·"'I~ wo11 1t\ 111x:n1ng round t ruc;h1ng Dc·11n1Jrk
5·0 Rut thl' \\H'\k4> at..o ""'ill ha' l.' to wan unttl toda)
bcfor<.' finding out y,.ho lht\ will meet tn tht•
quarterfinal<, l'llhcr Ital\ or Paragua)'
Ital> l<.'ath , I \Irr th the rt•\ l'f\e 'iinglc\ w IX'. plaH·d
on Monda.,, The ParJgu.t) Ital) mart h hl.'11111 hl'l<.l 1n
Palermo. ~tnh ha\ twrn pl 1g1H'd b\ rain
In othrr "-odd Cirriup quarh·1final pa111ng\
Australia \\tll lau· B111;1111 .ind Yuguc;l;H 1a "tll takl· 11n
Czecho,101.akra
Bean, Inkster post victories
Aod y Bun l_l1\1'1t 1111' "hen Hubert
Green bo$e)t•d tlHl'L' ttl tlw la\t lour holes
in rcaulatton pla} \'<in thl F ;ic;tern Open
golf tournament ~und.n \1.1th a b1rd1c putt
o n the fourth pl11~111l hole HeJn a runner-up last week.
and the vc1cran ( ifl'l'll the l urrcnt re'\ champion.
each finished thl· rC'gulat11m 72 h11kc, at 2..,6, 12 'lhot'>
under par on the Rlu<' \1on\t<'r rnurc,c The" 1c tof) was
worth S90.000 from thr tot:il pur\C.' ol S500,000 (1rce n
wonSS4.000 In thl'l f>(, \ JulUnksttr ~1nning hcr
first toomamcnt 1n thH'l' \C':tr\on th<' tour, tapturcd the
Womtn'i Kem per Opcn t1n1\h1ng with a 12-undcr-par
276 One itrokC' h(h1nd lnkc;trr .... a., 198~ l.'hamp1on
AmJ AIC9U. With an 11 ·undn ·par 277 r 1cd tor third at
10.under-pat ?78 were Marr l Bourtb and Cbrts
.JtUIM Inkster won S45.000 for fir\l pain~. \Icon
S27, 750, while John~on and llc11arth won S 18.000 cnch
for their third place tic
BASEBALL
Curry gets second-round KO Tw1· ns w1· n
FORT WO RTH -Donald Curry m knocked out Eduardo Rodngue7 with a
crac;h1ng lcft·ng.ht to the head in the \econd s 11 9
round and retained the und1c;puted w1..•I-on ma ey s te™'ctght champ1onsh1p ~unda) ~tore a frenzi ed
crowd of hometown tans
It wa!I ( urr) '<; fi rc;t dt:fcnsc of tht· und1 sputt"d title
and 11 could be h1 -. last H1., next fight likely will be a h 7 5
challenge to Mike Mc(allum. the World Boxing omer <\ssoc1at1on'c;Jun1or m1ddlewc1gh1 champion. -
Curn brought a c;tand1ng room onl) crowd in the f
8.600.,eat Will Rogt·r-1< oltscum tom fl.'et ""hen he hurt
Rodnguc1 y,.1th a left hiwk to the 1aw 40 sccondc; into
the sct·ond round
(urr. \!rho '"ctght'd 1..u .. •., tht·n shook th(•
challenger from Panama ""'ho weighed I 461l2, wnh
se'eq1I c:omb1nattonc; to the head bdore Rodngue1
escaped m1dwa> through the round.
Then. with 50 sccondc; left 1n the round < urn \l'nl
Rcx.lngue1 to the ropes with a ll'ft-nght tu th1..· head I h1..•
c hampwn do'>1..'d rn and connected \\Ith a lclt-nght that
dmp~d Hodngul'/ on hrc; back, when· he y,.ac, rnu1111..·d
out at~ :!Q h' rcfcrec Hubert tarle
R1x.lngu·l.'I ""'ho was the World Bo\tng '""lla-
1111n'<. "'o I "'dtcn.,e1ght contender. rl•m:um·d 11n the
tloor for alm11~t li"e minutes whrk ht'> d1..Pllur\ and
handler'> worked ll\N him He lt:ft the nng on ht'> own
Perreault scores 500th goal
'ea\on goal ot h1., NHl career and Doug '
Gil Perreault \cored the 500th regular ~
Smith scored the \.ll inning goal as Ruffalo
be3t New kr,ey. 4. \m Sunda} .~n11th
1all1td on a \hort .,h<JI with lt.'5'1 than li'l' minute., to go
1n the game ;1t t1:r Paol Cy r drew two New Jer~y
detcnseman toward him and <,ltppcd a pa'>'> to the
undle('ked ~mt th llkka Sinisalo and Murray Craven
'>tored power-pla} goal' 1n a fo ur·goal first peno<l.
tnggcnng Ph1ladelph1a It> a 4-1 v1cto!J O\.Cr the New
Y orlt Ranger<\ Steve Larmer '><ored l"' o goal'
1ntlud1ng the I SOth ol his tarecr. to lead < htlago to .i
4-:! \ICIOr) mer St Lout'> Doug Smail scored t"'o
goal<. a-; \'-1nn1pcg beat Pttt'iburgh. S· "l Craig
Laughlin and Bob Goold <,eored set:ond·pc1 tod goal-; tu
break a I· I tic and g1,e "-a'ihtngton a 3-1 '•lluf) O\er
the New 'I ork fo;landl"r' Kelly Kislo scored a <\hort-
handcd goal carh tn thl· third pcnod to lOmplcte a
Dctrotl comehat k and hclp the Red Win~c; w a\-l 11e
"llh < algan
Gervin moves up on score list
George Gervin took mer 'IC\l~nth m plt!Cl' nn thi.· all t1mt• NR·\ 'iCOnng ltst with
J 2 7-point dlort and Sidney Green con-
nt'l'tl·d 101 a 1..art•cr-h1gh JI po1ntc; ~unda}
111lcad1ng( lmagotoa 114-101 v1ttor}O\.er New York.
< 11.'r' tn, who nov. ha'i 26. 197 poum moved past John
ffavllcck. tormcrly of the Hoc,ton ( cl ttcs. who had
\tored 26. W'i po1ntc, tn hi\ career El'iCwhe rc in the
l\JBA. Brad Davis 'lrnrcl.l a wa,on·htgh 23 points.
1ndud1ng 11 down the c;1n·t<h. as Dallas defe~ted
'iiacramento 117-102 Albert King scored 28 points
and Otis Birdsong added 27 as New Jersey defeated
Phocn1~ 11 'i 111 Moses Malone scored 34 poant'i
and pulkd d<m n J 7 rd'>ounds as Philadelphia defeated
Indiana 120.102
Angels' open house a success
I he .\ngcl'i drew a crowd of some ii lll.1.100 to Anaheim ~tad1um ~unday
afternoon -not bad cons1denng the team
"'a\ playing in Yuma. Ant
"It wa-; our first OJ>l'n hou..c and we didn't cx~ct so
man> people, .. Tom 5ecber:g. the Angel'>' vice pre 1dent
tor publtt· relat10ns. ~1d of the promotion.
"The peopll' got a tour of tht' faoht1cs. including
th<." dugout\ and tht' preo;s bo' and we sold some
c;ea'lon ti cket' ·· •
Television, radio
TELEVISION
10 pm -SUPERSOCCER: C. hanncl 50.
IO p m -MOTOR SPORT From Ascot
Park. ( hann<.'I 56
RADIO
IO JO a m -BASEBALL Boston v<;
r>odaer\ from V cro Beach, Fla . KA BC I 790).
l p m -BASEBALL· An1d s \"' <ian
Franu~o ii\ Scottsdale. KM PC (710)
TUESDAY RADIO
JO am -BASEBALL· Dodge~\~ Cinctn·
natt ot Tamp.i. KA BC' (790)
I p.m -BASF.BALL· Angels v . Mil-
waukee at Chandler, KMP< (710).
Gooden pitches 3
scoreless innings
in Mets· 8-1 win
From AP dispatches
It''> a dream s1tua'tton. The scor<." 1s
tted 1n the last of the ninth and )Ou hn
a home run to win the game.
Thaf<\ wh at Ro} Smalley did
">unda). h11t1ng a two-run homer with
t"o outs 1n the ninth to gi ve the
".1 111ncsota Twins a 7.5 victory over
the ( 1nc1 nnat1 Reds in ex hibition
baseball
:\ sacrifice O)' b)' Alex Sanchez.
produci ng his third run batted in of
the game. tied the score at 5-5.
Smalley. batlin$ wi th Mark Davidson
on ba'lc. then hit the next pitch from
Mike 'imtth over the wall in rig.ht
field.
"I've been around too long to make
a big deal of h1t11ng a home run an
spring trainm$." Smalley said. "But
the good thing 1s to put something like
this in the memory bank It's some-
thing that I'll think about later 1n the
'cason when the games count."
f he Reds took a 5.3 lead on home
rune; b} rookies TerT)' Lee and Wade
Rowdon in the seventh inning. Lee's
solo homer tied the game 3·3. and
Ro..,.den hit a two-run blast. Ttm
Laudner added a solo homer for the
Twins.
l\anchc1. who the Twins got in a
trade wtth Detroit dunng the off·
season. dro\e m runs 1n the sixth and
eighth innings wnh a double and a
single.
Wbltt Sox s. Ro yals 4, 10 lnnlngs:
Pinch-hitter Jerry Ha1rston's single
with two out and the bases loaded
scored two runs in the bottom of the
10th inoang to bnng Chicago from
behind. .
The White Sox, 3· I. set the sta$e
wi th infield singles from Reid
Nichols and Bobby Bonilla and an
intenttonal walk to Carlton Fisk.
which loaded the bases. Hairston
followed with his game.winning in-
field hn.
The Royals. 0..2. had taken a 4-3
lead 1n the top of the 10th on Greg
Pryor"s RBI single off Chicago re·
ltever Juan Agosto.
Bret Saberhagen. the AL Cy Young
Award winner last year. made his
spnng debut for the Royals and threw
three scoreless innings. Richard
Dotson. trying to come back from
shoulder surgery. staned fQr the Sox
and gave up one run in three innings.
Ortole1 3, Yaaken t : Baltimore
scored three umes in the ninth inning,
two on home runs by rookies Ken
Gerhart and Jim Traber and the
winning run on a single by rookie
John Stefero
Tigers 11, Red Sox t : Mike Laga
and Nelson Simmons each homered
to back th<." combined s1x-h1tter of
Dave La Point and three other Detroit
pitchers. The Tigers scored four runs
in the first inning off Boston nght-
hander Roger Clemens and __ got ~ve
more in the seventh off Mitch
Johnson. It was Clemens· first game
competition since August. when he
had surgery on his nght shoulder.
Rangers 7, Blue J ays I: Rookie
Mike Stanley's one-out solo homer in
the bottom of the ninth inning
provided the winnini run af\er Bob
Brower. another r'ook1e, tied the game
with a solo homer in the e111hth
A'• 6, Marlntra 5: Catcher Charlie
O'Bnen slammed a one-out home
run in the bottom of the ninth inning
to gi ve Oakland its first victory in
three games.
Dwayne Murphy hit a thrre-run
hom~r for the A's.
Braves 4, Expos %: Bob Horner
drove in two runs with a pair of
singles and Craig McM unry. ~rying to
come back from a disappointing year.
pi cked up the victory with two
scoreless innings. McMurtry gave up
just two hits.
Mell 8, Cardinals I: Dwight
Gooden. the NL Cy Youfl$ Award
winner. made his 1986 debut with
three scoreless innings and rookie
Stanley Jefferson hit a home run to
pace the Mets, who took advantage of
three St. Louis errors to score seven
unearned runs.
Jefferson's solo homer 1gn1ted a six -
run eighth inningoffJoe Boever. Tim
Corcoran knocked in three runs wnh
a double.
PbUlles I, Pirates t : John Russell
tripled and homered to lead Philadel -
phia to a come.from-behind victory.
A two-run double by Sixto Lezcano
and Sid Bream's sacrifice fly helped
the Pirates to a 3·0 lead. but Russell's
triple and a two·run triple by Steve
Jellz keyed a four-run founh inning
for the Phillies. Jeltz also added a two-
run homer in the fif\h.
Brewen 8, C•b• t : Randy Ready
and Jim Adduci each had three hits
and two runs batted in to lead
Milwaukee. The Cubs got a two-run
homer from Tony Woods and a solo
shot from Mike Brumley._·
Giants t, locUu1 S, 10 llll•11:
Jessie Reid's sacrifice fly to center
drove in Candy Maldonado with the
winning run. Maldonado led off the
last inn10g against reliever Jim Kem
with a ground ball that first baseman
Jim Wilson booted for a two-base
error. Maldonado took third on a wild
pitch. After Brad Gulden hned out to
second, Maldonado scored on Reid's
fl y ball to center.
Hagler 1Deets 'The Beast'
LAS VEGA -Marvelous
Marvin tfaaJer, who calls himself a
man on a ml sion. will defend the
world m1ddlwe1ght championship to-
n1Jht aga1nsl u nbeaten John "The
Beast'' Muaab1
, Hasler 1s a soltd favonte to move a
step clo$Cr to completing the m1ss1on
-brcakina Carlos Monion's tteord
of 14 successful mrddlwc1aht title
defenses.
h will be Hagler's 12th defense of
the undisputed title he won when he
stopped Alan Minter in three rounds
Sept. 27. 1980, in London.
A victory for HIJ)cr alw could set
up a rtmatrh with Thomas Hearns.
who also will fight on the card at
Caesars Palace in a challenge to
undefeated James Shuler for the
Nonh American Boxina Federauon
middlewc1aht title.
The two 12-round fights at a
soldout I 5,000-scat outdoor arena at
Caesars Paltoe Wlll be shown on
closed-c1rC:\.11t and pay-per.view lelc-
v1sion, as Wlll a I S~roun4i World
Box1na Aswc1at1on bantamwc1aht
title defense by R1chie Sandoval
apinst Gabby Canizales.
Tt\c bant.amwei&ht fi&ht 1s 1ehed-
ulcd to stan at 6:10 p.m .. the Hearns
fiaht at 7: I 5 p.m. and the Haller fi&ht
at 8:10 p.m.
NCAA •••
From Bl
"There are some dynamite aamn
an the first (Ound," he wd.
Survivo~ of this com1n1 wttk-
end's prelimmary rounds w1U ad-
vance 10 rqional compet1t1on at four
sites· Houston in the West: Allan ta 1n
the Southeast; East Ru1hen:ord1 NJ.,
in the East: and Kansas C'ny an the
Midwest.
In the West at Ogden. Uta.h .. on
Thursday. sccond·sccded Lou1sv11le
meets No. 15 Drexel; No. 1 Bradley
lacklc No. I 0 Texas-El Paso; No. 3
Nonh Carolina faces No,. I~ Utah:
and No. 6 AJabama-Birmingham
plays No. 11 Missouri. In the West at Long Beach on
Friday. it will be No. 4 Neva~~-Las
Vegas against Northeast Lou1s1ana;
No. 5 Maryland vs. No. 12 Pep-
perdine; and No. 8 Auburn against
No. 9 Arizona. Other first round games in the East
Regional at Greensboro on Tb~y
arc fourth-seeded Oklahoma ~~n~t
No. 13 Northeastern: No. 5 Virginia
against No. 12 De Paul: and ~o., 8.0 ld
Donunion vs. No. 9 West V1rguua.
First-round action in tht East at
Syracuse. N.Y., on Friday matches
second-seeded Syracuse vs. No. 1 S
Brown; No. 3 Indiana ap1nst No: 14
Cleveland State; No. 1 Navy against
No. 10 Tulsa, and No. 6 St. Joseph's
against No. 11 Richmond.
NCAA T.um.ment
Eut •etienM
Ft.ST ROUND
Thurwll\I
Oulo.t, 32·7, Y\. Mlnlulppl lleltev SI., 20·'
Old Oomlnloo, ?7·7, "'· Wffl Virginie , 77·10
Virginie, 1'· 10, V\. OtP•ul. 16-17
OklahOme. 25·1, vl. Norlheestarri. 26·•
Ff'IOl\I
St J0\4K>h'\, 2S·S. V\, IUcnmond, 73·6 tndlane, 7i·7, n . Ctevtt.nc:t SI., 77·J
Ntvv, 27·4, "' TUlu.. 23·1 Svr.cu~. 15·5, "'' Brown. 16· 10 SECOND ROUND
Satvrde\I
Oukt·Mln Vt lltv SI. winner '" Oki Do
mlnloll·Wffl Virginie winner Vlrglnlt ·O.Peul winner v' Ok1enom.·Nor1n·
tHltrn winner
Sunde\I SI JO\.et)/l'l·Rlchmond winner VI ll'dltllt
Cle .. lend SI winner N1vv·Tului winner vi Svr.cust·Brown win
s.vtMe1t RetlenM
FIRST ROUND
Thuncllly
Purdu., 21·7, vs. Loul1lena SI. 21·11
MemOflll St. 77-S. n Ben St .. 11·9
Virginie T ten, 27·1, v1. V1l .. nov•. 27· lJ
Georgie TK l"I, 75-6, VI. Merill. 19·11
Frtcle\I
Kt nluckv, 19·3, v1 OtvldlOn. 10-10
W KtnlUCkV, ?7·7, vs Nel><nlte, 19· iO
Al•Dltm•, ?1·1, vl. X•vler, Qnlo, 2~4 1111nor,, 2i·t , v1. Fa lrfletd, 24·6
SECOND •OUND
Sttvrde\I Purdut·Loutsltna SI winner vs MemDflls
St ·Bell St winner
Vlrgl11I• hch·VIH•nov• winner v\ Georgie
TKl"l·Mtrl\1 winner
SUftCSllY
Ktnluclt.v·Otvld'°" winner vs W l<en!uckv
Ntt>rHk• wrnner
Altt>ame·Xt vitr, Ohio winner vs 1111nol1·
FalrllelCI winner
""4Wnt Retlenal FIRST ROUND
Thundlv
Kenu.1, Ji·J, o North Ctrotlne ,t.& T 27 7
JKkM)l'lvltte, 2i-t , "' Teml>le. 1'·5
Mkflloen SI . 11·1 .. , Weshlll910l'I, 19-ti
Gtorvtlown. 73·7, "' Toes Tech, 17·i)
Frtci.Y
N Cerotl"I SI II· 11, vs !owe 10-11
Noire Oem. 2l·S. V1 Ark ·Lil!le Roctt. 77· 10
towt $1 , ~10r-V.l ~ U • ..
MICtllotn 11·4, "' Ak ron. 22·7 SECOND ltOUND
Sttvnlllv
l<t Mtl·N CeroOne A& T winner vs Jee~
M)l'lvllle·THTil>le winner
Michigan SI ·W11nlngron wtnntr H
Georve1own·Tex11 TKl'I win,,...
SUftdll\I N CtroOne Sr ·IOwe win,,., vs Nolrt Dt me
Ark ·Llllle Rock winner
towe SI ·Mlt ml, Olllo Wiiiner <ll Mlc'11gen
Akron wlnr>er
Wfflft,.ien.t .
FIRST litOUND
Tllunde\I
Ala -Blrmlngr>em, 24·10,"' Mln ourl, 7i· t3
Norll'I C•rollna, 26· S, v\ Ulal'l, 20·9 Bredlev. 31·2 n . Texes·Et Pno, 77-S
Loul\vllte. 76·7. vl. Drexel, 19·11
Fr'lde\I
$1 Joon·1, 30-4, v1. Monl•n• St., 14· 16
AuDu•n~ 19· IO, vs Arl1on., 73·1
Mtrvlanc:t, 11· 13, "'· P~Olne. 7S·4
NE Lovl\len., 20·9, Y\. Nev_·Ln Vevn, 31 •
SECOND ROUND
Sttwdla\I Alt ·Blrmtnvnam·Mluourl wlnl\r v\ NOflll
C•rollne·Ul•l'l winner 8r•dtev·Tu u ·E I PaM> win~ v1 Lo.;l•vllie
Orutl Winne<" Sundav
St Jolln'\·Monten. St w inner vs AUOYrn
Artr~ winner MervlencS·Pec>Pefdlne winner vs Nev ·Lu
Vev.1·NE LOlll\ltn. winner
1
JOYNER •••
From Bl
·would be great." he says. "The best
compliment r could get would be if I 0
years from now, some general man·
ager says to a prosect, 'you're coming
up to be a Wall y Joyner-type player.•"
Joyner, who was bom in Atlanta
and still resides in Georgia, hadn't
even heard of Vernon, but has his
choices for his favorites and role
models.
''My role models are Reggie Jack-
son for hitting, Steve Garvey for the
way he plays first base and Dale
Murphy for his mannensms on and
off the field. If I could be anywhere
near them ... "
Joyner 1s another in a recent scnes
of the strong farm products making a
name for themselves as the Angel'>
begin a transition to a much younger
club.
"The last few years. they (the
Angels) have JOne that way. (Gary)
Pe1t1s and (Dick) Schofield opened
the way, along with (Kirk) McCaskill
and (Stewan) Cliburn.'' said Joyner.
"Mauch and Pon have been m1xina
veterans with youth. which means
instead of I 0 rookies this year1 we
have four or fi ve and five guys Wlth a
year of experience.
"That means I can go to one of the
younger guys fo~. advice. instead of
JUSt the veterans.
Joyner says most of h.is advice has
come at the hands of Jackson (hitting)
and ea~w (fieldina).
"Reggie taught me to be caJm
during games. Whenever t~J!P<>~·
ma club would send a Jdt. er to
face me, he came over, put his ann
around me and gave me confidence. l
was really surprised, because he
didn't have to do that. he wanted to
"You're always lcamil'\I out here.
you never stop, e pecially with Gene
Mauctt out here. You don't stay
around here if you stop lcantlna. ••
With the statistics he lhowcd in
Edmonton and Pueno Rico, It ap-
pears Joyner hat studied well with the
people around him and i1 ready for
his final cum -with a diploma In
the form of a 1tanin1 Job 1wa.ilina
him u a .,aduation present
'
Oran1e Cout Collece la •ezpected· to be one of the top Lut year. tile Bace won the Pactfl.c Cout ·no'rice eJCht
oolle&tate rowtnc powera on the Weet Cout th.la HUOD. champlonahlp and flnlabed MCond in tbe JV eJCht.
Gleason takes helm of Pirates' crew
'Blue collar' oarsmen expected to lead
Orange Coast to another winning yea~
Some things never seem to change.
Take for example Orange Coast
College's crew.
For the past 20 years OCC has
annually fielded one of the top crews
on the West CoasL
Things don't figure Jo be any
different in 1986.
Pat Gleason, who takes over for
Dave Grant this season as the head
crew coach, says the Pirates' No. I
boat. will be a "blue collar crew. We
may not look pretty on the water, but
we'll be physical and we'll slug it out
with the best of them."
Gleason, a former OCC oarsman
who later rowed at the University of
Washington, 1s filling in for Grant,
who is taking a year off to handle
some extra duties as Coast's dean of
students ... Our JV eight (OCCs No. I
boat) will have size and depth this
year," said Gleason. "We have some
strong returnees from our novice
eight, which won the Pacific Coast
championship last year, and from our
frosh eight that fin ished fo urth on the
West Coast. We also have three solid
transfers.··
Heading the list of returnees are
Scott Perryman, Scott Southwick,
Brooks Dwinell, Joe Ferguson and
Ron Garcia.
Perryman, Southwick and Dwinell
all rowed in OCCs frosh boat last
season. Perryman is a 6-1, 190-
pounder from Winthrop, Wash.
Southwick, a 6-5, 185-pounder, went
to Fountain Valley High, while
Dwinell (6-5, 195) is from El Toro.
Both Southwick and Dwinell were
invited to test for the U.S. National
team this spring.
Ferguson (6-4, 200) rowed 1n
OCCs novice eight boat a year ago.
From Georgia, he was also invited to
test for the National team. Gama 1s a
6-3. 210-pounder from E.dison High.
He rowed on the OCC novice boat.
Other key oarsmen include Greg
Hagler-Mu.gabl fiabt at Marr1ott
Ton,ght's world m1dalewc1ghl t11Je fight
between champion Marvin Hagler and John
.. The Beast" Mugab1 will be: shown hveonclosed
circuit TV al the Mamou Hotel 1n Irvine.
Irnne N~bt at Laken .
The C11y oT Irvine 1s taking rcservauons for
the Lakcrs vs. Houston Rockets game excursion
Sunda)'.
Children and adults arc 1nv1ted for a S 12 fee.
including transportation and game admission
Children under 15 must be accompanied by an
adult
Phone rtf,IStrauon for the game. which 1s sold
out. 1s bc:tng taken by calltng 66(}.3881 Monday
through Friday from 8 li. m -5 p m. and V 1sa and
Mastercard arc accepted.
Transpon.at1on will leave from Nonhwood
CommunityPark, 4531 Bryan at~ p.m. an WI r
return around 11 p.m.
AIJ6el•' e.dllblt1on t1cket.
Tickets arc S20 and and arc on sale at Megan's
in the Hcnt.agc Shopping Center in Irvine and at
all T1cketmasirr locauons.
The program bc&ms at 6 and includes Tomm)
Hearns vs. James Shuler and Richard Sandoval
~ s Gaby Canizales
La1m bo•Una competition
Dias (6-5, 205), Steve Henderson
(6-2, 200) and Steve Welcom (6-2,
190). All arc transfers.
Dias rowed in UC Berkeley's
freshman eight in 1983, Henderson
was a member of Oregon State's
varsity eight last season and Welcom
rowed for Northeastern University's
frosh eight two years ago.
"We're big enough and stron~
enough this year to go a long way,'
Gleason said. "Our success will
depend upon bow well we get our
blades m and out of the water, and
how much we want to win."
The freshman eight will be coached
by Lee Miller, a former OCC cox-
swain who also attended the Univer-
sity of Washington.
Orange Coast will open the season
Saturday. April 5 at the San Diego
Crew Classic on Mission Bay. Yearly
the top crews in the nation compete 1n
this event.
The Pirates will host the 21st
annual Newport lnv1tat1onal Rowing
Regatta Sunday, April 27 on North
Lido Channel. Competing will be UC
Irvine, Long Beach State, UCLA.
Loyola-Marymount, Uni versity of
San Francisco and the California
Maritime Academy.
The Pacific Coast Championships
(Western Sprints) will be held May
I 0-11 on Lake Natoma near Sacra-
mento.
occ Crew SCMdlllle
Seturav, AD<il S -San 014oo Crew Ci.ulc
Min ion 8ev. I • m.
S.lurav. AD<ll 12-UC Irvine. USC 11 Ort noe
Cou t (NewPOrt 8evl. 10 a m
S.tura v. AD<h 19 -11 Sttntoro IRtcrwood
SllOl'ts), 10 a.m.
Sundav. A-1>1'*h-"20~"""11rcatHorn11 ~M!WW
Stl<>r•' I, 10 t .m.
SunO•v. AP<ll 27 -NewPOtt R111a111 (NewPOrt 8ay), I a.m. (UC Irvine, i...ono 8eacn
Sttte, UCLA, Lovota, Cali!«l'nta Maritime, USF
OCCl. I a m
Saturday, Mav J -OCC, UC Sen 014oo II
UCLA (6allona CrHttl. 10 a m.
Satura v, /My 10 -Wtsltrn Sc>rin!l 11
Sacramento IL.alt• Natoma), I a m Sunoev, Mav ti -WHlarn Sprints at
S.cramento (Lelle N1toma), I 1.m
..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT IMond.-y, Merah 10, 1N8 D
Sunset opens
volleyball,
baseball play
Sea View Lea ue
. opens track season
with Thursday meet
Sunset League bar.cbaJ I begins this
weelc, ut for mo~t 1t probably will
feel lice JUSt another tournament
game after the league's heavyweights
have fought it out in various tour-
neys.
In volleyball Sunset leaJUe play
ge'ts under way Tuesday ntght. while
Sea View action. continues after
starting last week.
The fi rst Sea View League track and
field action 1s also set Thursday, as
well as the w~k's No. I attraction. the
Be,ach Cities lnv1t.at1onal at Newpon
Harbor High
The annual Beach C1t1es m~t will
lure some of the area's best, including
athletes from Corona del Mar. Cost.a
Mesa. Estancia, Woodbridge, Uni-
versity, Fountain Valley. West-
minster and the host Sailors, in
add1uon to others.
Teday
HIGH SCHOOi...,_ -FOIJ<lleln Vellev vs Mllll· II•~ 11 81elr Fltlcl 1oou111er1 .. 0«J. 3 15 om
Irvine vs S•~•nne II 8r001tnurst Perli. ) 15 om
T..,.._v
COLLEGE -S.n Oleo<> Stete al UC Irvine 2.lO, SoC1t College 11 USIU 2.lO om
COMMUNITY COLLEGE -~ ti
O<anoe COH I, 2'30 Golden WMI ., Cerritcn
1.30
HIGH SCHOOL -Founllln Vellev at Mlnlofl
Vlelo, Oe"I Hiiis al Unlver1f1y, J IS, El OoreOo
e l trvlne. l. Sonor1 "' HuntlnQton 8H 4lll et Mlle Souere Perk (Ooul>letle10tr), 3:1S. Marina et
Arl9'1e (doul>leflHOerl. 4
Wednesdev
COLLEGE -Soutl'l«n Cel Colleve et UC
Irvine 2 30
HIGH SCHOOL -Tustin at Corona <let /Mr J IS, Cee><streno Vallev II Mater De< l
ThuncleY
COLLEGE -New Mulco e t UC Irvine I 30
COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Orenoe Co.$1 at
GOiden West, 2 JO
HIGH SCHOOL -Gallr VI NtwPOfl Htrbe><
•I TeWlnkle Pe rk ldo\lb4eflteoer J. 3, L19una
8eec11 11 S.nte Ana Velley, S
fl'ridlv
COLLEGE -USIU 11 UC UC Irvine, 2;30
HIGH SCHOOL -Founteln V1ttev v,, Ocean
I/few at Mlle S<auart Perk, 1. EOI'°" a t
W111m1n,1er. J ·IS. Tu"ln Vl E't1ncl• 11
Te Wink le Perk (OOublenee<ler I. 4.lO, Sen
Ctemenlt e l WOOOOf'~ (OOUl>llMM!ef) 3
Unlversitv 11 El Toro, l IS
S.tvrd9Y
CC>t!LEGE -Cel Lut~1n 11 Soutl'l«n C•I
COli.oe (OOUO!efle1oer >. noon
COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Go!Oeft Wttt 11
Cvoreu. noon. Ra nchO S.ntl100 11 Or•-
Coest, noon
HIGH SCHOOL -Huntington 81ec:h at
Marina . I. COCOOI <let ,,._., et Dana, Jilli~
(Ooul>iefleec:ltt). 11 Irvine 11 Coste Mew
(Ooul>lehtaoerl, II, St P1u1 11 Mall" 0•1. 2·4S.
Laguna Hills •' S.OdlebK• IOouOleneeoer>. 11
VoUeyball
Tu.sdaV
COMMUNITY COLLEGE -GOIOen Wes! at
Cl\apmen, 1
HIGH SCHOOL -Irvine at S.n Clemeflte
S.JO, Es1a1>cl1 al C0<ona oec Mar. 5 JO. L.OIJl\ll e .. cn •t Cost• Mew. J IS. UnlvenllY 11
Newoort H.,.,, W~ et ,,..._ Oii,
3 IS, '
w.-.MlllY
COMMUNITY COLL.•O& -Pltrce •I Gold~
en Wffl, 1
HIGH SCHOOL -F9'111leln VelllY et Hunt•
lnflon lkoKll, S-.lO; L.e Oulnlt a t ICllMfl. ~.
MJr• COll• 11 Merine, •id OcMn Vltw el w .. 1ml11t1er. S'lO
1'.W.y
COMMUNITY COl.LEGI! -GolOM W.1 Ill
LOll9 le.di cc. 7
HIGH SCHOO\. -CeciK~ Y....., ~I
lrVfftt, UO, CorOfle del Mar et~. l:Je;
NewPOl'I .... ,bcw ef E1tende, S:Jt1 Colle~
11 Woodbrklee. UO, C>aen 'View et ,OUlllPI
V1t1ev. U O, w .. tmlnatw 11 l!dlloll, UO; Met'IM
11 Hunll,,.ton 8-ctl, S-.JO.
l s.1Vrdav
HIGH KHOOL -Alumni et Elleftda, 1
Track UJd Field w.-..v
HIGH SCHOOL -~ Del e l Fountt lfl
Vellev. l
TIIW'MllV
HIGH SCHOOL -L..-Hiiis a t Irvine, 2:AS, WOOObr~ If Ccwont deC MM, l, ~ 8Mcft 11 co,11 Meta, 3, ~_, H¥bor •t
Estencla 2 d , ~ et Unlvw51tv, 3:151
/Mrlna II Velencle, 3, lkMe Gr.nc!e a l W..1-
mln•lar, 3 ,.....,
COMMUNITY COLLEGE -S~ 11 O<enge Coast, 2 30, Compton 11 GOlcMn Wnt, 230 •
SaVGllY
HIGH SCHOOL -lrvlne, ~ Harbcw.
E'llnci1 Ce><ona de! MM. to.ta Mfte, Wood-
brlc!Oe, Unlvtfslly, Foutlleln V.....,, Westminster
11 8..cfl Cit'" tnvll1tlonel (N9wPorl Harbcw
Hlg!I), II 1 m
StrimmlDI
TIMICllV
HIGH ~HOOL -Lono S..Cll Wltwn 1!
N .. _., Hllf'bor, 3, Metar o.I at 0.ne HI"'· l
w.._..v
COMMUNITY COLLEGE -GOiden Wftt,
Mt Sen Antonio ., CVPf'MS, 2'.30.
HIGH SCHOOL -Corona de! Met' I I Coal•
Mna, l, Esr.llcle et Woodbr1cloe, 3, Untvenltv
et L...eQune a..d\, ); Saodlll>ecll el lffwCJot1
HerbOt. 3
HIGH SCHOOL -El TD<O et Irvine, 3
l'.W.V
COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Ml. s.n Antonio
at Ortnoe Co.SI, 2.JO ' HIGH SCHOOL -Edhotl et Estenda, l,
Woootlrklee et T rutluCo Hilb, J, Cllino et
Founttin V1t1ev. 3, Male< o.I et Chemlneoe, J.
S.1Urcllv
HIGH SCHOOL -EOlson et SoCet AH·eoed
Ret1vs 11 Lo• Amigo,
Mlf*v
COLLEGE (Men) -Ken•H "' UC Irvine 11
RecoUll Club of Irvine, 1;30
COLLEGE (Women) -UCLA et UC lrvlllt,
1;30
HIGH SCHOOL -E'laKla el Irvine, ),
Newoor1 Hllf'bor 11 Sumv Hiiis l
TIMICllY
COMMUNITY COLLEGE <Men> -Ortnoe
Co.SI 11 S.OdleOadl, 21 Mt S.n Antnlo el
~Wnt,2..
COMMUNITY COLLEGE (Women! -
SedOlel>aCk II Or1nee Coe"· 2.
HIGH SCHOOL -COi'-oel Mar et Soult\
TOl'rance. 2;30, Coate Meta et Wntmin"er· 2~.
EdlMltl 11 Min ion Vl4io. l.t5. Hunllno1on a..c..
11 Le Qu;ntl,2 30
w ..... v
COLLEGE (Women) -ICenus 11 UC trvlne,
I.JO
HIGH SCHOOL -~ II Eatencla, l .
NewOOtt H1r1lor II ~ e..q,, l . Ccwone Oii
Mar al Cotti Mna. 1.JO. ~'-11 Unlver\llv J
TIMlndly
Tickets for the Angels· ci1h1b111on games at
Angel Stadium tn Palm Spnngs arc now on sale
al all T1cke11on outlets (1ncludmg Sears and
Tower Records) or by phone 10 Tcletron.
634-1300.
This year's schedule will consist of I I games
played daily fTom March 2 1-31. Angel oppo-
nents include Milwaukee (March 21-22). Chi-
cago Cubs (March 23). San Francisco (March
.?4-25). Cleveland (March 26), Oakland (March
27-28). Scalllc I March .?9) and San Diego
(March ~31)
The Sou1h~cst l'>1 v151on of the '\mcncan
Women's Lawn Bowling Assoc1a11on will hold
singles and novice singles compc1111on Monday
and Tuesday. March 17-18. bcginntng at 9:30
a.m. at the Ncwpon Harbor Lawn Bowling Club.
The event 1s open 10 the public for spectator
viewing.
For infonnauon. phone Boh Hicks at
644-4138 Kurri, Edmonton
stop Kings, 7 -3
COMMUNITY COLLEGE (Man) -Cyoreu
" Or•noe COH I 1. S.cklleC>edl a t Golden WMI.
2 COMMUNITY COLLEGE <Women> -O"
•noe Co.st al Cvor .. J.. 2. HIGH SCHOOL -EOIMltl I t 8everlv Hiib.
J IS. 8ol!la GrenOe II Hunll"91ori 8Mcll 3 15,
Gereletl Grove 11 W11tmlMttf' l·IS, /Mlar Del
11 Foun111n Vallev 3
l'rtdmV
Torvl.11, Dean at Forum
Olympic ice dancing gold mcdahm Jayne
Torv1ll and Chnstophcr Dean will make their
first United States stop on their curren1 world
tour Friday and Saturday. March .?8-29 al the
Forum tn lnglcwood
The Bnush p3tr, known for tis tnnovall"C
style. will bc:JOtned by I 6othcrtop skaters for the
1wo and a half hour show
The Fnday sho~ wrll be: al 8 p m . ~11h the
Saturday performance at I p m
Tickets arc available at the Forum eo, Office
and at all T1ckc1master locauons
For 1nforma11on phone (2 1))419-3182.
Llndbor6 Tennh Clualc
Sign-ups arc being taken for the fifth annual
Tcnnrs Classic to be: held Fnday, May 9 al the
Ltndbor& Racquet Club in Huntington Beach.
The event, sponsored by the Sales and
Markchng Council of the Buildtng Industry
Association of Southern Caltfomta. will have
compctiuon m A, B and C d1 v1s1ons as well a~
men s open class for men. women and m111cd
doubles
Anyone in the bu tiding 1nr411~1rv or allied firms
1s 1nv1ted to play for a fee o· . h include~
trophies. breakfast. lunch and dtnncr, as well as
beverages. a tennis shin. souvenir bag. towel and
visor.
The event bcaiM with a continental brt'akfast
at 7· I 5 a.m .. with milled doubles play st.art1na at
81.m.
Spectators and other non-pla)crs may attend
the awards dinner for SIS
Sponsorships a~ av1t1lablc by contat:11n1
Gordon Hicksat 731-01 4 1
For sign-up informauon contact Judy Foster
at cm-4663.
E dl•on academic boo.ten J Ok
The I OK Run for Acadcmu: E\ccllcnce.
sponsored by the Academic Booster Club of
Edison High. will be run Sunday. April 6,
beginning at 8 a.m ..
The race. which will begin and end at the
Hunttngton Beach Pier. will run along the bike
1ra1I and access road
The pre-registered fees arc S 10 with T-sh1n
and S 7 w11hou1 Day of the race fce<s arc SI 3 w1 th
T-shin and S 11 without. Entry forms arc
available at spons stores and al the school.
Trophies, medals and desk sets will be: given tn
12 male and 12 female categones. with a to tal of
I U pnzes
For more information phone Barbara Hauk al
968-7530. •
Anaheim Boat Sbo•
The 18th annual Anaheim Boat • how will be
a1 the Anaheim Con~en11on Crntcr. 800 '.'.
Katella. '\pnl 9· I 3
Show hours arc 3-10 pm Wcdncsda)'·Fnda):
11 a.m.-10 p.m Saturda). und 11 a m.-6 pm
Sunday
Admmion 1s S4.50 for adults and $2 for
children 6-1 S. Children under sax arc admt11cd
free
The show fcature1 boating equipment and
cccssoncs aJ ~11 u vacation information
For funher 1nform111on. phone 999-8900
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Glenn
Anderson scored three goals and
added two assists and Jan Kum had
two goals Sunday to lead the E.dmon-
ton Oilers to their ~venth straight
victory. a 7-3 NHL decision over the
Los Angeles K.ings.
Anderson. notching his founh hat
tnck of the season and 15th of his
career, scored his first goal of the
game midway through the second
penod to gjve the Oilers a 4-3 lead
He added two more goals. givmg
him 48 on the season. in the final
period as the Oilers pulled awa).
Kum. the NHL's top goal-scorer.
raised his total to 55 on the season
with a goal in the opening penod and
another in the third.
Paul Coffey and Wayne Gretzky
each scored one goal for Edmonton.
Gretzky also added three assists to
raise his record total this season to
139.
Bob Mongratn. Sean Mc Kenna and
J.P. Kell> each had one soal for Los
Angeles, which dropped its e1~th
'itra1ght game at home The loss ttes a
club mark for consecutive defeats at
home set m 1971. The defeat was the
KJngs' 23rd at home this season,
eclipsing their previous record of 22
losses in a season stt in 1969-70.
fhc two teams traded $Oals 1n the
first penod. which ended in a 2-2 tie.
Gre1zk) scored his 48th goal of the
year 3 51 tnto the second, but J P.
Kell} ued the game for Los Angel~
with a goal 16 ~onds later
··Not bad for an af\crnoon pme."
said the pleaSt'd ndcrson. ..We
exchanged goals back and forth unul
the third penod. The game could
havr gon" either wa'
"I thtnk we've hit ·our stnde for the
Mandlikova mqnages, but can she get to No. 1?
WEST WlNDSOR. N.J. (AP) -Hana
Mandhkova as starting to wonder whether she'll
ever be the world's top-ranked women's tennts
pll)'er. "I don't want to be cock)', but people hke to
push me," she said. "They are always putting
pre sure on me, sayina. 'When are you going to be
No. I?' and thin&s hke that. I think it's much more
difficult for me to fulfill my potential than
w tneone who •SJUSl working hard and dmng their
own th1na."
Mandhkova, 24, seemed to reach that poten·
t1al tn ptembcr. dcfcatina Martina Navratilova
in thrtt tel! to w1n her fiBt U. Opcn It wM her
th1rd Grand Slam ~•ctory. but her firu ~mcc I ~81.
f.\Cn ~ ~he wa~ ~till ranked third in lht".
computer standing.'>, behind Navraulov nd
Chris Evert Lloyd. Because of a recent 11\JUI)' that
s1dehned her, she has dropped to fifth 1 n the world
.. Wmnmg the U.S. Open wa much tougher
than four years ago when I won my first Grand
lam," she satd. "No one knew me then and I was
a new star. I had nothma to lolle. Th" time. they
knew I could win, but nobody really hchevcd 1n 1t.
Like Navratilova. Mandhkova turned to
tennis a a youn ter 1n C'ze<"ho loval1a, rapidly
p1ck1na up an •~nal of ~hot\ .. r wa aJways able to do whatever they tneJ 10
teach me," she said.
"My t~her would trll mr \'OU \hould do 1t tht\
w ) , and I w1d I'm not gomg to do 11 this wa) ... \he
rtalltd dunna an interview pnor to the lJ .
Indoor Women's Championsh1~ ", he went to
my tnuner and told him how he v.antcd 11 done.
and I listened to my trainer instead of m) own
father."
By the llmt' she was IS. Mandh kova wa\
playing an the United tates. She spokC' httlC'
English and was mo tly a loner on the c1rcu1t
By 1980. Mandhkova was read) for the bta
time A ner lo 1na the U Ope n to Lloyd. ~he won
the umahan Open and followed It ~Ith a French
()pen victory 1n 198 1. bcal1n Uo)d 1n the
S(m1tinals
lloyd avenged the lo al W1mbkdon latrr
that year. but by then Mandhkov had made 11 to
the final of four tra1aht urand lam event .
playoffs." added Anderson. refemng
to the Oilers' 11 v1ctones in their last
12 games. ··\\c hope to t.ake the
winning attitude nght into the play-
offs."
Asked about the Kings· problems a1
the Forum this season, Anderson
said: "They 're ha' ing a tough 11me at
home. I don't know wh) When the)
come to Edmonton. the) 're a much
belier team. You alv.a)'i ha'e that
pressure at home ··
Klngs Coach Pat Qutnn. v.ho did
not use center \farce! Dionne in the
third penod. ~1d "I wanted 10 g1q~
our young guy!. a cha nce I wanted to
fi nd out about the rest of our team"
COMMUNITY COLLEGE (""'9fll -G<ou·
mont t i ()r"'" COH I, 2
HIGH SCHOOL -E'tenc:ie n W~.
l Co'" Mas.I 11 Newoort H•r'llOf l , ~
•' COl'Oftll Oii Mar . 3 UnlvenltY et ~
8 .. C!I 3 M IU 'Ofl Vle.O II lrYIM . J
SundaV
COLLEGE (Men) -U of Mia mi Fla v' UC
1rv1,,. •' NewPOl't eaacll T~nl' Club, t IS
Softball
Mermv
COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Orenoe Co.SI ti
Sen 0>990 Mella
Tuesday
COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Golden Wn l at
E Cam•no l
HIGH SCHOOL -Cvcweu Tournemenl
E,1anc11 al Foot!llM 3 IS. Coste MeM 11
Sen! ICJO IOOUll+eheeOerJ • SeOOleC>Kk II
Tustin 3
Where do your
children play?
0
If you~ve created a special
pla y area·, share it with the
Daily Pilot readers & WI N!
Find co ntest details in
toda) · cla ified ction.
'
~ > . ...
wasTIIJt• coetP'U...C. ~OMii. w L Poet. •-Llllr .... • ,. ''° ~ ,, ,. ...,, ,.._,.. ,, ,, lit
S...11tt 1'J • l6S
~ D 41 '"' Q.OIOtfl $1• ,. ?I u .Jll
~~
Ho\l•IOll .. ,. •U o.n .... J9 u -o ... , J) 30 S2A
Ut•ll ,... :::n » m
Sell AtllOnlO 31 )t •n
*'-to 21 l6 G
•ASTll•M COMP'llJtllNCll
A..-C OM.-
.... ~ton '° tt ..
·-~ .cl 14 us
NewWMY ll ll 500
WHNnoton 31 SJ ..
Ne-tit v °""' JO .. .lll
CAMn11 OMIM
11·M.lw• ...... 4S 20 ..,
A1i.n1• )f u '°' o.tr041 le H St• c~ 24 ,. 311
.Cl>lc.eeo n &l .lll
llldl9N n '3 l)I
.c·CllM:"-0 PMYolf Clefttl
S..V'l ScWft
Lahn IOI, S..llle 106
0en .... 123 ~ 121 ,.._ J.,.wv llS, ~I• 111
PN~ .. 120, t"°l•ne 10'2
ChK990 11•. H-Yor-101
D•Mu 117. S.Cre.,,.nto 10'2 T__..,c:.-
PN>eftlx et Oetro1I
Botton er Della' Se.Ille et Goloen Stelt
TueMl9¥'l ~met
~el Lalc•O
Cle•N "° el N•w 'fork Oen•., et •Hant•
PtllladelOnl• et lndten•
N-Jen•v 11 ChlullO Botton et Houaton
$en Antonio el Sec:reme1110
Lallen 10I, 5en1c, 106
ff
lt\') ,,.,,
l•~
IS ll
• i~ .....
tt
11
" 20 31 •
S"'1
6"'>
20
23
23
LAKUU (IOI) -~1gg\ 2·l 0 0 ~
Worll'W 7·17 2-2 16, Abdul·JeCC>tr I· 14 4·6
20, JOMton 12· 1' I· 10 )2 Sc.Oii 7·t 1· I lS
C-1·2 1·1 •. GrMn •·S 0-0 I , LUC.\ ~7 I·• t , McG" CH> 0·0 0 Tottl\ •S·73
ll ·lS IOI SllATTLI ( 106) -Cl\emot n 10·10
lC>-11 JO. McOenlel t ·IS 1-2 It, Slltmt S·IO
0-0 10, Henclerton 9· 17 1-1 19, Young 2·5
O•O '· ~' l ·I 1·1 7. McCorm~ 1·11·1 •. Vrenn 0-4 o-o o. PM!"' o-o o-o o, wooo
•·I S·6 ll Tott " '3-19 10-11 106 ker'9W~ Lellen 16 ?9 26 27-IOI
Seetti. 31 ,. n 25'-106
FouleO out-Hone Reoouncn-Lo• •n· ~ 3S tSc:ott t >. S.ettle l3 CCl\lmO...s IOI
Aulat\-Lo\ ,_ngete\ 2• (Jol\mOll 9), Se•I· ... 1S (HenOef'SOll 7J Totel louts-LC»
.ngelft 73, S..111• 21
Alle<ld•nc• 10,311
N""9ft 122, ~ 121
OIMVllJt ( 12:Jl -Engli\I\ 1'·21 8·9 36,
Hett 7· ll 10-11 74. C-S· 12 O·O 10,
Lever 6·ll 0-0 17, Dunn 1·3 0-0 2. Turner
0·4 O·O O. Henrtlk 2·4 S·6 9, SCl\lvtt 2·• 2·2
6. Evens 10·" 2-2 2' Tot•ls '7·87 71·30
123 CLl"ERS ( 111) -1111uwell 6· IS ,., 16.
Nlmonlu• 2· 10 0-0 •. t.nl•mln l 1·21 S·9 27.
Jo4'1n'°'1 11·19 3·4 2S. Nixon 10· I 1 0-0 2S,
Whitt 3·9 S·6 II, Gordon 2·t 0·0 S,
Eawerd\ 2·S O•O •. Ceoe 2·2 0-2 •Totals
<19· 107 17·27 12 I
Sc.er• lrY OU•"-' Denver 27 21 3' :M-173 Clippers 37 ,, 26 3'-121
Thrff·POont OO.ll-E•ens 2, Nlaon S
Gordon Foute<! out-None Reoounos-
Den"tr ~ rCoooe< 121. L~ .nQele\ SJ
18enlem•n 16) Aul\ts-Oenvtr l3 ILtver
Ill Los Al!Qlelt\ 3' INi.on II> To•••
tou••-c>.nvtr 2S Los Angell\ 21
Att....otnu a.449
How AP too 20 fer9d
I Ou~• 132 21 Dell Wnt FO<t\I 61·60.
0 .. 1 lllro;nle 1S·SO oe•t No 6 Georgia
TKn 61·67
2 l(an'" (ll·l l 0 .. 1 l(•nw' S1 74·SI,
b .. I Ho IS Okl9hl)('N n 10, beet towe
St••• T.1·11 3 l(entudlv C19·31 btal or Mluln lPPl
95-69, OHi LOUl\len• Slt l• 61·SI, oeet
Aleo.ma IJ·n
4 Norin C•rOllnt !26 Si IO\I 10 Mervt•nd
I S·7S
S St John'• (30-•I 0 .. 1 !>eton Hell 87·61,
OHi llllle nolft 7S·'4. bHI No I Svr•CuMI
10·'9
6 C.eorol• Tech l2S·61 beet Clemson
79·61 beer MAlrvleno 64·62, IO\I to Ou-e
61·67
1 Mlcnlgan 177·•> OHi Otlto Slalt 99·11,
OHi NO 16 lndl1n1 80·S7
I S.rttuu 12S·S> oe11 8o•ton COi~
10'2·79, De•I No I• Geor<.>etown 7S·73, OT. '°" IO No s St Jo4'1n'' 70·69
9 Br•Otev r3l·2) bea t Wttt Ttxa\ Stett
61·SS. oeal Illinois Siert 6S 64, IO\I to Tul'3
74·S8
10 MemPhl\ State 127 SI Deal South
Cer~,,_ IOO·S9 al LOUll••ll•. l(y, Deal
FIOf'ld• Stele 73 11 IOsl lo No II Loul•vllta
U ·79
11 LOUl\Yllit 126 1 OHi C1nclnnat
16·6S o .. , No 10 MtmOI\•\ Stat• •• ,,
12 Notre Dem. 113 Si oeat N-Orltt ns
7S·'7 OHi O•vton 69 SS
13 Ne••d•·La\ II eon I) I 41 OH i
Fresno Slttt 61·•9 oeet Fullefton St
7S·6S Deal Nt"' W<et1<0 Stete 15 SS
I• C.eorge1own 123 1 oeet P1ttsourgn
S7 $6 >O\t 10 No I Svrecuu 7S·73 OT
IS 0~ ltllOm• 126 II IO\I IO Ol<lal\Oma
Sl•te 17 14 Deal M•u ovr 11 1S. 1<111 to No
1 Ktn\as 11 10
16 tna lena 121 71 oea• No 11 M1c111gen
Slat• 91 79 '°" 10 No l M1cn1gan 80· S2 11 M1cl\1gen St••• t7t·71 IO\I 10 No 16
1na1e11e 97 19 11ea1 01110 S•ttt 9t et
II Na•v 117 '' o-a1 Nortr1 C.ero11ne -
Wt1m1ngton 67 60 Dear George ~'°"
72·61
19 IHh'IOI\ !71•91 IO\I to towe ~' SJ. DUI Minnesota 13 6'
?O Norlh Caro11na !>tat~ 111 171 IO\I 10
Vlrgll'llt 6.4 67
Cohee K Of'H
TOURN~ENTS
Allenttc c .. 11 ContweftU
CMfl'ICllOml\lo
Du'I 61 Georgie T Kii 67
Metre c..--..
CMmoleMfti.
Loul\•111• aa Meml>l\ls ~"'' 79
eie '""' c~• CMmoielt""9 I(•'"" 13 towa Sit•• 11
c.ltfemla Communttv c..._.
ChlmpfeftsNcn
M•N
(ti N-eMt)
PtHdent CC 123 101 •l Stcr•,.,.•Uo Ct
(13·71 ~ytlne 174·61 "' 1.0' AnotMts $oull'lwe\I
<21·•> ~tr• C.o\lt 12'·61 vs Sente l•rbere cc 120-101
l..01 Anoetet Heroor 121 Ill "' Clh Cotttot of Sen Frenct\c:t !19 11
WOMllN'S (II CU1Mf11nt)
Fut..,IOll 117 •1 "' l(lng\ River f 19 11
Sen Joeoutn 0et1e I lt·91 "' C41rrtto\ 124·7)
•unt (21·41 •s Rl•er,10. CC CJ0-01
LO\ Anott.l fr.at Ttch (70-91 ., ~n
Mateo 113·fl
o... .........
OAVIY'S LOOCllJt <""'-' IMeOll
-Je •~' 61 Mftllo, I vtlOwlell, I
halibut, 60 ce11co °'"· n Mftd beu. '° l'Ndl.tf'tl, 4A Wfl/t9ftUI, 50 111119 DWdl, 10
MMD.i.ed
... ~T LANOMG -l6 tngW• II
se1'd 11e ... 10 teUICMft. 1 htlfbuf, J roel<fl\11
2't
M9C O'GtedY. tlt.000 n·•1·ff-10-1n .wu~ ...... tlf.000 11-.,....·10-11' -Tom P\irtlw. 06.750 .. 11·1>•1°'""'* •• ,
O..,lcl Frost, •ll,500 .,.10-73·6'-29 I
E4 Flori, 'll, 500 61-M· 74· n-211
811 Kn11"1. Ul,500 n-10-•t-~211
lloOOy W.all lr>S, 'll, MIO n·.,..••-1~1
,,,_.,. Cab IO(:Cfl, ' ll.500 '5 n -n -n-211 .,
lt.v FIOYd, M,571 ~ro-11-11-m Do.le T...,., 11,571 .,......,,..,._m
Mil• Oorlela. tl,571 71-1'0-70-71-212 aoo Glldw, 11,.$7 I 6t-12-70-71--'m
~ A.llnMr. tl,571 ,. .. , ..... ,,.......,
Ktfl 8'0Wfl, ll,S71 61-4t-73•7>-211
0.A Weltwlnt, ll,S71 6'-'7-11-1rm m
~ LaclotflOff. u.a:s 61·11·73·71-29)
0.,,..,., Ectw9'0\, U.t2S ~t-n-n-m Howerd Twlltv, U.tU 7Hf-74-213
Jll'll Thotw, $5,IU ...... 70-7.-nl ..
8ruoe Lleni.t, M, ISO 73 ... 9-71·71-214
Hal MIOfl, M. 150 1 H, . .,. ,,_,..
Lene. Ten 81'odl, M, 150 7H7·'9-1>-114
~ Mt:Cumber. M. lSO ,, .... ,,.,.,_214
Tim SlmPtOn, M.150 61·7'2-70-7.,_214
llS
Larry Nellon, Sl,l2S .,.,,.73.11-as
o ... 8err, ll.l2S 10-11-n-n-ns
&tnCren-"tw, '3.ns 73· 10-10-n-ns
Tom Wet"OPI, 13,325 n-10-10-n-Jts -R Idle rd F tt>r, '1 ,471 69·73·73-71-2"
MIU Mlcolette, •:1,471 74·6'·71·n-n6
Cr..rle\ 80111119, '2,471 70-70-74-n-216
Tom Slec:kmenn, '2,471 64·71·7'·~
Morrl1 H•tel~y, '2,471 71 ·71·71·7)-lM
Clirls Penv, S1 ,AJI .,. n-10-1s-2t6
Tom W•lse>n, S2.•7* 69-l'0-71-76-216
Ton• SIKI, n,•71 73•'7•70-7~ #o Loren~"· '2,471 n -6HN 4
217 f'l .i, .. Mikt MCc~h. '1,75( .... , ... n-;1t7 .
Dt •ta Edwtr.O\, '1,7SO 75-61·~ -2tl Mlllt Hulbtr1, '1,7SO n -64-7 1..-211
R-Mell~. 11.7SO u-1~n-1s-a1
Ktlt lrwl/I, s l,7SO ... n...,-1~ ·-G-S.uto, s lt:1'9 10-11· 71 ·7.,_211
8oo LOIV, t 1,26 71.71.71.7.,_,.
Jc S.-d, \1,:16' 70-73·71·74-211
George Arefler. s I,?,, .--n-n-1r-111
Jeck Mlcil19u\. '11269 70-70-13-75-111 Jn ~Ing, '1.U9 n-'9·71-76-211
o.nl' W•IMHI, Sl,269 71·70-71-76-281
8ooov C.lemoett '1,269 7S-6Hl·n -211 .. Wlnte WOOd, '1, 130 11-n-n-1.,_m
JtmGel\eQ,,...., 11.130 61-n-n-16-m
C•IVln PMle, t I, 130 10-10-n-n-m
Tim Norns, s 1.130 11-10-11-11-m
Cltrenct li!OMI, Sl,130 7•·'9·69· 77-219
?90
Fuuv Zoetitr, s I, 100 71·69·7S·7S--190
?tl
Jim COibert, 11.0IS 69· 71· 74· ltr-19 I
Jeff Lewis. SI.OU 71-71·73·16-291 ,,,
L• rrv Iii Inker. l 1,060 69· 7•· 73-ltr-292
Berrv Jetekel, s 1,060 11-10-1•-n-m
8oo Twav, '1,060 n -10-11-1t-m
Jtl
l(enf'lv l(no,. 11.040 12·11·71·7t-'193 m
Mlk• Mlle\. SI ,030 13· 70·78· 74-?9S ,,.
Brea Fe Del, l 1,020 10-n · "· ac>-?96 1'7
Tom Snew, SI.GOS n -11-n -n-'t'l1
Oev•d Grel\em S l,OOS 13·10-1F1'-191
2'9
Tom Pern•c• \990 73·70-79· 77-199
lO'l
Siu lngreht m S9IO 70·73· 79·11C>-)O?
Kemoer <>oen
let Prtnc.w8e, HeweW)
276
Ju' IM \!tr US,000 11·6'·10-10-116
D7
Arnv AlcOll S17,7SO 70·69·6'·69-277
VI
Cltrls JOMson. S 18,000 69·66· 7.) • 70-171
Merci 801erth, Sl8,000 67·70·69·72-271
219
JoAnnt Ca rner Sl2.7SO 70-70·73·'6-279
211
Be1w King, s 10,soo 70-61 71·11-?tl
28:1
Pettv Sllttl\•n. s7,900 71-71 72·6t-2'2
Sherrin Getorellh, S7,900 13·70·61·71-?92
Jen Stee>hen'°n, '7,900 7 l-70-70-1l:-217
28l
Myra Btacl<wtlOr, '6,001 71 10-73-69-:183
Kelrtv Postlewait, '6,000 ". 70· JS· 70-213
2M Lisa Young, M,IOO 1S·10-70· 69-21•
J ene Geodfl, '4,800 71·72·71·70-214
Al\Ul<O Hlllege, '4,800 69-n -12-11-2'4
Cathy Mora.. M.800 71-71 ·61·74-2'4
215
Jodv RO\tntnal, '3,97S 73 10-69·7)-7tS
Beth Oenlec, '3,97S 61·10· 73· 7.,_,.s
2M
Rosie JonH, '3,371 71 7•·~0-71-216
J•M BlelOtk. '3.378 7•·69·7:1·71-216
COlfffn Wtlll•r. '3,378 71-70·73-n-216
Clndv Fogg, '3,J77 71·69·7•-n -216
D•te EQ9ellng '3,377 13·'9·71·73-216
Allet Miller '3,:171 69·69· 73· 7S-216
287
HOili\ Ste cv '2,910 74-70-75-~2'7
211
T,,....ne Henion S1,61S 71·72·74·71-lle
Pe111 R•uo '2,61S 61·7•·7•-n -211
Heall\er Ferr. '2,61S 73·70·12·1l-7tl
Sendra Pelmer. S1,61S n -73·69·76-118 m
Vat Sllonner, '2.212 1S 71 7•·69-2'9
M Zmmrm•n '2.212
7S·69·7S· 70-?t9
Ok·HH l(u, Sl,212 n -1• n -11-m
Lori Geroac1, '2,211 n -1•-11-n -m
•llc.t Rlltmen, S2,21 I 7S·6f·77·7l-2t9 Lauri Pele<M>tl, S2 ,211 71·17·10-1S-2'9
Ctndv Rarick. •2.211 70-71·72·76-289
?90
Pei ere dlev, s 1,830 77·61·7•-71-190
De.OH Luker. ",aJO 1'·71·71·7)-290
Su\11 Berning, SI ,l30 70· 72·69· 79-290
191
Send•• Hevnle, s 1.sn 70-76-7•·71-291
J.,lfvn Brllr. s l.S71 6f·7S·73·7.,_191
Janet Cotes, s 1,571 72·11·73·7S-191
JuOv Oltkln\On, Sl,S71 70-69·76•7tr-?91
192
Muffn Sc>ncr·Ovtn. l l,310 71-73 7S·7l-292
HHther Drew, ".J?O n -1•-n -1.,_m
Lenort MurtOll.•, SI ,320 11·70-7S·76-m
Lauren Howe Sl,J10 7•·69·11·71-292
1'1
lllCkl l=erQOn. S 1,0SJ n '9·n -1s-m
L•ur t Iii lnlltr SI .OSJ 7S·7172·7S-293
atc:llv PHrson \l,OS3 72·1HS·7S--l't3
[)fl) R tche rd 11 OS3 11-n -n-16-m
Penn• Hemmtt SI OS3 7l·70-77·7t-293
1'4
Bevertev D••I\, sass 12·11·19·n-19•
Anne·M•n• P•lll sass 14 71·7•·7S-?9•
Bonnie L•ue<' SISS ,. ·69· 73· 7t-19• m Merv 0.Long 1120 76·70·7S·7.,_?9S
Shlrltv FurlOl>Q, 1720 7l·1H6·7S-?9S SMlltv H•mlln, •710 n -11-n -1s-2ts ,..
K11tW 8••••. sSI• 10-14·1'-~
Jene Crelttf U7• ,. 70 71·7-,,.
Sherri Tur~. IS74 71 7•·7S·76-,,.
"obln Welton SS1l 7l 71-16-76-2'6 m
Stel)flenlt Fa rwtg M9S 13·12·1•·79-1'1 ,,,
N•ncv Tomich, U4S 72·1l·7'·7S-7'9
<IOI
I. yM AOems MSO 17·'9·7'·76-301
~ . . • •
s.-..
H~lleedl s.-r .....
·~ F011ntel11 lletlrf ..,._ II, Cesle Mele 4
W111ttt.r 16 ~lli'ietoft IM:ft 7
FOU11teln Velie¥ AINoot 1, s.tlte •n. 4
Wtttl'lllMI« lt, lM AlwnllM 11
c~
Irvine 11 Ml•slotl VltlO 1 $.ell leech I), Coale AoWM 11 ~~Oii t4, AntNlm S
HunllntlOll heell IJ. El MMte •
Mopping up
Dwaiie WuhlnCton la ~led by Syracue coach Jim
Boebe~ (ri&btJ alter Illa •hot at the _b1l.U_!_r waa blocke4.
IM.ng $t. Johli'• a 70-69 win ln thelil.gl!iiftiOe game. ·
NHL
CAMPIELL CONFERENCE
Smvtlle OfvlMefl w L T '"" GI" GA
•·Eomonton .. " 6 102 3'° x·Ce!Qerv 3l 26 I ,, ?91
Winnipeg n " 6 so ?•s kJnei 20 '° 1 •7 2•1
llencou•er II 37 10 " m
.......... OfvlMefl
x·Crtlceoo 3' 26 • 76 JOI
x·St LOVI' 37 27 • n 267 x·Mlnnesote JO 2t 9 69 ,,,
Toronto 21 '° 6 .. 269 Detroit 14 47 6 3' 277
WALES CONl"EJtENCE
P•frktr OMslert
Ptllleoefonle '3 21 • 90 2tS
WHhtnoton ,2 19 s 19 2S6
NY l1fende" 31 2S 10 n 265 PlnsOurgl\ 31 19 1 69 269
NY R•nger' 31 31 " 230
H-J•r"v 22 " " ., 1S1 Ademl DMsltfl
Monlreer 36 2S ' 71 219
Queo.c 36 2t 4 76 2tO
Buff•to J? 30 ' 70 :1S7
8o\lon 31 29 7 69 266 H•rtforo 31 }4 2 " 26S
•·ctlncl\ed Plevoff oer111
SundeV's "'"' Edmonton 7, Kine. 3
WunlnQton 3, New 'VOl'll t\lenotn I
C•IO•rv ), Detroit 3
WlnnlPeQ S. Pi1tst1ur;h 3
8utlel0 '· N-Jenev 3 PhlfedttOl'll• '· New Y0111 RenQt<S I Chic.go •. St. Louis 2
T ..... t'1 Gemt
Hertfora •' Montreat
TYetdeV's Gemtl
Hew Yorll Rat'lffl's at Ntw J.,.~Y
Plltst>urgrt el Wuhlnoton
Vancouver et ~
Cetgar. at Ntw York lsler>deo
Buffelo al St Louis
Edmonton •• Mlnntwte
Olers 7, Klnos 3
SGert llY P811ocb
264
2SS
l20 m
27S
219
251
262 ru
lSO
213 no
2'3
244
?26
lOt.
230
2S1
2'9
2S1
262
Eomonlon
King'
2 2 l-7
2 I 0-J l"lnl Period
I Eamon1on, Coffey 41 (Anderson,
Meuler>. •·'7 2 Los •nQeln. Mongreln I
lSvkH, Erlclc10r1). 6:00 3 Edmonton, Kurrt
5' (Hunter. Greukv), 9;21. 4 Le» Angeles,
MclCenne I (Nl<:llOlt•). 13 •7 Pen•I·
tin-Hunter, E.Om (hoOlllng). 6 •2, Edmol'I· ton bench, senie<f'bv-Semenllo (too m•nv
men on feel. IO:AI. HerdV. LA. melor
!fighting), IS 57, Mc.sol'ltv, Edm, meior
(llgh!lng). IS S7
Seaftd~
S Eomonton, Grelll!.v '8 (Ander\Oll),
3 S2 6 Los All9elel. KtltY • CNIChOll1). • OI
1 Edmonton, Anderson " (MeU~) •• '°
Penellles-Sml!h, Edm 11111111-stlc.klng). .21.
Greukv. Edm (hOOlclnol. 12 10. Will<\, LA (rouolllng), lS SS, Tikkanen, Eom (rOUQll·
Ing). IS 5S, l(enneav. L•. melor Cfi9hllng).
IU5; MCClettenC!. Edm. m91or CflQflllng),
16 •S. Smith, Edm lsleshlng). 11 Sl,
Semenko, Edm <rouohlng), 17'51. Gettev.
LA (roughing). 17'51.
TIW'd Pen.ct
I .Edmonton, Anderson •7 (Grtlzkv),
S9 9 Edmonton, Kurrt SS !Hunter, Gregg),
12.20. 10. Edmonton, •naerson '8 (Grt11kv,
C~y), 13-01 (OP) Peneltlt-Le<lverd, LA
(he>oktng), l:lt; McSorlev, Eom (cross·
cllec:klng). 9:00, Mtlenson, L•, senied bv Reomona lsl•"'lng), 12:20; Anderson. Edm
Crou11hln11>. 16:..,; Sykes, LA (roughing),
16:..,, Gretzky, Edm lrOVQhlng), 16;52.
Wllllem\, LA (llOOl\lng). 16:52; Well\. LA
(rOUOhlng), 11:'3.
Shots on goat-Edmonton 11·13·11-lS
Los Anoele\ IS· 10-11-36.
Power·P«•Y Oooor1unllle1-EOmonton I
Of l , Los •rigeiei o of 6.
Goet~Edmonton, Fuhr 136 sh011·33
savesl Los •lllltlH. ~nson llS-291. Atttfldence· 16,00S
Ref ... -'lon Wldo LIMSmtn-Wevne
8onnev, ltyen 8otti'i
9ASKmT8ALL
atv et Ne wl*t ... ct.
MKM'S L•AGUIS Mel*YC~
J W MllCMtl 7 0
T .... TMm 6 I
Ltllher lkA• • 3 It 19.F No 1 l S
WMO l S
ttlFNol 07
lltct!W telf..a J w Mllehell n. It.I , . No 2 •1
Tiie TMm 60, WMO f7 Lee!~ l•Hs '°· R 8 F No I .,
TlleMleY I OM.-
COUGtr 7 l
New•PIC s 3
Touclle Rou S 2on c1er11 Int • 4
T11lro $1rl119 i 6
THmenlen Wer Oevl11 2 6
·--~ Clerk In' 62. Tovc:lle ltou encl Co 18
New P•c •2. Tumettlen Oevll1 SO
Couoer 67, Tlllr4 $11"0 2t
......... A~
VI"• Nova 7 I
l ll11tfrlc'1 6 2
.,._ "'""" ~ ~· ll'OOtt J s JOlln H«lrv 2 6
sntmrod>. Ll9htlflll I 1
lteceM IC9NI
lunnY 1S. Sl\9f'nt0Clc 4'
VIiie Nov• •• C.ulOV'l Foots SI
8Ntrlrlc.h 6', JoM H«w'Y S7 ......... cc OMlllM
Lltlll ~s a 0 GO~C I J '"°"* s J ltllnOff' l s SVClt 1 6
Wn ldlff Sof'Ofl 1 1
•ectRt M>tr'M ltllnotrl .,, SYCR ,,
0 0 ~ C H, WftlCtltf S--ts SJ
Lilll• ~ 6', CIW>vln 49
TitwMll't .. ~
~ f I •• •
.-1drei S, Aneeh •
kwe bY lllNnei
Angel\ 010 100 110--. 12 1
Sen Diego OlO 0'20 00•-S I O
Wiit. Forscn 10 . Sitton (61 e!IO Boone.
Mille< 16), Dr•veck•, Ltfltrts Ul, Gouege
11), McCutten (IJ '"° KenMdv, 8othv (S)
w-or .. ec•v. l·O L-Wlll, O· I HR-Boone (I)
Dedeef'S ,, Astros 1
kwe bV ""*'II Hou\ton 000 000 100-1 S 0
Oode>tr\ 100 031 10x-(, 12 0
MeOdtfl, ~leno <•>. Oewtev (6), Ololno
(I ) end SCloscle, Vatenzuete , C Oler (4),
Powell (6), Nledenfuer 18) ena Berley,
Brummer IS) W-Velenzuete, l·O L-
Ma~. 0-1 HR-Houlton. GD••h (I)
Misc.
UCI er.-scMdUM
Mon . Merell t -Alumni Dey et UCI
Bo.thOUM. 10 1.m .. Sun , Marth IS -
Perk., Cup CLovole·Marvmount '"° Sen Diego Steta •I Merine Del Rev <TB•>. Sun ,
Merci\ ?9 -et UC Sen Di.Go. 1:30 • m.
Set , •prll S -el S.n Dleoo Crew
Clank. I 1.m , Set , •prll 12 -USC end
Orenoe Co.\I COlltQe (llOIM). I a.m.; Sun ,
April 77 -HtWPOf'I Rtllell• (Orenoe COHI
Cotteoe, UCLA, LovOla·Mervmount, Long
Beecl\ Stele, Cal Maritime, University of
Sen Fr•ntl\CO (hOme), 8 • m Set . ~y 3 -L.ono a .. ch (l\Ome), I
e m .. Sal ·Sun . Mev 10· I I -Pacific Co.\t
Ch•molon\hli>t el Sacramento (Lake
Nelome), a• m .
Devts Cup
(et Guevt4IUI. llcuedw)
""' R~ united Steies def Et;Uedor. Sweden del
Oenm9rk, S·O, ll•tv ...0. Per•l>l>8v. 2·1,
Au\lrelle def N-ZH19ncl, •·I, Britain def $oeln, •· 1, C1tehollovtlll• def tnC!le, 4· 1,
YUGOsfe•ll def Soviet Unlor, 3·2
8oxlne
(at .. .,, Wtirtfl l
Wttterwelg11ts-Doneld Currv (Fort
Worlll) knocked out Eduerao RoarlgueT
(Ille W8A's No I contender> In MCond
round Currv retained unC!l•Pl.lled wtl·
lerwetol'lt c;l\emPlonshlp (Currv Is now
25·0, 1toar111uez ts 10-21.
Frencnees Troupers
OeOll 0Ynt•IY
Peclflc Mutuel
T,.,. Froren Rooes
Pltver•
T,,_ '15 8etr•
YOUTH 9ASK•T9ALL
Qty ...... ..,, a.di
,.LAY°'P'S
'""'· II.di .... ...,,... .. s HlfW VltW $2, ...._, ......,_ 11
7 0
• 3
3 •
3 •
2 s , s
Hlol't teortt'•: HftM (HV), 11, ltOllos
IHVI, ll; Sutaon (HV), 10; t<eMI (HV) ••
Husan (NH), 6; Oonov•n (Hll), 4
Mlrillen •• .....,... J4
Hl11h .coreo· 8Mu (M), 74; Weir <•>. 10
Tlllr4, "-"' Gt-Mt Htf'Mr VltW 29, ......,, heCll 12
HIOll tcor•rs Brennen (HVI. 13,
Ceven1ugh (NIU, •
GOL, LatUM a.di Oelf AIM.
MOMTHL. Y TOU9'NAMmNT
(et._ "Mr 04N e.unt) A .....
I Al Orenne, n · 13·'4, 2 ltelPI!
Smet1110. I0-14·6'. > Ultl Herrv a..1e
7'·12-61, Sien lowen, 7'•12 .. 7; Al*
Goniein. n -10-61 .......
I ,r.,. ltou l, 76·16·51, :1 Arnold
Cer!IOll, n •'7•t,S, 2. (tit) IErttle SdlooMr,
l l·lS·U . l(en Sn\lth, •»17-66
c """" l Frtc1 Sterk, 13·11·65, t. TOOV White,
IS•lt .... J Cle\M arOWft, '9-tl-a D .....
1 emn Alexender, N-2'..,; 2 Ol•l ~d
F-.-1 tM4·'7, WfiflY 9-, '2·2~. 4
lti•l •rven l(lfttmt11, to-77'-41, It lrend.
'7·24·"· TllWOfl Otfnltrt • .o-n~ .. .......
I (lit) 1 111 Wlttofl, '1·2'-tS, C>IClt Jer·
rett. f4•2t~O; lrvlflt Ort Y, t7·:12·6S, 4 Gw9t lulln, ... ,, .... J. ICICie OOtlltO*'• ts-tNa
-~~-~--~ - --
• .. d'
... Alllltl
IUMOAY'I tlUULT1
(51'111 ............... -.,.....,
... .., JtAC&. I Mlle. ~ Toudl (TOOl'O) IS.00 SA l..0
Ao. Adi Heir (Vlitllluele) UI UO
Ow Cholcl tP!ncev Jt) UO
Timr. t:a.1 A11o Jltln: Pl'lnc:w BobOY I .. IOid And
~. Count Eric.
~eafflof.
U •XACTA (M) 1111ct ISUO
18COMO llACa. 6 lur!OflOs E• lrnt w (IE&trdl t 00 uo 3.40
HlrrY k . IV~J'Ullel U0 > 20 attlllOY ($1bfee) 7 .a
T1met 1:MU
Allo lt.W. DQ-Whlttte For LU(k,
e11uard '°"""'· Vwcete11, Preot1nl, sword Pl'lllc:e, ~ Soedel. JeldcO, 8old
T~ • Scnlelled; Cordon,~ Eve., 111•11
tteold Uoft. EMe lll>.
00-0IM.tlllfltd Ind lll9aoct 1111\.
n.o RAC•.·~ F\lt'IOlllS
LMd °" (fl!W.n Jt) 10 '° '3 ~ 1, 6Q_ SIM'S ao..,., (Hlwtey) -~ ~(W.) uo
Tirne: 1:17.
Aho lten: Vertietlm'• Prlele, CovOl.,o
ScntcNd. MMtv Gi.clen, Or•I Ao<•· "*''• ltun Roni ltun st DAIL y oouau (7· I) H id 170 "°
l"OUltTH llAGll: 6 tvrtono\
$.ti ~ ttun IMc:CJronl le.IQ 4.60 l 00
l(ltlY'• e • .,,.,,.,. C81ect1> 1~ uo
E •celellnt Soirll (Slblle l l 40
Time: 1: 11.J
Abo Ran: Clt¥W EO!le. Arllb<e LedY, A·
Rl..r Of $ten, Tll Ou\1'11, Nell•• D•wn,
Foxllunt.r'• lttet. SU.Idled: Stl'awbel'rv Oewn, Mi.
~ P., OeflOW"1 1teoerd1.
•·COUPled-E•oellenl Solrlt L Rl•tr Of
Siers
l'IP'llt RACE. 611) furtonv1
Orlenlel (Slevensl 1.60 3 eo 2 IO
Slmpty S.•Y (V•'-'1"9lel 1.10 2 60 OMIU Rov•I Monte (Sfblllt) 3 60
~.:1:17. "''° lile A: Kere·D9Qll, Mluean, Soll 0-, ~tlna
SCr .. dltd: Relonlng MtlOOY, HI Tet'1
Girl, SNe> To Sllort
SS llXACTA <•·SI Hid sso so ~on Mlueen
SUCTI4 JtACI. I~ mllft
SclYtllern Helo (Pncv Jr) S.20 l .O 160
Scw'uc:e S«loPer (Sttv~l 3 40 160
lntulttveneu (Mtr-11 2 IO
Time: l:Sl.1
AllO R.n: ~dad. Oew.11 O' Tiie Dene•.
SU' Richard H., Julnolnv Dotlor
Scntc::Md-Veve, Rldee "..,.. .. .,.,Serving
s•v•NTI4 UCL 6'h turtonvs Chldl. Or Two (P!Qv Jr) 11 IO 6 40 l 10
Jed'M'I Cllolce ~) 16 60 S IO
Funlon Dvnurv lM.u l 2 40
Tlme: l:IU
""°Rell: lill•tf Cher, Bi.ct.loo, Ee~·, Music. Orlolnel SCrlPI. ,.,, De••
Scntctlecl: None. SS llXACTA 11·71 oeld "39 00
ll!GffTH llACI. 111. mlles on turt
Strt....,.,,.., Rot4 (Stvn1J S 20 • 00 l 40
Hell 80ld Klno (Sl\Oemelltr l 6 olO • 60
Scnlller <Mer-11 I ao
Time: 2;03.2
Al'° Ren: Val O•meur, Luc:Xv H Gr..,.,,
Telekeno, Febl>l1nl.
Sctetc:hecl: Trucultflt, Ci.nrelller
8r..O...s' Cuo Awerd to Slrewbtrrv Roed II Foti L Nominator Awerd·Sl.SOO SI0.000
Revtr11 to 8rHden• Cuo Awerd Fund
NINTH llACll. I 1116 mile\
Forgot The ltlng (MCCrrn> 3 IO 2 ao OUT
F10Ulous ""'8morY (Sle•ensl • 00 OUT
Juntun (V•lenluela) OUT
Time: IAl.1 •tw Ren-Lt Cid.
Saetd'ltd· Ono Gummo, Ees• Mo•er,
Oleiuwon SS IJtACTA 12-S) Peid '31 SO tl PtCK sot (9·4·S or •Of •·•·•·2 « •I oeld Jl,761.IO 10 9S winning tickets hlx
"°'"'' " ~ NINE (1·7·1·9-•·S or • or
9·1·•·2 or •> H id •5 100 70 10 lo.Jr winning
tlclltls (eight horsul Cerrvo .. r
SlSl~.03
Alltndence 39,666
Wwnen's PA llrllne
GIANT SLALOM
(et Seu1tt Lair• TtMt)
I, Ceth'( Bruce. Strenon, VI. JO PO(nl\,
11,SOO, 2. Kim Relchlle4m, 8oulder, Colo • 1S
POlnls, Sl.000 3, Lvndell Hever, ~owe, Vt., 20 oolnl\, seoo. '· Bente O•hlum. Norw•v. IS POlnt,,
'600
Les A~ Marethen
MllN I. Ric S.vre, AJ!llend, Ort , 1 12 59, 2,
Gldeml• Shehtnge, Ten1enla, 2,ll.27, 3,
Rod Ot.on, New Ztelend, 2.1' 4 , •. EWl\lrd Wevet. Wnt Germany, 2:1100. S,
Garv Tutlle, Venture; '· Doug Kurtis, Derron, 2:19.04; 7, Klell·Erlk SteN, Swtdell.
2:19.20; e. ChrlslOOlltr Schellert, Los An·
Qele\, 2:19.42; 9, Victor More Gercle,
COlumble, 1:20.46; 10, Luis Pinon, Sen
Pedro, 2:22.02. WOMaN
1, Nenc:v Dllt, WOOC1slae, l:lt,27; 2,
Christe VehleMleck, West Germenv,
2:36.37; l, MeQde llencl•, 8e1Qlum, u u s. 4,
Merk:N HUf'lt<IO, Me11ko, U:l.10, S,
Leurle MechOn, New Y«k, 2:.Sl.01; 6,
Josll• llMr, l lSllOO, ?:SUI; 7, Urecell
Sates, Los A,,..._., 2:51.5'; I. M~ Titt.
Los Anoetes. 2:5'.JO; f, Peme4e Morris, Pl~. l:Si&.50; 10, Kathy ThomH, Sen
Pedro. 2:.S.UO.
UC ntM tradi lcMcMt
Sat., March 22 -Lone IMeth Stele,
Oreoon Stele end Nol'ltllf'n Arlrone
(notne); FrL·$tl., Mlrdl 2'·'9 -11
Stentwd Ffttlvel (T9AI
Sal., AMII S -11 FrWIO ... Oemet
(TIA); Set., Atlfll tt -It Nor!Nldee
UWlltllonal (TIAll. ~!:•_ AlltM 1t -SM
oi.oo srete Ind QOCIWl'ltll <110mt>• $.et -~.. •orn , •• p -at Mt. Sen •ntonlO
Colle9t lt•vt (TIA)
Set .. Mev > -New .. tence lnvlletlonel
(WO/Mii) (home) (TIA); Frl,•Satu MIY
t•lO -PCAA Chtmo4oMfllii>t ti FrtsN>
Slele (T8Al
AN field tvtf'll• Mein t i 11:30 e.m.;
1tunnl119 evtnt• el MS o.tn., unln• noted.
w ..... .,. .. del• ..,. •• u.
~"""" $EA TTLE MARINERS--$10Md Jim
ll'rttltv, lflltd MMlnlft • .,..., OoMlt *''·
taldlW. " _....., COfttrect• ......."""" MOHTltlliAI. IX~ lttf'ICIY St CllH-t. ol!CMt lo t OM->¥9el conttec1
NOCK9Y ........ ......, .......
QUEHC ~OIQUIJ-Tteclld JoM
Alldlnon, lofwlrd IO IN Herttoed WMlllort
for ltlllo Slltllfttll, ~n
.. _.
B<Ll T l~C
lOcrews
to vie in
LB race
Congressional Cup
activities begin
with crew meeting
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY
o.llr,... ..... .,....
Head-to-:head racing in the 22nd
Congressional Cup at Long Beach
docs not get under way until Wedne~
day, but the 10 invited skippers and
crews will have a busy two days today
and Tuesday.
Following a meetint today at 10 •
a.m., sluppers wiU draw for boats l!ld
then take to 1he water for pracucc
racing.
The draw for boats will not be
significant as crews will change boats
after each day's race to make certain
tha1 no skipper $ets stuck with a slow
boat for the entire series, despite the
fact the host Long Beach Yacht Club
has made every effort to equalize all
of the loaned Catalina-38s.
The club furnishes identical spin-
nakers aod jibs for all boats.
Practice racing will again be the
order of the day Tuesday, and on
Wednesday the first of the 45 two-
boat matches will get under way.
Six skjppcrs (two from the U.S.)
will be honing their match-racing
skills for the America"s Cup trials
starting. next October off Fremantlc,
Australia.,
America's Cup hopefuls from the
U.S. are Rod Davis. skipper of
Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Eqle
Challenge. and Dave Perry. skipper of
Yale Corinthian Yacht Club's
challenge.
Other America's Cup trial skippers
m Colin Beashal. Royal Perth YC.
Australia; Harold Cudmore, skipper
of England's Cup hopeful; Chris
Dickson, Royal New Zealand YC.
Terry Mclaughlin, Royal Canadian
YC, and Aavio Scala. Yacht Club
Italiano, Italy.
Dave Dellenbaugh of New Y6rk
will be substituting for John Kolius,
New York Yacht Club, who is in
Australia prepping for the Cup trials.
Southland sk.jppers are Steve Aam.
representing the host LBYC. and
John Gobbell. Huntington Harbour
YC. who gained a berth by winnin&
the 8111 Ficker Bowl for tbe third
straight year.
Fleet White
takes home
Balboa Cup
SAN DIEGO -Fleet White of
Newport Harbor Yacht Club defeated
four contenders Saturday to take the
Balboa Challenge Cup back to its
home port.
The sudden-death race was actually
1he 1985 challenge. but had been
postponed twice because of un·
suitable weather.
The weather almost forced another
postponement as southwest winds
ranged from I 0 knots at.the start to 20
at the first mark and then back to light
and moderate at the finish.
A few minutes after the completJon
of the race. a weather front m oved in
with strong wind and torrential rain.
Whtte grabbed the lead at the start
and led at the first mark ahead of
defender 8111 Munster of San Diego
Yacht Club and Dave Ullman.
Balboa YC.
Ullman moved up from fourth to
second on the final leg but was unable
to overtake White. Third at lhc finish
was Munster.
The Balboa Challenge Cup dates
back to 1952 when Bob White
dedicated a family trophy for a
sudden death race in Rhodes-33s,
usually sailed a week after the SCY A
Midwtnters.
With the demise of1hc Rhodes-33s
the trophy was donnant for several
years, and then was rededicated by
Bette Andrews, daughter of the orig-
inal donor and wi(c of the current
BYC commodore. for a race to be
sailed in one-design boats 20 feet and
longer:
("
Encore winner
in BCYC series
Stormy weather hammered the 28
boats which turned out Saturday for
the first race of Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Oub'sAn1tlman Series, a race
around the buoys off Newport Beach.
There were 4~ntries m the series
but the strong winds and rain kept 29
skippers and crews on the beach for
the first race.
TheAngfman Series, honori~ the
late Husfl • Angetman, one of the
Southland•s sreat yacht dcsianers is
for the Performance Handicap RAc·
in& Fleet
Clw A winner Saturday was
Encore, skippered by Joe Hoffman
BCYC: Clau B winner was Pion-era'
Bill and Carole Byrne, BYC. and Oass C wu won by Obsession, Bill
Apps, Ba.Jboa YC.
Summary of results:
CLASS A-1. Encore, Jot Hoffmen,
a.hie CorlntNen YC; 2 .. RtntMdt, Rotlet't
Koll, UC lrvlnt S.mno Aaaodallon; 3
ChtlstOOher Robin, 9ruct Hans.en, Vov• ...,.. ye;"~. Rica Nowuno, South
Shore YC.
CL.ASS &-1. Plonero, 8111 •net Caroee avrne, BCYC; 2. Cennonbell, JoM·
IOf\SHtkuN, a YC.
CLASS~-1.0btel.ion, afll APPi, IYC;
2.Bleetrk Pumokln, Skip Elllott·£rtc
K.,_.,.d, NewPClt't Htl"DOr YC; ). Tret
GotdO, Daw Price, IYC .
Policies
on drugs
to be set
WEST PALM BEACH, fla. (AP)
-While buebell'a drua problem
isn't aoina to fade a~y anytime':~
Playen Association Oitec\or Do Fehr saya the controvmy aurround-
ina drua testinJ iJ 1oin1 to end within
two months.
"It's aoina to be over in 30 to 4S
days," Fehr said after discuuif\I the
Situation for nearly t'INO boun with
members of the Atlanta Braves.
"Either arbitration is aoina to
decide a dru~licy bas to be negotiated thro the union or it will
decide to allow em (the ownen) to make policies:·
Fehr was angered by Com-
missioner Peter Ueberroth's decision
last week \o conditionally suspend 11
players for their documented in-
volvement in drugs. In order to play1 in addition to monetary fines ana
community service. those players
must submit to random dru& testing
for the rest of their careers.
Fehr said Ueberroth's decision
simply brought a brewing problem to
a head. '
Owners had already begun to use
drug testing as leverage in contract
talks, offering Iona-term contracts in
some cases only if playen ~to be
tested for drug use, Fehr wd.
The first test of the owners'
methods will come later this week. eit~crFridayorSat~y.in~bocnix, Marathon madneea Ariz., when an arbitrator will hear a ,
grievance on behalf of former San 1'&DCJ Dita ~=LCl'GllM ftal•b U... wlalle a ,ace oftldal
Francisco Giant Joel Youngblood. (rf.Cllt) fl.Dela lf ID die patb of more tlaan 5.000 nm.Der9
Ml.IC NOTICE PtllJC NQTIC[
. -
•
er._ eo.t DAILY PILOT /Monday. Metdt 10, 1Me •
I#• st 111
Giants 1
methods
illegal?
SAN fllANOSCO (AP) -A Sen
Frucuco Giants dNI tat'ns = ~th~ :z=neoe'° .a:== emDloYen in tbe dry lrVIJ\ ~ their Worten for dnap..
Tbe Oianll' pollC)' ()( aski.ail IO!M
players ~ aubm.it to ~ lelUlll
doeln•t &.mpresl SupetVUIOI' Bil
Maher, author of tbe ordinance. SUd Maher th.it weekeod:
.. h doesn't mean a tbina wbdbtr
their propam (Oiants) it m•nde"O"Y
or voluntary. If~ Giants ate 8*ial
the players to do it, it•a not~
. . . if• inbettnt coerc1oo. ....
inappropriate and not lcpl b tbc
Oiaots ... miuestina blood OI' uriae •
tall for t.beit playen. We'll tee aboul
it ...
Maher drew wei&hty iupport &om
SupervisoT Quentin Kopp Who, u
thouab be WU apinst the ordi.naDcc.
said that under the law~ Giants are
just another San FrancatCO corpor.
ation.
.. As the only supervilor who vo\ed
Ip.inst this misp.ided ordinance,
and with all due deference to the San
Francitco Giants. the ordinance
prohibiU for the most pan drua testin& of anyone employed by the Gia.Du. ..
at tlae ~natna of tlae LOii AD&elee llaratlaon Sa.nday. llJc
S.yn ol AehJ.ead, Ore., wu tlae men'• wlmaer.
Reached at spring trainina in
Phoenix. Oianu President Al Roten
said, "I did not know we were cloina
l;Dythinl wront-. It is not our intcn-
uon to do anyt.lllna wroni."
::
CATEGORIES
Best use of water in house or garden-do
you have ceramic mermaids in your spa? Or
do you have a koi pond in your garden or
fountains in your foyer? Enter your display
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 have become to amuse your child.
Best use of art in dee.orating-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 1s 1t an "80' s" gourmet type. ·This
category is wide open or "space saving'' d
that's your type.
CONTEST RULES
n.. c-.. ~ t0 ,_ .. ·~ loooo °"' .:.«·-d o -((lf'46 oonr-
lldloie !Ooie 01 ~ ,..c1'I l\jQ c~coOl -oM fo --..,. ~..,..,. Cf'lll "'°""' • liNl!Ogr• ol .... _,, no. _,, -... -~ .... 0 """.,.'°" ol ... -· , ... ~ --~ d .... Oo"v '-"'"""'""'°" a.oc+-~....,..IQeOI ""'°('OMO! ... ,......,. E,..,,.. -be --'td 11y w~. ~· 2 19~ °' .,..._., ..., ""' ()r,.i,. ~ ~...,._~dU•-c ol•• ... Sooc_.C_ :UO Bo.,S..... Cooto M.to
Ce ,,,,, bv ! oo 1>"' """°"' ""'' l 19&6 w_, ... be w...eoe1 .. "<" .. -1 "'°"°"'..... ... .... l"""9 s.oc.. --'O ... .,......_ ""'~ 17 , ... Oo.tt '""' ~...,0-
e.octi .......,_ ...... ...,._ore "OI e10oG1e E ... _ -be II...,.. old°' -""" -.. ~ "' ..,. Dooly ,.,,,.._,,"""°" a.oci. ..._,.._ ~~....,°' areo Oo"Y ,...,, ~ ....,...
~" l)llotoOr_....• .... °"°"'9'""" llMI w--e --IOI Plltkot~ • .... I •""O Sci«• _._ c-1 "'°'!' -f!IOf• """ 0!'9 (Clle90'Y ~ .W. ,_ _, (Wo
c~ •• 1>11 (Of'•.Weo 0.. --~ <"'°90" "'"boo c...,_
LIVING ·SPACES ENTRY FORM
INTIANT'S NAMla
ADOalSS2
J
.. 0renge Cout DAILY PILOT/ Monday, Merch 10, 188e ,.
CALL 642-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE
IF CALLING FROM IOUTH ORANGE
THE ART OF SELLING IS
MADE EASY IN THE
DAILY PILOT'S
CLASSIFIED P.AOES.
Nl.lC M>TIC[ Ml.IC M>TIC£ · IMl lltatt ftr Salt al 1111 ht .. C.UfJ Cetta 11tN 2114 Cetta NIM 21H ll!fll! lt1cll 2111
K _.. 11 any, or tn. rM I prot*tY P!!f11!7 llD MESA VERDI!· 4BR, love-NB DUPLEX Huge uppef' 2 Bedroom, 1. Bath. MW •AVAILABL! NOW* Cozy Studio w/wood
JtOTICI °' ouortbed above 11 RHhl/C..••• WllWl • flLLlllll ty, MWty cMc., apecloul. ~ VltW, 41JR .2'A.ba, carpet l Ptllnt. •wellc4n t8DRM w/c.rpOrt se20 decor. etepa to ~n
TMl•TU'I IA&.I purported to be 72 EeQle YllWJ No pete $1295 751·3898 frplo, 11500/mo clOMt a&e6/mo. lmmedl· OR w/prvt angl gar se50 $.450 + 11t, latt I MC i "9'9flfW* Point. Irvine, Callfornta lta111l 1002 BM.uONI, torev.r HO' DOWNSTAIRS Ocean ate~· 851..Q.424 QUl!T. patio, pool, ep41, reta. (2 13)64 .. 2039 N:J:; ~· 4. 112i~! underelgned dla-YIEWJ ~ ='. 33!: :: V=P==~~p. ~~,:R 2ba. trplo, **EASTSIDE lo¥9iy ftfrN NO PETS 549-2447 EnjOy the Luxury dlof th~
Traot _, ctetme any ttabltlty for any * BLUFF'S BEST* Spactoue tam\fy home with 2 ec AVOS. FA. AC. bf .ht end llgllt 28R 28A. &oe E. Ocean Front. 29r 28e. D/W, w/d, bale, WI lfHI A 011111 t>MUtlful surroun ngi
0
't'OU ARE IN DEFAULT lnoorrectneu of lhe "'"' BUOOET BUYI eay. ocean and city Large party pool. TO • dbl oar. w/d. No Both unf\lm. Rent until oar 1900 + ltOO MC. went • Mlec:tlon of gre•I Ill UllYH Ul1 UNDER TME DECLAR· eddr .. s and other common Charming. smaller 3 vtew1. 4 Bdrm, 3 bettla, 3 SE(l NOW red t o pe1e. 11100/mo. Call June so. C911 o.n1ae AvaH 3/3, 831-3&48 living? We can offef' any· In a apactou• 18drm. tea
ATION OF COVENANTS, dealQnallon, 11 any, lhOwn 89droom 2 Batn, 1 Story, car g.,-age. Aleo• famlly 1249,000. Celt M5-4220 Ann• Mc Ca a I and 851·11M 9.5pm, P·~• IWnllll I thing from a amatt apt lo Townhme w/frplc, 2 car
CONDITIONS AND RE· herein. End Unit Adult home room, 1helter9d patio aoday to.... $31·1288 * _.._ r11111 -a 4 bdrm noute. If look· gar w/opnr Security STRICTIONS.ASANNEXED Sakhalewfflbemtlde,bul S165,000·(lnc:ILenCS) and. mottva19d aeller. ·-·-NwptHQht938R28A,gar, Spaolou• CIHn quiet Ing In CM. NB, or HB guarded g•tH . W /d
TO THE SUBJECT PROP· without covenant or wet· lastllll1 I Of, Convenient locatlof'I, tx• MU apa off rMtr bdrm. Quiet. lmmeC 28r 1lABa 2 ttl'Y thlmt of ut firet lor that hkups. CALL 644--0509
ERTV. UNLESS YOU TAKE ran~, ••Pf'HS or lmP41ed. ,. '40-lllO Alfnllt <*lent eetM>o!a, p(lced to $1000/mo. ~ Garden Af>t, Pvt patio, choice of Ideal living C Vlllege ~g~~o~Roi~Rr\,~?,.T~~~ ~:t,1~·,: Mil at S6e0.000. ......,c... Uppet Unit DplX 2Br 28a. r!°'P:-Grsi~~-r. TSL MQMT M 2·1803 ~~:,~um~TieA.Avall
BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC remaining pflndpal eum of IARIAJll (714) 673 4400 Pl.USH CONDOS w/f911a gar. Oceen vu.. blk to bch 16th Curt II ~1-1288 WEST SIDE· Lg 1/bd Apr t $1400/mo, yrty
SALE IF YOU NEED AN EX· lhe llan MQ.lre<J by eeld real S.nk Repoe. Forec:lo'4Jr.. leatraJ Uft ttrMma. Gar w/Of)nr 11000 + U1lls 67~ . Duplex prv bacil yd, all Agent 673-3777
PLANATION OF THE propeny wlthlnler•ttl'M,,.· All areu Graet financing. NB 3iR· 2W:::::;: •>AH wtd hkuc>, MW ct.oor. Avl or(818)359:"539 • 2Br 18a up1tra. 571 ulll pd, $535/mo, 781 -NR .... A .. & Udo$"""""'
N A T u R E o F . T H E on, u provtoeO In said Luxury & Custom Homes. ~ ....,...... ... "'' now 2bf 2be 1950/mo Joenn Mu 2 ........u. No J St appt only ........,, • ...,.... PROCEEDING A.GAINS T CC&Ra, edvane.t, If any, steps to betl, emell oceatf aso0 VILLA BALBOA 18R 1b&, • .............. oann • ' 3/BR 2 bth f·P d/Wuh 't'OU. YOU SHOULD CON· und., the terms ol said Agent. 854-2480 view. It 150, )'T1y 1 bf S750 11t mo + w/d, pert rum. ocn vu, peta 1635 Agt 660-1015 5.49-0433/650·3673. Garage Like new 11 ~95
TACT A LAWYER 0 CC&RI, ,_ c;nerges. and CM 191h St C-1 LOI. HB 1 81.K to bctl, 2BR 1BA MC. 5.49-2447 11050/mo. 862-4557 ••••• ...... 514Ctubhouse 998-5888
on Maren 3 1, 19se. at expenMS of tile Truatee and 60x 180 w/Plans for 2,500 -r>t w/enc:fec* & ger 1876 ...... ~BllU lO.OO AM tile law otflcel 01 ot the 1rua11 creeled by Hid sq h. Cape Cod Offtce aulll -••JY ' ...... ~BJl8 VIiia Balboa 2Br 28' fam-~-u !i *lg 2Br 2Ba. Walk to SPACIOUS 38DRM 2BA
G R E E N w A L 0 • n 0 CC&R• Bldg. $205,000 C•lh firm & -~u fly rm, 11100 VIiia Rental• bCh. Patio Gar $775 No lvklw Neer bel()h. Gar· RESNICK,u dulyappolnted The total amount 01 th41 759•0469 0wner/Bkr ,..,.,,'MIT 675-49120R7S4-1792 .. APUTllm pete780-17131857·t776 age Yrly $t250 Avail
ageot for the DEERFIELD unpaid balance of tne obll· l14/llM111 Tl .. 1.1 VILLA BALBOA Exec 18' Feetunng l>Mutlful land· now VIiia Aentala
COMMUNITY ASSOC IA· gallon MCUreo by tile prop-llPUI ·Ill 0,1,I, 0..-. ftr IHt +Den, Incl trplc, w/d, ale ecape, BBOI. p()Ol/14>a. llLID 211/211 675-4912 or 7S4· 1792
TION under ano purauant 10 erty to be aold and reason-Pride of ownership 11 r• IDTll.111111&11 Frple, v.ulted oellnot. dbl & oth• upgr~. POOi, Patlo/dec:ka. Gar.-or Mlle to beeeh, 9001 gar. -11 •n
the DECLARATION OF able aatlmated cosll. ex-fleeted In this beautifully 5 yrs old, xlnt r901al prop.. NOT A LIST AGENCY oar. pool 6. epa. No pe11. ep41, aec bldg & aib-carports. Heat paid. I le blll 1700 SPlv"' a
COVENANTS, CONDITIONS penset and advanoea 111 the maintained duplex. Each toe 500 btk of Narc1aau1, Rare ftnd 2br w/loft newer 1Bdrm S750 prkng gar. Great 1oc -Sorry no pete rp • ne, • 1 mite to beach M 2•
2367
ANO RESTRICTIONS (here-time 01 the Initial publlcattoo unit teatures two bdrm• to many amenltlet to llet. kltch frplc gar 1575 666 W. 11fth Watte to befl. S1050/mo. 1Bdrm' . $810 Aft 5:30 &60-4614 _I
lnatter "CC&Rs") recorded of tile Notice of Sale Is w/numerous amenltlH Greel lnvett. opportunl-choice Aghbrhd MS-2739 984-• 183 un.2939 Ev/Ms-6836. 2Bdrm 288 $795 YllSAJUES In BOOll 11589 P•nes 332 $t,572 62 '"" 82"' "··ter St •~2 142~ 2BR 2BA. frplc, din rm
lnclualve.OtflclalReeordeoi The~tlciery.MLLAGE plus a lour car garage. ty, favorable financing *llM110* a L::L 21'1 .,.,.., . -. .. IUWlllYILUIE Amenftlea$965667-7252 Orange County CaJllorota GREEN MAINTENANCE AS· Great rental area. Atmoat avail $475,000. l eura H«e'a a J9W9I 3Br 288 DI . .._. 'W 3/bd, 2/ba, WESTCLIFF, $S45. UpP9r trg quiet as annexed 10 'the aubteci SOCIATION, under setd $300,000 of assumable 760-9146/E 758-012910 tncd pvt 2 gar posatble 38r 2L. fam rm w/retrJO, l~geyard, flreplaoeS ".new newly renovet9d 18R, no wuw llT1
properlyVMUnglnthe name CC&RSheretotoreexecuted financing Offered at CORONA DEL MAR option 1850 539-6190 crpta, drpt, gar 11200. ~~~Oof~d/52•1~50• ~. cerp0'1, lndry facU w••
of Patricia Fierro WILL SELL and deUve<e<I 10 the under· $335,000 New homes for sale, 3/bd, Best Alfy fee Call P9te, Bltr 751-319.1 . ' 83f·21ntiJ &.48..e<>19 Live where you have
AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO signed e wr111en Declaration LINDA TAGLIANETII Ill~ t f,!!'11 S THE HIGHEST BIDDER FO"' of Default and Demand tor 2'Mba, l rom $260K. lal... 11111........ ... . 1111--• pectacular ap ta ., s d I N ·-I 64'5-1056 BA_,. rMI ...... *, & 2Br, 1 & 2Ba sullee CASH (payable Ill lime ot ere, en a wr nen o1...., o Ptala1aJ1 2107 2Br 28a, all amenlflet, ..... un . 28.drm 18a Eeatllde. •Spacious townhouse1
Mle In lawful money ol the Default and Eleellon to Sell Ct I M l 024 $1100 + 1tt lut & aecur· Mar~ Condi&, wet -., t N 1 United Stat .. ) al Ille oulllde Tiie unoer11gned caused 1 1 Ha For $1050 ooean & ;:rtY lty Call &.4-2607 or bat m!a~ !Ip, w/~1.1'). · "'u e arH.
0
pe
1
*Flrepleoes
front entrac11o tile building said Nottce of Oeteul1 and Brighi up1telr1 28R 3br 2ba hm dbl ger M\·7589 or ~513 2 ear ga;~. 631-6155 •Private batconlH or
located at 4350 VON Election· to Seti to be r• Pentrldge Cove unit, over-gourmet touchH at .... ~:>nl. ape $695/mo. 71•1 1635/mo 2BR 2BA. frplc, Garden patio•
KARMAN, DAON BUILD· corded in Ille C01Jnly where tOOks pool, upgrad91 539-6191 Agt oost ..... te the rest 2bdrm mod 995-8612 2131596-3853 encl gar, all bltnl. near WIY HT1
WESTQLIFF 1/bd condo,
unturn, adults, no-pet1.
$675/mo, 673-6640
Sut1 ha 2 0
Lg 28drm, 2 Bath Neet
Soutl'I Cout Plaza
$595/mo 551-1313
Iliac. leatab
ING, NEWPORT BEACl-1 Ille real property ,, IOcated ·--·00 .... ---.. ,_ Musi Sell. Under market llvlng encl gar kid• $500'• ehOpplng center CAUFO~NIA 111 right. title DATED Marcn 3. 1986 ats114,500.831·2966 Ooeenlront hm for tae ottieraaval153Mt91 thl 810Cent., •3Ughl9dtennlacourts IMal 27H
and Interest conveyed to, 0" I! EN WALD and BY OWNER "'BR S127,500 $1500/mo. 2BR 11~BA, Agent ootl llM -• --••J.,M• *2 Swlm1T1lng poolt and now llllO by It, undet MINtcK, M True•. USO ~ newly dee Stove/frig In-•--• -• •Streeme & panda $275 In my Costa M ...
H id DECLARATION OF '= K~ ~~m:: Encllupgrad9d oorner lot eluded. sis-8455 lrriH 144 28R 2BX. carport. 1788. IAll& ml IPTS •Sorry no pets home Incl utll, no smok· COVENANTS,CONDtTtONS ....:(
7141
as'
1
•
9001
ey __ ..,.,._, WlllCarry &4S-7782 2BR 2BA. YJ, gar, pool, Pool, Jae, rec room. 1er & 2ar frig range. 1tFurnl~lng1avall tng,lemaleonly 557-549•
ANO RESTRICTIONS In Ille 9atMI RMnlcll • CISTA nu OIAI•• Cert•• ••l llu 2122 tennll. gym, alarm. No 5-45-7131°'731·5188 laund po(,.~. NO Gu tor Haetlng & C~lng 2 rms furn or uni One
property auuated tn saio Publlllhed Orange Coast Wnllff 4Bdrm, 2Ba. 1800 sit. ~ A hae com. pool, pets. ~8 ~9002,,,/mo. Avall So. Coast Condo 2br 2be, petl. is50 & '$650/mO. Paid $275 One wtpvt bath &
County •nd State Oescrlbed 01111y P11o1 Maren 10. 17 24 1271,IOO H~e new mstr suite. tennis Vu, DR FR, 52200 now."'" • ..,... carport, pool, jec. 1895. 931 W. 19th St. S48--0492 W""Y NOT CALL pvt ent S350 646-2348
as Unit 1 as snown and~ 1986 Enjo top shape re (213) a""9513 " rcrtbild In tne condominium I moleled 3. BA fea\url~ Hr Wd tlrs. covr'd patio mo. Bkrtown ~152 **lllT&LJ•* .....,.. De1Uxe"2Br 2.88 w/gar. Nu na-1111 Futn .. pvt ba. nr occ
plan recorded tn Book POOLIC NOTICE large yard Inviting patio with spa Great yrd Nr JASMINE CRK 3BR 1ge CALL US REGARDING AtarUlnl1 Paint & c.rpet. 44e Ham-Complete house prlv ~=d:o~e~~ry~10~1 NOTICE Of 1 and wonderful spat New ~o;,11:,:14=ta~~= ramlly rm. ~. wd. nrs, IRVINE RENTALS .. 1... lhon AY91&75675-9797. SUWlll YILUIE S350tmo. 5-49-3674
ange. State of Celllomte PU9UC HEARING Roper oven and micro onel 840-2038 Ray Agt top cond. lovefy petlo lm1e Otllf a.llten ·1 •--..1 --EASTSIDE 28', yard, gar· 15555 Huntington VIiiage LIDO ISLE. quiet, pvt
fhe streel eddrast end Notlcetsllerebygillentnet Assumabte toan ' $2300/mo 760-1634 711-TIOO 1.... .... age. Kld1/Pet1 okl lane, from San Otego MSTA STE Br-Ba-Den-
otller common designation, the Pteonlng Commtstlon of •'4-tOIO FIR SALi IY OWIH Lg 3BR 2BA sundeck BAVFRONT 1Br. xah •. No $695/mo. 1767 W••t· Freeway, north on Beacn Hall Furn/unfurn Mat
II any. or the reel property uie City of Newl)Ort Beacn Upgreded 3Br 2Ba. 2 wtvlew lndry' very fW!IW *ORANGETREE 1Br pets or smlcrs. $775/mo. minster, #A. 720-9422 lo McFadden, west on N/S Sep grdn entr No
des c r 1 bed 1100 ve 19 wlll llOtd a public hearing on lrplce, 6' •wet bar. den, s 1375/~o. 67S·6699 Condo. Patio, on •traem. Yrly. utlls lnci 873-6640 Eattllde deluJCe 28A 18A, McFedden acc~ss hse. Wet bar, frig,
purported 10 be • 1 Snow· Ille eppllcatlon or OonalO L used brick patio. Hot t\Jb. ~ pool, Jae, tennle, ale .... F B On bd Stps-bay $750 berry, lrvtne. Catllornla Bren Company for AmeoO· I nunllC Ml'\TICE 1 mt to ocean Assum e1t1 Mna 2124 $655. No pets 854-1141 Bal 11 1br furn $1000/mo 1 level, ceder ~le. frplc, Wat., .. ronl Apt um 2 R Incl utt dep 675-6852 92714 ment No 631 and ten111t111t1 ruu nu loans, s189•950 412 E. * est• e , , _ It L 4 yrly. Barbara agtl walk-In closet, dthwr, 2ba, S 1200t mo yrly
Tiie undersigned dis-Tract Map No 12271 on lw ood Community 19th Bk 63149l9 =••• IC• 875-5511,494-~2ev.s trig, w/d lnclud9d. Gar· 633-9161or536-9524 t ad 1 •836 r • 1Ba Duplex. Tiie floors, T.ii No pet•. $795/mo. ---ctetms any ll11blll1y tor any properly ocat a Park-Crel1 Room Modi-crpts. drps, w/d hkup, n view 3Br 2Ba. 261 2BR 1BA, patio, Chalet. for ..._A .... 1.12•• 1ncorrec:1ness of Ille atrMI Jamboree Road llc:a1tons" Bid •86-4 15 IESA IEL IUI Wave St. S1395/mo. lee. Nee. s h B Yrfy ,,_, -"""' u
address and olher common Request lo erneno por-LOCATION OF THE !Great 4 bdrm. 2 balh garage. S600 +sec Must Frplc, neww/w, Open Sat S97~ Incl ~~Its. 8;~58 lrriH -44
designation. 11 any Sl'lown tlOfls of \ne Nortll Ford WORK The work 10 be per !'tarter home. New paint stand credit ""' No pets. 12-4pm. 818128-4-5265 NOW LEASING
hefeln Planned Community de· 1ormed heu1under 1t located I outside and situated on a 770•5629· Ctnaa •11 llu HU • Saldsatew111 bemede but •velopment alandards tor I'" lhe Ctty 01 lrvtne Coun!y c.ut-de-eec Asking 3/bd. 2/ba, trl·level, Brit· 3/BD, 2/BA, N. ~una •HARVARD COURT*
w1111ou1 covenant or war Resldtr11lal Area 5 so 111 to ot Oranoe at 4531 Bryan • 5142 500 leny Wood.s Condo. ale, Charmer. frplc, waking 1p8~t~~;=,~~:ria: EAST SIDE LuK In a Pine ran!y. express or Implied re-delete p<ov1s1ons lor snared tntersechon 01 Bryan •nd • f pie d/w pool tennis dlllance to beech, + 7,.,.8515 F0<-t, ._ 1/br, di-, trig, Brend new apartment• gerdtng mle p0uess1on or dnv-eys Oil substendaro Yale Avt"nve r • • • • $1600/mo, 675-5061. ....,-v .. 'V'"' -Ideally located In lrvtne
encumbrances 10 pa~ tne tots 1nc1-tne mtntmum DESCRIPTION OF WORK Traditional S1200/mo, 640-5t92 • gu/Wtr pd, 2 patios, rernetn1ng prlncfpet tum ot ,lot size trom 2 400 sq 11 to Tne work to be performed IANordable luKury 3br de-4 Bdrm, 2'~ba hm ec.an 1BR 1BA, cSec*, gar tPaoe-$580/mo, adult•. no peta. 1 & 2 89droom noor plans
the 11en secureo by sa10 reel .3 000 sq 11 es1e1>hstl 11 mm•· 511811 inclu<le but 001 t>e llm· Realty sired area cool pool trwy & Coastllrte Vie ot Laguna No pett. $850, 111 + dep. yr ieue, MS-08&4. Pool & Spa
property wnh tnteresl there
1
mum average tot wkml of 55 11ed 10 Constrvcuon 01 a I 6'\ l 7 'HO nr $755 net ph 539-6 t90 Beach S 14OO1m 0 ' S7S..SSO.l O< ~ E'SIDE 1BR Adlta/no peta w·• .. ...,, dist·~ 10 on. as provided 1n said tt revtM tile garage '81· new net toogve and groove ' • • Best Alty fee 497~11 1 BA apt. 1 year old. O/W, pool, tndry, $445/mo .,,,""' _.....,.
CC&Ra advances ti any 1>ac~ requlremeots, estet>-reowooo SJdtng cell!~ ell New i.. lbf conoo. st"""" to bltlna. No pets, no amkrs. Jt.tA.333.4 tv m.,. * S""""""" under tile 1erms ol said llsn petm•tled •ocauons fOf tabor and materlels A w1lk MUST SELLI 3BR 2BA Don't pass up this 5 rm E· "' ...... -~ -.. .. .,....,.. .. .,
CC4R1, 1-. Charges and /guest pen..tno and mcrea.se 1,hroughoflheprojecureats Tri-level, Brittany Woods side hOme w/gar & yard a~eah, poolS650~ 1Puta7• ~·Y5..n'0· S750/mo 644-7163 E'SIDE 2 BA 1 ba down-* Theetr• eJ1pen,.. of Ille Tr1.1stee and the maximum height for SG~urec fOf Merell tO d aJ t di $650 539~191 A t I ~ "' 2Bdrm 1Ba stove retrta stairs, 1 car~, natlo * ~taurant• ot the trusts created D" u10 opeo trellla end beam COO· 19a"' al lO 00 11 m 111 N ....... 11• con °· c. rpk::, w, g ee s· ' =n.ar.· ..-• Partee/Tennis Courts ' h °" .,.., pool lennls By ownet No ~ts 770/mo. 606~ S750/mo, 81
CC&Rs ,structton wit tn tllerequlred wood Perk S13S 500 640-5192 . Eastslde 2Br, beam cell· L111a1 lilatl 2152 Acacia. (71~)673-2269 °' The total amount ot tt1e llde yard setback trom 8 COMPLETION OF WORK __ • _ · Inga. Sharp & clean Pet --(213149 .. 3632 E/alde 2BR, ger, patio, no S e I • c I e d U n I I •
unpaid bllllnce ol Ille obit feet to 9 feel The proposat All work II lo be completed Im•• l 044 Ole $795/mo. 760-8862 New 3Br 2 • Condo In pelt, 2 people se75/mo w/Cathedral Celllngs
Quiet haven. Npt Bch. am
rm lor M/Sr. exec/pf't,
lite K prlv, no amk, pv1 ba.
carport $350 6«...0369
Rm In Newport Bch house.
Full nouae prlvll
642-8537 leave message
ROOM. tum, laundry facil.
S250/mo Refs req
Costa Mesa S48· 1372
Btt1l1/M1ttb 'll
UllUIUOI ·-·· Wkly rentats. Low rates
$135 & Up/Wkty Color
TV. meld servlee, free
coNee, heated pool 8
steps to ocean Klteh'•
a11all 985 N. Cout Hwy,
Laguna Beach, 494-5294 gallon secured by rlle prop 11so includes 11 requeat to wllhln 1o consecutive work· beach close Beecon Hiii. 2 room IUlte be, pvt ent. 267 Cebrlllo M2-5568
erty 10 be sold end reason revise 11 prevlouSly approved Ing days lrom the date specl-FOR SALE BY OWNER EASTS I DE Broadway 3Br, Enjoy tennle poola & Deck Micro' frig No pet& · NOW TAKING
able esllmeled costs. ell· T&01a1111aMapolTrec1·No fled'" the Notice 10 TURTLEROCK flreplace,grdnrlnc.1 $825 spas Indoor' washer & $550.lncutlis fet +dep E/alde 2BR, newly dee, RESERVATIONS FOR SEAWlltTtL
penses and 11dvances at tlle 12211 so as to subdivide PrOGeed Unobstrue1ed View 3BR No pets 646-3177 dry e r s 9 7 5 1m 0 67S-550t or' S.U-.w64 · patio, gar. $690/mo. MAY OCCUPANCY. For Wkly rentals now evall
time or the 1nlt111J publlcatton 26 4 acres of tend 1n10 159 LIQUIDATED DAMAGES 2BA 1wnhm, air, frpl, up-Klds/sml pet ok 2br pad &40-1341 Eves 558-6170 Avail Mar 16. 5-48-1709 d i rections and Info 5129.50 wk & up. 2274
ot the Notice ol Sale 1s numbered tots tor detached For failure 10 complete the grades 7 Rainbow Ridge --EXTRA lg 1BA w/2 lg tllld· 854-4942, 8:00-5:30 PM $ l,274.80 smgle tamlly res1dent1111 de-work on time, llquldele<I Open H se Sat/S 1 5 not lar to ocean $6()('1 Ing closets lg deck new Extra lrg 2BR 2BA, patio. Nwpt Blvd, CM &48-74•5
The beneltclary. DEER-vetopment, one tellered IOI damages wlll be assessed at S~75 000 un • 539-6191 Agent cost Inert ... ,.. 2119 bldg. ssooi mo 722-'7634 frplc, encl gar. No pela. OAANGETREE 1BR. A/C, SU I Ill LOHE
FIELD COMMUNITY AS lor pmate recrea11on11I one hundred ($100) dollara 854 1779/SS4 L 3B 2B 2 ~AVSHORES $650, 11t & tut, $300 refrio, $625/mo. Pool SOCIA T ION under seld purposes. ano e•ght lettllfed per calender day over con-• •8607 ge r e stor;-On Narcissus · 2BR 2BA, 2 aec. M2'"°"33 evee tennTe/no pe11. 559-8322 3026 W Pactnc Coaat Hwy
CC&RS lleretotore e•ec:uted Iota tor private open apace tract l ime If tWJ1rl ltacll l 9 ondo. Yard, garage. 3/bdr' 3/ba, 60 11 to boh, car ger • pvt lndry with ---------=----==---=--..,,...,,~ Newport Beech Refrlg TV
enddetlveredtotheunder 11ndtandsc11pepurp0!18S I PROPOSALGUARANTEE $llOO Villa Rentals 51600/mo.S48·74 15· w/d. $1050/mo lease. ~a1leacll I S125+wlcagt,nodepoalt
signed a written Oecteretlon NOTICE IS HEREBY ANO BONDS Eacll bid shall ILIFFS 675·4912 Blurts . 260011 condo (d~ 6«-7211 Agt ~ oc:n/coestiine Vtew. lg
or Default end Demano 101 FURTHER GIVEN tllat all be accompanied by a 3Br 2Ba COM PA REI LUlllY OHll~ tach) on greenbelt. 4BR, • 2Br 1Ba wl trplC & yard. Ital ah It Illa re
Sele, and 11 written Notice 01 significant eolllronmental lcerttlled or cashiers cl"lec:k COMPARE! S 189 000 tam rm, 21~ba. fully furn ntl HI &P&IT911TS S940/mo Incl ullla. Outel 2724
Default and Election to Sell ICOflcerns tor tne prop0sed 1or by 8 corp0rate &Yraty fee The Property Mart B;~;yddn.:,3g:~.2pe'~b!~~· Inc crockery, llnen Avail SHARP Gara;; Af>t. 1BR. Ukebren<lnewlAllutllltlet Adult1497-5700 .,39 .. A"!2•8•A_,fu,.r·n·,.,.,..-·d·•0oiiiirn-.,;I ...... ~.
Tne undersigned caused ,project llave been ad· bOl'ld on the lorm turntalled I 640·9019 "" Easter LM 6-12mo at ttove/refrlg. no peta Id Pool pet =----:::---=--,...,...= """' •• utd Holtoe of Defiun end dressed 1n a p1ev1ousty by tne Owne< 119 guarantee __ color S1095. 642·9686 S2000/ 75,.3,..13 ,5201 "'~"13n 1{!~ · •gar, no u'90· I~ II t S300. Prof, n-1mkr.
Elec:tton to Sell 10 ~ 1e •certified env1ronment111 inet bidder will 11 en award HVH-$242.500 Must see mo .,.. " mo.~ .,..rm .., 857·2121 Uk for Marte
CO!Oed In tlle county ""'1e<e Oocument and lhlt Ille City IS m110e to ntm '" IC· to apprec Highly up· MESA VERDE HARBOR VIEW 1100.,, 2Bdrm 1Ba se96 2 l 28X i7001mo.
me reel property,, 1oc111ed 1of N-p011 Be&cn mtefnds to lcordence wltll the t«ms of graded 3br 2ba Carmel. 3BR 2BA hM . clean and 2 t den or 3BR. corner 301 Avoc.do M 2·9850 Refrlg, dlhwshr ttove BALBOA PEN. M/F prof DATED Mer'I\ 3 1986 use se•d documen1 or tlle light, 2 car gar. frplc. No MOVE IN COST Incl fie Pets ~855 non amkr to lhr 3bf, 1 blk " n1s bid promptly sec;ure 1963 Port Weybridge pets $950/mo. Avail Mar locatlon. lnclud91 gdnr & Lna Cottana T-. 2BA LARGE lharp 1 bedroom, 0 RE£ NW AL O an d et>ove noted pro1ect and Worlcmen s Com~ntlon OPEN SAT/SUN 1·5 pool Avall 4/ 1186 •--..-,,,.. alnt d from bch S350+ John RESNICK," TruetH , 4350 runner 111111 there are no ad· insurance end hat>•llty tn-Owner/Agl 759_ 1870 15 Call Anne McCasland S 5 · C · 1BA, pvt patio, w/d hkup. new P • new rapee, * 1 llllM UH* 548-7696/E 549-7155/E
Von KMmen. Sult• 450, dthonal reasonable aneroa-surance Seid clleck or btd· 631· 1266 1 OO/mo all Lola no pets S675/mo. new ti()()( tlle, ab90lutety Retrlg dlah'#Mhef & 11ove I~--..,.------
N-pon IMach, Cellfornla tiv" or m111oeuon measures ders t>ond s111111 be in •n 1rwptR·T IEllm I ~ii#··? 673-7S4-4 TSL MGMT 642·1803 Immaculate. dl9hwMhef, Incl. NO PETS 545-4855 Beaut NB pvt hm. Empl le,
929eO (714) 151 I001 8 11\81 lllOUld be conslde<ed 1n IUI • ... r • a~i~w \.? . encloMd lodcabte oar· avl now $275 Call Sunny aarnet ""nlctl • ' ' coniunclton wilh uio pro-$T~nl,o ol c{'f1 tessd tnen $210.000 Must Selll Ill" • r , • 1 lllTI Fiii IEIT age, pwtt Ilka ground•. 2 & 3 Bdrm unl'\Jm. yrly, H 64S-9515 W 631-7305
f>ubflslle<I Orer19e cnast tKI Copies 01 the prev1ou5ly sue<! by co~Jan~: !11::11 CourJesy to Bkr 642·7190 ti' ·J3 ~9 -1BR at $535/mo 2BR $580. No Pett. ~279 summer, winter. Cannery C M. 3br hM nr OCC avail
Delly Ptlot Maren 10 T 24 prepared envtronmenlal ere rated A or A. 1n Ille IEWNllT m IPEO .. ESA \JERDE-3/bd 2/ba ··--·-· •• $595/mo. All built Ina, Lrg clean 1BR. MW CfJ)t• FW!to, Inc. 675-4606 tmmed. non amlc. 21 -35 1986 document are evallat>le tor 6 1 R un G ~ 111 • ""' • • Hit 3/2br 1~• ..._ lndry rm nr bch & ahopl M llCl8 put>lte re111ew end 1nspec11on ac:pt~ F~llu~~ 10 ~:b:,: setting on a giant lot. 2 dbl garg, encl yd, gar· es area '"" .....,, 735-741 w tSth St · on Joenn St. $450/mo. **Brend Ml wttom 28' $335/mo. 5"'9·3755
al tne Planning Oepanment acceptable bonds will be bdrm1 & den: huge llv rm dner S1150 557·2382. hlcupe dshwshr & yrd dbl TSL MGMT . M2 16o3 Refs. Cell evee S4M938 2Ba, cnoloe area. Garage, fe, b9eut 2BA 2BA Efalde
--n-.. n-l-IC_M_O_T_IC_E __ City of N-oon Beach 3300 cause tor re1ec11on ot t::11d w/lrplc. din g area & Mesa' Verde 3BA 2BA, x;g~ ~9215 A~·~~telayl • -• .. P7!~017$90013 orN8o5 ~1t7a7. SLM CM apt $360/mo + •,; _.....;.r.....;.uu __ ., ____ Newporr Boulev1rd. New-1 PREVAILING RATES OF much. much more In mdl supe< clean, beaut yard. .,-.. !Bdrm Apt w/balcony, -•to ~ 7-1 utlls. 722-1387 tvemsg
P!>rt Beech Celtlornie WAGES tn accordance wtth cond Owner MUST Mii. $ t100/mo, 1,t, laet, s250 LIDO IS. 3BR 28A fl.Im. pool. NO pets $.495/mo. $625/mo. E/alde 2BA NEWPORT MARINA APTS N~T~OF 92658·8915 (7141644-3200 ltne provisions ot Secllon has already purchaMd. dep. s.4'5-6035 aft 5pm beaut. Avell to 7/15. M6-3616 18A, patio, p()OI, lndry Beeutlf\JI 2Br 288, micro, FEMALE BUSINESS LADY
1'RUST£l'S SALE Nottc:e 19 nereby l\lrther 11773 of l!'le C1111torn111 Labor Price reduced. Cent/2t S 1650/mo. Agt Rod , 1Br E·slde $.495. Squeaky room. Cloee to all. frplc, encl gar. Prvt WANTED-To ahare large
oiven tnat 5111d put>hc near· Code tne general pr11v111itno Ber-9 962-8891 673~00/d 673-8821/e clean w /wood beam 149 E. Ba6,. beach, boat lllp available 21bd condo, pool, garg, R•fef•nce 1n11 Wiii be helo on \he 20111 rates 'of per diem wages and • llST mt TS MGMT • 3 5 n-91Ttkr, neat & r .. pon. CMIMllL . Lot 1. oav "' March 1986 al tne l 1101tde" and ovart1m11wo1k In Jllolnlt Btatl -n llUT cells. No petl 990·2970 L 2·1603 1 9 Imo. Sorry, no slble, w /nentleman, Unit 31, 1101.1r of 7 30 pm 1n the I ' F •-J l lOO 3BR 2BA hse, pool, den. •towf"• pete. 760--0919 Btwn 8-5 " Tract 10111 c..ovncll Cnemb~r 01 tlle tne t()(.811fy tn w111cn tne wor~ tr H I dbl gar, spacious. Only Spaclou• 3Br 2•,;Ba, new 1Br upstra w/garage. Aer. Im Al $400/mo, 4 95·3173.
YOU ARE IN OEFAUl T Newport Beaon Cll'y Hell ~b't~1~:r'r~,;,m:i:e l\~r:6o~ New 3 A, apace rent $1100/mo. crpt, w/d, refrlg. Im· req'd. No pets $495/mo. 2BR I • 1BA VERSAILLES* Laguna Niguel. UNDER THE DEC.LAA
1
3300 Newpon Boulevard. ,.,,_ $l30 pelt ooeanbreeze 2094 Belmoral maculate $1350 leaM. 352 Victoria M5-8161 1BA, dlahwaeher, S.C, pool/rec lac S725 F k 24
ATION OF COVENANTS N-pon Beech Cellloro1a of lhe u..Pilrtment ol lndUS· Co. • . . TSL MGMT M 2·1803 VIiia Rental• 675-4g12 Avail April let. balcony, view 213/387-5900/687-3292 em n-sm er +yr•.
CONDITIONS AND RE 1111 wn1ch tllrn'I and piece any trill Re11111ona a copy ol In Ila Mesa 5.45-6-456 2201 Pllcif\c room CdM 3Br hi e.
STAICTtONS AS ANNEXED end all persons tnteresled 1wn1ch1,ont11e1n111eotflcaol People who need people M \J Executive hm. 4BR l'OStlble rent/own 3/4br 2/bd, 1\1\/ba. no pet• TSL MGMT M2·1603 3Bdrm, 288, MW orpt, $375+ utll. 675--0501
TO THE SUBJECT PROP may appel!lr and be heard :lie Clly ~ler.~r~: 111~ Ctty ~I should always check the 3ba, lamlly rm, redwood lam rm huge flp elite arae no gar% se15 ~ & trplc. S~ to F.m thr beautllul 38r 28a,
ERTY UNLESS 't'OU TAKE thereon For1nlorm1111onca11 a~™'1~"•n'''\ ter;~~•v•: Serv1CeOlrectorylntlle 14>a,gardnerlncld under priced at $1500 275 A abrlMo .. 1.. VN11yll1 Imo. xlt Penlneula local. F/p, ACTION TO PROTECT (7 141644 3200 y n par y DAILY PILOT $1400, 548-9950 539-6191 Agtlee 675-7450n 30-1286. Furnllhed .... t. Gar...... VIII• Ren1ela 675-4912 w/d, gar $400 utlla ..,.
YOUR PROPERTY IT MA't' Pat Elclleonofer Sec· upOn reque91 Tiie contrec ...., -•· ""' BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC 1111111 Plenntng Com-1or end any subcontree1°' ---------2Bd 188, cpta, drpe, OW· IMmdry. Good locatlof'I. ULMA UY ot.• Avl 3115 673·1~
SALE IF YOU NEED AN E)(. m1ss1on City ol Newpon unoer nim shall pay no• '"' f'tln.IC NOTICE "8.JC NOTICE P\8.IC M>TIC[ No pe1a. Adlta pref 1700 $500/mo 548-4"8 Studio/Club memberltllp i..dy/gey guy, MCIUded
PLANA TION OF THE Beach tllan Ille specified prevethng I " ti 14 LM. AVI now. 548-1234 Piil llTTm W/111W req & avt $1000 548-0329 tropical, pry be, frptc,
NAT u RE 0 r THE NOTE TlleeJ1pense ol 11115 ~= :p~:Ov!!,'~n·'1'~°".~ BY b:t~"':i Ille City & M•tlcPau~~ Channel P1 . Newpor1 a.ec:n. 2/bd, 2/b&. qulet-ilpttalra, 2 ..... rm 288. veutted --'I-CNffheven 2BR 1BA, patio. b9am•. $400, 5-45-1104
PROCEEDING AGA1NST notice •a oetd lrom a flttng "" ~ Council ol the Cl"' of lrvll'le nrlel t .. ·~,....... _..., CA 92&63 t tllltl Id .,.,. .._ YOU. YOU SHOULD CON tee cooecteo trom 111e app1• eoc~':o~ '~e~r~:ONS DATED Feb~'uary 27 CAT92e&3 Patricia Bray Cunning. $7~~/m~ e22e'...~ttori Inga, prvt petlO/baloony, ~tor ~r9d pereona. COM to ltlr. lrg 38R. Prof TACT A LAWVER cenl 1986 • hi• bu11n ... I• eon· 3810 Channel Pl . N9W1)0t1 St CM Ron 646-0•77 l•c. bltlna. No pet• pell. 5306 non·•mkt . CIOH to
On Marci\ 31 1986 at Publlened Orange Coast Tll~ cootr&etor shall comply CIT'Y 0 1' l"VIMI IY· ducted by: an lndMdual ee.ctl, CA 92&63 , • . ~ Ot 831~ 107pm ·~ •u~L •••t beectl. S.2. 5 675-M99
tO 00 A M tile law otflCM of Dally PtlOI Ma1ch 10 1986 w•lh 111 Ille requuemen\a of NANCY C LACEY 'cm Matt Paul Ullywtllte Thia bu1lneu le con· 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, ~ -• ... G R E E N w A L 0 I n d M.()()6 Section 1777 51oge1111t wltl'I ClE"K ' • This atatement WU filed duc1ed by. an lndMdUal carpott Large yerd No Prvt 18r, trptc, ='~tto, Lii UlllA" -
RESNICK, u duly appointed •11 0''* ~ppt1C8~ '~utr.. Publlehed Or.nge Coeet With the County CMttl Of Or· P11rto1a Btay CunnlnO pe1t M71S/Month. 2625 gf ·No/:*· 99 ·Bay '-'QU Beeut. decor. ml/bdl ffpl
agent for th• VILLAGE Ml.IC NOTICE ~8~ c:O. th• •11 ornl• Dally Pilot March 3, 10, 19tWI ~~I)' on Febn.tary Thi• '1atement ... llled Elden, Apt #F. ~19 $5t eso.-e357 I.. tennla, •tr male. Avl now.
GREEN MAINTENANCE AS· DAAWINGS AND SPECI· M-tt7 · ,., .. , with the County Cler1c of Or· REDEC. 28R. ger, ~ DESERVE 1395/utll+dep 497· 1304 S~~:,~1~: ,:~~c~~~ c1n Of! ,..VIHE FtCATIONS A 1u11 tel or Publllhed Orange CoMt ~~ty on February 2Br 1k Cleen 2Br 1aa. patlO. )'d, no SN'tli 2 people THE BEST' MIF lhr 3Br sea hm. ~ ~ TION OF COVENANTS CAll1<>f'NIA tPOCltlcallOns It avallable for I PtllllC NOTICE Dairy Pllol Marett 10, 17, 24. ,.,. ~. w/d ~~ ... seaoa sea<>. 388 w. ~AY ST. • Rtn/88. Laguna ocn eyn CONDITIONS AND RE'. NOTICE INVITIHO ptek upwflhout Chargeallhe 31, 1"6 Publlahed Or C0Mt VIiia Rent ... v ,,1 E/SIDE 28R 1 ~ 1875. !ft $450/ 497
STRICTIONS flleretnelter atos Purc11a1111Q 0tv1a1on. 15029 Nottoe of lfy Piiot Marcti8{r, 17. 24, 28' 18a, patio, encl ger. 271 Cabttllo. 722.o812 • Fttness Centers v mo ·5600 "Cc.\R•"lrecord9d ln8ook NOTICE IS HEREBY SendC•nyon Avenue tnth._ Aw......,of PlaJC N()TIC[ 1.1H6 209 Maple St. 54&-940e Sha 2eR 1~ba wait\· NB,profM/F26+,lgP9nln n &4e Pagee 1613• 1674, In· GIVEN t11111 aealed Dlds witl CtlY of lrvtn• Speclflcallon• Ut-.-Mted M.975 Marcet tpeek• Spanllh d rp '* · tlo • Tennis, Sw 1mm1ng Pt 2br 2ba S.25 Inc utll.
1 lllve OtflciaJ RecOfdt 01 be re<:elved l>y !he PurcllU· 1 •nO bid dOCumente wllt be e.ntcee ACTrnOUI .,._,, ' l"f'9' up, ptltl •gar, no F ~ Bob 873-0727 aft 8:30pm ~a e County CeltlOfnla Ing Ol11IS1on In Ille Clt'y 01
1
melted upon receipt Of 1e-S1•rtlng Point of Orange NAm ITAT'OmNT 2Bdrm '595 pet.a se5(), 549-"60 • UfOIS11ed/
.. ~nexed 10 the tubjeei lrvtne C111torn111 tor questa no1111erth11n111n1101 Coun ty Wiii pl'Ovlde from ThefoltowmoP«'IO'llar• 3Bdrm seas -····-Unfurnished N/tmkr pref 25+ lhr aer
property VN11ng In lhe name lurotalllflg Ill plant lllbor I calllfld•r daya prior lo Iha March I, 1996 to Oeo.mtMll dOlng buelneee aa: National Pool. No r>e1• M5-9e65 I --• Monlh·tO M onth Condo, Nnport cr .. t
01 Karen 0 Chlmlel WILL aervlc.• m11.-u111 10011. oe111 set tor e>pontng b101 3 t. t986 '56,200 of un· P11tfFM Publlehln9 Com· 2Bdrm w get, orpta, drp., $360+~ ut1 M2-2487 Ev
SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION eqvlprNltlt t11.1ppllt1• trane-1 SECURITY FOR COM coml)tntated WV1c.e to P-"Y. 711 W Jamee St,_ "8.IC M)ftc£ •FREE CABLE TV. Lg 18r bltlna. Fncd Yfd W/ptitlo. Models optn d•ily, 9·6 PROF Clean n -em,;-r
TO THE HIGHEST BIDD£R port•llon, ullllhH •nd •II PLETION OF WORK The ellglble Pl'IOll• needing ... •C. Coeta MIN. CA 92927 & 2Br Grdn Apta. Pool 2437 "A" 0rang9 ... 1875 Soiry, nt> pets ...ice aeme to .... r, "1g'
FOA CASH (peyeble 91 time other ttem1 and tac1UUM city wm ret•ln 1t1n ( 101 per. coMI or dNQ ranabllltatlon Mark MacGregor Look• 1525-1825. 710 W 18th 83f..4120 CALL 1·5PM .. ,
of .... lnlawfutmoneyot the necuury 1ner11tor u centottll4tbldamounl until tnd ire unat>i. 10 pay teet. 7t7 w J-Str11et condoln aecurecs o()nlm,
Unlle<J Sta.Lea) et lh• outllde provided in lhe contract all worll •• eoml)leled to the E t 1 g 1 b 111 t y t 0 r u n . •C. Coeta MeM. CA t2t21 Cetta ... 1114 C.ta ... MM Newport Beech No COM. Rm w(ocn vu. fX'V
front entrtet to the bulldll'IO doCl.HMnl• tor Cra11 Aoom ... leftc'IOll of the City Al COmpenullld l9l"lllOel Wiii '11iia butlnau le COi\• 880 1 A ba. wtd. Po6f, teoum, tocated 111 4350 VON modtl1Cat1on1 et Nonn....ood ,,,. requeet 8nd 1xpenM of be 11m11eo 10 pertOne wtioee oucted by en lndMduel rvmt venue terinl1, frplc, lncludN
KARMAN DAON BUILD Community f>er\ together the ~ bidder. Ille ll mlty Income .. not mora Mark M Loci!• ··--·• .. AlB• Y• • a""•. (II r61hl clMnltlg glr1, fem~ wlll ING NEWPOAT BEACH with eppurten~ 111eteto, City Wiii ~ 1ne amount .o than"" eutreni povwny In-Thie statement wea fled ~~ .... 145-ncM contllder mete, 1'150/mo
CALIFORNIA 111 tlglll 111~ In etrle1 .uordance wttll the re1elned upon compllance come guldeflnee (C.t900'Y wm1 the County aeR of Or· • DAllTMlllTI ~, • ~ U111, rof '9q. nd Int .., con. 10 spectnc.a11on1 on Ille 11 lhe wttll the requirement• ~ I ) eetabbhad by lhe o.. ange County on fetlMW)' Ntwporl B11cn So evall now. Shaun a
and • ne4d b 11 ~ office of Ille DlrlC'lor o1 Put>-Gov.rnment eoo. 8«:1ton partl'Mflt ot Health and 2s. 1eee COl'W' tniot ou~fsdell 11 ......... , 1\.-1• e ........ , ...... "-1100 1&1h Strttt ~5pm, 964-2111 • now y He ServtcM t44()2 and ttle prO'</lelone ot Humen s.vicee ,..,.. ,_ .... """" vm1VI .......... ..
H id OECLAllATION Of DATE. OF OPENING ISIOS th• contract document• Publl9hed Of ,. ___ • Publlhad °'nr Coeet tll>'f to ltttwm So Goist Plala ...... onlp lllltluln 10 llM• 1•1 Dover) Prof MIF "" 2•n -l COVENANTS. CONDITIONS ....... -·•1 ...... ----... ...... _. • ....._ I •. ..... ange ......... ....... M ..... 1 .. butlt Giffin atltll~ NO PfTS f'l[AS( ~ ..... n"' .. ., ··-.. ANP RESTRICTIONS In lhe .....,. ..,. .,. ,_...,at ..... ....,.._ .. ",, o ou ... dtutton Deity Pllo1 MarOh t. 10 11 Cely.....,. """' • 1 • •4• 9"K • ., • 8ch home Pvt beth ed "' aald Puf'Cf\allnO Ot'MIOl'I 1n "" of Secunt,. teee · · · a 1, ttM ..., • IHI • .._, -wa11c to bead! Ger ~~-!".!'att ..._...._. City of l"""9 IOcaled at PAOJC:CT AOMINll· Su-05i M.tl2 I ~ $475+\Wtu.. Yt .,.5.,, ....,.,,..1y .,.., o tl t _..,.._, 150n $anc1 ~ Av TRATION All tecll11lc1l l-· =· -,... __ ,,
u Unit 3t u tnown and enue. Irvine, Callfornla qvee11Qn1 f1IMltlV9 10 lhla I -1t PrOf MJF.10 lht CM l'IOme
d .. crlb•d In lhe con· ti7 t4 "'1111 11 30 a m on prOfeCt Pf10r to opentno Dlda Pl8JC M>TICl I W I •I -..Sl 11 Own ti./bdrm 1375/mo
dOmlnlum plen rec;ofded MAl'dl 1a 1t H 11 wf'ltcfl atlal be dlr«1ecl 10 Aon .A""""'fmercs Avail "'/ ... APfW 24• '811In800k 12M8 time and Place bldl will be Morgan AMOCl1te Engl-rtetmOUI ...... P'CJmoue..... PW1Jf1 l&I, .. , I ... Wlftl... ,...,._. ..
14
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1
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P-oe 1711 10 1748 lnCWIYe Pl>~ oC**' 81dt lhell ,,..,, 81 (7 t4) 8S7.0124 f Of ..._ ITATW'f ...-9TAW ~ OrMQe eo.t .. Hll "W R&B~I' Pl quiet prof n/..,.,r
of Offtclel R9COrc'9 Of Of. ~ aubmllled In M ated QIMllOn• relating to the bMI ~ lollo-lnO pertOfle... The~ S*90"'-~ "°' Mwell 5, tO 11, fem lllY 38t 2~8a Hwpt
enge Courl'Y Ce. ..,~ maniao on the prooeA contact Aot>en J ~"' t>ua1neet • M L me, orno &ualneee aa: TM 24, ,... Tll .........., 1W.. I 141· t• .,.__ Condo Ger Pool The atraet addrltee eno outlllc» • 81d• kw Norttl-~ , Purchatll'IO ~t. 23 Art•• Ct • Ne on M ~. se 10 M-1166 JaC. ~Simo. 114, ._, i
0,,_. OOf'l\tnOf't o.ionation. , leectl, CA t HM -·-., _i 9Kl '722·7441nU-7114
'· ' ' '
ltat1h tt d" lut11•/lffitt ._, Mlt I ,..... !! llM CJedMIJ-.. ... Cledlil/.._ Mel CWl/lm•••te !l•!!!•!•!.I __ .;.!!!!I !!l!!!...-....o!!ill m" 14 n11 ;aM&IMIWX..!lr ...,~ UCMT~IOl'O ANT. .. ...mu F ~ ...... ""!'!"'! ... -mliilli5
r.rm .. nr~.r:..-:i~ ·!!.~--L~l~~-~I~ I "*"*-~ fOOd ~ AMOO In Wlfilltli 47_. .........
r-..1Celb'4""°31 Full mulelng. leoe Pwti, C.. ...._ m\llmf .,..,ence fot 1N1M NlneedelNltlftWCWMn Htgt\ ~ -,_.. ,_ .... l'MllDclllllft.
C0Mnrbelld\, .. Pf9f, airS:~~\~ e:JM7WIH.... Ii I i:fl/Mo"':P'-.~ ::.....~: ::-... ~, .. ~:.: =::C'.:"O: n-Mnkr28A2~Me.'475 111 a._...,...._,._lt IO&c.17A.o411 ...... 1714tortippt ....,.. ._ ._. .,.. ,,.._ ... ,MO.C..
+ 'Autlle t5Mll1 meg NlWPORT IEAC.. Aecell EwnlnO ed In t~e ... l lllftJIY/1119f *'*"· M.L TW dliy .....
RMMTE lhr 3 IR • £·2.tOOeqrt f(UI) ADS r:~Oft.:.To~:f TwoP.,.,.Tlme&two,._ For .,_,... tulle in :.Wc:'._~W:..._u_to-,.,....-,-,.--,......,,, .... ~-.,,.
pool+ u 'uttc111 '12c2.M1-..!'4002 /rrt0 ... 1 aA1n"°"1•s1~··1110, ARE FREE . nm. dettcet Polttlof19. tMM. "°'· ""'__... .... "'' ·~ ....... u... ..,.. • ... cll'fv "'° 1-1fiii;mf;,il11i•li;iiiuiliiTi•Ni•Gir-iiiiiiiil"iif•iiiiiiiili~~ " · • '" -• v ,... · l l m 'M A"PI" et lnduatrlel 1\#\/lnt__..... .,_...., .. .._..... .. .., MO. ~ ~ • l8MCI ONMTOM _ ... _,,_ ,. , .,._ ..... _ = .....,_ NUW or OOi I ellll: lft
Rmmle wanted M/F 28R Oc.enVlew2otow/w. HomeHealthC.. ~Of()rtngt~ •-.a,._ •. -. MOTnsnl KITCHIN le 1122 ,CM. IMMed_..*'191or ... & ~ ........ 1w. .... &
condo, fullY tum, NB r .. Wiel tp11oe & ltOt9Qe Cal.• ofAIMftoe Cr.CSl t Union; 15901 4-1 In ,_..W-F ._ Hlrtnt ~ a11ll1 •. ,._. °'1M o.noer,-..,:lft,..,11s.
ff()Olmo ~8-0394 t1150mo FUhloni.t.and Redhill, t'9 101; TU9tln. CellU.AM.U..1222 I --per wlil, ,.._ 722·at00. apeo; w/9'_,...._ I
M/F rmmt• owr 50/Wht (714) 040-0755 MJ ... 11 MANAGER . (714) 2"-4144 W. lllllTJIY ~ m 11r.1t. CM. PHOTOili••1•tea ~--.-
ahr IQ 28A 2be 11Pt A.ft Offloe Spact Avellable. GEN Of'ICe-PIT ftex ht, Needed for ..... ~ •P I WI '" '*"'-.. .,._, '6iiV'i DiWWW req. 'leiry ,.... rent. Gar. Singte or Sult• In good 1~1• opening for IUll Vetted due• le. typlnt. ttg1ou1 ts yr o9d Co. ~ fl\. pl\ ~metwe/t.oneet, L&.Wldl and.._.. lllo
Furn. 112 utlt Rec . .,... toe. on Newport A"'d. Found: llQ bledl 1-n.,t:toa. time C*trk:I Meneow. 13.50/lltart, 557-3200. looet•d In Newport ~· tood & ~. n·•mkr 7 U·IOOt, Uc.~ .... ~
Smoklng0KIMO..o293HB e31..0140A81cforSal\dy 1tth/Htrbor, CM. GIRL ,AIOAYT I IMot\.'°'"9~. ~. IS1.-.Z •
AOOm1/E'11de. Mllr b• PRESTIGIOUS N 8 omce Wrkdye 548-1323, Mutt en)oy worklna wtth • l!!:IJ hMvy ~. ~ be 1110 IMI, CM. •n• ...
S400. utll Pd+ prl'(ll. OulllSt.Lge2tm,llghtA 754-0575 • f!J~~~n. bperl•no• !,~=~;el(; ~c.::m~~ 161441 M/P '° _... tn e1 oper.
AnotMr rm $275. AftP elry. M70 mo to mo or FOUND dart! e.,loo c.t. no ~· hd Send,..,... to: PO lox ----Ml I J LIW ....,,.. "'M.a. ~
n·amkr MW223 Iv meg ...... 833-3381 white, •bout 2 yre, we of* en u~t ben-oPPrt. lm1 gtOW'll oo. N-2640. Ntwoort. leech, le __.... 1111p#IOllC!one ...,....,.. o.. a. eNp, °"'°"* ter4., in.-
The ... ..... .... Harbor View HomH. eflt PfOQfatn, pa6d va-llN!r Pff CMe 84-7111 CA tffeS, AtWn: T... tor .... foiOwtl•: t6oft ,.._ ~ .. llO K:':L control Cell 1...S • ........ ••••ltletl E 17th St, Coet• Me.a tM0-17N ~::-.: ~~ Piii Tm t bllll/t ... FIT o; W*-·So .. eo.t Hwy, L.eaune ~ 1-6711 LO.!. daye/nUH. Tvee·'''
For the Roommete your'• eoo.1200 9Q tt t1.10 per LOST: 00id'HOQ9 bmnQ. eurenee S•l•ry plu• BookkHP•rllyplet. • 1 ... ,.~rtd Dey Ho.l-let\ t-10ern, M-f. E.OE ULD-.a/11 _m_IOf_,1"1'1_1111_ ... ..;._ __ __,_,,.,
IOOklng For·s.t.c1ed by 1q It groa Avlll lmmed. Sat 311 Sw.p meet,e.l. mlteege ;elmt>ureement PtMNnt onloe In ~ In Mon ttwv C L WaMld M & part"4:1me lor .,. i .. your need• 4 meuurect Call tor •PPt to ... Pentn? Rewwd IM&-2852 · Corona del Mer. t7M271 XdiUiliMI Frtdey. :::"tam . 12 un6que Otft atore. A1JfJ1Y
compa0blllty.2f1·5n7 8:30-5 30 , Cr a ig LOST·~ 16-Feb) Fem ~t Appllcent mu8t llPe)t)f In Apply 7am only, Noon No Dhone oe19 ....... In'*'°"• 8undeY Slt l w l n ta11 Waat .. 2711 831·12te grey.':'abt>y w/wtlt 10 pereonatDallYPliot:330 Nll&LW M~Yedlt• plH;e tit SIHPY IV DI t>twn~or'T'*'9 LEI , 111••
dOOdOIMi\meJen<f111u-mo1. 4th/Merlgold. W1tt Bay St .. Coete ':;,.c.::'~c:! 1831 ~tla.CM. Hotlow '&.ane, uouna °"'.-..~ ~~2.f~~eoo10-5E..(U.23.louftA'Olit,_.
dlo or bech In CdM or N.B rernu bleck loQO CdMar 64()..4255 M... Ce. ~ 9-' 1 a.vtcie Company hM -·-8Mct\ ~ ect In 10da!Y'• ~~ ""'a';"'A2 ... ...,_ I io./ ...... dllp. l 11ID -up to 1450. 733.-0321 p~~·• eton.m. ~-.4 p.rn. ( lrQM. --. . for. -... !ewt FULL TIME VEGeTOMOOli COOKS Piii* on Pege At end In~ ...:._ ,.._ 7-"'"'l•lnO MOO. ~ 3:3().9pm/546-9500, I.JU ..._., t ~ .. ). .._..,._ -~-, thin, be IUN to vi.ti Ull ,.,. .._ n•n -v-• .,., i-,-....,,....___,..,,,.,.....,....,,.,.,,.....2'"
1038, Ladd. taatrdal Pr~~ PfOfillen'fttltl ptOf•-., ............ 1111• pay r o 11 Cle t II . CLA88EHOU>1 LICENSE •ILll'I the F.ny crOllllnO. AltO KfTCHlH ~· 30-40 _.., _,.,.. __ ,,_ Aeepot.albllt ... lnoll.lde HOU8 EXP.lllEO. •: lllG 11111 I PM needed en .. ....,,t ...,. • ..., .._..._..
11 If ti H I tat 1 Ing, i~::=I•~ ,:'.l..~_2>·~ ,!'112 ~iewtng. lnputlno & pro-GORDON MOVING & ~ J.o.ttone Home Heltttl C.. Boollkeeper tor P..,,al & CMl'I & r9ena 'NJ/NlllllJ 1741 ........ n.1n111. 213~1793 ''V'' .............. ,'1V"Vll' ;:::,,::v-~c:-& STOA.,~ INC . ~~&Cotd ofAIMt1ca AocounttP.oie. Ootcl'. .... ofr.tn-7171
•tn-c'"'i _tng..,.t -ca-,-g .. a-r.""'V .. "'Y• FREE ~TANOINO Tiil I fUT••y UUI !Mlea1)a.lal 11!! llghl typing. Ex~lent LIM Cook8. 91 and..,. SERVICf STATION WW!lw & °"* ,,_ -.
clean/dry, eleo, ht cell, Nr Lrg Show Room & Ottteee -~ C!mR Po:RICin. beneftt• padtega Non-... UIT. PIT lhtftll llVllll 7 d8Ya a/Wlc. •nl a.,. ATTENDANT, pit. 4-lpm. Stove 11tl. Ol•Pt
OCF/Gr l35751-3531 ComerofWMtcllff&lrvlne <111)111-IMI Apply White From Phar-emolt .. onty.~to w/mfg. MuM· heYI UPS ,We heva rec!"!'y S 16/00hr, ...... 1151COM. 1100.8488149 --.,,..,...,.-:=~---Slgnlf)aoeeVlonWMtctltt l2.00+1olllfeny macy, 801 Baker. II••----knowledge & axper ••oedand1emodelld. tcn'*"&~.Wf.. --... E/aldeCM,20112d,1tOfage ta.1111 . 540•2ea2.CM. _....... wltttof> too11. 261-9311 ,.._.~lf ....... lllld etart«, detaM on.med. ••-
onty, minimum IM 8 mo PtnHal lt1tlct1 W H•IUlm M '°' llPPt 1n ~ oooll:lnO FMI Peced oftloe. Cell 8fllDIMna DeptJ ,..,.. 1125/mo+MC 145.-723-4 Pll lTllllll Llll1111 ,_,.,. 1au1 VON KARMAN end belnQ c:nMM. 845-2000 Jene .._ &e ftUlnt EftQIWt
Sttrl t 741 Retail/Office epac., 1ea1 JtM Newpcrt Urok>Ollt. ndt IAVINE,92715 nTffA &/ 225E.17tfl.CM~7111. HAIR STYLIST h · ~540-6l60 LES _,._
-& S2.00 tq. ft. On comer EIOiifiOllHLS e11p'd person lmrnedl-Pteewlt per90n needed to ' 11 WAfTEAS WAITAUSU pe1111ioed, In heir outtlng, T£LEPt.oNE *I 11f -.m• Y STllAIE of MacArthur & Cout 841.se27 atety. Kathryn 844--8722 work In NB lne agency. PlllllP 111'111 COCKTAIL SEAVERS: perme l "'1W. mlbture, 111' 1fft1. 'I ~ s6:~:CC:d!v:i1,~at>M1 t~:~~~~~!:~ lc~1tll -••-.ua. ~~~-'1!:Po~=ut:::. lmmedl•t• opening tor ~S:~1~'dv::S : ... ~~· 111...so1 No-~~-~g:~~::.,OMl~m. f:!,~/frr' ~w;r·l! ~·2~~~~w~ ~!~ la1tncti1a 31121Me~. h~:::. ~mo; ~:,:~ :=:1~~ ::~ =· :=":er~~ :Z.:!:~ .. 1..~ !net llf. •tllDfM...... Se;.'; Aen, M;;;;:'F°':i c.11 733--1• Iv fNO. 6 °". ·· r pm (7 14)67S..900 ; APPLE ii.iii. Private I medlc:al Ina. bitting & fol-uper., pest.up bade-PIT, FIT, .. "'*'· ~. 8M ... 1pm, ~ 8drm IUltl, IEthM AIM, C ... ttcial , leltofl S 15"r. S..up l'lme, 10W up. Type, Ne, good PRIVATE P. 0 . • 0 C AK· gtound helpful. >Ont ben-WlnmfWllTllml A1k for 1eCtt 751-1187 paid .-iy, cir-f tor etwrywd. .,.. ...... t•
u. •-•/Int hctat PUJU~f busln•uyetern564-5S40 phone tedln!Que & good pol't .,_pit, Mon-Fri, eftt• tnetudlng medlcal & ~ mlMnUm 5 )'W'I aw•-atudente & hol 1M4Yee, drMt wl rrWrOit. qn WI ..,, _ HM beneftte. Call 253-7324 flex.ltite tn. 1sa-aaoa. dental tnturenoe, con-Fine ~----....--c:.11KlmbertV182-6144. f001~d t1soo ~ • SCIENCE TUTOR. _..,,..... e~e. Con-._---. -•.. 3 "--'-...._ .-........ · la1ia"1/0ftict ltat SPARKUNG i Unit fui. Biology, Cham. & PhY*9. MEOICA. L BACK OFFICE. PIT CLERICAL WORKER. ~An..., M2-4S21 eict. WlM k~ge • inuM. -WANTED • ENERGETIC ----27H blUtf, 72K grON Mlclng Dr. e. Belman 87S-3148 femlty practtc., Hunt. Mat. woman, exp .. to Ot• 291 FleJdbte houf8 required. Al etlffta PIT FfT 0.. Pt. Mlf-mo11vated peep .. '. t:' •=:. = --P'"'!"l'WP,.""...,-"l!P I "95 000 Bier 953· 1220 Bch. E.JCper'd, X·Ray per-aena. ftle, llte btclcpg, AeuMsonty. Only liPPIY &In Juen Clip. ee1.et2e Pleelent WOf1lJn.g con-· W .. •3000. 1368, 645 & 453 ' · mil. Good aaleiry fOf em-hrt n.x. $5 ht. 548-0135 •1111..-r If you meet •bove cmione. no up needed, qua.n •100• 7 ....
Sq. Ft. 1017 WESTCLIFF, adatH flaaaci1I .·-t1 t clent girt. 842-oe85 PfT Ofc wortc for mature c;rlterte. Cell for llPPt on PAIT Tm.. wtll train.~ In. FIT ltroYMt din. '"' .er· md
Nwpt Bch 541·S032 Agt -_!f!H P/-Ill UI •-eom__.._..t• lndlvtd~ •Y PlllT Monday or Tuwt.y btWn Some f*1c wen, phone or PIT am.. No = tbl/3 tv., 4 ctn. ...,...., ,_ •• __ _ ...-...-330 W. a.y 8tfMt 9em-11em onty481-4865 & lflls>olna. 14 per hour. ~ QS>Pt'y for c:Hf'9 doeec tcp oond...
427 Sq. Ft. OffloeSpaceat l11iHll fer hit ca.n.a "--e 3111t. 5 d-...., wMec 3 ~ uel, ecc:un:te 'YPlnt r• Coate.WW. ca. 82e27 Ave Feet Reataurent Student OK. '31-9213 ltudenta or houll'...,_, '350. twnbedw,.,,,., ... below martlet pric. Xlnt .---.,.. • _,_ ,._. ' QUl(ed, cell ~1831. ••• •••1 328 ,,_.___ 1 .........
Freeway ec:cess. Cost• ·~ AXevsifttR ReeoEB per dey. c.ii 432-eo 14 ---"_.,.... --1--------= .... ....,. dbf......,... 111-Gl47
Mesa. near South Coe11 COUNfRV d1H SHOP 3 days per wk. Rett req. Coeta Meea PIT POSITl()N..~ 251 8w:tl ParMlme .,...9 3700 COMt Hwy. COM. DANISH ~ WEiiNBi
Plaza (714)548-2982 SHOPPING CENTER Laguna8cl'l494-1833 CleriulJOiHM 5ti1 ~ twks:' req, ~· e:t:: llll WAITRESSES AND ..w WWW mu DESIGHED, eald T• ----..,,--,,-..-$41,000 Incl Inventory & -1 exp req • ..-HOSTESSES · Lete...,. . .,.,., dW\lngu:bte3'x5'...,.._ 525 sq ft. $425/mo. Fl•ture . Agt, Doris t1alcpr1Chdcr, wMkdaya, .-&llPll lllllT. 50wpln date Input, haevy NnQ9. greveywd. Apply Attention Homemuert, Retired ~ Pl...,•ed, Ing to I' MOO. ea..
BalbOI Penln. Pvt entry & (213192µ270 car r e q . 2 • 6 Pm, PIT ettemoona P09tlng phn oontec:t, gen c1er1c:111 *awaT IMD* et fhe Grinder 1400 Pa-high ec:tloOt Mnlof'I. cot-but not nee nnry. uo -. DUH8AA 7• tote
batn Clean 760·9792 • --759-1068. NB AR/AP. gen Otc:. saiarY dutlee, call Pat 261-5041 F1n .. t°'9,aee6t~l'9l&eble c:lftceo.at ...Y. NB lege ltudenb & moon-(11•>91...... S200. Metc:hJno cMJr
BAYFRONT BLOG ··~llHH Dea"tiCI II open. Mike 650-2570 ... , •• , ~~~-.:=::.1 s•-llghtertl Talemerk .. lng laJa n•t ...... 175. 837-"M EXECUTIVE SUITES -~rtuiti" zt04 . s.403 ..-u ~ firm needl 8 Peoc* wt'O .-J
s 1 35· & UP 642 .. 944 1·9 ~ELCOME f(>r .... cf~':'p:~.10'C':u0p~e~m~~~ Ctwlfted MYlrtlaJng p~~.~~r~~ Ugtlt typing.
541 EARN :~ ~~~ K~ ~ sm ~ ..S:O'.'="rm ":?
NEWPORTBCH Ofc.apnc of Truclttng Compeny trantporutton 4-8 TILEPllllllLIS mgmtcow/bueyphoneS. ,_ ... _ ptomotetNl.,...ftl-.t A~RAC~!!!r~ 2---.w1~_._
643 aq tt al'lwf Nr PC H through Chaper 11 Hrs/Dy M·F 875-1790 ~a + 8:30-1, _.._.. unll('V ~ Only,....._ omen_..,. '850. 7•1aM
& Post office 848-2947 Proceedings. O.adllne -~---ln<llvldual needed l0t full-M.;~· "'~~~to work 1111521 iWiift 1111U11L I ment 11 e p.....m --.. ~o.n:~ n.--......., --r 3118/86. Mlntmun bid Mt --~ tlm• temporary tel•· o.I ~. ~ phone HMded for AutomotlW & W. r:t: l)holM voiee. Hour'I: M-F .. ,. ....-• ..._.,., ,...._., • c:~~ledpl~g,s;l~~-=·1,ti{;: at S9157.S1. Single tuC-totakecareoh•ctertyper-phones ..... poeltlon. manneramu8t.M2-1803 Real Eatata Claaelfled ~ 5:30pn to t:QOprn, Sat-Z"; poeltlon. W~-C:: 3~.,tw.Het:'ie
cesstul bidder to ba sons 24hr ehltta, 4 day Poealbly permanent after U•ml•IT A~ S-. at • Ml.Y urday e·ooam to 1:00pm. ~ · tbl CONOie 28 5 E Cit Hwy 675-6900 awarded all uaeta on wk, • pr99are m .. lsllgl 2 month•. Minimum 45 rlf)ldly expending local ...... H S1art et &4.00 per hoUr. Anewer A No 202 • t 195 -. ~ oerte
DESK SPC $150/mo G•r· terms of Cash within 10 hsetcpng, weges negot on wpm typing required. Mutt type 50wpm. flllng. ~. ~·· tt you.,. kddrig ~extra Coinmllelofil & ~ !"2-4300 24 l'n. hd~d $86. 1 11
den otc .,. patio wl bay daya of acceptance expt 720-97~. 78(). 1943 Salee e,.,._.__ ...... ful heavy phonel & otMr Mlf-d'9dpllned lndMd~ ~ ::':· OJt Ilk• P'1v8M ct.-end -..-• ·v Call 1·800-442·5285 " · ................. , .... .., · clertcel office dull••· uce1en _..... .. ... --• view Gd parkg 842·5010 TtlC~tn 4151 c.n Kathleen Otlon '°' Mu11 enjoy working uata mey Min t to go peec. e Magic ~ enn. For in.-
FULL SERVICE OFFICES Succeutu. I Orange County . Info. or ~1rnent. w/loU of people Sllary Income (Mlary + com-Mountain, Knotta Berry View c:8I Mery Grant. .. Avall. furn View. Business .... lmmedl-INSTRUCTOR DOE. Call 852--0m Mk mi9alon). benefit•. end Fann, Oft Win Pnziee end M2-4333bwtntwn-3pm penins• Now Av•il•bl•
MecArth Bl d 81 port ate fina.nctal bad(lng for Proof machine operator. 111111 ll&IT f0t Mary ~t opportunl-Awerdt, Call ue nowt We M-f= or 142·M78 efW
ur v · r Big Bustneu Op· 15/hr per wk, CM .,. .. , •HLf PUT · 1Y· SaJee end/or actverti. heYI NV"eral opeillflOl In 5:30pn ,_..F,
area. 851·1342 pcrtunlllel FOf Info & call Coutllne ROP 91111 U.lll•IT/TYNT Ing' exper1enoe helpful. C.M .. H.B. or F.V. Calltodey1tar1torno11own CAR ROUTES
IRVINE/nr OC Airport, 1 or Appl call Berry Ruuett 979-1955. ~. • .330W. Bay St. P/Ttme, muattype~. Send reeurne to: 142-4333 ~"'c:'~~~~o:; 84t·9502or760-7255 PlllOl llLTUMI ~t.~2~~~~~ :!n":'c:::r.ce:~;:~ -~-,-.-.-.-.-.-.. -.. -.-.-.•~••••••• .. .,..
ceptlontst. tax llb<•ry. rn-••rt I " T.D. l Needed FIT fOt 3 veer . Ml.TN.IT •• DEl:.IVERY DRIVER houN computer. copy I W hU money. fOf Olds. P:or lrvlne Prognm. llllllL W • SECRET ARY p O Box 15e0
mechtne. prole11tnal. T.D's. $10,000/up. no Req ECE & eicp w/yng N..d ~ to -eo.ta·..e...CA.9282e •
lrtendly atmoapher, credll"'/nopenatty.Call c:Nldren.Calt 552-1ee7 leam.~hefpful.FIT. l9llYmT • Dally Pilot motor route Poal:5~~~~~~ ac:;ev •. Oenlaon Auoc 873-7311 Pnf"dM&J/ $4/hr to atart. 957.3073 nt I : available In Huntington
NEWPORT BCH. Sublet AllHUMllt••• Malal1tr1d" SIM ........ ,,.n.. sr:ng·~~: ••JW • Harbor area. 1-2 hours
preetlglou• office In Laeucnant1 n• BXRkiNd Tuee thru Sat. Beaut. paper on Plgl At Ind lllllln "*'"' : per afternoon.
Weeterly Place Bldg. -& Ull•t* Proof m41Chlne operat0t. 5 working enwonrnt. Type U-1, be eure tovttlt uel N••ded f o r Reta II •
t500 Quell St. Fully *--yr• min 111·up In banking 45WPM. Exper. pref. Mwrtlafng S.... •t e • Call 642-4333,· Monday-
lumllhed. Incl: Recep-P«tonallzed Relumee & to teach 15/tn per wk Appty In pet90n Tuee ttvu ta-I" rl!Ptdfy expanding IOc9I • tlonlat 2 phone llnee & letlef't. Sarne day MNlce AM's CM area cell Sat. Dana Pol.nt Mar1na HorneHeetttieat. MW9P11P9r. A9gf..aM. • Friday 10-5 P.M. Ask for
phone. 1at MO. fr... avail. RESUME WORKS eoutllne ROP 97~1955. Co. 24705 Dena Or, Dena °' Arnettc:a Mlf-dlec::lpttned lndMd· • Art
752"'8265 111-1.... Pofnt Hatbor. Ullfl tn"Y wn •XC:IMI It e '
Mttrtllla1 let"
$2.40 per day
Tl'lat'1 ALL you pay lor
3 lines, 30 d•Y mtntrnum
In tl'le
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
Income (Mlary .. com-•
mi.Joni. beneftte. enes • Orenge Coa•t ~~~: : Delly Piiot :
1ng expet1ence • must. • 330 W. aa., Drive • Send ,...,,,,. to: • •
Me11nc1a Thec:keiry • Coet8 ...... CA • ·.::.e:~ :..!.~········· ............ :
330W.891St.
Colla Mw. CA. 82e27 MOTOR ROUTE
$ $
SALES
MANAGEMENT
OPPORTUNITY
Crew Supervisors are now
needed to work In a pro-
fessional management pos-
ition.
We now have openings for
mature adults to supervise
newspaper sales crews.
Responslbllltles wtll 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
Aak for Aon
842-4333
E•m Extr a C•.tt
Ft!r Dell~•ry Of Thi• p.,,_
HUNTINGTON BEACH
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
INDEPENDENT
Deliver 1 day a week. N
collect Ing. no soliciting.
Must have dependable car,
truck or station wagon and
insurance
CALL 842 -1444
Ask for JoAnne Craney
If ,.. .,. .. 1•11•••• N4 ••t tt • .........
WIWAllTYOUI ................. .., ... .. .... ,.. .................. . ... , ................ . •••r • ulut•a ••14.
Cel T.-,1
A* fw T.C.
(7 t4) 642-4111
'
, I
[
v
0 CHICK IVERSON
Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi
441 E. C111t lhry., l••••rt l11cll
113-0IOO
Highest Quality Sales & Service
0 HUNTINGTON CHRYSLER/PLYMOUTH
Visit our A ward Winning Service
Department. The # 1 Chrysler
Corporation facility in Orange County.
16661 BEACH BLVD. HUltTUIGTOlt BEACH
842-06 31 • 540-5164
lllaillD
btasiliy
"SPECIALIZI NG IN MERCEDES IENZ"
And all Othef Fine European Automobilet
L A.'s only authoriHd °'n•t dealer
ALL MAKES AND MODELS
714-557-4040
S~E;:•~~!~~:. ~~:G &
''WiJere Professional Attitude Prevails"
8P9(:1 .. lrlng In Europeen D•llHry. E1c:ellenl a.tectlon of
.... end cerefully prepered UMd BMW-a always tn stock
835-3171
208 W. 1at St., Santa Ana
Corner of Broadway & 111 SI Closed Sundaya
G STERLING
SAUS -SERVICE -UASl•C -'HTS
Overseas Delivery Specialists
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
BMW -ROLLS ROYCE
1540 Jamboree Rd.
Newport Beach 840-·na.a~
G JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS
1301 Ow/I St. -#Nw C•r Location
1001 Ou•ll St. -R ... M Olvl•lon
(!) World's Largeat Selection of 0
Mercedes Benz ~
833-9300
Wes · Lmill · Parta • Serfkt · W, llllf
O sO~~th County~
VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU
CALIF'S =1 I LARGEST VOLKSWAGEN DEALER
NEED WE SAY MORE?
Parts Open M-Sat 8 • 5·30 Sat 9 • 4 pm
Service m-Fn 7 30 -6 p m
11111 BEACH Bl VD HUNTING TOH 9EACH
714/ 842-2000
0 NABERS CADILLAC @
2800 HARIOR ILVD., COSTA IESl
(114) 140-1100 (213) 111 -1288
• Best Pnces • Convenient Location
•Great Location •Super Service
• Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales _People
~EA.
-8(..C.11
PACIFIC
OCEAN
o COMMONWEAL TH
VOLKSWAGEN ~ 'FAMILY STORE SINCE '53' .Jil ~ Sal.a -Service • Leulng ~
Ml-0110
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
20IO larhr lh4., hsta le11
142-0010 tr 140-1211
0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS
• Ease of Ownership terms
• Lease conventence-12-72 mo.
• Select from 100+ new and pre-owned
• Oellvet)' In Europe option
dlal Mercedff
714/213 837-2333
Sant• Ana (5) FrHW•Y @
8eech In Bu.na Park
0 808 LONGPRI'
Or•• County's Oldest & Ll~st Ponti.it< Oe•lenhtp
at IN<h 8M:t. I the Gatdtti GroYe ft'HW9y
f7t4 nz .... 11 f7t•t •N-ZIOO
W• perform •II Pontt.c warranty work. ~n:tteu or
where you origin.ally purchased )OU' atr.
.-llOMMY llVm ..... ...,., .........
[iYAJ~
BUICK Laius JAGUAR ISUZU
0 •
the PROFESSIONAL APPROACH
714-979-2500
2925 Harbor Boulev ard
• Costa Mesa. CA •
a mcrJD1 a mcv.ai
SUBARU PONTIAC
• TRANS AM
• flR£81RO
• 5000 sn
• PARISENN£
• BOHN(Vll. l[
• GRANO PRIX
• S~ COfMRllBU
• T 1000
• GRANO AM
2480 Hiit.er .. d.
C.ta ..... """*1 Btldt
714/549-4300
SLASHES
• PRICES! e
LIQUIDATING
1985 MODELS
IHl(R Nf1 CMClllST NOS
WE Wll ~
NOT BE lJ«>ERSOlO! ---·--
SUBARU
2410ltlr'-llwct.
C.ta lltu Nnpert Btach
714/54H300
G ORANGE COAST JEEP/RENAULT
# 1 ,, Tiii .,,, ,,,
1111JH,SI/ti111 I,,,,.
~O.D1n2e. sALEs Loast • seAv1cE
,.,. .... .,. 11.1110 • LEASING .. Mi'•i023 • ACCESSORIES OEPTI
G UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE
HONDA
2llO Herbor Blvd.
Coet. 11•1 540-0713
------··--·
25~
MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1986
Astronaut· remains found . .
Shuttle's cabin resting 100 feet below
surface;recoverytotakeseveraldays-
• CAPE CANAVERAL. Aa. (AJ>)-
Seatchcrs have found remains of
Challenger's astronauts in the debris
of ~he .shuUle's crew compartment,
which 1s resting on the floor of the
Atlantic Ocean I 00 feet below the
surface, NASA announced Sunday.
A search ship usin• sonar about 25
Marathon man
Ric Sayre of Aebland,
Ore •• won the lnaacmaJ
Loe AJlCelee Marathon
Sanday. Bl.
Movlngln
A o conalden form-
& rnolatlonary ao•-
emment. mo•ee ber of-
flcee into palace. A4.
California
Man opens fire during
church services, killing
one and Injuring two
others./ Al
Gas price wars are begin-
ning In some cities, but
big price declines are not
yet widespread./ Al
Nation
Shuttle astronauts,
angered by lack of con-
sultation In safety Issues,
are demanding more say
In management de-
cisions./ A5
World
Phlllpplne rebels have
suffered setsbacks, but
some analysts believe
that could be shortllved If
reforms are not forth-
coming./ A4
Sports
UC Irvine's men's basket-
ball team has been In-
vited to participate In
post-season play In the
NIT Tournament./81
Wally Joyner has a
chance to take over first
base for the Angels./81
Ttie NCAA basketball
tournament announces
participants In this year's
champlonshlps./81
Entertainment
Modern drama and social
satire mix In "The Day
They Shot John Lennon"
at Orange Coast./ Al
miles northeast of Cape Canaveral
made a possible identification of the
compartment late Friday, and divers
Saturday positively identified com-
partment debris and crew rcmams. a
NASA statement said.
Recovery of data tapes that were in
the cabin could shed light on the cause
Coast's
• oceanic
nursery
in peril
Visitors advised
to see, not touch
tide pool creatures
The Orange Coast's flat,· sandy
beaches may be playgrounds to sun
bathers and surfers. But the rock
outcroppings arc home to purple
spiny animals. black prehistoric-
looking snails and a variety of plant
and animaJ life with colors that span
the spectrum.
Tourists flock to the sandy beaches
to work on the "perfect tan," while
others discover tide pools to look for
LAURA
RI
Focus ON rHF Nf ~~
the "J>Crl:cct find," which includes
anything from a purple sea urchin to a
lobster.
But these tide pools arc en-
dangered, according to the Depart-
ment of Fish and Game. In the past,
overzealous sightseers · have taken
such a toll on these ocean aquariums
that some biologists estimate it may
take as long as 25 years for them to
return to their ori~nal state.
Animals living m the tide pools arc
unique because they successfully
adapt to harsh changes in weather
conditions and yet arc extremely
fragile when handled carelessly by
man.
Too many times enthusiastic vis-
itors have trampled and poached \he
pools in an attempt to build a replica
of Mother Nature'sartwork in a home
aquanum, sc1ent1sts have said.
(Pleue He TIDE POOLS/ AS)
Teens get
advice on
life during
Focus '86
By LAURA MERK
Ol IM .,.., Not .....
Doug Smith, a center for the Los
Angeles Rams told of his strugg.le to
get to the big leagues while just across
campus a 14-year-oldgirl spoke about
drug abuse on her 53rd day wi thout
using drugs.
A woman who had been severly
beaten and shot in the head while
h1t.chhi1Ung warned students of the
dangers of thumbing a ride. while
wheelchair tennis champio n Brad
Parks talked about overcoming
hand leaps.
For the second time in two years,
Focus '86 attracted a number of
speakers to Laguna Beach High
School to speak on topics ranging
from skin care to drug addiction. The
day-long event is sponsored by IM-
of the explosion, but it was not known
how well the tapes survi vcd. Recover-
'"' the compartment wreckage and remains could take several days,
depending on the weather and sea
conditions, NASA said.
Seven crew members died when
Challenger exploded 73 seconds after
liftoff' Jan. 28.
Matk Weinberg, a spokesman for
the presidential commission in-
vestigating the shuttle explosion, said
he could not comment on the sipifi-'
cance of the find to the commission's notified," l&ld Bl'UQC Jarvis, whole
probe. son Grqory died in the explosion.
"J would not want to characterize "All throuah tbiJ inveltiption I
its importance. That's to be de-haven't really beeft contacted."·
tennined. Clearly all pieoef of Tbe Orlando resident aaid the
evidence arc important," be said. dilClOvery of the cabin helps to put his
NASA's statement said family . mind to rest. •
memben of CWlenaer's crew have "I never did like the tho\llht of
l>cen informed 8f the discovery, but them bcina blown to pieces. .. be~
the. father of one astronaut said be 0 1 wou.ld have liktd to have bachome
learned throuah news reports that the tan&ible proof that they just didn't com~ment had been found. disappear."
"f m anary that I haven't been Marvin Resnik, the father of
...,,...,......, ............
Rodaer Healy (left). 15, and Andy Yelland,
14, Check tide poola for tiny eea creataree.
Tbey were .-,...S to draw all tile onee
tbey obeened.
astronaut Judith Raruk, IUd NASA
told him about the di1COvery bd'oft it
was made public.
.. h's not~ &o brina anybody
beck," he saad in Ala'Qft, Ohio .
Francis W. Scobee, wboee 108
Francis R. was commander ol dae Cballenaer, said the 4i1covery .. ;u.
opem up a lot of WQ'dnds IPin-"
The othen kiUed were Oarill8
McAuliff'e1 a New Kampabire
tehoolteacner who was ftvill& •
(PIMM ._ 81111TTLs/d)
Political
foe says ·
Frizzelle
invisible
Baldwin unopposed
In Democratic race
for Assembly district
. 81 PAUL ARClllPLEY
Of .. ...,,... ....
CallinJ incumbent Nolan Frizulle
"the invisible le&islator," Democratic
challenaer Jack &Jdwin has launched
what he called 0 an improbable but
not impossible" campaign to unteat
the 69th district usembfyman.
Baldwin, running uno~ for
the Democratic nominauoo in the
June ~mary, said Frizulle detervcd
the mclcname for contributina little in
legislation since his election to the
Assembly in 1980.
"Lots of people don't care for him
because he doesn't do anythina; he
sort of takes up space," Baldwin said.
.. Tbc less be does the prouder be is.
u1e he thina he•a kcepins-SoT-
emment out of people's lives."
Althouab he considers Frizulle a
.. decent, educated person.'" Baldwin
said the assemblyman .. contributes
little to creative problem solvina."
In fact, Baldwin said bi.s own Democratic Party is like I.be Re-
publican• in its failure to promote
visionary leaders rather than ··ao00
mechanics."
"'Tbc best people a:ren 't surf...ma to
tbe top, and we act mcc-hani<5 who
can play politics. he said "They're
&ood at understandinJ the structure
and bow to work with n. but they lack
vision to deal with society's prob-
lems."
Understandably. Baldwin reserves
his strongest criticism for the Re-
publicans who. he cbar&es. speak out
only when they're attacking someone
rather than offering solutions.
"They use fear tactics rather than
vision. It makes problems worse, and
makes people less trustful of their
politicians." be said.
"Traditional politics is a con-
tributor 10 the problems. lt's reactive.
(Pleue eee BALDWDf/ A.2)
HB planners want
Bolsa linear park
expanded 50 acres
Brad Pub, 198& U.S. Open Wheelclaalr Tennla champion;
apeab to etadeata aboat OTeJ"COllliDC bancUcape. Be wu one
ol a boat of apeaken at Focu• '86 at Lapna Beach llllb·
PACT, a parents grouf formed two drua and aJcohol abuse.
years ago with the aoa of educating To some students. the seminar was
parents and students to the dangers of (Pleaee 11ee TltSJlf8/ A2)
By ROBERT BARIER °' ... ...,,... ...
Huntinaton Beach Planning Com-
mtssionen want to put about 50
additfonal acres into the Bolsa Chica
linear park to ensure that it's Larae
enou&h to accommodate bikers and
riden on its scenic trails from
Huntinaton Beach Central Pirie to
Bolsa Chica State Beach. ~ plannina comm1ss1on unani-
mously approved a resolution callina
fo r the park to contain 177 acres -as
opposed to the 120 10 130 proposed
bv city and Oranae County officials.
•
Planning Comm1ss1oner G raoc
Wmchell. who drafted the rcsoluuon
along with colleague Richard Rowe.
said the goal 1s to make sure theTC's
aboul 85 acres in the park devoted
strictly to public use.
"The staff couldn't gi ve us figures
that wt could use." W incbell said. "so
we settled on what seemed reason-
able. We thouaht 85 acres would be
the minimum l'igure humans need ...
Winchell and Rowe and othen say
they fear that 011 dnlhng opcrat1ons.t a
Southern Cahfomia Edison Co. ta-
cility and the relocation of en-
vtronmcntally scns1uve habttats may
combtne to crov.'d out humans from
the~. •
As a result of a compromise
agreement. la.ndowner Slgnal Land-
mark must relocate about 85 acres of
(Pl-..e ... BOLSA/ A.2)
INDEX
Advice and Games
9ulletln Board
Business
Claaslfled
A7
A3
A 10-11
85-7
A8
87
A8-9
Super Bowl bighit with Chinese TVvi~werS
Com lea
Death Notices
Entertainment
Opinion
Obituaries
Potlce log
Publlc Notteea
Sport1
Tetevtalon w .. ther
A12
A8
A3
B-4, 7-8
81-4
A9
A2
PEKJNG (AP) -Wilham "the
Refri1erator"' f>erry and the Chicago
Bears stomped their way through
millions of household Sunday 1n a
broadcast of Super Bowl XX that
introduced ChmeJC to the my5tcnc
of"ohve ball."
Up to 300 m1lhon Chinese-more
tnan the populallon of the United
States -watched the game, the lint
11mc Amcncan football Wl'I broad-
cast 1n this country of more than I
b1lhon people. accord1na to C'h1na
Central Telcv1s1on
)
"It's fierce, it's intense.'' said 102-
ycar..old Zhu Yonpn as she sat on her
bed 1n Pekina·s Don,chena distnc1.
"I've never attn anythma like it, and f
don't act 1t at all."
Chtnett call the ~me .. pn tan
q1u." or "ohve ball.' because of the
shape of the p1t4lt1n. H11hl~t• of the
clash belwcm t~e .. Ju Xions .. (Oiant
Bear) and .. A1 Guo Zhc" (Patriot)
teams we~ produced by TU lntcr-
nat1onal Corp. ofC'h1cqo for CCTV.
Ttic Bea.rs c:ruihed the New na-
land Pa1not 46-10 1n the Na Laona I
'
Football Lcaauc championship aame
Jan. 26
"We try 10 introduce all sports of
t~ world to our viewers, and Amcn-
can football 1s a fine sport, so we're
sho~ga it." 111d ht Qilun. an editor "ccrv. which paid nothin& 10 air
the_i!mC•
CCTV camcd money. thou&h.
from commercials before a_nd af\er
the "Chao Ji Bc1° (Super up).
1ncludina ad for Cluna-Hcwlctt
Packard.. McDonnell Dou&las C'h1na
Inc and N1kt arhlchc 'hOt ht said
he d1dn•t know how much ponsors
paid.
This week's cdltion of the state-run
neW1papcr O\ina TV News (Zhona-
auo Dian hi Bao) has a front·pqt
story introducina the pme and says
American advert•sers paid S 11
million for one nunute of air tame on
uper Sunday.
H\)lna Vina. l S. who hvn in the
ame back-alley courtyard a
c.cnttnanan Zhu. utd ..,.tch1na the
pmc was p'Clt fun and she would
lovt her tchool to fonn a &c.a.m
"Did you hear that'>" she ll .. ed.
tum•n• awa) from h~ family'
H1tach1 color tekvmon. "They JUI\
called No. 72 the 'Dian B1npt1ft&'
(Electnc Refn,rrator)."
Scventy-t ... o as the number worn by
Perry. the ~pound defensive
lineman. Cluncx rcfrisraton arc
about half the site o( their U ..
counterparts and arc•= the most
coveted houxhotd po~
"That Elean Rcfntentora really ~mc1hcc::..•ar/H\
. -
Al Oraange CoMt DAIL y PtlOT I Monday. Match 10. 198e
SBUTTliE CABIN, CREW LOCATED ...
Pr.a Al NASA's first "ordinary cinzen'' 10
l}leCC; piJot Michael Smith. Elhson
Omzuka. and Ronald McN&ir.
NASA in its sta\emcnt said I.bat.
"ln deference to family wishes,
NASA will not make further com-
ments until recovery operations and
identifications arc complete."
When the remains arc recovered
they wlll be ta.ken to a hospital at
Patrick Air Force Base, about 25 miles south of Cape c.anaveral, said
NASA.
"Assistance in positive identifi·
cation of crew will be provided by
Armed Forces Institute of Pathology
personnel," the statement said.
"Local security measures arc being
taken to assure that recovery oper-
ations can take place in a safe and
orderly manner;' It said.
NASA spokesman Hugh Hams
said be could provide no additional
information on the condition of the
crew compartment or the remams.
Families of the crew members
contacted after the NASA statement
was released refused to comment.
Eleven stups and two small man-
ned submarines have concentrated
their search in recent days in a 350-
square miles area about 20 to 40 miles
nonheast of here. The effort includes
three robot submersibles. seven sonar
ngs and 41 divers.
After the search ship LCU's dis-
covery, operations were suspended
for the night for safety reasons. NASA
said.
The LCU or Landing Craft Utility
vessel, is a U.S. Navy sonar.equipped
support ship which has been used to
help map the ocean bottom dunng
the search for shuttle debris.
On Saturday, "the USS Preserver.
whose divers art thoroughly bnefed
on debris identification. began to
work." the statement said.
.. Subsequent divers provided
A TLA NTIC
OCEAN
0
Ml..ES
pos1t1ve 1denutacauon of ChaJlenger
crew compartment debris and the
existence of crew remains," it added.
In the days after the accident, 12
tons of Challenger debris was picked
up from the ocean surface. Then
searchers turned to the ocean bottom
where recovery is more difficult.
About 5 tons have been rctneved
from the depths. including a 4,2()()..
pound piece of the shuttle's left
booster rocket. which was brought
IOtO port ~turday. r
The left booster was retre1vcd from
210 feet of water as a practice session
for retrieving parts of the right rocket
later from 1.200 feet down.
The right rocket 1s the chief suspect
as the cau~ of the tragedy and
investigators want to retneve its
debris for poss1b~ clues. Some of-
fkials have said the cause may never
be found unless the booster can be
examined.
Four arrested in Newport Beach
in $1 Ocounterfeitcheck scheme
By tbe A11oclatH Press
FBI agents arrested four people m
Newport Beach Fnday for 1nvesttga-
tion of involvement an a $10 mtlhon
counterfeit check scheme that was
used to defraud banks.
The four. three of them
Guatemal".ns. were arraigned m lcd-
eral court an Los Angeles following
their arrests.
Clyde C. Lewis. 74. of Gardena.
was released on his own re·
c°'niz.ancc. A U.S. magistrate denied
bail for Naomi Jerez. 42, Juan
Manuel, 26. and Gerardo CarbaJal. 40. all of Guateo(ala. A bail heanng
was set for Wednesday.
Jerez is also being investigated in
connection with losses totaljng S22
m1lhon at Hacienda Federal Sa vmgs
and Loan in Oxnard. the FBI said.
'l ne Ventura Lounty thnlt was taken
over by federal regulators after 1t
became insolvent.
The arrests climaxed a six-month
investigation 1n which the group
allegedly dealt with an undercover
agent. FBI spok'esman Jim Neilson
said. The group allegedly caused
several banks to lose up 10 S I 0m1 lhon
when the) honored forged and
counterfeit checks. ~e1lson said.
TEENS GET ADVICE ON LIFE ...
From Al
httle more than a free da) from class
work. They were the ones who
1nd1scrcctly stood by the exit, glanced
around and then dashed to freedo m
before the last speaker took the stage
But many other students found the
seminars enhghtenang.
··1t's a great way to teach us aboul
drugs without telling us not to do 1t
These people arc here because the)'
want to tell us something. .. said 16-
year-old Todd .\ust1n.
"And you hear 11 from people )'OU
respect, hkc pro football players."
added Brent Buchsbaum, 14.
Students were allowed to select the
speakers they would hear 1n three
hour-long prcscn1a11on~ 1n
classrooms throughout 1he campus
But Scott Marshall. of Coast V 1ew
Mcmonal Hospital tn Long Beach
was so popular at Focus '84, he. along
w1th Doug Smllh, µve presentation<,
to all the students 1n the gymnasi um
"Who know'i someone you be lieve
has a problem w11h alcohol or drugs''"
asked Marshall
Almost every student 1n the g)'m-
nas1um ra1seo a hand
"No one puts 1n their diary in 6th
grade that 'I want 10 grow up and Ix' a
drug addict.' ·· %1d Marshall. a re-
covering alcoholic who accompanied
a teen-age patient from 1he hospital
Tanya. 14. wa<o nen ous when she
stepped to the podium.
"It was the summer between 7th
and 8th grade A fnend got me some
buds and u was totally rad. I loved at ..
she said of her first expenencc with
marijuana. ·:eut when school started
I was smolo ng everyday afier school."
Tanya. younger than most of the
students surroundjng her, had aged
beyond her years Barely a teen-ager.
she has tned to commit suictd<'
several times. tned almost every drug
available and now as entering her
fourth month in a rehab1litat1on
program.
Afraid she was preaching to her
older peeri.. Tanya said. ''I'm nor
saylDg don't do anything, JUSt do tt in
moderation. l used to be one of vou
and now rm d11Tcrent. I went to.the
extreme:·
Just a few hours earlier. fi ve other
youths talked about their experiences
with aJcohol and drugs.
Soupy, 18. made his fir.;t talk tn
public about his rchab1htat1on.
He began smoking marijuana and
dnnking in 5th grade. Trouble 1n
school land<'d him 1n North Carolina
to live "1th ht<, father Poor grades
there landed him 1n a military school.
where he quickly learned he could
drink cough med1c1nes to get high.
..\t 13 he ran away from the school
and hitchhiked with a friend to
Cahfom1a. Once Ile amved in Los
Angeles, he abandoned his fnend to
get home an time for his mother'"
birthday "I left my fnend 3.000 miles
away from home. I just left him
there." he !>aad as if apologizing for the
hundreth time.
Soup was 1n an out of Juvenile haJI
three times and had a crimmal record
by the lime he was 14. On has last
arrest, three months before
Christmas 1984, the Judge sent him to
a rehab1litat1on center.
"I cried. That was humiliating and
a guy hugged me and told me he loved
me uocond1t1onally. I didn't want to
be there. There were homosexuals
there. Or at least. that's what I
thought. Because I never had any-
lh!ng uncond1t1onal 1n my ltfe." he
SIJd. "I didn't understand It, I
thought they were after my money."
After his release. Soupy said he so
afraid to be on his own that he
returned to the hospital dunng the
afternoons for first 14 da>-s. going
homeonlytoslccp Todaythrccofh1s
old fncnds are sober, two died in car
accidents and two still use drug'>. he
said.
When asked what was hie, goal 1n
hfe . he ~id, "My goal 1s to \lay '>Ober
for the rest of the day."
BOLSA PARK EXPANSION SOUGHT ..•
From Al
w1ldhfc habitats W1n<.hcll and Rowe
fear that most of the habitats will he
moved to the linear park
The proposed relocation n f much
of the habitat area., into the linear
park also has been named a\ a
problem by the Huntington Beath
Co .. the princi pa l ownt'rofland 1n the
bl uffiop area
Officials of the lan<.J holding wm-
pany have said the} would like to
preserve the bluff propcrt\ for rc\I·
dcn11al use and not dedicate 1t for
park land or w1ldltte habitat.
"The expanded park <proposed by
the planning comm1ss1on) 1s un-
reahst1c of the ctt y needs," ~1d
\\1lham D Holman. a Huntington
Beach Co offiu al "They (planning
comm1ss1oncrs) are going far be"ond
what's been env1s1oncd for a linear
park."
The state ( oastal Comm1ss1on.
after }Car) of wrangling. has g1 ven
approval to a recreational and res1·
dentiaJ development on l ,600 acres
of marshlands south of Warner
Avenue and adjacent to Pacific Coast
Highway 1n unincorporated Orange
County island surrounded by Hunt-
ington Beach.
The plan calls for the preservation
of9 I 5 acres of wetlands, construction
of up to 5,700 homes, a 1,200-slip
marina and a possjble na vigable
channel to the ocean.
BALDWIN SAYS FRIZZELLE INVISIBLE •..
From Al
Finger somebody as the culprit. ~uch
as claiming Rose Bird as the reason for
more cnmc becau'IC ~he doe\n't
support the death penalty," Baldwm
s~ud.
"If people took the time to listen to
her ideas. they'd learn she\ a g11icd.
v1s1onary leader. the type of leader-
ship Cahfom1a should have ..
Baldwin believes the death penalty
1sn·t the solution to crime control, but
rather a reactionary an<Jwcr to the
problem. He rroposcs legislators look
to the root o the problem and work
from that vantage point
"The soluuon 10 cnmc 1s to create a
home and school environment of
support and trust. rather than 'us
versus them.' .. he s~ud.
He said the IOrJc. chls'i Sl7es 1n
California. which rank'\ SOth 1n
na11on in teacher-to-student ratio~.
means that each ,tudent get hnlc
i>ersonal attention from his teachers
He proposes construction of new
Khools to lowe-r class size to 2S
students, shuttina down antiquated
schools. ·and boosuna teacht-r
salanes.
"We've &Ot 10 fet back to tht front
of the pack. Rtad)USt our state budget
pnontics. •• he 111d
• •
Orange ( ounty should readjust its
transportation priorities, too.
Baldwin said.
"ihe question or transportation
alTect!I me bccau'iC behind my home
1n Irvine arc beautiful hill'> where the
Irvine transportation comdor would
go." he said .. I'd hate to sec those ht lls
go.
"The ultimate !10lut1on. and it's
now almost 1mposs1blc. 1s more mass
transit. •
"People art so oncnted toward the
automobile that to overcome that
would take enormous pohttcal lead·
ersh1p. and I don't think 1t cx1ns," he
said
Baldwin satd pnvate industry and
government should collaborate on
research and development projects to
develop new soluuons to the South-
land's transponat1on woes.
He also lamented aovemmcnt
pre sure to end Amtrak subsidies.
arauina. "I think we should increase
Amtrak rather than eliminate it. Put
stations 1n Irvme and M1$SiOn Viejo.
keep the nation in San Juan
Capistrano. and ,tan sellina people
on Amtrak
"ff we'rt on the .lead1ni edie of
technoloS)' why do we have an
'
arch.a1c transportation system? It's
because we have leaders like Fnuclle
who don't have the courage to bite the
bullet."
Baldwin alw said pohuc1ans hsvc
to stop foot-dragg.ing on Orange County'~ :11r transportation prob-
lems.
. A new airport needs to be built tn
south Orange County or north ·an
Diego County. he said.
"We're going to have to make some
sacnficcs, noat some bond issues or
devise crcatt ve financing Wlth heavy
mcius1on of pnvate industry and the
public sector that will benefit from an
ai~rt." he •ld. • Perh11.ps the public would accept a
saks ta.x fgr an aarpon even thou&}!
they rt)«ted ope for hi&hways."
Baldwm.ftas bttn mamed 16 years
Ind IS the fathCT of a I ().month-old
boy. He has been active m the
Democratic Party sinoc moving to
0t"&llge County 12 years a,o. Ht~
involvement includes membership
on the state Executive Board, the state
u ntral Committee and the Platform
Committct. He waJ the Oemocra11c
nom.anee for state A sembly 1n the
74ch di tnct l"ICC 1n 1980 .
'
Rain to taper off by afternoon
Rlln throughout the Orar\gt Cottt wlll t>eCOme heavy at
tlmM thla morning before tapering to ahowera thla •fternoon. the
National WMthet Service forecuta. Ctlancee of r•ln today are
80 pef cent.
Wind• alto wtll diminish and beoOme weat.,.ty by thla
aftemoon
Htgha wilt range from 6e at the beeCne. to 82 Inland LOWS tonight wlll rlltlge from 50 to se.
1'ontght •nd Tu.day, partly cloudy aklel and cool.
aometlmee guaty nort~t wind• wilt bring a ch•nce for more
lhowert.
Prob•blllly or rain tonlQht •nd Tuesday la 40 pef<*'lt.
A heavy aurf advleory la In effect for weet-f.elng beaches
begtnntno tonight. South to southweet wind• Witt blow 15 10 25 knot• this
morning, ehlfttng lo west to northw..1 winds and decreasing lo
10 to 18 ltnote tontoht along the Inner eoutal w•l8'1. The westerly swell la 2 to 4 feet Increasing to 5 to 8 feet
tonight. .
80
-...~,~·~· ,.,_OHTS ~'-'if.~ "fJiiJ/ W111m -COid...,.
Brealcert will range from 6 to 9 '"1 on west f•etng beacheS
tonight, with Hta as high as 13 feet. •
SN>-• R..,, F~11es Snow Occtu0eo ..,._ Stahcm,;vy &y
,.._ w .. .,.. .,_.,, ~ ..()..,. v ~ !all• ~ L!Mlt.._
U.S. Temps 3S 11
.. 17
76 IO
71 87
11 ••
76 ... ,. 30 n M
.. 44 76 M 73 39 77 62
73 ..
13 52
44 31 ,. 21
78 •• 77 SS
" n 1 7 21 ., 11
79 ..
17 51 51 27
74 ff
83 at
57 441 3e 17
.. 31 •• 32
.. 30
61 ..
84 40 t2 ..
S7 4t
)1 21
64 $2
43 32
oe H
06 ••
01 u ~1
50
ChineHcentenarlan Zhu Tongan, 102, and
family memben view China'• replay of the
,,~
Super Bowl Sanday ln Peking. ~hta of
the aame were telecut nadonwtae. -
CHINESE TV SERVES SUPER BOWL •..
F rom Al · dweller Wang Zhenjtang. 27. who Cit} take great pnde 1n their local a soccer mat~h. "except that m ohve
works in a Jewelry factory. "They said teams." Reagan's message said. "All b~ll. ~~.don t understand what wm-
hc eats four whole chickens for this of course adds to the excite-• ning is. lunch." ment." Soccer and volleyball are the most Wan~. a self-descnbed sports ad-In Chma, the communist ~overn-popular spc~tator sports in .China,
diet. said he rushed home from work ment co ntrols all sports activ1t1es especially since the women .s vol-
')unday afterneanng his colleague'i A Chinese sports announcer chat-leyball _team won the Olym61c gold
talk about lhe match tered awal during the game. explain-medal in 1984 and World up title last year. "I thought 1t was Saturday and was ing that ootball 1s a fa vorite U.S. Huang Zhawen. a writer for the
1..hsappoanted that I missed 11." he spectator SJR>rt and many Americans official Sports News (Tiyu Bao). said
said, sitting in the tiny brick room he spent six to seven hours watching he and five other sports reponers
shares with has bndc "At least I saw Super Bowl and pregamc activities watched the broadcast in their news-
thc second half." that weekend. room. "We saw why Americans like 1t
The 90-minutc broadcast began Most scenes showed dramatic so much," he said. "We liked the
with a videotaped message from U.S passes. rushes. crucial fumbles, but Bears' quarterback (Jim) McMahon
Ambassador Winston Lord that in-there were Oeetang glimpses of bun-and especially the Electnc Refriger-
cludcd greetings to the Chinese died-up fans and cheerleaders. ator."
people from President Reagan. a Yang XueJuan, 39. said all the men But he said the game isn't likely to
fo rmer sportscaster. who work with her at a restaurant catch on 1n China soon. "Chinese
"Although the sport is a profit-planned to get home by kickoff time. aren't ready for it yet. We're too
making business -each team as She said the enthusiastic American small ... he said. "The Americans ...
pnvately owned -the people of each spectators were like Chinese watching have tremendous physiques."
Memos from chief astronaut
show 2-year concern on safety
By tbe AuociatH Prus
Chief astronaut John Young had
been wn ting internal memos warning
NASA about shuttle safety problems
for at least twoJears before an
explosion destroy Challenacr and
killed $Cven crew members, accord-
ing to published reports.
Fellow astronauts and several key
NASA officials confirmed that
Young had written numeroµs strong-
ly worded memos to NASA managers
1n rece nt months pressing for im-
~~A~~E Daily Pilat
MAIN OFFICE
l.lO ""• • Bet ~· ~• v .... CA I.la a<JO<tU 8 • \I'll Cc.•• I.In. c A 97618
provemcnt an decaying satety sys-
tems, The Houston Post said 1n a
copyright story.
"John Young has been puuing out
these type of memos for the last two
years.• the newspaper q uoted a
NASA official involved in fli&ht crew
operations at the Johnson Space
Center as say1na. The official told the
newspaper that he feared losing his
job if has name were used.
"He's been puuing out a lot of
deficiencies and raised these issues
before. But the program people
haven't been listening. They (top
NASA rnanaaers) were too worried
about the schedule and money as-
sociated with it to pay attention," the
source said.
1:he WHhin[ton Post quoted Paul
Weitz, Youna s deputy, as sayina. "~his .i~ not a Jo~nny-come·latcly thing. Its not Just since the accident.
Young, who has Oown on more
space missions than any other
astronaut, refused to make any public
statements, said the space center·,
chief spokesman, Douglas K. Ward.
Delly Pltot
l>etlYery
11 Guaranteed
ci .... ,.., ldt Sd se11 o.--& eo.101 .. • so 01 • Justcall 642-6086 ...._,.., ~, " '°" do l\01 l'lav• yOUI 0*"9< tl'r
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S-.:Cl"IO _., t'<"'"9" '°""' •• ~·• "-Ca •;;. I U I' )OJ Svo.cr pf.Or' ~. CA·t~ $~ 1$ mQ<"t•,., o,,... t'OO "'°"",
What do you hkc about the Daily Pilot? What
don't you like? C.11 the number above and your
messqe will be recorded, transcnbed and de-
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The same 24-hou·r an1wtnna scrvt~ may be
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Co ntributon to our Leners column must include
their name and telephone number for verification
Tells \U what's on your mind
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