HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-03-18 - Orange Coast Pilot·---~ -
. .WARM
* fOMCAITa oeea
TUESDAY, MA RCH 18, 1986
Mesa skyscraper plan Shelved
In a surprise move, Segerstrom & Sons
agrees to revise One South Coast Place
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of ... Dl!llr .........
After strong opposiuoo from resi-
dents testifying Monday before the
Costa M«a City Council, developer ·
C.J. SegerstTom & Soos retreated
from the showdown over its proposed
32-story skyscraper and q,eed to
A wttneee to one of the
lfiabt Stalker ldJHn&•
gc:Inted out Richard .
mires ln court u tbe
ueallant he •• ln tbe
dark. A5.
Coast
New confllci of Interest
charges arise In Costa
Mesa's cracked home
controversy./ A3
Nation
More remains from shut-
tle cabin brought In./ A4
World
Prosectutors think they
have man who sho t prime
minister of Sweden.I A5
Sports
come up wtth a new \lfOject.
The surprise decision came at the
UJJing of Councilman Doon Hall,
who suggested 4'h hours into the
public -hearing that the Segcrstroms
take the proposed SOO-foot-tall office
building back to the drawing board.
Later. the council voted to wipe the
slate clean of ~ previous business
Foreign
trade
reversal
hits U.S.
Record deficit of
11 7 billion stirs
economic alarms
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
WASHINGTON -The United
States suffered a record S l l 7. 7 bimon
deficit in the broadest measure of iu
foreign trade last year as the country
became a net debtor for the first time
in 71 years, the government reported
today.
The Commerce Department re-
ported that the deficit on the coun-
try's current account for 1985 was 9.6
percent above the previous record
deficit ofS l 07.4 billion in 1984.
The current account is the broadest
measure of the country's inter-
national transactions because it
measures not only trade in merchan-
dise but also in services, mainly
foreign investment flows between
countries.
Up until 1982, the country enjoyed
a surplus in the current account
because American mvestment earn-
ings overseas were enough to cover
deficits in merchandise trade.
complex conceptually approved LO
1984 for the same property, known as
the Segcrsttoms' Home Ranch.
The old plan had been revised to
feature the "One South Coast Place"
skyscraper a granite-faced high-rise
th.at would have surpassed the 285-
foot Center Tower as the tallest
building in Orange County.
The skyscraper, tho first phase in ~vised plans for a 98..acre business
center, fueled residents' fears of
traffic jams comparable to downtown
Los Angeles.
Ducking the weather
The tower also became the focal
point in Costa Mesa's long runnina
battle over growth, as well as over the
political influence of developers -
like the powerful Sestrsttom family
-in the city.
Before a standing-roor,n·only crowd, Hall uked Seaentrom plan-
ning director Male.elm Rou to atart
over -"and I mean from tht ~nniog" -and come up with a
budding more acceptable to the
residents.
u1 would hate to see a project like
this split the comm unity. That is why
I'm tell~you to take it and go away, Mr. Rout·• Hall taid.
After a quick di1CUssion with other
Setmtrom officiala, Rou acknowJ~ edeed the intense opposition and
pulled the tower proposal from the
~cilman Dave Wheeler labeled
the retreat as a ploy to save face and
allow the oppo11tion to coot
.. Yoll're bcina piccemealed and
jerked around," Wheeler warned the
audience of more than 300 people
jammins the councd chambers.
However, Wheeler later went alona
with the 5-0 council decision to a.ooepc
lbe withdrawal.
The Setentroma had offered to
provide an employee cbild<:are
center for 120 children, an art pOery
and parks u pan of the akyac:r8per
project north of the San DiCllO
Freeway, just east of Harbor
Boulevard.
However,. one resident compued
the amenitJes to .. Pvin& U'inkeU to
(Pleue ... 111.UA/ A2)
Developer wins
roun·ct against
Laguna council ·
Judge sa ys city park
cannot block access
to housln project
By LAURA MERlt
Of .. 0.-, .......
A Superior Court Judge ruled
Monday th.at ~na Beach was not
justified in building a mini-park that
blocks access to a proposed 108-untt
housing development.
City officials will now have to
renew public hearinp on a general
plan admendment that includes the
mini-park.
The Carma-Sandling Group had
initially gone to the city for approval
to build 11 0 homes at the top of a hill
near Alta Laguna Boulevard. The
aroup also uked the city to extend
Alta Laguna Boulevard to provide
access to the property.
But the council refused unless
Carma-Sandling agreed to scale down
the project to 70 homes. The council
argued that the development would
create traffic hazards on Park Av-
enue.
The Irvine developers then went to
the county for the nCClCSSll')' zone
changes and tract map approvals.
which were received last year. The
homes arc planned for 28 acres of a
47~acre site. Ninety percent of the
land would remain undeveloped.
However, the council approved a
mini-park at the end of AJta Lquna
Boulevard at the mouth o( the
housing develoJ?meot. The Alta
Laguna Park, wb1cb bas virtually no
development except picnic benches
and trash containers, is 90 percent
complete and blocks the only aoc::as
to Carma-Sandliog's development.
Superior Court Judge Judith M.
Ryan Monday ruled that the city bad
(Pleue eee L A GUJIA / A2)
Jall golngnear Analielm Stadlam
Despite stiff public opposition, the Orange County Board of Supervisors
today chose a site near Anaheim Stadium for construction of a new count;y jail.
The board voted 4-l with Oiairman Ralph Oark dissenting to begin the
rcqui~ environmental review process on the site at Katdla and OouaJast
streets. The fo:opcrty is across from one of Anaheim Stadium's main exits and wu one of (;ur urben sites considemf by the board for a 1,000 to 1,500 bed
medium-maximum security jail
UC Irvine goes against
BYU tonight In the NIT
Tournament./81
Angels pitching Is rough-
ed up./81
However, the country's soaring
trade . deficiu have swamped the
small mvcstment surpluses in recent
yean.
For 1985. the sum of investment
(Pleue eee FOR&JON/A2)
Theee foar waterfowl were more forta.nate than tbe owner
of tb1a mnall ..Uboat anchored off Balboa Jaland. Tiiey
atayed aOoat d11J'lD& tbe weekend 8torm while the craft
eank beneath tbe weJ.cbt of tbe rain water.
Oranae County has been studying remote sites for a S,000 to 6,000 bed jail
since 198 f but supervisors voted last week to build a smaller Jail immediately
to try to placate a federal COW1 judae who found them in contempt of cowi a
year 110 for ianoring his 1978 orders to reduce crowdfog at the Main Jail in
Santa Ana.
The world of men's pro
golf ls In turmoll./82
Entertainment .
The prize-winning play
"The Shadow Box" re-
ceives a superior enact-
ment In Laguna./85
INDEX
Advice and Games
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Death Notices
Entertainment
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports'
Television
Weather
A10
A3
A7-9
B6-8
·A11
B8
BS
A12
A6
A3
B4, 8
B1 -4
BS
A2
Mayor demands
county DA finish
conflict probe
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
u d ROBERT HYNDMAN
OfllleDlllJ .........
Chargjng he 1s being "crucified m
the local press," Fountain Valley
Mayor Fred Voss 1s demanding that
the Oran&e County Distnct At-
torney's office complete its investiga-
tion of his business dealings.
Jn a letter last week to District
Attorney Cecil Hicks, Voss chafied
the prosecutor's office is "partici-
pating in a politically motivated
smear cam~ai~ by those opposed to
my rc-clcct1on ' since it launched the
mvcstigation in February.
Deputy District Attorney Maury
Evans said this morning the in-
vestigation is continuing and dechn-
ed to predict when it would conclude.
"We're looking at some things and
we're not done yet," Evans said.
"I can tell you that we're not going
to speed up our investigation for any
one person." Evans said. "We're
going to follow o ur normal
procedures on this."
Voss was unavaJlable for comment
this morning.
The district attorney's office 1s
investigating the mayor's rela-
tionship to a development firm that
built a condomm1um complex m
Fountain Valley and whether there
mil.ht have been a conflict of interest.
ihe mvesti~tton focuses on a
proposal considered by the Caty
Council that might have saved J.S.
Propenics more than $200.000 in
County residents give high
marks to UCI, poll indicates
University study a lso finds many think
campus funded by donations, tuition PHIL
A new survey reveals Orange
County residents arc as well-ac-
quainted wtth UC Irvine as they are
wtth UCLA and USC. They also
believe it provides a quality educa-
tion comparable to that offered by the
more famous Los Angeles schools.
At the same tune, many local
rcsidenu arc confused about where
UCI aeu most of its money. Many
incori'cictly believe pnvate dooat1ons
or tuition cover most of tl\e costs of
operatin! the Irvine campus.
The attitude and awareness"
surve_y was conducted for UCl last fall
by Foothill Associates. bated in
Manhattan Beach. Results of the
S 1•,000 study werci recently made
public. Kathy Jone , UCT's assistant VlCC
chancellor for communications and
un1vcrs1ty advancement, said the poll
was commt ioned to find out how
)
-----------------
effecuve UCI is 1n making its pro-
arams known to Oranae County
residents. Campus officials also want-
ed to P~•e community attitudes
about UCI and to find out how
accessible the campus ts for public
events.
"Overall. we were very P."tified
with the results. .. Jones said. .. We
went into this aurvey with nonpecia-
tions."
Particularly aurprisj na WU the hiab
pcrccn(qe of ~idenu who had been
to UCI or at least knew how to tet
thCR, Jones said. (Tbe survey fum
noted, however that the poll did not
addren .. the puhUc'a comfon level in
naviptina lhc camP.us once they
have arri-ved at UCI. • )
Jona said campus officials were
not surprised tha1 re idents believe ua offcn hilh~uahty education,
p&nicularty 1n the "bard sciences.'
But she 111d the survey may prompt
UCl to boost promotion of iu fine
arts. en1foeerfoJ and bu incss pro-
parn'-with which rc11dcnu arc less
familiar.
The research firm conducted 50S te~hone 1ntervt..ews wtth Oranac
County residenlS.~lectcd at random.
The survey bu a •· • pen::ent matJin
of error, meanina that's the extent to
which its results may chff'cr from the
county's adult P.>PUlation as a wbok.
lntervteWsubjcets were not told the
poll wu commi 1oned by UC'l. ~
that this Information would not color
the1r~pon (Pl ...... aaam&In'91 A2l
HB coalition gets
redevelopment
project approval
Mayor F red Voee
park site fees.
Voss, who voted for the proposal
when at appeared on the council's
Nov. 19 consent calendar. densed he
had a business relationship with the
Irvine-based firm and said there was
(Pleue eee llA TOR/ A2)
By ROBERT BARI.ER
OfllleDlllJ .........
Huntington Beach officials Mon-
day night gave a company that
includes a coalition of downtown
property owners the inside track to
build a $40 milhon redevelopment
project on two blocks of Main Street
at Pacific Coast Highway.
The Main Street-Pacific Property
Owners company was given exclusive ri&b ts to come up with a plan within
50 days to· rehabilitate many of the
l 920s-cra buildingsJ. to construct up
to 100.000 square rcct 1n retail and
commercial buildings and to build
about 275 apartments, all on the
north side of Main Street.
The company 1s composed of the
Manufacturing blue
~..,.~an euly-momt.nc
ftn at a Pulter-BA••lfan aesoe,.ce ma.aa -
factulal plaat ln ln'ln• today. The &:aa
a.m. blUe at 1•300 AJtoD A..aae caued
aJl eetlmat.d $2,000 ln ....... bat DO
l.$rt•. MN Flre Capt. Loe hnt. Be Mid
Pacific Heritage Co. of Huntington
Beach. A&M Equities of Newport
Beach and e~t owners of small
downtown busmcsscs.
Pacific Herita&C, along with the
Aviv Co. of West Los Anicles.
previously was chosen to build a su-
story hotel and other buildings on the
south side of Mam Street at Pacific
Coast Highway.
Dick Schwartz. president of Pacific
Hentage, said the second phase of the
development will include a 2.~scat
movie theater, restaurants. boutiques
and other busmesses m additton to a
six-story apanment development.
Main Street owners will be given
the choice of having their buildings
rehabilitated "to look hke new .. or
(Pleue eee DOWNIOW11/A2)
d * Orllnge C099t OAJLY PILOT/ Tu.c:Sey, Merth 18, 1988
~,... ....... .., Le9...,,..
Stand.lnC-r~m-only crowd in Coeta Meu
City Council Chambers Monday DlCht beard
Setentroma • Sona eYentually withdraw
propoeal for 32-atory omce buildini.
MESA SKYSCRAPER PLAN SHELVED .••
From Al
the Indians:·
Another res1dent Peter S1m1luk
added that he would not be pacifi ed
by "a children's room or play-
grounds."
The over-capacity crowd also had a
large share ofSCgersirom supponcrs.
many of them child-care spec1ahsts
and an enthusiasts.
.. Embract this proJect." Chuck
Hamilton, chairman of the Costa
Mesa Civic Assoc1at1on. advised the
council. "h w11J become to our city
what the Golden Gate Bndge 1s to San
Francisco."
The Segerstroms had asked the
council for approval to build the
6 77 .000-square foot-tower as well as a
•w<-'ltorv ga rage. DevC"IOf't'r<; wrre
also seeklng conceptual approval for
the enttre business center. including a
400..room hotel, smaller offic.e build-
ings and a restaurant, oo the sprawl-
ing lima bean fields between Fairview
Road, Harbor Boulevard. Sunnower
Avenue and the San Diego Freeway.
An amendment was needed to the
cit y's general plan. a bluepnnt for
Costa Mesa·s development, to
surpass height rcstncuons and other
limits placed on the property.
A previous proposal. including a
25-story high-rise. was conce ptually
approved by the council in May 1984.
However. the Segerstroms developed
a new plan to remove some of the
buildings and consolidate them into a
taller skyscraper.
While accepting the Scgerstroms'
WJthdrawal. the council unantmously
passed a complicated measure allow-
ing the developer to sidestep the
general plan process. Instead. restric-
tions will be handled through a less
cumbersome review of development
plans
Although the change theoretically
makes 1t easier for the developer to
move through the bureaucracy, it also
knocks the previous preliminary ap-
proval off the bookc;. city planner
Perry Yalantine said.
"We took that proJect out of the
general plan and didn't put 11 any-
where else," Valanune sa1d ... ll JUSt
went away."
FOREIGN TRADE DEFICIT REPORTED ...
From Al
earnings totaled S2 I .4 b1ll1on. a slight
improvement from 1984 But the
merchandise trade deficit last } ear
totaled S 124.3 billion, an 8 9 perce nt
increase over 1984
The soanng merchandise trade
deficit and S 14.8 b1ll1on m tran\fcr
payments such a'> fo reign aid
swamped the $21 4 billio n invest-
ment surplus to give the country the
S 117. 7 b1lhon cu rrent account deficit
fo r the year.
This b1~defic1t wiped out the small
S28 2 b1llton surplus Amenca had at
the end of 1984 in its overseas
mvestmc-nts. pushing the country
into the status of net debtor for the
first lime since 1914.
Simply stated, that means that
foreigners owned more Untted States
investments than Amencans own in
foreign investments.
DOWNTOWN PROJECT ...
Some economists have warned that
the country's foreign debt could nse
to $400 bilhon before It begin!> to
taper off Bu t analysts are d1v1ded
over how scnous a problem this 1s for
the U.S economy.
From A l
havmg them tom down and stanmg
all over again. Schwartz said
He sa1d residences will be included
1n the downtown face It ft to provide a
constant base for commerci al ven-
tures "so that businesses won't ha vc
to rely solely on tounsts ··
Cit) officials sa1d the com pan~ was
gi ve n the nod over three compet110~
largely because 1t in cluded pantc1-
pat1on b} downtown propen} own-
ers.
In other acti on Monday. the ( 1ty
Council:
•Approved water rate in crease'>
that wi ll see typical households
paying 80 cents more on thr1 r
b1monthl> "atcr bill s 1 mmed1atel~
The rate will go up another 80 cent!>
fo r each 60-da> billing penod on Oct.
I
•Gave the YMCA. another 60-day
extension to raise more than SI
million to stan construction of a
facility at Central Park.
xtended by 60 days a deadli ne for
moving mobile home owners from
Hunungton Shores Mobile Home
Park.
•Put off until March 24 decision!>
on how large Bolsa Chica Linear Park
should be, and what to do about
proposals to realign Gothard Street to
help ease nonh-south traffic.
President Reagan has contended
that the country's status as a net
debtor 1s not a cause for alarm but
should be taken as a vote of con#.
fidence in the Amencan economy. He
has argued that 11 shows that "we are
the best and safes1 investment 1n the
world."
But many pnvate e<:onom1sts have
argued that with the United States
no" 1n hock to the rc'>t of the world.
this countf) '<; standard of"" mg will
be depressed as more U.S. capital
flows into foreign hands to service the
debt burden. These analysts contend
that the country 1s now m dan~er
ostagc to. the whims of foreign
in vestors.
RESIDENTS GIVE UCI HIGH MARKS ..
From Al
In their e'\ecut1ve summary. the
r oo1h11l pollster<; said. ··Recogmt1on
and knowledge of UC'I 1s very high
amon$ the Orange ( ounty pubhc
{T l 1s recognized by th e Orange
County public a5 offering com-parattvel~ high quality of educatio n
In the publtc·s mind. the level of
atadem1c quality equals that of
UCLA and USC and fa r exceeds the
academic quality of schools m the
C ah fo m1a State I n1vers1ty system:·
Following are some of the survey"s
ma1or findings
•When the nam es of eight
Sou them C ahfo m1a un1vers1 11es were
rcClled. the largest percent of respon-
dents -76 4 percent -said they
were famthar with IJCLA ana UCL
After that came L'SC. with which
"'O I percent were familiar Then
came Cal St.ate ~u llenon (64.6 per-
cent) Cal State Ufifg Beath (60
percent). UC San Diego ( 40 percent).
UC 'ianta Barbara (39 percent) and
UC R1verndc (23 6 percent)
•Those fam1har with the eight
schools were asked wh ether the
quality of education at each cam pu~
was supenor. average. belo" averagc
or whether the re!i1dent did not know.
On this question. 59 percent ..aid
l l(LA offers supcnor education
following by USC·., 5fi percent <.u-
penor rat1n8. Bu t 52 percent al')<1 "11d
UCI provides a \u pcnnr t1uahty
educauon.
In contra~t. 23 percent ~1d Cal
<itate-Long Beach offers su peri or
MAIN OFFICE
l ~ iNft°'~ f'•r • "'I.._ A
education. followed b) 19 percent for
(al tatc Fullenon. More than half of
those polled said the two Cal State
campuse\ provide "a verage .. quality
education
•Orange County residents ap-
peared to be quttc fam1har w11h I'( I '
locauon Almo'it 60 percent of those
polled said they had v1stted the
cam pus. while another 20 percent
s~ud they hadn't been to UCJ but
could find ll without d1rect1ons.
• Almo<;t 60 percent recogn11cd
LCI fo r 1ts academic programs but
onl> 16 percent said the school I'>
noted for non-academic act1v1t1es
<>uch as sportmg events or the campus
environment. In co ntrast, UCLA.
USC and Cal State Fullerton all had
higher recogn1t1on for non-academic
act1v111cs.
or 80 percent of the ~ndcnts,
UCTSacaoemic reputation rests pn-
manly on lls "hard science'" pro-
grams, mcludmg med1c1ne, biology
and chemistry Only 11 percent of
those fam1harwi th the Irvine campus
said 11 1s known for its proJr!imS 1n the
humantllcs. ans and social \CICnces.
In contra'it, the survey fo und that 68
percent of those familiar with C~I
St.ate Fullerton recognized it for
hu~tness programs. which drew li ttle
att.cntJO n at UCI.
•.Presented wnh a list of UCI
activities and pr<>gr•ms, 58 ~rcent
5.ald 1hey were familiar w11h the
un1vers1ty's medical research. Its
conunumg or adult education pro-
grams placed ~concl. w1111 16 percent
recogn1t1on
•Respondents wemed to have
httle knowledge of UCr s main source
of income. One 1n fi ve people said
they didn't know.
Another 22 percent mcnuoned
taxes or an unspecific government.
The state government was named by
20 percent as the matn funding
source. while 19 percent though t
tu1t1on 1s UCT s primary source of
money. Another 17 percent believed
pnvate donations are the main rev-
enue !>Ource.
In fact. campus officials said. 32.5
percent of (T s funding comes from
the state. while another 29. 7 percent
co mes from operauon of its teaching
hospi tal IUCI Medical Center). Stu-
dent fees, 1ncludJ ng tu1t1on, only
provide U pe.r-CCD.lof lJCl's funding
Pnvate donations also account for
less than 10 percent of the school·s
revenue
•The survey tnd1cated UCI has a
high profi le 1n the news media. Four
out of I 0 respondents said they had
seen or heard news about UCJ during
the previous three months. About
one-third said the stones concerned
growth or development associated
with the campus or about research
taking plac.e at UCL
The polling firm said private
industnes that use adven1sing to
create a public image or s11mulate
demand would envy ucr, high level
of recognn1on
Dally Piiot
Dell very
I• Ou•rantMd
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0 -r.O•Ot ~·1 ~1• ~--~ .,,,, •• •):• Just call 642-6086
VOL 71, NO. T1
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The ~me 24-hour answenng service may be
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Tell~ u~ what'i on your mind
I
Circulation
T•phone•
., " Oo• a:iu-1, "•It Mt>4m
,
S~nta Anas will warm thi.ngs up
A htgh-~ l)'etern brought bright, bluttery we.their to
SoutMrt\ Clfffomla todtly. Hot knta Ana wtnd• wet• u~td
to etatt bfowtng below the northern foothllte and canyone, and to
eprMd eouth Wtdnetday, eooordtng to the Natk>nal W•thet
SeMct.
Wtdntedey wm l>t warmer. acoord=to the WMthtf aervtoe. wtth hight ot 7 4 to 82 on the coutal . 40 to 50 In the
mountelnt and'~ tow eoe to low eo.1n the a. T ontoht. the
mercurywlll dip to the uppet 30e and 408 etong the cout, the 20t
In the mountarna Ind the uppet 20. to mtd 408 In the dtMrte.
Along the Orange Coee1 It wtfl l>t ciMr tcQgM wtth gtmy
northeae1 Wind• to 30 mph below the cenvon• and pueee. wanner Wedneeday. Lowe 38 to •a. High• 77 to 82.
'From Point Conception to the ~idcen Border -OYlf' lnMr
watera, email craft advleory for Wind• below the eanyone trom
Santa Monte. northWard. Heevy .url advteory ttndlng by tonight
on weet f~ng beachea.
U .S •• Temps
...... .,
S:26 a.I'll. , , ·eo a.I'll.
7.27 P-"'·
.. ,
0..4
S,4
Gun-wielding bandits pull
two heists within minutes
By ROBERT BARKER
OflM~,...·--
Two young gunmen pulled off two
robberies in Huntington Beach
within moments of each other -the
second occurred when a victim was
stopped for a red light, police
spokeswoman Jo Anne Bergstrom
said today.
The bandits first struck Monday at
I 0 a.m. in the parking lot of Security
Pacific Bank at Brook.hurst Street and
Adams A venue. Bergstrom sajd.
The victim, a 41 -ycar-old woman.
apparently had amved at the bank a
few minute'i before it opened. Aftl'r
sitting in her car a few minutes, she
went to the trunk to get a money bag
c.ontainiog about $400 that belonged
to the Sowers School PT A.
One of the men pulled a gun and
grabbed the money bag. They then
esconed the woman back to her car
where they took $40 from her purse.
She last saw them running through
the nursery area at the Target depart-
ment store.
About five minutes later the same
two men -both described as in their
early ·20s, about 5 feet 8-t<>-10 inches
tall and having brown hair, allegedly
Jumped out of their car at Hamilton
A venue and Brook.hurst Street and
accosted a Naugles restaurant man-
ager who had st~ped bis pickup
truck for the red Ii L
One of the men em anded a money
bag contatning about $1,300 that the
restaurant manager was taking to the
bank.
They pocketed the money and
raced away when the hght turned
green.
Their car, which had no license
plates, was described as a dark gray
Volkswagen Jetta, Bergstrom said. h
was unknown where the two bandhs
had stashed their car after robbing tbe
woman at the bank parking lot,
Bergstrom said.
LAGUNA LOSES MINI-PARK FIGHT •..
From Al
not given proper notice to Carma-
Sandling of its plans to build the park
and amend its general plan. Carma-
Sandhng officials argued that the city
did not follow procedures dictated by
the Cahfom1a Environmental Quali-
ty Act in noti fymg affected residents
of the amendment.
Judge Ryan also th rew out a lawsuit
filed by the city agamst the county.
The lawsuit claimed the county
disregarded the traffic analysis m its
approval of the housing development
plans.
Carma-Sandling still has two law-
suits pending. said Larry Lynch, vice
president of the firm. One suit, filed m
federal court Monday, clajms the citY.
has violated Carma-Sandling's civll
nghts m refusing to extend Alta
Laguna Boulevard The other suit 1s
aimed at proving the group has access
to the property through a loophole m
Cahfomia law.
"The single issue which remains to
be solved is acccs~ .. said Lynch. who
added that the nrm hopes it can
ieaot1ate with the city.
If negotiations fail, Catma-Sand-
ling could await the outcome of its
lawsuit or ask the county to condemn
the property.
MAYOR DEMANDS AN END TO PROBE •••
From Al
no reason to disqualify himself from
the vote.
However, Voss saJd he was a
business panner until last fall with
l.S. Properties pnncipals David ls-
raelsky and ex-Fountain Valley
Mayor Bernie Svalstad.
The vote authorized ci ty staff to
draw up an agreement fo r a $60,000
mitigation fee in lieu of a $269.000
park site fee
Voss was JOtned in approval by
Councilmen George Scott and Jim
Neal.
Councilman Ben Nielsen abs-
tained because be said be was con-
sidering investing in the project and
Councilwoman Barbara Brown voted
against the proposal.
The mayor's open letter to Hicks
expressed his growing impatience
wi th the continutn$ investigauon.
"Although my nghts to know my
accusers and to a speedy resolution of
the accusations against me are not
being technically violated smce no
charges have been brought against
me, thev arc in fact being violated
through the press," Voss charged.
Saytng that unnamed sources have
been leveling charges against him to
the press as wen as the district
attorney's office, Voss said be should
know who his accusers are or Hicks
should drop the investigation and
"clear my name in the community
which I have served with integrity
and honesty for over 15 ycan."
"This has gone on quite long
enough, .. he concluded.
A rotton sportshrt With
a unq\.e pattern ~n.
slighdy oversized and
comfortal:)e. In wh~e and
burgurdy by Merona
WESTCUFF PLAZA,
NEWPORT BEACH. CA
f7Mt M2-70et
-
Ballerina alated
for UCI concert
Ballerina Jillaoa will appear u pat IOloilt
with the South Cout Ballet in its ftnt •Pri• teatOD
at UC Irvine toni&ht and Wednaday. The per-
fotmaoce Qf five ballets will be J)mCnted lrit.b the
40-member Mu1et Chorale of Oraqc County and
the 16-member CapiatrMo V~y Symphony.
. Jlllana, ~ntly on th~ UCJ faculty ua ballet
1nttructor, will be featured 10 lbc wortd~miere or
James Jones' Uebetlicder Waber." Petformaocet
wilt be aivcn at 8 J>.m. both eveoinp at'tbe VilJaee
Theater on the UCI camput. Tickets are $1 2.50 and
may be ordettid by callina 8.S6-66 I 6.
JlarbJe •arpJu Mle Ht
. A public auction or Marine Corps equipment ~ll be held March 25 at Camp Pendleton, with sale ~tems so!J>a on display in Buildina 2241 ror
1nspect.1on now under way from 7:30 a.m. to 3 p.m .
daily, exoept weekends.
Reaistration will begin at 8 a.m. on the day of
the sale and bidders must be present and reaiJten'ed.
Call the sales office at 725-4 3 31 for additional information.
Brea.t enm• planned
Healthcare Medical Center of Tustin will
Sj)Onsor a free breast self-examination clinic today
from 6:30 to 9 p.m. at the Woodbridae Medical
Center, 49SO Barrance Parkway, Suite 202, in lrvinc.
Oinic participants wilt be tauaht the proper
techniques of breast sclf-eumination and will
receive a breast cum by a physician. Reservations
arc required and may be obtained by calling
Healthcare at 838-9600, ext. S823.
C.IJ•mber meetmg T.IJanday
Directors of the Corona del Mar Chamber of
Com meroe will hear Buzz Person, chairman of the
NCW{>Ort Beach Plannin& Comnussion, at iu next
meeung Thursday.
The program is scheduled for noon at the Ming
Dynasty Restaurant, 390 I E. Coast Hi&bway
Corona del Mar. The cost of lunch is s ro and
reservations can be made at the chamber office,
673-40SO.
TeJemarketbJg Hmlnar Ht
A seminar for developing telemartetina tech-
niques will bepreKnted by sales training expert Judy
McKee Thursday from 8 a.m. to noon at the
Countryside Inn in Newport Beach, and another
seminar entitled "Selling for Men, for Women
Only" will be presented from I to 5 p.m.by
communication consultant Joe Tanenbaum, also at
the Countryside Inn.
The cost of the morning event is $60 and the
afternoon session $70. Advance registration is
required by Wednesday. C.all 549-4737 for details.
Art lectarea planned
The Laguna Art Museum will offer a six-week
slide lecture series on the de-mystification of
modem art from World War I to the present by
educator and art historian !Ute Johnson.
The lectures began today and will continue
through April 22 frosh 9:30 to 11 :30 a.m. at the
museum's South Coast Plaza expansion location.
Admission to each lecture is $3 for museum
members and $4 for non-members. Call 494-6S3 I
for details.
Poetry readlng •lated
Poet Diane Wakoski will read her poetry
Thursday at noon in the Forum of Irvine Valley
College, Room 30 I. The event will be presented by
lbe Associated Students of the college.
Wakoski will read "A Dissertation on Small-
ness" and "The Falber of My Country," as well as
selections from other poems. Admission is free and
further information is available at 5S9-9300.
Tuesday, March 18
• 6 p.m., Lapaa Beac• City Couctl. City
Council Chambers., 505 Forest Ave.
• 7:30 p.m., Lapu Beacll Ualfted Scllool
Dt1trtct, administration offices. 5SO Blumont St.
• 7:30 p.m., lrvilae Ua.lfled Scllool Dt1trlct
Board of Ed11C&tioa, District Education Center.
SOSO Barranca Parkway.
Wednesday, March 19
• 7:30p.m.,Lapaa8 eac11Parktac. Trafflcud
CtrC91adoa, City Hall Conference Room, SOS Forest
Ave.
• 7:30 p.m .1 Set1mlc Safe*1. /Dl111ter
Prepare4ae.1, PolJoe Department Library, SOS
Forest Ave.
. Of1lnoe COl9t DAILY PtLOTIT~. ~ 18, 1m • M
LB ~eighs contested park Use policy
BJ LAUR.A Mm ..............
A controvenl.ll park policy that a
teliaiout leCt calls dilcriminatina aod
uncoo1titutiona.I will be before the J..acuo&
Belch City Council toniabt f'or edopt&Oll U
law. •
The Park Ute Policy WU in.iealJy
adopted la.It May to help cue the heavy
ute or the city'• public pub. It erohibhed
orpnizations from 1ettina up bootha or
1tructure1 on 'the park property fOr a
festival or celebration. All such pt.betinp
were moved to the Irvine Bowl.
The decilioo came Just before the Hate
Krilbnu wa"t to bold the Festival oftndia
at Maio Balch. But lbonly afttt the
deciaion, the COW>Cil llJ'eed to lllow the
Am Commiaion to 1ct vp booth• for its
annual ~In-Motion festival. The ac-
tion spuked a lawsuit threat from the Hate
Krilbrw and the council chanpd iu
politlon.
But in February, when the council
considered mwna the controvenial pol-
icy Jaw it was qain threatened with a
lawsuit by Krilhna attorney David
,
Ubmnao. Ke accuaed the council of
ditc:rimlaatina apiut cer\a1n rel.iaiou.t
~.
• 111111 counc:il ~'°take a teeond loot
at the policy. apeciftca1.ly the '* ol 1oud.tpeabn. tbe elimination of any evnu at Main l.cb and the poaability ol a1JowiQI conceru at ju.at 10me of the city
pub.
City Jtatr memben will be recommeod-tna that the COWICil prohibit any u.e of
apmolifien in city pub CAoept in put
b'1ildln1"
Ka.nlDC admbaUtrator Karell llumueen la the
center of atteatioD da.rtni open lloa.e demon-
atradon for tile new ortbopedlc anlt of Boac
llemorlal Boepltal ID Kewport 8-cb . Sile la
a abort arm fl~n from or-techntclua Tln.ker oa (left) uul ltd
Co (MCODd from left). Wa at ~t la
Diane Waldo, head DUM of tbe orthopedic amt.
Conflict charges renewed
over Mesa's cracked homes
City officials probe lin k between developers
and geological consultant that· cleared' them
By TONY SAA VEDllA °' ... ..., .........
Allegations of impropriety have re-
surfaced over a geological study tha1
cleared the South Coast Plaza II construc-
tion project of damaging about 14 7 hOmei
in Costa Mesa. ·
City officials are looking into a oew link
between geological consultant Leighton
and Associates and mall-developer C.J
Scgentrom &. Sons.
The North Costa Mesa Homeownen
Association last week uncovered docu·
ments revealing that the gcologkaJ firm
worked on soils reports m 1983 for a
condominium project in which th<
Scaerstroms were partners.
The 17.6-acre AS{>eD Village COD·
dominiurn complex is in Santa Ana.
rou&hJy 120 feet away from one of the
Costa Mesa neighborhoods besieged b}
mysterious cracks.
Leighton and Associates was hired late
last year by Costa Mesa to investigate the
source of the cracking walls. buck.lini
walkways and sinldng houses in north side
neiahborhoods.
City officials apparently believed the
firm had no pttvious lino to the
Scgentroms or any other developcn in the
area.
The acologists concluded after a $40,00C
study that homes were damaged because of
expansive clay soil that bad contracted,
cauJina the around to sink..
Residents bad charged that the land was
settling because of an excavation for the
nearby South Coast Plaza annex. They
claimed that ground water was draining
from beneath their neighborhoods and
into a 2~foot deep pit at the const.ruction
site, where it was ~umped out
Last month, residents charaed the study
was tainted by a conflict olintercstafter
learning that Leighton and Associates had
simultaneously worked on an en-
viron men ta I repo rt for ano ther
Scgentrom project while mvestigting the
cracking homes.
After a city inquiry, the council ruled
early this month th.at the study was not
slanted in the ~erstroms' favor.
Furthermore, no conflict e~istcd because
Leighton and Assoetates was thcoreucaJly
turcd by the city to work on studies for the
other project.
The council, sayi ng there was no prior
relationship between the Scgentroms and
the Irvine-based gcologJcal consultant,
turned down the residents' request for a
new geological report on the craclcing
homes ..
However. residents have found
evidence to the contrary.
Santa Ao.a city rece>Tds revealed
Leighton and Associates was bmd by Far
West Scsentrom Partnen, a joint venture
including Henry Scttrstrom, Harold
Sqcrstrom and ToTCD Scgenttom, to do
work on a condominium project.
"When I saw that (document) with the
Sc&entroms' name on it ... I was quite
surprised." said Dave Lciabton, a spokes-
man for the homcownen' aroup and no
relation to the aeot~caJ firm.
"The city's crcdibili'}'. i D telling US there
was no conflict -they re just SCRwinl us
around and we're getting tired of it We
want to get some answers," Leighton said.
City Manager ALJan Roeder said be
wouJd review Santa Ana's files on the
condominium project. Additionally, the
Scacrstroms and Leighton and Associates
will be asked to reply in writing to the
cbaracs. Roeder wd, declining to com-
ment further.
Richard Lung. vice president of
Lciah ton and Associates. said all their
dealings were with Far West Partners -
co-developers of the condommium pro-
ject.
"I don't think we had knowledge tt was
the Scgerstroms." Lung said.
Tom Santley. spokesman for C.J.
Scgentrom &. Sons. concurred that Far
West contracted with Leighton and As-
sociates.
"The decision (to hire the aeologicaJ
firm) was not made by us." Santley sa1d.
"from o ur prospective, there was never
any conflict of interest."
• • •
GasspW
forces street
.to close
About 50 p1Jon1 or plOline &eak.ed from
a N~rt Sou.Jevud terVice atatioe oa10
ao adJaCC1lt atn:et in Colta Mesa tatty
today. forcina officiab to clOle '*1 of lbe street as firccrcwt neutralized the IUOliae.
Tbe DIOline Oowcd onto Bay Street
about 1:15 Lm. after a mo10rilt ran over
and aevered a bole leadina from a tanker
truck to an uoderlround •tontae tank at
Thri!\y Gas. 2021 Newport Blvd. .. lf at bad been ipi1ed, we would have
bad a fire about a blOcll Iona and all the can
parked. ~ Ilona the curb would have IODC
up," said Banal.ion Olief Ed Lewi.a.
Ftrefiabten oeutrali%ed the plOtinc
with land, but said the actwa.l deaaup
would be left to the aervice •bon. A
private firm WU reportcdJy c:ootacted IO
vacuum the pJOline and sand from the
lltect.
The p.eolinc flowed from a driveway
near the comer ofN~ BoWevard ud
Bay Street to a ~ mteneaion. Tberc
were DO injuries. Residents and buNNMH
in lhc: area were not evacuated.
Fire aboard
cabin cruiser
may be arson
A boat fire that may have been staned by
an anonist was quelled in Hunt.incton
Harbor Monday.
The fire OD the )6.foot cabin cruitef
caUJCd an estimated St ,SOO damw, uid
Huntioaton Beach Ft.re Chief bennis
GroaL
Fuefi&hten resooodina to the 3:2.S p.m.
call i..ndudcd ti untixti D Beach, the ~County Hatbc>r ~trol from Su.Diet 0rus County VolUDleer'I md
Seal Bach, Groat aid.
Harbor Patrol firefiahten wete OD the
scene 6nt, dousina the flames with dry
chemicals and water pumped from an
.onboard pump.
Tbe boet ii reported)y owned by Moe
Noortbab, but DO one WU 00 tbe boel
when fire6*bten responded, Groat laid.
However, people were 1een on the boat
immcdi.ately-bdOre the 6.re, be uid..
Groat declined to elaborate pendin&
completion of an invcstiption.
Baby food r ecalled
after glass found
LOS ANGELES (AP)-Jan of Gerber
baby food were pulled from lbe sbdves of
two Southern California supcnnartets
after customers complained of findina
glass or gritty residue, officials said.
A spokC$man for the Fremont., Mich.-
based Gerber Products Co. said be was
unfamiliar with the mcident.s. but said no
tampering has been found in investiption
of numerous previous complaints this
year.
In Lancaster, a woman said she found a
sliver of glass an a jar of Gerber's bananas
wilb pineapple and tapioca fiavor &be was
foedlna her 6-month-old dauahtcr Sunday,
sheriffs LL Don Maben sai<f Monday.
Mesa teen mother sought
in abandoning of her baby
Monday along the 400 block of South
Coast Highway, the V1ct1m told
police. • • • Pohcc arrested two motonsts on
i;usp1c1on of driving under the m-
fluencc of alcohol. Ree Verne
Kramer, 3S. of Laguna Beach was
arrested at 9:20 p.m. Monday oo
South Coast Highway. Ralph Rich-
mond Conedon. S3, of Long Beach
was stopped at 11 p.m. Sunday along
the 6000 block of South Coast
Highway.
In a scperate Newport school
brca.k-m. burglars took an un-
determined amount of cash from the
walk-ID safe at Horace EnsJIP School.
They apparently pncd open the officc
door, opened the safe and searched
the offices of the pnnc1pal and vict
pnncipal.
his betJe 1979 Chevrolet van was
burglarized near has home. The loss
included stereo equipment worth
$300 and a floor jack worth StOO. • • • A clerk at Paisano Och. 8890
Warner Ave:. told police that a man
apparently took $SO from a bank bq
under the counter Saturday whtle she
was an the lcitchen. A Costa Mesa teen-ager .suspected
of abandoning her 16-month-old son
in some bushes outside a home in
Garden Grove i1 beina sought today
by polioe who report they've bad little
luck-90 far.
Joshua David Walsh wu found
early Jut Thursday in some 1brubl
outside a house in Giiden Grove,
accordin1 to s,t. Bruce Beauchamp.
The child, clad only in diapers, wu m
good condition but wu shiverina
ftom the-cold, police said.
Bpdnpm Beach
Thieves entered a residence
throuah an unlocked rear door in the
4000 61ockofHdl Avenue and stole a
$2.SO camera and S 12.600 in jewelry. • • • Someone smashed a W1 ndow to j!t
inside Pasha's Liquor. 706 Pacific
Coast Hiahway. losses weTC .un-
known. • • • A buraJar entered a house in the
7000 block of Palin throuah an
unlocked front door and stole a $249
camera and S32S in campina cqu1~
ment. • • • A youth was ta.keJ'I into custody at
T111tt sto~1 9882 Adams Ave .. for
alleacdlY lfYln& to steal three p&in of
shoes valued at SS3.98. ••• A 1 ().speed bicycle valued ac SI 00.
wu l\Oren at Ocean V.ew Haab
School.
The child now is beina cared for at
Oranaewood Children's Home in
Oranae.
The mother. Danette Walsh, 19,
was la1t teen in Costa Mesa where she
had been livina in a Harbor
Bou.levard motel ainoe October, said
Beauchamp. He uid 1he form.ally
lived in Arizona.
The woman is dctcribcd as bavina
Iona brown bair, about S feet. 6 mches
tall and wei&h1 about 250 pounds.
• • • An ansry man called police and
claimed that hi1 wife and dauabter
weTC watched by an empfoyee throuah a two-way m im>r while they
weTC undretsinaat Fuhion Gal. 7S62
Ediqer Ave. • • • Someone entered an apartment 1n
the 8000 block of Sen AnteJo and
stole a $200 Penian cat. • • • A aitl was apprehended while the all~y tried to st.ca.I a bottle of
tcqWla Valued at S 12 at Albert.Ion '1 at
7101 Warner Ave. • • • A man uid his locker was ran-
sacked at the Holiday Health pa,
J 7091 Beach Blvd. • • • Thieves tole ~ In cash. a
checkbook and •vinp book from an
office at 18821 Delaware l • • t Someone stoic a it ,Sl2 tclta.cope
police sa1d.
She is being sought on child
endangerment ,charges. said
Beauchamp. Several bruises were
found on the child's body, but pohcc
said it is not known if they are a result
of physical abutc or a fall.
The same day Joshua was found. an
hourH>ld infant boy was found in a
ttub bin in Oruge. That child is now
beina cared for at children's Hospital
inOranae.
and tripod from a prqe in the 19000
block of Shordine. • • • Someone shot out a window o(the
Arco service station, t 6502 Bolsa
Chica St. nearwberean attendant wu
standina.
Lap.Da8eecb
The keys to a vehicle were stolen
from the counter of a bus.ancss on
North Cout Hiabway, the victim told
police Monday. The car had to be
towed and the losa of keys ultimately
cost the victim about S 168. • • • Police mpondcd 10 complainu
Monday cveoina of a man drivint a
dark srccn van alona Mountain Road
who repoftcdly tJied to act a youna
1>rl into the vehicle. Pohce wtrt
unable to locate the vehicle • • • About $250 in currency wu !itolcn
' '
Coeta lleu
Nane dollars 10 cash was rcponed
stolen from a desk drawer ai tht Garis
O ub of the Harbor Arca offi ce. t 81 S
Anaheim Ave .. between 7 p.m Fn-
day and 9:30 a.m. Saturday Entry
was made through rear doors.
• • • A telescope with camera and tnpod
attachments was reported stolen from
Scope City. 3033 Bristol St .. around
I 2:J5 a.m. Monday. Entry was made
by break.Ina a front Window. The lo
was set at S 1,220. • • • The front wmdow near the cash
tqJStcr at Der Wdncnchruttcl, t 9S I
Harbor Blvd .. was rcpontd broken
between 11 p.m. Sunday and .S:29
a.m . Monday The rqmer wu
empty. • • • • Assorted brass tiuwes worth S 18 ..
~ re~ stolen (tom Allred'•
Pool Supply, 3JJ E 17th t .. between
3p.m.Sunday and8:4Sa.m Monday
Kew port Beach
Buralars pncd open the door to the
cuttodiH'• room at Newpon HC\l,h1
Elementary hool Poh~ said they
took 1t least five keys to the school
and cautN SSO damaac to the door
• • • A totaJ of $33 was taken from two
purses left in an employee's
storeroom at Robmson's department
store. Pohcc say the Fashion Island
bufl)ary occurred Tuesday. • • • Burglars reportedly looted a build·
1ng under constructJon m the 4000
block of MartJnple, talunt about
$9,900 in apphan~ The uflla'1
apparent!} entered through a door
that was wired ihut to takr an oven
ranae. deep fryer. mixer and other
items • • • A rcs1dent1al burglal) 1n the on
Bayfront Avenue reponcd a $4,625
los . A wedding band and scvcral
items of opal Jewelry ~ taken
PountaiD Valley
Usina a tire iron. someone tned to
pry open a door without succe , then
broke a Window to enter the office of
Advanced Tax Con ultants.. 17220
Ncwhope SL, over the Wttkrnd The
loss included a statue. a telev1S1on tell
a video rcconicr and a ty~ter, al
valued at $6,397. • • • Two male studtnts at Lo AmlJO
Hath School. 16566 Newhope St.
~rtcd Monday that tomcooc
broke into their locktn at the school.
do1na .$!00 damqe The IMS also
included clothing and b&sebttl equ1p-
m~t and worth S4 I 1 • •• A rt1.1<knt of the t 7 300 block or
Wiid trttt rcporttd Monday th.at
t
• • • A nurse reported Monday that
someone broke into her red 1984
Toyota Cellca while it was ~ked in
the southeast lot at Fount.aio Valley
Re&JonaJ Hospital, 17100 Euchd Ave.
The loss included stereo equipment
wonh$SOO.
tmne
A buraIAr took a $5,000 piece of
pa.1ntm1 equipment from a construc-
uon site at 9950 Jeronimo Road
Monday mom1na. • • • A thief took a 81aupunlc ste~.
valued at about $300, from a con-
dom1n1um at the 40 bl()(k of Pcraola
Monday momma. • • • A Volkswqen R.abb1t on the 2600
bl()(k. or Kelvin was broken into
Monday afternoon through the wind-
wina and a AM-FM cauette player,
valued at aboul $300, was stolen • • • A thief stole a Clanon radio,
cassettes and sl>Clkcn fTom an car
1>9rked It the 2 \ 00 block of Mt'Oaw
A venue Monday afternoon. • • • Thrtt bacylces WCIT stolen Monday
betwttn 2 and 6 p.m A red, chrome
BM X Tt'aJ tolcn from tbc 3900 bkd
of Ac::aaa It about 2 p.m A blUiC
Murrty c::ruitcr -.s stolen from tbe
4200 block of Banana Patkway at
about 4 p.m. nd a black cnuter wu
stolen from the 20 block of
TanaJcwood_
---------------= ----
I
Hostages'
kin to start
letter drive
Search of Challenger's
cabin area almost over
W ASHlNGTON (AP) -.. Rel.a·
u ves of the American host.qt m
Lebanon plan to launch a national
letter-wriuna campaign Ut'flJ\I the
Reapn administration ·to mtensify
iu effons to secure freedom for the six
captives.
"We're goina to use the churches to
help us." said Enc Jacobsen, 29, of
Huntmgton Beach, son of hostage
David Jacobsen, S4, administrator at ·
the American Univenity Hospital in
Beirut.
The fanulies announced the lette-r-
writing dnve Monday. hours after
they met with administration of·
fi cials at the State Department.
, Relatives ~ope Americans will show
their support for the hostages by
sending letters to the adman1strataon.
Charles Redman, a State Depart-
ment spokesman, wd Monday the
administration 1s working through a
"variety of channels" to bring about
the hostages' release. but he refused to
say whether there were any optt m1sttc
signs Irish eye. were smiling
0
CAPE CANA V£RAL. Fla. (AP)-
The search of the Atlantic wheR
ChalleQICT's cabin wrcctqe and~
mains of utronauu have been f'C'"
• covered may be near ao end now that
a salvqc ship bas made a third trip
into port with debris, sources say.
And the Navy said today that a
piece of booster rocket wrcckqe that
may provide a clue to the space
shuttJc's explosion bas betn raised
from the ooea.n bonom.
The US.S Pmerver, as it did its last
twO pon ca.Us. pulled in under cover
of darbess and without tiahu Mon-
da ~L
Dnlike last Wednesday's arrival,
there was nQ,honorguard of wlon io
dl'C$S blues nor was there a Oq-
drapcd object on deck.
But there were several sailors m
wort clothes standing at parade rest
on deck. and conllinen from~ ship
were loaded aboard two military
ambulances that sped away. Both
wert indications that remains of
astronauts were aboard.
He issued a statement calltnj on all
countries with 1nfluenc.e 1n the
Middle East to 101n together in
demanding the "immediate, uncon-
d1t1onal release" of the host.ages.
Preeldent Reacan congratulated Sen. Tbomu O'KeW Jr.,
-appropriately on St. Patrick'• Day -for 50 yean of
publlc •l'Tlce. The Boue Speaker wu honored at a
banqaet benefiti.DC hU alma mater, Boeton Collete.
Wreckage coUected from 100 feet
down in the Atlantic 18 miles off-
shore also was seen piled on the decks
of the ship.
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration officials have refused
to acknowledge that any remains
have been returned and decline to
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I M.tie •"~-A~•\A·...U~""' I L ____________ _J
m Bank of America
Booster seals not up to standard
SPACE C£NTBR, Houiton (AP)-Seals on Challenger's rocket boosten were amona 748 puta wba. fluhare would have doomed the craft but wen
approved f6tfliabt e~n tbouah they didn't meet ideal standards, a top NAS~
eqineer sar.-
A president.a.al commtWon mvcstlptina the accident bu focused on lb(
f'.'Sbt tolid roctet boosttt wbOIC IC&ls.. called 0-rings, are believed to bav(
failed. TM IC&ls ftrt on \M cntica.l ttems list and granted a ~aiver. .
Waiva'S were a.aued for 617 of the 748 parts after evaluations detemune<!
they could be Oown without uonea:essa.ry risk, Marion E. Merrell of the
Jobmoo ~ Ce-ntcr said Monday.
Such criticality l ltans" Clist on jetlinen and oars and probably alwayi
will ai11 ~ Sl*lt abut~ Mem.U, head of the center's Safety, Reliabilit)
and Quality Aaurancc . fi . The mnainlna l l l perts were exempted from the class,1 u::auon system
becauic ~was no way to establish a redunClancy •. or bac1'up. These parU
tncluckd IUCh thinp as ~wi.np and tail.
Waivers arc aranted for .. tb09C items that we ~ not able .to act up to
standards," but not "until all avenues are exhausted, Merrell said.
discws anythina about the recovery
operation. in deference to the families
of the IC'Veo astronauts killed in the
Jan. 28 explosion.
Agency officials reportedly were
unhappy about lhe honor guard and fl.aa last Wednesday because they
were spotted by reporters and pho-
tograpben staking out the arrival
from across Pon Canaveral's entry
channel.
The ship's captain, Lt. Cmcir. John
C. Devlin, said he ordered the bono1
guard because of the solemnity of the
event.
Sources close to the investiption,
who spoke on condition of anonymi·
ty, said most of the remains and cabin
wrecU&e now have been recove~
and that the search of the cabin area
may be near completion.
Papers outlining
Marcos' finances
given to Aquino
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
United States today turned over to
the new Philippines government
l,SOO documents detailing the
financial boldinp of former Presi-
dent Ferdin.and Marcos.
The papen were given at the State
Deputment to Jovito Salooga, chair·
}man of the Commission on Good
'GovernmenL The panel was a~
Pointed by incoming president Cor-
azon Aqumo to investigate Marcos'
wealth, which bas been estimated as bi&b as SS billion.
The documents were provided to
Salonp by Michael Armacost, under-
secretary of state for political affairs,
said Debbie Cavin. a State Deoart·
ment spokeswoman.
The action came a day after a
federa11u• in New York. refused to
intervene 10 a request to prevent
Aquino'sgovemment from obtainint
lbe documents· which Marcos took
with him when he went left Manila
last month. ·
The State t:>c,>artment is also
expected to provide the documents to
a House subcommittee which has
been investigating the extent of
Marcos' U.S. holdings. The House
Foreign Affairs Pacific subcommittee
was expected to receive the docu-
ments later today after it issued a
subpoena for them.
'Desperately ill' man
rests with third heart
HERSHEY, Pa. (AP)-A 48-year-
old man given an artificial heart after
bis body-nrjected a transplanted
human organ repined consciousness
today but remained in critical and
unstable condition, a hospital spokes-
man said.
Robert E. Cresswell, of Hunt·
inadon. the second ~rson to recci ve
the Penn State aruficial heart, re-
pined consciousness at 5 a.m .. said
Milton S. Henbey Medical Center
spokesman John W. Burnside.
The device. implanted Monday
during ei~t hours of surgery at the
center, is antended to keep Cresswell
alive until another human heart can
be transplanted. .
Overnight, CressweU had "a mod·
crate amount of blcedina" that re-
quired transfusions, Burnside said in
a news bncfing in nearby Harrisburg.
He said the bleeding had sJowcd
considerably later in the morning..
Death row inm.ates end
uprising, let hostages go
By lite Auodaled Presa
MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. -A I 2'h-hour uprising by death row inmates
who took three people hostage ended peacefully after their complaints about
the practice of assipjng two prisoners to a cell were broadcast, officials say. No
injuries were reported dwin& the disturbance, which began Monday morning
when two inmates wielding sharpened broomsticks seized the bosiqes during
a recreational period, said Department of Correction spokesman Vau&}ln
Oventreet. One of the two once wrote the state Supreme Coun that "death
seems the only escape from the aaonies" of prison.
Mulroney .. ,,. enriroruneata dJ1n6
WASHINGTON -Canadian Prime Mfo.ister Brian Mulroney pressing
for action to combat acid rain Jj<>llution~. told U.S. citizens today their
environment is dyina alona ~th Ca~ada's. "Tour environ~ent is dyi:t as
surely u summer follows SptlllJ, u 11 oun," Mulroney said. Makins . the
acid rain issue ovenbadows all others as he bqan talks with Re&41n at the
White Howe, Mulroney said environment.al problems will rcmatn on the
aaenda "1~!11 after it 1s no lonaer trendy in Wuhinaton to talk about N'ica.rqua.
Computer matdl rmcovedZJ6 f raad
WASHINGTON -Federal investia'ton looki~ for fraud arc usina
computer technolOI)' to Poke into some o1the most pnvate areas of people's
lives -not just tu returns, but allO death certificates, divorce decrees,
marriqe lioen1e1 and even 1ebool attendance records. The arowina u1e of this
"comr.ter match" technoloSY ls of concern to civil libenict aroups, who fear
that lintina dilt.ant computen for frequent cbecb may lead to the bKkdoor
creation o(a national databenk -a vut repository of detailed information on
tbe citizenry. But the problem is ditmiued by Richard P. Kuuerow, inspector aeneral of the Health and Human Services Department, who says, .. Any
computer match that does not consider privacy, faimm and due process as
amona ha m~or 1oal1 it not a aood project."
Jad6e warn• accrued Nu collaborator
NEWYORX.-Anemiafefacinaadeath ICntenoein lheSovict Union for
Nu.i war crimea Sot a cool reception from one of the Judaet considerina his
appeal of a deportation order. "You do not eUcit sympetby of the coun with
tftft 10n of dekndant," Judie Frank X. Altinwi oftbc 2nd U.S. Cimait Coun
of A~ told Kart Umw' anorney Ivan Benins on Monday. He told the thrtO-J~ ~Uaie panel that deponlna bis client to the Soviet Union would
viol.ale Linnu constitutional ri&bu bcc:aute he .. never bad the opportuAity to
contest the punishment that awl.Ju him."
No Nttlement bi •trlJce at S GB plaJta
LYNN Maas. -After a four.daJ ~ Gencra1 Electric Co. officiall and
repraeotatfvee of 10tne 7,500 •ttttina worten at three planu mu.med
net0tiationt Monday, but the ta1U teOellCd without qreement. The two akSe1
met for about ftve houn, Mid union spokeswoman 1'atbera Sweeney, !ho
declined to MY if there Ud been any prosrae. The ta.lb we~ ldiedweo
'fl\ti t•t*' 1•"4-I·•-·"'""''"'·~ ......... ,,,.,. 'm.inth ••ti••••uf' ti •n•"""'""'''-•J t .... ~ ...... lfnotltf ~··"""".'"""''"-NI 11'/VnnuO..~ ..... _.....,..nc1 •n .,, .... , ••Mlr'tnt , .. "'."" Tlw..r1,... ... •"""•' ~ resume TUClday. abl l&id .• 1"he ltlib that.., Feb. 21concernsIblc:k.los0 .__ ___ ~_ .. _ .. ~_ •• _ .. _ •• _ .. _ .... _ •• ..,_ .... _ .• a_,,._ .. _ .. _h _ .. _.,..,_ .. _•_hi_• r_··--_"_ .. _~_· ,_ ..... _,_ ... _ ..... _ .. _ ... _-... _1_1 ""_'"11_ ... _._.~_ .... _._ ... _ .. _ ••• _."'_"""_ ... _.~ __ ... _.-_ ..... _....-__ ... _ ... _ • ...._ __ ·"-"_ .... _ .. _ .. _ ..... ________ •_~employee p'levancet and the suapenaion of. tbop steward.
I t • -------
Car bomb kills
60inSyria;
-110 wounded
Iraqis blamed for
Damascus blast:
reporting delayed
BEIRUT (AP) -A Christian-
controlled Beirut radio station said
today a car bombins in the Syrian
capital killed 60 people and wounded
110. Syrian state media blamed Iraq
for the bombina.
The Voice of 1..ebanon radio sta-
tion, which is controlled by President
Amin Gemayel's Phalange Party,
said its report on the explosion was
based on informatfon from uniden-
tified informed sources.
Syria's state radio and television
network said Monday, "a number of
ci tizcns were injured" Thursday
when a refriaerator truck packed with
explosives blew up in Damascus.
Neither Syrian radio itor the Syrian
TV rcpGrt gave a specific number of
injured. The television station broad-
cast footaJC showing 12 badly
wounded Vlctims in hospital beds.
Tbe Syrian state television said a
.. Lebanese agent of the Iraqi regime"
drove a refrigerator truck loaded with
explosives into the northern entrance
to Oanwcu1 and detonated it.
The broadcast showed film of a
man who said he wu Ahmed Hassan
Eid, 27, of TriPoli, Lebenoo, and be
stated he carried out the bombina oo
instructions from the Iraqi teeret
service.
The Syrian' broadcasts did oot say
why President Hafez Assad'11ovem-
ment waited five days to announce
the bombina.
The Voice of Lebanon 6nt ro-
portcd the bombing Sunday Dia.ht. It
said the explosion occurred Thursday
in Abbassicn Square a few yards from
a bousina compound for Soviet
advisers. It did not say if there were
any Soviet victims.
Friction between Gemayel and
Assad increased after Gemayel re-
jected a Syrian-sponsored pact de-
signed to end Lebanon's I I-year-old
civil war between Christian and
Moslem miljtias.
Syria and Iraq are governed by rival
wings of the Socialist Baath pany and
have long battled over ideological,
political and economic issues. Syria
and Libya, both close allies of the
Soviet Union, are the only Arab states
that suppGrt Persian 1ran in its 51h-
year-old war with Arab Iraq.
OPEC leaders weighing
oil production cutbacks
By ~e A11octated Pn11
GENEVA -OPEC leaders, ~lung to stabili.u declining oil prices,
indicated today they may be ready to cut production without insisting that
Bntain and other non-OPEC nvals do the same. It remained unclear, however,
whether the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries could reacb
agreement on a common strategy. Most of the OPEC leaders remained out of
public view today, but statements from key delegations indicated the
organization may be Wlllmg to cut production without insisting on reciprocal
action by non-OPEC producers.
French leaders cont er on premier choice
PARIS -President Francois Mitterrand met this morning with Premier
Laurent Fabius, but there was no indication when the Socialist president would
announce his choice for Fabius' replacement. Mitterand has promised that the
new premier will come from the ranks of the conservatives, who narrowly won
c-0ntrol of the National Assembly in Sunday's elections. The conservative
premier will operate with the smallest legislative majority in the history of the
Fifth Republic and w1th an ideologically hostile president. The president said
Monday night he would name a new premier today. There was no indication by
midday when Mitterrand would announce his choice.
U.N. driver kidnapped ln Lebanon
VIENNA -A dnver for the U.N. Relier and Works Agency was
kidnapped in Beirut today. the agency's headquarters in Vienna announced.
The agency. which provides schools, housing and other aid for Palestinian
refugees in the Middle East, said in a statement to news agencies that l.aki
Hamadeb was taken at gunpoint from a bus while on his way to work. Five
gunmen. driving a car without license plates. stopped the U.N. agency's bus
and abducted the 49-year-old Hamadeh, the agency sa1d. _
Eleventh body found ln hotel rubble
SINGAPORE -Rescue workers tunneled to within three feet of a
survivor still stuck in the rubble of a collapsed hotel, but there was little sign of
life elsewhere in the wreckage today, a senior official said. Crews recovered the
body of an unidentified woman today, increasing the number known dead in
Saturday's collapse of the Hotel New World to 11 . Sixteen people have been
rescued. Lim Siam Kim. operations director of the Home Affairs Ministry said
today about 75 people may remain buried in the wreckage. Hedid not provide
any explanation of the figure.
Sa kllled Jn South African riotlng
JOHANNESBURG -Groups of m iners at the world's second-largest
gold mine fought with long knives, axes and sharpened metal rods in the early
morning darkness today, and six men were killed, miners and a company
spokesman said. Police said that elsewhere in South Africa, two blacks were
killed in rioting. Miners at the Vaal Reef gold mine 95 miles southwest of
Johannesburg said secunty forces backed by a helicopter fired guns and teargas
to break up the groups of battling miners. Barry Avery. a spokesman for Anglo
American Corp., owner of the mine, said six miners died and eight were
seriously injured. He said 1,250 miners quit their jobs after the fighting. and
denied a suggestion by some miners that the departing men had been
dismissed.
'Prime suspect' in custody
in Swedish leader's slaying
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (A P)-A
prosecutor said a Swede now in
custody 1s a prime suspect in the
assassination of Pnme Minister Olof
Palme, and news rcpGrts said the man
once belonged to a right-WlnJ group
that bad called Palme a "madman."
Chief prosecutor K.0 . Svcnsson
uked the Stockholm magistrate's
court Monday for permission to bold
the suspect for further i.nvestipti.on.
"perpetrator" could mean either the
iunman or an accomplice actively
involved in the slaying. Svensson's
statement did not clarifY rus use of the
word, and officials ref used to
elaborate.
The prosecutor said the suspect's
clothing will be analyzed by experts in
Wiesbaden, West Germany, and
police indicated the analysis for
possible gun~wder stains could
yield more evidence soon.
PaJme1 59, was shot in the back as
he and nls wife walked unguarded
thrOUJb Stockholm on the niaht or
Feb. 28.
"As a result of 1nvest1gat1ons
carried out to date. probable reasons
have emeried in the view of the
prosecutor lo implicate the man of
compliatr in the murder as per-
petrator.· a statement from ...--------------;
Svensson's office said. S
"It 1s most impGrtant that he be RUFFELL'
dctamcd until the suspicions have
been further investigated," said UPHOLSTERY INC
Svensson an his request, which the •
court is to consider Thursday. -. '• D* c:...n •tt
In $wcd1~h lepJ parlance. the word tm i-. •WI~ COSTA IEA-541-115'
tlRir l'ro~urtion' pr..iocU y •nnounrf"~ our
nf'wl) ffmud,...,ct. pr<~"'i"r •t1lon onJt"r """
ownf'f'111hlp. W t •rf' • lf'am of m111.-1atl'4' &
'4"r•il'f' Ol'lf'nlt"d •lyllllt' & m•nil'uriah.
1 lt""n 7 .tay• for your""'"""'""•"
'"INl•1l•11 prntl11rr• •••ll1tb~
Hither •lither
Tlae ID&k• tlaat 8t. Patrick •appa 1edly 4roft oat of Ireland
weren't for&otten ln 8aD Jl'rancleco llonclay. Here Le9ter
Tee cbuee la.la •Dake, Donal4lna, da.rtnc tbe ftaala of the
18th amuaal St. Patrick'• Day anake race when 80 reptil•
competed for the dtle of "futeet •Dake ID the Weet. ..
~ Coelt OAJLY PtLOTIT~, Mardl 18, 1• * A8
Rotarians ordered
to reinstate club
that allows women
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Rowy
Jnaerutional must reiosaaae the
Duart.e chapter it oUl1ed eiabt yean
llO for adm.iuina tbM womeo mem-
bers, a state appd.Late court ruled.
The 49-.,..e. decilion Monday by
the 2od Diltrict Cowt of Appeal
revmcd a l 983 rulina by Lot Aoplcs Su~or CoUJt Judie Mu F. Deutz
Which u,Pbeld the OUllef and 11.DO-
doDed tbe ma.lo-only membmb.ip of
the intern&tiooal orpnization. .. tocredibty, 1'4 ycan before the
•tan of the 2 r I\ ccntwy and 210 yean
afttt the aiplna of the ~tion of
Independence, we ttill find ounelvcs
ha~ to write an opinion defeodina
the riabt of American women to eq_ual
opportunity in a leCular orpnizauoo
of approximately. 20,000 clubs, with
more than 900,000 members, .. Jus-
tice Euaene Mc:Closh wrote.
Justice Arleiab Woods and Los
An&eles Superior Court Judie Irvin&
Witness identifies Ramirez in slaying
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A young
man who watched in his rear-view
mirror as a man wrestled a woman
out of'ber car said he never heard the
shots that killed her but pointed out
Richard Ramirez in court as the
assailant be saw in the dark.
Defense attorneys for the ··Night
Stalker" defendant challenged the eye
witness identification by Jorge Gal-
legos Calderon, noting that Calderon
wu never asked to attend a Police
lineup and bad not picked out
Ramirez untiJ bis testimony Monday.
Calderon's testimony opened the
third week of a preliminary bearing
for Ramirez, who is charged with 14
murders and 54 other felonies in Los
AnJeles County-the ma~ of the
serial attacks that tcrro · Cali-
f omians last year. The hearing will
determine if the 2~ycar-old drifter
from El Paso, Texas, must stand trial
on the charges.
Calderon, a Mexican emigrc who
speaks little English, testified through
an interpreter on the one.-ycar an-
niversary of the murder of Tsai-Lian
Yu. He recalled the sounds of screams
in the nillht and her plea: .. Help me!
HelpmeF
Calderon, 22. said he was sitting in
a pickup truck with his girlfriend
when be heard noises "like a child's
cry," looked in bis mirror and saw a
man struggling with a woman.
"He was trying to pull her out (of
her car)," he said.
.. Do you see that man in court
today?" Deputy District Attorney
Education chief calls
for morality lessons
SAN DIEGO (A P) -U.S. Sec-
retary of Education William J. Ben-
nett called on the nation's univer-
sities to take a more active role in
teaching students moral values, in-
cuding the difference between right
and wrona.
"Pa.rents don't expect their chil-
dren to come out (of collcge2 worse off
than when they went in, ' Bennett
said in• speech Monday to more than
1,300 members of the Association of
Governing Boards of Universities
and Colleges.
4 i:htnk thar parents have a
reasonable right to expect from a
college that it will establish a certain
environment ... that it will point the
young men and women to the good
things, the noble things. the ex-
emplary things," Bennett said.
Bennett also said colleges and
universities must protect students
from drugs.
Bennett's remarks drew criticism
from at least two trustees of the
California State University system.
"I was embarrassed by the lack of
depth to tbe secretary's under-
stand.mg of what higher education is
all about,'' said trustee Celia
Ballesteros. "If I can say this without
offending PT A members, I bad hoped
that the nation's secretary of educa-
tion would come across soundin,g
better than a small-town PT A prcs1-
den t. but that's how he sounded."
Trustee Robert Kully said he was
surprised as Bennett's "simplistic" war, oflooking at morals.
' We can all agree to support the
sanctity of life, but what does the
secretary want us to teach about
abortion, tne death penaf ty and birth
control? These are the rcaJ sanctity of
life and moral issues that we face, not
the simplistic notio n of right and
wrong," Kully said.
later, at a news conference, Ben-
nett said be suj>ports placing under-
cover police officers on school cam-
puses to catch drug users and de-
scribed druJ abuse as the biggest
problem facing the nation's schools.
"I don't care who's pushinf-
whether it's parents or whether 1t s
kJds ... this really is approach.mg a
propGrtion ofa olague," Bennett said.
Your feet need a doctor of their own!
Phone for important /
information. / .. ~
Pt..charric phy~•< 1.in~ and
surgeun" -pod1atnsl<;-
have taped 1mp11nan1
mt'4'S<lges rur } I IU
Phone and
ask for ........ =-
tht
tape by
numlx'r
714-635·5680 Oranx• L uunt) l\d1.1t"' \IM!,.al '-• 1tt\
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2. I >1atwlr'-
3. Alhlttr\ f•li•t
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6. I lt•alth anrl ·•llllllC
7. lngr11wn t•1t•na1l<
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AGl"OF
A LIFETl
Pbili Halpin asked him.
.. ~es," said Galleaos, Pointina
across the courtroom to where
Ramirez sat at the counsel table.
He was the second penon to
identify Ramm in court u the so-
called Night Stalker. Maria
Hernandez pointed him out last week
as the man who shot her the same
night Yu was slain and another
woman, Dayle Okazaki, was
murdered.
However, Calderon said be did not
see or bear the shooting which killed
Yu. a JO.year-old law student from
Monterey Park, the night of March
17,1985.
"I didn't pay attention to what was
going on because I thouaht it might be
a lovers' Qll&JTCf," the witness said.
After he beud ber temUDilll b
help, be jumped out of' bis tnd, llW
the mortally wounded Yu c::nwtia&on
th.e sroWMI and tried to hdp ber,D.lt
police arrived wit.bin mi.D.utel. be
testified.
A doctor who pronounced Y• dmd
on arrival at the ~taJ testified lhe
bad a bullet wound m her cbelt.
Defense attorney Daniel
Hernandez tried to lbow th.at
Calderon's eye witnc:U identi6cadon
was untrustworthy becau1e be could
not sec cnouab to delcribe tbe
IMl!ilant accurately.
On the witncts stand, Calderon
said he bad told police the man bad dark. curly hair, wu HillPUlic or Asian and .. about my beiabL., But
Calderon said be is S-fool..I, .mile
Ramirez. N.Dds over 6 feet.
Peace marchen vow to contb:Jae tlJeJr trek
By d9e Alseda&ed Prest
BARSTOW -SpGkcsmen for a scalcd~own Gn:at Peace Marcb u1d
they have opened more th.an a doz.en reaional offices and I~ forward to
continuina their trek to Wub..ington D.C. to promote nuclear disarmament.
Meanwhile in Los An&clcs Cimarron Productions Inc. sued the now-defunct
group that s~ the ~b .to ~ver s l S0,000 it claimed to have paid for
ex.elusive televwon and movie ~u to the story o~t.be ~ c:roD-<X>Wllry
march. "Wo're movina forward,' volunteer field dinictor Tun Carpenter said
at a news oonfercncc MondaY, in ~ delert cor:n.munity. ~We've ~ 13
offic.esacrosstheoountry. We lloonunuetomobilizcandllltateto~down
nuclear weapGns until we arrive in Wuh.ington, D.C." Carpenter said more
than 1,000 people were wa.itin& to join the march later.
FBI boatltJng •PT llanten bJ Saa Dlf!6o
SAN DIEGO -San Diego's attractiveness to spies 100utina military and
technol()licaJ secrets bu prompted the FBI to double the number of qcnts
here devoted to countcrinteD.iFooc work., an aeeocy ~kesman said. San
Di90 is a key target for foreign qents because of its hiab concentration of
military bascs.._rcsea.rch facilities and higb..&ccbnolocY-oompan.ies, FBt
spokesman Gary Latumo said. Accord.in& to Laturno, four of' I 3 defendants
under indictment for cspio~ in the nation last year had ties to the San Diego
area. Those four were convicted last year on~ related to the theft of top-
secrct Navy code cards used in military communications. he said.
McMartbl• uy •tatae of Umltatlon• ap
LOS ANGELES-The statute ofllmitations bas expired on most of the
child molestation cbar&es against McMartin ~bool defendant Peggy
McMartin Buckey, and those charges should~ dismissed. her attorney says.
Jn a motion filed Monday, attorney Dean Gits asked Los Aqelcs County
Superior Court Judge Roaer ~ren to dismiss.16 of the 20 molestati~n cbarlfi
against Mrs. Buckey. 57. She 1s also cbuJcd with one count of consptraey. M_rs.
Buckey's son, Raymond Buckey,. 27, is charged with 79 counts of child
molcstaLion and one count of consptr1cy.
You'll have an answer on a PenonalLoan in 24 hours..
At Beneficial~ the boss just so happens to be a very friendly
manager. Someone you can talk to about what you want No
committees.Just you , the boss-and a Personal Loan in just 24
hours. So go ahead. Shake hands. And talk personally to
the boss.
The boea ia in at the Collotri.ng loca.tiou:
ANAHEIM-
.mW 1.Jno91n.Atto1P Suite 140
COSTAMW-
3420S 8 11alol S1 Sotle 330
CVPAESS-
9841 Wlllk•rSI nro..o-
2370'EHoroRd Sutte 1
FULLERTON-
! 12 S Hfllt>Of Blvd
QAAOENOM>Vl-
91SO~A ....
121 5700
NMl11
11t-'60ot
HUNTINOTOH 8EACH-
161218Mcl\ 81...0
PUCfN'f'\A-
11eo ~Linda 8!\IO
OllUINQE-
777S Meln$1 SultelO M7100t
.. ..
Talk to the manager, and yoa 're tatkhag to the boa
A8 * OrllnQe Cout DAILY PILOT/ Tueld-.y, March 18, 1988
P APARAZZI
-------
~n evening to remember for the House Ear Institute
BJ MA.RY LOO HOPI.INS
........ C.1 $ t I
It was an evenina to remember.
It was the ninth annual House Ear lnstitute's benefit dinner in the
lnte~tional Ballroom of the Beverly Hilton Hotel with entertainment
provu:lcdby emcee Beb Hope, Aacly WUllam1, Pblll• OW.r, the International
Children's Choir and IUdard Kufmu and his band.
As the institute's chairman emeritus/Founder Dr. Howard 8Mae turned
the prop-am over to Hope, be said, .. What would we do without Bob Hoper'
· "This is a command perforinance, otherwise I don't get a free car test."
replied Hope, wbo bas donated bis service u emcee of the benefit for years.
The program opened with songs by the International Children's Choir
with about 75 children dressed in their native costumes.
The &litterina cast's nut performer was Playlll1 Diller, who thanked
Boward lfeue for restoring ber heanng. She kept the audience laughing with a
fast repertoire of jokes.
Theo the evening's star-performer Alldy Williama, accompanied by
Kaufman and his band, sang "Memory" from the musical "Cats," "Moon
River," "Glory, Glory Hallelujah," and a medley of gospel songs accompanied
Connie Morthland (center) with Clement and Lynn Blnch.
Dorothy Miller with Grayne Price.
by a chotr. "My brother Dick, ananaed the medley," Williams said.
In ke:~ with tradition, the ptOIJ'am closed with NueneF .. ray in sign
lanauaae mpanyina Williams u he sana "We'll Be Lovina You Always."
Before the~· Dim1erCo-Chairman William P•J-J welcomed the 700 guest$ and mtroduoed LfU (Mrs. Clem•O ll1ncl. Newpon Beach, who
was wearioa ~black-and white jeweled gown by desipcr _.~. Lynn
chaired tbe party for a seoond year for the Associates, a support aroup of the
institute, founded in 198 J by Adlalle Clute of Newport Beach.
Lynn pve special ~ition to sponsors of the benefit. Contributing
SJ S,000 each were Mn. BanW McAlllter, Doro~y Colliu Bnwa, Popejoy,
Mn. Ray Ree•n and the Hirscbcs. Associates President J..e (Mn. William) Bo.ae announced that there
were 120 members of Associate$.. The ~up bas contributed S 1,500,000 to the
institute. In sip languqc June said,' l love you."
A biahli&bt of the evening was a multi-media film of the work being done
with the coc6Jear implant developed by the institute's president Dr. Wllliam
BHH (he's Howard's brother). The implant brings totally deaf persons from a
world of silence to a world of sound.
Earlier. Howard House presented tpe institute's Humanitarian Award to
Sa.de and Jack Peltaaon.
LUil.an Lealle and Pat Cox.
GHr&• C. P11e in recosniuoo of his exceptio~ serv1~. .. . ••
"His (Paae'•) ircatest pleasures are h11 philanthrop1es, House wd. We
arc prctenti°' you with a clock, and we hope it will tick many years for you."
"I can't unqine any cause puter than what the Ho~se bro~ers .~re doi~" Paae said. "They are belpmg people to overcome their hand1<:&pe ..
'Giving to worthy causes is so satisfying I hope th.ts wtll pve
encourqement to others (to give)."
Proceeds of$2SO,OOO will be used to conunue the research and education
efforts of the House Ear lnstitute. Amo~u;:_u from Oranae County were Associates' Past President
CouJe Me and her husband, Drew; Lo&lae and Sill Anold, Patty and
Harry Bnwa, Marpret and Boward RJcbrdlOD, Tel'T)' and Woody SmJ'
BatM.ra and Alell S.wte, Dlue and Lee BromUey, Ju and T•Y Vitti. Jo and
.Jeu Pierre Oleta, Marp.ret and Carl ltuclter, Ju and BW Luci, UCl
Chancellor Jack Pelau. and bis wife, Sule; Mary and Bob O.brtU, Mary
and Jim Reosevelt, Chapman College President Back SmJ~ and his wife, Joai;
Mrs. WW Ward, Trl*andJolmO'Douelland Lynn'sdaughtersMissesSlteUy,
Banara and Ttlfuy Ban.
P.,.nul la ediW f»J Dally Ptlot Style eclttor Vida Den.
lluy and Jim Rooenelt.
DellJ ............. lllJO.... ...........
Award winner Mary Ellen
Hadley.
Panhellenic
award to
Mary Hadley
By CAROL HUMPHREYS
~Not Ceffl IJ ....... ,
In poetry and li terature the
goddess Athena is described as the
embodlment of wisdom. reason
and the arts and is a symbol of
excellence and distinction. Thus
the ancient Greeks arc rcspQnsible
fornamingtheawardgivenannual-
ly (for 20 years) by tbc Newport
Harbor Panhellenic to recognize
the outstanding philanthropic ef-
fort.sofa woman in the community.
The 1986 winner is Mary Ellen
Hadley.
Fixed Rate Home f4uity Loans.
On Sale Now.
Where do your
children play?
Awards chairman Llllian LetUe
and 1985 recipient PatCoaan-
nounced Hadley as the wmner
during a luncheon at the Irvine
Hilton.
A 1 5-year resident oflrvine.
HadJey is currently a member of the
governing Board ofEducation for
the lrv1 ne u rufied School District.
In 1980sbesinglehandedly
founded a Chjld Molest Prevention
Program, raising funds and de-
veloping a network of volunteers to
present a program of personaJ
safety 1 n the Irvine schools. For this
she received national recognition
on ABC's 20/20.
Fixed Interest Rate•
Annual Percentage Rate"
Crocker has never before offered
California homeowner" "uch a low rate on
fixed rate home equitv loan~ In fact, our
rate may be one of the 11 >We(;,f you can find
for thi s type of loan. So. if you're a California
homeowner in the markrt for a loan, your
timing's just right.
You can borrow ft1im $10,000 to
$200,000, depending on tht· value of your
home and your personal finanaal strength .
And because it's a fixed ratt loan, your
payments will stay the same for the full term
of the Joan .
So come talk to one of our loan
experts. You can visit your neare~t Crocker
office, or call us toll· free at (800) 548-HOME,
ext. 712.
But don't delay. Nobody likes to
miss a sale.
'l<,111' tn rffect no M11rrh 14 ~n<I hi ~UhJl"l I 111 chanl(l' wt1h1•11I
.. T~ 1\nnual P..rrt>ntaRt Riil(' I bctwd "" 11 IJO,OOO lo;m '"' 1110 monlh\
,.,,h .. rnt"<I ratf' "' 11 611' and a monthlv pavml'nt .,f$'.l'H 11:
<i Crocker Bank
If you've created a special
play area, share it with the
Daily Pilot readers & WIN!
Find contest details in
today's classified section.
CONTEST RULES
Th<l COf>le11 II cle~ ''f tK-t~ Ir-C1101Y OCC-ol 0 loM COftdo -·-OIQbole llof'le 0t k..abootd yoctit No c.-oal _._ To etll•, ,.,,,.,.._,>Ill -r '°''"and
>Ubnl~ o pholOOfoph ol l!lt--, n.. ""'r"""" bt O«OfllpClllOtd bro ctetocit'°" ol 111t ""'Y· ''-phologroPl>t b«OMt ptopetl'f ol Ille ~ Not/H.iM~ teoch h~ Ofld COMO! bt
ltl"'ned fM'"' -bt ~td by W.....,, Apr• 2, tfl6 O' ~tted to l!lt Do.ly
'4ot/HllMlllQ!Otl lleoch ~~Ill .-... c/o I~ S..C• '°"""'· 330 W loy s.. .... C-~ Co 92626 by ~ 00 p ... TllondDy Apr-A 3, 1916 w_, _. bt ...,,td ., nor ... O'..:I
pllotagt•• .. .... '"""" Scioceo'' *'°' to bt........, """ 17. ,, .. ~ Nol/Hwoll ......
8eoct-~........,... "'' "°' ....,._ t--bt II.,._,~"' -°"" -•t11dt
• "'-Do'v "''"'~ leocfl ~ ClrCMlaihool •• Oofr Not/Hunl"'V'°" 8-'~ ·~· ~Ql)hen ... fllloOaVapft,.,. ....... -i.. lor poAllicollOft ...... "l••"'ll Si>o<•• •e<•l()fl COlll-• _., -,_, "--C01t90tY ttlltolflt Of"v °"" -v ""' •o•egotv w·I be COllt<*ed 0.. ·-pet cotegOry will bt dlotel>
LIVING SPACIS INTIY POIM
INTIANT'S NAMl1. ___________ _
AODllSSt.~-------------~
DAY PHONI NUMlll1 ----------
IVININO 'HONI NUMllli. ________ _
CATIOOIYa _____________ _
SIND
INTlllS
TO
LIVING SPAQ CONTEST
,. c/o DAA.Y Pl.OT/
HUNTINGTON llAOt .......... T
330 W. IAY ST.
COSTA MISA, CA 92626
'
She is chairman of the Legislative
Action Network and has been
chosen as a delegate to organize the
I OOtb Birthday Celebration of Or-
ange County in 1989. She is a
charter member of People for an
Irvine Community Hospital and
will chair its Babes in Toyland
brunch this Chnstmas. Mary Ellen
founded the Irvine Child Care
Project and chaired the Meals on
Wheels Harvest Moon Ball in 1985.
Married. with 12-year-old twin
boys, Mary Ellen said she was
overwhelmed with the award." I
can't believe it," she said while
gazing down at the gold Athena
medallion. "Some people do what
they do out oflove ... some for
money. I do this with love. And to
the other nominees, you arc what
makes this community spec1aJ."
''.Th~ Athena Award presen-
tation 1s our only fund-raiser.
Nomination forms were sent to
local_groupsinJanuaryand 17
nominceswcresubm1tted toa
selection committee. When every-
one is so qualified, it is always a
difficult choice," said president
Grayne Price.Grayne'sattirewas
totally coordinated with the pink
and green color theme of the
luncheon ch.aired by Dorotlly Mill·
er.
Newport Harbor Panhellenic is a
non-profit organization of univer-
sity womeo who joined national
sororities during their college years.
Proceeds of the benefit will provide
funds for scholarships and student
loans.
Following no-bast cocktails and
lunch the Athena nominees were
introduced. Receiving certificates
of gratitude from the Newport
Harbor Panhellenic were Vlrstala
C.1tle, Pfllyllla W. ~ri1ta1e11,
Cla .. la Collotl, Lyu Dowty, ~e
Dracbiaa,SILtna Lee Etllt, Pat
Pell» ... •r1 Naaey FeNa, BenaMt-
teO..ta. , ... J ... 1,LM Mer-
IJ'IDU. SalJJ Aue Miller, VI.._
Owea, J ... PoH, Maey Sabatuto
andSaDJY ... a.
ll'lertllee Smalet provided a
Spriqand Summer fuhion show
to the 330 attendina the afternoon
planned by chaimwl Dendly Mill-
er, c.ar .. ne WM4,J.eel,. GU.
bert, SHiia H•Jlet and Ckr!~ne
Stare1•-
Paparalll l1 edited by DaUJ PUot
Sc,le e4Jtor Vl4a Deu.
. .
•
•
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN8ACTION8, Al
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------, Us~ of store_charge cards rises-:
Despite the competition as more stores
are accepting major third-party cards
they dcadcd to ICCePC bent crecht
cards.
Another crcdi t exccoti ve
empba&ized the value of advertiijna
in the monthly billina statements.
thttd..puty cards.
There are other considerauons., too.
"It's very CApe0$ive" for n:wlen
to off'er store cards. Ounkdbcra sajd
in a telephone int.etview f'rom West
Lafayette, lod. However, be added,
ICOeJ)ti.oa ~party cards u not
chap for the retailers, either.
i
By OOITEN TIMBER.LAU ., ...... .._
NEW YORK (AP)-The use of
nore clwse cards bas in<naJe<S
$1puficantly in n:cent years despite
the fact that a arowina number of
storu now also accept thi.ni-patty
cards like A.mttK:an Express and
MasterCard. a recent study says.
Sales chafaed to private customers'
accounts represented S6 percent of
total department stoTC sales in 1984,
compared with 45. l percent in 1975,
accordina to the study.
The study was conducted by Rob-
ert Shay, 1 money and financtaJ
markets professor at Columbia Uni-
versity, and William Dunkelberg, a
Purdue University econom1cs
professor. It wu commissioned by
Citicorp Retail Services Inc.
Third-party credit cards, mean-
while. acoountcd for 9 percent of store
...
sales in 1984 V$. 4.8 percent in 1979,
the fi.nt year ~or. which the professon
proVlded stausuca.
The tb.ird~party cards included
American Express, MasterCard,
Visa.. Diners Cub and Cane Bla.ocbc.
Store ctwae Clrds &ive 1 retailer
control over the availability and
terms of'CRdit for its customen., said
Shay and Dunkelbcra. wbo inter-
viewed the credit executives a1 14 of
the largest retJlili..n& orp.nizations in the COUDll'y.
In addition, customers who bold the store cards are loyal These
customers make IS purchase visits a
year in stores where they have c.barae
accounts, a typical credit manager
told the professors.
Some of the CJ"edjt m1n1•ge~
ported that the marketing value of
their own list of charge customers is
so high that they spent additional
funds to expand these lists even as
The bottom line ii that store clwte
cards ~ inacmental sales pins.
the credit manqtTS told the
profeston.
In addition, the buyi.na Ktlvity of
the stom' own c::red.it~ customers is a aensitive indicator of future sales
activity, the profcsaor, said.
For eu.mple, the last m::ession bit a
low poiot'io 'November 1982, but that
tumi.napointwasaipaJed II months earlier by an upturn in retail revolv-
iq_credit. they said.
Tbe profeaton ~that re1&il man.,, enmine the activity or
their own credit card customers
relative to sales as an early warning
system f'or inventory ~ons and
capital investment planning.
On the downside, the retail credit
executives perceived their own ~
tomcn to be sJ..iahtly less credi-
tworthy, have slightly lower avcrqe
ea.mi.op and lower average credit
card purchases than people using
Store cards do not have annual fees
and are iencrally accepled only in 1.bc
SU> tea.
The avel'IJC balance OD a third-~y card is S hOOO. On a store card it !' $200. The repayment tenns and
interest rates on store cards and tb.ird-
party cards vary tremendously.
.. It's nice that all these banks and a1J
these stores offer all t.besc dilf'erent
plans and consumers can pick the. one thau best for them," Dunkel.__ said. .._..
M.asteiCard and Visa are offe~
through banks that allow rci-ymcnt
in monthly installments while Ameri-
can Express. issued by the company
of the same name, calls for full
payment once a month of the
outstanding balance.
Of the top nation's IOOdcpa.rtmcnt
stores, 99 have a privato-labcl credit
card, said aticorp Retail Services, a
division of the nation's laracst bank
bold.in& company that provides pri-
vate-label credit card services to
retailers.
Forty-seven percent of all families
have a major retail credit card, such as
one from Sea.rs, Roebuck and Co. or J.C. Penney Co., and 34 percent have
additional proprietary cards, the
professors said.
Thirty-nine j)ef"OCDt of all families
have at least one bank credit card,
they said.
MASTIN
Charles Dunn, . . .
adds parm.ers
...._ AttecU Jr. and Jeftrey G. 6-tller ba~e been made partnc:rs
in the Oranac County office of a.tlel 0-c. ... real cswe brokaa&e firm. Arlotti of Irvine bas been ~ County -.la
manaan-since 1981 and is a recipient of the 1rvioe Co. 's Broker of the
Year award. He is a member of the Ne.,.n s.rtM a.tary, the
NetrJ*t AW.tic CM, YMCA Y .... Olp.aa.._ and the ln1IM v..a Seceer AIMck...._ Gunther is currently rqionaJ manatet of
.Dun.o's Ora.nae County and Arizona propci:ty man•lf""'C'Ut
divisions. The Corona deJ Mar resident is acuve l.D the<>rap C-., BalNlq <>nen a.I......,_ Aueda...._ • • • s..ly Martlm bas joined the Southern Ca.W'orma region of ~II
C.. as director of matkcti.na for the Newpon Beach firm. Martin Ud
held a similar position with 0.-81• H The Laauna Hills resident
is 1 member of t.bc Sala a.& ~ C.•cO of lhe a.oc.,
!Wacry Auedadea and is 1 put member of the group's board directors. • • • Paal Lkata. aeneraJ manarr of Hu.otin&ton Bcacb-bucd
Uca&a'• CaWenla lli•trt.._ C.&en., has been efccted president of
theG.we. Wnt Nlllrtdeeal P .... A...mdea (0..Wat). The trade
organization represents the indumy in So~ California. Arizona.
Nevada and H.awa.ii. He is president of die county chapter or the
s.dety for Abaacemat ef Mugemat and serves on the
executive council oft.be Nadeaa.I Netrfdeaa.I Pooa Auoda...._ • • • 1\mo.., 8 . 'hcbr of Costa Mesa bas jomed VSI Futaen. Iae.
as product managrr for the Stan tan firm. Tucker previously opentcd
'hcbr A...mia advertising~· VSI supplies fasteners, rope-
(Pleue .. TOP/A8J
1
I
t
'orav~o '\ -,,_ Off 11.l S v J W lil P a r bt r S cl 1 0 \io, -1 0 f f I '
No~ get the CD you can add to.
Here's a new advantage. a fixed rate CD you can add monc;yt{). tt• called De:poc;1t-
Plus and ii works like this: r
During March. open a new Dcposit-Plu~ CD with a minimum of SUXXl • •
The opening high interest rate is guart11Wtd for six months. Anytime during lhat ''
rnc>ne}u, you can add to your original inv~t in any amount up to the amount of
your origjnal deposit. The new deposits earn intcreSI at the original~ rate
Limited Offer· Deposit-Plus~ only available during the month of March.
Eem .,. t01 l5t.OOI~. 6~
8 50:._ 8 Vldd•
8.15 ~
s.an-"' " 000 ~ .......... """"'" 7 90 ~nffl • )lriJ•
7.60~
~Open your aa:ount today. Call the toll-free ~ Financial line now: l-800-423-BANK .
Great American With 18 o1ftca lt'f'Ving ~County:
AMhdm Hilb EJ Toro
\bur advantage bmk.9' 8aftloa bland Founcma Valley
S.. ~ Huntinltoo Beech
~a.di u.una &e.ch
LSJJC ,....~_IC...,. .... ~ ................ ._,_......_.............. .,.,..-...,.,. ..... ~ .......... ,...,......~ ...... , .... ~ '""-'._.,\,.,
l~!::-:--;;J ~•" -·-~ ..... <tll._.,Mllttw_,__.,, ...... _ .... ,. ........ ,. _.._,.,.....-.l-•llllv1'fl•~..., ... ___ ~_..., ........ ,. __ j
~ --· """...,_,.."""'"'"' ........ "."'·"' Tiit ~ ·-............ l .. , __ .. ...,. .. -...... 'k•-· ..... ..--11'1 ·~· ~ .... ....:i"'P-•-1~· ·--~ .... .,.. ___ ........... __ i.. ............ ,.,..,...11"('1,.,_• ~-~ ... --i-;--..................... ~ ........... .
. •
---
I f£°1~ 11 -I I l•CP ·~ -~ Moron ~ -~ I nlle 7 -~ 1 Actn~t_1yil 1~ -IV)
14 Ltl'IViiiind ~~ -"° I NLI I 1 ~ -1 A v,-~
1 ~~n ~~ -''" 1 II V) -1\IJ eirkr I '6 -,._
WW 'l'"' -~ C)lbc v -~ orp 1 -.. -~
vl&aldWUtd ,-~ 4 Em.ryAF ~ -1\4 S LLCCorP '\-ti -\4a 6 ParadVne -v,
•
Orange Cout DAILV PILOT I Tueeday, March 18, 1998
Video tapes speed home sales
Intimate tours on screen shOW hoU"Ses
to best advantage -even when tt rains
By LAURA MERK °' .. DOlllr,... ...
Gone may be the days that long
drives and lena1hy, tiring walks are
routine for spending the day house-
bunting.
According to John lucewicz, of
JTL Productions, using video tapes to
sell homes is the upcoming trend an
the field.
Intimate video tours of expensive
homes arc made op sunny afternoons
sbowina California at its best. To sell
Laguna Beach as the town to li ve an. a
series of tapes have been made for
Turner Associates RcaJty, a company
~ Re~cfy for operation
specializing in private and expensive
homes. The tapes focus on a particu-
lar house or describe an area of town
Most of the homes sold by Turner
Associates arc expensive, such as the
$1.6 million Irvine Cove offering or
the $1.9 million piece of beach
property.
"If the Realtor feels the property
will onJy be for sale for a short time,
there 1s no need to use the video. But
a $2.5 million house might be on the
market for a long time. A video might
&horten that time,'' sa1d Luccw1ci.
Those moving to Southern Cah·
fom1a through job transfers may not
AP~o
Bill Weimer, a 3M proceaa development engineer, lnapecta
aurglcal ataplea dealj(ned to replace traditional auturea.
The ataplea are used 1n the 26-count Prectae brand Skin
Stapler by 3M'• Medtcal-Surgtcal Dlvlalon.
have enou&}t time to 5earch for a
home. Viewing the video tapes
months tn advance gives buyers the
opportumty to view scveraJ homes
without havina 10 make long airline
trips. It aJso eliminates the pressure o f
dccidina on a home in one week while
the employer provides the family
with a hotel room, said Lucewic--L.
"The days of searching for a home
in three or four days are over," he
said. ·
"We arc able to show them a
glorious day from sun-up to sun-
down. I believe in trying every
approach you can 1f you have some-
one with the money to buy an over SI
million house," said Sandy
O'Sullivan of Turner Associates.
"I feel a major property like this
needs this."
The pro~ny showing on the screen
10 the pnvate room of Turner
Associate! has a children's wini, an
indoor theater, a tenrus stadium
which scats 100 people, indoor pool
and panoramic views of tbe moun-
tains and ocean from every bedroom
in the house.
"You buy a home because you love
1t. Even the little person puts his or
her major wealth into a home," said
O'Sullivan.
She said people move to Southern
California for the sunny wann
weather. Nothing is worse for busi·
ness than showing a house on a foggy
afternoon.
"To capture the sunset, you can't
keep the people there for I 0 hours,"
said O'SuUivan. "Bringing them in-
side for coffee and a wann, bright
video tour of the house, is more
profitable."
Employee'sjob
all in the family
By SCIENCE DIGEST ............ ..-
The office "family" of father-boss
and sibling co-workers is replacing
traditional family ties for some
people for whom the office has
become an emotional home away
from home.
Many business concerns promote
this family feelin~ according to an
article in the Apnl issue of Science
Digest, but thi s is not always healthy.
Jane Gnffith, a psychologist at the
Americas Institute of Adlcnan Stud-
ies in Chicago, explained the reasons,
saying that "with the breakdown of
the neighborhood, religious life and
the extended family, people are
naturaJly turnintt to their JObs for a
sense of connection."
Psychologists and personnel man-
agers, however, are discovering that
the merger offamil~ and corporation
does not always work for the best.
Saul Pavlin, a New York psychol-
ogist who spcc1ahzcs in group coun-
seling for corporate employees, said
some people acted out family roles on
the job -often unconsciously and
with disastrous results.
People with an unresolved need for
a canng parent, for instance, some-
times see the boss as a father. They
1deahzc him -even 1f he does not
deserve 1t -and are disappointed
when he fails to take care of them.
Employee'> also ma} engage in
sibling nvalnes with co-workers,
competing for the attention of their
"boss-dadd\ "
Employees sometimes use their
commitment to a job as an excuse for
ignoring their real home life
'J.t's all too easy to havcJour first
pnority be your work an not the
persons you love," said Jacqueline
Plumez, author of ''Divorcing a
Corporation." "Relationships arc
hard work. and unlike a job, they
sometimes do not have clear-cut
reinforcers. At your job, at least you
get a paycheck."
Dan O'Keefe, manager for staffing
and development a t Helene Curtis
Industries, said when he was person·
nel manager at another corporation
he noticed some people were spend-
ing too much time at work.
"The comfort level was obviousJy
higher at the office than it was at
home," he said.
One danger for the individual is
that when he 1s laid off or he retires or
his Job lets him down, he has nothing
to fall back on.
Some people are so em otionally
tied to their work they cannot quit.
even when 1t would be in their best
interest to do so.
Pat Heanuc, co-owner of the re-
cruiting firm of Vantage Careers, said
one of the biggest problems she faced
was getting people to overcome the
separation anxiety and guilt they felt
when they switched Jobs.
"Getting a divorce from your
corporate marriage can be every bit as
wrenching as getting a real divorce."
Plumcz said.
Many corporations foster office
family feeling as a way to encourage
loyalty. and their effon s range from
holding picnics to offenng "cradle to
grave" henefits packages.
Wilal's more important 111 ~ou than your
11nmediate famih circle?
·· ~othing.',. )OU ~ay1
Then wh} art· }OU \\Orkmg ~o hard
and not ~pending a1i much time with ~our
familv ~ you should?
The American Savlugs family knows
11 takes more mone\ e"ery year to provide
for the family you love. But at American we
don't think you should have to work harder.
We'd like to show you how co work smarter
and have the quality time you want to
spend in the warmth of your family circle
' MONEY MATRIX C.D. Take a good look inside the cirde
we'v<.· dr.t\\-11 here Think about how earn-
inR IO'X, more, compounded daily, cou ld
reduu~ the extra hours you're working.
Think about the extra time you'd have to
<ihare with the people you care about If
your money kept workrng after ~our work-
ing ctay ended.
,;
\tlnunum lt'rrtl or I H'llr II 1th '.!~.1100
minimum \pplt1 ' I•• t• rt 1 ••I I ,, .tr
h·d1•rJI rt")(ttl~tl••fl m1111rn ~ 11ti-1,11111Jl
IOl('ft'~I JWll.tlt\ ,,,, nlrh II tlhtlr~..t di \JlllllAI
\ wld ha'll·d 1111 cb11\ l1tmpou11cl1111( 11 h1·111111t•rt'\I
"11•(1 "" d1·p11,t1 fur 001· 11 JI r1 rm II.II• \"Id Jiii!
ll'rfll \llhJI ti flt dlJltl(f" II tll" •Ill lltfll( t
COSTA \U.SA/\A~TA A~A
~11~1>' nn,tol 1ir111
1 JI \111101 '"', r,
( ~1.) l)~l, 118110
GARl>f.N (,RO\~.
12141 Cianlt-n Cr11\1· Bl\d tJ~M\
(at Harllor Bl\11 >
n~) '\~·+ xc,110
• •
. 82 %
ANNUALIZED YI ELD
.45 %
Take a few minutes right now to
hecome a part of the American Savings fam-
il} circle. Open one of our hard working
an:ounts today and you'll have more time
to spend in your famil y circle from now on!
American Savings and Loan offering
California families an unbroken ci rcle of
'!afet~ for more than 100 years.
CURRENT RATE
lltrNTINGmN BEACH
..,8 \0 Edin~er Ave 9264..,
(al Jfuntmglon Center)
C't4, 848 2a2
HUNTINGTON HARBOUR
J(1911 Algonquin St . 92649
(m Huntmgton ftarbour
\hopp1r1g f,t1nten
('l<t)WH) B55
l.AGlJNA tflLL~
24085 F.I Toro Rd . 9l65~
(at Pa.W<> de Valencia)
C'l4) ·,-,o ix16
ORANGE
1965 N 1\11\lln AH.' . 926M
(north of Taft)
('14) 9"''f 1620
SEAL BEACH
801 Paafic Coast Hwy . 90740
(at ~aJn)
(213) 594 8855
TUSTIN
641 F. First St , 92680
(at Newport Nie )
(,14) 8U 2581
MERICAN SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
CRf 011 L1N f
AMES JtURILUK 8 \JGNA
TOP BROKERS NAMED •••
P'romA7
cordage and related products to home improvement-hardware and
food-drug stores. • • • • Irvine resident Maureen Gallogly has been promoted to vice
president and senior ponfolio manager ofSecurlly Pacific NatJoa~
Suk'• trust investments department. She began with the bank 10
1980 as a manager trainee. • • • McCar1er-8arke'1 Irvine office has announced ats top three real
estate brokers for 1985. They are: Steven Ames of Ne~rt Beach,
Rookie of the Year; Jame• Kurlluk of Irvine, Top JndustnaJ Broke:;
and l.euetb Busu oflrvine, overaJI Top Broker. McCarter-Burk~ is
a commerciaJ. industrial and investment real estate brokerage with
offices in Irvine and Orange. • •• Tboma1 S. Maddock, president and chief executive officer of
Newpo. rt Beach-based Boyle Eogloeertng Corp., is the rec1p1ent of an
Oustaoding Engineer Merit Award from the ID1tltate f9r tile
Advancement of EnglneerlD1. Maddock has spent 30 years ~th
Boyle and become nationally recognized for hts technical expert1~
on water resource matters. He frequently testifies on water issues in
legislative and judiciaJ proceedmgs. He 1s a Newport Beach resident. • • • • Mark A. Williams has joined J . W. Bell & Co. of Newport Beach as
vice president of the search firm, specializing in real estate
development a nd construction industnes. • • • Irvine resident NeaJ M. Reitz, president of Neal Rell% & Co.
Certlfled Public Accoant.ant1, has resigned as chief operations officer
of American Emerglceoter lac. to devote full-time to accounting.
Neal Reitz & Co. provides advisory services to the health care
industry among other clients.
MADDOCK WILLIAMS REITZ
JeaDDt Mayfield has been promoted to sales manager of the
domestic car division at the Huntington Beach headquaners of
Pacific Aato Acct11ory Speclallst1. She has been with the firm since
1t was established in J 978. • • • MellDcla Morgan has joined the public relations d1v1s1on ofB.J .
Stewart Adverll1log aad Pabllc Relalloas, Inc. of Newport Beach as
an account executive. She previously worked as manager of corporate
pubhc relations for Offsbore, Daystar of California clothing
manufacturer. • • • Mary Allee and Harry Dell, broker-owners of RE/MAX of
Huntington Beach, were among more than 1,600 top-producing real
estate associates from 30 state and nine Canadian provinces who
attended the RE/MAX 13th lntcmat1onal Convention in Dallas.
Texas, recently.
AMERICAN AIRPORT
TRANSPORTATION
& LIMO S INE
SERVICE. INC.
Buses/Minibus limousines
Stottonwogons Vons RVs
Door to Door Service
Private Charters ond Tours
1-800-524-I 300
Advertising Art
Services
• Brochur .. /Ca1..Jo9\ .. De11qn
v l.09oe/Corpora1e I D Poc~ov••
"' Typeaettin9
GRAPHICS NEWPORT
(714) 720-9191
Rockwell
announces
re-purchase
PITTSBURGH (AP) -Rockwell
International Corp. said Monday it
plans to re-purchase $500 million ol
1 ts common stock as·• pan of our Iona·
term goal of improving shareholder
values."
Roben Anderson, chainnan and
chief executive officer, said the re-
purchase program was autbonzcd
after 10 consecutive years of record
earnings and "relects the board's and
management's confidence in the
outlook for Rockwell's future."
Rockwell said the program would
reduce by about 8 percent the current·
ly outstanding 149 million shares of
common stock at current prices. It
supersedes two programs begun in
November 1983 under which 7.7
million shares of common stock were
re-purchased for about $220 million.
Rockwell manufactures the space
shuttle, t.he B-1 B bomber and other
aerospac.c, electronics. automotives
and general industries products .
the
PQwerof
effective rommumcation. • •
Learn how to communicate more effectively in business,
socially and with loved ones and friends. Learn what to
say or write 1n any situation.
The NATIONAL COMMUNICATION INSTITUTE is scheduling
seminars 1n lh1s area 10 help people with all forms of communication.
HERE'S WHERE
WE CAN HELP
YOU!
•Doy 10 day buMess
• Soc1al 1n1erocr1oos
•Family commun1cat1on
•Public speok 111g
•All y~r personal
communicotton
HERE'S WHAT TO
EXPECT FROM OUR
SEMINAR I
• P., IOnOI 1ntir11< tl()I'
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•Vod<to lope ol y0u tn tittoon
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•leorn style. po<se ond
body longuoge
• t 90f"11 how 10 pion, orgon1ie
and ta'( who! you wont tn
con~•n01.on, lett1n. ~het.
l lC
HALF·PRICE INTRO.
DUCTORY OFFER!
$295 COMPLETE
16 Week Course)
!group & corporale
discounts avoilablel
Coll now and reserve
o place at one of our
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April 3, 1986.
National Communication Institute
2920 NEWPORT BLVD. NEWPORT BEACH, CA 67.W211
,
,
\
I .
Onlnge COMt DAILY PILOTITu.day, Mltoh 18, 1eee• *M
NYSE CoMPo s1a TRAN SACTIONS
AMEX LEADERS
W HAT NYSE Om
NEW YORK (A.P) Mar. '8
NYSE lf ~DER S
NASDAQ SUMMARY
qutt.4 po99tbly the
t»rfact. pcl<tz.t., e
be~ic m aw,ry mons
wordrobz. sof"L.
mm nzpcz.llllnt. el I
cotton ~hall w1t.h
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wr~nlmu:19
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'
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~t. btoch 6'11 rh'!lhion olcrd., l\'1/ftt, "n10
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poMdi:lm ~~~\h lOM4"« .8181 9~3~
mon "°"' fh io t.o q oot.ufdnv 'Oto 6 t. !!Ur doy n n to !>
We4MMay, Mardt It
Aft;IES (March 21-Apnl 19): Spotlight on family, home, safety
precautions, lona-ranac prospc<:ts. You'IJ be reunited with 10div1dual who hel~ you an recent past. Financial picture will be brighter as result. Can<.-cr
nattve plays rote.
Appliances need
a woman'stouch
TAUf\US (April 20-May 20): Key is flexibility -forces tend to be
scattc~ curio~1ty is activated. ~cans. sc.et\ario highliahts inquiries.
responses, questions, aos~ers, cxpenments. You'll add to wardrobe, you'll Q
also be more weight conscious.
GEMJNI {May 21-June 20): Be willing to revise. review, remodel. rebuild
o n more substantial structure.
Emphasis also on payments, coll~
tions, income potentiaJ. Take inven-
tory, be aware of value of possessions.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Focus SYDNEY on writing, travel, romance. You'll be at
right place, populanty inCTCases. you'll 0MARR be asked to accept chaJlenge which
includes a "close deadline." Member of •••••••••••• opposite sex figures prominently.
LEO(July 23-AuJ. Z2): You could locate document that relates to family
member. Scenario h1ahhghts intrigut, secret visits, clandestine arranJC-
ments, majordomcsticadJustment. You'll be presented with gift represcnung
token of affection. .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Define terms, avoid self-decept1on, perfect
tcehniqucs, streamline procedures. Powers of persuasion arc heightened -
you will be "lucky" in matters of speculation. Pisc.es, another V irgo play
important roles.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Emphasis on career, achievement, prestige,
possible conference with individual in position of authority. Law 1s on your
side, you actuall y are in driver's seat. You'll have~rc pressure,
responsibility. -·
SCORPIO ~Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Project can now be completed. Focus on
love relationship, creativity, ability to imprint your own style. Burden 1s
removed, you grow more popular, you could actually be "flirting with fame."
SAGIT7 ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Emphasis on innovation. a possible
new position. You'll gain confidence following initial setback. Member of
opposite sex helps you understand and to get to heart of matters. Leo plays
prominent role.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You no longer will be alone -you'll
attract valuable allies. Spotlight continues on cooperative efforts, legal
affairs, spec1aJ ues and marriage. Family member reassures you of loyalty.
Cancer native plays prominent role.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2~Feb. I 8): Define terms, give full rein to intellectual
curiosity. f ocus on service. pets. people who rely upon you. You mi~t be
co.nccrned with appearance, general health. News ultimately will be
favorable.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Roadblock to love 1s tem porary. You'll be
stronger as result of adversity. There soon will be favorable changes. you
could travel in connection with "strong" relationship. Taurus. Scorpio play
dynamic roles.
For some reason 1 will never figure
out. most of the inventors in thir.
country~ men, who crute producb
that arc used mostly by women.
For those of us who must use these
products. the results arc obvious.
The man who designed the mod·
cm-day iron. for eumple. never
stopped to fiJurc out that the only
women who iron anymore are over
40. We can't find our glasses without
glasses. So bow can we possibly see
liOT, MEDlUM or COOL on the
iron without burning our noses?
Same deal with the sewing. ma-
.chine. Who was the humorist who
thought it would be amusing to plJt a
needle at chest level with the bole
facing away from us and a light that
blinded us when we came within
ral!JC? It has always been so.
carpet sweepers were invented m
1876, with an anachmcnt for all
seasons. Most women would rather
fiaht off eight Merchant Marines in
the back seat of a convertible than
J ugglc all the parts of a sweeper.
Curling irons were invented by
men, which is why a tiny screw that
holds the handle on aJso heats up so
that you have to not only keep the rod
away from your scalp, but your
finger<away from the handle. Neat
triclc. ~
What they should have-put a heater
on were the stethoscopes they in-
vented in 1816. And you have already
figured out that onJy a man wouJd
invent a see-through covering to put
over your leftovers while they arc
stored. Women never said they
wanted to SEE their leftovers ... only
to store them unul it was time for
bunal.
You have only to look at a bicycle
scat to know that a man designed the
seats witho ut ever having looked at a
ERMA
Bo11EcK
woman leaving a room. It is pbysi·
calJy impossible to distribute a female
form overit. In 1892, men were onto
somctbina when ·Whitcomb L.
Judson invented the zipper, but in
their infinite wisdom someone put
the men's tippers in the front of their
clothes and women's in the back
where they could neither see nor
reach them.
In a profession that is supposed to
spawn mothers of n.ca:ssity, it strange
there are so few women inventors, but
their discoveries have been of major
significance.
Jane Wells was the first to acknowl-
edge children did not sit in seats, they
jumped in them and bounced off the
ceiling, so she invented the jumper
seat. Margaret Knight revoluuonizcd
marketing when she came out with a
paper bag with a square bottom that
stood up when you put it down. And
who can forget Ruth Wakefield who
drop~ piec.es of a candy bar in her
cookie batter one day and invented
the Toll House cookie.
But my candidate for maJOr inven-
tor of her time is Elizabeth Aanap.n,
an upstate barmaid, who combrned
rum, rye whiskey and fruit juice,
decorated the glass with a feather
from the tail o(her Tory neighbor's
rooster, handed it to a French officer
and said, "Vive le coq's tail."
It's been an antidote for man's
inventions ever. since. IF MARCH 19 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are direct. romantic, attractive
and psychic. Although independent, you do care for those who lack physical
strength. You art" drawn to the underdog, you seelcJUStice and you often give
of your time and energy to help those you consider worthy. Leo, Aq uari us
play important roles in your hfe. You malce new stan this year. you'll get to
heart of matters and could fall madly in love. Good financial news comes m
March. July will prove outstanding for you in 1986 Compassion ur4ed
. . forhardofhear1ng Some c1t1es could use DEAR ANN LA NDERS: Loss of
G t 1 ' J • hcanng 1s like alcollohsm. It 1s Ua ema a S Po lcy intrusive. n.egative andaffccts every-
one aro und the person Wlth the
problem. Those who hve Wlth a hard-
It was said of onetime Guatemalan
dictator Ub1co. "At least he got the
potholes fixed." After he came 10
power 1n 1931 Ub1co rode h1'i •
motorbike all over his country. When
he tut a bumpy road, he tracked down
the local official. toolc away the
fellow's car. and made him nde a
bicycle for a year. Guatemala de·
veloped a fierce pothole policy, no
longer quite so stnngent.
Nobody seems to know why more
babies are born on Tuc~day m the
United States than on any other day
of the week.
If asked to name the onlv cn ncr 1n
the animal kingdom w11h1ust one ear,
say "praying mantis"
The top nine t ar most <;ought h}
professional thieves with shopping
lists are foreign made. according to
police stat1st1c1an'>
Q What people smoli.c the mo'>t..,
A. The ( ypr111t\ Circch •(uhans
In that order
That celehnt ~ "ho pull' the mo'it
fan mail now -~I 000 card~ and
lette~ a week -1\ \Cl•d to be Michael
J. Fo~
O. How often do we get 1wo full
moons 1n one month''
A. Average 1n1crval. l'\ Cf) 31 6
months
L.M.
Bo YD
of-heari n$ person need help as well as
the md1v1dual with the problem.
This poem was written by a
member of our Buffalo group. I hope
you wlll find space for it in your
column. -HOWARD STONE. EX-
ECUTIVE DIRECTOR. SHHH.
A PRAYER FOR ONE WHO LIVES
WITH SOMEONE WHO JS
LOSING HEARING
Lord, my beloved is coping with
together. How come the dmosaurs her progressive hcanng loss better
d ied out and the tunics didn't? than I am, and I feel so guilty. It seems that as it becomes more
difficult for me to communicate with
her the more frustrated I become, and
I lcnow It should be the other way
around. .
I know she takes her hearing aid off
occasionally to rest her ear and then I
become upset when she doesn't know
I want to talk with her.
You know ho" the renowned
sourdough crock 1s kept year afte r
year. tapped and replenished, e ven
bequeathed to heirs? The onginal
pepper pol soup of the Caribbean is
li ke that. With meat, hot peppers,
Juice of cassava root. it's simmered
indefinitely tn a big lcettJc on lhc back
of the fire. Whatever food turns up is
thrown in. It's never emptied com·
pletely. A seasoned pepper pot. half
full. 1s beq ueathed too. Or was. Over
generauons.
Q CofTee nght')
Often I forget and tum my back
even though I know she needs to read
my hps and see my facial ex prcss1ons.
"You're not hsteoiog!" J scream,
when 1t is I who have forgotten about
background noises or water running
comes from bemcs. or an airplane overhead. I plead for forgi veness when I sec
the pain m her eyes when she has to
repeatedly say, "I didn't hear you." A . It does. And each berry has two
beans
Observed Kathleen Noms "In
spite of the cost of hv1ng, it's still
popular."
Nuns hve longer than pnests.
I know the problem is that I can't
accept her increasing dependence on
me, when I've depended on her for so
many years.
So. Lord, I need your help to make
me more thoughtful, considerate and
supportive.
Help us both to explore other ways O ne flower tn every seven 1s an of communicating our love and
orchid. concern for each other.
PLEASE! -A SHHHER IN L.M, Boyd Is a 1yadlcat~d BUFFALO.
Turtle' and d1no\C1Ur'> lived columa/11. DEAR MR. STONE: Tlumkl for
ANN
LANDERS
pas11D1 oa tlaat HDt ltlve poem. I
woa.ld Uke my readers to now tbt
SHHH 11 u orpa.lutton for lrarcl-..f.
lleariD1 people ud tllelr familles.
Tbere are claapters ID muy cities.
A.ayoae interested 1lloald wrtte for
lllformatloa ud Uteratare to: SHHH,
7890 Wlacoa1ln Ave., Bethesda, MD
Z08U. Pltoae (301)-157-%%48. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: My hus-
band and I have five children under
12 years of age. No two bear any
resemblance whatsoever to one
another or to us.
We have a blue-eyed blond, a
brown-eyed brunette, a green-eyed
redhead, a gray-eyed brunette and a
hazel-eyed towhead. Two girls arc tall
for their age, two boys are sbon and
one is about average.
What do I say to people who raise
questions about the paternity of these
children? One woman has asked me
three times 1fany of our children were
adopted. She has asked twice if they
have the same father. I have told her.
.. No, they are not adopted," and.
.. Yes. they have the same father. I've
been mamed only once."
How should I respond to such
questions m the future? Are these
people rude or am I overly sensitive?
- A MOTHER IN LONGVIEW,
WASH.
DEAR MOTHER: Tbe best way to
budle nde qaeattoDI (ud tlaat oee 11
oae of tile radeat) 11 to u1wer tile
saestlon WITH a qae1t101. Sample:
• Now wlly lD tlle world woa.ld yoa ask
a tltln1 Uke tlaat?'
Valerie chafes at 'antiwoman bias'
By the Auorlated Press
NEW YORK -While \hC'<i
thnlled 10 have a steady tclc-
v1s1on Job ag:un. actres~ Valerie
Harper say\ <1how bus1ne'>s still
treats women dishonestly
"We're men''i pannef'\ on the
planet, and everybody keeps lyina
and pretending we're less than
men. not qunc as full~ human,
not quite as 1ntell1gt"nt or
capable," she $81d in the Apnl
issue of McCall's magazine
Harper 1s <1t.amng in the TV
series "Valene."
Mualcal governor
C HARLOITE. N.C. -Back
held Lin sold1er-stra1ght. head
cocked Jauntily to the side, he
""dC1 10 the podium looking
every bu lake the conductor he's
no1.
Gov Jlm Manta ga ve 1nstruc-
t1on~ and adVlce to 6S robed
s1niers · 1n the basement choir
room of Charlotte's Covenant
Presbyterian Church. They were
about to Jive a world p~miert of
his chun:h music before 300
people
The re11JJOUI mu ICWIS wrincn
Valerie Ra.rper
by Marttn dunng the J)U1 10
ycan: two anthems and I 0 short
pieces includi na ofTertones.
choral amens and calls to
worship. Much ofit was heard for
SkJtcb Be:adenon
the fim ume
Skltch appointed
NORFOLK, Va. -at~
HeMtnea, fonncr music direc--
tor for NBC-TV's "Today" and
"Tonight" shows and conductor
for the New York Pops, has been
named conductor for the Vil'Jinia
Symphony Pops' 1986-87 season.
Henderson, who worked for
NBC from 19SO to 1972. will
conduct five of seven conceru
and select the music and auest
anists for the season, said Jerry
Rayate, symphony executive di-rector.
Wrona--road
TOLEDO, Ohio -Fonner
m~or league baseball pitcher Jim
Baalas, now • conarcssiona.l
candidate, took a bit of a cam-
pa.ip detour when a plane 1n
which be was rid!OJ had to land
on an inter1&ate bil)lway.
The twin-en&ine plane carryina
Bunnioa and the pilot made an
emCJFDCY landina on an inter·
state eouth of Toledo.
Bunnfoa. a Republican con-
iresaional candidate in Ken-
tudry, and the pilot were not
irtjured. and the plane JnS not
da~, IAid the state bi&hway pa! . Bunnfoa wau oitc6er for
the Detroit Tleen aad Philadel-
phia Phillies.
TWO DISHES OF DUCK
Both vulnerable. North deals. ------------
NORTH
+KQJ 3
V' KQJ
<>Q864
•92
WEST EAST
•S.f 2 •A871l
'V 8Sll 'V A432
¢10 0 976
•A 10 8 7 6 3 • K J
SOUTH + 109 v 1097
0 AKJ32
•Qll•
The bidding:
North Baat
I+ Pua
3 r/ Pu•
PaH PaH
8oath Wffl
2 <> Put
3 NT Paa•
Opening lead: Seven of +
Have you wondered how E'XJK'rtS
find the dazzling lines of play you
read about in bridge columns? In
the majority of cases, the winning
technique was found at the table .
Here and there. however , we suR-
pect that it was located during the
post-mortem. ·
North-South conducted a s light-
ly aggressive though not unreason-
able auction to arrive at three no
trump. Beside the club weakness,
the lack of aces In their holding
boded ill.
West led his fourth-best club.
East rose with the king and re-
turned the jack. Since he was dead
if clubs were 6-3, declarer made
the fine play of ducking. So West
had no entry to his clubs. the con·
tract was sec ure as the cards lie.
In the post-mortem, it was sug-
gested that East could have de feat·
CHARLES
Go REN
OMAR
SHARIFF
ed the coritract by playing the Jack
to the first trick (That is all well
and good as the cards lie, but could
have fatally blocked the suit had
West led from the queen rather
than the ace.) If declarer wins the
queen, he stands no chance. Sooner
or later EaBl will gain the lead, and
when he return!! the king of clubs,
West r an overtake with the ace and
run the suit.
However, an excellent case can
be made for South to duck the jack,
In which case the def enders would
again be held to two club tnc.ks and
two aces If South wins the queen,
he will be defeated if clubs are 4-4
(the defenders can take three club
trick~ and two aces) or f>-3 (when
they will get foµr club tricks and
the two aces ). Virtually the only
chance that declarer has to prevail
is to hope the clubs are 6-2, the suit
1s blocked by East having two high
honors. and West has no entry.
Not much to hope for, but any
chance is better than none.
'::~~~' S@l'.~~-~t.~se woo ....
141tot4 lty Cl.A' a. POl.&..f,N 0 ReotrO"Q• lell•ta of , ...
four Kro..,bled words ti.-
low 10 '°'"' lour 1<11\ple words
I must be getting old, Sighed
my neigtiC>Ot "II used 10 oe that
people we1e cooperative.
--------nowadays apanment -are
SU TMEK I ...__I ~I s-1-,-, -,___. G C°"'o"'.. th• ch..cUe o..ot<Od
. • • • • by 1,11,,.0 '" the "'''"'"II words .__.....__.____._...._....__. you develop Ir-\190 No 3 below
~..-P ...... R,.....;0 ...... 0_0~1 } I I' I I .
& P~l'll t.iUM8f'!O l( TTE,5 IN 1
lHfSE SOUAUS
TODAY'S
·CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Golf club pan
6 Incisive
11 Ike's pany
t4 - -might
say"
15 Loather
16 Sewall
17 Texas
Rangers. e.g
19 Emmet
20 German title
21 Chimpanzees
22 Philo -
24 Succors
26 Yielding
27 Sparkles
30 Squanders
32 Schisms
33 Young hog
34 Decree
37 Circle parts
38 Mortgages
39 cr .. 1ed
40 Scary word
4 1 Oventutfa
42 China grau
43 Trough
45 Talked Idly
46 DupllcatM
48 Chair par1a
49 Frencti Clly
50 Disfigure
80
52 Rain trough
56 Small IUN.
5 7 Began again
60 Encountered
61 Cheer up
62 Brainpower
63 AhMd of
pref
6<I Matriarchs
6 5 Proof-
readers'
marks
DOWN
1 Meat dish
2 Bone: pref
3 Skyrocket
4 Enrollefa
5 Shelter
6 Mnt cuts
7 Rhonchus
8 Aliment· auH.
9 Hr. aegment
10 Stave oH
1 t Bridge feats
12 Weight unit
13 Dwlndle
18 Sturta
23 Conlunctlon
25 Poueutve
26 Repute
27 Clutd'I
'
28 Greek Isle
29 Not whole
30 Undiluted
31 Liiy -
33 Locus
35 Straight aa -
36 Nettle
38 Dawdles
39 "Manon"
compoaer
41 Wu scornful
42 Jau piece
'44 Dletresa
'46 Mlerobe
46 Cluster
47 Lubrt~tor
48 Crlppi.
50 Con g.,,,.
51 Animal 9hed
53 Skin dlMue
54 Garment
55 Greek
resistance
58 Guido'• note
59 Lettet
I• ~
THE
FAlllLY
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane
"Instead of sayin' I had an 'upset tummy,'
couldn't you say 'belly ache?' "
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"There must be something about you that
Is tax-deductible!"
PEANUTS
IS TMAT ALL YOU'RE
HAVING FOR LUNCH. SIR?
JUST FRENCH FRIES ?
GARFIELD
I MAVE A THEORV
THAT EATING TOO MANV
FRENCM FRIES CAUSES
MEMORV LOSS AND
PERSONALffi' ALTERATIONS ..
BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) _ ............. _ ._._.. -.. ~~---
-... _ "''"' I
3-lt
" ... but you aren't gonna believe how
reasonable the summer rates are."
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham
"1 Lll<E GINA . ~ES A GIRL BUT~
LETS YOU FORGET rT ONCf IN A WHILE.'
IFTHEV OIO
TuERE0D8EA
WARHIN6 ON
THE $1DEOF
EACM E ..
by Jim Davis
GARFIELP, IT'S flM(
TO PUT YOO ON ANOTMER '71£.T
PO YOO t<NOW WMAT A 1)1£1' COOLP 00 -ro Mf?
TUMBLEWEEDS
WE CAN! CAMP ~e:RE! 'THERE'S W WATE~ rJEA~E"f!
a v ~
DRABBLE
ROSE IS ROSE
... NOT~ I l NAVE 10 a;..
by Tom K. Ryan
by Kevin Fagan
J~
by Pat Brady
'
-\. -~ ---
BLOOll COUl'fTY
11001' llULLIK8
·BYE CcJSPtt> ...
... C,A~D FRoM
YotJR DF:NTIST.
-r1Me FoR You~
~-MONTH
CHECl<·UP.
SHOE
JUDGE PARKER
S HE WENT OUT FOR THE
EVENING SHE DIDN'T SAY
WHERE. MR HOR.ACE I
DOONESBURY
AJH()r
I
Ot.noeeo.t DAILY PILOT~. MetUt 18. t•
f#O.':
ZQT~~
l 151 W"1<Mff ""'°"''· STHtW~
fll*}· . wml ~ l(f~
:-,
by Berke Breathed
rw oMr """" ff1«'r LAM• MY~-
0 •
'
!1
J
i
by Ferd & Tom Johnson " .,
How Do You WANT To
SeNC> iHeM IN THIS TIME,
~P.S. OR FED·EX ?
by Lynn Johnston
by Jeff MacNally
by Harold Le Ooux
TELL HER I 'M IN THE
LIBRARY euT ~T I DON'T
wANT TO ee 01STURBED •
by Gary Trudeau
)
I
J
1 •
1
AlS 0renge 0oett DAILY PILOT/ Tu.day, March 18, 1988
Bus ticlf_ets a
harsh solution
to transiency
It migpt have been harsh reality or a mean lack of
empathy. Either way, it sounded bad. These were, after
aJl, people talking about otlier people, fortunate people
for the most part, discussing the problem of unfortunate .
people. .
But reading an account of the forum on the
homeless in Laguna Beach last week, it was easy to forget
that the subjects -the problem -were humans
surviving tenuously at the bottom edge of civilized
America. Rather, some of the speakers made them seem
like barnacles clinging to the bottom of boat -only with
less character.
Those most cnucal of Laguna's transient popu-
lation included several businessmen and City Coun-
cil man Neil Fitzpatrick, who declared most of the
homeless "bums." The depth of Fitzpatrick's concern
for his fellow man stopped well short of compassion. He
advocated what has become known as .. Greyhound
therapy" -a one-way bus ticket out town. Such
treatment has earned a despicable reputation in the
mental health care industry, where difficult patients
without private resources are sometimes hustled off to
cities where they may find the care they need.
But Fitzpatrick was not talking about the mentally
ill who wander the streets. Nor was he disparaging those
who have faJJen upon hard times, he said. His remarks
were reserved for those homeless, jobless, aimless people
who might be expected to take more responsibili ty for
their own circumstances.
Cenainly, the councilman's point that diny-looking
loiterers panhandling and urinating near city's stores is
bad for business must be accepted.
But, It is one thing to be repulsed personally by
someone who is so pungent a reminder of the fraility of
the human spirit and quite another to institutionalize
that repulsion in public policy.
Councilman Fitzpatrick is frustrated. Though hi s
constituents are affluent, his city is small. It cannot
afford to offer sociaJ services to every drifter who finds
Laguna Beach's winters more palatable than Seattle's.
But homelessness in America today 1s acknowledged to
be a problem of major proportions. Orange County has
come to grips w11h part of it, admirably offering shelter to
ho meless women. County officiaJs have recognized -as
apparently Councilman Fitzpatrick, has not -that
making moral Judgments about people based on their
appearance and chasm~ the arbitranly defined "bums"
out of town is no t the kind of policy they were elected to
formulate. Vigilantes could dispense that kind of
government as well, and cheaper.
Fitzpatrick and his council colleagues have a
problem. They must keep downtown Laguna Beach
from becoming a Skid Row if they are to protect the vital
tounst industry and its practitioners. And they must do
it while maintaining the appearance of being human,
civilized beings worthy of representing the people who
entrusted cit y government to them.
It's not easy, but the forum was a place to start.
Representauves of the United Way, the county
Department of Mental Health, the police department
and St. Mary's Episcopal Church helped define the
problem . They will continue to offer assistance, if the
city demonstrates an interest in solving the problem of
the homeless. not just moving it on.
Opinions expressed in H'11s space are those of the Daily Ptlol Other views
expressed on this page are those of lhetr authors and artists Reader
commen1ts1nv1ted TheOallyP1tot POBox 1560.CostaMesa 92626 Phone
642-6086
LETTERS
~~--
Voters' own tax dollars
at stake in city lawsuits
Io tht• Editor
I nol<"d "-Ith 1ntrrc'it tht• h:h II
artH.k h\ I h11ma\ Elia.. ·~1t
intt.·re\t ti1ul<J lloom deep ~kcl\'
1n1t1at1 \l· ·
Mr f:.11.t\ mc1kc'> a good point
CIJO(ern1ng thl' r><>tentlal Of the vOtcr'i
lO rcJeC t thl" f Jlr RC\f>'1ns1b1lity A<.t
on the Junr I 9kf, hrJllot However, a'>
Jn area to d M1rm.in fo r th1\ 1n·
1t1at1\e 11 \ITm'> that 1n1t1at1 vc prop<>·
nent\ \hould undcr<>tand th1~ P<>'i\I·
h1li ty and ut1l11r 1t t11 1he1radvanlagc
..,pcc1fic.all y 1f the voter\ undcr-
\tand that II I\ their tax dollar\ wh1th
arc being unfo1rl} spent to ..at1sfy
JUdgmcnt\ Wh1d1 do n<Jt re0ect tax-
payer hab1lity pcrhap't the voter\ will
By lbt' Auodated Preu
act to protect their own P<X kctbooko;
b" '>upporting the 1n1t1at1ve
The mun1c1paht1es which most
often get caught 1n the "deep pocket"
'i)ndromc are not faceless 1nst1tut1ons
ofgreat wealth. They are yourc1ty. my
city. our school d1stncts. etc More
importantly. they operate with our
tax dollars It 1s th1'> that I hope the
voter\ wall understand when they
con'l1dcr the fair Rcspons1b1hty Act.
The fair Respon<;1b1lity Act should
pass. It would be appropnate voter
respon~ to the undue mfluencc
wielded by the ~pecial interests in
Sacramento on th1li issue.
MARIAN BERGESON
Senator, 37th Otstnct
Today'' l uc..da y ~fare h IX the 77th day of I Y86. fhcrc arc 288 days left
10 the year
Five year\ ag<i \ccretaf} of \tale Aleundcr M Haig Jr defended the
adm1n&'itra11on '\6 ~ h1lhon for('1Kf! aid package 1n te!.ttmony before ( ongress.
'8ying the commun1'>t mflv<'mrn1 wa\ iumcd at thr takeover of Central
Amenca
OAANGf COAST
Daily Pilat
.. .
,,Ml! ZJftf
(OotOI
T-T8't Mlll'~[OllOI o..,....,
C.tY EdrtO!
TOftlC._.
N-.f'01IC)t
CteltlNff !looftt Fdttor
~Chur~
(l)ttlt
,_.....,, L C-1191
P1~t!Ql'I Mtl'\e04I'
T.,,,IC .... r . ..u:1A1"ion Ml~ .............. ,..,,
Mllkt1inQ OlrtclC>t
c!::rtec1 ~or
.. Calderon Js clearly correct Jn saying that conslstency mands that
(the newly proposed Museum ofLatlnoHJstory)g~.t the same
consideration as the twoearller mus~umgrants.
Silly season of political
• • maneuvering in process
'Already had news from individUals
who tell me_they've been~urged tQ run·
The silly season ts almost upon us
again That's the ume of year when a
whole scad of 1nd1viduals decide to
throw their hats in the nng for
political office. What office? It really
makes no d11Terence.
Locally we're going to have .. dif-
ferent" candidates for all the c1t1es on
the Orange Coast
Then we're going to have another
group of 1nd1v1duals who have de-
cided. w11h the help of their friend~
and relauons and pohucal bosses
that the electorate 1s JUSt panting for
them to be a candidate for something.
That runs nght up the scale -
county, city, state, federal and. in-
directly international.
Alread'!' I've had news from 1nd1-
v1duals who tell me they have been
"urged to run." Who urged them?
Well. of course, families and relations
had talked 1t over. They have been
approached by ''poliucal big shots"
who tell them 111s their "duty" to run
for somethmg or other.
The City Council of Newport
Beach 1s a case in point. That city has
one woman counci l member who is
trulysupenor. Herrecord is excellent
Even more than that, her commentc;,
her questions, and her votes on
meetings of the City Council have
proved she 1s truly 'lupenor -in
contrast to the humbling of some of
her colleague'>.
The same thing goes for a male
council member in that c11y. He. too.
has announced he will not "run
again ."
In Huntington Beach, where as I
told you last week. they have an
outstanding chief of pohce, there's a
group determmed "to get nd ofh1m."
Same th mg g()(S for the city attorney.
I don't know too much about the
city of Irvine. but I assure you I'm
going to do some hard lookin~ at 1t.
Laguna Beach has allowed itself to
grt involved 1n the sex lives of some of
its city officials It shouldn·t. Can-
didates for office should be selected
entirely on the basis of their mentality
and their courage to ui.e 1t
As most of you know. I am •a
registered Republican. Even so, we
have already elected some pretty
doubtful characters. supplanting
some excellent individuals whose
sole negative quahty was that they
belonged to the wrong pohucal party
Belonging to the wrong political
party 1s often a very good reason for
dumping an individual from office.
But it's a stupid reason for throwing
out an officeholder who has 'lerved
well in order to put a novice in.
We have one member of the Board
of Supervisors whom I, for one. will
be glad to sec get the state office hs 1s
running for. Only problem to date 1s
that he hasn't been able to make up
his mind what state office to run for
He started out to run for lieutenant
governor Then he got to a point
where he thought the competlllon
was going to be too tough there, so
he's going to run for a different office
-secretary of state.
Unlike the Secretary of State for the
United States, the job of secretary of
state in Cahfom1a doesn't amount to
too much Nevertheless. for an ind1-
v1dual who l'i chmhmg up the
WALTER
Bu11oucHs
politic.al ladder, it's a good spot for
publicity -the sort of the thing that
goes on in the city of Los Angeles
where the cuy attorney was able to
wangle a JOb as prosecutin~ attorney.
That Wlll be an interestmg one to
watch. This 1s his second step up. His
next step will be to attempt to become
state auorney general, as his prede-
cessor was able to do. And then what?
Well, probably run for governor in
four years There's a history on that
one, too.
So far as Orange County is con-
cerned, I used to be extremely proud
of the way our representatives, both
in the state U:gislature and the state
Senate, performed.
As I remember 1t, there were three
members of the leg.tslature and one
state Senator. They weren't aJI Demo-
crats and they weren't all Re-
publicans.
Nevertheless. when it came time
for doing somethmg for Orange
County, they closed ranks and all of
t.hem "hauled on the line."
My sole suggestion is that each one
of you fine people who read the
Searchlight this year, take the trouble
to find out about the quality. or lack
of quality, of all the people and the
propos1t1ons that will appear on your
pnmary ballot and, later. on your
final ballot 1n November.
WaJter Barroagba la tbt Pilot's
foedlng pabllabt'r.
New Army tank heads into
mine field of design glitches
No major safety defects, but some of its
features are a headache for the crews
WASHINGTON -The Army's
new M-1 Abrams tank has been mired
in controversy ever since 11 ten the
drawing board. Cnllcs have charged
that 1t 1s subJCCI to frequent break-
downs, has an unquenchable thi rst
for fuel and requires maintenance
that is too complex to be done 1n 1he
ftetd.
The Army wtll eventually have
7,000 of the $2.2 million behemoths,
and the overall cost will top $20
billion. IL~ fans call it the finC1t tank
ever made; the cntics say it's an
overpriced clunker that 1s already
obsolete.
Internal Army safety rcpons,
which record every incident 1nvolv-
1ng the tank stnC(: its introduction 1n
January 1981 to November 1985.
provide good news and bad new~ The
aood ne~ 1s lhat the tank, named for
the late Gen. Cre1&hton Abrams, U.S
troop commander in Vietnam afier
Gen Wilham Westmoreland and
later Army chief of staff. has demon-
strated no major safety defects so far.
In thousands of hOut'$ of training
exercises. only three death~ were
recorded None were caused by the
tank's dC11an -and one occurred
when an alle&cdly drunk wld1er
drove his car into the path of an M· 1
The only bad news involves minor
desian sJ1tchcs that area headache for
the crews, panicularly tho~ who
attn't fully alert to the tank's statc~f
the-an feature• Our assoaate
Do.nald Goldberg has winnowed
these incidents from the voluminous
safety reports:
•The knee-level switch for the
ammumuon storage companment is
a frequent cause of IOJuncs. It allows
the loader to get to the ammo wt th the
touch of his kn ee -but the switch i5
also activated when bumped acciden-
tally during rough rides. The auto-
matic door can be rislcy to an uowary
or forgetful loader's finiers. One
soldier bumped the knee swlteh and
tncd to 'itop the door from closing
with his hand. "The weight of the
door was too much and 11 severed the
fingers pnor to stopping," the report
noted .
•The tank'" braking system
doesn't alway, keep the huge M-1
st.a11onary, unlcs$ 1t ,, parked whef't' 11
can't slap or shde -something not
always possible in combat. And once
a parked tank st.arts 10 $hde, there's
not much the dnvcr can do about it,
because it takes "a sian1ficant period
of time" to mtan the engine.
In one mc1dcnt, an M-1 shd into
another t.tnk, causina no in,Junes but
topplina a tree and damllJna both
tanks In another, the dnver JUmpcd
for h11 hfe. "The ve hicle continued
down a forested hill throuah a fence
until It crashed into a buildina in the
ammo bold1n1 aru which contained
aaortcd types of I SSmm proJechles."
the ufety n:J)On stated The repon
does not ma.kc clear whether the
JACK
AIDEISOI
and JOSEPH SPEAR
ammumtion went up.
•The dnver's seat is more hke a
recliner lounge chair, because of the
tank's admirably low profile. The
d river is almost lying on his back and,
after lorta periods oo the road, is apt to
dou off, with 'tbe tank endina up in a
ditch or stopped by a tree.
•No designer could outwit every
Beetle Bailey or Zero of lh1s man's
anny, of course. "The driver was
instructed to tum left by the tank
commander: however, he turned
rig.ht, causina the M· I tank to 10 over
a 20-foot embankment," the report
notes ''The tank shd, then rolled over
twice. landin& on its track." On a
West German Autobahn, a driver
m1Sjud1ed his tank's width and
sideswiped a bus; another M-1 "spun
out" on the freeway and ripped up a
guardrail.
•Demand mg camera crews can
cau~ problems. too. "In order for
photovaphers to take some pictures
near water," an obli&ina tanker drove
hJS M-1 • little too CIOIC to a lake.
"The left side of the tank 1Jjd into the
lake. submersina approximately one.
half of the vehicle, .. the reoon stated.
J•d. AH.,.,. ul J..,. $tJnr •re qetlkau!ll ~...,,,.,
THOUS
Euas
Ethnic
groups
push for
grants
Latinos fallow two -----other groups given
funds for museum -------------
h's no surprise to anyone who
knows politics that other ethnic
groups have now begun lining up for
state grants similar to the almost $6
million given out last year for
museums documenting Japanese-
American history and the mass
murder of Jews in World War II
Europe.
For the ma1n questjon after Gov.
George DcukmcJian ok.aycd those
two grants last year was who would be
the next to belly up to the public
trough.
That question has now been
answered. Not surprisingly, it is
Latinos.
With a booming population that
promises to become the maJority in
California over the next 2S yean,
there's no doubt good justification for
the newly proposed Museum of
Latino History.
"It is long overdue," says Demo-
cratic Assemblyman Charles
Calderon of Alhambra, who sup-
ported the other state museum grants
last year. Calderon will seek $10
millson 1n state funds for the Latino
museum, which would detail the
history of more than 80 different
H1spa01c communities present in
today's California.
As with the Nisei and the Jewish
Holocaust experience, there is ample
Justification for a Latino museum.
There is probably good rcasoo for a
Chinese-American museum, too, and
a Filipino-American museum and a
Vietnamese-Cambodian one.
And because Dcukmejian and the
state Legislature have given to the
first two, it will be inconsistent to
refuse the others when they belly up,
as Latinos are now doing.
Arguments justifying the Latino
museum arc very similar to those
made for the first ethnic museum
considered, the planned Museum of
Tolerance to be run by the Orthodox
Jewish Simon Wiescnthal Center for
Holocaust Studies in Los Angeles.
But those arguments ignore two
key questions: One is the issue of
whether the state can afford to
subsidize museums honoring vir-
tually every major ethnic group it
contains. For once the state finances
one, it is morally bound to fund every
other responsible proposal of the
same type.
The other qucstjon 1s lhe issue of
who will control the museums. The
Museum of Tolerance, with its anti-
gcnocidal theme, will be run by the
Wiescnthal center and the Japanc~
Amencan museum will also be inde-
pendent of the state. In both cases.
California taxpayers arc Jiving
money away with no voice m the
·specifics of how it's to be spent.
That reality offended many fore-
sighted Jewish groups a year ago,
when the Museum of Tolerance was
first considered. In a rare split in the
Jewish community, groups like the
B'nai B'rith Anti-Defamation league
opposed the Wiesenthal center.
"We believe there should be such a
museum ... but the funds should be
given to an appropriate public institu-
tion such as the University of Cali·
fomia,'' said the AOL, which saw the
first Jrant as a dangerous precedent
crossins the line of church-state
separation.
And Howard Friedman, president
of the American Jewish Committee,
warned that "It opens a Pandora's
Box for every kind of orpnization
imaginable to seek public fundina."
At the time, Wicsentb&J centtt
Dean Marvin Hier claimed tb09C
concerns were merely the bleatings of
orpnii.ations seeldna to preserve
their turf -and their lonatime
donon -apinst his upstan or-
pnization, which often upstages the
more establi shed groups.
But then came Dcukmejian's ac-
quiesccnce in the grant to the
Japane~American museum, a rc-ve~I of bis earlier oppositjon to ethn1c museums.
And now comes the La11no
proposal, where ultJmate control 11
not yet spelled out definitely.
Calderon 1s clearly correct in sayina
that consistency demands that it set
the same con11deratlon as the two
earlier museum pnu. And con.
sistency also will demand similar
trutment of whichever other mu~
seum pla.n comes alona nut.
And that means Friedman was
~t. Pandora's Boi1. is opc1' and it
W1JI be hard to close Without eJtposina
~meonc to bitter charies or bypoc..
nsy.
n..mu El.lat I.a 1 Su&a Mlllle>
bald C91aalat • 1taw l ......
TUESDAY, MARCH 18, 1988
Men'• pro golf tour le finding lt1eff In • tutmolL 112.
Corou del Mer High'• Jeff Frrer wine ecOrtng tltle. R
0..., ......... .., ......
Gene llaach bu an eye on Jut aboat nerythl.nc at the Anceta• Ilea,
Artsona. tntntn1 camp -from pltcben Urbano ~qo (upper left) and
lllke Witt (upper rtcJlt) to Rick Burleeon and R~e Jackaon (lower
center). At lower left Regle ta1b ahop wt~ tDe Anceta• •kipper.
Anteaters go for it tonight against BYU
Victory would keep UCI
on road at Ohio State
Tournament to detennine the conference's
NCAA entry.
Despite the quick ejecuon from the
tourney, NIT officials beckoned the Anteaters
to their post-season tournament and Mulligan's
crew didn't let the chance for a rebirth get away.
center, has averaged 20.5 points and 6.9
rebounds.
There's been a rebirth here at Provo, too.
with the Cougars rccovenng from a 3-9 start to
enter tonight's game at 17-13 after finishing one
game off tne championship pace in the Wes tern
Athletic Conference.
boards arc taken (they grabbed 46 of them 1 o the
Loyola game).
Rogers and Murphy arc the 1-2 1ntmor
punch with their 10s1dc muscle and fine touch.
m addition to superior board play. Speclal to lbe Dally Pilot
PROVO. UT AH -UCLA-buster UC
lrvine, w~icb dropped the defendina c~ion
Bruins out of the National Invitation Tour-
nament in the first round last week , seeks to
qualify for the quarterfinals berth at Ohio State
tonight as the Anteaters take on Brigham
Young University here on the Cougars'
campus.
UCLA lost in the first round despite-the
advantage of the home court. now it's BYU
which enjoys the edge.
It'll be aired on KPZE ( 1190) radio at 6:30
and Mulligan's starting hneup figures to be the
same as which took the floor at UCLA -
forwards Wayne Engelstad and Johnny Rogers.
center Tod Murphy and guards Scott Brooks
and Joe Buchanan.
l\;inong those absorbing defeats by BYU
have been Notre Dame. Utah and Texas-El
Paso.
The Anteaters' chances of advancing to the
quarterfinals arc considered no worse than
50-50. Mulligan's team 1s the type which can
(and has) defeat Nevada-Las Vegas twice, and
by the same token can lose (and has) three times
to Cal State Fullerton.
Rogers bas a high game of 41 (against
N~vada-1..as Vegas).
Between the two of them they have been
the two leading scorers for UCI in 24 of the
Anteaters' 29 games.
Engelstad is a 6-8 sophomore with a 6.6
sconng average and a 3.6 reboundlng average,
while the backcourt consists of JUntors.
Brooks (5-1 I) averages I 0.2 potnts a game,
and Buchanan. a 6-1 transfer from Notre
Dame. averages 8.3 points a game.
The Anteaters of basketball coach Bill
Mulligan enter with a 17-12 record after
fininshing second in the Pacific Coast Athletic
Association's regular season before bemg
eliminated in the first round of the PCAA
Rogers. a 6-10 senior transfer from
Stanford. has averaged 20.4 points and 8.7
rebounds a game. while Murphy. a 6-19 senior
It's the type of team which ltkes to run (the
Anteaters scored 100 points against Loyola-
Marymount) and usually succeeds when the
This 1s MuU1gan'ss1xth year at UCI and the
coach enters with an overall record of I 05-68.
* * * Loyola
bumped
from NIT
From AP dl1patcbes
Fennis Dembo led Wyoming with
24 points Monday night as the hot-
shooting Cowboys beat Loyola Mary-
mount 99-90 in the second round of
the National Invitation Tournament
at larm1e, Wyoming.
Dembo led Wyoming, 22-11, on a
17-7 run against the West Coast
Athletic Conference team late in the
first half as the Cowboys broke open a
three-point game to take a 42-31 lead
with 4:05 left 1n the half.
Wyoming Coach Jim Brandenburg
had said before the game that the
Cowboys of the Western Athletic
Conference would have to slow down
the fast-brcakina Lions to win, but
instead the home team matched the
visitors' running.
Wyoming, which beat Teus A&M
79-70 in last week's first round, led
S7-41 at the half, after completina 11
percent of its shots.
Loyola Marymount's Mike Yoest
and Forrest McKenzie led a second-
half attack from both the inside and
outside, but the Lions, 19-11.
couldn't get closer than I 0 points
until McKenzie hit a jumper from the
naht comer with seven seconds to
play to set the final score.
Elsewhere in the NIT Monday:
Provldeace te, Geor1e MHon 71:
The Friars, with Harold Starks and
Steve Wri&)\t lgniting a powerful
IDside aame that all but decided the
issue early in the second half, was one
of 1even teams to advance to the NIT
quarterfinals.
Providence, 17-13, led 38-32 at
halftime, then scored eiaht layups ID
ntne attempts in the next eight
minutes to jump ahead 58-43.
The Fri an are hopi nt to uphold the
pmtiae of a lcaauc th.u la~t scaspon
provided three of the Final Four
NCAA teams, includin& national
champion Villanova. The Wildcats,
1984 NCAA champion Ocoraetown.
(l'leue eee NJT /82)
'
Pac-10 has become W eak-10 Capo gains
another MD
grid transfer Inferiority complex s t a rting
to s et in after disma l s howing
The once-mighty Pacific-I 0 conference. cham-
pioned through the years by UCLA in NCAA basketball
tournament play, may be dcvelopmg an tnfcnority
complex.
And it would seem justified.
The conference ego was on the hoe last Friday when
Arizona. the Pac-I 0 champions, took on Au bum in the
first round of the NCAA West Regi onal at the Long Beach
Arena.
But the Wildcats couldn't keep upWlth Auburn 1n the
final minutes and lost 73-63. giving the Pac-10 an 0-6
record in NCAA first-round games the past two years.
Southern Cat. Arizona, Washington and Oregon
State were the victims in 1985. Washington preceded
Arizona in defeat this year, falling to Michigan State on
Thursday ni&)\t.
"It's another slap at the Pac-10. I guess," Arizona
Coach Lute Olson said after the Wildcats' loss. "I don't
ltnow. But it's not a slap at our guys; I'm proud of what
we've done this year."
The Pac-10 didn't haven't any better luck in the
National In vitation tournament this ttme around.
UCLA , the NCAA champion 10 times under John
Wooden tn the 1960s and 7CX and dcfendtng NIT
champion. was upset 80-74 by Cal-Irvine of the Pacific
Coast Athletic Association in a first-round NIT game
Thursday night.
"It wasn't like play10g the UCLA ofold," said lrvlDe
forward Johnny Rogers, who scored 29 points in the
victory at Pauley Pavilion, where the Brutns once were
practicall y mvmcible. "But getting UCLA at their place 1s
great for a program that gets no respect ...
The same oiaht. Ca.I lost an NIT game to Loyola
Marymount of the West Coast Athletic Conference.
giving the Pac-I 0 its third tournament loss of the evening.
"It was a bad otght for the Pac-I 0, .. UCLA Coach
Walt Hazzard said afterward.
Another PCAA representative. Nevada-Las Vegas.
has made 1t to the final 16 teams 1n the NC AA
tournament, so the PC AA and W(' AC. once regarded as
the "little brothers" of college basketball on the West
Coast. have the only teams still altve in post-season play. ·
Hazzard. however. thinks there are better things
ahead for the Pac-10. commenting. "We're a young
conferenc.c . . our conference will be very compet1t1vc
next year."
By ROGER CARLSON
Of .... 0.-, ..... 118'1
Mater De1 High School has lost
another football talent -1t has
been learned that place-kicker Joe
Wood. a sophomore backup to
All-CIF star Gary Coston this
past season. has checked out of
the Monarchs campus and 1s
enrolling at Capmrano Valle~
H1ah School.
Wood. a 5-1 I. I 65-pound wide
receiver when not Inciong. fol-
lows All-Angelu~ League quar-
terback Todd Mannov1ch to
Capistrano Valle)
Although on the varsity roo;ter
as a sophomore. 'Wood did not
catch a pass or l11:l for the
Monan:hs' vars1t)'
Mixture of favor~tes, longshots remains
NCAA tourney is at 16
with new Final 4 a ssured
Down 10 the Sweet Sixteen, the NC'AA
basketball tournament still has an interesting mix
of favorites and longshots as the road to Oalla'I
weaves throu&h four more rcg.ional sJtcs this
w~kend.
Three of the four top seeds survived the sub-
rqJonal rounds, Wlth only St. John's, asst&Ded the
No. I slot in the West, knocked out of the
tournament. The other lop seeds, Dute in the East.
Kentucky in the Southeast and Kansas 10 the
Midwest. all remain 10 businel'~ and arc favortd 1n
their next pmcs.
Also still ativc arc lonphots ltke DcPaul an4
Oevcland tale, No. 12 and No. 14, rcspccuvety.
in the East ~on, Lou1 1ana State, No. 11 an the
Southeast. M1chipn State, Nonb C~rolina tale
and Iowa talc, who were Nos. >6-7 ID t~
Midwest. and Aubum, which went tn as No. 8 ID
the West.
The tournament resumes Thund,ay Wlth Wc1t
ReJional pmcs matchma Auburn apanst Ne·
vada·La.s Vegas and North Carolina against
Louisville at Houston. Kentucky plays Alabama
and LSU faces Georgia Tech at A1lanta 1n the
Southeast matchups.
Friday. the East Regional at Ea!lt Rutherford.
N.J. has Duke against De Paul and (1eveland talc
playrng Navy At Kansas City that n1&)\t, the
Midwest pairinp arc Kansas vs. M1ch1gan State
and N.C. State aaamst Iowa tate.
The bettina line run'I from Duke as a
comfonable 91h-point choice over DePaul, to
Auburn and Nevada-Las Vcps. hsted as pack 'cm
In between those extremes. Georg.ta Tech '"
favored by 8 Kansas by 7. Kentucky and Navy
each by 3. N.C. State by l'h and North Carohna hy
I.
Some o( the sun1vors beat tournament
hcavywctlhts to reach this siqe Two of the ma1or
upsetscamuntheC'amerDomcat )'TICusc. NY ,
where unheralded Cleveland tate, a 12~-I 'lhot
t*fo~ the tournament bcpn, tomahawked In·
d1ana. then 40-1 Navy \lJfl>n~ yracuisc ''°an
the Ea t Rca:1onal, De Paul. 40-1 . whipped V11'Jln1a
and Oklahoma
Navy center David Rohin~n. who wrecked
Syracuse Wlth 3~ po1nt'I. includ1na a rt"g1onal
tournament record 21 from the foul hnc. recalled
that before leavmg tht campus for his team's fi1rst-
round game, he had pecked at the tournament
packs of has fnend•1. They were not totallv
supportive of the M1d\h1pmcn who had lost hy :!.~
po1ois to yncusc earlier m the 'ICllSOn
"They \o\el't' pickm& )T'ICUSC ... ~said .. The)
all Slid, 'We know )OU iUYS can win. but, he). th1 is our money • ..
Kevin Macke)' ( leveland tatc's youna
coach. never had met Indiana ( oach Bobby
Knt&ht before the 1oumament 'When the) shook
hands, Mackey saad, "Go cas on us •· Even thoua,h
Knt&ht knew better than to be \wttt-talkcd into
complacency. 1t didn't help the Hoo 1er5 a"o1d the
upset
When Cleveland ta~ belt l. Joscph'l, Pa 1n
the second round, 20.~car-old fttc.hman MouK
McFadden. the team high !COrtr. cluhed
"That't for all you doub~n. all you peopl" who
8J'e everybody cite the pub fpuhhC'1t'f) ••
OtPauri puhhaty had t-ttn m°'tl\ bad
dunna a 12-los!I ~'°n But the Blue OC'm un\
spruna eonsttuuvc urprises on ll"Jln1a and
Oklahoma
Angels'
pitching
battered
Oakland expl es
for 18 hits, 11 runs
in 11-IOA'swin
Fnm AP ...,_teMI
PHOENIX -Stan Javier's ~
off the leg of pitcher D.W. Smith
brou'1il Steve Keifer home with the
wiruun' run in the bottom of tbe = 1nnina as the Oakland A'• the Angels 11-10 in exhibition
baJeball Monday.
The teams combined for 34 bits in
the slu&f'est. which saw the A'1 ta.kc a
9-S advantaae into the eighth. only to
have the Angels come up with fi ve
run1 in the inning to take a 1().9 lead..
Left-bander Bob Fallon, who j ust
arrived in camp in a trade that sent
outfielder Ron Harrison to the Chi-
cago Wbi~ Sox, picked up the victory
despite allowing five runs and six hits
in one inning.
The winnin& rally beaan when
Dave .Kingman singled, and Alfredo
Griffin ran for him. Keifer siqled
Griffin to third, and Steve Henderson
got a base bit to tic the game. Javier
then lined the shot that caromed off
Smith's leg.
Dusty Baker bit lus fint home run
of the spring. a two-run shot. in the
fifth inning for the A's. Brian Down-
ing also bit bis first homer of the
Cactus League for the Angels to lead
off the game.
Three Angels pitchcn -Mike
Witt, Jim Slaton and Smith -were
t.aucd for the 11 runs on 16 hits.
H owever, Angels Manqcr Gene
Mauch quickly discounted the poor
performances.
"You·u see an ugly game like this
two-three times every spring,"
Mauch said. ref erring to chilly
temperatures and a stiff oul-blowing
wind.
"Breaking-ball pitchers have no
chance."
That was apparent as Slaton, who'd
been unscorcd upon in five previous
exhibition innings, bung one curve
ball after another. He allowed six runs
and seven bits in two innin_,.
"I couldn't get a good gnp on the
ball.'' said Slaton. ··But it looked like
evervone else had the same ~ 1c.n~.,,
The Angels' 18-hit attack improved
their team batting average to .326 fo r
IOgames.
Downing retained bis tcam-leadina
1nd1V1dua1 ma.rt, following a first-
1nntng homer with a pair of singles.
1Jod6enla.e
VERO BEACH -Tom Brookens'
bases-loaded grounder in the 12th
inning knocked in the deciding run in
a 4-3 Detroit decision over the Los
Angeles Dodgers.
The Tigers bad taken a 3-1 lead in
the I I th on a two-run tri{>le by Dave
Collins. But the Dodgers tied it on Bill
Russell's two-run singJC.
Fernando Valenzuela went six
mn1n15, walking five and striking out
SIX.
Rustlers
ripped off;
Eagles fall
An abbrcv1ated schedule allowed
only two area baseball games to be
played Monday because of the wet
grounds, and Golden West College
probably wishes it would've stayed
home also as the Rustlers took a nasty
lump on the head from South Coast
Conference front-runner Ccmtos to
h1ghhght the action.
Meanwhile, Mater Dea chncbed
third pla~ of the Newpon Harbor
Elks Tournament W1th a close win
over Estancia.
Herc's what happened:
Cerrito• 18, Golden West 4: utcher
Craig Wilson was 3-for-4 Wltb two
RBI and center fielder Greg Mannion
was 3-for-5 with four RBI and lhrcc
runs scored as the Falcons ( 11 ~)
continued to roll an the South t
Conference wnh a btg win over the
Rustlers at Cemto
Cemto 1s 1n first place 10 the
conference. a haJf ..garnc ahead of
Oranae Coast (3-0)
Golden w"' Starter Dean Douty
~ufTered control problems,, walkina
four 1n 1 i,, tnninp Georac Lua.Ide
{:!.-for-2) had an RBI and scored a run
for the Rustlers.
Fre'lhman n&ht-handcr Fernando
~\\a pushed his rcoord to 2-1 Wlth
five ~trons tnninas of work for
Cemtos Wilson also scored two runs
and Mannion provided the bta blows
Wlth a double and a home run.
Dave Llhbam relieved tcvc Hunt
tn the 'llXth 1nn1nt for QW(' and
pitched 2111 1nn1nas. allowina three
hits whale ~tnk1na out two
In a htah school prne:
Mata Dd t El1Uda l: Jim
Zachery '1n&led home Lout Dlu an
the seventfi mning to 11vc the
Monarchs a nttded cu h1on and
catcher Mike Kelly went l-for·.l.
1nclud1na a MX>n fly b&Jl to center
field m the tCCOnd 1onina.
The host f.aaks (2-3) tcOrM IW1ct
m the sixth anmna after betn& down
)...(} v..hcn an error at shon top oft" the
fPleue ... llASSBA.LLfSSJ
•
• • * Ortinge CoMt DAILY PILOT/ Tueeday, March 18, 1988
Pro golf in tizzy;
Beman is on spot
Ballesteros. O'Grady,
Lan erareateenter
of ame's problems
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -The
PGA tour is in turmoil.
Mac O'Orady tl threatening a court
auit. Scve Ballesteros of Spain is
muttenng darkly of a personal
vendetta. Deane Beman has
proposed disciplinary action that as
the most severe 1n the 12 years he has
been comm1ss1oner.
Bernhard Langer of West Germany
is wrestling with complex tax prob-
lems that have a beanng on has
particapauon on the Amencan tour.
About 40-SO players held an im·
promptu, closed door mee1tng last
weekend ••to discuss current prob-
lems and possible solutions."
Another meeting as scheduled
Wednesday at New Orleans That
meetmg precedes by one day
Ballesteros· scheduled start an the
only Tour event in which he 1scltgible
this year and will follow immediatel y
the first head-to-head session be-
tween the comm1ss1oner and
O'Grady's attorney, te'e "lovak
"We'll see where that takes u .....
Novak said
So far , at has brought the tour to a
low boil.
"There as a sense of unea~e on 1he
tour." Hal Sutton ~•d
At the centtr of the comple'\
satuatton -the panaal banishment of
Ballesteros, a proposed suspension of
O'Grady, the target of O'Cirady's
scath ing comments -" th<'
belea~uered Beman
the lea 1 controversial.
Si mply, the West Gennan resident
and native is taxed on his worldwide
earnings by his home country. To
retam his non-resident alien status in
the United States -and thus avoid
another tu on has worldwide earn-
ings -he is ltmatcd in the number of
days he can pla~ an this country. That
limitation prohibits him from playing
the IS American 1oumaments re·
quired by PGA Tour regulations.
Beman bas indicated that an ac-
commodauon probably will be made.
Ballesteros' loss of membership on
the American tour, and the O'Grady
situation -wi1h his hcadline-lflb-
btnJ charges -and the proposed
mll)or disciplmary actions, have
produced much more comment attd
concern among the players.
The fiaJ:nbouyant Ballesteros, per-
haps the Tmesl player in the world,
·was stripped of his membership-on
the American tour afteT failing to
appear in IS U.S. tournaments in
1985. as he had agreed to do. lie
played in nme.
"It as better for both sides (U.S. and
Europe)." Ballesteros said in England
Last year after it became apparent he
would not play in the required
number of Amencan events, "ifl play
when l want 10 ptar anstead ofstack.ing
to their sill y rules. ·
The PGA Tour administ ration did
not agree.
NIT BASKETBALL ..•
Jl'romBl
SyraCUIC and St. John's all were
eliminated from the NCAA last
weekend. Pitt1bur&h was knocked out
lhe the NlT in the first round.
Clem .. 17, Ge.rcJa fi: Horace
Orant and Glenn Cotbit scored 24
polnu apieee to power the visitina
Tiaers over the Bulldogs.
Corbit and Olen McCants had four
points each in an 8-0 Clemson run
early in the second half that pve lhe
Tilers a 43-32 lead. Clemson, I 9~ I 4,
led Georgia, 17-13, by at lcas1 five
points the rest of lhc way.
Donald Hartry has 17 points for
Geol'Jia.
Grant scored 14 first-half points as
Oemson led 3S-32. The Tigers took
charge late in the half on a I 0-2 flurry
with Grant gettina six points.
Florida '17, TCtJ 75: Joe Lawrence
bit a 2~foot jump shot with one
second left after reserve freshman
guard Oifford Lett scored seven
pomts in the last 3:38. Lawrence
scored after. grabbing a tipped re-
bound of a shot by Ronnie Montgom-
ecy with six seconds left, exchanging
paMel with Montgomery and scoring
from the left comer.
The Gators, 18-12, were led by
Andrew Moten with 20 points. Lett,
who hit all seven shots be took from
the field, scored l 1 of his 16 points in
the second half.
C.arl U>tt scored 21 points for TCU
and Carven Holcombe 20 as the
Homed Frogs, 22-9, rallied from a
63-52 deficit.
°'lo St. '11, Teu115: Forward Brad
Sellers led the way with 25 points, and
host Ohio State got 17 points from
Curtis Wilson and 11 from Jay
Burson as the Buckeyes overcame a
12-poinl deficit
Wilson, a sophomore, who also had
six assists, and Burson, a freshman,
came off the bench to spark a rally in
which the Buckeyes ran off I 0 of 12
points after leading 54-52 with 3:28
remaining. Forward Dennis Hopson
added 14 points.
who had 18..J)Oints. Brownlee addc
17 while Karl Willock and Ray Dav
had 11 apiece. LoalJlua Ted '1'1, McN .... St. t
Juruor forward Robert Godbo
scored 20 points and hauled in I
rebounds as the host Bulldop, 18-1
advanced. WiWe Bland added l
points and U>uis Cook 10.
McNcese State, which beat Louas
ana Tech twice durin1 the rquh
season. finished 21-11.
Kenny Jimerson, who fouled ot
with 2: 18 remaming, aod resen.
Michael Cutright led McNcese Stai
wilh 16 points each. Jerome Batist
added 11 points and 10 rebounds fc
the Cowboys. Soetllweat Ml11oart 13, Mana.en
ft: Junaor guard Winston GarlAn
scored 22 pQints and. senior Ph
Schlegel added 21 to pace Southwet
Missouri State.
The Bears, 24-7, built a 39-2
halftime lead, but Marquette whittlo
the deficit to five points on tw
occasions. the last at S9-S4 with 7:3
left in the game.
Kerry Troller fouled out for th
Wamors with 4:53 left, and wa
assessed three technacal fouls fo
conttnumg an argument with th
referee. Southwest Missouri capi
talized on the technicals by sconn.
seven points for a 72-57 lead.
Boxer dies
LON DON (AP) -Steve Wau, th1
Scottish wellerweight boxing cham
pion who collapsed an the ring after 1
fight last week, died Monday night, 1
hospital spokesman said.
The spokesman for Charing Cros1
Hospital said the cause of death wai
not immediately known. The boxer'e
family and fnends were with hirr
when he died. tbe spokesman added.
Hes under attack by 0"(1rady He\
under attack by Ballesteros And he"c;
bctng questioned by other pla)er!>
who suppon the pos1t1ons of those
two players
The tax c;ttua11on facmg Langer,
wanner'Ofthe Masters tournament, as
Following tournament regulattons
an this case -which Ballesteros
helped draft -the Tour Policy Board
revoked his membership for a year
and made him ineligible for PGA
Tour events. Exceptions were made
for the Masters, U.S. Open and PGA
(which are not PGA Tour events) and
this week's USF&G Classic at New
Orleans. in which Ballesteros 1s the
defendmg champion.
.. II 1s a personal thang between
Beman and myself." ~allesteros said
earlter thac; year
,,, .......... '°
Florida'• Clifford Lett goee up for two a&aln•t Tuu Chrl•
tian ln NIT play Monday nJCht. The Gators won. 77-76.
Ohio Statel 16-14, took command
af\er Texas 6-10 center John
Brownlee fouled out.
Texas. was led by Patnck Fatro.
Watt, 28, sanJc into a coma sbonl)
after being stopped by Rocky Kelly 01
U>ndon in the 10th round of a non·
title bout last Friday. Authonties said
he never regained conciousness.
SPORTS BREAK
He was surprised
it took everyone
so long to find out
From AP dispatches
PITTSBURGH -Former Pittsburgh
Pt rates patcher John C andelana sa}s he wa~
surpnsed former drug user'i on the team
weren't dcte~ted sooner bet:ause their u~
m
of drugs "was flagrant and C\ef'fbod) knew ti ··
Three fo rmer Pirates -Da"e Parker. Dale Berra
and John M1lner -adm1t1cd dunnga federal coun tnal
last summer tha1 th t» used tocaanc frequently whale
playing for the team
Several other formcr Pirates. 1ndud1ng Lee Lacy
and Rod Scurry. were linked dunng 1nal testimony to
cocarne use. and Scurry underwent drug rehab1lttat1on.
Candelaria. now wtth the Angels, said drugs
ra vaged the Pirates' once-harmonious clubhouse as the
team tumbled from a world champ1onsh1p 1n 1979 to
last place 1n the National League East 1n 1981.
'Tm surpnsed those guys didn't get caught
sooner:· ( andelana told fhc Pittsburgh Press ··1 don"t
know how C\Cr)bod) massed It A.)ont: who says he
didn't know abou1 ti was looking the other way."
Fom1 cr Pira1e'i Manager Chuck Tanner said he
was unaware that 'iome of h1-. players were usang
cocaine up to four tame'> a week. accordang to 1est1mon)
last fa ll
Candelaria af1cr mon1hs ofaskang 10 to be traded,
had his wash grantt."d b) the Pirates last August when
they dealt him to the Angels .\ P1ra1es' starter for 10
year<;. ( anddaria was unhapp~ with being banished to
th e hullJXn h~ fdnner
C andclana a former 21>-~me wanner was 7-3 with
the .\ngel'> He ha\ ••lil'Jth l>cen penci lled anto the
.\ngels' startrng rot.1111111 tor this season by Manager C1ene Mau(h
Quote of the day
Mil ton Rlcbma11 , I n11ed Prrs<o lnternattonal
column1\t recalling the word s of Bobhy Bragan,
~ho had fo ur managerial stops in the maJor
league\ a' R1thman wmtc about the parting of
Dac k William!> and the \an Diego Padres: "Afier
~ou·.,,e managed pla)er'> a while. a sickness sets
1 n They get sack of yo u. and you get sack of them ...
Walden charged in shooting
H.\l'\:HRllX1f (,3 -f ormer "I FI [il
puntl'r Hohh) Walden ha\ been charged c Cl >
with ,,,(unl.H) man\laughtn 1n the <>hoot-
ing death 111 .t man at h1\ 'inut h C1eorg1a
home la'it I nda>
\\ alden who played for the National Football
l eague' \11nn<''>ola Viking\ and Pittsburgh Steelers
after <,tarring 1n t0lkge lr>r the Georgia Bulldogs. as
a1.cused an lhl' '>hooting death uf Andrew Faiso n of
Ba 1 n hmlf(t'
.\ccrirdang to Detatur C'o unt) ~henff E.W
Phillt p<;, Walden looked 1n h1'i back yard fnday naghl
and~"" I a1<,on 1 n \\ aldcn ''i c.ar An altercation ensued.
and I a1\on wa'> k1lltd lhe 'ihenfT \aid
Walden 1<, frrc •in ~5 ()()() bond Has t ase ·~
scheduled to ht' n1c\cn1ed 10 a grand JUry on May S.
Washington agrees to penalty
ATLANl A -A1lanta lJraves out· m
fielder Claudell Wa'ih1ngton agreed Mon-
day to accept pcnalt1<'' am posed hy ba<;chall
Commissioner Pe1rr l ehcrroth for pa'lt
involvement w11h dru g\
Washington wa<; one ot I I player-; ordered by
Ueberroth to donate a portaon of their ~lanes and
perform communal}' '>Crv1ce work or fate su\pcnsaon
Under the agretment Washing1on wall pay S
percent of has S 7~0.000 ~lnry 10 an Atlanta drug
rehabilitation center. perform ~O houn of community
service in each of lh e n<'-'I two ytar5 and undergo
random drua testtnll for the re\1 c>f hai. career
Beee •tan up Darrell Thoma•
SAN JOSE -Tht' \an JoM' Rees a
announced Monday they've "gned Oarretl
Thomas to play center fitld fo r the
California LatlUe club. The Beadld Dot disclose wh t they will pay the 35· ~-<>kl fonnet San Franc1'Co C11an1. but team
spoteiman Mark Wilson uad the salary wa' "cons1s-
ttn.t with ()(bet mjnor league contract\ "
BASEBALL
Green's late shot nips Detroit
~~,h~1611~0~~~:1a~1ta;.~~~~~~:ura~ ~ Yanks' Burns 1·n p -a1·n Jazz a 107-106 victory over the Detroit ~
Pistons in National Basketball Association
Other half ofNY's pitehtngstaff
struggles against Toronto's bats
action Monday night. After Green's basket and a
timeout. blab Tbomaa worked the clock down to eight
seconds and drove for the hoop. but has shot was
blocked by 7-4 Jazz center Mark Eaton. rhe looSt" ball
went to Kelly Trlpacka, who put up a Jumper that
bounced off the nm at the buzzer. Elsewhere in the NBA From AP dlapatcbes
Monday, DomlnJqae Wiik.ina led a 13-0 Atlanta run an
the third quarter, and the streaking Ha~ ks went on to
defeat the Chicago Bulls I 06-96 after Wllhstandang a
foun h-quarter rally spurred b) Mlcbael Jordu .
Sedale ~eau and Charles Barkley each scored 2 1
poi nts to lead the Philadelphia 76ers to a 11~11 2
overtime victory over the Cleveland Cavalters. . Buck
Williama scored I 0 of has 19 poants and pulled down
'iCven rebounds 1n the first quaner as the hot-shootang
New Jersey Nets routed the Washangton Bullet'
130-1 02 ... Herb Williama scored Indiana's last nine
points an the first half en route to a career-high 40, and
grabbed 14 rebounds in leading the Indiana Pacers over
the New York Knicks I 12-92.
Drought ends, Capitals win
sconng drought with a pair of goals to help '
Dave Clartattu ended an I I -game ~
the Washington Capitals 10 a 5-3 Nati onal
Hockey League victory over the Pmsburgh
Penguins on Monday naght. The victory, Washington's
10th in the past 11 games. moved the Capitals within
one poant of the first-place Ph1ladelph1a Ayers an the
Patrick D1v1s1on. Elsewhere an the NHL Monday.
Mlcbel Goulet scored four tames and assisted on two
other goals to lead the Quebec Nordique~ 10 an 8-6
shootout decision over the Montreal C'anadaens ..
Dino Clccarelll's third power-play goal of the game w11h
25 seconds remaining an ovename gave the Minnesota
Nonh Stars a 6-5 victory over St. Louts .
Jacobs resigns golf position
RANCHO SANTA FE -Tommy
Jacobs. the tournament director of 1he
PGA 's MONY Tournament of Champions
for the past IS years, has resigned. effect1 ve
May I st, it was announced Monday.
n
Jacobs, the one-time tounng pro who also has been
the director of golf at La Costa Country Club. resigned
both posts to supervise construction ofThe Fanns Golf
Club course in Rancho Sante Fe.
Groundbrcakang for the course, which will be
designed by golf-coursearchi1ec1 Pete Dye, 1s scheduled
fo r April with a completion date set fo r late ~um mer of
1987.
Shywing pulls away to victory
ARCADIA -Heavily favored Shyw·
ang drove to the lead an midstretch and
drew off late 10 a 2''4-lcngth victory in the
$64,550 Las Cienega.<; Handicap for older
fi lltes and mares Monday at Santa Anita.
Reigning Countess, ridden by Gary Stevens.
finished second 1hrec lengths in front of Her Royalty,
ndden by Chris McCarron .
Frostje Shades, the only other starter in 1he field of
four, broke down in the stretch after leadang for the first
half-mile.
Shywing earned $37.SSO for 1hc vi c1ory in the race
for distaffcn. 4 years old and up.
The winner was clocked in I. I 8 for 61/J furlongs
over a muddy track.
Sent off the even-money choice, hywmg p:11d $4
and $3.20 and Reianing Countess returned $4 60 10
place. There was no show betting.
Televt.lon, radio
TELEVISION
7·30 p m. -PRO BASJtETBAtL < lapperc.
at Golden State. Olannel S
RADIO
10:30 a.m. -BASEBALL Oodgel"'i v~
Texas. ftom Pompano ~ach, Fla., KAO<, (790)
4:30 p.m. -PRO HOCKEY· Kings at
Wasbinaton. KGIL ( 1260).
6:30 p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL U(
Irvine at BY U an second round of NIT. KPLE
(1190).
7:30 p.m. -PRO BAS~ETBALI: Portland
at Laken, Kl.AC (570).
7:30 p m. -PRO BASltETBALL Clappers
It Golden State, KMP(' (710)
WEDNDDAY'S RADIO
10:30 a.m. -BASEBALL: Ho uston vs.
DocSaen. from Vero Beach, Aa., KABC (790).
Britt Bums. who t'i supposed to JOtn Ron Guidry as
the ace-; of the New York Yank ees' pitchang rotation,
stru~lcd through three innmgs Monday. hurt both by
paan 1-n has h1pand the sting of the Toronto Blue Jays' bats.
Bums, acquired by New York dunng the offseason
from thC'Chacago White Sox. ga'e up fi ve runs m the first
inning. But of greater conc~·rn was the veteran lef\-
hander's hip cond1t1on
"'I've always patched v.1th -;ome pain. but ti's a hule
wo~ today." said Burn'i, v.ho had patched only two
1nntng.'> pnor to Monday Hurns has had ha p problems
!ltncc his youth.
But the Yankees aren't WOIT) mg too much about at
-for now
"Look.mg on the bnght side, he was able to go thrtt
innings and didn't have to leave because of 11," said
Yankees owner George 'itcanbrenner. "We"ll have ham
examined and see what happens."
The Blue Jay'> edged the Yankees 8-7 at Dunedin,
Fla . on Garth lorg's two-run double an the seven1h
inning. breaking a 6-6 tie
Elsewhere Monday
Pirates s. A1tro1 3: Mike Brown htt a three-run
ho mer to cap a four-run fifth annang that erased a 3-0
Houston lead. It was ht'i fir<; I homer of the spnng and the
thafd bv a Pirate
Twins 2, Expos I: Tam Laudner's IOth-innang single
drove an Gary Gae1t1 with the wanning run for Minnesota .
Gaetll led ofT the inning with a double and took third
when center fielder Henn Winningham kicked the ball for
an error. Laudncr followed wtth a single through the right
side of the Expos' drawn-an an field.
Cardinals 6, Red Sox 3: Jose Oquendo tnpled an two
runs and scored on a squeeze bunt in the sixth mnang,
sparking St. Louis. Oquendo's tnplc off loser Sammy
Stewart drove in Tito Landrum. who had doubled, and
Terry Pendleton, who had walked, and erased a 3-1
Boston lead Winning patcher Greg Mathews then
successfully executed the squeeze play to score Oquendo
and put St. Louts ahead 4-3.
A's 7, Giants 6: In Scottsdale, Anz .. Mike Davis
slammed a bases-loaded triple an a four-run first inning
for Oakland. Tony Phillips collected three of Oakland's
I 0 htts. including a run-scoring single as the A's scored
twice in the eighth to break a 11c.
Red• S, Wblte Sox 4: Eddie Mainer made hi s first
cxhabitjon-game appearance and his pinch-hit single in
the bottom of the nanth drove home the winning run.
TENNI S
,, __ ,.... ..
National Leape umpire John Kimble
arpea with Cub9 coach Ruben Amaro.
Braves I, Royals 8: Rjck Mahler became the first
Atlanta pitcher to go five innings, combining wtth Jeff
Dedmon and Paul Assenmacher on the shutout.
The Braves scored the game's onJy run m the third as
Bruce Benedict scored from second on an error by second
baseman Frank White. who lei an Omar Moreno
grounder skip between his legs.
Martaera t, Caba '1: Seattle collected I 5 hits. Third
baseman Jim Presley drove an two runs w11h a wind·
blown double in the first tnmng. Cubs starter Dennis
Eckersley gave up six runs on nme hits in four innings.
Ru1er1 t, Orioles 3: -Pete O'Brien's three-run
homer and Darrell Porter's two-run homer off Baltimore
starter Ken Dixon sparked a six-run first inning for Texas
as the Rangers pounded the Onolcs 9-3 at Pompano
Beach Aa. P~e. S, Meta 4: P1och-h1tter Joe lefcbvrc's first hit
in almos1 two years ga ve Phila~e!phia a 5-4 victory over
the New York Mets as the Ph1ll1es took the field in St
Patrick's Day green at Clearwater, Fla. ·
UCI drops 5-4 tiff to Miami
UC Irvine·~ men's tenrus team drop~J a S-4 non·
conference deci ion to 13th-ranked Miami Monday
af\emoon on the Antea1ers' courts. ..,
MiRmi got an upset victory an smiles as Andy
Burrow, ranked No. SS in the natio n. rallied to defeat
Bruce Man SonJ Hing. 3-6, 7-S. 6-4 to spark a 4-1 edge for
the visitors an singles.
Darren Yates was the only UCI 5ingles player to
5UCCeed.
The IOiS drops UCI. which was 25th an 1he nation. to
8-4 overall. Miami is 9-?.
The Antea1crs' next venlure as their own 16-tcam
tournament, which beg.ans on Fnday and concludes on
Monday.
On the prep level Monday:
Corou del Mar 15, Costa Meu S: The Mustanas wert
never an the match. losang nane straiah1 sets in singles
before the No I doubles team of Oary Bl~ and Glenn
Gallacher helped avoid a CdM sweep by wmmng two sets.
John Torell, Scott Atkin and John Brant were easy
wannen an singles and the freshman doubles team of
DouJ Schulcm and Rob Atkin swept throuah their setsas
the Sea Kmgs (5·2. 2-0) won a &a View J..aaue match on
then home coun
Newport Harbor 11 , aay Hiiia 7: Jeff Martin and
Kent Greeley were tOU$h in doubles and fttshman Chris
Rabbttt improved his singles record to 2G-4 as the Sailors
(6-1 . 1-0) won a non-lcquc match at Sunny Hills.
Martin and Greeley won three straa.aht sets and
Rabbitt surrendered only four pmes durio.a his victory
for Newport Harbor, which hostt Woodbnd.ae today (3
p.m.) for a Sea View League match.
Newpon's No. 1 siQgles player, Jae" Banks, won
twice and los• once and No. 3 player Daryl Miller won his
last set in sinaJes, 7-6.
Eatuda Ii, SaddJeback S: The ~es (5·3) won a
tnakeup pme and also improved to 2-0 an the Sea View
League with a victory over the Roadrunners. aete
Otosh!, Estancia'_s No: I sin~cs player, swept through his
sets wtth three v1ctones whale the Eagles' No. I doubles
team of C. J. Vince and Oris Hastings won all three of
their matches.
lo community colleac action:
Orua~ Coast t, Cypre11 0: Chris Ganz and Dean
Olson,. OCCs N.o. 1 and No .. 2 singles players,
respectively, remained undefeated in conference action
as the Pirates(?-2, S-l)dominatcd theCharaersm a South
Coast Conference match at OCC'.
Oanz coupled with Pat Oedley to wan the No. 1
doubles set and Olson t~med with John StudebaJcer 10
win twice in No. 2 doubles for OCC', wh ich travels to
Rancho S.CWaco today (2 .P:m.) for a conference match.
0.nz and Olsol'I are both 6-0 in South C'oast play.
In women's community collqe acuon:
Oruc• C...t t, Cnns• t: C.anic Hams and Jill Quarwvo posted shutout ,victories in am&lcs and Ka.ryn
Thurmond and Bct.b Barmore allowed only one pme u
the Pirates (S-1) overwhelmed the Chargers in a South
Coast Conference match at Cypress. . Usa Newman and Amanda Brodie also recorded
wi ns in s1naJcs for OCC, which ends the fif"lt round of
conference play 1oday (2 p.m } apinst Ra ncho Sa.ntta o
-.. ·-----~-
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Orange CoM1 OAILY PILOT/Tu.dey, Metch 11. 11M -Tourneys
highlight
baseball
next week
Fryer winds up No. 1
• • 1n area scoring race
Preps stay b sy
urtng vacation
with tournaments
l.eque play is in its initial macs for
Suo1et, Sea View and South Coast
l.eque bopefuJs, but before it tcts lOO
bot.and heavy &l.\ere's another return
lO toumamenl action scheduled for
several teams with the sprina break
beainnina on Salu:rday.
Tumina lo &oumament play on
Saturday arc Estancia, Costa Mesa.
Woodbrid&e, Irvine, Ocean View and
Fountain Valley.
f oUAtain Valley is scheduJed to wrap up its play in the 32-team Loan
l!lvttationaJ Saturday apiost River-
side Nonh, and Ocean View opens in
the Pomona Elks Tournament.
Costa Mesa and Estancia arc in-
volved in the Bolsa Grande Tour-
nament, which runs across four
diamonds and encompasses two
pmes on Saturday.
Irvine and SaddJeback arc at the
Santa Ana Elks Tournament and
Woodbridge is entered in the West ·
Anaheim Lions Tournament.
* S...AMllrtT~
, SAT\MDAY'S ,.ST ROUND
(et VIII httl Htltl)
10'.lO -Min ion Vlelo V'-Lof10 leecfl Mlllllall
1:30-Gerden Grove n. VIie Parll
(et Se.-AM._>
10-.lO -El MoOefle vi. El Toro
1.JO -Lone 9-ch JorclM n. S.11te AM letS.11'1&2 .. )
IO:JO -lrvlne vs. Orenee
l:JO -Foottlll v-. ~ , .. ...,, httl, Of-..
10'.lO -Lo. Alal'llllOI vs. h mlnt
I :30 -Kai... vs. Senle Alie Valley
Welt MeMlm U.. Teurwn.nt
SATUllOAY'I ,.ST ltOUNO
(et a.. MMMft)
10 -C•llYOll vi. Lone t..a. Po1v
I -IUordon (Sell FrelldlCO) VI AllCNe V•llev
4 -Woodbridte YI. Kenned\'
1 -S.va1111e v-. Fullet'lon
..... GtMde T~
SATUllOAY'S GAMllS , ....... ~,
10-.lO -GteM vi 8olM Grellde
10-JO -E1le11Cle "'-C•Pl"r•no Ven.v (JV Ii.id)
(It ""*-1
10-JO -Co•I• ~ v-. Peclfk:e
10'.JO -Arln l• VI. Leu1I~ (JV llekl)
(et Relldle ~)
10-.JO -Lvnwooo •I. It~ Alemltot
10-.JO -S."tleoo vi. Sellle Fe (JV n.td)
(et L• Amllllll
10'.JO -Le MJrllde vl. Los Amloos
l~JO -Or•noe Luttiere11 vi. Le Quint• IJV neld>
Nol•· WJMers II Nctl Ille N Y., versJIY lleld
el 1:30. LoMrl el .. di 11te N Y el JV l1eld el l:JO,
Toronto
putKlngs
away, 7-6
T O R O NT O (AP ) -
Czccbolovak.ian linemates Miroslav
Frycer and Peter Jhnac.ik picked up
three points apiece and center Tom
Fergus contributed his 30th and 31 st
goals of the season as the Toronto
Maple uafs outlasted the Los An-
aelcs Kin., 7-6 in an NHL game
Monday night.
Frycer got his 26th and 27ih goals
of the season, both set up by Jhnacak,
and assisted on bis linemate:S 18th to
propel the Leafs to a 4-1 lead midway
throuah the second period. But it took
the two goals by Fergus - one in the
second and another earl~y in the third
-to keep the Leafs in front.
The vtctory moved the fourht·
place Leafs 16 points ahead of Detroit an the Norris Division. Both teams
have 10 pmes left.
The J(jngs, holding down the
fourth and final playoff position in
the Smythe Division, dropped to
21-42-7 for 49 points, one ahead of
Vancouver.
Rookie Wendel O ark. with Ills
31st, and Dan Daoust scored the
other goals for the Leafs. Rick Vaive
had three assists.
Jim Fox bad three goals and an
assist for the Kings, while Bernie
Nicholls picked up a goal and three
assists. Other Los Angeles goals went
to Dave Williams and Bryan
Erickson, while defenseman Jay
Wells assisted on three goals.
BASEBALL •••
From Bl
..._ ......................
Cd.II'• Jeff Fryer, who aha.red Sea View MVP bonon with
8addleback'• Bryant Walton, la the area acortnc cha.mp.
Sea View stars place
five of the top six
In final prep·stats list
By ROGER CARLSON °' ...............
Corona del Mar Hlj,h'1 Jeff Fryer
established himself as the rabbit 1n
the chase for 1COrin1 honors for
Oranae Coast area Prei> basketball
players early this past season.
The 6-2'h senior scored a season·
hiah 46 points in the Sea Kiop'
second pme of the season qainst El c~ mino Hi&h of Oceanside, and
lh1nas never chanted.
Fryer finished the ~ason With a
28.2 scoring average to pin area
0nMe C.lt ~ T .. 10
I F,..,..,, Corone oel Mer
2. Wel!Oll, S.dclleOect<
l. P9ilcflowllcl, Cost1 Mese
4. ~ •• L.eeufle INecfl
S. ThotN1, Meter Del
6. l(Mfe, SeddleOKk
1. AmmeM , Edi-&. O.lrouwer. 0c .. 11 vi.w
t. Dever, Wnlml1111er
10. llutler, OoM11 View
......... ht
2'"22U .. ,, .., 20 •
I• 3'S 212 '3
2S Sot2 2U l6
31 us 20.1 34
21 S09 1'. I )1
26 462 17.7 34 n ltf 17.6 29 n 347 16.• 29
2• •7 16. I 2.S
honors, with Sea View League nval
Bryant Walton second at 24.S.
Costa ~esa's Much Pelichowslu,
hampered by injury and illness,
fini shed third al 23.2. but massed
seven games, all in league play.
1..a,una Beach's Coby Naess. the
fourth of five Sea V 1ew players in the
ToP. I 0, 1s fou.rth at 21.6 with Mater
Oct's Stuan Thomas at No. S (20.1 ).
Woodbridge sophomore Adam
Keefe, the fifth Sea View player
involved, 1s at the No. 6 spot with an
18.1 average.
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22 ., ''" •
24 311 '"' H 2• US 1U If 24 2" .., n
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SI ••111 di (14· ll) ..........
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19 " l.A 10 Prep basketball log
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lZMI
67 Lot Alemllo• SI
63 El CemfflO Sl
SS LI Jorden 40
65 LHUN a..cn •9
'6 El Toro. " SS FooltllU 56
61 Fifi. Velley 42
65 Mission Vlelo Sot
6S lltowmeed 42 as Hiii. hKtl 5'
Sot MluJon Vlelo SI
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S2 U~tv· 4'
5' Woodbr1ctoe•· S1
93 Cott• Mew· ..,
4S Sed~· CJ
S1 Leeune a..ct1· 60
74 Npt, ~ 60
60 Ellllftde • 43
.. Urwenltv• 61
11 Woodbffdee• '9
'3 Coste Mfte• Sot 63 Seddlel>edt. ., a' 12 El MoOene
37 Oomlnguer
•STANCIA
(I)· 12)
62
S3
SS Werren l3
47 L8 Jorden S3
62 El Cemlno n
SO Norco 57
62 DOii LUOO " 14 Ce11y011 60
SO ff«-Vellev " 70 IOlenl,Hew. 52 42 E dllOll 40
4' Domlnouez S9
66 Mlulon Vlelo SA n Cos•• Mae· 43
5' u111venrtv• lotl 59
31 COM• " S1 Nol. Hert>or• S2 n ~ 9Md1•60 "° ~· S7 55 WOOdbrldoe' 70 '1 Cotle Mfte• 5'
70 U11l\lersJtv• SO
43 COM• 60
S2 Npl. HerbOf• S3 63 ~ ._d\.SI
'3 ~· 71
5' Woocfbrldoe• SI
LAGUNA a•ACH
(1).12)
6t TrDC Hlltt JV 37
.. Norco SA
49 Tustin 42
4' COM 6S
60 Foo1n1H n
7S CvPfeu 61
47 LI Wiison S9
11 luene Perk 52
40 CdM• 64
O Burt>enk (lorf.l 2
SI Meonolle 41
61 Woodbrfdoe• '2 n Cost• Mfte• se n S.ddlet>Kk • .,
60 E1te11CI•' 12
S2 NDI. Hertlor' 62
s1 Unt"er111r 41
60 CdM• S7
3S W~ldoe' 47
.. Cotle Mfte• 69
IO Seddlel>eck • 61
SI E 11e11ele • '3
SS NPI. Her1>or' 70
S9 Ulllveottv• 76
" Seddle0ee1I•' •
COSTA MUA (I·•>
66 S.n Cl9mellte <n
62 LI Wll-'3
SI Fin. VeU.v IO
60 S.1111•90 S3 64 Ce11von 11
S3 CePO Vell9v 103
'3 El Modene IO
43 E11enc:ta• n
0 Seddlebe~. ..
SI Le9Une 8eecll• n
l I Woodbrldoe' 66 SO U11fv.,sltv• SI
43 COM• 93
5' NPI Hertlor" 12
5' E 1lenc1e • 11
52 Seddlebeek. 71
69 Levune a..c11· 1M
'9 Woodew'ldoe' 13
• U11lvert 1tv• 67
SA COM' 13
Sl NDI Hertlor' IS
SAOOL•aACk
(14· II)
S1 SA Venev S2
60 Mln l<HI Vlelo 61
SI Senti AN 3'
1l Artn le St
S1 Nor111 111t1 .. 1 se
5' lrvl11e 61
62 LekewOOd Sol
SI Mel., Del loll S3
" Or•noe 52 ., Fin. V•ll•v SA
60 Unlver11tv• 63
61 Coll• Meu• 4S
" WOOdt>rldOe' Sl
" LH UM ... cn• 13 46 ND!. Herbor' 43 51 E1le11Cle • 40 '3 CdM' 4S
60 Unl•er11tv· S9
11 Coale Mew' S2
SS WdbfldOe loll S1
61 L•eune BeKn· eo
SS NDI Herl>Or· ..
71 E11e nc:te• '3
4t COM• '3
41 LH &eedl•• 4A
52 U11lverst1Y•• 45
CIP:
SS Not'lll (lltlv ) n
UNIV•llMTY
112·141
7S Cvoress SS SA Gellr 70
J7 L il WllM>ll 40 '° MellflOll• .,
" S.nle Ane SS a MerlN 4'
62 A11111elm 40
7t Trbc Hiiis JV lf
53 e r .. ·Otlllda 61
6? E l Ooredo 66
63 Seddlet>eek • 60
St E111nc1e• 1011 S6
Sot NPI. Hertior• 6S
•t CdM• 51
SI Co111 Mew' .SO
61 WOOd• (2 ol) 61
• t.eoune B .. Cl'I. S1
Sf S.ctdlebeck• 60 SO E11e11e1e• 70
S7 NPI. Herbor• so 6' COM• fl
67 Co111 Meu' 41
41 WOOdtwldoe' 49
76 leg 8"cfl• Sf
65 Nwpl • • I? otl 64
'-' Seddlebeck.. S2
WOOONIOG•
!2"7)
5e EIMll\llowr (ot) '°
76 Le Hebfe U
·~1M.ue91me
IOISON
(17·10)
O CePO Venev 63 11 Cenvllfl ICC l 41
Sf Cet>rlllo SA
4S S.n11 Ciera '3
611 LekewOOCI S9
61 El MO<lene St
56 Htn aeecll toll 60
M Lot Allot 61
IS L111une HIH1 3'
40 Eile ncl• 42
76 Celltornle St
14 Hin l ffCfl 42
40 LI POlv JI
'3 L I Wit-67
71 Wnlml11,1er • 41
SI Oc:Nn View• S6
41 Hin lhe<:11• S2
S 1 Fin Veli.v• 32
Sot Merl11e• 63 SO Oceen vi.w• 62
6S w n 1m11111er 41
41 F111 Vettev• J7
.. Hiii Beec11• 41
6-4 Merine• 56
CIP
4' Verl>Um 0.1 SS
S4 LB Poly SJ
57 S.ne
P:TN. VALLIY
(l>·Ul
..
60 E t Toro SO
MAAINA
(I•· m SO lrvlne 63
61 Le Quin•• S6
61 SI. Jo~ 63
63 S.nl• l re>ere 41
49 Oelle Hills S2
75 Ss ve11na «
SJ llt.Alemllos (Ol I S8
49 U111venllv 41
60 Orenge 41
69 lrvlM S4
11 Or•noe JV •2
75 Dene Hllll SO
7' C.DO Vs li.v SJ
Sl Senti Cler• '2
65 Mlu lon Vl.ic> 12
Sl L•k•WOOO SA 41 Hin 8H«I' ll
l3 F111 Vettev• Cl
6S Ocff11 View• 7•
SO Westminster• 5'
63 EdllOll• S4
S7 Fin Vellev' 34
S.S H rn IHcll • 61
II wn1mlns1er• 60
S3 Ocffll View• " '6 EdfM>fl' S4
CIF
61 L• Sern
OCEAN VIEW
(Jl>-4)
10?
3S Compton 45 69 St Jo .. ons •I
S B•kenli.td 41
8urrow111 tit) 60
13 Mire Co11e 49 SI
•I SI Antnonv .. 16
4S Mllllke11 '3 61
IO Colle Mew SI 37
S2 lrvt11e 49 11
Sl Nortll ( lltlv I 1• 69
42 CdM 61 51
" El Modene 39 SS 61 CePO Vetlev 69 SO
31 Dena HIU1 30 SJ
SA $edd!eoecll 47 70
0 Pewdell• 4 I •S
l7 Muir 4S '9
37 OC..n View• SO SO
42 Nllrln• • 33 S6
S1 Wnlmlniler' S1 14
l1 EdtlOll• S\ 56
6.5 Hin aeecn• 21 n
~ Mer111e• S7 62
d OC..n View' 67 67
37 Eot-· 41 ,,
S3 Wnlml11•ter• 63 ''
61 HI" IMctl• 41 69
CIP' s 1 St 8et11ero
l•nnlng 49
tngi. NOOO :M
Serre S7
Com111on 41
Ceoo V •II• v SJ
St. Bernerd •S
tnglewOOO l9
Pl11e Bluff ,Ark 61
E Ascnsn,La St
Keme>tvllle, Va 41
LI Polv Sl
Ftn Ve1tev• >7
EdtlOll• SI
Merine• 6S
Hin Beecn· SI
Wn 1ml11s1er• ..
EdllOn' SO
F111 \leti.v• 42
Hin a..cn• '6
Merine• S3
Wn tmlntter• ,.
~CM1t~
IRVIN• DANA HILU
111·11) (6.IS)
63 Merl11e SO 42 LB Jorden
S3 HH Wiison 13 JI W•rren
52 Jensen 4S VIit 69 S.ve1111e 60 61 RIOhelll 59 MHllOlle SO 5' El Pno ROC>ls
60 MOOerlV •S lellls 69 WOOClt>rtdOe 7t S2 Merl11e
S6 S.n1111eo 41 " Footnln
49 Gu 111r 40
1s Dixon 49 Fin Vellev S2 SO Merl11e
61 S.ddlel>edt S6 30 Fin Vellev )1 LIM
39 Porter 71 Et Toro n 4S Mlu lon l ev
Sol Merl11e " '6 Mire Mew 61 Celltornle 10 42 Min ion v1e1o•
71 Glen Hoover 61 .. C•PO \/ •flev•
76 Werren 67 SO El Toro•
.. SA Vellev 61 .. lrYIM•
61 It• Alemlloi 66 SS S.11 Clemente•
Sl U llUN Hllti• 42 30 Le9Uf!e Ht1ts•
Sot El Toro• s1 40 Mlulon v1e1o•
6S S.n Ctetnente• ., Sot C•PO venev•
14 C•PO v e11n· IO " El Toro·
70 Oene Hlh• .. 5' lrvlM'
S2 Mission v1e1o· 10 se S.11 Clement••
6f LffUM HIH1• 60 65 Legune Hiii$• n El Toro• 10 •L TORO
S7 ...
76
" 70 ..
JI 42
" " " '3
S3
n S.n Cl9mente• 51 ( 14· 12~
'4 CePO V....... 17 SO Fifi Vellev 60
91 0 -Hfb• SI 70 Teml>ll CllY n
SI Mission Vi.to• Sot 61 Cvoress SO
61 Et Toro.. 63 " Foo1111• 61
CAP'O VALLIY 10 Sen Clemente SI
(21·l ) S3 Don Lugo SO
63 Edison 67 " CdM 66 61 Cenvon 60 61 Norco S1
11 Sonore 46 n lrYIM 1t 11 Elsennower 61 S2 Merv11not1.Hw 6'
• 67 HH WlllOn '4 n Kelter,Hew 57
' SS Vert>um O.t .. 10 Nenekulll SI
S3 oc .. n Vt.w Sl 47 Ceoo Velley• '4
S3 Sen•• Montee S4 S7 1rv111e• Sol
S9 F elrfu 56 • 1 Le11u11e Hlll1 • S2
103 Cot I• fM'4I S3 .. Dene HIMI. so
" Fifi. Vellev 61 .. MIUlon v1e1o· 11 7' Merine S3 n Sen Clemente• 61
Sot Meler 0.1 67 1S C•PO Veffey• IS
Herring
Petdlell
11t1 ....
SnoooY
Temun
Llllltr
~1
00...
h it.nlYM
Norton
"'91trlOll
COOk•
Nee»
HerOmen
Ettiten
Scielll
Fortune
Lewter e ngte11e1er
Mc:Oofleld
HO\IM
Oevl11e
n
13
7
2• 23 24
20
22
12
9
II • 1rvtnt 1 u. m
20) .. \9 in 1 s 11
.... 16
152 63 IS
132 S7 12
125 S2 12
79 lt 14
SI 26 I
31 26 I
' 1 0 ) 10 Of ' • 06 2 ... .,,.., ....
2S J7S 14 I 27
21 311 1u n
,. 249 .. 2'
25 .... u n 179 11 22
17 116 , • 20
26 "' o n 2S llS H 10 IJ 4f l7 •
20 .. ll II
1 • 12 ' 9 10 I I )
l..atuM ... ctl Cll· 12> .............
2S 5'12 216 l6
24 341 If.? 74
24 259 IOI 21
24 N 3S 10 2s es 3 • a
16 " 3 0 11 11 2• 2 0 •
2 J 's l
21 27 1.2 '
1l 12 D.9 '
""'on Gonkow1kl
Ferrell ... _,
Kl.lit Ii
veMI
lltocne
Dever
Austin
Cebles CllleU~I
Snlllll
Love
SYOOOCle
lltec:IM
kllfll
Luce1
Allrtle
TMIOll
Port .. ,.,,_M)fl
K ....
NIJJrOfty
lrvMI
~lven
Townwnd
Al\denOll
Yorll
Song
Bell~
Dolle nut
1touneon1
VtrOUOO
26 19a 7.4 IS n 112 ..e "
22 " 3.0 1J 13 ).4 t • 12
20 .., 2.1 6
s ' u s 13 16 1.2 s I 7 OA 3
1 4 0 s ' w"., .... l6· 11> • 22
22
22
23
" ' 22
10
1
11
' 3 • •
• ..,.. lie
)62 16.4 •
"' 7.3 14 161 7.3 22 1'1 70 If
124 ... l)
~ 6.S 14
11• u 10
• ll 6
10 14 2
12 1 I 6 s o.a l
2 °' 2 2 6.S 2
l ~ 2 w ........ (21.7) .........
21 509 la.I JJ
,. -11.t "
,. 2:)1 "' 15 21 u. " 11 ,, 1' 40 lO
1 24 3.0 f ,. 63 2.A 12
, 11 2.l 10
2:5 57 21 6
• I 2.0 3
2734125
1• 19 I 2 •
n Nogetes " 10 1rv111e• n
... El Toro• 47 .. Legune HIUI' .. n •I ·s.11 Clem n " D•M Hiiis• ...
76 Delle Hiii•• " • Mii.lion Vlelo' Sf IQ lrvl11e' 1' 61 S.11 Clemente• S3 ao Min ion vi.to• " .. lr•lne.. "
71 LffUl!e HIM1' ff Cll'' IS El Toro• 75 47 S.nle Monica 6S
111 Sen Clemente• 13
69 Dene Hitt•• S4 SAN CLIMRMTa
Fountain Valley puts
Lakewood away, 3-0
17 lrvtne• '4
'6 Mtu lon v1e1o· S9
ft L•llVN Hlns• 61
CIP
" Redondo n .. EIHnl!Ower 52
7S Rio MeM S6
69 Simi v •llev 97
MISSION VIUO
121·7)
71 Servile SS
S6 Weilmln11er lf
6 I S.ddleC>eck 60
61 lolw Grenoe •7
S3 Loi Amleot lS
17 We11ern 60 '3 Woodt>rlOQe 10
90 lltelld'lo Ate m SS
S4 CdM 65
10 Werren S7
11 Cypre" 41
Sl COM S4
SA E•lencle " n Merl11e 6S
4f Sen Clemente• 34 u Oene Hlltt• 41
.. Le11Vt1e HIHI • 4A
6' Ceoo ve11ey• ao
71 El Toro• 6'
10 lrv111e• S2
79 S.11 Clenleflte• 60
M Delle HIUi• 0
SI Legune Hlft•' lf
S't C•PO Vellev' ..
59 El Toro• •
(11-14)
66 Trov 61
'1 Tu1lln S6
" Norco 47 S6 El Cemlno S.S <n Co11e Meie 66
SI Fon1e11e '3
SI El Toro 70
41 Sen P1souet •? '3 Glell Hoo..., Sl
ff Enc111lle1 l1
31 OC..nsldt 34
61 Mire Mell 63
4S Mlu lon llev SI
l4 Min ion vi.1o• ff
73 Ce PO Velley• 92
62 trv1119• 6S
66 Le11une Hiii• • JS
'4 Dene Hllli' SS
61 El Toro• n
60 Mlulon V lelo' 79
'3 C•PO Velley• I II
S7 trvlM' 72
S6 Lii Hlff1• (Oii 52 '3 Oene HI~' SI
SJ El Toro• 61
~,L.._.
MAT•ll D•t
Ut ·ll
St LekewOOCI lt
90 EtMfenr• Sf
SI V1lencle U
S6 Dos P'ueOtoi '3
61 $1 &«nero se
" Benning lO
Fountain Valley contmucd to stay
on track with a shutout agamst
Lakewood and Laguna Beach felt a
strong Dana Halls punch as the two
schools played part of an abbreviated
softball schedule Monda)
Herc's what happened
Fottntatn Valley 3, Lakewood 0:
Jacka Blake was the whole show for
the Barons as she provided a kc)
tnpk an Founuun Valley's thrtt·run
fourth inning and pitched a two-htt
shutout an a non-league game at
Lakewood.
Shelly Mardon started the Barons·
rally wtth a single. then scored on a
tnple b) Blake. who come home whC"n
Laune Ah1tt2 tnpled to make 11 :!.()
.\lvarcz scored on an infield error otT
the bat of Cath~ Foran)1c to gne the
Barons enough of a margin to coa~t 10
a 6-0 record.
Blake t4-01 considered Founuun
Valle> 's No 1 pitcher behind ~nior
Pam Taylor (2-0), fanned four and
walked thrtt while allowing JU.st two
singles. Fountain Valley will host a
double-header against Sunny Hills on
Wednesday (3 p.m.).
Dua Hilla 15, Lquli Bea~ 1:
Five costly errors proved to be too
much for the Artists to handle and
Lhrtt Laguna Beach pitchers com-
bined ·to allow eiaht bits as the
Dolphins soored seven times in the
fou rth inning 10 put a quick cod to the
A.rttsts an a non-league contest at
Laguna ~ach.
Shannon Maunce was 3-for-4 and
K.nsten Huahes scored l..agllna's onJy
run wbcn Angela Bruno grounded out
tn the fifth inning as the Artists fell to
0-5
ophomorc ngbt-hander Jodi
\\-cber (0-2) suffered the loss for
Laauna 8cach after be•tli relieved by
Jennifer Cooper and Hugh~ Dana
H1U IS 3-2.
bat of Ed Caron allowed Alex Sand-
ozequi and Din Burke to 9COre.
Estancia ICOrcd one in the bottom
half of the 1eventh to make it 4-3 after
Mater Oci had aonc ahead by two in
the top half.
N•w.c>RT
(1Js11)
43 Sunny HI"' 36
IO Cellvon 5'
71 lrvlt\e " ., t..eoune H Ills 0 WHTMINST•ll
Sot lr'lt11e• SI
Cl' Sot FOOllllll l6
60 I~ ..
S7 Felrtea SJ 1Tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;:iiiiiiiii;:::::;iii~iiiiiii Sl s.111• Mo111c1 u II HTN. a•ACH
Ct·ISl
C.onrad Colby had an RBI around
out to ICOre catcher Tom Campeau
for EsUncia ln the seventh. Caron
collected the Eaales' only hit, a
sccond-innina tingle.
Mike Roaellini who'll be on the
mound tonlaht when Estancia opens
its Sea View Leaaue schedule apinst
Costa Mesa at TeWinkJe Park (7
p.m.), walked three and struck out
two an one innjna of work •nst the
Monarchs. Javier Oomez pitched in
bj1 first pme ever for Estand a.
>6 Ke.... SI .., Onlnee S1
•S oc.nslde S3
SI a urrouotis JI
ft Yume ..
63 Fe~ S4 S3 It-.,
.. • Loi AlemllOt 61
.. ...,. (It-) "
" Woodbrldte• 51 SO CdM• 73
6S Ulllver11tv• Sot
S2 E11enc:1e• S7
43 Seddlllbeck. ..
'' ~ hecfl•n •2 CO.It ~· 56 49 Woodl>rldoe• SO
60 CdM• 14 SO U11lvenJtv• S7
S3 E11e11ei.• st ... Se ddtloecti • s.s
70 Let 9-cJI • SS as Cosl• Mfte• 51
... Ulll\I.•• (1 ot) '5
n Ore!'M •S
70 MIH lon Vlelo '3
.. Senle Ant 4'
70 F oottll" SS '4 SuMy Hiiis O
5' Pomone 0 '4 El Ooredo 71 SI ar .. -o11ncaa .,
S1 H91. HM110f• st
62 Latufll hecft• " SI ~· ..
66 CO.le Mfte• 31 S7 CcSM• 56
61 Urtlv. • (t ot) 61
70 E 111.llCI•· SS
SO Niii Hert1or• 4t 47 Leoune a..cn• 35
S1 Sddlebcll ( ol) SS n Cotl1 Mne• 4'
ff CdM• 11
ft U11l...,1l1v• ..
5' E1tenc1e• 56 Ct,.
4' EINIMo-SI
(6.17)
SS ~Gr~ 70
5' Meonolle 76
lf Mlulon Vleto 56
0 SA Velley 41
... a l\llOO DlellO 42 M C91Nrlll0 45
.. kllle Ito.I'• jO u 5-111• Cler• •2 '2 Lo.Ire 46
'1 uk-OOd SI
SI FOOllllM 5' n Mettt Del IO
66 Le Qullll• 71
.. E.d1-· 1t
6 I Hin. IMcll• .. 5' Fifi V11tey• 57
5' Mer111e• so ,.. 0c .. 11 view· »
52 Hiii kfl• (Oii S1 • ec11-· •s 60 Merl11e' II
6' f'lll Vettev• S3
.. OC.." View' 6f
61 Glendele 64
SO Mvlr S1
.. M!lilllefl ,.
" W'll.. " .. ComotOll S3
.. SA Vellev 41
S2 LI Wilson S3
6 I • Le Qulflte &l
60 Edlwi (ot I 5'
.0 $A II ellev •S
S. CdM U
76 CVPftlt 6' tt Edison 74
SS Mltlhce" 69 JI Merllle' 47
.. w es1ftlln11er• '' S? EOtlOn• 41
SI Ocee11 View' S6
11 Fill. Vettev• ~ 51 W\ltMttr• (Oii 57
61 Merl11e • U
46 OC..n vi.w• 74
.. E.dftOll• ..
.. Fiii VeJtey• 61
SI Muir 6'
LAGUNA HILU ,,...,
.. Loere .. cs Gerdel\ Grove SO
S1 F ullefton 63
SS Lot Aml9ot ff
SO Re11cll0 Ale m
61 43 WoodbfldM '3
S7 CorOfle " )t &dltOll H
S4 !Olelll,Hew 10
•1 lrv111e• S3
S2 El Toro• 61
.. Mlulon Viejo' • l.S S.11 CiefMnr.• U
ff Cuo ll1ll9'tf• 11
JI 0.N Hilt•• )Q .0 trvlne • 6'
ff l!I T-· "4
)f Mb\Jon Vlelo• 51
U Sn Clm' IOI) S6
61 oo Veiev' fO
Sl 0.11e Hiii$' tS
1S L.A Jordell ,.
53 ~(Ol)SI
67 S.nle Clere •
61 CH O V...., ~
10 W9ilrnf"tlel' n 16 St P.ut• SJ
'2 L8 Polv IOI) "
'2 a 1111e1e Mont • •'
" Pl\lx x• 61 62 W\'fte• ..
7' 811110e Arner• SJ ti SI .. ~. '2 • .,.,_ Mon! • .., s. ~ x· 31
56 llllloo Arnet• lO "4 s..n.11e• u
CIP
71 St F'-" •l
71 SI A"lllOl'IY '2
62 SI 9emef'd •
.. Sen'• " ............
11 , '""° 5 dlsoofl 74 S7 C"1MNw lotl ,,
Johnson captures a very wet LPGA event, finally
GLENDALE (AP) -Chns Johnson, com-previously 11nce JOtnana the tour 1.0 1980, was tK'd plctina the final m boles of the round &be had wi th Geddes at one·under·per throuth 48 holes
bqun two d.aya earlier, finished with a five-under-when play was suspended by ra1n Saturda)'.
par 67 Monday_ and won the l"lln .. bbn:viatcd Sunday's play was postponed by rain. and the
ONA.Olendale Federal C\aaic. • aolfen rontinued the third round Monday, from
JohnJOn wou.od up the LPOA tournament. where they had marktd their ball two days earlier
wtucb wu shortened ftom 72 to S4 holes, with a Sk.acs were su.nny and the c:ounc was dr)
thJ'eeo-round total of 212, four;.undcr-par at Johnson, who bc-pn thr fi nal day on the 13th
Oakmont C.ountry Club and two shots ahead of !Airway, chnchtd the victor) with thrtt b1rd1c -
Jane ~des. on the 14th, I Sth and I ~th hole, -and thrtt pan
The 27-yur-old Jobnton. who had won twice over the closina ''" hole, .,
... '
GtddC1 <1f'OPPCd behind qu1ckJ). bocc),na
No IS. aivina Johnson a thrtt-hot le.d. but SM
btrdttd tbe fi nal two bole fora lhud·round 7 l th.at
P"C ber • 214 total
Juli Inkster card~ • 71 and fin1 h~ thud ..
four hots beh1od the wanner. Amy Alcott and
Laune Ranker ti1itd for fo'1nh at 217
Ahhouah 1l took tbru days to complete the
lh1rd round, Johnson'• 6 7 was the l<''W'S\ 18 hok
score 1n the two }CAI"\ of th(' t0umamrnt &t
Oalcmont
• •
NaA
Wln.•N c:o.tfblNCI
.. adllc OMllefl
W L ll'<t. G• y-Lalten Sl 16 161
Poni.nc! ,,. u ... 11\'t
""°9n1Ji t6 40 3f4 14~
S...ttle 2S •2 373 26 ~ 2S 43 .361 26\'i
Golden ''"' 23 " l33 1' MWWflf OMWll
HOU•IOll 42 t6 611 o.tlvtt 4 I 27 .o::i l
ow~ 36 31 S37 s11ii
Ulell 34 35 "3 •11> S.n Antonio 31 le 449 ll''>
S.UemtnlO )0 JI 441 17
aASTIRN CONl"ll•INCI
A .. ntl< OMsNft
a·Sotlon
x·PnlledtlOlll•
Ntw Jerwv
WHlllnGIOll
lffw Vor~
S4 13
" 25 3S 35
32 36 10 .,
(9'lhl OMalell
a-Milwtutr.M '6 ?2
11-Allllnle CJ ?6
Jt-Otlroll 40 1'
Clev9t.nd 2S 43
lndlene 2S 45
Clllc.tl>O 24 •S
•·Clinched ~vol! Deni!
906
63' soo 411
190
II
20'-'l
71''2
35
v-Cll"°*' dM•lon tllle end i>levoff b9f'lh ........ .,.. ScwM
tn4le11e 112, New Vork 92
New Jer .. Y 130, Wul'llngron 10?
Alle111a 106, Chlc•oo 96
Plllledetl>lll• Ill , Clevaleno 112 loll
Ul•h 107, O.trolr 106
TeNIM'• Ge"'" Pwllend ar Letran
Cllloen et GOiden Slate
Clevfiend v• Botron al Harttord, Copn
New Vork er New Jeri.ev
Wunlngron el MllweukM
San Antonio er Oettu
Pnoenl• el Hou,ron
0.,,ver er S.cramenro
urell al s..11i.
WeclMldeV'l C:O.me:t I.Men e I CJipclen
lndlene er SO•lon
Chicago ar PllllaOtll>tlle
Allenla el San Anlonlo
Otrroll al Oellver
Sacramento et PllOtnl~
NCAA TOURNAMENT
WestR....,_,
SE.IWFINALS
TllundtV'• CHmH (tf Heu1tWI)
Auburn 121· 101 "'· NeveClt·LH lltQH m-•> Norrh C•rouna (28-S) Y) Loul111111e ('11-7)
ICh•molon•hlo oeme Is S.luron I
EaatR""'*
SEIWl"INALS
, r1dltV'• o.mes
(at latt RllfMrfwd. NJ.)
Dulle 134·71 vs OtPeul 118· 12)
Nevv !29·•1 vs Clevtteno Sr 119·3>
(C11amolon1lllo oarM 11 Sunoavl
SoutttMst R"60nal
SEIWl"INALS
TlllwMllV'• G•~ (et Atlelltll
Kanr"'kv (31-3) v~ Atat>ame 124·11
LSU '1•·111 ... Georol• TKll 127-6)
ICnemolon•hlo oeme '' Sa1uroav1
Mktwest R"60nlll
SEMIFINALS ,,....,.,o-
(et Kenu• Clfv)
Ken•as 133·31 Vl Michigan Sr (73·11
Nc><l!I CarOllnt Sr 120-121 "'~ Iowa St
122· 10) 'winner
(Cnemplon1nlo oeme Is ~unoavl
T1'e FINI Four
,,, o.a.11
SEIWl"INAU
Setvrctn, Mardi 1'
Ent t hamolon Vl Midwest chemo1on
!>oulhHsl cllamolon "'· Wttt chamolOn
CHAMPIONSHIP
MendeY, Mardi 31 Stmlfln1t win,,.,,
NIT
SECOND ROUND Monele V'l Scores
wvomlng 99, Lovole 90
Clem.on n, Georgia 65
Ftorldt n, Ttxos Chrl•ll•n 7S
Providence 90. Georoe Muon 61
Ofllo St 71 TuH 6S
Lou11l•n• TKll n McNet" SI 61 SW Mln ourl SL 13, MarQIJfttt 69
T~f"• Game UC lf"Vlllt ( 17-11) e l BVU 117 13)
OVARTERl"INALS
Thundey
SW Mluour1 S1e1e !2•·71 et FlorlOe
111· 12)
Loul•lena Tech 11-IJ 111 Prov1oe~
17-131
Cttmso" 19 141 al Wvomlng 72·111
l"tldty
UC lrv1ne·Brtgnem Youno winller At
On•o Sta te ! 16· 14)
61
SIEMIP'INALS
~Y (el N9W Yet111
CHAMPIONSHIP
WedrlfldlY, Mardi ,.
Cat New Vor1!)
NAIA
(al KtnW• Cttv, Mo )
MendeV'• Stm+flnlll Scort'S Ar•a nMts Mo1111ctlto 67 SE OlttahOma
Oa v•O L oKomo Tenn 107 !>t Tnomu
Aou1no N Y 91
CMmoloMlllo
Tanitlht Ar~ Mon11cello 126 91 vs sr Thornu
Aoulnas NY f~·4l
"-~ tT-TI TOUIU•AMaNT ,., OM!iMd)
S.tw•V'•~ OMI-. .......
11 e tn -Woodlellt Yt. Cele-u
OMMlll IM...,. ltid o tn -CrOOTMd& v& Vanden
OMsllll .. Olr1t
1 4S -c111no "' Nova!O DM-*' II hYt
•:JO -Hee~ ~hll WllM>n Ill
AOIOI
OMUell I ca.ta
6 IS -Point Lom41 Y• Grant OMUeft'""' I IS -Cr911i.llaW Vl Oa._lanO 81..noc>
o •Oowd.
NHL
CAMl"lll!LL CON,IRIENCE
Smittllt DM1*I
v·Eomonron
•·Caloarv Wlnnloeo
Klnlll
Vancouver
W L T "' G, GA so ls 6 106 'llO 27•
3S 2' I 1t )OS 174
13 42 6 S2 2S6 3lt
21 •2 1 49 252 3'S
II 39 12 48 23S 2'S
A•Clllc.aOO
A•MIMHOla
•·St Louts
Toronro
Detroit
Nwrh PM'*' JS '11 • ,. 316 31)
33 19 9 7S 191 'ln
ll lO • 14 211 267
23 '1 6 S721el40
IS 49 6 36 733 361
WALES CON,IERENCIE
Pt"1<* OMIMfl
x-PnltedelPlll• '6 21 • 96 297 219
Jt•WHlllngron 45 20 s 9S 211 232
NV 1.ienoers ~ 76 10 7t 290 253
NV R•ngan 33 l2 S 71 2CJ 23S
P1ll~~Oh l l 32 I 70 279 261
Ntw J erwv 22 4S 3 '1 761 l26
Adam• Olvbkln
o.i.l>K 39 ,. s
MonrrH I 37 t9 6
8o11on 33 29 I
Buffelo 33 37 6
HerllO<O 33 JS 2
•·cllnclled PlevoH Deflh
Y clinched OIVlllon lllle
a) m
80 305
74 27S n 269
68 '113
MeftdtV'• Sc«t'l
Quaoec I , MonlrHI 6
WHhlnglon s, Plllll>urQh J
Toron10 7, Los An~s 6
Mlnntiora 6. SI Louil S lot)
TMtllf'• G.,nas
Kln9s at Wulllngron
Hartford at De1roll
267
253
256
263
271
New YO<"t Aenoeu •t New Yori<
h len<tto
Winnipeg et Edmonton
WedMMlllV'• G•mes
Toronto el QutbK
Plllsbl.lroh II New Jll' .. v
Harlfc><O e r Sr Louis
MofHreel e l Winnipeg
MlnMwra et Celoar\I
BuffalO al Va ncouver
Mal!M LNh 7, Kln9S 6
SCO('e by PeriOch
Klnos Toronto
Flnt .. wted
I I .._.
J 2 2-7
I T0<on10. Oaousr 7 CS.1m1no1, 3 '6, ,
LOI Anoe'fl, Nletlol•s l2 (Ha rov Erlcllson),
10 10 loo>. J Toron10, Frycer 26 (PoOdull·
ny, IMacekl. 10.36, • Toronto. lh11tc.k 11
CFr11cer. Valve), 18 16 !ool p.,,.1 llas-Monortln LA, (roughing), 3·49,
Ot OUSI Tor (roughing). 3·49, EOwtrOI,
Tor "rveo ov Clerk Ct1oow1ng), 411,
Parerson LA (lnlerfttence l S:31, Nvlulld
Tor (lrioo•nol I 41 l<enneov LA (lrloolnol
17 U Nvtund. Tor Crougnlng) 17 15 Gellev
LA ("04c!lngJ 17 41
s.c.nd.~ S Tc><onto, Frycer 27 Clllnacell) 12-<ll, 6
Toron10, Fergus 30 <Thoma•, Ve lvel. 12:23.
1 Los An~s. William' 19 lFo•. Wtll•I
t• 49 Pene11~-Sa1mlng Tor lllOldlnol.
201 Lukowk:l'I, LA me lOf' (tuoh·•llcklng)
3 41, Va lve Tor 11nrenerencel, 6 17,
Nk llolll LA !hOOl<lng), 7 29. Jenec:Vlo. LA
"rveo OY N'CflOllS l•IH hlng) 9~. Cl&rk. Tor, m1•con0uct. 9J 4, Hardy, LA, mlKon
ouct, 9.:M. Smith, Tor le1oow1no1 20:00.
Wlllle ms, LA lrouonlng l '0:00
Thlf'd Pen.d
• LOS Anoelt•. ErlclllOn 19 (Svktl.
Welli l. •S. ' TorOlllO, Fergu, 31 COaou1I. Vt lYt ), •.JJ. 10 LOI Angele\, Fox s
(Nlc11o111. We!lsl. 6 42, I 1 Toronto, Clar II 31
(Smllh, Courrn.111. 16 '3, 12 Los AnotlH ,
Fox 6 tNlcllOlll), 16·50, 13. Los Angele,,
Fox 1 (Lukowlch. Nlclloll•I, 19:S9. Penal·
H••-LUkOWlch LA ma lor ltlglltlng), ·SO,
Tllomta Tor, ma lor lllOl'tltng) .50, F eroul
Tor (hOIOlng). I.SA, Wlhlam1 LA (lleslllng),
1711. Smlll'I Tor (hOOlllng), 17.21, LOI
Ainoalt• oenctl. \er-vao ov Fox Cdtlav of
Otl"M). 17:21
Sholl on ooe~Lo1 Angell\ 6· II· lt-32
Toron10 1S· 13·+-37.
Power-~av Oooorlunltln-t..oa Angat.1
I 01 4, Toron10 1 of 6
Goe llfl-l.01 Anotlfl. J•ntcvk (24
'no"· 19 ltvHI. Mela nson 112 23 '9Cond
1·61 Toronro, Edweros <13 191 Wr-t
Cl 40 tnlrO, 9-71
A-1S.3SO
Rtftr-Terrv Greo\On Llneimen-
Mcerk Pare, Boo Hodoes
0..0 Me ftlNne
NEW~T LANDING -1 engltrs. 10
ca11co oan. 1 rock fltll, 4 lllMoshMd, 2
lCUl01n
DAVEY'S LOCKER (,.._part llMdl)
-ll •nolers 15 l>Onllo. 310 calko oau, 235
1>4ue oercn, 10 white 11•11. 26 11\Hosllted, 3
sculoln
,_.. .............. .. ,., .... ....,... ..... ) ""' ...... ...... JOIMln Kr.-IU.S.> ... Tim WllkllOn
IU.S.I. 6--4, 6-l, Tim MaV'OI .. (U.S.) def
Scott Devil (U.S.), •-•. 6-); lillol Ttnlodler IU.S.I def. LewtOll Dunc.n CU S.>, 7"'6, 6-1;
O•vld ... ,. (U.S) ... Tom GullllllOn (U.S.),
6.J, 3•6, 6·>. Biid kllultt <U.S.) def. Serl\My
Glemma111a (U.S.J, 6•4, 6--31 Jelme Vaeo.
<Peru> Clef. Lerrv Stefallkl cu.s.1, 6-• ... 2;
Todd Wllalltll (U.S.) def. Paul Mc~""
(AuWelr.), 7-S, 3·6 ......
......,, lftdMr teurwnent
tat lkvu.111) ,.,.., ....... ~
Marl•n ValcMI (CJtelloalovtAl•I def. VllH Garulallf& (U .. S.), 6-3, ... i Allder'a
J1rryd !Sweden) def. Brian TMCtler (U.S.),
6·1, 6·2, Emilio S.ncnet ISH ln) def. Ronald "'*'°' (FrallCll), •-•. 6--•; Jeramy Sales IGrHI Srllaln) def ~olo Caal (Spain),
7·6. 6·1, Ker91 o.muvndl <&elolum) def
Merk 01cuon (U.S.>. •·>. •·•. ,.,
Wemen'I~
(at New Yftl ,Int ....... SINllft
Srtffl Grel (West Germany) Clef,
G•brlela Saballlll <Ar_,llnal, ''"'°· 6·7, 6·7; OoMI• Geou.-(U.S.) def Manuet.
Ma ..... , (Sulo.rlal. 1·6, 6·4, 6-l.
c .....
Miami S, UC 1MM 4
SINllft
Burrow (Ml Clef. Man Song Hl119, 3-6,
7-S, 6·4, KtnntdV (M) def. Darr, 6·4, 6-2,
Wllltllt>oro !Ml def 8am.m, 6-2, 6·1;
Flcllardl CMI def Keolan, 6·l, 6-4, Ytlft
IUCll def Louw, 4·6, 6-2, 6·3; Scllwartr
(M) def, Htrnendu, 6-4, 7-S. ~
Man Song Hlno-YelH IUCI) def
FICherdt·Louw, 7·S. 6·4; Otrr·Harn.ncltr
IUCt) Clef ICtnnedY·Wllltntl«o, 6-1, 6-1;
8erl'lam·IC•~n IUCll def 8 urrow-
Scllwarrr, 6· I 0-6, 7 ·6.
UC lrvtne '""'"111MMI
l"IRST ROUND f"AIRINOS
(l"ndaY, t I.IT\.)
Mtrvtano vl. llllnols
Utthe .. ,. Cl\lomcen
ArlrOlla Stale v1 New 111\txl<o
Ouke v• FrHnO Stale
UC lrvlna vs lnolene
Wlcllll• Sl•lt n . Hou"on
Harvard Vl Ariton•
Arken•H (Lllllt Roell) .. , NorlllWHltrn
First 1touno melclles el Perk NewDOrl,
IUCIOfllnt TC I Or onge). Irv Int Merrloll, UC
lrvlrie
Second Rouno mercnes Sa1uroev al on
tour sllH
Ch•molonll"o 5emlltnel• Sundav el
lrvlnt Marrloll (noon! ano UC lrvlne 11.30)
Cht molonslllo llnels Monday et UC
tr vine (I 301
Comm""'9v ColeOt ~
Orall9t CM•t 9, CVPf'flS 0
(Seutl\ C..st Cen..,•a>
~
G1n1 IOC:CI oaf. Belnllcti. 7·S, 1-6. 6·2.
Olson IOCCJ Clef 0.vlnt, •·2. 6-3, Oedlev
IOCCI Otf Btulllle, 6-3, 6·3, Sluelebtktr
!OCCI Otf Flatt, 6-2. 6·2, Berrie (OCCI
Otf Sanchti. 6·0, 6· l, Lolltfler IOCCI Clef
Yoo 6-1. 6·1
~
Geni ·Ofdlty Clef 8elnUc:tt-O.vlne. 3-6,
6·2 6-3 Olton·SluOtballer def Bautiste·
Senchtr, 6-1, 6·0, Lolleflef·Hu•1eo (C>CCJ
Clef Ftael·Yoo. 6-1, 6·3
c-dll Mar IS, Costa Mesa l
(See Vltw LNVUt)
$intle1 Tortu (CdMI def Navcllreri.in, 6·3,
Zillman, 6·2. Vu. 6· I. S Arkin (COM) won,
6-l. 6-2. 6· I Brenr ICOMI wOll 6·3. 6-I
6·1
O.U.1
Fenlev·Louc1ts !COM ) IOst 10 BIOOO-
G•ll•cl'ltr, •·6. Nouven·Veoor, 6-7, def
T1nau·Olnll. 6·2. Sclluleln·R. Aikin (COMI
won, 6-3, 6-1, 6•0, Hllt>erl·Norrl• (COM)
ki&I, 3·6, won, 6-1, 6·2
N-per1 H1rtler I 1, S-V Has 1
('*l·lletue)
S#MIMs
Benlu (NHI losl ro Henderson, 5·1, Of'I
Chrllll, 6·0, PKk, 6-1, Rtt>Olll (NH) won,
6-•. 6-0, 6·1, Miiier (NH) IOSI, 0-6, 1·6. won,
7·6.
OtUblft Marlln-Grtet.y (NHI def Pft.tlsn-
PHrson, 6·0, OtF11lo-Cllng1bero. 6-3.
BellarO-Sc>urlock, 6-3. S.ktr·Wtrmlnoton
(NH) won, 6-3, losl, 4·6, 3·6, 811r-Shtn
INHI won, 6·3, loSI, 1-6, 0-6
E&tanclt IS, Secldll08Clt l
ISM View LNIUI)
$lntles
Otoshl IE J Otf NouYan. 6·4, Otf
Truong, 6·1, Otf HO, 6-0. OllC (El lost 6-7,
won 6-0 6·2, Burlc:a IE I IOI! S-7, won 6·4,
6·2 o.ue..
Vlnce ·Hullng• (E ) def Nouvan·Trtn,
6-0, def. Lv·Sevc;ociu, 6-0, def. Olnll·
Truong, 6•0, Sruoaoaker·Mellter (E ) won
6·2, 6-1, 6·0: Qulrk·MoodY (El won 6-1,
lo•I 4-6, WOii 6· l
Cemmunltv c.-... WWl*'I
Or'IMI CN st 9, C.-~ 0
(Seuttl C..st C. .... -..)
SlllllM
Thurmond IOCCI def. Allan, 6•0, 6· 1, Newman IOCCI def. Jlmrnenon, 6·3, 6·1;
Brodie IOCC> def. Slltrrlll, 6-0, 6-2, Herrlt
IOCC) def Barb Hellwlo, 6·0, 6·0,
Querlararo (OCC> def Branda H .. wlo, 6-0,
6·0, Bermort IOCCI def. Long, 6·0, 6· l
Oeutllel
Quar1eraro-Perrv (OCC) def llranoe
HtllwlO-Jltnmerson, 6·0, 6-0; Broc:tle-
Bormore Otf Slltrrlll-Borll Htllwlg, 6-4,
6·2, Good11oc:ty-Morer10 (OCC) def ICllalaf· • Ali.n. 6· I. 6· I
Pl&.IC NOTIC£ Pla.IC NOTICE rtB.IC NOTICE Ml.JC NOTlC[ fltBJC NOTICE
tUMMONt cloftelporpen.dele-'9. EROMAN. hueb•nd
(Cl'TACION JUDICIAL) Eale .... otf'Oe ,..it11toe wife, end recorded N
•nd ovem-
NOTICE TO DEFENDANT ........ .._. ... wted ber 10, 1983 .. lnetrvmen
(Avleo • ACUlldO)ANNE .... .._ • llfl........ No 83-521391, of Offlclel
t
ty, MONIC PAUL Ma MONIC ~ltno_. Recordl of Orenge Coun
PAUL M8 A M PAUL ek8 A -8 Uft Ill D 9edo, .... c.llfomle. and purtuan I to
eutt lemar • 11n _...,. • Nf-11181 cert.in Notice of Def MONIC PAUL •nd DOES 1 ereno6e de ilu .. dn 0 ; thereunder reeor~ th~°QB11 ~~~~ SUED una oftctM de 9fvde ..... oember 3, 19115 aa
BV PLAINTIFF:(A Ud i. Mii '"" e4 dtfMtOf'lo t.J.. ment No. 85-4832117.
0.-
lnltru-
of Of-
Coull-dtm1nd•ndo) FEDERAL ~cl·-....... 71m flal•l Records of Mk! DEPOSIT INSURANCE -ty, wlll under and pu
CORPORATION u Re-Tiie neme end llddr-of to Mid Deed of Truat
rouent
Mii at
oe1ver of HERITAGE BANK Ille court II: (El nomllH y publlc euctlon IOf CUii dlrecdon de la cortt •)" IUI money of the
, law·
United
You tw"9 _, CAUMD~ ORANGE COUNTY MUNICI· Sta tea of Amerlc
OAYI """' thle -• PAL COURT, STATE OF cunler'a cneca peya ••• ble to
on • le _....., Oft JOU lo fie • CALIFORNIA. HARBOR JU-Mid TruatM drewn
tr.,.wrttt-Net*'M at OICIAL DISTRICT, •110 1 llttt Of natlotlal bent! •• Uf'llon. !Me-'· Jamboree BM!. Sul1• 101, ltat• 0< ,_,.,., cr9dlt A ..._, Of ,._ ~ .. N9wport Beech, Cellfornle Of a ltete OI federal ~ "°' protect ro.; ,_ .,... t2ell0 ano 1oen MeOCHtlon dom'-
"'"'-" ,. •P 1 w IMlt M The name. tddr... and Cllecl In Ulla ltet9, a1 IN
"'" ranee t 114
In"""*' ..... fof'M •,.. ~ llUl'llber Of plain-rnetn entranc. to
Wllftt the -.rt le '-,.._ tltt'e attom.y, or plelntlff A~ Tltle 11*1
c.M. wl1hout .,, attom.y, It: (El Compeny IOoe1ed • " r-de Mt tie ,_ nombte, la dlreock>n y 11 nu-Eut Fifth St....e. In the
n1p1w •......, r-""'f mtro de · telefono del of Santa Ana. Callfomle.
... .. .... .... ,.. ~ del ~-. 0 that r1gflt, lttle end ..,....
• ...., _.., _. ,_. del ~:•• que "° ~ to end now
~
l'llld
of "11 llWf M WI• ........ llencl • , •): RO&-by 11 under Mk! o.ed
fWtMt ...... "-h ERT G O'/ RBY, Eaq. (71•) Trut1 In the propoarty
-1. ~6-5358, JOHN A. NOA-ated In Mild County
etl\r
end ... Ttlen -.._ ..... ,. GARO. Eaq., KENOERTON Sllte deecrlbed ...
..... ,ICIML Yeu l'MJ WMM S. LYNCH, Ill, &Q.. 150 Lot 3 of TrllGt No M33
lo ul • ........, rtpt Peutartno Center, 8Ylte 200, .,_on• IMP u..ol
.. .,. If ,_ • Mt beowft Coat• MeM, CA 92121. OOfded In loot! 311,
,...
lfl ........,, ,.. ,_, .... MAILING ADORE.SS. P 0 • 1 and •2 of MillOllel
........, ,....,,... ...._ ., Box ~•. Nawpot1 9-dl. MllPI• recotde of Or
• ..... llW .... (IMd lfl CA t2MO County, c.Mtornla.
PtlO" ..... ...
or tM ,.._ .._.). OAT£ (F~a) JUN 11 The atl"Mt 80dree9 0..-• ... 11 .,._ 1985 °"* common dMIOnelton .,..... .... ......._. ,... J. ,...,...,. c--. .., "· of H i d properfy: I• .._. ....., .._ •..,. ~ .,.,_., put'POfted to b« 21 : I• Corn-
• • 111Ae CM.lllDANoe PublWla:I Of-. C019t bridge, ~ CA t21 ,.,. ,, ...... ., ... o.lty ""°' Mardi 11. 25, Seid ....... be
1111s .. ...,.. a .... Aptfl 1. 1. 1tee wttW ocwa•1t °' ... •........... T-OM ranty, ..,,._or Implied U. ..-ow .._.. to ctne. pc11..,on or
I I I d1 r • le ....... fUlJC lllOTIC( cumtltenoet 10 MdlifY
pi II ! t • •11p 11 ~~~on ...... r 1 t ta....... MOTICI °' not. or l'°"9 ~
•••..elr ... IH let• TWUSnre IM.I Mild o.ed ot Truet. to
.... '.... • • • • • • • P..wtll 111,084 03... plut the fOIOwo. 0 1
.. ..... ..... On "°" 1 , ..... 11:00 Ing ....... d ooeta ;i9 ....... __... • e m ,lftlf AMUUCAN pen1111! end ..... .. -. · mu ~ COM-tllM Ofthl~~ ........ p .... PAHV,. Trwe., or""°" Of tflle HoOca Of :i:;.:~ •• ,C';' ,t ~~:,~ iun.~,o
................ ~ Dwf Of Trwt •-OOU6Ui¥ °"'9R f etrM ..... .. H ~ by THOMAI 'II YOU A/1111.. 1H DEF • ... _. !"'*AH end KAMH K UNDO! A oaD Of'~
, ..
made ... ...
~
"" rN
by
wit:
. •· ..... ....
AUt.T .
DATED SEPTEMBER 27, BY PLAINTIFF: (A Ud. le alt•
1983. UNLESS YOU TAKE dem•nd•ndo) GOLDEN ACTION TO PROTECT WEST PUBLISHING, INC , a
YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY Cel"omla ~a11on BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC Yw hew CALDGAR SALE. IF VOU NEED AN EX· DAYl....,tNe-• PL~NATION OF THE ,....,...JOU .. •• NATURE OF THE :U:-o!':" ,......... •• PROCEEDING AGAINST
YOU. YOU SHOULD CON· ,......,.,,._. ....
TACT A LAWVER. not '"*' ,.. '::J': ,...., AmNCM mu ...... ,. ... ,.... -.... lll•MCll COWA#Y a "' :': ............ ",.., C •an• :.:r,;....,.,.;,.; wont -' ........
...... 114 """ ...,_, oee..
..... ~ .... tm1 • JOU de not,..,..,
(714) 1 r..--.... JOU,,.., Dated: Mardi 4. 1tee .... the-. ... ,..
PutllWled Otonge COMt ...... ......., ... .c = Piiot Mardi 11, 11, 25, =-,,..,-.... . .,,.. ,._ ..
T-Oet ..n.. n.re_..._....,,..
Ml.IC lllOTICE ..... ......, ... y.., """ .... ........ ......, ..
PICnnout ._ .. • ., .• ,. ..... er....
lllMmlTACT MT . ........,,,......, ....
The tblowlng pel'90N .,. ......,,....,,... .......
~ae: • ..... .... .... (lteeed 1111
SPtCE co OF ............ ).
8A TON A<>tJOE LA., 5252
~· IMM, Cl 92714 0..,.. •J::. ..
W. Brown, Jr (Biii), =-=.... .... -----&: 5a&2 Aoyele, lrvlne, CA de IO IMAI CAUND 92114 Tiii• bullnlM la con· ,., . .:, ...... , ....
ducCtd by. an lndl'Muel ,...., ....... a .. ............ ROY IAOWN, JR u.. ..... _ ..... Thie ~ ... ....,
wtth the County Clet1I Of Of. ............... ..._..
prot11111 4 • """ 1111111 M09 COunty on ~et'/ Melftee••··--.. 20, , ... "°'., ..... r"' ... ••• ,.,.
Publlh9d OrMOA COMt ••tel 4•4•• ..J:J.•••• .,,,, 1 .. ..... = Ptto4 Mardi 11, 18, 25, ................ t,1Ne ..... T-091 .......... ,, ...... -
r11p 111111•~,... MUC flJTIC( .............. , '.:.~·~ .............. euww , •lr•• ........
(Cff ACMMI NDtCW.ltr ... , ...............
NOTICt TO DEnHOA : '':'C: ............. ~vleo o Ac:utledO) VAllN-...... ,,.
AANCH MAN<IT, a = .............. P9'\l*'lhlp, AOHH'f LIN· ............
VILL!. lndMduelfy, •nd ..................
MU<! ... EJN"'°", lndMcN-... . ........ :-:::.
e-It··end~-..................
lLNCIA MA .... ~...::.!!.!:..: K£T00end DOU 1 to 10 v AM 8ElHO sum , ... ., .... ,..
LNA....,.,.... ............ ,
Chris JoMIOll, U7,500
Jene Geddes, t23, lt5
JtJfl lnllat«, s 16.a5
Amv Alcort, s11..e1s
L.eut .. ltlnktr. 111.175 Selldr• ,..,.,., • ,, , 125
HOlllt SIKV, 17, US
A~l.on Fflllltv.1 17, 12S Linda Hunt, 11,125 C•ttw 1Vt1¥w, 1l;2so
JOdV it-lllal, M,597
Pit aredleY, M,5'1
Penny Pull, M , 15'
lkf•Y Ktno, Sl,56 l v .. Skinner. Sl,5'0
HMlhtt Farr, U ,5'0 $htlltv Htmlltt, t),5'0
Katny Poshtwall, 13,02'
P9nnv Hatnl'llel~U 0'2• RoOlll Welton, 13
D• E09lllnll, ,716 "*Tl Turner, 12,715 M.S-·Otvdn, '2,497
Ll114 V OU!1t, '2 ,AH
Rcni. Jonn, $2,22t
MlnclV "'-•· u.m Vitti Fwoon. 12,nt
c1ndV Meckt1" u.m Col!Mft Wallctr, 12,221
Leuretl Howe, 11:7'2 A~Merlt Palll, 11,742 8onnle Lauer, 11,742
C•lllv Mant, 11.742
ISatll Oanlel, 11,742
Jene 81elock, 11,742
Judy Olcldn.on, $1,741
K1thv Whltworlll, 11,741
Therese Hession, •1.741 Slllr1tv Furlong, I 1.lle
Oawn Cot, Sl.337
Olt·HM l<u, 11.337 0..-L.elktr, '1,337
ISallv Sarrell, 11,053 Nencv Ledbetter, 11.~
Mlu lt Mc:Geor11t, S l,OS3
Cerole Cherbonnltr. 11.0SJ
Amv llellz, 11.053
Pat MtYen.11,osl ISadly F'Mnon, Sl,053
Sartin Mltrellle, 1m
Mitzi EdOe, sm
Dell Rlc:Nrd, Int
OtnlM Slreolo, 1771
J1na1Allderwn,1m
Jo.n Jovce. U09
Cathv JOflnston, J'°9
JH nlltflt KollllleH , S609
Slaoll.enlt FarwlQ, U09
Mvr• 81adow.ider, 1503
JoAnne c.mer. 150'2
Gtr11' MCICW
ALL·SOUTM COAST LaAGUR
"'8VWeflflilYMI'
HHllltr Huldllnton (Min ion Vlelo). ".
miOfftlcW·dffendtr
f'lnt Twm
ForwtrO• -Kim Ctrltndtr (El Toro),
sr , Kim Oullon (Min ion Vi.lo), lr, Erin
McGlnnll (Laguna Hiiis), Ir.
Mldfleloen -Julie Foudv tMlnlon
Vltlo), fr.; Connie Jeffers IOane Hlll1). "··
1Cert11 Nenc. ICtoo Vallev), ., .; Kim Schiel
ILeoune Hltll ), " Defender• -Shan. deFrle• (Minion
Vlelol, V ., Kim JlnMn (C.oo Valley). v .,
HMllltr Mclntvrt (Laguna Hll!l), lOC>ll .•
DtPll11t Sct\tltr (El Toro), sr.
Go.Ile -All GI~ CEI Tc><o), •r
5-tdTHm
Forw1rdl -Kerl K911Mdv (Min ion
Vlelo), f>OC>ll , Kathy Schick (El Toro), Ir
MIOflelOtr• -Xan,. 8rallke1Laouna
Hlll1), sooh., i.nnv Cowoer (L•ouna Hllsl.
\OC>ll., Sl>tlla T•k•llaml IS.n Ctementt), "· Ot1elldln -Shafi ISarltfl (Minion
Vltlol, lOPh., Oawn Slencaflor (Min ion
Vl•lol, lr.; Allclt HtrrlM>n IOtnt Hlll•I.
lOOh.; Heidi Krau,. IEI Toro>. Ir.; Vole/Ida
Torra. (Laouna Hiii•>. sr
Goall• -Julia Frlen !San Ci.rMnrtl,
" L vnn La m wt c Laouna Hlllt l, \OC>ll "_...,..,.....
FOf'Wtrd• -Cllldv Allewev (Ceoo
Vellev), sr., Joanne NOOlt ll..eoulle Hibl.
sooh.; Laris" RostM (Caoo Vellevl. Ir.,
Shlllev Wetker <L•gune Hiii,), M>Ott.
MIOflelei.r\ -Otna OtAVllt (El Toro),
Ir.; Jtn11lttr OolltrlY <San Clemente), sr.,
Ht Sherwood (lrvlnal. Ir., Sarel\Slon.y
(C•oo Vellev), fr., Tammv Ve~o.
(Minion Vi.to). JQOft
~ -Deanna COllln• COan.
Hiiis). lOOll.; Nickl 0.Megglo CCaoo Vel· ••vi, "·· Tracey Kleuotl (El Toro), ioc>ft., su"n Steub (Caoo Vallevl. tr
C ..... ndr
UC ltvlM lcMdllle
Sar., Mardi n -Long ISaacll Sttle, 0rl90fl Slate end Northern Arltone (t'lomtl
Fri ·Sat , Mardi 2'·19 -al Sta nfo<O
Fesllvtl IT8A)
Sat., Aorll S -el Fre.oo llM Geme1
(TBA)
Sar , Al>l'll 12 -t i Nc><lllrldllf Invite·
tlontl (TBA I
Sal., Aorll 19 -San Olaoo Stal• and
Occldtntal (home)
Sal ·Sun, AOl'll 26·27 -al Ml San
Anronlo Co1141ot Rfiev1 IT8A)
Sat , Mav 3 -New 81lence lnvlletlonel
lwomtnl (llornt) IT8A)
Frl.·S.t., Mey t ·IO -PCAA Clltm·
olonclllp1 t i Frtlno Slate CT8AI
All fltlcl evt11t1 t>eoln el 11:30 e.m.;
running tV91111 •lert al l:IS o.m
~ . ' ... '"
•XHllttTIOft IASalALL
A'I 11, Aftelb 10
(At ....._..)
Al\elll 100 031 050-10 " Oeklelld (H ) JOO 074 Oh-11 1' I
Wiit, Sitton CS>. $rnltll m end Boone. Mllltr I $1; l<rueoer, COONf m. F •llon (11.
OOii.t Cf) and O't rfell. 9mllh 161 ~•Mon, 1·0. L-Smlth, 0-1. Sv-Oculer
(1). Hlt~elltor11le, Downing, Qelt.lanO. laker m.
........... INftdlnel
AAW•ICAN LRAOUE W L .. <1.
Mllwaukff 6 2 7SO
o.iro11 1 , m "-w Vork S 3 625
O.k1eno 6 s .s..s
A...n s s 500
Chboo S S 500500
KenMI CllV 4 4
TexH 4 4 500
TorOlllO 4 • 500 ISOllOll 4 s ...
Mlllnesota 4 S 444
S..lllt 4 s 444
IS•ttlmort 3 6 .333
Clevtlend 3 6 333
NATIONAL L•AGUE
Allenlt 1 San F rt lid KO 1
Cincinnati 6 NtwVork S
~ s
SanOltoo 6
Pnll•ci.!Ollla 4
SI LOUI& 4
Plllsl>uroll 2
Clllceoo l
Houston 2
Monlr .. I I
NOTR: s.lt·-' ..,_ ...............
MIMIY'a SCW..
0.klend 11, A...n 10
2 "' 2 m
J '" ) 62S
4 SS6
6 .~
4 500
4 .500 s 216
9 2SO
1 .m
6 143
CIUftt In
O.lroll 4, ~ 112 lnnlng1)
Cl11clnn•ll s. Chic.too Wllll• Soll. •
St. Louis 6, Boston 3 Allllnlt 1, Ke11'9s CllV 0
Pfllladelonla S, New York Malt 4
Pl11.ouro11 s, Houston 3
MlnM.ol• 2, Mon1r .. 1 l ( 10 lnnlngll
TtXH 9, 811tlmoA 3
Toronto I, New Yortl VankHI 7
S.n Frendsco (H ) ..... MllwtUkM, ood' rain
Seattle 9. Chieffo Culls 7
Oaklelld (U ) 7, San Franclico (H I 6
Tad9Y'I GanWI
A...n -.... San Fralldtco el Scolltdtle,
Ariz , l o.m Dedlwa VI. TtXH •• Pomoano, Flt .,
1:30 o.m.
Toronto vi. So11on at Winier Heven.
Fla., 1 P.m
Atlante n . St. Louil •' SI Pttanburo,
Fla., 1:05 p.m.
Kan .. , Cllv Vl. Montr-.al II West Palm
8hdl, Fla,. 1:30 o.tn
Cincinnati v•. Plll•buroh at 8r10enl011.
Fla., 1.30 o.m.
New York VenkM• v•. Clllceoo Whitt SoK •I SarHola, Fla., 1:30 o.m.
New Vc><k Meis v•. Ottrolt II Ltktleno,
Fie , 1:30 o.m
Hc>u•lon YI. Mlnneiolt ,, Orlenoo. Fta .
1;30 om.
Clllal>O CUOI .... Cltvtlano t i Tuaon,
Ariz .. 3 o.m
San Oleoo 11• MllwaukM el Chtn41er,
Arli .. 3 o.m.
Stt lllt vs. Oakland •I Phoenl11, Arlr , 3
o m \
Pfllledetottle v• Bttrlmore et M131, 7 JS o.m
cenvnunnv c-...
Cen1tft 18, G.edlft Wnf
(Seutll CMS! C.• •a)
Goio.n WHI 000 0 11 110-4 1 I
Cerrito• 011 21?2 OOX-11 17 3 Ooutv, Brvenl (2), Mtr11n (S), Hunt IS),
Ullllarrl (61 •lid Keub, Slllflty (6) LtYYt .
Mer•ll•H (6), Sfflt (7). Gutltrrtt (9) end
Wiiton, Wtller (6) ~aYn (2· 1)
L-Ooutv 28--hrwle (Cl, MeMlon IC)
Ntflo (C). Sudar !Cl HR-Mennlon IC),
Loreno !Cl.
Hltlll ICMel
Metw Del •• lstlNlde l
( ....._, Het11W H1• "'4H"llamellt)
Mater 0.1 100 101 l-4 1 I
E•lencle 000 002 1-3 I 3
Ruootl, Warson (41. Melvin (SI, Fleming
(6), S Ktllv (6) an4 NI.. Ktllv. Rowfllnl,
Ct ron (2), Gome1 co, Burke 171 ano
Ce tn-u. W-Wet.on 12-0) L-Burlla
10·11 28-0'Connor !MO). Hunllngte>fl
IMOI
Huntington e .. cll Westmln1tar
Fountain Velltv
Ocean View
Edison
Marin.
TllftOIV'1 ~
WLT
I 0 0
1 0 0
0 0 I
0 0 1
0 I 0
0 I 0
Merine et Founreln Velltv Cl :IS)
Weslmlnsttr YI Hu11tlnolon Beech 11
Miit Sclu•rt Perk 171 w ..... .,..Gel'N
oc:aan VI-YI. Edison at Miit Scluart
Park (71
SM V1ew t...-we
T .. V'• °'*""' Woodbrklot ti N-oon Herbor (J·lSI
Unlver•ltv et Seddlebec:k (3:15)
L.eguna 8ffCh •I Corona def Mar (l : ISi Coll• Mftt n E•lancle el TtWlnklt
Par" (7)
ThundeY'a a-(l:lS)
Corona dtl Mar al Ntwoorl Hert>or
S.ddltbeck 11 Coste Mne
unlver•llY al E11e ncla
WOOdbrklot el Lallune ISaedl
s.uth C..st LMtue
T .. V's 0--. U>
Irvine at Laguna Hiib
El Toro •I C.Plslreno Velltv
Min ion Vlalo et San Cltmtnlt
TlwrldlY's 0-(l)
El Toro I I '""'"' Da na HI"• t i Mlulon V,.lo
C•t>l•lrano Valley •I S.n Cltmln1t
s..119 MM
MOMDA Y'S RHUI.. TS (~" .... y .................... ) ,.ST UCI. 1 FUfJont\,
SwMI ~,,_ !Sollsl ls.AO 1M l.AO
M.tmbetl (~QUtl) uo uo
Ylocrvavo (Htt"nancltz) UO
Time: 1:2S ""° Rell. Wrll• To ni. Wirt, ArcMet, AIOia NOi .. , Roll Trtls, lklO'a TYrent.
Hliam. Pirate'• Ransom, Not11t Rllvtfltn. SCtt tcMCI· Nol Tiii RHUler, Felr-
l)ellker, Noble ROM', Cool PhlltMrl.
12 RXACTA (10>)) ~Id 1116.20
HCOND RACI. 6 llutlOllel
TrlllltY Hau IPtdrota l • 20
Growler S.nelu9 CMcCerron)
Seek SlrMI Slues (Bleck) Time 1"17 3
uo uo uo uo uo
Also Ren· Nelur1I COUfltf, PNOO ..
vamoow . Forc.iu! Wava, Meck .. Do II
$craldle0 Camllla'• 8oY
TH•D •ACI, 6 ~urlonQI All•~ Vitt <Mcc.rron) I 60
Princess Lark !Gome1l
Sonlca (OtiellOUHtYel
Time: 1:13 3
410 )00
100 t:
AIMS Ran: RtolO ltaold, Shinn So 8rtohl,
Nlaoar• Ladv, Grad SCllool Fund, Juctv'•
Hoar, Bat 8ectl
Scrtlc:Md None. 12 DAILY OOUBL• (4-61 oald OUO
f'OURTH RACI. 6 Fur1onG1.
Ei.oan1 Mt ($1tillltl 2s 40
Kllal 'N' Tall (Veltnzutie)
M.S MolO (Mer-I)
Time 114 I
''° uo 6.to uo ),40
AIMI lien Pastrtll, GOid Ctarlon, Mt
Anotl. I'm THll411if Too
Sc:ratclled Klllanv's Hontv, ISr-.ekMert
Miu .
""" ltACR. ,..., Furtonll1 Trtuma TlrM IOrtaoal 21 00
Gf'tn Emorlon (Hewtev>
Crtslt Ledy (StevtM)
TlrM 119
6.40 4..AO uo uo
l 40
AllO Ran ~s Love R0'91, Soanlsll
Julle, Exuw•ncv Scralclled C•IV•rv Cllaoel, Quick N'
Solld. IS EXACTA 12·$) oalo 114650
SIXTH RACE. 6'h Furtonol.
Vlrol11la Colony (McHr11t) I IO
Luck'• F•ntt•v IMcCerron) c .. ver Edoe IVttemutlel
Time: 1·11.2
340 1 60 ao uo uo
AISO Ren GrHn•boro, Fine
QuMn Savoy, Fowhunter's RMI
Screlclled: Oencer'& Raoerds..
SIVINTH RACE. I Miit
Lucky Rollerl• (Sllemktrl 7 40
Baronn• OlrK1 (McCarron)
ice s1 .. 1er (Oll ... rH )
Time 1.31
uo 2'0
440 3.00
2 IO
Also Ran. 8oklltra, Bhart i, ROOln'i ROO.
Vloor'' Laov Scr1tclled· Vole/Ida
IS EXACTA (1-211>4110 •9000
llGHTH RACE. 61.'! Furtono•
Shvwlng (Pincev Jr) 4.00 l-20 OUT
Reigning Counten (Sttvano 4.60 OUT
Htr RoYaltv !Mc:Carre>fll OUT
Tlmr I.II
Al•o Ran: Fro•lle Stlcedes
ScrelChtcl Got You Runnln, Sol ... , R"'I
Tits. Take Mv Picture, Wl1d Kiiiy
U l.XACTA (2-31 P411d Ml SO
"" &. Siii PWlce Money rev.,.., to MlOd•-llon 116,0001
NINTH •ACE. l 1116 Mllel.
CeO<loltlt IOrtaoal ll 00 IS.60 ·9.00
Antonina (Crowder) 6.40 3.IO
Blnoa IHIOutrt) 7.20
Time 1·41 2
Alto Rall Qutck CIWll. A~.
Merlko's Alllln San, CHllda'i CllOlc:t, Slit!
FHll,.n. I'm Gunneoatt'llln
ScrtlClllO Jtllo, Soc:lttv RI ...
U •XACTA (1-1) 1>4110 1647 SO
12 PICK SIX IS-2-S-1·2 or 1-7) otlO 36
win,,.,• (•Ix llon~) 13.S2UO; Pl<k She Nel
Ctrrvovar l 126Ml.IO
U ll"ICK NINll (10-4·6·S-2·S-1·2 or 1·11
ci.ld )4 winner• (nine ,_...,, '340.10
Allendance: 31,926
,....¥',~•
aA.SllaALL
A"*'tML....-TORONTO llLUE JAYS.-Senl Otll
Graen, oulflelOer, end Fred McGrlff, flnt
t>ewnan, 10 Syrac:ute of Illa 1n11me11ona1
I.Mou.. Sent Gi.nati.n HIN. outfielder, lo
KnoxvlMt of Illa Soutlllrn LMoue. ......... ~
CHICACiO cuss-s.n1 Garv Permt!>ltr
•lid Ct l1I011 Hamilton, Cllt~. •lid Damon
8trrvtlll, etldltr, IO Ille dull'• minor
IMeut comPlt• tor rHntonment. O..IQ•
1111.0 °'"' Mar11Mr. Poole,. ISam•llne, outfletdtfl, 1lnd Mika tarumlty, thor1&too,
IOt rnutonmen1. OO!loned TOllV WOOdl,
llllrO t>awmen, •lid Sieve Enlltl, Pllc:lltr, to
low• of !ht Amer!Qn Auoclellon. Oolloned
Oarrln Jec:kMlll, oulfltlder, Pll'•fletd of Illa
EHlern LHOUt.
Pl'TTSISURGH PIRATEs-Nemecl
Jtl'Tlft Lac:lllmla HM""'' dlrtc:tor of out>llc rttallon•.
COLLI GE
KAN$AS ST A TE--f'4•mtd Lon l(ruoer
men'• baJtl•tt>an coec:ll. An~ 111e
c.ncellellon of Illa w-·· IOflt>tl end
men'• 19111111 oroorems.
rta.IC M>TICE Ml.IC lllOTICE PlB.IC NOTtCE NIJC lllOTICE ..... ,. d•m•nd•ndo) DE'ION J~... cllNcllefto ..... C..ONo.-KLINGER ANO BETTY NOTICaCW
The name end eddteel Of KLINGER ~ .... a.. DSATH CW
WILUAll llAYO IN ooun le: (El nombfo ~ You M'ftl • CA&.lllDAR MIWtW.l. .... dlrecdon de .. oorte •. The name end addre. Of
MUNICIPAL COURT OF D.AYI .,_Ille-••• the court le: (EJ nombf9 J -.a.JAMI&.
CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF ........... ,.. ..... dlrecx:lon de le oott• -~ s AND~ ORANGE, South Orange :U.-:!t...,. Napenee at PERIOR COURT -Of ALI· TOAO•ltYIM Count! Judlclel Oletrlct. FORNIA, COUNTY OF OR-HTAft NO. A,._ 3014 Crown Vall~ A...._.,,._._. .. ANOE, 700 CMc c.rtter
Parkwey, LAgune Nlguel, ::.c-=,....,...,... Ortv. Walt, P.O. Box 138, To .. lleln,~
92877. ,.., ......... -Senta Ana. CA 92702-4131. credhor1 and oontlngont The name, adchea, end "'::: ........... ,.. The name. addrelia, end oredltore, end pweone ~
teieptlone number Of ~ ~ number of plain-may be othel .. '"'......, .... ......... ,.. 11ffl •tte>mey, Of plelntlft -.. tiff. attorney. Of plelntlft In the wta end/or •et• or: wl1hou1 .,.. attom.y, le: (El wtttlout an attom.y, le: (El WILLIAM M.AVO NEWHAll..
nombrl. fa dlrecaon y el nu.-",.. ...... ,..,.., nombt'e. le dlreoc4on Y el nu-fff, AKA WILLIAM M. NEW-
mero de telafono d•I , ................. ,......, mero de t1lefono dal HALL, Ill
abogedo del dlmandent•. 0 ...... -. ... ,.. 800gado del daNndante. 0 A~ llal beel\ lleed del demandente que no ..... ..., ... .c del demandame que no ~ T J. SCHAO, JA.
uence aboliado, ••>: ~-...... ttenoe ~·•);Gery J. FOAMST !. NEW·
HICKEV I. N ULANO, At• ....... """ .. lodllofl, 7 Wlllt 20th H.ALL In "'8 8upettcw Court
t::i:,: Law, 2~1 El .-rt. ltreet. Santa Ane, Ca. of~~-Toro ,Ste.HO.~ n.e ........... t210l~14~&43-7111. ~ tMC J. ectiAO,
HMll, CA 92963. .. ....... v .. .., ... DA • ( ICN) JAH 22 J . ANO FOMllT I. NEW·
DATE: (fllCN) JAN t• ................... , ... HALL be eppott"9d M per.
ltM ::.::---.... .., L. ...... Cleltl, '°'* ,~......,,. to ad-:•.£' A. Me•HR, -~.., .... ., ..... y .... ....., ,.,.,,...., .... of ... a... ec...-..,.., ....., ....... ~ Orsnoe Coest Oldsnt • Or-. COl9t a ............. (llltMllll = Piiot ~ 11. 26. The petition tequa111 = Plot MwCfl 11. 25, ........... ). 1,8, , ... authOrlly to edmlnllt• tfll
1,l ,1MI T..otl ... ... under rN lndepen-
T.ot7 0-,-·.z:.: ~ dent~of&-==--.... ... Nit.
Mt.IC lllOT1CE ~---= NlJC lllOTU A ~on the petttion ••IMAICWAI wll be on APAll 2,. .... a. ,.,. ,, ..... tar •Ra l'TA,._., °' ttM et •.JO AM. In °"" (CffMllOll ...... % I I lltl ..... a ..... ••MDC1••mwT °' No 3 at 700 CMc o.m. NOTICE TO O€f£NO : ............... UM °' piecnnow Dr1¥e w•. Santa Ano. CA
1Avleo I Acluledo) WAM4-.,.. ..... _ ........ ...... ..,... 92702 .
NGTON CAPITALW INC.: ............... ..._.. TM~ l*90ft• " YOU 09JECT to the TH! WllUAM C. AAM-prltlllflAl .. llllJ I oranttno of .. petttton, >'O'I have • the .. of IHOTON COMPANY, INC.: ................. Ille Fletltlou• l1111n ... ~ .............. TI4 WILLIAM C. WAAM-···r"' .... •a• ,.,. Nani« N & I I.TO., 1to21 J ......... arid ..... y04ll Ob-
INGTOH OIV!LOPM!NT •al ,.,.. • •••••• ~ Cir-. IMnl. CA C-:°'·--= CO .. INC.: WAAMtNOTON ... ,,, ............ tt wN\tfleoowt
,,NANCIAL COAPOA· ............... Thi ActJtloue .,._ the ....... YtNI _...
ATIOH; A.W. McCARTHY I .... Name,...,,_ 10 Mow .. ... ~be"' perlOn "'~ AUOCIATU; IAVINI IN--~---·-fled In Or~ ~ on '/04/r~ YUTOM I, • lln"'9d 1*1· ••••11••··~·,... October 19, 116 Fl NO. " YOU A CMOOOA ~AOHAT W • ........... , ..... F2lt2a • • 00t•191t1t cncMor of ; WtLUAM C. ................... ~ ........ ,.~ .. 1111 ••• JOU,,.,.. ...
WAAMINGTON llf; JOHN M. '•''" ......... Avie., --. CA t02t t ~ ..... .,,, .. OELL~:o fOWAAO 0 . pi'' I I• ...... "*~ .. OM-It IO fie per'IOnll
WANil TON • .Hl; MAN< 'm'C,_.. ........ ducted 2' en llldMCUlll. ·•-*""-= ..... ~ D. ,AMOHI; ""4.NCO .... .. ,,, .. n.11 n-.1 .. fled .. oourt ""'*' tnOftttll MCICA"1H~ AOll,_T J. = ............... wfCt\ tM OOutity a.. Of Or· ""' ... ct-. Of '"' ...
flHl1.Pll tCf<Y ~ .... ..... fl M09 bouMy on~ ..... o1 ....... llFCMded
OAMll OtO~ PA IP • I IRI ......... ,,~=tied Or91ge -.• In leotton 100 of tN
GAUlT, AHO 1 TO .. • -••.• ''• z::::. ~~~ Codi of a.twNa
100 ............... = PloC Mardi 11, , .. 21, TM ..............
YOU AM KJNO SUED ............ 1 •• 1,1• r.oaa "°' ...,.... ptor to '°"' ev P\.A#frl'P: (A Ud le-. _ ................ "'°"""'""" .........
--
'$hadowBox' sUpefiorara•na
-7:15-
1 NBA 8ASKET'8Al.L.
-7:30-e 20N THETO.
8 PNCl IS llOHT I NIA IASICETIAU
Ft'EONLA
• $1,000,000 QWCE Of A
LHTlllE
ew•A•S'H
• NEWLYWB> <WE
I PROfl.ES Of NAT\R
ntE WOYIEliWCERS S.0. AT l.AAGE
PEOP\ES COURT B:/PAJV(
• RAONO FfWlM SANT A AMTA
NEWS
r=(Aff lJoo
s
DINNER NIGHTLY
6:00 P.M. to Midnight
Mondays & Tuesdays:
Two Dinners for 115.95
Wednesdays:
6 Course Italian Dinner 19.95.
2900 N eW])Ort Boole~a.rd • Newport Beada • 87~2N8
COMMDCZ IU>G • ORANGE COl.'NTY FAJllCllXTSDS
11 rAll DRIVE • COSTA MESA. CALlfOI IA
ra.ndey thru S.tur'lill)'. 1 · • p.a. • s-dily. S-· I p.a.
MARCH 20, Z1 , 22 & 23, 1986
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-Or1nge C0Mt DAILY PILOT/ Tu.day, March 18. 1086
I
a AMlflm INDEX ...... ,.
P'ROlll NORTM OfWtQI CO. ...1Mt
•• -·
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IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGI!
IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANG!
THE ART OF SELLING IS
MADE EASY Ill THE
DAILY PILOT'S
CLASSIFIED PAGES.
al 1112 lnrprt ..... 1111 CtltA .... 1114 ···-.... 1111 •• ... ...... .... ftll ...... /Ollltt ... U,,.., ITUU PEHTRIOOE COVE Hwpt Hgta 38drm. 411 St. 11111 ... AP'tl iffiMiOMN cll'll b:Gfi. nr Fum. room for ~ Oftto/. ftlt lllllflll IMJ Prime loo w/ 1eo• PM--V~~. WtfY "*P. Andr9'" "95. HOUN 1 Br & 211t, ft.IQ, t*'Of, bOtl 1 ~~= no 9300/mo. Mttr bdrm, pvt !x~ Corp PW'lt In
-
Illa• -... oramlc Vl .. •I MUST bf hi end llghl 28R 2BA, elto tor ..... 542-HM t~ry. pOOI, cerpo.1. No P9Q, • bl, pert(lng ere., kitchen lrvtne. Brend new ()floe
•• .,_ SELL Ihle 1113 home HUH· fr • dbl ger, wld. No PRIME WESTCLIFF L<>-P9'1 '5&o & se50/mo =a~ ~ Mil ptM!eoN. W!Mkty "*' BtdQ In preet~ OfftCe
LIDO ISLE OREOS OF THOUSANDS pet1 a 1100/mo Call cation 2/bd 2/ba condo 931 W 19th St 54&-0492 m't 15/m: wvtc.. 117-0074' Pwi 2000-7500 Sq. Ft.
75'8AYFRONT LOT wt1h l>elOw mktl Submit eny Anne M o C u t a nd 1160/mo, 78o-"40 • I 1700 mo. Met.IF to rent room & bath Avail Mey 15tfl. Comw of
Dock to .acomodate up t•m9 OWC Cell Petftc* 831-12N •&~ Aefl1a. dllhw9hr, ltove tn lg mobile home nr 8 c.t Murphy & Corporate
to 90'ylliQflt BUiid t111 • T • n 0 r • SPARKLING 2 bdrm, 2 ba wwc:m._1 11CWU1 lnol. Ho Pet9 54M&66 Plz a2ao/mo 557-412ei PIU1<. Bldg 91gnage evall.
tate Of eubdtvlde 8Mled 780-1702/83M2M home •t 8-yrldoe, wttl'I 11101111 .... HendlOIM 11lowenoe tor olr• accepted thru gated entry,~ oar IOoked IPUTmlTI * MESA VERDE·MHter tenant ~mta Contact
MARCH 21. • 19ee. Mini-' g•. u. now '°' a 1300. Uk• bf and newt Aff utllltlee fWrlQ. dlehw-. a ltow bdt, PN petlo ent a ba Tar ... et 545--3.115
mum bid 1 1.eso.000 Ownrtbtcr 954 48el ~·Pool. gar. no '*'· lnot .... 0 PETS 54M865 n -1mkr, '325/mo-1200 ......... ..,,_'""=....,,..._,.._,,..--,-
(122,000 per tront"' ............. Vllte Belbee 2llt 28a f 28drm 1e. Mell 1BR/~ 1 bath Nicety MC 54~12 ORCXJNO flr.ofc. front on CALL AGENTS ~-U '9 • fm-301 •~AA 542-t8$0 fumn. '*"Ina i..-. pool Hwpf 81~900a/fopn JennfferSMw75t-9064 ....... llyrm.11100 Vllfe Aentall ,.....,_,o eOotmci. l' " .... ,, ROOM IN NB HOUSE, bMml 91fytft• ~·g JoennAkennen87~71tl 3Br 2Be. COMPAAEI ftwllllll 875-49l20R754·l7i2 Eut91de 1Br tBa. Old & ~ :_mo. ~1t=to Femele prefer.ct. rent l1126imo47~
. OR e.u.eoeo COMPARE I s 189.000 ..... '".... ... .... tbt ct.arming 1525/mo. Cell •• v IMO negotllble. 5-41-1945. OFFICE 8f'ACE For
, .. The ProP«tY Mart Frple v9Ulted oei11ng9 dbl 1111 Larry iai &4&-5830 2 l 3 Bdrm u.nf\irn. yrty, Lilb/rn Bil ... ~ .,. ft I ,_.,. __ .......... ,.,_ 640-9019 ' ' IU"'"*• Winier. Cennery _ ,.,..n, 1..., tq. " wrprv -c· poof & 9P9 No pet._ 2BR 2BA CAl1)0rt 1758 EASTSIDE 2Br, yard, QW-Aentala Inc 87Mee>e um&... dOc>r. ate, C... Mell ()p-
COLOWC?U BANl(eRO in Ill TIWL ...... 111 1 rm eee w 18th 1750 Poot, Jae, rec . room ;i951m~ld•1'/a~t• w:.~~ S. I . 1.i..11t11,. ..,.. • ttc:al 543-9"4. CM .
3BR 2V1ba. lrg m1tr eune. 545-2739 "4--4183 &45-7131or731-5181 mlrmef, IA 720-9-422 2'~~1'..%: t Wkly rent• Low t1t• omc.-watertron1 Sult•. trple greenblt toe exoel So ,.._~ Cond 2 •· very pv · 1 135 a Up"""'.., Coto< 850 ICl ft on the bay mot! val~ I 12• 990 rio agt1 PLUSH CONDOS w/111111 vv..t 0 br 2ba, EAST SIDE Lux In • Pine Stepe to t>Mch. Garag., ' ..... ,. dynatnlc Y1ft lt'I N 8 . pvt ~377/d: 831-&&5•/n etrMm•. Gar w/opnr carport, poof. Jae. $e95. Forett, lge 1/br, d/w, frig, WHh/Oryr I HO/mo. ~ m~':J'°9· "-: entry, evt lmrMd 011:..00 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil --w/d Ntup, new decor. Avt (213) 880-9513 gu/wtr pd, 2 patio•. 980-53«, 545-1n11MQ It ... to oceAl'1 ~ch'• 256-9300 E/873--3M2
0.t t C.aAty now 2br 2ba 1950/mo, VERY CLEAN 3BR 1 1eY91 1580/mo, adu1t1. no pet1. •IAft ~* ,::: 985 N eoM1 Hwy
SCIAILETS
All
HOROSCOPES
AllllW
LIUTll
HTIE
FUI
ADVICE
liAIES
PAliE
Prtprty 1529 1br $750 1•t mo + 1500 hm In pvt, gated comm. yr IMM, 848-08&4 1 + 1 New decor + LAoUna ~ •IM-6214 ........ IP•
--MC 5"9-2«7 Ot>I gar Cvrd petlo, Can-• · • E. 17th St, co.ta Mau UI 11111 OI -WORTH A LOOt< trll A/C Only 70 yd• to E SIDE 2BR 1ba. IOI car carport 1525. Fee UM Ml ma 500 1200 ICl ti 11 10 per
Lat ct.anoe for-rural llv· Low rent high v.iue 2br tllhlng ta«el No pet•. &9:;~~1;_.~30~52 TILDDT Ill-.... Wkly rentlf9 now •v.it. eq "n groaa. A~all immec1
Ing, FallbrOOk level 1 14 •bode .,ound '500 ftal 11050 per mo Agl 1129 60 wk l up 2274 Qill tor appt to ...
vw ac. cioN to town, kldartneothefeavell 714/432-0732 E/StDEdeluxetwnhM,2br •Uflm&ITI* Nwpt.BNd CM848-7445 8 :30·5:30, Cra i g
wat• & &lee. qule1 and •l•t-t1M* 1'hb•. patio 1725/mo ' 83t-12M
• e c I u d e d , c a I I • JUtllnll 2548 Orange 542-2520 NON·SMOKERS ONL y IU I Ill I.ME ~"~~)· 819-728-8028 Off Fairview 3bf 2ba flat s I. euJly your1 1755 kid• ot Gfttral 2'tJ LARGE lharp 1 bedroom, EASTBLUFF. tunning, lg 3028 W. P.ctftc CoMt ~ Iii•' an.rt'"' 1910 courM detalla 539-&190 ANAHEIM 38R ilXb. en new paint, ,_ drapee. 1Br lBa Apt. TwnhM "' Newport BMctl. R9frlg •u••'*'~"'· -Beet Realty f.. new paint very epac 1• car new floor Ille, •b90tutety pin. Frplc, patlO. pOOI. 1125+ wk egt, no depoelt. .,.-_;;--.......,.....-::---
111111 PllPlm I •---.. 0 encld ga; coin laundry Immaculate. dl9hwuti«. !;!!~. 1e;7v~~=~9 No Vuatlta ltatala C..am P"""'1 Exel INDIAN WELLS, UI. -,. s89~ 98~.1,.42 after encloMd lockable gar-.--· 1771
Dofado Vlllu 3BR 3ba 38r 2L, fam rm w/r;#flg, 5pm 992-&8&8 ' age. partc llke ground•. *1111' IUD* 2722 ,..,....,....,..~~~~~
lux condo Great lo-crpt1. drpa, gar 11095 $580. No Pet• 5"M279 2 + 2 ~ .. ._ ,., ORde did BEAR CABIN l,ool 11. n. llTll.
cation B .. ullfully UP· Call Pete. Bkr 751-3191 lal~ -• -' -'"., ' Pool tibia, COior TV. 2 FREE ~TANOING
graded w/poola. IPU & - -hlaU •aAa -H _,,, Wtlas, hlJ 1121. '" flreplecH . Bl .. P• 14. Lrg Show Room 6 OtflOM foll of 1enn11 Unfurn R9-I 1875 3Br 2ba b11galn A .... 1825/mo. Et1tde 2BR wwi iram It• •••• Cor f w~m & lrvtne duoad Owner anx1ou1 OC41an cioM lrptc moo XffRXCttVE, SUNNY 1BA. p1tto. poof, tndry 1u.u1 .-..... 645-9918 nero
$220.000 8191568-0778 kllch wtll not tut ph Apt 1vall 3-15 lhru 6-15, room. Cloee to Ill. . •IUI IUOI* ....... •• ~.,. Slon IP=10r..iam
-------• I.I W .. -1tt.2S ~9-81111 Agent coet yrly or .ummer 873-3468. 149 E. Bay Studio, ulll• Incl .._ 15 Onfy 2724 ------.----• HI • BE AC H H 0 VS E 2 1 4 • J TSL MGMT 842-1803 S3001 F... COM 2 STORES. 21,000
... -·1·.-_11•1•1·,· .. -.--.,-•,.-__ •_•al-----_. la1.Ma [oc;J couple woukl like to Knoxvllle 3/bd 2/b~ hot l'a~ 1 PUl llTTlll W/YllW 'l1'RI •• ._ 11 ..... 2BR 2'hBA Condo N.B nnn Alklng 1241.900 .. ... ..... 1112 Ptaia1ala 1007 buy 3 or • bdrm home In tub. 3· c a; g~rg . ** fBr 18• Duplex. 28drm 2e. V9Ulted cell-15_.._1 r pool, jac., MU11a 1350+ Frrifln Alty 840-7000. 1;;;;;;;;;;;::::::;;;;;;;11nr1Rl!EA~THTHf!Xi:ik~IN:Nd~c~.:tt&laJlrnnee c M ., .. 845-8219 'l150/mo. owner In bade ::,r~;,..~:f!7~/dryr lng9. PM patio/balcony, N;::oy ~~~:A2-:r~ ~:l t2~1~t~2-i~~~~ PUmlllll Ltl&lm lnNl/Cedn FllEIT tunMt.1 from oceanfront ltatab unit. 960-809e. RoMlle l•c. blt1n1 No pet• 0 1800 8 F Retall/Otnce epec4, 1811
--------2 1tory, BllbOI Pen Pt BEAUT turn condo 1 ml LRG2BR 1ba.eom.OOMn 855-oe85or831-8107pm en, q . t. F/2~25 ~Mnk &Ide CM 12 ft On
Gtaeral 1002 YIEWI home, away from board· Bta1t1/C.a•n 10 beach 2br 2ba, refrlg., vv Ldry. D/W, d«tt, frplc FIREPLACE-POOL-PATIO ~~rt~t h::~ m~~ 3br 21>& $280/mo 11tllut ~ M·:A"rihu~ & =
--------ProfeMionalty decofated 2 walk •br 4ba, office, ranoe. micro, dll90Ul, I 1000/mo. 875-4MO X-Lg 1Br 1585 & 2Br $M5 beeCh. boat •II evaltable dep 8'6-1934 aft 8. Ulura Hlgl'lwey • Prime llPOl In
*IUT••--Sllf* Bdrm condo with ocean. -.Vetor, al!ylllM. par·IGtural 2102 d/w. MC 55 & OVM, C..t1Mt11 If Eut91de 557-2841 $2195/mo. sPorry, no Fe,t>Mu12BR28AE/91de llndmartclocatton 2411 __.r ea and ,...., 11i...h1t v1eow Que! "°°''· 1000• IClft. 1995/mo 536-1734 c • .,,.,.1 1L E Cout Hi.."""-' Sutte LAlr~ 38' 2'h8-End Unit Y ""'' "'V tam/party rm 2 ftp 2 car NEWPORT BEACH --SHARP a;a;; APt f BR REOEC 2BR gar fence pet• 760-o9l9 Btwn 6-5 M ~t. _....., mo • " 2oo Cof 'V"-~ M
2 huge pa1IOI, Ilk• ""' ~~1:, ~;~y .e~~~~~ gar +-d~. tonV t•m 1 BLOCK TO BEACH 1 •m•• 144 ltove/refrlg, no P•I~ patio, yd. no P..1."2 people *IBA VERSAILLES• utlf9 22•1387 IV'e mag • (71•)8o;t..900 at.
Int Very 9harpl High Bai.. FeblJoue community rec· la.nd ..... 1695,000 By 2BR 1BA houM. lnod yd. 2 2BR 28A a;;, end utlh m $520/mo 5"8-1377 1650. 388 W BAY ST Sec, pool/rec lee 1725 Fern./non 9mkr 23-28 10 ~--
anc:. ueu12~ = /r'f*' reetlon tacllltlH Pool Owner. LA county trad" car pkng, avall lmmed bell condo. plentatfon llOO lfF --E/SfDE 2BR 1'.t81 $e75. 213/387-59001887-3292 9flr 3br 2b1 N.B. hOUM 1•1d..,aiiiilt•r.,.i,.al..__._. ...... ..,
right at • M and IP• 12111500 conlldered 875-3850 '860/mo. Y91rly ahuttws Ir door• 11250 271 Cabrlllo. 722-0&12 38d 28a t '300/mo plutil. 848-6457 25ii11Ud elf nr & Xlf
ladlap I h . ' C.rtaa ••I lbr 1ill "AOHI HAln mo no P.11 780-1092 Lge ~~~N f~T 2BR Sharp 2BR, t'hb&, wun-g.:.:;. & trplc Stepe~o Fem rmmt to anr 2br 21>& port. Sml olc w/wwetiM. MO-llllUTillllt (714) 673 4400 25' 1(:2 fo1 wt2bf hOUM 2 Plff IWl&IEIHT **HITW• * lBA. pvt patio. w/d Ntup, dryer hkup, petlO. gar, no bMch. Yearly $1100/mo. NB condO, pool. Jae, wllk 11258 & 1792. 132-4190
Ill,. blk1 to bdl. Choice 11 Old l14/llJ.111J CALL VS REGARDING no petl 1675/mo petl 16.50. 546-9850 Vitia Rental• 875-49l2 to l>Mch $400 + '.t el.c lmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim
Pllll IDllTlll CdM loll of rm to bUlld About the cnee~ 3br 2 IRVINE RENTALS TSL MGMT 542-1803 IP&lllll Ctlfthaven 2BR 1BA, patio W1t57-9400 H/8"5-872~ RW I ITllJ ....
IPYIUll llU. l275K ownr 875-3175 bath y0\1'11 find seoo·1 lm1t OtHt Rtafttn l llM11 FIU lllT 1895/mo 3BR. 2BA ldMI tor retired peraon1. IRV. M/F non 1mkr. pvt WWlllll mTI
Pr11llglou1 eucutlve BEAUT 2 UNIT DUPLEx 539-619 t Agt am coat 111-llOO 1BR 11 1535/mo 2BR townhouH. encl gar, No pet•. 648--5308 ~~~~in~s2~1tennl1 F• LIAll
home wttl'I oceen. moun· 5 yra Old, xlnt rental proe>, laJMI blaa• 21H -1595/mo All bull! ln1. lndry room. yard. EASTBLUFF Deluxe Apt, _ _. __ _
tlln & City tight• VleW In loc 500 blk of Narcluu1. Db 2 mllr bd 2'1> ba 1800 lndry rm. nr bCh & lhoe>• 713 W 191h St 2Br 2'..tBa, comple1ety Lady/gay guy. MCluded Localed on comer of 17th
terene aettlng Pool & to many arnenltlel to 1111 2BR 2BA den. new carpet •I tip, pool, 11una. leo-735-74 1 W 18th St TSL MGMT 8"2-1803 renovated Obi gar troptcaj. prv be, frple, St end Pomona A~. CM
a N-taodec:.ep4 Grut Invest opportuni. Pa Int. v e ' Y CI ea n nta crt S 1325 Scott "1 TSL MGMT 542· HI03 --. w/099"*. Pool l rec beaml, $.400, 5"5-11().4 De91gn per90nal layout
t9pgr1ded ··c apettor':.· UllAlll ty, favOfable financing s 1500/mo/ 675-2578 558-151710 492-0215/E 1/Bdr "-Plex cow., EUI· 1:~~0~,~ cc?blM:.~~ ., ... No pet• $975 + NC LO 2/bd 2/ba nr occ all w/112.00 PF allowance,
moa.i with • bedroom•. Bank Repoe. Forecfo9ur• 1v111 l-475.000 Leur1 lal~ 1mmacutat• condo In Univ aide · no pet• 1525/mo 2BR lBa wlfrptc, gar 1775 dep. 875-00N/830-3229 amenfttM + • $400/,;,o llmlted unit• •vaJlable.
2'.I. ba1h1. tamlly room& Allareu Oreatnnanc1ng 780·9141/E!S6-0129/D I Ptaiatala 2107 TownCenter.2BR2'~BA. 111 i eec.•9•:5195.CM. QUIET,p•tlo,p00t.ep1, Lj ·2/bd, 1/ba,frple,garg. 957·85581883-..743 , p~~~S 70
wet bar. 2 llreplac.e Luxury& Cuatom H<>me9 1111111 PllOf $1100/mo Agt 875-8000 NO PETS 5"9-2-«7 780/mo no peU roee ·
11 1 rd w ood t Io or 1 Agent ~2460 DUPLEX 2Br lb h Mo~ fut blk to ocean 3br RANCHO SAN JAOOUIN 1Bdrm Apt w/balcony, --87~2112~1 •5~50 ' Mature M room w/pVI ••• ,..11 SM() 000. • • eec hm 2bl 2 gar llp gourrMl pool No pet1 $.4115/mo U1111tlel paid. $400 entr nr OCC, quiet non _.
BELLE CHAsE LEE So-<>f·PCl-1 1264.900 kltch •I I 1050 5311-6191 Executive Condos. 2l bd, 546-38111 Avallble 411 1BR apt NR 8Mc:tl & Udo Shopa emkr $375. 556-0&37
75Q-9100 ---
1 \.-' • • • '.
·-·---·-521 Carnatlorl By owner Agt am lee den. -l·bar, larew1y. --No petl 840-5341 3/BR 2 bth d«tt d/wuh M"TURE RELl'"BLE "dult (NoBr<*_..PIMM). 873--0241 Of 873-15" 1 wtv'tftw, 2 car g11. qule1. E·llde 1Br w/10t1 ot nat --Garage Uk• new 111115 "" '" " COLOWC!U
BANl(eRO -Ctrtal ••I •ar 2122 l 1350tmo, 1130-7708 wood Freeh u 1 bree:re WI lfFU & 111111 51,. Ch.ibhOUM 730 7721 to lhr In COM, 7 bike to .,...-=.,,.,,,..,...,...,=-..,.......,,..,,....,.~ 11 If IAJllll IPt.J ----.r.tti $.4115 No petl 990·2970 Want I ..i.ctlon of grHt --·--beh, 759-41976. W. COSTA MESA: 18th St.
Two 28drm Unlt1 Only •llHI l'IUI* WfHI ltac~ t.14• 28drm ~Cott -.. -llvlng? we can otf« any· Sharp duplex-3BA 2BA MiF tor 31bd 111>& on 7~15.000 Ill 4000 •II
132•K Prlnclpal• only 3Br w/gar ~ utlls Incl Sa50 1375 OdOIJX yard apr1nQ rr':f: ~ thing from I amell apt to S1250. 818-356-755edyl Penl1ul• . Bay • lrt ale ofc on 40,000 lq ti
----PASH PROPS 720·9422 28r 2Ba aqueaky 1925 Hiiia area 111 bungalow poof NO PEl'S 900-:21170 a 4 bdrm hOUM . If tootc· 213-4181-8347 ~ MS3/mo, yriy, avall 4-10: :~ ~~~· adj. NB. MftlP .... llllUllLIU t1Mt11 lil4 1Br l8awte&cozy l625 a cceu l r u uttla Ing In CM. NB. or HB SPACIOUS 380RM 28A 722·942•
Goroeou•. bdrm. 3 bath 112..-OTHERS AVAILBLE-F .. 539-8191 Agent COit 1Br upltf9 wtgarm: ~· think of UI ""' for that /Ylft NMt beach Gar· --~~-=----Ian•• •u·tr~f
eiecuttve l'lome Loceted,Newty decorated 3 BR • TELHllT 111-IHO 3/BD. 21BA, N i..aun• ;~r v::r:• 8,.:~~~1 TS"L~~~dffl 1~~1803 age. ·vrty s 1250 AvaJt N:p~IO~l~~~~~-~v~)~ flM
In ttwl Back Bey. th••1 ch&rrMr,ptantatlonlhut· E~~~r~~';:'2101 •SPYGLASS HILL• Charmer, frplc, wafklng Av1ll Aprt1111 now VIII• Rental• utll.831·5894. SPARKLING 8·01111 EMl-tiorr:i-hu 1 •P•. wet bar, 1er1, llrept1ce. <:4tlllng arry • 8Br •'hBe. new paint & dlatanc a to beech. WEST SIDE large 1 Bdrm 875-4912 Of 754-1792 K
lsth hou1e and mucll lama. brUI hardware. •llWUSflfH• crptS3000tmo6'l•·148 1 $1600/mo,675-5061 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, Duplex,prvbadcyd,utll sr•-•-NB,profM/F28+,foPenln ~~~ ~753..~~ more Aaklng $235.000 I redwooel IP•.,_ P'Jnl 28' 2e. Condo ,., Tru•t ---carport. Large yard. No pd $535/mo 7111 Joann _..,.I P1 2br 2b• M 25 me utll. -. . r '4V 1'h blOCkl to beechl O.ed appro• 8 875% 3BR 2b1 cottage In Olde DELUXE CONDOS 2/bd, peta $e751Month 2825 St ' 850-3873' 5"~73 1 mile lo t>Mch. 842·2357 Bob 1173-0727 at\ 8·30pm 'f d. . I ••• ,.._" CdM Tiie. hardwood 2'M b1. furn & unturn. Eld9'1. Apt tlF. 84M519 · • -lulanl I rtaudal r a 1t1o n a ---Fllled Owner wtll PIY noor1. dbl gar 703 lrll lrpl9. amenttlM vi.w.. Dua..... ...., ... / .. •/'"' ,. Nd rmt• to ltlar• COM --------
R Jt I
buyer c1011ng co111 $1550/rno 675-9791 patios, parking. 11200-2Br tBa. Ctean 2Br 18a.. S'°EPS TO BEACH apt, n-ltnkr, fem perf. ea Y STEAL at '123.500 $1400. VILLAGE REN· garage.w/dhkupa$e50STUDIOAPT.W/full khc& 28Rl1 '.tba. very pvt. 1350/mo.760-8730 lulana
tt:l J • 7'.l?O Mllllon1 ot Pt®le IOOI! to 8"0-81201675-4912 Bkr •BR 2'.l.BA hee oom pool, TAL 497-5"88,Agt VIiie RentaJI 875-4912 ba, utll pd, M 50/mo. Garage. W Uh I Or yr -NEW CONDO-SHARE gp;taaltin ztM ct913tlled1tv11ryd1y 111 I - -04 1ennl1 Vu. DR FR, 12200 M1·3ell3111 8pm. • 1950/mo 845-l77lmeg ltl'll'li-il¥iliili~iftiiiiPP.-....,. uMd,_. rri1t l 4 mo Bkrtown e.40-4152 LEASE SPECTACULAR 28' 2Be. lndry rm, SM!I geo..6844 'with 2 malee, own room. •1e leoMEfOf MJe
loo21
Geaeral lOIZ 1 Italy Whllewet• View, walk to mo 2120 Pomon1. Wat• 1111•W1111 $.400/mo+ 11t& lat only, of Truc;ktng Company
...._....,....._ ___ ..;i_;.;ii_-.; lo<*lng for ,_ ownefl Character enhllllCel hae vllt~, 3/bd, 2/1>&, Ip, & ga& paid. 141--0356 Upatllr• 28' 28e, den ftllAIUJI evlll lmmed 84M!515 through Cha per 11
_.------$78,500 Mlke645-1208 rental wood nre •Pf'' & decks, 11975/mo, 2BR 2BATownhome S775/mo 33421Cheltam 2BR 2BA frplc dlt'I rm NPT onthebMCh,2rme. Prooeedlng1. 0.adllne
Sall ~ ,., Pr•ttttrl
C111 C1111ifll4,
642-5678
for information
& surprisingly
low cost.
rt ... Ci.. 1..rt ~~9.:19\ ~m~•co11895 71•...-9•·•934 Carport, pv1 patio. pantry Wey , Apl D. Cell Amenlt..Sl te5.817-7252 avlll now 1500. 11t/1111 3/18/M . Mlnlmun bid Mt
• '"' 0 QUAINT •BR 2BA ~ rm. lndry lac 1725/mo 240-1891or811-3208 dep 7•11-4511/M&-2991 at 19157.31 Slngle eoc-
COlY beh cottage So of view ger a 12ootmo. 5te Joann St 850-3873 aat 1.. V2fLbLA Bll1boa1 • newerltl2BR ~11lul bidder to be
*OUffUYU* Nwp1 Ht• big R-2 lot
S209K w/fr .. 38r Older
hom., l/p, hrdWd nre
Own41'/Agt 842-98116
Hwy 2Br/lplc hardwd nra · f: or 649-0433 • • a, 1 amen u . N-SMKR. lltepe lo bet\, to award.cl all ._.., on s9151,,,0 833_7062 6"5-64 2 or 843-25"1 ORde 28r 2L. CiOM to $1200/mo 8181-«7·2689 1hr 5 bdr houu, term• or caah wttl'lln 10 Lalau 11111 ~ 2BR Duplex. or .. t 11• bet\. Petlo Oar 1750 No Waterfront Apt Furn 2BR 850·32311846-3181 d119 of ecceptanoe.
JAi SMllNE C~~-38R, lge 38 2b cond Xlnt Newcarpet-palnt·drapee P«•780·1713/857·1778 2bl $1200/mo .lrty Prof lam 211-35 lhr Cll11·300-442·5265." 1m ly rm •.. ......,, wd nr1. • o at•. gar , yd $e95 559·5001 --· · top cond, tovely p&tlo vi-. ""' cpt/palnt & ·-.-3BR 2ba c;IHn, frplc, 933.g191 or 536-95 • w/MIM 3BR NB condo. ;,yt"• T.D. s23001mo 780•1834 drpe. Pool anct gar •E SIDE 1BR. wood u1>9«, enc gar, avt now -1 •-•ra•
4
Exel toe nr bdl 1325 --• $875/mo 8•2--0ee1 bMml cell CIOp, refrg. $e25/mo 1•2-oee1 18 I ,..a • poof/Jae 780-8818 WI , hu money fOf JASMINE CRK 3BA 2'1tba ' 11515 Incl utll 831·38"8 ' T.O •. 110,000/up. no
Ille & bright Sec get•. l~rt ltack flit ---38R 2ba. ctMn. nu CC>. t Prot/F wanted. To 9hr 2br credll,.../no penalty. Cllll UYl lT Tll IUll tenn11 pool 11900/rno •E·llde lg 18' 18-w/gat. p.int frpt y11d encl g11 IAll UY UU C.M. twnhouM. 13e2.50 Dent.on Ateoc 873-7311
UDO P9nl 9UI 2BR lb Laral~ 84"-8907 4 r, am rm. ¥19w, pool, RHpon pereon only Avt n0w U26 e.42-oee1 18drm, 18a, frplo, r• + ~ ulM. 722-8128 !~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!._!.... __ n a a. tennl1. ic.11 loc 12100/mo. 1550/mo Credit ,... frlgerator No P911 Ma& ••
moblll home Fully Lovety 3BR condo w/l1m 760-8782 or 975-9889 req'd. No pet1831·2242 Ill.ID 1 •/21& 20432 S A A . RMMTE ltlr 3 BR Condo, turnl.ned 2 car carport Nft p 1 1 c -_ ante na ~ pOOI, Jae. C.M. '375/mo
Pv1 beach S35,000 or IN ~: n n 11 paono 1 r;': 5BR. mtn & city llQhtt vu. •~ESA VERDE d'lux 2Br ~~tctobt:-C~7~ ger. 540-4828 or 833-3313 + ~ utll. 722-7842 AaatuMtafttl Ital
1875/mo For Info Call ' 180 0 ·, m 0 .K. t" y Ph&M 111 HlrbOr 'l/u Hm• 181, garage, dlhW•hr Aft ~3o ~.814 . MIN ta I Am1• lhr 2BR 2be condo. ·-· •••• ,. Debbie at 579-7500 Grante<I .,.,1 875•6000 I 1975/mo Agt 8"0·56M 1650 No pat1 8"-0-2495 · • OCC
-v PLUSH NEW APTSI Mlle fo11 of extr... Mr Per~ ~ I MWPllTISUll ................
Cullom 2 1tory, xlnt
decor 1 IO deO Bey v!eow
3 Bdrm. 1p&, etc .
Own/ Agt 14 59 ,000
850-6443 or 951-2777
Preatlgloua Spygt ... Hiii Aprll nr11 3 .. br 3ba FR •FAEE CABLE TV. Lg t8' to beh, approx 930-2352 ..... .... "425+dep 540-2714 letter•. Same day~ 4158~ lrg yd canyon vu lrplc IP~ age kit & ~ar & 28r Ordn Apt1 Pool ICl ft lo gategea 1111 •• 8hr Laguna Nlguel condo avell. RESUME WORKS
$2800/mo AOI 760-Mo40 1950 muat ... 53t-e 91 '525-M25 710 W 18th amedttlel, 846-9501'. fRm, pvt bOldh Pf1Y. p:;t 28rtj1c, n-•mkr re1p l ... 11M
It ••• M ,.n,, Agentt.. _ 2Br 1Ba up1~ ffi entrS375+191,IMl.Nwpt fem. 13e2.50+dep. Dy r--:-ir-ia--r--....~
'-"I HI 6lft B LUFF8t8paclou1 3 Joann. Max 2 people. No IUWlll YILUIE Bch 831 -8711 or 360-3680 ev 495-0028 I
fBdrm. 1tove, reYrfG, :net bedrooms. 2'A beth on pet• 1535 Agt 550-1015 873-3119 ' • liFi'"'oP.,OiiiA""'Bfiii._,,9 .. 5..,.QiiiNNO
garege 14 75 water & gu greenbelt Vacant I 1400 -Wll llT1 2 room 9Ult• ba pvt ent The SIAMESE l(ltty, Newport
pd No pell 5•8-MaO NANCY IMBERNINO R E. tlll PD~ Oec:t!. Mtcro' ~·· No pet~ 1....... .......... Beactl, calt 84&-al33.
00 l a• •••• 2Bdrm 18• EHt•lde UV9 wh«e you h•Ye .... 50 Inc ut':-.. +-.,. F0< the Roommate )'0Uf'e1.,,..,,-..,,....,,......,,....._....-----2 BEDA M. tV. BATH. --~ Oulet arH No peta *Spectacular 8')tl .., .... •• --r· IO<*lng For-a...cted by DEAR GOO Thank you f0<
oar.tncdyrd,S570tmo 1 Dover Shr• lovely 4Br 131-8155 •U 2Br, 1&2Ba9Ult• 975-6501 °'~ your nead• l meeeur9d theNte'91urnofLUCKY.
depollt 1153-5950 2'.tBa lg tam rm new ------•Speetou1 townhoutlel Fum for gk1 In beaut NB compalfblllty. 291·5777 T S~__!'!! 2Br Duplex, gatage, wtd kltch, 0form dining S2200 $83ll/mo 28R 2BA, trpto, •Areplaclel hm w/htippy family. Pv1 he Robert.....,.,_ Famlly
hkup1 21788 Placentia 722-6428 or 846-0100 encl gar, 1111 bltne, near •Private batconlH or be. Kit, tndry & pool Pflv lab U
1835 No pet• 5"~7983 E/BLUFF LUX TWNHSE lhopc>lef0:., G•den patlol 1375. Refs 780-2990 lid CANYON. f2 month
••IUTlll* w/v'tfrw Spactout 2 atory Tll~ M2·1MI WITllT1 •!!Jiit ... ~ Mii :01~9:~ :~ fQUI) ADS
I • 1 ~ patlO Ut119 ~ 2 =~~~i~:.ar ~':; *' Lighted '*"* oourtl --yr Old glfl, MWNlr•, r• IDf FREE
Ml .. to beech M 50 ,... pet• 11550/mo O< .... mealiBJHI •2 Swlrtlmlng poole quired from m-r "IHI . M TILlllll Ill-.... Av111 mid Aprll 722· 10M •*!~• & pond• Phone ~ellt to Nlcole .uu ... -+tAReOR VIEW-• .. .. ,.,. ·~=veft 11""•7&-•~· Cal: . ••
rrl Al IMY Al PIE TO ADVEATI8E IN nte DALY N.OT'8 CLA881FIED PAGEi
PfWYATE PART't' AA TC IN<> CancA1flahQn1
~ 5 ''""-mlnllrltJm
""',,.,,,.,. £ump/9 3 llMs. 5 <Jayt J9 ()() . ,,,... ,.,. orm:o ,,.,,. •~riNd '°'.a PflCct "'I t{)()(J OQ ()( ~H
• Prlof ,,... ,,. "' Ml • ,.,_ oo.. not ltPtllY ro ConvlwCJ11I ~oun11 Of R.t r .i.1111
• NO C~'flCN8 OR CHANG( S OflCf th4 •d /Mtt r11n CutnmM ~
,;.-;;,;~ Dail Pilat CAUMMln
3 + 2 + Garage. Fncd yrd 2 • den °' 3BR, comer tmmecu4at• •oe Garden o .. tor HMtlno & eootc1no "'If f 142 ... 11 Hurry Sl50 ~.. tocatlon lnctuOee odnr I A$)ta. 8-utlf\illy lend-pafd WWW 111DllT 11".... comm poof Ava11 4111ee IC9Ped ground•. pOOI l •• 12 ..... 1..... .,......, .. s 1500/mo Call LOii epe, patlO/dedl No P91• WHY NOT CALI. ... ., .. .. Stor• 8peoe. AVllllebte
•SHARP W•t91de 28r 873·7&.4• 18drm M2S-.M40 111-1111 Dlll-.....i.ltlHI. ~~~ FOUND deolewed wtllte
1Be °"/,lex Tiie ftoor1, HUGE .wC..m1r~ 151 E ~~1!~-~240I _,,'"" 873-1331 Mon.-Frl'~~ Hlmtley1111 oat, bl1bltln ~<Pt•. ~ w/d hkvp. vtew 3-Bd;m 2 ba wt1h 18drm M20 WWlllYILLlll •M onth-to-month • · VIC M4-1107
r.1.!rcredll ~ ':, =• fireplace S UOOtmo 131 E 11th 841-1f1f 15655 Huntington V1ltage 1110 11111lablt FOV"IO LHASA AP80
770-6829 Avail now 50e E 0cMn---------Una, from San Dleoo U. lale/lnt lc*'ltlfy. front, Balboa PeniMuta O.Uxe 2Br 28e wlger Nu Fr...,ay, nor1h on 8wtt · furn11htd/ ta4
l;-38r 28• 2 1tory Cell o.ni.. Paint 6 c:erpet 441 Ham-to Mdedden. ...i on unfurmshtd ladana/AU.1--a.t 7St-08 Condo Yard, garege 11 151· 11M ltton Ave $e75 87M797 McFedden "'1'" FOUND Ring Medi Oo\l'I
11100 VIiia Aentalt Ull flU · f1tne11 Ctntt". fl•I w/bltl ring, 1.,,.... Vcty B 87~9 12 Cttta .... MM C..ta lltta 1114 tennis, 1w1mmino ; \Ai I Ui SQuere F...-. 8t a Balt>oe 171443'
3BR 2BA, newly dee tf17 WU1'CLIFF L.08T Coe*-mate 8r~~·3~ba .. l tp. s 1 6 e~~ ~ r ~.'I y wo--O-DN a ... YILLAGI Models open d••lv. 9 6 Hwpt 8ch 541-5032 ~ blk, 60 lbl, Vki•' c..: .,......., Sorry. no pets IAYI' IL --. CM, 842·6131. tnc yd. dbl gw. pet°"· pt! MUlt rent 2br 2be 1100 a•a ···-· cotor StOO' 542·~ IPltA aoe linen • oer r ., •• ..,. Newpo11 Bll<.h No !X[CUTIVE SlKTU LOIT Wlllt• M/UIAH
MESA Vl'ROf. 38r 28a 539-8 t9f Agent coat Comt I tfllOJ lltir plltll tljll lpU Quttt. COllllOftabll hfllll l80 lrvtnt Av11nu11 11 34~ M_2_ ....... _ Apao dog vtc, Udo lele,
dbl gareo-. 9nCI. yard ~ Condo ,,.., Hoeo ,low 10 tr .. wiys' So Cont ~11 wllM Olllr ll1tnutn 10 !tit 111 t6thl NEWPORT 8CH Oto. llPfll no°'*'· N.I . 873-3721
gard«lerlt l50 &57·2312 Hoep 2BR2'itbeon~ belcll C.t*CtS •••il•blt HO PCT$ f'l(AS( M5-no4 .-::.~-~~ H 1~~;~;;~1
MESA VERDE • •BA. iov. cut de NC Pool/~ Newpon Beech So Ii
ty newty dee,~ Avalf 411, l tOOOtmo. lft 11001ttt!S11111 CdM dill ult ... AIC, y0ut erectn? O a c
No peta 1t?961~1·:tlte 59'n c9'I U~73M •1-.. 111 Dov.t i .,,_pq, llt*l.Jenlt«. ln••PI._ Mt-1111 n'6 I c.c Hwy f7MIOO
r
• . ~ ~ . ' ~ ' ,.,.... ............ ___ _
Daily Pilat • · • • • • ··:
• • • PUT TllE lfFICE CWI • • • • Very busy CH'culallon office needs •
• part ume help answenng heavy e
• phone traffic We have ruce cus-•
• tomers' Applicants must be rieat. •
• responsible. and have a pleasant •
• telephone persona.lily Some light •
• off ice work also Hours are approx •
e Mon-Fn. 8.00 AM to 1 00 PM, start •
• mg salary 1B $100 per week Apply •
• m person, Mon-Thurs, 2 00 to 4:00 •
• PM. Ask for Eileen • • • e ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT •
e 330 W BAY ST . COSTA MESA, CA 92626 ••
• AN EOUAl OPPOllTUHIT't E~PlOYEA • ....................
I/.
$2.40 per day
That'1 ALL you pey fOf
3 "'*· 30 d-V minimum In lhe
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
MOTOR ROUTE
Available In Irvine area.
$300 to $600. No collect-
ing. 3-4 hours a day. Mon.
thru Friday afternoon. Sat.
& Sun. morning. Call
642-4333, ask for Kirk.
ORANGE COAST
Illy Plllt
330 W. Bay St.
Costa Mesa, CA
-~ --.
~.:i:or •lob? Hll I.he t beifwe you hit IM
~t -eorieult a..
fled.
Earn Extra Ca•h
For De/Ivery 01 Thi• Pa,,.r
HUNTINGTON BEACH
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
INDEPENDENT
Deliver 1 day a week. No
collecting. no soliciting.
Must have dependable car,
truck or station wagon and
insurance.
CALL 842 -1444
Ask for JoAnne Craney
$ $
SALES
MANAGEMENT
OPPORTUNITY
Crew Supervisors are now
needed to wor1c In a pro-
fessional management pos--
ltlon.
We now have openings for
mature adults to supervise
newspaper sates crews.
ResponsiblllUes wUI Include
hiring, traJnlng, and motivating
teens In obta.lnlng new cus.-
tomers for one of the area's
leading newspapers.
For an excellent opport\Jnlty
and earnings of $500-700 per
wk,
C1ll TC
A1k for Ron
842-4333
I
If ,.. .... ,._ .. , ... -' .... tt . ...........
WEWAITYOI! •. ,,.... ........ ..,, ... .. .... ,.. ............ ,"' .. . .......................
..... ,., ............. 14.
Cell...,. Ater'• T.e.
(7 t4) '42-4JJi
=---.A--
....
WIWlllU ••m• 111111
lllOOE
$299.98
Per Mo .... Ta. eg., ~ ':r;;:,'
CllP Red. 18.802
Rel6dl.ial 1 1 a. 1 ee
T otel PllY"*'tl of
S19,071 eo
OACCEL
II 110E
$199.98
Per Mo • Tu
90 Laeee p.,...._,u
CllP Co.I U3.eeo c.c> Red S7 .257 ~113,590 90
Tot.i ~ta ct
112.111 '°
OACCEl
lll-'840
Nii. For Jim, Jr
.......... tnl
wXNt to ~ aw. Uooo
Of ,..... -411 pey (..,, c.. Jerry m-1~
4 WW Drift/ 'tlie ..... --oom. WCth buO'tl! .... lind l'edltll ,.,... order '°"" tOCley -OAAHGE COAST
~ 1'51• Hart)Or Coeta ..... . .. ,
)
. J
-----
0rMge Coat DAILY PtlOT/ Tueedey, Match 18. 1988 -DODGE '93 VM Qon..
\l9l'llllof\. Lo ""· loecMd w/ut:ru. Unt .... atuoo.~
°"'-COUNTY IC-. flleCmtOUe 11 11•• P1Cnnow .-• evw• Oii '"' -. MUNM:•N. COURT M01'1CS Oii um rrA,_,. um rrA,...., 9"1AL ITAT&MINT °' .. , '1 ' w ..._ DI.ATM Ofl n. ~ l*'ION .,. T1'e ~ pereont ere el'IWlt#IT nna .... ,_.._ ,.o.._.,. A.DaLIK.19C& dolina~-dc*IO~•· rt ~Nn ........ ,
,..;;._a!_ .... , ........... ..... MA AMLL.l lllCI TH! l'AMILY CU!AHEAI. IOTANICAL AA'TI. 180 n1 • .._. 0.... -.,._. ..,. A88ETI CA .... 1M7 MDOl'NiiliGN :171MI Wtet Edlnalr A,,. H. "C" 811'Mt, luetln. CA ..................... 1iii bod~· i Ton CUh wld SecufltlM I 318 878,000 Plelntlff: HIAITACU'. TO U•HTD enue. Sent• AN, CA t2104 t2NO "'17117 ~ _...., ,_., a Loen1 Reoe1vabie • eAHt<. e Celfor"'8 OOf'PO'· HTAT'lleO.A-'1-Huy0uMgPMl'n,IOl1..a Anchw 81uett Outanl, Yw ..-.. D111•11
_, ·-•mv a PrOf)lrtjee Head I S• 1,573, 108.000 etton To .. 1w1ra, ~ ec.. A....,_, MldW9)' ~. 180 H. "C" $11Mt, Tu.tin, 11 -Pix 9'Wllll M 146-TIMt --------°' ot Devetopment, net 128,551,000 D•lendan1· AOll .. T eredtlon end OOtltlnoenl CA t2tOO CA NNO t .... 1111•..._. ..... e.toftwcwte,000. ~=1~ ...... _.. 19,539,000 IU .. KE. CATHERINE ctedltort.end l*'IOflewflo HuongTN~.8081· Thie l>Yelneee .. con--..,,,.., ..... '&Pl ·ee ~ ..... IURt<E. end DOU ONI 'MY be om..-~ ... ..-c1 8 9o6l8 AYenUt. MldWay w l)y: en~ ~ c..., ......
W · 4 dr St Equtpment, net 32 288 000 lhrOUQh T!N, 1nc1u1M In the w11 end/or --ot: ettv. CA t2t66 AND At! W STU A A T .__. .,._ fllM Iii Gd~~J!.:.19 ~ ~ .. Home loen • • c... ~. 50003 ADfLLI K. RICE. AKA th.. bullnaa I• con-DUAAl'T ...-11 ... uer t .........
71M ml, IMO, 54Mn7 =~ .. Ind Oth9r AIMta 17,880,000 ~...:: A~~::~ bee11 Ned ~by: 1 oentrel pert• ~~he ~b:Of ~ ~'=''!' .... ~ =
.... • ...... EJto.e of Cott~ net 34, 104,000 A....,.., C:~ by I.ORI AKTICOUNI RICH· Huy OuMg PMm, Huong lll'09 County on FebNtitY (Hr,111;;-;rtt'f,lt71 -•• _._, AaMf.e •-t M0nCm 'r• ...._ .._ Tl"-AKA LORI A. AICHT'!A Tiii Nguren 21. 1Ne ..,._ • ,._... ,... lRlmllflll ..._urea, net 40,658,000 ..... .,.....,..._,...._ lnthe~CoUttOfOf. TNI ~1 wa llMd ,._ ioJti1't • -.....m: • -11111_ 1_ *2.114,tM.OOO ....... ,_ ...._. ,_. engeCountyrequ19tlngltlat wt1t11MCountya.t!OfOf· Publllhed Ofllll09 CoMt eo•o lor 1111• JHr ••• UARn.a AND ...................... LONANTICOUNI AICHTIA • .,. County Oil F*'*Y DeltyP!lot M11cti '1, 11,25. t1t,nt,A1t10l lm11 .... I• M..... ITOC~"'8 I OUITY ...-.._ ...... .._, Al<A LOAI A. RICHTER be 20. IHt -'Pffl I, IMe W ._.,.._ ..... ~. 1~ CCM --Savlngt Accounta $ •• ..._ ............. .... llPPOll'lled .. petlOllel ,. ,.,. T .oeo •• ...., ~. ... _;,,..high speed.· .,..,, Fedetal H L B 1·-0,72l,OOO lfyouwt.n tollelt the.0-1'9Mnt8tlwlo8dmlnlet•tho Pu~ 0r-,.. _ _.. et.-......._ .... _. Prtv~WV~. FClrtl'ldy Not• Pay':: oen ank Advances 3 17,&~.ooo vice of en 1tt~ 1n lhl9 ••••Ofthedecledent DllllY'Pi;,i'Menihtt 1ITs' .,. ... .,. 11nnl'c ...... .-IM MMlll
In M TOP SSS PAii Accrued Tax• H5.CM7,000 matter, you ltlOUld do to fho pellllon r~u .. 11 Aprl 1, 1... ' ' • ..--"''"iw. lla..._t .., a. ,_. IMMAC~E Other Ueblttt.. 14,828,000 l)f~ly to "'-' 'Y04J# IW!t· IUttlOtlty IO 9dmlnlltet tfle T.075x ACTmOUI llUIMH ..... Dm•lu It, -.
Pr loo upon r•quHI For Pamp«ed Deferred lncom. 99,870,000 ,.,.. reepoNe, tf any, mey be •l•le undw Che lnclepln. ~ ITATIMmfT INde to tM .....,_. ~?.:!!~~838 Aak for .:.;m UU Subordtneteo Capital Note, 091 ~g·~~:·~ ~~":. "-...._ ... :'.!i :m~lf8tlon of ~ Mt.JC M)TIC( ~::::::!::tone .,. ~..;..;.;...-' ,:,::,..--:
__ , Capltel. Surplu• and Aeeerves 45'609'ooo -dido IJtrtlluMI..... A hettlng on lhe l)Otttlon '1Cml0Ue .,..... Q Vin' HINGE LOCK ....
CHAYSLER'M . 4dr luxury T~~L·L*-PETER~"PYald ... ,...: -··ooo .......... ,. UC. ..... wlllt>ol'lllOonAPRll.t. tHt MAim ITAT'lmNT c 0 M PAN y t 6 7 0 lfW ............. ,,,.. Qua6c n.i.. ._ "' "" --· ......_ • ...._ ... Ud. 119:30 A.M. In Dlc>L No. 3 8t ' ~t; .Niii -A. c.t., ... 1.111· o~..:,"'••h1"'a12133200. -.a If •llTI a. ..... .-~ '"'' •.....,. ....... 100 CMo c.nw Ortw W• The lollow4no peraone •• BrOOkhollOw 0rc111e;,.281~'· u.c. ~n.-w """' ... ..., ..u-• --~ ..-w.,.1...,·~ ""ange Coast Delly Pllo1 March 18, 1986 T-095 '--lo...._ 11tr11..... Senlt ANI. CA 92702 ' ~ ~ •• 200, Senta Ana. A• ~ e ... ,
6 ...._ -~ •• --• -~-------...,.---------9"'-------..:....:.~ SI Ulted d-.. aOlicftar.. IF YOU OBJECT to the lbCH IAWANA, 203 0-W. I<. Senti. 1570 Publllhed Or COMt ••-' c= 213 or 71037 ·2333 Pl8JC tlOTlC[ Pl8JC fl)TIC{ Pta.IC fl)TIC[ c:oneo)o de un 1boOeOo en grenttng of the petllton, you 42nd, Hiewpot1 Beedl, CA 8'oolltloltow Ot1v,. lull• OeliY P1ot Mercti'7t. 1' 19 ___ __,, ............... ,;..;;;.;;;.....___, __ .....;..-.,---..;...;..;..;..;... _______ .....;.,__,,-.. __ •t• llUnlo, deberie tleolfiO lhould ehMr ~ 8t lhe t2N3 200, 8en11 ANI. CA U705 20. 2 0 ' '
'85 Jetta GLI, a/o, tnr1, MOT1CI TO T 045107 NOnC• Of' lnmedleiamenl• de Oltl hOlltng and ltale your Ob-TI"' o I h y J 1 me 1 Thia tx.11IMe9 11 con· 20, 1. I M M-01"
lllW ~'?:ie!.m~f;;':.c::'i-0361:' c=~O:. T~~C:Lf ""':.~::_IALI =:;.·~·.;~Yu~-:,=: =on~~~:!wC::J:>; ~~.28!:= N9w-due11£~N~~=~
SIMPt.Y THE BEST SehOol Dlllrict: Coas1 T S Ni> 9140 YOU AM .. ~AULT .., rrg11r9de 6 Uempo. the heeflng. Y<Nr ~-Thie bulll\ON 11 con• Thll ttelornenl wM fllod rtaJC fl)TIC(
8E .... URO·P~N oe·LLl.V .... EAngY ~.~~::~o ~1o:516e~l.U =:'7:.0flu:im atv!i~~~~ ==belnpwnorby duc1~:r~~ ::.l=ly:--~ ••tt
""' o'Cloctr L m Of lhe 241h dey UN>ER A Deed OI Tl'Ull YOU TAICI ACTIOH TO by lhe plelntltl agelll9t you. If IF YOU :re A CREOfTOA Thie 11•1ernent .,.. fled 24, INe IYNOf'911 °' TMI """ 1540 JAMBOREE AD. of M.,ch, INe OATED JUNE 27, 1984 '9110TICT YC>utt '9110ft· you wllh to defend lhll law-or 1 conllngenl Cf9dltor of with the Counly CWtt of Or· '101811 MUM. ITAT-.rf, ANVIL
NEWPORT BEACH ~ ol Bid Receipt: Of. lJfll.ESS YOU TAKE ACTION IRTY, IT llAY M IOU> AT eull you mull within • the d«.lHHd you ITll'9I file MQ9 County on ~ Herwffd, Adlll11eon I lttlUftA.NCI COWANY,
AdJacent lo Futllon llland floe ol Purehulng Olrec1or. TO PROTECT YOUR ;. "*-JC •Mi .• YOU dayt •tlet Ihle iummont 11 your Cialm wtih lhe coun or 21, 19M .. ,II.Hf, Atl ... rlefl •• ,..., COWAN, '°9T OI'·
()pen 1 08)'9 e Week Betty Ktlln, Coelt Comm. PflOPERTY, IT MAY BE •tD AN UPU.NAnoN lerWd on you, file wtlh ~ ~t It 10 lhe P9'90MI ,.,_ ~. llO .._.... CMW ~I ltOX ..... 1WM, ~ SUPER BEETLE '73, College Olalrlol, 1370 SOU> AT A PUeUC S.AlE IF Of' THI NATI.IM Of' TMI ooun e written rMpanM lo nlP'_,IAtlw IC)pOinled by Publllhed Ofange CoMt DttN, ...... -.._~ CALM'~ _,II ·-···n -·· lmmeculete eood, $2850, Adema AY9 .. eo.11 ....... YOU NHO AH ~ftOCHDINQ AQAINIT the complalnl Un .... you Oo the OOUrl within four month.I Delly Piiot March 11, ta. 25 ...... CA-.. y.., Ended Deoatnller 31, _,._ s-~ "9-7766 CA 9282& EXPLANATION Of THE YOU, YOU IHOULD COM-IO, your defeull will be rrom the deto Of llrtl It-APfiJ 1, 19M PublW!ed Orange COM1 1985
DELIVERYOEPAATMENT"";;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;. __ ,.., Proj•cl ldlnllllc atlon NAT\JAE Of ™" TACTAL.AWYUl enler.donepplioallonofthe IUlflC!eoflettersUptO'lllded T~72 DellyPllotMercfl It, 18,26, Tot•I •dmllled ......
McLAREN'S BMW • Name: Bid fl 1303. Gotden PROCEEDING AGAINST On 411111 et 10!00 A.M. pleintltt end lhl9 c:outt mey In s 11 700 1 h APftl 1. 1oee $18,405,473, Total~ OVTH COUNTY WMI COiiege Evaporetor YOU, YOU SHOtA.D TftANIAMlfUCA TITU enler •'judgement eoelMt Ptobel9: ~of C:..or:.: .,._.,. Ml\n.-c T~73x 12,578.105, Sptdal ~ \'OJ K W AGEN Pt111 CONTACT A LAWYER. .. I . CO.•..., ..,,alntild you lor the rellof domMdecl The time'°' ftllng Clelrnt wffi ,._,.. nv1iw. fund• 0, Cepllel peld· M·F tlll 9, S·S tlll 8
826 S. Eudld S I,
Fullerton, CA
71~8300
21~1-8701
LARGE SELECTION OF
NEW & USED BMW'S!
LMllAlllD
VOLUME SALES
SERVICE & LEASING
3870 N Cherry AYO LONG
BEACH
(No Cherry exlt-405)
(l 14llH-lllO
Tred•in• Welcome
OPEN SEVEN DAYS
.. ':..:l,··' •
• •• •
BMW '74 Bav. Boe/t>Qo, al-
loys, enrt, amTtm 119'eo
tape Xlnt cond $3950
<*>. 850-2364. MS--4053
BMW '81 320I, 1 ow;;:
3g,eoo ml, 1tM. •Ir, anrl
I 10,500 obo 720-035-4
• Piece Plw .,. on Ille: Ot· On April 8, l 988, II 10:00 T tu 1t1 • u "de t e 11 d In the comptelnl, which no1 •xs>lf'• Pflor 10 lour '1CTrnOUI llUt•ll Pl8JC M>TICE u p I G u u 1 n t y C 1 p I • & floe of Director. Eugene F. ~~ SetlllOO pwwent '° o.od ot Truet could reeull In gwnllhment monlht from the date Of the ~ ITATWmNT 1e11S1a1u1ory O•po1ll ISUZl' Htn1e, Ptly. Fee Planning, • OUly liPCIOWld ,_... 71>1114 • ....,.._ of wagee ttklnQ of money or hMtlng notice~ The lollowlng flCTmOUl llU .... U t,500,000. Gra.t ~·In
Coul Comm College Otlt. ~-under ano puniuene lo _.. Ne • .._,1t117, ., Of. P'OC*'tY. °' olfler r9llef r• YOU MAY EXAMINE the doing bullMM :eone .,. MAim ITATDmWT ind C<>nlrltx.lted eurplu1
IN U.S.A.
AHO fRYIHG HARO£R
TOBC -1
·SALES
·SERVICE
·PARTS
•LEASING
A~ I I IMl'f' ,_.,
,1; 1'11 /If • 1A I
£V£RY MOOEl ' COl~ CALL TODAY
1370 Ademe Alie., Coe'!~ 12 1::.. TIUSI '9COt'Old .Al"f tloMI .................... -.,: queeted In 1t1e complelnl. ~kept by lhe 00Ul1. If you D I V E R S E The lallowtng pereone.,. 275,000, Unaalgned funde
M-.CA9282e, Teleptlone ~ 71 ' • Ooa.wnent no OICU eueNCOltNJO,. 0.led. MAR 17, 1t83 .,. a pwn ln1«eated In TECHNOLOGIES 1791 doing bullnee1u: 4,052,lea: &Ki*le • t• l7~4b~~·:10;S . .HEREBY .,:c:.:.~~~ ::.0...U.:tt!~.: Bv's~WL~~~HINC~~· lhe eet111, you mey ~ Whlttlor Avonue,' Colle P6sTALPERFECT MAIL· x:;~;elf~0~•.:,: GIVEN thll llTe abov .. <>renge County, Celltomia. c_.,;.._,..of:::: . .,,..,... upon Jhe1xeculororedmln• M ... CA92827 ING SERVICE. 20182 · ·15 eOe.,.,.2• ~ amed Schaol DI let ueou11c1 b AM..,_, M. Cll'IW 'Y 111retor. or upon the al· Klttt G MoElney 427'h Beyvtow, San1a An• Helgh11 year • ,... • n air tor a SA.laan u" ~Wt c_.,, ltete of C . Publlatled Orenge CO..t lorney tor the executor or PoltlMtlta Corona d.. M1r CA 92707 . men11 lor Ille '/H t ~=-bye®:·,;-::~~ AT P1J8UC AUCT~ SE~ ~Tl::l.LT:T Hl=ti ~~ ~l~~erch 11, 18, 25. lldmlnl8tralor, and flll wllh CA 92925' ' Wllltiem F. Hegler, 1708 11~!"~0lr11ty lMt tt'le
Govemlng Board. herein-HIGHEST BIOOER ~ ..,.,... F°" CAIH ,,.,. • T ~ the COUrl with proof of ..,. Thie bUllMel •• con-Pomone, Sant• A~. CA Abo¥9 h91N .,. In liC·
ltler ,.,.,,_, to .. "DIS-CASH, CPl!Yeble • nme of Mill ...._ M ttme ot .. In WM lllcl, a written reque91 et•I· dueted by: an lndMduel t2075 c«dance wtttl lhe Annuel
TRICT", wlll recelw up to, 511n ~) money ol ,,.,. Url4tect "'011op of the United ~:9!,>;: =-of~ Thl:l~~!!.,~ELMEY...., 20~'::1 .. ~ ~bu,!; Statement tor lho yHr
bul not11ter than lhe lbove-•• .. IN nGfttl ln>t1I ...... ) et: THI c~ "8.IC fl>TICE . "' -·-.... ,....... ended o-n1>er 31 1N6 11eled time. -lod bld1 tor ent111nm IO 1"9 County AVINUe IN'T1'ANCI TO 119nlory and ~I of with ltle C®nty C*1t ol Or· Hllghtl, CA 92707 mllde lo lhe ltllUrN eom,:
lhe ewerd of 1 contract lor Coutlhouff. 700 CIYic: c..ocer THICfVIC <:eJfT'l"IUtLD-~ COU«T Mt•I• ....i. or of the petl-MQe County on F9bfu.aty Ginger Pope, 20182 mllllonot 110 lew
lhe above protect l>fl'4 w..r. Sent• Me. ING. a IAIT CHAPMAN Of' TMI ITATI llOne or eocount1 menlloned 11, 1988 Btyvl9w, Santa Aile, CA l<El'ITON~ITESEL
Sida lhlll be reoei'«J In Cahlomll 92701 .. rigl'tl lille AVENUe, OAAHQI. CA IM Of' C~ Ill Section 1200 end 1200.5 '*741 921'07 •
the piece ldenllflecl above, eno ,,...,... ~ tO eno rteflt,. tme end 1n-..t FOA nt1 COUNTY ol the Cellfomle PrObele Pubhhed Orange COM! Thia bu11n .. 1 11 con· :r:.:~~~!2:ERT 0
en0 lhAll be opened and now held Dy • unoer 111111 o..ci oom•r•Mo Md now Mid Of' OAANQ1 ~ HutaMn., A-~ Plloi Marett 11, 18. 2 ~ed by. 1 limited pertner· PublWled Orange CoMt
put>ffcly reed eloud II lhe ol Tl'Ull 111 ,,.,. ptope<Ty ••Ulled ~ It .... '* Deed °' JOSE DORNINI , •le.. ·-·-, ...... -1, 19'8 ... Delly Piiot Merell 12 13 14
lbOVl·llllld 11m1 1nd In ...., County, Cet11Dmie, TNlt In ttM prop9rtJ lltu· P lllnllll YI JOSEPH ~..._~:J.. ~ ... T-087 WHllarn F N~ 17 18 t9M • • •
pt-. dMo"lbtng ll'll lerld n.e111· .._, 11'1 uMI County lftd KATCHER. et ti , o.t.n· ._.,._., ·-Fua. Thll 11tlernertl -fllod ' ' W-33-4
Thlte will be a s 10 00 de-Loi 59 or Tl'llC1 7844, In lhe •tate deecr1bed M! dant1 ertoft, CA mll DI-•c lln'N'C with Ille Counly Clerk ol ()(.
POlfl required for MCh Mt ot City of Newport 8-:11, County LOT t Of1 TAACl NO Cue No 43-19-82 Pvbftlhed ()(Mge Coul n-.. ""'~ l/l09 County on Fobrv1ry1---------bld Oocument110 guartnlM ol Ofai>ge, Stall of C.IDm-. •1. Al ll"eA MU g : NOTICE OF Delly Piiot M.,ch 17, 18, 24, PlCTrnOUI .,_11 24. INe ,_,.. "8JC M)TICE
heir relum 1n good oondlllon •pet MIC> Aeooroeo in boc111 COM>ED .. toot( 417 RECEIVER'S SALE 1988 NAm ITATUmWT Publllhed Otanoe Coeal l-------------
wlthtn 10 deys •ti•,,... bid 314, PeQll 27 lo 38 lndUlw, ,AOll. AND 50 °" .. ..: OF REAL PROPERTY MT~l3 The folowlng pereone ... Dtlly Piiot M1rcn 11, 18, 25, ~A~ .. ()C)enlng d1t1 "'~ "'IOI. in the C~OUI MUI IN By Ylrlue of the ordet AC>-do4flo ~ u . April 1 1988 The 1--......
EACfl bid mull conlOfm otb ol t"9 Councy ~ o1 THE O"ICI OF THE pointing • recetvor i nd f'tllJC *>TICE N£WSLETTER COS UL· • T .o18 d"'"" :::--.=! ~co .... "!9T Ind be rMponllY9 to the &M!Counly COUNTY MC~" °" AUlhorlzlng lhe tale Ind TANT&. 4900 Oorcheller ............. _ -· .... contrect dooumen11 The llflMll Addre11 and IAtD OfllANQI COUNTY. oonv.yanoe of real property NOTICI Of' Rd, Cofone dtll MAf, CA CERAMICS. 2133 W. eo.t
Etch bidder lhell aubmlt, Oiiier common c!Mlgnenon, 1t UCEn THEAIPAOM mecs1 by lhe 1bove-named ~TH Of' 92825 PtBJC NOTICE Hwy, Newport Beecn 92M3
on the form fumltl'led with any, ol t"9 ,... P<°'*'Y AU otL., OAI ANO ...._ ooun In the lbove-enlltlOd MllllU CAMOU. Mary Ellen Simon 604 Rodney Robert Wellec;.e,
the contrect document•. 1 delcr10ed ~ • OUl'POf'lld lAAl.8 Al MNAVED.,. menerb~derntedonF• -.RT,ekt S.Wwd Rd, Corona del f'ICTITIOUa eu ... 11 2288 PAClflc "J", Cott•
1111 of the propoeed IUbcon· to tie. S3 MontealO DIM, n4E 0£0> MCON>ID '" ruery 13, 1985, I, Mlon I< MllMU c. QL8IJn" Mii'. CA 92$26 NAm ITAn.NT M .... CA 92&27
trlctors on thl1 projee1 u Coron.a Del Mer. C. 92825 toOf( ..a, ,AGE -Of'· PhelPI. u rec41Yw In Ille ANO Of' HI I I 10i1 Anne E. Lewie. 4800 The tOllowlng pw10n1 are JMr1 Mane Wlllecl., WM
required by the Sublelllng The u~llld TNllM f'ICIAl. fllCON>I. 1bove-entltlod matter, otter TO A.Dl9ISTEt Dorcn.tet Rd Corona dtll doing bullneee as· Thla IX.lllneee II con.
Ind Subcontr1cllng F1lr dlldelma "'Y liebll«y tor l/t'f The 1"-t llddr-. lftd tor tale ell rlghl, lllle Ind EITATR NO. A 1m71 Mw, CA 92825. THE CHRISTOPHER EX· duelld by ~And.,,,_
PrlCllOel Act. Govt Code lnOOmld,_ ot tf\e 1111111 oth9' oommon dM'tnelton lnler .. t Of the plelnllft ltld To ell heirs. benellcllOlil Thi• bul lnMI II con· PERIENCE. 3519 A Eut TAodh ney R Wallace
Sec 4100 e1 HQ lld<I,..• end Olher common If ..,y, of tho ,.., ~ the dotendanta In lhe •~ oredllora and oonungeni ducted by. co-pertner1 Coeat Hwy, Sulle 71, Cofone 11 1t1temen1 wea flied
Eeett bidder mutt 1Ubmll lkMl'Vnelion, 11 Inf, "'°"'" de1'crlbed above 11 enllllod ectlon In the reel ctedllors, and peraone who ANNE E LEWIS Ciel M1t, CA 92825 , with lhe County C1ertt of Or·
wilh Moh bid cen1fled a1 ,..,..., ~lo br. tCIZ2 CAM-property loeeted In lh• mey be Olhenw!M 1n1.,Mted Thie 1tetement wu flied Or Suetn Chrla1optler, 1n09 County on Februwy
caahler'1 check p1yet>le to SelCI .... Wll be "''°'· bu1 MoNADE C1"CLE. COITA County of OfMQe. Stele of Ill lhe wlll end/or Mt1te ol with the C®nry Cieri! ot ()(. 331 Promontory Drtve Eut. 24. l9M
lhe DISTRICT or 1 bid bond ~ OOYenenl or wwranty. MEIA, CA Cellfornle o.orll>ed • I'*-RUSSELL CARROLL GIL· MQ9 County on Feoo.ry Newi>or1 Beech, CA 192080 ,.._
In lhe fonn Mt forth In the .. ~ or wnploect, ~ K•FtCIA"Y: TWAN~ Iowa BERT, Al<A RUSSELL C 25, 1988 Thll bualn ... 11 con. Publllned Orange CoMt
conlract dooumenll In 1n tllle, l>OIMa8'°", or ~fltCA FINAHC&Al ao.. PAtcel 1, Unll 5 .. 1hown GILBERT FJ01MI doc11d by. en lndlvlduel DAiiy Pllol M.,ctt 4, 11, 18,
llmOUnl not leN than 10% ot encuml>l'Bnc9I, to P8't the VICH 714-f71...a77 and de"'1ed on thel oertaln A pellllon hAI ~ filed Publllhed Oranoe Cout SUSAN CHRISTOPHER 25, 19M
Ille maximum 1moun1 of bid remAJnong PMClPlll &um or the T1'e .,.,... .... *' Trw ... condominium plan recorded by RUSSELL T. GILBERT In Delly Pllol March 1 t 18 25 Thll 1tetM*!t ... nled T -464 :,ag~~"!':'.;h•1'n~':~~~ :~~~~!1-aa:=. ~:t:'J:::. ~='.~ ~~~o~n~ ~~r=~I~; April 1, 1988 . T~7~ :;.•~;tyon~~ Pt8JC M>TICE
Pfopoeed contrlCt If lhe • ~ '" Mild note(s). 1tNet eddr'Me lftd OCMf Recorda ot °'anot County. RUSSELL t GIL8ER'\' be U , 1918
Mme II AWAfded 10 IUOh ~. 11 "'Y· under Ille --deeltrt•tlon " Cautornlt eppo!nted .. per.anal rep-fJailD77 Plel1TIOUI .,... ..
bidder In the event of failure ••m• ol lhe Deed Of Tnal, "''· IMwrt IMntn. ' P.,cel 2 An undivided ,_!Alive 10 edmlniltet the fltllJC M)TIC[ Publllhed Orenge eo..1 NAm ITATDIDfT 10 enler Into .. Id contreci, r-. dwg• and 91~ ot le6d .... _.. M m.cM 1120 lnter .. 1 u tenent1 In •1•11 ol the o.c:.dent. Delly Piiot Marctl 11 18 25 The lollowlng Pl'ION ere
IUCh MOurtty wi ll be l0t· ,,.,. Tnal• and ol the !natl lMlt Wlttlout ~t ~ common In And to lhe oom• The P•llUon requlltt FICTITIOUI llUIMU Aprll 1, 1986 · ' ' doing bu1IMM u : The
felted. ' ere.tea l)y lllld OMO of Tnal, • .,,,.,.t,, • .,,.. Of Im· mon ar .. be4ng L019 1 •nd 2 141thorlty lo ldmlnllt• the NAm ITAT'bmNT T-074 Oulclde, 500 8. 8.wytront,
DISTRICT reMrVea Ille ror Ille amount ,_,.bly pMed ~ lttte ~ ot Tract No, 9902 u lllOWn e1ta11 under the llldepen-The lollowtng per90n1 Ate Belboe llland, Calif. 92N2
11ghl to r•tect any 0t 4111 bid.a •llmated lo tie· '533.088 33 ~. Of eftCWftbfMo.., on • map recorded In Book dent Admln111retlon o1 e. doing bu*-u : l'tB..IC fl>TIC£ Jecl< Dee Unac:ott. 300 E.
ortowa/Y9anylrregut1rltlee The beneflOAIY undlt 11110 topeJthl,__.lllll~ 417,P11Q9138And39of Mlt-lll91Act (Al NATIO NAL . EN· Coeat Hyo #301, N9wpor1
In eny bid• or In lhe bidding. Deed ol TIUSI hlretOlore ,.. -of tM ---cellaneoue Mepe Ill,,..~ A heer1ng on tno i>e'lllon VIRONMENTAL SYSTEMS, PlCTmOUI ., .... 1 &Meh, Cfijlf 92eeo
PvrlUent tolheprovlllor11 .. eou1ect IW1CI ~to the CVfeci by MW o.Od Of c«da or Orange County. wtnt>ol'lllOonAPRIL9, 198e (B) N.E.S., 2406 8. Blroh MAm ITATlmWT Mllbe M LJnlcon, 300 E
otSee11ont773ofthel.ebof underlognld 1 wnlten True, t. wtttl ""9rMt .._.... Celllorn11 logelfler wfth ell 1t9·30A.M.ln0ep1 No.3 •1 8treet.Sent1Ana.CAt2707 Thefollowtligptr10r19.,.CoMt Hwa •301, N9wpor1
Code OI lhe St lie ol Cell· Oedermrion OI Oeleul Ind Oft M pro¥tded In uld lmprovementa thereon Ill· 700 CMc Cenler 0rtw WMI I E.P Inc . • Cellfomle doing bullneee .. &Meh, Ce~ 92080
lornl1,lheDISTRICThuob-DemendlorSele.llnO•Wflllen not. ...,,_, H .,. cepllng 1heretrom oon-SanlaAne CA92702. 'corpor1llon, 2405 8. Birch CAEATIVE MEETING Thia bu11no11 11 OOn·
IAlned lrom lhfl Director of No11c1 ol Oelauft Md EtecilOl'I WW!ief• tf1e terme ot :; domlnlum units 1 through IF YOU ' OBJECT lo lhe Slreel. San11 Ane. CA '2707 CONCEPTS, 196 HHrth· dueled by: en lndlYldull
the Oepenment of lnduatrter to 84111 The lindlratgllld D••'i:I of Truit ,... 20.1nc1utJ.,.., loceted 1tier. gr11111ng of lhe i>e'lllOn you Thia butlMN 11 con-atone, IN!ne. CA 92714 Me1Y1 M. Llneoott
Ae1111on1 lh• g1ner11 ca*ld l6'd Nohoe ol Oellilull chtrtee end H~ .J on lhould ellher ~ at the ducted by.• aorporatlon Carol L Mott111. 195 Thll 1t1lement wu Ned LARGEST SELECTION l>'l'Yllllng rete ot I*' diem lt'CI EledlOl'I 10 Sell to be ttie ""'*end of tN .,,,.._ Pwcei 3· An llldullYe '-1ng 11'\d ltlle "I04JI ob-E C P!tte, Prllldent HHr1h1lone, lrvlne, CA with lhe County Clent of Qr.
of le1e model low mlleege wigaa ind th• generel -0.0 in Iha COUl'!ly wt.. c....-s by MW o.Od of .....,,.,..t pert1nen1 1o MCI'! lectlOnl or me written ot>jec> Thia tlltement -flied 9271~ lll'09 County on Mtrdl 7,
CadlllllC8 In Orange prevllllng r•t• lor holiday 1119,... l)l'Opetly • locllld Truat, for the •"'ounl unit lor the UM and ~ tlone wfth 1t1e court before wtth the County C-. o1 Of. Helen J Moffett, 1224 INe
MAZDA 626 '83 4 dr,I Coyn1ytSeeu11odayt tndovertlmewortc1ntt1eto-V~ugoSetYaCoriior1110n rwo,,....,eettmated to be cupencyotthoeepor11onaot the heerlng. YOIJf aw--111'09 County on FebtUery Gran9d1Wey,Sen Marcoe. ,_
auto. ml1ty bl metelllc.
1
540 9100 cellly In whlctt 11111 work 11 to • UIO TIVll1•, • m .a. , lhe r•lrlcted common .,. enoe mey t>o 1n petlOrl or by 20. 19M CA 92099 Publlatled 0.Mge Coell ale, cc, pa, am/Im CUI, • be oerlormed tor eech cretl 401 Notti'! Brano BlvO . Th. beMftclory und9r deelgneted In the Oeclar· your attorney ,..,.., Thie bualne11 11 con· Oally Pllol Mwdl 18, 25,
excellenl $6950/ b 2600 Harl>Of Blvd. or type ot worker needed 10 Glen04UI. CA 91203 uld 0... of Tn.t ....... Allon of Reelrlcllon1 ,... IF YOU AAE A CREDITOR Publllhed Orenge Cout dUc1ed by OC>-9A/1Mfl April I, 8, 1988
846-8-425 ' o 0· I COSTA MESA 1xecu1e Ille conlrlct T1-Telephone (818) 500-2485 10fvt9 eJC-..d end ct. corded In Book 12808, peg. or 1 conllngent c:redttor of ~!!!.'! Ptlol MAtch It, 18, 25. CAROL L. MOFFATT
,., .. we on nte II the OIS· 8y l.Oll "*"c:lll "*M .. "'° Ulldlf ...... 1208 of otnclal ~d• And the deceeMCI, you,,_. flll ......... 1, '* Thie llAlement -flied
MAZDA '81 RX7 red, gd Wf llf lU llAIEI TRICT office IOCe1ed 11 A&Ah0n1ea SogNl1n 1"""-~of0. lhown on Ille oondomlr\lum your c;t.im wllh the coun or T -0&8 wilh the C®nty Clent of Or· PlllJC M)TICE
cond. ale am/fm $5900 USED CARS & TRUCKS Treller Feetllty, 1370 Adema Oa!e MAtt1I 4. 1988 tMitt end D1imanc1 tw ..... plan for MCh unit preeent 11 10 IN per.anal MQ9 County on Fet>ruetyl----........ ..;..;~---
957·2565 or 759~5484 COME IN OR CALL FOR Ave, Coete M-. 92628. Mat. t8, 2S, AO< 1, ieee lf'Cf e Wfttteft Nottoe Gf o. Said real property 19 A110 r41P'eeen1Atlve appointed by Pt8.IC fl)JIC[ 27, 108e PlCTITIOUI llUllNEll
MBZ .73 450SL. 2nd F•EE •-u•u Cop ... mey be obtained on e>i.nge c-11 o..ty Pllol f..it and lloottoft to .... lcllOWll .. Unit E· 101at2554 lhe coun wllhln four monlh• '11111221 MAim ITA~ n ..,..,.__ requ.1 A copy ot ''-The under919Md ceue9d Eldon Avet1ue In lhe City of from the date of flrtt I• flCTITIOUI llUIMU Publllhed Orenge Cout The followtng persone .,.
owner. tllver/bllc Int DeLILLO r1111 lhell be polled et lhe fltB.JC N()TJC[ uM1 Nottoe Oi ~Md eo.te M .... Oranoe Coun-IU~Ofleu .... uprOYlded MAim ITAT'llllJIT Delly Pllol March 11, 18. 25, doing bullnt11 u: APPLE
0..IQ. 1 of the sharpeal In ClmtlfT l<>b alt• llecttoft '° .... to be ,.. ty, C.lltornlL In Section 700 of the The IOllOwlng per1on1 we Aprll 1, 19M SIGN & GRAPHIC, 2710 S.
Celftomlall 87~306' 182 1 t BEACH BLVD 11 IMll t>emandetoryupon ~AMO ACCl>CNT AND ~In tM OMlftt:::: Pro1pec11ve bidder a Problile Code o1 Ctlltomla. do4flo bullnell N T.On Belcet llC, Santa AM. CA
MBZ 78 450SEL. lllver HUNTINGTON BEACH the CONTRACTOR 10 wnom HEALTH IYN0,.111 OF the,..,,,...,., le lhould r9'er lo Soctlon1 The time fof filing dtlma wt11 A~T SYSTEM'S 1549 ..... er lln1¥c 92707
821( ml, mint. Mull Mii lheconlrectlaew.,ded end THIAHNUAl.ITATRmN'T o.tr.t/4./11 · 701510 lo 701.880 In-not nplre prior to fOU< Plaoenlle, Suite 209 Now-,.~ nu1~ Dll Phuong, 2710 S S 18.000 obo 675_5690 14l·IOl7; 141-HI 1 upon 1ny 1ubcon1rec1or • YUll l!NDID DECI_,. TMNIAmNCA Tm.a clullve. ol lhe Code ot CMI monlh1 trom the dele ot the por1 8eedl CA 92883 NOTJCI 0 , A lt\ll C Belter flC, Sanla Ana. CA
Che Cll 11 n •80 ve under 9UCh CONTRACTOR, It, ,_ Of' '9110~ INIUftANCI COM,ANY PrOC.OUre for pr0Yltlon1 ~ nouoe abo11e. Gary Wa ltle r Heueu LI 92707 c:1n a/~ 0,0 ml one lo P•Y nol leel than the N ld MUTUAL LJFm ... Ufl.AHCI Al TftUITll . av ANN governing lhe t~m•. con-YOU MAY EXAMINE the 1649 P'-ltlt, Sull• 200: ~~~~=~= Thi• butln... ,, con·
0 rie · S3s0o &«-S945 ~fled rtl91to111 wortcera COWANY Of' ~L-euttKL.Ft, A .... t..,1 lee--dlllon1 Ind effect ot lhe NII n1e kepi by lhe court If you Nowpon 8oech, CA 92M3 MATlON c---............. ducted by: en lndMduel ~ • employed by them In lhe IJI· ~HIA, 1100 MAftKI T ,.....,, and lhe lltblflly of defaulting Ari • per90l'I lnt .... ed In Thi• bullnoee ,, con---Of' Oat Ptluong
CHRYSLER 5th Ave '85, ecutlon ot the contract 8TltHT, """-ADl~A. P\lblllhed Oranoe Coeat bldderl the 111111. you may eerw ducted by: en lndMduel ~ COUNTY, CAU-Thlt ltetement wM fltecl
t><ownexl/lanlnl loaded No bidder mey wllhdrew '1ENNIY\.VAMA 1'* Oell)'Ptlot Mmrctl 11 18 25 NOTICE IS HEREBY uponlheexecutoror~ HARYW HEUETT ~°'!.!.!! AMmXA· wllhtheCounlyc:Wtt of()f.
7000 ml und~r wirr At"f bid for • period of llxty Totel 1dml1ted a11e11 19M ' ' GIVEN thet on Thuradey, 1a1rator, or upon the 11• Thia ltat-t WM flled -"•AIM UN9t-ange County on Februwy s 12 500 n~m 751•2200 (80) days 1t1er the d11• .. , 12 ,4 13, 158, 184; To111 T.oa2 Apnt 3, 198&, 1t 10-00 Lm. torney ror the executor or with the County CWtt o1 Of. g=wD ~°"" 19, 1968 *II 'II JOOI* · for the opening ot bld1 ll•blllUH 2.256,438,980; II the law ofllcle ot SP99ft edmlnlllrllor, and llMt wllh MQ9 C®n"' on F...._._ ,,. ,.,_
Red/Pal Xlrit cond ~r.ICORVETTE 1979, ~ T A peymet1I bond Afld e Capltel peld up None; Groee Dana T .. I & Belfour. Sulle the court with proof Of..,. 20, l988 " ·--7 NIWf'CMT '.,AY ~ Publllhed Orenge CoMt
vk:e recordt lowmlles 1 Top, A 1 condition perlormence bond wtll be P•ld In and conlflbuted P\8.IC NOTIC£ 780, 811 Anton Boull'Ywd, lllcl, •written reqUMt Itel-,.,.. =..:,.~~HCrrY Ofl Diii)' Pllol M.,cn 18, 25,
yr warr LUM or buy 45.000 miles $8,000 or required pr10r 10 execution 1urplu1 None: 8p1cl•I flCTTTIOUI 9UIMll Cotla MoH. Calllornle 1ng lh•I you dellr• ~ P\lblllhod OrMQe COM1 Thie bllC .._..._ Apfll 1. 8, 1988
(024305) best offer 638--0554 or the contract Ind lhlll be IUrplul Fund• 157.719,824, N.U. ITA.-.--NT 92628, I wlll Mii II public notlol ol lhe filing of Al\~ Deity Piia( Mwcti 11 18 25 ....... pu ·-"'V wlll be T-ote _ _ ____ In the tonn Mt tonh In the UneaelQMCI lunda (turptue) '~ IUCllon to lhe hlgheel bidder 119t'tlory Ind~.,..,.,_,. of Aprfj 1 INe · • • • ...,. In lhe OfMQe C0umy 121.111 CORVETTE '82, Cro .. conlrect documen11 None, 011n ILOM) from~ T"9 IOllowtng pereone we lnlewfulmon-rollheUnlled Miiii lllMll or Of the petl-' T Hall of Admlnl1trallon,I---------
8 300D'1 (n Slock lo Fire engine, fully equip!, Pureuant to Secilon 4590 er1llon1 1,011,587, Iner .... dol~ t>Ulln... II THE SltlM, all 11ght lltle end llont or eccounla mentioned -08e 8oerd Of ~ Heer· P'UBUC M)TIC(
chooselroltl I extre 1herp D1y1 oflheGovemlTl«'ll C<>deof (()ec(MM) In Capital and GRAD PLAZA HOTEL, lnlereetoflhe1~ lnSec11onl20011'1dl2006of lngRoorn,nretfloor,10CMc:
tH• llf•Oll 547.7393 EY99 &4&-434 1 the Stale ot Cellforn11 the Surplu1 during 1985 2726 South Grend Avenue, Parlnerahlpand thep.,-1nere lheClllfornle Prof)etecOcse Pt8.JC M)TlC[ Center Plua, Sente AN, fllCTmOUI .,... ..
•-----oonlrlcl wlll con.II In (129.088). lneurenc1 In Sanla Ana. Cellfornl192705 lhetoof In the abo_.<S. Hurwlla Ro1t1or i Cellfoml• on Wedneldey, N.._ ITATl....-r lllPllTS wt WAIT Y• prOYialon• permltllng the J: or c e N 111 o n w 1 d • Grand Plue 0.V..()9menl terlbed property DIV"--• An.m.,. ,_ '1CTmOUI llUtMU April 2, 1988 a1 Ille hour of The lollowlng l*'90nl are
tOOf Ouell SI NB OWi --1ucc111lul bidder to 15.891.096, 141. Aoc:ldenl & Cornpeny. 11639 Sorren10 0.led· MAtetl 1Ne. ,_.,.'°'* '• ...._,_,, ...._ ITAT'lmNT 2:00 p.m •Of M IOOI\ ttier. doing bullneal ae: 433.9300 •-• IAIJ eube11tull MCurlllee tor 1ny He 1 11 h pr em 1um 1 Valley Roed, San Ofeoo, CA AMwl K. ~. ..._ C..tw Drfw.. ....._ u., The folowlng penone.,. after u the oommllllon'I U (TI M ATE PAO.
See Vono doe Stintoa ITIOneY9 wlthheld by lhe OIS-118,814,33-4, lneutenoe In 92121 .... ....,_, ...... CA -do4flg ~ -eoende permlte. •t wtllctl DUCTIONS. S305 I Cello
CHICM
IVEllaON
..c>ASCHF
AUDI
CHf!VltOt..fT
HltlMRO-tJ~
W..65.nto
TAICT Jo i naure per· Force 1,521.153,029; Aoc1.-Atlel Hottll. Ille . I Del• Publlatled Orange Cou1 Publlahed Oflll'09 eo.t BA'OOKFIELD PAAl<ER lime ell lnt•91ted pert._ A\lledor, Sle A, Sen Juen
lormanoe under the c;on.. dent Ind ~lh prernlume • WAfe oorporallon Dally Pllol Mwch 1 I, 18, 25 Diiiy Pflol Mll'ctt 18. 19 25 EHVIRONMEHTAL EQUIP· wlll be heerd. <Aolelrtn0.i. CA t2e78 1r901 Direct Clllfornl• &e1neu Thll bu11ne11 11 con-198e ' tNe • • • MENT CO., MO w. 18UI The 11nneutlon lenllory Chattee \JCl4ll'nen Heck1111,
Qowernlng aoerd, tr Page 18,439,225 dueled by. • oen«et Pert· T-Oe3 TW-Oe4 8ll'"Olt, Sutle ~. Coela lnVOIYtil ~oxlmately 15 31171 Holly, South L11Qune
..--... 5 "°"'"'" E ROBINS
FORD D .. , d A. • r 0. rte"· "'' hereby Cll"ttfy lhellhl nerthlp Mesa. CA 92$27 eQf .. tocetechl the OMter'ly a.en. CA t28n !~~~~!~~~~ChefluNar above ltemt ere 1ri ec· Wllllem H McWe'lhy, Jr . P\llllC fl)JIC[ De'lld 8'00lc"'6d o.voe exllNllon Of Mw Ol'Ne, NlcholM M, Mag.loulla, Publllhed Oftnge Cout c«danoe wllh ttie AMU1t1 t.4~ Pertner IMO W. 18th Strwl, ~ IOUtfl of Brtltot Slrwl Md 25771 9uetelllone, ~
Deny PMot Mareh 5 12 108e Slatement for U1e r"r Thie lflllement wu llled AC'TITIOU8 .,_.. Ml.JC fl)TIC( C4, C... Mesa. ~ He27 Wlet Of JetnborM Aoed In H ... CA H877
Amended PuDt1c;'1110n ended Decetnt>er 31, te5 wllh lhe County~ of Of· .. ..._ ITATQllWT Thie bue1M01 la con-tho norlh Newpor'I leeal Aober1 M. Sc>IMw. 2406
Mtfcl\ 18. ltee D'ede tothelntun1noeeom. angeOoun1yon Janu~8. Thet~S*'IOfleate ll'NOI' ... OI' TI«I M-dUct«l by:anlndMduel .,._ C e llo M1Jorc1, Sen
)060 HAAl.O• Ill Vr:>
COHA Ml \A 041 0010
.11111101 I IOI
Ora11ct Co11ty·1 o""'
llecol;; lltrc1r, dultr
T-"9 mlltloner Of lhe 8t•I• of 19M dQlng buelw u: Potomeo MUM. tTA~, ~ OAVIO DI VOE ,.,. Loe.I Aa.ney F~ o.am.nte, 'CA t2t72
C.lllomla. pur1UAnt 10 i.w. ,_ Uindlng ~·t eom. CAM INeUll.lltCa COii-Thie 11etement "' 111ec1 tlon Commlelron, •• L4lld Jack P*oe, 33061 c.11o _________ , ....,., JoM ~ Jr hte, L••renH, At• p.ny e Joln1venturt:2tff2 ,AfllY. ~H1 CAll,Ut IMtl'llfllOoum'/ClettcOfOr· ~. puf'IUtlnt lo lhe Allledor, 8t• A. San Juen rtllJC fl>'flC( Pl'"lllden1: Jarnea F~ ~ .e ~. ,_ ._. iVy Glenn Dr'N9. Sutii 100 :=:. lftVlNf. CALI• anoe County on F*'*Y Celllor1111 , lnvlronmonlel c.oi.tr~. CA t2e75 1111, '"" JOI •111ity
·-<cx,Secntaty ~ ,_.. .• ..., "-d. ...._ UaouneNtguel,CAt2en ' · _,,. 20, ltle Outllly Ac t (CEOAI fhll buelneee It con-
... g_ c.-i .._, "' Put>IWled 0r-. CoMt 191, ... .J*ilie. C:A ...,, Iulo-Potomac Lid • y IMM' D ~ Plttt1I ~ a Neoettv. Oecler· duCted by: • llnltld pem.,. :.,~'::Ai:.i:: t1: Otitt Piia( MatOfl 1e, 19. 20. Publllhed Or-. Ooeat ~Ill• llmltod pert;.. 11 :.11 "' • Putlllhed Ofange eo.t etlon fof the annueuon of lfllp
ul11 Hmct. I 1u1111
,ClflClt
IVDJioit
~ ....... , ••• ~ iMol~~ CANADIAN lfllDIMNITY 21, 22, 1968 Deity Pltot February 28, 1hlp, 16538 Bernardo ,..., ... "W ...... Delly Piiot Mardi 11, 11, 25. the temtory lo lhe Ctty of CNttaa C. HldtM1 • ::r.... ~M.,..,E"=RC'""'"~c-.p-,-,-.,,7""'3--N.--1 COWAln' -HAMOR T-083 M1<ctt 4, 11. 111. INe Centef Ortw, Sulfe 200, 8an MT.t11.IMl T .... l rl• April 1, 1Ne Newpon 8eedl TNe ~ ..... flled m;;~;;;;;;;;:;;;~~;;Aj brtic•ltlr•. Need• *Oftl •OULIVA"D, COITA ~o;:c9~1ng Lid a ~:~~!~ ....... ..,..... T~7I tcr1~1on'": ,f:~-~ =tfle~~..!!.~ ~ 1 175 Cau 54'" •2""' ,....,. CA-•mt er 111111'\til'r lllllBI.,. tal\1¥C ' ., •-• •1 t _..., Of ....,. 28 1"'"• --r ~ '8 1 Ro&dltr • .,, ~"" v.;'EndedDloemt>erll ,.-.n. nu1~ ..-~ nunw. Ceittorni. llmlled PM'*· 1tp/Q•eren , ci;;i. 1.,. annexttlon terrttory · ...., ~.,.. ""*1t. ~ OLDS '78 Cuti... 2 dr l'ld· tOU f.CTITIOUI eu...u ACTmOUI __,...., •hip, 18538 Be rnerdo l•llltat•l•rr De,eilt and the locel Agency For· Pu Of ,_
... 9'000/0C>o~2541 1 top.tupefeln •·shape. Tot• e<Sm1ned .... ,. ...._ITATl-..n NAMllTATSWWT =:m2~e 200,Sen i.-.-.. Or:-......-''cmnoueM111U1 =~=-~~0~ De/ltt~llToh~ 1~
POMQil 73 91 1 Terga. gf1 ttene &44-1<*) eft 4pm N 2.407 711: Totel lleblllt._ The IOllOwlng s>e'tOftl tt• Tht fOllowtng P9'90nl .,. Thl1 bullMN 11 oon-:-: .. •::• U • ~ ....._ rfAW of the llPPl!Cetlon docu-April I 1M6
blk/blllc xlt cond OLOS '77Ctl11auSupCpe 5'.328020. Cep11e1 peld-dolng t>u11n111 •• do4flo ~ • ll'IAST ductedby'Joinl"'9rtt\#'e ~·c.-.!.-.">•::a"•ed Tlllfolowln0~-ment1areonfllleenctl't9ll-, T-471 !..--~....: ' Exit h d u p /Oue r1nty C ap t . ANSWERING MACHIN! Wl!STl!RN MfDICA L Bule-Polom Lid ---.. dolna~•· tbtetorpubltc rlMlwlntfle t10.ooo. ~-moc con • ~ te ll81•1ulory Oe poalt ME88AQU 1274 CON OAOUP 2130 (Mt f~h Cellforf'lle 11m1:!d .. • ........ ,...... -!ASTWOOD I l A8T· oommltlllon'• lllff 0 1---------
PO...CHi '71 81 18C paint $1575 7.~ 1,250,000; Unualgne dWAY AV!NU!, COSTA Slreot.SanteAN.Cellfomle thlp , BY 1u1r"l7: •Jtt••••; "!!"--.WOOD NHEAIU, 2808a locetedlnthoOrOdl•= ~tlll. 7Mmll15 450. OL.OS '11 o.rte aa. 4 Dr. ~ l,82t,8M; Surptue .. MESA. CA 92828 92705 80CIATE8. LTD •• c.. ::,;;,..eo..l • reer Aceclt ...... Laoune Hiiie, llulldlno. 1200 Norttl MMll ...... ,., or 1iiit4014 ale. pta. ptb auto, p/w regard• pollcytloldere Nancy Hart. ..me 11 ~on H Merlhtll. M.0 , fom1e lmlted pertn.wfllp, .., ... ,_, ~ 1'* CA~ •----....... St,.., .,,.. 215, s.nia l2000 090 55~-4e85 3.079.M . Income tor IM AbOW 2130 !Mt 'ourth Slreet lty T1'e lll6e c:or,,ordon a w. ...._,_, AN. Celfornle. '« ll'IOl'9 ln-POM641 ·nm (nu pnt, rMr 4A,013,30e. °'80vr• MlohMI Het'I. Mme Al Senta MA.. Cefllomla t27o6 Cefffornla OOt'pOretlon o.n.. ._ ...:":: .. :-.::-.. '.:: ~::a CA~ 1..erie, Uigune formellon, IOle phon•
.... ~). h1pd,8 '81 Cull .... V8, m•nt1 lor lhO ~Ur At>ov9 Thia buelnoe• 11 con-lf'el Pat1net, 1ty tto'*1 A W"f 11 ..... ~ ltelnl Artfluf fM1WOOO 714/A+mf dUMg nor· p1re MINT• tit( at-f120 l*'9 •IWl'lt ""'VI. -1nt. 44,900. llM Thie bualne" 11 con dYClld by en lftdNIOuel Wyett, VIOi ~I 1......_. IW Ille • '"4111 bualr-. hOuf't ,...;....~..,...,,,..--:-.:,_~Tl:'."""~I IMl!eoffet 543-f50e W1"'"9by01ttlfy lfMtt !tie dl.ICtedby.lluebll'>dlllldwlf• Myron H Mllflhell. M.O. ,.,... 11 • ..,.,.,,, ... fllled ...... D ,. It ,.,,_ :Sc~ ...... LAIOuM IV OADfA OF THI! ........ l'\lllfO -urbO -lbove lleme ero In ~ Heney Hert Thie '19'ement w• fled wftll tho County~ Of Or· • -, • . lOOAL AGENCY FOAMA· lfW'OClf1'llilfl lf'llt'. Prtoed Ate )'Oii &aoetding on oordance wt1'I the Annuaf Thie ateternent w• llled w1tt1 the County Qertc Of O...· ar1ge County on .,_, 31 .... I .. , .._ ..._.__ TIMI buelMll II COrt· TION COMMtS810H OF OA-'"'cMt uooo ··~·· -~?Fllld • l'l'IOte .. Oii St•tement lor ,.,. .,.., with the Courtly~ Of Or· atlOI County on '*'-'/ 3, ttM .., • ~-IF • ,... • .. ~ =~ AHOI COUNTY. CALI· .,...~ 720-t2t2 .,,.,...,,.,,W1,11111ri.o ended o.:.nw 31, 1915, -.eountvonOctc>t>er30 1Ne ,_.,.. i i w .. 4 T , .. ,.,,.1 ....... _ -........ FOANIA
"*"lo the lnaw9noe Com-1915 ,._., Me Delle I~ Mee i.t a , · • ',,.. .._Miit ... -o..ed: ~ 4, 1-At-a.~~ n11111o1•.~101ew , ... Gthe11, D•11• •.....,A,..;,.,. .. ~ ro~dHl; ...... ,. • wtltlll'leCouncya.tiOf Or-~ '.· ~ "'9IJ ff'.. Fteder1cltC l<nttw.Ul'llt· P\11:>411hed 0rlll'09 eo.1 CnMMf, PO lea ._, ,.,.._...,_.,._; ................. , anot CountY °" F*'-Y ._.... -..,, edStal•~ OeityPllo!OCIObet3, 10, H • .....,.,....,CA_, Dllip.CAltlf{" • ..,. 25.1... ,._A..-. ..... c..
Is the answer to your buying Putlllhed °'anoe eo.t ~4. 1985 Publllhed Orange eo.t Pl*ltfled o...-. eo.t P\lt1411Nd °"'* eo.t .......... 0r-.. ~. Olly Pilot Metefl 12, tt, 14, Arn•nded Put>ttcellon Delly ~ Fet>NltY a . Dell)! "'°' Fellruery 21, OeffY Piiot Mardi 1), 14, 17. o:,:::;:4~ 1~ C ... ..
and selling needs. 11 .. 1• Marcf\ ,, 'H41 Msctl 4, 11. 11. 1... r.aen=n 4. 11. , •• ,... ... 18. 1... AP'I 1 1.. • • ~ arar.t COllll w~ T.... T-460x T"°"'x Th 741 • T.070 ..,_,........,. tQrCfl tl, 'r'
~.....::::::===::::...
'
.. 25 ¢
TUESDAY, MARCH 18, 1986
esaskyscrapershelved
Segerstrom wit hdraws plan on a dvice
from councilman, in f ace of opposition
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of .. ..., ........
After strong· opposition from resi-
dents testifying Monday before the
Costa Mesa City Council. developer
C.J. Sqerstrom & Sons retreated
Coa•t
New conflict of Interest
charges arise In Costa
Meaa'acracked home
.;ontroversy .I A3
California
Eastwood's mayoral bid
gives rise to song./ AS
Nation
Reagan making gains In
gathering votes In House
for Contra aid./ A4
More remains from shut-
tle cabin brought In./ M
World
Prosectutors think they
have man who shot prime
minister of Sweden./ AS
Sports
UC Irvine goes against
BYU tonight In the NIT
Tournament./81
Angels pitching Is rough-
ed up./81
The world of men's pro
golf ls In turmoll./82
Entertainment
The prize-winning play
"The Shadow Box" re-
ceives a superior enact-
ment In Laguna./85
IND EX
Advice and Games A 10
Bulletln Board A3
Business A 7 -9
Claaalfled 86-8
Comics A11
Death Notices B8
Entertainment BS
Opinion A12
Paparazzi A6
Police Log A3
Public Notices 84, 8
Sports 81-4
T elevtslon 85
Weather A2
from the showdown over its proposed
32.-story skyscraper and aareed to
come up with a new project.
The surprise decision came at the
urging of Councilman Donn Hall,
who suggested two hours into the
Ramierz
did it·,
witness
testifies
LOS ANGELES (AP) -On the
one-year anniversary of her murder,
the violent death of Tsai-Lian Yu at
the hands of the "Niltbt Stalker" was
recounted in coun Mondar, by a man
who recalled her cries of 'Help me!
help me!"
Defendant Richard Ramirez was
identified as the assailant by witness
Jorge Gallegos Calderon, 22.
"Do you see that man in court
today?'' Deputy District Attorney
Philip Halpm asked.
"Yes," said Gallegos, pointing
across the courtroom to where
Ramirez sat at the counsel table.
Gallegos' testimony came as a
preliminary hearing resumed for
Ramirez, who is charged with 14
murders and 54 other felonies an Los
An~eles County-the majority of the
senal attacks that terrorized Cali-
fo rnians last year.
Gallegos said he was parked on a
street m suburban Monterey Park
when he heard a noise in the car
behind him.
"I first heard like a child's cry. Later
1 heard, 'Help me! help me!"' he
testified.
He initially turned in the scat of his
pickup truck and saw two cars parked
behind b1m, Gallegos said. He said a
man was leaning into one of the cars,
trying to pull a young woman out.
Gallegos, who said he was involved
m a conversauon with bis 11Tlfriend,
conceded he ianored the dJSturbance.
"I djdn't pay attention to what was
going on, because I thought it might
be a lovers' quarrel." he said.
But moments later, he said, when
he heard the call for help, he jumped
out of the truck and ran to the woman,
who was crawling on the ground.
He s.a1d he attempted to help her.
but withm minutes police arrived.
Ms. Yu, 30, of Monterey Park, was
shot repeatedly as she returned home
from a friend's house JUSt before
midnight March 17.1985.
Another witness, Dr. Richard
Tenn, s~ud he was on duty m the
emergency room where Ms. Yu was
brought and pronounced her dead on
arrival. He said she had a aunshot
wound in her chest. The bullet
appeared to have entered from the
side and exited through the front of
her chest, he said.
GaJIC1los' account of the incident
(PJeue eee SECO?m/A2)
550 peace marchers
vow to reach capital
BARSTOW, Cahf. (AP)-Despite
the collapse of its founding board,
leaders of the Great Peace March said
I 3 regional offices opened across the
country Monday and that at least 550
people would march to Washington
en massc.
"We're moving forward," volun-
teer field director Tim Carpenter said
at a news conference. ·•we ve opened
13 offices across the country today.
We'll continue to mob1hze and
agitate to bring down nuclear
weapons until we arriv~in Washing-
to~E:'?·" \Arl>Cntcr said more than 1.000
people would join the march en route.
"We will take marchers on ahead.
The people are there once we hit the
trail," be said, noting that dozens of
people arc already in Las Vegas acting
as an advance committee.
A fund-ra1S1ng event was planned
Sunday at the Imperial Palace Hotel
in Las Vegas. spokesman Richard
Polesc said at a temporary head-
quarters set up at . Barstow's I st
Congregational Church.
The group has Sl,700 in its bank
account and plcdacs totalina SI S,000,
said spokesman Steven CaiTillo.
The mal'(hers ha<\ met over the
past few days and decided Monday
(Pl.U.eeePSAC&/A2)
public beanna that the Seaerstroms
take the proposed SOO..foot tall office
buildina back to the drawina board.
Called .. One South Coast Place.''
the biah-rise tower proposed for the
Sqcntrom•s Home Ranch property
in north Costa Mesa was to have been
the tallest building in Orange County.
gel es.
And tho!t fean fanned Costa
Mesa's long running battle over
growth as weU as over the inOucncc of
developers.
.. I would hale to tee a PfOJCCl Like
this split the community, th.at is why
J'm teJli~you to take it and 10 away, Mr .. Rou, Hall said.
After a quick discussion W1th other
Seatrstrom officials, Ross acknowl-
edged the opposition and pulled the
tower proposal from the agenda. As the first phase in a sprawling 9g,.
acre business complex, the skyscraper
fueled residents' fears of traffic jams
comparable to downtown Los An-
Bctore a standtna-room only
crowd, Hall asked Segcntrom plan-
ning dinctor Malcolm Ross to start
over -"and I mean from the ~nning" -and come up with a
build.in& more acceptable to the
The Seaentroms .. bad proposed a,n
employee child care center for 120
children, an art pllery and lush,
&TUSY landscaping as pan of the residents. ·
Toasting St. Patrick
lllke McCaffrey, Eileen Bylama, Grea
Smythe, Allee McCaffrey and ~e
...,,... .....................
Meyen were weutn • aad 4rlllldn • tile
ireen a t llalarky'a 111ah Pab today.
S t.Patrick'sDaycelebrating
begins early a t Newport pub
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of tN~Net8'""'
Talk about the luck of the Irish ...
Willie Stephenson was wondering last week how
he was going to get off work today to celebrate St.
Patrick's Day.
"But I didn·t have to wonder for very long. I got
laid off. How's that for Irish luck? .. said Stephenson,
laughing, as he clutched has cup of wh1slcey-laced
coffee.
"I work w11h the steel industry and these (lay offs)
aren't unusual," he said. 'Tm not worried."
Stephenson had little lime to feel sorry for himself.
At 8 a.m. he was among SO green-clad celebrants
getting an early start on the St. Patrick's Day fest1vit1es
at Malarky's lnsh Pub in Newport Beach.
While most everyone else along the Orange Coast
was getting out of the shower and wondering what to
wear to work today, the crowd at Malarky's was
already working on their second glass of green beer and
mopping up a plate of corned-beef hash and poached
eggs.
And when the stereo system pumped out Motown
classics and, later. the Talking Heads' "Life During
Wartime," a few people hopped off their bar stools to
dance.
The early start on St. Patnck's Day has become a
tradition at the Newport Boulevard pub. Over the past
ciaht years, lines of customers have extended along the
sidewalk and around the block for a chance to get
inside.
With St. Patnclc's Day falling on a Monday,
however, the early morning crowds thinned this year.
But the same ca~de prevailed.
Mike Meyers of Garden Grove and his garlfnend
Alice McCaffrey of Huntinaton Beach got up at 5:30
a.m. so they could drink champagne, yell, dance and
get to Malarky's when the doors opened at 7 a.m.
''I've been an the restaurant and bar business for
about I 9 years and this is the first tame I've been able to
go out drinking on St. Patrick's Day." Meyers said.
"But this is a tradition for this lady."
"I asked for this day off a long time ago."
McCaffrcy said. 'Tm going on a cruise in June. so I
asked for that week also. But I asked for St Patnck's
first. Shows ):O U where my pnoriues arc."
(Pleue eee cgL&BRA Tll'fG/ A2)
akyteraper pro)cct north ot &be Su Dicao Freeway, juat cut of' Katbot
Boulevard.
The ~ma' ret:rc:lt railed tbe
ire of Couocilman Dave W'beea.,
who accuted the company of~ to
tiJve face in Order to wait until tbe
opposicioo coots.'
··vou'rc beina piecemcaled ud
jerttd around," Wbc:der warnod the
audience.
Delay in
picking
jail site
sought
County supervisors
to address Issue of
Jail expansion today
By LISA MAHONEY
Of .. Dllllr ........
Anaheim city officials will uk
Orange County supcrvison today to
slow down efforts to build a new jail
by conductina a full environmental
review and a detailed economic
analysis of whatever site they choose.
Supervisors are expected to pick a
new jail site from a field or fout
possibilities -two in the city of
Anaheim and two in Santa Ana -to
stave off a possible oontem~t of court
order !Jiinst county Sheriff-Coroner
Brad Gates in connection with over-
crowding at the Main Jail in Santa
Ana.
U.S. Distnct Court JuctF William
Gray ordered Gates to &PJaf Tbun.-
day to explain why on at least three
occasions the inmate population a t
the jail cxccedcd a 1,500 prisoner cap
be unposed in January.
Gray already found Gates and the
board ofsupervison in oontempt last
March 18 for failing to reduce jail
overcrowdina despite a I 978 court
order to do so.
Hoping to show that the countf is
doina all it can to remedy Jail
crowding. the board of supervisors
March I I ordered county staff to
prepare a report detailing all possible
locations where a I ,000 to I ,200 bed
medium-maximum security jail
could be built quickly. Consultants
arc already evaluating remote sites
for a S,000 to 6.000 bed jail. but site
selection is at least a year away and
actual contruction as much as three
years down the road.
Released Friday, the staff report
identifies four sites as best suited for a
facility. They are a former trash
transfer station between the Santa
Ana Raver and the 57 Freeway at
Katella Avenue near Anaheim
Stadium, I 7 acres at Ball Road and
Harbor Boulevard north of Dis--
ncyland in Anaheim, 20 acres at
Grand and McFadden avenues in
Santa Ana where the county Registrar
of Voters is located and I 0 acres on
(Pleue 11ee DELAY I A2)
Mayor Voss demands D.A.
bring probe to conclusion
Mayor l"'red Voee
By PAUt ARCHJP LEY
OftN~Net--
Chargang he 1s bemg "crucified an
the local press," Fountaan Valley
Mayor Fred Voss demanded this
week that the Orangc,County Distnct
Attorney complete its 10vestigat1on
of his business dealings.
In an open letter to Distnct
Attorney Cecil Hacks. Voss chaf'$ed
the prosecutor's office as ''partJc1·
patina 1n a politically mouvated
smear campaign by those opposed to
my ~lectJon."
The dlstnct attorney's office
launched an anvesugauon in Febru-
ary of the mayor's relationship to a
development firm seeking to build a
condominium complc' an Fountain
Valley.
The inves11ga11on focuses on a
proposal before the cat)' council that
would have saved 1. Properties
more than s200.ooo in park Site fees
Vo . who voted for the proposal
when 1t appe~rcd on the Nov 19
consent c~lendar, denied he had a
bu iness rtlauonship Wlth the lrvtnc-
bued firm and said there was no
reason to d1squahfy him~lffrom the
vote
However. Voss said he was a
business panner until last fall with
l.S. Properties pnncaples David 1,.
raclsky and ex-Fountain Valley
Mayor Bernie SvaJstad.
The vote authorized drawtni up an
agreement for a $60,000 millpllOn
fee m heu of a $269,000 parlc site ftt.
Vo was JOmed m approval by
Counetlmcn Grorae Scott and Jim
Neal
.Councilman Ben Nielsen abs-
tained because he said be was con-
(Pl-.. eee llA TOa/ A2)
County r esidents gi v.~· high
m a rks to UCI, poll indicates
PHIL
SllEIDEllll
Drugs No. 1 problem
in schools Bennett
AN DIEGO (AP) -tllcaal dl'U,p
art the b\gelt problem facing the
nation's schools, lJ.S Sectttary of
Education Wilham J Bennett said
Monday
on school campuses. sucn •• u1~
conducted by the San Dteao Police
Dcpenment and the San Dtemo
County henff Both aacnac hrie
t'nrollcd undercover offi0C11 an area
IC'hoots '" ~nt months.
Univers ity study also finds ma n y t h in k
campus funded by donations. tuition
A new survey reveals Orange
County residents are as well-ac-
qU&Jntcd wtth UC Irvine as they arc
with UCLA and USC. They al'°
believe at provides a quality educa·
t1on comparable to that offered by the
more famous Los Anaelcs schools
At the same 11mc, many local
rttidcnt1 art confused about where
UCl 1eu most of 111 money. Many
incorrectly believe pnvate donations
or tuition cover most of the co u of
opcratinA the Irvine campU'I.
The 'attitude and awareness"
survey wa conducted for lJ t last fall
by Footh11l Auocaatcs, bated an
Manhattan Beach. Results of the
S 14,000 study were recently made
pubhc.
Kathy Jones, UC l's assistant vitt
chancellor tor communications and
university advancement. said the poll
was oomm1 1oncd to find out how
effective UCl as en maklna tl.'1 pro-
srams known to Orllnae County
ttSJdcnts. Campus officials aJso want·
cd to puae community 1rt1tudc'
about UCJ and to find out how
ac:cn 1blc the campus 1'1 for public
events
"Overall, we were wry F.-llfied
with the tt ults," Jones uad. "We
went into th1uurvey with nocxpccu-
tions "
P1n1cularly surpmmg W8' the h1ah
l
Focus ON TH£ NEws
ptttentqc ofres1dents who had bttn
to UCI or at least knew how to act
thert, Jones sa1d. {Tht survey finn
noted, however. that the poll d1d not
addrcs "the public's oomfon level m
D1Vlllt1n1 the aamP.u ontt tht>y
have am"ed at UCI. • )
Jones 111d campu offietals wt'rt
not surpnscd that resident~ believe
UC'I offers ht&)l..quatity education.
particularly 1n the "hard sc1en«~ ·•
(P1 ...... asam&lfTS/ A2)
Bcnnt'tt, an a ne~ oonfcttnoc
followina a speech to the A SOC1&t1on
of Govern ma Boercls of Univcn1ues
and Collqcs, said I 7 percent o( the
nation's h1ah .chool "U<knts have
tned coaunc at lea t on~ Of that
number. nnrty half ~1d they
purchased the dru on the hool
campu\
Bennett ~•d he supports the ron-
ttp\ of ianderoovcr drua o~~uona
)
The undercover offittn plbeT
ev1dence. wtu h then \lied to obWn
arm\ wan&nli for c:ampu d.rua
de.ten
"I don't care who's push.
whether it's pa~11u or ~ '!';
ktds th11 really as apipri)rbiDI a
proportion ofa J>laauc. .. Btnnettlaid. "Drva edu tion pr'Ol11am but
(Pl-...-•MON/AS)
.
)
'
l I
,
Al 0nnoe COMt DAILY PILOT/ Tueedey, March 18, 1N8
PEACE MARCHERS CONTINUE ON TREK •••
holllAl
momina not to aplit up into smaller
ll'OU~ altbouab doi_nJ IO mipt ba ve
made food distribution euaer. Car-rillo said.
"We will leave toaether -unified
lhrouabout th.e peace march," he
said.
"We•rc 99 pen:ent unified and want
10 march topther," added apokci-
man Jim Walsh.
Peo\>le Reachina Out for Peaoc, the
march a oraaoizin& aroyp, collapsed
under the ~iabt of de~ and pulled
out Friday.
Poleae said be could not comment
on whether PRO-Peace would file for
protection under fed~I bankruptcy
law, althouS)\ former PRO-Peace
march director Steve Perki01 PJd had
said Sunday that the bankruptcy
filin& was planned Monda)'. · T6e march's new o~nizing group
was to file incorporatton papers as
The Glut Peaoe March for Nuclear
Disarmament Inc.
Spokesman Chris Ball said the
marchen would remain in Barstow
until sufficient donations of food,
equipment and cash were received to
proceed. •
..The glitter and glamour are gone.
Wbat remains is 'a arau-roou or-
pnization " Ball said.
"We widget to Wasrun.ton. D.C.."
said marcher Judith Rane. "All of ui.
have made our most difficult decision
already to leave our family, home and
ca~. so all our decisions now arc
easy."
Some equipment was returned to
owners Monday as part of the
breakup of PRO-Peace. However,
Polcte sa1d at least two trucks had
been donated for the duration of the
march to carry supplies 3.23S miles to
the District of Columbia .
lnJurance was no loo.ger a primary
concern of march org.aruun, Polese
Said, although some government
agencies had said the march couldn't
go on without it. ·
RESIDENTS GIVE UCI HIGH MARKS •.
Prom Al
But she said the survey may {>rompt
UCI to boost promouon of its fine
arts, enginceri!1f and business pro-
grams, with which residents arc less
familiar.
The research firm conducted 505
telephone interviews with Orange
County l"C$idents selected at random.
The survey has a 4.4 percent margin
of error, meaning that's the extent to
which its.results may differ from the
county's adult population as a whole.
Interview subjects were not told the
poll was commissioned by UCl, so
that this informatio11'would not color
their responses.
In their executive summary, the
foothill pollsten said, .. Recognition
and knowledge of UCI is very high
amonf the Orange County public ....
U CI ts recognized by the Orange
County public as offering com-
paratively high quality of education.
Jn the public's mind, the level of
academic quality equals that of
UCLA and USC and far exceeds the
acade&nic quality of schools in the
California State University system."
Following arc some of the survey's
major findings:
•When the names of eight
Southern California universities were
re.cited, the largest percent of respon-
dents -76.4 ~rcent -said they
were familiar with UCLA and UCL
After that came USC, with which
70.1 percent were familiar. Then
came Cal State Fullerton (64.6 per-
cent). Cal State Long Beach (60
percent), UC San Diego (40 percent),
UC Santa Barbara (39 percent) and
UC Riverside (23.6 percent). ·
•Those familjar with the eight
schools were asked whether the
quality ot education at each campus
was superior. average, below average
or whether the resident did not know.
On this question, S9 percent said
UCLA offers superior education,
following by uses .56 percent su-
perior rating. But 52 percent also said
UCI ~rovides a superior quality
education.
In contrast, 23 percent said Cat
State Long Beach offers superior
education, followed by 19 percent for
Cat State Fullcn on. More than haJf of
those polled said the two Cal State
campuses provide .. average" quality
education.
•Orange County residents ap-
peared to be quite familiar with UCl's
location. Almost 60 percent of those
polled said they had visited the
campus, while another 20 percent
said they hadn't been to ua but
could find it without directions.
•Almost 60 percent recognized
UCI for its academic programs but
only · 16 percent said the school is
noted for non-academfo activities
such as sponing even ts or the campus
environment. In contrast, UCLA,
USC and Cal State Fullerton all had
higher recognition for non-academic
activities.
or 80 percent of the respondents,
UCI's academic reputation rests pn-
marily on its "hard science" pro-
grams, including medicine, bi ology
and chemistry. Only 11 percent of
those familiar with the Irvine campus
said it is known for its p~s in the
humanities, arts and social sciences.
In contrast, the survey found that 68
percent of those familiar with Cal
State Fullerton recognized 1t for
busjncss programs, which drew little
attention at UCJ.
•Presented with a list of UCJ
activ1t1cs and programs. 58 ~rccnt
said they were familiar with the
university's medical research. Its
continuing or adult education pro-
grams pl.aced second, with 36 percent
rc<:0gn1uon.
•Respondents seemed to have
little knowledge ofUCl's main source
of income. One in five people said
they didn't know.
Another 22 percent mentioned
taxes or an unspecific government.
The state government was named by
20 percent as the main funding
source, while 19 percent thought
tuition is u c r s prunary source of
money. Another 17 per~nt believed
private donations arc the main rev-
enue source.
In fact. campus officials said, 32.5
percent of UCl's fundinJ comes from
the state. while another 29.7 percent
comes from operation of its teaching
hospital (UCI Medical Center). Stu-
dent fees, including tuition, only
provide 7.2 percent ofUCJ's funding.
Private donations also account for
less than I 0 percent of the school's
revenue.
•The survey indicated UCI has a
high profile in the news media. Four
out of I 0 respondents said they had
seen or heard news about UCI during
the previous three months. About
one-third said the stories concemed
growth or development associated
with the campus or about research
taking place at UCI.
The polling firm said private
industries that use advertising to
create a public image or stimulate
demand would envy UCJ's high level
of rccognjUon.
DELAY SOUGHT IN JAIL SITING •..
From Al
Fruit Street in Santa Ana where the
Phoenix House drug rehabilitation
center 1s now.
In a special emergency session
Monday, members of the Anaheim
City Council unanimously agreed to
send supervisors a resolution oppos-
ing suggested jail locations in their
city and asking for a full environmen-
tal review of all potential sites 1n
addition to an economic analysis.
Such studies would slow Jail con-
struction, something the board is
trying io avoid.
Disneyland, the Disneyland Hotel,
the California Angels and the Los
Angeles Rams are becking the
Anaheim council's action. All say a
prison would be inappropriate in
what Mayor Don Roth calls the "hub
of happiness."
.. You're talking about putting a
prison in the center of a tounst city
which doesn't make se.nse, quite
frankly, said Tom Seeberg, vice
president of publicity for the Cali-
fornia Angels. HavingaJail across the
stree't from Anaheim Stadium's
Douglass Street exit' "definitely
would have a profound effect on
attendance." he said.
Bob Roth. manager of pubhclly for.
Disneyland, also felt a Jail wouJd hurt
Anaheim's ima~e. "We JUSt felt a Jail
located in the vicinity of Disneyland
runs contrary to something we've
been working on for 50 years -a
wholesome. friendly atmosphere.
We're asked to put something in the
middle ot that that runs contrary to
everything people have worked hard
to create and maintain," he said.
Both men suggested that the board
is acting too hastily and that a more
thorough examination of altemat1 ves
is needed.
Anaheim is not alone in its dislike
for county plans to hurry along new
jail construction. The Santa Ana
Unined School Board is also dis-
mayed by the tum of events,
spokesperson Diane Thomas wd.
District officials had been discuss·
ing the possible purchase of paru of
the Mcfadden and Grand and Fruit
Street properties with the_ county
since last fall. she said. The district
needs the land for new school sites,
Thomas said.
Jn a hastily convened meeting
Friday, the school board voted to try
to buy the parcels from the county.
Thomas said the d istrict will initiate
condemnation proceedings 1f the
county proves uncooperative.
The district 1s particularly dis-
turbed by the idea of a jail at
Mcfadden and Grand avenues.
Thomas said. because it is construct·
mg a new high school right across the
street
Santa Ana officials Mooday were
also busy mapping out an approach to
the possibility that their city would be
called on to host another jail.
Details of a late afternoon City
Council meeting were not available.
Two supervisors, Roger Stanton
and Bruce Nestandc. say they favor
buildmg the Jail near Anaheim
Stadium because 11 is located 10 an
industrial area with few residents.
Neither expressed much sympathy
for arguments that having a Jail across
from the stadium might harm busi-
ness ... People are certainly not gorng
to stop going to the baseball games,''
Stanton said. "It's the airport re-
visited. Just don't put it near me,"
Ncstande said.
Supervisors Chairman Ralph
Clark. whose d1stnct includes
Anaheim. said he wants the new jail
to be built behind the existin~ one -
on 2.8 acres of coun ty land 1n Santa
Ana. "This makes more sense than
their sticking it on prime property
across from Disneyland" or across
from the stadium, he said.
But Stanton, Nestande and Super-
visor Harriett Wieder all rei'ected
Clark's idea because a jail cou d not
be constructed quickly o n such a
small site. The board plans to adapt
the design ofits inmate intake-release
center to the new jail to save ti me.
Tbc center's design wouJd not fit on
such a small parcel and coming up
with a new design would delay
construction, county staff said.
A spokesman for Wieder said she
had not yet decided what alternative
is best. Rod Speer said Wieder wants
to hear what the public has to say
before casting her vote.
Supervisor Thomas Riley also said
he is undecided on the matter though
he had hoped the site that Clark
favors would have been feasible.
CELEBRATING BEGINS EARLY AT PUB •.•
From Al
Kathy T1baldo, a hospital admm1s-
trator, said she's ta.Icing the entire
week off. On her hat, Tibaldo wore
eight green-and-white buttons -one
for each of the annual celebrations she
has attended at Malarky's.
"This is a very special day for me,"
Tibaldo said. "I get here early, smg
Irish songs, dance Jigs and meet all my
friends."
The St. Patnck's Day celebration ts
the bi~cst day of the year for
Malarky s, which was appropriately
adorned for the occasion.
A huge wbite-and..grcen bunting
hanging above the rectangular bar
spelled out "Erin Go Bragb" several
times. A huge green banner said
"l nsh Spoken Here'' and another sign
featured a countdown of days ap-
proachin.a St. Patrick's. Customers
were given green hats, buttons. green
plastic leis and green T 4shirts.
The bartenders wore crisp wbJ te
°c~"A1~E Daily Pilat
MAtN OFFICE
tuxedo shins with green bow tics and
cummerbunds. To complete the look,
however, they wore long, baggy shorts
-just to remind customers that this
is Newport Beach. not Dublin.
"I guess I'm one of the pnvileged,"
said bartender Ken Shaw, as he eyed
the crowd at the bar.
Despite the early start on dnnk.ing,
Shaw said the bartenders hoped to
pour as much coffee as ~n beer to
keep the partygoers upright, at least
through lunch.
"I got here early because )'OU can't
get ID here later on." said Frank
Bryant of San Oemcnte. who wore
green leprechaun shoes with the toes
curling up. .. I plan on sticking around here for
a little w)Ult, go home, then come
back later in the afternoon, Thcre'5 no
way I'm going to be able 10 sit)'erc all
da .. J~y Heller of Newport Beach and
her fncnd Tracey Franz of West-
minster also planned to leave after
only a couple of beers.
"We've stall got to~et to work by .9,"
Heller said. "But J m coming right
back afterward."
Lee Solow of Balboa bland had his
boss' permission to have the day off.
He's self-employed.
"Everybody is Jnsh on St. Patrick's
Day," he said. "The nice th mg about
coming here ID the mommg is that
you have a few drinks, have a good
time, then all of a sudden you notice
it's 9 at night. Then I ride my bike
home."
But having a good time, not getting
drunk., is the goal at MaJarky's. Even
that. however. is open to debate.
On one wall of the pub a smaJJ
plaque reads: "An Irishman is never
drunk as long as he can bold on to one
blade of grass and not fall off the face
of the earth."
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VOL 71. NO. n .
(
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TellJ us what's on )our mind
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Clear, tunny 9nd ~days at• predicted tor the OfMge
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North«ty Wlnde 15 to 25 mph wtll blOw ~ tti. ~ON
and pueee todty, ahlftll\g to northMlt on W9Cll\9eday. HIOh• today Wiii , .. from tM uppw eoa at tti. bMchee to
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upper 70t.
Lowa tonlOht wm range In the 401.
A amall craft advl.ory ha been poeted fort~ Inner coutaJ
waten, with combined .... ranging from S to 8 feet.
Weat to northwest wtndt wlll blow 12 to 22 knota today with
loc.lly stronger gutta Mlow tti. not1h OMyone.
Rough NU are forecut for the ooter COM1et wat91'9.
ranging from 8 to 14' feet today and 8 to 10 feet tonight.
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eQllll'ln 1:06a.m.
Boat fire called suspicious
A boat fire that may have been
started by an arsonist was quelled in
Huntington Harbor Tuesday.
T he fire on the 36-foot cabin cruiser
caused an estimated $1 ,SOO dama~e,
said Huntington Beach Fire Chief
Dennis Groat.
Firefighters responding to the 3:2S
p.m. call included Huntington Beach.
the Orange County Harbor Patrol
from Sunset Beach, Orange County
Volunteers and Seal Beach, Groat
said.
Harbor Patrol firefighters were on
the scene first. dousing the flames
with dry chemicals and water pump-
ed from an onboard pump.
The boat is reportodJy owned by
Moe Noorkhah, but no one was on
the vessel when fire fighters re--
sponded, Groat said.
However. people were seen on the
boat immediately before the fire, be
said.
Groat declined to elaborate pend-
ing completion of an investigauon.
MAYOR WANTS PROBE SPEEDED UP •.•
From Al
s1denng investing m the project. and
Councilwoman Barbara Brown voted
against the proposal.
Oeputy Uastnct Attorney John
Gier has been in vesttgating conflict of
interest charges that have been
leveled at Voss.
The mayor's open letter expressed
the mayor's growing impatience with
the continuing investigation.
"Although my rights to know my
accusers and to a speedy resolution of
the accustations against me are not
being technically violated since no
charges have been brought against
me. they arc in fact being violated
through the press," be charged.
Saying that unnamed sources have
been leveling charges against him to
the press as weO as the district
anomey's office, Voss said he should
know who his accusen are or Hicks
should drop the investigation and
"clear my name in the community
which I have served with integrity
and honesty for over 1 S years."
"This bas gone on quite long
enough!'' be concluded.
SECOND WITNESS IDENTIFIES RAMIREZ ••• From Al -·
was complicated by the fact that he that the release of Rarnirc'l's picture man and the rape of his fiance. The
speaks no English. His answers were to the news media before his arrest charges arc one count of attempted
given through a Spanish-speaking bad influenced the eyewitness identi-murder, two counts of rape, two
court interpreter. fication. counts of forcible oral copulation,
Early m has testjmony. Ramirez's Gallegos said he knew of the serial two counts of robbery and one count
lawyers, Daniel and Arturo killings -"Everybody was taUcing ofbWJlary.
Hernandez, who are unrelated. about it" -and le.new that he was Police have said satanic symbols
protested that the translator was not supposed to keep the doors and were scrawled at some of the murder
accurately interpreting the Gallegos' windows of h.is home locked at the scenes, and some victims' bodies
words. Both lawyers speak Spanish. time the Night Stalker was being were mutilated.
There was a bricfrecess, and a new sought. But be said he didn't see
translator was brought in. Ramirez's picture until the time ofh.is
A k.ey point disputed by the defense arrest.
on cross-examination was whether RamirC2, 26. appeared lcth~c
the witness had seen enough to Monday. He arrived in court rubbinJ
accurately describe the assailant. sleep from his eyes and· sat through
They noted that although Gallc,$OS some testimony with bis bead down
at one point said the man looked hke on the counsel table.
Ramirez. he gave a description of Jn addition to the 14 Los Angeles
someone shorter. murders. Ramirez is charged with
On the witness stand. Gallegos said five attempted murders, seven rapes,
the man he saw had dark., curly hair, five acts of oral copulation, seven of
was Hispanic or Asian and "about my sodomy, three lewd acts on children,
height." But Gallegos said be is 5-two kidnappings, 19 burglaries and
foot-8, while Ramirez stands over 6 six robberies.
feet. In Orange County, be is charged
Daniel Hernandez also tried to with eight felony counts in the
show, as he has with other witnesses, attempted murder of a Missjon Viejo
,
' •
BENNETT •.•
From Al
law enforcement first and foremost
We're going to focus on getting drugs
out of school, getting the pushen out
of school."
Bennett said he thin.ks competency
testing of teachers, such as that
recently conducted in Texas, will
spread to most states within five
ycan.
"It's the wave of the future," he
said. "No pass, no teach is a very good
idea."
A ootton sportshirt with
a unique pattern design.
sightly o~ and
oomfortat)e. In wh~e and .
burgundy by Merone.
WESTCLIFF PLAZA,
NEWPORT BEACH. CA
(714) 942-7081
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