HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-03-27 - Orange Coast PilotORANGE CO\Sf •
FOMCASTIONAI •
THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 1986
NB·poliCe call audit misleading
Lac o majorc rtme follow-up reports
explained ; d etectives keep t h em on file
By SUSAN HOWLE'IT The audit., which recommended °' .. ..._,......,. "co~siderable improvem~~t·: in de·
· lCCtlves' case loads and cntietzed the
Tbe_portion of an audit that says usc...of.apparenl "eiccsaive force" by ~rt Beach ~lice . ~~ves officers durin.a arresu, also sajd lhe
failed to follow up mves~ption.s on cost of runmnJ the department is
66 psroent of the m&JOr COIJ)ts more than double the national aver-~n~ in June I 98S is being called age of cities of comparable size.
misleading by polioc officials. Among the major crimes the audit
Nation
President Reagan said
today that the Nica-
raguan offensive In Hon-
duras was "a slap In the
face" to the House of
Representative./ Al
Entertainment
A mellower Pat Benatar
atlll thrllla her fans at the
lrvlne Meadows./ Al
INDEX
Advice and Games
Boating
Bulletin Board
Business
Claaslfled
Comics
Death Notices
Entertainment
Opinion
PaparazzJ
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
Television
.Weather
A10
84
A3
A6-7
85-7
A11
87
A9
A12
8 4
A3
83, 7-8
81-3
A9
A2
Cheese makers
face charges
BUUETIN (AP) -Sbty crtm1aa1
CMah were te be ftJed a.day aptut
Jallac9 Mexicu Pre4ecta lac. ud
twe <*llpuJ effldal1 a1 a renlt of
u lavntip d• lato lite dteese--
ltded dbeaJe epidemic tbt tilled
douu of Pffple lalt year, a defeue
lawyer uJd.
fte cbrlH tUt trW be fUed ate
i otas lo be all ml1demeaaor cbr1n, a~nlla1 to Roser Rola, lawyer for
lite compuy ud for Jall1co Preti·
deat Gary McPlltersoa.
He esplaJ.Ded tUt wllle ta1eattoa
of lllte clltefle CHted lite deatla1
blame4 u U1terio.l1, lave1ttpton
aever nowed tUt Jallaco wa1 dte
IOertt of lite 1J1terta m0tt0Cyto1ean
bacteria tUt lltealtla of.(lda.11 aald
ta.lated lite ~eeae.
Concert
• noise
battle
revived
Ferguson introduces
new bill aimed at
Pacific Amphitheatre
By TONY SAAVEDRA °' ................
Assemblyman Gil Ferguson has
taken up the battle to lower lhe
conccn noise driftinJ from the Pacific
Amphitheatre into Costa Mesa neigh-
borhoods.
The Newport Beach Republican
introduced a bill that would allow
Costa Mesa to immediately enforce
city noise limits on the I 8,000-
capacity arena.
Assembly Bill 4255 is similar to the
ill-fated anti-noise bill presented last
year by state Sen. John Seymour, R-
Anaheim. After months of intense
debate, Seymour withdrew the
measure Jan. 23 amid strong opposi-
tion from the amphitheater's influen-
tial Sacramento lobbyist.. retired
JUd&c Jame-S Garibaldi.
fferguson said he was recruited by
Costa Mesa officials to revive the
legislative battle as the concert arena
prepares to open its fourth concert
season next month on the state-
owned Orange County Fairgrounds.
Rock band Simple Minds is sched-
uled to take the stage April 22.
"J intend to pursue this until the
Pacific Amphitheatre and any other
commercial use on the fairgrounds is
brouJ)lt under control," Ferauson
said man igterview Wednesday. His
bill would exempt the annual county
fair in July.
Noise lawsuits have been filed
against amphitheater-owner Ned-
West. Inc. of Los Angeles by neigh-
(Pleue aee P'ltRGU80ft/A2)
aaid Newpon detectives did not
follow up were a S7S,OOO "residential
buralarv a $7 ,000 safe buralarY and a $24~000 ~y. It also said a rObbery
follow-up report was misaina and
none of the files showed the name of
the investiptor assianed to cases.
Newport Beach police spokesman
Trent Harris Did the findinp are
mialeadina because detectives keep
their own files on open cues and,
oopics of those files arc DOt ICOt to the
records division, wh.icb was audited.
"Records are being kept," Harris
Water baby
wd. "Each detective keeps a· lot on
each case. However the records
department is not notified until a case
is completed."
The audit team made its de-
termination after reviewing mes on
1,024 police cases loged in June
198S. Of those cues, 391 were
clauified as a maJor crime-murder.
forcible rape, robbery, all assaults,
buralarY, laroeny, motor vet\icle theft
and ars0n. the report said.
The 700-pqe report. released last
Swtmmtn. weather la bere &Caln. and Diane O'Dell and her
22-month-old daapter, DebOrab, of lrrine take a dip ln the
Newport-co.ta lleu TllCA pool. Deborah la &etttni an
ea.rlJ nut on 1-.nrlnC to ..tm tb.roqh a 8J>rtna clua offered ander the 1111perTlaton of aqaadca lnatructora.
week by Newport Beach City Man-
ager Robert Wynn. was cenerally
complimentary of the depanment,
thouJ.h it offered suuestions to
eliminate several problem areas.
The audit estimates the cost of the
Newport Beach PolWc Department is
S 173,063 per I ,000 res1denu. ~Jc
the national averaae for comparable
cities 1s $74,094. No recommen-
ditions were made on how to cut
costs.
The audit team critic1:ud jail
operations, includina inspection and
supervision prooedura it II.id c:oWd
eventually lead to irrju.ry of either 1
jatler or a pritoner.
The audit team recommended that
manaaement personnel continually revtew the use of detention to make
sure people arc jailed .. only when
abtolute)y oeceuary .. and then re-
leued or transferred u soon u
possible. ,,
· The audit team also recommended
that the city stop puttit11 women ia
thec1ty JaJI unless a matr0n is on duty.
(Pl--Ne JlfB POLICS/ A2)
Police probing
ct·eaths of Latino
and bar owner
Two victims of attack
a t Mesa gay bar were
s hot more than once
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of ... o.lr ... 141111
Homjcide detectives this morning
were still trying to unravel the
mystery surrounding the deaths of
two men found shot ans1de the office
of the Lion's Den tavern, a Costa
Mesa bar known for its homosexual
clicntele.
One shooting victim was idenufied
as bar owner Lawrence L. Rohr, 49.
The other man was described only as
a male Latmo, approximately 37
years old. Police were withhoklina his
name pending not.ification of family.
The bodies were found Wednesday
at the 719 W. 19th St barbyajanitor
at 4:47 a.m., said Costa Mesa police
Lt. Rick Johnson.
The Janitor!~ho detectives declin-
ed to identi~1., caUed Costa Mesa
police after discovering the victims
on the floor of the cramped office.
Johnson said an officer bad been
sent earlier to investigate .. breakin& ·
noises" reported in the alley behind
the bar about 3: I I a,m. Howcver1 the
patrolman could find notning
(PleueNe TAVBU/A2)
Courthouse escapee
captured in Irvine
By PAUL ARCBIPLEY
Of ... o.lr .... .._
An Irvine police officer chased and
captured a counhousc cscapct
Wednesday night after the fugitive
fled from Harbor Municipal Coun in
Newport Bea.ch about noon.
According to county Marshal
James Byham, the suspect, 1dent1fied
as Kenneth Mays of Santa Ana. was
scheduled foran afternoon hcanngon
charges of burglary, grand theft and
receiving stolen propeny.
Mays, who was wcanng black.Jail·
issue coveralls. was spotted several
times throughout the afternoon. but
eluded capture until he arrived at an
ex-friend's house on Mann Street 1n
Irvine. The former friend called the
police.
When offiQCR arrived, Mays tried
to run off. He wu captured by Irvine
police Officer Barry Aninq at 7:.CO
p.m., 1&.1d Lt. Mike White.
Mays was booked into Newport
Beach Jail.
Mays, 3.S, escaped after beina
interviewed by two public defenders
in an interview room, Byham said.
The prisoner and attorneys were
separated by glass above a desktop
and wallboard part_ition.
"We place him in the room, then
leave him.'' Byham wd. "Then.
when the attorney is finished, or if
there's a problem. the attorney can
push a button.
"In this case, the intervaewer insists
(Pleue eee P'UGITIVlt/ A2)
Police Bowl title, new pet
brighten life for teen-ager
Fog delays
flights ,
snarls When Bernadette Kemp p ve birth
to her son, her hopesandexpectations
surro unding the new life were devas--
tated by her doctor's-l>rediction: Her
child wasn't expected to live to be 3.
But I 3 years later. Kemp says her
teen-ager 1s a joy she and her husband
Chuck have been fortunate to raise.
''He'sa great kid," she said ... A real
blessing."
Kemp agreed to to be interviewed
on behalf of her son Dou~ who is
often too weak due to his illness to
talk at length.
She described her son's life as often
lonely compared to other boys his
age. He suffers from a rare form of
muscular dystrophy called Werdina -
HotTman Syndrome, which forces
him to spend several hours daily 1n an
iron lung.
Muscular d~strophy 1s a muscle
disorder that 1s suspected of being
inherited, but its cause is unknown,
SUSAN
HOWLETT
Focus ON THE NEws
she said. She knows of no other
relatives who have had the disease.
The disease appears at an early age,
affecting male children more often
than females. The swellini of some
muscle ussue and the detenoratation
of others causes disarrangement of
connective tissue and abnormal ac-
cumulations of fat between muscle
fibers.
The condition makes it vital for the
Garden Grove boy to sleep in an iron
IUOf every night and spend more time
in 1t when he has complications,
Kemp said. The breathing device is
essential because most victims of the
disease die of pneumonia, she added.
"He's usually in pretty good spirits,
but it's gotten a ljttle worse," she said.
Kemp explained that Doug is now
entenng his teens bound to a wheel-
chair and accompanied by a medical
aide wherever he goes.
"It isn't easy," she said. "It's
starting Lo bother him more now that
he's a teen-ager."
But through the efforts of volun-
teers at the Ma.Ice-A· Wish Foun-
dation, the spirits of the ill youth have
already been lifted. It looks like he
will1soon have some company of the
camne ki nd.
~rae and Celeste Macer of
(Pl_.. tee POLJCS/A2)
County granted month's delay
to reduce overcrowdlng at }all
By LISA MAHONEY °' ..............
Orange County has won a month's
delay in mak.ina further court-<>r·
dercd inmate reduct1on1 at the Main
Jail hT Santa Ana.
Instead of bc1na pared to 1,400
inmates by April I, t.heJad population
may climb to I ,500 inmates a day
throu&h May l, a federal court Judae
said Wednesday.
The month-Iona. I00.1nmate
repneve was requested by the
Shenfrs Depanment The current
I 1$()().mmatc cap has been 1n effect
since Jan. IS.
Onnae County ShcnfT Brad Gate,
aaid he ~•II use the time arantcd by
U.S. Otstnct Court Judge William P
Gray to prepare statist1cs to blclc up
his claim lhat he has done all he can to
reduce lhe Main Jail's inmate popu-
lation without releas1n1 felons.
Oates told Orly last Thunday that
aJI inmates wbo can be transferred to
branch jails or releucd pending tnal
arc routinely removed from the
crowded Matn Jaji. Only prisonen
who pose a danaer to the community
arc lcept at the county'• only maxi-
mum security jatl. he said.
Oray wu m Santa Ana last Wttk for
Gates' contempt heanna. Gray or-
dered Gates to explain why inmate
totals have exc::ecdcd the Jan. 15
1nmatecapofl ,SOOon five occasions.
The JU<Jae accepted Oates' expla-
nation that he thou&ht the hm1t
apPlied onJy to the jail's midnialn
pnsoner count, but Gray warned the
sheriff that be would be pena.lited if
inmate totals exceed 1.SOO at any
time in the future.
Gray also den.led a request to waive
the new 1,4()()..lnmate cap. AJlh~
be sa.1d he wanted to cooperate with
the counry, Gray said be was ao1na to
require ''u much Pf'OlftSI to 6e made
(on inmate reduct1on1) as is teUOn·
ably post.Ible."
However. Oray did leave lhe door
open for the county to uk him •fo
for a wa1veT. If the ahcnff "finds
himself in a lituat1on wh~ it's either
let a dlnterous felon p> free or violate
the coun order. I want co know 1bouc
(Pleue ... .JAIL/ A2)
RMCae
ROIMla employeee Brett llorrta (left). 17, and Mark ~. 24, N&Cted ca-1U11 wed.Deeesa.,. re.cutni
BaJ ... lluln._ after abe crulaed Iler car throafb a bloci
wall ud lnfO a ll1rimln1q pool nut door to the Hant1nCton
._cla dealenblp. See atory Pate A2.
OC traffic
By LAURA MERK
Of -Delly ..... 9WI
Heavy fog may have dampened
Ea.ster vacation beach plans. caused
traffi~ snarls and forced fhght delays
at John Wayne A1rport this monung.
but no weather-related accidents were
rt'ported along the Onnae Coast.
Onl} a few flights were delayed this
morning a1 John Wayne Atrpon
bccau~ of f<>&. according to Steve
Pansk} a supervisor in thc control
tower
Man) incommg nights were dt--
la)'ed prt'VIOUSly at other arrporu.
Pansky said. so fewer flights were
departing this morning.
Tht f<>&. which has been an early
morning and tvcn1na visitor alona
tht coast this week. lif\ed about an
hl)Ur after the 11rport was scheduled
to open at 7 a.m .. he said.
V1s1b1hty increased to a male and a
quantr from one-sixteenth of a mile
earlier in the momina. Pansky said.
adding that normal fliaht Jehcdul~
rc,umcd by a.m.
No weather-related arodents were
reported anywhere on the Oranac
Coast
1 he fi rolled 1n off the ocean
behind a ~treating htgb-prcssurc
dome which brought record~brcabna
heat to Southern C"ahfonua on
Wednesday. the National Weather
~ICC reported
Coastal temperatures sho\11d ~
t~ttn 6 7' loda) with inland
1cmpcratut'C1 reachna the low-.IOs
Hu} ,un hint and icmpcratu.ra an
the h1ah 60a to low 70. are c~~
Fnda) -.ith the m~ury dippina
fun.her over the Wttktnd
low clouds and fot arc e•pec:tcd
aptn Fnday, ~rdtna co the N•-
11onal Weather Serv1oe
• I
'~
AA • °""'9 C<*C DAILY PfLOT/ Thureday, Match 27, 1He
Honda workers save driver
after car plunges into pool
By PHIL SNEmERMAN °' ..............
Employees of a Hunti~ton Beach
car dealership were credited today
with savina the life of an elderly
woman whose car embed throuah a
block wall and plunpd into a swim·
01in1 pool. .
Mark Ottenbacb, 24, and Breit
Morris. 17, both employed by Hunt·
iogton Beach HondaJumpcd into the
pool and pushed the Ooatina car to the
side of the pool. Then they helped 77-
year..old Halene Harpaves of Hunt-
mgton Beach th.rough a window,
Polict rcponcd.
A third employee of the dealership
at 19232 Beach Blvd., servi0t man·
•' Leroy Halstead. us11tcd at
poolside.
.. They're heroes," said Dale Falk,
the dealership's d!n:ctor of partS and
service. ..The lady could b.ave
drowned.''
Falk said the woman's 1983 Honda
Ci vie sank to the bottom of the pool
immediately after she was ttseued.
But he said Hargraves "never even.
got weL"
Martha Werth, a Hunungton
Beac h Fire Department
spokeswoman, said Hargraves re-
quired only minor first ajd after the
incident
The woman b.ad driven to the
dealership for servicina at 7 a.m.
today, aocordina to police and fire
department rcPorts. For an un·
detemuncd reason, the woman's car
bqan aooclcrauna throuah the car lot.
struclc. a planter, embed t.hrouah a
block. wall and plunged into the
swim mini pool of an adjacent home.
Residents of the home were away
on vacation when the accident oc-
curred, Falk said.
Initial Police rcpons said the
woman's accelerator mig)lt have
stuck. But eJl.lk said a check after the
car was raised found no problem with
the throttle.
TA VERN DEATHS PROBED IN MESA •••
From Al
suspicious in the area.
Johnson said both men wen: shot
more than onoc.
While besitatin~ to rule out robbery
as a Possjble mollve, Johnson said at
appeared that no money was talcen
from the bar. Then: also appeared to
be no signs of forced entry.
He added police did not know the
relationship between the victJms, but
said the unidentified Latino was
apparently not a bar employee.
"We really have no idea why they
were in the office at that time of the
morning," Johnson said.
Autopsies on Rohr and the other
victim were scheduled for today.
Sgt. Tom Boylan, head of Costa
Mesa's vice detail, classified the
tavern u a weU-k.nown py bft,r.
It is flanked by a grooery store and a
neighborhood market in a
predominately Hispanic commercial
center, where many of the storefront
signs are written in Spanish. Among
the businesses arc a tortillaria, a
panadcria, a carnioeria and a dis-
coteca -Mexican tonilla, pastry,
meat and record shops.
Scattered graffiti marks the wall of
the alley where police were searchin!
th.rough a ycUow1 "Hooey Bee'
Datsun parked behind the bar's rear
door. The car reportedly belonged to
the unidentified victim.
An employee at a liquor store
across the street from the Lion's Den
said hrs boss, Frank Showalter, was
locking up at 3:30 a.m. when be heard
two loud pops and a car screeching
away from behind the tavern.
The empJoyee, Mike Williamson,
said Showalter knew Rohr because
many of the same customers ~uent
both the bar and the Sunshine Liquor
store.
Williamson said Showalter walked
across the street to check, but found
both the front and back doors locked.
Showalter repon.odly waited until
the day shift employees arrived, and
apparently went mto the bar with the
JaIDtor, Williamson said.
Showalter told Williamson the
other victim was the doorman. fleP,erter PaaJ A.rd.lpley COD·
trta..i.I le .... •tory
NB POLICE AUDIT CALLED MISLEADING •••
From Al
Female prisoners usually are trans-
ferred to the Orange County Jail, and
pan-time matrons arc available on
call, the rePon said. "But females arc
sometimes held an the Newpon
Beach Police Depanment jail up to
two hours without a matron on duty."
The audit also cnticized the scxuaJ
and racial mix of the Police force and
urged the city to increase the number
of women on the force.
Of the I 39 sworn personnel. two
are female. There is one black officer
and two others arc manontics.
"Over the years, the depanment
has not been fully successful an
achieving a police worltfon:c reflec-
tive of the characteristics of the
community as a whole," the rcPort
said. "Espcoally underrepresented
arc the females, who make up 51
percent oftbc population of Newport
Beach. but represent only about 1. 7
percent of the sworn strength of the
department."
In the wake of City Council
concern on the issue. the audit team
also looked into several complamts of
excessive force. It concluded the
dcpanment's aggressive patrol tactics
should be revised.
"The reducuon of e~ccss1ve-forcc
complaints and claims should be a
high pnonty objective for the depart·
mcnt," the rePon said.
The report noted that complaints
were filed agamst 32 Police em-
ployees an a 30-month period ending
Last June and said the department
"bas a reputation for maintaining a
strict enforcement Policy and for
being at times unnecessarily beavy-
handcd."
The audit recommended that once
a new pohcc chief as select~ he
should review the department's en-
forcement Policy to detennjne "if
greater discretion and more selective
aggressiveness will better serve the
contemporary Policing needs of the
commmumty."
Acting Chief Arb Campbell de-
fended the dcpanment on 1,he issue
last week. saying complaints against
officers multiply through publicity,
and speculating that the media attcn-
uon given to the audWs findings will
produce more excessive force claims.
Wynn said at a press conference
last week that city officials wilJ not
comment on the vahdjty of the audit
until a new police chief bas been
selected to ~lace Charles Gross,
who Stepped down in January. City
officials hope tO select a new chjcf
sometime in April.
The audit was requested last sum-
mer when juvenile vandalism and
other problems plagued the Balboa
Perunsula, causing questions to be
raised about the deployment of
officers, Wynn said.
But the audit was prompted by
other factors as well, according to City
Council members, who called the
study "a good managing tool."
Every city department in Newport
Beach -except the fire department
-has been studied by .an indepen-
dent audit team. The latest report,
which cost the city about $60,000,
was the first comprehensive n:view of
the police department in city history
and is the most extensive study done
of any city agency.
The audjt was conducted by the
National League of Cities Police
Consultation Scrvict, an indepen-
dent finn based in Washington, D .C.
FERGUSON REVIVES NOISE BILL ...
From Al
boring residents, the City of Costa
Mesa and even the arena's landlord
-the state-apPomtcd Orange Coun-
ty Fair Board.
The legal battle by the c11y and
homeowners has been stalled over the
question of whether local ~overn·
mcnt should have the ability to
regulate act1v1t1cs on state property
side."
Representatives from Ned· West
could not bt-reached for comment
Wednesday evemng.
JUSI an old man whose name and fame
have controlled the Legislature,"
Ferguson said." His time 1s ~st due."
He added that the bill would
probably find more fa vor in the
Assembly than in the Senate because
the d1stncts are smaller and there is
more opportunity for contact with
local governments.
"The Assembly is closer to the
24 -...
Coast sipping pea soup today
H.vy tog blenketed the Southern c.Jlfomlt co.t Mrty
today, torctng llUthottttM to oanoel landlnga or at lteet 15
alf'llnera at lot Angetee lnternetlonel Airport.
The hlQ~• ione continued to move N11, and after anott~ hot day tod1y, pertly cloudy weather wlll move In rrom
the ocean fll"lday, the wee1her Mtvtc. predicted. That wttt rnMn
lower tefnS*ltur .. throughout the~. morning and evening
low cloud•. rog llOng the cout, and high cloudlneea In the mountain• and~.
Alona the O(wnge Coet1 there wtll be increuing night end-
momlng fow c:tou«M end toa tonight becoming pertty cloudy on
Frldey. Hlgha today from U to 72 at the beecMI to the mld-70•
to low 80t Intend. Lows tonight In the upper 40t and 5Qa.
From Point Conception to the Mexican Border -lnMf
wet9'a: Light and v1rtable wind• night and morning hour•
~lny WMt to .outhweet 8 to 15 knota In the afternoon and
evening h0ul'1 Frldey. w .. terty lwell 1 to 2 feet. Extentlve rog
and low cloud• tonight With partial olearlng Friday.
U.S. Tempe 74 ..
81 30
41 21
75 411
15 u
7$ 51 ~~ :: Calif. Temps
$1 " 1• es 7' 411 Hlall. io. !or 24 ~~•I 5 • m.
83 86 ... ....., 78 112
T3 ~ Eaw.U to •• 74 40 ,.,_ 1t 66
.. ~ L..-.-~ ~
70 ~ Lot~ ti 83
111 112 o.1ena eo se
83 31 PMO AollM IO 411
74 " Aed llluft 78 50 711 112 ~City IO 55
et 34 a.cir~o n 111
7t 82 hMnM 82 111
eo 11 a.n DltOO ea se
711 5$ 8en Fr.-11 IO
81 41 Sent•..,.. 711 52 ,. 4t 810Clll10n 78 60
5 7 40 Hlgl'I, IOw fof 2• llOun endlnQ •I 5 P m.
78 ~ APC* Vt/IWy 64 40 87 32 ..,..ow 18 52
Surf Report
IGllaMAN
2"°°j poor
2 poor
2 poor 2 poor
2 poor
2 poor
Extended
n M 8lg 8e11t 117 27
73 ... llWlop 77 33 --~-------75 5$ lllylhe t3 M 18 4 1 CalellM SI 52 tl 4t Long.-, 71 53 Tides
.. L.e H IO 72 .,
.. 45
27 22 n 60 ta ·111 71 ff t4 ~
78 43
.. 48 71 60
71 40 &4 311 .. 5i
711 47
71 53
M 32
13 29
73 M 12 33
73 S4
75 52
71 31
65 M
115 2e 83 31 31 111
81 ..
15 -06 38 31
17 2t 13 31
Ill 47
112 33 so to 71 $7 &4 32
78 ... n 64 ... ,,
MonnMe ... 5S ----------Mont..,. 73 ...
Smog Report :..="a-:11 ~~ ~ TOOAY
Ont.no ~ 52
3.44 p'" t:&e p.m ,.., .. ., Ot II.I
Pollutttll attnd41rd lndll.lt (Jlel) 0.100 Pllm 89'lngll 114 57 fOOd, 100-200 uMMltM\il for......,,. P...o.M 11 ..
4·31 Lm
10'4la.m
4 14 p'"
10-33 p.m
oe
4..2
11 s.a '*"*· ~ unhMftllful tor ... ,._.,. , , 49 *-600 -OOUL FlrWI llgw• le Sin IMmlfdlno M 41
todey'I p.i IOrecMl, __, 11 pr9'llOue Sen 09brW 111 114
_,-. M1...o oe1 Sen JoM IO 47
s.tltl AM 71 52 .. S4 64 115 75 Ill
74 42 71 116
Oreno-Cou1............ .. ........... ll&-131 a.M• Clw 75 41
lnlend Orenv-County ........ " ..... 75-131 T8'1oe Vt//Wy IO 28
Sun ... 1 loeley t1t:10 p m , ,.._ Ftldey 111 5·41 a.m. end eet1 IQMI al 8: 11 p.n1.
Moon r-. 10dl)r et 'l.20 p.m., ..,..
Friday •t 8· 10 a m end ,.._ 1QM1 at
5·41un Melropolllen Loi AnoML ........ ll&-200 Y oe.nlle vty Ill 44
FUGITIVE CAPTURED IN IRVINE ..•
From Al
she pushed the button, but the JaiJcr
djdn't gel the light."
Aft.er the attorneys left, Mays
kicked out the wallboard below the
dcslc and glass partition. crawled
through and escaped o ut the inter-
viewer's door, Byham said.
He wasn't missed until he was
called to court for the afternoon
session, andJaders realized he wasn't
with the other pnsoncrs.
County marshaJs were assisted 1n
their search by Ne~rt Beach police
and the county Shenffs canine unit.
Mays' escape was the first in at least
three years, Byham said. Between 40
and 50 prisoners are held at the court
each day, he said.
Byham said Mays bas several
altascs, and that his past skinnisbcs
with the law involved minor offenses
such as bad checks and traffic
violations.
He also said changes were in order
for the internee interview rooms.
"The wallboard's not going to be
wallboard anymore." he said.
JAIL REDUCTION DEADLINE EXTENDED •••
From Al
it," Gray said.
Gates said he knows he can't keep
the Main Jail population below 1,400
even with the recent addition of 180
beds at Theo Lacy Branch Jail in
Orange. Reducng inmate totals to
I ,.SOO is djfficult enough, be sa1d.
So Gates as.lced Deputy County
Counsel Ed Duran to contact Gray
Wednesday and ask for an extension
whiJe the Sheriffs Department comes
up with a system to idcntifyJ'ust who
as being held at the Main ail on a
week-by-week basis and why.
Gates believes his dei;>anment
should be indefinitely . relieved of
having to meet the 1,400-inmatc cap
because of the steps the county has
taken to reduce overcrowding at the
Mam Jail.
A year ago, Gray found both Gates
and the Board of Supervisors in
contempt for 1~noring a 1978 order to
reduce crowding at the jail. At the
time. more than 2,000 prisoners were
ID the Mam Jail and some were forced
to sleep on the floor in dayrooms.
shower stalls and near toilets. The
jail's capacity was 1,191.
To draJ n some prisoners away from
the Main Jail, tbe Board of Super-
visors authorized a tent city and
modular housjng at James A. Musick
Honor Farm in El Toro. Tbcy also
expanded a detention-n:leasc pro-~m in which people booked at the
Jaji are screened to sec if they arc
eligible for a reduction in bail.
Supervisors have also designated a
tentative site for a 1,000 to 1,500-bcd
medium to maximum-security jail in
Anaheim. In additjon, they ac-
celerated environmental studies on
that location and at the honor farm.
where a total of I ,53S minimum
security beds will be needed by the
year 2000.
Dick Herman, an American Civil
Llbenies Union attorney, said he
opposed the county-requested ex-
tension in a conference call with Gray
and Duran Wednesday.
Hennan, who brought the con·
tinued oycrcrowding to Gray's atten-
tion last year. maintains that fewer
than 10 P.Crcent of the inmates a t the
Main Jail pose a danger to society.
He wd there arc plenty of things
the county can do to move more
inmates out of the jail, including
scheduling night and weekend ar-
rajgn.ments, using parole and other ~lte~atjv~ ~ntencing programs, and
1SSwng citations for some misde-
meanor offenses.
"The . county's just . not using
alternatives to mcarcerauon the way
they should," Herman said.
To support his claims. Herman
said he wtll do his own survey of who
is in the jail.
A hearing on the matter will be held
sometime next month. In an attempt to keep the peace
with Its neighbors, the Fair Board has
taken legal acuon through the state
attorney general's office to quiet
down the 2'h-year-old amphitheater.
As wntten. the measure would
allow the city to regulate noise at the
fairgrounds from any outdoor theater
with a capacity of at least 15.000 The
only such facility ts the Pacific
Amphitheatre, believed to be the
largest outdoor theater on the West
CoasL ~all~wnMpec~"hesa~."Myri~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ colleagues come from cities and httle
Meanwhile. Ferguson introduced
his measure Feb 21 to keep the
pressure on Ned-West as well as on
the Fair Board to control the allegedly
no1sv tenant.
The amphitheater leases a portion
of the fairgrounds under contract
with the Fair Board. offic1ally known
as the 32nd D1stnct Agncultural
Assoc1at1on
"l find II inconcc1 vablc that the
state can enter a commercial contract
simply to make money and be
un10h1b1ted by the local laws,"
Ferguson said. "(Just thank it's unfair
and I'm very much on Costa Mesa's
Ferguson said he has also asked the
Assembly's legal counsel, Bion
Gregory, for an opinion on whether
commercial ventures on state prop-
erty arc immune from local laws.
Preliminary research indicates
commercial activities must abide by
local zoning and nuisance ord1-
nanccs, Ferguson reported.
"We have three court decisions
that are nght on the money," he sajd,
adding he expects a final report by tbe
end of the week.
Despite the demise of Seymour's
ball at the hands oflobbyist Garibaldi
and Senate opponents, Ferguson said
he as not ant1m1dated.
"I have no use for Ganbaldi; he's
towns, too."
Ferguson said the biJI was sched-
uled to go before the Assembly's
Local Government Committee in
April.
The Western Fairs Association,
which represents many of Cali·
fomia's fauwounds. sent Ferguson a
letter of protest claiming the measure
would cause serious damage to state
fairs.
The bill's approval would set a
dangerous precedent of forcing fair
boards to share their authority with
local JOVcmments. sajd the letter by
association Assistant Executive Di-
rector Stephen Chambers.
I
POLICE BOWL TITLE CHEERS TEEN •..
From Al
Lakewood have donated a full-bred
Gcnnan ~hcphcrd puppy to Doug to
gi ve ham some companionship while
he 1s attached to the mechanical
breathing device. SpeciaJ training for
the dog has been donated by Bob and
Marla Taylor. also of Lakewood.
Doug will get the puppy an a couple
of weeks. When it gets strong enou&h.
at will be able to do several helpTul
chores. includina pulling Doug's
wheelchair. his mother said.
But the gift as not the only honor
Doua has received recently.
He has been named honorary
~~~~E Daily Pilat
MAIN OFFtCE
'10 W""1 11•? ~' Cotl•t M .... CA
Mto! •00<-Bo• • !ieO Co.ta ,,..,.. CA 911116
capuun of "Cop Bowl VIII," an
annual football game presented by
the police depanments of Costa
Mesa, Huntington Beach, Irvine,
Garden Grove, Buena Park and
Fullerton.
The game wiJJ be played Apnl I I at
7:30 p.m . at LeBard Stadium on the
Orange Coast College campus.
Dou' attends Carl Harvey Or·
thopcd1c School in Santa Ana, and aoes to three classes a day at nearby
Carr lntennediatc School, his mother
said.
She considers the last decade with
.
her son "a blessing" because of
Doug's terminal diagnosis. But Kemp
said she and her husband have had
some close calls.
"He's had pneumonia a bunch of
times. and we almost lost ham when
he was S," she said.
The key 1s just living one day at a
time, enjoyina the time they have
toaether, she said. The Kemps have
spent the last decade appreciating the
lime they have had t<>sc:ther and
trying to prepare tbemselvC$ for the
day it may all end.
"You never know," said Kemp. "It
could be any tJ me."
C-lecl-&42·54119 -'.Ot0t• &-62 4321 Justcall 642-6086 MonOtrJ·'•te»r ~ rou oo
l'IOI ,,...... "°"' ~ lly s 30p"' CMl»l<lr• tom ...,, "°" C""Y ... De .,..._., COP'I"..,..' •!HIJ .Y•"llf Coe•• li'ub"V"IJ "-"' ,.._,
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"""'' ·~ .... , De •tO'OOUC.0 •<"OU1 tO«• .. I* ..._ °' cnor•-o~· t -
$.c,.,.,., '"'• 1""'•11" e>e>C 11 Cati• Iii.,. 1.4•1r><~·• !ll"1! , .. ll-001 """'' "'..,.. ..,,, ~· ... ,. l "''("'"''
Dy ..... t 7 00 ""'>' " ,
YOl.. 71, NO.•
What do you hke about the Dally Pilo t? What
don't you hkc? Call the number above and your
message will be recorded. transcn~ and de·
Livered to the appropriate editor.
The same 24-hou.r answcnng serv1~ may b(
used to n:cord letters to the editor on any topic
Contnbutors to our Letters column must include
their name and telephone number for verificatio n.
Tclh uJ what's on your mind
I
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...
Blood1nobile set
for county stops
County baeksAIDS support plan
American Red Crou Bloodmobiles will be
placed in 26 different Jocatlon1 throucbout Oranae
County durina April. Citiz.ens also may donate
blood Monday lhrouah Friday It the Hun\inaton
Beach blood tet"Vioc center, 18822 Be.ch Blvd.
Local Bloodmobile stops and information
numben include the Laauna Nisuel Women's Cub,
24600 la Plata (83 l-l 93'7), April 1j, Fountain Valley
School District, I 741S t.os Jaro.ioes (963-83S9).
April l O; Community Lutberao Church, 19900 £1
Toro Road. El Toro (833-1720), April 12, and
Saddlebeck tiospital, 2445 I Via Eatrada, 1..a&una
Hills (83S-5381, ext. 31), April 14.
Cllfld.IJood memou talk Rt
Rememberin& childhood, and beaJina it, is the
theme of a psycbol<>sic:al workshop scheduled for Satu~y at the Q;nter for. Hu~an Ecology, in
Huntmgton Beach s Sea.cliff' Village shoppina
center.
Eric Ian Schneider will conduct the atl~y
seminar, which begins at .8 a.m. The tuition is $50
and further information is available at 960-3740.
Plutlc •urgeon to •peak
Dr. Michael J. KJlmper, a P.lastic surgeon, will
be the guest speaker at Tuesday s luncheon mcetin~
oflhe Huntington Beach Kiwanis Oub at Francois
Restaurant on Beach Boulevard.
The discussion will include the various types of
cosmetic surgery. Call 846-8282 for additional
information.
Blood preaare cJlnlc Rt
Indian Summer Homes, in cortjunction with
American Savi°"', will host a free blood pressure
clinic Tuesday from 10 to 11:30 a.m. at the El Toro
office of the savings and loao firm, at El Toro Road
and Pasco de Valencia.
Further information may be obtained by calling
380-1703.
Rables clinic announced
A neipiborhood, low<.c>st anti-rabies vacci-
nation cliruc for dogs will be held Tuesday eveniDf at
the Onnge County Animal Shelter, 561 City Drive
South in Orange.
The vaccinations will be given from 7 lO 8:30
p.m. at a cost of$3 per dog. Call the animal shelter at
634-7287 for more.information.
Water Afety program
The Orange County Aquatics Academy, a joint
eff on of lhe Orange County chapter of the American
Red Cross and the city offrvine, will offeu course in
water safety beginning Tuesday and running
through May I at Heritage Park in lrvine.
The provam offers courses in lifeguard train-
ing, first aid, cardiopulmonary rc$UJCttation and
advanced lifesaving. Call the Red Cross at 835-5381 ,
exL 233, for details.
School meeting planned
Marco Forester Junior High School will host a
special PTSA meeting Wedneday evenin3 in the
library of the school, 25601 Del Avion1 San Juan
Capistrano, open to all parents and cbilaren.
OT. Mike Anf.ioli, a family therapist. will give a
presentation on hving and copin.a with adolescent
behavior. Elections will be held for new officers of
the group.
Health Care Agency to address unmet needs
of counttans suffering from deadly disease
AIDS bu beee ~ mueh limited to
idmtifyint ud cnckina ~ But wtiile all invOlved with AIDS
~ lllf'OC that the county bu done
an exemplary job in thoee ua.s, educ.
tion.. PfC!Yenuon and J)ltieat services have
been left to patG'OOU "®91 dependent
on state .,anta llld J)rivat.c donatioM.
BJ LISA MAHONEY °' .. ...., ........
Ora.nae County's willinaness to develop
a muter plan for dealina wilh AIDS bu
raiaed hopes among community-bated
AIDS education and suppon aroups that
financial help may soon follow.
County supervison voted Tuesday to
prepare a muter plan that will document
resowus available to people with ac-
quired immune deficiency syndrome, a
deadly disease that destroys the body's
immune syitem.
The plan, to be prepared by the Health
~ Aaency, also will identify the unmet
needs of AIDS patiebu in 0ran&e County.
Tbat•s seen as good news l>y groups
providing AJDS-related servic;es to the
county's 84 surviving AIDS patients and
lhe 116 othen with non-fatal AIDS-related
symptoms.
"We(in Oranp:Coun~)are not really u
prepared to handle this disease as we like to
think we are. We don't have a good plan.
We're not as proactive as we should be,"
said Pearl Jemison-Smith, a nurse
epidemioloeist at UC Irvine Medical
Center in Orange.
Jemison-Smith formed the AIDS Coali-
Pilot carrier honored
tion To Identify Onnae County Needs
more tbao a year aao to cootclinat.c the
effons of the nwnerous pnvate, non-profit
and aovemmental •ndes involved with
the AIDS epidemic.
ACTION bu been wOJ'k.Jna on an AIDS
The 1tate•1 AIDS Advitory Comm1nee
took Orante County to wt in January for
not providina enouab of a teedenbip role in edutaitina the pubt.ic and preveJlti.QI the
TIJecoaatytr .. crltlcUedla January
for a.at provldl'W eao~ leadenldp bJ
preveatbJg the •pread of the dllleue
muter plan of its own, but the coelitioo
has no full-time staff to bony lhe project
alona.
Jcntisoo..Smith said she a.sk.ed Health
Care Aaency Director Tom Uram to help
pay for secTCtarial help for ACTION's
plan, but was told there no money was
budaeted for such a project. Now that the
county is aoi.na to develop a plan of iu
own. ACTION wants to be sure it is part of
the process, she said.
"We feel we played an important part in
instipting thia. We're goin& lo stay and
make sure the needs are met." she said.
To dale, OranJC County•s approach to
spread of the disease.
Saying that responsibility for public
health resu with county aovemment in
California. committee Cbair!Pan BNClC
Decker uracd county official• to take the
burden off" the backs of community aroups
by underwritina their procrams.
Spurred by Decker's comments, 2nd
District Supervisor Harriett Wieder bepn
looking into the sitution and q:reed wilb
ACTION that a master plan is needed.
ln a letter to other board members,
Wieder uked them to support develop-
ment of a muter plan as well as the
provision of ~p-to-date AIDS information
to public libraries.
0.UJ PU~ oabu.ier Karen A. Wlttm.er pre•eata a
plaqae to P'Uot curler Brent Velln, wlao woo an
boaorable mention ba tlae California Jlfewepaper
Yoath Foundation'• ba.tn .. aclllnemeat
awarda propam. Brent'• father wu alM a canter
for the Dailj Pllot ID Ide Joatb. Wilen Brent mOTea
OD to hJ.e Datjob be wU1band09er h~=per roafe to 1lla yoa.naer brother, Rpn. . are,
from left. Liane lielcl by ber fatlaer-Bob Velln,
R)'IUl. mother DonDa: BreDt. Pilot drcaladoa man••• Art Broadatoclt, d.latrlct mana•er Jerry
hits and Wittmer.
The coatiibutioD in 11111f time ~
to come UJ> with 1 muier Pia is wdcome,
Jemt.oo-Smith aid. Sbe alto nOCbd that tbe Health Care ~KY it IMhtiq ACTION with the
~tioD of a put appticatioll that
could meu S l .6 nullion -IOr AIDS pro-
pa.m.s over the nen four~
To ,et the money, Al.OS wvice
providnl such u a~ "'-itall, lkilled
nunina. &cilitiet, the V'i:ii. Nunet Aslociation and the AIDS ServiC:a FOQn-
dation mUJ1 form 1 couortium to provide
..U ncasury levds of ~ to AIDS
patienu tn Oranae Co\ulty, Jemilon·
Smith said.
"We are womna totet1\er rilbt now, but
I think that havina some money would
really facilitate thcle eff'orta." abe IUd.
Werner K.~ director of tbe AlOS
Respon1e Prolram of 9raDF County and
a m~ber of ACTION, apud that a
mu* plan is needed to keep UICk of
AJ.0$ ~ but be believfll tbe county
should contract with ACTION to do it.
ACTION memben kn01IP .what pro-
grams are available and where let'Vice PPI
art, be said.
He wsed Health ~A#DCY officials to
draw on that pool ol kDOwledtc in
developina the muter plan and tben to
decide what steps to take next.
.. Suppon (services) and prevention are
an issue. The county really needs to
address what plans they have to
provide ... suppon." Kuhn said.
Badhamset
for trip
to Turkey
Rep. Roben E. Badham, R-Newpon
Beach, will depart Tuesday for lstanbul,
Turkey, to participate in an international
conference on Turkish-American rela-
tions.
The trip is not being paid for by U.S.
taxpa)'.en. said Badham aide Willam
Schreiber.
Badbam and four other conpus:ional
representatives will attend the four~y
conference hosted by Istanbul's Political
and Social Studies Foundation. The foun-
dation is a non-profit organization that
conducts research in social and political
problems of Turkey.
~A cooll.Ducd ~-level prC9COCC in
Turkey is vital at this Juncture, particularly
considering the recently concluded talks
between the Secretary of State and Turkish
leaden OD the illue of U.S. bue lf':ee: menu, .. Bedbam aid. "'Thil was an ideal
~rtu:l•.at DO coat to~ tupayen, to ditCUll .... fur1ber wttb the leaders
of a country that it IO vital to the -NA TO
alliance and ii 10 atntf&icaDy critical lO the
freewotkl. ..
Rep. Mary ROie Oaka', D-Oeve~
Rep. Eldon llldd. It-Arizona; Rep. Jerry
Klea.ka. 0-MitwaJbei ~ Rep. Tom
Lantos, D-San Maieo willJOtD Bedham on
the trip, Schreiber said.
Security check• offered
The Costa Mesa Police Department is offering
Neighborhood Watch and home security inspec-
tions as a free service to rc$idents of the city. The
programs arc available upon request dwi.DJ week-
days, evenings and Saturdays.
Irvine shelves tourism funding request
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' ................. for the first half of 1986. funding lhe bureau last year.
The inspections arc available for homes,
condoniminiums. townhouses, apartments and
trailer homes. Call Linda Fowler at 754-5658 for
further information.
With an $80,000 funding request for lhe
new Irvine Convention and Visitors'
Bureau heading toward a tie vote, Irvine
City Council members instead diverted
the matter to an advisory panel for further
study.
In a revised financial report issued in
January, however, the bureau's directors
said they bad only spent about $5,500 of
the initial city funds. They requested an
additional $80,000 to carry the organiza-
tion through the end of June.
The funds are to be used lo pay for a new
executive director, secretarial help, office
equipment and promotional materials.
Baker and Miller pointed to the $2.4
million the city expects lO receive this year
throu~ lhe 8 percent bed tax charged at
lrvine s hotels. They also said the hosvita1-
ity industry helps the city by proV1ding
jobs, other tax revenue and by attracting
people for special events.
Catalano, who was appointed to the
council after the initial bureau funding was
awarded last year, said be did not think lbe
bureau's backers have made a strong
enough case yet justify city funding.
H~ recommended the request be re-
ferred to the Irvine Finance Commission
for more study. Catalano said be wants the
commission to review what benefits w
city can expect from the bureau and
whether the city wiU earn back its
investment through increased tax rev-
enues.
Baker also argued lhat the competiuon
for local tourist and convention dollars 1s
becoming more intense, and lhat Irvine's
hotels and restaurants need help in
attracting their share.
Thursday, March 27
Council members debated whether city
funds should be used to subsidize an
organization designed to boost business at
local hotels and restaurants. The argu-
ments mirrored those raised last year when
the bureau was proposed.
Last August, lhe council voted 3-2 to
provide $52,000 for the convention bu-
reau's operations through the end of 1985.
At that time1 the council promised to
consider providing an additional $228,000
During Tuesday's meeting, council
memben were headinJ toward a 2-2 split
on providing lbe addiuonal mo!ley. Coun-
cil memben David Baker and Sally Anne
Miller expressed suppon for visitors·
bureau funding. while councilmen Larry
Agan and Ray Catalano indicated they
would vote against it.
Agran said be supports the concept of an
lrvine convention bureau but believes the
businesses involved should fund 11 them-
selves.
He also suBF.Sted a funding plan be
studied in which city money would be
matched by business contributions. No meetlaga sded.ied
The fifth council member, Barbara
Wiener. was absent but voted against
"I don't know why this industry needs
public assistance." he said.
When the deadlock on city fundmg
appeared imminent, Catalano·s motion
was approved 4-0.
FBI to check bone particles
for link to Laura Bradbury
By STEVE MARBLE °' ................
The FBI has been asked to examine
bone fragments found near the desert
campground where Laura Bradbury
vanished in 1984, and Sao
Bernardino Sheriff's deputies will
resume a search of the area where the
remains were found.
The fruments1 .~hich include •
port.ion ol' a cnitd's skull, were
eumined Tuesday br Ca.I State
Fullenon anthropolosm Dr. Judy
Sucbey who concluded that the bones
were from a child who had probably
been dead less than two ycan.
Suchey also said the bone fraa-
ments had been exposed to the suno
for less than four montba, tCClOrdint
to San Bernardino County Deputy
Coroner Phil Alexander.
Alexander said hi• office has asked
for help from FBI forensic specialists
and is not 1W'C what. ifanythlna. they
Bantt..,ton Beacb
A resident of lhe Huotinaton
Shores Moblle Home Pact It 21002
Pacific Cout Highway fe1)0tted eatly
today that tomeone uJed a briek to
break a window and buralarite hiJ
home. The loss included a auiw and
amplifier worth S 1,000. • • • A resJdent of the 6100 block of
Norbrook rePoned Wednesday that
her wallet was stolen from her puree
(
mi&ht learn by examining the frag-
ments.
"We'd like to a get a blood l)1>C and
an exact rcadina on bow Iona the
victim had been dead." said Alex-
ander, who said the fragments will be
i-ckqed and shipped lo FBI head~
quarters in VirsiruL
.. Anythina mi&ht help," be sajd,
The frqments were found by
bikers Saturday about two miles
nonbwest of the Indian Cove camp.
around in Joshua Tree National
Monument where the Huntiniton
Beach airl disappeared Oct. 18, 1984.
It bu been presumed laura was
abducted. but San Bernardino Sheriff'
Capt. Gene Bowlin said it is possible
the child llipped on some rocks and beca~ wcdeed ~n the buae
bolden that cover the ptrk'a land-
scape.
LL Dean Knadlcr laid a search of
the area near the spot whe~ the bone
ftqmenu were found will be
while she was ahoppina at the Ralplu
market at Oolden West Street and
Warner Avenue, The loss included
the SlO wallet and SSO in cub. • • • A iaident ~ th~ lh?ft-Wcdnetday of an unlocked Schwinn
Crui1et bicycle parked at the Hw:ai-.
inaton Lanes bowlina aUey, I 9S82 Beach Blvd. The loss wuesumated at
Sl60. • • • Srnash1na a pas.rnarr WlndW'ln.& t"
launched Saturday. An earlier two-
day search was halted Monday.
He said the search party will be
looking for bone fragments, remnants
ofclolhingand fibers that mi&bt show
up in inimal droppings.
"We're goina to look in a slightly
different area this time," said Kna-
dler.
Bowlin said it is his speculation the
bone frqments belona to the miuina
Huntiniton Beach airl.
But K.oadler, who will take over as
captain of the sheriff's Morongo
Basin substation when Bowlin retires
at week's end. said he is unoom-
fonable wilh such speculation.
"Yo\I can't really say one way or tM
other. The most you can say is that
thete frlpnent.s open up a new
avenue to investiption;· M said.
.. And if they are (the Jirl's "'mains)
y.ou still have to determine what
happened."
enter, someone bwJlarized a told
1981 Volklwattft Jetta paiked
Wednetda_y on the 16700 block of
Hotkins SU'ttt. The ao. included slmo equipmenl wortb. l600. • • • A woman «*I DOlioe Wednad.ay
bet black and white Toyota ('.elica
was buttlarized while parted at the
Huntinatoo Center shoppiq ~ 7777 f.di"F Ave. The loll ind
stereo equipment wor1h UOO.
1
• • • A manager at Straw Hat Pizza,
6920 Warner Ave., reported Wednes-
day that someone stole a yellow 10-
speed bicycle beloDjing t~ an em-
ployee. The loss was esumated at
$ISO.
Foantaln Valle)'
A Huntington. Beach f'CS'ldent re-
poned Wednesday that his gray 1982
Toyota Celie.a was stolen while
parked in the nonhcast lot at the
Fountain Bowl, 171 l 0 Brookhunt SL • • • A roofer working It a construction
site at 17077 San Mateo rcponed
Wednesday that someone entered bis
unlocked green 1975 Ford van and
stole an air staple gun and an
electncal hand-held compressor. The
loss was esumated at $596. ••• Between March 19 and March 26,
someone entered a locked shed on the
200 block of Gannet Lane and stok
carpentry tools worth $240.
Newport Beach
A burglar entered a home on
Polaris through an unlocked door and
took a re~rted $2.700 in Jewelry.
Police wd lhe lhief was "very
selective" durinf the theft. • • A burglar~ a pry tool to get into
Caspers Park closed
after attack by lion
Ronald W. Caspers Region.al Part.
where a mountain lion attacked a
you.na prt, will be cloJCd for• month
while ranaen oomb lhe hills for other
potentially danaerous cats, officials
saad.
Some wtldlife experts said Wednet-
day the wttkend attack may iochcate
that mountain lions are losing their hr of humans as sob\ltbt eDCl'OICb
on their tcmtory and their own
population incre&JCS bcQuse of a
bunu.ngban.
Tbe VlCtlm. Laura Mtc:beUe Small, s. of El T~, WU ~rted in serious
condition wcdnnday u docton It
Mission C.Ommu.nity Hospital \Md
•o rcttore full body movement and
the si&ht In one eye. both impaittd by
bite wounds on her bead
laura was walkina with her molhCT
Sunday on a trail in the pert when the
mountain boo sprana from the brush
and sciud her by the head Another
hiker relCued the girt by dnvina the
cat away wtth a tick. and bunters
shot it the next day after a tranquilit.er
dan failed to knock it out.
The-park. in the Sa.nta na Moun-
tains near San Juan C..pi.stnno, will
be cloeed unul Apri1 2S while rlJllCn
look for other mounllan lions. said
Tony Gimbronc. county perks d1s--
trict supervi.or
"'h's probably ovefttll on my ~rt.
but I don't .,,,nt to throw the ptn
open until rm suTC it's 51fc." Otm·
brooe wd "I JUSt want to~ sure 1n
my mmd that we don't have another
cat in theft that's not •'"'1d of
human ••
a c.ar parked at East Bay Street and
Island. The owner reported a S300car
stetto missing. • • • Another car was hn at the sam~
location. A SI 00 car stereo was wen
in that burglary.
Coetalle9&
S•erco equipment and a flashltght.
all valued at $530, were reponcd
stolen from a car in lhe parking
structure at 320 I A venue of the Ans
last v.cck. Entry was made by pulling
back a wmdow and rcachin& 1n to
unlock lhe door. • • • Clolh10g._glusa and a briefcase. aJ I
worth $730, were reported stolen
from a car partced m the SOO block of
V1ctona Street between 9 p.m Mon·
day and S:lO Lm. T~y. • • • Petty cash lOtahn1 s I so WU IT·
poned stolen from R.W.R. As-
sociates tnc, 2950 Airway Ave.,.
between 10 p.m. Tuesday and 6 a.m
Wednesday. Entry WU made b)
forcina open a glass front door. • • • C.ash totalina SIOO was reported
stolen from Uoyd's Nunery, 2028
Newport Blvd.. bctwcicn 6 p .m .
Mooday and 6 a.m. Tunday Entry
a~nlly ~"-'made by using a metal pipe to pry open SCC'Unty ban on a
window.
lntne
.\ 198-4 silver Ponuae wa stolen
from lhe l 8000 bloc of MacArthur
Boultvard Wed~)' nJlht about 7
p.m
• • •• A bu.ralar reportedly smuhed the
k.Jtchcn window of a home on
8ea.rplw Wednesday e~n1na and
toot three suns.. '°me ~lry and a
picture.
. \
U.S. ends exerCises off Libya; carriers stay
WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S.
naval optrations in the Gulf of Sidra
will end this momina. but the three.
carrier battle poup will remain
nearby in the central Mcditenanean
Sea for 10me days yet, Pentagon
officials said.
Maj. Fred Lash, a Pentaaon spokes-
man, coo finned tbe conclusion of the
exerciles in a brief statement.
.. The exercise by the 6th Acct in the
Gulf of Sidra is endina today."
He would not be more specifi~.
Pent14on officials who demanded
anonymity, however, said the last
filaht operations over the disputed auif would be concluded by 1 a.m.
PST, assuming there were no mo~
military chaUenaes by Libya.
The IOUrcet said three U.S. combat
ships now inside the iulf would also
move to the north of Libyan strong·
man Moammar K.hadafy's "line of
death" by that time.
The sources said the level of U.S.
fliaht activity over the gulf had been
decreasing for several houn, but
a<lded that as of S:3Q..a.m. PST, there
were still some NavYlets Oyina in the
area.
The sources also streucd that the
three carriers and more than two
donn other combat veuels would
remain in the central Mediterranean
to the north of Libya for several dayt.
One source explained the shlps and
planes of the 6th Acct would remain
at "stand-by stations" outside the
Tripoli fli&bt-control rqjon at least
through "SatuTday and probably
longer.
"They're not steaming for port,"
the source wd. "They're just leaving
the gulf."
The sources added that no ad-
ditional exercises or flia.ht operations
were bein& contemplated at the
moment, even thoujh the United
States had initially indicated man-
euven mil.ht last until April I.
Robert ~ims, the Pentagon's chief
spokesman. declined this morning to
• offer any details about the decision to
withdraw from the gulf in advance of
Nation's airports use extra caution
By die AJaoclatecl Prea1
Extra viaUance ls the order of the day at airports from Boston to Los
Anieles, but officials al New York and Atlanta airports say secunty is tight and
won't get any tiahter for fear of Libyan terrorists.
A secunty alert was declared Wcdnc-sday al Cbicqo's three airports. and
extra uniformed personnel were deployed at Los Angeles International
Airport.
However, Jam~ Nachstein, chief inspector for the Pon Authority police
in New York, said securitr. at Kennedy, La Guardia and Newark airports has
not been increased since Libyan and U.S. forces clashed in the Gulf ofSidra this
week.
"We feel that we've done what 1s required. The airport has more than
adequate security now," he said.
"We have increased the amount of uniformed personnel in 1he
international (terminal) building especially," said Sgt. Ruben Martinez of the
Los Angeles lnternationl Airport police. ·
Maninez would not say how many officers were being added, but said the
totaJ force is ~bout 200. ~
a briefing later jn the day. ing Wednesday that the exercise was
The Pentagon source$ began signal-about to end. One source said at the
time:
"As Iona as Khadafy doesn't •ttrt
shooting aaain. it looks like wc'U start
pulJina out of the aulfThunday." But the first formal indication of
the withdrawal c.ame from the Italian
government this momma. In Rome, a
spokesman said the United States
had informed Premier Bettin6
Craxi's office that the maneuvers
would soon be over.
The spokesman. Antonio Ghirclh,
said hi1$ovcrnment had been told of
the dtlt'1sion to suspend the oper-
ations at 3 a.l'Jl. PST.
The U.S. naval maneuvers in ~he
Mediterranean and the gulf, which
Khadafy claims as his own but the
United States regards as international
waters. began Saturday night.
Monday morning. less than 24
hours after U.S. planes and ships first
tntered the gulf. Li~y~ fired at le~sl
.six surface-to-air missiles, according
to the .Pentagt>n. In retaliation, the
Pentagon sajd, U.S. forces sank thrte
EASTEl ·EGG HUMT
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• • •
We'll be looking for you at the Eastbluff Park
Vista del Oro & Eastbluff Drive •
next to Eastbluff Village Center
• •
Sponsored by City of Newport Beach
Parle & Recreation Department
and
A special . invitation to all children 2 to 10 years old
Come join the fun
Saturday, March 29 at 10:00 am
The Easter Egg Hunt will have lots of candy, prizes,
• Clowns, Jugglers, balloons & a giant Bunny for pictures!
• Bring a basket or bag! • •
• •
• •
• • •
\bur Competition
Start~r«M
Get Spring AJXI Sutnmes Dues Free.
Summer's coming up fast. And out there on
the beach, the competitions gonna be tougher
ch:m ever. Whac your bqdy needs 1s some spring
rraining at Holiday Spa Health C lub. With the
kind of soph1sricated equipment and fac1lit1es you
won't find anywhere else. Swimming. Jogging.
Lifecycling~ And that's just the beginning.
If you JOln now, you'll ger from che day you JOin
unnl September 21 added free co the end of a one
ye;ir memberllhip.
Holiday ·ra Ht!alch Cluh. Call or come by any
dub today for a free guest tour. See whar we can
Jo for you r boJy. And for your summer.
Available at parcic1pacing club~ Not all facilitie:i at
all locations
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Libyan t>oats, damqcd at least oac
other and twice attacked a radar-
auided missile facility near the Ub-
yan town of Sirte Monday and
Tuesday. But Wednesday, Vice Adm. Frank
8. Kelso, commander of the 6th Fleet,
said be was not prepared yet to claim
that any Libyan boats had been aunk. saying that "there were two defini1ely
severely damaged patrol boats and we
arc continuing to evaluate the
others." Word of the impcndin1 departure
came as Libya vowed to retaJiate with
terrorism for the dcstNetion wroqbt
by the U.S. wanhips.
It also followed a day on which the
Pentagon reported ~t U.S. planes
and ships operated without e~
inside the disputed JUlf. The Amcn-
can forces rem11ned on what
amounted to a wartime alert, offteiab
said, primed for action against an
enemy that didn't appear.
Israeli jets
kill IO in
retaliatory
hit on PLO
SIDON, Lebanon (AP} -Israeli
Jets attacked Palestinian refugee
camps outside Sidon today, killina 10
people and wounding 22, police said.
The attack came shortly after a rocket '
exploded in an Israeli town near the
Lebanese border .
Guerrillas in the Ein cl-Hilweb aod
Mich-Mich refugee camps and the
nearby hilltop village of Siroubieb
unleashed barrages of shoulder-fired
SAM-7 anti-aircraft missile at the
Israeli fighter-bombers.
The pfanes released scarlet hot-air
balloons to deflect the Soviet-made
heat-seeking missiles .
Police said no hits were reported on
the four planes th.at made six attack
runs finng rockets on the three
targets. Israel's military command
reported all planes returned safely to
their base .
Israel's military command said the
air strike was launched 1112 houn after
a Soviet-made K.atyusha rocket fired
from southern Lebanon hit a school
yard in the northern Israeli toWn of K.iryat Shmona. ·
Police slay 2 more
blacks i n S . Africa
JOHANNESBURG (AP}-Police
said today they shot dead two blacb
in a slum near Cape Town when a
crowd firebombed a private vehicle,
bringin~ to 30 the number of blacb
killed in two days anti-apartheid
unrest.
It has been one of the most violent
outbreaks since daily rioting bepn in
September 1984. Policcconfinned 27
black deaths from police gunfire and
three in black-apinst-black fiahtina.
Meanwhile, police in the black
homeland of Bophuthatswana said
2, 500 blacks were arrested after police
fired on a crowd of protesters at a
mass rally Wednesday. k.illina l I
people.
Col. Da vc George, in the homeland
capital, Mafikeng. also said 32 people
were admitted to a hospitaJ with
gunshot wounds, and an un-
determined number of o<hcr people
were treated for lesser wounds. Resi-
dents said they believed as many as
100 people were wounded by the
gunfire.
Waldheim 'bu proof'
of wartime l.nnocence
VIENNA (AP) -Former U.N.
Sccrctary-Oeneral Kurt Waldheim
was quoted as sayina today that the
Yugoslay JOvcmament has docu-
ments provma he did not commit war
crimes as a World War JI soldier.
Wednesday the Yu4oslav news-
paper Vcccmje Novostl )llUbliahcd a
1947 Yugoslav document describina
Waldheim as an alleged war criminal
guilty of" murder, slauahter, ahootina
of bostaget ... and ravaaina of prop-
cny by burning of settlements.'
Waldheim, a front-runner in the
May 4 presidential elections, wu
quoted by the Yuaoslav newspepcr
today as saying be was certain
documents that would clear him of
any guilt exist in Yuaoslav archives,
and said they should be rclca.scd to the
public.
Carbomblnjaree21
In Melbourne attack
MELBOURNE (A P) -A car
bomb exploded today in front of
police headquarters, irtjuri~ 21
people, 11 of them police officers,
authorities said. It was followed by
five smaller blasts that police laid
may have been caused by detonators.
The city block was cordoned off
and bulldinas were evacuated be-
cause police said they feared there
mia.ht be another e"plosjon.
Prime Minister Bob Hawke called
the attack "deplorable .. and said the
nation was "shocked."
No one claimed rcsponsibilicy for
the blasts, but radio repons said
police were huntina an allqed neo-
Nui in connection with the attack.
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Ormnge Coel1 DAILY PILOT/ Thul'ldey, March 27. 1986
Families to pay third of 1986 income in taxes
By JIM LUTHE R
UTNWTtMt
WASHINGTON -Mr. and Mrs
vcrage Amencan will send $6,86 7 of
their earnings to the federal govern-
ment this year, and $965 of it w11l go
to pay interest on the public debt. a
private study says.
One-third of the taA payment will
come from individual income taxes
aid slightly less than one-third from
SOCial'Se<:urity taxes. accordina to the Tax Foundatton, a nonpartisan re-
search organization. The remainder
wiU be paid by the $28.000.a-year
couple and their two kids as indirect
taxes on business and excise taxes on such products as ~solinc and
cigarettes.
But although the famil y pays
almost 25 percent of 11s income an
federal taxes, there's more.
"The family must assume 11s
$1 ,848 share of the $202.8 b1lhon
fiscal 1986 deficit," the foundation
said. refcmng to money the govern-ment will borrow to make up for ats
revenue shortfall. "All told, current
federal taxes and borrowing add up lo
OvER THE CouNTER
--~ -
$8, 715. or 31 -percent of this moder-
ate-income family' earnings."
Herc's how much the family•s taxes
will contnbute to some other federal
programs: income security1 inch.tdina
Soc1aJ Sccunty. hous1Jli a1d and the
like, $2.150; national defense.SI, 797;
health, $705; education and social
services. $207; transportation, $183:
veterans' benefits. $180; agriculture,
$175; in ternational affairs, including
foreign aid, $1 16: and other purposes,
$389.
• • • If you dnve your own car on
business for your employer. you may
need to increase the amount of taxes withheld from your paycheck. Other-
wise, you could be penalized for
underpaying.
Under new IRS regulations, any
mileage reimbursement exceeding 2 I
cents a mile 1s taxable income to the
employee. If the reimbursement is
over 21 cents, the employer is
expected to repon the full amount as
income on the worker's W-2 fonn at
yea rend The worker then could claim
the first 21 cents per mile as a
deducuon by fihng Form 2106.
If, for example, an employcednvcs
1,500 miles this year on comP411y
business and is reimbursed 30 cents
per mile, the W -2 fonn he or she
recc:avcs early in 1987 should hst as
additional income $225 (2,500 times 9 ctnts). The company is not required
to withhold taxes from the rcambursc-
ment.
SQ if the employee h~s a consider-
able amount of interest (which also as not subject to withholding) the reim-
bursement might be enough to put
her above the threshold and require
that she estimate what her 1986 tax
will be and make quarterly payments
ln general, quarterly pay~ents are
required 1f withholding does not
cover at least 80 percent of your 1986
taxes or al least as much tax as you paid for 1985.
• • • If you have no mortgage payment
but gi ve n considerable amount of
money to charity, the IRS says, you
may be better off not itemizing your deductions. That's because for re-
turns besng filed this year, the special
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O TC U P S AN D DOWN S NEW YORK (AP) -The following list shows lhe Over the • Counrer slocks and warranls lhar have oone uP rne most and down lhe mosr based on o.rCtfll of cru.noe for Wtdnescsay No securllflK trading below s2 or 1000
shares ere included. 2 Net ancs o.rcentaoe changes are rne 3 difference t>elween the pr evlo1,1s closlno orlce and WeCSMsdav's last or bid orlce ,.
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Workshop Persons of All Ages
Six Thursday Evenings
April 3-May 8
7:30-9:30 p .m.
FEE: $20.00
S1 . A 'DHEMS PRESBYTERIA:\ CHU R C H
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deduction tor contributions by t~x
paycrs who do not itemize has been increased.
"Some taxpayers have 1tcm11e<l
deductions even though it would be
more advantageous not to itemize
and deduct half of their charitable
contnbutions," the IRS srud. The
agency suggests you calculate your tax
both ways and use the more advan·
t~eous. No matter how you fiJUre it.
however, as a rule your deduction for
chanty may not exceed ha lf your
adjusted gross 1noomc.
• • • Rep. Richard Schulze, R-Pa.. a
member of the Ways and Mean
Committee, as no fan of the several
proposals to declare a temporary amn~ty for federal tax cheats.
But if Congress should approve
amnesty, Schulze knows where lbe
money should go. He has introduced
a bill allowing compensation of up to
$500 10 any taxpayer who. after an audit by 1hc IRS, is found to owe no
extra taxes.
Executive for Rent f~'';i1;~
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Market continues climb
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market r09C
sharply today, following thro. on Wednesday's
full-speed-ahead advanc.c as mtercst rates kept
declining.
The Dow Jones avenge of JO industrials, up
32.20 Wednesday to a rccoro hiah. climbed 27.78
to 1.838.48 by 2 p.m. today on Wall Street.
Gaiocn outnumbered losers l!)' about S to 2
among New York Stock Exc~listed issues..
In the credit markets today, prices of tooa-
tcrm government bonds. which move in the
opposite direction from interest rates. rose more
lhan SI 0 for every S 1,000 in faoe value.
WHAT AMEX DID WH AT NYSE 0 10
NEW YORK (AP) Mar. 26
AMEX LE ADERS
GoLo QuorE s
METALS QuoTES
NYSE LE~DER S
To H::ott ~ t.cz..s
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Governor opens
new state prison,
criticizes Bradley
TEHACHAPI (AP) -Accusing
Democratic rival Tom Bradley of
lyina about delays in prison construc-
tion, Gov. George Dcukmejian dedi-
cated the first new maximum sccunty
prison in I OS years.
whatsoever'' in finding a needed state
prison site in the Los Anaclcs area.
"All he docs is carp and complain,"
the Republican governor said of
Bradley's charges that prison con-
struction bas been delayed under
Dcukmejian. "Mayor Bradley has consistently
made untruthful statements regard-
ing o ur prison pr<>JfBm. He has seen
fit on every occasion not to tell the
truth," Deuk.mejiao told an im-
promptu news conference Wednes-
day followina formal dedication of a
new l,()()().()ell maximum security
prison at Tehachapi.
Bradley and Deukmejian have
clashed repcatedJy over delays in the
state's S 1.2 billion prison expansion
program, and especially over Brad-
ley's contention that Dcukmcjian bas
not built a single new prison during
his three years as governor.
Dcukmejian a15o said the Los
An&eles mayor, his aJl-but-<:ertAln
Democratic opponent for governor
again this year. has been· "no help
BradJcy has said the projects Dcu-
kmejlan has completed arc only
additions to .existing prisons. while
Dcukmejian calls them new prisons
and says that's o ne of Bradley's
"untruthful statements."
State won't intervene in
McMartin 1nolest cases
By tile A11oclated Pre11
LO~ ~NGELES -The state attorney general's office has refused requests
by the c1ucs of Manhattan Beach and Hermosa Beach to intervene in the
McMartin Pre-School child molestation case. Stale prosecutors. an official ~ettcrs, to~d officials of the two cities that there was no grounds for state-level
mtervcntaon based on community outrage regarding djsmissal of charges
against five of the seven originaJ defendants. The attorney general's office.
howe ver, is still considering a request for intervention made by parents whose
children went to the Manhattan Beach school.
Jalled Domlnelll suffers new stroke
SAN DIEGO -Convicted swmdler J. David Dominelli, pan1ally paralyze~ from a strok.e suffered 10 Jail 10 San Diego I 1h years ago, was
hospatahzed after suffenng a second stroke in federal prison. The 44-year-old
banlctupt fi~anc1er was taken to Valley Memorial HospitaJ 1n Livermore.
abol;lt SO m~es. southea~t of San Franci.sco. Wednesday. Hospital officials
declined to g.ive informauon on Dom incl h's cont11tion. and nursing supervisor
Judy Jensen said no one by the name of J. David Dominelli was registered at
the hospital. But a source close to the Dominelli case confirmed Dommelli
suffered "a mild stroke ..
Lottery ticket forgers caught ln sting
SACRAMENTO -Lottery agents have lured 16 suspected ticket forgers
to a Hollywood-style sting operation meant to dramatize the futility of trying to
steal ~rom the games., In South~m. California, agents were in the process of
arresung another 26 people for s1m1lar suspected fo rgenes. Statewide. most of
the suspects were accused of pasting ticket facsimiles from Game No. J
brochures to los1n.g tickets. then submitting the crude forgenes to the lottery for
SI 00 pnzes and chances to be 10 a real grand-pnze drawing. lottery officials said
today.
Prostltutes' advocate moves to France
SAN FRANCISCO-Margo St. James has had 1t. The fiery protectress of
prostitutes. bnght beacon for the world's ladies of the night. 1s heading for
France today al'ter 13 year.; ofbatthng pohce, the couns and society m general
from her base in San Francisco as head of the prostitute's union, COYOTE.
Even an self-exile near the town of Montpell1er, the 48-year-old Bellingham,
Wash., nat1ve says she'll continue to fight to "decriminalize prosutution."
Gold Rush trlnkets unearthed ln SF
SAN FRANCJSCO-More than a million Items from the Gold Rush era.
including bottles with 130-year-old whiskey still ms1de. have been uneanhed at
the construction sate of an office building. "The whiskey 1s probably still good,"
said Dr. AJlen Pastron, the archeolog.ist who conducted the dig. "Maybe I'll
drink some of 1t." The ob1ects include crates of Mexican War Anny rifles.
ammun111on. picks and shovels, cases of boots and shoes. barrels of nails. tools
and salt pork They arc what 1s left ofa general store destroyed 1n an arson fire·
in I 8S I . second only in size to the fire that followed the Gr~at Eanhquake m
1906.
LUXURY fHfATRfS
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G uess whds going to be the life of the party?
Nicaraguans
surrounded'
in Honduras
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (AP)
-Anti-Sandinista rebels claimed to
have surrounded up to t .SOO
Nicaraguan soldiers in southern Hon-
duras and said they could foil any
attempt· to break the encirclement
and retreat back across the border.
Wednesday U.S. mihtary heltcop-
ters fenied about 600 Honduran
soldiers to the remote area to join
another 3,000 Honduran troops near
the border.
A U.S. Embassy official, who spoke
on condition of anonymity, said no
funher flights were contemplated.
Nicaragua's leflist Sandinista gov-
ernment denies sending any soldiers
onto the tenitory of its nonhem
neighbor, and claims the repons of an
incursion are designed to promote the
Reagan administration'scampa1gn in
Congress to allocate $100 million in
aid to the Contras.
Accounts of the fighting could not
be verified independently.
Senate rebuffs Kennedy
bid to ban all Contra aid
WASHINGTON (A P) -The Senate has rejected a
blanket ban on aid for the Contra rebels fighting
Nicarqua's leftist government.
The Senate voted down. 74-24, a proposal by Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass.. that would have
forbidden U.S. assistan~ and thus would have~ect1vely
scuttled President Reapn·s proposed packa of $100
malhon m aid to the rebels.
Today's vote in the Repubhcan...controlled Senate
was the first on a number of amendments expected to be
offered to the proposal, which was the final major item on
the chamber's agenda before its Easter recess.
Other pending amendments would modify the
package by requiring U.S.-Nacaraguan peace talks or by
delayina release of the aid until another congressional
vote is taken.
Kennedy told ht~ t'olleagues the U.S. &1d should be
halted because "we are moving closer an~ closer to d1~
mihtary involvement" 1n the fight against Nicaragua s
Sandinista government
But Sen. David Durenbcrgcr. R·Minn .. opposed tlle
Kennedy proposal, arguing that it would rule ~ut even
non-lethaJ aid to the Contras and thus would end the
mean by which we could achieve a negot1atcd !t<>lut1on"
to the impasse.
In New Orleans. Reagan said the N1carasuan
mcurs1on mto netghbonng Honduras was :·a ~lap in the
face" to House members who voted down has aid plan last
week m hopes the action would be taken as an attempt at
reconciliauon.
Reagan •. on his wax. to Cahfomia for 11n Easter
vacation said "this m1htary dn ve demonstrates the
nature of the Nicaraguan regime.''
Reagan: Nicaraguan attack
answer to Contra aid refusal
NEW ORLEANS (AP)-As the Senate neared a vote
on his $100 million aid request for Nicaraguan rebels,
President Reagan said today a new Nicaraguan offensive
against rebels in Honduras was "a slap in the face" lO
House members who rejected his a id plan last week in
hopes Nicaragua would see the action as an attempt at
reconciliation.
Reagan's remarks were in a speech prepared for a
GOP fund-raising luncheon in New Orleans, his first
public appearance since the United States engaged Libyan
forces in the disputed Gulf ofSidra and rushed emergency
military aid to Honduras to repel the reponed Nicaraguan
attacks.
Reapn offered a rationale for the U.S Navy's
cross10g 1nto waters claimed by Libya and for his proposal
to suppl)'. the Nicaraguan Contra rebels.
"Mllitaristic states perceive unilateral concessions as
a sign of weakness, not good faith," Reagan said. "Serious
negotiations flow not from proving smcenty but from
resolve and leverage."
He quoted a House member, whom he did not name,
as saying after the aid proposal was defoated last week. "J
hope the Sandm1stas take 1t as a sign of peace and
fnendsh1p."
"The Nicaraguan communists 1ook the House vote
as a sign all nght," Reagan said "They invaded the
temtory of Honduras with about 1.500 heavily armed
troops. and then they lied about 1t. ·•
The Managua govemmnen1 denied any cross-border
operations and called for international ob ervers to
monitor the frontier
But Reagan maintained that "this mahtary drive
demonstrates the nature of the Nicaraguan reg.a me. This
Sandinista offensive 1s a slap in the face to everyone who
voted against aid to the freedom fighters thinking 1t to be
a vote for reconc1hat1on."
'Missing link' virus
may be a key to AIDS
6 charged with da111aging
abortion clinic in Florida
By tbe A11oclated Pre11
WASHINGTON (AP) - A virus
that could be the long-suspected
bndge which brought AIDS from
animaJs to humans has been dis-
covered in people in Western Afnca.
and researchers ~Y it may be valuable
in findinga way to prevent the deadly
disease.
Research groups from Harvard
Un1vers1ty and the Pasteur lnstnute
1n Pans, working separately 1n Afnca,
said Wednesday they have found
human viruses closely related to the
one that causes AIDS which resemble
a monkey virus.
In line with a theory that human-
acquircd immune deficiency syn-
drome sprang from an animal virus
which crossed species into man. one
of the American researchers said their
newly discovered virus could be the
disease link between humans and
monkeys.
"I think at 1s fair to ~Y that 1l may
be the 'missing hnk' virus that 1s
closest to the virus that jumped from
GING
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monkeys," Dr. Myron Essex of the
Harvard School of Public Health said
in a telephone interview.
The virus. isolated from healthy
people in Senegal. apparently docs
not give people disease, a develop-
ment that could help in developing a
preventive vaccine against AIDS. he
added
The newly discovered West
Afncan viruses ha ve been labeled
HTL V-4 by Amencan researcher~
and LA V-2 by the French. These
viruses may be idcnt1c"8.I , or at least
very similar. but researchers say the)
will not know until findings by the
l~o groups are published and com-
pared.
Findings by the Harvard group are
to be presented here today at a
meet in~ of the Amencan Society for
M1crob1ology and published in the
Apnl I I issue of the Journal Science
A repon on the French work has been
submitted to Science but not yet
accepted for publication.
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PENSACOLA. Fla. -Six people lacccharges of invading a twice-bombed
abonion clinic and injunng two women one da) afier acuvists from around the
nation were encouraged to take more acuve roles 1n fightmg abon1on. Po lice
said the six stormed into the Lad1e~ Center chntc Wednesday, damaging
equipment and injuring two women. including a member of the National
Organization for Women. who was esconmg patients into the building. The six
arrested were among about 30 people: who had been picketing the clinic. which
was bombed twice in 1984. including a Chnstmas Day incident that drew
nationwide attention.
Death knell for tobacco sald.premature
ATLANTA -Surgeon General C. Everett Koop, who says cigarette
companies should be planning for the day when America stops smoking.,
should not look for a career in financial analysis, says a tobacco industry
spokesman. The Pubhc Health Service 1s walhng to help tobacco companies
make a transition "to t~ lund of business that enhancn life and not the kind
that invites death,'' Koop said Wednesday, predictinJ at an anu-smok.ing
conference that cigarette production would stop within 20 years. "I really
believe the days of the c1prcttc industry are numbered .... Despite mergers and
buyouts, the ci~rette industry 1s not and never again will be a growth
industry," he said.
Radloactlve lodlne found ln TMI workers
MIDDLETOWN, Pa. -Detectable levels of radioactive iodine were
found in about half of the 120 workers wh o ingested the <ubstancc dunng a
buildup of gas at the Three Mile Island nuclear plant, a plant spokesman says.
Body scans of the workers found levels well below federal hmtts, said Doug
BedeU. a spokesman for the plant's operator. GPU Nuclear Corp. The other
workers had no levels but pro bably breathed some of the 1od1nc in the Unit I
containment building. he said .
Asterolds to honor Challenger seven
CAMBRIDGE. Mass. -Seven asteroids disco vered since 1980 will be
named for the astr0nauts killed 10 the space shuttle Challenger explosion, a
Harvard University astronomer says. The asteroids, discovered at the Lowell
Observatpry in Aagstaff, Anz .. are believed to be five to 10 miles in diameter.
The Pans-based 1nternat1onal Astronomical Union handles the official
na.mingofall celestial objects. and the asteroids were nam~s through the IAlI's
Minor Planet Center at Harvard. ~1d Daniel W F Gr~n of the Harvard
Sm1thson1an Center for Astro phy'i1c...
Alaska volcano threatens major eruption
ANCHO RAGE, Alaska -After s1mmcnng for six weeks, Mount
Augustine began belching fire and smoke today in what officials said may be
the prelude to a ma1or eruption. "It looks as though Mount Augustine may
have had some sort of eruption,'' said Tom Miller of the U.S. Geological
Survey. He said the Coast Guard, fishing boats and residents of the coastaJ
community of Homer rcponcd the mountain came alive about 2 a.m.
New York leader faclng crbnlnal c1Jarge11
NEW YORK -Bronx Democratic leader Stanley Fnedman. one of the
city's most ~werful poli.tician.s, faces criminal charges 1n the dealing.'i between
the scandal-ndden Parking Vaolataons Bureau and a computer company his
attorney sa~s. Thomas Puccio disclosed the pending charges Wednesday ~fter
the bureau s former director and a former city transponation administrator
were indicted on racketeering charges that also involved Donald Manes the Ql;l~ns borough prcs~dent who killed himself recently after an unsucce~sful
su1c1de attempt. Puccio decltned. to ant1c1pate the charges against Friedman. tl~;;;;;;;:u;:n:;;g;;DUj;------L-------------1 who became the most prommcnt known subject of city corruption w:"'..:'.;!'..~ .. ~ , .. "'"' invest1gat1ons after Manes' March 13 death
//PHIL fOO!J' DAY
A cut above the rest -f1AAN10.M ~ Pfl1SE..NTI) A HOMfTONN ~MS PR()(X.COC>N
N'ffl. FOOLS Q4.Y Ms:. BY 0WL£S BERNSTE"" WRITTEN BY~ 8.ACH
PAOCUCED 8Y FRANK MN<VSO ~ DIRfCTEO BY FRED \\N.TON
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STARTS TODAY -,....,........,, ..,.. ... LA-""*~"' sn "''
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"Richard Benjamin's gm for this kind al comic
Invention is now finely honed .. .Long is adorable ...
Hanks has the weird aplomb Cary Grant used to
monage...and Godunov proves himself a
gifted comic actor:•
-llcNrd ScHdlll, 11Mf llMWlff
TOM HANKS SHELLEY LONG
EyPIT
,~rill~ Cit CD,rJ~· A UNIVERSAL Picture • .__...... .. Cl••• ...... -c
NOW PLAYING
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Soviet schoolgirl
meets Reagan on
mission of peace
WASHINGTON (AP) -Katerina
Lecheva, the Soviet schoolairl tour-
i na the United States on a mission of
peace, got a "smile and a handshake"
dunna a mectma today with Presi-
dent RCA11n at the White House.
Reapn chatted for three to four
minutes with the I I-year-old Jlrl in
the hallway oft he residence as she was
windina up a private tour of the
White Hou~. Reagan spoke~man
Peter Roussel u 1d today.
"He pve her a smile and a
handshake end asked her how she wH
enjoyina her 101.1r of the United
States,'' Rous~I said of Reaaan's
m"tcting with the 1Jrl.
The spok~man said Reapn had
been aware that the younastcr would
be toorina 1he Whttc House. and •
meetina wa arranaed.
She was 1ccomptni~ by her
mother and a member of the "Ch1l·
drtn as Pcac:cmakers' orp011.a11on.
Roussel satd.
' 'Mellowed' Pat Benatar
in subdued Irvine Show
IJ TONY MA VBDR.A
Of .. ..., ........
If parenthood bu indeed mellowed
rocker Pat Benatat, it hun't slowed
down her auiW·playillJ husband,
Neil Geraldo.
Althouah the lm.ne Meadows'
apotliaht wu locked Saturday on the
black...,t>ed Benaw, the real abow
wu in the darker rcceaes of the •taae.
where Geraldo wiekled his ax like a
modern day Lizzie Borden.
Not tq take anythina away from
Benaw. From her black boots to her
bejeweled black beret. the opera-
trained rock star seemed as
pu,nacious u ever. Her voice spent
more time in the sravel pit than on the
upper levels of ber three«tave ranae. ~int a ro~ edae to her over-pohabed mx>rdlQll. Brinaina her &loved-fist. to cheek
levellheextoUedtheaudienceto .. Hit
Me With Your Best Shot .. and to
"Stop Usina Sex u a Weapon!'
Hi&hli&bts to be sure, but not
enouab to carry a 2l«>na per-
formance throuab nearly two houn.
And her dancina wu limited to the
wne borina two-s~ mauled by
Bruce Spri.teen in hJS "Oancina in
the Dark" vtdeo.
Undoubtedly, those fans ma.kins a oil&rimmqe to adore, pay bomqe or brina baby toys to the couple's year-
old dauabter were thrilled to tevs.
Others would bave been welJ-
ldviled to look beyond the spoc.liPt
to OenJdo, who struck a Jama Deu~
like ~re with hi1 hair sreued and
hiawh1te shirt tail1 out.
~ith a _lit ciprette hanaina from
bis Upe. Geraldo ooolly swuna and
pounded hls auitar, strums ofsmoke
curtina above his head. He puffed bis
way throupi some hot licks in
"Promiaes an the Dark," .. Hell is for
Children" ahd "Heartbreaker."
The newer selections from
Benatar's latest offerina "Seven the
Ha.rd Way" came up snake eyeu
Thou&h sometimes lyrically touch·
ina, they don't carry the z.ina of
Benatar's earlier rccordinp. It ~
~='.alEA =~ Merk Htrrler. ITENKO
H~ "AecllleM Dinglrd" 119151 WMSTUNG
Tm Halper. Lesle NlllMn. MOYIE
-I;»-tt "Porky'a N: The Nex1 Oty''
l=YTD ~~~WyattKnlght TIWPER~. M.D. Cl) HONEYMOOHERS: THE LOST
PM MAGAZINE EASOOE8
THE VIRBINIAN -10: 15-
HONEYMOONEN • AEUCWUS PAOOf\AMfMO
-t:OO--~-
ll!F: IE.-:.
-11:00-
•• ~Sabat•" (19101 Lee v111 1•••9 a~ ....... ,.._. ww-.,_ CAAION'S COMEDY~ --·"-"~~. llZAAAE l ~MA-n.E IAANEY MIU.EA
P'MllETHE LON> ~ ~
STM TIB Ttl8 °"y tt~OI Women"(1981)~· ·~~
ct1o Mas1roianni, Ettore MIMI. {f) MOYIE
-t:aO-•• "Bordello" ( 1975) 8 QI AU IS .FOAGIVEN (!) UFE8TYLES Of THE NCH AHO
(!) MOYIE FAMOUS
Ut'A "Inherit The Wend" (1980) (l)MOYIE
Spencs Trtey. Fredric Merell **'~ "L<Mt Letters" {1983) Jlmle
CC) MOYIE Lee Curtis. James Keech
t t t "The Y• OI L.Mng Din--11:30-~ously'' (1983) Mel Gibton. Sigour· 1 ())NIGHT HEAT CO w...-. QI TONIGHT tt~lnformer"(1935)Vlc· ;o~
tor MeLaglen. Heather Angel. G MOVIE
-10:00-t t "Tiie Ficlde Finger OI Fete" 11 KNOTS I.NONO (1967) TM> Hunter, Luts Prendes tat STAEET aw D't'NASTY
NEWS HAWAI F'IYE-4
20 / 20 OOMPUT9' CHAONIC\..ES
THE SAINT PRAISE THE LOAD
.. ..., ........ .., ..........
Pat Beaatar la lrrille.
pears her transition in to a 'balladeer ii
incomplete.
Opening for Benatar was the ~l,
uh, Del, er, Del TacosJ.. no that's not it.
It wasn't the Del t"uegos. I'd re·
member the Del Fu~os.. No, it was
the Del Lords. That's al
They sounded more like the Farm-er in the Dell.
Big suits vie
at NB theater
The Balboa Cinema will present a
"big suit" contest Friday in conjunc-
tion with its weekly midnight show-
ins of the Talking Heads concert film,
"Stop Maki04 Sense."
The "bi.gsu1t" contest is inspired by
the oversized pants and jacket Talk-
ing Heads leader David Byrne wears
on stage during much of the film.
Those wearin$ big suits to the
midnight screening Friday will be
admitted free and will be judged by a
panel of retired tailors and awarded
an array of prizes, promises theater
manager Eric Levin.
The Balboa Cinema is located at
709 E. Balboa Bl vd. on Newport
Beach's Balboa Peninsula. For more
information, call 675-4580.
laity Pllet
142-Hll
WINNER OF 7
ACADEMY AWARDS
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HoR oscoPl
Friday, Mar~ H
Al\IES (March 21-Apnl 19): Famil~ financiaJ dispute can be amicably
settled Your position is strong, you can afford to mile inteUiacnt oonoeuion.
Focus aJso on mystery, alamor, unique invitation which could lead to
romance.
Something lost
in t h e translation
TAURUS (April 20.May 20): .Emphasis on affairs of heart, travel,
speculation, popularity, serious consideration of marital status. You'U add to
wardrobe~~yc:>.u'll lcam where you stand with "very important person."
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Details are more important than previOllslY
considered. Read between lines, scpar--------------
ate facts from fancy. Check source
material, be sure references arc up to
date. Taurus, Sco11>io natives play SYDMEY
sianificant roles. " CANCER (June 21-July 22): You'll
have greater freedom of tbou~t, action. OIARR Realize you pin through wntten wotd ·
and by imprintina your own style. •••••••••••• Member of op~ite se~ becomes valu-
able ally. Genuni, Virgo'fijurc p,rominently.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): M&Jor domestic acijustmcnt dominates scenario.
Emphasis on security, residence, special relationship with older individual.
You'U receive gif\ representina genuine token of affection. Taurus native
plays paramount role.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Define terms. clarify meanings, steer clur of
self-deception. Refuse to give up something of value for mere whispered
promise. You'll get what you need, you'll also gain greater degree of
emotionaJ fulfillment.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Focus on payments, profit from crcaove
enterl)rise. Check long overdue will arrive -rou'll also meet deadline, and
love relationship grows stronger. legal dCCJsion will go in your favor.
Capricorn figures prominently.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You meet more people, you a.re released
from previous restrictions, personal horizons grow larger. Love plays major
role, i~dividual~ you admire will return compliment. You are going places,
you gain rccogmuon.
SAGl17ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Emphasis on new start, pioneering
spirit, courage of conviction, intensified romance. Individual who attempts
to invade your privacy should be told in no unccnain tcnns to steer clear.
Aquanan plays role.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Puzzle pieces fall into place, mystery 1s
solved, financial picture becomes bnghter than orig.maJly ant1c1pated. Focus
on family reunion, security, romance. ability to dance to your own tune.
Cancer natJve plays role.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Previous mqu1rics are answered -you
learn more, morale 1s boosted. popularity increases. You'll add to wardrobe,
you become more aware of body image. Gemini, Sagittarius fulfill dynamic
roles.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You're asked to make declaration of
mtent1ons. Be specific, state views in frank manner. Focus on spiritual vaJ ues.,
travel. unique reading matenaJ. You'll have chance to rebuild on more
suitable structure.
If you're a parent wbo believe, that
Enahsll is the universal languaae
between you and your child ... you're
new to this planet.
We may aJI speak the same words,
but they don't even bqjn to mean the
same thlng. For example, when
someone calls and asks me "What
are you doing?" and I say, "N'othing,"
I mean nothlng. I am siitina there
starina into space with my hands in
my lap and my eyc:s&lazod over. Even
my breathing is Shaflow.
When you ask a child what be is
doina and he says, "Nothing," that,
my friend. is a 911 signal. ''Doing
no th mg" to a child is what is not being
done out of the sight of a parent,
behind a closed door or at a friend's
house when there is no one at home.
Sometimes in the background there
are sounds of water running, a dog
lau&hing. bodies falling, &lass being
bro'kcn or sirens getting fouder and
louder. If a parent is sman he or she
will ask, as quickly as possible, how
many people in the room are doing
"nothing" with you, how Ion• have
you been doing it and why did 1t take
you 15 minutes to answer the ques-
tion'!
Another phrase that does not
translate the same from En-1ish Adult
to English Child is. "In a mmute." To
an adult, a minute is a precise form of
time measurement. It spans exactly
60 seconds, no more, no less. When
an adult says, "I'll be there in a
minute" they are locked into a time
frame that does not give.
When a child is asked to do dishes
and he responds, "In a minute," that
can mean anywhere from an hour to
three weeks. It can mean when be is
finished talking on the phone to a girl
who wants to play Phil Collins' entire
ERMA
Bo11Ec1
album for him. 1t can mean when he _
goes to the batbioom, plays with the
dog, shoots a few baskets until it gets
dark and does bis homework. It h as
been known to span a period of time
so long the pattern of the dirty dishes
is discontinued.
"I cleaned my room" does not have
the same meaning for kids as it does
for a mother. I personally have always
used the deftnition in the second
college edition of the American
Heritaie Dictionary, in which
"clean' is a verb meaning to remove
dirt or other impurities.
It seems rather clear to me that that
would include socks drying on a light
bulb, pizza boxes under the bed, eight
pairs of underwear stuffed in the
closet, a science project that is
multiplying, and orange juice on the
ceiling. That is obviously not the case.
Oddly enough, neither pa.rent nor
child ever becomes totally bilin2uat.
T here are always "gaps" like, l'l'Get
me up early. I have to study." Parent
Early is 5 a.m. Child Early 1s at noon.
The first time I discovered this
"gap" was one day when I asked my
son if he had washed his face. A 19-
incb tongue came out of his mouth
and ti.it every comer of his face. He
said, "Yes."
That's when I knew I had used a
word that would not translate.
IF MARCH Z8 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are independent. creative,
sensual and stubborn. You appreciate beauty, art, music and literature. You
are an original thinker, seldom follow the crowd. Your father probably had
more influence than did your mother. Anes. Leo, Aquarius play imponant
role~ in your hfe. You make new stan this year, you could also fatl madly in
love. April will feature change. travel, variety and creative endeavors. July is
IJkely to be your most memorable month of 1986.
People's parental
planning personal
Pr1·nce Charles has DEAR ANN LANDERS: Three cheers for the wnter who said people
1 fl 1 to~s }~;:,~:~ ;1~~~~g~osy questions about
Co Or U ances fbecameprcgnantthreeyearsafter
Jay and I were married. When I quit
Among the distant ancestors of
Pnncc Charles. accordin$ to those
who check out blood lines. were
Genghis Khan, George Washington
and Count Dracula.
Fancy bathtubs used to have lids
notched at one end. Or some did. The
head of the bather stuck up through
the notch. This was 1n 18th century
En~and. Many a high-born lady
while taking a bath, carried on
conversation with one or more
gentleman callers ~ted thereby
The heavy dnnker who tosses back
a few breath mints to conceal the
liquor odor isn't going 10 wm that
one Like garhc and cofTce, alcohol
produces perspiration of a particular
odor
If ~ou ~tick 10 the .. peed hm1t and
dnve for 24 hours, you'll travel 44
times as many miles 1n that time as a
salmon at sea
Women are more sens1t1ve than
men to most drugs. Why 1s that? asks
a client. Bod> weight. The lighter the
person. the •monger lhe reaction to
the same amount of drug. Labels on
most oral medications d1fTerent1ate
onl y between children and adults.
Some medics say dosage should be
prescnbed according to body weight
PEOPLE
L.M.
Bo YD
Our Chief Prognosticator thinks
TV makers Wlth cable companies
soon will enable you to push a button
that will let a window pop up on your
screen wherein you can see the day's
TV hstmgs as well as a listing of every
show on the air at the time.
Only three letters in theaJphabet-
Q. X and Z -turn up less frequently
than J.
Q. That fish called the sturgeon has
no teeth, right?
A. Right No bones, either. Not
even a backbone. It's frame 1s
carulage.
Q. Land-locked Hungary -850
miles from the Black Sea's nearest
open water -1s registered as a
seaport with a merchant marine of 19
ships. How come'!
A. It 's on the Danube.
In Blue Eyes. Ark . the mayor 1s
required 10 mow the city park lawn.
That's the deal
my JOb a great many people asked.
"Was the pregnancy plannodr' I
responded, "Yes, we arc thrilled."
Inevitably the nexl question · was,
"How lonJ did you and Jay try?"
ActuaJly we had been trying for over a
year but I didn't thmk it wasan}'one's
business.
Recently I d iscovered I am preg-
nant with a second child. This one
was NOT planned. Everyone, from
my sister and my in-laws to casual
acquaJDtanccs, has asked, "What
were you using'!" It floQrs me that
people have so much nerve.
Last week I heard a woman brag
that she became pregnant both times
··on the first try." She was telling this
to someone who had had three
miscarriages in five years. She laugh-
ing)y added. "Maybe mr, husband
should gJve yours lessons.' I thought
I'd die.
Please. Ano. say it one more time.
Family planning is an intensely
personal subject. It's awful to be put
on this spot or given unwanted advice
about it. Say so. -WEARY OF
LUNKHEADS JN FLA.
DEAR WEARY: Wllat boggle• me
11 not tJtat lbere are 10 muy brua-
plated, fou-door clod• wlllo uk
DU8Yyerf>lmlz-type q8ettiODI ud
make tacky commenta, btlt ~e
namber of lmbecUes wlllo believe tffy
laave u obligation to U1ten to tlllem.
Aayone wlllo aalll, "Bow loa1 dJd
yoa try?'' deservea to be left 1tud1Dg
alone, 1tarba1 at a bluli waU. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS:I know
remark.able strides have been made in
L.M. Boyd I• • 1yadlc•t~d denti5try and I hope I can be helped.
coluDJDJ1t. Please check this out.
A111
LAllDERS
I am a 52-year-old woman who has
worn full dentures for several years. I
have seen some e11ceUent dentists in
both Baltimore and Washington,
D.C.1 but my lowers have a tendency
to shp now and then -always. of
course. at the most inopportune
times. ,
I've been reading about complete
1mplantat1on and it sounds
marvelous. The thought of having
teeth put in my $urns, one at a time,
and· never needing to worry about
dentures again would be pure heaven.
Would you please contact an expert
and let me know if this isa possibility'!
Also, what about the cost?-D.R.L.
DE.AR D.R.L.: Dr. PHJ Gold.Uber,
deu of tllle Harvard Sclaool of Dntal
MedJcllte, 11 oae of tlae coutry'• most
kDowledgeable mea lD tlte field of
deatal lmplutatloa. Be told me tlte
followhtg:
Dtffereat types of lmplaat1 are
•H4 for cllffereot problem1. ne COit
depada, 111 part, oa die com.plenty of
~e proced•re req1lred.
YHr "dream" of 11.av&q a com-
plete 1et of lmplaated teetll IDcl 11evcr
..... Dffdlla& to lee • de1att1t 11
totally ureaJl1tlc. A .. cceslfal lm-
plul of a 1llal)e tootll will laat
:nmately flve yean. Alao, yoe
4 be aware tllat rtlb w&~
&mpluta may t.cl8Cle local lafecdo•,
Iott of boH aroud Ch lmplaat, ud
1la11ltl1 or Hmbaesa of die lower Up
d.e to H"e dama1e dub11 die
Hrlical pr'9Cedve. So JM see -It la
DOt all beer IDcl 1kinles, my dear.
Bill Cosby will speak to r eal doctors
By tbe A11oclated Pre11
NASHVILLE -BIU Coaby,
who portrays a doctor in bis hit
telev1s100 series, will deliver the
commencement address at
Meharry Medical College May
2S. college officials say.
"We arc delighted to have 811l
Cosby keynote the 1mponant
occasion,' said Dr. David
Sacca.er, the president. "He ex-
emplifies the integrity, strong
character and solid values. as wtll
as the academic achievement we
have tried to emphasize in our
students."
Meharry. a predominately
black school. was mentioned dun~ a scene on "Tht Cosby
Show this season.
Scatm•n back
LOS ANGELES -Seaunae
Crotkn was bo pi&altud three
days last week with flu-like symp-
toms. but hu resumed work on
the set of his new CBS-TV series
"Mominp&ar, Eveninpw." h.,
publicist said.
Crothers. 7.S, waJ bosp1taliud
for three weeb last July after
docton found an inoperable ma-
8111.Coeby
hgnant tumorbetund bis left tuna.
Ooc1ors determmed that ~mov
i na the tumor was too danserous
and he has been uoderaoina
radtat1ort trcatmenu since
The actor, whose real name 1s
Sherman Crothers, bepn a 6().
year cntenainment c:arecr WJth a
band, later movina to films and
television
8catma.D Crotllen
Quitter at 85
CHOTEAU. Mont. -It's
never too late to stop smoltina.
says Puhtzcr Prize-w1n nin1
author A.8. 01Grle, who IUcked
his 6}-yca.r-old habit recently at
.,e8S.
"I j ust got tired of beina a slave
to it and got tired of cou&hing, and
also I didn't like to s~nd SIO a
week for nothing," 111d G uthrie,
who won the Pulitzer for .. The
Wa_yWcst."
G uthrie, who had smoked up to
10 packs a week, quit with his
stcJ)SOn two days aft.er Christmas.
Nicotine gum was their ooJy
crutch.
Concert off
NASHVILLE -An anti·
apar\Mid benefit concert won't
go on with Pete See1er. GU Scott,.
He,.. and folk sinaer Holly Near
because orpni.urs say they are
havina difficulty linina up other
perfonners.
The three perfonncn had
pledfed their services for tbe
Freedom Jam '86 that had been
acheduled for ApriJ 12, wd
orpnizcr Aashid Himons. who
announced the c:anceUatron.
Proceeds were to ao to South
African Bishop 0...... Tlln'•
South African tehoLarship and
refuace funds; Transamca. a
Wuhinaton-based anti-
apanhdd lobby; and a locaJ
aroup1 .. t!Jc AlfO.Amencao Cul-
tural A.llW\CC.
A MATTER OF ENTRIES
East-West vulnerable.
deals.
NORTH
+ ACJ 3
Q K 843
0 7~
+A KQ 10
EAST
• K6 2
North
WEST •9• \)J76 ~1i_Q96
.;r& '2
SOUTH
0 J 10 9 8 . 3
+83
•QJ 108.7
Q 102
0 KQ6 2
•J7
The bidding:
North Eut South
1 NT Pa.. 3 +
4 + Pase Paes
Opening lead: Jack of 0
WHt
Pus
PaH
If you are sure that, 1n the full-
ness of time. you will get a ll the
tricks due to you, you can afford a
passive defense. If, however, you
can see that declarer has a source
of discards, you cannot sit back
ancft..'ait-you roust strike imme-
diately.
North-South reached four
spades on a normal auction. With
three-card support and a double-
ton, North clearly preferred the
s uit contract to no trump.
West led the jack of diamonds to
his partner's ace, and East paused
to take stock. Three defensive
tricks were obvious: the red aces
and the king of trumps The natu-
ral way to take the setting tnck
would seem to be with the queen of
hearts, since the king was in
dummy. However, East realized
the queen of hearts might never
take a trick.
West could no thave a fast entry
CHARLES
GOREN
OMAR
SHARIFF
to lead a heart through the king
And the table's clubs were surely
going t o provide declarer with on{'
or more discards . What then'?
Ea.'\t came up with the bright
idea of trying tor a diamond rutt
For that to succeed . he needed to
find declare r with at least two
hearts and his partne r with the
jack. At trick two East returned
the queen of heart.s!
There was no counter to this bril-
liant stroke If declarer tried to dis·
card a heart on clubs. West would
ruff. Declarer won the king of
hearts, came to hand with the jack
of clubs and tried the trump fi.
nesse. East won and continued
with a low heart to his partner'!J
jack.
It was obv1ou to West why his
partner had not cashed the ace of
hearts which he obviously held
West 's diamond return capped off
a brilliant defense by allowing his
partner to ruff for the setting trick
For Information about Cbarle•
Goren's new neweletter tor
bridle players, write Goren
Bridge Lett.er, P.O. Box 4426, Or·
lando, Fla. 32802-4426.
'::~~:;· S~\\'4!~-~£~s· :::
-----..WlrrCUY I ~
0 ·-!'01199 le-. of tt.. '°"' act0,..bled word• ti.. lo-IO 1,..... four li"""9 wo-da I G N A T I c I
I I I I I 12
WONNK Ii' I I I' I .
8 "1;~~5~~~~s l£11US IN I' I' I' I' r r I
A UNSCtAMllf lflTUS TO V (I ANSW I
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSI
1 Clubs
5 S!rlpltngs
9 Hiiiside
14 Arab
chieftain
15 Mlscellany
16 Sprinkle
17 Runs
18 Supplanting
20 Son ol
Aphrodite
21 Brat
22 Builds
23 Stows cargo
25 Staple fOOd
27 War god
29 Wood
30 fetched
34 Hobnob
36 Puffs
38 ROOf type
39 Big 1969
event
42 Animal
shelters
43 Firing
44 Macerate
45 Barracuda
46 Pose
4 7 Lox source
49 Spirit
51 Jungle beast
2 3 '
14
17
20
23
39 '
61
67
54 Perauade
58 Uneven
60 Metric unit
61 Alcoholism
63 Plenty obs.
~ Habiliments
65 Matted mass
66 Scruff
67 Soothsayers
68 Otherwise
69 Toboggan
DOWN
1 Bakery Item
2 Gathering
place of old
3 Surveying
instrument
4 Was cheeky
to
5 Italian city
6 Out on --
7 Unsymmet-
rical
8 Concession
9 Grass
10 Fine fabric
11 Of ears
12 Hemmed In
13 Work units
19 Tire problem
PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED
24 Bridge ol -
26 Bridge seats
28 -"King"
Cole
30 Obs1ruc1
3 1 Primitive
32 Ice mass
33 Pav1hon
34 Some Gls
35 011 balance
37 Splotch
38 Civet's ktn
40 Master
41 Bricltlayer's
trough
46 Look to be
48 Compares
49 Corpulent
50 Copyreads
52 Marry on the
OT
53 Sculled
54 Calculates
55 Ances1or
56 Graf -
5 7 Ttie Sov1e1
!>9 Engagement
62 Lincoln
10 11 12 13
THlt
FAMD,Y
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane
"I won't kick you again, Mommy."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
.~~"'
·~~~!!':-:::; .. •"';tC••UMeO,_..,•~""
-" '' , ...
"Marmaduke, I would llke to chat with
some of these people we're whizzing past!"
PEAlruTS
GARFIELD
MOW DO VOV EXPECT
TO PLAY TENNIS AMP
EAT COOKIES AT
TME SAME TIME?!
BIG GltORGlt by V1rgll Partch (VIP)
"He Ilk•• popcorn with Iota of butter."
DENNIS THE llENACE
--------
by Hank Ketch.am
~ .
3·'21
by Charles M. Schulz
TME MARD PART IS
RECEMM6 ~E IJ.}YILE
DIJNKJN6 A COOKIE IN
A 6LASS OF MILK ...
by Jim Davis
TUMBLEQEDS by Tom K. Ryan
I HEAR 'THE Ha110WN MORAAR'( HAS AN ORGAN. ,..._ ______ _... NOT ~AfJ •.. 1}-IE ~11\Jt'ER'S
ROSlt IS ROSE
MONKfV'S A ~II 0151RACTING
by Kevin Fagan
\..E.l'~ ~ M-< CAR. l'O
K~"tE. 10 sa>t~ . ~~~(~4
by Pat Brady
-
BLOOll COUXTY
llOON llULLINS
Nl88 U' L : .. ®
~j:..'{o!
\(ITTY~~
FOR BETTltR OR FOR WORSE
SHOE
JUDGE PARKER
DOOMESBURY
0r.nge Ca.1 OAJLY PILOT /Thureday, Marcti 27, 19M Al 1
by Berke Breathed
·nc nmR ·MT .. ! nc. Pl ... ?
I .
·by Ferd & Tom Johnson
by Lynn Johnston
I Gt>ESS WE.fll ~ a.>R~~
by Jeff MacNaJly
by Harold Le Doux
I SAW HER SEFMNG ~HER EAAlJ£R!
HE .AIRR~O TO FICK HER UP /llo&O.JT
TWO eL.oCKS FROM nE OJ.Je! HE THEN
DROV!! ro WHAT I ASSUME WAS HER ~MENT I I CAN STILL SEE HE?'
TA KING HIM f!!!ff THE HANO ANO
L.EAOING HIM INTO
THE ek.JILOING! SHE
L.OOKEO "TO ee
ABOlft20 YEARS OLO!
by Tom Batiuk
by Gary Trudeau
I
'
\
I
I
.
Orenge Cout DAILY PILOT I Thureday, Maroh 27, 198e
Survey sends
clear message
to city officials
The latest controversy to stir Newport Beach's pot is
the direct mail questionnaire enti tle~ ."Winter 1986
Homeowner Survey." ·
Distributed to 12.019 homes by the Newport 2000
political action committee, the survey is loaded' with
questions that seem to suggest negative responses.
Although spokespersons for Newport 2000 defended the
inquiries as .. honest'' and "relatively unbiased," the
organization's official vi.ew of the city is negative.
On the questionnaire, it states its opinion that the
quality of life in the area is deteriorating and notes
specifically that there are "Too many airplanes. people
and cars. Too much noise and polluti on of our air and
bay water. (and) Too much development."
That certainly sounds like bias. Constructive bias,
perhaps, but bias nonetheless. After all. if a political
action committee doesn't harbor a bia·s. cultivate it and
promote it, it has no reason to exist.
But you be the judge. The questio nnaire co ntains 33
multiple choice questions. Here are a few that seem to
capture th e flavor of the survey, shed light on the
philosophy of Newport 2000 and preview issues that wtll
be prominent in upcoming City Counci l ca mpaigns:
• How do you generaJly feel about the (airport)
expansion agree ment1 l. OK. Best cit y could do. 2. Not
very good: too much expansion. 3. Bad: ci ty caved in to
county interests.
• What bothers you most about the airport? I.
Noise. 2. Air pollution from jets. 3. Safety: air crashes. 4.
Traffic in airport area. 5. Commercial and industnal
growth surrounding airport. 6. Big airport not ap-
propriate for our area.
• The c1ty.reounty agreement provides for a new
passenger terminal of337,900 square feet (more than 11
times the size of the present terminal) Do you believe
that this enormous investment will inhibit the develop-
ment ofa supplemental or alternative site for an airport?
l. Yes. 2. Probably. 3. No.
•The new city-county agreement allows for a huge
expansion in the airport and number of passengers using
it. Our city council has called it the best possible
.. compromise" between the need for growth of air travel
in Orange County and the quality of life for residents of
Newport Beach. Do you agree with this concept? l . Yes.
2. No.
• Do you believe our city council should have been
more careful in approving an agreement (under whi ch
the county increased the number of"no1sy" flights from
55 to 95)? I. Yes. 2. No.
• The con tinued growth of Newport Beach, the
airport ex pansion and the proliferation of hotels,
commercial and industnaJ development will make a bad
traffic si tuation worse? l . Yes. 2. No.
• Do you recall seeing or hearing any information
from the county and/or the ci ty on an alarming increase
in bacteria and coliforn(sic) in the bay? 1. Yes. 2. No.
• Do you believe that the huge increase in
residential and industrial development upstream from
Newport Bay is a majorculpnf? I. Yes. 2. No.
• Do you belteve that our area's two largest
developers, The Irvine Co. and the Don Koll company,
ha ve had a maJOr influence on our cit y council elections
through their financial support to certain candidates? I
Big factor. 2 Moderate influence. 3. No 'opin1on.
• Should we try to elect new counci l members and
county supervisors who wi ll be more sensitive to the
needs of residents and less concerned with the interests
of the big developers?
The message 1s clear: Opponents of growth and
development in Newport Beach are mobi lizing for a
fight. Encouraged. perhaps, by the political successes of
anti-deve lopment organizations in Costa Mesa, New-
port 2000 and those who are attracted by It s platform
expect to be a potent force
Opinions expressed 1n tnls space are those of the Dally Piiot Other 111ews
expressed on this page are those of tne1r authors and artists Reader
comment Is invited The Dally Pilot PO Boir 1560, Costa Mesa. 92626 Phone
~2-6086
Reagan would once have
opposed his own policies
To the E:.dttor
Mr. Reagan cannot undcf'itand
why we Democrat!> oppo..e his polt·
c1cs 1n Central Amenca.
There was a time when he would
have opposed h1i. current pohc:te\
There was a ume in hti. ltfe when he
felt compas<J1on for ltttk people
caught under 1hc power of despots
As human hcings. we are 1nchncd
10 view things not a, they are. but as
we arc. If you arc a Republican kadcr
you will view anything !hat curb<> free
cntcrpnse big bus1ne ,, or the milt·
tary-industnal complex u being
wrong at best and subven1vc at wor'>t
We Democrats ~e the pohc1es ()f
la1ssc7 faire in Central America lor
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
\
.1n} when.') 3<; creaung people hkc
Duvalter of Ha1t1, Somoza of
Nicaragua. and Marcos of the Phtltp-
pines. Men of this type do not seem to
worry Republican leaders, but they
arc of great concern to Democrats.
We bcheve thal <tuch men and their
poltc1cs tmng about cond1uons which
result 1n a strong \OCtal backlash.
often led bycommun1c;ts If good men
1n our government do not establish
'(>Ctal poltc1e' that put a nnor under
the feet of the poor and 3 cc1hng over
the head\ of the nch. ~r arc headed
for a \trong <toc1al hackla\h 1n our own
mun ti')
JOHN KERR < o~ta Mesa
IC-Whtm«
,fefllr 11"1
I 1l1l(lf
Tom Teilt
U•~t0no EdtOf °'°"'....., C.•I'( [dtt0t
r .... c*"" ~Fdtttl<
Cf'llla"*' Spottt fdltOf
lll~Cllurcm-n
Conltollfo•
"""1l ~
Pr ".»:'·"' Ma~
. Terry IC.,._
.••c.J>atl()l'I U~
..... ct~
M•l'lcllfrOQ OlltctQf . ....., ......
~~ OlrtclOf
·'It seems to me that R~an 's Impatience and anxious paranoia over
theofflclaJJyrecognlzedgovernmentlnNlcaragualsheadlngusdown
the same rusty muzzletllat exploded Jn our laces Jan. 28."
DSA.1'LOOll08
free-laace writer -
J1c1
AIDEISOI
and JOSLPH SPEAR
Doubts
linger in
Mengele
,.4 probe
--
"JEEPERS! ... I THOUGHT GETilNG A KEY TO THE EXECUTIVE
WASHROOM WAS SUPPOSED TO BE AN HONOR ..• I
Urgency over Contra funds
recalls Challenger tragedy
Let'sgive heed
to the warnings
this time around
By DEAN LOOMOS
When advised by the more rauonal
and cautious contingencies of Con-
gress 10 wail (maybe six months)
before increasing the m1htary funding
of a dubious force of Nicaraguan
mcrcenanes. euphemistically called
.. freedom fighters :· the words of our
president went something hke this:
.. That's too long. for down there six
months 1s too long."
But the b1pan1san voices of hal-
anced reason persist: Give the Con-
tadora group a negotiating chance.
These na tions speak the same
language as the Nicaraguans and
share the s.ame regi on. If anyone 1s to
have questions .of national sccunty
due to bogeyman-communism. 11 ts
the}
Contadora (and the entire 1n1cr-
nauonal communtt} )wants us to wait
-to pursue peaceful negouauons -
not to go on funding the further
brutal121ng of Sand1nt<;ta heahh-care
cen1ers, literacy workers and farming
collectives. Out of the office of the
president come the famihar words
.. Of course he w1ll lts1en, but he won't
compromise. We're going for the full
SIOO m1lllton now."
Shades of the NASA dec1s1on-IT)aktng process now lay painfully
-ON THE RIGHT
bare. A process of top-down c11-
ecuti ve stubbornness and 1ndi5ere-
tionary risk-taking that weighed to<>
lightly the need for safety precautions
and ignored the warnings of those
engineers who knew the shon-
comings of the shuttle's booster
design; saw the freezing weather for
what it was. But deadlines were
deadlines.
What have we learned from the last
eight weeks of shuttle investigations?
Anything about patience, over-
confidence. JOinl decision-making.
hsten1ng to those who are wiser and
more informed in the cri tical details of a given snuatjon?
It seems to me that Reagan's
1mpat1ence and anxious paranoia
over the officially rec<>Jnizcd g~vern
ment in Nicaragua is heading us
down the same rusty muule that
ex ploded in our faces Jan. 28.
With the tears barely dry from the
Challenger backfire, America's
number-one PR man ts n~t now
calmly assuring us (with s1mphsuc
scare tactics) that his way 1s the only
way to stem the "red ude of co m-
munism" that he expects us to believe
is lapping against the shores of San
Diego.
According to Reapn's 1deo-
logically fogged mind. tt s time to nd
our hemisphere of th ese loathsome
brigands who have dared to lift their
people out of ignorance. disease and
starvati on by doing 11 "their way" -
wnh th e atd of whoever would help
(be they Western or Eastern bloc
nations). But the call from the White
House ts "damn the torpedoes. full
steam ahead ...
If we substitute weather and 0-
nngs for torpedoes, blast-<>ff for
steam, t.he analogy speaks for itself.
But what speaks for the conscience of
millions of U.S. ettizcns who must
live with the deaths of hard-work.mg
Nicaraguans who Wlll pay with their
lives on the firing ends of M-t 6s that
we pay for out of our taxes? Who
speaks for us. the American people who Reagan himself admits are
overwhelmingly against our 1ntcr-
ve nt1on in Nicaragua?
There 1s yet to be a citizens·
commission on the shuttle disaster,
even though a "common citizen"
sacrificed her hfe. I hope such a
commission evolves because the
underlyi ng causes and wammgs of
ChaJlenger are just beginning to
surface.
But for now, Wlth our mfonned
hindsight. can we perhaps show some
good old Yankee foresight, and
prevent a Nicaragua disaster, one that
our president wants us to court. I say
let's hold the reins. This time. let's
listen to the bellwether warnings that
go deeper than our insecure need to
remake d1ffenng governments in our
own image. To fund a band of
vengeful mercenaries and their
Marcos-minded leaders with military
supplies -in hopes of their creating
somethin$ better by their destructive
tactics-ts tantamount to sending up
another shuttle next week. in freezing
weather, with the s.amc booster that
fajled so miserably Jan. 28.
Deu Loomos l• a freeluc:e poUtJ-
eal writer, rHearcbcr and editor.
End of an era for Reagan;
far worse for Nicaraguans
But vote a lso reveals Americans' lack
of con fidence in their c hief executive
They speak of the N 1caraguan vote
as of an end of an era
That was the golden day when the
thralldom of Congress b) Ronald
Reagan. exercised through his magic
as the great communicator. ended.
and. once ended (goes the specu-
lat1on), 11 cannot be revived
Humpty-Dumpty has ta.ken a great
fall .
There 1s a cen.ain plaus1bil11y 1n this
ltne of argument. Not onJy dtd Mr.
Reagan, when he addressed the
Amcncan community, pull out all the
stops, he c11ercised himself in pnvate,
callioa in indjvidual congressmen
and pitching them his analysis in
person. and with t.he aid of his
pnncipal advisers Even so. defec-
tions were numerous enou&h to deny
him what he asked for. $100 million
to finance a counterrevolution
Anthony L.ewis. seizing the op-
portunity, writes 35 though Congress
has proteClcd Mr. Reagan from a
pnvate obscs!>ton. Mr. Lcw15' point ts
almost always predictable here· Any-
one who fai.tens concentratcdly on a
communist sahent 1, suffenng from a
McCanhyite obsession. He d~ not
mention what 1t 15 that people suffer
from who art silenced. w:.o go to 1111.
or who are tortured by those govem-
men ts we·have an obsession Wllh.
In one way ll ts true that Mr.
Reagan ha' been seriously under·
mi ned Because if everythlllg he said
about what 1s 101ni on in Nicara,gua
can be cheerfully disrq.arded. then he
1s sutfenng from a form of paranoia •
and 1s to be treated hke the man who
visits the psych1atnst. complain in& of
all the grauhoppen that cling to his
t.pel\.
So'>
The best fnend of Mr. Re-.an·~
strategic reputation 1s the govern-
ment of Nicara~ua. Two con-
gressmen visiting in Managua last
weekend were shocked by what they
saw: the fanaticism, the militancy of
the rhetonc, the general disarray. One
of these congressmen said he con-
tinued confident that he had voted
correctly 1n denying the contras SI 00
m1lhon because, he explained,
Nicaragua is going to fall from its own
weight, th anks to the fanaticism of its
leaders.
These arc happy thoughts. causing
us. in retrospect, to wonder onJy why
Hitler didn't fall under the weight of
his fanaticism. or Stalin, both o(them
at least the equal of Mr. Ortega in
fanaticism.
Mr. Reagan wiJJ in due course be
sustaJncd by historical develop-
ments, but that docs not give us the
answer he seeks, wruch is: What
should the leader of the free world do
about it?
The invincible ianorance of those
who arc li&htheancd about develop-
ments 1n Nica~ua wu dJSplayed 1n
the London Times last Thu'lday
when Graham Greene asked -and
before you laugh, remember that Mr.
Greene, though capable of wonderful
irony. 1s capable aJso of wonderful
na1vete -Why do they call 1t a
communist government 1n
Nicaragua, why not a Catholic gov -
ernment, since three of •U senior
officiaJs art Catholic pricsu?
By the same reaJOning. one would
call the 1overnment or Ho Chi Minh
not a communist 1ovemment, but a
poet's government. since Ho was also
a poet. The priests a soct11cd with the
Sand1nistas have been retired from
~rv1ce. two by the V1t1can. another
by the Jetuit order; and the
archbishop 1n Manqua has been
WILLIAM F.
Bue KLEY
forthright in denouncing the pro-
gressive inroads of the Marxist state
on the schools, on civil rights, in
foreign poli cy.
Reagan 1s down1 and in pan this
was, sad to say. his own doing: He
asked for a peashooter, having de-
scribed a dragon. Confused people
figured wb y bother with a ~shooter
if it really is a dragon, and 1fit is not a
dragon, wh y bother with a
peashooter? It was that undergirding
unrnlity. one must suppose, that did
Reapn in.
Because the alternative 1s truly
unthinkable. If the American people
do not tru!t sufficiently in their chief
executive, in the secretary ofstate, in
the Joint Chiefs. to identify a menace
so close to home. then the struClurc of
authority 1s in serious di$&1T8y. It
wasn't as 1f Reapn had said; Loolc,
there are two ways of dealing with
this, one of them being to hope that
the whole thing will go away.
He said Act now. or prepare for
such arave po ib1lilles as the oom-
muniution of CcnttaJ America and,
inevitably. pressures on Mexioo that
Mexioo i1 not in a position to cope
with.
A loss of confidence in a leader to
'ee sttuattons descriJ>ed as
seopolilically obvious is a sreat suain
between the people and their elected
chief ~11ecutive. lt 1s ironic that the
likeliest rcbuildtr of Mr. Req.an's
lost ~g:;t1on 1s the Sandinistas.
W IJ9d.leT 11 • 1Tf14ktll#
r91muJ1L
J
Decision on death
called 'too hasty'
by forensic dentist
WASHINGTON -Just as in-
vestigators from the United States,
West Gcnnany and Israel were 1n hot
pursuit of Dr. Josef Mengele, the
most notorious Nazj war criminal
still on the hlm. his family suddenly
announced last year that be ~
drowned in 1979 and that his bones
were buried in Brazil.
Forensic experts examined the
skeletal remains and identified the
bones as Mengele's "with reasonable
scientific certainty." This led the
three governments to call off their
search for Adolf HitJer's "Angel of
Death."
We pointed out some curious
discrepancies that aroused our suspi-
cion that maybe, just maybe. Meogele
had pulled a hoax on the world and
had escaped again. Our associate
Lucette l...agnado pursued clues from
Gcrma,ny to Paraguay.
Now the United States' leading
forensic dentist. Dr. Alben Dahlberg,
has asked the Simon Wicscnthal
Center to reopen the in vestigation of
the skeletal remains exhumed m
Brazil. He is profcs.sor emeritus of
anthropology at the University of
Chicago and is considered the dean
and pioneer of forensic dentistry.
This is the science of identifying
bodies by teeth and dental records.
Dahlberg said he was not im-
pressed by the explanations various
team members made recently at the
annual convention of forensic scien-
tists in New Orleans. "I think there is
much that is unanswered." Dahlberg
said. "They were a littJe too hasty, and
the evidence was mea~cr."
The forensic medicine team is still
split over its pending final report on
the skeletal remains. Some members
arc anxious to have done Wlth the
matter; others want to have aJl the
lingering doubu resolved before sub-
mitting the final report.
One frustrating concern is that the
Brazilian government, after almost
10 months of trying. has been unable to tum up a single X-ray that could be
used to identify the skeleton p<?Sitive-
ly. Mcngele's diaries -which have
been authenticated -told of numer-
ous physicaJ ailments that would
likely have led to X-rays, as did
testimony of the peo ple who
protected him in exile for more than
20 years.
Although d~tors and dentists who
treated Mengele have been found.
none had an X-ray of their notorious
patient Mengcle insisted on obtain-
ing all his X-rays, they said.
One curious incident involved
Mcngcle's hairball, apparently caused
by ingestion of mustache bnstles that
lodged in rus digestive tract. The
doctor who treated Mengele was
located, and he recalled the diffi culty
he had borrowing the X-rays he had
taken when he wanted to discuss the
unusual operation at a medical con-
ference some time later.
The patient, whom the doctor
knew then as Wolfgang Gerhard, was
extremely reluctant to part with the
X-rays even fora few days, and finally
agreed only on condition that no
copies be made. He scrupulously counted each X-ray, and checked
them just as carefully when the doctor
returned them.
X-rays of the lower abdomen
would aJmost surely include ponions
of the pelvis and spine that could be
matched apfost the bones dua up in
Brazil. Mcngele. himself an
anthropologist, would have known
th.at such X-rays oould demolish any
hoax he might have been pla.nnina.
Dental records arc also oon-
spicuously absent. and DahJbera said
be was unimpressed by the dental
evidence found in the Brazilian arave.
He believes acnetic studies miaht
help to identify the few teeth u
MenJelc's or not, but this would
require the Menaele family's cooper-
ation. whi ch has not been forth·
coming.
Meanwhile, the n:~n of Dr.
Donald Onner. a Smithsonian In-
stitution anthropologist wbo eum-
mcd some of the remains mdepco-
dcntly, was inconclusive. When
asked the crucial q,uestion, Ortner
first replied: "There is nothin1 in the
skeleton which proves it is Mente le ...
But be also pointed out: "There ll
nothina which proves 1t 1s not
Menaele "
Ki s JUt mstmct based on othe.r tcs~ Ortner wd, Lt that the bones in
the Bralllian aravc wen: ~le' J•d~-J s,.r an'"""**,.,,_.,._
• lllly Piil THURSOA Y, MARCH 27, 1988
lloeton ecoree %1 rune on 22 hit• In exhibition exploelon.12.
Ohio 8gte weehee out Wyoming for.NIT cheniplonehlp 92.
Pirates 1
' win own ·
tourney
Coast talks it up
in 16 -1 t h rasl;ling
of uthwesterri
B·i dnus MONAHAN
. '
They have a pecuJiar way of &<>in& •
about things in the baseball propam
at Orange Coast ColJege -they don't
t.alk about winning. But right now the
Pirates arc winning and are the wk of
Orange County community coU.
baseball.
The Pirates ( 18-4) completed their
own two-day, three-team invitational
tournament Wednesday, tbruhina
Southwestern College ofChqla Vista.
16-1 in the championship. In the
process, the Pirates extended their
winning streak to 12 pmcs.
"We don't talk about winnina."
said OCC Coach Mike Mayne. "We
don't say, 'we bavctowin bispmeor
that game.' We know that if we play as
welJ as we can, we have a chance of
winning.''
Winning is nothing new to OCC
teams playing under Mayne, but the
~anncr in which they. are winnin&
n ght now has Mayne himself a little
shocked.
' Dllllr ........... "' ~ 1(....,
OCC •Paul Newman (abo•e) flrea to flrat bue to complete double play u Todd O.hlro loob on. Pirate pltcber Sam Aap.at (right) throwa to plate.
The Pirates scored 37 runs in the
tournament and have scored 123 over
the last seven games, includ.in& 33
against Compton, 27 apinst Mt San
Antonio and 22 against Golden West.
(Pleue Me OCC/112}
From AP dJ1patcbea
Iowa basketball coach George
Raveling, who's turned down the
coachingjob at Houston, says be will
bold another round of talks with
officials fTom USC to sec about
becoming coach of the Trojans.
Raveling told reporters Wednes-
day night prior to a business conven-
tion dinner that be was "stilJ talking"
with USC officiaJs. Earlier in the day
he said he would fl y to Los Angeles
today for more negotiauons.
A source said USC had offered the
coaching job to Raveling, who has
been at Iowa for three )'ears. A report
said Raveling was offered the job,
vacated when Stan Morrison resigned
two weeks ago to become associate
athletic director at the school.
One report said that Raveling
received a "very attractive" offer to
coach the Trojans and was seriously
considering acccptin1t it.
Raveling told WHO radio io Des
Moines late Wednesday that
although he was interested in the USC
job and was goin~ to meet with school
officials, be wasn t ready to ac.ccpt the
JOb JUSt yet.
"At this point, I feel there's some
extremely relevant oonversations
that need to take place between
myself and their athletic director and
president," Raveling said. "Once that
conversation takes place, then r
would think I would be in a pos1llon
to say yes or no."
There were reports that USC of-
ficials were planning a news con-
ference for today to announce their
new coach, although a USC spokes-
man said nothing was scheduled.
Raveling has guided Iowa to re-
cords of 13-15, 21-11 and 20-12. The
Hawkeyes played in the NCAA
tournament in each of the past two
years, but lost in the first round.
SCCwlns
twln blll
Southern California College got
in some hitting practice, then put
in some reserves as it over-
powered We t Coast Christian,
10-6 and 5-1, in a non-conference
college baseball doubleheader at
SCC Wednesday.
The Vanguards wasted little
time in the initial contest. amass-
ing I 0 runs on six hits and three
WC Christian errors in the fi rst
three innings.
SCCs Ron Nelson hit in both
of his plate appearances and bad
one RBI, Jeff Motske was 2 for 3.J
Howard Wellama went 2 for J.
with an RBI and Lou McC.ollum
had a 1-for-l outing with 2 RBf.
Brian Otten improved his record
to 2-4 with the win.
Robert Mansfield had a
shutout work.10g through eiabt
mninp. and p ve up five hits 1n
nine 1nninl$ of work while fan-
nin1 SIX.
Nelson ap1n took hmina
honors with a 2-for-4 outing with
an RBI. ..
Tbe Vanauards (I S-8) hosted
Atu$&·Pacific in an NAIA Oi!--
tnct III doubleheader.
Bill Bavasi 's challenge:
To find major prospects
From AP d11patcbea
Manager Gene Mauch and the Angels, who
have a l<?t ~f quesuons about the upcoming
season, picked up last Fnday and moved their
spnng trainins headquarters to PaJm Springs.
Left behind at the Angels' facility in
Tempe, Ariz .. was Bill Bavasi and 131 possible
answers to the team's shortcomings in the
seasons down the road.
Bavasi, the Angels' director of minor
league operations, and his staff will be
overseeing the club's minor-league camp. With
them will be 131 ballplayers of varying
cxpencnce and talent competing for a spot on
KINGS DON
~OADTOGS
IN7-3WIN
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Maybe,
just maybe, it's been the uniforms
behind the Los Angeles Kings' hor-
rendous season at home this year.
The Kings, playing in their road
uniforms at the Forum, rang up a
spirited 7-3 victory Wednesday night
over the Calgary Flames.
"I didn't think it meant a thing
yesterday," Jim Fox said of the
uniform switch. "But tonight I'm not
so sure."
Fox and Bernie Nicholls each
scored two goals to pace the Kings,
who played like an inspired team.
Was it the road uniforms'?
"It was a lot less of that than other
things," Kings Coach Pat Quinn said.
"W c finished our checks and drove to
the net. They kept driving. They put
60 mmutcs together."
CalJMY Coach Bob Johnson said
the Kings {>layed with a lot of spirit
"The Kings played with a lot of
intensity and a lot of emotion," he
said. "They had a lot more at stake
than we had."
The victory kept the Kings even
with the Vancouver Canucks at 53
points for the final Smythe Division
playoff berth. The Canucks defeated
the Quebec Nordiques, 7-6 Wednes-
day night.
one. of the four minor-league teams 10 the
Angels' organization.
~hilc Mauch. looks for his lineup for
opening day, Bavas1 and Co. will have concerns
all their own.
"They arc two completriv different
cam~:· ~vasi said .in a recent phone
10te~1ew. Th~ cmp~as1s at the major-league
level 1s that you re trying to come up with your
best 25 guys . . . young, old, in-between it
doesn't matter. '
"At our camp, we have prospects we expect
to play in the big leagues and kids who are non-
prospccts today. You're just training them ...
and putting players at the level they're best
suited."
The drills at the minor-league camp come
with dJfferent intentions.
"It's a lot more intensified in fundamen-
tals," Bavasi said. "In the big leagues. they go
over the same things, but it's usually JUSt a
refresher course for them. We arc teaching."
I~ additio~ t.o teaching the finer points of
throwing and bitung, the Angels' instructors are
trvin1t to instill a winning attitude.
"We sit around after workouts ... we
suggest. we argue, and we try to come up with
our four best clubs," Bavas1 said.
"Twenty-four hours a day we put pressure
o n you to.win." Bav~si said ... We want you to go
to bed with a knot in your stomach and learn
how to live with 1t ... try to get you to like 1t.
"When you instill in them that kind of
intense pride in winning, they become hungry to learn ...
A typical player in the Angels' organization
will begin at one of the club's three eta.A
team~ -Quad Cities, Salem or Palm Springs.
He will then move op to the Dou~A Midland
Angels and advance to the Triple-A Edmonton
T rapPCrs of the Pacific Coast League before
making the big club.
Player assignments will be decided by
Ba.nsi and bis five minor-league managers:
Winston Licnas (Edmonton)· Joe Maddon (~idland); Tom Kotchman (PaJm Spnngs);
Bill Lachcmann (Quad Cities); and Joe Hines
(Salem). Also involved will be minor-league
pitching instructor Joe Coleman and m1nor-
lcague hitting instructor Rick Down.
"Of the 131 ptaycn on our minOT·lcacuc
roster. if 13 make 1t to the rnajon that shoald be
about n&ht," Bavasi said. "But you can never
tell which ones they arc ...
"People in the past have talked about the
minor-league opentions of the Los Angeles
Dodgers or the Kansas City Royals.~ Bavas1
said. "We want people to talk about the
California Angels hke that.
Moore gets decision
in Angels ' 9-8 win
Willard fTom third. Julio Franco's
leadoffbomer in the sixth made n 5-5. Joyner ups average
to .428 with strong
4-for-5 perf0rmance
From AP dJ1patcbe1
PALM SPRINGS -Oeveland
shortstop Dan Rohn bobbled Gu!)
Pohdor's lWO-OUl sroundcr In the
eighth to aJlow Dick Schofield to
score from third as the Angels
downed the lnd1ans. 9-8, Wednesda)
in exhibition baseball.
The Angels had loaded the bases on
two singles and an intenuonal walk
before Pohdor's grounder up the
middle.
Donnie Moore. despite allowing
three runs m two innings. earned his
first dec1S1on for the Angels. no"' 11 -8
m Cactus League play Cleveland 1s
10-9.
The Angels Jumped off to a 4-0 lead
m the first against nght-hander Reg·
gJe Rntter on RBI angles by Doug
Dcemces and Ruppert Jo nes and
Rob W1lfong's two-run double
Carmen Cast11lo'c; two-run homer
his third of the spnng. made 11 4-~ m
the second and Joyner's RBI smgjc m
the fourth gave the Angels a 5-2lead.
Bnan Down1ng's homer off Rich
Yett m the bottom of the sixth made 1t
6-5. but the Indians rallied for three
runs in the seventh against Moore.
Andy Allanson's two-run single mak-
ing it 8-6.
The Angels drew even in the
bottom of the seventh on Polidor's
two-run single off Dave Von Ohlen.
For his second straight game.
Joyner "-'ent 4-for-5 to raise his spnng
average to 428. which leads the
Angels. The rookie first baseman also
1s tops m runs ( 12). hits (27) and
doubles (5)
"I'm pleased to have gotten to play
every da) l'H been successful so
far:· said Joyner. who doesn't nave
an) big league eitpenence. 'Tm a little
11red I'm no t hitting the ball as hard
ac; in Puerto Rico M
E zpo9 edge Dodgen
VERO BEACH -Andre Dawson
drove in five runs. including the tytng
and winning runs. as the Montreal
fapos rallied to beat the Los Angeles
Dodgers 10-9 1n 11 innings.
The Exi;><>s were tnuhng 9-8 m the
ninth 1nnmg when Dawson hit h1
first home run of the spring, off Los
Angeles reliever Ken Howell. "It would have been nfoer 1f
Vancouver didn't win," Quinn said.
"Pressure can get to the point where
athletes don't perform well. lfwe had
fallen two points behind. it could
have been like that ..
Dod.aler Man8'er Tommy Luorda up• with bomeplate
umplre Terry Tate after Ken L&nclreaaz (left) ... called OD
atrtkea darl.nC 1ame wltb Ezpoe Wednaday.
Cory Snyder led off the Indians'
fifth with a s1ngk Jerry Willard
blooped a single to center and nyder
scored on Gary Petus' Wlld throw to
third. Rohn's sacnfice 0\ scored
In the 11th. Dawson'ssuwe scored
Herm Winnmaham. Howefl was the
loser and Montreal reliever Randy t
Clan~ got the win
If 'Skins give up, Theismann would like to talk to Rams
f'Tom AP d11patclae1
Joe The1smann 1s ready to talk to the
Rams. if the Rams arc ready to talk to him.
The Wash1naton Redskins have given
their quarterback permission to negotiate with
other NauonaJ Football League teams.
The1smann said that the Rams arc the first
team he wants lo t.itt-To-1f he no longer has a
future with the Redskins.
Thcismann's career wasjCoparducd when
he broke his nght lea Nov 18 durif\I a pme
against the New York G iants. The 36-ycar-old
quanerback suffered a compound fracture
when he was sacked by Lawrtnce Taylor.
But The1smaM wd he really doesn't
expect to talk with any team other than the
Rcdskms until he as funher alOfll 1n h15
rchabtlitauon. .. It would be wrona ror me to call a tNm
I ,
and say. 'ttus 1s Joe The1smann, arc you
interested in me playt ng for you,"' Ile said
"As the draft aoes on and I get stronger and
stronger, those thinp wlll probably develop
more. Riabt now, there's not a lot I can do other
than aet ready to play football.··
Tbeismann, 1n town to film a commercial.
said be wu not here to meet with the Rams and
negotiate a trade to play in Anaheim next
season. However, "1f someone is 1ntcrcstcd in
me, I'd be happy to talk to them,." he added
"I sec Steve (Ba.rtkowskl. a lrtt agent) was
out here for a tryout, so the Rams may be
considering a cha• at qua_nerback."
"I've wd before that the teams I've
considered cont.act.1na arc the Rams. the
Atlanta Falcons and tht attic Sea.hawk • "
The1 mann said.
"I feel I can play this year, but ifs a httlt
f '
premature. If! met with a team. I couldn't work
out or show m y war~ npu now ..
The quanerback said that time might not
be far off. however.
"Dr. (Charles) Jackson 1s quite confident
that things ~II be healed enough for me to pla)
this year." The"man wd.
"I would hope l would be able 'o mo\e
prcttyck>Kto IOO pcrttntby June That ma" be
a httJc optJm1s1ttc. ·
"The leg feels really good .\s oflast Fnday
the doctor said it looked hke I wouldn't havt to
wear a brace of any lnnd.
"I get X-rayJJ o n the 1q every thrtt wtt ).
w 1n the next thrtt weeks rm to•na to do
athletic th1np to ,.mulatc what do on the
football field, hkc drop ti.ck and spnnt out ··
The quarterback Yid he has no doubtc; he
will play this sca50n. Howtver. ht' didn't have
an answtr as to v.h<'re he m1aht be playt ng
Soon afttT he brolt<' h111 leg. l'he1 mann
vov.-ed he would return to challenge Jay
Schroeder for the Redskms' startlf\I ciuar
terback JOb 1n 1986 Schroc<kr. a former UC'LA
quanerbad. .. led the Redskms to five W1D'I m tht'
last six games of the 198S K'Uon
The1smann sa.1d he didn't know what ha
tatus was with the Red lun
"I wic;h I could tell you." he said "What
the) 've said to me 1 ·we want to Stt how )'OU
arc. but W<"'re leaning another way
.. lhhcy foci they have a quarterback of the
futun-in Jay ( hrocdcr) a nd they want co o
with lum. then that's fine
"The Red Ions havt bttn sr?t They let
mt v.ork out everyday at (JFK) S\ad1um and
thtv'vt 1vtn me ~1 s1on to talk to other
tam'i "
\ \
-,,..
.
I
Finger of blame
points to Hough's
fancy handshake
From AP dl1patcbe1
POMPANO BEAC H, Aa. -Texas
Ran&ers knuckleballer Charlie Hough is
scheduled for surgery today after breaking
the little finger on his ri&ht hand during a
fancy handshake with a rnend.
The injury will cause the veteran right-bander to
miss his opening night pitching assignment.
Hough will have a steel pin implanted into thr
finger to hold the bones together and facilitate recovery,
team officials said.
The severity of thr mJury
wasn't discovered until Tuesday,
and general manager Tom Grieve
announced that Hough had been
placed on the 21-day disabled list
1mmed1arely.
Manag_er Bobby VaJenune
tabbed rookie Jose Guzman as
Hough's replacement for the
Aprif 8 opener m Arlington
Stadium against tbe Toronto Blue Roach Jays.
Hough said thr accident occurred as he left a party
JUSt before 10 p.m. Monday. Hough had shaken hands
with his friend, then the two locked fingers and
continued the handshake m a semi high-five.
He said he put ice on i1 in his hotel room, but did
not think it was senous until 1t began hurting while he
was riding an exercise bikr Tuesday morning..
X-rays showed a break m the bone below the lower
knuckles of the finger.
Officials said Hough will need another 10 days
after Thursday's surgery before he can resume throwing
and he would not come off the disabled hst until a week
into the season.
"They say thrtt weeks. but I'm saying less than
that," Hough said "I figure I'll miss a week of the
regular season I can't 1magjne 1t tak.mg more time than
that. That finger doesn't even touch the ball"
Quote of the day
Cbucli Nevin, the 7.5 reserve center of the
Detroit Pistons, on standing out in a crowd:
"Someumrsa person will sec meand say. 'Ob my
God!' I tell 'cm, 'Just call me Chuck'."
27 thoroughbreds die in fire
CAMDEN. S.C. ,_ At least 27 ~
thoroughbred racehorses wonh millions of
dollars were killed in a fire tha1 destroyed a
horse barn here. officials said today.
The fire at Festoon Farms was reported about IO
pm. Tuesday after an assistant trainer went to see what
was d1sturb1ng the horses. Firefighters ext1ngu1shed the
blaze early today. said Joel Barnes. public 10format1on
officer for Kershaw County
The trainer was overcome by heavy smoke but
escaped through a window of the barn. said Jill Davis,
owner of the barn
"The bam 1s complete!\ 1otaled. ·· !>ht' said '" a
telephone 1nte~1cw
Davis next Houston coach?
HOUSTON -University of Hous-m
ton athletic director Tom Ford declined to
confirm or deny the story. but a radio
report said Stanford University's Tom
Davis will succeed Guy Lewis as the Cougars' new head
basketball coach
• Davis arrived at Houston Intercontinental Airport
late Wednesday afternoon with his family. Houston
radio stau on KTRH reponcd.
Lewis announced in January bis retirement after
30 season!>. U l-1 officials said last week they hoped to
hire a successor by the end ofth1s week.
Ford met with Oav1s for several hours Wednesday
night. but declined comment about the meeting upon
his return borne about m1dn1ght, the station said.
Kl RH ~portscaster Ken Silverstein said Davis
and his lamil) were met at tile airport by U H regent
Don Sander~ .... ho 1s 1n chargr of the coach mg search
comm1t1c<:
"I would assume that your assumptions (of Davis·
succerd1ng Lewis) are correct. but that's basically all I
kno" ··Sanders replied later in the night.
BASEBALL ~
::;:y~:;.:~~:~~~~06-97 Red Sox explocle, 27-10
tonio IOl I ~lid COnlnbution fro~ its m _ "'
bench to f'e$1Ster a 105-97 NBA victory Bost 1 g 22 hit d Whit S sinJlc off Ed Lynch snapped a tie aa overt~e~sA~ele$<;lippers. Thev1ctorywasonlythc __ Oil S ~ $ S. rOpS e OX; 'J'.oront~ ~red three timct in the
Spurs third an their last 19 pmes. The Spurs 0 1 1 J R d R l t l e•atnh inning. One out lattr Willie n:iaintained their two-.r,me .lead over Phoenix for the r 0 es, ays, e S, angers V C Or OUS Upshaw and Garth Iors addCct RBI
e1ahtEh and final,playo spot 1n ttte Western Conference . From AP cllipatclae. wi'th 11 runs. The Red So• scored 51 . ., singles to. m~ke it 4-1. The Meta .. : lsewhcrc IJl the NBA, Mose1 .Maloae scored 32 "' " scored twtcc m the eiahtb off Stan
points and passed the 11,000 mark m career rebounds The \h1cago White ox bad their runs in the first innina. five each in aarke on Ron Oardenhirc's betet-
as PhiladclpJ.Ua defeat~ Atlanta. hatting shoes on Wednesday. They the fourth and seventh and four io the loaded ain&le. Mets starter Sid
112-103 for 1~s first Vlttory over scored I 0 runs on 17 hits -and lost eiahth and njnth. femdndez blanked the Blue-Jays 00 the Hawks thlS season ... Adrlao by 17 runs. Ron Kittle and Rudy Law homered two hits over the first five innlnp DucJey scored 18 of his 37 points The Boston Red Sox must have for the White Sox. who played with a . ·
in the first q,uarter to pace Utah to thought they were home in cozy split squad. A contest against the Ran1ers 8, Brans I:. Rookie Ed
a 116-1 O I victory over Denver. . . Fen way Park instead o(Payne park in Pittsburah Pirates was rained out. Correa, a 19-year-old naht-bander,
Ed1ar Jonu tipped in a missed Sarasota, Aa., as they pounded four The Chicago Cubs also are having ~ur!ed perfect ball for the fin1 fo~r
shot with four seconds left to give Chicago pitchers for 22 hits and pitching problems. They drop~ a 1n~1~gs. Correa struck out f1ve wh4e
Cleveland a 110-108 victory over clobbered the White Sox 27-10 in an 12-5 decision to the Oakland A sand rcttn.na th~ fif'1t 12 Braves but lost bis
New Jersey ... AJleem Olajawon exhibition aame. The Red Sox made have been outscored 34-7 in their last no-hitter Ul the fifth ~hen Atlanta
scored eight of his 27 points in the the most of five doubles. four triples three garnet, all losses. scored a run on four smgJC1.
final two minutes and pulled Rich Gedman's homer and 14 bases Pad ... t, Gluts&., J~rrv Ro-•-•a 11a1 0 ball Orioles lt, Roy&11 J: Al Pardo and ..... • -·:1 :1·-· ~· . do~ 21 ~uods as Houston, n s. John Shelby hit three-run homers for ei&hth-inning llomer off Mark Grant playt~ their first game "':lthout injured~ SamptH Glenn Hoffman drove in six runs Baltimore. Pardo homered in the capped a San Dteao comet.ck which , rallied to a 110:.101 victory over Indiana ... Du while BiUBuckner,MartyBarrcttand 1'ncluded single run"' m· __ ... of ... A
M'" St h h bad t': RBI second inning to tic the score 3. -i and • ~ ....., ROIUMlt. leld scored Washington's final e: .... t points in •a.e en o use eac 1our · th Ori I ...,, 0a"'~' last • &--ur at-"-ts. Tony '&" H ff · e e o es went ahead with a th~ • ""'~ w uw the thtrd quarter to help squelch a Dallas comeback. o man, arrett and John fiA'-Gwynn's RBI single .:ed th• ...... -m· · Ch · t h h d h h '.t. run l•w inning when Shelby, Juan u .. _..,, .. and the Bullets went on to defeat the Mavericks, ns ensen eac a t rec H;S. Beniquez and A oyd Ra~ord all had the seventh innina. 120-112 ... Larry Bird'• layup with 4:39 left broke the includina a pair of trifles by Barrett. . 16th and final tie and started an 8.() Boston run that Chicafo starter Joe Davis bore the run-sconng singles off anny Jack· MartDen 8, Brewen 7: Ste"e
b h Bo bo ba d son. Shelby's homer came in the si .. th lif\ed the Celtics to their ninth consecutive victory, runt o t e ston m r ment. off Joe Beckwith. ... Fireovid pitched out of a beses-
121-11 S over Milwaukee ... Rookie Ed PIDdDey He surrendered eight hits and walked loaded jam in the ninth innina.
scored seven of his career-high 27 _points in a decisive six in four innings and was charged Blae Jaye'· Met1 S: Cecil Fielder's Seattle scored five runs in the bottom
third quarter as PhocniJl def ea led Seattle, 120-107. of the eighth, including Al Cowcn1'
North Stars shine ln 6 -1 win
Dino Clccar.elll and Sc:ott BJu11tad ~
scored two goals each and Neal Broten '
picked up two assists to become the first
U .S.·born NHL player to get 100 points in
a season as Minnesota roUed over Toronto, 6-1 ,
Wednesday night ... In other NHL games, Gary Lapal
and Doa1 Halward each scored two goals to lead
Vancouver to a 7-6 victory over Quebec ... Scot
KJelDeadorat and Roa Frucl1 scored 32 seconds apart
m the first minute of the final period to boost Hanford
to a 3.0 victory over Montreal ... Wayne GretUy
scored his 51 st goal and assisted on three others,
including Jarl Karri'• 62nd, to help Edmonton clinch
tbc ~ular season championship with an 8-3 victory
over Pittsburgh ... Doag WUtoD scored two goals to lead
a Chicago comeback and Darryl Satter provided tbe
tiebreaker to lift the Black Hawks to a 5.3 victory over
Detroit.
Lendl advances; Leach ousted
C HICAGO-ToP.:sceded Ivan Lendl
overpowered Tim Wilkison and second·
~eded Jimmy Connors held off Steve
Denton on Wednesday night in first-round
matches at a pro tenms tournament.
Lendt defeated Wilkison 6-4, 6-3, and Connors
beat Denton 6-4, 6-2.
Earlier Wednesday. third-seeded Boris Becker
scored a 6-4, 7-6 second-round victory over John Sadn
while eighth-seeded Andres Gomez defeated Laguna
Beach's Rick Leach, 6-4, 7-6
Ex-Redskin Metcalfe arrested
ARLINGTON. Va. -Terry Met-
calfe, a former member of the Washmgton
Redskrns and St. Louis Cardinals of the
Nauonal Football League. was arrested
Wednesday by Arlington County, Va .. police. who said
the charges included cocaine possession .
County Police spokesman Tom Bell said Mrtc-alfe.
34, was stopped for speeding by officers and became
abusive after bcmg asked fo r his dnver's license and car
reg1strat1on.
Metcalfe y~lled at a female police officer and
brandished a slick he was carrying on the front
passenger scat ofh1s 1978 Audi, Bell said. Metcalfe then
argued with a male pohceofficerbcfore being taken into
custody.
Police reported finding a kmfe m the door of the
driver's side of the car along with a gram of cocaine, Rell
said.
Television, radio
TELEVISION
10 p.m -WRESTLING: Channel 56.
FRIDA Y'S RADIO
10:30 a.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers V!>.
Texas. from Pompano Beach, Ra .. KABC (790).
I p.m -BASEBALL: OakJand vs. Angels.
from Palm Spnngs, K.MPC (710).
Ohio State takes
NIT championship
They won't have a bi~er fan next
year than Eldon Miller. I m not going
to the moon or outer space."
three-run pinch triple, to take an ~
lead.
A1tro1 s, Twin• G: Jim Deshaies
allowed two hits in five innings as
Houston recorded its tint shutout of
the spring. Charlie Kerfeld; Aurelio
Lopez and Dave Smith completed a
three-hitter.
Reda 3, Twin• %: Terry Lee's solo
homer and Sal Butera 's two-out sinJ)e
accounted for a pair of eighth-inning
runs.
NEW YORK {AP) -Ohio State
nevrr won a conference or a post·
season tournament lltle in Eldon
Miller's fir t nine years as coach. In
his I 0th season, six weeks after he was
fired. the Buckeyes gavr Miller a
champ1onsh1p in the 49th National
lnv1tat1on Tournament.
"I've experienced this feeling only
one other time in basketball, 25 years
ago." Miller said Wednesday ni~t
after Ohio State defeated Wyommg
73-63 in the NIT championship game
at Madison Square Garden. "I was a
senior at W1ttenbe~ College and we
won the college d1v1sion national
champ1onsh1p.
OCC WINS TOURNEY. • •
"I told our team at halftime that 25
years from now, I want to be able to
celebrate two championships. Now,
all I have to do is make it that far."
Miller, who was fired Feb. 3
effccti\C at the end of season. coached
Ohio Sntc to five consecutive NIT
v1ctone'i. At the same time. he was
trying to recruit players by telephone
for Northrrn Iowa, where he will
coach nr't season.
"I have no special emotion'> ... c;a1d
Miller. 47 •·1 am JUSt glad I've got a
place to go. I didn't say goodbye to
them I don't say goodbye to friends.
MD ho111ers
sinkPiusX
DOWNEY -Jim Oldham and
Jim Austin slugged home runs in the
seventh 1nn10g Wednesday to lead
MaterDe1 ton 3-1 victoryovcr·Pius X
in an Angelus League baseball game
at Pius.
Th<: Monarchs (6-4. 2·3) and the
Warnor<; (0-5) scored their only other
runs m the founh. with Mater Dei
getting 1ts run ac; Dave Randell
singled home Mike Kelly. who led off
the inning with a walk.
In the seventh. O ldham camr m to
pinch bit and shced the ball deep to
let\ field for the homer. Two outs
later. Austin hit his round·tnpper to
the same field.
From Bl
"This team can really score 1n
bunches. It 1s incredible.'' said
Mayne. "It gets conta11ous. I haven't
ever had a club that has hit this good
for this long.
"It's freaky what this club 1s doing
in terms of scoring runs. I'm at a loss
for why. I sure am enjoying it.
"Today we came to play a little
better. Yesterday {Tuesday), we
didn't play with the same intensity as
we have in conference. Soutbwesf"'
had to score eight runs {in the first
three iQnings) to wake us up. Today
we showed up to play. I could sec 1t
from the time we took infield."
The Piratessbowed up all right. and
early. Designated the visiting team,
they scored eight runs JO the first
inning. due in part to some Apaches
who didn't show up -mainly their
pitchers.
Southwrstcrn Head Coach Jerry
Bartow's pitchi11g staff was deci-
mated. His No. I starter. Roddy'
Wilburn, was sidelined with arm
trouble and his No. 2 man, Aaron
Rico pllched five innings Tuesday. As
Mayne put it, "their No. I guy 1s hurt,
their No. 2 guy threw Tuesday.
Toda>, who knows who they had
left?"
The key blows in the first came
from the Pirates' two sizzling
freshmen. leftfielder Joey James and
designated hiller Dave Staton.
Staton. who was 2 fot 3 with 3 RBI.
delivered a two-run double. James.
who was 4 for 4 with 4 RBI, delivered
a run-scoring double.
was the No. 3 pitcher in the Barons'
lineup, but has found a home in
Mavne's rotation.
With bis four innings of work
Wednesday, August (6-0) has now
pitched 44 innjngs, giving up onJy
three earned runs (an ERA of 0.61 ),
while striking out 4C) and walking o nly
20. He and sophomore Longo Garcia
( 4-1 ) arc big reasons the Pirates lead
the South Coast Conference by l 'h
games.
Mayne says bis club accomplished
what ll needed to in the tournament
and will have a couple days off.
"We got in some at-bats and some
innin&-5 and now it's back to the
wars, ' be wd. meaning the Pirates
rcsumr SCC play Monday against
Saddleback.
GWC wins, 6-5,
in 12 innings
Darren Tomasick's two-out single
in tbebonomofthe 12th inning drove
in Scott Rath to caJT Golden West
College's 6-5 win over LA Harbor in a
non-conference baseball game at
Golden West Wednesday.
The Seahawks ( 13-7) held a S-4
edge after eight, but a Jeadoff triple by
Dave Solorzano and an RBI single by
Todd Nash tied the score in the ninth,
S·S.
After Harbor's three-run fifth,
three Rustler pitchers combined to
shut out the Seahawks over the next
seven innjngs. gjving up only four ruts
in that stretch ..
Dean Douty got the win with relief
help from Adam Sanchez aod Gregg
Martjn.
"He is someone we would feel very fonunate to
ha .. e If Tom said this 1s the man we want, believe me I
would be 100 percent behtnd him " ••••••••••••••••• .. __.J
Steve Watson {3· I) pitched the win.
striking out three, walking one and
allowing four hits.
James, out of Newport Harbor
High. continues to tear anyone who
dares throw to him. In 22 games, he 1s
hitting over .450 with nine home runs
and 49 RBI. With at least 17 games
remaining. he is just five home runs
and 19 RBI short of Gene
Roumimper's OCC 5Cason records m
those respective categories.
Another freshman who continues
to impress is Sam August. August,
who played on Fountain Valley
High's 1985CIFchampionshipteam.
Nash had two RBI in his 3-for-6
perf ormance, wbjle Rath also bad
three hits in six at-bats. Chip Damato,
Keith Kaub and Solorzano were 2 for s.
The Rustlers (9-9) resume South
Coast Conference play Tuesday at
Rancho Santiago.
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The Monarchs have next week off.
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loston 121, MltweullM 115
Clev•nd 110, New JarMy IOI Ptlna~a 112. Atlanta 103
Wetlllnoton 120. Danaa 111
HOUalon 110. lndlana 101
Uteh 116, o.nver 101
Ptloenl• 120, *"'• 107
Tenltllt'1 Ga"'" Dalla• at New York
S.11 Antonio et Goldert St•I•
S.eremento at Seattle
llr1dllY'1 G-OlllMrs at P?loenlx
Wnhlngton at loaton
Clllcaoo at New Janev
Mllwaullff al Ptllla<M!Pflla
HOUiton at Datroll
Atlanta at lndlena
Utah at Denver
SllUrt 1os, ~ n
SAN AN'TOfftO (10S) -S Jof\n$Oll 2-1
1· 12 11, Mlldlatl t-72 0-0 It , Gltmor• l·S
2·21, Wllllam1 1-1O·O2, Rooetlton S·l2 5--S
IS, Mallhewa l ·• 0-0 6, Gr .. nwood J·S S-6
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TOlats 41·'6 23·30 105.
CU..,.llU lt7) -Mallwal 4·5 7·t IS,
Nlmonlu1 4·1 4·4 12, 891111mln 7· 1) 6·1 20,
M..Jollftson 6· 14 3·4 IS, Nixon 5-IS 2·2 12,
C111t •-6 2-• 10, Edwerd• 3·9 IHI 6, Whlll
2·7 1·2 5, GordOn 1·) 0-0 2 Totats J6•IO 2S·XJ f7
ktnll'I 0Uar1wt San Antonio 2t 11 It 30-!OS
Kings l2 :n 24 It-'7
F°"*I out-Maxwa•. Rtbollnci-S.n
Antonio 52 IS JOl\nson, Wllklnl I), LM
Anlltles S7 t8anl1mln 9) Aulst1-San Antonio '11 (Sol'ldvold I ), L.OI A~ 23
(Nixon I). Tot1I louts-San Antonio 26, LOI
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NCAA TOURNAMENT The,..,..,__,,
(atD.itu Sarw.Y"a ~
Loulsl1na St 176· 11) "' Loulsvllle IJ0-7) !Channel 2 11 12.JO pm)
Dulle 13'·2) vs Kari"' (35·)) (Cllanna! 2 at 3 P.m )
""'*Y"• OlanwMI"""' LSU·Loulavlllt winner VI D\111 .. 1(.nMI
winner CCllann.t 2 II ' pm l
NIT (at ..._ Y~)
~ ..... on1o s1a11 n. wvom1no '3
T1*4 fl'llKlt
Louisiana TKft 67, Flor!Oa '2
MMt'I~
(at C'llkff9)
"'"'·--~ Ivan Ltndl 1Ctae11ollov•kl•) Clef. Tim
Wlltll.on (U.$.1, 6·4, 6·3; Jimmy Connon
(U.S.) Clef. Stav• Denton (U.S.>. 6·4, 6·2;
Borla B«ktr (WHI Garma"v> Clef. Jotln
S.drl, 6·•· 1·•; Andres Gom.r Clef. Rkfl.
Lt1ct1 (US I. 6·4, 7·6
Men'• teiumernent
(atlll~•~> SICltftd ...... ~
Joell.Im Nnlrom !Swedenl def Brian
TllC'har IU.$.), •-3, 7·5; Anders Jarryd
(Swt<lan) def. H.inr Guntllardt (Swllttr·
land), 6·3, 6-4, Tomei Smid (Ctacnoslo· v1kla) def Vllay Atnrltral (India), 6-4, 7·6,
Woltatl Flbek (Poland) def Lltloef Plmak
ICtedloslonkla), 7·5, •·l.
o.. ........
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meell1rt4, to sculc>ln, 2 •""9tllffd, s
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N•Wll'OAT LANDING -44 1nolars. 36
Miid NII. 1 ShMCl'lhMd, 9 rocfl.flatl, 40
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HOOfllC> lllACI. One mile tn>t.
Mr Cont«11 (IC~) 4 20 UO UO Miiford MerrOMv (WU11atm, Jr I uo uo
s.ltv (Plano> l.40
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Lucti.v Chi IBarbrJ 4 00
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Scrat~ Early Spirit, Miu Monav..i.
Sl IXACTA (s-8) oalcl .-..10
SIGHTit RACE. One mlle -· Or1n111rk Donna !Mr) 4.70 400 UO
F.il111 (Rlldl .. ) I 20 7 40
Challll'lng !Lonool 4 40
Time: 2.«U
AllO Went: Poslllvatv Rowdv. SOMd O
Cl\ertar, KOiie. Scratc:hed: NOM.
SJ IXACTA (5-7) oald Mt.to
NINTH RACS . Ona mtle Ha.
Caoan Row IPlarC'IJ 6.00 UO 2.10
Llldtv lunnt (Plano) 7 40 l .00
Ovnamlt• Gift (ROMn l J.20
Time: 2:01.1 AllO Went: AWi'( From Home, Maona
Krlall•, Ante N111C\1, Andvl May, Sultld To
AT ... hte Jolle
Ser1ldled: Dune L..adY, Charmed OIMrk. n l"tCK sax 12+.-~s-11 oa1c1
Ml.371.20 to -wlnnlno tkkat (6 llOnal)
Comollllon P1dl Six Olld '3s.100 10 31 wlllnlna tlckell U hotwl).
SJ IXACTA (M) paid "2.AO
Dua to fooov c:Mdltlom, ll'le final two
raea on Wldneldav'• eerd ware ~
Alltndal'Ce l3lS.
SaMa ......
WEDNHDAY'S RSSULTS ,.,,. .. ., •• y .. ~ .... ,,__,
l'IRIT RACE. 6 lurtonet.
Comoar1bliltv lMCCrron) f.00 J.20 2.1d
Fa'111on Dynasty (Metal 2.40 2.40
SM Oo\lbv Run (DNhOutMY•> UO Time. 1;10.
AllO Ren: Arvanterlo, Miiiers Stationary.
SMtalollaladY, Rufllas N B .. us, Lllllt
Rlffer. Orlt lnal Script.
Seralehld: J•ctyn•s CllOIGe, River Char
U Ix.ACTA 11-6) paid S19'0
H COND RACE. 6 lllr!On9s
Prm" M4 Lek (DlhHY) SAO UO UO Pollvs Lii RHC.I (Sll Vant) S.00 J.00
wine Glrl 1v11en1uet•l UO
Time; 1:10.•
AllO R111: Mle Right, Oak Portel, Lovfly
CandY, D•wn Ot Glofv, To It lmPftHIVt
Scratdlld. Quick N' S041d, C.lverv
Cri.Ptt.
T"IRD ltACI. 6 f\irlOl'.IQ1. Ms L'9hl11lng l oll (HWIY) 9 40 S.40 • 20
Fire Mlu Leader (PldrOH) 17 '° '·'° Se•rdl For HtlVMI ($olls) 5 20
TI me. 1'11.2
AISO Ren: Monti Lynn, Diana F•ncv.
SwMt Wlnkle, Ancient Lady, Tricky Turn,
Mllllent a.a., Slnlln' Suttin.
Scnldled: Rad Franc:hv n DAIL y oou•L• (t · 10) o.lcl '30 20
"ou.lTH RACE. 6 ~IOnllt Raldarell ICHt•non) llUO JI.JO 16-20
Sar•h'a H-(Soils> 1•.00 f 00 The Makar ($tevM1s) l.40
Tlme· 1:1U
Also 11111 DouOle Decorated, lobbl's
Prlnctu, CleOPl•r•'s Chance, Peppy'•
S-"ltss. Lovelv S.leor. Twlslln Mama, E !Oquant Jenny, Fllohl Siii', Cumulus
Cloud Scretdled· Hot C>Hlrl Nl9'11, Al NIOhl
Nt .... Elc!Ore's Ftfll, PratlY $10f11,
"'"'" RACI. 6\'a furlOnlla on turf. Fort•ndo (MC'Carron> 4.20 3.20 uo
Fort1110hllv IMeHar1111t) 15-20 6.40
Zanv TKtlcs (Toro) l .20
Ml.JC M>TlCE
NHL
C~•&.L CON'llllNCI -...~
v·Edmonton •<•!oarv WlMIHO
IC.Illa Vancouvw
W L T "-G' OA SC IS ' 114 406 211
,. lO ' '1 325 2" 25 .s ' 5' m 354
23 45 7 SJ 271 * 20 41 13 S3 2'0 310
'"""~ x·ChlcHo x·St. Louis
x·Mlnneaofl 11·toronto
Detroit
J7 2t • tt 330 325
)6 31 • '° 2'1 716
" >2 , 1' 309 2'0 nu 6 um>M
1'S3' •2S2m
WA&.aS CC*llD•NCI ~~ a·W1!Jllnoton 41 21 S 101 290 2• •·Piii~ 41 22 • loO 311 221
NY lllltndan l6 71 11 ll 2" 2' 1
PlllMl\lrllh 33 >4 I 74 2t7 211
NY ll~s )4 JS S 73 255 2S4
New JarMY 24 C7 ) SI 2IO 3oM
Ad9i'M ~
~ 41 JO s o 314 m
Monlr"t l7 32 6 10 311. 265
loaton >4 30 10 11 m m
Hertford l7 JS 3 n 30I 215
eutt11o " 33 6 76 m 273 •·dlndled Playoff berth
y·ctlneMd dlvl~ 1111e
W ..... Y'IScw'W
~ 7, Catoarv 3
Hartford 3, Montr•l O Edmonton I, Plttlbuftlfl J
MJMftOta 6, Toronto 1
Cl\lcaoO S. C>tlrolt l
Vancouver 7, Quebec 6
T ........ s ~
MontrMI 1t 18oston
Butf•lo •t Ptln.daloNa
St LOI.Iii at New JarMY
,.,,..,...~
ICllla •' venc:ouvar ,.._ Yon lalandan •I WHhlnoton
Edmonton el Naw Yor1l ll-s Winni-,, c.teanr
""' ...... 0 l ~J 1 , 1-7
I. LOI ...,.._, Fox 10 (Nlc:tlolt\, wn-
1tam1>. t:IS. Pentttlet-SllMllY, Cal ltrtp-
Plnt), 2:51; Lull-ldl, 1..A ltrlclolnt). 5:14;
Redmond, I.A lhOldlno), 1'44; Suter, C.I
I hOldtno>. 1':2S. I.-.,...
2. CalOarY, Wiiton 27 (a.xtw, Tonattt),
1:07 3. Loi Antelet, Nldlotls 33 (Fox,
KanntdY), S:26. 4. Ca.,..,, Suter 11 (Quinn,
Rtlnllert), S:AO. S. c.i.tv. LooO 2' (TOMtll,
Sflffhy), 7:40. 6. LOI Alleeln, l.ultowlc:h 12
(Wiits), 15:.57. Penattlft-Wllllams, LA.
mlnor•malor·Nme mllCClnduc:1 lrOUllhlng·
flllhllno>. 7:4'; 1t.inflan, cat. malor Cfltmt·
lnol. 7~; McDonlld, Cal ldlal'Olnt), 10-.36,
Tontlll, Cat (h19'1·tllctllnt), J:S3; Lllllowlch,
LA, malor 1119'1tlnol. 16:35; Mulln, Cal,
malor 1119'1tlna>. 16:35; Hunter, Cat, minor·
ml~l"fff'M mlscondUct (roueNno),
20:00, Kelty, LA (rouonfno), ~ .,...... .....
1 Lot...,,_.., Svllft 20 CG.-..,), 't;lS. I.
l.Ol AnMlel, Fox II (Nldwlls, Dlofww), S:lt
(pp). t Los """'"· Nldlolll ~ (Malen· sonl, 12:1' (Ill). 10. Lo. A,,,.._, D4oflne 35,
14:31. Penal!~. Cal (trlPPlnsl), 3:56; Lullowtcll, I.A <•S111nt), 6:06; Pwl!Mkl,
Cal (alaalllne), 6;06; C1Krle, LA (hOtdlnel.
11:27, laxtw, Cal ll'Olllltllne>. 14:31; Pllt·
lenon, LA (rO\lllhlne). 14:31; Lllkowldl, LA
lroutlfllno), 1H 1; IC--.ad'f, LA ( routlfllnol,
1~1. Mc~. Cal CrOUllfllnt>. lHI;
FotlU, C.I (rOUDfllnol. lf:ill; aaxt•, Cal (rO\lllhlno), lHI.
Sllols on eoet-<alNtY t· IO-t-27 L.OI A119t1et Ht•l>-39. ~~play OPClortuntlln-<alNrY 0 of
4; LOI Anoelet I of S.
~....,..,. Umelln ()6 shoh-2'
W'fft). Vtmon (14:11 third, l·3). Los
A""'81, ~ntOfl (27·241.
All~;f-'2(1,
NI.JC M>TICE
1'16 P'GA 1111W lcMcMe
Maret\ ?7·30-Townamant Pllv•n Cl\amcllonshlo, Ponte Vadra, Fla
Aprh 3.·....-0rMlll' GrMntOorO ()pan
Aprll 10-1)-Tilt Maslar1, Autua11, G1
Aprft 10-l~lt Gurentv Clank,
HattlesOuro, Miu.
Aprfl 17·20-Sta Pines Harli~ Clan k .
HUion Held l.iand, $.C Aprlt 24·21-+touslon OMll
Mrlt >o-Mav ~ v ... , lnvlt•tlonal
Mav l ·n-evron Na4son Clauk, trvlntl,
TIX.
May lS-1...-<olonlal N•tlonat lnvlta-tlollll, Ft Wor1tl
Mav 22·25 M41rnor'8t Tournament, Outllln, Ohio
May 2t·Juna 1-Kemoar ao.n,
8etl\Mclt, M4.
June 5-+-Wfttc:Nllar ciau lc, Har-rison, N.Y
June 12· IS-U.S Olien. SouthamPlon.
N.Y
June 12· 15'--f>fovldtot Clan k , Chat·
t1nootN, Tenn.
June 1t·17--Allanta Clauk, Mari.tta,
GI.
June 2•-19--C•nadlen ONn, Oltltvflla, °"'· July l·~reatar Heriford Coen, Cromwtll, Conn
July IO-ll-Anha'1Mr-811Kh Cl1ulc,
Wllll1ms1>11rt . V1.
July 17·~.,,,..., Claulc, Co.I Vtl·
leY, IN.
July 2•·17-Bulcil ao.n . Gren<t Blanc,
Mlcll
JulY ll·A1111 3-Wasttrn Open, O.tr.
arooi.. IM.
Allll 7·1~A Cll•molonalllP, Toi.c:io,
Ohio
Auo. 14· 17-Tl'le lnternatlolllt, CH iie
Roc:lt, Colo
Auo. 21-2-..Ec world Sarlft of Golf, AVon, Otllo
Auo. ll·J'l--Mt"'°"I' Clank, Cordovi ,
flM
Stot 4·7-9 C Ol>efl, Endicott, N Y
Stot 11·1-.aotton Clanlc
Stot lt·21-Graatar Mltweul\M Coen StPt 2S-2t-Soulhwast Clan k, ADll«w
TIX.
Oct 2·5'-Soullltrn Ooen, Columt>ul,
Ofllo
Ocl ,.1,.......,..,,'8CO!a °""
Oct. 1..,. lt-Olanav World Clank, Lakt
Buena Vlal1, Fii
Oct. 23·26-Tuaa Ollen, San Antonio
Ocl. »Nov. ~Tucson Maleh Plav c llamPlonalllp
Oct. >0-Nov. ~l•llahaUM ()pan Ole. 4·7-Mlxld T11m, Laroo, Fla
Ole. 11·1+-T"m lnvllallonal, 8oca R1ton, Fla.
NlJC fl)TIC[ NlJC llJTIC(
Oranoe Cou1 DAILY PILOT IT'hutadey, Mardi 27, 1M8 * 81
~ . ' " . ...........
.... -.c.All &.1..U.
• &. " . 10 '
10 ' 10 1 IO 1
11 •, 10 • 10 ,
10 10
' 10 • 10
6 ' 7 11
' 1' •ATlOMA.L ._.A.OUI
Atlenll
NawYOf1l ~ ~" S.11 F 'lll'Clsco
SI.Louis
1-ftOltoO Pitt~
°"""' MontrMI
Ollcffo
Hout ton
NOTE. 5'1111·MMl4 SlllndlnoS, llK do llOI
t1
10
' 10
' • 10
7
1
' 7 • --W1llr11,.Y1 kw
Mella '· Oewlend •
6 .Ml 7 •• 7 ..56l
• .55'
• SJt . -11 '" I AV
11 ...
10 .m
14 ..m 12 ..m '*"" In
Montreal (U) IO, °"""9 t, 11 "'"'"-'
Clndnnatl J, Mlnnetole (U ) 2
To<onto •· ,.._ Yor11 Meta 3 Texas e. Att.nt1 6
81ttlmore 10, K1n1as Cttv J
ChiQoo Whit• So• (1$) VL Plttab\lr9tl, c:ndd .• rain
Botton ?7, Chieffo Whlll Sox '"l 10
S..llle I, Mllweull" 1 Oalllend 12, Chlcaoo Cubs 5
San Oltoo 6, San F randsco S
Montrffl (ss) v•. ,._ Yori! v..-..,,
cndd .. rain ~la vs. Datrott 11 L..ellttand.
Fii., c:ndd .• rein
Houston S, Ml"""°'' Os) O T .. Y'IO-
C>Htand "'· .,... " Palm swines Mlnnnot• v1 ~ ai Vero 8Mc:ll, Fla
PlllSOufOh vl, Botton at Winier H1,,t11,
Fie.
Detroit VI. Clnd11111ll al l-. Fla
Toronto vs. $1. Louis 11 $t ~11.
Flt. Houslon VL Montr .. l (HJ It West Plltn
hadl, Fie.
Cincinnati (U) vs ~ at
CIMrweltf, Fie
New York Ylll'llMS In ) VI r ... , at ~.Fla.
Atlenta vs. 8altlmora 11 iw.mt
Chlcaeo Cubs YI Oevtllncl 1t luaon.
Arll.
Mllwa.MC .. VL Sen Frenctaco II Sclot·
IMMlle, ArlL Montr·•• (U ) YI. New Yo<k Y•nk-
(ss) at Fort L•llOWdaM,
SMllle vs. San Dleoo 11 Yumt1, Arlt.
l't*Y'• 0-.
Oaklalld "'· .,..... at Patm Sc>rlnts DeMrl vs ta•es 11 Potnoano. Fla.
N-Yori! Matt "' lotlon et Winier Hevan, Fie.
HO\lslon VI. Clndnnall at t1moa, Fie.
PhllaOalonl• Vl, St. Louis 11 $1. Ptltnl>uro. Fla. '
KenMJ CllY VJ. Plllsbllf'tn •• areci.nton.
Fla.
Montr11I "' Atlante at Wast P1tm 8MCll, Fla
Chlcaoo Whit• Soll YI Mlnnffoll at
Orlando, Fla,
Cltvtland v' MllwlYk" 1t Ollncller,
Arlt.
SMttla vs Sin Di.to 11 Yum., Arlt
C hfcaoo Cubs vs $an F renclsco 1t S<.ollldele, Arlt.
Tor onto vs.. Detroll et Lallalend, Fla
Banlmore v' New York Ylllkaat at
Fort L.aud9r0.le .... '· ......... (e1 ,. .. ,.,....,
Clnallnel 020 021 300-t t 1
....,,.... 400 101 21.-9 14 )
Ritter. Yet1 (~). Von ONlrl (11': llaed (I)
end Wl,..rd, Allenson (6) ~•.
arvdan m. ""-• m. Smith !fl encl
Miiiar, Uddle (I), ,...,,on (t). 'N-IM«•.
1-0. L-RMCI, 0-2.. Sv-Smlttl (1). HRt-C ........ nd. Ce1tllo ()), Franeo (2). A,_.,
Downlnt (3)
EX1191 10,~t
lit Ytn a.di. flla)
Monlrlll 201 1JO 101 01-10 16
Dodoar'\ 0'20 220 Q)O 00-' 1S 2 SIVPar, Brown (5), Rti.y <'), SI. Clalre
(I) Incl Vent, Anelefson (t); It~•. ,._..
(5), Caslftto (7), V111dt&ar11 (I ), Howtl (f)
111d Sdosc:la W-St. Ctalfa, 2·0. L-HOwall,
0-3. Hlh-Monlr11I, Wallach 111. OeWton
(1)
C.-...bltMMI
NON·CON,.IRS NCS
s.clll C..... 11, Wast Ceest Qw1stleol •
l"tnt Game> Wast Coast C11rr.tlan 004 000 ,_ 6 I J
Soc.I COlllM 451 000 11-IO t 2 Rut and ZHr1V, Lumottln (2), OvarMm,
0tt911 14) Incl Nfllon. w-<>!lan, 2•4. L-4tut. 28-McColum ($CC), Mottx1
(SCC>. Remlret (WCCJ HR-9arker (WCCI
SaCal c..... s. W9A ca.st CJwtl1IM I
(S...0-)
Wett Coast Cllrlsllan 000 000 001-1 S l
SoCal Colleoe 000 >00 to.-S I 0
JKltson aftCS Lumr>kln, Mll,_flelcl encl
Nelson w~. H . L-Jacllson
28-WancMr ISCC>. Neon ($CC), 2
C~C-...bltMMI
NOM·COHl'•RINCE
~Waet 6,L.A~S
(11 ...... )
LA H1rbor IOI Q)O 000 000--S 10
GOld9ll Wett 030 000 101 001-6 IS 2
Cortez, H19Mtd (6), AleHndar (I), Incl
An~IQht, DIMavo (It), Sanchet, Martin m. Doutv 11n and S11W1ev. Kina 1111
W-Doul'I, t ·l L-AllJ,and•r
2&-<:1mciod lH), ltMd IGWCI, IC.aub
!GWCl, Reth IGWC), Damato IGWC>
Ja-<:amoblll IH), Solon11no (GWC>
NI.JC fl)TIC[
""" ~ ........... OIL RaY ~ACMM aovs --°" 111, ....... ,. 200 mtdleY ,....,,_1. Mttw Dtl, 1:Sf..2.
2'00 fr-1. Smfttl !Ml. HU; 2. Thome6
(M ), 2:20.4, l ~ !M), nJ..J.
200 ,,....1. Soto (M), 2:217; 2. Can·
1ar• (M), 2:37.0; J Saulr' (M). lm..1.
SO "-1 Klllll IM), 2S..S; t. ltMltl (M),
27J; l Nick CA), 21..S.
100 ftv-1. Bra.i (Ml, !U, 2. TilomM
IMI. 110f.2.
100 fr-1. ~trt (M), 5',I; 2. &..-(M), 1:01.S, 3.. Den (A). 1:020.
JOO fr-1. 8r.ell (M l. SA2; 2. Smltfl (M), ~ 0; 1. ~ !Ml. 1:10..0.
100 oeca-1. MarMr1 lMI,1:11.I; 2.. Scott (A), MU; l. c;...,..... !Ml, 1~
100 llranl-1. Soto IMI, 1:11.1, 2. G-.
IA), 1.17.A; l Cantv ... (M), l:l&.S.
«IOxlOO fr• ,....,,_1. Meter Dtl. JIM;J
SAM ... RMA..00 YAL&.aY &.IMU8 •u --°" "' ...._, s.s 200 madlW l'MV-1. Mattr Dtl, 1'111..t.
200 fr-1. 8wl'Ymlll (M), 2*.8i 2.
0.tv IM>, 2-.lo.7; l. J-' (A), 2:».5. 100 ~1. ICwe (A), W .7; 2.
McCarthy IM), 2:3U; l. ......,.._.,, (M),
2:41.1.
50 lr-1. Stalftet (M), 77.7, t. LIM (A), 21.7; ). Morin (M), 2'.9.
100 tlv-1. 9unw. IMI. t~f; 2.. JeMt
(A), 1:20.J.
100 lr-1. $...,_, IM), ".J; 2. JudY
(Al, 1:06.2; l. Geer (M), l;lll
500 fr-1. ~ IM), ~5.'; 2.
ICere IA). ~; 3. ~ (M), a-..,
100 lledt-1. Burm (M), 1:05.2; 2
McCartfly (Ml, l:OU; 3. o.udle (A), l:AU.
100 llrMsl-1, H9eltler (A), l:IU; 2..
Manlart IM), 1lt.1;1 Morin (M), 1:22.4.
411100 fr" rtlay-1. Maler Del, 4:2.U.
w1•11 ,.,.,a-a
aAMaALL .......u.we Ct11CAGO cuas-w.._, .. _.. ,..,.
tenon llllcl l.MY ~ l>ltdlan.
HOUS'TOH ASTito;::.:/tMUl8Md Ger·
man It IV« a and Nellofl ltoOd, ""'91dars, to TlllCOll of ttla Pllelflc COMI ~
NEW Y~IC ~T$-$ent ltand't Mvwi
Ind Terry L..Mdl, pltcNn, ~ Jef-r.aon Ind TtrrY lloc:k•, ~-.John Glbbonl. aldlar. encl ""-"s s.taar,
lnfleldar, lo their mlmr•,__ c::wno tw
rM•sl9nmenl
SAN DIEGO PADlllEs.-ft...._ Marlo
Ramh1, lnflelder R"'llone<t l'tuslY Tiiiman and J-SIMM, outfletclen, lo
Las v .... "' lflt Pllctflc Coatt Lteoue.
'OOTaALL c:...... ....... ~ HAMIL TON TIGER·CATS-Sloned
Troy Hunter ano ~ $.IOr'W. wlcM ,._,_,_
NOC«n ............. ~
BUFFALO SAIRES-.8'11t'necS MtiA
Oavls, rletlt wine, to ltoel'lester ol tN
Alnarlcwl Hodlav L-.,ut
~La .. 80STOH COLLEGE-Hamid Jim
()' 8r'9ft "'9lt' S llelllattlelt Coed\.
CHEltltY IOWL-Dlamluact Frill*
Waltr•. aMCUtlw dlt9CIOr, and Mic11e91
Miiis, martlatlrlo director. MINNESOT A-fUmld lllol>lnson
wretlflnl coed\
PtTTS8UlllGM-ffamld P11ut E...-
man'a ta.Ml•tb91 coedl.
SOUTHElllN MJ$$ISSIPPl-Promotec1
ROiand Dale from alhlttk ~ to 1thlelk dlrKtor -11\IL
WISCONSIN·SUPEllllOR-Announc•d
tr. rasltnatlon of Garv HarMr. r-t;ay
c:oech
\
I
.. * Otano-Cout DAILY PILOT/ Thwldey. Mtweh 27, ieee
Finger-of blame
points to Hough's
fancy handshake
From AP dlspatebet
POMPANO BEACH , Fla._: Texas •
Raniers knuc~lcballer Charlie Hough iJ
scheduled tor surgery today after brcak.ing
the littJc finger on has right hand during a
fancy handshake w1th a friend.
The injury will cause the veteran right-hander to
miss his opening night pitching assignmenJ. .,
Hough will have a steel pin implanted into the
finger to hold the bones together and facilitate recovery,
tram offictals said.
The severity of the injury
wasn't discovered until Tuesday,
and general manager Tom Grieve
announced that Hough had been
placed on the 21-<iay disabled list
t(Jlmed1ately. • •
·Manager Bobby Valentine
tabbed rookie Jose Guzman as
Hough's replacement for. the
Aprif 8 opener in Arlington
Stadium against the Toronto Blue
Boacb Jays
Hough said the acCtdent occurred as he left a party
JUSt before 10 p.m. Monday. Hough had shaken hands
with his friend, then the two locked fingers and
continued the handshake an a semi high-five.
He said he put ice on it an his hotel room. but did
not think it was serious until it began hurting whale he
was riding an exercise bike Tuesday morning.
X-rays showed a break an the bone below the lower
knuckles of the finger.
Officials said Hough will need another I 0 days
after Thursday's surgery before he can resume throwing
and he would not come off the disabled last until a week
into the season.
"They say thr-ee weeks, but I'm saying less than
that," Hough said ··1 figure I'll mass a week of the
regular season. I can't imagine It takmg more time than
that That finger doesn't even touch the ball."
Quote of the day
Chock Nevitt, the 7-5 reserve c.enter of the
Detroit Pistons, on standing o ut in a crowd·
"Sometimes a person Wlll see me and say. 'Oh my
-God!' I tell 'cm. 'Just call me Chuck'."
27 thoroughbreds die in fire
CAMDEN, S.C -At least 27 E
thoroughbred racehorses wonh m1ll1ons of
dollars were killed 1n a fire that destroyed a
ho rse barn here. offiCJalli said today.
The fire at Festoon Farms was reponed about IO
p.m Tuesday after an assmant trainer went to sec what
was d1sturb1ng the horses. Firefighters extinguished the
blaze early today. said Joel Barnes, public anformataon
officer for Kershaw County.
fhe trainer was overcome by heavy smoke but
escaped through a wandow of the barn. said Jail Davis,
owner of the barn
"The barn 1s completcl) totaled," she said an a
telephone antef\ 1ev..
Davis next Houston coach?
HOUSTON -t:n1 vcrs1ty o f Hous-m
ton athle tic director Tom Ford declmed to
confirm or den) the story, but a radio
repon said Stanford University's Tom
Davis wall succeed G uy Lewis as the Cougars' new head
basketball coach.
Davis amved at Houston Interco ntinental Airport
late Wednesday afternoon with has family, Houston
radio station KTRH reported.
Lewis announced an January his rettrement after
JO seaso ns UH o ffi cials said last week they hoped to
hire a successor by the end of th as week.
Ford met wath Davis for several hours Wednesday
night but dec ltned comment about the meeting upon
ha~ return home about m1dn1ght. the station said.
Kl RH sponscastcr Ken Silverstein said Davis
and hac; famtl~ were met at the airport by U H regent
Oo n ~a ndt'rs. who'" 1n charge of the coaching search
<omm1ttcc
"f 1.1.ould ac;<;ume that your assumptions (of Davis'
succeeding l 4!1.1.1c;) are correct. but that's basically all I
know " \anderc; replied later an the night.
"He t\ \Om eone we wo uld feel very fortunate to
ha'"e If Tom said this 1s the man we want. belteve me I
wo uld be ICX> percent behind ham ."
NOW OPEN
BASEBALL •
~i~~~E~.i~~~t; Red Sox explode, 27-1 o
~~~~!0U>~~~,:.bi~~n~A~~:~wason!Jlhe Boston s lugs 22 hits, drops White Sox: ¥~~en~0":~0f:.!e08S:! *L!1c0:
~~~~i~e!Jdth;rr t~~~:t1~: o~~oe~~: f:frh~ Orioles, Jays, Reds, Rangers v1Ctortous t~~~~n~~~i.o~ ~~~t~e:'~l
eiahtb and final playoff spot in the Western Conference --singles to make it 4-J. The Meu
... Elsewhere in the NBA, Motes Male111e scored 32 From AP dlipatclaei with 11 runs. The Red Sox scored six scored twice in the eiahth off Stan
points and passed the J 1,000 mark in career rebounds The Chicago White Sox had thcar runs in the first innin&. five each in Clarke o n Ro n Oatdenhire's batet-as Philadelphia defeated Atlanta, hitting $hoes on Wednesday. They the fourth and seventh and four itt the loaded sinf.le. Meu starter Sid
112·103 (or ils first victory over scored 10 runs on 17 hats -and lost eiahth and ninth. femandei bla nked the Blue Jays on
the Hawks this season ... Aclrla.o by 17 runs. ""Ro n J(jttlc and Rudy Law homered two hits over the first five inrunp.
Dull?i; 5COrcd 18 of his 3~ints The Boston Red Sox must have for the White Sox, who played with a Rusert a, Braves I: Rookie Ed
tn• the 1nt ouarter to pa--tab to thou0 ht they were home in cozy fl11it squad. A contest •0 Ainst the "' ~.... • --Co-... a 19-year-"'ld .; ...... _ .... _ ... _T, a 116-101 victory over Denver... Fenway Park instead of Payne park in ittsburah Pirates was rained out. hu;i;J perfect ballfor ih';'fi~ur
Ec11.,. Jone1 tipped in a missed Sarasota. Aa., as they pounded four T}le Cbicaao Cubs also are having C k fi
shot with four seconds left tog.ave Chicago pitchers for 22 hits and pitching problems. They dropped a innings. orrca struc out tve while
Oeveland a 110-J 08 victory over clobbered the White Sox 27 -10 in an 12-5 decision to the Oakland A s and retiring the first 12 Braves but lost his
New Jersey ... Aleem OlaJ•woD ex.tubition game. The Red Sox made have been outscored 34-7 1n their last no-hitter m the flf\h when Atlanta
scored eight oftus 27 points in the the most of five doubles, four tnplcs three games. aJJ losses. scored a run on four sinaJes.
finaJ two minutn and pulled Rieb Gedman 's homer and 14 bases Pad-• t, Glaata 5: J c""' Rove•-'• • ball Orloln lt, R•yals J: AJ Pardo and ... . •. " ,,.Ka Ma eee down 21 rebounds as Houston. on s. John Shelby hit three-run homers for eighth-inning homer off' Mark Orant
Plavina their first a.me wi. ·thout inJ'ured Rat...., Sam-Glenn Hoffman drove an six runs B . capped a t--0 Di-o comei..--k wi.1.a.. ,,.... -.,. r~ hit B·11 B ... _ M Ba altamore. Pardo homered in the .:>& -· """ WWJ • rallied to a 110-101 victory over Indian-... Du w e 1 uciu1er, arty rrctt and second inning to tic the soore 3_3 and included single rons in each of tbe 'RoadfleJd scored Washinstnn's final e;"'"'t points in Mike Stenhouse each bad four RBI. h 0 . Pad-s' last .r.our at·.._... Tony .~ '6"' H ff B t e notes went ahead with a three-.... •• ..,. .... the third quarter to belp squelch a Dallas comeback, o man. arrett and John • fif\ Gwvnn's RBI sm· ...... tJ.ed the sco-t·n
Ch · h h run 1 h innin~ when Shelby, Juao ·· J .,.. • ... and the Bullets went on to def~t the Mavericks, • nstenscn cac ad three hits, Be · d ~ the seventh inning. 120-11 2 ... Larry Bird's layup with 4:39 left broke the including a paar oflrirles b)' Barrett. naquez an oyd Rayrord all tiad
16th and final tic and started an 8--0 Boston ...... that Chicaf o starter Joe Davis bore the run-scoring singles off Danny Jack-Marlure I, Brewen 7: Steve ,,... b h Bo bo son.Shelby'shomercamein thesixth lifted the Celtics to their ninth consecutive vi<.'tory, runt o t e ston mbardment. off Joe Beckwith. Fireovid pitc hed out of a baaes-
121-11.S over Milwaukee . . . Rook.ie Eel Pl.Debey He surrendered eight hits and walked loaded jam in the ninth innina.
scored seven of his career-high 27 points in a decisive six in four innings and was charged Blae Jays t, Mete 3: Cecil Fielder's Seattle syored five rons in the bottom
third quarter as Phoeni:x defeated Seattle. 120-107. of the eighth, includin& Al Coweos'
North Stars shine In 6 -1 win
DlDo ClccarelU and Scott BJ11stad
scored two goals each and Neal Broten
picked up two assists to become the first
U .S.-born NHL player to get 100 points in
a season as Minnesota rolled over Toro nto, 6-1 ,
Wednesday night ... In other NHL games. Gary LapaJ
and Do11 Halward .each scored two goals to lead
Vancouver to a 7-6 victory over Quebec ... Scot
KlelDeadorat and Roa Fructa scored 32 seconds apart
in the first minute of the final period to boost Hartford
to a 3-0 victory over Montreal ... Wayne Gretzky
scored his .SI st goal and assisted on three others,
ancludang Jart Karri'• 62nd, to help Edmonton clinch
the ~ular season championship with an 8-3 victory
over Pittsburgh ... Do11 Wllsoa scored two goals to lead
a Chicago comeback and Darryl Satter provided the
tiebreaker to lift the Black Hawks to a 5-3 victory over
Detroit.
Lendl advances; Leach ousted
CHICAGO-ToJ?:-seeded Ivan Lendl
overpowered Tam W1lk1son and secood-
sccded Jimmy Connors held ofT Steve
Denton on Wednesday night in fint-round
matches at a pro tennis tournament.
Lendl defeated W1lluson 6-4. 6-3, and Connors
beat Denton 6-4, 6-2.
Earher Wednesday, third-seeded Sons Becker
scored a 6-4. 7-6 second-round victory over John Sadn
whale eighth-seeded And.res Gomez defeated Laguna
Beach's kick Leach. 6-4. 7-6.
Ex-Redskin Metcalfe arrested
ARLINGTON, Va. -Terry Met-
calfe, a former member of the Washington
Redskins and St. Louts Cardanals of the
Nauonal Football League, was-arrested
Wednesday by Arlington County, Va .• police who said
the charges included cocaine possession.
County Pohcc spokesman Tom Bell said Metcalfe.
J4, was stopped for speeding by officers and became
abusive after being asked for his dn ver·s license and car
registration.
' Metcalfe yelled at a female police officer and
brandished a !>tick he was carrying on the front
passenger seat of has 1978 Audi, Bell said. Metcalfe then
argued with a male police officer before being taken into
custody.
Police reponed finding a knife an the door of the
dnver's side oft he car along wtth a gram of cocaine, Bell
said.
Television, radio
TELEVISION
I 0 p m -WRESTLING: Channel 56
F RIDA Y'S RADIO
I 0.30 a m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers vs.
Texas. from Pompano Beach. Fla., KABC (790).
I p m. -BASEBALL: Oalcland vs. Angel<;,
from Palm Spnngs. KMPC (7 10).
Ohio State takes
NIT championship
They won't have a bi~er fan next
yearthan Eldon Miller. I m not going
to the moon or outer space ...
three-run pinch triple, to take an 8-6
lead.
Attro1 5, Twins t : Jim Deshaies
allowed two hits in five innings u
Houston recorded its fir1t shuto ut of
the spring. Charlie Kerfeld, Aurelio
Lopez and Dave Smith completed a
three-hitter.
Reds 3, Twta1 %: Terry Lee's solo
homer and Sal Butera's two-out sinpe
accounted for a pair of eighth-inmna
runs.
NEW YORK (AP) -Ohio State
never won a conference or a post-
season tournament title an Eldon
Mailer's first nine years as coach. In
has I 0th season. sax weeks after he was
fired, the Buckeyes gave Maller a
champ1onsh1p m the 49th National
Jnv1tat1on Tournament.
"I've experienced this feeling only
one other tame an basketball, 25 yean;
ago," Maller said Wednesday na~t
after Ohio State defeated Wyoming
73-63 an Lhe NIT champ1onsh1p game
at Madison Square Garden. "I was a
senior at Wiucnbefl College and we
won the college d1v1s1on na~onal
champ1onsh1p.
OCC WINS TOURNEY ..•
"I told our team at half\amc that 25
years from now. I want to be able to
celebrate two championships. Now.
all I have to do as make it that far."
Maller. who was fired Feb. J
effective at the end of ~ason. coached
Ohio St·11c to five conse<:utave NIT
v1ctoncs At the same tame. he was
trying to recruit players by telepho ne
fo r Nonhern Iowa, where he wall
coach next season.
"I ha\C no <ipecaal emouonc;," said
Maller. 47 "I am Just glad l'\C got a
place to go I didn't say goodb~c to
them I don't say goodbye to fnends.
MDho1ners
sinkPiusX
DOWNEY -Jam Oldham and
Jam Austin c;lugged home runs an the
seventh annang Wednesday to lead
Mater Dc1 to a 3-1 victory over Pius X
an an Angclu!> League baseball game
at Pius
The Monarchs (6-4. 2-3) and the
Warrior\ (0-5) scored their only other
runs 1n the fourth. with Mater Dci
getung its run as Dave Randell
sangled home Make Kelly, who led ofl
the inning with a walk.
Jn the seventh. Oldham came an to
pinch hit and sliced the ball deep to
left field for the homer. Two outs
later, Au'ittn hit has round-tripper to
the same field
Steve Watwn O· I) patched the wan.
i.tnkang o ut three, walkmg one and
allo wing four hits.
Jam Zaccan and Austin were 2 for 4
and Randell was 2 for 3.
The Monarchs have next week ofT.
From Bl
"This team can really score 10
bunches. It as incredible.'' said
Mayne. "It gets contagious. I haven't
ever had a club that has hat th as good
for this long.
· ''It's freaky what this club is dotng
in terms of sconng runs. I'm at a loss
for why. I sure am enjoying it.
"Today we came to play a httle
better. Yesterday (Tuesday), we
didn't play with the same intensity as
we have in conference. Southwest,..
had to score eight runs (an the first
three6innings) to wake us up. Today
we showed up to play. I could sec at
from the time we took infield.''
The Pirates showed up all nght, and
early. Designated the visiting team.
they scored eight runs an lhc first
annang. due an pan to some Apaches
who didn't show up -maanly their
p1tchcu.
Southwestern Head Coach Jerry
Bartow's pitching staff was deci-
mated. His No. I starter. Roddy
Walburn, was sidehned with arm
trouble and has No. 2 man, Aaron
Rico patched five innings Tuesday. A
Mayne put it, "their No. I guy is hun,
thcar No. 2 guy threw Tuesday.
foday, who knows who they had
left?"
The key blows an the fim came
from the Pirates·-two sizzltng
freshmen. leftfielder Joey James and
designated hitter Dave Staton.
Staton. who was 2 for 3 Wlth J RBI.
delivered a two-run double. James.
who was4 for 4 with 4 RBI, delivered
a run-scoring double.
James, out of Newport Harbor
High, continues to tear anyone who
dares throw to him. In 22 games, he 1s
hatting over .4.SO with nine home runs
and 49 RBI. Wtth at least 17 games
remaanang. he is JUSt five home runs
and 19 RBI short of Gene
Roumampcr's OCC season records 10
those respec1ive categones.
Another freshman who continues
to impress is ~m August. August,
who played on Fountaan Valley
H1gh's 1985 CIF championship team.
was the No. 3 patcher m the Barons'
lineup, but has found a home in
Mavne's rotation.
With his four innings of work
Wednesday, August (6-0) bas now
pitched 44 innings, giving up only
three earned runs ,(an ERA of 0.61 ),
while striking out 49 and walking only
20. He and sophomore Longo Garcia
( 4-1 ) arc big reasons the Pirates lead
the South Coast Conference by l 'h
games.
Mayne says his club accomplished
what It n~ded to in the tournament
and will have a couple days off.
"We got in some at-bats and some
inninP, and now it's back to the
wars, • he said, meaning the Pirates
resume SCC play Monday against
Saddleback.
GWC wins, 6-5,
in 12 innings
DarTen T omasick's two-out single
an the bottom of the 12th inning drove
an Scott Rath to cap Golden West
College's 6-.S win over LA Harbor in a
non-conference baseball game at
Golden West Wcdne"1ay.
The Seahawks ( 13-7) held a ~
edge after eight, but a leadoff triple by
Dave Solorzano and an RBI single by
Todd Nash tied the score in the ninth,
5-5 .
After Harbor's tnrce-run fifth,
three RuslJer pitchen combined to
shut o ut the Scahawks over the next
seven inning.s,g.iving up only four hits
in that stretch.
Dean Douty got the win with relief
help from Adam Sancha and Gregg
Manin.
Nash had two RBI in his 3-for.{)
performance, wbjJe Rath also bad
three hits in six at-bats. Chip Damato.
Keath Kaub and Solorzano were 2 for
5.
The Rustlers (9-9) resume South
Coast Conference play Tue"1ay at
Rancho Santiago.
Come to the
Countryside.
the shores interiors
SOFA• LOVE 8EAT
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}
KDCM
JOINS THE
''EAGLE CHALLENGE" •
IN THEIR EFFORTS TO
BRING THE
·AMERICA 15 CUP
TO NEWPORT BEACH
HEAR "EAGLE UPDATES"
FRIDAYS AT 9:30 AM & 3:30 PM
ON KDCM
taa.t
FM STEREO
Your Offic1ol Eagle Station
• -• .L
FoR THE RrcoRo
~
NI~
WllTDN COftP•••NCI ~DMUell
W L 5' 11 " ,. ,. «2 v .. ,. " ,. 47 ,........, OMMe!I
~ 1'1 ... •• .170
.J5'
.J5'
••Hovtton 4S 7t •1• •·Otnver 4J 31 511 · 7\lt Odet J9 )l s.t1 SI,';
Utell JI 3' S14 7'h
\\en AntOl\lo J3 42 .440 1l
Sacremttito 31 41 .GI ll
IASTHN COftPl•INC•
AIMlk OMMe!1 'f'•lk>lton
• Plltladtlonl•
•· Welllln91on x·Hew Jer~
New VOfll
~ ll 41 ,,
lS ll lS ,,
22 SI ~OM.-
•·MllweullM SO 23 ••Atlente 45 1'
11·0etro1t •I :n
Ctevelend V '44
Chlceeo 25 41 lndlene 2S .,
X·~ NVof1 ti.ftll
s~ ' n
2S
2S...,
y·dtl'CN<I dlvtt lon Ihle end Nvoff bettll 1·dlnclled COf!Wence lltte
W ....... Y't~
k n Antonio lOS. a...rt f7
Boston 121, MllweukM 11S
Cte ... nd 110, N-.lerMv lele PNlecMIPllle 112, Atlente 103
Wesl'll1111lon 120, Delles 111 Ho\Jston 110, llldlene IOI
Utell 116, Denver IOI
"'-'• 120. S..ltte 107
T..._..s GerMt
OeHH at New York
Sen Antonio at Goiotn Slate
$ecra mento et S..ttte
''*"'' GemM °"'""' et "'-nl• Weanl119ton 11 Boston
Clllce90 et New Jtrsey
MllweullM et Plllleeleleltlle
Houston 11 Detrofl
Atlenta at lndlane
Utall 11 Otnver
Soun 1os,~n
SAN ANTONIO (115) -S Jolwlson 2·8
1-12 11, Mltdltll t-22 O·O It, Giimore l·S
2·2 I , Wlllema l · I 0-0 1. Rotlertson S-12 S·S
IS, Mattllews l ·4 0-0 •• Gr-ood l·S S••
11, WTlll!ni •·7 0-0 8, Lemo 6•11 2·2 14, Hutllfl 0-2 0-0 0, SYnovOld S-t 2·3 12
Totets 41 ... 2l·l0 IOS
CL.WrllllS ('71 -Me11w .. •·S 7·9 U,
Nlmonlut 4·1 4·4 12, llenlemln 7· ll "8 20,
M.Jotlnson 6·14 J·• 1S, Nixon S-IS Fl 12,
Ceee 4·6 1·4 10, Edwerds l·9 0-0 6, White
2·7 1·2 S. G«Oon 1·3 0-0 1 Totels 3'·IO 25-33 97
k-bV Ollanen Sen AnlOlllo 2f 21 18 30-IOS
Kings 37 23 24 1.-'7
Foulecl out-Me11wen Rtt>ou~n
Antonio 51 IS.JCIMson, Wiikins II, Los
"'""'" S2 18entemln 91 ""'".-s." Antonio V (S\Jn<lvold 81. Loa A""81es 23
(Nl•Oll II. Toter foult-S.n Antonio 26, Los
Angeles 24. Teclvllc•l-LOS "'~· llleoal
oefensa
AlltnOtnce: 9,153
NCAA TOURNAM•HT TN fflnll ,...,..
(ef Daiei
S.tw•Y'• ~ Loulilene St 126•11) vs Loulavllle (lC>-71
<Cllel!MI 2 II 12:30 o.m I
Duk.a (3'·21 vs l(ensa• IJS-l) (Cllenne4 2 et l pm.) .......... ~ ....
LSU·Loult vllle winner vs Oulle·K•nset
winner ICllenMI 2 et 6 pm I
NrT (tt .... Yen I
~
Of\lo srete n , Wvomlno 6J
TlllN ~
Loulalene Teel! 61, Ftorlde 62
MM'•~
(•t~)
""' lltund ..... lven L~ <Ca cf\Otlovekl•I def Tim
Wlllllson IU S.I. 6·4, 6·3; Jimmy Connon (U.S l dtt. Sle¥e OentOll (U.S I. 6·4, 6·7;
!loris 8Kktr (Wtsl Gtrmenv) def Jolln
Sadri, 6·4, 7·6; Andres Gomer def Rid<
Leech (U S I. 6·4, 7.,
MM'• teurMmeftt
<•··~·~) lectlld•--~ Joeklm Nv•lrom ISwedenl def. Brien
THCller IU.S.l, 6-l , 7-s. And«• J•rrvd
(Sweden) def. ~1111 GUtltllardt (Switzer·
land). •·>. .. 4. Tomaa Smid (Cttdlollo-vtlo;le) def llllav Anvltrt l (lndl•I. .. 4, 7·6.
Wolt• Fltlefl !Poland) def Lll>oer Plrntll IC1KllOllOvekla l, 7·S. 6·).
o.... ..........
OAVIY'S l.OCK•A (~ '-di)
-13' 811111en 1 berrecude, 311 bonito, 1 llellbut, 101 a lko t>ess, 34 send Dass, 240
rnaGkerel, fO Kutoln, 2 shMc>llleed. S
wlllltflall,
NIWPOttT l.ANOINO -44 •nelen . 3'
.. nd tleU, I 1"""'1leed t roekflltl, 40
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• LAt AlefftlllM
WIDNISOAY'$ ••su&..n (11a., u.a • ....._. ,,......,
P•ST ltAC•. OM mlle Net.
lllowctv lllodltr (Pierce) 560 4.20 UO
Ceno11 Orlve (hrnet> 17.AO MO
Qutllt11 Perller (Ve .. ndlntnem) > 00
Time; ?;O:U
AltO Went. Think II Slllooer. Wttdl Tiit
lvrdle, Llneen Wiide, ft9tllt &Ion. Win· 1111111 SMson, Vl(toriovt F~
krat<lltd· Mv MoNrt. Nvtrll It lhan. '2 IXACTA CMI H id 111.40
llCOftO aACI. OM mite trot.
Mt Content IKueblerl u o > .o t eo
Miiford NvtrrOMV IWllllemt, Jr ) • .O > .O Saltv (Pleno) ) 40
Time. 2.0S.
Also Welll. Hl«*I Ciiio, Torrid ... u.
Francis C'°"""'ty, Mlsi.r G. ,_
SOnt aov. imo Imo •mo
SCrttcMll: TllHdow.
$1 IXACT'A (1·21 H iii m.20
TH•D ltACI. One mlle Net
Hoortrun (Hvmen) UO UO ) 40
M IH SIV ""'et (AUOlll) ~ 400
Ludl• Clll l&erllerl 400
Time: HU
Also Went: tnolen Comet, Lodi, Loven Levltv, I{~
ScretcNd: ""-·
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POUllTM •Ac•. One mite oece.
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The End\enter (Mueller) UO
Time: l·!a,
Also Went: JHon Menover N, Tef'ry
Butter A, Fultlfloht HallO\ler
Scre tclled: Good AutllorllY A, Tr•Ck
hlk A. "'"" ••c•. One mite oece WllhOut A Traw IPercl UO J.00 2.40
Sly AmDanador IRoltfll S.00 l.00
E1tel1e<luef (Peter.-n. Jr.I HO
Time: 2:01.J
Atso Went: Anciva SkNter. Pure Cteu,
8erv J-. Mark II Linde, Ha,.,.., Hussv,
Good N Sty
Scra tdled· Hello CllarM!', l.lnoe11
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U IXACTA 12·SI H id 142'0
SIXTH aACI. One mite trot
S-nel ILt<i1lnl n 20 6 00 :t 60 Lelloe (Coleman) UO 2 40
lntrleulno Star (Mvrnafl) 2.JO Time· 2-01.1
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Oouble. Llltte Houw, llul
SC:retdled· Idle Rules
SJ aXACTA (4·SI H id 1tl 50
savmM'tH 1tAca. One m11e oece
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Henrev1 a rotller !Sievel 10.IO 4AO
Geln A Chime A IVelle~ml l 00
Time' 1•59.4
AllO Went DrMm OI Fortune N,
Prntons Pr IOI, Teoutete Ha110ver. Jelellto,
Cllrlsto, ~ Tr-N.
Scretd'led: Eertv s.>irn. Miu Moneve«t. U U(ACTA (S-8) H id SJM.10
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F .. IH (RllClllt) 8.20 7.40
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T lme: 2:00. l
Also Went: Po1111v .. v Rowdv, SOHO O
Cllereer, Kolle. Scra ldled: None.
U IXACTA (S•2) oel<1 MUO
NINTH lllACI. One mite oace.
C.pera Rena IPlerc:el 6.00 l.IO 2.10
Lucllv aunns IPlanol 7.40 3 00
Dvnamltt Gin (R-1 3 20
Time: 2:01.1
Atso Went: Awev From Home, MetJN
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A TM , 8elle JOiia.
SCre tched: Dune l.AdV, Cllermed Querlt.
12 ~K MX 12+.-S•S·7) H id
Ml,371.20 10 one wlMlnt ticket (6 llorMt)
ContOle tlon Pick SI• oeld lo)S) 00 to JI
winning tldlttt IS flOt'Mt)
U 1.XACTA (7·1) H id "2.40
Due to folHlv conditions, the flnal two
reca on WednftdeV'• cerd were ~
Allendenc .. 331.S.
s..... Anita
WIONalDAY'S AISULTS
(tflllef lf•v IMllU"* N ,,_...
"•ST llAC•. 6 furlonos,
ComH r•OllllY (Mc:Crron) f.00 UO 2.IO
FHhlon Ovnasrv (Meal 2 40 uo
SM DouC>v RUii (Oelehouueyt ) UO
Time: 1:10. Also Ren: Aroenterto. MllleN Stetion¥y,
SlletalOtleledV, Ruffin N 8aein, Llllle
Rltloer, Orl911184 Serio!
Scre rclled: Jec:tvn's Choice, River Cller
U IXACTA (7·'1 paid 11940
SICOND lllAC•. 6 turlonili
PrmM Me Lek (Olhuyl S.40 3.60 UO Polrys Lii ltMCel (Stevena> S.00 3.00
Wine Girt (Valenzuela ) 2.60
Time: 1:10.•
Also Ren: Mia RIOfll, 0.k Portel, Lov .. v
C•n<lv, Oewn Of Gtorv, To ee lmCH"eulvt Scre tdled· Quick N' Solld. Celvarv
Clleoet.
n.•D •ACI!. 6 ""'°"''· Ms Ll9htnlno aon IHwtvl 9 40 S.40 oo
Fire Miu Lucier (P9clron l 17 IO t IO
Seerdl FO' HMverl (Sollsl S.20
Time• l:llJ
Alto Ren· Monti Lvnn. Diane Fenc:v,
SWMI Wlnllle. Ande11t uov. Tricky Turn,
Mllllenl a.llt. Sln lln' Suenn
Scretc:hed. lted Frenctrt
12 DAIL y oouaLtl It· IOI oald IJ0.10
"OU.TH 111 ACI. 6 tur1onot ltek*etl ICutenonl l It 60 Jl.IO l'-20
Sar all's Hooe (Solla) 16 00 f 00
Tiie Meker (Stevena> • 40
Time 1.11 4
AISO ti en Double Decorfled, aoeot•s
Prlneels. 0.00.tra'a Chence, Pepoy'a
s-cNH1. LovelV Siller, Twlstln Meme, Eloouent Jennv. Fll9ht Star, Cumulul
CIOUO k nlctled' Hot OKert Nloht, Al Nlolll
N••· EIOOI'•'• Finl, Pretty Slollt.
Pl~ ltACI. ,,,., lunonos on turt.
FortendO IMcCerron) 4.20 l.20 7.40
Fortnlellllv IMcHareuel IS.20 •AO
Z.nv1 Tecllca (Toro) 3 20
Ml.IC fl>TICE
NHL
CMY"a•&.L CON'la•NC• ..... 0....-w L T "-0, OA
54 IS ' 114 406 117
3')0 'tlttS2"
2545 . 5'27tJ54 n 45 1 si 211 * 20 41 ll S3 uo 310
x•Ct!IQeo x·SI. Louis
•·Mlnnesot• x·TOl'OlllO
O..rolt
....... ~ 11 ,. 8
3' l l 8
lS l2 t
82 DI '° 2'1 7t .,
23 45 '
" S3 •
S2 m
• 252
WALIS COM'IAINCI
l"ell1dl DM*" 11•Weahtneton 41 11 S 101
JI. Ptlli.deltllllle 41 22 4 100
NV lllend«t :W 77 11 13
Plllab1K911 XI U 8 74
NV llleneers u JS s n
New Jenev 2A 47 3 SI
A411tms OM.-Quebec •I )0 s f7
Montreel 31 32 6 to
Botton u lO 10 71
Hertford 31 3S 3 n
&uffelO lS 33 6 76 •·dlnc1* pleyoff Derlh
v·dfnc:hecl dMtlon title ·---Y'•SC-Q191 1, C.tewv J
Hertford l, Monl,...I 0
Edmonton 8, PlllablKeh l
M!Mtwl• 6. Toronto 1
Chlceeo S, Detroit 3
Vencouvtr 1, Quebec 6
T......,.so-
MontrMt er lk>lton
8uff110 •• Ptll~•
St Loul1 et N-.i.rWY ,,...,.. o..n..
K.-.. el llencouver
290
)11
2" m
2SS
2IO
314
lll m
30I
212
New Y0111 lllender1 at We"""9ton
Edmonton el New York lt8"98r1
WlMIP89 " Ce!Mrv
"'"' .....
t• 22t
2'1
211
254
:MA
271
265 m
215 m
1 Los Antetn. Fo• 10 (Nlclds, Wll·
llemal. 1·1s. Penelllet-sr-tlv. Ce/ (trip. Plnol, 2:51; Lullowlctt, LA (trtoolncll. S:l4;
llltdmond, LA (llOldlno), 8:44; SUter, Cel
(lloldlnol. 16:25. ..... ,..,...
2. C.IHrv, Wit.on 27 ( .. 1i0er. TOMllU, 1m. l . Los A,...., Nlc:tlolls l3 (Fox,
Kenne<IYI, 5:26. 4, C.IHrv. Suter 11 (Quinn, Rtlnllert), S:40. S. CeleerY, L.ooO U (Tonelll,
Sheetlvl. 7:40. 6. l.O• A,_..., Lullowldl 12
(Welll), 1S:S1. Penellie.-Wlllems, LA.
mlnor·rnelor·eame misconduct lrouenlno-
flelltlnol, 7:A6; lllelMert, Cet, rnaicw lfloht·
1119), 1:4'; McOonel<I, Cal (c:Nlrelne), 10'".36;
Tonelll, Ce/ (llf9h•stlc:klnlll. J:S3; Lullowlch,
LA, rnalor (fllltlllnol. 16:U ; Mullen, Cel,
melor (fllltlllnol, 16:3S; Hunter. Ce/,""'-·
mtseollduCI--mltconducl (rOUlllllnel, 20:00; KellY, LA ( routfllno I. 20:00. ,.....,..,...
7 Los ""'*"· Svtles 20 IGallwl. US. I. LOI Anoelft, Fo11 11 (Nlcholll, 0~). S:lt
(PO) t. LOI ~. Nlcholb 34 (~
son). 12:1' 1&111. 10, Lot AntelM. 01oMe 15.
l4:Jl. Penett~nn. Ce! <trlPilllnel. 3:56. Lullowldl, LA ISieslllne). 6:o6; ~I.
cat llllulllnol. 6.-06; Currie, LA <llo6dlnel. 11:17, ... ..,., Cel (rOU9tllnll, 14:31; Pat·
tenon, LA CrOUlfllnol. 14:3'; Lullowlc:ll, LA
<rOU8111nol. lt:Ol, KllllMCIV, LA (rOU9fllnol.
lt:Ol; McDoneld, Cet (rouelllrl91. lt:Ol;
Fotlu, C•I (rOUlf\lno), lt:Ol; llHter. Ce/ (rOU9fllnt), lt'OI
Sllots on ooel-<"'8rv f-lo+-27 Lot
Anoeift Mt-l>-39.
Power· ... Y °"°"'unllln-Ce/owv 0 of 4, LOI Anotltl I of S.
GoellH C.twrv, 1.emtlln (3' lllOIS·2'
MVft), Vernon (14:>1 llllrd, l·l ). Lot
Anotlet, MtleMon (77·24).
A tlenclence-t ,420.
NIJC fl)TIC(
. .
-~
1"6 NA tliUf' M:Mdute
Meretl 77·»-Tournement Player•
CllelTlllloMlllo, Ponte Vtdre, F•
AorR l·~rMter GrNMOoro OPen
Aorl 10-1)-Tfle Me1ters, AUOIAI•. G• Aorll 10-1~11 Gvrentv Clenlc.
Hettlelbur9, Mls1.
.t.orll 17·»-Sff Pines Herlteoe Cleulc,
HUion 11..o lllend, S.C
A.or• 24·77-+i-ton <>Pen ~" lo-Mey ~. v-~ tnvll•llonal ,.,.., 8·11-&'1'1'on Helson Ctu slc, 1rvl119,
Tu .
Mev IS-11-<0lonlet Nettonel Invite· llonel, Ft Wortll
Mev 22·25 Memot rat Tourrwnent, Outllln. Otllo
Mev 2'· June 1-Kemoer OHn,
htl\Mde, Md.
June S-.-Wettc:t\Hter Claulc. Her· rtson, N.Y
June 12· 1~ S OPen, SoutllemPton.
N.V
June 12· ls-f>rovldent Cleulc, Cllet
••noooe. Tenn
June "·22-Alle nl• Claul<, MAr1t11e, G•
June 26·~enadl•n OPen, Oehllle.
Ont.
Jutv 3·6'--GrHter Hertford Ooan, Cromwell, Conn.
July I0.1>-AnlltUter·8uscll Cleulc.
Wllllemsbure. Ve.
Julv 17·~•r0M'• Clauk , Coel Vel·
tev. Ill. JulV 24· 27-8ulclo. Ooan. Grelld 8i.nc,
Mlcll
July ll·Auo >-w .. 1ern OPen, O.lo.
8rOC*, II
Auo. 7· le>-f>GA CllamPlonalllP, ToteOo,
Olllo
AUii 14·17-Tlle International, Cu tia llloctt, Colo
Aue 21·2-EC Worlcl Seri.t of Golf. Akron, Of11o
Auo. 21·31~otlla Clank , CO'dove , Tenn
5"1 4·7-8 C Ooen, Endicott, N Y
5eot 11·1-.0.ton Cleuk
5-1 18·11-GrH ter MltwaukM OPen 5-t 2S-i.-5outhweal Clank . Al>llent
Ttx
Oct 2·S-S0Utllern <>oen, COlvml>us
Oftlo
Oct ,_ l~MCOlll ()pen
Oct 1 .. 1.-0lanev WOl'l<I Cleule, L•U
auene Vlate. Fie
Oct. ?3·26"-TtXH ()oen, San Antonio
Oct lo-Nov ?-Tueson MetCll Plev
CllemPlonslllo
Oct. lO-Nov 1--hlllllles ... ()pen
Dec 4·7-Mlxed TH m, Leroo. Fla
Dec. 11·1-TH m lnvllellonel, 8oce
Raton, Fie.
t •
~COM! DAJLV PILOT/Thutldey, March 27, 1NI * 81
'Y' . . . " ...........
~MUA.W
Detroit
....... YCIB
Texu MlfwMIUe
Twomo
Olklend _,....
CtevtliNld
CllkMo
MIM9tO!a
S.ltlt
Kensa.Cltv
aantmon lot ton
WL
tJ •
10 •
10 ' IO 1
IO 1 ...
10 8 10 ,
IO 10
' 10 • 10
' ' 7 11
' It NATIONAL "--ACW.
Allenlt 11 6 M1
Mtw Yon lO 7 _.
PNltd "' C¥t f 7 ..5'.1 C~ll It 8 M6 5e!'I jl: r tl'CIKO t I .,m
~-Louis 8 8 .JOI Soell Olteo 10 11 476
Pltt1Nllll ' 8 M1 ~ 711 ..
Montreat • 10 J7S
Clllc69o 7 14 .m
Houston • 12 .m
NOTE: 5-41!-l-.ct -cOU11t lft
•l•n<llnot, "" do not .......... kw
-... '· Clev.ienct 8 MonlrMA (U ) 10,.,.,.... t, 11 fMltWt
Clndnnell3,Mlnnftote (H)2
Toronto 4, New V0111 Mets 3
T HH 8, Atlente 6 8altlrmre 10, Kentea Cltv 3
Chlce90 Wlllle SO• (Ill va Plltl0ur9",
cnc:l<I., re in
lk>llon 27, Chlceoo Wlllle Sox (U ) 10
S..llle I, Mllweu!IM 7 Otltlend 12, Chlce9o Cubs S
Sen O'-o '· San Frenclsco S Montreal Casi vs. New York Yenl\tft,
c:ncld.. rein
Pl\lledelollle vs. 0.trolt at L.e4'<etend.
Fla., cndd .. rein
H-lon S, Mlnnesote (HI O T•Y'•~ Oeltteno ..s. _,.. et Ptlm 5wlftet
Mlnnesote v1. ~ et \lero laeol,
Fla
Plll.OWllll vs !lotion •• Winter Ha,,.,., Fie,
Detroit VI. Clnclnnetl et T..,..... Fii
Tor onto ""-St Louis ., SI Petersoure,
Fla.
Houston VI. MontrMI (U ) 11 Wetl PUT! 8-CI. Fte.
Clndnnell (H ) VI Plll1ldllpf\11 ti
OMrweter, Fla.
New V0111 V•nll-(u l .... Ttau et
P-.Fle.
Atlenta vs. a.tllmore et Mleml
Chlce9o CuC>s vi Clevelend at Tucson, Ariz.
Mllweukee .... $tn Fr.nc:IKO ., Scot·
tl4ele, ArlL
MontrMI (u ) YI. New York Vanll-
1111 et Fort Llluderdele,
Seattle vs. Sen D'-o et Vume, Arl1 ''*Y'• 0...... Oeltlend vs ......... et Pelrrl Sorl1111t ~ vs TtaH at Pomoeno, Fii
N-York Met• n . lk>lton •I Winter
Haven; Fie.
HOUSlon n . Cincinnati et T•"-• Fie
Phltedelollle YI. St. Loul1 et SI Petersbur9, Fie.
Kanses Cltv "' Pltl•°"'llfl •I &reclentClfl, Fla.
MonlrHI VI Atlanta ., W•t Palm
hech, Fie.
Clllc:e90 Wllllt SOx n . Mlnnesote et
Orlendo. F ... C...,_..nd V\ MltweukM el Cllendfer,
Arl1.
Seattle "' Sen Oleeo el Yuma. Arlt Clllc.eoo CUO\ vs Sen Fr~ et $c:ottldllle, Ariz
Toronto vs. Detroit ar Lall.eitncl, Fii
llaltlmore .... N-Yor11 Venllen •• FOl'I LAudwdele ...................
(el ll'elm _,.., c1ev ... nc1 ao 021 ,..... • 1
A.Mell 400 IOI 21.-f 16 l
llltler, Yett ISi, Von Otllen 111. ltMd <II
end Wlllar<I, iUenMMI (6) McCetllll.
llrvden m. ,,,_e m. Smlttt If> end
Miier, Liddle Ill, Nwron (f). w-Nttll/Ke,
1-0. L-RNCI, 0-1 S-Smllll (1). Hlll-Clevelend, C.stlllo (l), Fr-<') ""'911,
Downing (l )
E.,._ lO, Decl9W'I t
<•t v-~ "11) MonlrMI 201 130 101 01-10 16 Dod9er's 020 220 mo 00-f IS 2
Stuper, Brown ISi. Rlltv (•I. St. Clelre
(8) end Vost, Mdenon (t), RNU, Pow ..
(SI. CH'"'° (7), Vende&ero (8), Howell (fl end Scloscte. W-St Claire. 2·0. L-Howell.
0·3. HRs-MonlrH I, Wellecll Ill, Dawson
Ill.
C-..bellMI
NON•COHFlalNCI
Steel c..... II, w ... Cent CIWtltltll •
(Pint Gerftel w .. 1 Coea1 Cllf"l1tlen 004 000 ~ • 8 <J
SoCet COlle9e 451 000 x-10 ' 7 Rui end Z..,.,.,., Lutne*ln Ul, OVerMm,
Olten 141 end Nelson w-<>tten, 2·4 L-Ruz. 2&-Mceolum (SCC), Motskt
ISCCI. ltemlret (WCC) Mlll-ilat'Ur
(WCC)
SeCal C-.. S, Wftf C.st Olm11M I
(S.....0-) w .. t Coest Christian 000 000 001-1 S 3
SoC.i Colleoe 000 )00 20li-i 8 0
Jec.t<son ·~ Lumoklft, ~ end """°" w-Mensflel<I, H . 1.-~aon
?&-Wendler <SCCl, fffilton CSCCI, 2
CemrnuflftY ~ .........
NON-CONP•alNCI ~ Wett 6. LA Mer1-S (U...._l
LA Harbor 101 mo 000 00C>-S 10 2 GOiden w .. 1 mo 000 101 001-t IS 1
Cortet, Heeotrd (6), Alexen<ller Ill, end
AllOf191\I, OIMeYO (12), Sanc:llet , Mertln
111. Ooutv (111 encl Shll1ev, Kint 1111
w -Ooutv . I 3 L-Ale aa nder
1&-<~ (HI, llNd (GWCI, K.eul>
(GWCl, llleth IGWC), Oameto IGWCI 311-<empbel (H), Solont-(GWCJ
a-c.,,.... LHJ, ._. (0«), ._..
COWCI. Ile"' COWC), D1r1191t 40.WC.) • CMJI II (H), ........ COWC"J.
H•ldletl11........_
D9Lart&AA.W aon
--D.e Ill, ........ ,.
200 medteV r•r-1. Mew o.I, l:Sf.2 .. 200 fr..-1. Smllfl (Ml. t.OU; 1 ThomM
(M), 2:20.4, l. c.n.o.tl (Ml. 2::2U. 100 lnc»-1. s.oto (M), t:2l.7; t. c:.n-
,.,.... (Ml. 'Y.11 A. > s.uw <Nil' ""1 .3. 50 ,,__1 Kine (Ml. 25.S, 2. ..._.. CM),
27.l; J Hick (Al, 2IL.s.
100 llY-1 ar-(M), SU; 2. TllomM
(Ml, 1:0'2.
100 1r..-1. Menlerl (M), JU; 2. ~
(Ml. 1:01.S; 3. Del' (Al, 1:02.0.
SOO fr-1. ar-<Ml, S.a.J; 2. Smltfl CM>. w .o; 3. s..-1M1. 7:10.0.
100 Dee:A-1. MlwUrf <NII, l:lU; 2. seott
IA.I. l:lU. 3. ~(Ml, ISM.
100 W-t-1. Soto (M ), 1.11.1, 2. G-.
IA), 1'17.A; l. Centw ... (Ml. l:ll.S.
400!t100 ., .. ,...,...1 Meter Del, ))#7
I.AN PIAN.U.00 VALUY LIA.eUe .. u --°"' "' ___,, .. 200 medlev r•-1. Meter Del, ~
200 1r-1. &errvn'\411\ tMI ~11 2. 0.lv IMI, ~.7; l . Jene! (Al. t:J1..s. 200 lnc»-1 Kwe (Al. t:».7; 2.
McCertlly (M), 2:32.f; 3. Mer1llrt (M), uu.
50 fr-1. S...,_ IM), '11 .. 1; 2. -t,.IM IA), 21.7; ). Morlll (M l. 2'.f .1 • 100 llY-1 &urna CM), UIUJ 1. ....,.,
(A), 1:2U.
100 fr..-I. Sltlfter <M l. 9U; 2. Judv IAI, 1:06.2; l. ca., (Ml. 1:13.2.
S00 fr..-1 &.rnimen IM), sa5,t; 2.
Kare IA), 6mA; i SIUld! IMJ, UU.
100 l>edl-1. lklma (Ml, l*U; 1
McC.,.,,.., <NII. l:OU, 1 09udle (A), l:AO.I.
100 llnleat-1. Heeltwr (Al. l:1U; 2. Mertler1 CM), I It.I; 1 Mor1" (M), l:2U
4lll00 tr• r•-1. Meter Del. 4QA.l.
WIMIMllY'S It 2
UM9AA.1. ........u... .
CHICAGO cuas-wei.tcs -..... "9t· ,.,._ tnd LtN s.r-. ~
HOUSTON ASTltos-« ......... ~·
men ltlvera end ""'°" lllOOCI, lllfteldln, IO TutCOll of Ille PKlflc C-t Leeeue.
HEW VOtltK MEn-iolflt llltNIY Mveti
elld T errv u.dl, "'1c:tlen, Sl.-V Jflf-
feraon end Terrv &locMr. outfltlders. Jolln
GM*IM, UICNr, encl At9tnls S.:ur. I~. to !Mir minor·--carN1 I«
rMs~t.
SAN DIEGO PADtltE$-tlt~ Merlo
Remrret, lnfltldtr lll•ultned ltustv
Tlllrnen end Je,,_ si .... outfltlldwl, to
Lea v ... s of Ille "-Mc c-t L..Mieue.
f'OO'TMkL
c....~-~ HAMIL TON TIGElll·CATS-Sloned
Trov Hunter end K-'" SIOrtv. wide recelven.
..oct(.I"'( ....... .......,~
aUFFALO SA&aE$-tltet\lmed MlitA
DevK. rloflt w"'9, to lllodlftter of !tit
Amtnc:M Hockey l.Meut
~Lt Ga
llOSTON COl.LEGE-ffemed Jim
O'&rltn ,_.,-~coed\. C~UY &OWL-otsmlued ~
W•ters, eucutlve dlf'ectOf, end MidlMI
Miii\, ITW'llt'I""' dlreclOf. MlNNESOTA-Hemed J llloOlnson """lflnt co.ell. PITTHUlllG........,._ ~ ev-mtll'• .... ., ... C09Cfl
SOU THE tltN MIUISSIPPl-f"romoled
ltOlend 0... from elflletlc dlrtclor to
etllletlc Olrec!Of -11u1
WISCONSIN·SUPEltlOlt-Announctd
Iha rnlenetlOll of Gtr\I Heft<«. llOc:k..,
C08Cll
..
\
I 1 • I
4 -
M Ot1nge Coat DAILY PILOT/ Thureday, March 27, 1988
Once.again, which is the best yacht club in the USA?
Which 1s the best yacht club 1n the
U.S?
That's a question that could be
debated from east to west and north
to south.
But two years ago Newport Harbor
Yacht Club came up with a gimmick
designed to settle the issue once and
for all. ·
Twelve of tbe foremost yacht cl ubs
in the U.S. were invued to compete in
a six-race regatta off Newport Beach
in New York-36 sloops to determine
which c9uld field the best racing team
1n a race around the buoys. The
winner would 00. awarded the .
Baldwin M. Baldwm trop..hy donated
by Mrs. Maruja Baldwin Hodges.
It is history now that the winner of
that first challenge regatta was East-
ern Yacht Cub of Marblehead, Mass.
with sk.tpper Robbie Doyle at the
helm.
The event was such a success that
NHYC decided to make it a biennial
regatta with selection of the dozen
competitors being made by a panel of
distan&uished J achtsmen from
throughout the .S. from a field of
more than 200 apphcants.
So now the stage 1s set for th~
second Yacht Club Challenge start mg
next Wednesday (April 2) and oon-
tinuing through Monday, April 6.
Back to defend its tttle will be
Eastern Yacht Club. The others
sclcctt"d by the panel are St. Francis
Yacht Club, San Francisco; San
Diego Yacht Club; Larchmont Yacht
Club, Larchmont N.Y.; Scawanhaka
Yacht Club. Oy ster Bay, N.Y.,
Southern Yacht Club, New Orleans,
La.; Chicago Yacht Club; American
Yacht Club, Rye, N. Y.; St. Petersburg
Yacht Club, St. Petersburg, Fla.; LaJce
Geneva· Yacht Club, Lake Geneva.
Wisc.; Houston Yacht Club, Hous-
ton. Tex.; and, of course. the hoS1
Newport Harbor Yacht Club.
The regatta will consist of of one
race each day with one throwout.
"The goal of this biennial event 1s
to bring together the best amateur
yachtsmen in the country," said
Arthur Strock, general chainnan.
"Newport Harbor Yacht Oub will
provide I~ evenly-matched New
York-36 sloo1>s for the competition
and every effort will be made to
equalize the sail inventory and hull
speeds. Wt Will also rotate boats after ..
each day of racing to preclude any
unfair advantage."
Selection panel for this year's
chaJICJt&e were William P. Ficker.
NHYC, chairman; James Michael,
San Francisco; William Parks, Chi-
cago; James Schoonmaker, Miami.
Fla.; Eustace Vynn, Seattle, Wash.;
NHYC staff commodore John Grif-
fith, founder of the event; Peter
Jans~n. editor of Motor Boating and
SailiOJ Magazine; F.d Muhlfield, edi-
tor of Yachting Magazine, and John
Burnham, cditorof~acht Racing and
Cruising Magazine. ·
ALMON
LocKABEY
In addition to the Baldwin M.
Baldwin trophy, s~iaJ prizes for t~e
winning crew wtll be donated by
Rolex watches and Mumm's Cham·
pagne.
CALENDAR Bring on the champagne for the Eagle! NHYC race Saturday By ALMON LOCKABEY
0.-, Not ...... ,...,
More than 200 local yachts are expected to follow the new 12-mcter EagJe
aroundNewpon Harbor on her inaugural sail Apnl 6.
With the crack of a champagne bottle across her graceful bow. Eagle.
Newpon Harbor Yacht Club'scontenderforachallengefortheAmenca'sCup.
will ve chnstened at pubhc ceremo nies at noon before staning her h1stonc
cruise around the ba)
Eagle Syndicate officials are inviting an~c who has a sailboat or motor
yacht to JOIO the parade, which as expected tb nval the boat parade after Bill
Ficker won the Amenca's Cup in 1970 "Th~ will be our way to demonstrate our suppon for skipper Rod Davis
and his I I man crew who wall be battling for the nght to challenge for the Cup
next October," said Gary Thomson, president of the Eagle Syndicate
And should Davis and has crew gain the nght to become the official
challenger and bnng yachting's "holy grail" to Newpon Beach. 1t would mark
a h1stonc event in 1991 when the Cup would be defended here.
The parade route starts at Manners Mile Shipyard, 2439 W Coast
Highway, proceed westward to the end <?f Lado Isle. then eastward down the
harbor t the Jetty entrance, then back along the nonh <;1de of the bay,
term inating off Harbor Island.
What the public will not sec 1s Eagle's innovative winged keel wh ich was
developed b)' a design team led b\ Johan ValentlJn. The keel is being kept
under wraps
If Eagle ~hould bri ng the Am erica's Cup to Newport Beach after the 1987
challenge. 1t 1s estimated that 1t would generate more than
I b1l11on to the Southern Cahfom1a economy. T he figure 1s based on added
JObs. tounsm and spending by challengers 1n 199 1, according to an economic
impact study b)' Chapman College
But fi rst Eagle will have to defeal five other Amencan hopefuls and ahout
a half dozen f0 re1gn challengers an the challenger tnal!> off Fremantle.
Australia. stanang next October.
Ke' officials an the Eagle Challenge arc President Thomson. designer
Valent1)n. skipper Davis. Gerry Dnscoll. director of opcrauon'i. Ball Ficker,
chief advisor. and Peter Ueberroth. honorary chairman.
Following her launchrng and chn stening. Eagle wi ll commence a three
months testing and tratning program tn Southern Cahfomaa wate~ betv.ecn
here and Long Beach before being r,h1pped to Australia 1n August
.. (
Rod Davia, •kipper of the Eacle Challenge.
Yacht racing will be light along the
Orange Coast this weekend as
yachtsmen take Sunday off to attend
church or hunt Easter eggs. The ooly
event scheduled 1s Newpon Harbor
Yacht Club's Ahmanson and
Dickson Series in conjunction with
Balboa Yacht Club's 66 Series Satur·
day.
The Ahmanso n Series 1s fo r Inter-
national Offshore Rule ratings, the
Dickson series for the Perfonnancc
Handicap Racing Fleet, and the 66
Series for IOR, PHRF and Midget
Ocean Racing Club (MORC) rating.s.
But if the weekend is light, there
will be plenty of action during the
following week.
Newpon Harbor Yacht Club's
Yacht Club Challenge will get under
way Wednesdav and run for six davs.
and the In-the-Water Boat Shows will
open at Lado Marina Village on
Wednesday.
In other Southern California
Yachting Association areas:
Los Angeles -Long Buell
Seal Beach Yacht Club-Saturday
Sailors Series (PHRF, One design).
Saturday.
Sula MonJca Bay
Manna Yacht Club PHRF
Regatta. Sunday.
San Diego
Southwestern Yacht Club -
Cabnllo Scnes. (PHRF) Saturday;
Buoy Scnes (MORC), Saturday.
Oceanside Yacht Club -KJds
Easter Float, Saturday.
Nortlt and lnla.ad
Pierpont Bay Yacht Club -Com-
modore's Trophy race, Saturday.
Boaters upset at user fees proposal
Recreational boating leaders are expressing dismay and outrage at the
Reagan adman1strat1on·s latest proposal to cut stale boating safet) a'\'iastance
and impose user fees for Coast Guard Serv1ce'i, according to the Outboard
Boattng Club of Amenca
This year the adman1strauon as proposing SI 5 mLILlon for state boating
safety assistance and $30 million fo r Coast Guard boating safety ac11v 1t1cs,
reversing the fu nding ratio provided b)' the Wallop-Breaux Act
It would also impose user fees for any Coast Guard services now pro"1dcd
free of charge to com memal vessels and recreational boaters TotaJ ant1c1pa tcd
receipts for fi scal 1987 would be $238 mil lion
Although no user fee 1s specified. a fig ure ofS20 per boater wa<; suggested
at last year's heanngs on HR 1936, C'onte's user fee bill
PAPARAZZI
Ron Stone. director of government relations for the National Manne
Manufacturer'iAsSOCJa taon, addressed the subject at a recent hearing before the
(oast Guard and Navigatio n Subcommittee of the House Mercha.nt Manne
and F1~hene'> Committee
Stone told the committee: ."We arc deepl y concerned that the proposed
re"ersal tn the fu nding ratio of the Boating Safety Account taken in
conJuncuon with the Gramm-Rudman spending cu ts will critically undennme
the states' ability to carry on with law enfo rcement, education and other
boating safety programs.
Stone also pointed out that 1t 1s possible that the amount of revenue
generated by the fede rall y<ollected motorboat fuel taxes is being under-
e~11mated b} the Treasury Department
Bob Sloan'• dog, Lanon, gazea out to sea from the deck of
'Spike Africa• a• hla master'• uhes were bem.E ecattered at
sea. Sloan'• bu.rial at sea and wake were heldlut Monday.
Do•e Manor wu aettlng for the Cryatal Circle brunch.
Arriving Les and Peggy Cotton get cham-
pagne from Joanne Derltta.
Michael and Carole Gllano take a '&rand
Victoria ride' with Barbara Rick.rode at the
relna.
It was a symphony of a party
ByVlDA DEAN As guests approached the manor, an antique horse
drawn carriage, complete with driver in t9P hat and
tails out front signified this was a classy affair. The view
of the "Grand Victoria" wedding coach -considered
the Rolls Royce of carriages-wasjust the beginning. •
I
Boem Palll aad Dlul• WUllam90n chat wttb Jady and Bob
Dake. Susanne Scbob
'
The party for the symphony was a sympho ny
itself.
It was a perfect blending of atmosphere. musical
entertainment, a medley of dining delights, fashion
para.de.t smartly attired guests, and it was all staged in a
magniucent 12,500 square-foot French cbateau estate
atop a hill in Orange.
Three hundred attended the Sunday brunch orcbestrat~ by the Crystal Circle Committee, OC
Pacific Symphony, asa prelude to the April 26
Viennese Ball.
''This event benefits Pacific Symphony and helps
provide funds for the ball," said party chairman Carole
Giluo, who also arranged for the use of the home of
Dlue and PHJ Williamson.
"1 didn't know the William sons, but saw the house
advertised for sale and called them. I arranged to meet
them and explained the type of party we would have
and they agreed to let us use it," explained Carole. (who
last year used the same technique to secure another
elegant home for that brunch.)
.. She already has a place selected for next year,"
commented husband Mlcbel OUuo. "It's a Spanish-
stylc home, and mariachis will play."
Twenty-five member$ of the committee acted as
hostesses in the rooms of the eight bathrooms/ti ve
bedrooms/six fireplaces home whereauests had the
freedom to tour and admire the results of two years o f
construction work. (They round out they could pick at
upforS2.S million.)
"Weare not movin1becauscwedon't like it:' said
Paul as he discussed the dreams and hard wo rk that
went in to the home dubbed Dove Manor. ( He's
buildinamore bomesand develop1~83 acres in the area.} "I can probably act another lahque chandelier."
said Diane. (The mirrorcdchaodelieroverthedinana
table wa one of the beautiful European impcrts 1n the
home.)
'
Once inside the estate, guests were entertained by
a string quartet from the Pacific Symphony, and by Lee
Ma11te, 2~year-old pianist, who also plays 14 other
instruments. arranges and composes.
Models paraded about in one-of-a-kind hand-
painted silk garments designed by Joanne Tagami and
featured at her Shebue boutique in Laguna Beach.
"No one will go away hungry today," commented
Mary Jonson. She had t~ out the menu that
required five pages-fruit, cheese, veggies to a hot
buffet, individual crepes with a choice of four fillings
and a "vaccinated strawberry bar" along with trifle
piled high with whipped cream and shaved chocolate.
(Turnip Rose catered.)
Meanwhile, when JUests wcren 't dining around
the pool/spa area (admiring Cltarlle PHp'1 floating
floral arrangement) or near the five-<:ar garage, they
were on the second floor in the en tenainment center
bidding on 90 pieaces ofltalian glass and Irish, English
and French crystal in a silent auction. (The brunch
brought in SI 7,000forthcsymphony.)
Pew Cottoa. ~ht1nnan of the Cry~tal Circle, was
therewith husbandLn(she's takingoffan a few days
for a month-long European trip). Others seen were Au
and Bob McLean, Marperlte Hol•b, Walh'Ht JecUJ1
(she's chairman of the ball). Marti ya and Tom Nlelso,
Barkra and Jlm Olabmu (the home is filled Wlth
Glabman furniture) ll8tll DI.a, Lala and Martoa
Halfacre(shc was wcarina the 16caratamcthysJ
necklace he and Traditional JcwelerdcsiJner Jim
OrUI created as a ball priz.e), &.area and JMla Beu.a,
JMJ and Bob 0.lle, MulH GlbeM, JtrT)' Rlcbrd1
and Dotaald and Joyce 01 ....
•• ,
Ora19t Cc.t DAILY PILOT!Thund9y, MlrClh 27, 1... •
TIE ART OF ma.-II
Ull EASY• TIE
DMYPIOT'S
t
CALL 842-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE
IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE cus•BPMES.
1r~eiiiiijiliimii~r.1~n1 c.......... 1111 .... 11•• c.ta... .. .......... • -... ••W,_ •••••nlWLll ~11•1'1 ,.1111•~ •1m11--. 1,_,.. ... ec,..-. DUPL!)(.28r 1be Wit\, 38A 21>A128R 2be. Qer. Br*'CI ""3bt 2'Mle. 1450 3~A ~'~=~· "450/mo. + 1et, ..... 2"21 L ,.. ..... ... ..... .. ....... ~ ........... Al n ,.. 52~ 1294,IOO. •· frplc, ~ celll. ti, tip. fncd yd, dbl o-. refrlo.' cpie1drp1 '. P.cto. WMlr & 119 pillld. $560/IM. Fot llOOtfft .• Plk .......,. De~ ._.....W..
873-0241 eJ.Y owner NiCely rum. deen. "!'IO· S 1150 P.e dl 722-4S24'7 I 1378lrno.175-15118 Cell e•e 93*> ~ Olll to-7842 · iJC..M. ,. ......,,....,, ICIO L c:... ._, K.I.
or 1541 =oJ7°' SWttOte. M.v e.. rwn. 48R 3t>e. •LAAO! ~ _,.._ *Ill I I J 11'11* .._, ~,.,... ldt pttw. * ,,..1ta1 tlllofl..M ~ telil... iff4 p 'a.i. .,.... '""rm, r9dwd ~ CldfW Cetta... MM Gweoei peeto, -... '" 8-eto....i..IUllO~ff1. ._ .... ._ ... 1'°' C 111~ iMldiri' OP5TXIR8 HA ~13, ... 3318 Ind a 14001mo w..9050 dupU bede. no P11t9 teeo. ., -. ....,. ,__ ...,, Ni . ._ piea. I.I. .. Ill-A P91bldgeCo..un1t.~-P\.IJSH CONDOS w/1911e .... 3.aW.ley.1424411 .....-loMe ... pttw.1111/Mo ,_ = :.4~PO==-~Pl=-~ w~~-=.~ •:.A~ '-fe = ~T 2BA '-!.....~ "'!.3:,.~ e:!i'!'!f P-Z. '::..':r;_ :.~~;" •t 111 fU'91J/'lllt
aU114,!50Q 831·2MI. · obligation by TOP now 2tlf 2ba 9"0/mo, 8A. pYt Pdo.-.;ld ,.up, S'°°lmo. Adlt• pref poa1. ttwrry aoo.,.. ....._ ._., ...._ ..._ prtw lltt Jm~na1&11w PRODUCER. Call 1btl75011tmo+.l500 T~=.:re :2~90r3 1•86e04«MM111 9 ] ~ ftr0.C.C.llt11•cllip. l'I WWW
Of You7'~"::0 P.AT .. ICK TENORE MC.~2'47 I.AG 1 IOAM ~ L~....... .• .. ... .=·:....
o b llgatlon by TO~ 631"1* Tldy48R 1'M>ePool 1mT'lfmMl'f poot,nopeta~mo+ ~~~ -.CGMo. IW M. pooe ':f'1a21:~,..
PROO.UCER . Call • S1050dlacount '5Wmo 18A 1BA. .. l300dec>.142-1401 . Oen. 1100 Sq. n 1Mry,U11ina.••• o-ft.!!!W.OIMSGM&
PATRICK TENORE 567..3118 bultt w., lndry rm."' -... ~,.,,....,.."*"; IObdl.fum.S(l.4aeo TOlllt.,agteQ..1IOS
·-631-12.te • Unique 111 ,E-•ld• ~ ~:4~1t1'18t. ae25imb~· E/elde 2BR ~-=.::•r-,':i: -.,.,009M H.B. ... M 5 d •/ ......
FUTURE wet.-front con-::--...r 0::: avell TSL MGMT 642·1903 1BA, P4'ti0. pool. lndry 12116/mo. Ais o • nM411111r. -.. lV, tnl doe on Udo 11. F~ 8d room. CIOM to II. F1'0NT BAY .._,.,. rNr.ro, •• -..11
typt1cedl0wntl73-13UI ·==00912141 1~~~PS:.,:=: TSLMG~E.'1.2~1903 19r, 11001q.A..wl1lof CM,_"' 8C ,_ MIF '*~1~~,...., * .. UltW* UlllltllW... 546-3811 ttte at>ove amenltlM nofHftW.HleiwtwlMO tMpe9cft 54wcmAcl'
2Br 28a Condo. 1et Tru8t 3BR, MOHACO $259,000. 48( IO;;t)! Okt ap;;;ti 18r 4:Plll, bttne, nu paint. NIW lrg lBR with dlr*10 I 11786• 8cwr/. no pea. enc Ull.. Joe ..._11"2 BAYFAONT 8LOO
DMd approx 8.875~ F•land.Owner7eo-M14 :r,-oolg tot, :::'f'eJ:'" No I*• 1515 • cMc>. d.c~·~·· rfJO.ot1tBtwna.S Amw/N91 +..,._'--IEXECUTIVESUTES
Axed. Owner wtll pey ••-1 .+MC. • 71&0Shallmar852-99N 28I E. 1w. St. "25/mo. •ITIPl11 .... 9c:Hr'nCIWnrlCIDobcfl S1.36'&UPl42_......
buyer eloelng eoete. -·-II Curt II 83t t2te 1+1 ,.. deoot Clf'PCW1 MOO + lee. ,.,_, Pf'Of --------STEAL at S 123 500 Weterrront with dock. Lg E...ade 1Br w/lot9 of net • 1 utti. Ind ......... ' FM n/etr*t •89l. Alfla reQ'd. CdM dbl wi... AIC,
MO-e1201175-4912' e«r · Hive buyer that want• to SPACIOUS 2812L'. 2 eer s='· Oufet Complex F1R£PLACE:POOL..PATIO __ -..-__ 174-7185 Evie .-.-12 .,..S*o. udl&jlnttor
trede up. Ready to go. g.erege,trptc:,veultedoell-Nopete990-2970 x-LG 18rl686&28r*5. •-• ••-Am /euncldt *"' 28MECllHwy87~ llU ML.. Call Ron Feteot 190-6000 Inge, PoOI I )leuDI. 2Bdnn 18a "Cottage'', pvt Eu111de S57·2M1 3Bdrm, 28a. new orpt, ---'w i-ptty' ,:. be.. ,W bckJ .... Corp Pft In
Vacant and reedy to go. 2 UNYerelty TownhouM. yatd ~ treeh USO ~ & trp6c. a_. to 0CC ,_. ~ 'fl u4Mn 1Mne. Brlnd ,,_ Offtoe
story, 3 bdrm, 2 bath ~ Al .A..V a 10251mo. 733-1989 NO PETS llOo-2970 *IW U •* beech. YW1y 111001mo. aoo: m.2 ua.. •• 1' mda In pr•llMM Offtoe =· : ':~ KCl"ffm., .. / WOODBRIDGE CONDO 18' upetra w/oarage. Refs 0:.iir~~~5= VIiia..,... 875-4912 WAHTE> AldNd 48 P8ri. 2000-7500 Sq. Ft
and tehootL Owner out Nt:\('I\...""'l."Yf F,L\ 11 ~~ENT~·~ req'd. No l*9 s.ttslmo. 211C&brllo.5424411 38R 2BA. CLOSE TO ..,_.,·,...,,., _..: =-~ ~5tt'I=-:
of ltate and motlYated. '8501~ 720-0878. • 352 Victoria 645-8181 SPACIOUS2BR21>e. trptc: BEACH. Sundec:* I rm In beedl--. Wll dO Plr1I.. fMdo lianllae 11¥91
Full pt1ce S1tl8,900. PLAN 7 Newport Creet • A~ Aprtl 111 garmge ac:roee from pert e-• ~2155 lrrlC)f~a on prop, H91deome elowir.ce for
Condo 38'. Partlel OOMn Lafw IN0~41 2BD, 1BA. 2271 Pomona. 17001~ 964-2087 BEACH-TENNIS & ~ t.Mdw•io, etc.. eo...de tiar..c lmprrlM. eonuc. Traditional vlew.By<>wner738-1833 &3L:f/P.in W patio, eerport, quiet Verynlce,Nbeama.llOtlt ...morpmy.17~ T-•~115
YllW•TmWllLI blk·bdl. Avt wtdyt er neighborftoOd. aei5imo. INlllll a1ry&pm2BR11•M>e1g i•ei .... iiii/911111iliiilillltffi1lll--=.iiiiiiiiiiiiim Realty Hartl«VlewHmePhaMlll '#t(()flTIO-m()$1500mo. NoPet1548-6e06. UH/mo. 38R 2BA ept.0anga,9tongel -auu•t-
631 7370 A d I d I 0 637-9311Of921·1528 VBO 1/BA w/gat" avail townhouM, encl gar, mor.'886/moY'fYlnd UllB.. ~ leMoa Buldlno-• emo e e •ne 01e · !mt... lndry room yard U1ll 545-1n1 cal - -Comer of....,& trw. Portonno. -4BR 3'Aba, LaeuJ!eel llSi 4-1-M• MOO mo, °'*' 763 w'. 19ttl.St ~Jmea°'*1 _,_ 511 Sca Pt. YEW SUITE
Dua .... IHI ~~,,:,':~01~~ Ag I r;'!lm' au;;;x: ;;;ca Yd. 5 ~~:... ~'5445, TSL MGMT 142· 1803 Sat/&An 313-30. ~ T"*" ~ = Wll "9dlcor•
WMr.x ~
.. . .
....... ..-.... --.
a: -~
CONDO OCEXN View a l e, frple. country •UNIQUE COMPLEX• 11AM-1PM. 5403 RMr lV INlld ..w., .,_ .... 111 ________ ,_ ______ _. 2BR 2BA, wld, ge1ed ft.UULllA kitchen, db4 gar. Agt 2 Bedroom, 1 :•:; 1BORMwl'l\db4gerte40 Aw.enCSof..,..._ coi9... 1..-s pool I OCEANVIEWSM..W.
a..l lltatt P• lalt leMraJ 1112 comm.. tennl1, pool. By ownr • Luxurtoua, t>eeut 7e&-7104 °' tl81-3437 ~7~r:' 2e25 2BR 18a w/trptc:. ~ sns Cllflhevwl 28A 1BA. petto. etepe to oceen. Klldl'• ..._ HRpor1 c.ntw. "-.a~ IY• S125,000. 24G-3804. tBR condo 1129,000. ·~ -~ 2lit Elden Apt #F 546.es19 OU1ET, petlo, poof, ape. ldMt tor NCINd perlOM. 81191. 116 H. ~Hwy, UO N11mport C.... Dr
-._ .. _ ...... _m;1 ........................ __ ... "'""' 1-1--I 714-SM&-7893 • . NO PETS 54~2447 No pea. ~530I l.AVUM Bw:t\. ... 52M Ste 200. ... 4482 .. ,
-CN>aeo'CoronacSe1M1r llTI9W ; VER5XILLE§; 2er 1aa. C1w1 2er 1aa.1--------------------------......,..=----------a..al 1112 lot evalleble a1 one ..... llll PUI trJ Lett See, PoOI S725. 752~11 garege, wld hkupe l650 WI ..... -~~~ ~ 2 rr-.!!" PM W..,., W....-~ Very nice
peroel1tS485.000C>f1wO -· ca IW Bll1ThomaaS48-0-425 VlllaRentale87M912 Wanta1•1cdonofor-t =-·~~--·Wkly,..... ncM ...... Fwn3""'8ulte.Nr NW 11Ttm•riiiiii 30'1otut'250000eaeti tn.1• . llvlng? We can off9r wrt· .. _ . ..,__ -~· 1 121.so wet & \IC>. 2274 ..__. ·~ ocn vu. VMy choice "Beyelde Seller wt1t pey dernout~ TURTLEROCK 4 BR 211\ ' A H#bO< VIM $400 1 been pad bllta 10 2bf• 1be· up9\alrl, 712 thing from I llNll apt to '800 Ind utl. '45-l3e0 Hwpt lltvd. CM ... 7441 FrM Pfbo. "911, Jan'I Co.." End Unit Twnhme cottl of elllltlng home If ba, approx 2400 eq n By Cemetery lote, Metlon wevu b11le decor Sl'lallmar-C, 3 people e 4 bdrm l'louM. If lo<*· Duptex. Apt Unfum 112 M:. ate. eaG Sf. Mo to
at watere edge lotureeold lndMdually owner. $227,900. i>Ye North Memorlll Garden 53M 191 AoentCOll1 m&ll,e.tty,545--4 158· Ing In CM, NB,°' HB blktobeedi.12225'hSt. llAl-Lll• mo.11000/mo.142~
"Baytront" wlf\111 view. BINNIEOlXON 833-1917,eva854-0fl19 $2500obo.6'6-8357 -4Br 38a, Doc*, Bayfront. 2BR,2BATlhM thlntt of ue flrlt tor that $715/mo yr round. 302tW.P.-ceo-tHwy C Hlinl '-,m
All eteoant & dtltlnetlve ........ lialk Hit 8Lot1 In Pedfle View. Sold $2200 Avt now. &46-7171 Window vu of golf erM. eholoe of Ideal IMng. 2131897-1505 ~8w::ih. AIMg'TY
Adult home 1653,400. _ MP or all. Gd Investment. Alie fC>f Chucit or Liz PV1 petlo. erprt, pantry, TSL MOMT &42· 1803 Lei 2BR/dln Newport U~ Mc'IQll, no dlpelll. , __ • ----~.....,
IMt'plh. ** ..... ** Tennele00ea543-579a 5BR,mtn&ctty~htevu, ~9'l1~~.N~md='~weetelde~2Br1'1\Ba. ...._F'llle,::'·,..,~9 111 tlH ltat1h iM•n.ma.
M0-5580 AHYTIMEJ ., 11n.-... • I PNM Ill Hart><>< Vu Hrna. 950-3e73'0f 549--0433 1200 elf. petlo. No~ etc. $805/mo, 8'&-9001 nu FE tTAHDtNO '.:miiiiilimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii' EXCELLENT VA[U-e": lrg $1975/mo. Agt &40-5864 Avlll 411. 548-4506 l.tg Show Aoom I Ofllcee *_Pl.L.,* 1•.-..... __ ...._ mMterbdnn.dlnlngnn+ Ulll-1LIT BAVSHORES 2BROUPLEX.GrMtarea. DuaPtlat 2121 ~1~~1=0= VXCXTRSNEiCRXNdE ConwofW lMllNne •Yl4'•·1WJ..,. trptc:. Newport at an ar-Like Pn ., .. of ()own.. 3/bdr 31ba 80 n to bet\ Newearpet,pelnt.drapee, Glr1oel*•no ,1195 EMEAAU> BAY home tor Slon1PM198'Wfon~
$herl> 3 bdrm, 2 bettl. 2 fordable price! Call town H B. Prtncipell onty. 6-9 mo rental S1fJOO/mo' garmge $650. 559--5001 1 , • ut • 614 ~,,_9M 58M othlr arel tlome tor .... 111
SfQfYcondo 1 b4odt from PATRICK TENORE Agt. An 5pm 538-9533 ~7-415 . . **Eaatllde 1Bd 18a CION to l>Ch, S475, llmlt.s time. 4117-7075 s. c. Ptca. Poot epe + --1-1 L-r . rm. tl81-&1-42. Sunny,.. Vbd condo In I I 11.. LEASE: COAOHA DEL ~ Onfy m eoo -' _., UIU BLUFFS CONDO 3BR Old quelnt. s 525imo. QIMd Gated comm pool Htl I It •lrt MAR 2400 eq ft lilor'9
Other2.bdfme·'88'.999: ----~ ..... IS7S 28apetlo,garege:PoOI& Callt.any541r-5880 2Br~~~·%t'tt! ete.644-1395,tvameg. · UM front, avell lmmed.
3 bdnne $79,999. 2511 •••ii--•• HORSE PROPERTY greenbel1 feH Incl. Clean E'1tde ltudlo ~w:urtty. JM-'541 • ••t-28A \IX'. POOi. J;c: J:m. S2IOO/mo.3131E.C... w. &Inflow. Cell Sue ---••• •••-. YUCCA VALLEY Cute ~1'50/mo. 754-1551 "425/mo Incl vtllltlel. I -• Pf'tlt 1m1u ok ~ ~. 0.,. 731-4041,
Seeward 631-1288 ........ ..... 1ba fbf houM, · COO'll, Oetuxe fully tum, ooean 110 credit cNt 5"46-381' 2BR & den, 2 ear gar; utl-Lrg 38R 2""8A w/vtw, 2 .:·.-.. ,/1. ~ ..,,..._ 562.tMa
I ~~\.fa Thie lov.ty Broldmoor * Hte A-"/' lot. new gar., 5 ac:r-. 2'it view condo, 2BR 2BA. All •E·llde lg 18r 1Ba w/get. ~·:!12~1 ~ :.. ~ ~·500/-.:--28R TwnNa. pool. Ille. f/p ..... ~ltli
4" .,· famlty home hal It 811. 5 ~ w/ff~ SBr Older i.noe. other QU1 bldgl. amentUeaSt395tmo. Dys Rupon pereon only meg TSL MGMT · l42'-1eo3 gar .. 1o "*'to bet\~ iriJiTiir; s;a IL--· BR. *"-· iov.ty yatd, home tip hrdwd "" 8191384-2401 ~ 6-42--0880, eYea 831-4897 $550/mo Credit ., lut .... ~ 1425 utll lne. e•e 3699 2 bite "°"' Hwy. master eutte with fir• • • · req'd No peta 631·22•2 ' SPACIOUS 380AM 2~ -OOO -pleoe, formal dlnlnQ, Owner/Agt 542-998& ... tab HUGE downstairs ocean · 2 .... Tl IUll 1vtew. New beedl. a.;. 3BR 2BA i.. to n In U ~ -n. ·
... •• famlty room. communl1y ·---· I vtew 3 Bdrm. 2 be wtUI •DllUDT ,_* Dellgl'tt1UI ooean br..._ age. Yrty 11250. A\1'1111 Elllde CM. S400/mo i' down. 4'7-6132 P.P. ..-, pooll --• flrepleee. $1800/mo. 2 • 1 • earpon ~t..0. Speelou1 1Bd plu1h now VIiia Rentele lfwofutSa. ~n I llltdll ltll •on•••• tu 1111 ·~. ~ ·~ ~ .._,c..a. ~:::.n::·i!: ;--.~ Huny 1475. FM · crptl , d!l)e. ·iota of s1s-.l912 «754-1192 48R 28A .-. c.w. Poot. HliliUO "*· "' & 4 _ ... ll'f IUll Owner '695K 875-3450 la 2 12 Call OenlM TEUlllT tl....... eloletl. Prvt patio. end SP.-S Jn ape. 50"TV WIO $325 + por1. Stnt °"= wtwe--.
CoMpietefy fumlatled and iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ••WR91fT eraJ I •t 851-1184 •FREE CABLE TV. Lg 18' gar. Lndry f~~ 1 mite to beedl. 6'2·2'57 utl I ~-850-8311 11251 & rm. 132-4190
bMutlfully decorated -•n• 12eo bungaJow none f()f a 28' Grdn Apll Pool land.caped BALBOA """ ...,..,.. I ,
bachelor condo near SCRAILm By owner: 4BR 3'Aba. ap-teut PV1 kit won't lull 1111/Pnl M 1525-se25. 710 w ·18th 2Br 2Ba. erpt1, drp1, STEPS TO BEACH 19' Own bdrm utll Incl: actat "'Y~
Hoag Hoepltal In fuM _. a•• prox 3200a/f home-7000 53M190 Beet Alty tee 3BR lwcury a.un. condo patio, gar, dlw, air, coin Vrty. Gw9QL No pets l350/ a73.6et2
eut11y build~ Prlva1e -elf lot. 59' flontege for NB 2BR 18A hM 1 blk I view. $1850. 720-1950 28r 1Ba up1tre. 571 lndry S725. 8'6-6451 '650/mo. S,.3-eMO ~-..,..-mo.....,·=-...,...,...--1•---.... .....,---
=.;,.;rM,dmll:::,t:: HOROSCOPES !:f9A:::t....,~ tx:h. lned yd, 2 Cflr pkng~ Udo tum 28r. den, 2'.'lba, =~5 .. ~t~01~o LARGE 28r 28a. aoM to UPC* 28' 18aw/*-. Al 8:-4Mll.4llr·a:i:· +~CM.I~~"".!: 1Pm
een ti.1 · -1 avall now $800/mo, yrty. pC)Ol/ape/tennls. S2400. bet\. P1tlo. G., $750 No new~ & erpt. Gartige N..arnlC en-1378 _.,.... ' ...._.71t 111 llW thll month. Need fut ALSO 2BR 2BA. lower Ray 261-6254 875-0475 3BO. 2BA, prv. tum, laund, pet1 857-177817&0-1713 $850/mo. Call Betty or vtlll. r. -'"1 _,OW!*
LAAa111 deal. Ae•dng s79s.ooo. In unit, 1 h .. off beach. 1-<:« gar+earpr1, cleen-A.ntonlo 751..-50 CdM 28A 2BA ~.tip, ... 11• I ft" lel ... Promontory Bay erea. S850lmo yny Udo Isle 'BR 3BA. tam rm, up to date n-pet• $950 *•Super IQ 28' 28a MP-mt 1oc non .,,., MIF
• TIE Fee. owner 6-48-8381 • din rm. 2 patlOa, redec, 544-7211 · t · ' arate Unit S795 Patto. gar Waterfront Apt. Furn. 2BR uu. • 7,..,. N.n ·
wtufy1. wt(ndl 87~2320 ~--· IUln new applls & carpeting. . IQ · 957.1n8°'1eo-111s 2b•. t12001mo yrly. -ane1 ut. ~ laliaHI ltr lilt Fii ADVICE UYflllfUIWTm PllPIAIAlllllT $2000/mo.~7 llLlll2ll2U 833-9181or53M52' Coeta Mw HM tow. .. lllES Mull SACFfrJ:lce-thll lH/llM1ll WESTCLIFFCONOO ~tfield Ml bel'I. trptc:. dlhwWhf. "' ... "" ~00.:_o~rnkr. pm '°' .. by = ~rn;,.4 ;:,rm~ lalMI _, 2107
2~~:,'7:0.b~PoOI. FlaYIPamutl ~0:,,~ oa~m~~~2~ Fem!Hmkr.SBR2bar.. ~ ~cW:: ~ PllE 8ayalde Ortw .,,,,5· boet Pnia1-.a Sim rnarV9lou9 3 + 8' 59Mlllng deal\ large ai>ll 1eoo eq. n. of PURE rv s.c PlZa S340+ 113 utll ~ MSo-Ull2 lift 3
lllp. PRICE SLASHED Fantai111C Kna 26' hm ltY' ~home not far to for famlllel with , ~ 2 ml IUll'I PmST LUXURY. Garage. SPA In l\/85CH..e6 wfl75-417 PM or 964-1132 llft IPM
let U1 Ilea, Ytt
Sell y .. ,,.,.,1
c. Cle111fW,
642-5671
for Information
& surprisingly
low cost.
SfJOOK from appraleal. 1-hkupe gar off Bal~ oeHn $950 detalll =r:; = per1c Ml QUIET RESORT LIVING muter mutt•. Otnlng F n-ernkJno peta. CM 4br le•I Tit
Low down OK. Thie le 8IVd $675 Won't last 53M191 Agt C0111 3Bd 28a l7a5 "Sperkllng heeted PoOI room. woodbumlnG nr. Me. W/O, j9a.cr:1t. S310 :tl..a...... --
GENUINE. Don't mlU ltl 53M191 Agt tee 3B.. 2... WESTCLIFF 2ecs:: 28a l730 °'CQJn yatd "'9w dining pleoe, mklr~.,,.~ 11t/'9t. Miry 540-1166 lt111t-..a~ FOf eddrw & Info call n. ...., • "Vignette 880.,.... pnvite patio. El.CWV"O 1 op;; oWf: t;;iiiil::;
PATRICK TENORE c.r... ..... 1122 i.rgeyard,nreptace.new 398W.Wlllort 631•5583 .,Twttgntdlnelneourt~ LMNG onty 15,,..,... F IMflWr"" 29A 2:be In dlae= ~ •tore
831-1288 e•rpet, frldg, 11300, $635/mo 2BR 2BA. frplc: gazebOe to So. Co. Pm&. Jult-' NB nr beac:tl "40. utl ~ aEXUTIFOt 3 a; l den/\Q 752-1983 °' 844-801-4. encl ger. all bttna. ,.,..; .... Speci<>UI Apartment• of NeclwOtt Btl>'d I eoutl'I and. 751-7113 Nlltklllllly known br9nda.
!Iv rm. hOuM. Ocean Vu. Yll •m-" ~ng center ,...You're own private patio ol San Diego tre.w.y. HB On cerw type to "" ~ E"8n Plciana. t $1750/mo. 582-"5137 ~~ 810 Center ,...Gourmet kltc:hen 2473 ORANGE AV£ 48R S216/mo s150 "-' W• 0..-k> .,_, meny --------cozv bel'I cottege. So of 0~0~~r/~~!~ 2 q~ TIL llllT 142-1MI :=r:-oe O:.t.fn' :', 631·5'39 ey 11PPt olfftt/. eee-1925, 993-48CM mor6. s 1e.eoo to ~.eoo
llLllllT111111 Hwy.2B.R,frpl.No1>9t1or 1eoo IQ."· of PURE $675 . 2 Bdrm 2 Ba. 2 "Gated00Yel'edpt1lng 1ua..... •H Male Pf'tlt, eo.. ..... ll'dJdea~-·~ emk,._, 1000. 838-7082 LUXURY. Garege. SPA In patio, Indy, no petl, gd with et or age 28A wlger, $311/mo + ~ tory, .. ---v· UT Overtoolclng Big Corona. master 1u1te1. Dining loe bike to bet\ 54~275o 2BR lC1r9 lg blllCIOnY. ocean utn.. w: cMp. ~2168 ~& ,::S~ ~
Unique com« location. 3br 2ba houle. evallable room. woodbumlog fir• All UTILffiES INCLUDED vtew. W9lk to bdl. gar .. M/F n/lmlt ... C II d p ti · New on market. Pl'leed to J 1 IMM $3000/ place, mlefowew oven, new 1n1lde. 1vl 413. "'9lure. r. a to •Y· rH ge
NII 1329,000. Call Ron une '497.1181 mo private petlo. ELEGANT ~lfield 1 & 2 Bedroom S6fl6+ cMp. 7~211 20·1 + 3Br 38e HB apt FllSNoM 501-Ut-2382
Feleot 7&0-6000. LIVING only 15 mlnut• Fumi.nlnga Avalleble 1250 A~ 411 Ml-6192 WllT •T
Ctnta .... 2114 to So. Co. Plaza, Jult wt IPllTmllll Sorry, No pet• IHI~ CHII ••tll Ne9\, f9P, "'"1tolflr38R SOI ~ .. ~ nr ~ AIA.V of Nepwort 8IVd & eouth Like bnlnd newt All utllltlel LA QUINT A HERMOSA ... 2BA COM apt. S340 + ~ eo.r w.y ~ I KU',,..,,. o/ 2~~up~f79Yf~~r: Of 2!~~ O~G:~· paid. Pool, gar, no'*'· 18211 Patkllde Ln. HB 1BR 1l( erld gar.™· 11t, leet l MC. 87Ml12 '°'a.a MONEY ':.A.KiN'd \lt'\'V 'J:V"" ... '*T f~j( 11 "35 No pell s.45-7983 · 831-5439 By appt only 2Bdrm 1Ba SM5 Ml ..... 1 = rm. nr SC Ptr.a. F~ SUMMER & W1NTEA "'"'"*· call AQ1. Bob -; . w v t--1 301 Avocado 842·9850 . No peta. ~1307 Stepe to bdl. Mlf '°'rm C*lktneon. 752-.2{81
lllffl *IUITlfa ~· Su c1 .... t. 2171 Ulll 111 IPTS SU-YIWIE 28R 2BA. eafl)Ott. 1755. wlb&. '525 Lndl'y I ldldl Vim I knlUtloe> .....
38r 2ea. COMPARE! 'Bdrm2Ba.2eargar,fned PANORAMicmv; 181 & 28', frig. range, 1 & 2Br tuxuty Aptl 1n 14 Pool, Jee , rec room. '9c. Pf1ma, pvt entr. 119 llNd ~ 1 yr, extt io.
COMPAREI 1189,000 yrd.Huny$900.'Fee CMn 3bd, 2ba. ac>a. leundry,pC)Ol,e.tpOf1.No Pl1n1 Poole. tennl1. S45-7131or731..S188 41at.'50-3231194&-3188 C9tton In NB. Mull ....
fee. The Property Mlr1. TILDDT 111-1111 petlo, low yd metn, call 1>9t1, '550 & $650/mo. wa1erlWll, pondel GM for N4"I PfOf ltra6ght MJF to cal M , M..f * 5400
&40-9019 ..... ........ Lucille 4~500. 931 w. 19th St. 54&-0492 ="\! = ~. ll1K. lalala ""3&R =-:· ~ ~ .... I -------....:~---------------..., Exec type Condo, 2 m1tr .... ~ Ct11t ••• ,. uu•• north on Beach to .... n• ~ ..... a.640-6000 rn.=:mi;;;. bdnM. loft modll, gar, 21H All UTll TIES PAID MeFedden, wHt . on evl'attnd '97.eec>7 menta, M¥9 llOOK equl-A PIECE OF CAKE PoOI te25/mo t182-1700 Compare before you rent MdFaddef\_ 15555 Hunt-1Br Nwpt Hgta. kltdl ptM. ry, N8 pr;m. oorrwn proe>
W51 Cut 2BR. •KM I M * Newly deeefated CU110l'I\ lngton V1lage L.rt. pv1 pool & Jae. Fem pr9 P1R ~ ...,..,, ape. nr llolr'pt1, went loan.
& wttl: w/~era, ,:.: 28'. 1Ba Condo, eerpott. dMlgn fNture1 pool, MU 1• 2s-30, $400 • MC. l(efttl non ~~.;5• ut1I S27SK 2nd TO.
in garden/yd No I*• poof,apaS725tl82·1700 bbq, CCM'd garmge . .,,. 6'2-3115or557-3401
22iaP1.cent1a.'545-2see rounded wtth plu9"l land-..,... ... ~ 2141 Prof fem 25-35 1hr Xtt ,.....,. Comm~
CHrl'"' THESE Aputllnh 11Cap1Bd 1'·2~· ... --.. mM'IX. no . .na. oc:n vu. ....... .... ... .,..,. 38A N8 condo ~.:: ~ m&K ~ -rm• ""'"" um--nr bel'I. bm ceM, ger. Aval Exd loc rw bdl 1325 • Frptc IMancee 5 rm l'IM IUMI 385 WEST WILSON 4115 •7S ..._$044 pooU)llc 7eo-ae18 bottlprophle:?.._ ~"'!~~i:..fnod ...... ... MJ-1111 ~ ..... ... Pr«lf to"" 3lbr 2/ba an'9.Cll 7'4-e54-19
•ut-1111* GO 2BA + a;n, 18X.1ro k" -11• ~ mA·1/8ca:;; . ...., =' = :.,::-ut': l!!!!!!!!!!!!!.--
M ... Verde ftat d*'P 3bt & Uvtng .,..._ 1 1050/mo. 28R t'lt&A. dehwr, frplc:, r_. bayffonC \#Wt, vtw. turn ' optional Vikki' 1j•~·=-=•=== 2ba QOUf'n* kit p001 • c.11 e13-12ea ywd. o-• ans aeis Ind u11. e1~1"3. ••12 .......... Me-04101762.70M., Ne · 19
moreN50klde53M1to 2340SantaANA~ / ·-&•II '* e..t Atty fM Cen • I lbr MU Mor on premlee 546-5421 280RM I 28A 1700 mo. S... ., t9 SB "-'>on QIAlit ptOf nlamkr P9i 80I ID ~ "-! ,_ a
Choice E..ide houee ciean w alJ ~ Eaet1k1e 18r 18a. Old & ::'\, ~,:...:S°" "'"1 lfW Hf 2'Mla Nwpt ....._ Seme dlly .W.
5 rm deOor p1u1 gar & 1BR w/bale. walldn eioeet, cnarmlng '525/mo. Cell .. I........... MIM Condo. Qer Pool. aYall RESUME WORKS
yat'd 1775 at 53M191 new erpt, r•t•. 1750· Larry ~~ •1mllll ... * ·Month·to·month Jee SS26/mo let,._.• ,._,... Awt fM &31·5092 or 540-~ AaM.. clWIWUrler & .. OW ' MC. 722·74411722-7174 l-r--...... r---....--....<>= •-· ----.,..----,,--:=:-EASTSIOE LUXURY In • ,_.,,., 1110 1V81l1blt t -a --.a IUlllT-2/bd, 11ba, utM, $850+ ~ Foreet 1ge 1bt d/w Ind. NO PETS 54M855 N-erT*r lfW 3 BR Condo, _ ... ;;';;;-;;;;iiii;;;
2 Bdrm 1 o.n. 2 ea.. PoOI. ~· ~.!~~~· rriQ. gaal..,r pd, 2 Pat~ 2er 2e. . A~ _." ·Furnished/ ~~22C:-:J:75Jmo + •
epa. Rent 11050/mo $NO/mo, edultl, no l*a. Se,_. ,.. 11t Mo rent fOf unfurnished
&4M291 pm. 2Br 1be. front apt, 1825 yew teeM. ~ quk* ~n 711C)..()ff4 ·Fitness centtri.
yrty, trptc:. OIW. 433 Iris ,._ 11_, Me.a
~t ..nted l275. furn •
poof, doee to t>Mcti.
E'SIOE Ex1ra lge 38R Of 8.e S,A T. OHL Y 10-1 PM C..ta ... 1114 .... ta -.. .,. tennis. SW1mm1ng
2+ den,'°" cond, bftln -:;:&iiiji;iliiiiiiiSilit~-;::::::;;;::;:::::1::::====:;:;;;.1 n..
NIWpor1 ~25
kltcl'I wlretrlg, nv •AWlll•An* WO-O-DuA .. y• ••GI Modt1aopend111y.96 I I 11 epl/drpe, dining r"'. 3 + garage. ,... Cfl>l•. _ ... ,. ..._.. So~ no peta llS ltllMI II
IT'S A PIECE OF CAKE TO ADVERTISE IN ~.,~ ~~s,:0.c! =-~,.!350 AltA•TMlllTI Newpor1Bt1ehNo ,-~~~=~
THE DAILY PILOT'. CLA •• IFIED P &QE8 peta 122-1191/541-7745 18.lmT 11..-.., lrv1,,. A~nut , ' l'O"' Medi & ,.._..,
f(Ul)M)S
ARE FREE
Cat
~ 6 tllfOf 1111 ,_. stJtl IC)b Qwl. cel'lllOrteit h fl1 *ht OOIT ..... f 2'1.em --------PRIVATE PARTY RAT E (No C.nc.!tttlonl Elllde lerge :tBR 1BA. 3/bcl. V. ger, wld, MW IO llMW1f1 & Se ColSt l'l&z1 l"tf to
311n9 5 tlrM rrtlnlmUm trptc. dining. anclfy. lftOI deoot """1We. ~ I\ r.tr '' HO PfTS "™' 16-'* 111111 II Ht ~ .... lrWI ...... 1 G:' .... ltaO°':r,/mo ,..~..._!? 714\t. Otet\ld n-~11: Nl'#l)Of1 Beech So IHI -.n lrWI a.n.. .... StJO,..,in.Eit_,,.,. 3.,., s a.rss9oo 2...... ..,... __ ,, 1• 1-1 ..... s ,. ............ -.............. -__ .... ,.,.,. 63 -1ne __ • __ . __ .____ ,_ V\11""' ,~Cibi...,,a::::cr :"=:..~1 ·:;_~ • n........r•t•Ot"YfPPIY lollfl(f'O~iM<H0t1 pot»olU0000001 ~ flC DOll'tfl ---• ., ...._..__, '-7 -··-:i. lncludtk1 .. Mill .. _ •aae.• S IO/mo Avell now • .-..au•• : s=EL~=~~~,::;-~·::i•OAomer~ .,.:ta ~-!..~.c:..! :::::::. ~::::a ~w..sm _.,_1._.,_11_or_n _1._1_sn __ ,.OUNO ~ • ~ ~,,,.1o11tietu1•~' I ·1y p·1at -··----1;;. ~ &&1,mata..,wana..a.. l!!!!!!l!..--...!n~•!!I ~;:...:·~~~· FOR MORE DITAILI II I L~::' v2!:. 20.:~ .:.ofpCti Sft=:: ... ........ AQartm(nS STOAAOE QAMQl '°' Fowncl.,,...... .... ...,.
CALL ...... ...,. S1100 VIII• A"ent•I• HAR80R REALTY t• llMA•"•mn rent CM~ t100fmo teme , Hare.or I ~~~~.,..~~·~~='·~~===~=~~====~~8~7Mt12 Ill.... ~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~;;;;;~~~~ ,OdO,t60-1... ... .... 1·1121
' I
• .. Orange Coat DAILY Pit.OT/ Thurldmy, MM:t\ 27, 1988 &.II',..... an Pnhnt•ll/ Puhnl•ll/ ....... ..... 1111 Clerteal/.... 1411 kJM 1111 Cl•fltttau utt ....... IHI lewal 17 !!!I .. -u...... r!l i
3 MO..,_, on PGrd .w: Group ........, ....._ LfGAL 8fCMTARY rront a beak. &per~ Chet fu1"'9 tot ~ IMITillll -11111 •• W = ~·:,:. ~.~· 8 ~ :~,~· ~¥..::Jo~=-' fOUNOftpardm&pup 1M•lehtratht l l•1 ........ 1dw 1111 •llltl ...,.,, ... ..,.. HM COOK ·;;;a;c;forHunt· Pilfer -........ ~GownllOOl't
""P4 9Clh. 1 .. 1110 a.. .,.... Thd of Naiwpott BMcf\, word rut COffe01 belQMd Ptef. debte. motivated Olrl Al IE IOI IDIDINI Kn 1 oountertlelp forCM. c111 Pant .,_.711 • .,, •
J"OUND yetto-.. Tlgtr Outelde Selea? Adl'{'lf\ ProDe11'ng ~. 3'-Y!'I Npt Bch. FIT· Mon tt)r 'rlday In atnell growing, NiMdad for Automotive & f/tMon-F'rl,~.meturt, n tnmnat FM .. , ..
M/kltt•n vlo, Oovtr poeltlon for IMrp, outgo. min ... aperlenele. •· Fri . ......ao71 pro~I nrm R.. AMI Ett•t• ctwltltd '9mala, $4.25/ht, c.11 Joa IU •••• Domino'• PtzU.. Od df'lv· H '-· ;;"~ • ' ·-· • "*-. N 8 54f.13A8 Ing penon, WOftt up to celt.ftt typlng/9')elllng ~~ ~ quitM od pt.one menn«, Mwrtllllig ..._ at a wkd• 524-t043, f/tl,,,.. Mon-"I Moci.m I"" r.cotd. W11ge + ttpe . ~to get l\m, M,, ..-..
· · very l\lgh Hrnlng•. •.klll• raq, l>•n•flt•.~ bM6o office lklll, Ilk• ct. r.pdly tllCpendlnQ toe.I Wktndeltvt 528-7027. o..y Cl pfant In COM UP to WHr. 11511 lolta no... 4 ltft. 912. 143i.,.... LotT Brown I wf\tte 941-7415. EtMnof. 155-0680. i.e. tel end Vlll'ltty. Wiii train nn~. ~. 87a.t57t 175-330e CNoe. ac>PIY 2-11 deity "'"'
CNtluetlua. vcty Ootd· FHt p•o•d NI A••· l'tgttt peraon. Gtow wtth Mlt-dlleolpllnecf-lndMd-•nam1mt1 . l'r• to good hOmt Mbcad
9'Wtl81ater842•M29 •llfUTllT .. anN'tW tl!Urant. "9ade btM* ofo u..MM111 ut1a nwiy wn exoelant Dey I nlQh1 eMtt ~. lllHllTW P>'TPICKEAPACf(EA A1.11tr lhe91~. 8-it,
LOST Oryl wht 2 yr ••·lll•IT 3 ywa ~ muttt per-eon, 3 deyelwtc, 10/ht .... llifT tnoome).(ut~ ~ ~In per90flt .. ~ Entty ~ poettlon. PV~ MdS~6t!~tlta,::;· e:.:.:t:ad~~ Ml...,_y Mmad Juno ANt bcN ~ oteot mtfdlt end Oey, mutt be Mita \0 -mlMlon , .... _.,pm, Mon tl'ln.i • .vv time .,./Hr to eteJ1, ... • 'i...---....-.._..-"TT"'..,.--
bl.,..., Ma·1eet. ' of 11Ucmi!N ~ ~rtei1CC:OtNeltd Ind hllnCla 9trw, Pf'9f _,., f=t c:;:: ~~· adv"'°'"*1t oppomn. en.tOI No .. NB 752·2801 abtt lhltt9. htk htllth'j 541-3975, Clpm-JwtlrJ/fut7fit
Lott m/Stbrn ..,._, """'• dent bank, hee lmmad r~I lud09taty '8,50/hr, 0111 collect mtdl tng · c:i ty.8 ... nd/oradv9ttlt-Rtetaurent ec11v. lnctMctuala who S!WINO MACHINE llU ·~7 ,._ opening In NIP heed-end PA. -Aepty to 21M24-e423.; p I •t• ~.Ti It Ing ~ tlelpfUI. $0 Ilk• to keep bWt lndoon OPERATORS ~~·~~l1~· ,.~ct, qult1.,. oto, accurate 81RTCHER P 0 itln ADV PA AGENCY In NB o a(7~~1-0~ ,f Send r9MM to: 10 ~S & outdoora. Sac Icing Commarotal •KP I !nallth l.MtY'I gQid Gi. DIW*
&V ... ..., ~ 811111• raq, die· CA' 12'11• -n "--al ~ ,.,, P. INevlM ~~ grooerlaa. rounding up IPMk ..... 831-2931, ~M ond laoe meeh bfld a1ts0 LOif' tll)hone & WP knowt-~· • ...--• need• pit .._._ "''"• MIRM 11111' r ~~ carte In per111ng lot & ..,. B"W• 250-3$00 or 844 1313 ~"°'·3181"C.M. ado• an advantage Attn.MtwyOConnell. WP paraon, M .f , tlml&lllL y---' vlng our Cuatomare St~tf & HouNW!We. • = 722:,171 ~d~ ~ loen' ~ Ul.ll I NIA••IY 9A·2:30P, 833-7173 lnveetmant firm In N9w-Ml. r-• o ,,, "~ chMffUlty. APC>IY In par-prr or FIT. H IHr ptue. Plutt I D19au ..... J.
t•tlon exp pr.t but not OENERAL OFFICE port 8-ctl Melling FIT P.O. 8ox 1580 Kltcban Help eon lo Ste>t9 Maneoer. Muat haV. own tranapor· ... . l~~' ~~~~'a7r0~~: ~ptlel, ~ ~~, ~· PEAi< ,u=tt.IONAL Need•. thl,nk ~~( '•, :::;~~ ~l=-~;r~r:, Coetl MeM. OA. 92129 LINE COOK :::: ~ ~ tltlon. Cell 722-15&4 8XtbwiR a;;o; 8PiMt
842..071a Aewwd .,.. wt0tw ........ .....,. Alaaderll>ttlthealthand peraon, 0' ,,_y 00• grarnmarallllla,wottq>ro-(7t•)788-7593 AlicfOf ··~,...,.. ',.....,. .... ,.,... PlanO . matcf\lng ltool
.. -•~ . lllllJllfBI• btetuyfteld,need925 ~~~:=":l:; cueing & phonu Teltmaf1(et::O SANDWICH SHOP PIT EOE Of Tarry M/F/HN to Mt appointment. on $900 ALSO
• JllJ EOE M/FN/H ~motlYatadmen ~&40-<>21SNB neoau.ry.Goodgrowth 1111----count•r help . No phona.NOMtllng.SalatyFRUITWOOO entertain• FRiEw@ldHt loss andwomanwtloara , . potent111. Non-1mkr. r-• •-•vH/wknd• lr.v/CM ll&PTllUl/Tr... S5 hr • t>onuw Flax mentoanter8'bY2'ttareo
too VOLUNTEERS MANAGER abo'4evw11guxaciutlw mllALPlllTlll $1800/mo.873-4227 •1JWll 971-1739957~2744 PIT. Eltc. angnr. firm In tire, call Mr Palmer reo<dr:.:,.toecrnb/W
HEED!O For Proven or top producing..... Part·tlmt lor Ate! Eatala lllllTllY Allantlon Homamuera, C.M. Au hr1. Student 71•1957·1800 TV a2 , ~35711
Waight Loee Program, Immediate opening fOr Ml ~= tl'latl'la 0C =.,._ Davatopmant/Proparty PIT fOr s.nta Ana..,... In· hlgl'l echool Nnlota& ' COi• WHAOSI TTAESESSESS E t,.A~ olt. 876-9075 an 8pm laJ'---t Wu... YAMAHA CoMota Pl~. Frea. Celt Mr Vincent ..,..,,_,.. tr Mgmt Dept. H,.. 9·11 M-,.... taoa ltudent. ~ -.... , ... ..--1-• ..---bon ~ 114-847·7800 HB. time Dl9trtct Maneoer. prc>gtam 6-e#I( w .F Dud .. Ind tys)ing, YMtlgatlw ofc. "4'Y IMd llgn1ara1 Telarnirtc•tlng niooa. Of. ave)'erd. APfJfy DRIVERS C>V9t 30 poa. Up IHI ,......_ ..... • ~ ·
-----·---M , joy .otklnQ wttf\ )'OUqualtfy)Mr.Hudeon. IUlog & llght aooountlng to FIT Of l!wtatlgatlva ftrmneade8peoptawtlo atfhaGrlnctar, t400P•· 10 a151hr, lot' ~t, cell if conct.$22t5. 1 .
TMI a FllTUJ llUI c~ld~n. Exparl ane• l1MlMlll Word procHtlng •X· poattlon. 542•9977 ·.,. ~t·eet~ ·i r-:o cfftc: Cout Hwy, N~. ~3.:;!,~~t~ ,.1.,. f3:aA ~~=t~ar M::t~~. with •rrttat ..... ~.
C:1!Jlll-H41 helpful. ./ ... tal SHI e!ci~ulr.{~;,,1~~~! llllOAIJ/lllPT .. ~!no~.~~!...~ W~"' SavaAganoy.F .. : · " r•farencaa: ~all araa ILlllllllTU-111 2
• +toll If any. We ofter an excellent btn--IL IT .. T · ·,dva~camant. Salary F~ll=-=:,."~ newepaper. Only raqul,. ~~~llan~lll~!"m 1 N::~· EASY AMembla Work I coda, 3151733 tllOO 942.()882
ent progrM),_ peict v.-. comrnaneurai. with ax-· ment I• • pleaaant t.... • • · seoo P.91' 100. Guar. ~-C.H.A. Cornpenton Alda. lu •..:t llllllLY 1111 cation• & t!Ollqayt, ~ Huntfhgton BcJI, tamlly J*lenct. FO< tur1har lnlo, SUllTllY phone Vole». Hour•: M·F 873--7729 ment. ~o Exp./no ...... loolclng 10< ~In poa.-,. .., ..
And wlll PAY FOR program end dental In-practJe». Exi>« d, P«· catl 94().1770 Thlnttlng of ltlltlng •new 5:30pm to 9:00pm. Sat· llatral 5131 0.1at11 eand Hll·•d· lllon, wlll car• tor )'OU In C..ta lltM '!11 PHOTOS tallan of aocl· 1uranca. Salary plu1 aonabta, talented ROH w? w contldef urdey 9:00am to 1:00pm. _ d r • • 1 • d 1 tamp• d your tioma. 722-7112 __ ,
den1. Corner of Lat1tapur mlltaga ralmburMmant. Kim 992-3310 DATA ENTRY r.'~wl hl::t E1crow Start at S..00 P« t!Our. lfTER anW!Opa: EL.AN VITAL ~ • -.. 42" round p;a 1Q, I
I PCH Cofone Def Mar mJIL IYWJ FIT, must type 50/wpm, being actlw llnca 19•7 Cornmlslf<>M & bonu... n -903 3<4 t8 Entars>'IM Rd EaltJaka hf·boy. ?
on N0v. 12th, approx =~t = ~~ wttl'I expanded dut• NB ;:, ~~~~·~ pr!.i want• to talk to you Call Prtvat~ deek1 and~· SCHOOL Ft. Pi.re., FL 33482. ' L#iMi All natt~ctvr~ ,.....,
3PM. (213)807-2111 M·F Wait Bay St .. Cost• lrH. P/tlma Wkdy Mldlalla 851-0517 • Lynn It 547·5e25 ~~!.~. r:-C:7n~ u.wruma --=~bl, maple ~
M .... Ca. Apply 9-11 90-8887, av/wknd lll-IUlll taNlewcallMaryGrantat JOBS Thinking of ttlftlng • .,.. -••111 tine drear, mahogany
WANTED: A.JEE" man • m. or 2-4 p.m. (Circul• 873--3403 lllllAI. lfflll Subatttute Clark 1 842""'333 bwtn 9am·3pm career? Why not conelder ~ Ilda cf\t, antique tool '°' • few woman. tton Dept.). p.r.,,. An lrvlna Co. need• Girt lllon• needed to be f:: M·F or 942·5e78 after EARN Eecrowl Bay Etcrow llAW LUI TllU cl'latt, Bifdaeye rotcr, tam
Mljor Ou tlona: Ho xperlanct t Friday Par1-tlma. Call lor by Huntington Beach City 5·30pm M·F being ac11va elnca 1947 1325. 842·2t54 ltand ate. 648-1M2 , ~tn~br~O.=f: ~i~°t:~ ~~· 1~=.,~t•. 84s-874g" an appt. 250-0532 School District. 17.09/hr Cat11od1y atart tomorrowll MONEY want• to talk to ~ou. Call Newport divorce fora.a BIG. SAMPLE SAL!
Ab9 Uncol~·amployed lllllALIFFIOI ulary, apply 20451 Lynn It 547-5e2 ..,. of elegant quality Brand namae at _..
35-45 Prolu1lon1i ' FIT. typing, phonaa, varied Cralmer Lena, H B. s.,.. I.Ady w/expartence, IZES FOREMAN French antlquaa. Aeu. Mia. Acttva/d~. ~ ~omen loolclng to ore dutlaa. 557-3200 964-8888,deadllna 04-01 pit, Of tit, lor Gift Store In PR Conetructlon cla•n·up Info. 873-177 t Barely Legal, Movlni
mHt GENTLEMEN. Clerk Typl1t-Mu1t be IC-Ttcbical/Tra•" BalbOa, 875-U7. TRPS w/t~'tusECLEANER s.lllng ANTIQUE QUILT ~::'C::::CM214~
Don't be emberuaed to $ curet• mature com-5505 SALES· COLLECTION. Over SO ue • •
raapond. Nona of ut .. , $ paaatOOata. 5 day 22'h/hr Need ambttloua le RHldentlal & Comm. qullte.. Sat. 1<>-3. 3808 29th 8-tpm, 5'48-0811 doo blaeult1. PO Box wtt, perm poa, ~183t lfafllf Tl...U wtiO are Mrioul ~t!ut hHTeritll fftt 5'4&-0821 , FIT, Gd Pay. Marcua Av.. N.B. etoaa Movtngl Ewrytt\lng goeal
4002. s..i Beec:h. 90740 ·-n••y Need Qd drv'g record a mulng money. 644-0195 l&ILY "11T Ull must St. Newport Bl & 32nd. New 9· 8etct\ trJ1
.. ,..,. .. , ---valld CA. lie lnltall & Mr· ........,, Gr•t lhe>p., gd toe. LAia Ahr All MWlno llam., Ind
-FMOfuNewpof11t ...._ ,,,.,.,.. e..ctltyptltomc.. 213' vice electronic garage IAUI .... II you are iOO\lrl"g. fOf extra etallon. Jerry 94().2421 macf\, clothee, It .,.. .,..-door opener. Benetta. To W0<1c S-.p Meet Week-k I llY IAllOll glUI kit. Car racSIQ., & QIN Cart 3111 Dys/wk. .5.50/Hr. Call Wiii train right peraon. end1. $50 + cornmlNlon. apenctl~ money, or II a HERBALIFE-SHACKLEE mite. Fri/Sat 9-3. 2882
eXIYsittEN§) ™ 3 SALES Sally 64~772 1599-B7 Superior Av, CM Mull have own Cir. IO go p I08I Ilk• Magic & CAMBRIDGE. DI•· LES 957-8133 Chloe Ad. 545-1304
ft I k (6 ti s c Pierced ear pref'd. Clean Mountain, Knott• Barry tr1bulora, call fOf a new t4 cu/ft SIS frig. 1 mo old . ..,....,..--~---=-• •r,nopon1 w .. r r ........ !,e.c, EPPr/olE c'o ~111 TUllll cut a honeat on"' •"ply Farm. or win Prize• and opportunity. 844--0195 Whlla Coit •700/Mll SOLID MAPLE Furn.~
total . •rfect ••• ICl'lool MANAGEMENT ~'W"'" .. -·a-•-:.15,:;:; · Awerd1,C1llu1 nowl W• · Org,rMIBooacb,Mf. Job for retlabla, rasp H.S. train, mu1t hive plaaaant ..--n11-Caryn 17141898--• "" have aever11 opening• In HOUSEKEEPERS $450, Singer MW mach. Lane c.dar Chaet, I
atudent (2 lrlenct1 may votce/pe1on1t11y, type Soma exp. A.B. Didi 380 y•-uu•-•-c M . H B or F.V. lll•H.tnlllll barely UMd, antq oall furn, Mucf\ Mora, 1 ~8
al'tr Job/hr•) $2.70/hr. OPPORTUNITY 40-50/wpm, $5.50/hr, dealrabla. Good bentflt1. -• ..-~-842~333 FIT PIT I 0 C cab. $75. 873--1771 Sytvt1 Lana 9 am F Mull five nr Upper Bay or call aft 10am 891..()280 Call Scott 94().9053 PIP Muat be •xpat d, am-• • • n · · ' ' · have reliable 1ran1. Start · bltlou1·rellable. Comm OT •To your ICl'ladula. Apt el2a Coldepot Aafrfg, MOVING SALE Stele ~I 3131. Call 845-9360 U•PllllllT WELDERS M1cGr•gor only Boat knowladge •Parm work In pvt riomee F/F. Xlnl · cond $100 accaeaor1M baby • h¥n
PIT, ,...,..,.....bla, mature Ylcf\t1, 1831 Placentia helpful Refs 65()..«..46 Ceramic Shop. alrbrulh •No '"8/tax• wlthl'lalct. 846-5137 aft 11am doll'lae anct' mOft ~· Full-time Chlld Cara Crew Supervisors are now ........ ~-Aw CM experience required Part •Need auto and phone • • needed In my Coate parson tor property • · Cl ... /lntaarutl Time. 831-3570 53-4-8703 · GE Top of Iha Una, At>ow 595 Stur¥s,.eon Dr. r
Meta home 650-5318 needed tO WOrk In 8 pro-mg mt co. w/bu1y WhenyouWW11to o-trlght 5520 . DANA'S HOUSEKEEPING Stow Mlctowave. new Pautartnol letol.
phones. a:30-1pm. Mon· to tM hMrt ol thlnO• ciUll· l1Tt lllY111 w . I ...... ... 1978 Aalllng s.400. 94().8543 Otflca ., ... daak 175, F'grd hllt1tic1 HU fesslonal management pos-Fri, muat be Ible to W0<1c lled'un OfQIOlacf. h-i10<· COOKS Lit• auto repalre and tire 911 I arv-.... nee I BUY RE FRIG ERA TORS automatic tranaml'*"'
---1111• -••r ltlo Sat 9~pm. Good phone m11lon-packed -Y to tlnO Pantry help 3 yr1 min Hrvloe Newport Tire LlllAIY OUll P /T WORKING OR NOT C-4 $80, btk• $55, Atari
-•r11 ..-n. manner a mult. 642· 1803 wt11t you're loolltng tor exp, hotel pref Center. 3000 E Cout Subltltuta cter1c poe CASH PD. 548-1172 2600 w/car1rldgaa f75,
Eng epkng Iv-In. Lt. care We now have openings for 0 SEM·N Hwy. Coron• del Mer. needed tor NEWPORT .,. __ .. ""-lg.~-----845-4443.
for nwbrn. Clean-cook· I •1 p•1 A H u " BEACH PUBLIC .,.......,.. ,,..., .. _..... =---=--..,,.--~"""' drive n--amk pvt apt. In mature adults to supervise II J I at ..... ~ . ·: Must lpeak Englleh. NAT JUI WHIEll LIBRARY ctark:al/pYblk: Dryer• S75 to S225. 1830 lut. ..... IIB
beaut home 1 blk·bch. I HOST/HOSTE.SS Apply In P«ton SCHOCK contacuxpdealreble. SupeJlor, CM 831-3197 SAT M at 6162 ~ ~~!=j ~7~~;.~'d. newspaper S8 es CreWS. Sat & Sun onty BOATS. 2900 La Fayette, Mull have on call min WU/hf & DrWf S 145 ... Magnolia/Banning. Port. .. Responsibilities will Include • • Newport Baactl: 1vall19hrl/Wk, to Incl Stove $125. D/Wlhf Spa. •••die aqulttltA PrefnlitHI/ • PAIT TllE OFFICE CLElll • MENS SPA ATIENDANT CASHIER/CLERK DAYS/EVE/SAT. s1oo. 648-5848 l1m99, end tabtta. OqfJM Malai1t11tt" SIM hiring, training, and motivating • • . PIT 4-10:30pm Dapanct1bla 1/1 Ot pit, J w S6 58/hr. application• WHIRPOOL WASHER & lbl, lote of goodlaal
teens In obtaining new cus.. • Very busy circulation office needs • LIFEGUARD ~~.?:'m~~:9~~~ 7:fu~~~= GAS DRYER sso ... ltwprt .... la 1111 ~~··~--~~ tomers for one of the area's • part ume help answering heavy • FIT Summer Only CantarBranctl,858San 644-8896 IJA'1W"'mAAfTORE'. oca
I I I I • phone traffic. We have-nice cus-. SN .. CKSHOPATIEND OLDIFlll-11 ClamenteOr,NB. r--itut Hl4 t>nc::k, email -or--.., mm ate open ng n our leading newspapers to 1 A 1 ts t be t ,..Su & Exp'd. Excellent W0<1clng -· 11 .. t .. ""'1' ... ,_. Newport Beach head· • • mers. pp 1can mus nea I • n Mon only condition•. Polygraph Lltlll Ol.111 I llY n'. lllnllE •m• .. u Cu, ugg a•. quarter, office. Thi•,,. For an excellent opportun1'ty respons1'ble and have a pleasant • c mlac:. 2417 8amboo ~t. regu•ar Ill position no · • ' e Ullll IAJ OLll raq'd. Night lhltt. all Korker llqUOf. Apply •t LES 957-8133 (E/Bluff). 8H·8~H.
late Friday's or S111ur-and earnings Of $500-700 per e telephone personality· Some light e For appt call Jerry 538-2722 ~~:.9 Jo;.~\~'=i~~· • •••-.. Sat/Sun hm to 1 ·
day a. 111uy comm k • office w ork also. Hours are approx. 845-5000x521 Sell things 114t with Dell) a -T tM.
w/e1p,c()(T)petltlwmat-W , • Mon-Fri,8:00 AMtol:OOPM,start-• Betwean9-4pm PllotWantAda ~UllllLDI llllllllMll•I rwprta r
Ck.9
1
1
11 Pra9tr~nenn:;l~•t1111· • ing salary is $100 per week. Apply • FIT ... Expar nae. 7' Ea. Mauva~aen1, INtt&;;Leeral till ...... "' ..... ..,.., Call TC • sTAG uouoR nr Newport came1 prlnt . .,__.eta• 851·9900 e in person. Mon-Thurs, 2:00 to 4.00 MOTOR ROUTE Beadl P* 873-4470 Sacrlfloa 1350 El OBO 12 Fl Flahaf w/o-
UtlllUOl IAll Ask for Ron • PM. Ask for Eileen. • 01y1 759-0242 EvH angina/gear 1450,
EOE M/F/V/H e e llUl. lllJYlln I.I. 640-4™ Salty 831-0287.
e ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT • Available in Irvine area. Marina Hardware d•· Beaut. oak kng c water =-,,-.-,-,-== ... -.. --=71..,l""ll ti yov ra jvst 1•11111ng your
own bu"ne" clualfl9d 1 • great place 10 buy office
equlpm9ot
M nrti1la1 lat"
$2.40 per da y
That 1 Al L you pay tor
3 1.r es. 30 day minimum
In the
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DIRECTORY
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Aep!'aHf'llltlve
142·4321 Hf, 301
642-4333 • 330 w. BAY ST . COSTA MESA. CA 92626 • $300 t o $600. No collect-:VT,;.~·~~Mc::':: =.iw/~~-= ;,= 21' sEXRXv . Muet ""'
• . l\N EOUAL OPPOATUHITY EMPLOYER • Ing. 3-4 hours a day. Mon. W•t Marina Product& Sell $650 848-5192 Low Hou re, Ex tr••
•e • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• •• • Call Jotin Day. 84S-1711 $t8,000 OBO 968-t409 thru Friday afternoon. Sat. IAIAMlmmt C:~~~°'b~ng;~ DONATE boa• a mar\ne -rJ!g. ~lo & Sun. morning. Call And Counter H .. p. ice ne1ii chamn Din tbl buf-equipment. unique 1ax I { ] l 642-4333, ask for Kirk. Cream & Gitt•. Balbo• lat hutch Orl~ntal opportunity (Corporate '-I 957 -8320 Catofyn cari>at. A.II 'excl cond. too). For con1uttalon 1
:: ,~j: . ' Orig COit S 10,000. Wiii 7ao-712• Mr. St9Wlt1 ORANGE COAST PllT OHTlll Tiii 1911 ror •5000 EvH Sall INtt 7114
C1rrn"7 Gectrical LadH•Jiat Palaliat Daily Pffat ~J,~.~=n~~~ :~ 67S.87811dy 994--0500 eAfXUXRXN I t,:r..,
Ooor.-moldlnga..t>ey wtn-NEW/REPAIR. Quality. No l Lancut PAINTER NEEDS WORKI mult tiav. good drMng •llctllu.... HU FOf Sela. Brand Nft
dowa, complete patio.. Jobi to amalf. r...on1ble Gardening Full Servloa Int/Ext. cetllng1, rann cab. 330 W. Bay St. record, call Mr. Taylor am ADLER pool ta6' N by Trak-18 Cat, atlll In addition•. quallty W0<1c Fr• eat .. lk:'d. 831-23•5 Mow~leen up .. tr" (26) yrs exp., work guar on"' 979.-8021 · boxaa 14000/obo 77 .. p , ........ ,, ........,_,. D1vt1 Pllntl"" ............ 7 Costa Mesa, CA ., 9. excel cond. all •xtru. • • ••
44
" au ..,............., Ft111iat WOf'k. 966-27l8/E Iv mag. .. • .,.._.....,. PROFESSIONAL $900/bo. 94().5074 _8.4_t ·_7_oo_5_. ----
Expert Carpenter. Reeld'I, FENC~lr New 1 Old C&B LAWN SERVICE UNIQUE PAINT HOUSEKEEPER B.C. YACHT CLUB Deluxe 27' Sallboa~, ~ Cornm'I Small/large jobll M ...... ..-,... Twtc. a month 10 yr1 tn Iha Harbor Ar ... _ To run top quallty hove. ·n . 8'1" hdrm, a. 53 3225 Jot! nS-8082 Wood, chain link, patlo'a. ., .. -...._ Fr" eat. 854--2732 hold & aul1t female Bual· R.F. Mambaraf\lp lhOwer, cultOfn Int. e 1· n rr .. alt. Grag, 968-0118 117.50lo125. 548-5722 neu Executive In •II 11250/0BO 842-«1283 n ew, bargain prJce
C1rret1 fir..... MalU..!I_ Pa~ria~ phuea of home acttvtti. FOR Mia: Couch excellent I 18,500. 080 494-511•
HOfna Carpet o;y ci:n FIREWOOD 179 sdf:i COrd BRICKWORK. Small Jobi FXRfAFd INTERIORS 5 Day weak, llva out. live condition. Sallbolt, 10 tt. Santana 30/30 "Srlllfu"
wl .--1yetem. Non toxic:. Winter Spacial Oull mix Newport, Cotti Me... HANGING/STRIPPING In when owner trave41. with Hll. Beet otter. Grenet Prix loaded-fuH
klll1 Ilea agg1. 845-5133 Dlflv .. Jim, 838-85&1 · Irvine. Refi. 875-3175 VISA·MC 873·1512 /( Musi Ilk• doge & have 8-46-4927. race Oya 752•9277 C C NG car. Top aalary & ban-. ' •U• art ,11 -'IL ----Concret ... Patloi & Drives. ANDYS WALLCOVERI '41) efttl . Muat hlll9 work , ... N.B TENNIS CLUB FULL ..,1-,1-,...,.,...,1~,.,,,...,,..., ... =---,1---
L!i~'!r:,Oo!.~rc:lld~ JIMS GUNS 1S:M. o\19f 0ryw111. p1~1 842-3238 Int Painting 543-4013 •tatlng pravlo~a ... 1750/0BO. 722-6480 dfll
M th F 850_.s.« CarOI colt For •PPt 0•11 k ,.. _ _.__ -·--am" parlence & Hlary r ... ..._ dtvOfca torcae ti' fr! HuM Gntr con;;; 60 &46GUNS or 831..()658 Muonry WC)( . UW<l. ---n -UI ·~.......... E l trf Ml Mothef wlll baby9ll tn haf ups, Ir" lrtm, removal DEPENDABLE QUALITY qulrament1 to: Ad #201. .... of elegant quallty hp vtn. w r, c:e.M
, .... _, • Gtaaa blocit Catpantry & ln11all1tlon & Removal ~ lated refarancea Write FAMILY MEMBERSHIP '._,
C.M .. ~.Mon thru Frt. ladlm guat'd Steve 835..,.833 Wortcmanlhlp. 642~13 A Dally Piiot. PO t580. Francf\ antlquaa. Aeaa. w/alda curtain• S.toO. ""'""' Coet1 M .... 92828 FOf Info 973--1771 E/720-99•1 01834-WOO --------548-5722 FENC TES Tr• trim Speclalllt: block, fancea-We gal1 lhd hang together ~ ___ ~ "itaalal Serrin Dump rune C M.IN.B. cement, plantar•. rMtucoo Hang111rtp. Advtca to Iha s P••• ••'W .. ••• •••••n•···~·iilallMlrU l tll Acft11ical Ctilia11 "' area. Jim Whyte, 842-7206 repalre. etc 24h< 5•5--0729 crazy. 839-0730 • R y EA 1 -ROBIN s cLEXNIMd DELIVERY D I ' I ru:n 'Ml Catalln•. AEBLOWN OR PAINTED SERVICE; • throoughty •GEN. HOME REPAIRS. STUCCO MASONRY· TILE Pl11t11/Drrwall • • In •toclc ~al. 5% ~ Uc~,~~~7exi P:~:~~95 Clean houM. 540-0857 ~~~~·a~a!~~~f,r;~z ~;'.;~~oLr:•ll. :J'1~5 lnt.IEXt. ~Pl .. tartng. : • Inv. 11• 50-4«8
-HouMCIMnlng ,. Yl'I exp cultom texturtng, quality ' I . Dally Pilot motor route • ltmn .... ,. ...
Ellqul•lte Acou811cs Re-reliable , .... fr .... , ~ ••HANDYMAN•• llftiat work. Problam .. No Prob-~o I~ . avallable In Huntington • I t:.. 7::L-apreyed or remove Ory-trena Pina MS.986& o.,11 Large Of 1m1J1 1 do It 1111 -lamal -328864 554--7831 '~ • • anu ._
waUAec>alr• 8•1-1901 . Pa1 531-5579 or iv.mag. *A-1..,..* pJ•--u • Harbor area. 1-2 hours : P&lot'tnmrNOa.
A'JIJaace --.... 1U11• --CLEAN&EXPERT 1.-9 : per afternoon. •. U!be~~~4'4to
i W• epedatiz. In Spring I l11lla1 Ov9t 25 )'WI axparlanol 24lwDf111-1111 ~~ • c -1 OOOd .,. tare 0eta11ed cfeanfng. CalllOf Lf AAJul'Jd • JoviNd Lie T -119,428 130-1353 •All plUmblnQ 1 ,....t1ng41 • all 642-4333; Monday _ • conct. asoo ... "32·!•
APPLIANCE SERVICE Mr'vlca now. 54-0757 Garage" Yard Clnup• H A.BC MOVINGH DRAINS CLEAR From $15 : Friday 10-5 P.M. Ask for : 1u,.1 n /l ter= =~· ~~~~~rver,:i; Tll .. ..,UY Jon 845-8192 Ou~ ~~:'~'5~j,~04e Faucet•, Dl9poaal, Heater, • Art. • ~
Community Appllenc• Fr .. .., rm 552-7729 Hauling Movtng Claen· . 841--0907 P&A 722·908e l'-'\S . . .. 23 .. •·co;u-m-Q"".-on-20 .. ,-'"°' __ _
789<1 Altar Circle. B p)( VACANCIES VACANCIES ups 7 Daya. Lowtet rat•. nu ... Ill.UH ...... ~ : Or•n~· Co••t :. ~ng..,; .x7~~ ~--·.::,;.ooo,
240 0717 or 522-2323 -Spacial Pr• S~I~ Ratea Call Barry, 722·Ml73 lrlllliil--•. cXL9Pso 4'66t SER· d1'.rv -.. -~ j,~~alt we do It am 57 1•2 JM OAlU WI uaJ Orange Co. Or1Qlna1 VICE: Rallabla, low rat•. : D•I y Piiot ' • llAT IUPI 1yr1• •NYT E 522 .,.73 Student Movar1. Tneurad • D a.. e 111111 .. Padng Area Repairs I C.1trMttll " IM · ...,., Uc. T12"4-438. 841·8427 Weekly. 847-7753 • 330 W ... , f••• • O. A.nu 8ayeldt vi-. :::1~1,:::~~1~ Rmal. .. wddlls§B'._g_9NKs1tc he•• Tu NEWWeraf'lou•StOfaoa ,~ ... , ,· • Coat• Meu, CA : i~t~=.~·~ " ,.._,......... . MYll-11111 FOlCS€RVfct PROP-. ... .,. ..... ________ .... ~ ........ ~elt·rapalr·prklng 10t1 Bath Tiie #3574e7 Int. FRANK MUSSELMAN ERTY MGMT 3% Bk ···········~····~····""l·Y• MOORING IN H!Wfll()RT apt comptex·hM"Y roller. 30 Yrl •KP ~ 1740 30 Yl'I· At Tax Coneuttant CertM-Court~ AMEAILANO i97--094 t r HARBOR. Up to 1tf
Jot 845 4269 7am-9pm ROLLS, Gen. Contract0f1 Sr. Cit. Rat .. ~7828 By t"trJ t1r C>Moe. ~3M5 850-1 t14 ,
luIA..1 1enrcn-Kltcf\an remodallt.g .......... ..,.... -·-· • .,..... 0 I N A II bl ON SHORE moonno ......
xa;;;iilng Xn i [ogo Spaciallat. 5524428 I .......,. ec;;p;:,n:ki;; for uc; PIH•llPU.. pe n n1• ow v• . • • Hr Balboa Pavtllon,
Oe91gri S.,.., Bfochu<• C..1~-·--Tll --In c:ere a lttt l'llkpg tor Reader. PMt·Futura S5 ad 97:Mt28 ~.
Typaaettlng GRAPHICS I I~ Lawn· Tr-.StlnJb lnetall. Iha elderly (714)833-2009 850-2751 Dl9na 831-1"4 c AR R Q u TE s ON-SHORE I Off SHOAi!
NeWPOAT 720·919t RTC -n..-u Tr .. Trim end Rtrnovel. ·-·-~ -• "--/'W ldea1 moorlnga. In Npt Hrbf -.,., __ , ... ...., 752-513-4 or 836-7417
rr:ng· ~0<a :~~~ !:°="1
1~,;om:1 ~-~~n~:'01"'':Pr: FtNE 4ri'INd BY RQ: E•rn Extr• C••h s Ho A E Moo A4 No O~ S'jECI ALIT Y 548923 . 1383924 Fr .. Elttmat•~ ::!t::·,18&8~~ ~&f'r:t~"*:' WANTED On Blilboa
oAAr HICS NEWPORT .....____ ~ng. S9f'lnkl«•. Thantt-Youl ·983-4114 Fr:.;-u;:.·131_2346 For D•llv•ry Of Thie P•,,.r 1a1and. Catt coee1ct
120 ,,,, _. Sod Claian-upe 20 yr• In . I 11e-~.0220
llliE LUIS eyEll~!!'f:E.,, ..-. rony .845-512• S:C::1~1 '411~ lrt11ntathtilefil il4wait tt • HUNTINGTON BEACH ~tvtJ'J~·=-:
or .. tflmetortftnenca Oeklflt 857-000R ~~ .... ~.":"~ JEFFINOUclntl"'-Oo-Kat11.Slngla~.M/C .......... , FOUNTAIN VALLEY 842-48449-5Mon-Frt
CALL HOW 942-4449 ~all .., Mauro. M2·9f73 A.A.A. PAINT ...... Scoot••·~·"°""· ... w•llT YAlll
LOTUS 1 2 3. PAYROLL. LOWUTpoeetbltpr10e Ellper1 per'IONI,... WIS ""' VVl INDEPENDENT lllte ,, ... _.. ...... PICl(up . ~. 100 e YWALL TAPING • ISHIKAWA LANDSCAPE 10 Stec> S.W.. 182-1235 Plupa.:Or.' f''ev .. 4M-l 187 __ • ___ ....,_••___,...,.._•_ ~ 97f..OS51 All Texturea I Accoutt~. Sod. Cttan·upa. Malnt. DAN SAL YEA PAINTH<i Ne,.._. .................. -,. Wt w• ~ • Freuet ~n 722·'21M ~larl, ate 85()..414'7 UC 1425124 nit .. ,.... • ._.... ._ .... ,,. ... ,
ryp1ng, RHum". R•-.. ~ • TIDI ce11 Anytime ..... 20,1 WWW tf;W. a... ....... a.,.. ._ft .. , .......... _lptlHt Deliver 1 day a week . No lt1t1tr1 1111 port•. Correapondanca. -u-~~th ..... -. i
m811ng 722·78o4 ,._ 1U1T91 Topped/ren'IOV'ed c.n-GLASGOW PAINTI~ kncfltn. Oall 722·1783 COiiecting, 00 SOliClt OQ . 1911 KAWSKI IOO, )lnt ~ QuamyWOftt,tr...... UC), newleWl'la. 751 -3-471 Int/Ext. 30 "'' exper., • :-• ft.,... ........... ., .. .,... Must have dependable car, cond uoo. 0..11 rm 142551~ M&-7401 Qaen Upa•TtM Topping ref'a. 642·!214 .. __ -7 t4/112t-4r.M '
_ _.. ~ ~ RESIO/COMM'l /IND 2t ~AemolllnQ-Hau{ HOMEOWNER EXPER'Ti LET TH! SUNSHINE IN ... .,,., .......... •••14. truck or station wagon and '78 Honda 750 as. -o::;;...c. 141~llO yn. Do my own W'Of1l. uc. Mll<E e50-32t3 Int/Ext. Aoous. c.Mrloa S\lnehlne wtncto. ~ wl blk felt~ , .. ,
_ n11CM1 A1 ...... 12t1 T-""mv'"-'----uc121Ue1 131-tm Ltd Ce11(71•1u1SNO CelT...,I insurance taootbone-*_.. I UllD OA AfPAI.. ·-' --_,...., -. -doora. lioclM; DON'S nECT'A1C ~ Comoetltlw 111111,.. P.n Window~ • , e w~ ~ 1 tr1m. 4tMl71 8tntOI ce1a. Prtote. ct.a "2·217' Uc qua1ty W'Of1l.""' tree We*> Wllll'I mlnM>lnaa ,. .. f tr • • CA l L 84 2 -1 4 44
1471totOonlM•• dtyWouu.tuCc,bonOtd. 0US FlNH LANOICAPE eet ¢ellenytlmt"2--4101 ~--720-l101 (7t4) 642 -4SJJ 0oor~-NWettone n.rcTNCIAH ,..,.., ... ~ TEACHERS PA.rD 8'1rlng OINnlno Spec1a1 ~ Ask for JoAnne Craney C.~P ... lookr -UC •2"10I. tfNll/latOt ...,, Hottloult maj, fvfl CONTRACTOR .. bildt 8alboa W1"dow WMhlng
35 ,... ••P .W,., 942.oM7 Jobe I r~ 54-52d°3 mainl reu raft 548-9027 F'r .. Mtlmel• ~ f8 17W 135
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LWl...:>iiht--.IT ::'::~=-"'---~ ~'1:ar~::: ~--~ ~~ECITYCLKM'90fl. dutMdtrr;:.:;:::-Pte-==A~M "::::.~.~-~::"·~ .. OM-
--..-T -..ca• wtl'le ,__ ~ *1d II Mt rot ltle C1Pe1*1G tNreof ~ll~gMfl ttwt MO.-ADOPT!O by Vie City 1'* ~ ... fl9d The~ l*90f".,. The fOIOWtl'I ..... .,.. ~W: ...............
-...a111111u&. iocetect •· 21141 9Wtl The9oefd of Tn.c..,.. "'-1oetdof TruM-. of tN "AHOROINANCtOFTHE Councill°' ttie CITY of Hunt• ...,, IMCountye'9ttl °'°'"-. ~ •· dolna ......_. ~ ._.....,
11118CM_..19C110M lf\otd., Hunttnoton leeofl. ....-tN~ofrefect· CC*t Communtty e CITY 0 1" HUNTINGTON lngton leedl at 1rt ~. tnOt County on Marcfl 11, AD·\.\OHTI Al • NIW'O"T MOllLI TNI IUU Hent -...
......... g!Wnby C~omla. TM bue4-. lnQ MY and .. .,. Otto Olfltrtct of Or-. Coun 'HACH AMEHOINO THE Mfftlna h•ld Mond•r. ttae IOCIATfl.1111VllaWa.y. MANNE. 3900 ,.,_., A¥e, ....... ~()lertltf()r..
tt1e D~ ot °"4lop.. ,_1.-dbytMMfdV... _..,.tntlrtegularltt.orln-c.llfornla. w111 r908M HUHT1NOTON BEACH OR· Marc:ll f7, t ... , bV the tOi-W Newpolt e.ot\, CA t2M3 Newpot1 leedl, CA tatU .._ County on ~ --~ ~ ~ &t Mid lot»tton la: forrnallllee In MY bid Of In eel bide""' to but no letet DI NANCI CODE B Y towing roll cahote: Pvbllltled 0ranoe Coelt IJQtll·Ad Al&Ocd .... , Ina., Mi'cflMt L. Miiier, MOO H . 1... t ttit~Sec1lon.ofttle "JACK'& SUIMA"INH ". tN bidding. than 2:00 p.m .. Monde)', AMENDING SECTION toll AYU: COundlmen: Kelly, Otlll)' f»tlot Mlll'Oll 20, 27, • ~ eotPOtetton AIYet A¥e, Newpoft 8Md\, ,_
Ctly Of Hunttnoton IMdl Seid~ t,.,.., le In-DAVI •ROWNILL. April 14, 1tH •t th• TOPAOVIOl!FOACHAHOe MacAIMMr, ~. Mtndlc, Ai>tU. to. ttee Thlt llV•IMM I• con-CAtlMS Publllhed Orange COMt
lflM tN tolkMng ~ tencild to be oonaimmated Ctl.11 lltr, llUlll' 111 » PurchMlng °"'*"ment of 0, ZOHINO FAOM M 1 BaM.y, OtWI Th-7N ducted W, a oorpcndou T,. bualneat It CClfto Deity Plot MetOtl 11. 20, 27, tor ._.tM OeG.luatlon tt tht offlc9 Of: ACTION ....... C..t C....ny Mfd oo1ege dl9tttct 1ocet.c1 (LIGHT INOUSTAIAU ANO NOES: COuncltm.n: None ~t dUcted by. 1rt lndMdual Aptfl 3. t ...
weN ~and ... ev.11-ESCAOW, INC .• 900 Mortll C...,. DWrtot at 1)70 Adll!N Avenue, At (SINGLE FAMILY) TO A8SENT• Councllm•n: Thlt al•lement WM tied MICkA!L L. MILLER Th-712
tlbl9 tor publlC,...,.... com-Tuatln Avenue. Suite 0 , Pvbllalled OnlnQe COMt Coal• MeM, Cellfomla at HIGHWAY COMMERCIAL Hone P\llJC NOTICE wtftl the County OWtt of Or-Ttlll at&t«Mnt wea llled --------Marci\ 27, ttee. Santa An&. Calttomla, Of. Delly fltlot Mlll'Oll 21, .A.pfll ), Wl'tlotl ume Mid bide oM11 be DISTRICT GEH!RALL Y'"" NOT VOTINO: Coun· tnOt County on Mardi 11, with~ County Ctanc of Of· PmlJC llOTIC( Decl&r&tlon No. anoa County on Of aft• Apfl ''" jM.iblcly ~ lrtd ,...., LOCATED EAST OF THE allman: Tllomea PtelmOUI =-tNe *'99 County on F'°"*Y ______ .......,......, __ _
1-.queet rot • I.OM 14, ttee. 1'hle bl* tt.,..., Th 718 tor· SOUTHERN PACIFIC RAIL· CfTY "' NUMTWCITOlt MAim ITA ,_ to. ttee M)fthOW ··n ... cfllrtg8 on •. t• acn pwcal .. nol tut>tect lo Callfotnla PAINT ANO BIND ttM AOAO RIOHT-OF-WAY BE· • I Ac" A 110 I• .. • The folOwtnO per90ne .,. PubllaMd <>ranoe Coelt ....n MAim 8TA1WlmCJ
ioo.ted-' I I 11 N9wm&n A"° Uniform COl'nfMrdel Code •-It' MnTlC( COMB I HE O SUMMER TWEEN CENT!R DRIVE • .....-.. C1tJ cteftl dO!fl9 bulinW • DCllly PllOt Mwoh 20. 27, Pvblllfled ()range C0Mt The fOIOwln8 ,,.,..,. --eun.ntt)I, tM zone Section 11oe ,._"" SCHEDULE; COAST COM-ANOEOfNOE"(ZONECASE Publletwd Orange Coelt EARTHQUAl<E REAOI· April 3, 10. ,... Delly Pllo1 Mardi •• 13, 20, doing bul6neelli •
dMIQnettonll Rhnd Ille,.. Tiie name and llddreaa Of liGAL NOTIC' MUNITY COLLEGE OIS· 16-11)" Dally Piiot Maret\ 21'. ttee NESS INCORPORATED, Th-755 27, ttea COUNTRY GAA0£N, 131 q1Mt le to cMtiQe It to R3. th• petaon with whom ~·.oe-TRICT IYNOPM: Th 7t2 113n S&nta lellnd&. Foun-.,._ It' MftftH' T'll-994 Via Und6M, ~ Blildl.
Cq>lea Of~~ clalma may be ftled le: AC-_ _._. All bids.,.. to be lo ao-Zona C... No. 15-11 taln Vllley, CA 92708 ,._ nu111K CA 92ee3
... on ftle with the City TIOH ESCROW, INC .• IOO N "AN oR':.:E OF THE OOtd#lee wtttl IM Bid OOQ#-.,,.,.,. o.trtct Map 15, Jerome J. Gulllano. 113n ---..... -.... ·-It' llftTll'C I> p. t r I c I • I( •• , n. Clattl. Qty ot Huntington TUSTIN AVENUE. SUITE 0 , manta wNoti .,. nqw tn Ille 8 toll dlanalncl the ~onlng "8JC NOTICE Santa a.llnde. Fountain VIII-.--"•-f"-.n. nu1.-. Httclllcoe*, t31 VI& Undtna,
9Mcll, 2000 Main Slr991.. SANTA ANA, CALIFORNIA CITY OF HUNTINO'TOH and may be MCUt'9d In Ille from R1 10 -~f 10 C4 on ley, CA 92708 MAim ITA,.....,, ·--N9wpoft e.ot\, CA 12113
Huntington 8"cll, Call· 92705 and the 1Mt dwy for BEACH AMEHDIHO THE omc. of tt1e Ol<tic1or of ptopetty generally loceted fl'ICTmOUI MWll Thia bualn ... la con-The folowlng per90ne.,.. fl'ICTITIOUI kll•ll Thia bualneae la oon-
lomle. Nrr pwaon wlahlng ftllng elal!N by any Cl"edltOf HUNTINGTON BEACH MU-Purcnulng of Mid college ... t ol the Soutllatfl Pacmc ~ ITAn.NT ducted by:. oorporatlon doing buelneM u: AICO NAm ITATllmlfT ducted w: an lndMdull
to oommant on tllaM ,. all&ll be APf'tl t 1, t088 Wl'tlctl NICIPAL CODE BY AMEND-dlatt1c1 Rellr90d right-of-way .,.._ The fo4k>w1ng peraona are Jerome J. Guiliano, P,...._ Company, 30100 Town The followtnQ per90ne.,.. PATRICIA I(. HrTCHOOOK
qlM1a mey do '° In writing la Iha ~ dwy before ING SECTION t3 ... too TO E.actt. tMddat muel IUblnlt tween Center Oftw and Ed-doing butlMM -dent Center Or., Sult• t36 Hert doing buMl&M -TNa ......,..,,. ... tied
wttNn 10 da)'9 of ttlla nolloa Illa coneummallon dale AOO A PROVISION DIS-wttll IMa bk! • CMhler'a lllQ9f and oonaolldat• a A 2 I M UT H PA 0 . Thlt atat--.t -flied Alt• L.agar, 1278 ~ INSTANT OAR DENS, w41tl "'8 County Clattl of Of.
by ptcMdlng written ~ ~ aboYe. A LL 0 W I N G PR 0 . chedl, certified cMck. Of por1lon of rallroed propetty DUCTIONS, a Callfornla wttll the County Clettl of°'· ntryre, Laguna 8Moll. Cellf. 22t5 Pon Cet1Wa. N9wpoft ange Coun1y on ....,.... 5,
ments to the Dapantnent ot Dated: Match 11, 1tle FESSIONAL TEA~HING ON bidder'• bond made payat>te lnlo the comnwclal elte. Limited PW1Mrthle>. , t&e Moe County on Mardi 4, 92851 Beectl, CA t2980 , ...
Dcl'I •l~tt SeMoea. En-ANGaLA w. Ll'I, T..-CITY PAOPE~TY to Ille order of the eo.t THE FULL TEXT OF THE Klngalon 8trM t, Co•t• ttle Tiiie tivaln... ,, oorh Victoria J .. n TllOmU, ,.,..
Ylronmental Reaouroaa Sao-...... '""°""· Commurilty College 019trlct ORDINANCE IS AVAILABLE M--. CA 92t2e ' ,.... ducrt~ by: an lndMduel .2215 Port ~· Ntiwport Publlatled OfanQe eo.t
tlon, P.O. Box tto, Hunt· ...... :t. LOYIM>Ge, Ordinance No. 2124 Board of Truat .. In an IN THE CITY CLERK'S OF· Jay C. Baumgardner, Publlallad °'ange CoNt Alt• Uoar . Beaoll, CA 92MO o.lly Plot Marcfl 13, 20, 27,
lngton 8Mctl, CA 92048. NTA D. LOVINDCM!, ON-amend• Ill• Huntington amount not i.. than. nw FICE t t&e Klngaton Street, eo.. Delly Plot Maren t3, 20, 27, Thia atatemem wea fled Tiii• bualf"N I• con. April 3, 1H8
Commenta wlll be con-MITH T. LOYllUDQI, Beectl MunidC>al Code ~ percent(5%) of the aum bid ADOPTED by Ille City ......_CA 92$29 April 3, 1Me wttll the County Clattl Of Of· ducted by: an lnOMdu&I TI\-724 "61tad by Ille Oectalon-T,........ amending $ 13.0 . 10 ... ~ant .. tlla1 the~ Counctl of the Ctty ot Hunt· Thll bUtlMM ,, con-Th-714 """'County on Mwdl It, • VICTORIA J THOMAS
l'Mktng body In na dellbat.. Publlahad Orange Cout Vending and P9ddllna •fol-cl« will ..,,., 1n10 th• lngton 8eaQr't at .,, regular duc1ed by: & ltmlted pertner· 1tle Thia ataternent -llled
tlon on wMttter In En· Oally Piiot March 2'7. 19M !owl: No_ pet'90fl ahall tor pt()90Md Contract II the mHtlng held Monday, llllp f'mM1 wttll tile-County aanc of Of· PdlJC NOllC(
wonmen1a1 lmpaqt Report , Th 794 =: ·:n "'°"~.:-=: ..,.,,. 1a awarded 10 him. In Maren 17, 198e, by Ille_ fol. Jay c. e.umoarctnar Pdll.IC NOTICE Pul>llehed Orange Coa9t = ~ty on FebtuetY I . Pk:nnoue MllllAt
llhould be ptapared lor the lllr .ciMlty 1 ~ opetty the.....,,, of laltu<a 10 antClf towing roll call vota; Thia atalM*lt -flied '1CTTT10UI .,._11 Delly Pffol Marcti 20, 27, t ' ,.._ um ITA.,_
projaat. "8,JC NOTICE wllllout 1,:' wT1tl pr -.. Into MICll contract, the AYEs; Councllmen: Kally. with the County Clenc of Of. .. ...... IT'" ... -Apfll 3, tO, ttae -no ....................... ~ ,....__. The.....-_.,. o.tecl MWGll 25 ttae an ,.._. prOCMdaoftlledledlwlll be MacAlllltar, Flnley, Mandie, ange County on Mardi 7, -..... _..., ,,,. .-v.--.. .,._, . .....,....,. """:"'--,.... ........ AMt9Wlt NOTIC• mlllk>n °1 Illa dtfac10f forfeited or In tile cue of • Balley Gt-t9MI The followlna pet90fll .,. Ody Piiot Mardi ' 13. 20. doing ~ ... ....,_ ' INYJTINO M>I THE FULL TEXT Of THE bond the fUll eum tllctraof NOEs: Councllman: None ,_ d~ ~ u: MlJC N01lC[ 27, 1tae ~ SULLIVAN, 2005
Pvbllehed Orange Cout Notice la llafeby given tllai ORDINANCE IS AVAl~BLE wlll tie forfeited to Mid col-ABSENT: Councilman: Publltlled Orange Cout EARTHQUAl<E READI· -nnout IU ... ll Th-M W. Batboe Blvd, lulte 812•
Dally Pilot March 27. 1986 the Board of Trual-of Illa IN THE CITY CLERK S OF· !age dlltrict None Dally Piiot Marctl 20 27 NESS INCORPORA TEO, r,.,. N9wpoft 8Mctl, CA t2tl3
'Tll-800 Cou1 Community College ~ED ~the City No bidder ,,,_y wttlldr-NOT VOTINO. Tllomu April 3, 10, 198e ' ' t':7J.!!1'~~~ Foun-r:::-~~.,. F:s~~:: --------Dlatrlct of Orange County. . Illa bid tor• period for forty-CITY OF HUNTIMGTON Th-748 _,, .,,..,_""' ...---"8.1C NOTICE ' rtaJC NOTICE California, wtll racaNe ...... Council ol Ula of Hunt· ,..... (45) daye •h• the date •• Ac H. A 11 c I • Ill . Jerome J. Gulllano. ll3n ~ bullneM •: ~ ...... CA mot
--------;;;...._-ed bk!• up 1o but no latet lnglon 8eectl •I an ragulat Mt for the opening thereof. Wentwont\, City ci.tti Sant• 8eNnda. Fountain Val· 20 •· 1170 N9wpoft Blvd.. fl1CT1TIOUI .,_.. Thia bualneee 11 con-
NOTICI TO than I l :OO a.m., Friday, Aptll meeting held Monday, The Board ot Trvat .. ,., Publllhed Orange Cout f'tllllC N0TlC£ ley, CA 92708 Coate M--. 92827 lieAm ITAT'lmWT dUC1ed by: an lndMcluel
CMDfTORI OF 22 t988 al the Putcllulng Marett 17, 198e. by Ille fol-NtVeathe'prMlagaotreject· Dally Piiot Mardi 27. t9&6 Thia t>ualneu la con· s-Inc., Call1omla cor-The follow4ng S**>"• are JUC.OH SUlUVAH 8UUC ~" DciPertment of aald collaQe !owing roil call vota: Ing any and 811 bid• Of to 'Th 793 fl1CT1TIOUI .,..... ducted by:• COfporatlon poratlon, 1 TamlDr, lrvtna, doing tMJalneM M: Thia at.~ wee tied
(Sec:a. 5101-8107 dlatrlct localed at 1310 AYES: Councllman. Kally, wlllw any lrregularlttaa 0t In-MAME ITAT'Rmwf Jerome J. Guiliano. Pr-. CA 927 t4 BlfOOERICK'S LAHD· wtttl the County Clenc. Or·
UC.Cl Adema Avenue, Costa MacAMltt•, Flnley, Mandie. lonn.allt ... tn any bid Of In P\8JC NOTIC£ The followtng ~are dent Titla t>ualn ... 1• COt't· SCAPINO, 311 W Wllaon, tnOI County on ~ Notice .. llafaoy grwn to M... Caltfomla •I wttlc;h Balley, Gre.t the bld<llng doing bu9lneea .. Thia ltalM*'ll WU !Med ducted by: an lndMdual Apt t4 Coat• M--. CA ti, 198e
c redllota of Illa wlthlnt1mataldblda wlll be pyb-NOES:Councllman.~ DAVI l"OWMELL LEGAL.NOTICE HUNTINGTON WESTwltlltMCountyClencofOr· AJIRabbanl,Prea. 92827 ' P..m
nemed tranaferorl that a llclyopened andrMdfor· ABSENT Councilmen: ChaM .. Or Coeat c-; ON>eNANCI AUTO BO DY. 14901 anQa County on Mardi 4, Thie llatemant WU flled Scott Tllomea Bfoderlctl. Publlahed OrMQe Coelft
bulk 1,.,,.fClf la about to be PRINT AND BIND l91M7 None mllflffy C~ D6atrtct NO m:a. CllHt nut Str•et, Well· ttae with the County Clenc of Or· 3l l W Wllaon Apt t4 Delly Piiot Mwcti I , 1$, 20,
mede on panonal Pfoper1)' C A T A L 0 G . 0 RANGE NOT VOTING: TllomU Publtelled ange Cout "AN ORDINANCE OF THE mlnetger, CA 92883 ..... ange County on Mwc:tl 12, Coate M... CA m21 ' 27, 1Ne '-*"•"• deac:tlbed COAST COLLEGE cm OF HUNT'INQTON Dally Piiot Matdl 17. April 3, CITY OF HUNTINGTON Jerry Lloyd Peery, 214 Publltlhed OftnOt Cout ttle This bllllMN I• COt't· TIMl80 The n-and bull,_. All bid• are 10 be In ec;.. IE AC H • A I I c I a Ill . t985 BEACH AMENDING THE. 34111 SI ·Newport 8Mctl, CA Deify Piiot Mwcll t3, 20, 27, fJ1IMl7 ducted by. an ~
eodr.. of the Intended cordanoe With the Bid Oocu-Wan~ City Ci.tti Tll-719 HUNTINGTON BEACH OR· 92M3 Aptll 3, ltle Publllhad Orange CoMt SCOTI T. BROOERICIC "8JC N0llC( tranefer<nate· ANGELA W ments which are now In n1a Publllhed Orange Cout OINANCE CODE BY Thia t>uelneu la con-Th-7t4 [)ally Pffot Mwdl 20, 27, Thie atat«nent wea ftled ----.=;;;;.;....;.;.;..;.;.;,;;_,_
LEE. 21 t48 8Mctt B/YO., and may be eecured In the Deity Piiot M11cll 2'7, 1988 PtBllC NOTICE AMENDING S ECTIONS dueled by: an Individual N>rft 3, 10, 198e with the County Clettl of Or· fl1CTIT10UI ..-11
t:1unllngton Beach, Call· olftoe of the otractor of Th 791 · 9130 5 AND 9130.7 REI.AT· Jarry Peery fltlllJC NOllCE Tit-nl *'99 County on February MAim ITATDmlff
fotnla. Purchutng of Mid COiiage FK:TTTIOUl IU ... 11 INO TO MAXIMUM SITE Thie atatement wu flied 24. 198e The followlng per90ne we
The locaUon In Callforttta dlstrlct P\BJC NOTICC ~ ITAT'DmtfT COVERAGE AND SIDE wt111 the County Ctar11 of°'· FICTlTIOUI ., .... , rtaJC NOTICE notra doing~•
of tlla chlet o.acutlve otnca Eactl blddClf mutt eubmlt The lollowlng P8'90N are YARD SETBACKS IN THE =County on Mardi t2, ~ ITATlmNT FK:TITtOUe .,._.. Pub411hed ()range CoMt KAOWN TIRE l Sln'PLY
or ptlnclpel bullnMS otflce lo/Ith hie bid a caatller'I FK:TITlOUl IUltNEll doing bual,_ u · OLD TOWN ANO TOWN 19 8 ,_ Tite followlng peraona we MAim ITATIWMT Delly PHot Mardi &, t3, 20, CO.. t3152A Red Hiii,
of the Intended trantftl'Ot II checic, certified chectt. or NA• ITATE•NT ROUNDTREE EXECUTIVE LOT DISTRICTS" 11 doing bua1naaa u : The follow! , ate 27. 198e Tuatlo, CA 92MO
3411 Pecan Street, lrvltte, bldd«'s bond made pa~ The following peraone .,., SERVICES. 234 E 17th IYNOPlll: Published Orange Cout LIFE SOURCE CO., 3519A doing b44A,.,.;: ~ Tll-e115 J&mH Thomae King,
Cellfomla. lo Ille ordet of lhe t doing bullnMt u . Slraet. Suite 108, Colla Ordinanc e No. 2823 Dalri Piiot ::~ctl 20, 27. Eat Cout Hwy, Suite ,955, TAAOE SHOW .ATTRAC-t3t52A Red Hiii, Tuatln, CA
An Other butl,,_. namN Commuttlty College Dletrlct N & S LTD. tl021..J Sky· ..._. CA 92e27 amandt Illa Hunllnglon AP' 3· lO. fll..75t Corona dell Mw, CA 92625 TIONS 1133 EJ CamlnO t2e80
and 6ddr-used by Iha Board of Truet.. In an paf1t Clrde, INine, CA 927 t4 NMcy e. Wright, 1133 BMctt Ofdlnance Code to Notbwt De I• Pana. 939 Coate M..., CA 92t2e • P\llJC NOTICE • Title buelneea 1• oon-
lr.,,.,.,or within the pa.at amount not .... than ftYe lldltco Nagy, 816 veinezi. Port Tlflln, Newport a.ch. permit up to 55% lite COY· Promontory Or W . Newport Kan F Sande 4 1 o t duc1ed bv: .,, lndMdutll
thfM yeare .,, percent (5%) of lhe tum bid Ava. Venice, Ca to29 t CA 92e80 arage with bonua 10 be off. f'tlllJC NOTICE 8Mcll CA 92ee0 Radllna Dr LakewoOct CA fl'ICTmOUI .,..... JAMES T. KING
Tite namM and bull,_, as • guarantee lhlt the Dkl· Tiiie bualna11 It con-Thi• buelnH• I• c;on-Ml by equal amounl of ad· Thia buelnau 11 con· Thie b~tln•H I• • con-MAim ITA,......,. Thie atatemant ... fled
addr .. or the lrll\lfer-der wlll enter Into Ille ducted by: 111 lndlvidual ducted by· an Individual dltlonal open apece In FtCTITlOUI 8U ... ll ducted by: an lndlvldual dueled by: an .Individual Tite followlng peraona.,.. with the County CIClftr'of Of.
ate: JAMES J LOVERIDGE propoeed Cottltact If the ILDIKO NAGY NANCY E WRIGHT balconlea or decile on Iha MAME ITAT'EmtfT NORBERT OE LA PARRA keH SANDS doing~ ea: lln09 County on f*'-Y
AND RITA D LOVERIDGE tame Is awarded to him In This etatemenl wu ntec1 Thia statement wu filed MCOOd level. Aleo 10 permit The lollowtng par.one 111e Thia atatarnent wu flied Title atalement -tied NEWPORT-MESA EX· 21• ttM
ANO KENNETH D LOVE-lhe event of lall\lrt 10 enttl' with the County Cler1! of Or· .tth Ille County Cler1t of Or· minimum ltna loot exterior doing bull,_ u . with the County CIClf1t of Of· wttll the County Clenc of Of. ECUTIVE SUITES, 278 VIG-,_.12
RIDGE. 17352 Cllapparal Into sucn contract, the ange County on Fabruaty ange County on Febtuaty aide yard Mtbaclc IOf gar-MONEY A NDERS, 1867 ange County on Febt\lary ange County on February tor1a St. Coate ....... CA PubhMd Orange CoMt
Lane.. Hunlinglon Beactl, Pl'oceed• ol thec:necti wtN be 13. 1986 11 t986 e.gae Ordinance No 2823 Tustin Avanue, Coate M .... 28, 198& 13 l98& 92827 Deity Piiot Man:tt 1~· 20, 27, California. lorfelled1'0f In tl\e cue of 1 nac.G ' f aoo.7 pertain• to ptoperty localed CA 92627 1'11D410 ' ~ Kt111 Grace SI ..... 314-C APl'il 3 , ttae
The property pertinent bond. the full sum the<eof Publlshed Orange Cou1 Publlahed Orange Cout In the Oldtown and Townlot Jed Janklnl, 18e7 Tustin Publlahed °'ange Cout Publlltled °' Cout Marguwtte Ave., Corona dell Th-7 t6 ~ato ISt~I~ .;' ri wilt De lorletted lo Mid col· Deity Piiot Mareh 8, 13. 20. Dally Piiot Merell 8, 13, 20. Specific Plan Ar... Avanue, Coate ....... CA Dally Pffol Marctl t3, 20, 27, DsJly P\lot Mar:T 13 20 Mw, CA 92825 Why tun all~ town wMf'I ., ... n ( •. X· lege district 27 1916 27 t986 THE FULL TEXT OF THE 92627' . Ap<ll 3, t986 27 ttee . • • Martlo JoM St ..... 314-you can ~t• perta lor
lurea. Equipment ano No bidder may wllhdr.,. Th~7 . Th-699 ORDINANCE IS AVAILABLE Thia bu1lneu II con· Th-717 ' Th-701 C Mwguertte Ave., Corona antlqueaulo lncllltlfl:
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~ECG\ST • 25~ '
•OMCMT• ON Al I
THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 1986
2 men :found slain in b ,ar
Costa Mesa tavern owner, unidentified
man discovere shot in of ice by janitor
By PAULARCHIPLEY ' °' .. °"",... .....
The owner of a Costa Mesa bar
reponedly frequented by homosex-
uals and another man were found
shot to death inside the bar's effice
Wednesday.
Police were investigatm& the
Second chance
Sirhan B. Sirhan &eta hJa
MCODd appearance In
nine montha before a
parole board Thunday.
and hJa attorney ea ya the
con.tcted killer of Rob-
ert P'. Kennedy la op-
timlatic he will MK>D be
releued. AS.
World
U.S. pilots airlift Hon-
duran troops to border as
Nicaraguan soldiers re-
portedly battle to escape
along jungle trails./ AS
INDEX
Advice and Games
Boating
Bulletin Board
Business
Classlfled
Comics
Death Notices
Entertainment
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
Television
Weather
A10
84
A3
A6-7
85-7
A 11
8 7
A9
A12
84
A3
83, 7-8
81-3
A9
A2
deaths as homicides.
Lawrence L Rohr, 49, owner of the
Lion's Den, 719 W. 19th St.t.a11d
another man were found by a janitor
at 4:47 a.m., said Costa Mesa 11<>lice
Lt. Rick Johnson.
The name of the second victim was
being withheld pen(j.ing positive
Libya
ur-es ·
suicide
attacks
U.S. says Libyans
have installations
under s urveillance
TRlPOLI, Libya (AP) -Libya
exhoned Arabs on Wednesday to
become "human bombs" and destroy
America's "terrorist embassies" and
other interests around the world in
retaliation for the U.S. Navy's actions
in the Gulfof Sidra.
Life appeared normal in Tripoli,
the capital, despite the violent appeal.
State Department spokesman
Charles Redman said in Washington
that Libyan agents have U.S. installa-
tions under surveillance and may
have targeted Americans for attack.
He called the situation .. potentially
dangerous" and said Americans
abroad were being advised to be
careful.
No new action was reported in the
gulf. where the United States said its
warplanes hit at least four Libyan
patrol boats and a shore installation
Monday and Tuesday after at least six
Libyan missiles were fired.
The Pentagon said ships and planes
from the U .S. 6th Acct continued to
operate below Libyan leader Moam-
mar Khadafy's "line of death'' in the
gulf, but no Libyan planes or patrol
boats bad ventured farther than 12
miles from the coast since early
Tuesday morning.
Khadafy claims the en tare gulf and
bas vowed to defend it. The United
States regards it as international
waters beyond the generally re-
cognized 12-mile hmit.
There were no signs in Tripoli of
the anti-U.S. demonstrators who
have paraded through the streets an
recent days and none of extraordinary
(Pleue Me LIBYA/ A2)
FBI ask·ed to examine
bOnes found in desert
SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -FBI
experts have been asked to examine
bone fragments found near the camp-
around where 3-ycar-old Laura Brad-
bury disappeared in 1984, a deputy
coroner said Wednesday.
Dr. Judy Suchey, a forensic
anthropologist at California State
University, Fullerton, determined
the fragments were from a child
between 2 and 5 years of age, but she
could not determine the exact age.
race or sex of the victim.
Chief Deputy Coroner Phil AJex-
ander said ttus is the first time the
coroner's office has sought the helo of
the FBI in a forensics investigation.
"We don't really know what all
they can find," he said. "We would
like to get a blood type, we'd like to
know how long the victim had been
dead and things like that. But we
don't know what we're going to get at
all."
Sheriffs Sgt. Mike Stodelle said the
bone fragmentl would be packed for
shipment to FBI facilities in Quan-
ttco. Va.
Laura Bradbury disappeared from
Indian Cove campground at Joshua
Tree National Monument on Oct. 18,
(Pleue eee P'BI/ A2)
Seriouslyill boy
gets helping dog,
honored by cops
When Bernadette Kemp gave birth
to a beautiful baby boy, her hopes and
expectations surround1na the new life
were devastated by her doctor's
prcdictJon: Herctlild wasn't expected
to live to be 3 years old.
But 13 years later, Kemp says her
tcen-aaer as a JOY she and her husband
Chuck have been fonunate to raise.
"He's a great lcid." she said." A real
blessina."
Kemp qrecd to to be intervic~
on behalf of her son Oou'1 who 1s
often too weak due to his illness to
talk at lenath.
She described her son's life as often
lonely compared to other boys his
aae. He suffers from a rare form of
muscular dystrophy called Werdina-
Hoffman Syndrome, which forces
him to spend stveral hours daily in an
iron lung.
MUtcular dt strophy is a muS<:le
disorder that 1s suspected of bcin&
1nhentcd hut its cause 1s unknown,
she said. he knows of no other
Susu
HOWLETT
f ocus ON 1Hf NH\S
relatives who have had the disease. The diseax appean at an early aac.
affecting male children more of\en
than females. The swetlln4 of some
muS<:le tissue and the detenorat.atfon
of others causes d1samn.acment of
connective tis.sue and abnormal ac-
cumulations of fat between muscle
Oben.
The condition makes It vital for the
Garden Grove boy 10 sleep in an iron
lunaevery n1aJ'lt and spend more tame
, ......... llOT I A2)
identificatlon and notification of
family, Johnson said.
He was described as a Latin maJe,
approximately 37 yean old.
The janitor, who police declined to
identiry, called Costa Mesa police
after discoverina the twQ victims in
Rohr's office l t bis bar. •
PoJice we~ still at the bar collcctina
evidence late Wednesday evenina.
and the bodies had nol yet been remo~ed. Johnson said.
"We're treating it as a homicide,"
Water baby
Johnson sajd.
Althouah the pair bad been shot,
Johnson declined to uy where they
we.re wounded or whether 'detectives
h&Cl ~ettrmined t.be type of weapdn.
The police did not have a weapon, be
said.
Asked ifthere was anycvid.ence of
robbery, Johnson said police had not
established a motive.
Accordi!lJ to an employee at
Sunshine Liquor, directly across the
street from the Lion's Den. owner
Swtmmtna weather la here aca1n. and Diane O'Dell and her
33-month-old daa&hter. DebOrah, of lnine take a 4lp In the
Newport-co.ta lleea YMCA pool. Deborah la I~ an
early nut on learniDC to •wlm thJ'oaCh a •Prlna .claM
offered under the nperrialon of aqaatic8 lnatracton.
Frank Showalter was just lockina up
aftercleaninaand restockina when he
heard two loud pops and a car
burning rubber behind the bar at 3:30 a.rn.
Showalter, wbo knew Rohr because
many of the same customers fre-
quented both est.ablishments, wa1ked across the street to check, said
employee Mike Williamson.·
'He reponedly found both the front
and back doon locked. and two can
parked behind the bar. Showalter
waited up untJJ the day shift em-: pk>yees anived, and apperently went
into the bar with the janitor. w~
Hamson wd.
Showalter tokt Williamson the
other victim was the doorman.
The tavern is located in a com-
rnertial area between a P'OCCJ"Y store
and a ociahborbood maUet. It it
known to cater to homoteXual(
accordin& to vice Set-Tom Boylan.
Williamson wd Rohr owned tbe
(Pleue ... 1Dlf/A9'
Court escapee
captured after
chase in Irvine
.,
Kicked through wall
of interview room;
on loose for 7 hours
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
OflMO.-,NeelW
An Irvine police officer ran down
and captured a courthouse escapee
Wednesday night after the fuJitive
bad fled from Harbor Munactpal
Coun in Newport Beach about noon.
The escapee was described as non-
violent. but prone to walking away
from minimum security Jails.
According to county Marshal
James Byham, the suspect. 1denufied
as Kenneth Mays of Santa Ana. was
scheduled for an afternoon court
hearingonch~ofbufllary,p-and
theft and receiving stolen Pf'Operty.
Mays, who was wearina black. jail-
assue coveralls, was spotted several
times throughout the afternoon. but
eluded capture until be anived at an
ex-fnend's house on Mann Street ia
Irvine. The former friend called the
police.
When officers arrived, Mays again
tned to escape on foot. He was run
down by lrvme police Officer Barry
Aninag at 7:40 p.m., said Lt. Mike
White.
Mays was booked into Newport
Beach jail.
Mays, 35. made bis fint eteape
(Pleue eee s&CAPSS/ A2)
Police audit cites
low follow-up rate
By SUSAN BOWLETJ'
OflMO.-, .........
Tbe portion of an audit that says
Newpon Beach poll~ detectJves
failed to conduct follow-up investip-
tions on 66 percent of the ~or
crimes reponed 10 June 1985 is being
called "misleading" by polfoe of-
ficials.
The audit, which recommended
"considerable improvement" 1n de-
tectives' case loads and cnticized the
use of apparent "excessive force" by
officers during arrests, also said that
the cost of running the Police Depart-
ment is more than double the na-
tional per capita average spent by
towns of comparable population.
Major crimes the audit said New-
pon detectives did not follow up
include a $75,000 residential bur-
glary, a $7,0QO safe bUJ'lluy and a
$24,000 larceny report. It also said a
robbery foUow-up report was miss-
ing, and none of the files showed the
name of the investigator assigned to
cases.
Newpon Beach police spokesman
Trent Harris said the findings are
misleading because detectives keep
their own files on current cues and
copies of those files arc not sent to the
records division where the audit team
was conducting the review.
"Records are being kept." Harris
said. "Each detective keeps a log on
each case; however, the records
depanment is not notified until a case
1s completed."
(Pleue eee POLICE/ A2)
Bill on concert noise revived
Ferguson vows topush measure giving
Mesa control over amphitheatre noise
County Faugrounds.
.. J intend to pursue It unul the
Pacific Amphitheatre and any otheT
commercial use on the fairgrounds 1s
bro uJht under control,'' Ferguson
said an an mtervaew Wednesday. His
ball would exempt the annual count)'
fair in July.
ANemblyman GU P'erp.on
By TONY SAAVEDRA
OflMO..,Nee ....
Assemblyman Gal Ferguson has
taken up the battle to lower the
concert noise all~edly spalling from
the Pacific Amphitheatre into Costa
Mesa neighborhoods.
The Newpon Beach Republican
introduced an urgency bill that would
allow Costa Mesa to immediately
enforce city noise hm1ts on the
18,000<apacity arena.
Assembly Bill 4255 is similar to the
.... ................. .....
eo.ta 11 .. police ~ 9W Beclletl •owa DoaC Kemp an •lmac"'" .... Tlae yoatll wu Mlected llonora.ry captain
of Cop Bowl vm.
). \
ill-fated ant1-no1se bill presented last
year by state Sen. John Seymour. R-
Anahe1m. After months of intense
debate. Seymour withdrew the
measure Jan. 23 amid strong opposi-
tion from the amprutheater's influen-
tial Sacramento lobbyist. retired
judge James Ganbald1.
Ferguson said he was recruited by
Costa Mesa officials to revive the
legislati ve battle as the concert arena
prepares to open its fourth concert
season on the state-owned Orange
Noise lawsuits have been filed
aga..anst amph1thcatcr-owner Ncd-
West, lnc. of ~Angeles by nci~
bonng residents. the city of Costa
Mesa and even the arena's landlord
-the state-appointed Orange Coun-
tv Fau Board
The legal battle b} the Clty and
homeowners has been stalled over the
(Pleue .ee COrtCSRT I A2)
Judge gives sheriff
1-month delay on
jail population cap
Gates preparing case
for why limit should
bellied indefinitely
BJ LISA MAHONEY °' .............
Onnae County has won a month's
delay in makina funher court-or-
d~ inmate rcductlons at thr Ma.in
Jail in nta na
lnstead of beina pared to a total of
I .400 an mates by Apnl I. the Jail
· populatJon may chmb to I JOO in-
mates a day throuah May I . fc:ckra l
c:ounJudac said Wednesday
The month·long. I 00-1nmate
repncvc was requested by the:
henfrs Dcpanment The cumnt
I ,SOO.inmate cap has been tn cffcct
IJ~Jan IS
Onnae ounty hcnff' Brad C:.atc:s
uid he wlll use the bruthma room
aranted by ll OtstnC't \oun Judae
Wilham P Gray to prepatt stat1\tl~
to b9ck up h1 claim that he ha' doM
all he can to reduce the Main J&ll's
inmate population Wlthout endanacr-
1ng the: public
Gates told Gra y last Thursday lhat
all inmates who can be: tr'llnsferred to
branch Jails or rclnscd pendana trial
are rouunel~ removed from the
crowded Mam Jail. Only pnsoncn
who pose a danacr to the community
are kept at the county', only mu1-
mum <Jc:Cunty facility. he \ltd
Gray was an Santa Ana last week to
conduct a contempt heanna for
Gates. whom he called on the carpet
JO explain wh)' inmate: totals bavt
e•C'Cedcd the Jan. 15 inmate cap of
1,500 on fi ve: occasions.
Thr 1udat accepted Oates' eAp&a-
nauon that he: thouaht the li11l1t
applied onl to the Jltl's m1druabt
pnsontt counL hut Gray warned the
,hcnfT that he: would be pee1ah.u:d if
inmate totah u~ l.SOO at a
umc: an the future
Gra) al~ denied a request to Wll\'t
the: new 1 .~1nmue p. Al\boup
he said he wanted to CX>Opa'lte wnh
(Pl--... JlJ'DO&/U)
.,
~----~--~------------------------------------------------------~-----------------------------
..
I'
•f
..
I •
'
A2 Oflinee CoMt DAILY PtLOT/ Thw9day, Marett 27. 1Me
LIBYA URGES SUICIDE ATTACKS ON U.S •.•
Proa Al
mUitary activity.
State televilioo lhowecl Ubyan
ciliuna lboutina llopn.s apinat the
Uruled States, but that bu become
oommonplace in recent months.
Anti·American .POStera were tacked
U(> It the airport. One showed. I ftaure
wt th ht resembllna that of the Statue~ ~bCny, its arms filled Wlth
an American t1aa and miulles with
11be Star of Davia on them. A black
man and an American lndl&n were
·.shown spiked on Libeny•s pointed -crown.
Libyan radio, monitored by the
..
British Broadcasuoa Om>. in Lon-
don, said. .. Ob, heroes of our Arab
nation, let your missiles and suicide
cells punue American tem>rist em-
busies and mtcrats Wherever they
may be."
lt .,....,V'd the em busies. "mtere:sts
andcompaniesoftenor"ofspyinaon
the Arab people and plunderina their
wealth.
The broadcast uraed "the Arab
nation" -which means Arabs ofaU
countries -to transfonn itself .. into
au.icide IQuads and into human bom~ missiles aod aircraft •o deter
.MEN FOUND SHOT •••
From Al
' t>ar for a little more than one year.
' It sits oear the police dep&rtmeot's
. new west side substation. which was
• opened as an outreach ef(on to t.be
large fiisP.anic community in t.bc
predominately low-income nei&b·
'borhood.
Accotdioa to city business m:ords,
the bar is owned by a pannenhip. the only name listed on a busa.ness
liceme ia Roh.r's, said a city cm· ployee. a.... ............ ,._, S.."'19 e. ............. ..,
and mist terronsm and destroy 1t for
IOQd!'
Tbe aroup led by reoeude Pa.lcsll-niu tem>nst Abu NidaJ issued a
statement in Dunucua. Syria. declar-ana that .. anythina American b.u
become from now oo a ':'IF' for our
revohitaonaries." The United States
blames him for tut December'•
airpon attacks in Rome and Vienoa in which 20 people were killed.
inchu1ina five Americans.
Soviet leader Mikhail S.
Oorblchev said iD Moecow that the UoJted Siatcs showed its .. imperial
be.odit faoe" in theclubawith Libya.
Vice Adll\. Frank 8. Kelso, oom·
mandcr of the U.S. 6th Acct. said
aboard the aircraft canier Saratop
that the wt clubet with Libyan
forces oocumd at 6:30 a.m. Tuesday
(midni&ht Monday EST).
Kel10 said that durioa the man-
euvers, U.S. ships bad not sailed any
closer than 72 mUes north of the
Libyan coastline.
,> F air skies continue on Coast
U.S . Tempe ......_. ,. 17 --~~ fl!M*TI Mllf'ftl9Mdl 74 .,,
MllllnO.oo... ,. 80 wwm-C0t0....,. Hllglle,IOw9~•pm~ ....... 11 Q
~ ..... u 11 ~. Rwl ,....,, .. Snow 0c~....,s._.,....,,.
""'*" 74 .. "-"~ ,. 11 ~ -S...Ce NOAA US 0.00 oJI C-<• ~ 12 M NewONMI u .. .. 41 .... YOf11 ,. 12
Mdloteoe t• 21 Notlolk,V• 71 ...
Alllrite 18 .. Hor1'I Plene u " Calif.. Tempa tloc*ton 70 ..
A-City 12 ... OlltellOfMClty 70 N TlflMV~ .. & AuMlll 1~ 17 OmlM 61 • TClff-..
leltlmor9 14 ... OtteNIO ,. " ...... '°"' "'°""' l'p.11\. ~· "--""'~ .,, .. ... 65 27 ..., ... ..,,.. n 42 =:;:r n .. . lltmlngflMI ,. 47 ~ N " 71 12
lillNtdc .. J4 ~--· • n u ..... II a Eztendecl ... .. 40 74 13 ....,,_. 1t 41
'°"'°" 71 47 PotWrld,O. •1 ... .. .., .. 21
ESCAPEE FROM COURT CAPTURED •••
Prom A l
..;:s::=.----lliftlllO 11 .. Pro\llOel I09 70 .. lllflOC> 71 aa
~.Y\. 17 80 =City . ,. .. ~ '° u ~ ..... M .. .= CMPW 14 :n ., " .. u
~.a.c .. 51 74 " ~City 71 .. end i.-M .. ......_to ~
after being interviewed by two public
defenders in an internee interview
room, Byham said.
The prisoner aod attorneys wett
~parated by glass above a desktop
and wallboard pat'\;ition.
"We place ham in the room, then
leave him," Byham said. "Then,
~ when the attorney is finished. or if
there's a problem, he can push a
button.
-"In this case. the interviewer insists
· she pushed the butrnn but the Jailer
didn•t ,et tbe lilbt." be laid.
After the attorneys kf\, Mays
kicked out the wallboard below the
desktop and glass partition., cnwled
through and eteaped out tbe inter-
viewer's door, Byham said.
He wasn't misted until be was
called to oourt for tbe afternoon
session, andjailen realized be wasn't
in the bold.in& population.
County manbals were assisted in
their search by N~ 8eacb police
and the oounty Shcrifrs cani.oe unit
Mays• escape wast.be tint in at least
three yan. Byham aid. Between 40
and SO prisooen are held at t.bc ooun
~day, he said.
Byham said Mayi bas several a1iues. and th.at b.Ja put skirmishes
with tbe law invol\'ed minor offenses
IUCb a.a bed cbecb and ll'affic
vio&atiooa. .
He alto said cbaqes ~ in order
for the internee interview rooms.
"Tbe wallboard·s not aoin& to be
waUboud anymore." he said.
~H.C 11
~ .. =:... .,
n
~ n OoNml*,l.C. 71
COU...Ofl. 13 ~)IH 13 o....-A~ 16 =· 71
e5
o.~ 56
o.'Clll .,
11"-" ........ 1a .. .,., at ,........,, 11 ~--61
~ ..... II
Gl•ltl>oro.H.C n
Hlf1bG 11 ..... u ......, 16
ltoo.l9lon 71
.. ~ 71 .. n It l.'°"9 .. 14 .. 11"-T~ 1t " a WL.MeClty '° SI .. "" AntoNo
,. 56
"' 191 Juen.P.A .. 11
56 .... 11 47
42 = 71 ...
57 47 S2
62 ---67 ,.
21 ~ 18 17
40 T~ 97 42
11 T-.. .,
M TIAll 71 M oe ·~ 75 41 2t Wll:Hte .. 47
2t w-.:a-. 11 ..
41
21 q Smog Report 40
24
72 l'llllluWll ~ .,... (pet): 0.100 .. good'; 100-200 ~ -......,.
Eura& .. 41 ~ n 47 ~ ,. 11 Surf Report Lono9Mdl 70 63 ~ .,. ..
10 .. LOCA.,._ -D& Monro'llll .. .. ZlllM leeoll w .. MotUU &H '° IO ..... MorllOe w .. Monter9¥ ., 41 :::T:::.o..... w ew M1. Wlleotl • ... "" c-y 24 w ...... • M OlltklOll b,...... uni.--.., Nliwport '-di 17 11
Oeldend 71 41 °"""° '° ... Tldea ... ~ t2 61 P..-w 11 12 .._~ 70 .. TOOA'f ........ '° 41 "1rlC IOw l:M &Al. -o..a
"'°""" 13 .. ::r • t:te Lii\. u ..,._, City 72 .. l;A4pAI.. 0.1 ---14 ao leoondflllll'I ..... Ill-"" ••• Selliwe 11 42 .... 'f .......... '° '° 41 "1rlC IOw 4:11 Lift. -0.t lenGeDtlll 12 !IO ::'3~ 10:41 &.M. .... • 11 1.,
JUDGE DELAYS JAIL CAP ORDER ••• ........ .. " c:=o-20WOO _,,..,.,,.. tor .-: 9enDlll90 4:Wp.m. ...--... " .. ,_...,Ant ....... ..,,rMCl9co 71 51 a-.dflllll'I 10'.33p.M. .. ._,a •flll T7 14 lodll(• 1191 lar-'. ~ .. ~ ...,,,_ 71 .. ,..,_ ~ ,. d9Y• eltalned pet Senta,.,.,. 1' 13 Prom A l
the county, Gray said he was going to
require "as much progress to be made
(on inmate reductions) as is reason-
ably possible."
However, Gray did leave the door
open for the county to ask him again
for a waiver. lf the sbcnff "finds
himself in a situation when: ifs either
Jct a dangerous felon go free or violate
the coun order. I want to know about
1t," Gray said.
But Gates said he knows he can't
keep the Main Jail po~tion down
below 1,400 even Wlth lbe recent
addjtion of 180 beds at Theo Lacy
Branch Jail in Oran&e. Wbittlina
inmate totals to l.SOO is difficult
enough. he said.
So Gates asked Deputy County
Counsel Ed Duran to contact Gny
Wednesday and ask for an extension
while t.bc Sheriff's Depan..meot comes
up with a system to identify}. ust who
IS being held at the Main ail OD a
week-by-wet bui.aand why. ... kl the fiaun:s will speak and
support what we•re uvi"• bere .. ~said. J..... '
Gata believes his &-""'et.. ~ be indefiAitdy ~;;· of
brft.aa to meet tbe 1,400-inmate cap
becaute of the steps tbe county bas
taken to reduce oven::rowdiq at the
MaiGJail.
A bearina OD the matter will be beld
tometimc next month.
ec-Qtr .. 41 ...... ler'ber• .. 47 lwl ,.... IOCllly .... 4, Ull. end ..
L.91v._ .. .. =eo., ................... 131 SentaCNI .. 46 :••t10p.m.
Ulll9 "°'* n a 0nnge County ..................... 1M ..,,......,. 76 46 ,.... ..., .. t;tO p.rn. end .... ......... 14 '° ~lfl Loe Allglla ...... 200 8enta Moniot u 56 ..-i•t:41&.ll'I.
POLICE AUDIT CITES WEAK AREAS •••
From Al
The audit team made its de-Beach Department jaal up to two The audit recommended that once
termination from a review of files on hours without a matron on duty." a new police chief is selected., be
1,024 police cues loged in June The audit also criticized the sexual should review the department's cn-
1985. Of those cues, 391 were and raciaJ mix oftbc police force and forcement policy to determine .. if
classified asa major crime-murder, urged th.at the city increase the greater djscretion and more selective
forcible rape, robbery, all assaults, number of women on the police force. agressiveness will better serve t.be
FBI AS·KED TO EXAMINE BONES ••• burglary, l.aroeny, motor vehicle theft Of the 139 sworn personnel at the contemporary yolicina needs of the
and anon, the repon said. department, two arc female. There is commmuruty.
From Al
1984. She was last seen walk.Jog
toward a campground toilet with her
then-8-year-0ld brother. TraVtS.
A three-day search of the area at the
u mc by about 250 volunteers turned
up no clues to her whereabouts. The
disappearance coindded with a grow-
ing nattonal awareness of the problem
of m1ssmg children. Her picture has
appeared on posters. milk cartons
and shopping bags and volunteers
HafT a full-time Find Laura ~nt.cr
near bcr parents' Oranae County
borne in Hunlillfl:on ec.di.
Alexander wd be hoped that,
because of the natiooaJ attention
focused on the case. the FBI would
give 1t a high prionty.
.. we·~ hopeful that we might
know something in a week or two," be
said. "But it's loing to depeo~ on
their workload. And. some of these
tests ~e lime." be said. .. Tberc.s no
real way you can speed them up."
Meanwhile, criminoloeists fro"'
t.be sheriff's crime lab will continue to oamine bone fratamta and other maua-pthered Sunday and Monday
&om the area wbere t.be fragments
were fou.nd.
Deputy Chief Tony l..onabetti said
CQyote feces arc beioa examined
clotely for hair fnplcnts, fabric
fibers or l"Cmai.ns of the rubber thongs
Laara was wcarina when she disa~
peaied..
The 7~paae report, released last a black officer and two other min-Actina Chief Arb Campbell dc-
wcek by Newpon Beach Ciry Man-oritics on the sworn force. fended the department on the iasue
ager Roben Wynn, was generally "Over the years. the department last week., S&YIJll oomplaints api.nat
complimentary of the department, has not been fully succ:cssful in officers multiply throuah publicity,
and offered sugestions to eliminate achieving a police workforce reflec-and spcculatina that the media alt.cn-
scvcral problem areas. tive of the characteristics of the tion given to the audjt•s findino will
The audit estimates that the per community as a whole," the ~pon produce mon: excessive-force claima.
capita cost of the Newport Beach said. "Especially underrepresented Wynn said at a press conference
Police DcJ)llrtment is S 173,063, while arc the females, who ma.kc up 5 I last week that city officials will not
the national average for cities of percent of the population of Newport comment on the validity of the audit
comparablesizcis$74,094percapita, Beach, but represent only about 1.7 until a new police chief baa been
but no recommendation or com-percen! of the sworn strength of the selected to replace Charles Gross,
m~ts were listed in the re~rt. department." who stepped down in January.
The audjt team criticized jail In the wake of City Council Th d. fth p 1: n... operations, including inspection and concern on the issue, the audit team cau ito e oucel.l'll;part.mcnt
SUIV'rVlsa·on ~u---i't ,. .. ;d could al I .. ed . t raJ •-:-f was requested last summer when ..,... . • v•~ ...... .-... so oo.. in oscve compuu.ut.so · ·1 daJ' d .... _ 11..
Cvcn•ualJy lead to i·n,·ury of ca'thcr a "' u~ b th JU Vena e van asm an Oun;i pro" ' excessive iorcc a y . ose lcms plagued the Balboa Peninaula
jailer or a prisoner. arrested by police o cers. It con-and there were questions about t.be CONCERT-NOISE BILL INTRODUCED •••
From Al
question of whether local ~ovcrn
ment should have the ability to
regulate act1v1tfos on state property.
In an attempt to keep the peace
with its neisJlbors. the govcrnor-
dppo1nted Fair Board has taken lcgaJ
acuon through the state attorney
general's office to quiet down the 2'h-
)ear-old amphitheater
\ifcanwh1le, Ferguson introduced
his measure Feb. 21 to keep the
pressure on Ned-West as well as on
the Fair Board to control the allegedly
noisy tenant.
The amphitheater leases a pon1on
of the fairgrounds under contract
wi th the Fair Board. officially known
:ls the 12 nd D1stnc1 Agncultural
\ssoc1auon.
"I find 1t 1nconce1vable that the
\late can enter a commercial contract
s1mplv to make money and be
uninh1b1ted b) the local laws.''
Ferguson said "I JUSt think it's unfair
and I'm very much on ( osta Mesa's
side ..
Representa11 ves from Ned · W~st
could not be reached for comment
Wednesday evening.
As written, the measure would
allow the city to regulate noise at tbe
fairgrounds from any outdoor theater
with a capacity of at least I 5,000. The
only such facility is the Pacific
Ampb.itbea~. believed to be the
largest outdoor theater on the West
Coast.
Ferguson said he has also asked the
Assembly·s legal counsel, Bion
Gregory. for an opinion on whether
commercial ventures on state prop-
erty are immune from locaJ laws.
Preliminary research indicates the
commercial acuvitics must abide by
local zoning and nuisance orch-
nanccs, Ferguson reported.
"We have three court decisions
that arc right on the money." he said.
adding he expects a final report by the
end of the week
Despite the demise of Seymour·~
bill at the hands oflobby1st Garibaldi
and Senate opponents. Ferguson said
he is not int1m1dated.
"I have no use for Ganbaldi; he's
JUStan old man whose name and fame
The audit team recommended that eluded that the department's ag-deployment of officers, Wynn said.
b.ave controlled the Legislature," management personnel constantly grcssivc patrol tactics should be
Fergu10n said. "His time is ~st due." n:view the use of detentio n to make revised. But the audit was prompted by
He added that the b1U would sure people are jailed "only wbeo "The reduction of excessive-force otherfactorsaswell,accordinatoCity
probably find more f.avor in the absolutely necessary" and then re-complaints and claims should be a Council members, who called the
Assembly than in the Senate because leased or transferred as soon as high priority objective for the depart-study "a good managina tool" for the
the distncts arc smaller and there 1s possible. mcnt," the report said. city.
mon: opportunity for contact with The audit team also recommended The report noted that complaints Every city department in Newport
local governments. that the city stop putting women m were filed against 32 police cm-Beach -except the Fire Department
"The Assembly 1s closer to the the city jail unless a matron is on duty. ployces in a 30-month period ending -has been studied by an indepen-
smalJ-town aspect... he said. ..My Female prisoners are usually trans-last June and said the department dent audit team.
coUeagucs come from cities and littJc fe~ to the Oranae County Jail. and nevertheless still "h.as a reputation for The audit was conducted by the
towns, too •· part-lime matrons arc available on maintainina a strict enforcement National Leaaue of Cities Police
Ferguson said the bill was sched-call, the report said ... But females arc policy and for being at times un-Consultation ~rvice, an indepen-
uled to go before the Asscmbty•s sometimes held in the Newpon necessarily heavy-handed." dent firm based in Wuhinston, D.C.
Local Government Comm ii tee in l~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!ii!!ii!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ii!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~--i April.
The Western Fau-s A$S0C1at1on,
which represents many of Cali-
fornia's f11rgrounds, sent Ferguson a
letter of protest claiming the measure
would cause serious damage to state
fat rs.
The bill's approval would set a
dangerous precedent of forcing fan
boards to share their authority with
locaJ JOvcrnmcnts, said the letter by
assoc1at1on Assistant Executive 01-
rector Stephen Chamben.
POWER OR SAIL
~ B<rl"f'O:\I I'\ I ~"J'f '''; t ~H .OH pt> r H l . :'\:\I:'\<; rooT
ILL BOY NAMED CAPTAIN OF COP BOWL •.•
:· ~ . ··~· ·•.. • ~· .1:: .. ~
I
P'romAl
in ll when he has compllcat1ons,
Kemp said. The breathing dev1cc 1s
e\'iCnt1al because most v1ct1ms of the
disease die of pneumonia, she added.
"He's usuall} in pretty good spints,
but it's gotten a little worse," she said.
Kemp ex~lained that Doug 1s now
entenng his teens bound to a wheel-
chair an« at:compan1ed by a medical
aide wherever he goe~.
"h isn't easy.'' she said "It's
starting to bother him more now that
he's a teen-ager ...
But through the efforts of volun-
teers at the Malec-A-Wish Foun-
datton, the spirits of the ill youth ha ve
1lready been lifted It looks ltkc he
will soon have M>me company of the
canine kind.
George and Celeste Macer of
Lakewood have donated a full-bred
German' shepherd puppy to Doug to
MA IN OFFICE
gi ve him some companionship while
be 1s attached to the mechanical
breathing dcVlcc. Spectal training for
the dog has been donated by Bob and
Marla Taylor. also of Lakewood.
Doug will get the puppy in a couple
ofweelcs. When 1t gets strong enough,
1t will be able to do several helpful
chores. including pulling Doug's
wheelchair. his mother said.
But the gift is not the only honor
Doug has received recently.
He has been named honorary
captain of "Cop Bowl VIII," an
annual football game presented by
the police departments of Costa
Mesa, Huntinaton Beach, Irvine,
Garden Grove, Buena Park and
Fullerton.
The game wiU be played Apnl 11 31
7:30 p.m . at Labard Stadium on the
Orange Coast College campus.
DouJ attends Carl Harvey Or-
thoped1c school in Santa Ana, and
goes to three claues a day at nearby
Carr lntcrmcdultc School, his mother
said.
She considers the last deade with
her son "a blessina.. because of
Doug's terminal diagnosis. But Kemp
said she and her hUlband have bad
some close calls.
"He's had pneumonia a bunch of
times, and we almost lOll him when
he wu S ycan old " she said.
The key is jutt Uvi.na one day at a
time, cnjoyioa the time they have
tQlletbe:r, abe said. Tbe Kemps have
spent tbie lut dealde apprecia.tina the
time they ba ve bed qether. and they
have tried to Ptt.pate tbemte.lves for
the day it may au end.
"You never know," saJd K.emp. "It
could be any time."
~ leG-MtMd 3JO W•I 8.ty St Olll t,t.w CA ) ~· -::.:;~~~~t<>.~;.;~~·"> Justcall 642-8086
CnoyttgM 108) O<-. Coet1 A1tw<"'"'11 ~
tWW9 110.,.. illlltl<ll'°"' ""'o<·t• "''".. • ·~;<=
~flOty " '°" 00 '* ..... '°"' PIP" Oy ~JO I>"' c •Mlof9 711m llld ,_ COOy .. tit ......
.,,.nt• _..,,, ,.,., 119 '""""''"00 w·ll-OVI V«·• ~ Wh•t do vou like about'tbe Daily PUot7 What -di~~·-•I. c don't you hke? art the number above 1nd your
~ c•us IJOJ'fll" 1>11 o •• ' •• "'"" c.111•0·• • mcssaae will be recorded. tranteribed and de-
1Vf"I 1u -eoo1 S...119<."°'«> 11' ~···• '~ 1~ ....,.,,,,,1 Ii vcred to the a~propn· ate editor
Dy ..... " 00 1"()nll'ly
VOL 71. NO.•
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used to record lettcn \0 the editor on 1ny topic.
Contnbuton to our lc'tttrs column must include
their name and telephone number for venftcatJOn
TcllJ us what's on your mind
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Outdrives -$45.00 + Materials
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